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Lamb Loin Chops
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Bone-In.100%Natural.
With Rib Meat or Thighs.
B o neless.
2-lb. Large Cooked Shrimp. Includes
Cocktail Sauce.
399
999
299
Saymluaye Farms Chicken
Hebrew National or Oscar Mayer Beef Franks
Johnsonvige Bratwurst or Italian Sausage
Wings
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Sold in a4-lb. bag, $10.76ea.
1u-m.
11 to 16-m. Selected varietieo.
28,9
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249
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Bush's BestBaked or Gfigiu' Beans
Campbell's Chunky Soup
2$4
2$4
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999
Cupcakes
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Tomatoes
,-, Each Price:258 Or Lemons, 2 for $1
13 to 15-ct.
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NageyOriginal
SafswaySELECTe Artisan Garlic Bread
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17-m. Selectedvarieties
Chili with Beans
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$99
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Club Pull
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599
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12to 16-02.Prslzels.. Selectedvsfishes. Club Price:$2.50en.
6-pack, 16-m. , @ Selected varieties.
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or Pepsi
6to6.25w. Crscksrfuls. Selectedvsrieliss.
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Club Pleool
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Tony Roma's Baby Back
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99
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$99
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16-m. Selected varleties.
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Hgagen-Dazs Ice Cream
Sslsdtdvsrisass.
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14.5 to 15-m. Selected varieties.
5-oz. Selectedvarieties — ivtBLE EE 4 I ~ea~ " " Club Price: $1.34ea.
Heinz Tomatn Ketchup
18.6ts19m.Sslsdsdvsrisae s ClubPrics:82.80ss.
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... Gatorade .
,S-pack, 20-oz. . Selected varieties. Club Price: $4.50 ea.
12-m.boNesor 22w. NinkssiboNsa Selectedvsrietisa PlusdepositinOregon.
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Prices inthis adare effective Sunday, Februaty2 thru Tuesday,February4, 2014(unless otherwise noted) inall Safewaystores inOregon(except Minon-Freevtrater) andS.W.Washington storesservingWahloakum,Courinz,Clark, SksmaniaandKlicknat Counties. Items offered for salearenot available to otherdealers or wholesalers. Salesofproducts containingephedrine, pseudoephedrineor phenylpropsnolaminolimited bylaw.Quantity rights reserved.SOMEADVERTISINGITEMSMAYNOT BEAVAILABLEINALLSTORES. offers, customermust purchasethefirst item to receivethesecond itemfree. BOG Ooffers arenot t/2 price sales. If only asingle itempurchased,theregular priceapplies. Someadvertisedprices maybeevenlower insomestores. OnBuyOne, GotOneFree (ABOGO") Manufacturers'couponsmaybeusedon purchaseditems only—not on free items. Limit onecouponper purchaseditem. Customerwil be responsiblefor tax anddeposits asrequired bylavvonthe purchasedandfree items. Noliquor salesinexcessof 52 gallons. Noliquor salesfor resale.Liquor salesat licensed Safevtlarstorosonlr©2014SafevvarInc.Avsgabgitir ofitems marvarir brstonLOnlineandIn stolo pnces,discountsandoffersmardrifer ei jde SPAOEA 4, PI,P2,P3,P5
BuY2aw 12-pack Coca-Cola, Pepsi or 7-IyP
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750-ml. Selected vsrietals. Single BONe Price: $15.99 es.
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Club8 f e el
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DAWDE RIDDO
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Dsscs tsu 11.2 tO12-OZ.bONea.
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Angry Orchard
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6-Pack INike's,
12-PackCorona or Heineken
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The Snack Artist Roasted Pistachios with Sea Salt
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12-m. cans. Selected variehss. Plus deposit inOregon>
10-m. Selected varlstlss.
12-Pack Blue Moon, Sltme Nsvada or New Belgium
12-Psck Stuls Arleis, Niuluni, B estsf Belgium
1297 ;q-- 1499 MARINADE
or Busch
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8 to10.5-m. Selectedvarieties. Club Price: $3.00ea.
$ggg06 9 to15.75-m
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Prices on this pagegood only February 2nd (unlossotherwise notet ALL UMIT5ARE PERHOUSEHOLD, PERDAY.
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W hen You Buy Any 2 or More with Card.*Good thru 2/ 8 / 1 4 Fj
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Bounty,Brawnyor Viva PaperTowels
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100-oz. Liquidor 95 to 98-oz. Powder. Selectedvarieties.
10or12 Big Rolls. Selectedvarieties.
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When you buy
3oo 2 or more
Flnal Prlce 99 with purchase of 1$00
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Cottoneiie or Quilted Northern Bath Tissue
When you buy
When you buy
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1$99 with purchaseof
99 with pumhaso of
any 2 or mora
any 2 or more
Finish Auin Dish Detergent
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Rancher'sReserve® Beef LoinT-BoneSteak Bone-In.OrRancher's Reserve® BeefTop Sirloin.OrPetite Ball Sleak,$3,99lb.Boneless.
99 with purchase of
150-oz. Liquid, 72-ct. Pacs or 156-oz.Surf Powder. Selectedvarieties. 1$$ Club Price 11 When ynu buy
56 to 90-ct. Selectedvarieties
I-
24Rolls. Selectedvarieties. daoo ClubPrice 4 When you buy
00 Flnal Price
Surf Detergent
Hefty Trash Bags
rfs
Charmin Bath Tissue
1+$$ Club Prisce
When you buy
3oo 2 or more
24 Rolls.Selectedvarieties.
GIBoaem e
When you buy
o3oo 2 or more
with purchase of 11g99 ea any2ormore
Gain Detergent 150-oz. Liquid. Selectedvarieties.
Selectedvarieties.
"At checkout when you buy 2 or more participating items. Prices and offer valid with Card thru midnight 2/8/14. The items pictured are for display purposes only and the sale prices are for the items designated in the ad copy. © 2014 Safeway lnc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Ib Club Ppscs! Safeway SELECT . Extra Neaty Pork Loin Back Ribs
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Safeway'Kitchsns Hot Dogor HamburgerBuns 12t013ca ClubPrice:31250a.
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299
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Boxed Diapers.
Ksndalldackson, H3orAtoz
Peet's Coffee or Single Cups 12-oz.bsg oy10rid. cups. Selectedvarietos.
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Arrowhead Water 24-pack,16.9-oz. Club Price:$3.50ea. Plus deposit inOregon
54 to 104-ct. Pampsrs or 112 to 148-ct. Luvs Diapers.
27 to 86-ct. Diapers or TrainingPants.
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Big Pack
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Hair Careor1-BoxRootTouch-up. Seiectsd varieties.
Selected varieties.
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Neutrogena Facial Care
3.8to 8-oz. Styleis, 12 to 23.7-oz.
10 to 12-oz.
Nabisco Snack Crackers or Toasted Chips 35hg.tqtzotdnntt il.lozgltn.Sdahdmida.
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Safeway SELECT' Gelato Pint. Selected varieties. Each Price $300
2dp
Ghirardeiii or Lindt Valentine ChocoiateBag
Herehey'sValentine PackagedChocolate
7.2 to 8.95-oz. Selectedvarieties. While SuppliesLast.
10to 11-oz.Selectedvayisgos. 0 While SupplieLas s t ClubPrie: $3.50sa.
499
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Offer excludes cardspriced at ooe Ogar valid wilh canpInm 1/zzn4 ts zyltn4 upts anwdmumat SI OO atputcipafint SalanayIsc. Company Sons.Putupasnp itemsmuslhspuichssadinasinslstuusstan.Osinutecsmhiaedwilhsnysthsrover.Uuit onepsrIransachsn. VoidNhus puuuhd. Subject tesvailahxp Valid onusst umhtomAusdcanOssliafr, Papynn andRsuydsdPapsiOusings.Ocludesuadspdculat0020,Sstpactasinfandtaudruds. OFFERExplnmh Fahmany IS,zef4 mhhuayciacsd TUNOOONI,ParfmnT2linnmOul nmhllsnumlahlsOulTmTlnubammdOul,PdmpiayheWONI,
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> Chinet Dinner Plates 100-ct.
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February is Heart Health MOnth! NatureMadeorNature's BountyVitamins
Ssltckxtdzssandvarieties. EndudingGummina
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Bayer Low DoseAspirin 120-cL
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Pricesonthis pageareeffectiveSunday,Februaryzthru Tuesday,February4,2014(unlessotherwise noted). ALLL!M!TSAREPERHOUSEHOLD,PERDAY.Selectionvariesbystore.
2 3 4 PRICESEFFECTIVE (UNLESSOIHERWISE NOTED) SPADEA 2, P1,P2,P3,PS
SPADEA 3, P1,pz,p3,P5
Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1.5Q
SUNDAY February 2,2014
Fermented teabooming Q eg jge'S f gye '1 50
IN COUPONS INSIDE
BUSINESS • G1
COMMUNITY LIFE• D1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
SOLAR ENERGY
Experts: Oregon has more potential
Super Sunday — Previews of today's game,and aBend man remembers playing in the Super Bowl in 2008.B1
Plus: Concussions — A study finds new ' helmets guard against them better.A3 Dfuught —In the West, the current drought is mild compared with earlier ones that have spannedcenturies. C5
Trip 97 —Highwayimprovements under consideration.C1
Promise zones? — Can enterprise zoneshelp revive depressed areas?P1
'TVeverywhere' — A way to reduce your cable bill?61
Complement • Woman with Bend ties Complement,PNHandSoliris is a part of the immunesystem that helps the body destroy bactediscoveredrare ilnesswhen Complement ria, viruses andother foreign matter. Red blood cells carry specific proteins on their surface that block complement, preventing it from destroying the cells. she becamepregnant Inparoxysmalnocturnal hemoglobinuria (PlfH),these blocking By Markian Hawryluk proteins are missing from the surface The Bulletin of red blood cells, due to agenetic Lily Perkins believes her unborn baby may have saved her life. Now, mutation. That allows complement to she's returning the favor. Doctors ad- create pores in the surface of the red vised Perkins to terminate the preg- blood cells. nancy to save her own life after she Pores was diagnosed with a rare blood disorder. If she continued, they told her, she had a one in five chance of dying. Perkins was diagnosed with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria,
By Abby Goodnough
Friends of Lily Perkins have created a website to raise funds to payfor her non-covered medical and living expenses. Contributions to the account can be made atwww. youcaring. com/ medicalfundraiser/ lifting-up-
an a gonizing d ecision, P e r kins, 27, and her
lily/118914
life, if I got better,
this
story online at bend bulletin. com/pnb
where the governors and supportersof President
Barack Obama's health care law.
Republicans have seized on the failures of homegrown exchanges in states like Maryland, Min-
nesota and Oregon — all plagued by technological problems that have kept
customers unhappy and enrollment goals unmet — and promise to use the
issue against Democratic candidates for governor and legislative seats this
fall. "People see incompetence when they look at this," said Michael Short, a spokesman for the Republican National
Committee. "Everyone
touted the renewable energy source in his State of the Union speech last
week. "To know the president is still behind solar
and gave it a shout-out in the State of the Union is fantastic for us," said
Israel, founder of Sunlight Solar Energy in Bend and president of the Oregon Solar Energy Industries Association. The United States is
A rare disease, it affects only 1 or 2
becoming a leader in solar energy,President Obama said during his address. "Every four minutes,
lion people, often with debilitating
How
WASHINGTON — With
legislative leaders have been among the strongest
when PresidentObama
out of every mil-
New York Times News Service
the federal online insurance exchange running more smoothly than ever, the biggest laggards in fixing enrollment problems are now state-run exchanges in several states
Microbe
its red blood cells.
And a Wed exclusive-
State health exchanges give GOP easy target
WASHINGTON — Like
many proponents of solar, Paul Israel applauded
body's i m mune system destroys j' ' I
EDITOR'SCHOICE
The Bulletin
or PNH, a condition in which the
'EGFWOfmS' —A few ways to get rid of those songs stuck in your head.A3
Virginia considers a lawthat would allow pets to beburied with their owners. bendbuuetin.com/extras
Red blood Protem cell marker
By Andrew Clevenger
Today:A newdrug changes the lives of patients with rare disease. Monday: Company nearly went broke before breakthrough.
'
I
I
I
I
'
I
another American home
or business goes solar, every panel pounded into place by a worker whose job can't be outsourced," he said. Oregon now ranks 11th
fiance, Silas Da-
vis, felt they owed a debt to their unborn child. Had she not become pregnant, Perkins' first sign of t he disease could have been a fatal blood clot.
"My baby is the only reason we caught this and I'm still alive," she
in the nation with 2,900
solar jobs, according to the Solar Foundation. It ranks 15th in both total
'7
solar capacity and the number of homes powered by solar, with 6,775. But industry officials say there's plenty of room for
SYMPTOMS
improvement across the country but especially in Oregon. Over the past five years, about five megawatts of
The red blood cell destruction leads to ahost of symptoms in PNH patients. If left untreated, onethird of PNHpatients will die within five years, mainly due to ahigher risk of blood clots.
said. "I felt like
Percent of PlfHpatients reporting: D ifficulty swallowing ......... . . . . . . I would never forP ulmonary hypertension........ . . . . give myself." S hortness of breath........ . . . . . . . . P erkins, w h o A bdominal pain.......... . . . . . . . . . . lived in Bend for C hronic kidney disease.......... . . . . seven years before moving to p ort- E rectile dysfunction........ . . . . . . . . land a year ago, H emoglobin in urine......... . . . . . . . sought a second B lood clots......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . opinion at Oregon A nemia.......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Health & Science S evere fatigue......... . . . . . . . . . . . . for the rest of my
gon, Israel said. By way of comparison, Portland
General Electric's coalfired plant in Boardman produces 550 megawatts, while the Mirror Pond Dam generates about 1 megawatt.
47% 6
26% 40% 88%
"Central Oregonians,
in their homes, have cre-
96%
University, where
hematologists see
solar power have been installed in Central Ore-
41'/ 47% 66% 57
ated a small power plant of clean energy," Israel
Source: Alexion
a new PNH case,
sard.
HOW THE DRUG WORKS Soliris(ecuuzumab)is anantibody reproduced in the laboratory to stop the final steps in the only then that the creation of complement.Complementis produced in the body through one of three pathways. couple l e a rned They all converge at asingle point, the C5step. Ecuuzumab targets the C5 step, they had been givpreventing itfrom cleaving into en outdated mediC5a and C5b,which triggers the cal advice. destruction of red blood Soliris, a drug m cells in PNH.Thedrug approved in 2007, Terminal does not affect produchas d r a stically tion of precursors to changed the out(CS) C5, which are neededto look for patients with PNH, and docfight off other types of tors no longer recommend terminating infections. pregnancies. See Blood /A6 Graphic by Markian Hawryluk and Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin on average, every other year. It was
See Solar /A7
TODAY'S WEATHER
IHII~
Partly cloudy High 38, Low 20 Page C6
INDEX Business G1-6 Calendar C2 Classified E1-6 Comm. LifeD1-8 Crossword06,E2 Local/StateC1-6
The U.S. tank industry at a turning point
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
that's associated with it is
going to have to deal with the consequences of this terrible law, including the state legislators who created these exchanges and the governors in charge of running them." See Exchanges /A7
By Marjorie Censer The Washington Post
tems plant where that rig was built.
supporting the war effort at home and those fighting on
The Marines that rolled to
the front lines has held tight
glory in it even showed up to pay their regards to the factory workers. That bond between the machinists and tradesmen
for generations — as long as
YORK, PA. — When an
armored vehicle pulled down the statue of Saddam Hussein in an iconic moment of the
Iraq War, it triggered a wave of pride here at the BAE Sys-
the tank has served as a sym-
bol of military might. Now that representation of U.S. power is rolling into
vot 'i12, No. 33, 4e pages, 7 sections
another sort of morass: the emotional debates playing out as Congress, the military and the defense industry adapt to
Q We use recyc/ed newsprint
stark new realities in modern warfare and in the nation's
I IIIIIII I
finances. SeeTanks/A4
Milestones D2 Obituaries C4 Opinion F1-6 Puzzles D6 Sports B1-6 TV/Movies D8
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
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e s one oes u n aun e r e o By Grant Schulte
Afghan attaCkS —Twoaides to an Afghan presidential candidate were fatally shot in the relatively secure city of Herat in western Afghanistan on Saturday, officials said. Theattack occurred around 6:30 p.m. whengunmenfired on a vehicle outside the campaign office, according to police officials and a spokesman for the candidate. The assault killed FaizZadaHamdard, a campaign manager for the candidate, Abdullah Abdullah, and the driver of the vehicle, Shujauddin, 19, the nephew of awell-known jihadi commander who goes by a single namelike manyAfghans. By lateSaturday, the police had detained several suspects, officials said.
LINCOLN, Neb. — With yet
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which raised no major objections to the pipeline. The oil industry, some union groups and congressional R epublicans called on the Obama administration to move forward with
the project, while a coalition of landowners and environmentalists say there is still cause
for denying a federal permit. The project would ship 830,000 barrels of oil a day from Canada to Texas Gulf Coast refineries.
Si sil.Ava
Dtsoosrs
Meanwhile, farmers and ranchers in Nebraska who oppose the pipeline are planning to run for seats on a state
board that regulates power staADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
tivists say they have recruited Project backers said the remore than 75,000 volunteers port — the latest in a five-year willing to participate in civil review by state and federal disobedience, should President agencies — bolsters their case
another obstacle removed for the Keystone XL pipeline, op- Barack Obama approve the ponents werepressingforward Keystone project. with a lawsuit to challenge the The project now goes to a project, public protests and an 30-day comment periodand effort to inject the issue into the a review by U.S. Secretary of November elections. State John Kerry and other Supporters and opponents agencies. Obama has 90 days both were quick to claim victo- to make the decision on the ries with the U.S. State Department reportreleased Friday,
541-385-5804
OR LD Iraq VialenCe —The United Nations said Saturday that at least 733 Iraqis were killed during violence in January, evenwhen leaving out casualties from anembattled western province. The figures issued Saturday by theU.N.'s mission to Iraq show 618civilians and 115 members of the security forces were killed in January. But the UNAMI statement excluded deaths from ongoing fighting in Anbar, due to problems in verifying the "status of those killed." The figures also leave out insurgent deaths. Also, the U.N.said at least1,229 Iraqis were wounded inattacks across the country last month.
The Associated Press
ONLINE
• • rolea4Aw.
NXTION +
tions that are needed along the
project route. And national ac-
for the pipeline and eliminates the need for further delays. The Keystone XL i s " n ot
about energy versus the environment. It's about where Americans want to get their
oil," said Russ Girling, CEO of pipeline developer TransCanapipeline, but the White House da. "Keystone XL will displace on Friday disputed the notion heavy oil from such places as that the report is headed to a the Middle East and Venezufast approval. Oil began flow- ela, and of the top five regions ing last weekthrough an Okla- the U.S. imports oil from, only homa-to-Texas section already Canada has substantial greenapproved by Obama. house gas regulations in place." "There's no question, if the Opponents were planning president approves this permit, to host vigils throughout the that there will be civil disobe- nation Monday and "pipeline dience," said Jane Kleeb, ex- meet-ups" throughout F ebecutive director of the group ruary to encourage people to Bold Nebraska, which has raise the issue with candidates helped organize opposition in in the 2014 election. They also the state. "We've said from the were waiting for a Nebrasbeginning that we will sup- ka judge to rule on a lawsuit port the landowners and what challenging a state law that they want to do and what they allowed the project to proceed. think is best for their property. A ruling is expected by late I think you'll see some land- March, and whatever the outowners driving really slow on come an appeal to the Nebrastheir county roads to block the ka Supreme Court is a near (pipeline) trucks." certainty.
Ukraine —U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Saturday that Ukraine, confronting a political crisis and massiveanti-government protests, should be free to align with Europe if it wants and not feel coerced by morepowerful neighbors such as Russia. "Nowhere is the fight for a democratic, Europeanfuture more important today than in Ukraine," Kerry said at asecurity conference in Munich. "While there are unsavory elements in the streets in anychaotic situation, the vast majority of Ukrainians want to live freely in asafe, prosperous country." Thai eieCtieh —Thailand's tense national election got underway Sunday with protesters forcing the closure of several polling stations in the capital amid fears of more bloodshed adayafter gun battles in Bangkok left seven peoplewounded. Theextent of disruptions was not immediately clear whenpolls opened nationwide. But there were early indications that several hundred polling stations in Bangkokand southern Thailand, anopposition stronghold, could not openbecause protesters had blocked thedelivery of ballots or stopped voters from entering. Theelections are expected to be inconclusive, leaving the country in political limbo. Ei SalVadOr eleCtiOn —Salvadorans vote today in a presidential election that may give former leftist rebels a secondchance atgovernment — or return national leadership to the right-wing party that ruled the country for two decades.Opinion surveys haveshown an extremely tight race, especially with the entrance of anewthird party run by a former conservative president with family members tied to notorious corruption cases.
LEBANESE CARBOMBING
ChriS ChriStie —New Jersey Gov.Chris Christie is going on the offensive after a former loyalist said hehas evidence the Republican governor knew morethan he hasadmitted about an apparently politically motivated traffic jam ordered byone of his staffers last year. The governor's political team sent anemail Saturday to donors, along with columnists and pundits who might be in aposition to defend Christie, bashing the manChristie put in a top post at the Port Authority of New Yorkand NewJersey andthe accusations the man's lawyer made in a letter Friday.
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United AirlineS —United Airlines said Saturday it will drop its money-losing hub in Cleveland, slashing its daily flights and eliminating 470 jobs. Thecompany's CEOJeff Smisekannounced in aletter to employees that the airline will no longer useCleveland to connect fliers coming from other airports around the country. As aresult, United's daily departures from the city will fall from199 currently to 72 by June. Similar cutbacks haveaffected many other small hubs in cities such asMemphis, Cincinnati and Salt LakeCity amid awave of airline mergers over the last five years.
s
— From wire reports
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POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
ta O>s O ar O as O OsO The estimated jackpot is now $215 million.
MEGABUCKS
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Lebanese citizens gather at the site of a carbomb that blew up near agas station, killing three, in the town of Hermel, Lebanon, astronghold of Lebanon's militant Hezbollah group about10 miles from the Syrian border. Lebanon's RedCrescent said another 18 were wounded. Lebanese groups backing different sides in Syria's sectarian civil war havecarried out bombings and
other attacks against each other. Sunni militant groups haveclaimed responsibility for a relentless series of attacks on Shiite parts of Lebanon, including a bombthat exploded in Hermel in late January. They say it is in retaliation for the Shiite Hezbollah group sending its fighters into Syria's civil war to support forces of President BasharAssad.
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AWARDS Writers Guild ofAmerica — The 66th annualWGAawards on Saturday were the final awards ceremony leading up to theOscars on March 2.
• ORIGINALSCREENPLAY: "Her," by Spike Jonze • ADAPTED SCREENPLAY: "Captain Phillips," by Billy Ray, based on the book"A Captain's Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALS, and Jonze Dangerous Days at Sea" • DOCUMENTARY: "Stories We Tell," by Sarah Polley I
• DRAMASERIES:"Breaking Bad" • COMEDYSERIES: "Veep" • NEW SERIES:"House of Cards"
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 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 Sunday, Feb. 2,the 33rd day of 2014. Thereare332 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS EIOCtIOtlS —El Salvador and Thailand both go to the polls in a national vote.A2 SUpSF BONfl —TheSeattle Seahawks face theDenver Broncos in NewJersey. 81
HISTORY Highlight:In 1914, Charles Chaplin made his movie debut as the comedy short "Making a Living" was released byKeystone Film Co. (Five days later, Keystone released "Kid Auto Races at Venice," in which Chaplin first played his famous Tramp character.) In1536, present-day Buenos Aires, Argentina, was founded by Pedro deMendozaof Spain. In1653, New Amsterdamnow NewYork City — was incorporated. In1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican-American War,was signed. In1887, Punxsutawney, Pa., held its first Groundhog Day festival. In1922, the JamesJoyce novel "Ulysses" was published in Paris on Joyce's 40th birthday. In1934, the Export-Import Bank of the United States had its beginnings as the Export-Import Bank of Washington was established. In1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the Battle of Stalingrad surrendered in a major victory for the Soviets in World War II. In1964, Ranger 6, a lunar probe launched byNASA, crashed onto the surface of themoon asplanned,but failed to send backanyTV images. In1971, Idi Amin, having seized power in Uganda, proclaimed himself president. In1988, in a speechthe broadcast television networks declined to carry live, President Ronald Reaganpressed his case for aid to the Nicaraguan Contras. In1999, in a dramatic concession to South Africa's black majority, President FW. de Klerk lifted a ban onthe African National Congress and promised to free Nelson Mandela. Ten years ago:President GeorgeW. Bush unveileda $2.4 trillion budget featuring a record deficit, as well as big increases for defense and homeland security. Deadly ricin was discovered in offices used by SenateMajority Leader Bill Frist. An eleven-story apartment building collapsed in Konya, Turkey, killing 92 people. Five years ago:Hilary Rodham Clinton was sworn in as U.S. secretary of state. The Senate confirmed Eric Holder, 75-21, to be attorney general. President Barack Obama's choice for health secretary, Tom Daschle ,apologized for failing to pay more than $120,000 in taxes. (Daschle ended up withdrawing his nomination.) Gunmenabducted American U.N.worker John Solecki in Quetta, Pakistan, killing his driver. (Solecki was released unharmed two months later.) Moammar Gadhafi of Libya waselected leader of the African Union. Iran sent its first domestically made satellite, Omid ("hope"), into orbit. Oneyear ago:Former Navy SEAL and "American Sniper" author Chris Kyle wasfatally shot along with a friend, Chad Littlefield, at a gun rangewest ofGlenRose,Texas;suspect Eddie RayRouth has been charged with two counts of capital murder.
BIRTHDAYS Actress Elaine Stritch is 89. Comedian TomSmothers is 77. TV chef Ina Garten is 66. Actor Brent Spiner is 65. Model Christie Brinkley is 60. Actor-comedian Adam Ferrara is 48. Actress Jennifer Westfeldt is 44. Singer Shakira is 37. — From wire reports
STUDIES
ome eme s 8 Bl' Tracking the toll of vodka aso in mncLiSSianSon Russianmen The newest design could reduce concussions by as much as half, a study released last week says.
By Melissa Healy
measurement they used were
Los Angeles Times
bottles of vodka consumed per
"Vodka is our enemy, so we'll utterly consume it!" goes the old Russian proverb. That love-hate relationship is thought to have helped send 37 percent of
By Geoffrey Mohan Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Super Bowl viewers might want to
keep an eye on the helmets crashing together in today's
week — a bottle being a half-liter (the equivalent of roughly 18 single servings of alcohol by U.S. standards). The research, published last week in the journal Lancet, im-
proves on past efforts to assess vodka's wages on the Russian toasted their 55th birthdays. population. For existing studAnd a new study finds that, ies,researchers have visited despite fitful campaigns to the homes of random Russians stem heavy drinking, vodka after they died and asked famcontinues to exact a huge ily members to report on the toll on Russian men. extent of their drinking. Such Among male Russian methods can be unreliable, besmokers, 35 percent of those cause families' recollections in th e h a rdest-drinking are often colored by the circategory — those who con- cumstances of the death. sumed more than a liter and The latest study is prospeca half of vodka per week tive, meaning that researchRussian men in 2 005 to
the grave before they had
game between the Seattle Sea-
hawks and Denver Broncos. A new study says that the lids worn by opposing quarterbacks Peyton Manning and Russell Wilson, not to mention
S E
p T
T
L
E
the dreadlock-filled helmet of
Seattlecornerback Richard Sherman, can reduce concussion risk by more than half, comparedwith anolderm odel. The study adds to a growing consensus that helmet design
Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press file photo
— died between the ages of
can impact impacts. This one, The helmet of Seattle Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman is published Friday in the Jour- one of a newer model that is more effective at preventing concusnal of Neurosurgery, was the sions, a study released last week shows. first to control for the number of impacts different players receive. It measured head motion duce sudden motion changes brain injury in a living human. changes during more than 1.2 of the head, which can cause You can't take someone in a million impacts over five years the brain to bump against the lab, hit him in the head and of Division I NCAA football skull, and has been related to see what the dinical outcome games played by eight college a higher risk of concussion. is for a certain impact. But the teams. None had controlled for the football players, they hit their Sixty-four of those hits renumber of times each helmet heads every day voluntarily. sulted in diagnosed concus- was hit. So theidea ofthe research is "So you don't necessarily to instrument that population sions, and the relative risk of being among those dizzy deni- know ifyou're comparing a and observe it over time so you zens of the gridiron was cut by player who is impacted infre- can collect data in a natural roughly 54 percent if players quently in one helmet type, and ethical manner." wore a more advanced mod- versus one player who is not Over the five years, about 3 el helmet. Both helmets in the impacted as much," said Row- percent of players sustained comparison were made by the son. "You might have a line- concussions,according to the same manufacturer, Riddell, backer being compared to a study.A far lower percentage which is the official helmet kicker." of players in Riddell's newer of the NFL (at least until SunQuarterbacks had the high- Revolution model l in e susday's game is over and its con- est recorded head accelera- tained concussions than those tract ends). tions, followed by running in the now discontinued VSR4
35 and 54, the study found.
151,000 Russian participants
That death rate was more
older than 35 while they were still healthy, and asked them
Halfthe concussions
by both teams' quarterbacks was slightly less than four per
tion). Most were re-interviewed
fied as lighter drinkers. But threeyears after the first oc24 percent of the Russian men in the study were clas-
sified as heavy or intermediate drinkers, meaning they drank more than a bottle of vodka — half a liter — per
casion to assess whether their
drinking habits had markedly changed.Many had, but in different directions. Then the authors waited until 2011, and
then counted the subjects who had died, and how. Among the intermediate The authors of this study male drinkers — those who came from several research
week.
said they consumed between half a liter and a liter
centers in Russia, and from Oxford University, the French
and a half of vodka weekly
Cancer Research Agency in Lyon andIcahn SchoolofMed-
— 20 percent died between
ages 35 and 54. A dismal 50 percent of
icine at Mount Sinai, New York.
The group's earlier research
Russia's male smokers who
had found that most prema-
fensivebacks,linebackersand
A spokeswoman for Riddell said the information in the
were in the lightest drinking category died between ages 55 and 74, the study found. But among the hard-
turedeaths of heavy drinkers
Studying brain trauma
"There were a lot of differ-
ent research questions that each group was asking independently," Rowson said. older helmet over the same Virginia Tech, in fact, was number of impacts, the study
not aiming to do a p roduct
found.
comparison. "The point of the study
would cover thousands of form er players who suff ered concussions, some of whom later were diagnosedwith serious degenerative brain diseases. Several previous studies had suggested that helmets with more padding and other design changes could re-
while 78percent were dassi-
design.
100,000 hits, compared with a bit more than eight with the
The NFL recently agreed to a $764-million settlement that
how much vodka they consumed (aswellas other forms The heaviest d r inkers of alcohol, which were not as were a minority, at 8 percent common and which generally of subjects in that age group, tracked with vodka consump-
backs and wide receivers, de-
"If players had matched im- linemen on both sides of the pacts throughout their whole ball, according to the study. career, you'd see about half the Virginia Tech had been number of concussions" in the p lacing instruments in t h e newer helmet, said the study's helmets of its football players lead author, Steven Rowson, a since 2003, said Rowson. But biomedical engineer at the Vir- other teams likewise were doginia Tech-Wake Forest Uni- ing similar investigations, and versity School of Biomedical they eventually agreed to pool Engineering and Sciences. their data. The concussion rate for the more modern helmet worn
than twice as high for "lighter" drinkers, 16 percent of whom died before age 54.
ers, starting in 1998, recruited
study "continues to show the
value of more advanced helmet technology." line was introduced in 2002, according to Riddell. Manning was among the first to adopt the new helmet, versions of
tween half a liter and and
Wilson and Sherman, according to Riddell spokeswoman Erin Griffin. NFL players can wear the helmet of their choice, but Rid-
dell has been the only manufacturer allowed to display its
tion of whether or not helmet
included Virginia Tech, Uni-
heart disease that is not a heart
a liter and a half of vodka attack. weekly, 20 percent would The averagelife expectandie between ages 35 and 54, cy of men in Russia is only 64 and 54percent would die be- years, putting it among the tween ages 55 and 74. b ottom 50 countries in t h e Virtually all of Russia's world. male drinkers also smoke, so the authors of the study largelyfound they were comparing the death rates of male smokers as a func541-548-2066
which now cover the heads of
those two specific helmets, but to address the general ques-
wasn't necessarily to compare
— accident, suicide, violence, alcohol poisoning — or a group of diseases induding liver canages. cer, cancer of the upper aerodiAmong the intermediate gestive tract, t uberculosis, male drinkers — hose who pneumonia, liver or pancreatsaid they consumed be- ic disease, or acute ischemic estdrinkers,64 percent died somewhere between those
The VSR4 was discontinued in 2011, and the Revolution
name on them, under an exclusive contract granted in 1989. The NFL has ended that relationship after this season. Teams involved in the study
in Russia were attributable to a clusterof "external" causes
WILSONSof Redmond
tion of how much vodka
theydrank. Thebasicunitof
design plays a role in reducing versity o f N o r t h C a r olina, incidence of concussion." The University of Oklahoma, Dartautomotive industry is keen- mouth College, Brown Univerly interested in such data, he sity, University of Minnesota, added. Indiana University and the "It's really hard to study a University of Illinois.
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Oust that tune: Listeningto a less
catchysongis 1 curefor 'earworms' By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — It hap-
itself might do the trick," psy- distract themselves with anchology researcher Lauren other song. Most said it usualStewart of the University of ly worked.
pens to nearly everyone: A London said. The British nasong — let's say Abba's "Wa- tional anthem, which Stewart terloo" — is stuck in your head concedes isn't the type to get and just won't go away. stuck in the head, was menNow science has not one but tioned most often by the Brits three ways to dig that dread- as an earworm replacement. ed earworm out. And none of Stewart wrote that 64 specifthem aretoo surprising, asre- ic songs were mentioned as searchers surveyed 18,000 res- good replacement tunes, but idents of Finland and England not many repeaters. So the and reported their findings in anthem topped the charts with
• Composition
were more likely to just try to embrace the song, play it over
• Metal • Tile
or listen to the end. And that also worked at times, Stewart sard. And then there's a t h i rd
• New CorLstruction • Maintenance • uopoBILn Roofs
• 84 Eeur Emergency Service • PVC/MO Flat Roofs • Snow Removal • Continuous Gutters
group who, like Stewart, just ignore earworms because they're not bothered by them.
About 90 percent of people The other replacement report earworms from time
the journal PLOS One. R esearchers at t h e U n i -
six votes.
versity of London found that
tunes that got multiple votes
include Culture Club's "Karma listen to the complete song or Chameleon" and the standard sing it; you can just not let it "Happy Birthday." bother you, or you can try usMost of the time the people ing another song to shove out who replaced one tune with the offending tune. another reported that the secHow about "God Save the ond tunedid not become an Queen"? earworm. About one-in-nine earworm victims say you can
"A tune that's not too catchy
On the other hand, more than half the Finns surveyed
Britons reported they tried to
to time and Stewart said two
things seem to be involved: lack of control and a brain that
is sort of idling. "People get very annoyed about being made to listen to music that they find is not to
their personal taste and that they cannot control," Stewart
sard.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
ANALYSIS:'PIVOT' TO ASIA
amas sia oic set ac e ow emocrat By Matthew Pennington •The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's Asia policy took a hit this week, and it came from a member of his own party. The top Democratic senator, Harry Reid, announced that he opposes legislation that's key for a trans-Pacific trade pact that is arguably the most important part of Obama's effort to strengthen American engagement in Asia. Photos by Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg News
An employee completes final processing of the M88Hercules heavy recovery vehicle on the sssembly line at the BAESystems factory in York, Pa. The plant is scaling back its operations because of a declining demand for tanks and similar vehicles.
Since Obama rolled out the policy, most attention
has been on the military aspect, largely because it was described as a rebalance in U.S. prioritiesaftera decade of costly war in Afghanistan and Iraq. But officials have increas-
Tanks Continued fromA1 As its orders dwindle, the
BAE Systems plant is shrinking, too. The company is slowly trimming workers and closing buildings.
ingly stressed that Obama's
foreign policy "pivot" to Asia is about more than ce-
In York, there's "sadness that
menting America's stature
somebody that has worked here 35 years and is dose to retirement is getting laid off," said Alice Conner, a manufacturing executive at the factory.
as the pre-eminent power in the Asia-Pacific as China
"There'salso some frustrati on
That's the importance of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, an ambitious
grows in strength. It's about
capitalizing on the region's rapid economic growth.
from management and my engineering staff as we see the skills erode, because we know
The future of tanks and similar vehicles, like the M88 Hercules, is
one daywe're goingto be asked unclear because of the Army's growing interest in more nimble to bring these back, and it's go- and tactical weaponry. ing to be very difficult." The manufacturing of tanks — powerful but cumbersome — is no longer essential, the
military says. In modern warfare, forces must deploy quickly and "project power over great distances." Submarines and long-range bombers are needed. Weapons such as dronesnimble and tactical — are the future. Tanks are something of arelic.
Strategic priorities The Army has about 5,000 of
them sitting idle or awaiting an upgrade. For the BAE Systems employees in York, keeping the armored vehicle in service means keeping a job. And jobs, after all, are what their
representatives in Congress are working to protect in their home districts.
The Army is just one party to this decision. While the mil-
— but slowed in the mid-1980s. Since then, the military has Eventually, BM Y c o mbined backed off vehide refurbishwith another defense outfit to ment, too. The York operation form United Defense, which has cut about half of its employ-
consolidated its business into the York site. In 1997, pri-
ees, the average age of plant workers has surged to 54 and
vate-equity firm the Carlyle lines are sitting idle at the faciliGroup bought United Defense ty, tucked into a swath of farmand eventually took it public. In
2005, the company was sold to BAE for just shy of $4billion.
land. In December, BAE started another round of layoffs.
The home to the fighting vehicle has been a low, squat tor hasn't built new Bradleys building — with tools in their but is running old versions places and signs reminding through a refurbishment pro- those on the floor to don heargram. In 2 008, 2,500 BAE ing protection. A large "Partworkers at the York plant were nering for the Soldier" banner pushing out about seven up- was on display. Much of the graded Bradley Fighting Vehi- Bradley equipment is being cles a day. moved into another building as Mel Nace, operations man- BAE consolidates. "The reality of it is we've alager at the plant, grew up in its shadow. In the 1970s, he rode ready started shutting down," In recent years, the contrac-
his minibike around the BAE
Conner, the manufacturing ex-
Systems factory, at one point ecutive, said. itary sets its strategic priorities, even jumping the fence to take it's Congress that allocates a spin on the test track used to Readyto shut down money for any purchases. And put the Army vehicles through If BAE does not get any new the defense industry, which ul- their paces. Bradley funding — or win new timatelyproduces the weapons, After vocational school, he work from commercial firms seeks toinfluenceboththemili- got a job at the factory in 1979 or foreign governments, it will tary and Congress. working in the machine shop. close the line in 2015. "The Army's responsibility With tuition help, he went to General Dynamics, which is to do what's best for the tax- collegeand received his asso- runs its tank-building program payer," said Heidi Shyu, the ciate's and bachelor's degrees out of small-town Lima, Ohio, top Army buying official. "The as well as an MBA — all while is facing a similar vehide. CEO of the corporation('s re- working full-time and raising Just like the Bradley plant, sponsibility) is to do what's best two sons with his wife. the Abrams factory bustled in terms of shareholders." In 2008, Nace was promot- over the past decade. At its The Army is pushing ahead ed to plantmanager. Thatyear peak in early 2009, the plant, on a path that could result in at was one of the site's busiest as which is owned by the governleast partial closure of the two it moved to refurbish vehicles ment but operated by General U.S. facilities producing these that were sent to Iraq and Af- Dynanncs, was pushng 2 t/~ vehides — buoyed by a new ghanistan and returned pum- refurbished tanks out the door study onthe state of the combat meled, sometimes with coffee eachday. vehicle industry due for release cups welded to the roof. For the first time in its histo"We basically had to hire ry, it diversified, producing not next month. But its plans could be de- 600touchlabor employees in a just upgraded Abrams tanks railed by a Congress unwilling 12-month period," he said. "We but also Stryker vehides and a to yield and an industry with had to recruit, hire, train and prototype of an expeditionary a powerful lobby. They argue acdimate all of those people." fighting vehide (able to travel that letting these lines idle or by sea and by land), which was dose would mean letting skills Preparing for the future built for the Marine Corps but and technology honed over deNot only was the plant roll- later canceled. cades go to waste. ing out Bradley vehicles, but In 2004, the plant started The Pentagon has "really it was planning production of spending millions to upgrade made a turn in that they are the next generation of fighting its systems, bracing to build now trying to solve million-dol- vehicle. BAE had been tasked not only the Marine Corps velar problems without bil- with building some of the hide but also the ones planned lion-dollar solutions, but Con- combat vehides induded in for the Army's Future Combat gress keeps redirecting them," the Army's expansive Future Systems effort. said Brett Lambert, who over- Combat Systems program, enThe factory added a $15.5 saw the Pentagon's industrial visioned as a sprawling arsenal million machining line — rebase policyuntil last year."This of drones, vehicles and robots placing a system installed in is a zero-sum game. For every all connected by a powerful the 1980s — that essentially dollar the Pentagon spends on network. cuts steel and aluminum hulls something we don't need ... it The York facility was ready- so that they are ready to be is a dollar we can't spend on ing for the boost, even install- pieced together, much like a something we do need." ing — at an $8 million price person would expect an Ikea For decades, BAE Systems's tag — a hulking high-speed, desktobereadyforassembly. facility in York has cranked out high-precision machine able But today the facility is down the Hercules, the Paladin and to mill, cut and thread almost to about 500 employees from a — most notably and most re- any material, from steel to alu- peak of 1,220. Following union cently — the Bradley Fighting minum to alloys. The company rules, it has laid off the newest Vehicle, a 75,000-pound main- had hired younger employees, employees and has worked stay of the military's tradition- bringing the age of its average its way back to those hired in al weapons, a kind of armored plant employee down to 44, 2005, said Keith Deters, direcvehicle that can hold up to 10 seeking to build a workforce to tor of plant operations. men, move at nearly 40 miles take over once older employees Military officials say they've per hour and fire a cannon, ma- retired. given careful thought to their BAE — and the York facility chine gun and missiles. strategy and they simply can't (Although the Bradley looks — suffered a major blow when affordto pay form ore upgradlike a tank, it is not technically the Army canceled the Future edtanks. considered one by the military) Combat Systems program. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the The factory got its start in The vehicles portion of the pro- Army's chief of staff, made its the early 1960s, when Bowen gram, which was to be shared casebefore Congress in 2012. "We don't need the tanks," he McLaughlin York bought a between BAE and General Dylocal farm. The construction namics, would have cost more said."Our tank fleet is2t/2years contractor's new business was than $87 billion, according old average now. We're in good military vehide overhaul. to Defense Secretary Robert shape, and these are additional Business boomed for a time Gates. tanks that we don't need."
free trade agreement being negotiated by 12 nations, including Japan, that account
for some 40 percent of global gross domesticproduct. "The pivot is th e T PP right now," Victor Cha, di-
rector of Asian studies at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service, told a conference at a Wash-
China'S SOfter image —With tensions between Chinaand the United States growing over a range of political and economic issues, the Chinesegovernment is using the 35th anniversary of diplomatic relations this year aspart of an intensified effort to soften its image. Combining the anniversary with the ChineseNewYear, which began Friday, Chinahas moved to expandfriendly cultural exchanges with the United States andpromote aseries of prominent collaborations in music, danceand education, particularly in New York. Theeffort, an acknowledged priority of China's ruling Communist Party, partly reflects what both countries regard as a deepening intertwined relationship betweenthe world's two leading economic powers, which hardly seemedpossible when embassies were formally established onJan. 1, 1979. But it also comesagainst a backdrop of rising mistrust of China among Americans whosee it as aneconomic and military threat. A surge of Chinese investments in U.S. holdings, ranging from Treasury debt to commercial real estate, coupled with frictions that have accompaniedChina's rapid expansion andassertiveness toward its Asian neighbors, are viewed aspart of the reason. A poll released byPewResearch this week found that just 33 percent of the American public has afavorable view of China, compared with 51 percent in 2011. "The Chineseare looking for a much more rounded image that they feel they deserve," said Shirley Young, anAmerican of Chinese descent andchairwoman of the U.S.-China Cultural Institute, a NewYork-based group that has been helping to advise and organize China's newcultural exchange outreach. In some ways, she said in aninterview Friday, "we are still strangers to each other." — New YorkTimesNews Service
ington think tank this week
on U.S. policy and the outlook for Asia in 2014.
The problemforObama is that Congress needs to approveso-called fasttrack negotiating authority to move TPP along.Many of his fellow Democrats are against fast-track authority,
barriers, which they worry worries the U.S. would seek will cost jobs due to increased changes to the ayeement. He competition. also acknowledged challenges But top Republicans who remain on auto and agriculturwant fast-track authority ac- alproducts betweenthebiggest cuse the administration of fail-
players in the TPP, the Japan
ing to do its part to mobilize and the U.S. support for it among DemoThe good news for Washing-
which would require Con- crats in Congress — a task that gress to act on the trade will be complicated by the middeals negotiated by the ad- term elections in November. ministration by a yes-or-no Lawmakers will be careful to vote, without the ability to avoid measures that could hurt make any changes. their prospects of re-election. In a b i tterly divided In an emailed comment FriWashington, Obama's in the day, U.S. Trade Representative rare position of having more Michael Froman remained support for a key policy upbeat about the TPP, saying among his political rivals, that momentum developed to
ton was that the Japanese and
the Republicans, than from
advance the TPP talks in 2013
his ownparty.
is carrying over to 2014. He said the administration is working closely with Congress and is committed to bringing home a deal "worthy of broad sup-
State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told report-
Reid, the Senate majority leader, said last week that
he opposed fast-track authority and that lawmakers
should not push for it nowa comment suggesting that legislation introduced three
port from the American peo-
Vietnamese envoys remained strongly supportive of the U.S. role in Asia, viewing it as a sta-
bilizing influence in a region beset by territorial disputes. Those tensions have height-
enedfearsofa conflict,asChinastakes its daims to contested islands in the East and South
China Seas. ers that from the president on down, the United States "could not be more committed to our
relationship with Asia." Despite U.S. Secretary of State John
ple and their representatives in Kerry's deep involvement in Congress." high-stakes Mideast diploma-
weeks ago will go nowhere Ambassadors of Japan and cy, this month he will make his soon. Vietnam both say they want fifth trip to the region since takThe Obama administra- TPP negotiations to be complet- ingoff iceayearago. tion's Asia policy has been ed before Obama visits Asia in welcomed by c o untries April. Japan's Kenichiro Sasae wary of China's rise and expansive territorial claims. told the Center for Strategic During the president's first and International Studies this term, the U.S. made prog- week that fast-track authority ress in strengthening old al- is needed because there are Plae Well, Retire Well liances with nations like the Philippines, forging deeper 1
ties with Indonesia and Viet-
mplements trrsere J~ke~t,s~J
nam and befriending former pariah state Myanmar.
There were missteps. Angry politics at home forced Obama to withdraw from the East Asia Summit last
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fall, raising some questions
•
about his commitment to
J
•
the region. New military deployments in the Asia-Pacific — a few hundred Marines
in Australia, new warships rotated through Singapore — have fueled Chinese accusations of a U.S. policy of containment while making
little impact on regional security. Asia got little mention in Obama's State of the Union
address Tuesday, adding t o perceptions i n s o m e quarters that the pivot has
dropped in the administration's policy agenda in the president's secondterm. But he did urge both parties in Congress to approve fast-track legislation needed
•
to make the TPP and a trade deal under negotiation with
• •
Europe a reality, saying it would open new markets and create American jobs.
While that legislation is co-sponsored by a senior Democrat — Obama's nom-
inee to become the next ambassador to China, Sen. Max Baucus — many in the
party join with labor unions in opposing lowered trade
•
•
•
•
• • f
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Brazil's uncommonnamesinspire pride, headaches By Simon Romero
Carrying an extraordinary name is remarkably wideSAO PAULO — When he spread in Brazil. Merely stand became a teenager,Wonarl- in line at a notary public and levyston Garlan M a rllon listen to a pencil-pusher call Branddon Bruno Paullynel- out names. You will be awed. ly Mell Oliveira Pereira did Mike Tyson Schwarzenegwhat any self-conscious per- ger P radella. E r rolflynn son worried about merciless Paixao. Charlingtonglaevitaunting from his peers might onbeecheknavare dos Ando: He pleaded with his par- jos Mendonf;a, a 31-year-old ents and the courts to let him plumber who prefers to go by change his name. Chacha. "I never had anything in Some scholars say the pracNew York Times News Service
Sim Chi Yin / New York Times News Service file photo
Children are dressed to perform last year at a temple at Mount Misofeng, a holy peak near Beijing that once dominated religious life.
In China, a fight to preserve traditional culture By lan Johnson New York Times News Service
BEIJING — Once or twice a week, a dozen amateur mu-
they're in t heir new homes
they're scattered," he said. "The knowledge isn't concentrated anymore and isn't transmitted
sicians meet under a highway to anewgeneration." overpass on the outskirts of
Beijing, carting with them Oldways are lost drums,cymbals andthe collecThat is the problem facing tive memory of their destroyed
the musicians in Lei Family
village. They set up quiddy, then play music that is ahnost
Bridge. The village lies on what used to be a great pilgrimage
never heard anymore, not even
route from Beijing north to
cultures to produce a fusion of ians change their names. "It's a identities. shame, because many names Regardless, Brazil ranks in Brazil are little more than among nations where naming alphabet soup." has evolved into something Yet many Brazilians relresembling a c o mpetitiveish having a name that twists sport. Neighboring Venezue- tongues,drops jaws or starts la is also a contender, with its conversations. "I have a marvelous name Stalins, Nixons, Hiroshimas, Tutankamens and Taj Mahals. Honduras has Llanta de Mila-
which makes me stand out
has its Godknows, Lovemores
Encountering such names,
above the crowd," said Creedgro (Mirade Tire). Zimbabwe ence Clearwater Couto, 34.
and Learnmores. though, can be a little bewilcommon with Marlon Bran- tice stems from a tendency Brazil is much less free- dering to newcomers. do," he said, referring to the to hold certain rich countries wheeling, however, for the "Never think he or she was actor for whom he was partly in higher esteem than Bra- u nfortunate s o u l s stu c k making a joke about his or her named. Sowiththepermission zil, prompting some parents with names they do not like. name," the Mexican novelist of his parents and the legal to aim for foreign-sounding Changing one's name requires Juan Pablo Villalobos, who system, the 19-year-old univer- names. Others say it reflects the approval of a judge. lives in Sao Paulo, wrote in his "The tendency of the courts irony-soaked "Brazil: A User's sity student whittled down his centuries of immigration, connine names to an economical quest and slavery, a process is to deny name changes," said Guide." "No matter the name four, Bruno Wonarleviston Ol- that has mixed indigenous, Gerson Martins, a lawyer who they told you, it's the actual iveira Pereira. African, European and Asian specializes in helping Brazil- name."
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here, where the steady drone of Mount Yaji and west to Mount cars muffles the lyrics of love Miaofeng, holy m ountains and betrayal, heroic deeds and
that dominated religious life
kingdoms lost. The musicians used to live in Lei Family Bridge, a village of about 300 households near the overpass. In 2009, the village
in the capital. Each year, temples on those mountains would have great feast days spread over two weeks. The faithful from Beijing would walk to
was torn down to build a golf
the mountains, stopping at Lei
course and residents were scat- Family Bridge for food, drink tered among severalhousing and entertainment. projects, some a dozen miles Groups like Lei's, known away. Now, the musicians meet as pilgrimage societies, peronce a week under the bridge. formed freefor the pilgrims. But the distances mean the
Their music is based on sto-
number of participants is dwin- ries about court and religious dling. Young people, especially, life from roughly 800 years do not have the time. ago andfeaturesa call-and-re"I want to keep this going," sponse style, with Lei singing said Lei Peng, 27, who inherited key plotlines of the story and leadership of the group from the other performers, decked his grandfather. "When we out in colorful costumes, chantplay our music, I think of my ing back. The music is found in grandfather. When we play, he other villages, too, but each one lives." has its own repertoire and local
Dying village life
aL
•
Tuesdsy
T uesdsy
10
10
•
variations that musicologists
haveonlybegun toexamine. When the Communists took tions like the Lei family's music over in 1949, these pilgrimages are under threat. Rapid urban- were mostly banned, but were ization means village life, the revived starting in the 1980s bedrock of Chinese culture, is when the leadership relaxed rapidly disappearing, and with control over society. The temit, traditions and history. ples, mostly destroyed during "Chinese culture has tra- the Cultural Revolution, were ditionally been rural-based," rebuilt. says Feng Jicai, a well-known The performers, however, author and scholar. "Once the are decl ining in numbers and villages are gone, the culture is increasingly old. The universal gone." allures of modern life — comThat is happening at a stun- puters, movies, televisionning rate. In 2000, China had have siphoned young people 3.7 million villages, according away from traditional pursuits. to research by Tianjin Univer- But the physical fabric of the sity. By 2010, that figure had performers' liveshasalso been dropped to 2.6 million, a loss of destroyed. about 300 villages a day. One recent afternoon, Lei For decades, leaving the walked through the village, land was voluntary, as people now reduced to rubble and moved to the cities for jobs. In overgrown with wild grass and the past few years, the shift has bushes. He started singing with accelerated as governments his grandfather when he was have pushed urbanization, of- 2. He now has an office job in ten leaving villagers with no the city's public transportation choice but to move. company and spends all his China's top leadership has vacation time working on the e quated urbanization w i t h troupe. modernization and economic Evenings after work, the mugrowth. Local governments sicians would meet in the temare also promoting it, seeing ple to practice. As recently as the sale of rural land rights as a Lei's grandfather's generation, way to compensate for a weak the performers could fill a day taxbase. Evictingresidents and with songs without repeating selling long-term leases to de- themselves. Today, they can velopers has become a favored sing only a handful. Some midmethod for local governments dle-aged people have joined the to balance budgets and local of- troupe, so on paper they have ficials to line their pockets. a respectabl e 45 members. But Destroying villages and their meetings are so hard to arrange culture also reveals deeper bi- that the newcomers never learn ases. A common insult in Chi- much, he said. And performing nais to call someone afarmer, a under a highway overpass is word equated with backward- unattractive, he said. "I guess for a lot of us it's a ness and ignorance, while the most valued cultural traditions hobby," said Li Lan, 55, a cymare elite practices like land- balist and singer. "It's just so scape painting, calligraphy and inconvenient now to come out court music. here andpractice."
10
Across China, cultural tradi-
But in recent years, Chinese
Last month, Lei's group was
Tes
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•
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•
•
one s
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scholars have begun to rec- featured on local television and ognize the countryside's vast invited to perform at Chinese cultural heritage. A mammoth
New Year activities. Such per-
government project has catalogedroughly 9,700 examples nationwide of "intangible cultural heritage," fragile traditions like songs, dances, rituals,
formances raise about $200 and provide some recogni-
martial arts, cuisines and theater. About 80 percent of them
district office of intangible cultural heritage protection, said the group's music was among 69 protected practices in her
are rural. In the past few years, for ex-
tion that what the group does matters. D u Yang, director of t h e
ample,Feng has documented district. "The goal is to make sure the destruction of 36 villages in Nanxian, a county on Tianjin's these cultural heritages don't outskirts, home to a famous get lost," she said. "It would be center of woodblock printing. a great pity if they are lost just " You don't know if it w i l l as our country is on the road to survive or not because when prosperity."
. US.Cellular. Hello Setter; Thingswewantfou to know: Newsvc. andS35deviceact feerequired. Add, fees,taxesandterms apply andvaryby svc. andeqmt. Useof svc. constitutes acceptanceof agmtterms,Inordertorecehfe plan minutes,themonthlychargemust bepaid beforeduedate. Youmay bechargedatanytime of dayonyourduedate andshould refil beforethatdateto avoid svc, Interruption. Youwil beunabletousephone If accountbalanceIs negative. Roaming,directory asslstanceandInternatloftal callsrequireaddeonalaccount fundsto complete calls. Oataspeeds: Full applicabledataspeedsapply for the flrst 500MBof usage.Dataspeedsshal beslowedto 1xthereafter fortheremainderofthebiling cycle. Ofers validat participating locationsonlyandcannot becombined. 15-Oay6uarafNee: Act. feeIs not refundable. Phone must be returnedundamagedin theoriginal packaging.Seestoreor uscelular.comfor details. Limited-timeoffer.Trademarksandtradenames aretheproperty of their respective owners, ©2014 U.S,Cellular
A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
Blood
FCC doubling broadband
ident for communications for the advocacy group. "According to the National
Continued from A1 The drug has improved quality of life for PNH patients so dramatically that insurance companies are willing to pay $440,000 a year for the drug, the single most expensive med-
Institutes of Health, there are nearly 7,000 such dis-
eases aff ecting 25 to 30 million Americans. Of all those diseases, only a few
ication in the U.S.
hundred have treatments approved specifically for
li)
While critics bemoan the high cost and the barrier it
that disease." enacted in 1983 provides
the success of Soliris — clinical and financial — has changed
extra incentives for companies topursue drugs for rare
l,
the landscape for PNH patients
diseases, and it's been effec-
and theprospectsof developing viable therapies for dozens
tive in bringing new drugs to market. But the high price tags that have proven palatable for breakthrough drugs have created new markets for a burgeoning biotech industry. While doctors have recently begun to push back against the high cost of drugs in the cancer field,
of other rare diseases.
Bone marrowdisease PNH is a somewhat mis-
named disease dating back to its discovery in the early 20th century. Patients would sometimes have dark urine in the
Photo by John Klicker
morning, and when doctors tested it, they found high levels of hemoglobin. They correctly surmised that something must be destroying the patient's red blood cells, dumping hemoglobin into the blood. But they mistakenly believed this happened only at night (nocturnal) and only from time to time (paroxysmal). Even the term hemoglobinuria, (hemoglobin in the urine) was not an accu-
Lily Perkins talks with nurse Kristin Moore at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland before an infusion of the drug Soliris.
rate descriptor of the disease.
Only a third of patients will have hemoglobin in their urine, it's not happening only at night, and it's not happening sporadically, said Dr. Jack Goldberg, a University of Pennsylvania hematologist, during a seminar
five years of diagnosis, generally due to a fatal blood clot.
for PNH patients last year. "We now know that term for
wanted to start a family. Six months after the blood test, she
stitute a Chicago, Ill. "Most that I know
of passed away between five to 10 years after diagnosis. I am in a rare group of PNH patients
leads to problems such as difficulty swallowing, abdominal pain and erectile dysfunction. The lack of nitric oxide causes pulmonary hypertension, or high blood pressure, in the blood vessels of the lungs, which leads to shortness of breath and fatigue. "These patients would have disabling fatigue, and I really emphasize disabling," said Dr. Robert Brodsky, a hematologist at Johns Hopkins University and one of the leading PNH experts in the U.S. He had one patient who de-
scribedhaving to decide each morning whether to go downstairs to eat breakfast or take a
shower. He had energy for one, but not both. Meanwhile, defects in plate-
lets increase the risk for blood dots, particular in the liver and abdomen. Patients often expe-
rienceabdominal pain and are at high risk for strokes or other complications. And the k i d-
neys can be damaged as they work overtime to filter the he-
moglobin and other red blood cell contents from the blood streanl. Before Soliris, t wo-thirds
of PNH patients would experience moderate or severe
kidney failure, and 20 percent would die of kidney failure. "It was bad forthese patients," Brodsky said "About
50 percent would get into real trouble, and the biggest trouble they would get into would be blood clots." Doctors tried t o
p r event
blood clots by placing patients on blood thinners, with limited success. And because patients
a third of patients die within
line effort to raise money for
t elecommunications and i n -
en't many of us." Indeed, data from a PNH
non-covered expenses (See "How to help"). Dr. Thomas DeLoughery, an OHSU hematologist, said Soliris is working well for Perkins and has brought down her levels of red blood
Another third will die within
20years. Marquez was diagnosed in 1990, also as a result of a
routine blood test when she
Submitted photo
Lily Perkins smiles with her fiance, Silas Davis, and his daughter, Chloe. Perkins was able to avoid terminating her own pregnancy thanks to the drug Soliris, which treats PNH, a rare blood disorder.
communications users. The
proportion that goes to broadband service in schools and
libraries will increase to $2 billion a year from $1 billion.
misdiagnosed, s w allowing difficulties attributed to acid
reflux, chest pains to angina, dark urine to urinary tract infections. That results in unnec-
essary medicati ons, useless would have to stop and rest tests and a delayed diagnosis. often," she said. "People would But once diagnosed, few will look at me and say, 'What's the have to endure what Marquez matter with you?' because I'm experienced. "When the f i rst p a tients not overweight at all." If she pushed onward she started going on the mediwould develop terrible chest cation, they were even more pains and eventually mi- grateful for how they felt than graines. She learned to pace the patients are today. The reaherselfso she could go to the son being is they often suffered store, but a field trip to the zoo through years and years of with her children was out of transfusion, fatigue, concerns the question.
about and complications from
For years, doctors treated her symptoms — mainly with migraine or pain medications — but could do little for her underlying condition. Then several years ago she learned about
blood clots," Brodsky said. "Whereas today's patients are more rapidly diagnosed. They're symptomatic for two weeks, three weeks, but they don't know what it was like to have bad PNH."
Previously, doctors could sawthe price tag andbalked. try to cure PNH with a bone "You're not that bad. You get marrow transplant, but that some headaches," she recalls carried high risks and was him telling her. generally done only in casA specialist disagreed. The es that couldn't be managed repeated migraines meant she with transfusions and blood was at greaterrisk forastroke. thinners. "That first treatment, that Soliris has all but eliminated first night, I knew it worked," that approach. "We seldom pick patients for Marquez said. "Instead of feeling like I had sludge in my bone marrow transplant any head, it felt like water. A lot of more," Brodsky said. "Before people say they don't realize Soliris, I lost a lot of patients to how bad they were until they the disease. It's really changed started Soliris." the life of these patients. Since Marquez cannow comfort- this drug has become available ably walk a mile and has cut I almost never have a PNH padown her migraines from 10 tient in the hospital. This is a a month to one every three game changer." m onths. A legalsecretary,she Its impact has been even helps manage the PNH Foun- more dramatic for pregnant dation and has seen the im- PNH patients, as pregnancy pact Soliris has had on other itself is a risk factor for blood
an eye out for, but so far,
official who spoke on the con-
it seems pretty stable," he said. "I tend to be the eternal
dition of anonymity because a formal announcement was being planned for this week. The E-Rate program is part of the Universal Service Fund, which also provides money to connect rural areas and low-income people to phone
optimist, but so far I think we're dolIlg good.
"You're so grateful in weird ways when you're found only trivial amounts of sick," she said. "Now it's the drug. like all I think about is being positive. If I do think of The gamechanger something negative, I don't Perkins now receives infu- want thebabyto feelthat, so sions every two weeks, along- I don't let myself go there." side many of the hospital's Doctors will continue to sickest cancer patients. "You sit monitor Perkins, now four there for an hour while it slow- months into her pregnanly drips away," she said. "It's cy, and the development of hard not to look around and her baby. Pre-term birth feel like you're dying." and slowed growth remain The liquid that drips into a concern. Until a cure for her arm contains one of the PNH is found, she will likefew medications on the mar- ly have to continue taking ket today that was designed Soliris for the rest ofher life. rationally based on biological PNH is not an inheritable knowledge, rather than the tri- disease, so it is unlikely her al-and-error approach used to babywillbe affected. find most drugs. In the 1990s, A graduate of Oregon researchers at the biotech State University-Cascades company Alexion Pharama- Campus with a degree in ceuticals specifically set out to psychology, Perkins had find a way to block the effects launched a children's day of complement. They screened care before she was diag30,000 different antibodies be- nosed but had to close it fore finding one that would tar- soon after. She said she has get the precise link in the chain wanted to have a child of reaction that produces comple- her own all her life. "If I didn't keep the baby, ment. Any further upstream, and they would have eliminat- I would have felt like I had ed much of the body's ability to nothing to fight for," she fight off disease and infection. said. "When I found out I By targeting the second-to- may not be able to keep the last step in the process, they baby, I didn't eat for three block the destruction of red days and I wasn't taking blood cells and sacrifice pro- care of myself. I know I ly, and tests of umbilical cord blood and breast milk have
tection from just one common
the
changes during his State of the Union address last week. The changes will not require any additional taxes or assessments, according to an FCC
optimistic route as well.
non-hematologists have never heard of it. Patients are often
Obama r eferred t o
"There's always an issue of whether this is reflecting an underlying bone marrow disease, so that's something we need to keep
Perkins has chosen the
Soliris.
Soliris from a PNH patient chat site. She said her HMO doctor
formation services" using the proceedsof fees paid by tele-
cell and platelet destruction.
calls. "I told them, 'I just found
would have not cared. I don't want to sound terribly
risk, meningitis. All Soliris patients are given a meningococ- morbid, but that would not cal vaccine prior to startingthe have been a great outlook to dnlg. have when you're trying to Alexion nearly went broke survive something." beforebringingits drugto mar—Reporter: 541-617-7814, ket and stunning the world by mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com charging $400,000 or more per year for the drug. Soliris is so effective at reducing the damage caused by PNH, however, that U.S. insurance companies patients. clots. Without Soliris, both will pay for the drug. Alexion "For some of us, it was a mother and child face an in- banked $1.5 billion in revenues game changer, a new life," she creased risk of death during in 2013 selling a single drug. said. "For others, it was just an- pregnancy, said Dr. Jamie Lo, Insurance plans are unlikely a high-risk pregnancy special- to have morethan one or two other treatment." Soliris so specifically tar- ist at OHSU treating Perkins. patients on Soliris at a time, "It canbe ashigh as 10to20 and even the staggering cost gets the destruction of red blood cells by complement in percent, and babies can have pales in comparison to the bilthe blood stream, that it has pre-term deliveries in as much lions spent on medications for less impact on patients whose as half of the pregnancies," she cholesterol,blood pressure or red blood cells are being de- sard. diabetes. stroyed elsewhere, such as in Because PNH is so rare and The high cost has proven
and Internet service using
money raised through fees on consumers' phone bills. The commission's chairman,
Tom Wheeler, is expected to announce details of the plan Wednesday at an event for
Digital Learning Day, which promotes the use of technology in education. Most of t h e r e directed spending in 2014 will come from fundsleftover from pre-
vious years. Next year, much of the money will come from
changes to the E-Rate program, including the elimination of programs that pay for outdated technologies, like paging services, dial-up Internet connections and email
programs that are available for free elsewhere. The spending will be used to increase available broadband speeds and provide wireless networks in schools, which
are increasingly in demand for students using tablets and laptop computers.
A 2010 survey conducted for the FCC by Harris Interactive found that roughly half of schools receiving E-Rate funds connected to the Internet at speeds of three megabits
per second or less — too slow to stream many video services. The commission wants
to give all schools access to broadband connections of 100 megabits per second by 2015, and connections of up to one gigabit per second by the end of the decade.
-Orien'taljRug~0wnerS
+
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Act. The effect can be var-
managed with blood transfu- ied even for a single patient, sions, restoring their supply of depending on factors such
Soliris relatively new, doctors have very little hard data for
a barrier in other countries.
