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MONDAY hbruary 2, 201 5
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
LANE COUNTY
LA PINE
Measles
POliCe OT —BendPolice works to rein in overtime for its sworn officers.Al
/
case is linked to outbreak
'.( /
, ~
By Andrew Clevenger
Tee time comesearly-
The Bulletin
With unseasonably warm temperatures this winter, Central Oregon golf courses areopen for business.B1
WASHINGTON — The
California measles outbreak centered around '
'
•
Plus: There's a championshipfor that?
"
Disneyland has spread to Oregon, but public health
/
officials remain cautiously
i
optimistic that the one case in Lane County won't lead
/
— U.S TobogganChampionships attracts thousands to Maine town.B7
rl/» '
/Q
to a local outbreak.
~
"In Oregon, we don't see measles basically unless it's imported from anoth-
An interesting income
er place," said Dr. Paul Cieslak, medical director for Oregon's immunization program. Often, the disease can be linkedto indi-
SniirCS —Youcan make $13,000 ayear selling what? A3
ln national news — Storm
t/
blankets Midwest in snow, canceling more than 2,000 flights.A2
viduals who have traveled
to or from Asia and Europe, where the disease is more prevalent. The one case
from thisyearhasbeen linked epidemiologically to
And a Wed exclusive-
the Disneyland outbreak,
After Ferguson, police consider 'tactical retreat' instead of force in certain cases. bentfbulletin.com/extras
he said. See Measles/A5
EDITOR'SCHOICE Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Budget talks point to a debate on defense
Bill Scally sits at the controls in the radio studio in the La Pine Chamber of Commerce on Thursday afternoon. Scally is the station engineer and overall driving force behind a new radio station broadcasting out of La Pine starting Feb. 14.
• It',NCP FM 107.3, anall-volunteer community radio station, is setto becomea reality
CI'ItlCS tul'n
By Beau Eastese The Bulletin
defensive
•
LA PINE — A new voice is set to emerge from southern Deschutes County. KNCP FM 107.3, a low-power and all-volunteer community radio station based out of La Pine, is
The Washington Post
The battle over the bud-
The nonprofit station,
get that President Barack
whose call numbers stand
Obama will submit today is emerging as a preview of
for Newberry Country Pride, will be run out of
the 2016 presidential elec-
the La Pine Chamber of
tion debate on national security, an area that for now
Commerce and expects to have at least seven locally produced shows, says Bill Scally, the station engineer and overall driving force behind the project. Scally, 68, also operates KITC FM 106.5 out of Gilchrist, a sim-
appears to be the greatest
vulnerability Related of Obama • A preview and the of Obama's Democrats. proposal, The presiAS
dent will ask
Congress to break through its own spending caps — commonly referredto as"sequestration" — and allocate about $561 billion for Pentagon expenditures, about $38billion more than is currently allowed under the law.
What:Low-powered, all-volunteer community radio station out of La Pine When:KNCPhits the airwaves Feb. 14, 2 p.m. Web:Sister station KITC FM106.5 out
of Gilchrist has more information on its website at www.kitcfm.com. Listeners will eventually be able to live stream KNCP onits own website. Thinkstock
County town 17 miles south
offices before he and his
of La Pine.
wife bought an RV park in Crescent in 1991. They sold
"This will give a voice to the community," says Scally, the RV park after 11 years a lifelong radio and techbut remained in Central Oregon. "Community radio is nology junkie who worked for McDonald's corporate
events and even a program dedicated to paranormal ac-
KNCP FN107.3
ilar low-powered station in the small northern Klamath
all about the community."
•
By Jack Healy and Michael Paulson New Yorh Times News Service
HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. — Their
scheduled to hit the airwaves Feb. 14.
By Greg Jaffe
Measles vaccine
Scally expects the new
tivities, to name just a few. "We take it as it comes,"
Scally says about local programs. "If someone has the energy and passion for a program, we'll help them
states grapple to contain
started to become a reality in November 2013 during
here at Disneyland, the
the FederalCommunica-
tions Commission's last window to apply for radio stations. Scally was grant-
ed a license in February of last year with an 18-month
old-time radio, La Pine-area
birthday parties and neighborhood play dates. Online, people call them negligent and criminal. And as officials in 14 a spreading measles outbreak that began near
little bit of everything once it is on air. Already he has Oregon's local music scene,
familiesare barred from
make it work." Long talked about, KNCP
La Pine station to offer a shows devoted to Central
children have been sent home from school. Their
deadline to get the new La Pine station up and running. See Voice /A4
parents at the heart of America's anti-vaccine m ovementarebeing blamed for incubating an otherwise preventable public-health crisis. Measles anxiety has rippled thousands of miles beyond its center as offi-
cials scrambled to try to contain its wider spread.
SeeVaccines/A5
There's broad consensus in both parties that the mil-
itary needs more money to modernize itsforcesand meet its responsibilities in a world that seems to
have grown more chaotic and dangerous in the past
Wisconsin's treasurer wants to mt his own job
12 months. It's unclear,
By Julie Bosman
however, how Congress
New York Times News Service
and the White House can
MADISON, Wis. — Last
come to an agreement on
Wednesday, in the grand
where to find the addition-
Beaux-Arts Capitol here,
al funds. Even ifboth parties share the blame, a cashstrapped Pentagon could still provide an opening for Republicans — whose
throngs of lawmakers and tourists milled around upstairs. Matt Adamczyk, the
newly elected state treasurer, however, was in his base-
ment office — alone.
One of the treasurer's few repromise to eliminate the posi- maining responsibilities is to much busier. tion during his one and only help supervise a little-known -. Next on Adamczyk's term in office. agency called the Board of Commissioners of Public < ~ s ' to-d o list: Get rid of his Despite its impressive n=ttt that they were a waste own job. name, the Office of the State Lands. of taxpayer money and In what may be the Treasurer is virtually powerAdamczyk was elected by no longer needed. Adamczyk ultimate expression of less. Most of its duties have a toothpick-thin margin in Laptops and telemany Republicans' de- gradually been transferred November, winning with just phones were scattered sire to whittle down governto other state agencies, like 49 percent of the vote. around a table, remnants ment to the bone,Adamczyk the Department of Revenue. See Treasurer/A4 Just a week earlier, there
were two other employees in the office, but Adamczyk had them fired, explaining
f rom a time when the trea-
ran for treasurer on the
surer's office was
standing on national se-
curity issues was badly damaged by the unpopular Iraq war — to make an
TODAY'S WEATHER
argument that they are the party best positioned to
Cloudy, rainy High 52, Low34 Page B10
keep the country safe.
SeeDefense/A5
b
INDEX Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified C 1 - 6Dear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope
C4 Local/State A 7-8 SportsMonday B1-9 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B1,B8-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9
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Q rt/ttre use recycled newsprint
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26 pages, 3 sections
o
IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
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U.S.ista in a es oo at armin Ukraine's orces By Michael R. Gordon and Eric Schmitt New York Times News Service
W ASHINGTON —
Russian-backed
Wit h
sep a rat-
ists pressing their attacks in Ukraine, N A T O's m i l i tary
aid, as is Gen. Martin Dempsey, ways evaluating other options that will help create space for a negotiated solution to the criIn recent months, Susan sis," said Bernadette Meehan, a Rice, Obama's national security spokeswoman for the National adviser, has resisted proposals Security Council. to provide lethal assistance, sevFueling the broader debate eral officials said. But one offi- over policy is an independent cial said that she was now pre- report to be issued today by paredtoreconsidertheissue. eight former senior U.S. offiFearing that the provision cials, who are to urge the Unitof defensive weapons might ed States to send $3 billion in the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, officials said.
commander, Gen. Philip Breedlove, now supports providing defensive weapons and equipment to Kiev's beleaguered forces, and an array of administration and military officials tempt President Vladimir Putin defensivearms and equipment appear to be edging toward of Russia to raise the stakes, the to Ukraine, including anti-arthat position, U.S. officials said White House has limited U.S. mor missiles, reconnaissance Sunday. aid to "nonlethal" items, indud- drones, armored Humvees and President Barack Obama has ing body armor, night-vision radars that can determine the made no decisions on provid- goggles, first aid kits and engi- location of enemy rocket and ing such lethal assistance. But neering equipment. artillery fire. 'The West needs to bolster after a series of striking reverBut the failure of economic sals that Ukraine's forces have sanctions to dissuade Russia deterrence in Ukraine by raissuffered in recent weeks, the from sending heavy weapons ing the risks and costs to Russia Obama administration is takand military personnel to east- of any renewed major offening a fresh look at the question ern Ukraine is pushing the is- sive," according to the report. of militaryassistance. sue of defensive weapons back "That requires providing direct Secretary of State John Ker- into discussion. military assistance — in far "Although our focus remains largeramounts than provided ry, who plans to visit Kiev on Thursday, is open to new dis- on pursuing a solution through to date and induding lethal decussions about providing lethal diplomatic means, we are al- fensive arms."
e sil.AvL
Dtschuiese
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Nam Y.Huh/The Associated Press
Airplanes are lined up in the snow at D'Hare International Airport in Chicago on Sunday. A slow-moving winter storm blanketed a large swath of the Plains and Midwest in snow Sunday, forcing the cancellation of more than 2,000 flights, making roads treacherous and forcing some people to rethink their plans to attend Super Bowl parties. Blizzard conditions developed in Chicago-
By Martin Fackler
ders in a kosher supermarket.
New York Times News Service
"This is 9/ll for Japan," said Kunihiko Miyake, a f ormer
TOKYO — When Islamic
State militants posted a video Sunday showing the grisly killing of a Japanese journalist, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe reacted with outrage, promising "to make the terrorists pay the price." Such vows of
r e tribution
may be common in the West when leaders face extremist violence, but they h ave
been unheard of in confron-
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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster: Send address changesto TheBulletin circulation department,PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
Central AmeriCan immigrantS — Thousands of immigrants seeking legalization through the U.S.court system have hadtheir hearings canceled andare being told by the government that it may be 2019 or later before their futures are resolved. Some immigration lawyers fear the delaywill leave their clients at risk of deportation as evidence becomesdated, witnesses disappear, sponsoring relatives die and dependent children becomeadults. The increase in cancellations began late last summerafter the Justice Department prioritized the tens of thousands of Central American migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border, most of them mothers with children andunaccompanied minors. Immigration lawyers in cities that absorbed a large share of those cases, including NewYork, San Antonio, Los Angeles and Denver,saythey've had hearings canceled with little notice and received nonewcourt dates. Work permits, green cards, asylum claims and family reunifications hang in the balance. BuS eXplOSiOn —An explosion Sunday ripped apart a bus carrying Lebanese pilgrims to Shiite shrines in Damascus, Syria, killing at least six people andwounding 27, official news channels reported. The attack stood out because it struck a specific vehicle in a tightly secured area just outside the Syrian capital's Old City, andspeculation quickly rose that Hezbollah fighters could havebeentargeted, or that the attack was abaldly sectarian provocation. The Nusra Front, an insurgent group linked to al-Qaida, claimed responsibility for what it called a suicide attack. But according to Syrian state television, two bombs were planted on thewaiting bus as passengers visited a shrine in the OldCity. One bombfailed to detonate and wasdefused, according to the state newsmedia. Ebnla drug trial —A clinical trial in Liberia of a drug to treat Ebola has been halted because of asharp decline in the number of people infected with the virus, and studies in WestAfrica of other potential treatments are also facing problems finding patients. The halted trial was testing the antiviral drug brincidofovir at a clinic in Monrovia, Liberia. The developer of the drug, Chimerix, announced late Friday that it would no longer participate in the study. "Without having enough patients there to makeany conclusions, it wasn't feasible for us to push forward," Dr. M. Michelle Berrey, chief executive of Chimerix, said in an interview Sunday.Shesaid the company hadshipped enough of the drug to Liberia for140 patients, but that fewer than10 had been treated since the trial started Jan. 2.
FranCe OfferS SuppOrt tn GreeCe —Frenchofficials said Sunday they would support the newGreekgovernment's efforts to get the country back on its feet after five years of crushing austerity, but warned that there would be nowrite-down of Greece's debt and pressed Athens to continue with reforms that are still needed to help mend the country's economy. "France is morethan prepared to support Greece," Michel Sapin, the French finance minister, said during a news conferenceafter a two-day visit by YanisVaroufakis, his new Greek counterpart. "Greeceneedstime to put things to work," he said. But headded, there was "no question" of forgiving Greek debt.
crucial moment in Japan's modern history. Since taking office two years ago, Abe, a high-ranking Japanese diplo- strong-willed c o nservative, mat who has advised Abe on foreign affairs. "It is time for
has tried to push his nation into
that its goodwill and noble in-
embraced after defeat in World
shedding the passive brand Japan to stop daydreaming of pacifism that it repentantly tentions would be enough to War II, and playing a more acshield it from the dangerous tive in world events. Analysts world out there. Americans and former diplomats say the have faced this harsh reality, stark savagery of the killings the French have faced it, and will be an important test of now we are, too." how ready Japan really is to The crisis also comes at a step onto the global stage.
for revenge after the killings of the journalist, Kenji Goto, Yukawa, raised eyebrows even
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Gov.MikeHuckabeeonSundaysaidbeinggayisakintochoosing to drink alcohol or use profanity — lifestyle choices hesays are appealing to others but not to him. Theformer Baptist pastor, who is weighing a second run for the 2016Republican presidential nomination, also claimed that forcing people of faith to accept gay marriage as policy is on parwith telling Jews that they must serve "bacon-wrapped shrimp in their deli." That dish would run afoul of kosher rules in the sameway Huckabee seesasking Christians to accept same-sex marriages. "We're so sensitive to makesure wedon't offend certain religions, but then weact like Christians can't have the convictions that they havehadfor over 2,000 years," Huckabee said.
I •
tation-adverse Japan — until now. The prime minister's call
Home deliveryandE-Editien:
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HuCkabee'S CantrOVerSial CammentS — FormerArkansas
Japanesepremiervowsrevengefor killings
and another hostage, Haruna
By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only:Onemonth: $13
— The Associated Press
English was released from anEgyptian prison anddeported Sunday after more than ayear behind bars, but his two Egyptian colleagues remained jailed in acase widely condemned as asham by human-rights groups. Australian Peter Grestewas whisked away ona flight to Cyprus. His releasecame asa welcome surprise to fellow reporters and activists who spent months pressing for his freedom. But rights groups andGreste's Qatar-based broadcaster called on Egypt to release the other two defendants in the case,which has hindered the country's international standing as it struggles to recover from the political unrest and economic collapse caused bythe2011 uprising.Greste,Egyptian-CanadianMohammed Fahmy andEgyptianBaher Mohammedwerearrested in December 2013 over their coverage of the violent crackdown on Islamist protests following the military overthrow of President MohammedMorsi.
— From wire reports
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where more than a foot had fallen by evening — and other Midwest locales as the system slowly crept eastward into Pennsylvania and western NewYork state. Parts of NewEngland still digging out from a storm early last week were readying for yet another round of snow to arrive Sundayand last through today.
Al-JaZeera repOrter releaSed —Areporter for Al-Jazeera
&eW
' g-' — r-r-)
in the military establishment,
adding to a growing awareness here that the crisis could be a watershed for this long pacifist country. "Japan has not seen this Western-style expression in
its diplomacy before," Akihisa Nagashima, a former vice ministerof defense, wrote on 7pvitter. "Does he intend to give
Japan the capability to back up his words?"
As the 12-day hostage crisis came to a grim conclusion with
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the killing of Goto, the world
has suddenly begun to look like a much more dangerous placeto a peacefuland prosperous nation that had long seen itself as immune to the sorts ofviolence faced by the United States and its Western
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, Feb. 2, the 33rd
day of 2015. Thereare332 days left in the year.This is Groundhog Day.
RESEARCH
ven wi c icens, e means ess
HAPPENINGS Odama'S dudget —President Barack Obama isproposing a10-year budget that focuses on policies to address income inequality.A1, A5
Navy YardshootingNavy Yard workers in Washington, D.C., begin returning to thesceneofadeadlyrampage, Building 197,where12 colleagues wereshot to death17 months ago.
HISTORY Highlight:In1925, the legendary Alaska SerumRunended as the last of a series of dog mushers brought a life-saving treatment to Nome,the scene of a diphtheria epidemic, six days after the drug left Nenana. In1653, New Amsterdamnow NewYork City — was incorporated. In1848, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the Mexican-American War,was signed. In1887, Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, held its first Groundhog Day festival. In1914, Charles Chaplin made hismoviedebutasthecomedy short"Making a Living" was released byKeystone Film Co. The musica l"Shameen Dhu," featuring the song "TooRa Loo Ra LooRal," openedon Broadway. In1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the Battle of Stalingrad surrendered in amajor victory for the Soviets in World War II. In1964, Ranger 6, a lunar probe launched byNASA, crashed onto the surface of the moon as plannedbut failed to send back any TVimages. In1971, Idi Amin, having seized power in Uganda, proclaimed himself president. In1980, NBCNews reported the FBI hadconducted asting operation targeting members of Congress using phonyArab businessmeninwhatbecame known as "Abscam," a codename protested by Arab-Americans. In1990, in a dramatic concession to South Africa's black majority, President F W.de Klerk lifted a ban onthe African National Congress andpromised to free Nelson Mandela. Ten years ago:In his State of the Union address, President George W.Bushcalled for changes in Social Security that would combine reducedgovernment benefits for younger workers with "a chanceto build a nest egg" through personal accounts. German heavyweight boxer Max Schmeling died at age99. Five years ago:President Barack Obama,speakingin Nashua, NewHampshire, branded Republicans as electoral opportunists more concerned about their own interests than the people's. One year ago:Academy Award-winning actor Philip SeymourHoffman,46,was found dead in his NewYork apartment from a combination of heroin, cocaine andother drugs. The Seattle Seahawks won their first Super Bowl title, crushing the favored Denver Broncos 43-8.
an
Gossip columnist Liz Smith is 92. Former FrenchPresident Valery Giscard d'Estaing is 89. Comedian TomSmothers is 78. Rock singer-guitarist Graham Nash is 73.Television executive Barry Diller is 73. Actor Bo Hopkins is 71.Country singer Howard Bellamy (TheBellamy Brothers) is 69. TVchef Ina Garten is 67.Rockmusician Ross Valory (Journeyj is 66. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, is 63. The president of South Korea, ParkGeun-hye, is 63. Model Christie Brinkley is 61. Actor Michael Talbott is 60. Ac-
tor-comedian AdamFerrara is 49. Singer Shakira is 38.Actor Rich Sommer (TV: "MadMen") is 37. Country singer Blaine Larsen is 29. Actress Zosia Mamet (TV: "Girls") is 27. — From wire reports
means more wi num ers
Findings from a new study using newborn chicks and mealworms support the idea that a "mental number line" that equates smaller numbers with the left side might be inherent rather than influenced by culture. By Erica Goode
than precise numbers. Human studies indicate that
New York Times News Service
Asked to picture the num-
as researchershave termed it,
when presented with a task involving numbers — categorizing them as even or odd, for example — people automatically create a mental scale, using one number as an anchor and locating smaller numbers to
is so pervasive that some scien-
the left and larger ones to the
tists have argued that the spatial representation of numbers
right. The findings of the new research suggest that some
is hard-wired into the brain,
version of this may be true for
part of a primitive number system that underlies humans' capacity for higher mathematics. Now a team of Italian researchers has found that newborn chicks, like humans, appear to map numbers spatially, associating smaller amounts
chickens. The scientists trained 64
bers from one to 10, most peo-
ple will imagine a straight line with one at the left end and 10 at the right. This "mental number line,"
chicks to find a mealworm be-
hind a plastic panel with five red squares on it (16 chicks were disqualified after showing "poor mealworm-following be-
with the left side and larger
havior," the researchers wrote). The chicks were then pre-
amounts with the right side.
sented with panels, one to
The chicks, trained to seek out mealworms behind white
the left, one to the right, each
plastic panels printed with varying numbers of identiRosa RuganiI Universityof Padova via The New York Times cal red squares, repeatedly A chick reportedly the sameageand strain as birds tested in a study by a team of Italian researchers. demonstrateda preference for The study found that newborn chicks, like humans, appear to map numbers spatially, associating the left when the number of
smaller amounts with the left side and larger amounts with the right side.
squares was small and for the right when the number was larger. The research, led by Rosa Rugani, a psychologist
nitive strategy available soon afterbirth."
Tyler Marghetis, a doctorversity of Padova, appeared in al candidate in psychology at Friday's edition of the journal the University of California, Science. San Diego, who has published In their report, the research- research on the spatial assoers said the findings supported ciation of numbers, called the the idea that the left-right ori- researchers'series of studies entation for numbers is innate "very cool." "We have brains that evolved rather than determined by culture or education — a pos- for fighting and finding food, sibility that was raised by some not for doing calculus," Marghestudies that found that in Ara- tissaid."So oneofthe hopes of bic speaking countries, where this kind of research is that it letters and numbers are read will tell us something about the right to left, the mental num- basic building blocks we have ber scale was reversed. But access to in building up these the new research, Rugani and morehuman concepts." her colleagues wrote, indicates But Marghetis said that the that orienting numbers in space studies only demonstrated that may represent "a universal cog- the chicks associated rough who was at the time at the Uni-
of the hopes of this kind of research ts that it
will tell us something about the basic building blocks we have access to in building up these more human concepts." — Tyler Marghetis, a doctoral candidate in psychology whohas published research onthe spatial association of numbers
they represented precise num-
bers in a mental line. And he cautioned against leaping from the study's findings to the idea
that chicks are capable of the same complex numerical abilities as humans.
Judging amounts, either of
training number. When that
new number was less than five, the chicks more often chose to look for food behind the
"We have brains that evolved for fighting and finding food, not for doing calculus.So one
quantities that were smaller or larger with left or right, not that
marked with an equal number of squares, different from the
left-hand panel, presumably because they automatically associated the left hand side with a smaller number. When the
number of squares on the new panels was larger than five, the chicks more often headed toward the panel on the right. The chicks preference for the left hand panel with smaller numbers held true even when the anchor number was
changed to 20. Like humans, they seemed to adjust their
how much food is available or choices to the relative maghowmanypredators are nearby, nitude of the numbers they is an important tool for survival. encountered. "We cannot think of any othAnd many nonhuman species — including chickens, pigeons, er, and simpler, explanation for monkeys and even some spe- the behavior of the chicks than cies of fish — have some ability assuming the training number to count, though this may be a is 1. Remembered and 2. Comcapacity to distinguish rough pared with the number seen at numerical magnitude rather test," Rugani said in an email.
Visit Central Oregon's
You canearn $13,000 ayear selling your feces ByRachel Feltman The Washington Post
You can donate blood, plasma, eggs and sperm. Why not poop? Yes, your feces are perhaps your greatest untapped monetary resource. Thanks to a nonprofit organization called OpenBiome,you can cash in to the tune of $13,000 a yearand save lives while you're at it.
Since 2013, OpenBiome has been processing and shipping loads of it all over the country.
The frozen stool is administered to patients who are very sick with infections of a bacte-
ria called C. difficile. The bacteria can cause extreme gastrointestinal distress, leaving some
sufferers housebound. Antibiotics often help, but sometimes the bacteria rears back as soon
as treatment stops. That leads to a
BIRTHDAYS
II
m i s erable, continuous
course of antibiotics. By introducing healthy fecal matter into the gut of a patient
(by way of endoscopy, nasal tubes or swallowed capsules) doctors can abolish C. difficile
for good. Finding a donor is tough business, and some patients grow so desperate that theytreat themselves with fecal matter from friends and family. That's what happened to a
easy as your standard bowel just helped this lady who's been movement, but the selection sick for nine years go to her process makes giving blood daughter's graduation.'" look like a walk in the park. Who are these valiant do"It's harder to become a do- nors, these chosen fevP. Since nor than it is to get into M1T," theyhave to come into the Medjoked co-founder Mark Smith ford, Massachusetts, office, lots (who would know, as he got his of them are Tufts University Ph.D. in microbiology there). Of students. the 1,000 or so potential donors For now, fecal matter transwho've expressed interest on plants really only have one use: his Web site over the past two treating recurring C. difficile. years, onlyabout4percenthave But OpenBiome is providing its passed the extensive medical samples to a number of trials questioningand stooltesting. exploring other uses. The screening process can Scientists know that the gut cost up to $5,000 — so when microbiomes of people with someone makes it through, obesity, inflammatory bowel Smith and his co-founders hold diseaseand even autism are ontight. different from those without. "We get most of our donors But just because there are gut to come in three or four times flora associated with these a week, which is pretty awe- conditions doesn't mean that some," Smith said. "You're getting rid of them can get rid usually helping three or four of their symptoms, and it cerpatients out with each sample, tainly isn't a given that fecal and we keep track of that and transplants will be the miracle let you know." solution they are for C. difficile. "There's a lot of promise in Fellow co-founder Carolyn Edelstein agrees that the do- other conditions," Smith said, nors are usually in it for more "But also a lot of hype. Treating than the money. C. difficile is a bit less sexy, but "Everyone thinks it's great that's the one area where we that they're making money do- know this works." However, ing such an easy thing," Edel- he's excited to see where the stein said, "But they also love "crazy frontier" of microbiome to hear us say, 'Look, your poop engineering will take us.
And in the meantime, Smith
is always happy to find more potential donors. "I never thought that after
getting my Ph.D. I'd start mailing poop around," he said, "But
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
"If anyone wants to be on the radio and be a
IN FOCUS: REGULATING INTERNET CONTENT
uestionsover Europe's'right to be forgotten'
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— Bill Scally, KNCP FM107.3 station engineer
By Mark Scott New York Times News Service
Voice
Dan Shefet doesn't want you
to Google his name. A Danish lawyer who has lived in Paris for 30 years, Shefet hasbeen accused online of professional malpractice, fraud and even having connections to the Serbian mafiaaccusations he strongly denies.
Continued fromA1 Unlike some startup sta-
tions, KNCP already had a ready-made studio, as multiple programs that run on KITC in Gilchrist — the
call numbers stand for In
"It's been nightmarish. It's
eI
the Community — are pro-
II I' •
affected my entire family," Shefet, 60, said at his somewhat cluttered office in central
Paris. "As a lawyer, I live and die by my reputation."
j 'P~l-
So in 2013, Shefet asked
Google to take down links to the defamatory material. The search engine complied, but only on its French site, meaning anyone outside France
In addition to the already established local shows currently running on KITC in Gilchrist, KNCP will also fill air time with syndicated
programs from around the country. "Calling all Cowboys," a weekly two-hour "music, poetry and old-time radio (show) with decidedly
duced in La Pine. Local shows such as the Central Oregon music program "The Dirt Road Tom H odgepodge Hour" a n d
Western bent" program out of Bend's KPOV FM 88.9
"The Classical Crossover
station will be on the air 24
station is expected to air on KNCP, as are several nation-
ally syndicated shows. The
Show with Becky Kiesel" hours a day, 365 days a year. "It's just a neat commushould be able to hit the ground running as they are nity project," says Patrice already familiar to listen- Mousseau, who organized ers in La Pine. New shows are also expected — a pro-
the new station's Kickstart-
could still see the items in
question.
gram dedicated to heavy
start in radio at KITC under
metal music is on the way,
Scally and now co-hosts the syndicated show "Para-
Then last year, after Eu-
rope's highest court ruled that anyone with connections to Europe could ask that links
about themselves be removed from search results,Shefet took a different approach. He sued Google's French unit — citing the so-called right-to-be-forgotten decision
Guia Besana/The New YorkTimes
Dan Shefet, who has pushed Google to remove links to material about him, stands in his office in Paris last week. Europe's right-to-be-forgotten rules are being tested by globe-spanning websites that
aim to apply looser standards on content intended for other regions. from its search results in Eu-
over the past eight months, ac-
its search results outside the
cording to the company's latest transparency report. — and asked a Paris court to specifically demand that the The advisory group includes forcethe company to remove company's non-European do- Jimmy Wales, the founder of the links not just in France but mains must comply with the Wikipedia, who has been a voin all of the company's global judgment. Although Google is cal opponent of the European search engine domains. being fined, no payments have privacy decision, as well as a And he won — perhaps set- been made. number of leading data protecting a precedent that the EuroStill, Shefet's case has raised tion academics. pean ruling should apply far a central question about EuBut after holding a number more broadly than originally rope's data protections rules: of public meetings across Euunderstood. How far can the Continent im- rope, the committee remains In the judgment for Shefet, pose its own strict privacy laws divided over whether Google the French judge relied on a on sites that operate outside Eu- should impose the right-to-bespecific point of the recent pri- rope, includingthose of Google, forgotten decision on all of its vacy ruling that said a compa- Microsoft and Facebook? globalsearch results, accordny's local subsidiary could be The ability for Europe to en- ing to several people with diheld liable for the activities of forcethe region'sprivacy rules rect knowledge of the matter itsparent.The judge ordered beyond its borders will be a who spoke on condition of anoGoogle'sFrench subsidiary major part of a report soon to nymity because the report had to pay daily fines of roughly be published by a committee yet to be completed. $1,100 until links to the defam- set up by Google. The report, Despite the differing views, atory content were removed expected to be released by however, the majority of the mid-February, will counsel the group isexpected to recomfromallsearches worldwide. "Google put up a hell of a company on how to handle mend that Europe's standard fight. But they lost," Shefet said. Europe's right-to-be-forgotten should only apply within the "Now if Google doesn't comply, standard. The company has 28-country bloc, according to they will be fined." complied with roughly 40 per- one of the people. That would Google says it has already cent of the 760,000 link-remov- support Google's efforts to limremoved the defamatory links al requests that it has received it the privacy decision so that
European Union would remain
Treasurer Continued fromA1 He was sworn i n J an. 5 and has wasted little time in
beginning to fulfill his campaign promises to cut what he
rope, and it argues that the Paris court's decision does not
unaffected. "It's our strong view that
there needs to be some way of limiting the concept because it is a E uropean concept," Google's top lawyer, David Drummond, told an audience
in Brussels in January, referring to the right-to-be-forgotten ruling. "We've had a basic approach. We've followed it; on this question we've made removals Europewide, but not
beyond." As people such as Shefet increasingly take Google and others to court to force them
to remove links from global search results, the battle over
whether people have the right to be forgotten online is set to intensify. "The European court's judgment will have profound con-
Scally says — including home and away coverage of La Pine High School's athletic teams. Low-powered
er effort. Mousseau got her
normal H o rizons," w hich
examines everything from haunted houses to UFO s tations lik e K I T C d o n 't sightings, out of Portland. have much range, especial- "A community radio station, ly when the listener is on it offers educational opporanything other than a car tunities for people like myradio, which is more pow- self who always wanted to erful than stand-alone ra- be on the radio." dios, Scally explains. Most KNCP, which l i s teners homes in La Pine aren't able will also be able to live to dial in KITC. Between a modest Kickstarter campaign, a charter
member pledge drive and a little help from the city,
stream from th e I nternet, promises to be an eclectic
mix of interests, a proud staple of many community radio stations.
"If anyone wants to be ly $8,000 in 45 days this past on the radio and be a DJ, winter. Scally put the finish- I'll teach them," says Scaling touches on the station ly, who co-hosts his own last week when he scaled program, "The Bill and Gil KNCP raised approximate-
La Pine's Finley Butte and planted KNCP's antennae.
Show," a G i l christ-centric talk show. "I don't care what kind of show they want to
"We're 99.9 p ercent ready," he said last Thurs- do, as long as they follow day from his La Pine studio. FCC regulations." "Everything but the pro— Reporter: 541-617-7829, gramming is done." beastes@bendbulletin.com.
Get ATaste For Food, Home 8 Garden
sequences," said Shefet, who
now advises others on how to demand that links to content be removed worldwide. "The
-••
floodgates have opened."
'
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T he
e t III
"I'm a big believer in efficiency. I've always just thought that this office doesn't really have any duties left."
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— Matt Adamczyk, Wisconsin's newly elected state treasurer, on his own job
sees as waste.
