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SUNDAY February3,2013
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Central Oregon is getting its 20th brewery. That's not
By Dylan J. Darling
counting the wneries, distilleries
The Bulletin
and cideries. And they all bring dollars from near and far.
ooze is i usiness SUNDAY BUSINESS • E1
TODAY'S READERBOARD
Gary Hickmann was shocked last October to see the steep increase for the fee owed the Bureau of Land Management to use a 2-mile dirt road across public land he drives to and from his home. What had been $444.55 for five years in 2007, the last time he'd received a bill, was now $1,727.02 for one year,
according to his statements from the BLM. The $88.91 per year he was paying is now nearly 20 times that amount. "I came out of my desk and nearly flipped out of my chair," said Hickmann, 60, who has lived on 10 acres only accessed by crossing public land near the Cline Buttes for 37 years. He hasn't yet paid the increased bill, nor has Sage Dorsey, 55, who has lived
nearby since 2004 and also received a bigger bill this fall. They say the increase for rights-of-way holders in Deschutes County is unreasonable and they want to find a way to return to fees similar to what they'd been paying for years. But BLM officials stand by the increases, even if some are dramatic,saying they are part of a nationwide order. SeeBLMfees/A6
Rhat 2012
MOdile priVaCy —The FTC suggests a do-not-track feature
in software andapps, among
tells us about
other safeguards.A3
Central Qregorj's PILIS —Theseapes like apps, just like we do.A3
By Elon Glucklich •The Bulletin
Central Oregon saw a slight increase in employment last year. But the region continues to fight an uphill battle to create jobs.
U.S. dedt —Experts ask, is it as dire as it seems?A5
Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties added about 420 jobs in 2012, new data from the Oregon Employment Department
North Koreannukes-
show. That beats the net gain of 100 jobs in 2011 but doesn't reallybegin to offset the more than 9,000 jobs lost in the region
How a third test might raise the stakes for the United States.AS
between 2008 and 2010. In Deschutes County, however, several industries posted solid upticks in 2012. Employment based around tourism and health care rose past prerecession levels. In Crook and Jefferson counties, growth came almost entirely
In national news — A
from government jobs.
W hite House photo shows President Obama skeet shooting.A2
But this year could be a little better. Especially in Bend, several hotels, restaurants and medical providers said they're hiring in 2013, banking on new business. "The summer peak season definitely came back strong" in 2012, said Wayne Purcell, co-owner of The Riverhouse Hotel 8. Convention Center in Bend. Monthly bookings at the convention center increased about 20 percent in the latter part of 2012, compared with 2011, Purcell said. Now he needs two new cooks, a restaurant maintenance worker,convention services manager and assistant front office manager to keep up. The picture isn't entirely rosy: The past few years have been thehardest Purcell has seen in 28 years in Bend's hotel industry. But he said 2012 was the best year for The Riverhouse since the crash. "It's a slow-growth environment. We're not back to the level of business we were at in 2007," he said, "but I think to some degree we are kind of moving in the right direction." D eschutes County posted an annual average of8,270 workers in the accommodation and food services industries last year, an all-time high, state data show. The figure reflects the average number of jobs in that industry each month. SeeJobs/A5
EDITOR'SCHOICE
A-Qaida is sp intered, but terror endures By Greg Miller and Joby Warrick
The Washington Post
Pushed to the brink of collapse in its traditional strongholds, al-Qaida has staged an unlikely but limited recovery over the past year through affiliates that have taken root in chaotic environments awash in weapons and beyond the reach of the U.S. military and CIA drones. The groups have taken advantage of political tumult in North Africa and the Middle East, carving out enclaves in Mali, Syria and other locations that have given a previously gasping organization new breathing room. The emerging offshoots have altered the composition of the terrorist network, scrambling its structure and complicating U.S. assessments of the threat that al-Qaida represents. U.S. officials said the terrorist network's core in Pakistan and its ability to carry out large-scale attacks in the United States have been all but demolished, leading to a shift in focus to emerging threats elsewhere. SeeTerror/A4
Snapshot of Deschutes County> Total employment in Deschutes County rose slightly in 2012, but not nearly enough to offset jobs lost during the recession. Two private sectors — education and health services, and
• Peak employment (Year) • 2011 • 2012 0
10K
60K
70K
Total nonfarm employme t 71,370 (200 60,SSO 61,170
Accommodation and food services ~
8(,270 (2012)
~ ~
7 860 8 27 0
,
,
accommodation
Educational and health services
and food services
~1
9,650 (2011)
~ ~
9,860 9,520
— exceeded prerecession levels. Employment in others, such as construction and manufacturing, remained flat last
year.
80K
Retail trade 10,510 (2007 9,120 9,150
~ ~
Professional and business services ~ ~
~
7,680 ( 2007) 6,480
6,4 1
I
Construction, mlnlng andlogging
I
\
r }
~ ~ ~
6 330 (2006) 3,2 1 0 3,2 6 0
Manufacturing ~ ~ ~
1S8
6,18 (2006) 3,7 1 0 3,7 6 0
'1 ,
Government Andy Tu)))s/T)7e Bulletin
Randy Knapp and Donna Scheitrum set up for an upcoming meeting at The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center in Bend. Jobs in the hotel and food services sector rose to an all-time high in Deschutes County last year, one of the few industries where growth has rebounded from the recession. This year, The Riverhouse is again looking for new blood.
TODAY'S WEATHER 4
Mostly sunny High 51, Low 25
Page DS
~ ~ ~
9,120 (2012) 8,950 ,9,120
Source: Oregon Employment Department
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks Ef-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles c6 B1-6 Calendar D2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries D 6 - 7S ports Classified G 1 - 6L ocal 8 State D1-8 Opinion/Books Ft-6 TV/Movies C8
Vol. 110, No. 34, 4e pages,
AnIndependent Newspaper
7 sections
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
1 We userecycled newsprint
- III o
88 267 02330
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
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The Associated Press WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. — To some, Dr. Salomon Melgen was a miracle worker who brought sight to the blind. To others, he was a smooth political playerknown for rubbing elbows and jet-setting. Whichever version of Melgen roused the interest of the FBI, which raided his offices this week, their investigation has illuminated the surgeon's ability to build ties to a host of Democratic lawmakers. F oremost among them i s Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, whose friendship with Melgen has yielded fundraisers, campaign contributions and trips on a private plane.
OUR ADDRESS Street
1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702
Mailing
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OR L D
Menendez said this week he did nothing wrong, and flatly denied allegations reported by The Daily Caller, a conservative website, that he traveled on Melgen's plane to the Dominican Republic for sex with prostitutes. Though facts remain piecemeal, a fuller portrait of Melgen has emerged. There are photos of the beaming doctor sandwichedbetween Menendez and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a trail of checks written to politicians and a web of business interests that apparently fueled his wealth. Melgen, 58, is a native of the Dominican Republic who has lived in the U.S. since at least
1980, holding medical posts a round th e c o untry w h i l e building a reputation as a top ophthalmologist. He has a wife and two children. Calls to his home and office were not answered, but his attorney has said he did nothing wrong. Last year, Melgen's practice gave $700,000to Majority PAC, a super political action committee set up to fund Democratic candidates for Senate. Aided by Melgen's donation, the super PAC became the largest outside political committee contributing to Menendez's re-election, spending more than $582,000 on thesenator's behalf,according to federal election records.
IS OBAMA A SKEET SHOOTER?APPARENTLY SO
U.S. companies to report that it is among a growing list of victims of Internet security attacks. Twitter discovered that the attackers may have
stolen user names,email addressesand encrypted passwords belonging to 250,000 users they describe as "a very small percentage" of its 200 million active users. The company reset the pilfered passwords and sent emails advising the affected users. The attack comes on the heels of recent hacks into the computer systems of U.S. companies, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and now The Washington Post, possibly the work of China-based hackers monitoring media coverage the Chinese government deems important.
Bldon On II'Bn —Vice President Joe Biden said Saturday at a security conference in Munich that the United States is prepared to engage in direct talks with Iran over its controversial nuclear program, although he added that the administration would negotiate only if Iranians were "serious." Talks have been offered in the past, but they have never materialized, and last month lran defiantly said it planned to accelerate its enrichment of uranium. Biden said that it was not too late to reach an agreement on Tehran's nuclear ambitions.
Syria conflict —Biden also metwith the Syrian opposition leader in Munich, commending the opposition's move raising the possibility of direct talks with President Bashar Assad. Biden made no new promises of support. The leader of the Syrian opposition council, Mouaz al-Khatib, also met with key Russian representatives, but the Saturday meetings were separate and there was no indication that any progress had been made toward a workable plan to bring the violence to an end. In Syria, Rebels captured a strategic neighborhood near Aleppo's international airport Saturday, putting opposition fighters in control of a key road that the regime has used to ferry supplies and reinforcements to soldiers, activists said.
State Of the Unian preVieW —Biden, addressing the Munich
Bend, OR97708
conference, said President Barack Obama — who "sends me to places that he doesn't want to go," he quipped — will address in his State of the Union speech on Feb. 12 nuclear nonproliferation, climate change, extreme poverty, political and trade alliances, and Mideast peace.
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TWitter haCked —Social media giantTwitter is amongthe latest
Pesseeees h's
MiSSing in Turkey —Sarai Sierra, a 33-year-old mother of two from New York City, was found dead Saturdayafter going missing while vacationing alone in Istanbul. Police detained nine people for questioning in connection with the case, Turkey's state news agency said. The agency did not say what caused her death. Sierra was last heard from on Jan. 21, the day she was to fly home. The disappearance of tourists is rare in Turkey.
eem
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VialenCe in Egypt —Egypt's interior minister vowed Saturday to
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White House via The Associated Press
Two days before President Barack Obama's first trip outside Washington to promote his gun-control proposals, the White House tried to settle a brewing mystery when it released a photo to back his claim to be a skeet shooter. Obama had set inquiring minds spinning when, in an interview with The New Republic magazine, he answered "yes" when asked if he had ever fired a gun.
The admission came asa surprise to many. "Yes, in fact, up at Camp David, we do skeet shooting all the time," Obama said in the interview released
last weekend, referring to the official presidential retreat in rural Maryland, which he last visited in October while campaigning for re-election. Asked whether the entire family participates, the president said: "Not the girls, but oftentimes guests of mine go up there." Few could recall Obama ever talking about firing a gun or going skeet shooting "all the time." The official White House photo released Saturday (above) is dated Aug. 4, 2012. The original caption says Obama is shooting clay targets on the range at Camp David.
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories are accurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.
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Aladama Standaff —Federal agents are still watching the underground bunker where they say a man named Jimmy Lee Dykes has held a 5-year-old boy hostage for more than four days now. Law enforcement officials are saying little aboutattempts to rescue the boy,
who was kidnappedonTuesdaywhenDykesallegedlyraidedaschool bus and killed the driver. Officials have been in constant communication with Dykes through a plastic pipe that he originally installed, a neighbor said, to eavesdrop on trespassers from within the bunker.
BOStan duS CraSh —A charter bus carrying high school students
O
The image of a U.S. president holding a gun is certainly nothing new. A number of men who have held the highest office have been pictured with firearms in hand. See a photo gallery atdenddulletin.csm/extras.
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....PO. Box788 Redmond, OR97756 Phone.................................541 -504-2336 Fax .....................................541 -548-3203
investigate the beating of a naked man by riot police that threatened to further inflame popular anger against security forces, but suggested that initial results absolve the police of direct abuse. The beating was caught on camera and broadcast live on television late Friday as protests raged in the streets outside the presidential palace. Video showed police trying to bundle the naked man into a police van. More than 50 people have been killed in violence over the last10 days in the country.
House grouphasimmigration plan
from Pennsylvania crashed when itattempted to pass under a low bridge in Boston on Saturday night, injuring more than 30 people, four seriously, and leaving some trapped for more than an hour, authorities said. The students had been in the area to visit Harvard University. The bus,which was carrying42 students and adultchaperones,wa s heading back to the Philadelphia area when it struck an overpass on Soldier's Field Road, a major crosstown road, at around 7:30 p.m., Massachusetts State Police said. State Police were investigating whether charges were warranted against the driver, who apparently failed to see a sign prohibiting the vehicle from taking that route.
By Ashley Parker
In a town where leaks are able to present controversial the currency of doing busi- ideas or walk away without The grnundhng'S fareCaSt —An end to winter's bitter cold The group met,on and off, ness, those with knowledge of details appearing in the news will come soon, according to Pennsylvania's famous groundhog. in almost complete secrecy for the group said the legislators' media. House Republicans inFollowing a recent stretch of weather that's included both record warm nearly four years. It lost mem- tight-lipped discipline was re- volved with the group did not temperatures and bitter cold, tornadoes in the South and Midwest, torbers to political disagreements, markable — and necessary. want to be associated with a rential rains in the mid-Atlantic and high winds in the Northeast, Punxand to re-election battles. AfImmigration is a politically topic they saw as potentially sutawney Phil emerged from his lair Saturday in front of thousands ter the November elections, it fraught issue, especially in the toxic, particularly with memin west-central Pennsylvania but didn't see his shadow — which, of regrouped and redoubled its House, and many of the mem- bers oftheir party's more concourse, meansspring will comeearly this year. — From wire reports efforts. bers wanted the safety of being servative wing. Soon, the bipartisan group of about eight House mem.s bers hopes to unveil its own ,7 immigration legislation, add, ' ' .- ~ . « +~ rhmem pmepa e ee' eah ing a voice to a growing swell of politicians — a bipartisan group in the Senate, as well as President Barack Obama pemLhp— who say they are serious about overhauling the nation's immigration system bythe end YERY SPECIAL BIG DESCHUTES P RIVACY A N D G R A N D E U R of the year. RIYER FRONT HOME O N A CO U N T R Y LA N E "For the last six or seven Immaculate custom home nestled on L2 perfectly Part of the historic Swalley Homestead, amazing landscaped acres overlooking the low bank of the years, there had been no one to panorama of the Cascades. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, Big Deschutes River. Cathedral ceilings, big picture partner with, but since Nov. 6 24 acres,23 irrigated, 1700 ft.of canal frontage, windows, manicured grounds. Includes oversized there's been a lotofnew dance 5880 sq.ft.barn,loafing shed and more. $595,000 double car garage plus RV garage/shop. This home CALL KRIS WARNER AT 5 4 1-480-5365. partners, and that'sgood,"said is move-in ready. $499,000 CALLAUBRE CHESHIRE MLS: 201205144 Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-III., a AT 541-598-4583. MLS: 201207224 member of the group. "The table is filling up with people, and people are talking and — RE A L T Ythey're having conversations." - fk' H Aides and members would not confirm on the record the 5 group's exact composition, but they said it would have an equal number of Democrats and Republicans. In addition to GutierN EW C O N S T R U C T I O N I N N EARTH E OL D M I L L 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1745 sq. ft. in row style rez, the chairman of the ConT HE HEA RT OF D O W N TO W N housing neighborhood. Built in 2006, close to gressional Hispanic Caucus' Luxe finishes and little details that set it apart. p u'*,' shopping and schools. $171,000 CALL LARRY Each home includes a permittedADLi. Amazing immigration task force, those JACOBS AT 541-480-2329. MLS: 201208282 investment potential. Built by Copperline Homes. involved in t h e d i scussions, Startingat $655,000. CALL JACQUIE SEBLiLSKI aides said, include Rep. Xavier AT 541-280-4449 OR MICHELE ANDERSON AT Becerra and Zoe Lofgren, both 541-633-9760. MLS:201300234,201300235, 201300237. California Democrats; John Yarmuth, D-Ky.; Reps. John Carter and Sam Johnson, both COTTAGES OF T exas Republicans; M a r i o WESTSIDE TERRACE Diaz-Balart, R-Fla.; and Raul Labrador, R-Idaho. Adorable free s tanding cottage with On Tuesday, the House Judivaulted ceilings, private fenced yard and all I MMACULATE NE H O M E ! ciary Committee is scheduled A block away from Bend Pine Nursery Park appliances. One bedroom with a loft. 971 to hold its first hearing on the and down the street from neighborhood pool. sq. ft. and move in ready. $199,900 CALL 4 bedroom, 2989 sq. ft., gourmet k itchen, immigration issue. The biparPRICEDTO SELL 3 bedroom, 1032 sq. ft. home with large fenced TAMMY SETTLEMIER AT 541-410-6009. formaldining room and 3 car garage. $359,000 tisan group of House members cALL TERRY sKJERSAA AT 541-383-1426. backyardand views of Smith Rock. $82,000. CALL hopes to release legislation of MLS:20120BB14 lANE FLQQD AT 541-350-9993. MLS: 201205053 MLS: 20130050 I its own, perhaps accompanied by its own set of principles, by • ' p Feb. 12, the day Obama delivers the State of the Union e I . p heehhsehss address. New York Times News Service
.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlettery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
4oQ4~ Qtt Qegaa Q I The estimated jackpot is now $208 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
12Q 24 Q 25 Q 29 Q 39 QSQ The estimated jackpot is now $10.2 million.
WARNER
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, Feb. 3, the 34th day of 2013. There are 331 days left in the year.
PROPOSED
RESEARCH
HAPPENINGS SuPer BOWI XLVII —Baltimore Ravensvs. SanFrancisco 49ers, 3 p.m. on CBS.Et
Cuda —Voters rubber-stamp a slate of approved candidates for the national parliament, which will in turn grant President Raul Castro a new fiveyear term that the 81-year-old has hinted might be his last.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1913, the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, providing for a federal income tax, was ratified. In 1783, Spain formally recog-
nized Americanindependence. In 1865, President Abraham Lincoln and Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens
held a shipboard peaceconference off the Virginia coast; the talks deadlocked over the issue of Southern autonomy. In1924, the 28th president of the United States, Woodrow Wilson, died in Washington, D.C., at 67. In 1930, the chief justice of the United States, William Howard Taft, resigned for health
reasons. (He diedjust over a month later.) In1943, during World War II, the U.S. transport ship Dorchester, which was carrying troops to Greenland, sankafter being hit by a German torpedo; of the more than 900 men aboard, only some 230 survived. In 1953, the Batepa Mas-
sacre took place in SaoTome as Portuguese troops killed some 1,000 striking plantation
workers. In1959, rock-and-roll stars Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson died in a small plane
crash near ClearLake, lowa. An American Airlines Lockheed Electra crashed into New York's East River, killing 65 of the 73
people on board. In1966, the Soviet probe Luna 9 became the first manmade object to make a soft landing on the moon. In1971, New York City police officer Frank Serpico, who had
charged there waswidespread corruption in the NYPD, was shot and seriously wounded during a drug bust in Brooklyn. In1998, Texas executed Karla Faye Tucker, 38, for the pickax killings of two people in 1983; she was the first woman executed in the United States since 1984. A U.S. Marine plane sliced through the cable of a ski gondola in Italy, sending the car plunging hundreds of feet, killing all 20 people inside.
Ten yearsago: Legendary record producer Phil Spector was arrested in the shooting death of actress Lana Clarkson at his mansion in Alhambra, Calif. (Spector's first trial ended in a jury deadlock; he was convicted ofsecond-degree murder in a retrial and sentenced to19
years to life in prison.) Fiveyearsago:The NewYork Giants scored a late touchdown to win Super Bowl XLII, 17-14, ending the New England Patriots' run at a perfect season.
One year ago:Federal prosecutors dropped their twoyear investigation of Lance Armstrong. (Last month, he publicly admitted taking per-
formance-enhancing drugs.)
BIRTHDAYS Comedian Shelley Berman is 88. Football Hall-of-Famer Fran Tarkenton is 73. Actress Bridget Hanley is 72. Actress Blythe Danner is 70. Singer Dennis Edwards is 70. Football Hall-ofFamer Bob Griese is 68. Singer Melanie is 66. Actress Morgan Fairchild is 63. Actress Pamela Franklin is 63. Actor Nathan Lane is 57. Actor Thomas Calabro is 54. Actor-director Keith Gordon is 52. Actress Michele Greene is 51. Actress Maura Tierney is 48. Actor Warwick Davis is 43. Actress ElisaDonovan is42.Reggaeton singer Daddy Yankee is 37. Musician Grant Barry is 36. Singer-songwriter Jessica Harp is 31. Actor Matthew Moy is 29. Rapper Sean Kingston is 23. — From wire reports
i iva u i
Antibiotics
inesOl' ITlO ea s?
might help in feeding the hungry
In a move to protect the privacy of Americans as they use the Internet on
f ormation, i n cluding w i r e less service providers, mobile their smart devices, the Federal Trade Commission on Friday said the mobile operating system developers, handset manufacturers,app industry should include a do-not-track feature in software and apps. companies, analytics outfits and advertisers - "a degree By Edward Wyatt including almost everyone in Google, Microsoft and Amaunprecedentedin the desktop New York Times News Service users' address books. zon, the suggestions essential- environment," the report said. An FTC staff r eport, reThe report lays out a clear ly carry the weight of policy. Together the actions repreleased Friday and approved picture of what sort of activities But the FTC also has its sent the government's heightby the commission, wants the might bring a company under sights on thousands of small ened scrutiny of mobile devicmobile industry to take more investigation — like, for exam- businesses that create apps that es, which for many Americans steps to safeguard personal ple, conveying the impression smartphone users can down- have become the primary way information. The move is non- that an app will gather geoloca- load for a specific service.The of gaining access to the Interbinding but is an indication of tion data one time only, when introduction of the iPhone cre- net, rather than through a laphow seriously the agency is fo- in fact it does so repeatedly. ated a sort of gold rush among top or desktop computer. "We've been looking at pri"This says if you're outside the startups to create apps featurcused on mobile privacy. As if to emphasize that, the recommended behavior, you're ing games, music, maps and vacy issues for decades," said panel separately fined Path, a at a higher risk of enforcement consumer serviceslike shop- Jon Leibowitz, the FTC chair2-year-old social networking action," said Mary Ellen Cal- ping and social networking. man. "But this is necessary app, $800,000 — charging the lahan, a partner at Jenner 8. The commission has begun because somuch commerce is company with violating feder- Block and former chief privacy to focus on mobile data primoving to mobile, and many al privacy protections for chilofficer for the Department of vacy partly because smart- of the rules and practices in dren by collecting personal in- Homeland Security. phones let so many entities the mobile space are sort of formation onunderage users, For companies like Apple, gain access to personal inlike the Wild West."
By Nicole Ostrow Bloomberg News
Antibiotics added to nutritional t h erapy h e lped aid recovery and prevent deaths among s e verely malnourished chi l d ren, findings that suggest routine use of the drugs should be considered. Children w i t h s e v ere malnutrition who received amoxicillin had a 25 percent greater recovery rate and a 3 5 p ercent lower death rate than those who took a placebo, according to the study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Those given the antibiotic cefdinir had a 40 percent better recovery rate and 45 percent reduced death rate. More than 2 0 m i l lion children worldwide each year suffer from severe acute malnutrition, leading to I million deaths each year. While the recovery rate is between 85 and 90 percent, adding antibiotics may offer a cost-effective approach to improve health and survival, said study author Indi Trehan. "No matterwhat advances we make in HIV or malaria or diarrhea, malnourished children will always be at the highest risk of death from these diseases," said Trehan, an American visiting lecturer at the University of Malawi. Malnutrition, defined by the World Health Organization as a very low weight for height and severe wasting, accounts for almost half of all child deaths under the age of 5 worldwide, Trehan said. The antibiotic A m oxicillin cost about $2.67 per child in the study, while cefdinir was $7.85.
SCIENCE
A placewhereeven the apeshaveiPa s
•
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i+
By Beena Raghavendran
nations to the Apps for Apes program directlyto conservaW ASHINGTON — T h e y tion efforts, unless they're speswipe, tap and scroll with ease. cifically marked otherwise. Orangutans at the National Becky Malinsky, a National Zoo have mastered the iPad so Zoo animal keeper, said the well, in fact, that they've devel- orangutans had p e rformed oped favorite apps. particularly well with the tranKyle, a 16-year-old male, sition to the iPad since the zoo opts for hitting notes on the had used touch-screen compiano app while glancing puters for the last 20 years. around his environment, hay What did take a bit of time, dangling out of h i s m outh. she said, was t r ansitioning Bonnie, a 36-year-old female, from the techniques used with pokes at cymbals on the drum touch-screen computers to app. Iris, 25, stares wide-eyed that of the iPad. Orangutans can't use their fingernails to at the calm koi pond app. T he National Zoo i s t h e navigate the iPad as they could 13th zoo worldwide to join with the computers; they had Apps for Apes, started by the to learn todevelop pressure larger nonprofit organization on the pads of their fingers for Orangutan Outreach toraise scrolling and swiping. awareness o f or a n gutans' Orangutans' physical enendangerment. richment is still dependent on Orangutans are native to the zookeepers. They're rethe tropical rain forests of In- quired to hold the iPads for the donesia, which has seen defor- orangutanstoprevent the apes estation increase over the last from taking them apart and 70 years. Some experts fear ingesting any small pieces, the large apes might be extinct Zimmerman said. Right now, in 10 years. "The situation in the zoo has six orangutans the wild is brutal," said Rich- and one iPad. ard Zimmerman, founder and The orangutans have used director of New York-based paint and music apps, and MaOrangutan Outreach."That's linsky said the zoo was hoping their home. They need that to teach them to use FaceTime forest to live in." video calling to communicate Zimmerman hopes the un- with other apes. conventional nature of orangOrangutans and h u mans utans using iPads will help share many similarities when attract more attention to his experiencing technology, said group's cause. The program, Suzanne MacDonald, an assowhich began in 2011, sends do- ciate professor of psychology McClatchy Newspapers
sa National Zoo / MCT
Animal keeper Erin Stromberg holds an iPad for Batang, who is playing the drum app. Orangutans at the National Zoo have been using iPads for six months as part of the Apps for Apes program to show that, in some ways, they're just like us — and worthy of protection. at York University in Toronto who specializes in animal science. Orangutans see images the same way humans do, she said, though the apes may interpret them differently. Zimmerman r e m e mbers watching Bonnie, the orangutan who loves the drum app, learn to use the tablet. Watching her use an iPad is much
like helping children play with toys, Zimmerman said — her face lit up in the same way. Malinskysaid shehopedthat through the program, more people saw these commonalitiesbetween orangutans and humans and became moreinclined to help protect them. "They're amazing animals worth saving," she said.
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Ebola link found inbats suggests it's widespread New York Times News Service For the first time, scientists have found evidence of the African Ebola virus in Asian fruit bats, suggesting that the virus isfarmore widespread around the world than had been previously known. That does not mean that outbreaks of hemorrhagicfever are inevitable, said Kevin Olival, leader of the bat-hunting team at EcoHealth Alliance. But the possibility exists: Bats are believed to drink out of jars attached to trees to collect tasty date palm sap, and fatal outbreaks in Bangladesh of Nipah virus, which is not related to Ebola, have been blamed on fresh sap contaminated with bat saliva, urine or feces. Palm sap gatherers should be encouraged to put bamboo covers on their collecting jars to keep bats out, Olival said.
For the study, published this month in Emerging Infectious Diseases, his t eam c aught 276 bats in four Bangladesh districts. "These bats roost in caves, but there are very few caves in Bangladesh, so we put up mist nets outside old ruins that looked like something out of 'Indiana Jones,"' he said. "In the evenings, they would come out to forage." The team would untangle the bats, draw blood and take saliva, urine and fecalsamples, and release them. Five of them — all from the Rousettus leschenaultia species — reacted to tests for antibodies to Zaire Ebola virus. The researchersdid not find any virus itself, so it was not possible to do genetic sequencing and seeexactly how closethe match to the African strain was.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
Al-l}aida offshootsemerge in chaotic environments The terror network is taking advantage ofpolitical tumult in areas outside its traditional strongholds and beyond the reach of the U.S. military. Atlantic Ocean
MOROCCO
Al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI)
TUNISIA ALGERIA
SYRIA
up to 2,500 fighters
0
Low hundreds tttito low thousands y
1000
MILES
CHINA
Pacific Ocean
LI BYA
Turkey attack: a throwback toGoldWar terrorism ANKARA, Turkey — Long before al-Qaida, when the Cold War gripped the world, leftist terrorists staged spectacular attacks in a doomed campaign to overthrow governments and impose their vision of a socialist utopia. The bulk of these extremist groups eventually drifted into oblivion, gutted by police pressure, internal rifts and an ideology undercut by communism's fall. In Turkey, one cult-like group didn't get the memo. The suicide bomber who struck the U.S. Embassy in Ankara
spent several years in prison on terrorism charges but was MALI
NlGER Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
SAUDI ARABIA
INDIA THAILAND
YEM
Several hundred fighters
Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)
Area of operations Influence rising
Jemaah Islamiah(Jl) ~e r haps 5,000 official members; several hundred believed active
Between 300-1,000 fighters Non-Somali fighters are said to number 200-300
Indian Ocean
OMALIA
PHILIPPINES
Influence declining
+
INDONESIA % a~ ,
Q» Read moreabout these terror offshoots and their influence around theworld at dendduiietin.com/extras
Terror
contain the militants. But as the war on al-Qaida Continued from A1 moves intoits second decade, Recent attacks on U.S. facil- t he evolving nature of t h e ities in Libya and a natural gas threatraises more fundamencomplex in Algeria, combined tal issues for the United States. with th e g r owing s trength Among them is whether the of an affiliate in Syria, have scale of the counterterrorism drawn attention to the lethal campaign is still w a rranted potential of a n i n creasingly when its initial objective — the atomized al-Qaida network, destruction of the core leaderofficials said. And though the ship organization that killed targets of th e g r oups have 3,000 Americans in the Sept. largely been regional, their 11,2001, terrorist attacks — has multinational m e m berships largely been accomplished. and adherence to al-Qaida's ideologyhave heightened con- Attack capabilities cern that the violence could U.S. officials said al-Qaida's eventually spread. f ranchise in Yemen on t h e "One of the most concerning southern tip of the Arabian things we'reseeing isa cross- Peninsula remains capable of fertilization and cross-polle- — and committed to — carrynization of affiliates," a senior ing out attacks in the United U.S. intelligence official said. States. Beyond Yemen, U.S. The newer groups have more efforts are aimed largely at diverse memberships, abun- countering potential threats dant access to weapons and a from groups that have not atwillingness to collaborate that tempted transnational attacks, "serves asa multiplier effect," as well as a post-Sept. 11 dethe official said. termination to deny any node The official, l i k e o t h ers of al-Qaida a safe haven like interviewed for t hi s a r ticle, the one its founders exploited spoke on the condition of ano- in Afghanistan. nymity to talk freely about onAfter bin Laden was killed going counterterrorism policy. in May 2011, senior U.S. ofThe shifting c o mplexion ficials including Defense Secof al-Qaida has created new retaryLeon Panetta described counterterrorism c h allenges t he group as being on t h e for President Barack Obama, verge of strategic defeat. Since w ho relied heavily on C I A then, a series of unexpected drone strikes and clandestine developments have extended missions by U.S. Special oper- the network's life span. ations forces to destroy large In particular, al-Qaida franpieces of the al-Qaida network chises have gained strength in and kill its founder, Osama bin regions touched by the Arab Laden, and other leaders in Spring. The popular uprisings Pakistan. that toppled autocratic governments across the Middle Constrained options East also weakened the grip U.S. officials said Obama's of security services that had optionsare more constrained kept extremist forces in check. in North Africa and the Mid- Civil wars in Syria and Libya dle East, regions where the provided local militants with United States has fewer intelli- weapons, experience and popgence resources and has seen ular legitimacy. "What we're seeing in North staunch counterterrorism allies, such as former Egyptian Africa and Syria is an unforpresident H o sni M u b arak, tunate result of Arab Spring," driven from power. said Seth Jones, a Rand Corp. In the short term, the affili- analyst and former conates provide new justification sultant to th e Pentagon on for the Obama administra- counterterrorism. tion's efforts to turn elements Islamists in those countries of its counterterrorism poli- are only nominally tied to alcies, including kill lists and Qaida, and most are focused drone bases, into fixtures for a on local causes. But their refight expected to last another surgence threatens Western decade or more. interests in the region and perThe U.S. military recently haps beyond, Jones said. d isclosed plans to b u il d a Western governments aldrone base in the west Afriready are warning of increased can country of Niger to con- threats to embassies, businessduct surveillance flights over es and tourists in the region. In neighboring Mali, where al- France, where 10 percent of the Qaida offshoots seized control population is of North African of parts of the country. U.S. of- descent, security officials are ficials have not ruled out using bracing for the possibility of the baseforarmed drones,but retaliatory strikes in response for now they plan to rely on to its military action in Mali regional allies and France to against militants linked to al-
Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), the affiliate in North Africa's Sahara and Sahel.
at the plant, including three Americans. "We call him a former alQaida leader," the senior U.S. Surging in Syria intelligence official said. But Among U .S . c o u nterter- many of the fighters who folrorism officials, a s u r ging lowed him have not formally al-Qaida affiliate in Syria is a broken with AQIM, the official source ofparticular concern. satd. The group, Jabhat al-Nusra, is AQIM was also linked loosebacked byal-Qaida'sbranch in ly to the attack on the U.S. dipIraqand has become one of the lomatic post and the CIA base most potent groups in a broad- in Benghazi, Libya, in Septemer insurgency againstSyrian ber, which killed U.S. AmbasPresident Bashar Assad. sador Christopher Stevens and AI-Nusra, as it is k nown, three other Americans. Despite was linked to suicide attacks the Internet bragging, however, on Syrian security installa- U.S. officials said there is no tions last year that also killed evidence so far that the terrordozens of c i vilians. Unlike ist affiliate directed the strike. rival groups, it has called atStill, AQIM is at the center tention to its al-Qaida ties and of a hub of militant groups in is thought to have attracted as North Africa with varying levmany as 10,000 fighters. els of allegiance to the al-QaiIts s h ort-term o b j ective da ideology.Among them are — the ouster of Assad — puts Ansar al-Din, which seized it in uncomfortable alignment control of cities in northern with U.S. interests. But U.S. Mali last year before a recent intelligence officials said they intervention by t h e F r ench are gravely concerned that military, and Boko Haram, a al-Nusra militants, including Nigerian organization that ofsome who hold Western pass- ficials said has contemplated ports, might move elsewhere in attacks on U.S. interests but the Middle East or into Europe has focused sofar on targets when the rebellion in Syria with weaker defenses. ends. They are a "highly effective AI-Qaida, the spiritual leader opposition force," a senior U.S. The blurring organizational intelligence official said of the boundaries fit into a broader group, which seeks to impose breakdown of the hierarchical Islamic rule. "If they don't structure that enabled al-Qaihave a role to play (in a future da to spend years plotting the Syrian government), where Sept.11 attacks. does that capability disperse?"
thatoversees spending on foreign operations. The issue is gaining attention as Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi has sought to quell protests with force, following other moves that raised U.S. concerns — his anti-Semitic comments, opposition to Western intervention in Mali, and temporarily asserting broad governing powers. Still, reducing or threatening to reduce aid may not encourage Morsi to moderate and couldbackfire, federal spending. While Egyp- said analysts such as David tian aid is tiny relative to the Schenker of the Washington budget deficit, foreign aid has Institute for Near East Policy. never been popular with lawU.S. aid has been a key lemakers since polls show that ver of influence with Egypt voters favor cutting what they for decades, helping solidify think is a costly program. relations with its military lead"It is becoming increasingly ership, connect with the Egypdifficult to make the case for tian public through developassistance to t h e E g yptian ment projects, and maintain government," said Sen. Patrick preferential Suez Canal transit Leahy, the Vermont Democrat for American warships. Egypt who heads the subcommittee regarded aid as part of the deal
actions such asthe embassy bombing might have onlya glancing connection with wider, contemporary events and trends.
Mali update —The United States is significantly expanding its assistance to a French assault on Islamist militants in Mali by offering aerial refueling and planes to transport soldiers from other African nations, the Pentagon announced Saturday night. The gesture comes amid a debate within the Obama administration about how deeply it should engage in the French effort to prevent Islamists from taking control of the West African nation. Meanwhile, French President Francois Hollande paid a triumphant visit to Timbuktu on Saturday, and thousands gathered to hail him as the city's, and their country's, savior. — From wire reports
U.S. officials said that al-Qaida'score leadership group in Pakistan, led by Ayman al-Zawahiri, continues to communicate with affiliates and other followers. But those messages are sporadic and rarely translate into any direct support. Regional affiliates are "not getting a flow of funds, personneland resources from alQaida core by any means," one senior U.S. intelligence official said. Nevertheless, the official said, the affiliates still look to al-Qaida "for affirmation, for validation and, to varying degrees, for guidance." Unable to rely on al-Qaida for help, regional affiliates like AQIM have been forced to raise their own funds, mostly through criminal enterprises, said David Cohen, the Treasury Department's undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence. "Their money is self-gener-
ated, predominantly through k idnapping v e n tures a n d other criminal enterprises," Cohen said. For example, U.S. officials said last month's attack on the Algerian gas facility was almost certainly financed by ransom payments, which have netted the group millions of dollars in the past five years. More than anything else, though, the Arab Spring "freed up people, resources and energy," while attracting foreign jihadists who gave local organizations a more international character, said Mike Shurken, a former CIA analyst. "We're seeing evidence of internationalization of t hese local g r o ups, p a r t icularly AQIM," Shurken said. "They are evolvingrapidly,and perh aps finally b ecoming t h e thing that people were fearing: a group with an international agenda."
Foreign fighters S yria an d N o rt h A f r i c a have drawn m i litants from dozens of countries, as well as fighters who have fled regions where al-Qaida has suffered setbacks, including Pakistan and Yemen, U.S. officials said. The flow of militants and weapons has s t rengthened and transformed AQIM, which officials had long r egarded as little more than a regional kidnapping a n d cri m i n al enterprise. In its broader incarnation, the group is one of the most diverse a f f iliates, d r awing militants from Mali, Mauritania, Libya, Egypt and Sudan. The organization's amorphous membership also i l lustrates what U.S. officials described as an increasingly fluid militant network. The attack last month on t he natural gas plant in A l geria was orchestrated by a longtime AQIM commander, M okhtar B elmokhtar, w h o broke away from thenetwork to form a splinter group but continues to collaborate with other offshoots. The attack led to the deaths of 37 workers
I'1.5 billion inEgyptaid maybeat risk Bloomberg News In Washington, lawmakers are questioning whether to continue sending $1.5 billion a year in aid to Egypt, setting the stage for cuts or conditions that may weaken relations, jeopardizeEgypt's peace treaty with Israel, and hurt U.S. defense companies. ThepoliticalturmoilinEgypt, with the Muslim Brotherhood coming topower through elections, coincides with intense pressure on Congress to cut
The Washington Post
released on probation after being diagnosed with a hunger strikerelated brain disorder, officials said Saturday. The bomber, identified as 40-year-old leftist militant Ecevit Sanli, killed himself and a Turkish security guard on Friday, in what U.S. officials said was a terrorist attack. Some analysts, and the Turkish prime minister, have speculated that the Revolutionary People's Liberation Party-Front, or DHKP-C, carried out Friday's attack in anger at NATO member Turkey's cooperation with Washington, the old "imperialist" nemesis of leftist radicals everywhere, in efforts to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad. The consensus is that the group is a throwback, deaf to historical shifts and political nuance, almost a novelty if it weren't so deadly. Howard Eissenstat, a Turkey expertat St. Lawrence University in the United States, said the group is trapped in an "ideological time warp" and falls "outside of our comfortable narratives," meaning
when it made peace with Israel through the U.S.-brokered 1978 Camp David agreement. Congress will have to examine theenormous changes in Egypt as lawmakers set aid levels for the next fiscal year, said Rep. Frank Wolf, a Virginia Republican on the House Appropriations Committee. At the very least, he said, it's clear that tougher standards will have to be applied to any U.S. funds for Egypt. "At a minimum, we need to have strings attached," Wolf said. Egypt this y ear r eceives $250 million in economic assistance and $1.3 billion in military aid. Even before the recent unrest, lawmakers have shown some reluctanceto provide funds to Egypt without i mposing c o nditions. C u t ting military aid would have U.S. domestic consequences: Egypt's military aid must be spent on American goods.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
LOOKING AHEAD: FISCAL CHALLENGES •
•
e twoesnotas iieast e seem,ex eitssa
By Don Lee and JIm Puzzanghera
Congress barely avoided the full "fiscal cliff" of spending WASHINGTON — Listen- cuts and tax hikes atyear's end, ing to the political shouting and Republicanlawmakers last match and seeing Washington week merely delayed until this lurch from one fiscal crisis to summer another showdown another, one might think the with the White House over the federal budget deficit is the debt ceiling. economic equivalent of a giant The next budget flash points meteor hurtling toward Ameri- are even closer: Mandatory ca, about to hit any day. spending cuts, the so-called The reality is quite different. sequester, are set to take effect In fact, the debt is probably not March 1, followed bythe March even thecountry's biggest eco- 27 deadline when spending nomic challenge, most experts authoritymust be renewed or say, and certainly not the most the government could be shut urgent. down. "Fiscal policy is a mess," said The evidence shows that the country is on a course of analysts at M a croeconomic spending and debt accumula- Advisers, a major forecasttion that could lead to serious ing firm. "The debt ceiling, trouble not today or tomorrow the sequester and the expiring but probably 10 to 20 years budget resolution c omprise down the road. a three-pack of uncertainties What the evidence does not that in the near term is bad for show is that such a crisis is the economy." close at hand or that the U.S. Yet separate the economic is in any i m m inent danger wheat from the political chaff, of turning into an economic and the solution is not that basket case like present-day hard. Greece. Over the last tw o y ears, Moreover, financial experts policymakers have e nacted agree that although America's measures cutting almost $2.4 burgeoning healthcare costs trillion from projected deficits pose huge long-term challeng- over the next decade. Most es for the budget, the nation's of that deficit reduction came debt could most likely be con- from reductions in federal protrolled for at least the next de- grams approved as part of the cade bymaking a seriesofrela- debt ceiling deal in 2011. About tively moderate policy chang- $650 billion of the total comes es. Those changes, although from new revenue generated perhaps unwelcome, would not bytax increases on the wealthy require drastic adjustments in that were part of last month's the lives of most Americans. fiscal cliff deal. Yet the bitterly partisan arTaken together, economists gument over the deficit and the and budget experts reckon, an national debt will surely burst additional $1 trillion to $1.4 trilforth again in coming weeks. lion in savings wouldbe enough Tribune Washington Bureau
Jobs
forcefrom about 564 workers in 2011 to 602 today, said Chief Continued from A1 Marketing O f f icer C h r i sty In Bend, some restaurant McLeod. owners said they're eyeing The clinic is looking to add 2013 for expansions. 15 more employees, from new Restaurant owner C arole physicians and mammograDeRose will nearly double the phy technicians to accounting workforce at La Rosa when it positions. "With health care reform opens its second location in southwest Bend in about two happening right now, nationweeks. ally and in the state of Oregon, that's definitely had an impact The Mexican restaurant in Bend's NorthWest Crossing on our hiring," McLeod said. neighborhood has averaged Health care i s b o oming. about 17 employees over the Tourism is picking up. last few years. It's at 23 today But a big part of Central Orand could go as high as 43 egon's economy is struggling when the new location is run- to find solid footing — despite ning at full speed. some positive signs recently. The expansion "was someConstruction and manufacthing we were looking at quite turing jobs are at a fraction of a while ago, before the down- their prerecession levels. Desturn in the economy," DeRose chutes County's 7,040 jobs in satd. manufacturing, construction, She started feeling more logging and mining last year confident about the business was less than half of its 2006 last year and picked up the ex- peak of 14,460 workers. pansionplan.Other Bend resMany local building comtaurants that have moved or panies "have found ways to plan to move into new and big- be more efficient with their ger spacesinclude Pho Viet 8. time andresources during the Cafe, Togo's, Croutons, Moth- downturn," said Andy High, er's Juice Cafe and Baldy's vice president of government Barbeque. affairs for the Central Oregon When tourists come, retail- Builders Association. ers, hotels and r estaurants Homebuilding in Bend apreap the rewards. pears to have jumped up from L odging ta x r e venue i n the bottom: The city issued 452 Bend was up about 7 percent permits for new single-family in the latter months of 2012, homes last year, up from 256 compared with 2011, accord- in 2011 and 186 in 2010. There ing to the city's tourism agen- were 676 permits issued in cy, Visit Bend. 2007. Service businesses have So homebuilders and subclearly benefited, said Damon contractors may be f ielding Runberg, a regional economist more jobs today than in recent with the Oregon Employment years, High said, but they're Department. still staffing for a depressed "Specifically in Bend, the market. increase wasn't all that surWhen Bend's building marprising," Runberg said. "The ket collapsed in 2008, some summer of 2012 was probably companies left the area for one of the strongest summer hotter markets, High said, like tourism seasons ever." the Tri-Cities region in southThey're l ower-wage jobs eastern Washington. than most other sectors — the Federal labor statistics listed average accommodation and about 850 construction-related food services worker earned companies operating in Desabout half the average annual chutes County through June, wage in Deschutes County in covering everything from the 2011, the most recent year U.S. largest general c ontracting Bureau of L a bor S t atistics firms to smaller companies wage data is available. like cabinet makers and elecBut s om e h i g her-skilled tricians. T h e p r e r ecession fields are seeing growth, too. high was 1,484 in early 2007. The average of 9,520 eduThe companies that surcational and health services vived the crash "aren't hiring jobs in 2012 was down slightly as quick as they were in 2006," from 2011. But before that it High said. But he sees glimhad increased each of the last mers of improvement. 10years. Early enrollment of buildCompanies like Bend Me- ers for COBA's spring Home morial Clinic have ramped up and Garden Show is up about staffing. A U.S. Labor Depart- 30 percent from last year. A ment report issued last year slight boost in B end home prices, and declining invenp rojected health care to b e the fastest-growing industry tory, could fuel an uptick this nationwide between 2010 and year — though the outlook is 2020, powered by an aging farfrom certain. "I definitely think you see baby boomer population and provisions of the Patient Pro- that people are cautiously optection and Affordable Health timistic" about 2013, he said. Care Act. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 BMC has upped its workeglucklich@bendbulletin.com
to stabilize the national debt as a shareof the overalleconomy. That would be achieved by bringing the deficit down to 2.5 percent of the country's annual gross domesticproduct, about one-third the share last year. "That's manageable; we've done a big chunk already," said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. "You can do that by raising taxes a little bit more or by cutting spending.... That's something that's doable." Moody's Analytics economist Mark Zandi, who regularly advises Democratic and Republicanlawmakers, agreed. Even if the bulk of the additional deficit savings needed
came from reduced spending as opposed to higher taxes, he said, those cuts could be done by "tweaking programs," such as changing the inflation index for Social Security, aligning Medicare drug payments with Medicaid and reducingsome farm subsidies. "It wouldn't be a wrenching restructuring," he said. So why the frequent paroxysms in Washington over the debt and th e eleventhhour deals to avert seeming disaster? In large part, the fight over deficits and spending has become a surrogate for battles over basic political and ideological disagreements over the role
of government and, behind the scenes, over how the economic pie should be divided. There also aresome realdifferences in how people view the debt and the risks to the economy. If the country could get $1.4 trillion more in deficit savings, total public debt would stabilize at the current level of about 73 percent of GDP within a few years, according to Richard Kogan, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington research group. That's still high by historical standards, and economists worry that such large publicdebts are corrosive to growth and give the economy little cushion should
another recession strike or interest rates surge. Still, even with the level of debt as high as it has been recently, the U.S. has not had any trouble borrowing money from abroad at very low rates. The nation's debt as a share of GDP remains lower than in such countries as Japan, Germany and Canada. And despite high unemployment, stagnant wages, widening social and economic gaps and other significant challenges, the country's economy is growing, its core inflation remains in check, its credit standing is still strong and it has control over its currency, unlike eurozone nations.
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Private andpublic lands
BLM fees
There are pockets of private land surrounded by public land in the Cline Buttes Recreation Area. Some Continued from A1 residents, who must drive across public lands to reach their homes, are shocked at the fee increase in their "We feel bad," said Susie latest road access bills. Manezes, assistant field man• Pr ivate land ager for the BLM in Prineville. .. It is high and we do under• Cl ine Buttes Recreation Area stand that." BureauofLand Management The increase started with — Right of wayaccess road the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which directed the f ederal government to determine fair market value for public land rights-of-way. Such an adjustSisters ment hadn't been made since the late 1980s, according to I the BLM. The bureau issues Cline Bnttes rights-of-way to people or comEagle e nd panies who want pipelines, Recreation Area Crest power lines or roads crossing Resort tr over public land. Hickmann and Dorsey have such agreeThornburgh P ments for the roads that lead to Resort their homes. The BLM is using land value information from the National Agricultural Statistics Service, which collects data about American agriculture, to determine r i g hts-of-way fees. The fees are based on a BUREAU OF LAND census of agriculture taken MANAGEMENT in 2007, which showed how Source:Bureau of Land Management Tumalo much people are willing to pay VTo Bend for agricultural property. Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin In 1988, the going rent for agricultural land in Deschutes shows rents have declined. BLM in Prineville. opened their bills last October. County was $9.22 per acre, F or now t h e B L M ha s Manezes said there haven't Dorsey's 2007 bill from BLM Manezes said. As of last year, charged Hickmann and Dors- been many complaints other came to$258.45 for five years, it was $325.93 per acre. This ey with 10 percent late fees, than from people living near or $51.69 per year. Last Octois why Hickmann and Dorsey about $172 and $99, respec- the Cline Buttes. ber the BLM bill was $996.36 "We've onlyhad a couple of for one year. That's a nearly saw the big boost on their bills. tively. Manezes said they have The BLM was due about two more months folks that have called in and 20-fold fee increase, similar to for a rights-of-way fee to pay or the BLM could had questions about (the in- the increase for Hickmann. i ncrease, said B L M end t h ei r r ig h t s-of- crease)," she said. Dorsey's 240-acre property is spokesman Jeff Clark way agreements and BLM officials say the agen- completelysurrounded by pubin Portland. still seek to collect the cy took public comment on the lic land overseen by the BLM. "It hadn't been for 20 money. fee changes in 2007 and sent The road is about I'/4-mile long The BLM has 10,235 notices about them in 2008 and features three turnouts years," he said. "There H i ckmann hadn't been a raise." r ights-of-way ag r e e- and 2009. that provide access to the Cline "We'vebeen warningthem," Buttes Recreation area. The feesare set for gradual me nts in Oregon, including «I don't see other governi ncreases each year until 2015, 1 , 114 administered by the field Brown said. w hen figures will be adjusted o f fice in Prineville. Of those, Neither Hickmann nor ment fees going up 20 times," a gain according to the 2012 4 2bills were mailed last year Dorsey sent in comments to Dorsey said. .. It is hard to c ensus by the National Agri- t o rights-of-way holders in the BLM, but they also say grasp." c ultural Statistics Service. The D e schutes County, said Molly they didn't know about the — Reporter: 541-617-7812, feescould lessen,ifthe census Br own, field manager for the size of the increase until they ddarlingC~bendbulletinicom "
lI
- I!( ! (il Andy Tullia/The Bulletin
Sage Dorsey stands in front of a Cline Buttes Recreation Area sign next to a road that leads to his house, which is completely surrounded bypublicly owned land. The Bureau of Land Management has billed him S996.36 for a year's use of the 1'i4-mite long road. "We are very open to negotiation," Dorsey said. "We want to have a good relationship with them. The BLM (is) our neighbor."
"+?-,a'r'rl
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Gary Hickmann drives down Dusty Dirt Road on his way to and from work.
.
IN FOCUS: HEALTH CARE COSTS
a in exico t e next estination or me ica tourism By Alfredo Corchado The Dallas Morning News
NUEVO VALLARTA, Mexico — Bruce Fry fixes his gaze on the ocean and talks about his vision for the future of medical tourism on Mexico's Pacific Coast: patients from Texas and elsewhere in the U.S. finding a low-cost alternative to soaring medical prices for everything from knee replacements to heartsurgery, then healing by the beach with their families. Fry, of C arrollton, Texasbased Fry Construction, which builds medical facilities, and his partner, Collin Childress, are convinced that Americans, particularlybaby boomers, will one daypay less forhealth care without having to flyto faraway India, Thailand, Malaysia or Brazil — popular current destinations for medical care. They could hop on a plane and in a matter of hours, be in Cozumel, Cancun or here on the shores of the Bahia de Banderas, just up the coast from Puerto Vallarta, with its airport and world-class medical facilities. Fry and others say the vision isn't far from reality, but many obstacles remain. "This couldbe a game changer forboth countries because we're talking n e w i n c ome stream for Mexico, improving the overall tourism economy," he said. «But as a gringo from Dallas trying to make this a reality, getting there is too often like a dog chasing his tail." It's been nearly 20 years since the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which opened the border to increasedtrade in merchandiseand services,among them medical care. But a plethora of restrictions remains, preventing Americans from cashing in on quality care that could be as much as 40 percent cheaper, Fry and others say. A recent report by the U.N. E conomic C ommission f o r Latin America and the Caribbean shows that despite its proximity to the U.S., Mexico is woefully behind other countries in attracting American patients. Mexico needs to do more both to improve security and to certify hospitals to treat international patients, experts say. Only 19 Mexican hospitals are certified by the Joint Commission, a world body that accredits hospitals, compared with 35 in Brazil. "Mexico needs toget more hospitals certified by the Joint Commission,address violence
and the perception of it, and needs to significantly increase a dvertising i n t he Un i t ed States," said Christopher Wilson, an expert on economic issues at the Woodrow Wilson Center's Mexico Institute. "In the U.S., states need to see if changes are needed in insurance regulation to allow policies to cover care in Mexico," Wilson said. "In California, for instance, some insurance companies are selling policies to cover care in Mexico. Finally, getting Medicare to cover treatment out of the U.S. is the holy grail for medical tourism advocates." Making changes to Medicare coverage is a thorny issue in Congress, though, and such changes are unlikely anytime soon, despiteincreased lobbying from many of the estimated 1 million Americans living in Mexico, many of them retirees. Two years ago, David Wagner, an expert on health care at the University of Texas, sent members of Congress a study showing how their constituents
would benefitfrom access to health care in Mexico. «Not one of them responded," he said. "The real deal-killer to retiring in Mexico is that your Medicare doesn't cover you down there," Wagner said. «If Medicare wouldcover,itw ould save the government money and people would live a lot better." For now, Brazil, Ecuador and some Caribbean countries continue to make significant gains in attracting Americans for privatecare, said Arturo Vargas Bustamante, a health care expert at the University of California, Los Angeles. Vargas said the things preventing Mexicofrombecoming abigger player are a lack of U.S. political will and Mexico's monopolistic business culture, in which mammoth corporations dominate industries ranging from telephones to medical care and are able to avoid competition. «My perspective is Mexican doctors seem to be too comfortable in what is working now, meaning they make enough money," Vargas said. "They're
shielded from the competition, and soprivate providers make a lot of money. The government has been trying to encourage them to be more ambitious, but they need to do more on that end and also do more to position themselves with a better strategy and market." A tourism official in the new administration of Enrique Pena Nieto said the president is committed to medical tourism and will continue to promote an office set up in 2012 to expand the industry. About 1.6 million Americans now actively seek health care abroad, Guevara said, and they represent an estimated $4.1 billion spent abroad annually for medical care. Millionsmore lack insurance and presumably might choose the lower-priced care outside the U.S., and the 35 million Americans with roots in Mexico constitute another potential market — especially along the TexasMexico border. "It's inevitable that the market will continue to grow becausethere'sa greatervalue for
return in Mexico — great medical servicesand great doctors, with springlike weather most of theyear,"said Guevara, aformer Dallas resident. "It's huge, and that's why it's so important to build on the foundation that we started." Wagner said that the U.S.Mexico border, particularly
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Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays, Getaways Travel and The Bulletin. This fabulous trip for two includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights' accommodation at Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort 5 Spa. You'll discover the sparkling magic of the lagoon, admire the awe-inspiring Mount Otemanu while luxuriating in the peace and tranquility of the surroundings.
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RULES:This award is valid for travel April 1 —May 31, 2013 fk November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-transferable, non-refundable, not redeemable for cash and may not be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional insurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes and fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or not directly specified above. Travel is subject to availability and some restrictions may apply.Winner must be at least 21 years old. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are not eligible to win. The Bulletin reserves the right to deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacation. Email addresses will not be sold but individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN,GETAWAYSTRAVEL and PLEASANT HOLIDAYS.One coupon per edition.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
IN FOCUS:NORTH KOREA'S NUCLEAR PROGRAM
im on n l aiSeS eSa eS As North Korea warns that it plans its third nuclear test since 2006, outside governments and analysts e'k'
are trying to determine a crucial question: Just what will Pyongyang's scientists explode'? The last two tests are believed to have been of plutonium devices, but the next logical step for Pyongyang's ambitious
The Associated Press
nuclear program could be to conduct a highly enriched uranium explosion. That would be a major
Multiple screens monitor North Korea's launch of a rocket as it put a satellite into orbit on Dec. 12, 2012, a boost for Kim Jong Un in the months after he succeeded his father at the helm of the Stalinist state. The launch was also thought to be a big step toward developing a nuclear missile.
accomplishment for North Korea — and a worrying development that would raise already high stakes for the United States and its allies. Double standards? North Korea is threatening to retaliate for what it calls U.S. double standards over recent rocket launches by Pyongyang and U.S. ally Seoul. A Foreign Ministry spokesman did not elaborate on what that might entail in his comments Saturday to the official Korean Central News Agency. But Pyongyang has recently threatened to conduct its third nuclear test in response to what it calls U.S. hostility. Washington says Seoul's rocket l a unch W e d nesday had no military intent while Pyongyang's i n D e c ember was a test of banned ballistic missile technology. The U.N. Security Council has imposednew sanctionsfor its launch, but Pyongyang says it should be allowed to launch satellites for peaceful purposes. Meanwhile, the North has put up a cover over the entrance of a tunnel at its main underground nuclear test site to foil U.S. intelligence efforts to determine whether a detonation there is imminent, a South Korean military official and mediareported Friday. That news came a day after a South Korean general said "brisk" activity had been spotted at the site. North Korea has said it would conduct a third nuclear test to retaliate against the U.N. Security Council's u nanimous d e c ision l a s t month to respond to a rocket test by tightening sanctions on the country. The North's media cited the country's top leader, Kim Jong Un, as ordering his military
and government to take "highprofile"measures — suggesting that the test might happen soon d espite i n t ernational warnings against it. In recent months, U.S. and South Korean officials have detected new tunneling activities and what appeared to be other efforts to prepare for another underground testat the site, Punggye-ri in northeastern North Korea, where the country conducted tests in 2006 and 2009.
Predictin g a test The North Korean threats have kept officials and analysts in the region on tenterhooks as any test is likely to aggravate tensions on the Korean Peninsula and anger the U.S. and other Westerncountries alarmed at the North's recent advances in its arms programs. Earthquake monitoring stations and military planes are on standby to detect seismic tremors and measure increased radiation in the air in case of a detonation. U.S. and South Korean officials have been scrutinizing daily updates from satellite imagery of the Punggye-ri site, which features three tunnels dug into a 7,380-foot-tall mountain. Still, predicting when a test might happen has been difficult because the satellites cannot observe what was going on underground. So the officials have been particularly zeroing in on the entrance of the newest of the three tunnels, where a test is considered most likely.
Plutonium vs. uranium:Whyis the latter moreworrisomefor theU.S.andits allies. EASY TD HIDE Nuclear bombs canbe produced with highly enriched uranium or plutonium. North Korea is believed to have exploded plutonium devices in the two tests it has conducted so far, in 2006and 2009. Uranium bombs worry Washington and North Korea's
neighbors becauseplantsmaking highly enriched uranium are much easier to hide than plutonium facilities. The latter
are largerand generate more heat than uranium enrichment plants, making them simpler for outsiders to monitor and for satellites to detect. Uranium can be enriched for use in bombs by using centrifuges that can be operated almost anywhere: in small factories or even in tunnels
and caves. Theycan be spread around the country out of sight of nuclear inspectors. And it would take a relatively small amount of highly enriched uranium to build a simple bomb similar to the one dropped on Hiroshima at the end of World War II. "A uranium test would be a
big deal because acentrifuge plant is much easier to conceal than a plutonium reactor, which is practically impossible to hide," said Daniel Pinkston, a Seoul-based expert on North Korea with the International Crisis Group think tank.