In Canada, the drug was aphow the drug works during proved by Health Canada, but pregnancy. Brodsky and his is not being covered by some colleagues have tracked about of the provincial drug plans. 20 cases. Lo said a similar Patients have been fighting number of cases have been de-
for access to Soliris in Australia, New Zealand and other
scribed in medical literature. "It's a difficult thing because countries. but it was a less than ideal Some patients need the treat- you have this new drug but we The company does provide solution. Doctors treated the ment more frequently than don't know what the long term assistance to patients who symptoms, but could do little to every two weeks. Sometimes effects on her or the baby are," don't have insurance coverage intervene with the progression M arquez canfeelthe effects she said. "But yet it can really for the drug, and the National of the disease. waning in the days before she reduce significantly mortality Organization for Rare Disorreturns for the next infusion. and morbidity for her and her ders has helped patients with Surviving PNH "You just hope it's going to baby. That's one of the hardest their copays. "What did patients do be- be a good two weeks," she said. things for (Perkins), I think, "It actually is a success stofore Soliris? I have to say many deciding that." ry, when viewed in the broader died," said Melanie Marquez, Oftenmisdiagnosed Doctors do not believe Solir- context of all rare diseases," 47, a PNH patient from West PNH is so rare that many is can cross the placenta easi- said MaryDunkle,vice presred blood cells and platelets,
President Barack Obama's promise to provide broad-
registry shows that more than
years without Soliris. There ar-
were often short of platelets, the spleen. Other patients have it was harder to regulate the run into financial difficulties, blood thinners. Many patients particularly with annual caps were at high risk for fatal on medical benefits, now outbleeding. lawed bythe Affordable Care Frequently patients could be
and libraries over the next two years, in an effort to meet
topay. Perkins has health insurance that is paying for the medication, although her friends have started an on-
in that I have survived over 20
tem known as complement. Other than a yellowing of With the protection miss- her eyes, a sign of potential ing, complement bores holes liverdamage, Marquez had no into the red blood cells, which other symptoms when she was then fill with water and even- diagnosed. But problems betually e x plode, d umping gan to emerge soon thereafter their contents into the blood and got progressively worse. "If I walked to the mall, I stream. The resulting detritus
contraction and for constriction of b lood vessels. That
amount of money it devotes to adding high-speed Internet connections in schools
15,000 schools, officials said Saturday. F inancing for t h e n e w spending will come from restructuring the $2.4 billion E-Rate program, which provides money for "advanced
thatdamage beginsto produce out today I was pregnant.'" defective copies. The resulting Marquez lost that baby due red blood cell lacks the protein to blood clots, but went on to on itssurface needed to fend have two children even without
associated with the disease. The released hemoglobin binds up nitric oxide, which is needed for smooth muscle
WASHINGTON The Federal Comm u n ications Commission will double the
band service for an estimated 20 million U.S. students in
plans have little choice but
receivedacallfrom herdoctor. "They told me, 'We finally because it's historic," he said. figured out what you have. I PNH occurs when the bone hope you're not planning on marrow is damaged and a mu- starting a family soon,'" she re-
causes most of the problems
By Edward Wyatt New York Times News Service
l e ss-expensive
patients and their insurance
we continue to have that name
off a part of the immune sys-
in schools
oncologists can often subtreatment. For many of the rare diseases, there is no other viable treatment, and
this disease is really false, but
tated stem cell able to survive
spending
The Orphan Drug Act
poses for patients worldwide,
as stress, illness or exertion.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A7
Photos by Derek Montgomery/New YorkTimes News Service
John Rouleau, left, hands out buttons mocking Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton to students at a town hall meeting Dayton held last week on the University of Minnesota, Duluth campus. Dayton is one of
The Vestry, Staff and Congregation at
five Democratic governors, including Oregon's John Kitzhaber, targeted by Republicans over their management of state-run health care exchange websites that have not had a smooth rollout.
Exchanges
Health and Human Services. The problems there are especially striking because the state's 2006 law expanding health coverage was a mod-
Continued from A1 Last month, th e R epublican N a t ional C o m m ittee
filed public-records requests in Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Oregon seeking information about compensation and vacation time for the exchange Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton directors, four of whom have is being mocked as "Governor resigned. All five states have Obamacare" by activists. Democratic governors whose •
terms end this year. Three of
them — Gov. Neil Abercrombie of Hawaii, Gov. Mark Dayton of M i nnesota and Gov.
John Kitzhaber of Oregonare seeking re-election. In Maryland, the turmoil
around the state-run exchange is dogging Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, a Democrat
hoping to succeed Gov. Martin O'Malley, who is leaving office because of term limits. O'Malley made Brown his point person on the health
care law's rollout in Maryland, and now Brown's opponents — both Democratic
and Republican — are bludgeoning him with the state exchange's failures. Addressing a l e gislative panel on Jan. 14, Maryland's top health official said the
state had made the mistake of using "off-the-shelf" software with serious defects. The of-
ficial, Joshua Sharfstein, said t he state would stick w i t h the current system until the
enrollment period ended on March 31, but it might consider other options, such as
joining the federal exchange, after that. All five states lean Dem-
ocratic, and many analysts believe the exchange failures will not be enough to allow Republican upsets this fall.
•
•
Still, the issue has been potent enough to hurt Obama's
wrong, told The Oregonian newspaper that he had been kept "entirely outside the loop" about the exchange's problems leading up to its debut.
approval rating and put con-
In M a ssachusetts, 5,428
that destroyed both of our sanctuaries. We are now happy to be back home inour St.Helen's Sanctuary at Idaho and Broadway.
til this past fall, when it was
overhauled to comply with the federal law. Attorney General Martha
ty of Minnesota, said it was
"quite possible" that Republicans could regain control of the state's House of Representatives — the only chamber whose seats are up for elec-
tion this year — if problems with the exchange persisted
people got private coverage into the fall. "If w e're s t i l l tal k i n g defensive. If nothing else, through the state's troubled it will provide a continuous exchange from O c tober about MNsure in October," headache for Democratic can- through December, accord- he said, "that's bad news for didates like Dayton in Minne- ing to the Department of Democrats."
Solar
ing them, because it costs them roofs are common, Central another customer, he said. Oregon features a lot of ranch"I have never thought of Or- style homes with asphalt shinContinued from A1 Solar has boomed across egon as a particularly vibrant gles, which are well-suited for the country, which now gener- solar market," Harris said."The solar, he said. "A solar company is a conates three times as much ener- utilities in Oregon, they aren't gy from solar as it did in 2010, really mandated to do a whole struction company," he said. report by the Environment Oregon Research 8: Policy Center. The U.S. Energy Information Administration predicts that
solar will continue its expansion by growing by 79 percent in 2013, followed by a 49 percent increase in2014. Oregon's solar c apacity reached69 megawatts in 2012, an increase of 39 percent, but it still lags behind states like
Maryland, North Carolina and New Jersey. Even with all these increas-
es, solar power still only accounts for less than 1 percent of
lot of solar."
"We have a lot of labor that
While a law enacted in 2007 we need to put a system on a requires the state's three big- house." gest utilities to generate 25 perOregon used to be a top-10 cent of their electricity using state for solar until the business renewable sources by 2025, the energy tax credit expired three prevalence of hydro and wind years ago, Israel said. power means that Oregon's enOregon Solar Energy Indusergy producers do not rely as tries Association is gearing up, heavily on solar, he said. he said, to push forsolar-friend"From an economics point lypolicies during the 2015 legisof view, (America doesn't) have lative session. the policies in place to drive the Charlie Fisher, a field orgaeconomics," Harrissaid. nizer with Environment OreHowever, as an industry, it gonwho specializes insolar enwill likely continue to boom, ergy, also said state legislators he said. While much of the so- need tobe convinced to make lar panel manufacturing sector solar energy apriority. "All across the country has gone overseas to China, much of that is automated, leav- you're seeing an enormous ining much of the job growth for crease in solar installation," he
electricitygenerated inthe U.S. "Germany still puts in more solar per year than we do," installation. "We're not likely to be a big said Glenn Harris, CEO of Suncentric, who consults with manufacturing center for most several companies in the solar parts of what goes into solar, 1Ildustry. but we're going to own installaPart of the problem in the tion," he said. United States is that utilities Out of 110 million homes in aren't always required to buy America, only 400,000 have back any excess electricity a solar panels installed, leaving residence or a business might lots of potential for industry generate, he said. While falling growth, he said. pricesfor solar modules may Installation requires local make it possible for customers workers — roofers,electricians to "zero out" their electricity — with local knowledge, said bills, utility companies don't Sunlight Solar Energy's Israel. have a financial interest in help- Unlike California, where tile
your prayers and support following the arson fires of March 6, 2013
had an existing insurance exchange that worked well un-
gressionalDemocrats on the
and 10 times more than it did in 2007,according to a recent
wish to thank our wider community of Bend and Central Oregon for
el for Obama's law. The state
Coakley of Massachusetts, a D e mocratic c a ndidate for governor, has said she sota, who is hoping to cruise would consider suing CGI, to a second four-year term. the contractor in charge of The website of the state's ex- t he overhaul, w h ic h a l s o change, known as MNsure, helped design the initially is still plagued by software problem-plagued federal exdefects, and an outside review change serving 36 states. The last month found that it canstate exchange has tripled its not be completely fixed be- call center capacity to help fore the March 31 enrollment people enroll and hired a condeadline. sultant to help fix the website. In Oregon, officials resortIn M i n nesota, exchange ed to processing applications officials have suspended a by hand after the exchange, promotional campaign feaCover Oregon, failed to work turing a statue of an injured on Oct. 1. People still cannot Paul Bunyan and are shifting fully enroll through the ex- resourcestothe exchange call change website, but about center, where customers have 32,000 have signed up for pri- experienced long waits for vate coverage using a backup help. The state's legislative auprocess. That is only about 14 ditor is conducting an investipercent of the 237,000 total gation into what went wrong. that, according to the U.S. DeAfter the outside review of partment of Health and Hu- MNsure was released, Dayman Services, the state had ton told reporters he "will originally hoped to enroll by take responsibility" for the March 31. problems, but added that he The interim director of the stood by the law. "As this expands," he said, exchange told state lawmakers in a recent hearing that "thousands more M i nnesohis staff was considering oth- tans are going to have access er options in case the website to affordable health care, and was not fixed by the end of that was the intent." March. Kitzhaber, who has Lawrence Jacobs, a politordered an independent in- ical scientist at the Universivestigation into w hat w e nt
Trinity Episcopal Church
said. "What matters here is that we need to pass the policies that
make solareasier and more affordable." If the government puts the proper incentives in place, the solar sector could take off in
Oregon, Harris said. "Central Oregon is a great place to do solar," he said.
"Oregon could become a solar hotspot. The mentality of the people living in Oregon is peffect. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, oclevenger@bendbulletin.com
We specifically thank: Our neighbors,especially those who also suffered damage and lossin the fires, for their patience The City of Bend Fire Department Fire Companies from Sunriver, La Pine, Redmond and Sisters Jeff Holmes, who first discovered the fire and called it in The City of Bend Police Department Deschutes County Sheriff Department Oregon State Police Criminal Investigation Unit Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Federal Bureau of Investigation Oregon Fire Marshall Rev. Thom Larson and the First United Methodist Church, Bend Fr. Jim Radloff, Margo Rupp and St. Francis Catholic Church Pamela Seidel and the Bend Montessori School The Bishop and Diocese of Eastern Oregon The Bishopand Diocese ofO regon The Bishop of Baker The Rev'd Anna Carmichael and St Mark's Episcopal Church, Hood River The Rev'd Janet Warner and St Andretsfs Episcopal Church, Prineville The Rev'd Nancy Sargent Green and Sunriver Christian Fellowship The Rev'd Ted Rodrigues and the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, Sisters The Revs. Chuck Christopher and Paul Morton, St Alban's Episcopal Church, Redmond The Rev'd Bill Ellis and St John's Episcopal Cathedral, Spokane Pastor Chris Kramer and Nativity Lutheran Church, Bend Rev. Steven Koski and First Presbyterian Church, Bend Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, Portland Jewish Community of Central Oregon St. Alban's Church, Tillamook St. Edward's Catholic Church, Sisters St. Chad's Church, Albuquerque, NM St. Catherine's Church, Nehalem, OR Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon House of Covenant, MessianicJew ishSynagogue, Bend Moraga Valley Presbyterian Church, Orinda, California Old Stone Church, Bend Kevin Barclay and the Administrative ONce, Deschutes Public Library
Amity Creek School Aloha and Bob Despain, Heppner, Oregon The Deschutes Historical Society The Bend Boys and Girls Club AA, NAand OAgroups KTVZ, News Channel 21 The Bend Bulletin Umpqua Bank McKay Cottage Abby's Pizza Papa Murphy's Pizza Round Table Pizza Jackson's Corner Strictly Organic Coffee Subways of Bend Shari's North and South Belfor Property Restoration Belfor Environmental Miller Lumber Company Kirby Nagelhout Construction Company Bend Heating Bend Mapping and Blueprint BuehnerConstruction Cabinets, Floors and More Carlson Testing Central Oregon Sound Chet'sElectric Classic Colors Direct Flooring DKA Architecture and Design
DO Insulation Executive Cleaning and Restoration Globe Lighting Guarantee Glass and Mirror Keeco Crane Mike's Fencing Oswego Drywall Pacifi cW ood Works PBS-Environmental Precise Plumbing Pro Rental River Roofing SafeWayScaff olding Waste Connection Inc. We Cut Concrete Win Elder Construction ZCS Engineering Hooker Creek Companies City of Bend Building Department Mike Morrison, Telephone MD Summit Power Infostructure Bend Broadband Classic Coverings Cascade Disposal Oxford Hotel and Suites Servicemaster of Bend Secure Storage Ricoh, USA
The Ohio Northern University Choir Donors to the Resurrection 2013 Fund Rev KunikazuOhashi and Tohoku Gakuin School,Sendai,Japan Expressions of support in cards and letters from Citizens of Bend Prayersfrom congregations in California and Oregon
We look forward to a grand celebration when our historic facilities are completed in the Spring of 2015. Trinity Episcopal Church 469 NW Wall Street (historic building) 231 NW Idaho Avenue (St. Helen's Hall and Family Kitchen) Services at 8:00 and 10:15 February 2nd, 2014 ONE SERVICE ONLY at 9am
541-382-5542 I www.TrinityBend.org Photob Gin er Livin stonsanders
AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
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2013
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Scoreboard, B2 Preps, B3 NFL, B4-B5 Sports in brief, B2 College hoops, B3 NBA, B6 NHL, B2 Golf, B4 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
.bendbulletin.com/sports
SUPER BOWL XLVIII
NFL Ray Gtly elected to football hall
• Summit freshman boysbasketball coach reflects onhisexperiencein the SuperBowlwith the N.Y.Giants
NEW YORK— Ray Guy has becomethe first punter elected to the Pro Football Hall of
Fame. Joining the long-time Oakland Raider were two first-time eligible players, linebacker Derrick Brooks and offensive tackle Walter Jones. The class of 2014 also included defensive end Michael Strahan, receiver Andre Reed, defensive backAeneas Williams and defensive end ClaudeHumphrey, who like Guywas asenior selection. Among the finalists who didn't get in were former coachTony Dungy and receiver Marvin Harrison.
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Manning wins 5th MVP award NEW YORK-
Peyton Manning's record-setting season earned him his fifth Associated Press NFL MVP award Saturday night in a landslide. No other player has won more than three. Denver's record-setting quarterback, who threw for 55 touchdowns and 5,477 yards in leading the Broncos to the AFC'sbest record, earned 49 votes from a nationwide panel of 50 media members who regularly cover the league. NewEngland quarterback TomBrady got the other vote. He also took theAP's Offensive Player of the Year award for the second time. Carolina grabbed two major awards, with Ron Rivera winning APNFL Coach of the Yearand linebacker LukeKuechly voted top defensive player. Green Bayrunning back Eddie Lacyand Jets defensive tackle Sheldon Richardson were the top rookies for 2013, and San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers tookthe Comeback Player of theYearaward. Chicago cornerback Charles Tillman won the Walter Payton Manof the Year award.
; .-'nttttg~ :::::
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Kevin Boss watches members of the Summit HighSchool freshman basketball team while coachingWednesday night in Redmond. Boss, an Oregon native and Bend resident, played with the New York Giants in Super Bowl XLII, a17-14 win in one of the biggest upsets in Super Bowl history.
By Grant Lucas The Buuetin
evin Boss will never forget the events
of that February day six years ago, as hazy as the details may be. Not what he describes as a "holy
crap moment"when the clock reached zero, or the confetti that rained down on him and the rest of the New York Giants as he
— The Associated Press
raced around wondering whom to hug first. Not the impromptu family reunion on the grass field at Uni-
COLLEGE
versity of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz., or the
BASKETBALL
hundreds of text messages and voice mails waiting on his cellphone in the locker room. Boss will never forget Feb. 3, 2008 — when the Giants
OIT coach Miles gets win1,000 SALEM —Oregon Tech coach DannyMiles won his 1,0000th career game Saturday night when the Hustlin' Owls beat Corban 71-51. Miles, in his 43rd season at the helmof the Hustlin'Owls, has a career record of 1000408. He becomesoneof two coaches in all of college basketball to reach 1,000 wins, joining Henry Statham of NAIA Division I I McKendree, in Lebanon, III.
recorded a big-time upset by defeating the previously unbeaten New England Patriots 17-14 in Super Bowl XLII. "Words can't do it justice, trying to describe that
feeling," says Boss, now 30 and a first-year resident of Bend, where currently he is coaching the freshman boys basketball team at Summit High SchooL
"The confetti falling down on you, pulling your family down from the stands, hugging your family and hugging your teammates — it really just felt like a dream." And it still feels that way.
The Boss file A quick look at the former New York Giant andWestern Oregon Wolf's career. NFL Yr Team G Rec Yds TD 07 NYG 13 9
118 2
08 NYG 15 33 384 6 0 9 NYG 15 42 567 5 1 0 NYG 15 35 531 5 1 1 OAK 14 28 368 3 12 KC 2 3 65 1 Total 7 4 150 2033 22
WESTERNOREGON Yr 06
G Re c Yds TD 6 33 40 3 5
05
11 53 6 2 1 8
04
10 3 9 5 0 6 5
03 5 9 60 1 Total 3 2 134 1590 19
SeeBoss/B4
For a clip of Kevin Boss playing in Super BowlXLVg: boodbull otin.com/doss
o
— Bulletin staff report
Seahawks OK with playing thevillian's role JERSEY CITY, N.J. own at the end of a hotel hallway, about 50 -
D
people gathered along with a dozen television cameras to record the thoughts of a running
back who
d oesn't
much like the idea o f s h aring h i s thoughts.
TIM
DAHLBERG
was in true Beast
Mode, though he surely couldn't appreciate the irony he was actually helping fuel the insatiable beast that is the media surrounding the Super
Bowl at a time the game was in need of another good story line. "I'm here, man," Lynch said. "So, I don't have to pay the fine, boss." SeeDahlberg/B4
Why the Seahawkswill win
Why the Broncoswill win
• Seattle-based Associated Press writer Tim Booth says Seattle's defense will win the day,BS
• Denver-based Associated Press writer Arnie Stapleton likesPeytonManning, BS
PREP ALPINE SKIING
Lava Bears dominate at Mt. Bachelor Bulletin staff report MOUNT BACHELOR — Bend
High's Keenan Seidel won his fourth consecutive Oregon School Ski As-
• Redmond boys top Baker,B3 • Prep scoreboardB3
In girls races, the Lava Bears dominated the mountain as Shel-
by Cutter, Elinor Wilson, Shannon Brennan and Lucia Charltonwent
1-2-3-4 for Bend. Cutter bested the sociation event of the season Saturday, posting the top combined time rounded out the top four in 1:13.66. field with a two-run time of 1:13.91. in the boys' slalom races at Mt. BachThe Bend boys narrowly edged Summit's Natalie Merrill broke up elor ski area's Lower Leeway run. out the Storm for top team honors, the Bears' bid for a top-five sweep, Seidel, a senior, turned in runs of registering a team time — the com- placing fifth.
Oregon's Joseph Young against USC.
Big run paces Ducks past USC Joseph Youngscores 21 points, including a 3-pointerthattouches off a12-0 second-half run,B3
Inside
35.6 seconds and 34.03 seconds, for
bined time of each team's fastest
a total time of 1 minute, 9.63 seconds. threeracers— of 3:36.14.Summit Summit's Jared Schiemer placedsec- took second with 3:37.83. The Lava Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Bend High'sKeenan Seidelwon the OSSA alpine slalom ski race on Saturday on the Leeway run at Mount Bachelor with a total time of 1:09.63.
ond with a combined time of 1:11.09 while his Storm teammate, Thomas
Bear's No. 6 skier, Sam Nelson came
The Lava Bears' Brody Swisher
victory for Bend.
The Bend girls cruised to Satur-
day's teamtitle, endingthe daywith a team time of 3:52.11, 50seconds faster than the runner-up Storm (4:42.89).
up big during his B run, recording a The OSSA season continues next Wimberly, finished third in 1:11.58. time of36.37 seconds to secure the Saturday with giant slalom races on Ed's Garden on Mt. Bachelor.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER EPL, West Bromwich Albion vs. Liverpool EPL, Arsenal vs. Crystal Palace HOCKEY NHL, Detroit at Washington
Time TV/Radio 5:30 a.m. NBCSN 8 a.m. NBCSN 9:30 a.m.
NBC
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Virginia at Pittsburgh Men's college, Michigan at Indiana Women's college, Notre Dame at Duke Women's college, OregonState atArizona Women's college, Miami at North Carolina Men's college, UCLAat Oregon State Men's college, William & Mary at JamesMadison Women's college, Stanford at California Women's college,TennesseeatAlabama
9:30 a.m. 10 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. 11 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
1 p.m. 1:30 p.m.
ESPNU
CBS ESPN
Pac-12 Root ESPNU, 940-AM NBCSN ESPN2 ESPNU
GOLF
PGA Tour, Phoenix Open PGA Tour, Phoenix Open
10 a.m. noon
Golf CBS
TENNIS
College, Florida at USC
Pac-12
1 p.m.
FOOTBALL
NFL, Super Bowl, Denvervs. Seattle
3:30 p.m.
Fox
MONDAY SOCCER EPL, Manchester City vs Chelsea
Time noon
TV/Radio NBCSN
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Notre Dameat Syracuse Women's college, Baylor at Oklahoma Men's college, Hampton at MorganState Men's college, Xavier at Villanova Men's college, lowa State atOklahomaState Men's college, Prairie View A&M atAlabamaA8M Men's college, Georgetown at DePaul
4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. Fox Sports1
HOCKEY
NHL, Colorado at NewJersey
4:30 p.m. N BCSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI7'or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF TENNIS BryanS Win doudleS to keeP U.S. aliVe — Bob andMike Bryan beat Dominic Inglot and Colin Fleming 6-2, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 Saturday in San Diego to pull the United States to 2-1against Britain in the first round of the Davis Cup.TheBryans breezed through the fourth setandwonthematchonasmashbyBob.Thematchwillbedecided today in reverse singles, whenWimbledon winner Andy Murray of Britain faces SamQuerrey andJamesWard of Britain faces Donald Young.
BASKETBALL PaCerS Sign BynumfOr reSt OfSeaSOn—TbePacers are adding sizeand scoring to the Eastern Conference's best team Saturday, signing free agent center Andrew Bynum for the rest of the season. Team officials did not release additional details of the contract. He is expected to join the teamnext week. BecauseIndiana had an openspot on its roster, it will not have to make aroster move to add the mercurial 7-foot-1, 285-pound backup to All-Star center Roy Hibbert.
WINTER SPORTS Men'S WOrld CuP dOWnhill CanCeled beCauSe Of fogFog in St. Moritz, Switzerland, prevented downhill racers from getting their Olympic dress rehearsal. Poor visibility on the middle section of the course forced World Cupofficials to call off a men's downhill on Saturday, the last speed racebefore the Sochi Olympics. A women's giant slalom in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, wasalso canceled because of poor weather. Thestart of the race was postponed several times and pushed backmorethan two hours before officials finally gave up.
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Barao retainS delt againSt Fader at UFC 169 —Renan Barao madequick work of Urijah Faber in his latest title defense, dropping the challenger with a right andpummeling himwith a series of shots to the head while retaining his135-pound championship in the main event of UFC169 onSaturday night in Newark, N.J.Baraowon via TKOat three minutes, 22 seconds inthe first round and hadFaberin all kinds of trouble from thestart. Referee Herb Deanstopped the fight onceBaraopouncedonFaberandpoundedawayonTheCaliforniaKid.
SOCCER U.S. blankS SOuth KOrea — Chris Wondolowski scored both goals in the United States' 2-0 victory over South Korea in aninternational friendly Saturday in Carson, Calif. Wondolowski strengthened his case for inclusion on theU.S.World Cup squadfor Brazil with his sixth and seventh goals in his past eight appearances for the U.S. team, which was missing several top players. — From wire reports
Louisiana-Lafayette 66, Louisiana-Monroe50 Louisville87,UCF70 MVSU 69,Jackson St .66 Tuesday Boys basketball: Bend atSummit, 7p.m.; Mountain Maryland80,Virginia Tech60 St.79, Oral Roberts68 View at Ridgeview, 7p.m.; Redm ond at Crook McNeese County,7p.m.;Madrasat Estacada,7p.m.; Culver Md.-EasternShore67,NCA&T60 at Kennedy,6:30p.mc Central Christianat Con- Miami64,Norfolk St.49 don/Wheele5:30 r, p.mcButte Fallsat Gilchrist, Middl eTennessee64,OldDominion48 7p.m. Mississippi75,SouthCarolina 71 Girls basketball: Summit atBend, 7 p.m.; Rid- Morehead St.65,Jacksonville St.54 geviewat Mountain View,7 p,mcCrookCounty MorganSt.77,Delaware St. 64 atRedmond,7p,mJEstacadaatMadras,7p.m.; NC Central79,Howard65 Culver atKennedy, 5 p.mc Central Christianat NichollsSt.78,Cent.Arkansas67 Condon/Whee ler, 4p.m.; ButteFalls atGilchrist, NorthCarolina84,NCState70 5:30 p.m. NorthwesternSt.84,AbileneChristian 66 Wrestling: Sum mit at LaPine, 7 p.mcRedmond JV, SC State63, Florida A&M59, OT Culver JVat Sisters, 7 p.m. SavannahSt.50, Bethune-Cookman40 SouthernMiss.78,Tulane47 Thursday U.62,Alcorn St.54 Wrestffng:Sisters, Summit at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; La Southern ennessee 76,Alabama59 Pine atMadras,7 p.mcMountamViewat Bend,7 T Tennessee Tech 81,Belmont 76 p.m.; RedmondatCrookCounty,7p.m. UALR62, SouthAlabama58 UNCAsheville 67,Longwood66 VCU81,Richmond70 FOOTBALL Vanderbilt55,Mississippi St.49 W. Kentucky 68, TexasSt. 64 NFL Woffor d77,Samford58 NATIONALFOOTBALLLEAGUE Midwest Playoff glance Dayton 75,GeorgeWashington65 All TimesPST E. Illinois76,SIU-Edwardsville 70 GrandCanyon72, UMKC53 Super Bowl GreenBay62,Wright St. 55 Today IPFW 77, W.Ilinois 64 At East Rutherford, N.J. lffinois St.75,Drake57 Denvervs.Seatle, 3:25p.m.(Fox) Indiana St.87, N.Iowa81 lowa81,llinois 74 lowaSt.81,Oklahoma75 Betting line KentSt. 60,Akron57 Kentucky 84, Missouri79 NFL Miami(ohio)65,E.Michigan61 HomeTeamin Caps Today MissouriSt. 74,Bradley61 N. Illinois67,Ball St.65, OT SuperBowl Favorite Open Current Underdog Nebraska-O maha99, IUPUI71 55, Minnesota54 Broncos PK 2.5 Se ahawksNorthwestern NotreDam e76, Boston College 73,OT Ohio 95,Toledo90,OT BASKETBALL OhioSt.59,Wisconsin58 Providence 77, DePaul 72 Men's College S.DakotaSt.70,SouthDakota68 S. Illinois81,Loyolaof Chicago76, OT Standings SaintLouis87,GeorgeMason81, OT Pacific-12 Conference SetonHall68,Xavier 60 All times PST Valparais70, o Ill.-chicago46 75, Cent. Michigan72 Conference Overall W. Michigan W L W L WichitaSt.81, Evansville 67 Southwest Arizona 8 I 21 I Ark.-PineBluff 66,Grambling St.64 UCLA 6 2 17 4 Baylor76,OklahomaSt. 70 California 6 3 15 7 CS Bakersfield72,Texas-PanAmerican64 Arizona St. 5 4 16 6 Louisiana Tech87, UTSA72 Colorado 5 4 16 6 Stanford 5 4 14 7 SMU87,Memphis 72 Washington 5 4 13 9 SamHoustonSt. 81,Houston Baptist 63 Oregon St. 4 4 12 8 StephenF.Austin 76,IncarnateWord 74 Utah 3 6 14 7 Texas81,Kansas69 Oregon 3 6 15 6 TexasA&M-CC58,Lamar 35 SouthernCal I 8 10 12 TexasTech60,TCU54 Washington St. 2 7 9 12 Tulsa94,NorthTexas63 Saturday'sGames UTEP68,Rice 57 Colorado 79, Utah75 Far West Stanford76,ArizonaState70 California60,Arizona58 WashinqtonSt.72, Washington 67 Colorado79,Utah75,OT Oregon78,USC66 Denver67,N. DakotaSt.63 California60,Arizona58 E.Washington94,N.Colorado90,OT Today'sGame Gonzaga 75, SanFrancisco65 UCLA atOregonSt.,11:30 a.m. LongBeachSt. 75,CalSt.-Fullerton 56 Montan a St.54,S.Utah52 Saturday'sSummary N. Arizona 67, IdahoSt. 65 Nevada69,Air Force56, OT Oregon 78, SouthernCal66 NewMexico 72,SanJoseSt. 47 NewMexicoSt.72,UtahValey49 SOUTHERN CAL (10-12) Oregon78,SouthernCal66 Jovanovic1-5 0-0 2,Oraby4-6 2-210, Howard Pacific84,SanDiego67 3-91-2 8, Terrell 4-8 6-715,Wesley8-13 3-319, Pepperdin80, e LoyolaMarymount 69 Prince1-I 0-2 2,Bryan0-10-0 0,Jacobs2-61-2 5, Portland76, SantaClara64 Gavrilovic1-I 0-2 2,Taylor0-00-0 0,Haley1-I 1-2 PortlandSt.70, North Dakota68 3. Totals 26-5114-2266. Sacramento St.78,Weber St.75,OT OREGO(N 15-6) SanDiegoSt. 65,ColoradoSt.56 Moser6-100-113, Carter 2-30-04, Artis2-81-2 Seattle68,Idaho67 5, Young 5-129-921, Dotson2-72-26, Loyd1-34-4 Stanford76,ArizonaSt. 70 6, Calliste6-123-418, Amardi1-61-6 3, Cook0-1 UC Santa Barbara82, UCDavis 67 2-2 2.Totals 25-62 22-3078. UNLV73, BoiseSt.69 Halftime —Southern Cal38-34. 3-Point GoalsWashingtonSt.72,Washington 67 SouthernCal2-10 (Howard 1-3, Terrell 1-4,Jacobs Wyoming74,UtahSt. 57 0-1, Jovanovic0-1, Wesley 0-1), Oregon6-25 (Calliste 3-9,Young2-7, Moser1-3, Cook0-1, Artis 0-2, Women's College Dotson 0-3). Fouled Out—Amardi. Reboun dsSouthernCal35(Jacobs9), Oregon31(Carter, Moser Saturday'sGames 6). Assists —Southern Cal 12(Jacobs5), Oregon17 East (Loyd5). TotalFouls—Southern Cal19, Oregon22. Albany(NY)69,Vermont52 A—11,178. AmericanU. 58,Holy Cross53 Army56,Loyola (Md.) 45, OT Saturday'sGames Brown79,Columbia57 Easl Bryant76,LIUBrooklyn66 AmericanU.63, HolyCross57 Bucknel64, l Colgate54 Army77,Loyola(Md.) 71 Cornell 65,Yale56 Brown64, Columbia56 DePaul74, Providence63 Bucknel79, l Colgate68 Fairfield52,St.Peter's 40 CCSU 74,RobertMorris 73 George Washington83,RhodeIsland68 Canisius 84,Fairfield 58 lona 80, Siena66 Dartmouth78, Princeton69, OT Lafayette70,Navy69 Delaware 66, UNCWilmington65 Lehigh67,Boston U.54 Fordham 85,Rhode Island79 Maine61, UMBC48 Georgetown 64, MichiganSt.60 Marist 65Monm outh(NJ)40 Harvard80, Penn50 Penn67,Harvard 38 La Salle71,Duquesne63 Princeton76,Dartmouth53 Lafayette72, Navy54 Quinnipiac93, Niagara78 Lehigh82,BostonU.80, OT Rider73,Manhatan 56 Maine83,UMBC80 RobertMorris67,MountSt. Mary's60 Marist78,Niagara64 Rutger s66,Memphis48 Mass. -Lowell62,Binghamton55 SacredHeart85, FairleighDickinson70 MountSt. Mary's95,LIUBrooklyn92 SaintJoseph's70,VCU51 Quinnipiac103,Siena95,OT St. Bonaven ture74, Fordham67 Rutgers93,Houston70 St. Francis(NY)71, CCSU50 SaintJoseph's73,UMass68 St. Francis(Pa.)92,Wagner 78 St. Francis(NY)73,Wagner 72,OT St. John's69,SetonHall 48 St. Francis(Pa.)83, Fairleigh Dickinson75 Villanova68,Creighton54 St. John'74, s Marquette59 South StonyBrook56, Harfford 52 AlcornSt.58, Southern U.52 Syracuse 91, Duke89, OT AppalachianSt.61,Wofford54 Towson75,Drexel73 Belmont69,TennesseeTech56 Vermont55,Albany(NY) 45 Campbel61, l Liberty55, OT Villanova 90, Temple 74 Chattanooga 76, Davidson 62 WestVirginia81,KansasSt.71 CoastalCarolina64, Longwood55 Yale61,Cornell 57 Delaware St.86,MorganSt.66 South Duquesne 55,Richmond45 Alabama A&M63,TexasSouthern62 E. Kentucky 75, SEMissouri 56 Alabama St.76, PrairieView63 ETSU 72,North Florida 57 ArkansasSt.83, Troy73 EastCarolina71,Charlotte 62 Auburn74, Georgia 67 Elon80,UNC-Greensboro57 Charleston Southern80, Liberty66 FIU 76,FAU72 Charlotte73,FIU61 FloridaA&M70,SCState64 Chattanooga67,Furman52 Gardner-Webb 76, UNCAshevile 53 Clemson 53,Florida St.49 Hampton 83,CoppinSt.75 CoastalCarolina61, Campbel 58 Howard 66, NCCentral61 Coll. ofCharleston67, Hofstra 49 Jackson St. 63,MVSU56 Davidson62,TheCitadel 43 LouisianaTech71, UTSA50 E. Kentucky 79,SEMissouri 78 Louisiana-Monroe 66, Louisiana-Lafayette59 EastCarolina74, UAB67 McNeese St.73, Oral Roberts57 Elon83,AppalachianSt.76 Mercer64,KennesawSt.59 FAU65, Marshall 57 Morehead St.73,Jacksonvile St.53 Florida69,TexasA&M36 N. Kentucky63,Florida Gulf Coast43 GardnreWebb73,Radford72,OT NC A&T73,Md.-EasternShore 63 GeorgiaSouthern 64,UNCGreensboro 62 NichollsSt.69,Cent.Arkansas60 GeorgiaSt.101, Texas-Arlington 91,OT Northwestern St.76,AbileneChristian 72 Georgia Tech79,WakeForest 70 Old Dominion 65, Marshall 52,OT Hampton 79,CoppinSt.76,OT PrairieView58,AlabamaSt. 47 High Point65, Winthrop64 Radford60,Charleston Southern 57 Jacks onville95,N.Kentucky77 SC-Upstate66,Jacksonville 58 LSU88,Arkansas74 Samford58,GeorgiaSouthern43 Lipscomb 60,North Florida 58 SavannahSt.71, Bethune-Cookman64
ON DECK
JasonKokrak Pat Perez GregChalmers Graham DeLaet Matt Every RickyBarnes ChrisStroud NickWatney PatrickReed Morgan Hoff mann JohnRollins JohnMaff inger CharlesHowell ffl Martin Laird SpencerLevin BrandtSnedeker BenCrane Cameron Tringale WebbSimpson WilliamMcGirt BryceMolder DavidLynn KevinNa Bill Haas DavidLingmerth BrendondeJonge JohnMerrick KenDuke GeoffOgilvy Scott Piercy CamiloVilegas ChrisSmith Phil Mickelson Erik Compton RobertGarrigus JamesDriscoll MichaelThompson RyanPalmer KiradechAphibarnrat JasonBohn K.J. Choi BrianStuard CharleyHoffman Justin Hicks Jonathan Byrd AaronBaddeley GaryWoodland JonasBlixt DavidHearn BrianGay MartinKaym er NicolasColsaerts Sang-MoonBae RobertoCastro BrianDavis J.B. Holmes JohnPeterson Y.E.Yang Jhonattan Vegas MarkCalcavecchia ScottLangley KevinStreelman Chris Kirk BenCurtis DerekErnst Steven Bowditch FredFunk Vijay Singh Joe Ogilvie
SouthAlabam a61, UALR56 Stet son82,Lipscomb47 TexasSouthern 66,AlabamaA&M61 Texas St. 72,W.Kentucky63 Texas-Arlington 67,GeorgiaSt.51 Troy83,ArkansasSt. 65 UCF52,Houston43 UTEP86, Tulane72 W.Carolina65, Furman54 Winthrop 51, Presbyterian43 Midwest Butler68,Xavier54 Cleveland St.84,YoungstownSt.80 Dayton103,GeorgeMason81 E. Illinois71,SIU-Edwardsville 61 Green Bay84, Detroit 72 IUPUI77,Nebraska-Omaha45 lowaSt. 84,KansasSt. 65 Marquette77,Georgetown54 Milwaukee 85,Valparaiso80 Minnesota 85, Michigan69 N. Dakota St. 85,Denver79 Nebraska 80, lowa67 NorthDakota69,Portland St.44 Saint Louis53,LaSalle 43
Uconn 86,Cincinnati 29
W.Illinois68,IPFW65 W. Michigan 56,N.Illinois 43 WrightSt.77,Bl.-chicago74 SOUTHW EST Ark.-PineBluff64, Grambling St.58 Baylor87,Texas73
HoustonBaptist 63,SamHouston St.62 Kansas70,TexasTech62 Lamar87,TexasA8M-CC72 MiddleTennessee67, Tulsa 57 NorthTexas66,UAB58 Oklahoma 81,OklahomaSt. 74 SMU85,Temple 75 Southern Miss. 74,Rice58 StephenF.Austin 79, IncarnateWord59 WestVirginia66, TCU62 Far West BYU88,Pacific 57 BoiseSt. 79,UNLV49 CS Bake rsfield 82,Texas-PanAmerican74 CS Northridge75,Hawaii 72, OT Cal Poly84, UCIrvine 79 Colorado St. 95,SanDiegoSt.48 E. Washington 52,N. Colorado51 Gonzaga101, SanFrancisco 66 GrandCanyon74,UMKC63 Idaho77,Seattle 59 IdahoSt. 82,N.Arizona72 LongBeachSt.83, CalSt.-Fullerton 64 LoyolaMarymount 90,Pepperdine74 Montana81, S.Utah73 Nevada84,Air Force74,OT NewMexico76, SanJoseSt. 73 NewMexicoSt.83, UtahValley 78,OT Portland75,SantaClara 55 Sacramento St.111,Weber St.104 SaintMary's(Cal)71, SanDiego68 UC Davis82,UCSantaBarbara70 UtahSt. 80,Wyoming75
HOCKEY NHL Standings All Times PST
66-69-68—203 65-68-70—203 65-67-71—203 67-72-65—204 72-66-67—205 71-67-67—205 70-67-68—205 69-68-68—205 67-67-71—205 69-66-70—205 72-67-67—206 67-72-67—206 70-69-67—206 67-68-71—206 67-69-70—206 70-64-72—206 69-69-69—207 71-67-69—207 68-72-67—207 65-69-73—207 67-71-70—208 72-66-70—208 70-70-68—208 69-68-71—208 72-68-68—208 66-73-70—209 75-65-69—209 70-67-72—209 71-70-68—209 67-67-75—209 70-71-68—209 70-69-71—210 71-67-72—210 67-72-71—210 70-70-70—210 67-70-73—210 72-68-70—210 76-64-70—210 66-71-73—210 70-70-70—210 71-70-69—210 73-68-69—210 70-71-69—210 71-70-69—210 68-73-69—210 68-70-73—211 67-72-72—211 68-71-72—211 68-70-73—211 69-71-71—211 69-71-71—211 69-68-74—211 67-73-71—211 72-69-70—211 72-69-70—211 73-68-70—211 68-70-74—212 64-73-75—212 71-66-75—212 70-71-71—212 71-70-71—212 71-68-74—213 65-73-75—213 68-72-73—213 72-69-72—213 71-69-75—215 69-71-76—216 69-72-75—216 71-70-77—218
TENNIS
EasternConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA 5 4 35 16 3 73 164 119 5 5 32 18 5 69 162 137 5 7 30 21 6 66 170 176 5 5 29 20 6 64 136 137
Professional
Paris Open Saturday At StadePierre deCoubertin Paris Purse: $710,000(Premier) 54 24 19 11 59 139 152 Surface:Hard-Indoor 55 24 21 10 58 158 176 Singles 5 5 21 27 7 49 133 174 Bemifinals 5 4 15 31 8 38 105 161 Anastasia Pavlyuchen kova, Russia, def. Maria Metropolitan Division Sharapova(I), Russia4-6, , 6-3,6-4. GP W L OT Pts GF GA SaraErrani(3), Italy,def.Alize Cornet, France,7-6 P ittsburgh 55 38 15 2 7 8 176 132 (3), 3-6,7-6(5). N .Y.Rangers 56 30 23 3 63 145 140 C olumbus 55 2 8 23 4 6 0 163 154 PattayaWomen'sOpen P hiladelphia 56 27 23 6 6 0 152 163 Saturday C arolina 5 4 2 5 2 0 9 5 9 137 151 At Dusit Rasarl NewJersey 56 23 21 12 58 132 140 Pattaya, Thailand W ashington 55 24 22 9 5 7 158 167 Purse: $250,000(Intl.) N .Y. Islanders 57 21 28 8 5 0 159 191 Burfaca: Hard-Outdoor WesternConference Singles Central Division Semifinals GP W L DT Pts GF GA KarolinaPliskova,CzechRepublic, def. JuliaGoChicago 57 33 10 14 80 200 158 erges,Germany, 6-3, 4-6, 6-3. St. Louis 5 4 37 12 5 7 9 185 125 EkaterinaMakarova (4), Russia,def.AndreaHlaColorado 5 4 35 14 5 7 5 165 142 Minnesota 5 7 29 21 7 65 140 144 vackova,CzechRepublic, 6-3, 0-6,6-4. Dallas 5 5 25 21 9 5 9 158 160 Davis Cup Nashville 5 7 25 23 9 59 142 172 WORLD GROUP Winnipeg 5 6 26 25 5 5 7 159 165 First Round Pacific Division Winners toquarterfinals, April 4-6; losersta GP W L DT Pts GF GA WG Playoffs Sept. 12-14 A naheim 5 7 4 0 1 2 5 8 5189 139 Britain 2, UnitedStates 1 S anJose 5 6 3 5 15 6 7 6 168 134 At Petco Park L osAngeles 57 30 21 6 66 134 122 Ban Diego V ancouver 56 2 7 20 9 6 3 142 147 Burface: Clay-Outdoor Phoenix 55 2 6 1 9 10 62159 164 Andy Murray,Britain, def. DonaldYoung,United C algary 55 2 1 2 7 7 4 9 132 173 States,6-1, 6-2,6-3. E dmonton 57 18 33 6 4 2147 194 JamesWard, Britain, def. SamQuerrey, United NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime States, 1-6, 7-6(3), 3-6,6-4, 6-1. loss. Bob andMike Bryan, UnitedStates, def. Colin Saturday'sGames Fleming andDominic Inglot, Britain, 6-2,6-3, 3-6, St. Louis4,Nashville 3, SO 6-1. SanJose2Chicago1SO Boston 4, Edmonton 0 Tampa Bay2, Montreal I, OT DEALS Colorado 7, Buffalo1 Philadelphia 2, LosAngeles0 Transactions Toronto6,Ottawa3 Columbus 4, Florida1 BASEBALL Phoenix3, Pittsburgh1 AmericanLeague Calgary4, Minnesota3, OT KANSAS CITYROYALS— Agreedto termswith Dallas 2, Anaheim0 LHP BruceChenona one-year contract. Designated Today'sGames INFEmilio Bonifaciofor assignment. Detroit atWashington, 9:30a.m. LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed totermswith C Winnipeg atMontreal,10 a.m. YorvitTorrealbaonaminor leaguecontract. Manday'sGames TEXAS RANGERS—AssignedRHPChazRoeoutEdmonto natBuff alo,4p.m. right toRoundRock(PCL). Ottawa atPittsburgh,4 p.m. National League Vancouver at Detroit, 4:30p.m. LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto termswith Coloradoat NewJersey,4:30p.m. CA.J.Ellis onaone-yearcontract. ColumbusatAnaheim 7p.m. WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms Chicag oatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. with RHP DougFister. Philadelphiaat SanJose,7:30 p.m. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS— Signed FCartier Martin to a GOLF 10-daycontract. INDIANA PACERS—SignedCAndrewBynumfor PGA Tour the remainder oftheseason. NEWYOR KKNICKS— Recalled GToure' Murry PhoenixOpen from Eri(NB e ADL). Waste ManagementPhoenixOpen SAN ANTONI O SPURS — Si gned G Shannon Saturday B rown to a10-day contract. ReleasedGOthyusJeffers At TPCScattsdale from his10-daycontract. Scottsdale, Ariz. HOCKEY Purse $6 2 million National HockeyLeague Yardage: 7,152;Par: 71 ANAHEIM DU C K S — Recalled CDavid Steckel Third Round 64-66-68 —198 fromNorfolk(AHL). BubbaWatson 65-68-67 —200 NASHVILL E PREDATORS — Recalled FSimon KevinStadler RyanMoore 66-71-64—201 MoserfromMilwaukee(AHL). HarrisEnglish 65-67-69 —201 TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING—ReassignedGKristers HidekiMatsuyama 66-67-68 —201 GudlevskistoSyracuse(AHL). Brendan Steele 66-74-62 —202 COLLEGE HunterMahan 66-71-65 —202 ARKANSAS— Suspendedmen' sbasketballFAlMatt Jones 65-65-72 —202 andiseHarrisandGMichael Qualls indefinitely. Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Montreal Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
Coyotesrebound from bad lossto beattough Penguinssquad The Associated Press
Evgeni Malkin scored for the Pen— Zbynek guins, who entered 8-0-1 against PaMichalek scored against his former cific Division foes. team, his first goal in 83 games, and Michalek's previous goal was the Phoenix Coyotes became the scored on March 5, 2012, for Pittsfirst Pacific Division team to beat the burgh against Phoenix. Eastern Conference-leading PittsThe Penguins, who had won three burgh Penguins in regulation this straight over the Coyotes, made their
NHL ROUNDUP
G LENDALE, A r i z .
season with a 3-1 victory on Saturday
first appearance in Arizona in 3 1-2
night. Mike Ribeiro had a goal and an
years. In other games on Saturday: Lightning 2, Canadiens 1: MON-
— Steve Mason posted his second shutout in three games with 35 saves
Blue Jackets 4, Panthers 1: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Linemates Ryan Johansen and Boone Jenner each
Flames 4, Wild 3: CALGARY, Al-
berta — Mikael Backlund scored two goals, including the winner 2:25 into overtime to give Calgary a victory
had a goal and an assist in the first and Wayne Simmonds scored his period, and Sergei Bobrovsky made over Minnesota. 100th NHL goal, leading Philadel- 36 saves to l ead Columbus past Stars 2, Ducks 0: ANAHEIM, Caphia over Los Angeles. Florida. lif. — Dan Ellis made 26 saves against Avalanche 7, Sabres1: DENVERMaple Leafs 6, Senators 3: TO- his former team in his 14th career Jamie McGinn had two goals and alk
RONTO — Phil Kessel scored three
shutout, and Trevor Daley scored in
assist, Gabriel Landeskog also had two goals and Colorado beat Buffalo. assist for Phoenix. Radim Vrbata Bruins 4, Oilers 0: BOSTON scored the third goal for the Coyotes, TREAL — Nate Thompson scored David Krejci scored a second-period who were coming off perhaps their twice, including the winner at 4:36 of power-play goal and Chad Johnson
goals, and Toronto beat Ottawa for its
Dallas' victory over Anaheim. Sharks 2, Blackhawks 1: SAN
worst loss of the season, 3-2 at home to the East's worst team, the Buffalo
Sabres, on Thursday night.
overtime, to give Tampa Bay a victo-
made 22 saves for his second career
ry over Montreal. shutout and Boston earned a victory Flyers 2, Kings 0: LOS ANGELES over Edmonton.
sixth straight win at home.
Blues 4, Predators 3: ST. LOU- JOSE, Calif. — Joe Thornton capped IS — Vladimir Tarasenko scored San Jose's perfect shootout with a and added an assist in regulation, nifty move past Corey Crawford that alkd then netted the deciding goal in helped the Sharks snap a three-game the shootout to lead St. Louis over losing streak with a victory over Nashville. Chicago.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
B3
PREP ROUNDUP
Fast start pacesRedmondto win Bulletin staff report P RAIRIE CIT Y
SILVER LAKE — The Griz— R e d - zlies fell to 0-8 in Class 1A
mond High grabbed a six-
Mountain Valley League play out of Portland won the event and 3-15 overall after failing with 156 points. Gladstone to score in the opening quar- was second with 150 /2 points
point lead in the first quarter
on Saturday afternoon, and Cody Moss' strong third quar- ter of their game against the ter allowed the Class 5A Pan- Cowgirls. Cassandra Blum thers to claim a 57-47 noncon- led Gilchrist with nine points. ference boys basketball win North Lake's Jade Stockton over 4A Baker at Prairie City led all scorers with 19 points, High School. 12 of which came off 3-point"We kind of got out to an ers. Kendra Murphy added 15 early lead," Redmond coach points and 17 rebounds for the Jon Corbett said. "And it just Cowgirls (6-2, 12-5). stayed there." Trinity Lutheran 45, Paisley Moss hit five 3-pointers on 36: PAISLEY — The Saints the day, three of which came went on an 11-1 run to open the
Chris Pietsch /The Associated Press
Southern California's Byron Wesley, center, passes the ball under pressure from Oregon's Damyean Dotson, left, snd Mike Moser, right, during the first half of Saturday night's game in Eugene.
uc s own roans The Associated Press EUGENE — The Oregon
PAC-12 ROUNDUP
Ducks seemed relieved to fi-
mouth," Wesley said. Sitting last in the league
nally get a quality victory. Joseph Young s c ored 21 points, including a key 3-pointer that touched off a 12-0 Oregon run midway through the second half, and the Ducks soundly defeated the USC Trojans 78-66 on Saturday night. "It's always important to get a win," said Jason Calliste, who finished with 18
points. "But just the way that we played was more satisfying, I guess you could say." Oregon (15-6, 3-6 Pac-12) led by as many as 17 points and had 16 steals, finishing just one shy of the school record. Young had a career-high six. The Ducks had lost six of their past seven games after
Calliste and Ben Carter's layup gave Oregon a 53-44 lead with 12:02 left. Rich-
standings, Southern C a l i-
ard Amardi made a free
fornia was coming off a 7675 loss to Oregon State on Thursday night. With the loss to the Ducks, the Trojans fall to 0-5 on the road in conference play. USC was plagued by turnovers, finishing with a season-high 22. The Ducks kept them off-balance by pressing
throw and Johnathan Loyd
scored a layup to complete the run that put the Ducks in command.
In other Saturday action: BOYS BASKETBALL
Broncos 27-20. Murphy also
and Colorado overcame a beat Utah.
Stanford 76, Arizona State 70: STANFORD, Calif.
-
TOP 25 ROUNDUP
mi Grant scored eight points weeks when the teams meet in overtime to finish with a again at Cameron Indoor career-high 24 and Jim Boe- Stadium. heim's No. 2 Syracuse stayed From the m oment Boeu nbeaten, topping M i k e heim and Kr zy z e wski Krzyzewski's No. 17 Duke 91- walked onto Jim Boeheim 89 on Saturday in a matchup Court to a d eafening roar ofthe two winningest coach- and hugged at midcourt sures in Division I history. rounded by a sea of orange, Coach K said before the the atmosphere was electric. game that he hoped the high- Singing and acting star Valy anticipated matchup lived nessa Williams, a Syracuse up to its billing. After the alum and former Miss AmerOrange withstood a tying ica, performed the national 3-pointer in regulation and anthem. won before a Carrier Dome Also on Saturday: record crowd of 35,446, BoeNo. 3 Florida 69, Texas A&M 36: GAINESVILLE, Fla.
-
then some. Michael Frazier II scored 21 "We've had a lot of games points, Dorian Finney-Smith added 11 and Florida overgreat. There's never been one whelmed Texas A8 M. as good as this one," Boeheim No. 4 Wichita State 81, sard. Evansville 67: WI C H I TA, C.J. Fair scored a ca- Kan. — Fred VanVleet and reer-best 28 points as Syra- Ron Baker had 14 points cuse (21-0, 8-0 Atlantic Coast apiece, and W i chita State
170 pounds — he defeated Ridgeview's Austin Hill 12-3 in the final — and junior Brennan Yates at 182 won titles for the Panthers. Mitch Willett, anoth-
er Redmond High freshman, ily Eidler scored seven of her took second at 182 pounds. nine points after the intermis- Connor Sperlingled the Ravens sionand totaled seven boards. WRESTLING
with a tournament champion-
(4-5, 6-11) while adding sev-
ship at 220 pounds. Boomer La Pine takes top honors at Flemingadded a second-place Frostbite: LA PINE — Thorin finish for Ridgeview, losing by Wilson's first-place finish default in his 195-pound final. at 120 pounds and five secNORDIC SKIING ond-place wrestlers helped Cougar boys and girls clean the Hawks edge runner-up up: MOUNT BACHELORMadras by eight points at The Mountain View girls beat their ow n F r ostbite Invita- South Eugene by 15 points to tional. Madras boasted four take first place at the Oregon first-place finishers, includ- Interscholastic Ski R acing ing Ian Oppenlander at 106 Association classic race. Tia pounds, Bryce Vincent at 113, Hatton led the Cougars with Jarred Dupont at 126 and Mi- a second-place finish on the
en rebounds, three steals and
chael Bauman at 182. Sisters
4.8-kilometer course, while
Gilchrist 69, North Lake 51: SILVER LAKE — T r inton Koch poured in 30 points, and the Grizzlies outscored
the Cowboys 16-6 in the third Mountain Valley L e ague matchup. Hunter Nelson had 13 points for the Grizzlies (6-2 MVL, 13-6 overall), and James Wible totaled 11 points. Daniel Libolt was 6 of 9 shooting for 17 points to lead North Lake
12-point second-half deficit to
ing the go-ahead 3-pointer to start the extra period,
Freshman Bunker Parrish at
pulled down 10 rebounds. Em-
throw to take a 13-12 lead at the halfway point of the first perIod. Oregon extended the lead to 23-18 on M ik e M oser's
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Jera-
that have been here that are
which came in the second half, when the Saints outscored the
Derek Brown finished with eight points and six rebounds for Redmond, which improved to 2-13 on the season.
of the season. Chantel Dannis chipped in with eight points, 18 rebounds, three steals and a block for Redmond (1-15), which played at Prairie City High School,and Maddie Edwards contributed five points,
points in overtime, includ-
threestealsand two assists. North Lake 58, Gilchrist 25:
five others placed in the top 10. Phacelia Cramer of South Eugene was the overall win-
ner. Molly Miller, representing Redmond Proficiency Academy, placed 40th, and Justise Bishop took 43rd to lead Crook County. The Cougar fore regionals, Mountain View boys also took first, defeating placed third overall at the Joe runner-up South Eugene by 21 Stewart Invitational at R ex points. Sam King led MounPutnam High School behind tain View by taking second the strength of seven Cougar and Imran Wolfenden came in finalists. Conner Duhn (106 third. Alex Martin of Summit, pounds), Zack Howe (113), which took fifth as a team, Jimmy Radaford (145) and was first overall. Leonhard Tracy Pitcher (152) all won Pusl was 27th to pace Crook tournament titles while Haden
County, which took sixth as a
Kingrey (126), Chase Misener team with 102 points.
Dwight Powell matched his season high with 28 points, helping Stanford beat Arizona State.
PREP SCOREBOARD
WashingtonSt.72,Washi ngton 6 7 : PUL L M A N , Wash. — D.J. Shelton scored
20 points and grabbed 18 rebounds as Washington State beat Washington, breaking a four-game losing streak.
No. 2 Syracusebeats No.17 Duke
heim said it certainly did, and
Belmontes added 14 points.
Talton scored five of his 14
opening the season with 13 straight wins and climbing as high as No. 10 in the AP 3-pointer. rankings. Byron Wesley finished USC tied it a t 2 5 a f t er Pe'Shon Howard's 3-pointer, with 19 points for the Trojans (10-12, 1-8 Pac-12), who but the Trojans didn't pull have lost three straight over- back in front until J.T. Terrell all and haven't managed to made a pair of free throws defeat the Ducks in seven and Omar Araby dunked straight meetings. to go ahead 31-28. Southern "They just came out and California led 38-34 at the really punched us in t he break, but Young's 3-point-
The Associated Press
ny (161 points) and Ridgeview (151) rounded out the top five.
14-4 lead after the first quarter en route to their first win
and California stunned Arizona to hand the Wildcats
High was second with 167 points and Tualatin took third with 166 points. South Alba-
C olorado 79, U ta h 7 5 : BOULDER, Colo. — Xavier
-
Justin Cobbs hit a step-back jumper with 0.9 seconds left,
field with 197 points, Redmond
lead on their way to a Class 1A Mountain Valley League victory. Katie Murphy scored 17 points to pace Trinity Lutheran (7-2 MVL, 12-7 overall), 15 of
their first loss of the season.
na 58: BERKELEY, Calif.
— Redmond's two high schools finished second and fifth at South Albany High School's Mid-Valley Classic. North Marion topped the 10-team
second half and build a 29-17
"I feel like each game that we play, we're getting better on defense," Young said. The Trojans jumped out to a 12-6 lead on Wesley's jumper, but Oregon responded with a 7-0 run capped by Young's layup and free
on defense.
California 60, No. 1 Arizo-
Redmond second, Ridgeview fifth at South Albany: ALBANY
lowed the Panthers to extend their lead to 45-33 heading into the final period. Moss finished with a gamehigh 17 points, and Michael
two assists. Cameron McCord finished in seventh as a team chipped in with 15 points for thanks in part to Mark Fish's the Cowboys. second-place showing at 152 GIRLS BASKETBALL pounds and Dyut Fetrow's Redmond 39, Baker 32: third-place finish at 126. PRAIRIE CITY — S o p h ia Cougs third at Putnam tourHamilton posted 10 points, and ney: MILWAUKIE — Competthe Panthers jumped out to a ing in its last tournament be-
Also on Saturday:
and Mountain View finished third with 148'A.
in the third quarter that al-
quarter to take the Class IA er, four straight points from
(132) and Kevin Wright (160) placed second. Roosevelt High
losing streak. No. 9 Villanova 90, Temple 74: PHILADELPHIA -
James Bell scored 19 points to lead Villanova to the win.
No. 11 Kentucky 84, Missouri 79: COLUMBIA, Mo. — Aaron Harrison scored 21
points and James Young added 20 to power Kentucky to the victory. No. 12 Louisville 87, UCF 7 0: LOUISVILLE, K y . Russ Smith scored 27 points
and Luke Hancock added 16 to help Louisville pull away from Central Florida. No. 24 Ohio St. 59, No. 14
Wisconsin 58: MADISON, Wis. — Aaron Craft scored all seven of his points in the
final four minutes, LaQuinton Ross finished with 13 points,
and Ohio State got a confidence-boosting road win. No. 15 lowa 81, Illinois 74: CHAMPAIGN, IIL — Gabriel
Alpine skiing OSSA At Mt. Bachelor, LowerLeeway Slalom
Boys Team scores — Bend12 points, Summit10, Lakeview 8, Ridgeview6, MountainView4. Individual (Top 10, two-run combined times) —1, KeenanSeidel, B,1:09.63. 2, Jared schiemer,sum,1:0.09. 3, Thomas wimberly, sum, 1:11.58. 4,BrodySwisher, B, 1:13.66. 5, KevinPanton, Sum,1:15.16.6, RyanDeCastihos, B, 1:16.14. 7, NateOdegaard, LV,1:17.83. 8, Javier Colton,B, 1:17.96. 9, MatthewScheafer, B, 1:20.89. 10, Ely Crane,B,1:21.53. Girls Team scores —Bend12,Summit10, Lakeview 8, Sisters6. Individual (Top 10, two-run combined times) —1, ShelbyCutter, B,1:13.9t 2, Elinor Wilson, B,1:17.27.3, ShannonBrennan, B, 1:20.93. 4, LuciaCharlton, B, I:23.14.5, Natalie Merrill, Sum, 1:24.21. 6,MargaretBlalock, B, 1:24.43.7,Jessica Bocchi, KU,1:25.35. 8, KianaHohman, B, 1:28.75. 9, CammiBenson, Sis, 1:30.18. 10,SydneyLevine, B, 1:31.37.
Nordic skiing OISRAJimmyJohns Classic At Mt. Bachelor 4.8 K, 3x1Relay Classic 80$8
Team scores —Mountain View16, SouthEugene37,Sheldon54,Ashland73,SummitIND 74, CrookCounty102,NorthEugene103. Top 10 individuals — 1,AlexMartin, S,17;13. 2, samKing, Mv,1a26.3, Imranwolfenden,Mv, 18:44. 4,Kimbert, SE,19:10. 5, WardNikolaus, MV, 20:01. 6,LangdonJunge,SH,20:04.7,DylanGillespie, MV,20:24.8,DakotaThornton,MV,20:25.9,Adi Wolfenden, MV,20:27.10, 6enMladenich,SH,20:31. Team relay — 1, MountainView,12:27. 2, South Eugene,13:24. 3, Sheldon,14:21. 4, Ashland,16:23. 5, Summit IND,16:01. 6, CrookCounty, 19:15.7, NorthEugene,17:41. Girls Team scores —Mountain View18, SouthEUgene33,Ashland54, North Eugene56,Sheldon 93, CrookCountyINC.
Top 10 individuals — 1,Phacelia Cramer, SE, 22:Ot 2,TiaHatton, MV,22;24.3, Clara Honsinger,A, 22:3t 4, RylieNikolaus,MV,23:23. 5,ClairePetitt, NE, 24:19. 6,HalleGlanvile, MV,24:25. 7,LaurenFinkelstei n,sE,24:3z 8,sageHassell,Mv,24;43.9,Melani e Nachtmann, MV,2549.10, Emm aEdgren,MV,2554. Team relay —1,MountainView,14:50. 2,South Eugene,15:51. 3, Ashland,17;46.4, North Eugene, 16:28. 5,Sheldon,20:40.
Boys basketball Nonconterence
At Prairie City HighSchool Redmond 57, Baker47 Redmond(57)—CodyMoss17, Belmontes14, D. Brown8, Benson7, Winters 5, Powell 3,Troutman 2, T.Brown1.Totals1814-2057. Baker(47) —Cline13, Srack11,Hayes10,Sand 7,Leauaster5, Scott1. Totals1416-2547. Redmond 14 16 15 12 — 57 Baker 12 10 11 14 — 47 Three -pointgoals— Redmond:Moss5,Belmontes, D. Brown;Baker: Sand2, LeaMaster. Class1A Mountain ValleyLeague Gilchrist 69, NorthLake51 Gilchrist (69) — TrintonKoch30, Nelson13, Wible11,Boone8, Wolf 4, McG regor3. Totals 26 13-NA 69. NorthLake(51)—DanielLibolt17, McCord15, Henkel7, Murphy6, Gilbert 4, McElhaton z Totals 1711-NA 51. Gilchrist 16 17 16 20 — 69 NorlhLake 15 12 6 18 — 51 Three-pointgoals— Gilchrist: Nelson3, Koch; North Lake:Libolt3, McCord2, Murphy.
Girls basketball sonconterence At Prairie City High School Redmond 39, Baker32 Redmond(39) — SophiaHamilton10, Dannis 8, Lennie6, Edwards5, Toledo3, Reed3, Bergum2, Joyce zTotals 8 14-2739. Baker (32) —MichelleFreese15, Bachman 5, Brown 4,Philips 2, Sands2, Lehman2, Tatlock 2. Totals 13 5-1632. Redmond 14 7 5 13 — 39 Baker 4 12 4 12 — 32 Three-pointgoals— Redmond:Hamilton 2, Toledo; Baker:Freese.
Class1A Mountain Valley League North Lake58, Gilchrist 25 Gilchrist (25) —CassandraBlum9, Longbotham 5,Lowell4, Berling4, Bernabe3. Totals 8 7-15 25. NorthLake(58) —Stockton19,Murphy15, Davidson10,Hand8,philips 2,Fine2, Nelsonz Totals 2013-22 58. Gilchrist 0 7 4 1 4 — 25 NorthLake 14 14 13 18 — 58 Three-point goals — Gilchrist; Berling, Bernabe ; NorthLake:stockton4, Handz Class1A MountainValley League Trinity Lutheran45, Paisley36 Trinity Lutheran(45) —Katie Murphy17, Eidler 9,Cowan4,Spencer4,M.Murphy3,Walker3,Sample 2,Clift 2,Martin t Totals18 9-22 45. Paisley (36) — Mattee Vickerman12, Hyde9, Basurto6, Colahan4, O'Leary 2, Lindsay2, Arrington 1. Totals1212-2236. Trinity Lutheran 9 9 1 2 1 5 — 45 Paisley 9 7 5 1 5 — 36 Three-poingoal t s— none.
Wrestling Frostbite Inysasonal At La PineHighSchool Team scores — La Pine170, Madras162,Taft 136, PleasantHil 111,Brookimgs87, Creswell 80.5, Sisters42,NorthLake24.5, Bandit 0. Top threetinishers 106 —1, lanOppenlander,M.2, TristanWilson, LP.113 —1, BryceVincent, M.2, Austin Russell, BA. 3,EthanMathews LP.120 — 1, ThorinWilson, LP. 2,JaceOppenlander, M.3, Skyler Tidwell, C.126 — 1, JarredDupont, M.2, JesseWitenborn, C.3, Dyut Fetrow,S.132— 1,LoudenOleachea,BA.2, Sean Brantley,LP.3,JessFitzhugh,BR.138— 1,Joe Salsbery,T.2, JimPray, PH.3, Isaiah Ross, BR.145 — 1, James Fahring, PH.2,WiliamIrvin, T.1521, Braden Seiber, C.2, MarkFish, S.3, Samuel Coyle, M. 160 —1, SethSteere,T.2, ChristopherLove, LP. 3, TylerMarrington,BR.170 — Nowrestlers. 182 —1,Michael6auman, M.2, MichaelParker,T. 3, Gage Hardy,PH.195— 1, Noah Casarez, PH.2, Chadon Jaynes, LP.220—1, Samuel Thurman, PH. 2, ageYeager, LP.3, NakomaNewman, T.285 —1, KollebeiNoble,T.2, Miguel Sevila, M. 3, AdenWillyard-Komm, LP.
Olaseni had 15 points and 12 rebounds and Iowa overcame
Conference) set a school re-
withstood an early barrage Illinois' furious comeback to cord for consecutive wins to by Evansville. pull out a victory. start a season. The Orange reNo. 5 San Diego State 65, No. 16 lowa State 81, No. mained one of two undefeat- Colorado St. 56:SAN DIEGO 2 3 Oklahoma 75: A M E S, ed teams in the nation, along — Coach Steve Fisher earned Iowa — Sophomore Georges with No. 4 Wichita State. his 300th win at San Diego Niang scored a career-high Syracuse students camped State behind 24 points from 27 points and Iowa State held out in the cold and were part Xavier Thames and 17 for on for its second win in six of a crowd that was charged Winston Shepard. games. up from the start for the first No. 25 Texas 81, No. 6 No. 19 Saint Louis 87, ACC meeting between these Kansas 69: AUSTIN, Tex- George Mason 81: ST. LOUlongtime powers. as — Isaiah Taylor scored IS — Rob Loe scored 10 of his Duke's Rasheed Sulaimon 23 points, Jonathan Holmes career-high 23 points in overbeat the buzzer in regulation had 22 and Texas claimed its time, leading Saint Louis to with an off-balance 3-point- sixth consecutive victory. the victory. er that tied it at 78. The Blue G eorgetown 64, No. 7 Saint Joseph's 73, No. 21 Devils led 87-84 with 80 sec- Michigan State 60: NEW Massachusetts 68: PHILAonds left in overtime before YORK — M a r k e l S t a rks DELPHIA — Halil KanacevSyracuse rallied. scored 16 points and George- ic scored 18 points and Saint Jabari P a rker h a d 1 5 town ended a five-game los- Joseph's broke away from a points and nine rebounds ing streak. late tie to get the win. before fouling out in regulaBaylor 76, No. 8 OklahoSMU 87, No. 22 Memphis tion for Duke (17-5, 6-3). The ma State70: STILLWATER, 72: DALLAS — Nic Moore Blue Devils, who had won Okla. — Brady Heslip scored had 14 points and 10 assists, five in a row, get their chance a season-high 20 points to and SMU stayed undefeated to avenge the loss in three help Baylor end a five-game at home.