"I'm a big believer in efficiency," said Adamczyk, 36, round-faced and garrulous. "I've always just thought that this office doesn't really have
of 'global climate change.'" heads the agency that he In an interview, Adamczyk helps supervise, the Board criticized Nelson, who has of Commissioners of Public spent much o f h e r c a r eer any duties left." Lands. Nelson is the daugh- working o n e n v i ronmental Getting rid of his own job ter of Gaylord Nelson, a for- policy issues, for testifying would require a constitution- mer governor and U.S. sen- beforea congressional comal amendment, a m e asure ator best known for creating mittee on global warming in that technically could not Earth Day. 2009. happen until 2017, assuming The smallagency managJack Voight, a Republithe Legislature approved it, es some public lands, mostly can and the state treasurer Adamczyk said. in northern Wisconsin, over- from 1995 to 2 007, called But in his first few weeks sees a trust that makes loans Adamczyk's efforts against in office, he has searched for to towns and provides money Nelson "a politically motivatwhat he calls egregious gov- to school libraries. ed witch hunt." "She did a great job when ernment waste and tried to Adamczyk is one of three stamp it out. elected officials who sits on I was there, and I think she Eliminating his employees' the board. The others are has continued to do a great jobs has saved hundreds of Secretary of State Doug La job," Voight said. "She has thousands of dollars, he said. Follette, a Democrat, and At- never exhibited any political Then there is the smaller torney General Brad Schimel, leanings whatsoever in that stuff: an unused printer sits a Republican. office." ready to be returned. Laptop According to public reWhen asked tocomment, cases, which belong to no cords, Adamczyk has repeat- Nelson pointed to the agenone, were stacked on a wood- edly asked how the agency cy's track record. "The history of Wisconen table. He spent one day spends money. Additionally, recently on the phone with The Milwaukee Journal Sen- sin's Board of Commissioners Verizon trying to determine tinel reported that he tried to of Public Lands is a rare and why his office had more ac- force Tia Nelson to remove enviable story of government tive cellphone contracts than her name from the agency's success, unique in this counit did employees. letterhead but was overruled try. Ours is the oldest state During a tour of his office, by theother board members. agency and one of the smallAdamczyk pointedout examEven the agency's news- est, yet, with bipartisan supples of how his predecessors, paper subscriptions have port, a staff of 10 and not a in his opinion, frittered away n ot gone u n noticed b y penny of taxpayer money, we taxpayers' dollars. Adamczyk. The public lands serve the people of Wisconsin Opening a large cardboard officesubscribes to several at an operational efficienbox, he pulled out tiny blue newspapers, including The cy unmatched in the private plastic piggy banks with the Wisconsin State Journal, The sector." d epartment's n am e p r i n t - Milwaukee J ournal S e ntiRaised in the Milwaukee ed on the side. "Do we need nel, The Wall Street Journal a rea, Adamczyk said h e these?" he asked. "No, we and The New York T i mes. was politically active from a don't." Adamczyk told Nelson that young age, relishing his first Adamczyk held up a new she should discontinue her participation in a presidential iPhone, still sealed in plastic. subscription to The Times. election when he cast a vote "This was a 'floater' phone," "I am beyond disappointed for Bob Dole in 1996. he said. "No one ever used in this expense," he wrote in After graduating from the it. It cost $58 a month. You an email to Nelson, adding, University of W i sconsin in "this is simply a want and 2000, he worked in the Capalmost can't make this stuff up. NOT A NEED." itol for two members of the There is plenty of bipartiHe also objected to a brief state Assembly. san support for abolishing the mention of global warming The offic e ofstatetreasurer treasurer' soffice.Butsome of on the agency's website. In an caught his eye years ago, he A damczyk's recent efforts to email dated Dec. 23, he wrote said, because it was so notoriroot out waste have caused to Nelson, "On the BCPL web- ous among lawmakers for its many people, including some site, there is a sentence that lack of power. fellow Republicans, to ques- states: 'Global climate change Although he has not yet tion whether his motives go is no longer debatable as a figured out a way to do so, beyond penny pinching. threat to ecosystems.' Why is Adamczyk has vowed to reAdamczyk has garnered the BCPL concerned with dis- turn 25percent ofhis$69,936 attention by targeting Tia cussing the hot button issue salary to the state. Nelson, a state official who
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Measles Continued fromA1 Health officials have been monitoring the Lane County patient, who is an adult male
of a lack of susceptible hosts. However, over the past 15
claiming either religious or than tripled. philosophical ex e mptions This mirrors the national from state vaccination require- trend: from 2001 to 2010, the ments has been creeping up. nationwide total topped 100 just In Oregon, 90.9 percent of twice. In 2011, there were more children between 19 months than 200 cases and almost 200 and 35 months have been cases in 2013, followed by 644 vaccinated against m e a- in 2014. Including the Disneysles, mumps and rubella, land outbreak, there have alaccording to the Centers for readybeen 84 cases in 14 states Disease Control. This falls in the first month of 2015. "We have the potential to well below the target of 94 eradicate this disease compercent, which is the point at which herd immunity will pletely, but we're not going to begin to fully protect against achieve that unless we can transmission of the disease, convince a higher percentage Cieslak said. to get vaccinated," Cieslak said. "Until now, I would have Some peoplecan't get vacsaid, (the measles vaccination cinated, induding those with rate) is not where we would compromised immune systems, like it to be, but it appears and the first dose is not usually to be good enough," he said. administered until a child is at "We're kind of on the cusp." least 12 months old, meaning From 2000 to 2012, there infants are at risk as well. "It's really an act of generwere 17 measles cases in Oregon, for an average of 1.3 a osity to be vaccinated so that year. In 2013, there were six, you're not transmitting to any five in 2014, and already one of those people," Cieslak said. case this year, so the average — Reporter: 202-662-7456,
years, the number of parents
number of cases has more
aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
we're practicing in the 1950s," said Dr. Eric Ball, a pediatriContinued fromA1 cian in southern Orange CounAmerica declared the ty,where some schools report highly contagious disease that 50 to 60 percent of their vanquished 15 years ago, kindergartners are not fully before a statistically sig- vaccinated and that 20 to 40 nificant number of parents percent of parents have sought
out far from Disneyland. In
of the National Vaccine Information Center, a dearinghouse
West coastvaccinations Oregon ranks 30th in the nation for children with all seven doctor-recommendedvaccines, with 68.4 percent of children ages 19 months through 35 months having received all the
who visited Disneyland, since early January, Cieslak said.
vaccines. Formeasles,90.9percentofyoungOregonianshave
Measles have a two-week in-
needed to prevent the spread of the disease.
cubation period, and cautious officials like to wait until four weeks have passed before they can say with confidence that an i n dividual has n ot transmitted the disease to any-
one else. In California, health officials have linked 52 in-state
been vaccinated, which is the 22nd highest rate in the country, but this is still below the 94 percent rate that doctors say is
PERCENTAGE OFCHILDREN WHO HAVE RECEIVED Mea sles, mumps ~ All seven major vaccinations ~ and rubella California Oregon
65.3% 99 8% 68.4%
99 9%
casesofmeaslesto the Disne61.7% Washington 88% yland outbreak, as well as 14 total cases in Mexico (1), Utah Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention via Bloomberg (3), Washington state (2), Colorado (1), Oregon (1), Nebraska Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin (1) and Arizona (5). Two of those cases, one each in Utah and Washington, ted by someone who had vis- Disneyland, but that the viare secondary cases, mean- ited the Southern California rus seems to be spreading," ing they were not contracted amusement park. Cieslak said. "I'm nervous "The problem is not so much we're seeing a lot a chains of through direct exposure at Disneyland but later transmit-
Defense Continued fromA1 "A lot of Republicans see opportunity in an election that's a referendum on Obama's
foreign policy," said Danielle Pletka, vice president for foreign and defense policy studies at the conservative American Enterprise Institute. A presidential election featuring
Hillary Rodham Clinton, who served as Obama's secretary of state, would raise the pro-
file of international issues. Democrats, though, are determined t o
p r event
the reemergence of t heir long-standing, politically unhelpful reputation as being weak on defense. The impasse over the defense budget has left the Pen-
tagon's top generals complaining that the spending caps, which have been in place since 2013, are damaging the military at a time when the country can least afford it. The list
of new threats includes Islamic State fighters, who last year
seized major cities in Iraq and Syria, a Russian-backed insurrection in eastern Ukraine
and the collapse of the government in Yemen.
"The global security environment is more dangerous, and sequestration is still on the books as the law," Gen.
Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said last week. "It's absolutely cra-
zy for this country." Obama has i n re c ent months been able to cite a re-
surgent economy, strong job growth and a low unemployment rate as proof that his
economic policies are delivering for the nation. "Because of the policies that this adminis-
tration put in place, our economy has bounced back stronger than ever," White House
press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters Friday. The public perception of the president's handling of national s e curity
m a t t ers,
amid the growing unrest in the Middle East and Ukraine,
has not been nearly as strong. "We've had an interesting and, I would acknowledge, up-and-down year with respect to the perception of our foreign policy," said a senior
that there was an incident in
Odama'splanon deficit detailed WASHINGTON — President Barack Obamawill propose a10-year budget Monday that stabilizes the federal deficit but does not seek balance, instead focusing on policies to address income inequality as he adds nearly $6 trillion to the debt. The budget —$4trillion in fiscal 2016 —would hit corporations that park profits overseas, raise taxes on the richest of the rich and increase the incomes of the middle class through new spending and tax credits. Obamawill challenge the newlyelected Republican Congress to answer his emphasis onwage stagnation, according to congressional aides briefed on the details. The central question Obama's budget will pose to Congress is this: Should Washington worry about what may bethe defining economic issue of the era — the widening gap between the rich andeveryone else — or should policymakers primarily seek to address a mountain of debt that the White Househopes to control but only marginally reduce as ashare of the economy? The president's budget will be just the starting point for that discussion with Congress, representing his aspirations, not the final word. Criticism of Obama's intentions arrived even before the budget was presented. "We're six years into the Obama economic policies, and he's proposing more of the same, moretax increases that kill investmentand jobs, and policies which are hardly aspirational," Rep. PaulRyanof Wisconsin, chairman of the House Waysand Means Committee, said in an interview this weekend. — The NewYork Times News Service
budget announcement.
Inrecentyears,Republicans and Democrats have been able and International Studies. to blunt the worst effects of Republicans, long divided the budget caps by cobbling between deficit and defense together short-term deals that hawks, have not made addimodestly increased defense tional spending on defense a and domestic spending by top priority in recent years. finding offsets — essentially, But as the economy improves cuts toother programs or fee and the presidential election increases. But each year that nears, they appear to be cothe budget caps are in place, alescingaround the need for it gets harder to find new sav- more Pentagon spending "for ings to meet the Pentagon's no reason other than expedineeds, lawmakers and White ency," Hicks said. "They'll have to move to the House officials said. Republicans have shown center" on defense spending,
ment officials familiar w ith the plans said on Sunday that the Obama administration is
on the issue. The president did not mention the need for
more military spending in his
proposing pay increases of 1.3 State of the Union address or percent for both the military his late-May major foreign and federal workforce. policy speech at the U.S. Mili"It looks like the administra- tary Academy — an omission tion is trying, but I don't think that some hawkish Democrats the fundamentals are there for found "worrisome," Hicks a compromise," said Kathleen sald.
pro-
tecting individuals who have been immunized, vaccines create herd immunity, where
diseases don't spread because
Kearny, Arizona, a small rural community with an economy tied to a nearby copper mine, a single family's Christmas vacation has upended the rhythms of daily life. The family visited Disneyland in December, and four of its unvaccinated mem-
at the same time to be alert to
symptoms.
supports inoculations.
post office and more — have measles alerts in the windows
featuring a blond boy with a more than in any other year in rash allover his face. Several more than a decade. Since Jan. signs say that someone with 1, the CDC has confirmed 84 measles was in the store at a measles cases in 14 states. Cali- specific time last week and fornia's health agency, which is advise others who were there soared last year to 644, many
Members of th e a nti-vac-
cine movement said the public backlash had terrified many people could have been parents. "People are now a fraid exposed to measles and 90 percent, a little lower than urged anyone displaying the statewide rate,90.4percent. they're going to be jailed," said symptoms to avoid Super But rates in some pockets, es- Barbara Loe Fisher, president In Arizona, health officials warned that 1,000
Bowl events in the Phoenix
for resisters. "I can't believe
what I'm seeing. It's gotten so out of hand, and it's gotten so vlclous.
Disneyland, store windows
Weekly Arts Br Entertainment inside M~
comes to vaccination, said Matt
••
were lined with measles Zahn, the medical director for alerts, and a sign on the Pi- epidemiology at the Orange nal County office building County Health Agency. "It warned: "Stop! Measles is in becomes agame of Whac-aour county!" and asked peo- Mole: As soon as you get rid of ple with symptoms to wear one issue, there's another." masks before entering. The people most at risk of But here in California, becoming seriously ill are baanti-vaccine parents whose bies too young to be vaccinated children have e ndured and the immunologically frail; bouts of whooping cough measles can transform into and chickenpox largely de- something much worse, like fended their choice to raise encephali tis,and can be deadtheir children on natural ly. Among the fully vaccinatfoods, essential oils and no ed, the chances of contracting vaccinations. "There is absolutely no
measles are small but do exist;
Crystal McDonald, whose
On Friday, all unvaccinated students who had been sent
home from Palm Desert High School for the next
two weeks because they did not have full measles immunizations.
percent have not been vaccinated for polio. In all, the state
says that 58 percent of Lagunitaskindergartners do not have
up-to-date vaccine records.
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
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home from Huntington Beach High School after a possible measles exposure were allowed to return to school. But
transition are encouraged to attend both sessions
in Riverside County, officials
Registration Deadline: February 4th
reporting a probable case of a school employee with the mea-
For complete seminar and registration
After researching the issue and reading infor- sles ordered 40 students withmation from a national an- out vaccinations to stay home. ti-vaccine advocacy group, Similar scares are playing
OregonState UNIVCISlrr
or call 800-859-7609
McDonald said she and her
She said they ate well and had never been to the doc-
Delicious Weight Loss /
tor, and she insisted that her
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daughter washealthierthan many of her classmates. But when the school sent her home with a letter, McDon-
ald's daughter was so concerned about missing two
weeks of advanced-placement classes that she suggested simply getting a measles inoculation. "I said, 'No, absolutely not,'" McDonald said. "I
said, 'I'd rather you miss an entire semester than you get the shot.'"
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link between vaccines and autism but was later proved
fraudulent and retracted. Today, the waves of parents
who shun vaccines indude some who still believe in
B•
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-
•
the link and some, like the
Amish, who have religious objections to vaccines. Then there is a particular sub-
culture of largely wealthy and well-educated families, many living in palmy enclaves around Los Angeles and San Francisco, who are trying to carve out "all-nat-
ural" lives for their children. "Sometimes, I feel like
th e
school's figures. Twenty-five
EVERGREEN
I Ng
TheBulletin •
the CDC says the vaccine is reason to get the shot," said more than 95percent effective. 16-year-old daughter was one of 66 students sent
m easles, according t o
pecially in the wealthier south-
area. In a small planned ern half, are sharply lower. "There are different threads community where one family became ill after visiting of concern out there" when it
cal journal that suggested a
in the president's party have questioned his commitment
p eriod. In a ddition to
frequently, has reported 91 cases, with the biggest number, 27, here in Orange County. The county's vaccination rate for kindergartners is about
to a 1998 report in a medi-
years. To that end, two govern-
was an absence of continuous transmission for a 12-month
updating a measles count more
that direction." It is unclear how hard the Obama administration is will-
boost for the Pentagon, some
States in 2000, meaning there
to listen to the science that
events are pushing them in
also been slashed in recent
were hospitalized. Thanks largely to vaccination,measles were considered "eliminated" in the United
reportedthat measles cases
to cover the costs of a bigger military budget. The White
ing to fight for more military spending. Although the president's blueprint includes a big
for Disease Control. Of those, 400 to 500 died and 48,000
ease Control and Prevention
she said. "And I do think world
not
measles vaccine in 1963, between 3 and 4 million people contractedthe disease each year, according to the Centers
Officials around the coun-
little willingness to raise taxes
likely to back a budget compromise that would boost defensespending atthe expense of prizeddomesticprograms and other priorities that have
of the disease, Cieslak said. Before the introduction of a
try reported rising numbers of patients who were seeking shots, as well as some pediatricians who w ere accepting nonvaccinated families but were debating changing their policies. The W hite House urged parents
The antivaccine movement can largely be traced
H ouse, meanwhile, i s
vaccination has been very effective in reducing the spread
In San Geronimo, California, a mostly rural community started refusing to vacci- a personal-beliefs exemption to of rolling hills and oak trees nate their children. vaccination requirements. "It's bers came back with measles; about 30 miles north of San In recent days, new mea- very frustrating. It's hard to a fifth person in Kearny also Francisco, 40 percent of the sles cases popped up in see a kid suffer for something contracted the disease. students walking into LaguNebraska, Minnesota and that's entirelypreventable." N ow, many l o cations i n nitas Elementary School have Marin County in California. The federal Centers for Dis- town — the grocery store, the not been inoculated against
children without vaccines.
Hicks, who served as a top official in Obama's Pentagon and nowisa seniorvicepresident at the Center for Strategic
additional 15 infections. The
Vaccines
husband, a chiropractor, decided to raise their four
a dministration official w h o
was not authorized to speak publicly ahead of the formal
transmission in California."
Measles are highly contagious, and in a totally unimmunized population, a single case will likely result in an
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
EVENT
CALENDAR TODAY ENCORE:HISTORYPUB: Nate Pedersen, community librarian with Deschutes Public Library and vice president of the board for the Des ChutesHistorical Museum, will discuss "The Many Lives of Klondike Kate"; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ bend or 541-389-1813. SAGEFRANCIS:The independent hip-hop artist performs, with Sapient, Driftwood Insomnia and The HardChords; $20 plus fees in advance; 8p.m.; Domino Room,51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. TUESDAY AUTHOR TALK:Featuring retired professor Wes Hervey, reading from his book"Spindrift," with live music by CanaanCanaan with Matthew Humiston; free; 11:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE ReedMarket Road; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-383-1133. R.W. HAMPTONAND MICHAELMARTIN MURPHEY: Thecountry singers perform an acoustic concert to benefit the BendChapter of Band of Brothers; $25-$35 plus fees; 7 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. SHEILARIOS AND PACO PADILLACONCERT:The Mexican artists perform; $15; 7-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, PinckneyCenter for the Arts, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; 541-318-3726. WEDNESDAY CENTRALOREGON FARM FAIRANDTRADE SHOW:Discuss the 2015 water forecast, learn about pesticide applicator certification credit, check out new equipment, products and services from local vendors; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Complex, 430 SW Fairgrounds Road, Madras; www. jeffcoseed.com/farm-fair, cofarmfair©gmail.com or 541-475-7107. "THE METROPOLITAN OPERA:LESCONTES D'HOFFMANN":An encore performance of Offenbach's opera featuring a poet, three heroines andfour villains; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 168 IMAX,680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-290 I.
oicewor s oreinin ove ime orsworno icers By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
Overtime logged by Bend Police has decreased some-
what since the beginning of the decade, according to records provide to The Bulletin
by the city of Bend. Since 2003, overtime
highest in 2010 cost the city
Since 2003, overtime hours for sworn Bend Police officers peaked in2010 at 10,007 hours. In 2014, sworn officers logged 8,667 hours of overtime. Since 2005, sworn officer overtime pay per hour, adjusted for inflation, has hovered around $55.
about $513,000 — was raised at a city budget meeting in early 2013. Overtime and
payment may also fluctuate with staffing levels, he said. "We're definitely trying to look at the data with our calls for service and investigations
hours for sworn Bend Police
officers peaked in 2010 at
FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET ANDSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music andmore;
TODAY
Deschutes County Commission — The commission is expected to meet in a business session at10 a.m. at the county administration building, 1300 NWWall St. On the agenda isa discussion of the sheriff's office's transition to a new sheriff. At1:30 p.m., the commission will hold a work session. On the agenda is anupdate from the planning
... and trying to target those things in a better way," said
division.
er said last week the depart-
Parker, who added, "We are
TUESDAY
ment has worked to make
overtime.
trying to be more proactive with the types of calls that
RedmondCity
Since2005,sworn officer overtime pay per hour, ad-
part to an effort to rein it in. Bend Police Lt. Nick Park-
efficient since the issue of officer overtime — which at its
scheduling of officers more
Councll —The
we see." See Overtime/A8
useumex i i anima s a cou
ou
council is set to meetat 4 p.m. at 716 SWEvergreen Ave.Thecouncil is scheduled to review its past goals andset new ones for the next fiscal year. Thegroup will also meet in executive session, which is closed to the public. WEDNESDAY
Bend City Council — The council is set to meet in a work session at 5 p.m. at BendCity Hall, 710 NW Wall St.
I lx -
The council will first meet in executive session, which is closed to the public, before returning to an open meeting to hear an update from Housing Works, the region's housing agency. At 7 p.m., the council will hold a business session, during which it will discuss general obligation bonds.
-
Deschutes County Commission — The commission is expected to meet in aworksession at1:30 p.m. at the county administration building, 1300 NWWall St. On the agenda isa discussion of whether to grant a license for a bike aid station. THURSDAY
Central Oregon Intergovernmental Councll —The Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Blake Evans, front, holds Django Evans, 3, end Chiho Gray holds Kaito Gray, 3, while looking at "Deadly by Nature," a new exhibit at the High Desert Museum.
THURSDAY
BEND INDOORSWAP MEET ANDSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music andmore; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Bing Binghamwill speak about his book"Shaped By the Land"; 5:30-7 p.m.; Art Adventure Gallery, 185 SE Fifth St., Madras; www. artadventuregallery.com or 541-475-7701. JIMBO MATHUSAND THE TRI-STATECOALITION: The Southern countryblues band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend;www. mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. RALPHIE MAY:The comedian performs, with Tony G; $24-$54 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE GLASS MENAGERIE": Performance ofTennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical. org or 541-389-0803. ADRIANKRYGOWSKI: The Nashville folk-rock artist performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
CIVIC CALENDAR
justed for inflation, has hovered around $55. The drop in OT is tied in
10,007 hours. In 2014, sworn
officers logged 8,667 hours of
A7
By Tyler Leeds
Most amphibians are poisonous, for example, but the Spanish ribbed newt, one of
The Bulletin
A menagerie of poisonous animals has clustered south of
the animals in the exhibit, is
Bend, about 5 miles north of Lava Butte.
one of just a few venomous amphibians.
"It's like a real world Wol-
Despite the presence of
verine from'X-Men'," said
some critters that could end a human life with one strike,
Jonathan Brower, an associate curator of wildlife. "It can stab
Quentin Hein, a first-grader at Pine Ridge Elementary, said Sunday the beasts aren't"too scary.
you with a toxin-coated rib which pierces its skin, and then the hole regenerates."
"I really like the underwater
Caring for the collection, which also includes a rose
sea creatures," he said, gazing up at a lionfish, a carnivorous
bubble-tipanemone and a
fish armed with venomous
spines. The animals, safely encased
"Deadlyby Nature: Venom end Poison" opened this weekend.
Louise Shirley, an assistant
within glass tanks, are part
of an exhibit that opened this
For those not in the know, ven-
weekend at the High Desert
omous and poisonous are not
Museum, titled, "Deadly by Nature: Venom and Poison."
synonyms. Poisonous animals can cause harm to a predator
free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. "HAROLDANDTHE PURPLECRAYON": Aplay with life-sized puppets about Harold's world of drawings, production by Philadelphia's Enchantment Theatre Company; $23, $13for children12 and younger; 6 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. FOGHORN STRINGBAND: The Portland roots band performs for Sisters Folk Festival's winter concert series, with Beth Wood; $20, $10 (youth), $50 or $25 (youth) for series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700W .McKinney Butte Road; www.
Vietnamese centipede, is "quite exciting," according to
sistersfolkfestival.org or 54 I-549-4979. SINKS SWIM:The Portland bluegrass and Americana bandperforms; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop &Ale Cafe, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 54 I-728-0703. "MONUMENTSMEN": Showing of the film about saving art during World War II; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. "THE GLASS MENAGERIE": Performance ofTennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre,
148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www. cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. JELLYBREAD:The Reno, Nevada, alt-funk band performs, with Tim Snider; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET ANDSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music andmore; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. AUTHORPRESENTATION:
curator. "We usereinforced gloves, that happens to eat them or just nibbleon an appendage,while which are puncture-proof, idevenomous animals actively in- ally," she said. ject or spraytheir poison. SeeDeadly/A8
Jon Abernathy will speak on his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon";1-3 p.m.; Costco, 2500 NE U.S. Highway 20,Bend; www.costco.com or 54 I-385-9626. VEGAS CASINONIGHT: Featuring a dance party, a TexasHold 'Em tournament, a silent auction and moreto benefit Family Kitchen; $30-$120, registration requested; 4-7 p.m. dinner, 4 p.m. poker check-in, poker starts at 5:15 p.m., casino opens at 6 p.m.; BendGolf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; www. mtbachelorrotary.org, gwend@bendbroadband. com or 541-382-5978. BENDBASEBALLBASH: Featuring dinner, a raffle,
live and silent auctions and moreto benefit the Bend High School baseball program; SOLDOUT;6 p.m. dinner, doors open and silent auction begins at 5 p.m.; Fieldhouse of Bend,401 SE Roosevelt Avenue;www. bendhighbasebal l.com, adam.randall©bend.k12. or.us or 541-730-9922. ANIGHT OFJAZZ WITH WARRENZAIGERAND FRIENDS: A concert to benefit the Summit High School music program; $15 plus fees inadvance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. BETHWOOD:The Oregon singer-songwriter performs, with Anne Weiss; $15-$20 suggested
donation, registration requested; 7 p.m., potluck starts at 6 p.m.; TheGlen at Newport Hills,1019 NW Stannium Drive, Bend; houseconcertsintheglen@ bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRALOREGON WINTERCONCERT:The group performs traditional jazz, gospel andBroadway classics; $10; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.bend.k12. or.us or 541-385-0470. "THE GLASS MENAGERIE": Performance ofTennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.
council's executive committee is scheduled to meetat4p.m. in the Redmond Public Works training room at 243 E Antler Ave.The committee will discuss its legislative strategy. The full organization will meet at 5:30 p.m. to hear a presentation on the 2013-14 audit.
Vacation Home Rental Task Force
— The task force will meet at 4 p.m. at Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall
St. The group is expected to hear code proposals from city planners to consider and to discuss licensing requirements for vacation rentals. Contact: 541-383-0354,
news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic Calendar" in the subteot hne. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. SUNDAY OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Afiddle performance, all ages welcome; free, donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road; 541-410-5146. STARSHIP:Theclassic rock 'n' roll band performs, with Bern Smith; $40-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. contact:54t -383-0351, communitylifeObendbullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least
10 days before publication.
AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
OREGON NEWS
Action planin works for Birch Creek SenSitiVe a iatiVe Care flood-prone
utura re resents a new a roac
By George Plaven
tilla County Soil & Water Conservation District are alltaking
(Pendleton) East Oregonian
By GosIa WoznIacka
PENDLETON — As a kid, part in the assessment. The Colin Hemphill r e members first community input meeting riding out on his family's ranch was Jan. 22 at the White Eagle between Pendleton and Pilot Grange. "There's been a history of Rock to pick up driftwood lit-
The Associated Press
teredaround the pasture after
W EST L IN N
change along the watershed," Staldine said. "The river's try"You'd have about six inches ing to seek equilibrium, and we of mud on top of your grass," have to make it work with our said Hemphill, 34, a fifth-gener- current users." ation farmer and cattle rancher. Birch Creek has been re"It was a mess. Once the water ferredtoasasanctuary forwild left, it was basically a mudflat." steelhead, and the watershed
— Wh e n
a Birch Creek flood.
doctors diagnosed Pilar Alcantara w i t h a d v anced breast cancer, she felt lost and intimidated.
1' p
Growing up in Mexico, she
r .O
learned to deal with illness-
es using home remedies and prayer. She was taught that
It is not uncommon to see
council estimates 70 percent of
flooding on Birch Creek, where the basin's salmonids use the agricultural practices in some creek at some point in their life areas led to bank erosion and cycle. Past restoration efforts instability. That's had a nega- include habitat rehabilitation, tive impact on both property as well as removing abandoned owners and native steelhead or obsolete irrigation dams that runs. blockfish passage.
doctors weren't to be ques-
tioned, and she preferred not to know the details of her illnesses or treatment plans.
She felt hopeless, but that was before she connected with a Portland-based non-
Restoration work has been
profit that takes cultural habits and beliefs into account while focusing on comfort and quality of life for patients
a staple on Birch Creek for decades as agencies seek a balance between healthy farms and fish. About 87 percent of
with serious or terminal ill-
the creek runs through private land south of Pendleton, rising
nesses. She said the approach saved her. "A few years ago, because
The assessment will iden-
tify where problems remain and help the agencies identify priorities. Research is funded
by the Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board and Bonneville Power Administration
at the base of the Blue Moun- throughit s 2008 fish accords tains and emptying into the with the tribes.
of the pain and uncertainty,
Umatilla River near Rieth. It is
Staldine is optimistic the
I wanted to bail on life," Al-
the home waters of a third of all
final action plan will address both the fish and flooding con-
cantara said. "Palliative care
gave me more control over my cancer." Palliative care, which fo-
GosiaWozniacka/The Associated Press
A nurse prepares liver cancer patient Crispin Lopez Serrano for an endoscopy at a ClackamashospItal In December. Lopez Serrano, a Mexican native who is fully bilingual, says his care improved
cuses on the well-being of after he receIved culturally relevant palliative care from aPortland nonprofit organIzation, helping patients with serious illnesses him to retaIn hIs doctors, boost his health literacy and receIve emotional support. by improving doctor-patient communication an d
t r e at-
ing pain and side effects, has gained traction across
the nation, but the culturally sensitiv e model embraced by
Familias
sta r t e d
it s
program in 2011 with a $260,000grantfrom thePortland-based Cambia Health
"Being culturally competent means you know where people come from, their values, and you take an extra step togo toward where
Familias en Accion, the treat-
Foundation. The system in-
they are. You need to address the mentality of
ment center that has helped Alcantara, represents a new approach. The method has taken root
volves patient navigators who
the person's approach to illness."
in Portland and Seattle, and
it's being taught to nursing
nancial assistance. Familias also offers support groups
students in California for its
and health literacy sessions
help chronically ill Latinos access doctors, fill out in-
Overtime Continued fromA7 For example, he said, it may be more efficient to handle calls for service from allegedly mentally ill subjects with Crisis Response Team officers trained to recognize and
respond when someone is in crtsls. Parker said the department
has also attempted to allocate more officers to typically busier times by reducing officers on duty at quieter times, but said volume of crime or calls for service isn't predictable.
trials.
person's approach to illness."
ment, said watershed council
step to go toward where they are," Olga Gerberg, direc-
In Alcantara's case, the or-
ganization radically changed her approach by encouraging her toeducate herself about different types of treatments
and teaching her how to discuss them with her doctor.
owners inthe area. M embers of O D FW, t h e C onfederated Tribes of t h e Umatilla Indian Reservation, U.S. Forest Service and Uma-
bers 1993, when the park was under four or five of water.
Yet despite the danger, Draper said they haven't yet found a solution.
With the help of her patient decided against chemother-
apy, instead choosing a less taxing treatment that allows more time with her two chil-
dren. She now volunteers as a patient navigator, helping other Latinos. She says there's a
need, since others likely face treatment barriers similar to her own.
Growing up, "health was
just not so important," she
said, explaining an obstacle that she once faced. "It wasn't something you d i scussed openly. If there were problems, you fixed it yourself."
Deadly
they get a small bite. Although a lot of the species ContInued fromA7 may be native to places halfThe exhibit is unusual for way around the world, many the High D esert M u seum, of them simply had to travel which typically focuses on over the Cascades to end up the region's flora, fauna and in Central Oregon: Some of history. the specimens are on loan "We did go out and try to from the House of Reptiles in do something global," Brow- Tlgard. er said. "There's just so many The exhibit is open until cool animals out there, and June 28. poison is pretty common, and — Reporter: 541-633-2160, we wanted to educate people take."
