Bulletin Daily Paper 03-04-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUESDAY March 4,2014

rnn< nun wrec<increwICnifeclass SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• D1-

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD A mushingfamily —The

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5 — 6:30 p.m.• Volcanic Theatre Pub• $20 at the door for Bend Chambermembers, $25 for nonmembers More info: bendchamber.org/chamber-events/whats-brewing-bends-town-hall-2

Seaveys havethree Iditarod wins in the trophy case, with perhaps more ontheway. C1

< Patrick Flaherty, the incumbent

John Hummel, the challengerW

Storms datter airlines

— This winter has cost them an estimated $5.8 billion in delays.C6

MEDICAL MARIJUANA

House delays vote on bans

SCallnpS —Now's the time to give them a try. D1 NeW SteW —Ideas to liven and lighten up aseasonal staple.DS

Four-decadewait —A U.S. inventor has had apending patent application for 43 years. He'd kind of like an answer.A3

New cartel doss — It's most likely Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, amanwithaknack for keeping a low profile.A6

• Monday was the first dayto attempt to register with the state By Elon Glucklich

Obama's budget to set the stage for a debate onjobs and poverty.A2

The Bulletin

A rough winter could mean good news regarding some invasive bugs.bunddullntin. com/uxtrns

The Bulletin

SALEM — On the same

day nearly300medical marijuana dispensaries registered with the

• •

state, lawmakers in the

In national news-

And a Wed exclusive-

By Lauren Dnke n

House took up a measure that could allow cities

Nick Harsell wants

and counties to ban the retail outlets in their

Bend to know he's open for business.

communities.

Harsell, 23, has a re-

Lawmakers were ex-

modeled former dentist's office on Northeast Third

pected to vote on Senate

Street, a staff of five and

Bill 1531, but House Democrats were able to delay

h;

a product that's been in the national spotlight for

the vote, arguing they need another 24 hours. The measure was also

nearly two decades: medi-

EDITOR'5CHOICE

In Crimea, nerves and talk of war By Alison Smale New York Times News Service

SEVASTOPOL, Ukraine — Rumor and raw nerves about Russia's intentions

reverberated on Monday throughout Crimea and especially this Black Sea port, where dozens of Ukrainian sailors donned orange construction hel-

mets and draped mattresses over the side of their ship in response to what

they feared was a Russian ultimatum to vacate

• Russia tightens grip,AS

t'

cal marijuana. Monday marked the first day for Harsell, owner of High Grade Organics, to apply for state recognition as a registered medical marijuana facility. He's been open

delayed Friday and has become one of the final sticking points in the short

legislative session, expected to wrap up at the end of this week.

On the House floor Monday, Rep. Andy Olson, R-Albany, a former a Oregon State Police trooper, told his colleagues the

since October and sent

his application in early Monday. He is hardly alone. The Oregon Health

state has created the most

"unregulated marijuana dispensary law" in the

Authority received 289

applications from dispensaries Monday, including

nation.

See Bans/A4

17 from Deschutes County. At least one clinic in

SenateBill 1531

Jefferson County applied Monday. No Crook County establishments

applied. Those figures far outpaced the state's estimate

of 200 clinics statewide. For years, clinics have operated in a gray area: Medical marijuana has been legal in Oregon since 1998, but the federal government still outlaws it.

its 2 million inhabitants with little history of open ethnic

Oregon House Bill 3460,passed lastsummer, sought to bring the clinics out of the shadows by putting new regulations in place and cracking down on those operating illegally. The scrutiny is just fine

weighed using n digital scale Monday nt his store in Bend. Harsell applied Monday morning with the state to be registered ns n medical marijuana facility, the first dny for such applications. Hnrsell

conflict, particularlybe-

with Harsell.

says he's been working with a lawyer to makesure his business meets state requirements since

th e vessel. Across the

Crimeanpeninsula, the talk turned more to war, even

as actual fighting remained hearsay and imaginary for

tween Russians and Ukrainians — brother Slavs who

SeeFacilities/A4

AndyTullisiThe Bulletin

Nick Harsell, owner of High Grade Organics, removes medical marijuana from acontainer to be

Summary:Would allow local counties and cities to regulate and ban medical marijuana dispensaries Sponsors:Sen. Rod Monroe, D-Portland; Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena Status:Passed the Senate, allowing regulation only for time, place and manner; vote in House expected today to discuss allowing local bans of dispensaries. Online:https://olis.leg. state.or.us/liz/2014R1/ Measures/ Text/ SB1531/B-Engrossed

Oregon House Bill 3460 was signed into law.

share centuries of culture. In Sevastopol, which

carpets the hills surrounding adjacent Black Sea bays and inlets, a sunny, almost summery day provided an unlikely backdrop for a day jangled by worry

California's roomyhenhousesruffle states' feathers

about whether blood would

By Stephanie Strom

actually be spilled.

New York Times News Service

The Slavutych was one

of two vessels accorded the Ukrainian navy at the Russian naval port here

after tortuous negotiations following the collapse of the Soviet Union

ATWATER, Calif. — Hens

in California are living the good life. Many can now lay their eggs in oversize enclosures roomy enough to stand up, lie down — even extend their wings fully without

touching another bird. Hens in most other states

don't have it so good. Their conditions, as the head of the California's egg trade group explained, are "like you sitting in an airplane seat in the economy section all your life." So if you're a hen, you want

to live in California. Short of that, you want California-size

leg room. And that's precisely what lawmakers in California are demanding of out-of-state

farmers who sell eggs in California — setting off a feud over interstate commerce that

has spilled over into the farm-

yard at large.

effort to prevent any new re-

The Missouri attorney

strictions on raising livestock.

"This is bigger than a case general has filed a lawsuit to block the California egg rules, about egg production and and at least three other states bigger than a case simply are considering doing the about agriculture," said Missame. The beef and pork lob- souri Attorney General Chris bies are also lining up against Koster. the California rules in an SeeEggs/A4

in 1991. Earlier Monday, a Russian minesweeper, the 912, patrolled nearby,

supposedly keeping the Slavutych and a smaller vessel, the Ternopil, from

departing. SeeUkraine/A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 52, Low36 Page D6

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

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

B5 Ct-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 112, No. 63, 30 pages, 5 sections

Q I/I/e userecyc/ednewsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

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they provide road maps for

WASHINGTON The Obama administration budget

mediate legislative action, but

Death Penalty law —Florida's death penalty cameunderfire from a key SupremeCourt justice Monday, asadivided court confronted the role of low IQscores in exempting convicted murderers from execution. Justice AnthonyKennedy,the court's frequent swing vote, joined more liberal justices in questioning Florida's rigid IQscore threshold for determining intellectual disability. Kennedy's positioning hinted atthepossibility that the court, probably on aclosevote, might strike downthe strict IQ rule usedbyFlorida, Idaho, Kentuckyandseveral other states.

the conversation, laying out competing priorities that are likely to occupy lawmakers in

Democrats and Republicans heading into this fall's midterm

earnest once the midterm elec-

to be released today will set the elections. And while the policy stage for an election-year de- prescriptions are vastly differbate overgovernment's role in ent, both sides seek to tap into creating economic opportunity, powerful anxieties about how with President Barack Obama hard it is for the average person callingformore federalspend- toget aheadintoday'seconomy. "The two sides have coningto help the poor and Republicans charging that such pro- verged in terms of the probgrams waste money and foster lems they're diagnosing," said dependency. Alan Viard, a resident scholar In his latest request to Con- at the right-leaning American gress,Obama plans to seek Enterprise Institute. "But the $56 billion in fresh spending solutions are very far apart. It's to expand educati onal off er- not dear that either party is goings for preschoolers and job ing to go too far away from the training for laid-off workers, policies they've traditionally among other priorities — the emphasized." verytypes of programs that ReThe bipartisan focus on ecopublicans sayhavebeenproved nomic opportunity reflects the ineffective. nation's changed economic Meanwhile, House Budget and political circumstances: Committee Chairman P aul The Great Recession is long Ryan, Wis., is at work on a over. The annual budget deficit GOP budget plan that aims is shrinking. And both parties to overhaul the nation's wel- have concluded that they would fare system, in part by cutting benefit from taking a break afspending on programs that terthreeyearsofnear-constant Ryan argues have locked peo- confrontation over the budget. ple into poverty. During this lull, Obama and The dueling blueprints are Ryan are working to change

enters the final two years of his

tionsare decided and Obama presidency. "I view both th e Obama

budget and the Ryan budget as laying out proposals and guideposts for what's going to be a year-long discussion and debate," said Bob Greenstein, president of the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. "Some of it will make

it into the campaigns. And the bigger decisions are going to come in 2015." With lus budget request, Obama is returning to the populist, bread-and-butter themes that helped him win reelection and have played to Democrats'

advantage for years. He will propose $28 billion in new spending on education, manufacturing and job training, as well as $28 billion for defense programs. He will endorse the idea of overhauling the corpo-

PiStOriuS trial —The murder trial of South African Olympic athlete Oscar Pistorius begandramatically in Pretoria's High Court on Monday, with a neighbor testifying that sheheard "bloodcurdling screams" on the night his girlfriend was killed. Michelle Burger, who lives close to Pistorius, told the court that shewas awakened bythe soundof a woman screaming in theearly hours of Valentine's Daymorning last year. Shesaid that she sat up in bedandthat her husband woke up and went out onto their balcony to listen. Pistorius, who in 2012 won acclaim for becoming the first amputeeathlete to compete in the Olympics, pleadednot guilty to the murder of his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp, asfamily members sat behind him in court Monday.

ChineSe train StatiOn attaCk —Chineseauthorities said late Monday that they hadarrested three more suspects in Saturday's deadly bloodbath in southern China, an attack they hinted earlier in the day was linked to international terrorist groups. Both claims were difficult to verify, deepening the mystery of how a handful of assailants, armed with only knives andsabers, managed to kill 29 train commuters and injure more than140 others. Since news of the train station attack broke Saturday from the southern Chinacity of Kunming, the Chinesepublic has respondedwith both sympathy for the victims and calls for harsh retribution against those whohad arole in carrying out the terrorist attack. PakiStani attaCk —At least11 people, including a judge, were killed and more than 25 injured on Mondaywhengunmen attacked a court in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, police said. At least four gunmen openedfire with automatic weapons in a court complex in the city. A police official speaking on condition of anonymity said that two attackers wore suicide vests and blewthemselves upafter a brief gun battle with police.

rate tax code to boost U.S. com-

Gay-marriage SuppOrt — Evoking Ronald Reaganand Barry

petitiveness and generate additional revenue to rebuild roads and bridges and create jobs.

Goldwater, a group ofWestern-state Republicans plans to enter the battle in favor of same-sexmarriage today, urging afederal appeals court to declare gaymarriage bans in Utahand Oklahomaunconstitutional. The most prominent of the approximately 20 signers of the brief are former Sen.Alan Simpson of Wyoming, a longtime supporter of gayrights,andformerSen.Nancy Kassebaum ofKansas.

HARSH WINTER KEEPSGOING BACK EAST

Military Study —Nearly1 in 5 U.S. soldiers had a common mental illness, such asdepression, panic disorder or ADHD,before enlisting in the Army, according to a new study that raises questions about the military's assessment andscreening of recruits. More than 8 percent of soldiers had thought about killing themselves and1.1 percent had apast suicide attempt, researchers found from confidential surveys and interviews with 5,428 soldiers at Army installations across the country. The findings, published online Monday in two papers in JAMAPsychiatry, point to a weakness in the recruiting process, experts said.

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." Hi« D EsERT '.. ". WILD G,A.MEs

Grand Prizes to be awarded at the end of the evening.

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A morning commuter walks to a train station during a winter snowstorm Monday in Philadelphia. Winter kept its icy hold on much of the country Monday, with snow falling and temperatures dropping as schools and offices closed andpeople from the South and Mid-Atlantic to Northeast reluctantly waited out another storm indoors.

With accumulations of 4-to-6 inches in Washington, Monday's storm would havebeenthe largest in the nation's capital in all of last year. But in the seemingly endless winter of 2013-2014, it came2t/a weeks after a much bigger storm, and the region settled into a familiar routine of hunkering down. — The Associated Press

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The Bulletin

HANNE

Obama pressuresNetanyahu on peace; Israeli leaderpushesback By Christi Parsons and Batsheva Sobelman Tribune Washington Bureau

some previous sessions in

n udge I sraeli work on the peace process thus far and reiterated his tanyahu toward a peace plan commitment t o p r e venting with Palestinians, urging him Iran from acquiring a nuclear to make the "tough decisions" weapon, a top Israeli priority. needed to advance a two-state solution.

N etanyahu, in t u r n , e m -

phasized the urgency of conBut as a U . S.-imposedtaining the I r anian nuclear deadline nears for both sides program — which the Islamic to accept aproposed frame- Republicsays is for peaceful work, Netanyahu pushed back purposes such as energy genagainst Obama's recent sug- eration — but did so without gestion that Israel should try directly criticizing an interim harder to make progress. deal toease some economic "Israel has been doing its sanctions against Iran in repart, and I regret to say that turn for its curbing of some the Palestinians haven't," Net-

nuclear activity. Previously,

anyahu said.

Netanyahu called that deal a

Ne t a nyahu "historic mistake." spoke to r eporters before With the Ukrainian crisis their meeting in the Oval Of- taking center stage, the two Obama an d

fice. Obama said he thought it was "still possible" to have

leaders did not hold a full news conference, and Obama

answered only one questionestine — "in which people are about the Russian military in living side by side in peace and Crimea. security." The meeting cast Obama "It's difficult and it requires as a more engaged player in a compromise on all s ides," peace process largely driven Obama said as he sat next to during the last year by Secthe Israeli leader. "The time retary of State John E Kerry. frame that we have set up for Obama is aiming to save the completing these negotiations U.S.-brokered framework beis coming near, and some fore the self-imposed deadline tough decisions are going to this spring. have to be made." In the hours before NeTheir tone and demeanor tanyahu arrived i n W a s hwere polite during the public ington, Bloomberg News comments, in contrast with published an interview with two states — Israel and Pal-

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TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

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

TODAY It's Tuesday, March 4, the 63rd day of 2014. Thereare 302 days left in the year.

ODDITY

HAPPENINGS

DISCOVERY

Potential

a en en in — or

Ukraine —u.s. secretary of State John Kerry is dueto visit the newgovernment in Kiev.A1

e a rsfora new

An inventor who shocked the world of technology with computer breakthroughs and got rich because

Pistorius trial —The first of107 state witnesses continues to testify in the murder trial of the South African double-amputeeathlete after taking the stand for three hours on Monday, the first day of trial.A2

Bloomberg News

considered confidential should be granted a patent. He thinks that's too long.

MINNEAPOLIS — Scientists h av e u n c overed gene mutations that slash

edgment for his work on what forcing me to appeal again and he calls "square wave machine 1oulld alldround.

Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON

-

For-

control."

ty-three years is too long even for Gilbert Hyatt, the dogged inventor who once shocked the computer industry and got rich. Hyatt said he's been waiting that long for a U.S. ruling on

Highlight:OnMarch 4, 1789, the Constitution of the united States went into effect asthe first FederalCongress metin New York. (Thelawmakers then adjourned for lack of aquorum.) In1791, Vermont becamethe

In the January lawsuit, Hyatt

Apreviouspatent It took Hyatt 20 years to get his 1990 microprocessor patent.

whether his electronic signal

to control ~ ery s h ould be granted a patent. The pat-

14th state.

By Michelle Fay Cortez

of them has been waiting for decades for a ruling on whether two patent applications that are so old it's

By Susan Decker and lan King

HISTORY

diabetesdrug

ent-approval process takes 28.3

alleges he was told by a PTO unit director that the agency's unofficial policy in dealing

weight and a sedentary lifestyle, is soaring as obe-

dent of the United States. The

been sitting in the Patent and

U.S. GovernmentPrinting Office began operation. TheConfederate States ofAmericaadopted as its flag theoriginal version of the Stars andBars. In1863, the IdahoTerritory was created. In1913, the "Buffalo nickel" officially went into circulation. In1930, CoolidgeDamin Arizona was dedicated byits namesake, former PresidentCalvin Coolidge. In1944, mobsters LouisCapone, Louis "Lepke"Buchalter andEmanuelWeisswereexecuted in theelectric chair at Sing Sing Prison inOssining, N.Y.,for the murder of businessowner Joseph Rosen. In1964, Teamsters president JamesHoff aandthreeco-defendants werefound guilty by a federal court in Chattanooga, Tenn., of jury tampering. In1974, the first issue ofPeople magazine, thencalled People Weekly, waspublishedbyTimeLife Inc.; on thecover wasactress Mia Farrow,thenco-starring in "TheGreatGatsby." In1994,in NewYork, four extremists wereconvicted of the1993 World TradeCenter bombing that killed six people and injured morethan athousand. Actor-comedianJohn Candydied inDurango,Mexico, atage43. Ten yearsage:Mounir el Motassadeq, convictedin Germany in connection with the 9/11 attacks, won aretrial from an appeals court. (El Motassadeq was later convicted of helping three of thesuicide hijackers and wassentencedto15 years in prison, themaximum possible underGermanlaw.l Fiveyears age:British Prime Minister GordonBrown, addressing ajoint meeting of the U.S. Congress,called onAmericans to look beyondtheir own tumbling financial markets to see a world grippedbyan"economic hurricane" that could be turned aroundwith U.S. help. One yearago:Cardinals from around theworld gathered inside theVatican for their first round of meetings before the conclave toelect thenext pope, following the retirement of Ben-

TrademarkOffice for 35years. Courtesy Gilbert P. Hyatt / Bloomberg News years, the agency canceled part The Las Vegas-based inven- Las Vegas-based inventor of the patent while allowing oth-

U.S. district courtin Las Vegas. Hyatt, the son of a Russian emigrant and civil engineer, Gilbert Hyatt, who turns 76 in er aspects of it to remain. spent the earlypart ofhis career March, filed a lawsuit in JanuStill, the patent became part working for aerospace compaary demanding action on what of Hyatt's licensing deal with nies. He said he got his ideas may be the oldest pending U.S. Philips, which has generated for a business while at Teledyne patent applications. more than $350 million. Philips Technologies Inc. in the 1960s. deducted its costs and then split He set up Micro Computer the proceeds 50-50, meaning Inc. in 1968 to implement his with Royal Philips, the Dutch Hyatt probably got more than ideas, with Noyce, who would co-found Intel that sameyear, as electronics maker, to license 23 $150 million. ofhis patents, indudingthe 1990 one ofhis investors. one. Intel Corp. co-founder Rob- Ensuing litigation Noyce, who died in 1990, ofert Noyce invested in Hyatt's Hyatt, who speaks softly in ten invested in Silicon Valley first company in the 1960s, ac- conversations, doesn't hesitate startups, said Thomas Misa, cordingto Hyatt. to fight. When California, where director of the Charles Bab"These were f undamental he oncelived,claimed he owed bage Institute Center for the technologies and even though $51 million in back taxes and History of Information Techthe industry has grown tremen- penalties, he shot back with a nology in Minneapolis, who dously, they are based on those lawsuit accusing state officials likened it to someone backing fundamental technologies," Hy- of harassing him and invasion a neighbor's ideas. Investing att, who stiII works in his private of privacy. He won a record with Hyatt would have been lab each day, said in an inter- $388 million award that's cur- consistent with his interests, view. "I suspect that my ideas rently being reviewed by Neva- he said. are still novel, even to this day." da's Supreme Court. Hyatt, who describes himself The patent office, which isHe has taken thepatent office as "at heart a frugal inventor," sued 302,948patents lastyear to court more than 10 times to said it's clear he will never be and receives more than 500,000 force the agency to reconsider placed in Silicon Valley's pannew requests annually, won't rejections of some of his appli- theon of founding fathers, even say what's in Hyatt's two pend- cations. He even won a case at with his 1990 patent. He just ing applications. the Supreme Court in 2012 over wants a decision — either give Because the filings are so old, what type of evidence can be him a patent, he said, or a rejecthey fall under a law that keeps presented in district court. tion that he can appeal in court. "I got a whole bunch of cases "I respect Gilbert Hyatt's them confidential, said Patrick Ross, a PTO spokesman. That referredback to the patent of- work — theprocess of engineermeans the office can't discuss fice telling them to do it right," i ng is difficult," B~ sa i d . them or even say how many said Hyatt. "I don't think they "But innovations are more than pendingpatent applications pre- want to let it get to the board ideas. The broader context matdate a 1995 change in the law, of appealsand therefore they ters. If Gilbert Hyatt had never Ross said. keep running me around fmm existed, I believe the microproAll Hyatt would say is that examination to appeal, reopen- cessor would have developed in he is fighting to get acknowl- ing prosecutions, examining, the same waythat it did."

edict XVI.

der diff erences occurs at all ting women's health at risk." stagesofresearch,from lab to Congress passed the 1993

times making the agency look bad duringyears of disputes. "It's totally unconscionable,"

said Brad Wright, a patent lawyer with Banner 8r Witcoff in

Washington who specializes in computer-related applications and isn't involved in Hyatt's case. "The patent office doesn't want to be embarrassed that

they might issue a broad patent that would have a sweeping impact on the technology sector. Rather than be embarrassed, they're justbottling it up."