BEND GIRLS GET WIN Bend's Shelby Cutter skis the course of the OSSA
alpine slalom ski race on Saturday on the Leeway run at Mount Bachelor. Cutter finished with the fastest time in
the girls race. For a related story, see B1. Joe Kline/ The Bulletin
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
Boss Continued from B1
Ila ~
Bend-bound Bosses Boss had always planned
I
the head coaching position for the freshman team, and Boss
I
gladly accepted. "I definitely wanted to be
NFL playing days ended. But Bend'? That, he says, was pretty
around kids and basketball
in particular," says Boss, who was a two-time all-league basketball player back at Philomath High. "I missed being around the game. It was kind of my first love. I loved being a part of basketball. So when I got the opportunity to be a part of it again, I just jumped
random.
fa
But in fall 2011, Bree attend-
ed a weddingin the area. "We were in the talks of getting pregnant and looking
.ii~,1'
at where to settle down in the
at the opportunity. And football, that's just what I know."
J
offseason or when football's over," Bree says. "I came to the
Coaching at Summit
wedding, saw the area, and I was like, 'We're going to like
From C.A. Rath (football) and Dave Garvin (basket-
Bend.'"
ball) at Philomath to football
intends to become a strength and performance coach here in
coaches Duke Iverson and Arne Ferguson at Western Oregon to Tom Coughlin with
"We love it," adds Kevin, who
Bend. "We're here for the long haul."
the New York Giants, Boss
has taken bits and pieces from
Boss does not maintain the
each of his former coaches-
same physique of his professional playing days, when he was a prototype NFL tight end at 6 feet 7 inches and 260 pounds — he now weighs a
!
trim 225. Boss was a celebrity back in New York, an easi-
, ,
')'
, r
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
such as coaching styles and techniques. At the beginning of the basketball season, Boss' players asked questions. They knew who he was and were curious. But Boss says, "I think I'm
ly recognizable figure. But in
Kevin Boss and his wife, Bree, look through e collection of media
more ofa normal guy now....
Bend, that is not the case. He is just another Bendite. And that is just fine with the soft-spoken
clippings and other Items fromKevin's rookie season in the NFL
We talk about it (his NFL ca-
with the New York Giants in their Bend home.
reer) sometimes, but for the
Boss. "That's how I would prefer it," he says, "fly under the radar."
Rising rookie Boss came from h u mble
beginnings. He grew up in
"I think I probably hopped up and thought, 'Holy crap. Did I just do that? Wow, Ijust made a play in the Super Bowl.' It's just for a quick second, and then it's like, 'OK, back to business, back
Oregon's Willamette Valley, where he was a multisport high school standout. He went on to blessed enough to be a part of a star as a tight end in football at play that kind of gave the team Western Oregon University, an a little bit of energy and got the NCAA Division II school half ball rolling offensively with The jump from D-II to the pros was significant — like a boulder being taken from a tide pool andthrowninto the ocean. After Boss was selected by the Giants in the fifth round of the 2007 NFL Draft, his top priority
was simply making the team. But late in his rookie season,
that catch that I had."
On the first offensive play of the fourth quarter, New
York quarterback Eli Manning dropped back and unleashed a bullet over the middle to Boss, who made the catch, broke a
tackle and sprinted another 26 yards before being brought down from behind at the New
after starting tight end Jeremy England 35-yard line. Shockey went down with a sea-
"It wasn't even a play that
son-ending injury, Boss was we had in the game plan," Boss thrust into the starting role. recalls. "It was something that And just like that, the rook- we kind of saw, that (New Enie was at the top of the depth gland safety) Rodney Harrison chart for a Giants team about to was really trying to cheat down make pro football history. too much and stop the run. We After dropping its opener drew it up on the sideline, realthat season at Dallas, New ly.... It was pretty wide open." York went on to win its next 10
The 45-yard catch-and-run
straight road games, including alone was longer than the Githreeintheplayoffstoreachthe ants'previous four drives put Super Bowl. There, the Giants defeated the Patriots — who
entered the game as 12-point favorites after putting togeth-
er the first undefeated regular season since the 1972 Miami Dolphins — and became the first NFC wild-card team ever to win the Super Bowl. New York won its first Lombardi
most part, it's pretty normaL" "For us, the players and the
coaches just see him as a tremendous coach who advocates
for kids," Frazier says. "Sometimes, we have to remind ourselves that he was a pro-
fessional football player. His ability to reach out to kids and — Kevin Boss his knowledge of the game, we wanted to take full advantage of that. It surprised me that his down (to the field)." passion and knowledge of the "I was helping my mom game was as strong as it was." down onto the field, and my Boss concedes, however, close friends and my aunts that there was an early speed and undes," Boss remembers. bump. "Looking back, that was prob"I kind of had a hard time ably one of my favorite mo- initially with, you know, 'Why aren't things run this way?' or ments: finding each other." kids are late to practice some-
to the huddle, and do it again.' "
the tiny town of Philomath in
an hour up the road from home.
together, and it would stand as
the longest play from scrimmage in Super Bowl XLII. "I think I probably hopped up and thought, 'Holy crap. Did I just do that?' " says Boss, whose m omentum-shifting
catc h
came in front of more than 71,000 fans in attendance and nearly 100 million more watch-
The unforgettable
Automatic Super Bowl berth and Super Bowl win. After that
a pass to wide receiver Plaxico
people outside our team that
stands in Glendale.
times," Boss says. "I'd been
The two weeks leading up to away from the high school Super Bowl XLIIwere fl ooded game for so long, it took a litwith unforgettable momentstle adjustment period where I from the minute the Giants de- had to take a bit of a step back feated the Green Bay Packers and be like, 'OK, this is not a in the NFC Championship to Coughlin-run program.' " experiencing Super Bowl meFor Boss, whose freshman dia day at University of Phoe- team currently boasts a record nix Stadium, and from walk- of 13-3, this new gig is more ing out of the tunnel onto the than just a spot on the team field for The Big Game to the bench. "To me, coaching is all about celebratory ticker-tape parade down Broadway back in New just helping young boys beYork. come young men," says Boss, Nothing will top having a who will also be co-hosting a child, Boss says. Bringing his local sports radio show with son Zeke into the world was friend and Summit JV boys — and will always be — the basketball coach Josh Cordgreatest thing Boss has ever ell. "That's the bigger picture. It's more than just a game. experienced. But professionally, the Super It's more than trying to win. Bowl will forever sit atop the It's about helping these kids, list. being a positive role model in "And it goes back to be- their life and being a positive ing able to experience that influence. "That's why I got into coachwith my family, having them there by my side throughout ing, and that's why I love my entire sports career, sup- coaching," he continues. "I'm porting me everywhere I've having a blast doing it, trybeen," Boss says. "Being able ing to teach these kids how to
Trophy in 17 years and denied ing on TV around the world. New England its fourth Super " 'Wow, I just made a play in the Bowl title in seven seasons. Super Bowl.' It's just for a quick None of this truly surprised second, and then it's like, 'OK, to share that with my family Boss, however, especially after back to business, back to the and friends, that's what it's all the Giants' final game of the huddle, and do it again.' " about for me." regular season, a 38-35 loss to Five plays later, Manning He went on to play three those same Patriots. connected with wideout David more seasons with the Giants "I remember walking off 7yree for a 5-yard touchdown and one each withthe Oakthe field after (that) game and to give New York a 10-7 lead. land Raiders and the Kansas "That's really when we start- City Chiefs, starting 56 of 61 thinking, 'Man, we can beat these guys,' " Boss recalls. ed to feel pretty confident that games during that time. After "They were untouchable. we might be able to win this suffering a serious concussion They were 16-0, and everyone game," Boss reflects. during the 2012 season, he was thought they were going to Sure enough, with 35 sec- advised by doctors to give up breeze through the playoffs. onds to play, Manning floated football. (Boss is not involved
"Terry and I were like, 'We're really thought we had much of a chance. But all it takes is 53 not leaving these seats until the confident guys. We were con- game is over,' " recalls Bree, fident and believed in ourselves "We felt like (heading down to that we could do it. That was the field early) might jinx it." able to pull off the upset."
Super Bowl XLII
The Giants' defense forced serving the 17-14 victory. The lant Boss raced around, look-
downs in his 13 regular-season ing for someone to hug. games and logged four recepBree and Terry had field tions for 45 yards in the Giants'
three playoff wins, hauled in just one pass during Super Bowl XLII. But that one grab
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. A desert critter saved leader Bubba Watson at least a stroke Saturday in the Phoe-
nix Open. Some pigskin play cost Phil Mickelson to the chagrin of the rowdy fans. Watson's drive on the par-
the 20,000-seat stadium hole where he "lost focus" think-
ing about throwing footballs into the crowd. He had a 72 to drop to 3 under.
Also on Saturday: Dubai Desert Classic:Defending champion Stephen 5 13th went into a desert Gallacher had seven birdies bush and settled next to a and an eagle on the back burrowing animal hole that nine to surge past Rory McIlwould have interfered with roy and take a two-shot lead his swing. He got a free drop, into today's final round. ended up saving par on the Gallacher equaled the Eu-
— the dedication and sacrifices you have to make to be
way to a 3-under 68 and a
ropean Tour record for the
two-stroke lead at 15 under. lowest nine-hole score with Mickelson made a double an inward 28 for a 9-under bogey on the par-3 16th hole, 63 for a 16-under total of 200.
successfuL" — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.
in the lawsuit against the NFL
GOLF ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
TO WENDOVER, NEVADA
sometimes flashes back to the
l ++ICg
Giants' playoff run and Super Bowl XLII when he watches
NFL playoff games each year. (He says he will be watching today's Super Bowl on TV, alongside his wife.) "I'll take it
AIHFAR Hr S tODOING,
f8a
fEEt
three incompletions and re- whenever I can get it." corded a sack, however, pre-
Boss, who made nine catches clock melted away, and a jubifor 118 yards and two touch-
Watson leadsat Phoenix
work hard and what it means to work hard and what it takes
Burress for a 14-yard touch- by current and former players.) game, though, I think that gave down to put the Giants back in He finished his career with 150 our team a ton of confidence, front 17-14. catches for 2,033 yards and knowing that we had almost But, says Boss, "we were still 22 touchdowns. But he would beaten one of the best teams holding our breath that last (35) play in only one more playoff ever put together. seconds." game, markingthe 2007 sea"Once we matched up with As were Bree, Boss' girl- son as the only Super Bowl them in the Super Bowl, we all friend at the time, and his older experience. "But I feel pretty blessed knew that we could beat this brother Terry, who along with team," he continues. "I don't more of Boss' family members that I was able to experience think there were a lot of other and close friends were in the it one time," says Boss, who
really all it took. And we were
ing hours with than the media that gets a glimpse just Continued from B1 here and there of their varied Lynch likely succeeded personalities. in that mission, escaping It was telling that the first the wrath of the NFL for not two questions to coach Pete speaking with the media. Carroll at his Wednesday But the image of him glaring press conference w eren't out from beneath a hat and about how todefend Manhoodie, gold headphones on ning or stop the touchdown top of his head, may be one scoring machine that is the that sticks this week with Denver Broncos. Instead, the Seattle Seahawks, just as they were about Lynch's sure as Richard Sherman's refusal to talk and the perpostgame rant did the week ception that the vaunted Sebefore. attle defense was built on They're the designated bad the backs of players taking guys in this Super Bowl. And banned PEDs. they seem to be enjoying the Carroll's answers o ften role. meander on any topic, and "What is there to get?" this one was no different. He asked receiver Doug Bald- talked about how his team is win. "He doesn't like talking young but is learning from its to the media." mistakes and that he doesn't Worse crimes have been mind allowing them to be incommitted, of course, and dividuals as long as they stay there are more than enough within the team concept. other players on the SeaHe said the coaching staff hawks to fill the void. Sher- has constantl y preached the man himself has emerged as message of having to play a loquacious spokesman for clean, despite the suspension the team, showing a great as recently as last month by depth of thought while an- cornerback Brandon Brownswering all questions that er for substance abuse and have come his way. cornerback Walter ThurBut a team built behind a mond in late November for ferocious defense by a coach the same thing. "I'm not concerned about who left the college ranks under a cloud has some rough the message," Carroll said. edges around it. Chief among "We would like to do right them is the suspension of and get better, so we're trying seven Seattle players for to improve and learn from evsubstance-abuse or perfor- erything that comes along." mance-enhancing drugs vioWhat comes along next is lations by the NFL since 2011. the biggest game any of the Matchedup against Peyton Seahawks have ever played. Manning's great season and M uch has been made of the his quest for a second Super fact it's the first Super Bowl Bowl ring late in his career, any of them will play in, and and it's easy enough to paint they've made much of their the Seahawks in the role of intention to play it as physivillain. cal as any game they've ever "We don't worry about rep- played. utations and things like that," Odds are they'll delivsaid Sherman, who himself er on that promise, though was suspended by the league that's no guarantee of suclast season for PEDs before cess against Manning and winning an appeal. "We Denver'sprecision offense. worry about football and we Seattle isn't likely to win a have a tremendous football shootout, but most handiteam that goes out there and cappers like the Seahawks executes week in and week to win their f irst Super out. At the end of the day this Bowl trophy if the defense is the NFL and that's all that plays like it has all season matters." and Lynch runs the ball At the end of the day, the effectively. Seahawks are in the Super If that happens, all the talk Bowl, too, which is all that about bad behavior will sudmatters to any NFL team. denly go away. They've also got a bit of a And chances are Lynch different take on the team- might even have something mates they spend most wak- to say about that.
ketball coach. Frazier offered
@'
to return to Oregon when his
Neither Boss nor his wife, Bree, who grew up in Salem, has family in Central Oregon. Neither had been to Bend in years.
Dahlberg
ing the role of strength coach. Boss then contacted Jon Frazier, the Summit boys bas-
Here for the long haul
I
J g I
I
Kevin, Bree and Zeke, now 17 months old, moved to Central Oregon in M arch 2013,
y 41ltee
renting a house just across
passes, which allowed them to find Kevin — in Giants jersey
the street from Summit High.
brate with him.
tracked down Storm football
(They have since bought a No. 89 — on the field and cele- home elsewhere in town.) Boss
"(They were) probably just opened the gates for the Giants. "Offensively, we were kind barreling through people," Kevof in a funk a little bit for most in Boss speculates, laughingly. "I'm surprised Terry and I of the game," says Boss, whose team had not scored since a didn't lose each other," Bree field goal on its game-open- adds. "After it calmed down a ing drive and now trailed 7-3. little bit, after we found Kevin, "I was fortunate enough and we went and got his parents
I
coach Joe Padilla during the summer, expressing his interest in getting involved with the program. And this past fall Boss served as an assistant coach at Summit, helping
out with the offensive line and tight ends while also assum-
BookOnline atW ENDOVERFUN.COM Or call866-FLY-WENOover(866-359-9363).
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RAINSDW H OTS L
• CAS INO
I'c;gopenaeI N O T • L
t
C A •
I N O
Seattle Seahawks (15-3) REGULARSEASON Week1 .............at Carolina.......................... W,12-7 Week 2 ............. vs. SanFrancisco ..............W, 29-3 Week .. 3...........vs.Jacksonville................W ,45-17 Week .. 4...........atHouston.......................W ,23-20 Week 5 ............. at Indianapolis ..................L, 34-28 Week6.............vs. Tennessee..................W,20-13 Week7... ..........atArizona........................W,34-22
Week11 ........... vs. Minnesota ..... Week12 ........... Bye Week13 ........... vs. NewOrleans.. Week14........... at SanFrancisco. Week15 ........... at N.Y.Giants....... Week16 ........... vs. Arizona .......... Week17........... vs. St. Louis ........
Week 9............. vs. TampaBay.................. W,27-24
KnowshonMorenocan offer enough balancewith his running to keepthe opposition, well, off-balance. His work asa receiver out of the backfield gives Manning an astonishing five targets who caught 60 or more passes.
BRONCOS OFFENSE
Total yards(avg.): 457.3 Passing Rushing 'I
117.
Postseason: 435.0 I
W, 34-7 L, 19-17 W, 23-0 L, 17-10 W, 27-9
POSTSEASON
Denver'sworkhorse
REGULARSEASON
REGULARSEASON
C AR YDS
CAR YDS
A V G LO N G T D
241 1,038 4. 3
31
10
43
C AR YDS
A V G LO N G T D
CAR YDS
A V G L O NG TD
37
3.8
50 249
5.0 40 3 '
28
1
*
E. Thomas 29 • FS
the NFC
B. Maxwell
Penalty 35
Ititle game.
41 • CB
M. Smith
Postseason:(53)
• @--3 :" 18
C. Clark
B. Mebane
75• LT
92 • DT
"64.5
. Chancellor 31 • SS
D. Thomas
SCORING (PPG) Pointsfor Poi n ts allowed ~24. Postseason Points for ~" 1 6 .5Points allowed
W. Welker
Ranked first in overall defense this year, yielding a league-low 231 points, Seattle was tops against the pass. This is likely where the gamewill be decided. If the secondary led byAll-Pros CBRichard ShermanandSEarlThomascanhandle Manning's myriad receivers in man erage, the Seahawksget a huge edge.
27 • RB
Regularseason Postseason Pass Rush
Seahawksdefense
74• RT
K. Moreno
4• P
M. Prater
Pa s s R u sh
E. Decker
5• K
87• WR 0.6
r 44.0
Spread the love
Why theBroncoswill win theSuperBowl
Broncos olense T. Holliday
Total catches (TDs)
Denver waswalloped 40-10 by Seattle in the preseasonwith Ronnie Hillman fumbling, Montee Ball stumbling and Peyton Manning grumbling. The Broncos are amuchdifferent team now, onethat should return to Colorado onTuesdayfor a victory parade clutching their third Lombardi Trophy. Chewed out by bossJohn Elway after that spectacle in Seattle last summer, the Broncos responded with a season for the ages, scoring more points than anyteam in NFL history (606) with Manning throwing for more touchdowns (55) and yards (5,447) than anyoneever
11• PR-KR
WR Demaryius ~ Thomas (14)
WR
... Eric Decker
87
(11) WR Wes Welker(10)
— Amie Stapleton, The Associated Press
tal catches (TDs) WR
Golden Tate (5)
WR Doug Baldwin (5)
D. RodgersCromartie
RB
Marshawn Lynch (2)
45 • CB
M. Adams 20• FS
had.
They're not always the prettiest of passes, asSeahawks star talker and cornerback Richard Sherman pointed out, but Manning's always won with his brain, not his arm. Manning's "Duck Dynasty" consists of an unprecedented five players who caught 60 or more passes andscored 10 or more touchdowns: DemaryiusThomas, Eric Decker, WesWelker, Julius Thomas andKnowshon Moreno. This could be thedifference Sunday night at MetLife Stadium, where the forecast isn't for weather as frigid as so manyfeared. The Broncos boast enough pick-your-poison talent in their five-receiver sets to befuddle even the stingiest of secondaries like Seattle's. Including the playoffs, Manning has thrown for anastonishing 59 touchdowns this season. Manning is the only player in this game who's won aSuper Bowl, and his top target today could even beJacob Tamme or Bubba Caldwell. Hedoesn't discriminate, he distributes. He doesn't often get duped. Hedeciphers. He doesn't force passes, he finds the best matchup. Because of that:Broncos27, Seahawks23
Not flashy, but effective
Denver scored 606 points, shattering the previous NFLrecord. Peyton Manning will lookfor his wideouts in favorable matchups, and forWesWelker in the slot and TE Julius Thomasover the milddle. Manning will go there quickly to see if Seattle can handle Thomas. TheBroncos do have a running game. The question is whether that ground attack, led by KnowshonMoreno, will get anywhere against Seattle.
TE Julius Thomas (12) 90 • DE
76• LT
59• LB
89• WR
W. Woodyard 52• LB
T. Knighton 94 • NT
4
D. Baldwin
J. Carpenter
M. Unger 60• C
33• SS
N. Irving 56• LB
M. Jackson 97• DE
M. Lynch 24• RB
J. Ryan 9• P
J.R. Sweezy
C. Bailey
64 • RG
24• CB
R. Wilson 3• QB
B. Giacomini 68• RT
M. Robinson 26• F
Oregon connections
D. Ihenacho
S. Williams
67 • LG
Z. Miller 86• TE
S. Hauschka
TEZach Miller (5)
D. Trevathan
R. Okung
L
Denver TE Julius Thomasplayed one G. Tate season of football with 81• PR Portland State — his senior season — but was afour-year P. Harvin starter for the Vikings' basketball 11• KR team. Another former PSUplayer, Seahawks DB DeShawnShead, has had limited playing time this season. Seahawks CBWalter ThurmondandCMax Unger played for the OregonDucks. Seattle OLPaul MCQuistan,who started14 games in the regular season, graduated from LebanonHigh.
G. Tate 81• WR
DEFENSE Yards allowed(avg.): 273.6 Passing R ushing
Ii Point s for ~" 1 4.4Points allowed Postseason Points for ~" 1 6 .0Points allowed
25 • CB
0. Franklin
B. Colquitt
PLAY SELECTION (PCT)
44.
1 4.
R. Sherman
65• RG
18• QB
'r I
First downs: (307) Rushing Passing Penalty
SCORING(PPG)
L. Vasquez
P. Manning
83• WR
136.8
Postseason:292.5
51 • LB
R. Bryant
M. Ramirez 66• C
88• WR
Total yards(avg.): 339.0 Passing Rus h ing
Postseason:358.5
B. Irvin
92 • DT
XX• LG
OFFENSE
Ij-"3
T. McDaniel Z. Beadle
Postseason:289.5
SEAHAWKS
1'1:" 13
B. Wagner 54 • LB
80• TE
DEFENSE Yards allowed(avg.): 3Se.o Passing Rushing
Seattle
Postseason:(27)
53 • LB
C. Clemons
J. Thomas
I
POSTSEASON
MarshawnLynch has been pretty much unstoppable in the layoffs. Powerful back with a burst, he broke ~ a40-yard TD run in
12
.....W, 28-20 ..... W, 27-17 ......L, 34-31 .... W, 35-28 .....W, 51-28 ...... L, 27-20 ..... W, 37-13 .....W, 34-14
Division ............ vs. SanDiego................... W, 24-17 Conf.................. vs. NewEngland ..............W, 26-16
Unleashthe Beast
POSTSEASON
120.0
First downs: (435) Rushing Pa s sing I 293
A V G L O NG TD
301 1,257 4.2
POSTSEASON 14 1
Week10 ........... at SanDiego............ Week11 ........... vs. KansasCity....... Week12 ........... at NewEngland....... Week13 ........... at KansasCity......... Week14 ........... vs. Tennessee......... Week15 ........... vs. SanDiego.......... Week16 ........... at Houston .............. Week17 ........... at Oakland...............
REGULARSEASON Week1 .............vs. Baltimore..................... W, 49-27 Week 2............. at N Y.Giants....................W, 41-23 Week3... ..........vs.Oakland......................W,37-21 Week .4 ............vs.Philadelphia................W ,52-20 Week 5 ............. at Dallas............................W, 51-48 Week .6 ............vs.Jacksonville................W,35-19 Week 7 ............. at lndianapolis ..................L, 39-33 Week .8 ............vs.Washington................W,45-21 Week 9............. BYE
Division............vs. NewOrleans...............W, 23-15 Conf.................. vs. SanFrancisco ............W, 23-17
Week8.............atSt. Louis.........................W,14-9
Denver
DenverBroncos(15-3)
W, 33-10 W, 41-20
Week10 ........... at Atlanta .............
Broncos defense The battered secondary handled Tom Brady quite well in the AFC championship, so it should ride awave of confidence into the Meadowlands. Veteran DBsChampBailey, TonyCarter andDominique Rodgers-Cromartie will have atougher time against these receivers than they did against New England.
Seahawksoffense The offensive line struggled protectingRussell Wilson, but was fine whenpounding it out against the 49ers. The Broncos aren't as physical or as deepdefensively, and without LB VonMiller, there could be vulnerability. Seattle prides itself on an unrelenting physical offensive line. Where the Seahawks sometimes struggle is keeping pass rushers off Wilson. Poised in the pocket, once hegets outside, he creates big plays either running or passing.
PLAY SELECTION (PCT.)
Regular season Postseason Pass Rush
P a s s R ush
54.
'r
59.8
Why theSeahawkswill win theSuperBowl In the midst of being reclusive for most of the weekleading up to his first Super Bowl, Marshawn Lynch spoke atruth about his Se attle Seahawks. What they might lack with a ros ter void of SuperBowlexperience they make upfor with an attitude and approach that PeteCarroll has instilled from the moment heland ed in Seattle. "I stay ready," Lynchsaid. "So there ain't no getting ready." If there is anoverbearing quality Carroll has produced in his four seasons in charge of theSeahawks it's a continuous trend of always being competitive. Theydon't get blown out. Theydon't get overwhelmed. Theydon'tsuccumb in the moment. Theytreat each week as an individual, singular event. The Seahawks are trained to operate in this manner and it's why even againstPeytonManning, even against the most pro lific, pass-happy offense in NFL history, Carroll's team will not be astounded. Seattle's been onthis stage once before, eight years agowith a completely different style of team that was unable to match thephys icality of Pittsburgh. Thing is, this version of theSea hawks look awfully familiar to that Steelers team. Ben Roethlisberger was in his second seasonasthe Steelers' quarterback, just like Russell Wil son is with Seattle. Roethlisberger was less of apasser at that time because theSteelers had arunning game led byWillie Parker and Jerome Bettis that was in the top
five in the NFLduring the regular season. TheSteelers also had ade fense that wasNo. 4 inthe league during the regular season. Ultimately, the strength of the Seahawks is greater than the strength of the Broncos:Seahawks 27, Broncos22 — TimBooth,TheAssociatedPess
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
Li ar its ame-winnin FTwit 11.8semn s e The Associated Press PORTLAND — LaMarcus Aldridge had 27 points and 15 rebounds, Dami-
quarter and by as many as 16 points an Lillard hit a go-ahead free throw during the fourth, but DeRozan nearly with 11.8 seconds and the Portland
NBA ROUNDUP
Toronto. Portland led 69-50 early in the third saved the day for Toronto. The All-Star
Pistons 113, 76ers 96: AUBURN HILLS, M i ch. — Andre D r u m m ond had 22 p oints and 14 r e -
Also on Saturday: Wizards 96, Thunder 81: WASH- bounds, and Detroit's talented frontINGTON — John Wall scored 15
court overwhelmed short-handed
NIO — Tim Duncan had 23 points and 17 rebounds, Tony Parker added
18 points and 10 assists, and San Antonio snapped a three-game slide by rallying past skidding Sacramento.
Trail Blazers edged the Toronto Rap- guard scored 14 points in the fourth of his 17 points in the second half Philadelphia. Suns 105, Bobcats 95: PHOENIX tors 106-103 Saturday night. quarter, including seven points during and Washington took advantage Hawks 120, Timberwolves 113: AT- — Goran Dragic scored 25 points a 16-2 Raptors run that gave them the
The Trail Blazers held off a furious
second-half comeback by Toronto, which wiped out a 19-point deficit to
103-102 lead.
After Lillard hit two free throws to take a 103-102 lead on two free throws regain the lead for Portland, Toronby DeMar DeRozan with 25 seconds to had a final chance, but Matthews remaining. forced DeRozan into a turnover. BaLillard and Wesley Matthews scored tum hit two free throws with 0.1 sec-
of a rare off-game from hometown star Kevin Durant in a win over the
LANTA — Kyle Korver scored 24
and Phoenix made almost 57 per-
points, including a trio of 3-pointers Thunder that stopped Oklahoma in a third-quarter stretch that gave City's 10-game winning streak. Atlanta the lead, and the Hawks Pacers 97, Nets 96: INDIANAP- overcame Kevin Love's 43 points to OLIS — Paul George and Roy Hib- beat Minnesota.
cent of its shots through three quarters to defeat Charlotte.
bert both had 20 points, and Indiana
and Miami avoided a winless sea-
21 points apiece for Portland and Nico- onds left to seal the win.
Pelicans 88, Bulls 79: NEW ORLEANS — Anthony Davis scored 24
overcame an early deficit to beat las Batum added 18. Portland came into the game in a Brooklyn. points and grabbed eight rebounds DeRozan finished with 36 points bit of an offensive slump, scoring seaRockets 106, Cavaliers 92: HOUS- to lead New Orleans past Chicago. and 12 assists, doing most of his dam- son lows of 81 and 88 points in its past TON — J ames Harden returned Grizzlies 99, Bucks 90:MEMPHIS, age during a 30-point second half. He two games. The Blazers found the best from injury to score 28 points and Tenn. — Nick Calathes, subbing for accounted for 22 of the Raptors' 26 wayto get it going was onthe defensive Jeremy Lin had his first career trian injured Mike Conley, scored a casecond-half baskets with 12 field goals end, as they held Toronto to 35 percent ple-double to lead Houston to its reer-high 22 points and the surging and 10 assists. shooting (14 of 40) during the first half third straight win with the victory Grizzlies defeated the Bucks. Kyle Lowry added 23 points for on the way to a 57-40halftime lead. over Cleveland. Spurs 95, Kings 93:SAN ANTO-
Heat 106, Knicks 91: NEW YORK — LeBron James had 30 points,
eightrebounds and seven assists, son in the Big Apple with a victory that snapped New York's four-game winning streak. Clippers 102, Jazz 87: LOS ANGELES — Jamal Crawford scored 27 points off the bench, Blake Grif-
fin had 25 points and 11 rebounds, and the Los Angeles Clippers pulled away in the third quarter.
NBA SCOREBOARD Today'sGame OrlandoatBoston,10a.m. Monday'sGames Orlandoat Indiana,4p.m. PortlandatWashington,4 p.m. PhiladelphiaatBrooklyn,4:30 p.m. Detroit atMiami,4:30 p.m. MemphisatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. NewYorkat Milwaukee,5p.m. SanAntonioat NewOrleans, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Dalas, 5:30p.m. L.A. Clippers at Denver,6p.m. Torontoat Utah,6 p.m. ChicagoatSacramento, 7p.m.
Standings AH TimesPST
EasternConference d-Indiana d-Miami Atlanta d-Toronto Washington Chicago Brooklyn Charlotte Detroit NewYork
Cleyeland Philadelphia Boston Orlando Milwaukee
W L 36 10 33 13 25 21 25 22 23 23 23 23 20 25 21 28 19 27 19 28 16 31 15 33 15 33 13 35 8 39
Pct GB .783 .717 3 .543 11
W L 38 11 34 13 34 13 34 16 32 17 29 18 29 19 26 20 27 21 23 24 22 23 20 26 16 31 16 31 15 32
Pct GB .776 .723 3 .723 3 .680 4'/r .653 6 .617 8
WesternConference
d-Oklahoma Cit y d-San Antonio Portland d-L.A.Clippers Houston Phoenix GoldenState Memphis Dallas Minnesota Denver NewOrleans L.A. Lakers Utah Sacramen to d-divisionleader
.532 11'/r .500 13 .500 13 .444 15'/r .429 16'/r .413 17 .404 17'Ir .340 20'/r .313 22 .313 22 .271 24 .170 28'/r
Pistons113, 76ers 96
41-92 24-40 113.
Philadelphia Detroit
Summaries Saturday'sGames
TORONTO(103) Ross 3-122-2 8, Johnson1-2 0-0 2, Valanciunas 8-11 2-5 18, Lowry7-15 6-7 23, DeRozan 14-29 6-936,Salmons0-3 0-0 0, Patterson6-10 0-0 13, Hansbrough0-1 1-2 1, Novak0-1 0-0 0, Hayes1-3 0-0 2, Stone0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-87 17-25 103. PORTLAND (186) Batum5-107-818, Aldridge8 2211-1427, Lopez 4-8 0-08, Ligard8-154-521, Mathews 7-11 2-2 21, Freeland1-22-24,Wiliams1-40-03, McCollum1-3 2-24, Rohinson0-10-20, Wright0-00-00. Totals 35-76 28-36106.
.340 21 .340 21 .319 22
CHICAGO (79) Dunleavy1-6 3-46, Boozer2-8 0-0 4, Noah5-9 4-814, Augustin8-176 623,Butler2-95-810, Gibson7-143-517, Hinrich 2-50-04, Moham med0-1 0-0 0, Snel0-1 l 1-2 1, Shengelia 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 27-70 22-3379.
NEWORLEANS(88) Aminu3-40-07, Davis10-144-424,AIinca4 40-0 8, Roberts3-100-06, Gordon4-150-0 9, Stiemsma 2-31-25, Rivers3-60-07,Evans4-153-311, Morrow 36017 Wit hey23004.Totals388081888. Chicago 21 18 18 22 — 79 New Drleans 23 2 7 21 17 — 88
Grizzlies 99, Bucks90
Heat106, Knicks 91
ATLANTA (120) Carroll 6-155-6 19,Milsap 9-18 2-3 20,Ayon 1-4 0-0 2,Teague6-15 6-619, Korver7-9 7-8 24, Brand 4-100-1 8, Wiliams2-52-27, Mack3-70-0 7, Schroder 0-0 0-00, Scott 5-93-414. Totals 4392 26-30 120. Minnesota 24 30 21 38 — 113 Atlanta 26 23 38 34 — 120
MILWAUKEE (90) Middleton3-84-412, llyasova5-132-314, Sanders 4-72-210,Knight8-195-623,Wolters4-91-29, Antetokounmp o1-30-03, Butler2-65-610,Pachulia 2-2 0-04,RadulIica0-12-22, Neal 1-80-03. Totals 30-76 21-2590. MEMPHIS I99) Princ e 0-5 0-0 0,Randolph 8-19 7-8 23,Gasol 9-151-419, Calathes8-12 2-3 22,Lee3-81-1 8, Franklin 0-00-0 0, Koufos0-0 0-00, Johnson7-13 0-014, Miller1-32-2 5,Davis0-1 0-00, Leuer2-3 4-48.Totals38-79 17-2299. Milwaukee 24 25 28 21 — 90 Memphis 17 26 24 32 — 99
MIAMI I106) Battier 5-8 2-2 16, James13-22 3-6 30, Bosh 2-11 0-0 4,Chalmers4-82-2 11,Wade10-152-3 22, Andersen 2-2 6-9 10, Allen1-40-0 3, Cole4-5 0-09, Dougla0-01-21, s Beasley0-10-00. Totals 41-7616-24 106. NEWYORKI91) Anthony 8-179-13 26,Smith 6-114-8 20,Chandler 4-50-08,Felton3-90-07,Prigioni2-50-06, Hardaway Jr 7 140 017,Martin 2 30 04 Tyler021-21, Stoudemire1-1 002, Murry00000, WorldPeace0000 0, Aldrich 0-00-00. Totals 33-6714-2391. Miami 29 24 24 29 — 106 New York 22 24 26 20 — 91
Pacers 97, Nets96
Rockets106, Cavaliers92
MINNESOT A (113)
Brewer5-70-010, Love12-2217-1843,Turiaf2-4 1-2 5,Rubio1-33 45, KMartin 5146 717, DCunningham 2-52-26, Barea5-110-012,Shved3-92-4 9, Priceg-30-00,MhahaMoute1-32-24,Budinger 1-30-02.Totals37-8433-39113.
Toronto 19 21 34 29 — 103 BROOK LYN(96) Portland 31 26 26 23 — 106 JJohnson6-142 216, Pierce3 97 715,Garnet 3-Point Goal— s Toronto 6-20 (Lowry 3-7, 0-0 12, Williams3-12 5-5 13, Livingston 10DeRozan 2-4, Patterson1-1, Salmons0-1, Novak 6-9 18 4-4 24,Plumlee2-4 2-36, Anderson3-5 0-0 7, 0-1, Johnson0-1, Hayes0-1, Ross0-4), Portland Teletovi c1-20-02,Terry0-41-21, Evans0-00-00. 8-18 (Matthews5-7, Williams 1-1, Batum1-4, Totals 34-77 21-2396. Lillard1-4, Aldridge0-1, McCollum0-1). Fouled INDIANA I97) Out — None. Rehounds—Toronto 52 (Patterson George7-194-420,West5-77-817,Hibberty-13 9), Portland 51 (Aldridge15). Assists—Toronto 6-6 20, G.Hill 3-8 3-410, Stephenson 5-8 4-414, 27 (DeRozan12), Portland 20 (Lillard 7). Total Granger1-76-78,Scola1-30-02,Watson1-41-23, Fouls—Toronto 30, Portland 24.Technicals—To- Mahinmi1-41-2 3. Totals 31-73 32-3797. ronto defensivethreesecond, Matthews,Portland Brooklyn 24 21 25 26 — 96 CoachStotts. A—19,996(19,980). Indiana 26 21 26 25 — 97
Saturday'sGames Indiana 97, Brooklyn96 Washington 96, OklahomaCity 81 Detroit113,Philadelphia96 Atlanta120, Minnesota113 Houston106,Cleveland92 Memphis99,Milwaukee90 NewOrleans88,Chicago79 SanAntonio95,Sacramento93 Miami106,NewYork91 Phoenix105,Charlotte95 Portland106,Toronto103 L.A. Clippers102,Utah87
Pelicans 88, Bulls 79
OKLAHOMA CITY (81) Durant8-2110-1026, Ihaka6-12 2-214, Perkins 0-3 0-00,Jackson6-170-012, Sefolosha3-50-08, Collison1-10-0 2, Jones1-53-4 5, Fisher2-5 0-1 6,Adams1-20-02,Lamb3-70-06.Totals31-78 16-17 81. WASHING TON(96) Ariza 7-151-118,Nene8-12 0-217, Gortat7-13 0-014, Wal7-18 l 3-417, Beal3-120-0 7, Webster 3-9 2-2 10,Seraphin2-2 0-0 4, Booker1-4 0-02, Temple 3-40-07.Totals41-896-996. Oklahoma City 1 3 26 26 17 — 81 22 2 7 21 26 — 96 Washington 26 17 36 18 — 96 32 26 36 28 — 113
Hawks12p, Timberwolves113
Trail Blazers106, Raptors103
.604 8'/r .565 10'/r .563 10'/r .489 14 .489 14 .435 16'/r
Wizards 96, Thunder81
PHILADELPHIA (96) Turner5-135615, Young7140 314, Hawes2 8 0-0 4, Wroten8-192-218, Anderson5-111-212, Thompson3-7 0-1 7, Allen1-4 2-2 4,Wiliams5-9 2-315, Dedmon 2-43-47. Totals38-8915-23 96. DETROIT (113) Smith4-101-59,Monroe8-105-921,Drummond 10-11 2-522,Jennings6-17 6-720, Caldwell-Pope 4112 212, Stuckey041-21, Single6-125 r 620, Bynum2-52-4 6, Harregson0-40-0 0, Datome0-4 0 00, Jerebko010 00,Vilanueva1-30 02. Totals
Spurs 95, Kings 93
CLEvELAN DI92) Deng10-191-2 24,Thompson2-6 2-2 6, Zeller 2-3 0-0 4,Irving 8-193-321, Jack3-90-0 7, Waiters 8-141-1 19,Sims3-71-2 7, Bennett1-30-0 2, Miles1-60-02,Dellavedova0-10-00. Totals38-87 8-10 92. HOUSTON (106) Parsons3-70-07, Jones8-140-217, Howard1012 6826, Beverley05 000, Harden10-175628, Lin 6-122-215,Casspi 2-64-69, Motielunas2-70-0 4.Totals 41-8817-24106. Cleveland 23 29 21 19 — 92 Houston 31 30 23 22 — 106
SACRAM ENTO(93) Gay9-184-723,Thompson3-64-410, Gray0-1 1-2 1, Thomas 11-26 2-2 26,Thornton3-11 2-2 8, Acy1-4 0-02, Williams3-5 7-814, Landry0-20-0 0,McLemore2-70-04,McCallum 2-30-05.Totals 34-83 28-2593. SANANTONIO(96) Brown0-2 2-2 2, Duncan8-13 7-1223, Splitter 1-1 0-02,Parker8-191-318,Joseph1-40-02, Diaw 5-64-614,Belinelli 3-100-08,Ayres1-20-02, Mills 6-141-1 15,Bonner3-40-0 7, DeColo 0-02-2 2. Totals 36-7617-2695. Sacramento 24 2 9 26 16 — 93 San Antonio 27 2 5 19 24 — 96
Suns105, Bobcats 95 CHARLD TTE(95)
Kidd-Gilchrist 4-63-311, McRo berts 4-90-011, Jefferson4-15 2-410, Sessions3-10 4-611, Henderson3-7 0-06, Pargo5-121-2 12,Zeller 4-7 3-5 11, Douglas-Roberts0-4 3-4 3, Tolliver 4-7 3-314, Biyombo1-12-24, Adrien1-10-02. Totals33-79 21-29 96.
PHOENIX (106) Tucker3-42-28, Frye3-80-0 9, Plumlee3-50-0 6, Dragic10-144-525,Green2-60-05, Mark.Morris 4-135-613,Marc.Morris5-93-415, Barbosa2-30-0 4,Smith4-80-08,Len1-30-02,Goodwin1-32-2 4, Christmas0-24-4 4, Kravtsov1-20-0 2. Totals 39-88 20-23106. Charlotte 27 14 22 32 — 95 Phoenix 32 27 31 15 — 105
Clippers102, Jazz87 UTAH(87)
Jefferson 6-103 419,Wiliams3-113-49, Kanter 10-193-623,Burke2-130-06,Hayward3-138-915, Burks1-81-2 4,Gobert 2-21-3 5, Garrett1-3 0-03, Rush0-00-00, Thomas0-10-00, Clark1-1 0-03. Totals 29-8119-28 87. L.A. CLIPPERS (102) Barnes3-73-69, Griffin9-197-1225, Jordan4 6 2-410, Cogison 4-82-211, Redick 1-62-24, Hollins 1-1 0-0 2,Crawford9-15 8-927, Dudley1-4 0-02, Turkoglu3-40-26, Green2-2 0-04, Bullock1-10-0 2,Mullens0-10-00.Totals38-7424-37102. Utah 21 21 23 22 — 67 L.A. Clippers 19 2 3 34 26 — 102
Leaders ThroughFriday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Durant,OK C 47 477 408 146731.2 Anthony,NYK 43 411 262 1168 27.2 James,MIA 44 421 253 1153 26.2 45 372 282 1129 25.1 Love,MIN Curry,GO L 45 379 190 1101 24.5 Aldridge,PO R 46 459 201 1120 24.3 Harden,HOU 40 287 295 948 23.7 Griffin, LAC
49 420 279 1127 23.0
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Calendar, C2 Obituaries, C4 Weather, C6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. HOUSE VOTE
• On Wednesday, the House of Representatives approved a compromise version ofthe Farm Billthree years in the making. The 10-year, $956 billion bill includes $8.6 billion in cuts to food stamps. The savings werenot achieved by removing participants from the program's rolls, but by changing the minimum spending on heating utilities required per household to qualify for additional food stamp benefits. The Farm Bill passed bya 251-166 margin, with 162 Republicans and89 Democrats voting for it. Sixty-three Republicans and 103 Democrats voted no.
U.S. HIGHWAY 97
BRIEFING Two killedin crash near Sistes ID'd
IMIlCBS, FIOFI IBS WBI By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
A multiyear effort to
improve U.S. Highway 97 conditions and decrease congestion is crawling forward, with transportation officials updating city and county officials last week on the
likely cost of wide-ranging upgrades. In 2011, Deschutes and
Jefferson counties, Bend, Redmond, Madras and La
Pine joined with the Oregon Department of Transporta-
tion to commission a highway upgrade study called Trip 97. The idea is to coordinate
improvement projects on the 80-mile stretch of highway between La Pine and Ma-
dras, prioritizing work that would make roads safer while
potentially providing an economic boon for communities. The proposed improvement projects haven'tbeen decided yet, but Deschutes County Public Works Director Chris Doty offered a first look at
potential costs and funding
mechanisms during a meeting with county commissioners last week. Trip 97's long-term goal is to raise $60 million in local funds over a 20-year period, Doty said. He laid out a series of 14 possible funding options, including a vehicle registration fee, diverting
"Collectively, the concept is viable," Doty told commis-
sioners. Pooling $60 million from the cities and counties could help leverage as much as $90 million from state and federal highway grants. "The way to move forward
and get state and federal money is to put matching
property and income taxes or
money on the table," Doty
implementing a local gas tax. But he stressed they were
said. "It usually falls to local
all theoretical at this point
requirements, or they can't move forward" with projects. SeeHighway/C5
and some would require changes to state laws.
governments to meet the
— Bulletinstaffieport
Greg jijralden (R)................ Y Eah Blumenauer (D)..........N Suzanne Bonamici (D) ...... Y Peter DeFazio(D)...............N Kurt Schrader (D).............. Y
L
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!
• On Tuesday, the House of Representatives passed legislation that would permanently ban federal spending on abortion. The bill also prohibits federal subsidies to insurance plans that cover abortion under the Affordable Care Act. Thematter passed by a227-188 margin, with six Democrats joining with 221 Republicans in voting yes. OneRepublican and 187 Democrats voted no, and onemember, Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., voted "present."
The Bulletin Call a reporter 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
Submissions • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com
Greg jijralden (R)................ Y Eah Blumenauer (D)............ Did not vote Suzanne Bonamici (D) ......N Peter DeFazio(D)...............N Kurt Schrader (D)..............N
U.S. SENATEVOTE • On Thursday, the Senate voted to delay the implementation of higher flood insurance payments for some homeowners, which were set to increase undera2012 law. In some cases, the flood insurance premiums areso high that homeowners would no longer beable to afford their mortgages. The bill would also let homeowners keep their current flood insurance subsidies. The measure passed, 67-32, with 53 Democrats and 14 Republicans supporting it. OneDemocrat and 31 Republicans voted against it. Jeff Mehdey(D)...... Ron j/jr)rden(D)....... — Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin
The two menkilledin Fridayafternoon'sfatal crash onU.S.Highway20 west of Sistershavebeen identified. According tothe Oregon StatePolice,61-yearold BruceSirnio, of Salem, was driving westbound on the highwaywhen for unknownreasonshe reportedly crossedinto the eastboundlane, hitting nearly head-on a pickup truckdrivenby42-yearold AndrewDeverna,of Newberg. Bothmen were kiled in the crash,andWendi Dion, a41-year-old from King City whowasa passenger inthe pickup, was taken toSt.Charles Bend for non-life-threatening injuries.
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to
news©bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" in thesubject, and include acontact name and phonenumber.Contact: 541-383-0354 Leslie Pugmire Hole IThe Bulletin
David Nordlund, 14, at left, and Mitchel Cartwright, 16, confer about their game concept during a "game jam" Saturday at Descutes County Fair 8 Expo Center in Redmond. The event was sponsored by Deschutes 4-H and Techstart to introduce kids to the Oregon Game Project Challenge, a video game design competition held in May.
Kids team up to design
asu remevi eo ame
By Leslie Pugmire Hole
awesome," said 12-year-old
The Bulletin
Mechai Meadows as he and
or a few short hours
F
Saturday, aliens, dragons, cyborgs and one Giant Hairy Sandwich Beast convened, battling for supremacy in a universe created by a handful of kids. "Oh mygosh, I can tell this game is goingto be
jam, introducing them to the possibilities of video
his fellow No Name Random game design with the help Awesomeness teammembers of industry mentors and De-
4-H after-school program coordinator who leads a Game Project Challenge teamin
bent over atable littered with
schutes County 4-H, which
Bend. "But they think about these kind of innovative
stickynotes, markers, cookie wrappers andslips ofpaper.
sponsored the event at the
things all the time, and this
Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center.
gives them a chance to work with other kids to understand
Mechai and 11 other mid-
dle andhigh schoolers were participating in the Oregon Game Project Challenge
"Not many of these kids
are on the track or football team," said Laura Cuthbert, a
the value workingtogether as ateam."
SeeGaming/C5
Well shot!
• School news and notes: Email newsitems and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email eventsto communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" online at bendbulletin.com. Details on the calendar pageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0358
Reader photos
• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the
Outdoors section. Submityour best work at beudbulletiu.com /suow2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotosO beudbulletiu.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include es much detail es
possible — when end where you took it, end any special technique used — eswell es your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (et least 6 inches wide end 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
In 1914, railrOadOffiCial PerCeiVeSgeneral SenSeOf OPtimiSm Compiled by Don Hoiness fromarchivedcopiesofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Feb. 1. 1914
of dullness which has prevailed for some time is about over. In Portland during the past ten days there has been
a very marked change in the conditions — a decided improvement in every line. Here in Bend, too, it seems
cases of the poultry product were shipped to Portland by O'Donnell Bros. The sunny weather that has prevailed this month has given the hens
in this vicinity encourage-
that there is a similar reawak-
ment, with the result that they
have been laying briskly. The price of eggs has dropped
W.C. Wilkes, assistant
ening, nearly all the business men with whom I have talked speaking very hopefully."
general passenger agent of
Mr. Wilkes returned to his
the S.P. 8t S. Railway system
headquarters in Portland last night.
Optimism is returning
YESTERDAY
spent yesterday in Bend calling on the business men and ascertaining the general business conditions. "There is a strong feeling of optimism everywhere now," he said, "and everybody
After having had to send out for years for its egg supply, to a large extent, Bend is beginning now to turn
seems to feel that the period
the tide. Sunday night two
Eggssentto Portland
from 40 to 25 cents and the market became oversup-
plied, hence the exportation. It is expected that this first shipment will be followed by others.
eral Laws of Oregon, Session person, firm or corporation of 1913, affecting the wages of employ women in any indusadult women workers will go try in the State of Oregon into effect Feb. 7. There will for more than fifty-four (54) be few persons affected in hours a week. Bend by the ruling. The order (3) Nor shall any such peris as follows: son, firm or corporation pay inexperienced, adult women (I) No person, firm or corporation shall employ any workers employed by time experienced adult women in rate of payment, at a rate of any industry in the State of wages less than six dollars Oregon, paid by time rate of ($6.00) a week. payment,ataw eekly wage (4) No person, firm or rate of less than eight dollars corporation owning or conand twenty-five cents ($8.25) ducting any mercantile, mana week, any lesser amount ufacturing or laundry estabbeing hereby declared inade- lishment shall employ women quate to supply the necessary workers in such establish-
Wage ruling in effect Feb. 7 cost of living to such women
ment later than the hour of
A state-wide ruling made by the Industrial Welfare
workers and to maintain
Commission, under the Gen-
(2) Nor shall and such
eight-thirty (8:30) o'clock p.m. of any day. SeeYesterday/C3
them in health.
C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
E VENT TODAY MASTER-FLY:A fly-tying competition in the format of popular reality cooking shows; free for spectators, $5 for competitors; 11 a.m.; Fin and Fire, 1604 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 12, Redmond; 307-680-0652 or www.facebook. com/centraloregonmasterfly. NOTABLES SWINGBAND: Featuring blues, Latin, rock'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-728-8743 or www.notablesswingband.com. "ALICEIN WONDERLAND": Bend Experimental Art Theatre produces the play based on the Lewis Carroll novel; $15, $10 for students; 4 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beatonline.org.
ENDA R EUGENEBALLETCOMPANY: The company performs Scheherazade, Bolero and more; $12-$42; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-485-3992, eballet©eugeneballet.org or www. eugeneballet.org.
FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and foodindowntown Bend andthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. THE CABINPROJECT:Orchestral pop-rockfrom Portland, with Genders; part of Mt. Bachelor Apres Ski Bash series; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's FeetCommons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066 or www.
crowsfeetcommons.com.
VagabondOperaandBabyGramps
AN EVENINGWITH AMY SPEACE AND KENNY WHITE: Folk and Americana music; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com.
RODGERS ANDHAMMERSTEIN CONCERT:Featuring Bend's finest musical performers and choral groups from around Central Oregon; proceeds benefit Court Appointed Special Advocates of Central Oregon; $30-$75 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.
FRIDAY
"WARRIORS DON'TCRY":A onewoman show highlighting racism, MONDAY bullying and the power of language; contains racially charged language; "AMERICANVIOLET": A screening $10, $5 children12 and younger, of the film about a single mother's plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 struggles to proveherinnocence; p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall free; noon-2 p.m.; Central Oregon St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. Community College, Redmond towertheatre.org. campus, 2030 S.E College Loop, SUNRIVER CHILLOUT:Featuring Redmond; 541-383-7412. a skating party, dummy downhill, K-9kegpull,m ushermadness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment and more; free for spectators, TUESDAY registration prices vary per event; "AMERICANVIOLET": A screening 7 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, of the film about a single mother's 57100 Beaver Drive; 541-585struggles to prove her innocence; 5000 or www.sunriversharc.com/ free; 5-7 p.m.; Central Oregon sunriver-chill-out. Community College, Hitchcock "CHASING ICE":A screening of the Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, 2012 documentary (PG-13) about Bend; 541-383-7412. National Geographic photographer GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A James Balog capturing the changing screening of the documentary glaciers across the Arctic; free, "The Island President" about the refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; president of the Maldive Islands Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County fighting global warming; free; Library, 134 S.E E St., Madras; 5416:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM 541-815-6504. SERIES:Ascreening ofthe best TAO- PHOENIX RISING:The films from the 2013 edition of The traditional Japanese Taiko Archaeology Channel International drummers perform; $32-$45 plus Film and Video Festival; $6; 7:30 fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Central p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall Oregon Community College, Boyle St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. Education Center, 2600 N.W. College towertheatre.org. Way, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. archaeologychannel.org. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS, LOVE 8 HATE:Local storytellers WEDNESDAY perform, with special guests; $15 plus fees in advance, $18at TOAD THE WET SPROCKET:The the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood California folk-pop band performs; $34-$39 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, solospeak.com. 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. ANGELINE'S BIRTHDAYBASH:The
THURSDAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
perform, with Bend Circus Center; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 8-11 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com.
SATURDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA:
org.
TRIO VORONEZH: The Russian
folk bandperforms; $60, $25
Courtesy Rob Shanahan
Toad the Wet Sprocket, a California folk-pop band, is slated to perform at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St. in Bend. For more information, visit www.towertheatre.org or call 541-317-0700. RUSALKA":Starring Renee Fleming in a soulful fairy-tale opera, with Piotr Beczala as the prince; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. BEND INDOOR SWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. SUNRIVER CHILLOUT: Featuring a skating party, dummy downhill, K-9kegpull,mushermadness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment and more; free for spectators, registration prices vary per event; 10 a.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 541-5855000 or www.sunriversharc.com/ sunriver-chill-out. FIRST ANNIVERSARYPARTY: Featuring live music, birthday specials and more; free; 5 p.m.; W orthy Brewing Company,495 N.E. Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776 or www.worthybrewing.com. DADDY DAUGHTER DANCE:A Mardi Gras themed dance for fathers or father figures and daughters; $32 per couple, $10 per additional guest, registration requested; 6-9 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-310-8582 or www. redmondrotary.org. FIREARMS ANDFASHION:A fashion show with historical characters outfitted with the guns they would have carried in the late1800s; no host bar; $5, $3 for members, registration requested; 6 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943 or www.bendcontradance.org. FRIENDS OFMUSIC'S "FOR THE LOVE OFMUSIC": Concert-rock violinist Aaron Meyer performs, with the Summit High School band, orchestraand choir; silent auction and raffle; proceeds benefit Summit High School music programs; $15 in advance,$20 atthedoor;7 p.m ., doors open at 6 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-815-5333 or www. friendsofmusic-shs.org. ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES:A screening of the best films from the 2013 edition of The Archaeology Channel International Film and Video Festival; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www.
archaeologychannel.org.
SOMETHING WONDERFUL:THE RODGERS ANDHAMMERSTEIN CONCERT: Featuring Bend's finest musical performers and choral groups from around Central Oregon; proceeds benefit Court Appointed Special Advocates of Central Oregon; $30-$75 plus fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS: LOVE 8 HATE:Local storytellers perform, with special guests;
$15 plus fees inadvance, $18at
the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. solospeak.com. AARON CRAWFORD: The Seattle country artist performs; $3 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com.
BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller Rich Goss and music by A Scottish Heart; $8 at the door; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend,
LSD to OMG"; $15, $13 for KPOV members in advance, $17 at the door; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.
Feb.12 "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: RUSALKA"ENCORE:Starring Renee Fleming in a soulful fairytale opera, with Piotr Beczala as
the prince; operaperformance
transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. ROSE WINDOWS:The Seattle psych rock band peforms; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
mcmenamins.com.
THURSDAY Feb.13 "BYE BYEBIRDIE": A presentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Majeski; dress in your 50's best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10at the door; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541504-3600 or linda.nye©redmond. k12.or.us.
Feb.9
Feb.14
SOMETHING WONDERFUL:THE
YEE PAW!:A country western
2]
benefit BrightSide Animal Center; $50, $10 for music and dancing only; 4:30 p.m., 7 p.m. music and dancing; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. brightsideanimals.org/events/
yee-paw.
OREGONWINTERFEST:Winter carnival featuring a market place, live music, artisan fire pits, ice and
snow sculpturesandmore; $6in
advance at OnPoint Community Credit Union, $8 in advance other locations, $10 on event day; 5-10 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3120131 or www.oregonwinterfest.
com.
VALENTINE DINNERAND DANCE: A baked cornish game hen dinner with music by Bradley D; leave a message with name, contact number, date of reservation and the number in your party; $15, $25 5-7 p.m. dinner, dancing until closing; American Legion Post 45, 52532 Drafter Road, La Pine; 541-536-1402. SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL'S VALENTINE'S DAYCONCERT 8 DINNER: TheSalem BigBand performs love songs, with dinner and dancing; $80; 6 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall,17600 Center Drive; 541-593-9310 or www.
sunrivermusic.org.
WEDNESDAY
95
dinner and adancelesson; proceeds
per couple, reservations requested;
performs "Boomeraging:From
FRIDAY
"BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Majeski; dress in your 50's best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 at the door; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541504-3600 or linda.nyeIeredmond. k12.or.us. "THE CANTERVILLE GHOST": The comedic play by Oscar Wilde about a ghost living in an old mansion in England; $8, $5 students and seniors; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300. "ITHAPPENED ONE NIGHT":A screening of the1934 classic film (NR); free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. jcld.org. "LOVE LETTERS":Cascades Theatrical Company presents the A.R.Gurneyplayaboutloveand friendship between childhood friends; $19, $15 for seniors ages 60 and older, $12 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC SERIES:A Valentine's Day concert featuring Catgut Trio; $42, $15 students and children 18 and younger; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. highdesertchambermusic.com.
0IL CHANGE
INCLUDES 5 QUARTS CONYENTIONALOIL& FILTER. LUBRICATE CHASSIS & CHECK ALL FLUIDS.
20 PQINTsAFETY INsPEGTIQN
GOOD THROUGH 2/28/14 E gPERIENCE 1S EVERYTHi g G
governtheindustry. The Oregonian "I am saying that becauseI ASHLAND — Rep. Peter want to let you know it's perBuckley, D-Ashland, on Fri- sonal to me," he said. day urged prospective mediBuckley told th e cr o w d: cal marijuana retailers to be "That is the pledge we have responsible business owners, made. You gottahave my saying he hadrisked his own back on this." "political credibility" to get He said he wanted people the dispensary bill passedlast in the industry to understand the "political framework" for year. Buckley got two standing the law and the stakes for leovationsfrom thoseattending galization if theindustry fails. last week's Oregon Medical Later, hesaid he's particularly Marijuana Business Confer- concerned about diversion of ence in Ashland, the first of marijuana to the black martwo conferences in O regon ket and nuisance complaints that focus onthe state's mari- from neighbors and other juanaindustry. businesses. "You have the chance to Buckley said he and Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, show the state ofOregon what put their credibility with fel- it could be, what a legalized low lawmakers on the line to marijuana system could look get House Bill 3460 passed. like," he said. "It's in y o ur
islation that would allow lo-
said.
cal governments to regulate medical marijuana facilities. Buckley, who opposesthe legislation, saidhe thinks lawmakers who opposethe proposal have a "good chance" to block the bill.
Buckley said his biggest worry for t he in dustry is greed.
A week be fore Go v. John Kitzhaber signed the bill into
hands now."
calls from reporters in Oregon
law, Buckley heard the governor was hearing from opponents and might not sign the bill. Buckley pledgedthe industry would be well run
could show they can work,
and that rigorous rules would
open at 6 p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills,1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-4808830 or ja©prep-profiles.com. WILL DURST:Thepolitical satirist
SUNDAY
Legislatorseeksdecorum on medicalpot "It will hu rt a nd d amage
Several Oregon cities, including Medford, have taken steps to restrict or prohibit dispensaries. Buckley said medical marijuana
pa t ients s h o uld
~
"Cities like Medford will get overit in time," he said.
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then "we have a damn good ic he's worked onin his decade shot at passing legalization in in the Oregon Legislature. November."
or beverage toshare;$10-$15, reservation requested; 7p.m., doors
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OREGON NEWS
By Noelle Crombie
for students younger than18; 2 and 6:30 p.m., doors open 45 minutes prior to show; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-350-7222, redmondcca@hotmail.com or www. redmondcca.org. HOUSE CONCERTSINTHE GLEN: The Eugene Americana singersongwriter Beth Woods performs, with Los Ratones; bring dish
Valentine's dance with live music,
"People w a nt t o
know
Lawmakers in F ebruary what's going on, how is it gowill consider proposed leg- ing to evolve in Oregon," he
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STATE OF OREGOM • Gev. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretaryef StateKateBrown,D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301
Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. OI;us
Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum,D
1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissioner BradAvakian 800 N.E. OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
REGON MCKENZIE RIVER
AROUND THE STATE
enaes is u e oxia eve The Associated Press
a cleanup plan. The list ul-
which made the amount found b e s u b mitted in those fish seven times highagencies in Oregon are at odds to and approved by the U.S. er than the new acceptable over whether toxic mercury is Environmental Pr o t e ction level. present in the McKenzie Riv- Agency. T he new s t a ndard w a s er, which has a reputation as The McKenzie is reputed for modeled on a federal threshone of the state's purest rivers. pristine waters that flow down old and adopted to protect The toxic substance was from heavily forested moun- residents who eat a lot of fish, EUGENE — State and local
timately w il l
reportedly found in the river's tains and snow packs. DEQ officials said. While fish, but some officials say The Eugene Water & Elec- drinking or swimming in the state's fish sampling pro- tric Board, which draws its water that contains mercucess was flawed, and its new drinking water from the McK- ry doesn't pose a health risk, standard for how much can enzie, says the toxic substance eating too much fish with elbe present in the species is too is not present in the river. The evated mercury levels can be stringent. utility says it regularly sam- dangerous. The debate follows a pro- ples raw river water and has The Eugene Water & Elecposal by the state Department not detected mercury in any tric Board says the types of of Environmental Quality to samples. fish tested were not the best add the McKenzie and other The state f ound a ccept- choice because they are mirivers to a list of mercury-con- able levels of mercury in the gratory fish that swim in both taminated waters. I t
c o u ld river's fish in 2008 and 2009.
the McKenzie and Willamette
mean the river may be tapped The DEQ took tissue samples r ivers, where mercury i s for future studies, cleanups or of northern pikeminnow and present. "Tying it back to the McKeven advisories limiting the large-scale sucker that were amount of fish people should found swimming near the enzie is kind of a stretch in eat. mouth of the McKenzie in the our minds," said Karl MorgenThe state would have to de- Springfield area. stern, EWEB's drinking water termine where the mercury But the DEQ later approved source protectioncoordinais coming from and develop tougher mercury standards, tor. "If there isn't a mercury
GetSIN8p llfllfef —A manwho police saydroveagetaway car in afatal gang shooting inWoodburnhas beensentencedto18years in prison. MarkAntonio Camarena was sentencedin Marion County Circuit Courton Friday.The23-year-old Camarenapleadedguiltyto a manslaughtercharge in October.Twenty-eight-year-old MichaelMcGovern, ofWoodburn, died of a gunshotwoundin the September2012shooting. Authorities said Camarenadrov eagreenHondasedanwithDanielNepomucenointhepassenger seat.After McGovernreportedlyflashed ahandsignal indicating his gang affiliation, Nepomuceno is saidto haveshot himwith asilver handgun. Camarenathendrove awayfrom the scene,according toauthorities. The 22-year-oldNepomucenopleadedguilty to murderandwassentenced in October tolife in prisonwith thepossibility of paroleafter 25 years.
source to start with, you're kind of chasing a needle in the haystack to find mercury that
doesn't exist." Instead of the pikeminnow,
the state should have sampled tissue from rainbow trout farther upstream, because they are resident fish that stay in
SeX Crime —An Omaha,Neb., manis going to prisonin Oregonfor reportedly havingsexwith agirl youngerthan12more thana decadeago. Jason MichaelGarcia,39, wassentencedFridayto eightyears andfour months in prison.Garciapleadedguilty last weekto twocounts of first-degree sodomy.Thestate accusedGarcia ofharming thegirl in September 1997ata home inHermiston. Thevictim didnot report thecrime for 12 years, according tocourtdocuments. Anindictment inJuly 2013ledto Garcia's arrestand thecharges. Garciaalso facedafelony charge onsuspicion of indecencyinvolving achildin BexarCounty, Texas.Thedistrictattorney's officetheredismissedthatcase after Garciaenteredthe guilty plea.
the McKenzie, Morgenstern sard. The state chose the pike-
minnow, because they are a predator and r esident fish,
according to the DEQ. The state didn't sample rainbow trout, because it's difficult to
tell which rainbows have been living in the McKenzie their
COfVBllhhSINSpepel'pleilt SOIII —Theproperty housing a Corvallis newspaperplant hasbeensold to agroup of local investors whoplan to tear down the building andreplace it with anewhousing development. The Gazette-Timespublisher RickParrish saidthe$1.8 milion transaction closed onFriday. LeeEnterprises, the newspaper's lowa-based parent company,putthe property upfor saleearly lastyear. TheGazette-Times says that thenewspaper plansto relocate to smaller officeselsewherein Corvallis to savemoneyon operating costs. Thepaper hasalready consolidated its printing operationandsomeother functions with its sister paper inAlbany.Thenewspaper'sstaffisdowntoabout25employees.Three neighbors whosought to blockthe redevelopmenthavesince withdrawn their legalappeal.
whole lives.
Another problem, critics say, might be the state's overly tight mercury standards.
"I'll be surprised if there was a water body in Oregon that passesthese standards,"
said Jeff Ziller, a district fish biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
— From wire reports
Pendleton farmers'co-op pursuesnational partner The Associated Press
BP gasstation fees ruled to be unlawful
added capital would help up- fect the co-op name, brand, grade grain elevators, technol- business model or its local eastern Oregon farmers' coogy andprovideaffordableag- control. operative is hoping to partner Fortune 100 company focused ronomic services. In recent years, farmers' cowith a large agribusiness col- on global energy, grains and The two organizations have ops have faced low commodity lective to spur new growth and foods. a history of working together. prices,rising costs and operinvestment. Pendleton Grain G r owers They formed a joint venture 15 ational issues, among other P endleton G r ai n Gr o w - signed a loan agreement last years ago at the Feedville plant problems. Forming mergers ers reportedly entered into a month with CHS Capital for in Hermiston. and other alliances has been non-binding agreement with $10 million. Officials say the The new deal would not af- one solution to the issue. PENDLETON — A longtime
Yesterday Continued from C1
75 YEARSAGO For the week ending Feb.I,1939
O'Donnell Field work is planned
CHS Inc. of St. Paul, Minn. to
pursue a possible partnership. CHS Inc. is a producer-owned
"East of the Cascades," Phil
F. Brogan's first book, was the
property on East Second and best selling nonfiction voler, city manager, said today. The work is preparatory to enlarging the Elks ball park
AmPm minimarkets. The case alleged that BP
Phil and Steve Mahre — will compete this week in the Post
On Friday the top 32 rac-
East Third streets, C.G. Reit-
The day's efforts resulted in the installation of 20 new
didn't follow Oregon laws in alerting customers of the charge and that many customers were not aware of the charge until the gas was already pumped into their car. The jury's decision on Friday allows consumers who bought gas between Jan. I,
wood ducks. The bird houses
2011, and Aug. 31, 2013, to recover up to $200 for the
as part of the Coors Light Pro Racing team. homes for some fortunate ers will compete in the giant were placed 12 feet high in slalom and on Sunday in the the trees to provide the ducks
violations of the Oregon Un-
slalom.