County sheriff's deputies in La Pine or Sisters. The tech-
ally venomous. When the liz-
mond Police and Deschutes
nology can save time and sleep. However, Bend Police officers, especially if they are on duty, usually testify in person. "I think it's good for the
grand juries that not all of the cases are presented by
tleeds@bendbuIIetin.com
on the diversity of forms it can A visitor may be surprised to see the bearded dragon included in the collection. The Australian species is a popular pet, but in 2005, it was discovered the lizard is actuard bites its prey, it secretes a venom similar to that found in rattlesnakes. Unlike the toxins
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
found within a rattlesnake, the bearded dragon's are much more mild, so acarelessowner need not rush to the hospital if
•J
•
•
video," said Anderson, who
added, "There's always a bit more of a disconnect when someone's on a screen." — Reporter:541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com ;". s.
I
/
I
f
I
minutes, it's four hours," Park-
SWee
P Vour sweet
Frida/ th 14th and S Eschats, Oregon .
Receive 20% ofF room rate when you bring tlzs ad aizd
bendbulletin.com
the Pilot Rock community park
director Jon Staldine, though andgrade school. Public Works solutions could benefit all land- Director Steve Draper remem-
navigator, the 45-year-old found a new oncologist and
"A lot of our overtime comes er said. A similar policy apfrom our court appointments," plies when officers remain on Parker said. duty beyond their shift, guarParker a n d Des c hutes anteeing them three paid overCounty Chief Deputy District time hours. Attorney Mary Anderson said Anderson said the court t he effort to reduce OT r e seeks a delicate balance bequires collaboration between tween defendants' rights to
Find It All Online
channel slows and deposits riv-
tor of patient navigators at Familias, said. "You need to address the mentality of the
at FamIIIas en AccIon
the two offices. According to timely court proceedings, Anderson, a case manage- the day and night schedules ment system that went live of police officers and victims' in late 2012 has been a boost: availability. "It's not only a It has accessto schedules of money issue," said Anderattorneys, officers and, when son. "We think it's very imapplicable, victims. portant that they're getting "With our new case man- enough sleep, so we're not agement system, we have bet- calling them (officers) four teraccess to officers'sched- hours after they get to sleep." ules," said Anderson. "So we Anderson said the court continue to use t hat w h en has been continuing use we're setting trials, setting of video transmission for grand juries, things of that grand jury testimony for nature." law enforcement officers in According to an agreement outlying areas of the county, between the city and the Bend including officers from RedPolice Association reached
"It never fails," said Parker. in 2013, court appearances "We staff ... lighter and then outside of an officer's normal we have three large incidents shift guarantee the testifythat occur, and we're asking ing officer four hours of paid for help from the county or overtime. As a result, officers other agencies in the area." working graveyard shifts colOfficers are called to testify lect overtime when testifying when a grand jury is deciding in court, which takes place whether to indict someone on during the day. "Even if you testify for 20 criminal charges and during
The Umatilla Basin Water-
— Olga Gerberg, dIrector of patIent navIgators
nesses "motivated me to live,"
cerns. He hopes to have the as-
In 1989, the Oregon Depart- sessment finished by summer ment of Fish and Wildlife put and the plan signed offby early up fencing along the creek 2016. at Hemphill's ranch to keep One particularly worrisome theircows from overgrazing flood zone is along the creek's the banks. ODFW also plant- east fork near the southern ed new riparian vegetation, edge of Hlot Rock, a city of including cottonwood trees, about 1,500people. Water flows to provide more shade for fish fast out of the canyon moving while holding the stream in its north, dropping quickly into bank during high flows. a flat alluvial plain where the shed Council, in collaboration er rock and sediment. with partners, is now taking The area is known as the stock of past projects, as well "Mirade Mile," because locals as natural and unnatural func- say it will take a miracle to tions along Birch Creek to solve the issue. There are about come up with an action plan 15 landowners in th e area, for future restoration. which makes it difficult to coorProtecting federally listed dinate clearing the blockages. steelhead is the primary ecoFlooding comes dangerously logical driver of the assess- dose to town, creeping along
s urance forms and find f i -
potential to improve care and to help ease stress, stabilize he said. reduce costs. Dr. Woody En- emotions and address culturAdvocates want such proglish, former medical director al factors that might hinder grams expanded to help of palliative care at Provi- care. the increasing population dence Healthand Services in At the outset, the group of aging minorities, and the Portland, said the multifacet- tracked 90 seriously ill pa- approach has popped up in ed approach "has the ability tients for two years and spots around the U.S. to transform the usual health showed a 62 percent reducAt H a rborview M e dical care system." tion in inpatient, outpatient Center in Seattle, where the Studies show p a l l iative and ER costs. foreign-born population has caredecreasesemotionaland Among those who received increased 40 percent over the medical crises and cuts down help from Familias was Crisp- past decade, culturally speon unnecessary emergency in Lopez Serrano, a liver can- cific palliative care programs room trips and hospitaliza- cer patient who had resigned have been created for immitions, leading to cost savings himself to fate and faith. The grants from Mexico, Somalia, sought under the Affordable 58-year-old suburban Port- Vietnam and elsewhere. Care Act. "A patient who is land resident had lost his priAnd, citing a need for not having a crisis does not vate health insurance when growth, California State Unicall 911," Dr. Diane Meier, his illness made him unable versity's Institute for Palliadirector of the Center to Ad- to work in construction. tive Care has begun offering "I was just going to get by an online course that hones vance Palliative Care, said. By adding a cultural em- with the grace of God, eat- in on the needs of Latino phasis,health care profes- ing aloe and drinking herbal patients. sionals aim to address patient teas," Lopez Serrano said. The programs help break needs that would otherwise A Familias navigator, how- down barriers that traditional be overlooked. "Until we un- ever, helped him sign up for care models miss, gaps that derstand a patient's drivers Medicaid and retain his same can lead to improper diagnoand concerns — the social, doctors. The support groups ses and poor treatment. "Being culturally compeemotional, religious and his- restored his hope and let him torical contexts — we can't know he wasn't alone. Get- tent means you know where begin to help the person," ting to know other Latinos people come from, their valMeier said. who were fighting serious ill- ues, and you take an extra
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A9
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
' ot am'star ei t s answit vi ain TV SPOTLIGHT
"Now," says Taylor, "he's finally decided that his ambi-
"Gotham" 8 p.m. Mondays, Fox
don't know that you can't.'"
But however comfortable he felt becoming the Penguin, son ever again." a couple of things took getting In a f a r m o r e b enign used to. way, Taylor's childhood in One was the Penguin's sigShueyville, Iowa, prepared nature limp. him for the Penguin's plight of Taylor's by-now-famous sebitter otherness. cret: "In every pair of shoes I "It was a good place to grow wear, the wardrobe departup," says Taylor, "but a public ment puts a bottle cap" — to school in a small town is very be specific, a Poland Springs much 'Friday Night Lights.' cap from an 8-ounce bottleFootball was primary, and I "taped in the heel of my right tion won't let him be that per-
By Frazier Moore The Associated Press
NEW YORK — A l though
filmed in the real Gotham City, Fox's "Gotham" inhabits a New York all its own.
What resides here is part reverential mythmaking (it recounts Batman's genesis), part free-floating film noir (whose 1940s manners coexist with '60s-vintage cars and circa-'90s cellphones). It's a hybrid dreamscape in meticuJessica Miglio/Fox via The Associated Press lous limbo. Robin Lord Taylor portrays Oswald Cobblepot in a scene from "I can't believe I'm here," "Gotham." "The majority of my roles have been darker characters. I don't know why," he says. "But it's a lot of fun." says Robin Lord Taylor. But he is, looming large as a shrimpy, gimpy psycho with oversize plans and the fused with a toadying creep- up for the Penguin in a show cunning to execute them. iness, Oswald flourishes as called 'Gotham.' But by then I He is O swald Cobblepot, a sympathetic chap, the guy had already made my choices better known as emergent you can't help rooting for. He's for the character. I knew what arch-criminal the Penguin, the show's most vulnerable, I was going to do at the audiand since last fall's premiere winsome figure, even more tion and I did it. I guess that of "Gotham" (airing Mondays so than Bruce Wayne, the or- was what they were looking at 8 p.m.), Taylor has stolen ev- phaned future Batman played for." ery scene in reach, certifying by young David Mazouz. What Taylor delivers is a himself as the greater-amongPortraying the Penguin in striver, schemer and surviequals in a splendid cast that his inchoate stage, Taylor has vor who had been bullied his also includes Ben McKenzie, been free to bring the role a whole life. His shimmying J ada Pinkett S m ith, J o hn fresh approach. This began gait — said to look like a penguin's — resulted when his Doman, Donal Logue and with the audition. "They wrote a fake scene then-boss, crime queen Fish many more. As the Penguin, he is high- with fake names that put the Mooney (Pinkett Smith), flew ly stylized, with fashionable character in asort of orga- into a rage and bashed his downtown duds, inky hair nized-crime situation, but it right knee with a wooden rod. and a leering smile. But Tay- wasn't identified," Taylor exThat became a t urning lor delivers more than broad plains. "My agent only told point. No more victimhood for comic-book strokes. Even inme the night before that I was Oswald!
wasn't into that. So I totally
understand being different and having ambitions different from what people expect of you."
15 years ago came to New York, where he has since ap-
guest appearancebyJoan Rivers, who returns as a boardroom advisor. In the first challenge, the teams are tasked with creating a "photo bomb" and a hashtag campaign for King's Hawaiian. The second hour finds the teams challenged to write a 30-second beverage jingle. In the boardroom, Donald Trump makes a startling decision.
est" and the "Law & Order"
his ebony thatch is "levitating
portfolio. He also played a short-lived character on "The Walking Dead." "The majority of my roles have been darker characters. I don't know why," he says,
off my head."
at that moment the picture of
in this midtown restaurant. A
boyish charm. "But it's a lot of fun." The slithery defiance he exhibits as the Penguin is an especially fun way to play his mirror-opposite. "I avoid conflict in my real life at all times," he says. "My
fellow diner has stepped up to praise his work. "I can't believe any of this is happening," Taylor marvels once the fan has gone. But he hastens to add, "It's the good kind of overwhelming, the good kind of daunting, the good kind of scary." Kind of like his performance.
The next moment, he is interrupted by an admirer. Even
with his hair less punkishly coiffed than Oswald's 'do, Taylor can hardly escape notice
oman's us in ace ains er MOVIE TIMESTODAY even moreunwante attention
• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and INIAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
bia. In cases like that, counseling
that itwill only increase.
and support groups can help. HowWhat constitutes an alcoholever, because you find it happening ic? Is it possible for Mike to drink even when you are not pressured or every day but not be one? I don't embarrassed, discuss it with your want to lose him, but he also has a physician to be sure there isn't an very bad temper, and I'm afraid it's underlyingphysical problem. not a good combination if we were
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY,
YOURHOROSCOPE
This may be more information
than you asked for, but I don't think Mike is marriage material because
it appears he is already wedded to his bottle. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
** * Be willing to stand up and assume perience a lot of activity around you. You your role in a particularly difficult situaBy Jacqueline Bitrar becomemoreaware ofthe peoplein your tion. You might not want all the attention life and their expectations. As youevolve on you, but it seems to be inevitable. Your affect a meeting and/or an interaction with role is dominant, and others will want to into a more empathetic person, you could this person. Avoid making any judgments, learn how to lead in the way in which you question how much moreyou shouldgive of yourself. Expect the unexpected, andyou and try stating your point in a different do. Tonight: Let it all hang out. won't be disappointed. If you are single, you way. Tonight: At a favorite spot. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) might change your CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * You'll be full of unexpected news. 8tarssitowthekind ideaofthetyPe ** * * You might want to be more aware Thoughyou mightnotreactasyou used of day you'll Itave of Person you are of your spending and your budget. You to, you still will have a strong response. ** * * * D ynamic attracted to. In any could feel as if your finances are out of Be aware of others' confusion. You know ** * * p osltlve ca s e, you are likely whack. Worry less, and stay centered. what is workable and what is not. Try to *** Average tomeet someone of You are likely to experience a certain convey whatyou know to those around ** So-so significance. If you amount of boredom in your daily routine. you. Tonight: Surf the Web. * Difficult are attached, the Change it! Tonight: Pay bills first. two of you might GAPRIGORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * Deal with a partner or associate redefine the boundaries of your relationship. Life won't be boring, and you will love ** * * * You will be in the position to directly. In fact, the response you receive all the excitement. LEOalways seems ready convince someone that the less exciting could be totally different than if you were to to have fun. option would be best. Misunderstandings discuss the same issue with someone else could lurk, and you might choose to see a there. Takeadvantage of a quiet moment. ARIES (March21-April 19) Be willing to state the samepoint several ** * * Excitement surrounds the morn- situation a lot differently from how those around you see it. Confirm important different ways. Tonight: Togetherness. ing. You'll get past an immediate hassle statements. Tonight: Be spontaneous. with ease. Meeting times will need to be AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) confirmed. If you think someone's remark VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You might have mixed feelings seems out of whack, just repeat back ** * Assume a low profile, even if some- and be overly serious, especially after a what you thought you heard. Tonight: Act one tries to shockyou out of complacenmorning surprise. Nothing is as it seems as if it were Friday night. cy. You'll need to observe rather than reand all is subject to change. Remain open act. Ask yourself what would be best to do to various ideas and you will head down TAURUS (April 20-May20) the right path. Tonight: Confusion reigns. ** * * You will want to straighten out a in order to move forward. You are much situation that involves a headstrong friend more together than you ever thought pos- Maintain a sense of humor. sible. Tonight: Get some Rand R. or loved one. This person might seem to PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) be quite closed off, but in reality, he or she LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * You could be somewhat fixated probably just wants to get past the present ** * * You could be stuck on the wrong on your scheduleand onwhatyou must misunderstanding. Takeyour time, rather side of a problem. As you try to resolve accomplish. You will have asurprising thanpush.Tonight:M osey on home. the issue, others might seem bent on cre- change occur at some point throughout the GEMINI (May 21-June20) ating uproar. If you try to intervene, you day. You might want to rethink a decision ** * * * S hare more of what ails you. A probably will find yourself in the middle with more care. Verify what you are hearof an argument. Ride the winds of fate. ing. Tonight: Squeeze in someexercise. partner or loved one might seem distant and difficult. The unexpected is likely to Tonight: Hang with friends. Ct King Features Syndicate
FEB. 2, 2015:Thisyearyou will ex-
an obnoxious TVweatherman
forced to relive Feb. 2 until he gets it right... mending his abrasive ways and winning the lovely Rita (Andie MacDowell).
nection between me and the
"blond, blond, blond roots" start growing out, it looks like
Dear Abby:I have a problem with Dear Abby:I've been dating my to get married. — Torn In North Carolina blushing. Whenever I'm the center 42-year-old boyfriend, "Mike," for of attention, even if it's with just one a year. I love him, but he's a heavy Dear Torn:You are right to be other person, my face goes bright drinker.He has a glass or two of concerned. Even if Mike promised red. This even happens when I'm whiskey on a daily basis and goes "not to drink so much," he might not feeling embarrassed. through a huge bottle of whiskey backslide on his promise after the I've learned to cope with the feel- every weekend. (He also drinks WeddlIlg. ing of my face flushbeer l ik e w a ter.) Also, has it occurred to you that ing. What I'm having When I asked him to the whiskey may be part of what is trouble with is peocut back, he refused causingMike'sbad temper? Large DEAR ple's comments about because he "loves" quantities of alcohol have been Ag gy CF why my face is so red. whiskey. I have never known to alter a person's percepI've never been able to seenhim drunk or act tion, and the results can be explocome up with a good intoxicated, so he ob- sive. If you haven't already done response. Tellingthem I'm not really viously has a high tolerance. so, consider attending an AL-Anon embarrassedis met withskepticism. It bothers me that Mike drinks so meeting, which may confirm this. — Red-Faced in Memphis much and that he won't cut back. I I'm not a medical doctor, but it Dear Red-Faced: M y advice isto told him I wouldn't marry him un- would be interesting to know what be upfront and tell the questioner less he does. My problem is, I don't your boyfriend's physician thinks that you don't know why it happens, know whether he's an alcoholic about the amount of alcohol he conbut you're not embarrassed. As you since he doesn't ever show signs of sumes, because the quantityyou say already know, blushing can happen intoxication. I've been told that alco- Mike puts away may put him at risk if someone suffers from a socialpho- holism is a progressive disease and for cirrhosis of the liver.
Punxsutawney Phil's day in the sun — or lack thereof — has inspired just one. Bill Murray stars in this1993 romantic comedy as
state — a direct physical con-
Good Wife," "Person of Inter-
acting teacher called me 'a fixer 'You want to fix everything and make it OK. You
can shake a candy caneat, but
shoe. It's not painful, just a reminder to put me in that mind-
with a l augh that once his
peared in such shows as "The
10a.m. onAMC, Movie: "GroundhogDay" — Christmas figures in more movies than you
8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Celebrity Apprentice" — A new episode called "Who Stole My Phone?" features another bittersweet
character." The other adjustment: a dye job every two weeks. "I had never dyed my hair before," says Taylor, noting
Drawn instead to acting, he attended Northwestern University's drama school, then
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANSNIPER(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:40, 6:30, 9:45 • AMERICANSNIPERIMAX (R) 12:10, 3:10, 7:10, 10:15 • AMOST VIOLENT YEAR (R)noon,3:55,7:30,10:20 • BIRDMAN(R) 3:20, 9:35 • BLACK OR WHITE (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 3, 7, 9:55 • THE80Y NEXT DOOR (R)12:55,4:45,7:50,IO:10 • CAKE(R) IO:05 • THEH088IT:THEBATTLE OF THEFIVEARMIES (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6, 9:15 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) 12:40, 3:45, 6:50, 9:50 • INTO THE WOODS(PG)12:05, 3:05, 6:10, 9:05 • THELOFT(R)l2:30,4:05,6:45,9:30 • MORTDECAI(R) 12:45, 7:35 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:40 a.m., 2, 4:20, 6:40, 9:10 • PROJECTALMANAC (PG-13) 1,3:30, 7:15, 10 • SELMA(PG-13) 3:40, 10:10 • STRANGEMAGIC (PG) l2:20,4:30,7:25 • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 6:20 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 2:10, 4:40, 7:45, 10:15 • WILD(R) 12:35,4:15,7:40, 10:20 • Accessibility devicesare available for some movies.
8:30 p.m. on 6, "Mike S Molly" —Even healthy people need to remain vigilant about
creeping medical issues as they approach middle age, especially if they're carrying some extra weight, so Molly (Melissa Mc-
Carthy) is seriously concerned when she learns that hubby Mike (Billy Gardell) hasn't had a physical in more than a decade in the new episode "Mike Check." She begs him to
see a physician (guest star Jim Holmes) pronto. 9 p.m. on CW,"Janethe Virgin"
— Jane (GinaRodriguez) sus-
pects thata big career breakthat just came her way may be alittle too good to be true, especially since it involves Rogelio (Jaime Camil). Worried about San Rostro's connection to the hotel, Rafael (Justin Baldoni) starts to fret about his family's safety. As Petra's (Yael Grobglas) past begins to catch up with her, she is dismayed to learn the truth about someone close to her in the newepisode"Chapter Twelve." 9 p.m.on FAM, "ChasingLife" — Awkward! April (Italia Ricci) is forced to spend an incredibly uncomfortable evening with Dominic (Richard Brancatisano) when they are both assigned to cover an event for the paper. The pain from their break-up very clearly is still keen, which makes April's hopes of making a fresh start with Leo (Scott Michael Foster) even harder. ©Zap2it
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A10
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Skiing, B2 NBA, B3
Tennis, B3 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesand events to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Sunday
iiBA basketball, Utah Jazz at Portland Trail Blazers,7 p.m. (CSflNW):After winning 30 of their first 38 gamesthis season, the Blazers slumped badly in the second half of January, losing eight of their past10 games. . Portland will try to get February off to a winning start at the ModaCenter in the team's first meeting of the season with the Jazz.
College football, SigningOay (5 a.m.-4 p.m., ESPBU): You thought football seasonwas over? A newseason kicks off this week asthe Ducks, the Beavers and college programs across the country find out which top prep andjunior college players are headedtheir way. In addition to ESPNU's daylong coverage, ESPN wil air a one-hour signing-day special starting at11 a.m.
College basketball, Washington State at Oregon State,7 p.m. (Pac-12):After falling twice on the road last week in Arizona — the first time the upstart Beavers have lost two in a row since November — OregonState looks to sweep the regular-season series with the Cougars. The Beavers handled theCougars 62-47 last month at Washington State.
Prep boysandgirls basketball:Bend's Civil War and Redmond's intracity rivalry highlight the Intermountain Conference schedule. The Mountain View boys playat Bend High, while the Cougar and Lava Beargirls square off at Mountain View, both games at p. 7 m.Redmond Highplays at Ridgeview, the girls at 5:15 p.m. and the boys tipping off at 7 p.m.
College basketball, Washington State at Oregon,4 p.m. (Pac-12):Former Oregon coach Ernie Kent returns to Eugene asfirst-year coach of the Cougars, who upendedthe Ducks in overtime at Pullman, Washington in mid-January. Kent, who played atOregon in the1970s, coached theDucks to five NCAAtournament appearances in13 seasons before he wasfired in 2010.
ea aw<s're ea i en s
Seattle's Russell Wilson reacts after throwing an
wi as-minu e inerce ion
interception in the final minute.
SUPER BOWLXLIX: PATRIOTS28, SEAHAWKS24 • B4-5
COMMUNITY SPORTS
TEE TO GREEN
This Bend Marathon looks to stick around By Victoria Jacobsen The Bulletin
As sporting events go, the marathon is fairly simple: Run along a marked course for 26.2 miles, and first to the finish wins.
But organizing a marathon can become quite complicated, and quickly. With three months to go
until the inaugural Bend Marathon and Half on April 26,
to recrurtrng
• Community spo r ts ca l endar, B7 • OSU Cascades competes in
volunteers to manning aid stations
to havingthe course certi-
fied by USA Track 8, Field. "It's not the
regional ski meet,B7 • Community briefs and scoreboard,
— The (Eugenef Register-Guard Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Golfers hit balls at the driving range at Rivers Edge Golf Course in Bend on Saturday. Rivers Edge was one of a number of Central
Oregon courses to be open last week.
B7
glamorous stuff," Loehr said. "How are we actually going to execute the race itself? How are we going to makesurepeople aresafe, people know where to go, that theyhave port-a-potties." Loehr and his business partner, Blair Hook, Port-
land-based founders of the Gorgeous Series of road races, are not the first to try to bring
a signature road marathon to Bend. Kyle Will and his wife, Bambi, organized two mara-
• Warm temperaturesmeansCentral Oregongolf coursesare open for business
one year in 2011. But neither
eventbecame a fixture on Bend's athletic calendar, in large part because of the difficulty of designing a desirable course and attracting enough runners to make the effort worthwhile.
on Buerger walked to the clubhouse of Eagle Crest Resort last week and glimpsed a rare sight for this time of year. Making their way down the sunny ninth fairway of the Redmond reSOrt'S Ridge COurSe WeretWO gOlferS in ShortS.
Buerger, director of golf at Eagle Crest, could not help but take notice of the atypical January clothing. "At some point we have to just be thankful that it is warm and we can get out (to play
See Marathon /B7
BendNarathon andHalf Race begins at intersection of Oregon Avenueand Bond Street at 7:30 a.m. April 26. Registration is available online. The half marathon costs $95 and the full marathon $105. Race website (including coursemap): www.bendmarathon.com Series website: www.gorgeousseries.com
gOlf)," Buerger SayS. Not Only haVe Central OregOn gOlferS had the OPPOrtunity to Play beCauSe Of an unseasonably warm, dry spell that closed out January, they also had an unusually vast array of venues at which to play. Inside
Higher-elevation courses such as Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend were open last week, and demand was strong enough that Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters expanded its hours to
• Offseason update: Smith Rock Golf Course,Bg • Koepka rallies for1st PGA win at Phoenix Open.Roundup, BS • Karrie Webb finds she is at the same place shebegan,Bg • Local golf scoreboard,Bg
accommodate an influx of
players. And for the first time in memory, Sunriver Resort opened its Woodlands
ers at Sunriver was instant.
Course to the public in January for a six-day stretch that ends today. Most years, Woodlands is the last of Sunriver's four golf
Within a day of the an-
courses to open for the sea-
son. But a two-week thawing compelled the resort to open its northernmost track.
"It's just incredible," says
Josh Willis, the director of golf at Sunriver and an 11-
nouncement last Monday that Woodlands would be Roland Buckman, of Bend, chips onto the18th green at Rivers Edge Golf Course on Saturday.
open, 113 tee times had been booked. Willis says the conditions have allowed the resort to test the waters to see if de-
mand is sufficient to justify time of year to go out and cut opening its courses in Janu"I don't think I've ever seen cups and mow greens." ary. So far he is encouraged. the ground thaw enough this The response from golfSeeEarly/B8 year veteran of the resort.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL iiio mOreeaSy
gamesfor Beavs
By Zack Hall •The Bulletin
thons here in 2003 and 2004,
and theideawas revived for
EUGENE — Halfway through the Pac-12 season, Oregon (5-4) sits in a three-way tie for fourth place. Thetop four teams in the conference get abye in the first round of the conference tournament. The unbalancedconference schedulehad Oregon facing theArizona schools twice in the first half of theseason, while the lonemeetings with California, Stanford, Utah andColorado come during the secondhalf. "When theschedule switches now,we'vegot a few more roadgames, so this was areally big win for us," Duckscoach Dana Altmansaid after his team's 68-67 overtime victory Friday night at ArizonaState. "We have thesecond half of the conferenceseason coming up,andweare going to have toplay better." Oregonneedsa strong stretch run toget in position for a third straight trip to the NCAA
is spending his days managing wouldnever think about, from finalizing permits
Ducks still have work to do
Tournament, but thefew returning playerscan look backto last season for inspiration. The Duckswere3-6at the midway point of Pac12 play and14-6 overall but won eight straight games down the stretch to earn asecond straight trip to March Madness.
race co-director Kerry Loehr details that a race outsider
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
CORVALLIS —Oregon State's playersand coaches knowthey must throw out the records of all future opponents. The No. 7Beaversare going to geteachteam's best from here on out. The Beavershavewon 18 straight conference games dating backto last seasongoing into tonight's homegame against UCLA.Andthey have beenplaying at a high level most of the season. So, is coachScott Rueck concernedthat the Beavers might bepeaking too early? "No, we'vegot so far to go," hesaid. "You lookat the boxscore and there's nothing perfect on this. Evendefensively it's not perfect. Sowe've gota long wayto go, we know that. It's possession bypossession. That's all wecan control." Added JamieWeisner: "We alwaystalkabout just trying to limit our weaknessesand Ithink every day we gointo the gym with that mindset. We havetough practices every dayandeveryone is working together toward that goal." — Cort/allis Gazette-Times
B2
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY BASKETBALL
Women's college, Michigan St. at OhioSt. Men's college, Virginia at North Carolina Women's college, Louisville at Duke Men's college, Morgan St. at Coppin St. Women's college, Syracuse atFlorida St. Women's college, Missouri at LSU Women's college,Washington St. at California Women's college, Southern Cal atOregon Women's college, Purdue at Indiana Men's college, lowa St. at Kansas Men's college,Alabama A8M atTexasSouthern Women's college, Washington at Stanford Women's college,UCLAat Oregon State
Time TV/Radio 3:30 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPNU 4 p.m. Roo t 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. P a c-12 5 p.m. P a c-12 5:30 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPNU 7 p.m. P a c-12 7 p.m. Pac-12(Ore.)
TUESDAY
ON DECK Tuesday Boys basketball: Summit atBend,7 p.mc Ridgeviewat Mountain View,7 p.mcCorhett at Madras, 7p,mcEstacadaatCrookCounty,7p.m.; PleasantHil at LaPine, 7:30p.m4Central Christian atTrinityLutheranJV, 7:30p.m. Girls basketball:Bendat Summit, 7 p.mcMountain View at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; MadrasatCorhett, 7p.m.;CrookCountyatEstacada,7p.m.;Pleasant Hill at LaPine, 6p.mcCentral Christianat Trinity Lutheran,6p.m. Swimming:Sisters, Redm ond, Ridgeviewat CascadeSwimCenter, 3p.m.
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/Inthebleachers
~II ),'
Wednesday
Wrestling: Crook County,Madras,Gladstoneat Corbett,TBD
'I
Thursday Swimming:Ridgeview,Redmond, Summit at Madras, 3p.m. Wrestling:Redmondat Ridgeview,6 p.mcBend at MountainView,7p,mcLaPineat Glide, TBD Friday Boys basketball: Mountain View at Bend, 7 p.mcRedmond atRidgeview,7 p.mc Cottage Grove at Sisters, 7:15p.mc Madrasat Crook County ,7 p.mcCoquiff eatLaPine,6:30 p.m.; Weston-McE wen at Culver, 4:30p.m.; Paisley at Central Christian, 7:30p,mc NorthLakeat Gilchrist, 7p.m. Girls basketball: Bend at MountainView,7 p.m.; RedmondatRidgeview, 5:15p.mcCotage Grove at Sisters,5:45p.m4Crook Countyat Madras, 7 p.m4Coquille atLaPine, 5 p.m4Weston-McEwen atCulver6 pmcPaisley atCentral Christian,6 p.m4TrinityLutheranatTriad, 4 p.m4North Lake at Gilchrist, 5p.m. Wrestling: Sisters atJunction City, 6p.m.; Madras, Gilchrist atCottageGroveInvitational, TBD
BASKETBALL
Leaders ThroughSaturday'sGames
IN THE BLEACHERS
Wooo-kooceI'.
Men's college, Indiana atWisconsin 4 p.m. E S PN Men's college, Georgia at Kentucky 4 p.m. E SPNU Men's college, Mississippi St. at Tennessee 4 p .m . SEC Men's college, St. John's at Butler 4 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Northwestern at Nebraska 4:3 0 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, WestVirginia at Oklahoma 5 p.m. E SPN2 Men's college, Florida at Vanderbilt 6 p.m. E S PN Men's college, Virginia Tech atSyracuse 6 p.m. E SPNU Men's college, South Carolina at Arkansas 6p . m . SEC Men's college, Seton Hall at DePaul 6 p.m. FS1 Saturday Men's college, Rutgers at lllinois 6:30 p.m. Big Ten Boys basketball: Culverat Pilot Rock,5:30p.m.; CentralChristianat NorthLake,3:30 p.m. NBA, Utah at Portland 7 p.m. CSNNW, Girls basketball: CulveratPilot Rock,4pmc CenKBND-AM 1110,FM-100.1;KRCO-AM 690,FM-96.9
tral Christian atNorthLake,2 p.m.; Gilchrist at Trinity Lutheran,5:30p.m. Wrestling:Ridgeviewat Mid-Valley Classic in Albany,TBD;Madras, Gilchrist at CottageGrove Invitational,TBD Alpine skiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, Ed'sGarden,10a.m. Nordic skiing:OISRAclassic andbiathlon at Mt. Bachelor,11:30a.mcOHSNOpursuit, classicand skate ,atMt.HoodMeadows,TBD
HOCKEY
NHL, Chicago at Minnesota SOCCER England, FA Cup,Man Unitedvs.Cambridge
5 p.m. NBCSN 11:30 a.m. FS1
Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
BASKETBALL Men's colleg Pac-12 All TimesPST
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Arizona Utah Stanford Oregon O regon St. 5 UCLA Colorado Washington St. 4 W ashington 3 C alifornia A rizona St. 3 Southern Cal 1
OLYMPICS IOC leader: BOStOn OPPOSitiOn exPeCted — Theleader of the International Olympic Committee believes it is too early to be alarmed by groups in Boston that don't want the 2024Games intheir city. President ThomasBachsaid the committee will conduct its own internal polling, but not for at least another year. Anopposition group is calling for a referendum onwhether the city should host the Olympics, though bid organizers are skeptical a vote will ever betaken. The U.S. Olympic Committee choseBoston as its candidate in January. The 2024 Gameswill be awarded two years from now. Rome is currently the only other official bidder. Bachsaid: elf Boston came to us and said we have100 percent support, that would also make the bid look very suspicious."
