Bulletin Daily Paper 02-03-15

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TUESDAY February 3,2015

Serving Central Oregon since190375

AT HOME • INSIDE

in er-inuSe SOu SPus:, IN SPORTS:FROMWORICERATA FAST-FOODJOINTTo A SUPERBOWLHERO, C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Small-school powerIn just four seasons, Trinity Lutheran has grown into a Class1A girls hoops powerhouse.C1

ew aem session, o i t: ems Lis in oweremissions By Taylor W.Anderson

the line if it passes.

The Bulletin

The low-carbon fuel

gon Democrats have

program would lower the carbon inten-

placed a controversial

sity of the state's

SALEM — Ore-

Ramdlin' Vans —Bend company offers vacation rentals — on wheels.C6

Plus: Craft deer contro-

and newly amended low-carbon fuel standard bill early on the 2015 legislative schedule despite Republican threats to block other

important bills down

standard would have re-

standards and included

quired lower carbon by 2020. The state would

a provision to end the program Dec. 31, 2015,

Inside

also include new

before fuels are actually

measures to prevent costs from rising out of con-

changed. Democrats are now considering

• More fuel supply 10 session percent by 2025, news,B3 trol in the latest according to an amended version version of the bill. of the bill, and seeks to The state in 2009 lower greenhouse gas passed a bill to study emissions. The previous the impacts of the new

removing that sunset,

sending lobbyists and other residents to the Capitol to argue over the merits of the bilL

See Emissions /A5

• Reinstated timber payments, wildfire funding andgrousemoney

VerSy? —A Budweiser Super Bowl commercial takes a swipe at craft beer drinkers.C6

By Andrew Clevenger

WhychusCreek —The

The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — The 2016 budget released Monday by the White House calls for the reauthorization

dam is gone,butmuchwork remains along the creekupstream of Sisters.B1

Plus: Sheriff successor — Search for a newDeschutes County sheriff nearing the finish line.B1

of timber payments, funds sage grouse conservation efforts and treats the largest wildfires as natural

disasters. The spending initiatives are all familiar to Central Oregon. The Secure Rural Schools program, which compensated timbered counties for harvest declines on federal lands, led to more than $2.8 billion in pay-

in e aceo ra e

ments to Oregon counties from its creation in 2000

Strippefs' working

conditions —Someof Or-

egon's seasonedstrippers are lobbying lawmakers for better working conditions.B3

Kim Banner

until it lapsed at the end of September. Earlier this year, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell

helps her

issued an executive order, instructing federal land

daughter,

managers to work with local officials to develop a science-based strategy for minimizing the de-

Brooke Twy-

And a Wed exclusive-

man, 11, with homework at their home

Does public radio sound too "white"? NPRitself is trying to find the answer. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

in Bend on Wednesday evening. Banner recently

EDITOR'5CHOICE

SuperBowl ads show it's cool to

bea dad

structive effects of rangeland wildfires on the sage

grouse's dwindling habitat. SeeBudget/A5

Secure Rural Schools — Theprogram, which

nity College Scholarship for the second time.

'lt <

( ~/

\

would need to bereauthorized by Congress, would receive $190 million in funding for 2016, down from its previous level of $300 million but much higher than the $50.4 million timber counties stand to receive in 2015without the program.

r

Joe Kline The Bulletin

Sage grOuSeCOnSerVatiOn —TheBureau of

By Jasmine Rockow

With the help of her friends, family and teachers, Banner,

The Bulletin

swiftly text my pops, sans

with their four children.

WASHINGTON-

Few things are more heart-punching than a dad with tears in his eyes. The Super Bowl Toyota Camry commercial featuring a weepy father wishing his military-bound daughter

But then tragedy struck, not

context: "LOVE YOU, DADDY" — and reflect on

once but three times. Within

the perception of fatherhood in American culture.

one year, Banner lost her mother to cancerand herfianceto

Involved dads are so hot

right now, as evidenced by the parade of painfully adorablecommercials

aired during television's biggest night. Does this

Land Management, the U.S.Fishand Wildlife Service and the U.S.Geological Survey would receive $80 million to continue coordinating habitat protection efforts. Most of that money, $60 million, goes to the BLM, up from $15million for the program in

• COCC scholarship recipient hopes to open her own preschool

farewell compelled me to

The Washington Post

IMPACT ONCENTRAL OREGON The 2016 budget submitted by President Barack Obama onMonday includes increased funding for several initiatives that would affect Central Oregon.

eu

received the Betty Gray Early Childhood Education Commu-

One year ago, Kim Banner 34, and her children are movand Ryan Olson had their life ing forward. In November, together planned out. They the Oregon Community Founwere engaged, both goingto dation awarded Banner her school to become teachers. second Betty Gray Early ChildThey lived in Bend, Banner hood Education Community pursuing an early childhood College Scholarship. She plans education degree at Central Or- to graduate at the end of this egon Community College while term with her associate degree, Olson worked toward his teach- after which she hopes to open a ing credentials. They planned preschool in Bend. "I'm still going to continue to eventually move to Wyoming

By Danielle Paquette

PRESIDENT'S BUDGET

complications with diabetes,

and she watched her 11-yearold daughter fight (and ultimately win) a harrowing battle with leukemia.

on with the dreams that we had and become a teacher,"

Banner said. "I still feel like that's important to do. Keep going forward." The first blow came in December 2013, when her mother, VoyAnn Jones, was diagnosed with terminal liver and colon cancer. Two months later, Ban-

ner's daughter, Brooke Twyman, came down with a cough. "The doctor immediately said

2015.

we need to do some testing,"

Wildfire funding —Thebudget proposesto

Banner said. "Theyknewright away that she had cancer."

treat the biggest wildfires as natural disasters and sets aside $1.1billion — $900 million for the U.S. Forest Service, $200 million for the BLM — topay for fighting them. This frees upthe agencies' funds for other programs, including fire prevention.

Brooke was airlifted to

Doernbecher Children's Hospital in Portland that same day. There, Banner learned Brooke

had acute myeloid leukemia, a deadly cancer of the blood and bone marrow. Brooke went through four rounds of chemotherapy over six months, each consisting of 21 doses over 10 days, Banner

ANALYSIS

Inbudget,Obama makeshiscasefor spreadingthewealth

said. Banner moved to Portland with 8-month-old daugh-

ter Aubree. Olson stayed home with Dakota, 14, and Blake, 4, and came to visit them on

weekends. SeeResilience/A5

gentle domination reflect a

broader cultural shift? By Julie Hirschfeld Davis

The data on fatherhood

in America suggests there's something changing, as the traditional idea of a dad

is shifting from merely "responsible" to "emotionally

New York Times News Service

Solution for missingjets is elusive

invested." Maybe a little

By Alan Levin

keeps tabs on airliners

manly tenderness is good for the economy. Working fathers who

Bloomberg News

to find them if they

WASHINGTONThe solution seemed

crash. Almost a year after

prioritize their kids might

simple after a Malaysia Air jet vanished last

the jet disappeared, however, regulators, safety advocates and the airline industry

locationofcrashes,as well as beefed-up flight

still can't agree on

data for investigators.

be better at their jobs: A paper published this month in Academy of Management Perspectives finds

year over the Indian

Ocean: expand the use of technology that

what to do. The U.S. National Transportation Safety

An industry task force and the United Nations' aviation arm plan to

Board has recommended tamper-proof

meet this week to consider proposed tracking

devices to transmit the

options that, at least initially, don't include that.

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama presented a budget Monday that is more utopian vision than pragmatic blueprint. It proGraphic poses a politically improbable reshaping of the tax code and generinside • Pleces of the budget pieA4

ous new social sPending initiatives

that would shift resources from the wealthy to the middle class.

Absent from the plan is any pretense of trying to address the main drivers of the long-term debt — Social Security and Medicare — a quest that has long dividedboth parties and ultimately proved impossible. SeeObama/A4

SeeJets/A3

"the more time fathers

spend with their children on a typical day, the more satisfied they are with their

jobs" and the less likely they want to leave their

companies. SeeDads /A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Periods of rain High 46, Low34 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 S n B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

AnIndependent

C1 4 D6

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

vol. 113, No. 34,

5 sections

0

88 267 0 23 29


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resi en ea srues onco e iono a a By David E. Sanger

became public. Obama publicly ordered the WASHINGTON — A year end of the monitoring of Chanafter President Barack Obama cellor Angela Merkel of Gerordered modest changes in many, saying he had known how the nation's intelligence nothing about the effort — an agencies collect and hold data admission that revealed the on Americans and foreigners, White House was not reviewt he administration wil l a n - ing NSA activities the way, for nounce new rules requiring example, it annually reviews intelligence analysts to de- covert actions around the lete private information they world by the CIA. may incidentally collect about The timing of the announce-

the names of leaders whom the White House plans to keep monitoring — will r emain secret.

Americans that has no intelli-

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gence purpose, and to delete similar information about foreigners within five years. The new rules to be announced today will also insti-

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tutionalize a r egular W hite

In its announcement, the administration will also make

modest changes in the use of national security letters, a disputed law enforcement pro-

gram that Obama declined to terminate. In national security-related

cases, the FBI uses the letters

companies, including telephone records or the names of visit the White House, where a subscribers. Unlike a subpoelong-debated arrangement for na, no judge is involved; the greater intelligence sharing FBI issues the letters by itself, between the countries is ex- usually requiring that the refore Merkel is scheduled to

House-led review of the Na- pected to be discussed. tional Security Agency's monO bama ha s n e ver s a i d itoring of foreign leaders. Un- whom, beyond Merkel, he til the disclosures in 2013 by took off the list of foreign leadEdward Snowden, the former ers whose conversations are NSA contractor whose trove monitored, but it appeared of intelligence documents is that programs in Mexico and still leaking into public view, Brazil continued, while sevthere was n o c o ntinuing eral dozen leaders have been White House assessment of removed. "There's now a process in whether the intelligence garnered from listening to scores place that the National Secuof leaders around the world rity Council runs," said one

cipients never disclose the let-

was worth the potential em-

senior official. But the results

barrassmentifthe programs

of that process — especially

ten justification for continued secrecy.

ters' existence.

In the new rules, "the FBI

will now presumptively terminate National Security Letter n ondisclosure orders at t h e

earlierof three years" after the opening of an investigation, the administration will announce, or at the close of the investigations. But an exception can be made if a midlevel FBI official offers a writ-

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Groundhog ClubhandlerRonPlouchaholdsPunxsutawney Phil, the weather-prognosticating groundhog, during the129th celebration of Groundhog Day on Gobbl er'sKnob in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, on Monday. Phil's handlers said the groundhog hasforecast six more weeks of winter weather. Members of the top hat-wearing Inner Circle announced the "prediction" Monday morning. A German legendhas it that if a furry rodent sees

his shadow onFeb. 2,winter will last another six weeks. If not, spring comesearly. The forecast was also announced onTwitter, as was referenced in the official proclamation read by Jeff Lundy, the FairWeatherman of the Inner Circle. "Forecasts abound onthe Internet, but, I, Punxsutawney Phil am still your best bet. Yes, ashadow I see, you can start to Twitter, hash tag: Six moreweeks of winter!" — The Associated Press

All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem Communicationsinc., 1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Death toll from GMignition switches is now at least 5'1some ; wait for payments By Tom Krisher

Biros said, but it could take un-

The Associated Press

D ETROIT —

til late spring to sort through all T h e f a m i - of the paperwork.

lies of 51 people who died in crashes caused by faulty ignition switches in small General Motors cars will get payments from a company fund, but others will have to wait months for decisions on thousands of new

daims. Compensation expert KennethFeinberg hasalso deemed 77 people injured in crashes as eligible for payments from the

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

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

t a Q>e Q asQ saQ ss Q»Q The estimated jackpot is now $9.4 million.

Al-Jazeera reporter's release —Al-Jazeerajournalist Peter Greste expressed "relief and excitement" Monday at being freed after more than ayear in an Egyptian prison, but also said hefelt real stress over leaving his two jailed colleagues behind. His first public comments came as a court in Egypt sentenced183 people to death in the violence following the 2013ouster of former President Mohammed Morsi in the latest in a series of harsh punishments that have drawn condemnation at home and abroad. Greste, an Australian, told Al-Jazeera English heexperienced a"real mix of emotions" when he was freed Sundaybecausefellow journalists Mohamed Fahmy,an Egyptian Canadian,and BaherMohammed, anEgyptian,remained imprisoned on terrorism charges andfor spreading false information. The three werearrested in December 2013 and received sentences of seven to10 years before their convictions were overturned onappeal. A retrial began Jan. 1. Ukralllo —As Ukrainian troops fought Monday to defend a strategic railway hub, Russian-backedseparatists pledged to boost the size of their force andWashington pondered whether to expand its assistance to Ukraine to include lethal aid. President BarackObamahas so far opposed sending lethal assistance, but an upsurge in fighting in eastern Ukraine hasspurred the White House to take afresh look at supplying Ukraine with such aid, asenior administration official said. Since the unrest in eastern Ukraine surgedanew in early January, the separatists havemadenotable strides in clawing territory away from the government in Kiev. Their main offensive is now directed at Debaltseve — agovernment-held railway junction once populated by 25,000 people that lies between the rebel-held cities of Luhanskand Donetsk. Almost 2,000 residents havefled in the last few days alone.

'Suge' Knight Charged —Formerhip-hop music mogulMarion "Suge" Knight was charged Mondaywith murder and attempted murder after he struck two menwith his pickup truck last week. Prosecutors allege that Knight intended to run down afriend and another manafter anargument on a movie set. Oneof the menwas killed. Attorney JamesBlatt says Knight accidentally ran over the men Thursday as hetried to escape a vicious attack. He turned himself in to police Friday. Knight's initial bail of $2 million was revoked Monday after a court commissioner agreedwith authorities that he was a potential flight risk and could intimidate witnesses. Theruling came after homicide detectives told the bail commissioner that the 49-year-old founder of DeathRow Records could face alengthy prison sentence because of a violent criminal past and had the potential to intimidate witnesses, LosAngeles County sheriff's spokeswoman Nicole Nishida said. MSSSISS VBCClh8tlOIIS —The politics of medicine, morality and free will have collided in anemotional debate overvaccines andthe government's place in requiring them, posing achallenge for Republicans who find themselves in the familiar but uncomfortable position of reconciling modern science with the skepticism of their core conservative voters. As the latest measles outbreak raises alarm, and parents who havedecided not to vaccinate their children face growing pressure to do so, the national debate is forcing the Republican Party's 2016 presidential hopefuls to confront questions about whether it is in the public's interest to allow parents to decide for themselves. Gov. Chris Christie's trade mission visit to London wassuddenly overshadowed Mondayafter he was quoted as saying that parents "need to havesomemeasure of choice" about vaccinating their children against measles. TheNewJersey governor, who is trying to establish his credibility among conservatives as he weighs a run for the Republican nomination in 2016, later tried to temper his response. His office released astatement clarifying that "with a disease like measles there is noquestion kids should be vaccinated." — From wire reports

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JaPaneSe hOStageS —Kenji Goto's words, now more than four yearsold,havetakenona new poignancy."Closingmyeyesand holding still. It's the end if I get mad orscream. It's close to a prayer. Hate is not for humans. Judgment lies with God.That's what I learned from my Arabic brothers and sisters." That tweet from Sept. 7, 2010, has beenembraced bysocial media users as afitting memorial to the 47-year-old freelance journalist. It had 20,000 retweets by Monday, and was being repeated byothers by the minute. Early Sunday, news emerged that Goto hadbeenkilled by extremists of the Islamic State group after efforts to secure his release from months of captivity failed. His reported death followed that of another Japanesehostage, adventurer HarunaYukawa, whowas also being held by the militants.

fund, which received at least

4,180 claims by a Saturday deadline, including more than 1,100 in the past week.

But attorneys, lawmakers they can sue General Motors Co., the new company that emerged from bankruptcy prowith Feinberg rather than run tection in July 2009. the risk that they would not be The bankruptcy agreement able to sue GM because of its sends claims from pre-bank2009bankruptcy agreement. ruptcy crashes to "Old GM," Camille Biros, deputy ad- which has few assets. Some ministrator of the fund who lawyers are seeking to overhas worked with Feinberg to turn that, claiming that GM decompensate victims of the 9/11 ceived the bankruptcy court by terrorist attacks and the BP oil hiding the switch defect. GM spill, said the last-minute flurry has askedthe court to enforce of activity is common in com- the bankruptcy order, and a pensation cases. She says the hearing is scheduled for later number of claims could rise, this week. because those filed by mail had Ken Rimer, whose 18-yearto be postmarked by Jan. 31. old stepdaughter, Natasha More death and i njury Weigel, was killed with two claims are likely to be granted, other women in a 2006 Cobalt and at least one familymember say some wereforced to settle

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crash in Wisconsin, felt the legal system was stacked against his family, almost forcing them

GM was aware of faultyigni- into a "take-it-or-leave-it" situation switches on Chevrolet Co- tion with Feinberg. balts and other small cars for The family, he said, was not more than a decade, but it did sure if the bankruptcy rulnot recall them until 2014. On ing would prevent a lawsuit 2.6 million GM vehicles world- against the new General Mowide, the switches can slip out tors. Also, the case could have of the "on" position, causing the been caught up in the federcars to stall, knocking out pow- al court system, avoiding a er steering and turning off the hometown jury. Then it would airbags. be returned to Wisconsin to P laintiffs a t t orneys a n d set damages, and he says that some lawmakers have said state has a cap on the amount the fund deadline should have that canbe awardedin a child's been extended because vic- death. "You either take it or you're tims do not know yet whether

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done," he said. "That was our

b est opportunity with t h e cards that we had been dealt."

Once he got to Feinberg, though, he felt the family was treated fairly. The family has notdisclosedhow much money it received. Bob Hilliard, a Texas attor-

ney who representedWeigel's family and has more than 1,100 other clients suing GM, said

there was no way he could advise those with post-bankruptcy crashes to reject Feinberg's offers. "You're not playing at a fair

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, Feb. 3, the 34th

day of 2015. Thereare331 days left in the year.

TRENDING

HAPPENINGS

'LNB OVB BB Bl'

Budget talk —TheSenate Budget Committee holds a hearing on President Barack Obama'sbudgetproposal.A1

HISTORY HighlightIn1865, President Abraham LincolnandConfederate VicePresidentAlexander Stephensheld ashipboard peace conference off the Virginia coast; the talks deadlockedover the issue ofSouthern autonomy. In1783,Spain formally recognized Americanindependence.

A recent sur vey by Nielsen found that 1 in 10 people in the U.S. eats snacks instead of meals. The generational uptick in snacking is a big reason Hershey got into the jerky business, agreeing last week to purchase upscale meat snack maker Krave.

In1913,the16th Amendment to ratified. In1924, the 28th president of

BIRTHDAYS ComedianShelley Bermanis 90. Football Hall ofFamerFran Tarkenton is75. Actress Bridget Hanley is74.Actress Blythe Danner is72.Singer Dennis Edwards is72. Football Hallof Famer BobGriese is70. Actress Morgan Fairchild is 65.Actor Nathan Laneis59.Rockmusician LeeRanaldo(Sonic Youth) is 59. ActorWarwick Davisis 45. ActressElisa Donovanis44. ReggaetonsingerDaddyYankee is 39. MusicianGrant Barry is 38. Singer-songwriter JessicaHarp is 33. Actor MatthewMoyis 31. Actress RebelWilson is 29. Rapper SeanKingston is 25. — From wire reports

" . ;

' •

Jim Wilson /The New YorkTimes file photo

Krave-brand jerky is cut up inSonoma, California, last year. The Hershey Co., the maker of Hershey's Kisses,Reese's Peanut Butter Cups and other candies, plans to buy Krave,the Sonoma company intent on turning jerky into the next upscale snack food.

By Roberto A. Ferdman

world's most promising foodThe Washington Post stuffs: jerky. Beef jerky is big business, The market for jerky has and Hershey wants in. ballooned into a nearly $1.5 The international chocolate billion industry in the Unitgiant announced last week ed States. Sales are up by 13 it has agreed to purchase percent since 2013 and by 46 upscale meat snack maker percent since 2009, according Krave for as much as $300 to datafrom market research million. The deal is unprece- firm IRI. Jack Link's, the largdentedforHershey, because it est jerky maker in America, marks the first time Hershey now sells more than $1 billion has purchased a company in meat snacks each year. that doesn't sell candy, chocoThe demand for dried meat late or other sweets. has risen to such heights that On the surface, it's fairly i t now dwarfs that of o t heasy to see why Hershey, let er once comparable snacks. alone any company interested A recent report by m a rket in a half-decent investment, research f i r m Eur o m oniwould want to acquire Krave. tor found that jerky outsells The high-end snack compa- seeds, party mixes and pita ny, which prides itself on its chips — combined. lineup of beef jerky offerings The rise of dried meat is with no artificial ingredients, in part the result of a generclosed 2014 with $36 million al uptick in snacking among in sales after only five years Americans. The U.S. snacks in business. The jerky's color- business, which includes not ful packaging, which enclos- only jerky, but also chips, es a variety of flavors, will bars,nuts and other fare, is soon be found at Starbucks now a $120 billion behemoth. restaurants across the coun- Pepsi now relies on snackstry. And it i s anticipated to not soda — for growth. And continue growing — and fast. it's easy to see why. A recent Jon Sebastiani, the compa- survey by Nielsen found that ny's founder, said he expects 1 in 10 people in this counKrave to more than double its try will eat snacks instead of business next year. meals, a number which the But acquiring Krave offers research company expects Hershey more than merely will increase. the opportunity to share in But jerky's popularity also the company's success. It also, owes a great deal to this counand perhaps more important- try's obsession with protein. ly, ushers the chocolate giant More than half of Ameriinto one of the savory snack cans say they want more of

it in their diet, and they have

Jets

They include a goal for all planes to transmit their lo-

Continued fromA1 In many ways, the lack of agreement illustrates the com-

plexity of a global aviation system that moves 9 million people every day over and between nations using 100,000 planes with varying technological capabilities. "We've got an airplane missing. There's a lot of con-

By Michael Christie Special to The Washington Post

Agoraphobia, from the Greek agora for marketplace, today afflicts 3.2 million adult Americans, a number no doubt underestimated because agoraphobics are notoriously hard to count. Originally conceived as the fear of wide-open spaces, the condition once conjured Munch's (an agoraphobic himself) "The Scream": a weakened individual cowering in the frenetic mod-

moment, whipping over the globe faster and freer than wind or electronic money. A recent study confirms the

actual dangerousness of our lives is decreasing, but our fear of crime is steadily rising. It's the Islamic State, Eb-

ola, illegal immigrants, extreme weather events, IEDs, toxins and terror. It courses

through our networks and vaults from our screens to

infectour defenselessheads. How afraid ought one be of bad neighborhoods or ern city. This definition has bee-slaughtering pesticides since mutated. Today, it's or Russian dirty bombs or understood as the endgame slushy ice caps? Who could of panic anxiety disorder, ever really hope to answer the fear of one's own fear re- that question? sponse — being driven mad by the inescapable thunder Rising cultural fear of a panic attack. Because of Reasonable concern is a this fear, agoraphobics map scarce commodity in our out safe zones (their homes, hyperventilated I nte r net usually) and retreat into pri- world. Anyone who's stayed vate worlds, which can be- up watching the Dopplercome prisons. ized formation of another Darwin had it. Dido has mega-superstorm that fizit. Emily Dickinson and Kim zled by morning, or who's Basinger, too. It's been called begun looking up a minor "GretaGarbo Syndrome" af- medical symptom and found ter the actress who holed up themselves self-diagnosing

the U.S.Constitution, providing for afederal incometax, was the UnitedStates, Woodrow Wilson, died inWashington, D.C., atage 67. In1930,the chiefjustice of the United States,William Howard Taft, resigned forhealth reasons. (He diedjust over amonth later) In1943,during World WarII, the U.S. transport shipDorchester, which wascarrying troops to Greenland,sankafter being hit by aGermantorpedo; of the more than900menaboard,onlysome 230survived. In1959,rock'n' roll stars Buddy Holly, RitchieValensandJ.P. "The BigBopper" Richardson diedin a smallplanecrash near Clear Lake,lowa. AnAmerican Airlines LockheedElectra crashed intoNewYork's East River, killing 65 ofthe 73people onboard. In1966,the Soviet probeLuna 9becamethe first man-made object to make asoft landingon the moon. In1972,the XIOlympic Winter Gamesopenedin Sapporo, Japan. In19N, Alfredo Stroessner, president ofParaguayfor more than threedecades,wasoverthrownin a military coup. In1994,the spaceshuttle Discovery lifted off, carrying Sergei Krikalev,the first Russian cosmonaut toflyaboard a U.S. spacecraft. In1998,Texasexecuted Karla FayeTucker,38, for thepickax killings of twopeoplein1983; she was the first woman executedin the UnitedStatessince1984. A U.S. Marineplanesliced through the cable of aski gondola in Italy, sending thecar plunging hundreds of feet, killing all20 people inside. Ten yearsage: Alberto Gonzales won Senate confirmation asattorney general.Aninterim report detailed conflicts of interestand flawedmanagementinthe U.N. oil-for-food program. An Afghan passengerIet carrying104 people crashedeast of Kabul,killing all on board. FiveyearsagLA suicide bomber killedsevenpeople in northwestern Pakistan, including three U.S.soldiers. Motivational speaker JamesArthur Ray was arrested onmanslaughter charges after threepeople died following anorthern Arizona sweatlodgeceremonyhe'dled in Oct. 2009. (Raywasconvicted of threecounts of negligent homicide andspent nearly two years in prison.) ActressFrances Reid, 95, died inLos Angeles. Oneyear ~e: U.S.stockstumbled, pushingtheDowJones industrial averagedownmore than 320points after reports of sluggish U.S.growth addedto investor worriesabout theglobal economy.FormerVice President Walter Mondale'swife, Joan, died in St.Paul, Minnesota,at age 83.

'Agoraphobia'rises with the digital age

safety initiatives'?" asked John

Cox, chief executive officer of aviation consulting company Safety Operating Systems. It's hard to see the safety benefits of requiring more position reports, he said. Inmarsat, the satellite com-

pany that has been part of the team trying piece together the whereabouts of the Malaysia Air flight, said it's a mistake to view tracking as simply a troversy. There's this push to response to that one plane's do something," said Thomas disappearance. Haueter, the former chief of Increased position reportaviation investigations at the ing may allow air-traffic agenU.S. National Transportation cies to bring planes closer to-

proved the talk isn't cheap.

The protein shake business has become a b ehemoth. So, too, has the protein bar

market, which was already worth more than $500 million in 2013. Sales of health and wellness bars, which often

dangle high protein content, are growing more than twice as fast as the overall food industry. Beef jerky, which is high in protein, low in calories and highly portable, can last for a long time and has benefited greatly from its ability to double as both a practical and healthy snack. "A recent trend among consumers of viewing protein as

in her New York apartment

a rare cancer after just 10

for almost 50 years with

minutes of clicking, knows

only her famous declaration "I just want to be alone" to

what I m ean. And u nlike

guard her door. Lately, I've been noticing how much harder it is to get people I know to leave their neighborhoods. To put down their phones. To read or watch or listen to things they don't already know they'll enjoy. It's not just my sphere; Americans at large are more

true agoraphobics, we enjoy the fear. Its seduction keeps us clicking and reading and w atching. A m ericans e x -

press widespread fear of natural disasters, but few

households actually have emergency kits. What effect does this ris-

ing cultural fear bath have? We overanticipate. Put on isolated than ever, and more our headphones and close anxious, across many dispa- our personal borders, lest a rate groups: children, soldiers, stranger engage us in any college students, women. We way. We clutch our phones increasingly fear things we (which might be increasing have no reasonable cause to our anxiety), read books fear. While the number of

dinically diagnosable ago-

we're sure we'll like, listen to voices with which we're

sure to agree and sink into something that reeks of ago- isolation as real as my mothraphobiaseems tobepresent- er's, even if the root of it is ing itself all around me. different. Each day, we wake raphobics hasn't increased,

Face ofagoraphobia I know what it looks like.

up with the realm of safety whittled a little smaller, the

borders of our own private

Hershey's acquisition of Krave is a v i ndication of both beef jerky's popularity

My mother's agoraphobia began in her early 20s. It started after a panic attack while she was driving. First she stopped using highways; then she avoided left turns. After that came a gradual narrowing. Friends and hobbies that required outward ventures were scuttled. Her

and still n ascent potential.

interests migrated indoors:

again. After trips to the gro-

The move creates a natural

reading, art, crafts, cooking.

avenue into a coveted food

By the time I was about 5, she didn't leave our house if

cery store, she would relate enthusiastic stories about

an effective appetite suppres-

sant and energy booster has further helped jerky to be perceived as a smart snacking option," Euromonitor notes in its report.

space the company has yet to explore: salty snacks. It also allows Hershey to experiment with a brand that

is recognized for eschewing price point for the quality, which,though the company might disagree, isn't exactly what people associated with

its chocolate bars.

cation at least once every 15

minutes during flights over oceans or remote regions, and once perminute during emergencies, according to an ICAO outline of the measures. The NTSB, which issued

its own recommendations to the FAA on Jan. 22 for locating aircraft after accidents,

wants to go even further by mandating tamper-resistant tracking technology and flight data transmissions during emergencies.

er. Outside is disease, bombs, inequality, crime, risk. Inside is warmth, screens, comfort,

Amazon packages, plenty, health, safety. Before her death, through

therapy and small acts of daily bravery, my mother was able to hold a job and to drive

all of the marvelous people she could help it. At school, and things she'd encounI'd hear about "vacations" tered. And I think we could from my classmates and had all learn a little from her. trouble parsing the idea. For- No matter how isolated and get airplanes or road trips fearful we become, we must — my mother couldn't leave stretch our boundaries. We our neighborhood without must continue to value bravrisking seismic panic. ery and good faith, to aspire She died five years ago, to be a people who would but I see my mother in every- rather assume the essentially one lately. On Instagram, my safety of the world and risk friends' gazes have turned getting hurt than live our inward: to their food, their lives in cowering safety. We dwellings, themselves. And don't have agoraphobia; we who can blame them'? Anxi- should stop acting like we do. ety and fear are the defining — Christie is the author emotions of this historical

of the novel "If IFall, IfIDie."

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gether on ocean routes, where ing Task Force wanted to they are now kept as far as 50 start with technology that is Not allcarriers are equipped miles apart, said Mary Mc- already aboard many longto send position reports via Millan, vice president for avi- range airliners and can be eassatellite and new technology ation safety and operational ily adopted, the group said in may soon overtake the need services at London-based In- its report. "You do what you can when forsuch reports.Some airlines marsat. Closer spacing allows also are questioning whether airlines to fly more efficient you can," said Perry Flint, a the firstdisappearance of a routesand save fuel,she said. spokesman for the Internapassenger flight in more than Aircraft-tracking proposals tional Air Transport Asso50 years justifies the cost of a developedby a task force of in- ciation, the trade group that technology overhaul. dustry groups will be consid- helped lead the task force. "If we spend a significant ered at the U.N. International "The fact is that no airline ever amount of money for each of Civil Aviation Organization's wants to have an airplane disthe operators for tracking, is it safety c o nference s t arting appear again with no idea of at the expense of more needed Monday in Montreal. what happened to it."

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

Obama

Revenue

The president's dudgetproposal

Continued from A1 The document instead indi-

catesthat Obama, after years of being hemmed in on his fis-

President Barack Obamasubmitted a budget proposal to Congress. The budget proposes almost $4 trillion in spending, and includes spending and revenue estimates for possible immigration reform.

Spending Mandatory spending Immigration reform

Other Income tax

cal priorities because of politics

and balance sheets, feels newly free to outline an ambitious set

Payroll taxes

2016presidential election.

$1.1 trillion

Revenue: $3.5 trillion

$283 billion

OieeretIeaary spending Defense $605 billion

L

Non-defense

$563 billion

Deficit: $474 billion Medicaid

can have big philosophical arguments about the role of government, and perhaps in 2016

Interest on debt

Other $662 billion

$112 billion

of a debatebetween Democrats and Republicans and shape the

with me oryou're not,'and we

$1.6 trillion

Excise taxes~

Spending: $3.9 trillion

of goals that will set the terms

"It's a visionary document and basically says, 'You're

$8 billion

Immigration reform $179 biilion

$351 billion

t

Source: White House

we will," said Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Prioritiesand a former top economic

Corporate tax

Medicare

$473 billion

$583 billion $938 billion

So c ial Security Tribune News Service/© 2014

adviser to Vice President Joe Biden.

The budget reflects the degree to which Obama emerged from last year's midterm congressional election losses determined to dig in — rather than

scale back — on his belief that the government should play a fundamental role in spreading economic prosperity throughout the country. Badly losing the midterm elections "has led them to get outside of a pretty narrow box they were trapped in, and they're thinking far more broadly and creatively about ways in which policy can help reconnect economic growth and middle-class prosperity,"

Low Prices.

Bernstein said. "They're fram-

ing a debate with bigger fish in mind than an annual budget. They're thinking pretty energetically about what ought to be done, versus what can be done."

The result is Republicans have dismissed Obama's budget as dead on arrival, branding it as a tired retread of job-killing, big-spending policieshe and hisparty havelong favored.

~50 ar

"Today President Obama

laid out a plan for more taxes, more spending and more of the Washington gridlock that has failed middle-class families," Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Monday. "It may be Groundhog Day, but the American people can't afford

mare

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down policies of the past." But several potential contenders for the 2016 Republican

presidential nomination — induding former Gov. Jeb Bush

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wealthy and large financial institutions over the next decade. There are some glimpses of potential common ground in the blueprint, including a proposalforthe kind of corporate

taxoverhaul andinfrastructure plan for which Republicans have previously expressed support. A six-year $478 billion plan to build and improve transit, roads an d

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discretion. Yet the budget confirms that

forObama, theeraofsearching for a "grand bargain" with Republicans on entitlements and spending is over.

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Entitlement programs would

rise from 13.2 percent of the economy this year to 14.8 percent in 2025, while domestic

and military spending would fall from 6.4 percent to 4.5 over adecade.

po

Ingredients for life.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Emissions

Overall, President Barack Obama's2016 budget calls for $4 trillion in spending, including $534.3 billion for the Defense Department, a 4 4 percent increase to the Pentagon'sbudget. To pay forthe plan,Obama calls for higher taxes on wealthy Americans, including raising the tax rate on millionaires to 30 percent. His budget would also close a

that trucking companies incur is fuel costs," said Bill

loophole that allows investors to avoid capital

the standards.

gains taxes on stocks they have inherited, as

The stage has long been set for a legislative clash over removing the proposal's Dec.

well as limit contributions to tax-preferred IRA

accounts to $3.4 million.

"One of the primary costs

Russell, a lobbyist for the Or-

egon Trucking Associations, focusing on one of the major questions opposition groups focus on when talking about

31 sunset.

Republicans say the proposal will hike gas prices

Budget

start treating wildfires like any

anywhere between 4 cents

and $1.06 per gallon, citing

Continued from A1 And members of Oregon's congressional delegation have introduced legislation that would pay to fight the top 1 percent of wildfires — which accountfor 30 percent of sup-

other natural disaster, which is exactly what they are."

The budget also sets aside $1.1 billion in emergency wildfire funding — $200 million for the BLM and $900 million for the Forest Service — which would be available to fight the

biggest wildfires and separate Federal Emergency Manage- from the agencies' operations ment Agency, just as is done budget. pression costs — through the

with hurricanes, floods and tor-

nadoes. The White House also Other provisions included the wildfire proposal Sage grouse conservation efin lastyear's budget, but neither forts would receive $80 million effort made much headway. total, Jewell said, including $60 The plan hopes to end "fire million for the BLM, up from borrowing," the practice with- the agency's $15 million for the in U.S. Forest Service and the program in fiscalyear 2015. Bureau ofLand Management Overall, President Barack in which the agencies raid oth- Obama's 2016 budget calls er programs' accounts when for $4 trillion in spending, infire-suppression funds run out cluding $534.3 billion for the during increasingly intense D efense Department, a 4 . 4 fire seasons. While the other percent increase to the Penaccounts are often backfilled, tagon's budget. To pay for the the work, inciuding fire-preven- plan, Obama calls for higher tion efforts involving removing taxes on wealthy Americans, hazardousfuelsfrom overbur- including raising the tax rate denedforests,is often delayed on millionaires to 30 percent. or postponed. His budget would also close a "This is a forward-looking loophole that allows investors budget. It supports our core to avoid capital gains taxes on mission and makes key invest- stocks they have inherited, as ments that will pay dividends in the future," Jewell said Mon-

well as limit contributions to tax-preferredIRA accounts to

day on a conference call with

$3.4 million. Rep. Paul Ryan, the chairman of the House Ways and

reporters.

Secure Rural Schools

Means Committee, which is

The president's budget calls

responsible for writing tax law, called the president's plan Secure Rural Schools with $190 "envy economics" on NBC's million in funding for 2016, al- Meet the Press on Sunday. "For six years the president though the total payments drop to $105 million, $61 million, $37 has pursued higher taxes and million and $8 million over the higher spending, and our econfollowing four years. These to- omy has paid the price," Ryan tals are wellbelow the $300 mil- said Monday in a prepared lion in total payments from last statement. "This budget is year but well above the $50.4 simply more of the same. The million that the administration American people are working will send to rural counties in the harder than ever to get ahead, program's absence. and this administration wants Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., to put up yet another roadblock: who co-wrotethe legislationcre- $2.1 trillion in new taxes. And ating the Secure Rural Schools despite this massive tax hike, program,tweeted his approval the president's budget never of its inciusion in the president's balances, adding $8.5 trillion 2016 budget."The budget rec- in more debt. This is simply ognizes the dire need to renew unacceptable." for a five-year reauthorization of

the rural safety net & extend

Andrew Malcolm, spokes-

county payments. I'm fighting man for Rep. Greg Walden, every day for it in Congress," he R-Hood River, said Walden tweeted Monday.

was still reviewing the details

In a prepared statement, Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., also praised the budget's inclusion of Secure Rural Schools funding as well as investments in

of the White House budget. "It appears to be a repeat of the top-down policies of the

past," Malcolm said. "We must tackle the debt and r educe

Washington spending without raising taxes on Oregon families. Greg looks forward to that Senator Wyden and I have supporting abudget plan in the pushed for, which would end House that actually balances the vicious cycle of robbing and promotes job creation and fire prevention funds to pay for higher wages for hardworking fires that are already burning," taxpayers." he said. 'We need to stop short— Reporter: 202-662-7456, changing prevention funds and oclevenger@bendbulletirLcom education and infrastructure.