The company said it was disappointed with the verdict and plans to appeal, but it will no longer charge the 35 cent fee as it reviews "op-
Professional racing is dif-
ume in the Pacific Northwest this past week, a survey of re-
f erent than W orld Cu p o r amateur events. Two courses
tail bookstores shows.
are set up side by side and
Eriksen store in R edmond,
The houses to be moved are and will be in Prineville on located on the left outfield of Friday afternoon. the ball diamond. The third order of books by The Works Progress Ad- the Eriksen store in Bend was ministration h a s all o t t ed nearly exhausted today. More $13,065 for the project which are being ordered. will c o s t ap p roximately $17,330. The city, sponsor TranSplant Of heart
with a safe abode as well as a
birds-eye view of their habitat around the lake. The snowmobilers offered
ent," the university said.
Surgeons said this dispar-
jected to rather cruel treat-
ity must be minimized in fuc ountrymen. ture operations of this nature.
ment by hi s These latest unfounded reports that suggested he was turning his allegiance away from the land of his birth were one more sample, and the chances are that if all the
facts were known, his acceptance of a German decoration
ARCO retail locations."
The case was originally filed in December 2011 and sought to create a class out
of Oregon customers who'd paid the fees at any of about 50 stations.
Consumers at ARCO can pay with cash or debit cards. The case was brought by Portland lawyer David Sugerman. He w ould n ot comment on the case, which
will move into a new phase on Monday. A
s t atement
from Sugerman's office said nearly 3 million people are covered by the class action suit.
tions and alternatives." BP
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
from each course advance to comprise the round of 32
pros. S kiers are then put i n brackets and race their opponent twice. The skier with the
greater time advantage after two runs advances.
tried on dying man The pros accumulate points $4,265 of the total cost of enSurgeons transplanted a in each round, with 35 points larging the grounds, building heart into the body of a man going to the event winner. new grandstands and bleach- dying of heart failure Thurs- The racer who earns the most ers, fencing and landscaping. day night. The transplant points at the end of the season heart beat for an hour before is named the U.S. Pro Team Lindbergh criticism the patient died. Champion. unjustified (Editorial) Physicians here said it was Phil Mahre won the gold The criticism of Charles believed to be the first heart m edal in the slalom at t h e L indbergh t hat s w ept t h e transplant in a human. 1984 Sarajevo Olympics, and country when it was reportSurgeons said they were he won a silver in the slaed that he was about to take gratified to confirm that pro- lom in the 1980 Lake Placid up his residence in Berlin for cedures previously worked games. He was three times the winter and that he was out in the experimental labo- the International Skier of the advising the Germans on ratory with animals also are Year and five times the U.S. their aviation program now effective in man. Skier of the Year. He also was appears to have been entirely University surgeons have the World Cup overall chamunjustified. Instead of Berlin, transplanted hearts in more pion from 1982 to 1983. Colonel Lindbergh has taken than 200 animals over a periSteve Mahre won a silver a residence in Paris and in- od of several years. medal in the slalom at Sarastead of advising Germany The university said the pa- jevo. He was the world alpine he is helping the democracies, tient had been rushed to the g iant-slalom champion i n England and France, in their operating room in shock, dy- 1982 and is a three-time U.S. air preparations against the ing of terminal heart failure. national champion — twice "Unfortunately, the dimen- in the slalom and once in the dictatorships and giving valuable information to his own sions of the only donor heart giant slalom. country. The facts have been available at the time of the The pro racers will compete slow in developing but they patient's collapse proved too for $50,000 in cash prizes. are out now and tell an entire- small for the requirements of ly different story from that at the considerably larger recipi- Teamwork helpsducks Lindbergh has been sub-
is not part of the price of gasoline or goods offered at
first heat, the fastest eight
"I •
of the project, will f u r nish
first current.
bank transaction fees and
lawful Trade Practices Act.
them a helping hand by transA nnouncement t ha t t h e as identical as possible. In porting them across more into a field which will be used B rogan book h eads t h e qualifications the pros are than 10 miles of rugged ternot only for baseball but for a Northwest list was made from assigned to either course by rain that lies between the lake racetrack. Erection ofcorrals Portland today, where sales a drawing. The fastest eight and a snow park along Highand stables is also planned at were reported outstanding. skiers from each course qual- way 58. the field. The south end of the Brogan autographed scores ify. Then the remaining racproperty will be landscaped of books Saturday at the ers ski again, and as in the beforethe work iscompleted.
gasoline. BP spokesman Scott Dean said the company
BP West Coast Products
in order to construct a series of wooden duck dwellings in trees around the lake. For the future we offer the Grape Nuts Pro-Ski Race at Damon, a sophomore at suggestion that the right and Mount Bachelor. Mountain View High School, kind thing to do would be to Both the 31-year-old Mahre organized the project to help let Lindbergh alone. twins claimed Olympic med- him win a promotion to the als during their World Cup rank of Eagle Scout, which is careers. They came out of the highest rank a Boy Scout 50 YEARSAGO retirement to join the North can attain. thing where criticism did not lie.
Brogan's book shoots men employed through WPA to top place on list the city from the grounds to
nomah County jury says
would be found to be some- in U.S. ski-racing history-
American Professional Tour
to move two houses owned by
also said the debit card fee M ult- is not a fee on the prices of
PORTLAND — A
wrongly charged 35 cents extrato Oregon consumers "continues to believe that who paid for gas with a deb- the debit card fee is a reait card at Arco stations and sonable method to cover
For the week ending Feb. I, 1964
Work on the recreational center of Bend located at O'Donnell Field will be started Monday with a crew of six
The Associated Press
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The Moon Country Snow-
mobile Club teamed up Saturday with a group of Boy
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25 YEARSAGO
many wood ducks that live at
For the week ending Feb. I, 1989
The scouts who were under the leadership of 16-year-old
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Davis Lake. Bend resident Lonnie Damon,
BaChelOrto hOSt PrOS hitched rides with volunteers Two of the biggest names from the snowmobile club
9 G
'Promotional offer valid 10/18/133/31/14. MustmeetOnPoint Community Credit Unionmembershipandcredit requirements. Offer valid onvehicles 2012 ornewer,andwith automatic paymentfrom anOnPoint checking or savingsamunt. At1.94% APRand60wonth term, paymentwouldbe $1750 per $1000borrowed. Maximumloanterm for194% APRis 60 months.certainrestrictionsapply. offerexcludesthe refinanceof existing DnPoint vehicle laans and Driver's Seat Auto LoanProgram. OnPoint's "green" vehicle discount doesnot apply to promotional rates.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
CALIFORNIA NEWS
I
BITUARIES FEATUREDOBITUARY
DEm'H NOTICES Kevin P. Williams Dec. 17, 1962- Jan. 29, 2014 Billie Glee Bryant, of Redmond April 7, 1932 - Jan. 30, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St., Redmond, OR 97756.
Eileen eNana" Metcalf, of Bend Aug. 2, 1923 - Jan. 29, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Graveside Service will be held in Anchorage, Alaska, in the Spring of 2014. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Harry Aldridge Mayer, of Bend Feb. 3, 1945 - Jan. 28, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmorluaries.com Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Martin Wayne Sagnimeni,of Bend April 17, 1953 - Nov. 21, 201 3 Arrangements:
Kevin Peter Williams, 51, passed away Jan. 29, 2014. K evin was b or n i n I n d i a napolis, IN in 1962. He and f amily m o ved t o B en d i n 1 963 when K e vi n w a s 8 months old. He graduated f rom M t . View High School, 1 981, a l -
ready
playtng in several bands. He was a musician Kevin P. most of Williams his l i fe a nd well k n ow n i n B e n d a rea. F o r ma n y yea r s , K evin p l a y e d b a s s f or Merle Haggard, touring all across this country. He is survived by his son, Zachary o f S o ut h B e ach, O R; h i s m o t h er , Ma r t y W illiams B u c k o f Be n d ; brothers, John and Nicholas of Bend; a s t ep-sister, D enise Parsons, o f M a r t inez, C A , a n d a st e p b rother, Phil B u ck , Jr . o f La Pine, and several wonderful nieces. He was prec eded in death b y h i s f a ther, Jack Williams. There will b e a c e l ebration of l i f e a t N i s w ongerR eynolds F u n era l H o m e on Tuesday, Feb. 4th at 3 .m. In lieu of flowers, the amily is requesting donations to Shepherd's House or Bethlehem I nn . P l ease sign o u r gu e s t b oo k at www.niswonger-reynolds. com
Robert A. Morrow
Niswonger-Reynolds,
June 7, 1934- Jan. 23, 2014
www.nlswonger-reynolds.com
B ob w a s b o r n in N ebraska C i t y , N eb r a s k a. Most of his life he lived in C alifornia w h er e h e f i n -
541-382-2471.
Services: Mass of Christian Burial, 11:00 AM, Saturday February 8, 2014 at St. Francis Historical Church, Bend, followed by a Celebration of Life at McMenamins Old St. Francis School .
ished high
school and served two y ears in th e A rmy. H e then went to college w here h e
Norman Nelson, of The Dalles, Oregon Dec. 28, 1924 - Jan. 29, 2014 Arrangements: Spencer, Libby and Powell Funeral Home, 1-541-296-3234
Ronald Keith McKinstry March19, 1938 - Jan. 7, 2014 Ron passed away quietly s urrounded by f a m i ly . H e was a kind, wonderful man with a huge heart and will be missed dearly. H e i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s w ife, L o r i e , h i s m o t h e r , Dorothy, five children and ten grandchildren. His family and his friends w ere all b l e ssed t o h a v e known him. We now h ave another guardian angel to w atch over us . A f ter s u f f ering f r o m a s t r o k e s i x y ears ago, w e n o w h o p e
you are riding your Honda
G oldWing, s m oking y o u r "1886 queen" cigars, and in o ur s p ar e t i m e , r a c i n g i gure 8 ' s at Um at i l l a Speedway. We will h av e a g a thering at a l a ter d ate to c elebrate his life.
got his BA Bob Morrow
tn
Ad-
tive Management. H is jobs i n cluded N o r th American Av iation, Rockw ell Int e r n a tiona l A u tonetics, Bourns, Inc., Bear Medical Systems, which he b ecame Pr e s i den t an d C EO in 1 984. A f ter r e t i r i ng in 1 996, Bob an d h i s w ife, R o salee m o ve d t o B end, OR . B o b e n j o y e d f ishing, h u n t i ng , s k i i n g , mountain climbing, r i ding horses and much more. He is preceded in d eath b y his parents, Noah A n sel and V i o la , h i s s i ster, Colleen and brother,Gene. B ob i s s u r v ived b y h i s wife, R osalee, d aughters, C heryl a n d P a t t i , t h r e e g randsons, W i l l i am, K y l e and Kory, A memorial service w i l l be held on F r i day, February 7, at the Church of the Nazarene on N E 2 7th St ., Bend at 1:00 p.m. Bob is at peace now and I'm s ure h e ' s w a t c h i n g over us. He was loved by all who knew him.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around the world:
Innsbruck, Austria.
Ray Clark, 82:Defense counsel
Maximilian Schell, 83: Aus- in the case of Richard Ramirez, who was accused ofbeing a serial killerknown asthe Night Stalker. Oscar for his role in "Judgment Died Jan. 7in Los Angeles. at Nuremberg." Died Saturday in — Fiom wirsrsports
trian-born actor was a fugitive from Adolf Hitler who won an
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Huizenga,physicist, outsized figure in nuclear development By William J. Broad New York Times News Service
John Huizenga, a physicist who helped build the world's first
came soon after the government detonated the world's
gle, Facebook and othertechcompanies have become atarget of demonstrations over gentrification, blamed for squeezing
first hydrogen bomb in the
less-affluent San Franciscans out of cherished neighborhoods.
Pacific in 1952. The bomb
a tom b o mb, vaporized an atoll. In sift-
solve dozens of atomic riddles and debunk claims that scientists in Utah had
Jim Wilson/The New YorkTimes
Passengers board a shuttle in San Francisco's Mission District Tuesday that's bound for Silicon Valley offices about 40 miles south. The shuttle buses catering to employees of Apple, Goo-
ing through the radioactive debris, Huizenga and his Argonne peers, as well
Tech companies' buses draw ire of Bay protesters
achieved nuclear fusion in a jar of water, died Jan. 25 in San Diego. He was 92. The cause was heart failure, his family said. Huizenga was present at the main junctures of the early nuclear era and helped push back many frontiers of nuclear physics. He also took on diplomat-
as teams in Berkeley, Calif., and Los Alamos, N.M.,
ic missions and prominent
were initially kept secret for
roles in settling scientific disputes.
security reasons, then un-
Early discovery
veiled in 1955, not long after the scientists they had been
huge lumbering beasts, the luxury buses shuffle down
named after had died.
Valencia Street.
found that two new elements — highly radioactive a nd unknown i n
n a ture
— had formed when uranium atoms in the nuclear
blast captured speeding neutrons. The discoveries, of eins teinium a n d fer m i u m ,
By David Streiffeld and Malia Wollan New York Times News Service
SAN FRANCISCO — Like
movement.
"It felt like regular old Berkeley behavior, to tell you the truth," another said. In many ways, it was. Levandowski's house used
and 100 in the periodic ta- ceived the government's ble — known, respectively, Lawrence Award for o utas einsteinium, after Albert standing accomplishments Einstein, and fermium, af- in illuminating the intrica-
tobe apartof asmallinformal commune in the late 1960s. front of a hipster coffee shop. Tom Hayden, a founding Bearded young techies swipe member of the radical group their IDs as they board, Students for a Democratic Soclutching cups of premium ciety, lived there. coffee. One fellow carrieshis dirty laundry. No one talks. The past meets the present
ter Enrico Fermi, the Italian
The buses take off for the
Early on, Huizenga was part of the scientific team that discovered Elements 99
One by one, they stop in
Recognition I n 1966, H uizenga r e -
cies of nuclear fission, the
Nobel laureate who helped fracturing of atoms into lead the atom p ieces. T h at bomb project at same year, he the University accompanied "John of Chicago. the first AmerAfter World War II, Huizen-
ga attended famous lectures
given in Chicago by Fermi a nd soon b e -
gan a half-century of atomic
sleuthing. "John Huiz-
enga conducted research at the forefrontof nuclear physics and contributed a host of
e x c eption-
al in s ights," said Wolf-Udo Schroder,
Huizenga conducted research at
the forefront
of nuclear physics and contributed a host of
exceptional insights." — Wolf-Udo Schroder, a professor at the University of Rochester
a
professor of chemistry and physics at the University of Rochester and a protege
of Huizenga's. The discoveries stimulated "vigorous research," he added, and remain central to the field.
It seems like a mundane
Soviet Union.
hometown is turning from ad-
to go into it," he said. "A ris-
He accepted a professorship
miration to anger. The buses, which reportedly illegally use city stops, have become an unlikely rallying point. First, people were priced out of their homes, activists say; now they arebeing pushed offthe
ing, serious hostility against Google and companies like Google is inevitable — part of a class struggle around the means of p roducing
at the Univer-
sity of Rochester in 1967 and s tayed t he r e
for the rest of his career. His 1973 textbook,
streets.
field. He was e lected to t h e
back, comparing the tech elite
avalanche."
sion," w r i t t en w ith Rob e r t
Vandenbosch, remains a standard i n the
National Academy of Sciences in 1976. H uizenga lectured i n China after its opening to the West. After one visit, in 1979, the nation's lead-
April 21, 1921. His father w as a f a r mer, and u n t il
ty of Rochester.
Fusion sleuth
In 1989, Huizenga was appointed cochairman of a Department of Energy Recruitment panel that investigated and He graduated in early debunked the highly pub1944 from Calvin College in licized "cold fusion" claims Grand Rapids, Mich., where of two University of Utah a teacher got him hooked chemists, who said they schoolhouse.
with persecuted Jews in Nazi Germany. "We've never seen anything remotely like this before," said Gary Kamiya, author of "San Francisco, Cool Gray City of Love." "Techies used to seem gike) endearing geeks, who made money and cute little
tain in their tactics. The acthose inthe East Bayaremore
indined to escalate their pro-
graduate school in physical chemistry at the Universi-
at room temperature in a jar of water. If their claims
test — when they stopped a
ty of Illinois and was soon drafted into the Manhattan
had been true, the discov-
the American Institute of
ly on the topic and in 1992
Physics, a federation of published "Cold Fusion: physical science societies, The Scientific Fiasco of the Century." On
t h e c l a im's
tance" of using his scientific 10th anniversary, in 1999, training "in an exciting and as true b elievers around militarily important secret the globe kept looking for project." glimmers of hope that cold In Oak Ridge, Tenn., he fusion could be realized, he supervised teams analyzing accused them of chasing a the purity of enriched ura- ghost. "It's as dead as ever," Huinium coming out of sprawling production lines. Robert zenga said. "It's quite unbeNorris, a nuclear historian, lievable that the thing has said the purified uranium gone on for 10 years." fueled the weapon that levH uizenga's wife of 5 4 eled Hiroshima in August years, Dolly, died in 1999. 1945. He is survived by four chilAfter the w ar , H u izen- dren, Linda, Jann, Robga received his Ph.D. from ert and Joel; two sisters, I l l i n ois Gertrude Drew and Kath-
and took a job in nuclear chemistry at the Argonne
ryn Disselkoen; and three grandchildren. National Laboratory, which Huizenga summarized was then on the University his career in a memoir, of Chicago campus. It was "Five Decades of Research there that he met Fermi. His in Nuclear Science" (2009). research focused on uncov- The book provided much ering the secrets of atomic detail on the half-lives of the subatomic p articles known as neutrons. His f i rs t
radioactive elements, but it
also provided evidence, he wrote in its concluding pagb i g mo m e nt es, of "a life well lived."
"It's like one snowflake after another landing on a
mountain," said Paul Saffo, managing director at Discern Analytics. "If conditions are just right, there's an Saffo, a longtime tech futurist, said the Bay Area had
been sliding toward an"Occupy Silicon Valley" situation for severalyears. "The tech companies are
going to discover they are going to have to become better citizens," he said, pointing out
that's what it takes to prevent
tivists in San Francisco seem him fmm going anywhere a bit more mainstream, while else."
had achieved nuclear fusion
ery would have flooded the Project to build the atom world with energy cheap bomb. enough to s upplant al l The recruiters, he r e- rivals. called in a m e moir f or Huizenga lectured wide-
howthe companies react.
products but couldn't get the that the sheen of corporate girls. Now they're the lord and coolness is alteady wearing masters." off. Google, for instance, is reIf the Bay Area is planning portedly paying an unnamed to relive the 1960s, it is still midlevel engineer $5 million only the dawn of the decade. a year. "Google is not doing The protesters are relatively this because they are generfew, fragmented and uncer- ous. They are doingitbecause
on chemistry. He entered
interactions, especially with
If something has started, the outcome still depends on what the protesters do and
department at the Universi-
the University o f
information."
Demonstrators regularly block the shuttles. And last week, a group of activists stalked a Google engineer at his East Bay house, urging the masses to "Fight evil. Join the revolution." A prominent venture capitalist struck
"Nuclear Fis-
the Mississippi River, on
"convinced me of the impor-
interview.
delegation t o be sent to the
ican scientific
was born in Fulton, Ill., on
high school, John learned his lessons in a one-room
r ip e f o r
'These days you have a commuting scene. But it is not. A security guard hovers. very large, frustrated youngThere might be trouble. er population watching the Even asthetech companies m iddle dass disappearbefore extendtheir global reach, their their eyes just as they prepare
er, Deng Xiaoping, sent his youngest son, Deng Zhifang, to study in Huizenga's
John Robert Huizenga
C onditions are
campuses of Google, Apple, another large-scale protest Facebook, Yahoo and eBay. movement, Hayden said in an
Drafting revolt The Counterforce leaflet,
Google bus in December, a which induded a photograph window got smashed. of Levandowski's Arts and The group that stalked An- Crafts house taken from thony Levandowski, an en- Google Street View, urggineer at Google X, the com- es the masses to throw off pany's dandestine research their chains, or at least their laboratory, calls itself the Google Glass, and "join the Counterfor ce,after aThomas revolution." Pynchon novel. About a dozen Silicon Valley has come members, all dressed inblack, full cirde. It used to be where gathered outside the Berkeley rebels and dropouts went. house where Levandowski One young man from the East lives with his partner and two
young children. They unfurled a banner and handed out fliers detailing the engineer's work on Google's driverless car technology, Street View and Google Maps. The flier read: "Anthony Levandowski is building an unconscionable world
Coast with a Harvard MBA, Tom Perkins, was t reated
with such suspicion at Hewlett-Packard in 1957 that he was put to work in the ma-
motto is "Don't be evil," de-
chine shop, running a lathe. You couldn't get any lower. Perkins dawed his way up tobeingone of the foundingfinanciers of the valley, funding Tandem, a leading computer m aker, and Genentech, which employs 12,000 people. The firm he co-founded, Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers, is
dined to comment.
still one of the leading venture
In the neighborhood
capitalshops, abackerofGoogle and Amazon.
of surveillance, control and automation. He is also your
neighbor." Google, whose famous
''We have to be careful that Several of Levandowski's neighbors, who preferred not we don't demonize anybody to give their names, said the and that we certainly don't deprotest ers decamped after monize the most creative part about half an hour and city of our society," he said. police dosely monitored the The techcompanies'posiblock for a day afterward. tion on the buses is this: We're One neighbor speculated that notdriving our owncars, jamthe protesters were associated ming the roads and polluting with the Occupy Wall Sheet theair.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
T HE
ES T
Scientistscontem ate ossi ii
o en urin ro u By Paul Rogers San Jose Mercury News
SAN JOSE, Calif. — California's current drought is be-
ing billed as the driest period in the state's recorded rainfaH history. But s c ientists who study the West's long-term ¹i
mate patterns say the state has been parched for much longer stretches before this 163-year historicalperiodbegan.
sediment and other natural evidence, researchers have doc-
umented multiple droughts in California that lasted 10 or 20
NEVADA NEWS
Governorexplains t , i t sim acts use of Guardflight
A 200-year drought?
The Associated Press
Evidence from tree rings in the American West shows that drought was historically much more widespread in the distant past than now.The20th century was wetter than normal. Percentage of American West affected by drought from the year 800 to 2000 • Drier • We tter 60
Sandoval is defending his
20
1850 California becomes a state
Medieval megadroughts The American Westexperienced two abnormally dry periods lasting close to 200 years eachduring the Middle Ages 8 00
900
10 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 4 0 0 1 50 0 1 6 0 0 1 70 0 1 8 0 0 1 90 0 2 0 00 Karl Kahler / Bay Area News Group ©2014 MCT
Source: E.R. Cook et al, Earth-Science Reviews
cuss the woman's illness or
any other details about her condition, citing respect for decision to allow the use of a patient privacy. He said neiNevada Air National Guard therhe norany ofhisstaffare aircraft to fly a critically ill related to the woman or have woman to an Oregon hospital any other connections to her. for life-savingtreatment. A spokeswoman for the The request for the special governor said he does not RENO, Nev. — Gov. Brian
flight on Dec. 28 came from
Average 40
A nd they worry t hat t h e
"megadroughts" typical of California's earlier history could come again. Through studies of tree rings,
C5
know the woman's identity.
Renown Regional Medical She could not get the treatCenter in Reno, where the ment she needed in northern woman was a patient, San- Nevada, Sandoval said. "So we had to take extraordoval said. He said the Air Guard asked for his autho- dinary measures to get her rization as the state's com- there," he said. "It was my mander in chief. understanding that there are "It was presented to me as only two facilities in the Unita life-or-death situation," San-
ed States that could treat her
doval said.
condition, and a hospital in
Sandoval declined to dis-
Oregon was one of them."
years in a row during the past 1,000 years — compared to the severemegadroughts make the
The reason: Although many Californians think that populationgrowthis the main driver of
Dust Bowl of the 1930s look
water demand statewide, it ac-
m ere three-year duration ofthe current dry spell. The two most
Gaming
their properties'? What if you had to collect points to win?
tame: a 240-year-long drought tually is agriculture. In an averthat started in 850 and, 50 years ageyear, farmersuse 80percent
Continued from C1 Twelve-year-old George During the game jam, kids C utter wa s a bit ov e r -
after the condusion of that one, another that stietched at least
of the water consumed by peo-
b rainstorm and w or k o u t their concepts on paper; it's a
180 years.
of 43 million acre-feet diverted
ple andbusinesses — 34million
day-long introduction to the program. Kids who join an Oregon Game Project Challenge team then learn basic computer programming skills
"We continue to run Califor- from rivers ,lakes and groundnia as if the longest drought we water, accordingto the state Deare ever going to encounter is partmentofWater Resources. about sevenyears,"said Scott
"Cities would be i nconve-
Stine, a professor of geography nienced greatly and suffer and environmental studies at some. Smaller cities would get
and can ultimately compete i n May ~ teams f i o m
Cal State East Bay. "We're liv-
across the state, taking their paper concepts and turning them into computer games. Oregon Game Project Challenge is sponsored by TechStart, a nonprofit with a focus on increasing technology education for grades K-12. At the Deschutes County Fairgrounds 4-H building on
itworse,butfarmerswouldtake
ingin a dreamworld." the biggest hit," said Maurice California in 2013 received Roos, the department's chief Nhat V. Meyer/BayArea News Group less rain than in any year since hydrologist. "Cities can always The low water level at the Almaden Reservoir in San Jose, Calif., it became a state in 1850. And afford to spend a lot of money to reveals an armchair on Jan. 22. at least one Bay Area scientist says that based on tree ring
buy what water is left."
data, the current rainfaH season Infrastructure is on pace to be the driest since Roos, who has worked at the 1580 — more than 150 years department since 1957, said the before George Washington prospect of megadroughts is anwas born. The question is: How other reason to build more stormuch longer will it last? age — bothunderground andin
Impact A megadrought today would have catastrophic effects. California, the nation's most
be shortages, Lund said, beOver the past 10 years, he cause Californians already buy noted, Australia has been coplots of food from other states ing with a severe drought. Urand countries and would buy ban residents there cut their waeven more from them. ter demand massively, built new supply projects and survived.
reservoirs — to catch rain in wet
Water solutions
years. In a megadrought, there
would eventually see water ra-
"I don't think we'll ever get to
would be much less water in the
tioning at 50 percent of current
a point here where you turn on
In urban areas, most cities
Delta to pump. Farmers' allot- levels. Golf courses would shut populous state with 38 million ments would shrink to nothing. down. Cities would pass laws residents, has built a massive Large reservoirslike Shasta, banning watering or installing economy, Silicon Valley, Hol- Oroville and San Luis would lawns, which use half of most lywood and millions of ames eventually go dry after five or homes' water. Across the state,
Too late? the tap and air comes out," he said. Some scientists believe we
are already in a megadrought, although that view is not universally accepted.
of farniland, all in a semiarid
more years of little or no rain.
rivers and stieams would dry
area. The state's dams, canals and reservoirs have never been tested by the kind of prolonged drought that experts saywill almost certainly occur again.
Farmers would fallow millions of acres, letting row crops die first. They'd pump massive amounts of groundwater to
up, wiping out salmon runs. Bill Patzert, a research sciCities would race to build new entist and oceanographer at water supply projects, similar NASA's Jet Propulsion Laborato the $50 million wastewater tory in Pasadena, says that the recycling plant that the Santa West is in a 20-year drought
keep orchards alive, but even-
Stine, who has spent decades tually those wells would go studying tree stumps in Mono dry. And although deeper wells Lake, Tenaya Lake, the Walker could be dug, the costs could River and other parts of the Si- exceed the value of their crops. erra Nevada, said that the past Banks would refuse to loan the century has been among the farmers money. wettest of the last 7,000 years.
Looking back, the long-term record also shows some stag-
geringly wet periods. The decades between the two medievalmegadroughts,forexample, delivered years of above-normal rainfall — the kind that
Economy would almost certainly provide "Some small towns in the
20th century, what Californians
California-Davis.
from 1987 to 1992 and from 1928 to 1934. Both, Stine said,
"But agriculture is only 3 percent of California's economy
are minor compared to the an- today," Lund said. "In the main cient droughts of 850 to 1090 urban economy, most people and 1140 to 1320.
What would happen if the current drought continued for another 10years or more?
the state could always build
oscillation" is underway — and
dozens of desalination plants, thathistoricallyhasbeen linked which would cost billions of dol- to extreme high-pressure ridges lars, said law professor Barton
that block storms.
Thompson, co-director of Stantute forthe Environment.
Such events, which cause pools of warm water in the North Pacific Ocean and cool
billions of dollars in emergency Saudi Arabia, Israel and oth- water along the California aid to farm communities. er Middle Eastern countries de- coast, are not the result of glob-
think of as severe, occurred
today. The longest droughts of the
that began in 2000. He cites the
now constructing in Alviso. factthataphenomenon known If a drought lasted decades, as a "negative Pacific decadal
The federal government ford Universily's Woods Insti-
Central Valley would really suffer. They would basically go away," said Jay Lund, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of
would cause devastating floods
Clara Valley Water District is
would learn to live with less water. It would be expensive and
inconvenient, butwe'd do it." Farmers with senior water
pend on desalination, but water
al warming, Patzert said. But
from these plants costs roughly dimate change caused by the five times more than urban Cal- burning of fossil fuels has been ifornians pay for water now. linked to longer heat waves. Thompson said that makes That wild card wasn't around desal projects unfeasible for years ago. "Long before the Industrial most of the state now, especially when other options like recy- Revolution, we were vulneraded wastewater and conserva- ble to long extended periods of tion can provide more water at drought. And now we have ana much lower cost. other experiment with all this But in an emergency, price CO2 in the atmosphere where becomes no object. there are potentially even more "In theory, cities cannot wild swings in there," said Grarun out of water," Thompson
ham Kent, a University of Neva-
Without question, longtime water experts say, farmers
rights would make a huge prof- said. "All we can do is run out da geophysicist who has studit, he noted, selling water at sky- of cheap water or not have as ied submerged ancient trees
would bear the brunt. Cities
high prices to cities. Food costs would rise, but there wouldn't
would sufferbut adapt.
Highway
much water as we need when we reallywant it."
in Fallen Leaf Lake near Lake
LEGO robotics, where kids are given a specific mission to accomplish, George didn't know what to do with all the
ideas and possibilities. ''We all have so many ideas, it's so hard to bring it down to one," he said. Even-
tually, his team voted, choosing the game concept of its youngest member, 11-yearold Jack Sorlie. Random A wesomeness decidedthe fantasy creatures
wouldn't just be fighting the robots and cyborgs, but the mice too, which would be a
common enemy. "Imagine if during the Cold
someness team was having War the U.S. and Russia had trouble corralling all of its to team up to fight aliens'?" ideas. Jason Cuthbert asked. "How Thirteen-year-old K a tie well would that go over? They Slough tried to ride herd. have to fight together for a "OK, guys — what's the greater cause." point of this game going to The goal of the program, be'?" according to Jason's mothA longpause followed. er Laura, is to help the kids "To fight each other until learn basics of team commuone side loses," said Jason Cuthbert, 13, with a shrug.
nication and the translation of abstract ideas into concrete
The dragons, elves, robotsand mice populating their game were providingchallenges. "I'm concerned we're mak-
plans. The teams even give short presentations, "elevator
ing it too complicated," Katie said.
pitches," to convince the oth-
ers why the game is worth playing. Despite the frustration of
"At least we're going to combining so many varied be here a long time," offered ideas, mostof thekidsseemed Mechai. to enjoy working together. "I'd much rather be on a "Not t ha t l o ng," K a t ie countered with a f rown of team than work alone, beconcentration. cause you get interesting perCuthbert walked from ta- spectives," Jason said. "With ble to table, offering occasion-
al suggestions to help teams progress. Initially, they resisted focusing, instead throwing out ideas: What if the dragon was afraid of the mice? What
if the weapons could change
me, when I latch onto an idea, I tend to ignore other possibil-
ities. But when my team challenges, it gives me pause and makes me reconsider." — Reporter: 541-54S-2186, Ipugmire@bendbulletin.com
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moving the Trip 97 project
"The alternative is to do nothing and let the
forward.
(highway) system get more congested or turn down development opportunities."
Continued from C1 Any actual highway work Some county leaders were through the initiative is still concerned the emphasis on years off, Doty said. But planHighway 97 projects would ning for them today makes take needed funds away from sense. " The alternative is to d o other areas, like highways 20 and 126. nothing and let the (highway) "How do you not have Trip system get more congested 97 draw all the other funds or turn down development away from Central Oregon?" opportunities," he said. "We Deschutes County Commis- w ere right there when the sioner Tammy Baney asked. recession hit, at the edge of Some also voiced concerns having to turn away develabout duplicating the work of opment" because of highway existing committees, like the congestion issues. Central Oregon Area ComThe next steps include mission on Transportation. hammering down funding "I would hate for us to set options and working with up more government ontop public officials across the reof moregovernment,"Baney gion to try to reach a consensaid. sus on priorities. Still, commissioners were — Reporter: 541-617-7820, g enerally s u pportive o f eglucftlich®bendbulletin.com
Saturday, the Random Awe-
whelmed. Experienced in
— Chris Doty, Deschutes County Public Works Director
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWSI ©2014.
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Today: 1 Partly cloudy.
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FORECAST: 5TATE •
WEST Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of rain south.
-Astoria
,
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Biggs •
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Tillamooke 45/34
Albany
• Pendleton
0 37/26
•
Enterpris • 31/17
31/1 7
on 342
Partly cloudy and cool conditions.
31/18
33/20 Union
•
CENTRAL
JoseP
La Grande•
•
33/21
Granite 32n 7
e Pray40/23
. Warmlpiings •
-
31QO
• Meacham
Ruggs 35/22
39Q6
Wagowa
37/21
Maupin
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• Hermiston 36Q4
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34/1 2
• John Day
39/2
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Yesterday's stateextremes
Jordan Rey 37/20
Frenchglen 42/22
Rome
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North Bend
44Q6
Chiloquin
Klamath
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39/1 9
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34/14
38/21
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Florenced 4~PHOA a
Unity
F a l ls 42/24
•7
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• J.akeview
McDermitt,
43Q4
41Q6
4 4Q3 ~
0
Lakeview
~
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
-o a
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Calga 14/-7
Saskatoon 5/.1 5
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4 44 0v 44 d~
Chegenne i
• 1.13
City
Saint Charles, Mo
(•
6/5 • Columbu ~ i .
Des Moine 17/5 hica' •
48/31
iladelphia
„
Denver
33/17
Vegas 51/38
~
<,
reen 8 7 •
• 28/6
R
ed
Os t. Paul I-3
Boise 39/20
44
Merrill, Wis.
o 16/5
24/7
46/31
• -21
Bismarck
Billings
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Kingsville, Texas
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9/-11
44/32
• 86'
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Winnipe 7/-22
•Seattle
(in the 48 contiguous states):
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Juneau 31/17
84 /67
FRONTS
OALASKA
Partly cloudy
L
Partly cloudy.
Partly
2
cloudy.
3
Partly cloudy.
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HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
34 14
35 11
28 11
26 10
BEND ALMANAC
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend Tomorrow Rise Mercury....800am......652 pm. High/low.............. 41/16 24hoursending4pm*.. 000" Venus......508am......305pm. Remrdhigh........69in1934 Monthtodate.......... 000" M a r s......1104pm.....1019a m. Remrdlow........ -13in1950 Averagemonth10date... 004"
Sunrise ioday...... 7:21 a.m. MOOnphaSeS Sunsettoday......517pzm Sunrisetomorrow .. 7;20a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 5:1 8p.m. Moonri isetoday....8:43a.m. Moonsettoday....9:18p.m.
F jrst f u g
New
Jupiter......2:20 p.m...... 5144a.m. Average high.............. 42 Year to date............ 1.22" Satum......1:37 a.m.....11:31 a.m. Average low............... 24 Average year to date..... 1.57" Uranus.....931 am.....1000pm. Barometricpressureat4pm2999 Remrd24hours ...089in1963 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX ~ SKI REPORT
OREGON CITIES
Yesterday S unday M o nday The higher the UV Index number, the greater 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 ........ 48/35/0.06....45/36/pc..... A3/32/c Baker City 37f23/0.05....34/1 2/pc.....29/1 0/pc Brookings 49/35/0.00....55/41/pc.....50/39/pc Burns.......... 39/14/0.00....37/14/pc......32/9/sn Eugene 52/38/0.00.....47/29/r.....43/28/sh ipamath Falls ...41ll 2/0.00....42/24/pc.....37/1 9/pc Lakeview....... .37/7/0.00....41/26/pc.....36/18/pc La Pine........ 43/20/0 00....38/1 8/pc.....33/10/pc Medford 52/27/0.00..... 50/32/r.....44/28/pc Newport 50/36/0.00.....46/37/c.....44/34/sh North Bend.....54/41/0.00..... 51/39/r.... AB/36/pc Ontario 41/27/0.00.....36/21/s.....35/20/sn Pendleton 42/33/0.00....37/21/pc......34/1 8/c Portland 49/40/0.00... A6f31/pc.....42/28/pc Prineville 43/1 8/0.00....39f21/pc......36/1 6/c Redmond 44/14/000....39/18/pc.....33/11/pc Roseburg 52/39/0.00.....50/34/c.....45/29/sh Salem 51/36/0.01 .....47/31Ic.....43/28/pc Sisters......... 42/1 7/0 00....38/21/pc......35/14/c The Dages 50/32/0.00....39/27/pc.....39/22/pc
1 L
MED IUM HIGH 4
6
8
117
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthonytakes ....... . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . 58 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report
Snow levelandroadconditions rePresenting conditions at 5P.m.yesterday. Icey:T.T. = Traction Tires.
ijmbe~riyne 5 75 warner canyon........ . . . . . .0.0... no report Pass Conditi ons Wigamette Pass .............0.0......24-36 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1.84atCabbageHig............Chains) 10,000 lbs AsPen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 24. . . . . .59-61 Hwy. 2patcantiam pass ...... Carrychains or T.Tires Mammoth Mtn., California....8-10......25-35 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hmi 26 at Och~o Divide..... Care chains or TTires Squaw Valley, California........ 4 . . . . . .21-29 Hyd e. 58atwigametmPass.... (.arrychainsori.iires SunValleY, Idaho....... . . . . . . p.p.. . . . .24-28 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.iires Hwy.242 atMcltenzie pass........Ciosed forseason Vail, Colorado....... . . . . . . . . 21 .... . . . . 66 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
BJ
Cold W a rm Stationary
CONDITIONS ( %+ x
44 ** ** * 1 4 4 4 '** * * * d4 >
*
ay 41 dh
Showers T-storms Rain Flurries S now
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
Yesterday Sunday Monday
City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lorig HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hyi/Lorig City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,1X......47/31N.00... 28/22/i. 42/35/pc Grand Rapids....27/21N.32.... 21/6/5 .. 19/Npc RapidCity........20/8/000...28/6/pc.. 20/6/sn Savannah.......53/4EN.t4 ..71/57/pc. 71/54/sh Akron ......... 46/31N02..29/14/sn.27/12/pc Green Bay......13/11N 02.... 9/7ls... 17Q/s Reno...........41 12M.00...41122/c. 42721 Ipc S eattle......... 4f/4M.08 ..44/32/pc.41QB /sn Albany..........41/21N00..42/20/sh. 31/15/pc Greensboro......59/26N00...61/36/c.42/33/sh Richmond.......56/24N.00...62/35/c..38/29/rs Siuux Falls........19/5I000....2I4/s .. 23/4/sn Albuqu erque.....50/39N.00..4929/pc..49Q7/c Hamsburg.......64/30/000..44/26/sh. 34/21/sn RoihesierNY... 40/22N13..35/1$50 .. 27/15/c Spokane.........25/1NIN... 32/20/c.. 27/10/c Anchorage......25/12N01..28/tipc. 27/19/pc Nartbrd,CT.... 46/29/000..46/27/sh. 34/19/sn Saoamento......60/35N.00... 58/35/c.59/35/pc Springfield Mp ..44/28IO12..29/15/pc. 39/25/pc Atlanta .........58/32N.00...62/50/c. 58/44/sh Helena..........23/1 2/0.00.... 248/c ..15/-3/sn St. Louis.........37/30N.52..24/12/pc. 32/21/pc Tampa..........77/6MJN ..80/64/pc.79/66/pc AtlanticCity.... A6/23N.iN..51/31/sh. 37/28/sn Honolulu........7N72/004 77/ .. 69/sh. 77/71Ish Salt LakeCity....36Q9N.00..33/17/pc.35/19/sn Tucson..........61/53N.IN..62/38/pc.61/37/pc Austin..........7465/0.1N..48/30/sh.51/44/sh Houston ........73/62/0.00... 65/41/t. 52/49/sh SanAntonio.....80/66N.00.. 52/31/sh. 53/44/sh Tulsa...........32/28N.00 .. 30/19/sn. 42/29/pc Baltimore...... 48/25/0.00..54/32/sh.3424/sn Huntsville .......66/32/0.02 ..52/34/sh. 47/41pc SanDiygo.......64/51/000..62/51/pc.58/53/sh Washington,DC.53/29N JN.. 56/33/sh. 36/26/sn Billings ..........16/3/019... 24/7/pc .. 14N/sn Indianapolis.....4l/30N.50 26/11/pc .. .. 24/17/s SanFrancisco....59/43/0.00... 57/44/r. 57/42/pc Wichiia.........29/23N.06..3IINpc .. 36/25/c Biimingham.....66/37/0.00... 6I42/t. 55/46/pc Jackson,MS.....76/41N00... 61/390. 51/48/pc SanJose........60/37/0.00... 56/38/r. 57/37/pc Yakima.........3$24000..35/19/pc. 33/17/pc Bismarck.........12/2N00 .. 16/ 5/pc...1Ijj/6 Jacksonvile......76/52/0.00 ..76/59/sh.. 79/5%c SamaFe........43/32/OJN..4819/pc .. 39/20/c Yuma...........6$50N.00..67/44/pc. 66/42/pc Boise.......... 40/28N00 ..39/2lpc. 36/1Nsn Junmu..........33/24N.00... 31/1 7/s.. 2Ij 5/s INTERNATIONAL Boston..........43/340 00 ..47/30/sh.. 35/23/c Kansas City......27/19N27.... 21 lis ..33/21/c Bridgeport,CT....41/29N.00..45/31lsh. 35/24/sn Lansing.........27/22N.34.... 22/2/s.. 17/3/pc Amsterdam..... 46/39/0.00..42/38/sh. 41/32/pc Mecca..........90/73/0.00... 87/67/s .. 86/66/s Buffalo .........38/26/030.. 31/13/sn.. 25/11/c LasYy gas .......54/43N00 ..51/38/pc. 55/3ipc Athens..........SI46I0.00 ..55/46/sh.. 48I39/c MeximCity......77/45/0.00... 77/4Is .. 72/42/s Burlington, VT....38/15/004.. 36/I 5/sn.. 24/14/5 Lexington.......63/41/000 .. 39/25/rs. 35/24/sn Auckland........73/57/0.00..74/59/pc. 74/52/pc Mymueal........30/12/000... 29/ 6/c .. 145/pc Caribou,ME......31/1/000... 33/9/sn... 18/1/s Liwmln..........25/15/0.02.... 25/9/s. 29/17/sn Baghda d........6?/44/0.00...60/49/c..59/43/c Moscow.........1408.00.... 8/-1/c... 12/5/c Charleston, SC...52/45N.21 ..69/56/pc. 66/51/sh LittleRock.......64/53N07..36/26/sn.39/31/pc Bangkok........91/70N.00... 94/74/5 .. 95/73/s Nairobi.........84/61/000... 82/53/s.81/53/pc Charlotte........5M1N00..64/40/pc. 49/37/sh LosAngeles......68M0.00 .. 62/4Ipc. 59/47/sh Beiling..........39/34/000.. 51Q3/pc. 31/20/pc Nassau.........82/738.00 .. 79/7Ipc. 78/72/pc Chattanooga.....56/24N.02 .. 52/38/sh...49/36/r Louisvile........63/4I000.. 38/24/rs.36/26/pc Beirut ..........66/54N.00...66/53/c.61/47/pc NewDelhi.......64/52/0.00.. 75/55/pc. 7I62/pc Cheyenne........22/7N.07... 25/6/pc... 26/4/c Madison,Wl......19S0.14... 11/4/5 .. 19/6/pc Berlin...........43QSN.00 .. 34I32/o ..34/28/u psaka..........59/30000 ..63/40/sh. 54/32/pc Chicago.........31/21N.42... 14/-3/s .. 17/8/pc Memphis........7052/0.00 ..39/2Irs. 41/37/pc Bogota.........68/39N.00... 7455/t...60/52/t Oslo............27/19N IN.. 34/32/sn.. 33/3ic Cincinnaii.......58/33N00.. 33/2Nsn. 32I22/pc Miami..........82/71N00.. 81/71Ipc. 83/76/pc Budapest........32/23N.00 ..3$19/pc.. 32/22/c pttawa..........25/7N.iN .. 25/-5/pc .. 15Q/pc Cleveland.......43/30N.30 .. 28/14/sn.. 23/11/s Milwaukee......23/1 5N.18... 15/-2/s .. 20/9/pc Buenos Aires.....75/66/0 00..83//0/sh...78/68/r Paris........... AI41N.00 ..43/37/sh. 43/3Ipc Culorado Springs.27/16N.02..28/llpc .. 28/12/c Minneapolis......27/0/0.00... 8/-3/pc... 13N/c CaboSanLucas ..77/55/0.00... 78/55/s .. 78/58/s Rio deJaneiro....97/7CN.iN ..90/73/pc.. 89/72/s ColumbiaMp , ...32/25N05...21/9/pc. 30/21/sn Nashville........63/45N00.. 41/29/rs. 41/34/pc Cairo...........7$50/0.00... 74/52/c.. 66/51/s Rome...........57/50N00..52/49/sh. 54/44/sh ColumbiaSC....45/26N.02 , ..67/49/pc. 56/aysh Newprleans.....74/51N00... 69/51/t. 60/Spsh Calgary..........1IIN00 .. 14/7/pc. 3/13/pc Sanfago........84/61N.iN...JN/58/s .. 83/61/s Columbus GA... 59/33/trace..67/55/pc. 65/49/sh NewYork...... 45/3EN00..48/31/sh. 36/27/sn Canmn.........84/70N.00... 81/73/t. 82/73/pc 580 Paulo.......95//0N.00 86/67/sh...86/68/t .. Columbus, 08....52/34/0 00.. 31/1isn. 29/18/pc Newark, NJ......44/32N00..49/31/sh.37/26/sn Dublin......... 46I34N.00..46/43/pc. 42/36/sh Sapporo ...... not available... 34/6/sn.. 21/7/pc Conmrd, NH.... 40/20N.00..42/21/sh. 33/16/pc Norfolk,VA......47/23N.05..65/40/pc. 42/33/sh Edinburgh.......43/36N 00..41/37/pc .. 41/34/c 54001...........43/34N IN ..40/13/pc. 33/15/pc Corpus Christi....78/67N 00.. 66/40/sh. 52/53/sh Oklahoma City...39/28N00 ..32/21lsn..38/31/rs Geneva. ........45/27N.00..3f/31lrs.36/29/pc Shangh ai........75/57N.00..Sf/4ipc..45/39/c DallasFtWorih...66/4EN 00.. 37/30/rs. 41/36/pc Omaha.........25/1 SN.03.... 23/9/s .. 28/j 7/c Narare..........64%4N 00.. 74/64/sh...74/62/r Singapore.......88/72N.00 ..87/73/pc. 87/74/pc Daytim .........47/33N02..29/16/pc. 2$18/pc Orlando.........8059/0.00..82/63/pc. 84/64/pc Hong Kong......75/63N.00...74/pys. 75/65/pc Stockholm.......3427/0.00 .. 35/31/sh.. 33fzffc Denver..........25/12N00..3512/pc..3515/c PalmSprings.....66/49/000..62/40/pc.61/43/pc Istanbul.........45/39N.00... 49/38/s.48/42/pc Sydney..........81/7M.00..93/62/pc.86/61/pc DesMoines......26/14N.08....17/5/s .. 23/14/c Peoria..........29/22/0.43... 13/-5/s ..251 1is Jerusalem.......64/44/0.00...61/48/c. 54/44/sh Taipei...........79/59N.00..74/58/pc. 68/59/pc Detroit..........35/27N.64.... 26/5/s... 18/3/s Philadelphia.....48/30N.00.. 47/31Ish. 36/26lsn Johannesburg....79/62/0 20.. 75/61/sh. 71/59/sh Tel Aviv.........73/46N.00... 6952/c. 64/Slsh dypc ..15/~ Duluth...........13/ON.04 .. 11/ Phoenix.........66/54000 ..65/42/pc.62/41/pc lima ...........77/68N 00..77/68/sh. 77/6Npc Tokyo...........5I41N 00..54/39/sh. 57/27/sh El Pam.........66/55N.00 .. 59/36/pc. 61/39/pc Piusburgh.......53/31N.00 ..38/20/sh. 30/1Npc lisbon..........55/45/0 00.. 53/50/sh. 55/46/sh Toronio.........32/25N.00...24/+sf .. 17/2/pc Fairbanks........15/-3/0.00... 14/4J/s.... 7/Is ForgandME.....38/23N00..42/23/sh.. 33/19/s London.........50/41N.00 ..47/37/pc.. 4439/c Vancauver.......39/28N.00 ..42/29/pc.. 35/14/s Fargo............12/1/000.. 6/ 1Ipc ..8/13/pc Pruvidence......43/32/0.00 ..48/30/sh. 35/23/sn Madrid .........55/39N.00 ..47/28/pc.. 4032/c Vienna..........28QSN.00 ..30/25/sn.. 31/27/c Flagsraff........36/16/002.. 37/16/pc. 34/17/pc Raleigh.........59/240.00..65/38/pc. 43/35/sh Manila..........BIJSN.00 ..89/70/pc. 89/73/pc Warsaw.........2N16N.IN..27/16/pc.. 31/16/c
WASHINGTON NEWS •
d
Surviving Doolittle Raiderleads a humble life colored byhistory
•
e
4
Ameriea Hears HEARING AIDS. Helpiny People Heer Better Established 1979
By Klrk Johnson New Yorh Times News Service
e rua
ENUMCLAW, Wash. — At
age 93, Edward Saylor still works in his shop behind the house, making stained-glass art and retreating to a cozy
Two 52 Channel Freedom SIE
armchair forsome afternoon TV when the weather turns
Hearing Aids with a 5 Year Warranty for
cold. He lives, he says, quietly in a quiet spot, among the pastures and fields of a community 40miles south of Seattle. But ask him about "the raid,"
0
$799 due at at time of purchase, $200 manufacturer rebate processed 30 days after purchase date.
David Ryder/The New YorkTimes
Edward Saylor, one of four surviving members of the 80-man crew
out, is hiding in plain sight in dubbed the Doolittle Raiders that bombed Tokyo in April 1942, lives Enumclaw, part of a living his- in Enumclaw, Wash. Saylor and others on his B-25 were hldden by tory that is rapidly fading away. fishermen after crashing off the coast of China subsequent to the raid. In April 1942, just a few grim months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Saylor,
(e~ +dyy
Offer valid thru 2/28/14 Color selection and supplies are hmite d 0
iuuoo
20s. Theywere sons of farmers, them under mats on his boat, then a sergeant inthe ArmyAir teachers and mechanics, and and a 14-year-old orphan beForces, climbed aboard a B-25 although their bombing rtm did came thei rguideand scrounger bomber with four crew mates little damage, it hinted at Jap- of food in the subsequent weeks and helped open a new era in anese vulnerability, kindling as they evaded Japanese pathe war. The Doolittle Raiders, hope for Americans in their trols on the mainland. The boy as they became known — 80 dark early days of WWII, histo- disappeared irt the chaos of men in 16 bombers led by lieu- rians say. the war without a trace, Saylor tenant colonel, James Doolittle He was a 22-year-old en- SalfL — launched themselvesover gineer-guttner in April 1942, "I was going to bring him the Pacific from the aircraft when the Raiders were ordered home with me,n he said. OWe carrier Hornet, aiming to strike to fly much earlier than expect- owed him." at Japan when few thought it ed, hundredsof miles farther After the airmen made it to a could be done, at least with any from Japan than planned. It safe area controlled by the Chihope of survival. seemed all but certain that they nese military, they were reunitSaylor is one of only four would rttn out of gas before ed with some other crews from Raiders left. Across the na- reachinga safe place to land the raid. Saylor's wife learned tion, art average of 413 Amer- in China after the bombs were he was alive from watching a ican World War II veterans a droppecL newsreel about the Raiders that day died last year, according As their plane bore down induded scenes of him receivto the Department of Veter- on the industrial waterfront ing a medal from Madame Chians Affaim, leaving about 1.1 at Kobe, their target, someone ang Kai-shek, the wIfe of the million survivors — down by cmcked open a bottle Of whis- Chinese leader. more than 40 percent since key to bolster their nerves, SayUntil their mission, no large, 2010. After many years of get- lor recalled. ONot enough to in- land-based bomber had ever ting together annually to toast toxicate,n he said. OBut it calmed taken off into combat from an
ydcteyym,
~
little men met in November for what they said was their final
He and his crew had to ditch their B-25 off the Chinese coast
training, led by Doolittle, who also piloted the lead plane off
after it ran out of gas a mile We just did what we had to from a little island controlled do,n Saylor said, sitting on his bythe Japanese. After reaching couch and speaking with a hu- shore on aliferaft thathadbeen mility not uncommon among partly punctured by their sinkservice members steeled in ing plane, they found that their O combat."It was ajob.n only Chinese phrase, We're Doolittle, who would later re- Americans," had been taught
the deck, was conducted on a
reUIllorl. O
ceive the Medal of Honor, and most of the men were in their
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aircraft carrier. Much of their
tiny practice airstrip in Florida. "It was a different time," said CoL Mark Wells, a professor of history at the Air Force Acad-
emy. "None of these guys had any huge and significant selection process or training. They to them in the wrong dialect. A were just sort of the normal fisherman saved them, hiding pilots."
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, D2 Travel, D4-5 Puzzles, D6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Fans collecting donations forvets Bend OregonRaider Nation, a local group of fans of the Oakland Raiders football team, will be collecting donations for Central Oregon Veterans Outreach. The event will take place from10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Newport AvenueMarket parking lot at1121 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. Community members are invited to stop by and drop off needed gear. According to a news release about the event, COVO has requested the following items: one- to two-person tents, 8-foot by 12foot tarps, backpacks, sleeping bags, small propane canisters, one-burner stoves, p-38 can openers, and five- to six-gallon water containers.
By John Gottberg Anderson«For The Bulletin
alentine's Day falls on a Friday this year. It is followed three days later by a national holiday, President's Day — which means the day of romance will kick off a three-day weekend. No doubt, many couples will want to head out of town to celebrate their passion. Where to go? From the Columbia Gorge to metropolitan Portland, down through the Willamette
Mini PPP logo contest underway
Valley to Southern Oregon, a slew of destinations — most of them within three hours' drive of Bend-
The Mini Pole Pedal Paddle T-Shirt contest is currently underway in advance of the May 18 kids' race that is a companion to the regu-
are pulling out all the stops for Valentine's weekend visitors. From spa treatments to wine tastings (with chocolates), from dance music to sweet strawberries (with champagne), lovers won't find it hard to stir their ardor.
lar PPP.
Here are suggestions for how and where to spend your Valentine's holiday:
Kids in first through sixth grade areencouraged to submit designs
W ine and chocolate
that depict activities
Thirty wineries on both sides of the Columbia River are join-
in the race: rafting, running, navigating an obstacle course and bicycling. Entries must be submitted in color on white paper. Designs must include the following information: • U.S. Bank Kid's Mini Pole Pedal Paddle • Bend, Oregon
ing hands — or at least raising toasts — to celebrate Valentine's
Day in the Columbia Gorge Wine andChocolateWeekend (Feb. 14-17). Many wineries are pouring new releases of reds, whites and dessert wines, with bottle
discounts
NOR T HWEST
The Historic Sunshine Mill in The
• 2014 • The letters MBSEF
TRAVEL Next week: S an ta Ro sa,
Calif. Dalles will offer wine and chocolate pairings and packages, with confections from the local Chocolate
somewhere onthe artwork • The artist's signature On the back of the design, please besure to include the artist's name, age, grade, teacher, school, home phone number and email address. Entries must be delivered or mailed to the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, 563 S.W.
'<DGE IELD' trrrsplNQT aols
+ rI R ONIP l R l h 4 . t '
Lab as well as strawberries
and angel-food cake. Hood River's Cathedral Ridge Winery and Naked Winery will offer gourmet chocolates with their
bold reds and customized wine flights, while the Phelps Creek Winery will serve a new sweet-
wine flight that includes its own estate ice wine. The Gorge White House in Hood River will
13th St., Suite 201,
also be open for all four weekend days. Among the highlights on the Washington side of the river, Domaine Pouillon (near Lyle) is celebrating the grand opening of its panoramic hillside tasting room by serving complementary wines with slices of woodfired pizza from its Solstice
Bend, OR,97702 by 5 p.m. Feb. 14. Awards will be given to the top five finishers. For more information, contact Molly Cogswell-Kelley at 541388-0002 or mollyO mbsef.org.
Courtesy McMenamins
McMenamins Hotel Oregonwill serve the hospitality group's ownwines with cheese and fruit as part of the hotel's "Sweethesrts Package." The historic McMinnville hotel is located in the heart of Oregon Wine Country. Cafe. A "Toast to Passion" weekend at the Maryhill Win-
ery will feature a photography show, live music and an artisan cheese and chocolate selection
to accompany wine tastings. Cascade Cliffs Vineyard
(Wishram) and COR Cellars (Lyle) promise an assortment of dark chocolates to pair with
ram) and the Waving Tree Winery (Maryhill) also plan to be open on all four weekend days.
their red wines. The White
For additional details and
Salmon Vineyard (Underwood), lodging options, contact www. Syncline Wine Cellars (Lyle), the columbiagorgewine.com. Jacob Williams Winery (WishSeeRomance /D4
Make-A-Wish Radiothonstarts The Horizon Broadcasting Group and Make-A-Wish Oregon are teaming upFeb. 27-28 to raise money for local children with life-threatening medical conditions. The Make-A-Wish
Radiothon will be broadcast live from Subaru of Bend on 105.7 KQAK-FM, THE PEAK104.1 and LITE
95.7 during the two-day event. The Radiothon will
feature inspirational wish stories from families, volunteers and local supporters. Participants can call in to donate moneyor airline miles. Organizers hopeto raise $30,000 to make wishes come true for local children. For more information, visit oregon.wish.org, email magic@orwish. org or contact 800-9349474. — From staff reports
Paid Advertisement
Making migrationeasierfor wi dife spa8clasercenler By Mac McLean
is inviting you to fall in love with Xeomin* Please join us
The Bulletin
Every fall, thousands of m ule deer embark on a 30- to
Tuesday Feb 4th From 9am- 6pm
75-mile-long trip from the easternslopes oftheCascade Mountains to the rolling
sagebrush south of Horse Ridge only to find the more
Please RSVP. Space is Limited
than 87,000 people who live between Bend and La Pine
are standing in their way. "The West has long had a problem with attitudinal
migration and human communities," said John Goodell,
curator of the High Desert Museum's natural history program. "And Bend is the perfect example of it."
Submitted photo
A deer uses the wildlife underpass on U.S. Highway 97 between Bend and La Pine. Wildlife migration routes are the subject of a new exhibit at the High Desert Museum.
Goodell and officials with the Oregon Department of
a path tens of thousands of
the topic of a new exhibit
mule deer use to go between
Fish and Wildlife said Bend's wildlife migration problem
their summer and winter
focused on both continental and local wildlife migration
habitats every spring and fall.
issues. The exhibit opened at
stems from the fact that there
has been a considerable amount of residential development right in the middle of
He said this situation
and steps that preservation groups in the community are taking to fix it will be
the High Desert Museum on Saturday (see "If You Go" on Page D7).
I
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D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
M II ESTONr ~
For ms f o r s agagsmsatw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBullstlat,777gytr Chandlerdvsv Bendo,r by emai l i ng milestones@bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within on month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
s+ L7
ENGAGEMENTS
MARRIAGES
1, l
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ANNIVERSARY
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ChelseaSchmidt and Zachary Zoboski
Schmidt— Zoboski Christian Sporck and Meagan Hasenoehrl
Hasenoehrl —Sporck
accounting. She is a full-time
University, where she studied
Chelsea Schmidt and Zach- student. ary Zoboski, both of Bend, The groom is the son of
communications. She works
were married Jan. 19 at Gold-
Meagan Hasenoehrl and as a product manager for Christian Sporck, both of Intuit. Campbell, Calif., plan to marT he future groom i s t h e ry Aug. 2 at Kualoa Ranch in son of Christian and Valerie Oahu, Hawaii. Sporck, of Bend. He is a 2005 T he future b r ide i s t h e graduate of Summit High daughter of Dave and Susan School and a 2009 graduate of Hasenoehrl, of Bend. She Cornell University, where he is a 2005 graduate of Sum- studied engineering. He works mit High School and a 2009 as a senior electrical engineer graduate of Seattle Pacific for Qualcomm.
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lege, where she is studying
s
I's
-f
Mark and Betsy Zoboski,
re
i
,4. |f
en Nugget Hotel and Casino of Bend. He is a 2004 graduin Las Vegas. A reception fol- ate of Bend High School. He lowed in a private suite.
works as the plant manager
The bride is the daughter for Be-Bop Biscotti. of Jim and Sheila McCaffery, The couple will honeyof Bend. She is a 2004 grad- moon in Kauai, Hawaii, in uate of Summit High School April. and is attending Linfield ColThey plan to settle in Bend.
Lois and Rolf Schuhr
Schuhr
lup, of Henderson, Nev., and Julie (and Robert) FitzRolf and Lois (Wenholz) gerald, of Westlake, Texas; Schuhr, of Bend, will cel14 grandchildren and two ebrate their 60th wedding great-grandchildren. anniversary with a recepMr. Schuhr worked as a tion hosted by their daughter graphic arts teacher and reg-
C1
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Toni, which will follow the second service at Nativity
istered nurse until his retirement. Mrs. Schuhr worked
Lutheran Church today. The couple were mar-
as a registered nurse for 45
ried Jan. 31, 1954, at Beth-
The couple are members of
lehem Lutheran Church in Dundee, Ill. They have four children, Toni (and James) Simpson, ofBend, Wendy McDole, of Rialto, Calif., Amy (and Brandon) Gal-
Nativity L utheran Church
years until her retirement.
and enjoy reading, going to local lakes and spending time with family. They have lived in Central
Oregon for 3 years.
Anders Will Johnson and Mallory Byers
Byers — johnson
Elise Fischbach and Caleb Salmond
Fischbach —Salmond
received a Master of Arts in teaching. She works as a kinElise Fischbach, of Eugene, dergarten teacher at Charlemand Caleb Salmond, of Herm- agne at Fox Hollow elementaiston, plan to marry July 19 at ry school in Eugene. Northern L ights C h ristmas The future groom is the son Tree Farm in Pleasant Hill. T he future b r ide i s t h e
of Julia Salmond, of Bend, and Steve Salmond, of Sunriver. He
daughter of Donna Charko, of Eugene, and Bruce and Kelly Fischbach, of Vermillion, S.D. She is a 2000 graduate of South Eugene High School,
is a 2005 graduate of Ashland High School, a 2010 graduate of Liberty University, where he studied psychology, and a
a 2005 graduate of Seattle
2012 graduate of Northwest Christian University, where he
University, where she studied received his master's in School international business and Counseling. He works as a French, and a 2009 graduate school counselor at Sandstone of Pacific University, were she Middle School in Hermiston.
degree in industrial/organizational psychology. She works Mallory Byers and Anders for adidas Group in Portland. Will Johnson, both of PortThe groom is the son of land, were married Oct. 19, Susanne Callanan, of Trum2013, at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Bend. A
bull, Conn., and Eric Johnson,
Room.
of the University of Connecti-
The bride is the daughter of Steve and Nancy Byers, of Bend. She is a 2005 graduate of Mountain View High School, a 2009 graduate of Southern Oregon University, where she studied psychology, and a 2011 graduate of
cut, where he studied psychology, and a 2011 graduate of
The Bulletin MI LESTONE G UI
of Bridgeport, Conn. He is a reception followed at the De- 2005 graduate of Trumbull schutes Brewery Mountain High School, a 2009 graduate
University of Ne w
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave.,Bend)or from any of these valued advertisers:
the University of New Haven,
where he earned a master's degree in industrial/organizational psychology. He works for Kohler Co. in Portland. The couple honeymooned
H aven, in Hawaii. Theywill settle in Portland.
where she earned a master's
AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park & Recreation District The Bend Trolley
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Ross and ToneyRyno, a boy, Paul Emerson Ryno, 7 pounds, Dec.27. Daniel and Jackie Vance, a girl, Suzanna Carol Vance, 5 pounds, 15 ounces, Jan. 6. Jake and Maggie Akerberg, a boy, Luke Henry Akerberg, 6 pounds, 6 ounces, Jan. 7. Jake and Maggie Akerberg, a boy, Liam ThomasAkerberg, 5 pounds, 11 ounces, Jan. 7. Chad Larson and Margaret Clarke, a girl, Adyson Marie Larson, 7 pounds, 6 ounces, Jan. 9. Tristin Bremer and Amber Constable, a boy, ConnerCalvin Shane Bremer, 7 pounds, 13ounces,
Jan.12. Jess snd Amorita Anstett, a girl, Jayden Star Anstett, 6 pounds, 14 ounces, Dec. 20. Keith and Naomi Demerly, a girl, Elizabeth LeeDemerly, 7 pounds, 14 ounces,Jan.11. Kevin Jordan and Kristina Spackman, a boy, KaoGrant Jordan, 9 pounds, 10 ounces, Jan. 8. Jeremyand Msndi Puckett,aboy, Rogen WadePuckett, 7 pounds,14 ounces,Jan.6. John and Ashley Nsal, a boy, Henry Robert Neal, 8 pounds, 1 ounce, Jan. I9. Nathan and AmyHolcomb, a girl, Annistyn HennesseyHolcomb,6 pounds, 8 ounces, Jan. 19. • •
Jesse Wallace and Christina Woo, a boy, KobeJamesWoo, 8 pounds, 1 ounce, Jan. 25. Brandon Mathers and Jayma Horn, a girl, Allie Elizabeth Horn, 7 pounds, 5 ounces, Jan. 24. Sean and Nicole Sutlle, a girl, Phoebe Craft Suttle, 5 pounds,1 ounce, Jan. 22. Joshua and Amber Haynes, a boy, Parker Brantley Haynes, 7 pounds, 9 ounces, Jan. 21. Canyon and Alisa Davis, a girl, Autumn Davis, 8 pounds, 3 ounces, Jan.12. JacobThompson and Emily Hueners, a girl, Ali Elizabeth
INES
Bend WeddingB Formal Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards B Events Ida's Cupcake Cafe
Thompson,6 pounds,4 ounces,Jan. 14. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Michael Van Sant and Kelli Eggerl, a girl, Brogan LynnVanSant, 8 pounds, Jan.17. Jacob and Heather Vandermeer, a boy, Eastyn Robert HansVandermeer, 6 pounds, 3 ounces, Jan. 1. Joshua Friend and Ashley Wrsy, a girl, Noble McKoi Friend, 7 pounds, Jan.5. Matthew and Heather Allen, a boy, David Alexander Tiberius Allen, 9 pounds, 8 ounces, Jan. 21.
