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Central OregonBeeSchool
Portland JazzFestival
— A pair of workshops will teach
beginning beekeepers how to build a hive, how to keeptheir bugs healthy and, yes, how to extract the honey from the hive.C1
— As the10-day annual music fest shows, Oregon's biggest city has becomeone of North
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— Local breweries arechoosing
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for their beers. Most put theirs on
America'sleading hobsfor
popular jazz.C1
draft, some bottle — and others, like GoodLife, plan to can.E1
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. Qwrl TODAY'S READERBOARD Rights underreview — Unfamiliar with the Voting Rights Act and the provision that's in peril at the Supreme
Court? A primer,A3
Plus: GaymarriageIt was a whirlwind week for the cases before the high court. A look at the often confusing state
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
of marriage in thestates, A4
WASHINGTON — As the amount of energy generated by wind turbines surged in America last year, Oregon ranked among the top 10 states for new wind energy capac-
By Dylan J. Darling •The Bulletin
ity added.
OdamasandJacksons — The complicated relation-
The Deschutes and Willamette national forests have considered a dozen sections of wilderness for prescribed fires. They've honed in on two.
ship between thenation's most prominent black families.AS
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Areas picked for prescribed burns
Are as considered, but not selected
Facedook afterlifeDeath creates complications
for social media accounts.E1 I I
acres19 miles west of Bend, along the Cascade Lakes
I I
WILLAMETTE NATIONAL FOREST
Scott Mountain area:About 5,700
acres16 miles hl SPOI"tS —Local alpine and nordic champions.01
area:About 9,000
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— It may lie in the past, thanks to new attempts at control, according to a commentator.F1
CascadeLakes
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Plus: TheWeb'sfuture
southwest of Sisters and two miles north of the McKenzie
", Mt. Jeffersnn Wilderngss.jtrea
Highway. Boundaries
wrap around Mount
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
Mt.Washington Wilderness Area
Bachelor. Plans call for prescribed
fire in 3,800 acres
Highway (state
And a Wed exclusiveAs police departments cut, private detectives fill in the gaps.
bendbulletia.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Wiretap from 1963 sparks a son's fight
of wilderness. The area includes trails
Highway 242). The
areais bounded by
Sisters
the scar of the 2010 Scott Mountain Fire,
to Green Lakesand South Sister. There
may be trail closures during the fires.
a lightning-caused blaze that charred 3,464 acres, as well as lava fields on the
Three Sisters Wilderness Area
east. Plans call for prescribed fire on as many as1,200 acres.
Bend
s
46
MILES 0
5
10
Source U S. Forest Service
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
with the CIA By lan Shapira
Experts:Serveup a ot morestudies on popuar diets By Gina Kolata New York Times News Service
By federal definition, wilderness is land to be left untrammeled, not changed by
The Washington Post
Paul Scott, the late syndicated columnist, was so paranoid about the CIA wiretapping his home in District Heights, Md., in 1963 that he'd make important calls from his neighbor's house. His teenage son Jim Scott figured his dad was either a shrewd reporter or totally nuts. Not until nearly 45 years later did the son learn that his father's worries were justified. The insight came in 2007 when the CIA declassified a trove of documents popularly called "the family jewels." The papers detailed the agency's unlawful activities from long ago, including wiretapping the Scott home. The operation even had a code name, "Project Mockingbird." Jim was floored: The CIA really did eavesdrop on Dad. Now Jim, 64, a retired Navy public relations officer, is waging his own operation against the agency. For the past five years, he has sought to declassify and make public any documents Langley might still have on his father and why he was wiretapped. See Wiretap/A6
Overall, wind was the fastest-growing energy sector in 2012, with its addition of 13,124 megawatts accounting for 42 percent of the new capacity added. With an increase of 640 megawatts, Oregon ranked seventh in the nation, according to the American Wind Energy Association. "The fact that wind power grew by another 28 percent in 2012 alone and poured $25 billion of private investment into the U.S. last year demonstrates wind's ability to scale up, and continue to serve as a leading source of energy in America," said Rob Gramlich, interim CEO of the American Wind Energy Association, in a prepared statement. In part, the boom was driven by a federal wind energy Production Tax Credit, which was set to expire at the end of 2012. Any wind project that broke ground by the end ofthe year would receive a 2.2 centsper kilowatt-hour credit for 10 years. But the tax credit was extended for one year as part of the year-end deal struck to resolve the "fiscal cliff," paving the way for more wind development. SeeWind/A4
the human hand. So staunch wilderness advocates are criticizing the U.S. Forest Service's plan to buzz Central Oregon wilderness with helicopters — dropping pingpong ball-like spheres that pop into flames or dragging a torch just above the treetops — to start fires when and where the agency determines they're needed. Those behind the plan defend it, saying the prescribed fires are necessary to restart a natural cycle of fire. "Right now things are out of whack," said Jude McHugh, spokeswoman for the Willamette National Forest. For the past two years, fire officials in the Willamette and Deschutes national forests have been crafting a plan to light fires in wilderness along both sides of the crest of the Cascades. They determined a dozen sections of wilderness in the adjoining forests they say would benefit from a series of burns and picked two to be the first to burn.
One of the sections is along the Cascade Lakes Highway west of Bend, in the Three Sisters Wilderness Area, and the other is off the McKenzie Highway southwest of Sisters near Scott Mountain, in the Mount Washington Wilderness Area. "The areas that we have chosen give us the bestchance of success,"said Kevin Larkin, district ranger for the Bend-Fort Rock District of the Deschutes. SeeFire/A6
"It basically is a form of manipulation of the wilderness ecosystem by humans that we are not supposed to do under the Wilderness Act." — Kevin Proescholdt, conservation director of Wilderness Watch
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 44, Low 22
Page B6
INDEX Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
This is a watershed moment in the field of nutrition, medical experts say. For the first time, researchers have shown that a diet can have an effect as powerful as drugs in preventing what really matters to patients — heart attacks, strokes and deaths from cardiovascular disease. The subjects were people at high risk of heart disease, and the diet was a Mediterranean one, high in olive oil or nuts. The study, published in the newest New England Journal of Medicine, is now shaking up the field of cardiovascular medicine, infusing it with optimism. Scientists are calling for similarly rigorous studies of other popular diets that are routinely recommended by cardiologists even though there is little solid evidence that they work. See Diets/A6
New York Times News Service file photo
The latest research says fancy Mediterranean dishes, like this olive tapenade atop orange slices, may stave off heart attacks and strokes in people at high risk for such conditions.
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 110,No. 62, 46 pages, 7 sections
+ .4 We ljserecycled newsprint
: IIIII
O 88 267 0 2 3 3 0
A2 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
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Terrar ill NOrth AfriCa —Chad's military chief announced Saturday that his troops deployed in northern Mali had killed Moktar Bel-
Ta a ainturnsto e icit
moktar, the terrorist known as the "one-eyed" who orchestrated the attack on a natural gas plant in Algeria that left 36 foreigners dead.
By Jackie Calmes
Kerry: StOP diCkering —Egypt's bickering governmentand
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Seventeen months after President Barack Obama signed doomsday budget legislation that was never intended to become law, the sweeping spending reductions in the measure have been imposed. Late Friday night, Obama formally triggered spending cuts that will reach across the breadth ofthe federal government after he failed to persuade congressional Republicans to replace them with a mix of cuts and tax increases. Lost in the talk of Washington's dysfunction is this fact: On paper at least, President Barack Obama and Congress have reduced projected deficits by nearly $4 trillion over a decade — the widely embraced goal for stabilizing the national debt. The spending cuts, which total about $1 trillion through 2023, come on top of $1.5 trillion in reductions that Obama and Congress committed to in
2011, mainly from the accord that averted the nation's first debt default. Nearly $700 billion more will come from tax increases on wealthy Americans, the product of the brawl in December over Bush-era tax cuts, and another $700 billion is expected to be saved in projected interest on the reduced debt. If the latest cuts stick, the two parties will have achieved nearly the full amount of deficit reduction over the next decade that economists and market analysts have promoted. Yet the mix comes with substantial downsides. It does not add up to the "grand bargain" that the two parties had been seeking, because it leaves virtually untouched the entitlement programs — Medicare,Medicaid and Social Security — that are responsible for projections of an unsustainably rising federal debt in coming decades. "This is not a r esult that deals with our long-term debt
The French military, which is leading the offensive against al-Qaidalinked rebels in Mali, could not confirm the death.
problem," said Vin Weber, a Republican former congressman. "The fact we've gotten to a $4 trillion deficit-reduction deal without tackling entitlements is almost a bad thing," he added, if it lulls the public and the politicians into thinking the problem is solved. Private an d g o v ernment forecasters project that sequestration alone will cost about 700,000 jobs this year and will shave at least a half percentage point from economic growth. Letters began to go out to governors Saturday, informing them of the smaller grants. And the Air Force Thunderbirdsthe elite team of F-16 pilots who perform tricks at air showsannounced on its website that all of its shows have been canceled starting April 1. Still, it will take some time beforethe cuts begin to make life more difficult for teachers, defense contractors, Head Start students, border patrol agents or others who rely on federal funding.
opposition need to overcome their differences to create "a sense of political and economic viability" if the country is to thrive as a demo-
cracy, Secretary of State JohnKerry said Saturday. In meetings with Egypt's foreign minister and opposition politicians, some of whom
plan to boycott upcoming parliamentary elections, Kerry said an agreement on economic reforms to seal a$4.8 billion lnternational Monetary Fund loan package was critical.
Syrian redel aid —Iran and Syria condemned aU.S. plan to assist rebels fighting to topple President Bashar Assad on Saturday and signaled the Syrian leader intends to stay in power at least until 2014
presidential elections. The remarks came against the backdrop of a strategic victory for the regime as the military regained control over a
string of villages along akeyhighway to open a potential supply route in Syria's heavily contested north. RIISSIIIII BdOPtiOIIS — Russian officials remained suspicious
Saturday about the death inTexasof anadopted 3-year-old despite an autopsy report that determined he died accidentally. Max Shatto, born in Russia, died Jan. 21 from a torn artery in the abdomen, officials
saidatanewsconferenceFridayinOdessa,Texas.Twoweeksago, Russian officials informed the public about his death, saying Max had
beenabusedandgivenpsychiatricdrugs.Noevidencewaspresented, but that description quickly became anemotional element of antiAmerican rhetoric and colored the explosive question of adoptions.
Casino underscrutiny —LasVegas Sands Corp.saysinaregulatory filing it probably violated a federal law that prohibits bribing foreign officials. The casino company, controlled by billionaire Sheldon Adelson,
said in a filing Fridaythat the Securities and ExchangeCommission asked two years ago for records. The Wall Street Journal, citing an anonymous source, reported Saturday that the issue is related to business deals in
DcsuussRe
mainland Chinaledby executives no longer with thecompany. In recent years, LasVegasSandshasexpandedaggressivelyinAsia.
FLORIDA SINKHOLE GROWS; NO SIGN OF VICTIM
ADMINISTRATION
ArmS SBIZllr8 Off Y8mell —An Iranian dhow seized off the Ye-
Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
meni coast was carrying sophisticated Chinese anti-aircraft missiles, a development that could signal an escalation of Iran's support to its
Middle Eastern proxies. Amongthe items aboard, according to a review of factory markings on weapons, were10 Chinese heat-seeking anti-aircraft missiles, most of them manufactured in 2005.
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Afgllall deathS —Two preteen boys collecting firewood with their
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations Keith Foutz ......................... 541-385-5805 Finance Holly West ...........54f -383-032f
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Engineers worked gingerly Saturday to find out
PhiliPPine inSurgenCy —President Benigno Aquino called Saturday for the surrender of anarmed Muslim clan that took over aMalaysian village, making theplea aday after a violent clash with Malaysian
more about a slowly growing sinkhole in Florida that swallowed a man in his bedroom. The 20-foot-wide
police officers. The statements appeared to undercut assertions that Friday's gunbattle, which left12 Filipinos and two Malaysian police of-
hole is almost completely covered by thehouse,and
ficers dead, hadsignaled theendof the group's takeover of the village.
Bush was in his bedroomThursday night in Seffner — a suburb of 8,000 people15 miles east of downtown Tampa— when theearth opened and took him
was jammedwith cars as engineers, reporters and curious onlookers came tothe scene. Twoneighbors' homes are also compromised bythe sinkhole.
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Postmast er:SendaddresschangestoThe Bulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR97708. TheBulletin retains ownership andcopyright protection of all staff -prepared news copy,advertising copy and news or ad illustrations. Theymaynot be reproducedwithout explicit pnor approval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
f QssO DsQsQsos The estimated jackpot is now $123 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
11Q17Q fs Q 30 Q 47 QSQ The estimated jackpot is now $11.5 million.
c.uolsculpting ~i
...Bye, Bge, Bulge
recoverthe body." Experts say thousands of sinkholes form yearly in Florida because of the state's unique geography, though most are small anddeaths rarely occur.
Jeremy Bush mourns his brother in front of the home. Heand four others escaped unharmed.
NEWS Q&A
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procedure that u ses a revoluti o n ar y cooling technology to reduce areas of unwanted fat gently and effectively. N o downti m e , no incisions.
Demolition of the four-bedroom home will begin today. "At this point," Hillsborough County Administrator Mike Merrill said, "it's really not possible to
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Street address.......226 N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address.... PO.Box786 Redmond, OR97756 .................................541-504-2336 .................................54f -546-3203
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and everything else in his room.
REDMOND BUREAU
One month: $14.50 By mall outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only: Onemonth: $13
— From wire reports
rescuers feared it would collapse on them if they continued the search for the body of Jeff Bush, 37.
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mander in Afghanistan, Gen. Joseph Dunford Jr., promptly issued an apology and said the killings were an accident.
The Associated Press photos
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and U.S. military officials announcedSaturday. ThenewU.S. com-
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donkeys were killed by weapons fired from a NATO helicopter, Afghan
(
e
• What are the occupa. tions of the members of Congress'? • A ttorney is t h e m o s t . listed occupation among members of the 113th Congress, with 128 lawyers in the House and 45 in the Senate. There are 130 businessmen and -women in bothchambers; 51educators; and 32 medical professionals. Other jobs represented in Congress include: farming, cler-
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Q
• We read a l o t a b o ut • Iran's nuclear program. But when did Israel get approval for its nuclear weapons? • Israel has n ever c on• firmed it has a nuclear arsenal, but the International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates that it has at least 200 warheads. It's believed Israel has had nuclear weapons since the 1960s, but an Israeli Embassy spokesman told The Washington Post l ast y ear that "Israel will not be the first country to introduce nuclear weapons into the Middle East." Since it hasn't signed the Nuclear Non - P roliferation Treaty, Israel "is under no legal obligation to submit ... to International Atomic Energy Agency inspections," the Post wrote. "Iran, in contrast, did sign the treaty and thus agrees to periodic inspections."
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, March 3, the 62nd day of 2013. There are 303 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
NEED TO KNOW
HAPPENINGS
Scrutiny of theVoting RightsAct
Mitt ROmney —The 2012 GOP presidential nomineeappears on "FoxNewsSunday"
' ts
in his first televised interview
The Supreme Court heard arguments last week on a key part of the
since his election defeat.
Voting Rights Act designed to protect against racial discrimination at the
Kerry in Egypt —Secretary of State John Kerry continues his Mideast junket, meeting with Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi today.A2
polls. The case could upend the way certain parts of the country make
y
changes to voting laws. Some questions you may have about the law:
IditarOd —After Saturday's day of fun, the real competition
is the Voting Rights Act, and how all these years, what's the issue Q •• What Q •• After long has it been in force? now?
begins today in the 41st annual
sled dog race inAnchorage, Alaska.
7
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HISTORY Spangled Banner" becamethe Hoover signed acongressional resolution. In1845, Florida became the 27th state. In1849, the U.S. Department of the Interior was established. In 1863, President Abraham
Lincoln signed ameasure creating the National Academy of
Sciences. In1913, more than 5,000 suffragists marched down
Pennsylv aniaAvenueinWashington, D.C., aday before the presidential inauguration of Woodrow Wilson. In 1923, Time magazine, founded by Briton Hadden and Henry Luce, made its debut.
In1943,in London's EastEnd, 173 people died in a crush of bodies at the Bethnal Green tube
The Associated Press fhe photo
The mass of machinery and plastic often seen nowadays in the operating room is a sign of modern technology — robots working with, and as, surgeons. But there has been an intensifying debate among doctors about whether the benefits of robotic surgery justify the increased costs and safety concerns.
ewerro o s in e The safety of some surgery robots is being
ing all 346 people onboard. In 1991, motorist Rodney
King was severely beaten by Los Angeles police officers in a scene captured onamateur video. Twenty-five people were killed when aUnited Airlines Boeing 737-200 crashed while
approaching the Colorado Springs airport. Ten years ago:Israeli troops arrested Hamasco-founder Mohammed Taha in a deadly
raid. (Israel released him 14 months later.) President
George W.Bushoffered a roughblueprintfor adding drug benefits to Medicare.
Five yearsage:Democrat Barack Obama said hiscampaign had never givenCanada back-channel assurances that his harsh words about the North American Free Trade
Agreement were for political show, despite aCanadian memo indicating otherwise. Operatic tenor GiuseppeDi Stefano died in Santa Maria Hoe, Italy, at 86.
One year ago:Conservative talkshow hostRush Limbaugh apologized on his website to Georgetown University law
student Sandra Fluke, whom he had branded a"slut" and "prostitute" after she testified
to congressional Democrats that she wanted her college health plan to cover her birth
control.
BIRTHDAYS Socialite Lee Radziwill is 80.
Movie producer-director George Miller is 68. Actress Hattie Winston is 68. Singer
Jennifer Warnes is 66.Actordirector Tim Kazurinsky is
63. Singer-musician Robyn Hitchcock is 60. Actor Robert Gossett is 59. Rock musician John Lilley is 59. Actress
Miranda Richardson is 55. Radio personality lra Glass is 54. Actress Mary Page Keller is
52. Olympic track andfield gold medalist Jackie Joyner-Kersee is 51. College Football Hall of
Famer Herschel Walker is 51. Rock musicia nJohn Bigham is 44. Actress Julie Bowen is 43. Actor David Faustino is 39. Actress Jessica Biel is 31. — From wire reports
do opponents want todo away Q •• Why with Section 5'? . They say it is outdated. "The violence, . intimidation and subterfuge that led Congress to pass Section 5 and this court to uphold it no longer remains," says the Shelby County challenge. And the formula still relies on election data from 1972.
many states are subject to the reQ •• How strictions in Section 5? . Alabama, which is the subject of the Su. preme Court case, and eight other states, as well as some other jurisdictions elsewhere are subject to Section 5. Most of the states are in the South.
why do supporters want to keep Q •• And Section 5? . They believe it's still a necessary pre. ventive measure against changes to voter ID laws, district lines and other adjustments that could impede the rights of minority voters. What might the Supreme Court do next Q ..about the Voting Rights Act?
*Individuat cities and counties exempt in some states
• That's not clear. But it's worth bearing A . in mind that in 2009, Chief Justice John Roberts signaled receptivity to the argument
of one of the hottest technologies in health care. By Robert Langreth
NEW YORK — The Food and Drug Administration has asked surgeons at key hospiA physician will sit at a tals to list the complications video-game style console they may have seen with their several feet from the surgery robots, which cost patient, peering into a high-definition display about $1.5 million each and were used last year in almost while using foot pedals and 500,000 procedures. The dochand controls to maneuver tors were also surveyed on mechanical arms equipped which surgeries the r obots with surgical tools. A might be most and least suited camera provides athree for,and asked to discuss their dimensional view of the training, according to c o pwork being done inside the ies of the survey obtained by patient. Bloomberg News. The answers may sway debate on whether robotic sur- pared with the total number geries promoted as being less of procedures, the agency's invasive are worth the extra reporting system has in the cost. (The findings may also past served as an early warndetermine the outlook for the ing system on concerns about firm in question, Intuitive Sur- medical-device safety. "One of the risks is that gical Inc. The da Vinci surgical system and relatedproducts the FDA could recall parts generated most of the Sunny- of the product or certain invale, Calif.-based company's struments, or somehow put $2.2 billion revenue in 2012, restrictions on certain surgerand helped boost market val- ies," said Michael Matson, an ue 70 percent over three years analyst with Mizuho Securito about $23 billion.) ties USA in New York. "But I don't think that's very likely." The surveys were sent to hospitals that belong to a product safetynetwork overseen COStS by the FDA. What theagenA rise in problems isn't neccy is trying to determine is essarily alarming because the whether a rise seen in incident number of surgeries done with reportssent to the agency are the robot has been growing "a true reflection of problems" rapidly, said Matson, who is with the robots or the result of based in New York. "The bigother issues, said Synim Riv- ger concernwould be that the ers, an agency spokeswoman, patients would get scared," he in an email. "It is difficult to said. "Part of what's driven know why the reports have in- this market is people seeking creased," she said. out robotic surgery; hospitals market it and the patients Surgeries under scrutiny seem to think it's better." The reports sent to the FDA Martin Makary, asurgeon outline s e r ious c o m plica- at Johns Hopkins Hospital in tions, including those involv- Baltimorewho has researched ing gynecological surgeries the marketing of the systems, that make up about half of said safety should now bethe procedures involving Income part of the debate. "Patients need to know the tuitive Surgical's robotic system. They include damage to truth about robotic surgery," uretersand bowels as well as Makary said in a telephone instances when instruments interview. "The Achilles-heel broke off from the robot and feature" of the robot is its lack fell into patients. Reports also of tactile feedback, which can cited burns to various organs spur "inadvertent injuries if or vessels, most repaired dur- added caution is not taken." ing the surgery itself. A report published in the Many of the reports were Journal of the American Medifiled by Intuitive Surgical and cal Association on Feb. 20 state that no robot malfunction found that surgery to remove was found or that the problem the uterus with the Intuitive rocame from usererror.Several bot costs thousands of dollars originated from patients. more without reducing compliThe robots are "extremely cations, compared with stansafe," said Myriam Curet, Indard less-invasive surgery. tuitive's chief medical adviser. Examining da t a fr om "There is a lot of redundancy 264,758 women who had a hysin the system to make it as safe terectomy for benign condias possible. "The percentage of tions at 441 U.S hospitals, the deaths and injuries "is extraor- study found that robotic opdinarily small," she added, and erations cost hospitals $2,189 "hasn't grown" over time. m ore pe r p r o cedure t h an W hile the number of r e performing the same surgery ports to the FDA is small com- without the robot.
sion to test the lunar module. In1974, a Turkish Airlines DC10 crashed shortly after takeoff from Orly Airport in Paris, kill-
• This is the part of the Voting Rights Act • under review by the high court. The act stipulates that areas of the country with a history of racial discrimination must receive preclearance from the Justice Department or a federal court before making any election law changes.
investigated, raising questions about the prospects
as a wartime air raid shelter. In1945, the Allies fully secured the Philippine capital of
from CapeKennedy on amis-
A
• Entlre state* • Only parts ofthe state
Bloomberg News
during World War II. In1969, Apollo 9 blasted off
• Over the years, Congress has reautho• rized Section 5 several times, most recently in 2006. That decision is at the heart of the current case involving Shelby County, Ala. The question before the court is whether Congress' 2006 reauthorization — which extended theprovision for another 25 years — exceeded its constitutional authority.
WhereSection5 applies
station, which wasbeing used
Manila from Japaneseforces
A
• Signed into law by President Lyndon • Johnson in 1965, the sweeping legislation was designed to prevent racially discriminatory voting practices. What is this "Section 5" we keep hearQ ..ingabout'?
Highlight:In 1931, "The Starnational anthem of the United States as President Herbert
A
that the provision is outdated. "Things have changed in the South," he wrote, adding: "The evil that Section 5is meant to address may no longer be concentrated in the jurisdictions singled out for preclearance. The statute's coverage formula is based on data that is now more than 35 years old, and there is considerable evidence that it fails to account for current political conditions."
Rodoticsurgery: How itworks
Source: U.S. Department of Justice
— The Washington Post
© 2013 MCT
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
IN FOCUS:MARRIAGE AND THE STATES
or a cou es, eneisen a man or ers By Kirk Johnson
Patchwork oflawsonsame-sexunions
New Yorh Times News Service
M OSCOW, Idaho — T h e border with Washington state is just two miles from the home that Henry Johnston and Alex Irwin own here in w estern Idaho, but for a gay couple it might as well be a thousand. O ver there, just a b r i s k morning's walk away, samesex marriage was approved by a majority of statewide voters last fall; over here, the Idaho Constitution, t h r o ug h an amendment passed by voters in 2006, says that even a civil union granted elsewhere has no validity. "Set your clock back," Johnston said of his daily commute home from a job in Pullman, Wash. The nation's patchwork ge-
ography of same-sex marriage laws was not much of an issue when just a few outlier states granted the privilege. But now nine states and the District of Columbia allow such unions, with Maine, Maryland and Washington voting to join the list last fall. And the U.S. Supreme Court could decide this summer whether equal marriage protections are a right under the U.S. Constitution. On Thursday — the last day it could — the Obama administration expressed its support for the case seeking to overturn California's Proposition 8
ban on gay marriage, which the high court will hear this month. Its brief says gay and lesbian couples there have the same "equal protection" rights to wed, and that voters in the state were wrong to ban it. The administration brief urges the court to take a skeptical view of similar bans and contends that denying gays and lesbians the right to marry violates the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause, though it does not explicitly call for gay marriage rights across the U.S. O n Monday, a g r oup o f prominent Republicans got there first, signing a brief to the court addressing the second gay marriage case, against the federal Defense of Marriage Act that limits marriage to one man and one woman. The Republicans argue that marriage is a constitutionally guaranteed right. All that has made the borders, and the sharp disparities between states, more important and complex than ever for gay couples, and for interstate tourism as well. The marriage license office in Clark County, Wash., across the Columbia River from Portland, had to increase its hours to serve border couples when Washington's new law took effect. The Episcopal Church said last month that the National Cathedral in D.C. would soon begin conducting same-sex marriages. But if newlyweds drivehometothe city's suburbs in Virginia, any rights granted under the vaulted limestone arches willdisappear under Virginia's constitution. Johnston and Irwin, both
Wind Continued from A1 The combination of the federal tax credit and state policies that support renewable energy developmenthave helped turn Oregon into a leader in wind energy, said Sarah Higginbotham, state director for Environment Oregon.In 2007, Oregon enacteda requirement that 25percent of energy sold by its major utilities must come from renewables by 2025. "We've invested in w i n d, and the technology has gotten better, and we've seen the market grow," she said. Much of the state's wind industry is located in the northern part of the state, in Sherman, Umatilla and G i lliam counties. Locally, a 104-megawatt West Butte Wind facility has been approved in Crook County. Texas, California and Kansas, which all a dded more than 1,400 megawatts, topped the list. Michigan, Pennsylvania and Colorado were also top producers. Part of what makes Oregon so attractive for renewable energy development is the extensive network of seasonally active hydroelectric sites, which can help store the power generated by wind and solar, said
k
The state of same-sex marriage in the states is sometimes unclear and ever-changing. Nine states plus the
c
District of Columbia grant full marriage rights to gay couples. At the other extreme, the federal government by law recognizes only heterosexual unions. But while some states prohibit most marriage-like rights for gays, by statute or constitutionally, others (like Oregon) have constitutional amendments against marriage but also
allow most marriage-like rights by law, in the form of domestic partnerships or civil unions. Still other states may recognize only some rights, or the unions performed legally in other states or countries. The map groups states into the following categories, where such laws areclear:
I
fs 4is
•
Gay marriage is legal
•
Ci vil unions or domestic partnerships • grant most marriage-like rights
So me marriage-like rights are recognized
•
Al l gay unions are banned
•
On ly gay marriage is banned, with other rights largely unaddressed
No specific laws on gay relationships
's s
"' i
by law or constitutionally Rajah Bose/ New York Times News Service
Henry Johnston and Alex Irwin walk their dog, Huck, behind their home overlooking Moscow, Idaho. Same-sex marriage was approved just over the border in Washington, but Idaho's constitution prevents even civil unions from being recognized. Still, says Johnston, "We're not going anywhere."
R 5$ • s.i.
Republicanswhoback a federal right to marry More than a hundred Republicans have added their names to a
legal brief urging the SupremeCourt to declare that gay couples have a constitutional right to wed. The Democratic White House,
too, has come in onthe side of same-sex marriage —butat this point, the Republicans whosigned thedocument aretaking a more expansive stance than President Barack Obama, who favors gay marriage but has said generally he would leave it to the states.
Business interests sometimes aligned with theGOPhavevoiced a similar opinion. In a separate brief last week, some of the nation's
largest companies said thefederal gay marriage ban imposes serious administrative and financial costs on their operations. That brief drew 278 signers, including more than 200 companies
— among themgiants like Citigroup, Apple, Marsand Alcoa —as well as city governments, law firms andother groups. While such friend-of-the-court briefs are not legally binding, the filings could have some influence on the justices. The list of
Republicans includes thesenotable names: • Alex Castellanos,Republican adviser and media analyst • Mary Cheney,Bushadministration adviser and former Vice President Dick Cheney's daughter • David Frum,former aide to President George W. Bush • Mark Gerson,conservative author • BenjaminGlnsberg, lawyer for the Bush-Cheneycampaigns • Carlos Gutierrez,commerce secretary under Bush • StephenHadley, national security adviser to Bush • Richard Hanna,current congressman from NewYork • Jon Huntsman,former Utah governor and presidential candidate • Gary Johnson,former New Mexico governor and presidential candidate • Ken Mehlman,former Republican National Committee chairman • Beth Myers,senior aide to Mitt Romneyand his 2008 campaign manager • Michael Powell,former Federal Communications Commission chairman • Ileana Ros-Lehtinen,Florida congresswoman andchairwoman of the House Committee onForeign Affairs • Steve Schmidt,senior strategist for John McCajn's 2008 campaign • Jane Swift,former Massachusetts governor • William Weld,former Massachusetts governor and assistant U.S. attorney general • Christine Todd Whitman, former NewJersey governor and EPAchief • Meg Whitman,2010 GOPnominee for governor of California
Same-sex marriage wasconstitutionally banned in Oregon(and ~+ View an interactive mapof ~ h o w rights have changed scores of other states) in 2004 — but domestic partnerships, which grant most state marriage benefits, were approved in 2007, over the years atbit.ly/L4oS4n Sources: Los Angeles Times, Greg Stoll apps
films like "Brokeback Mountain" has not entirely faded. Even adding p r otections for gay men and lesbians to Idaho's Human Rights A ct has hit a wall, with advocates unable to get the Republicancontrolled Legislature to print a bill, let alone hold a public hearing, after years of trying. But on the local level, the picture is changing, slowly, and it depends on where couples live. In just the last two months, two Idaho cities, Ketchum and Boise, have passed nondiscrimination ordinances proSources: New York Times, Politico, American Foundation for Equal Rights tecting gay, lesbian and transgender people in housing and proudly gay and proudly IdaJohnston, 27, was born and employment. Three more comhoan, said they had thought raised in a n I d aho timber- munities, including Johnston about taking a Sunday drive cutting town. He rejected the and Irwin's town, are debating to get married and then dis- idea of marrying just to make it. Before December, only one missed the idea out of hand. a statement. "The minute place, the small town of SandMarrying across the border we drive across the border it point in the state's panhandle, and returning home to a place w ould become invalid a n d had enactedsuch protections. where none of it h a d legal we'd be back to just being two Changes beyond I d aho's meaning, they said, or picking guys who own a house togeth- borders, including a subtle shift up and moving to Washington er," he said in an email. in policies in Utah by the Morto obtain marriage protections The message is clear, John- mon church, which has a huge would represent equal mea- ston added in an i nterview, influence in Idaho, have given sures of surrender and defeat. that they are staying put to gay people here added resolve For them, the battle for rights fight. "We're not going any- and have provided crucial poand recognition is to be waged where," he said. litical cover for their supportat home, in a deeply conserHardlyanyone imagines that ers. In late 2009, the Church vative state where same-sex Idaho and conservative places of Jesus Christ of Latter-day marriage remains, for now, an like it — voters in 30 states, in- Saints said it would support unlikely dream. cluding Oregon, have banned nondiscrimination protections "How are things going to same-sex marriageby statute for gays in Salt Lake City, change if people aren't there to or constitutional amendment home to the church's headhelp make them change'?" said — are likely to be moved any- quarters. About one-fourth of Irwin, 25, who grew up mostly time soon to a full embrace of Idaho's population is Mormon, in Pullman, home of Washing- gay life. The portrait, or carica- a higher percentage than any ton State University. ture, of the American West in state besides Utah.
Rachel Shimshak, executive director of the Portland-based Renewable Northwest Project. "So far, wind and solar have made over $6 billion worth of investment in the state. That helps a lot of the local counties, because they pay taxes and that helps the local tax bases," Shimshak said. In 2011, wind project owners in Oregon paid more than $14 million in property taxes, according to t h e A m erican Wind E n ergy A s sociation. That year, wind generated 7.1 percent of O r egon's power, enough t o p o w e r 7 7 0,000 homes. Oregon's 2nd Congressional District has the fourth most installed wind capacity in the country. Wind power also appears to be a good investment for the future, said Bob Jenks, executive director of the Citizens Utility Board of Oregon. The cost of wind energy is going down, but the current abundance of cheap natural gas makes it look expensive by comparison. "But gas is ultimately going
to have some sort of carbon regulation" and may end up exported and sold on the international market, which will drive its prices up, he said. In the meantime, consumers are paying for installation costs of wind facilities, which pushes costs higher in the short term. But, once the turbines are up and running, they don't require additional fuel the way power plants do. "Wind is a good long-term investment," he said. "We're investing in (sites) now, they are putting upward pressure on the rates, but my gamble is that 10 years from now, we're going to feel really good about this." Nationally, wind power has made substantial inroads. In 2006, wind represented 4 percent of the 6.649 quadrillion British thermal units of energy generated by renewables, according to the U.S. Energy Information A d ministration. Four years later, wind accounted for 11 percent of the 8.090 quadrillion Btus generated. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet g gg •
•
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• • Classjfieds
Los Angeles Times
"I believe the support of the Mormon church is key," John Reuter, a former Sandpoint City Council president, said of the town's nondiscrimination statute. "That the LDS church supported it in Salt Lake had a ripple effect in Idaho." With more gay people, es-
Council and a co-sponsor of the city's new nondiscrimination law. "But my kids aren't influenced by a national debate," she added. "They just say, 'Discrimination isn't OK.'" Here in Moscow, Johnston and Irwin said they were comfortably open about their lives, pecially younger ones, living even holding hands in public. openly in their communities, Last month, Johnston started the discussion has become a two-hour radio show on a loless about a class of people cal community station called "Give My Regards to Broadthan about individuals. "Who gets the credit here is way," and on a recent Sunday the lesbian and gay communi- he played his favorites from ty, who have had the courage the Broadway hit "La Cage to come out," said Mayor Ran- aux Folles." "It doesn't get any gayer dy Hall of Ketchum, a resort town near Sun Valley. than that," he said. Other people said the perBut Johnston's message was sonal and the political were severely limited in its reach by melding. T h a t Pre s ident KRFP radio's tiny 100-watt Barack Obama offered his signal.However fervently exsupport of same-sex marriage pressed in words and music, last year, and that majorities the show can barely be heard of voters in three states did the beyond downtown. same, prompted a new discus— The Associated Press sion about Idaho's path. To contributed to this report.
many younger people, though, w hat matters is d ow n t h e block or in the school cafeteria, not across the border. "I've listened to this national debate," said Lauren McLean, a member of the Boise City
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
AS
TODAY'S READ:OBAMAS AND JACKSONS
Ica o oI Ica ran s Iver e •
•
By Jodi Kantor
microphone. His son issued a rebuke. "He should keep hope alive," he said, "and any personal attacks and insults to himself." The elder Jackson's influence was already on the wane, but the hostility he showed toward Obama, who was winning the devotion of black voters,sealed his loss ofprestige. Obama's attitude toward the older manwas "I'm bigger than this, so I'm just going to ignore you," said one fundraiser.
and Monica Davey New York Times News Service
When Barack and Michelle Obama were married in Chicago two decades ago, Santita Jackson, a daughter of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, sang at their wedding. When Obama ran for his first national office, he made sure he was not stepping on the ambitions of her brother, Jesse Jackson Jr., who later became a co-chairman of his 2008 presidential campaign. Now the younger Jackson, 47, who served 17 years as a congressman re p r esenting his hometown, is most likely headed to prison for campaign fraud, trailed by a string of problems from an extramarital affair to mental illness. Although the fates of Jackson and Obama could notbe more different, their stories, and those of their families, are bound together. The rise of the current leading black political family in the United States is inextricable from the unraveling of an older one, with the two tangled in shifting alliances,sudden reversalsoffortune and splits. Decades ago in Chicago, the younger Jackson was seen as a far more promising figure than his friend Obama — one the heir to a legend, the other an outsiderseeking to surpass the father he barely knew. If Jackson had decided to run for the U.S. Senate in 2004, Obama most likely would not be president. That year and again in 2008, Obama, seeking to bolster his credibility with African-Americans, enlisted Jackson for crucial help. But along the way, the Jackson father and son helped define what the future president did not want t o b ecome: a black politician mired in the old urban-ethnic mold; a leader tainted by personal transgressions or a dysfunctional family. Now, the Obama administration's Department of Justice is poised to send Jackson Jr. — who came under investigation after he pursued but failed to obtain Obama's old Senate seat — to prison. "The beginning of Jackson's star being tarnished was the beginning of Obama's star rising," Eric Adelstein, a Chicago political consultant, said in an interview. "You can plot it on a chart: As Obama ascends, Jackson descends."
Jackson Jr.'sdownfall Obama's presidential elecWhen Sen. Barack Obama was running for president in 2007, the tion victory seemed to create Rev.Jesse Jackson was often in the background — at campaign the opportunity the younger events, but also figuratively, or at least his civil rights legacy was. Jackson had been seeking. But the relationship between the men has always been difficult, He lobbied hard for Obama's and now President Obama's Justice Department is poised to send Senate seat, petitioning Gov. Jackson'sson — a 2008 Obama campaign co-chairman and until Rod Blagojevich, who would recently a congressman — to prison. make t he appo i n tment; seeking letters o f s u pport from opinion-makers; pub"The beginning of son that they had not seen in licizing a poll his camp had his father — crossover appeal (Jesse Jackson Jr.'s) commissioned. to white voters, expertise in Instead, his life fell apart. both politics and policy, an star being tarnished Blagojevich w a s ar r e sted, was the beginning of ability to move between the charged with trying to solicit civil r i ghts m ovement and money or a job in exchange Obama's star rising." elite institutions like St. Alfor the Senate seat. And a — Eric Adelstein, friend of Jackson's was acbans, his prestigious Washington school. People magaChicago political consultant cused of offering large camzine even named him sexiest paign contributions if Jackson politician. was picked. Jackson denied "If I wanted to be an elected something Junior never had knowing about the offer, but official, that's not enough," to do. But I think in his mind, a House Ethics Committee inJ esse Jackson Jr. told T h e somewhere deep down, Junior vestigation was opened. C hicago Tribune i n 1 9 9 5, felt that way." In 2010, revelations emerged speaking of the expectations After that, the younger Jack- of an extramarital relationhe faced. The jobs he talked son appeared to grow even ship. By 2011, few even seemed about pursuing were mayor more determined. He trans- to think of him as a contender of Chicago or speaker of the formed himself with weight for the job of mayor of ChiHouse, but his father and oth- loss surgery and considered cago after Daley announced ers went even further, Jackson a run against Mayor Richard plans to retire. And by June noted: "'One day, son, you may Daley in 2007. 2012, he disappeared from be president.'" In th e 2 008 p r esidential Congress, his office eventually It is not clear why he did not race, both Jackson men en- announcing that he was being run in 2004 for a Senate seat dorsed Obama. But though treated for bipolar disorder. that some thought could be his the congressman served as He resigned in November, and and gave Obama the go-ahead a co-chair of his campaign, pleaded guilty last week to a instead. Some say Jackson his father o p enly s eethed felony fraud count for spendhad set his sights on other of- a t Obama, criticizing h i m ing campaign funds on living fices; others say he did not at turns for "acting like he's expenses and collectibles. think Obama, who had been white," not appearing at a civil (On Tuesday, Robin Kelly, trounced in a 2000 congres- rights anniversary and "talk- whose campaign called for sional race, had a chance of ing down to black people." He tougher national gun l aws, winning. made a crass anatomical re- clinched the Democratic nomHe gave Obama a muchmark about Obama, unaware ination in a special primary n eeded endorsement in t h e that he was speaking on a live electionfor Jackson's House Democratic primary. "Jesse had him on 100 billboards," said the elder Jackson, when Obama's name "was hardly known." The Associated Press file photo
They had no reason to be. Jesse Jackson Jr. was already a sensation: At just 30, he had defeated m or e e s tablished politicians for a congressional seat. His father proudly raised money and campaigned on his behalf, at one point distributing buttons that read, "a new generation." S ome i n Ch i c ago s a w strengths in the younger Jack-
Jesse JacksonJr., the disgracedformer congressman who pleaded guiltyto misusing more than $750,000 in campaign money, is writing a memoir, two sources familiar with the project
told the ChicagoTribune. A person who has seen drafts of portions of the memoir said
Jackson was trying to "clear up his legacy." "He hasnothing else to do right now," the source said. "He's desperately trying to change the narrative of his life story." Putting pen to paper is nothing new for people in trouble with the law. While former lllinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was awaiting trial, he wrote "The Governor," a book in which he blamed his
downfall on overzealous prosecutors and political enemies. Jackson
Although Jackson is already a published author
— he wrote a book of financial advice called "It's
About the Money" with his famous father in 1999, and "A More Perfect Union," which proposed constitutional amendments deal-
ing with employment, housing, health care andtaxes, with an aide in 2001 — he may face an uphill climb to find a find a publisher now, according to Gail Ross, a lawyer and literary agent in Wash-
ington. "To get big moneyyou'd need apublisher who is really, really interested in his story," she said. "... Maybe someday he'll write
the redemption story, but he can't write the redemption story until he'sredeemed. Redemption hasto be beyond the magnitude of the crimes."
Jackson, 47, suffers from bipolar disorder and took amedical leave of absencefrom Congress in Juneand resigned in November. He will be sentencedJune 28after a seven-year crime spree in which he usedthe illicit money for a Rolex watch, celebrity memorabilia, furs, a cruise and two stuffed elk heads, among other purchases. He faces between 46 and 57 months in prison
and his wife faces one totwo years behind bars. — From wire reports
seat, in a district that heavily leans Democratic.) Through a spokesman, Jesse Jackson Jr. declined to be interviewed for this article, but he issued a statement apologizing to those he let down.
He had just returned from W ashington, where h e a p peared in court with his son, and he sounded weary. But he discussed the p resident with none of his old acrimony. Obama, he said, was a "rare
genius."
Where they stand now
He seemed to savor the one moment he has shared with Obama in r e cent years, a quick staged photograph after the dedication of the memorial to the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 2011. The Jacksons waited along with other civil rights leaders for their shot with the Obamas, but Jackson described the encounteras a reunion forthe two families, who spent a few minutes exchanging pleasantriesand memories. he was going across a bridge He said he spends little time that came from the rocks of worrying about his standing the walls that w e k n ocked at the White House or invitadown," the elder Jackson said tions there, adding, "I give him in the interview. room to govern." Since becoming president, Obama has had d w indling contact with t h e J acksons. The son was under investigation and the father was persona non grata, invited to not a single one of the civil rights meetings Obama has held, despite the role that Jackson played in the movement and in helping to clear the way for a black man to become president. "By the time he came along,
Turn of events
Still, Obama was wary of being identified with the older generation of Chicago politics, particularly the elder Jackson, whose fiery civil rights rhetoTies to the first lady ric often alienated whites and Decades before M i chelle whose reputation was sullied Obama worked on her hus- by a messy personal life, inband'spresidentialcampaigns, cluding fathering a child out of she volunteered on those of the wedlock. elder Jackson. Her father, FraCampaign aides wanted the ser Robinson, was a city water Obamas alone on stage the worker and ward capnight he won the primatain, but Santita Jackry, two of them said latson, the oldest daughter er, without other local of the most important politicians — especially black politician in the the elder Jackson, who c ountry, was on e o f had a habit of making her c l osest f r i e nds; a beeline for the victor later, Santita Jackson at the moment cameras became godmother to clicked. Malia Obama, the couA few months later, ple's older daughter. when the still-obscure " Michelle u sed t o candidate became the come to the house all S a n tita toast of the Democratic the time,"Jesse Jack- Jacks on, Party after a soaring s on recalled in an in - to p , wasa speech at the presidenterview. (Th e W h i t e ch i l dhood tial n ominating c onHouse declined to com- f r iend of vention for Sen. John ment for this article.) Mich e l le Kerry, several people The man she even- O b ama's. noticed that both Jacktually married was a son men seemed disoristranger to Chicago, who had ented by the turn of events. "They w ere t h e b i g gest to pound the sidewalks of the South Side to collect signa- thing i n A f r i c an-American tures to run for a lowly state politics," said J i m C a u ley, Senate seat in 1996. Obama Obama's campaign manager would regularly attend weekly in the Senate race, and in one meetings of Jesse Jackson's night, "they got eclipsed." Rainbow/PUSH or g a n izaThe younger Jackson felt tion, and the Jacksons tried that Obama "was sort of elto be helpful with advice and evated to his status without opportunities — for example, having to pay his dues or do giving him chances to "get his grunt work," said Alexi Gispeaking legs," said Hermene annoulias, a former state treaHartman, publisher of an Af- surer. "Which was simply unrican-American n e w spaper, true — he worked incredibly N'DIGO. hard as a candidate and he did "I don't think the Jacksons so all across the state, which is were threatened particularly," said Don Rose, a longtime political consultant.
Jackson Jr.'sappeal
Jesse JacksonJr. will write a memoir
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
Wiretap
"I don't have any animosity for the CIA. I respect what they do. But they make it extremely difficult for the average citizen to interact with them. It makes me wonder what they are still trying to hide about my father."
Jim's home in waves, packed with new revelations. Continued from A1 Jim learned, according to So far, the CIA has released one FBI memo, that his dad truto Jim a handful of intriguing ly alarmed the government at a documents. But Jim has been Feb. 6, 1963, news conference trying to compel the agency to in which he asked McNamara — Jim Scott, of Anne Arundel County, Md. several questions about Cuban cough up more. A federal declassification review panel is weapons. Paul used precisely now reviewing Jim's case and the same information in his could decide as soon as this when it m e ntions methods, with the words "SECRET" and questions that was contained month whether to direct the techniques or sources which, if "EYES ONLY." Every sentence in secret Navy documents. CIA to release more Mocking- they wererevealed,could harm seemed more tantalizing than And the Navy, according to the bird documents. our nation's security or place the next. bureau memos, wanted the FBI "I don't have any animosity someone's personal security at Between March 12, 1963, to find out who his source was. for the CIA," said Jim, whose risk," Ebitz said. "The agency and June 15, 1963, phone bugs But FBI director J. Edgar father died in 2001 at age 80. "I works diligently to make public were installed at both the AlHoover expressed reservarespect what they do. But they information no longer requirlen and Scott homes and their tions in a letter to Kennedy. Almake it extremely difficult for ing protection, releasing what Capitol Hill office. But this was though the FBI official seemed the average citizen to interact we can and withholding what no rogue operation: CIA direc- alarmed by the "Allen-Scott with them. It makes me won- we must in the interest of na- tor John McCone approved the Report," he didn't want the buder what they are still trying tional security." operation "under pressure," reau involved. "I was elated when I read all to hide about my father." The CIA declined to com- the documents said, from Atment onthe Scott case. But Tom torney General Robert F. Ken- this. These are some heavyNot eager to share Blanton, director of the George nedy. And Kennedy planned it weight people," Jim said. "I It's not easy penetrating one Washington University-based with Robert McNamara, the figured that I am getting this of the world's most secretive National Security A r c hive, defense secretary and Viet- from the FBI, and it'll just be a organizations. questionedthe agency's refusal nam War architect. matter of time before the CIA Tourists can't just showup at to release the documents about The wiretap identified many sheds some light as well. its famous headquarters. Even Jim Scott's father: "There's of the reporting team's sources: But Jim never got any tracformer spies-turned-memoir- nothing truly secret about the a dozen senators; six congress- tion with the CIA. ists need agency approval for wiretapping of Paul Scott now." men; 11 congressional staffers; He has taken his fight to the "What this is really about," 16 "government employees," Interagency Security Classitheirmanuscripts before publication and often can't reveal Blanton said, "is bureaucracy including a staff member at fication Appeals Panel, a Suseeminglyharmless or boring and power." the White House and some at preme Court-like body made details about their careers. the vice president's office; and up of officials from agencies "other well-placed individu- such asthe CIA, State,D efense For ordinary people — aca- High-level wiretaps demics, journalists, relatives of In June 2007, Jim read about als," the documents said. and Justicedepartments. The former employees — extract- the CIA's decision to release The journalists actually got group,which decides declassiing agency information can be the family jewels. The collec- more classified information fication requests, has already tough. They can file Freedom tion of long-secret documents than they could use, the docu- discussed Jim's appeal.The of Information Act and Privacy revealed new details about ments noted, and passed along soonest the panel could make Act requests or mandatory de- the agency's activities from the leftovers to rival reporters. its decision would be m i dclassification review requests. the 1960s and 1970s, includBut several pages were fully March. If it rules in Jim's favor, But the CIA usually isn't eager ing a failed assassination plan or partly redacted. Jim felt the CIA could appeal the decito part with much, said Steven against Cuba's Fidel Castro, a teased. Why, he wondered, did sion to the president or release Aftergood, director of the proj- Watergate burglar's search for the CIA keep those pages se- the documents. ect on government secrecy at an expert lock picker, and ille- cretafterso many years? Are Jim, his four sisters, and the Federation of A m erican gal wiretaps of reporters. the names of all their sources their 88-year-old mother wish Scientists. To Jim's shock, two of the hidden behind the redactions? P aul were still alive so h e "I have a number of requests wiretapped journalists were So, in 2008, the son filed his could fill in the holes. Jane Cowith the CIA that are more his father and his writing part- first FOIA with the CIA. bis, who was married to Paul than five years old," said After- ner, Robert Allen, who died for 55 years, said she remembers sources dropping by their good, who has sued the agency in 1981. The men once wrote Clues from the FBI a handful of times for docu- a syndicated column in 300 Twelve months later, the home. One was from the CIA. "He was a good friend of ments. "The message they're newspapers called the "Allen- agency mailed Jim a packet sending is, 'If you want our Scott Report." Their column of partially redacted memos Paul's," said Cobis, who has attention, sue us,'" he said, call- often contained national seabout Paul. None touched on since remarried and lives in ing it "a time-consuming and curity scoops, including exclu- the 1963 Mockingbird wireAnne Arundel. "He would talk resource-demanding e ff ort." sives about Soviet aid to Cuba tap, though there was an into him frequently and give him He usually loses. during the 1962 missile crisis. triguing account of a visit his a lot of information. He was Todd Ebitz, a n ag e ncy Jim called his mother about father made to South Africa in probably the reason we were spokesman, said the agency the wiretap revelations. She 1968 to interview a captured wiretapped. He and his wife receivedmore than 5,400 FOIA reminded him about the time Russian spy. came out to the house a lot. He "The CIA gave me stuff that felt there were certain things and Privacy Act requests, along he complained about hearwith mandatory declassifica- i ng strangers' voices on a I didn't know even existed," the press should know." tion review requests, in fiscal phone call with a high school Jim said, "but I just wanted to Though the source and his 2012. The agency doesn't keep classmate. know what articles triggered wife are deceased, she'd rath"I had heard some clicking the wiretap." track of how many of those er keep their identities secret. requestscome from ordinary in the background," Jim said, In early 2009, Jim requested The Scotts have their own citizens versus journalists, aca- laughing. "I heard someone say, the wiretap documents for a family jewels to protect. 'Don't worry, it's just two kids second time. "Isn't it safe to demics and nonprofit groups. Since 1995, he said, the CIA talking about homework as- assume that most, if not all, has released more than 10 mil- signments.' As a teenager, you of the key players complicit in lionpages of declassified mate- kinda just blow that stuff off." thisoperation are deceased?" rial. The agency also has used Once the family jewels were he asked in a letter to the CIA. its own discretion to release posted online, "I couldn't go That summer, the CIA remore than 100,000 pages of to sleep that night, reading jected his appeal, ruling that CIA material, including docu- the documents," Jim recalled. the information still required I ments from the family jewels. "What startled me was the lev- secrecy. Meanwhile, Jim had But just because documents el of seniority that approved pursued a second route: the are old doesn't mean they can this operation." FBI. To his surprise, the buII be made public. The wiretap on his father reau was more than happy to "CIA information that is de- was described in only three play along. Throughout 2011, cades old may still be sensitive released pages, each stamped F BI documents arrived a t
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Diets
assigned to follow a Mediterranean diet and the rest to Continued from A1 follow t he sort of standard "We don't know what the l o w -fatdiet that cardiologists best diet is," said Dr. Michael o f ten prescribe. Those on the Lauer, the director of the divi- M e d iterranean diet had 30 sion of cardiovascular scienc- percent fewer heart attacks, es at the National Heart, Lung s t r okes and deaths f r om and Blood Institute. "This is a h e art disease compared with great opportunity to come to- p e ople i n the control group g ether and use power of the w h o a t e more or less the scientific method to get closer s ame way they always had. to the right answer." Dr. Ramon Estruch of the The National Heart, Lung U n i versi ty o f Bar c elona, and Blood Institute is sup- t h e leadauthor of the study, porting a large clinical trial s a i d thatalthough some had to see if fish oil and vitamin D t h o ughtpeople would never can prevent heart attacks and a l low their diets to be decided cardiovascular deaths. But b y a figurative toss of a coin, while that is important, heart i t w as not hard to get people e xperts say it is time to also t o s w i t h c to a M e d iterralook at diets as a nean diet. "They whole. wanted to eat the Dr. I.awrence "We dOn't way their grandAppel, a profes- knOW What the fathers ate." E struch s a i d he and his colwho was a mem- Th ls IS a gl'eat leagues were so
ber o«he 2005 and 2010 U.S. dietary guidelines
success of their study that t h ey committees, said tO t he I'Ight were p l a n ning he was inspired anSWer." another one. by the MediterraB ut for n o w , — Dr. Michael Lauer chaos reigns. The nean diet study. "Can we do a p ublic i s b o m trial of fruits and barded with diet vegetables?" he asked."I think a d v i ce,often contradictory we can." and lack ing a rigorous sciT he situation in nutrition e n t i fic grounding, medical today reminds Lauer of an e x p e rts sard. "Diets are an e x t reme era in the 1950s when doctors struggled to figure out c a s e ofaccepting evidence h owbesttotreatheartattack w e w a nt to believe," said patients. Dr. J. S anford Schwartz, a "Nutrition r e search i s pr o f esso r of medicine at the where heartattack research University of Pennsylvania. w as," Lauer said. Patients in T h a t i ncludes doctors, he those days were advised to a d d ed,w ho overlook that the stay in bed for four to five e v i dence for the low-fat diets weeks and take l idocaine t h ey ofte n recommend is the to normalize their hearts' s o r t "wewould never accept rhythms and nitroglycerin to i n the pr actice of medicine." open blood vessels. Those low-fat diets sound But it t u r ned ou t t h a t se n sible : Eat fruits and vegtreatment actually hastened e t ables, fish and lean meats. death. It took years to find C u t b a ckon and sugar-laden the answers, but e ventu- s o das an d salty potato chips. a lly, Lauer said, dozens if not C u t o r sharply limit most hundreds of l arge clinical f a t s, inc luding olive oil and trials radically transformed n u t s. But such diets have heart attack treatment. not been tested in the way But when it comes to diet t h e M ed iterranean diet was and heart disease, doctors t e sted. — and patients — have been Doct ors are in a bind, said going on hunches. Dr. Dani'el Rader, a heart disThe new study could be e a s e spe cialist at the Univera start in changing all that, s i t y of Pennsylvania. When heart researchers said. It in- p a t ientsask what to eat, he volved 7,447 people in Spain, s a id, "you have to give them ng." half of whom were randomly s o m ethi
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wildlife," she said. While he considers lightning fires to be a natural part of wilderness forests, Kevin Proescholdt, conservation director of Wilderness Watch, said he is skeptical about the idea ofprescribed fires burning in wilderness. Proescholdt lives in Minnesota but works for the Montana-based nonprofit focused on wilderness conservation. His c r iticisms of the idea were in line with Coulter's. " It basically is a f orm of manipulation of th e w i lderness ecosystem by humans that we are not supposed to do under the Wilderness Act," Proescholdt said.
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Forest Service's reasons The Forest Service plans are legal, said Larkin, the BendFort Rock ranger, and he contends they are in the spirit of the Wilderness Act. Larkin offersthree reasons for doing the prescribed fires in the wilderness: • Returning the f orest to a state where fire can plan a natural role and lightning fires may be allowed to burn. • Keeping w i l d fires t h a t start in the wilderness in the wilderness. • Increasing the safety for firefighters who respond to wildfires. Babb and Larkin both emphasized that t h e b u r ning would be done in a relatively small piece of wilderness at a time, at most a couple hundred acres, and the intention is not to burn the entire section outlined in the plan. "This is really the start of a process that we envision taking 20 to 30 years to finish," Larkin said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarIIngC<bendbulletin.com
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burned woods, where lightning-sparked blazes would not Continued from A1 grow as large as they do now, The Willamette is further said Geoff Babb, a fire ecoloalong in planning and may gist with the Forest Service light the first fires in the proj- and U.S. Bureau of Land Manect this fall. The Deschutes is agement in Central Oregon. on track to begin in fall 2014. Such a patchwork would mimic the forest seen in centuReturning a patchwork ry-old, black-and-white photos Firefighters light prescribed of the forests near Bend and fires when weather conditions Sisters. For much of the 100 match a given prescription, yearssince,the Forest Service likely to produce a fire that and other agencies were quick burns as they have planned. A to snuff wildfires even in the prescribedfire is often preced- wilderness, creating an overed by thinning of the woods grown forest prone to big fires. "Ithinkif many of those were set to be burned and building of fire lines to keep the fire allowed to burn, they would from spreading out of control. have created those patches that These prescribed fires in we are talking about," Babb wilderness areas w o u ldn't sard. have this preparation. There are no plans to thin before the Opposition fires, Larkin said. And fireThe Forest Service plans go fighters would be using trails against the intent of the Wiland natural f eatures, such dernessAct of 1964,which set as rock outcroppings,as fire aside lands to be left in their breaks ratherthan scratching natural condition, said Karen in fire lines. While the Forest Coulter, director of the Blue Service has used prescribed Mountains Biodiversity Projfire in wilderness elsewhere ect in Fossil. "We are strongly opposed," around the country, this would be the first time it would be she said. done in Central Oregon. She offered threes reasons The Cascade Lakes and f or her o p position t o p r e S cott Mountain b u rn s a r e scribed fire in wilderness: planned for fall days when • Prescribed burning is the temperatures are cooler than type of human management the prime fire season of sum- not intended for wilderness. mer but forests are still dry • Protecting c o m munities enough to burn hot. and other assets outside of wilAlong with helicopters, the derness isbest done by treatplan says firefighters on the ing the forests close to them, ground may use flame-drip- not the backcountry. ping torches to start the fires. • The fires wouldn't burn The goal is to have high sever- the same as natural, lightningity fires, burning through the started fires. "Prescribed burning in wiltops of the trees and killing many of t h em. Firefighters derness isde facto managewould wait to start to the fires ment of wilderness and conwhen the weather forecast calls tradicts the intention of the for impending snow or rain. Wilderness Act to set aside The fires would create a untrammeled wild places for patchwork of burned and un- spiritual solace, recreation and
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T OUR OF HOM E S ™ YOUROFFICIALGUIDETOTHECOBA SELF-GUI DEDTOURFEATURINGTHE FINESTHOMES BUILTINTHEPAST YEAR One of the most popular events in Central Oregon is the COBA Tour Of Homes™. More than 35 homes were featured last year as part of the tour. This "Official Guide" provides details about each home, the builders and contractors involved, and a full-color tour map. Distributed to all Bulletin subscribers and at tour homes, the guide is a great reference companion throughout the year for home improvement ideas.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
IN FOCUS:PICKING THE NEXT POPE
a icanre o cou in uence conc ave By Henry Chu
— already a matter of fevered conjecture in the Italian press VATICAN CITY — D e ep — could become a factor in inside a safe in the papal apart- the selection of the next pope. ment lies a top-secret report Even though the 115 cardinals — for his holiness' eyes onlywho will choose a new pontiff that has become the most-talk- are not being allowed to read ed-aboutdocument in Rome. the confidential file, what they Written by three elderly car- believe to be in it could color dinals, the dossier delves into their decision. the most damaging security Speculation over the dossier's potentially explosive conbreach inside the Vatican in living memory: the recent leak tents is just part of the politickof private papers belonging to ing that is likely to go into the Pope Benedict XVI. The pon- heavily veiled process of picktiff commissioned the senior ing a new leader for the world's prelates to find out how such 1.1 billion Roman Catholics. a major lapse could have ocThat process in effect startcurred and why. ed earlier than usual this time Where the f i ngers point because ofBenedict's surprise Los Angeles Times
announcement of his intention to step down from office rather than let death remove him from it. The advance notice of a vacancy on the throne of St. Peter means that papal hopefuls, their supporters and detractors have already begun sizing one another up, plotting strategy and assessing chances. As yet, no w hisper campaigns or well-timed leaks to the news media have sprung up. But if past papal transitions are any guide, that could just be a matter of time. "I'm sure we'll see it," said John Allen, a veteran Vatican watcher for the National Catholic Reporter.