W L PcL 8 7 6 5 5 4
5
3
1 2 3 4
.888 .778 .667 .556
W L Pct.
20 2 .909 17 4 .810 15 6 .714 15 7 .681 4 .5 5 6 14 7 .667 4 .556 13 9 .591 5 .444 11 10 .524 . 444 10 11 .476 6 .3 3 3 14 7 .667 6 .33 3 13 9 .591 6 .3 3 3 11 11 .500 8 . 1 11 9 12 .429
Sunday'sGames
California90,Washington 88 Utah67,Southern Cal39
Wednesday'sGame Washingtonat Oregon,6 p.m. Thursday'sGame UCLAatStanford, 6 p.m. WashingtonSt.at OregonSt., 7p.m. SouthernCalatCalifornia, 8 p.m. Saturday'sGames Arizonaat ArizonaSt.,1;30 p.m. UCLAatCahforma,5 p.m. Utah at Colorado,7 p.m.
FOOTBALL GiantS matriarCh, Ann Mara, dleS —AnnMara,the matri-
Sunday'sGames TDP 25 No. 11Utah67, Southern Cal39 FloridaSt. 55,No.23Miami54 EAST Manhattan 87, Monmouth(N.J.) 76 Marist 75,Canisius67 Niagara105, Quinnipiac100, 20T SOUTH EastCarolina50, Cincinnati 46 FloridaSt. 55,Miami54 MIDWEST Dayton101,Fordham77 MichiganSt.76, Michigan66, OT N. Dakota St. 64,W.Illinois 62 Oaklan d96,YoungstownSt.80 SOUTHWE ST Houston70,Uconn68 FARWEST California90,Washington 88 Utah67,Southern Cal39
arch of the NewYork Giants for the past 60 years, died Sunday.She was 85. Giantsco-owner John Maraannouncedhismother'sdeath Sunday. AnnMaraslipped in front of her home in Rye, NewYork, during an ice storm two weeksagoandwas hospitalized with a head injury the following day. AnnMaraand her children owned 50 percent of the Giants, one of the founding families of the league, since the death of her husband, Hall of FamerWellington Mara, in 2005. aMrs. Mara was atower of strength, dignity and inspiration for her family n and all of us in the NFL, Commissioner RogerGoodell said in astatement. aHer family and theGiants organization havealways reflected Mrs. Mara's competitive spirit, integrity, and wonderful sense of humor. Our thoughts and prayers arewith John Mara and theentire Mara family." — From wire reports
Scoring GP G A PTS Jakub Voracek,Phi 51 17 41 58 TylerSeguin,Dal 49 28 28 56 PatrickKane,Chi 50 25 31 56 ClaudeGiroux, Phi 50 16 36 52 SidneyCrosby,Pit 45 15 37 52 EvgeniMalkin, Pit 45 19 32 51 Nicklas Backstrom, Was 49 15 35 50 RyanGetzlaf, Anh 49 15 35 50 TylerJohnson,TB 49 17 32 49 V ladimir Tarasenko,StL 48 2 4 24 48 JohnTavares,NYI 49 23 25 48 StevenStamkos, TB 5 1 27 19 46 H enrik Zefferherg,Det 5 0 1 5 31 46 Goalies GP MINSGA AVG BrianElliott, StL 23 1324 43 1.95 PekkaRinne,Nas 37 2230 73 1.96 CareyPrice,Mon 39 2332 79 2.03 Jimmy Howard, Det 32 1848 65 2.11 MichaelHutchinsonWin 23 1285 46 2.15 CalvinPickard,Col 15 881 32 2.18 BradenHolthy, Was 43 2514 93 2.22 HenrikLundqvist,NYR 38 2261 84 2.23 FrederikAndersen,Ana 41 2384 90 2.27 CoreyCrawford, Chi 32 1894 72 2.28 TuukkaRask, Bos 41 2416 93 2.31 RyanMiler,Van 36 2070 80 2.32 Marc-Andre Fleury,Pit 39 2302 89 2.32 BenBishop,TB 40 2276 88 2.32
TENNIS Australian Open Sunday at Melbourne,Australia Men's Championship NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. AndyMurray (6), Britain,7-6 (5),6-7 (4), 6-3,6-0. Mixed DoublesChampionship MartinaHingis,Switzerland,andLeanderPaes(7), India, def. KristinaMladenovic, France,andDaniel Nestor(3),Canada,6-4, 6-3.
Wo m e n's college Sunday'sGames
TDP 25 No.1 SouthCarolina 77,Mississippi 59
No. 2Uconn83,Temple49 No. 3Baylor66,Kansas58 No.4NotreDame92,WakeForest63 No. 5Maryland93,lowa88 No. 6Tenne ssee79, No.18 Mississippi St.67 No.10 Kentucky 80, No.21Georgia72 No. 11ArizonaSt.58, Utah48 No. 12TexasA&M78, Auburn 45 TCU64,No.14Texas59 No. 15Nebraska75, Michigan60 No.16 NorthCarolina 72,Boston College60 No. 22Rutgers 76,PennSt. 65 WestVirginia78,No.24Oklahoma69 EAST
Delaware 73,Hofstra 62 Fairfield54,Monmouth(NJ) 52, OT Harfford60, Vermont 49 Maine52,Albany(NY) 44 Mass. -Lowell66,Binghamton49 Pittsburgh81, Miami66 Quinnipiac81, St.Peter's 50 Rider52,Canisius 51 Rutgers76,PennSt. 65 SetonHall78,St.John's73 StonyBrook60,NewHampshire 52 Towson 71, Coll. ofCharleston49 Uconn83,Temple49 WestVirginia78,Oklahoma69 William &Mary72, Northeastern66,20T Xavier68,Providence57 Yale60,Cornell 53 SOUTH Arkansas 53, Alabama42 Drexel61,UNCWilmington44 Florida67,Vanderbilt 58 GeorgiaTech79,Virginia Tech71 Kentucky 80, Georgia72 Maryland93, lowa88 NorthCarolina72,Boston College60 SouthCarolina77,Mississippi 59 Tennessee 79, Mississippi St.67 Virginia77,Clemson72 MIDWEST Creighton62, Butler55
DePaul49,Vilanova47 Drake64, Wichita St. 61 llinois St.72,Loyolaof Chicago56 IndianaSt.67, Evansville 52 Marquette80,Georgetown73 N. Iowa 64, MissouriSt. 56 Nebraska 75,Michigan60 Northwestern70,Minnesota49 NotreDam e92, WakeForest 63 S. Illinois76,Bradley59 Wisconsin73,llinois 62 SOUTHWE ST Baylor66,Kansas58 Rice58,NorthTexas55,OT TCU64,Texas59 Texas A&M78,Auburn45 FARWEST ArizonaSt.58, Utah48 Colorado81,Arizona69
HOCKEY
Novak Djokovic-AndyMurrayhead-to-head 2006 Madrid Masters: clay-outdoor, R16, Djokovic,1-6, 7-5,6-3. NHL 2007 IndianWellsMaslers: hard-outdoor, SF, Djokovic,6-2, 6-3. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 2007 MiamiMasters:hard-outdoor,SF,DjokovAll TimesPST ic, 6-1,6-0. 2008 Monte-CarloMaslers:clay-outdoor, R16, EASTERN CONFERENCE Djokovic,6-0, 6-4. Atlantic Division 2008 TorontoMasters: hard-outdoor,QF,MurGP W L DT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 51 32 15 4 68 166 133 ray, 6-3,7-6(3). 2008 Cincinnati Masters:hard-outdoor,F,MurMontreal 49 32 14 3 67 130 111 Detroit 50 29 12 9 67 149 129 ray,7-6(4),7-6 (5). 2009 MiamiMaslers: hard-outdoor, F,Murray, Boston 50 27 16 7 61 134 124 Florida 47 21 16 10 52 115 132 6-2, 7-5. 2011 Australian Open:hard-outdoor,F,DjokovOttawa 48 20 19 9 49 136 136 Toronto 51 22 25 4 48 144 156 ic, 6-4,6-2, 6-3. 2011 Rome Masters:clay-outdoor, SF,DjokovBuffalo 50 14 33 3 31 94 179 ic 6-1 3-6 7-6(2) Metropolitan Division 2011 Ci n cinnati Masters:hard-outdoor,F,MurGP W L DT Pts GF GA NiY.lslanders 49 32 16 1 65 158 139 ray, 6-4,3-0,retired. P ittsburgh 5 0 2 8 14 8 64 145 129 2012 Australian Open:hard-outdoor, SF, N.Y.Rangers 47 28 15 4 60 139 112 Djokovic,6-3,3-6,6-7(4), 6-1, 7-5. Washington 50 25 15 10 60 147 129 2012 Dubai:hard-outdoor,SF , Murray,6-2, 7-5. Philadelphia 51 22 22 7 51 140 151 2012 MiamiMaslers:hard-outdoor,F,Djokovic, NewJersey 50 19 22 9 47 113 138 6-1, 7-6(4). Columbus 48 21 24 3 45 120 151 2012 Olympics-Wimbledon: grass-outdoor, C arolina 4 9 1 7 2 6 6 40 105 129 SF,Murray,7-5,7-5. WESTERN CONFERENCE 2012 U.S. Open:hard-outdoor,F,Murray, 7-6 Central Division (10), 7-5,2-6,3-6, 6-2. GP W L DT Pts GF GA 2012 ShanghaiMasters: hard-outdoor,F, Nashville 49 32 11 6 70 149 115 Djokovic,5-7, 7-6(11), 6-3. St. Louis 49 32 13 4 68 160 120 2012 ATP Finals-London:hard-indoor, RR, Chicago 50 31 17 2 64 155 115 Djokovic,4-6,6-3,7-5. Winnipeg 51 26 17 8 60 142 132 2013 AuslralianOpen:hard-outdoor,F,DjokovDallas 49 23 19 7 53 157 159 ic, 6-7(2),7-6(3), 6-3, 6-2. Colorado 50 21 18 11 53 131 141 2013 Wimbledon:grass-outdoor,F,Murray,6-4, Minnesota 49 23 20 6 52 135 140 7-5, 6-4. Pacific Division 2014 Miami Masters: hard-outdoor, QF, GP W L DT Pts GF GA Djokovic,7-5,6-3. Anaheim 50 32 12 6 70 147 134 2014U.S.Open:hard-outdoor,QF,Djokovic,7-6 SanJose 50 27 17 6 60 139 135 (1), 6-7(1),6-2,6-4. Vancouver 48 27 18 3 57 131 124 2014 Beijing:hard-outdoor,SF,Djokovic, 6-3, Calgary 50 27 20 3 57 144 129 6-4. LosAngeles 49 21 16 12 54 134 132 2014 ParisMasters:hard-indoor,QF,Djokovic, Arizona 50 18 26 6 42 116 170 7-5, 6-2. Edmonton 50 13 28 9 35 115 166 2016 AuslralianOpen:hard-outdoor, F,Djokovic 76(5) 67(4) 6360 Sunday'sGames Anzona 3,Montreal 2 St. Louis4,Washington 3 DEALS Nashville 4,Pittsburgh0 Minnesota 4, Vancouver2 Transactions Today'sGames BASKETB ALL Florida atNY Rangers 4 pm National Basketball Association WinnipegatCalgary, 6p.m. NEW YORKKNICKS — Recalled F Cleanthony Edmonto natSanJose,7: 30p.m. EarlyfromWestchester (NBADL). Tuesday'sGames HOCKEY OttawaatNewJersey,4 p.m. Florida atN.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. National HockeyLeague LosAngelesatWashington,4p.m. DALLASSTARS— ReassignedDJamieOleksiak Arizonaat Columbus, 4 p.m. and RW Bret Ritchieto Texas(AHL). Buffaloat Montreal,4:30p.m. TAMPABA Y LIGHTNING— Recalled GAndrei TampaBayatSt.Louis,5p.m. VasilevskiyfromSyracuse(AHL). TorontoatNashvdle,5 p m WASHIN GTONCAPITALS—Reassigned DCamChicago at Minnesota 5 pm eronSchilingto Hershey(AHL). Coloradoat Dallas, 5:30p.m. COLLEGE WinnipegatVancouver, 7p.m. AUBURN — Dismissed women'ssenior basketball Carolinaat Anaheim,7p.m. FHasinaMuhammadfromtheteam.
SKIING
Lige out to defend his 3world titles at Beaver Creek By Pat Graham
downhill, since the A m eri-
The Associated Press
cans are already so deep in re a
The hill? Perfectly suited
for Ted Ligety's style. The
man, Marco Sullivan, Travis Ganong, Jared Goldberg and,
hand? Almost healed. The
hardware'? He's hoping to retain aii those medals.
of course, Bode Miller, who
The American skier knows
(e unerv
it won't be as easy as 1-2-3 to defend his giant slalom, super-combined and super-G
ra
ships in Beaver Creek, Colorado, beginning Wednesday with the super-G. After all, he had one of those everything-goes-right Pier Marco Tacca/The Associated Press kind of performances two Ted Ligety competes in Adelboden, Switzerland, last month. The years ago in Austria, when two-time Olympic champion just had that everything-goes-right he became the first male ski- kind of performance twoyears ago in Austria, when he became er since French great Jean- the first male skier since1968 to win at least three golds at worlds. 5E v
Still, Ligety's not ready to surrender those crowns at worlds this
week at Beaver Creek, Colorado.
Still, Ligety is not ready to s urrender those crowns -
any of them. "Defending all three gold
will return after undergoing back surgery in November. Recently, Ligety took a pit stop home to Park City, so he could fine-tune some tech-
titles at the world champion-
Claude Killy in 1968 to win at least three golds at worlds.
the event with Steven Ny-
his only giant slalom race so in the snow as he cruises far this season by holding off around gates. medals? I guess I w ouldn't Alexis Pinturault of France Ligety said he still has "good days and bad days" say that's my expectation," by 0.18 seconds. Ligety said in a phone interLigety hasn't been his usu- with his dinged-up hand. It view from Park City, Utah, al dominating self this sea- affects him more in slalom where he was squeezing in son, particularly in his signa- events, because he has to some last-minute training ture event, the GS. tightly tape it and wear a probefore making his way to ColIn his words, he's "fighting tective brace. "But in G S an d speed orado. "It's certainly on the the skis and gravity a little dream side, for sure. bit. e events, it's not a bi g deal," aBut it's still possible." The reason could be simsaid the 30-year-old Ligety, Especially at Beaver Creek, ple: Ligety is racing with who will have the screws rea venue Ligety has ruled in four screws inserted into his moved after the season. "This the past. He's won five times left hand after breaking his is not ideal, but not something on the demanding Birds of wrist in a training accident that affects me a great deal." Prey slope, including in De- two months ago. He remains At Beaver Creek, his plan cember when h e c a ptured wary of dragging the hand is to ski every race except the
nical issues he spotted on video. Even the world's best occa-
sionally need to a refresher course. "I would say this year has been a little bit of a struggle for me," said Ligety, who added a gold medal in the giant slalom at the Sochi Olympics last February to the gold in the combined he captured at the 2006 'Ibrin Games. "I've
figured a couple of things out in my skiing, to hopefully realign myself back to where I have been." When Ligety is at his best, his skiing appears almost effortless. His turns are razor sharp and his speed unmatched. That hasn't always been the case this season, with tiny hiccups interrupt-
ing promising performances. To have any chance of duplicating his success two years ago in Schladming, Austria, the skier known as "Shred" realizes he needs to
uncover his top form and fast. "Beaver Creek is probably
Niller confirmshewill competeatworlds BEAVER CREEK,Colo. — Six-time Olympic medalist Bode Miller, who hasnot raced this season because of aback injury, has confirmed that he will compete in thealpine world championships, which are set to begin hereTuesday. n l'm going to race thedownhill, the super-G, and we're trying to figure out if I will race the combined," Miller said Saturday. "But as of right now, it doesn't look likely, as I haven'tnhadanyslalom, and my slalom setup isn't that comfortable for me.
If all goes according to plan, Miller's first race will be the super-G onWednesday, followed by thedownhill on Saturday and the alpine combined onSunday. Hewas the runner-up in the giant slalom here in 2013but will forgo the event this year because it is the most taxing on his back. Miller, 37, is recovering from anoperation he had inNovember to repair a herniated disk sustained in acrash while he was competing last March at theWorld Cupfinals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. nMy back seemsgood," he said. "It's obviously the sort of thing where the closer you get to being 100percent healthy, the more danger there is, becauseyoustop protecting it and you stop being real careful, which you need to do to racewell." Despite his ailing back, Miller, who hascollected four world championship gold medals andonesilver, is confident about his chancesin Beaver Creek. nl wouldn't be racing if I wasn't trying to win or get medals," he said. "I hope to be onthe podium, but it's going to be a challenge, because everyone is skiing well and it's my first race of theyear." — New YorkTimesNews Service
one of the best places possible they can tackle me, e he said. "It's good to have that kind
for me to have a chance of repeating,e said Ligety, who has his own company that makes
that means you've done some
goggles, helmets, gloves and outerwear. Asked if he feels like a marked skier heading into worlds, Ligety laughed.
things right. "But this is about me skiing the way I can ski and being confident and hopefully putting together some great
"It's not like football, where
of pressure on you because
runs."
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TENNIS: AUSTRALIAN OPEN
COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP
o ovica ain ominan in usraian en ina
Late 3-pointer lifts
By Christopher Clarey New York Times News Service
MELBOURNE, A u s t ralia — Huffing and stretching with
full-throttle effort Sunday, ripping forehands from inside the baseline, Andy Murrayseemed for quite some time to be a player on amission to impose a new
ending for himself at the Australian Open. But Novak Djokovic had oth-
r
er ideas and a cooler head, and in the critical phases of their
/
latest big match in Melbourne,
the scene looked familiar as Djokovic kept collecting games and momentum and Murray
kept berating himself and the tennis fates.
Djokovic's 7-6 (5), 6-7 (4), 6-3,6-0 victory,which came so hard in the beginning and looked so easy by the end, gave him a fifth Australian Open singles title and an eighth Grand Slam singlestitle. While Djokovic is now 5-0
Cal overWashington Nextup
The Associated Press SEATTLE — Sam Sing- Washington er was originally looking to at Oregon drive, but a jab step created space and the sophomore let When:6 p.m. the ball fly from the top of Wednesday TV:ESPN2 Radio:KBND-AM the key. He knew right away the 1110, FM-100.1 ball was going in the hoop. Singer hit a 3-pointer with Washington State at Oregon five seconds left to lift California to a 90-88 win over State Washington on Sunday. When:7 p.m. "I was in a little bit of a Thursday slump, pretty much this TV: Pac-12Radio: KICE-AM 940, whole year," Singer said. KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9 "But I kept working, put my head down, kept getting shots up in the morning, afSinger'sshot came after ter practice, stuff like that. It Nigel Williams-Goss gave feels great to have it all pay Washington an 88-87 lead, off and finally hit a 3, espe- i ts first since early in t h e cially the time that I hit it." first half, with a short jumpDuring a timeout prior er at 19.5 seconds. to the game-winning shot, California, led by the Bears had called a play Mathews' 23 points and Tyin preparation to face a rone Wallace's 21, had fendman-to-man defense.When the Huskies came out in a
2-3 zone, California stuck with its original calL Singer caught the ball at the top and originally was going to drive to the hoop, thinking defender Andrew Andrews was going to jump into him hard. When his jab step created space, Singer took the shot he is known for around the California program.
in finals at Melbourne Park, Murray is 0-4. He has beaten
Djokovic in other places for other major trophies, but on the hardcourts here, he has
been unable to controlenough of the big rallies or enough
the former No. 1 and current
U.S. Davis Cup captain, told Australian television. "I think it's really hard to understand
down.'"
e
unless you've been in that caldron. Murray is a guy who wears it on his sleeve. Some
LES — Jakob Poeltl had 14 points and nine rebounds to
lead Utah's rout.
NHL ROUNDUP
s d
PIETR ANGELO
]118
Alex Brandon/The Associated Press
St. Louis' T.J. Oshie, left, Jay Bouwmeester, and Vladimir Tarasenko celebrate Tarasenko's goal in the third period of the
Blues' 4-3 victory at Washington onSunday.
Steen, Elliot lead Blues overCapitals W ASHINGTON —
NBA ROUNDUP
NBA SCOREBOARD
I(nicks' win overLakers pulled fromnational TV one of those moments where
NEW YORK — Carmelo I h ad to look at the bench and Anthony hears those voices l e t them know that I've still
saying he's getting old, that gotit." he can't jump like he once Mis singhalf itsstarpower with Kobe Bryant sidelined
some of them are NI X t l l p coming from right in
after shoulder surgery, t he game was yanked from ESPN
his locker room.
— the Knicks' fourth
an-
consecutive game
swered in hi s ow n
way Sunday, scoring 18ofl s31pont m Utah the third quarter as at Portland the New York Knicks W h beat the Los Angeles T d' 7P' ' " y TV:CSNNW
that wa s d r o pped from the NBA's na-
tong T V
s c hed-
ule. ESPN i n stead
showed a celebrity bowling tournament that took place more
than three weeks ward his own bench Radio: KBND- ago. in the second quarter AM 1110, Also on Sunday: after rising high to FM-100.1; Heat 63, Celtics 75: slam down a lob pass KRCO-AM 690, BOSTON — Hassan from Jason Smith, FM-96.9 White side s c ored r evealing t ha t h i s half of his 20 points teammates were teasing the during a dominant stretch 3 0-year-old forward recently spanning the t h ird a n d afterseeinghimdunk. fourth quarters to lead Mi"They said they haven't ami.Whitesidealsohadnine seen that before in a long r ebounds and blocked three time,"Anthonysaid,"andwe
No. 11 Utah 67, Southern
California 39: LOS ANGE-
half deficit to beat Miami.
The Associated Press
Lakers 92-80. He stared back to-
Pac-12
Bernat Armangue 1 The Associated Press
may love it. Some may hate it, Novak Djokovic celebrates a point wonagainst Andy Murray during the men's final at the Australian but he lets you know what he's Open on Sunday. Djokovic won his fifth Australian Open title with a7-6 (5), 6-7 (4), 6-3, 6-0 victory. feeling." Despite Murray's often inspired play earlier in the tour- skills, tested each other in a se- through some tough physical to Djokovic's physical issues. "He does it all the time." nament and in the first two sets ries oflong athletic exchanges. moments. But I did." of the final, it was difficult not It was often breathtaking in Djokovic said the problem But Murray continued to to view Sunday's gesticulations both senses of the term. The was in his legs. worry. He lost his serve in the "Just my thighs, my quads," next game and his scoreboard and running monologue as first set required 72 minutes; regression: the kind of distrac- the second 80, in small part he said. "After playing two advantage. When Djokovic tion he tended to avoid when because two protesters briefly hours and something, I didn't held to go up, 3-2, Murray sat Ivan Lendl, his former coach, m anaged to enterthe courtbe- feel I have the strength in my in his chair on the next changewas sitting stone-faced behind fore being removed by security. thighs." over and swore repeatedly. his sunglasses in the players But early i n t h a t second He said he did not ask for He managed to getto 3-3 box. With Lendl in his corner, set, Djokovic began losing his medicalassistance because he and get a break point in the Murray won the 2012 Olympic balance during some rallies, did not feel he had a specific subsequent game, but he did gold medal in singles, the 2012 falling in the first game and injury. not convert and after losing his "I didn't have any cramps," own serve to go down, 3-5, he U.S. Open and Wimbledon in pitching forward again in the 2013. second. he said. "I just felt weakness at chuckedhisracket. "So many times," he said. But his convincing run back After Murray won the sec- that stage." to the final here as the No. 6 ond set, Djokovic's problems Djokovic has experienced "How do you do it to yourself?" seed with his new coach, Ame- continued. Murray broke him such problems before, strugBut Murray is no rookie. At lie Mauresmo, providing the in the opening game and then gling to remain upright in a 27, he has a wealth of major counsel does put him firmly held serve at love to take a 2-0 match in Shanghai against tournament experience, and he back in the mix at the top, and lead when Djokovic barely Juan Martin del Potro in 2013. acknowledged that he should that top does lookvery familiar. moved for two shots he would But Djokovic's powers of quick have concentrated on his own "There's the baby," Djokovic normally have chased. recovery have been a major end of the court. "He absolutely collapsed," "Two and a half hours for said affectionately when it was factor in his continuing sucplaced in front of him later at a two sets has taken a toll on our cess. Down by 0-2 in the third Pat Cash, a former Wimbledon news conference. bodies, both of us," Djokovic set Sunday, he won his next champion, said in a radio interThis final was intense from told an Australian TV station. service game at love. view. "You like to put a rose tint "Don't worry about him," on this, but he's melted down. the first rally as Murray and "I was trying not to show him, Djokovic, men with similar because you don't want to show Murray said t o h i mself on He's been disappointing. I'm games and similar defensive your opponents you are going courtin an apparent reference disappointed for him."
A nthony
of the second half. Washington tied the game on four occasionsbefore Williams-Goss' jumper. Also on Sunday:
when we work out, he makes Top 25 that shot all the time," Bears Florida State 55, No. 23 guard Jordan Mathews said. Miami 54: TALLAHASSEE, "In the mornings, he makes Fla. — Montay B r andon that shot all the time. Jabs, scored 18 points on 7-of-7 a nd shoot it. I w a s , 'Oh, shooting and Florida State that's down. I knew it was overcame a 16-point first-
difference. "I don't think you can really quantify what that pressure does to someone," Jim Courier,
dld. Hard not to, since
ed off the Huskies for most
"He doesn't think so, but
of his emotions to make the
The Associated Press
B3
s h o ts. Chris Bosh added 18
had this conversation before points, and Tyler Johnson the game today, so it was just h a d 13.
Standings
Summaries
AllTimesPST
EasternConlerence W L 40 8 33 15 31 17 30 19 29 20 25 22 21 26 20 27 18 28 18 30 16 30
d-Atlanta d-Toronto Washington d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Miami Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando NewYork Philadelphia
tr 32
15 35 10 38
to 38 WesternCottlerence W L d-Golden State 31 8 d-Memphis 35 12 LA. Clippers 33 15 d-Portlartd 32 16 Houston 33 15 Dallas 32 17 SanAntonio 30 18 Phoenix 28 21 NewOrleans 25 22 Oklahoma City 23 24 Denver tg 29 Sacramento 17 29 Utah 11 30 LA. Lakers 13 35 Minnesota 8 39 d-divisionleader
Knicks92, Lakers80 Pct GB .833 .688 7 .646 9 .612 10'/~ .592 11'/r .532 14'/r .447 18'/r ,426 19'/z
.391 2t .375 22 .348 23 .347 23'/~ .300 26 .208 30 .208 30
LA. LAKERS (80) Hill 1-3 0-0 2,Kelly2-4 0-0 5, Sacre0-6 2-22, Clarkson6-13 4-619, Ellington2-122-2 7, Lin 1-3 2-24, Boozer6-157-8tg, Davis4-6t-2 9, Johnson 4-121-111,Black1-20-02. Totals27-7619-2380.
NEWYORK(92)
Amundson 2-72-66,Anthony13-253-43t,Smith 4-90-09, Calderon 4-50-09, Galloway4-113-3t3, Hardaway Jr3-100-08, Acy3-90-07, Larkin3-50-0 7, Thomas 1-30-02. Totals37-84 8-13 92.
L.A. Lakers NewYork
Heat 93, Celtics 75
MIAMI (83) Granger2-62-2 6, Bosh6-195-718, Whiteside 10-17 0-020,Napier2-80-0 5,Chalmers1-4 2-44, Williams0-10-00, ArtderseIt 2-20-05,Johnson4-9 .688 5r/r 4-613, Cole2-50-04,Ennis3-62-2t,Haslem e-0 .667 6'/~ 0-00.Totals32-7715-21 83. .688 5'/r BOSTON (75) .653 7 Crowder1-20-03, Bass7-141-215, Zeller6-13 .625 8'/r 5-817, Bradley8-150-017,Turner0-60-00,Thorn.571 11 ton 3 9 22 9,Sttllirtger3-111-2 7, Smart 1-600 3, .532 13 Young1-21-2 3,Walace 01 000, Pressey02 t-2 .489 t5 1. Totals 30-8111-1875. .396 19r/r Miami 25 19 17 22 — 83 .370 20'/~ 15 16 28 16 — 75 .362 21 Boslon Pct GB .822 .745 3
.271 25'/r .170 30
Leaders ThroughSaturday'sGames
Sttnda y'sGames
Scoring
Miami83,Boston75
NewYork92,LA. Lakers80 Today'sGames CharlotteatWashington, 4p.m. Philadelphiaat Cleveland,4p.m. Milwaukee atToronto,4:30 p.m. LA. ClippersatBrooklyn,4;30 p.m. Atlantaat NewOrleans, 5p.m. Orlandoat OklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Minnesotaat Dallas, 5:30p.m. Memphiat s Phoenix, 6tIm. Tuesday'sGames Denver at Philadelphia, 4p.m. Miami atDetroit,4:30 t.m. Bostonat NewYork,4:30p.m. Utah atPortland,7p.m. GoldenStateatSacramento, 7p.m.
19 20 18 23 — tn 32 15 25 20 — 92
Harden,HOU James,CLE Westbrook,OKC Davis,NOR Anthony,NYK Aldridge,PO R Cousins,SAC Curry,GO L Griffin, LAC Thompson, GOL Bryant,LAL Irving,CLE Lillard,POR Wade,MIA Bosh,MIA
G FG FT PTS AVG 48 396 378 1297 27.0 39 362 240 1030 26.4 33 284 223 820 24.8 42 396 236 1028 24.5 36 321 171 867 24.1 42 395 185 1000 23.8 34 279 244 803 23.6 45 364 173 1036 23.0 48 426 234 1094 22.8 44 359 143 1000 22.7 35 266 196 782 22.3 46 363 182 1005 21.8 48 349 213 1036 21.6 35 29t 153 750 21.4 38 294 159 801 21.1
The
boarding Karl Alzner early in the second. The game turned, but not in the Capi-
St. Louis Blues are rolling. Against the Washington tals' favor. Capitals, an injury, an ejecSt. Louis killed off the tion and Alex Ovechkin's five-minute penalty, limtwo goals weren't enough to iting the league's fourthstop them. best power-play unit to two Alexander Steen had two shots. "It's c onfidence for u s goals and an assist, Brian Elliot stopped 33 shots and and frustrates their best the Blues beat the Capitals players," Blues defenseman 4-3 on Sunday. Alex Pietrangelo said about "This was a real gutsy the penalty kill. "(Washingwin. You lose one of your ton) is a team that thrives on top defensemen second shift the power play." into the game. Your captain Hitchcock called it the goes out," coach Ken Hitch- key to the game. "We took the energy out cock said. "We didn't (just) hang on, we played really of the building, we took the well. There's wins and then energy out of their team," he there's really i mpressive said. wins. This was a very imAlso on Sunday: pressive win." Coyotes 3, Canadiens 2: Defenseman Kevin Shattenkirk left with a first-pe-
riod injury, forward and captain David Backes was ejected and the Blues still
MONTREAL — Lauri Kor-
pikoski scored two power-play goals for Arizona, and Montreal-area native
Louis Domingue made 18 won their f i ft h s t raight s aves to wi n i n h i s f i r s t game and third in four days. NHL start. The 22-year-old Dmitrij Jaskin and Vlad- Domingue helped end the imir Tarasenko also scored Canadiens' five-game winfor the Blues, winners and ning streak. 10 of 11, and T.J. Oshie had Predators 4, Penguins 0: three assists. P ITTSBURGH — Ca r t e r O vechkin, wh o
h a s 1 5 Hutton made 21 saves for
goals in his last 15 games, his secondcareer shutout in added an assist and his Nashville's first regulation t wo scores gave hi m a n victory in Pittsburgh in 11 NHL-leading 3 1 go a l s. years. He became the fifth playWild 4, Canucks 2: VANer in NHL history to start
COUVER, British Columbia
his career with 10 30-goal seasons.
— Devan Dubnyk stopped 35 shots to help Minnesota beatVancouver.