'Fundamental technologies' No one is able to put a price tag on what licensing those two

patents would cost technology companies. Even Hyatt said he's not sure whether he would

replicate the shock of getting a patent in 1990 on a "single chip integrated circuit computer ar-

chitecture," a ruling that effectively gave him a financial daim to most microprocessors, the

digital backbone of every personal computer in the world. What is certain is that Hyatt

isn't some gadfly in a garden shei. He's probably made more than $150 million from a deal

daiming credit for one of the

Medical studies' male focus deemedharmful femalesare included, research-

Bloomberg News

ers fail to analyze and report results by sex, the authors said.

"We've got to do the work continue to neglect gender in m edical research,endangering and change the way science is women's health by focusing on done and translated to clinical males in studies that shape the care," Paula Johnson, executive treatment of disease, according director of the Connors Center, to a report released Monday. said in a telephone interview. The lack of attention to gendoctor's office, according to the

25.8 million in th e United States, have diabetes,

according to the World Health Organization. The 7ype 2 form, tied to excess sityrates rise.

The study provides "important new insights into

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

Bans

Other cities in Central Ore-

gon and throughout the state

Eggs

Continued fromA1 The marijuana industry, Olson said, told cities and counties: Trust me. "Many counties are willing to do just that," he said. But for those municipali-

are also tackling the issue.

Continued fromA1

ties that aren't, including Ma-

The city of Bend has taken a hands-off approach; 17 Deschutes County dispensaries

applied to register with the state Monday. Several proponents of the bill argued that without this

dras and Redmondin Central measure, local cities and Oregon, this measure would counties would b e f o rced a llow l ocal c o ntrol o v er to take the issue up in the whether to allow the dispen- courts, which would be costly saries in their towns. and time-consuming. House Republican LeadThe Senate passed the er Mike McLane, R-Powell measure, allowing for cities Butte, echoed Olson's senti- to have control over the time, ments, noting the vote would place and manner for operhave been timelyMonday, ating dispensaries but not since it was the first day the allowing for an outright ban. retail outlets could apply for Rep. Brian Clem, D-Salem, a license. said the holdup on the cur"We want local control," McLane said after the floor

rent version of the measure is

ries in 2013. Before that, several of the retail outlets were

come up with a version that

due to the "uncertain path in session. the Senate." House members The Legislature legalized say conversations are ongomedical marijuana dispensa- ing, and they are hoping to stands a chance of passing open but operated outside the the Senate. bounds of the law. The vote to delay the meaSeveral cities across the sure was 31-27. The House is state have passed bans expected to vote on the meaprohibiting them in t heir sure today. communities. If the bill passes the House, The city of Redmond is it would head to the Senate proposing adding a section to for a concurrence vote. If it its development code clarify- fails to pass the Senate, it ing that any business violat- would be sent to a conference ing state or federal law would committee. not be welcome. It's a move

— Reporter, 541-554-1162, Idake@bendbulletin.com

toward banning the outlets.

Facilities

and licenses that could be revoked, the state "didn't

Continued fromA1 He said he's been working

know whether a

with an attorney since Gov. John Kitzhaber signed HB

tient was at risk." T here aren't an y

3460 into law, making sure every aspect of his business — from the potency of his product to the num-

on the number of clinics that can receive licenses,

ber of security cameras in

1,000 feet of one another or a school.

his building — meets state requirements. "I've been planning for about seven months. I've taken it as a very slow, steady process," Harsell said. He employs two growers and two additional staff-

p r o duct

was safe or whether a pac aps

though HB 3460 does ban

them from operating within Bloom Well filed an application just minutes after the state started taking them at

8:30 a.m. Monday. J eremy Kwit, owner o f

the Bend dispensary, said he traveled to Salem once a

ers, and said he wants to be

month as the medical mari-

viewed like any other small business in Central Oregon.

juana dispensary rules were being written.

"I want to b e open be-

Kwit, 42, put his master's

cause there's nothing to hide," he said.

degree inbusiness admin-

Not everyone is on board,

istration to work, attending each meeting w it h f r e sh

though. Since the passage copies of the requirements of HB 3460, some cities and and making changes to counties are trying to crack his documents along with down. lawmakers. Redmond is considering He said the idea was to changing its development hear about any possible code to ban any businesses changes to the law the secthat violate federal law, and ond they were proposed and Deschutes County Sheriff take the right steps right Larry Blanton has asked away. "Everything we've been the county to consider the same. A change to county doing is in lock step with the code wouldn't override city rules as soon as we knew policies. them," Kwit s a id. "We've C ommunities such a s been complying to the greatMedford and Gresham have est extent possible since betaken similar steps to pre- fore we opened our doors." vent medical marijuana opBesides the $4,000 in aperations from popping up. plication fees, Kwit said he's It's uncertain how many paid $6,000 to install a lock more clinics are out there, and safe system and place how many will apply and security cameras throughwhich ones will be accepted. out his building on NorthMedical marijuana opera- east Division Street. tions looking for legal status Bloom Well opened in have to register with the state

December. Since then, Kwit

and pay $4,000 in application

said he's taken steps most other businesses wouldn't

and inspection fees. Tom Burns, director of

think of, contacting Bend

pharmacy programs for the Police, the Deschutes CounOregon Health A u thority, ty Sheriff's Office, city which oversees the Oregon councilors and county comMedical Marijuana Pro- missioners to let them know gram, said the push to give he's up and running. He said clinics clear legal standing he wants to keep an open is about separating the legit- dialogue with nearby busiimate businesses from ones nesses and residents. "Because these rules and whose owners have criminal backgrounds or whose regulations exist, aboveoperations could be a fronts board operators and profesfor illegal sales. sional managers like myself "The argument the Legis- are comfortable enteringinto lature used was that you've

the industry," Kwit said. "It's

got 200 of these businesses a very special time for all of currently operating without us who are trying to provide many rules or regulations," safe access to cannabis." h e s aid .

W i t h out s t a n -

dards for clinics to meet,

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

"These laws mise an import-

ant commerce dause question that affects many, many industries nationally, and I believe

the courts need to respond." California voters set new

standards for hen housing in 2008whentheyapproved aballot measure that imposed more generous living conditions for egg layers in their state. When producers complained that the measure created a compet-

itive disadvantage, the state legislature tacked on a law that mandated imported eggs be produced under the same standards. Those provisions, as well

Peter Dasilva/New YorkTimes News Service

as similar laws going into ef- Hens mingle in "colony cages" — which fulfill a California law that requires farmers to provide generfect in Michigan, Oregon and ous living conditions for chickens — at Dwight Bell Ranch in Atwater, Calif. Lawmakers in California Washington state and under are demanding of out-of-state farmers whosell eggs in California adhere to the samelaw, setting off a consideration elsewhere, in- feud over interstate commerce. spired a national proposal to require more space for laying hens across the country, ford the new housing systems. that th e C a lifornia d i strict last word on this analysis," he but Congress dropped it from Larger California producers courts and the 9th Circuit have said. "The U.S. Supreme Court the recently passed farm bill. also are reducing their flocks. not been particularly friendly is unlikely to allow a state to Lawmakers and some compa- JS West, forinstance,isreduc- to this sort of assertion we're put this type of trade barrier in nies have been responding to ing its flock to 1.4 million birds making here, but I also have place in the agricultural arena consumer pressure (induding from 1.8 million, which will cut confidence that will not be the or any other arena." from several colleges) forbetter production to 12 million eggs treatment of animals raised for

from 19 million.

food. The state's egg producers have already spent millions of dollars installing "colony cages," like those in two ofthe

Today, there are roughly 26 million laying hens in the

six barns at JS West and Cos.' Dwight Bell Ranch in Atwater.

state, about 12 million fewer than it needs to meet demand

— which is why it imports eggs from states like Missouri.

thanks from the heart,

According to Koster's lawsuit,

On a recent visit, white leghorn about 540 million of the state's hens craned their necks out of approximately 1.5 billion eggs the cages to stare and cluck at end up in California. strangers, then withdrew to the Already, Arnie Riebli, head safety of perches or the priva- of the Association of California cy of the laying nest, neither of Egg Farmers, and other prowhich are available in conven- ducers, said retailers insisted tionalcages. There are about 60 on pricing eggs from hens livhens in each cage. ing in colony cages as if they The colony cages are about were cage-f ree and specialty the size of a Ford F-150 pickup eggs, even though the new systruck's flatbed, while about 90 tems are estimated to add only percent of the nation's roughly about apenny to the cost of pro280 million laying hens are still ducing an egg — the hens eat in battery cages about as big as more but are slightly more proa filing-cabinet drawer. Califor- ductive and have a somewhat nia's egg producers have inter- lower mortality rate. "We have no influence over preted their state's laws, which go into effect Jan. 1 next year, what they charge, but if more to require 116square inches per eggs are produced this way, bird, compared to the industry then the price is going to come standard 67 square inches. down," Riebli said. "It's simple JS West and Cos., a fami- supply and demand." ly-ownedbusinessthat features Riebli noted that federal a "Hens Live" camera feed on courts in California in general its website so customers can have ruled in favor of animal view their birds' living con- welfare advocatesin othercasditions, has spent more than es challenging state laws aimed $6 million installing the new at the humane treatment of cages. Jill Benson, senior vice livestock. Most recently, the 9th president, said she believed U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals eventually all chickens across upheld a California law prohibthe country would be raised iting sale in the state of any foie in such conditions. "For us, it gras produced by force-feeding was a decision to invest in the birds, which was challenged future," said Benson, whose as a violation of the interstate great-grandfather, James Stew-

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and at least three other states — Nebraska, Arkansas and the

nation's largest egg producer, Iowa — are considering supporting its lawsuit, according

-

to representatives of their attor-

neys general. Egg producers are warning

-

that Californians, who con-

sumed an estimated 9 billion eggs last year, will almost certainly face higher prices as a result of the rules' import restrictions and effect on in-state

producers. "Come Jan. 1, I'm fairly convinced there is going to be a fairly large shortage of eggs in California," said David Cisneros, chief operating officer of Dakota Layers, a large egg production company headquartered in South Dakota. Cisneros, who is based in

Los Angeles where the company has its cage-free and other specialty egg business, previously worked for MoArk, the egg division of Land O' Lakes,

ftealtor of the Vear

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TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

IN FOCUS: UKRAINIAN CRISIS

e in warnin s, ussias ren ens ri By David IIIlcHugh end Dalton Bennett The Associated Press

KIEV, Ukraine — Russian troops said to be 16,000 strong

tightened their stranglehold on Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula Monday, openly defying the U.S. and the European Union and rattling world capitals and

tional unily government," Lav- as nonsense but refused to rov said of the fledgling new elaborate. administration in Kiev, "a govIn Washington, the State ernment of the victors has been Department warned of a "dancreated." gerous escalation" and said the The latest flashpoint came U.S. would hold Moscow directwhen Ukrainian authorities ly accountable for any threat to said Russian troops had issued Ukraine's navy. an ultimatum for two of the Russia is "on the wrong side besieged country's warships to ofhistory" in Ukraine, President surrender or be seized. Barackobamasaid, addingthat "I call on the leadership of the continued military action would Russian Federation. Stop the be "a costly proposition for Rusaggression, stop the provoca- sia." Speaking to reporters in tions, stop the piracy! These are the Oval Office, Obama said the crimes, andyou will be called to U.S. was considering economaccount for them," said acting ic and diplomatic options that

Ijkraine's east-west divide

Much of western Ukraine advocates closer ties with the EuropeanUnion, while eastern and southern regions look to Russia for support. The stark east-west divide wasevident in Viktor Yanukovych's 2010 presidential election runoff victory over Yulia Tymoshenko. UKRAINIANS WHO SPEAK RUSSIAN 2010 UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Percentage of population

Tymoshenko

1-10% 1 0 -20%

0-2 5 % 25-50% 50%+ 0 - 2 5% 25-50% 50%+

2 0-40% 40-80% 8 0% +

M a rgin of victory

Yan u kovych

stock markets.

The West struggled to find a wayto get Russiatoback down,

RUSSIA

BELARUS

but with little beyond already

threatened diplomatic and economic sanctions, global markets fell sharply over the prospect of violent upheaval in the heart of Europe. For its part, Moscow reiterat-

ed its price for ending the crisis: restorat ion of a deal reached with the opposition less than

two weeks ago to form a national unily government in Kiev that r epresents pro-Russian

as well as Ukrainian interests, with new elections to be held by

December. Ukraine, meanwhile, accused Russia ofpiracy for blocking two of the besieged country's warships and ordering them to surrender orbe

seized. The U.S. originally estimated that 6,000 Russian troops

were dispatched to Crimea, but Ukraine's mission to the United Nations said Monday that

RUSSIA

BELARUS

'Ii o iev

UKRAINE

UKR

E

Ukraiinan President Oleksandr

would isolate Russia, and called

Turchynov. on Congress to work on an aid "The commanders andcrews package for Ukraine. are ready to defend their ships. Still, it was not dear what the ' 0 100mi 0 100 mi They are defending Ukraine," West could do to make Russia CRIMEA CRIMEA 'Iitrchynov said in a televised retreat. The dearest weapon at address to the nation after a mil- the disposal of the U.S. and the Sources: Ukrainian census; Ukraine Central Election Commission AP itary spokesman said Ukraine's EU appeared to be sanctions corvette Ternopil and c om- that would freeze Russian aslin might carry out more land signed to deepen the trade rela- elections and surrender some mand ship Slavutych were sets and pull the plug on multigrabs in pro-Russian eastern tionship between the two coun- powers. Yanukovych fled the being blocked by four Russian billion-dollar deals with Russia. Ukraine. tries. Lacking authorization to country after sealing the pact navy ships in the Crimean port Late Monday, the EU threatU.S.Secretary ofState John speak publicly about the trade with the opposition and foreign of Sevastopol. ened to freeze visa liberalizaKerry was headed to Kiev in meetings, the official requested ministers of France, Germany V ladimir A n i kin, a R u s - tion and economic cooperation an expressionof support for anonymity. and Poland. sian defense ministry spokes- talks and boycott the G-8 sum"Instead of a promised na- man, dismissed the accusation mit in Russia later this year. Ukraine's sovereignty, and the But it was Russia that apEU threatened a raft of puni- pearedtobedrivingthe agenda. tive measures as it called an Foreign Minister Sergey emergency summit for Thurs- Lavrov said at a U.N. Human day. The Pentagon said it was Rights Council session in Genesuspending exercises and other va that Ukraine should return activities with the Russian mil- to an agreement signed last • 7 itary, and a senior U.S. official month by pro-Russian ~si• relatLI II 1UAlrry said the U.S. would not move dent Viktor Yanukovych — but

16,000 had been deployed. That stoked fears that the Krem- forward wit h

Tf y Z

m e etings de- not Moscow — to hold early

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Ukraine Continued from A1 As darkness fell, the mat-

tressesappeared amid widespreadtalk of a 5 a.m. Tuesday ultimatum issued by the

Russians to clear the vessel. Russia's official news agency denied any such ultimatum

had been issued, but residents of the nearby Severnaya district of Sevastopol clustered

near the vessel nonetheless, worried that hostilities would erupt.

Five miles away, Rear Adm. Sergey Gaichuk took over earlier Monday as the new com-

Andrew Lubimov/The Associated Press

Ukrainian seamen stand guard Monday on the Ukrainian navy ship

mander of Ukraine's slender Slavutych in the harbor of Sevastopol. The ship is one of two the fleet— a naval force carved Ukrainian navy hes there. out of the Soviet Black Sea

fleet and far inferior to that of the Russians, who have a lease on Sevastopol until 2042.

surrounding region, as what largely seemed like a phan-

Clearly apprehensive after his predecessor Denys Berezovsky lasted barely a day in office before joining

tom war fueled both dread and

the Russians, the admiral de-

clared himself "on the side of the Ukrainian people," and loyal to acting President OleksandrZltrchynov.

Local reporters and a handful offoreigners were admitted into the command head-

quarters of the Ukrainian navy, a collection of white and

blue buildings on the outskirts of Sevastopol.The reporters had to pass a cordon of six

armed men clad in khaki who spoke Russian and seemed torn by their guard post duty, turning to avoid cameras and casting their eyes low beneath their helmets.

Inside, Capt. Andrei Ryzhenko, 45, expressed the agony of Ukrainians now facing potential conflict with their more powerful Russian counterparts, recalling that they

had cooperated perfectly in severalexercises and projects

involving all nations bordering the Black Sea. "We are a little bit shocked,"

the captain said. "We worked next to each other, we studied together." It was barely credi-

ble that such closeness could fall apart in the space of a week, he said.