As spiritual and prayerful as the process is supposed to be, cardinals have been known to resort to more worldly methods of advancing their favored candidates or issues. "They are talking with one another — not in public view, obviously," Allen said, a nd some also have made brief statements to the news media. One of the issues expected to arise is the internal workings of the Vatican, which has come under heavy scrutiny in the wake of the leaked papal documents. The papers painted an unflattering portrait of an institution racked by turf battles and corruption at the
Who's in ch arge when there isn't apontiff? the sub-dean. Burly and sociable, the ItalV ATICAN CIT Y — Th e ian Sodano was Pope John Catholic Church awoke Friday Paul II's longtime secretary of with no leader following the state. As dean, he spoke on beresignation of Benedict XVI, half of all the cardinals in givwho pledged obedience to his ing a final farewell to Benedict successor and described him- on Thursday, thanking him self as "simply a pilgrim" start- for his "selfless service." ing the final journey of his life. Still, Sodano and Benedict Now begins a period known were known to have clashed as the "sede vacante" or "va- when Benedict was Cardinal cant see" — the transition be- Joseph Ratzinger, particularly tween the end of one papacy over the scandal-plagued Leand the start of another. gion of Christ religious order. During this l i mited time, Sodano was a chief backer s everal ke y p l a y ers t a k e and protector of the Legion's charge of running the Holy late founder, the Rev. Marcial See, guiding the College of Maciel, even though the VatiCardinals in t h eir delibera- can had known for years of tions and organizing the con- solid allegations that he was clave ofcardinals whose votes sexually molesting his semielect Benedict's successor. narians. W i thi n B e nedict's With the 8 p.m. Thursday first year i n o f f ice, Maciel end of Benedict's papacy, ev- was sentenced by the Vatican ery department head in the to a lifetime of penance and Vatican lost his job — except prayers for his crimes. That for those whose officesare same year Benedict named c onsidered crucial f o r t h e Bertone to replace the retiring smooth running of the transi- Sodano assecretary of state. tion period. On Monday, the cardinals The master of liturgical b egin meetings to se t t h e ceremonies: Monsignor conclave date an d d i scuss Guido Marini problems facing the Catholic The master o f l i t u rgical church. ceremonies runs the religious Here are the top figures who side of the conclave and the will run the church in the com- installation Mass for the new ing days: pope, all of them c arefully c h o The camerlengo: reographed rituCardinal Tarcisio Bertone als. He is by the The camerlengo, or cham- side of the dean berlain, takes over the day-to- when the newly day running of the Holy See as elected pope is M a r ini soon as the papacy ends. He asked if he acplaces the seal cepts the election. And as the on th e p o pe's main witness and notary, he study and beddraws up the formal docuroom and takes ment certifying the new pope's possession of the name and thathe has accepted A postolic P a l the job. ace, "safeguard- B e rtone Benedict appointed Marini ing and administo the job in 2007, replacing tering the goods and temporal Monsignor Piero Marini who rights of the Holy See" until a for two d ecades was Pope new pope is elected. On Thurs- John Paul II's right-hand man day night, Bertone sealed the for all things liturgical. The papal apartment, which will shift was intentional. Under not be reopened until a new Guido Marini, papal Masses pope is elected. became far more reverent, Benedict in 2007 gave the with more Latin, Gregorian camerlengo job t o B e rtone, chants and the use of heavy 78, a natural choice given silk-brocaded vestments of the that Bertone is currently the pre-Vatican II church. Vatican No. 2 as secretary of In changes introduced just state and runs the Vatican bu- before he resigned,Benedict reaucracy anyway. A p r iest made clear he wanted this of theSalesian order, Bertone more traditional vision of his was trained as a canon lawyer papacy carried forward for and taught in various Roman the installation of a new pope. universities for several years He called for the rites of instalbefore coming to work for the lation to be separate from the former Cardinal Joseph Ratz- liturgy itself and for the cardiinger at the Vatican's doctrine nals to make a public pledge office in 1995. of obedience to the new pope during the Mass.
highest levels, and suggested that Benedict was unable to curb abuses. The pope's personal butler was arrested and convicted by a Vatican tribunal of stealing the private papers. Benedict later pardoned him and commissioned the three cardinals to investigate. One recent Italian news report, citing anonymous sources, said the top-secret dossier on th e s o -called Vatileaks scandal contains revelations of a gay lobby within the Vatican, some of whose members were being blackmailed over their sexuality. Vatican officials have la-
beled such reports as baseless and malicious. But that has not stopped some Vatican watchers from wondering whether some mudslinging is already under way, although no one has quite yet divined who benefits and who doesn't from the speculative accounts of the dossier's contents. This week, the Vatican said the confidential report, which Benedict has read, would be handed over only to his successor and not be made available to the rest of the cardinals. But the three prelates who compiled the dossier will attend the generalcongregation and could divulge some of its findings.
. US. Cellular.
By Nicoie Winfieid Associated Press
The dean of the college of cardinals: Cardinal Angelo Sodano
The dean is the senior member of the College of Cardinals, the so-called "princes" of the church whose main task is to elect a pope. In one of his first official acts as dean, Sodano on Friday officially summoned cardinals to Rome Sodano to participate in the pre-conclave meetings, a formality given that most were already here. The first starts Monday at 9:30 a.m. The dean oversees these meetings, at which the problems of the church are discussed,and has duties inside the conclave itself, including asking the newly elected pontiff if he accepts the job. But Sodano is 85 and cannot vote, so some of those duties shift to
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The proto-deacon: Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran The proto-deacon's main task is to a nnounce to the world that a pope has been elected. He shouts "Habemus
Papam!" ("We have a pope!") f rom t h e b a l cony overlooking St . P eter's Square after the white smoke has Tauran snaked up from the Sistine Chapel chimney. He then introduces the new pope — in Latin — along with the name the pope has chosen. The French-born Tauran is a veteran Vatican diplomat who served in the Dominican Republic and L ebanon. He currently heads the Vatican's office for interreligious dialogue as the Vatican's primary point man for Catholic-Muslim relations.
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A8
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
IN FOCUS:GUN CULTURE
or some amiies, uns are a au e o rowin u By Eli Saslow
fear and excitement, counting out his breaths and slowing his heartbeat. A grown man pulls the trigger.
The Washington Post
M OUNT A I RY , M d . Chanse Mullinix arrived home from fourth grade on the school bus, carrying a Cherry Coke and a plastic bag of his classmates' handmade valentines. He shouted goodbye to the bus driver — "See ya!" — and ran down the sidewalk, because a youth football coach had recommended once that herun everywhere. He climbed the steps to a two-story townhouse — the only home he had ever known, and the place he sometimes referred to as a "great gun museum." He dropped his camouflage coat into a pile of hunting gear at the entryway and fired an imaginarybullet with his finger at a buck mounted on the living room wall. "Bang!" he said. There were replica guns on the floor, video-game guns on TV, Nerf guns in the basement and five generations of family guns locked upstairs in a closet-size safe. On display in the kitchen were dozens of framed photos of the seminal moments in Chanse's nine years of life. First hunting trip, age 4. "It was cold and I was a little scared," he said. First gun, age 6. "Santa gave me a.22. I get in good with Santa by leaving cookies for him and carrotsfor the reindeer. You can't forget the reindeer." First buck, age 8. "A clean hit, and then we were following the blood trail."
'Gun showandtell'
Late one afternoon, Chanse urged his dad upstairs to the gun safe. It is too dark outside to shoot, but he wanted to see their arsenal anyway. Scott covered Chanse's eyes with one hand while unlocking the safe with his other. "Time for gun show and tell," he said. Inside are two dozen unloaded guns, including four that belong to Chanse. Scott reached into the safe and handed them one at a time to his son, so he Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post can feel each gun's weight and Scott Mullinix stays close as his son, Chanse, 9, fires a shotgun at cans and bottles at a friend's farm learn its history. near Mount Airy, Md. Guns have been part of the Mullinix family tradition for generations. Below, Out came a German Luger, Chanse fires a.22-caliber rifle that belonged to his great-great-grandfather. still in its holster. "A gift from my great-uncle," Scott said. Out came Chanse's great-grandGun dedate thiS Week —After a delay, father's 12-gauge shotgun and the Senate Judiciary Committee will likely his grandfather's 20-gauge. Out return this week to the gun control legislacame a small .22 single-shot rition being written. The panel is considering fle, in a black case labeled "My Democratic-sponsored bills that would ban First Gun," the Christmas gift assault weapons, strengthen federal laws Chanse received in 2009. against illegal gun trafficking, provide money But the gun he wanted to for school safety improvements andexpand see most wasn't in the safe. " Where's the K i mber?" h e the requirement for background checks for gun purchasers. asked. — The Associated Press "You don't need to know where that one is," Scott said. "Why not?" "Because that's not a hunting covered half of the county, to guns? Oneresultis Chanse. man raises a 250-pound hog, 16 acres of hunting woods, to a He is 4-foot-I and 82 pounds, loves him like a pet and names gun, son. That's for protection." townhouse in the Washington with a patch of freckles around him Rudy, brushes his wiry Scott had spent a mortgage exurbs — their traditions sur- his nose, a small gap between hair every week for a year, and payment on the Kimber a few vived inside the safe at the top his upper front teeth and a di- then sells that hog at a 4-H auc- years earlier, a silver.45-caliber of the stairs. "I'm still country," sheveled head of brown hair tion. He delivers that hog to the handgun with a red laser sight. Chanse said. that a family friend cuts in their meat locker himself, choking The gun had become like "a Afamily tradition It is a l ifestyle his family kitchen. He lives alone with back tears as he says goodbye pacifier" to him, he said, always Since the Mullinix family fears is at risk in the escalat- his father, a swimming pool and pushes him out of the crate in reach while he slept, offersettled here 150 years ago, this ing argument over gun controL builder named Scott Mullinix, one last time, and then thanks ing a sense of control over his is how generations of children Since 26 people were killed at whom he adores and calls "Sir." the butcher when handed a fact house and his familyeven when have grown up — a certain Sandy Hook Elementary in DeHe is one of the smallest boys sheet describing what Rudy so much else about America kind of A m erican boyhood cember, parents and teachers in his grade, but his father's will become, a one-page dia- seemed unstable to him. Lately, meant to form a certain kind at Chanse'selementary school highest praise — the compli- gram labeled "Pork Cuts." as the Mount Airy economy of American man. There is a have been debating the basic ment Chanse seeks out and reA grown man understands continued to stutter and Presifamily rabbit hunt on Thanks- role of guns in America. Do peats — is that he carries him- what it means to live and to die dent Barack Obama urged new — knows that, as Chanse says, limits on gun ownership, Scott giving and a youth turkey hunt they encourage responsibility self like a "grown-ass man." on the Fourth of July. One gen- or recklessness? Do they fosA grown man opens the door "life is a cycle, and it's not alhad been craving even more eration passes its guns on to the ter relationships or endanger for women and does his home- ways going to be fair like when control, so he had been testnext, along with lessons about them? Are they part of our cul- work as soon as he walks into everybody who plays gets a shooting an AK-47. "Can I please see the Kimself-sufficiency and self-pro- ture or an outdated relic from the house. A grown man rides trophy." A grown man knows tection, life and death. Even as our past? an XR70 dirt bike just like his how to sight his target through ber?" Chanse said again. "I just the family's land dwindled over What arethe results of Amer- dad and drives four-wheelers a rifle's scope and how to man- want to look at it." the decades — from farms that ica's long r elationship with at a friend's ranch. A grown age the simultaneous surges of Scott took a drag of his ciga-
rette. "One day you'll have your own family to protect," he said. "You'll have your own gun for protection, and you can look at it whenever you want. Until then, I'm the sheriff."
Target practice The next a fternoon they drove away from the townhouse in Scott's truck after loading a rifle case into the back and ammo into the glove box. They traveled beyond the subdivisions and to a friend's 200-acre farm. They parked the truck on a frozen field and stepped out into blowing snow. Geese flew overhead. Trees lined the nearby ridge. It was empty and quiet except for the wind. Scott handed Chanse his great-grandfather's .22. "This gun is timeless," Scott said. They shook up four plastic bottles of Coke and placed them in the field as targets, 25 yards away. Chanse held the rifle up to his shoulder as Scott knelt behind him, repeating the advice he had been giving for years. "Stay steady. Breathe. Relax," he said. Chanse loaded a bullet into the chamber, shut his left eye and stared at the target through his right. He set his
finger on the trigger.
"Get 'er done," Scott said. Beyond the ridgeline, in the rest of America, the complicated debate over gun control continued. "We need to do a better job protecting our children," Obama was saying that day. "We need to protect our rights," an NRA spokesman was saying in response. Guns were either problems or solutions; weapons or tools; a core piece of America's identity or a threat to its future. But here on the farm, a 9year-oldsqueezed the tri gger of an old rifle and experienced a reaction more basic and instinctual. The butt of the rifle jerked into his shoulder. A hot shell ejected onto the ground. A crack echoed off the ridgeline as Coke and plastic exploded into the air. "Awesome," Chanse said. "Let's shoot another."
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©
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
Ben to au itvacationrenta s
I
LILY RAFF
McCAULOU rl
Healing with crafts and casts lan Teshima jokes that he didn't take a single breath as he tied his first fishing fly. One year later, he now finds the craft relaxing.
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
The city of Bend plans to audit vacation home rentals this spring to determine whether they are collecting city tourism taxes. The issue arose during a politically charged discussion of whether to raise the Bend tourism tax earlier this year. Hotel operators on the board of Visit Bend, the official city tourism promo-
tion agency, proposed an increase in the city hotel tax rate from 9 percent to 11 percent. City councilors discussed the issue Feb. 6 and decided not to ask voters to approve an increase in May. However, some people told city councilors they thought that many operators of single-family homes rented for vacation stays are not collecting the tourism tax. City officials said they
believe the majority of these vacation rental operators do collect the tourism tax, but they had not previously audited these rentals. Tourism lodging operators must register with the city and collect the tax. "We did a look onto vrbo. com that has vacation rentals and the first 30 that we saw that popped up all made mention of the city's tax, so it appears that most vacation
rentals, just based on that
inquiry, are passing along or attempting to pass along the tax," City Manager Eric King said Thursday. The audit will determine whether that is true, King said. The city also has a list of vacation home operators that collect the tax, which shows that roughly 130 properties are currently taxed. See Rentals /B2
— Lily Raff McCaulou is a columnist for The Bulletin. 541-617-7836, Iraff@bendbulletin.com
A Bend manwas indicted by a federal court late last month for al-
legedly filing fraudulent documents to obtain tax refunds to which he was not entitled, and attempting to retaliate
against federal employees, including the Secretary of the Treasury. According to the indictment, in 2008 and 2010, Mark T. Ellis filed four claims with the In-
knowing his claims were "false, fictitious and fraudulent." The IRS is-
sued Ellis one refund for more than $311,000, the indictment states. In 2010, the indictment alleges, Ellis filed false liens against the
Okinawa (Japan)," he said, "which
Again, he turned to fishing. This time, he wanted to help other veterans, too. On Friday, instead of telling the vets to "tie the thread off," Emery said "dog it off." The once-quiet room erupted with questions: What does that mean? Where did you come up with this? "It's an Army term," Emery said. Questions gave way to guffaws. "In the Air Force," one man said, "we have far less crude ways of saying that." "I was in the Army for 15 years and I never heard that before," said Kelly Davis. As the jokes rolled, so did spools of thread. D avis, who served three tours of duty in Iraq, said fly tying was a welcome distraction. "It keeps me focused," he said. Though he's never cast a fly rod, Davis said he looks forward to eating the fish he catches. Some of the others groaned. "Oh, no. Another fish-eater?" Servicebranches divide the group, leading to playful banter. So, it turned out, do opinions on catch and release. For Dick Coffman, an Air Force veteran who served in Vietnam, the tricky part wasn't learning any particular technique. "It's getting these meat hooks," he said, raising his large hands, "to do it right." Then again, producing perfect flies wasn't the point. "It gets me out of the house," he said. "And he gets to learn a new language," Kreft said, nodding to Emery. "I'll bet Dick knows some of my phrases,right?" Emery said. "I'm not admitting nothing without my lawyer," Coffman replied. The men laughed, their eyes fixed on their vises.
Bend manindicted in tax fraud
for tax refunds totalling nearly $900,000 while
too much concentration for the mind to wander, but not so much that it's overwhelming. That's why some local veterans find solace in it. Teshima's service in the Air Force, from 1972 to 1975, overlapped the end of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. "The closest I got to Vietnam was
sues bubbled back up," he added.
BRIEFING
ternal RevenueService
Like fly fishing, tying flies requires
was fine by me. I had friends who died in Vietnam." Teshima retired a couple of years ago anddidn'thave much todo.H e visited the Central Oregon Vet Center, where he came across Central Oregon Project Healing Waters. It's part of a national program for veterans and disabled active service members, to promote physical and emotional rehabilitation through fly fishing and fly tying. Every Friday afternoon, any veteran may drop in and tie flies. The group arranges fishing trips, too. In May, they'll fish the private Lake in the Dunes. In June, the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs has invited them to fish the tribal side of the lower Deschutes River. The program provides free rods, reels and fly-tying equipment. John Kreft, of Central Oregon Flyfishers, is not a veteran but volunteers with the program. "Just seeing these guys when they hook up on their first fish ... it's awesome," he said. During last week's fly-tying session, eight men each attempted to disguise a tiny metal hook pinched in a vise as a mayfly known as a bluewinged olive. They hunched over, using spools of thread to wind fur and feathers around the hooks. "When we came back (from Vietnam), we weren't ... treated real well," said Brad Emery, an Army veteran of the Vietnam War who helped found the local group. Emery credits his wife, hunting and fishing with helping him weather that rough period. "After retirement, some of those is-
www.bendbulletin.com/local
property of federal employees RonRobinson and Timothy Geithner,
then the Secretary of the Treasury. In 2011, Ellis allegedlyfiled another
lien, against the property of Jonathon Dittman, an IRS investigator. Ellis' next court date has not been set. — From staff reports
Photos by Scott Hammers l The Bulletin
Musher Kenzi Meyers and her team push for the finish near the end of a five-mile race at the Bachelor Butte Dog Derby. The races continue today at 8 a.m.
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON
it a itte
aw ower,
s e ers race Or t e iniS The dinatWanoga Sno-Park at8 a.m. Saturday was deafening — the sound of dozens upon dozens of straining at the leash for a chance to get out and run. Twenty-nine mushers, four skijorers, and more dogs than can be r ealistically counted took to t h e trails Saturday for the Bachelor Butte Dog Derby, the only sled dog race in Central Oregon this winter. Now in its fourth year, the twoday race continues today. Competitors will make a second lap around the course they completed Saturday, with the winners determined by their combined two-day time. Polly Riley, one of the race organizers, said conditions should be better today. With temperatures near 50 on Saturday, it was 40 degrees warmer than the dogs would prefer, she said, and the course was a bit on the soft side. "It's supposed to get below freezing tonight," she said "The trail should set up and if the groomer has an opportunity to go around and put a nice finish on the course, it should be fast." Dogs returning from a morning on the courseare far calmer than those who have yet to race. Fresh off a nine-mile sprint, the
nine dogs belonging to musher Jane Devlin of Bend sat tethered to her truck, alert but silent and star-
and immigrants. The bill passed the by a 286-138 margin, with 87 Republicans joining
199 Democrats in supporting it. All 138 votes against the bill were cast
by Republicans. U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Reauthorize Violence Race volunteers Chris Elevg and Lucas Carstens steady musher Laura Crocker's dogs as Crocker waits for her team to be called to the starting line of the Bachelor Butte Dog Derby on Saturday at Wanoga Sno-Park. ing off in the distance. At the tail- a timed course. Sled-dog racing is an expensive gate, Devlin filled nine dog dishes with servings of water and Glyco- u ndertaking, said m u sher T i m Charge, a dietary supplement inCurley of Sandy, noting that even tended to help them recover from if he manages to win his class, he'll nearly 40 minutes of exertion. be going home with nothing but a While the dogs lap up the post- trophy. "Some raceshave money, but the race treat, Devlin checks them over, inspecting their paws for scrapes money is usually spent by the time and feeling for tight muscles. you get there," Curley said. "This I n Bend, even th e d ogs a r e is a losing proposition all the way multi-sport athletes. A dog trainer around." by trade, Devlin said her sled team The racesare free for spectators, spends the summer competing in and begintoday at8 a.m. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, agility trials, racing around, over and through various obstacles on shammers~bendbulletin.com
YESTERDAY years, has been formed in one of the Central Oregon towns. No matter by what name these organizations of boys are known, they
should be encouraged by
angle, composed of boys
the older people in the small towns of our state. For one thing, these clubs tend to tie the boys to their home towns, and discour-
ranging in age from 12 to 20
age their going away to
The Knights of the Tri-
Senate version of the
lesbians, bisexuals and transgendered people
Mt. Bachelor breaksattendance records in '63
Boys clubs
passed in the House, the
in tribal communities,
dogs, all barking, whimpering and
For the week ending March 2, 1913
day. Unlike the version
prosecutions extends protections to women
The Bulletin
100 YEARS AGO
the Violence Against Women Act on Thurs-
bill that funds domestic violence prevention and
By Scott Hammers
Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
— The House ofRepresentatives passed the Senate version of a reauthorization of
seek their fortunes, as they say, in strange and distant places. If these bands of young men caninclude in their aims something to interest their members in land development and the growing of crops or livestock suited to the climate and soil, some communities will soon be leading the less progressive ones to better and more substantial things.
Local commercial bodies can well afford to go out of their way to help such unions of their town youth and assist them with suggestions and other ways more tangible. Anything that will keep the young men at home, and close to the land, is quite worthwhile not only in Central Oregon, but in every other section. See Yesterday /B3
Against WomenAct I/I/alden(R)................... Y Blumenauer (D)........... Y Bonamici (D)................Y OeFazio (D)...................Y Schrader(D) ................Y SeeWeek/B2
Well shot! reader photos • We want to see your best photos capturing local wildlife for another
special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at www.bendbulletin. com/wellshot/wildlife, and we'll pick the best for publication.
Submissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 9770e Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-035e, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news©bendbulletin.com, with"Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
E VENT
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvtv.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
AL E N D A R
TODAY
MONDAY
BACHELORBUTTE DOGDERBY: A trophy race for sled dogs and skijoring, with up to 30 dog teams; free for spectators; 8:30 a.m.; Wanoga Sno-park, Century Drive, Bend; www.psdsa.org. PIONEER QUEEN'SDINNER: Potluck meal in the museum events center features stories from Crook County Pioneer Queens; bring a dish and table service; free; 1 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-4473 I03. SPRING BOOKSALE: The Friends of the Bend Public Libraries hosts a bag sale featuring books, CDs, audio books and more; free admission, $4 and up per bag; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7047. KNOW SHAKESPEARE: WHO WERE SHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN?:Portland State University professor Amy Greenstadt explores Shakespeare' s most memorable women andhow theychallenged gender stereotypes of Elizabethan England; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. NOTABLES SWING BAND:The big band plays swing, blues, Latin, rock 'n' roll and waltzes; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-6397734 or www.notablesswingband. com. KEVIN EUBANKSAND STANLEY JORDAN:The guitar virtuosos perform; $32-$47 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
NO EVENTSLISTED.
TUESDAY KNOW SHAKESPEARE: SHAKESPEAREONSCREEN: A screening of the1996 PG-13 rated film "Hamlet"; free; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Surviving Progress," a documentary film about the implications of human progress; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.
WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: RIGOLETTO":Starring Diana Damrau, Oksana Volkova and Piotr Beczala in an encore performance of Verdi's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-3826347. THE BLACKBERRYBUSHES STRINGBAND:The Seattle-based alternative folk act performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. RYAN STILESANDFRIENDS: The improvisational comedian performs, with Northwest improv all-stars; $50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. JOHNNY OUTLAWANDTHE JOHNSONCREEKSTRANGLERS:
Rentals
city audits of tourism tax collections focused on hotels, fuContinued from B1 ture audits will also include a The city t y p ically audits sample of vacation homes. "I actually did check with tourism, or room tax, collections every three years. "Based staffand they said there are a on the direction from council, lot of small places that are paywe will be focusing on vaca- ing the tax, and so they think tion rentals, and kind of have that the vast majority of them the auditor specifically look at are," Capell said. that," King said. During the discussion about The last city audit of ho- whether to raise the tourism tel tax co llections, in 2 011, tax rate, "Some people said we found that many of the hotels shouldn't increase the tax unin a sample had collected the til we're sure everyone's paycorrect amount of tax. How- ing it," Capell said. The city ever, one hotel owed the city should make sure all tourism $37,000 and another owed the lodging operators pay the tax, city nearly $16,000, according Capell said, but the question of to the audit. whether to raise the tax rate is City Councilor Mark Capell a separate issue. said that although previous City Councilor Doug Knight
people; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. PALEYFEST:"THEWALKING DEAD":A pre-recorded QB Awith stars and producers from the television horror series, "The Walking Dead"; $15; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com.
fS 1' / Submitted photo
Kevin Eubanks performs with Stanley Jordan at 7:30 tonight at the Tower Theatre in Bend. The Portland-based country act performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.
minute presentations on a range of topics, each chosen by the presenter; SOLD OUT; 7p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St.; 541-317-0700 or www.ignitebend.com. THURSDAY NATHANIELTALBOTQUARTET: CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S The Portland-based folk artist performs; $10, $7 students; 7 SHOW:Featuri ngvendorsand a p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., variety of resources for outdoor Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. recreation, with a head and horns belfryevents.com. competition, a kidstrout pond, cooking demonstrations and more; "OKLAHOMA!":The Mountain View High School music and drama $10, $5 ages 6-16, free ages 5 and departments present the story younger, $15 for a two-day pass; noon-8p.m.;Deschutes County Fair of two cowboys in 20th Century & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Oklahoma Territory seeking the Way, Redmond; 503-246-8291 or hearts of the women they love; www.thesportshows.com. $8, $6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6 and younger; AUTHOR!AUTHOR!: Stephen 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Greenblatt, Pulitzer Prize winning Mountain View High School, 2755 author of "The Swerve" and "Will in the World: How Shakespeare became N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. Shakespeare" speaks;$20-$75;7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Bend "THE SHADOW BOX": Preview night High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541of Cascades Theatrical Company's 312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.org. presentation of the drama about IGNITE BEND:A series of fivethe lives of three terminally ill
said the city must ensure it treats "traditional hoteliers" and vacation homes equitably when it comes to collecting tourism taxes. Knight also has otherconcerns about singlefamily home vacation rentals. "I'm quite disturbed with the (vacation rental b y o w n er) scene, not just as it pertains to the (transient room tax), but the impact on neighborhoods and how it bumps up against the noise ordinance," Knight said. He has heard about problems related to these rentals at neighborhood meetings, Knight said. Zoning is generally restrictive in residential areas, but the city n onetheless allows vacation rentals that are com-
mercial enterprises, Knight said, and "I think it's a huge problem." Knight said he plans to raise these issues with the rest of the City Council, but he does not know when he will do that. Knight took office in January, and said he is still getting up to
speed. "What I would like to see at a minimum is some kind of conditional use requirement, because of that it would be a more stringent application process," Knight said. This would allow neighbors an opportunity to provide input on the proposed rental property, Knight said. — Reporter:541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
0700 or www.towertheatre.org. "OKLAHOMA!":The Mountain View High School music and drama departments present the story of two cowboys in 20th Century Oklahoma Territory seeking the hearts of the women they love; $8, $6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6 and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E.27th St.,Bend;541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. "PARANORMAN":A screening of the PG-rated 2012 film; free; 7:30 FRIDAY p.m.; Jefferson County Library, CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., SHOW:Featuri ng vendorsand a Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. variety of resources for outdoor jcld.org. recreation, with a head and horns "THE SHADOW BOX": Opening competition, a kids trout pond, night of Cascades Theatrical cooking demonstrations and more; Company's presentation of the $10, $5 ages 6-16, free ages 5 and drama about the lives of three younger, $15 for atwo-day pass; terminally ill people; with a noon-8p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair champagne and dessert reception; 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; Way, Redmond; 503-246-8291 or 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, www.thesportshows.com. 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., LATINO DANCE FESTIVAL: Learn Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. todancethe bachataand cumbia; cascadestheatrical.org. $5 minimum; donations to Latino DAVID HAAS:TheCatholic Club scholarships accepted; 2-7 composer performs; $10 suggested p.m.; Central Oregon Community donation; 7:30 p.m.,doors open at College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. 7 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic College Way, Bend; 541-318-3726. Church 8 School, 2450 N.E. 27th CASCADECHORALE:The group St., Bend; 541-280-9744 or www. stfrancisbend.org. performs classical works by Bach, Handel and Mendelssohn, under ELIOTLIPP:The Brooklyn-based the direction of James Knox; electronica artist performs, with free; 7 p.m.; Bend Church of the Nick Nyquil, Zebual, Prajekt and Nazarene, 1270 N.E. 27th St.; www. Codi Carroll; free; 9 p.m.; Liquid cascadechorale.org. Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., TRIVIA BEE:The Education Bend; 541-389-6999 or www. slipmatscience.com. Foundation for the Bend-La Pine Schools holds a trivia competition DIEGO'SUMBRELLA: The San between three-person teams; Francisco-based pirate polka band with hors d'oeuvres; ages 21 and performs; $8 plus fees in advance; older only; proceeds benefit the 10 p.m., doors open at 9 p.m.; The foundation; $21 plus fees; 7 p.m., Annex, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., doors open 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317p44p.biz.
Week
Obama nominated the former White House chief of staff on Jan.
Continued from B1
10, and Lewquickly passed avote by the Senate Finance Committee following his Feb. 13 confirmation
Less than two weeksafter
hearing. Theentire Senateap-
SenateRepublicans blocked Chuck Hagel's confirmation as
proved Lew by a 71-26 vote, with
defense secretary by defeating Vermont lndependent Sen.Bernie a cloture vote that would have Sanders joining 25 Republicans in endeddebateonhisnominaopposing the nomination. Three tion, enough Republicans Democrat senators did not vote. dropped their objections to
allow Hagel's nomination to proceed. Hageleasily earned
U.S. SENATEVOTE • Confirm Jack Lew Merkley (0) ........................... Y I/I/yden (D)............................. Y — Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin
a majority Tuesday, 58-41, in a straight up-and-down vote.
Four Republicans joined the Democratic majority, and all 41 no votes came from GOP members. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., did not vote.
U.S. SENATEVOTE • Confirm Chuck Hagel
Merkley (D) .................. I/I/yden (D)....................
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
Jack Lew, President
Obama's nominee to replace
For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.
CONGRESS
LEGISLATURE
U.S. Senate
Senate
• Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RonWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-5244 W eb:http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
• Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp,R-District27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 W eb:http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. JohnKitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, 0 1590regon State Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurerOstate.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosendlum, 0
1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasoncongerOstate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District55 (Crcok, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. GeneWhisttattt, R-District53 (portion of DeschutesCounty)
• Tony DeBone,R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©co.deschutes.or.us
CITY OF REDMOND 716 S.W.EvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706
City Council • Mayor GeorgeEndicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email: George.Endicott@ci.redmond .Ol'. tlS
• Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick@ci.redmond.or.us • Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.Centanni@ci.redmond.or.us • CamdenKing Phone:541-604-5402 Email: Camden.KingOci.redmond .or.us • Ginny McPherson Phone: to bedetermined Email: Ginny.McPherson©ci.redmond .Ol'. tlS
• Ed Onimus Phonet 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus@ci.redmond.or.us
520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR 97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561
~> <
secretary, did not provoke a
• David Assott Phone:503-913-7342
filibuster, and the Senate voted to confirm him Wednesday.
Email: dasson©ci.sisters.or.us • WendyHolzman Phone:541-549-8558 wholzman@ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone:541-549-2471 Email: bboyd@ci.sisters.or.us • Catherine Childress Phone:541-588-0058 Email: cchildress@ci.sisters.or.us • McKibbenWomack Phone:541-598-4345 Email: mwomack©ci.sisters.or.us
Natural Golden & GreenSapphires
HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (1 block West of Costco)
CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462
541-323-3011 • starks.com Sewing Machine Repair & Service
541-549-9388
City Council • KathyAgan Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kagan@ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kmulenex@ci.la-pine.or.us • Dott Greiaer Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: dgreiner©ci.la-pine.or.us
Send a Message of Support to Your Deployed Friend or Loved One
Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: dvarcoe©ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: smartinez@ci.la-pine.or.us
to sign up for a FREE care package. Care Packages sent monthly to our local, tri-county deployed service members or anyone with a Central Oregon connection.
• Datt Varcoe
CITY OF SISTERS
QIQ~+
Timothy Geithner as treasury City Council
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A Free Public Service
Orepon NewspetH:r
.~tr>k' ~
t uetiehera tteeoctatioo
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Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties,
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org
I
Phonei 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@co.deschutes .Qr.us
• Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@co.deschutes.or.us
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
PERSemployees get better benefits
AROUND THE STATE Life SentenCe —A Marion County prosecutor says a 30-yearold man has been sentenced to life in prison for murdering a Salem
and pay lessfor them, studysays The Associated Press PORTLAND Oregon public employees get better retirement benefits and pay less for them than counterparts in neighboring states, according to a Portland State University study. The study from the school's Center for Public Service aims to account for variations in retirement plans in O regon, Washington state and Idaho to compare threepublic employees: an accountant, a teacher and a police officer. It concluded that to get benefits in retirement that would be worth $1 million today, the Oregon workers would pay $160,000. Similar employees in
Washington and Idaho would
pay $370,000 to $560,000. An exception i n O r egon would be the 30 percent of public employees who make a 6 percent contribution. Their payments would b e a b o ut
$320,000. Employers "pick up" that contribution for the remaining 70 percent. A summary of th e study has been circulating in Salem, where the Legislature is considering proposals from Gov. John Kitzhaber and individual lawmakers to rein in costs. At issue are whether the proposals amount to breaking a contract and would be struck down by the state Supreme Court, and w h ether
"Employees have no financial skin in the
game." — Jim Green, deputy director of the Oregon School Boards Association they are fair. A union leader said in an email to The Oregonian that they would be unfair because employees have traded pay for pension benefits during contract negotiations. "For decades, Oregon's public workers have paid for their PERS benefits through every
paycheck by way of markedly
man in 2011.Deputy District Attorney Matt Kemmysays Nicky Dave Chavez was sentenced Friday in Circuit Court after pleading no contest to charges that included aggravated murder and kidnapping. The
sentence carries a mandatory minimum of 30years before Chavezis
lowered wages," wrote Heather Conroy, executivedirector of Local 503 of the Service Employees International Union. "A secure reti rement through PERS is the promise the state of Oregon has made year after year; to revoke that promise when retirees most need it is irresponsible and immoral." Employer groups said the magnitude of the differences was stark. "What this shows is that Oregon has the richest benefits, and employers are bearing the cost," said Jim Green, deputy directorof the Oregon School Boards Association. "Employees have no financial skin in the game."
eligible for parole. Police said Chavez and another man lured 23-yearold David Polanco to an apartment on Oct. 16, 2011, bound him with
duct tape, robbed himand shot him several times. POliCe OffiCer PayOut —A federal jury has awarded a former sergeant $750,000 in a lawsuit over his departure from the Roseburg police force. The Roseburg News-Review reports that Gregrey Fetsch argued the city didn't give him a chance to clear his name before forc-
ing him to quit and then madepublic the results of an internal investigation into his conduct. The investigation cleared him of wrongdoing but concluded he'd been dishonest during the investigation. A state
board declined to revokeFetsch's law enforcement license. POt arroStS —Oregon State Police say they found13 pounds of marijuana in the trunk of a cardriven by aWashington state man near Klamath Falls. The driver, Samuel Alcalan of Yakima, Wash., was
cited and released. Oneof his passengers, Mario Serrano-Lopez, of Wapato, Wash., wasbooked in the Klamath County Jail. Eachfaces one charge of unlawful possession and distribution of a controlled
substance. — From wire reports
Crime rises inGrants Passafter lossof timber subsidies, budgetsarecut The Associated Press GRANTS PASS — Crime is up and prosecutions are down in Josephine County and the city of Grants Pass since deep cuts to the jail and the district attorney'soffice were forced by voterswho refused toraise their taxes to make up for the expiration of a federal timber
subsidy.
Yesterday Continued from B1
Outlook on irrigation improvements bright Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Howard returned to their home at Deschutes last week, after a two month Eastern trip. Sailing from San Francisco, they touched at Central American points of interest and were on the Isthmus of Panama for a number of days and thence proceeded to New York and Columbus, Ohio where Mr. Howard had business with the Eastern capitalists interested in the Central Oregon Irrigation Company of which he is
manager. "Satisfactoryarrangements for financing local irrigation improvements were m ade," said Mr. Howard on Saturday. "I believe that we shall be able to accomplish a great deal, and I also am confident that this will prove the best season, from all standpoints, that we and the settlers have yet had. Already an excellent sale for lands is developing and with new acreage tobe reclaimed the prospects are excellent." While the exact plans for development work were not yet matured, they probably will be ready for announcem ent w i t hi n a co u pl e o f weeks.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 2, 1938
Lone survivor of women's temperance group On the day before Christmas, 1873, 70 women met in a church in Hillsboro. They read the 123rd Psalm and
sang hymns. Then they did something extremely unusual for women of their day — they launched a movement. This was the Women's Temperance Crusade, reorganized ten years later by Frances Willard to become the Women's Christian Temperance Union which has spread all over the world. Today, more than 65 years after the little meeting in the Hillsboro church, only one of the original 70 founders is still alive. She is Mrs. Jenny Duffy, 82 years old, who still lives in Hillsboro. Mrs. Duffy is in good health, does some traveling, and still is intensely interested in current affairs and particularly in the temperance movement. Two other Hillsboro women, Mrs. Elizabeth Leslie and Mrs. Elizabeth Harsha, who attended the original meeting, are still alive. They were just children, however, when the
T he Grants P ass D a i ly criminal justice system. "We're seeing increased Courier reports that burglaries were up 5 0 p ercent in crime," Henner said. "Our ofGrants Pass and 45 percent ficers are saying they're havin the rest of the county in ing more hostile and violent 2012, compared to the previ- encounters w i t h s u s pects, ous year. Prosecutions were who are c hallenging them down 42 percent. and fighting." Grants Pass Public Safety H enner added t h a t t h e D irector Jo e H e nner s a i d numbers are likely to get even the county is seeing a failing worse.
Midway through last year, deep cuts affected jail, prosecution and rural patrol services, plus juvenile department services. "A full year (of statistics) likely w o u ld show greatercall increases," Henner said. Liquor store owner JackIngvaldson said there is "anarchy in the alleys" of downtown.
meeting was held. The W.C.T.U. is still strong in Hillsboro with 115 members. One of its leaders, Miss Mary Cowman, feels certain that the nation one day will have a b solute p r o hibition
the clutteredranch grounds and saw only the potential of the lake. What he envisioned was a place where rainbow trout would gorge themselves on insects, and ducks and geese would come to nest and rest on their annual flights. Scott and a p artner purchased the ranch in August 1985, marking the beginning of a costly and time-consuming effort to make the ranch into the fish and wildlife haven that Scott believed was possible, Scott, who has since bought out his partner, immediately
again. "The liquor traffic cannot be controlled," she says, "it must be prohibited."
Skyliners add slalom to Sunday tournament events An extra event, a mass slalom race for junior skiers, was added today to the Skyliners tournament program for Sunday afternoon. The race will preceed the class A and class B ski jumping on Skyline hill, in which several former northwest champions will compete among the leading ski jumpers of the Pacific Northwest. The junior slalom race, in which about 25 of the best y oung skiers of B end w i l l come down the slalom course in a group, is scheduled for 1 p.m. Forty minutes later, the ceremonies dedicating the big ski jump, in use for the first time this weekend, will begin and at 2 p.m. the jumping contest will start.
T he B end C h a mber o f Commerce has asked all local m erchants and salespeople to wear an item of ski clothing on Friday and Saturday, as a local tie-in with the carnival. The registration for a free $100 gift certificate for ski wear or ski equipment has been set up invarious merchants' stores. A winner will b e chosen from among all college students during the Four Freshmen concert Saturday night at the Bend Senior High School auditorium.
Records broken in highly successful ski carnival
Records were piling up all over the place after the Seventh Annual I ntercollegiate Winter Carnival in Bend last weekend — m os t s uccessful in the history of the Portland State College-sponsored event. With three days of gorgeous ski weather, carnival attendance recordswere estimated at upward of 3,000. But that was just the beginning. Bachelor B u tt e e n j oyed its biggest weekend in h i story with an estimated 10,204 flocking to the ski area Friday, Ole Tverdahl sets mark Saturday and Sunday. on skyline hill Saturday's attendance of Ole Tverdahl, of S eattle, 4,515 broke the previous onewon th e S k y l iners m ajor day record of 3,100 set Dec. 31, awards in the first ski tour1962. nament on the new jump. He Y et, d e spite t h e hug e placed first in the class A ski crowds, ski accidents were jump and also won the special held to a minimum and Chief award for the best single jump of Police Emil Moen praised of the day, 211 feet. the young ski enthusiasts for Second went t o H e r mod their outstanding behavior. Baake of L eavenworth Ski In fact, Moen is so happy Club and third to Helge Sath- over the conspicuous lack of er, also of Leavenworth. Lief trouble by visiting students Flack of Seattle placed fourth, that he intends to write a letter Hjalmar Hvam of the Cascade of gratitude to Portland State Ski Club fifth and Olaf Skjer- College. saa of the Skyliners sixth.
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 2, 1963
Winter ski carnival gets under way on Friday
He burned th e d i l apidated buildings and hauled off the cars and other garbage around the ranch. Now a double-wide mobile home is the only building on the entire ranch. Scott also drilled a second a rtesian well an d t h e t w o wells together produce about 2 million gallons per d ay. There now are two lakes on the property, which is not far from Ana Reservoir, a desert impoundment fed by artesian springs. He also purchased three t housand ra i n bo w tr o u t and stocked his two l akes, which held only about 50 fish when he started work on the project. Today, after more than 2'/~ years of work, the ranch is close to becoming the ideal place to grow trophy trout and provide nesting areas for waterfowl that Scott envisioned when he first walked on the ranch.
It's the waterand a iot more
Once it was just another "It's the largest intercolle- desert junkyard, a few weathgiate winter carnival held in ered shacks surrounded by America!" the rusting remains of a couThat's the word from Harple dozen wrecked cars. vey LaZelle, who is handling Steve Scott first showed up publicity as Portland State's at the 480-acre ranch in the '63 spectacle opens Friday on High Desert near Summer the snowy slopes of Bachelor Lake in the summer of 1985. Butte and carries through the He saw something in the runweekend with a jam-packed down place that most of us schedule of activities. would have missed amid the Members of the Willamette wreckage of the abandoned University team r olled into ranch operation. Bend this morning and regIt was the water. istered at the Pilot Butte Inn. Cool artesian water gushed T eams from more than 2 5 out of a well in a steady flow, colleges and universities are creating a small desert lake shortly to follow. An estimated and a welcome patch of green 2,000students from schools as in t h e o t h e rwise b a r r en distant as California and Brit- desert. ish Columbia are expected Scott, a Bend realtor and an during the big weekend. avid outdoorsman, lookedpast
Last year, about 1,400 cases were prosecuted versus 2,400 prosecutions t h e p r e v ious year. "I lost four attorneys (out of nine)," he said. "And that's not a full year, either. I didn't lose those attorneys until July 1." Since then, a full-time and part-time attorney have been rehired.
lES SCHNIB
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25 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 2, 1988
" I'm putting i n g a tes t o keep them out," he said. "I'm a pretty compassionate guy. I donate. But at what time does one run out of patience?" At the District Attorney's Office, about 1,000 fewer cases were prosecuted last year, compared with the previous year, according t o D i s trict Attorney Stephen Campbell.
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
BITUARIES Marilyn Johnson
DEATH NOTICES
llov. 27, 1924 - Feb.10, 2013
Barbara L. Blackwood, of Bend April 4, 1932 - Feb. 23, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No Services will be held, per Barbara's request. Contributions may be made to:
Heart 'n Home Newberry Hospice, P.O. Box1888, La Pine, OR 97739; (541) 536-7399.
Billie Loretta Butler, of Bend Jan. 27, 1929 - Feb. 25, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: No Services will be held at this time.
Connie M. (Turman) Straly, of Bend Feb. 27, 1938 - Feb. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held at the LDS church (High Desert Ward), located at 60800 Tekampe Road on Monday, March 4, 2013, at 11:00 AM followed by a reception. A Graveside Service will be held after at Pilot Butte Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org, Bend LDS Church, High Desert Ward.
Ivan "Ike" L. Wilson, of Sunriver Oct. 29, 1917 - Feb. 25, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Private Urn Placement on the family farm will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, 541-382-5882.
Julie Anne Chamberlain, of Bend Feb. 17, 1948 - Feb. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: Private Family Services will be held at a later date.
Thomas Cliff Negus, of Bend Nov. 24, 1948 - Feb. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: No services will be held.
Mildred Gladys Eubank, of Bend Aug. 23, 1928 - Feb. 16, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: A private urn committal service was held at Roseburg National Cemetery in Roseburg, Oregon.
Virginia Leah Day Sept. 11, 1919- Feb. 6, 2013 V irginia L e a h D ay of R edmond, O R, p ass e d away peacefully on February 6, 2013. She was 93. V irginia w a s b o r n S e p t ember 11, 1919, i n H a r ney County, OR, to James a nd L e f a Williams. Virginia attended Redmond Union High School. S he w a s married to Flovd Virginia Day William Day in 1938 and they lived i n O r e g on , O hi o , and T exas during t h ei r m a n y years of marriage. V irginia w a s a l l a b o u t family. She loved to go and d o everything w i t h t h e m . She never got her dr iver's l icense, so sh e r e l ied o n others to drive her around. She ha d m a n y i n t e r ests a nd h o b b i e s i n c l u d i n g: gardening, fi shing, c ampmg, and shopping. Her favorite thing t o d o t h o u gh was going a n d w a t c h i ng h er k i d s a n d gr a n d k i d s lay sports. She was also a uge Elvis Presley fan. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n d eath b y h er h us b a n d , F loyd W i l l i a m D a y ; h e r b rothers, D o n W i ll i a m s and Jess (Bud) W i l l i ams, a nd s o n s-in-law, D e n n i s L enaburg an d J e sse L e e Jones. She is survived by h er da u g h t ers , Sh a r o n ( Day) L e n a burg , L i v i n g ston, TX, and Judee (Day) Jones, Redmond, OR; sist ers, D or i s Tr au t m a n , Moses Lake, WA, Darlene M orrison, N e w p o rt , O R , a nd Ca r o l e Han c o c k , Powell Butte, OR . g r a ndchildren, Lori (Jamie) Ryburn, Onalaska, TX, Cindy (Curt) Sim m o n s , Red mond, OR , C a r y ( K r i s t i) Lenaburg, Alvin, TX, Kelly G illmann, R e dmond, O R , Kevin (Tammy) Lenaburg, L eague C i t y , T X, Juh e Jones, Redmond, OR, and Jodie Desanto, Redmond, OR. She i s a l s o s u r vived by 15 great-grandchildren and ei g h t g r ea t - g reatgrandchildren. A graveside service was held in h e r h o n or , Saturday, February 9, 2013. Any contributions may be made t o V e t erans H o s p ital o f Bend, OR.
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M arilyn B e r n ic e M e t t a Johnson p as s e d aw ay p eacefully on Su n d a y , February 10, 2013, in Bend, O regon at th e ag e o f 8 8 . S he was a n a c t iv e m e m ber of Grace Reformed Presbyterian Church. Marilyn w as b o r n in Dwight, Illinois, to B ess a n d ~ .: ~ > ! James Metta. Aft er h er MarilYn B. mother's premature death, her sister, Jean, moved to Los Angeles, CA to live with M a r garet and Wayne Mulford, their 2nd cousins, o n e g e n e r ation r emoved, w h i l e M a r i l y n remained with he r f a t her, James, in Illinois. After she w as g r o w n , sh e , to o, moved to LA to be with the Mulfords. Marilyn w o r k ed f or G - 2 ( m i l i t ar y i n t e l l i ence) where she met her i fe-long fr i e n d , M ar g e H arris, and i t w a s d u r i n g this time that she met and married H. D . J o hnson in 1948. A fter l i v i n g br i e f l y i n N ew M e x ic o a n d Ok l a h oma, M ar i l y n m ov e d back to California with her son, B i l l , w h e re she worked for Texaco, Inc, in the legal department until h er r etirement. Sh e t h e n r e-located t o S a n t a B a r bara, CA, to be close to her s on. Shortly after Bill an d his wife, Susan, moved to Bend, Marilyn joined them there in 2003. M arilyn wa s a k i n d a n d l oving person with a w o n derful sense of humor, and w as always ready w it h a g ood j ok e o r a sn a p p y c omeback. W h erever s h e w ent, people w ere d r aw n to the twinkle in her eyes a nd he r g e n erous s p i r i t . She loved watching movies, time spent with family and friends, her pets, good c onversation an d t h e f e l lowship of her church and bible study. She i s su r v i v e d an d missed by her son, Bill and d aughter-in-law , Su sa n , Bend, OR; her sister, Jean V an N e st , R e d ding, C A ; and her nephews, Jim Van Nest, R e dding, C A an d Gary V a n N e s t , S e a ttle, WA. Memorial services will be held a t G r a c e R e f o rmed Presbyterian c h u r ch , at 62162 Richardson H amby R d., ( 541) 3 8 2 -1572, o n Saturday, M arch 9 , 2 0 13, at 1:00 p.m. In lieu of flowers, contributions t o H osp i c e of R edmond (OR), would b e a ppreciated; w ww .r e d mondhospice.org. N iswonger-Reynolds F u neral Home is h onored to s erve the f a m i ly . Pl e a s e sign our online guest book at ww w .n i s w onger-reynolds.com. 541-382-2471.
Smith's memoirsrecalledordinary life By Paul Vitello
FEATURED OBITUARY
New York Times News Service
S ylvia S m i t h who dropped out of high school at 15, never married, lived most of her life in London rooming houses, never had a great adventure orsuffered a great misfortune, and never read books by most accounts — began writing her memoirs in her late 40s, when illness and a government disability pension had allowed her to quit the last of a long series of secretarial jobs, most of them as a temp. It was an unlikely foundation for a literary career. Just as unlikely was the literary stir she created with her first book, "Misadventures," published in 2001 when she was 55 after years of work and
hundreds of rejection letters. The book, a plainly written, deadpan chronicle of an ordinary life, seemed to push the allowable boundaries of ordinary, entering an edgeof-space world where criti cs quarrel over l iterary metaphysics. Reading "Misadventures," they were divided over whether they saw a bad joke or a kind of outsider-art masterpiece in a passage like this: "Early in December, Carol asked me, 'What day is Christmas?' I replied, 'I don't know.' The following morning she told me, 'Christmas Day is on the 25th of December.' I replied, 'I know that, but I thought you meant what day
of the week.' She didn't believe me." One critic said the "unremitting banality" of "Misadventures" had put "another nail in the coffin of our cultural life." In the other camp, reviewers said Smith had written an existential classic. Her literary celebrity was short-lived, and not very lucrative. After a round of television appearances and interviews, the public gradually accepted that she was neither a publisher's gimmick nor a literary hoaxer but rather exactly who she said she was — a former office temp who wanted to be a writer — and the debate over her work died down. She died on Feb. 23 in a hospital outside London, at 67. I
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ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Armando Trovajoli, 95: Italian who composed music for some 300 films. Died last week in Rome. — From wire reports
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Gail DeForrest Sigmund Gail DeForrest Sigmund, 85, died February l9, 2013 at his home in Klamath Falls. Gail was born January 9, 1928, in Hettinger, North Dakota to Jacob E Ethel Kammerdeiner Sigmund. His family lived there Until he was 9 when they moved to Bend, Oregon. At the age of 18, Gail joined the Army Air Corps. He married his loving wife Marilyn Hanshew on December 26, 1950 in Bend, Oregon. In 1959 they moved to Klamath falls where they raised a family of three boys and one girl. Gail will be rememberedmost by his gentleness and kindness. His favorite activities were family reunions, writing poetry and playing cards and board games.Gail enjoyed fishing, playing golf and he sang in a BarberShop Quartet. Gail is survived by his loving wife Marilyn, sister Donna Hull of Bend, OR, children Randall Sigmund of Henderson, NV, Robert Sigmund of Redmond, OR,Jennifer Gribling-Brown of Bend, OR and Nicholas Sigmund of Klamath Falls, OR, l 7 grandchildren and l 7 great grandchildren as well as multiple nieces and nephews. Gail and his sister were the only surviving children of Jacob and Ethel.
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David William Holland (1941-2013) In 1941, David William Holland was born in Laramie, Wyo., to David Holland, Sr. and Sylvia (Dwehus) Holland. From that moment Until his accident Feb. 10, 2013, while S.C.U.B.A. diving in Cozumel, Mexico, he pursued a love affair with the natural world. A Celebration of Dave's Life will take place Saturday, March 9, 2013 at1:00 PM at the Aspen Lakes Golf Course, located between Redmond and Sisters. A reception will immediately follow. A public visitation will be held on Saturday, March 9, 2013 at 10:30-11:30 AM at Autumn Funerals, located at 485 NW Larch Avenue, in Redmond. On May13th, 1966, David married a kind young woman named Rita Thompson, right before be graduated from CSU with a B.S and an M.S. in Economics. He always wanted good answers, whether it was how marketforces drove local economies or why Jim Crow laws existed at all. In1963, he and three friends were arrested in Montgomery, Alabama, while marching with the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. David's love for explanations and for the natural world quickly blended. He defended his doctorate in Agricultural Economics at Oklahoma State University in 1972, working first at the University of Kentucky and then joining the faculty at Washington State University in 1973 in Pullman. Graduate students knew him to be a demanding-yet-loyal mentor. Professionally, David Understood the economic development of small communities in the American west, as well as overseas, in a way that few did. He targeted projects that could be used immediately by regUlar people. He was known for his honest and meticulous work, especially when his conclusions were inconvenient or politically explosive. In 2008, David and Rita retired to a wonderful community of close friends in Redmond. Here David continued his pursuits. He continued battling lovingly with the Spanish language, earned a Master Gardener certification, fished more rivers, and spent sunny afternoons skiing at Mt. Bachelor while Rita read in the lodge. Indeed, David was accompanied everywhere by Rita, his beloved travel companion and sparring partner. Rita made him delicious healthy food. He took her around the world. David was never satisfied with easy answers. He was always willing to meet someone in the middle if they were ready to work hard. He once hooked three steelhead in one afternoon on the Grande Ronde River. He was a strong person. He will be deeply missed by many, including his loving wife, Rita Holland of Redmond, OR; son Josh Holland of Santa Fe, NewMexico; daughters Julia Watters of Seattle, WA, and Sarah lhusband Mark) Diestler of Highlands Ranch, CO. David is also survived bytwo grandchildren, Jacob Watters and Morgan Diestler. Other survivors include David's brother, Paul (wife Judy) Holland, of Reno, NV; and his sister Marsha lhusband Virgil) Miller of Colorado Springs, CO. Memorial contributions in David's memory may be made to: Oregon Public Radio, www.opb.org, Amnesty International USA, www.amnesty.org, or to the Deschutes Land Trust, www.deschuteslandtrust.org. Autumn Funerals of Redmond is in charge of the arrangements, (541j504-9485.www.autumnfunerals.net.
MARCH 09, I 9 2,6 - FEB. 2,2,, 2,OI3 Towner Menefee was born on March 9, 1926 ar the Wilcox Maternity hospital in Portland, he was not alone. Towner's twin sister Cornelia quickly followed. They joined their older brother Bruce andwere raised by their mother, Cornelia Cook Menefee,a force to be reckoned with, as well as by their father, PLMenefee. Towner's outlook on life was one of unbounded enthusiasm. He regaled his children with storiesfrom his youth with his Riverdale School friends lwho remain close to this day), to boarding school on Vancouver Island, B.C. (Brentwood Colle e), a short stint in the arm,y and then briefl yattended Claremont Men's College. Towner returnedto Portland where he married Elizabeth Cronin and together they raised sevenchildren. Weekends for Towner were spent in the outdoors, hiking or taking pack trips into the ThreeSisters Wilderness area, climbing mountainsor kayaking down rivers. In the mid 1960s, Towner happened upon property near Tumalo with a spectacularview of the Three Sisters and Mount Bachelor. The Quail Farm became theMenefee family's refuge from Portland. Winter weekendsand summers, the Quail Farm was a hub of activity as friends gravitated to the Tumalo area with their own families. Throughoutthoseyears, while raising an active family, Towner gave his children the gift of unconditional love and his passion for the outdoors. His children remember him as a kind, thoughtful and humble man, with an irreverent senseof humor. Towner had alove for the John Day River area. In 1970, Towner and a group of friends purchased Twickenham LLC. The ranch was two miles up from the Twickenham bridge. Strong bondswere forged through the adventures spent with family and friends exploring this area. In addition, many deep friendshipswereformed with the ranchers and farmersfrom the Twickenham valley. This was one of Towner's favorite places and throughout his life he visited often.
Towner was a magnet for his children'scronies and after his divorce he was also a magnet for Nancy James Zeppa, whom heconsidered the love ofhis life. Nancy readily embraced Towner, his gaggle of children and grandchildren as well as hisIoy of life and adventurous spirit. Towner found in Nancy a soul mate and traveling companion. Nancy's love and devotion was never more evident than in the last few years as she selflessly and compassionately cared for Towner as his health declined. In the 1960s, Towner was a board member of the Catlin Gabel School and one of the founding trustees of the NW Outward Bound School. He was also a member of the Skyline Trail Riders and the PinaforeInvestment Group. Over the years, his volunteer involvement also included theJuvenile Diversion program in both Vort Townsend and Vancouver, Washington, and the Portland ProvidenceHospice Bereavement program. Towner was anactive member ofTrinity Episcopal Cathedral where he served on the endowment committee and as an usher. Towner issurvived by his wife, Nancy JamesMenefee; seven children, Sally Mooreof Portland, Caroline Sheahan of Edwards, CO, Cookie Lafferty (Michaell of Eugene,Betsy Rickles (Norml of Portland, ]ohn (Sheilal of Bend, Christine (Wesl of Bend, Veter (Ginnisl of Bend; 17 grandchildren and hvo great-grandchildren. Towner was predeceasedby his son,]ohn Brian, in 1959. A servicewill be held on Wednesday, March 6 at 11 a.m. at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, Portland, OR. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to The Trinity Episcopal Cathedral Outreach Program, 147 NW 19th Avenue, Portland, OR 97209, and the Oregon Historical Society.Pkase sign the onlineguest book at wwworegoniivecomlobits
SUNDAY, MARCH3,2013 • T HE BULLETIN B S
OREGON NEWS
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an s uIs non et a o tions Federal grazing fee
By Jeff Barnard
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The AssociatedPress
GRANTS PASS — As long as wolves have been making their comeback, biologists and ranchers have had a decidedly Old West option for dealing with those that develop ataste for beef: Shoot to kill. But for thepastyear,Oregonhasbeen a"wolf-safe"zone, withranchers turning to more modern, nonlethal w ay s t o p r o tect livestock. Whilethe number of wolves roamingthestatehas goneup, livestock kills haven't — and now conservation groups are hoping Oregon can serve as a model forother Westernstates workingtoreturnthepredator to the wild. "Once the easy option of killing wolves is taken off the table, we've seen reluctant but
responsible ranchers stepping up," said Rob Klavins of the advocacy group Oregon Wild. "Conflict is going down. And wolf recovery has got back on track." The no-kill ban has been in place since September 2011. That's when the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced it planned to kill two members of the Imnaha wolf pack i n n o r t heastern W allowa C ounty f o r ta k ing livestock. Conservation groups sued, arguing t h at rules allowing wolves to be killed to reduce livestock attacks did not comply with the stateEndangered SpeciesAct. The Oregon Court of Appeals stepped in, prohibiting wolf kills while the two sides work to settle, although ranchers who catch wolves in the act of killing livestock may still shootthem. At the end of 2012, wolf numbers in the state had risen to 46 from 29 in 2011, according to state fish and wildlife o fficials. M e anwhile, f o u r cows and eight sheep were killed last year by two separatepacks, while 13cowswere killedbyonepackin2011. W allowa C o u nt y c a t t l e rancher Karl Patton started
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TheAssociatedPress RENO, Nev.— The federal grazing fee will stay at the minimum allowable level for a seventh consecutive year, a development that has rekindled a longstanding debate in the West between conservationistsandranchers. U.S. Bureau of Land Management and ForestService officials last month said the fee of $1.35 per animal unit month will remain in effect this year for ranchers who hold some 26,000 grazing permits on public lands in more than a dozen Western states. The formula used to determine the grazing fee, set by Congress in 1978, isbased on market conditions, including private grazing lease rates, beef cattle prices andthe cost
and a populargame animal — startincreasing, he said. The Idaho numbers show "you can't manage wolves usOregonDepartmentofFishandWildlife/TheAssociatedpressfilephoto Wolf coordinator Russ Morganexamines a female wolf pupjust fit- ing conventional wisdom and ted with a radio collar in2010innortheastern Oregon. For the past assumption," said S u zanne year, Oregonhas beena wolf-safezone, where a temporarycourt Stone of Defenders of Wildorder bars wildlifeofficials fromkilling wolves thatkill livestock. life in Idaho. "Using these old While wolf numbers have risen to 46, the number oflivestockkills archaic methods of managing hasnot. predators by just killing them isnot working." In "no-kill" Oregon, ranchgiving nonlethal methods a open range. ersdisagree. Wallowarancher try in 2010, after he fired off Seen as a scourge on the Dennis Sheehy puts bells on hispistolto chase off apackof landscape, wolves werenearly his cattle to help scare away wolves in a pasture filled with wiped out across the Lower48 wolves. He also spends more cows and n ewborn calves. by the 1930s.In 1995,the fed- time with his herd, and cleans State wildlife officials proeral government sponsored up old bone piles. Neverthevided him with an alarm that the reintroduction of wolves less, he believes a kill option erupts with bright lights and into Y e llowstone N a tional should always be on the table the sound of gunshots when Park and central Idaho. They for wolves that prey on livea wolf bearing a radio-track- eventually spread to Montana, stock. The 2011 ban, he said, ing collar treads near. He also Wyoming, Oregon, Washing- "really upset people around staked out fladry at calving ton and California. here." time. The long strings of red W ith w ol f n u m bers a p Patton has never lost a cow plastic flags flutterinthe wind proaching 1,800, the federal while using the fladry and to scare away wolves. The government dropped Endan- alarms. But two were killed flags fly from an electrically gered Species Act protection ontheopenrange andoneina charged wire that gives off a in 2011 in the Northern Rock- large pasture where such projolt to predators that dare to ies,eastern Oregon and east- tectionmeasures areimpractitouchit. ern Washington, and turned cal. He has also found tracks T he r a ncher p u t 7 , 0 00 over recoverymanagement to showing wolves crossed the miles on his ATV spending the states. fladry and walked among his more time with his herd, and While ranchers are not cows without, for some reacleaned up old carcasses that happy with the wolf come- son, attackingthem. put the scent of meat on the back, the wider public is. A He still believes the only wind. And state wildlife offi2011 survey for the Washing- way to deal with wolves that cialstexthimnightly, advising ton Department of Fish and attackcattleistokillthewhole whether a wolf with a satellite Wildlife found 74.5 percent of pack. "It's frustrating, more than GPS tracking collar is nearby. Washington residents believe "None of this stuff is a sure it acceptable for wolves to re- anything, because we have cure," said Patton, who worcolonizetheirstate. our hands tied," he said. eYou ries the fladry w il l l ose its Wolf advocateshopetheOr- can kill a man (who) comes effectivenessonce wolves be- egon experiment can spread into your house to rob you. come accustomed to it. Such elsewhere, especially Idaho, Wolves are more protected m easuresalso can'tbe used in which had 746 wolves in 2011. thanpeople."