Lake Creek Lodge M.Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School Northwest Medi Spa Salon Je Danae Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
ar TearScience
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Have you been suffering from dry eye7
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
I'Bcl
OIA IAScIM OI' Cl'cIABS OA By Mary Ann Anderson KEARNEY, Neb. — Just be-
fore sunrise, in the hourglass
WHERE TOSTAY • Best Western Plus Mid-Nebraska Inn andSuites: centrally located to RoweSanctuary and CraneTrust; Kearney, Neb.; rates from $89; www. BestWesternNebraska.com
heart of the North American
continent, the temperature has dipped to 15 degrees on the Platte River.
I'm shivering in a wooden blind, even with layers i,
of fleece and foot warmers to ward off frostbite. It's late
k
March and it shouldn't be this cold, not even for Nebraska's
Great Plains. Across the frozen landscape, the sun begins its ascent into a blush-colored
International Crane Foundation via McClatchy-Tribune News Service
sky, and slowly on the river dark shapes begin to stand
The endangered whooping cranes are the occasional visitors in
and stretch and flap. An ancient, natural avian
River Valley heartland during the annual migration.
the flocks of sandhill cranes that pass through America's Platte
flock from all over the world
to climb aboard the crane train that begins in that win-
dow of time possibly in late February and that lasts until
INFORMATION • The Crane Trust; www.Crane Trust.org • lain Nicolson Audubon Center at Rowe Sanctuary; www. RoweSanctuary.org • Nebraska Tourism Commission; www.VisitNebraska.com • Grand Island Hall County Convention and Visitors Bureau; www VisitGrandlsland.com • Kearney Visitors Bureau; www.VisitKearney.org
spectacle is about to happen ther north to Canada and SiThe birds stay in the Platte near Kearney. Here, the sand- beria for the breeding season. River Valley for about three hill cranes are awakening, I'm in the blind, a shed real- or four weeks, consuming untold thousands of t h e m, ly, anticipating the massive enough calories to bulk up their silhouettes barely visi- breakfast liftoff that will soon about 20 percent of their body ble in the bitter predawn cold. occur. weight for the lengthy flights From the mist, a cacophony That surreal moment comes north. of cackles, calls and coos ris- sooner than I expect. A pair of Earlier in the day, a ghostly es with each passing minute, scalawag eagles have caused field of snow geese, probably the cadence increasing with havoc among the birds, and a bit of a nuisance to the Middaylight. suddenly in seconds seeming- westerner, is a magical ocFor the cranes, waking ly impenetrable synchronized currence to a Southerner like from a cold night on the silent, clouds of blue-gray cranes lift me not used to such a natural swiftly running river, sunrise to the skies in a furious at- avian circus. The sight of so brings feeding time, where tempt to escape becoming the many geese just adds to my up to a half-million birds will predator's next meal. glee. rise and fatten up on the waste T he eagles dive into t h e The migration is amazing. corn, most of it leftover from mass of birds, with flocks of The cranes are huge, standing autumn harvest months, in cranes going every which- up to 5 feet tall of gray plumthevastacreage offields,open away. The bright early morn- age, sporty red cap, and some landscapes and pastures of ing sun was occluded by the serious attitude. Their wingrich, sweet grass before re- wing-tracks of 10, 20, 30 thou- span easily reaches 6 feet in turning back to the river at sand birds. circumference, enough to give sunset to slumber again. And just like that, they are you a scratch or two should During that time, the cranes gone for the day, only to re- one get hold of you. Not to will look for a mate, striking turn late in the evening, long worry. You can't come within poses, bending and preening stretches of v-shaped columns a country mile of one of these for a few moments of passion of birds just keep coming and skittish babies. on the prairie, sandhill-style. coming like a never-ending Sometimes the whooping For the nosy birdwatcherfreight train. cranes come, that rarest and that would be me — it's worth About 70,000 cranes zip most beautiful bird, as they a 15-degree morning just for through the Rowe-Kearney follow the migration route, that spectacle as they search area each night during migra- too. In another early morning for a mate for life. tion along the Central Flyway, jaunt to see the birds at the I 'm i n N e b raska t o s e e one offour routes across the Crane Trust, jumbled into the
debeest Migration of Kenya and Tanzania, birdwatchers
308-384-707f
WHERE TOEAT • The Cellar Bar andGrill: soups, sandwiches, steaks, Mexican and Italian comfort food; Kearney; www.Cellar BarandGrill.com • Thunderhead Brewing Company: stone ovenpizzas, calzones, andspecialty beer; Kearney; wwwThunderhead
April. Peak times, though, are about the last two weeks in March.
"It's a place where you have to linger," says Forsberg. "The more you stay here, the more you want to stay. It's not just a great gathering of birds but a great gathering of people." To see this wondrous crane occurrence
the annual migration of the
United States that most birds,
cranes passing through the
waterfowl like ducks, geese, of a single-engine airplane. and more than300 other bird As it comes into sight, Brad species including the stately M ellema, once d i rector o f heron, follow annually. the Crane Trust Nature and
Platte River Valley from their
wintering grounds in Texas and Mexico as they glide far-
racket of sandhills is the sound
the jittery birds. "If it circles,
that means they've sighted a whooping crane." Watching the plane intent-
ly and hoping it would circle back, I was a bit disappointed as it puttered on westward,
"They've seen the rise and fall
signaling the whoopers were nowhere to be found.
of civilizations." Like those who travel to
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD P A V E
A S T E I C T T
H O H U M
AVS V I E N E E N Y O S T E W I S P I N I TE M
C H L O T T S K T H I E S EME V I N T I LE A P A S T S R T A
A H O S N E N T Y WA T E A L VA I ST M N TH S N E S E W S PR Y R A I M E R O A V O L U N I ZE S E S L R W OE Y E S K V I LO S N U N A GE W I C G A F E O R S S D O
P O R V A I J O A L
B E C O M E T H
A L E C
D Y N A M
CO Z A S A T R H T H S O T E E RW A U R A E
S I T I N F O R
S A B B R G I I T D O L E H V A E S G A
R I N G U N T O
A S HO W S L O E W E T M A R N E L WA R M U P E I A P I O L A N T E 0 M I NO R B E EN O S T A V E N E 8 I D E D O R K U R U B I AL Y
E R I E C A N A L
D A N I C A
T HA S T W OO E R TY A R W H I H O N Y O K
CROSSWORD IS ON D6
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trp' n
WS E P L F L S
able. I'm not a bird expert, by a long shot, only a lifelong admirer of all winged creatures, great and small. Perhaps. like me, you'll come away from the migration all insane for cranes.
SOLUTION To TODAY'S SUDOKU
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3 1 6 7
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M I NGLE P O T E NT Z E NITH L O T ION
N E R D
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2/2/14
JUMBLE IS ON D6
NO PASSING ZONE
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1t's everything that brings us together. It's a million conversations happening at once and sometimes, it's one momentous event that we all witness together. It's our shared sense of wonder. It's our collective hope.
It's not just the place we live but the place we're all creating. WpcIt Wp S p cIt"p
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WISDOM SHABBY
O T O E
Na t i onal
United States is just remark-
All in all, the sandhill cranes gave a five-starperformance. "Cranes have been moving up and down this highway for centuries," says renowned nature photographer and author Michael Forsberg as he speaks of the migration.
low whisper as to not disturb
that
Geographic calls the greatest wildlife phenomenon in the
here at the Rowe Sanctuary
V isitor Center, speaks in a
BIAS East Africa for the Great Wil-
Brewing.com • Doc and Fritz's Shady Bend Restaurant: local institution for Italian food along the Lincoln Highway; Grand Island, Neb.;
If gsll gs
McClatchy-Yribune News Service
D3
bendbroadband www.bendbroadband.com
D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
fn I
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John Gottherg Anderson/For The Bulletin
Maryhill Winery, on the Washington shore of the Columbia River Gorge, will host a "Toast to Passion" weekend for Valentine's Day.
Events will include a photography show, live music, and an artisan cheese and chocolate selection to accompany wine tastings. The Southeast Wine Collec- tions: 800-966-6490 or www. oregongardenresort.com. Several of Eugene's small hotels have specials of their own. The Excelsior Inn (541342-6963, www.excelsiorinn. sewinecollective.com. com) will present couples Willamette Valley with roses, sparkling wine Lovers of Oregon's famed and chocolates, as well as a pinot noir wine know to head special dinner with live musi-
tive is just off Southeast Division Street at 2425 S.E. 35th PlaceinPortland. For reservations: 503-208-2061 or www.
Photo courtesy of the Bkamania Lodge
Washington's picturesque Skamania Lodge, beside the Columbia River near the Bridge of the Gods, is offering three "Month of Ro-
mance" packages through February. One, called "Lover's Retreat," includes tulips, chocolate-covered cherries and a couple's massage.
Romance
Roman cgetaways
Continued from D1
Gorge lodging One possible accommodation choice is the picturesque
ryhiH 4 .~ " e Dalles .Hood iver f Portland McMjnnvig&+~SHvort
tipwber
Photo courtesy of McKenzie Orchards B8 B
=
Romance" packages through February. The Lover's Retreat ($539) includes premier lodging, a couple's massage, and a bou-
Gourmet morning meals at the McKenzie Orchards Bed & Breakfast may include waffles with fresh
berries. Valentine's Day guests will also be treated
ly <Iigener
to roses, chocolates, a full dinner and a cooking lesson from innkeepers Karen and Tom Reid.
egend
quet of tulips with a box of rRoseborg W Canyontvige rants Pass'
chocolate-covered cherries upon arrival. Two less-inclusive packages are called "A Night to Remember" ($264) and "Passionate Escape" ($224). (Rates do not include tax, gratuities or lodge fee.)
OREGON
For moreinformation
~WW~ei,'d Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Travel Oregon. 1000S.W.Broadway, Suite 2300, Portland; 503-275-9750, 800-9623700, www.traveloregon.com
Pianist Tom Grant and singer
Shelly Rudolph will play a Fri- group, which includes the day night Valentine's jazz and popular Lucia, deLuxe and dance concert. Mimosa break- Governor properties, is offerfasts-in-bed will be offered on ing its own romance packSaturday and Sunday morn- age. Hotel deLuxe is serving ings, and the hotel restaurants up a twist on the old-fashwill offer special dinner and ioned date night and movie. cocktail menus. Overnight guests will enjoy The Waterleaf Spa also is a three-course dinner for two offering several Valentine's at Gracie's restaurant with a packages, including the "Four piano serenade of classic movHands and Two Hearts" cou- ie love songs. After dinner, ples massage ($330 for two) they'll enjoy chocolates and — an 80-minute, side-by-side pinot noir as they snuggle up aromatherapy massage with in their room with a DVD of glasses of champagne. The the 1957 Cary Grant-Deborah "Be My Valentine"package Kerr movie "An Affair to Re($340 per person) is a three- member," which also happens hour indulgence that includes to be the name given to this an exfoliating sugar scrub, a package. Rates start at $249 massage and a facial, along plus tax. Reservations: 866with a long-stem rose and 986-8085 or www.hoteldeluxe champagne. There's also a portland.com. "Sweet Red Rose" facial ($145) At chic Hotel Lucia, overand a "Devil Made Me Do It" night guests may oversleep in chocolate pedicure ($65) or newly renovated rooms with the "Morning After" package: manicure ($55). Information: 866-399-7980 They need not check out until or www.skamania.com/ 1 p.m.Priced from $329 per valentines-day. night, this package features Sweethearts who want a plushbathrobes,a $30 credit little more privacy can con- for breakfast in bed, a bottle sider a getaway to the His- of chilled bubbly and freshtoric Balch Hotel in Dufur, 13 ly squeezed orange juice for miles south of The Dalles and mixing their own mimosas. just off U.S. Highway 197. A Reservations: 866-986-8086 or red-brick landmark in this www.hotellucia.com. The "Tempting Turndown" old farming town, the Balch has just 18 rooms, and its Val-
package at the historic Gov-
entine's weekend special in-
ernor Hotel will set the mood for romance with fresh rose
cludes a romantic four-course dinner. Information: 541-4672277 or www.balchhotel.com.
petals on the bed, a chilled
bottle of Prosecco and a latenight snack featuring fresh
Urban delights
& Restaurant (541-343-1119
tub; a bottle of pinot noir with
ings. The Oval Door Bed and
gourmet chocolate on arrival; a gourmet four-course din-
Breakfast Inn (541-683-3160,
pool, sauna and steam room.
Stevenson
is offering three "Month of
the luxurious Allison Inn & Spa in Newberg, a "Valentines and Vineyards" package includes a stay in a deluxe king fireplace room with a soaking
strawberries, whipped cream Each of d owntown Port- and gourmetchocolate sauce. land's P r ovenance H o t els Checkout isn't until 2 p.m.
claimed Campbell House Inn or www.campbellhouse.com) will present a f ive-course, prix-fixe dinner, by reservation, with optional wine pair-
www.ovaldoor.com) p r omises a complimentary bottle restaurant; and use of spa fa- of sparkling wine or cider to cilities, including a swimming any overnight guest on Feb.
posite Cascade Locks.
At once luxurious and rustic, the celebrated spa hotel
cal accompaniment. The ac-
ner inthe hotel' s superb Jory
G0
SkamaniaLodge,located near Stevenson, Wash., almost op-
south from Portland into the upper Willamette Valley. At
tions: 888-246-5631, www.gov
baby," according to the promotion. "No proof necessary, we trust you." Priced from $399.
ernorhotel.com.
Reservations: 800-263-2305 or
the next day. The package is priced from $239. Reserva-
wwwvintageplaza.com. "Even Cupid Is B lushing" package will allow couples to Valentine activities arrive in their rooms to find For those willing to leave champagne on ice, rose petals their rooms, the Oregon Symon their bed, bath salts beside phony is presenting "A Storm their tub, a feather boa and L arge Valentine" for t w o body-massage oil. Priced from nights, 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 14 $319. Reservations: 888-207- and 15, at the Arlene Schnitzer 2201 or w w w . monaco-port Concert Hall. The frequent land.com. Pink Martini collaborator has At the Hotel Monaco, the
14. And at the McKenzie Or-
Spa treatments are additional. chards Bed & Breakfast (541Priced from $550. Reserva- 515-8153, www.mkobb.com), tions: 503-554-2525 or www. the package includes a cooktheallison.com. ing lesson — along with lodgAt McMenamins' Hotel Ore- ing, dinner, breakfast, roses gon in McMinnville, a "Sweet- and chocolates. hearts Package" (available now through Feb. 16) includes Southern Oregon a room for two, dinner in the
It may be no coincidence
pub, a bottle of McMenamins' own Edgefield sparkling wine (with keepsake flutes) and breakfast the next morning. Priced from $155. Reserva-
that th e a n nual O regon Shakespeare Festival begins
tions: 888-472-8427 or www.
peare's t empestuous
its 8 t/z-month run in Ashland
on Valentine's night, Feb. 14, with a performance of Shake"The
mcmenamins.com. Tempest." Two other playsThe spring flowers won't neither of them by the Bard be blooming yet, but Silver- himself — open on Feb. 15 and ton's Oregon Garden Resort is 16. keeping things colorful with Continued next page its own Valentine's Day package. Not only does it include lodging, dinner and breakfast www.AgateBeachwotel.eom fortwo; it also offers garden Private, vintage,oceanfront ~getowoy admission, a bottle of local ewport,' O tR wine and two 50-minute mas1- o~o~-7ss-s674 sages in the resort's own spa. Priced from $299. Reserva-
A...ate Befi( motel
At th e R i verPlace Hotel, done some marvelous love V alentine's guests ar e b e - ballads, including a stunning
ing encouraged to check all of their personal electronics devices — cellphones, laptop computers, iPods and the like — into a private safe to en-
version of George Gershwin's "Summertime." For
t i c kets,
priced from $35 to $127: 503228-1353,
htt p : //tickets.or
able them to enjoy a "Romantic Revival" with their loved
symphony.org. Portland is also home to a group of 10 small wineries
one. Lodging in the four-star
that call themselves the South-
hotel will include late check-
east Wine Collective. On the
out, chocolates and sparkling wine, and a private bath but-
nights of Feb. 12, 14, 15 and 16, the winemakers will serve a
ler to draw an indulgent bath Valentine's dinner for two, feawith special amenities. Priced turing glass pours of obscure from $454.Reservations:888- French wines and small-plate 869-3108 or ww w r iverplace servings of baked Camembert hotel.com. cheese (with a hazelnut crust And then there's the Vin- and pinot-poached cranbertage Plaza's "Conceive and ries) and flourless chocolate Receive" package. Romantic fudge cake a la mode. rooms come stocked not only On Thursday night, Feb. 13, with red wine and chocolates, the collective's "February Supbut also with oysters, mood per Social" will be an interacmusic, and a b ook entitled tive group dining experience, "How to Choose the Sex of a raclette party featuring Old Your Baby." Parents who start World and New World cheesa family during their stay will es chosen by Steve Jones of receive 25 percent off an an- Portland's Cheese Bar. Resnual return visit until the baby ervations ($30) are required, is 18 — "or 50 percent if you but guests may casually drop guess the correct sex of the by anytime between 6:30 and 8:30p.m.
~
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Gaily decorated, the Historic Sunshine Mill in The Dalles is one of 30 Columbia Gorge wineries celebrating Valentine romance during a Feb. 14-17"Wine and Chocolate Weekend." The Sunshine Mill will
offer pairing packages as well as strawberries and angel-food cake.
'onboartr credlt("ooc") ofrerappliesto new individualbookings made 01/0142/28/2014, valid contact your vacatlon speclallsts at: on 6-night or longer Royal Caribbean Intemational sailings departing 03/01-12/31i201S exctuding 541.388.3424 Quantum of the Seas. Qualified European sailings depart and return to European ports. OBCoffer applicable to oceanview and above stateroom categories & vades by statercom category 800.477.2363 purchased. PromoCode: YOURWOWis required andmust be presented at time ofboosng. OBC 't has no cashvalue, is non-transferable, not redeemableforcash, and will expire if not used by10:00 PM on last night of cruise. Free upgrade refers to booking a balcony statercom for an ocean view stateroom fare onAllure, Freedom, Independence, Jewel, Navigator, andOasis and applies to nsw bookings of 6e night Caribbean cruises departing between 03101-08/31/2014. Free upgrade offer valid for bookings made between 01/2742/28/2014. OBC olrer and Free upgrade olrer have e44 hfE Greentjtrood Aue Bend prr gyypt Iestrtccons and are subject to availabety and change without notice, capacity controlled, and may be withdrawn at anyCme.©2014 Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. Ships registry: The Bahamas.
FEAK
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ri ac in ime o avana By Patricia Sheridan Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
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HAVANA Colorful, crumbling and controversial, Cuba is caught between then and now, between commu-
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challenge of two currencies. Thanks to a loosening of t ravel restrictions fo r
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It was the proverbial dark and stormy night when our I>iii o I charter plane finally touched down after an eight-hour delay in Miami. Once we were through customs, the glass doors slid open to reveal a Photos by Patricia Sheridan/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette crowd of people three deep Morning breaks over the former capital building in Havana. It is an exact replica of the U.S. Capitol and waiting to greet family mem- now abandoned as the seat of government because it is viewed as asymbol of corruption. bers pushing carts piled high with goods. "This welcome is all for you," joked in-country guide Vivian Quintero Triana. She assistedJoe Scarpaci of the sNMCenter for the Study of Cuban 'U
Photo courtesy of Provenance Hotels
A classic movie theme is used in the lobby of the Hotel deLuxe, where a Valentine's weekend package is named for the1957
movie "An Affair to Remember." Couples will enjoy a threecourse dinner followed by private viewing of the Cary Grant film.
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Culture + Economy as he led
the group from the Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh. If you think cigars, rum and classic cars when you envision Cuba, you won't be
From previous page More to the point for cou-
ples, this is also the time of the Ashland Chamber of
d isappointed. Even i n
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the
dark, cars from the 1950s and '60s were obvious in the parking lot just beyond the greeters. There are so many still running that it's like a vintage car show all the time. Weaving among them on the city roads
The Saratoga Hotel, built in the 1930s, boasts a mezzanine bar, complete with palm trees, that captures all the romance of old
enjoying a "Valentines and chocolates and sparkling Vineyards" package. Spa sercider. From $225. Reserva- vices are extra, but use of spa
extra.
license is issued by the U.S.
Shakingoffthe shackles
Treasury Department's Office ernment officials, and a few of Foreign Assets Control. The are kept up with funds from
tions: 541-488-1700 or www.
facilities, including a swim-
the families who once lived
m ingpool,saunaand steam room, are complimentary.
The impact of the U.S. trade embargo initiated in 1960 and
Carnegie went on a People to
ashlandspringshotel.com.
People permit in partnership
there.
the loss of Soviet support in
with the Center for the Study of Cuban Culture + Economy,
Art and power outages
Commerce's annual " Sea-
sons of Romance" promotion, with special lodging packages offered by at least eight individual hotels and country inns in the state's
Nr /
southernmost city.
Just one example is the romance package presented by the iconic Ashland Springs Hotel. In addition to lodging, parking and breakfast, guests are offered special treatment at the Water-
John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
stone Spa: a 30-minute soak A massage and facial are for two, a steam and sauna
de rigueur at the Allison Inn
session, and a relaxing foot
& Spa, where couples may
treatment for two in a sunlit solarium, served up with
find time for pampering while
Dinner isn't included in
the Ashland Springs package, but Valentine's is a special night at the beautiful new Belle Fiore Estate
religion, including Santeria, a Plaza de Armas and the near- blend of Catholicism and Afare Soviet-era models, bicy- Havana. by Plaza de Cathedral. For rican spiritual practices. Hacle taxis and, in Old Havana, fans of 1950sarchitecture, a vana is an enchanting meld of horses and buggies. Murals stop at the Hotel Rivera, fa- cultures, architecture, people and billboards celebrating the because CUCs are worthless mous for being a Mafia hang- and places, and although the 55-year-old revolution and its outside of Cuba. out, is a must. sun will inevitably set on the heroes add a surreal qualiM ost mansions from t h e Castros' Cuba, what will rety to the country, especially Cityof Columns glory days of the sugar planta- place it remains to be seen. in combination with the old The only way for Ameri- tions are still standing. Some vehicles. It's like a movie is cans to travel to Cuba legally are occupied by employees of being filmed and you are an is with a licensed group. The the owners who fled after the
the late 1980s have taken their
In Roseburg, Hokanson's Bed & Breakfast, on the Na-
and Winery, two miles east tional Historic Register, is of the city. A p r ofessional offering a Friday or Saturday ballet performance and an night Valentine's Day Weekevening of classical music end special. Innkeepers John will accompany the three- and Vicky Hokanson will course Friday night dinner, includedinner or breakfast including a glass of the win- for two, with a room, for $95, ery's exclusive white blend. including a special gift of a The price of $65 per person bone china cup and saucer. includes gratuity. Reserva- Reservations: 541-672-2632 tions: 541-552-4900 or www. or w w w .hokansonsguest bellefiorewine.com. house.com. In nearby historic JacksonThe Umpqua Valley's hisville, Bybee's Historic Inn on toric C.H. Bailey House Bed the Old Stage Road is offering 8z Breakfast is welcoming a second night's stay for half guests with a"Valentine 2014 price to any guest checking in Special" that includes a 10 on Feb. 14. From $202.50 (for percent room-night discount two nights) including a three- and a complementary bottle course breakfast; an extra of champagne — or, if you $25 gets you a Valentine's prefer, ch o c olate-covered package of a bottle of cham- strawberries — in the name pagne, c h o colate-dippedof romance. From $135. Resstrawberries and a single red ervations: 541-672-1500 or rose. Reservations: 541-899- www.chbaileyhouse.com. 0106 or www.bybeeshistoric Just outside of the Southinn.com. ern Oregon city, special The Lodge at Riverside in wine-and-chocolate pairings Grants Pass offers a "Relax, are being offered both at Renew and Recharge" pack- the Abacela Winery and the age that includes a night's Delfino Winery. lodging with breakfast and Finally, Valentine's will be a couples' treatment at its a big day at the Seven Feathspa, recently voted the best ers Hotel 5 Casino Resort in in Southern Oregon. This in- Canyonville: Country mucludes two 60-minute Swed- sic superstar Leann Rimes ish massages, foot soaks, will perform in concert at aromatherapy, champagne 9 p.m. Tickets priced at $40 and two day passes to the and $55, may be reserved at athletic club. From $ 265. 888-772-5425 or wwwseven Reservations: 877-955-0600 feathers.com. or www.thelodgeatriverside. — Reporter:janderson@ com. bendbuIIetirt.com
Many old cars still fill the streets in Cuba.
toll. Buildings that would be which is based in Virginia. declared uninhabitable in the There are performance and United States are bursting at religious licenses that grant their disintegrating seams Americans access to Cuba with inhabitants. as well. Beyonce and Jay-Z "The two biggest issues caused a stir when they celfacing Cubans are food and ebrated their fifth wedding housing," said Scarpaci. anniversary by traveling to President R a u l
Ca s t r o, Cuba. The famous duo used a
brother of Fidel, has introduced some reforms and the people are slowly shaking off the shackles of a 100 percent state-run economy. With
checkout. The "Morning After" package includes breakfast in bed along with champagneand orange juice for making one's own mimosas.
Americans must follow the
program outlined by the permit they are traveling under.
Visits to the homes of Cubans — some living very well and others scraping by — are included in the program as well as dinners in paladares, which are privately run in-home restaurants. While we were
stayed at the Saratoga Hotel, the same as the Carnegie
dining at L'Atelier, a wonderful paladar in an old Vedado
group.
mansion decorated with the
dents are allowed to operate palm trees, that captures all
The staff didn't miss a beat, quickly lighting the room with
artists, the lights went out.
businesses from their homes
the romance of old Havana.
and buy and sell their own houses. You often see people holding homemade signs advertising for buyers or sellers. Another reform is the per-
The rooftop bar and pool were candelabras. just mint on the mojito. Power outages are common
mission to buy a car. A new
Capitol. It was the seat of gov-
Across the Paseo del Prado
ly restoredrelics offer rides
in Cuba. So are exceptional
from the Saratoga is a build- artistssuch as Jose Fuster, a ing that is a replica of the U.S. mosaic artist who didn't stop
Chinese-made car can cost ernment before the revolution, up to $240,000, a ridiculous but after, it was considered amount in an y c ountry. In a symbol of corruption and Cuba, it would take the aver- abandoned for a time. Just beage person more than 1,000 hind it sits one of 40 tobacco years to pay it off, accord- factories that once operated ing to Scarpaci's calcula- during Havana's heyday. tions. Those with beautifulHavana is sometimes called the City of Columns because
lndudes air, taxes, transfers, free pre-cruise night, $50 on board credit per cabin free shore excursions, free post night and more!
.' U
work of contemporary Cuban
• OR CASINO TOU R + KB I?-19 $269 PPDO
5 casinos, food credits/free slot play/ free breakfast
SISTERACT-KELLERAUDIIORIUIIII APRIL 1 i SI89 I'P Indudt5 free dinner. Hit BroadwayMusical based onWhoopi Goldberg's dassic movie!
PALM SPRINGS APRIL6 t2 I st 699pPDo Includes air, taxes, transfers, 6 breakfasts, aerial tram, Deluxe Tour of Elvis L Priscilla Presley's Honeymoon Horn, 1 lunch, 1 dinner, FINAL season of PalmSprings Follies, Celebrity Horne tour, Indian CanyonTour andmore!
VICTORIA B.C. MAY ts 21 I St 349 PPDO lndudes Air/taxes/transfers, 3 nts at 5-star Grand Padgc, Butchart
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with his home and tiled his
neighborhood with colorful, whimsical designs. Then there was sculptor Yoan Capote, who talked to the Carnegie
RHINE RIVER CRUISE OCT. 31-NOV. 8 $4,299 PPDO Pay ln full tty reb. 28 R. recelve $500 oii alr!Tour Marksburg and ruins of Heidelberg Castle in Germany, Black Forest region, Holland's windmills, Strassbourg in France, nlghtllfe in Rudescheim's Drosselgssse. Indudes air, taxes, transfers.
travelers about the meaning behind his work, much of which deals with communica-
tion and his country's relation-
e•
ship with the United States.
around Havana and along the Malecon, the famous road and seawall built by
Cuba's African side influof all the colonial colonnades. Because part of the city is a ences its music, art, dance and
the United States before the revolution.
thefacadesmust bepreserved. Ernest Hemingway is the
Cubans are paid in pesos by the state, but visitors use CUCs (Cuban convertible pesos), a different currency that
rare c elebrated A m erican.
UNESCO World Heritage site,
The Floridita, self-proclaimed cradle of the daiquiri, has a bronze statue of Papa in the
corner, leaning on the bar. It's U.S. dollar. Most people hire a photo op most visitors can't the cars for an hour, but they pass up. Live music, smoke can be had for 30 minutes for and crowds make it a place about 15 CUCs. The bicycle to pop in, get the picture and taxis that remind one of rick- move on. shaws are just a few CUCs. The Floridita sits at the beCubans are generally very ginning of Obispo, a narrow friendly and happily interact street that leads to the harbor with visitors. Many speak and is filled with tourists and English, so if you don't speak Cubans. While wandering Spanish it won't be a problem. t hrough th e s o uvenir a n d What you need to know is T-shirt shops where imagt rades one to one with t h e
big-ticket items are often paid
Photo courtesy of Provenance Hotels
~I V ER C R U I SE ~ IIIN 27 IIIL - 5 [51AR TINGATII37N PPDO
People to People license and
es of the revolutionary Che
dollars are not accepted. Most Guevara hang next to Cuban people bring cash and change licenseplates,comrade caps, it at the hotel. You end up with bongos and beads, it's easy to about 87 CUCs for $100. forget this is not a free-market A s for buying art, t he society. Musicians, shop own-
The chic Hotel Lucia, in the heart of downtown Portland, offers Valentine's guests a stay in its newly renovated room with late
revolution. Others house gov-
Built in the 1930s, it boasts a r e s i- mezzanine bar, complete with
state-issued p ermits,
American credit cards and
ale
area visitors can't miss is the
ers and peanutsellers vie for
for by wiring the money once your attention just as in any you get home. You take the art tourist destination. with you. It is an honor sysAlong the way you pass the tem. Americans are allowed Hotel Florida, built in 1885; the to bring home jewelry, art and 19th-century Johnson & Johnmusic but nothing state made, son pharmacy building, which which means no cigars or is now a museum; and the rum. Bring at least $500 if you Hotel Ambos Mundos, where enjoy bringing home memen- Hemingway wrote "The Old tos and change it as needed Man and the Sea." Another
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
SU D O K U
by Osvld L Hsyt snd Jea Knussk
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Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
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to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abovecartoon.
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the world's image of Dublin fails to capture what makes the city special for locals. uTo a lot of people's per-
ceptions, Dublin is home to the Guinness Storehouse and Christ Church Cathedral," he
said. "We export so much of
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GuinnessStorehouse, except that it's there. Dublin is more culturally verdant and there's
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
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Which is harder?
James Vincent McMorrow, an Irish musician, said Dublin's coffee
conversation about Dublin's
houses and music venues are among his favorites, offering home-
other offerings with McMor-
spun culture in a city otherwise known for church and beer.
Emma J Doyle via New York Times News Service
row, whose latest album is "Post Tropical."
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"Even when all the experts agree, they may be wrong." — Bertrand Russell. "Which do you think is harder," Unlucky Louieasked, "dummy play or defense?" "Dummy play," I replied simply. "You're in the minority," Louie said. 'The consensus is that defense is harder. Defenders consistently face unpleasant guesses." Louie was right, but I think it takes more time and eÃort to become a fine declarer. Dummy play has many elements, but a defender usually has few options and sometimes has only one. In today's deal, North's response of four hearts was a "transfer," obliging South to bid four spades. To make South declarer, with the opening lead coming up to, not t hrough, his strength w oul d o f t e n b e an advantage. West happened to lead a heart, and East took the king and ace and returned a heart to the queen. West then shifted to a club. Declarer won in dummy, picked up the trumps with winning finesses, and claimed his game. After East showed the A-K of hearts, South needed all the missing aces for his INT opening bid. So West had one chance to beat the contract: to promote a trump trick for East. At the fourth trick, West should lead the 13th heart. If dummy ruffs
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Q
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• Food in Dublin has got• worth checking out? • ten immeasurably better • The main place where than it was. When I was a kid, • everyone congregates there weren't a lot of options. would be Whelan's. It's one Now you're overwhelmed of those places that probably with options. One of my favor• Which music venues are
• For me, it's drinking • great coffe e and being by the sea. I grew up in a place called Malahide, which is by the water and is beautifully quiet, leafy and part serene. If you hop in a car, you can go
A
should fit 200 people, but it
ite places is a Lebanese spot
feels like they somehow man- calledRotana cafe;you can go there in 20 minutes. age topack 700 inside.Iguess late at night and get food for the New Y or k c o mparison very little money. One of my What are some of your might be the Bowery Ball- favorite bars is J. O'Connell. It's a quintessentially Irish • favorite coffee shops? room; I don'tknow whether • If you were to go back that place has the same in- bar, but not in a twee sense. • five years, Starbucks frastructure, but W helan's It's one of those places where would have been considered nurtures musicians. It's very the people who run it don't the best in Dublin. Now they homespun. All my first shows really want you to be there, have these small barista shops were there. All my first expe- but they're OK with your presthat make truly incredible cof- riences as a musician were ence, as long as you're not too fee. There's this place called there. I don't think you'll find loud and they play the music 3FE, which is run by Colin a musician in Dublin who that they want to play, which Harmon. He's finished third didn't get their start there. The is usually Garth Brooks or in the World Barista Champi- great thing about Whelan's is something ridiculous. onships and treats it like a sci- it was a great leveler. When I Dublin is actually quite ence. Around the corner from was starting out, I'd go in there small. You could probably walk
Q•
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me, there's another beautiful
SOUTH 4A85
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What's your experience
and every musician, whether it was me at the time, or some
across it from top to bottom in
of the bigger Irish musicians become a coffee nut. At these like Damien Rice, we'd all just places you can go in and order be there together. In a waythat a flat white. If I go somewhere made it very intimidating. I'm else and order the same, and mostly a keep-to-myself kind the people on the other end of of guy, but you slowly find the counter don't know what yourself getting folded into the I'm talking about, it's probably musical tapestry.
off the beaten path. There's a
coffee shop called the Fumbally. I've traveled quite a lot and
30 minutes, so it's hard to get place called The Winding Stair, which is out on the river. People go there at 8 o'clock at night when the sun is going down, and look out over the city. In some ways, it can feel like the tiniest city in the world.
Opening lead — 9 3 (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD ted by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWIS "VW SHOWROONI" ee Ieng ofheafls ey MATr feature IIICKINLEY 91 Marfinof swift 93 ParIofa ACROSS SISICIISS
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D7
aarist atareeas ont e an,eas ont etraveer By Alida Becker
of hundreds of thousands of
New Yorh Times News Service
wildebeests.
"Want to have lunch with
the elephants'?" That sounded
Parts of Samburu can, I've heard, feel almost as dense-
like an offer we couldn't re-
ly populated — with tour-
fuse — even if at least half the menu was bound to consist of hunks of grass and splintered acaciabranches. Luckily,the human side of the invitation included gazpacho,zucchini frittata and salad. Myhusband and I did mind our manners, keeping our picnic well inside the Land Rover while a herd of our multi-tonhostesses grazed peacefully a few yards away, surrounded by children of all sizes. What better welcome to
ist-packed minibuses. But at Elephant Watch we saw no
one on our game drives except our own guides, members of the Samburu tribe. Their in-
timate knowledge of the local herds owes much to the efforts
of the camp's proprietors, Iain and Oria Douglas-Hamilton, who've been studying Earth's largest land mammal for more than 40 years. A British zool-
ogist, Iain Douglas-Hamilton first came to Africa in 1965,
at the age of 23. His wife (who to the sort of experience we'd happens to be a cousin of Jean hoped to find on safari in East de Brunhoff, creator of Babar) Samburu National Park and Africa.
was born in Kenya to an Ital-
For a pairof travelers of ian-French family. In 1993, at a certain age, preferring to the invitation of the Kenyan live easy on the land but still Wildlife Service, they estabgo easy on ourselves, there'd lished a research station at been some uncertainty about Samburu and a charity, Save just how rough the roughing-it the Elephants. The safari might be. Reassuring answers camp opened a decade later. were provided by two small The camp's six guest tents, eco-friendly camps: Elephant sheltered under thatch roofs, Watch in Samburu, in cen- are, in a way, a collaboration tral Kenya, and Olakira in between the elephants and the northern tip of Tanzania. Oria Douglas-Hamilton, who The first was hidden among confesses in "Among the Elethe trees on the banks of the phants," one of two memoirs Ewaso Nyiro River, offering written w it h h e r h u sband, access to a hilly landscape that she gets "great satisfacof dry savanna dotted with tion from being able to make patches of scrubby forest. The nice things ... out of scraps"second yielded the panorama the scraps,in this case, being of the Serengeti plains, along driftwood from the river and with spectacular sunrises, lumber from trees felled by from a string of tents pitched the elephants. The result, for a a bove a bend in t h e M a r a guest, is a spacious private lair River, one of the crossing with a bed made of huge twistpoints of the Great Migration ed branches and an adjacent
Wildlife
Rates at safari campsvary by theseason andcan vary by the length of stay. At ElephantWatch (elephantwatchsafaris.com), the base rate in peakseason is $745 aperson per night for a double; it's $645 a person at other times. Thebaserate at Olakira (olakira. asiliaafrica.com) in the low seasonstarts at $660; $745 in high season. Included arethree mealswith wine, beer and mixed drinks; game drives; laundry service; andassociated activities, but not park fees. Each camp is within easy driving distance of anairstrip; air transport should be arrangedwith a reputable safari outfitter. Visitors to East Africa need to packvery lightly as luggage is subject to weight restrictions; this can vary from onecarrier to another, but the limit is usually15 kilograms (33 pounds) aperson. Use soft-sided bags; pack drip-dry, neutral-colored clothing. Those entering Tanzaniaare required to show proof of vaccination against yellow fever. Dollars areaccepted in both KenyaandTanzania; bring a generousamount of small bills for tipping since the one person who provides you with a service is probably supporting an entire family.
The problem Local mule deer tend to spend their summer months
in a triangle-shaped region stretching from R edmond and the Three Sisters to Davis
Lake and other parts of the lower Cascades range where they can feast on young evergreentrees and other plants that grow on the densely packed forest floor. But while this habitat may
be perfect for the deer in the q u ickly
What:"Animal Corridors, Planning for Movement, Migration and Refuge" When:Exhibit runs through February 2015 Where: High Desert Museum, 59800 South U.S. Highway 97 in Bend Cost:Included in the cost of admission to the museum Contact:For more information visit www.high desertmuseum.com or call
multicourse meal of zucchini soup, lamb chops, roasted potatoes, cauliflower casserole and chocolate pudding, largely provisioned from the family farm. Off to the southwest, in the
beests to give birth to their
calves. Although the camp's goal, as its literature suggests, is "to leave nothing behind but footprints," that doesn't in-
volve enormous sacrifices for visitors. What amped the ac-
commodations up to five-star geti, the crocodiles of the Mara status was the view over the River lie in wait for their prey river, as striking in the early — the armies of wildebeests morning as it was at dusk, that cross twice a year, once when the sound of the rushing as they reach the final stages water was joined by the roar of of their northward migration a marauding lion. (usually in the early summer) As for the Mara River crocand again, six months later, odiles, they seemed well-fed. when they head back. We ar- Other guests had seen crossrived at Olakira's Mara camp ings in the days before we toward the end of the norther- arrived, but the herds we folly trek, but the plains were still lowed appeared reluctant to crammed with thousands of take the plunge, and I couldn't weary wildebeests. blame them. At one stop along Olakira also moves with the river, we came upon a the migration, pitching its wildebeest carcass wedged open-air shower and toilet. cious documentary filmmak- nine canvas guest tents near among some rocks. "The crocs are saving it for When we were at Elephant er who greets new arrivals the Tanzania-Kenya border Watch last July, its daily oper- barefoot and in pigtails, then during the dry season, then later," explained our guide, ations were being led by Saba turns up at dinnertime in an following the herds back to the Usiah, gesturing toward some Douglas-Hamilton, Iain and elegant red tunic and upswept southernSerengetigrasslands of the giant beasts sprawling Oria's eldest daughter, a viva- hair, ready to preside over a when it's time for the wilde- in the sun with swollen bellies. fartherreaches of the Seren-
NEW LIMITED-TIME OFFER
Ifyou go
Continued from 01
summer months, it
Ifyougo
STARTING ASLOW AS
541-382-4754
becomes inhospitable for the animals in the winter, when it gets blanketed by snow that
make their way from one side
buries the plants deer eat and of the highway to another makes them an easy target for without crossing its surface predators, said Corey Heath, a and getting hit by vehicles. wildlife biologist with the OrHe said these two underegon Department of Fish and passes — which opened last Wildlife's Bend office. winter and are located at the That's why at some point highway's Cottonwood Road b etween late O ctober a n d
and Lava Lands Visitor Cen-
early November, the animals start making their way toward their wintering grounds, places like ODFW's Paulina Wildlife Management Area
ter exits — line up with gaps between Bend's southern boundary, the Newbery Volca-
— which stretches from southeast Bend to Fort Rock State
Park — where they can eat plenty of sagebrush and bitter brush in an area that's full of wide-open terrain. "The problem with this mi-
Monthly Access
no's lava fields and Sunriver's
northern boundary so they create a clear, uninterrupted corridormule deer and other
animals can pass through on their way from west to east. "These tw o u n d erpasses
TALK 4 TEXT
have helped out a lot," Heath said, explaining the animals
gration is the west side of (U.S. are starting to use the underHighway 97) where there's al- passes and are incorporating most continuous development from Bend to La Pine," Heath
said, explaining that deer have a strong level of fidelity to their migration routes and do not adapt well when something gets in their way. "Anything like that is going to lessen their chances of surviving
them into their traditional mi-
gration routes. Goodell with the High Desert Museum said his exhibit will take a look at these under-
passes, which are the state's first highway underpasses specifically designed to allow for wildlife movement, and
the winter if they even make it other development techniques that far." such as establishing buffer Even if t h e a n imals are zones between recreati onal lucky enough to escape get- facilities or private developting hit by the thousands of ments that allow for wildlife cars thatcrisscross the Bend- migration. La Pine corridor every day, He said that while officials
Heath said they still have to deal with barking dogs, buildings, fences, outdoor recreation facilities and other obstacles that cause them a great amount of stress as they mi-
may have "missed the boat" when it comes to using these techniques as they planned the development of the Bend to La Pine corridor, it's not too
store enough fat for the winter
The museum's wildlife corridor exhibit wil l a lso look
and raise their calves, Heath said, citing one report that
at wildlife migration from
showed the Paulina Wildlife
Goodell said, by focusing on
Management Area's w i nter
the Yukon to Yellowstone Initiative and its efforts to create
deer population has fallen by 35 percent over the past 15 years.
The solution
•
I I • •
•
•
'I
For first3months; additional 55/month thereafter. II
ii
•
s
s
late to use them in other parts
grate east in the fall and back of the county or state where to their summer habitats in the human communities may mountains each spring. come into direct conflict with Thesestressescan interfere migration routes. with the animal's ability to
PLUS FREE WORLD MESSAGING UNLIMITED
the continental perspective,
AMERICA'S LARGEST,MOST RELIABLE 4GLTE NETWORK.
a 2,000-mile-long network of parks and private preserves from Canada's Yukon Terr itory t o Y e l l owstone N a -
Heath said ODFW sought tional Park that would give to address this problem when bears and other top predators it worked with the Oregon De- room for their own migration partment of Transportation to routes. design two new underpasses — Reporter: 541-617-7816, that can help wild animals mmclean@bendbulletin.com
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Alderwood Quiltworks machine quilting frame for sale, locally made in Prineville,
Low-impact workout for less stress and strain on your body. walking foot, needle Folds quickly for fed industrial leather sewing m a chine. easy storage, but we just don't have room M achine i s t a b l e forit. $99 mounted. When last 541-419-6408 used it was in excellent working condition. Add i tional pictures upon request. $1500 OBO. 541-213-2333
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Life Fit R91 Recumbent BikeAbsolutely like new with new batteryoperates perfectly! Clean, always housed inside home. $2100 new; selling for $975. Great Christmas gift! 541-647-2227
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245
Golf Equipment CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. uSpellchecku and easy to use, makes human errors do ocquilting a dream! Bowflex XLT with Lat cur. If this happens to Comes with Handi bar, good s h ape, your ad, please conhandles, includes. $195. 541-389-2167 tact us ASAP so that manual, exc. shape, corrections and any Just bought a new boat'? only used to quilt 4 adjustments can be Sell your old one in the tops, like new. made to your ad. classifieds! Ask about our $600. 541-549-1273 541 -385-5809 Super Seller rates! or 541-419-2160 The Bulletin Classified 541N85-5809 242
Exercise Equipment
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*Ad runs until it sells or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
Item Priced at: • Under $500 • $500 to $999 • $1000 to $2499 • $2500 and over
FOR AOLITRf At
00+
Your Total Ad Cost onl: $29 $39 $49 $59
I ncludes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with
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$700 541-000-000
• Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000 potential customers. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 15,000 in central and Eastern oregon • Continuous Listing online, with Photo, on bendbulletin.com
Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.
E2 SUNDAY FEBRUARY 2 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D 1
IT'S ALL RELAT IV E By DANIEL A. FINAN / Edited by Will Shortz
ACROSS
52 Swear off I Apply quickly 53 Potentially dangerous 7 Wall 55 Sapling 13 Gringos' land 20 Place with wheels 56 Relax and deals 58 Goes in 21 Summit planner 5$ Stairway post 22 Worse 60 Twinkie filler 23 Woodworking tool 62 "Back to the Future" villains 24 Untrustworthy sort 64 Amo: I love:: 25 What players do : I hate at the start of a game of tag 65 "The Merry Drinker" painter 28 Some bling 66 Pop singer Del Rey 27 One for the "no" column 67 In need of a lift 29 Most Cypriots, 70 "Adoration" ethnically subjects in a Leonardo painting 31 Massages 74 Maine college 32 Like some eagles and tires 75 Irish county and 34 Li'I Abner's seaport surname 77 Have troops in 36 Company with the 79 [What a bore] Havoline brand 81 Martin Sheen's real 38 Notre dame, e.g. family name 38 Valdez of 83 Tops off? coffee advertising 85 Pam of "Jackie 40 Period of the Brown" Cenozoic Era 86 Takeout choice 42 Language suffix 87 All riled up 45 Servings of mashed 88 Part of London potatoes, e.g. where Eliza 47 Writer Kipling Doolittle is from 48 Let go 90 One side of an 18991902 war 4$ Cynic Bierce who once defined 91 Smidgen "alone" as "in 92 Source of ivory bad company" 83 Uzbekistan's Sea Online subscriptions: 84 About a quarter Today's puzzle and more of the population of than 4,000 past puzzles, Sicily lives on its nytimes.com/crosswords slopes ($39.95 a year).
$8 Title girl in a Chuck Berry hit 99 Make enforceable 100 Opportunity 101 Learn well 104 Take blows for 107 A line in an A-line? 109 Punk offshoot 110 Be supported by 112 Movie director who was himself the subject of a 1994 movie 114 Gold-medal gymnast Mary Lou 116 Powell's successor on the Supreme Court 117 Some starting help 118 "Keep going I" 119 Love to hate? 120 Canon parts 121 On the receiving endof a Dear John letter DOWN
1 Writer ofold 2 Secular 3 See 51-Down 4 Gumshoes 5 empty stomach 6 73-Down, relatively 7 Denver-toAlbuquerque dir. 8 See 52-Down 9 Break a peace treaty, say 10 Gaelic tongue ll Lunging sport 12 93-Down, relatively 13 Lines to Wrigley Field
14 See 82-Down 15 Fine point 18 Bone: Prefix 17 Moreno of "West Side Story" 18 Ticked (off) 18 Goofs 28 "Yessiree!" 30 Dreamcast maker 33 Resume datum 35 in ka n g aroo 37 Boomers' kids 40 Sip on 41 Limit 42 95-Down, relatively 43 " gut" 44 Breyers alternative 46 Rest in a hammock, say 47 Wanders 48 Abbr. at the start of a memo 48 He's 2, for one 50 He "will never speak unless he has something to say, n in a song 51 3-Down, relatively 52 8-Down, relatively
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82 14-Down, relatively
84 Indian wrap 89 Depots: Abbr.
90 Built-in part of a tank top, maybe 92 Block party? 83 See 12-Down 95 See 42-Down 96 "Make it stopl n
97 Observed Yom Kippur 98 Italian grandpa 99 Funeral delivery of old 101 " stupid question ..." 102 Vitamin a.k.a. paraaminobenzoic acid 103 Director Gus Van
10$ In a hammock, maybe 106 Gershwin biographer David 108 Many a Yelp link lll Big Apple N.L. team 113 Fielding feats: Abbr. 11$ Cable inits. for a cinephile
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE E3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo in your private party sd for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 245
248
Golf Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
GOLF CLUBS! Putters: Ping - Master Roll - Olimar - Master IOW'IIS TMI Roll grip! Others Mredgesr Ping - Taylor Made carbite. DO YOU HAVE Cobra 9 o Driver, M SOMETHING TO speed, 50R shaft; BaSELL zooka g o Driver, Hot FOR $500 OR launch R and Cobra LESS? D river: Ping G - 1 5 Non-commercial 15.5' 3-wood, iron advertisers may covers, full set. All in place an ad ood-to-great shape! with our all let's deal - Come "QUICK CASH to look!! Call Bill at SPECIAL e 541-548-9880 or 1 week 3 lines 12 leave message. OI'
I
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Computers
Misc. Items
Medical Equipment
Tools
Snow Removal Equipment
Heating & Stoves
Full size power adjustable bed w/memory foam mattress, $800. Portable wheelchair, 4 leg walker, Quadri-Poise cane, bathroom assist chair, all for $200. Call 541-526-5737
Newin box, or nearly new Craftsman Tools:
Snow blower, Yard Machine, used 1 season, 5.5hp, electric/pull start, $200. 541-771-1252
ADVERTISER
Top Pin Archery Pro Shop New 2014 Bows have arrived! Check out our Bows on Clearance! 1611 South 1st St., Redmond, 541-316-1784
T HE B ULLETIN r e - Guaranteed Income For quires computer ad- Your Ret i rement. vertisers with multiple Avoid market risk 8 ad schedules or those get guaranteed inselling multiple sys- come in retirement! tems/ software, to dis- CALL for FREE copy close the name of the of our SAFE MONEY business or the term GUIDE Plus Annuity "dealer" in their ads. Quotes from A-Rated Private party adveriis- Companies! ers are defined as 800-908-7035. those who sell one (PNDC) computer.
• 10e Stationary
radial arm saw, Model ¹315.220100, $37$. • 10 e Stationary table saw w/guide rails, model ¹315.228590, $32$. • 6-1/se Jointer planer "Professional" model ¹351.227240, $250 obo. CBii 541-504-6413 daytime hours.
265
Building Materials
NOTICE TO
Since September 29,
1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the O regon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.
17' aluminum plank, max load 250 Ibs, $100. 4xs lumber rack, like new, $175. 541-383-7603 Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 740 NE 1st 541-312-6709 Open to the public. 254 Building Bargains Snow Removal Equipment Steel Allocated Discounts We do deals 30x40, 50x60, 100x100 and more. Snof/rblower Total Construction and Craftsman electric or Blueprints Ayailable pull-start, 29" wide, www.gosteelbuildings.com Check out the 9HP, 5 forward 2 reSource ¹18X classifieds online verse speeds. 541-227-6921 www.bendbuttetin.com $400 cash. WANTED: 24" r o und 541-815-6319 Updated daily concrete s t e pping stones. 541-408-0846
283 Two Gen 3 Glock 23's, How to avoid scam Tools one Gen 3 Glock 27258 and fraud attempts $500 each. also Travel/Tickets VBe aware of interna- shp air compressor, 125 1000 rds .40 practice max, 240V, like new, a mmo; Glock g u n Advertise VACATION tional fraud. Deal lo- Ib cally whenever pos- askinq $625. Delivery light/laser; .40 to 9mm SPECIALS to 3 milsweeks aa! ~ available. 541-385-9350 Where can you find a sible. conversion ba r r el; lion Pacific N orthAd must V Watch for buyers misc. spare parts & helping hand? westerners! 29 daily include price of Have an item to who offer more than efensive am m o . newspapers, e six From contractors to ~l e l e o f $5D0 d503-585-5000 your asking price and sell quick? states. 25-word clasor less, or multiple yard care, it's all here ask to have items whose total sified $540 for a 3-day who If it's under Where can you find a money wired or in The Bulletin'5 a d. Cal l does not exceed (916) handed back to them. '500 you can place it in helping hand? "Call A Service 2 88-6019 o r vis i t Fake cashier checks $500. www.pnna.com for the The Bulletin From contractors to Professional" Directory money orders Call Classifieds at Pacific Nor t hwest and yard care, it's all here are common. Classifieds for: 541-385-5809 Daily Co n nection. L ady'3, tall, f ull s e t . sv'Nevergive out perin The Bulletin's (PNDC) Great shape $175 www.bendbuiietin.com sonal financial infor'1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days "Call A Service obo. 541-548-9880 250 mation. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Professional" Directory s/Trust your instincts Misc. Items Take care of (Private Party ads only) Mint condition and be wary of Wanted: Collector seeks someone using an upgraded senior your investments + high quality fishing items Adouble depth in escrow service or shafts, head covwith the help from & upscale bamboo fly ( terment gra v e agent to pick up your ers &new grips. rods. Call 541-678-5753, space with o uter merchandise. The Bulletin'8 Drivers: Ping G10 or 503-351-2746 ( burial container built 13.5 T-Made Super "Call A Service The Bulletin in, located in MeadServing Cenvaf Oregon since l903 fast 12'. 247 owpark area of De- I Hybrids: Cobra DWS Professional" Directory Sporting Goods ( schutes Memorial 4-5-6 irons; CleveFind exactly what - Misc. Gardens, $ 1 000. land HB 3, 7-8-9 and Kahr PM9 9mm comI Call 541-389 1821 you are looking for in the P/W; Ping G156 pact stainless/black O'Brien Vortex GenCLASSIFf EDS iron green dot; polymer pistol w/ two erators Comp Shredder Cleveland XLi S/W, mags, box, & manual. wakeboard, nice! $20. yl/edges: Ping G15, $500. 541-977-3173 541-388-3879 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS *REDUCE YOUR gap S/W, lobb. Search the area'3 most CABLE BILL! Get an 951-454-2561 253 comprehensive listing of All-Digital Sa t e llite BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS classified advertising... system installed for TV, Stereo & Video Search the area'3 most real estate to automotive, FREE and program245 comprehensive listing of merchandise to sporting m ing s t arting a t Guns, Hunting classified advertising... DirectTV 2 Year Sav- goods. Bulletin Classifieds $ 24.99/mo. FRE E real estate to automotive, ings Event! Over 140 appear & Fishing every day in the HD/DVR upgrade for channels only $29.99 merchandise to sporting print or on line. new callers, SO CALL month. O nly Di7MM reloading sup- goods. Bulletin Classifieds a NOW (877)366-4508. recTV gives you 2 Call 541-385-5809 appear every day in the plies, cases, bullets, YEARS of s a vings www.bendbulletin.com (PNDC) print or on line. Dillon shell p l ate, and a FREE Genie Redding dies. Call for Call 541-385-5809 Call The Bulletin The Bulletin Offers prices. 541-728-0445 www.bendbulletin.com upgrade! ServingCentral Oregonsince Saaa 1-800-259-5140. Free Private Party Ads Armalite 33 8 L a p ua The Bulletin (PNDC) Air conditioning mani- • 3 lines - 3 days serving censre oregonsince nas NightForce Sx32x56; fold gauge set, new • Private Party Only DISH T V Ret a i ler. • Total of items adver200 Lapua Brass, 165 $25. 541-388-1686 Starting at tised must equal $200 are loaded, 500 Si$19.99/month (for 12 Auto Accident Attorney or Less erra Match b ullets, Stag Arms AR-15: AN FOR DETAILS or to mos.) & High Speed INJURED I N 500 Federal primers, Model Stag15, I nternet starting a t AUTO A CCIDENT'? PLACE AN AD, 5 lbs. RL 22 powder. 5.56/223, Stainless $14i05/month (where Call InjuryFone for a Call 541-385-5809 $5500. 541-350-3811 steel barrel. Leavailable.) SAVE! Ask free case evaluation. Fax 541-385-5602 upold Firedot G Bend local pays CASHI! About SAME DAY In- Never a cost to you. AFTER SEFORE 3-9X40 Scope, for all firearms & stallation! CALL Now! Don't wait, call now! Wanted- paying cash FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck MagPul PRS FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck ammo. 541-526-0617 1-800-308-1563 1-800-539-9913. for Hi-fi audio & stucan haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and buttstock, Hogue can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and (PNDC) (PNDC) dio equip. Mclntosh, CASH!! grip, Bipod. $2000 a tough VB engine will get the job a tough VB engine will get the job JBL, Marantz, D yFor Guns, Ammo & Buying Diamonds YOUR Call 541-410-3568 REDUCE done on the ranch! done on the ranch! naco, Heathkit, SanReloading Supplies. /Gotd for Cash CABLE BILL!* Get a 541-408-6900. whole-home Satellite Saxon'3 Fine Jewelers sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 541-389-6655 system installed at Taurus PT 24/7 G2, BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS NO COST and pro.45 cal, $350. BUYING 261 Search the area'3 most 30-40 Krag, Sold. ramming starting at Lionel/American Flyer comprehensive listing of 541-610-6019 1 9.99/mo. FRE E Medical Equipment trains, accessories. classified advertising... HD/DVR Upgrade to 541-408-2191. real estate to automotive, new callers, SO CALL www.bendbulletin.com Falcon 4-w h eel merchandise to sporting USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! NOW BUYING a S E LLING goods. Bulletin Classifieds 1-866-984-8515. All gold jewelry, silver power scooter with appear every day in the Door-to-door selling with (PNDC) and gold coins, bars, accessories, gently To PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, ViSit USOnline at fast results! It's the easiest rounds, wedding sets, used, in need of print or on line. TV 46" Samsung flat new battery (orderWW W . b e n d b u l le t in . C O m or Call With queStiOnS, class rings, sterling silway in the world to sell. Call 541-385-5609 screen, 1s/a yr old, w/ ver, coin collect, vin- ing info avail.) Call www.bendbulletin.com Magnavox B l u-Ray tage watches, dental 5 41-389-1821 f o r The Bulletin Classified player, all for $400 gold. Bill Fl e ming, details. The Bulletin 541-385-5809 Serving Central Oregon sinceSale obo. 541-923-8349. 541-382-9419.
+
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Sell you r s t u ff f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds
Sell your stuff f aster w i t h c o l o r .
assi je s
5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 E3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
f JtrMJ Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
267
356
Fuel & Wood
Farmers Column
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft.
306
10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. (other sizes available) 541-617-1133. CCB ¹t 73684 kfjbuilders©ykwc.net
Farm Equipment & Machinery
5Xil o
o
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
P O N I N O Flooring S A W Established floori ng company i n N A Redmond, needs D Y licensed subcontractor with hardE J wood floor laying G L O experience to help Personal Assistant The Bulletin's install pr e -engi- A M B R O S Professional-creative "Call A Service neered and solid Exp'd in corp world. T R E E L E Bookkeeping-cooking- Professional" Directory flooring in high-end is all about meeting homes. S a nding N E W E L decorating? Get your yourneeds. experience a plus. 0 D I household running Pay DOE. smoothly. Call on one of the Local since 2006 Call Doug at T H E M professionals today! 541-410-7859. Shenanagain59@ O C C U P Y yahoo.com Construction Labor(775)750-4201 B E H E A D ers needed for underground utility work. Where can you find a I R E D E CDL preferred. ComSell an Item helping hand? petitive pay & local T A D W A From contractors to work. Benefits and N A D yard care, it's all here 401k available. Equipment Operators in The Bulletin's A B S O R B needed for u nder"Call A Service S T A N D O ground utility work. If it's under$500 CDL preferred. Com- Professional" Directory K E N N E D you can place it in petitive pay & lo cal work. Benefits and Media co. seeks Pub- A N T O N Y The Bulletin
/i 0
0
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through 454 automatically to your Looking for Employment website.
60" Brush hog, good condition, $550; and 60" adjustable blade for t ractor, S OLD.
The Bulle6n
270
Lost & Found L ost at east end o f Maple St. bridge area, Redmond - pure black fixed cat, heavy, 2-3 y rs. o ld , l e f t e a r clipped. smallish head, 541-280-4825 LOST KEYS! 1 remote, 1 Honda key, 2 silver keys on red/pink carabiner clip. REWARD 541-408-4949
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds Lost men's w edding ring, Tungsten & gold, in Sportsman's Warehouse, Bend. Sat., Dec. 14th. Call, REWARD! 54'I -408-4531
REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 54'I-382-3537
Redmond
541-923-0882
pnoevire 54s-447-rsre; orCrers Cats 54s-eee-e420. 260
Estate Sales Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email classified@bendbulletin.com
266
Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.000ff Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment
Registered Nurses Community Counseling Solutions is recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedinJohn Day, OR.
This position works with the treatment team to promote recovery from mental illness. This position includes telephone consultation and crisis intervention in the facility. Qualified applicants must have a v a lid Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's license at the time of hire, hold a valid Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal history background check. Wages dependent upon education and experience, but will be between $48,000 to $72,000. Excellent benefit package, including signing bonus. Please visit t h e O r egon E mployment Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for an application or contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-878-9181, nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 489, Heppner, OR 97838.
• Interest in automotive racing and motorsports • Ability to interpret CAD / mechanical drawings • Experience in internet marketing /
e-commerce
Work location is central Oregon. We offer competitive pay and an excellent benefits package including group health insurance, 401K, flex spending account, paid vacation, PTO and more.
experienced professionals in manufacturing, engineering, purchasing, QA & admin. Current job postings include:
Assembly
Avionics
University Advancement is c ommitted to providing a fair, equitable, and inclusive work environment. We welcome applications from candidates that will promote and value our culture and exercise teamwork and collaboration when working with diverse groups, donors, volunteer groups, and coworkers.
Purchasing
Search will remain open until filled. Review of applications will begin on Feb. 25, 2014. Salary is commensurate with experience and will range from $85-100K. The university offers an excellent package of employee benefits.
Technical Writer
UO is an AA/EO/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity
A S P E L L
lisher for B2B sales in high end Bend magazine. Residual comm., training provided, autonomy. Send resume to: aflood@ bestversionmedia.com (no hyphens)
Y O U B E T C H A S A R I N Y M
S T R E S H E R W E A S G R E K U M A N N S R U F O R E A S R E M E A L S G I B S N O O G R I S T E N T H O G N E S H I E E D W A L E T E N
E P E E E D G E L A Z E D E L O G E
T A L K T O Y O U L A T E R A N D O U T
S E G A P I N E
B R A D P S
E L N O L O U S S C A T K N E X A C O E N E R D A S K E T E N T B Y A N A S S L E S T E C H I N O E R S A L E C T S H E M R E T E N C D U M
R I T A
T E E D
E R R S
E X C E S S I V E
S E H R
E D Y S
A G E S
D O Z E
T H E T O P
N O M O R E
A T O N E D
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE EZ 476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Sales T elephone B2 B prospecting position for important professional serv ices. Ba s e + commission. Health and Dental Insurance after 180 days. Other benefits. B end west side loca t i on. Sales experience a plus, but will train the right person. F ax resume t o
Surgical Services
Office A s s istant needed for growing Medical BesfCare in Madras, co. in La Pine, OR. Experience in GenOregon is recruiting a licensed c h i ldren's eral Office duties inc u s tomer mental health clini- cluding cian for our outpatient service. Must be procommunity m e n tal ficent in Quickbooks, health. I t in v o lves Excel and Internet pplications. A c working with children A and shipand families with high counting experience a level mental health ping Must have a needs. Must be skilled plus. positive attitude, orin individual, family ganizational s k i lls and group therapy and be a team player .Must be engaging, in a small office atcompassionate and mosphere. embrace d i v ersity. Please send resume Will join two o ther to:bmyers0057@aol. child/family therapists, com or SMI PO Box a wraparound coordi- 1410, La Pine, OR nator, and a c h ild/ 97739 adolescent psychiatrist. Full time w ith benefits; EOE; highly competitive s a l ary. Call The Bulletin At 641 -385-5809 Send a cover letter a nd res ume t o : Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Heatherc© bestcare- At: www.bendbulletin.com treatment.org
541-848-6395.
The Bulletin is your Employment
Marketplace Call
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
RN
Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in Enterpnse, OR Part-time 24 Hours plus. Variable shifts/days - Shift differential applies to nights and weekends. CPR/ACLS Required PALS
preferred.
Prior Pre-Op Care PACU & scrubbing experience
preferred.
Excellent benefit
package. Visit our website at www.wchcd.org Contact Linda Childers at 541-426-5313 EOE
to advertise. General
Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunifies
www.bendbulletin.com
Civil Deputy $2,502.00 to $3,256.00 per month - DOQ Closes February 14th, 2014
The Bulletin
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to:
Jefferson County HumanResources, 66 SED Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCountyis an EqualEmployment
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ASSESSMENT TECHNICIAN I — Assessor's Office (2014-00010). Full-time position. Deadline:WEDNES DAY, Ogfl2/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH PROGRAM MANAGER
General
— Behavioral Health Division (2013-00098). Full-time position. Deadline Extended:FRIDAY, 2/21/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I —Case
Central Oregon Community College has openings li s te d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. BusinessSystems Programmer Provide technical advice and support to users, includes troubleshooting, reports data extracts, and data analysis. Collaborates with a larger team to manage all aspects of the ERP system for COCC. 1-yr Linux/Unix exp. req. Extended Close date Feb 10.
Manager, Behavioral Health Division (201400013). Full-time, limited duration, grant funded position. Deadline:MONDAY,02/17/14. BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST II - School
Based Health Clinics, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00005). Three full-time and two half-time, limited duration, grant funded positions. Deadline:MONDAY,02/17/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II
Residential Specialist, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00012). Full-time, limited duration, grant funded position. Deadline: Pre-employment d r u g scr e e n and MONDAY, 02fl 7/14. non-competition agreement required. E.O.E. Senior Enrollment Specialist COMMIININ JUSTICE SPECIALIST I —Juvenile Join a winning team! Submit your resume, with Provide Admissions customer service to stuCommunity Justice Division (2014-00009). work history, cover l etter a n d s a lary dents about COCC programs, registration, Full-time position. Deadline: WEDNESDAY , requirements to hr©fuelsafe.com placement testing, financial aid, and advising. Serve as department Lead for office opera02/1514. t ions. Associates + 2- y r s e x p . r e q . CUSTODIALSUPERVISOR, NIGHT CREW$2,549-$3,034/mo. Closes Feb 9 EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER DAY property & Facilities (2014-00014). Full-time Director of Library Services on.Deadline:W EDNESDAY,02/12/14. Provide administrative direction in planning, positi BRING YOUR RESUME implementing, and supervising Library proPEER SUPPORT SPECIALIST —Behavio ral r ams. Mas t ers + 5- y r s e x p . r e q . Health Division (2014-00011). Full-time, Saturday, February 8th, 10 am - 1 pm 65,224-$77,646/yr. Closes Feb 16 limited duration, grant funded position. 22550 Nelson Rd., Bend, Oregon Deadline:MONDAY,02/17/14. Immediate openings available for aviation-
The University of Oregon seeks applications for a r e gional Director of D evelopment position to be located in our Portland, Oregon, White Stagg building offices. Reporting to the Assistant Vice President Oregon Regional Development, the director is responsible for the strategic identification, cultivation, and solicitation of prospects with the capacity to make gifts of $100K or more in the Oregon r egion. Additionally, the director will be expected to build and successfully manage a portfolio of philanthropic partners, as well as work collaboratively with the advancement team, university leaders, faculty, and unit development officers to coordinate donor cultivation and solicitation strategies. This position is f i eld-oriented, requiring direct contact with donors and donor prospects. The director will b e r e sponsible for meeting f undraising goals as t hey r elate t o t h e strategic needs of the university. This position will involve regular travel (60% of time) to work with gift prospects.