— The Associated Press and New Yorlz Times News Service
'I I
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EASY TD WEAPDNIZE
EASY TD DIG ljp
It is also simpler in some ways to build a nuclear bomb with highly enriched uranium than one with plutonium. "While a plutonium bomb
NDT EASY TDKEEPSECRET Even as Pyongyang negoti-
North Korea says the pro-
gram is for peaceful, energy-
ated with the world to scrap its plutonium efforts in the latest round of nuclear disarmament talks, which began in 2003 and were last held in late 2008, its scientists were apparently working on a secret uranium
generating purposes. But while uranium enriched to low levels
is used in power reactors, centrifuges can also bemade
requires the assembly of acomplicated weapons system to deal with pre-detonation issues, a HEU bomb is relatively easy to construct," Harvard physicist Hui Zhang wrote in an analysis for the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. "Moreover, unlike plutonium, HEU poses no significant health hazards during the construction phase because of its low level of radiation." Scientist and nuclear expert Siegfried Hecker said plutonium is considered better for building small warheads, which North Korea is believed to be attempting to develop so it can threaten the U.S. with long-
to enrich uranium to the high levels needed for bombs. North Korea apparently de-
program.
cided a fewyears ago to focus
Outsiders have long raised
on highly enriched uranium rather than plutonium, Acton
suspicions of such aprogram. James Kelly, aU.S. envoy dur-
said. That's probably because
ing the Bush administration, confronted North Korean officials with claims about uranium enrichment during a 2002 visit to Pyongyang, sparking a nuclear crisis that led to the creation of the now-stalled sixnation disarmament talks. Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has said North Korea worked with A.Q. Khan, creator of Pakistan's atomic bomb, to obtain the centrifuges needed for uranium enrichment before Khan's operation was disrupted in 2003. In 2007, then-U.S. nuclear envoy Christopher Hill said Washington knew Pyongyang had bought equipment only used for uranium enrichment. North Korea finally revealed at least some of its uranium enrichment equipment in November 2010 to visiting Americans.
its leaders realized that "with a given amount of investment,
it could produce more bombsworth of HEU than plutonium," he said. North Korea has large deposits of uranium ore, and is far less able to acquire plutonium. Hecker estimated that Pyongyang has only 24 to 42 kilograms of plutonium — enough for perhaps four to eight rudimentary bombs similar to the plutonium
range nuclear-tipped missiles. "Switching to HEU at this point actually increases the technical challenge" for North Korean scientists to build miniaturized nuclear warheads, James Acton, a physicist at the Carnegie Endowmentfor International Peace, said. It's not clear whether North
weapon used onNagasaki in World War II. It does not appear to be making more; its plutoni-
um reactor north of Pyongyang was shut down during disarmament negotiations. "It's only logical that it would now test an HEU device, since that would be most helpful for designing its future arsenal," Acton said, though he didn't rule outa plutonium test. Acton, Hecker and other analysts have raised the possibility that North Korea may try to test both plutonium and uranium devices simultaneously.
Korea hasmadebomb-grade uranium. But Pyongyangconfirmed long-held worries that it was enriching uranium in late 2010, when it showed foreign experts a facility at its Yongbyon nuclear reactor site. Analysts strongly suspect it has other uranium enrichment facilities.
They saw what appeared to be a sophisticated, modern uranium enrichment facility with 2,000 centrifuges. — The Associated Press
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Scoreboard, B2 NBA, B6 Golf, B2 NHL, B6 College basketball, B3 Prep sports, B6 Football, B4, B5 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
O~» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
CYCLOCROSS
No finish for Bend's Trebon LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Bend's Ryan Trebon did not finish Saturday in his men's elite race at the 2013 UCI Cyclocross World Championships. The 31-year-old Cannondale-Clement rider was one of six Americans in the race, which was originally scheduled for today but was
NFL: SUPER BOWL XLVII
avensor erS: • The long balcoul l dcarry Baltimore to its secondvictory in the SuperBowl
Series record:Ravenslead3-1 Lastmeeting:Ravensbeat49ers
water in the Ohio River and possible flooding at Eva Bandman Park, site of the competition. Trebon said he crashed with two laps remaining and injured his back, wristand elbow, but did
16-6, Nov. 24, 2011
Last game:Ravensbeat Patriots 28-13; 49ers beat Falcons 28-24
Inside
not break any bones.
utes, 35 seconds over the 2.8-kilometer circuit course; Vantornoutfinished in 1:05:37. The top American finisher was Timothy Johnson, 19th in 1:08:55. In three other world
championship races Saturday, the top spot on the podium went to riders from the Netherlands. Marianne Vos won the women's elite race in 43:00, followed by American Katherine
• A balancedoffensecould bekeyfor San Francisco in its questfor anothertitle
The SuperBowl Baltimore Ravens(13-6) vs. San Francisco 49ers (13-4-1) When:Today, 3 p.m. Where:Superdome, NewOrleans TV:CBS Betting line: San Francisco by4/z
moved to Saturday because of projected high
Sven Nys of Belgium won the men's elite race by two seconds over fellow Belgium rider Klaas Vantornout. Nys posted a time of1 hour, 5 min-
o w i e u e r '?
Patrick Semansky/The Associated Press
Baltimore Ravens wide receiver Torrey Smith.
• Bill Parcells leads the Hall of Fame inductees,B4 • Vikings RB Adrian Peterson is named MVP,B4 • A preview of the Super Bowl,B5
MarcioJose Sanchez/The Associated Press
San Francisco 49ers running back Frank Gore.
By Janie Mccauley
By David Ginsburg The Associated Press
The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Fear the dreadlocks, San Francisco. Torrey Smith just might be the difference in a Super Bowl that will hinge on the 49ers' ability to prevent the Baltimore Ravens from scoring with the long ball. You might remember Smith from that playoff game in Denver on Jan. 12. Broncos cornerback Champ Bailey sure does. Bailey, a 12-time Pro Bowl star, watched the dreadlocks flapping from the back of Smith's helmet as he chased the speedy wide receiver into the end zone on touchdown catches of 59 and 32 yards. Oh, and let's not forget that Baltimore forced overtime in that game on a 70-yard touchdown pass from Joe Flacco to Jacoby Jones with 31 seconds left. SeeRavens/B4
Compton (44:34).
ttUIro A Family Affair ~
NEW ORLEANS — Colin Kaepernick is a mystery man under center, a strong-armed passer one moment and a 25year-old kid who can run right out of the pocket for a huge gain the next. Baltimore mustbrace forthe unexpected on every snap in today's Super Bowl. There'sflashy Michael Crabtree on the edges and Vernon Davis down the middle, Frank Gore and LaMichael James clogging things up in the running game. The creative, switch-it-up San Francisco offense sure keeps opposing defenses guessing. The 49ers hope to do it again at the Superdome, when the Ravens will face an array of lo oks from Jim Harbaugh's team. See49ers /B4
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PREP ALPINE SKIING
In the U23 men's division, Mike Teunissen was first with a time of 48:40. Belgium's Wietse
PGA TOUR GOLF
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Bosmans wassecond (48:54), and Zach
r
McDonald was the top American finisher, 11th
so
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overall (50:22). In the men's junior division, Mathieu Van Der Poel finished first with a time of 40:47, and Dutch countryman Martijn Budding was
t
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second (41:44). Thefirst American was Logan
on this '16th hole
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Owen, who was fourth
overall(42:10).
— From wire reports
BASEBALL/ SOFTBALL
Meeting set for local umpires
• No other tourney can quite equalthe rowdy atmosphere of the PhoenixOpen
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The first meeting of 2013 for the Central Oregon Baseball/Softball Officials Association
By Karen Crouse
(COBOA/COSOA)is set for Monday, Feb. 11, in Bend. The meeting will take place starting at 6:30 p.m. in the library at Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St. Current association
New York Times News Service
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Madison Archuleta, of Summit High School, skis the second run of the giant slalom at the Ore-Cal Classic on the Cliffhanger run at Mt. Bachelor ski area on Saturday. Archuleta placed fourth in the girls race.
members and prospective new members are encouraged to attend the meeting. No um-
piring experience is required to join COBOA/ COSOA; the association will provide training. COBOA/COSOA serves all of Central
• Mt. Bachelor hosts an event
officiating for all levels of high school baseball and softball, as well
featuringskiersfrom Oregonandfrom its
as for Central Oregon Community College club
neighbor to the south
baseball. Many association umpires also go
By Amanda Miles
Oregon and provides
on to officiate for local youth and adult baseball and softball organizations. Association umpires
are paid from $25 to $60 per game andare reimbursed for mile-
age. For more information, contact Jack Robertson, association president, at 541-771-6336, or Bob Reichert, association commissioner, at 541382-3180 or 541-5936222. — /3uiiet/n staff report
Inside • More prep coverage,B6 compared with conditions at his home mountain, Mount Shasta. "More snow, a lot more terrain difference, and it's a lot grippier," said Crago, the 51st-place finisher in the boys race, who noted that he enjoyed the skiing the backside of Bachelor in particular. "Mount Shasta's, like, really
The Bulletin
MOUNT BACHELOR — Saturday's Oregon School Ski Association giant slalom race had a bit of a different looktoit. Sure, skiers from the various OSSA high schools such as Summit, Redmond and Ridgeview took to the Cliffhanger runatMt. Bachelor ski area for their two runs each. But so did a bunch of teenagers from California, who also were there to compete in the first Ore-Cal Classic, a competition among the
icy." Bend High's Keenan Seidel clears a gate while racing the second run of the giant slalom at the Ore-Cal Classic on the Cliffhanger run at Mt. Bachelor ski area on Saturday. Seidel won the boys race. OSSA schools and about a half-dozen schools from Northern California, from communitiessuch as Redding, Red Bluff and Weed. "It was great to have those skiers there," Bend High coach Greg Timm said about
the Californians. "We hope to continue the relationship, continue the competition." Lucas Crago, a sophomore at Fo othill High School in Redding, Calif., enjoyed the quality of snow Mount Bachelor had to offer — especially
Bend's Keenan Seidel took top honors in the boys race and helped the Lava Bears squeak out top team honors by just 0.32 seconds over Summit. The Storm's Jared Schiemer and Thomas Wimberly were second and third, respectively. The top boys finisher from a California scho ol was Butte Valley's Lucas Ericson, in 11th place. SeeSkiing/B4
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Like green flags at a racetrack, the birdie putts of Josh Teater and Martin Flores dropped on the 15th hole Friday, signaling to their caddies that the race was on. After Teater and Flores struck their tee shots at No. 16, their caddies broke into a sprint, high-stepping around cactuses and other desert flora with their employers'
40-pound golf bags bumping against their backsides and the raucous cheers of a few thousand fans ringing in their ears. It was just another tournament round at the Phoenix Open, a PGA Tour stop that decorum routinely skips. Augusta National Golf Club has Amen Corner; TPC Scottsdale has Fraternity Row, the choker chain of humanity that wraps around No. 16, a 162-yard par 3, and offers fans at each end a bonus view of the 15th green or the 17th tee. John Rollins, a three-time tour winner who was tied for eighth place after 36 holes, said, "It's the most nerveracking short iron you'll ever hit." SeePhoenix/B4
Inside • Phil Mickelson takes a huge lead atthePhoenix0pen B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY
Grand Prix, FS Pipe, Park City
Utah (taped), NBCSN. TRACK & FIELD
GOLF 1 a.m.:European Tour, Dubai
11 a.m.: New Balance lndoor
Desert Classic, final round, Golf Channel. 10 a.m.:PGA Tour, Phoenix Open, final round, Golf Channel. Noon: PGATour, PhoenixOpen, final round, NBC.
2 p.m.: Sevens World Series
BASKETBALL 8 a.m.:Women's college,
Grand Prix (taped), ESPN2. RUGBY (same-day tape), NBCSN. FOOTBALL 3 p.m.: NFL, Super Bowl, Baltimore Ravens vs. San Francisco 49ers, CBS.
DaytonatRichmond, ESPNU.
10 a.m.:Women's college, Duke at North Carolina, ESPNU.
MONDAY
10 a.m.:Women's college, Washington at Arizona State, Pac-12 Network.
10 a.m.:Women's college, Oklahoma at West Virginia, Root Sports.
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Men's college, Notre Dame at Syracuse, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Women's college,
Marquette at Louisville, ESPN.
Purdue at Penn State, ESPN2. 4 p.m.: Men's college, Oklahomaat lowa State, ESPNU.
Noon:Men'scollege,Oregon
4 p.m.:Men's college, George
State at Stanford, Pac-12 Network.
Mason at Old Dominion, NBCSN. 5 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Minnesota Timberwolves, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
11 a.m.: Men's college,
Noon:Men's college, Virginia at Georgia Tech, ESPNU.
2 p.m.:Women's college, Stanford at Oregon State, Pac12 Network.
HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.:NHL, Pittsburgh Penguins at Washington Capitals, NBC.
WINTER SPORTS 10 a.m.:Freestyle skiing, aerials, Deer Valley, Utah
6 p.m.:Men's college, Texasat West Virginia, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Women's college, Texas A&M at LSU, ESPN2.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Seton Hall at Pittsburgh, ESPNU.
7 p.m.:Men's college, San Diego at Loyola Marymount, Root Sports.
HOCKEY
(taped), NBCSN. 11 a.m.:Freestyle skiing, U.S.
6 p.m.: NHL, Dallas Stars at Colorado Avalanche, NBCSN.
ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY BASKETBALL Noon:Men'scollege,Oregon State at Stanford, KICE-AM 940.
FOOTBALL 3 p.m.:NFL, Super Bowl, Baltimore Ravens vs. San Francisco 49ers, KRCO-AM 690, KRCO-FM 96.9.
MONDAY BASKETBALL 5 p.m.: NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Minnesota Timberwolves, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
Listingsare the mostaccurate available. 777e Bulletinis not responsible for late changes madeby Tllor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF LOCAL
the top-ranked Mike and Bob
Bryan 7-6 (6), 6-7 (7), 6-4, 3-6,
Softdall fundraiSer taday
6-3 and kept the United States — A fundraiser for the Redmond from clinching the first-round Ricochet12U softball program Davis Cup match in Jacksonville, is taking place today from 4 Fla.. It was only the third time p.m. to 9 p.m. at Straw Hat Pizza the Bryan brothers had dropped in Redmond. Thirty percent of a Davis Cup match. It was just proceeds from purchases will go the second time that they had to the softball program. Straw dropped a five-set match in ATP Hat Pizza is located at 3853 S.W. competition. The United States 21st St., Suite109, and can be has a 2-1 advantage heading reached by phone at 541-504into today's reverse singles. The 4784. United States' John Isner faces Brazil's Thomaz Bellucci in the opening match. If Bellucci wins to even the score at 2-2, Sam WINTER SPORTS Querrey of the United States and Bowman,Wise claim Brazil's Thiago Alves will meet in halfpipe titleS —Maddie the deciding match. Bowman followed up her gold at the X Games with another at Saturday's U.S. Grand Prix in BASKETBALL ski halfpipe in Park City, Utah. Bowman was the only woman Mavs coach finedfor competing with two 900s and COmm8lltS — Mavericks landed both on her second run to coach Rick Carlisle was fined win with a score of 85.2. Japan's $25,000 by the NBA on Saturday Ayana Onozukawassecond with for criticizing the officiating after a score of 84.4 and Virginie Faivre Dallas' loss to Golden State. of Switzerland took third at 82.8. With the Mavs trailing 98-97 X Games champ David Wise and on Thursday, Brandan Wright fellow American Torin Yater-Walhad the ball knocked away while lace finished 1-2 in the men's going up for a shot, and nofoul World Cup event. was called. The Warriors went onto win100-97at home. Carlisle was particularly frustrated because the NBA had acknowlTENNIS edged the referees made a misBrazil cuts U.S. leadtake in the final seconds of a loss Brazil's doubles team of Marcelo at Portland two days earlier. — From wire reports Melo and Bruno Soares upset
GOREBOARD Arkansas73,Tennessee60 ArkansasSt.75,North Texas66,OT Cent. Arkansas79,Nicholls St.76 Monday Denver79,TexasSt. 64 Boys basketball: Culverat Regis,8 p.m. EastCarolina79,Rice63 Girls basketball: Culver atRegis,6.30p.m. Wrestling: Ridgeviewat TheDalles Wahtonka,6 Houston84, SMU80, OT HoustonBaptist 66, NJIT57 p.m. KansasSt.52,Oklahoma50 Kentucky72,TexasABM68, OT Tuesday NewMexicoSt.75,UTSA62 Boys basketball: MountainViewat Bend, 7p.m., Summit atCrookCounty, 7p.m., Madrasat North Oral Roberts65,SELouisiana59 Marion, 5.30p.m., LaPineatCotage Grove,7.15 SamHoustonSt. 55,TexasABM-Cc 51 p.m., WestemMennonite at Culver, 6.30 p.m., SouthAlabama70,UALR66 Central Christian at Horizon Christian, Hood StephenF.Austin 65,Lamar51 Texas60,TCU43 River ,730 p.m.,Redmond atRidgeview,7 p.m. TexasSouthern84, PrairieView48 Girls basketball: Bend atMountainView,7p.m., American68, ChicagoSt. 65 CrookCountyat Summit, 7p.m., Madrasat North Texas-Pan Marion, 7 p.m.,WesternMennonite at Culver,5 UTEP62,Tulane50 p.m., Central Christian at Horizon Christian, WestVirginia 77,TexasTech61 Far West HoodRi ver,6 p.m.,Ridgeview at Redmond,7 p.m., SweetHomeat Sisters, 5.45p.m., LaPine Air Force70,SanDiego St. 67 Arizona79,Washington St.65 at Cottage Grove,5.45 p.m. BYU96,SantaClara79 BoiseSt.77, UNLV72 FOOTBALL GS Bakersfield75,UtahValley62 CS Northridge69, UCRiverside 53 NFL California58,Oregon54 ColoradoSt.65, Wyoming 46 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Gonzaga 65, SanDiego63 Time PST Hawaii 77,CalSt.-Fugerton75 Super Bowl Idaho66,SanJoseSt. 63 Today LongBeachSt. 50,CalPoly48 At New Orleans Montana 65,E.Washington46 Baltimorevs.SanFrancisco, 3 p.m.(CBS) MontanaSt.70, PortlandSt.64 NewMexico75,Nevada62 Pacific 77, UC Davis 64 Betting line S. Utah78,N.Anzona67 NFL Saint Mary's(Cal)77,Portland42 Favorite Open Current Underdog San Francisco86,Pepperdine78 Today UC Irvine62, UCSanta Barbara60 49ers 4 .5 4 Ravens Utah 58,Colorado55 UtahSt.68, Seatle 46 Washington96,ArizonaSt. 92 BASKETBALL WeberSt.85,N. Colorado64
Middle Tennessee 70, FAU67 Morehead St. 70,Jacksonville St. 59 MurraySt.65, Austin Peay61 N. Kentucky81,SC-Upstate 61 NC AB T67, Md.-EastemShore55 North Florida56, Stetson52 Presbyterian71, UNCAsheville 40 Samford59, Wofford 45 SouthemU. 83,Grambling St.81, 20T Tennessee Tech67, Belmont62 Troy 68,Louisiana-Lafayette61 W. Carolina60, UNC -Greensboro 49 Winthrop73, CharlestonSouthern65 Midwest Akron 75,Buffalo57 Bradley90,S. Illinois 48 Creighton98, Drake71 Detroit 61, Milwaukee 59 E. Illinois 70,SIU-Edwardsville 65 E. Kentucky53, SEMissouri 49
ON DECK
Men's college Saturday's Games East Albany(NY)79,Binghamton46 AmericanU.68, Lafayette64 Boston College75,Clemson68 Bryant77, Monmouth(NJ) 62 Bucknell69,Navy54 CCSU80,Fairleigh Dickinson71 Canisius77, lona74 Cincinnati65, SetonHall 59 Colgate63, HolyCross45 Cornell 71,Penn69 Dartmouth71, Yale62 Delaware 71, UNCWilmington 56 Georgetown 68, St.John's56 Hartford66, BostonU.58 Harvard89, Brown82, 20T La Salle80, GeorgeWashington 71 Loyola(Md.)89, Niagara87,20T MountSt.Mary's91,SacredHeart 82 Northeastem 59, Drexel52 Pittsburgh65,Syracuse55 Princeton72, Columbia66 Quinnipiac74,Wagner69 RobertMorris60, LIUBrooklyn 57 Saint Joseph's70,Temple69 St. Bonaventure68,Duquesne 60 St. Francis(Pa.)64, St.Francis (NY)61 StonyBrook56, NewHampshire54 UMBC68,Maine67 South Alabama 58,Vanderbilt 54 Alabama ABM65,MVSU64 AppalachianSt.74, W.Carolina 65 Ark.-PineBluff 81,AlabamaSt. 77 Belmont74, TennesseeTech52 Bethun e-Cookman67,FloridaABM 65,OT Charlotte66, UMass65 CoastalCarolina62, Radford 52 Coll. of Charleston 81, UNCGreensboro59 Davidson68,Woford 57 Duke79, Florida St.60 ETSU 90, Lipscomb88,OT Elon 77,Samford 66 FIU 76,Louisiana-Monroe73 Florida 78,Mississippi 64 FloridaGulf Coast81,Jacksonville 78
Gardner-Webb76,Longwood65 George Mason74,JamesMadison63 Georgia67, SouthCarolina 56 GeorgiaSouthern59,Chattanooga57 GeorgiaSt. 83,OldDominion 63 Hampton 64, MorganSt.62 High Point78,Presbyterian68 JacksonSt.84,Alcorn St.71 JacksonvilleSt.70, MoreheadSt. 59 LSU69, Mississippi St.68 Louisiana Tech64,Texas-Arlington 51 Marshall 75,UCF71 Maryland86,WakeForest60 Memphis 94,Tulsa64 Miami 79,NCState 78 MiddleTennessee73, FAU56 MurraySt.75,Austin Peay68,OT N. Kentucky 70, SC-Upstate 65 NCABT46,Md.-EasternShore44 NC Central54, DelawareSt. 43 NorfolkSt.80, CoppinSt.70 North Carolina72,Virginia Tech60,OT North Florida64, Stetson59 Richmond 73, Xavier 71 Savannah St. 52,Howard42 SouthemMiss. 79,UAB75 SouthernU.59, Grambling St. 31 The Citadel84,Furman79 Troy 71,Louisiana-Lafayette52 UNCAsheville 78,Campbell 61 VCU81, Fordham65 William 8Mary72,Hofstra59 Winthrop66, Liberty56 Midwest Akron 86,Ohio72 BowlingGreen70, Ball St.59 Butler 75,RhodeIsland68 ClevelandSt.77, Ill.-chicago66 Creighton75,Bradley58 Drake74,IndianaSt. 71,OT E. Kentucky81,SEMissouri 72
Green Bay73,LoyolaofChicago65 l linois St.83, S.Illinois 47 Indiana81, Michigan73 lowa St.79,Baylor71 Kent St.77, E.Michigan62 Miami(Ohio)70,Cent.Michigan61 Missouri 91,Auburn77 Missouri St.62, Evansville 61 N. Dakota St. 65,South Dakota46 N. Iowa 57, Wichita St.52 North Dakota 69, IdahoSt. 52 Northwestern75, Purdue60 NotreDame79,DePaul 71, OT Oaklan d96,Nebraska-Omaha81 Ohio St.63, Nebraska56
OklahomaSt. 85, Kansas80 S. DakotaSt.88, UMKC57 SIU-Edwardsville49,E.Illinois 45 Saint Louis81,Dayton52 Toledo69,N. Illinois 64 W. Illinois 68,IUPUI59 W. Michigan71,Buffalo 60 Southwest
GreenBay99,Ill.-chicago 53 IUPUI61,W.Illinois 55 lowa St.67, TexasTech52 Kansas89,KansasSt. 80,20T Marquette70, DePaul66
N. DakotaSt.57, SouthDakota50 N. Iowa75,Evansville 64 Nebras ka-Omaha67,Oakland63 Notre Dame 64, Cincinnati 42 S. DakotaSt. 62, UMKC61 Valparaiso92, ClevelandSt. 84, OT Southwest Baylor 81,OklahomaSt. 62 Lamar61, StephenF.Austin 55, OT LouisianaTech78,Texas-Arlington 62 NJIT 81,Texas-PanAmerican 75, OT Nicholls St.68, Cent.Arkansas62 Oral Roberts90,SELouisiana48 Texas61, TCU56 TexasSouthern51, Prairie View46 Tulane74, Houston56 UALR65, SouthAlabama34 Utah Valley75, HoustonBaptist 71
Saturday's Summary
California 58, No. 10Oregon54 OREGON (18-4)
Kazemi4-62-210, Singler3-10 0-07,Woods35 8-1214, Loyd3-71-28, Dotson4-71-1 9, Austin 0-0 0-2 0,Moore1-10-0 2,Carter0-00-00, Emory 2-6 0-0 4.Totals 20-42 12-19 54. CALIFORNIA (13-8) Solomon3-107-813, Kravish4-130-08, Cobbs 3-8 2-38, Wallace3-103-412, Crabbe6-11 0-013, Smith 0-30-00,Thurman2-4 0-04.Totals21-59 12-15 58. Halftime Oregon 27-24. 3-Point Goals Oregon 2-12 ILoyd 1-4, Singler 1-6, Emory 0-2), California 4-17(Wallace3-7, Crabbe1-5, Solomon 0-1, Smith0-2,Cobbs0-2). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —Oregon32(Woods8), California31 (Solomon 12). Assists —Oregon 14 (Loyd 7), California 15 (Cobbs7). TotalFouls—Oregon 15, California 16. A — 9,457.
Far West BYU65, SantaClara48 Gal Poly 79 UC Riverside 56 Denver75,TexasSt.62 Gonzaga 81, Pepperdine52 Hawaii 65, CSNorthridge 53 Idaho 83,SanJoseSt. 66 Idaho St.60, NorthDakota43 Montana76, E.Washington 51 N. Colorado65, WeberSt.47 NewMexico69, Nevada66 Pacific 69,LongBeachSt. 53 Portland65, LoyolaMarymount 63 PortlandSt.75, MontanaSt.72 Sacramento St. 93, S.Utah86 San Diego63, SanFrancisco 61 San DiegoSt.68, Air Force46 UC Irvine70, UCDavis 57 UC SantaBarbara60, CalSt.-Fullerton 50 UNLV75, BoiseSt. 61 UTSA66, NewMexico St.53 Utah St.67, Seattle 62 Wyoming82 ColoradoSt 67
HOCKEY
Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST
Conference
W L 7 2 7 2 6 3 6 3 5 4 5 4 4 4 4 5 4 5 2 7 2 7 1 7 Saturday's Games Utah 58,Colorado55 California58,Oregon54 Washington96,ArizonaState 92 Arizona79, Washington State65 Arizona Oregon ArizonaSt. UCLA California Washington Stanford Colorado SouthemCal WashingtonSt Utah OregonSt.
NHL
17 5 16 6 13 8 13 9 13 8 14 7 9 13 11 11 10 11 11 10
Today's Game
OregonStateat Stanford, noon
Wednesday'sGames
Stanford atArizona, 6p.m. Utah atOregonState, 7 p.m.
Thursday's Games Washingtonat UCLA, 6p.m. California atArizonaState,6.30 p.m. ColoradoatOregon, 7p.m. WashingtonStateatUSC,8.30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 9 Stanford atArizonaState, 4p.m. Utah atOregon,5 p.m. WashingtonStateatUCLA,7pm. Sunday, Feb. 10 CalrfornraatArizona, 4p.m. ColoradoatOregonState, 6p.m. Washingtonat USC,7p.m.
Women's college Saturday's Games East Albany(NY)69, Binghamton41 Army 61,Lehigh56 Boston U.42, Hartford 40 Bryant58,Monmouth(NJ) 55 Dartmouth63, Yale48 Fairleigh Dickinson55, CCSU53, OT Fordham71, VCU41 Harvard68, Brown58 Holy Cross71, Colgate61 Lafayette49,American U.47 Loyola(Md.)53,Siena37 Navy 61,Bucknell 40 Niagara64, Rider 59 Penn 65,Cornell 56 Princeton87, Columbia41 Quinnipiac74,Wagner56 Rutgers58, Villanova50, OT SacredHeart58, MountSt. Mary's50 Saint Joseph's78,RhodeIsland 51
Stony Brook60, NewHampshire 47 Syracuse75,Providence59 Uconn 71,St. John's65 UMBC86, Maine79 South Alabama St. 66, Ark.-Pine Bluff 63, OT AppalachianSt.80, Elon62 Bethune -Cookman59,FloridaABM 49 Campbell62,Longwood51 Chattanooga60, Furman57 CoastalCarolina52,Radford 51 Coppin St.79, Norfolk St. 49 Davidson73, GeorgiaSouthern61 DelawareSt.58, NCCentral 49 ETSU85, Lipscomb64 Florida GulfCoast80, Jacksonville 49 Hampton81, MorganSt. 60 Howard53, SavannahSt.41 JacksonSt. 40,AlcomSt. 34 Liberty 67,High Point 59 Louisiana-Monroe71, FIU61 Louisville 74,Georgetown60 MVSU51, AlabamaABM45 Mercer 57,KennesawSt. 36
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST
Overall W L 19 2 18 4
Eastern Conference Atla ntic Division
G P W L DT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh 8 5 3 0 10 24 19 N.Y.Islanders 7 4 2 1 9 27 23 NewJersey 7 3 1 3 9 17 19 N.Y.Rangers 8 4 4 0 8 19 22 Philadelphia 9 3 6 0 6 21 26 Northeast Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA 8 6 1 1 13 24 19 8 5 2 1 11 24 14 7 5 2 0 10 24 16 8 4 4 0 8 21 23 8 3 4 1 7 24 29 Southeast Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA TampaBay 8 6 2 0 12 39 21 Winnipeg 8 3 4 1 7 24 32 Carolina 7 3 4 0 6 18 23 Washington 8 2 5 1 5 18 27 Florida 7 2 5 0 4 16 27
Western Conference Central Division
GP W L DT Pts GF GA 9 7 0 2 16 28 20 8 6 2 0 12 31 19 8 4 3 1 9 22 24 8 3 2 3 9 14 20 9 3 5 1 7 18 28 Northwest Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA 8 4 2 2 10 21 20 8 4 3 1 9 20 21 8 4 3 1 9 20 22 8 4 4 0 8 19 20 6 1 3 2 4 16 24 Pacific Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA San Jose 8 7 0 1 15 30 14 Anaheim 7 5 1 1 11 27 22 Phoenix 9 3 4 2 8 27 26 Dallas 9 3 5 1 7 17 23 Los Angeles 7 2 3 2 6 16 23 NOTE.Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime
loss.
Saturday's Games Chicago 3, Calgary2, SO Nashville 2,SanJose1, SO Pittsburgh5, NewJersey1 Montreal 6,Buffalo1 Colorado 3, Edmonton1 Boston1,Toronto0 Philadelphia 5, Carolina3 N.Y.Rangers3, TampaBay2 Columbus 4, Detroit 2 Phoenix 2,Dallas0 Anaherm 7, LosAngeles4
Today's Games
PittsburghatWashington, 9.30a.m. OttawaatMontreal, 11a.m. Florida atBuffalo, noon NewJerseyatN.Y. Islanders, noon
Monday's Games CarolinaatToronto,4 p.m. Dallas atColorado,6 p.m. Minnesota at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Vancouve ratEdmonton,6.30 p.m. San Jose atAnaheim,7 p.m.
GOLF PGA Tour Phoenix Open Saturday At TPCScottsdale Scottsdale, Ariz. Purse: $6.2 million Yardage: 7,216; Par: 71 Third Round 60-65-64 189 Phil Mickelson
64-66-65 195 64-70-63 197 66-66-65 197 67-65-66 198 69-65-65 199 65-64-70 199 70-66-64 200 66-67-67 200 67-66-67 200 65-68-67 200 67-67-67 201 67-67-67 201 69-68-64 201 64-69-68 201 66-66-69 201 65-67-69 201 66-66-69 201 66-65-70 201 67-68-67 202 68-68-66 202 65-71-66 202 67-66-69 202 67-71-64 202 68-63-71 202 70-65-68 203 65-69-69 203 64-73-66 203 65-66-72 203 67-63-73 203 65-71-68 204 67-68-69 204 67-67-70 204 68-66-70 204 69-67-69 205 68-68-69 205 67-69-69 205 66-68-71 205 67-67-71 205 64-70-71 205 69-68-68 205 68-70-67 205 69-64-72 205 67-65-73 205 71-67-67 205 66-69-71 206 68-67-71 206 72-65-69 206 71-66-69 206 71-67-68 206 70-68-68 206 69-67-71 207 69-66-72 207 67-67-73 207 71-65-71 207 72-65-70 207 72-66-69 207 65-71-72 208 65-71-72 208 68-68-72 208 72-64-72 208 69-69-70 208 71-67-70 208 69-67-73 209 68-69-72 209 66-72-71 209 73-65-71 209 69-67-74 210 66-69-75 210 70-68-72 210 67-71-73 211 70-68-73 211 67-71-74 212 65-73-74 212
BrandtSnedeker PadraigHarrington RyanMoore TroyMatteson Brendan Steele Bill Haas Scott Piercy BrendondeJonge GaryWoodland RobertoCastro HunterMahan BryceMolder Billy Horschel TedPotter,Jr. John Rollins Matt Every RobertGarrigus Angel Cabrera Jeff Klauk GregChalmers Justin Leonard William McGirt BenCrane CharlieWi Brian Harman John Mallinger RyanPalmer BrianGay Keegan Bradley Nick Watney CharlesHowell gl Casey Wittenberg Rory Sabbatini Cameron Trrngale KevinStadler Chris Kirk KevinChappell BubbaWa tson Jeff Maggert Tim Clark LucasGlover Kevin Na DavidHearn K.J. Choi Ken Duke Bo VanPelt Carl Pettersson Chris Stroud Bud Cauley GeorgeMcNeig DavidToms BooWeekley Harris English Colt Knost DavidMathis JamesDriscoll HankKuehne Martin Flores RichardH.Lee
Sang-MoonBae John Merrick JamesHahn AaronBaddeley JimmyWalker Scott Verplank ChadCampbell RussellHenley Jeff Overton JasonDay Dicky Pride J.J. Henry Kyle Stanley Y.E.Yang
TENNIS Professional Davis CupResults WORLD GROUP First Round Winners to quarterfinals, April 5-7; losers to WG playoffs, Sept. 13-15 United States 2, Brazil1 At Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena Jacksonville, Fla. Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles SamQuerrey,UnitedStates,def. ThomazBelucci, Brazil, 6-3, 6-4,6-4. John Isner,UnitedStates, def. ThiagoAlves, Brazil, 6-3, 7-6(4),6-3. Doubles MarceloMeloand BrunoSoares,Brazil, def. Bob and MikeBryan,UnitedStates, 7-6(6), 6-7(7), 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Also on Saturday.Canada2, Spain 0, Italy 2, Croatia 1,Serbia3, Belgium0, France3,Isreal 0, Argentina 3,Germany0, Kazakhstan2,Austria1, Czech Republic 2,Switzerland1.
Open Gaz de France Suez Saturday At Stade Pierre deCoubertin Paris Purse: $690,000(Premier) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Semitinals
Sara Errani (1), Italy, def. Kiki Bertens,Netherlands, 5-0,retired. MonaBarthel,Germany,def. Kristina Mladenovic, France,6-1, 6-4.
Pattay aWomen'sOpen Saturday At Dusit Resort
Pattaya, Thailand Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semitinals SabineLisicki (5), Germ any, def.NinaBratchikova,
Russia,7-5, 6-3. Maria Kirilenko(2), Russia, def. SoranaCirstea
(4), Romania6-0, , 6-2.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
American League BOSTONRED SOX Assigned RHP ChrisCarpenteroutright toPawtucket(IL). National League MIAMIMARLINS AssignedOFKevin Mattison outright toNewOrleans(PCL). PHILADELPHI A PHILLIES — Assigned RHP J.C. Ramirez outright toLehighValley (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA Fined DallascoachRickCarlisle $25,000 for public criticism ofofficiating. ATLANTA HAWKS Signed GJannero Pargo toa second10-daycontract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —Suspended Washington Capitals D John Erskine for threegamesfor elbowing Philadelphia FlyersWayneSimmonds. COLLEGE PURDUE — SuspendedWRO.J. Rossindefinitely from thefootball team.
Mickelsonhasfans rocking at Phoenix Open The Associated Press SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Phil Mickelson drew the loudest cheers from the biggest crowd in golf history Saturday at the Phoenix Open. Mickelson nearly aced the par-3 16th, hitting a 9iron to a foot to set up a birdie on the rowdy stadium hole packedwith nearly 20,000 screaming fans. "What's funny about that is 172 yards is a very tough 9-iron for meto get there, but I immediatelytake 5 yards off and in my head I had 167," Mickelson said. "The reason is you always have a little bit of adrenaline here, and the ball goes a little bit longer on 16. "I played for a 167-yard shot and tried to hit just a comfortable or stock 9-iron, and the ball ended up flying that far and released to the hole. Having played this course and that hole over the years and knowing what your body does and how to adjust to it has helped me, and certainly it did today."
GOLF ROUNDUP Estimated at 179,022, the third-round crowd broke the record of 173,210 set last year, also on a Saturday at fan-friendly TPC Scottsdale. The event has drawn 467,030 fans for the week and is in position to break the mark of538,356 setin 2008. Mickelson birdied the final four holes and five of the last six for a 7-under 64 and a six-stroke lead over Brandt Snedeker. "I know how good Snedeker is and how hot he can get with a putter," Mickelson said. "He can make birdie from just about anywhere. He's going to make a run tomorrow. I, hopefully, will be able to keep pace." The 42-year-old former Arizona State star has led aftereach round, opening with a 60 and shooting a 65 on Friday. He fella stroke short ofthe tour record for
the first 54 holes, and matched the tournament mark set by Mark Calcavecchia in 2001. Making his 24th appearance in the event that he won in 1996 and 2005, Mickelson is trying to complete his third wire-to-wire victory and first since the 2006 BellSouth Classic — a 13-stroke blowout the week before the second of his three Masters victories. Also on Saturday: Gallacher takes 3-shot lead in Dubai DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Stephen Gallacher shot a 10-under 62 to grab a three-shot lead at the Dubai Desert Classic and break a three-round scoring recordset by Tiger Woods 12 years ago. Overnight leader Richard Sterne (66) tried to keep pace with the Scotsman, sinking long birdie putts on the eighth and 11 holes and then a 45-footer from the fringe on 15. Thorbjorn Olesen (67) was five shots back in third place.
Matt York/ rhe Associated Press
Phil Mickelson reacts to his birdie putt on the first green during the third round of the Phoenix Open Saturday, in Scottsdale, Ariz.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: PAC-12 ROUNDUP
No. 3 Indiana knocks off No. 1 Michigan
u c s a a ainin a
TOP 25 ROUNDUP
The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — The No. 1 chants rained down from the student section even before Saturday's game ended. By Monday afternoon, it should be official. Cody Zeller finished with 19 points and nine rebounds, and Victor O l adipo a dded 15 points, leading the thirdranked Hoosiers to an 81-73 victory against No. 1 Michigan on a day that the nation's top two teams lost. The results will likely send Indiana back to the top spot, which it held for the first seven weeks this season. "It's a huge accomplishment," Oladipo said about the expected climb. "You know we started there, we had a hard road to get back here. We're just going to continue to keep working." If the Hoosiers (20-2, 8-1 Big
Seth Curry scored 21 points, Quinn Cook added 18 and Duke cruised pastdefending Atlantic C oast C o nference champion Florida State. P ittsburgh..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 5 N o. 6 Syracuse..... . . . . . . . . 55 PITTSBURGH Tray Woodall had 13 points, four assists and three steals as Pittsburgh continued its mastery of top 10 teams at home by pulling away from Syracuse. N o. 7 Gonzaga ...... . . . . . . . 65 S an Diego..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3 S AN D I EG O — Da v i d Stockton hit a runner in the lane with 55.9 seconds left after Kelly Olynyk scored on consecutive possessions and Gonzaga held off San Diego for its fourth straight win. N o. 9 Butler..... . . . . . . . . . . . 7 5 R hode Island...... . . . . . . . . . 6 8 I NDIANAPOLIS — R o t Ten) keep playing like this, nei Clarke scored 23 points they might even change the and Roosevelt Jones added trend and hang around for a 18 to lead Butler past Rhode while. Island. Since Indiana's loss to Butler N o. 11 Ohio State..... . . . . . . 63 on Dec. 15, the No. 1 spot has N ebraska..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 6 been held and surrendered by LINCOLN, Neb. — Lenzelle Duke, Louisville and Michi- Smith Jr. had 21 points and gan (20-2, 7-2). Kansas, which Ohio State held off a late Nemay have beenpoised to move braska surge. up, also lost 85-80 to Oklaho- N o.14 Miami ...... . . . . . . . . . 7 9 ma State on Saturday. N o. 19 N.C. State...... . . . . . . 78 That puts Indiana, on top RALEIGH, N.C. — Reggie of its game and the Big Ten Johnson tipped in a m issed standings, in position to rule shot with 0.8 seconds left to lift the college basketball rankMiami over North Carolina ings, too. State. It has wo n f i v e s t raight N orthern lowa...... . . . . . . . . 5 7 since losing to Wisconsin last No. 15 Wichita State...... . . . 52 month, broke through a logC EDAR F A L L S , Iow a jam atop the conference stand- — Anthony James scored 16 ings to take sole possession of p oints and N o r thern I o w a the league lead at the midway beat Wichita State, sending point and became the first the Shockers to their first losteam in school history to beat ing streak of the season. No. 1-ranked teams at home in No. 17 Missouri...... . . . . . . . 91 back-to-back seasons. A uburn..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 7 Over the past seven days, COLUMBIA, Mo. — Keion nobody has played better than Bellscored 24 points and Earthe Hoosiers. On Sunday, they nest Ross added 23, both seasurvived a slugfest with No. son highs, as Missouri used 13 Michigan State and even- another strong second half to tually pulled away for a 75-70 beat Auburn. win over Indiana coach Tom No. 18 Kansas State ...... . . 52 Crean's former boss, Tom Izzo. O klahoma..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 0 On Wednesday, they handed NORMAN, Okla. — Angel archrival Purdue it s w o r st Rodriguez hit two free throws home loss ever, 97-60. with 5.6 seconds remaining On Saturday, all five start- to give Kansas State a victory ers reached double figures. over Oklahoma. Christian Watford posted a No. 20 New Mexico ...... ... 75 double-double with 14 points N evada..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2 and 10 rebounds and Indiana ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. limited Michigan to 42.9 per- Chad Adams hit two 3-pointcent shooting. ers during a key second-half "Indiana's a heck of a team run that carried New Mexico and I'm glad we got to play past Nevada. them tonight," Trey Burke said N o. 21 Creighton ...... . . . . . 75 after leading the Wolverines B radley...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 8 with 25 points and eight asOMAHA, N eb. — Doug sists. "We'll get better from it, McDermott scored 25 points, move on to the next game." including nine during a deciIn other games on Saturday: sive 12-0 run, and Creighton O klahoma State..... . . . . . . . 85 overcame poor 3-point shootN o. 2 Kansas...... . . . . . . . . . 8 0 ing in the first half to defeat LAWRENCE, Kan. Bradley. — Markel Brown scored 28 A ir Force ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 0 points,Marcus Smart added No. 22 San Diego State......67 25 and Oklahoma State held AIR FORCE ACADEMY, on to upset Kansas, ending the Colo. — Michael Lyons scored Jayhawks' nation-leading 18- 20 points and Air Force beat game winning streak. San Diego State, overcoming N o. 4 Florida ...... . . . . . . . . . 7 8 a 25-point performance by No.16 Mississippi ...... . . . . 64 Aztecs star Jamaal Franklin. GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Erik N o. 24 Cincinnati..... . . . . . . 65 Murphy scored 19 points and S eton Hall ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 5 9 was instrumental on the deNEWARK, N.J. — Sean fensive end in leading Florida Kilpatrick scored 21 points, to a victory over Mississippi. Cashmere Wright added 17 N o. 5 Duke...... . . . . . . . . . . . 7 9 and Cincinnati held off Seton F lorida State..... . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 Hall after blowing nearly all of TALLAHASSEE, Fla. a 20-point lead. -
The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. Arsalan Kazemi held his breathfor a moment when he saw Oregon point guard J ohnathan Loyd hi t t h e ground hard late in the first half and wince in pain. L oyd wa s p l aying i n place of starter Dominic Artis, an Oakland native who missed hi s s econd straight game with a left foot injury. " When I sa w h i m g o down I got nervous," Kazemi said. "That would have left us with one point guard. I was glad he got back into the game." It was just one of several things that w ent w r o ng for No. 10 Oregon in it s 58-54 loss to California on Saturday. Loyd had his sore right thumb tightly taped for the second half. He was unable to rally his teammates, though. T ony Woods h a d 1 4 points and eight rebounds for Oregon but failed to get off a potential tying shot after grabbing E.J. Singler's missed 3-pointer with 5.2 seconds left. The D ucks (18-4, 7-2 Pac-12) were held scorelessover the final four minutes after h olding a 50-42 advantage with 6:33 remaining. " We got th e l ook w e wanted. We just didn't get it," Ducks coach Dana Altman said after Oregon's f irst tw o - game l o s i ng streak. "Tony did a great job getting the board. I feel bad for the guys, they played hard. We had a sixpoint lead with three (minutes) to play and we never got any stops." The Ducks, held to their lowest two point totals of the season this weekend, also had 22 turnovers, and Woods got the only four offensive rebounds. "Twenty-two turnovers on the road, that's a formula for a loss," Woods said. "We've averaged a lotof turnovers lately and that's a big negative. We just have to get better. We need D.A. healthy and we need to cut outtheturnovers." Altman wasn't blaming the point guard situation for all the miscues. "It's everybody," he said. "A couple of our turnovers started fast breaks for them. Turnovers and second-chance points made the difference. We just need to bounce back." Loyd has played in every game thisseason but made just his seventh start. "He was all heart for us," Woods said. "He's always been a leader. He landed on his finger and then played through it. That's heart." Justin Cobbs made an 18-foot jumper with 1:35 remaining andthen added a pair of free throws as California hung on to beat a top 10 team at home for the first time in seven years. Allen Crabbe and Richard Solomon scored 13 points apiece, and Tyrone Wallace added 12 w h ile
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Eric Risberg /The Associated Press
California guard Justin Cobbs, right, collides with Oregon center Tony Woods during the second half of Saturday's game in Berkeley, Calif. California won the game 58-54.
OregonState, Stanfordplaytoday A suddenly dominating Stanford is next up for the Oregon State Beavers. The two teams meet in a Pac-12 Conference men's basketball game today at noon at Stanford's Maples Pavilion. The game will be televised live on the Pac-12 Network.
The Cardinal (13-8 overall, 4-4 Pac-12) are coming off a convincing76-52 home win over10th-ranked Oregon on Wednesday night. In its previous game last Sunday, Stanford won 87-56 at Utah in its most lopsided conference victory in nine years. Oregon State (11-10, 1-7) is looking to get off the bottom of the
conference standings. TheBeavers becamethe sole occupants of last place when Utah defeated Colorado on Saturday. Since registering their first Pac-12 win of the season on Jan. 23 against Washington, the Beavers have dropped three-point decisions to Washington State and at California. Oregon State's last three losses have been by a total of seven points. — From wire reports
helping th e G o lden B ears (13-8, 5-4) win back-to-back games for the first time since December. The frantic finish was in stark contrastto the first 35 minutes of the game when both teams struggled to find any kind of offensive rhythm. Oregon shot 47.6 percent from the floor but made only one real solid run in the second half when the Ducks scored 11 straight to take a 50-42 lead. That turned out to be the
lone highlight of the week for Altman's team. Oregon, which jumped six spots in the rankings this week, lost to Stanford 76-52 on Thursday. Also on Saturday: No.8Arizona ...... . . . . . . . . 79 Washington State...... . . . . 65 PULLMAN, Wash. — Mark Lyons scored 20 points as Arizona beat Washington State, the Wildcats' fifth consecutive win over the Cougars. Solomon Hill added 18 points for Arizona (19-2, 7-2 Pac-12),
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which swept the Washington schools on the road. Utah...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Colorado ....... . . . . . . . . . . . 55 SALT LAKE CITY — Brandon Taylor drew a charge with 9.7 seconds left and Glen Dean hit a pair of free throws on the other end to help Utah survive a late rally and upset Colorado. Jason Washburn scored 13 points and collected 11 rebounds, while Jeremy Olsen added 12 points off the bench, to lead the Utes (10-11, 2-7) to their second Pac-12 win of the season. Washington....... . . . . . . . . . 96 Arizona State..... . . . . . . . . . 92 SEATTLE — Aziz N'Diaye converted a three-point play off an offensive rebound with 34 seconds left, Andrew Andrews led Washington with 20 points off the bench and the Huskies held off Arizona State despite 32 points from Sun Devils' freshman Jahii Carson. The duo of N'Diaye and Shawn Kemp Jr. dominated the interior for Washington (13-9, 5-4 Pac-12), but no rebound or basket was bigger than N'Diaye tapping Scott
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B4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
Phoenix Continued from B1 No. 16 has five bunkers, but the real hazard takes the form of f ive rows of bleachers replete with beer vendors an d o r g a nized agitators, and 177 skyboxes from which it occasionally rains gin and tonics. "It reminds me of when I go to Fenway Park," said Keegan Bradley, a Boston Red Sox baseball fan who played his way into cont ention Saturday wit h a second-round 63. "There's always lik e a mu r m u r. There's always a little ambient noise." On Friday, Billy Horschel, a University o f F l o r ida alumnus, backed off his tee shot when a voice, rising abovethe cocktail party din, asked if he had met his wife, Brittany, "at a UF football game or a frat party." When Rickie Fowler came to the hole later in the day, two men held up white boards. The first, referring to Fowler's sister, read, "Is Taylor single?" The second read, "If not, are you single?" During l u ll s b e t ween groups, the left-side bleacher creatures turned their attention to women searching for open seats, holding up numbers to rate their attractiveness. Some sang a few bars of "Happy Birthday to You," raised their beers in the direction of the celebrator and c hanted: "Chug!
NFL
Parcells, Sapp, Carter lead Vikings RBPeterson Hall of Fame induction class takes MVPaward By Paul Newberry
will face the San Francisco 49ersin the Super Bowl, spent N EW ORLEANS — B i l l all week lobbying for Modell, Parcells was a winner every- their former owner who died where he coached. Time and last year, to claim a place in time again, he took over strug- the hall. gling franchises and showed It didn't work out, no doubt them what it takes to be a suc- pleasing fans i n C l eveland cess, including a pair of Super who r e main b i t te r a b o ut Bowl titles with the New York Modell moving the original Giants. Browns to Baltimore. Parcells pulled off another Parcells had to wait a while, victory Saturday — election to earning a bust in Canton on the Pro Football Hall of Fame. his fourth try. He thought he Getting in on his fourth try, might get in the previous year Parcells led an induction class in tandem with one of his forthat also i n cluded mouthy mer players, Curtis Martin. "It was a little less stressful defensive lineman W a r ren Sapp, prolific receiver Cris than last year," Parcells said Carter and a pair of stalwarts in a telephone interview from from the trenches, offensive Florida. "I was kind of hoping linemen Jonathan Ogden and we could do it together, but Larry Allen. as fate would have it, it didn't The class of 2013 also in- work out." cluded a pair of senior selecIn addition to Bettis, four tions, Curley Culp and Dave other players failed to get in Robinson. The announcement on the final vote: Charles Halwas made in New Orleans, site ey, Andre Reed, Michael Straof today's Super Bowl. han and Aeneas Williams. Almost as noteworthy were Parcells reversed the forthe finalists who didn't get in, tunes of f ou r t e ams, also including running back Jecoaching the New England rome Bettis and owners Art Patriots, New York Jets and Modell and Edward DeBartolo Dallas Cowboys, during 19 Jr. Players and coaches from years as a head coach. He finthe Baltimore Ravens, who ished with a record of 172-130The Associated Press
1, most notably leading the Giants to Super Bowl titles in 1987 and 1991. Sapp got in on his first year of eligibility after playing 13 seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers an d Oa k l a nd Raiders. He amassed 96'/2 career sacksdespite playing on the interior of the defensive line, i ncluding d ouble-digit sack totals in four seasons. Carter played 16 seasons, becoming only t h e s econd player in NFL history to reach 1,000 receptions in a career. He caught at least 70 passes in 10 seasons, and totaled 130 touchdown receptions from 13 passers. Allenplayed 203 games over 14 seasons, spending the bulk ofhis career withthe Cowboys. He played every position on the offensive line except center and was a first-team All-Pro seven straight seasons. Ogden played a dozen seasons with the Ravens, a lineman who led the way for Jamal Lewis to become just the fifth running back in NFL historyto rush for 2,000 yards in a season. Ogden was a six-time All-Pro and was voted to 11 Pro Bowls.
By Barry Wiiner The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Ad&an Peterson called it a blessing in disguise. Strange way to describecareer-threatening major knee surgery. The Minnesota Vikings' star came back better than ever, just missing Eric Dickerson's longstanding rushing record and closing out the season with two of the top NFL awards from The Associated Press: Most Valuable Player and Offensive Player of the Year. As sort of an added bonus, he beat Peyton Manning for both of them Saturday night. "My career could have easily been over, just like that," the sensational running back said. "Oh man. The things I've been through throughout my lifetime has made me mentally tough. The award came at the "2nd Annual NFL Honors" show on CBS saluting the NFL's best players, performances and playsfrom the 2012 season. The awards are based on balloting from a panel of 50 media members who cover the NFL.
Manning's ow n s e n sational recovery, from four neck surgeries, earned him Comeback Player h onors. Before sitting out 2011, Manning had never missed a start in his first 13 seasons w ith Indianapolis. But h e was released by the Colts last winter because of his neck issues, signed with Denver and guided the Broncos to the AFC's best record, 13-3. Also honored were: • Wa s hington's R obert Griffin III, who beat out a strong crop of quarterbacks for the top offensive rookie award. • Houston end J.J. Watt, who took Defensive Player of the Year, getting 49 of 50 votes. • Bruce Arians, the first interim coach to win Coach of the Year after leading Indianapolis to a 9-3 record while head man Chuck Pagano was being treated for leukemia. Arians is now Arizona's head coach. • Carolina l i n ebacker Luke Kuechly, the league's leader in tackles with 164, who won the top defensive rookie award.
Chug! Chug!" Miss the green and you're a deaf man walking. Teater, who is from Lexington, Ky., likened it to heaving an air ball from the foul line during a road game at Rupp Arena, home of University of Kentucky basketball. "Last year I s t r uggled on the hole, and I really got booed," Teater said. Some players' strategy on the hole is transparent. Robert Garrigus threw hard candies into t h e c r owd. Ricky Barnes and Brendan Steele, who represent Oakley, dug sunglasses out of their bags and tossed them to fans. "You kind of get them on your side a little bit," Steele said. Jock Holliman, a longtime marshal at No . 16, regards it as the hole Phil Mickelson built. M i ckelson, who starred at nearby Arizona State University, made the cut as an amateur in 1991, four years after the tournament moved to TPC Scottsdale from P hoenix Country Club. He has won it twice since turning professional in 1992, and he takes a six-stroke lead into today's final round. "This town just loves Phil Mickelson," Holliman said, adding, "Phil brings more intensity to this tee box than any player." He quickly added, "Well, other than Tiger Woods." In 1997, Woods took his 9iron and made a hole in one on the 16th, igniting a roar that roused Garrigus, then a 19-year-old behind the tee box for Woods' swing. " I w a s s tanding t w o people behind the ropes," Garrigus said, "and, I don't know, I might have been the first guy to throw a beer." He added: "That was pretty cool. That made me — if I didn't want to be a professional golfer right there, I wasn't going to be one." Watching from his home in Minneapolis, Mike Leonard was spurred by Woods' shot to plan his first visit to the tournament. He has come every year since 2000, bringing notes on all the players in the 132-man field. If the 16th hole has a conductor, it is Leonard. He had staked out his spot in the bleachers by 7:30 a.m. Friday, avoiding the hourlong lines that formed later. Soon he was leading chants of "Sexy Pants" for the sharpdressing Canadian player Graham DeLaet. With the arrival of Teater, Flores and Hank Kuehne, some fans placedbets expecting to see the golfing equivalent of the Milwaukee Brewers' bratwurst races. On Thursday, Charles G ibson, who w o rk s f o r Teater, raced Flores' caddie, Dan Gadberry. Gibson fell behind, and with Teater's permission he dropped the bag severalyards from the finish before sliding headfirst onto the green in a futile attempt to win. The race was caught on video andbecame a highlight on ESPN.
49ers Continued from B1 "With Kaepernick, it's like p ick your p oison," Hall o f Fame receiverJerry Rice said. "Are you going to try to shut down that pistol and not let him get outside, where you've got Frank Gore and LaMichael James going downhill? Then, Crabtree and Vernon Davis on the outside. I think the secondary of Baltimore, right there in the middle, is where they're going to get exposed. ... If you double team Crabtree, it's going to be Vernon Davis. If you get Crabtree one on one — for some reason
Ravens Continued from B1 The Ravens have 17 pass completions of at least 40 yards this season, six of them involving Smith. Sometimes, Smith runs deepjustto free up wideout Anquan Boldin or tight end Dennis Pitta or running back Ray Rice underneath, leaving Flacco a variety of viable targets. "It all depends," said Smith, t he speedy r e ceiver f r o m Maryland. "It's not like they say, ' Hey Torrey, just r u n straight down the field' all the time. Some of it i s schemewise to open other guys up. Against certain coverages, I have certain responsibilities. We do attack vertically. That's a strength ofours,and I'm one of the guys that they definitely use to do that." Combine all that with a San Franciscodefense that gave up 396 yards passing to Atlanta's Matt Ryan in the NFC title game, and it could add up to a very long night for the 49ers. "Joe Flacco, he's playing excellent football right now," former 49ers star receiver Jerry Rice said. "You've got Torrey Smith and also Anquan Boldin
Skiing Continued from B1 Like Crago, Shasta High
School (Redding, Calif.) junior Chase Layfield was having a good time on his trip to Bachelor, which he said was his first. "It's a g reat mountain. I like it a lot better than Mount Shasta," observed Layfield, 39th in the boys race. "Not getting much snow there. Dirt's starting to come up." One of L ayfield's Shasta High teammates, Rose Schreder,finished second to Bend's Brooke Kelley in the girls race and led her team to a thirdplace finish behind Bend and Summit. Schreder, a junior, was familiar with B achelor before this weekend, having traveled to Central Oregon frequently l ast s k i s e ason when snow wa s sparse in California. "It's pretty fun, because you
he's playing with a swagger right now that's unbelievable." Kaepernick has shown two drastically different styles in two postseason games. What he'll show the Ravens is any-
K aepernick only r a n t h e Gore, coming off his franball twice, instead handing off chise-record sixth 1,000-yard to his go-to guy, Gore, and the rushing season, ran for secNiners rallied from a 17-0 defi- ond-half touchdowns of 5 and cit for the biggest comeback in 9 yards in the comeback in his an NFC championship game. firstcareer postseason perfor"He's very good, he's very body's guess. mance with two TDs against In a 45-31 rout of the Pack- accurate," Ravens defensive the Falcons. He ha s t h r ee ers in the divisional round, coordinatorDean Pees said of touchdowns and 209 y ards Kaepernick ran for a q u ar- Kaepernick. "They've done a rushing during this postseaterback playoff r ecord 181 great job with putting him into son run. yards and tw o t ouchdowns a system and building a sysA balanced offense, indeed. "There's a l o t," C r abtree and also threw for 263 yards tem to make him successful, with two TD passes to Michael but to be able to throw the ball said. "I could go on talking Crabtree. deep you have to have guys about the talent that we have A week later at Atlanta, ev- that can run deep. Crabtree around here. On t h e t i g ht erything looked different in a and Vernon Davis and Randy ends, running backs, you have 28-24 win that sent San Fran- Moss can run deep." to remember we have three cisco to its first Super Bowl in And Gore can grind out people injured that played a 18 years. yards. major part in our offense. But
I would say that with all of these weapons, I don't think that you can go wrong." San Francisco's offensive line will have to do a better job than in a 16-6 loss at Baltimore on Thanksgiving night 2011, when the unit allowed the Ravens to match a franchise record with nine sacks. "We've seen enough film to kind of know what to expect, u nless they come up w i t h something different," center Jonathan Goodwin said. "But definitely a talented group up front, and that's what makes them a good defense. They try to do some things to confuse
on the outside, and passes over 18 yards. They targeted Torrey Smith 109 times. So they're not afraid to throw the ball deep. T he secondary of t h e S a n Francisco 49ers, they have had problems with the deep ball, so they can't let these guys run free." T he 4 9 er s k n o w thi s . Whether they ca n p r event Smith 8. Co. from breaking loose is another story. Rice is also a threat — he caught 61 passes for 478 yards during the regular season. "I think No. 1, you've got one (receiver) that's got track speed that will take the top off your defense, so he's going to draw some attention," San Francisco cornerback Carlos Rogers said. "Anquan is a very
previous 10 games with a torn right triceps. "They're going tobe up," San Francisco running back Frank Gore said. "Ray Lewis means a lot to that organization. He's been playing the game for a long time, he's probably the best at his position and guys love him."
physical guy. He doesn't go deep as much as Torrey, but he's got the ability to. He's just got that connection, strong
erslook silly and break yards. ... So everybody on our side of the ball has their hands full with those guys." O n the other side of t h e ball, the Ravens' defense will be poised to hitch their emotions to middle linebacker Ray Lewis for the final stage of his last ride into retirement. The
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"I think everyone who ski races is competitive," said Archuleta. And when more skiers are in the race, she added, "You just kind of end up skiing faster." — Reporter: 541-383-0393, amiles®bendbulletin.com.