That feeling was widespread in Sevastopol and the

~r.gg

they insisted was an expected Russian assault. Power had

been cut, the men said. disbelief. A group of their wives and One woman who had no daughters blocked the gate, doubt that the appearance of kissing their husbands and mysterious armed forces in looking with hostility and apher town was nothing but bad prehension at a small group of news was Elmira Ablyalimo- pro-Russian women nearby. va, 39, who confronted camouAt other m i l i tary b a ses flage-clad soldiers around the throughout the p eninsula, Ukrainian military base in her tight-lipped soldiers p r ehometown Bakhchysaray. sumed to be Russian special She sought their c om- forces, without identifying m ander after a cluster of his insignia and carrying large soldiers, their guns draped automatic w e apons, s t ood overflak jackets or propped at the gates, preventing anyagainst trees, drank w ater one from coming in or out. just a few feet away from local Self-proclaimed defense milichildren playing in a primitive tias, in plainclothes but wearplayground on the edge of the ing red or black and orange small base. a rmbands, stood in a l i n e , "Please, I am begging you," creating a barrier in front of she beseeched the command- the soldiers. er, a silent man who had deIn some cases, crowds gathscended from a military trans- ered with Russian flags and port truck. "You're a hand- signs denouncing the new prosome young man,you must visional government in Kiev have a wife, and children, and as "fascist." Many also exparents, a family of your own. pressed strong anti-American We don't need you here in our views. town to protect us." Ksenia Kaluzhnaya, 40, He listened for several min- who stood in one such crowd utes then moved away, she outside the headquarters of sald. Ukrainian Naval Base A-0225 The same kind of t ired in downtown Sevastopol, said nerves were on display at a there was no desire for viosmall base in Lubimovka, near lence, but that Crimeans were Sevastopol, where about 200 defending their identity. " We don't w ant a w a r ," Ukrainian soldiers had dug in behind sandbags on the mani- Kaluzhnaya said. "We want cured lawns of the base. Many Sevastopol as it is, as it was smoked; some did not appear and always will be: a Russian to have weapons to resist what city."

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

LOOKING AHEAD: CARTELS

War deaths top 13,000 inAfghan securi forces

After 'El Chapo' arrest, focus turns to next boss

By Rod Nordiand

firmed on Monday that 4,551

New York Times News Service

The numbers also reflect an soldiers and police officers increased tempo to the con- wounded. KABUL, A f ghanistan flict. More clashes have taken Previously, Afghan minisMore than 13,000 Afghan sol- place as insurgents test the tries in charge of police offidiers and police officers have government forces, without as cers and soldiers had released been killed during the war much fear of intervention from incomplete information on here, far more than previously the American-led coalition as death tolls, and in the past year known, according to Afghan it prepares to withdraw. had stopped doing so entirely. government statistics. A statement released late Known fatalities for the army Most of those losses oc- Sunday by President Hamid had been estimated at 3,546, curredduring the past three Karzai's Cabinet, the Council and for the police at 6,890, up years as Afghan forces took of Ministers, put the total num- through June 2013. over agrowing share ofthe re- ber of people in the Afghm seA spokesman for the Afsponsibility for security in the curity forces killed during the ghan Ministry of Defense, country, culminating in full past 13 years at 13,729, with Gen. Dawlat Waziri, respondAfghan authority last spring. an additional 16,511 Afghan ing to the Cabinet report, con-

Afghan soldiers had been past three years. killed through March 20, 2013. Before 2010, both police and But he said the ministry did military casualties were relanot have figures for the cur- tively few, reflecting the small rent Afghan year, which ends size of the Afghan security March 20, 2014. forces, and the higher proporThe Cabinet figures indud- tion of the fighting carried out ed most of this year as well, by NATO and U.S. troops. For according to a Cabinet official, instance, in 2009, roughlytwice but didnot distinguishbetween as many coalition soldiers were soldiers andpolice officers. killed as Afghan soldiers, based While there was as yet no

casualties occurred during the

on datacompiled by the Brook-

complete breakdown year by year, there is little doubt that

ings nstitution and icasualties. org, a website that collects data

most of the increase in Afghan

onwar casualties.

By Richard Fausset and Richard A. Serrano Tribune Washington Bureau

MEXICO CITY — With the arrest of Sinaloa cartelboss Joa-

quin "ElChapo" Guzman, the leadership of Mexico's largest and most sophisticated illegal drug operation has most likely transferred to Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, a66-year-old former

farmer with a knack for business — and maintaining a low profile. Like his predecessor, Zambada is a country boy made good who hails from the badlands of Sinaloa, the traditional heart of

Mexican drug-smuggling culture. Though he has enjoyed less publicity than Guzman, he has long been considered a high-level target for U.S. and Mexican authorities, who have managedtonab anumber ofhis family members and dose associates in recent years. Now that pressure is likely to increase substantially. As long as Zambada remains

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ftee, however, dose observers of the Mexican drug world will be

analyzingthe little thatisknown about his style in an effort to

divine the future for his global drug empire. They will also be attuned to Zambada's person-

al history — particularly his longtime business alliance with Guzman. The current Mte of

more

that partnership couldbethedifference between a smooth succession within the Sinaloa cartel

and a bloody ~ r i n g of what has long been a loose-knit and

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

BRIEFING

OU Ol

Meet principal candidates Bend-La Pine Schools has invited community members to meet the candidates for principal of Three Rivers Elementary School at 5 p.m. today at the school in Sunriver. The four finalists are Tim Broadbent, vice principal at Lincoln Middle School in Cottage Grove; Jeff Byrnes, principal of Canyon Breeze School in Avondale, Ariz.; David Cory, principal of Maywood Middle School in Corning, Calif.; and Joshua Marks, studentservices coordinator at Three Rivers. Principal GayleVidal is retiring at the endof the school year after a decade with the district. The new principal will start the job July1.

Flahe settles lawsuit

OO

By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty has settled another lawsuit with a

county employee who alleges he discriminated against her and violated her freedom of

speech. Trial assistant Nicole Jenson in April 2012 filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Eu-

gene, alleging Flaherty made changes toher schedule that

caused her hardship. Jenson alleged the changes came in retaliation for her participation in the office's unionization

efforts, because of her sex and her family relationships and because Flaherty was upset

L

that Jenson's mother-in-law

had decided to resign from her position at the DA's office.

Man leads police in car chase A Bend manwas arrested Sundayafternoon after leading police on a short car chase, the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office said. Brian Fee,48, was arrested on suspicion of attempting to elude, reckless driving, reckless endangerment and probation violation after he fled from asheriff's deputy attempting to pull him over. Around 2 p.m., a sheriff's deputy observed Feedriving a 1995 Saturn sedannear Brookswood Boulevard in Southwest Bend.Fee was a knownwanted suspect, and thedeputy signaled him to pull over. Fee did not pull over and instead spedaway, leading the deputy on a short car chasethrough a residential area. Later, Feefled from his car on foot. Police later found him hiding behind a shop. Hewas arrested and takento Deschutes County Jail. An unknown passenger was also seen running from Fee'svehicle, but police say the personis nota danger to the public.

Immigration reform tour Bend First Presbyterian Church hosted various community members and organizations from Central Oregon on Monday evening aspart of a national bus tour to highlight immigration reform. The Fast for Families Across America Bus Tour is traveling 14,212 miles and visiting 100 congressional districts across the U.S.to begin dialogue with congressional leaders andconstituents about passing immigration reform. The stop in Bendwas sponsored by Oregon immigrant rights organizat ionCausa,among others, and hoped toallow members of the 2nd Congressional District to talk to bus riders and learn more about the cause.

Jenson alsoallegedthat the county and Flaherty to-

gether retaliated against her Roh Kerr/The Bulletin

Pedestrians use a walkway between a large puddle and the Deschutes River on Monday near Riverbend Park and the William Smith Properties off-leash dog area. Precipitation and temperatures from freezing to the mid-50's are forecast for the rest of the week.

HAPPENED TO ... •

PHIL'S TRAILHEAD RENOVATION

is enew ar e ral over

Oi'

• Legal challenges to the nearby Phil's Trailheali let changes U.S. Forest Service plans to overhaul the parking lot at Phil's city water projecthavestalled work The Trailhead off Skyliners Roadnext spring. Features include: By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Deschutes National Forest officials say they still plan to renovate Phil's Trailhead west of Bend, with

• 76 parking spots, including three ADAspots • Possible asphalt parking surface

In Alfalfa, rogresson re district By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

With two months before

Alfalfa's rural fire district officially forms, and nearly a year before it collects any funds, supporters are racing to put the pieces of a new fire

department together. It hasn't been easy, and board members said the dis-

~.;— :,;:~~:..'/ P".

trict probably won't be fighting fires until 2015. But the rural, unincorporat-

ed community 16 miles east of Bend has lacked adequate

the work now set for spring 2015. The project was originally supposed to start in 2013, then rescheduled to this year, but it was delayed by legal challenges to the city of Bend's Bridge Creek water project. Last month, a federal judge denied a request by a pair of conservation groups — Central Oregon

fire protection for years, with

no city or county agency assigned to the area. Two board members said

in recent days they're making progress, though major hur-

LandWatch and WaterWatch of Oregon — to halt

dles remain.

the city's installation of a water pipeline under Skyliners Road. Staging is already underway, and the

SeeAlfalfa/B5

city plans to start the installation next week.

The Forest Service and Deschutes County are waiting for the city to install the pipeline before starting their own construction projects. The Forest Service

t

plans to reconstruct Phil's Trailhead while Deschutes County plans to repave about 9 miles of Skyliners "It will be a busy couple of years on Skyliners," said Amy Tinderholt, recreation team leader for the Bend-Fort Rock Ranger District of the Deschutes

National Forest. See Phil's /B5

Source: U.S. Forest Service

Andy Zeigert l The Bulletin

BRIDGE CREEK WATER PROJECT

The Bulletin

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

The city of Bend plans to have a groundbreaking ceremony next week for

STATE NEWS Portland Corvallis

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

A sign notifies motorists of activity on Skyliners Road, where work is set to begin next week on the Bridge Creek

drugsto students By Shelby R. King

Work set to begin oncontested project

water supply project.

2accused

of selling

Road betweenBend and the Skyliner Sno-park.

— Bul/etinstaff reports

• Purtluud:Cover Oregon andOracle reach atransition agreement,B3 • Curvullis:Polk County ranch failed in alpaca boom and bust,B3

decidedto reportwhatshebelieved was Flaherty's misuse of a law information database. The county was later removed from the lawsuit. SeeSettlement/B2

Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit beudbulletiu.com/updates

nn

as a whistle-blower after she

The full project, which has been stalled by lawsuits, includes replacement of water intake equipment at Bridge Creek and the

the oft-delayed Bridge installation of one newpipe Creek water supply project. to replace two old ones.U.S. Staging for the instalDistrict Judge Ann Aiken lation of about 7 miles of is still weighing a lawsuit pipeline under Skyliners brought in November by Bend-based Central OreRoad has already begun and steel pipe should arrive gon LandWatch and PortThursday, said Heidi Lans- land-based WaterWatch of downe, project manager Oregon, a pair of conservafor the city. tion groups, that could stop "So we are starting right the updates to the water now," she said Monday. intake and the installation "We have a lot of equipof the pipeline under and ment and material to move along Itunalo Creek. e SeeBridgeCreek/B5

Two Bend residents were

arraigned Monday in Deschutes County Circuit Court on allegations they were selling illegal drugs to local high school students. Jeremy Burkett, 28 and

Jameson Williams, 30, appeared in Judge Roger Dehoog's courtroom via video from jail. Prosecuting attorney Kandy Gies said in court that Burkett was "caught

selling marijuana at Marshall High School." It is undear whether the

alleged sales were made on school grounds or nearby, and it's unknown whether the

allegedsalesoccurred during school hours, but Bend-La Pine Communication Director

JulianneRepman said Monday visitors are required to check in

at the office and school staff is trainedto question anyperson not wearing a visitor badge. SeeDrugs/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

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

relevance to our society of today; performance transmitted live in free, reservation requested; noon-1 high definition; $24, $22 seniors, p.m.; Central Oregon Community $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT:A College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 screening of the 2013 documentary College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; "Gasland II" about oil industry 541-312-2901. TEXAS HOLD'EMPOKER fracking; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First "THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS": A Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth TOURNAMENTFUNDRAISER: Featuring dinner, beverages, prizes screening of the 2001 film directed St., Bend; 541-815-6504. and raffles; proceeds benefit the by WesAnderson,witha costume SUMMIT EXPRESSJAZZ BAND: medical expenses of two employees contest; free; 7 p.m.; The Old Stone, Celebrate Mardi Gras with Dixieland with cancer; $50 to play, $20 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541jazz; $4 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors suggested donation to watch; 322-7273 or www.bit.ly/WAnders. open 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 5:30-10 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery 8 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 VIASOL:The funk-fusion band Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., or www.towertheatre.org. performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Bend; 541-382-9242 or www.j.mp/ Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. MARDI GRAS/FATTUESDAY HoldCancer. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or MASQUERADE PARTY: Costumes, "CROSSINGTHEBLVD: King cakes, prizes and live music; $5; STRANGERS,NEIGHBORS, ALIENS www.mcmenamins.com. 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. IN A NEWAMERICA": Judith Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or Sloan presents the human stories www.volcanictheatrepub.com. of the reasons why immigrants THURSDAY and refugees have migrated to the U.S; free; 6 p.m.; Central Oregon LATE MODELRACE CAR VIEWING: Community College, Hitchcock View a race car signed by Central WEDNESDAY Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Oregon veterans or sign it if you are Bend; 541-383-7412. a veteran; T-shirt sales benefit race THE CHANGINGFACE OF AMERICA: IMMIGRATIONTHEN "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: car maintenance; free; 8 a.m.; Elks AND NOW: Actor and author Judith PRINCE IGOR"ENCORE:A Lodge, 151 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5304 or kim.phillipp© Sloan discussesher performance presentation of Borodin's Russian of "Crossing the BLVD" and its epic about a conflicted hero; opera co.crook.or.us.

TUESDAY

Settlement Continued from B1

her old schedule back" sooner than it was to take the case to a trial by jury.

Court documents filed Feb. 20 indicate the parties have

Flaherty has agreed to set-

This is th e t h ir d l awsuit

reached a settlement. Jenson's tle since he took office. In attorney, Beth Ann Creighton January an agreement was of Portland-based Creighton reached between Flaherty & Rose PC, said Monday the and former investigator Shadocuments have not yet been ron Sweet, who alleged she finalized and declined to say was discriminated against how much the settlement is and wrongly fired from her for. Creighton said they did not job. Sweet's Portland-based make a demand for a certain attorney, Charese Rohny, dollar amount. She expects said the settlement should the settlement to become final be finalized next week and she'll able to disclose the dolearly next week. Flaherty denied the bulk lar amount. Sweet originally of the lawsuit in an answer asked for $22.4 million. Forto Jenson's complaint filed in mer Deputy D i strict A t torJune 2013. He did not respond neys Phil Duong, Brentley Monday to a r e quest for a Foster and Jody Vaughan in comment on the lawsuit. July 2013 settled for $710,000. Jenson is still employed by The trio originally asked for the DA's office and Creighton $22 million, alleging wrongful said she agreed to a settle- termination. ment in part because "it was more important to her to have

— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletirLcom

Drugs

school, possession of marijuavolved high school students," na, possession of a Schedule I Beekman said. controlled substance and two The officer doing the in- counts of delivering a Schedvestigation got a search war- ule I controlled substance. rant for Burkett's Olney AveWilliams is charged with nue address. five counts of delivering mar"Officers located marijua- ijuana to a minor, six counts na packaged for sale, over of delivering marijuana withtwo ounces of processed marijuana, 'medibles' or these drug transactions in-

Contlnued from B1 "We have no knowledge of this person ever being on school grounds," Repman sald. B urkett

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. NATHANIELTALBOT:Thefolk-pop artist performs, with Jeffery Martin demonstrations andmore; $10,$5 and Anna and the Underbelly; $10; ages 6-16, freeages5 and younger, 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., $15 for a two-day pass; noon-8 Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fairand belfryevents.com. Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, "THE WORLD GOES'ROUND": Redmond; 503-552-5003 or www. A play about celebrating life and OTshows.com. the fighting spirit; $22, $19 for "FOOTLOOSETHE MUSICAL": studentsandseniors;7:30 p.m .;2nd The Redmond High School drama Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette department presents its winter Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or musical; $12, $10 seniors in www.2ndstreettheater.com. advance; $15, $12 seniors at the door; $8students;7 p.m.;Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs. FRIDAY redmond.k12.or.us. LATINO DANCE FESTIVAL: Learn BURNING QUESTIONSAND BEER Latin dances invarious workshops; WITH LINSEYCORBIN:A Q-and-A with the Ironman Champion; free, proceeds benefit Latino Club reservation requested; 7 p.m.; scholarships; $5 per day;; Central FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; Bend; 541-317-3568 or www. 541-318-3726. footzonebend.com/events. HANZ ARAKIDUO:The Portland CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S Celtic band performs; free; 7 p.m.; SHOW:Featuring vendors and CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring vendors and resources for outdoor recreation, a head and horns competition, a kids' trout pond, camp cooking

a n d Wi l l i a ms

were arrested Sunday after tips from concerned citizens,

according to a news release from Sgt. Brian Beekman. An investigating officer identified Burkett as having sold marijuana and psilocybin mushrooms to minors over the last month, Beek-

c annabis-infused

food s ,

drug proceeds, psilocybin mushrooms and other items used to assist in the packag-

ing and distribution of controlled substances," Beek-

man said. man said. "Using a variety of invesBurkett is charged with tigative techniques, Jameson five counts of delivering Williams was also identified marijuana to a m i nor, six as a co-conspirator, and it counts of delivering mariwas determined many of juana within 1,000feet of a

Arts SrEntertainment ••

TheBulletin

Ia a aaznlr

resources for outdoor recreation, a head andhorns competition, a kids' trout pond, camp cooking demonstrations and more; $10, $5

ages 6-16, freeages5 and younger,

$15 for a two-day pass; noon-8 p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fairand Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503-552-5003 or www. OTshows.com. FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and foodindowntown Bend andthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. HONGKONGBANANA:Garage rock from a member of Hillstomp; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's FeetCommons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066 or www.crowsfeetcommons.com. "FOOTLOOSETHE MUSICAL": The Redmond High School drama department presents its winter musical; $12, $10 seniors in advance; $15, $12 seniors at the door;$8students;7 p.m.;Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs. redmond.k12.or.us.

in 1,000 feet of a school, pos-

session of marijuana and two counts of delivering a Schedule I controlled substance. Both Burkett and Williams

were conditionally released from jail Monday. — Reporter: 541-383-0376 sking@bendbulletin.com

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TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

over re onan r ace en er ransi ion a reemen

AROUND THE STATE Warning On e-Cigarette datterieS — Thelithiumbatteries that power the vaporizers in electronic cigarettes havecausedtwo recent fires in Medford, and fire officials say users should becareful with the newly popular devices. "Some of the batteries are failing in them or they arebeing overcharged," said Fire Marshal GregKleinberg. In one case, hesaid, a mattress caught fire but a resident put it out. Last week, ane-cigarette exploded while being charged, sending bits of burning battery flying into the ceiling andwalls, he said.