Cage-free eggs find pereh
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in a changing food market By Eric Mortenson TheOregonian
CANBY — A red glow from LED lighting bathes Greg Satrum and his father, Gordon, as they slowly lead the way through a sea of chickens. The hens, offshoots of th e classic Rhode Island Reds, warily cluck and part; some instinctivelyhoptothe safetyof perch pipes that run the length of their new $1 million henhouse. They settle quickly enough, however, and soon approachto inspect visitors and make exploratory pecks at rings, pens andnotepads. The chickens' new home is state-of-the-art, one of two new RossWilliamHamilton/Theoregonian henhouses built t o i n crease Greg Satrum, co-owner of cage-freeegg production at Willamette Egg Farms in Canby Willamette Egg Farms. inspects the productionline. The construction represents Willamette Eggs is expanding a significant pivot for Oregon's its cage-freehenhouses.
largest egg producer, and is a response to risingconsumer demand as well as legislative changesonthehorizon. Most of W i l l amette Egg Farms' production wil l s t i ll come from hens in conventional — a n d c o ntroversial — cages. But the 40,000 hens roaming each of the newhouses, oneinfulloperationandthe other nearlyso, will have three levelsof perches, nestingboxes inwhichtolayeggsandground space to move around. Hens cannot go outside — but they can hop down onto dirt floors to socialize, flap their wings andscratchthedirt. The red spectrum produced by energy-efficient LED lightingcalmsthehens,andthesystemisprogrammedto simulate agradualdaybreakandsunset. Feed and water are dispensed automatically, and c onveyor beltsremove 95 percent of the manure. The nesting boxes have gently sloped floors, allowing eggs to roll out the rear forcollection. The company, established in 1934 and still family owned, produces about 1 million eggs a day in Oregon and another 600,000 daily at a site in Mo-
steady for 7th year
In 2012, hunters and wildlife agents killed 422 wolves, comparedwith296for2011. Sheep and cattle kills, meanwhile, went up from 192 in 2011 to 341 in2012. Idaho Fish and Game biologist Craig Whitesaidit"raised eyebrows" onboth sides of the wolfdebate whenthelivestock killsrose even as more wolves were killed. Previously the trend had been for livestock kills to go down as wolf kills went up. The state plans to continue killing wolves until e lkherds — theirp™ ' y p r e y
ses Lake, Wash. With the new houses, the company's cagefree production will amount to about 8percent of its total. It willincreasethatpercentageas its oldbuildings arephased out andreplacedbymorecage-free facilitiesovertime. Nationally,cage-freeproduction was 5.7percent of the total as ofMarch 2012,according to theAmerican Egg Board. "I have to expect it will continue to grow," said Greg Satrum, whoisco-owner withhis father and the third generation torunthecompany. Sharon Harmon, executive directoroftheOregon Humane Society, saidthe Satrums areat the leading edge of an industry that recognizes that the public
largely opposes tight confinementof farmanimals. But it is egg producers who havetobearthecostof change, and it can't be accomplished overnight,shesaid. "We want better care for hens now, but that's an incredibly expensive infrastructure to change over," Harmon said. "Credit is due Willamette Eggs for standing up and saying the
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atedlessthan one-sixth ofthe expenditures needed by the government to manage grazingonpubliclandsin2004.
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of livestock production. An AUM is the amount of forage a cow and her calf can eat in onemonth. Katie Fite, biodiversity director of the Western Watersheds Projectbasedin Hailey, Idaho, saidthe feeisunrealistically low because it's set by an outdated formula that allows ranchersto pay far less than they would for grazing onprivateland. The fee falls well short of covering government costs to manage grazing, she said, and taxpayers end up footing thebill. AccordingtoaGovernment Accountability Office report
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windsofchangearecoming." Satrum describesthe new system in measured tones. Given the average life of hen houses and equipment, it is a 40-year investment, he said. Whether it's "better," he said, dependsonyourvalues. Hens raised cage-free are eating the same food as those in conventional cages and
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produce the same quality egg. Cage systems are more cost-efficient, curbhen-to-hen aggression andresultin fewerbirdinjuries because they can't jump or flyaround,hesaid. "But then you look at cagefree,and there's more freedom to perform natural behaviors," Satrum said. "They have privatenestingareas,theabilityto perch andto scratcharound on thefloor. "What we've seen is sortof a shift in the whole idea of what humane means," he said. "For years it was all about being healthy, clean and efficient. Nowthereseemstobemoreinterestinnaturalbehavior." Action by some of the nation's largest supermarket and fast-food chains are helping drivetheindustryshift. Aramark, a national food services companythat supplies institutions ranging from prisons to schools, has announced it would use nothing but cage-
freeeggsbytheendof2014. Safeway, with more than 1,600 stores nationwide, set a
goalin2010of increasing cagefree egg sales to 12 percent of its total in two years. The company easily surpassed it, with cage-freesalesreaching 15percentin2012. Satrum believes many consumers will continue to buy eggs based on price, and conventional cage eggs cost less to produce. But a significant percentageof consumers iskeenly interested in locally- and humanely-producedfood. "Itwasn'tjustafadthatcame and went,"he said."They'reinterested in the story behind the food."
REMODELING DESIGN & OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW o
ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR oo~ <a
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@y5 ~.
PubliShing Date: Tuesday, August 20
HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION
The Central Oregon Builders Association (COBA) presents the Remodeling Design 8 Outdoor Living Show just in time for autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and is a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
THE NATURE OF WORDS
NOV
THEGUIDETO CENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
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The Nature of Words annual literary festival celebrates the literary arts in Central Oregon during a multi-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and c o ntests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports creative writing throughoutreach programsfor both students and adults in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide is distributed to aii Bulletin readers as well as those who attend the annual literary event. PudliShing Date: Friday, October 25 •
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As t o ria 50/37
Hood
Seasideo 47/41 • Cannon each
51/32
River Th
Biggs
•
Hjilsboro POrtland 51/38 C ' • • Sa n dy
50/37
57/30 •
I
49'28
La Grande•
44/25 Umon
46/26
Albany~
38/20
Warm Sp 9
51/32•
47I27
Redmand 44/22 Sunriver Bend
Day
40/22
51/30
Paulina 37/i9
Valeo 51/30
•
Coos Bay
amEmon• Bur 5 La Pule41/18 39/19 • • Riley 42/20 Crescent • Fort Rock 42/20 41/2i
Crescento
50/34 •
p
Roseburg
50/34
•
Chemult
Nyssa
Port Orford
•
45/23
Frenchglen 47/25
Rome
+
• Brookings
51/30
55/37
%
Fields•
• Lakeview 44/2 2
F a I ls 47/23 ~
M cDermin' 55i 5
49/29
4 8/3 4
(in the 48 contiguous states):
,r~; x
r Ye u J
m
~4
+"+,",
4 7/ 2 8
• -24'
xx38
1
+
Quebec tu 37/3
+
Thunder Bay 21/-9
o
ortland 51/38
• 870 Yuma, Ariz.
+ +'+W 38 >
9 y Saskatoona;Winnipe
•Seattle
alifax 40/32
~ Toron'to
• 2
Detroit 28/17•
JDes Moines.
42/29 ton
W
27/21
•
, + Q5/19 w (M •
y 42/29
Crane Lake, Minn
• 1.02w
l
Quillayute, Wash.
f Denver 62/30
6/50 Vegas 76/52
v CD Honolulu ~ 81/67
5
Ys~
'
•
.I Phoenix •
'
Tiluana 68/48
•
q 6 7 /40 •
Anchorage 32/22
Oklahoma City 66/46•
a
7o 7os BOS
Chihuahua 81/46
La Paz 84/62 Juneau 40/24
OALASKA
R
' •
Kansas City 44/33 I
81/5
HAWAI I
.' ~ St . LouisL . ~H
I
60s I
43/28
m 41/33
L;ttle Riick ' Nashville ~~ ( 54/35 ~ I 4 2/27
•
• DallasL Sos ' 67/So I Houston
J w • Louisville 39/27
'~ l •
'Atlanta Birmingham 46/31 46/29
New Orleans • (
•
lando 0/36 • Miami 66/44
Monterrey Mazatlan • 84 /67
FRONTS Cold
Chance of rain show-
Rain showers.
I
ers.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
52 29
49 26
46 25
45 22
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrise today...... 638 a.m. MOOn phaSeS SunsettodaY...... 5 57 P.m. I.ast hlew F i rst Full Sunrise tomorrow 6 36 a m Sunset tomorrow... 5:58 p.m. Moonrise today........none Moonsettoday .... 9:44a.m. Mar.4 Mar.11 Mar.19 Mar. 27
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:19 a.m...... 5:58 p.m. Venus......6:32 a.m...... 5:22 p.m. Mars.......7:03 a.m...... 6:46 p.m. Jupiter.....10 09 a.m......1:14 a.m. Satum.....10;39 p.m...... 9:06 a.m. Uranus.....7:31 a.m...... 7:52 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 55/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........69m1931 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow.......... 0in1971 Average monthtodate... 0.06" Average high.............. 48 Year to date............ 1.80" Average low .............. 25 Average year to date..... 2.68" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.09 Record 24 hours ...0.72 in1972 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES
S K IREPORT
Yesterday S unday M o nday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........53/45/0.10.....50/37/c.....51/41/pc Baker City......50/28/0.00....42/24/pc......46/27/s Brookings......47/46/0.00....55/37/pc.....53/42/sh Burns..........53/27/0.00....43/21/pc......47/26/s Eugene........55/49/0.00....51/33/pc......54/38/s KlamathFalls .. 56/27/000 ...47/23/pc ... 53/27/s Lakeview.......52/27/0.00 ...44/22/pc.....49/28/pc La Pine........ 53/29/0.00....41/I 8/pc.....54/24/sh Medford.......55/39/0.00....57/31/pc......59/37/s Newport.......50/43/0.05....50/35/pc.....52/40/pc North Bend......54/48/NA....50/34/pc.....53/41/pc Ontario........53/30/0.01 ....51/30/pc......52/31/s Pendleton......57/40/0.00....58/30/pc......54/33/s Portland .......57/47/0.00....51/38/pc......55/41/s Prineville....... 55/39/0.00....41/23/pc.....57/29/pc Redmond....... 57/34/0.00....44/1 7/pc......52/28/s
Snow accumulation in inches
1
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 78 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 81 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .74-112 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .115-122 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . 109 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......65-73 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 146
L 0
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .42-95
Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Aspen, Colorado..... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . .37-44 Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0. . . . .85-185 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .48-62 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . .23-94
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires
80/51•
CONDITIONS • +++Q
.++++ '
04
4>
* * * * * * * ***+*
xr 3 83 F
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......66/30/0 00...81/53/s.. 82/38/s GrandRapids... 29/16/0 00...32/14/s. 33/I7/pc RapidCity.......63/28/000...55/27/c. 36/22/sn Savannah.......51/34/0.00... 53/31/s.57/35/pc Akron ..........29/24/001...27/I6/c. 32/I8/pc GreenBay.......28/10/000...27/12/s.29/17/pc Reno...........66/36/0.00..53/31/sh.. 61/31/s Seattle..........57/50/0.03... 50/34/c .. 54/40/s Albany..........36/27/000...38/24/c.. 36/26/c Greensboro......45/30/000..45/26/pc. 50/30/pc Richmond.......4005/0.00..47/26/pc.. 49/29/s SiouxFalls........29/6/0.00 .. 34/26/rs. 32/18/sn Albuquerque.....64/36/000..67/40/pc. 61/34/pc Harnsburg.......39/31/0.00...40/24/c.41/25/pc Rochester, NY....27/23/0.02 .. 26/20/sn.29/21/sn Spokane ........53/41/0.00..45/27/pc. 44/31/pc Anchorage ......32/24/000...32/22/s. 35/19/pc Hartford,CT.....40/34/0 00...43/25/c.42/28/pc Sacramento......71/46/0.00... 68/42/c .. 68/41/s Springfield, MO ..32/24/0.00... 50/36/c .. 53/31/c Atlanta .........39/34/000..46/31/pc. 57/42/pc Helena..........57/30/0.00..46/25/sn. 32/21/sn St. Louis.........36/27/0.00... 41/33/c .. 46/33/c Tampa..........60/48/0 00 ..62/39/pc .. 68/48/s Atlantic City.....41/28/0.00..44/31/pc.44732/pc Honolulu........81/70/0.00...81/67/s. 81/67/pc Salt Lake City....50/29/0.00 ..48/27/sh.. 39/26/s Tucson..........96/43/0.00 80/50/pc .. .. 76/48/s Austin..........63/39/0.00...73/50/s.82/49/pc Houston ........57/40/0.00..64753/pc.78/56/pc San Antonio.....68/38/0.00...75/48/s .. 84/52/s Tulsa ...........47/24/0.00..60/42/pc.59/34/pc Baltimore .......41/30/000 ..42/27/pc.. 43/28/s Huntsville.......38/33/0 00..41/28/pc .. 53/41/c SanDiego.......80/54/0.00..65/53/pc.. 61/52/s Washington, DC..39/33/000..43/2ipc.. 43/31/s Bigings.........62/38/000..53/30/sh..35/24/rs Indianapolis.....30/25/0.00 ..33/22/pc.. 36/29/c SanFrancisco....63/52/0.00... 59/44/c.. 56/43/s Wichita.........36/18/0.00..53/34/pc.52/28/pc Birmingham.....39/33/000 ..46/29/pc. 60/47/pc Jackson, MS.... 39/27/000 ..52/34/pc 69/52/pc SanJose........71/49/000.. 64/41/c.. 61/39/s Yakima .........58/36/0 00 57/29/pc.. 48/31/s Bismarck........48/24/000..34/24/sn.25/10/sn Jacksonvile......54/34/000..55/30/pc.62/38/pc SantaFe........60/21/000..60/35/pc. 53/30/pc Yuma...........87/51/0.00..87/55/pc.. 82/54/s Boise...........60/33/000...47/28/c .. 50/30/s Juneau..........40/31/000 ..40/24/pc.. 39/20/s INTERNATIONAL Boston..........42/34/0.00...44/30/c. 43/33/pc Kansas City......32/21/0.00...44/33/c .. 43/26/c Bndgeport,CT....40/34/000...42/27/c. 41/28/pc Lansing.........25/20/0.00...29/9/pc. 31/16/pc Amsterdam......41/36/0 00 .. 45/29/c 50/35/pc Mecca..........91/77/000 94/73/s93/73/s .. Buffalo.........26/21/000 ..25/I9/sn. 29/19/sn LasVegas.......75/49/0 00..76/52/pc .. 70/49/s Athens..........55/44/0.00... 53/41/r. 55/44/pc Mexico City .....59/46/0.00... 69/39/s .. 71/40/s Burlington,VT....32/24/006.. 36/25/rs. 34/28/sn Lexington.......31/26/000..35/23/pc. 44/32/rs Auckland........73/63/000 ..77/64/pc.72/61/pc Montreal........32/25/0.03 .. 31/27/sn..32/30/sf Caribou,ME.....36/28/0.09.. 35/29/rs..37/30/rs Lincoln...........43/9/0.00...46/32/c.. 42/24/c Baghdad........75/55/0.00... 79/65/c .. 85/59/c Moscow.........25/1/0 04 .. 16/1 0/sf...13/6/c CharlestonSC...52/36/000... 53/32/s. 55/35/pc Little Rock.......44/32/0 00..54735/pc. 61/40/pc Bangkok........95/81/0.00 ..96/77/sh...85/78/t Nairobi.........86/59/0.00... 83/58/s. 83/58/pc Charlotte........46/33/0.18 ..48/26/pc. 52/33/pc LosAngeles......82/59/0.00 .66750/pc.. 64750/s Beiling..........39/23/000... 51/35/s. 57/28/pc Nassau.........68/61/0 03 .. 72/63/sh. 67/61/pc Chattanooga.....39/35/000..47/26/pc.. 55/39/c Louisville........34/29/000..39/27/pc..43/34/c Beirut..........64/54/0 00... 79/56/c.63/53/sh New Delh/.......77/52/000... 81 /57/s.. 83/58/s Cheyenne.......53/34/000 ..57/25/pc. 37/18/pc MadisonWl......27/4/0 00..33/15/pc. 32/18/sn Berlin...........43/23/0.00...43/30/c. 44730/pc Osaka..........46/36/0.00...44737/s.. 48/41/s Chicago.........31/23/000...35/24/s. 35/26/pc Memphis....... 36/30/0.01 . 46/39/c .. 60/44/c Bogota.........70/48/000... 71/50/t...64/51/t Oslo............45/28/0.00 34/28/pc .. .. 34/25/c Cincinnati.......31/27/000 ..34/24/pc. 41/29/sn Miami..........69/56/0.00..66/44/pc.. 68/53/s Budapest........46/25/0 00... 45/29/s. 45/30/pc Ottawa.........23/19/0 00 .. 28/23/sf ..30/25/sf Cleveland.......27/23/004 .. 27/18/sf. 29/20/pc Milwaukee..... 28/20/0 00... 32/20/s. 32/24/pc Buenos Aires.....77/66/2.95 .. 74/53/pc.. 74/56/s Paris............39/34/000... 47/30/s. 55/39/pc Colorado Spnngs.55/26/000..60/30/pc. 46/20/pc Mrnneapolrs.....32/10/0.00...33/21/c. 31/16/sn CaboSanLucas ..90/66/0.00... 86/64/s. 88/61/pc Rio de Janeiro....82/73/0.00... 86/73/s. 89/74/pc Columbia,MO...32/22/0.00...41/32/c...46/30/r Nashvige........35/30/0.03..42/27/pc .. 51/42/c Cairo...........82/54/000.. 85/53/c. 74/52/pc Rome...........63/45/0.00... 54/41/s .. 58/46/s ColumbiaSC....50/31/000...50/27/s. 55/35/pc NewOrleans.....52/38/000..55/41/pc. 68/58/pc Calgary.........32/23/000 ..30/18/sn.23/I2/pc Santiago........86/46/0.00... 86/63/s .. 86/63/s Columbus, GA...42/37/000 ..51/33/pc. 61/44/pc New York.......40/33/0.00...42/29/c. 41/32/pc Cancun.........75/61/000 ..73/63/pc.75/64/pc SaoPaulo.......81/66/0.00... 81/66/t...84/67/t Columbus, OH....31/27/001 ..32/21/pc. 39/25/pc Newark,Nl......41/32/0.00...42/28/c. 43/31/pc Dublin..........45/27/0.00...40/32/c .. 44/38/c Sapporo ........52/27/0.11 ...27/15/c. 28/22/pc Concord,NH.....39/28/0.00...42/22/c.. 39/25/c Norfolk,VA......42/38/0.00..46/29/pc .. 48/30/s Edinburgh.......54/32/0 00... 41/30/c .. 49/34/c Seoul...........36/25/0.00 39/32/pc. .. 41/38/pc Corpus Christi....71/44/000...69/62/s .. 80/59/s OklahomaCity...51/22/0 00..66746/pc. 61/37/pc Geneva.........37/34/0.00..46/32/pc.. 47/31/s Shangha/........45/34/000 ..48/38/pc .. 55/42/s DallasFtWorth...56/31/000...67/50/s. 78/43/pc Omaha.........33/20/000...42/32/c .. 40/23/c Harare..........79/59/0 00... 76/60/t...76/61/t Singapore.......90/77/0.85... 88/77/t.87/76/pc Dayton .........28/25/000 ..33/22/pc. 39/26/pc Orlando.........61/46/0.00..60/36/pc.. 66/43/s Hong Kong......73/59/000 ..66/62/pc. 71/63/pc Stockholm.......41/19/0.00 32/22/pc .. .. 33/28/c Denver..........50/26/000...62/30/c. 44/24/pc Palm Springs.... 84/55/000. 83/51/pc .. 78/51/s Istanbul.........54/43/0.00 ..48/37/pc. 49742/pc Sydney..........72/63/000 ..73/68/sh. 79/68/sh DesMoines......32/18/000...39/28/c. 35/24/sn Peoria..........28/22/0.00...36/25/c. 37/27/sn lerusalem.......64745/000...79/50/c.61/48/pc Taipei...........59/54/0.00 59/55/pc .. .. 62/58/s Detroit..........30/26/000 ..28/17/pc.. 33/19/s Philadelphia.....42/34/000...44/28/c. 45/30/pc Johannesburg....71/53/0.22... 75/57/t...76/57/t Tel Aviv.........73/48/0.00...88/57/c. 68/55/pc Duluth..........29/9/000..28/13/pc. 29/13/pc Phoenix.........85/51/000..81/56/pc.. 80/56/s Lima...........84/70/0.00 ..77/71/pc.. 76/70/c Tokyo...........52/41/0.00 ..47/39/pc. 47/41/sh El Paso..........70/35/000 ..76/54/pc .. 70/45/s Pittsburgh.......30/25/0 01...30/18/c .. 34/20/s Lisbon..........59/43/000 62/50/sh 59/53/sh Toronto.........25/18/000 27/21/sf. 30/23/pc Fairbanks........15/9/000 .. 18/-13/s...22/-6/s Portland,ME.....43/31/002 .. 42/29/rs..41/29/rs London.........41/30/0.00 ..46/32/pc.. 49/38/c Vancouver.......50/45/0.77...48/34/c.. 50/34/s Fargo............24/2/000..29/21/sn.28/13/sn Providence......41/34/0.00...43/28/c.43/30/pc Madrid .........55/27/0.00... 50/36/c. 52/43/sh Vienna..........43/27/0.00...46/29/s.. 35/29/s Flagstaff........63/20/0.00 ..57/26/sh.. 52/21/s Raleigh.........48/26/0.00...47/27/s .. 50/30/s Manila..........90/75/000 ..88/71/pc. 88/70/pc Warsaw.........41/30/0.00..41/28/pc. 34/25/pc
•
•
Make your selections from Anthony sspecial' earlydinner menu Choicesin.clude fresh fish and featured entrees, appetizer, chowder or salad, and dessert All for S 19..95.
Monday through Friday until 6 PM
5n
:F
a a e~
Partly cloudy.
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m extremes
gz
Roseburg.......57/49/0.00....52/34/pc.....60/38/sh Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
YeSterday S •
gz
Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-53 Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .60 73 Salem ....... 55/46/000 ...52/33/pc ... 55/39/s Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . 46 Sisters......... 58/34/0.00....42/21/pc.....53/25/pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dages......57/39/0 00....57/30/pc......51/33/s www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Rome • 25 0 Rome
46/28
47/21
• 57/31•
Ashland
• 65'
50/23
Paisley
Chiloquin
Medford
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
43/21
45/22
• Beach 54/39
50/30
ll
Chr i stmas Valley
Silver Lake
39/16
•
Juntura
39/1 7
34/1 2
• Bandon
Slight chance of rain and snow OntariO early.
42/24
prineville 41/23 4«3
Sisters
EUgene•
EAST
Baker Ci
• Madras
Sh 50/38
CENTRAL Partly cloudy with isolated rain and snow showers.
3//24
43/29
45/24
52/33•
Florence•
Ruggs
•
Maupin
r W allowa en e ton 36/2i • Enterprisq 58/30 • Meacham • 38/19 r8
•
5i/3i
45/28
McMinnvige 5 50/35 • 7 Governmentx~ Lincoln City Salem Y. CamP n' IM 49/37 • 50/35
,
oWasco
r
50/37
• Hermiston 51/30
Arlington
51/33 D a ges 49/30
Tigamook•
Mostly sunny.
3
BEND ALMANAC
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2
Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6
© www.bendbulletin.com/community
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
Celtic Society plans Irish event The High Desert Celt-
ic Society will present a traditional lrish ceili Saturday at Kelly D's Irish
Sports Bar in Bend. A ceili is a social gathering that features
music, dancing, storytelling and poetry. Dinner kicks off at 6
p.m. and features traditional lrish fare including
corned beef,cabbage, potatoes, shepherd's pie and Irish stew. Entertainment begins at 6:45 with Bend storyteller Doug Butler shar-
By John Gottberg Anderson •For The Bulletin
ing a story of Ireland. The band Triur Amadan
PORTLAND — Kenny Garrett clutched his
starts at 7 p.m. Tickets forthe din-
horn as he might have held a writhing python.
ner are $20 in advance (through Friday) and
Rocking back and forth, now in musical conversa-
$25 at the door. Res-
ervations are required.
tion with pianist Vernell Brown, now swapping
For entertainment only,
there is a $5cover charge at the door.
notes with drummer McClenty Hunter, the Grammy
Contact: www.hdcs.
Award-winning saxophonist played a ceaselessly
net, highdesertcelts© gmail.com or 541-771-
intense 90-minute set last week at Portland's Dolores
5330.
Winningstad Theatre.
Girls summit set for La Pine
Blasting original post-bop riffs as he moved from melodic to improvisational, from intricate world beats to wistful balladryand mixing in a
Middle and high school girls throughout
Deschutes County are invited to attend the seventh annual South County Girls Summit, a free day of activities
ed by visits to a half-dozen small clubs and lounges. But I missed shows at Jimmy Mak's jazz lounge, the Crystal Ballroom and the Alad-
series of arched-
NORTHWEST TRAVEL theaters to na back, deep-knee bends that must but a few other Next week: Dayton and have delighted locations. Waitsburg, Wash. his personal But it's not just trainer — Gar10 days in Februrett and his quintet earned a ary when Portland swings. rousing standing ovation from In fact, Oregon's metropolis 300 musiclovers during the anhas become one of North America's leading hubs for popular nual Portland Jazz Festival. The 10-day music fest, now jazz music, rivaling such cities a decade old, has become one as Boston, Detroit, Pittsburgh of the "go-to" events for leadand Kansas City. (New York and ing jazz musicians. Held every N ew Orleansare faratthe top year in mid to late February, it of the list.) On any given night, presents events in 30 different mid-week as well as weekvenues, from tiny tea rooms to ends, local and touring artists the multiple stages of the Portstretch the boundaries of music — swing, funk, fusion, bebop, land Center for the Performing Arts (PCPA). Hotels, restaurants progressiveand Latin jazz, as and universities also get into the well as many other styles. act, hosting workshops and conSouthernroots versationsas well as numerous small-combo shows and student I make no apology for being a recitals. jazz fan. I was a mere D years Big-name artists, such as old when I was introduced to Garrett, drummer Jack De Joh- the genre at a concert by the nette, pianist Wayne Horvitz Dave Brubeck Quartet, whose and vocalist Patricia Barber, jazz anthems "Take Five" and "Blue Rondo a la Turk" opened a mostly perform at the PCPA. I caught three shows there in a whole new musical door to me. full weekend of music, accentSeeJazz/C4
intended to empower young womenwith positive, healthy activities, from 8:45 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. March 25 in La Pine. The day will start with
a "getting to knowyou" event and will include
gift giveaways, snacks and a free lunch. Session choices at the event will include: scrap book-
ing, African drumming, yoga, writing, archery, a conversation about bullying, nail art, safe dating and more. Registration is re-
quired. To register, or for more information,
call Mary Fleischmann at 541-563-5002.
Sisters rotary plans fundraiser The Rotary Club of Sisters is hosting its third annual Wine in the
Pines fundraiser from 6to10p.m. March16
RIGHT: Dapper sax man Bobby Watson, at front left, joins a world-premiere performance of the Jazz Mes-
at Aspen Lakesgolf course's Brand 33 restaurant, 16900 Aspen Lakes Drive in Sisters. Tickets to the event cost
sage, a seven-member band of Art Blakey alumni paying tribute to their mentor. Joining him on stage, from left, were George Cables (piano), Buster Williams (bass), Eddie
$35 and can bepicked up at the U.S. Bank,
Bank of the Cascades, and South Valley Bank locations in Sisters or
Henderson (trumpet), Lewis
can be ordered through
Nash (drums), Javon Jackson (alto sax) and Curtis Fuller
Sisters Rotarians by
emailing rotarywitp© gmail.com or calling
IIS
(trombone).
Thinkstock
541-977-6545. Eightperson tables at the
Photo by Mark Sheldon courtesy of the Portland Jazz Festival.
eventcan be purchased for $300.
Downtown Bend
to host urbanrace The Dash 2 Dare Urban Race willtake place in downtown Bend on March 31. Teams of two to four people will
What's the buzz'? Bee school in Bend
be given four hours to solve clues andperform basic challenges during the 3- to 4-mile race. The deadline to register is March 24, and the
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cost is $45 per person. The event will com-
menceatnoonataloca-
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tion to be announced. From there, clues related to spy trivia will lead teams to various downtown locations. Partici-
pants are encouraged to bring a smartphone or a digital camera to use during the race. Contact: www.dash2
dare.com or 503-6833274. — From staff reports
By Mac McLean
and $25 for nonmembers (see "If you
The Buuetin
go").
A pair of w orkshops set for this weekend will give local beekeepers a chance to sharpen their skills and teach beekeeper wannabes about what they'll need to keep Apis mellifera, the Western honey bee, happy and pollinating the region's trees, flowers and crops. The Central Oregon Beekeeping Association i s h o sting it s a n nual Central Oregon Bee School at Bend's Partners in Care hospice facility on March 9 and 10. The two-day event will cost $5 for association members
COBKA spokesman Mike Ashley said Saturday's events will include a series of quick workshops teaching beginning beekeepers what they'll need to get started. These topics include bee anatomy and health,how to build a hive for bees, how to protect bees from mites and other pests and how to extract honey from hives. It will also feature a lesson on the equipment someone needs to start beekeeping, a full set of which costs about $350. See Bees/C3
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If yougo What:The Central Oregon
Beekeeping Association's 2013 BeeSchool When:9 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 9-10
Where:Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend
Cost:$5 for COBKA members, $25 for nonmembers (includes aoneyear membership) Contact:Register for
the program through beeschool©cobeekeeping. Submitted photo
Tyler Blackwell tends his hive in Bend in 2008. The Central Oregon Beekeeping Association is hosting its annual Central Oregon Bee School next weekend.
org or 541-280-4940
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
M j QESTONE~
FormsforengagementweddinganniversaryorbirtitdayannouncementsareavailabieatTheBugetin i777SWChandterAve.,send orby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com.Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
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ENGAGEMENTS
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By Helen Anders Cox Newspapers
SOUTH P A D R E ISLAND, Texas — With sand between thetoes of her bare feet, Rebecca Ferguson married Austin Vandever on the beach at South Padre Island in October. The two University of Texas graduates were both beach lovers — her family had vacationed often at Crystal Beach and his at South Padre Island — and they wanted to get married someplace close to their hearts that wouldn't be too far for grandparents and others to travel. The answer: the Texas coast. Here's the thing about a destination wedding: Thebad news is that not everybody invited will go. The good news is that not everybody invited will go . You keep costs down, and the people closest to you will make the effort, especially if you, like the Vandevers, choose a nottoo-far location in the offseason, when everything's reasonably priced. Beach weddings are getting m or e p o pular, s ays Jackie Reeves, the Vandevers' wedding planner, of Beach Bride Guides (texas
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David Mossman andHaley Siefken
Siefken — Mossman
elementary education at Biola University, in La Mirada. She Haley Siefken and David works as a teacher assistant at Mossman, both of La Mirada, Biola University. Calif., plan to marry June 30 The future groom is the son at Saddleback Church Rancho of Rick Mossman and Jeanette Capistrano, in San Juan Cap- Mossman, both of Bakersfield, istrano, Calif. Calif. He is a 2009 graduate of T he future b r ide i s t h e Bakersfield High School and is d aughter of R o n a n d S u e studyingbusiness management Siefken,ofBend. She is a 2009 at Biola University. He works as graduate of Mountain View an intern at Broadcom CorpHigh School and is studying oration in Irvine, Calif.
and your guests. A big wild card, though, is the weather. You or your wedding planner should have a tent already lined up in case things turn ugly. (The Vandevers had their reception on the outdoor deck of the Hilton Garden Inn and wound up beachwedding.com). Reeves tenting it when a cold front is even planning the pending arrived.) Here are some other wedding of two Irish wolfbeach wedding tips: hounds — both therapy dogs — on the beach. (It's on hold Choose your chunk of for the moment, though, she • beach carefully, aimsays: "The couple is experi- ing for a less-populated area encing difficulties.") u nless you want a l o t o f "If you're a beach person, crashers. Reeves stages all there's nothing better you weddings at the north end of can do" than have a beach South Padre Island, where wedding, Rebecca Vandever few tourists venture. Even says. "But if you're doing a then, she posts lookouts. beach wedding, you need to be laid-back about it. Be calm. Get a permit if it's needExpect the unexpected." • ed. Your planner can True. An island is no place get it, or you can. for a bridezilla. Vandever did Colette Rye chose to renew have her chance to become her vows recently with her one, though, when the cater- h usband, Thomas, on t h e er accidentally put an A&M beach at Port Aransas' Muslogo rather than a UT one on tang Island. "We just c h ecked i n to their wedding cake. "The mother of the bride the Mayan Princess, asked spotted it," Reeves says. "I a priest to meet us there, took it off t o catering and walked out on th e beach, t hey tried to melt off t h e did our vows then went right A&M and make it into a UT back into the room," she says. out of it, but it was the wrong It can, if you want, be just as font." The caterer wound up simple as that. throwing rose petals on the cake to cover up the goof. G et married o n t h e "We were cracking up," • sand if you wish, but Vandever says. "It makes for choose a reception venue that's not on the sand. The a good story." So, rule No. 1 for a beach main reason, of course, is the wedding: No freaking out. sand. It gets in the food, the B eyond that, y o u'll f i n d drinks, the people. Also, getthat a wedding in the sand, ting permits for a food-andwhether at South Padre, Cor- d rink-on-the-beach t h i n g pus Christi, Port Aransas or can be daunting. Instead, Galveston, creates unmatch- choose a hotel or venue that's able memories for both you wedding-savvy.
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Britanie Rasmussen and Nick Pieratt, both of B end, plan to marry Aug. 24 in Bend. T he future b r ide i s t h e daughter of Rich and Monique Rasmussen, of Bend. She is a 2006 graduate of Bend High School and a 2007 graduate
lege. She works as a hairstylist at Ka Nui Salon in Redmond. The future groom is the son of Curt Pieratt and Connie McCool, both of Bend. He is a 2005 graduate of Mountain View High School. He works as an excavation contractor in Bend.
Thinkstcck
At a beach wedding, the appropriate footwear — if any at all — is flip-flops, and your guests should be informed of that ahead of time.
2
ANNIVERSARY
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Your guests should as. sume they are paying for their own rooms, unless you say otherwise, but your invitation could include a line about hotels offering specially priced blocks of rooms. As to whether you pay for your attendants' rooms: That's for you and the attendants to work out, but be clear about it. If the wedding is, indeed, . on the sand, the only appropriate footwear is flip-flops. (The Vandevers and their entirewedding party were barefoot.) Guests should in some way be reminded about this, as well, either as a line in the invitation or by word of mouth. R emember your d a r n • marriage certificate.
"I've had three couples show up without marriage licenses, saying, 'I thought you were taking care of that,'" Reeves says. Wedding planners do not get marriage licenses. The
happy couple does. Remember to get yours.
F R I 6 I DLI R E Compact Refrigerator
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Adjustable Glass Shelves
Crisper Drawer
g $199 OHNSON TV.APPLIANCE jofsnsonbrotfserstv.com
Jerry and Patty (Taylor) Rood
The Bulletin
Rood
Arcata, Calif. Mr. Rood works in outdoor Jerry an d P atty ( T aylor) maintenance for th e B endRood, of Bend, will celebrate La Pine School District. Mrs. their25thweddinganniversary Rood works as a medical techwith a cross-country ski trip to nologist at St. Charles Health the Methow Valley inthe North System. Mrs. Rood e njoys Cascades of Washington. gardening. They both enjoy The couple were married outdoor activities including March 5, 1988, at St. Elizabeth cross-country skiing, camping Catholic Church, in Portland. and fly-fishing. They have two children, Kyle, They have lived in Central of Pittsburgh, and Emily, of Oregon for 25 years.
MI ESTONE G UI r •
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• •
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Joseph and Kelly Janes, a girl, Peyton Merritt Janes, 7 pounds, 9.5 ounces, Feb. 23. Nicholas Noble and Sara Jo Dale, a boy, GageNico RonanNoble, 8 pounds, 4 ounces, Feb.24. Forrest Young andAndria Zippler, a boy, Harley JamesYoung, 4 pounds, 10 ounces, Feb.22. Kevin and Krista Lauinger, a girl, Esther Elise Lauinger, 8 pounds, 6 ounces, Feb.20. Jeremy and Jennifer Ennis, a boy, Ryder Lowell Erjnis, 6 pounds,4 ounces, Feb.20. Chris andAmanda McCarty,a boy, Cooper Jack McCarty, 8 pounds, 10 ounces, Feb.18. Jeff and Erin Woods, a boy,Gavin David MichaelW oods,9 pounds,12
ounces,Feb. 17. Mandonand Kristi Welch, a girl, Vella Rose Welch, 6 pounds, 10ounces, Feb. 21. Bradly Larson and Kaylin Elms, a girl, Brooke Elizabeth Larson, 7 pounds, 14 ounces, Feb.12. Michael and Denelle Wilms, a girl, Violet Cora Wilms, 7 pounds, 7 ounces,Feb. 11. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond
Taylor Webber andAshlee LindorZehner, a boy, JaxonDouglas Webber, 7 pounds, Feb. 20. Alex Hall and Britfanee Shults, a boy, Ariez Alexander EugeneHall, 6 pounds, 12 ounces, Feb.23. Jonathan Walgren and Kristina Boot, a boy, BlakeTimothy RossWalgren, 9 pounds, 3 ounces, Feb.21.
•
INE S
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave.y Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers:
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Erin Hardy Images Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events Giorgio's Wine, Brews & Spirits House on Metolius M.Jacobs MCMenamins Old St. Francis School Michelle Cross Photography Northwest Medi Spa Old Stone Pronghorn Sunhver Resort Totally Polished Widgt Creek Golf Club
Join us for a special lecture on one Of Oregon's most iconic governors! Featuring TOm MCCall biOgraPher
Brent Walth March 20 at 7 PM Tower Theatre I Bend, Oregon Tickets: $10 I BoxOfficeTickets.com Presented by the Oregon Historical Society. Co-sponsored by the Deschutes County Historical Society and the OregonCommunity Foundation,
•
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Bees
esearen' ouravera e os es • Cost isn't the main draw for a newcrop of design-conscious accommodati ons New Yorh Times News Service
Grupo Habita, the Mexico City-based team behind the upscale Hotel Americano in New York, is known for taking an unconventionalapproach to hospitality. Still, its latest property — D o wntown M exico, a hotel within a 17th-century palace in the Centro Historico district of Mexico City — houses a bit of a surprise: the company's first hostel, Downtown Beds. Downtown Beds occupies the palace'sformer service quarters. Borkur Sigthorsson / Kex Hostel via New YorkTimes News Service "The space had the bones for A group of friends in Reykjavik, Iceland, converted an old biscuit factory into Kex Hostel, which feaa youthful project," said Carlos tures a retro barbershop, a gestropub end a music venue/art gallery. Couturier, managing partner at Grupo Habita, which created an upscale hotel at the opposite end of the building. "But there was an intimate pa(/ji L l>g<yaTi iT (1v e» iil'efjiil i>eit>gr 'pal,v,v tio and a rooftop that could be i rETgry 'a'i%> vv i,l,f Jlf fj I IIi ieres iiw,'+ '« Pirg p<7i , . 'll transformed into something kvkl rgTpi yivir '<xviihrire„„' cool." '[ifjfi1iJIJ te f&355 fl1sILTJ W pT The local architecture firm liii"IIVll~li ',Vse wib~~illari tlt TET im Cherem Serrano kept the origs~'>s< gri '<igqtgisi rsg0rygrua iriri A~«~e >'1i'i'jig (i irqq vvhrs<i inal Catalan vaulted ceilings, qsgssgl ljlg fllj v l t . '«qr irs, painted the w o oden f l oors plg v white and installed up to eight bespoke lattice-brick bunks in il'lllltl each room, as well as en-suite bathrooms with r ai n showers. The patio is now a "chela" Oj i '
garden (that's slang for beer),
and the rooftop has a swimming pool and bar that draws a steady stream o f l o cals. There's also a kitchen serving Mexican street snacks, a screening room, table tennis, foosball and free use of bikes. "Peopledon'tcome to Dovmtown Beds because it's cheap; we have had guests pay with Amex black cards," said Couturier, whose company also plans to open a hostel in Mazunte, Oaxaca, in two years. "They come because it's fun and different." Clearly, Downtown Beds is not your traditional hostel, nor could its guests be defined as typical backpackers. There are no chores required, no lockout hours or curfews, and linens and toiletries are provided in each ofthe 17 rooms, whether private or shared. It is one of the latest examples of a global, industrywide trend focused on accommodating d esign-conscious20- and 30-somethings who are seeking out the scene (via Facebook, Twitter, Instagram) for reasons beyond sav-
ing a buck.
"We're s eeing more a n d more travelerswho can afford to stay at hotels, yet choose to stay at hostels for the social experience," said Aaron Chaffee, chief executive of Hostelling International USA, who noted that many modern hostels are offering the same amenities as hotels: private rooms, concierge service, Wi-Fi, restaurants and bars. And, of course, stylish interiors.
Asian and European roots According to Chaffee, the trend has its roots in A sia, known for its capsule hotels, and Europe, largely considered the vanguard of hosteling. There is, for example, Matchbox, which opened near Singapore's Chinatown in 2011. It calls itself a "concept hostel." Think breakfast all day (In-
dian rojak or Malay cookies) and pod-style bunks with panels that open and close, in case you'd like to chat with your
neighbor. Meanwhile, outside Munich, the German Youth Hostel Association has tapped the Laboratory for Visionary Architecture, also known as LAVA, an eco-conscious local firm, to transform thecirca-1930 Berchtesgaden Youth Hostel. "We were commissioned to rethink what a hostel could be in the age of boutique hotels," said LAVA D i rector Tobias Wallisser. The first section reopened just over a year ago with natural-wood "cocoon" bunks, energy-efficient wood pellet heating and cantilevered window nooks affording views of the Bavarian Alps, where a resident outfitter arranges mountain biking and ski trips; the next phase, with a bistro and lounge, is set to be completed by 2015, along with LAVA's second hostel, in Bayreuth. And in Reykjavik, a group of former soccerplayer and filmmaker friends recently turned
Continued from C1 S unday's session w i l l feature Ramesh Sagill, an assistant professor at the University of Oregon and the head of its honeybee research team. It will also feature m or e a d v anced courses on topics like colony management and bee nutrition. Each day's session lasts from 9 a.m. to 5
"Hostels ... are challenging two- and three-star hotels. The difference between these two options is basically the letter 's.' It stands for 'social.'"
By Christine Ajuda
t Undine Prohl / Downtown Beds Mexico City via New YorkTimes News Service
The rooms at Downtown Beds in Mexico City feature latticebrick bunks in each room, as well as en-suite bathrooms with rain showers. two- and three-star hotels. The differencebetween these two options is basically the letter 's.' It stands for 'social.'" The United States has been rather resistant to hosteling, although a number of hoteliers have started experimenting. Last year, in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., former Joie de Moris Moreno/ New YorkTimes News Service Vivre e x ecutive C h r i stian The Freehand in Miami claims to be "the first upscale hostel in the Strobel opened the a dvenU.S." The firm responsible for the hostel's design sought to create ture-friendly Basecamp with a "happy,summer camp vibe." amenities (communal dinners, fire pits, a rooftop hot tub) meant to encourage guest ina disused biscuit factory director, 26-year-old user-ex- teraction. Its 50 rooms are all originally scouted by Icelandic periencedesigner Rodrigo Maprivate, but some have bright director Oskar Thor Axelsson rangoni, embedded the space orange bunk beds and sleep for his movie "Black's Game" with smartphone-compatible up to eight. More recently, — into Kex Hostel. With a retro QR codes, allowing guests to the "straight-friendly urban barbershop, a gastropub and a d ownload everything f r o m resort," Out N Y C , o p ened music venue/art gallery that subway maps to, say, a song by eight hostel-style Sleep Share stages events from the likes of the Sao Paulo rapper Criolo. rooms featuring roomy bunks Sigur Ros (or Russell Crowe with personal TVs and privacy and Patti Smith, who recently Money to be made curtains; access to the hotel's gave an i mpromptu perforWe Hostel Design is a fam- nightclub, spa and 24-hour mance), it has a cult following ily-financed project. gym is included. among travelers and locals. However, "investors are In Florida, the Sydell Group, Increasingly, the hostel is starting to realize that there is which runs the Nomad Hobeing reinvented abroad — in money to be made in this busi- tel in New York, describes its places like South A m erica. ness," said David Chapman, latest property — Freehand Inspired by his backpacking director general of the Amster- Miami — as "the first upscale trips around the world, 28dam-based World Youth Stu- hostel in the U.S." It opened year-old Guilherme Perez left dent and Educational Travel in December in an Art Deco a careerin banking to create Confederation. building a short stroll from the old-meets-new, minimalAccording to the latest in- the luxury hotels lining South ist-chic We Hostel Design back ternational hosteling survey Beach, with 239 beds divided home in Sao Paulo, Brazil. — which the confederation among 63 rooms. "We wanted a happy, sumAfter finding the location — a produces in collaboration with whitewashed, early-20th-cen- Hostellinglnternational, Hostel mer camp vibe," said Robin tury mansion in the Vila Mari- world.com, Ho s t elBookers. S tandefer of Roman & W i l ana neighborhood — Perez com and others — the indus- liams, the New Y ork-based asked architect Felipe Hess to try is now valued at $34 bil- design firm responsible for design the seven dorm rooms, lion, with the global economic the hostel's boho-chic interiors two private rooms and multiple downturn acting as a boon. (not to mention Manhattan's common spaces (including a That said, the profitability of Ace Hotel). "glass room" with wraparound hostels has gone largely unnowindows and a low slate roof, ticed — until now. " There's been a n i n f l u x where guests are invited to SOLUTION TO leave their mark i n c h alk) of high-profile brands in the TODAY'S SUDOKU with a black-and-white color market," said Chapman, "with scheme. The hostel's creative hostels that are challenging
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p.m. "Keeping bees can be a bit of a struggle in our region," Ashley said, explaining one of the reasons why COBKA offers its bee school each year. Ashley said the region's cold temperatures can cause a problem for beekeepers because honeybees i m mobilize t h e mselves if the outdoor temperature is lower than 45 degrees. There is also a dearth of flowering crops for bees to feed upon — especially in t h e s outhern parts of Central Oregonand the crops that do produce flowers, such as alfalfa, clover, rabbit brush, and bitter brush, are either cut before they flower or have a s h or t b l o oming
— David Chapman, director general, Amsterdambased World Youth Student and Educational Travel Confederation
The wooden bunks have Mexican blankets, bolster pillows, linen shutters and builtin nightstands with reading lights and power outlets so you can recharge your smartphone while you sleep. Staff members wear T-shirts by the emerging U.S. fashion duo Timo Weiland, custom beach cruisers are available for rent, and the bar, in an overgrown tropical garden with mismatched vintage furnishings and a swimming pool, is a favorite among Miami's hipster set. Bartenders
cycle.
mix cocktails ($11) using herbs
But Ashley said these challenges didn't sink his s pirits when he and h i s wife decided to start keeping bees after attending a series of COBKA meetings and itsbee school four or five years ago. He learned the role beekeepers play in the region's agricultural industry — s o m e s e ed crops grown near Madras and Culver must be pollinated by bees in order to grow — and wanted to get involved. Over the years, Ashley said he's also seen an increase in the number of people who are interested in keeping bees. He said this uptick in membership has been fueled in part by increasing demand for bee-related products l i k e b e eswax, propolis, raw honey and royal jelly, and a g ricultural programs like 4-H and the Oregon State University Extension Office's Living on a F e w A c r es
grown on site; there are $3 Miller High Lifes and bottles
of Krug for $350 a pop. "People are generally putting up hotels that have some sort of lifestyle or design element," said Sydell G r oup founder and chief executive Andrew Zobler. "It was only natural that would happen in the hostel space, but it really hadn't reached the U.S."
A social space For many travelers, though, a hostel is just a cheap place to crash; in this country, the word tends to connote an environment akin to its pronunciation. Set on changing that perception, the Sydell Group plans to open Freehand locations nationwide (next up: New York). Still, designer uniforms and Champagne aside, there is something to be said for the romance of roughing it — the
journey, not the lodging being the point. If you ask Chaffee, "a hostel is only well designed if it supports what it was designed to do: provide a social space for travelers to meet up, go out and explore the location and then return to reflect on the experiences of the day." Farryn Weiner, a 27-year-old New Yorker, is one such traveler. Whether for work (as the global director of digital and social media for Michael Kors) or pleasure, she is on the road about 10 days a month, stopping anywhere from a business hotel in Tokyo to a tented camp at Coachella. Recently, Weiner booked a bed in one of Freehand's "quad" rooms. "It was like a mix of a hostel and a boutique hotel," she said. "Everyone was sharing tips on where they were going and what they were doing; I walked away with all sorts of connections. For me, at this moment in my life, that's worth more than a five-star spa."
program. Right now, Ashley said, COBKA boasts 80 hobby beekeepers on i t s r o l l s, many of t h e m m a r r i ed couples. These people tend about 45 to 50 active honeybee hives in the region and represent about twothirds ofthe area's total
hobby beekeepers. "We gain some and we lose some," he said, noting the non-member price for this weekend's bee school includes a one-year family membership in COBKA. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
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Open enrollment for PK3 to 5th grade begins at 6 pm.
Monday, March 4 www.eastmontschool,corn 62425 Eagle Rd., Bend 541-382-2049
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
Jazz Continued from C1 When I personally met Brubeck more than 40 years later — the pianist died three months ago on the eve of his 92nd birthday — he recalled the very show, at Eugene's McArthur Court, at which I had become a disciple. Over the years, I've become enamored with the music of many other jazz greats, from Miles Davis, John Coltrane and Count Basie to Wayne Shorter and Joe Zawinul. At jazz clubs and concert halls, including Bend's own Jazz at the Oxford series, I have found jazz artists to be far more approachable than most rockmusicians. They freely discuss their art and are generous with their time in conducting workshops for budding student musicians. Jazz, which has roots in Southern plantation spirituals and blues, is widely regarded as the most purely American genre of music. Born from a mix of A f rican slave chants with the harmonies of Englishlanguage church hymns, it later absorbed Afro-Latin music and rhythms from the Caribbean. New Orleans became the hub. During the Prohibition era, ragtime melodies begat swing music; following World War II, syncopation and improvisation began incorporating elements of American popular music. Jazz came to Portland duri ng the World War I I e r a , when large numbers of African-Americans came from the Southern states to work in the shipyards. According to historian Bob Dietsche, author of "Jumptown: The Golden Years of Portland Jazz," north Portland's Williams Avenue was lined with jazz clubs that bustled day and night. Nationally known artists like Duke Ellington, T-Bone Walker, Coleman Hawkins and Thelonious Monk made it a regular stop on the circuit between California and Seattle. Clubs come and go, but none in Portland has the longevity of Jimmy Mak's in the Pearl District. Owned by drummer Mel Brown, a former Motown session musician for a r tists such as Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and the Temptations, Jimmy Mak's is the city's premier lounge for live jazz nightly except Sundays. P ortland g u i t arist Da n Balmer plays every Monday; Brown's own band performs Tuesdays and W e dnesdays. Weekends bring a variety of national acts. This month, that includes guitarist Stanley Jordan on Thursday (after having played in Bend tonight), singer Martha Reeves (of Vandellas fame) on March 14 and Northwest bluesman Curtis Salgado March 29-30. Other Portland jazz clubs include downtown's Brasserie Montmartre; Ivories, W i l f's and the Camellia Lounge, all in the Pearl; the Blue Monk in the Belmont neighborhood; and Tony Starlight's in the Hollywood district. And hotel lounges — among them, the Benson, the Heathman, The Nines and the Modera — feature regular performances.
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Jazz fans gather outside the front door of Jimmy Mak's, a Pearl District lounge that is an institution for music lovers. Its owner, drummer Mel Brown, was a Motown session musician for such performers as Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye and the Temptations before moving to Portland in1973.
Photo by Mark Shetdon courtesy of the Portland Jazz Festival
Grammy Award-winning saxophonist Kenny Garrett wows an audience of 300 at the Portland Jazz Festival on Feb. 21. Blasting original post-bop riffs from his latest recording, "Seeds from the Underground," the Detroit-born musician earned a standing ovation at the Winningstad Theatre.
Portland jazz cluds 0 Wilf's Restaurant and Bar Union Station, 800 N.W.Sixth Ave. 6 Camellia Lounge 510 N.W. 11thAve. 6 Mission Theatre 1624 N.W.Glisan St. 9 Ivories Jazz Lounge and Restaurant
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of the arts. Portland is a really creative community, friendly and diverse." Lamb, who often performs in Bend and Sunriver, has a worldwide reputation. He tours with such artists as Gino Rich jazzscene Vanelli and Diane Schur, and "On a per capita basis, Port- in the past year alone has preland has one of the richest sented concerts in London and scenes anywhere," said local Milan, Tokyo and Jakarta. saxophonist Patrick L a m b, Not surprisingly, he speaks whose single "Maceo!" is cur- passionately of h i s c h osen rently No. 3 on Billboard Mag- path. "Jazz iscomplex," he said. azine's national contemporary "It's like a great book, 'War and jazz chart. "Portland just needs to be Peace,' versus the funnies. "It's a deep music involvbold and say that! Because it's true! But we don't put a Los ing a lot of cerebral abilities Angeles sheen on our music. and voices to play. It makes us We're somewhat humble in think and get outside the box. It that way." takes us away from our typical Lamb is one of many Port- day-to-day activities. In fact, it landers who h ave made a takes us on a journey." name for themselves in interAnd Lamb is i nvested in national jazz circles. In addi- leading young musicians into tion to Balmer, trumpet player jazz, even as federal funding Chris Botti, vocalist Esperanza for the arts is challenging the Spalding a n d s a x ophonist future of music education. "There's always going to be Hailey Niswanger are making splashes on the national scene. a few passionate people who Internationally a c c laimed keep the flames alive," Lamb musicians who have settled in said. "I do school workshops Portland include Brown, who any time that I can, any time has lived here since 1973; key- I'm available. It's a personal board player George Colligan p hilosophy. I f I ' m ar o u nd and guitarists Eddie Marti- and can lend a hand, I will be nez and Jennifer Batten. That there." doesn'tinclude such performers as Thomas Lauderdale's Annual festival j azz-influenced P in k Ma r The Portland Jazz Festival tini or dynamic vocalist Storm is a sort of annual summation Large. And many other names for the city's jazz scene. It's preare worth acknowledging. sented by a not-for-profit orga"Some notable talents seem nization named PDX Jazz, esto come out of here fairly regu- tablished "to present, preserve larly," said Lamb, a Portland and promote jazz in the Pacific residentsince he was a youth, Northwest," according to manwhen his schoolteacher father aging director Don Lucoff. moved the family to Oregon PDX Jazz presents a wide from Mississippi. "That's usu- range of concerts throughout ally indicative of the culture the year, exposing Portlandof the city, and some density area audiences to both interna-
0 Crystal Ballroom 1332 W. Burnside St.
0 Brasserie Montmartre 626 S.W. ParkAve. 0 Portland Center for the Performing Arts 1111 S.W.Broadway ho e@0,' P Tony Starlight's Supperclub & Lounge L 3728 N.E Sandy Blvd. (D The Blue Monk 3341 S.E Belmont St.
Stark St. g Belmont St.
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
tionally acclaimed artists and local acts. Through jazz education and outreach programs, the agency strives "to inspire, educate and develop future jazz audiences for generations to come," said Lucoff. Among its regular presentations is a monthly series at northwest Portland's Mission Theatre, featuring local musicians in tribute shows for jazz luminaries; and concerts at Jimmy Mak's, PCPA's groundfloor Art Bar, Tony Starlight's and the RiverPlace HoteL
During the final weekend of the jazz fest, I caught three separate shows in the PCPA's Winningstad and Newmark theaters. As well, I circulated to severalother venues to see Portland-area artists: vocalist Hallie Lorin and her trio at the Benson Hotel, Latin singer Jessie Marquez in a duo at The Nines, the extraordinary double bassist David Friesen at the Camellia Lounge, and small combos both at Ivories and at the Hotel Modera's Nel Centro
Garrett's p erformance — with a fist pump, he encouraged audience applause — was nothing short of astounding. Drawing heavily upon his recent "Seeds from the Underground" recording, the 16th album of his stellar career and one that earned him his fourth and fifth Grammy nominations (he won for a previous recording with Chick Corea and John McLaughlin in 2010), the 52-year-old Detroit native dazzled the audience. Garrett cut his musical teeth working with such genre immortals as Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner and Pharoah Sanders. His c u rrent band — with Brown on keyboards, Hunter on drums, Corcoran Holt o n s t and-up bass and Rudy Bird on percussion — puts a group of remarkably gifted musicians on stage together. The quintet is as tight as one can be. I was not impressed by the improvisational notes struck two nights later by drummer Jack DeJohnette and his quartet. As much as I appreciate experimentation in jazz, this concert was over the top — scattered noise without a rhythm or melody that I could connect to. In between however, I loved the Friday-night performance by the seven-piece Jazz Message, playing a tribute to the late drummer, composer and bandleader Art Blakey. For more than a half-century, until his death in 1990, Blakey's band, the Jazz Messengers, was one of the most acclaimed en-
sembles in the world. The Portland festival inspired alumni of his band to regroup for a worldpremiere show. If one man stole the show, it was saxophonist Bobby Watson, a Kansas City native who playedthree sold-out shows last March at Bend's Oxford HoteL
Always dapper and playful, unmistakable in his horn-rimmed glasses and wide-brimmed hat, Watson anchored a horn line that also featured musical director Javon Jackson (sax), Eddie Henderson (trumpet) and Curtis Fuller (trombone).
Continued next page •
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A clarinet nestled in a display case, surrounded by champagne, leaves no doubt that newly opened Quartet aims for a high-brow patronage. Located on the South Waterfront, it has a musical theme and a menu that combines Pacific Rim and French culinary touches.
From previous page
Local celebrity chefs are The work of pianist George doing well in downtown PortCables and bass player Buster land. The charcuterie platter Williams was unforgettable, at Little Bird, a casual bistro and the masterful Lewis Nash owned by Gabriel Rucker of ably filled Blakey's old role on Le Pigeon fame, was one of drums. the best I've seen anywhere. Vitaly Paley's Imperial offers Stay and eat three hearty meals a day in the During the jazz festival, I Hotel Lucia — quite a switch was pleased to be able to stay from hisupscale Paley's Place in the heart of downtown. in northwest Portland. MeanThe luxurious Heathman while, Tasty n Alder, a tapashotel is a mere block from the style restaurant from T o ro PCPA. It's a bit pricier than Bravo's John Gorham, has many other downtown howon raves since opening on tels, but I was willing to pay a Jan. 30. bit more for the convenience I felt a little jazzier at Oba! — and the valet parking. This The bright lights of the nuevo is ahotelwhere personal con- C aribbean r e staurant a r e cierges handle your check-in just around the corner (actuand valet service, and where ally five blocks) from Jimmy original Andy Warhol litho- Mak's in the heart of the Pearl graphs of zoo animals hang at District. each elevator landing. But the creme de la creme The dining scene is continu- on this visit was newly opened ally evolving in Portland. In Quartet on the South Waterrecent months, severalnew front, a quick cab ride from restaurants have opened in the the heart of downtown. Promheart of the city, and my visit ising great food, hospitality, gave me achance to sample a ambience (a wall of windows range of establishments. facing the Willamette River) Raven 8z Rose made its de- and music, this restaurant (rebut in January in the historic placing Lucier) lives up to its 1883 Ladd Carriage House, billing. Hawaiian chef Adam opposite T h e Or e g o nian Kekahuna combines a Pacific news building on Broadway. Rim heritage with a French Much like a grand Irish tav- culinary sensibility in dishes ern, complete with strains of like jade halibut (on vegetable Celtic music, it boasts gour- sushi) and sea scallops (on met "cottage cuisine." My apple-leek risotto). favoritedishes were a cured I think any Portland visitor salmon-and-crumpets appe- can get jazzed about food like tizer and a rotisserie chicken this. entree with a p a r snip-and— Reporter: j andersonC© potato mash. bendbulletin.com
Expenses Gas, Bend to Portland (round trip), 320 miles@$3.50/ gallon: $44.80
Dinner, Oba!: $30
Lodging (three nights with
Breakfast, Imperial: $17 Dinner, Raven 8 Rose: $43 Lunch, Little Bird: $25
parking): $587.39
Dinner, Quartet: $54
Concert tickets
Breakfast, Heathman: $19.50 Total: $908.69
(three shows): $88
Ifyou go (All addresses are in Portland) INFORMATION • Jazz Society of Oregon. P.O. Box19882, Portland, OR 97280; 503-427-1676,
www.jsojazzscene.org • PDX Jazz. 133 S.W. Second Ave., Suite 420; 503-2285299, www.pdxjazz.com • Travel Portland. 701 S.W. Sixth Ave.; 503-275-9750, 800-962-3700, www.travel portland.com
littlebirdbistro.com. Lunch and dinner. Moderate • Oba! Restaurante. 555 N.W. 12th Ave.; 503-228-6161,
www.obarestaurant.com. Dinner only. Moderate to expensive • Quartet. 1910 S.W. River Drive; 503-222-7300, www.
quartetpdx.com. Dinner only. Expensive • Raven & Rose.1331 S.W. Broadway; 503-222-7673,
LODGING
www.ravenandrosepdx.com. Dinner only. Moderate
• Ace Hotel. 1022 S.W. Stark St.; 503-228-2277, www.ace hotel.com/portland. Rates
• Tasty n Alder. 580 S.W. 12th Ave.; 503-621-9251, www. tastyntasty.com/alder/. Three
from $95 • The Benson Hotel. 309 S.W. Broadway; 503-228-2000, 888523-6766, www.bensonhotel .com. Rates from $170 • The Heathman. 1001 S.W. Broadway; 503-241-4100, 800-551-0011, portland. heathmanhotel.com. Rates from $171 • Hotel Modera. 515 S.W. Clay St.; 503-484-1084, 877-484-
1084, www.hotelmodera.com. Rates from $169 • The Nines. 525 S.W. Morrison St.; 877-229-9995, www.the
nines.com. Ratesfrom $309 • Red Lion Hotel Portland
Convention Center. 1021 N.E. Grand Ave.; 503-235-2100, 800-343-1822, www.redlion.
com. Rates from $89 • RiverPlace, A Kimpton Hotel. 1510 S.W. Harbor Way; 503228-3233, 800-227-1333,
meals daily. Moderate to expensive JAZZ VENUES • The Blue Monk. 3341 S.E. BelmontSt.;503-595-0575, www.thebluemonk.com • Brasserie Montmartre. 626 S.W. Park Ave.; 503-236-3036,
www.brasserieportland.com • Camellia Lounge. 510 N.W. 11th Ave.; 503-221-2130, www.teazone.com/live-music/ • Crystal Ballroom. 1332 W. Burnside St.; 503-225-0047,
www.mcmenamins.com/ crystal • Ivories Jazz Lounge and Restaurant. 1435 N.W. Flanders St.; 503-241-6514,
www.ivoriesjazz.com • Jimmy Mak's. 221 N.W. Tenth Ave.; 503-295-6542,
www.jimmymaks.com
www.riverplacehotel.com.