Backes was booted for
B4
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
UPER BOwLXLIX: PATRIOTS 28,
• Wilson throws an INT at the goal line to give thePatriots their 4th NFL title By John Branch New York Times News Service
GLENDALE, Ariz. — On the same field where a receiver named David Ttirree had im-
probably caught a desperation throw to propel the New York
Giants to Super Bowl victory over the New England Patriots seven yearsearlier, the Seat-
tle Seahawks had a potentially historic acrobatic catch of their own to remember and
treasure. The difference in the falling reception by Jermaine Kearse,
however, is that the Seahawks did not complete the drive into the end zone.
The highlight was almost immediately trumped by a highly questionable play call and an interception at the goal line, each more unbelievable than the catch that had preced-
ed them. "A very, very hard lesson," Seattle coach Pete C arroll
said, noting that his team had been on the verge of another
championship. "I hate to learn the hard way, but there's no other way to look at it right
now." Seattle had blown a 10-point fourth-quarter lead but found
itself at New England's 38yard line with 1
m i nute 14
seconds left. Trailing by 28-24, quarterback Russell Wilson lobbed a pass down the right side to receiver Kearse, who
was blanketed by the backup cornerback Malcolm Butler.
'r"
c
<+~,-rs(-",+sr's'k+.;„
Both men leapt over the 10-
Kathy Willens /The Associated Press
yard line, falling backward New England's Malcolm Butler intercepts a pass intended for Seattle's Ricardo Lockette in the final minute of Super Bowl XLIX in Glendale, Arizona on Sunday. like high-jumpers over a bar, as the ball was volleyed into
the air while they skidded backward on the grass. The ball dropped into the arms of
Kearse, who cradled it for a catch as dramatic as any in Super Bowl history. The Seahawks had a first down at the 5-yard line and used the second of their three timeouts with 1:06 left. Wilson
"It's not the right matchup for us to run the
football, so on second down, we throw the ball, really to kind of waste that play. If we score, we do. If we don't, then we'll run it on third and fourth down."
play-calling and, shortly after, a fight that escalated momentarily out of control in the end
Seattle's Jermaine
Kearse makes a catch as
zone.
The Seahawks had one timeout remaining and Lynchthe league's leading bulldozer, — Seahawks coach Pete Carroll on the decision to throw with more rushing yards and the ball from the1-yard line instead of calling a run play touchdowns than anyone over
he falls
against New
England's
the past four seasons — ready
handed off to the bruisingback "It's not the right matchup Marshawn Lynch, who gained 4 yards, nearly dragging de- for us to run the football, so
line, Wilson took the snap
from the shotgun position. He fenders into the end zone. on second down, we throw threw immediately to the goal Carroll, h i s u s ua l s t a te the ball, really to kind of waste line, toward receiver Ricardo of calm lost in emotion that that play," Carroll said. "If Lockette. seemed balanced between an- we score, we do. If we don't, But Butler and the ball arger and disappointment, said then we'll run it on third and rived at the same time, and
Malcolm Butler to set up the
to plunge in for the winning score.
series of
Instead of Kearse becom-
ing the hero, it was the lit-
plays that ended with Butler's win-clinching inter-
t le-known Butler, who h a d been the foil to Kearse mo-
ments before he saved the game for New England with
after the game that he had not fourth down." He said he had Butler snagged the prize: a an interception. "I've worked so hard in looked at Wilson, his thirdgame-clinching interception. "I put the blame on me," said practice, and I just wanted to play and thought a quick pass year quarterback, before the would be the game-winner. play to make sure that Wilson Wilson, who did not question play so bad and help my team
ception.
wanted to "waste" a running The o ff ensive
c o ordinator, understood the gravity of the
Darrell Bevell, made the play moment. He did. call, but Carroll gave it the goWith the clock ticking, on ahead without debate. second-and-goal at the 1-yard
Ben Margot/ The Associated
Press
the call when he received it. out," Butler said afterward. "I "I'm the one who threw it." got out there and did exactly The interception immediate- what I needed to do to help my ly set off a debate over Seattle's team win."
Seahawks' vaunted defensefalters in the 4th quarter By Tim Booth
lose two starters it's going to Seahawks' title a year ago. be tough for your defense." Bobby Wagner w a sn't
The Associated Press
GLENDALE, Ariz. — It's
The Seahawks fell to 2-6
hawks, always with the idea of being the better team at the
end of the game. For a change, Seattle's re-
whether Seattle could use this
cord-setting defense wilted in the fourth quarter. Instead of finishing, they faded before Tom Brady and New England's rally. Kathy Willens/The Associated Press "I think I'm going to go lock Seattle's Jeremy Lane is tackled by New England's Julian Edelman after a first-quarter interception. myself in my room for about Lane injured his wrist on the play and did not return, forcing the Seahawks to shuffle their secondary. two weeks. This one hurt because we had it," Seattle linebacker Bruce Irvin said. "We had it." Staked to a 10-point lead at
the start of the fourth quarter, the best defense in the NFL
could not deliver a second straight Super Bowl title for the Seahawks.
Seattle had the best pass defense, best total defense and best scoring defense in the NFL. The Seahawks had al-
lowed less than 10 points per game during their eight-game win streak to close the season.
Failing in the fourth quarter was a crushing turn for a
interested.
"I would rather learn from over the past two seasons when allowing 24 or more winning than learn from lospoints. Five of their six losses ing," he said. this season, including Sunday night, came when giving up 24 or more. The question afterward was
one of the mottos of Pete Carroll's program. The word "Finish" is everywhere when it comes to the Seattle Sea-
loss the same way it used its 2012 playoff loss to Atlanta, which was the catalyst for the
2 locations inBend Main Center 215I NEstudioRd,suiteu NWX 2863Northwest CrossingDr,suite iO
unit that had been praised for being the best of this era of the NFL. All-Pro safety Earl
This wasn't the elite Seattle defense of late in the sea-
back Tharold Simon was suddenly thrust into action and
son on Sunday. Thomas and struggled. Thomas sat silent at his locker Sherman both played with Defensive end Cliff A v r i l for more than 10 minutes in an injuries suffered in the NFC suffered a concussion in the oddly quiet locker room. championship game. Chancel- secondhalfand Seattle's pass "We'vegottobefundamen- lor injured his knee in practice r ush was unable to get at tally sound. We're a very good Friday and had to go through Brady in the fourth quarter. fundamentally sound team, a pregame workout just to be Brady was 13-of-15 passing in but when you're not funda- cleared. the final quarter, and the Pamentally sound things hapThen the Seahawks suf- triots had 123 yards of offense. "Those were two big injupen," Kam Chancellor said. fered two major losses during "Things happen and a great the game. Nickel cornerback ries to core guys for us, but quarterback like Tom Brady, Jeremy Lane broke his wrist we ran the same plays," Sherhe'll find it. He'll definitely find after intercepting Brady in the m an said. "We executed,even it. We've got to be fundamen- first quarter, causing a shift in though some mistakes were tally sound." the secondary. Backup corner- made atthe end. When you
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN B 5
UPER BOWL XLIX: PATRIOTS 28, NFL SCOREBOARD
asovercomea versi or aes i e
Sunduy'sSummary
Patriots 28, Seahawks24 N ewEngland 0 14 0 1 4— 28 Seattle 0 14 10 0 — 24 SecondQuarler NE — LaFell11 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 9:47. Drive:9plays, 65yards,4:10. KeyPlays: Brady 17 passto Amendola;Brady5 passto Vereen on 3rdand-3;Brady23passto Edelmanon3rd-and-9. New England 7, Seatle 0. Sea —Lynch 3 run(Hauschkakick), 2:16.Drive;8 plays, 70 yards, 4:51. KeyPlays:Wilson 6passto Kearse on3rd-and-6;Wilson44passto Matthews.New England 7, Seattle 7. NE — Gronkowski 22passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick),:31. Drive: 8plays, 80yards, 1:45.KeyPlays: Brady 11 pass toAmendola; Avril 5-yard offside penalty on3rd-and-3;Brady16 passto Vereen. New England14,Seatle 7. Sea —Matthews11 pass fromWilson (Hauschka kick),:02. Drive: 5plays, 80yards, 0:29.KeyPlays: Turbin 19 run;Wilson 17run; Wilson 23passto Lockette;Arrington10-yardface mask penalty. New England14, Seatle14. Third Quarter Sea —FGHauschka 27, 11:09. Drive: 7 plays, 72 yards,3:51.KeyPlays: Lynch15run;Wilson45pass to Matthews. Seatle17, NewEngland14.
G
454. Drive: 6plays,50yards,3:13.Key Plays: Wagner interceptionat NewEngland40; Wilson15 run; Lynch 14 run.Seatle 24,NewEngland14. Fourth Quarter NE — Amendola 4 passfromBrady(Gostkowski kick), 7:55.Drive:9plays, 68yards, 4:15. KeyPlays: Brady21passto Edelmanon3rd-and-14; Thomas15yard unne cessaryroughnesspenalty; Brady21passto Edelmanon3rd-and-8. Seatle 24, NewEngland21. NE — Edelman 3 passfrom Brady(Gostkowski kick), 2:02.Drive:10plays,64yards, 4:50. KeyPlays: Brady20passto Gronkowski; Brady13passto Gronkowski.NewEngland28,Seattle 24.
versity of Phoenix stadium in shocked silence. If anyone was worried about legacies and deflated footballs, the frenetic end to this game Sunday night surely went a long way to settle
Sea —Baldwin3passfromWilson(Hauschkakick),
A—70,288.
First downs RUSHING Passing Penalty THIRDDOWNEFF
FOURTH DOWNEFF
TotalNetYards Total Plays AvgGain NETYARDSRUSHING Rushes Avgperrush NETYARDSPASSING Sacked-Yds lost Gross-Yds passing Completed-Att. Had Intercepted Yards-PassPlay KICKOF FS-EndZone-TB Punts-Avg. Puntsblocked FGs-PAT sblocked TOTALRETURNYARDAGE PuntReturns KickoffReturns Interceptions PENALTIS E-Yds
Fumbles-Lost Time ofPossession
NE 25 1 21 3 8-14 0-0 377 72 5.2 57 21 2.7 320 1-8 328 37-50 2 6.3 5-5-5 4-49.0 0 0-0 79 3-27 3-49 1-3 5-36 0-0 33:46
Seu
20 8 10 2 3-10 0-0 396 53 7.5 162 29 5.6 234 3-13 247 12-21 1 9.8 5-3-2 6-44.8 0 0-0 20 2-6 0-0 2-14 7-70 0-0 26:14
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS RUSHING New England N o Yds AvgLg Blount 14 40 2.9 9 Vereen 4 13 3.3 7 Edelman 1 7 70 7 Brady 2 -3 -1 5 -1 21 57 2.7 9 Total Seattle No Yds Avg Lg Lynch 24 102 4.3 15 Wilson 3 39 13.0 17 Turbin 2 21 10.5 19 Total 29 162 5.6 19
TD 0 0 0 0
0 TD 1
RECEIVING
No Yds Lg TD 11 64 9 109 6 68 5 48 4 29 1 6 1 4 37 328
16 23 22 17 11 6 4 23
1 1 0 1 1
New England Allen Total Seattle Ryan Total
4 109 45 3 59 25 3 45 33 1 3 1 31 1 3 3 12 247 45
1 0 0 0
0 0
1 2
Lg TD 0 0 0 0 Lg TD 0 0 0 0 0 0
reer: 164, Brady*
4
because these New England
Patriots had gone through so much just to have a chance to
wWi©/4r~
'
reer:1,605, Brady
(
They milled about midfield as the confetti streamed d own, w h il e
Most completions, game: 37, Brady Most passing yards, ca*
: 4r7
win.
Most touchdowns, career:13, Tom Brady, NE longest Punt: 64 yards, Ryan Allen, NE
S eattle f a n s
who just a few minutes earlier were sure this was their
TEAM Most first downs passing, game, team: 21, New England Fewest kickoff returns, game, team: 0, Seattle Fewest kickoff returns, game,bothteams: 3 Fewest kickoff return yards, game, team: 0,
Super Bowl filed out of Uni-
Kathy Willens I The Associated Press
that. If anyone was worried New England's Tom Brady celebrates with the Lombardi Trophy after defeating Seattle 28-24 in that th e P a t riots c ouldn't Super Bowl XLIX at Glendale, Arizona. It is the fourth Super Bowl victory for Brady, and he won his overcome both controversy third Super Bowl MVP award. and recent history, well, the
Seattle
Fewest kickoff return yards,game,bothteams:
Lombardi trophy was going back East once again after the throw the ball on the 1-yard- handwritten speech blasting Patriots somehow escaped line with the Super Bowl on everyone — including the with a 28-24 win.
For those keeping score at home, that's four Super Bowl
wins in 14 years for the powerhouse under Tom Brady and Bill Belichick. But the last
one was a decade ago, and the pressure had been building long before the pressure was taken out of the balls in the AFC title game. "I never thought another
trophy would feel this good, but this absolutely does," owner Robert K r af t s a i d. "Any true Patriot fan understands that." Yes, Russell Wilson tossed
this one away with one terribly ill-advised throw on what began as an ill-advised play call. No team with Marshawn Lynch in the backfield should
they were professional foot49 ball players, and they both *Extended previous record NFL — who thought the team the line. played and acted like it. The Indeed, by all measures, might have been cheating by Seahawks played pretty well, the Seahawks should have deflating the balls in the AFC too, but the contrast in styles been the ones celebrating. game against Indianapolis. c ouldn't h ave b een m o r e terbacks who hear the whisThey should have had their He wanted to take the pres- evident. pers after going a decade besecond straight Super Bowl sure off his team, and he did. On the sidelines in the sec- tween big wins yet somehow win, and the talk should have The questions about deflated ond half,Sherman mugged rise to win both the game and been about the dynasty Pete balls became questions about for the cameras. After scoring the MVP award. Carroll was building in the football instead. the touchdown that put his Brady was 8 for 8 on the Pacific Northwest. Surprisingly enough, the team up 10 points, receiver final drive to put the Patriots B ut now B rady ha s h i s New England defense was Doug Baldwin was flagged ahead. "I don't think about that," fourth ring and is in the con- better than the vaunted Seat- for a celebration that looked versation again when it comes tle unit behind Richard Sher- like something he might do in Brady said when asked if it to great Super Bowl quarter- man, especially when corner- the bathroom, not on the field. would be his signature drive. backs. Now the talk can begin back Malcom Butler made the And in the final seconds, "It's a team effort. There's again about the great Patri- play of his life by intercepting Seattle linebacker Bruce Ir- never one player. It took the ot dynasty that was quieted Wilson at the goal line with vin was ejected after starting whole team." with losses in New England's 20 seconds left. a fight. On this night the whole "It's not the way we drew it last two Super Bowls. None of that would go on team was there, and there Give the owner a rare as- up," Brady said, "but this team under Belichick, of course, were no more questions to be sist on that. Kraft stepped has never given up the entire though style doesn't always answered. forward upon the Patriots' year." win games. Neither, for that — Tim Dahlberg is a columnist a rrival in A r i z ona w it h a They didn't give up because matter, do 37-year-old quarwith The Associated Press.
Brady cementshis G LENDALE,
Ariz.
When quarterback Tom Brady first jogged onto the field before Sunday's Super Bowl, thousands of New England Patriots fans rose from their seats, burst into
15 0 15 0
No Yds FC Lg TD 2 6 0 6 0 2 6 0 6 0
KICKOFF RETURNS NEWENGLAND NO YDSLG TD Amendola 2 44 23 0 Develin 1 5 5 0 Total 8 4 9 23 0 Seattle No Yds Lg TD Total 0 0 0 0 DEFENSE New England Tk Ast Sk FF FR Collins 6 2 0 0 0 Ninkovich 3 3 1 0 0 4 1 0 0 McCourly 0 Hightower 3 2 0 0 0 Siliga 2 2 0 0 0 Cha.Jones 3 0 1 0 0 Butler 3 0 0 0 0 Browner 3 0 0 0 0 Branch 3 0 0 0 0 Arrington 3 0 0 0 0 Wiffork 2 0 0 0 0 Revis 1 0 1 0 0 Ryan 1 0 0 0 0 Chung 1 0 0 0 0 Slater 1 0 0 0 0 Edelman 1 0 0 0 0 Bolden 1 0 0 0 0 Total 4 1 10 3 0 0 Seattle T A 8 Fcd Rec Wagner 10 2 0 0 0 Wright 10 1 0 0 0 Chancellor 7 3 0 0 0 Thomas 8 1 0 0 0 Maxwell 5 0 0 0 0 Williams 2 1 0 0 0 Sherman 2 1 0 0 0 Irvin 2 0 1 0 0 Bennett 2 0 0 0 0 McDaniel 1 1 0 0 0 Avril 0 2 0 0 0 Shead 2 0 0 0 0 Coyle 1 0 0 0 0 Terreg 1 0 0 0 0 Johnson 1 0 0 0 0 Lockette 1 0 0 0 0 Total 56 12 1 0 0 MISSED FlELD GOALS —None.
a
a
upset. His 3-yard touchdown pass to Julian Edelman with 2 minutes and 2 seconds re-
maining in the game — a classic connection, with a
calm Brady, looking one way and then throwing the other way — sealed the Pa-
But Brady was not in the
Seattle.
mood for idle celebrations of B rady became just t h e his appearance, his sixth in third starting quarterback a Super Bowl, a record for a to win four Super Bowls, afquarterback. ter Terry Bradshaw and Joe He waved his arms over
continued
No Yds FC Lg TD
•
applause and then sat down. triots' 28-24 victory over the
No Avg Lg l20 6 44.8 61 1 6 44.8 61 1
•
his first Super Bowl in an
No Avg Lg l20 4 49.0 64 1 4 49.0 64 1
•
legacywithcomeback
his head and gestured for the fans to get back on their feet and cheer. Brady, 37,
PUNTING
3 27 2 3 27 2
Most completions, ca-
seemed muted, maybe
By Bill Pennington
PUNTRETURNS
New England Edelman Total Seattle Walters Total
* 247, Tom Brady, NE
L ENDALE, A r iz. The c e lebration
New York Times News Service
4 No Yds Lg TD
INTERCE PTIONS New England No Yds Butler 1 0 Totals 2 0 Seattle No Yds Lane 1 0 Wagner 1 0 Totals 2 0
INDIVIDUAL Most passes, career:
0 0 1
PASSING New England Atl Cmp Yds TDLong Ini Brady 50 37 328 4 23 2 Total 50 37 328 4 23 2 Seattle Atl Cmp Yds TDLong Ini Wilson 21 12 247 2 45 1 Total 21 12 247 2 48 1
New England Vereen Edelman Gronkowski Amendola LaFell Develin Hooman awanui Total Seattle Matthews Lockette Kearse Lynch Baldwin Total
Super Bowl records set
TiM DAHLBERG
Montana.
"It's been a long journey,"
Brady, who was named the
game's most valuable play-
t h i s un s u btle er, said afterward. "There
demonstration until he was greeted by a more raucous response. Kickoff was still 90 min-
have been a couple of tough losses in this game. But we made the plays at the end of
4rllr a!
this one."
His coach, Bill Belichick, Long before the game be- with whom he shares a 4-2 gan, Brady knew the stakes Super Bowl record and with and the effect the outcome whom he will forever be would have on the narrative linked, said Sunday's perof his career. The bold, last- formance was quintessening impressions of Brady's tial Brady. "Tom does not doubt himstory have always been written in the postseason, s elf, and he sticks to t h e with precocious success and plan," Belichick said. "He's a a 3-0 Super Bowl record be- great player and at any time fore he was 28 years old. he can make great plays." utes away.
But two straight losses in
the biggest football game of the year followed, and Brady was clearly growing weary of the stain that was leaving on his legacy. Sunday's game unfolded like a microcosm of his Super Bowl experience. At first, he could do no wrong against the Seahawks, and then, he could do little right. Still, as he walked onto the
field midway through the final quarter, with the Patri-
ots trailing by three points, the crowd chanted: "Bra-dy! Bra-dy!"
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was not surprising to those who have been around Brady the longest. "I've been coaching for 14 years, and I've never known
FF
ROSES
anyone who has more men-
tal toughness," New England's offensive coordina-
this Valentine's Day!
tor, Josh McDaniels, said. "It
was a fitting end for him." I n the aftermath of h i s fourth Super Bowl victory,
Brady could do something he might only have dreamt
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of 90 minutes before Sun-
day's game. He was plotting a fifth Super Bowl victory. quarter in which he looked Asked to assess his legaharried and o ld, B rady cy, he shook his head. It was was suddenly resurrect- too early for that. "No, not going to do that," ed. Poised in the pocket, he again looked like the care- Brady said. "I've got a lot of free 24-year-old who won football left." After a stumbling third
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
O M M U N IT Y BASEBALL BEND BASEBALL BASH: Saturday, Feb 7: Featuring dinner, a raffle, live and silent auctions and more to benefit the Bend High School baseball program; SOLDOUT; 6 p.m. dinner, doors open and silent auction begins at 5 p.m.; Fieldhouse of Bend, 401 SE Roosevelt Ave.; 541-730-9922, adam. randall©bend.k12.or.us or www.bendhighbaseball.com.
RUNNING PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP WITH MAX KING:Tuesdays; interval-based running group. Locations vary; free; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; 541317-3568 or maxIefootzonebend.com. REDMOND RUNNINGGROUP: Tuesdays; group runs in downtown Redmond. Meet at 314 SW11th St. All abilities welcome; free; 6:30 p.m. NOON TACORUN: W ednesdaysfrom FootZone. Order food from the Taco Stand and it will be ready upon your return; free (tacos not included); noon; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or teague©footzonebend.com. FLEET FEET WEDNESDAYRUNS: Fleet Feet's Run this Town runs, usually 3-5 miles; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. MOMS RUNNINGGROUP:Thursdays; rain or shine, 3 to 4.5 miles; free; 9:30 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; 541-3173568 or angelaIefootzonebend.com. GROWLER RUN:Thursdays; Group run of 3-5 miles from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; free;
PORTS
6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-390-3865 or scott.white© fleetfeet.com. RORK SATURDAY RUNS: Weekly run or walk with the Redmond Oregon Running Klub at 8 a.m. Email Dan Edwards for more info; free; 8 a.m.; downtown Redmond; rundanrun19@yahoo.com or www.raprd. org. SATURDAYA.M. RUNS:Meet at Fleet Feet Sports Bend. Various routes. Mostly trail. We will car pool to a trail head if necessary. Expect longer runs 4-8 miles of beautiful local routes; free; 8 a.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601. READY, SET,REGISTER:Saturday, Feb. 7; race representatives and training programs from around Oregon will be on hand to discuss their events and offer special deals for early registrants; event is free but RSVP is strongly encouraged; noon to 5 p.m.; FootZone,842 NW WallSt.,Bend; http://www.footzonebend.com/events/ ready-set-register. FOOTZONE PUBRUN TO MCMENAMINS: Monday, Feb.9;grouprun to M cMenamins Old St. Francis. Meet at FootZone at 5:30, run a loop with 3-5 mile distance options, and finish at McMenamins. All paces and running levels are welcome; RSVPstrongly encouraged; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; http://www.footzonebend.com/ events/. FOOTZONE'SGOOD FORM FUNNING CLINIC:Tuesday, Feb. 10 and Thursday, March19; learn to run faster, easier and avoid injury. Clinic will last about 90 minutes and space is limited to15, so RSVP is required; free; FootZone, 842 NWWall
E
Emailevents at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
1VD
St., Bend; http://www.footzonebend.com/ events/clinics. SPRING TRAININGINFORMATIONNIGHT: Tuesday, Feb.17; Learn about training programs for 5K and10K races; free; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or scott.white© fleetfeet.com. NO BOUNDARIES5K TRAINING KICK-OFF: Monday, March 2; organized group training program for 5K race; $100, includes race entry fee, registration required; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 541-389-1601 or scott.whitejifleetfeet.com.
where and when to ski, the importance of trip planning, how to spot red flags, as well
as an introduction to companionrescue
and related gear. Participants should be ready to skin up and ski or splitboard down some beginning and intermediate runs. Class starts with an indoor session at Pine Mountain Sports at 9 a.m. before driving up to Mt. Bachelor. Limited to12 people. Call 541-385-8080 to register; $85; 9 a.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, 255 SWCentury Dr., Bend; pinemountainsports.com. BEGINNERSKATE SKILESSONS: Tuesday,
Feb.10; morning grouplesson for beginning
skate skiers; meet at Pine Mountain Sports RUN THIS TOWN10KTRAINING KICK-OFF: at9a.m. and carpoolto Meissner SnoMonday, March 2; organized group training Park; no experience needed but skiers program for10K race;$100, includes race must provide own skate gear (which entry fee, registration required; 6 p.m.; Fleet can also be rented from Pine Mountain); Feet Sports, 1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; lesson approximately 90 minutes; RSVP 541-389-1601 or scott.whiteefleetfeet.com. and advance payment required; $20; 9 a.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, 255 SW Century Dr., Bend; 541-385-8080 or www. SNOW SPORTS pinemountainsports.com. SKI WAXINGCLINIC:Tuesday,Feb.3 and BEGIN TO SKIN GUIDED BACKCOUNTRY Tuesday, March 3; hot waxing clinic will OUTING:Sunday, Feb.15; Day-long guided coverthe basicsonhow totuneandwax outing for beginner backcountry and your skis at home. No need to bring your splitboard skiers; meetat Mt. Bachelor own skis; RSVP required;12 people per Nordic Center; Call 541-385-8080 to RSVP; session; free; 7:30 p.m.; Pine Mountain pack a lunch; limited to six people; $85; 9 Sports, 255 SW Century Dr., Bend; 541-385- a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 3000 Century 8080 or www.pinemountainsports.com. Dr., Bend; www.pinemountainsports.com. MOON COUNTRY SNO-MOBILERSWEEKLY SWAMPY SHELTERSKI OR SNOWSHOE: RIDE: Wednesdays;opentomembersand Sunday, Feb. 15; trek out to the new Swampy nonmembers; 10 a.m.; Moon Country Snoshelter; free, donations accepted; 9:30 a.m.Mobilers, 2242 NEEdgewater Dr., Bend; 4 p.m.; SwampyLakeSno-park, Cascade 541-728-5166. Lakes Highway17 miles west of Bend; 541647-0942 or connordicclub©gmail.com. BEGINTO SKIN AVALANCHE SAFETY CLASS:Friday, Feb. 6; learn how to identify FULL MOON XCSKI:Saturday,M arch avalanche terrain, how to use local and 7; Moonlight cross-country ski outing at regional resources to make decisions about Meissner or Swampy; depart from Pine
OSU-Cascadescompetes in regional ski meet Bulletin staff report
30 finishers in the men's diM OUNT BACH E L O R vision. Ogren's time over — Alpine club skiers repre- two runs was 1 minute, 41.95 senting OSU-Cascades were seconds; Viner's time was among the contestants in a 1:43.46. A t h ir d O SU-Casnine-team United States Col- cades skier, Danny O'Neal, legiate Ski and Snowboard did not finish his second rtm. Association/Northwest Colle- The winner was College of giate Ski Conference qualifier Idaho's Lucas Underkoffler in stagedJan. 24 and 25 atMt. 1:22.53. Bachelor skiarea.Slalom racIn the Jan. 24 w omen's es for men and women were race, OSU-Cascades' Emheld on both days. ily McDonald placed 23rd On Jan. 2 4 , O S U-Cas- among 39 finishers with a cades' Christopher Ogren time of 2:02.96, and teammate and Colton Viner placed 12th Sheridan Jeffries was 35th and 15th, respectively, among in 2:25.02. College of Idaho's
Marathon Continued from B1 "They suck so much of your energy, they have to have a heart (to continue)," said Leslie Cogswell, director of the 2011 Bend Marathon.
Cogswell said her race drew a "significant number" of participants for a first-year event, but when it came time to con-
sider organizing a second marathon in 2012 she realized she would rather focus her ener-
gies elsewhere. Will said his race, which began at Mount Bachelor and
finished at Shevlin Park, never drew as many runners as he hoped for. As he and his wife startedtheir ovvntrainingbusiness and had children, trying to grow a marathon no longer seemed like such an enticing idea. "To be a big event, it's amazing the time, energy and money it takes," Will said. "I never looked at it as something that
would make me rich, but it was a cost-benefit analysis: no
money for a ton of work." Loehr said he and Hook did try to learn from previous
won with a time of 1:24.22.
honors both days. OSU-Cas-
On Jan. 25, OSU-Cascades' O'Neal rebounded to finish third (1:27.44). Viner placed 12th (1:43.00), and Ogren was 22nd (2:13.10). The men's winner again was College of Idaho's Underkoffler (1:24.26). On the women's side, College
cades'women placed sixth on the first day and third on the second day. The OSU-Cascades men placed eighth both days. Another NWCSC qualifi-
er is set for Feb. 5-8 at Bogus
f inished 1 7t h
a n d 25 t h , And the 2015 USCSA Nation-
respectively. College of I daho took
"One of the reasons we thought (marathons) in the past weren't successful was that they really catered to locals only." — Race co-director KerryLoehr
al Championship is set for March 1-7 at Mt. Bachelor.
to their cap of 1,500 entrants.
The runners who have signed Teague Hatfield, the owner of up so far hail from at least 25 local runners about previous Footzone shoe store in Bend, different states. courses,for example, many one of the race's sponsors. "I The Bend Marathon and said they were not enamored think the local participation Half will be the sixth race in with the difficult routes, both won't be dramatic. It's got to be the Gorgeous Series, which of which started outside of driven by visitor participation." sponsors scenic events across town. Loehr said he and Hook Oregon — among them the 'What we wanted to do was have made aconcerted effort Gorgeous Relay in the Cokeep the course in Bend itself, to publicize the marathon out- lumbia River Gorge and the have it show off the best parts side of Oregon. Gorgeous Hood to Hood Re"One of the reasons we lay from Mount Hood to Hood of Bend,"Loehr said, notingthe route for the new race begins t hought ones i n t h e p a s t River. Loehr said some of the downtown and winds through weren't successful was that lessonsfrom those races are Drake Park and the Old Mill they really catered to locals directly incorporated into the District, then snakes up Centu- o nly, whereas we want t o plans for the Bend Marathon. "Finishing at brewpubsry Drive before turningback to make it something where we finish at 10 Barrel Brewing in can bring people into the com- runners love that," Loehr said, west Bend. (The half marathon munity to r e ally showcase referring to the finish-line feswill follow the first half of the how beautiful it is here," Loehr tivities planned at 10 Barrel marathoncourse, turningback said. "I tried to explain to the Brewing. "We're duplicating to 10 Barrel instead of going up city council and the people I that model from our other racCentury Drive.) met with is there's a precedent es, and the feedback has been And then, of course, there is for this. I took an article that wonderful. People are like, the issue of persuading enough was written by the Mssoula 'Yes — I don't want to finish runners to try a f i rst-year (Montana) paper, and it said in a parking lot. I don't want power. When they talked to
event. "For all of B end's allure, it's still a community of only
the local Missoula Marathon
to finish in a park I want to
brings in over a million dollars finish at a brewpub and have a into the local community every party.
Bend marathons as they tried 80,000 people, and I think peo- year. And so that's what we're to design an event with staying ple forget that sometimes," said aiming for."
— Reporter:541-383-0305, vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com.
TABLE TENNIS TABLETENNIS EVENING: Mondays;evening playhosted by Bend Table Tennis Club;$3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; 6-9 p.m.; Boys8 Girls Club of Bend,500NW Wall St.; www.bendtabletennis.com.
WATER SPORTS BYOB KAYAKING: Sunday,Feb.15;BYOB
(bring your ownboat) to theCascadeSwim Center on Sunday evenings. Kayaking enthusiasts can practice their skills and float their boats in the safety and comfort of our pool. Visit Cascade Swim Center on the first and third Sunday of the month from 5-7:30 p.m. for practice. The evening costs $5. Cascade Swim Center, 465 Rimrock Dr., Redmond; http://www.raprd.org/CSC/ cschome.html.