"It (also) embraces the bipartisan wildfire-fighting reforms

Dads Continued from A1 Time spent with children

had "a significant positive

Resilience

tal Quality," House Repub-

Senate Bill 324 would allow the state to require fuel suppliers to decrease carbon intensity for most fuel sold in Oregon by10 percentin a decade. Sponsors: Sen.LeeBeyer,D-Eugene;Sen.MichaelDembrow, D-Portland; Sen. SaraGelser, D-Corvallis Background:Thestandards are modeled on those in California, which has already put its program in placeand has studied some of the costs. Republicans say the price of agallon of gas would rise under the program. Researchers say that's not true, and Democrats are working to pass the bill early in the 2015 session. What'snext: Hearing held Monday. Another scheduled for Wednesday. Online:Readthe bill online at https://olis.leg.state.or.us.

lican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, said Friday.

He added, "The Legislature must suspend our work on SB 324 until the Ethics Com-

mission's work and all investigations are completed."

A decision is expected in that probe in March. Republicans also threaten to hold hostage an important

transportation package that would likely include gas tax increases if Democrats use their majorities to pass the low-carbon standard bill.

said Sonia Yeh, a senior re-

"She was very persistent

theyboth had cancer, and they graduate with a degree in early both had to fight and they both childhood education in March Continued from A1 would not stop," said Amy had to be strong," Banner said. and then start the process of Tragedy struck a gain Howell, program director of Banner got Brooke on the opening her own preschool. April 10. At 38 years old, early childhood education phone. She said goodbye to When askedwhat she's learned Olson suddenly died in the at COCC. "All of us expected her grandmother and told her from the last year, Brooke's middle of the night from her to tell us she would drop it was OK to let go. Within 10 answer is simple. "Never give complications with diabe- out, but she was very clear minutes,Jones succumbed to up," she said. It's a lesson she tes. Banner was in Portland that she wanted to keep go- her cancer at age 55. learned from her mom. "We still are trying to create with her dad, who had come ing. She was a strong advoBack in Oregon, Brooke confrom Utah to help her during cate for her own learning." tinued to fight her own cancer. new memories and keep going Brooke's treatment. Despite having terminal In March, she went into remis- forward, and keep (Ryan's) Banner and Olson had cancer, Jones flew from her sion,and the doctors released memory alive," Banner said. been together 4~/z years and home in North Dakota in her from the hospital in June. "We involvehim and talkabout planned to marry but hadn't May and spent a week with When Banner returned to Bend him in everything we do. We set a date. They met while Banner after Olson's death. with her sister and her kids, the send balloons up in the sky for working at the T-Mobile call Her sister, Stacie Banner, reality of losing Ryan came him. We're always talking to center in Redmond. Banner 22, moved from Utah to help crashing down. Aubree about her daddy and "That was when I had to how great of a person he was. was pregnant with Blake with the kids, and today she at the time, and in 2013, the lives with Banner and her adjust to the love of my life You just have to put your mind couple had Aubree, their first children. not being there anymore," she to it, to be able to keep going child together. By September 2014, Jones said. "When (Brooke) got to forward." " It was r eally h ar d t o was back in North Dakota come home atthe end of June, Sometimes going forward lose him, because that was and not doing well, Banner that's when even more reality meant focusing on the next my biggest support system said. Afraid this might be sunk in. There's lots of tearful hour, or the next day, Banner through the whole thing," their last chance to see their nights." said. It meant looking to her she said. "I know he's here mother, Kim and Stacie BanBrooke's cancer remains in four kids for motivation, and in spirit. He just can't phys- ner drove to North Dakota. remission, and she is recov- relying on the support of her ically be here with us. My Shortly after they arrived, ering welL But she'll continue family and friends. 4-year-old cries all the time, Jones chose to stop chemo- to live with repercussions of "When you have goals and 'Why can't Daddy just come therapy and focus on com- the diseaseforthe restofher you challenge yourself, if you home?' He just doesn't un- fort and started the transi- life. Having children will be really want to get through it, derstand," Banner said. tion to hospice care. difficult. She's at risk for heart you can get through it," she "That was a really hard, Throughout all of t his, complications later in life, and said. "You don't need to give Banner continued her stud- hard thing for our family," she must be tested every four up or think there isn't hope. ies. She completed online Banner said. Three days to six weeks to make sure the Even when it feels like there's classes while in Portland later, the hospice nurse told cancer isn't coming back. no hope, there's always hope." and sent in homework by Banner that Jones wouldn't In December she had her — Reporter: 541-383-0354, email. make it through the day. But first normal blood results, jrockou@bendbulletin.com "(My teachers) were able Jones continued to hang on. Banner said. Now Brooke's HEARING AIDS to work with me and to help All of her children had given life is starting to return to norme, and it's been amazing," their blessing for her to let go, mal. She attends sixth grade DOES Banner said. "All those ladies but one person wasn't there and last fall she played soccer. EVERYONE "Soccer is her life," Banner in the department have just — Brooke, busy battling her MUMBLE1 been phenomenal with help- own cancer in Portland. said. "She sleeps, dreams, ev"And then it all hit me, be- erything is soccer." ing to make sure I have any Connect Hearing tools I need to be successful cause Brooke and my mom, Life for Banner and her kids through this process." every time they saw each is a delicate balancing act. FORMERLY LEAQELOHEARINGAIOCENTER Banner's teachers de- other, it was, 'I'm going to There's a lot of crying together, scribe her as an exemplary keep fighting; you gotta keep a lot of praying together. Banstudent, and they were more fighting. We can't give up; ner volunteers at Pine Ridge than willing to help her stay we can't give up.' They real- Elementary and is taking her in school. ly bonded over the fact that final term of ciasses. She'll

The number offathers who stay home to watch children for any reason has nearly doubled since 1989, when 1.1 million were in this

category.

significant negative effect on Most stay-at-home parents ninefold since 1960, from less are mothers. But fathers rep- than 300,000to more than 2.6 resent a growing share of all million in 2011. The number at-home parents: 16 percent of single-mother households, work-family enrichment." in 2012, up from 10 percent in on the other hand, increased The fathers surveyed re- 1989. Today, 1 in 5 fathers is more than fourfold during ported support from man- the primarycaregiver ofpre- that time period, up to 8.6 milagementbecause,apparently, school-age children when the lion in 2011 from 1.9 million in actions like leaving early to mother is employed, White 1960. take your kid to soccer prac- House data shows. In the last But most new fathers don't tice are seen as noble and quarter-century, the number take much paid leave. respectable. It should also be of stay-at-home dads with a Today, 70 countries offer noted that women don't enjoy working mom doubled. paid leavefor fathers.Presithe same perception privilege: Roughly a quarter of these dent Barack Obama recently Only 21 percent of Americans dads report they are home granted federal employees surveyed by Pew in a poll mainly because they cannot the opportunity to take paid said more mothers working find work, according to Pew. parental l eave an d a s k ed outside the home is good for Twenty-one percent, howev- Congress to bestow the same society. er, say the main reason is to benefits to all workers. Social More men are staying home care for their home or fami- scientists say men who spend to help raise the kids. ly. That's a fourfold increase time with children in the first The number of fathers who from 1989, when only 5 per- months of their lives are more stay home to watch children cent of stay-at-home fathers likely to be deeply involved in for any reason has nearly cited that same reason. the long run. doubled since 1989, when 1.1 And more single fathers are Today, most American dads don't take much time off work million were in this catego- leading households. ry. That figure peaked at 2.2 A record 8 percent of Amer- following the birth of a child. million in 2010, just after the ican households with minor About 76 percent of new faofficial end of the recession, children are headed by a sin- thers surveyed by Boston Coland has fallen slightly, driven gle father, up from just over lege researchers went back to mainly by declines in unem- one percent in 1960, Pew work after one week or less; ployment, according to a Pew found. 96 percentreturned aftertwo analysis of Census Bureau The number of single-father weeks off or less. Lost pay and data. households has surged nearly social pressures stand in the

significant negative effect on work-family conflict, and a significant positive effect on

Department of Environmen-

group that has pushed for the Democrats, including Senthe Department of Environ- searcher with the UC-Davis standard. ate Majority Leader Diane mental Quality and another Institute of T r ansportation Hayes said she collected Rosenbaum, D-Portland, say study by the Boston Consult- Studies who was involved in $118,000 total in 2011 and the state is too far in to pull ing Group. implementing the California 2012, the first years of the back on the fuel standards But researchers said Mon- program. third term of her f iance, now and show no signs of day that California, upon Fuel producers would Gov. John Kitzhaber, from slowing down. "There's already been a lot which Oregon's proposal is reach Oregon's lower stan- a group that worked in part based, hasn't seen costs in- dards in Oregon by changing on the low-carbon propos- of work done on the renewcrease under its low-carbon their fuel blends or buying al. There is an active probe able fuel standards, so we're program. credits to comply. Lawmakinto whether Hayes, who was moving forward on that," Researchers from the Uni- ers are now proposing giving considered a policy adviser Rosenbaum said. versity of California-Davis the Department of Environ- for the governor at the time Rosenbaum told a roomful told lawmakers the impact mental Quality new power to of the contracts, acted im- of reporters less than an hour was around a third of a cent regulate the credit market to properly during Kitzhaber's before the Senate was set to per gallon in 2014. make sure those costs don't third term. convene that her caucus list "The e xact purpose o f get out of hand. Republicans are using the for early in the session inThe bill to remove the probe andrecentrevelations cluded universal voter regis(the) policy is to move away from the status quo and sunset, Senate Bill 324, was to stall the standards. tration, class-action payment "Hayes received payments reform and the low-carbon reduce emissions through nearly in doubt because of more use of low-carbon fu- revelations of a p otential to influence the Governor fuel standards. els via market competition conflict of interest between on, among other things, the — Reporter: 406-589-4347, and technology innovation," first lady Cylvia Hayes and a Low Carbon Fuel Standard tanderson@bendbulletin.com

effect on job satisfaction, a job-withdrawal intentions, a

program overseen by the

SenateBill 324

Continued from A1

A5

that her educational goals

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way of longer time off. A larger share of men aren't the family breadwinner. More than 40 percentof m othersare now the sole or primary source of income for the household, according to White House data. This reflects both a rise of single

mothers — 65 percent participate in the labor force — and the fact that more married

women are out-earning their husbands. Twenty-four percent of married women now

earn more than their husbands, compared with only 7 percent in 1970.

A lot of guys don't identify with Hollywood's Arnold Schwarzenegger version of masculinity. "What makes a man stron-

ger?" a Dove Men+Care ad asked during the Super Bowl.

BEND FEB14 paeeend Pee

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The company famous for tackling body issues is now taking on gender roles. A Dove survey of thousands of men in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany,

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Brazil and China found that

only 7 percent can relate to the way the pop culture depicts masculinity. Ninety percent saw caring side as a sign of strength. Eighty-six percent said the idea of masculinity has evolved, compared to their father's generation.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY3, 2015

BRIEFING

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO ...

Sisters hiker found dead A Deschutes County sheriff's deputy found a Sisters man dead ona U.S. Forest Service road shortly after he was reported overdue byhis family. According to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 70-year-old James Holcomb had gone out for a hike in the area of Forest Service Road1514, near the 980 spur road andabout10 miles south of Sisters. He was reported overdue around 8:36 p.m. Saturday. As search-and-rescue units prepared to search for Holcomb, another deputyfound Holcomb's vehicle on the roadand drove up the spur to look for him. When the deputy walked down the spur road, he found Holcomb's body in the middle of the road. Hehad apparently beendead for several hours. An initial investigation determined Holcomb likely suffered a medical emergency anddied at the scene.

Following up onCentral Oregonstories that have been out of the headlines. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.com.

DESCHUTES COUNTY

eson i e as am is emois e, ne s eri ewor isn' over WHYCHUS CREEK

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

Deschutes County com

missioners appear set to

approve retiring Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blan

BEFORE

Upper Deschutes Watershed Council/Submitted photo

A Deschutes County Circuit Court judge set $500,000 bail in the case of a Bendwoman arrested this weekend in connection with the alleged physical abuse of a 3-month-old girl. Nicole Johansen, 41, was taken into custody Saturday after Bend Police investigated a report of a child suffering internal head injuries at St. Charles Bend. Johansen, a licensed care provider since 1999, runs Nicole's Day Care innortheast Bend, according to the Oregon Office of Child Care. According to the Office of Child Care, Johansen is a registered family provider, meaning she canhave upto 10 children in her home, only two of whom can be younger than 24 months. In 2009, the Oregon Office of Child Care found three infants were in Johansen's care. Johansen fixed the compliance issue in the presence of licensing staff, according to the Office of Child Care. An unvalidated complaint from June 2014 stated Johansen spanked children in her care.

An excavator at the Pine Meadow Ranch dam along Whychus Creek upstream of Sisters is shown ready to start removing the concrete structure. The removal took about a wmk last year.

officer in 1993. Nelson cur rently is commander of jat'I

hiccup," said Blanton of the

operations.

the matter was brought before the commissioners

SeeLocal briefing/B2

ow Ranch dam along the creek as it parallels the road

U.S. Forest Service and partnering conservation groups are now focused on replacing a nearby footbridge over the creek and filling in parts of

to Three Creeks Lake. The

the creek's deepest channel.

tion to replace Blanton, but Deschutes County Counsel Dave Doyle said that under Oregon revised statutes,

commissioners bear the responsibility of appointing

AFTER

Deschutes County commissioners approved a $5,000 grant Monday to help landowners prepare for the likely federal listing of greater sage grouse as an endangered species. The grant money will be used to encourage landown(

s'

Deschutes River Conservancy / Submitted photo

Where the damonce stood is a floodplain, and restoration work this year will revive old creek channels in the stretch of the creek.

Late last summer, excavators tore apart the Pine Mead-

r e t i r ement date. He said the sher i f f's office needs time to

ba c k fill additional positions, i ncl u d ing that of corrections

captain, which Nelson would vacate if he is appointed sheriff. SeeSheriff /B2

the bird.

The Bulletin

blocking Whychus Creek is gone,but more work remains along the creek upstream of Sisters.

months before his planned

Money for thoseprepping for sagegrouseprotections By Ted Shorack

The last concrete dam

transition, explaining why

a replacement for the sher

s

The Bulletin

September.

Deschutes County ComSheriff's Capt. Shane Nelson m i ssion Chairman Tony to succeed him. DeBonethanked Commissioners Blanton for his serheard testimony Monvice. "The culture of day from Blanton and the organization is Nelson, who spoke outstanding," said to Blanton's achieveDeBone. ments as sheriff and Blanton Commis s ioners Nelson's career histoTammy Baney and ry. Blanton is schedAlan Unger were uled to retire June 30. also supportive. "I When Blanton think you've given announced his retireus confidence in the ment in December, he leadership," said also announced his Nelson Unge r. Baney moved support for Nelson, to formalize the recwho has held a variety ofpo- o m m endation into a future sitions in the sheriff's office c onsent agendaitem. "It has to go without a since he began as a reserve

they'd received inquiries about holding a special elec-

By Dylan J. Darling

the 2016 general election, mu s t sign up to do so this

ton's recommendation for

Commissioners said

Day care provider held on dail

iff to serve until the end of Blanton's term. Nelson, who plans to run for sheriff in

6-foot-tall dam was the last of about a half-dozen concrete dams taken out of Whychus

Creek and its tributaries over recent years. The dam removaldone, the

"There is still a lot of earth-moving that is going to happen," said Mathias Perle, project manager fortheUpper

short window to enroll in agreements with the feder-

also based in Bend, are working with the Forest Service on the project.

pose land use restrictions to

cil. The council, a Bend-based restoration group, and the Deschutes River Conservancy,

SeeWhychus Creek/B5

our landowners as the sage

grouse gets listed," Commissioner Alan Unger said at a work session Monday. Commissioners Tony DeBone and Tammy Baney also supported providing the grant, which will con-

ers to enroll in conservation nect landowners with the agreements with the U.S resources for developing Fish and Wildlife Service. agreement plans. The 30-year agreements Sage grouse habitat is would include improvement concentrated in the southplans for sage grouse habieastern part of Deschutes tat and protect landowners County off U.S. Highway 20. from further regulation once Crook County has a larger the sage grouse is listed. concentration of favorable Landowners have a sage grouse habitat that al agency and implement the habitat plans. The sage grouse is expected to be listed under the Endangered Species Act in September. The listing would provide greater protection and im-

Deschutes Watershed Coun-

"This is the path to be able to get some certainty for

improve the population of

landowners there will also

have to take into account. "We're barely ahead of the curve right now," said

Rex Barber, chairman of the Deschutes Soil and Water Conservation District

board. "If we can stay ahead of that curve, then the im-

pact is going to be minimal." SeeSage grouse/B5

January2015weather for Bend

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DAILY HIGHSAND LOWS Average temperature: 37.4' (4.7' abovenormal) KRKRKRKRKRRRERKREHtEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHKREHRKIKRKRKRKRKRKRKXKHtKH 23 29 4 2

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B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

Evxxr TODAY AUTHORTALK:Featuring retired

professor WesHervey, reading from his book "Spindrift," with live music by CanaanCanaanwith Matthew Humiston; free; 11:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-383-1133. R.W.HAMPTON AND MICHAEL MARTIN MURPHEY:The country

singers perform anacoustic concert to benefit the Bend Chapter of Band of Brothers; $25-$35 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. SHEILARIOS AND PACO PADILLA CONCERT: TheMexican artists perform; $15; 7-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 NWCollegeWay, Bend; 541-318-3726.

WEDNESDAY CENTRAL OREGONFARM FAIR AND TRADESHOW:Discuss the 2015 water forecast, learn about pesticide applicator certification credit, check out new equipment, products and services from local

vendors; free; 8a.m.-4 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Complex, 430 SW Fairgrounds Road, Madras; www.jeffcoseed.com/ farm-fair, cofarmfair©gmail.com or 541-475-7107. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LES CDNTES D'HOFFMANN": An encore performance of Offenbach's opera featuring a poet, three heroines and four villains; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

THURSDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques,

ENm a children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bing Bingham will speak about his book "Shaped By the Land"; 5:307 p.m.; Art Adventure Gallery, 185 SE Fifth St., Madras; www. artadventuregallery.com or 541-475-7701.

JIMBO MATHUS ANDTHE TRISTATECOALITION:TheSouthern country-blues band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. RALPHIE MAY: The comedian performs, with Tony G; $24-$54 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, Submitted photo 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; Comedian Ralphie May of "Last ComicStanding" fame will perwww.cascadestheatrical.org or form at the Tower Theatre on Thursday at 7 p.m. 541-389-0803. ADRIANKRYGOWSKI:The FOGHORN STRINGBAND:The 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, Nashville folk-rock artist performs; Portland roots band performs for 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, www.cascadestheatrical.org or Sisters Folk Festival's winter concert 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; series, with Beth Wood; $20, $10 541-389-0803. www.volcanictheatrepub.com or (youth), $50 or$25(youth) for 541-323-1881. JELLY BREAD: The Reno, Nevada, series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, alt-funk band performs, with Tim 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; Snider; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 www.sistersfolkfestival.org or at the door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre FRIDAY 541-549-4979. Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or SINK & SWIM:The Portland BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND 541-323-1881. bluegrass and Americana band SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts performs; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top and crafts, collectibles, antiques, Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 NW children's activities, music and Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. more; freeadmission; 10a.m.-5 SATURDAY btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 "MONUMENTSMEN": Showing BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. of the film about saving art during SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts "HAROLDANDTHEPURPLE World War II; free; 7:30 p.m.; and crafts, collectibles, antiques, CRAYON":A play with life-sized Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County children's activities, music and puppets about Harold's world Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www. more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 of drawings, production by p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 Philadelphia's Enchantment Theatre jcld.org or 541-475-3351. SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Company; $23, $13 for children12 and younger; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, Performance of Tennessee Williams' AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jon 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. autobiographical play; $20, $16 Abernathy will speak on his book "Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. for seniors, $13 for students;

PUBLIC OFFICIALS U.S. SENATE • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

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

STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofState KateBrown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state. or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneralEllen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

Saturday, was on a stretch of road that does not have lighting Continued fiom Bf or crosswalks. According to a preliminary investigation, police Deschutes County Circuit determined James was wearing Judge Roger DeHoogsaid if redark clothing as she tried to leased, Johansen must haveno contact with the alleged victims or cross the road. James, of Bend, remains at St. their families and avoid going to Charles Bend in critical condition, places where children are known and an investigation into the collito congregate. sion is ongoing. Johansen faces two counts Anyone who witnessed the of first-degree assault and three crash and hasn't been interviewed counts of first-degree criminal by police is asked to contact the mistreatment, according to the department at 541-693-6911. Oregon Judicial Information Network.

LOCAL BRIEFING

IDS in CaI-PedeStrian

accident in NEBend

The Central OregonCommunity Bend Police have identified the College Board of Directors will driver and the pedestrian involved meet in executive session Thursday to continue deliberations over in Saturday's crash at NERevere who shoul dbecome thecollege's Avenue andLytle Street in Bend. next president. According to Bend Police Lt. Board members met for six Nick Parker, 45-year-old Michael hours Saturday to discuss the Anthony Jones, of Bend, was driving a1999 Nissan Pathfind- four candidates who interviewed er eastbound on Revere when for the job last month. The board had planned to meetagain today he struck 49-year-old Pamela Kay James. The crash, which but postponed that meeting two took place just before 6:30 p.m. Ciays.

The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 8:32 a.m. Jan. 19, in the3000 block of N. U.S. Highway97. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 3:56 p.m. Jan. 27, in the 63300 block of N.U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Matthew Scott Hummel, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:38p.m.Jan.29,inthe 200blockof SW Century Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 10:35 a.m. Jan. 30, in the1800 block of NE JacksonAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:58 p.m. Jan. 30, in the3100 block of N. U.S. Highway97. DUII —Tyler Lawrence Higgins, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:14 p.m. Jan. 30, in theareaof NE Division Street and NWRevere Avenue. DUII —Nolan Everett Davis,24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at

1:59 p.m. Jan. 31, in thearea of NW Galveston Avenueand NWHarmon Boulevard. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at1131 a.m.Jan. 31, in the 500 block of NWRiverside Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:32 p.m. Jan. 31, in the20800 block of Solstice Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:55 p.m. Jan. 31, in the2200 block of NW High Lakes Loop. Burglary — A burglary was reported at1:51 p.m. Jan. 25, in the20600 block of Brant Court. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:42 a.m. Jan.31, in the63300 block of Kalamata Loop. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at 8:55 p.m. Jan.31, in the area of NW Franklin Avenue and NW BrooksStreet. Burglary — A burglary was reported at10:25 p.m. Jan. 25 in the63000 block of Lower MeadowDrive. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:46 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 800block of Watt Way.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:12 p.m. Jan. 30, in the area ofNE Elm Street. DUII —Krystal Bergland, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving

under the influence of intoxicants at 11:54 p.m. Jan. 30, in the area ofS. Main Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 4:14 a.m. Jan.31, in thearea of NW Ninth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:09 p.m. Jan. 31, in thearea of SEElm Street.

JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'8 OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at 10:32a.m. Jan.26,inthe600 block of SE Nugget Lane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:11 p.m. Jan.26, in the Crooked River Rancharea. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:18 p.m. Jan. 27, in the 500 block of Fourth Avenue. DUII —Nikkia SummerRain Malloy, 46, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:02 p.m. Jan. 27, in the 500 block of First Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at11:04 a.m. Jan. 29, in the7200 blockofSW Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at1:05 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 3600 block of S.Adams Drive.

BEMD FIRE RUNS Thursday 18 —Medical aid calls.

music program;$15plus fees

in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. BETH WOOD:The Oregon singer-songwriter performs, with Anne Weiss; $15-$20 suggested donation, registration requested; 7 p.m., potluck starts at 6 p.m.; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive, Bend; houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON WINTERCONCERT:The group performs traditional jazz,

Continued from 61 Nelson thanked B lanton,

the commissioners and his family and said he had "big boots to fill." He s ubmitted

letters of support from local leaders, including BendPolice Chief Jim Porter, Chief Deputy District Attorney Stephen

Gunnelsand Redmond School Board Chairman A.J. Losoya.

Nelson serves on the Redmond School District board.

der Stiles, the sheriff's office

secured permanent funding through a tax levy in 2006.

FEB. 9 NATIVE VISIONS:A two-person show that depicts the lives and experiences of Native Americans who impacted our nation's history; free; 5-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College

ROB LARKING8(THEWAYWARD ONES:The Los Angeles rootsrock band performs, with Micah

Peterson; $5; 8p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Next, the board plans to make finalists' colleagues andseetheir current working environments. At Saturday's meeting, board members heard feedback from representatives of COCC faculty, staff, administration, students and community members on the candidates.

Free sessions inBend on Medicare dasics An insurance carrier will host two free classes in Bend this month to help Central Oregonians approaching age 65 learn more about Medicare, the complex federal health insurance program for certain Americans ages 65 and older and people with disabilities. PacificSource Medicare, a private company that also sells Medicare Advantage plans to supplement people's Medicare coverage, will host "The A, B, C and Ds of Medicare" this Thursday and Feb.19in Bend. At the events, PacificSource's experts will explain the differences betweenMedi-

2 locations inBend Main Center NWX 2863Northwest CrossingDr,suite iO

541-389-9252

FEB. 11 AUTHOR!AUTHOR!:Garth Stein, author of "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; BendHighSchool,230 NE Sixth St.; www.dplfoundation.org, suzyo©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1027.

care's PartA, Part B, Part Cand Part D plans. They'll also compare Medigap andMedicareAdvantage plans. The first event will be from 4:30 to 6 p.m. Thursday at the Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Road. Thesecond will be from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Feb. 19 at Central Oregon Community College's Chandler Lab,1027 NW Trenton Ave. For more information, visit www.medicare.pacificsource. com. — Bulletin staffreports

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OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: A fiddle performance, all ages welcome; free, donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road; 541-410-5146. STARSHIP:The classic rock 'n' roll band performs, with Bern Smith; $40-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.

541-318-3726. FELIX MARTIN:The jazz-metal guitar wizard performs, with Barishi and HaloHaven;$5 plusfeesin advance, $6 at the door; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; www.j.mp/felixmartinbend or 541-306-3017.

one or two site visits to talk with

A 144-bed expansion of the October.

SUNDAY

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$10; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.bend.k12.or.us or 541-385-0470. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;

B lanton s u cceeded L e s Stiles as sheriff in 2007. While

he served as a lieutenant un-

www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.

gospel andBroadwayclassics;

Weekly Arls & Entertainment

Sheriff

NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG

GOCC to meet Thursday on search for president

Central Oregon"; 1-3 p.m.; Costco, 2500 NE U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.costco.com or 541-385-9626. VEGASCASINONIGHT: Featuring a dance party, a Texas Hold 'Em tournament, a silent auction and more to benefit Family Kitchen; $30$120, registration requested; 4-7 p.m. dinner,4 p.m. poker check-in, poker starts at 5:15 p.m., casino opensat6 p.m .;Bend Golfand Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; www.mtbachelorrotary.org, gwend©bendbroadband.com or 541-382-5978. BEND BASEBALL BASH: Featuring dinner, a raffle, live and silent auctions and more to benefit the Bend High School baseball program; SOLDOUT; 6 p.m. dinner, doors open and silent auction begins at 5 p.m.; Fieldhouse of Bend, 401 SERoosevelt Avenue; www.bendhighbaseball.com, adam.randall©bend.k12.or.us or 541-730-9922. A NIGHTOF JAZZ WITH WARREN ZAIGER AND FRIENDS: A concert to benefit the Summit High School

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

emocl'a smove as as

Geology official found dead —Police inAlbanywhoresponded to a911hang-up call found a 64-year-old state Geology Department official dead in ahome. They havearrested the man's 26-year-old son pending investigation of murder andassault. The body of ThomasFerrero wasfound Sunday evening. Martin Ferrero is scheduled for a court appearancetoday. Hewas treated for minor injuries. Police Lt. Travis Giboneysays an autopsy is scheduled today to determine acause of death for the elder Ferrero. TheOregon State Police forensics team isassisting in the investigation. The victim was recently namedassistant director of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries' Mineral LandRegulation & Reclamation program. Thenewspaper said Thomas Ferrero came back to Oregon after spending six years with the California Department of Conservation's Office of Mine Reclamation.

e isa ivesession e ins By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM — Democrats are

wasting no time before using their expanded majorities in the Oregon Legislature to push forward with several of their initiatives that stalled in recent

Bloody footprilltS —Police said a Portland woman returned home from the golf range with her teenageson to find bloody footprints in her house. Jessica Hull sent her14-year-old son to aneighbor's house to get helpSaturday, armedherself with a golf club and went to investigate avoice she could hear, according to reports. In a second-floor bedroom, shefound a naked, bleeding man in abed. At that point, she said sheretreated and called police. Police arrested 21-year-old Forrest Avila-Crump. Court documents said he told police he washighonmushrooms andenteredthehousebybreakinga window. OnMondayafternoon, he wasarraigned on onecount of first-degree burglary in MultnomahCounty Circuit Court.

i

years. As l awmakers formally began the 2015 legislative session Monday, hearings were

k~ I

scheduled on t h ree D emo-

cratic priorities: expanding a dimate-change program, automatic voter r e gistration

and changes to the rules for dass-action lawsuits. In prior years, all three initiatives fell short of the 16 votes they needed to pass the Sen-

— From wire reports

ate. The Senate now has two

IndependentPartysays it's now a majorparty

more Democratic seats and the House has one. "We feel this i s

c omplet-

ing unfinished business from the last session," said Rep.

Val Hoyle of Eugene, the No. 2 Democrat in the House. Brent Drinkut I Statesman-Journal via The Associated press "Things we ran on and said if Sen. AlanOlsen, R-Canby, and Sen. BetsyJohnson, D-Scappoose, talk during the opening dey ofthe we got amajoritywe would do." legislative session in Salem. Democrats, in a stronger position in bothchambers this session, could be By moving forward quiddy sending some controversial measures to the governor's desk quickly, over Republican objections.

By Steven Dubois

consider themselves independent (with a lowercase 'i') are PORTLAND — O r egon accidentally joining the Indehas only had two major po- pendent Party. "I can't read into people's litical parties in its historyDemocratic and Republican. hearts and minds," Peralta It might soon have a third. said of that speculation. The Independent Party of Jim Moore, a political sciOregon says it's up to 108,744 ence professorat Pacific Unimembers, giving it 5 percent versity in Forest Grove, said of the state's registered voters. the evidence is that the rate of That's the threshold for be- Independent Party growth is coming a major political par- much quicker than for other ty. Party secretary Sal Peralta minor parties. "And there's no reason the said the party will send a letter to the Secretary of State's Independent Party would Office asking it to confirm the be growing at a faster rate," development. he said. "It's certainly not an Besides bragging rights, advertising campaign that the main benefit of being a they're doing or anything." majorparty isan appearance Unlike conservative Reon the primary ballot. Peral- publicans and liberal Demota said attaining major-party crats, the Independent Party status would also help it re- of Oregonhas lacked a clear cruitcandidates and perhaps philosophy or platform. The start w inning l egislative party surveys its members to races. learn what its priorities will "There is a t r emendous become. Peralta said its supThe Associated Press

on some of their most provocative measures,Democrats can

prevent them from becoming bargaining chips later in the session. They could come up for avoteintheHouseorSenateas soon as next week and reach

Gov. John Kitzhaber's desk quiddy. "They definitely have the votes to pass," said Senate Majority Leader Diane Rosenbaum, a Portland Democrat.

Republicanssay Democrats are rushing, denying critics a chance tohave theirvoices

heard. "I always believe that reasoned arguments are persuasive, but I fear in this instance

political payback is what tops ing ahead with Secretary of harmed neverdaim their porthe priority list for the majority State Kate Brown's proposal to tion of the judgment. Propoparty," said Rep. Mike McLane use driver's license records to nents want to use that money of Powell Butte, the automatically r egister for legal assistance for the poor. top Republican in the Ralatad peop l e to vote. Brown But critics say it would unfair• More House. estimates it would add ly affect lawsuits already in Republicans hav e a b out low- a b out 300,000 people progress. fought pa r t icularly c a rbon fuel to the 2.2 million regis- Legislative leaders have hard against the pros t andard,A1 teredvoters. promised they'll use their exp osed extension o f A third bill w ould panded majorities to pursue Oregon's low-carbon fuel stan- change the way Oregon han- gun-control measures, but they dard, which was never fully d les class-action lawsuits. The haven't yet been introduced. implementedandexpiresatthe m e asure was i ntensely dis- Sen.Ginny Burdick,aPortland end of the year. The program is puted in the legal community Democrat who has long advodesigned to seed a market for when it was first proposed last cated stricter gun laws, said cleaner-burning fuel sources year. she expects them to move earsuch as propane orbiofuels. In class-action lawsuits, ly in the five-month legislative Democrats are also press- many of the people who are session.

Strippers lobbyfor better work conditions By Jonathan J. Cooper SALEM — Any tourist guide

Strip clubs can't be treated any differently than other places

the strip dubs. There are dozens of them,

that serve food or alcohol.

something for any taste or any neighborhood, helped to ubiquity by Oregon's fierce protectionoffreespeech. T ired of watc h i ng well-meaning strangers impose their own visions for improvingtheplight of the dancer,

A poster in the dressing room isn't necessarily a problem, said DaCorsi of the indus-

try group, but he worries club owners would have to pay for a hotline. T he dancers' work

with

lawmakers has surprised and

some of Portland's seasoned

confused DaCorsi and his col-

strippers are working directly

Don Ryan/The Associated Press

Elle Stanger is a performer et the Lucky Devil Lounge in Portland.

fessional lobbyists. Some of Portland's seasoned strippers are working directly with Around the country, strip- state lawmakers and professional lobbyists in search of better pers have stepped up their fight working conditions. for better working conditions.

porters have shown a strong

preference for consumer protection, campaign finance re-

more than anything is what's form, economic development driving our growth." and increased transparency Tony Green, spokesman for in government. the Secretaryof State's Office, Now that the party appears said it's too soon to say wheth- onthevergeof joiningthemaer the I n dependent Party jors, Moore said it will have to qualifies as major, though he start acting like it. "They'vebeeninthis weird, confirmed the party is correct semi-party state, where peoon its membership figure. Established less than a de- ple like me look at them and cade ago, the Independent say, rYou know, you're not actParty quickly surged past ing like a party, because you other minor parties in mem- don't have a platform or canbership, if not profile. didates who are registering as From the start, however, Independents,"' Moore said. there's been talk that the con- "Now, with major-party stafusing name is what's driving tus, we're going to be looking the rapid gains. In Oregon, at dothey become what we've voters who don't want to align been looking for in the United with a party are supposed to States for a longtime — a true register as nonaffiliated. The third option to beat a Republiassumption is that voters who can or a Democrat."

allowed to get to customers.

to Portland will tell you about

atio n w i t h

now," he said. "I think that

how much clothing dancers must wear orhow closethey're

The Associated Press

with state lawmakers and pro-

a mount of ~

the two major parties right

leagues, he said. "How did it get to this point where entertainers got fed up

to the point where they felt we need to enact a law or do some legislation around this?"

Some are suing. Others have filed complaints with state regulators. A handful have union-

ized. But the effort in Oregon to work directly with the Legislature — with the support of lob-

byists — is unique. "The hardest part about be-

ing a stripper is battling the stigma that we are victims that need helpfrom outsiders,"said

Elle Stanger, a stripper who's been active in the movement. "It doesn't matter if you work

in education, dergy, any kind of blue-collar work — the people who do the work know what the work environment

needs." Stanger has worked her entire five-year career at the Lucky Devil Lounge. She's pleased with the management,

she said, and isn't concerned she'll face retaliation for speaking publidy. But as the assistant editor of Exotic Magazine,

a local publication for the sex industry, she's seen plenty of dubs. They'renotallasgreatas hers, she said. "Some of the buildings are literally dilapidated and not

are appalled when strippers pendent contractors, dancers are mistreated, said Claude Da- may not realize when a manCorsi, a club operator and pres- agement demand is illegal or ident of the Oregon chapter of inappropriate, they say. The asthe Association of Club Execu- sociation helps keep them from tives, an industry association. being on their own. "We're here to protect and "Social workers have almake safe environments for ways fought for people who entertainers," DaCorsi said. want to fight for themselves," "They're the reason we exist." said Delmar Stone, director of The dancers and lobbyists the Oregonand Idaho chapter. "We're in solidarity with them have settled on a handful of improvements they'd like to in achieving human rights, pursue. basic protections, not being Ideally, they want to see strip exploited." dubs comply with mandatory Dancers warned the group health and safety standards not to require strippers to get — clean stages, structuraHy licensesor make i t harder for sound poles, adequate security. them to work as independent But that could be a tough sell in contractors. They like the anthe Legislature. onymity and flexibility they More realistically, they plan have when they're truly treated to push for a m andate that as contractors. dubs display a poster outlining The lobbyists brought their dancers' rights with a hotline own news: Oregon's freethey can call to ask questions speech protections, which are or report abuses. They want more robust than the federal the hotline to be staffedby peo- First Amendment, severely limple with experience in the in- it the regulations that can be dustry, not bureaucrats or law imposed. Rules that apply exenforcement. dusively to strip clubs won't fly, Strippers generally work as so they'llhave tobe imposed on

maintained," Stanger s a i d. independent contractors rath"You have entertainers that er than employees. They pay could injure themselves from a stage fee or a portion of their

broken glass on the stage, poor earnings to the management, wiring with the sound system. bartenders, bouncers, DJs and We just want to get these work- other support staff. places up to a minimum safety M any young women getinto standard at least." the business without much There may be a few bad ap- work experience and are exples, but most club owners take ploited, some strippers say. Not dancers'safety seriously and knowing their rights as inde-

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B4

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f you got no further than the front-page chart showing local graduation rates in Thursday's issue of The Bulletin, you might think students in Crook County are failing to complete high school in droves. You would be mistaken. As reporter Abby Spegman noted in her article on graduation rates, one reason the Crook County rate seems terribly low — only about 30 percent — is the inclusion of numbers from the online charter school the district sponsors. Insight School, with 100 seniors when the numbers were collected, graduated just about 16 kids in that group. That's partly because it's difficult for the district to ensure that online students actually take required exams on time. There are other reasons for the district's poor showing. The reporting rules changed last year. Before that, districts could not include students who received modified diplomas when counting their graduates. Some, but not all, students who receive special education services graduate with modified diplomas. The state also now lets districts count among their graduates students who have met graduation requirements within four years but who stay on for a fifthyear to attend

a community college for free. Crook County mistakenly failed to include both groups when it sent its graduation numbers to Salem, according to Stacy Smith, the district's director of curriculum and instruction. It currently is working with the state Department of Education to correct the problem. At the moment, there's no guarantee that will be done before state report cards are issued in October, or that the state will use Crook County's updated graduation figures when calculatingthe report cards. We hope the state does allow the district to update its graduation statistics and uses the new numbers when calculatingthe district's report cards. It's one thingtobe tagged as a place that does a poor job educating kids when that's what is happening. Then, the extra requirements aimed at improvement make sense. It's something else again when a simple filing error skews the numbers, as is the case in Crook County.