• Mission Theatre. 1624 N.W. GlisanSt.;503-223-4527,www.
Rates from $219
mcmenamins.com/mission
DINING
• Portland Center for the
• Higgins Restaurant and Bar. 1239 S.W. Broadway; 503-222-
Broadway; 503-248-4335,
9070, www.higginsportland. com. Lunch and dinner.
Moderate to expensive • Imperial. 410 S.W. Broadway; 503-228-7222, www.
imperialpdx.com. Threemeals daily. Moderate • Little Bird. 219 S.W. Sixth Ave.; 503-688-5952, www.
Performing Arts. 1111S.W. www.pcpa.com • Tony Starlight's Supperclub & Lounge. 3728 N.E. Sandy Blvd.; 503-517-8584, www.tonystarlight.com • Wilf's Restaurantand Bar. Union Station, 800 N.W. Sixth Ave.; 503-223-0070,
www.wilfsrestaurant.com
PHILADELPHIA Mutter Museum may leave you shocked and horrified or amazed and fascinated. Either way, its collections of bones, bodies, body parts, plus tumors and other terrors are unforgettable. The nation's finest and oldest medical m u seum — celebrating its 150th anniversary Monday — bills itself as "disturbingly informative" and that is absolutely true. Specimens lining its wood-and-glass display cases reveal the effects of epidemics and diseases on the body, as well as an amazing array of human curiosities and anomalies. One of its newest — and most famous — attractions is the brain of legendary German physicist Albert Einstein, who d eveloped the Theory of General Relativity. Truth be told, the museum just owns pieces of it, 46 tobe exact,mounted on a set of microscope slides. But it's quite a specimen and just one of five sets known to be in existence. The Mutter is the repositoryfor a who's who ofbody parts, including skin samples collected during President James A. Garfield's autopsy, a cancerous tumor removed from P r esident Grover Cleveland's jaw and the 4th and 5th vertebrae from President Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth. The museum, on two stories of the stately College of Physicians of Philadelphia building at 19 N. 22nd St., is a place where forensic pathologists, like Fox TV's Dr. Temperance "Bones" Brennan, would love to hang out. Its collection of 139 human skulls, numerous skeletons, plus additional dried bodies and body parts would provide a wealth of props for a ghoulish Halloween party or a very scary night at the museum. "We don't sugarcoat or
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The Morning Call (Aflentown, Pa)
If you go What: Museum of the
College of Physicians of Philadelphia houses
an unusual collection of medical artifacts, including tissue samples of Albert Einstein's brain. Where:19 S. 22nd St., Philadelphia When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
daily. How much: $15; $13, seniors 65 and older; $10, ages 6-17 Harry Fisher/Allentown Morning Call
Collection highlights: Skull collection, body
The Dr. Joseph Hyrtl Skull Collection is on display at the Mutter Museum of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia. "We don't sugarcoat or glorify anything," says curator Anna Dhody. "We ask visitors to come with open minds and focus on the subjects that appeal to them."
oftheSoapWoman, malignant tumor removed from President Grover
Cleveland's hard palate, conjoined liver from
cal tools. The museum has interactive elements: visitors c an try "reading the dead" using prompts from the museum's cellphone tour to examine six skeletons for clues about their sex, age, race and maladies.
Siamese twins Changand Eng Bunker, piece of tissue
R orke-Adams turned t h em over to the Mutter. The specimens are now on permanent display.
removed from the thorax of
Abraham Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth. • Tip1: Museum exhibits might be disturbing for some visitors, particularly small children. • Tip2: Check out the videos at www.youtube. com/themuttermuseum
Looking for relevance
The human body The museum, founded in 1858 by Dr . T h omas Dent Mutter and opened in 1863, originally focused on schooling doctors and improving the education of medical students who were not permitted to assist with patients or surgeries. It opened with 1,300 specimens Mutter collected to provide hands-on experiences for his students, but the collection has grown to more than 25,000 objects. "Our educational mission has never changed, but our de-
Another d i splay d e livers a lesson about "the price of beauty," using the contorted skeleton of a woman who wore a corset laced so tightly and for so long that she displaced her abdomen and damaged internal organs, including her liver. Dr. Chevalier Jackson's eyeopening assemblage of items he retrieved from people's throats reminds parents to watch their children and avoid putting nonfood items in their own mouths. Among the 2,374 items he recovered and saved are open and closed safety
ten plenty of ribbing from my colleagues but I'm collecting jars of p icked human skin from a woman with a compulsion to do it (dermatillomania). I'm even documenting the amount she picks each year. It is extremely rare to have physical manifestations of a psychopins, hair pins, a ship-shaped logical disorder." metal game piece, a perfectBesides the permanent colattendance pin, dentures, a lection, the museum presents mographics have," says Dhody. peach pit and the metal key special exhibits. On display is "The majority of today's visifrom a sardine can. a preview of "Broken Bodies, "One of my missions as cu- Suffering Spirits: Injury, Death tors do not have medical backgrounds, although we still see rator is showing the 21st cen- a nd Healing i n C i vi l W a r medical students and those tury relevance of our primarily Philadelphia," which focuses in health-care-related fields. 19th-century collection," says on Civil War-era medicine. It Many more come from the Dhody. is scheduled to open later this area's middle schools and high To that end, the museum's year. Another, called "Grimm's schools. 139 human skulls have been Anatomy: Magic and Medi"Everyone h a s be c o me scanned and their details have cine, 1812-2012," explains the more interested and fascinated been added to a database that medical reasons behind the by the human body. People can be accessed by scientists deformities and behaviors of are flocking to see the travel- working on projects such as the fairy tales' characters. ing 'Body' exhibitions and designing better helmets to glorify anything," says cu- our own visitation has risen to protect against concussions. rator Anna Dhody. "We ask an all-time high of more than A 150-year-old cholera specvisitors to come with open 131,000 visitors." imen in the museum's colleciPPure C/Jadk Crf. minds and focus on the subFigures are e x pected to tion contains DNA that can be jects that appeal to them. climb even higher as word compared tomodern cholera's We provide the diagnostic continues to spread about its DNA and could serve as an ininterpretations for the items offbeat contents. The gift of the dicator of how it will evolve in they see in our displays. Einstein brain slides in 2011 the future. " Some visitors tell u s drew journalists from around Dhody muses aloud, "The Bend they feel nauseated by what the world. "I believe we're the truetreasures of the museum Redmond they've seen, but that's OK. only place where people can still could be waiting to be John Day It's how they feel. Others see the actual samples," Dhody found." Burns tell us our specimens make says. Dhody is a hands-on — pun them grateful to be born The slides were prepared intended — curator. "I've gotLakeview in the 20th century, with in 1955 in the pathology lab its antiseptics, antibiotics of Dr. William Ehrich, chief and anesthesia. Others say of pathology at the Philadelthey've gotten a greater un- phia General Hospital and the 5K • 10K • 1K derstanding of what it is to Graduate School of Medicine Run - Walk be human." of the University of PennsylSunday vania. Five sets were prepared; Weird wonders presents one was given to Dr. Ehrich by APRIL 21, 2013 Some treasures within Dr. Thomas Harvey, who perthe collection once were formed the post-mortem exam sideshow s t ars. O t h ers of Einstein at Princeton Hospicould have been. tal after he died at age 76 from Chang and Eng, twins an abdominal aneurysm. born in Siam, toured the There is controversy over w orld an d i n spired t h e whether Harvey was even auterm "Siamese twins" for thorized to remove Einstein's 'I I' conjoined twins. The pair, brain, but by most accounts I s I I who married sisters and fa- he was given the family's pert g• t i thered 21 children, are stars mission to keep it for medical of this category. A plaster study. •• z death casting of their conThe slides eventually ended joined torsos is displayed, up in the hands of Lucy Rorkealong with the preserved Adams, a senior neuropathololiver they shared. gist at The Children's Hospital The Wind Bag or Bal- of Philadelphia and clinical loon Man, who also prof- professor of pathology, neuited from putting himself rology and pediatrics at the on display, had a horribly University of Pennsylvania. A distended abdomen, which longtime fellow of the College you can see in a hospital of Physicians of Philadelphia, photo taken shortly before his death from constipation.
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On display is his huge and grotesquely swollen bowel — nearly nine feet long and measuring from 10 to 30 inches in circumference. He suffered from a congenital condition which could have been surgically corrected today. Additional weird w o nders: The mysterious "Soap W oman," w h o s e b o d y turned into a soap-like substance called adipocere or "grave wax"; a wax cast of a Parisian woman's head, showing the 10-inch horn that grew from her forehead, and an ovarian cyst
weighing 70 pounds. In th e b e lieve-it-or-not category: Some 19th century physicians "remembered" deceased patients by having their skin turned into leather fo r b i n ding books and making wallets and leather cases for medi-
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WASHINGTON The woman sitting in front of me on this plane seems perfectly nice. She, like me, is traveling coach class from Washington to Los Angeles. She had a nice chat before takeoff with the man sitting next to her, in which she revealedshe isan elementary school teacher, an extremely honorable profession. She, like me, has an aisle seat and has spent most of the flight watching TV. Nevertheless, I hate her. Why? She's a recliner. For the five minutes after takeoff, every passenger on an airliner exists in a state of nature. Everyone is equally as uncomfortableas everyone else — well, at least everyone who doesn't have the advantage of first class seating or the disadvantage of being over 6 feet tall. The passengers are blank slates, subjects of an experiment in morality which begins the moment the seat-belt light turns off. Ding! Instantly the jerk in 11C reclines his seat all the way back. The guy in 12C, his book shoved into his face, reclines as well. 13C goes next. And soon the reclining has cascaded like rows of dominos to the back of the plane, where the poor guys in the last row see their personal space reduced to about a cubic foot. Or else there are those, like me, who refuse to be so rude as to inconvenience the passengers behind us. Here I sit, fuming, all the way from IAD to LAX, the deceptively niceseeming schoolteacher's seat back so close to my chin that to watch TV I must nearly cross my eyes. To type on this laptop while still fully opening the screen requiresme to jam the laptop's edge into my stomach. Obviously, everyone on the plane would be better off if no one reclined; the minor gain in comfort when you tilt your seat back 5 degrees is certainly offset by the discomfort when the person in front of you does the same. But of course someone always will recline her seat, like the people in the first row,
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or the woman in front of me, whom I hate. (At least we're not in the middle seat. People who recline middle seats are history's greatest monsters.) What options do we, the reclined-upon, have? We can purchase the Knee Defender, a product which snaps onto the tray table and prevents the passenger seated in front of us from reclining their seat. But that seems fraught with potential awkward complications. What if the person ahead of you protests'? What if the flight attendant gets angry? (The website for Knee Defenders even acknowledges these difficulties with a whole page titled "Etiquette on Airplanes" — and offers printable ucourtesy cards" to hand to the person in front of you.) Lacking a Knee Defender, you can politely ask the person in front of you not to recline. But then the person in front of you is filled with resentment, because he feels you h ave forced him to give up his comfort in favor of yours. (Plus, the person in front of him may have reclined her seat.) And it might not even work. Once, on a flight from Chicago to Honolulu, a sweet old Hawaiian lady and her husband sat in front of me, and both reclined their seats at the very beginning of the eight-hour trip. MExcuse me," I said. "That's very uncomfortable. Is there any chance you could put your seat back up, at least partway?" RNo!" she snapped. "We paid
for these goddamn seats, and we'll recline them if we want to." So then everyone was an-
gry: I was angry because I had no room, and she was angry because Ipassive-aggressively kicked her seat once every 15 minutes — often enough to be annoying, but not often enough to definitely be on purpose. The problem isn't with passengers, though the evidence demonstrates that many passengers are little better than sociopaths acting only for their own good. The problem is with the plane. In a closed system in which just one recliner out of 200 passengerscan ruin it for dozens of people, it is too much to expect that everyone will act in the interest of the common good. People recline their seats because their seats recline. But why on earth do seats recline? Wouldn't it be better for everyone if seats simply didn't? Some European a i r lines have begun installing seats that are slightly tilted in their natural resting state, which, anecdotally at least, helps convince passengers they don't need to tilt further. But that doesn't go far enough. It's time for an outright ban on reclining seats on airplanes. I'm not demanding that airlines rip out the old seats and install new ones; let's just extend the requirement that seats remain upright during takeoff and l anding through the entire flight. To those who say such a rule is unenforceable, Irespond: Kick. Kick. Kick.
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWIS "INVITEES" By ELIZABETH C. GORSKI
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CROSSW OR D SOLUTION ISON C3
Amsterdam,cruisesand kitchenettes The Washington Post A friend and I are trav• eling to Amsterdam in May. Are there afew things that we absolutely must do'? We're looking into which museums we should visit and maybe a canal tour. . Yes,acanaltourisgreat, . and definitely visit the Rijksmuseum and the Anne Frank House. Most people take a walk through the redlight district for the voyeurism/curiosity factor. — Zofia Smardz
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traveling to Hawaii Q •• I'm in May. I'd like to have a
than the beaches and Alaska? We prefer the mountains room with akitchenette so I can or river tubing to a crowded save money by eating meals in boardwalk or beach. Certainthe room. Would it be better to ly there are cruise options for look for a condo to rent? travelers like us. • Many lodgings come • S ounds a s i f y ou ' d • with k i t chen facilities, • be p r i me c a n d idates not just condos. Check Oahu's for a Canada/New England tourism w e bsite ( w w w .go cruise. My p arents took a hawaii.com/oahu), which has cruise that started in N ew an accommodation-finding tool. York, worked its way up the — Andrea Sachs New England coast and end-
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liked it. — Becky Krystal
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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By Jodi Kantor New York Times News Service
If you want to know why peoplecome to Rio de Janeiro, and came even during its years of bloody, decadent decline, stand on the Arpoador Beach promenade at day's end. Before you lies an orchestral finale of a sunset: iridescent water, pastel-streaked skies and hazy silhouettes of cliffs to the west. Behind you are swarms of Cariocas, as Rio natives are known: men with phones tucked into the fronts of their bathing suits, swimmers shaking offdroplets ofw aterbefore ordering caipirinhas at an outdoor bar. At the moment when the neon-pink sun slips below the horizon, everyone stops, stands and claps: a nightly salute to city, beach and sky. This was part of why my 7year-old daughter and I traveled to Rio in December, to experience urban beauty so intense that even the locals pause to applaud it. Rio may be the most voluptuous city in the world, with soft beaches, dramatic mountains, waterfalls, a rain forest, lagoon and orchids — planted by residents — peeking out of lush old trees lining the streets. Papayas and jackfruit drop from branches all over town, symbols of the city's overabundant sweetness. The place makes Miami look like Cleveland. I had another reason as well: I wanted to test out the new, supposedly safer Rio. Until recently, it had been considered
a laughably inappropriate destination for a mother-daughter trip, with a highway from the airport that closed sometimes because ofdrug-related shootouts and warnings to tourists that began with phrases like "to minimize the chance of kidnapping ..." But in the past severalyears, a strong national economy combined with the double honor of hosting the World Cup (throughout Brazil
in 2014) and the Olympics (in Rio in 2016) has prompted the city of 6 million to remake itself. Brazilian authorities have boasted that R i o's m u rder rate has plunged to the lowest point in decades, supposedly below those of U.S. cities like Baltimore and St. Louis. Drug gangs have been chased from their former strongholds in the c oastal n e ighborhoods favored by t o u rists. Travel magazines describeRio as a place to be, and for children it seemed as if it could be paradisiacal, with bird-size monkeys, sorbets made of mysterious Amazonian fruits and only a few hours of time difference from the East Coast. I booked two tickets. But once I started reaching out to friends and travel agents who really knew the city, I stiffened with apprehension, worried that R io's rehabilitation was more public-relations coup than reality. The bad Rio stories are really quite bad; many involve tourists, and some are uncomfortably recent. You would never know from looking at the alluring website of the Santa Teresa Hotel, one of the loveliest and priciest establishments in the city, for example, that its guests were robbed at gunpoint in 2011. The year before
that a drug gang took 30 people hostage at the InterContinental Hotel. I also started to hear anecdotal tales of muggings and pickpocketing from friends, along with warnings about Rio's still-weak emergency services — i.e., good luck getting an ambulance. So we flew off with a question: Would it be possible to experience Rio with maximum pleasure and minimal risk?
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hear about it until we returned home. And tourists can attend rehearsalsfor the samba schools that compete at Carnival, but the events only get cooking at midnight, in far-off neighborhoods, many of them
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Photos by Lianne Milton / New York Times NewsService
Previously considered an unsafe city for tourists, Rio de Janeiro has cracked down on crime as it remakes itself in anticipation of the coming World Cup and Olympics. trarich and its perpetual poor is impossible not to feel. The rooftop pool at the Philippe Starck-designed Fasano hotel, where rooms go for $750 and more per night, overlooks the democratic panorama of Arpoador Beach on one side, and on the other a favela, or urban shantytown, setting up a scene in which plutocrats relax while gazing at the homes of laborers.
I asked the tour guide who was taking us around the city that day why Rio didn't do more to showcase its cultural treasures.He rolled his eyes. "Brazilians do the minimum, they don't invest," he said, a sentiment I heard a few times during our weeklong stay.
Worth the trip
On the final day of our trip, I set out to visit the favela of R ocinha, just next door t o Gavea. I ended up leaving my daughter with new friends for a few hours; security concerns aside, a sociology lesson that Q~» 'r;,.+ lasts hours in the broiling heat seemed a bit much to ask of a 7-year old. That was probably the right Missed opportunities decision, but I'm sorry she Halfway through the week missed Rocinha, a bustling, People watch a sunset at Arpoador Beach in Rio de Janeiro. we switched hotels, from the byzantine world o f s h o ps, Surrounded by beaches, mountains, waterfalls, a rain forest and Promenade Palladium, a tidy patchwork houses and do-itlagoons, Rio is one of the most picturesque cities in the world. and comfortable hotel in Leb- yourself electrical systems, lon that had only been avail- crisscrossed b y al l e yways able for the first few days, to with the smallest stores imagfresh litchi, have some coconut ature had hit an unspeakable the Gavea Tropical, a small inable, some j us t v i t r i nes water servedin a green shell, 109 degrees (usually Rio tops house-turned-inn in the leafy carved into notches in a wall. look at that 70-year-old guy out in the 90s in summer), and green hills above the city. The My guide — another friend of jogging in the 90-degree heat. Christina's friend Claudia had neighborhood of Gavea looks a friend — was Leandro Lima, Leblon is at the western edge taken pity on us, inviting us to like Beverly Hills but is sand- a walking personification of of the city's famous double her club for refuge. wiched among favelas, and the how Rocinha was changing. crescent of beaches, quieter To get there, we were ferried hotel is home to a small popu- The son of an electronics reand with pricier real estate across a small channel to a lation of f r i endly m onkeys pairman, he was slowly workthan Ipanema and Copaca- verdant floating enclave with who munch on bananas that ing his way through journalbana to the east. Each stretch tennis courts, swimming pools guests feed them. That was it ism school and had started of beach is a small world unto and views of R io's famous for a certain 7-year-old. She a community news website, itself and our hosts pointed to Christ statue. Claudia, a petite, could have spent the rest of the faveladarocinha.com. spots for stoners, gay men and thoughtful handbag designer, vacation right there, beckonAs we walked up the hillother crowds. ordered me a caipirinha, and ing to her new friends. From side, motorbike taxis whipThe beach at Leblon cer- as we moved to the pool, I real- the hammock on ourbalcony ping past, he showed us the tainly seemed secure t h at ized we were enjoying the ul- looking over a dusky blue and n eighborhood's new b a n k s afternoon, with the only com- timate Rio luxury: the ability green panorama, the rest of and florist, th e s t i ll-spotty motion coming from children to leave our bags carelessly on the city seemed at a safe and trash collection, posters of — now including my daughter chairs without worrying about manageable remove. smiling light-skinned politi— shouting as they hopped theft, an irresponsible act elseI n ou r w a n derings, w e cians embellished with sprayaround in shallow waves. Yet where in the city. could see how hard Rio was painted gang tags, a gleaming even here, I was warned to be When we left the club, my trying to m ake itself ready new government-built library, on guard: Never wear jewelry, daughter asked me what the for visitors, with construction and even some ever-present and carry only a day's worth word "exclusive" meant. It is projectsand cleaning crews Rio joggers happily bouncof cash. My jumpy will-we-be- hard to be in Rio these days roaming around i n o r ange ing past. As we got to the top, safe feeling returned. and not think about money jumpsuits. Newness was ev- sensational views peeked out Here's a travel cliche that and class, in part because ev- erywhere: a new subway stop from between trash heaps comes to life in Rio even more eryone sits around and talks under construction in Leblon, than in many of the world's about the soaring prices: the new umbrellas on the beach, other great cities: Spend as equivalent of $20 for cocktails, new rapid-transit bus stations. much time as possible with $40 for entrees and $80 for But at moments I felt we people who really know the children's bathing suits. You were in a city that had not fully place. Email your sister's col- can still travel there without capitalized on its own vast pol ege roommate wh o l i v e d paying absurd prices — we tential. I had wanted to teach there five years ago, or your stayed at tw o l ovely hotels my daughter about Carnival, colleague whose cousin lives during the December holidays which would be taking over i n Copacabana. See w h at for less than $250 a night, and the city in two months, but Facebook and Twitter can do my daughter ate lots of cheese aside from the empty concrete for you. And if all else fails, pastries for about a dollar a viewing stands near downhire a private guide or two, as pop. town and a dusty shop where we did. I've navigated plenty But Rio has become a city she tried on a costume, it was of foreign cities before with where people talk w i t hout hard to find a toehold. Where only some advance research, a irony about how cheap the were the samba workshops guidebook and amap. But Rio apartments are in New York. with danceteachers and bestis different, with relatively few And although the economic of-all-time Carnival p erforEnglish speakers, a language boom that lifted Rio also low- mances on an IMAX screen'? that cannot be faked and a ered poverty and expanded (Rio does have a Samba Mureputation for s t reet c r ime the country's middle class, the seum, it turns out, but it's obthat makes you reluctant to gap between Brazil's new ul- scure enough that we didn't linger on a corner squinting at
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Pedestrians cross a bridge in the Rocinha favela, an urban shantytown in Rio de Janeiro. The large gap between wealth and poverty is easily observed in Rio.
and knots of overhead wires: Corcovado in one direction, the ocean in a nother, with h ang gliders l o oking l i k e small, colorful i nsects suspended in the distant air. We talked about the shifts in the favelas, welcome and unwelcome — the Bg Bs that were opening, the houses that h ad been marked for p r eO lympics d emolition w i t h residents given little say. For visitors who want to explore favelas, Leandro had some advice: Go with a local guide, and while jeep tours are fine in other parts of the city, skip them in favelas, where residents find them insensitive. "The jeeps are almost like a safari, taking photos out of the window," he said. From a security point of view, the v i sit t o R o cinha seemed like a n o nevent, a sunlit walk through a busy neighborhood with police officers posted every few hundred yards. Around the same time, a friend sent news that a mass robbery had taken place on Leblon Beach just 24 hours after we'd been there. A gang of thieves had surrounded beachgoers, taken their belongings and run off before the police could get them. So which was the unsafe neighb orhood, Leblon or th e f a r poorer Rocinha? We flew home that night, our Rio experiment at an end. There was no way the city had lived up to the here-come-theOlympics, everything-is-awesome-now hype I had seen in some travel magazines. Still, Rio was easily the most visually dazzling city I had ever seen. We'd gotten acquainted with one of the world's only other great multiracial democracies, experienced strange and wonderful ne w f r u its, fed those monkeys, tried our tongues at Portuguese and bought fabulous sandals. And we were fine. I hope my daughter had learned the beginnings of an important travel lesson: Justbecause a place isnotperfect doesn't mean it isn't worth the trip.
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Hot and confusing
When my d a ughter and I struck out on our own, we often found the city hot and confusing, with little air-conditioning to be found (even in pricey restaurants) and service that could best be described as languid. One afternoon we set out to explore Ipanema, Beach time the beachside neighborhood A few hours after we landed, of the famous song, figuring we were sitting on the beach we'd wander through its marin the calm, upscale neighbor- kets and shops, maybe buy hood of Leblon being schooled some flip-flops and get lunch. by Brazilian-American friends Nope: We stood at the front of in the art of Rio beachgoing. restaurantswhose maitre d's Americans take a minivan's never came to seat us, jammed worth of gear to the beach; my ATM card into a series of Cariocas take almost noth- machines that didn't work and ing, just flip-flops, sunglasses, finally retreated back to the phone and a soft little wrap hotel pool in defeat. called a canga. Vendors rent But every time we were with out chairs and umbrellas and members of our loose new netsell everything else you could work of Carioca friends, a far possibly need, from cheese friendlier metropolis emerged, grilled on portable hot coals with rooftop hide-outs and to bikini tops, which they twirl delicacies we would not have from u m brella-topped rods known to order. Which is how like tropical maypoles. we ended up the next day at As the buffet of o p tions Clube dos Caicaras, a private passed by, we did everything swim club on the lagoon, or o ur f r iends C h ristina a n d lagoa, nestled just inland of Sundeep told us to do: Try this the Leblonbeach. The temper-
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C8 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
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TV SPOTLIGHT
producer Lizzy Weiss.) The prospect is dreaded by By Lynn Elber the Carlton students, either bet. The Associated Press cause they've felt the sting of LOS ANGELES - "Until being an outsider or because hearing people walk a day they treasure being part of a in our shoes, they will never deaf-oriented school. "Deaf people feel that movunderstand," says a guidance counselor at a high school for ing into the mainstream chips deaf students in "Switched at away at t h ei r c o m munity, Birth." which is about language and Such insights are a staple of culture," said Jack Jason, Matlin's longtime interpreter and the ABC Family drama, a TV rarity that puts deaf characfii'rt' the series'on-set arbiter for q ~C" ters, played by deaf or hard-ofcorrect sign-language use. hearing actors, at the center of With Daphne as the driving the action. ABC Family via The Associated Press force and invoking Gallaudet, But Monday's episode takes Karla Gutierrez, left, and Ashley Shimizu star in "Switched at students mobilize to take over it a bold step further: Save for Birth." Monday's episode is almost entirely silent, relying on the administration building a few spoken words at the be- American Sign Language and subtitles to keep viewers clued in. and demand Carlton's survivginning and the end, it is silent. al. The conflict's ending will The actors' hands do the talkwait for the March 11 season ing with American Sign Lan- Vasquez. "It's not exactly the moment for the deaf commu- finale. The uprising panics parents guage, even rapping together same, but maybe you can try nity: A 1988 student protest at in one gleeful sequence. to imagine what your every- Gallaudet University in Wash- and puts relationships at risk, Subtitles, which are typiday life would be like." ington, D.C., that ended the including that of Daphne and "It's a risk," added Leclerc, unbroken succession of hear- Bay Kennish (Vanessa Macally s prinkled t h r oughout "Switched at Birth" episodes, who has an inner ear disorder, ing presidents at the school for rano), the s w itched-at-birth k eep the v i ewer c lued i n . Meniere's disease, that can the deaf. c haracters of th e t i tle w h o But when a deaf character is cause hearing loss and vertigo. For fictional Carlton High have come together asteen"A big r i sk," Matlin said confused because she can't School (inspired by real-life agers from two very different hear something vital, the au- through a sign language-inter- LA school, Marlton), more is households. "We started in the pilot with dience is too. It's powerfully preter. "But it's going to be an at stake: The school faces clodisconcerting. eye-opener. I'm very proud to sure because offunding cuts, just one scene that was pure ASL," involving Daphne and The cast, including Oscar- be part of this risk-taking, his- which means its students will be "mainstreamed" with hear- Emmett (Sean Berdy), said winner Marlee Matlin as the tory-making episode." school counselor,are excited Matlin knows about making ing teens. Weiss. As the series developed, a bout what they see as a history. She was the first (It mirrors a real-life trend she and her writing team begrand experiment and eager and remains the only — deaf caused by budget constraints, gan pondering the "what-if" of for viewer reaction. person to receive an Academy Leclerc said. There's also an an all-sign language episode "This is an opportunity for Award acting trophy, honored increasing number of children for the second season. the hearing person to watch as best actressfor 1986's "Chil- being given cochlear implants T hen A B C F a m il y a p at home and try to experience dren of a Lesser God." to counter hearing loss, itself a proached her with the same it," said Katie Leclerc, who The " Switched at B i r t h" controversial issue, according idea, and the challenge was on stars as deaf teenager Daphne episode pivots on another key to series creator and executive to find a logical and engaging i; i
way to realize the ASL-only goal and a big enough story to make the most of it. Last year, a "CSI: NY" episode took a stab at a nearly silent episode, using music by Green Day for most of its storytelling before reverting to dialogue in the final act. The solution for "Switched at Birth" was to make sure every scene included a deaf character: "The truth is, when y ou're around people w h o are deaf,it's considered rude not to sign if you know how," Weiss said. To avoid overloading viewers with subtitles the story was designed to be highly visual, including scenes of the student protest complete with picket signs and a defiant "Take Back Carlton" banner unfurled from the occupied school building. Although some moments depict the pitfalls of b eing a deaf person in a h earing world, Weiss said, that's balanced by positive aspects. "If you have been anything that's in the minority — gay, Jewish, a woman, anything — you have some piece of your identity that brings with it a lot
of baggage and hardship, but also a lot of pride," Weiss said. "That's what we're trying to connect with."
The episode also highlights t he beauty of A S L an d i t s "coolness," such as being able to sign across a crowded theater and have an essentially private conversation, she said.
Mom'sre uestso son are izarreMOVIE TIMESTODAY
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Dear Abby: My husband and I have been married for 30 years and will be visiting my mother-in-law again soon. Even though he is 50, she is obsessed with dressing him. As soon as we arrive, she searches
t hrough our l u ggage and announces that his clothes are
not "good enough."
DEAR ABBY
Then she wants to put her son in her dead husb a n d's clothes. She always threatens that she will have a fit if he won't wear the clothes she chooses. What should I do? — Baggage Check fn Montana
Dear Baggage Check: Your mother-in-law may still be in deep mourning for her husband. If your husband bears a strong resemblance to his father, it's possible that seeing him in those clothes in some way brings her husband back to her. Frankly, her behavior is quite bizarre — including the threatened tantrum if she doesn't get her way.
(Could she be losing it?) When the subject comes up again, as it will when you arrive, you AND
your husband should stand your ground and let her throw her fit. It might be the beginning of some healing. Dear Abby: I have a question regarding what to do when someone
especially if it is deserved. Dear Abby: About a year ago my sisters, a daughter and several niecesand nephews decided to get the word "family," in my mother's h andwriting, tattooed on t h e ir pays you a compli- bodies to memorialize her. I didn't ment. I was always do it because Mom didn't like tattaught that a c om- toos and would not have approved p liment should b e of anyone getting one for any reaanswered with a po- son. I do a number of other things lite "thank you." So in her memory. when my h u sband Should I feel guilty for not joincompliments me on a nice meal, I ing them i n t h eir e ndeavor to say, "Thank you." remember Mom, or is it OK to reHe believes that you are not be- member her in a way she would
ing humble enough when you say
approve of?
thank you, since it is recognizing that you did a good job. He thinks you should say, "I'm glad you like it," instead of thank you. What is the correct response'? — Grammatically Perplexed Dear Perplexed: You are not a robot, and your husband should not attempt to program your respons-
— No Tats For Me Dear No Tats: The process of mourning is an i n dividual one. There is no requirement that families do it "en masse." If you prefer to memorialize your mother in your own way, then do it and don't feel guilty about it. However, because your relati ves chose to do something else in the spirit of family harmony — which your mother would not approve of — be careful not to criticize the path they took.
es by "correcting" you. Saying thank you for a compliment is the appropriate response when one is offered. When paid a compliment, I see no reason to feign humility by saying anything that lessens it,
— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013: This year could be very special for you. You might feel more inspired than you have in many years. Use this gift well, especially if you are an artistic or creative type. You also might become more Stars show the kind intuitive; follow of dayyou'll have y our hunches. If ** * * * D ynamic you are single, ** * * P ositive y o u could meet ** * Average som e one who ** So-so will introduce * Difficult you to a different lifestyle. If you are attached, the two of you might take up a hobby or a commitment that makes you more visible as a couple. SAGITTARIUS thinks that he or she knows more than you do. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * Y ou are ready for an adventure. Taking a trip will help give you some time away from the stressful elements in your life. You might be amazed at what a change of scenery does for you. Tonight: Keep your mind busy.
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
the afternoon, you naturally will kick back and enjoy yourself. You could overindulge, and, before you know it, you might go to extremes. Listen to others' feedback. Tonight: Pick up the tab.
CANCER(JUNE21-JULY 22)
SAGITTARIUS (NOV. 22-DEC. 21)
** * * * Y ou can get sucked into silliness just like anyone else. You also often get strong feelings and premonitions. You might want to listen to one today that might involve a key child or loved one. You enjoy your time with this person to the utmost. Tonight: Swap great ideas.
** * * C ome midafternoon, you'll switch from tortoise mode to hare mode. Don't be surprised if no one can keep up with you. A family member could be distressed, and he or she might need to have a conversation with you. This person needs your feedback. Tonight: All smiles.
LEO (JULY 23-AUG. 22)
CAPRICORN(DEC. 22-JAN. 19)
** * You could be on top of what needs to happen with a partner, but convincing him or her of that fact will take talent. You have a strong drive and a sense of whatyou want. Let this person develop the same. Confusion surrounds calls. Tonight: Followyour imagination.
** * G o to church, meetup with friends or go for a Iog, as you could have a iot of energy. In the afternoon, don't be surprised if you feel like going on a retreat. Do just that, but at your home. Screen calls. Tonight: It is your time for you.
VIRGO (AUG. 23-SEPT. 22)
AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18)
** * Use the morning to the max. You could have some difficulty coming to terms with a certain domestic issue. TAURUS (APRIL 20-MAY 20) There is little you can do but hope that ** * * A loved one might invite you to the other party chills out. Only then can you work out this problem. Tonight: A join him or her. You could be pleasantly surprised at how interesting a new person little confusion over plans. is. Discuss different possibilities and new LIBRA (SEPT. 23-OCT. 22) directions. Intense discussions mark your ** * You might want to do something day. Tonight: Where the action is. quite differently. You'll need to discuss it GEMINI (MAY 21-JUNE20) with those around you who will feel the ** * * K eep reaching out to someone change. Confusion surrounds plans. As whom you care a lot about. Invite this a result, you probably won't do what you thought you were going to do. Tonight: person to join you for a late brunch. You Meet friends. Catch up on news. couldhavemuch more to discussthan you originally thought. Plan on visiting SCORPIO (OCT.23-NOV. 21) with this person more often. Tonight: Get ** ** U se the morning for any a head start on tomorrow. matter that is important or critical. By
** * You might want to touch base with a parent in the morning. Invite him or her to brunch. Later in the day, friends will seekyou out, and a good time could be had by all. Sometimes you need to let go. Learn to go with the flow more often. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Live today.
PISCES (FEB. 19-MARCH20) ** * * You might be capable of seeing a situation from a more spiritual perspective than others. Understand how very different you are from many of the people around you. Invite family over for a favorite meal. Confusion could surround plans, so be precise. Tonight: Stay present. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
10 a.m. onH A, "NBA Basketball" — Conference finals previews, anyone? Two pairs of prime contenders for the East and West titles go at it today on ABC, starting with this clash at New York's Madison Square Gardenbetween Carmelo Anthony's Knicks and LeBronJames'Miami Heat. Then the scene switches to Staples Center in Los Angeles, where Chris Paul and the Clippers play host to Kevin Durant and the Oklahoma City Thunder. 8 p.m. on HIST, "The Bible" — Mark Burnett ("The Voice," "Survivor") and Roma Downey ("Touched by anAngel") are creators and executive producers of this 10-hour, five-part docudrama that retells the stories of the Bible, offering new insights and historical context. Keith David narrates, and Hans Zimmer ("The Dark Knight Rises") provides the musical score. B:30 p.m. on l3, "The Cleveland Show" — Rallo's head starts to swell after a good run at bowling, but Donna bursts his bubble by informing him that he isn't really that good — because no little kid is that skilled at anything. Cleveland, Lester, Holt and Terry try to cure their boredom by visiting an abandoned amusement park in the new episode "Pins, Spins and Fins! (Shark Story Cut for Time)."
9 p.m. onH C), "Red Widow" — Marta Walraven (Radha Mitchell) is enjoying all of the perks of being a nonpracticing member of her Russian immigrant organized crime family, with none of the immediate danger — or so she thinks. Then her husband is gunned down in front of their youngest boy, and Marta discovers just how close the family business hits to her own home. This new series, penned by "Twilight" and "Dexter" scribe Melissa Rosenberg,is based on the Dutch series "Penoza." 10 p.m. on HIST, "Vikings" — Michael Hirst ("The Tudors") is creator and writer of this ninepart scripted series about the lives and adventures of legendary Viking warriors. Itfollows Ragnar Lothbrok (Travis Fimmel), a young farmer and family man, charting his ambitions to discover civilizations across the great ocean to the west as well as his inevitable conflicts along the way. Gabriel Byrne co-stars as chieftain Earl Haraldson. Jessalyn Gilsig and Katheryn Winnick are also in the cast. ©Zap2tt
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Scoreboard, D2 NFL, D3 NHL, D2 Golf, D4 Sports in Brief, D2 Prep sports, D4, D5 NBA, D3 College basketball, D6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
ALPINE SKIING
MLB
Selig: Increase drug penalties SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.
— Baseball commissioner Bud Selig wants tougher penalties for
major league players who violate the sport's
drug agreement. Players' association head Michael Weiner said the union is willing
to discuss changes, but only ones that would start in 2014.
Ben 'sRossta essecon inWor Cup race Smoothskiing Laurenne Rossearned her first career World Cup podium finish on Saturday. But she has had a solid
season overall, including five top-10 finishes (listed below) — in addition to three 11th-place finishes:
Speaking ata news conference Saturday,
Date
Selig said the situation
March1 9th Sup er-G Feb. 24 10th D o wnhill Feb. 8 8t h C o mbined Jan. 12 5th Do w nhill
surrounding last year's positive drug test of AllStar game MVP Melky
Cabrera andallegations players received banned substances from a
P l ace Discipline
March 2 2nd Downhill
From wire reports G AR M ISCH-PARTE N K IRCH EN, Germany — American Laurenne Ross, a 24-year-old from Bend, postedthe first podium finish of her career with a surprising second-place performance in a World Cup downhill race Saturday. Ross became the sixth U.S. Ski Team women's speed athlete this season to finish in the FIS Alpine World Cup top three. She also became the first U.S. woman to land her first World Cup podium this season, joining t eammates Stacey Cook,Leanne Smith and Alice McKennis. Tina Maze of S lovenia broke the record for points in a World
Cup season by w i n n ing Saturday's downhill and became only t he third woman to wi n a r a c e in all five disciplines in a single campaign. Maze secured the overall World Cup titleone week ago, and her ninth win of the season took her to 2,024 points in the overall standings. Austrian g r eat H e r mann Maier held the previous record of 2,000 points on the men's side. Maze covered the 1.81-mile Kandahar course in 1 m i nute, 40.46 seconds. Ross was 0.39 seconds behind for her career-best result, and Maria-Hoefl Riesch of Germany took third in her hometown race. See Ross/D6
j
M~crsJon
Marco Trovati iThe Associated Press
Laurenne Ross, of Bend, celebrates at the finish area of Saturday's World Cup downhill, in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. Ross finished the race in second place.
now-closed Florida anti-
aging clinic helpedlead him to seek stiffening of
GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL
PREP NORDIC SKIING:STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
penalties as quickly as possible. He declined to give
any specifics of what
Lava Bears top Marist to reach
he had in mind, saying MLB Executive Vice President Rob Manfred and Weiner will meet. Selig said he wants
increased penalties "as expeditiously as possible."
Weiner said Monday that some players have expressed supportfor tougher penalties. Selig said he wasencouraged by Weiner's comments. "The players have
5A state
tourney
been discussing wheth-
er changes in the penalties are warranted since
s
the offseason," Weiner
„
By Beau Eastes
•
said during a telephone
The Bulletin
interview Saturday. "As I've said throughout spring training, there's
The Lava Bears are headed back to Matt Court. Playing without all-Intermountain Hybrid point guard Delaney Crook — she • Summit, suffered a Madras, season-ending knee Sisters fall in injury last Fripl a yoffsD5 day in Bend's 51-33 victory over Mountain View — the Bears outlasted Marist 45-43 at Bend High on Saturday. Junior guards Kendall Kramer and Jessica McClay scored 11 points apiece for the Lava Bears, who with the win advance to the 5A state championship tourney in Eugene for the third time in
a variety of player views on this subject. In fact, during the offseason
we suggested to the commissioner's office the possibility of differ-
ential penalties, namely advanced penalties for certain intentional
violations but reduced penalties for negligent violations."
MLB and theunion started urine testing
with an anonymoussurvey in 2003 andadded penalties in 2004, when a first offense resulted
in counseling. A10-day
four years.
suspension for a first
Bend (19-5 overall), which rolls into state on a 10-game winning streak, will face Columbia Gorge Conference champion Hermiston (16-8) on Thursday at 3:15 p.m. at the University of Oregon's Matthew Knight Arena.
offense wasaddedfor 2005 and the current discipline structure
has been in placesince 2006: 50 gamesfor an initial steroids infraction,
100 gamesfor a second and a lifetime banfor a third. No player has reached the third level. — The Associated Press
Ryan Breooecke /The Bulletin
Summit's Casey Shannon (167) skis into the finish line for a first-place finish during the boys 5-kilometer classic race at the Oregon High School Nordic state championships Saturday at Emil's Clearing at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
• The Storm boys and girls teams continue their dominance at Mt. Bachelor ski area By Grant Lucas
Inside
The Bulletin
M OUNT BACHELOR —
WRESTLING
OSU winsPac-12 championship TEMPE, Ariz.— Oregon State took home its second straight
Pac-12 Championship
in wrestling and third in
the past four years on Saturday. The Beavers won
Saturday's results, D4
For s ix
years, Oregon High School Nordic (OHSNO) has existed. Ten state championships had been contested — for boys and for girls each of the past five seasons — heading into this weekend's championships. In all but one, the victorious colorswere the green, black and silver of Summit. On a high-overcast Saturday, the final day of the 2013 OHSNO state championships at Mt. Bachelor's nordic area, the Storm added two more titles thanks to 11 top-10 finishers — six boys, five girls
— in the classic race. "We have a lot of depth, more than anything," Summit coach Luke Smith said. "We have a bunch of good skiers." Casey Shannon finished the 5-kilometer course in 14 minutes, 9.1 seconds, to anchor Summit's boys team, which won its sixth straight OHSNO state championship with 16 points — one point off a perfect score of 15. Bend High finished second with 48 points, followed by Hood River Valley with 67 points.
Redmond High (113 points), Corvallis
"We were playing for Del-
aney," Kramer said about her teammate. "When someone goes down, we know someone
(151), Cleveland (179) and Crescent Val-
else is going to pick it up."
ley (180) rounded out the seven-team boys field. For the Storm, who finished first in the team relay event ahead of Bend and Hood River Valley, Alec Wiltz and Max Millslagle took second and third, respectively, while Skylar Kenna (fifth place), Zebediah Millslagle (sixth) and Nico Gi-
Lisa Sylvester stepped up her scoring in Crook's absence, contributing nine points off the bench. Mekayla Isaak, the Intermountain Conference champions' leading scorer during the regular season, added eight points. Bend, which led for the entire second half, outrebounded the Spartans from Eugene 31-22 and forced 18 Marist turnovers in the playoff game. See Bend/D5
annoses (ninth) all placed in the top 10. "I don't know what the formula is," Smith said about Summit's reputation of fielding successful skiers. "We're lucky to have them. It's kind of luck.... Maybe it's being closer to the snow." See Nordic/D4
three individual champi-
onships and had ateam total of 158 total points,
ahead of second place Boise State (136.5).
PREP ALPINE SKIING: STATE CHAMPIONSHIPS
Mike Mangrum (141
pounds), Taylor Meeks (197)and ChadHanke (heavyweight) all won individual weight class
crowns. For Mangrum it was his second straight
Pac-12 Championship, while Meeks andHanke both walked away with their first. OSU did not have a
wrestler place lower than third, as Scott Sak-
aguchi (149), R.J. Pena (157), and SethThomas (165.) all took second. Oregon State will send at least seven wrestlers to the NCAA champion-
ships in DesMoines, lowa, March 21-23. — The Associated Press
Bend Highgir sandboyscaim season teamtites at Bacheor By Mark Morical
InSide
Saturday's results, season standings, D4
The Bulletin
MOUNT BACHELOR — Brooke Kelley had a choice to make between club ski racing and high school ski racing, and she is ecstatic that she chose the latter. Kelley wrapped up an individual overall season championship and led the Bend High girls to a team title Saturday on the second and final day of the Oregon School Ski Association state championships. A racer with the Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation since she was 8, Kelley,
a junior, decided to race only in the OSSA this winter. "I like the team aspect, and I can be more competitive," Kelley said of high school racing. "It's really fun being with a big group of teammates and getting to know them. We do a lot of team building. In high school skiing you can be more competitive, but club is just a lot of traveling and a lot of commitment." See Alpine /D5
I
! ~z 1
lgllli
c.
g4:i gjr Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Bend's Brooke Kelley skis her second run on the slalom course during the Oregon School Ski Association state championships on Saturday on the Thunderbird run at Mt. Bachelor. Kelley won the OSSA's individual overall season championship.
D2 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
SPORTS IN BRIEF
COREBOARD ON DECK Wednesday Boys basketball: Class5Astatetoumament at Matthew KnightArenain Eugene, Mountian Viewvs. Wilsonville, 3:15 p.m. Thursday Girls basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat MatthewKnightArenainEugene,Bendvs. Hermiston, 3:15 p.m.
Pacitic 70,UCRiverside 68 Sacramento St 53,ldahoSt.52 Saint Mary's(Cal80, ) SantaClara67 San Diego76,Pepperdine 69 SouthernCal57, ArizonaSt.56 UC Davis71,CalSt.-Fullerton68 LIC Irvine72, LongBeachSt. 69 UC Santa Barbara 83, CSNorthridge 74 UCLA74,Arizona69 UNLV80, Nevada63 IJtahValley76,ChicagoSt. 69 WeberSt.80, N.Arizona78, DT
BASKETBALL
Bucknell 62,Navy46 Buffalo 81,Akron67
Delaware82, GeorgeMason77 Drexel62,UNCWilmington 46 Georgetown 64,Rutgers 51 Holy Cross74, Colgate59 LIU Brooklyn96, Quinnipiac90 La Salle97,Duquesne64 Lafayette80,American U.72 Lehigh81, Army75 Louisville 58Syracuse53 MountSt.Mary's103, FairlerghDickinson82 NJIT 69,HoustonBaptist 58 Niagara 78, St.Peter's61 Old Dominion 81, Northeastern74 Penn75,Harvard72 Princeton68, Dartmouth63 Providence 62, St.John's59 Rider65,Canisius61 RobertMorris81,CCSU61 Saint Joseph's82, Fordham56 Saint Louis66, GeorgeWashington 58 St. Bonaventure104,Charlotte83 St. Francis(NY)92,SacredHeart 80 Temple 76,RhodeIsland70 Towson 67, Hofstra64
Wagner 67, Monmouth(NJ)57 Yale 79,Cornel 70 South Alabama St 74,Grambling St.62 Appalachian St. 86,Chatanooga60 Austin Peay 91, UT-Martin 58 Belmont78,Jacksonville St.71 Cent. Arkansas 68,McNeeseSt. 67 Charleston Southern75,Coastal Carolina64 Coll. otCharleston74, Furman50 Davidson83, GeorgiaSouthem48 Delaware St. 56,Howard 53 Duke79,Miami 76 Elon 80,UNCGreensboro 66 FAU77,FIU60 Florida64,Alabama52
FloridaGulfCoast67,KennesawSt. 49 Gardner-Webb 76, Presbyterian 57 Georgia78,Tennessee68 Hampton77, FloridaA&,M68 High Point63, Campbell 62 JacksonSt. 60,AlabamaABM57 James Madison69, Wiliam& Mary67 Liberty 73,Radford 56 LouisianaTech88, SanJose St. 61 Louisiana-Latayette 71, Louisiana-Monroe63 Maryland67, WakeForest 57 Memphis76, UCF67 Mercer77,Stetson65 Middl Tennessee70,W Kentucky62 MississippiSt. 73,Mississippi 67 MorganSt.58, Md.-EasternShore45 N.Kentucky66,Jacksonville62 NC A8158, SCState35 NC Central51, SavannahSt. 47 Norfolk St.62, Bethune-Cookman61 North Florida85,Lipscomb78 SE Missouri84,MurraySt. 68 SouthAlabama53,Troy49 SouthernMiss 88,EastCaroina69 Tennessee St.85, E Kentucky 81, DT Tennessee Tech 72,MoreheadSt. 66 UAB74, SMU69 VCU84, Butler52 VMI 94,Longwood80 Vanderbilt 62,Auburn55 VirginiaTech69, Clemson 61 W. Carolina56, Samford 54, DT Winthrop70,UNCAsheville 61 Wofford69,TheCrtadel 62 Midwest Ball St.86,Toledo72 Cent. Michigan 69, N.I linois 50
Cincinnati61,Uconn56 Creighton91,Wichita St.79 Dayton78,Richmond74 Detroit 79,Ill.-chicago67 E. Illinois 61,SIU-Edwardsville 46 E. Michigan50,WMichigan 49,DT Evansville84,IndianaSt.68 IPFW74,Oakl and72 llinois 72,Nebraska65 Indiana73,lowa60
Kansas 91,West Virginia 65 Kent St.78,Miami (Dhio)58 Loyola ofChicago87,ClevelandSt. 60 Marquette72,NotreDame64 Minnesota73,PennSt. 44 Missouri89,LSU76 MissouriSt.64,Bradley56 N. DakotaSt.84, Nebraska-Omaha57 N. Iowa80,I inorsSt. 72 Ohio 78,BowlingGreen65 S. Illinois 66,Drake63 LIMKC48, IUPUI44 IJMass77,Xavier 72
Valparaiso75,GreenBay56 W. Illinois 61,SouthDakota59 Wright St.72,YoungstownSt.45 Southwest Arkansas 73 Kentucky60 Houston103,Marshall 76 Idaho90, TexasSt. 81 Kansas St 64,Baylor 61 Oklahoma 86,lowaSt.69 OklahomaSt.78,Texas65 Oral Roberts68,Lamar50 SamHoustonSt. 54,SELouisiana 45
Seattle 53,UTSA37 SouthernU.61, PrairieView39 Stephen F.Austrn 64, NorthwesternSt. 63 Texas A8M74, South Carolina 56 Texas A8M-CC 68,NichollsSt.64 Texas Southem 78,Alcom St.59 TexasTech72,TCU63 Texas-Arlington 61, UtahSt. 46 Tulsa78,Tulane66 UALR 78,ArkansasSt. 71 UTEP 67, Rice56
Far West BYU73,LoyolaMarymount70 BoiseSt. 78,ColoradoSt.65 California62,Colorado46 Denver66,NewMexico St.60 FresnoSt. 56,Air Force41 Gonzaga 81, Portland52 Montana71,MontanaSt. 68 N. Colorado 85 PortlandSt. 75 NewMexico53, Wyoming 42 North Dakota 78, E.Washrngton74
Delray BeachInternational Saturday At Delray BeachStadium & Tennis Center Delray Beach, Fla. Purse: $519,776(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals ErnestsGulbis, Latvia,def. Tommy Haas(2), Germany,6-3, 4-6,7-6(2). EdouardRoger-Vasselin,France,def. JohnIsner (I), UnitedStates, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.
Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST
Men's college Saturday's Games East Brown61, Columbia58 Bryant85,St.Francis(Pa.)60
BASEBALL
Conference Oregon
UCLA California Arizona Colorado SouthernCal ArizonaSt. Washington Stanford Utah
OregonSt. WashingtonSt.
W 12 12 12 11 9 9 9 7 7 3 3 2
L 4 4 5 6 7 7 8 8 9 12 13 13
Saturday'sGames
Overall W L 23 6 22 7 20 9 23 6 19 9 14 15 20 10 15 13 16 13 11 16 13 16 11 17
USC57,ArizonaState56 Calitornia62, Colorado46 UCLA74,Arizona69
Today's Games
WashingtonStateatWashington, 12:30p.m. Lltah atStanford,2 p.m.
Women's college Saturday's Games East Army62,Lehigh52 Baylor 80,WestVirginia 49 Bucknell55,Navy48 Columbia58, Brown55 DePaul81,Pittsburgh 73 Hartford59,Vermont33 Harvard67, Penn54 Holy Cross53,Colgate51
Marquette51, Georgetown48 NotreDame92, Providence57 Princeton68, Dartmouth60 Quinnipiac66,LIUBrooklyn45 SacredHeart57, St.Francis (NY)53 SetonHall60,St.John's51 Towson79,Wiliam 8 Mary63 Villanova77, Syracuse75, 3DT Xavier67,UMass54 Yale71,corne 64 South Belmont69,Jacksonville St. 49 Cent. Arkansas 77, McNeeseSt. 69,OT Chattanooga 69,Appalachian St.45 Coll. ot Charleston73,W.Carolina 61 FIU 68,FAIJ65 GeorgiaSouthern67,UNC-Greensboro53 GramblingSt. 68,AlabamaSt. 64 Hampton59, FloridaA8M39 High Poin58, t CoastalCarolina53 Howard65,DelawareSt.39 JacksonSt.52, AlabamaA8M45 Liberty88,CharlestonSouthern 62 Louisiana-Monroe 64,Louisiana-Lafayette 50 Middl Tennessee71,W Kentucky54 MorganSt. 65,Md.-EasternShore28 N. Kentucky76, Jacksonville 71,DT NC A8T59, SCState54 NC Central33, SavannahSt. 29 Norfolk St.67,Bethune-Cookman40 North Florida61, Lipscomb49 Presbyterian76, Longwood72 Radford70,Gardner-Webb64 SE Missouri61,MurraySt.58 SouthAlabama71, Troy 70 Stetson74, Mercer60 Tennessee St.69,E. Kentucky66 Tennessee Tech73, Morehead St. 53 Uconn85,SouthFlorida 51 LIT-Martin81, Austin Peay64 Winthrop100,UNCAsheville 56 Woffor d75,Furman57 Midwest Cincinnati56,Rutgers48 ClevelandSt.58,Valparaiso54 Detroit 66,Milwaukee40 E. Washington67, NorthDakota58 GreenBay67, Ill.-chicago 36 IUPUI82, IPFW67 KansasSt.68,TexasTech62 Nebraska-Om aha68,UMKC41 S. DakotaSt.94, N.Dakota St.70 SIU-Edwardsville70,E.Illinois 62,OT W. II inois64, Oakland53 Youngstown St.64, WrightSt. 54 Southwest Nicholls St.60,TexasA&M-CC51 Oklahoma 85, Kansas77 OklahomaSt. 64,Texas58 Prairie View 59, Southern U.42 TCU61,lowaSt.58 TexasSouthem70,AlcomSt. 43 UALR 58, ArkansasSt.50 Far West BYU73,Portland63 CS Bakerstield85, NewOrleans 55 Cal Poly72,CalSt.-Fullerton47 California78, Washington 50 ColoradoSt. 72,BoiseSt 60 Denver71, NewMexico St.63 FresnoSt.80, Air Force55 Hawaii69,CSNorthridge 60 Idaho72,TexasSt. 59 IdahoSt.81, Sacramento St.61 LongBeachSt.66, UCDavis 54 Loyol aMarymount58,SanFrancisco55 Montan5a8,MontanaSt.55 N. Arizona65,Weber St.49 N. Colorado63,PortlandSt. 48 Pacific 65, UC Irvine53 Pepperdine 80,Saint Mary's(Cal) 67 San Diego84,SantaClara66 SanJoseSt.60, LouisianaTech58 Seattle56,UTSA54 Stantord 72Washington St.50 UC Santa Barbara 62, UCRiverside42 UNLV80, Nevada63 UtahSt.81, Texas-Arlington 57 LltahValley59,Houston Baptist 46 Wyoming72, NewMexico 50
TENNIS Professional DubaiChampionships Saturday At Dubai TennisStadium Dubai, United ArabEmirates Purse: $2.4 million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Brazil TennisCup WTABrasil Tennis CupResults Saturday At FederacaoCatarinense deTenis Florianopolis, Brazil Purse: $236,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Monica Niculescu,Romania,det.Dlga Puchkova Russia,6-2,4-6, 6-4. Malaysia nOpen Saturday At Bukit Kiara Equestrian &Country Resort Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia Purse: $235,000(Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Karolina Pliskova,CzechRepublic, def. Ayumi Morita (4)r Japan,6-0, 6-2. BethanieMattek-Sands,UnitedStates, def.Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (3), Russia, 6-4,6-1. MexicanOpen Saturday At The FairmontAcapulcoPrincess Acapulco, Mexico Purse: ATP,$1.35 million (WTBOO); WTA, $236,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Championship DavidFerrer(1), Spain,vs. Rafael Nadal (2), Spain, ate
Japan Cuba China Brazil
1 1 0 0
0 0 0 2
AtFukuoka,Japan Saturday, March2 Japan5,Brazil1 Cuba 5,Brazil2
1.000 1.000 000
I/2
.000 1'/z
GROUP B W L Pct GB Taiwan 1 0 1.000 Netherlands I 0 1.000 SouthKorea 0 1 .000 1 Australia 0 1 .000 1 At Taichung, Taiwan
Saturday, March2
Taiwan4,Australia1 Netherlands5, SouthKorea0 GROUP C W L DominicanRepublic 0 0 PuertoRico 0 0 Spain 0 0 Venezuela 0 0 GROUP D W L Canada 0 0 Italy 0 0 Mexico 0 0 UnitedStates 0 0 Thursday, March7 At Scottsdale, Ariz.
Pct GB 000 000 000 000 Pct GB 000 000 000 000
Italy vs.Mexico,noon Friday, March 8 At Scottsdale, Ariz. Canada vs. Italy,11 30a.m At Phoenix Mexicovs.UnitedStates, 6 p.m.
GOLF
MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Spring Training
Saturday's Games Detroit (ss) 4,Pittsburgh1 Boston 2,Minnesota1 Toronto11,Philadelphia6 N.Y.Yankes10, Detroit (ss)3 Washington 6, St. Louis2 Tampa Bay4, Baltimore1 Houston 6,Atlanta5 N.Y. Mets8, Miami8, tie Milwaukee 4, L.A.Angels3
Kansas City 9, SanFrancisco(ss) 5 San Francisco (ss) 9, ChicagoCubs7 Seattle 9,L.A. Dodgers5 San Diego11,Cleveland8 Oakland6,Colorado 3 ChicagoWhiteSox4, Crncinnati 0 Texas7,ArizonaI
Singles Championship NovakDiokovic(1), Serbia,def. TomasBerdych (3), Czech Republic, 7-5, 6-3.
WBC World Baseball Classic Glance All Times PST FIRSTROUND GROUP A W L Pc t GB
72-71-70 —213 71-72-70 213 73-69-71—213 69-72-72—213 67-72-74—213 73-71-70—214 72-71-71—214 73-70-71 214 69-73-72—214 69-71-74 —214 71-69-74 —214
LPGA Tour HSBCWomen's Champions Saturday At SentosaGolf Club(SerapongCourse) Singapore Purse: $1.4 million Yardage:6,606; Par:72 Third Roundleaders 69-66-67 —202 Na Yeon Choi 67-66-69—202 StacyLewis 68-67-69 —204 PaulaCreamer DanielleKang 68-69-70 —207 Ariya Jutanugarn 69-66-72 207 AzaharaMunoz 65-70-72 —207 SunYoungYoo 67-68-72—207 JessicaKorda 72 68 68 208 KarineIcher 70-71-68 —209 NicoleCastrale 69-71-69 —209 CandieKung 69-71-69 209 ChellaChoi 68-67-74—209 MorganPressel 70-71-69—210 Lexi Thompson 73 68-69 210 JiyarShin 71-69-70 —210 PornanongPhatlum 67-71-72 —210 LizetteSalas 67-74-70 211 CatrionaMatthew 70-69-72 —211 BeatrizRecari 71-72-69 —212 MoriyaJutanugam 73-68-71 —212 68-73-71 —212 YanrTseng
Beavers stay perfectThe Oregon State baseball
team swepta doubleheader from visiting Bryant Saturday afternoon at Goss Stadium in
Corvallis and in the process, the Beavers kept their record perfect and reside at11-0. OSU
won the second game,3-1,
SOCCER
after winning game one, 7-2. OSU pitcher Andrew Moore
MLS
was dominant in the second
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PST
game, allowing just four hits,
EasternConference
W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 1 0 0 3 3 0 SportingKansasCity I 0 0 3 3 I Houston 1 0 0 3 2 0 Montreal 1 0 0 3 1 0 Chicago 0 0 0 0 0 0 NewEngland 0 0 0 0 0 0 NewYork 0 0 0 0 0 0 TorontoFC 0 I 0 0 0 I Philadelphia 0 1 0 0 I 3 D.C. 0 1 0 0 0 2 WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA Vancouver 1 0 0 3 1 0 FC Dallas I 0 0 3 1 0 Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 0 Portland 0 0 0 0 0 0 RealSaltLake 0 0 0 0 0 0 SanJose 0 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado 0 1 0 0 0 1 Seattle 0 I 0 0 0 I ChivasUSA 0 1 0 0 0 3 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.