Basketball
Gymnastics
Mes's ADivision Week11
Oregos OlympicAthletic Results WestsideClassic Jan. t1e is8Tigard
L
2 3 4 5 6 8 9
to
Men's 8Oivisios Week 11 NWA
BendBroadbandBusiness Orbitals Bladrswoodworking WidgiCreek Eye oftheNeedle Tomco Electric HoopsWeDidIt Again PrestigeWorld Wide BlueRetinaRavens NTheZone BlueCollarBallers
Loehr said the effort seems
currently more than halfway
CENTRAL OREGONAVALANCHE: Girls 12U fastpitch team seeking players interested in competing in softball on the next level. M usthavebeen no olderthan12 on Jan. 1, 2015. Practices will be held Mondays, W ednesdays and Fridays in Bend beginning in March. If necessary, tryouts will be held March1. Contact Aaron Henry at 541-6106817 for more information.
W
W 11 9 9 7 7 6 6 3 3 2 2 1
L 0 2 2 4 4 5 5 8 8 9 9 10
Bowling
to be working. He and Hook were hoping for 1,000 runners in their first year, and they are
SOFTBALL
CountryCatering 10 Furnish/ZenithAuto 8 GFP 8 KnightRyderz 6 10 Barrell 6 Snowplanks 4 Goodyear/Wiliam Poter Attorneys 3 SonnyCaldwel 2 ContinentalShaggers 1
Basin, near B o ise, I daho. The USCSA Western Region
son again placed first, while Championship is scheduled OSU-Cascades McDonald for Feb. 19-21 at Powderhorn (2:02.98) and Jeffries (2:21.25) Resort on Mesa, Colorado.
Mountain at 7:30 p.m. for March ski; bring food, water, headlamp and afew dollars for grooming donation box; demo skis available on first-come, first-serve basis; free; Virginia Meissner Sno-park, milepost14 Southwest Century Dr., Bend; 541-383-4000 or www. pinemountainsports.com.
COMMUNITY SPORTSSCOREBOARD
Caroline Sanden Gustafsson men's and w o men's team
of Idaho's Sanden Gustafs-
87
RimrockLanes, Prlneville Week 21 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague Team highs — Scratchseries: Environmental Controls, 2944.Scratch game:Prineville Reservior Resort,1012; Handicapseries: TheUdder Guys,3329; Handicap game:Prineville Heating andCooling,1154. Men's highs —Scratchseries: Matt Haw es, 681; Scratchgame:Larry Gerke,267.Handicapseries: Ken cook, 780;Handicapgame:Gregcoflman,284. Week 16 FridayNightSpecials Team highs—Scratchseries: Tobie's BadDogs, 2311.Scratchgame:Bowling Stones,790; Handicap series:HorsePlay,2735; Handicap game: Aley Katz, 961. Men'shighs—Scratchseries:paulSloanJr.,728; Scratch game:RickyMayers,246.Handicapseries:Brias Jordan,700;Handicapgame:Larry Gerke,259. Women's highs —Scratchseries: Julie Mayers, 565; scratch game: LydiaEvans,21a Handicapseries: LeslieGerke,701; Handicap game: RamonaFreeman, 255.
Level FourBoys —Rohan Ali, 6, 57.40allaround score,t-second;SullivanYoung,7-8,57.70 all-around score,ninth; BodenCoker, 9-10, 55.80allaroundscore,t-fourth. Level Fi ve Boys— Mathew Borne,7-8,50.70 all-aroundscore, fourth; MarcosNgo,9-10, 52.00 all-aroundscore,13th; JordanKennedy, 9-10, 48.80 all-around score,14th. Level Slx Boys — ZacharyMiler, 7-8, 42.60 all-around score,42.60all-aroundscore,fourth; Zane viles, 9-10,55.80all-around score,first; AlexGarza, 9-10, 52.00all-aroundscore,second; Nathanvezina, 11 and above,51.90,first. LevelSeven Boys — MateoGarza,13 and above,54.10,first. Level EightBoys—Travis Fields,15-18, 60.00 all-around,first. LevelNineBoys—BlaimeDavis,13-14, 71.20 all-around score,first. Winter Invitational Jan.23 mEugene Level Four Boys — Rohan Ali, 6, 54.50 allaround score, third; SullivanYoung,7-8, 54.10 all-aroundscore, third; MastinLiebman, 7-8, 53.60 all-aroundscore,fifth; BodenCoker, 9-10, 56.20allaroundscore,second. Level Fi ve Boys— Mathew Borne,7-8,51.00 all-aroundscore, second.MarcosNgo, 9-10, 56.10 all-around score,fourth; JordanKennedy, 9-10, 5a90 all-around score,sixth. Level Slx —ZacharyMiler, 7-8, 38.10 allaround score, second;ZaneViles, 9-10, 57.60 all-aroundscore, third; AlexGarza, 9-10, 50.50allaroundscore,fifth; Joel McLaughlim, 9-10, 49.00, sixth; Nathan Vezina,11 andabove,4t.30 all-around score,first. LevelSeven — Mat eo Garza,13andabove, 53.10, first.
Pickleball Plckleball Festival at SageSpringsClubI Spa Jas. 25 MixedDoubles4.0—1.Viki perkettandNick Bozilov, 2. Jamie Filipeli andRonGreene MixedDoublesae — 1. KimandRon Bessling, 2. HeatherJohnstonand DanFuller Women' sDoubles— 1.RochelleNealandShannon Morton, 2.JamieFilipeli andviki perkett Men'sDoubles— 1. Chris PointsandRon Bessling, 2. LarryBoydand Riley McHugh
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF SKIING Mt. BaChelOr hOStS VertfeSt —Mt. Bachelor Ski Area will host Vertfest, a backcountry skiing festival, on Saturday andSunday. The weekend includes backcountry races, clinics, demonstrations and parties with a strong emphasis on snowandwinter safety. Further information and online registration are available at mtbachelor.com andvertfest. com. The festival benefits the Central OregonAvalanche Association. — Bulletin staff report
WINTER SPORTS
U.S. TobogganChampionships in Mainebringsfamiliar competitive whimsy the championships committee. "And The contest has competitions for theyarescaredtodeath ofcourse." two-, three- and four-person teams. Seventy feet up, tobogganing newRacers use traditional wooden to- Last year's winners were all from bies suddenly appreciate the gravity boggans, with the curling, upturned Maine and were called Two Wingof their situation: They're about to front ends, to hurtle down a 400-foot- nuts, Absolute Zeros and Instigator. approach 40 mph on something that long wooden chute that was first built Teams signed up for this year indude looks like it belongs on an old fash- in 1936. A "chutemaster" releases a Haligonian Hooligans from Nova ioned postcard. lock that tips the toboggan down, the Scotia, Canada, Drinking Team With Hundreds of teams will fill up the Earth's pull takes over for a thrill ride A Tobogganing Problem from New Maine town of Camden next week- that will last about nine seconds. York City, Nothing To Luge from end for the 25th U.S. National TobogThe volunteer-run event will at- Rhode Island and 'Djvo Pounds from gan Championships — an event that, tract thousands of people to Cam- California. despite a name that would seem to den's town-owned skiing area startThe competition often attracts a indicate it attracts only the most ac- ing Friday, doubling or perhaps tri- team from the Netherlands, but uncomplished competitors, sometimes pling the coastal tovvn's population, fortunately they aren't coming this gets people who have never crouched Edwardssaid.Organizers said 425 year, Edwards said. However, the in one of the wooden sleds. teams from all over the U.S. and team's absence could be good news "We get lots of people every year Canada are set to participate, and for toboggan lovers: the Dutch alwho have never done this before," between 6,000 and 10,000 people are ways dominate the race's annual cossaid Holly Edwards, chairwoman of expected to attend. tume contest. By Patrick Whittle
The Associated Press
Contestants enjoy their ride in the 2009 U.S. National Tobog-
gan Championships In Camden, Maine. The U.S. National
Toboggan Championships will take place thls
weekend. The Associated Press file photo
BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
GOLF ROUNDUP
T etric cacuuso ra in JameisWinston
Brooks Koepka hits out of
a sand trap on the fourth hole during the final round of the Phoenix Open
on Sunday in Scottsdale, Arizona.
By Bill Penningtone New York Times News Service
Koepka rallied for a one-stroke victory.
TAMPA, Fla.— At a downtown park here on April 26, the Sexual Violence Task Force of Tampa Bay plans to host a "Take Back the Night"
Rick Scuteri/The Associated Press
rally, a candlelight vigil and silent march to raise sexual assault awareness. Four days later, and less than 5 miles away, executives sitting in the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' gleaming office complex must decide whether to use the first pick of the NFL draft on Jameis Winston, the Florida State quarterback who was accused of raping a fellow student in 2012. Winston, 21, has asserted his innocence, did not face criminal charges and was
I(oep a raies or P oenixwin
recently cleared by Florida State of violating the university's student code The Associated Press
of conduct.
S COTTSDALE, A r i z .
Brooks Koepka has lost track The downtrodden Bucca-
of the miles flown, the oceans
neers need a quarterback, and Winston, a Heisman Trophy of the top two available along with 2014 Heisman Trophy
crossed and the stamps in his passport as he toiled in remote corners of the golfing world for more than two years to prepare himself for moments like
winner Marcus Mariota. But
Sunday atthe Phoenix Open.
Winston's checkered past — he was also involved in BB gun incidents, cited for shoplifting and suspended one game for shouting an obscene phrase
The most significant journey turned out to be the 50 feet his golf ball traveled from the fringe, up a ridge and right into the cup.
winner in 2013, is seen as one
O ~
on campus — has presented the team, and its fans, with
.
-
That eagle on the par-5 15th
Pj~
a quandary that has divided
hole gave Koepka a share of the lead, and he left the mis-
/ g~ji
and unsettled the Tampa Bay
community. In the wake of last year's graphic video that showed former Baltimore Ravens running back Ray Rice punching his future wife and the firestorm the league's initial, light punishment of Rice gen-
takes to everyone else the rest
of the way. He closed with a 5-under 66 for a one-shot victory and his first PGA Tour title.
"I left every long putt short today," Koepka said. "I said to my caddie, 'I'm finally going to
I
I
get this one there.'"
that it was taking domestic
Hideki Matsuyama, among five players who had a share
violence and sexual assault matters more seriously. With
of the lead over the wild final hour at the TPC Scottsdale,
the league's general reputation
was the last player in Koepka's way. The 22-year-old from
erated, the NFL a nnounced
in mind, however, it is unclear if the NFL has substantively
changed any policies when it comes to vetting draft prospects in the aftermath of the
Rice scandal. T he Buccaneers are n o t
The Associated Press file photo
as many as 20 NFL teams, who have begun exhaustive examinations into Winston's past.
"He's brought the scrutiny on himself, and how he deals
but NFL teams will have to consider whether they went the baggage that comes with his sexual assault allegations.
the consuming focus of as many as 20 NFL teams, who have begun exhaustive examinations into Winston's past.
Early
months will be a big part of every team's evaluation." said
be examined. Teams will ask
Mike Mayock, a former NFL player who is now a top draft
Winston to take a Wonderlic
analyst for the NFL Network.
that dates to the 1930s. But without Winston's approval or
Compiling a c omprehensive report on Winston's background will be crucial because several draft experts have pre-
test, a cognitive ability exam
will hope Winston falls from a first-round pick to a
second- or third-round selection. It is a curious moral judgment. "It is money, pure and simple," Mayock said. "It in the third round because it costs less to sign that player." For the teams that still value Winston as a firstround pick, the decision is
likely to be made at a team's highest levels. "Only an idiot would fail participation, the NFL, as well as individual teams, will scour to recognize the heightened through the minute details of sense of concern about
dicted that Winston, despite his troubles, will be a top-five
Winston's life.
pick, or maybe even the first
organizational chart
overall selection.
Winston. But other teams
is less of an economic risk
Behind the scenes, Winston's behavioral patterns, personality and temperament will
with the next three or four
"Everyone in the team's
these kinds o f
o ff enses
right now," Billick said.
m a kes "And for a change, you some calls to their counter- might see several owners
"He's had off-the-field is- parts around the country," get very active in the draft sues, but if he checks out and Mayock said. "The equipment process for that reasonyou can reconcile that all of guys might call the equipment although it won't prevent that is behind him and not go- guys at Florida State, and someone from taking Jaming to happen again," ESPN's the public-relations guy calls eis Winston." Mel Kiper Jr., a draft analyst, around to the college sports insaid, "then he goes No. 1." formation directors he knows With all that at stake, teams
victory. Also the 2011 win-
ner, the 40-year-old Goggin Open during the final stretch finished at 11-under 269 at of the Race to Dubai in Europe Panama Golf Club. He earned in November — moved him to $112500 for his fifth victory No. 19 in the world. on the tour and first since 2011.
the College Football Playoff semifinals his sophomore year,
train with a quarterback guru, with the Giants' brain trust but he will also be schooled for away from the team's comthe dozens of interviews he plex so t h e i n f ormation willhave withteamexecutives. could be shared with only "His agents will get him to select officials. a professional interview coach S eparately, th e NF L , al violence task force, howev- who will instruct him how to which employs more than er, have visited with members dress, act, sit and talk to the 70 independent investiof the Tampa Bay front office. teams," said Brian Billick, who gators, does background Asked about the prospect of won a Super Bowl as coach of checks on each of the 360 the Bucs selecting Winston, the Baltimore Ravens and is players invited to the comthe task force's chairwoman, now an NFL Network com- bine an d s c ours s ocial Amanda Brennan, said in a mentator. "He'll learn some media for clues to their statement: "The larger issue is mantra about learning from character or to potential that there have been many al- his mistakes or how he has problems. The NFL a l so legations against Jameis Win- matured and is ready for the has a remittance policy in ston, yet there is no question next step." which teams must pay fines that Jameis Winston will be if too many of their players chosen by an NFL team to play have off-field issues. The next season. As an NFL player, Predicting how reports on the 360 players he is a role model for boys and Winston will behave are hand-delivered to the 32 young men across the counteams. try. The Sexual Violence Task off the field as a As i nvestigations and ForceofTampa Bay would like highly paid pro football evaluations o f Win s t on to know that Jameis Winston player has become are completed this spring, will be expected to adhere to a some teams may pass on behave off the field as a highly paid pro football player has become the consuming focus of
starts against strong fieldshe won the Turkish Airlines
Jameis Winston has tremendous talent, as he showed leading Florida State to a national championship his freshman year and
commenting on how they plan to use their first pick. A team spokesman said they were evaluating all the draft prospects and would not speak publicly about any specific player. Representatives of the sexu-
strict standard of conduct." Predicting how Winston will
Japan had an 18-foot putt to
"It's unbelievable," said force a playoff, but it never had a chance and he closed with a K oepka, wh o f i n i shed a t 15-under 269. "I didn't think 67. Masters champion Bubba I would work my way up this Watson (65) and Ryan Palm- quickly, but playing the Chaler (66) had to settle for pars lenge and European tours on the three closing holes and led to this. And especially joined Matsuyama in a tie for the failure I've had. I can't tell second. you how much I learned from A week that began with that." hype over Tiger Woods, who Also on Sunday: shot 82 Friday and missed the Mcllroy wins in D ubai: cut by 12 shots, ended with yet DUBAI, United Arab Emirates another example of a massive — Top-ranked Rory McIlroy generation shift. won the Dubai Desert ClasThe 24-year-old Koepka sic for the second time in six didn't get th e r ecognition years, shooting a 2-under 70 to of Jordan Spieth and Justin match thetournament record Thomas, or former U.S. Ama- of 22-under 266. Alex Noren teur champion Peter Uihlein, was second, three strokes his roommate in Florida with back after a 65. whom he often traveled in EuGoggin wins W eb.com rope. His raw power got the opener: PANAMA CITYattention of his peers, howev- Australia's Mathew Goggin er, and Koepka went through won the Web.com Tour's seaenough trials to mature into a son-opening Panama Claro rising star. Championship, closing with His second victory in four a 3-under 67 for a four-stroke
who might have dealt with
will employ every resource at Winston." their disposal — scouts, coachFor many years, the New es, executives, psychologists, York Giants used a former inorthopedists, private d etec- surance fraud investigator who tives, criminal investigators, was a licensed detective and security agents, cognitive test had ties to local, regional and specialists and personality as- federal law enforcement offisessment clinicians — to gath- cials. The investigator created er information on Winston. a file of stories, interview tranThe NFL combine, a mulscripts, depositions and court tiple-day skills audition, is in cases about whatever prospect mid-February. Winston will was being considered. He met
ly. It's kind of a Catch-22, so to
speak."
Continued from 61 "If this works and people
History certainly could repeat itself this year. In fact, no
Still, an unexpected boost
in business is always welcome. actually utilize th e f acility, At Eagle Crest, the Ridge and we have another stretch and Challenge courses of (warm) weather, we might which are open year-round, consider doing it again," Willis weather permitting — were says. closed 13 days in November, "The most important thing 13 days in December, and for is that we are able to do it be- the first four days of January. cause the ground is actually That is about average for thawed, and we typically nev- golf's offseason in Central Orer get 14 days in a row with egon, says Buerger, who has nice weather (in January). tracked thedays Eagle Crest Even if we get a week's good has been closed because of weather we don't thaw out weather since he became the enough to even consider doing resort's director of golf in 2007. A two-week spike in play this." Even bouts of fog last week has overcome that mediocre did not hurt the courses be- start — at least as it relates cause soil temperatures in to the golf business — and most places are higher than business is now on par with a normal. dry January 2014 that was an Warmer ground tempera- above-average winter month tures prompted Juniper Golf for Eagle Crest. "Comparatively, in terms of Club in Redmond to open its regular greens last week, revenue, we might equal last nearly a month earlier than year," says Buerger. "It's going would ordinarily be expected, to be really close." says Bruce Wattenburger, JuLast year, though, a signifniper's head golf professional. icant snowstorm in early FebThe municipal course uses ruary knocked out golf for the temporary greens in the win- majority of the month, closing ter months, but warm weather Eagle Crest for 17 days. had Juniper golfers clamoring to open the facility's regular putting surfaces. And with ~+ccoolsculpting ground temperatures higher
veteran Central Oregon golf course operator would be surprised tosee another dose of winter.
"You can probably factor
that we are going to hit one
storm in February — we always do — but the question is: Is it 1 inch or 5 inches?" Buerg-
er says. If the storm does not come, or the snow is minor, golf course operators all around the region might have a sunnier-than-normal disposition.
"We could come out with a pretty good year that is ahead of most," says Buerger, adding that in an average February, Eagle Crest is closed eight days becauseof weather. "Ifit
keeps going like this we have a chance to slaughter last year's February." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall®bendbulletin.com.
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend,'s
than 40 degrees and with air
temperatures forecast to mostly stay above freezing for the immediate future, Juniper de-
cided to move forward.
LEFFEL GE N T E R R
W S
«
8
teestside.
Dan' t settle far anyone brrr a p l asticsrrrgeas for Coo/rru//r/ng'
www.northwestcrossing.com
www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006
"If we have to shut it down
again, we will," Wattenburger says. "But it's not looking like
I i
we will have to."
An early opening is a blessing, he adds. But it does come with some risk to the turf.
It
"It's good news from the
business standpoint," he says. "But the concern I have is that if we do get a lot of traffic and
the grass is not really starting to grow out yet, then (the turf) wears out kind of quick-
vaanomo
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P
t ' t
i t
i i
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
T EE TO
HEEN
easonu ate: mit Roc o ourse
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletin welcomes contributions to ils weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed lo the sports deparlmenl, 641-386-0831, emailed to sports43hendbulletin.com, or mailed to P.O. Box 6020; Bend, OR97708.
Club Results By Zack Hall in a weekly Tee To Green fea-
SmithRock Qolf Course
ture in which we check in via
Number ofholes: Nine-
The Bulletin
This is another installment
email with Central Oregon golf facilities for an offseason update. This week we contacted Walt Zelinsky, owner
of Smith Rock Golf Course in Redmond.
Zelinsky, a former golf course superintendent, bought the par-3 golf course and driving range in 2013. This is what he had to say about the current business of
golf and about Smith Rock:
Q•
How was business in • 2014?
had a slight inA•• We crease overall, taking into consideration it was our
hOle Par-3 COurSe
Status:Openyear-round, weather permitting Location:1401 NEMaple Ave., Redmond Tee times:None Information: 541-923-3426
Course designer:Jim Ramey (2002) Extras:Full-size driving range, putting green, pro shop Website:www.smithroCkgOlfCOurSG.COm
Nothing of note, al• though we c ontinue
A•
first full business year under new ownership and the long, o ur work t o wet spring. greens.
A•
W e are offering driving • range m e m berships this year and additional targets on our full-size driving range. We will be offering golf lessons beginning this April. has been made Q •• Much about new initiatives to grow the game (FootGolf, 15inch holes, Speedgolf, etc.). What, if any, of those initiatives would you consider the
most promising'? • I'I n ot in favor of com• bining these activities
A at a traditional golf facility. I'm sure there is a draw for these activities, but I picture
them having separate locales. your club either Q •• Has startedto offer or does
it plan to implement any of
i m p rove t h e those initiatives'?
any changes of Are any changes and/ Q •• Were note made to the facili- Q • • or improvements to the ty during the last year?
facility scheduled for 2015'?
do no t hav e A•• Wanye plans for t hose initiatives.
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletin.com.
After manymilestones,Webb returns to where it all began
DESERTPEAKS
ThursdayMen'sClub, Jan. 22 Blind Nine 1, Val Paterson,29. 2 (tie), DeanHunt, 30; Mike Funk,30.3, JoeStanfield, 31. KP —Mike Funk. LD —DonKraus. SundayGroupPlay,Jan. 26 Stroke Play Gross: 1, DennyStory,72.2, KenBlack, 77.3(tie, Jim Wyzard, 79; GaryGruner, 79. Neh1, MikeGardner, 67. 2,RussSchoff, 68. 3(tie), ValPaterson, 69; DonKraus,69. KP —BobbyBrunoe. LD —GaryHopson. EAGLECREST
Men's Club,Jan. 28 at RidgeCourse One NetBest Ball PlusBonus 1,Andrew Lesko/Jerry Volf/Tom Johnson/Don Greenm an, 35. 2 (tie), RandyMyers/Steve Dawson/ Greg Pluchos/BiffyBalding, 42;RickMangels/Roger Palmer/WiliamFlinn/DanMyers, 42. 4, Dennis Rector/RonWolfe/Larry Bell/blind draw,43. 5, Tim Swope/ Hank Cavender/John Boynton/Jerry Rogers, 44. KAH-NEE-TA
Central Oregon Winter Series, Jan. 23 Triple Six A Flight —Gross:1, Scott Barton/HarryPaik, 66. 2, RosieCook/TimBooher, 67. 3 (tie), Roger Eichorn/DonOrreff, 68; Scott Holmberg/Charffe Rice, 68.Net: 1, MarkGarcia/Matt Burgess,61.8. 2, PatHuffer/RigoMontes, 66.3, JohnBaker/Dennis Schaberg,66.2. 4, Matt Pinkerton/MichaelJackson, 67.6. 8 Flight — Gross:1,TimSwope/Reed Sloss, 78. 2, RobertHolloway/JimAnderson,78. 3, Roy Fullerton/Steve Hanus, 80. Neh1, RonAnderson/ Jim Wilcox,62. 2, MelBarlow/JohnHowey, 63. 3, Barry Cook/JackCuniff, 63.2. 4, PatMarquis/Gary Molder,66.6. KPs —0-10 handicaps:John Baker,No. 3. 11-15: DarrylHjeresen,No.8. 16 andhigher: Mel Barlow,No.1. Skins — Gross: Barton/Paik, Nos. 12, 18; Smaff wood/Olds,No.8;Johnson/Romaine,No.10; Springer/Meredith, No. 15; Benson/Chastain,No. 16; Eichorn/Orreff,No.17.Net: Barlow/Howey, No. 1; Johnson/Rom aine, No. 10;Springer/Meredith, No. 15; Eichorn/Orrell,No.17.
Hole-In-One Report Jan. 26 CROOKED RIVER RANCH
Jody McConnell, Fairbanks,Alaska No. 4 1 3 2 yards pitchingewedg
Calendar
By Lisa D. Mickey
The Bulletia welcomescontributions to ils weekly localgolf eventscalendar. Itemsshould be mail edtoP.O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708; laxed to the sporls department al 641-3860831; oremailed to sporls@bendbulletin.com.
New York Times NewsService
OCALA, Fla. — Karrie
Webb said she was caught by surprise last week when she
TOURNAMEN TS
arrived at Golden Ocala Golf
Feb. 6: CentralOregonWinter Seriesevent at MeadowLakes Golf Clubin Prineviffe.Shamble tournamentbeginswith an11a.m. shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Costis $30for professionals, $50foramateurs. Cost includes grossandnet skinscompetitions. Cart costsextra.Agplayers must signupby noononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister orfor more information, call PatHufer, headproat CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpato crookedriverranch.com .
and Equestrian Club for the LPGA's 2015 season opener and realized she had come
full circle. "They went through the whole thing in my first-tee i ntroduction — that I'm i n the Hall of Fame, I've had 41 LPGA wins and won seven
majors — and I was thinking that I've come a long way Ocala backin 1995," Webb said. "I never, ever dreamed I'd be in the position I'm in
now."
•
Webb's rise to become one of the LPGA's most decorated
players started that week in Florida's rolling horse country. Playing in only her third professional tournament in
naments she played in that spring, including three topthree finishes. "She was very poised and already had the game when she came hereto play," said Eloise Trainor, founder of the
morethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is $30 forprofessionals,$50for amateurs. Costincludes gross andnetskins competitions. Cartcostsextra. Ag pl ayersmustsignupbynoonontheWednesday beforetheevent. Toregister orfor moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headproat CrookedRiver Ranch, at 541-923-6343 or email himat crrpatocrookedriverranch.com. Feb. 28:RotaryClubof JeffersonCounty's 23rd annualCherryTreeOpen is a four-personscramble tournamentheld at Kah-Nee-TaHigh Desert Resort nearWarmSprings. Shotgun start at 10a.m. Cost is $60 perpersonandincludes net andgross prizesand hole-in-onecontest. Fieldlimitedto120 golfers. Registrationdeadline:Feb.21. Formoreinformation orto register,call Kah-Nee-ta at541-923-8110. March 7: PolaBear r Openat MeadowLakesGolf Course in Prineviffe.Individual stroke-playtournamentteesoff witha 10a.m. shotgun. Costis $20per teamplus$25per-persongreenfee.Toregister orfor moreinformation,call theMeadowLakesgolf shopat 541-447-7113.
March 13: CentralOregonWinter Series event at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Scrambletournamentbeginswith an 11a.m.shotgun. Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowedper team.Costis $30forprofessionals, $50for amateurs. Cost includes grossandnet skins competitions. Cart costs extra.All playersmustsign upbynoononthe Wednesday before theevent. Toregister or for more information,call PatHuffer,headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpato crookedriverranch.com . March14-15: The Kah-Nee-TaSpring Invitational at Kah-Ne e-Ta Resort onthe WarmSprings Indian Reservationis presentedbythe OregonChapter ofthe PGA. Formoreinformation, call 503-521-7374orvisit www.orpga.com . March 20:Central OregonWinter Series event at Brasada CanyonsGolf Clubin Powell Butte. Better-bafftournament beginswith an11a.m, shotgun. Two-person teamswith nomorethanoneprofessional allowedperteam.Cost is $30for professionals, $50 for amateurs. Costincludesgrossandnetskinscompetitions.Cartcostsextra. Affplayersmust signupby noon on theWednesday beforethe event. Toregister or for moreinformation, call PatHuffer,headproat Crooked RiverRanch, at541-923-6343 oremail him at crrpat©crookedriverranch.com . May 26-27:OregonChapter of the PGApro-am tournament.Formatfor first roundis netrotationfollowedbytwo net best bals. Thistwo-dayevent is held at BendGolf andCountry ClubandBrasadaCanyons Golf Club inPowell Butte.Costforamateurs is $200 per golfer.Contact: 800-574-0503or www.pnwpga. com. March28:CrossCountry tournamentat Meadow LakesGolfCourse inPrinevile. Individualstroke-play tournament forces golfers totakea newpath around Meadow Lakesover12 holes. Teetimesbeginat8a m. Flightedfield includesbothgrossandnet payouts and KP compe titions. Cost is$20plus reducedgreen fee of $15. Formoreinformation or to register, call the Meadow Lakesproshop at541-447-7113. March 28:ThirdAnnual SpringInvitational Bestball atBendGolf andCountry Club. Teambest ball is open tothepublic andbegins with 10a.m. shotgun. Two-person teamscaninclude oneprofessional and teamma tescannot havemorethana10-strokespread betwee nhandicapindexes.Bothmenandwomenare welcome. Cost is $120perteam,andincludesgolf cart for thefirst 34teamto RSVP, prizesandhosted beer. Deadline to enter is March15andfield is limitedto 46 teams.Formoreinformation orto register: 541-3822878,bendgolfshopobendgolfclub.com,or www. bendgolfclub.com. April 3:CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat PronghornClub'sNicklausCourse in Bend. Shamble tournament begins with an11a.m.shotgun.Two-person teams with nomorethanoneprofessional allowed per team.Costis $30for professionals, $50for amateurs.Costincludesgrossandnetskinscompetitions. Cart costsextra.Agplayersmust sign upbynoon on the Wed nesdaybeforetheevent.Toregisteror formore information,call PatHuffer,headpro at CrookedRiver Ranch,at 541-923-6343or email himat crrpato crookedriverranch.com .