No sympathy for short sellers By Stephen Carter

Choking on the smog

from governor's office

G

ov. John Kitzhaber and his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, have b rought disgrace to t h e governor's office. Kitzhaber has been a fine politician. Oregonians would not have re-elected him for a fourth time and we would not have endorsed him if he couldn't lead. His legacy will include his reforms to state prisons, education and perhaps public pensions. Even with the fantastic flop that was Cover Oregon, he has pushed the state elsewhere into experiments with providing care to Medicaid patients that we hope will work. But all o f t h e c ompliments Kitzhaber is owed do not nullify the ethical and legal smog of Hayes' policy and political work.

charges about his disclosures on state ethics reforms with legalistic jitterbugs. His answers to more questions about Hayes' tax filings was to tell reporters: Ask Hayes. Reporters have tried and get no response. Common sense should have told a politician of Kitzhaber's experience that something was acutely wrong. The state's ethics laws are supposed to restrict the choices, decisions and actions of public officials. The cornerstone of the ethics laws is to prevent people from using their positions "to obtain financial benefits for themselves, relatives or people they are associated with through opportunities that would not otherwise be available but for the position or office held." What do Oregonians learn Kitzhaber came out Friday to about ethics from the governor? meet reportersand declare Hayes An attorney could construct an will play no policy or political role argument that Hayes is not a pubin his administration. It's long lic official, or somehow Kitzhaber overdue. Does anyone seriously and Hayes did enough because believe her influence will end? the rules aren't clear enough. But The news c o nference was what Kitzhaber and Hayes have a disheartening spectacle that succeeded in doing is reinforcing brought no comfort. He couldn't the worst of what people fear about or wouldn't answer some ques- politicians — that they think the tions. He responded to the serious rules don't apply to them.

clear who exactly has to be protect-

calculation — I suspect a correct

B/oomberg News

one — that the buzz about how

A

much people are willing to pay for tickets in the secondary market is

ed from what. s an interesting coda to the Moreover, the proposed solution most thrilling Super Bowl — holding back some tickets for rein recent years, I'd like to lease closer to the event — doesn't point to an unintentionally hilari- make any sense. Consider the issue ous article at ESPN.com about the from the point of view of the Nationtravails of ticket brokers who were al Football League. The only reason unable to fulfill customer orders for the brokers exist is that the NFL the event. Evidently it has become has intentionally created a secondcommon for brokers to engage in ary market by selling Super Bowl short selling, charging their clients tickets below the market-clearing heavy markups for tickets the bro- level. kers don't own but hope to pick up Put otherwise, if a fan is willing later for less than the contract price. to pay, say, $2,000 for a ticket with This year, prices never fell and the a face value of $1,000, the league brokers couldn't fulfill the orders. could simply price the ticket at Now, you might respond that this $2,000 and cut out the middleman. is always the risk in short selling: Why doesn't this happen? The market moves against you; you There are many r easons a can't cover your position; you take a for-profit business might choose to bath. That's exactly right. The puz- price its goods below market-clearzle is why we should somehow have ing levels. One stands out in this sympathy for the brokers who bet case: the positive value of buzz. the wrong way. Think about Beanie Babies. The According to the story, Arizona stuffed animals were intentionally Attorney General Mark Brnovich priced below the market-clearing "suggests that it's possible for the level because the manufacturer league to help alleviate market ma- wanted the secondary market to nipulation in the future by holding exist. The trading in Beanie Babies, back tickets and releasing them along with the limited quantity of closer to the game, just like some each model, helped maintain excitehigh-profile entertainers have been ment about the product itself. known to do." Now consider professional footTo which one wants to reply: ball. Everyyear at Super Bowl time, Huh? What market manipulation? The brokers didn't manipulate the

the networks run stories about how

far more valuable than the returns

that would come from charging more in the first place. For the NFL to hold back a large

block of tickets for later release would be inconsistent with this plan. It's true that the ticket brokers

who lost out are participants in the secondary market that the league itself has created. But that doesn't

mean they should be rewarded for betting the wrong way. The market wasn't manipulated.

The market worked, and worked well. The public anticipated a great Super Bowl, and tickets were quick-

ly bid up to the market-clearing level. The short sellers got caught holding orders they couldn't fill. That happens to short sellers all the time. If short sellers never lost money, everybody would do it. And if this particular tale of short selling didn't happen to involve football, nobody would care.

The ESPN.com article strongly implies that the people who bought from the brokers and never got tickets were victims. If so, they were victims of the brokers, not of the

league. Regular readers will know I hold no brief for the NFL. Quite

much tickets are going for. This market; they just guessed wrong. helps the NFL in its effort to pres- the contrary. But this is the rare They were punished for it, offer- ent the game as an exciting event professional football controversy ing their clients refunds of twice or everyone should care about. The about which we can confidently more what was paid for the unde- league makes most of its money conclude that the NFL is genuinely livered tickets. Probably most took from advertising, not ticket sales. blameless. hits to their reputations as well. Ad dollars rise with viewership. — Stephen Carter is a columnist for This all is as it should be. It's un- The league has plainly made the Bloombergand a law professoratYale.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

The right amount of help for American job seekers By Megan McArdle Bloomberg News

A

new workingpaper from the National Bureau of Economic

Research argues that extended unemployment benefits probably raised the unemployment rate by

about 50 basis points. This is of particular interest to me for two reasons: 1. Like all Americans, I am passion-

ately interested in having a strong labor market that employs as many people as possible. 2. I've argued that extended unemployment benefits were a good idea during the depths of the Great Reces-

sion. If you look at the data on separations and job turnover, it seems obvious what was driving unemployment higher was the fact there were way more people who wanted jobs than

though I am open to revising my beliefs, so far I stand by them: Extending unemployment benefits was good policy in 2008. But let me propose an addendum: Ending the extension was good policy in 2013. And it maybe should have been done even earlier. Before I proceed, however, the standard caveats: This is only one paper. Its results could be wrong, not through any fault of the authors, but because the world is complicated, and it's hard

to tease true economic effects out of noisy data. However, the methodology seems sound, and I have no reason to

think that it is wrong; I'm just applying my standard caution against relying too heavily on the results of a single

paper, even agood one. Having gotten that out of the way, assume that it is correct Why doesn't

that change my mind about the merits So was I wrong? Were extendedun- of extending unemployment benefits employment benefits a big mistake? in 2008 and 2009? I've thought about this pretty careBecause the labor market was fully. I've also read other papers very diff erent in 2008 and 2009. Back

there were jobs available.

that tackled the same question. And

then, the ratio of job seekers to job

openings had more than tripled; at its ployment rate. Countries that provide lengthier and peak, there were nearly seven people Exiting unemployment unsurpris- more generous support tend to have searching for every one available job. ingly seems to be dosely connected higher unemployment rates — though The dominant factor in unemploy- to how much time you spend looking. to be sure, they also tend to have othment was clearly not the availability Unfortunately, looking for a job is er labor market policies, such as rigof benefits; it was the lack of employ- miserable, and it makes unemployed id job protections, that also depress ers who had places to employ new people anxious — and anxious peo- employment. workers. Even a diligent job seeker ple may put off looking because the But as sound as our policy is, we was in for a long search, and extend- constant rejection, the feeling of doing need a safety valve for extraordinary ed unemployment benefits did a lot of your best and not getting anywhere, circumstances like the Great Recesgood things: injected some cash into a ranges fromunpleasant to terrifying. sion, when even the most dedicated shattered economy; stabilized family This is a huge mistake. The longer job seekers had slim chances of landfinances so that more people did not you're off the market, the harder it is ing another slot right away. And again, join (and make worse) the cascade of to find a job. It's an understandable there, I think we hit on the right policy: defaults, bankruptcies and foreclo- mistake, one I myself made during my Extend benefits in emergencies, then sures; protected peoplefrom thepara- attempt to find a job after grad school. terminate those extensions when the lyzing despair that can actually make But a policy that helps people make labor market inches backto normal. ithardertolookfor ajob. At that time, I that mistake is a bad policy. So I don't think I was wrong to supThat's why I think America general- port extending unemployment benethink extensions were the rightpolicy. By December 2013, when Congress ly has the right idea about unemploy- fits during the worst of the recession. decidedtoend theextensionprogram, ment insurance: We provide benefits, But I also don't think Republicans the job market looked very different. but they're sharply time-limited. It's were wrong to want to curtail those The ratio of job seekers to job openings a cushion to tide people over, not a extensions five years later. Both were had fallen much doser to its historical means of helping them avoid the psy- good policy, and I hope they'll be a average. At that point, extending un- chological pain of a job search (or, yes, m odelfor anyfuture crisesweface. employment benefits could make a in some cases, to put off looking for — Megan McArdle is plausibly large difference in the unem- work because you'd rather not work). a columnist for Bloomberg.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Laura Marie Browns, of Bend Oct. 21, 1922 - Jan. 29, 2015

Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Services may be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.

Kay Dean Thompson, of Bend May 18, 1923 - Feb. 1, 2015 Arrangements:

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Thur., Feb. 5 at 1PM at Trinity Episcopal Church, 469 NW Wall St., Bend.

Dawn A. James

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

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com

wedding ca ke dispute

soil and water conservation districts are the lead agencies in getting landowners to enroll in agreements and funneling federal dollars

Improvement plans might require removing invasive weeds, thinning juniper or changing grazing patterns to keep cattle off

The Associated Press

to develop habitat improve-

important habitats.

OREGON NEWS

Sage grouse

Hearing setin same-sex

Continued from B1

PORTLAND — A

ing is scheduled in March to determine how much in

closed the shop and moved their business to their home.

damages two Oregon bakers owe a lesbian couple

a commitment ceremony in

moval, creekrestoration and other work connected to the

J ames o f P e n dleton, O r egon; two daughters, San-

dra (Dan) McConnaughey of Windsor, Colorado and

J oni ( K eith)

G o ode o f

Sweet, Idaho; tw o s i sters, Sandy Kure of San Marcos, C alifornia an d B e tt y W i l -

son of Olympia, Washing-

ton; a brother, David Grocott o f L o n g v iew, W a s hington; 1 5 g r a n dchildren; and 28 great-grandchildren. Whispering Pines Funeral Home is assisting the family with arrangements; 185 NE 4th St., Prineville, Oregon 97754. 541-416-9733.

dam Site

Carroll Petrie, 90: A prominent socialite and philanthropist who gave hundreds of millions of dollars to museums, hospitals and charities, continuing the largess of her husband, the retailing mogul Milton Petrie, after his death in 1994. Died Jan. 22 at her home in Manhattan.

Margaret Bloy Graham, 94: A p i c t ure-book i l l u strator best known for the whimsi-

cal and delicate "Harry the Dirty Dog," a c a utionary ablutionary tale from 1956 that remains a staple of childhood. Died Jan. 22 in Belmont,

Red o d I

Round Butte Mitigation Fund

Deschytes River

and the Reser Family FounDend dation all contributed money Greg Cross/The Bulletin to pay for the project. The goal is to create habi- of the family that has long tat for steelhead and salmon, which have been returning to

tricts and

l a ndowners. If

A griculture awarded $9 million in January to eight Oregon counties, including Crook and Deschutes. That money can be earmarked for assisting landowners in implementing habitat im-

roll i n t he co n servation agreements, other grants

owners do not wish to encan be obtained for habitat r estoration projects in a n -

ticipation of the sage grouse listing. — Reporter 541-617-7820 tshorach@bendbulletin.com

Service installed a s i milar

spreading over the floodplain. bridge a few years ago on Storms in September and Link Creek by Suttle Lake. December have a l r eady Riehle wrote in an email brought floods to the stretch Monday he does not have an of Whychus Creek. exact cost estimate yet, with "We ha d s o m e p r e t ty the planned bridge about to good flood events that came go out for bid. "The new bridge will be through," Perle said. Project planners wanted to made of steel, will have a see the flooding, a sign of the slight arch and will have creek's recuperation. a cedar wooden deck," he Part of the next step in wrote. "The old bridge was the revival of this portion of made from reused car bridge Whychus Creek will be re- beams that were treated with placing the Whychus Creek creosote." Mainline Footbridge. The While the current footdesign of the current bridge bridge spans about 40 feet, creates a narrow passage for the new steel truss bridge is the creek, with a pier in the set to stretch nearly 125 feet, center that may trap passing according to plans from the debris and create a blockage. Deschutes National Forest. Originally installed in the The new design will also

I

I

slated to be held in the communities of B r others and

portant habitat. The U.S. Department of

turn to a seasonal pattern of

W

Board, Patagonia, Pelton-

districts wanted to do in Deschutes County.

wrote in an email. planned pending earthwork Bridge replacement should will include filling in sections start the second week in July of the channel, Perle said, and take until the end of Sepprompting the creek to re- tember, he said. The Forest

Cr

Enh a n cement

The grant approved Monday will pay for two workshops for local landowners about the sage grouse agreements. The workshops are

soil and water conservation

ly in one channel. Part of the

River Crookd Riv

ture Conservancy, Oregon Watershed

would benefit from it, we are

provements to their property.

oeschutes

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, the National Forest Foundation, The Na-

cover outreach activities the

plans might require remov- Hampton. ing invasive weeds, thinning Johnson said the w orkjuniper or changing grazing shops are likely to provide patterns to keep cattle off im- connections between dis-

DESC UTES NATIONAL

project is about $2 million.

The USDA funding didn't

the landscape. Improvement

adras

Former

W ater C onservation D i s -

trict, said the agreements are an "insurance policy" for landowners. "If they feel like they there to support it," Johnson said. The agreements will be differ ent for each property, Johnson said, depending on

standpoints.

Whychus Creek

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020

(Cathy) James of Redmond, Oregon and Gary (Robin)

Cryer and Bowman held

sa Klein refused to make a

Arlo n Dawn " Dawnie" James, age 88, passed away Friday, January 30, 2015 at her home. A Visitation will be held 4:00 t o 8 :00 p .m. Thursday, February 5 at Whispering Pines Funeral H ome. A Celebration of L ife w i ll be hel d , ! 2 :0 0 p. m . Friday, February 6, 2015 at at P r i neville Dawnie James Community Church. Private i n terment will b e a t J u n i per H a v en C emetery. Pas t o r C h r i s C ookston a nd Ch ar l e y Hughbanks will officiate. Dawnie was born F e bruary 25, 1926 in L o ngview, Washington to John Henry and Madeline Grace (Archer) Grocott. She grew up in Longview and Olympia, Washington and graduated from R. A . L on g H i gh School in Longview in 1944. She a t t ended N o r t h w est C hristian C o l lege i n E u gene, Oregon for a year aft er h i g h s c h o ol . D a w n i e married Donald H . J a m es December 3 1 , 19 5 0 i n L ongview. In 19 5 3 t h e y m oved t o P r i n eville, O r egon where Dan began his Forest Service career. She was a loving and dev oted wife an d m o ther t o her family of four children. She w a s an ex c e l l ent s eamstress, making m a n y garments, and in later years q uilts. S h e en j o y e d oi l p ainting, to le pai n t i n g , cooking and f l oral design. She was an active member in PEO Sisterhood for many years. Dawnie attended the P rinevill e Commu n i t y C hurch and w a s v er y a c tive in her Christian beliefs. O n W e dnesdays sh e a t tended the Ladies Quilting Group a t t he Pri n e v i lle Community Church. She was also a member of Look Out Mountain Grange, XYZ Club at t h e F i r s t B a p tist Church and th e P r ineville Garden Club. Every spring and summer she had a yard full of flowers. A fter retirement i n 1 9 86 she and Don traveled to Europe and England twice and m ade several t r ips t o t h e East Coast and the Southwest. She and Don worked as volunteers each spring as host and care takers of the K i r k w oo d Hi s t o r ical Ranch in Hells Canyon Nat ional Recreation Area o n t he Snake River. A fter 2 1 years they retired from that In 2009. Dawnie is survived by her h usband, D o n J a m e s o f Prineville; two sons, Steven

Deaths of note from around theworld:

Priscilla Johnson, man-

ager of the Crook Soil and

June 2013 and were married wedding cake in 2013. in May 2014, four days after A n a d m inistrative l a w a federal judge ruled that judge has rejected the bak- same-sex marriage was leers' c ontention t ha t t h e gal in Oregon. state's discrimination laws Investigators f o r the violate their religious free- state Bureau of Labor and dom, the Oregon labor de- Industries a year ago recpartment said Monday. o mmended $75,000 i n The bakers unlawfully damages. discriminated against the McCullough is to hold the same-sex couple by denying damages hearing in March them full and equal access and make a recommendato a place of public accom- tion to the state's elected modation, said the judge, labor commissioner, Brad Alan McCullough. Avakian. The controversy began His decision could be apwhen Rachel Cryer and pealed to the courts. Laurel Bowman went to Although the two sides the Sweet Cakes shop seek- went through a conciliation ing a wedding cake. When process as part of the agenthey learned there were two cy's procedures, the two brides, Aaron and Melis- sides haven't changed their

Fax: 541-322-7254

ELSEWHERE

ment plans.

for refusing to bake them a

Feb. 25, 1926- Jan30, 2015

DEATHS

The Crook and Deschutes

cake. The Kleins have since

h e ar-

Continued from B1 Total cost of the dam re-

Bend, OR 97708

B5

owned the ranch, replaced a

log diversion dam at the site Whychus Creek since 2009, with a concrete dam in the when Portland General Elec- late 1980s. Comprised of 120 tric and t h e C o nfederated cubic yards of concrete over

Tribes of Warm Springs fin- a metal frame, the dam stood ished a submerged fish tower strong until last September. in Lake Billy Chinook. The Planning the removal took structure allows fish to mi- much longer than the removgrate from waters flowing to al itself. Devising the plan the lake, like Whychus Creek, took about five years of talks, 1950s as a bridge for cars, the out to the Pacific Ocean. Perle said. Removing the dam bridge was decommissioned Since the late 1800s, a dam took about a week. in the 1980s and converted of some type has blocked The dam sat in a floodplain into a footbridge by the Forest a nd diverted w ater f r o m for Whychus Creek. Along Service, Mike Riehle, superW hychus C reek t o Pi n e with the dam, berms and visory fish biologist for the Meadow Ranch, about a mile dikes — man-made earthen Sisters Ranger District on the away. Doug Sokol, a member walls — kept the creek main- Deschutes National Forest

completely clear the creek,

removing the pier support for the current bridge. "So it won't be as narrow

right there for the creek to go through," Perle said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Massachusetts. — From wire reports

FEATUREDOBITUARY

emist was nown as 't e at er 0 t e i ' By Robert D. Mcfadden New York Times News Service

Carl Djerassi, an eminent chemist who 63 years ago synthesized a hormone that

changed the world by creating the key ingredient for the oral contraceptive known as "the pill," died at his home in San Francisco on Friday. He was 91.

His son, Dale, said the cause was complications of liver and bone cancer.

Djerassi arrived in America as World War II engulfed Europe, a 16-year-old Austrian

sized a progestin called nore- educations and careers. It also generateddebatesoverpromiskey ingredient of the pill. It was cuity and the morality of birth Oct. 15, 1951 — one of those control. The Roman Catholic datesrecorded forposterity — a Church, in particular, emyear before others created simi- phasized its bans on artificial lar compounds in other labs. contraception. Scientists had long known The pill m ade Djerassi high levels of estrogen and wealthy and something of a ceprogesterone inhibited ovu- lebrity as he moved through a lation. But synthesizing them series of careers as a professor from animal or plant extracts of chemistry, an insect-control had proved expensive and entrepreneur, an art collector, i neffective for u s e a s o r a l a rancher, an author of science contraceptives. novels and nonfiction books as The synthesis by Djerassi well as a poet, playwright and and his colleagues, Dr. George founder of an artists' colony. thindrone, which became the

Jewish refugee who, with his mother, lost their last $20 to a Rosenkranz and the student, swindling New York cabdriver. Luis Miramontes, was both He wrote to Eleanor Roosevelt,

asking for assistance and obtained a college scholarship. It was a little help that made a big difference.

Djerassi wrote books, plays and 1,200 scientific artides; taught at universities for five

decades; created an artists' colony in California; and obtained a patent on the first antihistamine. His work on the science

"Yes, I am proud to be called the father of the pill," he told

Nicholas Wroe of The Guardoral use. All three names went ian newspaper in 2000. "But on the patent. identifying scientists is really At first, the team deemed it a only a surrogate for identifying breakthmugh for fertility, not the inventions or discoveries. birth control. While its signif- Maybe it is true that Shakeicance as a pregnancy inhibi- speare's plays would never tor was soon recognized, five have been written if it wasn't yearsoftrials were needed to for Shakespeare.But I'm cer-

and his mother made their way to America in 1939, settling in

upstate New York, where his antihistamine. mother worked in a group medHis first marriage, to Virginical practice. His father immi- ia Jeremiah, ended in divorce grated to the United States in in 1950. He and his second 1949. tercession, Carl briefly attend-

who committed suicide in 1978.

ed Tarkio College in Missouri, then earned a bachelor's degree with honors in chemistry at Kenyon College in Ohio in 1942, when he was not quite 19.

Thatmarriage ended indivorce

In 1945, he earned a doctorate at the University of Wiscon-

Middlebrook, whom he married in 1985, died in 2007. Besides his son, he is survived by a grandson and a stepdaughter, Leah Middlebrook.

American citizen.

Over the next four years, Djerassi was a c hemist for Ciba, a Swiss pharmaceutical