PGA Tou
HondaClassic Saturday At PGANational (Champion Course) Palm BeachGardens, Fla. Purse: $6 million yardage:7,110; P ar: 70 Third Round 68-63-71 —202 LukeGuthrie 67-65-70 —202 HOCKEY MichaelThompson 66 68-70 204 LeeWestwood 68-66-70—204 GeoffOgivy NHL 65-71-69—205 RickieFowler NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 67-67-71—205 CharlesHowell III AU TimesPST 67-72-67—206 Y.E.Yang 71-67-68—206 PeterHanson Eastern Conference Keegan Bradley 68-68-70—206 Atlantic Divisio n JustinRose 68-66-72—206 G P W L OT Pts GF GA GrahamDeLaet 65-68-73—206 Pittsburgh 22 14 8 0 28 77 64 DarronStiles 71-68-68—207 N ewJersey 21 1 0 6 5 25 52 56 Erik Compton 69-68-70—207 Philadelphia 2 31 1 11 1 23 66 68 JamesDriscoll 69-68-70—207 N.Y.Rangers 1 9 9 8 2 20 48 49 LucasGlover 69-66-72—207 N.Y.lslanders 2 1 8 1 1 2 18 61 73 TomGigis 67-68-72—207 Northeast Division NicholasThompson 69-66-72—207 GPW LOT Pts GF GA BooWeekley 66-67-74—207 Boston 18 14 2 2 30 54 38 DavidLynn 72-68-68—208 Montreal 21 13 4 4 30 64 50 BrandtJobe 69-71-68—208 Ottawa 22 12 7 3 27 50 41 Kyle Stanley 70-69-69—208 Toronto 22 13 9 0 26 64 55 BenKohles 66-73-69—208 Buffa o 22 9 12 1 19 58 70 Bob Estes 69-69-70—208 Southeast Division GraemeMcDowell 67-68-73—208 GPW LOT Pts GF GA SeanO'Hair 66-68 74 208 Carolina 20 11 8 1 23 60 57 RussellHenley 68-71-70—209 Winnipeg 21 10 10 1 21 55 64 70-68-71—209 CharlSchwa rtzel T ampaBay 21 9 1 1 I 19 73 67 MarkWilson 70-68-71 209 Florida 2 1 6 10 5 17 53 79 67-70-72—209 Chris Stroud W ashington 2 0 8 1 1 1 17 55 59 67-69-73—209 Jeff Klauk Western Conference 65-70 74 209 RobertStreb Central Division 70-70-70—210 TigerWoods GPW LOT Pts GF GA RetiefGoosen 72-67-71—210 Chicago 21 18 0 3 39 68 40 GeorgeMcNeil 71 68-71 210 St Louis 20 11 7 2 24 59 57 StewartCrnk 68-71-71—210 Detroit 21 10 8 3 23 60 57 FabianGomez 66-72-72—210 Nashville 2 2 9 8 5 23 46 54 DanielSummerhays 69-67-74—210 Columbus 21 5 12 4 14 47 65 BrianStuard 66-69-75—210 Northwest Division MatteoManassero 73-67-71—211 GPW LOT Pts GF GA TrevorImmelman 73-67-71—211 V ancouver 20 1 1 5 4 26 59 54 StevenBowditch 70-69-72—211 M innesota 20 1 0 8 2 22 45 49 BenCrane 70-69-72—211 Edmonton 20 8 8 4 20 49 54 FreddieJacobson 70-69-72—211 Colorado 1 9 8 8 3 19 49 58 BrendondeJonge 70-68-73—211 Calgary 1 9 7 8 4 18 53 66 DustinJohnson 66-71-74—211 Pacific Division BrandenGrace 65-71-75—211 GPW LOT Pts GF GA Chris Kirk 68-68-75—211 Anaheim 20 15 3 2 32 71 55 DougLaBelleII 66-68-77—211 SanJose 20 10 6 4 24 47 44 Matt Jones 67-73-72—212 Phoenix 21 10 8 3 23 62 59 Scott Stallings 74-66-72—212 Dallas 21 10 9 2 22 57 62 NicolasColsaerts 69-71-72—212 L osAngeles 1 9 1 0 7 2 22 49 47 BrendanSteele 72-67-73—212 NOTE:Twopoints for awin, onepointfor overtime Vaughn 71-68-73 212 T a yl o r loss. 71-68-73—212 KevinStreelman Saturday's Games 68-71-73—212 GregChalmers Buffalo 4,NewJersey3, SD 67-72-73 212 BrianGay Phoenix 5,Anaheim4, SD 67-71-74—212 KevinStadler Philadelphia2, OttawaI 67-71-74 —212 Jeff Dverton Boston 3,TampaBay2 69-70-74 213 JasonDufner Washington 3, Winnipeg0 69-69-75—213 RyanPalmer Pittsburgh7, Montreal6, DT 71-66-76 —213 Martin Kaym er Carolina 6,Florida2 ErnieEls 69-70-75 214 Vancouver 5,LosAngeles2 HankKuehne 67-72-75—214 SanJose2, Nashville 1 RossFisher 71-66-77—214 Today's Games CameronPercy 71 66-77 214 Chicagoat Detroit, 9:30a.m. PatrickReed 67-73-75—215 OttawaatN.Y.Islanders, noon SteveMarino 71-69-75—215 Coloradoat Columbus,noon JamieDonaldson 73-66-76—215 St. Louisat Dallas, noon MarcLeishman 69-69-77—215 Carolrnaat Florida, 3p.m. D.A. Points 67-71-77—215 Montrealat Boston,4:30p.m. GaryWoodland 68-70-77—215 Buffalo atN.Y.Rangers, 4:30 p.m. Justin Hicks 71-68-77 —216 Edmonton at Minnesota,5 p.m. Billy Horschel 66-69-81 —216 VancouveratCalgary, 5 p.m. BradFritsch 68-72-77—217 JasonBohn 70-69-79 —218
BASEBALL
AnnaNordqvist JennyShin InbeePark ChieArrmura KarinSlodin Vicky Hurst Hee-WonHan StacyPrammanasudh Brittanyl.incicome Jodr EwartShadoff HeeKyungSeo
Saturday'sGames
SportingKansasCity 3,Philadephia1 VancouverI,TorontoFC0 Houston2, D.C.United0 FC Dallas1,Colorado0 Columbus 3, ChivasUSA0 Montreal1,SeattleFC0
Today'sGames
Chicag oatLosAngeles,2p.m. NewYorkatPortland, 4:30p.m. Real SaltLakeatSanJose,7p.m.
one unearned run and awalk in eight innings of work. Michael Conforto finished the day with five runs driven in after
he homered andwent threefor-four in the first game. The clubs finish their four-game se-
ries today with a gamescheduled to begin at1:05 p.m.
Oregon falls to Fullerton — Ryon Healy had two hits
for the second consecutive game, but it wasn't enough as Oregon couldn't overcome a three-run first inning by Cal State Fullerton in a 5-2 loss to the Titans at Goodwin Field on Saturday night in Fullerton, Ca-
lif. Oregon finished with seven hits, one more than Fullerton, but the Titans infield robbed the Ducks of two more hits
that cost Oregon (7-3) at least one run. Oregonand Cal State Fullerton wrap up thethreegame series today at noon.
M O T O R SPO R T S NASCAR Sprint Cup Subway FreshFit 500 After Friday qualifying; racetoday At Phoenix International Raceway Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1 miles
(Car number inparentheses)
1. (55)MarkMartin, Toyota,138.074mph. 2. (5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet,137.862. 3. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,137.804. 4. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,137.673 5. (24)JettGordon,Chevrolet, 137.164. 6. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,137.143. 7. (29)KevinHarvrck,Chevrolet,137.075. 8. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,136.924. 9. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota, 136.882. 10. (39)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,136.861. 11. (2)BradKeseiowski, Ford,136.835. 12. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,136.731. 13. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,136.654. 14. (56)MartinTruexJr.,Toyota,136.602. 15. (99)Carl Edw ards, Ford, 136483. 16. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,136.364. 17. (16)GregBiftle, Ford,136.291. 18. (43)AricAlmirola,Ford, 136.266. 19. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,135.936. 20. (31)JeffBurton,Chevrolet,135.89. 21. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,135.87. 22. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,135 44. 23. (51) A JAllmendinger, Chevrolet,135.44. 24. (34)DavidRagan,Ford,135.267. 25. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,135.247. 26. (7)DaveBlaney, Chevrolet,135.1. 27. (36)J.J.Yeley,Chevrolet,135.064. 28. (95)ScottSpeed,Ford,134917. 29. (42)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 134.821. 30. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,134.705. 31. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,134.695. 32. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,134.373. 33. (47)BobbyLabonte,Toyota,134.343. 34. (83)DavidReutimann, Toyota,133.814. 35. (19)MikeBliss, Toyota, 133.774. 36. (35)JoshWise,Ford,133.591. 37. (30)DavidStremme,Toyota,Owner Points. 38. (33)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,Owner Points. 39. (44)ScottRiggs, Ford,OwnerPoints. 40. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 41. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota, Owner Points. 42. (32)KenSchrader, Ford, Owner Points. 43.(13)CaseyMears, Ford, Owner Points.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITYRDYALS Agreedto terms with RHPAaronCrow,RHPLouis Coleman,RHPLuis Mendoza,RHPGuilermoMoscosoandLHPFrancisley Bueno onone-yearcontracts. LDS ANGE LESANGELS—Agreed to termswith DF PeterBourios,RHPRyan Brasier, DFKoleCalhoun,RHPDavid Carpenter, CHankConger,DFScott Cousins,RHPBarry Enright, INFTommyField, RHP ErnestoFrierr,RHPStevenGeltz, CJohnHester, INF Luis Jimenez, RHPMichael Kohn, LHPNick Maronde, LHP BradMils, RHPGarrett Richards,INFAndrew Romine,Li-IPBrandonSisk, LHPAndrewTaylor, DF MarkTrumboandDFTravis Witherspoononone-year contracts.Renewedthe contract ofDFMikeTrout. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Agreedtoterms with RHPChaseAnderson, RHPCharlesBrewer, RHPJosh Collmenter,RHPRandall Delgado,RHPDaniel Hudson, RHP Starling Peralta, RHPEric Smith, RHPZeke Spruill, LHPPatrick Corbin, LHPEuryDela Rosa, LHP Joe Paterson,LHPMat Reynolds, LHPTyler Skaggs, OF Keon Broxton, DFTony Campana, OFAdamEaton, OF AlfredoMarte,DFA.J. Pollock, INFDidi Gregorius and INFPaul Goldschmidt onone-year contracts. Renewedthecontract of LHPWade Miley. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGOBULLS— Signed FLouAmundson to a 10-daycontract. MIAMIHEA T—Signed FJuwanHoward to a10day contract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL—Fined Dallas F JamieBenn$10,000 for cross -checkingEdmonton FRyanJonesina Feb.28
game.
LDS ANG ELES KINGS—Activated DAlec Martinez fromthe injured reservelist. AssignedDAndrew Campbelto l Manchester (AHL).
MOTOR SPORTS Kyle Busch gets win
— Kyle Busch overcamea mid-race gaffe on pit road with a dominating performance, leading 142 laps to win his fifth Nationwide Series race at
Phoenix International Raceway on Saturday. Busch started
from the pole andshookoff a speeding penalty to pit road with what was easily the fastest car during the 200-lap race
around PIR's mile oval.
WINTER SPORTS Bjoergen wins 30K
— Marit Bjoergen of Norway secured her12th world title on Saturday by beating Justyna Kowalczyk in a sprint finish to win the 30-kilometer classic event at the nordic skiing world championships in Va) Di
Fiemme, Italy. Bjoergen, who won three Olympic golds in
Vancouver and hasdominated these championships aswell, spedpastKowalczyk with 200 meters to go to win in1 hour,
27 minutes, 19.9 seconds. Kowalczyk was 3.7seconds behind.
TENNIS Djokovic takes DudaiNovak Djokovic won his fourth
Dubai Championships title on Saturday by beating thirdseeded Tomas Berdych 7-5,
6-3. The top-ranked Djokovic extended his unbeaten streak this year to13 matches and
has beaten Berdych in13 of their past14 meetings.
Nadal wins in Mexico — Rafael Nadal blasted
past top seed anddefending champion David Ferrer 6-0, 6-2 in Saturday's final of the
Mexican Open in Acapulco in a powerful performance that indicated he has returned to
near his best after a longterm knee injury. Ferrer was a three-time defending champion and had won19 straight matches in this event, but he could find no answer to Nadal,
losing to his Spanish compatriot in just one hour and five minutes. The women's final was similarly one-sided with
Italy's Sara Errani beating Carla Suarez-Navarro of Spain 6-0, 6-4.
White tops U.S. Open
Bruins rally from two goals down, get win over Lightning The Associated Press BOSTON — Brad Marchand scored a tiebreaking goal on the power play with 2:16 left in the third period, completing Boston's comeback from a 2-0 deficit with a 3-2 victory over the Tampa Bay Lightning that extended the Bruins' winning streak to six straight. Marchand's 11th goal of the season came late in a double-minor high sticking penalty to Brendan MikkelsoTL It was the second power-play goal of the game for the Bruins, who had not scored at home with a man advantage entering the game. T yler Seguin also scored on t h e power play for the Bruins 3:22 into the second period, pulling Boston within 2-1 after slow start. Rich Peverley tied it just 1:17 later with an even-strength
NHL ROUNDUP goal, and the score stood until Patrice Bergeron and Marchand broke free for a 2-on-1 late in the third. Steven Stamkos and Alexander Killorn scored for Tampa Bay, both on power plays in the first period. Also on Saturday:
Flyers ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 2 Senators..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 PHILADELPHIA — Jakub Voracek and Wayne Simmonds scored goals and Ilya Bryzgalov stopped 33 shots to help Philadelphia defeat Ottawa.
Sabres .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 4 Devils ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 BUFFALO, N.Y.— Jason Pominville scored twice and added a shootout
goal, and Buffalo beat New Jersey. Capitals ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Jets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Braden H oltby stopped 35 shots and Mi ke Ribeiro had a goal and an assist and Washington defeated Winnipeg.
Penguins........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 7 Canadiens.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 MONTREAL — Brandon Sutter's second goal of the game 52 seconds into overtime lifted Pittsburgh to a wild victory over Montreal.
Hurricanes.......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 6 Panthers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 RALEIGH, N.C. — Jussi Jokinen scored twice and added an assist, and Riley Nash netted his first goal as part of a three-point night in Carolina's win over Florida.
C oyotes ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Ducks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 GLENDALE, Ariz. — Steve Sullivan scored the tying goal with 6:28 remaining in regulation and then netted the lone goal in the shootout to lift Phoenix over Anaheim. S harks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Predators..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 SAN JOSE, Calif. — Dan Boyle and Joe Pavelski got San Jose's struggling power-play unit going with goals that helped the Sharks beat Nashville. Canucks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Kings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 VANCOUVER, British C olumbia — Daniel Sedin and Jannik Hansen scored 2:44 apart late in the second period to lead Vancouver over Los
Angeles.
— Shaun White defended his title at the U.S. Open snowboarding championships, in Vail, Colo., easily winning the
event Saturday with a flawless performance through asunsplashed halfpipe. White went
big in his opening run, holding little back, and only got bet-
ter on his second passwhen he turned in the high score of 95.58 points. Japanese teenager Ayumu Hirano finished
second and LouieVito of Sandy, Utah, took third. Later in the day, Kelly Clark captured
her sixth U.S. Openhalfpipe title, the most in the history of the competition. Clark's elec-
tric opening run earned ascore of 84.45 points as she edged Hannah Teter by 2.32. — From wire reports
SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY
NBA ROUNDUP
BASKETBALL college, Wyoming at New Mexico (sameday tape), Root Sports. 3:30 a.m.:Men's college, Pepperdine at San Diego (sameday tape), Root Sports. 9 a.m.:Women's college, Southern Miss at Tulane, CBSSN. 10a.m.:NBA, Miami at New York, ABC.
10 a.m.:Men's college, Purdue at Wisconsin, ESPN.
10:30 a.m.:Women's college, Vanderbilt at Georgia, ESPNU. 11 a.m.:Men's college, Florida State at North Carolina, CBS.
11 a.m.:Women's college, St. Joseph's at Dayton, ESPN2. 11 a.m.:Women's
college, Rhode Island at Virginia Commonwealth, CBSSN. 12:30 p.m.:NBA, Oklahoma City at L.A. Clippers, ABC.
12:30 p.m.:Men's college, Washington State at Washington,
Root Sports. 12:30 p.m.:Women's
college, Tennesseeat Kentucky, ESPNU.
1 p.m.:Men's college, Michigan State at Michigan, CBS.
1 p.m.:Women's college, North Carolina at Duke,
HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.:NHL, Chicago at Detroit, NBC. 4:30 p.m.:NHL,
<ir'yigl i i<
PI(
Montreal at Boston, NBCSN.
'";) +qp i if Pgt V (! lg I +I yP + x(
RODEO 9:30a.m.: Bull riding, PBR Dickies Iron
, t~~V& i
CYCLING prologue (same-day tape), NBCSN.
I ~gvq +
SOCCER 10 a.m.:MLS, Montreal at Seattle, NBCSN.
4:30 p.m.:Major League Soccer,New
r,i
York at Portland, ESPN2.
<'>EP EEgg
WINTER SPORTS Noon:Skiing, U.S. Freeskiing GrandPrix (taped), NBCSN. TRACK 8 FIELD
Don Ryan/The Assoaated Press
Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Lillard, left, goes to the basket against Minnesota Timberwolves forward Dante Cunningham during the second half of Saturday night's game in Portland.
ESPN2.
VOLLEYBALL 7 p.m.:College, USC at Stanford, Pac-12 Network.
iar 's
oin s ea 'wo ves
MONDAY BASEBALL 6:30 a.m.:MLB,
spring training, Chicago Cubs(ss) at Los Angeles Angels (taped), MLB
The Associated Press
FISHING 4 a.m.:Bassmaster Classic, day 2 (taped), ESPN2.
training, Colorado at
Seattle (taped), MLB
challenged.
Network. 5:30 p.m.:MLB,
That's been a rarity for the Blazers, who have had problems sustaining leads this season. "Even at shootaround, we were talking about how we can't play down to the level of this team even though they're hurt," Hickson said. "We just wanted to come out and play our game and we did that tonight." Derrick Williams had 23 points and eight rebounds to lead the short-handed Wolves, who have dropped their past five games and 21 of 25. Luke Ridnour added 18 points and six assists, and former Blazer Dante Cunningham had 16 points and eight rebounds off the bench. The Blazers entered the game having lost eight of their past nine to fall back in the playoff hunt. Portland is in 10th place in the Western Conference, behind the L.A. Lakers and Houston. The Blazers' only win since Feb. 4 was last Sunday over Boston. "I really like the demeanor we came out with in this game," Stotts said. "We addressed that, and guys really took it to heart." Injured Timberwolves guard Brandon Roy returned to the Rose Garden for the first time since coming out of retirement to join Minnesota last summer. Roy was a three-time AllStar and NBA rookie of the year in Portland
3 p.m.:Men's college, North Carolina State
at Georgia Tech,
BASEBALL 6a.m.:MLB, spring training, Detroit at New York Yankees
(taped), MLB Network. 10 a.m.:MLB, spring training, Toronto at Philadelphia, MLB Network. 1 p.m.:MLB, spring training, New York Yankees at Boston
(taped), MLB Network.
5 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Detroit at
Atlanta (taped), MLB Network. 8 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Chicago White Sox at San
Diego (taped), MLB Network.
GOLF 6 a.m.:European Tour/Sunshine Tour, Tshwane Open, final round, Golf Channel. 10 a.m.:PGA Tour, Honda Classic, final round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGA Tour, Honda Classic, final round, NBC. 4 p.m.:LPGA Tour, HSBC Women's Champions, final round, Golf Channel.
MOTOR SPORTS 9 a.m.:Motorcycle racing, AMA
Supercross World Championship (taped), CBS.
Network. 10a.m.:MLB, spring training, Atlanta at New York Mets, MLB Network.
Noon:MLB,spring 1 p.m.:MLB, spring
spring training, Houston at Detroit
(taped), MLB Network.
SOCCER 11:55 a.m.:English
Premier League, Aston Villa vs.
Manchester City, ESPN2.
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Cincinnati at Louisville, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Women's college, Connecticut at Notre Dame, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Men's college, TexasTechat Kansas, ESPNU. 6 p.m.:Men's college, Baylor at Texas, ESPN. 6 p.m.:Men's college,
BASEBALL 1 p.m.:College, Bryant at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940.
game. Roy's injury is far from Minnesota's only problem. The Wolves were missing three starters — leading scorer and rebounder Kevin Love (broken hand), forward Andrei Kirilenko (calf) and center Nikola Pekovic (abdominal strain). "It's hard when you're missing players, especially scorers like Kevin, Pek and Kirilenko," said Minnesota guard Ricky Rubio, who had 12 points and nine assists. "It's something we have to face every night — play the players we have and fight until the end." The Wolves shot just 39 percent from the field and made just one of 12 3-point attempts. In other games on Saturday: B ulls ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 6 N ets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 5 CHICAGO — Joakim Noah had 21 points and 10 rebounds, Carlos Boozer scored 20 points and Chicago beat Brooklyn. Bucks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 Raptors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 MILWAUKEE — Monta Ellis scored six of his 23 points in overtime and Ersan Ilyasova and Brandon Jennings added five apiece in the extra period to spark Milwaukee over Toronto. 76ers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 W arriors ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 7 PHILADELPHIA — Evan Turner had 22 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists, Jrue Holiday scored 27, and Philadelphia snapped a seven-game losing streak with a victory over Golden State.
North Carolina A&T, ESPNU.
Standings
college, Louisville at
NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION AllTimesPST
Syracuse, CBSSN.
Eastern Conference
7 p.m.:NBA, Charlotte at Portland, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL,
Tampa Bayat Pittsburgh, NBCSN.
TENNIS 6 p.m.:Exhibition, Juan Martin del Potro vs. Rafael Nadal, ESPN2.
ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY
before deteriorating knees forced him to quit after the 2010-11 season. He is still beloved in Portland. Sitting on the bench in a dress shirt and tie, Roy received a standing ovation from the crowd when he was shown on the big screen during a second quarter timeout. Roy hasn't played since undergoing his seventh knee surgery on Nov. 19, "but I'm still excited to be here and see the fans," he said before the
NBA SCOREBOARD
Savannah State at
6 p.m.:Women's
MONDAY BASKETBALL 7p.m.: NBA, Charlotte at Portland, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations
The Associated Press
seemingly can apply for a job. Some men who
1 p.m.:USA Indoor Championships, NBCSN.
GYMNASTICS 2 p.m.:Women's college, Alabamaat Arkansas (taped),
By Michael Marot INDIANAPOLIS — Ezekiel "Ziggy" Ansah knew nothing aboutthe NFL when he was growing up. Now, he could be a first-round pick in April's draft. Ansah played soccer in Ghana as a kid, came to America to play basketball at Brigham Young and, after getting cut twice, finally took the advice of his track coach and tried out for football. The first time he put on football pads, as a sophomore in 2010, he looked like the Michelin man with things in all the wrong places. Until last fall, he had never started a game. These days, NFL scouts are drooling over his potential. "I try to stay up late and watch NFL Network. I see some things," Ansah said. "This is going to be my life, so I just try to suck it all in." Ansah has been a sponge in this new world order of pro football, where anyone on Earth
10 a.m.:Paris-Nice,
training, Colorado at Seattle, Root Sports.
college, Utah at Stanford, Pac-12 Network.
+$'~~
CBS.
ESPNU. 5 p.m.:NBA, Chicago at Indiana, ESPN.
2 p.m.:Men's
AV'
Cowboy IV (taped),
PORTLAND — The best way to win, Terry Stotts told his Portland Trail Blazers, was to not let their opponents hang around in games. The Minnesota Timberwolves found out the hard way. Damian Lillard scored 24 points, J.J. Hickson added 18 points and 16 rebounds and the Trail Blazers took an early lead and never looked back in a 109-94 win over the Timberwolves on Saturday night. LaMarcus Aldridge had 17 points and eight rebounds for Portland, which had six players score in double-figures. The Blazers were up by 10 points in the first quarter and led by as many as 18, while the Timberwolves never
ESPN2.
Scouting combine shows NFL's global progress
tgz 1'+
Fresh Fit 500, Fox. 1:30 a.m.:Men's
FOOTBALL
11:30 a.m.:NASCAR,
Sprint Cup, Subway
D3
d-Miami d-NewYork d-Indiana Atlanta Chicago Brooklyn Boston Milwaukee Philadelphia Toronto Detroit Cleveland Washington Orlando Charotte
Pcf GB
W L 46 14
Pcf GB
WesternConference
d-SanAntonio d-Oklahoma City d-LA. Clippers Memphis Denver Golden State
uiah Houston LA. Lakers Portland Dallas Minnesota
Phoen> x NewOrleans Sacramento
W L 42 14 35 20 37 22 33 24 34 25 34 26 31 27 29 28 23 34 23 37 23 38 20 39 18 39 16 43 13 45
d-diNisionleader
42 l6
43 18 3B 19 38 22 33 27 32 27 32 28 29 30 27 31 26 32 20 36 21 39 21 39 20 40
Saturday'sGames Philadelphia104, GoldenState 97 Chicago96,Brooklyn85 Milwaukee 122,Toronto 114,OT Portland109, Minnesota94
750 636 6 i/2
627 6'/z 579 9 1/2
576 9'/z 567 10 534 12 509 13'/~ 404 19'Iz
383 21 377 21'Iz 339 23'/z 316 24'/2 271 27'/z 224 30 767 724 3 705 3'/z 667 6'/~ 633 8 550 13 542 13'Iz 533 14 492 16'Iz
466 18 448 19 357 24 350 25 350 25 333 26
Today's Games Miami atNewYork,10a.m. Oklahoma City atLA.Clippers,1230 pm. CharlotteatSacramento, 3p.m.
Memphisat Orlando,3p.m. PhiladelphiaatWashington, 3p.m. Dallas atHouston,4p.m. DetroitatSanAntonio, 4p.m. ChicagoatIndiana,5pm. Atlanta atLA. Lakers,630p m Monday'sGames NewYorkat Cleveland,4p.m. Miami atMinnesota,5p.m. OrlandoatNewOrleans, 5p.m. Utah atMilwaukee,5p.m. Atlanta atDenver, 6p.m. Charlotteat Portland,7p.m. Toronto atGoldenState,7:30p.m.
Summaries Saturday's Summaries
Blazers109, Timberwolves 94 MINNESOTA (94) Gelabale2-4 e-e 4, D.Wiliams 9-20 5-e 23,
Stiemsma0-20-00,Rubio3-106-612,Ridmr7-15 4-618, Johnson2-51-25, Barea5-143-414, Shved 0-32-42,Cunningham 6-14 4-616 Totals 34-87 25-36 94.
PORTLAND (109)
Batum4-122-212, Aldridge7-163-517, Hickson re 4718, Lillard 9-184424, Matthews 4-7e-0 9, Maynor3-70-07, Leonard6-70-212, claver4-61-2
Fields7-131-1 15,Johnson9-111-219, Bargnani 4-142-211, Lowry 4-70-010, DeR ozan6-21 6-818, Lucas6-9 0-016, valanciunas2-5 t-e 4, Anderson 8-20 4-521, Ross0-0 0-0 0. Totals 46-100 14-18 114. MILWAUKEE (122) Mbah aMoute2-5 6-1010, lyasova12-215-529, Sanders6-8 1-1 13,Jennings 3-124-4 11, Elis 918 5-6 23,Dunleavy3 7e-0 8, Dalembert1-3 0-0z Redick6-122-216, Henson4-5 0-0 8, Udoh0-1 2-2 z Totals 46-92 25-30122. Toronto 32 23 19 30 10—114 Milwaukee 23 3 12 8 22 18 — 122
Bulls 96, Nets 85 BR00KLYN (85) wallace3-71-38, Evans0-2 e-00,Lopez9-164-5 22, Wil iams4-125-514, Johnson5-10 0-011, Bogans0-00-00,Humphries0-10-00,Watson3-70-0 7, Blatche4-105 613,Brooks0-00-20, Teletovic4-7 t-09, Taylor0-01-21. Totals 32-7216-2385.
CHICAGO (96) Deng3-10 2-2 8, Boozer9-16 2-220, Noah1013 1-1 21,Hinrich5-e e-0 12,Belinelli 2-7 2-2 7, Robinson 4-92-212 Butler 4-75-513, cook1-3 0-03,Mohammed0-0 0-00.Totals 38-73 14-14 96. Brooklyn 27 12 20 26 — 85 Chicago 27 26 24 19 — 96
10, Barton e-r 0-00, Freeland0-20-00. Totals 4490 14-22 109. Minnesota Portland
19 25 27 23 — 94 31 20 32 26 — 109
3-Point Goal— s Minnesota 1-12 (Barea 1-3, Ridnour0-1, Gelabale0-1, Rubio0-1, shved0-2, D.Williams0-4), Portland7-20(Lilard 2-5, Batum27, Matthews 1-2, claver1-2, Maynor1-2, Barton0-2). FouleO dut— None.Rebounds— Minnesota56(Rubio 9), Portland62(Hickson16) Assists—Minnesota19 (Rubio 9), Portland32 (Maynor12). Total FoulsMinnesota17,portland 30.A—20,390 (19,980).
Bucks 122, Raptors114 (OT) TORONTO (114)
76ers104, Warriors97 G0LDEN sTATE(97I Barnes2-r 1-1 5, Lee6-14 1-2 13, Ezeli 1-4 00 2, curry 0-20 5-730,Thompson11-18 e-0 29, Jack 3-130-0 6, Landry2-78-9 12, Green0-2 0-0 0, Bazemore 0-10-0 0, Jefferson 0-00-0 0. Totals 36-86 15-1997. PHILADELPHIA (104) Turner10-150-222,T.Young7-15 e-e14, Hawes
0-9 e-e 0,Holiday0-20 2-227, Iveye-e 1-317,Allen 2-70-04, Pargo1-21-23, Wright5-90-013, Moultrie 2-20-04. Totals44-85 4-9104. Goldensfate 31 2 3 27 16 —97 Philadelphia 20 3 13 1 22 — 104
made it to this year's 333-player combine were born or reared in Australia, England, Estonia, Germany, Jamaica,Japan, Liberia and Tonga. Sure, the NFL has a history with players from the Pacific Rim and Africa. Some fans will remember Christian Okoye, nicknamed the Nigerian Nightmare, or Jack Thompson, known as the Throwin' Samoan. Maybe this should have been expected given the league's conscientious effort to expand its global reach, though the NFL still lags behind Major League Baseball, the MLS, the NBA and the NHL. NFL officials have been scheduling regular-season games annually in L o ndon since 2007 and will play two regular-season games there in 2013. Buffalo has played five times in Toronto and has signed an agreement to play at least one game per season there for the next five years. The NFL also has staged preseason games in Mexico City and Tokyo in the past. Twice, league officials tried to create a European developmental league, a venture that ended in 2007. But now the results are rolling in. Ansah played well at the Senior Bowl in January and only cemented his top-15 status by measuring in at 6-foot-5, 271 pounds and finishing the 40-yard dash in 4.63 seconds. Some have questioned his practice habits, but the one guy who has worked up close and personal with him, Lions coach Jim Schwartz, disagrees. Schwartz coached Ansah during Senior Bowl week. "I think the most important thing in football and scouting is how they play," Schwartz said. "He played well in the game and just like this — it's important what you run a 40, it's important how many times you can bench 225 (pounds), but the thing that's most important and what you can't lose sight of is what the game day looks like. And he's done a good job and has put together some good game tape." Ansah might be the first player from this year's foreign contingent to hear his name called. It's a virtual certainty he won't be the last. Estonia's Margus Hunt has been turning heads, too, since giving up on becoming an Olympic discus thrower and shot putter to pursue a career in football. He went to SMU for one reason: training with the Mustangs' track coach. But with the program no longer in existence, former NFL coach June Jones allowed him to walk onto his football team, much to the dismay of his fans back home who once referred to football as a "stupid sport." After a solid showing at the scouting combine, Hunt's stock is rising, too. Scouts see the 6-8, 277-pound defensive lineman as a pass rusher. "I had a really challenging situation in Estonia where I couldn't train because I was ranked No. 4 or No. 5 in the country (in throwing) and they only train the top two or three, so I came here," he said. What other foreigners could get picked? Utah defensive tackle Star Lotulelei, a native of Tonga, was projected to be a high firstround pick until doctors at the combine discovered a heart condition. Florida State defensive lineman Bjoern Werner, a German native who started playing football after coming to the United States as a high school exchange student; Connecticut linebacker Sio Moore, who was born in Liberia and grew up in America; and Alabama defensive tackle Jesse Williams, who grew up playing rugby in Australia. Each played well enough in college to earn an invite to the combine. "I think aggressiveness plays a pretty big part in playing the defensive line and especially hitting without pads and then here using pads," Williams said. "I wouldn't say it shaped my game, but it helped me being aggressive. I love this sport. I like being powerful and being able to control my body and use the techniques I have to be successful." And they're becoming ambassadors for the sport, too. Ansah, Hunt and Moore all acknowledge they've spent hours teaching the game to family members and friends. They say once they understand the sport, they love it. It's not just foreigners making inroads overseas, either. Kentucky offensive lineman Larry Warford made a service trip to Ethiopia in May, USC quarterback Matt Barkley has done volunteer work in Mexico, Nigeria and South Africa, and BYU offensive lineman Braden Brown spent part of his free time in Ecuador. All have been able to explain or teach the game during their travels. Perhaps that explains why there are now 64 nations with national federations of sport dedicated solely to American football, up from 40 in 2007.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
GOLF COMMENTARY
Mcllroy feeling pressure of being world's No.'1 By Tim Dahlberg
by contrast, has been brief. The Associated Press He's been there on a weekly n an y o t her s p or t i t basis since winning the PGA wouldn't be an issue. Championship last year, with LeBron James isn't go- Woods now occupying the ing to forget how to dunk, No. 2 slot. and Roger Federer won't But the game that seemed suddenly lose his forehand so effortless for McIlroy sudsmash. Michael Phelps isn't denly seems confounding to likely to sink to the bottom of him. He was a whopping 7the pool, either. over par through eight holes But this is golf, a game when he hit his second shot so mental it can sometimes in the water and decided to seem impossible. And Rory look for the easy way out in Mcllroy is in trouble. Florida. And he hasn't played Not with the PGA Tour, on a weekend yet this year. even though he walked off Mental or d ental? Take the course in t h e m i ddle your pick, but the space beof his round Friday in the tween a golfer's ears can be a Honda C l assic. O f f i cials dark spot not so easily treatwill surely take at face value ed by a few aspirin. McIlroy's belated excuse that To p araphrase S h akehe had a toothache, even if speare, uneasy is the head he was seen wolfing down a that lies beneath the crown. "When you start trying to sandwich just minutes before calling it a day. prove things to other people He seemed to be eating and you stop playing for well the night before, too, yourself,it's a dangerous sending out a p i c ture on placetobe,"said Gr aeme McTwitter of a birthday dinner Dowell, Mcllroy's friend and for his mother. countryman. But the tooth it is, because What McIlroy wanted to it's harder to deal with the prove, of course, was that other issues that might be the new clubs introduced in a facing the No. I player in the music and laser show in Abu world. Mcllroy himself al- Dhabi were just as good — or luded to them while walking better — than the ones he to his car, telling reporters used to win two major chamthat he's "not in a good place pionships and become the mentally." world's top player. And they Just why that is has raised may be, though clearly the speculation on both sides of adjustmentprocess has been the Atlantic. The leading can- more difficult for M c I lroy didate is that McIlroy hasn't than he publicly allows. yet figured out how to play At a reputed $20 million with the new clubs he got in a a year, though, he's got no multimillion dollar deal with choice but to play on with the Nike, though questions about "Swoosh." his well-publicized relationWoods went t hrough a ship with tennis star Caro- similar equipment change line Wozniackiare never far when he turned pro, though behind. his was more gradual. Nike Or maybe Tiger Woods didn't even make golf clubs just spoiled us all into believ- when Woods signed with the ing it was easy to be No. 1. company, andhe had time to I ndeed, w h i l e Wo o d s work them into his bag. measures hisgreatness with Mcllroy, meanwhile, is still major championship titles, adjusting to constantly being his reign at the top of golf's in the public eye, and somestandings may be the one times he's too honest with the record he holds that won't be media for his own good. Havbroken. He's spent a total of ing a tennis star for a girl12 years as the No. 1 player friend only adds to the mix. "He's a superstar, a global in the world, including his last streak of 281 weeks that superstar. And that can only ended in October 2010. be pressuremagnified," McHe held it even when Phil Dowell said. "But he'll get Mickelson said he was play- over it. He's a smart kid." ing with inferior equipment, The Masters is a little more and reclaimed it after swing than a month away, adding to changes that no other player the senseof urgency McIlroy would even attempt. It took surely feels. Maybe by then a car crash and the public we'll have a real sense what outing of his private life to his issues are, and he'll have finally oust him from the top, a sense of how he can overbut his lead was so big that come them. he remained No. I for nearly The only thing for sure a year after the rest of his now is that golf will be in a world collapsed. better place when McIlroy is M cIlroy's time as No. I , in a better place.
GOLF ROUNDUP
Guthrie, Thompsontied for Honda Classiclead The Associated Press P ALM B E A C H GA R DENS, F l a. Michael Thompson felt like he was
round, a group that included Charles Howell III, Keegan Bradley, Justin Rose and Rickie Fowler, who surged playingin a U.S.Openwhen- into the picture with a birdieever he saw his golf ball in eagle finish for a 69. He was the rough or the scores on the only player among the the leaderboard at the Honda last 46 players to tee off who Classic. broke par. No one was going anyMissing from the mix was w here Saturday a t P G A Tiger Woods, who shot 70 National. and was eight shots behind. In cool, blustery condiAlso on Saturday: tions on a course with water Lewis tied for lead hazards at nearly every turn, S INGAPORE — S t acy the strategy was to keep your Lewis shared the lead with head down and k eep big Na Yeon Choi at the HSBC numbers off the scorecard. Women's Champions after Thompson and PGA Tour the South Korean birdied the rookie Luke Guthrie man18th hole in a rain-delayed aged to do that well enough third round. Choi shot a 5-unto share the lead going into der 67 to tie the 28-year-old the final round. American at 14-under 202. Guthrie was tested his first Lewis, the overnight leader time in the last group on tour and reigning LPGA Player and made a collection of solid of the Year, had a 69. Paula pars on his final eight holes Creamer shot 69 to trail the for a I-over 71. Thompson leaders by two shots. accepted his bogeys and finFour tied in South Africa ished with a two-putt birdie CENTURION, Sout h on the 18th for a 70. Africa — Darren Fichardt They were at 8-under 202, stormed into a fo u r -way and while th e c o nditions share of the lead with an were tough, equally daunt- 8-under-par 64 in the third ing were some of the names round of the Tshwane Open. behind him. Fichardt moved to a 16-unLee Westwood and Geoff der total with Chilean Mark O gilvy both shot 7 0 a n d Tullo (67) and fellow South were two shots behind. Elev- Africans Charl Coetzee (68) en players were separated by and Dawie Van Der Walt four shots going into the final (67).
Nordic
Members of the Summit High School boys nordic ski team pose after claiming the Oregon High School Nordic state team championship Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
Members of the Summit High School girls nordic ski team pose after winning the Oregon High School Nordic state team championship Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
Continued from D1 Jack Widmer finished seventh to pace Bend, followed by teammates Peter Schwarz in eighth place and Steven Dougherty in 10th. Redmond's top finisher was Clayton Aas, who came in 17th, and Sisters was led by Devin Calvin, who took 21st. For the girls, a day after successfully defending her freestyle state title, Summit's Emily Hyde completedthe weekend sweep by winning the classic event in 15:46.8, nearly a full minute ahead of South Salem's Vivian Hawkinson. "I was confident in myself," Hyde said. "That's the way to go.... Just have fun and ski well." Summit's Anne Jarvis and Olivia Moehl joined Hyde in the top five, finishing third and fifth, respectively. The Storm won the relay as well, besting Bend and Hood River Valley, to finish atop the team standings with 20 points. "I think S ummit's pretty dominant, generally," Hyde said. "I think winning just adds to the fun." The Lava Bears took second as a team with 60 points, led by Kira Smiley's fourth-place finish in 17:08.1. Also placing in the top 10 for Bend was Siena Brody-Heine, who claimed the ninth spot. Those two, Bend coach Ron C r awford said, have been strong all year for the Lava Bears. "We had good skis," Crawford said. "I think w a x ing changed a little bit for our girls. I think we could have done a little better on that, but our girls were strong. They had a good attitude through it and still had some good results." Natalie Ulum finished 11th to paceRidgeview, and Jessica Aas led Redmond with a 12th-
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Summit's Emily Hyde skis to the finish line for a firstplace finish during the 5-kilometer classic race at the Oregon High School Nordic state championshipson Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
place showing. But the day b elonged to Summit, with the girls defending their state championship from a year ago and the boys adding a sixth straight title. Smith laughed off the thought of a dynasty. His Bend High counterpart, however, offered: "Summit's like the Russian team," Crawford said. "Every time they graduate kids, up come more strong skiers. It's always a good battle."
Photos by Ryan Brennecke/ The Bulletin
— Reporter:541-383-0307; glucaslbendbutletin.com.
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls basketball Saturday'sresults Class 5A Stateplayoffs, first round MARIST (43) — Delanee Martin 14, Smith12, Krier7, Harrison7, McLean3, Silver, McCabe.Totals18 2-5 43. BEND(45) Kendall Kramer0, Jessica McClay11, Sylvester9, Isaak8,Maloney4 BsrnhamZ Totals 18 8-13 45. Marist 1 3 6 15 9 — 43 Bend 1 4 18 6 7 — 4 5 Three-pointgoals — Marist: Martin 2,Harrison, McLean, Krier, Bend:Kramet SUMMIT (29) — SarahHeinly12, Char8, Edwards 5, Patterson3, Manley1, Cuniff, Trejo Cai. Nichols, Powers,Dugast,Harder. Totals 11 4-10 29. CORVALLIS (57) — McKennaMcGowan 18, Bartholomew 0, Robinson 11, Coe6, zalesky 4, Altheide 3,Creswick3, Gourley1. Totals 17 5-NA 57. Summit 4 11 6 8 — 2 9 Corvallis 8 23 12 14 — 57 Three-pointgoals— Ssmm< t t einly 2, Edwards; Corvallis: McGowan 2, Bartholomew,Altheide, Creswick,Coe. Class 4A Stateplayoffs, first round
MADRAS(43) — MariahStacona17, Jones8, T Adams8, Ssppah7, J. Adams2, Whipple, Wolfe, K.Adams,Munson.Totals17 4-743. LA GRANDE (65) Breattna Partttey26, Comfort15, Mills 7, M>ller-Moylas6, G>rgsby 4, Elliott 4, White, 3, Page2, Albrecht 1, Avila, McDonald, Alexander. Totals 2511-21 65. Madras 1 1 21 6 5 — 4 3 La Grande 17 19 11 18 — 65 Three-pointgoals—Madras. Stacona2,T.Adams 2; La Grande: Partney2, Mils, White. SISTERS(44) —Taylor Nieri11, Rowe7, Petterson 6,Spear6, Moore 6, Edwards4, Vogt4. Totals
15 18-30 44. MAZAMA(82) — HannahReynolds 27, Lease 18,Morris16,Totten7, Smith 6, Durant2, Mathis 2, Paschal 2, Foust2Totals 2618-21 82. Sisters 9 8 13 14 — 44 Mazama 11 23 21 27 — 82
Three-point goals —Sisters.none, Mazama . Reynolds 6, Lease2, Morris 2,Totten. Class BA playoffs SecondRound
CentralCatholic74,Roseburg39 Clackamas 42, SouthEugene31 OregonCity60,SouthSalem42 SouthMedtord78, Southridge39 St. Mary'sAcademy59,West Salem49 Westview 68,West Linn44 Beavertott 76,Sheldott 70
Tigard24,Jesuit17
Class 5Aplayoffs FirstRound Lebanon 48,The Dalles-Wahtoska33 Milwaukie58, Marshfield 33 Springfield63,Silverton23 WestAlbany55,Churchill 26 Willamette63,CrescentValley 40 Class 4Aplayoffs
FirstRound Banks48,Philomath42
Brookings-Harbor61, CotageGrove42 Cascade 54,Gadstone32 JunctionCity46, Seaside 29 La Salle52, Phoenix26
Class 2ATournament Fourth/sixth
Oakland44, Pilot Rock33 Third/fifth place
WestemMennonite 56, Heppner46 Championship final Regis60,Union48 Class 1ATournament Fourth/sixth TriangleLake51, Penydale 45 Third/fifth place St. Paul48, HosannaChristian 46, OT Championship final DamascusChristian 46, Condon/Wheeler 44
Boys basketball Saturday'sresults Class 3ATournament Fourth/sixth place
CascadeChristian 64, PortlandAdventist 57 Third/fifth place Dayton51, ValleyCatholic 42 Championship final HorizonChristian Tualatin49, BlanchetCatholic 29
Class 2ATournament Fourth/sixth CentralLinn67,Vernonia 51 Third/fifth place Pilot Rock57, Westem Mennonite 50 Championship final Oakland60, Irrigon54 Class 1ATournament Fourth/sixth Imbler 60,Columbia Christian42 Third/fifth place Hosanna Christian 58, Elkton52 Championship final City Christian41, HorizonChristianHoodRiver 39
Girls Teamtimes — Bend4:4z76, Summit5:27.14, Sisters6:1816, Redm ond6:45.06. Top10 (combined A and6 runs) —1, Brooke Kelley, Bend, 1:29.03. 2, Kiki Nakamsra-Koyam a, Bend,1:34.99. 3,ShelbyCutter,Bend,1:28.74. 4, Lucia Charltott, Bend,1:45.86. 5, NatalIeMerrill, Sttmmit, t:48.74. 6, KIerstenRowles,Bend, 1:50.26.7, Cammi Benson, Sisters,1:53.3z 8,JacquelineAdler, Bend,1:55.1z 9, Britt Hanson,summit, t:55.60. 10, BrandiLarson,Lakeview,1.5801. Final seasonstandings Team — Bend 84 Summit 70,Sisters, 36, Redmond 2z Lakeview16. Individual overall — 1, BrookeKelley, Bend, 1,360.2,Kiki Nakamura Koyama, Bend,870 3, MadisonArchsleta,Summit, 790. Individual slalom — 1, BrookeKelley, Bend, 560. 2,KikiNakamsra-Koyama,Bend,370.3,Madison Archuleta,Summit, 369. Individual giant slalom — 1,BrookeKelley, Bend,800.3, Kiki Nakam ura-Koyama,Bend, 500. 3, MadisonArchsleta,Summit,430.
Boys Teamtimes— Summit430.64,Bend 4:39.99, Redmond 5:28.84.
Top 10 (combined Aand6 runs) — 1,Jared Schiemer,Summit, 1:27.74.2, Mitchell Cutter,Bend,
1:31.56. 3, Thomas Wimberly, Summ it, 1:31.79.4, BrodySwisher,Bend,133A9 5, MatthewScheafer, Bend, 1:34.94.6,Jack Pepper,Summit,1:34.99.7, Javiet coltos, Bend,1:37.5z 8, pierce schreder, Lakeview,1:39.96.9,KevinPanton, Summit,1.40.84. 10, Ryan DeCastilhos, Bend,1:43.55. Final seasonstandings Team — Bend78,Summit 76,Redmond 54, Sisters38. Individual overall — 1, JaredSchiemer,Sttmmit, 980. 2,Keenanseidel, Bend,96z 3, M>tchell Cutter,Bend,789. Individual slalom — 1,JaredSchiemer, Summit, 540. 2, ThomasWimberly, Summit, 340 3, Keenan Seidel, Bend,299. Individual giant slalom — 1,KeenanSeidel, Bend, 663. 2, Mitchell Cutter,Bend,504. 3, Jared Schiemer,Summit 440.
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Nordic skiing Saturday'sresults OHSNO State Championships at Mt. Bachelor nordic area 5,000meters
Classic
Boys Teamscores— Summit16,Bend 48,Hood River valley67, Redmottd 03, Corvallis151,Cleveland179 CrescentValley180. Top 10 individuals — t, Casey Shannon, Summit 14:09.1. 2, Alec Wiltz, Summit, 14.29.7. 3, Max M<llslagle,Summit, 14:39.5. 4, SamWiley, HoodRiverValley,14:41.6. 5, SkylarKenna,Summit, 14:43.0 6, ZebedIahMilslagle, Summ it,14503. 7, Jack Widmer, Bend, 14:54.9. 8, PeterSchwarz, Bend, 15:Oz9. 9,NicoGianttoses, Summit, 15:30.5. 10, StevenDougherty,Bend,15:33.5. Team relay (topthree; times notavailable) 1, Summit. 2,Bend.3, HoodRiver Valley. Girls Teamscores— Summit20,Bend60,Hood R<verValley 98, CrescentValley141, Redm ond150, St. Mary'sAcadem y160, Corvallis 20z Top10 1, Emily Hyde, Summit,15:46 8 2,Vivian Hawkinson,SouthSalem,16:34.9. 3,AnneJarvis, Summit, 16:38.6. 4, KiraSmiley, Bend,17:08.1. 5, Olivia Moeh,Summit,17:09.4. 6,Emm aSu, Summit, 17:17.7.7, PhaceliaCramer, South Eugene,17A7.9. 8, Helen Cutting, North Eugene,17:496 9, Sietta Brody-Heine,Bend,17:57.3. 10, EmmaMalmquist, Summit 18:28.0. Team relay (topthree; times notavailable) —1, Summit2, . Bend.3, HoodRiver Valley.
FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN:
Sutherlin 38,Central30
Class 3ATournament Fourth/sixth place Santiam Christian 48,Scio 29 Third/fifth place Rainier 28,Wilamina25 Championship final ValleyCatholic40, St. Mary's27
Alpine skiing
~nnr. pulsepoll. com
Saturday'sresults OSSAState Championships at Mt. Bachelor alpine area Slalom
Amehda
SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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PREP ROUNDUP
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Bulletin staff report LA GRANDE — Madras played with La Grande for a half, trailing 36-33 at halftime, before the Greater Oregon League girls basketball champions broke the Class 4A state playoff game open in the third quarter en route to a 65-43 victory. "We went f rom b eing down four points to down eight, just like that," White Buffalo coach Mike O sborne said. "It was turnover, turnover, turnover. It went downhill pretty fast." M ariah S t a cona l e d Madras with 17 points and seven assists before fouling out early in the fourth quarter. Teneasha Adams added eight points and four rebounds for the Buffs, who end their season 14-12 overall.
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Photos by Joe Ktine /The Bulletin
Continued from D1 Kelley won the slalom race on Mt. Bachelor ski a rea's Thunderbird run o n S aturday with a two-run time of I minute, 29.03 seconds, to finishthe season undefeated along a course that featured soft, chunky snow on a mild
day.
K elley's teammate, K i k i Nakamura-Koyama, finished second in Saturday's slalom
(I:34.99) and second behind Kelley in the overall (giant slalom and slalom) season standings. The Lava Bear girls won the slalom team event with 36 points, ahead of Summit
(30) and Sisters (eight). More important, Bend claimed the seven-race overall s e ason title with 84 points. Summit finished second on the season with 70 points, and Sis-
ters was third (36). The Bend girls won all seven scored races of the OSSA season. "It's kind o f b u siness as u sual," Bend c o ach G r e g Timm said of his girls team. "But it's never a f o r egone c onclusion i n s k i r a c i n g . The girls h ave been solid and consistent al l s e ason,
Bend
Schiemer did not finish his second run in Friday's giant slalom event, so he was satisfied to bounce back in the slalom. "It's definitely rewarding to come back after letting it go the first day," Schiemer said. "There's definitely a lot of young talent (on the Summit squad). We had a solid team this year." Cutter, who finished third in the individual overall season championship, was happy to end his senior season with a second-place finish at Summit's Jared Schiemer skis his second run on the slalom the state meet. "It's just a great way to end course during the OSSA state championships on Saturday on the Thunderbird run at Mt. Bachelor. Schiemer claimed the individual it off," Cutter said. "I love racoverall season championship. ing this hill. I've still never won a race, but ... " Cutter added that the seaand they've been very comslalom team c hampionship sonlong duel between Bend petitive with each other. One on Saturday, finishing with and Summit made for some of my fears was that they 34 points. Bend was a close memorable, competitive ski would get complacent. But second (32) and R edmond racing. "It's been a battle all year there was enough inner-team claimed third (22). S ummit ju n i o r Jare d long," he said. "In the regular competition." The Bend High boys were Schiemer w o n S a t u rday's season we got it done, and s omewhat i n c onsistent a t s lalom race w i t h a co m - they just came right back." the OSSA state champion- bined time of I:27.74, edging Bend also claimed the comships, but they still managed out Bend's Mitchell Cutter bined boys and girls season to claim the season title with (I:31:56). Schiemer secured team title, finishing with 162 78 points, just edging Sum- the individual overall season points. Summit took second mit, which finished with 76 championship, an d B e nd's (146), followed by Redmond points. Redmond was third Keenan Seidel finished sec- (76) and Sisters (74). ond in t h e o v erall season — Reporter: 541-383-0318, with 54 points. mmoricalC<bendbulletin.com. The Storm boys won the standings.
but Bend knocked the ball out of bounds on four conContinued from D1 secutive inbound plays, leav" We knew t hi s w a s g o - ing Marist just 1.6 seconds ing to be a dogfight," Lava left to work with on their fifth Bear coach Todd Ervin said. attempt to inbound the ball. "They have to play SpringSpartan senior Delanee Marfield (reigning state champ) tin missed an off-balance 3and Willamette (2012 state pointer as the buzzer soundrunner-up) twice a year (in ed, and the Bears earned the the Midwestern League). We chance to match or exceed figured they'd know how to their fifth-place finish at state play." from a year ago. The Spartans (11-15 overMartin led Marist with 14 all) trailed 32-19 at halftime, points, and freshman post Jubut they nearly forced over- lia Smith added 12 points. " It's t ough," E r v i n said time with their half-court trap and outside shooting. With about a team r eturning to her team down 45-38 with state. "You can play a little 24.5 seconds left in the game, looser, a little easier when you're not supposed to go, Marist freshman guard Tiffany McLean hit a 3-pointer or it's been a long time since — her only basket of the af- you've been there." ternoon — to make thescore The Bears opened Satur45-41. The Spartans called a day's game by using a fulltimeout after McLean's buck- court pressagainst the Sparet and then promptly stole tans. The strategy worked, Bend's inbounds pass and as Bend reeledoff three conscored an easy layup, narsecutivesteals and grabbed a rowing the Bears' lead to 45- 10-0 lead. 43 with 18 seconds to play. D espite an 1 1-0 ru n b y Clinging t o a tw o - p oint Marist, the Bears ended the lead, Bend missed the front first quarter with a 14-13 adend of a one-and-one free- vantage. Bend then outscored t hrow opportunity w it h 1 7 the Spartans 18-6 in the secseconds remaining, giving ond quarter on the way to its Marist one last chance to tie 32-19 halftime lead. Kramer or take the lead. A loose ball hit a critical 3-pointer in the that went off the Lava Bears second quarter, and Sylvester gave the Spartans possession ended the first half by grabunder their own basket with bing a loose ball and hitting a 7.8 seconds still on the clock, long jumper as time expired.
"Look at our stats," Ervin said. "Scoring, rebounds, defensive plays. Everything we do, it's truly a team effort. If we're going to have any kind
the backcourt and were forced into turnovers." In the second q uarter, Summit w a s o u t scored 23-11 en route to a firstround loss in the Class 5A state
playoffs. Sarah Heinly paced
the Storm with 12 points, Raja Char added eight, and Christina Edwards finished with five points and seven rebounds. Summit ends the season with an 18-8 overall record. Mazama...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Sisters ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 KLAMATH FALLS — The Outlaws' season came to an end in the first round of the Class 4A state playoffs. The Vikings, one of 4A's two No. I seedsforthe postseason, hit26 field goals, including 113-pointers, to advance to the 4A state tournament. Taylor Nieri led Sisters with 11 points, but she was the only Outlaw to score The Tigers (20-5) took in double figures. "They're fast, control of t h e g ame af- they play tenacious defense ter h a lftime, o utscoring and they can shoot the 3 with Madras 11-6 in the third a hand in their face," Sisters quarter. It was more of the coach Julianne Horner said same in the fourth, as La about the Vikings (24-2). The Grande turned what was a Outlaws finished the season three-point game after two with an official record of 8-16. quarters into a b l owout. "I'm just so unbelievably proud Breanna Partney led the of these girls and how they reTigers with 26 points. sponded to adversity this year," "They've got depth and Horner added. experience," Osborne said. "They're a pretty decent team." DOUBLE SAVINGS NOW! In other Saturday action: $25-50 rebates on select GIRLS BASKETBALL Hunter Douglas products, Corvallis...... . . . . . . . . . . 57 and matching instant dealer Summit....... . . . . . . . . . . 29 CORVALLIS The rebates (thru 4/2/1 3) Storm hung with the Spartans early, but in the secTLASSIP ond quarter, Summit coach Ryan Cruz said things "got away from us." "We had a COVERINGS couple opportunities in the 541-388-4418 first to go ahead," Cruz said. www.classic-coverings.com "We had atough time han-
The Bend High School boys (top) and girls (bottom) alpine ski teams pose after winning the Oregon School Ski Association season titles.
Alpine
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
onza arou s 0 an,sa escaim o o. The Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — The raucous student section at No. 2 Gonzaga's arena had no doubt where the Zags should be ranked when The Associated Press' Top 25 comes out on Monday. "We're No. I! We're No. I!" the students shouted as the clock wound down in Gonzaga's 81-52 victory over Portland on Saturday. Coach Mark Few was a little more restrained, noting the polls are out of his control. "It's never happened here before," Few said of a No. I ranking. "It would be an honor. If they think that highly of us, we'll take it." But a minute later Few also betrayed some a m azement that the little Jesuit school from Spokane couldreach the pinnacle of college basketball. "At the end of the day it would be pretty cool for Gonzaga to be No. 1," Few said. "My first year here we won four Division I games." E lias H a r ri s s c ored 2 0 points and Kelly Olynyk added 15 points and 11 rebounds for Gonzaga (29-2,16-0 West Coast), which ha d a l r eady clinched the West Coast Conference regular season title and the top seed in next weekend's tournament. Gary Bell Jr. added 14 points. Gonzaga, winner o f 12 consecutive games since a last-second loss at Butler, has escaped thelosses that have a fflicted other teams at o r near the top of the poll in recent weeks. That included a loss by top-ranked Indiana to Minnesota earlier this week that opened the door for the Bulldogs. The Zags have never been ranked higher than their current No. 2 position. But because of their lightly regarded conference schedule, there is a chance a lower team could leapfrog them in the poll. Gonzaga's only other loss was at home to Illinois in December. Also on Saturday: N o. 1 Indiana...... . . . . . . . . . 73 l owa...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Cody Zeller overcame a sluggish start to score 22 points and Kevin "Yogi" Ferrell added a career-high 19 as Indiana got past Iowa. N o. 3 Duke...... . . . . . . . . . . . 7 9 N o.5Miami ..... . . . . . . . . . . . 76 DURHAM, N.C. — Duke's
Ryan Kelly scored a careerhigh 36 points in his return from a foot injury that had sidelined him since January to lead the Blue Devils (25-4, 124 Atlantic Coast Conference). Shane Larkin scored 25 points to lead the Hurricanes (23-5, 14-2), who missed two 3s in the final seconds to tie it. N o. 6 Kansas...... . . . . . . . . . 9 1 W est Virginia...... . . . . . . . . . 65 LAWRENCE, Kan. — Ben McLemore scored a Kansas freshman-record 36 points, and Jeff Withey came within one block of a triple-double for the Jayhawks (25-4, 13-3 Big
12).
regular season title. No. 15 Oklahoma State......78 T exas...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 5 STILLWATER, Ok la. — Markel Brown scored 18 points and L e 'Bryan Nash added 16 as Oklahoma State (22-6, 12-4 Big 12) won. N o.18SaintLouis.... . . . . . . 66
GeorgeWashington ........58 WASHINGTON — Dwayne Evans scored 22 points and Kwamain Mitchell added 18 and Saint Louis won its 11th straight game, holding off George Washington. N o. 19 Memphis..... . . . . . . . 76 C entral Florida..... . . . . . . . . 67 ORLANDO, Fla. — Joe
N o. 7 Georgetown..... . . . . . 64 R utgers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1 WASHINGTON — Taking over thegame after Georgetown trailed early in the second half, Otto Porter Jr. finished with 28 points and eight rebounds, leading the Hoyas past Rutgers for their 11th consecutive victory. N o. 8 Florida..... . . . . . . . . . . 64 A labama...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 G AINESVILLE, F l a . Casey Prather had 10 points and nine rebounds, most of them in the second half, and Florida rallied from an eightpoint deficit. N o. 10 Louisville...... . . . . . . 58
Syracuse (22-7, 10-6 Big East). Russ Smith led Louisville (245, 12-4) with 18 points. UCLA . ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4 N o. 11 Arizona...... . . . . . . . . 69 LOS ANGELES — Shabazz Muhammad grabbed adefensive rebound, got fouled and made both free throws with 9 seconds remaining, helping UCLA hang on for a victory over Arizona that moved the Bruins into a f i r st-place tie with idle Oregon in the Pac-12. No.13 Kansas State ...... . .64 B aylor..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 1 WACO, Texas — Rodney McGruder hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer and Kansas State pulled out a victory after a failed desperation inbound pass gave the Wildcats one more chance. No. 14 New Mexico...... . . . . 53 W yoming ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 A LBUQUERQUE, N.M . — Alex Kirk had 15 points and nine rebounds and New Mexico (25-4, 12-2) clinched the Mountain West C onference
eight shooting as Marquette (21-7, 12-4 Big East) won its 25th consecutive home game, beating Notre D ame ( 22-7,
10-6). No. 25 Louisiana Tech.......88 S an Jose State..... . . . . . . . . 6 1 RUSTON, La. — Raheem Appleby scored 16 points and Louisiana T ec h e x t e nded the nation's longest winning streak to 18 games, clinching at least a share of its first Western Athletic Conference championship with a victory over San Jose State. U SC..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 A rizona State ...... . . . . . . . . 5 6 L OS ANGELES — E r i c
Ross
Adrien Theaux of France earned his second career
orado (19-9, 9-7).