•Theexchangeagreestoreleasepayments it had beenwithholding from its contractor

White SuPremaCiSt murder trial — A whitesupremacist

by Cover Oregon that it's lic can sign up for health inreached a transition agree- surance in one sitting through ment with Oracle. The state a marketplacerequired under agreed to pay $44 million of President Barack Obama's the nearly $70 million it was health care law. By Gosia Wozniacka have insurance under the fed- withholding. Cover Oregon Cover Oregon said that unThe Associated Press eral health care law. said it will continue to with- der the transition agreement, "It has become increasingly hold $25.6 million that Oracle Oracle will provide services PORTLAND — O r egon's troubled health i nsurance clear that we may not be able Corp. has billed for technol- during o pen e n r ollment, exchange said Monday it to have the public portion of ogy development work from which ends March 31. The will pay its main technology the website operational for September 2013 through Feb. contractor will also provide "transition services, maintecontractor much of the mon- the current enrollment peri- 28, 2014. ey it's been withholding in od," Kitzhaber said in a stateThe state has already paid nance and repairs." payments, in exchange for ment following Cover Ore- the Redwood City, Calif., The exchange's acting diOracle's promise to continue gon's announcement. "While company more than $90 mil- rector, Bruce Goldberg, said working with the state during I am deeply disappointed in lion in federal funds for build- the agreement covers two a transition period. the technology's performance ing the exchange. It stopped months, in anticipation of a M eanwhile, G o v . Jo h n to date, we must do every- payments after the exchange possible federal extension of Kitzhaber expressed pessi- thing possible to ensure that website failed to go live Oct. 1 the open enrollment period, m ism about the prospects for we continue to enroll Orego- and serious problems with the which hasn't yet been anCover Oregon and Oracle fin- nians through ou r c u r rent site's coding came to light. nounced. Goldberg said no ishing the website before the process." Oregon is the only state that further development work end of March, when nearly Kitzhaber's statement folstill doesn't have an online would be done during those all Americans are required to lowed the announcement portal where the general pub- two months.

accused of a Northwest crime spreethat claimed four lives has accepted legal help less than two months after winning the right to represent himself at his upcoming trial, his lawyers said Monday. Court-appointed attorneys Renee Manes and Richard Wolf confirmed in phone interviews that they areagain representing David "Joey" Pedersen. Pedersen, 32, andHolly AnnGrigsby, 28, areawaiting trial on federal charges of kidnapping, carjacking and murder. Theyare accused of killing a man on the Oregon coast and another in Northern California. Pedersen previously pleadedguilty to murder in the slaying of his father and stepmother in Everett, Wash.

Ballot measures dropped — Publicemployeeunionsandantiunion petitioners agreedMonday to acease-fire on competing ballot measures, avoidinganexpensiveandbruisingshowdown between unions and business interests. Thedecision is a coup for Gov.John Kitzhaber, whohasworked for more than ayear to get businessand labor interests to movepast their acrimonious 2010 fight over two measures that raised taxes oncorporations and thewealthy. Hehopes to eventually broker acompromise that would have both sides support a wide-ranging tax-reform effort designed to reduceOregon's heavy reliance on personal incometaxes to fund schools and state government, but the ballot measures threatened to poison thewaters. — From wire reports

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PENDLETON

-

enforcement authorities as still puzzled about Chang's motive.

Al-

"I don't think even he can

though he talked freely about how he committed

answer that," said Police Chief

the crimes, it's still unclear

Stuart Roberts. "If he could, he

would have."

By Erik Lacitis

why a Marine deserter from California fatally stabbed

The Seattle Times

an Eastern Oregon mo-

tel maid and beat another woman with a metal pipe, an investigator says. Lukah Chang pleaded guilty in January and has

CORVALLIS — Here, at the

large-animal hospital at Oregon State University, in stalls

with wood shavings on the ground, are the alpacas that look at you with those innocent

I

There are 15 that need spethat are well enough to be in outdoor pens in a field owned by the school. On this afternoon last week,

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cial care, and an additional 160

)

Plan Well, Retire Well

also reported on an interviewwith Chang's sister, the East Oregonian (http://bit. Iy/IhYD5MP) described law

I

J

I

been sentenced to life in prison for the two attacks that unnerved Pendleton. In an extensive story that

eyes. They evoke even more sympathy from o bservers who know what they've gone through. According to authorities, they were starving to death.

s

'i

W+) '

Q RE G Q N

Shari Bond andJackie Glover have driven down from Teni-

G

no, Thurston County, to begin Steve Ringman/The Seattle Times finding homes for the 175 ema- Little White pokes its head out from under its emaciated mom at ciated alpacas that were seized Oregon State University's veterinary school, where175 alpacas by the Polk County Sheriff's rescued from a ranch in Polk County are being cared for.

0

M

M

U

N

IT Y

® IN V E S T M E N T S E R V I C E S

Office, southwest of Portland.

It's the biggest job ever for the nonprofit Cross Creek Alpaca Rescue, which the two

women founded four years ago. "Look, you can see her backbone; it's two fingers," says Bond. Bond means that this alpaca

lip mania of the early 1600s in paca business, "You have to be which people mortgaged their independently wealthy. It has homes to invest in the bulbstobe a labor oflove." an unsustainable enterprise. 'We're doing whatwe can'

L idtimes atone ranch Lt. Jeff Isham detailed what

Polk County deputies found in is so gaunt that even after more December at the ranch owned than a month of being fed by by Jocelyn and Robert Silver: the Sheriffs Office, her spine 16 dead alpacas, and an addiis still protruding, when in a tional 20 that later died because healthy animal it wouldn't. they were in suchbad shape. But at least it's better than in Forensic testing indicated late December, when the sher- many had died of starvation, iff got a court order and took says Isham. over the alpacas at Jocelyn's Each of the Silvers has been Alpaca Ranch in nearby Falls charged with 16 counts of misCity. demeanoranimal neglect and Bond saw the alpacas at that two counts of felony animal time, and she says some had neglect. They have pleaded not backbones that stuck up four guilty. inches, "and you could see ribs When contacted by phone, and hip bones." Robert Silver, 73, says he has The sight of alpacas is famil- receipts to show the animals iar to those taking a country had been fed hay. drive in the Pacific Northwest. Silver says he and his wife Washington and Oregon, got into the alpaca business af-

the U.S. fromthe Peruvian high

It is Bond who found out called the veterinary school for

help. "I can't stress enough how much she's helped," says Lt. Jeff Isham. With feed costs, vet costs,

alpacabusiness tothe Dutchtu-

e•

removal of the dead animals

and even having to buy freezers to store some autopsied alpacas for trial, the sheriffs

departmenthad spent $16,000, a big sum for an agency going through layoffs. Grants and donations have defrayed most of those costs, says Isham.

I ~ I

•.

At the university, says Chris

• •

~

I '

I

Cebra, a professor of large-animal medicine, "We're doing what we can." He is donating

ter she went to a livestock show

of 50-some animals, which av-

plains in the mid-1980s. The an- eragesoutto $6,400 an animal. imals were touted for their lus- That still was considerably betrous, hypoallergenic fiber. low average auction prices that M oney was to be made, not included high-end alpacas. just in the fleece, but with the Then, with building a barn, big profits in breeding stock feed costs at $36,000 a year as that reached into the tens of the herd grew and other exthousands of dollars per ani- penses, he says the couple was mal. In 2005, industry figures in it for $750,000. "It was our life's savings," showed the average auction pricefor a female alpaca was says Silver. around $70,000, and for a male H e says the t heory w as in the low $30,000s. that if a $7,500 female alpaca A TV commercial around (which average higher prices) then by the industry featured gave birth to a female baby, a retirement-age couple having that baby would sell for $7,500. "We never were able to sell coffeeand happily watching any," says Silver. their herd of alpacas. The wife says, "I step out the By last year, they were refront door and I'm at work ... duced to selling females at It's a wonderful business." $1,000 each. The bubble had But one agricultural eco- burst, at least for them. nomics expert has likened the

isproud to sponsor acom plimentaryseminar hosted by the Oregon Communitylnvestment Services Team and LPL Financial.

about the plight of the animals, contacted the sheriff, and then

his time, and for students, he says, it's a valuable experience. 16,000 registered alpacas, are and became enamored with Still, he says, there are second and third in alpaca pop- them. unavoidable costs, from the ulation in the U.S. (Ohio is No. Beginning in 2005 to 2006, $5,000 spent on castrating 70 1 with 28,000). Silver says that eventually, the male alpacas before they go to The first alpacas arrived in couple spent $320,000 for a total their new homes, to lab tests

with respectively 20,000 and

Oregon Community Credit Union

Now, he says about those

I • •

• •

and vaccinations. On this afternoon, Bond and

I'

.

Glover take a look at the alpac•

as at the hospital to see which

canbe trucked to newhomes. A brown-haired female in one of the cages has a bulging midsection and is very near giving birth.

.

I

I

The vet students helping out

named her "Lady Lazarus," after the biblical figure restored tolife.

Lying down and in a bad way when she arrived, the pregnant alpaca improved. "She rose from the dead," says student Allison Bonang. Bond now has 300 people wanting to adopt, drawn from their network of volunteers and a list of those who had contact-

ed the sheriffs office. On this day, four have arrived with

considering getting into the al- their trailers.

OregonCommunityCU.org 541.681.6231

$%

800. 365.1111

"Securities ond odvisory seruices offered through LPL Financial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRA/Slpe Insurance products offered through LpL Financial orits licensed affiliates. Oregon Community Credir Union snd Oregon Community Investment Services are not registered broker-dealers and are not affrliated with LPL Financial. Not NCUA Insured

Not Credlt Unlon Guaranteed

0 2014 Oregon Community Credit Union.

May Lose Value


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

EDj To

0

The Bulletin

s

e IS B l v e

HbY?

sessionnee s i misor i s

/

lllf

n 2010, Oregon voters approved annual legislative sessions to allow lawmakers to react to emergencies and deal with vital services in a timely way. Previously, the legislators met every other year, with emergency special ses-

s

+

sions as needed. The 2010 measure limited the sessionsto 160 days in odd-numbered years and 35 in even-numbered years. The idea was to deal with urgent, changing issues in the short sessions, while tackling more complex problems in the longer ones. That's not how it's playing out. Legislators this year have filed bills on a wide range of new and old topics, many of which are neither urgent nor suitable for quick action. Some lawmakers andlobbyists have complained that the short sessions, occurring in election years, have become hyper-partisan and campaign-focused. There's worry that complex issues aren't getting the attention they need, and that things are moving too fast for the public to react and be heard. Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin, has proposed shifting 10 days from the long session to the short one, accordingto The Oregonian, while Rep. Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, suggests dumping the short sessions or placing sharp controls

on the number of bills introduced and requiring supermajority votes to pass them. While we share concerns about what's happening, we don't think dumping the short session and going back to the old way is the answer. The state has grown since the days when legislators could meet every two years. The executive, judicial and regulatory arms of government are in full swing all the time. Jumping in with special legislative sessions on an emergency basis isn't enough in today's world. Shifting a few days from the long to the short session might help a little, but almost certainly not enough. And nothing will prevent legislative sessions from beingpartisan, election year or not. It may take a while to sort out the best meeting schedule for the Legislature, but in the meantime, we like McLane's idea of limiting the number and type of bills that can be introduced in the short session. That would restore the concept behind the voters' 2010 decision to add an even-year session.

Misreading Putin, and history WASHINGTON-

ne hundred years after a spark in Central Europe igGEORGE nited a conflagration from WILL which the world has not yet recovered and from which Europe will never recover, armed forces have crossed an international border in what "self" was he speaking? SomeCentral Europe, eliciting this anal- times he spoke of the self-determiysis from Secretary of State John nation of "nations," at other times of Kerry: "It's a 19th century act in the "peoples," as though these are syn21st century. It really puts at ques- onyms. Wilson's secretary of state, tion Russia's capacity to be within Robert Lansing, wondered "what

O

A step closer to promise

of 'opennessprevails'

O

n President Barack Obama's first full day in office, he ordered government agencies to administer the Freedom of Information Act "with a clear presumption: In the face of doubt, openness prevails." But that's not what happened. Rejections, delays, inaction, requests for high fees are what people got instead when they requested public records from the federal government. The level of cooperation on FOIA requests varies widely from request torequest or agency to

agency. Journalists who cover the White House — and it's not just liberal or conservative journalists — say this is the most secretive administration they can remember. It's at least encouraging, then, that last week the House of Representatives unanimously passed HR 1211, the FOIA Reform Act. If

it becomes law and is carried out, it would be the first meaningful reforms to the federal FOIA in seven years. Many things in the legislation hold promise. It would create an online portal, making it easier to track requests. More things should be automatically disclosed by the government. It codifies the "presumption of openness" concept. It may also make it easier to track how wellgovernment agencies are complying with the law. That's all encouraging. Journalists pay close attention to this issue. But it's not just about journalists. The public has a right to know what its government is doing. Government shouldn't be able to conceal information because it might be embarrassing,because mistakes might be revealed or because of indefinite fears. Let's hope this time when it is said that openness prevails, openness prevails.

sula where Putin is now tightening his grip. Conservatives who should know better have often said the Yalta Conference "gave" Eastern Eu-

rope to the Soviet Union. Actually, the Red Army was in the process of acquiring it. This process could no more have been resisted militarily by Stalin's allies, which the United States and Britain then were, than

Putin's aggression can be. Barack Obama, who involved the United States in seven months of

war with Libya, perhaps because that "certain phrases" of Wilson's the project was untainted by U.S. peace has been regularly broken be- "have not been thought out." But national interest, is seeking dipcause national borders do not tidily they resonated. In the Atlantic Char- lomatic and especially economic coincide with ethnic, linguistic and ter of 1941, Franklin Roosevelt and leverage against Putin's ramshackle religious patterns. This problem was W inston Churchill a ff irmed t h e nation in order to advance the enorintensified by World War I, which rights of "peoples." The U.N. Charter mous U.S. interest in depriving him demolished the Habsburg, Romanov endorses the self-determination of of Ukraine. and Ottoman empires. Ukraine is a "peoples." Which became a third inUnless Obama finds such levershard of the first two, and a neighbor gredient, ethnic self-determination. age, his precipitous slide into Jimmy of a remnant of the third. Wilson had sown dragon's teeth. Carter territory will continue. As an The problems bequeathed by that While Wilson was making phras- expression of disdain for a U.S. preswar were aggravated by a peace- es in 1918,a German corporalrecov- ident, Putin's seizure of Ukraine's maker, one of Kerry's precursors ering from a gas attack was making Crimean peninsula is symmetrical among American progressives ea- plans. And on Sept. 27, 1938, the cor- with Leonid Brezhnev's invasion of ger to share with the world their poral, then Germany's chancellor, Afghanistan late in Carter's presexpertise at imposing rationality said "the right of self-determination, idency. Large presidential failures on untidy societies. Unfortunate- whichhad been proclaimed by Pres- cannot be hermetically sealed; they ly, Woodrow Wilson's earnestness ident Wilson as the most important permeate a presidency. Putin's conabout improving the world was larg- basis of national life, was simply de- tribution t o t h e m i n i aturization er than his appreciation of how the nied to the Sudeten Germans" and of Obama comes in the context of world's complexities can cause im- must be enforced. So Czechoslova- Obama's self-inflicted wound provers to make matters worse. kia was dismembered. Still, the war Obamacare, which simultaneously Wilson injected into diplomatic came. shattered belief in his competence discourse the idea that "self-deterThree months from the end of and honesty, and may linger as rumination" is a universal right and the war in Europe, the architects inously for Obama as the Iranian "an imperative principle of action." of the impending victory — Roos- hostage crisis did for Carter. the G8." For many centuries, European

unit has he in mind" and warned

Several of his Fourteen Points con-

evelt, Churchill and Stalin — met

cerned self-determination. But of

at a town on the Crimean penin-

— George Will is a columnist for The Washington Post Writers Group.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com

Could Founding Fathers solve today's political gridlock? By Joseph J. Ellis

white males gathered in Philadelphia, imposed complete censorship over hen I appear at book festi- the deliberations, regarded slavery vals or give readings, lots as the ghost at the banquet (it could of folks want to know what not be openly debated), and then had the Founding Fathers would do or say the audacity to send the document to about our currently dysfunctional the states under the rhetorical mantle Congress. There seems to be an un- "We, the people." If ourmodern values spoken but widely shared assumption of inclusiveness, transparency and that the most prominent members of diversity were imposed on the foundthe founding generation represent the ers, the Constitution would never have gold standard in political leadership, happened. and our contemporary politicians are Lately, however, I have been having the epitome ofdebased currency. As some second thoughts, prompted by one commentator put it, "Once you recent arguments linking the gridcompare then and now, you've got lock in Congress with the purportedly to believe that Darwin got it exactly outdated and anachronistic character backward." of the Constitution itself. Those arguMy standard response to all such ments lead to the conclusion that we comments is to warn the audience need a second Constitutional Conventhat makinghistorical comparisons in tion to rectify the problem. For The Los Angeles Times

w

such a straightforward then-and-now

But, seriously, a second Constitu- on any bill that does not have the mational Convention? It could never suc- jority support of his or her party. ceed, chiefly because the secrecy, elitAgain, neither of these procedurism and the rest of 1787 reality could al principles is anywhere to be found never be duplicated in our time. (And in the original text or subsequent ought not be.) Besides —and here I feel amendments to the Constitution. So an obligation to defend the legacy of we cannot pin our gridlock problems the founders — the current gridlock in on the founders. Congress is not a function of anything But let's push it to the next level. Neiin the language of the Constitution. ther the Senate nor the House, under Gerrymandering and primary elec- the administrative pretense of contion politicking are surely part of the trolling its own procedural rules, has problem. So too is the plutocratic char- the authority to alter the meaning of acter of our political culture in what the Constitution. The only way to do

swoonish swings in popular opinion. Nothing in the Constitution gives the Senate the authority to redefine the Constitution as it sees fit.

The current Congress is dysfunctional, then, largely because it has adopted procedures that systematically deny the rights of the majority in ways that violate the original intentions of

the founders. The proper place to adjudicate this issue is neither the House

nor the Senate but the Supreme Court, which is the ultimate arbiter of what has become, in effect, a second Gilded that is by a constitutional amendment. the Constitution says and what the Long-standing members of the Sen- founders intended. Age. But the core problem in getting legislation through the House and the ate will cry foul at any argument that If by some miracle we could bring Senate areprocedural rules adopted questions their discretionary author- Madison back to testify to the high

by both bodies over the last century. In the Senate, the culprit is the filibuster. Its history is long and labyrinIn truth, most of the prominent thian, but, in the form it has assumed founders, induding Jefferson, Mad- overthelast30yearsorso,asupermaison and Adams, would probably jority of 60 votes is required for pasnot object to such a proposal — insage of any and all legislation. (The deed would be surprised that their "nuclear option" weakened the filibus-

fashion is misguided, and that bringing the founders into the present is like trying to plant cut flowers. Moreover, canonizing and capitalizing the Founding Fathers is more hagiogra- 18th-century creation had lasted as phy than history. long as it has. Jefferson thought that For example, once you understand the Constitution should be redone how the Constitution was created, everygeneration, meaning every 20 all rosy myths evaporate. Fifty-five years or so.

terms, making them less vulnerable to

ity. They have exercised that author-

court in just such a proceeding, the

ity for so long, and their convictions

"Father of the Constitution" would

about the special status of the Senate apprise the justices that the current are so embedded in their hearts and modus operandi in Congress is not minds, that they sincerely believe the what he and his colleagues had in founders designated them as Delphic mind. In short, he would declare it orades. unconstitutional. Not so. The great and not-so-great

ter when applied to some presidential

men in Philadelphia indeed wanted

appointments, but not to legislation.)

the Senate to serve as a check on the democratic excesses of the House.