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going to be a challenge with him, too. "We're challenged atevery position. The tight end in the red zone, he's got a connection, too. Ray Rice out of the backfield, people don't look at that, but when you break down film, he continues to make lineback-
juices.
37-year-old announced before Baltimore's first playoff game that he would quit when the Ravens ended their run, and since that time they've been playing their best football of the year. So has Lewis. He has a team-high 44 tackles during the playoffs after missing the
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don't know how they ski, and you don't know how different or how fast they're going to be from you, so it's just like a new e x perience," Schreder said about the opportunity to race against some new competition. One of the fresh faces — to S chreder, anyway — wa s Summit freshman Madison Archuleta, who finished just back of Schreder in f ourth place. Archuleta said she feels skiing in larger fields — between boys and girls, nearly 120 skiers participated in the inaugural O r e-Cal C l assic — helps stir up the competitive
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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SPECIALISTS
Record-setting pro resume. the only coach with wins in his first five postseasons SelectedoverRexRyan and several othersto takeoverthe Ravens in 2008after making his mark as Philadelphia's special teams coordinator.
J. Flacco 5 • 08
S. Koch 4• P
91 • DT
M. Oher
74 • RT 49ERS DEFENSE The league'sbest linebacking corps, features twoAff-Pros in Patrick Willis andNayorro Bowman.AldonSmith is considered alinebacker, but is a hybrid LB-DEandhe ledthe NFOwith19.5 sacks. Ahmad Brookscomesoffa spectacular secondhalf in Atlanta.
27• Ra J. Tucker 6• K
Field goals Jllstln
12• PR
Emdoldened wideout Totalcatches Regularseason(TDs)
WR Anqnan Boldin (4)
Regular season
Bofdin
TE Dennis
"- P>tta (7)
Anpnan Boldinhasbeen W
RB Ray " Rice(1)
sensational onevery route in thepostseason (16 catches, 7 13-yard average, 3 Tos) Powerful, versatile andcan outleap defenders for balls CBs will have adifficult time with the
4
Building dlocks
Regularseason(TDs)
Crabtree (9)
WR Mario Michael Crabtreehas Mannfngham(t) - 42 matured this seasonand becamea true No. 1receiver. Somehowfinds TE Vernon way to getwideopen several times Davis(5) a garn. He'sgoodafter thecatch, but needsbetter ball security; WR Randy Moss (3) —29 I fumbled atAtlanta in conference championship.
II
E. Reed
91• LB
20 • FS
52 • LB
RB Frank ....~l
Gore (1)
B. Pollard 31• SS
74 • LT
84 • WR
59 • LB
92 • OT
V. Davis 85 • TE
Free agents ~
99• La
77 • LG
T. Snggs
21• Ra
Production insidethe20-yard line, includespostseason:
B. Miller 49 • FB
4• P
mzaa m •
D. Akers 2• K
No ordinary Joe
Passingyds:3,817 (reg.)• 953 (postseason) Touchdowns. 22 (reg.) • 8 (postseason) Loss Y ARDS 299 232 382
356
8 Bye 9~
153
34I
11 ~
164
12 ~ 13 ~ 14 ~ 15 ~ 16 ~ 17 • 34
355 188 182 254 309
Production inside the20-yard line, includespostseason: No OFFENSE Fleld score Touchdowns goals 12.5%
A. Davis
RAVENS DEFENSE
76• RT
WPiz Q
187 234 147
e ~
24• Ca
32.8'/. • The mostphysical andfundamentally sound 7.1% DEFENSE front seventhat the49ers haveseenin the playoffs, led by Ray Lewis. Passrushers 33.3% • M. Crabtree Terrell Snggs,DEPaul Krugerand T. Ginn 19• KR Pernell McPheewill needhelp containing Kaepernfck, sowatch for frequent blitzes Armed and tatted 49ERS OFFENSE from thesecondary. Pass yds: 1,914 (reg.) • 496 (post.) The Ninershave, byfar,the bestrunning Touchdowns:10(reg.) • 3 (post.) back inFrank Gore,best running QBin W Win R Los s M Tie Colin Kaepernick,andbest runblocking, led by left guardMike lnpati and left WEEK TDSo YARDS tackleJoe Staley that the Ravenshave 1faced. Kaepernfckisn't just a threat to use rnick 2 his usain Bolt-style strides tobreakdown 3defenses. Hisarm is strong andaccurate, NOTE:Replaced 0 former starting and he isn't timid aboutletting go into tight QB Alex spots. 6 H 82 Smith who 7suffered a Touchdownpasses 8concussion dy distance i n Week10. 9 Bye YDS TDS 10 ~ 117 ll ~ 243 M9 ~ 7 l2 ~ 231 13 208 20-29 & 3 14 ~ 185 ~ 4 15 EZR~ 221 Flacco(30) R 16 o ~ 244
A. Lee
127% q
5~ 6~ 7~
P MoPhee
SP ECIALISTS
27.1'/ •
r ~
C. Graham
90 • OE
Field No score
~ Win ~ WEEK TOS 1~ 2 ~ 5~
A. Boone
C. Kaepernick 7 • QB
Touchdowns goals q 11.9% q
DEFENSE
Zoning in
59 • C
F. Gore
~ ss • I, Free agents I Waivers2
55 • LB
J. Goodwin
In the red
Team makeup
~
P. Kruger
M. lnpati
Blueprint for success Current 53-manroster Draft Trades1
D. Ellerbe H. Ngata
• s~ I
Regular season
WR Michael -.
R. Lewis
Trades1
Draft
000
Made • Missed o
Total catches
J. Staley R. Moss
50+•0 0
Golden receiver
C. Upshaw
PROJECTED STARTERS
Current 53 manroster
• 0• 0 0 0
4049•00 0• 0 00 0 00 00
29• Ca
"- Jones(1)
Team makeup
20 29 •• 0'I 0• OOO 30 39 • 0 • OOOO
Crabtree
C. Williams
k
WR Jacoby
smart, physical aoldin.
YARDS 1-19•
OB Joe Flacco will be seeing the fiercest defensehe's facedall seasonbecausethe Niners aremoreversatile than the Dpresented bythe Colts, BroncosandPatriots in the postseason.Flacco and his targets — WRs Anqnan Boldin andTorrey Smith, TE Dennis PittaanddoeverythingRBRay Riceshould beencouraged by what the Falcons a ccomplished in t ~ the first half. They found seamsand gaps everywhere,andthe 49ers' secondarymust be stingier this time.
ilr gf
WR Torrey "- Smith (8)
Field goals
RAVENSOFFENSE
J. Jones
Made 0 Missed 0
Jim Harbaugh Quarterbacked14 seasonswith four teams afterbeingselected inthe first round ofthe1987 draft bythe Bears. Wasthe 2011 NFLCoach of the Year asarookie, guiding the Niners to theconferencetitle game.
22 • CB
R. McDonald
A. Bonldin 81 • WR
20 29OO OOOOOO 30 39 OOOOOO OO 40-49 OOOOOO O OOOOP P 50+ Oppp
W W 24 L 7 T11
C. Rogers
R. Rice
Tucker
Career record (Reg.season)
55• LB
K. Osemele
V. Leach
I
Little dro
A. Brooks
90 • NT
D. Pitta 88 • TE
T. Smith 82• WR
• ' 58gt
t 53.0
53• La
J. Smith 94 • DT
OFFENSE
Flacco
Kaepernick(13) H
17 ~
276
40-49• IV|; ~ DI ~
282 l 31
CONF ~
~ 3 0
z4O
WO DIV ~ toNF ~
Total TDsin pa r entheses; incl udes postseason
SOURCESNational Football League, STATSLLC
www.lesschwab.com
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Halfback (see wing back, running back, up back, tailback, scat back): 1. The player who is carrying the ball. 2. Six positions Tim Tebow cannot play. Harbaugh (see Harbaugh Face): The last name of seemingly everyone on the field and in the stands at the Super Bowl. Harbaugh Face: 1. An intense grimace, as if one has endured excruciating pain by passing a kidney stone or seeing a field-goal attempt miss wide left. 2. Jim Harbaugh's standard expression. HarBowl:A terrible branding decision. Icing the kicker:A timeout meant to unnerve the opposing kicker by giving him an extra 30 seconds to ponder his deep-rooted feelings of professional inadequacy. Kaepernicking: A celebratory act that involves kissinga biceps and answering questions in a dull, dreary, monosyllabic fashion. Nickel (see dime, quarter, half-dollar, Sacagawea dollar):1. A defense that uses five defensive backs instead of four. 2. Five cents. Passer rating:Invented by the scientist who discovered the human body temperature is 98.6 degreesFahrenheit,this scale measures a quarterback's throwing ability, with t h e highest NFL score being 158.3. Play-action pass: A fancy way of s aying fake handoff; much like the quarter-behindthe-ear trick, this fools defenders regularly even after all these years. Quick count: Snapping the ball hurriedly after the offense is in formation. If children played in the NFL, the defenders would complain that they were not ready and demand a do-over. Read option: 1. An offensive scheme that calls for the quarterback to decide whether to keep or to pitch the ball, depending on what the defense is doing. 2. A class popular with football players at many Division I colleges. Red zone:The part of the couch cushion that used to be white before you dripped salsa on it and flipped it over. Replay review:An extra timeout, built in so fans can use the bathroom, when officials reexamine a call to be sure it is correct. Sam, Mike and Will: The names of the first men in football to play strong, middle and weakside linebacker. To avoid c onfusion, their coach named the positions after them, as in, "OK, today,you play where Sam did yesterday." Spread offense:The house with the best Super Bowl party menu, as in: "That guy has a killer spread offense. You ever taste his teriyaki wings?" Spike: Something more likely to have been done to your party punch than by someone in the end zone because jubilant acts after touchdowns are generally frowned upon by the NFL. Besides, today's players often want to keep the ball for t hemselves. They are worth money! Squib kick:A short kickoff in which the ball bounces severaltimes, then explodes. Super Bowl: A game of football played in fits and starts around a 12-minute concert and the broadcast of 137 highly anticipated commercials.
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Some experts have posited that it t akes about 10,000 hours of intense study to learn a language. Although the CBS pregame show for today's Super Bowl may seem that long, the reality is that fans hoping to be fluent in football by the kickoff do not have nearly that much time. As a reference, then, The New York Times offers this primer. Ball So Hard University:A small liberal arts college from which linebacker Terrell Suggs and other Ravens players may claim to have graduated. Known for it s p h ilosophy program, it competes in a league with the likes of Ball State University, Ball Don't Lie Institute of Technology and the School of Hard Knocks. Bubble screen: A short pass thrown with a long, sweeping motion, like the waving of a plastic wand filled with a soapy solution on a warm summer's day. Cadence: T he n o n sensical barking b y quarterbacks awaiting the snap, using mostly repetitive nouns to remind teammates of the play's basic instructions or just to sound in charge. Example: "Georgia! Georgia! Black dog! Black dog! Manning's not here! Neither is Brady! Hut!" Dead-ball foul:An infraction between plays. Not to be taken literally; all balls are dead.
eleb~at ion
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Postseason.414.5
Postseason
1-19 -
from squibkicks By Sam Borden
: 23 ' 22 DEFENSE Yardsallowed (avg.): 294.4 Passing R u shing
Guts and Gore
Ray Rice hasbeenthehub ofthe Ravens'offense throughout his career.Oneof his bestattributes is his ability to pick upyardageboth inside andoutside. He'sathreat to break longgains on runsor screen passes. Regnlarseason
Postseason.415.0
yARDS
Breaking down the lingo: What it all means,
Postseason.(50)
Postseason: (64)
~t.
Regular-season• Postseasonstats OFFENSE
Super BowlXLVIIfeatures aset of brothers knownaroundthe NFLasfierce competitors unafraid to makeabold move during the season.Unafraid to upset anyonewho stands in their way,John Harbaughfired his offensivecoachmidseason and Jim changedquarterbacks, movesthat factored in the recent surges. The Ravens'John and little brother Jim ofthe49erswill becomethe first siblings to square off from opposite sidelines when their teamsplay for the NFLchampionship. Both teamsrallied from halftimedeficits on theroad in the conferencechampionships to earnberths in the Super Bowl, which will be playedat theSuperdome in NewOrleans.
Total yards(avg.): 352.5 Passing
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
NHL ROUNDUP
Lone goal leads Bruins over Leafs The Associated Press TORONTO Chris Bourque had gone so long without a goal, he almost forgot what it felt like. B ourque, th e s o n o f former Bruins icon R ay Bourque, scored his first goal with Boston in a 1-0 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night. The 5-foot-8 B ourque crashed the net to stuff in a nifty angled pass from behind the net from Chris Kelly at 8 :54. Bourque's only other NHL goal was scored in December 2008 w hen he played for t h e Washington Capitals. "I kind of blacked out I was so excited," Bourque said. " I don't t h ink I ' v e scored an NHL goal in four years." The Bourques are the fifth father-son combination to play for the Bruins. Chris led the AHL in scoring in 2011-12 with 92 points for Hershey. Brother Ryan is currently playing for the Rangers' AHL farm team in Connecticut. S ince 2007-08, C h r i s B ourque has p l ayed 13 games for the Capitals, 20 for Pittsburgh, and seven for Boston. "It was nice to see him score that goal," Boston coach Claude Julien said. "That's what we've been talking about. We k n ow he's very capable of doing those kinds of things. The confidence he had — you could tell he was a different player. It was nice for him to get that monkey off his back and get the winning goal." Also on Saturday: Penguins.... . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 D evils... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 PITTSBURGH — Sidney Crosby and Chris Kunitz each had a goal and two assists, and Pittsburgh picked up its first home victory of the season, beating New Jersey. Canadiens.... . . . . . . . . . . . 6 S abres ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 M ONTREAL — R e n e Bourque and David D esharnais each scored twice to lead Montreal to a win over Buffalo. Avalanche.... . . . . . . . . . . . 3 O ilers .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 DENVER — P.A. Parenteau and Jamie McGinn scored goals3 minutes, 29 seconds apart in the second period to help Colorado rally past Edmonton. Rangers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Lightning.... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 TAMPA, Fla. — Rick Nash scored a g o-ahead goal early in the third period, and the New York Rangers beat Tampa Bay. F lyers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Hurricanes..... . . . . . . . . . . 3 PHILADELPHIA Claude Giroux and Danny Briere each had a goal and an assist to help Philadelphia beat Carolina. B lue Jackets.... . . . . . . . . . 4 R ed Wings..... . . . . . . . . . . 2 COLUMBUS , Ohi o — Artem Anisimov scored twice in the second period, and Steve Mason stopped 32 shots to lead Columbus past Detroit. C oyotes ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 S tars ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 GLENDALE, A r iz. — Mike Smith stopped 17 shots, and Phoenix was at its tight-checking best in a win over Dallas. D ucks.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 K ings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 A NAHEIM , Cali f. — Nick Bonino scored his third goal on a power play with 11:21 to play, and surging Anaheim beat Los Angeles in the first Freeway Faceoff of the season. Blackhawks..... . . . . . . . . . 3 F lames.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 C ALGARY, Alberta Marian Hossa scored the tying goal with 2.3 seconds left in th e t h ird, Patrick Kane added a goal in regulation then had the shootout winner as Chicago earned a win over Calgary. Predators..... . . . . . . . . . . . 2 S harks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 SAN JOSE, Calif. Craig Smith scored the lone goal in the shootout to help Nashville hand San Jose its first loss of the season.
PREP ROUNDUP
Portland Trail Blazers center J.J. Hickson, right, looks to shoot against Utah Jazz center Al Jefferson during the first quarter of Saturday night's game in Portland.
.@/lEI~
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Cougar nor ic team inishes irstatBachelor • Skiers leadMountain View boyssquad with a third- and afourth-place finish
azers e ac a azz The Associated Press PORTLAND — Portland's maligned group of reserves stepped up Saturday night, leading to one unusual scene in the Trail Blazers' locker room. Little-used guard Nolan Smith had a seasonhigh 13 points as the backups scored 28 points in all for their best total in more than a month, helping Portland to a 105-99 victory over the Utah Jazz. Afterward, when a crowd of TV cameras and reporters circled Smith's locker, teammate Wesley Matthews chided the second-year guard, who has played for only 169 minutes in 23 appearances this season. "Did L. A. switch lockers?" Matthews loudly asked, referring to the crowd that usually gathers for All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge. Smith got his share of playing time against the Jazz in part because Matthews sat out with a sore right ankle. "Wes is my big brother and he's the happiest guy in the locker room right now. He told me just to be myself and play basketball," Smith satd. Damian Lillard led the way with 23 points as the Trail Blazers salvaged the second half of back-to-back games between the division rivals. Utah beat Portland 86-77 on Friday night in Salt Lake City. J.J. Hickson added 21 points and 11 rebounds, and Nicolas Batum fell just shy of his third triple-double of the season with 12 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists. But it was Smith, as well as bench players Luke Babbitt and Will Barton, who received all the accoladesafterward. The Blazers led 8883 on Smith's reverse layup with 4:59 to go. He added a 3-pointer that made it 93-87, and Portland held off the Jazz the rest of the way. "We knew that with Wes out of the game tonight we were gonna need peopleto come in and step up," Lillard said. "I thought Luke did a good job of coming in and making shots and I though Nolan and Will were the keys to winning tonight." Randy Foye had 23points for the Jazz, who led by as many as 10 points in the third quarter. Lillard added eight assists in his 23rd game of the season with at least 20 points. Aldridge
NBA ROUNDUP finished with 18 points and 11 rebounds. In other games on Saturday: Cavaliers... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 Thunder.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 CLEVELAND — K y rie I r ving scored 35 points, including 13 in the final 2:52, and Cleveland stunned Oklahoma City. Knicks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Kings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 NEW YORK — Amare Stoudemire was 10 for 10 from the field for 21 points, and New York unleashed a 38-4 run on Sacramento in the first half and went on to its fourth straight victory. Bulls... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 Hawks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 ATLANTA — Luol Deng had 25 points and 14 rebounds, and short-handed Chicago used its stifling defense to shut down Atlanta. Rockets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Bobcats.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 HOUSTON — James Harden had 21 points, 11 rebounds and 11 assists for his first career triple-double, leading Houston to the victory over Charlotte. Timberwolves..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 Hornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 MINNEAPOLIS — D a nt e C u nningham scored a season-high 18 points, Nikola Pekovic added 14 and Minnesota snapped a six-game losing streak.
Spurs ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 96 Wizards ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86 SAN ANTONIO — Tony Parker scored 19 points, Danny Green added 15 and Tiago Splitter had 12 for San Antonio (38-11) in its victory over Washington. Bucks.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107 Magic ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 MILWAUKEE — Monta Ellis had 21 points and 11 assists as Milwaukee handed Orlando its ninth straight loss. Warriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113 Suns.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 OAKLAND, Calif. — Stephen Curry r eturned after missing two games with an ankle injury and scored 19 of his 29 points in the second half, helping Golden State beat Phoenix.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PST
Eastern Conference d-Miami d-Newyork d-Chicago Brooklyn Indiana Atlanta Milwaukee Boston Philadelphia Detroit Toronto Orlando Cleveland Charlotte Washington
W 2rj
30 2rj
28 28 26 25 23 20
L 14 15 18 19 19 20 21 23 26
18 2 rj 17 30
14 14 11 11
33 34 35 35
W 38 35 34 30 30 30 26 26 24 21 20 18 17 16 15
L 11 12 14 16 17 18 22 23 23 26 27 26 32 32 33
Western Conference
d-Sait Antonio
d-OklahomaCity d-LA. Clippers Memphis GoldenState Denver Utah Houston Portland LA. takers Dallas Minnesota Sacramento Phoenix NewOrleans d-diwsion leader
Pct GB 674 667 617 2 5rj6 3 5rj6 3 565 4t/r 543 51/2 500 71/2
435 10t/r
383 13 362 14 2rjB 17 2rj2 17'Ir 239 19t/r 239 19t/r
Pct GB 776 745 2 70B 3 t/r 652 6 t/r
63B 7 625 7'Ir
13, Barton3-61-2 7.Totals 38-7519-28105. ut'ah 23 23 21 32 — 99 Portland 24 19 29 33 — 105 3-Poittt Goal— s Utah 8-19 (Foye6-12, Bttrks 1-t
Ma Williams1-3, Millsap0-1, Tinsley 0-2), Portland 10-1B (Lillard 3-5, Smith 2-3, Batttm 2-4, Babbitt 2-4, Claver1-1, Baiton0-1). FouledOttt—None. Rebounds —Utah39 (Milsap B), Portland61(Aldridge, Hicksoit 11).Assists—Utah24 (Tittsley 6), Portland 25 (Batttm 9). Total Foul— s Utah 22, Portland17. Technical— s Carroll. A—20,376(19,9BOi.
Spurs 96, Wizards 86 WASHINGTON (86) Webster5-91-214, Nene5-121-411, Okafor1-6 0-2 2,Wall 10-221-121, Temple 1-40-0 2,Crawford 3-7 0-0 6,Price1-73-45,Seraphin1-4 2-44, Vesely 0-1 0-0 0, Ariza4-9 0-0 10, Singleton5-7 0-0 11. Totals 36-88 8-17 86. SAN ANTONIO (96) Leonard3-93-310, Duncan3-6 2-2 B,Splitter 5-B 2-212, Parker9-151-219, Green6-91-1 15, Diaw 3-5 2-2 9,Jackson2-5 0-0 4,Neal3-7 0-0 7,Blair 1-4 0-02, DeColo1-30-02, Bonner2-50-04, Mills0-2 4-4 4. Totals 38-78 15-1696. Washington 17 9 30 30 — 86 SanAntonio 27 24 17 28 — 96
542 1 1t/r
531 12 511 13 447 16 426 17 409 17'Ir 347 21 333 21t/r 313 22t/r
Saturday's Games Chicago93,Atlanta 76 NewYork120,Sacramento 81 Clevelattd115,OklahomaCity110 Hottstoit109, Charlotte95 Minnesota115,NewOrleans B6 SanAntonio 96,WashingtonB6 Milwattkee107,Orlando9B Portland105,Utah99 GoldenState113, Phoenix93
Today's Games LA. Clippers at Boston,10a.m. LA. takers aiDetroit, 10a.m. Miami atToronto,11a.m. Monday's Games Orlandoat Philadelphia, 4p.m. LA. ClippersatWashington, 4 p.m.
ChicagoatIndiana, 4p.m. Detroit atNewYork, 4.30p.m. Charlotte aiMiami, 4.30p.m. Portlandat Minnesota,5 p.m. Dallas atOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Sacramentoat Utah,6p.m.
Summaries Saturday's Games
Blazers 105, Jazz99 UTAH(99)
Bucks107, Magic 98 ORLANDO (98)
Harkless7-165-919, Nicholson3-30-06, Vttcevic10-16 0-020, Moore3-14 0-0 7, Redick5-163-4 15, Jones 3-72-5 B, Ayon1-2002, Smith 2-70-04, Tttrkogltt 1-20-0 2,McRoberts2-40-2 6, O'Qtiinn 4-7
1-29. Totals41-9411-2298. MILWAUKEE (107) Mbah a Mottte4-7 0-0 B, llyasova6-13 2-2 16, Sanders7-15 3-417, Jennings8-16 2-220, Ellis 716 6-7 21,Dttitleavy 4-9 0-011, Dalembert0-1 0-0 0, Heitson4-71-5 9,Daniels 0-0 0-0 0, Udrih2-4 0-0 5,
Udoh0-20-00. Totals 42-9014-20107. Orlando 22 26 19 31 — 98 Milwaukee 31 21 27 28 — 107
Knlcks 120, Kings 81 SACRAMENTO (81) Garci a 0-3 0-0 0,Salmons 1-5 0-0 3,Cousins 10-14 5-525, I.Thomas3-13 0-0 8, Evans3-101-2 7, Thompson2-4 0-0 4, Fredette6-8 0-014, Hayes 0-00 0 0, Thornton1-50 0 3 Robinson4-83-411, Outla w 2-62-46.Totals 32-7611-15 81. NEWYORK(120) Shttmpert2-61-2 6,Anthony4-12 0-0 9, Chandler 4-B3-411, Kidd2-5005, Felton3-B0 07, Smith 916 0-0 25,Stottdemire10-t01-1 21,Prigioni 1-1 0-0 3, Novak5-70-015, K.Thomas5-60-011, Whitet-t 0-2 2, Copeland1-5 2-25, Brewer0-1 0-20. Totals 47-86 7-13 120.
Sacramento New York
Cavaliers 115, Thunder 110 OKLAHOMA CITY(110) Dttrant 8-2113-1732, Ibaka7-12 4-41B, Perkins 3-60-0 6,Westbrook12-224-52B,Sefolosha0-20-0 0, Martin6130015, Collison1-1002, Liggitts00 0-00, PJottes0-00-00, Thabeet2-30-04, Jackson 2-30-05. Totals41-8321-26110. CLEVELAND (115) Gee 2-42-3 6, Thompson4-13 3-4 11,Zeller 381-1 7, Irving 12-238-B35, Waiters4-13 3-412, Speights10-151-1 21, Livingston1-20-0 2, Miles 5-7 2-216, Ellittgton 2-5 0-0 5.Totats 43-90 2023 115. OklahomaCity 25 3 2 21 32 — 110 Cleveland 23 29 24 39 — 115
Bulls 93, Hawks76 CHICAGO (93)
Rockets 109, Bobcats 95 CHARLOTTE (95) Kidd-Gilchrist 1-5 2-2 4, Adrien 1-4 2-2 4, Biyombo0-2 0-0 0, Walker10-232-2 24, Henderson 5-8 5-5 15,Taylor6-81-2 15, Sessions5-99-1120, Haywood0-30-00, Thomas1-3 0-0 2, Gordon4-14 0-011. Totals 33-79 21-24 95. HOUSTON (109) Parsons 9-17 3-3 24, Patterson10-122-2 24, Asik B-133-6 t9, un 4-101-1 9, Harden6-11B-9 21, Aldrich 2-41-2 5, Dougla3-11 s 0-0 7 Delfino 0-200 0,Morris0-2 0-0 0.Totals 42-82 18-23 109. Charlotte 27 24 26 18 — 95 Houston 32 30 17 30 — 109
Tlmberwolves 115, Hornets 86 NEWORLEANS(86)
Ma.Williams 7-130-015, Millsap 7-16 4-418, Jefferson6-130-012, Tiitsley 2-B2-26, Foye 7-15 3-4 23, Favors 4-7 1-2 9, Bttrks 1-6 2-2 5, Kaitter 0-7 0-0 0, Carroll 5-5 1-2 11. Totals 39-90 1316 99.
Amintt 0-22-22, Davis6-126-718, Lopez7-102216, Vasttttez 3111-1 7, Mason1-4 00 3, Anderson 2-8 3-4 8,Henry2-52-3 6, Rivers2-6 5-B9, Miler 1-2002,Smiih2-4226,Roberts2-62-27,Thomas 0-0 2-2 ZTotals 28-70 27-33 86.
Battrm4-72-3 12,AldridgeB-1B2-6 18, Hicksott 6-11 9-1121, LiIlard 9-t 72-2 23, Claver1-4 0-03, Babbitt 2-5 2-2 8,Leonard0-0 0-0 0, Smith5-7 1-2
Kirilenko 4-73-6 12,Wiliams1-3 3-4 5, Pekovic 5-10 4-5 14, Rttbio 3-5 3-4 9, Ridnottr 3-8 0-0 7,
PORTLAND (105)
2-70-0 5, Stiemsma 3-4 2-2 B,Gelabale 4-5 2-211, Amttttdson4-5 0-2 B,Johnson3-30-06. Totals 4577 20-29 115. New Orleans Minnesota
MINNESOTA (115)
Cunningham 9-9 0-0 1B,Shved4-11 3-4 12, Barea
Deng 10-212-2 25, Butler 6-16 3-3 16, Gibson 9-141-319, Robinson8-160-0 20, Hamilton 3-14 0-0 6, Belinelli1-B 35 5, MTeagtte1-2 0-0 2,Radmanovi c0-20-00.Totals38-93 9-1393. ATLANTA (76) Stevenson1-60-0 2, Smith 9-160-319, Horford 7-180-014, J.Teagtte 5-114-416, Korver3-61-1 10, Pargo0-60-00, Jenkins2-31-2 5, Johnson3-8 2-5 8, Tolliver1-2 0-0 2,Morrow0-3 0-0 0,Scott 0-00-0 0. Totals 31-79 8-15 76. Chicago 24 19 26 24 — 93 Atlanta 17 27 16 16 — 76
Warriors 113, Suns93 PHOENIX (93)
Tucker5-72-212, Scola3-113-4 9, Gortat2-7 0-04, Dragic3-105-713, Dttdley5-9 4-416, Beasley 10-23 3-324, Marshall1-1 0-0 2, Brown2-61-4 5, Morris 3-70-06,Johnson0-3 0-0 0,Zeller0-1 0-00, Garrett 1-10-0 z Totals 35-8618-24 93. GOLDENSTATE(113) Bames9-11 3-421, Lee6-16 4-516, Bogttt 5-9 1-411, Cttrry11-201-1 29,Thompson6-14 3-317, Biedrins 0-00-0 0,Green0-3 0-0 0, Jack3-9 0-06, Landry3-32-3B,Jefferson 1-1 0-02, Ezeli 0-10-00, Bazemor e1-20-03,Jenkins0-00-00.Totals45-89 14-20 113. Phoenix 29 23 22 19 — 93 Golden State 26 2 23 3 32 — 113
Bulletin staff report M OUNT BA C H E L OR — Mountain View's Imran Wolfenden and Sam King took third and fourth in the nordic skiing boys division, respectively, and the Cougars won the relay race en route to a first-place finish with 19 points at an Oregon Interscholastic Ski R acing Association freestyle race. T he Cougars beat o u t second-place South Eugene by 15 points, followed by
Eugene's Sheldon (60 points) and Summit (62). The Storm's Alex Martin took first-place honors for the boys with a time of 12 minutes, 41 seconds, on the 4,800-meter course, while Sisters' Devon Calvin came in fifth. In the girls' event, Sage H assell tied fo r t h i r d t o lead three top-10 Mountain View placers — i ncluding Tia Hatton and Grace Cole, who finished sixth and seventh, respectively — but the Cougars were edged out in the relay by 11 seconds by South Eugene. The Axemen took first, six points ahead of Mountain View. In other Saturday action: WRESTLING
Fleming, Sperling pace
Ravens MILWAUKIE Ridgeview took 17 wrestlers to the seven-team Milwaukie Tournament, and 15 found their way to th e p odiums of their respective weight classes. Boomer F l eming and Connor Sperling l ed the way for the Ravens by finishing first at 182 and 220 pounds, respectively, to help Ridgeview place second as a team with 120 points. South Albany wo n t h e t o u rnament with 152 points. Calvin Rodman took second at 132 pounds, while Tanner Boat-
man (106 pounds), Cooper Shaw (132), Cohen Merritt (145) and Brandon Hanson ( 195) each finish third i n their brackets. Buffs take eighth in Cottage Grove COTTAG E GR OV E Paced by t h i r d -place showings by Bryce Vincent
(113 pounds) and Miguel Vasquez (132), Madras finished eighth with 84 points at th e 3 6 - team C o t tage Grove Invitational. Jared DuPont took fourth at 120
pounds for the White Buffaloes, while Ian Oppenlander finished fifth at 106 and Miguel Sevilla took sixth at 285. Madras returns to the mat on Tuesday, when the White Buffaloes visit La Pine for a dual meet. Anglen wins at Heppner HEPPNER — At the 17team Heppner invite, Culver f inished seventh w it h 8 9 points thanks in part to the performance of Bolten Anglen, who took first at 132 pounds. Kyle Belanger took third at 152, while Levi Vincent (138 pounds), Juan Diaz (152) and Mitchell Adams ( 182) each placed fifth i n their weight classes. Wyatt R ufener finished sixth a t 160, and Jordan Henson did the same at 220. Culver hosts a pre-district event n e xt Saturday. GIRLS BASKETBALL T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . 48 P aisley... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1 The host Saints outscored the Broncos 21-8 in the second quarter and held off a late rally to pick up a Mountain Valley League win, improving Trinity Lutheran to 10-9 overall, 6-6 in league play and into fourth place in the conference, within striking distance of a potential playoff berth. Emily Eidler led the way for the Saints, pouring in 20 points to go along with 12 rebounds and f our blocks, w h il e K a t ie Murphy added 19 p oints. Trinity Lutheran heads to Prineville on Wednesday to take on the Crook County freshman team. BOYS BASKETBALL P aisley... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1 T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . 38 A fter e r asing a ni n e p oint h a lftime d e ficit t o even things up at 3 4 l ate in the fourth quarter, the Saints had a chance to earn a Mountain Valley League win with less than 30 seco nds remaining. But t h e final shot did not go Trinity Lutheran's way, sending the game into overtime, where the Broncos outscored the host Saints 7-4 to get the victory. Tyler Dunn and Gabe P hillis scored 11 an d 1 0 points, respectively, for the Saints, and Nate Carpenter grabbed 10 rebounds. Trinity Lutheran (1-18 overall, 0-12 MVL) visits Gilchrist on Friday.
PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketball Saturday's results Class1A Mountain Valley League
en Cutting,NE,16.16.T3,ClaraHoitsinger, A,16.24. T3, SageHassel, MV,16.24.5,Natalie Mosman,SE,
17.03. 6,Tia HaIton, Mtt 17.15.7,GraceCole, MtI 17.17. T8,SophieSmith, PH,17.18.TB,AnneRamey,SE,17.1B.10,GenevieveBrandt SE,17.19.
Relay times 1, south Eugene,tz30. 2,
Mountainview, 1241. 3, North Eugene, 1248. 4, PAISLEY (41) Martin McKay 1B O'Corritor Ashland,13.33. 5,Phoenix,19.07. t0, walton 6,Jones5, wamplerz Totals16 8-11 41. TRINITYLUTHERAN(38) — TylerDttnn11, Alpine skiing G. Phillis10, L Phillis 7, Nihei 4,Carpenter4, AkiSaturday's results yama 2,AtriIp, Law,Kruger, C.Kitattss, D. Knattss, OSSAOre-Cal Classic Olano.Totals 163-6 38. at Mt. Bachelor Paisley 11 15 2 6 7 — 41 Giant slalom Trinity Lutheran 6 1 1 7 1 0 4 — 38 Three-point goals Paisley. McKay,Trinity Girls Lutheran. G. Philis 2, L Philis. Teams (top three) Bend 6.13.74,Summit 6.37.77,Shasta6.45.26. Top 10 individuals (combined A and B Girls basketball runs) — 1, Brooke Kelley, Bend,ZOO.OB. 2, Rose Saturday's results Schreder,Sha,Z04.19. 3, Kiki NakamttraKoyama, Bend,2.05.27.4,Madison,Archttleta, Sttm,2.07.7z Class1A 5, ShelbyCutter, Bend,Z09.39. 6, Natalie Merrill, Mountain Valley League sItm, ztz28. 7,Luciacharlton, Bend,z12.5B.8, JojoBond,Sttm,z13.76.9,Jesse stevens,Red, PAISLEY(41) —TessO'Leary19, Vickerman9, 215.B1.10,camiBenson, sis, z16.23. J. 0Leary 6,Arrington5, Lindsay2, Norris. Totals 15 11-17 41. Boys TRINITYLUTHERAN (48) Emily Eidler 20, Teams (top three) Bend 6.03.49,Summit Mttrphy19,Carpenter5,Cowait2,Martin Z Sample, 6.03.81,Redmond6.3B.97. Glift, Dehm, Ho.Totals 22 2-448. Top 10 (combined A and B runs) — 1, Paisley 10 8 9 1 4 — 41 KeenanSeidel, Bend,1.56.23. 2,Jared Schiemer, T rinity Lutheran 1 2 2 1 9 6 — 4 8 Sttm, 1.59.33. 3, Thomas Wimberly, Sttm, Three-pointgoals — Paisley.None,Trinity Ltt2.00.62. 4,Mitchell Cutter, Bend,2.03.29. 5, Mattheran.EidlerZ thew Scheafer,Bend,2.03.97. 6, CharlieStttermer, 2.04.B6.7,samuelNelson, Bend,z05.64. 8, Kevi t panton, Sttm,Z06.65. 9, Javier Colton, Bend, Nordic skiing 2.07.00. 10,JackPepper,SItm,2.07.9B. Saturday's results Oregon Interscholastic Ski RacingAssociation Freestyle at Mt. Bachelor 4,800 meters
Boys Team scores Mountain View19,South Eugene 34,sheldott 60,summit6z
Top10 — 1,AlexMartin, Sttm,1241. 2,Trevor Merrifield,SE,13.1z 3,ImraitWolfenden,MV,13.26. 4, Sam King, MV,13.3Z 5,DevonCalvin, Sis,13.5B. 6, DylanGilespie,MV,14.18. 7,AdiWolfendeit, MV, 14.30. B,Gabriel Wihtol,SE,14.37.9, DakotaThornton, MV,14.38.10,LangdoitJttnge,Shel,15.04. Relay times 1, Mountain View,10.35. 2, South Eugene, 11.30. 3, Sheldon, 11.47. 4, Sttmmit, 11.53.
Girls Team scores South Eugene 21, Mountain View 27,NorthEugene4B,Ashl and61,Phoenix9B. Top10 — 1,Phacelia Cramer,SE,15.14.2, Hel-
Wrestling Saturday's results Milwattkie Tournament At Milwattkie HighSchool Team scores —SouthAlbany152, Ridgeview 120, Silverton114, Milwattkie107,CrescentValley 90, SouthSalem84, Franklin 47.
winners andtopRidgeview stnishers
106 1, TannerStones, SS,3, TannerBoatmait, RV, 6,TannerStewart, RV.113 — 1, Jasiah Williams, F, 4,TrentPickett, RV.120 — 1, Christ Morgan, SA.126 1, Rattl Villareal, SS.132 — 1, IzaakTobin, S, 2, Calvin Rodman, RV,3,
CooperShaw,RV.138 —1, AdrianLyons-Lopez, SA. 145 1, NaveneBinder, F, 3, CohenMerritt, RV. 152 1, Eric Lippi, M, 5,VaughnRobinson, RV,6, Alvaro Jimenez, RV .160 — 1, RobertAkil, M, 4, Chase Wolford, RV,5, Luke Httntiitgton, RV. 170 1, Randy Stocker,S.182 1, Boomer Fleming,RV,5, SeanHancock, RV.195 1, Clay Cisphan, M, 3, Brandoit Hansoit, RV. 220 — 1, ConnorSperling, RV.285 — 1, Camryit Clokey, S,5, BrianChavez,RV.
IN THE BACI4 ADVICE (6 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5
Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Archeology films kick off Friday Travel to Greece, Namibia, Indonesia or other locales around the globe through the
upcoming ArchaeologyFest Film Series, coming for four nights this month to Central
Oregon Community Collegein Bend. The series contains the best films from the
Archaeology Channel's 2012 International Film and Video Festival. The films range from a look into a breed of Navajo sheep to the fate of Beijing's history amid rapid development to the tomb of Egyptian pharaoh Ramesses the Second. The screenings take place Friday and Saturday, and Feb.15-16 starting at 7:30 p.m. in COCC's Boyle Education Center. They last about two hours. Admission each night is $6, with tickets available at the
Courtesy Brundage Mountain
Cory Whitney blazes a trail through fresh powder snow near the top of Brundage Mountain's Bluebird Express lift. The McCall, Idaho, ski resort gets more than 300 inches of annual snowfall, drawing a regular crowd of weekend skiers and snowboarders from Boise, 107 miles south.
door. Contact: filmfest© archaeologychannel.org or www.archaeology channel.org/eventsguide/archaeologyfestfilm-series-guide.
Immunizations needed soon
Brundage
McCall
+ — Mountain
Council
Children who are
missing required immu-
Resort
Donn lly
Cambri
nizations will not be able to attend school or child care starting Feb. 20,
By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
Cas ade
Midvale
according to the Oregon Immunization Program.
Weiser
State law requires that all children in public and private schools, preschools, Head Start and certified childcare facilities have up-todate documentation of their immunizations, or have a religious or medical exemption. Children with incomplete immunizations will receive a letter in the next couple of weeks letting them know what is missing. Deschutes County Health Services lmmunization Coordinator Heather Kaisner says, "The goal is to make sure children in our
• With ski areas, a hockeyrink and plenty of festivities, McCall is an endlesswinter playground
New Meadows
OREGON
McCALL, Idaho — The run was called "Hotshot," and the light powder snow shooting off the tails of my skis made me feel like one. April Russell
Payette
IDAHO
I
and Cory Whit-
Ontario 0~
P'1 JL -«}+
Nyssa
McCall
IOAHO
ampa
l
~~ oise Greg Cross/The Bulletin
. ra
es
community are protected against serious
diseases that caneasily spread in a school environment if children aren't fully immunized." Contact: www. healthoregon.org/imm, 800-723-3638; or, in Deschutes County, contact: www.deschutes. org/immunizations or 541-322-7400.
Kids: Enter your Mini PPP logo Local children are invited to submit designs for consideration for the 2013 Kid's Mini Pole Pedal Paddle logo contest. This year's race will take place May19. The winning logo will
NO R THWEST TRAVEL
n ey, both o f nearby McCall, Ne x t week: Joshua Tree were l e ading National Park me through 5 inches of freshly fallen snow at Brundage Mountain, a lovely family ski resort in southwestern Idaho. From just below the 7,600-foot summit of the Lakeview Chair, a spectacular panorama spread before us. The mile-high town of McCall, its population less than 3,000, stretched for a couple of miles along the south shore of Payette Lake. Beyond, to the south, snow blanketed the farmlands of the Long Valley. "The Lakeview Chair opened in 2007," Russell told me. "It only serves four named trails — Kickback, Springboard, Dropline and this one. But in typical McCall style, it serves about 36 unnamed runs." As if to demonstrate, my companions swerved offthe main course and led me through a grove of widely spaced pines into a hidden powder stash. We rode the untracked blanket of white for the balance of the 800 vertical feet to the bottom of the lift. A day earlier, snow conditions would have made a similar foray more challenging. As more than a week had passed since the previous storm, the slopeswere closely groomed, hard-packed "corduroy" that begged for sharpened edges. The overnight snowfall, however, had added the dimension that draws grateful powder hounds north 107 miles from Boise, Idaho's thriving state capital. Annual snowfall here, after all, regularly exceeds 300inches.
The call of McCall John Gottberg Anderson i For The Bulletin
"Wintery Wizardry," built roadside on Third Street in McCall, was named "most photogenic" in the 2013 Idaho Snow Sculpting Championships. Featuring a children's slide through the wizard's head, it was one of many highlights of the 10-day McCall Winter Carnival.
My visit to Idaho coincided with the start of the 10-day McCall Winter Carnival, an annual event since 1924. (Today is the final day) See McCall/C4
appear on raceT-shirts for participants. The contest is for children in first to sixth grades. Entries should
be drawn on white paper and should include the following information: U.S. Bank Kid's Mini Pole Pedal Paddle, Bend, Oregon, 2013, MBSEF, and the artist's signature. The picture can include activities of the race. Onthe back, children should include
their name, age,grade, teacher, school, phone number and email. All entries must be
received by 5 p.m. on Feb. 15 at: Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, 563 S.W. 13th St., Suite 201, Bend, OR 97702. Contact: 541-388-0002
or molly©mbsef.org. — From staff reports
At Great Ring Meltdown, catharsisfor the divorced By David Jasper The Bulletin
If you're recently divorced, Valentine's Day is probably not the holiday for you. However, if you haven't chucked your wedding ring in the nearest river, you may just fall in love with — or at least get fired up about — The Great Ring Meltdown. The Feb. 8 event (see "If you go") is the brainchild of Tumalo artist and Central Oregon Community College professor Jim Dailing, a sculptor and jewelry maker who specializes in designing custom wedding
rings. About a year after his 1999 divorce, Dailing was puttering around in his studio when he
If yougo What:The Great Ring Meltdown When:7 p.m. Friday Where:Artist Jim Dailing's studio; address given at registration
Cost:$30 Contact:www.jimdailing.
com, jimdailing©mac.com, or 503-481-1323 pulled open a drawer to find his old wedding ring staringback at him. "Most of the bad energy was gone,butbeing who Iam and doing what I do, I'm not going to give it to somebody, I'm not
going to take it to a pawn shop. So I thought, 'I'm going to melt this sucker down."' "It was just the natural thing to do," Dailing says. "I'm melting gold and silver and things down all the time. But what was interesting, and something I had no awareness of or planning for, is it just gave me this sense of closure." Dailing, since remarried, says his first wife had fallen in love with someone else. He shrugs and says, "It happens. But because I'd had no control — I lost my house, the dog, my wife, all these things — (melting the ring) just gave me a sense of control over this time that I'd had no control over." SeeRings/C3
Submitted photo
Jewelry designer Jim Dailing works in his Tumalo workshop in this undated photograph. Dailing will host The Great Ring Meltdown, during which participants can melt down old rings and possibly shed old relationship baggage, on Friday.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
M I I ESToNE +
Formsfor endadementw,eddtnd anniversartrorbirthdatr announcements areavailableat TheBulletin, 1777sw chandierAvev send orbtr emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
en olli' ome oes romsea os inin
BIRTHDAY
Flint Lottie Flint, of Redmond, will celebrate her 100th birthday with an open house reception hosted by her children Saturday,Feb. 9,from 1-5p.m. at 4553 W. state Highway 126, Redmond. Friends and family are invited to attend. Ms. Flint wa s b orn Feb. 11, 1913, in W i llow C reek, Mont. She married Russell Flint and worked as a homemaker. They were married 79 years, until his death in 2011. She has three children, Jo Copenhaver, of Redmond, Charlotte Holland, of Canby,
P,' . S~
By Stacy Chandler The News k. Observer
(Raleigh, N.C.)
Lottie Flint and Fred, of Pony, Mont.; six g randchildren; a n d s e v en great-grandchildren. Ms. Flint has lived in Central Oregon for 55 years.
ENGAGEMENT .s J
1
'd'
r
4
Amy Belasenand Steven Draheim
Belasen —Draheim Amy Belasen and Steven Draheim, both of Bend, plan to marry Oct. 12 at Rock Springs Ranch in Bend. T he future b r ide i s t h e daughter of Alan and Susan Belasen, of Voorheesville, N.Y. She is a 2001 graduate of Voorheesville High School and a 2005 graduate of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where she studied English. She works as the senior mar-
keting manager for Northview Hotel Group and is a published author. The future groom is the son of Don Zygutis, of Bend, and Sally Motley, of Fossil. He is a 1991 graduate of Bend High School, attended N o rthern Arizona U n iversity, w h ere he studied education, and is a 1994 graduate of Western Culinary Institute in Portland, where he s t udied culinary arts. He is the owner and chef of Barrio in Bend.
ANNI V ERSARY
RALEIGH, N.C. — When 10-year-old Kelly Berg first told her f riends about the seven-month c r oss-country family RV trip her mom was planning, the response was: "Is your mom crazy?" But that quickly gave way to a little bit of envy when they heard the details: Kelly is spending the second half of fifth grade traveling with her mom and 7-year-oldbrother, Anton, to national parks, historic sites, factories and museums in 48 states to learn about America firsthand. Their mom, Brenda Berg, is driving uForrest," the family's 32-foot-long RV, down 17,000 miles of highway on a quest to give her kids the kind of education that can come only f rom experience. Also o n board is Marina Kranjec,a 19-year-old exchange student from Sweden. Berg's husband, Christer, will join parts of the journey when his workload allows. It's a full house and an even fuller schedule. When presented with a map of the U.S. to use as a wish list, Kelly and Anton marked about 400 places they wanted to see. Together, the family pared the route to about 90 stops. The explorers left Raleigh, N.C., a few days after Christmas, heading first to Florida and getting used to life on the road. The route won't take them home again until late summer, in time for Kelly to start middle school — but that doesn't mean they'll be out of touch. The children, who attended Stough Elementary in Raleigh and are registered as homeschoolers for this half of the academicyear,make frequent blog posts on a website created for the trip. Skype video calls allow Kelly and Anton to share what they learn on the road with their Stough classmates and to sit in on science lessons and other events going on back at school. uA lot of kids don't get to do this," said Kelly, already looking comfortable on the RV's
4g(~sr 's,va ''gt *
l.
-
~
e
Brenda Berg pack the family RV at the Bergs' home Raleigh, N.C., in preparation for a crosscountry trip. The family is partnering with First Bookto deliver books to underprivileged kids across the U.S. Travis Long Raleigh News 8 Observer
sofa the day before the trip began. uSo it's really cool that I get to do this." Before the Bergs left Raleigh, they took the RV to the school to show to Kelly and Anton's classmates. "We said to each and every one of them, 'We want you to be part of our trip, we want you to go on our trip with us,"' Brenda Berg said. uI can't wait to spend this time with my kids, and it's about us, but I also want them to understand that everything we do is about more than just us. I want them to understand that they're doing this on behalf of other kids who can't." The school was «unbelievably supportive" of the trip, Berg said. "From the first minute we even mentioned it, it was like, 'Great, how can we be apartofit?'" Teachers and administrators at Stough were happy to help, principal Cheryl Stidham said, because the trip fits right in with the school's emphasis on educationthat reaches beyond classroom walls. "Many students never have an opportunity to get outside of Raleigh," she said, uand so I thought this may be a real opportunity for the children at Stough to see the country through the eyes of one of their classmates." Berg hopes the j ourney both tightens the family and expands its horizons. uI hope the kids will just get a better understanding of our
country," she said. "They've been abroad, they've been to a lot of places, they've been on a lot of airplanes. But they've never seen our country by the road, and really how massive and how interesting and how diverse." To explore that diversity, Kelly and Anton each are interviewing at least one adult t hey meet each day. T h e question Kelly chose to ask was "What do you love about America, and what is the one thing you w ould change?" Anton asks, «If you could live in one book — fact or fiction — what would it be?" His question stems from the love of books he and his sister share, and another aim of the trip is to share that love of reading with other children. The Bergs have partnered with nonprofit First Book to donate books to schools in need along the way. Friends and family on their route also pitched in with their own book drives before the Bergs even hit the road. Between the books and the chronicles of the family's travels online, Berg, 40, hopes to open children's eyes to all the opportunity America has to offer. uI've been to all 50 states. I traveled the country in the back of my parents' car" as a child, she said. uIt changed the way that I live my life completely. I'm a first-generation college-goer, an entrepreneur. I believe firmly that it's be-
cause of my experiences understanding the scope of this country and understanding the diversity of the country, and I'm hopingthatother kids might get that bug and want to go outside of their own comfort zone." S he's c o mfortable w i t h travel, and even with driving an RV that stretches to 50 feet long when the family's car is hitched to the back. But that doesn't mean this adventure was an easy decision. She left her job leading Scandinavian Child International, the children's product distributor she started in 2003. She plans to stay involved as a member of the board, but asa "m ore-thanfull-time entrepreneur," she said, uI'm gone." "I've done a lot of really hard things," she said. "This is by far going to be the hardest thing I'veever done. But I'm ready for the challenge." One thing that buoys mom Brenda Berg is the reaction of people — friends and strangers alike — when she tells them aboutthetrip. "Almost every single person I've talked to has been supportive of it, and excited about it, wishing they could go on it, wanting to contribute, wanting to be part of it," she said, uand that's powerful." But most powetful is the response from people with older children, who Berg said invariably tell her, «'You will never regret it.' I live by those words at this point."
HFrigidaire
Settle in at a great American lodge
•
•
s
By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes
the federalWorks Progress kids club makes it easy for the Administration. L oc a t ed adults to take advantage of the Get cozy with the kids in a 60 miles east of Portland, full-service spa on site. • I • great Americanlodge. Here the well-crafted structure Contact: 1 - 8 00-903-4045; • r are five to consider: has long served as the cen- www.thewhitefacelodge.com • Devil's Thumb Ranch, Tab- terpiece of t hi s m ountain ernash, Colo.Stay in a cabin playground. Take a guided, or the main lodge and stay moonlit snowshoe tour, extoasty near one of 45 flick- perience snowcat skiing or ering fireplaces. Enjoy local simply soak up the historic specialties in the lodge din- ambience while taking note ing room, where a three-sto- of the extraordinary views. ry, three-hearth fireplace of Ask about weekday ski-free hand-stacked stones warms deals. winter visitors. Grab the binContact: 1-800-547-1406; oculars to catch a glimpse www.timberlinelodge.com of wildlife roaming on this • El Tovar Hotel, Grand CanIf you would like to receive forms 6,000-acre expanse of Colo- yon National Park, Ariz.Open to announce your engagement, rado beauty or set out on the since 1905 and registered as a wedding, or anniversary, plus Nordic trails for an up-close National Historic Landmark, view of winter scenes. From this charming 78-room lodge helpful information to plan the now through May, stay two is just steps from the South s perfect Central Oregon wedding, • nights and get the third night Rim of the Grand Canyon. pick up your Book of love at free. Take in a n ature talk, go The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Contact: 97 0 -726-5632; for a mule ride or hike the Ave., Bend) or from any of these www.devilsthumbranch.com famed trailsthat crisscross valued advertisers: • Skytop Lodge, Skytop, down and through the park. Pa. For junior boarders and Marvel at the extraordinary AAA Travel skiers, this lodge in the Po- beauty of snow falling onto Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park & Recreation District conos offers gentle, crowd- the multicolored rock walls The Bend Trolley free slopes on which to learn. and into the canyon below. Bend Wedding &Formal Kids as young as3 can enroll Contact: 92 8 - 638-2631; Black Butte Ranch in ski school. Dog mushing, www.grandcanyonlodges. Central Oregon Event Professionals Assoc. tobogganing, sledding, ice- com Cuppa Yo skating and c ross-country • Whiteface Lodge, Lake The DD Ranch skiing add to the active purPlacid, N.Y. Located in the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Eastlake Framing suits available on this sprawl- heart of the Adirondacks, this Enhancement Center Medical Spa ing 5,000-acre estate. Later, woodland lodge is spacious, Erin Hardy Images stretch out in the indoor pool with modern amenities. At Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events or bubbling hot tub and get the same time,itoffersrustic Giorgio's Wine, Brews & Spirits ready for game night. charm, with stone chimneys, House on Metolius Contact: 1-855-345-7759; antlerchandeliers and handM. Jacobs www.skytop.com crafted Adirondack furnishMcMenamins Old SL Francis School • Timberline Lodge, Mount ings. Nightly family bonfires, Michelle Cross Photography Northwest Medi Spa Hood. Located in Oregon's a skatingrink, cross-country Old Stone Mount Hood National For- and downhill skiing, snowPronghorn est, this magnificent lodge shoeing and indoor swimSunriver Resort was built at the height of the ming programs provide plenTotally Polished Great Depression by unem- ty to keep an active family Widgi Creek Golf Club ployed craftspeople hired by engaged. A complimentary The Dallas Morning News
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Eva (Stokes) and William "Val" Todd
Todd
manager of the meat department at W a gner's Grocery William "Val" and Eva until his retirement in 1990. He served in the Navy during (Stokes) Todd, of Bend, will celebrate their 60th wedding the Korean War. He enjoys anniversary Feb. 7. playing cribbage. Mrs. Todd The couple were married worked as a bookkeeper for Feb. 7,1953, in Winnemuca, Kokanee Wood Products until N ev. They h ave tw o c h i l - her retirement in 1989. They dren, William, of Bend, and both enjoy spending time with Janet Keranen, of Portland; their family and visiting the four grandchildren;and four Oregon Coast. great-grandchildren. They have lived in Central M r. Todd worked as t h e Oregon for 41 years.
The Bulletin
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BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Thomasand Molly DolFalio, a boy, ConorThomas DalFoglio,7 pounds,9
ounces, Nov. 7. Chrisand Emily Quaka, twins, girls, Cady JaneQuaka, 3pounds, 6 ounces, andEllie Noelle QIiaka,2pounds,1 ounce, Dec. 29. Pauland Meghan Kincannon, a girl, Tyler Jade Kincannon, 6 pounds, 3 ounces, Dec. 19. Heathand Clarissa Bonneru, a girl, LuCyAnne BOnnerlf,6 POundS,15
ounces, Jan. 18. JosephKepple and ShyannAnderson, a boy, NoahScott Kepple-Anderson, 6 pounds 9 ounces, Jan. 18. Grantand Erin Finter, a girl, Kathryn EliZabeth Finter,4 POOlfndS,5 OunCeS,
Jan. 15. JoseAntonio Sanchez andReina Sanchez Giron,aboy,IsaiasSanchez
Giron, 7 pounds, t1 ounces, Jan. 17. MarkandLisaGoodman,aboy, Benjamin RobertGoodman,7 pounds, t ounce, Jan. 17. JustinRegimbal and Cassie McGuire, a girl, Harper Rosie Regimbal, 7 pounds, t1 ounces, Jan. 16. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Gabrieland Tirzah Erhart, a boy, Gabriel Dominic Erhart Jr., Jan. 15. Nathanand Sheila Miller, a boy, Trystan Tanner Miller, 7 pounds, 12 ounces, Jan. 21. KatelynDobbs, a boy, Landon Wayne Dobbs,8 pounds,2 ounces,Jan.1st. KennethHorton and Christina DodiniMarqlfezcq, a girl, APril Emmalea Annette Horton, 7 pounds, 8 ounces, Jan. 24. Chrisand Leslie Colovos, a girl, Jozie MCQlfinn COIOVOS, 7 POundS, 1t
ounces, Jan. 25.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 3
By Alex Hutchlnson I stole my first glimpses of Tasmania's rocky s o uthern coastline from about 2,000 feet up, peering through the rounded pane of the cockpit window whenever I felt composed enough to look up from my sick bag. Beside me, our Q pilot, Thomas, was riding the ,. /p yoke as if it were a mechanical bull, trying to keep the singleiJ engine Cessna steady as gusts roared in from the Southern Ocean. M y wife, L auren, and I were on our way to the starting point of the South Coast Track, a s e ven-day t r amp along a trail that remains as untamed now as it was more than a century ago, when the route was first blazed to help shipwrecked sailors find their way back to civilization. This swath of wilderness, protected as part of the 2,300-squaremile Southwest National Park, is the last stop from Australia before Antarctica. Its remoteness,rugged terrain and often fearsome weather have kept it essentially uninhabited and unexploited — for good reason, as we would soon find Photos by Alex Hutchioson / New YorkTimes News Service out. A hiker walks through a rain forest along Tasmanla's South Coast W e had o rdered a s l i m Track, a route that was first blazed to help shipwrecked sailors find guidebook to the trail — the their way back to civilization. o nly one available — a n d were reassured to read that "many experienced walkers regard the track as easy." The routespans a modest 52 miles, with c a m psites p e ppered throughout, so w e d e cided to finish it in seven days (the guide recommended seven or eight) and splice a demanding three-day side trip to a nearby mountain peak into the middle, for a total of 10 days. After all, we didn't want to squander our vacation on an insufficiently challenging trip.