company in New Jersey, where he receiveda patent for devel-

~~~coolsculpting

tain that if we didn't do our

LE F F E L CEN TE R 0

C'0 8

%,

8

Danys ettle faranyone b ut a plastic surgeanfor

Coolsculpsng'

www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006

wards and done it." Carl Djerassi was born in Vienna on Oct. 29, 1923, to

Samuel and Alice Friedmann

in 1976. His third wife, Diane

sin and became a naturalized

and effec tiveness. Even then, work, then someone else would drug companies were reluc- have come along shortly after-

of birth control helped engen- tant to market the pill, fearing der enormous controversies boycotts of their products by and social changes, altering religious groups and others opsexual and reproductive prac- posed to birth control. tices, family economics and In the 1960s, however, the the working lives of millions of pill — based also on pioneering women around the world. work by M.C. Chang, Gregory While never a h o usehold Pincus, John Rock and others, name, Djerassiwas oftencalled and technically known as the "the father of the pill." But it combined oral contraceptive was something of an exaggera- pill — was developed and martion. He did not invent the com- keted by various drug compamercial birth control pill and nies. They included Syntex, was only one of many scientists where Djerassi and his colworking over decades who pi- leagues had worked. oneered the chemical bases of Use of the pill spread rapwhat would become the pill. idly, producing vast economAnd even on the day of the ic and social effects. It gave breakthrough, he was one of women unprecedented control two chemists working w ith over fertility, separating sex a student assistant at a small from procreation. It let couples pharmaceutical laboratory in plan pregnancies and regulate Mexico City who first synthe- family size, and women plan

wife, Norma Lundholm, were

With a scholarship arranged married in 1950 and had a son, through Eleanor Roosevelt's in- Dale, and a daughter, Pamela,

economical and effective for

demonstrate its relative safety

oping Pyribenzamine (tripelennamine), the first commercial

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

f

)

In Loving Memory o

physicians who were divorced when he was 6. The boy, a bril-

()

ROBERT (BOB) PERSONS

liant student, attended schools

()

Djerassi. His

p arents were

in Vienna, including Sigmund Freud's old "gymnasium," and summered in Sofia, Bulgaria, where his father specialized in treating venereal diseases before penicillin. In 1938, when Nazi Germany annexed Austria and 70,000 Austrian Jews and Commu-

nists were quiddy rounded up, the elder Djerassi returned to

Vienna and remarried his wife in order to take her and Carlout of the country. The marriage was soon annulled, and Carl

JULY Ro~ r927- JAN. R6yRor5 Bob lived his life of 87 years with great inner strength and true love and compassion for his family and friends. () He proudly served his country as a WWII Naval veteran and ( volunteered for many yearswith the Culver Lions Club. 'Ihe outdoors was his passion; hunting, fishing, camping and 'sittin' on the front porch. Bob was a loving husband to his wife, Pat, of 61 years; a devoted father to Robert Jr., Teri and Mike; a much loved father-in-law to Scott Ashbaugh and Heather Persons; aspecial grandpa to Skyler and Coiby Ashbaugh and Sara Persons. A beloved brother to his six siblings and favorite uncle to many nieces and nephews. We will miss you very much and hold in you in our hearts always, love and peaceto you.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015

I

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH 46'

ALMANAC

W EDN E SDAY

34'

Mostly cloudy with a couple of showers

51'

Cloudy and mild with a couple of showers

Breezy and mild with periods of rain

I,

EAST: Another gray day with a wealth of clouds andperiods of rain as anactive weather pattern persists.

TEMPERATURE

3

Seasid

r

Yesterday Today Wednesday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 50/23/0.00 60/41/pc Cannon High 55 42 55' in 1952 lington 47/34 Portland 4 Akron 19/12/0.32 26/24/pc Meac am Losti ne 53/42 34' 24' -19'in 1950 Low 9/3 Albany 12/5/1.06 21/5/pc 40/2 • W co 5 /34 44/31 Enterprise di t he gall Albuquerque 57/26/0.00 57/32/s Tigamo 4 • 43/29 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Rain and andy • Anchorage 20/6/Tr 18/2/s 46/36 53/42 Mc innviff • JosePh Atlanta 57/35/0.49 52/32/s • He PPner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.06" clouds will overspread Gove nt • upi Condon 7/34 44 30 Atlantic City 44/34/1.26 30/24/s Record 1.23"in 1907 the region onceagain Lincoln union Austin 47/33/0.00 51/38/c 43/ Month to date (normaf) 0.0 5" (0.05") as yet another storm 53/44 Sale Baltimore 45/32/0.40 33/23/s • pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.31 " (1.61 ") systemmovesin 51/4 • 7/33 Billings 37/22/0.00 39/12/sn 'Baker C Newpo 41/25 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 0" today. • 45 35 Birmingham 38/35/0.15 52/30/s 1/41 54/44 • Mitch II 41/26 Bismarck 19/-6/0.00 19/-1/sn Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Wetweather 46/30 OrV R I S SUN ANDMOON eu Boise 46/33/0.18 48/36/r Yach 45/31 • John will be had once 50/42 Boston 21/1 3/s 53/45 • Prineville oay /26 Today Wed. tario Bridgeport, CT 31/10/0.77 again, especially 29/22/1.10 24/1 7/s 46/33 • Pa lina 47/ 3 2 7:21 a.m. 7: 2 0 a.m. 33 Buffalo 14/12/0.39 19/18/pc early, as afast moving Floren e • Eugene 'Be d Brothers 4630 5:15 p.m. 5: 1 9 p.m. storm systemsweeps 54/46 Valee Burlington, VT 2/-5/0.39 15/9/pc Su iVere 46/34 5:31 p.m. 5: 2 9 p.m. 43/33 -5/-16/0.04 Caribou, ME 5/-8/pc through. Nyssa • 45/ Ham ton Charleston, SC 63/59/0.05 52/33/s 5:51 a.m. 7 : 2 3 a.m. La plne 44/33 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 57/53/0.41 49/29/s • Burns OREGON EXTREME L ast Ne w Firs t 47/33 52/45 /45 Chattanooga 41/37/0.32 49/29/s 56 • Fort Rock Rfley 49/34 YESTERDAY 4' Cresce t • 47/31 Cheyenne 49/1 8/0.00 51/24/c 49/32 46/32 Chicago 19/6/1.37 26/17/sn High: 62' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 27/20/0.02 39/31/pc Jordan V gey Feb 3 Feb 11 F eb 1 a Feb 25 at Roseburg 55/50 Beaver Silver 48/32 Frenchglen 54/50 Cleveland 18/11/0.20 27/24/pc Low: 24' 49/35 Marsh Lake 53/36 ColoradoSprings 55/1 7/0.00 56/35/pc Toufght's uftff:TheFull Snow Moon(3:09 49/36 at Sisters 48/32 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 23/11/0.01 48/30/pc • Paisley 7/ p.m.i is in the constellation of Cancer.Jupiter a Columbia, SC 59/57/0.64 53/28/s • 55/39 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 50/46/0.44 54/34/s Medfo d 5 1 / 37 will be just abovethe moon. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 21/17/0.22 32/28/pc 58/ 55/39 • 44 Klamath Concord, HH 11/6/0.85 18/1/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • Fage • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 56/46/0.00 50/44/r Bro ings 58/ 58/ 55/35 52/3B 55/35 Dallas 42/24/0.00 57/41/pc Dayton 22/16/0.03 35/29/c Denver 52/9/0.00 58/31/pc 1 g a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 15/-3/Tr 32/1 4/sn 0 I~ T ~ T I 0 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 19/11/0.05 22/22/pc The higherthe AccuWsalberuum IIYIndex number, Asturis 56/42/0.44 52/39/sh53/45/sh Ls Grande 46/37/0.11 44/30/sh 46/38/sh Portland 59/4 3/0.3848/37/sh 49/43/ sh Duluth 15/-12/0.00 14/-1/c the greatertheneedfor eyssndskin protscgun.0-2 Low, Baker City 39/32/0. 04 41/26/sh 41/32/sh Ls Pine 51/32/0.33 45/32/r 51/35/sh Prinevige 55/ 32/0.2346/33/r 51/36/sh El Paso 62/37/0.00 66/39/s 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 56/51/1.36 58/49/r 58/52/c Me d ford 52/4 2 /0.71 55/44/r 57/41/c Redmond 58/ 28/0.2145/34/r 51/39/sh 7/-21/0.00 -9/-27/s Fairbanks Bums 52/30/0.08 49/34/r 50/35/c Ne wport 55/4 6 /0.28 54/44/sh 57/50/sh Roseburg 62/ 4 7/0.3554/50/r 59/50/sh Fargo 22/-4/0.00 18/-1/c Eugene 61/46/0.33 50/43/r 53/46/sh N o rth Bend 5 7 / 52/0.33 56/48/r 61/51/sh Salem 60/47/0.35 51/40/sh 51/44/sh Flagstaff 59/22/0.00 59/27/s Klsmsth Falls 49/40/0.57 55/35/r 54/38/c O n tario 40/36/0.18 44/33/r 45/36/sh Sisters 54/24/0.25 45/32/r 51/37/sh Grand Rapids 19/3/0.07 25/1 9/c ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto Lakeview 48/39/0.09 52/36/r 55/39/c Pendleton 56/33/0.01 47/33/sh 46/37/ s h The Dsges 5 9 /40/0.18 46/36/sh 45/39/ s h Green Bsy 16/3/0.00 18/10/c www.bendbugetin.com/webcams Greensboro 56/50/0.38 46/29/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-parffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-tbunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-lrsce,Yesterday data ssof 5 p.m. yesterday l-&4 atCabbageHill: Cloudytodaywith spotty Harrisburg 39/30/0.30 28/16/pc showersduring theaftemoon.Damproads. 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Yesterday Normal Record

53/40

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UV INDEX TODAY

ROAD CONDITONS

NATIONAL WEATHER

+XXX

GRE 5a atWigamette Pass:Occasional rain throughthis eveningmakingfor wet roadconditions. Alitlle snow late; noaccumulation expected. GREsa 1 at Diamondlake: Periodsof rain today and tonightmakingforwet roadcondilions.

SKI REPORT In inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday

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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 31/25/0.00 28/23/pc 31/14/c 23/1/Tr 48/21/pc 26/2/sn

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15/5/0.09 68/45/0.00 28/23/0.15 19/-7/Tr 41/26/0.00 78/51/0.00 29/24/0.01 15/-2/Tr 37/29/0.00 85/68/0.02 17/10/0.08 16/0/0.00 31/28/0.07 58/42/0.03 31/29/1.22 32/31/1.34 61/43/0.34 39/17/0.00

15/-4/Tr

77/60/0.13 80/50/0.00 17/10/0.02 41/33/0.99 73/48/0.00 Pittsburgh 37/23/0.44 Portland, ME 8/4/0.59 Providence 31/17/0.89 Raleigh 62/38/0.39 Rapid City 39/3/0.00 Renu 54/32/0.03 Richmond 58/41/0.47 Rochester, NY 19/9/0.45 Sacramento 66/41/0.00 Si. Louis 29/18/0.03 Salt Lake City 56/40/0.01 Ssn Antonio 52/39/0.00 Ssn Diego 73/52/0.00 Ssn Francisco 66/49/0.00 Ssn Joss 68/42/0.00 Santa re 49/20/0.00 Savannah 63/59/0.03 Seattle 52/41/0.29

Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc Wichita

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24/20/pc 25/1/sf 71/46/s 71/46/pc

40/30/pc 48/22/c 41/14/pc 22/-8/sn 54/32/s 59/30/c 75/53/s 74/53/s

44/34/pc 48/22/c 19/8/sn 20/-5/c

50/35/s 57/29/pc 74/64/c 75/69/pc

23/16/sn 24/2/c 20/10/sn 19/0/pc

48/32/s 55/27/pc 53/45/c 57/45/r 26/21/s 41/32/$1 24/18/s 40/29/sf 38/28/pc 53/39/pc 59/38/s 52/23/c

37/12/c 21/-7/sn 66/50/s 73/57/c 84/55/s 85/56/s 34/21/c 28/2/sn

30/23/s 46/33/pc 75/52/s 76/52/s 26/23/pc 39/1 9/sf 20/5/s 30/23/sf

21/11/s 46/29/s 45/12/sn 65/35/c 42/28/s 21/13/pc 67/44/c 49/33/pc 56/42/r 49/42/sh

37/28/c 56/38/pc 26/16/pc 65/42/c 55/37/pc 32/14/sf 63/48/pc 39/12/sn 53/37/c 61/42/pc

68/54/s 68/54/s

63/50/c 61/51/pc 68/45/pc 65/46/pc 51/28/s 54/27/s 53/35/s 63/46/c 51/41/sh 51/45/c 14/-11/Tr 23/11/sn 17/-2/c 36/30/0.12 39/31/r 40/35/c 28/16/Tr 71/63/0.19 72/45/0.00 35/12/Tr 50/30/0.11 32/8/Tr 42/29/0.05 77/50/0.00

53/33/s 47/13/pc

67/53/pc 72/59/pc 74/47/s 75/47/s 58/35/s 51/19/c 39/30/s 52/36/pc 58/29/s 39/15/sn

44/32/sh 43/36/sh 80/50/s 81/52/s

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Mecca Mexico City

93/73/0.00 73/47/0.00 Montreal 5/-8/0.00 Moscow 32/24/0.00 Nairobi 86/61/0.00 Nassau 81/66/0.02 New Delhi 73/54/0.01 Osaka 42/35/0.00 Oslo 24/23/0.34 Ottawa 5/-6/0.12 Paris 39/31/0.05 Rio de Janeiro 82/77/0.05 Rome 52/36/0.02 Santiago 88/59/0.00 Ssu Paulo 79/70/0.16 Sspporu 29/24/0.12 Seoul 40/19/0.00 Shanghai 44/33/0.00 Singapore 82/75/0.18 Stockholm 25/25/0.51 Sydney 72/66/0.05 Taipei 68/57/0.17 Tel Aviv 69/38/0.00 Tokyo 47/37/0.00 Toronto 12/5/0.14 Vancouver 46/45/0.00 Vienna 39/32/0.02 Warsaw 37/21/0.00

96/71/pc 71/39/c 14/9/pc 28/21/sn 87/58/s 79/65/pc 68/50/1 46/32/c 28/17/c 16/10/c 36/30/pc 89/76/1 52/46/r 89/56/s 81/66/1 27/1 2/c

98/71/pc 73/42/s 24/5/sn 27/20/sf 86/58/s 78/66/pc 68/47/c 47/33/c 25/1 4/c 23/0/sf 39/27/pc 90/77/f 56/47/r 90/57/s 79/66/r 28/17/sf

41/21/pc 40/21/pc 47/36/c 48/31/pc 84P5/1 32/26/sn 76/64/sh 68/59/r 69/52/s 46/35/s

20/13/pc 48/39/sh 38/27/pc 35/26/pc

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 Skiing, C2 College hoops, C3 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

O

SKIING

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

SUPER BOWL XLIX

Bend'sRoss7th in downhill training

Seattle's

BEAVER CREEK,

Colo.— American skier Stacey Cookclocked the fastest time in awindy downhill training session at theworld champiRoss onships Monday with teammates Lindsey Vonn and Bend's Laurenne Ross not that far behind. Cook finished in1 minute, 48.16 seconds despite blowing snow, 0.09 seconds aheadof Switzerland's Lara Gut and Norway's Ragnhild Mowinckel, who tied for second. Vonnwas tied for fourth, 0.62 seconds back, but stood up after the final jump and cruised into the finish area. Ross, who is likely to race in today's Super-G, was seventh in 1:49.10. It was an important performance for Cook and Ross becausethey are vying with two otherteammates for two remaining spots on the U.S. downhill team for Friday's race. Vonn and Julia Mancuso are already in.

ww w .bendbulletin.com/sports

final call roundly criticized • With 6 playersstill remaining from the original team, oft-overlooked Tiinity Lutheran has grown to becomeoneof the state's top Class1Ateams injust 4 seasons

By John Branch New York Times News Service

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Darrell Bevell was 20 miles from home, but he

really just wanted to go I

*

yard. That was how far the Seattle Seahawks

s

were fromthe winning touchdown in the final seconds of Sunday's Super Bowl. How they got therewas Bevell's

t

1ns'tr

)Ig

I lÃ~

—TheAssociated Press

• Sherman decision. needs As a teenager, To m my B evell and J o h n his father, su r gery, C4 Jim, would watch film of games together, pushing the button to

make it go forward and back and forward again, analyzing what worked and what did not. Jim Bevell was the coach at

Chaparral High School in Scottsdale, Arizona, and Darrell Bevell was

Inside • Five races to watch at the alpine world championships,C2

his star quarterback. "To be able to play in a Super Bowl here, you couldn't even dream it up

this good," Darrell Bevell,

NFL

45, said last week.

SeeSeahawks/C4

Quinnnamed Falconscoach ATLANTA—The

Atlanta Falcons' long wait for new leadership on the field finally ended Monday whenSeattle defensive coordinator Dan Quinn wasnamed the team's coach. The Falcons said Quinn will be introduced at a news conference today. Quinn replaces Mike Smith, who was fired following a 6-10 finish in 2014. Falcons owner Arthur Blank said hewas impressed by Quinn's "definitive plan for our football team and what

it will take to win on a consistent basis." The Falcons exercised patience while waiting for Quinn, who could not be offered a job until after Seattle's 28-24 Super Bowl loss Sunday night to the New England Patriots. "This felt like the right fit from the be-

ginning, and I want to thank Mr. Blank for his resolve as this was an extended and complicated process," Quinn said in a statement released by the team. "My goal is to build upon the foundation that has

been laid here andto play a physical brand of football as we build a championship caliber team." Quinn, 44, helped Seattle reach back-toback Super Bowls. Seattle beat Denver in last year's championship. — The Associated Press

CORRECTION

Meg Roussos /The Bulletin

Trinity Lutheran seniors (left to right) Erin Cowan, Madison Martin, Victoria Sample, Katie Murphy and Megan Clift have led the Saints to a 17-2 record and a No. 5 ranking in Class 1A. All are original members of the fourth-year program.

atie Murphy is not sure many local residents know where, or what,

LUCAS

In northeast Bend, near the intersection of 27th Street and Butler

road from Popeyes toPatriots

Market Road, only a small sign notes the location of the school. There are no spacious or Adam Kilgore

towering buildings like at Bend, Mountain View and Summit high schools. There is only a

The Washington Post

Shennelle Parker, the manager of the Popeyes

small dearing for Trinity Lutheran, which passers-by may mistake for a simple church.

Louisiana Kitchen in

The gymnasium is unassuming, tucked behind module trailers by the front

Vicksburg, Mississippi,

parking lot. There are no championship banners draped from the walls inside.

could always count on Malcolm Butler. Parker

The thumping echoes of bouncing basketballs are confined within the gym's

rgÃ8 y

doors, serenading only the handful of players and coaches — and on game days, a few spectators — who proudly call themselves Saints.

hired Butler as a cashier, and before long Butler began to "cross train," which meant he could perform every task in the store. Butler showed

up on time, washed dishes, took orders up

institution with a high school enrollment

Murphy, a senior for the Saints. "We might be in 1A — we're not in 5A like everybody

of 59 students. These are the Saints, now in

else — but we can still do it in 1A. We're at

their fourthyear of existence. Despite being thought of as the little sibling of the other Bend high schools, Trinity Lutheran has persevered and used that perception as motivation to become one of the top girls basketball

the top." Murphy is one of six seniors on the Trinity

This is Trinity Lutheran School, a K-12

teams in Class 1A.

"This year, and last year a little bit, we've kind of proven ourselves in a way," says

front and graduated to the batter station, where

he would drop chicken into sizzling oil. "He was a good employee," Parker said Monday morning in a

Lutheran roster — and all six were original

members of the Saints' fast-risingprogram.

"We've always been with each other," says senior Megan Clift, "and it just continued

phone conversation. "He kept the customers hap-

on."

For a photo gallery of Trinity Lutheran's gameagainst McKenzie last week:www.bendbulletin.csm/sperts

SeeSaints/C4 Katie Murphy, the defending Mountain Valley League player of the year, leads Trinity Lutheran with15.9 points per game.

py and pleased. I was always pleased. He was a hard worker. Everybody in here really liked working with him." See Butler /C4

TENNIS

For Serena Williams, noquit is double-edged sword By Christopher Clarey

A story headlined "This Bend Marathon looks to stick around," which appeared in Monday's Bulletin on page B1, listed an incorrect web address for the 2015 BendMarathon. The website is www. bend-marathon.com. The Bulletin regrets the error.

GRANT

Trinity Lutheran actually is.

Butler's

know when to quit. Look, here I am

New York Times News Service

still playing, and I'm 33." Here she is, and off she goes: heading to Argentina shortly after winning the Australian Open for aboutthegrassinabizarreand her 19th Grand Slam singles title. brief doubles match at Wimbledon Although Williams said with a lastyear. chuckle that she has ordered fam"I have a stopping issue," she said ily and members of her support MELBOURNE, Australia — Serena Williams is now prepared to confess what led to her stumbling

in an interview Sunday. "I don't

team to rein her in for her own

have a quitbutton. You just can't press control-alt-quit with me. The

good, she still deemed it best to board an overnight flight out of Melbourneon Monday morning

window will stay open. I do not

for Los Angeles and was then plan- Madison Keys, now up to 20th in ning toboard another overnight the rankings after reaching the flight after a few hours of work for

Australian Open semifinals.

her personal charity. Her destination will be Buenos

This is hardly all for the glory of Fed Cup, even though Williams says she enjoys playing for her country and is looking forward to the experience. She needs to play

Aires, where she intends to play in

a second-division Fed Cup match for the United States against Argentina on Saturday and Sunday. If in the International Tennis Federso, she will be part of a powerhouse ation's annual team competition team that is expected to include her to be eligible for the 2016 Summer sister Venus, Varvara Lepchenko Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. and the emerging 19-year-old star See Serena/C3

Inside • Where Serena Williams ranks in all-time women's Grand Slam singles titles, C3


C2 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER England, FACup, Manchester United vs.CambridgeUnited

Time TV/Radio 11:30 a.m. FS1

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Indiana atWisconsin Men's college, Georgia at Kentucky Men's college, Mississippi St. at Tennessee Men's college, St. John's at Butler Men's college, Northwestern at Nebraska Men's college, WestVirginia at Oklahoma Men's college, Florida at Vanderbilt Men's college, Virginia Tech atSyracuse Men's college, South Carolina at Arkansas Men's college, Seton Hall at DePaul Men's college, Rutgers at lllinois NBA, Utah at Portland

4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPNU 4 p.m. SEC 4 p.m. FS1 4:30 p.m. Big Ten 5 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. FS1 6:30 p.m. Big Ten 7 p.m. CSNNW, KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1; KRCO-AM 690, FM-96.9

HOCKEY

NHL, Chicago at Minnesota

5 p.m. NBCSN

WEDNESDAY SOCCER England, FACup, Bolton vs. Liverpool

11:30 a.m. FS1

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Ohio St. at Purdue Men's college, Temple at S.Florida Men's college, GeorgiaTechat Duke Men's college, E.Carolina at Connecticut Men's college, Boston College atNotre Dame Men's college, TexasA&M at Mississippi Men's college, Marquette at Villanova NBA, Chicago at Houston Men's college, PennSt. at Maryland Men's college, TCUat Baylor Men's college, Washington at Oregon Men's college,KansasSt.atTexasTech Men's college, Clemson atFlorida St. Men's college, Missouri at Alabama Men's college, Creighton at Xavier NBA, Dallas at GoldenState

3:30 p.m. Big Ten 3:30 p.m. ESPNN 4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPNU 4 p.m. Roo t 4 p.m. SEC 4 p.m. FS1 5 p.m. E S PN 5:30 p.m. Big Ten 5:30 p.m. ESPNN 6 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. Roo t 6 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. FS1 7:30 p.m. ESPN

ON DECK Today Boys basketball:Summitat Bend,7 p,mcRidgeviewat Mountain View,7 p.m.; Corhettat Madras, 7p.mcEstacadaatCrookCounty,7p.m.; PleasantHil at LaPine, 7:30 p.mcCentral Christian atTrinity LutheranJV,7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Bendat Summit, 7p.m.;Mountain View atRidgeview,7 p.mc Madras at Corhett, 7 p.m.; Crook Countyat Estacada, 7 p.mcPleasant Hill at LaPine,6 p.mcCentral Christian at Trinity Lutheran,6p.m. Swimming: Sisters, Redmond,RidgeviewatCascade SwimCenter, 3p.m.

Thursday Swimming:Ridgeview,Redmond, Summit at Madras, 3p.m. Wrestling:Redmondat Ridgeview,6 p.m.; Bendat MountainView,7p.mcLaPine at Glide,TBD Friday Boys basketball:MountainViewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview, 7 p.mcCotage Groveat Sisters,715p mcMadrasatCrookCounty,7p m.; Coquille atLaPine, 6:30p.m.; Weston-McEwenat Culver,4:30p.m.;PaisleyatCentralChristian,7:30 p.m.; NorthLakeat Gilchrist, 7 p.m. Girls basketball:Bendat Mountain View,7 p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview,5:15p.m.; CottageGrove at Sisters,5:45p.mcCrookCountyat Madras,7 p.m.; Coquilleat LaPine, 5 p.m.;Weston-McEwen at Culver, 6p.m.;Paisleyat Central Christian,6 p.m.; TrinityLutheranat Triad, 4 p.m.; NorthLake at Gilchrist, 5p.m. Wrestling: Sisters atJunction City, 6 p.mcMadras, Gilchrist atCottageGroveInvitational, TBD

Saturday Boysbasketball:Culverat Pilot Rock,5:30p.m.; CentralChristianat North Lake,3:30p.m. Girls basketball:Culverat Pilot Rock,4 p.mcCentral Christian atNorthLake,2 p.m.;Gilchrist at TrinityLutheran,5:30p.m. Wrestling:Ridgeviewat Mid-Valley Classicin Alhany, TBD;Madras, Gilchrist at CottageGrove Invitational,TBD Alpineskiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, Ed'sGarden,10a.m. Nordic skiing:OISRAclassic andbiathlon at Mt. Bachelor,11:30a.mcOHSNOpursuit, classicand skate ,atMt.HoodMeadows,TBD

Go l f

All TimesPST

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI7'or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL JBdgO tgyalltS COllCBSSiOgl SOttlsmallt tO Bill mOB8— The judge presiding over thousands of NFL concussion lawsuits wants lawyers to tweak the proposedsettlement to benefit more retired players. Senior U.S. District Judge Anita B. Brody in Philadelphia has been nudging both sides toward a planthat could pay out $1 billion over 65 years. Brody granted preliminary approval last year after the NFL agreed to lift a $765 million funding cap. OnMonday, sheasked for further revisions that would let more retirees, or the families of deceased players, claim awards or seekneurological testing. The NFL expects 6,000 of nearly 20,000 retired players to suffer from Alzheimer's disease or moderate dementia someday.Thesettlement would pay themabout $190,000 on average, given that most would be diagnosed in their later years. MRRZiel enterS rehad —Cleveland quarterback Johnny Manziel, who hasearned a reputation as a hard-partying celebrity, has entered a treatment program, said the team's general manager, Ray Farmer, and Manziel's adviser Brad Beckworth. Manziel was drafted by the Browns in the first round last year and immediately made headlines for his off-field behavior. Hestarted the season onthe bench and then played in ahandful of games before getting injured. SGpOg BOtgyldOlilyOFSRll-timO TV gOCOgd— The biggestaudience in television history — a record114.4 million viewers — tuned in to watch the SuperBowl. TheNBCbroadcast drew 2.2 million more viewers than last year's SuperBowl, which hadheld therecord for TV's biggest audience,according to Nielsen. NBCsaid that with a rating of 47.5, Sunday's gamewasthe highest-rated Super Bowl in 30 years.

BASKETBALL BeaVerS' IeiSner joinS1,000-Point Clud — Jamie Weisner scored all 18 of her points in the first half to becomethe 18th Oregon State player to reach1,000 career points as No. 7Oregon State beat UCLA82-64 Monday night in Corvallis. Ruth Hamblin added 15 points and 12rebounds and Sydney Wiese added 13points and nine assists for the Beavers (20-1, 10-0 Pac-12j, who hadfive players score in double figures. — Fromwirereports

EasternConterence AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA 51 32 15 4 49 32 14 3 50 29 12 9 50 27 16 7 48 21 17 10 48 20 19 9 51 22 25 4 50 14 33 3

0

68 166 133 67 130 111 67 149 129 61 134 124 52 118 138 49 136 136 48 144 156 31 94 179

MetropolitanOivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.y.lslanders 49 32 16 1 65 158 139 P ittsburgh 5 0 2 8 14 8 64 145 129 N.Y.Rangers 48 29 15 4 62 145 115 Washington 50 25 15 10 60 147 129 Philadelphia 51 22 22 7 51 140 151 NewJersey 50 19 22 9 47 113 138 Columbus 48 21 24 3 45 120 151 C arolina 49 1 7 2 6 6 40 105 129 WesternConterence CentralDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA Nashville 49 32 11 6 70 149 115 St. Louis 49 32 13 4 68 160 120 Chicago 50 31 17 2 64 155 115 Winnipeg 52 26 18 8 60 144 137 Dallas 49 23 19 7 53 157 159 Colorado 50 21 18 11 53 131 141 Minnesota 49 23 20 6 52 135 140 PacificDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 50 32 12 6 70 147 134 SanJose 51 27 17 7 61 143 140 Calgary 51 28 20 3 59 149 131 Vancouver 48 27 18 3 57 131 124 Los Angeles 49 21 16 12 54 134 132 Arizona 50 18 26 6 42 116 170 Edmonton 51 14 28 9 37 120 170

Monday'sGames Edmonton 5, SanJose4, SO N.Y.Rangers6, Florida 3 Calgary5,Winnipeg 2 Today'sGames Ottawa atNewJersey,4 p.m. Florida atN.Y.Islanders,4 p.m. LosAngelesatWashington,4p.m. Arizona at Columbus,4 p.m. Buffaloat Montreal, 4:30p.m. TampaBayatSt.Louis,5p.m. TorontoatNashvile, 5 p.m. Chicagoat Minnesota,5 p.m. Colorado at Dallas,5:30 p.m. WinnipegatVancouver, 7p.m. CarolinaatAnaheim,7p.m.

TENNIS ATP World Tour OpenSuddeFrance Monday at Montpellier, France First Round Tohias Kamke,Germany, def. Vincent Millot, France, 2-6,6-3,7-5. Joao Sousa(7), Portugal, def. Laurent Lokoli, France, 6-2,6-4. JerzyJanowicz(5),Poland,def. DustinBrown,Germany,2-6,7-6(1),7-5. ZagrebIndoors Monday at Zagreb, Croatia First Round RicardasBerankis, Lithuania, def. LukasLacko,

Slovakia,6-0,6-2. SergiyStakhovsky,Ukraine,def. BornaCoric, Croatia, 6-2,6-4.

USATodayTop25 coachespol Record Pls Pvs 21-0 799 1 22-1 74 9 3 2. Gonzaga (1) 19-1 70 9 2 3. Virginia 19-2 70 3 5 4. Wisconsin 5. Duke 18-3 69 1 4 6.Arizona 20-2 65 0 6 7. Villanova 19-2 59 5 7 8. Louisville 18-3 56 0 9 9. Kansas 18-3 549 11 10. NotreDame 20-3 53 0 8 11. Utah 1 7-4 417 10 12. WestVirginia 18-3 40 8 17 13. North Carolina 17-5 39 9 14 14. IowaSt. 1 6-4 396 16 15. N.Iowa 20-2 37 4 18 1 8-4 31 9 13 16. Maryland 17. WichitaSt. 1 9-3 31 6 1 2 17-4 21 4 15 18. VCU 1 6-5 207 19 19. Baylor 17-5 173 20. OhioSt. 14-7 138 21. Oklahom a 16-6 9 4 22. Butler 1 8-4 6 8 23. SMU 15-6 57 22 24. Georgeton w 16-6 4 9 21 25.1ndiana Othersreceivingvotes:Arkansas39, Colorado St.37,Texas37,Dayton27,SanDiegoSt.25,Texas A&M 16,Wyoming10, Providence9, Tulsa 8, Seton Hall 7, StephenF.Austin 7, MichiganSt. 5, TCU5, Stanford2, LSU1,Valparaiso1. 1. Kentucky(31 )

"Stop whining and get up! No ectoplasm, no foul!!"

EcuadorOpen Mondayat Ouito, Ecuador First Round HoracioZehallos,Argentina,def. AustinKrajicek, UnitedStates,7-6(3), 6-4. Albert Montanes,Spain, def. FacundoArguello, Argentina,6-1,6-3.

Leaders

NATIONAL HOCKEYLEAGUE

TampaBay Montreal Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo

d

Professionai

NHL

5 p.m. NBCSN 1 1 p.m.

In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomrcs.com/rnthebreachers

RODEO

HOCKEY

The AssociatedPressTop25 poll Record Pts Prv 21-0 1, 625 1 2. Gonza ga 2 2-1 1,503 3 3. Virginia 1 9-1 1,470 2 4. Duke 1 8-3 1,416 4 5. Wisconsin 1 9-2 1,381 5 6. Arizona 2 0-2 1,338 6 7.Villanova 19-2 1,209 7 8. Kansas 1 8-3 1,177 9 9. Louisville 18-3 1,114 10 2 0-3 1,072 8 10. NotreDame 1 6-4 892 15 11. IowaSt. 17-5 86 1 13 12. NorthCarolina 17-4 824 11 13. Utah 20-2 79 2 18 14. N.lowa 18-3 77 9 17 15. WestVirginia 1 9-3 678 12 16. WichitaSt. 1 8-4 508 16 17. Maryland 18. VCU 1 7-4 479 14 19. Baylor 1 6-5 420 2 0 20. OhioSt. 17-5 358 21. Oklahom a 1 4-7 31 2 2 4 22. Butler 16-6 25 0 25 23. SMU 18-4 221 24. Georgeton w 15-6 162 21 25. Texas 14-7 10 6 19 Others receivingvotes:TexasABM40, Seton Hall 22, Arkansas21, Indiana18, SanDiego St. 18, ColoradoSt. 11,Dayton9, Tulsa8, Xavier 8, StephenF.Austin 5, Providence3, Stanford3, LouisianaTech2, MurraySt. 2, OklahomaSt. 2, Temple 2,Georgia1, MichiganSt.1, RhodeIsland 1, Valparaiso1. 1 . Kentucky (65 )

Wednesday Wrestling: CrookCounty,Madras, Gladstoneat Corhett,TBD

HOCKEY

NHL, Boston at N.Y.Rangers GOLF EuropeanTour,MalaysianOpen

IN THE BLEACHERS

Through Sunday All-around — 1.Trevor Brazile, Decatur,Texas $14,464.2.StevenDent, Mullen, Neh.11,741. BarebackRiding — 1. RyanGray,Cheney, Wash., $11,482. 2. TimO'Connell, Zwingle, lowa, $10,3 28.3.BobbyMote,Culver,Ore.,$8,063.5.DavidPeehles,Redmond,Ore.,$6,240.11.R.C.Landingham,Pendleton,Ore., $3,894. 16. Austin Foss,

Terrehonne,Ore.,S3,373. Steer Wrestling — 1.AdamStrahan, McKinney,Texas,$14,708. 2. KyleIrwin, Robertsdale, Ala., $12,116.3. BeauClark, Belgrade,Mont., $11,139.6. BlakeKnowles, Heppner, Ore.,$5,773. Team Roping (header) — 1. RileyMinor, Ellensburg,Wash., $7,979.2. Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla. ,S07,614.3.Jake Cooper,Monument,N.M., $7,572.8. CharlyCrawford, Prinevile, Ore.,S4,653. Team Roping (heeler) — 1. BradyMinor, Ellensb urg,Wash.,$7,979.2.JakeLong,Coff eyville, Kan.,$7,614.3.TylerMcKnight, Wels, Texas, $7,572. Saddle BroncRiding — 1. TaosMuncy, Corona,N.M.,S13,393.2.Cody DeMoss,Heflin,La., $11,959.3. ClayElliott, Nanton,Alberta,$8,964. Tie-down Roping—1. MattShiozawa, Chubbuck, Idaho,$8,468.2.Adam Gray,Seymour,Texas, $8,178.3.DaneKissack, Spearfish, S.D.,$7,915. Steer Roping —1. Scot Snedecor, Fredericksburg,Texas,$10,989.2. VinFisherJr., Andrews,Texas, $9,194i3.Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, $7,952. Bull Riding —1. ParkerBreding, Edgar, Mont., $18,393. 2. ZebLanham,Sweet, Idaho, $12,802. 3. Brennon Eldred, Sulphur, Okla.,$10,755.5. Cain Smith,Pendleton,Ore.,$9,456. Barrel Racing —1. LaynaKight, Ocala,Fla., $14,748.2. KellyTovar, Rockdale, Texas, $13,767.3. FallonTaylor,Collinsville, Texas,$12,764.

BASKETBALL

EAST

Bryant73,St.Francis (Pa.)71 CCSU 68,LIUBrooklyn54 RobertMorris71,Fairleigh Dickinson58 St. Francis(N.y) 52,MountSt. Mary's46 SOUTH Ark.-PineBluff57,JacksonSt.49 Campbel62, l Winthrop52 Charleston Southern 70, UNCAshevile 57 Chattanooga64,ETSU56 Duke66, Louisville 58 FloridaSt. 62,Syracuse52 Furman 78,UNC-Greenshoro70 Gardner-Wehh 50, Presbyterian 47 GramhlingSt.62, MVSU31 HighPoint77,Longwood63 Howard92,Md.-Eastern Shore90,OT LSU74,Missouri 65 Liberty75,Radford 39 Mercer74,Samford59 Morgan St.62, CoppinSt.53 NC Central59, FloridaA&M48 Wofford 59,W.Carolina 49 MIDWEST Indiana 72, Purdue55 Ohio St.76,MichiganSt. 62 SOUTHWE ST Alabama St.73, PrairieView65 TexasSouthern 67,AlabamaA&M54 FARWEST California57,Washington St. 54 Oregon63,SouthernCal57 OregonSt. 82,UCLA64 Stanford 82, Washington 69

Men's colleg Pac-12 All TimesPST

Arizona Utah Stanford Oregon O regon St. 5 UCLA Colorado Washington St. 4 W ashington 3 C aliforma A rizona St. S outhern Cal 1

W L Pct. 8 1 .888

W L Pct. 20 2 .909 17 4 .810 15 6 .714 15 7 .681 4 .5 5 6 14 7 .667 5 4 .556 13 9 .591 7 2 .778 6 3 .667 5 4 .556

4 5 .444 11 10 .524 5 . 4 44 10 11 .476 6 .3 33 14 7 .667 3 6 .33 3 13 9 .591 3 6 .3 3 3 11 11 .500 8 .1 11 9 12 .429

Wednesday'sGame WashingtonatOregon,6 p.m. Thursday'sGame The Associated PressTop25 CLAatStanford, 6p.m. Record Pls Prv U W ashi n gton St, at regonSt., 7p.m. 1. SouthCarolina (26) 21-0 8 4 2 1 SouthernCalatCalO ifornia, 8p.m. 20-1 82 4 2 2. Uconn(8) S aturday' sGames 20-1 77 6 3 ArizonaatArizona 3. Baylor St 130p m 21-2 74 8 4 4. NotreDame UCLA atCalifornia, 5 p.m. 19-2 68 0 5 Utah atColorado,7p.m. 5. Maryland 19-3 67 6 6 6. Tenne ssee Sunday'sGames 19-1 65 0 7 7. Oregon St. Washington atOregonSt.,1:30 p.m. 19-2 62 9 8 WashingtonSt.at Oregon, 4p.m. 8. Louisville 20-2 56 1 9 Southern 9. FloridaSt. CalatStanford, 5:30p.m. 20-2 528 11 10. Arizona St. 17-5 48 1 1 0 11. Kentucky Monday'sGames 12. Stanford 1 6-5 437 12 TOP 25 13. NorthCarolina 18 - 4 40 8 16 No. 3Virginia75, No.12NorthCarolina 64 14. Texas A&M 17-5 39 5 12 No. 8Kansas89, No.11lowaSt. 76 15. Duke 15-6 356 17 EAST 16.lowa 17-4 303 2 0 lona atFairfield, ppd. 17.Mississippi St. 2 2-3 296 18 American U.57, Holy Cross50 18. Princeton 19-0 288 1 9 NJIT86,Hampton 67 19. Nebraska 1 7-4 265 1 5 Pittsburgh72,Bryant 67 20. Texas 15-5 20 1 14 Siena79, Rider72 21. Rutgers 16-5 16 8 22 SOUTH 22. Georgia 17-5 138 2 1 CoppinSt. 80,MorganSt. 67 23. Chattanooga 18-3 9 2 25 Howard83,Md.-Eastern Shore74 2 4. George Washington 19-2 69 Jackson St.69, Ark.-PineBluff45 25. Syracuse 15-6 6 0 23 MVSU 68, Gramhling St. 65 Others receivingvotes: SetonHall 57, Green McNeese St.73,SELouisiana60 Bay 49,SouthFlorida20, Oklahoma10, Florida Gulf NC Central85, FloridaAILM43 Coast 9,California8, LSU8, Dayton 4, James Madi- NichollsSt. 67,NewOrleans55 son 4,MiddleTennessee3, Minnesota3, Gonzaga2, Virginia75,NorthCarolina64 DePaul1,FresnoSt. 1. Winthrop 77,CharlestonSouthern55 MIDWEST Monday'sGames Green Bay71,Wright St.58 TOP 25 Kansas 89,lowaSt.76 No. 7OregonSt.82, UCLA64 SOUTHWE ST No.15 Duke 66,No.8Louisville 58 Alabama St.73, PrairieView71 No. 9FloridaSt. 62,No.25Syracuse52 HoustonBaptist 77,AbileneChristian 61 No.12Stanford82,Washington69 SamHoustonSt.79,Lamar50 No. 23Chatanooga64, ETSU56 TexasSouthern 68,AlabamaA&M65, OT

Wo m e n's college

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

Major League Baseball OFFICE OFTHECOMMISSIONEROFBASEBALL — Named Frank Robinson senior adviserandthe honorarypresidentofthe AmericanLeague.Suspended BostonminorleagueSSRicardo Cubilan (Lowell-NYP)76gamesafter testing positivefora metaholite ofNandrolone; freeagentminorleagueINFWilson Betemit 50games andSan Francisco minor league RHPEthanMiler (Salem-NWL) after testing positive for Amphetainm e; andfree agent minor league1BTanner Norton50gamesfolowing asecondpositive test for a drug of abuse;all violationsof theMinor League DrugPreventionandTreatment Program. AmericanLeague LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith RHPGarrett Richardsonaone-year contract. TAMPABAY RAYS — Signed RHPRonaldBelisario, INFAlexi Casilla andLHPRobert Zarate to minor leaguecontracts. NationalLeague ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Agreedto terms with CGerald Laird onaminorleaguecontract. CINCINN ATI REDS— Agreed to terms with LHP PaulMaholmonaminorleaguecontract. NEW YORKMETS—Agreedto termswith18 Lucas Dudaona one-yearcontract. Name d Ryan Elis short-seasonhitting coordinator,BennyDiStefanooutfield coordinator,LamarJohnsonhitting coordinator. SANFRANCISCOGIANTS—Agreedto termswith 18 BrandonBelt onaone-yearcontract andwith RHP Cory Gearrin,LHPBraulio Lara,RH P Curtis Partch, LHPNikolasTurley,INFCarlos Triunfel andOFJustin Maxwelon l minorleaguecontracts. WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms with RHPCaseyJanssenonaone-yearcontract.DesignatedRHPEric Fornataro forassignment. BASKETB ALL NationalBasketballAssociation DETROIP TISTONS—SignedGJohnLucasIII to a10-daycontract. Women's National Basketball Association NEW YORKLIBERTY— SignedGTanishaWright, CCarolynSwordsandFRebeccaAllen. FOOTBALL

NationalFootballLeague ATLANT AFALCONS— NamedDanQuinncoach. CINCINN ATI BENGALS — Signed OTMathew O'Donnell. WASHING TON REDSKINS— Named Rohh Akey defensive line coach. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague DALLASSTARS — Recalled D JyrkiJokipakka fromTe xas(AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS— RecalledFJacobdela RosefromHamilton(AHL). SOCCER MajorLeagueSoccer NEW YORKREDBULLS— AnnouncedMFTim Cahill hasleft theteamhymutual agreement. NEWYORKCITYFC— SignedFAdam Nemec. TORONTOFC— AnnouncedFSehastianGiovinco wastransferredfromJuventus(SerieA-Italy) COLLEGE UTAH—Announced running backscoachDennis Ericksonwasnamed assistant headfootball coach; quarterbacks coachAaron Roderick andoffensive line coachJimHarding werenamed co-offensive coordinators,andrecruiting coordinatorMorganScalley wil coachspecialteams.Named John Peasedefensive coordinatoranddefensive line coachand Justin Ena linebackers coach.

SKIING

5 events to watch at the alpine world championships By Bill Pennington

Nen's downhill

Women'sgiantslalom Nen's giantslalom

Women'sslalom

SATURDAY The glamour race ofthe world championships wasplaced in the marqueespot in the competition — the first Saturday of theevent. For much of thelastyear, Kjetil Jansrud of Norwayhas beenthe world's best men'sspeedskier, winning a goldanda bronze medal at theSochi Olympics and three World Cupdownhill races this season. However, Jansrudhasappeared in four world championships since 2005but hasyet to win a medal. If he isgoing totake his placeamongthe long list of Norwegian skiing greats —and he has displayedthat kind of ability — hewill have to makea name for himself this week.

FEB. 12 The World Cupwomen's giant slalom standings this season have beentopsy-turvy, with Eva-Marie Bremand Anna Fenninger of Austria and theAmerican Mikaela Shiffrin all vying for the top spot.. Fenninger is the reigning World Cup overall and giant slalom titleholder, and shewontwo Olympic medals last year. But Shiffrin, whose best discipline is the slalom, has beentrying to establish herself as agiant slalom threat as well. (Shewonthe opening World Cupgiant slalom of the season.) Aworld championship medal in theevent would be a bold declaration that she has more than onespecialty.

FEB. 14 Shiffrin, who grew up inthe Vail valley and isthe defending Olympic slalom goldmedalist, will defend herworld title in the event onthe final weekend of the championships. Like Ligety's, Shiffrin's superiority in her best eventwaswell-recognized in thelastyear. But this winter, while she has won twoslaloms, shealso finished11th in anotherand currently rankssecond(behind Sweden's FridaHansdotter and just ahead ofSlovenia's Tina Maze) in theWorld Cupslalom standings. Giventhat, a victory before a homecrowd next week could havethe feel of a coronation for the19-year-old Shiffrin.

New York Times News Service

BEAVER CREEK, Colo.— The Alpine World Ski Championships come to the United States for the first time since 1999, with the first races of the two-week competition set for today. Here are five races to watch:

Women's super-G TODAY Lindsey Vonnenters the first race of the championships as thefavorite despite two serious operations on her right knee inthe past two years. Theinjuries causedVonn,who hastwo Olympic andfive world championship medals, to miss lastyear's Sochi Games,but shehas returned to the World Cup circuit this season andquickly re-established her dominance inthespeedevents. Still, Vonn, 30, hasnot won an Olympic or world championship race since the 2010 VancouverGames, sohercompetitors, and the larger ski community, will be watching closely to seewhether she candeliver another major title.

FEB. 13 Ted Ligety is thedefending Olympic and world championin the giantslalom, and for the pastseveral years hehas been consideredthe maestro of the event. But winning hasnot comeso easily this winter for Ligety, whoseoffseason training wasinterrupted by poor weather conditions and abroken hand. Still, Ligety has won five of the past six World Cupgiant slaloms contested at Beaver Creek, including the most recent one, in December.Maybehis luck will change this week. Marcel Hirscher ofAustria holds acomfortable lead inthe World Cup standings, but BeaverCreekalways seems to bring out thebest in Ligety. He also has areputation as a big-event skier: At the last world championships in 2013, Ligety wonthree times, a rarity.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NHL ROUNDUP

NBA ROUNDUP

Famespu awaywit 3- oa 3r

Hawks' winningstreak snapped at 19games

The Associated Press

er play at 4:24, making it 3-1 which has won seven of its when Diaz let a r ocket go past nine games. Brandon Bollig and Raphael from the blue line that found Blake Wheeler and Bryan Diaz scored their first goals the top corner. Little had the goals for Winof the season to help the CalBollig made it 4-1 at 7:23, nipeg, which has lost four gary Flames beat the strug- converting a pass from Joe straight in regulation. gling Winnipeg Jets 5-2 on Colborne for his first goal in Also on Monday: Monday night. 61 games. Oilers 5, Sharks 4: SAN Leading by one heading David Jones, Mason Ray- JOSE, Calif. — Jordan Eberinto the third period, the mond and Sean Monahan le scored twice in regulaFlames struck on the pow- also scored for C algary, tion, and Rob Klinkhammer CALGARY, A l b erta

scored in the 13th round of the shootout to help Edmon-

ton snap a 15-game losing streak in California. Rangers 6, Panthers 3: NEW YORK — Dan Boyle

scored a deflected goal 8:10 into the third period, and Rick

Nash and Mats Zuccarello added late insurance goals for New York.

Serena

Bulletin wire services a game at a time. But it's great. NEW ORLEANS — It had I 'mproudof ourteamandwhat we've been able to do. We've to endeventually. Atlanta's 19-game winning been playing high-quality basstreak, tied for the fifth-longest k e tball for the last two months in NBA history, came to an r e a l ly. Now that it's over, we'll

abrupt halt with a 115-100 loss reflect on what we did and get to New Orleans on Monday readyfortomorrow." night. Also on Monday: The loss was just Ne X t u P Caval i ers 97, 76ers the third in the past 36

8 4: CLEVELAND -

games for the Hawks, who had several other

Kyrie Irving scored 24 points, and LeBron James added 18 in C l eveland's 11th straight win.

streaks broken with

Continued from C1 Despite resistance from many players and from the

j

the lopsided loss. Coming to an end were: • A 12-game road winnmg ~eak. • A 12-game winning streak against Western Conference

'

W TA's leadership, the i n t ernational f e deration i n creased th e c o m m i tment

t

required to be considered for an Olympic team. Play-

Utah

Thunder 104, Mag-

teams, a run that be-

at Portland ~h 7 t ". 9 ht Tif: CSNNW

IC 97: OKLAHOMA CITY — O k l ahoma City's Russell West-

on Nov. 28.

FM-100.1;

1 4 assists an d