Professio nal PGA Phoenix Op en Sunday atTPCScottsdale, StadiumCourse, Scoltsdale,Ariz. Yardage: 7,266;Par:71 Final (a-amateu r) BrooksKoepka(500),$1,134,00071-68-64-66 —269 Bubba Watson(208), $470,400 65-71-69-65—270 RyanPalmer(208),$470,400 64-72-68-66—270 HidekiMatsuyama(208),$470,400 69-71-63-67—270 a-JonRahm 70-68-66-68—272 MartinLaird(105), $252,000 66-66-68-72—272 FreddieJacobson(85), $211,05068-73-68-64—273 JordanSpieth(85), $211,050 70-68-70-65—273 Graham DeLaet (85), $211,050 67-70-69-67—273 BrandtSnedeker (65),$157,500 70-68-70-66—274 BrianStuard(65), $157,500 72-68-67-67—274 DanielBerger(65), $157,500 65-69-71-69—274 RobertStreb(65), $157,500 66-70-69-69—274 ZachJohnson(65),$157,500 66-70-67-71—274 AngelCabrera(56), $116,550 67-69-69-70—275 RussellKnox(56), $116,550 69-71-65-70—275 AaronBaddeley (52), $94,500 68-71-71-66—276 Keegan Bradley (52),$94,500 65-73-71-67—276 Andrew Svoboda(52), $94,500 70-70-68-68—276 RyanMoore(52), $94,500 69-67-69-71—276 Justin Thoma(52), s $94,500 67-68-69-72—276 TonyFinau(48),$68,040 72-68-70-67—277 68-69-72-68—277 K.J. Choi(48), $68,040 RorySabbatini (48),$68,040 68-71-67-71—277 Franrm scoMolinari (48)$68040 70-71-64-72—277 Brendan Steele(44), $50,243 71-67-71-69—278 Brendon deJonge(44), $50,243 67-71-72-68—278 73-69-66-70—278 Kevin Na (44), $50,243 Pat Perez (44), $50,243 70-69-68-71—278 BooWeekley (37), $36,729 69-71-70-69—279 Shawn Stefani (37), $36,729 67-74-69-69—279 Billy Horschel(37),$36,729 69-70-71-69—279 HunterMahan(37), $36,729 69-71-71-68—279 SungJoonPark(37),$36,729 71-69-69-70—279 MichaelPutnam(37), $36,729 71-70-67-71—279 Matt Kuchar (37), $36,729 70-70-68-71—279 WilliamMcGirt (37), $36,729 67-71-74-67—279 KevinChappell (37), $36,729 75-65-65-74—279 KevinStreelman(37), $36,729 70-72-73-64—279 ChadCampbell (29),$25,200 70-70-69-71—280 MarkWilson(29),$25,200 70-70-71-69—280 PatrickReed(29), $25,200 71-69-71-69—280 HarrisEnglish(29), $25,200 72-70-71-67—280 JasonKokrak(29), $25,200 72-71-70-67—280 66-73-75-66—280 BenMartin(29), $25,200 George McNeiff (22), $17,658 70-72-67-72—281 JhonattanVegas (22), $17,658 71-72-67-71—281 Seung-YulNoh(22) $17658 68-75-67-71—281 JamieDonaldson (22),$17,658 68-73-68-72—281 MartinFlores(22), $17,658 69-72-71-69—281 GeoffOgilvy(22),$17,658 68-69-70-74—281 RickieFowler(22), $17,658 70-72-72-67—281 69-73-69-71—282 CarlosOrtiz(16), $14,616 Justin Leonard (16), $14,616 67-73-72-70—282 LucasGlover(16), $14,616 70-70-72-70—282 MorganHoffmann(16), $14,616 72-67-73-70—282 CharleyHoffman(16), $14,616 69-73-71-69—282 TroyMerritt (16),$14,616 71-72-71-68—282 Matt Jones(9), $13,734 70-71-70-72—283 70-71-67-75—283 StewartCink(9), $13,734 LukeGuthrie (9), $13,734 70-72-70-71—283 67-73-66-77—283 James Hahn (9), $13,734 NickTaylor(9), $13,734 71-71-71-70—283 RusselHenl l ey(9), $13,734 69-71-65-78—283 70-73-74-66—283 CoryRenfrew(0), $13,734 J.B. Holmes (4), $13,041 68-73-70-73—284 69-74-70-71—284 CharlieBeljan(4),$13,041 BrianHarman(4), $13,041 68-75-70-71—284 71-70-73-70—284 JasonBohn(4), $13,041 BryceMolder(1), $12,726 72-70-71-72—285 CharlesHowell III (1),$12,537 70-71-72-73—286 MichaelThompson(1), $12,537 67-75-71-73—286 RickyBarnes(1), $12,348 71-71-71-75—288 70-71-71-77—289 RetiefGoosen(1), $12,222 BrianDavis(1), $12,096 74-68-77-71—290 71-72-72-77—292 Bill Haas (1), $11,970
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TheBulletin
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the United States on what was then the Futures Golf Tour, Webb, an Australian, won the 1995 Ocala event by eight Statesfor $4,500. She finished in the top 10 in all five tour-
Feb. 21:CentralOregonWinter Serieseventat CrookedRiverRanch. Beter-ball tournament begins with an 11a.m.shotgun.Two-person teamswith no
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate
since they introduced me in
shots and collected her first winner's check in the United
B9
wP The Associated Prese file photo
Karr(e Webb plays at the the International Crown tournament last July. Webb returned this week to Golden Ocala Golf and Equestrian Club for the LPGA's 2015 season opener, the same course
where she started her career. year. Lewis said that Annika Sorenstam, in her prime for
es shows little emotion when
and Jane Crafter to the LPGA
course, she's really down to
she is playing, is more likely to a decade beginning in 1995, show her soft side away from "got all of the attention even the course. "On the golf course, she's a though Karrie also did some Futures Tour. "She didn't need pretty impressive things." bit intimidating and a fierce a lot of development." Webb followed her fellow character who's not really W ebb, 40, saw herfirstpro- Australians Jan Stephenson chatty," Lee said. "Off the
fessional season differently. "It was more raw t alent than knowing what I was do-
Tour and proceeded to inspire earth." a new wave of talent from her Webb said that when she ing," Webb said. "I still had a homeland. started her youth series, she "In Australia, she's a nawasn't sure that she had a lot lot to learn and to fine-tune." Mostly what Webb needed tional hero and all girls look to teach others but wanted to was professional tournament up to her," said Katherine reciprocate because "so many experience. She got that in Kirk, a two-time LPGA win- people gave a lot for me to be 1995 in the spring tourna- ner. "There aren't too many where I am now." "The girls say they're very ments in the United States and players who have had a career playing on the Ladies Europe- as long and as successful as thankful that I do it, but I've an Tour that summer. Karrie." gotten just as much out of it as Her Futures Tour win i n At least 10 young Austra- them," Webb said. Ocala came in April, and lians now playing on proWebb also returned last four months later she won fessional tours around the week to the Ocala home of the Women's British Openworld met Webb while they Craig and Debbie Mueller, which she won again in 2002 were amateurs c ompeting who hosted her 20 years ago. as an LPGA member. on the Karrie Webb Series The Muellers have remained "When I won in Ocala, they back home. They competed close friends with Webb and didn't have a clubhouse and in 12 amateur tournaments, have seen 14 of her tournaI think we had to hit balls in earning points for t h eir ment wins, including two U.S. a schoolyard because there performances. Opens. wasn't a range, but I wasn't "My memories of that week At the end Of the series, bothered by that stuff," Webb the top two players are each in 1995 are more about them said. "I was just keen to play awarded a $10,000 scholar- than the golf," Webb said of professional golf and try to ship and get to attend the U.S. the Muellers. "They had travmake a living out of it." Women's Open Champion- eled to Australia, so we had a Since that time, Webb has ship to walk with Webb inside connection straight away, and earned more than $19 million the ropes. they made me feel comfort"She was a role model to able from the start." on the LPGA Tour. With her consistently high level of play, me and the girls coming up in That comfort turned into she has earned the respect of junior golf," said LPGA rook- confidence in a 20-year career her peers. ie Minjee Lee, a scholarship full of milestones. "I think she's one of the recipient. "She gave us confiAnd coming full circle last mOSt LmderaPPreCiated leg- dence to make it to the LPGA." week inOcala,Webb found ends of the game," said Stacy Many observers agree that herself right back where she Lewis, the 2014 player of the Webb, who behind sunglass- first learned to win.
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B9.0 TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
I
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I f '
TODAY
iI
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TONIGHT
HIGH i
LOW
52'
34'
Cloudy with a touch of rain
I
ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record Low
42 24'
69' in 1934 -13'in 1950
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Record 1.04"in 2006 Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.04") Year to date(normal) 0.25 " (1.57") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 6"
SUN ANDMOON Tue.
Today 7:22 a.m. 5:16 p.m. 4:34 p.m. 6:16 a.m. L ast Ne w
CENTRAL: Rain and clouds will overspread the region throughout Lincoln the day today asa 55/46 storm system moves Newpo in. 56/46 WEST:A wet day will featured aswaves of Yach rain and cloudsstream 56/47 throughout the day. Floren e
YESTERDAY High: Sa'
Tuuight' s ulty:TodayisGroundhog Day, a cross-quarter day,which occurs roughly midway between asolstice and an equinox.
43'
I
•
• Eugene
55/46
49/36
Roseburg Gra a
• Silver Lake 49/36 51/37 Chiloquin Medfo d '51/38
35 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.
ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbugetin.com/webcams l44 at Cabbage Hill: Rainandsnowwil cause slick conditions onthe roadwaytoday. US 20 atSuntium Pass:Rainandsomesnow will make slick spots onthe roadwaytoday. US 26 atGov'tCamp:Showers causewet conditions tothe roadway.Watchfor slick spots. US 26 atOchocoDivide: Raintoday will cause the road to bewet. Watchfor slick spots. OREaaatWillamette Pass: Periods of rain to-
day will causesomeslick spotsontheroadway. ORE138 utDiamondLake: Roadconditions could beslippery todayandtonight dueto rain.
SKI REPORT
tario 4 32
Nyssa 41/33
Riley 51/34 51/33
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
47/36
53/38
• Burns Jun tion
• Paisley
• 55/38
Rome 57/39
Klamath • Asm nd • Falls 54/
42/26
• Burns Juntura 46/34
Ch ristmas alley
•
Beaver Marsh
Yesterday Today Tuesday
The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm tiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low,
• Fort Rock Cresce t • 51/36
'Baker C
Vale» 42/32
Ham ton •
•
Union
• John »U Day /28 49/ 3 4
• Pa lina
•
La plne
/44
56/50
Granite» 43/30
' Re d Brothers Su iVer» 52/34
• 49/ Grove Oakridge
44/30
•
• 2/37 • Mitch U 51 /33
52/34
" rpd
45/3 •
erande
47 34
• Prineville
•
r
Meac am l.ostine
Heppner
•
• +~
50/34
• Lakeview
53/38
McDermi
51/39
51/36
Yesterday Today Tuesday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 54/42/0.1 8 55/43/r 51/39/c La Grande 39/ 28/0.11 47/34/sn 45/30/sn 37/27/Tr 42/26/sn40/23/r La Pine 46/27/0.04 49/35/r 45/30/r Brookings 58/49/Tr 5 7/52/r 5 7/49/r Me d for d 48/3 3/Tr 54 / 48/r 5 5/44/r Bums 43/28/Tr 5 1/34/c 48/29/r Ne w port 54/4 5 /0.12 56/46/r 5 5/45/c Eugene 52/39/0.11 56/44/r 53/43/r No r th Bend 57 / 48/0.07 58/48/r 57/48/r Klamath Falls 50/23/Tr 53/38/sn 54/36/r O n t ario 39/30/Tr 41/32/r 4 3/31/r Lakeview 48/21/0.00 51/39/c 53/38/r Pe n dleton 36/ 3 2/0.13 48/37/c 46/33/c
City Astoria Baker City
Yesterday Today Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 44/4 0/0.2253/41/r 48/39/c Prinevige 43/ 3 1/0.0152/34/r 45/32/r Redmond 46 / 30/Tr 55/33/r 47/31/r Roseburg 54 / 42/0.08 56/50/r 56/48/r Salem 51/37/0.25 56/43/r 50/42/c Sisters 49/30/0.03 54/34/r 47/29/r The Dages 4 5 /36/0.04 54/39/r 47/35/c
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ 0
6
~ 06 d
NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the
~ t ee
~ 208
d
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*
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*
*
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~ 406
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48 contiguousstates) National high: 84
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Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 55/42/0.00 51/36/s 59/42/pc Akron 35/26/0.56 25/7/sn 26/24/pc Albany 27/10/Tr 17/-1/sn 20/7/pc Albuquerque 51/32/0.00 53/30/s 57/32/s Anchorage 25/5/0.00 22/7/s 19/3/s Atlanta 56/40/0.24 43/27/c 51/33/s Atlantic City 40/23/Tr 50/20/r 31/24/s Austin 73/57/Tr 52/31/pc 51/39/c Baltimore 39/18/Tr 51/17/r 34/23/s Billings 28/2/0.01 47/30/c 38/14/sn Birmingham 57/47/0.13 43/24/pc 51/29/s Bismarck 5/-8/0.07 25/4/pc 19/-1/c Boise 42/30/0.02 46/36/sh 47/34/r Boston 30/1 2/0.00 34/8/sn 21/1 3/s Bridgeport, CT 34/11/0.00 35/11/sn 24/1 7/s Buffalo 26/23/0.08 15/1/sn 20/18/pc 4/-8/sn 15/7/pc Burlington, YT 9/-2/Tr Caribou, ME 4/-7/0.00 -1/-11/sn 5/-8/pc Charleston, SC 67/36/0.00 59/29/r 52/31/s Charlotte 57/36/0.02 53/22/r 50/27/s Chattanooga 53/37/0.16 38/24/sf 49/28/s Cheyenne 25/13/Tr 47/32/c 51/29/c Chicago 31/21/1.22 17/8/sn 26/21/c Cincinnati 45/33/0.24 27/18/sf 39/31/pc Cleveland 32/29/0.52 17/6/sn 25/22/pc ColoradoSprings 30/20/0.03 52/30/c 56/34/pc Columbia, Mo 38/33/0.54 29/22/s 49/30/s Columbia, SC 67/36/0.00 59/26/r 52/29/s Columbus,GA 61/40/0.45 49/27/c 54/32/s Columbus,OH 38/31/0.29 20/11/sf 31/27/pc Concord, NH 22/1/0.00 12/-1/sn 17/2/s Corpus Christi 81/55/0.00 57/43/pc 53/46/sh Dallas 58/43/0.12 46/32/s 58/42/pc Dayton 41/33/0.38 21/13/sf 34/28/c Denver 29/17/0.14 52/33/c 57/32/pc Des Moines 34/31/0.75 19/13/s 29/17/sn Detroit 32/20/0.59 18/2/sf 20/19/pc Duluth 10/-3/Tr 15/0/s 14/1/c El Paso 61/41/0.00 61/36/s 65/38/s -9/-24/0.00 0/-25/pc -11/-31/pc Fairbanks Fargo 6/-7/0.00 20/1/pc 17/2/c Flagstaff 52/29/0.00 58/28/s 60/29/s Grand Rapids 21/18/0.43 16/ll/pc 24/21/c Green Bay 13/10/Tr 15/6/s 19/10/c Greensboro 55/35/0.02 51/23/r 46/28/s Harrisburg 37/12/0.02 41/1 2/r 28/18/pc Harfford, CT 33/14/Tr 26/5/sn 23/10/s Helena 26/11/Tr 42/35/sn 39/17/sn Honolulu 80/65/0.05 81/72/sh 82/71/sh Houston 77/60/0.01 52/38/pc 50/42/sh Huntsville 59/45/0.15 38/23/pc 49/30/s Indianapolis 33/29/0.38 22/14/c 36/27/c Jackson, MS 72/50/0.60 45/25/pc 55/34/s Jacksonville 74/39/0.00 65/32/t 57/40/pc
43/30/0.93 70/59/0.24 at Alice, TX Auckland 69/65/0.22 * * „ „* Re idciiy National low: -27' 17/1 p » iro' i+ „ * * * * * * *„ Baghdad 66/43/0.00 45/24 s» j s 18/2 at International Falls, * Bangkok 88/75/0.00 unFr»n sc» eed»tphta 19/13 +A MN 32 * . Beijing 37/21/0.00 4/61 C» mbus 4 * » 5»li Lsk» ity 20 1 Beirut 68/54/0.00 Precipitation: 1.01 Omah me 1/8 ~* 54/41 d d d d d Berlin 38/33/0.09 at Peoria IL shln u d d d Denver u Bogota 64/54/0.05 d d d d i 2/23, s V»g 52/ 3 3 Kansas Ci d d d d Si „ ' 32 /84 Budapest 37/25/0.00 * * • 8 dddddd 28/1 8 j ej ao Buenos Ai r es 84/66/0.00 * d d d d' L»s An l»s A l bu uerque xi d d d Cabo San Lucas 75/60/0.04 34/2 . 8 3/3 • Char» 4/53 Cairo 75/52/0.00 \ /22 g u u Anchorage kl»homa Ci • Calgary 19/1/0.00 4 22/7 4 u u Cancun 82P2/0.00 Ph»eni '~ uir inghe x4 • Oega 43/27 3 /51 8I P» Dublin 39/30/0.00 Ju 44/3 1/3 Edinburgh 37/35/0.00 24/10 Geneva 36/32/0.30 Chihuahua Harare + * » ilp)»' 84/63/0.33 w Orleans X XXX * * 58/37 2/38 Hong Kong 66/53/0.00 N* * Honolulu 52/37 Istanbul 64/57/0.01 sfm Mismi Jerusalem 66/40/0.00 83/eff i51v4% ~ Johannesburg 78/60/0.02 Lima 81/71/0.02 Lisbon 54/45/0.16 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 42/35/0.02 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 46/36/0.00 Manila 85/72/0.00
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 49-4 9 3-3 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 9-28 0 42-7 2 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 30-59 4-10 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 28-4 1 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 3 2B-5 1 Vail, CO 3 41-41 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 20-40 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-3 0 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 49-49 Sun Valley, ID 0 46-6 3 Source: OnTheSnow.com
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The m a rketing package is designed to reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion will saturate the marketplace with more than
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Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis
41/28/c 58/49/c 77/64/pc 73/48/s 90/74/pc 48/25/s 71/54/s 33/24/sn 66/46/c 39/26/s
87no/pc 77/53/pc 72/53/s 17/8/c 82/70/pc 39/29/sn 37/27/sn 34/20/pc 76/62/t
72/60/pc 53/45/s 62/41/s 81/58/pc 81/72/c 56/45/sh 39/30/c 49/30/sh 84/71/s
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 35/19/0.00 26/9/s 27/25/pc 34/18/0.42 28/18/s 48/20/pc
19/18/0.38 65/44/0.00 48/33/0.46 24/20/0.45 58/43/0.53 76/49/0.00 49/38/0.42 16/15/0.45 59/48/0.72 Miami 76/63/0.00 Milwaukee 24/22/0.53 Minneapolis 21/12/0.02 Nashville 56/40/0.74 New Orleans 75/57/0.04 New YorkCity 36/20/0.00 Newark, NJ 36/15/0.00 Norfolk, YA 48/24/0.01 OklahomaCity 42/38/0.25 Omaha 27/22/0.51 Orlando 75/49/0.00 Palm Springs 81/54/0.00 Peoria 35/34/1.18 Philadelphia 39/21/0.00 Phoenix 69/50/0.00 Pittsburgh 35/24/0.16 Portland, ME 26/0/Tr Providence 33/11/0.00 Raleigh 57/33/0.00 Rapid City 15/-1/0.05 Reno 59/24/0.00 Richmond 50/24/0.00 Rochester, NY 28/13/0.05 Sacramento 67/38/0.00 St. Louis 42/35/0.69 Salt Lake City 50/27/0.00 San Antonio 77/60/0.00 San Diego 71/53/0.00 San Francisco 64/46/0.00 San Jose 67/39/0.00 Santa re 44/21/0.00 Savannah 71/36/0.00 Seattle 47/40/0.06 Sioux Fags 10/6/0.16 Spokane 32/29/0.10 Springfield, Mo 44/37/0.37 Tampa 76/56/0.00 Tucson 64/48/0.03 Tulsa 47/29/0.14 Washington, DC 44/27/0.00 Wichita 32/27/0.28
150/sf
Yakima Yuma
44/32/c 47/30/c
8
40/35/Tr
24/21/pc
68/46/pc 70/46/s 30/18/sf 41/29/pc 21/13/s 36/16/pc 45/26/s 55/33/s 74/53/s 73/53/s
32/24/sf 45/34/pc 14/8/s 22/15/sn 40/27/s 51/36/s 83/61/pc 75/65/c
17/10/s 25/19/sn 19/10/s 23/9/sn 36/22/c 49/32/s 52/37/c 55/45/c
37/13/r 26/22/s 38/14/r 27/1 8/s 58/26/r 37/28/pc 45/29/s 61/39/s
19/9/s 32/14/sn 75/43/c 68/51/s 81/54/s 83/54/s 19/14/s 33/26/c
45/17/r 28/24/s 73/51/s 76/53/s 37/9/sn 27/23/pc 12/3/sn 19/5/s
36/8/sn 22/13/s 56/24/r 47/29/s 45/24/c 42/17/sn 66/37/c 64/33/c 56/24/r 42/28/s 17/0/sf 22/12/pc 67/45/c 66/46/c 29/22/pc 49/34/s 54/41/c 56/41/r 56/39/pc 49/43/sh 70/53/s 69/53/s 64/51/pc 61/49/c
69/46/pc 66/44/pc 47/25/s 52/28/s 60/29/r 50/45/r
54/34/s
52/43/sh 17/8/pc 23/12/sn 37/33/sn 40/31/r 35/23/s 54/34/s 71/43/sh 66/52/pc
71/46/s 74/46/s 40/26/s 59/35/s 52/23/r 39/29/s 40/23/s 59/28/s
74/52/0.00 76/50/s 80/51/s
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93/73/0.00 72/45/0.00 Montreal 5/0/0.00 Moscow 36/32/0.05 Nairobi 86/54/0.00 Nassau 77/64/0.00 New Delhi 72/48/0.00 Osaka 42/32/0.02 Oslo 30/27/0.36 Ottawa 1/-2/0.08 Paris 39/34/0.25 Rio de Janeiro 90/78/0.34 Rome 52/36/0.04 Santiago 90/57/0.00 Sao Paulo 79/68/0.02 Sapporo 31/20/0.25 Seoul 36/12/0.00 Shanghai 42/29/0.02 Singapore 86/75/0.03 Stockholm 34/32/0.48 Sydney 75/66/0.08 Taipei 63/55/0.00 Tel Aviv 70/39/0.00 Tokyo 47/36/0.00 Toronto 15/10/0.04 Vancouver 46/33/0.00 Vienna 34/23/0.00 Warsaw 39/30/0.06
95/71/s 69/47/pc 3/-11/sn 29/20/c 87/59/s 80/65/pc 73/52/c 44/33/pc 34/21/c 5/-13/sn 38/29/pc 88/76/1 52/38/pc 89/56/s 79/66/1 31/26/sn 39/20/pc 47/39/c 85P5/pc 31/27/sn 75/66/pc 69/60/c 72/53/s 48/35/s 11/-3/sn 47/39/r 38/25/sf 36/26/c
96/72/pc 70/44/c 11/8/pc 27/20/c 87/59/s 78/65/s 68/49/1 46/31/c
27/21/sn 15/6/c 37/30/pc 88/76/t 52/45/r 89/55/s 79/65/1 28/25/sn 41/21/c 48/37/c 84/75/t 30/26/sn
76/64/pc 67/58/r 70/52/s 49/36/s 22/11/pc 48/38/sh 39/25/pc 35/26/pc
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6522 JeffwsonAve., Bend541-888-0092
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 •
•
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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B u I l e t i n :
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
202
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
WANTEDwood dressers; dead washers. 541-420-5640 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
1 7 7g
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
s
w .
208
210
Furniture & Appliances
Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. T railer a t Jak e ' s D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco in Redmond; Drexel donate M-F at Smith Woodbridge Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, pecan coffee table Bend; or CRAFT in Tumalo. Can pick up and two pecan end tables. End tables large amts, 389-8420. www.craftcats.org have pull-out shelf.
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
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A v e .
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• B en
d
O r e g o n
9 7 7 0 2
210
242
246
246
257
260
Furniture & Appliances
Exercise Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Musical Instruments
Misc. Items
Refrigerator - white 22 cu. ft. Maytag, French door with icemaker and bottom freezer, only 2 years old, and has been stored for most of that time. Paid $1500,asking $1000. 541-923-7360.
Browning Citori 12Ga. over-under shotgun, 28", $1000. Call 503-320-3008
BUYING &
New, Para s tainless 1911 45, match grade barrel, $495. 541-306-0166
Like new h igh-end CASH!! Ruger, Vaquer stainquality Sole F80 moFor Guns, Ammo & less 357 mag, $450. torized treadmill, 3.0 Reloading Supplies. 541-306-0166 H P motor. Wid e , 541-408-6900. quiet deck. LED disSleep Comfort Twin plays include speed, Smith & Wesson XL adjustable bed adj. incline, fan, disM&P15-22 with with vibrator, with or tance and more. Easy 4x16x44 BSA Cats without mattress & folding an d l i f ting Eye scope, Fieldline foundation, clean, d eck. $ 9 50 . Ca l l DO YOU HAVE Tactical carrying needs new air pump. 541-410-8849 SOMETHING TO case. Excellent con$600 SELL 541-382-7072 or dition, was used in 245 541-410-5165 FOR $500 OR National Finals LESS? Rodeo for target Golf Equipment Non-commercial competition. Comes advertisers may with original sights TheBulletin CHECK YOUR AD place an ad and 25-round magarecommends extra ' with our zine.$850 obo. i caution when pur"QUICK CASH 541-410-0841 chasing products or • SPECIAL" services from out of I 1 week3lines 12 f the area. Sending f or' Wanted: Collector seeks ' cash, checks, o r ' on the first day it runs high quality fishing items ~k n n k k 2 N i credit i n f ormation to make sure it is corAd must & upscale fly rods. Call may be subjected to rect. nSpellcheckn and 541-678-5753, or include price of i FRAUD. For more human errors do oc503-351-2746 nn le tnm oiknon information about an c cur. If this happens to ~ or less, or multiple advertiser, you may I your ad, please conitems whose total l call t h e Ore g onl What are you us ASAP so that does not exceed ' State Atto r ney ' tact corrections and any $500. looking for? i General's O f f i ce adjustments can be Consumer Protec- • You'll find it in made to your ad. Call Classifieds at tion h o t line a t i 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds i 1-877-877-9392. The BulletinClassified www.bendbulletln.com
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1981 Yamaha Console Piano with bench,
1 owner, rich tone, excellent condition, currently tuned by Jana. $1 700 obo. 541489-1966
I
i
I TheBulletin I Serving CnnrrncOregon since rggg
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 212
Antiques 8 Collectibles
R U T !
255
NEW Cleveland Irons!
Computers
4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in
plastic,$325 obo! 951-454-2561 (in Redmond) 246
Antiques Wanted: Guns, Hunting Tools, furniture, marbles, & Fishing $300 set. coin-op machines, beer 503-317-9668 cans, pre-'40s B/W pho- Bend local pays CASH!! tography. 541-389-1578 for all firearms 8 ammo. 541-526-0617 G ENERATE SOM E End t able, a n tique, ra c k , EXCITEIVIENT in your w /magazine neighborhood! Plan a $25. 541-480-3893 garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified!
541-385-5809. sn French Bulldog AKC pupk oak 5'x6', leaded pies, great Valentine's Hutch, gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 glass doors & mirror Oak frame 28" x31", chrisandcyndioyahoo.com at back, 3 cupboards scroll work. $50 obo below. Exc. c o nd. 541-419-6408 Malemute/Husky pups, $400. 541-318-8797 blue eyes 3F/5M deThe Bulletin reserves 208 posits now, r e ady the right to publish all Pets & Supplies 2 /1 4. $500 & u p ? ads from The Bulletin 541-977-6150. newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet webThe Bulletin recom:g site. mends extra caution s when purc hasThe Bulletin ing products or serLeather designer SnrvcngCentral Orngon since Sggg vices from out of the couch;and brown area. Sending cash, 240 microfiber chair Cute, Smart & No checks, or credit inwith matching Crafts & Hobbies Shed. Min-Schnauzer f ormation may b e ottoman, Schnoodles. Tails subjected to fraud. all like new! Antique windows small docked, 1st shots, & For more informa$1 375. panes: 4x5 $90;2x3. wormed. $350-$450. tion about an adver541-388-4324 $45 obo. 541-480-3893 tiser, you may call Good homes only! 541-322-0609 the O r egon State INDIAN DRUM, Queen bed with wood Attorney General's authentic, $25. Office C o nsumer POODLE or POMAPOO headboard and frame, 541-480-3893 puppies, toy. Adorable! dbl pillow top mattress Protection hotline at 541-475-3889 linens included, exc. 1-877-877-9392. 241 shape. $500 or best Queensland Heelers Bicycles & offer. 541-389-0340 The Bulletin Standard & Mini, $150 gnrving Central Orngon slncnSggg Accessories & up. 541-280-1537 Adopt a rescued cat or www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, Rhodesian R i dgeback more! CRAFT, 65480 AKC, 7mo female healthy, 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, sweet, big & beautiful! 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420$1400 obo. 541-923-9861 Range, Jenn A i r, N EW Marin A r www.craftcats.org down draft, black, genta Nev er ridden 2010 m o del Siberian Husky purebred with four burners, Boxer/bulldogpups, 7 pups! & Husky-Wolf pups! convection oven with Shimano 105 thrumo. 2M, 1F , $ 350 $400. 541-977-7019 three shelves, great o ut. 6 0 6 1 al u m . obo. 541-460-3026. triple- butted Hydro cond. 210 Edge Road main Paid $2290. frame with carbon Asking $1600. Furniture & Appliances s eat-stay and E 4 503-866-8858 anti-flex chain-stay. A1 Washerse Dryers Fits 5'8n- 6'1n $750 $150 ea. Full warCheck out the ($825 if you want PD wi ranty. Free Del. Also 5 700 B lack S h i classifieds online Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! wanted, used W/D's 105 pedals) www.bendbulletin.com mano 1st shots, dewormed, 541-280-7355 541-480-2483 Updated daily $250. 541-771-0956
541-385-5809
E iwKEA T
• New, never fired Weatherby VanguardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired Howa,wood stock, cal .300 Win Mag.$725 Must pass background check. Please call 541.389.3694, leave message.
T HE B ULLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
i
SE LLING
All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rouncfsi wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419.
Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip Mclntosh JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 262
Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 1977, excellent cond, only played senior year in college, $1000 obo.AND
i i
I
Pets & Supplies
c h a nd l e r
5-drawer Hon Industries commercial file cabinet, 43" wide, 66" high. Originally $1000; asking$450.
King Trombone,1941 HN White, 7-1/2" bell, $500, obo. 541-388-2045 or 541-280-1912 eves
541-948-1824
260
Misc. Items
263
Tools 54-piece set of Nobility plate, 4 ad d itionalDrum/flat sander, $230. salad utensils, cher- 9" bench vise, $110. rywood chest. $49. 541-548-6181 541-504-4437 Buying Diamonds TOOL SALE. A s hop full of wood working /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers machinery, hand held power tools & hand 541-389-6655 tools. Too much to BUYING list. Sat. 8 Sun., Feb. 7th & 8th.9am-3pm, Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. No early birds please. 541-408-2191. 1357 Koyoda St., Madras. Turn East on Advertise your car! Brush Ln., just North Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers! of Sonny's Motel and follow signs. Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds 541-460-1853
L
I ng k
~
à ~ k ',
how your stuff
sell your stuff.
Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 perweek. V isit w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n .c om , c l ic k o n " P L AC E A N A D " a nd follow th e e a s y s t e p s . AII ads appear in both print and online. Pleaseallow 24 hours for photo processing before your adappears in print and online.
BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com
To place your photo ad, visit Usonline at w ww.bendb u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions,5 41-385-58 0 9
C2 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphoto in your private party ad for only $15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
Icaii for commercial line ad rates)
*llllust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
' ~tLIIW j IJI~~IIJk'
~I
341
Horses & Equipment
Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking forEmployment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486- Independent Positions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
265
270
Building Materials
Lost & Found
La Pine Habitat Found transit coins near RESTORE Crooked River. Call to Building Supply Resale identify, 541-977-4490 Quality at LOW PRICES 52684 Hwy 97 541-536-3234 REMEMBER:If you Open to the public . have lost an animal, don't forget to check Prineville Habitat The Humane Society ReStore Bend Building Supply Resale 541-382-3537 1427 NW Murphy Ct. Redmond 541-447-6934 541-923-0882 Open to the public. Madras 541-475-6889 266 Prineville Heating & Stoves 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats NOTICE TO 541-389-8420. ADVERTISER Since September 29, 266 1991, advertising for Sales Northeast Bend used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been ** FREE ** certified by the Oregon Department of Garage Sale Kit Environmental Qual- Place an ad in The ity (DEQ) and the fed- Bulletin for your gaeral E n v ironmental rage sale and reProtection A g e ncy ceive a Garage Sale (EPA) as having met Kit FREE! smoke emission stanKIT INCLUDES: dards. A cer t ified Garage Sale Signs woodstove may be •• 4$2.00 Off Coupon To identified by its certifi- Use Toward Your cation label, which is Next Ad permanently attached • 10 Tips For "Garage to the stove. The Bul- Sale Success!" letin will not k nowingly accept advertising for the sale of PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at uncertified woodstoves. 1777 SW Chandler 267
Fuel & Wood
Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin serving central oregonsince rse
269
For newspaper
delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 54'I -385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email
classified@bendbulletimcom
The Bulle6n
316
Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $5,000/acre Call 541-419-4440
Good classified adstell the essential facts inan interesting Manner.Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin serving centralcwgons/nce 19N
servlnyceneal oregon slncessr
270
Lost & Found
Quality orchard mixed grass hay, $190-$235 ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 betwn Bend/Redmond
Found college student's physiology book & notes. Wheat Straw for Sale. Call Lani, COCC RedAlso, weaner pigs. mond, 541-504-2901.
Circle Y mens saddle leather saddle bags, all related tack, $500.
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 bendbugetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbugetin.com
541-385-6021
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities ADMINISTRATIVE
541-480-3893
RXil s
o
The Bulletin 541-385-5809
w anted t o j o i n our caring
m emory
care
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
c ommunity. A l l shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable.
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Buffetin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
t ime c hef. F o r more in f o rmation, or any
Also needed part
questions,
please call 541-385-4717
Manufacturing Assembler Assembler of mechanical products needed. Products include standard parts and custom work — no "assembly line". Requirements include: 2 yrs. experience in a manufacturing position; thorough attention to detail; reliability; experience with basic hand tools, power tools and tape measure. Must be able to read and interpret written w ork i n structions and mechanical drawings. Products are built while standing at a work table. Must be able to lift 20 Ibs on a regular basis, and 40-50 lbs. on occasion.