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serviny cenrrer oregon since seos
and verbal • Sales and marketing experience of a technical nature • Mechanical aptitude • A passion for sales and the ability to identify and pursue new markets
Bonding
1777 SW Chandler
Ave., Bend, OR 97702
• Excellent communication skills, both written
Aviation Mechanic (A8 P)
Director ofDevelopment, Oregon University Advancement
For further information, please see the full position announcement, including minimum and p referred q u alifications, e ducation requirements, and application procedure on the UO website at http://hr.uoregon.edu/jobs/.
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
Requirementsfor the position include:
Desiredqualificationsinclude: Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential • Bachelor's degree in engineering, business or Treatment Facility providing services to marketing individuals with a severe mental illness.
These positions provide mental health nursing care including medication oversight, medication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low physician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , temperature and respiration to provide daily information, educate and train staff on medication administration, and e nsure documentation is kept according to policies.
L A I C A L
FAST!
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's 541-923-9758 "Call A Service N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 Professional" Directory 401k available. Classifieds for: Pre-employment drug swather, 14' header with conditioner, cab screen & background heat/A/C, 1300 orig. check required. $t0 - 3 lines, 7 days 375 hrs. $29,000 obo. C-2 Utility Contractors, 1486 International, cab Meat & Animal Processing $t6 • 3 lines, 14 days LLC is an EOE. Mail heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 resume to PO Box Servlny Cennel Oregon slnseSera Pto, 3 sets remotes, Buermann's Ranch (Private Party ads only) 7585 Bend, OR 97708 nice tractor. $18,000. Meats, Burns Oregonor fax 541-389-8445 1 cord dry, split Juniper, 541-419-3253 We delIver to Bend area! $190/cord. Multi-cord /2 hog or whole lamb, Pressroom 325 discounts, & ~/~ cords $200 fully processed. Night Supervisor available. Immediate Hay, Grain & Feed Now taking orders for The Bulletin,9located in beautiful Bend, Ordelivery! 541-408-6193 ranch-raised grain-fed egon is seeking a night time press supervisor. Hay 1st, 2nd, 3rd beef, half or whole, $3/Ib We are part of Western Communications, Inc. All yearDependable Alfalfa cutting, Hay tests on fully processed. which is a small, family-owned group consistFirewood: Seasoned; request. delivery avail. Call 541-573-2677 ing of 7 newspapers: 5 in Oregon and 2 in Lodgepole 1 for $195 $200 ton. Mitchell, OR California. Our ideal candidate will manage a or 2 for $365. Cedar, 541-462-3156 small crew of 3 and must have prior press exsplit, del. Bend: 1 for Have an item to perience. The candidate must be able to learn $175 or 2 for $325. First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on 541-420-3484. sell quick? hay, no rain, barn stored, style is a requirement for our 3~/~ tower KBA If it's under Ranch press. Prior management/leadership experiPine & Juniper Split $250/ton.Patterson Sisters, 541-549-3831 ence p referred. I n ad d ition t o our '500 you can place it in 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous 345 The Bulletin PROMPT DELIVERY commercial print clients as well. Besides a 542-389-9663 Livestock & Equipment Classifieds for: competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. 4-H Plgs born on Jan. Well over a cord - split s10-3 lines 7 days seasoned lodgepole, 5th & 12th. Breed is If you provide dependability combined with a d elivered. $19 5 . Hamp, York, Duroc, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days positive attitude, are able to manage people $175. Ready to go in (Private Paity ads only) and schedules and are a team player, we 541-480-5335 March. Call or t ext would like to hear from you. If you seek a 269 541-777-7144 stable work environment that provides a great Gardening Supplies place to live and raise a family, let us hear General from you. & Equipment JeffersonCount Job 0 o r funifies Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at Patrol Deputy Sheriff - $3,175.00 to BarkTurfSoil.com anelson©wescom a ers.com with your com$4,657.00per month -DOQ plete resume, r eferences an d s a lary Closes February 18, 2014 9:00 a.m. history/requirements. No phone calls please. PROMPT D ELIVERY Drug test is required prior to employment. 541-389-9663 Patrol Division Corporal Sheriff's Office EOE. $3,333 - $4,669 per month - DOQ Closes February 6, 2014 9:00 a.m. For newspaper delivery, call the For complete job description and applicaCirculation Dept. at Salesand fi/farkefing Representative tion form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click 541-385-5800 - Inside Sales on Human Resources, t hen Job OpportuniTo place an ad, call 541-385-5809 ties; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing and Fuel Safe Jefferson County Application forms to: or email Systems is looking for an experienced sales classifiedebendbulletin.com and marketing professional. We are an ISO Jefferson County Human Resources, 9001 certified manufacturer of fuel containThe Bulle6n Servlny Cennel Oregon slnseSene 66 SE D Street, Suite E, ment systems for the motorsports, aerospace Madras, OR 97741. and military industries. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
S C R I B E
CNC Operations
Composites Document Control
Engineering Checker General Administration
Information Technology Liaison Engineer
Machine Shop Materials & Process Engineer
Mechanical Engineer Paint & Body Work
Quality Control
Research & Development Sub-Assembly
Tooling Trim 8 Drill
Welding LOOKING FOR QUALIFIED CANDIDATES
For more information, Contact Kellys@epicaircraft.com or visit the company website at www.epicaircraft.com
Assistant Professor f of Health & Human Performance Provide instruction of Public Health, Health & Fitness, First Aid, Epidemiology, and other wellness and activity classes. Provide student advising and evaluation on performance. Masters + 2-yr college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 f or 9mo cont r act. Closes Feb 3
Assistant Professor f of English Provide instruction in composition and literature/humanities. Masters + college-level writi ng a n d lit e rature i n s truction r e q . $41,449-$46,309 f o r 9mo cont r act. Closes Feb 17
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT SPECIALIST
Property and Facilities (201 4-00003). Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,02/09fl4. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER — Adult
Treatment Program, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00001). Will consider any full or parttime equivalent. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTY SHERIFF -Sherjff's Office.
(2013-00013). On-call positions. Deadline: THISIS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. SENIORSECRETARY — Child and Family Team, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00006). Full-time position. Deadline: WEDNESDAY , 02/1514. TELECOMMUNICA TORI —911 Service District. (2013-00079). Full-time positions. Deadline:
Assistant Professor 1 ofBusiness Provide instruction in Business Administration, which includes introductory business, marketing, and business writing courses. Provide student advising and evaluation on performance. Master's + college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9 m o c o ntract. THIS IS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. Closes Feb 19 AssistantProfessor f of Biology Provide instruction in majors and non-majors biology courses. Provide student advising and evaluation, and select lab learning. Masters with 5-yrs business exp. + 2-yr teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9 m o c o ntract. Closes Feb 21 Assistant Professor f ol Speech Provide instruction in Speech Communication courses. Includes lectures, classroom activities, evaluating student performance and student advising. Masters in Speech Communication req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Feb 21 AssistantProfessor f of Economics Provide instruction in Economics, including a full range of courses offered in Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, and Contemporary Economic Issues. Masters + college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes March 6 Part Time Instructor NEWPositions: Baking & Pastry, Dining Room Service& Beverage Nfanagemenf, and CulinaryChef Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
WIC CERTIFIER —Public Health Division (2014-00004). Full-time, limited duration, grant funded position. Deadline:WEDNESDAY, 02/12/14. COMINGSOON: SENIOR SYSTEMS ANALYST — Web
Solutions PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE PROGRAM MANAGER DESCBUTESCOUIITY OIILY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. Tg APPLY FOR THEABOVELISTED POSITIBBS, PLEASE VISIT OURWEBSITE AT www.deschutes.org/ jobs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via emailONLY.If you needassistance, please contact the Deschutes County PersonnelDept., 1300NWWall Street, Suite201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programsandactivities. To request information in analternate format, pleasecall (541) 617-4747, fax to (541)385-3202 orsendemail to accessibilily©deschutes.org. EQUALOPPORTUBITYEMPLOYER Women,minorities, andths disabledareencouragedts apply.
E4 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Bsntj &RaRs op©ggg [Pp •
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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./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
476
Employment Opportunities
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The Bulletin
caution when pur-
products or y I chasing services from out of ~ f the area. Sendingf c ash, checks, o r / credit i n formation / • may be subjected to I FRAUD. f more informa- y I For tion about an adver- • f tiser, you may call f the Oregon State f Attorney General's f C o n sumer s I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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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 concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
BANK TURNED YOU
DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEytWebuy
secured trust deeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.
834
719
850
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Real Estate Trades
Snowmobiles
Call for Specials!
ALASKA LAND FOR
Norris & Stevens, Inc.
Houses for Rent General
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
Open Houses
848
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any 528 such pre f erence, limitation or discrimiLoans 8 Mortgages nation." Familial status includes children S TRUGGLING W I T H YOUR M O R TGAGE under the age of 18 living with parents or and worried a bout foreclosure? Reduce legal cus t odians, your mortgage & save pregnant women, and money. Legal loan people securing cusmodification services. tody of children under Free co n sultation. 18. This newspaper Call Preferred Law will not knowingly ac1-800-335-6592. cept any advertising for real estate which is (PNDC) in violation of the law. Where can you find a O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that helping hand? all dwellings adverFrom contractors to tised in this newspayard care, it's all here per are available on an equal opportunity in The Bulletin's basis. To complain of "Call A Service d iscrimination ca l l Professional" Directory HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The 573 toll f ree t e lephone Business Opportunities number for the hearing i m p aired is WARNING The Bulletin 1-800-927-9275. recommends that you 858 i nvestigate eve r y Houses for Rent phase of investment opportunities, espeSW Bend c ially t h os e fr o m out-of-state or offered SW Bend, walk to DRT by a person doing and Old Mill. Master business out of a lo- on main, pool, hot tub, cal motel or hotel. In- tennis. Yard maint. vestment o ff erings incl. No pets. $2,000. must be r egistered bendriverwild.com with the Oregon Department of Finance. Have an item to We suggest you consell quick? sult your attorney or call CON S UMER If it's under HOTLINE, '500 you can place it in 1-503-378-4320, 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. The Bulletin
744
Open 12-3 1472 NW Portland Ave. City View From West Side Classic Lauri Miller, Broker 541-480-8958
880
880
Watercraft
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
ds published in "Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 41-385-5809
The Bulletin
1994 Arctic Cat 580 SALE - 5acres HayEXT, in good stack Mountain on SE condition, $'I 000. Slope, near r i ver, Located in La Pine. great sun, hardwood Call 541-408-6149. f orest. $20,000 o r 860 trade for land in Oregon. 701-580-5453 Motorcycles & Accessories
Limited numbers avail. 1,28 3bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mounfain Glen 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by
875
880
541-548-0318 (photo above is of a
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
•
Need to get an ad •
in ASAP?
hel B ahe llC •
541 383 4360
wwwthegamergroup.eom
Open 12-3 19036 Mt. Shasta Dr. Luxurious Home in Three Pines Rob Davis, Broker 541-280-9589
Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900.
Ihe l Esate llC •
541 383 4360
wwwthegameqpepcom
Open 12-3 19121 Chiloquin Dr. Stunning Home With 4-Car Garage Matt Garner, Broker
Fleetwood Bounder, 2000 -Great amenities! 34', special exterior coating, side by side fridge, corner china cabinet, queen bed, tub/shower, 1 large living room slide out, air leveler, warm & cozy interior. Ford V10 Triton 44,000 miles. $25,000 541-318-7473
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049
HDFat Bo 1996
thegarnergroup hel B ahe llC •
541 383 4360
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Classifieds for: A Classified ad is an General 748 EASY W A Y TO The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturREACH over 3 million '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Northeast Bend Homes day night shift and other shifts as needed. Pacific Northwestern- '16 - 3 lines, 14 days We currently have openings all nights of the 3 bdrm 2 bath, 1258 sf, ers. $5 4 0/25-word week, everyone must work Saturday night. c lassified ad i n 2 9 (Private Party ads only) upgrades, vaulted, culdeShifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. sac. 2574 NE Cordata Pl. daily newspapers for and endbetween 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All 858 $189,900. 541-815-3279 3-days. Call the Papositions we are hiring for work Saturday or 541-815-3241 cific Northwest Daily nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we Houses for Rent Connection i91 6) pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some Redmond 750 288-6019 or e m a il shifts are short (t t:30 - t:30). The work conRedmond Homes elizabeth Ocnpa.com Quiet country setting sists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, for more info (PNDC) w/amazing views. 1 bdrm stacking product onto pallets, bundling, Eagle Crest cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying embath, 672 sq ft home in REDUCED! Gated -14th Tee Where can you find a 1 ployees we offer benefits including life insurNE Redmond. $600/mo+ Gorgeous Custom ance, short-term & long-term disability, 401 (k), helping hand? security dep. Taking ap4/3.5, paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is replications - 541-419-1917 3208 Home, From contractors to sq.ft., $478,000 quired prior to employment. Please submit reVirginia Dougherty Look at: sumes to keldred@bendbulletin.com or com- yard care, it's all here Principal Broker, Bendhomes.com plete an application at the front desk. No in The Bulletin's RE/MAX phonecall s please.EOE. for Complete Listings of "Call A Service 541-350-3418 Professional" Directory Area Real Estate for Sale The Bulletin Serv~ng Cenrral Oregon since 1903 859 Looking for your next Extreme Value Adveremp/oyee? Houses for Rent tising! 29 Daily newsPlace a Bulletin help Nurses Sunriver papers $540/25-word wanted ad today and classified 3-d a ys. reach over 60,000 Reach 3 million Pa- VILLAGE PROPERTIES readers each week. cific Northwesterners. Sunriver, Three Rivers, Your classified ad La Pine. Great For more information will also appear on call (916) 288-6019 or Selection. Prices range bendbulletin.com in Care $425 - $2000/mo. email: which currently reelizabeth@cnpa.com View our full ceives over A career with countless rewards. inventory online at for the Pacific North1.5 million page west Daily Connec- Village-Properties.com views every month A career with Partners In Care Hospice 1-866-931-1061 tion. (PNDC) at no extra cost. and Home Health is more than a job. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! It's an opportunity to make a powerful and Senior Project Manager Call 385-5809 or lasting difference in the lives of your commuplace your ad on-line Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades in nity members. Rediscover the patient-cenat Bend invites applications for a f u ll-time tered care that drew you to your profession in bendbulletin.com (1.0 FTE), 12-month, Professional Faculty the first place. position as Senior Project Manager. The following positions are currently available 757 Duties include, but are not limited to, planning at Partners In Care: Crook County Homes the design and construction of the new physical facilities of Oregon State University • Hospice RN Case Manager- (full-time) 20 ACRES! Private, Cascades' campus. This includes providing Primary responsibilities include providing timely, cost e ffective, and p r ofessional Gated w/Public Lands day-to-day care to hospice patients in their Close. Well, Septic services that enhance the i nstructional, homes / facilities while being the point person Feas Done. Easy research, and service goals of the University. for the patients case management team. Access to Airport • Hospice RN Support - (fulf-fime) Support Shopping, Recreation A minimum requirement includes a Bachelor's RNs primary responsibilities include providing Powell Butte or Master's degree in Architecture, Engineerday-to-day care to hospice patients in their ing or Planning. P r eferred qualifications Virginia Dougherty homes / facilities. Principal Broker, include experience working within higher • Home Health RN Case Manager (Fuff time, RE/MAX education. The anticipated start date is in 4 days/32 hours a week) Primary responsi541-350-3418 February, 2014. bilities include providing day-to-day care to home health patients in their homes / facilities Where can you find a To review additional minimum and preferred while being the point person for the patients helping hand? qualifications, and to apply for this position, case managementteam. please go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs/ and From contractors to • Home Health/Hospice RN Su pport view posting number 0011870. The closing (Casua/) Support RNs primary responsibiliyard care, it's all here date is 2/4/14. t ies include providing day-to-day care t o in The Bulletin's OSU is an AA/EOE. home health/hospice patients in their homes / "Call A Service facilities. • On-Call CertifiedNurse Assistant (Casual Professional" Directory Sales Status) Responsibilities include providing patient care in our inpatient facility covering va771 Independent Contractor Sales cations. Position is on-call from 7:00pm to Lots We are seeking dynamic individuals. 7:30am, as needed. • Hospice Nursing Supervisor (Fulf time) SHEVLIN RIDGE DOES THIS SOUND LIKEYOUP Primary responsibilities include supervising 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap• OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE and directing nursing care and all related proved plans. More • PERSONABLE & ENTHUSIASTIC activities in the Hospice Home Care departdetails and photos on •CONSISTENT & MOTIVATED ment according to p o licies, procedures, craigslist. $149,900. philosophy, and objectives of the department 541-389-8614 Our winning team of sales & promotion and organization. The H ospice Nursing Supervisor is responsible for day to day professionals are making an average of 775 s upervision of H o spice R N s t aff a n d $400 - $800 per week doing special Manufactured/ processes while ensuring quality patient care events, trade shows, retail & grocery Mobile Homes and outcomes. store promotions while representing THE BULLETIN newspaper Partners In Care offers wages and benefits FACTORY SPECIAL as an independent contractor New Home, 3 bdrm, competitive with the local market including $46,500 finished health/dental/life insurances, disability coverVi/E OFFER: on your site. age, retirement plan with company match on * * Solid Income Opportunity J and M Homes contributions, and paid time off. * 541-548-5511 * Complete Training Program * No Selling Door to Door * If you are interested, please send a cover LOT MODEL letter, employment application and resume * No Telemarketing Involved * LIQUIDATION via email to HR©partnersbend.org or submit * Great Advancement Opportunity * Prices Slashed Huge via regular mail to: * Full and Part Time Hours * Savings! 10 Year Partners In Care, Attn: HR, conditional warranty. 2075 NE Wyatt Court, FOR THE CHANCE OF A Finished on your site. Bend OR 97701 LIFETIME, ONLY 2 LEFT! Please visit our Redmond, Oregon Call Adam Johnson websithttp//www.partnersbend.org to 541-548-5511 download an application. 541-410-5521, TODAY! JandMHomes.com
N ayion R V 20 0 8 , Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality throughout, rear slide-out w/ queen bed, d e luxe captain swivel f ront seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ smoking. $77,500 or make an offer. 541-382-2430
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$77,000
541-548-4807
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l ift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504 The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs. Call on one of the professionals today!
singles right now! Triumph Da ytona Meet No paid o perators, 2004, 15K m i l e s, just real people like perfect bike, needs you. Browse greetVin nothing. ings, exchange mes¹201536. sages and connect $4995 live. Try it free. Call Dream Car now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Auto Sales (PNDC) 1801Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
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Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds FIND ITr appear every day in the astf v 1 7 I print or on line. SELL IT! Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classifieds
The Bulletin Sew>ngCentral Oregon since 19l8
Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very Fleetwood D i scovery clean, non-smoker, 40' 2003, diesel mo3 slides, side-by-side torhome w/all refrigerator with ice options-3 slide outs, Washer/Dryer, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, maker, Flat screen TV's, In etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. motion satellite. Wintered in h e ated $95,000 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-480-2019 541-447-8664
541-810-8448
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541-388-8939
thegarnergroup •
1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
similar model& not the actual vehicle)
•
thegarnergroup
KOUNTRY AIRE
$25,000.
Motorhomes
COACHMAN Freelander2008 32' Class C, Nl-3150 Pristine - just 23,390
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384
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
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed,hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541 -385-5809 881
Travel Trailers
Fleetwood Wilderness N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 1 sbde, sleeps 6, queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front elec. jack, waste tank heate rs, s t abilizers, 2 prop. t a nks, no smoking/pets, winterized, good c o n d. $8500 OBO 541-447-3425
Redmond:
541-548-5254
TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides CAT
350hp diesel engine,
$125,900. 30,900 miles,
new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays The Bulletin & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towTo Subscribe call bar and Even-Brake in541-385-5800 or go to cluded. Call 541-977-4150 www.bendbulletin.com
Keystone Laredo 31' RV' 2006 with 12' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,800 541-447-4805
Partners
V ictory TC 9 2 ci Call 54I 3855809 io Promote yourtenice • Advertise for 28daysstorting ttt 'If(I Itiri Vvtt~ag a eemniVSrmO VW em> 2002, runs great, 40K rn., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r Building/Contracting D o m estic Services L a ndscaping/Yard Care brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665 NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land-
, 4s'sIsTI,H,
law requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adATVs be licensed with the :.Asafatfejf Snsfors vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- .:, +ei'tss HoNceo + Landscape Construc'! ' tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: active license : l.ight housekeeping p lanting, deck s , means the contractor ja otheiservices., fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. .' i.icensed s aonded. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's " '.,", „Baa certified' ' stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at systems to be Honda TRX 350 FE www.hirealicensed$'08-7-'6-8». 4 lrigation icensed w it h th e 2006, 4 wheel drive, contractor.com Landscape Contrac"<>itesttted tn Redmond electric start, electric or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit s hift, n e w tir e s , The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in$2500, 541-980-8006. mends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to contisements which indi870 tracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and Boats & Accessories also req u ire addiworkers c ompensaHandyman 17' tion for their employFishrite G u i de tional licenses and ees. For your protecModel drift boat, 54" certifications. tion call 503-378-5909 beam, great shape! I DO THAT! or use our website: $3800. 541-610-3183 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS www.lcb.state.or.us to Search the area's most check license status comprehensive listing of before contracting with classified advertising... the business. Persons real estate to automotive, doing lan d scape merchandise to sporting maintenance do not goods. Bulletin Classifieds Handyman/Remodeling r equire an LC B l i 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, appear every day in the cense. Residential/Commercial inboard motor, g reat print or on line. cond, well maintained, Small Jobs to Just bought a new boat? Call 541-385-5809 $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Eslire RoomRemodels Sell your old one in the www.bendbulletin.com Carage Organization classifieds! Ask about our Obrien towable 2 perHome lnsPection RePairs Super Seller rates! The Bulletin son tube, HD, exc. serwngcenlrv oregon srnce19t8 541-385-5809 Quality, Hcmest Work $40. 541-388-3879 Dennis 541.317 9768 Ads published in the ccnnsurz Bondeklnsured Debris Removal Painting/Wall Covering "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, ERIC REEVE house and sail boats. HANDY For all other types of watercraft, please go SERVICES to Class 875.
SENIC)RS',
865
MARTIN JAMES
541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Will Haul Away
' FREE g"
Servin Central Ore on since 1903
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
For Salvage ~ . Any Locfaklon ,g Removal Also Cleanups .
Ah Clewllowts n
I~
All Home & Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no pmblem. Senior Discount All work guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insund CCB¹149468
European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License ¹ 1 861 47 LLC
541-815-2888
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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882
882
882
908
908
932
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
CHECKyOUR AD
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Laredo 2009 30'
Njl • '
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiias 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomas 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
881
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Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Layton 27-ft, 2002 Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8495 541416-1388
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Check out the Sprinter, 35' 2006 classifieds online Rear living, large www.bendbulletin»cem refrigerator, walk-in Updated daily shower, queen bed, lots of storage inside & out, new tires, electric jack, excellent condition, only used 3 times. Call tosee!
Get your business
your ad, please con-
tact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,
in La Pine )
$28,000
ILL DELIVER
541-419-3301
RV Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, CONSIGNMENTS 2 slides, AC, recliners, WANTED walk-around queen bed, We Do the Work, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water You Keep the Cash! On-site credit heater, good tires. Brand approval team, new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 web site presence. owner, n o n -smokers. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. $13,499. 541-447-7968 BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Good classified ads tell Redmond: the essential facts in an 541-548-5254 interesting Manner.Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the 885 facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will Canopies & Campers help them insomeway. Cabover Conestoga This camper, fits 6' bed, advertising tip stove, heater. Quick sale, brought to you by $200. 541-771-1252
The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince tgtg
Call Dick,
g
541-480-1687. Fleetwood Mfifderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500. 541-383-8270
king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
& Service
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands of readers! •
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Cfassffteds
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0
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Keystone
2004 CH34TLB04 34'
541-385-5809 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. ins ide & out. 27" TV dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5 t/~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slidCall The Bulletin At ing hitch that fits in 541-385-5809 your truck. Call 8 a.m. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail to 10 p.m. for appt to At: www.bendbulletin.com see. 541-330-5527.
916
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
'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
1974 BeHanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
ln
Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, Shp Buick Skylark 1972 » Please see Bend In Madras, pump, 4-3 hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. Craigshst for details and call 541-475-6302 541-820-3724 more photos. $19,900. 541-323-1898 Dramatic Price Reducngoodbuyn Say tion Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) to that unused 60' wide x 50' deep, item by placing it in w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, The Bulletin Classifieds offc, bathroom. Adjacent Price Reduced! to Frontage Rd; great Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 5 41-385-580 9 visibility for aviation busiengine, power everyness. 541-948-2126 or thing, new paint, 54K email 1jetjock@q.com orig. miles, runs great, 929 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 Automotive Wanted obo. 541-480-3179 DONATE YOUR CARFAST FREE TOWING. 24 hr. Response Tax D e duction. »n'n t UNITED BR E AST CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free M ammograms 8 GMC 8 ton 1971, Only Breast Cancer Info. $10,500! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd 868-592-7581. owner. 760-985-4016 (PNDC)
541-385-5809
931
Ch allenger
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, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text 541-325-1956.
SuperhawkOnly 1 Share Cessna 150 LLC Available 150hp conversion, low Economical flying time on air frame and in your own engine, hangared in IFR equipped Have an item to Bend. Excellent perCessna 172/180 HP for formance 8 affordsell quick? only $13,500! New able flying! $6,000. If it's under Garmin Touchscreen 541-410-6007 avionics center stack! '500 you can place it in Exceptionally clean! The Bulletin Hangared at BDN. Call 541-728-0773 Classifieds for:
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
908
Aircraft, Parts
1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
'toggtg»rg t
1/5th interest in 1973
Garage Sales Garage Sales
882
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
,
Garage Sales
MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides,
541-420-3250
Fifth Wheels
e ROW I N G
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Pegasus 2008 24' w ith slide. A/ C , queen bed, sleeps 4, 2 door fridge, microwave, awning, & more! Non-smoker, exc cond, $11,295 541-390-'I 755
human errors do occur. If this happens to
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Orbit 21'2007, used
Just too many collectibles'?
rect. »Spellcheckn and
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
541-318-6919
only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,51 1 OBO. 541-382-9441
on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor-
•
1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo. 541-948-2963
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional 14 » Multi-fit rims, 5-lug from The Bulletin's pattern, $60. "Call A Service 541-279-8908 Professional" Directory
Automotive Parts, Hangarfor sale at Redmond Airport - not Service & Accessories a T Hangar -$39,000. 541-420-0626
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o 4 seat, 1/3 interest i n w e l l- Commander, 150 HP, low time, equipped IFR Beech Bo- full panel. $23,000 nanza A36, new 10-550/ Contact Paul at prop, located KBDN. obo. 541-447-5184. $65,000. 541-419-9510 - ~
N S ee
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
GMC Sierra 1977 short bed, exlnt o r iginal cond., runs & drives great. V8, new paint and tires. $4750 obo. 541-504-1050
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SAT. 12-5 PM S UN. 11-2 P M Location-Location-Location! This home is located in such a terrific LOCATION - close to the NW Canyon with various views available - all new homes will surround this new constuction home. The home itself ig a single level with 2020 SF gnd triple car garage - what g nice 3088 NW 17th St., Redmond flootplan - very open with great room ggd kitchen to the eating bar Directions:North on Htjt)t 97, left gnd nook. Kitchen hgs large walk- on QuinceAven right on /ft/r 10th in pantry, comer sink, wrap around eating bgr with knotty Alder natural SI, lefi on NuiSpruce Ave, right
cabinets. There is full landscaping on gttd a fenced yard.
Hosted by:
17th St. House on right past Teakwood.
$297,000
BRUCE DUNLAP Principal Broker
541-604-4200 Listed byi
BRUCE DUNLAP Iik JIM HINTON
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I I THUR - SAT 12PM - 4PM
THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM Beautiful Pahlisch Homes community featuring amazing neighborhood amenities: pool, hot tub, clubhouse, sports center, gym, game room and more! Come tour a variety of single level and 2-story floor plans.
Dirsctfons:Pom theparkway, east on Reed Narket, sou!h on 15th, then
follow signs.
Homes Starting Hosted byi
High-$300s
features a 3-Gtr garage, great room
Chroma quartz counters !even in baths) with under20781 NE Comet Lane mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention given Directiorgs:North on Boyd Acres, to allow for tons of natural Right on Sierra, Leg onBlack Powder, light 8t much more. Come Righl on CometLane, Lookforsigns. by the model home for more starting under
information and plans.
Hosted 6 Listed byi
TEAM DELAY
$200,000
RHIANNA KUNKLER
Edie, Sam, /Ifoe
541-420-2950 R
One level home on a large comer lot in Newport Hills. This home
wood floors, solid surface
R E A L T 0
R 6
Hosted Sat. tr)ii
R E 4
t. T 0 a s
West, left ontW Neuiport Hills Dr, left on 18th, home onthe right.
$415,000
Hosted Sun. byi
JUSTIN IAVIK Principal Broker Listed byi BRIAN LADD
Broker
541-306-0939
w/breakfast bar island, wood flooring asd formal living with ggg fireplace gnd vaulted ceilings. Master suite w/garden tub a 1253 NW 18th ST. gepgrate shower. A great value for a desirable location. Directiorgsr Take Newport Atte.
BRIAN HILTS Principal Broker
g
REALTYGROUP,ILG
A rcrrntirvalue cv.sgal sgottgggCt
I
SAT. 9 - NOON SUN. 12 - 3PM
SAT. R SUN. 1PM - 4PM
Homes start under $200,000. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahlisch is known for — stainless steel appliances, laminate
20862GoldenGatePlace,Bend
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CENmtu. OREGON
Immaculate Glacier Ridge single level home with 2-car arage. 3 bedrooms t 2 aths, great room with nice light, vaults, bay window, gas fireplace. Paver patio and deck with prtvate 5552 f ttfE Palmer Dr master entrance. Come see! DirectioggsiFrom east on Ne ff, right on Glacier Ridge /td, le Hosted Sat. byi ft on BRIAltf HILTS lVEPalmer. Principal Broker
$210,000
Hosted Sun. byi GREG BARN%XLL
Principal Broker
Cascac(e SOtheby'S INTERNATIONALREALTY
Principal Broker 541-408-3912
Listed byi BRIAN LADD Prfncipal Broker
Cascacje Sotheby's INTERNATIONALREALTY
541-408-3912
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*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
InCludeS UP
to 40 words of text, 2" in length,
Item Priced af:
• Under $500 ----.
Your Total Ad Cost onl: -------------- $2rgf
• $500 to $eee ....
............................$39
with border, full color photo, • $1000 to $2499 bold headline and price. • $2500 and over
The Bulletin 541- 5 - 5
........................... $49
........................... $59
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• The Bulletin, • ce n t i'al or e g on Marketplace • The central oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.
wrscked 8!e& Affsr m@ket motorupgmde . Vsn Fast anuFUA. e allSsrvicerecoms Itlov!ng forcss s I i $2OOOO8O 541-OOOOOO
E6 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN 932
935
Antique & Classic Autos
Jeep CJ5 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch package, Warn hubs. Excellent runner, very dependable. Northman 6trss' plow, Warn 6000¹ winch. $7900 or best reasonable offer. 541-549-6970 or 541-815-8105. Find It in
The Bulletin Clnssifiedsi 541-385-5809
Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
975
975
975
975
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Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
© s un mu
Tahoe 2001, 5.3L USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Chevy V8, feather, air, heated seats, fully 120K, Door-to-door selling with $7500 obo.loaded, 541-460-0494
fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
Ford Bronco 114x4, 1989, auto, high miles, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662
933
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975
CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes inAM General Hummer fphoto for illustration only) s tructions over t h e Ford Thunderbird Olds 98 REgency 1990 H1 1996; $ 48,500; Subaru Forester XT exc. shape, runs as phone are misunder2004 pics at ebay or email Limited 2007, 4 Cyl., stood and an error new, one owner, 20 Convertible auto, AWD, leather, can occur in your ad. with hard & soft top, bmartin029tthaol.com mpg in town. New moon rof, p r ivacy If this happens to your battery, stud snow silver with black glass, roof rack, alloy ad, please contact us tires.$2000. interior, wheels. Vin¹710326 541-389-9377 the first day your ad all original, $15,488 appears and we will very low mileage, be happy to fix it as in premium condition. s oon as w e c a n . $19,900. Get your 702-249-2567 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Deadlines are: Weekbusiness miles, premium pack877-266-3821 days 12:00 noon for (car is in Bend) age, heated lumbar Dlr ¹0354 next day, Sat. 11:00 supported seats, pana.m. for Sunday; Sat. o ROWI N G oramic mo o nroof,Subaru Outback 2011 12:00 for Monday. If People Lookfor Information About Products and Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- 2.5i Prem. 24,500 mi., we can assist you, ¹372300 • $22,995 with an ad in non headlights, tan & Services Every Daythrough please call us: black leather interior, The Bulletin's 541-385-5809 The Bellefie Clessiilede n ew front & re a r The Bulletin Classified "Call A Service brakes O 76K miles, Honda Accord EX 2011 one owner, all records, Professional" black, 22,600 mi., 541-598-3750 very clean, $16,900. $17,995 ¹085779 Directory www.aaaoregonauto541-388-4360 source.com
Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerChevy Suburban lines, 541-593-2597 1500 LT 2009 5.3L V8 Flex fuel. 4wd Heavy Duty tow pkg., Cargo Racks, running boards, leather interior, power locks, XM Rolls Royce 1992 Silsatellite, OnStar ver Spur II, excellent! multi-disc MP3, Midnight Blue exterior, Bluetooth. Summer Parchment leather inteand new studded rior, 15-inch chrome RR tires. 81,000 highwheels, Alpine Sirius way miles. $25,000 DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS OBO. 541-480-8231 navigation system, 77,200 miles, dealership maintained, always garaged. New, about $250,000; sell $19,500. 541-480-3348
Pickups
935
CLASSIC 1966 Ford F250
3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD,
P/S, straight body, runs good. $2000. 541-410-8749
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.
Corvette 1979
L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.
541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
f photo for illustration onlyl iphoto ror illustration only) V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Subaru Outback 3.0XT AWD, sunroof, lux/winter Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., LL B ea n E d i tionpkgs new tires moret auto, AWD, leather, 2006, AWD, leather, $7775 obo.541-330-5818 m oon r o of , re a r m oon r o of , al l o y spoiler, alloy wheels. wheels, Lo aded. V W Passat 2007, charVin ¹207281 coal gray, 50k miles. Vin ¹203053 $23,988 $19,988
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S UBA R U ,
eusmsontsss aou 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Find exactly what you are looking for in the Garage Sales CLASSIFIEDS Garage Sales
Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with f photo for illustration onlyl hardtop. 50K miles, Subaru Outback 2.5i XT Wagon 20 0 5 , 541-385-5809 new factory Porsche leather, dual m oon motor 6 mos ago with roofs, rear s poiler, 18 mo factory warToyotaCelica ranty remaining. alloy wheels. $37,500. Vin ¹365464 Convertible 1 993 541-322-6928 $12,488
541-598-3750
www.aaaoregonautosource.com WHEN YOU SEE THIS
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Place a Bulletin help Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr wanted ad today and (longer style) sedan, reach over 60,000 Call on one of the silver, black leather, 4.2L readers each week. professionals today! V8, AT, AC, fully loaded Your classified ad + moonroof. Runs great, $12,900. SuafARu will also appear on reliable, always garaged, SUBARUorssss.ssu Dave, 541-350-4077 116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. Good classified ads tell bendbulletin.com 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. which currently reFront/side airbags, the essential facts in an 877-266-3821 ceives over 1.5 milBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS non-smoker. $7900. interesting Manner.Write Dlr ¹0354 lion page views 541-350-9938 Search the area's most GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 from the readers view -not every month at speed, a/c, pw, pdl, comprehensive listing of the seller's. Convert the iphoto for illustration only) cost. Bullenicest c o n vertible no extra classified advertising... facts into benefits. Show Subaru Tribeca 2009, real tin Classifieds around in this price estate to automotive, the reader howthe item will H6, 3.6 Liter, auto, merchandise Get Results! Call sporting range, new t i res, help them insomeway. AWD, roof rack, pri- goods. Bulletinto 385-5809 or place wheels, clutch, timClassifieds vacy g lass, a l l oy This your ad on-line at ing belt, plugs, etc. appear every day in the wheels. Vin ¹405069 advertising tip bendbulletin.com 111K mi., remarkprint or on line. iphoto for illustration oniyl $17,988 Mazda Miata 1997 brought toyou by Subaru Outback 3.0 able cond. i nside Call 541-385-5809 M-edition 2005, H6, 3.0 Liter, and out. Fun car to © s u a ARU. www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Mica Green, 5-spd, Need to get an senlngrenru ornnn since1%8 a uto, AWD, m o o n drive, Must S E E! original interior8 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. roof, leather, alloy $5995. R edmond. ad in ASAP? The Bullctin exterior. All power 877-266-3821 Srning Central orrron since1%8 541-504-1993 wheels. Vin ¹203121 options, leather, You can place it Dlr ¹0354 $18,488 convertible boot, online at: Tonneau Cover 940 © s u a aau www.bendbulletin.com 114K miles, synVans thetic oils, new tim2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ing belt © 81K, 541-385-5809 877-266-3821 & more! $5995. (Photo for lllustration only) ExH E A T Dlr ¹0354 541-548-5648 Subaru lmpreza 2.5i R U V X CORVETTE COUPE 2011, 4 C y l., auto, Ford Windstar van, 1996, Glasstop 2010 I The Bulletin recoml Volkswagen AWD, running lights, 1 owner, only 68,100 Grand Sport -4 LT mends extra caution I Touareg 2004 n ice w h eels. V i n Need to sell a miles, new tires, always loaded, clear bra when p u rchasing s Meticulously main¹507659 serviced, no smoking/ Vehicle? hood 8 fenders. tained. Very clean f products or services $16,488 Call The Bulletin pets. Like new, $3950. New Michelin Super from out of the area. inside and out. V6. 541-330-4344 or and place an ad Sports, G.S. floor f S ending c ash , serviced ® s u aAau iphoto forillustration only) Recently 541-420-6045 today! checks, or credit in- s mats, 17,000 miles, 60 point inspection l A s k about our 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Subaru Outback 3.0 R sheet. $6,800.00 Crystal red. formation may be I "Wheel Deal"! 877-266-3821 VDC Wagon 2005, Call 541-480-0097 $42,000. Honda Odyssey J subject to FRAUD. l f o r private party l 503-358-1164. Dlr ¹0354 H6, 3.0 Liter, auto, For more informa1999.Very good advertisers AWD, leather, dual f tion about an advercond. Runs well, moon roofs, roof rack, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! tiser, you may call Two sets of tires on alloy whee l s.Vin I the Oregon State rims - summer and ¹349337 winter. $2500. Door-to-door selling with Attorney General's I $19,488 o nsumer I 541-593-2312 fast results! It's the easiest Office Chotline at or 541-977-7588 © s u a aau way in the world to sell. / Protection 1-877-877-9392. Call a Pro Subaru Legacy 2.5i 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Ford Thunderbird Whether you need a The Bulletin Classified Premium 2012, 6 4 877-266-3821 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 2004 serving central orsson sincetsts fence fixed, hedges C yl, a u to , A W D, Dlr ¹0354 541-385-5809 Convertible Door-to-door selling with power seat, a l l oy with hard & soft top, trimmed or a house wheels. fast results! It's the easiest silver with black built, you'll find Vin ¹040619 way in the world to sell. interior, professional help in $17,988 all original, very low mileage, The Bulletin Classified The Bulletin's "Call a ® s u aAau in premium condition. 541 485-5809 Service Professional" $19,900. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Directory 702-249-2567 877-266-3821 975 (car is in Bend) 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354 Automobiles
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Ford F250 Camper Special 1966, AT w/limited slip rear end. A few issues but runs good. Full steel rack w/tfrs. $1950 firm, cash. 541-420-0156
Kia Sportage 1996 4x4, full power, hitch, rack, air, set up for towing, runs reat, 4 extra snow tires. 3200. 541-728-1265 Just bought a new boat? USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Door-to-door selling with Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
Corvette Coupe
Lincoln Aviator, 2004 Light tan/gray metalFord Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching ful l 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
lic, all wheel drive, V8 engine, heated leather seats, 3rd row seat, 131K miles, very well maintained. $7777. 541-389-9829
What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809 FORD XLT1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy,
30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $1 3,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781
And sell it locally. Super winter car!
Audi 4000CS Quattro,
1986, close ratio 5 spd, fun car to drive, new tires, runs great, needs paint, 187k miles. $2500. 541-771-8661.
' g( s
Range Rover HSE, 2011
Super clean, loaded, running boards, luxury & towing packages. Up top pod, 43,000 miles, $45,000. 541-593-9116
fphoto forillustration only)
4 door, rebuilt trans, newer clutch, brakes, manifold, etc. High-performance. Extras, receipts, excellent mpg. $5,800 obo. 541-390-6004 silver, 61,000 miles, good condition. Excellent care. $7,000 OBO, 541-419-9669.
Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $6,500. 541-233-8944.
A ltE P U B L I C NCYllCES IM ~ RTA N M An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate lo make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility io citizens who want to know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go towwvtr.bendbulleftn.comand click on "Classi%ed Adsa
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Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR D E SCHUTES C OUNTY. WE L L S FARGO BANK, NA; Plaintiff, v. JOSE A. PINTO GONZALEZ; B EATRIZ PIN T O ; STATE A C CIDENT INSURANCE FUND (SAIF) C ORPORATION; and DOES 1-2, being all occupants or other persons or parties claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the Complaint herein and located at 6297 1 Mimosa Drive, Bend, OR 97701; D efend ants. C as e No . 13CV0647. SUMMONS. TO:DEFENDANTS J OS E A. PINTO GONZALEZ, B EATRIZ PIN T O , AND DOES 1-2: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: You are hereby re-
quired to appear and
Buick CX2005
Subaru Forester 2.5X Premium 2 010, 4 Cyl., auto, AWD, panorama roof, privacy I nternational Fla t Need to get an ad glass, roof rack, alloy Bed Pickup 1963, 1 wheels, Vin¹751051 ton dually, 4 s pd. in ASAP? $19,988 trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood © s u a a au Fax it te 541-322-7253 hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-419-5480. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Psuu(fs 5sK!
I'
Audi A4 2001 1.8T
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
OI'
1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol
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To receivyour e FREECLASSIFIEDAD,cal 385-5809orvisit The Bulletin officeat:1777 SWChandler Ave.(onBei)d's westside *Offer allows for 3 lines ot text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentalsandemploymentadvertising, and all commercialaccounts. Must beanindividual itemunderI200.00 and priceot individualitemmustbeincluded is thead. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentativeabout special pricing, longerrunschedulesandadditional features. Limit 1 adper item per30 daysto besold.
defend the complaint filed against you in the above case w i thin thirty days after the first date of publication of this summons, and if you fail to appear and defend, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded i n the complaint. The object of the complaint and the demand for relief are: The plaintiff seeks to foreclose its trust deed on the subject real property described in the complaint as d escribed below in the amount of $322,956.17, plus interest, late charges, costs, advances, and attorney's fees, and to cause th e s u bject property to be sold by the Sheriff of Deschutes County, foreclosing the interests of all defendants in the real property with the proceeds applied to satisfy Plaintiff's lien. The real property is described as follows: Lot Six ( 6), T E RRANGO GLEN SOUTH, re c o rded February 11, 2003, in Cabinet F, Page 394, Deschutes C o unty, Oregon. Commonly known as 62971 Mimosa Drive, Bend, OR 97701. NOTICE TO DEF E NDANT: READ THESE P APERS CAREFULLY! You must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatic ally. T o "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or
"answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein a long with th e r e q uired filing fee. I t must be i n p r oper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n a t t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at (503)
PERSONAL REPRES ENTATIVE: Gr e -
gory Hinds, 229 NW 177th Street, Shoreline, WA 98177, Tel. ¹
206.2 3 5.5792. LAWYER FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Bob Turner, OSB¹891725, 777 NW Wall St., Ste. 304, B end, OR 977 0 1 , 5 41.318.6055 fax : 541.318.6058, bobttttplgbend.com.
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC AUCTION Public auction to be held Saturday, February 22, 2014 at 1:30 P.M., a t Ja m ison Street Self Storage, 63177 Jamison St., 684-3763 or toll-free B end O R 977 0 1 . in Oregon at (800) (Unit B-043 & U n it 452-7636. H E R SH- C-013, Kaidee NER HUNTER, LLP, Pike-Howard). By/s/Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, OSB 902254, Of Attorneys PUBLIC NOTICE for Plaintiff, 180 East The Bend Park8 Rec11th Avenue, P .O. reation District Board Box 1475, Eugene, Oregon 97440, Tele- of Directors will meet in a work session and phone: meeting on (541)686-8511, Fax: business Tuesday, February 4, (541)344-2025, 2014, at the District ncary@hershnerh unter.com. Fir s t Office,799 SW CoP ublication Dat e : l umbia, Bend, O r egon. The work sesJanuary 19, 2014. sion will begin at LEGAL NOTICE 5:30pm. The board IN TH E C I R CUIT will receive a d raft COURT O F THE Easement Policy, an STATE OF OREGON update on the FOR THE COUNTY district's website and OF DES C HUTES applications for two Probate Department. vacant positions on In the Matter of the the Budget CommitEstate of C atherine tee. A regula busiHinds, De c eased. ness meeting will be Case No. 13PB0150. conducted beginning NOTICE TO INTER- at 7:00 pm. The board ESTED P ERSONS. will convene as the NOTICE IS HEREBY district's Contract ReGIVEN that the unview Board to condersigned has been duct a public hearing appointed p e rsonal to receive comments r epresentative. Al l on the district's draft persons having claims f indings for an e x against the estate are e mption fro m t h e required to p resent competitive b i dding them, with vouchers r equirements for a attached, to the un- certain public condersigned personal tract pursuant to ORS representative at Bob 279C.335 f o r the Turner, 777 NW Wall Simpson P a v i llion St., Ste. 304, Bend, project, consider OR, 97701, within four adoption of Resolumonths after the date tion No 316, adopting of first publication of the Cons t ruction t his notice, o r t h e Manager/General claims may be barred. Contractor (CM/GC) All persons whose findings, consider apr ights may b e a f - proval of the Discovfected by t h e p r o- ery Park Master Plan ceedings may obtain a nd consider a p additional information proval of renaming the from the records of South Canyon Bridge the Court, the per- to C onley B r ooks sonal representative, Bridge. or the lawyer for the T he a g enda a n d personal representa- s upplementary r e tive, B o b Tu r ner. ports are posted on Dated and first pub- the district's website, lished on January 26, www.bendparksan2014. Bob T u rner, drec.org. For more Attorney for Personal information call 541-389-7275. Representative.
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
SUNDAY READER
JOHN COSTA
Larger questions about City Hall
T
l
Tf rr' •
he Bend city administration's
response to questions about the investigation of one officer's behavior and the firing of a chief of police could be induded in a journalism textbook. If it were, it would be in a chapter ti-
tled, "Whenthe questions get tougher, expect resistance." It's two weeks and running since the city, to its credit, usheredthen-Lt.
Chris Carney off thepolice force and outthedoorforsexualmisbehavior
with female city employees and, he daimed, a member of the media. Through her attorney, the media
member denied his daim. Aweeklater, Police Chief Jeff Sale, with two-plus years on the job, was
dismissed after City Manager Eric King concluded the chief did not have
A vacant coal preparation plant near a mountaintop removal mining site in a region designated a "promise zone" by President Barack Obama in
effective working relationships with
Knott County, Ky., last month. President Obama's promise zones aim tofight inequality and poverty.
PhotosbyAngelaShoemakerI The New YorkTimes
his key subordinates. Again to its credit, the city adminis-
tration was relatively forthcomingin this chapter of the story. Yet, as these stories usually do, this
one evolvedthe wayballs of yarnpull apart, and these strings lead to questions beyond the damnable behavior
of CarneyorSale'sdism issal. Sale was hired in 2011 for many reasons, but among them was, as he
indicated in his evaluations, to change the culture of the police department. What, we wondered, was the cul-
e iver~
ture he dearlythoughthe was recruited to change? What was simmering at the police
department that King felt it necessary tobringin an outside change agent? How long had it been allowed to ex-
Joseph Nantz, a
ist, and under whose regimes'? After all, a former deputy chief re-
heavy equipment operator who lost his job at a mine that closed in
tired under a doud, Carney — whose
transgressi ons dateback decades— is out, and a former captain is in a federal prison. In the hiringprocess, did anyone consider that Sale might not be suit-
~r
able for the mission?
an area named a "promise zone" by s
President Barack Obama, near the mining site in Perry
Asked that question, King offered a
County, Ky., last
curious answer. "I think there was a general aware-
month.
ness ofhis style (personality) as part of our due diligence ...; however, the environment as a Police Chief of a City with apopulation of 10,000 and his experience with the Washington State Police may have been a better fit
for the style he offered so it wasn't all that apparent — at least initially."
Fair enough. Longbefore the blowup over Carney, Sale's evaluations started losing their luster. In the various categories
of performance in his second and last evaluation, the number of "outstand-
ing" ratings is reduced substantially. Did the cityleave him in place too long? Did Carney's antics force a reluctant administration into action? In any case, what we wanted to know, and what we think citizens
should knowis whether these incidents suggest anything larger about
• Regions like Kentucky's coal country havebeenravaged economically asan industry fades. Can the politically popularenterprisezonedo enoughto revivedepressedareas like this one?
the competence of City Hall.
In a citythat's predictably goingto grow in size and sophistication, do we have the municipal capacity to play in thebigleagues? Can our city administration identify challenges, recruit the right talent, superviseandlead correctly? If so, great. If not, we have larger problems than sewers, water, failing dams or
ByAnnie LowreyeNew York TimesNews Service
HAZARD, Ky.oseph Nantz still looks back fondly at his job as a heavy machinery operator at the mountaintop coal mine here, helping to
libidinous police lieutenants. Inlight of these questions, The Bul-
blast and cart away layers of rock to reveal
letin requested documents focusing on the processes that could begin to
provide answers. Suffice it to say, the city's response suggests we are not going to get many answers unless we launch a costly legalbattle to gain documents so
blackseams of coal and then restore the rubble fora handsome $24 an hour. "We've got to get some industry other than coal in
enormouslyredacted as to be nearly
here," said Nantz, who lost his job along with 750 other
meaningless. You canimagine why we find paying for our own censorship distasteful.
miners in summer 2012. "There's only so many people
But, what is crucial is whether this administration and, more importantly, the City Council understand that
municipal credibilityhas taken ahit and that squaring with the public is in its best long-term interest. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com
Drawing new industry to this tucky is once again a major federal priority. This month, Presi-
ically popular enterprise zone. Although Obama can point to a steadily improving economy, many Americans say they
dent Barack Obama named the
have seen little benefit from
region a"promise zone," which means it will garner renewed
the recovery and complain that
attention from Washington,
against them. Nobody doubts that this part of Appalachia could use the help. The local unemployment rate is 12.8 percent. Drug abuse
hilly and remote corner of Ken-
left. The halfway smart ones are leaving."
which vowed to provide it top priority for federal grants and, if Congress goes along, new tax dollars as well. "We will help them succeed," Obama said. "Not with a hand-
out, but as partners with them, every step of the way. And we're going to make sure it works." But Obama's promise zones, which are part of the larger agenda to fight inequality and poverty that he unveiled Tuesday night during his State of the Union speech, are just the latest
iteration of an old idea: the polit-
the economic deck is stacked
is rampant. The poverty rate is
nearly 26 percent. But experts are broadly skeptical that any federal initiative would be
enough to combat either the immediate economic upheaval causedby thelossofcoaljobs or the long-term economic torpor that is a product of remoteness, poor infrastructure and
an undereducated workforce. SeeZone /F6
w
My agenCy iS inVOIVed With trying tO retrain 8,000 COal minerS WhO haVe lOSt their jObS. Unfartunately
one of the more successful things we're doing is helping them find jobs outside the area." — Jeff Whitehead, executive director of the Eastern Kentucky Concentrated Employment Program
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
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&K,C&m AbbREK tK LiKK SQAHt" 4,4mm Tl 'KKT:..SEfbREAMb, Y5V'RK op THF U@ot4
t's too soon to start charging Oregon State Universi-
A~ RM Rb, foOMHbSR
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ty-Cascades Campus for property taxes it won't be paying. But it's not too soon tohave a discussion about it. Around the county, municipalities have been looking at ways to get money from colleges and other nonprofits that have property tax exemptions. Some schools make what are called payments in lieu of taxes. Boston,forinstance,has aprogram that requests donations. The city received $11 million in 2013, including $6 million from Boston University and $2 million from Harvard University. Such paymentsare more common in the Northeast, but the idea is spreading. In Racine, Wis., the mayor sent out a letter in November 2012 asking 182 nonprofits, induding local churches, to make such payments. At the time, none of the nonprofits started making contributions. Closer to home, the University of Oregon inEugene does not make such apayment. Theuniversity does pay systemdevelopment charges on new buildings. It does contract for servicesfor specialevents,such as football games. "In many ways, the university campus is similar to a city park in its use for members of the community," said Julie Brown, senior director for communications at UO. Brown noted that the salaries the university pays to its staff make a significant contribution to the community, some $353 million.
In Corvallis, Oregon State Universitydoes not make such a payment. Central Oregon Community College does not make such a payment. It's indisputable that if OSU-Cascades grows to the goal of 5,000 students, it's going to have an impact on city services. There will be costs. And it's also true that the city of Bend gets most of the revenue that goes to pay for police and fire protection from property taxes. But if payments were made by OSU-Cascades, it would essentially be a tax on the tax dollars Oregonians already pay to support higher education. It would also be a tax on tuition that students pay, making higher education less affordable. Is that what residents of Bend want? It would also be unreasonable to single out OSU-Cascades. If it has to pay, other entities with tax exemptions, including nonprofits, should have to pay such fees, too. A developed four-year institution in Bend will bring the community innumerable benefits. Any fee paid to the city by OSU-Cascades should be fair and predictable and take into account the benefits the campus brings. But it's hard to come up with any reasonable way to calculate the benefits and costs of OSU-Cascades, at least until it has some buildings on the ground.
eUl + e~ 77
Xl
Cg
M 1Vickel's Worth 'just let nature take its course'withbarred owls
T
have tried it. Davis will have to convince legislators — and likely voters — that the general fund still would be served. Rep. Carolyn Tomei, D-Milwaukie, wants to put into law a re-
sponsible-gambling policy already
started by the lottery, aimed at helping vulnerable individuals. Rep. Bill Kennemer, R-Clackamas, has proposedlegislationto restore the agency's gambling outreach ads on telepeople enjoy playing with no mean- vision, which were blocked last year ingful harm, and it brings in lots of after questions were raised about money — an estimated $1.04 bil- the legality of spending lotterymonlion in the 2013-15 biennium — that ey on them. He urges sending a otherwise would have to be raised sum of money to the Oregon Health through higher taxes. Authority to pay for ads that target Still, there's good evidence that a problem gamblersand encourage significant part of the lottery's reve- them to seek help. nue comes from a small number of Problem gamblers should be the players wholose repeatedly onvideo sharp focus of changes to the state's slotand poker machines, as shown lottery system, making Kennemer's in a recent Oregonianinvestigation. and Tomei's ideas appealing. Davis' Rep. John Davis, R-Wilsonville, approach will require exploration. is sponsoring the most unusual The Legislature has a positive idea. He wants to create a savings responsibility to address the harms program where players would have caused by the state's lottery. Lawmoney set aside for them and later makers should approve money for returned. He calls it the "silver lin- the ads, for sure, and give serious ing lottery game," according to The study to other ways to compensate Oregonian, and says other states forthe program's harms.
of people who suffer from illnesses dents but quit offering it as a choice. such as depression, bipolar disor- Kids complained when the water, a der, schizophrenia and now PTSD! very healthy choice, was mysteriChances are you know someone ously pulled. who has a mental illness or perhaps For years, local health profesyou have a loved one who battles sionals and parents have advocated a mental illness. These folks need to make chocolate milk a once-in-
It was appalling to read that barred owls are being lured into a killing range. Their only crime seems to be that their habitat is en-
Round of lottery bills seek to mitigate harms his year's crop of legislative proposals targeting the Oregon Lottery has much in common with earlier efforts: They seek to mitigate the uncomfortable truth that the state makes money through a system that hurts vulnerable citizens. Whatever the details, mitigation is the only workable approach, because the lottery isn't going away. And for good reason: Thousands of
g
croaching on spotted owls' habitat. medical treatment but also a sup-
a-while "treat" in our local schools.
Hasn't anyone heard of "survival of the fittest"?
portive environment, including fam-
In fact, the school board was giv-
ily and community mental health services. They can get help!
en a petition with over 500 names
Are these barred owls harming humans in any way? Sometimes humans try to meddle in some things that should be "just let nature take its course" instead of slaughtering these birds. What's next? Killing all the Canadian geese because we don't like them li ving hereyear-round? Barbara Hunter Bend
Peterson story illustrates plight of mental illness
Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI)
signed by local pediatricians, health professionals and local parents. It was ignored. Childhood obesity is a
provides support, education and ad-
problem in Bend. Please write or call
The local chapter of the National
vocacy for victims of mental illness (541-355-1000) the district and memandtothe families who care forthem. bers of the Bend-La Pine Schools To learn more about classes and sup-
Redmond
Chocolate milk an
Hope you got a chance to read
unhealthychoicefor kids
The Bulletin's Sunday article on
board and ask that water once again
port groups provided free by NAMI, be offered as a choice, and that sugcheck out www.namicentraloregon. ary milk be offered only on Fridays org or email namicentraloregon@ as a special "treat." gmail.com. Melissa Hassell Marge Kocher Bend
In support ofMiller's candidacy for judge It is without hesitation that I rec-
Jan. 12 about young Olympic skier Thank y o u f o r t h e we l l -re- ommend Randy Miller as Deschutes Jeret Peterson, who, after a life filled searched article on Jan. 16 about County Circuit Court Judge. Ranwith ups and downs, called 911 and chocolate milk in our schools. Acdy served our country valiantly announced "I'm going to kill myself cording to the article, a child who as a Marine during the first Gulf and want the police to come get the chooses chocolate milk at school War. He has served Central Oregon body." Peterson was dead by the w ill u n n ecessarily c o nsume a proudly as a police officer. He has time police arrived. Nearby was a whopping two pounds of extra sug- served our community with selflessnote to his mother saying he just ar during the school year (imagine a ness and integrity as a board memcouldn't stand the pain any longer. 5-year-oldeating a 2-pound bag of ber of Crystal Peaks Youth Ranch. This is the poignant, yet all too com- sugar.) Personally, he has been an active mon story of someone struggling The Bulletin's reporter found a lo- and honored friend, showing a dedwith depression. The article tells us
cal, peer-reviewed study not funded
ication to his wife and children and
there are 36,000 suicides in the U.S. by the powerful Dairy Association an overall passion for life. He will every year and one in 10 Americans or the USDA, and lo and behold, bring his honor, integrity and passuffer from depression!
it finds that if kids are not offered
Mental illness, thought to be bio- chocolate milk, they will choose logically based, strikes 5 percent of white milk or water. Bend-La Pine the U.S. population. That's millions
sion as a Deschutes County Circuit
Court Judge. Dr. Shawn Clark
Schools used to offer water to stu-
Redmond
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Prohibition's sobering lesson: do nothing to excess By Reg Henry
tors vouch for it, I shall popularize my BBB dietin a book and make
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
t
have spent January as a strict tee- many othersmiserable. totaler. With an exquisite timing
that the Marquis de Sade might have appreciated, I also spent the month reading an absorbing book about Prohibition, a history to make a man thirsty if ever there was one. "Last Call," w r itten b y
D a n iel
Okrent, was published in 2010 to rave reviews, but I only got around to reading it now at the suggestion of a friend, the happiest way for good books to find their audience. The pre-Lenten fast was my own dumb
idea. But it happens pretty much every January. The Christmas and New
Year revels leave me in such full figure that a button is likely to fly off with the force of a small caliber pis-
tol putting passers-by in peril. At that moment, I swear off booze
but also bread and bonbons, which is to say candy of all types. In short, I give up fun. One day, after thin doc-
The poet T.S. Eliot called April
the cruelest month, but apparently he never went dry in January. Why can't I remain fat and happy'? Why do this to myself? To prove to myself
What ironies abounded back ordinary Americans. On the bright then. The people's freedom to buy side, people did drink less overall drinks was specifically outlawed in and snoring no doubt abated. the Constitution, the very document What ironies abound today. We
Excess doesn't make a good antidote to excess, not in 1920, not in
that protects the people's freedoms.
fined noses at the obvious signs of craziness.
have a small political faction severe
A major impetus was religious duty as the old drys but instead railing to a savior whose first miracle was to against the i ntoxicant of f ederal turn water into wine. spending, an issue which did indeed In the process, America made it- need attention just as the dive saself the world's laughingstock. Win- loons of yesteryear were an invita-
2014. Back in Prohibition, the 1 percenters at last looked down their reIt was the Depression that mostly
ended the farce — banning liquor didn't seem like the nation's top prithat I can. My liver thanks me. My wife thanks me, because my snoring ority anymore — but a rich and indisappears as I trim down. Appar- ston Churchill, the famous statesman tion to a hatchet. fluential group finally organized to ently, the human tuba does not put and expert in alcoholic beverages, Of course, this being America, ev- defeat it. out the same volume of noise when said Prohibition "was an affront to erything gets taken too far. The drys In the same way, establishment it is smaller. the whole history of mankind." of yesteryear made the whole nation conservatives are now trying to deBeing on the wagon has other Those who gave the nation Prohi- as miserable as one of my Januarys. caffeinatetea party congressmen compensations: You can read a book bition were a strange coalition that Today's tea party, averse to compro- or pour them down the drain so the on the back of the wagon, as there is brought together religious conser- mise, has been happy to shut down Republican Party can appeal to a nothing else much to do in the way of vatives who wanted to exorcise the the government in honor of a Consti- broader group of sober-minded votentertainment. And "Last Call" gave demon rum and progressives who tution that is all about establishing a ers: those who still hold the quaint rise to an insight beyond the scope of wanted to advance causes such as functioning government dependent idea thatmembers of Congress are the book. It made me feel a bit better women's suffrage. on compromise. there to make government function, about our own age, although some It lasted from January 1920 to In its quest, the tea party mimics not make it dysfunctionaL parallels haunt both eras. December 1933 and was a disaster, the best tactic of the Anti-Saloon This is encouraging and it hasn't Certainly, politics are crazy today, breeding hypocrisy and contempt League, which was to use the power even taken years to happen. I'll but there's comfort in knowing that for the law like poisonous mush- of a dedicated minority to intimidate drink to that. Is it February yet? as outbreaks of insanity go, Prohibi- rooms. It also put the federal govern- politicians and control the political — Reg Henry is deputy editonal-page tion has the present age beat. ment more squarely into the lives of agenda. editor for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
e oison o 11 presidents at one time have
A airbrush away their sins. But what is fudged on the truth. Most pol-
VICTOR DAVIS
iticians pad their resumes and
HANSON
new about political lyingis the present
os mo ern ies supposedly serve the noble majority lier that the radical Muslim Brotherare true; those that supposedly don't hood was"largely secular"? become lies — the facts are irrelevant. By what arbitrary rules can one When Sen. Hillary Clinton in 2007
daim that "Piss Christ" or o ther
heard the factual details of the suc- provocative anti-Christian art is blascessfulIraq stuge as related by Gen. phemous or inferior, if its apparent David Petraeus, she said it required a purpose is to lessen the influence of "suspension of disbelief." In her post- a purportedly pernicious religion? modern sensibility, fighting an unpop- Was Obama's autobiography truth ular war was a lie, but opposing it was or fiction, or something in between the truth — and the actual metrics for — as hinted by the president himself whether the surge was working or not when he was caught in untruths and were simply an irrelevant narratke. then backed away from some of his Later, as secretary of state, Clin- stories, claiming they were now just ton dismissed the c i rcumstances "composites"? surrounding the murders in BengPart of old America still abides by hazi with the callous exdamation, absolute truth and falsity. A door is 'What difference does it make?" She either hung plumb or not. The calihad a postmodern point. If President brations of the Atlas rocket either are Obama, then-United Nations Ambas- accumte and it takes off, or inaccurate
notion that lies are not necessarily lies
anymore — a reflection of the relativ- ed ancestry proved useful in upping ism that infects our entim culture. her careertrajectory. When pressed Postmodernism (the cultural fad about her racial background during "after modernism") went well beyond her2012 campaign, the Harvard law questioning norms and rules. It at- professordenied any deliberate mistacked the very idea of having any representation and went on tobe electrules at all. Postmodernist relativists ed. Such progressive crusaders asdaimed that things like "truth" were sume that they serve the greater truth mere fictions to preserve elite privi- of social change. lege. Unfortunately, bad ideas like that In the gospel of postmodern relativhave a habit of poisoning an entire so- ism, what did it matter if the president ciety — and nowthey have. of the United States promised that Texas gubernatorial candidate Obamacare would not alter existing Wendy Davis was recently caught health-care plans when it was dear fabricating her own autobiogmphy. that it would? Instead, the good inten- sador Susan Rice and Clinton herself She exaggeratedher earlier ordeals, tions of universal health care are the all wrongly and deiiberately assured lied about the age at which she di- onlytruththatmatters. the nation that a politically incorrect vorced and was untruthful about how For that matter, the "law" that re- video had triggered the attacks in she paid for her Harvard Law School quires a president to enforce legisla- Benghazi, were they not on the right education. tion passed by the Congress is like- side of opposing religious bias and When caught, Davis did not apol- wise a construct. If ignoring bother- helping a progressive president to be ogize for lying. Instead, she lamely some laws — whether the individual re-elected? How could that good intenoffered that, "My language should be mandate and timetable of Obamacare, tionbe a lie? tighter." Apparently, only old fogies or federal immigration law — serves If Director of National Intelligence still believe in truth and falsehood a greater social justice, then such der- James Clapper lied under oath to the — period. In contrast, Davis knows eliction also becomes "truth." Blindly Congress that the National Security that promoting a progressive feminist enforcing legalistic details of the law Agency does not snoop on American agenda is "truth," and she only needs that are deemed no longer in the inter- citizens, how can that be perjury if to be"tighter" about her fabrications to est of the people would be the real lie, Clapper's goal was to silence Obama's right-wing critics'? neutralize herreactionarycritics. or sothe reasoning goes. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth WarWithout notions of objective truth, For that matter, if Clapper wanted ren for years falsely daimed that she there can never be lies, just competing to show tolerance for Islamists, how was a Native American. That fabricat- narratives and discourses. Stories that could it be a lie when he testified ear-
CHARLES LANE
Collective bargaining no bargain merica's public-sector unions are on the defensive. Wiscon-
sin has stripped them of most collective-bargaining rights and ended mandatorydues payments. Union-ne-
gotiated pension benefits are linked to the fiscal plight of cities from San Jose
and it blows up. Noble intentions can-
to bankrupt Detroit.
not make prime numbers like 5 or 7 divisible.