In the House, the source of gridlock is the unwritten code that gives the

But they believed that goal would be speaker the authority to block a vote achieved by giving senators six-year

— JosephL Ellis is the author of "Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation" and "Revolutionary Summer: The Birth of AmericanIndependence,"among other books. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.


TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Phil's

BITUARIES

Continued from B1 The overhaul planned

'I

route under Skyliners. "Their waterline is basical-

' sI

cludes a new double-vault

Will Adams, of Bend Oct. 30, 1917- Feb. 14, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Will's Life will take place in Los Angeles at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

Oct. 9, 1926- Feb. 13, 2014 O n T h u r sday, F eb . 1 3 , 2014, Grover C. Palin l eft t his world t o b e w i t h h i s L ord and Savior. H e w a s 87 years old. Grover was born on Oct. 9 , 1926 in B o r i ng, OR, t o Clarence and Grace

(Metcalf)

P alin. H e attended The Actors Fund schools in www.actorsfund.org t he P o r t land area. Sara Moser, of Bend He an July17, 1932- Mar. 1, 2014 swered Arrangements: the call of Grover Palin Baird Funeral Home of our counBend 541-382-0903 try and joined the Navy in www.bairdmortuaries.com September o f 1 9 44, servServices: ing in the South A private family gathering P acific o n th e car r i e r will be held in the Spring. USS Vella Gulf as a GunContributionsmay be made n ers Mate 3c u nti l M a r c h to: of 1946. After serving our Partners In Care, 2075 c ountry, h e m a r r i e d h i s NE Wyatt Court, Bend, high s c h o o l sw e e t heart Oregon 97701, a nd th e l o v e o f h i s l i f e , www.partnersbend.org or E dith Row l a n d s , and American Cancer Society, settled in Prineville around www.cancer.org/donate 1948. He w o r ke d v a r i ous j obs a t t he lo c a l mi l l s (Hudspeth Pine, now Cont act L u m b e r a n d A l e x ander Y ocki , n ow Death Noticesarefree and W oodgrain), a n d w a s a will be run for oneday, but s alesman fo r S e ar s R o e specific guidelines must be b uck an d C o m p any u n t i l h e opened hi s ow n b u s i followed. Local obituaries ness, Prineville V e n etian arepaid advertisements B linds, l a t e r b ec o m i n g submitted by families or Tri-County W i n dow P r odfuneral homes.Theymaybe ucts and Floor C overings. submitted by phone, mail, Later, he transitioned from emailor fax. TheBulletin the retail business into the reserves the right to edit all c ommercia l bu si n e s s , submissions. Pleaseinclude w orking m a i nl y w i t h t h e contact information in all Bend-La Pine School Di scorrespondence. trict, Beaver Coaches and v arious other i n t erior d e For information on any of signers in Central Oregon. these servicesor about the He was self employed his obituary policy, contact whole life and n ever con541-617-7825. sidered himself "retired". Deadlines: Death Notices H e was i n strumental i n areaccepted until noon s tarting t h e C e n t ra l O r Monday through Friday egon Boat Club and the loc al US Coast Guard A u x for next-day publication i liary, w h i c h w as l oc a l and by 4:30 p.m. Friday f amilies t h a t b o a t e d t o for Sunday publication. g ether a n d se r v e d th e Obituaries must be c ommunity b y pa t r olling received by 5p.m. Monday t he l o c a l l ak e s du r i n g through Thursday for e vents, taking care of t h e publication on the second docks and cleaning up the day after submission, shoreline. He was a Charby1 p.m. Friday for ter Member of the PrinevSunday publication, andby i lle E l k ' s L o d g e , B P O E ¹ 1814. H e l o v e d t o b o a t 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday and camp, taking his fampublication. Deadlines for ily on many vacations, indisplay adsvary; please call cluding b o a t in g u p th e for details. Columbia Ri ver i nto Phone: 541-617-7825 Canada, c r u i sing i n th e Email: obits©bendbulletin.com San J u a n Isl a n d s and fishing on the Oregon and Fax: 541-322-7254 W ashington coast a n d Mail:Obituaries v arious l a k e s i n ce n t r a l P.O. Box 6020 O regon. He w a s a n a v i d Bend, OR 97708 hunter, too. He b ecame a i lot a n d a l s o fl e w hi s a mily o n v a c ations f r o m h ere t o C a n a da, M e x i c o and all over the west coast. DEATHS He had many friends and will be sorely missed. ELSEWHERE Grover was p r eceded in d eath b y hi s p ar e n t s ; brother, Joe; and tw o s i sDeaths ofnote from around ters, Bobby and Grace. He the world: i s survived by hi s w i f e o f Ralph M. Bahna, 71: Cred- 6 7 years, the l ov e o f h i s ited with creating one of the life, E d ith ; h i s d a u g hter, first luxury b usiness-class Kim Denfeld (Gil) of Bend; services on a major airline. h is son, Wes (Nikki) o f He later became chairman of Prineville; 1 1 gr a n d c hilPriceline.com. Died on Feb. 24 dren; 1 9 g r e a t-grandchild ren; h i s s i s t er , C l o v e r in Manhattan. riggs of Pr i n ev i l l e ; Lee Lorch, 98: A soft-spo- B rother, P a t Pal in of ken mathematician whose b Prineville; an d m any leadership in the campaign nieces and nephews. to desegregate Stuyvesant A celebration of h i s l i f e Town, the gargantuan hous- w ill b e an n o u n ced a n d ing development on the Low- held at a later date. Memoer East Side of Manhattan, r ial c ontributions ca n b e helped make housing dis- sent to the Elks Children's crimination illegal nation- Eye Clinic, care of PrinevElks Lodge ¹ 1814. wide. Died Friday at a hos- ille W hispering Pi n e s Fu pital in Toronto of natural neral Home handled the causes. arrangements, — From wire reports 541-416-9733 to:

Obituary policy

the elements of the project

"We don't even have a site yet" for a fire station, David Warren, an Alfalfa Fire District board mem-

homeowners passed a tax to form the A l falfa Fire District in November, sup-

porters have been meeting monthly, developing time-

P u litzer tionship with, his white-suited

trict's challenges is a short-

ddarling@bendbulletin.com

will hopefully put an end to ing for their neighbors for help when a fire spreads, he said. "Our neighbors are great, but they really shouldn't have to" put out fires, Kathman said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbullettn.com

Alfalfa Market Rd.

Alfalfa ToBend

Beltone

MlLE

DESCHUTES i CR O O K

COUNTY

trict in 2012. An Alfalfa resi-

The district r eceived a $10,000 loan from Deschutes County last week to help pay for costs until

dent since 2008, he said he's watched both of his neighbors'

then.

Alfalfafire board President Bob Kathman told county commissioners the

ers from qualifying for fire insurance. in the Culver and Maupin areas as a blueprint for Alfalfa's district. If Alfalfa can find a

property this year, he said, the hope is to start building the

Call Today mplements ttteeue J ~Fe~ue~ J

t h e g r ound

H e said the lack o f

.

'Beltone-

70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend,OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeirtteriors.com

fire

protection in the area has

I

of our newest most advanced hearing aids

Kathman said the board has looked at rural fire districts

without anyone but nearby community members to help.

district needs funds to pay for insurance costs and legal fees now — before it starts bringing in tax revenue. Firefighters, even volunteers, need to be properly

TRIAL

prevented some h omeown-

The district doesn't have

homes burn to

I COUNTY Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

about 300 homes.

541-389-9690

trained for a district to receive insurance. "We don't want to have to wait nine months to do those things," K athman said. The funds could a l so h elp the district put u p

• •

I

.

some money to get state and federal grantsforrural fire operations, and pay for architectural services and building permits for the new building. The grants could be crucial to pay for land to build a firehouse on. The U.S. Department of Agriculture provides Volunteer Fire As-

sistance grants to rural areas with fewer than 10,000

people. Kathman said the dis-

trict is already in line for about $7,000 in volunteer

fire grants and hopes to ap-

Bridge Creek

the court case is resolved. "It just seems risky," he said.

for city of Bend water ratepayers, Lansdowne said, so

Bartlett's Familiar Quotations,

the city wants to go ahead

and Mark Twain," published ness over the telephone were the year before. In it, he exam- then put into letters or diaries."

has been coordinating with

Alfalfa Fire District

age of funds. The tax — up any firefighting equipment eito $1.75 per $1,000 in home ther, but Kathman said finding value for residents in the some surplus equipment from district — doesn't take ef- Deschutes County or the U.S. fect until July, and the dis- Forest Service shouldn't be a trict won't see any of it until major problem. November. The roughly Warren started collecting 40,000-acre area contains signatures to form the fire dis-

Lincoln Steffens, and who was U.S. character, then he vastly later known as the editor of preferred to train that lens on a

the telephone comes in. And t h e P u litzer it means that the talking and Prize for biography in 1967 for ideas and the relationships that his first book, "Mr. Clemens now disappear into nothing-

downe said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812,

the days of homeowners look-

ply for more funds.

translate to increased costs

sald. Kaplan won

of public works for Deschutes County. He said the county

About 300homesin aroughly 64-square-mile areashould havebetter protection fromfires whenthe Alfalfa FireDistrict starts operatingnext year.

Source: Deechutes County

lens through which to view the

tions of Parkinson's disease, his Post. "For biography it's a terrifdaughter Susanna Donahue ic time because it's just before

For most of the 7 miles the pipeline will run under Skylinty's Skyliners Road repaving, ers, it will be under the southTinderholt said, putting them ern edge of the road, Lansbothunder thesame contract. downe said. But the pipeline The county has a grant itself will turn north before from the Federal Highway Ad- it reaches the cutoff to Phil's ministration to cover most of Trailhead. "We don't even come down the $10 million repaving project, said Chris Doty, director that far with the pipe," Lans-

firehouse in early 2015. That

s tep supporters hope t o

7tvain, Walt W h itman a n d

Mass. He was 88. The cause was complica-

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

Alfalfa Fire District

take this summer. Underscoring the dis-

publicpersona. If Kaplan saw biography as a

diedon Sunday in Cambridge,

sociated with the pipeline installation will put on the road.

',RA

i

stones before they get up and running in mid-2015. Warren said securing land for a firehouse is the board's top priority. It's a

Prize-winning biographer renowned for his lives of Mark

time well before his own. "I'm in love with the 19th century," he said in the 1981 interview with The Washington

I,:

lines to meet major mile-

Watch. He said he thinks the city should wait until

Justin Kaplan, a

because of the wear trucks as-

,.I qe~

FOREST

hustle. Since about 3 00

By Margalit Fox New York Times News Service

s aid Deschutes County i s waiting for the city to finish

1

ber, said Monday. That's not for a lack of

3ustin Kaplan, 88, was celebratedbiographer ined his subject's construction of, and deeply ambivalent rela-

Irailhead

combine the Phil's Trailhead grant, Tinderholt said. The construction with the coun-

Continued from B1

Heidi Lansdowne, project manger for the city of Bend,

c

Pllll's

as a partial match to the

Alfalfa

lane," he said.

I I

that have higher priorities, such as replacing the toilet. The design for Phil's Trail- plans include repaving the head has yet to be final- road from Skyliners into Phil's ized, she added. Trailhead and discouraging The Forest Service has parking along the forest road. "The long-term goal for a $250,000grant from the Federal Highway Admin- Phil's is to have it be a much istration for P hil's Trail- more safe parking area," she head and will spend about said. $25,000 of its own funds The Forest Service plans to

Continued from B1 Saying it could harm fish and wetlands, the groups are challenging the U.S. Forest Service's issuing the city apermit for the project. If the groups win in court, the city may have to abandon the pipeline put under Skyliners Road, said Paul Dewey, executive director for Central Oregon Land-

FEATURED OBITUARY

ly right underneath the bike

/v

toilet, 76 designated park-

ing spots and possibly asphalt paving, she said. Whether the parking lot gets paved depends on how much money is spent on

particularly, on the pipeline's

--«jttlrtelo Greek

f or Phil's T r ailhead i n -

DEATH NOTICES Grpypr C. Pgljn

the Forest Service and the city,

l i

.

• •

for March 13. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

a

~

~ •

Q R E G Q N C

• •

I '

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'/

I /

• ' '

M

U

s• •

I T Y

•I

N

I

I

t

M

.

I

Q

0 I NV E S T M E N T S E R V I C E S

with the work as soon as possible. Installing the pipeline under Skyliners should next week. The groundbreaking ceremony is set

9

Delays in the project

take about a year, she said, with the first hole to be dug

B5

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

W EAT H E R Maps andnational forecast providedby WSI ©2014

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INTERNATIONAL

2013

Readers' Choice

MED

Skireport from aroundthestate, representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday; Snow accumulations in inches Skiarea Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes.....................p"......................63" Hoodoo................................p"......................48" Mt. Ashland.........................0"......................66"

Mt. HoodMeadows.............5"....................106 Mt. HoodSki Bowl...............p"......................47" Snowlevel androadconditionsrepresentingconditionsat5p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. =TractionTires. Ti m berline............................7"......................73" lakeview 54/41 r Wamer Canyon ('.pnrgtrpns Pass Medford 67/48 pc Q/47 r Willamette Pass...................1"......................26" Newport 57/50 r 54/48 r I-S at Siskiyou Summit..............Carry chains, T. Tires NonhBend 58/52 r 58/49 r I-84at Cabbage Hill................. Carry chains, T. Tires Yesterday's Aspen Cpipradp 4 p Ontario 6N38 cd 59/42 r Hwy.20at Santiam pass..........Carrychains, T Tl«s MammothMtn., California..1"......................65" stateextremes Pendleton 54/40 r 56/43 r Hwy.26at Government CampCarrychains, T. Tires p a rk City, Utah.....................3"......................82" Portland 5N46 r 56/45 r Hwy.26atOchoco Divide........Carrychains, T. Tires S qaw Valley, California........4"......................20" Prineville 5286 pc 5938 r • 63' Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass......Carry chains, T. Tires S u n Valley, Idaho.................3"......................41" Redmond 5385 pc 57/38 r 6>49 o» 63/50 cd 58/47 r Hwy.138at DiamondLake......Carrychains, T Tires T a os, New Mexico...............6"......................52" PortlandTroutddlm>rg Salem 6IM 0.42 EN48 r 57/47 r Vaik Colorado-----------0"----------- 69 Hwy.242 atM cKenzi ePass..........Closedforseason o 24' Sisters 5432 0.18 5%38 pc 54/38 r For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: Theoalles 45/27 0.12 56/40 pc 56/41 r Hermist www.tnpcheck.com orcall 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun,pc-partialclouds,c-cl ouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurriies,sn-snow, i-ice,rs-rainsnowmix,wwind,f fog,dr driizzle,tr trace

Toronto , . - g ~

n~ggO

PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION Tomorrow Ris e Set Yesterday'sweatherthrough4p.m.inBend Mercury..... 921 Pm..... 736am. Higiytow 55o8go 24ho„omrgng4pm* PPP venus......... 8:08p.m..... 6:05a.m. Rmglhigh..... . 70'in1986 Monthtodale.......... 0.11" Mars.......... I:15pm....1222am. Rmrglyw......... 8'in1960 Averagemonthtodate... 006" Jupiter........4:06a.m..... 7:28p.m. Averagehigh.............. 51' Yeartodate............ 2.24" Saturn........ 331 p m..... I:28a m. Averagelow............... 25' Averageyeartodate..... 1.68" Uranus......ll:25p.m....12:05p.m. Barometricpressure4p.m.29.86" Record24hours ..0.28in 1991 *Meltedliquidequivalent

Sunrisetoday......6:36a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 5:57p.m Sunrisetomorrow ..6:35 a.m First F u l l L ast Sunsettomorrow... 5:58p.m Moonrisetoday 8'17a m Moonsettoday ...]0:20p.m Mar8 Mar16 Mar23 Mar30

City

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58 36

XiamathFalls LaPine

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algary

Vancouver 44/37

(inthe48 contiguous states):

HIGH LOW

49 34

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

/ 20 Q105 / 0 Q10s Q20s Q305 Q405 / 50 /605 /

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

50 32

Astoria BakerCity Brookings Bums Eugene

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s / 30

HIGH LOW

54 38

Yesterday Tuesday Wednesday The higher the UV Index number, the greater City HiRo/Pcp HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W the need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hourtotalsthrough4pm.

EAST

Partly cio.dy.

HIGH LOW

OREGON CITIES

Partly to mostly cloudy skies.

McDermitt • 50/36

Fields 49/40

s440

58/38

CENTRAL

Partly i-dy.

Qoud y with a chance of rain.

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

WEST

• Astoria

Seaside •Cannon each

Broo ngs

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IN THE BACK: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College hoops, C3 NHL, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

PREP WRESTLING

MLB

NBA

Replay passes its first tests

The rich get richer after trade deadline

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.

— Challenged for the first time under Major League Baseball's expanded replay system, umpires got it right. In fact, the umpsgot it right three times in as many tries Mondayas MLB tried out the new format at three spring training games. The first test came in Fort Myers, Fla., after first-base umpire Fieldin Culbreth ruled that Toronto shortstop Munenori Kawasaki's throw pulled Jared Goedert off the bag in the sixth inning. "I'm not too sure that you're not right here," Culbreth said BlueJays manager John Gibbons told him, "but since we haven't done it before, let's go take alook." Culbreth answered:

By Brian Mahoney The Assoctated Press

Buyout season helps the NBA's rich get richer.

The remainder of the schedule will determine

if they actually got better. With Danny Granger signing with the Los Angeles Clippers and Caron Butler with Oklahoma City, teams that

were alread good were able to add

'L

t

"OK. That's what it's

former all-stars

-':u,:j® i

without

for." After two minutes and 34 seconds, replay umpire Brian O'Nora relayed his call by headset, confirming that Minnesota batter Chris Rahl was safe. During

having to give up anything except money.

It sometimes even

seems unfair, since just a few days earlier adding players would

realized heperhaps was part of history. "It's kind of funny. I was thinking, 'Is this the first one?'" he said. O'Nora madethe final ruling from a satellite truck outside the stadium. During the regular season, umpires on the field will check with the replay booth in New York, where anMLB umpire will make the final call. Later in the game, Culbreth rotated and

have cost assets if teams

wanted to improve via trade before the

deadline. The buyouts usually start as soon as the

deadline has passed, when the agent of an unhappy veteran who did not get moved — or, in Granger's case, moves somewhere he does not

want to go — works out a deal in which the player agrees to leave some

tooka turn in the truck,

— The Associated Press

SOCCER U.S.: Friendly vs. Ukraine is on CHICAGO — It looks as if the U.S. men's national team will get to play Ukraine after all. Wednesday's friendly in Larnaca, Cyprus, appeared to be in jeopardy because of the upheaval in Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. But the U.S. Soccer Federation said Monday night in an emailed statement that the game would proceed as scheduled. The friendly is part of the United States'

preparation for this summer's World Cup.