Work location is Redmond, Oregon. Hours: 7:00 a.m. — 3:30 p.m., Mon.-Fri. Starting pay depending on experience, plus excellent benefit package w hich i n cludes h ealth insurance, life and 401(k) Plan. Pre-employment drug screen required. Equal Opportunity Employer.
AircraftRubber Manufacturing, lnc. dba FuelSafe Systems 1550 NE Kingvvood Ave. Redmond, OR97756 Mill Workers
421
XXTR Truck School
REDMOND CAltrlPUS
Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.XXTR.EDU
INDIAN HEAD CASINO (Warm Springs, OR) Staff Accounfant
We are seeking experienced Operators, Feeders, Graders and Stackers in our Fingerjoint and Lamination plants. If you have a g o o d w ork history and attendance record, please come and apply with us. Starting pay is commensurate with experience $10.50 to $15.00 or more. Medical, dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 days. Vacation after 6 months. Profit sharing also.
541-546-6171
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 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 Bend Homes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 -Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
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 RentNEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 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
Caregivers
EXPERIENCED FINGER JOINT ANDLAMINATION PRODUCTION
Schools & Training
•
CAUTION: DMV Title & Ads published in Licensing Clerk "Employment Op(Bend) porlunities" include Big Country RV has employee and inde- immediate opening for a pendent positions. DMV Title 8 Licensing Ads fo r p o sitions Clerk / Receptionist to that require a fee or 'oin our team. Must upfront investment ave experience with must be stated. With automotive or RV titling any independentjob or extensive adminisopportunity, please trative experience. We i nvestigate tho r - a re expanding a nd oughly. Use extra l ooking for a te a m c aution when a p - player with a positive plying for jobs on- attitude to operate with line and never pro- energy and to be cusvide personal infor- t omer-oriented. To p mation to any source pay, retirement plan, aid v acation, a n d you may not have p benefits packresearched and medical Apply in person at: deemed to be repu- age. 63500 N 97 Bend, table. Use extreme Oregon orHwy online at c aution when r e bi e . eom ~ s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. Need to get an ad We suggest you call the State of Oregon in ASAP? Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal OpportuFax It to 541-322-7253 nity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of The Bulletin Classifieds Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division, 97'I -673- 0764.
Qualified applicants will submit resume stating S undowner alum. 2 horse walk-in. Padded, relevant experience by fax to (541) 923-6015, by email to hr©fuelsafe.com or you can apply great cond., $2800. 541-385-6021 in person at: Western suede chaps, adult, $75 obo.
•
476
526
Employment Opportunities
Loans & Mortgages
Houses for Rent General
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.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate adverMercy Medical Center, tising in this newspain Roseburg Oregon, per is subject to the is see k in g a F air H o using A c t q uality-driven, c u s which makes it illegal tomer-focused directo a d vertise "any tor to lead our Home Call The Bulletin At preference, limitation Health/Hospice ser541-385-5809 disc r imination vices i n Do u glas Place Your Ad Or E-Mail or based on race, color, County. If you are a seasoned Hom e At: www.bendbulletin.com religion, sex, handicap, familial status, Health and Hospice professional ready to LOCAL MONEY:We buy marital status or natrust deeds & tional origin, or an inmake a difference, secured some hard money tention to make any explore this exciting note, loans. Call Pat Kellev such pre f erence, opportunity by visiting 541-382-3099 ext.18. limitation or discrimius at nation." Familial stawww.mercyrose.org/jo tus includes children bs.php and search for under the age of 18 Requisition Number living with parents or 1 400034807 or c a ll legal cus t odians, J ohn H o ward a t pregnant women and 541-677-2476 f or people securing cusmore information. tody of children under 18. This newspaper Sales Associate will not knowingly acMiller Paint C o mcept any advertising pany is looking for for real estate which is 616 an individual who in violation of the law. enjoys working with Want To Rent O ur r e aders a r e the public, working informed that flexible hours and C lean l i ving, n o n - hereby all dwellings adverwho is positive and smoker, nondrinker, tised in this newspasolution f o c used. nonpartier, nondrug- per are available on Paint and home imuser, with stable in- an equal opportunity provement expericome seeking studio basis. To complain of ence is preferred but or one-bdrm. apt. with d iscrimination ca l l not required. This is kitchen, prefer washer HUD t o l l-free at a full time position & dryer. Availability of 1-800-877-0246. The a nd benefits a r e internet & phone ser- toll f ree t e lephone available. vice required. Very number for the hearQualified candidates good rental history im p aired is will clear a b a ck- and excellent refer- ing 1-800-927-9275. ground check, DMV ences. Please call check, r e ferences S tephen Green a t and p r e -employ- 541-514-9704. Houses for Rent ment drug screen NE Bend prior to being hired. 631 Bring your resume Condo/Townhome 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1700 and apply now at for Rent sq. ft. gated home 2121 NE Division St. $1300 month. Or e-mail your Broken Top 3 bdrm 2.5 1670 NE Northview Dr. resume to: bath Townhome. Si ngl e 541-610-9589 careersOmillerpaint. garage, partially furcom The Bulletin nished, W/D incl. Outside maint 8 garbage inc. To Subscribe call $1600/mo., year lease 541-385-5800 or go to required. 541-389-2581 www.bendbulletin.com caution when pur632 chasing products or I 675 services from out of a Apt.ilylultiplex General RV Parking i the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r CHECK yOUR AD Complete RV hook-up l credit i n f ormation near trails 8 shops in l may be subjected to Bend. Winter rates! FRAUD. Call 541-408-0846 for For more informa- I more info. tion about an adver- '
Home Heaith/ Hospice Director
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We are a family owned wood remanufacturer in business for over 50 years. Learn more aboutourcompany and the products we make at www.brightwood.com. Please apply in person at our main office located in the i tiser, you may call Madras Industrial Park. the Oregon State Attorney General's Bright Wood Corp. Office C o nsumer s 335 NN/ Hess St. Protection hotline at l Madras, OR97741 I 1-877-877-9392. Must pass pre-employment drug screen. gThe Bulleting
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Experienced professional with strong general ledger and reconciliations background to handle general accounting duties, special projects and month end close, under the supervision of the Controller/Accounting Supervisor. Must have at least (3) three years related experience. Associates Degree. Strong organizational skills, planning and communication and PC skills. Knowledgeable in creating and analyzing spreadsheets. Team player. Must NEWSPAPER TRUCK DRIVER submit to and pass the Oregon State Police WANTED backgroundand obtain gaming license. Wage: Must have doubles DOE. Apply online at indianheadgaming.com. endorsement. Call HR at (541) 460-7714 for information. Local run. Truck is parked in The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journalist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps Madras. 541-475-4221 Tax assistant. This position is ideal for a journalism People Look for Information student with interest in a broad range of sports. About Products and Duties include taking phone and email informa- Services Every Daythrough tion from sources and generating accurate, concise accounts of local high school sports events. The Bulletin Classifiarfs Hours vary; most work shifts are weeknights and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and profes- Looking for your next Tax Senior Professional sional-level writing ability are essential, as are a employee? sports background and a working knowledge of Place a Bulletin help Established in 1952, Les Schwab isn't your traditional high school sports. wanted ad today and regular tire store. We are a growing company reach over 60,000 with a strong reputation of excellent customer The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an readers each week. service and over 450 stores and 7,000 equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment Your classified ad employees in the western United States. We drug screen required. will also appear on a re currently seeking a Se n ior T a x bendbulletin.com Professional in our headquarters in Bend, To apply, please emailresume and any which currently Oregon. T his i s a s e nior level position relevant writing samples to: receives over 1.5 reporting to the Director of Tax and working s ortsassistantCi! bendbulletin.com million page views extensively with outside service providers. every month at No phone inquiries please. no extra cost. The primary responsibilities of this role Bulletin Classifieds include the following: Get Results! • Manage the tax reporting and tax compliance Call 385-5809 function for multiple corporations and partneror place ships 5ervrhg Central Oregon since 1903 your ad on-line at • Develop and implement corporate tax bendbulletin.com strategy General • Prepare the tax provision for audited The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturfinancial statements day night shift and other shifts as needed. We • Prepare quarterly estimated taxes currently have openings all nights of the week. • KSS • Research complex tax matters Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts • Respond to IRS and state/local tax audits % Mzm start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoTo be successfulin this role, the Senior Tax sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Professionalmust have the following: Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a • Bachelor's Degree and CPA minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts • At least 5-7 years of experience in public or are short (t t:30 - t:30). The work consists of private accounting loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack• Strong income tax compliance and consult526 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup ing experience, primarily in the corporate area and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Loans & Mortgages with some partnership tax experience offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, • Understanding of multistate tax planning and short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid WARNING compliance, especially in the western United vacation and sick time. Drug test is required The Bulletin recomStates prior to employment. mends you use cau• Strong verbal and written communication tion when you proskills Please submit a completed application attenvide personal • Extensive experience with Microsoft Excel tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available information to compa• Experience with ERP implementation would at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Channies offering loans or be beneficial dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be credit, especially obtained upon request by contacting Kevin those asking for adLes Schwab offers a competitive salary and a Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). vance loan fees or full comprehensive benefit package including phone calls please. Only completed applicompanies from out of health, life, d e ntal, v ision, e xceptional No cations will be considered for this position. No state. If you have retirement plan, paid vacation and holidays. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reconcerns or quesPlease go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. quired prior to employment. EOE. tions, we suggest you No phone calls please. consult your attorney or call CONSUMER The Bulletin Les Schwab is proud to be an servintrcenrral oregon since l903 HOTLINE, equal opportunity employer.
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Want to impress the relatives? Remodel The Bulletin serwngcenaaroregon since rssr your home with the help of a professional All year Dependable from The Bulletin's Firewood: Seasoned; "Call A Service Lodgepole, split, del, Professional" Directory B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 or 2 cords for $365. Multi-cord discounts! 325 541-420-3484. Hay, Grain & Feed Dry lodgepole firewood, orchard grass, 1 cord $195, 1/2 cord Premium $100. Split and deliv- barn stored no rain, 8 2nd cutting. Del. ered. Bend a r ea. 1st avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 541-408-2996 or 541-948-7010.
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
• Hay, Grain & Feed
541-420-3277
476
Prep Sports Assistant
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.
325
3-horse Silverado 2001 29'xs' 5th wheel trailer. Deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO
476
The Bulletin
1-877-877-9392.
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adiustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
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Senior Apartmentlooking for Independent Living Currently girls who want to play ALL-INCLUSIVE s oftball for the u p with 3 meals daily coming season.Must Month-to-month lease, be 12 or under by check it out! Jan. 1st. Call 541-233-9914 541-610-6817
• •
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Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone NOTICE: Oregon Landwho con t racts for Contractors Law construction work to scape 671) requires all be licensed with the (ORS that adConstruction Contrac- businesses to p e r form tors Board (CCB). An vertise Landscape Construcactive license tion which includes: means the contractor l anting, deck s , is bonded & insured. ences, Verify the contractor's water-features, arbors, inCCB l i c ense at stallation, repairand of irwww.hirealicensedrigation systems to be contractor.com wit h the or call 503-378-4621. licensed ContracThe Bulletin recom- Landscape Board. This 4-digit mends checking with tors is to be inthe CCB prior to con- number cluded in all advertracting with anyone. tisements which indiSome other t rades cate the business also req u ire addi- a bond,insurance has and tional licenses and workers compensacertifications. tion for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Debris Removal or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to JUNK BE GONE check license status I Haul Away FREE before contracting with For Salvage. Also the business. Persons Cleanups 8 Cleanouts doing land scape Mel, 541-389-8107 maintenance do not r equire an L C B cense. Handyman I DO THAT!
Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768
Get onthe list now for
Weekly Serviceand Spring Clean-ups! Free estimates!
COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/i 541-480-9714
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEB 2, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w'll shpr tz
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency " I applied my f a vorite rule of holes," Unlucky L o uie g r umbled after losing in a penny game: "'When you're in one, stop digging.' And look how much good it did me." Louie was South, and North's 2NT response was a conventional forcing raise in spades. "I had extra strength and could have tried for slam," Louie told me, "but I was in a hole, as usual, so I took the 'sure' game." When West led a club, Louie won and led a trump — and West showed out. Louie disgustedly conceded a trick in each suit. "I can't stop digging fast enough," he sighed.
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today's news
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©2015Tribune Content Agency, LLC
02/02/15
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY2 2015 C5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
•fj
I
• •
880
882
908
933
935
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
CAL LW •
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - MotorcyclesAndAccessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies end Campers 890- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts end Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service end Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 860
732
Commercial/Investment II!lotorcycles & Accessories Properties for Sale
880
Motorhomes
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541-388-7179 881
Travel Trailers
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound,A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available.541-923-6408 Laredo 2006 31' Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
HIGH PROFILE LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN REDMOND This commercial building offers ex-
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164.
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTDr twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance 8 Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-6664
0
Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3689 or 541-420-6215.
P
Trucks 8 Heavy Equipment
DodgeRam 2003
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541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5 1000
Toyota RAV 2007, Limited, silver, 107K mi., exc. cond. $10,900. 541-548-8895
1
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975
Automobiles
Good runner Vin¹ 672057
BMyy 330c 2003
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $55K. Ph. 541-447-9268
Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242
$7,977 ROBBERSON ~
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541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809
I —I (
Buick LeSabre2005 super clean, senior owned, always garaged. 74,000 miles.
$7,000.
00
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The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7236.25557 R e f e r-
ence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Dexter L Dickson and Elsie I Dickson, as tenants by the e ntirety, as grantor, to Amerititle, as trustee, in favor of Long Beach M ortgage Company, as b eneficiary, da t e d 03/08/05, r e c orded 03/14/05, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES C o unty, Oregon, as 2005-14614 and subsequently assigned to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-WL1 by Assignment recorded as 2007-62346, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot one (1) and the Westerly six (6) feet of Lot two (2), in Block three (3) of Timber Ridge, Deschutes C o unty, Oregon PROPERTY A DDRESS: 2 0 406 BULLBLOCK RD 97 7 0 2
Both the beneficiary No text messages! and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon RePT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, vlsed Statutes 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, 86.752(3); the default new tires + mounted for which foreclosure studded snow tires, is made is grantors' $7250. 541-433-2026 failure to pay when due th e fo l lowing Dodge Neon Sport, 2-dr sums: monthly pay1995, 2.0L 4-cyl DOHC, ments of $ 1,658.46 91,500 original mi, S-spd, beginning 0 7 /01/13 AC, exlnt m pg,cash only. $1,860.57 begin$1995 obo. Clean title. and 10/1/13; plus late Sold as is. 541-480-7671 ning charges of $ 7 4.43 each month beginning 07/16/13; plus Focus SEL 2012 prior accrued l a te charges of $0.10; plus advances of $2,791.21 that represent property inspections, property preserALMOST PERFECT! vations, pro p erty Vin ¹151095 valuation and p a id $12,977 a ttorney fees a n d costs; together with ROBBERSON title expense, costs, t rustee's fees a n d LlllcoLN ~ II IR W R a ttorney's fees i n 541-312-3986 curred herein by reaDlr ¹0205. Price son of said default; good thru 02/28/1 5 any further sums advanced by the benefiFord Mustang GT 1996, ciary for the protecblack, convertible top, tion of t h e a b o ve Good cond. $10,000. described real property and its interest 541-923-3043 therein; and prepayment penalties/premiHondaAccord 2005 ums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has I d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediGorgeous and ately due and payPriced fo se//! able, said sums being Vin ¹¹018626 the following, to wit: 11.977 ROBBERSON I I II c 0 I N ~
$161,166.23 with in-
terest thereon at the rate of 9.75 percent per annum beginning 06/01/1 3; plus l ate charges of $ 7 4.43 each month beginning 07/1 6/1 3 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $0.10; plus advances of $2,791.21 that represent property inspections, p r operty
IM ROR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5
4
®
Legal Notices
B END, O R
360-774-2747
00
¹
0
2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977 ROBBERSON
916
M.F. 230 DIESEL $3,977 2007 Jayco Jay Flight CASE 200 GAS 29 FBS with slide out & FORD 2N GAS cellent exposure awning - Turn-key ready ROBBERSON RV BEND 541-382-8038 along desirable NW to use, less than 50 toco ~ maza a CONSIGNMENTS 6th Street. tal days used by current WANTED Currently housing owner. Never smoked in, 541-312-3986 925 We Do the Work, The Redmond no indoor pets, excellent Dlr ¹0205. Price Utility Trailers Spokesman newscond., very clean. Lots of You Keep the Cash! good thru 02/26/15 On-site credit bonus features; many paper offices, the approval team, 2,746 sq. ft. space is have never been used. Asking $16,500. C a l l web site presence. perfect for owner/user. Two Lisa, 541-420-0794 for We Take Trade-Ins! more info / more photos. private offices and BIG COUNTRY RV generous open Bend: 541-330-2495 spaces. Three Dutchman Denali Harley Davidson Redmond: parking places in CargoMate tr a i ler 32' 2011 travel Ford 2004 F-250 Allegro 32' 2007, like trailer. 541-546-5254 883 Sportster 6'x12' with large rear back+ street park2 slides EvXLT 4x4 new, only 12,600 miles. 1996, 20,200 miles, ing. $259,000. door and extra side erything goes, all Extended Cab Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 :.p exc. cond., door, additional [ . kitchen ware, linens 94K miles, excellent transmission, dual exhauling rack on top, Call Graham Dent $3,500. etc. Hitch, sway cond, many extras. haust. Loaded! Auto-lev541-383-2444 very good condition. 541-548-2672. $10,900. eling system, 5kw gen, bars, water 8 sewer COMPASS $3800. Call Stan ffto Call 541-233-3281 hoses. List price power mirrors w/defrost, Commercial see 541-420-1916 $34,500 - asking 2 slide-outs with awHarle Fat Bo 2002 nings, rear c a mera, $26,800 Loaded. F latbed t r ailer w i t h Snowbird Special! 744 trailer hitch, driver door Must see to appreciFordF350 2002 ramps, 7000 lb. caOpen Road 36' 2005 w/power window, cruise, ate. Redmond, OR. Open Houses pacity, 26' long, 8'6" + e '0 model is like new exhaust brake, central 541-604-5993 wide, ideal for hauling w/3 slides!! King vac, satellite sys. Asking hay, materials, cars, bed, hide-a-bed, $67,500. 503-781-8812 exc. cond. $2600. glass shower, 10 gal. 541-420-3788 water heater, 10 14k orig. miles.. Excu.ft. fridge, central cellent cond. Vance & 7.3 Powerstroke 932 vac, satellite dish, Hines exhaust, 5 4x4 ¹A90623. 27" TV /stereo sysAntique & spoke HD rims, wind $12,977 tem, front power levvest, 12" rise handle 20991 Miramar Dr. Classic Autos Heartland P rowler eling jacks & scisbars, detachable lug( 5beds,3baths,3,643 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', sor stabilizer jacks, ROBBERSON gage rack w/back sq ft., media room, Beaver Marquis, like new, 2 slides-liv16' awning. 2005 u seoLr~ maaa a exercise room, 6 yrs. I rest, hwy pegs & many i ng area & la r g e 1993 model is like new! chrome accents. Must old, 3-car garage, .34 closet. Large enough 40-ft, Brunswick $25,995 541-312-3986 see to appreciate! ~ acres, mountain view, ~ to live in, but easy to 541-419-0566 Dlr ¹0205. Price floor plan. Many $10,500. In CRR area $599,000. tow! 15' power awcall 530-957-1865 good thru 2/28/1 5 extras, well mainOpen House Sat., ning, power hitch & tained, fire sup885 I 1/ 2 4 11am-4pm i I stabilizers, full size 541-350-3998 or visit pression behind FIND IT! 1950 Mercury queen bed , l a r ge Canopies 8 Campers www.BendOre on.house USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! refrig, Stow Master 4-dr Sedan BUY IT! shower, porcelain sink J Door-to-door selling with 5000 tow bar, & toilet. Ground-up SELL ITr 745 Adventurer 2013 66 $21,995. $26,500. 541-999-2571 FB truck camper, restoration, beautiful! The Bulletin Classifieds fast results! It's the easiest 541-383-3503 Homes for Sale Call for details. way in the world to sell. $19,600. 2205 dry $35,500 weight, 44 gallons or best offer. GMC 1974 NOTICE The Bulletin Classified f resh water. 3 1 0 ugly but reliable! All real estate adverwatts rooftop solar, 2 541-385-5809 541-892-3709 95% tread on tised here in is subdeep cycle batteries, siped tires. ject to th e F ederal LED lights, full size Fair Housing A c t, HDFatBo 1996 $695. q ueen bed. n i c e which makes it illegal KeystoneLaredo 31' 541-460-0527 floorplan. Also availFleetwood D i scovery Rll 2006 w ith 1 2 ' to advertise any prefable 2010 C hevy 40' 2003, diesel, w/all slide-out. Sleeps 6, erencei limitation or Silverado HD, options - 3 slide outs, queen walk-around discrimination based 935 $15,000. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, bed w/storage underon race, color, reli360-774-2747 Sport Utility Vehicles etc., 32,000 miles. neath. Tub & shower. gion, sex, handicap, No text messages! A Private Collection Wintered in h eated 2 swivel rockers. TV. familial status or naCompletely 1956 Ford pickup shop. $79,995 obo. Air cond. Gas stove & tional origin, or intenRebuilt/Customized 541-447-6664 refrigerator/freezer. 1932 DeSoto 2dr tion to make any such 2012/2013 Award Microwave. Awning. 1930 Ford A Coupe preferences, l imitaWinner 1929 Ford A Coupe Outside sho w er. tions or discrimination. Showroom Cond. Slide-through stor1923 Ford T Run. We will not knowingly Many Extras a ge. E a s y Li f t . All good to excellent. accept any advertisBMW X3 35i 2010 Low Miles. $29,000 new; AskInside heated shop ing for real estate Exc cond., 65K miles $15,000 ing $13,600 BEND 541-382-8038 which is in violation of w/100K mile transfer541-548-4607 Gem Top Outfitter 541-447-4605 this law. All persons able warranty. Very Canopy for 8' bed Freightliner 1994 are hereby informed clean; loaded - cold truck. Double doors in Custom 870 weather pkg, premium that all dwellings adrear. Lined inside. Motorhome Call a Pro pkg & technology pkg. vertised are available Boats & Accessories Opening window on Keyless access, sunWill haul small SUV on an equal opportuWhether you need a one side; sliding roof, navigation, satelnity basis. The Bulle- 16' 2001 SmokerCraft or toys, and pull a window on the other. fence fixed, hedges lite radio, extra snow tin Classified Osprey, 50 hp Merc trailer! Powered by Boat rack on top. trimmed or a house tires. (Car top carrier electric trolling motor, 6.3 Cummins with 6 $650 obo. 750 not included.)$22,500. 1965 Mustang am/fm/cass., open bow speed Allison auto built, you'll find ln Redmond, OR 541-915-91 70 Hard top, Redmond Homes tilt steering whl, cus- trans, 2nd owner. Call 541-548-7154 professional help in 6-cylinder, auto trans, tom canopy w/side Very nice! $53,000. The Bulletin's "Call a power brakes, power curtains, F i shfinder, 541-350-4077 Looking for your next steering, garaged, live well, life jackets, FordEsc~ae 2005 Service Professional" Lance Camper 1995, emp/oyee? 10.9, on e o w n er, well maintained, rod storage & holders, Directory Place a Bulletin help electric jacks, awning, engine runs strong. anchor, trailer & spare. wanted ad today and Very low hours. $7200. 541-385-5809 Fantastic fan, winter 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. reach over 60,000 541-410-9651 package, Honda 1000 Must see! readers each week. enerator, exc. shape 541-598-7940 Your classified ad 7500. 541-410-9651 RV will also appear on CONSIGNMENTS 4x4 ready for HOLIDAY RAMBLER bendbulletin.com WANTED adventure! ¹D11893. VACATIONER 2003 which currently reWe Do The Work ... o Bargain Corral 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, ceives over workhorse, Allison 1000 You Keep The Cash! priced © $6,977 0 0 1.5 million page On-site credit 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 5 speed trans., 39K, views every month NEW TIRES, 2 slides, approval team, ROBBERSON Wakeboard Boat at no extra cost. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS web site presence. I I N c 0 L II ~ IM RO R I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Bulletin Classifieds brakes, steel cage cock- We Take Trade-Ins! tons of extras, low hrs. Mercedes 380SL 1982 Get Results! washer/dryer, fire541-312-3986 Full wakeboard tower, pit, Roadster, black on black, Call 385-5609 or lace, mw/conv. oven, BIG COUNTRY RV Dlr ¹0205 Price light bars, Polk audio ree soft & hard top, excellent standing dinette, place your ad on-line good thru 02/28/1 5 speakers throughout, was $121,060 new; now, Bend: 541-330-2495 condition, always gaat Redmond: 908 completely wired for raged. 155 K m i les, $35,900. 541-536-1008 541-548-5254 bendbulletin.com amps/subwoofers, un$11,500. 541-549-6407 Aircraft, Parts derwater lights, fish Ford Expedition & Service .Rjf finder, 2 batteries cus775 tom black paint job. Looking for your • I R I Manufactured/ next employee? $12,500 541-815-2523 Mobile Homes Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and List YourHome reach over 60,000 JAYCO 1993 27' V W CONV. 1 9 78 JandNfHomes.com readers each week. 2006 50k miles, excellent We Have Buyers $8999 -1600cc, fuel Your classified ad This is a nice one! condition. $9300 obo. Get Top Dollar injected, classic 1978 will also appear on 1/3interest in Vin¹A18610. 541-573-7131 Financing Available. Volkswagen Convertbendbulletin.com Columbia 400, 9,977 541-548-5511 ible. Cobalt blue with which currently reFinancing available. RV a black convertible ROBBERSON ceives over 1.5 mil2007 Bennington CONSIGNMENTS $125,000 top, cream colored lion page views evI I 8 c 0 LN ~ IM RO R Pontoon Boat WANTED (located @ Bend) interior & black dash. ery month at no 2275 GL, 150hp :0. We Do The Work ... 541-288-3333 This little beauty runs 541-312-3986 extra cost. Bulletin Honda VTEC, less and looks great and You Keep The Cash! Dlr ¹0205. Price Classifieds Get Rethan 110 hours, turns heads wherever On-site credit good thru 02/26/1 5 sults! Call 385-5609 original owner, lots it goes. Mi: 131,902. approval team, or place your ad of extras; TennesPhone 541-504-8399 web site presence. on-line at see tandem axle GMC 2004 Yukon We Take Trade-Ins! bendbulletin.com trailer. Excellent 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K 933 condition, $23,500 miles, mud 8 snow tires, BIG COUNTRY RV 503-646-1804 Pickups 1 owner, well maintained, Bend: 541-330-2495 882 1/3 interest in well850 Redmond: $7850. equipped IFR Beech BoFifth Wheels Snowmobiles 541-548-5254 541-389-3316 nanza A36, new 10-550/ C all me i f y o u a r e Ads published in the thinking about tradingprop, located KBDN. "Boats" classification 2000 Yamaha 700 3 in to a dealer or sell- Jeep Cherokee Sport $65,000. 541-419-9510 include: Speed, fishcyl., 2300 mi 4 2006 www.N4972M.com ing your current Full 2001, 4.0, straight 6, Polaris Fusion 900, ing, drift, canoe, Size late model 4WD new studded tires & house and sail boats. only 788 mi., new mirpickup and want to summer tires on rims. rors, covers, custom For all other types of get more cash then 1st $3000, it's yours! skis, n e w rid e -on watercraft, please go dealer trade-in. Pri541-923-4237 Alpenlite 28 ft. r ide-off t r ailer w i t h to Class 875. vate party looking to RV PACKAGE-2006 1987,New stove, spare, + much more. 541-365-5809 p urchase for c a s h Mountaineer 2004 fridge. Good furMonaco Monarch, 31 ', $6,995. Call for desale one nice conditails. 541-420-6215 Ford V10, 28,900 rniles, nace, AC. Stereo, Iljii~ Serv>n Central Ore on sinre 1903 tion pickup directly auto-level, 2 slides, DVD player. Queen Fl this beautiful 182 f rom o w ner. N O queen bed & hide-a-bed bed WITH bedding. One owner last 25 Bayliner 185 2006 DEALERS PLEASE! 4k gen, conv mi20 ft. awning. open bow. 2nd owner sofa, years, always hanCall (after6p.m.) or crowave, 2 TV's, tow Good shape. $4500 — low engine hrs. gared, rigorously Text with pictures to package,$66,000. 541-977-5587 maintained, no dam— fuel injected V6 Bill 541-420-5318. OPTION - 2003 Jeep I' 4x4, lots of room! — Radio & Tower. age history. Wranglertow car, 84K Vin¹J21627. Sensibly priced at 4-place enclosed InterGreat family boat CHECK yOURAD miles, hard & soft top, 5 Priced to sell. Only $7,977 state snowmobile trailer Chev Silverado $44,500. speed manual,$1 1,000 w/ RockyMountain pkg, $11,590. Call Don Wilfong for 541-815-6319 541-548-0345. $6500. 541-379-3530 more in f ormation ROBBERSON 541-389-1456 or u eeoLe~ m e OS 875 wilfong.d@gmail.com Get your Watercraft 541-312-3986 business on the first day it runs 'vv ~ e L Dlr ¹0205. Price to make sure it is cor2005 crew cab great ds published in "Wa Find exactly what good thru 2/26/15 rect. "Spellcheck" and you are looking for in the looking! Vin¹972932 tercraft" include: Kay e ROW I N G human errors do ocaks, rafts and motor Winnebago 22' $19,977 CLASSIFIEDS cur. If this happens to Subaru Forester 1998 Ized personal 2002 - $28,500 your ad, please con170k miles., red, two with an ad in watercrafts. Fo Chevy 454, heavy ROBBERSON 4 tact us ASAP so that HANGAR FOR SALE. sets tires, daughter "boats" please se duty chassis, new The Bulletin's ~ mama corrections and any 30x40 end unit T moved to Sweden Class 670. batteries & tires, cab "Call A Service adjustments can be hanger in Prineville. needs $. Clean, no & roof A/C, tow hitch 541-312-3986 541-385-5609 made to your ad. Dry walled, insulated, pets. Dependable car. Professional" w /brake, 21k m i ., Dlr ¹0205. Price 541-385-5809 and painted. $23,500. $4200. more! 541-260-3251 good thru 02/28/15 Directory servingcentral oregon since mm The Bulletin Classified 541-647-0657 Tom, 541.766.5546
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e rty valuation a n d paid attorney fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any furways garaged, all ther sums advanced maintenance up to by the beneficiary for date, excellent cond. the protection of the A STEAL AT $13,900. above described real 541-223-2218 property and its interest therein; and prepayment Looking for your penalties/premiums, if next employee? applicable. WHEREPlace a Bulletin help FORE, notice hereby wanted ad today and is given that the unreach over 60,000 dersigned trustee will readers each week. on Apnl 21, 2015 at Your classified ad the hour o f 1 0 : 00 will also appear on o'clock, A.M. in acbendbulletin.com cord with the stanwhich currently redard of time estabceives over 1.5 millished by ORS lion page views 167.110, at the folevery month at lowing place: inside no extra cost. Bullethe main lobby of the tin Classifieds Deschutes C o u nty Get Results! Call Courthouse, 1164 NW 365-5809 or place Bond, in the City of your ad on-line at Bend, County of DEbendbulletin.com SCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest I The Bulletin recoml bidder for cash the mends extra caution8 i nterest in t h e d e when p u r chasing • scribed real property f products or services which the grantor had from out of the area. or had power to conf S ending c ash , vey at the time of the checks, or credit in- q execution by grantor formation may be I of the trust deed, to[ sub!ect toFRAUD. gether with any interFor more informaest which the grantor f tion about an adver- or grantor's succestiser, you may call sors in interest acI the Oregon StateI quired after the exAttorney General's e ecution of the trust Office C o nsumer I deed, to satisfy the f Protection hotline at foregoing obligations 1-877-677-9392. thereby secured and t he costs and e x penses of sale, inserving central oregon sincemB cluding a reasonable VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
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