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'End of the Road' Thomas finally turned the plane inland and pointed into the distance. We could see a tiny splotch of white in the otherwise unbroken sea of green scrubland: a patch of flat gravel that would serve as our m a k eshift a i r strip. From here we would hike back down to the coast, then follow it from the southwest corner of the island to the southeast, finishing at the southernmost tip of the southernmost road in Australia — a spot marked by a wooden sign engraved with the words "The End of the Road" — where a pickup t ruck would b e w a iting t o shuttle us back to Hobart, the Tasmanian capital. (The trail has beenunaffected by recent widespread wildfires.) That first day — after our inner ears had regained their equilibrium - was idyllic. After three hours of w a l king across gentle buttongrass plains, we reached the coast and camped in a sheltered grove of eucalyptus trees next to a creek. As the sun set, we strolled along a beach dotted with starfish, watching wallabies and pademelons — mini kangaroos, essentially — feed among the dunes, while oystercatchers swooped above the crashing waves. We woke the next morning to the steady patter of rain on our tent — not a big surprise
Rings
A hiker negotiates a muddy path along the South Coast Track. The weeklong, 52-mile hike involves braving rain, rnu and challenging terrain. in a region where it rains an average 250 days a year but a gentle reminder that the trip wouldn't be all moonlit walks and cute marsupials. We hastily strung up the ultralight silicone-coated tarp we'd bought s pecially fo r t h e t r i p a n d breakfasted under it in relative comfort. Then we hoisted our packs and set out eastward along the beach. Although the route follows the wateras much as possible, there are stretches where the coastal cliffs are impassable. This necessitates long inland detours across poorly drained moors, through lush rain forest, over two subalpine mountain ranges and through dense scrub that's "as thick as hair on a cat's back," as one of the original trailblazers described it in 1906. Much has been done since those days to smooth the passage of the modern travelerboardwalks oversome of the swampier quagmires, ropes strung across deep river crossings, basic pit toilets at some of the most common camping spots. Still, no two trips along the trail follow exactly the same path, thanks to the constantly shifting coastline
Ring Meltdown. Dailing hopes to hold reguContinued from C1 lar Meltdowns, perhaps even Not long after, Dailing told make them monthly. "We'll a friend what he'd done. The (decide) that by the interest friend urged him to give oth- in the area," he says. Any ers a crack atthe same feel- such future events would be ing, and thus was born The held separately for men and Great Ring Meltdown, a sort women, "so there's no sexual of anti-Valentine's Day event, politics (and) you don't have to aimed at those ready to take be embarrassed about sharing the next step forward after di- your story, whether you're at vorce.Before moving to Bend fault, whatever," he says. in 2009, he hosted previous Should there be any gemMeltdowns in his former home stones in individual rings durin Portland. ing the Meltdown, "We'll use " I've only done it a f e w that time for me to take the times. I tend to keep busy with stones out while that person my own work," says Dailing. basically tells their story; eiDailing ha s b een c r eat- ther what happened, or where ing jewelry for more than 25 they hope their life goes," he years. His innovative jewelry says. "Give some information, designs were recently recog- shed some baggage." nized in the 65th-anniversary O nce the stones are r e issueofLapidary Journal Jew- m oved, Dailing will f ir e up elry Artist magazine, along- the casting torch, which can side eight other p r ominent melt down all gold, including jewelry makers. white, yellow and other varietH e divides his t im e b e - ies, along with platinum, paltween teaching at COCC and ladium, sterling silver and fine his commercialart endeavors silver. He'll provide the necesat his Tumalo home studio, sary safety equipment, "and where he'll host his next Great I will guide that person and
and the tides. Picking our way along the route, we started to get a taste of the coastline's stunning topographical diversity: beaches alternating with rocky i nlets, gnarled trees twisting away from the salty wind, columns of water erupting from blowholes at the base of dramatic cliffs.
'Normally easy' Partway through our second morning, we reached a set of cliffs that jutted out into the water, blocking the beach we were trying to follow. Skirting the base of these cliffs is "normally easy except at high tide," our guidebook blithely assured us. Seeing that the tide was still rising, we hurriedly began to pick our way from boulder to boulder, scurrying along the sand between waves. It turns out t hat o ceans are much less regular and predictable than we, in our landlubbering i gno r a nce, had presumed. Rocks that had been comfortably out of the water during one set of waves were suddenly under two feet of pushy surf in the next set. Soaked to the thighs and clinging to the abrasive
they will melt down their own wedding ring," he says. Participating in th e M eltdown costs each participant $30, which Dailing will apply to the cost of making something new for them, should they so choose. Either way, they'll leave the M eltdown with a bag of th e precious metal pellets — he likens them to seeds — that result from melting. They'll also receive a "birth certificate," wit h t h e d a t e, type of metal and physical weight of the metal and Dail-
vate beach sealed off f r om the rest of the world by rocky headlands. Each one had different charms: beachside waterfalls, vertiginous cliff-top tent sites, mysterious caves with sets of a n imal t racks leading in but not out. The stormy seas had turned some normally reliable freshwater sources brackish. At one campsite, short on water, we cooked our pasta with half saltwater (which tasted much better t h a n s e m i -brackish muesli the next morning); at another site, we dug into the sand at the base of a cliff to collect water from a freshwater seep. With plenty of time to spare, these challenges now felt more like brainteasers to solve than stressors. Still, the track never got easy. Even as we approached the end, we cursed the prodigious mudholes and the fickle skies. But we also marveled at the sight of a pademelon carefully grooming the tiny joey in its pouch, so unused to humans that it seemed not to even notice us. After climbing into hilly terrain one morning, we stopped to look back at the coastal plains we'd just hiked across. In the distance, a r ainbow curved down from the sky to the very place we'd camped. "Look," Lauren said, "it's moving." Sure enough, the arc was sweeping majestically along the coast toward us, illuminating the beaches and hills and fluted cliffs along the way. We stared, transfixed — and then realized what it meant.
How extreme?
New York Times News Service
Rankings are from 1 (not very) to 4 (very). REMOTENESS No roads except at the finish point; bush plane to the start. Transport to either end is easy to organize, but there's no easy access if something goes wrong en route. 4
CREATURE DISCOMFORTS The only campsite amenities are patches of flat ground cleared of brush, and rudimentary pit toilets. 4
PHYSICAL DIFFICULTY The distance traveled each day is relatively short, but the muddy terrain is unexpectedly challenging, especially with a full pack. 4
cliff face with white knuckles, we eventually made it to the other side with a recalibrated sense of what "normally easy" means. The challenges intensified the next day, when we were scheduled to climb from sea level to 3,000 feet then back down again to cross the Ironbound Range, th e h i ghest point on the trip. This time we woke not to rain but to the rat-a-tat of hail slamming into our tent, and the discovery that a swamp rat (or some similarly destructive rodent) had chewed through Lauren's pack and at least three layers of plastic to feast on our stash of dried pineapple. A sturdy trail led u s u p the western side of the Iron-
en route to the trail's end. For starters, we took the next day completely off. Using thin strips of sappy gum bark as tinder, we managed to get a fire going in the intermittent rain and kept it going all day to dry our boots. We scouted the coastline up and down from our campsite, scaling lookout points and clambering down into hidden coves. With string and a safety pin, we tried fishing in a nearby brook; we got one nibble, but the fish seemed otherwise uninterested in the green gummy candy we were using as bait. We returned to hiking the next day with r enewed enthusiasm and found that our eyes were once again open to the beauty — and noveltybounds, along grassy slopes around us. Lauren discovered bursting with p i nk , y e llow that the gas-filled flotation and blue wildflowers, but the pods of giant kelp beached in weather worsened steadily. By the recent storms made a satthe time we reached the top, af- isfying pop when stepped on ter three hours, we were being — the sandy path in front of alternately buffeted by gusts of us was suddenlytransformed white-out snow and fusillades into a 3-mile-long carpet of of stinging horizontal hail that natural bubble wrap. seemed to intensify every time We now had several easy we stopped for a break. (Our days with no more than a few bag of M8.Ms soon contained hours of hiking ahead, campas many ice pellets as pieces of ing each night at another pri.
We quickly shrugged off our packs and yanked our rain gear on, then turned back to the trail and hiked on as the drops began to fall.
candy.) And the worst was yet to come. Th e wi n d -sheltered eastern side of the range is covered with thick, wet rain forest. Instead of a trail, we faced anendless succession of man-eating sinkholes linked by steep mudslides, choked with razor grass and impenetrable scrub, and barricaded by downed trees the size of SUVs. It took us twice as long to get down the mountain as it had taken to climb it. The hail turned to rain. I had to move our bag of salt from our food stash to the outer pouch of my pack, ready to peel off the leeches that periodically attached themselves to our arms and legs. By the time we stumbled into our campsite, our mood was existential. Why, on our preciously rationed vacationdays, were we here?
A change of plans Adversity is an i nevitable part of wilderness travel; for many, the struggle is part of its allure. But if you're not also enjoying the moment, then any future pride will seem awfully hollow. And at this point in the trip, we really weren't having much fun. So we called an audible. We scrapped the three-day side trip and decided instead to slow down and treat each of our camping spots as a destination to be explored rather than merely as a place to sleep
Answer:
R EMOVE I N FUSE PEB B L E SAVORY U N FAI R SA N D AL When the AFC and NFC met in
thechampionshipgame, everyone had a-
SUPER SUNDAY JUMBLE IS ON C6
ANSWER TO TODAY'S LAT CROSSWORD W E S T
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gesture of seeds towards a new beginning," he says. "I'm pretty sure, because of this primal energy that the intense fire has, that ( participants) will not only have fun, but also ... release from this object that has had so much importance. What happened for me is that fire got rid of all the bad juju
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just became this material." — Reporter:541-383-0349, djasper®bendbulletin.com
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With our extremelow level of homes currently available, I have severalbuyers still looking:
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
City-league hockey players compete in a co-ed match at McCall's Manchester Ice & Event Centre. Built in 2003 with $6.2 million in private-foundation funding, the arena has grandstand seating for 650 andan extensive events schedule. Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin
An energetic dog accompanies two cross-country skiers on a loop through McCall's 1,000-acre Ponderosa State Park. Many area Nordic systems welcome dogs, including the 25 kilometers at Jug Mountain Ranch, nine miles south of McCall.
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defaulted on a $250 million loan from a consortium led by Credit Suisse. Tamarack has been in foreclosure since February 2008, according to Idaho Resort Realty and the "First Tracks!!" online ski magazine. After the ski hill closed for the 2009-2010 season, Tamarack homeowners anted up enough money to m aintain the ski runs and operate four lifts, which access 2,800 vertical feet of terrain. Handsome mountain homes still line the lanes that climb the 7,700-foot mountain. But the resort's future remains uncertain.
acres of Payette National Forest backcountry are accessed by guided s now-cat t ours
(priced at $249 per head). And the resort has plans to add another lift to the apex of adjacent 7,803-foot Sargent's Mountain. That would open many more expert runs and increase th e a r e a's v e r tical from 1,800 feet to nearly 2,000. Views f r o m t h e 7 , 6 40f oot summit o f t h e B l u e bird Express quad chair are memorable. Continued next page
Brundage Mountain
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Brundage, however, is going strong. Established as a ski resort in 1961, it is southOREGON CASINO TOuR ern Idaho's second leading FEB 14-16, 2013 j $249 ppdo winter-sports destination afEnjoy 3 days/2 nights visiting 5 casinos! Receive food credits, fun book and one ter Sun Valley. From McCall, deluxe continental breakfast! the drive to the mountain is a RENO, NEVADA mere eight miles — half of it APRIL 2-5, 2013 j $199 ppdo on Highway 55,the remainAlways fun! Enjoy 4 days/3 nights at the Sands Hotel Casino in downtown Reno! ing four m i les on w i n ding Stop at Kla-Mo-Ya Casino in Chiloquin, Goose Lake Road. (In normal and Desert Rose Caslno in Alturas! Receive cash rebates and food credits! The 77-room Shore Lodge, built in 1948 and fully renovated in recent years, is McCall's finest, moderately priced accommodation. Its winter driving conditions, it PALM SPRINGS, CA amenities include two restaurants, a full-service spa, a private marina and an 18-hole golf course open May to October. takes about 20 minutes.) Owned b y t h e D e B o er APRIL 8-13, 2013 j $1,099 ppdo 6 days/5nights HyattRegency on family, descendants of Idaho Palm Canyon Dr., Celebrity Home tour, They've only lost once in 33 Windmill tour, Aerial tram ride, Villagefest, t rails fo r h i k er s a n d b i k - a private marina with boat pioneers, it has avoided corFollies featuring Lesley Gore, ers. Old-growth pine, fir and rentals and sailing lessons; games this season." p orate i n tervention p a r t ly Palm Springs College of the DesertL more! Continued from C1 spruce treesshelter scores of an outdoor swimming pool Teams from B oise State by staying small. Even after RASH DANCE More than 30 intricate ice campsites. And back in town, and hot tub beside a private University and the University more than a half-century in APRIL27,2013 j $189 s culptures, carefully li t f o r jet skis, water-ski boats and beach; tennis, racquetball and of Idaho had two matches on business, Brundage has just Includes Dinner. night viewing, were b eing pontoon boats are available basketball courts; a 24-hour the first weekend of the winfive chairlifts. Its 1,500 acres I<eller Auditorium, Portland completed for the Idaho Snow for rent at Mile High Marina. fitnesscenter; a fleet of cruis- ter carnival. A w e e k l a ter of mostly intermediate terrain MONTREAL-QUEBEC Sculpting Championships. The marina i s f l a nked by er bikes; and an 18-hole golf (concluding last night), a pro- are less than half those of Mt. MAY 29-IUNE 2,2013 j $1,199 ppdo They stood in front of ho- Legacy Park, whose white- course, the Whitetail Club, fessional ice show called "The Bachelor. Airfare not included! NewTour! 4 nights, brealdasts, 2 dinners!Enjoy acity tour that tels, r estaurants, m a rkets, sand beach extends more open from May toOctober. Magic of B r o adway" t o ok But an a dditional 17,000 4includes Old Montreal, Notre-DameBasilica, s chools, banks a n d o t h er than 500 feet to the grounds F or w i nter v i s itors, t h e center ice. Olympic Park,St. Joseph's Oratory, Montreal Harbor, Chinatown, McGill University, Boestablishments. of the town's landmark buildShore Lodge features a gear I also found time, during tanical Gardensand excellent French cuisine. Friday n i g h t' s o p e n ing ing, Hotel McCall. valet and tuning room, as well my McCall visit, for a little www.AgateBeachMotel.coni Ride the train to one of the most beautiful cities in the world, QuebecCity for 2 nights children's torchlight parade This 1 9 -room b e d -and- as complimentary shuttle ser- cross-country activity — not lPrivate +vitttageaoceanfront getaway in the historic heart of FrenchCanada. and fireworks display were b reakfast inn w a s b u ilt i n vice to Brundage Mountain. at Ponderosa State Park, but Newport, OR s •s followed at n oon S aturday 1904 by town father Tom Mc- Dogs and children are wel- at Jug Mountain Ranch, nine ' +1-800-755-5674 by a 90-minute Mardi Gras Call (no relation to the late come, too. In fact, McCall's miles south of town near Lake rr rr only movie theater is within Fork in the heart of Long Valprocession through the cen- Oregon governor ofthe same ter of town. During the week name). Idaho's McCall helped the lodge. And i n s ummer, ley. A residential community that followed, events included establish a logging industry there's a kids' day camp here. not unlike Central Oregon's snowshoe golf, an i ce-fish- that provided an economic Black ButteRanch, Jug MounSkating on ice and snow ing derby, a snowman-build- foundation for this commutain is a winter wonderland. ing contest, sled-dog pulls nity until the last mill closed Outside of the lodge and the The ranch boasts 25 kilomeand a "polar plunge" into the in 1977. mountain, I was most drawn ters of groomed nordic trails Payette Lake's frigid waters. The hotel anchors the High- to the Manchester Ice & Event and snowshoe routes — all There was plenty of live mu- way 55 dogleg at the heart Centre. Opened in2003, the of them open to dogs — rollO • 0 of town. The highway heads Manchestercould be the envy ing over a golf course and up sic, eating and drinking. Much of the activity was west as Lake Street, which is of many a small town, not to mountain slopes. focused along I daho State lined for a couple of blocks mention a city like Bend, a Extending about 35 miles Highway 55, which links Mc- with restaurants and retail winter-sports town w i t hout f rom north t o s o u th, f i v e Call with Boise as well as outlets, as well as the spectac- an ice arena. Built with primiles from east to west, Long with U.S. Highway 95 at New ular Manchester Ice & Event vate-foundation funding for Valley was settled by Finnish Meadows, a hamlet 12 miles Centre. $6.2 million, it occupies a full homesteaders in the 1880s. A Pearl District Location „y'0 west. The highway makes an A half-mile west o f t h e city block. It has a profession- tiny Finnish church, built in abrupt 90-degree turn in the rink, the North Fork Payette al-size hockey rink, grand1917 and placed on the Naheart of McCall to trace the River, a Snake River tribustand seating for 650, skat- tional Register o f H i s toric Includes: south shore of the lake — 6.2 tary, pours out of the lake. ing rentals and year-round Places in 1980, is a landmark — Continental Breakfast '~~ rt-. ~ $ I k~ miles long and about 300 feet The Shore Lodge, McCall's public skating hours and an to that era. At th e v alley's deep. finest hotel, occupies the lake- extensiveschedule of hockey heart, 29 miles south of Mc— 24/7 Espresso Despite its depth, Payette shore just across the Payette competition. Call, the tiny Valley County - NY Times Lake, which was carved by River bridge. This was where On the night of my arrival seat ofCascade sitsnear the in McCall, I joined my friend north end ofmanmade Lake glaciers more t ha n 1 0,000 I stayed for three nights. - Wi-Fi y ears a g o , f r e ezes o v e r I have rarely felt more wel- Mike Glover at the rink. Glov- Cascade. ''~3r,,id through the winter months. Its come at a hotel than I did at er, a former director of the Overlooking Long Valley to - Afternoon Tea highlight is Ponderosa State this 77-room inn. From the Bend Chamber of Commerce the west is Tamarack Resort, — Wine & Cheese Reception Park, which occupies a 1,000- valets to the receptionists, the who now lives in McCall, was hailed as the first major new acre peninsula just two miles restaurant staff to the house- there to applaud townspeople U.S. ski resort in two decades from downtown McCall. This keepers, e v er y i n d i v idual competing ina co-ed hockey when it opened in 2004. Inter' ' I 'e all . separates the main body of with whom I c rossed paths league. national tennis stars Andre "This is a fantastic facility," the lake from its East Arm, was helpful and friendly, even Agassi and Steffi Graf were like a mitten from its thumb, warm. Glover said. "It's given our among c elebrity i n v estors • I • and in w i nter is a p o pular Built in 1948 and fully ren- youth hockey team, the Idaho who intended to build a luxplace for nordic skiing; a sys- ovated in recent years, the Junior Steelheads, an oppor- ury hotel. But they withdrew tem of well-maintained trails Shore Lodgeofferscontempotunity to r egularly compete when the ownership group ' I I • for classic and skate skiing rary gourmet dinners in The against teams from Seattle, include a loop that welcomes Narrows dining room, break- Salt Lake and o ther l arge well-behaved dogs. fasts and lunches in the Lake cities. Our kids are in a firstIn summer, the park has Grill. Its amenities include a place runaway in the Westboat launches and miles of full-service spa, The Cove; ern States Hockey League.
McCall
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Hotel McCall is a European-style landmark in the heart of downtown. The 19-room bed-and-breakfast inn was built in 1904 by town father Tom McCall, who helped establish a logging industry that anchored McCall's economy until tourism took over.
541-383-0069 *All pricing is per person, double occupancy, cruise only, and subtect to change and availability. Air, transfers, fuel surcharges, government taxes and fees are additional. tShipboard credit is up to $25pp for a maximum of $50 per cabin. Ships' Registry: The Netherlands.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C5
en 0 u rave insurance By Seth Kugel
this example: If you leave your cellphone in your bathing suit and go into the water, it's not covered. That's not only the kind of thing I do, it's exactly what I did on a New Year's Eve a few years ago in Rio de Janeiro.
New York Times News Service
-I '7 '
Courtesy Brundage Mountain
The Bear Chair, one of two new lifts installed at Brundage Mountain in 2007, carries 1,800 people per hour to the yurt-like Bear's Den cafe. Above it, some of the resort's most popular intermediate runs fall from the mountain's 7,640-foot summit.
From previous page T hey s pa n a l m ost 3 6 0 degrees — northeast to the Salmon R i ve r M o u n tains, west to t h e S e ven D evils Range, above Hells Canyon, and O r egon's s p ectacular Wallowa Mountains. As my friends gave me the locals' mountain tour, from Alpine (my favorite run) to Engen to 45th Parallel, Russell pointed into a wooded ravine she called "Stupid Boy." No, it doesn't appear on the trail maps. "A few years ago," she related, "a snowboarder headed down through the trees to the bottom of the gully, onlyto discover that once he got there, he couldn't find his way out. When his friends reported him missing, the ski patrol finally found him. The gully became known as 'Stupid Boy.' "The following summer, a veteran area employee came in and cut down many of the dead trees in the gully.
He carved a trail out, so that many people now ski through thetreesthere.I've been down there myself. "But we still call it 'Stupid
Boy."'
After several hours of powder, mycompanions and Iretired to Smoky's Bar 8. Grill in the newly expanded base lodge, where I enjoyed a bowl of Cajun jambalaya and a frosty mug of Udaho golden ale from McCall's Salmon River Brewery. Then there was time for a few m ore r un s before I returned t o m y ov e r night
lodging. Brundage, by the way, is not the nearest ski area to McCall. That honor falls to the Little Ski Hill, just three miles from town on Highway 55. Established in 1937, a year after Sun Valley, it has a single T-bar serving a 400-foot hill. And it's lit for night skiing. Reporter: j andersonCm bendbulletin.com
Expenses Mountain: $57 • Lunch, Smoky's Bar & Grill:
• Gas, Bend to McCall
(round-trip), 746 miles © $3.20/gallon: $95.49 • Lunches, en route: $12 • Lodging (3 nights), Shore Lodge: $417.96 • Dinner, The Narrows (Shore Lodge): $36.80
$12 • Dinner, The Sushi Bar:
$30.25 • Lunch, Manchester Ice
Centre: $8 • Nordic skiing, Jug Mountain
Ranch: $10
• Groceries for three breakfasts: $8.28 • Lift ticket, Brundage
• Dinner, Buffalo Gal: $26.50 • Total:$714.28
If yougo McCall; 541-634-4772, www.
INFORMATION
salmonriverbrewery.com.
• McCall Area Chamber of Commerce. 102 N. Third St., McCall; 208-634-7631, 800-260-5130, www.
Lunch and dinner. Moderate.
• Steamers Steak & Seafood.
mccallchamber.org LODGING • Bear Creek Lodge. 3492 Hwy. 55, McCall; 208-634-3551,
www.bearcreeklodgemccall. com Rates from $100. • Hotel McCall. 1101 N. Third St., McCall; 208-6348105, 866-800-1183, www. hotelmccall.com. Rates from $135. Rupert's restaurant serves dinner; moderate. • Shore Lodge. 501 W. Lake St., McCall;208-634-2244, 800-657-6464, www. shorelodge.com. Rates from
$99. Restaurants serve three meals daily; moderate to
expensive. DINING • Buffalo Gal. 319 N. Main St., Donnelly. 541-325-8258, www.buffalogalidaho.com. Dinner only. Moderate. • Pueblo Lindo. 1007 W. Lake St., McCall;206-634-2270,
www.facebook.com. • Salmon River Brewery. 300 E. Colorado St.,
308 E Lake St., McCall; 208-634-1411, www. steamersrestaurant.com. Dinner only. Moderate to
expensive. • The Sushi Bar. 414 Railroad Ave., McCall; 208-634-7874, www.sushibarmccall.com. Dinner only. Moderate
ATTRACTIONS • Brundage Mountain Resort. 3890 Goose Lake Road, McCall; 208-634-4151,
www.brundage.com • Jug Mountain Ranch. 13834 Farm to Market Road, McCall; 208-634-5072, www.jug mountainranch.com • Manchester Ice & Event Centre. 200 E Lake St., McCall; 208-634-3570, www.
manchester-icecentre.com • Ponderosa State Park. Miles Standish Road, McCall; 208634-2164, www.idahoparks.
org • Tamarack Resort. 311 Village Drive, Tamarack; 208-3251000, 877-826-7376, www. tamarackidaho.com
Would you like to add travel insurance to y our purchase? That little pest of a question pops up every time I book a flight, confirm a hotel room or reserve a rental car. It's become the «Do you want fries with that?" of online travel booking. The difference: Sometimes I buy the fries. I h ave n ever b o ught travel insurance in my life because instinct has always told me that it's a bad deal. I rarely pay for hotel rooms, tours or rental cars in advance. I don't pack designer clothing in my checked luggage. I'm generally healthy, and I have medical insurance that covers me abroad. (It claims to, at least.) But instinct is a poor way to make decisions about insurance. So with a threeweek trip to Asia approaching, I finally decided to figure out whether I should be traveling with i n surance, and, in general, when it is smart to have it and when is it unnecessary. Travelers tend to buy insurance if they are more at risk or more likely than the average policyholder to make a claim. In economics that's called "adverse selection" — but it's adverse only for the insurance companies. For consumers, it's just smart. Imagine two people looking at a $100 insurance policy for a twoweek trip: One is a 65-yearold heading to India, where he plans to rent a scooter, eat street food and sleep in already reserved five-star hotels every night. The other is a 30-year-old going to London, planning to crash at a friend's apartment and buy discount theater tickets every night. It's pretty clear who should buy insurance. For my own coverage, I looked atpackages offered by World Nomads (world nomads.com), a p o p ular and well-regarded company that provides travel insurance plans online. (If you are buying insurance, try them — or examine the options at i n s uremytrip. com, a travel insurance search site.) C overage for my A s i a t rip t hrough World N o mads would cost me $85 for its standard plan, and $116.40 for slightly more elaborate "explorer" coverage. I looked at each element of their plans — which are similar to most other packages out there — to calculate whether, overall, they might be worth it to me (and to you). Here is a breakdown.
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Accidental death and dismemberment
Illustration by Scott Menchin / New York Times News Service
ing care from licensed health care professionals no matter where" I am through the Blue Card Worldwide network. I went to th e Blue Card Worldwide website and was relieved to find many affiliated hospitals listed in the Asian cities I was planning to visit. But I was still suspicious. I offered a hypothetical to the customer service phone line: What if, in an emergency, I ended up at an out-of-network hospital because I c o uldn't communicate with paramedics or there was no affiliated hospital nearby? T he r e presentative w a s stumped, put me on hold and came back. "I checked with a supervisor," she said. "The claim would come through, we would deny it, then you would have to appeal it," she said. Appeals, she added, were made on a " case by case" basis. Freelancers wouldn't speak on the record to clarify further. But since I wouldn't be engaging in any high-risk activities and I had a fighting chance of being covered should the very unlikely worst-case scenario occur, I decided the medical coverage added minimalbenefit. I did, though, arm myself with a printout of all the affiliated facilities in the areas I was visiting.
spend much on a trip before I leave beyond the plane ticket (always coach) and maybe the first night in a hotel (always cheap). But for others, with expensiveseats and long prepaid reservations, it might make sense.
Baggage protection World Nomads will r eimburse you for items lost or damaged intransitand cover expenses incurred b ecause
luggage isdelayed. For me, this was triplicate coverage: M y credit card covers this,and airlines are legally required to reimburse you as well, with limitations. But th e N o m ads p o licy also covers damages and loss beyond your flight. I c a r ry around about $3,000 of electronic equipment everywhere I go, and World Nomads would cover up to $500 per item (after depreciation). It's worth it to determine the value of what's
I've never understood this one. If you need life insurance, wouldn't you want it for the whole year, not just when you're traveling? And if you lose a limb, will a few grand — what World Nomads offers — really help? (Note that life insurance companies will ask about your travel habits; so be sure you're honest when you apply — and if you already have coverage, be sure it covers the countries you're visiting.)
So is it worth it? Although some elements of the World Nomads package might have benefited me, I decided the package as a whole didn't make sense for my trip.
(I did end up buying a yearlong
medevac plan I found through insuremytrip.com for $225.) Although my initial instinct to avoid package insurance had been (coincidentally) right, the process was valuable anyway: I now know a lot more about my medical coverage and credit card perks. Everyone should make similar calculations. Of course, there's one more inside your baggage and do variable: If you're a worrier the math. and having coverage for every Of course,whether you get imaginable circumstance will reimbursed is partly up to you. allow you to relax and enjoy A World Nomads customer your trip, then go ahead and do service representative gave it. I just won't be joining you.
Spectacular OceanViews From EveryRoom.
Emergency evacuation
• rr
This one is simple: Without coverage, if I have to be medically evacuated home from a distant land, I'm out something like $30,000. So it comes down to how likely the scenario is. Headed to a particularly isolated region? Climbing mountains or fording rivers? Then having evacuation coverage as part of a package or separately (the cheapest I found for my trip on insuremytrip.com was
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Receive 20% off room rateewten you bring this ad and donate a can of food for each night of your stay. Valid Sun-Thurs, Now — May 23, 2013
$40) is a good idea.
(Offer a nor good Mar 22-30, 2013 or w>th other arcovnts Food donated ro uncoln County Food Share )
Travel protection
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This kind of insurance offers reimbursement (sometimes partial) for prepaid reservations if your trip is canceled, interrupted or delayed. I rarely
OvERLEAF LoDGE s3PA 800-338-0507 overleaflocige.com overleafspa.com !s I'
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Medical If your r egular health insurance doesn't c over you while abroad, you need some when y o u t r a vel. Medicare participants and citizens of countries covered by national health services generally fall into this category. Others s hould check on the specifics of their policies. I have coveragethroughthe Freelancers Insurance Co., which uses the Blue Cross Blue Shield program; my policy states that I'm "assured of receiv-
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Find It All Online bendbulletin.com The Bend City Council appointed Mirror Pond Management Board is launChinga three-PhaSe PrOCeSS to reaCh a COnCluSiOn on Whatto do
with the silt build-ttp in Mirror Pond. For the first phase, your input is needed. I
Take your family on a Club Med all-inclusive getaway! EVERYTHING INCLUDED IN ONE CONVENIENT PRICE.
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
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Now arrange the mfcled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
PRINT YOUR ANSWERIN THE CIRCLES BELOW
DIFFICULTY RATING: *** *
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SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Michael Wines/New York Times News Service
The Sipadan-Kapalai Dive Resort is one of the top scuba destinations on earth, and with water that is home to about 3,000 species of fish, the World Wildlife Federation has called it one of the most diverse spots on the planet.
JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
Short-suit leads By FRANK STEWART cfy
Tribune MediaServices
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I'll bet you love to lead singletons against suit contracts. You envision partner producing the ace and giving you a ruff, and all is right with the world. Leading singletons has a caveat. Your short suit may be a suit declarer will use as a source of tricks. Your lead may help him set up his suit or concede valuable time. Today's West led h i s s i ngleton
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(C1 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris nad Joyce Nichols Lewis eKIDDIE TAXIDERMY"
By BRUCE R. SUTPHIN and DOUG PETERSON
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CROSSW ORD SOLUTION IS ON C3
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By Michael Wines
being round pegs in a square hole full of scuba veterans. We were in fins and snorkel And we were certain that a masks, navigating the thicket diet of unabated diving would of wooden posts that lift the leave us stir-crazy after a couSipadan-Kapalai Dive Resort ple of days. No beach? Are you above the limpid waters of the kidding? Sulu Sea off Sabah, Malaysia. Kapalai, as we soon learned, Around us were enough tropi- is spare but not spartan — its cal fish to make not a school, 59 chalets are roomy cathebut a university and all its de- drals with infinite ocean views partments: a score of yellow- from the decks, a cooling wind and-black-striped ti g e r fish, and nothing but the sound of stock-still under the stairs; a lapping water and the sway of massive grouper, presiding creaking timbers to lull you to over an artificial reef; banner sleep. No restaurant scene here: fish, angelfish, statfish, parThe food, a fish-heavy mix of rotfish, needlefish, you name it, Malaysian cuisine and Western lounging amid corals and dart- favorites like spaghetti for the ing between rocks. younger set, is cooked on-site Then came an u n derwa- and served at a sprawling bufter yelp, loud enough to make fet. Nor are there televisions, waves, from 16-year-old Jack. in-room telephones or room "Something bit me!" he said service, although Wi-Fi can be after sutfacing, pointing to an had in the combination dining inchlong welt on his leg that room and lobby. Diversions was in the shape of a mouth. are limited to a tiny gift shop, a And so something had: a dull rudimentary bar, a Ping-Pong brown triggerfish, maybe 18 table and a stack of books on inches long, which apparently local sea life. Beyond the daily mistook him for the vanguard speedboats that deliver fresh of a home invasion. guestsand remove staleones, "They can get aggressive about the only visitors are Maaround mating time," our scu- laysianarmed forcespatrolson ba instructor, Alex, said later. the lookout for pirates (more on Imagine that: a tropical re- that later). sort where the fish bite, and the Beginners welcome mosquitoes don't. Actually, there are no mosTo our surprise, Kapalai was quitoes at Kapalai to speak of not just for hard-core divers. — and no palm trees,except There were Chinese families in pots; no beach, unless you with children in water wings, count a slendersandbar that Aussie couples seeking a ropeeks above the waves at low mantic interlude and other scutide; no rental cars, no shop- ba noviceslike ourselves. And ping street, no bars. There is after a few days of lessons, it only a web of spacious chalets became clear that scuba divlinked by boardwalks and an ing imposes its own soothing ocean stretching to the edge of rhythm on even the most disthe sky and beyond. tracted vacationer. That, and those amazing So we fell into what became fish. an enchanting regimen: dive, lunch; dive, relax; snorkel, din'An untouched piece of art' ner. Then a spirited bout of the Kapalai is an artificial island, board game Settlers of Catan a diver's nirvana atop wooden on the veranda, followed by a stilts sunk into a shallow reef, stroll to the sunbathers' deck 40 minutes by speedboat from to watch poisonous lionfish Malaysia's easternmost coast. and curious sea turtles gather Water is not just the compel- below, lured by spotlights. And ling attraction; it's the only one. then to bed. If you are so inclined (and you Teenage boredom subsided will be), world-class snorkeling in a flash; scuba diving proved is as easy as duckwalking in an almost ideal mix of exercise, your flippers out a chalet door adventure and variety. We left and down the stairs, straight Sipadan — diving's holy grail into the sea. — until the end, for good reaBut snorkeling is just the ap- son: While the island has some petizer in an underwater ban- dive sites suitable for beginquet. Kapalai is also the clos- ners, unpredictable currents est habitable spot to Sipadan can race through others. NovIsland, a tree-shrouded speck ices can be pulled away from that is among the top scuba- their guides or even yanked diving destinations on Earth. downward to potentially danTwenty more minutes by boat gerouslevelsby riversthey can transports you to a wonder- feel but cannot see. land teeming with barracuda, Kapalairequires beginners sea turtles, sharks, pumpkin- to obtain PADI open-water cersize clams and enough psyche- tification(would-be divers must delic fish — 3,000 species, by be at least 15 years old), and as experts'reckoning — to dazzle is the rule in the Sipadan area, the most jaded ichthyologist. everyone mustnotch a seriesof The World Wildlife Federa- successful dives before making tion has called it one of the most a visit. Although we learned to diverse spots on the planet. In dive during our trip (and under 1989 Jacques Cousteau labeled Alex's tutelage were explorit "an untouched piece of art." ing subsurface Kapalai on our M embers of our family second day), it's best to arrive husband and wife; twins, Jack certified and ready to explore and Nikki; an d 2 3-year-old places like S ipadan where Brett— are obsessive getaway divesare more demanding. planners, poring for w e eks ofSipadan over websites and dog-eared The marvels Lonely Planets for locations By Day 4, we were cruising with enough diversions to suit to the best dive sites on Mabul five different tastes and enough Island,a palm-covered diver's solitude to allow a good rest. hangout that can be seen from We had booked rooms at a K apalai. Offshore Mabul i s small island resort with a gor- known as one of the world's best spots for muck diving, geous beach and kayaks. Then fate intervened. A Ma- which focuses on smaller botlaysian monsoon blew us out of tom-dwelling sea creatures. But that place and into its sister re- we found an impressive array sort Kapalai, 165 miles south. of fish and turtles there as well. We cursed our luck at being Finally, one d awn f o und stuck literally in the middle of us on a speedboat headed for nowhere. We worried about Sipadan. New York Times News Service
Geography and geology make this tiny egg-shaped island, just 220 by 550 yards, a diver's paradise. Sipadan is Malaysia's only oceanic island, the tip of an extinct underwater volcano just off the continental shelf that rises from the ocean bottom some 2,000 feet below. A reef traces a ring around the island. Nearby, a trench provides a haven for deep-sea fish that follow cool currents upward in search of food. The combination makes an unparalleled scuba experience: on one side, a near-vertical wall teems with m orays, clams, turtles and endless varieties of fish. On the other, reef sharks, jack, eagle rays, manta rays and even whale sharks cruise in crystalline waters. Near the sutface, the vast fringing reef is home to fabulous corals and brilliant fish. Sipadan's stellar reputation almost proved its undoing. By the 1990s, five resorts pocked the island, and clumsy divers and sewage runoffthreatened to wreak havoc on the corals and marine life. But in 2000, the island won a n i m probable reprieve: A band of Abu Sayyaf g u errillas, I s l amic separatists from the southern Philippines, raided the camps and kidnapped 21 people, including 10 tourists. The group was freed months later after Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi paid a $25 million ransom. But nervous divers gave Sipadan a wide berth and a respitefrom damage forsome time afterward. Four years later, Malaysian authorities, awakened to the tourism value of an untouched Sipadan, ordered the resort operatorsand their camps offthe island. Today fishing is banned within one kilometer of the shore, and diving is limited to 120 visitors a day — a vast improvement in protection, although toomeager forenvironmentalists who fear the island can't sustain even that procession of tourists.
Back for more Yet after a day of diving, it is hard to say no to a second helping. Many of the island's 15 or so dive sites promise something unique: At the aptly named Barracuda Point dive site, whorls ofbarracuda chase one another in a huge vortex, a pinch-yourself scene unlikely to be repeated in a lifetime. At Turtle Patch, sea turtles glide by within arm's reach. Just a few yards' swim from Sipadan's coral-sand beach, hammerheads sometimesgather mornings at the Dropoff, a limestone cliff mere feet from the island jetty that plunges to the seafloor. Drift diving — letting the express currents carry you from view to view — is the common way to see Sipadan's marvels. To stop and enjoy the view, grab an outcropping of rock or another diver and hang on — if you can. For us, the boat ride back to the chalet came all too soon; a farewell to Kapalai followed shortly after. But not for longfour months later, we returned for another look. We still meticulously plan our journeys. But we also keep in mind what John Barth once wrote about another traveler and another destination: "You don't reach Serendib by plotting a course for it. You have to set out in good faith for elsewhere and lose your bearings ... serendipitously." Even if you run into a few triggetfish along the way.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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By Eric Weiner
If yougo
New York Times News Service
Great writers often shape our impressions of a p lace. Steinbeck and Dust Bowl Oklahoma, for instance. Sometimes a writer might even define a place, as Hemingway did for 1920s Paris. Rarely, though, does a writer create a place. Yet that is what the Indian poet and Nobel Prize winner Rabindranath Tagore did with a town called Shantiniketan, or "Abode of Peace." Without Tagore's tireless efforts, the place, home to a renowned experimental school, would not exist. For Indians, a trip to Shantiniketan, a three-hour train ride from Kolkata, is a cultural pilgrimage. It was for me, too, when I visited last July, in the height of the monsoon season. I had long been a Tagore fan, but this was also an opportunity to explore a side of India I had overlooked: its small towns. It was in places like Shantiniketan, with a population of some 10,000, that Tagore — along with his contemporary Mohandas Gandhi — believed India's greatness could be found. As I boarded the train at Kolkata's riotous Howrah Station, there was no mistaking my destination, nor its famous resident. At the front of the antiquated car hung two photos of an elderly Tagore. With his long beard, dark eyes and black robe, the poet and polymath, who died in 1941, looked like a benevolent, aloof sage, an Indian Albus Dumbledore. At the rear of the car were two of his paintings, one a self-portrait, the other a veiled woman. Darkness infused them, as it does much of Tagore's artwork, unlike his poems, which are filled with rapturous descriptions of nature. As the train ambled through the countryside, Tagore's words echoed in my head. "Give us back that forest, take this city away," he pleaded in one poem. The son of a Brahmin landlord, Tagore was born in Calcutta, as Kolkata was called back then, in 1861. He began writing poetry at age 8. In 1913, he became the first nonWesterner to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. The committee cited a collection of spiritual poems called "Gitanjali," or song offerings. The verses soar. "The traveler has to knock at every alien door to come to his own, and one has to wander through all the outer worlds to reach the innermost shrine at the end," reads one. Tagore became an instant i nternational c elebrity, d i scussed in the salons of London and New York. Today, Tagore is not read much in the West, but in India, and particularly in West Bengal, his home state, he remains as popular — and revered — as ever. For Bengalis, Tagore is Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, Andy Warhol and Steven Sondheim — with a dash of Martin Luther King Jr.— rolled into one.
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GETTING THERE Shantiniketan is reached via Kolkata. The fastest way is by train. The Shantiniketan Express runs daily and takes about 2 1/2 hours. Round-trip fare: approximately 1,560 rupees, or about $30, at 52 rupees to the dollar, on Indian Railways: indianrail.gov.in.
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WHERE TOSTAY !!,
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Mitali Homestays (91-94-3307-5853, mitalishantiniketan.com; 1,560 to 4,160 rupees, about $30to $80, a night) is a delightful B&B run by Krishno and Sonali Dey with lush gardens, an impressive library and delicious food. They will lend you a bicycle for the day and offer suggestions about what to do.
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The Rabindra Bhavan Museum features several of Rabindranath Tagore's original manuscripts, as well as letters and photographs.
Closed Wednesdays. WHAT TO Bijv Shantiniketan is known for its leather goods, batik prints and artwork. Visit the bustling Saturday market on the outskirts of town. Photos by Sami Siva/ New York Times News Service
Students have class outdoors at Visva-Bharati University in Shantiniketan, India. Since Rabindranath Tagore founded the experimental school in the town, Shantiniketan has become a cultural pilgrimage for Indians and others.
My destination was Rabindra alongside the road, strumming Bhavan, the small museum an ektara, a guitarlike instruthat celebrates Tagore's life. ment with a single string. He Built on his former estate, waved and I steered my bike it consists of a clutch of bun- toward him. dian filmmaker. With their unruly hair, matgalows separated by r a ked "If Shantiniketan did nothgravel. Inside the dimly lighted ted beardsand saffron kurtas, ing else," Ray once recalled, exhibition hall are a few hand- the singers (baul means "cra"it induced contemplation and written pages from "Gitanjali," zy") are difficult to miss. Neii a sense of wonder in the most Tagore's most famous poem, ther Hindu nor Muslim, they prosaic and earthbound of and black-and-white photo- are said to be insane with the I minds." graphs of Tagore — a few of love of God and wander the r Today, more than 6,000 stu- him as a dashing young man, countryside, as they have for dents attend the university, but most of an older Tagore centuries, singing enigmatic which is now known as Visva- with crinkly eyes, looking off songs about the blessings of Bharati. Despite a drop in aca- into the distance. madness and the life of a seekr', demic standards, its art school There are photos of Tagore er. Tagore adored the bauls is still considered one of the with Helen Keller, Freud and and even declared himself one best in the world. Gandhi. Notable for its abof them. As the school grew, so did sence is the Nobel Prize itself. I sat on the ground and listhe town. Its streets are lined It was stolen from the museum tened to the hypnotic music. Fine Arts students work in a studio atVisva-Bharati University. with stately sal trees (some in 2004, a crime that remains Bauls have grown popular in planted by Tagore), tea stalls unsolved and that is, some be- recent years and, inevitably, and tiny bookstores. The po- lieve, emblematic of a deeper poseurs havetried to cash in. transformation from a place sidewalk shops, a sign for the ems and paintings of Tagore problem. So when another traveler, a "Long before the prize was well-off Kolkatan with an exwhere "the days went by in lei- "Tagore Institute of Manage- are everywhere. surely fashion," to the churnment for Excellence." Fifteen Bicycles, which outnumber stolen, Tagore was stolen," pensive camera, joined us, I ing, chaotic city that it is today minutes later, I entered the lush cars,are the best transporta- quipped Kumar Rana, an aid asked, "Do you think he is a — Tagore decamped in 1901 to g rounds of the Mitali inn tion. One day, Dey lent me his worker I m e t . R eminiscing real baul singer?" a barren plain about 100 miles and exhaled. India often takes clunky bike equipped with a about Shantiniketan's "good Clearly displeased with my north of Calcutta. Tagore's fa- your breath away; rarely does single gear and a bell, which old days" is a popular sport question, he said after a long ther owned land there and on it give it back. came in handy given that there here. Everyone I met told me pause, "He's as real as you one visit experienced a moAfter settling into my simseem to be no passive-aggres- how the air was once cleaner, want h>m to be. ment of unexpected bliss. He ple room, lined from floor to sive driverson Indian roads, the streets quieter, the people Sitting on the hard Shanbuilt a hut to mark the spot, but ceiling with b o oks ( includ- only a g gressive-aggressivegentler. tiniketan earth, a breeze foreother than that and a few trees, ing Tagore's), I met the inn's ones. Riding under a blanket shadowing the monsoon rains, the young Tagore found only owner, Krishno Dey, a former of monsoon clouds, I passed Crazywith the love of God I closed my eyes, listened to "a vast open country." United Nations official who schoolgirls in crisp blue uniToward the end of my stay, the music and asked no more Undaunted, he opened his returned to his native Bengal forms, two or three to a bike. I encountered a baul singer questions. school later that year, readily some years ago. Sitting in a admitting that it was "the prod- portico with ceiling fans whirluct of daring inexperience." ing, wedined on chom-chom, r l I I' i There was a small library, lush or mango pulp (it tastes better r • gardens and amarble-floored than it sounds). "You're not going to s ee prayer hall. It began as a priI • I • mary school; only a few stu- much here," Dey warned me, dents attended at first, and one " because there's really n ot of those was his son. Living much to see." conditions were Spartan. StuPerfect, I thought. I had just I i I ' i I dents went barefoot and meals, spent three weeks in Kolkata, ' il I I i I which consisted of dal (Ientils) an unrelenting city of 13 milil ' I 'I and rice, were "comparable lion, and "not much" was pre' ' to jail diet," recalled Tagore, cisely what I craved. India may I i I I ' i I I i I i I I I I who believed that luxuries in- have invented the concept of I ' 'I I i terfered with learning. "Those zero, but traveling in the counII I who own much have much to try has more to do with infin/ fear," he would say. ity. A seemingly infinite numI I I I ber of people, vehicles, noises, / / Leaving the chaos odors, wonders and hassles. Shantiniketan and its school Not in Shantiniketan, thankrepresented an idea as much fully, where there are j u st as a place: People do their best enough sights to justify a few days' stay. learning and thinking when they divorce themselves from The petfect activity is to read Iraade the distractions of urban life Tagore, and that's what I did on Huludyvllsvyw and reconnect with their natu- the veranda,where Istumbled WalkIhCA I0!RI ral environment. That's not across a poem called "The GarA daring experiment easytodoinlndia. Asmytrain dener": "Let your life lightly Poet, artist, novelist, com- trundled past rice fields and dance on the edges of time like poser, essayist, educator, Tago- open space, I was inundated dew on the tip of a leaf." FrOm itS heritage to the artS, there'S re was I ndia's Renaissance with offers of a s h oeshine, man. He was also a humanist, pens, biscuits, flowers, jhal- A sense of wonder driven by a desire to change muri (puffed rice), newspapers, Tagore, who lived on camthe world, which is what he musical performances and a cammur lyesewsa p us, produced much of h i s Four times a year, Redmond Magazine RedweHsrveftG rt intended to do in Shantinik- magic show that featured the poetry in Shantiniketan (and is published to highlight the etan. Upset with what he saw transformation of a Pepsi bot- nearly all o f h i s p aintings), businesses and individuals as an India that mooched off tle into a bouquet of flowers. taught a few courses and hostvvho work to build a strong other cultures - "the eternal Before I knew it, the train ed a parade of visitors that incommunity. The publication ragpickers of other people's pulled into a tiny station, and cluded Ramsey MacDonald, a dustbins," he said — he imag- the touts and hawkers were future British prime minister, features a calendar W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: ined a school modeled after replaced by a few young men and Gandhi. '~cg of community events, the ancient Indian tapovans, or meekly asking if I needed a Ridiculed at first, Tagore's PubliShing four editiOnS a year personality features forestcolonies, where young taxi. We drove past a moving new school, which he called Wednesdays: April 17, June 19, and insight into "hidden men meditated and engaged collage of small-town India: Patha Bhavan ("a place for the treasures" around Redmond. in other spiritual practices. squat buildings, women in sa- wayfarer"), became a college August 28, November 13 His schoolwould eschew rote ris riding sidesaddle on motor in 1921 and attracted thoulearning and foster "an atmo- scooters, men i n r i ckshaws sands, including a young Insphere of living aspiration." selling banners emblazoned dira Gandhi, the Nobel Prize Equipped with this visionwith verses from the Great winning economist Amartya and unhappy with Calcutta's P oet, tailors working f r om Sen and Satyajit Ray, the In1
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REDMOND MAGAZINE
DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER somethingfor everyonein Redmond.
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SISTERS M AGAZ I N E
Travelers boardthe express train that runs between Kolkata and Shantiniketan in India. Train cars are decorated with photos of Rabindranath Tagore, the poet who foundedthe school that gave rise to Shantiniketan.
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WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS
Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniqueneSSOfthiS mOuntain tOWn. i
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Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlig ht Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.
SISTERf CH MS T K L S EVZNTS ItOIJ M T G I V l ' G U OIE LTEMTH CLIJJUOLlt • ISXZRSSTJBB T M G S T S
W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: PubliShing four editiOnSa year
Fridays: March 29 (My OwnTwo Hands), May 24 (Sisters Rodeo), June 28 (Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show), August 23 (September in Sisters), November 15 (A Cowboy Christmas)
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
A D V IGE 4 ENTERTAINM E N T
a 's ourwi ewa c in o a? TV SPOTLIGHT By David Bauder The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Men might want to take note if their loved one turns to the Investigation Discovery network today for Super Bowl counterprogramming, where a marathon of "Wives With Knives" episodes will be r u nning during the
game. It is a typically colorful pro-
gramming choiceby a young network that has grown quickly because of them. Five years into its life, the network devoted to true crime and mystery stories has attracted new fans so rapidly that its chief executive, Henry Schleiff, boldly predicts that it will be the top-rated cable TV network within three or four years. T he f i v e " Wives W i t h Knives" episodes tell stories of five different women who stabbed their h u sbands or boyfriends, sometimes k i l ling them, sometimes not. The women are all interviewed by criminologist Casey Jordan. "We thought we couldhave fun with t h i s m arathon of 'Wives With Knives' that intentionally, perhaps, tries to cut the men out of the picture," Schleiff said, as his publicist groaned in the background. "Wait! It gets worse. Itgoes directlyto our core audienceoffemales because, as that audience understands, the quickest way to a man's heart is through his chest."
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"We thought we could have fun with this marathon of 'Wives With Knives' that intentionally, perhaps, tries to cut the men out of the picture." — Henry Schleiff, chief executive, Investigation Discovery network
ies. Women, in particular, using their intuition or whatever, and like the problem-solving." Investigation Di s c overy began life five years ago this week, after parent Discovery Communications bought out Investigation Discovery via The Associated Press the stake of the then-Discovery An actress portrays Jamie Czerniawski, a New Jersey woman acTimes network that it shared cused of stabbing her husband in 2009, during a re-enactment for with The New York Times. an episode of the true crime series "Wives with Knives." That network averaged some 80,000 viewers at any point during the day, according to the Bad taste, perhaps? "We're days. There's "Blood, Lies Nielsen company. Since its rehaving fun with it," Schleiff 8. Alibis," "Blood Relatives," launch, ID has grown viewers said. "I think our audience will, "Date From Hell" and "Deadly each month to the point where too." Women, Fatal Encounters." it averaged 669,000 viewers Judging by the titles of ID's Tia Carerre is host of ID's in January, Nielsen said. In 55 programs, the free-wheeling Valentine's Day special, "50 million homes five years ago, it meetings where titles are pro- Ways to Leave Your Lover" will be in 85 million by the end posed would make a fascinat- where, it's safe to say, the pro- of March. ing program itself. Schleiff tagonists will think of more Schleiff, a natural showman claims credit — or blame — for colotful approaches than slip- who has run Court TV and "Wives With Knives." ping out the back, Jack. the Hallmark Channel, was ID's audience is 61 percent brought in in 2009. The colorThere's also "Who the (Bleep) Did I Marry?" on peo- women, perhaps counterintui- ful programming gets attenple who discoverugly secrets tive given the nature of its pro- tion, but there's a serious side about their spouses, soon to gramming. But many women on programs like the upcomhave a spinoff. "Stolen Voices, are big fans of mystery and ing "March to Justice" docuBuried Secrets" has murder suspense novels, Schleiff said. mentary, about the early days "Women love these stories of the civil rights movement. stories told in the first person. "Happily Never After" is about from a number of perspecWith its female, primarily people who meet untimely de- tives," Schleiff said. "At their older audience, Investigation mises around their wedding heart, these are really myster- Discovery has done a good job
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Acto in ness e Dear Abby: When I was 12, my a hug and drove off. family moved to New Jersey. It was When I went into my house and a difficult time in my life. Lucky for my mother saw the ring, she said, me, I made a best friend across the "What did you do to get THAT?" It street, "Janie." We spent all our time made me feel dirty and I didn't untogether. I loved being at her house derstand why. So I sent the ring to because it was a hapJanie and asked her to please return it to py one, unlike my own home. (My mom R andy, which s h e DEAR was erratic and undrd. ABBY 4 happy, and it affected In the years that our whole family) have followed, that man's generosity and A year later, Janie learned her family would be mov- compassion have stayed with me. ing to Ohio. I was devastated. The Sadly, I have never known how day the moving truck came, Janie to find him to thank him. Randy: and Iwere inseparable. The driver Wherever you are, please know was a young man in his 20s named how much of a difference your kindRandy. ness made in my life. When Janie and her family left — Still Grateful in Texas in their car, I sat on the curb outside Dear Still Grateful: You are living my house sobbing. When the load- proof that what goes around comes ing crew finished, Randy startedthe around. One simple act of kindness truck, then turned off the engine. He made an impact on your life, but got outand came and satbeside me you have multiplied it many times on the curb and told me how some- over by continuing to pass it on. day my pain would lessen. Dear Abby: When setting someHe said Iwas a special person, one up for a date, do you think it and shared a little about his own is important to share the person's family who was far away. Then he race? My friends and I have no probtook a ring off his finger and said he lem with interracial relationships, wanted me to have it. It was a Ma- but other people, unfortunately, rines ring his grandfather had given sometimes do. I would hate to put to him. He insisted I take it, gave me someone in a situation where a date
im ression
reaching a group of people that watches TV heavily, said Brad Adgate, an analyst for Horizon Media. It reaches for reali ty-based programming t h e same type of people interested in CBS' prime-time shows, he satd. It has the chance to become one of Discovery Communications'most profitable networks, A dgate said. He be lieves a prediction that the network can be No. 1 in cable over the next few years is too optimistic, though. ID scores high in Nielsen's m easurement of " l ength o f viewing," an obscure statistic advertisers love: it means the network's viewers tend to hang around longer than they do at other places. It also indicates the network has an attractive identity in itself, that viewers are tuning in more to ID than to specific shows. "Although we may change the titles every hour, we may have a slight variation ... the one common denominator is they are incredibly riveting," Schleiff said."They are incredibly compelling. They are incredibly emotionally moving."