CORRECTION A story headlined "Ravens' road ends in play-in defeat" that appeared in Sunday's Bulletin on page D4included incorrect information about Ridgeview High basketball player George Mendazona. Mendazona is a sophomore. The Bulletin regrets the error.

onlnbounds

a little

the wait, Rahl said he

confirming another safe call at first base. In the eighth inning, Doug Bernier of the Twins was called safe on a close play at first. The call was confirmed, Bernier was safe. Extra replay also was in place for two games in Arizona — the Los Angeles Angels vs. Arizona Diamondbacks in Scottsdale, and the Chicago Cubsagainst Milwaukee in Phoenix. In January, owners approved the use ofadditional video replay to review most calls other than balls and strikes. Previously, umpires could go to replayonly to review home runs and boundary calls.

• Blazers come back from 15-point d e ficit, but lose to Lakers

John Klicker/For The Bulletin

Crook County's Tyler Rasmussen celebrates his win in the220-pound Class 4A championship match with assistant coach Mike Shinkle, left, and head coach Jake Huffman, Saturday night at Memorial Coliseum in Portland.

• Crook County's record-breaking performance at the state wrestling championshipsmaybe impossible to improve upon

GRANT

LUCAS

"Prineville's a

PORTLAND-

d Burton has seen greatness. The 72-year-old has served as publicaddress mnouncer at the OSAA wrestling state championships for 30

little Podunk town with 700 kids in the

school.And we don't care. We just go about our business

years, during which time he has seen Burns rack up 10 straight Class 3A team titles, Lowell boast six individual champs on two separate occasions, and Culver place second or better as a team in the 2A/1A

and be the

best we can be, and we go

competition each of the last 10 years (including seven first-place finishes). Burton has witnessed his share of wrestling dominance — but nothing quite like Crook County. "Crook County is the class of Oregon this year," Burton said Saturday night at Veterans Memorial Coliseum.BNot just the class of 4A, they're the class of Oregon. I don't believe there's a team around that could beat them."

out and beat people that we shouldn't."

money on the table in exchange for his release. As long it is done by March I and he clears waivers, he is free to sign with any team except the one that released him and would be eligible to suit up for that team in the playoffs. The Clippers picked up Granger and Glen "Big Baby" Davis that way. Jimmer Fredette

signed with Chicago on Sunday, and Metta World Peace remains

available. Indiana coach Frank

Vogel thinks the Clippers got "dramatically better" with Granger. But tinkering this late in

a season can be tricky, and not everyone is sure it is best.

"They're adding pieces. With adding pieces, sometimes you can add too much, so I wouldn't

fall in love with every move that's made,"

— Crook County

Golden State coach Mark Jackson said.

coach Jake Huffman

"Sometimes the best

SeeWrestling /C4

move is no move at all."

SLED DOG RACING

COLLEGE HOOPS COMMENTARY

With past two tit es, Seaveysa strong presence

Memories ofDeanSmith linger ashismemoryfails him By John Feinstein Sp«tal to The Washington Post

Dean Smith celebrated his

By Mark Thiessen The Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Don't get Dallas

and MitchSeavey wrong. They loveeach other, even though they might not say it in so many words. But they are also fierce competitors, more than happy to pass each other during the nearly 1,000-mile Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race to be the first to reach Nome. The then-25-year-oldDallas became the

Oan Joling / The Associated Press

Defending Iditarod champion Mitch Seavey drives his team down the Cordova Street hill during the ceremonial start of the Iditarod. Mitch's son Dallas won the race in 2012.

to look behind another shoulder as Conway

race's youngest winner in 2012, only to be reSeavey, Dallas' younger brother, establishes placed by his dad, Mitch, who at age 53 became himself in the sport. the Iditarod's oldest winner last year. While

SeeIditarod /C4

"You're talking about the

83rd birthday on Friday. In

p e r son who had the sharp-

all likelihood, there was not much of a celebration. .

e s t mind and the most re-

markable memory of lnSI"e Smith is suffering anyone I've ever met. • AP TOP It's just not fair." from dementia and 25,C2 If h e c o u ld, Smith only occasionally is aware of what is going would undoubtedly on around him. tell others not to shed tears No one deserves such a

they play out their rivalry, they might need

cruel," Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski said recently.

fate, but anyone who has ever known Smith finds it especially galling that this disease would befall him. "Of all people, for it to happentohimisbeyond

for h i m , that he has lived

a great life and there are peo ple who are suffering far mo r e than he is suffering. The r e is not a self-pitying bone in Smith's body. See Smith /C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

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BASEBALL

MLB, Texas at L.A. Angels College, Stanford at California BASKETBALL

Men's College, Michigan at lllinois Men's College, lowa State at Baylor Men's College, Floridaat South Carolina Men's College, GeorgiaTechat Syracuse Men's College, Creighton at Georgetown Men's College, Alabama atKentucky Men's College, Florida State at Boston College Men's College, Marquette at Providence Men's College, ArizonaState at Oregon

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HOCKEY

NHL,Tampa BayatSt.Louis

5 p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL

MLB, Boston at St. Louis

10 a.m.

FS1

BASKETBALL

Women's College, Virginia Techvs. Clemson Women's College, Virginia vs. Boston College Women's College, WakeForest vs. Pittsburgh Men's College, Dukeat WakeForest Men's College, Rutgers at Connecticut NBA, Dallas at Denver Men's College, Colorado at Stanford Men's College, WestVirginia at Oklahoma Men's College, Wyoming at UtahState NBA, Atlanta at Portland Trail Blazers

1 0 a.m. R o ot 12:30 p.m. Root 3:30 p.m. Root 4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPNU 5 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E SPNU 7 p.m. Roo t 7:30 p.m. ESPN

Men's College, Utah atCalifornia Men's College, Arizona atOregonState

8 p.m. E SPNU 8 p.m. FS1

1110 AM, 100.1 FM

HOCKEY

NHL, Washington at Philadelphia SOCCER Ukraine vs. United States England vs. Denmark Spain vs. Italy

5 p.m. NBCSN 10:30a.m. ESPN2

11:55 a.m. FS2 12:55 p.m. ESPN2

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER Holden's return cutshort byapparent injury —American midfielder Stuart Holden lasted less than ahalf-hour in his first match since another major kneeinjury last year. Holden started Monday night for Bolton's under-21s at homeagainst Everton in his first game appearance since tearing his right anterior cruciate ligament during the United States'1-0 victory over Panama inthe CONCACAFGold Cup final on July 28. Holdenwas indiscomfort when hefell to the turf in the 23rd minute andwas replaced by LukeWoodland, Bolton said on its website. TheBolton News reported the 28-year-old held his right thigh and back of the kneeearly, and collapsed clutching the back of the kneewith no one nearhim. The team said Holden was able to get up and rundown thetunnel to the dressing room.

FOOTBALL 49ers, WR AnquanBoldin agree to 2-year deal —While chatter has swirled about Jim Harbaugh's future with the 49ers in recent weeks, wide receiver AnquanBoldin hassecured his status in San Francisco — andeven credited the coach for his decision to come back. Thefranchise gave him afew million other reasons, too. The 49ers signed Boldin to a two-year, $12million contract with $9 million guaranteed Monday,keeping quarterback Colin Kaepernick's top option from last seasonand oneof Harbaugh's favorites from hitting free agency. Boldin, who wasset to become afree agent next week, led SanFrancisco with 85 catches for1,179 yards to gowith seventouchdowns lastseason.Hewastradedfrom JohnHarbaugh's Ravens to the 49ers in the offseason for a sixth-round pick after helping Baltimore win the SuperBowl.

OLYMPICS U.S. cancels Paralympicdelegation, diit will still COmPete —The United States canceled its presidential delegation to the Paralympic Games inSochi, Russia, citing Russia's intervention in Ukraine. Thedecision, announced Monday bythe White House, will not affect the 80 U.S.athletes scheduled to compete in the games, which begin with Friday's opening ceremony.While Western leaders have protested Russia's actions in Ukraine, only the U.S. and Britain haveabandoned plans to send official representatives to the Paralympics. Craig Spence, aspokesman for the International Paralympic Committee, said in anemail that the Ukraine delegation was already in Sochi, and that 39 teamswere to havearrived by Monday night. The others, Spencesaid, were scheduled to arrive by Thursday afternoon. More than half of the U.S.team is in Sochi, Beth Bourgeois, a spokeswomanfor the U.S. Olympic Committee, said in an email.

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL NO. 1 UCOIlll I'OlltS NL 3 LOIIISVIIIS —Breanna Stewart had 22 points and 14rebounds andtop-ranked Connecticut blew out No. 3 Louisville 68-48 Monday night to complete anunbeaten regular season. KaleenaMosqueda-Lewis added13 points and10 boards for the Huskies. Theend of Louisville five-game winning streak spoiled the home finales for four seniors including guard Shoni Schimmel, who scored nine points before aschool record crowd of 22,163. — From wire reports

BASKETBALL Men's College Pacific-12 Conference All times PST W 14 11 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 7 2 1

Arizona UCLA ArizonaSt. Colorado Stanford California Oregon Utah Washington Oregon St. WashingtonSt. SouthernCal

L 2 5 6 7 7 7 8 8 8 9 14 15

Today'sGames Arizona St, atOregon,8p.m. Wednesdayi sGames Coloradoat Stanford, 6p.m. Utah at California, 8 p.m. Arizona at OregonSt., 8p.m. Thursday'sGames UCLAatWashington,6p.m. Southern CalatWashington St.,8 p.m. Saturday'sGames Utah atStanford,11:30 a.m. Arizona at Oregon,1 p.m. ArizonaSt. atOregonSt., 1:30p.m. Southern CalatWashington,1:30 p.m. Colorado at California, 3:30p.m. UCLA atWashington St.,8 p.m.

W L 27 2 22 7 21 8 20 9 18 10 18 11 20 8 19 9 16 13 15 13 9 19 10 19

Monday'sScores Easl SetonHall71,Xavier 62 South CoppinSt.86,Howard 69 FloridaA&M78, MorganSt. 73 NC A&T62,SCState60 NC Cen tral64,SavannahSt.57,OT NorfolkSt. 77,Md.-EasternShore65 NorthCarolina63, Notre Dame61 Southwest Oklahoma St.77, KansasSt. 61 PrairieView79, AlabamaSt. 58 AP Top 25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press' college basketballpoll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughMarch2, total pointsbasedon25 points for a first-place votethrough onepoint for a 25th-place voteand lastweek's ranking; Record Pls Prv 1. Florida(46) 2 7-2 1,606 1 2 . Wichita St.(14) 31 - 0 1 , 555 2 3. Arizona (5) 2 7-2 1,514 3 4. Duke 2 3-6 1,364 6 5. Virginia 2 5-5 1,304 12 6. Viganova 2 6-3 1,292 8 7. Syracuse 2 6-3 1,240 4 8. Kansas 2 2-7 1,200 5 9. Wisconsin 2 4-5 1,075 14 10. SanDiegoSt. 25-3 995 13 11. Louisyille 24-5 95 9 7 12. Michigan 21-7 899 16 13. Creighton 23-5 89 2 9 14. NorthCarolina 22-7 75 5 19 15. Cincinnati 24-5 737 11 16.lowaSt. 22-6 613 15 17. SaintLouis 25-4 539 10 18. SMU 23-6 42 7 23 23-6 423 19. Uconn 22-7 364 21 20. Memphis 23-5 338 25 21. New Mexico 22. Michigan St. 22-7 32 2 18 21-8 183 23. Oklahom a 20-9 9 4 20 24. lowa 21-8 9 2 17 25. Kentucky Others receiving votes: Texas70, VCU58, UCLA45,Gonzaga38,StephenF.Austin38,Kansas St. 19, SaintJoseph's19, OhioSt. 17,GreenBay 13, Harvard7, ArizonaSt. 5, UMass5, Colorado2, Pittsburgh2, Xavier 2, NCCentral1, OklahomaSt. 1, Southern Miss.1. USATodayTop25 Pol The top 25teamsin the USAToday men's college basketballpoll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughMarch 2, points basedon 25 points fora first-placevotethroughonepoint fora25th-place voteandpreviousranking; Record Pls Pvs 1. Florida(25) 27-2 79 3 1 2. WichitaState(7) 31 - 0 7 6 9 2 3. Arizona 27-2 74 1 3 4. Duke 23-6 67 2 7 5. Virginia 25-5 656 11 6. Viganova 26-3 64 7 9 7. Syracuse 26-3 56 3 5 8. Kansas 22-7 55 9 6 9. Louisville 24-5 54 8 4 10. SanDiegoState 2 5 - 3 5 1 1 13 11. Wisconsin 24-5 489 14 12. Michigan 21-7 455 16 13. Creighton 23-5 41 1 10 14. NorthCarolina 22-7 35 2 21 15. Cincinnati 24-5 351 12 16. SaintLouis 25-4 29 3 8 17.lowaState 22-6 27 7 17 18. SMU 23-6 18 5 24 19. Uconn 23-6 170 20. Memphis 22-7 160 22 21. New Mexico 23-5 146 22. MichiganState 22 - 7 14 3 18 23. Oklahom a 2 1-8 123 25 24. Kentucky 2 1-8 106 15 25.lowa 20-9 8 6 19 Others receivingvotes: Texas50, KansasState 40, OhioState21, UCLA20, VCU19, Gonzaga 10, StephenF.Austin 9, Pittsburgh7, SouthernMiss. 6, Oklah oma State4,UMass4,SaintJoseph' s3,Harvard1.

Women's college Monday'sScores

East Bryant72,CCSU65 FairleighDickinson75,Sacred Heart 69 RobertMorris71,MountSt.Mary's 65 SouthFlorida60,Rutgers51 St. Francis(NY)66, LIUBrooklyn50 St. Francis(Pa.)101,Wagner 75 St. John'63, s Providence42 Temple66,Houston 54

IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers

Monday'sGames

Tampa Bay6, Philadelphia1 N.Y.Yankees4, Washington 2 Minnesota(ss) 12,Toronto 2 Pittsburgh7, Boston 6 Minnesota(ss)9, Baltimore2 N.Y.Mets6, Atlanta 2 Detroit 8,St.Louis5 Houston4, Miami0 Chicag oCubs4,Mil waukee2