brook had his second t riple-double of t h e gan with a v i ctory Radio: KBND- season and 10th of his against the Pelicans AM1110, careerwith 25points,

ers now need to be nominated to their national team

three times, up from twice, in the four-year Olympic cycle, with at least one of those nominations coming in 2015

11

• A five-game win- KRCO-AM690, rebounds. ning streak on the FM-96.9 Hornets 92, Wizards $

road against the West. 88: WASHINGTONThe loss for the Hawks was A l Jefferson had 18 points and theirfirstof2015. 12 rebounds to lead Charlotte.

or 2016.

"None of the players are happy about it," Williams said. "The IT F h a s t h e ir rules, and we did our best to win our case, but we didn't.

"I want to start with giving

Bu c ks 82, Raptors 75: TO-

New Orleans a lot of credit,"

R O NTO — K h ris Middleton

Hawks coach Mike Budenhol- scored 25 points, Giannis Anzer said. "They played really tetokounmpo had 12 points

So we just have to continue

well, all up and down their ros- a n d 12 rebounds, and Milwau-

to go on and continue to fight

ter and in every phase of the kee snapped a six-game losing game.... Give our guys a lot streak against Toronto. of credit for a lot of goodwork Net s 102, Clippers 100: NEW

later on, but in the meantime, do what we have to do to get

to the Olympics." Rob Griffith/The Associated Press This will be Williams' sec- Serena Williams, center, arrives with her coach Patrick Mouratoglou, left, for a photo session with ond Fed Cup appearance in her Australian Open trophySunday. The next morning, Williams took anovernight flight from Austhis cycle. If she does indeed tralia to Los Angeles and was then planning to board another overnight flight to Argentina to play in

over the last month. Tonight wasn't our n i ght. I' m v e ry

Y O R K — Jarrett Jack made a

make it to Brazil to defend

ing out how we can improve

9 4 : DA LLAS — Monta Ellis scored 23 points, and Dallas

a second-division Fed Cup match for the United States.

her Olympic singles title and perhaps her doubles titles with Venus, she will be on

the cusp of her 35th birthday. "Rio's always been a goal for me," she said.

The logical question is whether making two long and nearly consecutive red-

eye flights, enduring more jet lag and more competition, is the right move so soon after

an emotional victory in Melbourne, where she battled a severe cold and, according to Williams, experienced some minor back pain. She also threw up off court during her 6-3, 7-6 (5) victory in the final over Maria Sharapova. Any concern she might pay a price for her early-sea-

Most women'sGrandSlamsinglestitles Margaret Smith Court Steffi Graf Helen Wills Moody Serena Williams Chris Evert Martina Navratilova Billie Jean King Suzanne Lenglen

had a lot to do with Williams'

weeks off and I'm not playing. I'm only playing two clay court events before the

French Open this year. If I can just push through this month, I'll be fine, and when

you win, it all seems to be easier." She is back to winning the big ones after a difficult

mental toughness. "When education meets a personality like Serena, it creates maybe the biggest champion of all time," he added. "She also has something that maybe she was born with, and it's her character, and her character is

that she refuses to lose." She is now just three victories short of Steffi Graf's

Open-era record of 22 Grand Slam singles titles and five

stretch in 2014, when she

short of

hung on to her No. 1 ranking but failed to advance past the fourth round in her first

overall record of 24. "We have to keep her mo-

three Grand Slam tournaments. She attributed some

motivation as the one she

M a r garet Court's

tivated at the same level of has now, and fit," Mourato-

of her struggles to "mental

glou said when asked about exhaustion" acc u m ulated Williams' matching Graf. "If over two seasons of great she does that and she plays success and intense effort. long enough, she will. BeBut she bounced back in cause she's improving still." late summer by w i nning The record book is helpful Stanford, Cincinnati and the U.S. Open. She then won the

as she fights to avoid com-

season-ending WTA Tour Finals in Singapore after recovering from a round-robin rout at the deft hands of Simona Halep. Williams now

another source of m o tivation: a new generation that

has won her sixth Australian

Open by thriving and serving big under pressure. Her coach Patrick Moura-

1 0

F 5 6 4 2 7 2 1 2 0 2

W 3 7 8 5 3 9 6 6 0 3

3

0

U Total 5 5 7 6

24 22 19 19

6

18

4 4 0 8 3 2

18 12 8 8 9 9

A: Australian open; F: French open; w: wimbledon; U: U.s. Qpen

the season the first month would be very difficult and Dubai, then I have several

1 3

Maureen Connolly Monica Seles

toglou said influence and education from her parents

it will be pretty easy. I go to

2 6 0 4

Molla Bjurstedt

son zeal? "No," she said. "I knew in

then, you know, after this

A 11

placency, but she also has

"When I lost to Muguru-

one to tell me to stop. I did tell

and get better." Jeff Teague led the Hawks with 21 points and seven assists. Paul Millsap added 15 points and Kyle Korver fin-

everyone inmy camp after that, 'Listen, if I'm sick, just

ished with 12 points. PHOENIX — Jeff Green con"I don't think we were ex- v e rted a three-point play with

beat me if you have to, hold

pected towin every game," 4.5 seconds remaining to give

me down, like don't let me go out.'" She said she had a similar problem in Wuhan, China, last September when she re-

Atlanta's A l

that's all it was," she said. "It's really difficult for some-

Standings

Williams said she under-

went extensive medical test-

All TimesPST

ing later in the year. "I had a bunch of follow-up

EasternConference

details, but I've been really

c o n t inued: good. "I need those young kids to She said she and Venus moment, t he n

show me how to play some- also pulled out of the doubles t imes. I needed her to d o tournament in M elbourne that to me or else, I tell you, partly because of her back I would never have won this issues and in part to preserve tournament." their chances of doing well Williams, who looked trim in singles. Mission accomand quickin Melbourne, can plished, with Venus reaching make a tricky game look the quarterfinals at a Grand easy, covering the corners or Slam event for the first time pounding aces at vital mo- since 2010. They played in their first ments, as she did on match point against Sharapova. Australian Open i n 1 9 98, But still there have been and 17 years later they were high-profile health setbacks still in Melbourne together. in recent months, includ- Would Serena still be doing ing the Wimbledon doubles this if Venus were not still doing it too? match last year when Wil" She influences m e s o liams looked dizzy and incoherent,whiffing on one much it would be kind of stroke and struggling to put hard to be somewhere withserves into play before final- out Venus," she said. "That's ly retiring. a really good question. I T here wa s

NBA SCOREBOARD

and more dizziness.

since. I don't want to get into

Williams laughed for a

H o r f ord s aid . M e m phis its seventh straight

singles match against Alize Cornet, citing a viral illness

tests in the fall to see why I

i n i t ia l c o n - don't want to have to answer

cern that it might have been that. I'm scared. I hope she includes Keys and 21-year- a case of medication gone doesn't end on me. I doubt old Garbine Muguruza of wrong, but she continues it. I know she wants to get to Spain, who upset Williams to maintain that the culprit Rio too." Clearly they both do, as at last year's French Open was a bad virus that left her this whirlwind trip to Argeni n the second round a n d disoriented. "I was just very sick, and tina for a second-tier team took another set off her in that's all I c o uld say, and tennis match makes clear. Melbourne.

won its first game without injured point guard Rajon Rondo. Gr i zzlies 102, Suns 101:

"We were definitely taking it w i n overPhoenix.

tired from her second-round

was continually getting ill za at the French, I hated it, and dizzy and felt like I was hated it so much," Williams going to faint," she said. "I'm said. "But as much as I hated on some new vitamins and it, I needed it, and I got bet- I've been really good ever ter. So thanks."

tiebreaking jumper with 1.3 proud of them. We'll get back seconds left to lift Brooklyn. to work tomorrow and figurMa v ericks100, Timberwolves

d-Atlanta d-Toronto Washington d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Miami Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando NewYork Philadelphia

W 40 9 33 16 31 18 30 19 30 20 26 22 21 26 21 27 19 28 18 30 16 30 17 32 15 36 10 38 10 39

Pct GB 816

W t 37 8 36 12 33 15 32 I6 33 16 33 17 30 18 28 22 26 22 24 24 19 29 17 29 I7 30 13 35 8 40

Pct GB 822 750 2'/~

WesternConference

d-Golden State d-Memphis Houston d-Porjland LA. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio Phoenix NewOrleans Oklahoma City Denver Sacrame nto Utah LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader

Bucks 82, Raptors 75

673 7 633 9 612 10 600 IOi/~ 542 13'/z 447 18 438 18'/z 404 20 375 21'/z 348 22'/z 347 23 294 26 208 29'/z 204 30

688 5i/z

667 6'/z 673 6

660 6i/z 625 8'/2

560 u i/~ 542 12'/z 500 14'/2 396 19i/~ 370 20'/z

362 21

27I 25i/z

167 30'/z

Monday'sGames

Charlotte92,Washington 88 Cleveland 97,Philadelphia 84 Milwaukee 82,Toronto 75 Brooklyn102,LA.Clippers100 NewOrleans115,Atlanta100 Oklahoma City I04, Orlando97 Dallas100,Minnesota94 Memphis102Phoenix101

Tuesday'sGames

Denver at Philadelphia,4 p.m. Miami atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Bostonat NewYork,4:30p.m. Utah atPortland,7p.m. GoldenStateatSacramento, 7p.m.

Wednesday'sGames

Detroit atIndiana,4p.m. WashingtonatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. BrooklynatToronto, 4:30p.m. Denverat Boston, 4;30p.m. Oklahoma City at NewOrleans,5p.m. Chicag oatHouston,5p.m. LA. Lakers at Milwaukee,5p.m. Miami atMinnesota 5p.m. OrlandoatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. MemphisatUtah,6p.m. Dallas atGoldenState, 7:30p.m.

Summaries

COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP

Cavaliers 97, 76ers 84

No. 3 Virginia bouncesbackto beat North Carolina The Associated Press

lina in the second half to win

back to "some good, old-fash-

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Virginia responded to its first loss

75-64 on Monday night.

ioned, blue-collar basketball."

"The guys, when they do by sharpening its focus back 16 for the Cavaliers, who that and they're right," he said, on what had carried the third- regrouped after a 6 9 - 63 "they can play." ranked Cavaliers to their best home loss to Duke over the Also on Monday: start in three decades. weekend. No. 8 Kansas 89, No. 11 lowa "They fought," B e nnett State 76: LAWRENCE, Kan. The result was an impressive road win against a highly said." I think we got back to — Wayne Selden Jr. scored ranked league opponent, the the mentality that we needed 19 points in a hot-shooting kind that proves — if there to.... Our way, it's a blue-collar second half to spark Kansas was any question — that Tony way, it's a fighting way, and I past Iowa State. Selden, after Bennett's veteran-led team think our guys responded well missing all three of his shots isn't easily shaken. and really rallied." and scoring only one point in Malcolm Brogdon scored 17 Bennett said he put the team the first half, drilled four of points and Virginia's defense through a tough practice Sun- his first five 3-pointers after locked up No. 12 North Caro- day with the goal of getting intermission. Justin

A n d erson a d d ed

Nextup Washington at Oregon When:6 p.m. Wednesday TV:ESPN2 Radio:KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1

Washington State at Oregon State When: 7 p.m. Thursday TV:Pac-12Radio: KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM690, FM-96.9

PHIUIDELPHIA (84) Mbah aMoute6-140-0 13, Covington6-132-3 18, Noel2-50-0 4,Sampson4-5 0-010, Carter-Williams1-9 0 02, H.Thompson3 I 2-210, Grant5 r 5-718, Sims 1-40-02, Mcoaniels1-71-23, DrewII 2-70-04. Totals 31-7810-1484. CLEVEL AND(97) James6-175-6 18, Love 1-7 2-2 5, Mozgov 4-11 2-210, Irving 9-16 3-424, Smith 5-100-012, Shumpert4-41-211,TThompson1-41-23, Dellavedova 471-212, Marion1-1 02 2,Miler 01 0 00, Harris 0-00-00.Totals 35-7815-2297. Philadelphia 15 2 0 30 19 — 84 Cleveland 24 23 22 28 — 97

Hornets 92, Iizards 88 CHARLOlTE(92) Kidd-Gilchrist4-65-1013,Zeller1-5 0-02,Jefferson9-190-018, Roberts6-105-518, Henderson 6-134-417,Stephenson4-80-08, Wiliams0-40-0 0, Neal 5-0 0-012, Maxiel 2-30-04.Totals 37-79 14-19 92.

WASHING TON(88) Pierce4-70-011, Nene4-10008, Gortat2-60 0 4, Wall4-147-716,Btal 7-162-218, Temple 3-70 0 6, Humphrie4-8 s 5-613, Porter2-40-2 4, Seraphin 2-72-26,Butler1-20-02.Totals33-8116-1988. Charlotle 28 25 17 22 — 92 Washington 24 27 15 22 — 88

MILWAUKE E(82) Antetokounmpo 4-9 4-8 12,Dudley5-12 1-4 14, Henson582212, Gutierrez05 00 0, MiddletonIO172-225,Bayless4-120-1 8,Martin 2-40-04, Mayo 3-90-07,O' Bryant0-40-00.Totals33-809-1782. TORONTO (75) DeRozan 5-16 6-8 16, A.Johnson1-20-0 3, Valanciunas69 0 012, Lowry I-r 0 0 2, vasquez3 11 0-0 8, Williams1-129-1012, Patterson3-8 2-29, Hansbrough I-I 1-23, Ross4-120-010. Totals 2578I8-22 75. Milwaukee 23 24 26 9 — 82 Toronto 14 27 19 15 — 75

Griulies102, SIIns101 MEMPHIS (102) JeGreen4-123-512, Randolph6-157819, Gasol 4-0 7-815, Conley9-154-5 23, Lee2-4 2-26, Allen 5-120-010, Udrih1-3 2-4 4,Leuer2-60-04, Koufos1-22-24, Calathes2-30-0 5. Totals 36-83 27-34102. PHOENIX (I01) Tucker2-7 2-2 7, Mark.Morris7-150-0 I4, Len 0 20 20, Bledsoe 9-162-421, G Dragic 7-140-115, Thomas8-196-624, Marc.Morris3-40-27, G.Gre en 0-00-00, Wright5-61-111,PlumleeI-I 0-02. Totals 42-8411-1810I. Memphis 25 24 28 25 — 102 Phoenix 23 21 28 29 — 101

Mavericks100, Timberwolves94 MINNESOT A(94) Wiggins4-146-714,Young5-105-615, Pekovic 4-11 0-08, Rubio4-9 2-210, Martin8-172-219, Dieng4-81-2 9,williams3-r r-r 15, Budinger0-2 0-00, Bennett2-30-04,Brown0-00-00,DanielsO-I 0-00. Totals 34-8223-2694. DALLAS (100) Parsons8-120-018, Nowitzki7-100-1 16,Chandler2-22-26, Barea4-142-210,Ellis7-21 6-0 23, Harris 2-62-27, Aminu4-50-09, Smith1-I 0-02, Powell0-00 00,Vilanueva2-90-04, Felton1-20-0 3,Jeff ersonI-200Z Totals39841218100. Minnesota 20 27 26 21 — 94 Dallas 30 24 27 19 — 100

Thunder 104, Magic 97 ORLANDO (97) Harris 8-202-318, A.Gordon2-t 2-2 6, INcevic 9-162-2 20,Payjon0-60-0 0,Oladipo7-146-6 22, Fournier1-50-02, Green4-7 2-213, Frye1-40-03, O'Quinn 5-101-311, Dedmon0-00-00, Harkless1-I o-o z Totals38-9015-1897. OKLAHOM ACITY (104) Waiters9-154-624, Ibaka6-122-216, Adam s 5-r 2-212,Westbrook8-158825, Roberson1-50-0 2, Perkins3-42-4 8,Jackson0-40-00, Morrow4-6 4-415, Collison1-60-02,McG aryo-I 0-00.Totals 37-75 22-26 I04. Orlando 22 28 17 30 — 97 OklahomaCit y 2 9 3 2 21 22 — 104

Pelicans115, Hawks100 ATLANTA (I00) Bazemore 4-91-39, Milsap5-145-615, Horford 4-9 0-0 8,Teague8-174-5 21, Korver 5-7 0-0 12, Antic O-I0-00, Carroll 2-4 0-06, Schroder4-132-2 10, Scott3-8 1-18,Jenkins 3-50-0 7, Muscala2-2 O-O4.Totals 40-89 13-17100. NEWORLEANS(115) Cunni ngham 4-62-210,Davis12-235-729,Asik 2-65-69, Evans 7-140-015, Gordon7-112-220, Pondexter3-9H7, Anderson5-104415, Fredete3-62-2 10, Salmons 0-1 0-00, WIther0-00 00,Wolters 000-0 0,Babbitt0-00-00.Totals43-8620-23115. Atlanta 22 20 32 26 — 100 Neworleans 32 2 3 33 27 — 115

Nets102, Clippers100 LA. CLIPPERS (100) Barnes5-101-212, Griffin6-101-413, D.Jordan 10-13 2-1222, Paul8-182-4 20, Redick 0-1 0-00, Crawford7-22 2-3 18,Hawes 1-30-0 3, Rivers2-4 0-05, Davi2-40-04, s Jones0-10-00, Turkoglu1-3 O-O3.Totals 42-89 8-25100. BROOK LYN(102) Johnson8-132-4 22,Garnetj 3-70-1 6, Plumlee 3-53-109,Jack3-11006, Anderson381-1 9,Lopez 12-200-024, Wiliams5-8 2-215, Jefferson0-10-0 0, Bogdanovic4-90-011, Morris0-10-00, J.Jordan 0-00 00, Brown 0-00 00.Totals41-83818102. LA. Clippers 22 1 4 36 28 — 100 Brooklyn 22 16 32 32 — 102


C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

Seahawks

do Lockette gave Seattle a new set of downs. From the 38-yard line, Wilson Continued from C1 lobbed a ball down the right side for And now here he was, with the Jermaine Kearse, who made one of game's key calculation, the ball at the the morememorable catches in Super 1-yard line, the fourth-quarter clock Bowl history. ticking into the final seconds, the NFL's In tandem, Kearse and New England toughest running back on the field. cornerback Malcolm Butler jumped But Bevell did not call for a hand-

for the balL It bounced off Kearse's

off to Marshawn Lynch. Through the hand as both men fell backward to the headsethe called a passplay,ascoach grass, then the ball ricocheted off one

t.

h

Pete Carroll wanted. Quarterback Rus-

of his knees, then the other, then off his

sell Wilson was intercepted, and the hands and into his arms. Seahawks lost 28-24. B evell became the goat, not t h e

ygLOVIGI P- -":.-'

hometown hero. "That was the worst play call I've seen in the history of football," Emmitt

The Seahawks had a first down at the 5-yard line, and they called a timeout with 1:06 left. Bevell called to hand the ball to Lynch, who ran to the left for 4 yards.

Smith, the former Cowboys running The clock ticked. The Patriots could back, wrote on 7witter.

have called a timeout, to give them-

Countless critics were equally exas- selves more time on offense if Seattle perated by Bevell's decision not to give scored.They could have let the Seathe ball to Lynch, nicknamed Beast

la

A.J. Mast / New York Times News Service

New England's Malcolm Butler seals the Patriots' Super Bowl victory with an interception near the goal line in the final minute Sunday in Glendale, Arizona.

Butler

ers who played professionally, and and Butle rshowedpromise asaspeall of them came to him for academ- cial teams contributor. Hall knew

Continued from C1

1c reasons.

Parker last saw Butler about one

month ago, duringthe New England Patriots' bye week. Butler had gone home to Vicksburg, and every time he traveled home he still stopped by Popeyes to see his old boss and talk. "He was excited about the play-

offs," Parker said. Monday morning, Parker watched Butler give an inter-

view on ESPN. She beamed when Butler mentioned he used to work at

Popeyes. Butler had completed an incon-

ceivable path from batter cook to small-college standout to undrafted rookie to Super Bowl hero. Sunday

night, Butler sealed the Patriots' 28-24 victory over the Seattle Seahawks with an interception at the

goal line with 20 seconds remaining, both the deciding play of a classic Super Bowl and the culmination

of Butler's self-made ascension. "The first thing I want to say is

he's a tremendous young man with a tremendous attitude," said Will

New England wanted him, and after "He's never had anything given to Butler went undrafted, the Patriots

him," Hall said. "Anything he's got signed him as a free agent. in his life, he's had to work for and Active for 11 out of 16regular-seaget for himself. You see a lot of guys son games, Butler played mostly on that are in that situation, and they special teams. But he made an imgo the other way. Malcolm realized pression on his teammates with his early on no matter what hand you're tireless work and his improvement dealt, you're responsible for your during the week. His playing time success and failures. Just like all of grew late in the season. "He's been picking me off all us, as he grew and got older, he realized what mattered." season in practice," Patriots quarButler continued to work away terback Tom Brady said at Monday from football, taking a work-study morning's post-Super Bowl press job at the school fitness center. He conference. "So it was nice to see sopped sweat off spinning bikes. He him do it to someone else." washed towels. He mopped locker All game long, Butler hounded room floors. He never complained. Seahawks wide receiver Jermaine

team. He stood out with sion II West Alabama. "Every day his ability to break on Hall, Butler's coach at NCAA Divi-

he wakes up, every time he runs into somebody, he makes their day better. He's just one of those people." For the public, Butler's interception turned him into an overnight

sensation. Nothing about his story, though, is instant or easy. Butler

locker room.

family and friends in attendance at

Kearse and Lockette were lined up to the right, covered by two Patriots. shotgun formation with 26 seconds

left. Kearse was jammed by one defender. Lockette cut inside along the goal line and appeared to be open. Wilson threw. He did not anticipate how "I thought it was a touchdown, hon-

and try to run him into another

back, and is a frequent candidate for

crossingreceiver. "I knew they were going to throw

head-coaching jobs in the NFL. His play call in the final moments of the

it," Butler said.

Super Bowl will probably be a question stuffed on third and fourth down. I he will be forced to answer repeatedly. don't know. This is what happened." Seattle had a 10-point lead before Butler stole the game. Bevell had New England quarterback Tom Brady questions to answer. It is a part of beled the Patriots on two fourth-quarter ing the offensive coordinator. "I know I have a hard job because I touchdown drives. The Seahawks, suddenly losing, 28-24, got the ball with 2 think everybody feels like they can call minutes and 2 seconds remaining. plays, whether it's the guy in his living Wilson lobbed a pass down the side- room or the people in the stadium," line to Lynch for a 31-yard gain, and Bevell told The Seattle Times in Janthe clock stopped for the two-minute uary 2014. "But there is a rhyme and warning with 1:55 left. After an incom- reason why we do everything." pletion, Seattle used its first timeout. He added: "And really, I'm my own There was 1:50 left, and the Seahawks worst critic. I like to go back and look at everything I do. Why did I do that? were at New England's 49-yard line. Wilson threw incomplete on second I know there are situations where I down, but his 11-yard pass to Ricar- wouldn't want to do that again."

Lockette slanted across the middle. For a moment, he came wide open at the goal line, with Butler

Immediately, Hall saw that But-

head on the turf. "I was so emotional," Butler said.

championship. Those usually went "I had a feeling I was going to make to North Alabama, a league power abigplay, but not this big." that historically dominated West Back in Vicksburg,Shennelle Alabama. In Butler's senior sea- Parker roared in celebration. Her son, North Alabama returned an former employee, her Facebook interception for a touchdown to tie friend, had just won the Super Bowl, the score, and in the stadium, Hall four yearsremoved from frying said, a sense of inevitability set in chicken to make a living. Butler has that North Alabama would beat not forgotten where he came from. West Alabama again. Then Butler "He always tells me he loved workreturned the ensuing kickoff for a ing at Popeyes," Parker said. touchdown. West Alabama beat Parker plans to buy a Patriots North Alabama and won its first jersey with Butler's name and numconference title. ber.She looks forward to seeing "Obviously," Hall said, "that's not Butler again on his next trip home thebiggest playhe's made now." to Vicksburg. Parker knows he will Early in Butler's career at West stop by again. She plans to take a Alabama, the Patriots showed inter- picture with Butler, the former batest in him. Joe Judge, the Patriots' ter cook turned Super Bowl hero. She will pin that picture on the wall,

for every person who walks into the Vicksburg Popeyes to see.

special teams coordinator, noticed Butler's ability to return and cover Alabama, Hall coached seven play- kicks. The Patriots value versatility,

Saints

After the Saints graduated could play against tougher 6-foot-2 post Abbey Carpen- teams and still win," Clift says.

Continued from C1

ter following the 2012-13 cam-

paign, though, Murphy worried that the team would plateau. Carpenter,she believed,

had been "our driving force," Trinity's all-league player in a 14-11 season.

other Bend high schools. MurO ddly enough, i t wa s phy was nearly one of them, during the next season that within a whisper ofbecoming a Trinity L utheran discovered Mountain View Cougar. Those self-actualization. "Last year was definitely a dose ties to her childhood teammates, however, kept her good year," recounts Sample. "We had success sophomore at Trinity Lutheran. "I think we've all just been year, too, but then junior year in it for each other since the it really dicked. We were really beginning," says Clift, who is prepared to have a really good averaging 4.6 points and about year." four rebounds and three steals After opening the 2013-14 per game. "Honestly, freshman season 2-4, the Saints ripped year, I just did it because I en- off 13 wins over their next 16 joy basketball and I wanted to games, including a critical 46do it with my friends. From the 42 Mountain Valley League beginning, I was just like going win over Triad of K l amath to play and see where it goes. Falls, which was undefeated As we got going, I think we re- in league play going into the alized how much potential we contest.

Bevell has built a dynamic offense

The ball was snapped to Wilson in the

penchant for making his best plays in the biggest moments.

Division I. During his time at West

theran to attend one of the

the matchup," Carroll told ESPN in the

the outside receiver, to run a slant

were not good enough to qualify for

Murphy, Clift and Victoria

His father, now retired and still

living in Scottsdale, was among the

in the air. He also had a

West Alabama had never won an outright Gulf Coast Conference

Sample have played basketball together since third grade. They have seen middle school dassmates leave Trinity Lu-

The Patriots inserted their goal-line de-

ry appearsdetermined to cement the fense, front-loaded with stout linemen. interception as a play-calling blunder The Seahawks had Lynch in the backas head-shaking as any. field and three receivers. "I mean, shoot, it didn't turn out the Bevell, speaking into a headset conway I hoped it would, so of course I am nected to Carroll and Wilson, called sitting here saying, 'Could I do some- for a pass. It was what Carroll wanted, thing different?'" Bevell said after the too. "I told him to throw it, because of game.

around Wilson, a third-year quarter- Just as the ball arrived at Lockette's back, and Lynch, the bruising running hands, Butler snared it from the air.

school to help his mother make ends meet.

recruited Butler, but his grades still

Super Bowl victory over Denver. Histo-

coordinator Matt Patricia had told him to look for Ricardo Lockette,

things." Butler started working at Popeyes on the weekend in high

to work at Popeyes. Teams from ConferenceUSA and the Sun Belt

and changed the personnel up quick charge ofSeattle's offense for four from it." years, including during last year's 43-8 The clock ticked toward 30 seconds. them and w ashed over Bevell, in

estly," Wilson said.

Wilson fired the ball. Butler dart-

weekends, he still returned home

as much of it as we could. We had one

went to Chaparral.' It is really cool and exciting to be back."

decent speed, though he was not the ed forward, doing what he did best biggest or fastest defensive back on during his time at West Alabamahis team. But Butler stood out with making a play on the ball in the air. his abilitytobreak onpasses, toplay He knocked shoulders with Lockthe ball in the air. He also had a pen- ette as the ball arrived and snared chant for making his best plays in the pass. Butler surged forward, the biggest moments. droppedtohisknees and rested his

Hinds took Butler back for his

timeout left, so we ran it on first down

of the Seahawks' formation, the Patriots' third cornerback. Defensive

in the NFL. He had decent size and

sophomore season, and he capitalizedon his second chance. On

clock," Bevell said. "We wanted to use

not make his best throw. But second-guessing flooded past

quickly Butler would surge forward from a few yards deep in the end zone.

Butler grew up in Vicksburg with no advantages. "Earlier in his life, he didn't have the easiest childhood," Hall said. "He didn't have a whole

Island, he was arrested and charged with possession of drug paraphernalia.) Butler moved back to Vicksburg and worked at Popeyes, hoping for another chance.

said), and Wilson admitted that he did

gets to say, 'Yeah, I remember when he

standingthreeyardsdeepintheend zone. Seattle quarterback Russell

to the Providence Journal in Rhode

touchdown.

"We wanted to be really conscious Carroll took responsibility ("There's really nobody to blame but me," he about how much time was on the

the 1, Butler set up on the right side

Seahawks with a first down at the 5-yard line in the final minute.

ler possessed the potential to play

He struggled in school and did not make grades to qualify for Division I football. He attended Hinds Community College in Raymond, Mississippi. He played five games before Hinds dismissed him. (According

throw it?"

On a second-and-goal play from

pass that Kearse then miraculously caught while lying on his back after it bobbled in the air to set up the

from childhood with honest, constant work.

lot of money, a whole lot of extra

with just about 20 seconds.

passes, to play the ball

earned his place in football histo-

ry through years of perseverance, through overcoming challenges

"WCE!!!" former Rams back Eric

Dickerson tweeted. "Worst Call Ever. The championship would rest on Beast Mode in the backfield and you whether the Seahawks would score a

University of Phoenix Stadium. Days before, Darrell Bevell, married with three daughters, had allowed himself to dream of a winning ending. "That would be extra special," he said. "You get to share it with your friends and your family a little bit. It is right here in your backyard. Everyone

Kearse — he knocked away the

Butler had decent size and decent speed, though he was not the biggest or fastest defensive back on his

hawks score immediately for the same

Mode, who had rushed for 4 yards on reason. "We would have used our timeouts if the previous play and 102 yards in the game. Former NFL running backs now that had been a running play," New Enin the Pro Football Hall of Fame, like gland coach Bill Belichick said, though Smith, were most indignant. that still would have left the Patriots

Lockette never saw Butler either. "In retrospect, we could have easily

run it and we wouldn't be talking about this," Carroll said. "We might have got

Shermanlikely needsoffseasonTommyJohn surgery Seattle cornerback Richard Shermanplayed the Super Bowl with torn ligaments in his left elbow andwill likely need TommyJohn surgery in the offseason. Seattle coach PeteCarroll sa!d Monday before the teamleft Arizona that It was his understanding that Shermanwould needthe surgery after the All-Pro cornerback was injured in the NFC championship game against Green Bay. "I'm just telling you, his will to play through that in this game couple a of weeksago and take it all the waythrough this game never wavered. Neverwavered," Carroll said. All-Pro safety Earl Thomasmay needto havethe labrum in his left shoulder repaired, and strong safety KamChancellor may needkneesurgery. One major injury Seattle suffered in the SuperBowl wasthe loss of nickel cornerback Jeremy Lane in the first quarter. Lane broke his left wrist after intercepting TomBrady. Lanewas injured on the interception return. "They have towait a couple of days to makesure it's all prepared properly and all of that, but he did have di afficult break," Carroll said. "He's going to be OKbut it's a significant surgery." — The Associated Press

one?"

over Chiloquin and Hosanna Threeyears afterbeginning Christian. "I don't think we realized what the program with an indepenUnthinkable for Polk three we were capable of at thatpoint dent schedule, the Saints have years ago, but not as much a either. 'Oh, we're going to go risen to No. 5 in the state, al- surprise to his players, who play and we'll see what hap- readywithtwo playoffappear- the coach says "are really depens.' And in some of those ances and in line to win their termined" and "were going situations, we actually pulled first MVL championship. to make it happen no matter "It is really fun to watch how what." through and won, and so it "I don't think it's weird," says proved to us that we could ac- they've grown and developed," tually do it." Polk says of his players. "I don't Murphy, the last season's MVL "We still continued to getbet- have to do much anymore. player of the year who is avter and continued to get more Their basketball IQs have got- eraging 15.9 points and more (players each season) who ten so muchbetter." than seven rebounds per game were good," Murphy chimes The result has been nearly this season. "I kind of knew in. "Each year has kind of been unthinkable. The Saints went that we would go this far. We surprising as we continued to 11-9 during their inaugural (Murphy, Clift and Sample) get better. But now, we expect season and followed it up with have been playing together a 14-11 overallrecord and a 9-7 since third grade. I knew that to be at the top." mark in the MVL, their first

There aretimes whenfourth- in the conference, in 2012-13, year coach Mike Polk has to capped with a first-round exit pinch himself. in the 1A playoffs. "I don't know if we looked Last season, Trinity Lutherat the long-term future," Polk an was again ousted in the recalls of his team's first sea- opening round after posting son. "We saw the potential. But a 16-9 overall record and finwhen we first started out, it ishing tied for second in the was just, 'What do we expect to MVL at 10-2. Now, with just six actually had. Now it's senior It was t hat v i ctory t h at get out of this season, our first games left in the regular seayear, and I think we have the openedthe Saints'eyestoeven one?' Then once we got past son, the Saints (8-1 MVL, 17-2 capability to do even greater greater accomplishments. that one, what do we expect overall) have a half-game lead "It was nice to see that we things." from the next one and the next in the Mountain Valley League

we had potential." Behind the six seniors — as well as Emily Eidler, a firstteam all-MVL selection last season who is currently aver-

aging 10.2 points per gameTrinity Lutheran has evolved into a contender, demanding the attention of a hometown

were like, 'Oh, we're going to

start a team because we feel like we should have a sport,'" Murphy says. "We all have the motivation and the drive to do it. Sometimes I feel like people think, 'It's just a bunch of girls who wanted to go play basketball, and they're probably not going to be very good.' But we allcame outhere forapurpose and to prove a point, in a way." The point being that Trinity

Lutheran belongs near the top of 1A, Polk says. He admits, however, that despite the suc-

cess of recent seasons, it is still strange to see his squad high in the state rankings. Through injuries, illnesses and various absences throughout their high school careers, Trinity Luther-

an's original members, those six seniors, have guided the Saints to prominence. "It's nice to show other schools that we're not just 'little Trinity Lutheran on the cor-

ner,'" Clift says. "We actually that struggles to locate the have the potential to play as school on a map. good as them orbetter." "It's not just a bunch of peo— Reporter: 541-383-0307, ple who came out here and glucas@bendbulletin.com.


C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY3, 2015 NASDAQ ~ 4 17,361.04

O» To look upindividual stocks, gc tcbendbugetin.com/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

+

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4,676.69

Todap Sales pickup?

2 020 .

Automakers report their latest monthly tally of U.S. sales today. Low gas prices have helped drive sales of new and used cars and trucks in recent months. Auto sales jumped 11 percent in December from a year earlier. A J.D. Power and LMC Automotive forecast calls for January sales to come in at a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 16.4 million units, up from 15.2 million a year ago.

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16,000

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17367.68 17037.76 17361.04 +196.09 DOW Trans. 8776.39 8583.54 8774.11 +124.79 DOW Util. 642.02 630.49 639.56 +2.36 NYSE Comp. 10676.44 10495.71 10669.04 +131.81 NASDAQ 4676.69 4580.46 4676.69 +41.45 S&P 500 2021.66 1980.90 2020.85 +25.86 S&P 400 1447.94 1420.14 1447.19 +1 2.09 Wilshire 5000 21314.61 20902.23 21310.47 +250.03 Russell 2000 1175.56 1153.79 1175.51 +1 0.12

DOW

NAME

Alaska Air Group Disney's latest financial results Avista Corp should provide insight into how Bank of America the media giant's slate of busiBarrettBusiness B nesses are faring. Boeing Co Cascade Bancorp The company,which is due to report its fiscal first-quarter earn- ColumbiaBnkg Columbia Sportswear ings today, has benefited from CostcoWholesale strong revenue at its film studio Craft Brew Alliance thanks to blockbusters like FLIR Systems "Guardians of the Galaxy" and Hewlett Packard DVD salesofmovies such as Intel Corp "Frozen." Disney's cable netKeycorp works, consumer products and Kroger Co theme parks and resorts also Lattice Semi have been growing. Did the trend LA Pacific continue in the latest quarter? MDU Resources Mentor Graphics DIS $91.93 Microsoft Corp $100 Nike Inc B $73.22 Nordstrom Inc 80 Nwst Nat Gas PaccarInc '14 ' Planar Systms 60 Plum Creek Operating Prec Castparts Schnitzer Steel EPS 1Q '14 1Q ' 1 5 Sherwin Wms StancorpFncl Price-earnings ratio: 22 StarbucksCp based on trailing 12-month results Umpqua Holdi ngs Dividend: $1.15 Div. yield: 1.3% US Bancorp WashingtonFedl Source: FactSet WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser

D

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.1.14% -2.59% -4.00% $.1.44% L $.0.37% L L +3.48% $.1.25% -1.57% L $.0.89% L L -1.25% $.1.30% L L -1.85% -0.36% $.0.84% L L $.1.19% L L -1.66% $.0.87% -2.42% L

95

38.34

37.3 0 +. 1 7 + 0 .5 L

N D J 52-week range $$7.$2 ~ $103 .78

Alibaba

I NTC 23.50 ~ K EY 11.55 ~ K R 3 5 .13 ~ $y LSCC 5.52 L PX 12.46 ~ MDU 21 . 33 o —

MEN T 18.25 — o MSFT 35.69 ~ 5 N KE 69.85 ~ J WN 54.90 ~ NWN 40.05 ~ PCAR 53.59 $y — P LNR 1.93 ~ P CL 38.70 ~ PCP 186.17 ~

SCHN 1 6.25 o — SHW 174.29 — o S FG 57.77 ~ SBUX 67.93 ~ UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 U SB 38.10 ~ WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 WF C 4 4.17 ~ 5 W Y 2 7.48 ~

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BABA Close:$90.13%1.05 or 1.2% The e-commercecompany reported mixed quarterly results as it faces pressure over preventing the sale of counterfeit goods. $120

8

0 N D 52-week range

$$2.$1 ~

$12 $.00

Vol.:18.8m (0.8x avg.)

Source: Factset

AmdFocus

SelectedMutualpunds

AP

Oppenheimer Equity Income invests in a mix of stocks and Marhetsummary convertible securities, and Most Active remains a solid choice among NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG equity-income funds, according S&P500ETF 1483822 201.92 +2.47 to Morningstar. BkofAm

Apple Inc s B iPVixST Microsoft SPDR Fncl iShEMkts CSVixSht Petrobras

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983279 604321 603862 487937 487177 479426 471906 418294 413478

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PostRck rs NuverraE GoodrP pfD Escalera pf GoodrP pfC ComstkRs MillerE pfD Walterlnv YouOnDm UBIC

LAST 2.20 3.00 7.65 11.57 7.73 5.06 13.35 18.12 2.46 19.22

CHG +.66 +.77 +1.75 +2.57 +1.68 +1.02 +2.34 +3.05 +.41 +3.12

%CHG + 4 2.9 + 3 4.5 CL cC + 2 9.7 $$ + 2 8.6 + 27.8 $$$ + 25.2 MorrdngstarOwnershipZone™ + 2 1.3 e Fund target represents weighted + 2 0.2 Q + 2 0.0 average of stock holdings + 19.4 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

Losers NAME LAST Ardelyx n 1 9 .25 N iskaGsSt 2 . 9 9 PluristemT 3 . 10 T ransgno 3. 1 4 SwEBioFu23 8.30

CHG %CHG -7.76 -28.7 -.82 -21.5 -.62 -16.7 -.60 -16.0 -1.54 -15.7

CATEGORY Large Value MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ ASSETS EXP RATIO MANAGER SINCE RETURNS3-MO Foreign Markets YTD NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR Paris 4,627.67 +23.42 + . 51 3-YR ANNL London 6,782.55 +33.15 + . 49 5-YR-ANNL Frankfurt 10,828.01 +1 33.69 +1.25 Hong Kong24,484.74 -22.31 -.09 TOP 5HOLDINGS

Mexico Milan 20,485.69 +38.95 + . 19 -.66 Tokyo 17,558.04 -116.35 Stockholm 1,575.95 + 2.33 + . 15 Sydney 5,586.50 +34.90 + . 63 Zurich 8,429.20 +44.07 + . 53

***00 $4,176 million 1.03%

Michael Levine 2007-07-16 -1.8 -3.3 +11.3 +15.7 +13.3

Citigroup Inc JPMorgan Chase& Co MetLife Inc Chevron Corp Ford Motor Co

Mkt. Cap: $224.03 b

N

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$24.07 ~

$42.87

PE:5 2 . 3 Yield: ...

YHOO Qualcomm QCOM Close:$44.69L0.70 or 1.6% Close:$65.53 L3.07 or 4.9% The technologycompany's stake in The chipmaker cut its profit outlook Alibaba is becoming less valuable for the year, citing increasing comas that company deals with a counpetition in China and an issue with a terfeit goods issue. major customer. $55 $80

Yahoo

50

70

45

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52-week range $$2.$$~

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P E: 5.9 Yield: ...

Extreme Networks

EXTR

Close:$3.09%0.15 or 5.1% The maker of network infrastructure equipment reported better-than-expected fiscal second-quarter profit and revenue results. $4.0

D

52-week range $$2.2$~

J $81.97

Vol.:21.0m (1.7x avg.) P E: 1 4 .9 Mkt. Cap:$108.25 b Yi e ld:2.6%

Flextronics FLEX Close:$11.20 %0.08 or 0.7% The electronics designer and maker reported better-than-expected quarterly financial results and a positive fiscal outlook. $11.5 11.0 10.5

Vol.:1.4m (1.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$301.4 m

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Vol.:4.9m (1.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$7.43 b

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SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

IU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.67 percent on Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 6 .05 + 0 .01 T

52-wk T-bill

.14

2-year T-note

. 4 6 .45

.14

+ 0 .01 T 5-year T-note 1.18 1.19 -0.01 T 10-year T-note 1.67 1.64 +0.03 T 30-year T-bond 2.25 2.22 +0.03 T

BONDS

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AMCAPA m 27.80 +.25 -0.7 +12.8 +17.8+15.3 C 8 8 AmBalA m 24.63 +.21 -0.5 +10.9 +13.0+11.9 A A A The price of CaplncBuA m 60.22 +.46 +1.1 +11.2 +10.8 +9.4 A A A crude oil rose CpWldGrlA m 46.52 +.42 +0.9 +8.5 +13.7 +9.9 8 8 C by more than EurPacGrA m 47.95 +.34 +1.7 +3.3 +9.4 +6.7 8 8 C $1 per barrel, FnlnvA m 51.45 +.67 -1.2 +11.9 +16.0+13.5 D C C adding to its big GrthAmA m 42.59 +.42 -0.2 +11.4 +17.5+13.9 C 8 D gain from the IncAmerA m 21.59 +.17 0.0 +10.5 +11.9+11.3 8 8 A end of last InvCoAmA m 36.83 +.48 -0.7 +14.5 +17.4+13.5 8 8 C week. Oil setNewPerspA m36.43 +.29 +0.4 +7.9 +13.7+11.2 8 8 8 tled above $49 WAMutlnvA m40.15 +.52 -2.0 +12.9 +16.2+14.6 8 8 A per barrel for Dodge &Cox Income 13.95 -.61 +1.2 +5 .4 + 4.3+5.2 D 8 B IntlStk 42.24 +.47 +0.3 +4 .9 +12.2 +8.0 A A A the first time in Stock 173.50+2.44 -4.1 +9 .5 +19.2+14.4 EA A four weeks. Fidelity Contra 97.46 + .80 -0.5 +11.5 +17.0+15.3 C 8 B ContraK 97.3 9 + .80 -0.5 +11.6 +17.1+15.4 C 8 B LowPriStk d 49.21 +.51 -2.1 +9 .1 +15.6+14.9 D D C Fideli S artan 500 ldxAdvtg71.58 +.92 -1.7 +15.7 +17.5+15.2 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC x 2.40 +.61-0.5 +3 .9 + 8.8 +8.8 E A A IncomeA x 2.3 8 + .61 0. 0 +5 . 0 + 9.5 +9.4 C A A Intl I Oakmark 23.53 +.18 +0.8 -1.2 +12.9 +9.9 E A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 46 +.24 -2.7 +12.9 +13.5+12.7 C E D RisDiv8 m 17 . 20 +.21-2.8 +11.9 +12.5+11.7 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 68 +.21 -2.7 +12.0 +12.7+11.8 D E E SmMidValA m47.69 +.62 -2.1 +11.4 +15.6+12.8 C D E Foreign SmMidValB m40.10 +.63 -2.2 +10.6 +14.6+11.8 C D E Exchange T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.6 0 + .49 -2.4 +9 .2 +14.7+12.8 E D C Canada is a GrowStk 52.2 7 + .39 +0.6 +11.5 +18.8+17.0 C A A major oil HealthSci 71.6 1 +.69 +4.4 +30.3 +34.8+28.0 A A A producer, and Newlncome 9. 7 5 - .61+2.0 + 6 .3 + 3.3 +4.6 B C D Monday's rise in Vanguard 500Adml 186.58+2.39 -1.7 +15.7 +17.5+15.2 A 8 A the price of 500lnv 186.56+2.39 -1.8 +15.5 +17.4+15.1 A 8 A crude helped to CapOp 52.42 +.17 -0.6 +17.2 +22.7+16.2 A A A lift the Canadian Eqlnc 30.67 +.41 -1.7 +13.9 +16.2+15.6 8 8 A dollar against IntlStkldxAdm 26.34 +.29 +1.3 +1.9 +6.5 NA 8 D its U.S. StratgcEq 32.14 +.22 -0.1 +15.9 +20.4+18.9 A A A counterpart. The TgtRe2020 28.58 +.20 +0.4 +9.4 +10.1 +9.8 A A A dollar was mixed Tgtet2025 16.56 +.13 +0.2 +9.6 +10.9+10.4 A 8 8 against other TotBdAdml 11.69 -.61 +2.2 +6.6 +3.0 +4.5 8 D D currencies. Totlntl 15.75 +.18 +1.3 +1.9 +6.4 +5.1 8 D D TotStlAdm 50.77 +.60 -1.6 +14.3 +17.4+15.5 8 8 A TotStldx 50.75 +.60 -1.6 +14.2 +17.2+15.4 C 8 A USGro 29.75 +.25 -0.5 +15.7 +18.4+15.8 A A B