MOVIE TIMESTQDAY • There may be anadditional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
rejectedhim/her or is rude because of race. Our friend "Jena" set up a girlfriend, "Joan," who is Chinese, on a date with a white man. Joan knew what the man looked like and was fine with it, but when Jena showed the man a picture of Joan (who is gorgeous), he made an excuse and backed out. We hate to think what he may have said to Joan if he'd gone into the date "blind." What do you think, Abby? We dislike prejudice, but we want to avoid hurting anyone in the future. — Colorblind in Melbourne, Australia Dear Colorblind: When arranging a blind date, the usual practice is to give each party as much information about the other as possible. Because it's part of the "package" you're offering, race should be mentioned to prevent any surprises. However, you may have drawn the wrong conclusion about the man in this case. Has it occurred to youthat he may have backed out because Joan is so gorgeous that he was intimidated? Many beautiful women have complained about having this problem. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or PO. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
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Regal Old Mill Stadium t6 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 54t-382-6347 • BROKENCITY (R)3:45, 9:30 • BULLET TO THEHEAD(R) I:10, 3:50, 6:20, 9:40 • 0JANGO UNCHAINED (R)I2:50,4:25,8 • GANGSTERSQUAD(R) t2:20, 3:05, 6:05, 9:t0 • HANSEL& GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS (R)1t:40a.m., 12:05, 6:45 • HANSEL RGRETEL: W ITCH HUNTERS IMAX (R) I2:40, 3:55, 7:25, 9:45 • HANSEL& GRETEL: WITCHHUNTERS3-0 (R)3:I5,9:25 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY 3-0(PG-I3)6 • THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-I3)2, 9:35 • LES MISERABLES (PG-t3) t 1:55 a.m., 3:25, 7:35 • LIFE OF PI (PG)12:15 • LIFE OF PI 3-0 (PG) 3:35, 6:30, 9:30 • LINCOLN(PG-t3) tt:50 a.m., 3, 6:t5, 9:30 • MAMA(PG- I3) 1:40, 4:20, 7: IO,9:50 • MOVIE43(R) I:50,4:45,7:50,IO: IO • PARKER(R) 1:20, 4: IO,7:05, 10 • THIS IS 40(R) 1, 4:05, 7:15, I0:20 • WARM BODIES (PG- I3) 12:30, I:30, 4:35, 6:55, 7:45, 10:15 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 1t:45 a.m., 3:t0, 6:35, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. t
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TV TODAY 3 p.m. on ANPL,"Puppy Bowl IX n — Puppy Bowl is backfor a ninth year with another cute cast of critters, featuring the usual fan favorites including the waterbowl cam, kiss-cam and more. It'll be repeated into the night, so you can catch the action before, during or after that other Bowl. 3:25 p.m. onE3, "Super Bowl XLVII" — The hype and hoopla of Super Bowl XLVII give way to the business on the field as the Baltimore Ravens andSan Francisco 49ers go at it for the NFL title and the Vince Lombardi Trophy. Jim Nantz and Phil Simms will call the action 7 p.m. onf3, "Elementary" — His efforts to catch unpredictable criminal Martin Ennis (Terry Kinney) bring Sherlock (Jonny Lee Miller) into the orbit of FBI profiler Kathryn Drummond (Kari Matchett), who's something of an expert on Ennis. Watson (Lucy Liu) faces the possibility of being evicted in the new episode "The Deductionist." 8 p.m. on l3, "The Simpsons" — Steve Carell provides the voice of Dan Gillick, Homer's new bowling teammate, who does accounting for Fat Tony. When Tony is called for jury duty, he taps Dan to run the mob in his place in "Penny Wiseguys." Joe Mantegna returns as the voice of Fat Tony. 9p.m. onHE3, "Live From New York: The First 5 Years of Saturday Night Live" — Remember the Coneheads? Emily Litella? Chevy Chase's clumsy President Gerald Ford? Dan Aykroyd's terminally mellow Jimmy Carter? John Belushi's manic samurai? Those immortal bits from the "Saturday Night Live" past, and those who brought them to life, are celebrated in this special. It includes interviews with Aykroyd, Chase, Garrett Morris and Laraine Newman, as well as frequent "SNL" visitors Candice Bergen, Eric Idle and Steve Martin. 11:35 p.m. onE3, "The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson" — The game may be over, but the good times continue to roll in New Orleans as the late-night host welcomes Steve Carell, Neil Patrick Harris, Julie Chen, Nikki Reedand Saints quarterback Drew Brees for "The Craig Ferguson Super Bowl Special." In addition to chatting with his guests, he visits Bourbon Street and other iconic sites in the city. © zapat
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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, FEB. 3, 2013: Tryto lighten up this year. You often areextremely serious, andyou could make more ofcertain situations than exists. Use your uniqueabilities to transform your issues bytaking atotally different approach. If you are Stars show the kind single, be careful of of dayyou'll have a v eryintriguing and ** * * * D ynamic mysterious person ** * * P ositive y o u meet. This ** * Average per s on is not who ** So-so you think he or she * Difficult is, andthis could spell trouble. If you are attached, the two of you will enhance your bond bytaking off on adventures together. Suddenly, you might act like newfound lovers. SCORPIO knows howto triggeryou. Learn the art of detachment. ARIES (March 21-Apr!119) ** * * You might seek some peace and quiet. Whether you throwyourself into a good book or go off on a hike byyourself makes little difference. You are alone and finally will have some thinking time. Follow through on an imaginative idea. Tonight: Togetherness works.
TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20j ** * * D efer to others — not only because it is easier, butalso because the person in question might be feeling a bit down. Knowthat while you are indulging this person, you also might be supporting the development of an attitude. Be careful establishing limits. Tonight: Say "yes."
GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE20j ** * Stay even and mellow, and know that others could be worn out, too. Give the people in your immediate circle
SCORPIO (OCT.23-NOV. 21j
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
thetreatmentyou would like in return. Question mixed messages. Tonight:Make itan early night, if possible.
CANCER(JUNE21-JULY 22j ** * * Y our creativityflourishes to a new level, which allows you to identify with others. Your understanding and sensitivity count to many people in your life, with the exception of a key loved one. This person will learn to appreciate you. Tonight: Act like it is Friday night.
LEO (JULY23-AUG. 22j ** * You might have had enough of staying close to home, so opt to go out and visitfriends. You also could meet loved ones for a scrumptious meal at a preferred spot. Be aware thatyou might be receiving conflicting messages. Tonight: Think about tomorrow.
VIRGO(AUG.23-SEPT.22j ** * * S hare more of what is on your mind with a neighbor or close friend. This person has been in a similar situation and can identify with you. You could feel bogged down or uptight. For that reason, clear the air or share your feelings. It will help. Tonight: Hang out.
LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22j ** * Curb a need to be possessive or have your way. Realize what is happening with a financial matter. You could have a last-minute problem. Avoid being controlling or forcing. Tonight: Listen to someone else's perspective.
** * * You smile and understand where someone is coming from. You might attempt to come to an understanding with aroommateorloved one.Though you clearly care, the timing might be off right now. Tonight: Be spontaneous.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54 I-330-8562 • WRECK-IT RALPH(PG)1t:30 a.m. • The Super Bowl gamescreens at3 today (doorsopen at 1:30 p.m.). • After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 2f mayattend screenings before7 p m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian.
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SAGITTARIUS (NOV.22-DEC. 21j * ** You do notneed toexplainso much. Instead of taking the lead, step back and observe more. Revise your finances, and get tothe bottom of a problem. You might decide to update your budget and communication style as a result. Tonight: Get to bed early.
CAPRICORN(DEC. 22-JAN. 19j ** * * E mphasize your friends. One ofthem could be somewhat depressed and might be distancing him- or herself. Make time for this person. You might be instrumental in changing his or her attitude. Tonight: All smiles.
AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18j ** * * O thers expect you to take the lead. You are responsible and very intuitive. Sometimes your seriousness could be overwhelming to those who haven't known you for a while. Be careful, as youcould be sending them mixed signals. Tonight: Aforce to be dealt with.
PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH20j ** * * Go offtoa movieto relaxyour mind. Realize that many people you know are far more sophisticated than you might realize. Open upto experiencing the world differently. Tonight: Explore a newtype of cuisine. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271
• CHASINGICE(PG-l3) 6, 8 • A ROYALAFFAIR (R) 3
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • HANSEL &GRETEL: W ITCH HUNTERS (R)Noon,2:t5, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • PARENTAL GUIDANCE(PG)t1:45a.m.,2,4:t5,6:30,8:45 • WARM BODIES (PG- I3) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 • ZERO DARKTHIRTY (R) 1t:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9:15
(hristinn Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 54t-549-8800 • Sisters Movie Houseis closed today. Madras Cinema 5,110t S.W. U.S. Highway97, 54t-475-3505 • GANGSTERSQUAD(R) 4:35 • HANSEL RGRETEL:WITCH HUNTERS3-0 (R) 1:15, 3:20, 5:25, 7:30 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 2: IO,7 • MAMA(PG- I3) 12:50, 3, 5:05,7: IO • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) 1:45, 4:15, 6:50 • WARM BODIES (PG- I3) 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:25 •
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Pine Theater, 2t4 N. Main St., 541-4t6-10t4 • ARGO (R) I2:30 • LINCOLN(UPSTAIRS — PG-13) Noon • Theupstairs screeningroom has limited accessibility.
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Calendar, D2 Obituaries, D6-7 Weather, DB THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
O w w w.bendbulletin.com/local
e rua is critica mont or snow ac WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — The Senate voted overwhelmingly to approve one of its own members, Massachusetts Democrat John
Kerry, as Secretary of State Tuesday. As various members of President Obama's cabinet depart at the beginning of his second term, the Senate will have to confirm
numerous nominees in the coming weeks and months. Kerry's quick confirmation to
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
A snow dump in the last weekof Januaryinthe Cascades helped boost Central Oregon snowpack numbers back above normal for this time of year. "It was definitely an impressive storm," said Julie Koeberle, a hydrologist with the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Portland. While the storm didn't drop any snow on Bend, it did cover the nearby mountains. As of Jan. 24 the snowpack forthe Deschutes/ Crooked River Basin was 93 percent of normal. After
the storm swept through the Central Oregon high country, the snowpack Thursday was up to 103 percent of normal. So far this winter's rain and snowfall has been sporadic, said Jeremy Giffin, watermaster for the Oregon Water Resources Department in Bend "(It's) not as steady as I'd like to see," he said. Giffin is in charge of regulating flows from reservoirs around CentralOregon to meet thedemands of growers and ranchers. The last three-plus weeks were pretty dry in Central Oregon, prompting Giffin to cut releases late last week
from Wickiup Reservoir upstream of Bend. By letting less water down the river, more is staying in the reservoir. He said there is still plenty of water in the Central Oregon reservoirs — Wickiup was 90 percent full as of Friday — but he may have to keep trimming releases if the weather stays sunny. While pleasant, the sunshine since the snowstorm is not the weather needed for boosting water supplies this month. "February is a critical snowpack month," Giffin said, "so we like to see the snow falling in February." SeeSnowpack/D2
Snowpackfor water year 2013
KEY
The area's snowpack is at103 percent of median and about 75 percent of peak. Snowpack is at137 percent of 2012 levels.
— Water year 2013 Water year 2012 Water year 2011 — Water year 2010 — Average 1971 to 2000
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Source Natural Resources Conservation Service Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
replace outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, which sailed through on a 94-3 vote, is likely to be the easiest of Obama's slate of
Girl Scouts get lesson in science andmore
nominees.
Three Republicans, Jim lnhofe of Oklahoma
and TexansJohn Cornyn and Ted Cruz, voted no, and Kerry, still technically a member of the Senate, voted "present."
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/"' ..''',a'~X> " -"'i Ti
U.S. SENATEVOTE • Approve John Kerry as
By Ben Botkin
Secretary of State
The Bulletin
Merkley (D) ..................Y Nlyden (D).................... Y
Nine-year-old Madison Neiswonger put together electrical gadgetry on a panel powered by batteries. A plastic red disc rested atop a small motor, flying upward after the Girl Scout flicked a switch. "It's kind of cool because you get to put it together," said Madison, a fourth-grade Girl Scout from Bend. She was one of 30 area Girl Scouts taking part Saturday in the Fourth Annual American Association of University Women Girl Scout Science and Engineer Fair at the Elks Lodge in Bend. For the girls, the event provides an introduction to theprospect of careers in science, technology, engineering and math, with hands-on activities and hearingfrom a professional engineer. The Bend branch of the AAUW, an organization that promotes equity for women, works with area Girl Scout leaders to put on the event. Before the hands-on activities started, the girls heard from Heidi Lansdowne, an engineer for the city of Bend. She told the group about her job and how a combination of gravity and pumps brings water into the city from wells and Bridge Creek. "What would you do if the water didn't come out of the faucet?" Lansdowne satd. SeeScouts/D3
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STATE NEWS
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o Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
The quonset huts of the former Yew Lane School now house the Bend-La Pine buses and transportation offices. • Salem:Activist Suzanne Gallagher to lead state GOP. • Baker City:WallowaWhitman supervisor in no hurry to close
ormer ew ane c OO ans reunion SU en
roads. • Elsewhere:Thirdgrader's threats cause
controvery; bakery
under investigation in discrimination and
more.
Stories on 03
Have astoryidea or sudmIssIon? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................ 541-617-7829 Redmond........541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver......... 541-383-0348
lementary school leaves its mark on everyone. For Dennis Koho, the imprint was literal. At 61, he still bears a scar on his thigh from one of the metal quonset huts that once made up Bend's Yew Lane School. After World War II ended, American soldiersreturned home and a baby boom followed. In Bend, that meant both elementary schools — Kenwood, which now houses Highland Elementary, and A l len, which later burned down near the current site of Safeway o n Northeast Third S treet — w e r e over-enrolled. So four military quonset huts were plunked down on Southeast Second Street, near Yew Lane and Wilson Avenue. A cinder block structure was built
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Bend-La Pine Schools. «We definitely got every ounce of life out of t hose LILYRAFF quonset huts." McCAULOU If voters approve an upcoming school bond, the quonset huts will be removed and a permanent building constructed in the center to connect the huts and in their place. provide office space. Before then, Koho, an attorney in Voila: Yew Lane School, grades one Keizer, hopes to hold a reunion for althrough four. ums, teachers and parents of the small, The setup was supposed to be tempo- quirky school. "It would have been a charter school rary, the 1940s equivalent of modular classrooms. But more than 60 years if it were around today," says Linda later, it's still in use, albeit as a bus barn Marteney, a former classmate who now and offices for the district's transporta- lives in Portland and is helping to artion department. range the reunion. "Right now, it's very cold and obvi"You would point to it now as a model ously very energy i n efficient," says for a community school," Koho adds. Julianne Repman, a spokeswoman for SeeSchool! D3 /,
Deschutes ...... 541-617-7837 Crook ..............541 -633-21 84 Jefferson ........541-633-21 84 Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456 Business........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands ..... 541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541 -383-0354
• Obituaries, Death Notices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
Government planned to harness the Columbia for power in1913 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb. 2, 1913
Proposal to harness Columbia is endorsed The United States government and the states of Oregon and Washington will each be asked to appropriate $50,000 that a detailed survey and thorough investigation of the proposed Columbia River power project may be made, as a result of an inspection made today at the prospective dam site by joint committees
YESTERDAY representing Oregon and Washington. The visitors were greatly impressed by the narrowness of the river. Here the entire volume of water of the Columbia passes between walls of rock 200 feet apart. State Engineer Lewis said he's certain that Oregon could dispose of its 300,000 continuoushorsepower available only eight months in the year. He suggested that each state and the national government jointly raise $150,000, the amountneeded to conduct the survey. G overnor West said he favors the appropriation being
made, and the committees from the two states said they would unanimously recommend the appropriations to their Legislatures and to the government for the purpose of making a detailed survey of the power project, whose estimated cost is $23 million. It would takeone year to make the investigation, Mr. Lewis thinks.
PUCKER UP FOR VALENTINES DAY!
Work on sewer starts again Last night R.E. Koon, construction engineer for the city, returned from Portland where he had been adjusting the final matters with the sewer contractorsand arranging for the continuance of construction by the city. SeeYesterday /D2
FILLER LIP SPECIAL
>75 oFF N ORT H W E S T
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
E VENT TODAY
AL E N D A R requested; proceeds benefit Soroptimist lnternational of Bend's projects; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-1753 or www. sibend.org. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Everything's Cool," a documentary film about global warming; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
"TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. NOTABLESSWINGBAND:The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed WEDNESDAY Market Road; 541-639-7734 or www.notablesswingband.com. KNOW CLUE:MURDER MOST HEYOCEAN!:The Canada-based FOUL:Deschutes Public Library pop act performs, with Chase Elliot librarians suggest and discuss and David Paul Gillespie; $8 plus riveting mystery books; free; 6 fees in advance, $10 at the door; p.m.; Downtown Bend Public 7:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary. 6804 or www.rlpheyocean.bpt.me. org/calendar. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: MARIA STUARDA":Starring Joyce MONDAY DiDonato, Elza van den Heever and Matthew Polenzani in an BINGO FUNDRAISER: A bingo night encore performance of Donizetti's featuring cash prizes and auctions, masterpiece; opera performance a bake sale, pizza, drinks and candy; transmitted in high definition; $18; proceeds benefit Sisters High 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium School athletics; $15 for 11 games; 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Sisters Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. High School, 1700 W. McKinney WORLD'S FINEST:The PortlandButte Road; 541-549-4045. based reggae, funk and bluegrass "JOSH GROBAN:ALLTHAT act performs; free; 7 p.m.; ECHOES":Afilm featuring Josh McMenamins Old St. Francis Groban performing hitsfrom his School, 700 N.W. Bond St., 12-year music career and selections Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. from his newalbum; $15; 7:30 mcmenamins.com. p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Bend; 541-382-6347 or www. Shakespeare's comedy about fathomevents.com. mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood TUESDAY Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. IGNITE FOOD:A series of quick cascadestheatrical.org. and energized presentations about the theme of food from different THE HELIOSEQUENCE:The academic perspectives; followed indie-rock act performs, with by a panel discussion; free; 4-5:30 Talkdemonic and All You All; $15 p.m.; Central Oregon Community plusfees; 7:30 p.m.,doors open at College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend;541- Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or 383-7786 or http:I/www.cocc.edu/. www.towertheatre.org. BUNCO FUNDRAISER:Play bunco, EXCISION:The dubstep act with instructions; reservations performs, with Paper Diamond,
Yesterday Continued from D1 This morning the steam drilling outfit working in the alley west of Wall Street was again put in operation, and about 20 men are working. The second boiler, installed at the corner of Wall and Ohio streets, is ready to use, and will be started on Monday, the two drill to b e used with it having arrived today. Work will be done on Ohio Street with them. Arrangements have been made to get a compressed air drilling outfit in from Portland, and this is scheduled to arrive in a couple of weeks. With the steam drills all working, about 40 men will be employed and when the compressor is installed this number probably will be doubled. The fact that hand drilling has been found uneconomicalhas caused the engineerto abandon that method entirely. At the outset all work will be done by day labor, until the exact cost of handling the different items is established, after which every effort will be made to let out piece or station work. A trial will be made in some ofthe deeper portions of the trench of tunneling; that is, instead of opening up the entire trench going down to bottom at intervals and then connecting the holes with a tunnel along the trench bottom.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb. 2, 1938
Roosevelt calls for larger Army and Navy President Roosevelt today warned Congress that America's national defense is inadequate for national security and called for a long-term billion dollardefense program, and asked for immediate start on construction of two additional dreadnoughts and two naval cruisers. He asked additions of more than $20 million to the present billion-dollar defense expenditures called for in the 1939 fiscalyear. Roosevelt asked — in view of war alarms spreading through the world — that Congress turn its immediate attention to enactment of legislation designed to eliminate profiteering in any future war and to equalize burdens ofany possible war so far as possible. The new defense program would add $20.8 million to the nation's 1939 military and na-
val costs, plus whatever might be spent in launching the proposed new dreadnoughts and cruisers. "Tension t hroughout t h e world is high" declared Roosevelt. "Armies are fighting in the far east and in Europe; thousands of civilians are being driven from their homes and bombed from the air. "As commander-in-chief of the Army and Navy of the United States it is my constitutional duty to report to the Congress that our national defense is, in light of the increasing armaments of other nations, inadequate for purposes of national securityand required increase for that reason." Roosevelt noted that the defense problems of the nation are not simple — that America has two long coast lines and must face possibility in which both coasts might be involved. "We cannot be certain that the connecting link — the Panama Canal — would be safe. Adequate defense affects therefore the simultaneous defense of every part of th e United States of America." Roosevelt declared that his arms proposals were designed solely for defense and to implement the nation's efforts for world peace. Completion of the recommended naval program would give the United States a Navy second to none in the world — of strength equal to Britain's mighty fighting fleet.
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb.2, 1963
Editorial: Ruiningour greatest natural resource The greatest problem in the U.S. today is water pollution, a terrible thing. You may not know it, but we in Central Oregon are slowly, but surely, ruining our water. A reason for this is that people use chemical detergent to clean dishes. When the housewives rinse their suds down the drain, they run into streams, lakes and rivers. On some streams you can see suds piling up on top of each other on the water on a stormy day. The housewives' reply to this is, "Well you can't get the dishes squeaky clean without those detergents." Another reason is that the cities run their sewers right into lakes and other bodies of water. At Lake Tahoe, on the border of California and Nevada, there are huge mansions on the bank of the lake. The refuse from
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
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Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" continues at the Greenwood Playhouse in Bend. Vaski and Lyfe; $20 plusfees in advance, $25 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. slipmatscience.com.
THURSDAY "IT'S A DISASTER":BendFilm presents the R-rated, 2012 festival winner for best script; $10; 6 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-3378 or www.bendfilm. ol'g. "THE REDVELVETCAKEWAR": The Ridgeview High School theater department presents a comedy as its premiere performance; reservations for Feb. 14 show requested; $5; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. CELTIC CROSSROADS: A stage music showfeaturing Irish singers, dancers and instrumentalists;
these houses eventually drains into the lake. People used to be able to drink right out of the lake. It's so polluted now they can't even use it for radiator water. The lake usedto be able to filter this out, but it is unableto do it now. Another reason is carelessness. One man will build a house and blast a hole for water. Another man will build a house right next to the other man's house and blast a hole for a toilet right next to the others man's water hole. When he flushes the toilet, all the junk goes into the other man's water. Around here we've been lucky because the lava has filtered all the stuff out. Bend has been lucky because itdoesn't have a very large population. Bend had better plan for the future. — Jay Maudlin, Chief Editor, Kenwood News-Views, Kenwood School, Bend
Letter. Artificial tracks would 'build'herds To the Editor: This controversybetween the State Game Department andthe hunters can be solved. The game department claims the winter range will not hold any more deer. To solve the road hunter
mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES:A screening of the best films from the 2011 The Archaeology Channel lnternational Film and Video Festival, including "The Lord of Sipan"; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www.archaeologychannel.org. SHOOK TWINS:The quirky folk trio performs; $14 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
The bluegrass rock band performs; $41-$53 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES:A screening of the bestfilmsfromthe2011 The Archaeology Channel lnternational Film and Video Festival, including "The Fate of Old Beijing" and "Bitter Roots"; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. archaeologychannel.org. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller Ron Bell-Roemer and music by Scottish Heart; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943.
$35-$55 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; SATURDAY Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall SENSATIONALSATURDAY:Learn St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. about hummingbirds and discover howtheir body parts are designed THE TWANGSHIFTERS:The for an active lifestyle; included in Portland-based Americana act the price of admission; $12 adults, performs; free; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert maverickscountrybar.com. Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. FRIDAY WRITE NOW!:Brainstorm, play "THE REDVELVET CAKEWAR": word games and more in acasual The Ridgeview High School theater setting, to help creative writing; department presents a comedy free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public as its premiere performance; Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541reservations for Feb. 14 show 312-1081 or www.deschuteslibrary. requested; $5; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview org/calendar. High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn CHINESE NEWYEAR Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600. CELEBRATION:Featuring a live AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Gregory performances, traditional Chinese Martin reads from his book, games,ping-pong and dumplings; "Stories for Boys"; free; 7 p.m.; free admission; 4-7 p.m.; Oregon Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 2690 Tai Chi Wushu, 2115 N.E. Highway E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318- 20, Bend; 541-639-8898 or www. 7242. oregontaichi.com. "DIAL M FORMURDER": A VALENTINESPAGHETTI DINNER: screening of the PG-rated1954 A meal of spaghetti, salad and film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson bread; proceeds benefityouth County Library, Rodriguez Annex, camps and conferences; $5, $20 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475per family; 4:30-7:30 p.m.; Holy 3351 or www.jcld.org. Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536"TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades 1992. Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about AN EVENINGWITH HOT TUNA:
ing up, they found themselves playing basketball with boys. " When I was i n t h ird or fourthgrade, my brother Chet and Ray Garretson would let me shoot around with them," said Nakada,the leading scorer for Mountain View High. "In fifth grade I didn't think I would go out for the team, because I thought I was terrible. It ended up none of the other girlshad ever played and Iwas a step ahead." Nelson, Redmond H i gh's talentedguard, remembers her problems as a youth. "In second grade, we had co-ed teams," she said. "All the boys didn't like to pass the ball to a girl." Now seniors, both will probably land berths on the IMC firstteam forthe second consecutive season. Nakada and Nelson have been meeting since seventh grade and the two will square off again tonight. For first-year MV Co a ch Bill Yonge, Nakada has been
Feb. 10 CHILI COOK-OFF:Eatchili and watch competitors compete for the best recipe; proceeds benefit The Education Foundation for Bend-La Pine Schools; $10, $5 ages 6-11, free ages 5 and younger; 12:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-355-5660 or education.foundation@bend. k12.or.us. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Fiddle music and dancing. Additional jam format from 12-1 p.m. includes junior, adult and senior fiddlers from the region; informal acoustic jam for nonperforming musicians in the Auxiliary room of the VFW hall from1-3 p.m; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-6474789.
Snowpack Despite his hopes, snow isn't in the immediate forecast for Central Oregon. Today should be mostly sunny in Bend, with a high of 51 degrees, and Monday should be partly sunnywith a high of 49. Snow could be coming to town later this week, though. The snow level is expected to be as high as 5,000 feet Wednesday, but then drop to between 3,500 and 4,000 Thursday, said Diann Coonfield, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Pendleton. Bend is at 3,623 feet. "(The) weather is coming out of the north, northwest," she said.
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together. "Her experience has meant a lot, her leadership has meant a lot," Yonge said. Under Yonge, the Cougars problem is easy, for he goes by have become ateam that conthe deer track, and deer he sees centrates on defense and ball along the road. I am going to controL The change has not show you how to make lots of bothered Nakada in the least. "If the shot is there, I'll take deer track along the road. This is a secret that I kept for it, she said. "If not, I'll pass off. 53 years; I probably will never I'd much rather have the team need it anymore. Gather up the win and me not score any legs of the animals you want points than score 25 points and to show the track of, cut off the lose." bottom of the hooves to 2 inches Nelson came into the season above the end of the hoof. Nail with a specific goal in mind them on a board 5 inches by 6 — make the playoffs for the inches. Nail them on from the fourth year in a row. inside so the nails don't show. N elson earned he r s p ot Nail them on so they will make in Panther hoop history her tracks like the animal is walk- freshman year. "She came into an o vering. Tack or screw them on your shoes, put two boards on time ball game against Crook each foot and keep them out of County," said RHS Coach Dick the sun when not in use. Branaugh. "I said, 'We've got N ow walk d ow n a n o l d to get someone in there with road orfield where the ground some quicks.' She caused the is dusty or soft, for you have turnover and hit the winning turned yourself into a deer, bucket." horse, cow, elk or what have Since then, she's been a you. If this is done right you will major part of th e Panther's even fool yourself at times. success. A friend of mine thought this Nelson and Nakada don't one up in Mexico to throw off know each other very well exthe border guards. cept on the basketball court. — A. Meglitsch, Redmond There they share a s i l ent kinship. "It's competitive, but it's fun. 25 YEARS AGO You know how she's going to For the week ending play," said Nelson of Nakada. "I admire her athletic abilFeb. 2, 1988 ity," said Nakada of her foe. Nakada and Nelson "She's an excellent competiWhen Laura Nakada and tor. Playing against her is a Laurie Nelson were g r ow- challenge."
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
D3
REGON
Activist Gallagher winsstate GOPchair By Steven Dubois
Former congressional candidate Art Robinson fell from P ORTLAND — I t i s S u - the race earlier in the day after zanne Gallagher's turn to help he finished third — six votes the Oregon RepublicanParty behind Lee — in the initial snap its losing streak. round of balloting. The party's state central Gallagher replaces Allen committee on Saturday picked Alley, who did not run, and the Republican activist to be will serve a t w o-year term its chairwoman. She defeated through th e 2 014 election, John Lee Jr., the chairman of which will be headlined by the Clackamas County GOP, races for governor and U.S. 66-52 on the second round of Senate. balloting that took place in The party has not won a Salem. statewide race in a d ecade,
controls just one of five congressional seats and is the minority party in the state House and Senate. To break the losing streak in statewide elections, the party must overcome a significant registration disadvantage. Just under a third of Oregon's 2.2 million registered voters are Republicans, and Democrats outnumber them by190,000. Gallagher did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment. She previously
The Associated Press
told The Associated Press that it will take an army of volunteers to overcome the registration disparity, and the party must rally around an economic question: "Whose money is it?" Gallagher u n s uccessfully ran for th e state House in 2004 and Senate in 2012 from districts that heavily favored Democrats. Lee and Robinson also did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment.
Wallowa-Whitman chief: No hurry on roadsplan The Associated Press BAKER CITY — The new supervisor of t h e W a llowaWhitman National Forest says he doesn't feelany sense of urgency to make a decision about closing roads in the 2.4-millionacre expanse he manages. "Maybe I will," John Laurence, 63, said with a laugh during a recent interview with the Baker City Herald. Laurence replaced Kevin
Martin as the Wallowa-Whitman's leading official on Jan. 14 and is the forest's third supervisor since August. A proposalfrom Martin'spredecessor last year caused an uproar among forest users, and was withdrawn. The issue dates back more than five years, when thenWallowa-Whitman s u p ervisor Steve Ellis said the forest would look at restricting some
motorized access. Roughly 6,000 people have signed a petition urging the Wallowa-Whitman to not close any roads to motor vehicles, contending it would prevent people from pursuing activities such as riding ATVs, hunting, picking berries and gathering firewood. Those who support closing roads say the forest must limit vehicles to protect elk habitat
and prevent environmental damage. They point out that t he W allowa-Whitman h a s 6,900 miles of roads open to motor vehicles, and closing some roadswould not severely restrict public access. Laurencerecognizes thatthe polarized debateover what's known as the Travel Management Plan posed a challenge to his predecessors and it will similarly challenge him.
School Continued from D1 Talking about their days at Yew Lane School, folks start to sound as if they grew up in a rural version of "Leave It To Beaver." Wilson Avenue was a nameless trail of cinder that locals referred to as "The Logging Road." Cattle and goats roamed pastures around the school. "You were able to tell which of the barbed w ir e f ences were electrified by putting a stick on them," Koho says. "If it smoked, you didn't touch it." Students, p a r ent s and teachers all chipped in to clear rocks and plant grass in part of the schoolyard. The huts were placed close together and students were not allowed to play between them. But the narrow gaps proved too enticing for Koho to resist. As he ran around the corner, the c o rrugated metal roof slashed his thigh. The injury did nothing to dull his affection for the school, however. Before hot meals were sold there, parents volunteered to grill and serve hotdogs for a special lunch twice a year. "If the school needed something, we'd have a cake walk to raise money," Marteney
says. The school shared a principal. Gym class was held once a week, for f ourth graders only, by a visiting instructor. "It was really just the four teachers," Koho says. And some very i n volved parents, too. Instead of a Parent Teacher Association, Yew L ane was overseen by t h e friendlier-sounding "Parent Teacher Club." Marteney's mother, Loretta Fread, was a r oom mother at Yew Lane for more than a decade, while her c h ildren attended. " Whenever there wa s a celebration, she came and brought homemade icecream and strawberry jam or cupcakes or something," Marteney says. Fread, who turns 91 next m onth, will a t tend th e r e union, Marteney says. "I don't think she'll make cookies," she adds, "but she'll be there." People who are interested in the Yew Lane School reunion should contact Koho at dkoho@koho.org. — Lily Raff McCaulouis a
AROUND THE STATE Third-grade threats spark controversy —Someparents in the Bandon School District are upset because they were not told that a third-grade student wrote threatening notes. The World newspaper of Coos Bay reports that more than a dozen parents complained at a school board meeting this week. Parents said the third-grader left notes in the desks of several fellow students in November, with messages such as 'You will die" and 'I'm going to kill you." The teacher discovered the notes and referred the student to the principal. One parent, Dutch Hauser, alleged that the school principal tried to sweep the incident under the rug because the student's parent is on the
school board. Superintendent Dian Buchedenied acover-up, saying the district followed its safety procedures.
BBkGI'y ulldGI' IIIVGStlgutlOII —The state attorney general's office is investigating a consumer complaint filed against a Gresham bakery that declined to make a cake for a same-sex wedding. The Oregonian and KATU report that Laurel Bowman wrote the complaint against Sweet Cakes By Melissa after she and her fiancee went to the bakery Jan. 17. In her complaint, Bowman said the owner refused to m ake the cake when he learned itwasfora sam e-sexwedding and called the couple "abominations unto the lord." Bakery owner Aaron Klein told The Oregonian he sells cakes to customers of all sexual orientations, but same-sex marriage goes against his Christian faith. He denies calling the couple"abominations." The attorney general's office is waiting for Sweet Cakes' official account before deciding whether to take action.
Bus drivers to get hours limited — TriMet busdrivers wil soon be required to take at least10 hours off between shifts. The plan tentatively agreed to Friday is in response to an investigation by The
Oregonian. Thenewspaperfound that some bus drivers, eager to work overtime, had been working up to 22 hours in a 24-hour period, and were having trouble staying awake while transporting passengers. The new agreement between the transit agency's management and Amalgamated Transit Union 757 calls for drivers to be limited to14 hours each service day. Union president Bruce Hansen says the new rules are for passenger and public safety as well as bus operator health. — From wire reports
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Continued from D1 On Monday, theSenateapproved $50 billion in aid for the victims of Superstorm Sandy. Earlier this month, after withering criticism from Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, the House of Representatives
and Senate passed$9.7 billion in aid. This week's Senate vote brings the total allocated to recovery funding for the Northeast states devastated by the storm to $60 billion. The
measure passed by a62-36
expenses until May. In addition to raising the debt ceiling, the No Budget No Pay Act would withhold the salaries of lawmakers whose chamber has not passed a budget by April 15. The Senate approved the bill by a 64-34vote,with Sen.Joe M anchin, D-W.Va., the only Democrat to vote against it. Eleven Republicans voted with the Democratic majority.
U.S. SENATEVOTE • No Budget No Pay Act
Merkley (D) ..................Y Wyden(D)....................Y — Andrew Clevenger, TheBulletin
vote, with all no votes coming
from Republicans. SevenRepublicans voted yes.
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Abby Dhone, 10, from left, and volunteer Marlene Kull watch as Madison Neiswonger, 9, launches a flying saucer kit the scouts put together from a schematic during the fourth annual American Association of University Women Girl Scout Science and Engineering Fair at the Elks Lodge in Bend on Saturday.
Scouts
"We were going to make a robot with arms for folding laundry. I hate folding laundry."
Continued from D1 She also encouraged the girls to be open to engineering fields. "I'm a wife and a mother and that doesn't mean I'm not an engineer," Lansdowne sa>d. The hands-on a ctivities were varied. The girls also c onstructed toys with f i l m canisters, rubber bands and washers that, using the principle of propulsion, could roll severalfeet. The girls also were tasked
U.S. SENATEVOTE • Superstorm Sandyaid Merkley (D) ..................Y Nlyden (D)....................Y On Thursday, the Senate signed off on a deal cut in the House of Representatives that would allow the government
to keep borrowing moneyto pay for previously authorized
E LEVATIO N Elevation Capital Strategies 400 SW BluADrive Suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
— Maryanne Slough, 10
to identify a problem and, on graph paper, draw a solution to it. Among the ideas: a dispenserforpet food and water so the dog can get more chow and water without begging. Another idea was a magn etic jewelry holder — t o avoid clutter and improve organization. That came from
Maryanne Slough, 10, and Maddie Langdon, 11, both fifth graders from Bend. Originally, they had a more ambitious idea. "We were goingto make a robot with arms for folding laundry," Maryanne said. "I hate folding laundry." — Reporter: 541-977-7185; bbotlzinC<bendbulletin.com.
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Camp Courage
Campers, Children's Grief Support
04
T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
T HE
EST
• A man who confessed to raping a teen near Maupin andan unknown number of murderskiled himself, leaving police in the dark By Sharon Cohen and Rachel D'Oro The Associated Press ANCHORAGE, Alaska-
4
The suspect, hands and feet shackled, fidgeted in his chair, chuckling at times <//p yg/
as he confessed to a brutal killing. Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he described in merciless detail how he'd abducted and strangled an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, p retending s h e was alive. As the two prosecutors questioned him, Keyes they w e re struck by his demeanor: He seemed pumped up, as if he were reliving the crime. His body shook, they said, and he rubbed hismuscular arms on the chair rests so vigorously his handcuffsscraped offthe wood finish. The prosecutors had a cceded to Keyes' requests: a cup of Americano coffee, a peanut butter Snickers and a cigar (for later). Then they showed him surveillance photos, looked him in the eye and declared: We know you kidnapped Samantha Koenig. We're going to convict you. They aimed to solve a disappearance, and they did. But they soon realizedthere was much more here: a kind of evil they'd never anticipated. Confessing to Koenig's kill-
taining guns, zip ties and other supplies used to dispose of bodies — were found in Alaska and New York. At the same time, incredibly, Keyes was an under-the-radar everyday citizen — a father, a live-in boyfriend, a respected handyman who had no trouble finding jobs in the community. Keyes claimed he killed four people in Washington state, dumped another body in New York and raped a teen along the Deschutes River near Maupin. He said he robbed banks to help finance his crimes; authorities corroborated two robberies in New York and Texas. He confessed to burning down a house in Texas, contentedly watching the flames from a distance. Though sometimes specific, he was o f ten f r u stratingly vague. Only once — other than Koenig — did he identify his victims by name: a married couple in Vermont. Israel Keyes wanted to be in control. Of his crimes. Of how much he revealed. And, ultimately, of his fate. In December,he slashed his left wrist and strangled himself ing, Keyes used a Google map with a sheet in his jail cell. He to point to a spot on a lake left two pages of bloodstained where he'd disposed of her dis- writings. And many questions. membered body and gone ice Investigators are now left fishing at the same time. He searching for a n swers, but wasn't done talking, though. they face a d aunting task: They're convinced the 34-yearHe declared he'd been "two different people" for 14 years. old Keyes was a serial killer; He had stories to tell, stories they've verified many details he said he'd never shared. He he provided. But they have a made seemingly plural refer- puzzle that spans the U.S. and ences and chilling remarks dips into Mexico and Canada such as, "It takes a long time to — and the one person who held strangle someone." the missing pieces is dead. FBI As prosecutors Kevin Fel- agents on opposite ends of the dis and Frank Russo and in- country,joined by others, are vestigators from the FBI and working the case, hoping a Anchorage police listened that timeline will offer clues to his day in early 2012, they came to grisly odyssey. a consensus: But they know, too, that IsIsrael Keyes wasn't talking rael Keyes' secrets are buried just about Samantha Koenig. with him — and may never be He'd killed before. unearthed. In 40 hours of interviews over eight months, Keyes talk- The final victim ed of many killings; authoriAuthorities aren't c ertain ties believe there were nearly when Keyes' crime spree bea dozen. He traveled from gan or ended. But they have Vermont to A l aska hunting a haunting image of his last for victims. He said he buried known victim. "murder kits" around the counSnippets of a surveillance try so they would be readily ac- video show the first terrifying cessible. These caches — con- moments of Koenig's abduc-
tion. Keyesis seen as a shadowy figure in ski mask and hood outside Common Grounds, a tiny Anchorage coffee shack then partially concealed from a busy six-lane highway by mountains of snow. It's Feb. 1, 2012, about 8 p.m., closing time. Koenig is shown handing Keyesa cup of coffee, then backing away with her hands up, as if it's a robbery. The lights go out and Keyes next appearsas a fuzzy image climbing through the drivethru window. Authorities outlined his next steps: Keyes forced Koenig to his Silverado; he'd already bound her hands with zip ties and gagged her. He hid her in a shed outsidehis house, turned on loud music so no one could hear if she screamed, then returned to the coffee shack to retrieve scraps of the restraints and get her phone. On Feb. 2, Keyes raped and strangled Koenig. He left her in that shed, flew to Houston and embarked on a cruise, returning about two weeks later. He then took a photo of Koenig's body holding a Feb. 13 newspaper to make it appear she was alive. Keyes wrote a ransom note on the back, demanding $30,000be placed in her account. He texted a message, directing the family to a dog park where the note could be found. Her family deposited some money from a reward fund. On Feb. 29, Keyes withdrew $500 in ransom money from an Anchorage ATM, using a debit card stolen from Koenig's boyfriend (the two shared an account). The next day, $500 more was retrieved from another ATM. Then on March7, far awayin Willcox, Ariz., Keyes withdrew $400. He traveled to Lordsburg, N.M., and took out $80. Two days later, a withdrawal of $480 in Humble, Texas. On March 11, the same amount from an ATM in Shepherd, Texas. By then, authorities had a blurry ATM photo and a pattern: Keyes was driving along route I-10 in a rented white Ford Focus. On March 13, nearly 3,200 miles from Anchorage, police in Lufkin, Texas,
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Ryan Mercer /The Burlington Free Press file photo
State police investigators slft through dirt and debris last year at a dlg slte off Vermont Highway 15 near Lang Farm In Essex, Vt., In what Essex Police Chief Brad LaRose described as part of the ongoIng investigation into the disappearance of William and Lorraine Currier, who went mlsslng In June 2011. After confessing to killing a18-year old woman In Alaska, Israel Keyes Is suspected of killing the couple. Keyes was found dead In hls cell on Dec. 2, and many of hls secrets died with him. he spoke to us. We didn't know ... the father, the hard-working business owner." Keyes warned investigators that others might mischaracterize him "There is no one who knows me — or who has ever known me — who knows anything about me really.... They're going to tell you something that does not line up with anything I tell you because I'm two different people basically ...," he says in one snippet released by the FBI. "How long have you been two different people?" asks Russo, one of the prosecutors.
in a m o untainous, sparsely populated area. The family moved in the 1990s to Smyrna, Maine, where they were involved in the maple syrup business, according to a neighbor who remembered Keyes as a nice, courteous young man. A fter leaving th e A r m y , Keyes worked for the Makah Indian tribe in W ashington, then moved to Anchorage in 2007 after his girlfriend found work here. A s elf-employed carpenter and handyman, he was considered competent, honest and efficient. "I never got any bad, weird, scary, odd vibe from him in Keyes laughs. "(A) long time. any way, shape or form," says Fourteen years." Paul Adelman, an Anchorage Authorities suspect Keyes attorney who first hired Keyes started killing more than 10 as a handyman in 2008. Keyes' l i ve-in g i r l f riend years ago after completing a three-year stint in the Army at also was floored to learn of what is now Joint Base Lewis- his double life, according to McChord near Tacoma, Wash. David Kanters, her friend. "He Sean McGuire, who shared had everyone fooled," Kanters a barracks with Keyes, says told The Associated Press in they developed a c a m ara- an email. "THAT is the scary derie while spending some part. He came across as a nice time together during grueling normal guy." (She did not retraining in Egypt. But he says spond to numerous requests he was disturbed by a dark for comment.) side that sometimes surfaced. Keyes blended >n eas>ly. When Keyes was offended by "He was not only very intellihis buddy's comments, he'd gent," Doll says. "He was very drop his head, McGuire recalls, adaptable and he had a lot of knit his brow, lower his voice self-control. Those three things and say, "'I want to kill you, combined madehim extraordiMcGuire."' narily difficult to catch." Keyes, the second eldest in a large family, was homeRead more online at schooled in a cabin without denddulletln.com/extras electricity near Colville, Wash.,
pounced when they spotted Keyes driving 3 mph above the speed limit. Inside his car was an incriminating stash: Rolls of cash in rubber bands. A piece of a gray T-shirt cut out to make a face mask. A highlighted map with routes through California, Arizona and New Mexico. The stolen debit card. And Samantha Koenig's phone. Monique Doll, the lead Anchorage police investigator in the Koenig case, and her partner, Jeff Bell, rushed to Texas for a crack at Keyes. Doll showed Keyes the ransom note. "I told him t hat the f irst couple of times that I read the ransom I thought that whoever wrote the note was a monster and the more I read it — it must have been 100 times — the more I came to understand that monsters aren'tborn but are created and that this person had a story to tell." Keyes' response, she says, was firm: "I can't help you." Two weeks later in custody back in Alaska, he changed his mind. He told another investigator, Doll says, to relay a message: "Tellher she's gothermonster."
Living two lives To Monique Doll, Keyes was a Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde personality, but she saw only the diabolical side. "We knew him as a serial killer," she says. "That's how
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Groups trying to protect wol oppose coyote hunt By Tracle Cone
hunt, or at least come up with a scientific solution to predator FRESNO, Calif. — A once management. "We are worriedabout the obscure coyote hunting contest in northernmost California has safety of the wolf and we're become anything but, as en- (coyotes) in the concerned about the persecuvironmental groups lobby the name of sport and tion of these animals (coyotes) state to call it off to protect a in the name of sport and recrecreation." lone, roaming wolf. reation," said Jennifer Fearing The hunt is sponsored by a — Jennlfer Fearing, Humane of the Humane Society of the hunt club and outfitter supply Society of the United States United States. store in Adin in Modoc County, The seventh annual hunt is withtheteam that killsthe most organized by the Pit River Rod coyotes between Feb. 8 and 10 fearothers could be in the area. and Gun Club, and the sponsor winning a silver belt buckle. The gray wolf is a federally is Adin Supply Co., which did Organizers say they're try- protected species in Califor- not return phone calls seeking ing to rid the Big Valley cattle nia, and w ildlife authorities comment. ranching community of coy- are in the process of determinOwner SteveGagnon recentotes,a predator that can harm ing whether state protections ly told KQED that killing coylivestock. The state's lone gray should be offered as well. otes is a way of life in the rural wolf currently is about 100 Opponents of the coyote hunt enclave. "What we have here is part of miles from the hunt, state wild- fear that participants won't be life officials say. able to readily tell the difference our heritage," he said. "It's been Opponents argue that wide- between a coyote and a much going on for years and years." spread slaughter of coyotes larger wolf, even though OR7 is Fish 8. Wildlife officials say disrupts the balance of nature wearing a tracking collar. the hunt is legal and there's "We contend that the state nothing they can do to stop it. and leads to an increase in the number of ground squirrels does have the authority to inThey were more concerned last and other vermin. tervene here and has the ob- year when OR7was inthe same But the main argument in a ligation to do so with regard county as the hunt and sent letter sent by 20 organizations to the threat to OR7 and other wardens to educate hunters. "The hunt organizers have to the California Department potential un-collared wolves in of Fish 8. Wildlife is about pro- the area," said Camilla Fox of complied with the laws we adtecting the wolf known as OR7, Project Coyote and the Animal minister. There's nothing prowhich became the first in the Welfare Institute. hibiting this kind of activity," state in nearly a century when Animal w e l f ar e g r o u ps said Karen Kovacs, a wildlife it wandered across Oregon and also plan to ask the Fish and program manager for Fish 8. into California a year ago. They Game Commission to stop the Wildlife. The Associated Press
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.. We're concerned about the persecution of these animals "
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Critics skeptical of federal 'compassion'for mustangs t
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By Scott Sonner and Matthew Daly
The Associated Press
Rich Landers /The Spokesman-Review
Volunteer Jim Jones, right, of the Inland Northwest Wildlife Council, takes lessons from Jim Kujala, left, as they trap the first deer for a northeastern Washington whitetail research project being conducted by Woody Myers of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, near Chelwelah, Wash.
ounteeIs oost w itetai eeI stu in as in ton By Rich Landers The Spokesman-Review
SPOKANE, Wash. — An ambitious r esearch p r oject is under way to shed light on the mysterious movements of white-tailed deer through the thick cover of n o rtheastern Washington. The study area in Stevens, Pend Oreille an d n o rthern Spokane counties covers the state's most productive region for whitetails and the hunters who pursue them during fall
big-game seasons. About 35 bucks, does and fawns gave researchers an intimate glimpse of their daily movements, migrations and, in a few cases, their deaths during the first year of research that started in January 2012. Another 35 already have been captured, fitted with transmitters and released duringthe winter trapping season going into the second year of the study. About $400,000 in federal grants, state wildlife f unds and volunteer services will be devoted to the project over 3/2 years, said Woody Myers, Washington Fish and Wildlife Departmentbig-gameresearch biologist. Up to 100 deer will be fitted with $170 radio ear-tags or with $2,200 GPS collars that allow researchers to peg their locationevery four hours. Deer movements can be overlaid on maps that will show their migration routes and habitat preferences. The number of deer with transmitters was small as the study ramped up in its first year,but some trends already are catching th e a t tention of Myers, and University of Montana researcher Charlie Henderson. "It's somewhat surprising to see how far some whitetails were migrating from summer to winter ranges," Myers said. "The Midwestern and Eastern version of whitetail research shows whitetails with f airly small home ranges, just a few square miles.But we're seeing some whitetails moving farther." One deer stayed within 393 acres — about a half-section of land — for the year. However,the largest home
range (year-round area) documented so faris 7,633 acres covered by a doe. She concentrated most of her summer on 563 acres and wintered on 755 acres. "As a storm was moving, the doe headed to her winter range as though a light came on," Myers said. "She left her summering area near the Pend Oreille River at 2 a.m. on Dec. 19 and arrived w i thi n h e r w i n t er range on the Little Pend Oreille (National Wildlife Refuge) on Dec. 21. That's 20 miles as the crow flies." S ome deer f o llowed t h e same corridor almost exactly
as they came to winter range and returnedto summer range in the spring. Others varied their migration patterns. The main research and parallel studies could help wildlife managers sethunting seasons and regulations and focus habitat improvements to boost the region's deer. Based on their perception that northeastern Washington was short on mature bucks, Stevens County s p ortsmen prompted a controversial rule two years ago restricting most hunters to killing only bucks with four antler points or more in thepopular Game Management Units 117 (49 Degrees North) and 121 (Huckleberry). Statewildlifebiologists didn't support the restrictive regulation approved by the state Fish and Wildlife Commission, but they acknowledged they didn't have an abundance of local researchdatato take a stand one way or the other. Research is under way seeking to estimate the northeastern Washington whitetail population. One of the techniques involves going into designated areas with dogs trained to sniff out piles of deer scat. The number of scats per site is figured with analysis of samples to peg how many different deer are using the area. "Whitetails aren't as easy as elk tocensus by aircraft,especially in northeastern Washington," Myers said. "We have to be more creative." C ollege students from a s far as M issoula, Mont. are involved in the studies, and some high school genetics lab students are doing DNA tests from blood samples. Contributing to the research arebiologists fromthe U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Spokane and Kalispel tribes. Two private timber companies and the Colville National Forest are giving researchers special access to closed forest roads in some areas. Researchers also are using ultrasound on trapped does and collecting road-killed deer to check for fetuses, which they can measure todetermine the dates of conception. Generally, deer benefit from having enough bucks for a concentratedNovember breeding period so fawns hit the ground in a short period in early June. Predators will kill fewer fawns if they are born within 10 days than if their births are scattered over weeks. On the other h and, late breeding o f f e m ale f a w ns would be a good sign that deer are finding proper nutrition, putting on weight and becoming sexually mature earlier than normal, Myers said. Most bred femalesare yearlings or older, he said. The study is enlisting the help of roughly 70 volunteers, mostly from the Inland Northwest Wildlife Council as well
as from colleges, Myers said. Groups are trained to help trap deer and then monitormovements of the radio-tagged deer from the ground. The Stevens County Fish and Wildlife Committee was particularly helpful in gaining access to private land for trappingthe deer,Myers said. Deer trapping is hard, dangerous, time-consuming work carriedout by volunteers who are donating $40,000-$80,000 of service time a year to the study, Myers said. The traps, which resemble p ortable dog k e nnels, a r e placed in secure areas such as farms where they can be baited and monitored. When a deer is caught,volunteers show up within hours and collapse the cage to immobilize the deer so it can be blindfolded and hobbled. In one case last year, two cougars attacked and killed a deer in atrap justbefore the research crew arrived. "Apparently one cat reached t hrough the mesh w it h i t s paws, pulled the deer close and killed it by biting its head," Myers said. "A single canine (tooth) punctured its skull into its brain." None of the collared deer were shot by hunters during the fall season. About twothirds of the deer collared so far are females plus several
During the peak season — between April 1 and Oct. 31 — a fee of$22 is charged for each permit. There is no charge between Nov. 1 and March 31. Permits are sold on a firstcome, first-served basis. The U.S. Forest Service says that
— Deniz Bolbo, American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign in compliance with federal law. The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco recently granted a horse advocacy group's appeal and ordered the BLM to review its practices to ensure it didn't violate the First Amendment by keeping some critics away from a 2012 gather in Nevada. "At all times, the care and t reatment provided by t h e BLM and contractors will be characterizedby compassion and concern for the animal's well-beingand welfare needs," wrote Edwin Roberson, assistant director of the BLM for Renewable Resources and Planning. Acting BLM Director Mike Pool said the changes represent "significant and substantial improvements" aimed at ensuring the "humane treatment of animals that are gathered on public rangelands." "At the end of the day, we need to find better ways to manage for healthier animals and healthierrangelands so that we can keep these symbols of the American West on our nation's public lands," he sa>d. B LM spokeswoman M i chelle Barret told The Associated Press, "All of this is in response to public concerns that were raised in a number of gathers.... The welfare issues, the humane animal treatment during gathers, we realized that we needed to step it up here and address some of the public concerns." Laura Leigh, president of Nevada-based Wild H o r se Education, who appealed her case to the 9th Circuit, is glad BLM is addressing the roundup concerns but doesn't "hold much hope that I will witness much change."
"I'll believe it when I see it," added Anne Novak, executive director of Protect Mustangs in Berkeley, Calif. American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign founder Neda DeMayo criticized part of the new policy that specifies BLM treat horses "consistent with domestic livestock handling practices." That's a significant step back from the standard BLM Nevada Director Amy Luedersestablished in a December 2011 memo that said it should be consistent with"domestic horse handling procedures," she said. "Although domestic horse handling practices are a step above the livestock industry, wild horses are neither domestic horses nor livestock. They are wild animals and as such must be humanely managed as a wildlife species on the range where they belong," DeMayo said. About half of the estimated 37,000 horses and burros on federal lands are in Nevada. BLM maintains that the range can sustain only about 26,000 and conducts roundups regularly to try to get closer to that number. But the practice is almost always contentious. Interior SecretaryKen Salazar, who is stepping down in March, has called wild horse management "the most difficult issue we have dealt with" in his four-year tenure. "We've had hundreds of meetings on it and there are still a lot of problems," Salazar told The Gazette of Colorado Springs last fall. He made the comment after apologizing for threatening to punch a Gazettereporter who asked him about problems with the wild horses at a campaign event for President Barack Obama.
E nroll toda y VYi thout Regret!
sublegal bucks Harvest of antlerless whitetails in units 117 and 121 is limited to youth, senior and disabled hunters during a fourday window in the season and bucks must have at least four points on one antler to be legal game. Those limitations plus a small sample size in the first year of the study lowered the probability that a marked deer would be killed by a hunter or a wolf, he said. Survival rates of adult and juvenile deer and causes of their deaths are key goals of the research, he said. Each deer is weighed and examinedby a biologist whotakes a blood sample for various tests and DNA. Deer released with radio-ear tags must be monitored by volunteers who go out on the ground and from occasional aerial surveys. Some deerget the more expensive GPS collars, so they can be tracked by satellite from Myers' computer or m o bile phone. One GPS collar has malfunctioned so far and a few of the ear-tag radios have dropped out as the deer go about their lives in the brushy wild. Overall, Myers expects to get two years of tracking out of each transmitter. The GPS tracking is so accurate, the research should reveal details such as how often deer are on north-facing slopes, in farmers'fields, near roads or what age of forest clearcut they prefer.
Mount St.Helensselling climbing permits The Associated Press VANCOUVER, Wash. Mount St. Helens officials are selling climbing permits for the upcoming season. The Columbian reports permits arerequired to go above 4,800 feet on t h e v o lcano.
RENO — The U.S. Bureau of Land Management is issuing new policy directives emphasizing "compassion and concern" for wild horses on federal lands in the West, in response to a growing public outcry over alleged abuse during roundups of thousands of mustangs in recent years. Federal law s p r otecting wild horses since the 1970s require the government to treat them humanely when culling overpopulated herds to reduce harm to public rangeland. But BLM officials said a series of new internal policy directivesannounced Friday will better protect free-roaming horses and burros by centralizing oversight and stepping up daily reports at each individual gather across 12 Westernstates. "Press/media, congressional and public attention to recent gathershave compelled the BLM to provide the most accurate and up-to-date information," one of the new directives states. The announcement drew, at best, a chilly response from most in the horse protection community skeptical of the a gency's intentions and a harsh rebuke from the largest national coalitions, which called it a "step backward." "It's an attempt by BLM to address criticism, but will do nothing to change the practices on the ground at the roundups," said Deniz Bolbo, spokeswoman for the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign made up of more than 50 groups. Among other things, helicopter contractors will have to take extra care not to separate slower young animals from their mothers during roundup stampedes. The new orders also require the agency to make sure the publichas reasonable access to observe the roundups,
"(The directives are) an attempt by BLM to address criticism, but will do nothing to change the practices on the ground at the roundups."
from May 15 until the end of October, officials impose a limit of 100 permits per day to minimize impact on the mountain's natural regeneration. Peak season climbing permits can be purchased at http://mshinstitute.org.
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® Top 5 Reasons Why Families Choose Morning Star Christian School 1. Students develop a love for learning through small class sizes and one-on-one instruction. 2. A solid foundation in reading and mathematics is built through leveled classroom instruction. 3. An enriched education is provided with Spanish, German, music, art and outdoor electives including skiing, kayaking, rock climbing and mountain biking. 4. Students learn to engage their community through relevant field trips and impacting service projects. 5. We teach to the whole child through an innovative approach of instruction in academics, spirituality and creativity. We provide Bus Service, Early drop Off — 7:30, Late Pick Up — 5:30 • We use current research based best practices to instruct students according to their many different learning styles. • We use efficient interactive SMART boards to keep our instruction relevant, flexible and excellent. • Teachers partner with parents to develop passionate learners in a safe and friendly classroom environment.
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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/business
ndonesia'sbeefban has catt eproducers in U.S.unhappy By Rob Hotakainen
Much to the satisfaction of cattle producers in states such as California and Texas, the U.S. government has decided to fight back: In the latest case to go before the World Trade Organization, the Obama administration is pressing Indonesia to open its markets and its estimated 240 million consumers to more American exports or face consequences. See Beef/E3
McClatchy Newspapers
WASHINGTON — When authorities discovered a case of mad-cow diseasein California last year, Indonesia angered U.S. cattle producers by becoming the first nation to ban beef from the United States. The fallout was immediate, and U.S. beef sales to Indonesia plummeted to nearly nothing.
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Kevin Kester, a fifth-generation rancher from Parkfield, Calif., calls Indonesia's actions to become the first nation to ban beef from the U.S. a "knee-jerk political action." Kester, seen on his farm, is among the many cattle producers nationwide who are happy that the U.S. government has decided to fight back by pressing Indonesia to open its markets and its 240 million consumers to more American exports or face consequences from the World Trade Organization.
Scott Ratcliff, co-owner of Volcano Vineyards in Bend, has added to his adult beverage lineup to increase business. On Saturday, he was scheduled to release his first distilled spirit, Volcano Vodka.
• Central Oregon's brewers, vintners and distillers cashin onthirst for potent potables By Rachael Rees ' The Bulletin
hen he started Volcano Vineyards in Bend nine years ago, Scott Ratcliff produced only two wines. Since then he's made eight reds, three white wines and three sangrias, with another on the horizon. He was scheduled to release Volcano's first distilled spirit, Volcano Vodka, on Saturday,and he may even create a Volcano beer one day. Ratcliff represents Central Oregon's growing alcohol industry, which has expanded beyond its beer base. The region now has two licensed distillers, Bendistillery and Oregon Spirit Distillers, with two others proposed, six licensed wineries, one of which sells mead, and five possible cideries. But beer is still king. Central Oregon has 20 breweries,according to Oregon Liquor Control Commission licensing records, nearly three times the number it had in mid-2008. The agency has issued 26 brewpub licenses in the region, but some, like Deschutes Brewery, 10 Barrel and Cascade Lakes, have more than one. While Central Oregon has a burgeoning booze industry, it isn't the only region in the state. Christie Scott, OLCC spokeswoman,
and makes it easy for people to try different things." During the '70s, Scott said, the wine industry took off. A decade later, she said, craft brewers started getting a foothold in the market, and today distilleries are popping up around the state. The alcohol industry helps support CentralOregon's economy, saidDamon Runberg, regional economist for the Oregon Employment Department. As of September,he said,240 people in Deschutes County were employed in the manufacturing and production side of the alcohol industry, and another 513 in the leisure and hospitality part of the business. In addition to generating revenue at local drinking establishments, he said, distributing alcoholic beverages nationally brings in dollars from outside the community. SeeBooze/E2
By thenumbers Central Oregon's alcohol industry.