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Frenchman takes men'sdownhill
10, 9-8). C alifornia..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 C olorado ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 BERKELEY, Calif. — Tyrone Wallace and David Kravish each had double-doubles and California won its seventh straight game. Wallace had 16 points and 11 rebounds, while Kravish had 14 points and 11 rebounds for the Golden Bears (20-9, 12-5 Pac-12). Xavier Johnson had 14 points for Col-
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Continued from D1 "It was my turn," Ross said. "It's such a cool vibe to have everyone so fast." She said she took a more aggressive approach to Saturday's race. "I haven't had the best downhill results over the last couple weeks, so I've been a little bit tentative with my skiing," Ross said. "So today I knew I had to send it. I knew that if I didn't give it everythingI had I would regret it in the finish. So I just put it all on the line and skied it as fast as I could. It wasn't perfect, but I was just trying to tuck everywhere I could and findevery bitofspeed." The race was interrupted for more than 20 minutes after McKennis crashed. She was evacuated by helicopter to a hospital and diagnosed with a broken shinbone. "Yea, that's so tough," said Ross, " especially when i t ' s y our ow n t e a mmate t h at crashes and you're standing in the start waiting to go. But that's something that happens all the time for us and it's just something that you have to block out of your head. You can't let it get to you up there or you're not going to have a good run, you're not going to put it all out there. "I was a little sad at first," she added. "I kind of let it get to me a little bit, and I was like, 'No, I need to snap out of it. I need to get in my zone. This is my run.' I just had to focus. I think that's really important when something like that happens." With 20 podium finishes this season, Maze is second on the all-time list with Phil Mahre of the United States, who did it in 1981-82. Maier holds the record with 22 podium finishes in the 1999-2000 season, when he finished with 2,000 points. "It's been an incredible season," Maze said. "It was not my
Wise scored 12 points and USC (14-15, 9-7 Pac-12) held off a furious rally by Arizona State.Jahii Carson scored 23 points for Arizona State (20-
F'OR THEPRlcE OFOljtE>30
No. 12 Syracuse............53 SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Luke Hancock hit a 3-pointer from the corner to break a tie with 50 seconds left for Louisville. It was the third straight loss for
Jackson and C h ri s C r a wford both scored 19 points as Memphis (25-4, 14-0) claimed its eighth Conference USA championship. V CU..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 4 N o. 20 Butler..... . . . . . . . . . . 5 2 RICHMOND, Va. — Troy Daniels scored 14 of his 20 points in the first half and VCU's f u l l-court p r e ssure overwhelmed Butler (22-7, 9-5) from the outset. N o. 22 Marquette..... . . . . . . 72 No. 21 Notre Dame....... . . . 64 MILWAUKEE — Jamil Wilson tied his career-high with 19 points and Chris Otule added a season-high 16 on eight-of-
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World Cup victory Saturday
by edging homefavorite Aksel Lund Svindal in a downhill in Kvitfjell,
Norway. Theauxmastered windy conditions to race down the steep1.64-mile
course in1 minute, 29.10 seconds and beat Svindal by 0.19 seconds. Klaus
Kroell of Austria was 0.50 seconds back in third. The
; p i
top American wasTravis Ganong in16th place.
— The Associated Press
goal at the start of the season to breakthe mark. My aim was to win the overall title." Maze also matched Austria's Petra Kronberger (1990-91) and Croatia's Janica Kostelic
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(2005-06) in clinching a singleseason sweep of victories in slalom, giant slalom, downhill, super-combined and super-G. She is aiming for the downhill and super-G titles as well. She is one point behind Lindsey Vonn of the United States in th e d o wnhill s t andings. Vonn is out for the season after injuring a knee at the world championships last month. Maze also has a 65-point lead over American Julia Mancuso going into today's race on the same Kandahar course. Maze and Mancuso shared
second place in Friday's superG. A win is worth 100 points. Ross was impressed with Maze's season. "It was a special day for me, but it's really incredible for Maze, really admirable," Ross said. "I am really impressed that she's had the strength to pull it off. It's been a really good year for her and it's been fun to watch. She is in her own
league."
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
Protect • Several Bend brewers, including GoodLife BrewingCo., plan to can, bottle their draft craft By Rachael Rees
• Death creates a complicated process for Facebookphotos
The Bulletin
ost Central Oregon craft brewers have their beers on draft. Others, like Deschutes Brewery, 10 Barrel and Cascade Lakes brewing companies also bottle their beer. Boneyard Beer plans to sell its beer in cans, possibly by next year. And GoodLife and Worthy brewing companies plan to do all three. GoodLife,which began bottling seven months after it opened, plans later this month to start canning its beer, using a mobile canning company. By fall, Worthy expects to be operating canning and bottling lines. "Cans are only second to kegs for maintaining a high level of product integrity — quality beer," said Chris Hodge, co-owner of the eastside brewery that opened last month. "They are the optimum method for getting your beer far and wide: Less weight, less waste and lower shipping cost. "But bottling is an important method for reaching the consumers who still have not embraced craft beer in a can." GoodLife co-owner Ty Barnett agrees. "We chose to do both because bottles are perceivably more artisanal, more readily available and more accepted by the public," he said. "Us trying to get (bottles) into a store is easier than cans." Bottles dominate the distribution of craft beer, although canning has been gaining ground. For craft brewers, the taste of the beer is key. Some people believe cans change the flavor, but canning proponents disagree. Barnett hopes to change the misperception that cans contain lower quality beer by canning GoodLife. "Cans are starting to be more accepted. We want to help the beer industry push the ball forward in the can genre to become more readily acceptable by the general public and stores,"
your digital afterlife By Lauren Gambino The Associated Press
BEAVERTON — A grieving Oregon mother who battled Facebook for fullaccess to her deceased son's account has been pushing for years for something that would prevent others from losing photos,
F
messages and other memories — as she CllCI.
"Every-
body's going
Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Crux Fermentation Project brewmaster Larry Sidor grabs a freshly cleaned bottle Wednesday morning while bottling DoubleCross, a dark Belgian-style ale currently being released in bottles by the Bend brewery.
Sunriver businessbrings canning to the brewery By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
p ~
l
Jacob Schumacher applies a label to a bottle of DoubleCross, a Crux Fermentation Project dark Belgian-style ale currently being released in bottles by the Bend brewery. he said. "Craft should be, whether you put it in a bottle or a can, accepted either way. It should be about the beer and not the package." Barnett said he wants GoodLife beer available everywhere, in all locations where a beer drinker may see it and
want to try it. Distribution in kegs gets GoodLife beer into bars, restaurants and growler fill stations; cans and bottles put GoodLife on grocery store shelves, and larger, 22-ounce bottles, lands the brew in specialty bottle shops, he said. See Beer /E2
Bend-based GoodLifeBrewing Co., which bottles its beer, plans to begin canning brews this month. Courtesy GoodLife Brewing Co.
The canning trend hitting the craft brewing scene has created a new industry: mobile canning. Central Oregon's first such company, Cascade Mobile Canning, of Sunriver, will start canning beer at the end of April. "We're really trying to make it easy on breweries to get into canning," said Zach Ayers, the founder of Cascade Mobile Canning. "The idea is to tailor our services to the wants and needs of breweries, and to work with them in an affordable way." Ayers and his father, Ted Beavers, decided to start the business in September after noticing the canning trend. Bottling still dominates craft brewing distribution. Roughly, 10-12 percent of craft brewers can their beer,based on figures from the Brewers Association and CraftCans.com, a web-
site devoted to the canning of craft beer. But nationwide, the number of craft brewers canning beer has grown about fivefold in the last four years, from about 50 in 2009, according to The Washington Post, to about 255 today, according to CraftCans.com's database. Samuel Adams Boston Lager will be available in cans come summer, Boston Beer Co. announced Feb. 19, and cans contained 52 percent of all beer sold in the U.S. in 2011, according to the Beer Institute. Ayers, who has a background in the wind energy sector, has been in Central Oregon since the 1980s, and watched the craft beer scene grow. "We were always the kind of people who'd say, 'Hey, we should start a brewery because we love beer so much,'" Ayers said. See Mobile /E2
)EKE Nt g) EscPg
to face this kind of a situation at some point in their lives," said Karen Williams,whose 22-year-old son diedin a 2005 motorcycle accident. The Oregon Legislature responded and took up the cause recently with a proposal that would have made it easier for loved ones to access the "digital assets" of the deceased, only to be turned back by pressure from the tech industry, which argued that both a 1986 federal law and voluntary terms of service agreements prohibit companies from sharing a person's information — even if such a request were included in a last will and testament. Lobbyists agree the Stored Communications Act is woefully out of date but say that until it's changed, laws passed at the state level could be unconstitutional. See Photos /E5
~ Ky~~'
Lauren Gambino/The Associated Press
Karen Williams poses with a photo of her deceased son, Loren, in Beaverton. Williams, who battled Facebook over the right to view Loren's Facebook page, has been urging lawmakers for years to do something to prevent others from losing photos, messages and other
memories. PAID ADVERTISEMENT
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THE VET TRAP
Low demand, low pay and huge loans By David Segal
Dr. Hayley Schafer, who has $312,000 in student debt, examines Cabo, who is owned by Brittany LaMarche and her son,
New York Times News Service
Hayley Schafer chose her dream job at the age of 5. Three years later, her grandmother told her that if she wrote it down, the dream would come true. So she found a piece of blue construction paper and scrawled on it with a pencil: "Veterianian.e "No one told me how to spell it," she remembers. "They just said, 'Sound it out.' " At 30, she still has the sign, which is framed on her desk at the Caring Hearts Animal Clinic in Gilbert, Ariz., where she works as a vet. She also has $312,000 in student loans, courtesy of Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine, on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts. Or rather, $312,000 was what she owed the last time she could bring herself to log into the Sallie Mae account that tracks the ever-growing balance. "It makes me sick, watching it increase," she said."There's also the stress of how am I going to save for retirement when I
Gage, at Caring Hearts Animal Clinic in Gilbert, Ariz. Joshua Lott New York Times News Service
have this bear to pay off." They don't teach much at veterinary school about bears, particularly the figurative kind, although debt as large and scary as any grizzly shadows most vet school grads, usually for decades. Nor
is there much in the curriculum about the prospectsfor graduates or the current state of the profession. Neither, say many professors and doctors, looks very
promising.
Integrity, Experience, Research and Results To learn more call Peggy Foutz Registered Client Service Associate 541-322-6130
ubs.com/team/rtveragroup
See Vets /E3
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E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbeforepublication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at www. bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
TODAY
541-617-7080.
FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507. REMODELINGSUSTAINABLY: Presented by local sustainable development professionals; Lawrence Schechter, keynote presenter; the process and options of cost effective and sustainable remodeling; free; 3-4:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-6 I7-7040.
WEDNESDAY
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; BendSenior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need MONDAY assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 preparation clinics with certified N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507. volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and LEADERLUNCH:Chamber state tax returns; appointments members and leadership lunch requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; centered around what's happening Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed in your industry, what's happening Market Road; 541-706-6234. in Bend and how can the Chamber help; cost of lunch plus gratuity; AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Waywill offer noon; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; tax preparation clinics with certified 541-388-8526. volunteers to help thosewho need assistance to file both federal andstate FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES: tax returns; appointments requested; United Waywill offer tax preparation free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church clinics with certified volunteers to of God, 51491Morson Street, La Pine; help those whoneedassistance to 541-536-6237. file both federal andstate tax returns; FREETAXPREPARATIONSERVICES: appointments requested; free;4-7p.m.; United Waywill offer tax preparation M.A. Lynch Elementary School, clinics with certified volunteers to 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., Redmond; help those who needassistance to 541-389-6507. file both federal and state tax returns; WOMEN'S ROUNDTABLESERIES appointments requested; free; 4-7 BASH: Networking, music, p.m.; M .A.LynchElementary School, KICKOFF food and cocktails; registration 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., Redmond; required; $10 for members, $15 for 541-389-6507. nonmembers; 5:30-7:30 p.m.;Studio 3, 50 S.E. Scott St., suites1 and 2, TUESDAY Bend; www.bendchamber.org. LAUNCHYOURBUSINESS: For AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION local companies who are just SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax starting up; participants work with preparation clinics with certified a business adviser as well as with volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and peers in the classroom; course combines four one-hour coaching state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; sessions with three three-hour Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed evening classes Wednesday, and Market Road; 541-706-6234. March 20 and April 3; registration INTERNETSEARCHING: 2-3:30 p.m.; required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Downtown Bend Public Library, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. 541-383-7290. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. THURSDAY Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SCOREbusiness counselors will be SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax available every Tuesday for free one- preparation clinics with certified on-one small business counseling; volunteers to help those who need no appointment necessary; free; assistance to file both federal and 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend state tax returns; appointments Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentral Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed oregon.org. Market Road; 541-706-6234. YOUNG PROFESSIONALS AARP FREE TAXPREPARATION NETWORK: 5:30 p.m.; Cross SERVICES:United Waywill offer Creek Cafe, 507 S.W.Eighth St., tax preparation clinics with certified Redmond; 541-548-2883 or www. volunteers to help thosewho need bendchamber.org. assistance to file both federal andstate KNOW WORD FORBEGINNERS: tax returns; appointments requested; 6-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; of God, 51491Morson St., La Pine;
541-536-6237. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center, 1144 Warm Springs Street; 54 I-553-1626. OPEN COMPUTERLAB: 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
FRIDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center, 1144 Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. KNOW WORD FORBEGINNERS: 10:30 a.m.-noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. CENTRALOREGONREAL ESTATEINVESTMENTCLUB: Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile©windermere.com. INTERNETSEARCHING: 2-3:30p.m.;Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.
SATURDAY FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Prineville COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-3260. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
DEEDS Deschutes County • M. Jay, Anna G. Merrill, trustees for Merrill Family Trust, to Michael I. and Katrina Anderson, Riverview Vista Estates, Phase 5,Lot 61, $250,000 • Terry S. and Chrissie Parker to David Hoenig, Fourth Addition to West Hills, Lots14, and15, Block 4, $375,000 • James R. Watts, trustee for James Robert Watts Trust, to Robert L. and Robyn Mickelsen, Wildwood Park, Lot 21, Block 3, $237,200 • Gerry Suyematsu andJessie Matsumura to Anthony J. Monteverdi and Christine M. Pierson, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase14, Lot12, Block 7, $579,000 • Goldspur Farm LLC to Patrick A. Powell, Wiestoria, Lots17-19, Block 48, $275,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC to Justin and Melissa Frazier, Northcrest, Lot 34, $218,615 • Ned R. and Judy A. Cutright, trustees for Ned and JudyCutright Family Trust, to Julie T. Montgomery, Indian Ford Ranch HomesPlat No. 1, Lot10, Block 2, $255,000 • EFKR Properties 3 LLC to Jeffrey E. and Rosemary S.Lewis, trustees for Lewis Family Revocable Living Trust, Eastbrook Estates, Phase 1,Lot 23, $166,000 • Timothy R. and Shelly R. Lind to Robert and Katherine A.Hughes, Bradetich Park, Lot2, Block1, $310,900 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Christopher P. Minderman and Debra J. Bruck, Sunpointer, Phase 3,Lot 35, $190,000 • Brookswood-Bend LLC to Hayden Homes LLC,AspenRim, Lots 48, 49 and 85, $180,000 •Jimmy D.JohnsontoJakeand Samantha Osborne,Township16, Range11, Section 34, $170,000 • Deschutes Landing LLC to Timothy A. Steiner, Deschutes Landing, Lots 2 and 3, Township18, Range12, Section 5, $700,000 • Thomas WestandWallace Holts dba Windor Properties to WSB Investments LLC, Partition Plat 200432, Parcel1, $219,000
Mcoonald'sshakesupmenu The Associated Press NEW YORK — McDonald's is getting rid of its Chicken Selects and Fruit 8 Walnut Salad and is considering the removal
of Angus burgers. The change-up comes as the world's biggest hamburger chain plans to step up the number of limited-time menu items in the year ahead. Most recently, the chain introduced its Fish McBites. It plans to introduce McWrap chicken sandwiches with lettuce, tomato and cucumber and a choice of three sauces later this year. The McWrap sandwiches will be larger than
Beer Continued from E1 Tony Lawrence, co-owner of Boneyard Beer, said the original business plan he formulated in his living room in 2009 called for canning, which B oneyard expects t o s t a rt sometime next year. He chose the can mostly because that's what he prefers. Canning's recent trendiness is a bonus. "For the bulk of our packa ged volume, c a nning i s our business plan," he said, "50 percent draft, 50 percent
TheBulletin
steve struck at sstruck©amfam.com. Local Contact 541-316-3022
First cannedbeersoldin 1935 Humans learned to makebeermore than10,000 years ago, according to historians, but they did not figure out how to put it in a can until the1930s.
The first can of beer, brewed byKrueger Beer,was sold Jan. 24, 1935, in Richmond, Va., according to the Can Manufacturers
Institute. The steel cancould only be openedwith a can opener. tles," Wilson said. "They both bring a different element to craft beer." But, it's not his strategy to do both.
Mobile
creating labels, getting approval and going through the paperwork can time for the brewery. "So it's slow. There's a lot of stages, and a lot of hoops to jump through to make sure everything is perfect before we start." Once Cascade Mobile Canning starts operations this spring, it will become one of just a handful of companies across the country to can on the go, accordingto CraftCans. com. Cascade Mobile plans on
Continued from E1 "We never got around to doing that. But when we decided to start our own business, we thought going into the packaging side of beer would be a
good idea," he said. Once he secures all the machinery, Ayers will install it on a trailer, he said. The equipment can be connected directly to thebeer tanks at a brewery and can fill between 15 and 30 cans a minute, Ayers said. A canning operation can cost a brewery anywhere from $15,000 to $2 million, based on the size and whether it's automated or manual. It can also take up a lot of floor space. "A lot of breweries would rather spend that money on more fermentor tanks rather than a canning line," Ayers said. Mobile canning is a solution to the pricey canning conundrum, said Ty B arnett, coowner of GoodLife Brewing Co. in Bend. On March 11, G oodLife expects to become the first
PROTECTDREAMS. PURSUEYOURS.
Food, Home & Garden In AT HOME
terprises as saying. That post has since been removed. After years of outperforming rivals, McDonald's has been struggling as competitors including Burger K i ng and Wendy's step up t heir marketing and menu offerings. Fast-food chains are also fighting to attract customers at a time when people are being more carefulabout where they spend their money. In a shake-up late last year, McDonald's ousted the head of its U.S. business. The move came aftera key sales figure dropped for the first time in nearly a decade.
"We will never put quantity in front of quality, ever," he said. "We want to ensure any beer we put into any package tastes as good as it does coming fresh out of the tap." canned packaging." On average, he said, 7 perFrom a business standpoint, cent of beer drinkers nationhe said it would beneficial to ally consume craft beer.In sell draft, bottled and canned Oregon, he said, it's about four beer, but Boneyard plans to times that. "If we only did cans, we'd be stick to cans and kegs, except for a few top-shelf specialty able to reach half that percentage," Hodge said. "If we did beers that will be bottled in wax-capped or caged-and- cans, bottles and kegs we'd corked bottles. be able to maximize our reach "I don't think I'd be interest- to all the consumers that are ed in all three tiers," he said. looking for a great craft brew." " But when you look at t h e Crux Fermentation Project, big players ... they play on all which opened in June, began three tiers. If you want to act distributing kegs to local reslike the big boys, you have to taurants eight weeks ago, said play like the big boys." Dave Wilson, co-owner. Hodge, of Worthy, said he's Crux bottled the first 16 casnot trying to equal the produc- es ofbeer Feb. 22 in a testrun tion of mega breweries. Like inside the tasting room. The Barnett at GoodLife, Hodge beermakers used a manual, just wants to reach all craft- two-head filling machine that beer aficionados — whether bottles two beers at one time, they choose the bottle, can or he said. "We love cans, we love botthe tap.
• Hayden Homes LLC to Mark R. and • Ben J. Pfaff to Equity Trust Anne E. Mastalir, Aspen RimNo. 2, Lot Company, Cascade View Estates, Phase 6, Lot 29, $192,600 206, $268,808 • Hasenoehrl Custom Homes lnc. to Crook County Mark Joseph andCarolyn Carlberg, • Keith A. and Victoria Riverato Skyliner Summitat BrokenTop, Phase Christopher andCarissa Morrow, 11, Lot 284, $517,625 Brasada Ranch 2, Lot 209, • JLS Rental Real Estate LLC to John $237,900 R. Blackford, Quail Run, Phases1 and • David L and Judy P Murphy 2, Lot 4, $209,000 toJames GodloveandPamela • Patricia M. Gilbert, trustee for Gilbert K. Bourland, First Fairways Family RevocableTrust of1993 Credit Subdivision, Lot 21, $182,500 Shelter Trust, to Peter J. andShari M. Adams,Township18, Range12, Section 21, $781,000 • Clyde W. Smith II and Gloria J. Smith to Brent A. and Brandi R.Etlick, Township17, Range13, Section 31, $335,000 • Office Court LLC to Donald C. DeLisi Jr., Office Park at Mt. Bachelor Village, We are currently looking for motivated, energetic Lots 4-6, 8 and 9,$980,000 individuals who have an entrepreneurial spirit and • Pacwest 2 LLCto Thomas G.and Teri A. Stark, Northcrest, Lot 45, $219,947 strong desire for success. As an Insurance Agent • Kenneth M. and Connie M. Miler to in Training, you will work under the direction of an Kristin Floyd, DeschutesRiverTract, Agency Sales Manager — learning to solicit, quote, Lot 48, $183,000 and bind coverage to help customers manage their • Scott Weber andTania Kneuer-Weber to Stephen Harrison, Parkside at Pilot unique insurance and financial needs. Butte, Lot 9, $181,750 This position is designed to give you • Henriette and Elwin Heiny to George on-the-job- training and development which will P. and Jane L.Boyd,Tollgate Fourth Addition, Lot158, $180,000 prepare you to operate an American Family • Lirenda T. Haak,personal agency of your own. This position offers a base representative for the Estate of Linda L. Hammack, to Edward S.and Marilyn L. salary plus bonus potential. We are currently Boehmer, Sterling Point, Phase1, Lot looking for individuals to support the 26, $210,000 Redmond and Central Oregon Community. • Jay L. and Alesa L. Terry to Katherine Marks, Providence,Phase8, Lot11, Block 7, $ l61,000 • Maritessand John Esguerrato Zope Development LLC,Emerald Villa, Lot 11, $159,000 AMERICAN FAMILY •Michael T.and JanetL.Jacobsto Jeffrey B. Hedges,CascadeView Estates, Phase1, Lot172, $195,000 If you are interested or would like any additional Information Please email your resume to
the chain's Snack Wraps. The Oak Brook, Ill.-based company said in an emailed statement that it is "evaluating options as it relates to the Angus Third Pounders," which were introduced in 2009. The Selects chicken fingers were introduced in 2004 and the Fruit & Walnut Salad was introduced in 2005. Earlier this week, the Kentucky New Era quoted a McDonald's franchisee's Facebook post noting the discontinuation of the three items. "Sorry ifone of these were your favorite, they just did not sell well enough nationally," the site quoted McEnaney En-
brewery in the area to can its beer, utilizing a Portland mobile canning company called Craft Canning + Bottling. The brewery expects to can about 800 cases, most of which will be distributed locally. "We're using mobile canning to be able to step into the can territory without taking a large financial risk," Barnett said. "It's not a long-term vision for us, but it's a good test-
ing ground to see if canning is financially feasible." Owen Lingley, the owner of Craft Canning + Bottling, started his mobile canning outfit in June. By the end of thisyear,he expects to be canning beer for between eight and 10 breweries. "It's about a t h ree-month process from the time it takes for a brewery to decide on canning to the point when I come in," Lingley said, adding that
"My personalpreference is you pick a direction and you go that direction," he said. "We are bottling here. It fits our branding; it fits who we are." But he's traveled in the other direction, too. Wilson is also vice president of sales and marketing for San Francisco-based 21st Amendment Brewery, the nation's second-largestcraft brewery — one that distributes beer exclusively in cans. "I own a b r ewery where we're bottling, and I believe that's the best way for Crux, and here I run another company that exclusively cans and I think it's the best direction for the 21st Amendment Brewery," he said. "It has to do with what you're trying to achieve." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
charging companies about $8 per case, and will cater to Oregon and northern California breweries. "The industry o f m o b ile canning is only about a year old, but we see a lot of opportunity in it," Ayers said. "It has us very excited for the future." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mlzehoe@bendbufletin.com
Kemple
® MEMORI A l
Children's en a inic
In our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes County who can't afford it, the Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists for their volunteered services in February 2013. VOLU N T E E R DE N T ISTS TREATING KEM PLE KIDS IN OWN OFFICES IN FEBRUARY 2013 Dr. Susan Armstrong
Dr. B r ad Johnson
Dr. Scot Burgess
Dr. Dean Nyquist
Dr. David Cauble
Dr. Zack Porter
Dr. Steve Christensen
Dr. M a ureen Porter
Dr. Blake Drew
Dr. Catherine Quas
Dr. David Dunscombe
Dr. D a niel Radatti
Dr. Greg Everson
Dr. Anne Scott
Dr. David Fuller
Dr. Marika Stone
Dr. James Hammett
Dr. Andrew Timm
Dr. Brad Hester
Dr. Jeff Timm
Dr. Dennis Holly
Dr. Ryan Timm
Dr. Mark Jensen
Dr. Steve Timm
Dr. Jeff Johnson
Dr. Peter Yonan
A special thank you to Awbrey Dental for their free day of dental care. At the KempleMemorial Children's Dental Clinic, ourmission is to improvethe health and well-being of children in DeschutesCounty byfacilitating critical preventative, educational anddental treatment servicesfor children whosefamilies cannot access basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all children needingtimely, highquality dental care.
SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Vets Continued from E1 The problem is a boom in
Henri the cat is made to feel more comfortable in a class on howto approach animals in an examination.
supply (that is, vets) and a decline in demand (namely, veterinary services). Class sizes have been rising at n early every school, in some cases by as much as 20 percent in recent years. And the cost of vet school has far outpaced inflation. It has risen to a median of $63,000 a year for outof-state tuition, fees and living e xpenses, according to t h e Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges, up 35 percentin the pastdecade. This would seem less alarming if vets made more money. But starting s alaries have sunk by about 13 percent during the same 10-year period, in i n f lation-adjusted terms, to $45,575 a year, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association. America might be pet-crazed and filled with people eager to buy expensive fetch toys and heated cat beds. But the total population of pets is going down, along with the sums owners are willing to spend on the health care of their animals, one of the lesser-known casualties of the recession. Today, the ratio of debt to income forthe average new vet is roughly double that of MDs, according to Malcolm Getz, an economist at Vanderbilt University. To practitioners in the field, such numbers are ominous, and they portend lean timesfornew graduates. "We're calling for more bodies coming through the veterinary educational pipeline at higher and higher cost at the very point in time that we need fewer and fewer," said Dr. Eden Myers, a vet in Mount Sterling, Ky., who runs justvetdata.com, where s h e crunches numbers about the profession. "And they are going to get paid less and less." For years, the veterinary medical group contended that the U.S. needed more vets, not fewer, especially in rural areas. To support this view, in 2007, the organization helped underwrite a study, hoping to bolster a call for government assistance to help meet a putative shortfall of 15,000 vets by 2024. The results, released last year, came to a s t r i k ingly different c onclusion. T itled "Assessing the Current and Future Workforce Needs in V eterinary M e d icine" a n d conducted under the auspices of the National Academy of Sciences, the study found little evidence of vet shortages. It also concluded that "the cost of veterinary education is at a crisis point." The current president ofthe veterinary medical association, Dr. Douglas Aspros, isn't talking about unmet needs. Instead, he sounds like a man ready to rethink many of the premises his organization has
f( It
,A
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I
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— from 2006 to 2011, the number of dogs in th e country dropped for the first time, albeit slightly, to 70 million from 72 million, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association Sourcebook survey — but the amount owners paid to vets fell, too. Owners Photos by Nicole Bengiveno/ New YorkTimes News Service reportedthey spent about $20 Looking to the future Marlana Brown, left, and Stephanie Abrams examine Kitty at Ross University School of Veterinary less a year i n i n f l ation-adMedicine in St. Kitts. Enrollment has been rising at the 28 veterinary schools in the U.S. and there are The last refuge for r o sy justed terms in that five-year plans to open an additional four. forecasters is the most recent span. Bureau of Labor Statistics reThe declines are more sigport. It states that "overall job nificant when it comes to cats. less time, but to critics, Ross is opportunities for v e terinar- About 36.1 m i llion h ousea bit like a factory that is conians are expected to be good." holds owned at least one cat stantly building up production. As Ross' public relations office in 2011, down 6 percent from This same criticism has also, points out, the report's data 2006. During that period, the in a milder form, been leveled suggests that the country will number of cat visits to the vet at many of the 28 vet schools need 22,000 new vets by 2020, declined 13.5 percent. In the in the U.S. far more than will be produced business, this is known as "the There are roughly 91,000 under the current system. cat problem." working vets in the country, But many people believe There is n o s i mple soluabout one-tenth the number that the bureau's report, which tion to the problem of sinking of MDs. But t hi s r elatively was written in 2009, is badly salaries and rising debt, nor to small universe is expanding in need of an update. One of the market saturation of vets, rapidly. State budget cuts have them is Henry K asper, the Aspros says. Tuition is expectled many domestic schools to economist at the Bureau of La- ed to keep going up,classsizes make up lost revenue by addbor Statistics who helped draft are expected to grow, and if ing students. At L o u isiana Jennifer Robinson, a student at Ross, practices holding a dog to the report. There are others. new vet schools are built to "We've gotten several calls the proper specifications, they State University, for instance, control its head and leg while a catheter is inserted. the entering class grew 9 perfrom disgruntled vets who say, will get the veterinary medical 'What is wrong with you guys? association's seal of approval. cent last year. Four more vet schools, both public and prislightly more generous terms, a time-limited and lower-pay- Are you c ompletely blind? Discussionsabout these vexvate, are either in the planning called Pay As You Earn, or ing internship, or a residency There is no demand for vet ing issues are conspicuously phases or under construction, PAYE, is available to more re- — down from 84 percentin services,'" said Kasper. "This absent in most vet schools, say one in New York, two in Aricent graduates.) Both income- 1999. Last year, 39 percent of is pretty high on our list to re- academics. Dr. James Wilson, zona and one in Tennessee. If based repayment and PAYE al- graduates had no job offers, up ally home in on the effects of a veterinarian, lawyer and all are built, there will be thou- low graduates to lead relatively from 19 percent in 1999. the recession and see if there professor who has taught at sands of additional DVMs on normal lives by paying back a But after graduation, little are long-term trends that have more than a dozen vet schools the market in coming years. modest percentage of their in- data is collected about emchanged." over the years, says he is conAt the same time, the vet- come based on a formula. After ployment and salaries. NoKasper said the full impact sistently amazed at how little erinary medical association's a fixed amount of time, from 10 body knows the number of un- of the economic downturn students know about their fiC ouncil o n E d ucation h as to 25 years,the balance of the employed andunderemployed had not yet hit when the bu- nancial future. "I have said it over and over picked up the pace of its ac- debt is discharged. vets. Vet-market o p t imists reau published its report. Also, That's the good news. The have long argued that many creditation of foreign schools, the bureau looks at long-term to myself and friends, 'This is like Ross on St. Kitts, giving its bad news is that the interest parts of the country are untrends, rather than short-term as close to predatory lending imprimatur to 10 of them since on the debt keeps growing derserved. And if you look at a business cycles. Research at as anything I've ever seen,'" 2000. The goal, says Aspros, and taxes must be paid on map of wherevets setup prac- the timesuggested, as Kasper Wilson said. "The only reason the group's president, is to the amount discharged, as if tices, you will see large areas put it, that "people will always it's not a high-profile crime make the U.S. the global stan- it is a gift. Schafer sends $400 of the country with little or no spend money on pets because in 2013 is because incomedard setter forveterinary med- a month to Sallie Mae, a sum coverage. they view them as part of the based repayment and pay as icine. He defends this practice that will rise. But what kind of To address this problem, family." you earn have postponed the by noting that you don't need tax bill awaits her? Asked to many states and the DepartThat belief has been tested. reality and pain for 20 to 30 a diploma from a school ac- run the numbers, GL Advisor, ment of Agriculture have of- Not onlyare there fewer dogs years." credited by the association to a financial services company practice in the U.S.; graduates that specializes in s t udent from unaccredited schools loans, calculated that Schasimply have to jump through a fer's debt is likely to exceed few additional hoops. But the $ 650,000 when her tax b i l l association's seal of approval lands 25 years after the start of means students can qualify for the loan, which means she will federal loans. Because tuition owe the Internal Revenue Serat foreign schools is not subsi- vice roughly $200,000. That dized by any states, graduates will happen while she is still 0 from places like Ross tend to deep in her career, perhaps wind up with larger-than-av- around the time she wants to erage debts. send some children to college. "What I've done isn't a bright And the level of debt for U.S. graduates, says Dr. Alan move," she said. "But I can afKelly, former dean of the vet- ford to eat. I bought a car. Notherinary school at the Univer- ing fancy, but functionaL" sity of Pennsylvania, who led Schafer wound up with this the study on workforce needs, huge debt because Ross was is already too high. the only school to give her a "The general guideline is come-hitherafterU.S. schools long espoused. "It's not a sustainable mod- that your debt should never refused her. She was twice el," he said of vet school eco- be twice your starting salary," turned down by the University nomics. "For the l ong-term Kelly said. "The debt of gradu- of California, Davis, where success and health of the vet- atestoday, on average, is three she was an undergraduate, in JOin III the fIIII during I;he ZdIICItiOII I'OIIIIdStioII'8 eighth Snnual erinary practice, we've got to times their starting salary. large part, she says, because TriVia Bee. IeSrly 00 tealIIII in PurSuit Of triVial 8IIPeriaritylook at every end of it." Well, this is a cataclysm." she received B's as a freshman That is a common sentiment For Schafer, the burden of and sophomore. With PrOCeedSgOing tOSrea, StudeIIta thraugh POuIIdatiOII PIagralIIS. "There are 100 openings among working vets, many her student loan has dictated of whom say the job market some crucial decisions, includ- and 1,000 applicants," she said. SPOIIIOr a teSm, SPOII8OIa raund, Or juSt Play alang frOIII the "It's competitive." is the worst they have seen. ing where to live. After she 8IIOIIyraity Of yOur OWa Seat. TiCketS are $81, aVSilable fram the But the deans of many vet graduated from Ross in 2011, Getting admitted to Davis schools see growth and op- she wanted to head home to would have cut her tuition bills Tower Theatre website and box office, For more information portunities, and one of them San Diego, but she realized more than 50 percent. But she is Dr. Elaine Watson of Ross, the city was too expensive, never balked at Ross' offer. Algo tO engagedmiIIdS.OIg. the only p r ofit-making vet given her debts. She has a sis- though Ross is rarely anyone's school accredited by the vet- ter who lives in Scottsdale, so first choice, even detractors erinary medical association. she settled on Arizona. say its educational standards Some vets and professors say It took an intensive, month- are high and its graduates are the school, which is owned by long search to find a job. Her impressive. But the commutDeVry Inc., a publicly traded technique was to walk unan- ing costs, the foreign setting educational company based in nounced into a clinic — she and the faint stigma that atNew Jersey, is a vivid example eventually visited a couple of tends education at profit-makof all that has gone haywire dozen — and introduce her- ing institutions have made it a for aspiring doctors of veteri- self to anyone who seemed school of last resort. nary medicine, or DVMs, as to work there. She got lots of If getting in is easy, staying they are known. sympathetic smiles and heard in is surprisingly hard. About When you factor in cost of many variations of " W e're 20 percent of Ross' first seliving and commuting costs, not hiring." She finally found mester students won't make it Ross is one of the more ex- Caring Hearts through a help to graduation, say administrapensive places in the world to wanted ad and beat out 30 oth- tors, an exceptionally high rate get a degree. And Ross mints er applicants. of attrition. (At U.S. schools, it's DVMs at a remarkable clip. The job pays well — $60,000, typically closer to 2 percent.) • r Last year, it graduated 287 of which is higher than the aver- About half of those students them — triple the number of age starting salary for vets in are bounced for poor academic I many U.S. schools. this country. Her days now performance. Watson s a ys I • Watson, not s u rprisingly, start at 7 a.m. and are booked most students flunk out early says focusing on the oversup- until 7:30 p.m. with new-puppy on, in the first and second seply of vets is shortsighted. She exams, emergency surgeries mester. But some fail much says educators ought to think and anything else that rolls in later. about how the field will look in the door. "There is no typical day," The job market 10 or 20 years. At any rate, she adds, students come to Ross she said. "I love the job." The poor job market for with their eyes open. new veterinarians is not the OK4D-Lh • l4C 5C400LS "They've made the decision Growing debt EDUCATIohf much-publicized fiasco that FOUNDATION that they desperately want to Today, her d ebt e xceeds it is for new lawyers. But it's "and they be vets," she said, her salary by a factor of five getting worse. For decades, SGOBRBOARD SPOKSOR R OU N D SPONSORS all realize that when they start — much higher than the rec- new DVMs were snapped up Bigfock B~ ;~ Den bsl- , Brpant, taking on debt." ommended twice-starting-sal- by clinics and hospitals in the BEND RESEARCH Lumber, Beloa Credit Union, 9t. Chsrlea Students spend seven se- ary ratio. She signed up for months before they graduated. VIErl' <= ',lE ICIHEE sVQFlk m~ ~ ~ w~ a~ ~ mesters at Ross, one after income-based repayment, a In 2012,a mere 45 percent of another, w i t hout s u m m er government program available graduating vets reported that Thaak you toour nxdia ~: BeadB~ T beB d l e tm, Cascak ~ ~ KI PK, ZI TR,KEBf and TheScarce WesUy breaks. This allows them to to federal student loan recipi- they had accepted a permaget through the program in ents. (A newer program with nent job offer — as opposed to
fered loan-forgiveness pro-
grams, hoping to l ure new graduatesto places where vets are needed. Success stories are rare. Even with government assistance, it is hard to make it financially as a vet in areas thatare both sparsely populated and poor.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Photos
Protectyourdigital estate
Continued from E1 "Everybody wants to do the right thing, but the hard legal reality is the Federal Communications Act," said Jim Hawley, a vice president at TechNet, an industry group that represents companies such as Google and Microsoft. Oregon lawmakers moved a head anyway with a p r o posal that would have given "digital assets" — everything from photos and messages stored online to i ntellectual
Estate planning attorney James Lamm, who writes the blog "Digital Passing," advises people to plan ahead for their virtual afterlives.
Your best bet is to makesurevaluable memories and intellectual property are stored somewherebesides asocial media account — so back upyourphotosonaUSBflashdrive.Lamm advises these four steps as asort of digital estate planning guide to help ensure your wishes arecarried out — eventhough, he says, with the law as it stands currently, there are noguarantees. • Keep a list:Make alist of this step could make it more all your digital accounts-
including social media, email, online banking, investment,
gaming and any other virtual assets there. Someonline profile you can think of. Include information has real financial
property and banking information — the same treatment as material property for estate
purposes. "I think it's time for us to really look at what we can do now," said Democratic Sen. Floyd Prozanski after hearing Williams testify about her loss last month. Two weeks later, however, language in the bill that would have covered social media accounts, from Facebook to Flikr, was stripped as tech lobbyists said the federal law and company privacy policies trumped anything that the bill would have included. "I recognize the emotional toll these types of decisions can have on a family who's lost a loved one," Prozanski said. "But some of these issues may have to be addressed when we have more information than we currently have." Still, the problem persists and discussions onthe issue are gaining momentum. As unlikely as such a case might be, even if a person willingly gives over login and p assword information to someone whom they authorize to access a given digital account, it would violate most terms of serviceagreements and both people couldbe charged with cybercrimes and face civil action from Internet companies
likely your wishes are fulfilled. • Will power:If you have a will, it's best to include your digital
your login information, such as usernamesand passwords, and encryption data. • Put someonein charge: Tell your estate plannerwhere
value, and it's good to cover all your assets. A McAfee survey found that on average
to find that list and give that person explicit instructions for
digital assets are worth about
how you want the information handled. Do they hit the delete button? Or do they notify the
company to memorialize your site? Don't ask this decisionmaker to commit a crime by
logging in to youraccounts, but if the law changes in the future under current law. Currently, five states have digital assets laws, which vary widely. This group includes Oklahoma, which passed a law two years ago allowing estate lawyers to access digital assets, even social media accounts. That measure did not face the opposition that has emerged in Oregon. "There is some question if laws like the one we passed in Oklahoma would stand up to a challenge by Facebook and Gmail saying their terms-ofservice agreements supersede laws like this one and the one being discussed in Oregon," said Ryan Kiesel, a former O klahoma l e g islator w h o wrote the law. "That's a question that remains to be answered," he
Americans believe the financial
and emotional value of their $55,000. • Hope for thedest: Sometimes, you cando everything right and still not get the results you want. Until there is more legal
clarification, you just haveto do everything you canand hope that it works out. added. Several other states, including Nebraska — guided in part by the story of Williams' 22-year-old son, Loren — are also considering proposals. And the Uniform Law Commission, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group that writes model legislation for states to help standardize laws around the nation, is examining the issue. "This law is a real need as we have moved into a digital world," said Lane Shetterly, a n Oregon attorney and a representative on th e c o mmission's drafting committee. The group isresponsible for standardizing a range of legI
Kiesel, the f ormer O k lah oma lawmaker, says t h e various attempts at legislation have sparked a long overdue conversation a b ou t e s t ate planning for digital assets. "I think that, because of the wide prevalence of online accounts and digital property, the federal government will ultimately need to pass some legislation that provides greater uniformity," he said. Congress, however, has no current plans to take up the matter. U.S. Sen. Mark Pryor, an Arkansas Democrat who heads the Senate Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, is not
planning to introduce any digital assets proposals and has not heard any come up, his press secretary said. Also, a bill aimed at modernizing the Stored Communications Act failed in the House Judiciary Committee last year. Under current law, Internet companies that provide storage for digital assets are prohibited from disclosing account information, even to families, without a court order, which can be costly and difficult to obtain.
liams sued and won, but she never receivedthe fullaccess she sought. Eventually, the account was taken down. In the end, she gained little more than a symbolic victory and a role as champion of a cause that didn't exist before the
• • J
one of several groups in opposition to the Oregon measure, provided written testimony arguing that legislation requiring online companies to provide access could subject them to federal criminal penalties. " We just w ant t o m a k e sure thatwhatever comes out doesn't put a company in a position where they have to choose between stateand federal law," said Hawley.
The pending Oregon legislation now covers only digital assetsof commercial or financial value such as online banking information.
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E ven then, there are n o g uarantees. Facebook, f o r example, citing its terms-ofservice agreement, won't provide access, even ifa judge orders them to do so. Facebook will not comment on pending legislation or specific cases other than to defer to their service agreement, which states, in part, "We may access, preserve and share your information in response to a legal request (like a search warrant, court order or subpoena) if we have a good faith belief that the law requires us to do so." Along these lines, TechNet,
policy in denying her. Wil-
, '$19999
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digital age.
islation, including commercial transaction regulations and child custody laws. Proponents say the need is clear. Without clarity or direction, the digital information leftbehind by a deceased person can spark emotional legal battles, pitting big business against devastated families. And as more and more memories are being stored online, new tools are necessary to make sure loved ones can easily access personal details that could belostforever. "If this were a box of letters under his bed, no one would have thought twice," Williams said. Months after the death of her first-born son, who was away at college in Arizona, W illiams found comfort i n his Facebook page. There, she was able to click through photos and letters that helped ease the pain of her loss — for two hours. She learned of the page from his fri ends and wanted access to his memories to keep them from being deleted, which was Facebook's policy at the time. Unaware of Internet privacy regulations,she reached out to Facebook for help. As she waited for a response, one of his friends provided a tip that helped her discover his password. "It was like a gift," she said. Shortly after, however, the site's administrators changed the password, citing company
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The job market is seeing the bright side of workers on payrolls would be at its highest level since Superstorm Sandy. November 2008, which was during the financial crisis. Rebuilding efforts following the storm mean For total employment to return to its peak from construction crews have January 2008, Credit Suisse Nonfarm job growthin thousands picked Up hiring. When says it would take until the the government releases 3QQ summer of 2014 if employers its latest update on maintain their current hiring monthly job growth Friday, pace. economists expect to see The Federal Reserve has a gain of 152,000 jobs for 200 said that it will keep interest 152 ra tes at their record lows February. Economists at Credit Suisse are more until the unemployment rate optimistic. They forecast falls below 6.5 percent, as growth of 175,000 jobs, long as inflation stays in which would top check.Economists expect January's gain of 157,000 Friday's report to say that jobs. the unemployment rate fell 0 If Credit Suisse is to 7.8 percent form 7.9 2011 2012 correct, the number of Source: FactSet perCent.
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ISM services index Feb. est. 55.0 Jan. 55.2 Federal Reserve releases Beige Book Staples earnings 4Q est. $0.45 Year ago $0.41 Consumer credit Jan. est. $13.9b • Dec. $14.6b
Kroger earnings 4Q est. $0.70• Year ago $0.50 Trade deficit Jan. est. $43b Dec. $38.5b European Central Bank meets on interest rates
Nonfarm payroll growth Feb. est. 152k Jan. 157k Unemployment rate Feb. est. 7.8% • Jan. 7.9% Source: FactSet
WILSHIRE 5000 16,028.27 ~
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151a20
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FRI. CHG FRL CHG WK MO aTR v TD +3.52 +0.23% +6.45% -33.54 -0.43% +1.26% +17.79 +0.28% +8.15% -140.05 -0.61% +0.99% -23.09 -0.62% +1.62% +47.02
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+51.16 -138.83 -540.30 -48.71
+1.68% -0.31% -0.94%
339.73 -0.80 2546.83 -22.34 830.27 -3.32 7601.99 +8.32 15675.37 -245.88 40134.57 +425.01 1199.21 -0.19
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3099.71 43982.16 56883.99 12773.12
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER
u e - rice io o ersvaue Bra e i teasi re aire at ome
By Emma Jayne Williams
Fort Worth (Texasl Star-Telegram
South Korean automaker Kia entered the U.S. market in the 1990s with the compact Sephia, but that wasn't the first Kia-made vehicle sold in the United States. That was the Ford Festiva, sold through Ford Motor Co. dealers from 1987-92. Since then, Kia has come a l ong way, a n d
By Brad Bergholdt
used on my car and SUV'? It seems that I'm allowed to go a lot further than I would • The center brake light have thought. A r e t h e se . on my 2 005 Chrys- reliable? ler Sebring convertible has • Both of your vehicles gone out, and the owner's • likely u s e i n f o r mamanual advises to have a tion gleaned from the enprofessional repair it. I feel gine management system's fairly confident I could fix sensors and asophisticated this, but before I go and pop algorithm to infer oil condithe light compartment off, tion. Startup temperature, I am hoping you can shine number of starts, run times, some light on this repair. engine load, operating tem• T his s h o uld b e a perature and other factors • simple and satisfying are crunched in order to inhome repair. Your center fer remaining oil life. high mount stop light, or I believe this is a much CHMSL, is integrated into a s marter a p p r oach t h a n molding that wraps around simply going by months or the convertible top b o ot, miles. Rather than letting just in front of the trunk. the clock run all the way The molding needs to be down, I prefer to utilize the removed from thecar,then smarts but take a conservathe CHMSL lamp housing is tive approach by changing removed from the molding. my oil and filter with 30 perThe published procedure cent oil life remaining. is as follows: Lower the conI've noticed my turn vertible top. Disconnect and isolate the battery negative . signals f l ash f a ster terminal. Open the t r u nk when turning left than when and remove the molding fas- I turn right. It's almost twice teners — there are five span- the speed, so I know somening across, and t h ey're thing isn't right. Can you visible once the front edge help? of the trunk lid lifts up and • F ast f l a s hing i n d i away. Pull back the trunk • cates l e s s el e c t ric liner material to allow the current is being delivered CHMSL wiring connector to the left side, which usuto be found and unplugged. ally means a faulty bulb. On Remove the molding and older cars, the thermal type remove the CHMSL fasten- flasher cycles slower. Try ers and CHMSL unit from engaging the hazard flashi t. Renew the bulb — i t ' s ers and walk around the veNo. 921, which i s w i dely hicle, observing brightness available for about $2. In- at each corner, compared to stallation is the reverse of the across-car mate. — Bergholdt teaches disassembly. McCfatchy-Tribune News Service
Q
REQ)EW has a big U.S.
lineup that extends all the way from entry level to premium. The Rio is Kia's entry-level model, one of the lowest priced sedans sold in A m erica. It comes in six versions: three four-door sedans and three five-door hatchbacks. Trim Courtesy of MikeDitz/ Kia via Mcclatchy-Trittune News Service levels for each body style are The 2013 Kia Rio is one of the lowest-priced sedans sold in America. base LX, mid-level EX and top-of-the-line SX. For 2013, the Rio comes with Standard safety f e atures less room — 31.1 inches leg2013 Kia Rio steering-wheel paddle shifters; include seat-mounted side air room, 37.6 inches headroom Base price:$13,600 the EX trims offer idle stopbags and full-length side cur- — but the outboard seats were As tested:$20,510 and-go technology in the Eco tain air bags. as comfortable as the front package; and the five-door EX Type:Four-door sedan or The trunk was large — 13.7 buckets. Rear passengers had five-door hatchback and SX trims have an undercubic feet — but the opening an overhead light and door floor tray in the cargo area. was restrictive. I needed to pockets with bottle holders, Engine:1.6-liter directMy tester was the SX fourhaul some medium-sized stor- but no cupholders. injection four-cylinder door model. Standard equipage tubs, but couldn't manage Leatherseats were included gasoline engine with138 ment included a 1.6-liter dito get them into the trunk. in thePremium Package along horsepower rect-injection fo u r - cylinder Anti-lock brakes, traction with heated front seats, power Mileage:28 mpg city, gasoline engine, six-speed aucontrol, electronic s tability sunroof, p ush-button s t art 36 mpg highway tomatic transmission with Accontrol and hill-assist control with smart key, and a navigative Eco system, sport-tuned are also standard. tion system with Sirius Traffic. suspension, he a t ed/powerMy Rio handled very well Satellite radio comes standard folding mirrors with turn indi- c ity/36 highway. Using t h e and, even w it h t h e s p ort- on the Rio SX with a threecators,and 17-inch, five-spoke Supervision Meter Cluster trip tuned suspension,the ride was month trial subscription. alloy wheels. computer, I m anaged 34 mpg smooth and quiet. The navigation system was With 138 horsepower, my c ombined, mostly i n s t o p There was plenty of room easy to use — intuitive, wellKia was no powerhouse, but and-go, rush-hour traffic. The in the front for average-to-tall labeled, easy to read — with I had no problem getting up meter cluster also displays dis- folks, with 43.8 inches of leg- precise audible instructions to driving speed quickly and tance-to-empty, elapsed time room and 40 inches of head- and detailed turn-by-turn on smoothly. and average speed, in addition room. The front seats were the screen. The Active ECO s ystem to total miles for two separate manually adjustable, and the The audio system, Virtual helps to conserve fuel by cut- trips, and the usual rpm, mph, tilt/telescopic steering wheel Sound by Arkamys, was exting down engine speed and fuel, engine miles, engine tem- was easy to move for a near- cellent with four strategically shifting gears earlier. perature, external tempera- perfect driving position. placed speakers forflawless EPA ratings are 28 m pg ture, and gear position. Rear passengers had a little surround sound.
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Q.
Q.
automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@ earthiinlz.net.
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INSIDE: BOOICSW Editorials, F2
Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
" ~IJ JOHN COSTA COMMENTARY
Legislature should fix foreclosure t's not often that the actions of the Oregon Legislature summon up remembrances of Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln, according to historians, was repulsed by the thought of executing anyone, but particularly deserters from battle in the Civil War. Confronted by the prospect of one, he is reported to have said, "If a man had more than one life, I think a little hanging would not hurt this one; but after he isonce dead we cannot bring him back, no matter how sorry we may be; so the boy shall be pardoned." The Oregon Legislature, controlled by Democrats, seems repulsed by the thought of banks and their responses to homeowners in distress. It is easy to understand the emotion, but harder to reconcile the potential impact of their — the Democrats — solution. D emocratsare not alone in regarding banks as villains. It may, in fact, be one of the few bipartisan instincts left in our society. In the wake of the collapse of the realestate,mortgage-based economy, banks' treatment of some homeowners faced with losing their homes has been cold, cruel or calculating. Borrowing from Lincoln, in those cases they could use a little hanging. As satisfying as that may be, it could hurt us all in the long run. The issue at hand is the home
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mortgageforeclosure process. Suffice to say that thousands of Oregon homeowners remain in distress on their mortgages and face, or are in the process of, losing their homes to banks. As painful as it may be, the best evidence to date is that in most cases the banks are playing by the rules in seeking back their money — or the house. It is sad to think of folks losing their homes. But even if we all agree that neitherthe lender nor the borrower should have made or accepted the loan in the first place, the money is still owed. Oregon is among those states that have two paths to foreclosure — judicial and nonjudicial. Nonjudicial is, for any number of reasons, a more efficient vehicle to process the foreclosures. It's also the processthat banks and trustee services had been using until the Legislature, responding to the mistreatment of some homeowners, added a mediation requirement. Judicial takes more time and is more expensive, but it is the one the banks switched to because mediation isnot required in a processsupervised, as the name suggests,by the courts. Now, theLegislature seems determined to add mediation to the judicial avenue, which would give the banks no alternative but to at least talk with the distressed homeowner. At the same time, the Oregon Supreme Courtisconsidering whether the mortgage registration service used by the banks meets the test of state law. Perhaps answers to this very complex situation can be better found by focusing on outcomes. If the focus is on the protection of the homeowner facingforeclosure, then adding requirements for the bank may be necessary. If, however, the focus is on finding the fastest and most efficient way to work through the inventory of distressed homes, then finding the most efficient path for the banks is the right way to go, however distasteful. Not to mention the crushing burden on the courts now swamped with judicial filings. It's hard to imagine that the time and added expense to the banks won't result in higher banking costs to all of us in the future. And it is easy to imagine why those states with an active nonjudicialprocess, as reported by The Wall Street Journal, are way ahead in resolving their foreclosure challenges and restoring their housing markets. The bestcourse for allconcerned would be to add mediation to judicial and fix MERS. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaC<bendbulletin.com
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• The future of the Internetmaylie in the past, thanksto a bevyof newattempts at control By Katherine Maher • Foreign Policy
WASHINGTONearly 365 years ago, more than 100 warring diplomats and princes got together in the cities of Miinster and Osnabriick, in what is now northwestern Germany. There they signed a set of treaties that became the basic framework for our modern world: the Peace of Westphalia. Thanks to these dignitaries, we have territorial sovereignty: nation-states, demarcated by borders. In the intervening centuries, Westphalian sovereignty has been the basic ordering principle of our societies. Empires have risen and fallen, countries come and gone. The most successful states have established internal monopolies on information and resources and have exerted discretion on what trade,ideas,money or people crossed theirborders. But 30 years ago, humanity gave birth to one of the most disruptive forces of our time. On Jan. 1, 1983, the implementation of TCP/IP — a standard protocol to allow computers to exchange data over a network — turned discreteclusters ofresearch computers into a distributed global phenomenon. It was essentially the work of three men: two engineers to write the protocol, and one to carry out the plan. It was a birth so quiet no one even has a photo of the day; a recent post by one of TCP/IP's authors, Vint Cerf, was able to turn up only
a commemorative pin. It took awhile for the Internet to make it from mainframes in universities to desktops in the home, but as it did, it birthed its own culture, full of shorthands and memes, communities and cesspools. This Internet was wild and woolly, unknown and unregulated. It was clearly a place, but a place without any familiar cultural signposts, a space be-
yond the boundaries of geography or identity. It deserved its own name: cyberspace.
Like all new frontiers, cyberspace'searly settlers declaredthemselves independent — most famously in 1996, in cyberlibertarian John Perry Barlow's "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace." Barlow asserteda realm beyond borders or government, rejecting the systems we use to run the physical universe. "Governments of the Industrial World," he reproached, "You have no sovereignty where we gather.... Cyberspace does not lie within your borders."
With the flip of a switch, three engineers had undone the work of more than 100 princes and diplomats. Barlow was right, in part. Independence was a structuralfactofcyberspace, and free expression and communication were baked into the network. The standards and protocols on which the Internet runs are agnostic: They don't care whether you were in Bangkok, Buenos Aires or Boise. See Internet /F6
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
AN INDEPENDENTNEWSPAPER
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be long before those schools are overflowing. An added complication is that nearly one-third of the available seats for all ages are in La Pine, while the faster growth is happening in Bend. The 138 smaller projects were chosen from alist of more than400, and include fixing leaking roofs and windows; updating heating, ventilation, electrical and plumbing systems; adding fire sprinklers, intercoms and fencing; renovating space forapplied arts programs; and improving playgrounds, gyms and fields, among others. With nearly half the district's schools now at least 30 years old, many of theseupgrades are essential. It's no doubt possible to quibble with a few of the items on the upgrade list, but the overall need is clear.If voters say no, costs for critical maintenance and portable classrooms would come out of the general fund, likely further reducing the teaching staff. Failure to keep up with growth would be felt for years to come. Approval won't increase homeowners' tax bills, but it will meet a critical need for our children. Voters should say yes.
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M IVickel's Worth ThankstoWyden, Merkley
State may need to help troubled timber counties
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Fditur-in-Ctnrf Editor foEdftoria/s
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ing the Great Recession and the slow recovery.
Measure 50, the third of three limiting measures, was approved in the late 1990s, it locked in place permanent property tax rates. The 08 C counties had historically low rates that became permanent, 59 cents per $1,000 of taxable value in Jospehine County and a penny more in Curry. By contrast, Deschutes County's permanent rate is $1.27 per $1,000. Without a change in the state constitution, those rates cannot change, though several counties will ask voters to approve public safety local option levies later this year. Even if all are approved, the state may have to step in if the counties are to provide even the most basic services. Among bills being considered by the Legislature, one would allow the state to declare a "fiscal emergency" andtake over public safety. One would allow the counties to declare bankruptcy. 0thers would let the secretary of state provide election services and the department of revenue assess and collect taxes. Those services all are mandated by law. There is no quick or simple answer to the counties' financial difficulties, though efforts to find some solution continue. Meanwhile, the state may have to step in.
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year to enroll in Bend-La Pine Schools, even dur-
ven if there had been no recession, a handful of Oregon counties, mostly in the southwest corner of the state, likely would be in a world of financial hurt. They've been hit by a perfect storm of financial difficulties not of their own making, and now the state is preparing to step in, should they go broke. The state can do little else. The problems for Curry, Coos, Jackson, Josephine, Lane a nd other counties are twofold. They're among the 18 counties in the state in which former Oregon & California Railroad lands are located. After the railroad went broke and Uncle Sam reclaimed the land, Congress in 1937 ordered it to be managed for sustainable timber production and allotted a chunk of the money raised from timber sales to the counties. It's an understatement to say that revenue from timber sales in the O&C counties has declined over the years. The counties divvied up, on average, $150 million in 08 C payments annually between 1960 and 1963; in 2011, they split $40 million. All federal payments to the counties have dropped bymore than half during the same period. The second problem lies in Oregon's property tax system. When
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ore and more students have been showingup each
In less than a year from March 2012 to February 2013, elementary schools gained about 250 students, middle schools about 70 and high schools about 65. For a longer look, forecasts from Portland State University's Center for Population Research predict another 3,000 students in the next 10 years. The numbers provide firm support for the district's $96 million bond request, which will go to the voters in May. It proposes to build two schools — one elementary and one middle — and to do 138 safety, maintenance and classroom-addition projects in other schools. Taxpayers' bills would stay about the same, even with approval of this new bond, because older bonds are being paid off. If it were defeated, tax bills would drop by about 26 cents per $1,000 of assessed value, or about $52 per year on a property with taxable value of $200,000. The need for a new school is most urgent at the youngest level, where growth is fastest and only about 600 seats are available across the district's 17 elementary schools. At the current growth rate of 250 students per year, it won't
BETSYMccooc Goaooft BEAEE
I want to thank Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley for introducing the Oregon TreasuresAct of 2013.This bill, an Oregon rivers bill, enhances protection for the Chetco, Mollala, Rogue and John Day Rivers. When passed by Congress, Oregon Treasures will designate areas along and adjacent to the John Day River as wilderness. Additional areas will be available for public enjoyment, more campsites along a popular stretch of the river will be possible, and user conflicts will decrease. The Oregon Treasures Act represents a forward thinking approach to conservation in Oregon. I hope that Wyden and Merkley are given the recognition and thanks that their efforts deserve. Jim Davis Bend
Fix in for in-state tuition I wasn't allowed to testify against the in-state tuition bill (HB 2787) at the Feb. 13 legislative hearing, although I arrived early and signed the first sheet. The fix was already in. No one wants to punish students brought here by law-breaking parents, but citizens should know that illegal immigrants who qualify for in-state college tuition may al so achieve protected minority status, giving them an affirmative action advantage for jobs against equally innocent American students. Employers who can't think past cheap labor are fueling the planned r epresentational i r r elevance o f
citizens a s i l l egal i m m i gration expands. When I asked Democratic Rep. Michael Dembrow if he'd sponsor a state e-verify bill to stop drawing illegal labor to Oregon, he dismissed it as a federal issue and walked away. How's that for compassion'? Lyneii Vandermoien Powell Butte
Mental institutions, prisons A tool is a tool. A hammer is a tool. A hatchet is a tool. An ice pick is a tool. A gun is a tooL A baseball bat is — well you get the picture. All of these tools or items, when in the hands of a person trained in their use, who is of a sound mind and mental state, perform as they were invented to be used. Yet, when in the hands of someone who's not of sound mind and mental state, these tools can be used to perform in methods that can have horrific results. History has shown all these aforementioned "tools" have been used to kilL These "tools," on a table by themselves, can do nothing. It takes someone standing behind them to do something! And no law, written or to be written will ever change their
er at our nation's mental institutions and our penal system. Because that's what really is broken! We all know it, and the time for fixing is now. Eric Nunez Bend
Support backgroundchecks With unacceptable levels of gun violenceacross the U.S. and recent mass shootings perpetrated by criminals or unstable individuals, our country needs to institute nationwide, universal gun checks. A recent poll conducted by Quinnipiac University of 1,772 registered voters showed an overwhelming
support for requiring background checks for all gun buyers, with 92 percent in support. All t y pes of households were polled, and homes that owned a gun showed a support level of 91 percent. Universal background checks are a reasonable approach to the gun control issue now facing our nation. We risk losing more freedoms if we do not take some pro-active measures to keep gun ownership limited to law-abiding citizens. While this will not solve the problem of those with no previous negative back-
proper or improper use.
ground purchasing or owning guns
In a mentally deranged or criminal mindset individual, laws are meant to be broken! They won't follow old laws or new laws. So if all you politicians can stop the political grandstanding on all these senseless and tragic events and want to really do something for America — and get off your personal "gun agenda" that you keep trying to sell all law-abiding Americans, as if it's their agenda, Mr. President — I suggest you look hard-
and snapping and hurting others, I fear that if we take no steps at all, the problem could get out of hand with more innocent lives lost and more and more strict bans might take place. The U.S. will always be a gun-owning country, and let's take action to keep it that way. Join me in supporting nationwide, universal background checks. Andrew Curtis Bend
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There must be mmpromise in gun-control changes T By Ai Baensch
hese pages have been filled with arguments about guns, assault rifles and the Second Amendment. Notably absent has been concern for people, civilized society and common sense. The Second Amendment reads: HA well regulated Mi- I N MY litia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." We need to be aware that constitutional scholars understand this right in the context of militias who owned muskets to secure the state, not necessarily extending that right to every individual. The notion of k eeping arms against the state, in defense of the Constitution, is rooted in politically inspired fears. Lost in this misguided
thinking is the necessity of compromise in democratic process. The Constitution makes no provisions for the use of guns against an overreaching government. Article 1, Section 8, of the Constitution: HTo provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union,
VIEW
su ppress Insurrect ion and
repel Invasions." Militias have been replaced by standing militaries, to secure the state against invasion and insurrection, not to overthrow it. Armed insurrection can only violate the Constitution, never uphold it. Peaceful channels are provided to hear and redress grievances. Does it not seem wiser to invest in active American citizenship, to vote intelligently, to politely but persistently question representatives or officials when needed, but also to accept com-
promises vital to a healthy democracy meant to serve us all'? Good hunters seek to kill mercifully with a single shot, using weapons optimized to the task. Target shooters also favorspecialized guns. None of these resemble military weapons designed for efficient killing of people. The legitimate sport of military shooting can surely live with reasonable restrictions. "Guns do not kill people, people kill people."We can be sure that many
of the hands of likely misusers. Gun sport enthusiasts should be proactive with reasonable control measures to protect their sport and society. A forward looking National Rifle Association would join the effort. Seeking solutions in arming responsible people to shoot the irresponsible ones makes no sense at all. Do we really want to return America to the wild West'?Arguments centered on guns and politics miss the mark. How can gun killings would not happen if a gun we justly weigh the lives of children were nothandy. We have to recognize against the rights of gun owners'? Are the truth that people, easy access to not ourlivesourmost precious possesguns, large magazines and rapid fire sion? What about the people who are combine with cultural, social and med- robbed of theirs'? ical factors to cause shooting deaths. Our nation was stained by over Requiring background checks for 33,000 firearm deaths in 2011, which all gun sales to identify criminal, do- are expected tosurpass automobile mestic violence and mental health deaths in three years. The Wikipeissues would help to keep guns out dia list of gun deaths in 75 countries
rates us No. 11, behind the Philippines, Montenegro, and Paraguay, earning us poor marks as a civilized society. Per 100,000 people, we killed 10.2 that year, our neighbor Canada 2.1, Israel 1.9, Sweden 1.5, Germany and Australia 1.1, and the British shame us with 0.3, or one gun death to our 34. The availability and killing efficiency of military weapons are serious factors, but people have to decide to aim and pull the trigger. Such deviant behavior is certainly increased by the general pervasiveness of violence in our culture. Any serious effort about reducing gun deaths needs to address violence in our nation on all fronts. Letusputpeoplefirst andgoforward together with cool heads, warm hearts, common sense and love of country to lessen this stain on our society. — Al Baenschlives in Prineville.
SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ow wI wor epublicans and D e mocrats are blaming one another for impending cuts to the defense budget brought about by sequestration. But with serial annual deficits
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view mi ita c uts?
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON
of $1 trillion-plus and an aggregate debt nearing $17 trillion, the United States — like an insolvent Rome and exhausted Great Britain of the past — was bound to re-examine its expensive overseas commitments and strategic profile. The president's nomination of Chuck Hagel fordefense secretary was a sort of Zen-like way of having a Republican combat veteran orchestrate a reduced military. In fact, Barack Obama has nurtured a broad and diverse constituency for his neoisolationist vision. Budget hawks concede that defense must suffer its fair share of cuts. Libertarians want back their republic and hate the big-
government baggage thatcomes along with a big military's involvement overseas. Leftists agree, adding that the U.S. has neither the moral authority nor the wherewithal to arrange events overseas.For liberals,a scaled-back military presence abroad means more entitlements at home. For each F-22 Raptor not built, about another 20,000 families could receive food stamps for a year. The American public — exhausted by Iraq and Afghanistan — is re-
ceptive to all the above arguments. If our poorer grandparents thought 70 percent of the annual U.S. budget devoted to defense after the Korean War was about right, we, the more affluent, insist that even the present 20 percent is far too costly. The result is that we lead from behind in Libya; France leads from the front in Mali. Syria and Iran shrug off Obama's periodic sermons to behave. Our reset with Russia was abruptly reset by Russia. American policy in the Middle East could be summed up as "Whatever" — as we become only mildly miffed that distasteful authoritarian allies are replaced by more distasteful Islamist enemies. In his first major speech as secretary of state, John Kerry did not worry about r adical Islam. Nor did he warn Americans of a rogue North Korea, a soon-to-be-nuclear Iran, or China — bullying in the Pacific and cyber-hacking the U.S. — but mostly of the need for collective efforts to address climate change. A shortage of solar panels and windmills, not impending cuts in U.S. ships and planes, is Kerry's
idea of existential danger on the global horizon. To the extent that there is a coherent American foreign policy, it is perhaps symbolized by drone assassinations: Every couple of days or so, just kill a terrorist suspect or two — and as cheaply, as remotely and as quietly as possible. What will the world begin to look like as the global sheriff backs out of the world saloon with both guns holstered? Japan and Germany, the world's third- and fourth-largest nations in terms of their gross domestic product, have never translated their formidable postwar economic strength into their past, prewar levels of military power. Yet both in theory could quickly do so — and make nukes in the same way they make fine cars — once they sense that there is no longer an unshakeable U.S. commitment and ability to shelter them from regional threats. In fact, an array of allies — South Korea, Taiwan, the Philippines — would all be frontline garrison states should the U.S. military vacate their bad neighborhoods. The world is full of hot spots apart from the Israeli-Palestinian dispute. Shiite majorities in many of the Sunni-ruled and oil-rich Persian Gulf kingdoms believe that a terroristsponsoring Iran is more a liberator
than rogue nation, and that Gulf oil has not been fully utilized as a strategic weapon. The Aegean, Cyprus, the former Soviet Republics, the Falkland Islands, Central America and the Baltic are all deceptively quiet. Potentially aggressive actors in the region don't quite know how the U.S. military might react — only that it easily could, and has in the past. We lament the terrible American losses in blood and treasure in tribal Afghanistan and Iraq. But privately, radical Islamists acknowledge that the U.S. military killed thousands of jihadists in both countries — and hope never to see U.S. troops on the battlefield again. Of course, a country that can neither budget the necessary money nor maintain the will to oversee the international peace has no business continuing to try. But in our relief from the vast costs and burdens of maintaining the postwar global order, we might at least acknowledge the truth, past and present: Just as the world was a far better place after 1945 because of an engaged United States, so it will probably become a much worse place due to an increasingly absent America. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
Most moms on't ive in a cocoon WASHINGTONhen Marissa Mayerbecame queen of the Yahoos last summer, she was hailed as a role model forwomen. The 37-year-old supergeek with the supermodel looks was the youngestFortune 500 chiefexecutive.And she was in the third trimester of her first pregnancy. Many women were thrilled at the thought that biases against hiring women who were expecting, or planning to be, might be melting. A couple months later, it gave her female fans pause when the Yahoo CEO took a mere two-week maternity pause. She built a nursery next to her office at her own expense, to make working almost straight through easier. The fear that this might set an impossible standard for other women — especiallywomen who had consigned "having it all" to unicorn status — reverberated. Even the German family minister, Kristina Schroeder, chimed in: "I regard it with major concern when prominent women give the public impression that maternity leave is something that is not important." Almost two months after her son, Macallister, was born, Mayer irritated some women again when she bubbled at a Fortune event that "the baby's been way easier than everyone made it out to be." "Putting 'baby' and 'easy' in the same sentence turnsyou into one of those mothers we don't like very much," Lisa Belkin chided in The Huffington Post. Now Mayer has caused another fem-quake with a decision that has
MAUREEN DOWD
a~
~ ) ~ • a special significance to working mothers. She has banned Yahoos, as her employees are known, from working at home (which some of us
i ~
call "working" at home).
It flies in the face of tech companies' success in creating a cloud office rather than a conventional one. Mayer's friend Sheryl Sandberg of Facebook wrote in her new feminist manifesto, "Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead," that technology could revolutionize women's lives by "changing the emphasis on strict officehours since so much work can be conducted online." She added that "the traditional
mothers." She wrote that Sandberg's exhortation for "women to pull themselves up by the Louboutin straps" is damaging, as is "Mayer's office-only work proclamation that sends us back to the pre-Internet era of power suits with floppy bow ties." practice of judging employees by face Men accustomed to telecommuting time rather than results unfortunate- were miffed, too. ly persists" when it would be more efRichard Branson tweeted: "Give ficient to focus on results. peoplethe freedom of where to work M any women were appalled atthe & they will excel." Yahoo news, noting that Mayer, with While it is true that women have her penthouse atop the San Fran- looked to technology as a leveling cisco Four Seasons, her Oscar de la force in the marketplace, it is also true Rentas and her $117 million five-year that tech innovators — even as far contract, seems oblivious to the fact back as Bell Labs scientists — have that for many of her less-privileged designed their campuses around the sisters with young children, telecom- management philosophy that intelmuting is a lifeline to a manageable lectual ferment happens when you life. force smart people to collaborate in The dictatorial decree to work"side person and constantly bounce creby side" had some dubbing Mayer not ative ideas off each other. "the Steinem of Silicon Valley" but Mayer has shown that she is will"the Stalin of Silicon Valley." ing to do what it takes, with no codMayer and Sandberg are in an elite dling. She has a huge challenge in cocoon, and in USA Today, Joanne turning around Yahoo — she was B amberger fretted that they a r e the third of three CEOs at the com"setting back the cause of working pany in 2012 alone. She had success
brainstorming face to face during her years at Google, where she was the 20th employee, the first female engineerand the shepherd of more than 100 products. The Times' Laura Holson wrote that when meeting with Google subordinates, Mayer came across like a "meticulous art teacher correcting f i r st-semester students." Mayer's bold move looks retro and politically incorrect, but she may feel the need to reboot the company culture, harness creativity, cut deadwood and discipl ine slackers before resuming flexibility. Coming into the office, Yahoo HR chief Jackie Reses wrote in a memo, ensures that"some of the best decisions and insights come from hallway and cafeteria discussions, meeting new people, and impromptu team meetings," adding tartly that if "Yahoos" "have to stay home forthe cable guy, please use your best judgment in the spirit of collaboration." Maybe as Mayer rejuvenates "the grandfather" o f I n t ernet companies, as she calls Yahoo, she needs the energy and synergy of a startup mentality. She seems to believe that enough employees are goofing off at home that she should bring them off the cloud and into the cubicle. But she should also be sympathetic to the very different situation of women — and men — struggling without luxurious layers of help. Mayer has a nursery next to the executive suite. But not everyone has it so sweet. — Maureen Dowd is a columnist for The New York Times.
Income tax is 100 years old; let the party begin By Kevin Horrigan St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration." — The 16th Amendment eb. 25 marked the 100th anniversary of the day that U.S. Secretary of State Philander C. Knox tookpen inhand and affirmed that the 16th Amendment, having been passed by Congress and ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the states, was part of the U.S. Constitution. The income tax is 100 years old. Got any big plans to celebrate? Probably not. The First Amendment has a lot of fans. The Second Amendment is huge. The 13th Amendment was a star on Oscar night. Chicks dig the 19th. We'll drink to the 22nd, which overturned the 18th. But few people love No. 16, which is strange, considering how much we all benefit from it. From the air we breathe and the water we drink to the security we
F
feel at night, from the teachers in the classroom to the meat on the table to the airplanes that do not crash, from FEMA and CIA, FBI and BATF and dozens of other acronym agencies and programs, taxes — as Justice Holmes observed — are what we pay for civilized society. Most Americans will admit that, albeit grudgingly. We'd just rather that somebody else pay a bigger share. The late Senate Finance Committee Chairman Russell Long, DLa., put it best: "Don't tax you. Don't tax me. Tax that fellow behind the tree." It's amazing to realize, but the passage of the 16th Amendment wasn't even close. Lincoln had briefly imposed an income tax to pay for the Civil War. Congress passed a 2 percent tax in 1894, but the Supreme Court threw it out two years later. So the only way to get one on the books was to amend the Constitution. It passed the Congress in July 1909 and whizzed through legislatures in Southern and Western states. People were ticked off. Harvard historian Jil l L e pore, in a short history of the income tax published in The New Yorker last November, wrote, "The tax was in-
tended to answer populist rage at the growing divide between the rich and the poor." A panicthat followedthe San Franciscoearthquake of 1906 had created a deep recession. Congress created the FederalReserve to shore up failingbanks. People thrown out of work were outraged that the richest I percent of households held more than a third of the nation's wealth. Imagine that: I percent of taxpayers holding a third of wealth — land, stocks, bonds, art, savings accounts, jewels, cars, boats, the whole kaboodle. Today it's 43 percent. The nextrichest4 percent hold another 29 percent of the wealth. That's 5 percent of households controlling 72 percent of the nation's wealth. And what have we got for public outrage'? Anti-tax crusaders. Teaparty Republicans. We've got people chained to the oars in one of those "Ben-Hur" Roman galleys, rooting for Caesar. How is it that the Americans of 1913 were so much smarter than Americans of 2 013? My t h eory: We've got a better quality of not-rich nowthan wedidbackthen.We've got television and the Internet to distract us and delude us, consumer fripper-
ies to appease us and social safety net programs topreserve us from the worst effects of income inequality. Also: We are easily bamboozled. Lepore's piece in The New Yorker recounts the long effort that began with Andrew Mellon, Treasury secretary under three Republicanpresidents, to convince Americans that the income tax was the spawn of Satan. She recounts the long effort by Robert B. Dresser, the Grover Norquist of his day, to repeal the "Marxist" 16th Amendment. So on the 100th birthday of the income tax, we are a nation that reviles the income tax instead of acknowledging what we owe to it and insisting that it become as fair and simple as it was, say, in 1913. You know who should celebrate the tax's birthday'? Republicans. Lepore quotes the late liberal economist John Kenneth Galbraith, who suggested that by defusing populist rage and giving wealthy Americans the right to say, "See, we're paying our share," even if they aren't, the income tax might have saved capitalism. "Conservatives ought to build a statue to it," he wrote. — Kevin Horriganis a columnist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
Mexico's
comeback is intriguing MONTERREY, Mexicoisiting Mexico this past week reminded me of one of my favorite quotes from my days in Beirut. It was when a hostess asked her dinnerguests during the Lebanese civil war: "Would you like to eat now or waitfor the cease-fire?" One ofthe lessons of both Mexico and Lebanon is how irrepressible is the human spirit — that no matter how violent a country becomes, people will adapt and take risks to innovate or to make profits or get to school or to just have fun. That is a key reason that Mexico is making something of a comeback these days. Whether it will make it back in a sustainable way is unclear. Mexico still has huge problems: stifling monopolies in energy, telecom and media; a weak K-12 education system; violent cartels; and a corrupt police and judiciary. Together, they will keep a lid on Mexico's prospects if they're not addressed, the human spirit notwithstanding. That said, it's useful to look at what Mexico has gotten right, despite its problems. The first two had to do with actions by the government — improved highereducation and macroeconomic policy. The third happened naturally. It's when a critical mass of youth "just don't get the word" — they don't get the word that the government is a mess or that China is going to eat their lunch or that the streets are too dangerous. Instead, they take advantage of how the Internet and globalization promote individual empowerment and opportunities to start stuff and collaborate on stuff really cheaply — and they just do it. Let's look at all three. According to the Inter-American Development Bank: Despite Mexico's weakness in K-12 education, in the past 10 years, Mexico doubled its number of public education institutions at the postsecondary level, and many are dedicated to science and technology. It now graduates many more engineers. On Sept. 19, The Financial Times reported that "according to UNESCO, the number of engineers, architects and others in disciplines related to m anufacturing g r a duating f r o m Mexican universities has risen from almost 0.4 per 1,000 people in 1999 to more than 0.8today.... The number for the U.S. over the same period has remained roughly flat at 0.6 per 1,000." That is a reason that Mexico in 2012 became one of the largest exporters of information technology services in the world, approaching the likes of India, the Philippines and China. As for economics,Richard Fisher, presidentof the FederalReserve Bank of Dallas, summed it up in a Nov. 2 speech, when he said of Mexico: "Between 1975 and 2000, there was one crisis after another: in 1976, 1982, 198588 and 1994." But thanks to a series of monetary and fiscal reforms, Fisher argued, the Mexican economy's vital signs look a lot healthier. "The U.S. deficit is 7 percent of gross domestic product," said Fisher. "Mexico's deficit is about 2 percent of their GDP." Meanwhile, he added, the U.S. "is growing slowly, weighed down by debt and the pervasive uncertainty caused by our nation's fiscal imbalances and growing regulatory complexity. Mexico, in contrast, is growing robustly, and, in contrast to their Washington counterparts,Mexican policymakers are demonstrating remarkable commitment to fiscal discipline." As for Mexico's "just do it" generation, I'd put it this way: Monterrey has tens of thousands of poor living in shantytowns. They've been there for decades. What is new, though, is that this city, Mexico's Silicon Valley, now also has a critical mass of young, confident innovators trying to solve Mexico's problems, by leveraging technology and globalization. I met a fewof them: There was Raul Maldonado, founder of Enova, which has created an after-school program of blended learning — teacher plus Internet — to teach math and reading to poor kids and computer literacy to adults. And there was Arturo Galvan, founder ofNaranya, a mobile Internet company that offers a range of services, including micropayments for consumers at the bottom of the pyramid. "We'veallbeen hereformanyyears, but I think that the confidence is starting to happen," said Galvan. Naranya is based on the Spanish word for "orange," or naranja. Why that name? I asked Galvan. "'Apple' was already taken," he said. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013
'LITTLE KNOWN FACTS'
J.D. Robb can never
Hollywood truth is stranger than fiction
disappoint "Calculated in Death" by J.D. Robb
"Little Known Facts" by Christine Sneed
(Putnam,g7.95) By Lezlie Patterson McClatchy-Tribune News Service
It's actually rather redundant to tout a J.D. Robb book as being ridiculously outstanding. I f you're reading t h i s review to see if this is the first of the 36 books the esteemed Nora Roberts (who uses the pseudonym J.D. Robb for these books) has stumbled with in this series, you can stop with the guarantee that it isn't. "Calculated in Death" is another wonderfully written and amazingly plotted story full of charm, wit, en-
gaging characters, passion and Roarke. M aybe n o t eno u g h Roarke, but really, is there everenough? Part of t h e b r i l l iance of Roberts' series is that the 36 books have taken place in a two-year span, dating back to 2058 when Roarke met Eve as part of her murder investigation. That first book, "Naked in Death," was written in 1995. Two book years, and 18 real years, later, Roarke and Eve are solidly married with a group of close friends who fit into their world. "Calculated In Death" is a satisfying fix for those addicted to Eve and Roarke, without having any grand personal conflicts, revelations or a huge murder story. It's just life as usual for Eve and Roarke. Which, again, i s p a r t of t he brilliance. E ve and her team i n v estigate the m u rder o f an auditor, who seems to have been killed because of something she was working on. That leads Eve to tap into Roarke's business expertise. While they investigate, the gang gets ready to att end the premier of t h e movie made about one of Eve's earliercases (from " Origin i n D e a th") a n d while not of that caliber, the current i nvestigation takes enough turns to keep it interesting.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the bestsellers for weekending Feb.23. Hardcover fiction
1. "Alex Cross, Run" byJames Patterson (Little, Brown) 2."A Week inWinter" by Maeve Binchy iKnopfj 3. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn (Crown) 4. "Until the End ofTime" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 5. "Guil" by Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine) 6. "Private Berlin" by Patterson/ Sullivan lLittle, Brown) 7. "A Memory of Light" by Robert Jordan(Tor) 8."The PowerTrip" by Jackie Collins (St. Martin's) 9. "Touch & Go" byLisa Gardner (Dutton) 10. "Tenth of December: Stories" by George saunders lRandom House) Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Life Code: by Dr. Phil McGraw (Bird Street Books) 2. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. (St. Martin's) 3. "The Soundtrack of My Life" by Clive Davis (Simon &Schuster) 4. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly iHenry Holt) 5. "The Melt Method" by Sue Hitzmann (Harper0ne) 6. "The Legend ofZelda" by Shigeru Miyamoto (Dark Horse) 7. "Slim For Life" by Jillian Michaels (Harmony) 8. "I Declare" by JoelOsteen iFaithWords) 9. "My Beloved World" by Sonia Sotomayor (Knopf) 10. "Coolidge" by Amity Shlaes (Harper) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
Jay L.Clendenin / LosAngeles Times / McClatchy- rribune News Service
Fiction writer Jim Gavin, pictured at home in Culver City, Calif., wrote "Middle Men," a collection of stories set in Southern California.
jim Gavin's 'Mi e Men'
ies etweentwowor s By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times
There's a subtle arc to Jim Gavin's first book, "Middle Men" (Simon 8 S c h uster; $23). Gathering seven stories largely set in Southern California, it opens with a high school basketball player and ends with Marty Costello, a
plumbing supply salesman who "averages 50,000 miles per year, vast territories, circles of latitude, Inglewood to Barstow, sailing across SoCal,
all day every day." In between, we meet men of different ages, from Costello's adult son Matt, also trying to make it in the plumbing supply business, to the 23-yearold protagonist of "Bermuda," who follows a girl who doesn't love him partway across the world. "The collection moves from apprentice to journeyman to master," Gavin explains, sitting in his Culver City apartment, sipping a beer in the thin light of a w i nter afternoon. "My hope is that the stories build on each other. I felt no compulsion to make that explicit, but it helped me see the structure of the book." At 36, Gavin is not unlike m any of his characters: a former high school basketballer who did his own stint inplumbing sales. Born in Long Beach and raised in Orange, he is a product of the same communities, the same environments, with their tract houses and freeway overpasses. "It's to my advantage that I have a lousy imagination," he
jokes, cracking a loose grin amid a few days' growth of beard. He's a bit uneasy, not completely comfortable talking about his writing, but at the same time wholly genuine, wearing jeans and a shapeless T-shirt. "I always liked writers," he continues, "who can capture the texture of a place: which freeway, which drive-through r estaurant. You m a n y n o t know the exact building, but you know what it means to the character. I want to get that right." For Gavin, the roots of "Middle Men" go back nearly a decade, to a UCLA Extension workshop he took with novelist and short-story writer Lou Mathews in 2005. To some extent, Gavin had already begun to zero in on writing as a way of living; as an undergraduate at Loyola Marymount, he majored in English — "kind of by default," he acknowledges — and after graduation, he worked for a couple ofyears on the sports desk of the Orange County Register. It was in Mathews' class, however, that he began to write fiction, and it was with Mathews' encouragement that he applied for a Wallace Stegner Fellowship at Stanford in 2007. "The big d i f ference," he says, "was that when I started class with Lou, it was the first time I had ever written about my life." In part, he suggests, tongue not entirely in cheek, that he "wanted to write something that didn't require research." But more to the point,
ery story," Gavin notes, "has one thing that's invented, and it changes everything. That, for me, is the joy." There is, of course, another joy to "Middle Men," which is its portrait of Southern California as neither glamorous nor mythic but instead defined by what D.J. Waldie has called "sacred ordinariness."This is both the most obvious thing in the world and utterly refreshing, given all th e i m posed meanings, the cliches and stereotypes, that make it so difficult to see this place for what it is. Gavin's L o s A ng e l es stands b l essedly o u t side H ollywood; th e o n e s t o ry he started thinking about his with an industry angle, "Elexperiences as material. ephant Doors," focuses on a "The plumbing stuff," he p roduction assistant (a j o b recalls, "I would tell people Gavin also had). Otherwise, about it at the pub, and they'd the characters here are adrift, say, ' Why don't yo u w r i t e wrestling with loss (the death about that?' I began to see that of a wife or mother), unsure of I was stuck with myself, that where they're going or who these were the stories I had. I'll they are. probably branch out in the fuIn that regard, Gavin says, ture, but I needed to write this the stories represent "the culfirst." mination of their screw-ups" The autobiographical as- — yet if that sounds dismal, or pects of "Middle Men" may even tragic, the key to the book prompt the question of why is their ability to persevere. Gavin chose to work in fiction, As if to make the point exbut in his mind there was nev- plicit, Gavin remembers high er any doubt. school, when he knew an older "Fiction is the thing I love boy who one day went into the most," he says, "and even if it's alley behind the K-Mart where autobiographical, I can shape he worked and shot himself. it in a way, construct the story Gavin too worked at K-Mart to get at something I couldn't (although a different one), and do in nonfiction, a different he and the dead boy looked kind of truth." enough alike to be mistaken As an example, he cites for relatives. "Play the Man" — the high The difference, Gavin has school basketball story come to realize, is that "I was which blurs the line between too dumb; I r e tained some memory a n d i m a g ination, sense of hope" — which is between what happened and what marks his characters, what never did. The narrator, as well. From that high school Gavin acknowledges, is him, b asketball player t o M a r t y a kid who dreams of stardom Costello, widowed, still driveven as he knows that dream ing the freeways, meaning acwill not come true. And yet, his crues in the smallest moments, foil, a teammate named Tully, which is true for every one. "All my characters," Gavin is acreation, a character who "tells the truth and has no il- says, "are waiting for somelusions; he sees exactly where thing they t h ink w i l l s a ve he's going all the time." them, but i t n e ver a r rives. Tully is often unsympathet- None of them get what they ic, even antagonistic, but his want. And yet, they do end up presence setsup an essential with some sort of understandtension, a resistance for the ing. Their delusions save them. narrator to push against. "Ev- The same was true of me."
R ED m O l l D P R 0 F IC IE 0 C 0
e 1 academ
of linked short stories. Each chapter is told from a differ(Bloomsbury) ent person's perspective, and it's through these supporting By Deborah Vankin characters that Sneed paints Los Angeles Times n i n timate, well-rounded F or a debut novelist with portrait of Renn, illuminata quiet literary sensibility i ng, from the inside, our socito take on the bloated, over- e ty's almost maniacal obsese xposed milieu of celebrity sion with celebrity. culture — and to approach it Narratives alternate beas a head-on dissection — re- t ween the third and first perquires a certain bravason and take many do. The soul-sucking formats. I n one Hollywood machine chapter, an embitis an area well tread tered, freelance prop by journalists, memmaster with kleptooirists, f i l mmakers maniacal tendencies and of course noveldoes an i m aginary ists, from Nathaniel Q-and-A with Renn, West and M ichael fantasizing what he'd T olkin t o Br u c e ask the actor if, say, W agner, who r e he were a highfalutin cently published his seventh f ilm writer for the Los AngeHollywood-rooted nov e l , Ies Times. "Dead Stars." There are also excerpts C hristine Sneed's debut of Renn's movie r eviews, novel, " Little Known Facts," s nippets of poetry, love letdoesn't exactly f u lfill t h e ters and Renn's own journal p romise of her book's title. entries as well as notes from M uch of her i nsights into the writing of his ex-wife's Hollywood culture feel al l scathing m e moir, l i s t ing t oo familiar. But it is an en- what Renn spent his money t ertaining, formally inventive on and memorable "things r ead. Renn Ivins is a twice- he said." Such as, after the d ivorced, charismatic A-list bombs started dropping on s tar — a Clint Eastwood- or A fghanistan: " If I w er e a Robert Redford-likecharac- y ounger man, I'd go to Kabul t er with artistic integrity and and teachdrama classes for s ex appeal who, in his early a year." The movie reviews 5 0s, has turned his hand to are effusive and overblown; s creenwriting and directing. both the Q-and-A and memHe also founded the requisite o ir outtakes are purposefully charity, a Katrina-relief orga- t rite. It's all a successful, if n ization called "Life After the o bvious, send-up of the types S torm" that's conveniently of pop cultural offshoots that in sync with his most recent c elebrity culture generates. film, "Bourbon at D u sk," U ltimately, the r i gor o f filming in New Orleans. Sn eed's prose, he r w e l l R enn is like a s w irling, drawn characters and her black holearound which the e ye for precise, telling detail p eople in his life orbit. His aren't quite enough to coundaughter, Anna, is a medical t erbalance that her n arrai ntern brimming with talent, tive offers few "Little Known but she has also succumbed to F acts" about Hollywood or, an affair with her much older, e ven, about the more unim arried attending doctor, a versal struggles of familial c liche she's all too aware of. strifeand the search for love Renn's son, Will, flounders, and finding one's place in the d irectionless, in his father's world. One almost wishes she shadow, seemingly paralyzed h ad applied her sure hand to b y privilege. One of Renn's a more benign but perhaps ex-wives has just published a m ore fertile topic. Like, say, tell-all memoir, and his young a twice-divorced zoologist s trawberry blond starlet girl- r ather than the simultanef riend is fraught with conflict ou sly l arger-than-life a n d o ver her feelings for Will , suffocatingly small world of who's in love with her. movie stars. What makes this book so That said, those who enjoy d ifferent from the standard r eading about celebrity culT inseltown saga is the way ture will find that the world S need tells her story. She is that Sneed creates in "Little a lauded short-fiction writer K nown Facts" — a blend of — her collection "Portraits of truth and fiction that weaves a Few of the People I've Made r eal life actors and directors C ry" won numerous awards i nto Renn's everyday life— and "Little Known Facts" makes for a clever take and feels almost like an anthology a fun read.
a
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Warmu wit 'Hearto Ice' "Heartoflce"
cisions about his personal life take priority. He wants a real (Gallery Book,$7.99) bond with Lily, the 10-yearold daughter he only recently ByOline H. Cogdill found out about. The FloridaSun Sentinel(Florida) based detective also needs to A gripping plot seamlessly find out where he stands with melds with a very personal Joe Frye, his girlfriend with look at a man at the cross- whomhe'sbeenhavingalongroads of his life and a family distancerelationship. wrackedbysecrets andliesin Louis has brought Lily for theexcellent"Heartof Ice." a three-day trip to Michigan's The 10th novel in P.J. Par- picturesque Mackinac Island rish's Louis Kincaid series, just before the remote tour"Heart ofIce" soars as a story ist area shuts down for the about a man reclaiming his winter. After their trip, Louis life and how so much of what willtravelto nearby Echo Bay we care about can be lost by where Joe is the sheriff. But carelessness,misplaced pri- the vacation has barely beorities andobsession. gunwhen Lilyfallsontopof a Like many of u s , L ouis skeletoninthebasementofan has reached a point in his life abandonedhuntinglodge. where he needs to make a While he is sure this is a change. And like many of us, decades-old homicide, Louis the changes that propel Louis decides not to get involved, meld his personal andprofes- wanting to concentrate on his sionallife. daughter. But Lily urges him Theyoung private detective to help and Louis sees this wantstoreturntolawenforce- as a way to win his child's rement, to regain the authority spect. The remains are that of andtherespect thatcarryinga a wealthy industrialist's teenbadge brought him. But more age daughterwho vanished in important, Louis'sconcretede- 1969. The case doesn't move
smoothly for Louis, who is dealing with a family forever stymied by the young woman'sdisappearance,aninexperienced local police chief and an arrogant state investigator whoonceworkedwith Joe. Parrish, the pen name of two sisters, Kelly Nichols of Michigan and Kris Montee of FortLauderdale, delivers a gripping peek into the private and sometimes messy life of a wealthy family, a story that surprises with every twist. "Heart of Ice" also delves into the lives of those who call Mackinac Island home while showcasing the area's charming V i ctorian a t mosphere. Kincaid, the heart of the series,matureswitheachouting and"Heart of Ice" forces him tomakesomehardchoices. "Heart of Ice" marks the mostwelcomedreturnof Louis Kincaid after atwo-yearhiatus. Parrish also is releasing this month a Kindle-only novella "Claw Back" that takes place in the Everglades and is a kind of prequel to"Heart of Ice."
by P J. Parrish
PhotosbyCharlie Mahoney/New YorkTimes NewsService
Domenica Ruta's newmemoir,"With or Without You," details her complicatedlife andher drug-addictedmother.
urvivin er mo er — an ei n e ae • Author delvesinto a painful childhood in recoverymemoir 'With or WithoutYou'
Jodi Picoult takes onthe Holocaust
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"The Storyteller" by Jodi Picoult (Emily Bestler Books/Atria, g8.99)
ByCharles McGrath New York Times News Service
DANVERS, Mass. — Domenica Ruta's "With or Without You" is a recoverymemoir in which the most vivid character doesn't recover. She is Ruta'smother, Kathi, alifelong druguserandoccasionaldealer — a "narcoticomnivore" as Domenica calls her in the book. Flamboyant and impulsive, Kathi Ruta raised her daughter as a single mother on welfare and was both a good parentandavery, verybadparent rolled into one. She was the kind of mother who allowed her daughterto eat ice cream for breakfast and urged h er to s tay h o m e f rom s c hool a n d watchmovies. She e n couraged Domenica's a r tistic bent, paid for paro-
Returning to Danvers, Mass., andthe Porter River, Domenica Ruta recalledher life withher mother, whomshehasnotspokentosince 2006."lmissher and wouldlike her inmy life, but I don't knowthat I wouldbeabletodo thatrightnowand staysane," Rutasaid.
no secret that the littlehouse at the end ofEden Glen Avenue where she lived with hermother and eventually a stepfather wasahangoutfordruggiesand so neglected it eventually had to be condemned. On thesiteisnowamodern colonial, with a w i de porch and handsome stonework, that Kathi built during abrief period of financial proschial school (by helpperity. But she soon ing someone sell a lost it, and Domenica brick of cocaine) and said she no longer felt persuaded her to apmuch connection to ply to A n d over, the theplace. "I didn't notice, or maybe I exclusive prep school. Yet she suggested that her preferrednot to care," she said daughter should get pregnant about growing up in a chaotic a nd drop out, and wa s so household and without many overjoyed when D o menica, friends."Ipreferredtobealone, a late bloomer when it came thinking my l ittle thoughts." to drugs, finally began smok- She added, "I did a lot of sadingpot thatshe gave her abag girl journaling, and wrote sadof it for Christmas. Later she girl poetry — lots and lots of shared unstintingly from her sad-girlpoetry." seemingly inexhaustible stash of OxyContin pills, or Oscars Victimhood as shecalledthem. Another trait Domenica has Domenica Ruta's own drug in common with her book is of choice proved to be alcohol. relentless self-criticism. Brian She began drinking a lot at McGreevy, the author of the Oberlin College; and during novel "Hemlock Grove," went graduate school at the Univer- to graduate school with her sity of Texas, where she stud- and said recently,"I always felt ied at the M ichener Center that, given her almost Dickfor Writers, the problem grew ensian background, the selfworse. deprecation was a s u r vival "I lied to myself for a long mechanism." time," she said recently."I had Their cohort at the Michener the CV (curriculum vitae) of Center included Philipp Meyer, someone who was doing well, the author of "American Rust," eventhoughI wasn't." and Kevin Powers, whose"YelShe got sober, as she de- low Birds" was recently nomiscribes in the book, by mov- nated for the National Book ingbackto the North Shore of Award. "Even in that group it was Boston, but also, painfully, by severing her connections to understood by everyone that Kathi, who by then was using she was one of the most talheroin and in a self-destruc- ented writersthere,"McGreevy tive spiral. For now at least, said."But with Domenicacomher life is without her mother, pliments go in one ear and out notwith. theother." He knew she was a drinker, Return to Danvers he added, but that was hardly In person, Domenica, 33, is remarkable."To be honest, our alotlikeherbook. She's sharp, entire social group consisted of intense, funny in that darkly functional alcoholics," he said. sarcastic way that working- "And so for someonetobe dysclass New Englanders so of- functional was not something ten are, and given to bursts of you'd ever think of intervening strong feeling. She now lives about." in Brooklyn, but last week she D omenica said t hat d u r came back to Danvers, where ing this time she was mostly she grew up. Turning off the writing "Connecticut divorce highway, she suddenly said: stories," knockoffs of Cheever "My heart always beats really and Updike. "I was writing fast right here. I don't know about wealthy people leading why." lives of quiet desperation," she A fewmoments later she be- said."I had no idea what I was came ironic and added, "Wel- talking about." Every now and come to the mean streets of then, to add a little life to these Danvers, those hardscrabble stories, she would inject somestreets." In fact Danvers is an thing drawn from her mother unfancy an d m o stly u n r e- or some detail from her own markable North Shore suburb, history and those, she recalled, whose greatest distinction is were what her fellow students that in the 17th century it was objectedtomost. "They'dsaypeopleinreallife where the Salem witches came don't talk that way," she said, from. It's still the kind of place laughing. Even so, shebeganto where everyone knows every- think,"Well,ifnobodylikesmy one else, and probably it was fiction, maybe they'll like my
realstory." McGreevy encouraged her, saying, "You're not thereyet,butyouwillbe." Domenica said it took her until the last draft of"With or Without You," which Spiegel 8z Grau is publishing, to figure out the proper voice and tone. "I didn't want to write another sad, lost-girl memoir," she explained."But I had only a limited idea of what a memoir couldbe. I associated memoir withvictimhood,and I don't think of myself as a victim." Driving around the North Shore, shepointedout the PeabodyInstitute Library, ahaven when she was a child and also where she wrote part of the book; the bar where she took her second-to-last drink; the beach where she took earlymorning sobriety walks. She dropped in on her father, Jeff Citroni, who still lives in Danvers, in the house he grew up in and where Domenica spent a lot of time, especially when life with her mother got out of hand.
both Sage's forgiveness and her assistance m ending his life. Josef and Sage are kindred spirits of a sort, andhe is By Lauren Gilbert eagertounburdenhimself,imNewsday ploring:"Youshowedmeyour Sage Singer, the protago- scars. I only askyou to let me nistof Jodi Picoult's ambitious showyoumine."Though Sage 20thnovel,"The Storyteller,"is is an atheist who has never a physically and emotionally consideredherselfJewish, Joscarred young woman work- sefhas chosen her because of ing as a baker in a small New her Jewishancestry. Hampshire town. She avoids Initially unwilling to grant human contact, interacting his request, Sage embarks on onlywiththewiseformernun a mission to bring Josef to juswho owns the bakery and tice. Her quest brings her into a married undertaker with contact with Leo Stein, a Dewhomsheishavinganaffair. partment of Justice attorney H er quiet e x i stence i s dedicated to prosecuting war shaken, though, when she criminals. Despite the numbefriendsJosef Weber, an el- bers tattooed on her grandderly German who frequents mother Minka's arm, Sagehas the bakery. A beloved former never before questioned her teacher and pillar of the com- grandmother about her warmunity, Josef confesses to a time past. Together, Leo and shocking Nazipast, askingfor Sage coax Minka's story from
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her, believing she might hold thekeytoincriminatingdetails thatcorroborateJosefsstory. "The Storyteller" alternates Sage and Josef's present-day encounter with Minka's history and with Josef's account of his wartime descent into inhumanity. Minka becomes areal-lif e Scheherazadewhen her gift for storytelling saves her life at Auschwitz, where her tale takes on different meaningstodifferentpeople. "The Storyteller" is a carefully constructed, multilayered novel about the transformative power of storytelling. As in many Jodi Picoult novels, the plot veers toward the formulaic. But Minka's story isthemostcompellingportion of the book, providing a fully imagined account of a young woman's experiences during the Holocaust.
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'The painful, honest truth' She and her father went out tolunchinEssex,apicturesque seacoast townnearby. The restaurant, a seafood place called The Village, is a sort of family landmark, because Citroni is a plain-spoken New England type — an Italian Puritan, his d aughter calls him — w h o doesn't really see the point of eating out. But in the book he and his daughter go there twice, onceafter shehalfheartedly tries to kill herself in the eighth grade and once while shetriestogetsober. On this visit, Citroni regarded his daughter with evident affection andacertain amount ofwonder,asifunsurejusthow a writerhadlandedinthe family. Alittlelaterintheafternoon Domenicaremindedhim, teasingly, that he had once said to her,"Nikki, whothehell would ever want toread abookabout you?"Citronigrinnedandsaid, "I'll admit tothat." Kathi Ruta still lives in Danvers, but Domenica has not spoken to her mother since 2006. "She has a spiritual autoimmune disease," Domenica said. "In my head that's how I make sense of it. It attacks everything in the body, including self-preservation, spiritual connection, love, friendship. There's miracles, but I'm not holdingontothat." Kathi, reached by telephone Tuesday, said ofher daughter's book: "She lied about nothing. She told the painful, honest truth." Domenica said: "I miss her and would like her in my life, but I don't know that I would be able to do that right now and stay sane. It's something I do want totry. We'llsee."
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SUMMER VOUTH ACTIVITY GUIDE NEVER BEBORED DURING SUMMER AGAIN
Find the summer's hottest activities for kids in this guide. Summer is the time of the year kids look forward to most. It is when they are free to explore, play and be who they want to be. The Summer Youth Activity Guide provides parents with information about the youthoriented programs that take place in Central Oregon — from away-from-home camps to daytime activities, sports to arts and crafts. There's no excuse to have bored kids at home. Find what suits them best in The Bulletin's Summer Youth Activity Guide
PudliShing Date: Friday, April 12
GR A D U A T ION 20'i 3 HONORING OURLATEST HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES
One of life's greatest accomplishments, high school graduation, is celedrated in this annual publication. Every Central Oregon high school graduate is listed in this annual publication profiling each of the area's high school graduating classes. Graduates and parents alike look forward to this keepsake publication, which includes the names and photos of Central Oregon's newest graduates. Congratulations Graduates!
Pudlishing Date: wednesday, June12
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Internet
2 billion people use the Internet, in nearly every country in Continued from F1 the world (North Korea is perIf they run into an attempt haps the last holdout). Blogs to block traffic, they merely are now m a i nstream, and reroute along a seemingly infi- social networks have pushed nite network of decentralized self-publishing even closer to nodes, inspiring technologist ordinary users, enabling inJohn Gilmore's maxim: "The stantaneous political and perNet interprets censorship as sonal expression. damage and routes around it." Andthe Internet — this globAnd unlike almost every al resource, this wild space other global resource in his- independent of states — has tory, the Internet largely es- made its mark on our neatly caped government regulation ordered world of nations. at first — probably because I nformation h a s a l w a y s no one could figure out how been power, and governments to make money from it. From have long sought to control it. the outset, it was managed So for countries where power not by governments, but by is a tightly controlled narraan ad hoc coalition of volun- tive, parsed by state television teer standards bodies and civil and radio stations, the Internet society groups composed of has been catastrophic. Its globengineers, academics and pas- al, decentralized n etworks sionate geeks — awkwardly of information-sharing have dubbed the multi-stakeholder routed around censorshipsystem. just as Gilmore promised they So lawmakers and p o l i- would. It gives people an outticians wrung t h eir h a n ds let to publish what the media over the I nternet's lawless- cannot, organize where organess, gnashed their teeth at nizing is forbidden, and revolt the moral decay of porn and where protest is unknown. downloads, and despaired at And the Internet isn't only their inability to l egislate a threatening dictatorships. It place without a geography. In has created newforms of politithe popularconsciousness, the cal participation and protest in Internet was simultaneously a democracies, where ithasbeen place of possibility and dan- used to demand the decentralger. In 1993, Time magazine ization of power to the people, warned, "People who use ... facilitate radical transparency the Net may be in for a shock. and information-sharing, de... Anybody can start a dis- mand responsive government, cussion on any topic and say unseat corrupt authorities, oranything." ganize marginalized minoriIt was precisely this struc- ties, and challenge the hegetural independence that trans- mony of traditional political formed the Internet from a heavyweights. mere tool f o r i n f ormationsharing to the world's open Regulations and firewalls forum. Naturally, systems of power have finally taken notice. Making its mark In response, governments The rise of self-publishing around the world have begun tools like Blogger transformed to assert control, seeking to the "third space" of cyber- carve up the global Internet, space into a modern speaker's manage it within national borcorner, offering any motivated ders, and impose Westphalian writer a platform for his or her sovereignty on the wild World political views. Initially, this Wide Web. It's not entirely a new trend. online free expression was often marginalized or dismissed The Great Firewall of China is — the term "blogosphere" was almost as old as the Internet originally a joke. But bloggers itself. But it is spreading, and kept plugging away. In liberal taking new shapes. democraciestheir free expresSome of these effortsare sion was guaranteed, and in explicitly about political conclosed societies connectivity trol, imposing strict limits on was often too limited to draw what users within individual any real attention. countries' borders can access. In the past decade, however, Iran's proposed halal Internet all this has changed. Roughly seeks to impose Islamic virtue
finding that 61 countries are at severe risk for disconnection, with another 72 at significant risk. That makes 133 countries where network control is so centralized that the Internet could be turned off with not m uch morethan a phone call. It seems our global Internet is not so global.
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The Internet's birth in 1983 was a quiet beginning, but it has grown to become a global force — one many countries are attempting to control. on the browsing masses. In Russia, the state agency Roskomnadzor enforces an Internet block list that has filtered the blogs of government critics. And in Pakistan, a recently revived proposal for a national firewall targets "blasphemy" as a proxy for ideas unpopular with the government. But some of this is about commerce and p a rtitioning off intellectual property from a world without jurisdiction. In 2012, the United States saw proposed legislation, SOPA and PIPA, that would have made censorship atechnical specification of U.S. networks and that threatened the stability of DNS — a p r otocol that comprises the very backbone of the global Web. And in Europe, the global trade agreement ACTA would have imposed similar restrictions — all to reduce piracy. Perhaps more worryingly, as countries seek to break up the Internet into neatly defined mirrors of themselves, they're trying to redefine international norms in order to justify their actions. At the summit of the International Telecommunication Union in Dubai this past December, a bloc of countries — RUCASS, made up of Russia, the United Arab Emirates, China, Algeria, Saudi Arabia and Sudan — floated a proposal that tried to define a new term: the "national Internet segment," or any telecommunications networks within the territory of a state. This language, later endorsed by Bahrain and Iraq,
Information has
always been power, and governments have long sought to control it. So for countries where power is a tightly controlled narrative, parsed by state television and radio stations, the Internet has been catastrophic. would have allowed countries full regulation of the Internet within their borders, from filtering content to imposing fees on foreign traffic. Ultimately, it was withdrawn. But even without new international regulations, the technical backbone of our Internet is increasinglycontrolled at the national level. Two years ago, as the Arab world exploded in popular protest, governments responded by simply shutting off the Internet, removing entire countries from the international grid. Egypt's mobile services were shut down and its Internet almost entirely disconnected, while in Libya, the Internet was throttled to a point of uselessness. Recently, the network research and analytics company Renesys tried to assess how hard it would be to take the world offline. They assessed disconnection risk based on the number of national service providers in every country,
and provisionsforwarrantless information-sharing.
A reversal of the Internet
Make no mistake, cyberhostilities are on the increase. Every day around the world, critical systems come under attack, whether from p etty cybercriminals or coordinated stateefforts. From Stuxnet, which set Sounding alarms back Iran's nuclear efforts, to But as worrying as these Shamoon, which d estroyed threats are, at least they have the control systems of oil giall been civilian, rather than a nt Saudi A r amco, to t h e military, attempts to exert con- r ecent compromise o f t h e trol over the Web. Washington Post, New York This won't be the case for Times, Twitter and Facebook, long: Governments around we're witnessing large-scale the w o rl d a re so u n ding attempts to penetrate and inalarms about the existential terfere with both private and threat posed by c y berwar. public systems. From hostile foreign regimes M any c y bersecurity e x to lawless nonstate actors, perts, however, disagree on the threat of attacks on criti- how to best tackle the threats cal infrastructure to the theft at hand. Many dismiss proof statesecrets,the danger of posals such as public-private economic warfare to corpo- data exchanges, arguing that rate espionage, not a day goes such solutions erode civil libby when cybersecurityisnot erties while failing to address in the news. critical problems. In response, governments Others argue that reducing around the world are devot- cyberconflict is best achieved ing significant financial, mili- through embracing the values tary, and personnel resources of an open Internet: creating to developing frameworks for transparent norms, such as escybersecurity and cybercon- tablishing clear red lines, comflict. Cyberspace is no longer mon terminology, and mutual the independent space of the confidence-building measures. cyberlibertarians; it is now a But the m ost i n f luential military domain. And when a voices remain those arguing freewheeling place like the In- for greater militarization: internet militarizes,the Internet's vesting in the development of laissez-faire culture of privacy, strategic exploits or offensive anonymity and free expres- capacity that double down on sion inevitably comes into con- the idea of the Internet as a doflict with military priorities of main subject to dominance by security and protocol. state actors. In the United States, the Nearly 365 years ago, those Pentagon has been t asked hundred-plus princes and dipwith the development of rules lomats came together to end of engagement forcybercon- war — and in the process, creflict. Just last month on Feb. 12, ated borders. President Barack Obama isThe Internet broke those sued a long-awaited executive borders down, advancing the order on cybersecurity and cause of fundamental rights, used his State of the Union ad- free expression and shared dress to call for new bipartisan humanity i n a l l i t s m e ssy legislation on the issue, em- glory. Now, to stifle political phasizing the need to protect dissent and in the name of deU.S. critical infrastructure. fending national security, govThe very next d ay, Rep. ernments are putting those Mike Rogers, R-Mich., and borders back up — and in doRep. Dutch R uppersberger, ing so, they're dragging the D-Md., reintroduced CISPA, Internet into ancient history. — Katherine Maher is director the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act — a bill reof strategy and engagement at viled by the privacy and civil the digital rights organization liberties communityfor its lack Accessand afellow at theTruman of credible privacy protections National Security Project.
IIIII I SPEGIAE EINANGING AUAIULBEE* FoR DETAILs.
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ON PAGE 2 NYT CROSSWORD ~ The Bulletin
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Queen AK-47 Romanian Special 345-Livestockand Equipment Sen ng Central o egon ence r903 items whose total help w/cat spay/neuter Poodle pupsAKC toys. 4-post bed frame & Forces, NIB, lots of ex347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals vet bills. Cans for Cats Loving, cuddly compan- m attress, does not exceed $300 . People Look for Information tras, 2 30-rd clips, $1000 ions. 541-475-3889 trailer at Grocery Outlet, $500. 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Vintage 5 - d rawer obo. 541-771-9902 About Products and SE 3rd/Wilson, 2/26- POODLE pups T o y, dresser & mi r r or 358- Farmer's Column Services Every Day through Call Classifieds at 3 /12. Donate M-F O dark colors, 4 males, $200. 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The Bulletin recompress.com BUY: Garage size 541-385-5809 and Amana over-the- Private collector buying mends extra caution space for my woodRodent control experts range microwave, hardly p ostage stamp a l when purc h a sturning shop, need (barn cats) seek work used, white, $400 both. bums & c o llections, ing products or ser220. 541-389-3992 in exchange for safe 541-848-9080 world-wide and U.S. vices from out of the shelter, basic care. Stove: Jenn-Aire con- 573-286-4343 (local, area. Sending cash, Fixed, shots. Will de- vection, self c l ean, cell ¹) checks, or credit inBULLETINCLASSIFIEOS liver! 541-389-8420. $125. 541-848-9080 f ormation may b e Just bought a new boat? Search the area's most Doxie pups! Adorable Seniors 8 Veterans! subjected to fraud. Washer/dryer Irg cap. Sell your old one in the comprehensive listing of I Want to Buy or Rent 10-wk-old short hair. Adopt a companion c at For more i nformawhite, n ew, classifieds! Ask about our classified advertising... A few red's and wild from Tumalo rescue, fee Amana, Super Seller rates! about an adver$700. 541-848-9180 Wanted: $Cash paid for real estate to automotive, tion boar/red & chocolate waived! Tame, fixed, 541-385-5809 tiser, you may call vintage costume jew- merchandise to sporting mix. Asking $300. Call shots, ID chip, tested, Washer, dryer WestingO r egon State Estate Sales Sale s Northeast Bend elry. Top dollar paid for goods. Bulletin Classifieds the 541-508-2167 if y o u more! 389-8420. Photos house, almond, $100. Attorney General's Gold/Silver.l buy by the appear every day in the are ready to give one etc: www.craftcats.org. Redmond, you haul, • Cr afts 8 Hobbies Office Co n s umer Look What I Found! Estate, Honest Artist print or on line. of these little ones a Like us on Facebook. 503-860-8974 Protection hotline at You'll find a little bit of ** FREE ** Elizabeth,541-633-7006 good home! Call 541-385-5809 Rockhound Equipment 1-877-877-9392. To good home, tabby everything in Garage Sale Kit www.bendbulletin.com & supplies. Saw, grind, The Bulletin spayed, sweet, mostly The Bulletin's daily Place an ad in The sand & polish. LorWANTED: Tobacco DO YOU HAVE i ndoor c a t . Li k e s recommends extra garage and yard sale Servrng Cent al 0 egon since r903 Bulletin for your gatone & Highland Park pipes - Briars, MeerI ce to ne 0 SOMETHING TO dogs. 541-419-2502. section. From clothes rage sale and reshaums and smoking SELL chasing products or • Bend. 541 280-5574 to collectibles, from ceive a Garage Sale Yorkie pup small fe- services from out of I accessories. Adopt a nice CRAFT cat FOR $500 OR housewares to hardKit FREE! WANTED: RAZORSmale, shots, docked, i the area. Sending I or kitten from Tumalo LESS? 205 ware, classified is Bicycles & Gillette, Gem, Schick, 8 weeks, ready for sanctuary, Pet Smart, or cash, checks, or Non-commercial always the first stop for Items for Free KIT I NCLUDES: etc. Shaving mugs Petco! Fixed, shots, ID great home! $ 6 50. i credit i n f o rmation advertisers may Accessories cost-conscious • 4 Garage Sale Signs and accessories. chip, t e sted, m o r e! 541-536-3108. may be subjected to place an ad with e Toshiba TV + conconsumers. And if • $2.00 Off Coupon To 31 Fair prices paid. 541-389-8420. Open Sat/ OUI i FRAUD. For more 17 n Well equipped mnt you're planning your Use Toward Your version box, works fine. Sun 1-5pm 65480 78th St 210 Call 541-390-7029 "QUICK CASH information about an I bike. Great deal $200. Next Ad own garage or yard between 10 am-3 pm. Sisters, 541-588-6070 Photos 8 info at Furniture & Appliances advertiser, you may SPECIAL" 541-480-5950. sale, look to the clas- • 10 Tips For "Garage www.craftcats.org 1 week 3 lines 1 2 call t h e Or e gon i Sale Success!" sifieds to bring in the 8 like us on Facebook. 242 8 x12 area rug, e x c . State 2 e e ks 20! Attor ney ' or ~ buyers. You won't find BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! quality, like new $200. Exercise Equipment i General's O f fi ce Australian She p herd Ad must include a better place 541-815-1523. There are over 2,000 folks in our community PICK UP YOUR price of single item Consumer P rotec- • minis, purebred, no pafor bargains! GARAGE SALE KIT at without permanent shelter, living in cars, Gold's Gym multi-trainof $500 or less, or t ion ho t l in e at I pers, 1 blue female, 1 red Call Classifieds: 1777 SW Chandler make-shift camps, getting by as best they can. male. 541-604-6060 multiple items A1 Washers&Dryers i 1-877-877-9392. ing door gym. never 541-385-5809 or Ave., Bend, OR 97702 The following items are badly needed to assembled. $12. whose total does $150 ea. Full waremail help them get through the winter: Bengals TICA R e g ., not exceed $500. 541-318-6368. ranty. Free Del. Also ClaSSifiedobendbttlletin.Com Champion lines, takwanted, used W/D's @ CAMPING GEAR of any sort: 8 Weider ProStack 550lb. ing deposits NOW! 541-280-7355 Call Classifieds at New/used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blanpress. 2 b e n ches,Mini Estate Sale Friday bengalcatspride.com. 541-385-5809 kets. @WARM CLOTHING: $200 541-419-4195. March 1 t o S u nday $800-$1200. Ready www.bendbulletin.com Bakers rack, black metal Antiques & Rain Gear, boots, Gloves. March 3. House full of 4/5. Call Kim w/brass trim, cstm glass anewboat? Collectibles furniture, cookware, sil- Just bought 503-860-8974, R e dshelves, 80x60x16, beauPLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS English Bulldogs AKC • S k i Equipment ver, antiques, china, Sell your mond. ol d oneinthe tiful cond, very elegant. AT THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER reg. & chipped, two Books Sale Mar. 2 & 3; too much to list. EvASk abOut Our 1036 NE 5th St., Bend, e xample: Lan d s -1 00cm K 2 Kah u na e rything must g o ! ClaSSifiedS! Dachshund AKC minia- males 4 yrs., need to $950. 541-923-5089 ture, b l ac k & tan find good home, $500 Display shelf, 6', 4 glass downe Birds of West powder skis w/bind- 5 41-382-3192 13 7 1 Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. SuperSellerrates! long-hair male, $325. ea. o r $ 9 0 0 b o t h. shelves, heavy, $200. Coast $30. i ng, $99. I ike n e w NW Vicksburg Ave, PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 541-420-9950. 541-389-2363, 6-9pm Info/pix, 541-420-6044 541-728-0105 901-299-6485. Bend. Follow the signs.
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
541-385-5809
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SAT 8r. SUN
SAT 8z SUN
NOON — 4PM
11AM — 4PM N ew C o n s t r u c t i o n
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Brand neW 2162 gq. ft. P ahlisch home i n T h e Bridges! Great room with
cozy fireplace, kitchen with stainless appliances. Large master suite with
huge walk-in closet. Big g uest rooms 6 B o n u s
61168 Lot 75 Sydney Harbor Dr, Bend
Room loft area. Tsgo-car
Directions; From the Parku'ay,
garage, fenced yard. Just east on Reed Markc/, south on 15/h d own th e s t r eet f r o m ft (eas/j. the amazing community 5/ree/, to community on le amenities.
$511,500 R E A
New cons/ruclions.
Saturday Hostod /sy ROY REYN O L DS, 33rrsker Sunday HOSted byr CHRIS SMITH , tgrokev
EDIE DEIAY
541-420-2950
5E Bend location.
$2U,950 - $249,950
541-330-1805
Hosted 0"Listed by PrinciPal Broker
— Upscale universal design Green Home. bed, 2 bath. Fully landscaped nnd fenced. Low maintenance yard. 61741 SE Daly Estates Dr. High efficiency furnace. Directions: North of Reed Above code insulation. Market off Pettigrew or 27th. Oversized garage. Great
541-350-5801
L T 0 R s
Lt'sged by:
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DAVE FEAGANS t PnnctjsnSBrniter
ALPINE REAL ESTATE u.c ctnraat olnoon
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY MARCH 3 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D I SURRENDER By Joe DiPietro / Edited by Will Shortz
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6 19
I Drumm e r ' s
accompanier
48 Quarters used in Greenland
107 When repeated,
50 Kegler's org.
108 Staffs
15 Good name,
51 Honeyed drink
109 Winged
5 3 Back dow n
110 "I' m
n urse in the C i v i l War
54 Detour si g n al ers
1 11 Big name in ' 6 0 s
12 Made up 18 Hardens 20 Fever cause 21 Most bass
22 Back down 24 Back down 2 5 Sinuous swi m m e r 26 Grub
27 Card game declaration 2 8 Show off o n e ' s "guns"
29 Some seen in mirrors?
56 The left, informally
1 18 Sheen, in Shef f i e l d
120 Like some oil refineries
6 8 Gather in b u n d l e s
1 21 Clearly m a r k s
7 2 Joint c o m m i t t e e ?
122 Mark, e.g.
83 Variety
33 Humdinger
87 Ball p a r t n er
36 Bakers' measures:
88 Downgrade, perhaps
3 8 Mrs. Mi n i v e r ' s h usband in " M r s . Miniver"
90 Back down 94 Father of P h o bos
95 "Welcome Back, K otter" g u y
40 Scope
97 L a
42 Sprinkler conduit
98 Treasures
T ar Pi t s
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st r i p 101
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Stranger"
44 Ages 45 Apologues
All-Star Jose
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47 Yahoo
6 Itch scratcher's utterance
48 Yahoo! had one in
7 "Is Your Mama a
1996: Abbr.
?" (children's
4 9 Kind of r a t
book) 8 Capable of seeing in
example
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82
42 Berry of " P e r f ect
5 Four-t im e baseball
67 Postseason footbal l
76 C a n d y s i nce 1927
93 Coarse
108 Paul Bunyan, e.g.
game played in
78 Healthy
96 Entrances
1 09 Do wit h a p i c k ,
Mobile, Al a.
81 Where you gotta go?
9 9 Procrastinator ' s response
112 French key
5 2 Inside lo o k ?
68 World
55 Dish out
69 Extreme aversion
57 Actress Berger
7 0 Aut ho r C a n e t t i
85 Frivol ous types
5 9 Model mater i a l ,
71 Silver's is 107.87:
89 Demonstrates
often
82 Take a card
Abbr.
73 Garnish, possibly
keyboard
6 3 Play a fl ut e
7 4 Keep at awhil e
12 Loudly l ament
66 Lay to r e st
7 5 Got
o n (n ai l e d )
maybe
100 Welcome through the door
8 4 Actor Si l v e r
113 Crackpot 1 14 N.C.A.A . ' s
102 Ballet dancer's
Gamecocks
support
91 Be rewarded for
62 Pressure group?
1 1 It's l ef t o n a
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45 50
first one
4 Go wrong
1 0 One to one, fo r
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44
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4 1 Rounds begin on t h e
2 Lays to rest
the dark
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68
35 Slightest complaint
I Try to sh oo t
9 Certain gr i l l i n g
105 PBS has a big one
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28
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34 Publishes
Down
102 Tough situation
short
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23 Circus support
3 7 Lost, as a t a i l
101 Made one
arrangements, fo r
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3 3 Blooming t r e e
"Hands of St o ne"
4 6 Run ou t
103 Company making
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playwright, 1958
123 Boxer ni c k n amed
43 Back down
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
31
32 "The Hostage"
3 Slick ones?
86 Pascal's law
30
48
19 Cut off
sincerity
3 1 Floor v o t e
29
2 8 Vertical st ab i l i z e r
65 Back down
8 0 Like some fi r s
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24 27
43
2 0 What's the big i d e a ?
{14 Handles reception s,
79 Envelope abbr.
12 21
26
36
a comma
61 Jacket decoration
82 Back down
Abbr.
peace activism
1 15 Back dow n
7 7 Talks w i t h o u t
11
17 Common abbr. after
6 0 Siberian ci t y
73 IHow dare you?!]
10
20
25
16 Miss
112 Back down
30 Foul mood
32 Leaning
i n formal I y yo u !"
5 8 Parts of g a l a x i e s
say
9
14 Mars candy
who served as a
6 Best-sell in g au t ho r
1 3 Dos but not d o n ' t s
eager
8
23
22
Across
7
115 Not keep up
104 A disk can be slipped in one
good service 92 Quai d'Orsay
116 Prince of Broadway
1 06 Was a lit tl e t o o fond
setting
1 17 Native of A u s t r a l i a
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in totai merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00per week.
OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50
Garage Sale Special
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
C©X
4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
BUYING & SEL L ING Bend Habitat gold jewelry, silver RESTORE Leupold scope 3x9x40 Alland gold coins, bars, Building Supply Resale New ln Box $200. rounds, wedding sets, Quality at LOW 541-647-8931 class rings, sterling silPRICES M ag-Pul 3 0 rou n d ver, coin collect, vin740 NE 1st 541-312-6709 mags, New In Box. tage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, Open to the public. $40. 541-647-8931
541-382-9419.