L

T T T T

T .33 T 1.50 T 2.65 T 3.60

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

h5Q HS

FUELS

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS

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

.01 .05 .09

T T

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.14 2.13 +0.01 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.09 4.09 . . . T T Barclays USAggregate 1.92 1.99 -0.07 T T PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.46 6.46 .. . T T RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.29 3.35 -0.06 T T YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.45 1.48 -0.03 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.78 2.84 -0.06 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

FAMILY

PCT 4.31 3.83 2.46 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.42 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.41 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.

Kate Spade KATE Close:$31.38T-0.15 or -0.5% The apparel retailer announced positive 2014 sales results and will close some stores to redirect focus on its flagship brand. $35

P E: . . . Vcl.:2.2m (0.9x avg.) Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap: $3.99 b

N D J 52-week range $2.$$~ $7 .4 $

l: '""Founder resigns from board

$51.00

52-week range

Package delivery company United Parcel Service usually gets a big boost during the holiday shopping DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current

$$2.72 ~

J

3.5 3.0

Heading into the Octoberannual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend December quarter last year, the announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash company increased hiring of value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. seasonal workers in anticipation of a pickup in deliveries. Financial analysts predict UPS will report today that its earnings and The founder of Lululemon Athletica, Chip Wilson, has and seamscoming apart. revenue improved in the fourth resigned from the company's board of directors. In August 2014 Wilson agreed to sell about half of quarter from a year earlier. Wilson resigned as chairman of the yoga clothing his shares in Lululemon to investment firm Advent company last year after controversy International for $845 million. Wilson still UPS $100.13 $120 erupted surrounding comments he owns about 10.3 million shares, or 7.8 made about customers' bodytypes. 0, ac co t$ g to $$$f~lf pe ce t , of Illule L ~ I' + FactS et, a stake worth more than $650 Lululemon has recently had its 100 million at Monday's stock price. share of challenges. Last year the $95.78 company dealt with complaints that Wilson plans to help his wife and son with 80 some of its yoga pants were too sheer. their new business, Kit & Ace, which sells Operating Other problems included pilling, holes, machine washable cashmere clothing. EPS 4Q '13 4 Q ' 14 Luiuiemon (LULU) M onda y's se: clo $65.52 pr i ce change 1 -yr 3-y r* 5-yr* Price-earnings ratio: 25 52-WEEK RANGE Price-earnings ratio: 4 0 L ULU 43.4% 1.0 35.0 based on trailing 12-month results 68 (B a s edonpast12-monthresults) $36 Dividend: $2.68 Div. yield:2.7% *annualized AP Source: FactSet

D 52-week range

30

100

Holiday boost?

season.

COH Close:$37.54L0.35 or 0.9% The handbag and accessories retailer reported better-than-expected quarterly profit results, despite a series of charges. $40

Vol.:6.7m (1.0x avg.) P E: 19.2 Vol.:6.2m (1.2x avg.) PE: 15 . 3 Mkt. Cap:$90.03b Yie l d: 3.7% Mkt. Cap:$10.35b Yie l d: 3.6%

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MCD

Close:$92.51 L0.07 or 0.1% The fast food restaurant operator's president and CEO Don Thompson will step down as the company struggles with declining sales. $100

NorthwestStocks Mouse house

pp53

1.1346

Stocks ended the day higher after fluctuating between gains and losses throughout the day. The market opened higher, but then moved downwhen a pairofweakreports onthe U.S.economy fed investor uncertainty. The market's momentum shifted toward the end of the trading session as oil pnces ended up surging for a third straight day, and stocks of big producers jumped. Rising oil prices helped energy stocks lead the market, all 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's 500 index rose. Investors will turn their attention next to several big companies reporting this week, including United Parcel Serviceand Disney on Tuesday and General Motors on Wednesday.

'

17,000:"

"

EURO +

g '33

StoryStocks

2,000 1,920

$49.57 +

$17.24

........ Close: 17,361.04 Change: 196.09 (1.1%)

17,000" ""' 10 DAYS "

CRUDEOIL

SILVER

T T T L T T T

3.42 4.90 2.33 5.61 4.4 4 1.7 1 3.1 1

CLOSE PVS. 49.57 48.24 1.39 1.37 1.76 1.69 2.68 2.69 1.54 1.42

%CH. %YTD +2.76 -7.0 -0.15 -14.7 +3.36 -4.8 -0.41 -7.2 + 4.65 + 7 . 6

CLOSE PVS. 1278.50 1278.50 17.24 17.19 1228.60 1238.20 2.51 2.53 788.30 772.70

%CH. %YTD +8.0 +0.25 +1 0.7 - 0.78 + 1 . 6 -0.67 -11.5 +2.02 -1.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.5 1.53 1.55 -1.07 Coffee (Ib) 1.62 1.62 +0.34 -2.5 -6.9 Corn (bu) 3.70 3.70 -0.07 -0.6 Cotton (Ih) 0.60 0.59 +0.89 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 312.20 321.80 -2.98 -5.7 -0.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.40 1.40 -0.29 Soybeans (hu) 9.60 9.61 -0.16 -5.9 Wheat(hu) 4.93 5.03 -1.99 -16.5 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5037 -.0024 -.16% 1.6432 Canadian Dollar 1.2 5 86 -.0095 -.75% 1.1124 USD per Euro 1.1346 +.0053 +.47% 1.3486 -.30 -.26% 102.32 JapaneseYen 117.23 Mexican Peso 14. 8888 -.0462 -.31% 13.3421 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9331 +.0022 +.06% 3.5160 Norwegian Krone 7 . 6428 -.0846 -1.11% 6.2803 South African Rand 11.4983 -.1370 -1.19% 11.0882 Swedish Krona 8.2 9 2 6 + .0153 +.18% 6.5527 Swiss Franc .9283 +.0109 +1.17% . 9079 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2812 -.0039 -.30% 1.1435 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2591 +.0096 +.15% 6.0605 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7532 +.0008 +.01% 7.7638 Indian Rupee 61.659 -.352 -.57% 62.490 Singapore Dollar 1.3518 -.001 0 -.07% 1.2767 South KoreanWon 1099.84 -3.25 -.30% 1083.22 -.15 -.47% 3 0.30 Taiwan Dollar 31.60


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY3, 2015

DEEDS Deschutes County • Steven S. and April J. White to Cynthia A. Hunt, trustee of the Cynthia A. Hunt Trust, Otter Run, Lot 22, $430,000 • Paul Buscovickto Parker 8 Young LLC, Deschutes, Lot 7, Block 4, $264,000 • Stephen C. Jaqua to 242 N. Larch LLC, McCaffery's First Addition, Lot10-12, Block 2, $195,350 • Stephen C. Jaqua to 241 N. Larch LLC, Sisters, Lot 7-9, Block 4, in addition with Partition Plat 2005-1, Parcel 2, $288,150 • John M. Krawczyk, trustee of the John Krawczyk Trust, to James P. and June L. Sweeney, trustees of the James P. & June L. Sweeney Community Property Trust, River Village1, Lot 1, Block4, $445,000 • Metolius Meadows LLC to Casie F.and Peter Ozolin, Elk Ridge Condominiums, Unit 20, $153,500 • James R. and Marie A. Seiber to Paul A. and Erin A. Biskup, Center Addition, Lot 9 and10, $210,000 • Robert W.P. and Janet E. Holstrom, trustees of the Holstrom Trust, to Marcus L. and Karol K. Cameron, trustees of the Cameron Family Revocable Trust, Tennis Village Executive CondominiumsStage3, Unit 34, $160,000 • Steidl Triplex LLC to David and Ellen Webb, trustees of the David & Ellen Webb Revocable Trust, River Terrace, Lot 7, 11 and12, Block 7, $925,000 •PWD Associa tes LLC to Sandra L. Husk, Points West, Lot 26, $829,750 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Stephen and Melissa Allen, Sandalwood Phase 1, Lot 3, $315,000 • Larry G. and Stacy Solie to Annette S. Montgomery, Second Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot 28, Block 20, $450,000 • Thomas 0. and Sonya J. Mclaughlin, trustees of the Mclaughlin Revocable Trust, to James R. and Judith L. Mackey, trustees oftheJames R.Mackey 8 Judith L. Mackey Family Trust, Homes of Vardon Court, Lot14, $530,000 • Ronald Jollo and Seana McMann Jollo, trustees of the McMann-Jollo Joint Revocable Living Trust to Eric W. and Suzanne M. Strecker, Hastings Addition, Lot 3-5, Block 2, $470,000 • James E. and Karen E. Dohertyto James R. and Sally J. Hockin, Village at Cold Springs Phase 2, Lot 67, $202,000 • Nevelyn A. Troyer, trustee of the Nevelyn A. Troyer Revocable Living Trust, to Steven S. and April J. White, Greensat Redmond Phase6A, Lot 89, $385,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Cesar J. and Yuri O. Chavez, Parkland, Lot 70, $196,500 • Carol L. Newbauer to Ronald and Deborah Simenson, Tillicum Village, Lot 23, Block1, $276,100 • CDI Northwest LLC to Barron E. andAmy Allen, Diamont Pines, Lot15, $274,900 • H. David Phillips, trustee of the H. David Phillips Revocable Trust, to Stephen and Rosalinda Cramer, Center Addition to Bend, Lot1-3, Block14, $495,000 • Craig A. and Cherie L. Cline, trustees of the Craig 8 Cherie Cline Sunshine Unitrust, to Robert and Laura D'Angelo, River Village 3, Lot 26, Block18, $498,000 • Gregory and Robert Dixon to Jacob R. and Heather C. Olsen, Gallatin Phases1 and 2, Lot17, $310,000 • Wood Hill Homes Inc. to Carl B. McConnell and Corinne T.Zanetti, trustees of the Carl B. McConnell 8 Corinne T. Zanetti Revocable Trust, Reed Pointe Phase 1, Lot 23, $279,950 • Carolyn C. Collins, trustee of the Carolyn C. Collins Revocable Trust, to James M. Robinson and Elia M. DeLuca, trustees of the Robinson 2014 Trust, Mill Addition to Bend, Lot 9, Block 9, $1,185,000 • Marie Oertel, trustee of the Marie Oertel Revocable Trust, to

Apple to se 6.5B in on s

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Ramblin' Vans What it does:Rents a camper vanand gear Pictured:Stacey McKinney, founder Where:Bend Employees:Two Phone:541-610-5387 Wehsite:www.ramblin vans.com

~~ p ' a r

By Keh Sweet

r ar n b l in'va n s

e Associated press

YORK — Appie

g other iarge bond

e at a 4me when mvest

p y gnear-recordpre gh quafitybonds The technology giant will sell a combination of bonds Andy Tuns/The Bulletin

am in' ansisa -so cam s o • The Bendrental companywill also help planyour campingtrip By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin

Stacey McKinney earned a minor in adventure recreation from Ohio University, and now she's putting it to work. McKinney is branching out

She started Ramblin' Vans,

Northwest in a Toyota Taco-

ma with her dog, a Malamute/ German shepherd mix named Gomez, and her gear, McKinney said, she concluded that she needed something bigger. Big enough, that is, for a couple of people, four or five bikes and dogs, too. "I was looking at vans, and it occurred to me I'd only be using it a small percentage of the time," she said, "so that's how it got started."

The van is designed for the adventurer who's as likely to find a spot to camp along a forest road as seek one in an established

campground, McKinney said. It's not RV plush, although it comes with pullout drawers, electrical

hookups, bike and gear racks, an outdoor stove and abed that sleeps three and converts to a table.

Ramblin' Vans will also rent sleeping bags, sleeping pads, backpacks and other camping equipment and plan clients' trips, she said. Rates range from $130 to $150 a day, depending on the season, according to the Ramblin' Vans website. "If someone wants to tour the

low-mileage2007 Ford E-150 cargo van as a test run last summer;

said. That includes details like

that now she's in the market for

a second van. She also picked up a business partner, Christina Thayer, who's responsible for the marketing, advertising and social media side of the operation. Demand for the service is

building, and the field, locally anyway, is without much competition, McKinney said. "I know

the demand is out there; it's just a matter of reaching those people," she said. "I wouldn't be doing this

coast or visit Canada, we'll support that with trip planning," she coordinating bike rentals or reserving campgrounds, McKinney said. The van also comes with guidebooks, maps and a six-pack of Oregon craft beer. McKinney said Rambiin' Vans offers a shuttle service to and from Portland International Airport. Even if Ramblin' Vans hits its

stride, McKinney has noplans to quit her work in solar power. "I really like what I do," she said. "I'm not so willing to give up my dayjob.s

if I didn't believe it would take

off."

BetsyMagdallandAnne R. Knight, Cottages of Westside Terrace Stage 2, Unit No. 16, $242,500 • Clifford T. and Sherry George to Carolyn L. and J. Pat Horton, Riverview Vista Estates Phase 3, Lot 32, $189,000 • Travis C. and Jennifer M. Phillips to David and Kristen Parnell, Yardley Estates Phase 4, Lot 87, $377,500 • Christopher C. Dorr to United States of America acting through the Rural Housing Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Diamond Bar Ranch Phase 4, Lot166, $155,193 • David L. and Juanita Vianelle to Susan W.Kurtz, Starwood, Lot1, Block11, $248,500 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to John M. and Jovani N. Montes, Bridges at Shadow Glen Phase 2A, Lot 51, $397,800 • Karen R. Flynn, trustee of the Karen R. Flynn Revocable Living Trust, to Robert and Nancy Corley, Riverrim P.U.DPhase 9, Lot 278, $399,000

• Gregory D. Peterson to C.J. and Consuelo L. Brigham, Copper Ridge Phases 2-4, Lot 20, $186,000 • Scott and Tricia Alexander to Timothy and Patti Denman, Tetherow Phase 1, Lot 217, $315,000 • Pacwest II LLC to John D. Brandenhorst III, Gardenside P.U.D., Lot 6061, $260,547 • Pahlisch Homes Inc to Craig H. and Linda N. Fletcher, Awbrey Woods Phase1, Lot 7, $345,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Phyllis J. Gore, Gleneden 2, Lot 34, $197,619 • Robert J. Dilleyto Christopher E. andMaureen T. Bayless, Orion Estates, Lot9, Block1, $349,900 • Timothy J. Rutter, trustee of the Declaration of Trust of Timothy J. & Joanne M. Rutter, to Kent D. Bingham and Karen D. Lam, Elkai Woods Townhomes Phase 5, Lot 29, $400,000 • Barbara R. Floyd to Chris F. and Sharyn E. Meinke, Hidden Valley Mobile Estates No.1, Lot5, Block 11, $155,000

but investor demand has been strong and Apple's offering might go as high as $6.5 billion. The sale is not one of the largest bond offerings from Apple. Apple sold roughly $17 billion in bonds in 2013, which at the time was the largest bond

sale everby a U.S. company. A year later, Apple sold $12 biliioninbonds.

The company has used the proceeds previously to pay investors dividends and increase its share buybacks. Applehasplentyofcash already. It reported $178biilion in cash and marketable securities on hand at the end of December. But most of that several other large tech compa-

McKinney, who kept her day job working for a solar energy-related company, launched Ramblin' Vans with a customized, the response was good enough

in bonds, according to traders,

is parked overseas and, like

into a vacation rental on wheels.

a campervan rentalcompany, in June. After years of camping and traveling around the Pacific

with maturities rangingfrom five years to 30 years, according to a filing with U.S. reguiators. The companywas originallytrying to sell $5billion

— Reporter:541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Q •• Howdoyou market and advertise your business? • Stacey • McKinney: This winter we're

A

doing that kind of

thing. We're going partly through Travel Oregon andVisit Bend, leaving fliers there and reaching out to folks. We're envisioning Google searches by folks doing trip planning.

Q •• Wheredo you see the business in three to five years?

A • vans,that would be great.

• If I had three

nies, Apple hasbeen reluctant to incurtaxes that would apply if it used that money in the United States. As of Dec. 27,

Apple said $157.8billion of its cash and marketable securities

are heldby foreign subsidiaries and wouldbe subject to this country's highercorporatetax rates ifbrought home. With so much money on its balance sheet, Apple is considered an ultra-safe investment and has typically paid investors extremely low interest

rates on its debt. The company is also likely taking advantage of the recent

drop in bond yields. The U.S. 10-year Treasury note, which is oftenused asabenchmark for otherbonds, was trading at a yield of 1.67 percent Monday-

BRIEFING Budweiser ad leaves aftertaste A Super Bowl ad for Budweiser that poked fun at craft beer left a hangover Monday morning. The minutelong ad, "Brewed the HardWay," extols the smooth, crisp simplicity of Budweiser, "proudly a macro beer," in contrast to beers meant to be fussed over. "Let them sip their pumpkinpeachale,"the ad copy reads, "we'll be brewing us somegolden suds." 10 Barrel Brewing Co.— founded in Bend and bought last year by Budweiser owner Anheuser-Busch — posted an apparent comeback with a hint of tongue in cheek Monday on its Facebook page: "Alright ... we slept on it all night and the decision has been made.Our next small batch beer is DEFINITELYgoing to be a Pumpkin PeachAle!" Messages left Monday with10 Barrel representatives and a spokesman for Anheuser-Busch's craft beer division were not returned. Seattle-based Elysian Brewing Co., sold in January to Anheuser-Busch, the U.S. arm of Belgium-based brewing giant Anheuser-Busch InBev, actually produced a pecan peach pumpkin ale last fall called Gourdgia on My Mind. Elysian co-founder Dick Cantwell on Monday morning emailed the Chicago Tribune: "I find it kind of incredible that ABI would be so tone-deaf as to pretty directly (even if unwittingly) call out one of the breweries they have recently acquired, even as that brewery is dealing with the anger of the beer community in reaction to the sale," the Tribune reported. "It doesn't make our job any easier," the newspaper quoted Cantwell as saying. — JosephDitzler, TheBullÃn

its lowest level in two years.

Meanwhile, thecompany has taken steps to appease

Correction

investors, includingthe outspoken Carl Icahn, who believe

A story headlined "2 new stores on their way," which appeared Wednesday, Jan. 28, on PageC6, incorrectly reported the date that men's clothing store Revolvr plans to open in downtown Bend.The opening is scheduled for March 6. The Bulletin regrets the error.

they should receive more of the

company's profits. Apple increased its quarterly dividend to 47cents a share from 44

cents lastyear. As of the end of December, thecompany said it had bought back $73 billion worth of stock as part of a $90 billio nrepurchaseprogram. The company earned a stunning$18billioninprofit on record sales of $74.6billion for the quarterthatended Dec.27.

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • What's Brewing? — Bend's Town Hall: Workforce Housing Crisis, What are our options? $15 members, $20 nonmembers; 5-7 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NWBondSt., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • Beginning QuickBoeks Pro 2014: Two-day class: learn to set up newcustomer and vendor accounts, create invoices, record sales andenter payments. Includes textbook; $89; registration required; 6-9 p.m. Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; 541-3837270; ceinfo©cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu /continuinged.

WEDNESDAY • Business Startup Class: Decide if running a business is for you; $29; registration required; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. • SCORE free business workshop: Financial fundamentals of running a business; registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 54I-617-7080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org. • What's Het inFranchising: Find out about the top trends and the best industries; $29; registration required; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend;541383-7290, sbdc@cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. • What's Brewing: Discussion of Crook County Schoolto-Work program; 7-8 a.m. Meadow LakesRestaurant, 300 Meadow LakesDrive, Prineville; 541-280-4097; kara@crookcountyfoundation. org.

THURSDAY • Holding Employees & Others Accountable: Help team members perform their jobs well; part of the Essential Leadership Series; $95; registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay,Bend; 541383-7270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged. • Project Management Information Meeting: Learn about project management skills and certification; free; registration recommended; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. • 3DModeling with SketchUp I: Learn to navigate in 3-D space, create interesting and detailed models, construct a scene containing shadows, sunlight, and fog and import ready-made models from around the globe. Class continues until Feb.19; $79; registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way,

Bend; 541-383-7270 or www. cocc.edu/ continuinged. SUNDAY • Rockyour Businesswith Mantrapreneur Mastery: Join Bend-based ZanKavanahin a Mantrapreneur Business Salon; five-week series; $22 per week, or call in for $11, registration requested byFeb. 7; 4:30-6 p.m.; Namaspa, 1135 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; 530-539-4493, zan© mantrapreneurmastery.com or www.mantrapreneurmastery. com. FEB. 10 • Enhance Your Website with Javascript: Overview of the Javascript programming language. Enhancewebpages for animations, form validation, and more. Class runs through Feb. 25; $129, registration required; 6:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY3, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

FOOD

HOME

a Andy Tullis /The Bulletin file photo

Chicken broth benefits from a long simmer time.

Make soupssing with this Asian-infusedbroth

'l

/@. Ik/'

By JanRoborts-Dominguoz

other hour orso. The cooked chicken has The other day I tumbled a been wrapped and tucked fistful of chopped-up garlic, a w ay in the freezer. And the onion, celery tops and fresh s t r ained broth, after a night ginger root into a stock pot, o f chilling so I can scrape off along with a cut-up chickthe f at, will also end up in en, red pepper flakes and dee p freeze. It's that fresh, chunpeppercorns. Then I - ked-up knob of ginger added enough water '.jj'" to cover the whole root that will set all affair, along with a future creations pinch of salt. made from -"' g,' -' It simmered this liquid gold on a gently until -, its fragrant, path far rechickeny lusmoved from cious aroma most broth-based permeated creations. every corner I could have of the house, Thinkstock added fresh For The Bulletin

Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Harry and Judy Harbin stand on their back deck with their two dogs, Rhody, left, and Bella.

, :

.

"

'

.

.

-

"

.

'

'

-

" -

.

.

• Harry andJudyHarbin haveadded a personaltouchto their 4-story home through aseriesof remodeling projects

at which point Ginger root adds subtle

Qn

cilantro, of

I lifted the lid Asian flavor to a simmered co urse, and and removed ch icken broth. even a couple the fallingof wedges of off-the-bone Meyer lemons, chicken pieces. I let them

but t h at would havebeen too

cool until they could be han- rigid a governor on my end dled without inflicting much uses. When I pull this broth pain, then pulled off most of f rom the freezer down the

By Penny NakamuraeFor The Bulletin

the tender morsels of meat

r oa d , it will provide a subtle

outhern charm and hospitality in Bend are

before returning the bones A s i an influence to a broad and scraps to the pot, where r ange of soups and stews

in full display at Harry and Judy Harbin's

they continued to flavor the broth as it simmered for an-

wit h out overstating itself. SeeBroth /D2

Awbrey Butte home, as can be seen by their purple front entry door.

GARDEN

The couple moved here 16 years ago to

of Mount Bachelor on one side and Pilot Butte

Grow an indoorgarden — no soil necessary

on the other. In between these two natural

By Nara Schoonberg

Everglades or tucked into

Chicago Tribune

cliffs in South America. In-

retire from careers in Louisiana and bought a 2,800-square-foot home with majestic views

landmarks are views of the Old Mill and Bend's

Love plants but hate dirt?

There's a whimsical burst of greenery that has your

city lights.

name on it. A native of rain forests, deserts and swamps, the air

It's a three-bedroom, 2'/2-bath home with 180-degree views.

plant — officially, Tillandsia — doesn't need soil. These

"When we first looked at this house, there

plants absorb all their water

and nutrients through their leaves, and theyuse roots

was a snowstorm going on, and it was so foggy we couldn't see any views. We had to take their word on it," recalls Harry Harbin, 67, who said they moved from a historic Southern 1910 Georgian Manor home with 16-foot vaulted ceilings, stately columns and a red brick exterior.

See Charm/D4

A hand-painted mural by artist Kim Smallenberg greets visitors

creasingly, you can see them in American plant shops and garden centers — and homes.

"They've gotten really popular over the last five years," says Zenaida Sengo, author of "Air Plants: The Curious World of Tilland-

sias" (Timber Press). "A couple of years ago you knew about them if you were plant

only to attach themselves to

savvy or style savvy, and

surfaces that offer good sun exposure. You might find air

now it's like, whoa! Everybody knows about them."

plants perched in trees in the

SeeAir plants/D5

as they walk into the Harbins' home in Bend.

Wherever you look in this charming home,you will see reflections of glass art and paintings that the couple

TODAY'S RECIPES Chili creations: Find comfort in these chilis: San Antonio Chili, Cin-

collects through their travels.

cinnati Chili, White

Chicken Chili,03 r '!

These pancakes will leave you speechless:"Can'tThink-of-Anythingto-Comment" Pancakes,D3

/

A' ,

/

Just add ginger:Ginger root adds flavor to these dishes: Gingered Chicken Broth, Hot andSour Soup with Gingered Chicken Broth and Chili-Soy Dumpling Sauce,Chinatown Mushroom Soup, 02

I I

- =

Super spuds:Satisfy that craving for crisp potatoes with Smoked Paprika OvenFries, 02

: -

I /

I /

ABOVE: The master bedroom of the Harbins' home inBend. RIGHT: The curbless walk-in shower wasdesigned with the idea of aging in place.

Recipe Finder:OssoBucois not asintimidating as you maythink, D2


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

FOOD

A t e aypr, rlp remprse Osso bucoclaassic Italian dish By Julie Rothman By Ellls Krieger Special to The Washington Post

The Baltimore Sun

Smoked Paprika Oven Mes

Dorothy

For as long as I can remem- Makes 4 servings ber, I have craved crisp pota- Smoked paprikaand rosemary add toes in any form: hash browns, a Spanish accent, a heady aroma potato chips, french fries. and an earthy depth of flavor. I find t hem al l i r r esistible. From nutritionist and cookbook When I was a kid, my favor- author Ellie Krieger. ite snack was a can of potato "stix," and for a recent birth- 3 Ig, skin-on russet potatoes day my celebratory lunch was (about1s/4 Ibs total) a largecone of Belgian fries 1 TBS smoked Spanish paprika from a hole-in-the-wall frites (pimenton) shop. 2 TBS olive oil It's exactly that yearning /4 to /2 tsp salt, plus more as that compelled me to the kitchneeded en to come up with a way to 1 TBS minced fresh rosemary hit the french fry spot more healthfully, so I could indulge Position oven racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven; preheat more often with no downsides. the oven to 450 degrees. Use cooking oil spray to grease two rimmed Mission ac c omplished. baking sheets. These are so good, I would go Cut the potatoes into '/4-inch-thick matchsticks, transferring them to a so faras to say Iprefer them large mixing bowl as you work. Add the oil, smoked paprika and salt (to over regular fries, because taste), tossing to coat evenly. Divide between the baking sheets, spreadthey are enticingly crisp, taste ing them in asingle layer; roast (on the upper and lower racks) for10 minsomehow more potato-yand utes, then scatter the rosemary evenly over the potatoes (do not stir) and have no greasiness. rotate the sheets top to bottom and front to back. Roast for 15 minutes or To make them, cut russet until the potatoes aregolden andcrisped. potatoes into thin sticks, toss Taste, and season lightly with a bit more salt, if desired. Serve hot. with olive oil, sprinkle with Nutrition per serving:220 calories, 4 g protein, 37 g carbohydrates, salt and spread them on a bak- 7 g fat, 1 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 160 mg sodium, 3 g dietary ing sheet in a single layer. Use fiber, 1 g sugar two baking sheets if you need to so the potatoes don't over-

lap, because they won't crisp

and they come out beautifully

potatoes are about halfway

up as well otherwise. Then bake in a hot oven until they

when you just leave them be

done. Here, I took them in a Span-

until they are done. These "fries" are delicious There is no need to peel the simply salted, but you can also potatoes; the skins give them play with any number of flaa rustic appeal and contribute vorings. Toss with garlic powfiber and nutrients. And don't der, Cajun seasoning or chili bother tossing them as they powder before you put them in cook. They tend to stick to the the oven; or sprinkle with Parpan if you try to move them migiano-Reggiano cheese or beforethey are well-browned, chopped fresh herbs once the are crisp and golden brown.

ish direction w it h

s m oked

paprika and rosemary, which add a heady aroma and earthy depth of flavor. Sure, I go back to that Belgian frites place now and then, but for everyday eating, there is no better

way to satisfy those crisp-potato cravings.

Gr i ff i t h ,

slow, gentle cooking to become tender, it is also quite forgiving. You just want to

RECIPE

of

FINDER

Sparks, Maryland, was looking for an osso buco recipe. She enjoyed the dish while

take care not to overcook the meat.

Looking for a hardto-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

on vacation in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and was not

been able to find it once she gothome.

Requests Jama Lazarow, originally from Baltimore and now liv-

ing in Brookline, Massachu-

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

Osso buco i s a c l a ssic Northern Italian dish tradi-

setts, would love to have the

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

recipe for the white cake that was made by the long-closed

tionally made of veal shanks braised wit h v e getables, white wine and broth. Osso buco is Italian for "bone with a hole" or "pierced bone," based on the marrow hole subtle tomato sauce. The dish that can be found at the center has a reputation for being difof the cross-cut veal shank.

Fiske's Caterer and Confec-

tioner, originally located on Park Avenue in Bolton Hill. Lazarow said th e d elicate

cake had a thin jelly layer and light lemon icing or glaze

ficult and t i me-consuming. But although it is true that, like most braises, it requires

The veal shanks are browned and then cooked slowly in a

and was his all-time favorite.

He requested it everyyear for his birthday.

Osso Buco With Toasted Pine Nut Gremolata Makes 4 servings into ~/2-inch dice 1 celery stalk, chopped into /4inch slices

4 veal shanks, cut 3 inches thick (about3N to 4 Ibs), tied to secure meat to bone

2 C dry white wine /4 C finely chopped Italian

6 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 1 med carrot, chopped into /4-inch-thick coins

parsley 2 TBS chopped fresh thyme /4 C pine nuts, toasted under leaves the broiler until dark brown 2 C basic tomato sauce (recipe Zest of 1 lemon follows)

1 sm Spanish onion, chopped

2 C chicken stock

Salt and pepper

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Season the shanks all over with salt and pepper. In a heavy-bottomed 6- to 8-quart casserole (preferably cast iron), heat the olive oil until smoking. Placethe shanks in the panand brown all over, turning to get every surface, for12 to15 minutes. Removethe shanks andset aside. Reduce the heat to medium, add the carrot, onion, celery and thyme leavesand cook, stirring regularly, until golden brown and slightly softened, about 8 to 10minutes. Add thetomato sauce, chicken stock and wine and bring to a boil. Place shanks back into the pan, making sure they aresubmerged at least halfway. If shanks are not covered halfway, addmore stock. Cover the panwith a tight-fitting lid of aluminum foil. Place in oven for 2 to 2~/t hours and cook until meat is nearly falling off the bone. Forthe gremolata,mixthe parsley,pine nutsandlemonzest loosely inasmallbowl. Setaside until readyto serve. Remove the casserole from the oven and let stand10 minutes before topping with gremolata and serving.

Basic Tomato Sauce

Broth

of the freshly made gingered

Continued from 01 One of the soups that will benefit from my g i ngered chicken broth is an elegant but simple preparation called

sour soup. With this recipe, I

plumper, slightly heartier-flavored bunch onions as they

have moved far from the traditional hot and sour soup one

become available at the farmers' market. The texture is a bit

chicken broth into a hot and

In late spring, I'll substitute

encounters in most Chinese coarser than the simple green restaurants. It's the way my onion, but the soup can certainChinatown Mushroom Soup. husband and I prefer it: strong ly stand up to the variation. It's a combination of fresh on bean curd and completely — Jan Roberts-Dominguezis mushrooms, thin Asian-style lacking in bamboo shoots. The a Corvallis food writer, artist, noodles, green onions, a bit of green onions are its backbone, and author of "Oregon Hazelnut Black Forest ham and a splash their mellow yet oniony flavor Country, the Food, the Drink, the of fresh lime juice for zing. I mingling with the ginger-laced S pirit," and four other cookbooks. may even throw in a few pieces chicken broth, the two compoReaderscan contactherby email of the ginger-infused chicken nents acting in concert to lift at janrd@proaxis.com, or obtain that I just put in the freezer. this soup out of the commonadditional recipes and food tips on First, however, I turned some placeinto the extraordinary. her blog at www janrd.corn.

Gingered Chicken Broth 8 C water

2 (14-oz) cans double strength

1 yellow onion, coarsely chopped

chicken broth, undiluted 1 whole chicken, approximately 5 Ibs 1head fresh garlic

s/4 C coarsely chopped fresh

2 C coarsely chopped celery, including stalks and leaves

1 TBS whole peppercorns

ginger root (no need topeel) 1 TBS red chile flakes 2tspsalt

Add the water, canned broth and chicken to a large stock pot. Peel away the papery outer skin from the head of garlic, then place the head on its side on a cutting board and make '/4-inch-thick cuts down through the cloves so that you end up with a pile of coarsely chopped pieces of garlic. Add the garlic to the pot, along with the celery, onion, ginger root, chile flakes, salt and peppercorns. Bring the mixture to a boil over high heat, then reduce to a simmer, cover the pot and cook for about1 hour, until the chicken is very tender. Remove the chicken pieces with a slotted spoon and let them sit until they're cool enough to handle. Cut most of the meat away from the bone and set aside. It's DK to leave some meat on the bones — it will help flavor the broth. Return the bones and meat scraps to the pot and continue cooking the broth for another couple of hours, covered, at a very low simmer. Remove from heat. Pour the broth through a strainer into a large, wide container (or 2 containers) so the broth can cool quickly, pressing down on the strained bones and vegetables to squeezeout as much broth as possible. Refrigerate for several hours or overnight so the fat will separate from the broth, then scrape off the fat. Spoon the chilled broth into appropriate-sized containers and refrigerate or freeze. Makes about10 cups of broth. The cooked chicken meat can be used immediately or packaged for the refrigerator or freezer. Makes about 4 cups of meat. Shortcut for gingered chicken broth:If you already have a batch of chicken broth, or even if you want to start with 10 cups of canned chicken broth, simply pour it into a pot, add about 1 cup of coarsely chopped fresh ginger, 1 head of coarsely chopped garlic and about 1 tablespoon of red chile flakes and simmer for about 2 hours, covered. Strain and cool before pouring into appropriate-sized containers for the freezer.

1 Spanish onion, cut into /4-inch dice 4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced 3 oz olive oil

crushed and mixed

4 TBS fresh thyme leaves

(or 2 TBS dried leaves)

Salt to taste

'/ carrot, shredded finely 2 28-ozcans oftomatoes,

Saute onion and garlic in olive oil over medium heat for about 10 minutes or until translucent but not browned. Addthyme andcarrot, cook 5 minutes over medium heat, then addtomatoes. Bring to a boil, lower heat to just bubbling and simmer 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Seasonwith salt to taste andset aside.

Hot and Sour Soup with Gingered Chicken Broth and Chili&oy Dumpling Sauce

a

a

Makes 8 servings This is genuine comfort food in the Dominguez house. And so easy to put together. 7 C Gingered Chicken Broth ~/s C rice vinegar

2 TBS soy sauce 1 C chopped green onions (all the white and half the green

portions of about 6 onions) 1 (1 Ib) block firm tofu, drained well and sliced into /2-inch long by /4-inch thick julienne

strips 10 dried shiitake mushrooms, soaked and sliced into thin

shreds (see Note) 1 TBS commercially made chili-

garlic sauce 1 tsp toasted sesameoil 3 to 4 Ig eggs, lightly beaten

In a large pot, combinethe broth, vinegar, soy sauce, green onions, tofu, mushrooms and chili-garlic sauce, andthe sesameoil. Bring the mixture to a boil over medium-high heat, reduce the temperature to medium-low, and simmer gently, uncovered, for about 15 minutes to give the flavors a chance to merge and develop.Adjust the seasonings, adding additional vinegar,soy sauce and chili-garlic sauce asdesired. Just before serving, bring the soup back to a slow boil. While slowly stirring the soup in one direction, slowly drizzle in the beaten eggs in the other direction. Theegg Chinatown Mushroom Soup will cook quite quickly in the hot Makes 4 to 6servings broth and blossomout into feathery strips and bits. Serveimmediately. 8 C Gingered Chicken Broth ~/4 Ib Black Forest ham (or other Note:To reconstitute the dried 1 Ib fresh crimini mushrooms, good-quality ham), thinly mushrooms, place them in a deep sliced sliced, then julienne cut bowl, cover with about 1 cup of About 8 oz fresh, thin AsianAbout 3 TBS fresh lime juice boiling water andlet sit for about 30 style noodles, cooked About 2 TBS soy sauce minutes or until the mushroomsare 1 bunch of green onions, 2 tsp toasted sesame oil soft and pliable. Tokeepthe mushwashed and thinly sliced into About1 TBS fresh chopped rooms submerged asthey reconsti1- to 2-inch strips (white, pale cilantro tute, place a saucer or plate on top green and about1 inch of the Enoki mushrooms for garnish and weight it with a heavy object, dark green) suchas a can ora coff ee mug to keep the floating mushrooms subIn a large pot, heat the broth with the crimini mushrooms, noodles, merged. Whenslicing, you'll discovgreen onions, ham, lime juice, soy sauceand sesameoil. To serve, ladle a er that some of thestems aremuch portion of the soup into eachbowl, then garnish with some of the cilantro too tough to slice. Set those aside and enoki mushrooms. foranotheruse.

FF

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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

i n in m m o r i n C i i S • No matter what kind you make,a bowl of chili will always satisfy

At a loss for words?

Post a pancakerecipe By Nancy Stohs Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

I encountered this:

"Can't think of anything to comment so I'm just going

Chili is in my blood. It is part of who I am. Of all the dishes my mother

made for our family, it is her r e member with

A week or two later I saw

the most fondness. Of all the dishes served for lunch at my

it again. And then again. Who is this guy, I won-

high school, it is the chili that

dered, thinking it must sure-

I remember as most edible.

ly be one person. Soon I s t arted seeing it everywhere, and y ou know what came next. Try Googling it yourself-

It is, for me, the ultimate comfort food. When I first moved to Tex-

as, a new colleague who soon became a fast friend held a

their first bowls. I was sweat-

Photos by Lauri Skrivan/ St. Louis Post Dispatch via Thts

lives back in his hometown of San Antonio. He makes it the traditional Texas way, with

fall, I got more than 100,000 results.

San Antonio Chili Makes 8 servings

small cubes of beef (or venison when he can get it), and then he mixes in an equal

2 TBS olive oii

amount of hot sausage. In another Texas tradition, he adds a bottle of beer. Dan

1 Ib lean beef or venison, cut into /~-inch cubes

t/~ C chopped dried chili

1 Ib hot sausage

12oz beer

t TBS cumin t C canned or bottled jalapeno

1 sweet onion, chopped 4 cloves garlic, minced

slices peppers, see note

1 TBS chili powder

Heat oil in a large pot or skillet over medium-high heat. Add onion chili, or possibly a Mexican and garlic and saute until the onion is translucent, about 5 minutes. Add er, that kind of status. It is the beer. Those craft brews with meats and cook until browned. type of food you bond over; overpowering hops or notes Add the chili powder, cumin, Ialapenosanddried chiles and pour in the arguments can be placated of raspberry marmalade will beer. Add just enough water to cover. Bring to a slow simmer and cover. with a good bowl of chili. only ruin it. Simmer at least anhour. If chili is too liquid, simmer awhile without the lid. And in the days when roadI also made a version of Note:This makes quite a hot chili. I used dried ancho chiles, which are side diners ruled the land- w hite chicken chili t h a t I relatively mild; you canmake it hotter by using hotter dried chiles. scape, the one dish you could cook only once in a very Per serving:343 calories; 27 g fat; 9 g saturated fat; 61 mg cholesterbe certain to find everywhere great while because it goes ol; 15 g protein; 7 g carbohydrate; 2 g sugar; 2 g fiber; 606 mg sodium; was chili. And it would be straight to your arteries. 34 mg calcium. — Recipe byDaniel Puckett, SanAntonio good. You first make a roux, There may be as many which is bad enough (and ways to make chili as there also good enough, if we're are people who make it, but talking about flavor), but then in the sense of any other chili ryphal, is that a h u ngry it is always good. Chili is im- you mix in a lot of half-and- you have ever known. man stopped into a Cincinpossible to make badly. half, sour cream and shredFirst of all, it is less a soup nati restaurant more than For my own little chili fies- ded Monterey jack cheese. than a sauce. It is spread on 90 years ago and asked for ta, I started with a version of Some people dispute that top of a bed of spaghetti and a bowl of chili. The owners, that hair-blasting stuff I had white chicken chili even qual- then topped with a mound of two brothers from Greece, way back in Texas. I'm not as ifies as chili because it is not shredded Cheddar cheese. A had never heard of the stuff young as I once was, so I tem- one of the two officially sanc- thin layer of chopped sweet and asked the man to depered it a bit and made it ever tioned chili colors (reddish onions or kidney beans — or scribe it. so slightly less fiery. But it's brown and brownish red). both — is spooned out by reH e explained it a s w e l l the kind of chili that adapts But I d isagree. It has chili quest between the meat and as he could, and then they easily to differing levels of powder in it, and it is a soupy the cheese. made what they thought that heat by changing the kind of liquid. To me that means it is The chili, or what we Cin- sounded like — but using peppers you use to make it. chili. cinnatians call chili, is sea- the spices common in Greek I used ancho peppersBesides, it is i ncredible, soned with cinnamon and cooking that they were familthey're poblano peppers that and this particular recipe is cloves and, often, chocolate iar with, such as cinnamon have been roasted and dried more incredible than most. (you won't really taste it, but and cloves. — which have a bit of a bite to Which brings us to Cincin- your mouth will be glad it's The result became instantthem but are still fairly mild. nati chili. Certain people, per- there). Some versions add all- ly popular around the reThey can be anywhere from haps even most people, will spice, as does mine, and oth- gion, but really nowhere else. about half as hot as a jala- deny that Cincinnati chili is ers go for nutmeg. But that's Some people love it. Some peno to almost as hot as one. chili at all. just weird. people hate it. I consider it the Of course, the recipe also But Cincinnatians will acThe story, possibly apoc- nectar of the gods. calls for a cup of jalapeno tually look at you squarely slicesfrom a can orjar.These in the face and insist that not have been pickled, so they only is it chili, but it is also the are not as hot as they would finest version of chili known be when fresh, but the chili to man. is still going to pack a fair I happen to be from Cinduced American beerfor this