Breweries:20 Distilleries:Two licensed; two proposed
Wineries:Six licensed; five proposed (includes cideries andmeadery) Sources: Oregon Liquor Control Commission licensing records; The Bulletin
said other counties also support a number of wineries, distilleries and craft brewers. Multnomah County has 69 brew licenses, 19 distilleries and 38 wineries, she said. "Oregon hasa really great atmosphere forbudding alcohol industries," she said. "The laws that we have make it easy for people to get different types of licenses,
"Oregon hasa really great atmosphere for budding alcohol industries." — Christie Scott, OLCC spokeswoman
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the ouncingprices • New online price trackers alert busy shoppers todeals By Stephanie Clifford New York Times News Service
Jen Hughes used to have the time to hunt for online coupon codes and refresh her Web browserto see if the clothes she wanted had gone on sale yet. But after she had her first child, she said, trying to track e-commerce prices had to go. "I spend my day chasing my daughter around, so I don't have the luxury of sitting at my computer," said Hughes, 29, of Reading, Mass. Many sites "have sales every other day, but I don't have time to go on and see if the things I actually want have made it onto the sale yet." Now she doesn't have to.
lllustration by James Best Jr. New York Times News Service
With retailers' Internet prices now changing more often — sometimes several times within the space of a day — a new group of tools is helping shoppers outwit the stores. Rather than requiring shoppers to do the work by entering an item into pricecomparison engines throughout the day, the tools automatically scan for price changes and alert customers when the price drops. SeeTrack/E3
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Green diseasesqueezes Florida's citrus growers
Valencia oranges grow in a citrus grove using the open hydroponics system.
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When the citrus tree-killing disease known as greening was detected for the first time in the United States in Homestead, Fla., in August 2005,some feared the end was near forFlorida's signature industry. Now, morethan seven years later,the apocalypse has not occurred, but the disease that results in bitter, misshapen fruit is said to be present in every grove to some extent. Although no one knows the actual number of infected trees, many place it as somewhere between 40 to 70 percent. The citrus industry has undergone a sea change.Production costs are up about 40 percent in many cases, mostly due to the cost of spraying for psyllids, the insects that spread the disease, and to nutritional programs to keep trees as healthy as possible. See Citrus/E5
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Integrity, Erperience, Research and Results To learn m0 re call Peg gy Fo utz Registered Client Service Associate Photos by Bruce iL Bennett/Palm Beach Post
Peter Spyke, president of Arapaho Citrus Management, holds a Valencia orange grown in a grove using the open hydroponics system at Gardinier Florida Citrus' Indiantown Grove, in Indiantown, Fla. Spyke says growers missed the window of opportunity when tree removal might have put the brakes on the disease.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION digital books to eReaders; 12:30-2 MONDAY SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, First St.; 541-536-0515. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; SERVICES:United Way will offer 541-706-6234. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 tax preparation clinics with certified CENTRAL OREGONFARM FAIR N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. volunteers to help those who need AND TRADE SHOW: Educational assistance to file both federal and BUSINESSNETWORK programs; presentation groupings state tax returns; appointments INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE about wheat, alfalfa, precision requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed application technology, the role Visitors are welcome and first two of organic matter in the soil and Market Road; 541-706-6234. visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend where nitrogen goes in the soil Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; AARP FREETAXPREPARATION and plants; two hours of pesticide 541-480-1765. SERVICES:United Way will offer recertification credit will be provided tax preparation clinics with certified Thursday afternoon from 1:30volunteers to help those who need FRIDAY 3:30 p.m.; for Crop Consultant assistance to file both federal and Advisors there will be 7.5 hours of state tax returns; appointments ORGANIZINGWITH OUTLOOK recertification creditavailable over requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; FOR BUSYPEOPLE WEBINAR: the two day event; free; 9 a.m.Pentecostal Church of God, Online webinar; discover howto 3:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair 51491 Morson Street, La Pine; integrate all the components of Complex, 430 S.W. Fairgrounds 541-536-6237. Outlook (email, calendar, tasks and Road, Madras; 541-475-7107. contacts) to make your time rich and KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: FREE TAXPREPARATION productive; hosted by SIMPLIFY; Learn basics of this spreadsheet SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; registration required; $80; 8-10 program and create a simple free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Downtown address book; 1-2:30 p.m.; La Pine a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-260Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall 8714 or info©simplifynw.com. Public Library, 16425 First St.; St.; 541-389-6507. 541-536-0515. AARP FREETAX PREPARATION KNOW COFFEE,KNOW EBOOKS: FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES: SeeMonday's listing; Learn about eReaders and howto SERVICES:United Way will offer free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior download eBooks and audiobooks Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket tax preparation clinics with certified from Deschutes Public Library; volunteers to help those who need eReaders are available or bring your Road; 541-706-6234. assistance to file both federal and own; free; 1:30-2:30 p.m.; Bellatazza AARP FREETAX PREPARATION state tax returns; appointments SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Coffee, 869 N.W.Wall St., Bend; requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. 541-617-7083. free;10a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Lynch Elementary School,1314 Family Resource Center,1144 Warm FREETAXPREPARATION S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond; Springs Street; 541-553-1626. SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; 541-389-6507. EMAIL: Must already free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary KNOW MORE School, 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., have Gmail account; 10:30 a.m.; TUESDAY Redmond; 541-389-6507. Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. HOW TO SELECTTHE RIGHT AARP FREETAXPREPARATION FRANCHISE: This workshop is BUSINESSSTART-UP WORKSHOPS: SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; designed to help participants decide For people contemplating business 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, whether franchise ownership is ownership; registration required; 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; right for them; participants will learn $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon 541 -706-6234. about howto choose afranchise, Community College, Redmond KNOW FACEBOOK:10:30a.m.howto arrange financing, and other campus, 2030 S.E.College Loop, noon; Downtown Bend Public critical details; registration required; Redmond; 541-383-7290. Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; free; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon 541-617-7080. CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATE Community College, 2600 N.W. INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Learn basics of this spreadsheet Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 program and create a simple THURSDAY or bobbleile@windermere.com. address book; 2-3:30 p.m.; KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 AARP FREETAXPREPARATION N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. Demonstration on accessing, SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; downloading and transferring OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior library digital books to eReaders; Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. noon-1:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. Road; 541-706-6234. Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: 541-312-1 080. SCORE business counselors will be SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; KNOW EXCELFOR BEGINNERS: available every Tuesdayfor free one- free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Learn basics of this spreadsheet on-one small business counseling; Church of God, 51491 Morson program and create a simple no appointment necessary; free; Street, La Pine; 541-536-6237. address book; 2 p.m.; Redmond 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend CENTRAL OREGONFARM FAIR Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; AND TRADE SHOW: Educational Ave.; 541-312-1050. 541-617-7080 or www.score programs; presentation groupings centraloregon.org. about wheat, alfalfa, precision SATURDAY application technology, the role YOUNG PROFESSIONALS NETWORK:5:30p.m .;The Pig of organic matter in the soil and FREE TAXPREPARATION where nitrogen goes in the soil and Pound, 423 S.W. Eighth St., SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Redmond; 541-526-1697. and plants; two hours of pesticide free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Prineville recertification credit will be provided BUNCOFUNDRAISER: Play bunco, COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; Thursday afternoon from 1:30with instructions; reservations 541-447-3260. 3:30 p.m.; for Crop Consultant requested; proceeds benefit Advisors there will be 7.5 hours of OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER Soroptimist lnternational of Bend's PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the projects; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Jake's Diner, recertification creditavailable over the two day event; free; 9 a.m.minimum requirements bythe 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 3:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Oregon Liquor Control Commission 541-382-1753 or www.sibend.org. Complex, 430 S.W. Fairgrounds to obtain an alcohol server permit; Road, Madras; 541-475-7107. registration required; $35; 9a.m.; WEDNESDAY Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www BUSINESSNETWORK .happyhourtraining.com. free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER Family Resource Center, 1144 Warm FREE TAXPREPARATION WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are Springs Street; 541-553-1626. welcome and first two visits are SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; free; 7a.m.; Bend Senior Center, KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; Demonstration on accessing, Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-749-0789. downloading and transferring library 541-389-6507.
• Lambert Neighbourto Silas A. and Sara J. Towne,Northcrest Subdivision, Lot 47, $198,900 • Albert L. Wright to Joseph E. and Lonna A. Stutler, SunsetViewEstates, Phase1, Lot 5, $165,000 • Robert and NancyS.Boliard to Dennis P.Murphy,AspenRim No.2,Lot202, $235,235 • Timothy M. andJolene D.Coxto Donald R.andTeresa M.Accuardi, Ridge at EagleCrest 53, Lot 27,$175,000 • Martha D. Coker,whoacquired title as Marthe CokerMerrill,trusteefor Marthe D. CokerTrust, to Erin Q.Campbell, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase22, Lot 8, Block 21, $179,000 • Mary E. Coulterto Susan R. Scott, Cottages atNorthWest Crossing, Lot12, $299,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC to Joe E.and Kathy J. Phillips, Gardenside, Phase 2, Lot109, $182,880 • William F. Root, trusteefor William F. Root RevocableLiving Trust, to James M. Andrews, trustee for JamesM. Andrews Trust, SunsetViewEstates, Phase1, Lot6, $775,000 • Andrew C.and Saundra Z.Ornberg to Bodie T.Dowding, DeschutesRiver Woods, Lot14, Block H,$174,900 • Douglass D.Wonser to Travis and Jennifer Lyman,Tamarack ParkEast, Phase 8, Lot 8, Block 2,$190,000 • Nancy L., NormanJ.and Mildred McCormickto Andrew D. andGabrielle E. West, Partition Plat 2004-16, Parcel 1, $275,000 • John P. and Amanda L. Schmidt to Tim K. and Amanda K. Porter, CascadeWest, Lot10, $181,000 • Alex A. Arrache to MichaelandTeresa Godfrey, Ridgepointe, Lot12, $161,000 • Yelas Developments Inc. to Melinda G. Halpern, Summershade,Lot2, $284,278 • Jason Mendell to Eileen M.Leary and Thomas E.Burns, trustees for Burns-Leary FamilyTrust, River Canyon Estates No. 4,Lot 286, $250,000 • Borgies Inc. to Mary E.Coulter, Tuscany Pines,Phase1, Lot28,
How to say'Look at me!' to an online recruiter By Phyllis Korkki New York Times News Service
If you are thinking of looking for a job this year, or are already searching for one, be warned: For some job seekers, the rules have changed. Technology and social media have altered the way some employers consider candidates. Sim-
ply sifting through job postings and sending out applications en masse was never a good route to success, and is even less so now. One of the most important questions that many job seekers can askthese days is this: How searchable am I? Some employersaren'teven bothering to post jobs, but are instead searching online for the right candidate, said Barbara Safani, owner of Career Solvers, a c areer management firm in New York. Not having an Internet presence can be damaging, Safani said. She is among those who recommend that job seekers spend serious time detailing their skills and experience on commercial sites like LinkedIn and Twitter, with an eye toward making their names a magnet forsearch engines. "Having a blog can be a good way to show that you are a thought leader" while improving your professional visibility, she said. And consider YouTube as a way to enhance your searchability, she advised. If a n e m p l oyer c o mes across a video of you giving a speech or a training presentation, she said, you may gain an advantage. M ore c o mpanies a r e turning to Twitter as a way to broadcast job openings, so you should use it to follow r e cruiters, i n dustry leaders and individual companies, said Alison Doyle, a job search specialist for About.com. She said that by linking to articles and sharing your expertise on Twitter, you can enhance your professional reputation — although you should beware of the site's potential as a time drain. On Facebook, "liking" a company can mean receiving early notice of job openings and other news. But privacy concerns make F acebook t r i cky, D o y l e
Booze
DEEDS Deschutes County • Ronald O. and Christine M. Nelson to Javan H.andJacqueline L. Shull, Township16, Range12,Section10, $507,500 • Richard K. andSusan M. Dolan, trusteesfor Richard K.Dolanand Susan M. Dolan Revocable Living Trust, to Jason M. andBambi R. McKibbin, Partition Plat1996-58, Parcel C, $9 I0,000 • Mel Lee, dba MelLeeHomes, to Northwest LoanServicing lnc., Roaring Springs, Lot 7, $200,000 • Cutter Bridge Development LLC to Richard K.and Susan M. Dolan, trusteesfor Richard K.Dolanand Susan M. DolanRevocable Living Trust, NorthWest Crossing, Phase13, Lot 618, $725,000 • Gerald Pettinger, Megan A. Schnack and lan D.Wilkinson, affiant for the Estate of SandraWilkinson, to Rebecca D. Winters, Stonehedge onRim, Phase 2, Lot1, $150,000 • Michael H. Sieverson to Brian J. S. Connolle yandKarenM.Gunton,Broken Top, Phase2H, Lot 226,$639,000 • Wolf Capital LLC to Justin P. and Jennifer F.Davino, Ridgeat EagleCrest 55, Lot102, $177,500 • Joseph E.and LonnaA. Stutlerto David R.andAmy L.Jones, Partition Plat 2003-80, Parcel 2, $465,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Gregory J. and Susan L. Hawkins, Newport Landing, Lot 21, $315,750 • Quail Crossing Inc. to GW Land Acquisitions LLC,Partition Plat1992-7, Parcel A, $320,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC to Julie A. Riel, Northcrest Subdivision, Lot9, $231,930 • Gary L. and Terrill L. Klein to Jeffrey W. Robinson, HamptonParkSubdivision, Phase 2, Lot16, $212,500 • Columbia State Bankto Te Amo Despacio LLC, Township15, Range13, Section 8, $240,000 • Awbrey Woods U.S.A. Limited Partnershipto Pahlisch HomesInc., Awbrey Woods, Phase 2, Lots14-20, $420,000
ORI<
$255,900 • Lawrence and Susan Nilson to Peter J. and Patricia Pianavilla, Tanglewood, Phase 3, Lot11, $197,500 • Jason R. and Andrea E.Buys to Julie DeVoe,HaydenView, Phase1, Lot31, $151,500 • Kevin Freidman to Crotalus LLC, Northwest TownsiteCOSSecond Addition to Bend, Lot 6, Block37, $247,500 • Pacwest 2 LLC to RexA. and Deborah M. Johnson, GardensidePU.D.,Phase 2, Lot103, $230,134.50 • Julie A. Nelson andJulie A. Simmsto Mathew E.and Deborah A. Diamond, West Canyon Estates,Phase4,Lot65, $162,500 Crook County • George L. andValerie Hanseth to William DragonJr. andGeorge L. and Valerie Hanseth, Brasada Ranch2, Lot 268, $265,000 • C. Bradley andJulie G.Waibel to Camille D.andJerry G.Wood, Partition Plat 2000-07, Parcel1, $280,000 • Michael andKristen Polich to Jack M. and Debra L.Simmons, Township14, Range15, Section 2,$240,000 • David S. and H.Frances Roweto Victor C. and Deborah L.Lehr, Prineville Lake Acres, Unit2, Lot23, Block27,$189500 • Amerititle Inc. to NLD Title LLC, Partition Plat1992-22, Parcels1 and 2, First Addition to Prineville, Lots 7-10, Block12, $878,749 • Marilyn J. Martin,trusteeforthe Martin Family Trust, to Bradley D.Pryor, West Powell Butte Estates, Lot 21, $450,000 • William M. andMelita J. England to Daniel D.andAngela R. Conner, SteelhammerRanch,Lot19, $232,500 • Bruce and Lorni Jarmie to John W. and Dona S. Marston, Partition Plat 200908, Parcel1, $275,000 • Anne Hudson, successortrustee of the George Albert HudsonFamilyTrust, to Steven Dougherty, Township14, Range 16, Section 30, $180,000
YOUR NAME HERE
lllustration by Minh Uong / New York Times NewsService
said: Make sure you understand who is receiving which of yourposts,or resolve to be thoroughly p r ofessional on Facebook at all times, she said. Be aware that hiring managers may see what you post on any of the major social media outlets, she added. Old-fashioned, per s onal networking can still be an effective way to land a job, but online networking now supplements it in many fields. Both Safani and Doyle say LinkedIn is a very important Web tool for making those connections. The site offers premium services for a fee, but almost all of the main features for job seekers are free, Doyle said. Spend a few minutes on the site each day making new connections, she advised, and keep your profile up to date. To improve th e c h ances that a connection request will be accepted,especially from someone you don't know, send a personalmessage along with it, noting, say, your similar backgrounds or interests,said Nicole Williams, a consultant who works as a career expert for LinkedIn. Baldly asking someone at a company for help in landing a job is never a good idea, on LinkedIn or anywhere else. Share links and advice with people in your LinkedIn network before asking for a favor like an introduction to a hiring manager or awritten recommendation that would appear on the site. If you are seeking a particular position, Doyle said, you
" We're going w i t h t h e spirit of craft brewing in exContinued from E1 perimenting and creating our Ratcliff of Volcano Vine- own flavors instead of going yards said if he earns approv- with a traditional English or al to add a distillery within French cider," Kevin Healy his winery space in the Cen- said, "which is why we think tury Center on Bend's west Bend would be such an acside, he'll be able to increase cepting place to do that." his business and his profits. The Healys aren't the only Because of the long agones tapping into the hardi ng process for w in e a n d cider market. Four o t h er consumers'changing tastes, Bend cidercompanies are in Ratcliff said he needs to of- the works. fer more products. He hopes But the brothers said they in addition to creating spirits, a ren't nervous about t h e he can also put his sangria on competition. "It's such a small part of taps around town. "Not everyone likes beer," the market right now," Eric he said. "It's refreshing to Healy said. "Having multiple have another choice." companies will help educate Even those who consider people as to what cider really themselves beer aficionados 1S. like to try something new. Nationally, cider producBrothers Eric and Kevin tion equaled less than 3 perHealy have decided to start cent of the amount of total Outlaw Cider LLC to g i ve wine bottled in the first 10 locals a taste of an alcoholic months of last year, accordbeverage beyond beer. ing to th e l atest statistics "I love beer. I love the craft from the Alcohol, Tobacco b eer that Bend has to o f and Trade Bureau. fer," Kevin Healy said. "But B ut th e a m ount o f c i I started getting kind of bored der produced in the first 10 with it, and my friends start- months of 2012 — 13.3 miled getting bored with this lion gallons — represented overhopped beer that Bend is an 80 percent increase over producing." the same period in 2011, acThe Northwest is a craftcording to the statistics. b rewing mecca, said E r i c On Wednesday, Dan McHealy. But while the region C oy signed a l ease for a produces m an y di f f erent 5,385-square-foot space i n beers, it brews almost no the East Bend Plaza to start craft cider. his company, Atlas Cider. He The brothers have their expects to open a 70-barrel equipment, a production faproduction facility, a tasting cility in southeast Bend on room and a growler fill staAmerican Loop, and started tion for the hard cider. making test batches. By sumDrew Wilson, vice presimer, they plan to sell their or- dent of Red Tank Cider Comganic hard cider to local bars. pany, said his company plans
might say something like: "I'm interested in this job. Do you have any information that you can share with me?" Joining industry groups on LinkedIn can build your visibility. You can also join college alumni organizations or otherfocused groups,like one for working mothers. Make full use of the skills section of LinkedIn, Williams advised, and the more specific you are, the better. Instead of saying that you have marketing skills, note the exact areas — direct mail campaigns, for example. LinkedIn can direct you to companies that are seeking these skills so you can follow them. Listing your skills could also bring you to the notice of a recruiter. Be aware,too, that an employer may be viewing your application via a mobile phone. Mobile traffic involving job search more than doubled in 2012 over 2011 at the employment site Indeed.com, said Rony Kahan, a co-founder and CEO. So make sure you know how your resume and cover letter look on a small screen. Resumes should be in a PDF format so they can be viewed on a variety of phones. In the age of online applications, one school of thought holds that cover letters are a waste of time, but Doyle disagrees. Cover letters are still a great way to differentiate yourself from the competition, she said — and the rise of applications via cellphone just means they should be more concise and specific to the job at hand.
t o start canning out of i t s Bend location in March. Wilson said h e d o esn't think it will be challenging to break through the beer barrier. The only difficulty he foresees is getting more taps for cider at pubs in town. Wesley Ladd, owner of The Horned Hand bar in Bend, said he's brewing up something different — mead. In October he began producing mead — a wine-likebeverage made with honey — out of his bar, but the demand was so high he needed more space. "The need for the mead was actually really astonishing," Ladd said. He's currently building his meadery in a 2,500-squarefoot space on Northeast Second Street. It will make his m eadery compatible w i t h many of the established meaderies in the U.S. Ladd hopes to open a mead hall and also plans to organize Bend's first mead and cider festival next fall. Gary Fish, who established Deschutes Brewery 8. Public House in Bend during 1988, said the growth of alcoholic b everage producers i s a natural progression for the region. But in an area with such a high level of competition, he said only the best will survive. "I think beer is going to continue to thrive," Fish said. "How well these other products do depends on who's doing it and what they're doing, and how well they can connect to consumers." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Beef Continued from E1 "There's no scientific basis for turning away U.S. beef," said John Harris, owner of Harris Ranch Beef Co., a family-run operation in California's Fresno County since the 1930s. Kevin Kester, a fifth-generation rancher from Parkfield, Calif., called Indonesia's action a "knee-jerk political action." And with U.S. beef exports accounting for nearly 13 percent of the industry's market lastyear, cattle producers say they rely on selling meat to foreigners to make a living. Industry officials say that foreign markets have become particularly important for meat cuts that won't sell here. The Japanese, for example, have shown an affinity for cow tongue, helping drive up the value of U.S. beef sold to Japan by 19 percent in 2012. On Jan. 28, U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said the U.S. had reached a new agreement with Japan to remove some of the restrictions on selling beef, a move that he said would result in hundreds of millions of dollars of additional sales in coming years. "We're not subsidized by the federal government at all — so we live and die by the marketplace," said Kent Bacus, associate director of legislative affairs in Washington for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, a trade group that represents 230,000 breeders, producers and feeders. The stakes are high for the U.S. economy, with the beef industry supporting 1.4 million jobs, according to industry statistics. And in 2011, the 742,000 beef herds roaming the nation's pastures resulted in $44 billion of economic activity in the U.S., the beef association said. The Indonesian Embassy i n Washington w o uld n o t discuss the case but said in a statement that I n donesia "takes note" of the U.S. action and will respond in a timely manner. "The government of Indonesia'saim is not to restrict imports, but to ensure that all imported goods are safe for consumption by c o nsumers and safe for the environment," said the statement, released by Ni Made Ayu Marthini, a commercial attache. The push to gain more access toIndonesia comes amid hard times for the U.S. cattle industry, the world's largest supplier of beef. Even in Texas, by far the largest beef-exporting state, there are signs of trouble. E arlier this m onth, M i n n esota-based Cargill said it would indefinitely idle its beef processing plant in Plainview, Texas, throwing 2,000 people out of work, mainly because of a declining cattle supply caused by years of drought. In making the announcement, John Keating, president of the company's Cargill Beef division, based in Wichita, Kan., noted that the size of the U.S. cattle herd is now at its lowest point since 1952. It's a familiar story for Kester, 57, who owns a ranch in Monterey County, with more than 20,000 acres between the San Joaquin Valley and California's Central Coast. He has spent all his life in the cattle industry and has watched it shrink, with the average age of a rancher now approaching 60. "It's harder and harder for ranchers and farmers to be in business because of high r egulatory costs an d h i g h land prices across the nation, especially places like h ere in California," said Kester, former president of the California Cattlemen's Association. "As time marches on, we just have less and less people in the business and less production." Overall, beef exports hit a high of $5.4 billion in 2011 and were expected to set another record in 2012, though year-end figures are not yet available. B ut while t h e v a lu e o f U.S. beef exports rose by 2 percent during t h e f i r st 11 months of last year, the amount of beef sent to othe r countries d e clined b y 11 percent, according to the U.S. Meat Export Federation. And the amount of U.S. beef exports to Indonesia dropped by 91 percent from January through November 2012, compared with the same period in 2011. The National Cattlemen's
tj.S. beefexports The value of U.S. beef
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Shifting markets Countries with the biggest
percent decreasesand percentincreases inU.S. beef imports, 2011-2012
Biggest losers Indonesia
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New Zealand
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Beef Association said that only two countries — Ind onesia a n d Th a i l a nd — moved to ban U.S. beef after the discovery of a C alifornia dairy cow i n fected with bovine spongiform e n c ephalopathy, or BSE. While the disease has c ome to c o m monly b e known as mad-cow disease, industry officials say that has become an inflammatory term. They prefer calling it BSE. The disease is deadly to cattle and also can kill humans who eat tainted beef. Industry officials say the ban in Indonesia now has been replaced with tight quotas and requirements that force U.S. exporters to apply for licenses, making it nearly impossible for cattle producers to sell their products. U.S. cattle p r o ducers n ow face so m uch r i sk and uncertainty in trying to sell meat to Indonesia that they've all but given up, said Bacus of the National C a ttlemen's Beef Association. "There's really no incentive," he said. While c a t tl e p r o duce rs ar e m o s t w o r r i e d about the import quotas, they face other complications in selling meat to the world's largest Muslim c o u ntry. I n d onesia requires imported beef to be slaughtered according t o Islamic r e ligious r equirements. And for U.S. exporters, that means obtaining a "certificate of Islamic slaughter" certifying that the animals have met those conditions. Industry officials say that's s imply the p r ice o f d o ing business in a n i c he market. But with the new quotas in place, U.S. officials say Indonesia has violated global trade rules by protecting its domestic agriculture industry from competition. If the two sides can't resolve their dispute on their own b y M a r ch, the office of the U.S. Trade Representative can ask the World Trade Organization in Geneva to create a special dispute-settlement panel. When he announced the action Jan. 10, Kirk complained that Indonesia had createda "complex and discretionary import licensing regime" that hadn't been addressed despite repeated requests. "We w ill c ontinue t o make clear to our trading partners that we will fight to support each job here at home affected by unfair restrictions abroad," said Kirk, who is quitting his job effective next month.
E3
Track Continued from E1 Some tools, including one from Citibank's Citi C a r d, even scoursites for lower prices after a purchase and help customersgeta refund forany pricedifference. Websites that help shoppers compare prices and track online deals have existed as long as e-commerce itself. But rapid changes in pricing at many major retailers have made it more difficult for shoppers to keep on top of it all. The research company Dynamite Data, which follows prices on behalf of retailers and brands, tracked hundreds of holiday products at major retailers in 2011 and 2012. During a t w o -week period around Thanksgiving, Amazon and Sears were changing prices on about a quarter of those products daily, a significant increase from the previous year. Wal-Mart, Toys "R" Us, Kmart and Best Buy also changed pricesmore frequently in 2012. Even the Web browser a customer usescan make a difference. The website Digital Folio, which shows consumers pricechanges, did side-by-side comparisons of t e levisions. On Newegg using the Chrome browser, the firm was offered a $997 price on a Samsung television. Using Firefox and Internet Explorer, the price was $1,399. The firm found a difference on another Samsung television model at Walmart.com, where using Firefox yielded a $199 price and Chrome and Internet Explorer $168. "A lot of t i mes the price will have a big difference on c onsumer b e havior," s a i d Larry Freed, chief executive of ForeSee, which analyzes customer experiences.
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Gretchen Ertl / New York Times News Service
Jen Hughes, of Reading, Mass., uses Hukkster, a new price-tracking tool, to find prices on everyday items, like diapers for her daughter, Lily.
"Everyone can relate to the buyer's remorse of buying an item and seeing it for a lower price a day or a couple of days later," said Jud Linville, chief executive of Citi Cards. For Citi, the idea is to get c onsumers using their C i ti cards rather than competitors' cards on big purchases, Linville said. Consumers must register the purchase online, and there is a long list of exclusions (Iive animals don't qualify, nor do antiques, boats Jessica Kourkounis/The New York Times or a>rhne t>ckets). Erica Bell, left, and Katie Finnegan, are co-founders of one of the The price difference mustbe new price-tracking tools, Hukkster. It works by sending shoppers $25 ormore, and Citisearches an email whenever an item they indicated they liked, goes on sale. the retailers' sites itself. When Citi finds a big enough difference, it emails the conpokes around Amazon's elec- ference if i t f i n d s a l o w er sumer, asksfor a receipt and tronics section, for example, price within tw o w e eks of t hen mails a check for t h e the sidebar lists live compari- the purchase. difference. son pricingforthe products. Retailers generally appreLinville said about a quarter Alerts can give shoppers ciate the sales traffic gener- of purchases over $100 that had a c ompetitive e d ge, s a i d ated by th e t r acking tools been registeredso fargot a rePatrick Carter, president of and do not try to block them fund, and almost 40 percent of 'Hukk it' Digital Folio. He gave the ex- even if t h a t m e an s s ome those over $1,000. Some eligiOne of the new price-track- ample of a Nikon L26 camera: c ustomers wil l r e a p e x t r a ble items included a Whirlpool ing tools is Hukkster, intro- Amazon was out of stock, but discounts. washer, a DKNY suit and a duced last year by two former at 10 p.m. one evening, it got In some cases, retailers are Canon Rebel camera. On averJ .Crew merchants. It a s k s the cameras back in stock at even changing t heir p r a c- age, said a Citi spokeswoman, shoppers to install a " hukk a reduced price. By the next tices to adapt to the new land- those who register items get it" button on their browsers. morning, Amazon was out of scape. Target,for example, back $80 an >tem. Then, when a shopper sees an stock again. "You get the alert announced this month that it While t h ose b u dget-conitem she likes, he or she clicks and you get in on the feeding would match prices from on- scious shoppers are clearly the button, chooses the color, frenzy," he said. line competitors like Amazon, interested in b u y i ng, t h ey sizeand discount he or she is Decide.com, which offers extending a promotion it tried may not be the type of longinterested in, tells Hukkster to price alerts and predictions during the holidays. term customers that retailers alert him or her when the price about where prices are goEven banks see a potential want to cultivate, said Freed of drops, and waits for an email ing, recently i n t roduced a role forthemselves as price ForeSee. to that effect. price guarantee.Ifshoppers monitors. Citibank r ecently Shoppers who are not price"We wanted a way to know, become a Decide.com mem- added a feature to its con- sensitive, he said, "are the conon a specific style we want, ber for $4.99 a month and sumer credit cards that gives sumers they really want, that when it goes on sale," said a co- follow Decide's recommencustomers a refund when it they can build loyalty out of founder, Erica Bell. Hukkster dations to bu y s o mething, finds a lower price on an item — not the consumers that are also looks for coupon codes Decide will r efund the difwithin 30 days of purchase. strictly taking a deal." that apply to specific items, so a J.Crew nightshirt that was originally $128 came out to $62.99 after a site markdown combined with a 30 percent discount code that Hukkster found. Currently, Hukkster makes money from referral trafficit is paid a fee when shoppers buy something via a link from its emails. The founders say they are approaching retailers PROMOTEYOUR SERVICES about ways of working with WITH YOURBUSINESS CARD ~o+ them by, for instance, offering personalizeddiscounts based OR ANSWER AQUESTION on shoppers' "hukks." AS ONEOFOURTAX "Retailers are forced to do, PROFESSIONALS say, 30 percent off all sweatYOUR ers when what they're really trying to move is the green 1. The Vertical AD merino sweater. This provides Business Card Space HERE them the option to do that on a :=/ » - ~ one-to-one basis," a co-found1.75" x 3" er, Katie Finnegan, said. * Hughes, theMassachusetts mother, "hukks" items in specific sizes and colors, and then waits for the notification, Not actual size like one on a Boden sweater she recently bought for her daughter. Q: Areindividuals on Social Security 2. The Featured "Now, of course, I'mhukking impacted if the payroll tax cut everything under the sun, in0uestion L AnswerSpace expires? Do theseindividuals receive cluding diapers, which I don't II II more Social Securityincome? 35 X3 think is their target audience," she said. A: The short answer is NO. The Social Other tracker options Security Trust Fund has enough funds D igital Folio c h arts t h e to pay out Social Security workers. In 30-day price history on elecaddition, during the period the payroll tax Available every Sunday begintronics items at a number of cut is in place, the General Fund oi the ning Feb. 3 to April 14, 2013. retailers so shoppers can see Government will transfer the foregone not only w here the l owest LOGO rev e nue dollar for dollar back to the Trust Space reservafion& copy price is, but also whether that ADDRESS Fund. Thus, there will be no impact to the due January29 by 5 p.m. price might go lower still. PHONE So c ial Secunty Trust Fund. Rather than coming back to the site each time they want to CONTACTYOUR ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE FOR MORE INFORMATION. check a product, shoppers can use Digital Folio as a sidebar in the browser. As a shopper L
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E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
UNDAY D R I V ER
Maz a's igCX-9has iggersticker By Susan Carpenter
BMW ownerbefuddled by battery that drains
The Orange County Register
The average American family consists of 3.14 people, according to the most recent U.S. census. The average household: 2.58. So it's a little odd that the market fo r s even-passenger SUVs is heating up. Americans, it seems, are feeling comfortable enough about the economy that t h ey
By Paul Brand
e
Star Tribune (Mi nneapoli s)
REQJEW are once again up-sizing. L ater th is month, Hyundai will introduce a new three-row version of its Santa Fe, and Ford will soon offer its popular Transit Connect delivery van as a seven-passenger Mom-mobile. But Mazda is getting a jump on the competition with a refreshed version of its CX-9. If family size is a function of wealth, it makes sense that Mazda's largest vehicle is also its most premium and its most expensive, catering to w e lleducated families making at least$100,000 who can afford to drop at least $30,000 on a car and fists full of cash every time they fill up the tank. For its sixth model year, the CX-9 is improved with mostly cosmetic an d t e chnological improvements. It's p owered with the same 3.7-1iter V-6 engine that gives it sufficient pull to safely merge into speeding traffic and enough juice to get up hills without overburdening the six-speed automatic transmission. Its profile, however, is more windswept, with a dramatically raked front window. The interior finish is middleof-the-road sleek, largely because it's entirely black, and it's hard to go wrong with such a basic. Mazda compliments the black leather of its seats with black suede and subtle red stitching. T echnology, h owever, i s where the real wars are waged between competitive vehicles. A new 5.8-inch display is now
• I have a 1997 BMW . Z3 roadster purchased used in 2001. Since Day 1, the battery will go flat if I leave the car sitting for more than a few days. Two different BMW shops have been unable to diagnose the problem. The battery that came with car and a new one needed to be replaced because of so many deep discharge cycles. I installed a battery cut-off switch to save the third battery and make sure the car will start when I want it to. Of course,I need to reset the clock and the audio system settings each time. My brother, an automotive mechanic, says the first thing he would check is the alternator becausethe diode sometimes goes bad and allows a small reverse current flow. Have you ever encountered this? • First off, recognize that . modern a u t omobiles equipped w it h n u m erous electronic processors and gadgetry experience a parasitic current "draw" on the battery when parked with the ignition turned off. BMW publishes service information showing the timeline for the current draw after shutdown. After 60 minutes the parasitic loss should be about 30 milliamps — or 0.03 of an ampere per hour — or less. It would take several weeks at this loss rate for a good battery to fail to start. The fact that every battery that'sbeen in your carha sdischargedtothe"no-start" point in just a few days indicates the parasitic current draw must be significantly higher. A stuck relay can draw half an amp per hour and flatten a battery in a couple of days. Since the shops haven't been able to find the leak, so
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David Dewhurst Photography l Mazda vis Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service
The 2013 Mazda CX9 is the largest among Mazda's current models.
2013 MazdaCX-9 Base price: $29,785 As tested: $39,605 Type: Front-wheel or all-wheel drive, seven-
passenger crossover SUV Engine: 3.7 liter, V6, 4 valves
per cylinder, DOHC, 6-speed automatic transmission with sport shift
Mileage:16mpg city, 22 mpg highway
standard on all three versions of the CX-9 and incorporates HD Radio as well as Pandora. Also standard is a Short Mess age System that, when a smartphone is synced with the car, can receive and send text messagesthatare displayed on the LCD screen. The same system will also automatically dial 911 if the car's airbags deploy. One of the most useful safety technologies on the CX-9 is blind-spot monitoring, a feature that is especially helpful for harried moms carting their bickering — and distracting — spawn. Every time a vehicle pulled into my blind spot, a yel-
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low graphic lit up in the corner of my side mirror to alert me. When using my turn signals to change lanes, the car beeped to let me know if I mightbe taking off another driver's bumper in the move. When I picked up my 9year-old from winter camp last week, he and his best friend were so excited to discover the CX-9's third row, they didn't even bother collapsing the middle seat to get there. Climbing into the rearmost row after the kids had cleared out required a bit of contortionism, I found. The second row doesn't slide forward enough to step onto the third row floor; I needed to climb onto the door sill and duck under a seat belt. Collapsing thethird row with the Grand Touring model is especially easy for parents who long for octopus arms that can wrangle kids as well as groceries. The lift gate automatically opens with the press of a button on the key fob, and the third row easily collapses with a clever system of pull tabs. Pull on the small tab under the head rest, and it flips forward. Pull on a second one at the back of the seat, and the whole thing
I
falls forward. I was testing the most premium of the CX-9's three trims — the all-wheel-drive $36,375 Grand Touring model fit with an optional tech package that upgraded the audio to Bose, expanded my radio options with Sirius, Technicolored the center consolescreen and letme gaze at the stars through a power moon roof. The CX-9 is available in front-wheel and all-wheel drive, the latter of which gets slightly worse fuel economy mostly due to the additional weight. I'm not sure it's worth the extra money and fuel economy compromise in temperate climates. The profile of the CX-9 is long, but driving it doesn't feel like a car that can pack seven and also haul 3,500 pounds. It handles like a smaller car. The most significant indicator of its largesse isthe screen that monitors its fuel economy, whichtold me, after 450 miles of driving, that I'd averaged just 18.2 mpg. Mazda won't say when it will be giving the CX-9 the SkyActiv treatment, as it has with its five-seat SUV, the CX-5, which costs $10,000 less and averages 29 mpg combined.
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to speak, you could try the do-it-yourself method t h at involves connecting a homemade ammeter — a tail light bulb's terminals connected between the positive battery cable and positive battery terminal. If there's a significant current flow, the light will at least glow dimly. If it does, unplug each fuse and relay, one at a time. If the light goes out as you disconnect or unplug a fuse or relay, that's the circuit where the current is flowing.
Q
• I'm having trouble with . the p a ssenger s i de original rear strut on my 1996 Camry with 500,198 miles on it. I've had a few timing belts replaced along with one fuel pump, oil pump, water pump and radiator. Unfortunately I've not replaced the struts. When driving down the freeway in the left lane, the right rearstrut makes no noise,but when driving in the right lane it clatters very loudly to the point I have to turn the radio up. Is it not safe to drive it this way? My friends say to drive it until my knees start to hurt. It runs down the freeway fine but handles more like a boat. • Are you telling me that . yourcarhasmorethan half a million miles on the original struts? That's incredible. If you're goingto keep the car, have new struts/shocks installed ASAP. Safety is the biggest concern. Dead shocks no longer properly control up and down wheel movement and load transfer. Congratulations on reaching the half-million mile club; that's an amazing achievement. Do your car a favor — give it a new set of struts. — Brand is an automotive troubleshooter andformer race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Includea daytime phone number.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
n ru , war oesn' o awa ar seems to come out of nowhere, like rust that suddenly pops up on iron after a storm. Throughout history, we have seen that war can sometimes be avoided or postponed, or its effects mitigated — usually through a balance of power,alliances and deterrence rather than supranational collective agencies. But it never seems to go away entirely. Just as otherwise lawful suburbanites might slug it out over silly driveway boundaries, or trivial road rage can escalate into shooting violence, so nations and factions can whip themselves up to go to war — consider 1861, 1914 or 1939. Often, the pretexts for starting a war are not real shortages of land, food or fuel, but rather perceptions — like fear, honor and perceived self-interest. To the ancient Greek philosophers Heraclitus and Plato, war was the father of us all, while peace was a brief parenthesis in the human experience. In the past, Americans of both parties seemed to accept that tragic fact. After the Second World War, the United States, at great expense in blood and treasure, and often at existential danger, took on the role of protecting the free world from global communism. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, both Democratic and Republican administrations ensured the free commerce, travel and
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON c ommunications essential for t h e globalization boom. Such peacekeepingassumed that there would always pop up a Manuel Noriega, Slobodan Milosevic, Saddam Hussein or Osama bin Laden who would threaten the regional or international order. In response, the United States — often clumsily, with mixed results, and to international criticism — would either contain or eliminate the threat. Names changed, but the evil of the each age remained — and as a result of U.S. vigilance the worldlargely prospered. Such a bipartisan activist policy is coming to close with the new "lead from behind" policy of the Obama administration. Perhaps America now believes that the United Nations has abetter record of preventing or stopping wars — or that the history of the United States suggests we have more oftencaused rather than solved problems, or that with pressing socialneeds athome, we can no longer afford an activist profile abroad at a time of near financial insolvency. Yet the reasons for our new isolationism, analogous to early 1914 or 1939, do not matter, only the reality that lots of bad actors now believe that the United States cannot or will
not impede their agendas — and that no one else will in our absence. Americans are rightly tired of the Afghan and Iraq wars. Yet we left no monitoring force in Iraq and are winding down precipitously in Afghanistan, and thus have no guarantees that our decade-long struggle for postwar consensual government will survive in either place. Much of North Africa is beginning to resemble Somalia. Our tag-along strategy in Libya resulted in sheer chaos, with an American ambassador and three others killed in Benghazi. The Muslim Brotherhood, headed by anti-Semite Mohamed Morsi, has turned Egypt into a failed state. Islamists killed dozens of Western hostagesin Algeria. The French are unilaterally trying to prevent an Islamist takeover of Mali. Meanwhile, 60,000 died in Syria, with thousands more fatalities to come. The common theme? Middle East authoritarians and Islamists expect that the United States will probably lecturea lot about peace and do very little about war. China and Japan appear to be on the verge of a shooting incident over unimportant disputed islands that nonetheless seem very important in terms of national prestige. A more muscular government in Tokyo and an expanding Japanese navy suggest that the Japanese are running out of patience with Chinese bullying. Japan, the Philippines, South Ko-
rea and Taiwan all have the wealth and expertise to become nuclear to deterChinese aggression, but so far they have not — only because of their relianceon a previously engaged and military omnipotent United States. A n ear-starving N orth K o rea, when not threatening South Korea, p eriodically announces that it i s pointing a test missile at Japan or the United States. Few believe that the present sanctions will stop Iran's trajectory toward a nuclear bomb. The more the Argentine economy tanks, the more its government talks about the "Malvinas" — replaying the preliminaries that led to the 1982 Falklands Islands war. In the last four years, tired of Iraq and Afghanistan, and facing crushing debt, we have outsourced collective action, deterrence and peacekeeping to the Arab League, the French, the British, the Afghan and Iraqi security forces and the United Nations. Does America now believe that our weaker allies, polite outreach,occasional obeisance and apology, euphemism, good intentions — or simple neglect — will defuse tensions that seem to be leading to conflict the world over? Perhaps,but there is no evidence in eitherhuman nature or our recorded pastto believe such a rosy
prognosis. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.
A victory for women, but at high cost By Karen Heller The Philadelphia Inquirer
erving in combat was never high on the original feminist agenda. Women fought for the vote and equal pay, not for the equal opportunity to get killed. Indeed, I have long believed that not serving on the front lines of war was one of the great advantages of being awoman. Women lead longer, healthier lives in no small part because we're less engaged with and exposed to sustained violence. So when Defense Secretary Leon Panetta lifted the long ban on women in combat last week, I was conflicted. For decades, parents worried about their sons getting killed in battle. Now we must worry about all our children. Allowing women in c ombat is resolutely the right move, argue some veterans. Retired Air F orce Brig. Gen. Wilma Vaught has championed women in combat since she went off to Vietnam soon after the Tet Offensive without military marksman training (she learned from her brother-in-Iaw) or a weapon (she secured two from another officer). "I feel very strongly that I shouldn't be told I can't try to do something because I'm a woman," said Vaught, president of the Women in Military Service for America Memorial Foundation. Instead, "we should have the person who can do the job best." Staunch feminists and antiwar activists like Gloria Steinem and Robin Morgan also support the decision. "The old me would have been deeply ambivalent," Morgan told me, "but the simple, flat-out truth is that
S
women are already incombat and have been in combat for some time." Morgan joined the advisory board of the Service Women's Action Net-
work (SWAN), the advocacy group that sued the military last November challenging the combat ban. Women constitute almost 15 percent of current enrollment in military active duty. More than 800 women have been wounded, and 130 have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, the latter now America's longest war. U.S. Rep. Tammy Duckworth lost both legs as a Black Hawk helicopter pilot flying missions in Iraq. The nature ofbattle has profoundly changed. We don't have trench warfare anymore. An IED can explode anywhere, rendering any site a combat zone. But with women on active combat duty, the number of female casualties will surely rise. One positive sign is that the top brass is changing in attitude, if not in appearance. "The time has come to rescind the direct combat exclusion rule for women and to eliminate all unnecessary gender-based barriers to service," Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, wrote this month, noting that more than 14,000 women were already serving under exceptions. Obstacles remain. Women may not be able to pass some of the more rigorousphysical standards required of top combat soldiers. In his letter, Dempsey acknowledges, "We need time to get it right." The plan is to implement all changes by January 2016. This should make for a more prepared military, one that integrates all soldiers into combat units. Women
tary needs to attract top talent while reflecting the nation's true diversity. g How long will it take until we have a female Colin Powell? ,( Clearly, this is a smart organizational decision that should draw to and retain more talent in the armed forces. "Women get to that midpoint, around the 10- or 12-year point, and they find they have greater opportunities on the outside and they leave the service, "said Vaught, who served almost three decades."These are people we never ought to be losing." And the military culture must change.For a long time, I wondered why any woman would want to enlist. Tailhook was more than two decades ago, yet, as the Lackland Air Force Base scandal demonstrates, some men have learned nothing.Women will be better trained and prepared testified before Congress that they for battle, "instead of the current feared their instructors more than workaround we have of attaching the enemy. women to units," said SWAN policy According to the Department of director Greg Jacob, a former Marine Defense, 19,000 soldiers, the great captain. "Women will now get proper majority of them women, are sexucredit and not be hindered in promo- ally assaulted each year in a military tions and recognition." that embraces the latest technology Which will certainly result in bet- while not doing nearly enough to end ter pay and benefits, and more wom- brutal, antediluvian behavior. en in leadership. "It's hard to make More women in positions of comit to a general, for example, without mand will not only improve the milia combat arms command at the bri- tary, but make it safer for everyone. gade and battalion level," Duckworth We will produce better soldiers, male told NBC. "The more women we get and female. "Combat is no place for a human in leadership positions, the more that our armedforcescan take advantage being,"Jacob told me, and I concur. of those talents, the better it is for our This seems a hardprice for equalmilitary." ity, but I'm convinced it's the path to Agreed,and forourcountry.Womprogress and bringing our military en need obstaclesremoved from ris- fully into the modern era. ing through the ranks while enjoying — Karen Helleris a columnist better and longer careers. The milifor PhiladelphiaInquirer.
Stagnating collectively is the new norm By Charles Lane The Washington Post
f the 2,000-plus words in President Obama's second inaugural address, surely the most provocative were "collective action." He presentedAmerican history as a "journey," during which, at every crucial turn, we discovered "together" that "preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action." His examples were efforts led by the federal government: interstate highways, financial regulation, the New Deal-Great Society safety net and victory in war. What would Mancur Olson have made of this? The late University of Maryland economist wrote a book called "The Logic of Collective Action," which, though first published in 1965, still provides a powerful counterpoint to the vision Obama laid out. Olson's critique of collective action is complicated, and it is made less accessible by an ungainly prose style. But the gist is that large numbers of people do not naturally band together to secure common interests. In fact, the larger the group, the less likely it is to act in a truly collective manner.
As Olson explained, the interests thatunite large groups are necessarily of the lowest-common-denominator variety. Therefore the concrete benefits of collective action to any individual are usually small compared with the costs — in time, effort and money — of participation. "Freeriding" is a constant threat — as the difficulties of collecting union dues illustrates. By contrast, small groups are good at collective action. It costs less to organize a few people around a narrow, but intensely felt, shared concern. For each member, the potential benefits of joint action are more likely to outweigh the costs, whether or not successcomes at the larger society's expense. Hence, the housing lobby, the farm lobby and all t h e special-interest groups that swarm Congress. Hence, too,the conspicuous absence ofan effective lobby on behalf of all taxpayers or, for that matter, all poor people. So when Obama called on Americans to once again act "as one nation, and one people," he was, at best, stating an aspiration. Olson's assessment of reality, both historical and contemporary, is less
lofty but more accurate: "There will be no countries that attain symmetrical organization of all groups with a common interest and thereby attain optimal outcomes through comprehensive bargaining." That quotation comes from "The Rise and Decline of Nations," Olson's 1982 sequel to "The Logic of Collective Action." This ominously titled book begins with Olson's observation that West Germany, successor to a state literally destroyed in 1945, was faring better, economically and socially, than its conqueror, Britain. His paradoxical,and deeply depressing, conclusion: Political stabilityis a curse of sorts,because, over time, stable societies accumulate interest groups, with all the distortion and complexity that breeds. "On balance," he wrote, "special-interest organizations and collusions reduce efficiency and aggregate income... and make political life more divisive." The problem is not, as the president implied, the opposition of an implacable few to the manifest general interest. Rather, it is that Washington is besieged by mutually offsetting lobbies
representingalmost every conceivable segment of society. Some (e.g., teacher unions) collect under the Democratic Party banner; some (e.g., independent oil operators) tilt Republican; and many (Wall Street, agribusiness, hospitals) have their hooks in both parties. As Olson warned, our stable democracysuffersfrom "crowded agendas and bargaining tables" — too crowded toagree on the problem, much less a solution. Or so the repeated failure to strike a "grand bargain" on fiscal
policy would suggest. Obama was surely right to maintain that there is such a thing as a public good: infrastructure, social equality, national and global security. He was also right that government is better suited than markets to provide some of these. But the president's paean to collective action lacked Olson's realism. The question is not just how much more government we need orwant, if any. It's also how much more government we can afford, in light of its purposes andgiven the risks Olson identified. — Charles Lane is a member of The Washington Post's editorial board.
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
The Great Inflection
p
resident Barack Obama's first term was absorbed by dealing with the Great Recession. I hope that in his second term he'll be able to devote more attention to the Great Inflection. Dealing with t h e G reat Recession was largely about "Yes We Can" — about government, about what we can and must do "together" to shore up the safety nets and institutions that undergirdour society and economy. Obama's Inaugural Address was a full-throated defense of that "public" side of the unique public-private partnership that makes America great. But, if we're to sustain the kind of public institutions and safety nets that we're used to, it will require a lot more growth by the private side (not just more taxes), a lot more entrepreneurship, a lot more start-ups and a lot more individual risk-taking — things thepresidentrarely speaks about.And it will all have to happen in the context of the Great Inflection. What doImeanbythe GreatInflection? I mean something very big happened in the last decade. The world went from connected to hyperconnected in a way that is affecting every job, industry and school, but was largely disguised by post-9/11 and the Great Recession. In 2004, I wrote a book, called "The World Is Flat," about how the world was getting digitally connected. When I wrote that book, Facebook, Twitter, cloud computing, Linkedln, 4G w i reless, ultra-highspeed bandwidth, big data, Skype, system-on-a-chip (SOC) circuits, iPhones, iPods, iPads and cellphone apps didn't exist — or were in their infancy. Today, not only do all these things exist, but, in c ombination, they've taken us from connected tohyperconnected. Now, notes Craig Mundie, one of Microsoft's top technologists, not just elites, but virtually everyone everywhere has, or will have soon, access to a hand-held computer/cellphone, which can be activated by voice or touch, connected via the cloud to infinite applications and storage, so they can work, invent, entertain, collaborate and learn for less money than ever before. Alas, though, every boss now alsohas cheaper,easier,fasteraccess tomore above-average software, automation, robotics, cheap labor and cheap genius than ever before. When the world gets this hyperconnected, adds Mundie, the speed with which every job and industry changes alsogoes into hypermode. Because of the way every industry — from health care to manufacturing to education — is now being transformed by cheap, fast, connected computing power, the skill required for every decent job is rising as is the necessity of lifelong learning. This is exacerbating our unemployment problem. In their terrific book, "Race Against the Machine: How the Digital Revolution I s A c celerating Innovation, Driving Productivity, and Irreversibly Transforming Employment and the Economy," Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology note that for the last two centuries it happened that productivity, median income and employment all tracked each other nicely. "So most economists have had this feeling that if you just boost productivity, the pie grows, and, in the long run, everything else takes care of itself," Brynjolfsson explained in an interview. "But there is no economic law that says technological progress has to benefit everyone. It's entirely possible for the pie to get bigger and some people to get a smaller slice." Put it all together, he added, and you can understand why the Great Recession took the biggest bite out of employment but is not the only thing affecting job loss today: why we have record productivity, wealth and innovation, yet median incomes are falling, inequality is rising and high unemployment remains persistent. How to adapt? It will require more individual initiative. We know that it will be vital to have more of the "right" education than less, that you will need to develop skills that are complementary to technology rather than ones that can be easily replaced by it and that we need everyone to be innovating new productsand servicesto employ the people who are being liberated from routine work by automation and software. The winners won't just be those with more IQ. It will also be those with
more PQ (passion quotient) and CQ (curiosity quotient) to leverage all the new digital tools to not just find a job, but to invent one or reinvent one, and to not just learn but to relearn for a lifetime. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New Yorlz Times.
F4 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
'Revenge' filled with haunting prose
Q~~ www.bendbulletin.com/books
BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR
THE HOUR o~PERlL
"Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales" by Yoko Ogawa, translated by Stephen Snyder
(Picador) By Monica Rhor The Associated Press
They are the scenes of ordinary l i fe: a m o t h er
stopping by the neighborhood bakery to purchase two strawberry shortcakes for her son's birthday, an aspiring writer toiling over a manuscript in a spare apartment, ayoung woman preparing dinner for her beau, a woman spying on her husband's mistress. Yetin Yoko Ogawa's story collection, "Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales," those ordinary exteriors are merely brittle shells that crack open to reveal darkness, death and despair. Woven through the 11 interconnected tales is a thread of the grotesque, the macabre, the mournful. The m o ther's e r r and turns out to be a paean to inconsolable loss. The writer emerges as an unhinged character that evokes both love and pity. The amorous young woman finds herself entwined in both a murder scene and a museum dedicated to torture. Ogawa, a prolific author whose work has appeared in The New Yorker and Harper's Magazine, laces her stories with gruesome murders, exotic a n imals and peculiar events. Her language is both spare and searingly precise, crystallizing the details of everyday existence and capturing the unexpected shock of the bizarre. In these stories, ordinariness is not a mask hiding the morbid and the macabre. In many cases, the ordinary life itself, with its insistent drip of isolation, sameness, sadness and loss, is what pushes the characters to the edge of madness and vengeance. Ogawa's haunting prose may not be to everyone's taste, but readers willing to explore the murkier edges of the human psyche will not be disappointed.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the bestsellers for week ending Jan. 26. Hardcover fiction
1. "Private Berlin" by Patterson/ Sullivan (Little, Brown) 2. cA Memory of Light" by Robert Jordan(Tor) 3."Suspect" by Robert Crais (Ptjtnam) 4. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn (Crowni 5. "Ever After" by Kim Harrison (Harper Voyager) 6. "The Fifth Assassin" by Brad Meltzer (GrandCentral) 7. "Tenth of December: Stories" by George Saunders (Random House) 8."The Racketeer" by John Grisham (Dotjbledayi 9. "The Husband List" by Janet Evanovich (St. Martin'si 10. "Threat Vector" by TomClancy (Ptjtnam)
Tish Wells/McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Author Daniel Stashower's new book "The Hour of Peril" chronicles the dangers leading up to Abraham Lincoln's 1861 inauguration.
oo c ronicesear reas o incon's ie "The Hour of Peril" by Daniel Stashower (Minotaur Books, 368 pgs., $26.99)
"He was no saint. This, at the heart, is the story of a barefoot cooper who c omes to America, becomes a world faBy Tish Wells mous detectiveand makes his McCiatchy Newspapers bones protecting A m erica's Today's political conflicts railroads." pale when compared with the When Sa m ue l Fe l t on, danger faced by A b r aham president of the Philadelphia, Lincoln on his way to Wash- Wilmington an d B a l timore ington, D.C., for his first inau- Railroad "whose track formed guration in 1861. a crucial link between WashHe had to travel through ington and the North," hears Baltimore. rumors of potential danger to T he city wa s f i l led w i th the president-elect, by the deSouthern sympathizers who struction of bridges or rails, p lotted, secretly and i n t h e he asked Pinkerton to find out o pen, against L i n coln. I n whether the threats are real. some cases,they called for his Stashower makes a solid assassination. case that t h ere w ere r e al You can read all about it in threats to Lincoln's safety on Daniel Stashower's "The Hour the planned Inaugural Train of Peril," an i n -depth look trip between Springfield, Ilat the short period between linois and Washington, D.C. the election and the March In meticulous detail, he shows inauguration. that t h er e w e r e m u l t iple The well-researched book warnings about th e p otencovers the obstacles that Lin- tial for an attack, or attacks, coln faced on that journey, and coming from many sources Allan Pinkerton, the Chicago along with Pinkerton's own detective whose job was to investigations. keep him safe. Lincoln had known PinkerAt a b ook rec e ption, ton when Lincoln was a lawStashower said of Pinkerton, yer for th e I l l inois Central
railroad, so when Pinkerton told him that "if he kept to the published itinerary, 'an assault of some kind would be made upon his person with a view to taking his life,'" Lincoln took him seriously. Pinkerton s afely e s corts the disguised Lincoln through Baltimore before the inauguration, thwarting the threatened plans. "The Hour of Peril" takes a while to get to that evening but the build-up is worth it. No matter that you know it ends, the tension is palpable. Winner of the Edgar and Agatha awards for his mysteries, and the Raymond Chandler Fulbright Fellowship in Detective Fiction, Stashower is also a j o u rnalist whose w ork has appeared in T h e Washington Post, Smithsonian Magazine and The New York Times. It's easy to sense that he could turn this into a well-written mystery or novel. As proven with the movie "Argo," even knowing the ending, viewers, or readers, can be caught up in the story.