Seattle(ss)8, Colorado1 Seattle(ss)6, Cincinnati5 Cleveland 6, Texas5 SanDiego7, SanFrancisco2 ChicagoWhite Sox 9,KansasCity 7 Oakland7,LA. Dodgers3 L.A. Angels3,Arizona2 Arizona 5, Colorado0 Today'sGames Minnesotavs. MiamiatJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Pittsburghvs. Detroit at Lakeland,Fla.,10:05a.m. Washington vs. AtlantaatKissimmee, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Tampa Bayvs. Boston atFort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. Houstonvs. N.Y.Metsat Port St. Lucie, Fla.,10:10 a.m. Arizonavs. SanDiegoatPeoria, Ariz.,12:05p.m. Seattlevs.L.A.DodgersatGlendale,Ariz.,12:05 p.m. Texasvs.LA. Angels atTempe,Ariz.,12:05 p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxvs. Clevelandat Goodyear, Ariz., 12;05p.m. Milwaukee vs. Oakland (ss) atPhoenix,12:05 p.m. Cincinnativs. KansasCity at Surprise,Ariz., 12:05 p.m. Oakland(ss)vs. ChicagoCubsat Mesa, Ariz., 12:05 p.m. SanFranciscovs. Coloradoat Scottsdale, Ariz.,12:10 p.m. Torontovs.PhiladelphiaatClearwater, Fla.,3:35 p.m. Baltimorevs.N.Y.Yankeesat Tampa, Fla., 4:05p.m. Wednesday'sGames "You got no breaking ball because of a Atlantavs. PhiladelphiaatClearwater, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Baltimore vs. MinnesotaatFort Myers, Fla.,1005a m. bad grip. You lose velocity because you Bostonvs.St.Louisat Jupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte,Fla., don't push off on your back leg.And you 10:05a.m. can't see the plate because your hat's Detroitvs.Houston atKissimmee,Fla.,10:05 a.m. N.Y.Mets(ss)vs.WashingtonatViera, Fla.,10:05a.m. pulled down over your eyes." Pittsburghvs. Toronto at Dunedin, Fla.,10:05a.m. Miamivs.N.Y.Mets(ss) at Port St.Lucie, Fla.,10:10 a.m. Colorado(ss) vs.ChicagoCubsat Mesa,Ariz.,12:05 South Money p.m. AbileneChristian96, SELouisiana82 1, DaleEarnhardt Jr., $1,719,183.2, DennyHamlin, LA. Angelsvs. SanFrancisco at Scottsdale,Ariz., CoppinSt.82,Howard 70 $1,436,570.3, BradKeselowski, $1,125,899.4, Jeff 12:05p.m. FloridaA&M79,MorganSt.61 Gordon ,S934,080.5,JimmieJohnson,$774,245.6, Cleveland vs. Seattle atPeoria, Ariz.,12:05 p.m. GramblingSt.70, MVS U61 Matt Kenseth,$686,458.7,KevinHarvick,$680,999. Colorado(ss) vs.Texasat Surprise,Ariz., 12:05p.m. Jackson St. 65,Ark.-PineBluff 52 8, Paul Menard,$656,296.9, RickyStenhouseJr., San Diego vs. ChicagoWhite Soxat Glendale, Ariz., Memphis53, Cincinnati47 S590,773.10,JoeyLogano, $584,375. 11, KyleBus12:05p.m. NC ABT52,SCState42 ch, $558,755.12,Austin Dilon, $548,140.13, Greg Oakland vs. MilwaukeeatPhoenix,12:05 p.m. NorfolkSt.61,Md.-EasternShore57 Biffle, S535,568.14, JamieMcMurray,$530,176. Kansas Cityvs.ArizonaatScottsdale,Ariz.,1210 pm. Savannah St.74, NCCentral 50 15, MarcosAmbrose,$513,313. 16,TonyStewart, L.A. Dodgersvs. Cincinnati atGoodyear, Ariz., 6:05 Uconn68,Louisville 48 S503,064.17, Carl Edw ards, $496,048.18, Case y p.m. Midwest Mears,$485,734.19,RyanNewman, S478,873. 20, TCU51,KansasSt.46 BrianVickers,$461,068. DEALS Southwest Alabama St. 81,Prairie View78 GOLF Oklahoma87,TexasTech32 Transactions Texas65,OklahomaSt.58 BASEBALL TexasSouthern81,AlabamaAff M 72 PGA Tour AmericanLeague Far West Leaders TEXASRANGERS— ClaimedINFAndyParrinooff Montan a72,MontanaSt.65 ThroughMarch2 waiversfromOakland. PlacedLHPDerekHolland on ScoringAverage the 60-day DL. 1, Dustin Johnson,68.79.2, Graem e McDoweg, HOCKEY National League 68.99. 3,ZachJohnson,69.23.4, BubbaWatson, 69.23. CHICAG OCUBS—Agreedtotermswith RHPJake 5, HarrisEnglish,69.29.6, Webb Simpson,69.33. 7, Arrieta,RHPDallas Beeler, RHPAlberto Cabrera, RHP NHL HidekiMatsuyama, 69.46. 8,Charles Howel III, 69.57. Justin Grimm, RHPBlake Parker, RHPNeil Ramirez, Standings 9, WillMacK enzie, 69.63.10, JimmyWalker,69.66. RHPHectorRondon, RHPArodys Vizcaino, LHPZac All Times PST Driving Distance Rosscup,LHPChris Rusin, C Welington Castilo, 1, BubbaWatson, 320.8. 2, JasonKokrak, 308.7. INF Arismendy Alcantara, INFMike Olt, INFChristian EasternConference 3, ScottPiercy,307.0. 4, J.B. Holmes, 306.6.5 (tie), Viganueva INFLogan Watkins, OFBrett Jackson,OF Atlantic Division Graham DeLaet andRobert Garrigus, 304.7.7, Dustin Junior Lake,OFMat Szczur andOFJosh Viters on GP W L OT Pts GF GA Johnson,303.3. 8, GaryWoodland,303.2. 9, Brendan one-year contracts. Boston 60 38 17 5 81 188 137 Steele,302.2.10,CarlPetersson, 302.0. NEWYOR KMETS —Agreed to terms with RHP Montreal 63 34 22 7 75 160 154 Greens inRegulationPct. Victor Black,OFAndrewBrown, CJuanCenteno, C TampaBay 61 34 22 5 73 177 156 1, Dus tin Johnson,76.74%. 2,Ryan Moore, Travi s d' Arnaud,RHP Jacob deGrom,OFMattden Toronto 63 32 23 8 72 186 193 75.85%. 3,Zach Johnson,75.46%.4,Boo Weekley, Dekker,LHPJosh Edgin, RHPJeurys Fam ilia, INF Detroit 60 28 20 12 68 159 165 75.23b k5,Graham DeLaet,75.00bk 6,JustinHi cks, Wilmer Flores, RHPGonzalez Germen, RHPErik Ottawa 61 27 23 11 65 174 199 74.64%. 7, ChadCampbell, 74.27%.8,Harris English, Goeddel ,RHP MattHarvey,OFJuan Lagares,INF Florida 61 23 31 7 53 151 197 74.07%.9, BubbaWatson,73.61%.10, CharlesHowell Zach Lutz,LHPStevenMatz, RHPJenrry Mejia,OF Buffalo 61 18 35 8 44 124 183 III, 73.41 'Yo. Kirk Nieuw enhuis, OFCesar Pueffo, CAnthonyRecker, MetropolitanDivisioII Putting Average RHPRyanReid, LHPScott Rice,INFJosh Satin, RHP GP W L OT Pts GF GA 1, PeterMalnati,1.684. 2,Dustin Johnson,1.688r3, CarlosTorres,INFWilfredo Tovar, RHPJeff Walters P ittsburgh 6 0 4 0 16 4 84 192 149 Webb Simpson,1.696.4, ZachJohnson,1.702. 5(tie), andRHPZackWheeler onone-yearcontracts. Philadelphia 62 32 24 6 70 174 180 LukeGuthrieandChris Stroud,1.710. 7, JasonBohn, SANDIEG OPADRES—Agreedto termswith RHP N.Y.Rangers 62 33 26 3 69 162 157 1.712. 8,BubbaWatson, 1.713. 9(tie), JordanSpieth JesseHahn,RHPCasey Kelly, RHPDonn Roach, RHP Washington 62 29 23 10 68 184 186 and K J. Choi,1.715. Keyviu sSampson,RHPBurchSmith,RHPDaleThayC olumbus 61 3 1 25 5 67 180 170 All-AroundRanking er, RHPNick VincentRHPJoeWieland, LHPRobbie NewJersey 62 26 23 13 65 148 153 1/ DustinJohnson,150.2, Webb Simpson, 218.3, Erlin, LHPJuan Oramas, LHPPatrick SchusterLHP C arolina 6 1 2 6 2 6 9 61 151 173 HarrisEnglish,235.4, RyanPalmer, 258. 5,Wil MacK- Alex Torres,CYasmani Grandal, CRene Rivera, INF N.Y.lslanders 63 23 32 8 54 173 215 enzie,261. 6,ZachJohnson, 277. 7, KevinStadler, YonderAlonso, INFAlexi Amarista, INFJedd Gyorko, WesternConference 284. 8 (tie),BubbaWatsonand Patrick Reed, 285.10, INFRyanJacksonINF Tommy Medica,OFYeison Central Division BrendonTodd,362. Asenci o,OFReymondFuentesandOFRymerLiriano GP W L OT Pts GF GA PGATOUROfficial MoneyLeaders on one-year contracts. St. Louis 60 40 14 6 86 200 139 1, JimmyWalker,(10), $3,785,680. 2, Dustin BASKETB ALL Chicago 62 36 12 14 86 213 166 Johnson,(5), $2,951,150.3, HarrisEnglish, (10), National Basketball Association Colorado 61 39 17 5 83 188 164 S2,318,397. 4, Bubba Watson, (6), $2,160,007. 5, HOUSTONROCKETS — RecalledGTroyDaniels Minnesota 62 34 21 7 75 153 150 WebbSimpson, (7), S2,019,016.6, RyanMoore, (8), fromRioGrandeValley(NBADL). Dallas 61 29 22 10 68 173 171 S1,997,050.7, Chris Kirk, (9), $1,946,070.8, Jason FOOTBA LL Winnipeg 62 30 26 6 66 174 178 Day,(3), $1,909,200.9,ZachJohnson, (7),$1,777,825. National Football League Nashville 61 26 25 10 62 150 185 10, Kevin Stadler,(9), $1,617,152. BUFFALO BILLS—Released LBWillie Jefferson. Pacific Division FedExcupLeaders CLEVEL ANDBROWNS—DesignatedCAlexMack GP W L OT Pts GF GA 1, Jimmy Walker, 1830.2, Dustin Johnson,1206. as thetransition playerfor2014. A naheim 6 2 4 3 14 5 91 202 150 3, HarrisEnglish,1116.4, ChrisKirk,1017.5, Bubba MIAMIDOLPHINS—SignedCBBrent Grimesto San Jose 6 2 3 9 17 6 84 188 151 Watson ,982.6,WebbSimpson,939.7,ZachJohnson, afour-yearcontract. Los Angeles 63 35 22 6 76 152 134 867. 8, Ryan Moore, 852. 9, KevinStadler, 804. 10, PITTSBURGHSTEELERS— DesignatedLBJason Vancouver 63 28 25 10 66 150 166 PatrickReed,776. Worilds as thetransition playerfor 2014. Phoenix 6 1 2 7 2 3 11 65 169 180 TENNE SSEETITANS —Agreed to termswith S C algary 61 2 3 3 1 7 53 141 185 BernardPollardonamultiyearcontract. BASEBALL Edmonton 62 20 34 8 48 154 204 WASHIN GTONREDSKINS— Placedthe franchise Monday'sGames tag on LBBrianOrakpo. Columbus 2, Toronto1 Spring Training HOCKEY Dallas 3,Buffalo2 National HockeyLeague Standings Minnesota3,Calgary2 NHL — SuspendedWashington D Dmitry OrAll TimesPST Los Angele2, s Montreal1 lov twogamesfor boardingPhiladelphia FBrayden Today'sGames Schennduring aMarch2game. AMERICANLEAGUE FloridaatBoston, 4 p.m. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreedto termswith W L P ct Detroit atNewJersey,4p.m. FBrandonBogigon a three-year contract extension Seattle 5 1 . 8 33 Dallasat Columbus,4p.m. Cleveland 4 1 . 8 00 through theendof the2016-17season. ColoradoatChicago,5p.m. Minnesota 4 1 . 8 00 EDMON TONOILERS— Agreed to terms with G TampaBayatSt.Louis,5p.m. Oakl a nd 4 1 . 8 00 Ben Scri v ensonatwo-yearcontract extension. Pittsburghat Nashyile, 5p.m. FLORIDAPANTHERS— AnnouncedtheresignaHouston 3 1 . 7 50 N.Y.IslandersatWinnipeg,5p.m. tion ofpresidentandCEOMichael Yormark. Chicago 2 1 . 6 67 Vancouver at Phoenix, 6 p.m. MINNES OTAWILD—SignedRWKurtis Gabriel to Detroit 4 2 . 6 67 Ottawaat Edmonton, 6:30p.m. athree-yearentry-level contract. NewYork 4 2 . 6 67 CarolinaatSanJose,7:30p.m. MONTREALCANADIENS — Assigned D Davis Tampa Bay 2 1 . 6 67 Wednesday'sGames Drewiske to Hamilton (AHL). Kansas City 3 2 . 6 00 Torontoat N.Y.Rangers,4 p.m. NASHVILL E PREDATORS — Recalled G Pekka Baltimore 2 2 . 5 00 Washington atPhiladelphia,5 p.m. RinnefromMilwaukee(AHL). Los Ange l e s 2 2 . 5 00 Ottawaat Calgary, 6:30p.m. TAMPABAY LIGHTNING — RecalledG Anders Toronto 3 3 . 5 00 MontrealatAnaheim 7 p.m. Boston 1 3 . 2 50 Lindback fromSyracuse(AHL). ReassignedGKristers Texas 1 3 . 2 50 GudlevskistoSvracuse. NATIONALLEAGUE WASHIN GTONCAPITALS— RecalledDJack HilW L P ct len from Hershey(AHL). MOTOR SPORTS Pittsburgh 4 1 . 8 00 SOCCER Washington 3 1 . 7 50 Major LeagueSoccer NAcnCAR Sprint Cup Miami 3 2 . 6 00 CHIVASUSA— Waived F Bryande la Fuente. Leaders Arizona 4 4 . 5 00 SignedMFDaniel Fragoso. ThroughMarch2 LA GALAX Y— Acquired a conditional 2016SuCincinnati 3 3 . 5 00 Points Milwaukee 3 3 . 5 00 perDraftpickfromChicagofor DGregCochrane. NEW YORK RED BULLS— Announcedtheresig1, DaleEarnhardtJr., 90.2, BradKeselowski, 84. Los Angeles 2 3 . 4 00 3, Jeff Gordon,80. 4, Kevin Harvick, 79.5, Jimmie SanFrancisco 2 3 . 4 00 nation ofgeneralmanagerJeromedeBontin. Johnson ,78.6,JoeyLogano,75.7,MattKenseth,70. Chicago 1 3 . 2 50 COLLEGE 8, DennyHamlin, 68.9, Carl Edwards, 65. 10, Greg NewYork 1 3 . 2 50 NEWJER SEY ATHLETIC CONFERENCE— AnBiffle, 64.11,JamieMcMurray, 64.12, Casey Mears, St. Louis 1 3 . 2 50 nouncedtheadditions of ChristoperNewport, Frost64. 13, RickyStenhouseJr., 63. 14, KyleBusch,61. Colorado 1 4 . 2 00 burgState,SalisburyandWesleyasassociatefootball 15, RyanNew man, 60. 16, Austin Dillon, 56. 17, SanDiego 1 4 . 2 00 membersinthe2015-16academicyear. MarcosAmbrose,49. 18, Kasey Kahne, 47. 19, Reed Philadelphia 1 5 . 1 67 UT MARTI N— Firedmen' sbasketballcoachJason Sorenson,41.20,TonyStewart,37. Atlanta 0 6 . 0 00 James.

NHL ROUNDUP

Dallas Stare

coach

.C

Lindy Ruff won his 600th

r••rr 'I1 rr • ' tUl r I •

NHL game Monday

LM Otero /The Associated Press

Today Boys basketball: Summiat t Hermiston, 6p.m. Friday Girls basketball:Summ it, Bendin5Astate playoffs, first round, TBD;4Astateplayoffs, first round,Madras atSutherlin, TBD Alpine skiing:OregonSchool SkiAssociationalpine statechampionships (giant slalom)at Mt.Bachelor, Cliffhanger run,10 a.m. Saturday Boysbasketball: MountainView,Bendin 5Astate playoffs,first round,TBD Alpine skiing:OregonSchool SkiAssociation alpine statechampionships(slalom) atMt. Bachelor, Cliffhangerrun,10a.m.

Conference Overall

WEDNESDAY

when the Stare beat Buffalo 3-2.

ON DECK

Da as tarscoac earns t The Associated Press

•r

•w••• ••rrrrr r I tt t t r t • rtr rrr' rrt

iijkr P+r'

Parkln

tory would mean for Ruff.

'~ atso scored azkd r~k;

"Obviously, it's huge to get that win for him," he said. "He's a very decorated guy, a great guy and a great coach." Enroth made 36 saves, and

night. Stars coach Lindy Ruff earned

700, hopefully," Ruff said. "It means that I've had a lot of good players and good teams. Those wins belong to those players." Chiasson's goal was his first in 13 games, and he wasn't the only player who broke a scoring drought. Alex Goligoski put Dallas ahead briefly 2-1 with his

his 600th NHL win, and he got it

third goal this season after 48

against his former team. Ruff's

games without one.

er-play goal in the third period than Quick made 17 saves to rehelped Minnesota notch its sea- main unbeaten since the Olymson-high fifth straight win. Kyle pic break.

DALLAS — A lex C hiasson

•tr +r •I •

"It means I'm on my way to

H L w in

needed a break, and he got one. The result was a game-winning, power-play goaL Chiasson snapped a third-period tie and lifted the Dallas Stars to a 3-2 victory on Monday

first 571 wins came with Buffalo.

Jordie Benn knew what a vic-

y Kuemper stopped 21 shot . Blue Jackets 2, Maple Leafs1: TORONTO — Dalton Prout and Artem A nisimov scored sec-

Dallas' Kari Lehtonen had 21.

ond-period goals for Columbus. Kings 2, Canadiens 1: LOS

In other games Monday:

ANGELES — Los Angeles' Jeff

Wild 3, Flames 2: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Jared Spurgeon's pow-

Carter scored his 250th career goal on a power play and Jona-


TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings

Summaries

AH TimesPST

Monday'sGames

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

W L 46 13 43 14 33 26 33 27 31 29 29 29 27 33 26 32 24 36 24 37 21 40 20 40 19 43 15 45 12 47

Pct GB .780

Lakers 107,Trail Blazers106

L.A. LAKERS (107) .754 2 Bazemore5-90-214, Johnson7-110-014, Gasol .559 13 10-20 2-2 22,Marshall3-9 0-0 7,Meeks 8-16 3-3 .550 13'I~ 517 15r/r 21, Brooks1-96-68,Farmar4-90-09, Kelly2-40-0 .500 16'/2 4, Sacre3-52-2 8, Henry0-2 0-00. Totals 43-94 .450 19'/2 18-15 107. PORTUIND (106) .448 19'I~ Batum6-14 3-517, Aldridge9-193-4 21, Lopez 400 22r/r 9-131-1 19, Li l a rd 8-191-420, Matthews3-120-0 .393 23 .344 26 7, Wright3-60-08, Leonard0-01-21, Wiliams3-9 0-00, McCogum2-31-1 6.Totals ,333 26'/z 1-27, Barton0-1 .306 28'/r 43-9611-19106.

Grizzlies110, Wizards104 MEMPHIS (110) Prince8-113-3 21, Randolph7-16 2-316, Gasol 4-10 2-410,Conley7-144-4 20, Lee4-71-1 9,Allen 3-61-1 7,Davis2-30-04, M,Miger3-62-210,Calathes 3-40-06, Koufos 2-23-37. Totals 48-7918-21 110. WASHINGTON (104) Booker 7-131-215,Ariza5-91-215,Gorlat7-122-2 16, Wall8-165-723,Beal7-156-621, Singleton1-40-0 2, Harrington 2-52-26, A.Miger0-1000, Gooden0-2 000, PorlerJr 2 40 06 Totals 89 8117 21 104. Memphis 20 30 29 81 — 110 Washington 20 25 19 40 — 104