Chili has that kind of pow-

amount of h eat n o

m a tter cinnati, and I am here to tell y ou t ha t C i n c innati c h i l i

which variety of dried pepper you use. The recipe comes directly

represents the pinnacle of all chili varieties and is the

from Dan Puckett, the same

ultimate expression of chili

friend who initially served

evolution.

me the chili and who now

type in the exact phrase, in

quotes. When I did this last

San Antonio Chili is for those whose paiates can handle a little extra kick.

ing, too, but not as profusely. didn't specify this, but I will: I think. At any rate, I passed Use a r egular, mass-pro-

the test. I was accepted.

About the time I was mak-

ing my discovery, so was news.com.au. For a story to post a pancake recipe." about the mysterious case And it was followed by, yes, of the pancake recipe gone a pancake recipe. viral, the Australian news That first time, I laughed. servicecontactedCoverdale, Well, isn't t h a t c l ever, I who said she had no idea thought. what was going on.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

dinner party to welcome me. He served chili. To be specific, he served hot chili. Volcanic chili. He thought it would be entertaining to offer Yankee Boy a bowl of t o ngue-searing spices. I gobbled it up and asked for more while the others were still dripping sweat over

magazine, tas t e.com.au. "Basic Pancakes" is attribut-

I first noticed it early last ed to food editor Kim Covfall. Scrolling through the erdale, who first posted it in comments on a story online, March 2010.

By Daniel Neman

chili that I

1

I sent my own email to the food magazine a month

or two ago but never heard back. I also contacted the Australian flour c ompany,

White Wings, whose self-rising flour is called for in the recipe. Nothing. I found the Facebook page for one of the commenters and sent him a Facebook message. Again, no response. Who started this? And

Each time, it was the iden- why? Why pancakes'? Why tical comment and recipe, this recipe in particular? word for word, punctuation When my i nvestigative mark for punctuation mark. attempts to get answers to And it showed up on a ran- these questions fell flat, I had dom collection of stories, my own "I give up" moment: Can't think of what else to most having nothing whatsoever to do with food. do, so I'm just going to make On a story about the Pal- a pancake recipe. And so I in family's involvement in a gave this one a try. brawl at a party in Alaska. Meanwhile, enthusiasm With therecap of a soccer for the post seems to have game on an Irish sports fizzled. Last week when I news website. On a forum Googled the phrase, I got where someone asked for 3 ,150 results. E ither t h e advice on what to tell hi s phantom pancake recipe little sister, wh o t h ought posters have grown bored, she was in love. (Somehow, concluding that the novelty I don't think pancakes will has worn off, or site managhelp.) On Kelly Osbourne's ers have been deleting the Facebook tribute to the late Joan Rivers. Screen names accompa-

comments. Or both.

"Make your own stuff up, stop stealing," wrote one

nying the post varied wide- commenter after seeing the ly, too: Jonathan Stapleton, post perhaps one too many Bryan Hernandez, Sweet- times. flame, Chewbaca, thatafriMaybe, if you can't think canchic, to name just a few. of anything to comment, it's The recipe, it turns out, best to just not comment at is from an Australian food alL

'Can't-Think-Of-Anything-To-Comment' Pancakes Makes10 to12 thick 4-Inch pancakes As pancakes go, these are fine, a bit sweet. They puff up and become quite thick, so you'll want to spread out the batter on the griddle. Tested by NancyStohs 1t/s C milk(plus more as

needed) 1 egg 2 tsp vanilla extract 2 C self-rising flour

t/~ tsp baking soda '/ C superfine granulated

sugar 2 TBS butter, melted

In a bowl or 2-cup measure, whisk together milk, egg and vanilla. Into another bowl, sift flour and baking soda. Stir in sugar. Make awell in the center. Add milk mixture. Whisk until just combined. Batter will be thick (thin with a little milk, if desired; batter will get even thicker as it sits). Heat a large nonstick skillet or griddle over medium heat. Brush pan with melted butter. Using about1/4 cup batter per pancake, cook pancakes 3 to 4 minutes or until bubbles appear on surface. Turn and cook 3 minutes or until cooked through. Transfer to a plate. Cover loosely with foil to keepwarm. Repeat with remaining mixture, brushing pan with butter between batches. Serve.

Just don't think of it as chili

W:

White Chicken Chili gets its color from sour cream and haif-and-haif.

this S UH Q A Y

White Chicken Chili Yield: 8 to 10servIngs 1 TBS vegetable oii 2 Ibs boneless, skinless

chicken breasts Cincinnati chili served over pasta and covered with cheddar

1 stick butter, divided

cheese,acombination known asa "three-way."

2 Ig onions, chopped

Cincinnati Chili

1 qt beef broth

t/4 C aii-purpose flour s/4C chicken broth 2 C haif-and-half

1 tsp Tabasco sauce

t tsp cumin '/s tsp salt

/s tsp pepper t (16-oz) can white beans 2 (4-oz) cans whole mild green chiies, drained andchopped t t/~ C grated Monterey jack cheese t/s C sour cream

1t/stsp chili powder

Yield: 6 servings 2 Ibs ground beef

D3

t/~ tsp ground allspice t/~ tsp ground cloves

1 C chopped onion

Pinch cayenne pepper

t/~ C chili powder

1 bay leaf

1 tsp ground cinnamon 1 tsp ground cumin 3 cloves garlic, minced

1 (15-oz)can tomato sauce

t/s tsp salt

t/~oz unsweetened chocolate

2 TBS cider vinegar or white

vinegar

Place beef in a large pot and add broth. Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally with a fork to separate the meat into a fine texture. Cover, lower temperature and simmer 30 mInutes. Add onion, chili powder, cinnamon, cumin, garlic, salt, allspice, cloves, cayenne pepper, bay leaf, tomato sauce, vinegar and chocolate and mix well. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer 1 hour, stirring occasionally. Refrigerate overnight. Skim off fat before heating andserving. Serve over a bed of spaghetti, then top with shredded mild cheddar cheese. Serveoyster crackers on the side. If desired, add alayer of kidney beansand/orchoppedsweetonionbetweenthechiliandthecheese. Per serving:346 calories; 19 g fat; 7 g saturated fat; 93 mg cholesterol; 33 g protein; 14 gcarbohydrate; 5 g sugar; 6 g fiber; 1,199 mgsodium; 80 mg calcium.

Heat a large skillet over moderately high heat and add oil. Meanwhile, season chicken with salt and pepper. Cook the chicken until brown on one side, about 5 minutes. Turn andcook — turning occasionally to keep from burning — until done, 10 to 15 minutes more, depending on the thickness. Remove chicken to a plate to cool. Whencool enough to handle, shred it with your fingers andset aside. Melt 2 tablespoons of the butter over medium heat and cook onions until softened, about 5 minutes. In a heavy pot large enough to hold all the ingredients, melt remaining 6 tablespoons of butter over moderately low heatandwhisk in flour. Cook this roux, whisking constantly, for 3 minutes. Stir in the onIonand gradually add the broth andhalf-and-half, whisking all the time. Bring mixture to a boil and simmer, stirring occasionally, 5 minutes or until thickened. Stir in Tabasco, chili powder, cumin, salt and pepper.Addbeans, chiles, chicken and cheese; cook over moderately low heat, stirring occasionally, for 20 minutes. Add sour cream. Serve immediately or refrigerate overnight for better flavor. Per serving (based on10): 407 calories; 26 g fat; 14 g saturated fat; 115 mg cholesterol; 28 g protein; 17 g carbohydrate; 2 g sugar; 3 g fiber; 586 mg sodium; 233 mgcalcium. — Recipe adaptedby Karen Cel iaFoxfrom TheKitchenforExplori ngFoods caterersin Pasadena,Califomia.

LOVE STORIES WE

HOW 'ASK MARILYN' Msr THE LOVE OF

Hsa UFE, AND 4 MORE HEARTWARMING TALES

0 D~

5 Romantic Tales ofLove

Lo Af f I K I I D gl

r tI t l


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

HOME ck

AR D EN For the "woman's cave," Judy took one

Charm Continued from 01 The couple originally wanted a one-story ranch house

of the extra bedrooms and made it her

sewing room. When she moved to Central Oregon,she fit right in as she learned to

here but instead found this

custom four-story home with an octagon-shaped roofline. Since buying the house, the couple has been doing remodeling projects in stages.

quilt.

First projects It started with a dding a two-story deck t ha t a d ded

cause it's a matter of safety,

3,000 square feet of outdoor living space. Harbins built a pergola, which serves as an outdoor living

because you don't have to enclose a shower with a 4-inch or 6-inch barrier," explains Ewen. "This shower has full width clearance for wheel-

room where the couple enter-

chairs, and we also installed a

On the bottom deck, the

tains friends inthe summer. With the large deck came Judy Harbin's large potted gardens. "Because the deck is surrounded by this clear-glass fence, I don't have to worry about the deer eating my flow-

bench and grab bars." Judy loves the rock mosaic

-.4 g J

tile on the floor of the shower,

I' .

,J

ji

which looks like a river flowing slightly out of the shower

I.

I

area.

But the best part of this b athroom remodel fo r t h e Harbins is t h e d ouble " S"

ers," says Judy with a sweet

Louisiana accent. "I have 16,000 bulbs planted all over.

curve shower wall, which is the first thing you see when you enter this spa bathroom. The glass had to be cus-

The tulips and lilies are in the

pots, and out in the yard we have daffodils, irises and hyacinths. I love my flowers."

tom-made, and it had to meet the standards for bathroom

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

A glass balloon decorates the kitchen in the Harbins' home. The home features glass art the couple have collected from their travels.

Her loveof flowers led her t o commission a r tist

glass, meaning it had to be

Kim

shatterproof.

"What was supposed to take eight weeks to make ac-

Smallenberg to paint an entry mural of all the flowers that bloom in the Harbins' yard. Though the house sits on

tually took 15 weeks," says H arry. It was hard for t h e

nearly an acre of land, there's a

glass maker to mold and bend

green belt that surrounds their

the curved wall. "It was worth th e w a it," chimes in Judy. "I love that

backyard area, which makes for a large swath of protected land, dotted with High Desert

II

junipers and local brush. Judy says she loves the area, because even though they have neighbors, the surrounding area makes it very private,

P,' j

glass with the swirl." Harry picked out the green soapstone slab countertop

iN

in the bathroom; the brown

veins that run through this slab give the counter a look of <-"'8

where juniper trees act as nat-

leather. "I love this stone. It h as

ural barriers. The next house project was A glass countertop shines in the kitchen of the Harbins' home. adding a recreational vehicle garage for the couple's trailer, fishing boat and other "toys." Harry Harbin is an avid fly-fisherman and road bicyclist, which made Central

speckles of jade in here," says Judy, running her fingers across the naturally textured

iS t i

stone. The white vessel sinks in the bathroom give the spa

bathroom a clean look.A windowed door in the bathroom leads to another outside

Oregon a natural fit for hi s

passions. On the second story, Harry

C

has his own loft office area, Judy calls it his "man cave." H arry f o u nded t h e "Hot

r,r

m aster

bedroom from the remodeled bathroom, Judy points to the

:.„.r,' I

Sprockets," a cycling group in Central Oregon. Sculptures and art ofcyciistscanbe found throughout the house. rooms and made it her sewing

their Jacuzzi tub. Walking into th e

r; J ,,:.— (I,,

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where he ties his own flies;

For the "woman's cave," Judy took one of the extra bed-

deck, where the Harbins have

I

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purple and lavender quilt she made for their queen-size

A;,!,"

poster bed.From their bed,

they have three large windows with 180-degree views Motion-sensor LED lighting was installed under the bathroom cabinet.

room. When she moved to

:?.:

Central Oregon, she fit right in as she learned to quilt. Sev-

The Harbins' recently remodeled bathroom incorporateden H$n

t hat s t r etch f r o m Mo u n t Bachelor to Pilot Butte. Be-

curved glass showerwall, vessel sinks and a "leathered" soap-

cause of the odd shape of the

stone slab countertop.

home's roofline, the v ault-

says she's been working on

ed ceilings are of varying heights. "The ceiling in here makes me feel like I'm on a boat," quips Harry, pointing up to

a Valentine quilt for the past

the wood-paneled bedroom

decade, but unfortunately, she says, it still won't be done in

ceiling. Just off the master bed-

time this year.

room, near the entryway, is

eral of her quilts can be seen throughout the h ouse. She

the powder room.

Kitchenremodel

To add a little more pizazz to this powder room, the Har-

'I'

Home improvement project No. 3 was the kitchen.

bins added glass tile flooring

"You should've seen it. We

had white melamine cupboards in here, and there was a small island in t h e m i ddle, which wasn't efficient at

all," explains Judy, who likes whimsical design along with glass art. "You can probably guess my favorit e colors are lime green and purple." All the accent pieces, inciuding the cupboard pulls, reflect

f i/.„

The soapstone slab countertop in the master bath has natural texture.

lect through their travels.

The three blue glass drop lights over the dining room

The Harbin's next remodeling project? "We'regoing on vacation, and we'll think about it," says Harry with a laugh.

chair," says Judy. "We also need to think of these things

as we get older." bought from an artist in TruckEwen says 95 percent of ee, California. the bathroom remodelsthese With her new r emodeled days have these new curbless spa bathroom, Judy says she Updating the master open showers. alreadyfeelsas ifshe's ata re"It's really a trend that al- sort at her own home. The latest home improvement project was recently most everyone is doing, be— Reporter: halpenl@aoI.com completed by Neil Kelly Design & Building, and it involved the master bathroom and a powder room. I The bathroom was dated and didn't seem to work or fit table were hand-blown and

artist David Fox custom-made the glass pulls and the backsplash tiles that have etchings

of the Cascade Range. Clerestory windows at the very top of the cabinets show-

case the colorful glass art that Judy has purchased from the couple's travels all over the world. She points to a purple balloon floating high on the kitchen wall and explains it's also a glass art piece. A solar tube adds more natural light into this whimsical kitchen. Be-

I

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l

with the Harbins' lifestyle.

Neil Kelly designer Nate Ewen delivered that perfect bathroom that "feels like a

spa". "We gutted this room, leaving only the vanity cabinet," explains Ewen. "There's also in-floor heat for added com-

cause of the plentiful natural

light flooding into the home, Judy says they rarely need to turn on lights during the day. The breakfast seating bar area thatseparates the open kitchen from the dining room and living room has a custom-made glass top that Harry

fort and a

m o tion-sensored

".Qe,

.

ir

<,j

'

toe-kick LED l ighting for ' middle-of-the-night' co n venience. It has a photo cell

override for daylight hours."

ordered from Canada.

With a nod to convenience

The 3-inch solid glass top

creditsher 45-year marriage to the fact that she always runs her ideas by Harry. "I

charming home, you will see reflections of glass art and paintings that the couple col-

Glass pulls add flair to the Harbins' kitchen.

her favorite colors. Local glass

with a wave pattern took three men to put in place. "I saw it on HGTV, and I told Harry, 'I think I'd like to have that, too,'" says Judy, who

with LED lights hidden in the baseboard that reflect off the tiles. Wherever you look in this

and aging, the Harbins also insisted on an open, curbless shower. "At the time we were having

this remodeling done, I was in a wheelchair after having surgery on my ankle and foot, so figure, if we're spending this things, he should be part of the we needed a full shower that much money on some of these decision making." could accommodate a wheelGlass tiles are illuminated with LED lights in the powder room.

Yachats, Oregon .

Receive2,0% offroom rate when you bring tlis ad ahd ' '

donate two cans of food for each night of your stay. Valid Sun-1'hurs, Now - Feb n„zoig.* 5~ L .S

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'

.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

ensee s ar in, imin is ever

In

By Adrian Higgins The Washington Post

The days are lengthening, and gardeners are getting twitchy. My green-fingered friends are doing a lot of plant planning and seed ordering

Air plants Continued from D1 Sengo's book is a great introduction. She has sections on care, origins and display, as well as hundreds of color photos to illustrate design and decorating projects to immerse yourself in the wonders of these deceptively simple showstoppers. She is well-versed in her subject. An artist and horticulturist in San Fran-

cisco, Sengo works with tillandsias at the highly regarded garden shop Flora Grubb Gardens. Air plants can be placed on trays, displayed in your favorite bowls, even glued

while trying hard not to start

things yet, although that day is almost here. Here, that is, for cool-season veggies that can go out as transplants before the last frost and with protection.

to wood. Their roots are for attachment only, Sen-

To state the obvious, we are weeks away from popping a

go says, and they grow just fine when properly at-

tomato seed into a foam cup.

tached with a nontoxic wa-

As for eight-week-old transplants of tomatoes and other

terproof glue such as Tilly Tacker. But air plants can't live

warm-season creatures such

as peppers and cucumbers, they shouldn't see the open

garden until May. It is easier than ever to find transplants started commer-

Luis Marmol I Dumbarton Oaks via The Washington Post

By late winter, the cold frame at Dumbarton Oaks' greenhouse in Washington is full of transplants that were started in early Febru-

ary. Cool-season vegetables such as kale, broccoli and chard can be started now, but wait for tomato seeding.

cially in the spring, even if m any retail sources make too

as possible. She recom-

April than to start one your-

a wall. In January I dust off

self at this time of year, but you'd be missing a lot of the

my homemade seed-starting apparatus — four decks of plywood, each bathed by two fluorescent shop lights — see what trays are serviceable

fore, but I keep it in a spare fridge and it stays fresh for

mends east-facing windows, where morning sun

two or three years. Last fall,

hits the plants for a few

I left some seed of choice

hours. West-facing w i ndows are good, too, as long as

Italian varieties of lettuce in the tote bag I cart to my gar-

and start filling them with blocks of seed mix and seeds.

den, and the odd rain shower moistened the packets. The

The cellar thus becomes an

instinct was to throw them

sent me the seed calendar unlikely but cozy wintertime assembled byher colleague ark. Heather V eneziano. T h eir I have found the perfect efforts start this week with veggie for gardeners who celery and a few contain- want to jump the gun a little: er-grown peas for the chil- the leek. Last week, I dropped dren's garden. 150 seeds of the varieties BanBy mid-February, however, dit and Tadorna into three Schumm and Veneziano will seed trays. I will plant them have sown seeds of spinach, out as baby leeks in early arugula, parsley, turnips and April, and because both are

out because wasting time with dud seed is the falsest of

even lettuce.

to set th e ba g

Ginter Botanical Garden in R ichmond, V i r ginia, w h a t schedule she follows, and she

winter-hardy I intend to har-

In the handsome Palladian vest full-size leeks from Sepgreenhouse range at Wash- tember through to the spring i ngton's D u mbarton O a k s of 2016, with a bit of luck. (alas, behind the scenes), I This is also the moment to found Melissa Brizer and Luis start the related cabbage, cauMarmol clearing the decks liflower, kohlrabi, kale and for their imminent seed-start-

broccoli. The last three are

ing endeavors. They have a

fairly dependable, but growing cabbage and cauliflower

tried-and-trusted regime of

starting early stuff such as is a bit of a tightrope act in celery, brassicas and onions getting them to head nicely in the next week or two. In before the heat sets in around a month or so, they will pot Memorial Day. The key is to up the seedlings from 72-cell grow them well — regular flats to individual pots, before watering and a little organic moving them to a barely heat- feed — but the key too is to ed cold frame in March. Here have sturdy and well-condithe transplants will harden tioned transplants ready to off for a couple of weeks be- put in come late March. That fore making it to the vegeta- means sowing them now. ble garden, where visitors can I tend to sow lettuce directly then watch their progress. into the garden in mid-March, "If you start too early," Briz- but I might be tempted to start er said, "they just get leggy." them indoors this winter, as

economies. But testing the viability is a

simple endeavor at this time of year: I arranged 20 seeds on a paper towel, folded the sheet like a letter, tucked it into a plastic sandwich bag marked with the variety, and moistened it. The idea is then s omewhere

warm and wait a week. I use a seed-starting h eat m a t ,

which is a must if you are germinating eggplant and pepper seeds, by the way. If half or more of my lettuce seeds sprout, I'll keep the packets. If not, I'll order afresh.

By checking your old seeds in this fashion now, you have the luxury of time — time to

assess the germination rate, time to buy new seed if that's necessary. In early summer, when the

the direct sun hits late in

the day when it's not as strong. The plants also need to be watered regularly; many growers use a combination of r e gular misting and occasional soaking. And air plants generally need fertilizer, which is added to water

and absorbed through the leaves during spraying or soaking. Choosing an air plant is part of the fun: Relatives of the pineapple, air plants can look like bursts of grass, miniature aloe vera plants and fluffy mosses.

' L'

)

®)

Where tobuy

Checkyour local garden center, andevensome big-box stores, for air plants. Hereare afew websites wefound that specialize in them:

• The Air PlantShop:airplantshop.com • Air Plant SupplyCo.: airplantsupplyco.com • Air Plant DesignStudio: air-plants.com

3great ideas From "Air Plants: TheCurious World of Tillandsias" • Addrocks:Author Zenaida Sengo loves to put air plants with rocks; smooth white pebbles can give agrassy air plant a seaside look. • Use yourtreasures: Since air plants don't need soil, they're easy to usewith bowls or trays you've already collected. • Twist somewire: A little stainless-steel wire canaffix liv- Zenaida Sengo, author of "Air ing air plants to leafless branch- Plants: The Curious World of Tillandsia." es; arrange in alarge vase.

frequently, so Sengo suggests choosing the leaves and structure you l i ke best; that's what you're going to be looking at most of the time.

Varieties

fre quently

seen in stores, such as T illandsia stricta and T .

aeranthos, can be good choices for beginners, Sengo says. Aeranthos has graceful hot pink and pur-

them back i n

ple blooms, and stricta has

e a rly w i nter

.

They flower, too, but not

day lengths start to get shorter again, those red cabbages will be ready for plucking. The idea that you started from a grain of d ormant life you held in your hand will make them especially delicious.

~M gj

'

m ands are simple, they're -Aie4~ non-negotiable. "Lighting is key. First a nd foremost, do y o u Caitlin Atkinson/Timber Press/Submitted photos have a spot that's bright Like most air plants, Tillandsia stricta loves east-facing morning enough?" Sengo says. sunlight. T illandsias need a s much bright, indirect light

last year or even the year be-

I asked Laura Schumm, a vegetablegardener at Lewis

iJ

ception — and if their de-

some do, though not before mid-February.

Most of my seed is from

~

on air — a popular miscon-

They have the luxury of a able too early. It is far more greenhouse. Trying to start convenient to pick up a broc- veggies on a windowsill is like coli plant in a 4-inch pot in beating your head against much tender material avail-

fun of the enterprise.

D5

sturdy pinkish blooms. "Those two types grow r elatively quickly, a n d t hey're easy to get t o bloom," Sengo says. A ir

p l a nt s s en d o u t

offspring, or "pups," after flowering, and m ost

LIVING SMART

s oureectrician uaiie? the work are not required to

ANGIE HICKS

be licensed electricians, even

though the company must at least have a licensed electrician on staff who is expected to provide oversight. "That's

s the nation's economy why asking about training is continues to improve really important," Long says. and homeowners tack- "You could be in a state that le more improvement projects, doesn't have (individual) lileaders in the electrical indus- censing (requirements), and try say a shortage of qualified the guy you're working with electricians makes it even learned it on the fly, and you're more important for homeown- really playing with fire." ers to hire smartly. Licensing regulations vary "The No. I challenge con- from state to state and countractors are facing is not the ty to county, so homeowners amount of work — it's a man- should first learn their local power issue," says Thayer jurisdiction's r e q u i rements Long, CEO of theIndepen- before hiring an electrician. dent Electrical Contractors, Then, follow up with the coma national trade association pany to understand exactly representing3,000 member who will be working on your "Nationwide, home and their qualifications. companies. there is a growing shortage of Many counties require a electricians in this countrylicensed electrician to pull a trained electricians." permit before beginning any With h omes b ecoming work or completing inspecsmarter with new technology tions. A reputable company and the growing popularity also will require staff to attend of LED lighting, Long says it's regular training courses and

A

on every job," he says. "You just have to have a licensed electrician overseeing the job to make sure things are done properly and up to code." He adds that a

l i c ense holder

remains responsiblefor the work done by employees and is required to make sure they

do only work they're qualified to handle. In Minnesota, unlicensed

workers need to be directly overseen by a licensed electrician, says Randy Smith, owner of highly rated Randy's Electric in Maple Grove.

species can grow i n to large spherical clusters of plants. Designing and crafting with air plants can be as simple as setting a plant in your favorite bowl or as elaborate as fashioning a wall design with multiple plants and a frame. In one striking — and relatively simple — project, Sengo glues fluffy mounds of tillandsia to a piece of

Tillandsia juncea takes center stage in a terrarium.

Air plants can be placed on trays, displayed in your favorite bowls, even glued to wood. Their roots are for attachment only, Sengosays, and they growjust fine when properly attached with a nontoxic waterproof glue suchas Tilly Tacker.

w eathered w o o d t h a t ' s the wall with steel prongs, air then mounted on the wall. plants grouped together in

The glue doesn't hurt the

hanging gardens, air plants plants, w h ic h c o n t inue suspended from the ceiling to grow as long as they like mistletoe. get enough sunlight and Whatever you do with your water.

like colors and textures so

your eye can differentiate," Sengo says. "It's much more pleasing to the eye that way, especially at first glance."

air plants, remember that less

Sengo shows air plants is often more, Sengo says. displayed in b u llhorns, "I usually suggest that you baskets, fronds and even stick to, if not a single type a hartebeest skull. There (of air plant), a few types, and are air plants attached to you group them together with

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

"You need to have a jour-

neyman's license to be on a job by yourself," Smith says. "Sometimes we send appren-

tice helpers along who are learning and sometimes we don't, but we always send a

licensed electrician out to the house." Crook says responsible electrical contractors take steps to ensure that qualified individuals work on appropriate jobs. "If you're hanging a fan or vital for homeowners to make stay current on the Nation- fixture, you don't really need sure the electrician they hire al Electrical Code, which is a guy who has a license for is properly trained to do the amended every three years. that," he says. "But if we're dojob and holds required trade Kent Crook, owner of high- ing a panel change, I feel like licensing. But even though the ly rated Wiremasters Electric we need a licensed guy. We company maybe licensed and in Miami, says he works in know that what we do isn't a employ a master electrician, Miami-Dade and Broward game. If an electrician messes that doesn't mean the percounties, where electrical con- up, a house might burn down. son doing an electrical job in tractors can send unlicensed It's serious." your home meets those same workers on jobs provided they — Angie Hictzs is the founder standards. have oversight from a licensee. of Angie's List, which offers "In our state, you don't have In about half of all states, he consumer reviews on everything says, individuals performing to have a licensed electrician from home repairto health care.

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL

Editer's note:Martha Stewart's column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslletters@marthastewart. com. For moreinformation on this column, visit www. marthastewart.com.

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D6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015

ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT

e es s owon eevision es e er TV SPOTLIGHT

is the exceptionally rare show whose attraction to her church ("Parks and Recreation" is an- is driven in part by a desire to other) where politics and do- do some good in the world.

"The Americans" 10 p.m.Wednesdays, FX

politics manages to remain sub- ents want? Good college, good ordinate to emotional storytell- marriage, good job," Philip ing. KGB strategy or the death snaps at Elizabeth later in the of Leonid Brezhnev get their season. "That's a f in e l i st," heft from the way Elizabeth Elizabeth slaps back at him, reand Philip react to them, rather minding her husband how little than having geopolitics confer she regards the Western trapmeaning on what are assumed pings of success and pleasure

By Alyssa Rosenberg The Washington Post

In the first scene of the third

season of FX's Cold War drama "The A mericans," KGB

deep-cover spy Elizabeth Jennings (Keri Russell) is taking a bath. In any other family drama, this might be a placid scene, or one of deep, but

to be the otherwise inconsequential lives of individuals. In "The Americans," it's the KGB that needs the couple to

safely domestic, emotion. Be-

cause this is "The Americans," though, this feels more like a poster for "Jaws" than a mo-

eYou know what most par-

mestic life are inseparable, but

that so often tempt him.

This conflict is intensified by the arrival in the couple's lives

of Gabriel (Frank Langella), a new handler who is far more to

agree to the agency's proposal Michael Parmelee / FX

Keri Russell stars as Elizabeth Jennings in the FX TV series "The

right now — at least that's what Elizabeth, the more faithful of the two, believes tobe true. And

Elizabeth's taste than Claudia

ever was, and who takes up the role in the family of a lovingbut highly influential grandfather.

ment of tranquility. The bath- Americans." The series is, at its most essential, e deeply felt drama tub may be shallow, but the about a family eroding from within. so the debates that play out in metaphorical waters are deep the Jennings home actually and dark and full of temble are of great significance to the choices. dia (Margo Martindale), the is good for those of us watching Soviet Union, as well as to the Elizabeth is thinking back to KGB handler who was manag- at home. Their bitter battle over health of the couple's marriage. "A couple of years, she goes the moment when her daughter, ing Elizabeth and her husband, Paige's future is a masterful Paige (Holly Taylor), learned to Philip (Matthew Rhys), told the continuation of "The Ameri- to college, she can have her swim. She stood with her ter- couple that the agency wanted cans'" exploration of geopoli- own life and we owe her that," rified little girl at the edge of a to recruit Paige. Claudia's re- tics and family, and this is shap- Philip pleaded with Elizabeth crystal-clear pool, sun shining quest follows a terrible failure: ing up to be the best season yet in Wednesday night's episode. down on them, and toldher The KGB had tried to recruit of the best show currently air- Like many parents, they want "We're going to do this. We're another teenager, Jared Con- ing on television. Paige to have all the choices in going to do this. It's going to be nors (Owen Campbell), withThere are shows like "Game the world. But that means difOK." Elizabeth's words were out his parents' consent. When of Thrones" that use the grind- ferent things for them. both true and a lie. She soothed they found out and refused, he ing impact of geopolitics on the Because Philip doesn't beher daughter and then — unlike the other mothers splash-

murdered them.

Claudia's request was meant

ing around with their children to avert another tragedy. It — threw Paige into the pool to

also sets up a dreadful dilem-

fendforherself. This being "The Americans," something more is going on. Elizabeth is contemplating the decision set up for her at the

ma for Elizabeth, who is a true

end of last season, when Clau-

believer in the Soviet system,

and Philip, who in small ways is drawn to American culture and the American way of life.

What's painful for the couple

intimate lives of individuals to illustrate the costs of war and stupid leadership. And there

"That doesn't count"?

Then they usually go on to ask why I don't have children of my own. My response is a big fat lie. I say, "It just never happened." The truth is my ex didn't want any more children. What can I say to these people to let them know that they need to stop and think about what they

say and ask, because their word choice in this circumstance is hurtful to the point of tears? — Stepmom In California

to many changes that are often triggered by surprising events. You might fight the inevitable, which will make the transformation process more difficult, butyou will be delighted with the results. If you are single, you will have many different potential suitors that come your way. Consider the different types Stars show the kistt of relationshiPs you of ttsy yos'g ltstre could fol'm wl'th

LGBT community, but finding this

out after so long shocked me. I'm worried now, and I can't seem to

wrap my head around the fact that he has sex with guys. I just can't quite look at or think of him the

his son was doing life in prison as an ac-

same way. I really do love him and can still

complice to murder. see a future with him. I just don't A nother ma n t o l d know howto handle this BIG news.

me he hadtwo children, a daugh-

Please, Abby, you're my only hope.

ter and an estranged son who was

— Liz In Texas

serving a long sentence — for sell-

Dear Liz: I would be curious about why your boyfriend waited

ing narcotics. Neither person was

happy to have been asked. After that, I stopped asking. I see no reason you shouldn't

simply tell the truth about why you are child-free. Not having (or wanting) children is nothing to be ashamed of — it's a personal choice that an increasing number of couples have opted for

Last night we were talking about

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, FEB. 3,2015: Thisyearyouopenup

doing more in the bedroom, and he told me that he is bisexual. I have nothing against the

from one man that

Dear Stepmom: A person who would downplay your role as a without regret. parent is rude, thoughtless and not Dear Abby: My boyfriend and I worth your time. As to asking why have been together for 18 months. someone is childless, I have ad-

so long to tell you. Because some-

one is bisexual does not mean the person is unfaithful and sleeping

agree with strategically. In encouraging Gabriel to see Paige as a prospect, Elizabeth is

making a decision that the couple have not yet agreed upon

By Jacqueline Bigar

seem to pop up from out of nowhere with demandsthatcould shock you.Know when you havehadenough and bewilling to say so. Others will respect your boundaries. Tonight: Talk and visit with pals.

together. It's a testament to the show's

powerthatitm akes uscareas much about whether Elizabeth

and Philip's marriage will survive as whether they'llbe killed in the service of their crum-

blingcountry.

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with both sexes at the same time. It

simply means the person is attracted to members ofboth sexes. You need to have further discus-

sion with your boyfriend regarding his attitude about his commitment to you before deciding what to do about his "big" news. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

Tonight: Be with a favorite person.

YOUR HOROSCOPE

CANCER (June21-July 22)

up to the KGB that he doesn't

let Paige say no to the program, he doesn't want to give her the are shows in which politics in- option to say yes at all. He is terjects occasionally, but where convinced that by foredosing personal and domestic drama one path for her, he will keep are in the foreground and func- others open. For E l izabeth, tion relatively independently though, this means closing off of the big issues and conflicts the opportunity that could be of the day. "The Americans" hugely meaningful for Paige,

dressed this subject in my column before. While many folks start conversations by asking whether someone has children, it can be a dangerous question. I learned my lesson and stopped asking after having received an answer CF

might be ready to be recruited because, "A few months ago I started going (to church) with her. I'd say we're doser than we ever have been. Ideologically, she's open to the right ideas," Philip is dismayed. Elizabeth isn't just promising something

lieve that the KGB will actually

Ste mot er wis es t atot ers wou n't evaue erim ortance Dear Abby: I'm a 42-year-old divorced woman with no children. My ex-husband has a son whose life I was a part of for 18 years. When people ask if I have kids, my reply is, "Yes, I have a stepson." Why do p eople think it's OK to say things like, "That's DFP,R no e same as a ABBY ing your own," or,

When, over dinner, Elizabeth tells Gabriel that Paige

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * Others often look to you when there is a major change. You could be overwhelmedby everything you need to accomplish. Avoid becoming stern or demanding with others. Be gracious with a family member or roommate. Tonight: Make the most of the moment.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dsc. 21)

* ** The unexpected runs rampant,yet ** * * Be aware of the costs of heading ** * * * Dynamic each person. Ifyou in a certain direction and of making choic- it will delight you. Acknowledge a problem ** * * Positive ar e attached, the es that are not flexible. As tempting as an by relating to one individual or a certain ** * Average two of you will have offer might be, you would be well-advised group of people. You could be in the mood to be apathetic, but ultimately you'll ** So-so some exciting moto hold off for a few days and see if you want this issue to work itself out. Tonight: * Difficult ments occur that feel the same way later. Tonight: Do reFavorite music, favorite place. you might need to search, pay bills, then put up your feet. adjust to. Fight less, and be more underCAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) standing. Learn to accept your differences LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * You might be in a situation that ** * * A llow greater flexibility with oth- could be rather explosive and changeable. and make them strengths. LEOchallenges ers today, especially a child or new friend. You are likely to have some difficulty you often. This person might appear to be quite rekeeping a lid on a budding problem. Trust ARIES (March 21-April 19) bellious, but you'll be able to identify with a partner or associate to handle this issue ** * * Though you might not be dihim or her, as long as you just relax. Trust with you. Tonight: Opt for togetherness. rectly hit by the full moon, an element yourself. Tonight: Play as if there were no aauaRiuS(Jan.20-Feb.18) of excitement will run through your day. tomorrow. Don't worry if a conversation goes off ** * * * T oday's full moon emphasizes the deep end; everything will end well. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sspt. 22) your long-term desires. Howyou deal You'll discover how much you like an ex** * * Deal directly with a loved one with a partner and the choices you make tra-charged atmosphere. Tonight: In the whom you carea lotabout.One-on-one could color a situation differently. Try to thick of things. relating could have aslight edge to it, but avoid an either-or situation, and putyour it's nothing you can't deal with. Good news focuson whatyou havein common. ToTAURUS (April 20-May 20) is sure to follow this long-overdue meeting. night: Prepare to have some fun! ** * You could feel pressured, as the Use your instincts, and you'll be on cruise full moon adds an element of stress to PISCES (Feb.19-March 20) control. Tonight: Just be yourself. your day. You are asign that likes life to ** * Know that you have more opportuproceed at a smooth, easy pace, so when LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) nities ahead than you see at the moment. uproar occurs, yourtension levels auto** * * Reach out to someone, and Be willing to dissect an idea in order to matically soar. Know that this, too, will see all of the possible options. Encourage refuse to stand on ceremony. Let this pass. Tonight: Search for a happy ending. person know that you care about him or a brainstorming session with a friend. You GEMINI (May 21-June20) her. Sometimes you overthink situations. could be surprised by what comes up. Tonight: Choose a fun stressbuster. ** * * * You could be overwhelmed by Don't. A meeting might be more ima sudden onslaught of activity. People portant than you originally had thought. © King Features Syndicate