'Big S River' hasengaging characters "Big Sky River" by Linda Lael Miller (HQN,
histwo sons to his sister's care in another town. 368 pgs., $7.99) Tara, on the other hand, is an admirable woman. After a By Lezlie Patterson disappointing divorce — made McCiatchy-Tribune News Service more so for the forced esLinda Lael M i l ler o f fers trangement from herbeloved readers another c ontempo- stepdaughters — Tara decides rary western with the third in to reinvent her life and moves her "Parable,Montana" series. from New York City to rural Readers have already met Montana tobecome a chicken S heriff B o one T aylor a n d farmer. chicken farmer Tara KendHer next door neighbor is all in previous books, where Boone. They don't hit it off, it was fairly obvious to sea- which is played out in previsoned romance connoisseurs ous books and referred to in that the two were destined for this one. couple-dom. Thankfully, by the time this B oone ha s b e e n s u l k - story gets going Boone has deing for a few years. True, he cided to cease and desist his lost the wife he loved, but it brooding, pouting and sulkjust doesn't add to his "hunk ing. True, his hand is forced points" that he essentially has a bit when sis calls to tell him been pouting in a run-down her h u sband's u n expected mobile home after banishing i njury/surgery/recovery w i l l
preventher from keeping his sons for a while. Boone brings the boys back to Parable, at about the same time Tara's ex-husband dumps his twin daughters on hermuch to Tara's delight. Except for the tantrums and sulkiness of Boone's youngest son (like father) the kids are all too-good-to-be-true delightful. O f course, this is romance fiction, so it really doesn't have to portray real life. In fact, it's preferable that it doesn't. As the past two books, the story is a bit thin on plot and romance. The hero and heroine just don't spend enough time together. But the characters are engaging, the setting is charming and glimpses of familiar folks from the early books make it a s a tisfying read.
emoir etais itera a ent's irst ears By Roger Rapoport McClatchy-Tribune News Service
NEW YORK — W h en "End Game," military historian Eric Durschmied's novel about Fidel Castro's regime, recently arrived on the crowded desk of veteran l i t erary a g e nt Sterling Lord, i t r e ally was love at first sight. For Lord, 92, the ambitious 200,000-word novel might not be the easiest book to sell in today's marketplace. " But I just fell in love with the writing and the story. I couldn't put it down." Lord, whose memoir "Lord
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had no literary value. They were drawn by celebrity biof Publishing" (Open Road ographies and authors who Media) on his first 60 years could be easily publicized." as a literary agent is out Lord, a tennis star in his this week, skips over focus youth, carved out several groups and market research important niches early in his when c onsidering m a nucareer. Among them were scripts like "End Game." He sports biographies like Jimdoesn't even worry about de- my Piersall's "Fear Strikes veloping a big following on Out," R o ck y Gr a z i ano's "Somebody Up There Likes Twitter. Instead he looks for unique Me" and later Jerry Krambooks that keep him reading er's Green Bay Packers claslate into the night — the feel- sic, "Instant Replay," written ing he had when he started with Dick Schaap. "I have always felt that my Jack Kerouac's " On Th e Road," Ken Kesey's "One job was to do everything for Flew Over T h e C u ckoo's writers, not the agency. I felt Nest," Peter Gent's "North if I chose writers properly Dallas Forty," or the fiction and did a good job for them of Dick Francis. the money would takecare Working five days a week, of itself." sometimes more, from the D evoting four y e ars t o offices of Sterling Lord Liter- selling "On The Road" was istic, America's most expe- typical o f L o r d ' s t e nacrienced agent represents a ity. Best-sellers like Ralph G. wide list of clients ranging Martin's biography of Winfrom poet Lawrence Ferling- ston Churchill's mother Jenhetti to sportswriter Frank nie and Peter Gent's "North Deford. Hissuccess stories, Dallas 40" were rejected by ranging from the popular Be- a depressinglylarge number renstain Bears series to the of publishers before finally memoirs of four U.S. cabinet making their way into print. "Today," says Lord, "selling members, inform the pages of his E-Riginal memoir (si- a first novel of an author who multaneously published as doesn't have a track record is an Open Road Publishing e- harder than it used to be. We book and paperback). are also in a period where For Lord, who said decades nonfiction books are tougher ago that publishing needed to sell. But it's also true that to reach the point where cus- books that have been out for tomers can acquire anybook quite some time are certainly instantly, e-books have cer- finding their own m arket. tainly broadened the playing The book business is not like field for millions of titles that making an auto. Each title is were once hard to find. unique." "But it's also true that it's For Lord, who knows what a tougher market for mass it feels like to have a book m arket paperbacks. I d o he believes in rejected 20 or think the h ardcover book more times before finally will never totally disappear. winning acceptance, stubToo many people are not bornness is critical. A case willing to give up the tactile in point is "The Ballad of feeling of a title that you can Dingus Magee," which went keep in a book case, for all of on to become a successful your visitors to see. movie. "When I started, most of "I beheved >n the book, the publishing houses were so the mound of rejections run by the people who had didn't discourage me. I kept s tarted them. They w e r e t elling myself that I w a s owned by people largely in- smarter than many editors. terested in the quality of the I may not have been smarter, books they published. You but I had to believe that I was never heard them talking — and I had to really believe about profits and the bottom in the book — to keep on line. Of course at that time going." the reading public was much This led him to another trusmaller than it was today. ism for survival in publish"When big money started ing: "Whether it was a major showing up for book acqui- triumph or a serious disaster, sition and marketing in the I would take only 10 minutes late '50s and '60s, people who to moan or to celebrate before hadn't bought books were moving on to the next client suddenly reading titles that or the next deal."
Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. (St. Martin'si 2."My Beloved World" by Sonia Sotomayor (Knopf) 3. "Francona" byTerry Francona (HMHi 4. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt) 5. "Going Clear" by Lawrence Wright (Knopfi 6. "I Declare" by Joel Osteen (FaithWordsi 7. "No EasyDay" by Mark Owen (Dtjtton) 8. "The 4-Hotjr Chef" by Timothy Ferriss (NewHarvest) 9. "The Plan" by Lyn-Genet Recitas (GrandCentral) 10."Thomas Jefferson" by Jon Meacham (RandomHouse) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
'Little Elvises' compelling, suspenseful, edgy "Little Elvises" by Timothy Hallinan (Soho Press)
every now and then a writercomes along with the imagination and skill to make the whole thing feel fresh and new again. That's what veteran crtme novehs >mo y al
pounding suspense.
Asthe storyopens, Junioris in afix, or rather, a bunch of them. The ex-wife he By Bruce DeSilva still yearns for has a new man in The Associated Press her 1>fe. H>s precoc>ous daughter, Ever since Dashiell Hammett intro- linan has accomplished with his Lllll who just turned 13, has acquired duced usto Sam Spade in "The Maltese latest series of novels featuring her first boyfriend, and Junior Falcon"83 years ago, hundreds of writ- Junior Bender, full-time Los Andoesn't approve. The daughter ers have adopted his formula, flooding geles burglar and part-time priof Junior's eccentric landlady the bookshelves with w i secracking vate eye-style fixer for the city's has run off with a cad, and she private eyes who work both sides of criminal element. needs Junior's help to bring her il't-.~' ' the law, disrespect authority, icily stare The first book tn the sertes, it)'tlUil>'i home. And an L.A.P.D. detecdown gun barrelsand conceal an im- "Crashed" (2012), was great fun. tive is going to frame Junior for mutable code of honor beneath a cynical The new one, "Little Elvises," is even pistol-whipping a judge's wife and stealouter shell. better, with an intricate high-stakes ing their jade collection unless Junior This can get awfully tiresome, but plot, a compelling subplot and heart- finds a way to get the cop's elderly uncle
+g~~g
out of a murder rap. The uncle, a record producer in Philadelphia back in the 1950s, got rich by recruiting a bunch of no-talent pretty boys, fixingtheir hair and teaching them to curl their lips to make them look like Elvis Presley, and foisting their abysmal howls on teenage record buyers. Along the way, Hallinan introduces us to a drugged-out, pain-impervious hit man, anonagenarian puppet master who rules the L.A. underworld, and a host of other charactersas dangerously outrageous as the murderous crew obsessed with obtaining the black bird in Hammett's 1930 masterpiece.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F5
'LEONARDO AND THE LAST SUPPER'
Debut novel 'Drowning House' How the rilliant slacker is witty tale of mystery inTexas
complete a masterpiece r
• Famous painting wascommi a ssion that da Vinci did not find enticing, authorsays ny," King writes, given Leonardo's"dreams of construct(Walker, 322pgs., $28) ing instruments of war." As if the loss of the equesBy Michael D. Schaffer trian project wasn't enough, The Philadelphia tnqairer Leonardo may have thought Leonardo da Vinci was a the Last Supper commission genius of delay, a master of the didn't play to his skills, or at unfinished. least didn't match his interB rilliant id e a s swi r l ed ests. The phrase "things asaround him like snowflakes signed, not my art" appears in a flurry and melted almost in a fragmentary letter to as quickly. Frustrated patrons Lodovico that King specutried in vain to get him to com- lates "may well have conp lete commissions, but t h e cerned the new assignment at perfectionist wouldn't be hur- Santa Maria delle Grazie." ried.Unfinished work seemed Leonardo had good reason to be a L eonardo specialty, to be u n enthusiastic about and as the last decade of the "The Last Supper." "A commission to paint a 15th century dawned, he had frustratingly little to show for wall was not the most obvithe prodigious talent he had ous assignment for Leonardo," displayed in his youth. "Tell King writes. "In fact, he was me if anything was ever done," an odd choice for the job." He he lamented in a notebook. had never worked in fresco, With that track record, an the preferred technique of observer might have been du- the day for painting murals. bious about the commission And he had never worked on that came Leonardo's way a painting so large: 15 feet tall late in 1494 or early in 1495: to and nearly 29 feet wide. paint a mural of the Last SupNevertheless, he undertook per ofJesus and his apostles the job, probably because he on the north wall of the refec- had little choice. The commistory at the convent of Santa sion likely came from Lodovico, Maria delle Grazie in Milan. a man Leonardo would have Ross King, an English nov- wanted to keep happy. Even if elist and historian, tells the the assignment came instead story, in "Leonardo and the from the D o minican f r iars Last Supper," of the improb- who lived at Santa Maria, the able creation of one of art's duke was clearly interested in greatest masterpieces. With a the project. This time, Leonfiction writer's feel for charac- ardo finished what he started, ter, King depicts a supremely although he took about four ingenious, enigmatic, stub- years and managed to go slowbornly independent, and unly enough toannoy the leader derachieving Leonardo, and, of the Dominican community. "Coming in the midst of so with a nonfiction writer's skill, he sets the sketch against a much dereliction and neglect, richly described background 'The Last Supper' was the triof a society in creative and of- umphant discharge of the debt ten violent ferment. that (Leonard's) genius owed King has visited the Italian history," King writes, perhaps Renaissancebefore,most no- a little grandiosely. Leonardo tably in "Brunelleschi's Dome" was probably happy just to get (2000), a finely wrought ac- something done. The work is "a landmark in painting ...," count of the construction of the great vault that crowns the King continues, the gateway cathedral of Santa Maria del to the age of M i chelangelo Fiore in Florence. and Raphael, when a r tists This time, King tells a tale "worked in a magnificent and tinged with irony. intellectually so p h i sticated style emphasizing harmony, Painting a wall proportion, and movement." "The Last Supper" commisThe Leonardo who emerges sion was not one that Leon- in King's pages may have been ardo sought; he may not even a genius, but he was a refreshhave wanted it. He had been ingly human one. "Lacking working on a giant equestrian much in the way of a formal statue of Francesco Sforza, education, he was one of hisfather of the reigning duke tory's great autodidacts," King of Milan, L odovico Sforza, writes, yet he was "a poor Leonardo's principal patron. mathematician, often making That project effectively ended mistakes" and had difficulty in 1494 when Lodovico took with Latin: "That one of histothe 75 tons of bronze destined ry's greatest brains struggled for the monument and used it with amo, amas, amat should to make three urgently needed be a consolation to anyone cannon instead — "a sad iro- who has ever tried to learn a
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second language." Physically, Leonardo was "strikingly handsome and elegant," according to early biographers. He was reputedly strong enough to be "able to straighten a horseshoe with his bare hands" and loved flashy clothing.
At Leonardo's leisure As he did in Brunelleschi's Dome, King guides us through the artisticpractices of the day, explaining the technique of fresco, which Leonardo had not learned as a young artist and apparently had no interest in learning as an older one. Fresco, which involved painting on wet plaster, required quick work. Leonardo liked to go slowly and to experiment. " He preferred to work at a more leisurely pace than fresco required, concerning himself with subtle effectsmodulations of color or transitions of light and shade — that fresco'srequisite speed of execution made virtually impossible," writes King. Leonardo's decision to use oil paints on a dry wall may have suited him, but it also made "The Last Supper" a flaking piece of endangered artwithin 20 years of its completion. Nor does King neglect the dangerous political world in which Leonardo lived, a landscape littered with names that have become bywords for ruthlessness — Borgia, Machiavelli, Medici. One fascinating digression recounts Leonardo's friendship with the Franciscan friar Luca Pacioli, a brilliant mathematician r e membered as the "Father of Accounting." King judges "The Last Supper" to be "arguably the most famous painting in the world, its only serious rival Leonardo's other masterpiece, the Mona Lisa." That's obviously one person's opinion ("Starry Night," anyone? "Guernica"? "The Night Watch"?) But wherever you rank it, "The Last Supper" is an amazing work of ar t and K i ng's book a worthy account of its
beginnings.
"The Drowning House" by Elizabeth Black (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday,
That k i n d o f ob s ervaBlack excels at summontional and descriptive skill is ing the unique culture of a good part of what makes Galveston, its t r agic p ast "The Drowning House" so 288 pgs., $25.95) and scruffy present, a town engrossing. that easily could have been By Joy Tipping Clare, a ph o t ographer, as important a s h i p ping The Dallas Morning News returns to Galveston (she's center as Houston or New Houston resident Elizabeth B OI, or " B orn o n t h e I s - Orleans till Mother Nature Black makes a notable debut land," which means, quite literally sank any hope of with "The Drowning House," adamantly, "one of us") os- greatness. The author aba multigenerational, thrilltensibly to direct an art exsorbingly draws out the isoi ngly evocative and w i t t y hibition. In truth, she's "gone lationist, melancholy nature novelthat spans the decades to Texas" because she, too, the island's inhabitants have between the devastating 1900 is desperate — to get away cultivated over the past 100 Galvestonhurricane and the from reminders of her child's years,suspicious of strangisland circa 1990. death and subsequently tor- ers but u t terly d ependent Black a musingly e l i cits tured marriage. on the tourists who f l ock Texas from the first page: "I She describes Galveston to Dickens on th e Strand knew I was in Texas when as "a place where you could and other manufactured I swerved to avoid a shape sometimes see the past run- merriment. by the side of the road," says ning alongside th e p r e sBlack's only major m i sprotagonist Clare Porterfield, ent," even in her own home. step is in trying to stuff too driving in from New York. Clare grew up in the historic much into one book, and "I stopped and backed up to Hayes-Giraud house, where in doing so, leaving a lot of confirm that the shape was t he photos weren't of h e r strings either tangled or una chest of drawers. I'd lived ancestors, but of those who tied too late. away long enough to find the built the p lace, and t h eir The relationship between sight incongruous. possessions mingled uneas- Clare and her teenage boy"But it all came back to me ily with her family's. friend i s f r e quently m enat once, the things I'd seen Two mysteries drive the t ioned, teasing t oward a abandoned at the side of the story and interrupt Clare's significant reunion. Yet we road in Texas. Not just on exhibit research, which has d on't get to meet him t i l l rural blacktops, but along a distinctly minor r ole i n nearly the end of the book, the busiest superhighways the narrative. One is from and it's a vexing letdown. gut-ripped m attresses, 1900, when a young woman The riddle of the drowned clothing, suitcases, and once, a llegedly drowned i n t h e girl also builds to an unsata velvet rocking chair. It was h istoric C a r r aday h o u se isfying conclusion. what you might expect in a n ext door, caught by h e r Y et maybe t h at's p a r t country at war — personal long hair on a chandelier as of the point. In Galveston, belongings strewn along the the water rose and trapped things never turn out quite side of the road or on the fron- her. The other is an incident as one might expect or want, tier, when travelers came this from Clare's teenage years and enigmas tend to stay just way as a last resort. In the that also involved a death, that. The Spanish, after all, days when 'Gone to Texas' and her and her boyfriend's called it Malhado — "island meant you were desperate." hasty exile from the island. of misfortune."
FINGER-POINTING
Former AIGCEO'sstory is hardto read By Susan Antiiia
are told in the preface. In an earlier affront to taxIf you're among the U.S. payers, Greenberg sued the taxpayers w h o w at c h ed U.S. government in Novemin horror as $182 billion of ber 2011, seeking $25 billion your money made its way to based on allegations that the the collapsing insurance gi- government, among other ant American International things, illegally seized stock Group during the financial from AIG in 2008 — stock he crisis, it might come as a had a big interest in as CEO surprise to learn that your of Starr International, AIG's forced munificence didn't biggest shareholder. make much of a difference. Greenberg pushed AIG to In his new book, "The AIG join the suit, but Jan. 9 the Story," former Chief Execu- board said it was taking a tive Maurice "Hank" Green- pass. berg offers his take on what Greenberg was forced out kept the company alive: "It of AIG in March 2005 amid was saved only by the loyal- regulatory probes that tarty and tenacity of its valiant g eted him a n d t h e c o m work force," he says. p any. The version of t h e That is just one of many story he tells in his book is mo- pretty much what he's been parallel-universe ments in t h i s p a rt-vanity, saying since the meltdown: part-vendetta work, w hich He was a brilliant businessG reenberg co-wrote w i t h man, an a l er t r i s k -taker law professor Lawrence A. and a victim of overzealous Cunningham. It's written in regulators and u n grateful the third person but "is very former colleagues. All the much Greenberg's story and bad things that happened a personal one at that," we at AIG began after he was Bloomberg News
shown the door. It's a shame we couldn't have learned more from this very smart business leader who, through acquisitions and an ability to spot opportunities where his competit ion didn't, built AI G i n t o the biggest insurance company in the world. Surely, after a high-flying career befriendingheads of state and moving AIG from i nsurance runt t o w o r l d wide behemoth, a man of 87 would have constructive insights about the near-collapse of the global economy. And, with a little luck, maybe even a bit of introspection about lessons he's learned? Instead, we get 328 pages of f i n ger-pointing an d self-congratulation. But Greenberg can't escape the fact that he's the guy who gave the OK to set up the operation that, without a taxpayer bailout, could have brought the financial system down.
'Me HeforeYou'will 'BigTruck' details disastrous Haiti aid effort move readers totears "Me Before You" by Jojo Moyes (Pamela Dorman Books) By Alicia Rancilio
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There are books that you cannot put down. There are also books where you become so investedinthe characters, you force yourself to stop reading to prolong the experience because you don't want the story to end, and that's what can happen when you read Jojo Moyes' latest book, "Me Before You." The novel follows Louisa Clark, a young woman living an ordinary life in a small English town. She lives with her parents and helps support her family by earning a modest living. She has no dreams or aspirations. She didn't attend college and has never traveled. She has a boyfriend who is obsessed with fitness, and she'll occasionally watch him exercise to show her devotion to him. Things begin to change w hen she takes a jo b a s an aide for a quadriplegic named W i l l iam T r a ynor, w ho was p aralyzed i n a freak accident. Before the accident, he was a corporate
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raider who loved adventure, culture and women. They get off to a r o cky start, but warm up as they teach each other about living in a differentway. Their story doesn't end there, like a TV movie. There are some very real obstacles in the way, and the book isn't a fairytale. Moyes w r i tes w e l l-developed characters, and it's impossible not to care about them. You'll f ind y o urself
laughing, smiling, feeling angry and, yes, crying. My only suggestion: "Me Before You" should be sold with a pack of tissues.
"The Big Truck That Went By: Howthe World Came to Save Haiti and Left Behind a Disaster" by Jonathan M. Katz (Palgrave Macmillan)
lions of dollars pledged to help the quake-struck nation have yet to materialize, and the U.S. T he Bi q T r u c k T hat Wen t B y is no saint in this regard. 1d The billions promised to 8 0~ t h e sor s ait < Haiti also included significant qme co Save „< <~gt Behind amounts in debt relief. But it's q gi SaS<er By Nahal Toosi strange to count this as "aid," The Associated Press Jonathan M. Ks Katz argues. After two and one-half years W hen countrtes do g i v e in Haiti, Jonathan Katz was money, much of it goes to interpreparing to leave the impovnational aid organizationserished but endlessly intriguthe Red Crosses, the Save the ing nation in January 2010. Whatevers — whose spendHis next reporting assignment: ing habits are difficult to trace Afghanistan. Then, a massive and often questionable. Such earthquake ripped apart his groups frequently spend exhouse, his plans and the lives of traordinary amounts on their Haitians all around him. own administrative costs, So Katz, then an Associated money that doesn't get anyPress reporter and the only full- answers arenot inspiring, and where near suffering Haitians. time American correspondent they shouldmake people seriHuge chunks of aid funds are in Haiti, wound up staying to ously think twice about dospent on everything from SUVs chronicle the aftermath of the nating to an international aid to personal security guards to temblor. Life in A f ghanistan organization. luxury hotel suites, not to menmay have been more uplifting. Forpeoplewholiveorworkin tion many, many plane tickets, In "The Big Truck That Went conflict zones where non-gov- because,after all,aid workers By: How the World Came to ernmental organizations and are a peripatetic bunch. Many Save Haiti and Left Behind U.N.-linked aid groups operate, spend only a few weeks in a a Disaster," Katz eloquently Katz's findings may not be that disaster zone, and the constant blends personal anecdotes and surprising, simply a reaffirma- change in personnel means treHaitian history with in-depth tion of depressing truths. But mendous time is wasted. reportage to show how one ca- the ordinary reader will likely Even more direct governtastrophe led to so many more, be shockedto learn of some of ment spending yielded some and how, three years later, Haiti the tricks of the aid trade. gems, Katz found. Why did the has barely moved forward. For one thing, pledging mon- earthquake prompt the U.S. At the heart of the book lies ey isn't the same as giving mon- Coast Guard to spend $4,462 the question, does foreign aid ey, but governments around the on a deep-fat fryer, Katz asks, actually work? Or, to p ara- world were quick to ignore that noting that figure is years of phrase Katz, whatever hap- distinction when issuing their income for the average Haitian. pened to that $20 you sent to press releases about how they Then there was the $18,000 help the people of Haiti? The would save Haiti. Instead, bil- contract the U.S. Navy signed
for a jungle gym from a Georgia company — which it could have bought for one-third the amount online. Many of the contracts signed p ost-quake were w it h n o nHaitian companies, which is understandable to a d e gree considering the lack of capacity in the struggling country. But, Katz argues, "it's misleading to call such spending 'money for Haiti,' especially when it gives the impression that any Haitian could have misappropriated or even profited from it. If anything, much of the money was a stimulus program for the donor countries themselves." Katz also questions the conventional wisdom that the Haitian government is too corrupt to be entrusted with more of the money. He raises legitimate concerns about how people define corruption in Haiti and whether the definition is so broad that it is an impediment to strengthening the government in the long term. "The Big Truck That Went By" is hardly a statistical analysis or a mere policy book. It probably could have devoted a hundred more pages to the question of aid and remained riveting. Instead, Katz elegantly uses personal anecdotes and the stories of Haitians whose liveswere turned upside down to paint a portrait of a strug-
gling yet beguiling country.
F6 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013
Savings
and small businesses than to speculateon paper promises. Continued from F1 He is onto something. There We want a world at peace is nothing like good old-fashand our interests protected. We ioned value. We need to value want a society that takes care those who create things again of its elderly and less fortunate. — not those who just leverage The choices we make in each assetsin order to break them category tell us what kind of up and sell them off. society we want. The pie is the Thrift was summed up by picture of what the infamous Benjamin Franklin as "indus"sequester" is all about. try, frugality, and generosity." Thrift is not just about "savls there someone to blame? ing" or "bargain-hunting." As "White House Burning" Thrift is a big idea. Stated as a points out, the government's theorem, thrift is "the ethic of finances are not like a family's wise use." finances; it is rather more like Ever since "Poor Richard's the finances of a family busi- A lmanac" laid a c l ai m o n ness. Businesseslive and die the American character, we by borrowing. Sole proprietors have learned that "the way to hear all the time that there wealth" is some combination is all sorts of capital seeking of being productive, shunning to be invested in enterprises waste and extravagance, savjust like theirs. Yet the family ing and learning to build cabusiness that has operated for pacity, and being a steward years with a line of credit can't who is future-minded about the better legacy we are meant get the loan to stay open or expand in uncertain days and to leave to our fellow citizens. months. What is going on? In order to t hrive in every What makes it work? imaginable condition, b oth It's th e f i n ancial s ector. individuals and governments That's where the stories of pub- are challenged to use their relic and private debt come to- sources most wisely. gether. Louis Hyman has writIn 2008, when all eyes were ten an entertaining history of on the bailout of our financial consumer debt titled "Borrow: institutions and on the emergThe American Way of Debt." ing outlines of the public and He insists we see borrowers personal debt crisis that would and creditors throughthe same be christened the Great Receslens. His great insight is to note sion, the Institute for Amerithat the birth and growth of can Valuespublished a report consumer credit has correlated to the nation titled "For a New with the shifting of capital in- Thrift: Confronting the Debt vestment away from assetcre- Culture." ation to the creation of securiNo less than David Brooks tized financial instruments. of The New York Times said: "This may be damning with As the American Dream of home ownership recedes on faint praise, but it's one of the the horizon, he lets us in on a most i mportant t h i nk-tank secret: "Without a good alter- reports you'll read this year." native, capital continues to be The analysis and proposals invested in consumer debt. It etched in the report are even is more important to ask why more important today. there was so much money to invest i n m o r t gage-backed Finding a solution securities than to ask about Start a public educational the particulars of how those campaign, c r eate n a t ional investments went awry. Don't savings plans, build new thrift ask just why Americans bor- institutions, repurpose the lotrowed; ask why our financial tery, and incentivize thrifty institutions lent!" behavior in every area of our His solutions will not seem lives. It is a call to personal repractical to m any. He sug- sponsibility, and a r eminder gests creating a new market of the crucial role that sound for small-business investment, institutions guided by creative modeled on the FHA or Fan- public policy play. nie Mae, which he calls Bobby We don't spend a lot of time Mac, that will make it more moralizing about this debt culprofitable for the financial sec- ture. We take note of the free tor to lend to entrepreneurs riders, the undisciplined, and
Itis a calI to personal responsibility, and a reminder of the crucial role that sound institutions guided by creative public policy
play.
stead, the lottery has managed to recruit them into a class of habitual bettors." We might just as well run the numbers: a class of habitual losers. Even a s s t a te-sponsored gambling seems accepted by all, something cries out to be done. Take a look at groundbreaking research on a savings vehicle called Prize Linked Savings. It turns out that credit unions, notably in M ichigan but alsoelsewhere, have developed a "Saveto Win" account that repurposes the lottery. The pooled resources of this classic savings account goes to awarding monthly and annual prizes. And it works. More people open accounts and more people save. However, it is illegal in most places because ofthe government's
the predatory alike. Complaining about personal and corporate rent-seeking is too easy anyway. Rather, we lift up those who have solved past the problems of creating social mobility and access to markets. We highlight the history of credit unions, the promise of community development financial institutions, models of reform that have both succeeded and monopolyon gambling. failed. We challenge our leadGet the government out of ers to provide alternatives to gambling. Do more than stay the c o ntemporary p a y day out of debt: Celebrate thrift.
lending (usury) industry; we challenge ourselves to teach and enable people to build real wealth. Pick up the report and read it. The most important phrase you will never learn if you don't is this: "anti-thrift institution." We may drive by a payday lender or a rent-a-center every day and not think about it this way: "Anti-thrift i nstitutions do more than simply hand out expensive credit. They also establish social norms a nd promote cultural values. For today's anti-thrifts, the effort to influence values takes the form of highly organized and self-conscious marketing and
LIFE AND TIMES OF jOY DIVISION
Band member tells story harshly,truthfully "Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division" by Peter Hook
(It Books, 416 pgs., $27.99) By Randall Roberts Los Angeles Times
In the three decades since he committed suicide, singer Ian Curtis has become both a symbol and a caricature. Curtis' seemingly tortured life as a member of the English post-punk band Joy Division and early death in 1980 have been transformed into myth and Curtis into a modern-day Thomas Chatterton or Sylvia Plath. His life offers a petfect narrative for disaffected, sunaverse souls the world over: a young genius too pure to live. As described in f o rmer Joy Division and New Order bassist Peter Hook's honest, punchy and rough-hewn document of that period, "Unknown Pleasures: Inside Joy Division," Curtis was as tragic and magnetic a figure as the legend suggests, though at the time, Hook saw him mostly as a beer-drinking, prank-
Debt is not our only problem. It is merely the consequence of notknowinghowtodistinguish wants from needs and thereby resist slavery. The real solution, after we have paid down our debt, isto reform ourselves and our institutions so that we make it as easy as possible to remain free. One last suggestion: "Bring Back Thrift Week," which was c elebrated nationally f r o m 1916 to 1966 on Franklin's birthday. From Jan. 17-23, we can share ideas about how we can encourage the small saver and revive the middle class. lobbying campaigns.... These Drive through your neighboreffortsare necessary to lower hood and take note of those psychological and social inhi- anti-thrift institutions, resist bitions against over-borrowing your spendthrift ways and reand over-indebtedness." flect on our national priorities, Take the largest, most po- and find out what thrift institentially corrupting, anti-thrift tutions make your community institution of them all: govern- stronger. ment sponsorship of gambling. We can discover together One canhardly think ofa m ore what will make us more proregressive,predatory practice ductive in our work, creatively than the state lottery — unless frugal in the stewardship of you bring in slot machines. resources, and progressively Every day, the lottery taxes generous as future minded the poor by selling them a lie citizens. that their best (and only bet) is Do your part, and we will all to get rich quick. "For a New be in your debt. Thrift" puts the contrast stark— Andrew Klineis the director ly: "With pro-thrift institutionof the John Templeton Center al incentives, many low- and for Thrift and Generosity at the moderate-income Americans Institute for American Values. He might be able to join the class wrote thisfor The Free Lance-Star of savers and investors. Inin Fredericksburg, Va.
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PRESENTINGA COLLECTION OF ORIGINALLOCALLY WRITTEN,AWARD-WINNING MAGAZINESANDEVENT GUIDESPUBLISHEDBY THE BULLETIN
NEED AN IDEA FOR HOW TO SPEND YOUR FREE TIME? THIS GUIDE HAS 110 IDEAS. Presenting thearea's mostcomprehensive guide to places, events aIIdactivities to keepyoII entertained throughouttheyear. The Bulletin's 110 Ways to Discover Central Qregon is one of the most comprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area. This co orful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Qregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce and other key points of interest, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors throughout the year.
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fect guide. "You shouldn't trust a word I say," he writes at one point, elsewhere admitting that during Joy Division's rise among a competitive Manchester music scene, "we reveled in backbiting and treachery." His tone suggests a bloke telling the wild storyof his youth over the course of half a dozen pints. He provides a raw, detailed c hronological a ccount o f those days with an admirable directness, even as he adplaying pal. dresses hard truths aboutthe Strugglingwith depression, way he and his mates handled a failing marriage and debili- their lead singer's condition. tating bouts of epilepsy, Cur- At one point, speaking of the tis killed himself on the eve of physical toll that touring was Joy Division's first American taking on the quietly suffertour, just as the band's pen- ing Curtis, Hook writes that ultimate single, "Love Will an alternate title for his book Tear Us Apart," was released. might be "He Said He Was The musical legacy of Curtis, Alright So We Carried On." Hook, guitarist Bernard SumHook describes those late ner and drummer Stephen performances unflinchingly Morris still resonates. as Curtis regularly experienc"Unknown Pleasures" is es seizures during shows. He'd a portal into a vivid moment freeze, staring blankly into in rock history as well as the space. Theband urged lighting life and times of a working technicians to avoid strobes, band. The book is filled with but they'd forget and Curtis car breakdowns, fistfights, w ould end up onthe fl oor. girls and, in the middle of it Theband's response, writes all, the transformative power Hook: "We'd stop him from of music. swallowing his tongue and Hook, a se l f -described he'd get up, tell us he was fine, w orking-class yobbo w h o and, well, you know the rest." cofounded Joy Division with Thanks to this sometimes Sumner in Manchester, Eng- heartbreaking, always enland, shortly after seeing the g rossing memoir, w e d o Sex Pistols in 1976, is the per- indeed.
Let's be thrifty
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Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Chesapeake AKC pups, shots, good lines/hips parents on site $500,
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with
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264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265- Building Materials 266- Heating andStoves 267 - Fuel andWood 268- Trees, Plants &Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost andFound GARAGE SALES 275 - AuctionSales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282 - Sales NorthwestBend 284- Sales SouthwestBend 286- Sales NortheastBend 288- Sales SoutheastBend 290 - Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales OtherAreas FARM MARKET 308- Farm EquipmentandMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain andFeed 333- Poultry, Rabbits andSupplies 341 - Horsesand Equipment 345 Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/ExoticAnimals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat andAnimal Processing 383 - Produceand Food
C h a n d l e r
541-259-4739.
A v e .
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Furniture & Appliances
Crafts & Hobbies
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
8th Street Artisans Saturday Market 6'/a boxes Winchester
The Bulletin recommends e x t ra
10 a.m. - 4 p.m. 1036 NE 8th St., Bend behind 7-11 store on
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chasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, c hecks, o r
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"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12 2 k 20 ! ~ Ad must include l price of single item ' /i/ii"il'. K!nl of $500 or less, or Chihuahua Pups, as multiple items sorted colors, teacup, Yorkie/Chihuahua pupwhose total does 1st shots, w o rmed, not exceed $500. pies, 1st shots, $200, $250,541-977-0035 cash. 541-678-7599 Call Classifieds at Yorkie, neutered male, 6 Need to get an 541-385-5809 mos, all s hots, $700 www.bendbulletin.com cash. 541-536-7770 ad in ASAP? Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl, You can place it German Shepherd 42 boys, potty training, online at: mo.-old male puppy health guar., pixs avail, www.bendbulletin.com He is very friendly and $550 8 up. 541-777-7743 been a r ound k i d s. $ 300 OBO. Call o r 541-385-5809 text 541-815-4588 Furniture & Appliances Chinese Crested Hair- Husky-Wolf female, 3 less, 2 females, 6-7 mos, beautiful blue eyes! A1 Washers&Dryers yrs old, free to good $250. 541-977-7019 $150 ea. Full warhome. 541-771-0529 ranty. Free Del. Also Labrador Pups, AKC wanted, used W/D's Chocolate/Yellow/White 541-280-7355 Hips OFA guaranteed.
Support your local craftsman!
brand new, unfinished. $500 originally; asking $300 obo. 541-548-4461 Equipment I General's O f f i c e Rockhound grind, sand & Consumer P rotec- • -p Saw, olish. L o rtone & t ion ho t l in e at I Highland Park Bend. I 1-877-877-9392. Info 541 280-5574 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
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Antiques & Collectibles
Antique Hutch - 6'x3' 100 yrs +, $200 OBO. For info, 541-388-5696 Antiques wanted: furniture, marbles, beer cans, early B/W photography, old hardware/ fixtures. 541-389-1578
RC CzIfc
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
SAT 8t SUN Brand new 2tr~z sq. ft n ahltsch hom e t n T h e
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Call 541-385-5809 Brand new GPS, never The Bulletin Classifieds h ad batteries i n i t , R ubber Stam p s , $70. 541-923-6538 100+, Stampin' Up. CASH!! $75. 541-322-6281 For Guns, Ammo 8 242 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. Exercise Equipment Desert Eagle 50 c a l. Help for lower back re- w/case, 200 rnds, & lief I nverter B o ard, reloading dies, $2100. w/rolling platform $125 call Rob 406-560-6684 obo. 541-382-6816. Richard Simmons Dream SKS Rifle, good condiStepper, great shape, tion, some shells also. $425. 541-504-1704 $50. 541-388-9270
Mike Rachor of Powell Butte New location: Auction has been moved to Wild Angel Antiques, 420 N. Main St., Prineville, OR (auction will be held in rear of shop)
SAMPLE TOOLS: New and used hand tools • Air and electric tools • New 2-ton floor jack with 2 jack stands • New 1500 lb. ATV/Motorcycle jack • Makita, DeWalt, B&D power tools • Auto tools. STEREO: 3 Roadmaster 300watt speakers • 2 Bang & Olufsen 60 watt speakers • 10" portable DVD player • Misc. speakers • New and used headphones • Plus other equipment. NEW MERCHANDISE: Neon bar table lights• Route 66 clock • 1963 Corvette lamps & clocks • Disco ball sets • Water fountain • Globe table lamp • Rotating Beacon lamps • George Foreman rotisserie • Charcoal BBQ grill • H20 holt/cold water dispenser • Triple scoop ice cream maker • Igloo portable electric cooler • Motion massage clock • 2 Suncast metal sports benches • Hamilton Beach snowman • Haier 10,000 Btu window air conditioner • Landscape lighting• Aquarium lamp • New and used wall mirrors. TOY GAMES: Pop A shot basketball • Pinball football arcade • Halex Boccerball II • Telescope • Six Flags Tsunami Blaster• Franklin THT Pro Action Hockey • Franklin whirl ball arcade. This is only a partial list of new merchandise! . MISCELLANEOUS: 4 ne w K e mper kitchen standing cabinets model VU188421 • Pepsi can dispenser Coin Acceptors Inc. model 800AI01B • 3 pair used auto bucket seats • Velvet jewelry cases • Flat screen TV s tand HUNTING & FISHING: Sleeping bags • Aluminum rifle & pistol cases • 10 new Zebco reels• Hunting accessories • Binoculars • Camo misc. • Lots of small hunting items. Too much to list! Food Available Check website for photos www.dennisturmon.com TERMS: Cash or Check • 10% Buyers Fee
IIHMIN TUIINUfq IfITL'III'IIIMS, LLL' Dennis Turmon, Auctioneer • 5tle23-tt2ttl • Cell: 5tla80-0795
1515 S. Bent Loop, Powell Butte, OR 97753 •
SAT R SUN i5/! l nI MI
IsI •
4 100 sf hnme. Master nn .'5 . e main & 2 upstairs. Hnuse features an elevator, theater room, office, rec. room with har & 414 NW Flaglitte Dr. kitchenette. Hardwood Di rectioasr Skv/i ner su m ntirfloors granitc countcr rurn a r tsr r >n F /a g l ( n e rff t tnps & 3 car garage. . •
Hosted Saturday byr
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—
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,
it/r. Washint„von On
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SLIE PRICE, Brrtker
541-408-7742
$311,500
Hosted Suuday byr
Hosted E~Listed hy
JOANNE MCKEE, Broker
EDIE DELAY
541-420-2950
Sat., February 9, 2013 10:00 a.m. Preview 8 a.m. Saturday
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garage, fenced yard. Just east on Reed rtfrrr/re/,soitth nn /5th d own t h e s t r e e t f r o m the antaztng comnutnity 5/reet,/orommitittti nn left(errvl.
PHncipnl Broker
for all firearms & ammo. 541-526-0617
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Brtdges' Great room wtth cozy ftreplacc, k t tchen v;ith statnlcss appttances L arge master sutte w t t h 61168 Lot 75 Sydney h uge walk m closct B tg g uest r o oms & B o n u s Harbor Dr, Bend Room loft area Two car Directions: From the Pnriritny,
amemttes
Bend local pays CASH!!
Reach thousands of readers!
00
NOON — 4PM
541-447-4101
LThcBulIcting
B ottega Venet a Handbag, as new. Curio cabinet, antique 1-541-954-1727 $175. 541-322-6281 208 oak replica, c u rved Pets & Supplies glass case, lighted, Collector's baby d olls, Find exactly what perfect cond. $475. boy & girl African-Ameri0 DACHSHUND AKC you are looking for in the 541-318-8130 Adult companion cats can, $200. 541-317-5154 The Bulletin recomFREE to seniors, dis- female mini longhaired CLASSIFIEDS Dining table, 6 chrs, 2 mends extra caution abled 8 vet e r ans! $600 541-598-7417 Divorce Liquidation leaves, oak Ethan Allen when purc h a s- Tame, altered, shots, 42"x72" e x c . c o n d.Autographed guitar coling products or serID chip, more. Will al- Dachshund, AKC mini lection: Clapton, McCart$875. 541-318-8130 vices from out of the ways take back if cir- black/tan female, $250. ney, Eagles, others. Valarea. Sending cash, cumstances change. 541-633-3221 P eople g i ving p e t sGENERATE SOME ex- ued over $2500 each; checks, or credit in389-8420. Visit Sat/ away are advised to citement in your asking $475 each, with Sun 1-5. Photos, info: Diamond Lamb & Rice be selective about the neighborhood! Plan a authenticity 8 appraisal. f ormation may b e 40 lbs. $26.99 Iwant to Buy or Rent www.craftcats.org. subjected to f raud. new owners. For the garage sale and don't Call cell, 561-880-7352. Quarry Ave. Hay & protection of the aniFor more i nformaforget to advertise in Wanted: $Cash Paid for tion about an adver- People Look for Information Feed. 541-923-2400 mal, a personal visit to classified! www.quarryfeed.com vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call About Products and the home is recom- 541-385-5809. elry. ToP dollar Paid for the O r egon State Services Every Day through mended. deposit bottles/ King bed, mattress set, Gold/Silver.l buy by the Auorney Geneial's The BulletinClassifieds Donate DsflIZV cans to local all volEstate, Honest Artist with Hollywood frame. Off;ce Visit our HUGE unteer, non-profit resElizabeth,541-633-7006 Protection hotline at A merican Eskimo, 5 $100. 541-771-8996. home decor cue, to help with cat Poodle Pups, AKC toys. mo. old male, pure NEED TO CANCEL consignment store. Wanted copy of Sept. 5, spay/neuter vet bills. Loving, cuddly companwhite, AKC/UKC reg., New items YOUR AD? 2012 Bulletin; will Pay See Cans for C ats ions. 541-475-3889 Thf s gLI]]fstITI $800. 541-610-2286 The Bulletin arrive daily! $20. 541-516-8681 trailer at Ray's MarClassifieds has an 930 SE Textron, Barn/shop cats FREE, ket, Century Dr, thru Queensland Heelers WANTED: Tobacco Sheriff's parking standard 8 mini $150 8 "After Hours" Line Bend 541-318-1501 tame, some not. 2/10, Pipes - Briars, Meer- Adopt a n ice CRAFT some lot 2/11-22, PetSmart www.redeuxbend.com up. 541-280-1537 Call 541-383-2371 We d e liver! F i xed, shaums and smoking 2/23-25. Donate M-F 24 hrs. to cancel cat or kitten from Tu- shots. 541-389-8420 rightwayranch.wordaccessories. © Smith Siqn Co, malo sanctua press.com your ad! n' Pet Secretary, drop front, WANTED RAZORS 1515 NE 2nd; or at Smart, & now Petco! Chain link dog run 8 Refrigerator: 26 cu.ft., mahogany, w/chair, Gillette, Gem, Schick, Saint Bernard puppies, san c tuary Fixed, shots, ID chip, panels, 6x10. $400. Tumalo French babied 8 b e autiful! etc. Shaving mugs t ested, moiel 3 8 9 - Misc. animal cages all anytime. 3 8 9 -8420; 1st shots, w o rmed, withicemaker, doors, bottom freezer, $500 and accessories. OBO. www.craftcats.org. $400. 541-280-1840 8420. ' photos, info: sizes. 541-771-8996. Fair prices paid. $400. 541-771-8996. 541-322-6281. www.craftcats.org & Scottish Terrier puppies, C 11541 390 7029 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! AKC, male & female, 1st Where can you find a The Bulletin reserves between 10 am-3 pm. shots, wormed, 8 weeks, There are over 2,000 folks in our community helping hand? the right to publish all BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! ready to go now! Call without permanent shelter, living in cars, ads from The Bulletin From contractors to The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are 541-317-5624 makeshift camps, getting by as best they can. newspaper onto The still over 2,000 folks in our community without yard care, it's all here The following items are badly needed to Bulletin Internet webShiba Inu Reg'd male permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift help them get through the winter: in The Bulletin's site. puppies, ready now, vet camps, getting by as best they can. 8 CAMPING GEAR of any sort: 8 checked, 1st shots, $600 "Call A Service The following items are badly needed to each. 541-388-5418 New/used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blanhelp them get through the winter: Professional" Directory kets. @WARM CLOTHING: 8 CAMPING GEARof any sort: 8 Shih-tzu, 6 yr spayed Rain Gear, boots, Gloves. female, free to good New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT home, 541-771-0529 • C oins & Stamps 8 WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT 1036 NE 5th St., Bend, Shih Tzu female, 8 Ibs, Private collector buying THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 16 mos, to senior home, Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. p ostage stamp a l 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. $275. 541-788-0090 bums 8 c o l lections, For Special pick up please call Solid oak dining table, 68 world-wide and U.S. For Special pick up please call Ken © 541-389-3296 Siberian Husky females: x 48, 6 highback chairs, 573-286-4343 (local, Ken O 541-389-3296 PLEASEHELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 10wks, $300; 15 mo AKC 2 mos. new! $950 obo, cell ¹) PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. $400. 541-977-7019 cash only. 541-549-1089
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Thompson, .45 cal w/3 30-round mags & 1500 rounds, NIB, $2850. Auto Ordinance M1 Carbine .30 cal w/1 5 mags 8 1000 rnds, NIB $2850.
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mag, 180 gr., $50 box or $45 if buy all. Call Rob (406) 560-6684 AK-47 (10) 30-round magazines, new 8 used, $50 ea. 541-788-8852
I 541-977-1737 I Ashford spinning wheel, A uto Ordinance T M 1
$300-$400.
v ' ll
A ccubond 30 0
Greenwood.
Springer Spaniel Pups ready2/1 7,Champion lines, $400. Now taking I credit i n f o rmation may be subjected to dep, 541-604-6232 I FRAUD. For more FIND IT! information about an g BUY IT! advertiser, you may I SELL IT! I call t h e Or e gon The Bulletin Classifieds S tate Att or n e yI
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9 7 ~ 7~ q 2
Pets & Supplies Price
out'
g 0 n~
541-480-5>59
Cascade
/ tsted byr
R E A L T 0 R s
C7
DEB TEBBS, Broker/Pres.
Sothebys INTERNATIONAL REALTY
gr
To PLAGE AN AD GALL CLAssIFIED 4 541-385-5809
G2 SUNDAY FEBRUARY 3 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O SSW O R D
BLACK CATS By Jeff Chen / Edited by Will Shortz
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52 Shred 53 Vil l ai n i n m a n y a f airy t a l e
1 08 In it s el f
20 Foursome
55 Winged
1 09 Really h u r t s
2 7 Ink h o l d e r s
57 Salon request
111 More poker - f a ced
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5 9 27-D ow n p r edator s
113 Show time
29 Return address letters'?
6 0 Diamond u n i t
115 Act impul si v e ly, as
32 Bonding
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21 Prompt again
6 2 Water park f e a t u r e
1 6 Make the B i l l b o a r d charts, say
25
w ater no rt h o f
1 7 Unwteldy b o at
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Norway
18 Victo r ian l e ader?
young lovers 1 16 Without any o o m p h
22 All o wed aboard
6 3 Sowed one's w i l d oats
23 Molec ules in n a t u r al gas
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1 17 More di r ty , as Santa's boot s
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1 18 He w r ot e " O n e
2 4 Acrobat
d eveloper
25 Chains
Dow Jones industrial a v e r age
2 6 "Take that ! " 2 8 Egg-sort in g d e v i c e
-dozen
7 0 Metals gi ant i n t h e
72 Monterrey che<ltlar?
news
7 9 Vil l ai n i n m a n y a n
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a ction mo v i e
D 0 w 11
I It may be spotted in a pet store
82 Darkens
2 Last Oldsmobil es
3 5 Davis of " I ' m N o t
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3 Hinders
mat er
37 Mom-and-pop orgs.
86 Bib l i ca l r e s t in g spot
5 Fancy f l o w e r h o l d e r s
38 Salty st ream
8 8 Base of A st i w i n e
6 The Pied Piper of
40 Afor ement i o n ed
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4 3 Author wh o w r o t e a bout fr o n t ie r l i f e 44 4 5 Vehicle th a t' s out o f this wor l d '?
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
9 1 First responders, f o r short
93 Pop's pop
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4 3 Cry l i k e a f e l i n e
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4 5 Partic i p a nts in so m e r ivalr i es , b r i e f l y
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46 Going r ate'>
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4 7 Yours, in Y p r e s
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La Guardia 50 Word often seen before 3, 4 or 5, b ut never I
Hamelin, e.g.
90 Sandwich spec
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49 Hwy. t hat ends near
4 Wife of Woody
41 New En g l a nd seafood staple
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4 8 Number-cr u ncher ' s numbers
84 Paparazzi payer
Rappaport"
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120 Swttddles
3 2 "Fi ne, have i t y o u r way!"
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33 Feudal vassal
39 Actress Sommer
Steps Back" 119 Dramatist Sean
7 5 Sanitari u m s 77 Chaise scene'!
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36 Sigmoid curve
S tep Forward, Tw o
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34 P.M. 's and such: Abbr.
30 Offense that's
p rovoked by l u r i d
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measurement
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8 Costumed anim a l ,
20 One on the verge of c r o a k i n g '?
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105 Sampling
1 4 Something me di a executives keep an eye on?
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51 Cold war f i g h t ers
perhaps
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49 Person on tap ?
Sea, b o d y o f
4
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I Break in p o e t r y
Across
3
7 Years abroad
8 "Misty " c r o o ner 9 Leigh H un t p o e m " Abou B e n
9 4 Where the M e t s once met
10 Middle weights?
95 Back-to-back c o m p e t i t i o n s?
12 Cry w it h an ac cent
100 ETs 1 02 Dominat r i x ' s w e a r
14 Screwball c h a r acter on "The Simpsons"
104-
15 Moistens, in a way
1 1 Traffi c d i r e c t o r
1 3 Mosaic t i l e s
51 Precocious Roal d D ahl heroi n e
67 Pioneering c onservat i o n i s t
76 Modern R& R o p t i o n
54 Apollo 1 0' s Snoopy, e .g., for sh o r t
68 Watson of the Ha r r y P otter f i l m s
7 8 Source of t a l k , o f t e n
56 -
6 9 Part of T . A . : A b b r .
58 Hero's spot
71 Retirement spot
6 1 Magazine of t h e National Space Society
7 2 Old barnstor m i n g
7 7 Well r o u n d ed
80 Jack of ol d w e s t er ns 8 1 "My t u r n "
Aldrich
Sandusky Bay 7 4 Roll a r o und i n t h e yartl'?
65 Raptors' home: A bbr.
93 Intl . st andard
107 A uthor 's encI.
94 Intense, as a gaze
1 08 Univ. f i g u r e
96 Not f azed by
109 "The Producers" p roducer Br o o k s
85 Shakes on
98 On the stock exchange
87 Cherry, e.g.
9 9 Stock un i t s ?
needs
64 High-f i ber cereal
106 When doubl ed , i sland near Tahit i
97 Kind of pass for an overseas passenger
83 Double agent
7 3 Lake c o n n e c ted t o
9 2 Sau t e e d seafood dish
9 0 Master of l i t e r a r y
110 It may be represented by "XXX" i n t h e funnies 112 One of the X' s i n
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XXX
103 Hitch
t wt st s
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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday. . . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00amFri ... 3:00 pm Frl ... 5:00 pm Frl
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place aphoto in your pri vate party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW OVER '500in total merchandise MARKED WIT H AN*() REQUIRE 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8.50 PREPAYMENT as well as any 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6 .00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Cenrrai Oregon cnre 1903 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Garage Sale Special Oregon 97702 (call for commercial line ad rates)
The Bulletin
C©Z
4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00
PLEASE NOTE; Check your 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 Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.
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Guns, Huntlng & Flshlng
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261
267
269
347
Mlsc. Items
Medlcal Equlpment
Fuel & Wood
Gardenlng Supplles & Equlpment
Llamas/Exotic Animals
Advertise V A CATION GENERATE SOME M edical Alert for S e WHEN BUYING SPECIALS to 3 m i lEXCITEMENT niors - 24/7 monitorSUPER TOP SOIL lion P a cific N o r thIN YOUR ing. FREE Equipment. FIREWOOD... www.hershe aouandbark.oom westerners! 30 daily NEIGBORHOOD. FREE Shipping. NaScreened, soil 8 comTo avold fraud, newspapers, six Plan a garage sale and tionwide Serv i c e. post mi x ed , no The Bulletln states. 25-word clasdon't forget to adver$ 29.95/Month C A LL rocks/clods. High hurecommends paysified $525 for a 3-day tise in classified! Medical Guardian Tom us level, exc. f or ment for Flrewood a d. Cal l 541-385-5809. day 88 8 - 842-0760. flower beds, l awns, (916) only upon dellvery 2 88-6019 o r vis i t (PNDC) gardens, straight Hot Tubs & Spas Inspectlon. www.pnna.com/advert GET FREE OF CREDIT Miracle-Ear 950 open • and s creened to p s o il. A cord is 128 cu. ft. CARD DEBT N OW! ising pndc.cfm for the Bark. Clean fill. DePhoenix jetted 5 -perBTE. Can be t rans- 4' x 4' x 8' Cut payments by up Nor t h west liver/you haul. son spa, you h aul, Pacific ferred by Miracle Ear. • Receipts should 541 -548-3949. Daily Con n ection. to half. Stop creditors New $5500; sell $699. include name, $200. 541-548-0291 from calling. (PNDC) 541 -410-0432 phone, price and 866-775-9621. 270 Animated Christmas kind of wood pur(PNDC) Lost & Found I TV, Stereo & Vldeo decorations, $20 ea. chased. Tools Highspeed Internet EV541-771-8996. • Firewood ads ERYWHERE By SatFound mountain bike in Showtime hit "Dexter" MUST include speBuying Diamonds e llite! Speeds up t o (3) 3500-watt gas gencies and cost per Bend. To claim, send Season 6 DV D s et, /Goid for Cash erators, $220 ea, obo. 12mbps! (200x faster serial ¹ to P .O. Box cord to better serve $20. 541-318-5732 Saxon's Fine Jewelers than dial-up.) Starting 541 -419-9859 our customers. 1269, Redmond, OR 541-389-6655 at $49.95/mo. CALL 97756, by A pril 25, Check out the NOW 8 G O F A ST! Craftsman 10v Table classifieds online 2013. BUYING 1-888-718-2162. Saw, $199; Yamaha www.bendbtrlletin.com Lionel/American Flyer (PNDC) 2600 Portable GenFound piece of silver, SE trains, accessories. Updated daily erator (never used) 541-408-2191. 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Bend, call to identify; will Kids' wood swing set, $450; Craftsman hold u n t i l 4/3 0 /1 3. $190/cord. Multi-cord 255 BUYING & S E L LING $150. rotating bench, $75. discounts, & '/z cords 54 I -639-7767 All gold jewelry, silver 541-771-8996. Computers Mike, 541-923-2953. available Immediate Lost: S t ainless s t eel and gold coins, bars, delivery! 541-408-6193 rounds, wedding sets, Lowa Gor/tex h i king T HE B U L LETIN r e wedding band w / diaclass rings, sterling sil- boots wm. 11, worn 1x monds all around, north quires computer adBulldlng Materlals i side of Bend, Jan. 30. vertisers with multiple ver, coin collect, vin- $75 541-815-2737 Call a Pro tage watches, dental Call 71 2-314-3541 ad schedules or those gold. Bill Whether you need a Fle m ing, Meade/Infinity 1114EQ Bend Habitat selling multiple sys- 541-382-9419. t elescope 114m m fence fixed, hedges RESTORE REMEMBER: If you tems/ software, to dis$130. Building have lost an animal, De- 910mm, Supply Resale close the name of the Cemetery p l o t trimmed or a house 541-548-6642 don't forget to check Quality at LOW chutes Memorial Garbusiness or the term built, you'll find The Humane Society dens. $500 or b est P oulan rider 42" c u t PRICES "dealer" in their ads. professional help in 740 NE 1st in Bend 541-382-3537 18'Iz hp, $650 obo. Private party advertis- offer. 541-408-1477 Redmond, 541-312-6709 ers are defined as F reedom e l ectric 2 - 541-389-9268. The Bulletin's "Call a Open to the public. 541-923-0882 those who sell o ne Service Professional" wheel scooter, $95 ProFlowers Enjoy 60 Prineville, computer. obo. 541-389-8963. percent off T e n der BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Directory 541-447-7178; Hugs and Kisses with Search the area's most OR Craft Cats, 541-385-5809 Chocolates for your comprehensive listing of 541-389-8420. valentine! Site price: classified advertising... A-1 DRY JUNIPER $49.99, you pay just real estate to automotive, $190 split, or $170 rnds $19.99. Plus take 20 merchandise to sporting multi-cord discount, del. percent off other gifts goods. Bulletin Classifieds Call 541 -977-4500 or over $29! G o to appear every day in the 541-350-1809 www.Proflowers.com/f print or on line. abulous or c all All Year Dependable Call 541-385-5809 1-888-721-9617. www.bendbulletln.com Firewood: Sp lit, Del. (PNDC) Bend. Seas o ned 286 Lodgepole: 1 for $175 I Est a te Sales Sales Northeast Bend SHARI'S B ERRIES or 2 for $335. Cash, Delight all of your valCheck or Credit Card Look What I Found! entines w i t h our 308 OK. 541-420-3484. You'll find a little bit of ** FREE ** freshly dipped strawHeatlng & Stoves i Farm Equlpment everything in berries, deca d ent Garage Sale Kit 269 & Machlnery The Bulletin's daily truffles and NOTICE TO Place an ad in The Gardenlng Supplles garage and yard sale hand-crafted sweets! ADVERTISER Bulletin for your gasection. From clothes & Equlpment SAVE 20 percent on rage sale and r eSince September 29, to collectibles, from qualifying gifts over ceive a Garage Sale 1991, advertising for housewares to hard$29! Visit w ww.berused woodstoves has Klt FREE! For newspaper ware, classified is r ies.com/enticing o r been limited to moddelivery, call the always the first stop for KIT I NCLUDES: Call 1-888-718-8479. els which have been Circulation Dept. at cost-conscious • 4 Garage Sale Signs (PNDC) c ertified by th e O r 541-385-5800 Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, consumers. And if • $2.00 Off Coupon To egon Department of To place an ad, call virtually new, less than 5 you're planning your Use Toward Your Student drafting table Environmental Qualhrs. $7500 new; asking 541-385-5809 Next Ad w/access. $50 o b o. own garage or yard ity (DEQ) and the fed$5000. 541-42 1 -3222 or email 541-389-1798 eves. sale, look to the clas- • 10 Tips For "Garage eral En v i ronmental claaaified@bendbulletin com Sale Success!" sifieds to bring in the Protection Ag e n cy The Bulletin Offers 325 buyers. You won't find (EPA) as having met Free Private Party Ads a better place Hay, Graln & Feed smoke emission stanPICK UP YOUR • 3 lines - 3 days for bargains! dards. A cer t i fied GARAGE SALE KIT at • Private Party Only Call Classifieds: 1st quality grass hay, w oodstove may b e Prompt Delivery 1777 SW Chandler • Total of items adver541-385-5809 or identified by its certifi- Rock, Sand & Gravel 70- Ib bales, barn stored, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 tised must equal $200 email cation label, which is Multiple Colors, Sizes $250/ ton. Also big bales! or Less classified0bendbulletin.com Patterson Ranch, permanently attached Instant Landscaping Co. Sisters, FOR DETAILS or to 541-549-3831 541-389-9663 to the stove. The BulPLACE AN AD, letin will no t k nowCaII 541-385-5809 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! W heat S t raw: s m a ll 292 ingly accept advertisJust too many Fax 541-385-5802 bales $2 bale or $65 i ng for the sale of Door-to-door selling with Sales Other Areas collectibles? ton. A fter 6 p.m . uncertified Wantedpa ying cash fast results! It's the easiest 541 -546-9821 Culver. woodstoves. F ishing, h u nting a r t , for Hi-fi audio 8 stuway in the world to sell. Sell them in collectibles, and furdio equip. Mclntosh, Call The Bulletin At The Bulletin Classifieds TURN THE PAGE nishings. F r i .-Mon., J BL, M a rantz, D y The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 400 NW Terrace Lane naco, Heathkit, SanFor More Ads 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail ¹4 in Prin e v ille. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-385-5809 T he Bullet i n 541-362-51 56. Call 541-261-1808 At: www.bendbulletin.com Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-B78-5753, or 503-351-2746
Farmers Column •
10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. I 4 541-617-1133. Beautiful and healthy CCB ¹173684. 4' t angerine m i l k kfjbuilders © ykwc.net snake. 6' tank and accessories. Bargain at Look at: $500. (541) 610-2363 Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Meat & Anlmal Processlngl Lambs corn-fed, taking orders now for March delivery. 541-475-7479
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-5809
JQ38 LUii'QHf J~)'Jff J'~ Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Bank Teller
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loansand Mortgages 543 - Stocksand Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opporlunities
470
476
Domestic & In-Home Positions
Employment Opportunities
Local Bank that is committed to personal, community- style banking has the following opening in our Bend - Tuscan Square branch in Bend, OR. Job ¹13-004 - Part- time Teller (25 hrs) Please refer to our website for a complete job description.
CONCRETE
Experienced Concrete Finisher/ Foundation Form Setter needed, for Bend/ Redmond area. Full-time employment. Musthave reliable transportation and clean dnwng record.