Last week, the Supreme Court heard a constitutional challenge to a long-standing element of public-employee-union power: the "agency fees" they charge to prevent "free-riding" by
But outside of math and science,
whose natural truth man so far cannot impugn, almost everything else in America has become "it depends." Admissions, hiring, evaluations, autobiographies, and the statements of
politicians and government officials, all become truthful if they serve the correct cause — and damn any reac-
tionary discrepancies. To pamphrase George Orwell, everything is relative, but some things are more relative than others. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at theHooverInstitation, Stanford University.
workers who are covered by contmcts
but don'twant topaydues. It may be only a matter of time beforethese disparate debates converge
and squarely pose the question that lies at the root of them all: Is public-sector collective bargaining in the public interest? The answer is no. All members of
thepublicuseschools,roads,parksand other government services — and pay taxes to support them Their interest
lies inreceivingthe highest-quality services at the lowest feasible cost. Period. Public-sector unions interfere. They
A silent majority alone, yet not alone here is a strong vein of hostility against orthodox religious
T today, especially among the young. believers in the United States
DAVID
BROOKS When secular or mostly secular people are asked by researchers to give their impression of the devoutly faithful, whether Jewish, Chris- of compassion." tian or other, the words that come There must be something legalisup commonly include "judgmental," tic in the human makeup, because "hypocritical," "old-fashioned" and cold, rigid, unambiguous, unpara"out of touch." doxical belief is common, especially It's not surprising. There is a considering how fervently the Scripyawninggap between theway many tures oppose it. believers experience faith and the And yet there is a silent majorway that faith is presented to the ity who experience a faith that is world. Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel
attractively marked by c ombina-
described one experience of faith in
tions of fervor and doubt, clarity and confusion, empathy and moral
his book "God in Search of Man".
demand.
morning and look at the world in a
talline voice and a sober intensity
"Our goal should be to live life in For example, Audrey Assad is a radical amazement ... get up in the Catholic songwriter with a crysway that takes nothing for granted. to her stage presence. (You can see Everything is phenomenal.... To be her perform her song "I Shall Not Want" on YouTube.) She writes the spiritual is to be amazed." And yet Heschel understood that
sort of emotionally drenched music
the faith expressed by many, even many who are inwardly conflicted, is often dull, oppressive and insipid — a religiosity in which "faith is completely replaced by creed, worship by discipline, love by habit; when the crisis of today is ignored
that helps people who are in crisis. A surprising number of women tell
because of the splendor of the past;
was in her 20s, life's tragedies and
when faith becomes an heirloom
complexities inevitably m ounted,
her they listened to her music while
in labor. She had an idyllic childhood in a Protestant sect prone to black-orwhite dichotomies. But when she
and she experienced a gradual eroreligion speaks only in the name of sion of certainty. authority rather than with the voice She began reading her way rather than a living fountain; when
through the books on the Barnes wouldn't have been like Christopher & Noble Great Books shelf, trying Hitchens." to cover the ones she missed by not Her life, like all lives, is unexpectgoing to college. She loved George ed,complex and unique.Her music Eliot's "Daniel Deronda" and was provides a clearer outward display taken by Tolstoy. "He didn't have of how many inwardly experience an easy time encountering himself," God. she says, sympathetically. "I was Ifyou are a secular person curireading my way from darkness into ous about how believers experience paradox." their faith, you might start with AuShe also began reading theology. gustine's famous passage "What She'd never read anything written do Ilove when Ilove my God,"and before 1835. She went back to Au- especially the way his experience is gustine (whose phrases show up in the world but then mysteriously in her lyrics) and the early church surpasses the world: "It is not physical beauty nor temfathers. Denominationally, she went back- poral glory nor the brightness of ward in time. She became Baptist, light dear to earthly eyes, nor the then Presbyterian, then Catholic: sweet melodies of all kinds of songs, "I was ready to be an atheist. I was nor the gentle odor of flowers, and going to be a Catholic or an atheist. " ointments and perfumes, nor manna She came to feel the legacy of mil- or honey, nor limbs welcoming the lions of people who had struggled embraces of the flesh; it is not these I with the same feelings for thousands love when I love my God. Yet there is of years. "I still have routine brushes a light I love, and a food, and a kind with agnosticism," she says. of embrace when I love my God"I still brush against the feeling a light, voice, odor, food, embrace that I don't believe any of this, but of my innerness, where my soul is the church always brings me back. floodlit by light which space cannot ... I don't think Jesus wants to brush contain, where there is sound that away the paradoxes and mysteries." time cannot seize, where there is a Her lyrics dwell in the parts of perfume which no breeze dispersChristianity she doesn't understand. es,where there isa taste forfood no "I don't want people to think I've had amount of eating can lessen, and an easy time." where there is a bond of union that She still fights the tendency to no satiety can part. That is what I go to extremes. "If I'd have been an lovewhen Ilovem y God." atheist I'd have been the most ob-
noxious, Dawkins-loving atheist. I
— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
demand more pay and benefits, and more control overthe workplace,than the people's elected representatives
might choose if they were answerable onlyto voters. Indeed, political war chests accu-
mulated through dues checkoffs and agencyfeesgive public-sector unions more influence than ordinary voters
in many states and counties. At contract time, theyface theirpolitical allies across a bargmning table. That table, by the way, is behind dosed doors; collectivebargainingis oftenexemptfrom "sunshine laws" that cover other public
business. Defenders of public-sector unionism argue that it reduces costs and
improves quality by ensuring "labor peace" — or, avoidingstrikes and creating a happier, better-trained workforce. A group of state governments led by New York made both arguments in a friend-of-the-courtbrief to the Supreme
Court, citing the need to prevent any repeat of the "devastating" 1,400 work
stoppages that plagued the country between 1965 and 1970. Why unions should have been rewarded for these
actions, many of which were illegal, is not immediately dear. In any case, even well-paid unionized public workers still strike, as Chicago's teachers proved in 2012 and the San Francisco Bay Area's transit workers did in 2013.
Conversely, there is no public-sector collective bargaining in Virginia, but it's not some hotbed of labor unrest.
Cananyonewholooks at this country's urban school systems seriously maintain that unionization makes for an ef-
ficientworkforce? The labor peace justification tries to make a virtue out of something Amer-
icans normally, and properly, despise: government by interest group. A variant of that argument, advanced by my
Hillary Rodham Clinton's regrets aren't enough
colleague Harold Meyerson, is that public-employee unions, with their large campaign donations and politicalstaffs,havebecome "theall-around linchpin of the modern Democratic Party" and the progressive causes for whichit stands.
By Jennlfer Rubln
With her syntax on the fritz, she
The Washington Post
stumbledon:"Im ean,you know,you
illary Rodham Clinton is many things, but sponta-
H Jersey Gov. Chris Christie's profuse neous and subtle? No. New
mea culpa for his staffers' appalling stupidity regarding the George Washington Bridge prompted some uncomfortable comparisons to the
non-apologies of Democrats, and Clinton — well, you can hear the wheels turn like church bells clanging. She or someone in her cast of advisers must have thought the comparison to her own evasions, lack of
expressed remorse and downright falsehoods concerning Benghazi were a bit troubling. In a safe setting, with yet another of her corporate hosts, the National Automobile Dealers Association
(Greens, are you really going to settle for this gal?), Clinton offered up a remarkably hollow comment on Benghazi, saying it was the incident that she most regretted. "My biggest, you know, regret is what happened in Benghazi. . . .
I t w a s a terrible
tragedy, losing four Americans, two diplomats and — now it's public, so I can say — two CIA operatives. Losing an ambassador like Chris Stevens, who was one of our very best and had served in Libya and across the Middle East and spoke Arabic."
have?
Do you feel something more, like make these choicesbased on im- embarrassment or guilt? perfect information. And you make Have you ever apologized directly them to, as we say, the best of your to the families of those killed? ability. But that doesn't mean that If you wanted to get to the bottom there's not going to be unforeseen of this, why was Cheryl Mills disconsequences, unpredictable twists patched to Benghazi to instruct State and turns." employees not to talk to visiting "Regret" is such an odd, under- congressmen? whelming word. You send regrets If you wanted to find out what for not being able to attend a wed- happened, why say, "What differding. You regret having to let an ence at this point does it make?" employee go in slow times. But the Why didn't you submit to quesmurder of four Americans, including tioning by the Accountability Rethe brutal killing of an ambassador view Board'? — the first U.S. ambassador slain in Why didn't you fire those dimore than 30 years — would, you rectly responsible for security in think, provoke a stronger sentiment. Benghazi? Moreover, if you didn't know betWhat system did you have in ter, you would never have guessed placeto flag urgent cables foryour from Clinton's spiel that she was ac- attention? tually in charge of the State Depart-
ment at the time. Her non-apology apology not only offered no admission of fault or personal responsibili-
When other countries pulled their
attack toa video were wrong and
misleading'? Was there a political reason for downplaying th e a l -Qaida connection? If you knew the attack was ter-
rorism from the get-go, why did you point a finger at an anti-Muslim video at the ceremony receiving the caskets'?
Were you alert to the spread of al-Qaida in North Africa? If so, what did you do about it while in office?
Maybe it wouldn't make a difference, as she said, if Clinton were retiring from public life. But someone who wants to be commander in chief needs to answer these and other questions fully — until there are no
more questions. Really, if she could not anticipate and be candid about
terrorism in Libya, how is she going to deal with an entire planet of in-
people out of Libya, what actions did convenient facts? you take to protect your employees'? These questions go to the central To whom did you report that the problem with her record: Was she ty, it made her sound like the victim. Libyan "victory" was deteriorating? inattentive, deliberately deceptive or Incomplete information? Yeah, who Did you ever discuss this with the simply unable to stir the president to knew Stevens was pleading for help president? Did you try to reach him act responsibly against jihadistsand that Benghazi had become a ter- the night of the attack'? or some combination thereof? She rorist haven? Why did Susan Rice, and not you, go shouldbe carefulin her answerIf a real newsperson had been onSundaytalkshowsaftertheattack? former defense secretary Robert there, a panoply of tough follow-up Why did you not caution the pres- Gates and maybe others were taking questions could have been asked: ident and/or his staff that statements notes along the way. What is it you regret? Did you up through Sept. 25 (including his —Jennifer Rubin is a columnist do or not do something you should United Nations speech) tying the for The Washington Post.
Some of us, though, don't think dependence on unions has been healthy for the Democratic Party or for the robust public sector it espouses. Again, the case in point is the public schools,
which employ almost half of all local government employees but which Democrats dare reform only at the risk of warwithteachersunions. No one is saying public workers have no right to organize. They are free to associate and lobby government, openly, for better wages and working conditions — or anything else. In fact, public workers should have the r i ght t o
f o r m m u l tiple
groups and not be forced to accept "exclusive representation" by one union. The New York brief argues that this would produce a chaotic cacophony of employee voices. Yes, freedom and democracy can be inconvenient.
The fundamental problem is collective bargaining. It is appropriate in the private sector, where workers bargain with private, profit-making corporations, not the taxpaying cit-
izenry — and where market forces provide an independent check on both sides' demands. In the public
sector, however, it means higher costs, lower efficiency and, worst of all, less democracy. — Charles Lane is a columnist for The Washington Post.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
BEST-SELLERS Here are the best-sellers for the week that endedSunday, Jan. 26. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Invention of Wings" by Sue MonkKidd (Viking) 2. "First Love" by Patterson/ Raymond (Little, Brown) 3."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 4. "Sycamore Row" byJohn Grisham (Doubleday) 5. "The First PhoneCall from Heaven" by Mitch Albom (Harper) 6. "CommandAuthority" by Tom Clancy (Putnam) 7. "Cross My Heart" by James Patterson (Little, Brown) 8. "Fear Nothing" by Lisa Gardner (Dutton) 9. "Lost Lake" by SarahAddison Allen (St. Martin's) 10. "Standup Guy" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Duty" by Robert M. Gates (Knopf) 2. "Super Shred" by lan K. Smith (St. Martin's) 3. "Things That Matter" by Charles Krauthammer (Crown Forum) 4."The Doctor's Diet" by Travis Stork (Bird Street Books) 5. "Killing Jesus" by O'Reilly/Dugard (Henry Holt) 6. "The Body Book" by Cameron Diaz(Harper Wave) 7. "The Daniel Plan" by Rick Warren (Zondervan) 8. "David andGoliath" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown) 9."Grain Brain" by David Perlmutter (Little, Brown) 10. "GeorgeWashington's Secret Six" by Brian Kilmeade (Penguin/Sentinel) — Distributed by MCT Information Services
eroinerecoun sac i In encoun er "Prepared for a Purpose"
't control his energy, like c o uldn children when she was 2. Only he w anted to scream and bust years later would she reconnect out of his skin,"'Btff writes. "Inwith her dad. Even then, it was s tead , he raised his rifle to eye a rockyre-introduction. level and made a moveforthe She and hermom became sided oor. "The side door," she continhomeless. When she was 13, she met the guy she thought ues,''is the door that leads to the would be her life mate forever. dassrooms where the kids are." S he dropped out of high school. H enever reached the classThey had a daughter, married, rooms. Instead, he stayed with then had a son. Tuff, who careThe son was born fully brought a with an array of young man back doned 'Ihffs mother and other
by Antoinette Tuff with Alex
Tresniowski (240pgs., Bethany House, $24.99) By Mark Davis Cox Newspapers
ATLANTA — A n t o inette Tuff was just a child when she confronted death. It came inthe
shape of a rattlesnake, crawling along a hot patch of South Car-
olina dirt. What happened next in her grandmother's garden would prepare Tuff for anoth-
disabilities and is in a wheelchair.
er encounter, years later, when death reared its head in a metro Atlanta elementary school.
"No, baby, don't run away," her grandmother said. "You don't let that snake scare you."
G randma stamped t h e ground. The snake got the message. Sodidyoung Antoinette. You Tuff last Aug. 20 when a man dressed in black, carrying a semi-automatic rifle, entered
the office of Ronald E. McNair DiscoveryLearning Center in DeKalb County. Officials identified him as Michael Brandon Hill, 20, of Decatur. They'd later
Charles Sykes/ Invision /The Associated Press
Antoinette Tuff's book, "Prepared for a Purpose," recounts her chilling encounter with a suicidal gunman at an Atlanta school.
mental health issues." What happened next is the
stuff of headlines, and the answer to every parent's prayer. In contrast to the shootings of innocents at Columbine, Virginia Tech and Sandy Hook, no one was killed at McNair. All the students, faculty — yes, even the gunman —
man. The 240-page volume, that question before. "I think God prepared me for in Tuffs life, places the reader all this," said Tuff, who has takin a school office where a book- en advantage of her celebrity
which toucheson other events
keeper unschooled in the art of
to found Kids on the Move for
negotiations averted a tragedy.
Success. The nonprofit organization provides underprivileged children with educational opportunities.
The book, co-written with c a me New York author Alex Tres-
away ali ve.Tuffisthereason. That tense encounter forms
niowski, debuted earlier this
It's an i ssue that strikes
month.
Is she aheroine? Thff,47, pre- home. As she recounts in her Purpose," Tuff's account ofhow paring for a live television inter- book, Tuff grew up hard, gtew she dealt with a suicidal gun- view, shrugged. She's fielded up hurting. Her father abanthe nudeus of "Prepared For A
'Dance of the Reptiles': the bizarre on display
And, through all this, said Tuff, she kept her faith,
with the rifle. A t t h e en d ,
a belief that the Almighty would help her through life's cruelties.
with police ringing the school,
Saun erson ame,Texasan i s ots installation. Other stories are more traditional in terms of voice and plot. The title story from "Tenth of December," for ex-
By MaggieGalehouse
By Colette Bancroft
is, after all, a state where we bulldoze wetlands and build
A year ago, the New York Times Sunday Magazine ran
subdivisions in flood zones, and then are surprised (and unprepared) when hurricanes
a cover story about George
wreak havoc; where we live
ries, "Tenth of December." The headline, in that first week of 2013, was actually a
perpetually on the brink of drought and yet give away oceans of groundwater to corporations that make enor-
Tampa Bay Times
mous profits bottling it and Giant pythons and hungry selling it back to us; where alligators striking fear in Flor- our Legislature does everyida suburbs, Kim Kardashian thing to make life easy for releasing a public statement the NRA and other lobbyists about the C asey A ntho- but wear price tags stapled to ny trial, a developer chop- their lapels. ping down 12,000 protected Those are just a few of the mangroves and subjects H i a asclaiming it was en addresses in eeeeeeleeeeeeleexeeeeflllee eeellwx eeeeeeeeswelelex seeeeee eseew eeexeeeeeeeesweeeeeee just a "terrible acthese columns, cident" that hap-
which are drawn from the last12
pened when he hired surfers to
prune the trees. You might think that al l
s o u nds
like a wacky Carl Hiaasen novel-
and you would be half right. "Dance of the Reptiles" i s
the latest from F lorida n at i v e Hiaasen. He has written 13
II
years or so and grouped thematically, under chapter headings like "Go Away," "Festival of Whores" and "Ready, Aim, Fire." Although s ome of t h em deal with nation-
al news (most of the c hapter "Shock, Awe, and Swagger"),
best-selling novels for adults the lion's share deal with mal(Bad Monkey was the latest) feasance and stupidity in the and four for kids, books that
Sunshine State.
have indelibly etched Florida's
Reading many of t hese columns together, I was im-
own brand of weirdness into the nation's consciousness.
His other job, since 1985, is writing editorial columns for
the Miami Herald, a position in which he serves as one of the sharpest, most relentless
pressed anew with how sol-
idly Hiaasen supports an argument. When he delivers an opinion, he doesn't blovi-
ate — he dishes up the names, the numbers, the dates and
and funniest watchdogs of the statistics. state's environment, citizens He also uses humor in a and sanity. That work w on wide range of ways. him th e L i f etime A chieveOften his satire is a dash of ment Award from the Nation- salt in an otherwise serious
al Society of Newspaper Col- essay. In a 2012 column about umnists in 2010. Florida's legislators propos"Dance of the Reptiles" ing to drug-test every state collects dozens of those col- employee except themselves, umns, many of which sup- he quotes Rep. Jimmie Smith port Hiaasen's claim that he of Lecanto, who calls testdoesn't have to make up the ing for lawmakers "political material for his fiction — he theater.... It was found to be just gets it from the news. unconstitutional to drug-test In Florida, the news pro-
elected officials because it
videsendless fodder for col- prevents us, as citizens, from umnists as well — m a y be having that First Amendment more than they want. This right."
Tuff writes that
the gunman was ready to surrender. "You can tell a big h elping o f ANTO I NETTE TU with Alex Twsreieeeshi cruelty. As she them (pohce) to r ecounts in h e r come in now," he book, she learned said. "I need to go that her fiance — later her hus- t o the hospital." b and — was engaged to anoth- That's a memory that won't erwoman. fade. "I didn't think God was "That was a sign, wasn't it?" going to put an AK-47 in my asked Tuff, who sighed. "I got facethat day," Tuff said. lots of signs." In her book's introduction, Later, her husband left her recalls that the day began o n her own. And nowhere was w i t h prayer. "The Lord is my she more on her own than Aug. shepherd," she prayed, reciting 20. In a series of recollections the 23rd Psalm, one of the Bisprinkled throughout the book, ble'smost revered passages. Tuff details the uncertain moAnd, a f e w l i n e s l a ter, ments whenmayhem hovered she prayed: "Though I walk in the air. through the valley of the shadItbegan when the gunman ow o f death, I will fear no evil, came into the office. for thou art with me." "This is not a j oke!" Tttff The shadow of death. It writes, quoting the gunman. passedby a little girl in a South " I need you to understand this C a r olina v egetable patch, is not a joke. I am here. This is only to return, years later. By real. then, the girl was grown, and "We are all going to die to- prepared. day," he told her. For that we can all say a "He was pacing fast, like he prayer of thanks.
Houston Chronicle
"Dance of the Reptiles: Rampaging Tourists, Marauding Pythons, Larcenous Legislators, Crazed Celebrities, and Tar-Balled Beaches: Selected Columns" by Carl Hiaasen (416 pgs., Vintage Originals,$15.95)
b r ink,
e ven after h e wounded himself
And life served
cannotletfear beyour master. That lesson came back to
characteriz e him as "a young man with a long history of
from the
Saunders, then setto release his fourth collection of sto-
ample, involves a chubby boy
100
with an overactive imagina-
ie.
prediction: "George Saunders
t
Has Written the Best Book You'll Read This Year." To
which many readers likely wondered, "Who on earth is George Saunders?" People who read literary fiction have known Saunders fordecades.His stories have
— sometimes that sabotag-
es your initial idea," he explained. "'The Semplica Girl Diaries' is about political op-
pression, but it had to be more than that or else it's a lecture.
been published in the New
Yorker since 1992. The term "genius" is thrown around. During the past decade, he has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, a
M ac A r t hur
tion and an old man dying of cancer who save each other in a frozen landscape. For S aunders, s t ories should be urgent, tight and complex. "Trying to give a story the maximum amount of energy
You're trying to start readers
on a certain path and comEvan Agostini / Invision /The Associated Press
Literary fiction writer George Saunders has gone from a relative
Fellowship and an Academy unknown to a big name in the span of a year. Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. B ut t h e Ti m e s pi e c e that would reduce you and
sard.
plicate it. You want readers to be surprised in a nonrandom
way — it can't be a spaceship that comes in and kills every-
one — butyou also want some kind of expectation realized
cranked up his fame in a big- make you trivial." It was i n A m a r illo t hat time, bold-face way. All of which is to say that Saunders stumbled upon a "It was huge, strangely Saunders gets a lot more at- copy of People Magazine in huge," said Saunders, from tention than he used to. which Jay McInernry and his home in the Catskills. "It Raymond Carver were prowas like if you were jogging Texanatheart filed. At the time, he had nevalong and a big hand comes The writer grew up in Chi- er heardof a m aster's offine along and throws you four cago, but was born in Amaril- arts program, but he applied miles ahead. Like being shot lo, Texas. to Syracuse and got in. "Emotionally as a kid I alout of a cannon. All along, everybody at the Times is say- ways identified as a Texan," The resume ing, 'We can'tguarantee the Saunders said. "My mom's Now 55, Saunders has pubpiece will run.' We (Saunders from Amarillo. My dad was lished four story collections " CivilWarLand i n B a d and his wife, Paula) were here in the Air Force. They met with our daughters for Christ- at a dance in A m arillo or Decline" (1996), "Pastoralia" mas. About a week before something. I t h ink w e l e ft (2001), "In Persuasion Nation" the story came out they said, there when I was 1, but every (2006) and "Tenth of Decem-
in a way that you didn't see
ber" — as well as a novella, a
do whatever you can — with
'We're running it.' And then it
was, 'Oh, by the way it looks like it's going to be the cover.' And then it's out of your hands. So we're up here, sledding, and suddenly the emails start coming in. And something is happening to you that has an uncertain relationship
to the work that spawned it."
summer there was this big ritual of the 25-hour drive to
Amarillo. My grandpa was a salesman who sold beauty
products in those Panhandle towns. ... I remember my grandpa giving me a Texas-shaped paperweight. When I w ent around with him, I could really feel that
Then in July, a convocation 1940s, 1950s Texas." speech Saunders delivered at W hile Saunders was i n Syracuse University, where college at Colorado School he teaches creative writing, of Mines in Golden, his parwent viraL In it, he confessed
that his biggest regrets in life
ents moved back to Amarillo
coming." Canada's great short-story writer Alice Munro won the Nobel Prize in Literature last
fall. Does Saunders anticipate a renaissance of the short form?
"My honest answer is that it makes me feel really happy that someone that good got rewarded fairly," Saunders said. "Ever since 'Tenth of Decem-
ber' came out, people have been asking me if it's now OK to write short stories. I never
really thought about it. You
children's book and a collec- power. I have a feeling the tion of nonfiction. (His GQ question about the short-stotravel story on Dubai, pub- ry form is a bit like, you know lished in 2005, is every bit as how in Vogue they'll say, chatty and far-reaching and 'Short skirts are back!' Well, I unforgettable as his fiction.) never felt the story was out of Most of Saunders' sto- fashion." ries are strange and some In his creative writing are vaguely futuristic. "The classes, Saunders t eaches Semplica Girl Diaries," for short stories to show students example,featuresyoung girls the "tricks" that writers use. from impoverished coun- On his go-to list of authors: trieswho agree,for a fee,to Pushkin, Babel, de Maupasbe strung together by their sant, Tolstoy, Joyce, Hemingtemples (a surgical proce- way, Flannery O'Connor. dure), outfitted in long white He doesn't teach his own dresses and hung together a stories.
and the city became a kind of home for him during his 20s. "I played guitar in a counimplored the new graduates to do "those things that in- t ry-and-western band at a few feet off the ground in the "That would b e w e i rd," cline you toward the big ques- huge dance palace where you yards of affluent Americans Saunders said. "Especially if tions, and avoid the things could two-step for hours," he — a sort of living, breathing you makethembuy thebook." are "failures of kindness" and
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN F 5
'Silence OnceBegun'a tale Farewell to acity andits characters built on false confessions 'The Days of AnnaMadrigal'
her light her candles and fire vided a light, sweet high for a up the vaporizer. For while she long time. still offers joints to visitors as if Maupin's adeptness at fluid pgs, Harper,$26.99) theywere canapes, Annamust dialogue, his flair for shaping ByCharles Isherwood employ an elaborate contrap- characters who thread the New York Times News service flon that removes the smoke needle between pop archeThe hills are still firmly in f r o m theweed, and features a types and singular human place, the Golden Gate Bridge "mouthpiece that looked as if beings, and his great gift remains a bright symbol of i t belonged on a wind instru- for intricate if occasionally welcome, but San Francisco ment of some kind, possibly a preposterous plotting are all has changed radbagpipe." (What's on drsplay m the new book, ically since Armore: She's now which focuses on the later life Maupm ARMISTEAD got aprescription.) of the title character. began charting When Maupin Unusually, Mauprn departs the mteriock g began writing the fromthe contemporary scenes lives of a handful c olumns in T h e to include chapters set in Anof its colorful ficSan F r ancisco na's distant youth — b ack tional d e n izens C hronicle t h at when she was a he, Andy, a in 1976. The city became the first shy boy growing up at his "Tales of the City" mother's bordello in d u sty that was once a beacon for people novels, they were Winnemucca, Nev., furtively looking to escape in a sense radical puttingpolish on his nails. the strictures of social manifesHarking back to his early conforrmty — and tos sneakily dis- cliffhanger style, Maupin crethe p u ritanical guised as popular ates a mystery surrounding streak in American culture — e ntertainm ent. Anna herself Anna's sudden desire to rehas become a high-amenity was revealed to be transgen- turn to her hometown, which bedroom community for the dered,but by the time this was Andy fled at 16 to head for the epicenter of the tech universe, d i scovered, she was too lov- big city. The flashback chapSilicon Valley. And so the bo- a ble to seem strange. ters are among the novel's h emian aerie at the center of Th r oghout u the f irst six most atmospheric, evoking Maupin's beloved "Tales of the novels, Maupin described the the young Andy's affectionate City" novels, 28 Barbary Lane, i n t imate lives of gay men and rapport with the most motherhas passed from the hands of women with a breezy charm ly of his mother's employees Anna Madrigal, the one-wom- t h at nev er shied away from and the dramatic fallout from an marijuana dispensary who ripe sexuality, foreshadowing his crush on a local boy of presided over her tenants as the entry of gay characters Basque extraction. Although b oth a spiritual guru and a i nto m a instream film a n d the secret of A nna's name surrogate mother. television in the next decade. was revealed long ago (hint, Now, the building belongs Michael Tolliver, one of the se- or memory-jogger: It's an anato dot-commers who, in the r i e s' cen tral characters, glee- gram having to do with her words of one of the charac- fullyexplored the topography gender switch), it turns out ters from Maupin's new novel, of cruisingthe city almost four there's more to the story. "The Days of Anna Madrigal," decadesbefore"Looking"was Meanwhile, in the present, have "made it look like a five- a twinlde in an HBO execu- most of Anna's acquaintances tive's eye star B and B." are making plans to attend the by Armistead Maupin (270
"Silence Once Begun" by JesseBall (256 pgs., Pantheon,$23.95) By Carolyn Kellogg Los Angeles Times
Jesse Ball's "Silence Once Begun" resists the standard
narrative tropes of contemporary novels. It pushes against them with antique, gentleman-
ly language, a conflicting set of stories that dearly reference "Rashomon," and
a structure like a funnel that starts at the wide open end.
he was being starved by his sistant professor at the School guards. One prison guard stole of the Art Institute of Chicago, some of Sotatsu's belongings the actual Ball teaches classes from his cell, induding a phoin lucid dreaming and lyingtograph of the woman, Jito Joo. at least, that's what his bio says. When Joo speaks to Ball, she His bios have lied before. recalls the events of that time So the "Jesse Ball" who ap- with the unfathomable logic of pears in the book's text as the a dream. The black and white i nterviewer and n arrator i s snapshot of her appears in the only to be partly believed. And text. There are others photos the novel, while presented in a as well; some have no apparent straightforward documentary explanation, while others evenformat, is fiction, tually reveal themselves. Ball and slippery fiction has embedded a poetic visual at that. narrative of empty spaces and realism is not his style. An as-
Sotatsu
Because the story's details unfold slow-
was
rooms within the larger story.
et: It gives too much
a quiet 29-yearold working at a thread factory when he was tricked into signing a confession by
away. Ball, a poet,
two new friends, a
the power to change his fatehe could free himself if he told
uses the structure
man, Sato Kaku-
the courtsof the false confes-
of his novels ("Samedi the D eafness," 'The Way Through Doors") as one way to challenge expectations. "Silence Once Begun"begins with the narrator (Jesse Ball) telling us that his relationship
zo, and a woman, Jito Joo. We don't
sion and the people who made him sign it. That he does not
ly, an
i n t erested
reader ought to ignore the dust jack-
immediately know what the crime is, only that it is something awful. His devastated family reacted in a variety of ways. His brother was loyal, his sister crit-
ical, and his mother followed inexplicably falling silent. His his father, whose reactions need for an explanation leads were cruel and unpredictable. him to Japan and the story of Meanwhile, portions of pohas ended because of his wife
Oda Sotatsu.
Years before, Sotatsu was arrestedfora crime he did not
commit; he signed aconfession, then refused to speak up to defend himself. "He carried a sort of tent of silence with him, and
out of it he refused to come," Ball writes.
Sotatsu's family and friends sit down to tell Ball their stories, which follow as t ranscribed interviews and letters. With
only the tenuous connection of silence, their cooperation with
Ball's project is improbable, but
As in Kafka's "The Trial," the justice of "Silence Once Begun" is both tragic and absurd. But
while Kafka's characters are trapped, Sotatsu actually has
makes him complicit in the cruelties enacted upon him.
The book is dedicated to the Japanese writers Kobo Abe
and Shusaku Endo, whose 1969 novel "Silence" is a dear antecedent. Ball's story a d-
dressesthe power ofsilenceit can destroy a relationshipand also its failures, for it does
not serve Sotatsu well. Meanthe missingparts imply Sotatsu while, Sotatsu's choices raise is being abused andmistreated. questions about the nature of From the officers' questions suffering; as the narrative unwe learn more about what has spools, he seems by turns an happened: A dozen senior citi- existential hero, a Christlike zens have mysteriously disap- figure, a fool. peared, with a similar card left Ball has built in a few genbehind in each case to prove uinely surprising twists that their connection. The police exist solely because of how the want to know what Sotatsu has story is structured. That's an done to them, where the bodies accomplishment; "Silence Once Begun" is a fascinating project are. He doesn't respond. Clearly suffering, Sotatsube- in which almost everything is gan a hunger strike. Or maybe, stripped away but the contrawe are told in another account, dictory stories people tell. lice interrogations are included;
QPUP)g
Say it ain't so, Anna! Or
own little Olympus. Now in
Inside the An Iraqblasted open, mind of a framed from the inside troubled teenager "The Corpse Exhibition: And Other Stories of Iraq"
by Hassan Blasim, translated by Jonathan Wright (196pgs.,
PenguinBooks, $15)
By David Kipen
New York Times News Service
"Carthage" by Joyce Carol Oates
(496 pgs., Ecco, $26.99)
The literature of American warfare tends to land in over-
nightmares. As with many of the stories here, a somewhat askew framing device brackets the action, raising doubts about the reliability, even the reality, of what's going on. Yes, more than a few stories here are, unhappy phrase, about storytelling. Still, after "The Corpse Exhibition" — a more satisfying
like Cressida Mayfield. The delicate heart of Joyce
lapping waves, like an invasion. First come the novels by book title than title story — the the war correspondents. Then, collection improves, with a in time, fiction begins to arrive couple of uncontested keepers, from the returning combat- "An Army Newspaper" and ants. Only later, like cries of the "Crosswords," coming soon wounded after a barrage sub- afterward. Sharp, tragicomic sides, can the other side finally moments in these consecutive, not-quite-ghost stories persist make itself heard. To speak of opposing sides in memory. Here's the narrator amid the asymmetric warfare of "Crosswords," describing a of Iraq, of course, makes as bombingatam agazine office:
Carol Oates' moody, mar-
much sense as talking about
"The windows shattered,
strategy in the trenches of
and the cupboards fell on top of him. His mouth filled with
By John Witwol Newsday
You may wish, from time to time, that you could feel like a teenager again. "Teenage knees'?" you think. "Sign me up!" But then you run into someone
velous new novel, "Carthage," 19-year-old Cressida reminds you that those
teenage knees come at a price: You'd have to suffer through all those teenage emotions again to get them. Cressida can be cruel. She'll snip threads on her
older sister Juliet's cashmere sweater, "shivering
World War I. There are no sides and no front in the Iraqi
exile Hassan Blasim's arresting, auspicious story collection
the New Woman
section." The prose here,
o f Blasim,
t ranslation f r o m the Arabic, is fine but not world-beat-
dad in 1973 and now lives in Fin-
tances, she was once struck
with "a kind of claustrophobia, conjoined with anthrophobia — her fear of other people, trapping her with their eyes, making a claim upon her." Tragically, Cressida feels unlovable. And now, poor Cressida is missing. She was last seen on the night of July 9,2005,inthe company of Cpl. Brett Kincaid, a disfig-
a t least i n
athan
who
pect of its ensuing, inexplicable unraveling. She can be jittery. Around family acquain-
ing.
land, was burning long before other forces showed up,
H +sa A
jerrycans of k er-
I
osene sloshing, to
phrase "lifeless corpse" appears tw ice which, even in a charac-
douse the flames.
ter's voice, rather
H
QIM
promise deepens as the book
found the next morning, "incapacitated in his Jeep Wrangler, that appeared to have skidded partway off" the road inside a for-
progresses.Blasim peoples show, where he competes with his first few stories here with other traumatized Iraqis to see violent Iraqi young men, who who can tell the most horrific count life cheap. anecdote. The contestants soon They boast, kill, watch mov- try to top one another, with one ies, even discover good books heard to mutter: "That's a stowith that c asual fatalism ry? If I told my story to a rock, recognizable among futureless it would break its heart." teenagers, both abroad and at Is Blasim suggesting the home. Several ofthese stories complicity of writers like himand characterscome to abrupt, self, who transmute the deaths often absurd, ends. of their countrymen into literThe collection takes its title ary fiction for self-congratufrom its opening story, a bu- latory Western readers tough reaucratic spiel from a terrorist enough to take it? If a short middle manager who wouldn't story could break the heart of b e out of p l ace i n o n e o f a rock, this might just be the George Saunders' workplace one.
ting of Oates' 2012 novel,
"Mudwoman." Kincaid recalls nothing. So the people of Carthage, led by Cressida's fiercely steadfast, hopeful f ather,
are blindly combing the wilderness. They hope it's a rescue mission. They fear
it's a recovery mission.
AT THE PUSH OF A BUTTON 3Eedic~sl
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been Juliet's fiance. He is
County, New York, the fictional Adirondack set-
her 90s, she resides in a more decades, the new book proeasily accessible neighbor- vides a necessary valedictory shows up, as a sort of fancified hood, with a caretaker, the lap:afin al toke, if you will, on candy striper assisting at the transgendered Jake, to help a literary joint that has pro- medical tent.
J on-
vet, who had until recently
est preserve near Beechum
novel composed entirely of text messages — also plans to attend, and to find a sperm donor for the baby she's decided tohave. Somewhat more i ncongruously, Mary A n n
W r i ght's
Iraniansand Americans, spear than Blasim's, is at least once carriers in somebody else's too many. But along comes that play, barely appear in these sto- detail about the New Woman ries at all. section, and we forgive Blasim Culled from Blasim's two everything. award-winning c o l lections A few good stories later, the published in Britain, and sub- collection takes another leap titled (not without stateside forward in "The Song of the calculation) "And Other Stories Goats," a cunning gem that of Iraq," "The Corpse Exhibi- places another o f B l a sim's tion" heralds a writer whose nameless, feckless narrators in
ured, traumatized Iraq War
a bisexual who's written a hit
in the story, the
AQ
L A
Michael is being semi-willingly inaugurated in the strange rites there by his considerably younger husband, Ben, while Brian's daughter, Shawna-
of his colleague, the editor of
bition," only paranoid top dogs and desperate bottom feeders. The Iraq was born in Bagh-
th e se ch aracters through the
Burning Man festival in the Black Rock Desert in Nevada.
blood. He spat out teeth and indistinctly heard the screams
"The Corpse Exhi-
with elation" at the pros-
Now that the culture has
rather Mrs. Madrigal, as she caught up with the books, was mostly referred to in the Maupin's frank exploration early novels in this series, of of the lives of Anna and her which this new book is the m a k eslnft family — surrogate ninth and — once again, say it sons Michael and Brian Hawain't so! — the last. kins anddaughter Mary Ann Time is a one-way street Singleton, and the spouses and has changed Anna as it and chil dren they've sprouted has changed her city. She has — doesn't have the radical bite had a series of strokes and beneath the chummy veneer. has had to descend from her B u t for th ose who've followed
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F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
Personal tragedy, T esto o un, sou u Stax Recor s powerful story "Respect Yourself: Stsx Records and the Soul Explo-
"Un-Remarried Widow" by Artis Henderson (256 pgs., Simon 4 Schuster,$25)
sharing a deep, passionate and breathtaking love for each oth-
By David Tarrant
er. It is that love that sustains Henderson when she moves with Miles to Fort Hood and
The Dallas Morning News
then to Fort Bragg, N.C.
There are stories of war we are used to seeing: the soldier
i s t n a m ed Johnny Jenkins to audition. One, high school showedup, accompanied by a slon student Booker T. Jones, soon driver who told anyone who'd by Robert Gordon (480 pgs. found a place at Stax playing listen that he was really a Bloomsbury,$30) keyboards and saxophone, singer. and writing one of the label's Wh e n t ibecame clear that By Michael E. Young first big hits, "Green Onions," Jenkins' stage show didn't The Dallas Morning News recorded by his integrated translate to records, Stewart In the glory days of Top 40 g roup, Booker T. and the a n d h i s producer-guitarist, radio in the 1960s, when the MGs. Steve Cropper, let the driver
Artisdescribes herself as a fish out of water in the intense-
a bout anyone who wanted
British invasion and the Cal-
S ud d e n -
as action hero or the wounded ly insular life of a military comwarrior returning home. Then munity. Feeling isolated and there are the war lonely, she moves
ifornia sound and Motown's l y, Stax h a d precisely produced R&B bat- 1ts sound
stories that are
to some under-
upstart arose in Memphisfunky, soulful Stax Records. Founded by a country fiddler with a day job at the bank, and financed with a second mortgage on his sister's house, Stax became a place where color didn't matter, even in the deeply segregated South.
standing of her p ast and t h e
Jim Stewart, whose musical tastes centered on the
death of her fa-
Western swing of Bob Wills and his Texas Playboys, and
back home with her mother when
not so familiar,
Miles d eploys
of the f a milies left behind. Artis Henderson's "Un-Remar-
with his unit to •
~
Iraq. The r elation-
ried Widow" is one such story, an exquisitely sensitive portrait of a new bride whose marriage is cut short when her husband is killed
s hip with h er mother is k ey to her coming
ther, and of how she grieves the
in the Iraq War.
The
tled for airtime, an unlikely
b o ok's
band. She writes withunflinchinghonesty of her grief and in a
his older sister Estelle Axton, started Stax in the late 1950s, borrowing the first two letters of their last names for the
way that puts herself, at times,
label.
death of her hus-
titlerefers to the characteris-
tically dry, bureaucratic language used by the military to describe a woman in Henderson's situation. As if writing in
passionate defiance of such a barren label, Henderson tells
the story of her relationship with Miles Henderson. They had different backgrounds. Artis grew up poor, the only child of a single mother, whose
As Robert Gordon writes in
his meticulously researched "Respect Yourself," things really started to happen when the white siblings rented the
former Capitol Theater as their headquarters in an Afri-
can-American neighborhood in Memphis.
loved one in the recent wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan. But young. Miles was a Texan and those stories seldom get told the son of an airline pilot. beyond the immediate family Artis has recently graduat- and a few trusted friends. ed from an Ivy League univerIn the hands of Henderson, sity when she meets Miles, an her own tragedy is redeemed Army pilot in helicopter train- by a beautifully written story ing, at a nightclub. Almost im- that is both deeply personal mediately they come together, and powerfully universal. f ather died when she w a s
A soundis found While Axton ran the Sat-
ellite Record Shop in the old theater's lobby, allowing neighborhood kids to listen to as many songs as they wanted, Stewart set up a re-
cording studio open to just
Zone "The evidence is m i x ed,
and pessimistic," said Bob Turner,associate professor at Skidmore College, who has studied such enterprise zones in depth. "There's a real gap between the amount of private
and public disinvestment in these areas and the scope of the public intervention." Despite their modest track
record, enterprise zones cona t t ract supporters
from across the political spectrum. In Kentucky, Obama's Doug Mills/The New YorkTimes program has the backing of President Obamaspeaks about the "promise zone" program the Democratic governor, during a news conference last month announcing the first five Steve Beshear, and even the promise zones in his battle against poverty — San Antonio, Philsassent of one of the country's
delphia, Los Angeles, Southern Kentucky and the Choctaw Nation
most conservative senators, of Oklahoma. Republican Rand Paul.
No'magic bullet'
But past enterprise zones
uct of
e x p erience. Clinton
But local workers and offi- have a modest track record. named the Kentucky Highcials — even while welcoming Many seem to have no effect. lands afederal empowerment any help that towns like Haz- Others seem to simply sub- zone in 1994. With a flush of ard could get — voiced skepti- sidize business i nvestment federal funds, employment cism that there was much the that would have already tak- initially increased and povgovernment could do to fun- en place, or to move business erty dropped. But ultimately, damentally turn the economy from one county to another the government could not say around. without helping the economy whether those changes were "There isn't a magic bullet overall. because of improvements in here," said Jeff Whitehead, the broader economy, or beexecutive director of the East-
Previous failures
cause of Washington's efforts.
ern Kentucky Concentrated For Appalachia, skepticism Jerry Rickett is the presiEmployment Program. "My of enterpris e zones is a prod- dent of Kentucky Highlands agency is involved with trying to retrain 8,000 coal miners who have lost their jobs. Un-
ers frequentlymet.
Soon after, Jim Stewart, a
guy for whom a handshake was enough to seal a deal, discovered he had signed over everything Stax ever produced by failing to read the contract with Atlantic Records.
"It was corporate homicide — polite, sterile and deadly,"
Gordon writes. Stewart made Under Al Bell's leadership, a pro d uction Stax soldiered on, quiddy reand distribution leasing albums and singles to agreement with bring in income to counter the
Jerry W exler
loss of the label's catalog.
of Atlantic Recol"ds, and soon A tlantic len t
anymore. The sound changed from soul to pop. Booker T.
But it wasn't the same place
Stax a couple of and Cropper left for the West acts who hadn't been successful at Atlantic Wilson Pickett, and a duo from
Coast. With all that money
floating around, people started carrying guns, even in the recording studio. But the hits stopped coming, debts rose, g ive-and-take world of t h e Mi a m i t h a t went by Sam and and by early 1976, Stax was Stax studio. Dave. dedared bankrupt and or" I think 'Green Onions' was Per f o r ming songs written deredto dose. the beginning of the Memphis by David Porter and Isaac Gordon lays out the story funk sound," Jones said. "This Hayes, who would soon be of Stax in remarkable detail, attitude of making it as funky a star himself, they quickly tracing the label's history from as it can be, as simple as it can found success at Stax. early stumbles to unimagined be, and let's do it togethersuccess to eventual collapse. A series of tragedies let's understand each other." He knows Memphis, and There was no place else One after another, the hits what Stax meant there, and he quite like it, especially in kept coming. Then the trage- clearly loves the music and the Memphis. dies began. people who made it. "The spirit that came from In December 1967, Redding, In something of an epilogue, Jim and his sister Estelle Ax- by then a rising international he details what Stax has beton allowed all of us, black star, died with several mem- come — an academy and a and white, to ... come into bers of his band in a plane museum — and how it continthe doors of Stax, where you crash. ues to shape and elevate the had freedom, you had harmoMonths later, the Rev. Mar- neighborhood around it. ny, you had people working tin Luther King Jr. came to In 1972, the Staple Singers together," said Al Bell, who Memphis to show his support had a huge hit on Stax with eventuallybecame a co-own- for sanitation workers who "I'll Take You There," written er and executive vice presi- had gone on strike over their and produced by Al Bell. With dent of Stax. deplorable work conditions. A "Respect Yourself," Robert One day, a flashy guitar- sniper killed him on the balco- Gordon does exactly that.
local residents express cynicouncil. "It's about creating a cism about Washington's new as Obama's. He said the en- policy that's greater than the efforts. "We've had Fortune terprise zone d esignation sum of its parts." 500 companiescome in here, from Washington had proved In Kentucky, the proposals stay long enough to get their a powerful tool for attracting include worker retraining, tax credits and get out," Nantz, business when it came with business investment and an- the former coal machinery opsignificant new f i nancing. ti-drug policies. "The idea is erator, said. Driving through Obama, however,has yet to to build a diversified economy Hazard, he pointed out the win additional money from based on the talents of the lo- empty shells of factories built Congress. cal people as they are now," with federal money and later "It worked very, very well," said Alison Davis, director of abandoned. Rickett said of Clinton's policy. the Community and EconomLocal employment offices "But we desperately need to ic Development Initiative of openly encourage workers attract businesses to generate Kentucky at the University of to leave the region for jobs. revenue here and tax credits Kentucky. She said drawing in Nantz said he, his wife and are a powerful tool for that." bigbusinesses with taxbreaks his 8-year-old daughter have Even if Clinton's proposal might be part of the solution, continually thought about did have a positive effect, it did but so would helping local heading elsewhere, though not prove enough to turn the workers start new businesses. he hated the idea of leaving "In the past, it's been a lot the rural area he has always Kentucky Highlands around. The area remains largely de- of 'Shoot anything that flies!'" called home. pendent on federal benefit she said. "But in Appalachia, Nantz is finishing an associprograms and on a declining particularly i n t h ese coun- ate degree in criminal justice, coal industry. Since the mines ties — it would be a special, but he wonders whether he started shedding workers, unique company that would will be able to find a decent job crime has risen and poverty find its needs met in eastern locally after he completes the intensified. Kentucky." program. "It's just tough losing your But the obstacles remain Different this time? huge, local business experts job and then getting retrained Still, proponents said this said. There is no i nterstate for something you're not gotime could be d i f ferent. A highway that might bring in ing to be able to get a job in," White House official said the manufacturers o r t r u c k ing said Nantz, whose previous administration had c areful- firms. In some areas, there is $50,000 in annual income ly studied earlier enterprise no broadband Internet. Many even beforeovertime pay once zones to ensure their efficacy. people suffer from drug and supported himself, his wife "These are communities that alcohol abuse and outmoded and child, his mother, a niece can reach a tipping point," said skills. and a nephew. "I'm not sure Cecilia Munoz, director of the Repeatedly disappointed, what we'll do." Investment Corp., a partner with Clinton's effort as well
Continued from F1
tinue to
playground of vice," Gordon writes, "where bands played louder, longer and more salaciously" — and brought to comp letion in t h e
that's what makes this memoir so poignant and authentic.
Stax musicians and songwrit-
Redding.
;;:;;::.;.":;; lII( <
in an unflattering light. But Love and loss in time of war is a story shared by thousands of wives and husbands, parents and children, brothers and sisters, who have lost a
audition. His name was Otis
ny of a Memphis hotel where
White House's domestic policy
fortunately one of the more
successful things we're doing is helping them find jobs out-
A Free Public Service
side the area."
In a typical enterprise zone, the government puts a thumb on the scale, aiming to attract
businesses to a given region with preferential tax
r a tes,
anti-crime programs and
other incentives. At the same
time, it often helps build up the workforce with education
programs. The appeal has always been bipartisan. Jack Kemp, the former George H W. Bush Cabinet official, was an early proponent of enterprise zones. ~sident Bill Clinton implemented a countrywideprogram inthe mid-1990s. Today, Obama has named five promise zones and
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
intends to name 15 more. Paul
and other free-market-oriented politicians have supported
I
creating new enterprise zones
with radically lower tax rates to help communities suffering after the recession.
"This adds up to a significant stimulus," Paul said in an interview in Maysville, a rural
town north of the new promise zone area. "It could have a big effect for people who are really hurting," he said. Paul added that he thought Obama's pro-
posal was too "timid" to help the most depressed communities, though he did not oppose it in principle.
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Qg~)HQ Q@ mayhave a perplexing name,but there's nothing strange about what this vitamin-like nutrient can do. Co
+10, as it is commonly known, has fundamental and far-reaching efFects on health. Discovered in 1957, its role in cellular energy production formed the basis of the 1978 Nobel Prize in chemistry. That's a pedigree that few other nutrients can claim. 'Ihe late Karl Folkers, PhD, who spent most of his life studying Co+10 and B vitamins, once told me that he and his colleagues regretted calling it a "coenzyme," a term that few people other than biochemists understand. Co+10 should have been called a vitamin from the beginning, he said. We need CoQ10 to make the energy that powers cells. Energy has been called the "currencyoflife,"and the im plications are profound when you consider that every one of the body's 70 trillion cells depends on CoQ10 for energy production. Secondary to its role in energy production, CoQ10 also functions as an antioxidant. Our energy-generating activity takes place in mitochondria, tiny structures in our cdls that break down the most basic food molecules and convert them to the pure chemical form of energy, known as ATP (adenosine triphosphate). CoQ10 shuttles around energycarrying electrons in the biochemical path leading up to ATP production.
Without CoQ10, we can't make ATP. And when CoQ10 levels are low, our cellular, tissue, and total energy levels start to falter. 'Ihe most active tissues — musde (including the heart) brain, and liver — contain the most mitochondria and also have the greatest CoQ10 requirements.
CO+10 BENEFrTs MANvHEALTHIssUEs Hearr Diseases.In the 1960s, Japanese physicians started to see the potential benefits of CoQ10 supplements. Healthy heart cells, comprising perhaps the most important muscle in the body, contain the largest numbers of mitochondria. After all, the typical heart must have the energy to beat 100,000 times a day and 37 million times a year. 'Ihe Japanese doctors were treating patients with cardiomyopathy and heart failure, diseases caused not by cholesterol, but by a catastrophic loss of energy in the heart.'Ihey found that CoQ10 supplements helped restore normal heart function to many of their patients. By the early 1980s cardiologists Peter Langsjoen, MD, of Tyler, Texas, and his colleagues had started using CoQ10 to successfully treat patients with cardiomyopathy and heart failure. A double blind, placebo-controlled study, presented at the 2013 meeting of the Heart Failure Association of the European Society of Cardiology, found that chronic heart failure patients treated with Co Q10 over the course of two years experienced half the risk of a major cardiovascular event, including hospitalization, urgent transplant surgery, and cardiovascular death compared to the placebo group. As a general rule CoQ10 supplements of 300 mg daily can significantly improve a weak heart's ability to pump blood. In its role as antioxidant, CoQ10 also protects LDL and pattern B LDL cholesterol, currently regarded asthe most accuratepredictor ofcardiovascularrisk,from oxidation. Boosting EnergyLeeeis.CoQ10 can also boost energy levels, increase stamina, and reduce fatigue. Dr. Langsjoen described 16 patients ranging from 80 to 88 years old who took an average of 220 mg of CoQ10 daily (range of 60 to 480 mg daily). The patients were in generallygood health for their age except for fatigue and labored breathing when doing physical work. After three months, all of the patients stated that they felt better and had less fatigue after physical exertion. The benefits lasted for as long as the patients took CoQ10 supplements — for several years — and the patients' heart function improved as welL Recent studies have confirmed that CoQ10 supplements boost energy levels and enhance stamina. In one study,Japanese researchers reported that people were able to cycle faster and achievequicker recovery times afterjustone week of taking 300 mg of Co Q10 daily.
In 2009, Danish physician Niels Hertz, MD, reported the results of 41 cancer patients who took 300 mg of CoQ10 and several other supplements in addition to receiving conventional therapies. All of the patients had poor prognoses — end-stage cancers, including those of the breast, esophagus, lung, pancreas, and prostate, with metastases to other organs. Niels and a British colleague calculated the expected survival of the patients with their respective types of cancer, and then compared their actual survival time. Although some of the patients had a decrease in survival time, three-fourths of the patients lived an average of five months longer than expected. In many cases, patients lived two years longer than expected. Migraines and Tinnitis.Peter S. Sandor, MD, of University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland, treated 42 patients with a history of migraines, giving them either CoQ10 (100 mg, three times daily) or placebos. After three months, half the patients taking CoQ10 had fewer and shorterheadaches and lessheadache-related nausea.Hardly anyone in the placebo group improved. Meanwhile, other research has found that CoQ10 (100 mg, three times daily) may help people with chronic ringing or buzzmg in the ears. STATIN DRUGS DEPLETE COQ10
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Renowned neurologist D avid Perlmutter, MD, blows the lid off a topic that's been buried in medical literature for far too long: carbs are destroying our brains and may be B RA i N contributing to dementia, ADHD, anxiety, chronic headaches, and depression. Perlmutter explains what happens when the brain encounters common ingredients in your daily bread bowl, why your brain thrives on fat and cholesterol, and how you can spur the rowth of new brain
cells at any age.
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If you're taking statins, take 100 to 200 mg of CoQ10 daily. CoQ10 will not interfere with the cholesterol-lowering effect of statins. However, do give serious thought to safer and more natural cholesterol-lowering alternatives, such as plant sterols.4
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Cholesterol-lowering statin drugs, such as Lipitor, Zocor, and Crestor®are among the most widely prescribed medications in the world.'Ihese drugs block an enzyme involved in making cholesterol and CoQ10. In other words, statins inhibit the body's natural production of CoQ10. In fact, statins have been shown to reduce blood levels of CoQ10 up to 54 percent. Not surprisingly, many of the side efFects of statins afFect muscles and the liver, tissues that are highly dependent on CoQ10.
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Breast Cancer and Other Cancers.Some of the most tantalizing research has focused on CoQ10 and cancer. In the 1990s, Danish surgeon Knud Lockwood, MD, reported patient case histories in which large amounts (almost 400 mg daily) of CoQ10 led to remissions and prevented metastases(the spread of a disease to other parts of the body) in recurrent breast cancers. He wrote that CoQ10 does not have direct anti-tumor properties, but that it probably helps energize the body's anti-cancer immune cells.
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Inherited ataxias, another type of neurological disease, Mect coordination and arm and leg function. Researchers reported that taking 300 to 3,000 mg of CoQ10 daily helped patients with hereditary ataxias, improving their strength and coordination, and reducing the frequency of seizures. A separate study of 77 patients with Friedreich ataxia found that a combination of 400 mg of CoQ10 and 2,100 IU of natural vitamin E led to a significant reduction in symptoms
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¹n rologicalDiseases. Brain cells also require large amounts of energy, and Co +10 can benefit some neurological disorders. A study conducted at 10 U.S. hospitals discovered that CoQ10 supplements reduced the symptoms and slowed the progression of Parkinson's disease. Eighty patients were given 300, 600 or 1,200 mg of CoQ10 or placebos daily for sixteen weeks. All of the patients taking CoQ10 had less severe symptoms than those in the placebogroup.'Ihe highestdose ofCoQ10 provided thegreatestbenefits.
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ChronicFurigue Syndrome.A team of European doctors reported that low levels of Co +10 were common in 58 people with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). All of the CFS patients had abnormally low CoQ10 levels, and almost half of them had Co+10 levels below the lowest level found in healthy patients. More evidence: CFS patients risk dying of heart failure 25 years earlier than people in the general population, another link that points to low CoQ10 levels.
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Another study, conducted at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, also found that both trained and untrainedmen and women had greater endurance aftertaking 200 mg of Co Q10 for two weeks.
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Women who have been diagnosed with, and treated for, invasive breast cancer have better odds of surviving if they happen to take multivitamin/multimineral supplements. Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, PhD, of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, along with colleagues at 10 other medical centers studied 7,728 post menopausal women from across the United States. All of the women had previously been treatedfor invasive breast cancer.
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Market Recap, G4-5 Sunday Driver, G6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY2, 2014
Kombucha Mama
brewer Jeff Clason shows the symbiotic
colonies of bacteria yeast in the
top of a brewing container during a tour at the kom-
bucha brewery. Kombucha ferments between seven to 30 days,
according to Clason.
• To meetdemands,KombuchaMamamovesinto bigger spaceto brew 6,000 gallonsoffermented teaaweek
In housing, big is back (and don't forget the extras) By Jim Rendon New York Times News Service
Katie Sleep and her
By RachaelRees e The Bulletin
husband, Jonathan, lived in the same four-bedroom home in a Washington suburb for 23 years. After Sleep decided to retire, they began looking for a new house, and, after viewing amodelhome in anew de-
ive months after increasing their production space more than fourfold, the owners of Kombucha Mama, the Bend fermented tea
velopment, decided to move
to Leesburg, Va., about 40 miles from the city. In having their new home built, they saw an opportunity
maker, are planning their next expansion. Check outa video tour of the new facility atbend bulletin.com/ kombucha
O
In September,the company moved from a 1,200-square-foot shop on Northeast First Street to a 5,000-square-foot
— not to downsize, but to createa far larger home ca-
brewery on Northeast Second Street, equipped with a tasting room and growler
tering to their every need. In April 2012, they select-
fill station. And with that additional space,
ed a model costing about
co-owner Jamie Danek said, Kombucha Mama has pushed production from 500 gallons a week to 6,000 gallons.
builder and chose a number of standard options
But
$850,000 from a luxury for an additional $650,000. Sleep, who was in the process of selling the software firm she founded nearly
D a n e k and
her business partner, Michelle Plantenberg, estimate that it may not
be enough. "The c rux o f
at Northeast
Second Street in Bend.
business has always been we can sell more
basement and furnished it
kombucha t ha n
room, a wet bar, a home office and a suite for their youngest daughter to use
with a pool table, a media
we
can produce," Plantenberg said. "And we thought by moving into this facility we would
Kombucha
Mama has moved into a larger space
two decades earlier, added a wall of windows to the
our
when she was home from
college.
have solved this problem for at least three
years.... By this summer we will have exceededcapacity.Peoplekeep showing up and wanting more." The demand extends far beyond Bend. Kombucha sales throughout the U.S.
"The housing market is being driven by the move-up buyer, the luxury buyer. And those who have strong incomes, secure jobs, their stock portfolio is doing well — they are
have risen from $49 million in 2011 to
$90 million in 2013, according to data from Portland-based Kombucha Wonder Drink, and Spins Inc., a market research firm. And they are expected to climb to
$118 million this year. Larry McGrath, of Brew Dr. Kombu-
cha, said demand has grown continuously since the company began brewing six years ago. The Portland-headquartered company currently distributes throughout Oregon and the Western U.S. SeeKombucha/G5
able to buy whatever they want. And what
they are buying is larger houses." — Brad Hunter, chief economist and director of consulting at Metrostudy
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They added a second master bedroom suite, on the ground level, for use
g!
when they are older and
stairs become tougher to climb. They upgraded floors, carpeting and molding, added a sunroom and a large deck and supersized the garage door to fit Sleep's Cadillac Escalade. The home's lighting and
gg Photos by RobKerr/The Bulletin
temperature, as well as me-
Clason moves equipment in front of large brewing contain-
Bend is home to the country's first kombucha brewery, Kombucha Mama. Employee Sasha Lawless filled growlers for a customer in the brewery tasting room on Tuesday. At least eight different flavors
dia on any of 14 televisions and the sound system, can
ers during production at the 5,000-square-foot brewery.
are featured withmore available bytheglass.
be controlled remotely.
This six-bedroom house, which has six full and three half bathrooms,
Will 'TV everywhere' reduceyourcablebil?
Where digital secrets goto die • e-End destroys hard drives, phonesandmorefor government, contractors
By Jim Gallagher St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Charter's bid to buy Time Warner Cable comes at a time of sharp and rising competition in the broadband Internet and pay-TV busi-
By Justin George
Jermaine
The Baltimore Sun
F REDERICK,
Md.
-
Myers, logisIn
tic specialist ate-End,
measures about 9,000 square feet, including the basement. The Sleeps ex-
pect to spend an additional $250,000 to landscape its 3-acre lot. "We went through some hard times with the soft-
ware company," Sleep, 57, said. "We feel blessed that we live here now. We pinch ourselves all the time."
ness. For the consumer, that promises faster
a 2 0 ,000-square-foot w a r ehouse, where visitors
and fasterInternet speeds and more and more
are r equired t o
high-definition channels.
driver's license for a visitor's badge, some of the nation's secrets are
circuit board into a bin be-
sharply. In July 2008, ac-
torn apart, reduced to sand or de-
fore recycling
magnetized until they are forever silent. "We make things go away," said
in Frederick, Md.
Association of Realtors, the number of homes that sold for $750,000 to $1 million dropped by 35.5 percent, compared with the previ-
It means further advances toward "TV ev-
erywhere," with consumers watching pay channels on their smartphones and tablets far from home. But it doesn't mean lower prices, analysts
say. Competition has cable, phone and satellite companies scrambling to sign up customers with cheap initial prices that last a year or so. Companies hook customers, then hope they hang around when the prices jump. Jump they do. A typical Charter introducto-
tr ade i n
tosses a used computer
a
!
s
Arleen Chafitz, owner and CEO of e-End Secure Data Sanitization
Kenneth K. Lam Baltimore Sun
homes like theirs slowed cording to the National
ous July. Those that sold
$110 a month, climbs to $130 after a year and $150 after two years, according to a Charter
and Electronics Recycling. Her /+e husband, Steve Chafitz, is the com! / pany's president. The company's clients include the Department of Defense and other federal agencies. Its work: wrong hands. destroying hard drives, computers, In a state that's become a center monitors, phones and other sensi- for federal intelligence organiza-
Communications Inc. presentation to analysts. SeeCable /G3
tive equipment that governments and corporations don't want in the
ry package of phone, Internet and TV starts at
! li
After the recession, the market for large, expensive
for more than $1 million fell 31.4 percent. Yet despite the bursting
lk
tions and private contractors gath-
ering top-secret information, e-End
has carved out a niche by destroy-
ing the hardware on which such organizations gathered classified material. SeeDestruction /G3
of the housing bubble, the ensuing recession and the slow recovery, buyers have not abandoned luxury homes. It turns out that they just took a break.
SeeLuxury/G2
G2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
B USINESS
END A R
presented by the Bend Chamber of Commerce; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m .;VolcanicTheatre Pub,70 No Business events listed. S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.bendchamber.org. SCORE —SMALLBUSINESS MONDAY COUNSELING: Those who operate or wish to start a small business can discuss business IPAD FORBUSINESS COURSE: Discover planning, organization and startup, finance, many ways to use iPads to work more marketing and other issues, no appointment efficiently, registration required; $69; 9 a.m.- necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown noon; Central Oregon Community College, Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541Chandler Building,1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., 617-7050 or www.scorecentraloregon.org. Bend; 541-383-7270. BUILDYOUR WEBSITE WITH DREAMWEAVER COURSE: Learn what to do when creating a website with Dreamweaver, WEDNESDAY registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; Central WHO ARE YOU,DEFINING AND Oregon Community College, Chandler PROMOTING YOURBUSINESS: Learn how Building,1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; to brand, market and advertise for your own 541-383-7270. business, registration requested; $35; 8-10 a.m.; COBA, 1051 N.E.Fourth St., Bend; 541389-1058, gretchenp©coba.org or www.
TODAY
TUESDAY
coba.org.
STRATEGIESFOR EMAIL SUCCESS: Learn strategies and solutions to help productivity and efficiency, registration required; $45; 8-9 a.m.; webinar; info©simplifynw.com. BEGINNING INDESIGNCOURSE:Learn how to use Adobe InDesign to create singlepage advertisements and fliers to complex multi-page color publications, registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. WHAT'S BREWINGINYOUR COMMUNITY?:Building Bend:W hathave
we learnedandwhere areweheaded?
BUSINESSSTARTUP CLASS: Learn what it takes to run a business, how to reach your customer base, funding options for your business, how much money you need to get started and legalities involved, registration required; $29; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. ADFED COWEBSITE HOT SEAT:Featuring
a panel ofonline marketing,searchengine optimization, branding, copywriting and community building professionals to reviewand critique business websites in front of a live audience, preregistration required; $5-10 donation suggested, free
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
for COCCandOSU-Cascades students; 6-8:45 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or https://selfservice. cocc.edu:8002/flexibleregistration/ index.jsp?frc=CLMAINLq=17899Lutm source=2014+Hot+Seat+blastLutm campaign=January+2014+Hot+Seat&utm medium=email. HOW TO SELECTTHERIGHT FRANCHISE WORKSHOP:Designed to help participants decide whether franchise ownership is right for them, learn how to choose a franchise and arrange financing, registration required; free; 6-9 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. TYPOGRAPHY,COMMUNICATING WITH FONTS COURSE:Learnhow theconscious and unconscious messages you receive through fonts can influence people's buying habits and perceptions about your business, registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
HOLDINGEMPLOYEES AND OTHERS ACCOUNTABLE COURSE:Learn skills to help each person on your team do his or her job well, registration required; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way ,Bend;541-383-7270. TRANSITIONING TOICD-10 COURSE: Learn how to implement ICD-10 properly for Oct.1 when one of the biggest health care
griffith©moneymanagment.org or www. crediteducation.org. OPEN COMPUTER LAB: 2-3:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050.
required; $79; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. BEND CHAMBER MASTERSERIES, BUILDINGYOUR BUSINESS FOR SUCCESS: Using the SMARTapproach: learn about business development, leadership development and peopledevelopment, series will run until April 24, cost of course includes assessments, best practices, tools, systems and processes and resources, registration required; $599; 1-2:30 p.m.; Smart Sales Solutions Inc., 123 S.W. Columbia St., Suite 110; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org/chamber-events/ smart-salessolutions-presents-building-
No Business events listed.
challenges indecadesarrives, registration
your-buisness-for-success-the-smartapproach.
THURSDAY OREGON EMPLOYERCOUNCIL CENTRAL OREGON BUSINESSSEMINAR: Seminar will coverpre-employment backgroundchecks, drug testing, social media investigations,
appropriate andinappropriate interview questions and video surveillance, registration required by Tuesday; $50 per person; 7:30 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541688-3024, denise.a.pollock@state.or.us or www.oec.org.
FRIDAY BUILDINGFINANCIALLY SAVVY COMMUNITIES:Become a certified money management trainer, learn how to manage personal finances, lunch included, registration required; $75; 9 a.m.-3p.m.;DeschutesChildren's FoundationEastCampus, 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane,Bend;509-242-4205,julie.
SATURDAY
SUNDAY Feb.9 No Business events listed.