Gardening Supplie~ & Equipment
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 316 421 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions Irrigation Equipment Schools & Training 476 - Employment Opportunities 3-inch 8 4 - inch pipe,A IRLINES ARE H I R- 486 - Independent Positions
or email Harmonics lam i nate classitiedabendisulletin.com MEC9000 shotshell 12 DISH Network. Starting flooring, 6 17.2 s.f. box. ga. reloader, RCBS at $19.99/month (for Sf 00. 541-382-8389 The Bulletin Nelson 100 Big Gun w/ ING - Train for hands model scale, $400. 1 2 mos ) & Hi g h Ser ng Central Qregon r nre lsas 541-389-8563 or cart, 3hp pump & control on Aviation MainteSpeed Internet startyukonwilly@msn.com panel, misc. All $3200 nance Career. FAA ing at $14.95/month Prompt Delivery approved p r ogram. Rock, Sand & Gravel obo. 541-420-2382 Military Spec. m e tal (where ava i lable.) Financial aid if qualiMultiple Colors, Sizes AR-15 30 rnd mags, S AVE! A s k Ab o u t NOTICE TO 325 fied - Housing availInstant Landscaping Co. ADVERTISER $35 while they last. SAME DAY InstallaHay, Grain & Feed able. Call Aviation In541-389-9663 541-601-7658, Bend t ion! C A L L Now ! Since September 29, stitute of 1-866-947-7995. 1991, advertising for SUPER TOP SOIL 1st quality grass hay, R emington 700 S P S (PNDC) used woodstoves has www.hetehe eoilandbatk.com 70- Ib bales, barn stored, Maintenance. Varmint 204 R uger, been limited to mod- Screened, soil & com- $250/ ton. Also big bales! 1-677-804-5293. $550!. Remington 700 GENERATE SOME (PNDC) els which have been post m i x ed , no Patterson Ranch, bdl . 22-250 S O LD. EXCITEMENT c ertified by th e O r - rocks/clods. High hu- Sisters, COL L E GE 541-549-3831 ATTEND 541-948-2646 IN YOUR egon Department of mus level, exc. f or ONLINE 100%. NEIGBORHOOD. Environmental Qual- flower beds, lawns, *Medical, *Business, Find exactly what Rossi single shot 12 Plan a garage sale and ity (DEQ) and the fed- gardens, straight *Criminal J us t i ce, gauge, great cond. don't forget to advereral E n v ironmental s creened to p s o i l . you are looking for in the *Hospitality, *Web. $125. 541-948-2646 tise in classified! CLASSIFIEDS Protection Ag e n cy Bark. Clean fill. DeJob placement assis541-385-5809. (EPA) as having met liver/you haul. R uger Mini 1 4 SS , tance. Comp u ter w/scope, 2 mags (25 GET FREE OF CREDIT smoke emission stan- 541-548-3949. available. F i n ancial Looking for your dards. A cer t i fied 8 4 0 r n ds) Sg1000. CARD DEBT NOW! Aid if qual i f ied. next employee? oodstove may b e 541-480-2265. SCHEV a u thorized. Cut payments by up w Place a Bulletin identified by its certifiLost & Found • Call 86 6 - 668-7078 to half. Stop creditors cation help wanted ad Wanted: Collector label, which is www.CenturaOnline.c from calling. seeks high quality today and permanently attached Found: Car Keys, on om (PNDC) 866-775-9621. fishing items. to the stove. The Bulreach over 2/22/13, at River Trail, (PNDC) Call 541-676-5753, or letin will no t k n ow- b etween Arc hi e 60,000 readers 503-351-2746 Highspeed Internet EV- ingly accept advertis- Briggs an d A r chie each week. Employment i ng for the s ale o f Briggs cut-off. Call ERYWHERE By SatYour classified ad Opportunities uncertified 541-322-0682 to ellite! Speeds up to will also identify. 12mbps! (200x faster woodstoves. appear on than dial-up.) Starting CAUTION READERS: bendbulletin.com Found keys, off China at $49.95/mo. CALL which currently Hat Rd near Mtn High, Yakima Skybox, com- NOW 8 G O F A ST! Ads published in "Emcall to I.D., 541-382-1490 receives over plete w/racks 8 locks, 1-886-718-2162. ployment Opportuni1.5 million page (PNDC) t ies" i n c lude e m $350. 541-676-2906 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS views every WHEN BUYING ployee and Search the area's most month at no Men's brand new winFIREWOOD... i ndependent po s i comprehensive listing of extra cost. ter hooded coat sz XL tions. Ads for posiTo avoid fraud, Computers classified advertising... Bulletin $40. 541-508-3886 tions that require a fee The Bulletin real estate to automotive, Classifieds recommends payor upfront investment T HE B U LLETIN r e - Pendleton vintage plaid merchandise to sporting Get Results! ment for Firewood must be stated. With quires computer ad- knockabouttoga sz M goods. Bulletin Classifieds Call 541-385-5809 any independent job only upon delivery vertisers with multiple $75. 541-475-1091 appear every day in the or place your ad opportunity, p l e ase and inspection. ad schedules or those print or on line. on-line at • A cord is 128 cu. ft. investigate thorThe Bulletin Offers selling multiple sysCall 541-385-5809 4' x 4' x 6' bendbulletin.com oughly. tems/ software, to dis- Free Private Party Ads www.bendbulletin.com • Receipts should close the name of the • 3 lines - 3 days Use extra caution when include name, business or the term • Private Party Only 341 The Bulletin applying for jobs on"dealer" in their ads. • Total of items adver- phone, price and Horses & Equipment line and never proPrivate party advertis- tised must equal $200 kind of wood purFound pres c ription chased. vide personal inforor Less ers are defined as Horse Boarding in NW tinted glasses on side • Firewood ads mation to any source FOR DETAILS or to those who sell one of road, Hwy 20 W Redmond. M onthly you may not have reMUST include spePLACE AN AD, computer. rates starting at $195 and Old B end/Redcies and cost per and deemed Call 541-385-5609 mond Hwy. The case per horse. Paddocks, searched cord to better serve to be reputable. Use Fax 541-385-5802 was b r o ke n but stalls with t u r nouts extreme caution when our customers. Misc. Items glasses appear intact. avail., indoor/outdoor r esponding to A N Y Wanted- paying cash logo says "29 Below" riding arenas, trainer online e m p loyment for Hi-fi audio & stuBulletin Advertise V A CATION dio equip. Mclntosh, The Coffman Vision Clinic. on site. 541-504-4262 Serving Central Oregon rtnce rsea ad from out-of-state. SPECIALS to 3 m i lCall 541-388-7510. J BL, Marantz, D y 356 lion P acific N o rth- naco, Heathkit, San- 1 cord dry, split Juniper, We suggest you call Found sunglasses i n westerners! 30 daily sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Farmers Column $190/cord. Multi-cord dressing room at Lydi's the State of Oregon newspapers, six Call 541-261-1606 discounts, & t/z cords Place, call to i dentify, Consumer Hotline at states. 25-word clasRafter L F Ranch & available. Immediate 541-385-3102 1-503-378-4320 sified $525 for a 3-day Farm Svcs. Custom 261 delivery! 541-408-6193 Haying & Field Work a d. Cal l (916) Lost male orange tiger For Equal Opportunity 2 88-6019 o r vis i t Medical Equipment Call Lee Fischer, People Look for Information cat, short hair, ScottsL aws: Oregon B u 541-410-4495 www.pnna.com/advert dale Dr. area, Bend. Shy, About Products and reau of Labor 8 Inising pndc.cfm for the Rolling walker, w/seat, Services Every Daythrough but lovable; answers to dustry, C i vil Rights 375 Pacific Nort h west brakes & basket, good Barney. 541-330-6923 Division, Daily Con n ection.cond, $65. 541-241-0237 The Bulletin Classiffeds Meat & Animal Processing 971-673-0764 R EMEMBER: If you (PNDC) All Year Dependable 263 have lost an animal, All N atural g r ain-fed Firewood: Seasoned don't forget to check Buying Diamonds Tools beef $2.68/lb. hang- If you have any quesLodgepole, Split, Del. tions, concerns or The Humane Society ing wt, half or whole /Gold for Cash Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 comments, contact: Saxon's Fine Jewelers 20' alum. e xtension for $335. Cash, Check in Bend 541-362-3537 to b e pro c essed Classified Department Redmond, mid-march. $500 dep. ladder. Werner. $100. or Credit Card OK. 541-389-6655 The Bulletin 541-923-0882 503-660-8974 Half Hog Sale, $190 in541-420-3464. 541-365-5809 Prineville, cludes cutting wrapBUYING Seasoned Juniper, 541-447-7178; Lionel/American Flyer 2hp 8 gal compressor w/ ping and cure. trains, accessories. Porter-Cable brad nailer, $200 spilit & delivOR Craft Cats, WHILE THEY LAST! The Bulletin 541-406-2191. ered. 541-977-2040 541-389-8420. 541-573-2677 $150. obo. 541-330-6175
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QB~I~ I i)QA Can be found on these pages:
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FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
General
Central Oregon Community College has openings listed below. Go to https:I/jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Vice President of Instruction
Provide strategic leadership for all academic programs across the college as well as provide guidance to the instructional areas. Doctoral Degree req. + 5-yr. administrative, management and leadership exp. 5-yr. experienced full-time faculty member and 3-yr. exp. in community college. Apply by March 16 to receive first consideration.
Library Specialist 4- Technical Services Coordinator
Responsible for cataloging of electronic and print library collections. Maintain library fund accounts; daily maintenance and troubleshooting of library online catalog system. Assoc. req. + 4yrs exp. $2,549 $3,034/mo. Closes March 11
Assistant Professor I, Geography
Provide instruction in Physical, Regional, and Human Geography. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching Geography. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 8
Assistant Professor I, Aviation
Provide classroom instruction in aviation. This includes ground instruction for both airplanes and helicopters. Bachelor's req. + CFI Certification. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 12
Assistant Professor I, Computer & Information Systems (CIS)
Provide instruction in Computer and Information Systems courses such as Introduction to Computers, Computer Concepts, Software Applications, Programming, and Operating Systems. M a ster's req. + 2yrs teaching exp. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 14
Assistant Professor I, English
Provide instruction in composition and literature/humanities. Prefer specialization in English, American Literature, or Humanities. Master's req. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 18.
Assistant Professor I, French
Provide instruction in French and a secondary language. Includes lecturing and guiding classroom activities in first- and second-year language sequences. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching college level French. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 21.
Assistant Professor I, of Art History
Provide instruction in Introduction to Art History courses, including European, Native American, Asian, and African. Master's req. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 28
Temporary Instructor of Forest Resources Technology
Provide instruction in the Forest Resources Technology Program in both classroom and laboratory environments. Master's req. + 3-yr. field exp. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes April 1.
Assistant Professor I, of History
Provide instruction in World History from the origins of civilizations in the Middle East, Mediterranean area, Africa, China, Indian subcontinent and the Americas to the end of the 20th century; including Western Civilization sequence. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching college level History. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes April 8
Part Time Instructors Needed New! Geology,Physics, Business, Accounting, Payroll, Water Distribution Systems and Veterinary Technician Education
Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 3 2013 G3
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER F I R E A T
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AL M A L A H A S M T A E M R O F P B A L I B A U L N S E S S O R T U O R N N I D F A L L F E A R R G O S
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T T I A E B D F B I T E N E H E A D N E T C O E S O O N E R T T N LO I E M O S B R E D B I R O N I H W E V A L E L
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Employment Opportunities
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Independent Positions
Sales Daytime Inside Maintenance PT for residential facilSales ity. Repair and main Will hire t w o s a leswork o n gr o unds, people to work from equip., and bldg. Prior The Bulletin newspaexp. i n i n s titutional p er office fo r t h e maint. preferred. Newspaper In Educawww.rimrocktrailsats.org tion sales campaign. This is a part-time, inPROPERTY MANAGEMENT dependent contractor P/T Assistant sales position, and Leasing Agent needed in Bend. Must be you will not be emable to work Mondays & ployees of The Bulletin. We offer a short weekends as needed. paid orientation proQUALIFICATIONS gram. The average • Customer service or s alesperson e a r n s sales exp. $400 to $7 0 0 p e r • Strong computer skills week, for a 27-hour • Property management work we e k . T h e exp. is a plus dress code is casual • Loan processing exp. is and this is soft, rea plus • Strong attention to detail laxed b usiness t o business sales. We To apply, send resume prefer a background to recruiter@princin "business to busietonproperty.com ness" selling. This is Remember.... not ad or s ubscripA dd your we b a d - tion sales, however, if dress to your ad and you have p r evious experience in adverreaders on The Bulletin' s web site tising sales, I will give will be able to click you priority considerthrough automatically ation. I'm looking for motivated, energetic, to your site. articulate people with excellent communicaTURN THE PAGE tion skills. Call MelaFor More Ads nie at 541-383-0399.
8 &Hxc@@
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ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST, Public Health Division, on-call, seasonal position. Deadline: SUNDAY,03/10/13.
1-503-378-4320,
8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri.
Newspaper Delivery
* Terrebonne *
CIVIL TECHNICIAN, Sheriff's Office, full-time position.Deadline: SUNDAY,03/03/13.
FINANCE DIRECTOR 8 TREASURER, full-time phase of investment position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH opportunities, espec ially t h os e fr o m FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONSON MONDAY, out-of-state or offered 03/25/13. by a p erson doing business out of a lo- PAROLE & PROBATION RECORDS TECHNICIAN, cal motel or hotel. In- Adult Parole & Probation Division, full-time vestment of f e rings position.Deadline: SUNDAY,03/10/13. must be r e gistered with the Oregon De- RESEARCH ANALYST (ADMINISTRATIVE partment of Finance. We suggest you con- ANALYST), Behavioral Health Division, full-time sult your attorney or position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH call CONS U MER FIRST REVIEW OFAPPLICATIONS ON TUESDAY, HOTLINE, 03/05/13.
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Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline. •
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RESERVEDEPUTYSHERIFF, Sheriff's Office, oncall positions. Deadline: THIS IS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT. TELECOMMUNICATORI, 911 Service District, full time positions.Deadline: MONDAY,03/04/13. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY A CCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE.TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTEDPOSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT www.deschntes.er ebs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have beenreviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via emailonly. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NWWall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722.
Deschutcs County p r ovides r easonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/ TDD 711.
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EOUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
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Appliances and Furniture • DINING SET. TOP brand name.
Perfect for family gatherings. Seats UP to 12 PeOPle, 2 leaVeS. Very niCe condition. Start making me mories
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PacificSource HEALTH PLANS
PacificSource HEALTH PLANS Health Services Representative IIPharmacy Our Pharmacy team is growing and we are seeking a Pharmacy Technician or Assistant to join our team. If you have strong pharmacy and customer service skills this may be the opportunity for you! This position coordinates pharmacy services and benefits; communicating benefit determination, serving as a liason between internal and extern customers, claims processing, claims audits, etc. This position interfaces directly with members, pharmacies, physicians, and benefit management companies. To review the full job description and apply, please visit us online at http://www.pacificsource.com/careers.
Senior Nurse Care Manager
Help us change healthcare! If you have a broad clinical background and would like to lead a team that enhances patients' quality of life and maximizes health plan benefits, this position may be th e o pportunity for you! PacificSource Health Plans is seeking a leader
for our case management team.
This position is responsible for oversight of defined Health Services programs, services, or functions which may include, but not be limited to, c o ndition/disease management program, complex case management, UM/CM, claim review, and/or policy/procedure writing. Position requires RN license and 5 years of varied clinical experience. Supervisory experience preferred.
T o a pply, p l ease v i sit u s on l ine a t http://www.pacificsource.com/careers.
EOE Banking
papers $525/25-word classified, 3- d a ys. Reach 3 million Pacific Northwesterners. For more information call (916) 288-6019 or email: elizabeth@cnpa.com for the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection. (PNDC)
BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST IH, Supervisor — Adult Treatment Team. Full-time position. Deadline: WEDNESDAY, 03/20/13.
573
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REACH over 3 million Pacific Northwesterners. $52 5 /25-word c lassified ad i n 3 0 daily newspapers for 3-days. Call the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection (916) 2 88-6019 o r em a i l elizabeth@cnpa.com for more info (PNDC)
mends you use caution when you pro- LOCALMONEY:We buy vide personal secured trust deeds 8 information to compa- note,some hard money ~res o ov' 0 nies offering loans or loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. credit especially ~ DESCHUTES COUNTY those asking for adGood classified ads tell vance loan fees or CAREER OPPORTUNITIES companies from out of the essential facts in an state. If you have interesting Manner. Write BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST II, Older Adult concerns or quesfrom the readers view - not Behavioral Health Specialist, Behavioral Health tions, we suggest you the seller's. Convert the consult your attorney Division, full-time position.Deadline: OPENUNTIL facts into benefits. Show or call CONSUMER the reader how the item will FILLED. HOTLINE, help them in someway. 1-877-877-9392.
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will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
WARNING
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573
Business Opportunities Business Opportunities
BANK TURNED YOU A Classified ad is an Extreme Value AdverDOWN? Private party EASY W A Y TO tising! 30 Daily news-
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Human Resource The Bulletin The Bulletin's Residential Counselors Sr. Business Lender Representative Bend, OR Mature individuals to Lookat: n o n-profitWoodgrain Millwork is "Call A Service work in drug and al- Craft3 is a D e v elop- seeking a highly motiBendhomeS.Com cohol resi d entialCommunity ment Financial Institution Professional" treatment for t eens. v ated H uman R e Nights 8 w eekends. (CDFI) with a mission to s ource Rep a t t h e chasing products or I for CompleteListingsof strengthen e c o nomic, Apply at: Directory and family re- Prineville, Oregon, lo- services from out of s AreaRealEstatefor Sale www.rimrocktrailsats.org ecological silience in Pacific North- cation. In this role you f the area. Sending west communities. We will be responsible for c ash, checks, o r i n f ormation Independent Contractor do this by providing loans providing comprehen- / credit Call a Pro assistance to entre- sive HR expertise as ~ may be subjected to ~ Whether you need a and FRAUD. preneurs, non-profits, in- well as ensuring comfence fixed, hedges dividuals and others, in- p liance w it h l a w s , For more informa* Supplement your Income* cluding those who don't policies, and proce- tion about an adver- ~ trimmed or a house normally have access to dures. Monitor and / tiser, you may call built, you'll find the Oregon State financing. administer w o r kers' comp claims and I Attorney General's professional help in P~ i ti P for gener- OSHA recordkeeping. Office Co n s umerG The Bulletin's "Call a Responsible ating and underwriting Must possess excel- Protection hotline at I Service Professional' new business loans and lent c ommunication, I 1-877-877-9392. ++++++++++++++++++ servicing a loan portfolio interpersonal and deDirectory that meets Craft3's mis- cision making skills. LThe Bulletin 541-385-5809 sion, financial and risk Experience in recruitgoals. The primary lend- ing, interviewing, new ing focus targets micro, hire orientation, ben- Looking for your next DO YOU NEED small and medium busi- efit coordination, payemployee? A GREAT nesses in central and roll. Proficient in Mi- Place a Bulletin help eastern Oregon, specifi- crosoft EMPLOYEE office (Word, wanted ad today and cally those owned by mi- Excel, Outlook), We are looking for independent conRIGHT NOW? SAP reach over 60,000 nonties, women, immi- experience a p Call The Bulletin tractors to service home delivery l u s. readers each week. rants, and low-income. before 11 a.m. and Bachelor's degree in Your classified ad routes in: L ocated in our new Bend, get an ad in to pub- Oregon office, this posi- related field preferred. will also appear on lish the next day! bendbulletin.com tion will also p rovide M inimum of 1 y e a r 541-385-5809. which currently marketing assistance in experience in HR. We Must be available 7 days a week, early mornVIEW the receives over 1.5 the eastside Oregon area offer competitive saling hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. Classifieds at: million page views and be responsible for ary, benefits including www.bendbulletin.com Craft3 branding efforts. m edical, l i fe , an d every month at Please call 541.385.5800 or To learn about Craft3, dental insurance, and no extra cost. 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or 401k. To apply, send Bulletin Classifieds Executive Director for visit www.craft3.org to Get Results! apply via email at Sisters OutdoorQuilt Complete the application; resume jtoholskyOwoodgrain. Call 385-5809 non-profit htt s://home.eease.ad . Show: online © bendbulletin.com com or place mgmt, event mgmt, com/recruit/?id=3970901 decision is schedWe are an equal your ad on-line at f undraising and P R Hirinq for 3/13. opportunity employer. bendbulletin.com experience preferred. uledCra/t3is equal For details and appli- opportunityan emp/oyer; cation process, visit womenand minorities Teaching www.sistersoutare encouragedto app/y. Concordia University's MBA program in Bend, doorquiltshow.org, Oregon, seeks a part-time business faculty and click on "About member to teach a graduate level Finance Us". Position closes CallThe BulletinAt course in Bend starting in May, 2013. Class 4-1-2013. meeting times are once per month on Friday 541 385 5809 evening and all day Saturday. The course Check out the case-based methodology and Harvard classifieds online PlaceYourAdOrE-Mail uses Business School materials. MBA or masters in www.bendbulletin.com related field required. Significant experiAt: www .bendbuletin.com aence Updated daily in Finance required. Proven success in college-level teaching strongly desired. Single course contract basis. Office/Clerical/Department Coordinator To apply, please send a letter of interest, Faculty Employment Application Form, resume or vita, and contact information for three professional references via email to Tom Daniels, Credit Union MBA P r o gram Di r e ctor, Be n d , at Department Coordinator tdanielsOcu-portland.edu. For a CU Faculty Members Financial Services Employment Application f or m a n d to learn more a bout C oncordia University, Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a team please vis i t our websi t e at: player to assist the Financial Planner. As part http://www.cu-portland.edu/aboutcu/employof an interdependent two-person team, the ment.cfm. MFS C o ordinator s e t s app o intments, schedules meetings, files correspondence, For information about Concordia's MBA proand deals extensively with the public by phone gram in Bend, contact Tom Daniels, Program and face-to-face. This position is 20 hours per Director, at ( 5 41) 3 5 0-3553. Concordia week with flexibility in the schedule. University, Portland is a regionally accredited, private university that specializes in underT his position requires someone with a graduate and graduate programs of profespleasant, friendly demeanor, professional sional study grounded in a strong Lutheran appearance and e xcellent communication Liberal Arts tradition. skills. The person selected must be willing to obtain i n d ustry-specific l i c enses and Concordia University does not discriminate in certification. the employment of individuals on the basis of race, color, national or ethnic origin, disability, Go to www.midoregon.com for more informasex or age. However, Concordia University is tion. Please send resume, cover letter, and an institution of The Lutheran Church-Missouri application to: Mid Oregon FCU, Attn: Human Synod and, to the extent allowed by law, Resources, P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97708. Concordia University reserves the right to give preference in employment based upon Mid Oregon Credit union is a religion. drug-free workplace
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573
Loans & Mortgages
PSM)I6Q
MidOregori Credit Union LOAN OFFICER
Mid Oregon Credit Union is seeking a loan officer with emphasis on portfolio mortgage loans and community involvement in La Pine. This position is located in a satellite lending office in La Pine, providing assistance to the Mid Oregon lending department in soliciting, interviewing and processing of portfolio mortgage products while promoting and growing Mid Oregon Credit Union business by actively participating in community events in La Pine.
Go to www.midoregon.com for more information. Please send resume, cover letter, and application to: Mid Oregon FCU, Attn: Human Resources, P.O. Box 6749, Bend, OR 97708. Mid Oregon Credit union is a drug-free workplace
EOE
General
CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Crook County Commission on Children and Families Domestic Violence Project Coordinator $1 8,598 - $1 9, 1 60DOE Part-time,no benefits (approx.20 hours per week) Closes: March 8, 2013 at 5r00 p.m.
There'sgood stuff in here.
Shouldn't YOU > be looking.
Position Overview: Job responsibilities include coordination of interagency domestic violence/ sexual assault intervention project; work with
agency partners on policy and procedure; development of community education materials; and completion of data collection and reporting. Funding is for 3 y ears with the option for reapplication.
Applications and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us. Please apply at the Crook County Treasurer's/Tax Office at 200 NE 2 n d S t . , P r ineville, OR 9 7 754; 541-447-6554.
Clas'sifieds,
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 2013 • THE BULLETIN a
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space
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Houses for Rent General
Rented your Property? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line.
627
Vacation Rentals
& Exchanges
Call 541-383-2371 24 Hours to
c~a cei o
ad.
Houses for Rent Sunriver house, beach walk from town, 2 bdrm /2 VILLAGE PROPERTIES bath, TV, Fireplace, BBQ, $85 per night, 2 Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great night MIN. Selection. Prices range 208-342-6999 $425 - $2000/mo. View our full 630 inventory online at Rooms for Rent Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061 Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Utils 8 l i nens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
DEAL!
744
Open Houses
Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 303-3152
Cascade Rental Management. Co.
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 & 3 bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen 541-383-9313
Open 12-3 20532 Gloucester Ln. Woodhill Park Just Completed Erin Campbell, Broker 541-410-0872
Professionally managed by Norris& Stevens, Inc. 636
Apt./Multiplex NW Bend
ga'rrier.
Drake Park luxury apt., www.thegarnernroup.com 1 bdrm, w/d, d / w, cable, $950 / m o. 541-788-0087
Small studio close to library, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870 642
Apt./Multiplex Redmond Country Living - Upstairs duplex, small kitchenette, 1 bedroom, den, outside deck, 17735 NW Lone Pine Rd., Terrebonne. $500/mo. 541-504-0837 PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
Open 12-3 20729 Kilbourne Lp. Great Family Home New Low Price Victoria Davis, Broker 541-410-2621
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2007 Ski-Doo Renegade 600 w/513 mi, like new, now reduced to $4500.
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Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
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Fifth Wheels
Four Winds Class A 3 2 ' Hu r r icane 2007. CAN'T BEAT
20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini 8 custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413
THIS! Look before
y ou b uy , b e l ow market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, Ithr, c h erry, slides, like new! New
low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216
Call 541-221-5221
Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satel-
lite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000. 541-480-3923
Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Just too many Cummins 330 hp diecollectibles? sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, Sell them in new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door The Bulletin Classifieds fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, 541-385-5809 Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp propane gen 8 more! $45,000. CHECK YOUR AD 541-948-2310
( 2) 2000 A r ctic C a t Find exactly what Z L580's EFI with n e w you are looking for in the covers, electric start w/ CLASSIFIEDS reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons. 20.5' Seaswirl Spy$8000 all. 541-536-8130 der 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for 800 Polaris, less than life $11,900 OBO. 250 mi, like new. 541-379-3530 700 Polaris with less that 900 mi, like new. RMK; tag good until 2015. Asking $6000 for both, you will not believe how nice they are. (541) 350-6865
OOO
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Laredo 2009 30' with 2 Pilgrim In t e rnational slides, TV, A/C, table 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, 8 c h a irs, s a t ellite, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 Arctic pkg., p o wer Fall price $ 2 1,865. awning, Exc. cond! 541-312-4466 $28,000. 541-419-3301
NuWa 29 7LK Hi t ch- RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED Hiker 2007,3 slides, We Do The Work ... 32' touring coach, left You Keep The Cash! kitchen, rear lounge, On-site credit many extras, beautiful approval team, c ond. inside 8 o u t , web site presence. $32,900 OBO, PrinevWe Take Trade-Ins! ille. 541-447-5502 days Free Advertising. & 541-447-1641 eves. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
lfmg,;r~.a
Canopies & Campers f
P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h
Canopy, fits '99-'07 Ford 7-ft bed, white, exc cond, call for details, $1100 obo. 541-593-3331
wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629
Please check your ad Monaco Dynasty 2004, on the first day it runs 22' Custom Weld Jet, • Yamaha 750 1999 loaded, 3 slides, dieto make sure it is corMountain Max, $1400. 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 sel, Reduced - now rect. Sometimes inhrs, garaged, loaded. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 $119,000, 5 4 1-923structions over the 541-923-0854. EXT, $1000. 8572 or 541-749-0037 phone are misI • Zieman 4-place • t i nderstood and an error Ads published in the 745 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEOS trailer, SOLD! "Boats" classification can occurin yourad. All in good condition. Homes for Sale Search the area's most If this happens to your include: Speed, fishLocated in La Pine. comprehensive listing of ad, please contact us ing, drift, canoe, CalI 541-408-6149. classified advertising... the first day your ad house and sail boats. NOTICE For all other types of real estate to automotive, appears and we will All real estate adver860 be happy to fix it watercraft, please see merchandise to sporting tised here in is subgoods. Bulletin Classifieds as soon as we can. Class 875. ject to t h e F e deral Motorcycles & Accessories appear every day in the If we can assist you, 541-385-5809 F air H o using A c t , CRAMPED FOR print or on line. please call us: Gambling Too Much? Meet singles right now! which makes it illegal CASH? 541-385-5809 to advertise any prefCall 541-385-5809 Free, confidential help No paid o p erators, Use classified to sel The Bulletin Classified www.bendbulletin.com is available statewide. just real people like erence, limitation or those items you no discrimination based Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT you. Browse greetlonger need. The Bulletin to talk to a certified ings, exchange meson race, color, reliCall 541-385-5809 • gion, sex, handicap, Just bought a new boat? counselor 24/7 or visit sages and c o nnect 1877mylimit.org to live. Try it free. Call familial status or nawith o u r sp e c ial RV CONSIGNMENTS Sell your old one in the tional origin, or intenWANTED rates for selling your I classifieds! Ask about our chat live with a coun- now: 8 7 7-955-5505. We Do The Work ... selor. We are not here (PNDC) tion to make any such Super Seller rates! ~ boat or watercraft! preferences, l i m ita-Harley Davidson HeriYou Keep The Cash! to judge. We are here 541-385-5809 tage S oftail C l assic, On-site credit to help. You can get tions or discrimination. f Place an ad in The 2006. Black cherry pearl/ We will not knowingly approval team, your life back. B ulletin w it h ou r b lack p e a rl , ext r a accept any advertisf 3-month p ackage web site presence. ing for r ea l e s tate chrome, stage one tune, ( which includes: We Take Trade-Ins! & Hines pipes. which is in violation of Vance Free Advertising. this law. All persons excellent cond„ always *4 lines of text and ~ BIG COUNTRY RV g araged, never l a i d are hereby informed down. 4100 mi, $11,900. Bend: 541-330-2495 a photo or up to 10 that all dwellings adRedmond: 541-548-5254 Home, 541-548-2258; J lines with no photo. vertised are available *Free online ad at Cell, 503-970-3328 on an equal opportucall54I 385 5809topromoteyourservice Advertisefor 28 daysstarting at 'Ifcirii»~reovpackagersnoravailableonourwebsiai I bendbulletin.com nity basis. The Bulle- Harley Davidson Soft- *Free pick up into tin Classified Tail D e luxe 2 0 0 7 , ~ The Central Oregon ~ white/cobalt, w / pas- f Nickel ads. Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care senger kit, Vance & FOR SALE Hines muffler system I Rates start at $46. I Southwind 35.5' Triton, N OTICE: O RE G O N & kit, 1045 mi., exc. 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du- NOTICE: Oregon state Call for details! When buying a home, law req u ires any- ERIC REEVE Landscape Contracc ond, $16,9 9 9 , pont UV coat, 7500 mi. 541-385-5809 83% of Central one who c o n tracts tors Law (ORS 671) 541-389-9188. Bought new at HANDY Oregonians turn to for construction work r equires a l l bus i $132,913; Harley Heritage to be licensed with the k SERVICES J nesses that advertise asking $93,500. gThc Bulleting The Bulletin Softail, 2003 Call 541-419-4212 C onstruction Con to p e rform L a n dSen ngCentalO e go s n ce 1903 $5,000+ in extras, tractors Board (CCB). All Home & scape C o nstruction $2000 paint job, GENERATE SOME exCommercial Repairs Call 541-385-5809 to A n active lice n se which inclu d es: 30K mi. 1 owner, citement in your neigmeans the contractor place your Carpentry-Painting p lanting, dec ks , For more information borhood. Plan a gaReal Estate ad. i s bonded and i n fences, arbors, Honey Do's. please call rage sale and don't s ured. Ver if y t h e w ater-features, and Small or large jobs, 541-385-8090 forget to advertise in 750 contractor's CCB installation, repair of no problem. or 209-605-5537 Winnebago Suncruiser34' classified! 385-5809. c ense through t h e irrigation systems to Redmond Homes Senior Discount 2004, on1y 34K, loaded, CCB Cons u mer be licensed with the An work guaranteed. too much to list, ext'd Landscape ContracServing Central Oregon smce 1903 warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Website 541-389-3361 www.hirealicensedcontractor. Looking for your next t ors B o a rd . Th i s Dennis, 541-589-3243 com 541-771-4463 4-digit number is to be emp/oyee? Used out-drive or call 503-378-4621. Bonded - Insured Place a Bulletin help 881 included in all adverparts - Mercury The Bulletin recomCCB¹I49468 tisements which indiwanted ad today and Travel Trailers OMC rebuilt mamends checking with Harley Limited 103 2011, reach over 60,000 cate the business has rine motors: 151 the CCB prior to conmany extras, stage 1 8 air a bond, insurance and readers each week. RV CONSIGNMENTS Find exactly what tracting with anyone. cushion seat. 18,123 mi, $1595; 3.0 $1895; Your classified ad c ompensaWANTED Some other t r ades you are looking for in the workers $21,990. 541-306-0289 4.3 (1993), $1995. tion for their employwill also appear on We Do The Work ... also req u ire addi541-389-0435 CLASSIFIEDS bendbulletin.com ees. For your protecHD Screaming Eagle You Keep The Cash! tional licenses and tion call 503-378-5909 which currently reElectra Glide 2005, On-site credit certifications. ceives over 875 or use our website: 103" motor, two tone approval team, 30 years Construction www.lcb.state.or.us to 1.5 million page candy teal, new tires, Watercraft web site presence. Experience Debris Removal views every month check license status 23K miles, CD player, We Take Trade-Ins! before con t racting at no extra cost. 17 Years hydraulic clutch, ex- Ads published in "WaFree Advertising. Bulletin Classifieds in Central with th e b u s iness. cellent condition. BIG COUNTRY RV tercraft" include: KayPersons doing landGet Results! Oregon Highest offer takes it. aks, rafts and motorBend: 541-330-2495 Call 385-5809 or scape m a intenance 541-480-8080. ized personal Redmond: 541-548-5254 do not require a LCB place your ad on-line Margo watercrafts. For at license. " boats" please s e e COnStructiOn, LLC bendbuHetin.com ATVs Class 870. Will Haul Away Home Repairs & 541-385-5809 FREE '% Remodeling COLLINS BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS For Salvage r Window & Door Search the area's most Springdale 2005 27', 4 comprehensive listing of Any Location Replacement 880 slide in dining/living area Call Now to Schedule classified advertising... g Removal ccn ¹176121 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 Motorhomes Spring Cleanup real estate to automotive, obo. 541-408-3811 Also Cleanups and Aerate/Thatch, merchandise to sporting Yamaha Banshee 2001 541-480-3179 Sr Cfeanouts I custom built 350 motor goods. Bulletin Classifieds Weekly or one time appear every day in the race-ready, lots of extras Grounds Keeping Service laa R ~gi:3 II $4999/obo 541-647-8931 print or on line. Landscaping/Yard Care • Mowing • Edging Call 541-385-5809 870 • Hedge Trimming www.bendbulletin.com Boats 8 Accessories E • Pruning ~ Weedeattng Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, 2003 Fleetwood Dis• Fertilizing • Hauling Excavating The Bulletin Z~Ot'I'4 Qua8rip Ser ngCent~al0 egonsnce f9t8 • De-thatching covery 40' diesel mo- fuel station, exc cond. torhome w/all sleeps 8, black/gray Zaurl gur e /,~. i nterior, u se d 3X , LEVI'SDIRT WORKS 773 options-3 slide outs, More Than Service satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, $19 999 firm BONDED & INSURED Acreages Residential/ Peace of Mind 541-389-9188 e tc.32,000 mile s . Commercial Wintered i n h e ated General 16' SeaSwirl 1980 Spring Clean Up Painting/Wall Covering shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Contractor CHECK YOUR AD •Leaves 1990 4-Stroke 45hp 541-447-8664 For ALL your dirt & Please check your ad •Cones Honda Outboard, excavation needs on the first day it runs • Needles $3000. Text • Smalliobs for hometo make sure it is cor• Debris Hauling 541-639-2479 v/ owners, by job or by rect. Sometimes inthe hour Wind River 250 RLSW s tructions over t h e 17' 1984 Chris Craft Weed free Bark • Concrete 2011 4-season pkg, phone are misunder- - Scorpion, 140 HP & flower beds • Custom Pads 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, dual pane windows, stood and an e rror • Driveway gradinginboard/outboard, 2 large picture window in no slide-out, Triton eng, European can occurin your ad. depth finders, trollLow cost — get rid of Lawn Renovation rear, super slide, If this happens to your ing motor, full cover, all amenities, 1 owner, pot holes & smooth Aeration Dethatching Professional foam/air sofa sleeper, ad, please contact us EZ - L oad t railer, perfect, only 17K miles, Overseed 26" LCD TV. Garaged. out your drive! $21,500. 541-504-3253 the first day your ad Call 541-639-5282 Compost Painter OBO. $3500 appears and we will ~ Oo CCB¹194077 Top Dressing 541-382-3728. be happy to fix it as Repaint MOrePiXat Bendbulletil!.COm s oon as w e c a n . $25,900. 541-408-2111 Landscape Specialist! Deadlines are: Week- 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, I Handyman Maintenance days 11:00 noon for 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 Oregon License Looking for your Full or Partial Service next day, Sat. 11:00 ¹186147 LLC hp Bowrider w/depth next employee? • Mowing ~Edging a.m. for Sunday and finder, radio/CD player, Country Coach Intrigue Place a Bulletin help I DO THAT! •Pruning ~Weeding Monday. 2002, 40' Tag axle. 541-81 5-2888 rod holders, full canwanted ad today and Sprinkler Adjustments 541-385-5809 400hp Cummins Dievas, EZ Loader trailer, reach over 60,000 Thank you! sel. two slide-outs. exclnt cond, $13,000. readers each week. Fertilizer included The Bulletin Classified 41,000 miles, new 707-484-3518 (Bend) Your classified ad with monthly program BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS tires & batteries. Most Search the area's most will also appear on options. $85,000 OBO comprehensive listing of bendbulletin.com Weekly, monthly 541-678-5712 775 Handyman/Remodeling classified advertising... which currently reor one time service real estate to automotive, Manufactured/ ceives over 1.5 milResidential/Commercial merchandise to sporting lion page views evMobile Homes $>nall Jobs lo EXPERIENCED ery month at no goods. Bulletin Classifieds Enlire Roo>n Remodels Commercial Iggt& appear every day in the extra cost. Bulletin FACTOR YSPECIAL 18'/2' G l a stron 2005, Gnrnge Organiznlio» & Residential Classifieds Get Reprint or on line. New Home, 3 bdrm, Home InsPeclion RePairs Volvo V6, h i gh-end sults! Call 385-5809 Call 541-385-5809 $46,500 finished Free Estimates equipped, less than 60 Qnalily, Hoaesr Work Econoline RV 19 8 9 , or place your ad www.bendbugetin.com on your site. Senior Discounts hrs, garaged, as close fully loaded, exc. cond, on-line at J and M Homes txennis 541.317.9768 541-390-1466 to new as you can get! 35K m i. , R e d uced bendbulletin.com 541-548-5511 c<.ssian7aBowlerl(lnsarev The Bulletin $12,500. 541-550-7189 $15,250. 541-546-6133 Same Day Response Sen«ngCenlral awgon s n<e 1903
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All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Open 12-3 F air H o using A c t 2616 NW which makes it illegal Crossing Dr. to a d v ertise "any preference, limitation NorthWest Crossing or disc r imination Across From Park Shelley Griffin, based on race, color, Broker religion, sex, handi541-280-3804 cap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any
such pre f erence, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cust o dians, pregnant women, and www.thegarnernroup.com people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper People Look for Information About Products and will not knowingly accept any advertising Services Every Day through for real estate which is The Bulletin Class/T/eds in violation of the law. O ur r e a ders ar e 745 hereby informed that Homes for Sale all dwellings advertised in this newspa- BANK OWNED HOMES! per are available on FREE List w/Pics! an equal opportunity www. BendRepos.com basis. To complain of bend and beyond real estate discrimination cal l 20967 yeoman, bend or
ga'r"rier.
HUD t o l l -free at 1-800-877-0246. The Just bought a new boat? toll f re e t e lephone Sell your old one in the number for the hear- classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! ing im p aired is 541-385-5809 1-800-927-9275.
Motorhomes
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 648
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Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
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Antique & Clas s ic Autos
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Buick Enclave CX 2010 AWD, incl factory warr anty, like new, 3 1 K miles, white e x terior/
Studless snow tires, 225/ 60R-17, fit '13 Subaru Outback,less than 2500 miles, exc. cond. $350! 541-536-1789
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BOATS &RVs AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION beige interior, seats 7, 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service factory loaded + extras. 805- Misc. Items Excellent cond, always Chevy Aveo LT 2010, Hyundai Sonata 2012, 850 - Snowmobiles 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment Stud tires P265/70R16, GMC V~ton 1971, Only garaged. You will be 2nd low miles, very clean. very low miles, power 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 925 - Utility Trailers l ow mi., l i k e n e w $19,700! Original low owner of t his beauty! Vin ¹129701. windows, power locks 865 - ATVs Aircraft, Parts 927 - Automotive Trades $400. 541-815-1523. mile, exceptional, 3rd $31,500. 541-312-2393 $9988. and cruise. & Service 929 -Automotive Wanted 870 Boats & Accessories owner. 951-699-7171 Vin ¹321163. 932 931 - Automotive Parts, Service S UBA R U . $15999 875 Watercraft Antique & and Accessories 880 Motorhomes S UB A R U . Classic Autos 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 932 - Antique and Classic Autos IU I 881 Travel Trailers 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 933 - Pickups -pvrnr 882 - Fifth Wheels Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, Dlr ¹0354 885Canopies and Campers Jeep Comanche, 1990, most options, new paint 940 - Vans 1/3 interest in Columbia original owner, 167K, & tires, 159K mi., $4250. 890 - RVs for Rent 975 - Automobiles 1921 Model T 400, $150,000 located 4WD, 5-spd, tags good Call 541-233-8944 O Sunriver. H o urly Delivery Truck till 9/2015, $3900 obo. rental rate (based upon Restored 8 Runs 541-633-7761 F ord F reestyle S E L Automobiles Automobiles Automobiles approval) $775. Also: $9000. People Look for Information 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, S21 hangar avail. for front 8 side airbags, 25 541-389-8963 T oyota Avalon X L S , About Products and s ale, o r l e as e O mpg, 3rd row seating, Chrysler Sebring 2004 2005, all XLS options $15/day or $325/mo. Services Every Day through pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, 84k, beautiful dark gray/ Hyundai Eiantra Lmtd including navigation. tan leather int., 2012, very clean, sat541-948-2963 The Bulletin Classifieds traction control, new tires brown, $5995 541-350-5373 $14,200. 541-548-1601 ellite radio, bluetooth, 8 brks, maintained exnavigation. t remely well, runs 8 Where can you find a Vin ¹271938.$20488 drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, Mercedes Benz CLK Volkswagen Jefta SE $6700. 541-604-4166 helping hand? S UBA RU. 320 Coupe, 1999. sunSedan 2011, Power SUBARUOPBBNDCOM roof, dark blue with From contractors to 1966 GMC, 2nd owner window, power lock, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. grey leather, chrome yard care, it's all here too many extras to list tilt and cruise. 877-266-3821 1 /3 interest i n w e l l -$8500 obo. Serious buy rims, o rig. o w ner, Plymouth B a r racuda Vin ¹369761. $14888 equipped IFR Beech Bo- ers only. 541-536-0123 Dlr ¹0354 in The Bulletin's 104k, exc. cond, very 1966, original car! 300 M nanza A36, new 10-550/ MyLittle Red Corvette" clean. $5,500. "Call A Service S UBA RU. hp, 360 VS, centerSUBARUOPBENDCOM prop, located KBDN. 1996 coupe. 132K, 541-306-0499 Need to get an lines, (Original 273 Professional" Directory 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $65,000. 541-419-9510 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. Honda CRV 2004, eng & wheels incl.) ad in ASAP? $12,500 541-923-1781 877-266-3821 $10,495. 541-593-2597 Mercedes E-class E430, Dlr ¹0354 You can place it Call 541-610-6150 or see 2002, AWD 4-dr sedan, Toyota Camryst PROJECT CARS: Chevy http://bend.craigslist.org online at: Special Edition, $15,000 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 1984, SOLD; /cto/3617273265.html Chevy C-20 Pickup Chevy Coupe 1950 www.bendbulletin.com obo. Call 12-5pm (Iv 1985 SOLD; msg), 541-350-0215 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; rolling chassis's $1750 1986 parts car auto 4-spd, 396, model ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541-385-5809 only one left! $500 CST /all options, orig. complete car, $ 1949; Door-to-door selling with 1/5th interest in 1973 owner, $22,000, Call for details, Cadillac Series 61 1950, Cessna 150 LLC Ford Taurus wagon 2004 541-923-6049 Volkswagen Jetta SE 541-548-6592 150hp conversion, low 2 dr. hard top, complete fast results! It's the easiest very nice, pwr everything Sedan 2012, auto 6 time on air frame and '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn w /spare f r on t cl i p ., way in the world to sell. 120K, FWD, good tires $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 speed w/sport shift, engine, hangared in PROJECT car, 350 $3950, 541-382-7391 Hyundai Sonata 2007 The Bulletin Classified 23k miles. Bend. Excellent persmall block w/Weiand GLS, 64,700 miles, Vin ¹072251. Just bought a new boat? Nissan Sentra 2012 formance & afford541-385-5809 dual quad tunnel ram excellent cond, good Pickups Sell your old one in the Pull warranty, 35mpg, $15988 able flying! $6,500. with 450 Holleys. T-10 • tires, non-smoker, classifieds! Ask about our 520 per tank, all power. 541-382-6752 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, new tags, $9500. S UBA RU. Super Seller rates! Sil v erado SOAr> Azr! $13,500. 541-788-0427 Weld Prostar wheels, Chevrolet SUBARUOPBENDCOM 541-280-7352 Executive Hangar 541-385-5809 rolling chassis + 2001 4WD Reg. Cab. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. at Bend Airport (KBDN) extra Toyota Corola 2011, extras. $6000 for all. 2 500HD A .C , T o w 877-266-3821 60' wide x 50' deep, Keyless entry, cruise package, Glass Tite Subaru wagon Dlr ¹0354 w/55' wide x 17' high bi- 541-389-7669. and tilt. canopy, clean and re1991 Loyale 4x4, 'l W"~ .g fold dr. Natural gas heat, l iable, 167,300 m i , Vin ¹630707. WHEN YOU SEE THIS S-spd, updates, offc, bathroom. Adjacent $13988 $5150. 541-480-4136 $1950 obo. to Frontage Rd; great ~OO 541-420-3277 visibility for aviation busiS UBA R U . Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 Nissan Versa S 2011, ness. Financing availM Ore P iX a t Bendbuletil),COm Honda CR-Z EX coupe Hyundai Sonata 2012, Power 1971 new trans, 2 ev e rything,2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. able. 541-948-2126 or On a classified ad 2011, Hybrid VTEC, new t i r es , ne w very low miles, power Toyota 4Ru n n er 877-266-3821 email 1jetjockOq.com very clean. Chevy Wagon 1957, go to CVT trans, low miles. brakes, 2nd owner, windows, power door 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , Vin ¹397958. Dlr ¹0354 4-dr., complete, www.bendbulletin.com Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, Vin ¹010255. r uns/drives g o o d. locks and cruise. 4WD, V6, 5 speed, $11788 to view additional $7,000 OBO, trades. based in Madras, alMake good w o od $16788 Vin ¹ 322715. $15,999. t ow pkg., plus 4 Toyota Corolla 2004, Please call photos of the item. ways hangared since truck. $1995 OBO studs tires on rims, 4@? SUBARU. auto., loaded, 204k 541-389-6998 S UBA RU. new. New annual, auto SUBARUOPBSND COM 541-350-2859 gg S UB A R U . SUBARUOPBENDCOM r uns great. W a s gg miles. orig. owner, non People Look for Information pilot, IFR, one piece Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. smoker, exc. c o nd. $ 5500, now o n l y 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. About Products and 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. windshield. Fastest Ar- 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 $6500 Prin e ville Services Every Daythrough 877-266-3821 cher around. 1750 to- auto. trans, ps, air, Chevy Sil v erado $4000.541-659-1416 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 503-358-8241 Dlr ¹0354 The Bulletin Classifieds tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. frame on rebuild, re- 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, 541-475-6947, ask for painted original blue, 8' box, bed liner, std Rob Berg. original blue interior, cab, auto, 4x4, 54k Vans co n d., original hub caps, exc. mi., e xc . $9000. chrome, asking $9000 Trucks & 96 Ford Windstar 8 541-977-6653 or make offer. 2000 Nissan Quest, Heavy Equipment 541-385-9350 both 7-passenger vans, 160K miles, low prices, $1200 & $2900, and worth Chrysler SD 4-Door every cent! 1000 1000 1000 1930, CD S R oyal 541-318-9999 Standard, 8-cylinder, Dodge R a m 2500 Legal Notices Legal Notices • Le g al Notices Legal Notices • Legal Notices iamond Reo Dump body is good, needs 2005, Quad Cab SLT or the other side will a nd cause o n o r TREE OLSEN, P.C. projects. The proTruck 19 7 4, 12 -14 some r e s toration, 4X4, very nice. ChevyAstro LEGAL NOTICE win a u tomatically. before the expiraBy Michael Botthof, posed goals and rayard box, runs good, runs, taking bids, Cargo Van2001, Vin ¹716973. IN TH E C I R CUIT O SB ¹ 1133 3 7 , 541-383-3888, To "appear" you tion of 30 days from tionale is available $6900, 541-548-6812 pw, pdl, great cond., $17888 COURT FOR THE 541-815-3318 m ust file with t he the date of the first mbotthof@rcolegal. for inspection at the business car, well STATE O F OR+©Q S U B A R U . court a legal docup ublication of t h is com, Attorneys for Airport Di r ector's maint'd, regular oil G K E AT BmoEGON IN AND FOR ment called a summons. The date P laintiff, 51 1 S W Office in the Termichanges, $4500. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. THE COUNTY OF tion" or "answer." of first publication in 10th Ave., Ste. 400, nal a t Re d mond Please call 877-266-3821 DESCHUTES The "motion" or Banthis matter is FebruPortland, OR 97205, Municipal Ai r port 541-633-5149 Hyster H25E, runs Dlr ¹0354 ONEWEST BANK, swer" (or "reply") ary 10, 2013. If you P: (503) 459-0140 between 8:00 a.m. well, 2982 Hours, FSB, its successors must be given to the fail timely to appear F: (503) 977-7963. a nd 5 : 0 0 p. m . , $3500,call Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 in interest and/or court clerk or adand answer, plainMonday th r o ugh 541-749-0724 7 -pass. v a n wit h assigns, Plaintiff, v. LEGAL NOTICE ministrator within 30 tiff will apply to the Friday at Redmond FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, p ower c h a i r lif t , UNKNOWN HEIRS PUBLIC HEARING door panels w/flowers days of the date of above-entitled court Municipal Ai r port $1500; 1989 Dodge O F D ONALD A . NOTICE first publ i cation for the relief prayed 2 522 S E Jes s e & hummingbirds, Turbo Van 7 - pass. HILL AKA DONALD CITY OF BEND white soft top & hard s pecified her e i n for in its complaint. Butler Circle, ¹ 1 7, has new motor and ALTON HILL; Ford 250 XLT 1990, CITY COUNCIL along with the reThis is a ju d icial Redmond, OR top. Just reduced to t rans., $1500. I f i n- RONALD V A N CE PROJECT NUMBER: 6 yd. dump bed, $3,750. 541-317-9319 quired filing fee. It foreclosure o f a 97756 for 30 days terested c a l l Ja y HILL, IND I VIDUPZ¹ 12-506 APPLI139k, Auto, $4500 must be in proper d eed of t r us t i n from the date of this or 541-647-8483 503-269-1057. ALLY A N D A S CANTS: West Bend Peterbilt 35 9 p o table 541-410-9997 form and have proof which the p l aintiff publication. PURPORTED Property Co. & Brooks water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, o f service on t h e r equests that t h e PERSONAL R E P3200 gal. tank, 5hp Resources. NATURE plaintiff's a t t orney plaintiff be allowed C omments on t h e B RESENTATIVE OF p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, Automobiles • OF A P P LICATION: DBE goal will be acor, if t h e p l aintiff to foreclose your T HE ESTATE O F camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. Type III Quasi-judicial interest in the foldoes not have an cepted for 45 days I nternational Fla t Audi Q5 2010 3.2 Prem. DONALD A. H ILL; 541-820-3724 Ame n dment, beginning February a ttorney, proof o f lowing de s c ribed Plan Bed Pickup 1963, 1 PONDEROSA ¹099460 $ 3 3,995 Zone Change, and 26, 2013, and can service on the plainreal property: LOT 5 929 t on dually, 4 s p d. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, PINES PROPERTY Text Amendment to t!ff.lf you have any IN BLOCK 26, TALL be sent to the fol2 dr. hardtop,fastback, trans., great MPG, Automotive Wanted OWNER'S A S SOreallocate e q ual-arPINES FIFTH ADlowing: questions, you 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 could be exc. wood CIATION; UNITED eas of the RS, CL, Oregon should see an attorDITION, DESDONATE YOUR CAR- radio (orig),541-419-4989 hauler, runs great, STATES OF AuroSource ME, and I P z oning ney immediately. If CHUTES COUNTY, Kim Dickie brakes, $1950. Fast Free Towing 24 Ford Mustang Coupe new AMERICA; STATE and plan d e signa-2522 SE Jesse Butler you need help in O REGON. Com541-419-5480. hr. Response - Tax 541-598-3750 OF OREGON; OCtions wi t h i n t he 1966, original owner, finding an attorney, m only known a s : Circle, ¹17 www.aaaoregonautoDeduction U N I T ED V8, automatic, great CUPANTS OF THE you may contact the 15847 Wo o d chip NorthWest Crossing Redmond, OR 97756 BREAST C A N C ER shape, $9000 OBO. source.com P REMISES; A N D O verlay Zone. A P Oregon State Bar's Lane, La Pine, OrOffice: F OUNDATION P r o THE REAL PROP530-515-81 99 PLICABLE C R I T E- (541) 504-3496 Lawyer Re f e rral egon 97739. NOviding Free MammoERTY L O C A TED S ervice online a t RIA: Bend DevelopTICE TO D E FENFax: (541) 548-0591 grams 8 Breast CanAT 52012 NOBLE ment Code, Section www.oregonstateDANTS: READ Email: Ford Ranchero cer Info 888-785-9788 FIR, LA PINE, OR2.7.300, N o r thWest Kim.Dickie©flyrdm.com bar.org or by calling THESE P A P E RS 1979 (PNDC) EGON 97739, DeCrossing Ove r l ay CAREFULLY! A (503) 684-3763 (in RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L with 351 Cleveland Case No. Zone, Chapter 4.1; or the Portland metrol awsuit has b e e n hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. fendants. modified engine. 1 2CV0888. S U M Land Use Review and p olitan a rea) o r started against you am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. Body is in Automotive Parts, owner, exc. c o n d. MONS BY PUBLItoll-free elsewhere Federal Aviation 541-420-3634 /390-1285 101k miles, new tires, in th e a b o ve-en- Procedures, Chapter excellent condition, CATION. TO THE Service & Accessories 4.6, Land Use District in Oregon at (800) titled court by OneAdministration $2500 obo. loaded, sunroof. DEFENDANTS: Map and Text 452-7636. This Office of Civil Rights, West Bank, F SB, 541-420-4677 $8900. 541-706-1897 UNKNOWN HEIRS 4 C o n tinental t i r es Amendments, B e nd AWP-9 summons is issued plaintiff. P l a intiff's O F D O NALD A . Area General Plan, Ricky Watson, MBA 225/6015 95%. $200. pursuant to ORCP claims are stated in Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, ~ Oo HILL AKA DONALD 541-480-5950 Oregon A d ministra7. ROUTH CRABt he w ritten c o mDBE Compliance 1983, 8000-Ib Warn MOrePjtaitl)t!IIIIII!IletinCO m ALTON HILL: In the tive Rules C hapter TREE OLSEN, P.C. Specialist p laint, a c opy o f winch, 2 sets of tire Eclipse all season tires, name of the State of 660, Department of By Michael Botthof, which was filed with Office: chains, canopy, 22R Buick LeSabre 2004, P235/60R-16 99T, (4) O regon, you a r e C o nservation (310) 725-3940 O SB ¹ 1133 3 7 , the a b ove-entitled Land motor, 5-spd t rans$150. 541-678-2906 30 mpg, 75k, heated hereby required to and De v e lopment, Fax: (310) 725-6819 mbotthof O rcolegal. C ourt. You mus t mission, $1795 obo. seats, nice wheels, appear and answer available at City Hall Kenwood KAT 7285 60 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 541-350-2859 "appear" in this case Email: com, Attorneys for eng, power everything, a utomatic, whi t e , the complaint filed w att amplifier. $ 60 or on the Community ricky.watson@faa.gov P laintiff, 51 1 S W or the other side will new paint, 54K original leather, Almost like against you in the Development Deobo. 541-382-0805 10th Ave., Ste. 400, win a u tomatically. Find exactly what miles, runs great, exnew of course! Bring above-entitled Court partment portion of Portland, OR 97205, To "appear" you Studded tires, fits Merc cellent condition in 8 you are looking for in the $6000 and it's yours. a nd cause on o r the C ity's w e bsite. P: (503) 459-0140 must file with t he Sable 205/75/14, $5 out. Asking $8,500. 541-508-9133. before the e xpiraCLASSIFIEDS PROPERTY L O C AF: (503) 977-7963. court a legal docu541-480-3179 ea. 541-475-1091 B tion of 30 days from TION: Various within ment called a mothe date of the first LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE tion" or "answer." the NorthWest B IN TH E C I R CUIT p ublication of t h i s Crossing Ove r lay The Bend Park 8 RecThe "motion" or ansummons. The date COURT FOR THE reation District Board swer" (or "reply") Zone. DATE, TIME, of first publication in STATE O F O Rof Directors will meet PLACE AND LOCAmust be given to the this matter is FebruEGON IN AND FOR in a work session and TION OF THE court clerk or adTHE COUNTY OF regular bus i ness ary 10, 2013. If you HEARING: March 20, ministrator within 30 fail timely to appear DESCHUTES, 2 013, 7:00 p .m. a t meeting on Tuesday, days of the date of and answer, plainONEWEST BANK, March 5, 2013, at the first publ i cation 710 NW Wall Street, tiff will apply to the FSB, its successors Bend, OR, in City Hall D istrict Office, 7 9 9 s pecified her e i n above-entitled court in interest and/or Council C h a mbers. SW Columbia, Bend, along with the refor the relief prayed assigns, Plaintiff, v. O regon. The w o r k ADDITIONAL INquired filing fee. It for in its complaint. UNKNOWN HEIRS FORMATION: Th e session will begin at must be in proper This is a j u d icial O F E DWARD R application, all docu- 5:30 p.m. a t w h ich form and have proof foreclosure o f a KONANTZ; JENNIments and evidence time the board will reof service on t he d eed o f t r us t i n FER L. KONANTZ; plaintiff's a t t orney s ubmitted by o r o n ceive a staff report on which the p l aintiff UNITED S T ATES or, if t h e p l aintiff behalf of th e a ppli- an indoor recreation r equests that t h e OF AMER I CA; cant and the applica- facility vision, a predoes not have an STATE O F O RFORD F1 50 XL 2005. This truck plaintiff be allowed tion criteria are avail- sentation of the draft a ttorney, proof of to f oreclose your E GON; OCCU able for inspection at senior center expancan haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, service on the plaininterest in the f olP ANTS O F TH E sion master plan, and City Hall at no cost tiff. If you have any and a tough V8 engine will get I lowing d e s cribed P REMISES; A N D a board GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES, ' QUAINTCABIN ON 10 ACRES!I and will be provided at review questions, you the job done on the ranch real property: LOT THE REAL PROPself-assessment proI Modern amenitiesandall thequiet I a r easonable cost. We are three adorable, bl I loving should see an attor15 IN BLOCK 6 OF ERTY L O CATED ney immediately. If CONTACT PERSON: cess. The board will puppies looking for a caring ,'you will need. Room to grow in,' PONDEROSA AT 15847 WOODmeet in a re g u lar Amy Bar r y at you need help in home. Please call right away. ,'your own little paradise!Callnow.,' PINES, THIRD ADC HIP L A NE, L A business meeting befinding an attorney, (541)693-2114, DITION, DESP INE, ORE G O N abarry@ci.bend.or.us. ginning at 7:00 p.m. to you may contact the CHUTES COUNTY, 97739, Defendants. Send w ritten t e sti- consider the contract Oregon State Bar's O REGON. ComCase No. mony to Amy Barry award for the Big Sky Lawyer Ref e rral monly known a s: 1 2CV0731. S U M c /o CDD, 71 0 N W Park a c c es s im S ervice online a t 52012 Noble Fir, La MONS BY P UBLIWall St. 97702, or atprovements. The www.oregonstateP ine, Orego n CATION. TO THE tend the meeting and board will meet in exbar.org or by calling 97739. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: ecutive session imstate your views The (503) 684-3763 (in DEFENDANTS: UNKNOWN HEIRS mediately f o l lowing hearing will be conthe Portland metroREAD THESE PAO F E D WARD R ducted in accordance the business session p olitan area) o r PERS CAREKONANTZ; AND ORS with B D C Se c t ion pursuant t o toll-free elsewhere FULLY! A l a w suit THE REAL PROP192.660(i) for the pur4.1.800. in Oregon at (800) has been s tarted ERTY L O CATED 452-7636. This pose of c o nducting against you in the AT 15847 WOODPUBLIC NOTICE performance evaluasummons is issued above-entitled court C HIP L A NE, L A tions of public officers pursuant to ORCP by OneWest Bank, Redmond Municipal and employees. The P INE, ORE G O N 7. ROUTH CRABFSB, plain t iff. 97739: In the name Airport hereby anMarch 5, 2013, Plaintiff's claims are of the State of Ornounces its f iscal agenda and meeting stated in the written egon, y o u are years 2013 - 2015 report is posted on the complaint, a copy of hereby required to District's webs i te: goal of 5.63% for People Lock for Information which was filed with appear and answer Disadvantaged www.bendparksanAbout Products and To PlaCe yOur ad, VISit WWW.bendbulletin.COm Or 541-385-5809 the a b ove-entitled the complaint filed B usiness Ent e r drec.org. For m o re Services Every Daythrough C ourt. You mus t against you in the prise (DBE) airport information call The Bulletin ClassiBeds construction "appear" in this case above-entitled Court 541-389-7275.
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