C A FLOORING Experienced L Hardwood Finish in Place Installers I Looking f o r ex p e ri- C enced craftsmen to start wor k i m medi- 0
A L E R O S
E S T 0 P S
S I B S
T 0 L L
A T O I
ately. Work will be in both the Tri-Cities and Walla Walla, Washington areas. V a l id driver's license and reliable transportation are required. Contact Brian o r Jim at Benjamin's Ca r p et One, Richland, WA; 509-946-4506
S O O N Y I
R A W D A P A T L M A U S M T S P A C T A A I M LO P E N I
U R A R A N N T O S S 0 C E P T S C R O S H I P E V I D R Y E T O L C O A I O T T A B G R G R A E M E N S T E S S T E T I N 0 C
M A T H I S
T E T R A D
A D H E M
S P A R E T I R E S
W B A L Q U E E L M P E E R R L O I A P E M P L A B A R O N I R E D A S E
C O T O L E N E S E S I V E R E A R S L L A K E E P E N A C A R T E D O A S R I S T M T A O N R Y H E A E X N T S R A I Y S O E N
C R A Z Y
B E D E W S
S C O R E A H M I L A T A T D I M Y L U D I R A R E D U E S U P E R R D A O T I F 0 L
T V U E B E L L I D E R G S E
Application packets are E A available at any of our CalI 541-815-8075 Looking for a r esponS M S branch locations or on sible, reliable, positive, CAUTION READERS: our website: O M S and expe r ienced www. remierwestbank.com babysitter? 21yrs old. Ads published in "EmFood Service:Cook, full A D A T Serv i c e Will interview & has ployment Opportuni- Please send completed Customer evenings. Exp. Rep./Office Person- time M tons o f r e f erences. t ies" i n c lude em - application packet to: Required! Apply after 1 421 Call 970-819-0946! ployee and P.O. Box 40, Medford, nel position avail- p.m. Monday thru FriS L S i ndependent pos i - OR 97501. ATTN: H.R. able. Drug and Alco- day, Roszak's F i sh E Schools & Training c o mpany House. 541-382-3173. S No hol f re e tions. Ads for posi- Reference job ¹ . T I T seeking reliable, res please. EOE A IRLINES AR E H I R tions that require a fee phone call sponsible, and honE S E Human Resource Call a Pro ING - Train for hands or upfront investment est team player with must be stated. With Carpeting, Vinyl and Representative on Aviation MainteWhether you need a M E T E basic computer skills. nance Career. FAA any independent job Tile Installers L E R approved p r ogram. fence fixed, hedges opportunity, p l e aseLooking for full-time in- J ob d e scription a t Woodgrain Millwork is E trimmed or a house Financial aid if qualiinvestigate t horstallers to start work www.mcpheetersturf.c seeking a highly moti- L Y D S fied - Housing availoughly. immediately. Work will om. Send resume to v ated H u ma n R e built, you'll find McPheeters Turf, Inc., s ource Rep a t t h e be in both the Tri-Citable. Call Aviation Inprofessional help in PUZZLE ISON PAGE GZ ies and Walla Walla, 2019 SW Park Lane, Prineville, Oregon, lostitute of Use extra caution when WA areas. Require- Culver, OR 97734. The Bulletin's "Call a cation. In this role you Maintenance. applying for jobs on476 573 ments include reliable will be responsible for 1-877-804-5293. line and never proService Professional" Dental Assistant providing comprehen(PNDC) vide personal infor- transportation 8 valid with Employment Business Opportunities Directory EFDA needed. Send mation to any source driver's license; pri- resume 8 cover letter to sive HR expertise as Opportunities owned tools are 5 !3mAie KI 541-385-5809 well as ensuring comyou may not have re- vately WARNING The Bulletin USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 20277396, c/o The searched and deemed a plus. Vinyl installers Box p liance w it h l a ws, recommends that you Bulletin, PO Box 6020, policies, and proce- Medical should be proficient in Door-to-door selling with to be reputable. Use investigate every Bend, OR 97708. cove welding or willing d ures. Monitor a n d phase of investment fast results! It's the easiest Retired male RN seeks extreme caution when to become so. Contact administer w o r kers' Wallowa Memorial opportunities, e s peway in the world to sell. live-in long-term care op- r esponding to A N Y Brian o r at comp claims and e m p loyment Benjamin's Jim DO YOU NEED c ially t h os e fr o m Hospital Car p et portunity. 30 yrs exp ICU/ online OSHA recordkeeping. out-of-state or offered ad from out-of-state. A GREAT The Bulletin Classified ER, total patient care, One, Richland, WA; Must possess excelby a p e rson doing EMPLOYEE Located in 526 living assistance, nutri509-946-4506 541-385-5809 lent c o mmunication, We suggest you call Enterprise, OR business out of a loRIGHT NOW? tion, therapies. Profes- the Loans & Mortgages interpersonal and deState of Oregon cal motel or hotel. InCall The Bulletin ATTEND COL L E GE sional, compassionate. Consumer Hotline at cision making skills. TURN THE PAGE before 11 a.m. and Full-time Surgical/ vestment o ff e r lngs ONLINE 100%. Call 270-629-5788 WARNING Experience in recruit1-503-378-4320 must be r e gistered get an ad in to pubMedical Surgical RN For More Ads 'Medlcal, *Business, The Bulletin recoming, interviewing, new with the Oregon De* lish the next day! mends you use cauCriminal Jus t i ce, T he Bullet i n hire orientation, benFor Equal Opportunity Variable Shifts partment of Finance. 541-385-5809. 'Hospltallty, *Web. tion when you proBULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS L aws: Oregon B u efit coordination, payWe suggest you conVIEW the vide personal Job placement assis- Search the area's most roll. Proficient in Mireau of L a bor & Insult your attorney or Pre-op, PACU, Classifieds at: tance. Comp u ter comprehensive listing of information to compacrosoft office (Word, dustry, C i vil Rights Certified Nurses Circulating 8 Scrubcall CONS U MER www.bendbulletin.com nies offering loans or available. F i n ancial classified advertising... Excel, Outlook), SAP Division, HOTLINE, bing Preferred Assistant Aid if qual i f ied. real estate to automotive, 971-673-0764 credit, especially e xperience a p l u s . (will train) for more 1-503-378-4320, those asking for adSCHEV a u t horized. merchandise to sporting Bachelor's degree in 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. information visit our Get your Call 866 - 688-7078 goods. Bulletin Classifieds If you have any quesvance loan fees or related field preferred. website companies from out of www.CenturaOnline.c appear every day in the business M inimum of 1 y e a r tions, concerns or www.wchcd.org A Classified ad is a n III: u:I u SYsrt: V state. If you have om (PNDC) experience in HR. We print or on line. comments, contact: 541-426-4313 EASY W AY TO St. Charles Health concerns or quesoffer competitive salClassified Department EOE Call 541-385-5809 TRUCK SCHOOL REACH over 3 million System is currently G ROW I N G tions, we suggest you ary, benefits including The Bulletin www.llTR.net www.bendbulletin.com Pacific Northwesternrecruiting CNAs to consult your attorney medical, l i fe , an d 541-385-5809 Redmond Campus ers. $525/25-word join our exceptional or call CONSUMER dental insurance, and Remember.... with an ad in c lassified ad i n 3 0 Student Loans/Job Caregiver team. A HOTLINE, 401k. To apply, send A dd your we b a d Waiting Toll Free daily newspapers for variety of CNA opThe Bulletin's 1-877-877-9392. dress to your ad and resume to 1-888-387-9252 3-days. Call the Paportunities are avail"Call A Service readers on The jtoholsky© woodgrain. a ble a t b o t h o u r cific Northwest Daily Bulletin' s web site BANK TURNED YOU com Professional" Bend and Redmond (916) DOWN? Private party Connection Coordinator will be able to click We are an equal ALCOHOL & DRUG 2 88 6019 o r em a i l as well as Directory through automatically will loan on real esopportunity employer. Residential Counselors hospitals, Hospice. St. Charles tate equity. Credit, no elizabeth Ocnpa.com to your site. Mature individuals to Health System ofLook at: problem, good equity for more info (PNDC) FARM FOREMAN work in drug 8 alcohol comp e titive (Bio Science Research is all you need. Call Bendhomes.com residential treatment for fers The Bulletin wages, excellent canow. Oregon L a nd T ech 2) Cent r a l for Complete Listings of teens. Apply at: extra ~ reer growth opportuMortgage 388-4200. /n Care Garage Sales Oregon A g r icultural Area Real Estate for Sale I Recommends www.rimrocktrailsats.org nities and a fantascaution when p urR esearch Cen t e r Partners In Care Home Health and Hospice is chasing products or l tic benefits package. E ver Consider a R e Garage Sales (COARC) M a d ras,Manager seeking applicants for a full-time (32 hours per services from out of ~ verse Mortgage? At Visit our website to Call The Bulletin At OR. Now Hiring at Juniper week) Volunteer Coordinator. view full job details Primary r e sponsibility least 62 years old? Garage Sales M otel i n Mad r a s. f the area. Sending 541-385-5809 and apply: c ash, c hecks, o r Stay in your home & for al l f a rming/crop Looking f o r li v e -inf credit i n f o rmation Qualified candidates must have a bachelors Find them Place Your Ad Or E-Mail increase cash f low! management opera- full-time man a ger. degree (related field preferred) while previous At: www.bendbulletin.com www.scmc.org EEO ~ may be subjected to ~ Safe 8 Effective! Call in tions, equipment upPosition includes 3 experience managing a volunteer workforce is FRAUD. Now for your FREE keep/repair a t the bdrm, 2 b ath home preferred. Competence with Microsoft Office The Bulletin For more informaDVD! Ca l l Now COARC Madras loca- and living expenses. Suite and strong organizational skills are tion about an adver- ~ 888-785-5938. Classifieds tion. Must be highly General For information call essential. f tiser, you may call (PNDC) self-directed, k n owl541-639-9936. Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t u nit the Oregon State 541-385-5809 edgeable of farming If interested in being considered for this role, The Bulletin Seasonal Deputy, Salary Depends on practices and able to Good classified ads tell I Attorney General's please submit a resume to: Offlce C o n sumer s To Subscribe call Experience and Qualifications work in collaboration the essential facts in an Protection hotline at l Value Adverwith other staff and Closes February 28th, 2013 541-385-5800 or go to Extreme interesting Manner. Write Partners In Care, tising! 30 Daily newsI 1-877-877-9392. research faculty. Refrom the readers view not www.bendbulletin.com 2075 NE Wyatt Court, papers $525/25-word F or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d quires CDL l i cense the seller's. Convert the ~Tlie. Bitlletip Bend OR 97701 - Attn HR, classified, 3-d a ys. application form go to within 3 months and I BUY REAL ESTATE or via email to HR@partnersbend.org facts into benefits. Show Reach 3 million Pawww.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H u man Pesticide A p plicator the reader how the item will Notes, Mortgages, cific Northwesterners. Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call License w i t hi n 6 yyatermaster and Trust Deeds. help them in someway. For more information m onths. Ap p l y a t 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson General 877-264-8623 The Oregon Water This call (916) 288-6019 or http://oregonstate.edu County Application forms to: CROOK COUNTY Resources Deadvertising tip email: /jobs/ posting MONEyrWe buy EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES brought to you by partment is recruit- LOCAL elizabeth Ocnpa.com JeffersonCounty Human Resources, ¹0010181. For assissecured trust deeds 8 ing to fill a Water- note,some hard money for the Pacific Northtance, call 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Crook County Health Department The Bulletin west Daily Connecmaster position in (541)475-7107. loans. Call Pat Kelley Madras, OR 97741. Health Nurse ll tion. (PNDC) our Burns office. To 541-382-3099 ext.13. $44,715 - $46,758 OOE Jefferson Countyis an EqualEmployment v iew the jo b a n Full time w/benefits (32 hours per week) Opportunity Employer Independent Contractor position nouncement go to ~res Closes: February 15, 2013 at 5r00 p.m. o" Daytime Inside sales. oc Oregonjobs.org ~ DESCHUTES COUNTY This position will provide comprehensive nursand search under Mid-South Sales Promotions is seeking to hire ing services to women and their families in the Oregon Water two sales people to work from The Bulletin Maternity Case Management, Babies First, CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Resources Decirculation offices as Independent Contractors CaCoon programs, and any other public health partment. c l osing BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I to secure sponsorships for the Newspaper in programs as needed. date is F e bruary Education program. This is not selling subHousing Specialist (2013-00007), Behavioral scriptions or advertising, but involves having 12, 2013. Requirements include: Bachelor's degree in In Care local businesses support The Builetin's Health Division. Full-time position $3,416 Nursing with experience in public/community Partners In Care is seeking candidates for a Newspaper in Education program. health preferred; current Oregon Registered - $4,675 per month for a 172.67 hour work full-time Intake RN to assist in processing Looking for your next Nurse Licensure; valid Oregon Driver's referrals and getting patients admitted into employee? month. Deadline: SUNDAY, 02/03/13. This is a relaxed environment and approach cense; through knowledge of principles, methPlace a Bulletin help care. This is a clinical administrative position involving business to business sales. ods, and procedures of maternal child health that does not include direct patient care. wanted ad today and Mid-South offers a brief paid training program and child development as they relate to the BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST II - Older reach over 60,000 but the ideal candidates will possess business home v i s iting s e t ting a n d ser v icing Applicants MUST have a current Oregon RN readers each week. Adult Behavioral Health Specialist (2012to business sales experience. under-served populations. Applications and full Your classified ad license. job d e s cription c a n be foun d at 00076), Behavioral Health Division. Full-time will also appear on Average salesperson earns between www.co.crook.or.us. Qualified candidates are encouraged to send bendbulletin.com position $4,057 - $5,553 per month for a $400 -$700 for less than 30 hours weekly. over letter a n d r e s ume v i a e m ai l t o which currently 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN The dress code is relaxed and casual. Please a p ply at the Cro o k Co u n ty cHROpartnersbend.org receives over 1.5 or regular mail to: This is not ad or subscription sales, however Treasurer's/Tax Office at 200 NE 2nd St., UNTIL FILLED. million page views if you have previous experience in advertising Prineville, OR 97754; 541-447-6554. EOE every month at Partners ln Care / HR Department, sales, I will give you priority consideration. no extra cost. 2075 NE Wyatt Ct, BUILDING SAFETY INSPECTOR I, II or III Bulletin Classifieds Bend OR 97701. I'm seeking motivated, energetic and articulate — (2013-00008), Community Development Get Results! people with excellent communication skills. Call 385-5809 Dept. On-call position $20.93 - $33.77. Please call Melanie at 541-383-0399. or place Lab Assistant (Organic Chemistry & Placement within the classification dependent your ad on-line at Central Oregon Community College Biology), Temporary, Part-time. upon e xperience a n d ce r t jfjcatjons. bendbulletin.com Independent Contractor has o p enings l i s te d b e l ow . Go to Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, a temporary, part-time employment opportuNeed help fixing stuff? * Supplement YourIncome * 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; nity. The ideal applicant functions as a memCall A ServiceProfessional LANDFILL ENGINEER TECHNICIAN —(2013(541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, ber of the OSU-Cascades upper division Genfind the help you need. 00006), Solid Waste Dept. Full-time position Oregon Relay Services number is 7 -1-1. eral Science (Organic Chemistry and Biology) www.bendbulletin.com COCC is an AA/EO employer. $3,584 - $4,575 per month for a 173.33 hour programs.
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Maintenance Specialist -Carpenter / Painter Perform journey-level construction, installation, repair, and maintenance work for Bend and s atellite campuses. 5 Y e a r s e x p . r e q . $2,548-$3,034/mo.Closes Feb 6.
Duties include, but are not limited to, setting up/preparation for spring term Organic Chemistry and Biology labs, assisting in Organic Chemistry lab development and execution of the lab courses.
Part-Time Instructor of Veterinary Technician Education Provide instruction in the Veterinarian Technician program, develop curriculum, evaluate student performance. 3 Years exp. as DVM or LVT with current license. Position need Spring Term March 2013.
Required qualifications include a familiarity with chemistry laboratory techniques including handling chemicals, making solutions, handling glassware and equipment. Preferred qualifications include experience with lab instrumentation (e.g., IR, GC, and HPLC) and sterile technique as well as a demonstrated commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity.
Assistant Professor l, Mathematics Provide instruction in all levels of community college mathematics courses (basic math, pre-algebra, algebra I, II, 8 i n termediate). Master's + 1 year teaching mathematics req. $38,209-$46,309 for 9 mos. Position need Fall Term September 2013. Part Time lnstructor's Looking for t a lented individuals to t e a ch part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
OUR WEBSITE AT www.deschules.org/jobs.
® Call Today ® We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Terrebonne *
To apply for this position, please submit a resume and/or a temp job application (http://oregonstate.edu/ admin/hristeam/forms/TS901.doc) to Jeff.Gautschi@osucascades.edu or via fax © 541-382-7053 or drop off at OSU-Cascades campus, Attn: Jeff Gautschi. The closing date is 2/15/13. OSU is an AA/EOE.
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at
p ,u)OWO . qTaV yei l T a A
DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS,PLEASE VISIT
Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
5 • SPO 5 • hhO PtCK~P $5 St RU'5 O)OTGy Cie S • QOQ yAe5 ' ' eTS ' +
work month. Deadline: SUNDAY,02/03/13.
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T he salary rate i s $ 1 1.82/hour and t h e anticipated start date is March 1, 2013.
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Where Buyers and Sellers Meet.
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EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
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To place your ad visit WWW.bendbulletin.Com or caII 541-385-5809
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED i 870
G4 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN 773
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634
648
Houses for Rent General
00~0~
DEAL!
2 bdrm, 1 bath,
$530 8 $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 383-31 52
630
CHECK YOUR AD
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Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 8 GREAT WINTER 8
Cascade Rental Management. Co.
Studios 8 Kitchenettes Call for Specials! Furnished room, TV w/ Limited numbers avail. cable, micro & fridge. 1,28 3bdrms Utils & l i nens. New w/d hookups, owners.$145-$165/wk patios or decks. 541-382-1885 Mountain Glen 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by
Say "goodbuy" Norris & Stevens, Inc. to that unused 636 item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Small studio close to library, all util. pd. $550, 5 41 -385-5 8 0 9 $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870
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Acreages
682 - Farms, Ranches andAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos & Townhomesfor Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homesfor Sale 746- Northwest Bend Homes 747- Southwest Bend Homes 748- Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast Bend Homes 750 - RedmondHomes 753- Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes andProperty 764- Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
RENTALS 603 - RentalAlternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- Roommate Wanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631- Condos & Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for Rent General 650- Houses for Rent NEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SWBend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 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- RV Parking 676 Mo bile/Mfd.Space
Rooms for Rent
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PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o u sing A c t which makes it illegal to a d v ertise "any
732
Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale
Sale/Leaseback Opportunities Medical/Office Building- Bend Cap Rate 8%, Price $345,000
5-Year NNN Lease
Special Purpose Bldg-Redmond Cap Rate 8.5%, Price $650,000 10-Year NNN Lease Contact Peter Lowes, Principal Broker 541-312-2113 L 0 PJE S COMMERCIA L
745
Homes for Sale
63410 Overtree Rd. Great 5-Bdrm Home Landscaped Acreage Call for Information Mollie Jurgenson, Broker
541- 815-5248
:PII II
Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions ove r t h e 850 phone are misunderstood and a n e r ror Snowmobiles can occur in your ad. If this happens to your 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade ad, please contact us 600 w/513 mi, like new, the first day your ad very fast! Reduced to appears and we will $5000. 541-221-5221 be happy to fix it as s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 11:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 Snowmobile trailer a.m. for Sunday and 2002, 25-ft InterMonday. state 8, 3 sleds,
541-385-5809 Thank you! The Bulletin Classified
Boats & Accessories
ATVs
$10,900.
541-480-8009
Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, race-ready, lots of extras, $5500/obo 541-647-8931 870
775
The Bulletin
LOT MODEL LIQUIDATION
amenities Ford V10 Ithr, cherry, slides, like new! New low
price, $54,900.
I YOURBOAT ... I with
our
18.5' Sea Ray, 2000, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/CD player, rod holders, full canvas, EZ Loader trailer, exclnt cond, $14,500. 707-484-3518(Bend)
Need help fixing stuff?
Call A Service Professional 18' Four Winns ski boat, find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
rates for selling your I I boat or watercraft!
I Place an ad in The Bulletin
w i t h our
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I 3-month p ackage I I which includes:
I bendbulletin.com *Free pick up into The Central Oregon I Nickel ads.
Interbath tub 8
shower, 50 amp propane gen 8 more! $55,000.
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541-948-2310
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I Rates start at $4EL I Call for details! Immaculate! 541-385-5809 Beaver Coach Marquis 40' 1987. New cover,
gThe Bulletlng
4.3L V6 M e rCruiser I/O, open bow, seats 8, GENERATE SOME exnew Bimini top, new site. 541-548-5511 in your neigpreference, limitation Harley Davidson Soft- Alpine stereo system & citement JandMHomes.com or disc r i mination Tail Deluxe 20 0 7 , spkrs, fish finder, dual borhood. Plan a gabased on race, color, w / pasbatteries w / c ontrols, rage sale and don't Own your own home for white/cobalt, religion, sex, handiswim-step part of boat forget to advertise in senger kit, Vance & less t ha n r e n ting. l o n g lad d er, classified! 385-5809. cap, familial status, Hines muffler system with C entrally located i n marital status or na$7995. 541-749-0994 www.thegarnergroup.com Madras. In- h o use 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. tional origin, or an inond, $16,9 9 9 , Servinq Central Oregon smce 1903 f inancing opti o n s c541-389-9188. tention to make any available. Call now at BANK OWNED HOMES! such pref e rence, 541-475-2291 FREE List w/Pics! Harley Heritage Used out-drive limitation or discrimi20.5' 2004 Bayliner Softail, 2003 parts - Mercury nation." Familial sta- www. BendRepos.com 205 Run About, 220 FIND YOUR FUTURE $5,000+ in extras tus includes children bend and beyond real estate OMC rebuilt ma20967 yeoman, bend or HP, V8, open bow, $2000 paint job, HOME INTHE BULLETIN under the age of 18 rine motors: 151 exc. cond., very fast 30K mi. 1 owner, living with parents or $1595; 3.0 $1895; Your future is just a page For more information w/very low hours, New Homes legal cust o dians, 4.3 (1993), $1995. lots of extras incl. away. Whether you're looking please call Under pregnant women, and 541-389-0435 for a hat or a pl a ce to hang it, 541-385-8090 tower, Bimini 8 Construction people securing cusThe Bulletin Classified is or 209-605-5537 custom trailer, tody of children under in NorthWest your best source. $19,500. 18. This newspaper Crossing HD Screaming Eagle 541-389-1413 will not knowingly acCall for Information Every day thousandsof Watercraft Electra Glide 2005, cept any advertising The Garner Group buyers and sellers of goods 103" motor, two tone for real estate which is 541-383-4360 and services dobusiness in candy teal, new tires, 2007 SeaDoo in violation of the law. these pages.They know 23K miles, CD player 2004 Waverunner, O ur r e a ders ar e you can't beat The Bulletin hydraulic clutch, exexcellent condition, hereby informed that Classified Section for 20.5' Seaswirl Spycellent condition. LOW hours. Double all dwellings adverselection and convenience Highest offer takes it. der 1989 H.O. 302, trailer, lots of extras. tised in this newspa- every item is just a phone 541-480-8080. 285 hrs., exc. cond., per are available on $10,000 call away. stored indoors for an equal opportunity 541-719-8444 865 life $11,900 OBO. The Classified Section is basis. To complain of 541-379-3530 ATVs easy to use. Every item discrimination c all Ads published in "Wai s categorized and every 'p " HUD t o l l -free at • laowg Il tercraft" include: Kaycartegory is indexed onthe ~Z 1-800-877-0246. The www.thegarnergroup.com aks, rafts and motorsection's front page. toll f re e t e l ephone ized personal number for the hearWhether you are looking for watercrafts. For NOTICE ing im p a ired is a home or need a service, " boats" please see All real estate adver1-800-927-9275. Class 870. tised here in is sub- your future is in the pagesof The Bulletin Classified. P olaris 4 x 4 , 200 7 , 22' Custom Weld Jet, Rented your propject to t h e F e deral 541-385-5809 winch, heated bars, erty? The Bulletin 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 F air H o using A c t , un scabbard, loaded, Classifieds The Bulletin hrs, garaged, loaded. which makes it illegal 4100. 541-923-0854 541-923-0854. has an "After Hours" to advertise any prefLine. Call erence, limitation or 541-383-2371 24 discrimination based hours to on race, color, relic~a ce l ad. gion, sex, handicap, familial status or naGood classified ads tell tional origin, or intenthe essential facts in an tion to make any such interesting Manner. Write preferences, l i m itafrom the readers view - not tions or discrimination. the seller's. Convert the We will not knowingly facts into benefits. Show accept any advertisthe reader how the item will ing for r ea l e state help them in someway. which is in violation of This this law. All persons advertising tip are hereby informed brought to you by that all dwellings advertised are available The Bulletin on an equal opportunity basis. The BulleRent /Own tin Classified 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. FOR SALE OAC. J and M Homes 541-548-5511 When buying a home 83% of Central 658 Oregonians turn to Houses for Rent
gar'rier.
Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo,
spe c i al
18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 *5 lines of text and 860 Penta, 270HP, a photo or up to 10 Motorcycles & Accessories Volvo low hrs., must see, I lines with no photo. $15,000, 541-330-3939 *Free online ad at CRAMPED FOR
541-548-5511
Prices Slashed Huge Savings! Full Warranties, Finished on your
Look before you buy, below market value! Size 8 mileage DOES matteri Class A 32 ' H urricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all
541-548-5216
$46,500 finished
on your site. J and M Homes
CAN'T BEAT THIS!
17' 1984 Chris Craft in ASAP? - Scorpion 140 HP inboard/outboard, 2 depth finders, trollFax it to 541-322-7253 ing motor, full cover, EZ - L oa d t r ailer, The Bulletin Classifieds $3500 OBO. 541-382-3728.
The Bulletin
CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm,
The Bulletin Need to get an ad
• Yamaha 750 1999 To Subscribe call Mountain Max, $1750. 541-385-5800 or go to • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 www.bendbulletin.com EXT, $1250. • Zieman 4-place You'll find it in trailer, $1750. All in good condition. The Bulletin Classifieds Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
Motorhomes
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Econoline RV 19 8 9 , fully loaded, exc. cond, Class 875. 35K m i. , R e d uced 541-385-5809 $15,250. 541-546-6133
Boats & Accessories
What are you looking for?
541-385-5809
new paint (2004), new inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, parked covered $35,000 obo. 541-419-9859 or 541-280-2014
The Bulletin
Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - n ow $119,000, 5 4 1-9238572 or 541-749-0037
TiCk, Tock TiCk, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
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Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT to talk to a c e rtified counselor 24/7 or visit 1877mylimit.org to chat live with a counselor. We are not here to judge. We are here to help. You can get your life back. •
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Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
t 642
Meet singles right now! Apt./Multiplex Redmond No paid o p erators, just real people like 2 bdrm, 1 bath duplex you. Browse greet- unit, $550 mo.+ $635 ings, exchange mes- d ep. 1326 SW O b sages and c o nnect sidian, Redmond. Call live. Try it free. Call for applications. Avail now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Feb. 1. 541-728-6421.
(PNDC)
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C al l 5 4 / - 3 8 5 - 58 0 9 to r o m ot e
/Building/Contracting
o u r se r vice Handyman
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gaFrier.
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NOTICE: Oregon state 30 years Construction law req u ires anyone who co n t racts Experience for construction work 17 Years tgb to be licensed with the In Central C onstruction Con tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n s e Margo means the contractor COnStructiOn, LLC Redmond i s bonded an d i n s ured. Ver i f y t h e Home Repairs & Eagle Crest - B e hind Call 541-385-5809 to contractor's CCB Remodeling the gates. Beautiful c ense t h rough t h e place your 2100 s q .ft., 3 / 2 .5, CCB Cons u m er Window & Door Real Estate ad. Reverse living. Large Website Replacement www.hirealicensedcontracior. 750 garagehworkshop. Hot ccs ¹176121 com tub. $1400/mo. Lease Redmond Homes or call 503-378-4621. option. $365,000. 541-480-3179 The Bulletin recomSec/dep. 541-923-0908 mends checking with 541-480-7863 Looking for your next the CCB prior to con- Landscaping/Yard Care emp/oyee? Pristine 3 bdrm, 2 bath Place a Bulletin help tracting with anyone. in NW Redmond close Some other t r ades N OTICE: ad today and ORE G O N s c hools/shopping wanted also req u ire addi- Landscape Contrac- to reach over 60,000 quiet n e ighborhood, t ional l icenses a n d tors Law (ORS 671) large fenced yard, RV readers each week. certifications. r equires a l l bus i - pad, 2-car g arage, Your classified ad will also appear on nesses that advertise laundry room, bright bendbulletin.com t o p e r form L a n d- kitchen, A/C, gas fireDebris Removal which currently rescape C o n struction place, walk-out patio, ceives over which includes: beautifully maint. Avail. 1.5 million page p lanting, decks , 3/1/13 $1050 mo. anviews every month fences, arbors, nual lease. For showat no extra cost. w ater-features, a n d ing 541-350-9188. Bulletin Classifieds installation, repair of Get Results! irrigation systems to Call 385-5809 or be licensed with the Houses for Rent Will Haul Away place your ad on-line Landscape ContracSunriver at t ors B o a rd . Thi s MFREE~ bendbulletin.com 4-digit number is to be VILLAGE PROPERTIES For Salvage v' included in all adver- Sunriver, Three Rivers, Any Location ' tisements which indiLa Pine. Great Want to impress the ,.',"„Removal cate the business has Selection. Prices range a bond, insurance and relatives? Remodel Also Cleanups $425 - $2000/mo. workers c o mpensayour home with the j& Cfeanouts' + View our full tion for their employinventory online at help of a professional ees. For your protec- Village-Properties.com from The Bulletin's tion call 503-378-5909 1-866-931-1061 "Call A Service or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to Professional" Directory check license status Garage Sales before con t racting 771 I Han d yman with t h e b u s iness. Garage Sales Lots Persons doing land- Garage Sales scape m a intenance ERIC REEVE (2) Bend City lots, 2851 do not require a LCB Find them 8 2857 Huettl St., off HANDY ~ license. Butler Mkt. All utils under in round $89,900 for both. SERVICES Painting/Wall Covering The Bulletin all Ron, 541-206-7995 All Home & Classifieds
541-385-5809
j,sws .
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Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132,913;
asking $93,500.
Call 541-419-4212
The Bulletin
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Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Di~count Au work guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded -Insured Ci eirl49468
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifiedsl Ask about our Super Seller rates!
541-385-5809
MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License ¹186147 LLC
541-81 5-2888
541-385-5809 687
Commercial for Rent/Lease
Custom Home In Your Future? We Have Great Lots For Sale The Garner Group 541-383-4360
3000 sq. ft. commercial space O 30c sq.ft. 61510 (¹120) American Lane. Call 530-305-0104 Off Empire: $1310/mo. 1 770 SF, 5 of f c s , 20'x20' room; strg., 2 rstrms; shades; fiber. www.thegarnergroup.com
gaFrier.
541-280-7489.
Now you can add a full-color photo to your Bulletin classified ad starting at only $15.00 per week, when you order your ad online. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: Pick a category (for example — pets or transportation) and choose your ad package.
QJ Write your ad and upload your digital photo. Create your account with any major credit card. All ads appear in both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.
To place your photo ad, visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions, 541-385-5809
BSSl 1C S www.benrlbulletin.com
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-5809 •
Travel Trailers
Motorhomes
WANTED! RV Consignments Paid for or Notl
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Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
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BIG W+x
925
932
Utility Trailers
Antique & Classic Autos
PYo~ d~sr!
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Big Tex Landscaping/ ATVTrailer, dual axle flatbed,
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BOATS &RVs
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION
908- Aircraft, Parts and Service COUNTRY RV 805 - Misc. Items 7'x16', 7000 lb. 916- Trucks andHeavy Equipment 850 - Snowmobiles • 90% of all RV buyers Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 Fleetwood Wilderness GVW, all steel, 29', weatherized, like 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, 1 /3 interest i n w e ll1966 GMC, 2nd owner, 860 - Motorcycles And 925 - Utility Trailers are looking to finance Accessories rear bdrm, fireplace, equipped IFR Beech Bo$1400. n ew, f u r nished & too many extras to list or trade. 927 - Automotive Trades 541-382-4115, or ready to go, incl Wine- AC, W/D hkup beau- nanza A36, new 10-550/ $8500 obo. Serious buy- 865 - ATVs • We have a dozen 929 - Automotive Wanted 541-280-7024. 870 - Boats & Accessories ers only. 541-536-0123 ard S a t ellite dish, tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. prop, located K BDN. finance options. 931 - Automotive Parts, Service 541-815-2380 26,995. 541-420-9964 $65,000. 541-419-9510 • We take anything on 875 - Watercrafl and Accessories trade, paid for or not. 929 880 - Motorhomes 932- Antique and Classic Autos • We do all of the work- FIND IT! Automotive Wanted 881 Travel Trailers SUY IT! 933 - Pickups you et the CASH 882 - Fifth Wheels SELL IT! 935- Sporl Utility Vehicles DONATE YOUR CAR885 - Canopies andCampers The Bulletin Classifieds 940 - Vans Fast Free Towing 24 K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 hr. Response - Tax Chev Camaro, 1969, fully 890 - RVs for Rent 975 - Automobiles slide, AC, TV, awning. D eduction UN I T E D restored, factory Glacier 1/5th interest in 1973 Blue, H0-350, 4 -spd, NEW: tires, converter, B REAST C A N CER I III S Q i Cessna 150 LLC brand n e w int e rior. batteries. Hardly used. 150hp conversion, low F OUNDATION P r o - $32,900. Here in Bend, $15,500. 541-923-2595 viding Free Mammotime on air frame and Call Safari Cliff at grams 8 Breast Can- call Scott, 406-839-1299 engine, hangared in 541-815-6144 Weekend Warrior Toy cer Info 888-785-9788 Bend. Excellent perHauler 28' 2007, Gen, (PNDC) formance & affordfuel station, exc cond. able flying! $6,500. sleeps 8, black/gray 931 541-382-6752 Chrysler SD 4-Door interior, u s e d 3X , Automotive Parts, 1930, CD S R o yal $24,999. "I AIRPORT CAFE MONTANA 3585 2008, Service & Accessories Standard, B-cylinder, 541-389-9188 (Bend Municipal Airport) Chevy C-20 Pickup Chevy Wagon 1957, exc. cond., 3 slides, body is good, needs Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Winnebago 30A 4-dr., complete, king bed, Irg LR, Arc- NofN open 7 daysltNk! some r e s toration, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, • Dally Speciais Michelin tires (4) auto 4-spd, 396, model 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Sightseer 2012, 31 ft., $7,000 OBO, trades. Looking for your tic insulation, all opruns, taking bids, • New Management CST /all options, orig. exc. cond. size radio (orig),541-419-4989 all options, 2 slides, Please call next employee? tions $37,500. 541-383-3888, owner, $22,000, OPEN DAILY, 8-3 P225/65R17's $150 362HP V10, 10K mi., Place a Bulletin help 541-389-6998 541-815-3318 541-420-3250 541-923-6049 Call 541-318-8989 call 390-1755. mint cond., $105,900. wanted ad today and Ford Mustang Coupe bought a new boat? 541-330-5516 1966, original owner, reach over 60,000 Nu Wa 297LK H i tch- Location, Location, '55 Chevy 2 dr . wgn Just Sell your old one in the VB, automatic, great readers each week. Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 932 P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 classifieds! Ask about our Location! 32' touring coach, left shape, $9000 OBO. Your classified ad small block w/Weiand Super Seller rates! Antique & Executive Hangar kitchen, rear lounge, 530-515-81 99 will also appear on dual quad tunnel ram 541-385-5809 at Bend Airport (KBDN) Classic Autos many extras, beautiful 60' wide x 50 ' d eep, bendbulletin.com with 450 Holleys. T-10 c ond. inside & o u t , which currently re4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe $32,900 OBO, Prinev- w/55' wide x 17' high biFord Ranchero Weld Prostar whls, ex 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Winnebago Suncruiser34' ceives over 1.5 milfold dr. Natural gas heat, ille. 541-447-5502 days lion page views evtra rolling chassis + auto. trans, ps, air, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 1979 2004, only 34K, loaded, offc, bathroom. Adjacent & 541-447-1641 eves. extras. $6000 for all. frame on rebuild, rewith 351 Cleveland ery month at no door panels w/flowers too much to list, ext'd to Frontage Rd; great 1921 Model T 541-389-7669. extra cost. Bulletin modified engine. warr. thru 2014, $54,900 painted original blue, & hummingbirds, visibility for aviation busiDelivery Truck Body is in Dennis, 541-589-3243 Classifieds Get Reoriginal blue interior, white soft top 8 hard ness. 541-948-2126 or Advertise your car! sults! Call 385-5809 original hub caps, exc. excellent condition, Restored & Runs top. Just reduced to email 1jetjock©q.com Add A Picture! or place your ad chrome, asking $9000 $3,750. 541-317-9319 $2500 obo. Reach thousands of readers! $9000. P iper A r cher 1 9 8 0, I T r a vel Trailers on-line at x ~ l or make offer. 541-420-4677 or 541-647-8483 Call 541-385-5809 54 1 -389-8963 based in Madras, albendbulletin.com 541-385-9350 The Bulletin Classifieds ways hangared since RV CONSIGNMENTS Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th new. New annual, auto WANTED wheel, 1 s l ide, AC, 882 pilot, IFR, one piece We Do The Work ... TV,full awning, excelFastest ArYou Keep The Cash! Fifth Wheels lent shape, $23,900. windshield. The Earned Income cher around. 1750 toOn-site credit 541-350-8629 tal t i m e. $68,500. approval team, Tax Credit. 541-475-6947, ask for web site presence. Rob Berg. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. earned it. Why BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495 not claim it? Redmond: 541-548-5254 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slide- Pilgrim In t e rnational outs, inverter, satelIf you're working hard just 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, lite sys, fireplace, 2 Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 to make ends meet and flat screen TVs. Fall price $ 2 1,865. have one or more children $60,000. 541-312-4466 541-480-3923 living with you, you may
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You may have
Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811
CHECK YOUR AD
qualify for the EITC. Think of it as a reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our Web site or ask your tax preparer if you qualify.
Diamond Reo Dump
II
Truck
19 7 4, 12 - 14
yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812
T he Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds.
Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the Call on one of the phone are misprofessionals today! understood and an error iQ"I can occurin yourad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. If we can assist you, slide,Bunkhouse style, please call us: sleeps 7-8, excellent 541-385-5809 condition, $16,900, The Bulletin Classified 541-390-2504
Qoo R
G K E AT
U Y T
Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500 call
Because when itcomes to getting more for your family, consider it done.
541-749-0724
A message from the Internal Revenue Service.
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Peterbilt 359 p o table 1/3 interest in Colum- water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp bia 400, located at 4-3" h o ses, Sunriver. $138,500. pump, camlocks, $25,000. Call 541-647-3718 541-820-3724
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ALL 541-385-5809 F R Y URFREE LA IFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad.
The Bulletin
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Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit1 ad per item per 30 days.
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G6 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN Pickups
Antique & Classic Autos
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RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, $8400 obro. eng, power everything, am/fm/cd. new paint, 54K orig mi, 541-420-3634 /390-1285 runs great, exlnt cond in 8 out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
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Sport Utility Vehicles
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975
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Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Buick Lucerne CXL 2009, $12,500, low low miles; 2003 LeSabre, $4000. You'll not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a thousand words. Call GMC Yu k on O e naiiToyota Land c ruiser Bob, 541-318-9999. 2 005, loaded, v e r y 2 000, A u to , 4x4, clean. Vin¹ 1 69789. leather. Vin¹ 214783 for an appt. and take a drive in a 30 mpg car! W as $16 999 N o w Was $21,999, Now $15,477 $18,788.
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S UBA R U . BUBARUOPBBNDCOM
BUBARUOPBRND COM
541-385-5809
Nissan Sentra 2012, 12,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB, AC, & more! $16,000. 541-788-0427
CHECK YOUR AD
Please check your ad • on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions ove r t h e Porsche 911 1974, low phone are misunder- mi., complete motor/ stood and a n e r ror trans. rebuild, tuned can occur in your ad. suspension, int. & ext. If this happens to your refurb., oi l c o o ling, ad, please contact us shows new in & out, p erf. m e ch. c o n d. the first day your ad Much more! appears and we will be happy to fix it as $28,000 541-420-2715 s oon a s w e ca n . Deadlines are: Week- PORSCHE 914 1974, Roller (no e ngine), days 12:00 noon for PSUBARU. lowered, full roll cage, next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 5-pt harnesses, rac2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend ing seats, 911 dash & 12:00 for Monday. If 877-266-3821 instruments, d e cent we can assist you, Dlr ¹0354 shape, v e r y c o o l! please call us: $1699. 541-678-3249 541-385-5809 940 The Bulletin Classified Vans Check out the classifieds online 96 Ford Windstar & 2000 Nissan Quest, www.bendbulletin.com both 7-passenger Updated daily vans, high miles, low Scion XB 2006, 5 dr., prices, $1200 & Chevy C obalt 2 0 0 5, FWD, tinted windows, $2900, and worth white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K Clean. Vin¹ 060269. every cent! miles, over 35mpg, auto Was $11,999. Now 541-318-9999 trans, AC, CD player, $9688. dual airbags, manual 3S U BARU. locks & windows, good cond in/out, runs/drives Chevy Astro NE Hwy 20 • Bend great, non-smkr, always 2060877-266-3821 Cargo Van 2001, $4950. pw, pdl, great cond., maintained. Dlr ¹0354 Call 541-350-9938 business car, well maint'd, regular oil Toyota Camrys: changes, $4500. Please call 1984, $1200 obo; 541-633-5149 1985 SOLD;
1983, 8000-Ib Warn 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 winch, 2 sets of tire Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 chains, canopy, 22R motor, 5-spd t ransmission, $2495 obo. Jeep Wrangler 4x4 541-350-2859 1997, 6-cyl, soft top roll bar, front tow People Look for Information bar, new tires, About Products and chrome rims, 103K Services Every Day through miles, gd cond, Toyota Tacoma 201 1, The Bulletin Classifieds $5700 obo. 4x4, lift, very clean. 541-504-3253 or V in¹ 0 1 5638. W a s 935 503-504-2764 Now $29,999, Sport Utility Vehicles $26,988.
Leg a l Notices
Legal Notices
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sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in item: F I L E NUM - said described real BERS: A-12-4 p roperty which t h e GMC f~ ton 1971, Only (MA-12-1 and Grantors had or had $1 9,700! Original low AD-11-11). SUB- power to convey at mile, e xceptional, 3rd JECT: An appeal of the time of the execuowner. 951-699-7171 an Administrative De- tion by him of the said cision approving two Trust Deed, together B U f arm-related dw e l l- with a n y int e rest ( FNMA ), Plaintiff, ings o n non - high which the Grantors or v s. LEONARD T . value farmland in the their successors in H AABY; DAVI D Exclusive Farm Use interest acquired after HOOLE AND LORJeep Comanche, 1990, zone. A P P ELLANT: the execution of said BUBARUOPBRND COM ETTA HOOLE; COoriginal owner, 167K, Jerry L. A p lin. A P- Trust Deed, to satisfy L UMBIA RIVE R 4WD, 5-spd, tags good PLICANTS/OWNERS: the foregoing obligaBANK; OCCU till 9/2015, $4500 obo. Kathy and Steve Sim- tions thereby secured PANTS O F THE 541-633-7761 pson, Cross Anchor S and the costs and exPROPERTY, DeRanch LLC. LOCApenses of s ale, i nfendants. Case No.: Buick Enclave 2008 CXL Jeep Wrangler VnlimTION: The sub j e ct cluding a reasonable 1 2CV0921. S U M AWD, V-6, black, clean, ited 2008, Hard top, property is located at charge by the MONS BY P UBLImechanicall y sound, 82k lift, S weet ! Vin¹ 7 1300 N W Lo w e r T rustee. N o t ic e i s CATION. To: David miles. $20,995. 572535 Was $26,999, Bridge Way, Terreb- further given that any Hoole and L oretta Call 541-815-1216 Now $23,988. onne, and is i denti- person named in ORS Hoole. Y o u are >r fied o n De s c hutes 86.753 has the right, Plymouth Ba r r acuda hereby required to iillf 4Q3p S UBARU. County A s s essor's at any time prior to 1966, original car! 300 BUBARUOPBRPID COM appear and defend Map 14-12-00 as Tax five days before the hp, 360 V8, center2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend the Complaint filed L ot 8 0 0 . STA F F date last set for the lines, (Original 273 877-266-3821 against you in the CONTACT: s ale, t o h a v e t h i s eng & wheels incl.) Dlr ¹0354 above entitled Cynthia. Smidt I desforeclosure proceed541-593-2597 cause within thirty chutes.org. Copies of ing dismissed and the Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, (30) days from the PROJECT CARS: Chevy most options, new paint Find exactly what the staff report, appli- Trust Deed reinstated date of service of 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & & tires, 159K mi., $4250. you are looking for in the BUBMAUOPBRND COM cation, all documents b y payment to t h e thissummons upon Chevy Coupe 1950 and evidence s u bBeneficiary of the enCLASSIFIEDS you, and in case of rolling chassis's $1750 Call 541-233-8944 mitted by or on behalf tire amount when due your failure to do so, ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Chevy Tahoe LS 2001, (other than such porfor w an t t h e reof, of the applicant and complete car, $ 1949; 4x4, 120K mi, Power Lexus RX330 2004 applicable criteria are tion of the principal as Plaintiff will apply to Cadillac Series 61 1950, seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd available for inspec- would not then be due 2 dr. hard top, complete row s eating, e x tra Leather, moon roof. the court for the re¹069866 $15,555! tion at the Planning had no d e fault oclief demanded in the w /spare f r on t cl i p ., tires, CD, privacy tintD ivision at n o c o s t curred) and by curing $3950, 541-382-7391 Complaint. NOTICE ing, upgraded rims. a nd ca n b e pur any o t he r de f a ult TO D E F ENDANT: Fantastic cond. $7995 1986 parts car, chased for 25 cents a complained of herein Oregon READ THESE PAContact Tim m at page. The staff rethat is capable of beC hevy L umina 1 9 9 5 $500. Pickups PERS CA RE541-408-2393 for info AutnSource 7-pass. v a n with 'My Little Red Corvette" port should be made ing cured by renderCall for details, or to view vehicle. FULLY! You m u st 541-598-3750 available seven days ing the performance p ower ch a i r lif t , 1996 coupe. 132K, 541-548-6592 "appear" in this case aaaoregonautosource.com Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 prior to the date set r equired under t h e $1500; 1989 Dodge 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. or the other side will 1971 new trans, 2 t he hear i ng. o bligation o r Tr u s t Turbo Va n 7 - pass. $12,500 541-923-1781 win a u t omatically. for new t i r es , new has new motor and Toyota Corolla 2004, Documents are also Deed, and in addition To "appear" you brakes, 2nd owner, auto., loaded, 2 04k a vailable online a t : to paying said sums t rans., $1500. I f i n m ust file w ith t h e Kia Optima EX 2004 r uns/drives g o o d . miles. orig. owner, non court a legal paper t erested c a l l Jay www.co.deschutes.or. or tendering the per2.7L V6, all power Make good w o od smoker, exc. c o nd. called a "motion" or us/cdd/. formance necessary 503-269-1 057. options, moonroof, truck. $2395 O BO Dodge Durango 2004, $6500 Prin e ville "answer." The Bmoto cure the default by LEGAL NOTICE spoiler, leather, 541-350-2859 503-358-8241 Limited, leather, tow paying all costs and tion" or "answer" (or PUBLIC AUCTION Nissan Armada 2007, Infinity AM/FM/CD, pkg. V in ¹ 1 4 2 655. 4x4, tow pkg., pw, pl. "reply") m ust b e expenses actually inAutomobiles Public auction to be alloys, Michelin & Was $14,999. Now given to the c ourt Have an item to held Saturday, Febru- curred in enforcing the V in¹ 7 0 0432. W a s studded tires, $9988 clerk or administraNow ary 16, 2013 at 1:30 obligation and t r ust $17,999, meticulously mainsell quick? tor within 30 days of 7SUBARU. P.M., a t J am i s on deed, together with $13,988. tained $6500 BUBARUOPBBND COM and If it's under the date of first pubStreet Self Storage, Trustee's Bend, 760-715-9123 a ttorney's fees n o t 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Q @ S U B A R U . lication spe c ified 63177 Jamison St., BUBARUOPBRND COM '500 you can place it in 877-266-3821 the herein along w i th B end, O R 977 0 1 . exceeding Chevy Silverado 4x4, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend BMW 328i, 1998, sun- Mitsubishi 3 00 0 amounts provided by Dlr ¹0354 GT The Bulletin the required filing (Unit B-221, F r ank 2001, 2500 HD ext'd 877-266-3821 86.753. In conroof, white/grey interior, 1 999, a u to., p e a r l fee. I t m ust be in Massari) (Unit B-096, ORS cab, 87,600 mi, asking Classifieds for: Dlr ¹0354 all electric, auto trans, w hite, very low m i . p roper form a n d Amanda Baker) (Units struing this notice the $9800. 541-410-6179 c lean, 1 6 8 ,131 mi , $9500. 541-788-8218. have proof of serB -043 & C-01 3 , masculine gender in'10 - 3 lines, 7 days cludes the f e minine $3200. 541-419-6176 Dodge Dakota Club Cab, vice on the plaintiff's Kaidee Pike-Howard). a nd the neuter t h e 4WD SLT, 2001, 4 7L '16- 3 lines, 14 days a ttorney or, i f t h e LEGAL NOTICE singular includes the V8, 5-spd man., canopy, p laintiff d oe s n o t Vehicle? (Private Party ads only) NOTICE extras, 36K miles. KBB, plural, t he word have an a t torney, TRUSTEE'S Call The Bulletin F ord E x p lorer X L T OF SALE "Grantors" i n c ludes $8500; asking $8000. proof of service on and place an ad to2 006, 4x4 , c le a n . Reference is made to 541-923-0286 WHEN YOU SEE THIS any successor in inthe plaintiff. If you day! V in¹ A 1 8448. W a s Porsche Cayenne 2004, that certain trust deed terest to the Grantors have questions, you Ask about our $12,999, Now $7,988. 86k, immac, dealer BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. Oo made b y L i s a M . as well as any other ~ should see an attormaint'd, loaded, now "Whee/ Deal"! Jensen, as grantor, to person owing an oblio wner, e xc . c o n d. ney immediately. If $17000. 503-459-1580 for private party More pi x at j I end b j l e ti ( j . com W estern Title & E s gation, th e p e r forS UBA RU. 101k miles, new tires, y ou need help i n advertisers On a classified ad RUBARUOPBRND COM crow Company, as mance of which is seloaded, sunroof. finding an attorney, Toyota Landcruiser, go to 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend t rustee, in f a vor o f cured by said Trust $8900. 541-706-1897 y ou may call t h e www.bendbulletin.com 877-266-3821 2000, 85K mi, leather, I NNspired, LLC, a n Deed, and the words Ford 250 XLT 1990, Oregon State Bar's Qo tow pkg, beautiful! to view additional Dlr ¹0354 ~ Oregon limited liabil"Trustee" and BBen6 yd. dump bed, Lawyer Ref e rral $17,700. 541-389-3769 photos of the item. ity company as ben- eficiary" include their M orePixatBendbulletin,com 139k, Auto, $5500 Service at F ord F r eestyle S E L (503) eficiary, dated Seprespective s u c ces541-410-9997 684-3763 or toll-free 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, tember 21, 2004 and sors in interest, if any. in Oregon at (800) front 8 side airbags, 25 recorded on June 1, DATED: October 30, 452-7636. The r empg, 3rd row seating, 2010, as I nstrument 2 012. Benjamin M . pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, l ief sought i n t h e No. 2010-21349 of the Kearney, Successor traction control, new tires Complaint i s th e O fficial Records o f T rustee, 8 0 0 Wil & brks, maintained exf oreclosure of t h e Deschutes C o u nty, lamette Street, Suite t remely well, r uns 8 property located at Oregon, covering the 8 00, E ugene, O R drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, 21049 Don Street, Ford F350 Super Duty $7200. 541-604-4166 following d e s cribed 97401, 541-484-0188. • P I• Bend, OR 9 7 701. Ki ng Ra nch 2 0 0 4 , real property situated Date of First PubliDeisel, loaded. Vin¹ in said county a nd cation: January 13, A34788 Was $29,999, state, to-wit: Unit No. 2013. McCarthy & Find It in Now $23,788. 687, Building No. 15, Holthus, LLP, Erica I I I ' Usage Week B, of the The Bulletin Classifieds! S UBA R U . Day, OSB¹ 113653, BUBARUOPBRND COM Inn of t h e S e venth I j I 541-385-5809 9 20 SW 3 r d A v 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend M ountain Cond o enue, First F l oor, GMC Envoy 2002 4WD 877-266-3821 minium, according to Portland, OR 97204, $6,450. Loaded, Dlr ¹0354 the Declaration Phone: (877) PUBLIC NOTICE Leather, Heated thereof executed Feb• t• FORD RANGER X LT 3 69-6122, Ext. seats, Bose sound The Bend Park & Recruary 13, 1970 and 3370, Fax: ( 503) 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 system. Ext. roof rack I I I I recorded in V o lume reation District Board ' Bl I I 694-1460, speed, with car alarm, B I Directors will meet (218) 478-4469 168, Page 886, Deed of eday © mccarthyCD player, extra tires records of Deschutes in a work session and I • ' Bl ' I on rims. Runs good. holthus.com. Of Atregular busi n ess County, Oregon, unI I II I torneys for Plaintiff. Clean. 92,000 miles •t• meeting on Tuesday, I B I I ' / / / der at A uditors File on m o tor. $2600 February 5, 2013, at LEGAL NOTICE No. 467 7 , as OBO. 541-771-6511. I II I I I B I NOTICE OF amended and the District Office, 799 ! ! Columbia, Bend, ELECTION OF supplemented, as le- SW I ' 'I I B regon. Th e w o r k DISTRICT BOARD gally described in at- O GMC Envoy 2005, 4x4, MEMBERS tached Exhibit A. Both session will begin at running boards, tinted 5:30 p.m. a t w h ich Cloverdale Rural Fire I nternational Fla t the Beneficiary and window. Vin¹ 260943. Protection District Bed Pickup 1963, 1 t he T r u stee h a v e time the board will reW as $14,999 N o w Notice is hereby given elected to sell the said ceive applications for t on dually, 4 s p d . $12,688. consideration to fill a trans., great MPG, that on Tuesday, May real property to satv acancy on o n t h e S UBA R U . could be exc. wood 21, 2013, an election isfy th e o b l igations BUBARUOPBRND CON Budget C o m mittee, will be held for t he hauler, runs great, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend secured by said Trust discuss a process for new brakes, $1950. purpose of e l ecting Deed and a Notice of 877-266-3821 filling a vacant posi541-419-5480. two board members to Default has been reDlr ¹0354 tion on the Board of fill the following posic orded pursuant t o D irectors, an d re tions and terms, inOregon Revised Stat- ceive and discuss including any vacancy utes 86.735(3); the formation r e garding which may exist on default for which the the board of Cloverforeclosure is made is s enior c enter s e r vices. The board will dale Rural Fire ProG rantor's failure t o tection District. abide by the obliga- c onvene as a c o n tions set forth in that tract review board at One Director, Position certain Co-Ownership 7:00 p.m. and conNo. 4, 4-year term. A greement Es t a b- duct a public hearing pursuant t o ORS One Director, Position lishing Fractional InThe Central Oregon Builders Association No. 5, 4-year term. t erests dated S e p - 2 79A & C t o h e a r public testimony and (COBA) presents the Remodeling Design tember 21, 2004, and The election will be entered into between consider findings of It Outdoor Living Show just in time for and conclusion of conducted by mail. Grantor and Benefi- fact law to support the use ciary, including the autumn and winter home improvements. C o n stitution Each candidate for an obligation to pay fees of th e Manager/General This guide features information about office l i sted a b o ve and assessments set Contractor (CM/GC) must file a d e clara- f orth therein i n t h e the vendors at the show, and is a process for the Colotion of candidacy or total am o un t of handy resource for finding local home petition for n omina- $29,957.45, including rado Dam construcproject. A b usition for office with the special assessments tion improvement experts and products for the ness meeting will be County Clerk of Desof $17,370.00 as of conducted i m m edichutes County, OrSeptember 30, 2012 home throughout the year. Tuesday, August 20 egon, not later than and regular assess- a tely f o llowing t h e board the 61st day before ments of $12,587.45 contract review hearing. the date of the reguas of September 21, public Agenda items include: lar district e lection. 2012. By reason of of The filing deadline is 5 said default, the Ben- consideration p m o n M a rch 2 1 , eficiary has declared R esolution No. 3 5 0 2013. all sums owing on the adopting the Comprej(PQI)II)S hensive Plan obligation secured by Amendment, apFiling forms are avail- said Trust Deed imWr wrB If you're working hard just to make uc able at the Deschutes m ediately du e a n d proval of m emoran1GIIu dum of understanding ends meet and have one or more County Clerk's office, payable, said sums w ith B e n d Pa d d le 1300 NW Wall Street, being the f ollowing, children living with you, you may Trail Alliance, and a Suite 202, Bend, Orto-wit: $29,957.45, The NatureOf WOrdSannual literaryfeStival discussion about qualify for the EITC. Think of jt as egon 97701 and onplus all interest, late line a t www . d es- charges, fees and as- partnership fundraisa reWard far dOing One of life'S mOSt celebrates the literary arts in Central chutes.org/clerk. s essments that b e - ing agreements. The beautiful, most important and most board will meet in exOregon during a multi-day event each come due after the Nancy Blankenship loving jobs. Visit our Web site or dates set forth above ecutive session i mautumn. The event features authors, mediately f o l lowing Deschutes County and prior to the sale. ask your tax preparer jf you qualify. Clerk seminars, workshops and contests. W HEREFORE, no - the business session ORS tice is hereby given pursuant t o Because when itcomes to LEGAL NOTICE Throughout the year, The Nature of 192.660(2)(h) for the R 'A that the undersigned NOTICE OF PUBLIC getting more for your family, Trustee will on April 2, purpose of consulting Words, as an organization, supports HEARING with legal counsel re2013, at the hour of consider it done. garding current litigacreative writing t hrough o utreach The Deschutes 11:30 o'clock A.M., in tion or litigation likely A message from the County B o ar d of accord with the stan- to be filed. The Febprograms for both students and adults Internal Revenue Service. C ommissioners w i l l dard of t ime estabruary 5, 2013, agenda in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words by ORS hold a de novo Public lished and meeting report is 187.110, at the Deswww.irs.gov/eitc Hearing on Monday, guide is distributed to all Bulletin readers on t he chutes County Court- posted February 25, 2013, at webs i te: h ouse steps, 1 1 64 District's as well as those who attend the annual 10:00 a.m. in the Dewww.bendparksan~ The I n t e r n a l schutes County Board NW Bond, in the City d rec.org. For m o re Friday, October 25 literary event. of Bend, County of of Com m issioners information call gg/J Revenue service Hearing R oo m at Deschutes, Oregon, 541-389-7275.
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REMODELING DESIGN & OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW ONE-STOP SHOPPINGFOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION
The Earned Income Tax Credit. You may have earned it. Why not claim it?
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THEGUIDETOCENTRALOREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
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LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E STATE O F O RE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, FEDERAL N A T IONAL M ORTGAG E ASSOCIATION
1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, to t ake testimony on the following
Legal Notices