MONDAY Feb.10 GETTINGTHE WORD OUT COURSE: Learn how to write effective email blasts, newsletters, press releases, fliers and more, registration required; $69; 6-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay, Bend;541-383-7270. IOSAPP DEVELOPMENT COURSE 2ADVANCED SKILLS: Advanceyourskills with this second class, learn more Xcode and Objective-C to create apps thatare more complicated, iOS App1 class is required or some prior experience with programs, registration required; $169; 6-8 p.m.; COCC — Crook County Open Campus, 510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Curtis S. Swanson to Richard L. and Jelinda S.Carpenter, trustees for the Richard L. Carpenter Revocable Living Trust, Partition Plat1994-46, Parcel 1, $1,550,000 • Micheale Giesler to Lisa N. Bertalan, West BendVillage, Phase 1, Lot19, $200,000 • Patricia E. Vittum to Kathleen C. Neilson, Eagles Landing, Lot1, $247,000 • Robert C. Shawand Ginger Durdan-Shaw, trustees for the Roginbertger RevocableTrust, to Glenn andJennifer Cole, trustees for the ColeFamily Trust, Indian Ford Meadows, Lot 6, Block 6, $1,475,000 •StephanM.and KathleenK.Jones to Joshua A.andTanya L. Hayden, Partition Plat 2004-96, Parcel1, $470,000 • David N. Telfer to Trevor W. and Sarah C.Gilbert, Carly Meadows, Phase1, Lot 4, $155,000 • West Bend Property Company LLC to Stone Bridge HomesN.W. LLC, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 18, Lot 645, $182,000 • Oregon Community Foundation, trustee for the William andJoyce Briggs Charitable Remainder Unitrust, to Julie A.T.Floyd, Partition Plat 2003-19, Parcel 2, $182,500 • Taj M.M. and Mirta K. Smith to Roquel L. HermanandRachel I. Bailey, Forrest Commons, Lot15, $201,800 • Metlife Home LoansLLC, a division of Metlife BankN.A., to Courtney Holton, GoldenButte, Phase 3, Lot 61, $325,805 • Christopher J. Kemperto Rick R. and Terri S. Pedigo, Crosswater, Phases1 and 2, Lot 40, $165,000 • Steven J. andAmy R.Stancliff to
William B. Miller, Forrest Commons, Lot17, $202,000 • William M. andCandaceK. Foxhoven, trustee for the William M. and Candace K.Foxhoven Revocable Living Trust, to Bonnie W. Edenfield, Westside Meadows, Lot 8, $330,000 • Ronald K. andCheryl D. Fuller to Cynthia L. Clark, Foxborough, Phase 2, Lot 98, $199,000 • Jamie Stanley Custom Homes LLC to Terry A. andPamelaPerrine, Newberry Estate, Phase 2,Lot1, Block12, $169,900 • Dennis C. Griston to Custom Estates LLC,Homestead,Phase4, Lot1, Block10, $235,000 • Jess Lete to Jadaand Jay Taber, Yardley Estates, Phase 1,Lot 35, $196,500 • Jason M. andMandy L. Gritzner to Tracy L. Kohl, River CanyonEstates No. 2, Lot 159, $369,000 • Leila Lovdale to Sandra R.and Michael A. Gianotti, Bridge Creek Village at BrokenTop, Lot 20, $335,000 • Kenneth A. andJudith A. Wullenwaber to Gary R.Black Sr. and Janet L. Black, trustees for the Gary R. BlackSr. andJanet L. Black Joint Revocable Living Trust, Ponderosa Pines, Third Addition, Lot14, Block 6, $218,000 • Christian and Christen B. Gladuto Timothy J. andMeghan K. Reardon, Valhalla Heights, Phase 7,Lot 8, $619,000 • Riki S. Court to Luis Elenes, Partition Plat 2009-1, Parcel1, $356,000 • Stacie A. andDaniel Matthew to Sheila D.Walker, trustee for the Sheila D.Walker Trust, Brentwood, Lot13, $262,000 • Evan A. Crane to Joshua and Riki Court, La CasaMia, Lot 6, Block 4,
Luxury
|
When it
R'
IB BIRII
co m es t o n e w
ter. The median size of new homes built for sale peaked
I
: ,
• William A. Beutler, trustee for the William A. Beutler andMarcell Ann Beutler Revocable Living Trust, to Keith A. andSandraBeutler, Bridges at Shadow Glen,Phase1, Lot15, $364,000 • Darrell K. and Sherry D. Aabyto Robin F.and Bruce R.Gaudette, Crooked River RanchNo. 5,Lot15, $392,999 • Christine S. Palmer to Paula K. Surmann, Aspenwood, Lot 3, $180,000 • Julie A. Lowes to Kelly Young, trustee for the Kelly YoungTrust, Awbrey Village, Phase1, Lot54, $465,000 • Muriel K. Lewis to William S. Ibenthal and Beth E.Evans,trustees for the William S. Ibenthal and Beth E. EvansRevocable Trust, Mountain View Park, Phase 2,Lot 67, $200,000 • Dollinda S. Taylor, trustee for the Dollinda S.Taylor Living Trust, to Jeffrey J. andMargaret M. Fackier, Township15, Range1i, Section 6, $850,000 • Judith M. Burbank, Mary Y. Bickersand Beverly D.Madieros, who acquired title as Beverly D. Stutz, to Tom L Edwards Sr.and Cheryl A. Edwards, Township15, Range11, Section17, $150,000 • Eugene S. CarseyJr., personal representative of the Estate of Alta Irene Carsey, to Jason A.Mendell, Center Addition to Bend, Lots 6-8, Block 47, $150,000 • Gary D. andJo Ann Mitchell to David J.andTamiL.McKinney, trustees for the DavidandTami McKinney Revocable Living Trust, CascadeView Estates,Phase8,Lot 274, $485,000 • William D. and Mary F.Raff to Curtis L. Marshall and EddieW. Kelly, SummerCreek, Phase1, Lot
e
jtl I•
.IJ
,
development in Yorba Linda,
er-larger homeshas returned:
among the country's wealthiest communities, where he
In 2012, new homes reached
later bought a five-bedroom,
a new peak of 2,384 square feet and,according to the Na-
4,600-square-foot home with a
Builders, some 41 percent of new homes had four or more
Katie and Jonathan Sleep at their new six-bedroom home in Leesburg, Va. The basic price for this type of home was $850,000, but
bedrooms, upfrom 34 percent in 2009.
thecouplechose add-ons costing $650,000 more.
ADVERTISING
AWARDS
double-height foyer. Cohen,35, and his wife, Esther, also a physician, saved for two years to buy it. Aware
of how fickle the Southern California ma r ket c an b e , they tried to add options that
it more difficult to handle sigBrad Hunter, chief economist Affluent buyers have been nificant monthly payments, and director of consulting at flocking to real estate, accord- to save a down payment and Metrostudy. "And those who ing to the Mortgage Bankers to qualify for a loan based on have strong incomes, secure Association, with applications their debt ratios." jobs, their stock portfolio is for home loans of $625,000 to Affluentbuyers are drawn doing well — they are able to $729,000up 56.7percent from to new homes in part because buy whatever they want. And August 2012 to August 2013. the market for existing homes what they are buyingis larger Mortgage applications fo r is so competitive,said Stephen houses." more than $729,000 were up Kim, a Barclays analyst. InToll Brothers, the publicly 41percent. ventories of existing homes traded company that built the At the same time, the lower for sale remain low, and buyhome forthe Sleeps,hasben- end of the market is stalling. ers are less interested in large efited more than others from Mortgage applications fo r homes in far-flung developthat demand, Hunter said, homes of less than $150,000 ments — the McMansions of becauseit caters to the luxu- fell 0.6 percent in that period. the exurbs that were emblemry market. In December,the "First-time buyers are having atic of the boom and bust. company reportedthat its rev- trouble c oming up with t h e Those homes have struggled enuewas up 65 percent in its down payment and qualifying to regain their value, accordfiscal fourth quarter, versus for mortgages," Hunter said. ing to La wrence Yun, chief the same quarter theprevious "They are coming out of col- economist at t h e N a t i onal year. The averagesales price legewith huge amounts of stu- Association of Realtors, and for its homes was up 21 per-
AMERIGAN
a physician in Orange County, Calif., began looking for a home with his wife and young son, they were outbid on one
later, after the housing crisis hit. But the appetite for ev-
Daniel Rosenbaum/ New York Times News Service
I DVII T I I I 1 4 fIOI hLTIOI ; CINThlLOhHON
When Dr. Jonathan Cohen,
after another.Frustrated, he visited a new Toll B rothers
"The housing market is being driven by the move-up buyer, the luxury buyer,"said
Lucas Treihaft, Diamond BarRanch, Phase 2, Lot 71, $152,000 • Mark L. Gabler andTerry L Metcalf, who acquired title as Terry L. Young, to Simon C.and Claire E. Johnson, AwbreyButte Homesites ,Phase25,Lot64,Block 18, $600,000 • Linda M. Addington, who acquired title as Linda M.Schaub, to Theresa W ang and RyanMcAdler,Chestnut Park, Phase 2,Lot 58, $221,500 • Kimberly H. Wyman to Kimberly A. Like, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 1, $194,987 • Dee A. Newton to Jeffrey D. and Vicki M. Hanson,Township 17, Range13, Section 33, $339,900 Crook County • Marcia L. Helmken, trustee for the Marcia L. HelmkenRevocable Living Trust, who acquired title as the Marcia L. HelmkenRevocable Living Trust, to Gary E. and Crystal S. Madison, High Desert Estates Subdivision, Phase 4,Lot120, $280,000 • Larry Knutzto Jeffery J. Puskas and Donna L.Stubbs-Puskas, Township16, Range,14 Section 8, $750,000 • Lee Investments Inc. to Jeffrey S. Jones andMyfanwy J. WellerJones, BrasadaRanch, Lot 29, $525,000 •James E.Alleyand CaroleAnne Alley, who acquired title as Carol A. Alley, to Lance G.and Kate D. Queen, SteelhammerRanch, Lot 44, $240,000 • Patrick L. and Carla K. Fouste to Robert B. andAmanda I. Abell, Partition Plat1998-30, Parcel1, $195,000
that are closer to job centers and have good schools. And builders are finally starting to put up more houses: Housing startsrose 18percent in 2013.
in 2007 at 2,295 square feet, then fell to 2,159 two years
tional Association of Home
8, $173,000 • Anita S. Elsey to Robin A. andKay K. Bithell, trustees for the Bithell Trust, Hollow PineEstates, Phase1, Lot13, $346,000 • Randall R. and Christina L. Reid to Hiiary W. Craig, trustee for the Hilary W. Craig RevocableTrust, Partition Plat 2008-32, Parcel 2, $525,000 • Mary M. Law, who acquired title as Mary M. Adsit, to Further 2 Development LLC,Barton Crossing, Phase1, Lot1, $220,000 • Further 2 Development LLC to Mary M. LawandKelsie L. Daubenschmidt-Bixler, Barton Crossing, Phase1, Lot1, $250,000 • Tetherow Glen 58 LLC to Robert W. Livingston II andJeanW. Livingston, Tetherow, Phase 2,Lot 9, $260,000 • Kelsi Erkkila to DeweyW.and Lili E. Hess, BrookswoodEstates, Lot 8, $232,500 • Earl S. and Patricia A. Kiingensmith, trustees for the Kiingensmith Family Trust, to Harvey G.and Dorothy K. Knuth, Copperstone, Phases 2and 3, Lot 15, $375,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to John H. and Caren L.Burton, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 28, $229,900 • Davidson Trust Co. andGene d'Autremont, trustees for the Borneman Family Trust, to Kenneth A. and Linda N.Hadlock, Vista del Sol, Lot 5, Block1, $405,000 • VRE Crescent LLC to Douglas A. and Natalie E.Vandenborn, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 295, $210,000 • Jeffrey L. Payne, doing business as Panterra Homes, to KaylaCarol, Pettigrew Highlands, Lot10, $274,289.50 • Jason D. andConnie L Neel to
lished suburban communities
x
Continued fromG1 In July 2013,sales of homes costing more than $1 million were up46.6percentfrom the previousJuly. homes, bigger is again bet-
$233,250 • Kourosh and Karin Mohtadi, Patrick W.Tester and Donna Launey to KevinP.and JeanK.Callahan, River Village 3, Lot 35, Block 20, $580,000 •Benand Lisa HusabytoPaulM. Maier and Maureen F.McCaffrey, Heights ofBend,Phase2,Lot58, $445,000 • Tylor L. Mitchell and Russel and Margaret Nunnellyto ChadW. Cox, Eaglenest, Phase 2,Lot36, $170,000 • Randall R. and PamelaJ. Kerr to Carolyn Stewart, Wildflower, Lot 27, $235,000 • Parrline Q. Norton to Federal Home LoanMortgageCorporation, Westwood Acres, Section1, Lot5, Block1, $309,138.67 • Bryan K. Johnson to Joshua Blessing andTina Morris, Tanager Village, Lot 24, $203,000 • Mary K. Gullette to ThomasP. and Angie M.Secoio, Northwest Townsite COS, Second Addition to Bend, Lot5, Block43, $255,000 • Matt Ward to Stephen A.and Peggy L. Chapman, trustees for the StephenandPeggy Chapman Trust, Alberello at Sunriver, Lot 25, $300,000 • Res-Or Two LLC to Wood Hil Homes Inc., Ironstone, Lots1-12, $357,391.20 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to David and Ailsa A. Winter, Shevlin Ridge, Phase 3, Lot 35, $685,000 • Kelly J. and Shantel L. Witt to Justin J. Clark andChristy L. Radke, Deschutes River Woods, Lot11, Block Z, $255,000 • Hilary W. Craig, trustee for the Hilary W. Craig RevocableTrust, to Benjamin N.and Lisa A. Husaby, Township17, Range11, Section11, $600,000
cent for the same period.
dent loan debt, which makes
affluent buyers want estab-
would raise the home's value. They upgraded the hardwood floors and added solid wood doors and the most expensive exteriorthe company offered,
a manufactured stone. In total, they spent about $80,000 upgrading the home, which ended up costing about $1.2 million. It's within a reasonable commute to work and in
a good school district, Cohen sard. "Before doing this, we were very concernedthat the market could drop again," he said. "But I am getting a brand-new home with a 10-year guarantee if anything breaks, built to
my specs.It's a decent size, a great pieceof property. If I am going to put money into property now, I can't think of a bet-
ter investment opportunity."
It's that time again! Time to enter your very best work in the 2014 Oregon American Advertising Awards (formerly the ADDY Awards.) So reflect, dig through your files, find that amazing work you created. And get ready to share it with the universe.
NeW thiS year- l ocal award categories! Celebrate excellence in our community by entering your favorite work in new community award categories. If you love awards, enter both the local AND the American Advertising Awards.
Drop-off party: February 20, 2014, 5:30-7:30pm Combined Communication 63088 NE 18th St. ¹200 Get detailed entry instructions atORAdvertisingAwards.com.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Cable ContInued fromG1 But the battle hasn't had much effect on the full retail
prices that long-term customers pay, analysts say. Instead, there's been an upward creep in bills around the country, analysts say. "Prices have been rising 5 or 6 percent a year, and consumers now pay about double what they did 10 years ago," saidJeffKagan, an indepen-
management, systems and sellbetter products. Charter also says its larger size wouldgive it the clout to demand discounts from the owners of cable stations
and other content providers. Those costs now eat up about 40 percent of Charter
revenue.
Destruction Continued from G1 Robert Johnson, CEO of the National Association for Information Destruction, said thousands of firms across the retain data. tion leaks from the National
the couple marketed and dis-
Security Agency and other
tributed e a rl y
this report.
organizations, and the steady
computerized backgammon games and other consumer
Because of its size, Time
stream of new laws and regulations to safeguard person-
shows on demand, and they
Part of that comes from pro-
said have undergone thorough background checks that go back at least seven years.
gramming savings, while the rest comes from "rationalizing" operations. in transition. It's under threat As the phone companies from new competitors," Kagan grow their footprint, cable said. "Thereisnew technology, companies are seeing a slow exciting new companies and drain of pay-TV customers. new ways to watch TV." Many move tophone comIn the St. Louis area, for ex- pany services as they beample, Charter and AT&T are come available. "It's pretty constant. You in a technological arms race. Charter this month announced see AT&T and Fios (Veriplans to move all its customers zon's competitor to cable) to digital service. That means taking share on quarter a cable box or TiVo-like device after quarter," said analyst on all but the most advanced Olgeirson. TVs. On pay TV, it's coming The switch eliminates analog doser to a zero-sum game. service, which for most custom- "Video is essentially a maers meant plugging the cable ture market. There's not directly into the back of the TV. a tremendous amount of A single analog channel takes growth left in that space," as much capacity as 14 digital Olgeirson said. stations. So digital means that That can be troublesome Charter can move much more for companies such as through its cable"pipe." Charter, which gets 49 perCharter says it will use that cent of its revenue from pay space to double the speed of TVsubscript ions,compared its standard residential service to 27 percent from Internet to 60megabits per second, or service and 8 percent from mbps, from 30 later this year at providing telephones. the same price. It also plans to Charter lost 3 percent of add 79 HD TV channels, catch- its video customers in the ing up to AT&T's offerings on year ending last September, its U-verse service. but its Internet customers AT&T's broadband service is rose 7 percent and phone a "small step under" Charter's customers rose 9percent. service today, said Ian OlgeirCompanies are trying to son, analyst at SNL Kagan. hold on to video revenue by The race is on to close the gap. raising prices and up-selling AT&T says it plans to double the remaining customers its U-verse Internet speeds by into more expensive sports the end of next year. The com- packages or to rented digital pany offers up to 45 mbps in video recorders. They are many areas, the company says, aggressively pushing packalthough in many others the age deals combining video limits are a fraction of that speed with phone and Internet. in others. The company plans to At Charter, that seems to be working. The commoveto 100mbps eventually. That is a lot of speed. By pany saw its revenue rise 5 comparison, an HD-quality percent when adjusted for Netflix movie requires about 5 acquisitions during the 12 months ended Sept. 30. mbps. cord and cancel cable TV. "The cable TV industry is
doubt on the future of such services. It tossed out a Fed-
ing satellite TV to people who eral Communications Comdon't like the cable and phone mission rule requiring that broadband providers treat companies. An arms race isn't cheap. all Internet traffic equally, a Charter says it has spent more conceptcallednetneutrality. That raises the possibility than $2 billion on system upgrades. AT&T calls its U-verse broadband providers such expansion a "multibillion-dol- as Charter and AT&T could slow some traffic and speed lar three-yearproject." Those big investments are others, depending on what one reason that competition is the traffic-provider will pay. playing out in service improve- In effect, they could place a ments more than a price war, toll on companies such as Netflix, altering the competOlgeirson said. It's unclear what effect itive economics. The costly technology the hostile takeover of Time Warner Cable might have on race also raises the quescustomers — if the takeover tion of how much service happens. people actually want. As Charter is a company with capacity grows, "there will relatively heavy debt and great be more and more HD, then need for capital spending. The ultra-HD," Breznick said. But do people really want merger — which would be financed with both debt and 200 HD channels, or a picstock — would leave Charter a ture so clear it would show much larger company with rel- the pores on the skin? Will atively heavy debt and a great they pay for it? People asked that same need for capital spending. Charter is a shark pursuing question when pipe capacia whale. Time Warner is nearly ty was much smaller, Brezthree times Charter's size. The nick said. But people always smaller company claims it can find a way to fill it up, if not make the whale swim more ef- with TV channels, then with ficiently. It pledges to improve something else.
They marketed an electron-
who offered to endorse it, but
the price was too steep, Steve Chafitz said. Photos by Kenneth K. Lam I Baltimore Sun
CEO Arleen ChafItz, left, and husband Steve Chafitz, president, run e-End, whIch specializes In the secure sanitIzatIon of electronic medIa and data residing on end-of-IIfe equipment no longer used
by government agencies, contractors services or businesses.
recyclable glass. Laser sights for weapons? Torn into tiny shards of metal.
E-End adheres to the government's highest demili-
A sample
tarization standards and NSA data "sanitation" with photo-
of an Intact demilitarized AR-15 and the shredded
graphs and paperwork. "They've done work for us
remains of a second one
several times, and we'll defi-
used for dIsplay at e-End.
guidelines, Steve Chafitz said, and documentsevery step the
nitely use them again," said Charles Garvin of the Defense Acquisition University, a Pen-
Other marketing successes allowed the Chafitzes to cash
in on their 14-year-old business in 1983 and move on to other ventures.
In 2006, the pair noticed that people were replacing their computers and cellphones more quickly, without taking care to safeguard data on thedevicesthey were leaving behind. "If you delete a file in a hard drive, it's still there," Steve Chafitz said. They also saw the plastic
and aluminum in the discarded machines filling up landfills. That's why they decided to open e-End with the ze-
ro-landfill policy — they say tough becauseeven my state they recycle everything. Leaks ofclassified informaEven as reports of data mis- groups think it's not going to In addition to "sanitizing" tion — most notably revela- management or theft prolifer- happen to us. Well, that's a devices, e-End also fixes and tions by former CIA employee ate, agencies and corporations risk I'm not sure you want to refurbishes discarded comand NSA contractor Edward may not realize the danger of take." puters that don't need to be Snowden about NSA surveil- not disposing of their equipWingert and Steve Chafitz destroyed and sells them on lance of cellphone and Inter- ment properly, said Molli Win- say the information technol- eBay or donates them to nonnet data — u nderscore the gert, CEO of Secure Data San- ogy departments at typical profits, Steve Chafitz said. tagon training agency.
teachers.
government's interest in keep-
itization, a 4-year-old business
companies might not have the
ing its secrets protected.
in Boise, Idaho. "I think we're still doing a
proper tools or training to ade- Arleen Chafitz said. "We felt quately dispose of data. IT de- we had to give back to the partments focus on fixing and environment."
Steve Chafitz described piles
of obsolete desktop computers, lot of educating," she said. "It's floppy disks, data CDs and cell-
"We've come full
phones that may sit around the
back rooms and hallways of federalagencies and contractors as "loaded guns." "Our job is basically to keep our nation safe," he said. "Our goal is to get them to get all this equipment out before they have another Snowden event."
The company has had con-
in Washington, and the Frederick County government. "We havebeen pleased with the thoroughness of the work
lier this month cast some
al computers.
it'? Crushed and ground into
1,000 mbps. "It's set a new bar," pocketbooks. Th e b u z zsaid Alan Breznick, video-ca- word is "screen-agnostic," ble practice leader at L ight said Nancy Garvey, vice Reading, a telecom news and president at AT&T. That means easy access research service. Few think Google will move to pay TV on smartphones, nationwide with such service, tablets and laptops.
a l t erna-
whether pens embedded with digital clocks or early person-
grandmaster Bobby Fischer,
the Secret Service, L-3 Com-
over-the-Internet
deals to sell the latest gizmos,
Need to destroy a rugged Toughbook laptop that might have been used in war? E-End will use a high-powered magnetic process known as degaussing to erase its hard drive of any memory. A computer monitor that might have some top-secret im ageslefton
customers carry pay TV around in their pockets and
panies have had to quiddy get tives is also changing the market. A $7.99 monthly better." Nationally, phone companies subscription to Netflix or have about 10 percent of the Hulu can beat a $50 camarket for pay TV, compared to ble TV bill for consumers 55 percent for cable.That's be- willing to skip some cable cause the phone company geo- shows and wait for others. But a federal appeals graphical footprint is still much smaller than the cable compa- court in Washington ear-
their retail businesses as they secured exclusive distribution
'Thoroughness'
Google is experimenting with
"We're in the middle of
or "The Adult Toy Store" for
ic chess game that attracted the attention of reclusive
tracts with the D.C. National Guard and said it works with
Breznick said. They see where a long process of rewriting the way we consume TV," speed is headed. " Customers f i nally h a v e Kagan said. "It will be on choice, but not all customers the smartphone, on your and not in all markets," Kagan smart watch." The coming of cheap, said. "Where we have choice,
The husband-and-wife team
Steve Chafitz
In the competitive batdisplay in Kansas City, where tle, the latest push is to help Part of the motivation is on
c o mpanies
used eye-catching mottoes such as "Space Age Fantasies"
has annual revenues in excess all of w hom
c a l c ulators,
such as Sharp and Casio were just starting to roll out.
of companies is expected to increase. "It is definitely a growing sector," Johnson said. The Chafitzes said e-End
reductions from the merger.
have prompted some to cut the
electronics that
al information, the number
than $750 million in cost
nies for fastInternetand TV. Meanwhile, DirectTV and the Dish Network are sell-
hones started at the other end of the spectrum. In the 1970s,
Charter executives dedined to be interviewed for
Such services let customers bypass the cable to watch
the traditional cable TV com-
T he road that led to t h e
Chafitzes' work destroying medical records, X-ray images, defense equipment and used BlackBerrys and iP-
country destroy devices that
of $1 million. The 8-year-old company employs 16 people,
but it has competitors worried,
restoring data, they say, while data-wiping companies focus on just the opposite.
With high-profile informa-
Warner already swings dent telecommunications ana- much weight with the prolyst in Atlanta. viders, Breznick said. Any Meanwhile, t hi s m o n th's benefits from squeezing court decision striking down harder are likely to go to the "net neutrality" raises the pos- company's bottom line, not sibility of higher prices for in price cuts to customers, over-the-Internet competitors he noted. such as Netflix and Hulu. Charter expects m ore
fiber-based Internet service at
G3
munications and other corporations, the French Embassy
done by e-End," said Scott Pearce, chief information se-
curity officer for Frederick County government. "They actually shred the d r ives while you watch and provide a certification sheet after the
process." E-End's clients also include health care insurers and pro-
viders, who worry about losing patient information — and drawing investigations and fines. Frederick Memorial Hospital uses e-End about once
every two or three months on average, said spokeswoman Amanda Changuris. Officials said e-End's "zero landfill policy" fits with the hospital's goal to seek as many "green options and opportunities" when disposing of equipment. But security is just as important.
"Our last delivery to e-End
was 1,884 pounds of miscellaneous electronics, mostly
computers, hard drives, DVDs and CDs," she said. "We part icularly l ik e
t h e f act t h at
hanks for hiring us to care for
your small business employees.
e-End provides certificates guaranteeing data sanitization and recycling." Last year, BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee paid a $1.5 million penalty to federal authorities after it lost 57 hard drives that contained information on 1 million patients, in-
cluding Social Security numbers and home addresses. The
organization said the breach cost it nearly $17 million in investigations, notifications and
new protection protocols. In recent weeks, authorities have arrestedan Iraq War vet-
www.trilliumchp.com
~Tnlltum Community Health Plari
eran accused of stealing information on about 400 members of his former Army unit so
he could make fake IDs for a militia, and a state employee in Tennessee resigned after
investigators said he downloaded data on thousands of
541-431-1950 800-910-3906
Think welL Be well.
1800 Millrace Drive Eugene, OR 97403
c i r cle,"
G4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
WT Consolidated Stocks NYSEand Nasdaq For the weekending Friday, January 1, 3 2014 WK YTD NAME
DIV LAST
CHG %CHG
ACE LM 2.14e 93.81 e1.62 ADT Corp .Sgf 630.04 -8.54 AES Corp .20 14.06 +.39 AK Steel 7.07 +.82 AT&T Inc 1.84f d33.32 -.10 AbbottLab .88f 36.66 +.08 AbbVie 1.60 49.23 +1.44 AberFitc .80 35.38 +.49 Accelrys u12.58 +2.50 Accenture 1.74e 79.88 -1.30 Accuray u10.65 +1.63 ActivsBliz .19f 17.13 c.46 AdobeSy 59.19 +.10 AMD 3.43 -.04 Aeropostl d7.05 -.21 Aetna .90f 68.33 -.60 Agilent .53f 58.15 +.28 Agnico g .88 31.08 +.16 AlcatelLuc .18e 3 . 95 +.14 Alcoa .12 11.51 +.07 Alexion ... u158.73 +25.09 AlldffevG 4.91 +.05 Allstate 1.00 51.20 c.58 AlphaNRs 5.68 -.15 AlpAlerMLP1.07e 17.80 c.14 AlteraCp If .60 33.43 +1.31 Altria 1.92 35.22 -2.08 Amarin 1.83 c.12 Amazon 358.69 -28.91 Ambev n d6.54 -.18 AMovilL .34e 21.26 +.08 AmAirl n u33.55 +3.15 AmAirl pf u26.65 c.31 ACapAgy 3.75e 20.95 +.14 AEagle0ut .50 d13.53 +.76 AEP 2.00 48.81 +2.04 AmExp .92 85.02 -1.93 AmlntlGrp .40 47.96 +.10 ARltCapPr 1.00f 13.84 -.19 AmTower 1.16f 80.88 +1.26 AmeriBrgn .94f 67.22 -.03 Amgen 2.44f 118.95 -.34 Anadarko .72 80.69 -.40 AnglogldA .10e 14.64 c.54 Annaly 1.50e 10.77 +.23 Apache .80 80.26 -2.16 ApolloEdu 32.29 -1.49 Apple lnc 12.20 500.60 -45.47 ApldMatl .40 16.82 -.35 ArcelorMit .20 16.48 +.20 ArchCoal . 12 4 . 2 4 +.13 ArchDan .96f 39.48 -.09 ArcosDor .24 d8.86 -.38 ArenaPhm 6.33 -.99 AriadP 7.39 -1.60 ArmourRsd . 60 4 . 1 1 -.01 AssuredG .40 21.15 +.20 Atmel 8.36 +.16 AuRico g . 16 4 . 5 9 -.16 Autodesk 51.25 +.81 Avon .24 d14.89 -.61 BB&T Cp .92 37.41 -.85 BG Med 1.21 +.01 BP PLC 2.28f 46.89 -.86 BRF SA .39e d17.68 -.19 Baidu 156.50 -4.87 BakrHu .60 56.64 +.36 BallardPw 2.12 +.19 BcBilVArg .55e 11.91 -.01 BcoBrad pf .23e d10.53 -.38 BcoSantSA .81e 8 . 64 -.05 BcoSBrasil .95e d4.57 -.49 BkofAm .04 16.75 +.30 BkNYMel .60 31.96 -.23 9 iPVix rs 49.51 +4.82 BarrickG .20 19.28 +.25 Baxter 1.96 68.30 +.66 Beam lnc .90 83.30 -.15 BedBath 63.85 -.74 BerkH 8 111.60 -.21 BestBuy .68 23.54 -1.48 BlackBerry 9.45 -.44 Blackstone1.18e 32.75 +1.62 BlockHR .80 30.40 +2.32 Boeing 2.92f 125.26 -11.39 BostonSci 13.53 +.19 BoydGm 10.56 +.81 BrMySq 1.44f 49.97 -.97 Broadcom .12f 29.76 +.37 BrcdeCm 9.34 -.06 CA Inc 1.00 32.09 -.57 CBL Asc .98f d16.99 +.02 CBREGrp u26.54 +1.07 CBS 8 .48 58.72 +.33 CIT Grp .40 46.55 -1.40 CME Grp 1.80a 74.76 c.34 CMS Eng 1.08f 27.79 +1.25 CSX .60 26.91 +.71 CVS Care 1.101 67.72 +.09 CYS invest1.28m 7 . 92 -.02 CblvsnNY .60 16.04 c.17 CabotOGs .08 u39.98 +.45 14.12 -.04 Cadence Calpine 18.98 +.30 Cameco g .40 21.22 -.66 Cameron 59.97 +2.00 CdnNRs gs .801 32.75 c.75 CdnSolar 39.13 +1.88 CapOne 1.20 70.61 +.04 CpstnTurb 1.62 +.03 CardnlHlth 1.21 68.02 +2.60 CarMax 45.11 c.54 Carnival 1.00 39.19 +.04 Caterpillar 2.40 93.91 +7.74 Celgene 151.93 -9.29 CeHThera 3.19 -.81 Cemex .45t 12.37 -.04 Cemig pf s2.02e d5.77 +.05 CenterPnt .95f 23.40 +.25 CntryLink 2.16 (128.86 -.29 ChelseaTh 4.45 -.14 CheniereEn 43.94 +.12 ChesEng .35 26.91 +.03 Chevron 4.00 d111.63 -4.66 Chimera . 36a 3 . 12 +.01 CienaCorp 23.33 +1.22 Cirrus 17.51 -2.16 Cisco .68 21.91 -.29 Citigroup .04 47.43 -1.89 CitrixSys d54.07 -4.83 CliffsNRs .60 19.32 -.01 Coach 1.35 47.89 -.92 CobaltlEn 16.37 -.80 CocaCola 1.12 37.82 -1.02 CognizTech 96.91 -.37 ColeREI n .72 15.15 -.11 ColgPalm s 1.36 61.23 -1.16
-9.4 -25.6 -3.1 -13.6 -5.2 -4.4 -6.8 +7.5 +31.9 -2.8 -3.9 -1.2 -11.4 -22.4 -.4 c1,7 +17.8 -10.2 c8.3 +19.5 +38.3 -6.1 -20.4 e,1 +2.8 -8.3 -7.1 -1 0.1 -11.0 -9.0 +32.9 +2.8 +8.6 -6.0 +4.4 -6.3 -6.1 c7.7 +1.3 -4.4 c4.3
+4.7
WK %RETURN NAV CHG 1YR 3YR
AmericanBeacon L gCpVlls 27 . 6 7 -.12 +23.0 +13.7 AmericanCentury Eqlnclnv 8.35 -.05 +11.0 +1 0.0 31. 6 8 +.01 +20.6 +11.5 33. 0 4 -.10 +27.6 e14.3
American Funds
AMCAPA m 26.97 +.01 +28.1 B alA m 23. 8 5 -.11 e14.8 BondA m 1 2 . 57+.03 +0.1 CaplncBuA m 56.72 -.48 +8.3 CapWldBdA m 20.20 -.08 -1.8 CpWldGrlA m 43.85 -.42 +16.2 EurPacGrA m 47.07 -.56 +11.1 FnlnvA m 4 9 . 99-.29 +20.7 GrthAmA m 42.12 -.10 +25.4 HilncA m 1 1 . 35-.04 +5.5 IncAmerA m 20.26 -.04 +12.4 IntBdAmA m 13.51 +.02 0 .0 InvCoAmA m 35.68 -.10 +23.6 MutualA m 33.64 -.05 +18.6 NewEconA m 37.86 +.07 +33.5 NewPerspA m 36.10 -.41 +16.4 NwWrldA m 56.05 -.66 +3.0 SmCpWldA m 48.40 -.21 e21,2 TaxEBdAmA m 12.59 -.02 -1.3 WAMutlnvA m 38.08 -.25 +22.2 Artisan Intl d 28.94 -.38 +13.4 I ntlVal d 35. 6 3 -.34 +20.6 M dCpVal 2 5 . 7 6-.21 +20.6 M idCap 47. 8 3+1.06 +31.2 BBH
e1 5.3 e11.4 +3.9 +8.5 +2.8 +9.5 +5.7 +12.4
e13.9 +7.0 +1 0.5 +1.9 +12.7 +12.7 +17.6 +1 0.6 +3.5
e1 0.3 c6.4 e14.6 +10.7 +12.7 +14.1 +1 6.9
TaxEffEq d 20.73 -.05 +16.5 e1 5.1
Baron
Growth b 6 9 . 70c.33 e24.4 BlackRock EqOivA m 2 3 .27 -.04 +14.3 E qOivl 23.3 2 -.05 +14.5 GlobAlcA m 20.90 -.12 +9.8 GlobAlcC m 19.36 -.11 +9.0 G lobAlcl 21. 0 0 -.12 +10.1 H iYldBdls 8.2 3 -.01 +8.6 Cohen &Steers Realty 65.07 +1.06 +3.0 Columbia AcornlntZ 4 4 . 89-.39 +13.4 A cornZ 36.1 7 -.15 +19.8 O ivlncZ 17. 6 3 -.12 +17.7 LgCpGrowZ 33.24 -.06 +20.9
e1 5.9
10. 3 2 +0.3 1 0 . 0 2+.01 +0.6 1 0 . 96+.03 +1.1 EmMkCrEql 18.23 -.17 -9.6 EmMktVall 2 5 .68 -.31 -11.9 IntCorEql 1 2 . 38-.18 +14.4 IntSmCapl 20.07 -.15 +24.2 I ntlSCol 18. 8 7 -.18 +19.9 I ntlValul 19. 1 0 -.32 +13.3 R elEstScl 2 7 . 03+.49 +2.1 USCorEq11 15.97 -.07 +24.3 USCorEq21 15.76 -.08 +24.7
+0.6 +0.8 c3.2 -3.4 -6.4 +5.4 +8.9 +7.6 +3.3 +9.3 e14.5 e14.6
DFA 1 YrFixlnl 2 YrGlbFII 5 YrGlbFII
+11.5 +11.8 +6.0 +5.2 +6.3 +9.1
c8.2 +7.4 +1 2.6 +13.2 +13.4
F rontierCm .40 FuelCegE . . . Fusion-io ..
4. 6 8 - .12 + . 7 IntlGame .44f d 14.43 -.61 -20.5 1. 4 3 + . 0 3 + 1 .4 IntPap 1 . 4 0 4 7 .74+2.18 -2.6 11 . 0 0 + . 54 +23.5Interpublic .30 1 6.32 -.47 -7.8 InvenSense ... 1 9.69 +.11 -5.2 Invesco . 9 0 33 . 25 -.23 -8.7 GT AdvTc 10.27 +1.18 +17.6 ItauunibH .38r 1 2.24 +.17 -9.7 Gafisa SA 2.55 -.19 -18.5 GalenaB(o 5.27 -.43 +6.3 GameStop 1.10 35.07 -1.45 -28.8 JDS Uniph 13.29 +1.51 +2.3 Gap .80 38.08 +.87 -2.6 JPMorgCh 1.52 55.36 e.27 -4.7 GenOynam 2.24 u101.31 +3.00 +6.0 Jabil .32 17.97 +.01 +3.0 GenElec .88f 25.13 +.18 -10.3 JanusCap .28 10.99 -.46 -11.2 GenGrPrp .56f 20.14 c .53 e . 3 JetBlue 8.76 -.10 +2.6 GenMigs 1.52 48.02 -.26 -3.8 JohnJn 2.64 88.47 -2.14 -3.4 GenMotors 1.20 36.08 -.75 -11.7 JohnsnCtl .88 46.12 -2.09 -10.1 Genworth 14.75 -.28 -5.0 JnprNtwk 26.61 -1.11 c17.9 Gerdau . 10e 7 . 05 +.08 -10.1 KB Home .10 19.34 +1.30 +5.8 -.9 Gerongp 5.02 -.60 +5.9 KKR 1.62e 24.11 -.45 GileadSci 80.65 +.03 +7.4 Kellogg 1.84 d57.98 -1.85 -5.1
Molycorp 4.85 -.16 -13.7 PUShSPXrs 66.64 +.71 +10.6 Mondelez .56 32.76 -.89 -7.2 ProspctCap 1.32 10.87 -.21 -3.1 Monsanto 1.72 106.55 -1.39 -8.6 P SEG 1. 4 4 33.34 +.32 +4.1 -.2 MorgStan .20 29.51 -.89 -5.9 P ulteGrp . 2 0 20.32 +1.48 Mosaic 1.00 44.66 -.72 -5.5 Gihoo360 u101.06 +16.34 +23.2 Mylan 45.41 +1.10 +4.6 Qualcom 1.40 74.22 +.14 NH Hldg 3.01 +.31 +9.5 Qstniag 1.32f d52.50 -1.21 -1.9 NQ Mobile 17.02 (.1.24 e1 5.8 QksilvRes 3.11 -.11 e1.3 NRG Egy .48 27.85 e1.15 -3.0 Quiksilvr 7.05 -.08 -1 9.6 NXP Semi u48.35 e2.77 c5.3 RF MicD 5.33 +.71 +3.3 Nabors .16 17.08 +.04 e.5 RadianGrp .01 14.88 +.07 e5.4 NBGrce rs 4.47 -.43 -20.2 Rayonier 1.96 44.26 +3.08 e5.1 NOilVarco 1.04 75.01 +1.01 -5.7 Raytheon 2.20 u95.07 +6.94 +4.8 NetApp .60 42.34 -1.62 +2.9 RealGSolar 3.95 +.34 +30.8 Nefflix ... u409.33 +23.25 +11.2 RegionsFn .12 10.17 -.38 +2.8 NeuStar 033.69 -11.10 -32.0 ReneSola 3.30 -.09 -4.3 NwGold g 5.74 -.03 +9.5 RentACI .921 (I24.94 -6.00 -25.2 NY CmtyB 1.00 16.19 -.60 -3.9 RepubSvc 1.04 32.03 +.29 -3.5 Newcastle . 405 5 . 44 -.26 -5.2 RexahnPh 1.15 +.15 +125.5
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S ynovus . 0 4 3.35 -.13 -6.9 Sysco 1 . 1 6f 35.08 -.40 -2.8 T-MoblUS n 30.57 -1.11 -9.1 TD Ameritr .48a 31.25 -.80 +2.0 TE Connect 1.00 56.51 -.81 +2.5 TECO .88 16.38 -.31 -5.0 TJX .58 57.36 -.39 -1 0.0 TaiwSemi .50e 16.92 -.65 -3.0 TakeTwo u19.18 +.72 +10.4 TalismE g .27 10.75 -.57 -7.7 T arget 1 . 7 2d56.64 -1.08 -1 0.5 TelefBrasil 2.44e 19.00 - .50 + . 4 Teradata 41.12 -2.66 -9.6 T eradyn . 2 4 18.81 -.35 +6.8 Terex .20 41.00 +3.08 -2.4 TeslaMot 181.41 +6.81 +20.6 T esoro 1 . 0 0 51.52 +.95 -11.9 TevaPhrm 1.28e u44.63 (.1.70 e11.4 T exlnst 1 . 2 0 42.40 -.25 -3.4 Textron .0 8 35.50 -.91 -3.4 ThermoFis .60 u115.14 (.5.1 9 c3,4 3D Sys s 77.73 -2.14 -16.4 3M Co 3 . 42f128.19 -2.03 -8.6 TW Cable 3.00f 133.27 -.43 -1.6 TimeWarn 1.15 62.83 -.49 -9.9 TiVo lnc 12.39 +.16 -5.6 -.7 TogBros 36.75 +1.18 T otalSys . 4 0 29.88 -1.08 -1 0.2 TractSup s .52 66.51 -3.67 -14.3 Transocn 2.24 d43.28 -.97 -12.4 Travelers 2.00 81.28 -.33 -10.2 TrinaSolar 14.85 +1.23 +8.6 Triguint 8.30 -.31 -.5 TurqHigRs 3.51 -.07 +6.4 21stCFoxA .25 31.82 +.55 -9.5 21stCFoxB .25 31.24 +.55 -9.7 Twitter n 64.50 e2.76 c1.3 TwoHrblnv 1.17e 9.83 +.12 +5.9 Tycolntl .64 40.49 +1.09 -1.3 Tyson .30f u37.40 e2.63 e11.8 U S Silica . 5 0 29.62 -.14 -13.2 UltraPt g u23.95 +.13 +10.6 UnderArmr u108.11+24.62 +23.8 UnionPac 3.16 u174.24 +2.60 +3.7 UtdContl 45.84 -.29 +21.2 U PS B 2 . 4 8 95.23 -1.10 -9.4 US Bancrp .92 39.73 -.41 -1.7 US NGas u24.18 -.43 +16.9 US OilFd 34.80 +.22 -1.5 U SSteel . 2 0 26.11 c.83 -11.5 UtdTech 2.36f 114.02 + 2.22 + . 2 UtdhlthGp 1.12 72.28 +.68 -4.0
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HIGH DKSKRT BANK
541.848.4444 www.highdesertbank.com
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+.2
-8.2 +1 2.6 -6.2 -6.0
+1.76 +5.0 -20.0 -.71 -5.7 -1.62 -8.1 -.12 -1.8 +.76 -1.6 -1.00 -3.4 +.23 -5.6 + .24 + . 2 -.52 -52.0 -4.11 +38.9 -3.72 -16.8 +1.56 +27.9 -.41 -3.4 -.10 -20.4 -.36 -4.4 -.33 +10.7
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e24,9 +8.0 -6.6 e1 8.2 -1 0.8 -4.9 -7.6 -4.7 -9.0 -26.9 +8.2 +8.4 +2.5 -10.3 c6.8 +25.4 +1.9 -13.5 e1 6.3 -3.5 -15.3 -1 2.0 +2.5 +39.9 -3.9 -1 6.0 -4.7 -1 5.4 +7.6 -8.5 +16.4 +9.4 -1.8 +22.4 -20.5 -5.9 -41.0 +27.0 +4.0
+2.05 +4.8
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+1.7
For the wee k ending Friday, Janua ry 31, 2014
I nvGrlnv U ltralnv
Comcast .90f u54.45 Comc spcl .90f u52.35 CmtyHlt rt ud.04 ConAgra 1.00 31.79 ConocoPhil 2.76 64.95 ConsolEngy .50 37.35 ConEd 2.521 54.41 Corning .40 17.21 Costco 1.24 112.36 Covidien 1.28 68.24 CSVlnvNG d4.24 CSVLgNGs u29.70 CSVeHVST 28.61 CSVxShtrs 9.59 CrwnCstle 70.96 Ctrip.com 39.51 CypSemi .44 10.04 CytRx u6.94
+22.4
MutualFunds FUND
CAP
LtNDtll
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164.47 -.67 +21.5 c1 3.9 164.45 -.68 +21.3 +1 3.8 27.18 -.03 +13.2 +10.2 27.18 -.03 c1 3.2 +1 0.2 11.46 -.02 +0.6 +6.2 46.55 +.02 +33.6 +1 6.0 107.48 +.04 +33.7 +1 6.1 P 114.05 -1.87 +11.5 +5.9 20.45 -.18 c1 9.6 c1 4.2 31.50 -.43 -1 2.5 -4.3 119.83 -1.92 +5.9 +2.0 28.57 -.1 4 c1 8.5 c1 5.4 59.89 -.29 +1 8.6 +15.5 93.63 -.36 c31.8 c1 6.3 100.68 -.39 +31.6 +1 6.2 61.59 -.19 +27.2 +15.2 61.59 -.18 +27.2 c1 5.2 P 151.99 -.45 +27.3 +1 5.3 94.40 -1.47 +5.3 +3.1 10.61 +.03 +0.3 e3.2 10.61 +.03 +0.4 +3.3 22.63 -.18 c1 7.3 e9.7 46.44 -.22 +23.0 +1 4.5 46.44 -.21 +23.0 +14.6 43.00 -.20 +23.0 c1 4.5 6.04 -.01 +4.6 +8.2 80.84 +.52 +37.7 +22.9 191.63 c1.22 c37.7 +22.8 11.31 +.04 -0.4 +5.2 9.81 +.02 +0.9 e5.5 26.04 +.10 -6.2 +4.1 10.61 +.05 -6.1 +4.2 13.26 +.05 -6.3 +4.0 163.42 -.67 +21.5 +1 3.9 163.43 -.67 +21.5 +1 3.9 41.01 -.15 +22.8 +14.3 22.02 -.41 c11.1 e6.3 70.04 -1.30 +11.2 +6.5 m 26.68 -.39 +6.1 +3.2 106.69 -1.57 e6.1 e3.3 s 106.71 -1.57 +6.2 +3.3 n 32.00 -.47 e6.1 e3.2 35.44 -.60 +11.4 +5.3 10.02 +.02 -0.3 +9.4 17.96 -.02 +6.9 e6.1 26.90 -.14 +1 3.8 +9.2 22.75 -.07 +10.3 +7.9 144.95 +.27 +23.8 c1 3.7 29.32 +.05 +23.5 +13.5 133.05 +.25 +23.7 c1 3.7 29.39 +.06 +23.8 +13.7 41.98 +.07 +23.7 +1 3.6 25.08 +26.3 c1 3.2 77.72 +26.5 +1 3.3 10.73 -.02 -1.3 e6.9
13.91 -.03 -0.3 +5.3 13.91 -.03 -0.2 +5.4 11.24 -.02 -1.1 +6.4 11.07 -.01 +1.0 +2.3 15.87 +0.7 +1.1 91.61 c.17 e29.8 e15.2 PrmcpAdml 94.99 +.17 +29.9 +15.3 PrmcpCorl 19.18 +.02 +26.7 +14.5 REITldxAd 95.46 e1.61 c2.9 c9.7 STBondAdm 10.53 +.02 +0.7 +1.8 STBondSgl 10.53 +.02 +0.7 +1.8 STCor 10.74 +.01 +1.5 +2.5 STGradeAd 10.74 +.01 +1.6 +2.6 STIGradel 10.74 +.01 +1.6 +2.6 STsryAdml 10.71 +.02 +0.4 +1.1 SelValu 27.20 -.09 +29.9 +15.9 SmCapldx 51.60 -.20 e26,7 e15,3 SmCpldAdm 51.64 -.20 +26.9 +15.5 SmCpldlst 51.64 -.20 +26.9 +15.5 SmCplndxSgnl 46.52 -.18 e26.9 e15.5 Star 23.56 -.07 +12.8 +9.6 StratgcEq 29.39 +.03 +29.9 +17.7 TgtRe2010 25.44 -.03 +6.6 +7.0 TgtRe2015 14.59 -.04 +9.0 +7.8 TgtRe2020 26.66 -.09 +10.8 +8.4 TgtRe2030 26.97 -.13 e13.4 c9.3 TgtRe2035 16.51 -.09 +14.8 +9.8 TgtRe2040 27.44 -.17 +15.5 +10.1 TgtRe2045 17.21 -.11 e15.5 e10.1 TgtRe2050 27.32 -.16 +15.6 +10.1 TgtRetlnc 12.47 -.01 c4,5 c6,2 Tgtet2025 15.43 -.06 +12.1 +8.8 TotBdAdml 10.70 +.02 +0.1 +3.6 TotBdlnst 10.70 +.02 +0.1 +3.7 TotBdMklnv 10.70 +.02 0. 0 + 3 .5 TotBdMkSig 10.70 +.02 +0.1 +3.6 Totlntl 15.95 -.24 +6.0 +3.2 TotStlAdm 45.24 -.17 +22.6 +14.2 TotStuns 45.25 -.17 +22.6 +14.2 TotStlSig 43.66 -.17 +22.6 +14.2 TotStldx 45.22 -.17 +22.5 +14.1 TxMCapAdm 90.68 -.34 +22.8 +14.2 USGro 27.88 -.11 e24.9 e14.9 ValldxAdm 28.71 -.08 +20.6 +13.2 Valldxlns 28.71 -.08 +20.6 +13.3 Wellsl 24.76 -.01 +7.2 +9.3 WellslAdm 59.98 -.03 +7.3 +9.3 Welltn 37.36 -.10 +13.9 +10.5 WelltnAdm 64.53 -.16 +14.0 +10.6 WndsllAdm 62.97 -.19 e20.3 e13.7 Wndsr 19.71 -.06 +23.5 +14.0 WndsrAdml 66.48 -.19 +23.7 +14.1 Wndsrff 35.49 -.10 +20.2 +13.6 Virtus EmgMktsls 8.98 -.15 -13.3 +3.4
Yacktman Focused d
24.31 -.18 +15.6 +12.8
Yacktman d 22.80 -.14 +16.6 +13.3 Fund Footnotes:b - Fee covering market costs is paid from fundassets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesare charged, usually a marketing fee andeither a sales or redemption fee. NA— not available. p - previous day's net asset value. s - fund split shares during theweek. x - fund paid a distribution during the week. Source:Morningstar.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
G5
Kombucha Continued from G1 "We are just completing another, and our most significant, expansion, which allows us to
•II
brew about four times our pre-
vious capacity," he wrote in an email. "The upgrade indudes
o'
1,000- and 1,500-gallon stain-
1 lllg -.,• -et
less steel fermentation tanks. We have also upgraded our bottling equipment to a llow
us to keep up with increased production." Kombucha Wonder Drink,
rl
a 13-year-old kombucha producer, has also experienced a
A cooler of product sits ready for distributioninside Kombucha Mama.
rise in sales, said Paul Sposato,
sales and marketingmanager. Kombucha is an alternative
to alcohol, high sugar and caffeinated beverages, he said, adding the beverage is growing in popularity not only at organic and natural-food stores, but
s;"'
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
mainstream supermarkets and other outlets as well.
Bend is home to one of the country's first kombucha breweries, Kombucha Mama, located at1125
N.E. Second St. Similar to beer tasting rooms around Bend, employee Sasha Lawless fills growlers "It's still very much a niche and growlettes for customers in the tasting room. Pints of kombucha and tastings are also available.
c hoice to consumers in t h e
multibillion dollar beverage category, but i t ' s c ertainly growing," Sposato said. "There's been a number of additional local and regional kombucha brewers here and across the country that have
poppedup.We estimate there's more than 80 kombucha com-
panies throughout the U.S. and Canada."
And like producers of any growing industry, kombucha brewers have formed a nonprofit trade association to pro-
mote their product and set industry standards. Last m o nth , K o m bucha Brewers International held its
first conference in Santa Monica, Calif., and Danek of Kom-
bucha Mama serves on the organization's board of directors. If theBend company expands again, its owners want it to be a location large enough to give Kombucha Mama room to grow in the future, Plantenberg said. The company is currently eyeing facilities between 50,000 and 75,000 square feet.
"It will offer us the opportunity to do distribution, if not
anywhere that you can go to a husband, said studying pocabinet or glass (refrigerator) tential health benefits, along and grab a soda, we want to with dearly defining komhave Kombucha Mama right bucha and setting standards next to it." for producing it, will be the Some kombucha proponents focus of Kombucha Brewers say the drink boosts the im- International. "Most people s t il l d o n 't mune system, improves digestion, balances pH, improves know what kombucha is," he sleep and promotes weight said. "They don't understand loss. But E ri c
Once brewed, the tea is Making more kombucha pects the tea will be for sale in pumped into 200-gallon tanks means more people can try it, Boise and Sun Valley, Idaho, filled with symbiotic colonies of Clason said. 'What we basically want to and Jackson Hole, Wyo. bacteria yeast, known as SCOHowever, its loyal con- BY, in the fermentation room. do is give somebody an altersumers may not recognize it. After fermentation, the tea native — to drink kombucha Danek and Plantenberg plan flows into big r efrigerated instead of soda," Clason said. to change the name of their tanks called bright tanks, and "Our competitors ... Dr. Pepproduct, its bottles and labels. on its way it is injected with per, Coke, Pepsi, Monster, Red "We are doing a whole re- juice and other ingredients for Bull. "We want to get our kombrand in the spring. We're not flavor. releasing the (new) name at From there, he said, it gets bucha in airplanes, airports; this time," Plantenberg said. packaged in bottles and kegs "The reason for the rebrand is andplaced in the walk-in cooler we want to capture the essence until it's picked up. XIE of what's behind our company. Clason said moving to the Roxie is dear to our We love the name Kombucha new facility has allowed the hearts. She likes Mama so much, but it doesn't company to automate the prosome dogs,but not capture the essence of the spirit cess, making it less labor incats. She LOVES Wash., and in March she ex-
of why we started it." But the way they brew the
tensive and time consuming to
produce more kombucha. "The other (facility) was tea and the taste will stay the same, with the addition of a very, very hands on," he said. "We hand-bottled, hand-filled, few new flavors. Danek said it takes nine hand-labeled each bottle.... We days to brew and package a hand-capped each bottle. Now b atch of k o mbucha at t h e our bottling machine does all Bend facility. the work." The process begins by brewIn the old shop, Danek said, ing a mixture of green and 60 cases could be packaged a black loose teas in a 310-gallon week. At the Second Street lokettle, said Jeff Clason, one of cation, she said 60 cases can be Kombucha Mama's brewers. packaged an hour.
people, andwould dowell in a family with children 12 and over.She'ssmart, got plenty of A'sin behaviorassessment,andwalks well on a leash.She's about 3, weighs 50 pounds, and is a Rottweiler/Italian Greyhound mix. View photos, video at http://brightsideanimals.org/dogscats-for-adoption/adoptable-dogs/, or meet her in personTues.-Sat., 10-5.
nationwide, at least in the Western half of the country," she
@
Sponsored by
P l antenberg, the benefits or the ramifica-
who serves as the core values tions of drinking beverages ambassador for Kombucha that don't support a healthy Mama, said there's no data to body." backup the claims — yet. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, Eric Plantenberg, Michelle's rrees@bendbulletin.com
Real PEOPLE! Real RESULTS! ge6ruary noel 0
"I lost over 70 pounds!" "The food choices where yummy and the staff is very supportive.I started to see the fat loss andfelt the increased energy, right away! The pmducts helpedme PRPGRAM$ wonderful reachmy goal quickly. I amIn skinny jeans and shoppingIs * f un again. Call now, make the changes and get theresults."
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FREE Consultation
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throughout Oregon and also in Bellingham, Wash. This month, she said, the company plans to add Vancouver,
Bend
A NI M A L CE N T E R
5413826447l2090NEwr ttc
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE. REDMOND, OR (541) 923-0882
t l r i t 101
Bend OR97701 i bendurology.com
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54q 225~9 q 8 -» .
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY
$CHG %CHG %CHG IW K 1W K 1MO
Under Armour Inc Alexion Pharma FacebookInc Wynn Resorts Ltd Chipotle Mex Grill Computer Sci Electronic Arts American Airlines Gp Illumina Inc Caterpillar Inc FlreEye Inc Servicenow Inc Block H&R Raytheon Co Tyson Foods
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1 08.11
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1 58.73
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62.57
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5 51.96
59 . 4 8 12.1
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60.41
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% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
11.3
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26.40
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33.55
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1 52.00
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72.99
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30.40
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3.8
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95.07
6.94
7.9
7.0
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37.40
2.63
7.6
1 1.9
TICKER
FRIDAY C L OS E
117.7 Arrowhead Research ARWR 69.9 Solazyme Inc SZYM 95.5 Echelon Corporation ELON 68.8 Isle Capri Casino ISLE 60.2 Onconova Therapeut ONTX 32.5 Accelrys Inc ACCL 72.6 Clearfield Inc CLFD 0.0 Enanta Pharma ENTA 196.5 Protena Corp PRTA -3.2 Horizon Pharma HZNP 0.0 Millenial Media lnc MM 126.5 Galectin Therap GALT 34.0 Accuray Inc ARAY 73.8 Care.com Inc CRCM 56.3 Dlgimarc Corp DMRC
15. 3 4 12. 9 7 4.06 9.56 15. 1 2 12. 5 8 24. 9 5 36. 5 8 30. 9 4 9.86 7.94 13. 7 1 10. 6 5 2 8 .7 1 36 . 5 8
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Mewmont Mining Mattel Inc Seagale Tech Whirlpool Apple Inc Boeing Co Citrix Systems Symantec Corp Amazon.com Inc Murphy Oil Corp
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
3.62 2.98 0.90 2.09 3.10 2.50 4.88 6.55 4.99 1.53 1.23 2.12 1.63 4.41 5.58
21.6 0
-3.28
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-9.7
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37.8 4
-5.16
-12.0
-19.3
S TX
52.8 6
-5.71
-9.7
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WHR
133 . 30
-12.38
-8.5
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AAPL
50 0 . 60
-45.47
-8/3
-7.5
BA
125.26
-11.39
-8/3
-9.0
C TXS
54. 0 7
-4.83
-8.2
-13.5
S YMC
21. 4 1
-1.89
-8.1
-7.4
AMZN
3 5 8.69
-28.91
-75
-9.5
M UR
56.6 1
-3.89
-6.4
-10.6
-41.3 Kalosios Pharma KBIO 19.8 ITT Educ Svcs ESI 60.2 Educati onManagement EDMC 23.8 hhgregg lnc HGG Izo DFC Global Corp DLLR 7Z2 Overstock .com Inc OSTK - 20.4 Progenics Pharma P G NX a s Star Scientific lnc STS I 4 7.8 Midstates Petroleum M PO 8 .2 Five Prime Therap FPR X
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
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24.3
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372.7 Mexico City Bolsa Sao Paolo Bovespa 0.0 Toronto S&P/TSX 429.4 /AFRICA 352.1 EUROPE
18/a 1 8/a
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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
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Globalmarkets
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
FRIDAY C LOS E
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6 018.65 +160.79 40879.75 -128.55 47638.99 +394.73 13694.94 -40.34
+ 2 .74%4
386.85 2891.25 I OI 2.85 81 91.33 19418.34 45132.11 1304.45
-0 71% -0.23% -0.39% -0.17% +0.04% -0.10% +0.12%
YTD -3.56% 2 57% 3 54% -5 45% -3.03% -8.45%
-0.62%
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
-30.7 Amsterdam 385.7 Brussels Madrid 83.3 Zurich 0.0 Milan 64.1 Johannesburg Stockholm 0.0
LAST FRI. CHG I782.59 -11.60 9306.48 -67.00 6510.44 -28.01 22035.42 -106.19 -I 4.30 41 65.72 14914.53 -9z53
-2.76 -6.72 -3.93 -I 3.63 +6.79 -46.15 +1.62
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ASIA
3.12
-2.20
-41.4
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21.06
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-3.49% Seoul Composite 1941.15 +24.22 +1.26% 4 T Singapore Straits Times 3027.22 -20.71 -0.68% T V V -4.43% 119.3 sydney All Ordinaries 5 1 90.00 +1 . 90 +0.04% V V 3 05% 11.2 Taipei Taiex -1.58% V V 8462.57 -135.74 I 73% -44.9 Shanghai Composite 2030.08 -19.83 -0.97% v Y -4 06% 6z6 Quotable Sz5 "There's stilla large group of investors who still think this market has -65.9
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legs ln it and are using anypullback as a buying opportunity." — Jonathan Corpina, a floor trader on the NYSE with Meridian Equity Partners, commenting as the stock market's momentum shifted downward in January
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
ettin ItIs'der Title: Principaland portfoliomanager, Jensen Investment Management
Rob Mcl
L
What he says The Basymoney in stocks hasbeen made.
Pick a stock, any stock. Last year, that strategy probably would have made money: Of the 500 companies ln the Standard & Poor's 500 index, 457 rose during 2013. That's the highest number in a decade. But Rob Mclver says stock investing won't be so simple going forward. He helps run the Jensen Quality Growth mutual fund, which has Mornlngstar's top gold rating, and the firm's younger Quality Value fund. Jensen focuses onhigh-quality companies, ones thathave been profitablefor at least 15 straight years. Not only that, the companies must have highprofits relative to the money that shareholders have invested in it, which further winnows the number of companies.
Last year was fun for a lot of investors. Everyone's enjoyedsome verystrong years ln the stock market, particularly last year. Butsince the end of the Great Recession, theFederal Reserve has beenturbocharging asset pricesthrough quantitative easing and lowinterest rates. It's apolicy that we've felt was a good one.That being sald, we think the easymoney hasbeen made.Investors should enjoyit. Correlations betweenstocks were very, veryclose, and investors were buying theoverall market, regardless of what webelieve to be proper market fundamentals.
a few continue to rise? Before, you could throw a dart at the board,and whatever you bought, that did quitewell. We think those days are coming to an end. There will be a separation, wherethose with earnings growth andrevenue growth will pull away. We think investors are goingto focus more onbusiness fundamentals, ratherthan the risk-on, risk-off trade that's been the rising tide that's lifted all boats.
panles. Forexample, ln the Quality Growthfund, we own Ecolab (ECL), an industrial cleaning business that has transformed itself over the last coupleof years and ls now the largest vendorof water-cleaning technology. Think about the shale-gas fracking industry: That's a very dirty business.
What areas do you like? Bothfunds have an overweight ln health careand global industrials. We see a lot ofopportunity ln global emerging What areas are you avoiding now? markets andtheir infrastructure buildNeither of our funds has any exposure out. Notwithstandingtheir short-term to telecoms orutilities because they're concerns,they're still growing. It's too highly regulated to make the mini- important not to forgetthat. mum profits that we want. We're very Interviewed by Stan Choe. Answers So instead of all stocks rising low in energy, but we get exposure together, we're now going to see only indirectly through someservices com- edited for content and clarity. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, January 31, 2014
+
I5,698.85
N ASDaa ~ 4,103.88
2 42 g
+
s&p500 1,782.59
R UssELL2000 ~ 1 3 2 5 I,130.88
WILSHIRE 5000 ~ I9,105.24
G6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2014
UNDAY D
R
ect t e wprs en'p t e
e s t Hesitant Fordmight need to befine-tuned
By Warren Brow Special to The Wa
DETROIT- No adventure is successfulwithout a safe re-
By Brad Berghoidt McClatchy-B.ibune News Service
turn home. That is the guiding wisdom of all road trips undertaken by me and my wife, Mary Anne. We will sacrifice economy in pursuit of that goal. Our priorities for long drivesare safety,comfort and enjoyment of motoring.
Q
• If I start to slowly ac• celerate from a stop in my 2013 Ford Taurus
Limited, then let up on the You'll then need to demonaccelerator and then accel- strate this specific acceleraerate again, the car has a tion/temperature/road condimoderately long hesitation tion mix to your Ford dealer before picking up again. tech during a road test, as he This almost caused me to or she is ready to engage the get hit by an oncoming car data-logger function of the when I was making a left VCM-II, Ford's specified scan turn. The Ford dealer has tool. Insist on a road test and had my car on the diag- the chance to directly explain nostic machine twice but all of your observations to the says they can find nothing technician. wrong. Any ideas? If you are unable to du• This is a tough one plicate with the technician, • without being there perhaps the dealer can send to witness the symptom. you home with the customer I'm guessingthere are no flight recorder — it's a valudiagnostic codes set and able partner to the VCM-II. the dealer technician may All you need to do is press not have encountered the the button on the supplied fault while his/her scan tool pendant as the symptom ocwas installed. curs. A s u per-informative Has this happened more movie will be taken of pertithan once? Can you dupli- nent powertrain parameters cate the symptom at will? during one of your real-world If it is repeatable, does the trips. Replay of the movie tachometershow a slug- shows the interaction of pergish or gradual climb, then haps 100 or more powertrain a jump as acceleration re- inputs, outputs and condisumes? This might indicate tions, which should point to a the transmission has up- determination. shifted somewhat early due Sometimes in a case like
To those ends, for our 564mile drive here to the 25th North American International Auto Show from
REVIEW our home in Virginia, we chose the 2014 Land Rover LR4 sport utility vehicle outfitted with the
HSE luxury package.
A
There were two substantial-
ly more fuel-efficient vehicles in our driveway — our own Mini Cooper and a borrowed 2014 Nissan Altima. But we've
Land Rover/The Washington Post
For 2014, Land Rover went for better fuel economy with a new V-6, direct-injection engine.
driven here for previous Detroit shows — moving north-
west through Maryland into Pennsylvania along the always challenging Pennsylvania Turnpike into the flatlands of Ohio and, literally, racing along the southern portion of Michigan's I-75 (an insanely high-speed road even in foul weather) into Detroit. It is not a
trip for wimp-mobiles. For that drive, we always
o verprepare. We pack an emergency kit — blankets, bottled water, dried food rations,
symptoms. You can really make a difference getting this fixed by diligently and patiently trying, over and over, until you connect the dots.
2014landRmerER 4 Base price: $49,700 As tested: $62,895 Type: Front-engine, fourwheel-drive luxury SUV Engine: Direct-injection, 24-vaive, 3-iiter V-6 gasoiine engine with variable valve timIng linked to a six-speed electronically controlled automatic/manuai transmission Mileage: 18 mpgcity/highway average
flashlights, batteries, backup GPS devices and emergency cellphone chargers. We always take a four-wheel-drive vehicle — one that could get us to De- been in a 2013 version of the troit and back to Virginia in a LR4 equipped with a 5-liter snowstorm, and one that could gasoline V-8 (375 horsepower, serve astemporary shelter if 375 pound-feet of torque). That we really ran into trouble. engine delivered 12 miles per The new LR4 served our gallon in the city and 17 on the purposes just fine, although highway, also sucking premithe Virginia-to-Michigan price um fuel all the way. for premium gasoline was a bit For 2014, Land Rover went steep at $112 (figure double, for better fuel economy with a of course, for the round trip). new 3-liter aluminum-alloy V-6 It could've cost more had we with direct fuel injection (340
horsepower, 332 p ound-feet
of torque). The smaller, lighter new engine delivers 19 miles per gallon on the highway and 14 in the city while helping to alleviate the weighty, ponderous on-road handling of the predecessor LR4. But, again, fuel economy
suspension system could be electronically adjusted for best traction in snow and ice. In the
event that we might have had to venture off-road, we could have adjusted the suspension for that trek, too. But we used
none of that stuff. We simply enjoyed the peace of mind of was the least of our concerns. knowing all of those things We've seldom driven to Detroit were there if we needed them. in January without running The LR4's six-cylinder eninto snow and ice. The LR4, gine numerically does not equipped with p ermanent pack as much horsepower four-wheel drive with traction control, easily handled the re-
to the light throttle, then
as the V-8 it replaces. But we didn't notice that deficit in the
mains of a recent snowstorm. high-speed insanity of I-75 Credit the LR4's four-corner into Detroit. The new LR4 reelectronic a i r su s p ension, sponded instantly to the need
which calms the vehicle over for speed, moving quickly out rough roads and helps to keep of the way of fellow motorists it balanced in twists and turns. for whom 80 mph in a 70-mph Land Rover h istorically zone was not fast enough. builds its vehicles for worstW e arrived here safely,encase scenarios. Our LR4, for sconced in a plush passenger example, came with the man- chamber trimmed with leathufacturer's Hill Descent Con- er and walnut. It was a beautrol to ease us down steep in- tiful, fun run. Happiness is clines without burning up the looking forward to the drive brakes. The Terrain Response back home.
Mone Matters
this, the evidence may indi-
is a bit clumsy to respond cate normal operation but to your change in throttle the data recording might be with a power-enhancing handed upstairs and used by downshift as you bear into powertrain engineers to finethe throttle. If the tachom- tune engine or transmission eter gradually rises but calibrations for enhanced perdoesn't abruptly jump, per- formance during an unusuhaps by 200-300 rpm, we're al driving or environmental holding the present gear condition. — perhaps a rather tall one for conditions — or the en-
gine could be the cause of sluggishness. This all comes down to
exploring and practicing various driving situations
— Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthiink.net.
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