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-I3) 5:30 • NIGHTCRAWLER (R) 9:30 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied by alegal guardi'en. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED ANIMATION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 6:30 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (no MPAArating) 3 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 8:15 I

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AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 3, 6:05 BLACKHAT (R) 6:15 INTO THE WOODS(PG) 4:15, 6:45 MORTDECAI (R) 4:45, 7 STRANGE MAGIC (PG) 4

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 3:15, 6 • FOXCATCHER (R) 5:45 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) 3:45, 6:15 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13)3:15 • WHIPLASH (R) 4, 6:30 r$• r

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • • • • •

AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 3:45, 6:40 THE IMITATION GAME (PG-13) 4:30, 7 PROJECT ALMANAC(PG-13) 5:05, 7:30 STRANGE MAGIC (PG) /I:50, 7:10 THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 5:10, 7:20 •

Sp.m.on5,8,"Parksand Recreation" — Among the anticipated highlights of this abbreviated final season is tonight's new episode "Donna and Joe," which features the wedding of

brassy DonnaMeagle(Retta)

and her mild-mannered fiance

(guest star Keegan-Michael

Key). Heck, check it out if only to see Donna's wedding gown, which she earlier revealed is a Shia LaBeouf original. Else-

where, JenBarkley (guest star Kathryn Hahn) has an interesting opportunity for Ben and Leslie (Adam Scott, Amy Poehler). 9 p.m.on 2,9,"Marvsl'sAgent Carter" — After weeks of being

viewed as a meresecretary,

Peggy (Hayley Atwell) finally is entrusted with a mission, and she summons her loyal Howling Commandos for back-up. Keeping her cover intact is going to be tricky, however, after Chief Dooley (Shea Whigham) insists on sendingalong AgentThompson (Chad Michael Murray) as well in the new episode "The Iron Ceiling." Greg Serano, Neal McDonough and Bridget Regan guest star. 9 p.m. on10, "New Girl" — A new episode called "Swuit" takes its title from Schmidt and Nick's (Max Greenfield, Jake Johnson) latest entrepreneurial inspiration: a suit made out of sweatshirt material. As Jess (Zooey Deschanel) helps the boys pitch this new business venture to potential investor Lori Greiner (playing herself), Coach and Winston (Damon Wayans Jr., Lamorne Morris) decide to

invest in Cece's(HannahSimone) future.

10 p.m. on 5, 8, "Chicago Fire" — In the new episode "Three Bells," Severide (Taylor Kinney) is led to a former nemesis who may have some important information as more clues emerge about the fire that killed Shay. A visit from Shay's sister (guest star Ellen Woglom) sparks warm memories of the firehouse team's fallen comrade. 10:30 p.m. on TBS, "Cougar Town" — In the new episode "Even the Losers," Jules (Courteney Cox) tries to help a depressed and financially

struggling Travis (DanByrd) by lending him money to start a new business. After Andy

(lan Gomez)loses his mayoral race, Ellie (Christa Miller) goads him into taking a mission of

revenge.

cr zap2it

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See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun ehen you wantit, shade ehen Jou needit.

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • • • • •

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN SNIPER (Upstairs — R) 6:30 • INTO THE WOODS(PG) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO

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The Bulletin delivers hundreds of dollars in money saving coupons and offers, every month. In fact, most subscribers find enough coupon savings in the first week of subscribing to pay for a full month's subscription. But thats not all, you'll also receive each day's in-depth local news, special features, arts and entertainment, sports and more. No one delivers more of Central Oregon to you.

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$tart A Two-Month $iibscription For Only $34* And Rscsivs A j FR EE $20 Frsd Msysr Gift Card

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The Bulletin bendbulletin.com To $tidscride Call 541-385-5800


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl

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Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

. Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad Th

e

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

B u I I e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingend Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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00 202

Want to Buy or Rent

Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006

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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsendSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

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210

245

257

260

265

267

Golf Equipment

Musical Instruments

Misc. Items

Building Materials

Fuel & Wood

Refrigerator - white 22 cu. ft. Maytag, French door with icemaker and bottom freezer, only 2 years old, and has been stored for most of that time. Paid $1500,asking $1000. 541-923-7360.

CHECK YOUR AD

Sleep Comfort Twin XL adjustable bed with vibrator, with or without mattress & foundation, clean, needs new air pump. $600 541-382-7072 or 541-410-5165

WHEN YOU SEE THIS Sisters Habitat ReStore All Year Dependable

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MoreP ixatBendbjjlletin.com on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

1981 Yamaha Console Piano with bench, 1 owner, rich tone, excellent condition, currently tuned by Jana. $1700obo.

541-389-1966

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The Bulletin recommends extra '

I caution when pur-I products or • I chasing services from out of I I the area. Sending I ' cash, checks, o r '

I credit i n f ormationI may be subjected to I FRAUD. For moreI

about an I I information advertiser, you may I

I call t h e ' State

Ore g onI Atto r ney '

I General's O f f i ce I

208

210

Consumer Protec- • h o t line at I i 1-877-877-9392.

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

I The Bulletin I Serving Cenrrnc Oregon sincerggg

WANTEDwood dressers; dead washers. 541-420-5640 French Bulldog AKC puppies, great Valentine's Just bought a new boat? gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 Sell your old one in the chrisandcyndi©yahoo.com classifieds! Ask about our Malemute/Husky pups, Super Seller rates! Drexel blue eyes 3 females, 541-385-5809 Woodbridge 5 males. Can send pecan coffee table photos. $500 8 up. 208 and two pecan end 541-977-6150. Pets & Supplies tables. End tables

,

Furniture & Appliances

I tion

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. T railer a t Jak e ' s D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco in Redmond; Desk, new, solid donate M-F at Smith wood,compact, by Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Bassett, 32" wide x Bend; or CRAFT in Tumalo. Can pick up 17 n deep x 60" high, hanging file storage large amts, 389-8420. ottoman, never www.craftcats.org used, $325. /n SE Bend, ca// 541-508-8784

A v e .

212

Antiques & Collectibles

Antiques Wanted: Tools, furniture, marbles, coin-op machines, beer cans, pre-'40s B/W photography. 541-389-1578 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

The Bulletin ServcngCentral Oregon since f9t8

241

Bicycles & Accessories

R U T ! NEW Cleveland Irons! 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in

plastic,$325 obo!

New Adams Idea

Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 1977, excellent cond, only played senior year in college, $1000 obo.AND

3,4,5 HB,6-PW,

senior,$325 obo! Sale ends 2/10/15 951R54-2561

(/n Redmond) 246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing Bend local pays CASH!!

for all firearms 8 ammo. 541-526-0617 Browning Citori 12Ga. over-under shotgun, 28", $1000. Call 503-320-3008 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies.

King Trombone,1941 HN White 7-1/2" beii, $500 obo 541 388 2045 or 541-280-1912 eves 260

Misc.ltems

Buying Dlamonds /Go/d for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers

On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item. 262

Need to get an ad in ASAP? The Bulletin recomN EW Marin A r You can place it mends extra caution enta Nev e r ridwhen purc hasonline at: en 2 010 m o del ing products or serShimano 105 thruwww.bendbulletin.com G ENERATE SOM E vices from out of the Cute, Smart & No EXCITEMENT in your o ut. 8 06 1 a l u m. area. Sending cash, Shed. Min-Schnauzer neighborhood! Plan a triple- butted Hydro 541-385-5809 checks, or credit inSchnoodles. Tails garage sale and don't Edge Road m a in f ormation may b e docked, 1st shots, & forget to advertise in frame with carbon subjected to fraud. wormed. $350-$450. s eat-stay and E 4 Smith & Wesson classified! For more informaGood homes only! anti-flex chain-stay. M&P15-22 with 541-385-5809. tion about an adver541-322-0609 Fits 5'8n- 6'1n $750 4x16x44 BSA Cats tiser, you may call ($825 if you want PD Eye scope, Fieldline the O r egon State POODLE or POMAPOO Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded 5 700 B lack S h i Tactical carrying puppies, toy. Adorable! glass doors & mirror Attorney General's case. Excellent con541-475-3889 at back, 3 cupboards mano 105 pedals) Office C o nsumer 541-480-2483 dition, was used in below. Exc. c o nd. Protection hotline at Queensfand Heelers National Finals $400. 541-318-8797 1-877-877-9392. Standard & Mini, $150 Rodeo for target 242 & up. 541-280-1537 Queen bed with wood competition. The Bulletin www.rightwayranch.wor headboard and frame, Exercise Equipment with originalComes sights Serving Central Oregon sinceSgge dpress.com dbl pillow top mattress and 25-round magazine. $850 obo. R idgeback linens included, exc. Adopt a rescued cat or Rhodesian 541-410-0841 7mo female healthy, shape. $500 or best kitten! Altered, vacci- AKC, big & beautiful! offer. 541-389-0340 nated, ID chip, tested, sweet, Wanted: Collector seeks more! CRAFT, 65480 $1400 obo. 541-923-9861 high quality fishing items 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Siberian Husky purebred fly rods. Call 1-5. 541 - 389-8420pups! 8 Husky-Wolf pups! Like new h igh-end & upscale 541-678-5753, or www.craftcats.org $400. 541-977-7019 quality Sole F80 mo503-351-2746 torized treadmill, 3.0 Terrier, pureBoxer/bulldogpups, 7 Wheaten H P motor. Wi d e , 255 bred, soft no-shed coat, mo. 2M, 1F , $ 3 50 tail docked, dewclaws, R ange, Jenn A i r , quiet deck. LED disComputers obo. 541-480-3028. plays include speed, shots. 12-wk f emale, down draft, black, adj. incline, fan, discrate & d o ggy door with four b urners, B U LLETIN r e tance and more. Easy T HE trained. Family pet only! convection oven with computer adfolding an d l i f ting quires $875. 541-447-8970 three shelves, great with multiple d eck. $ 9 50 . C a l l vertisers cond. ad schedules or those 210 541-410-8849 Paid $2290. selling multiple sysFurniture & Appliances Asking $1800. jr/, temsi'software, to dis503-866-8858 243 close the name of the Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! 1st shots, dewormed, Ski Equipment business or the term A1 Washerse Dryers "dealer" in their ads. $250. 541-771-0956 $150 ea. Full warPeople Look for Information Sn h MSR D Private party advertisranty. Free Del. Also About Products and D og R u n , met a l , wanted, used W/D's nali classic as new, 3 ers are defined as Services Every Day through 4'/z'x4~/~'x14' long sets flotation t ails, those who sell one 541-280-7355 The Bulletin Classifierfs $110. 541-526-5164 computer. $150. 907-953-1016

541-549-1621 Open to the public.

Multi-cord discounts! 541-420-3484.

266

Dry lodgepole firewood, 1 cord $195, 1/2 cord $100. Split and delive red. B en d a r e a.

Heating & Stoves

541-408-2996 NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Find exactly what Since September 29, 1991, advertising for you are looking for in the used woodstoves has CLASSIFIEDS been limited to models which have been 269 certified by the Oregon Department of Gardening Supplies Environmental Qual5-drawer Hon & Equipment ity (DEQ) and the fedIndustries eral E n v ironmental commercial file Protection A g e ncy For newspaper cabinet, (EPA) as having met delivery, call the 43" wide, 66" high. smoke emission stan- Circulation Dept. at Originally $1000; dards. A cer t ified 541-385-5800 asking$450. w oodstove may b e To place an ad, call 541-948-1824 identified by its certifi541-385-5809 cation label, which is or email permanently attached classified@bendbulletin.com Ibico Ibimatic binding to the stove. The BulThe Bulletin machine, exc. cond. letin will not knowServing Central Oregon sinceSgco includes su p plies, ingly accept advertis$120. 541-526-5164. ing for the sale of 270 uncertified 263 woodstoves. Lost & Found Tools Found: 1 (one) ring on 1/28/15, area of Mary 267 Drum/flat sander, $230. Rose Place & Watt Way. 9" bench vise, $110. Fuel & Wood Please call 541-848-1657 541-548-6181 to identify.

Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures

TOOL SALE. A shop full of wood working machinery, hand held BUYING power tools & hand Lionel/American Flyer tools. Too much to trains, accessories. list. Sat. & Sun., Feb. 541-408-6900. 541-408-2191. 7th & 8th.9am-3pm, No early birds please. BUYING & SE LLING 1357 Koyoda St., MaAll gold jewelry, silver dras. Turn East on and gold coins, bars, Brush Ln., just North rounds, wedding sets, Sonny's Motel and class rings, sterling sil- of signs. ver, coin collect, vin- follow 541-460-1853 tage watches, dental • New, never fired gold. Bill Fl e ming, Weatherby Van541-382-9419. 265 guardS2, synthetic stock, cal 30-06.$550. Building Materials • New, never fired Wanted- paying cash Howa,wood stock, cal for Hi-fi audio & stuBend Habitat .300 Win Mag.$725 RESTORE dio equip. Mclntosh, Must pass backJBL, Marantz, DyBuilding Supply Resale ground check. Please 541-312-6709 naco, Heathkit, Sancall 541.389.3694, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 224 NE Thurston Ave. leave message. Open to the public. Call 541-281-1808 541-389-6655

Building Supply Resale Firewood: Seasoned; Quality items. Lodgepole, split, del, LOW PRICES! B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 150 N. Fir. or 2 cords for $385.

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon sineefggg

Found college student's physiology book & notes. Call Lani, COCC Redmond, 541-504-2901.

Found transit coins near Crooked River. Call to identify, 541-977-4490

REMEMBER: If you

have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882

Madras

541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

have pull-out shelf. $300 set. 503-317-9668

Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.

Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.

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E2 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • •• 11:00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• 3:00 pm Fri. • 5:00 pm Fri • Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad for only $15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Speclal

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

eilliust state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

:> Qfy J~;QJI)I~~ Can be found on these pages:

ADMINISTRATIVE

Looking for your next employee? FINANCEANDBUSINESS EMPLOYMENT Place a Bulletin help (Bend) 410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts Big Country RV has wanted ad today and 421 - Schools andTraining 514 - Insurance reach over 60,000 immediate opening for a 454- Looking Ior Employment 526- Loans andMortgages DMV Title & Licensing readers each week. 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 543- Stocks andBonds Your classified ad Clerk / Receptionist to 'oin our team. Must will also appear on 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 556- Business Investments ave experience with bendbulletin.com 466 - IndependentPositions 573 - BusinessOpportunities automotive or RV titling which currently or extensive adminisreceives over 1.5 476 476 trative experience. We million page views Employment Employment RBEIIDBI a re expanding a nd every month at l ooking for a te a m Opportunities Opportunities no extra cost. player with a positive Bulletin Classifieds attitude to operate with Get Results! Sales Associate energy and to be cusAdvertiseyourcar! Call 385-5809 Miller Paint C omt omer-oriented. T o p or place Add A Plcture! pany is looking for pay, retirement plan, your ad on-line at Reach thousands of readers! an individual who p aid v acation, a n d bendbulletin.com working with medical benefits packCall 541 385 5809 enjoys aqe. Apply in person at: public, working 628 The BulletinClassifieds the 63500 N Hwy 97 Bend, flexible hours and Loans & Mortgages Oregon or online at who is positive and solution f o c used. ~ ei e .eom WARNING INDIAN HEAD CASINO Paint and home imThe Bulletin recom(Warm Springs, OR) BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS provement experimends you use cauence is preferred but Search the area's most Staff Accountant tion when you pronot required. This is comprehensive listing of Experienced professional with strong general vide personal a full time position classified advertising... ledger and reconciliations background to information to compareal estate to automotive, handle general accounting duties, special and benefits a re nies offering loans or available. merchandise to sporting projects and month end close, under the sucredit, especially goods. Bulletin Classifieds pervision of the Controller/Accounting SuperviQualified candidates those asking for adwill clear a b ackappear every day in the sor. Must have at least (3) three years related vance loan fees or print or on line. ground check, DMV experience. Associates Degree. Strong orgacompanies from out of check, r e ferences nizational skills, planning and communication Call 541-385-5809 state. If you have and pr e -employwww.bendbugetin.com and PC skills. Knowledgeable in creating and concerns or quesment drug screen analyzing spreadsheets. Team player. Must tions, we suggest you prior to being hired. submit to and pass the Oregon State Police The Bulletin consult your attorney Serving Cenirel Oregonsince Sgre Bring your resume backgroundand obtain gaming license.Wage: or call CONSUMER and apply now at DOE. Apply online at indianheadgaming.com. HOTLINE, 2121 NE Division St. Call HR at (541) 460-7714 for information. 1-877-877-9392. Caregivers Or e-mail your w anted t o j o i n resume to: Look at: our caring Mill Workers careersOmillerpaint. Bendhomes.com com memory car e for Complete Listings of EXPERIENCED FINGER JOINT c ommunity. A l l AND LANINATION PRODUCTION Area Real Estate for Sale shifts a vailable. Licensing Clerk

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Must be reliable. Also needed part t ime c hef. F o r more in f o rmation, or any questions, please call 541 -385-471 7

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BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party caution when purwill loan on real esPLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction I chasing products orI tate equity. Credit, no is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right If you have a g o o d w ork h istory and • services from out of • problem, good equity to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these area. Sending is all you need. Call attendance record, please come and apply I the ash, checks, o r newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Oregon Land Mortwith us. Starting pay is commensurate with I c credit f ormation gage 541-388-4200. Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. experience $10.50 to $15.00 or more. Medical, • may bei nsubjected to dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 I FRAUD. LOCAL MONEyrWe buy 286 325 476 days. Vacation after 6 months. Profit sharing For more informa- I secured trustdeeds & also. Sales Northeast Bend H a y, Grain & Feed Employment tion about an adver-• note, some hard money Client ServiceAssoc. ÃINil « loans. Call Pat Kellev Opportunities you may call for Financial We are a family owned wood remanufacturer I tiser, 541-382-3099 ext.13. Oregon State Planing Firm Looking for your in business for over 50 years. Learn more I the ** FREE ** Attorney General's Add your web address Successful i n d epen- aboutour company and the products we make next employee? Garage Sale Kit to your ad and readOffice C o nsumer s dent financial plan- at www.brightwood.com. Please apply in Have an item to Place a Bulletin Protection hotline at l Place an ad in The ers on The Bulletin's ning firm looking for a person at our main office located in the help wanted ad sell quick? Bulletin for your gaI 1-877-877-9392. web site, www.bendhighly motivated per- Madras Industrial Park. today and rage sale and rebulletin.com, will be If it's under son to join our team. 14eting reach over LThe B ceive a Garage Sale able to click through M ust h a v e go o d Bright WoodCorp. '500you can place it in 60,000 readers 421 Kit FREE! automatically to your communication and 335 NW Hess St. each week. website. The Bulletin Schools & Training problem solving skills, Madras, OR97741 KIT INCLUDES: Your classified ad TRUCK DRIVER be able to multi-task Classifieds for: • 4 Garage Sale Signs WANTED will also and work i ndepenHTR Truck School • $2.00 Off Coupon To Must pass pre-employment drug screen. Must have doubles appear on dently, and be techREDMOND CAMPUS Use Toward Your TURN THE P AG E '10 -3 lines, 7 days endorsement. bendbunetin.com Our Grads Get Jobs! nologically savvy. SeNext Ad Local run. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days which currently 1-888-438-2235 curities lic e nsing General • 10 Tips For "Garage For More Ads Truck is parked in receives over WWW.IITR.EDU p referred. Ple a se The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturSale Success!" (Private Party ads only) e mail resume t o : day night shift and other shifts as needed. We Madras.541-475-4221 1.5 million page The Bulletin 470 ekgposition©gmail. views every currently have openings all nights of the week. PICK UP YOUR com month at no Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Domestic & GARAGE SALE KIT at start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and extra cost. In-Home Positions 1777 SW Chandler end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoDoor-to-door selling with Bulletin Tax Ave., Bend, OR 97702 sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. fast results! It's the easiest C urrently looking f o r Classifieds Exp. caregiver, will work girls who want to play Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a Results! way in the world to sell. priv. or state pay. exp The Bulletin CallGet s oftball for the u p minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Servrng renrref Oregon since rglB 541-385-5809 with end of life & recoming season.Must are short (11:30 1:30). The work consists of or place your ad The Bulletin Classified spite care. Avail. most be 12 or under by loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackon-line at hrs. 541-419-4343 541-385-5809 Jan. 1st. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup bendbunetin.com 541-610-6817 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we Call The Bulletin At Tax Senior Professional offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, 541-385-5809 341 short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Established in 1952, Les Schwab isn't your Place Your Ad Or E-Mail vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Horses & Equipment regular tire store. We are a growing company At: www.bendbulletin.com with a strong reputation of excellent customer prior to employment. service and over 450 stores and 7,000 Please submit a completed application atten476 employees in the western United States. We •. g, tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Employment a re currently s eeking a Se n io r T a x at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanCQII 54 / -385-5809 Professional in our headquarters in Bend, Opportunities Blvd.), or an electronic application may be to ro mote o ur service 316 Oregon. T h i s i s a s e nior level position dler obtained upon request by contacting Kevin reporting to the Director of Tax and working Irrigation Equipment 3-horse Silverado Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com ). Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care CAUTION: extensively with outside service providers. No phone calls please. Only completed appli2001 29'x8' 5th wheel Ads published in FOR SALE trailer. Deluxe showcations will be considered for this position. No NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land"Employment O p The primary responsibilities of this role Tumalo Irrigation resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reman/semi living porfuniiies" include include the following: law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Water quired prior to employment. EOE. quarters, lots of exemployee and inde• Manage the tax reporting and tax compliance who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all $5,000/acre tras. Beautiful condipendent positions. function for multiple corporations and partnerconstruction work to businesses that adCall 541-419-4440 tion. $21,900. OBO The Bulletin Ads for p o sitions ships be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Sermng Cenrret Oregon sincerggg 541-420-3277 that require a fee or Construction Contrac- Landscape Construc• Develop and implement corporate tax Where can you find a upfront investment strategy tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Check out the helping hand? must be stated. With active license p lanting, deck s , • Prepare the tax provision for audited NEWSPAPER classifieds online means the contractor fences, arbors, From contractors to any independentjob financial statements wvvw.bendbulletin.com opportunity, please is bonded & insured. water-features, and in• Prepare quarterly estimated taxes yard care, it's all here Updated daily Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of iri nvestigate th o r - • Research complex tax matters in The Bulletin's CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be oughly. Use extra • Respond to IRS and state/local tax audits Circle Y mens saddle "Call A Service www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e when apleather saddle bags, caution contractor.com Landscape Contracplying for jobs onThe Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journalTo be successfulin this role, the Senior Tax Professional" Directory all related tack, $500. or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit line and never proist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps Professional must have the following: 541-385-6021 vide personal inforassistant. This position is ideal for a journalism The Bulletin recom- number is to be in• Bachelor's Degree and CPA 325 S undowner alum. 2 mation to any source • At least 5-7 years of experience in public or student with interest in a broad range of sports. mends checking with cluded in all adverHay, Grain & Feed horse walk-in. Padded, you may not have Duties include taking phone and email informa- the CCB prior to con- tisements which indiprivate accounting great cond., $2800. researched and • Strong income tax compliance and consulttion from sources and generating accurate, con- tracting with anyone. cate the business has 1st Quality, 2nd cutting 541-385-6021 deemed to be repucise accounts of local high school sports events. Some other t rades a bond, insurance and ing experience, primarily in the corporate area re q uire addi- workers compensagrass hay, no rain, table. Use extreme with some partnership tax experience Hours vary; most work shifts are weeknights also barn stored, $225/ton. c aution when r e - • Understanding of multistate tax planning and and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and profes- tional licenses and tion for their employGet your ees. For your protecCall 541-549-3831 s ponding to A N Y compliance, especially in the western United sional-level writing ability are essential, as are a certifications. tion call 503-378-5909 Patterson Ranch, Sisters business online employment sports background and a working knowledge of States Debris Removal or use our website: ad from out-of-state. • Strong verbal and written communication traditional high school sports. www.lcb.state.or.us to Premium orchard grass, We suggest you call skills barn stored no rain, JUNK BE GONE check license status the State of Oregon • Extensive experience with Microsoft Excel The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an before contracting with 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. I Haul Away FREE Consumer H otline equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment • Experience with ERP implementation would the business. Persons avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 For Salvage. Also at 1-503-378-4320 be beneficial drug screen required. doing land scape or 541-948-7010. Cleanups & Cleanouts For Equal Opportumaintenance do not With an ad in Mel, 541-389-8107 nity Laws contact Les Schwab offers a competitive salary and a To apply, please emailresume and any r equire an LC B l i Quality orchard mixed Oregon Bureau of relevant writing samples to: full comprehensive benefit package including cense. grass hay, $190-$235 The Bulletin's Handyman Labor & I n dustry, health, life, d e ntal, v i sion, e x ceptional s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com ton, small bales. Deliv. Civil Rights Division, retirement plan, paid vacation and holidays. avail.541-280-7781 "Call A Service I DO THAT! Get on the listnow for 971-673- 0764. Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone inquiries please. betwn Bend/Redmond Home/Rental repairs Weekly Serviceand No phone calls please. Professional" The Bulletin Small jobs to remodels Spring Clean-ups! Wheat Straw for Sale. SMI/ng CellcrelOregoll slllce Sla Honest, guaranteed Free estimates! Les Schwab is proud to be an Also, weaner pigs. 541-385-5809 work. CCB¹151573 COLLINS Lawn Maint. Directory equal opportunity employer. 541-546-6171 Serving Certtral Oregon since f903 Dennis 541-317-9768 Ca/I 541-480-9714

We are seeking experienced Operators, Feeders, Graders and Stackers in our Fingerjoint and Lamination plants.

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541-385-5809 Private party merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. e


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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEB 3, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wii'shortz

C L U B Tuesday, February3,2L15

ACROSS i Feature of a royal event sWhat bulldogs' jowls do s Food for Fido, perhaps i4 "Hasta luego!" is Houlihan: Maj. :: Klinger: iz "House" star Hugh is Xerox competitor is Friend of Pooh aoNot forgotten ai Green who was on four seasons of "The Voice" aaU.N. grp. monitoring workers' nghts aaBrown v. Board of Education city 24 Cheerleaders' handfuls ar Announcer Johnny famous for crying "Come on down!" as Point the finger at

Thin and crispy play By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Cy the Cynic maintains that if at jumps to two spades (preemptive). first you don't succeed, say the heck What do you say? with it and order a pizza. Cy was ANSWER: This case is close. A declarer at today's 3NT, and his play negative double is possible (if a part was typically lackluster. He put up of your methods) but might only dummy's king on the first spade and delay the problem. You might stretch was relieved when i t w o n . E a st to compete with a bid of three hearts signaled with the ten. if your queen of clubs were a low The Cynic counted eight tricks: a club.Take a chance and jump to four spade, four clubs, two diamonds and hearts. This is not a huge overbid; a heart. He shrugged and led a heart your king of spades will probably be to his jack, but West won, and the worth a trick. defense rattled off four spade tricks South dealer for down one. Neither side vulnerable BEST PLAY

NORTH 45K4

Cy hied once and didn't succeed. He could get extra cheese — I mean an extrachance by taking the A-K of diamonds before finessing in hearts. If the queen fell, he would be home. But Cy's best play — best psychologically — i s t o l e ad t he queen of hearts from dummy at Trick Two. Only a super-expert or novice East would fail to cover if he had the king. So when East plays low, Cy can take the ace, cash the ace of diamonds, go to the ace of c lubs and return a diamond to his jack to l and nine tricks.

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You hold: 4I K 4 9 Q 9 3 Openinglead — 435 0 7 5 4 2 A A Q 7 3. Your partner opens one heart. The next player (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

ai Our planet, to Germans aaBe impending a4 North Carolinian asChem., e.g. 4i Maneuver for slot car racers or stunt pilots, as suggested by this puzzle's cfrcled letters 44Yodeler's locale 4sJonathan Swift, notably 4s Food for Fido 4T Zairean resident obutu Seko 4s Goes around soSound in a lamasery saHad a good day on the links, say sz Transcribe again ssExpert so Shakes, as in a car chase s4 Iris ring

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ccm/crcsswcrds ($39.95 a year).

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WijMO And now there's whole grain crackers for everybody! Today is a specialday because we've also got prunes and bran muffins!

ACROSS 1 Pharmacy purchase 5 Figure (out), slangily

DOWN 1 Geometric art

21 Watermelon

11 Mall directory

This has got to stop...

23 Austin-to-Baton

Rouge direction

24 Flat hat with a

pompom 26 40 polos? 28 Football club

based in Lombardy The moment before the revolution

32 Many a casino visitor

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39 Texter's "Horrors!" 40 4 tire inserts?

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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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13

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21 24

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18

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R D E Y E D E S T H E E S A T U P S H O I L

25

22 26

23 27

54 Plea at sea,

briefly

28

29

30

31

55 "Sadly ..."

musical piece 62 ACC team with a turtle mascot 64 1,500 thermometer units? 67 Letter carrier's

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53 K h a rtoum's land

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36

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44

42

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48

47

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49

52

51

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66 Gobbled up AFTER THR 5TOCKBRDKFR

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38 Boston NBAer

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49 Chatty gathering 51 600 stand-ups?

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56 Pouty expression

GEEHD osclo Tribune contentAgency, LLC AO Rloha Reeerved.

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We have to do something!

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By C.C. Burnlkel ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

60

02/03/15



E6 TUESDAY FEBRUARY 3 2015 • THE BULLETIN I

• 8 ~ I

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

• •

I

932

933

935

935

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Dodge Ram 2003 •

0 0

908

932

Antique & Classic Autos

908

& Service

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time,

full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184. 916

Columbia400,

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Financing available.

$125,000

(located O Bend)

$8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399 933

restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.

541-892-3789 1/3interest in

1 9 78

Find It in

Chev Silverado

The Bulletin Classifiedsl 541-385-5809

t

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $85,000. 541-41 9-95i0 www.N4972M.com FIND IT! BtIQ /TI

SELL I?7 The Bulletin Classifieds

M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038 Say ogoodbuyo

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

$19,977

A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop

oI o o0I o ~

CALLcx TODAYW

ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

925

Fl this beautiful 182 One owner last 25 years, always hangared, rigorously maintained, no damage history. Sensibly priced at

$44,500.

Call Don Wilfong for more information 541-389-1456 or wilfong.dOgmail.com

olooooo ~

II IR W R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

l4

7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623.

360-774-2747 No text messages!

1965 Mustang

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway.

F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. ca-o HANGAR FOR SALE. 380SL 1982 pacity, 26' long, 8'6 Mercedes 30x40 end unit T Roadster, black on black, wide, ideal for hauling soft hanger in Prineville. & hard top, excellent hay, materials, cars, condition, Dry walled, insulated, always gaand painted. $23,500. exc.cond. $2800. raged. 1 55 K m i l es, 541-420-3788 Tom, 541.788.5546 $11,500. 541-549-6407

This advertising tip

Wi

4x4 ready for

adventure! ¹D11893.

Bargain Corral priced O $6,977 ROBBERSON y Llooooo~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

4x4, lots of room! Vin¹J21627.

Only $7,977 ROBBERSON u ooooo~

maintenance up to PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 541-312-3986 excellent cond. 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, Adate, Dlr ¹0205. Price STEAL AT$13,900. new tires + mounted 541-223-2218 good thru 2/28/1 5 studded snow tires, Subaru Forester 1998 $7250. 541-433-2026 The Bulletin's 170k miles., red, two What are you sets tires, daughter "Call A Service moved to Sweden looking for? Professional" Directory needs $. Clean, no is all about meeting You'll find it in pets. Dependable car. yourneeds. $4200. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-647-0657 Call on one of the professionals today! 541-385-5809 Toyota Highlander Dodge Neon Sport, 2-dr WHEN YOU SEE THIS 1995, 2.0L 4-cyl DOHC, 91,500 original mi, S-spd, AC, exlnt mpg,cash only. $1995 obo. Clean title. On a classified ad 2008 Sport, 3rd row, Sold as is. 541-480-7671 go to and lots more! www.bendbulletin.com Focus SEL2012 Vin¹024803 to view additional $19,977 photos of the item. ROBBERSON

MorePixatBendbjletin.com

ROBBERSON

Toyota RAV 2007, Limited, silver, 107K mi., exc. cond. $10,900. 541-548-8895

II IR K R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/28/1 5

GMC 1974 ugly but reliable! 95% tread on

siped tires. $895.

541-480-0527

Where buyers meet sellers.

Easily. The Classified Section is easy to use. Every item is categorized and every category is indexed on the section's front page.

Thousandsof adsdaily in print andonline.

brought to you by

The Bulletin

Sor 'oyCentral Oreyoosince f9t8

• Io

ALMOST PERFECT! Vin ¹151095.

$12,977 ROBBERSON

Automobiles

9,977

BMyy 330c 2003

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

Vin¹A18610.

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bullstlo ClassrTrerfs

ROBBERSON uooooo~

~m m m

541-312%986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15

Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242

GMC 2004 Yukon 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K miles, mud & snow tires, 1 owner, well maintained $7850. 541-389-3316 Jeep Cherokee Sport 2001, 4.0, straight 6, new studded tires & summer tires on rims. 1st $3000, it's yours! 541-923-4237

Garage Sales

nsaoa ~

~

541-312-3986

975

2006 This is a nice one!

Garage Sales

Classifieds

Looking for your next employee?

nama ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price

good thru 02/28/1 5

olooooo ~

Ford Mustang GT 1996, black, convertible top, Good cond. $10,000.

$7,977

541-923-3043

Honda Accord2005

ROBBERSON u ooooo~

~m e Oe

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price

Gorgeousand Priced to se//!

good thru 02/28/15

Vin ¹¹018628 11.977

Get your

ROBBERSON

business

olooooo ~

sRBWING

Garage Sales

With an ad in

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

The Bulletin's "Call /A Service

541-385-5809

Directory

Professional"

IM ROB

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e !

I

h,'

I

I

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for 8 caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

I

I

I

GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,W6 Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

s

*Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories.

The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n c I bu l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,

5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1 5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

I The Bulletin recoml extra caution 8 I mends when p u r chasing • f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f checks, or credit in- s I formation may be I

[ subject toFRAUD. For more informaf tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon Statel s Attorney General's s s Office C o nsumer I f Protection hotline at

f

1-877-877-9392.

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The Bulletin SeoorngCentral Oregon since 1Ã3

Want to impress the Need to get an ad relatives? Remodel in ASAP? your home with the help of a professional Fax it to 541-322-7253 from The Bulletin's "Call A Service The Bulletin Classifieds Professional" Directory

In Print CInd Online WithThe Bulletin'S CICISSifiedS. l

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

ways garaged, all

~ma g a a

$12,977

II IBRD B

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

BEND 541-382-8038

Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condiCargoMate tr a i ler tion.$12,500. 8'x12' with large rear Must see! door and extra side 541-598-7940 door, additional hauling rack on top, very good condition. $3800. Call Stan Hto see 541-420-1916

ROBBERSON

ROBBERSON

541-385-5809

Utility Trailers

$3,977

C all me i f y o u a r e thinking about tradingFord 2004 F-250 in to a dealer or sellXLT 4x4 ing your current Full Extended Cab Size late model 4WD 94K miles, excellent pickup and want to cond, many extras. get more cash then $10,900. dealer trade-in. PriCall 541-233-3281 vate party looking to purchase for c a sh sale one nice condition pickup directly Ford F350 2002 from o w ner. N O DEALERS PLEASE! Call (after6p.m.) or Text with pictures to Bill 541-420-5318.

541-288-3333

Suh

Good runner Vin¹ 672057

Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170

h

$7,000.

BMW X3 35i 2010

V W CONV.

Pickups

1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up

owned, always ga-

raged. 74,000 miles.

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

Aircraft, Parts & Service

975

Automobiles

Buick LeSabre 2005 super clean, senior

! tj~li

00 Aircraft, Parts

Mountaineer 2004

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

975

Auto m obiles


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