Bucks114, Jazz88

33 8 0 24 20 — 107 UTAH(88) .250 31'/2 L.A. Lakers Portland 20 86 28 22 — 106 Jefferson 3-70-07, Wiliams2-60-05, Favors1-5 .203 34 3-PointGoals—L.A. Lakers 8-18 (Bazemore 4-5, 0-0 2, Burke 2-71-2 7, Hayward 6-156-6 20, Burks WesternConference 2-6,Marshall1-2, Farmar1-3, Kelly0-1,John- 5-122-412,Kanter8-1611-1227, Garrett1-50-02, W L Pct GG Meeks son 0-1),Portland9-29(Lilard 3-8, Wright2-4, Ba- Evans2-30-0 4, Gobert 1-10-2 2, Rush0-20-0 0. d-Oklahoma Cit y 45 15 .750 tum 2-5, McCoffum1-2, Matthews1-6,Aldridge0-1, Totals81-7920-26 88. d-San Antonio 43 16 .729 1'/2 Williams0-3). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—L.A. MILWAUKE E(114) Portland 41 19 .683 4 Lakers 51(Gasol9), Portland 63 (Lopez16). AsMiddleton4-6 0-0 9, llyasova13-143-431, Pad-L.A.Clippers 41 20 672 4r/r sists — L. A . Lakers 29 (Marshaff 11), Portl a nd 22 chulia 3-48-814,Knight4-72-311, Wolters4-6 0-0 Houston 40 19 678 4'/2 (Williams,Batum,Lilard 5).Total Fouls—L.A. Lakers 10, Mayo1-50-0 3, Henson3-7 0-06, AntetokounGolden State 36 24 .600 9 Phoenix 35 24 593 9I/2 19, Portland13.Technicals—L.A. Lakers defensive mpo 3-91-1 8,Adrien3-8 2-4 8, Sessions4-7 6-6 14, Raduljica0-10-00. Totals42-7422-26114. Dallas 36 25 590 9'/2 threesecond.A—20,013(19,980). utah 21 27 19 21 — 88 Memphis 34 25 576 10'/2 Milwaukee 30 25 40 19 — 114 Minnesota 30 29 .508 14'/2 Pistons 96, Knicks85 Denver 25 34 ,424 19'/i NewOrleans 23 37 .383 22 NEWYORK(88) Timderwolve s132, Nuggets128 Utah 21 39 .350 24 Anthony 11-21 2-4 28, Stoudemire9-11 4-4 L.A. Lakers 21 39 .350 24 22, Chandler3-92-2 8, Felton1-91-2 4, J. Smith MINNESOT A(182) Sacramen to 21 39 .350 24 5-172-216, Shump ert 2-70-0 5, Prigioni 1-2 0-0 Brewer6-103-616, Love10-2111-1333,Pekovic d-divisionleader 2, Hardaway Jr. 0-60-00, Tyler0-10-00, Murry0-0 5-8 6-916, Rubio1-23-4 5, Martin 3-1116-1722, Monday'sGames 0-00, Aldrich0-00-00.Totals 82-8311-1488. Barea4-107-816, Cunningham4-51-1 9, Budinger Memphis110,Washington104 1-3002,Dieng3-50-06,Muhammad1-55-67, DETROIT(96) Brooklyn96,Chicago80 Jo.Smith 5-175-915, Monroe 4-103-411, Drum MbahaMoute00000.Totals888082 64182. Miami124,Charlotte107 mond6-9 5-717, Jennings4-100-0 9, Singler 3-8 DENVER (128) Detroit 96,NewYork85 0-0 8, Stuckey6-16 4-4 16,Bynum5-10 5-6 16, Chandler11-221-325, Faried9-113-521, Mozgov Milwaukee 114,Utah88 Jerebko 2-3 0-0 4, Cal d wel l Pope 0-0 0-0 0. Tot als 23014, Lawson11-166731,Foye8162 322,HickMinnesota132,Denver 128 85-88 22-80 96. son 2-71-35,Fournier1-52-25,Adhur2-51-15,Brooks LA. Lakers107,Portland106 Newyork 28 16 20 21 — 85 3-90-08,Vesely1-1 0-02.Totals 60-9616-26128. Sacra mento96,New Orleans89 Detroit 20 19 30 27 — 96 Minnesota 40 26 82 84 — 182 Today'sGames Oenver 25 24 84 45 — 128 GoldenStateat Indiana,4 p.m. SanAntonioat Cleveland,4p.m. Nets 96, Bulls80 Miami atHouston, 5p.m. Kings 96, Pelicans89 CHICAGO (80) PhiladelphiaatOklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Dunleavy 3-9 0-08, Boo zer 4-10 2-410, Noah 5 8 L.A. Clippersat Phoenix, 6p.m. NEWORLEANS(89) 0-010, Hinrich2-7 0-0 5, Butler 4-115-913, GibNewOrleansatLA. Lakers,7:30 p.m. TEvans 8149-1027, Davis41448 13, Ajinca24 son5-62-312,Augustin4-97-716,Sneff1-20-0 0-0 4,Roberts6-13 2-215, Gordon4-9 H10, Rivers Wednesday'sGames 2-92-66, Stiemsm a1-1 0-02,Withey1-20-02, Aminu HoustonatOrlando,4 p.m. 2, Mohamme d1-1 0-02, Fredette 1-20-02. Totals 30-6616-23 80. Utah atWashington, 4pm. 0 02 22,Morrow49008. Totals82 7519 2889. Indianaat Charlotte, 4 p.m. BROOK LTN(96) SACRAM ENTO(96) Gay 5-104-414, Thom pson2-4 2-6 6, Cousins MemphisatBrooklyn,4;30p.m. Johnson7-112-219, Pierce5-121-1 14,Plumlee 3-3 0-2 6,Wiliams6-11 7-820, Livingston4-76-6 5-1313-1623,Thomas8-166-622, McLemore 3-4 Golden Stateat Boston,4:30 p.m. 4-410, Wi l liams 0-3 0-0 0, Acy0-1 0-00, Johnson Chicago at Detroit, 4:30p.m. 14, Blatche4-113-311, Kirilenko3-31-47, Teletovic 5-7 0-210, McCagum3-71-1 8. DallasatDenver, 5p.m. 0 5 0 0 0,Thornton1-71-2 3, Anderson1-2 0 0 2, 1-31-23, R.Evans NewYorkatMinnesota, 5p.m. Collins 0-10-00.Totals 34-73 21-2896. Totals 32-6831-4196. Sacramento at Milwaukee,5 p.m. Chicago 18 24 17 21 — 80 Newerleans 18 2 0 21 80 — 89 Atlantaat Portland,7:30p.m. Brooklyn 27 28 26 20 — 96 Sacramento 28 1728 28 — 96

Hea t 124, Bobcats107 CHARLO TTE(107)

Kidd-Gilchrist 3-4 2-2 8, McRoberts3-6 0-0 7, Jefferson18-242-438, Walker 3-81-2 7, Neal3-11 2-2 10,Zeffer4-7 2-410, Douglas-Roberts 3-9 4-5 12, Tolliver4-101-212, Biyombo0-00-0 0,Ridnour 1-30-03.Totals42-8214-21 107.

MIAMI (124)

James22-339-1261,Battier1-40-03, Bosh6-14 2-215, Chalmers1-72-24, Douglas4-50-010, Allen 3-70-0 9, Cole1-20-0 2, Andersen3-3 0-07, Beasle y1-22-24,Oden2-20-04,Haslem 1-31-2 3, Lewis0-00-0 0, Liggins1-1 0-02. Totals 46-83 16-20124. Charlotte 26 28 28 28 — 107 Miami 29 81 38 26 — 124

Leaders ThroughMonday'sGames Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Durant,OK C 59 613 506 1862 31.6 Anthony,NYK James,MIA Love,MIN Harden,HOU Griffin, LAC

Curry,GO L Aldridge,PO R DeRozan,TOR George,IND Cousins,SAC Nowilzki,DAL Irying,CLE Liffard,POR Jefferson,CHA Thomas,SAC Dragic,PHX Gay,SAC Davis,NOR Wall, WAS Jordan,LAC Love,MIN Drummond,DET Howard,HOU Cousins,SAC Noah,CHI Aldridge,PO R Vucevic,ORL Jefferson,CHA Bogut,GO L

Lawson,DEN Curry,GO L Wall, WAS Rubio,MIN Jennings,DET Lowry,TOR Teague,ATL Nelson,ORL

58 576 343 1626 28.0 55 558 312 1511 27.5 56 478 400 1490 26.6 51 376 385 1247 24.5 61 550 366 1477 24.2 57 475 229 1372 24.1 55 534 234 1304 23.7 57 454 346 1304 22.9 59 452 288 1334 22.6 51 401 335 1137 22.3 59 460 255 1269 21.5 58 448 245 1246 21.5 60 419 265 1269 21.2 51 466 132 1066 20.9 60 421 283 1234 20.6 55 398 248 1131 20.6 54 408 225 1096 20.3 52 397 249 1045 20.1 60 432 262 1201 20.0

Rehounds

G OFF DEFTOT AVG 61 246 603 849 13.9 56 176 565 741 13.2 60 325 462 787 13.1 59 196 539 735 12.5 51 156 435 591 11.6 58 215 446 661 11.4 55 127 488 615 11.2 44 144 337 481 10.9 51 103 431 534 10.5 52 149 395 544 10.5

Assists G AST AVG 4 6 407 8.8 5 7 503 8.8 6 0 524 8 . 7 5 9 500 8.5 58 59 55 56

46 4 45 4 385 386

8.0 7.7 7.0 6.9

NBA ROUNDUP

The Associated Press file photo

Former North Carolina coach Dean Smith turned 89 years old on Friday. He Is struggling with dementia and has difficulty

recalling somemomemts of his legendary career.

Smith Continued from C1 When hismemory began to fail, it frustrated himbe-

cause he was so accustomed to being able to find anything in his memory that had ever been there — even if it had been only for an instant. The first time I ever saw something was in 2005. I was

The Washington Post. He

interviewinghim for abook I

kept insisting I should write about his players, but I said

went to the national semi-

finals as Frank McGuire's assistant coach at North Carolina.

Dean Smith reaching for a name and not finding it was

slightly more stunning than wakingup to find the sun rising in the west.

"My memory's slipping," he said."I forget things now." He had just turned 74, so a little memory loss did not

seem like a big deal. "Most people would kill to have 50percent of your memory," I said. "We've been talking an hour. This is

rable shot he has had than his game-winner against

retelling. In 1981, Smith most

grudgingly agreed to cooperate with me on a profile for

beringthe name ofacoach he had met the first time he

Johnson wa s h a r d-pressed to think of a m o r e memo-

There is one story that-

to me — defines him. I have told it in the past but it bears

him have difficulty recalling was writing on the Final Four and hehad trouble remem-

The Associated Press PORTLAND — Wesley

with close friends. He might have despised losing an argumentevenmore thanhe despised losing a basketball game. As withbasketball, he won a lot more than he lost.

the first thing you couldn't

Portland.

remember."

Kent Bazemore lobbed to Johnson for the go-ahead basket with 6.9 seconds left, and the Los Angeles Lakers

upset."I know," he said. "But that never happened in the

He shook his head, still

I had written about them. I wanted towrite about him.

He finally agreed. One of the people I inter-

viewed for the story was Rev. Robert Seymour, who had been Smith's pastor at

the Binkley Baptist Church since 1958, when Smith first arrived in Chapel Hill. Seymour told me a story about how upset Smith was to learn that Chapel Hill's

restaurants were still segregated. He and Seymour came up with an idea: Smith

would walk into a restaurant with a black member of the church.

"You have to remember,"

Reverend Seymour said. "Back then, he wasn't Dean Smith. He was an assistant

coach. Nothing more." Smith agreed and went to arestaurant where man-

past." He was right. Dean Smith

agement knew him. He and his companion sat down and were served. That was the

"To pull out the win like we did and fight the whole game, it was a good one." Pau Gasol scored 22 points

remembered every name, every game, every play in every game. He also remembered every call that went against him and anything written or said about one of his players or friends that he thought was a slight — real or perceived. He never asked me how my kids were. He asked

and the Lakers won their sec-

aboutthem by name.

SBld.

defeated the Trail Blazers 107-

106 on Monday night. They had been practicing that very play. "It's one of them. It's gotta

t

be up there," Johnson said about where the shot ranked.

ond straight, snapping the Blazers' five-game winning

But his memory was only a tool — an impressive oneand nothing more. His true

r

streak. Jodie Meeks added 21

points. The Lakers, who led by as many as 15 points in the first quarter, pushed the lead to 97-

greatness was in his loyalty, in his passion, his compassion and his selflessness. He was appalled in 1986when

86 in the fourth on MarShon Brooks' short jumper.

he learned that the new basketball arena at North Caro-

B ut

Ni c o la s

Bat u m ' s

3-pointer narrowed the gap to 103-101 for the Blazers with

3:37 left before Wesley Matthews' fadeaway jumper tied it at 105 with 1:10 left. Damian Lillard hit one of

two free throws to give Port-

Don Ryan /The Associated Press

I thought what the Lakers did

Timbervvolves 132, Nugmore than anything was they gets 128: DENVER — Kevin came out and sustained it for Love scored 33 points and points and Gasol's dunk ex- the entire game." tied a season high with 19 retended the lead to 82-73 with In other games Monday: bounds for his NBA-best 50th 2:36 left. Dorell Wright hit Heat 124, Bobcats 107: MI- double-double this season can just throw it a nywhere two consecutive 3-pointers for AMI — LeBron James scored as Minnesota won its third around the dash," Bazemore Portland to close within 82-79, a career-high 61 points to win in a row. Love topped 30 said. "He (Johnson) caught but Bazemore answered with breaking Miami's franchise points for the 11th time in his it and could have actually a 3 for the Lakers. record. James made 22 of 33 last 14 starts. "They were making shots. shots from the field, includdunked it but went with a safe Bucks 114, Jazz 88: MILone." They were making jumpers. ing his first eight 3-point at- WAUKEE — Ersan IlyasoRobin Lopez had 19 points I think we were deflated all tempts. His career best had va scored a season-high 31 and 16 rebounds, while Batum the way around," Blazers been 56 points, on March 20, points on 13-of-14 shooting, had 17 points and 15 rebounds guard Wesley Matthews said. 2005, for Cleveland against and Milwaukee hit a blister"Their energy was higher Toronto. for the Blazers. ing 57 percent from the field. The Lakers jumped out to than ours." N ets 96, Bulls 80: N E W P istons 96, K n icks 8 5 : a 31-16 lead in the first quarBlazers coach Terry Stotts YORK — J ason C o l l i ns AUBURN HILLS, Mich. ter, capping a 14-2 run with said he didn't believe his played the final minutes of A ndre Dr ummond ha d 1 7 Meeks' dunk. Portland strug- team overlooked the Lakers. a winning home debut with points and a career-high 26 " I think i t ' s a c r e dit t o Brooklyn. D eron W i l l i ams rebounds as Detroit surged gled with eight turnovers. Portland closed the gap in the Lakers. They sustained scored 20 points and Joe past New York in a matchup the second quarter, pulling to their style of play from the Johnson had 19 for the Nets. of slumping teams. within 45-38 on Batum's dish very beginning," Stotts said. Grizzlies 110, Wizards 104: Kings 96, Pelicans 89: -

to Lopez for the dunk and a free throw. But Bazemore's

"They got out in t r ansition,

they were aggressive in passlast-break dunk extended the ing lanes, they forced eight Lakers' lead to 56-47 with 3:27 turnovers in the first quarleft in the half. ter. They got us on our heels

WASHINGTON — Tayshaun

Prince scored a season-high

SACRAMENTO, C a l if. D eMarcus Cousins had 23

21 points and Memphis with-

points and 12 rebounds and

stood a late rally to snap Washington's winning streak

Isaiah Thomas scored 22 for Sacramento.

"Why? You should be proud of doing something like that." He leaned forward in his

chair and in a quiet voice said something I've never forgotten: "You should never be

That is what Dean Smith has done his entire life. There

from Michael Jordan to

and 1997 who would not run

point — more than Smith. He had one firm rule that Linda

half. Los Angeles wouldn't let the Blazers get closer than four

"I wish he hadn't done that."

players," he said. "I never scored a single point." No coach ever genuinely cared about his playersPortland on Mondaynight.

more pitched to Johnson for the deciding layup and Lillard missed a 3-pointer as time ran out. "These guys are straight up athletes in this league and you

he asked. "Reverend Seymour," I

You should just do what's

first quarter. But the officials reversed a possession call with 7.1 seconds left, giving

at six.

"Who told you about that?"

proud of doing what's right.

walk-ons whonever scored a

right away. We got back, but

he shot me an angry look.

the Dean E. Smith Center. "They should name it for the

Portland coach Terry Stotts reactsto a call during the first half against the Los Angeles Lakers In

The Lakers led 63-56 at the

Smith and asked him to tell me more about that night,

lina was going to be named

land its first lead since the

the ball to the Lakers. Baze-

beginning of desegregation in Chapel Hill. When I circled back to

right." is not a single player who played for him between 1962 through fire and abrick wall for him. It has nothing to do with the games he won. It has

Woods, his longtime assistant, knewhad tobe followed

everythingto dowith each of them knowinghe would do

to the letter: If any player-

the same — and more — for them.

any player — showed up in his office needing to see him, she was to interrupt whatever

Recently, I asked Larry Brown, who played on the

he was doing, regardless of who he might be talking to. No one came beforetheplayers. It was not a credo or a

first team Smith coached at North Carolina, what one

motto, it was a way of life. He was also as competitive

Brown thought for a moment.

a human being as has ever

thing made Smith so special to all those whoknewhim. "He's the single most decent man I ever met," Brown

lived. It was not just in basketball. He was almost ruth-

SB1Cl.

lessly competitive on the golf course, even when playing

way for anyone tobe remembered.

That is a wonderful

NorthCarolinaholdsoff NotreDame CHAPEL HILL, N.C.— James Michael MCAdoohit the goahead shot in the lane with 3:09 left and Marcus PaigG blocked Eric Atkins' driving shot oll the final play to seal No. 14 North Carolina'S 63-61 viCtOry Over NOtre Dame OnMOnday night. MCAdoo finished with14 points to lead the Tar Heels, who bleW a14-Poitlt halftime leadatld had to fight to the hOrn fOr

their 12th straight win in their home finale Atkins scored 21 points for Notre Dame. — The Associated Press


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

Wrestling Continued from C1 He said that even before

the championship finals had begun. Crook County, which

daimed its second straight Class 4A title over the weekend with an all-classification state

record of 405.5 points, showed abrand of dominance no Oregon high school team had ever displayed onthe state championship stage.

"It's pretty rare," Burton said.

"There will be another team like it, but not soon." Burton recalled the Russ

Thurman era at Crook County, when Thurman, who passed away in 2012, coached the Cow-

boys to a long run of success that included state championships in 1969 and 1975 and

runner-up finishes in 1967 and 1976.

"Backin the day ... you could notbeat a Crook County Cowboy," Burton said. "From top to bottom, his kids were just dominant. And now it's that

way again." The Cowboys are back among Oregon's wrestlingelite. "There's been some teams,

historically... there was a Roseburg team aboutthreeor four years ago that was probablytheir equal," said Mountain View's 18-year coach, Les Combs, referring to Roseburg's run of five Class 6A state championships in six seasons from 2007 to 2012. "But who

I actually (coached) against, bar none (Crook County is) the greatest team I've ever compet-

ed against." Lastyear,after38long years, Crook County reigned again as wrestling state champions, posting a point total of 290 that ranked as the third-highest

total ever recorded at the state tourney and just 13 points off the top mark of 303 set by

Hermiston in2009. So at the beginning of the 2013-14season,

Game of theweek Clinging to a two-point lead with17 seconds left, Mountain View denied crosstown rival BendHigh a chance for a potential game-winning or game-tying shot, allowing the visiting Cougars to escapewith a 58-56 boys basketball victory on Friday night. The win gave Mountain View, which entered the game No. 4 in the Class 5Arankings, the Intermountain Conference title over the then-No. 6 LavaBears.

Five Seavey family members have raced

Iditarod Continued from C1 The Seaveys shy away from the term "mushing dynasty," but Mitch Seavey, who

Boomer Fleming closed his high school wrestling career in quickyet decisive fashion on Saturday night at Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Portland. The Ridgeview senior recorded four straight falls over the weekend, including a 1-minute, 6-second pin of Elmira's Matt Engholm to earn Fleming athird consecutive individual state

Both Danny and Mitch live in Seward on the Kenai Peninsula. Dallas has his kennel about 150 miles north, in Wil-

Conway,17, last month won the Junior Iditarod, adding to his title from 2012. And he will be eligible for the full Iditarod in 2015.

also won in 2004, acknowl-

low, where he admits he has

edges that "we sure mush a

little contact with the outside

lot."

" We got a c o uple of brate the 100th anniversary good-sized, serious k en- of the Iditarod Trail, and his nels banging away at it," trip to Nome was sponsored Mitch Seavey said. "You're

by the Iditarod Historic Trail

bound to get your share" of championships.

Alliance. "We've certainly got a legacy that dad handed down to us, and then myself on to Dallas and beyond," Mitch Seavey said. "We've learned a lot and hopefully we've helped each other as we go along."

You can count three for the family in the first 41 editions of the Iditarod. Mitch's father, Dan, helped

organize the first Iditarod in

Player of theweek

ers must have gone horribly wrong.

in the Iditarod, and they are not done yet:

1973 and finished third that

year. W hen Dallas won t h e This year's Iditarod startrace two years ago, all three ed Sunday in Willow, and men were on the trail. Dan the race will finish sometime Seavey that year, at age 74, early next week in Nome, on ran his fifth Iditarod to cele-

Alaska's western coast. In the

world and does not own a early going, four-time cham- television. "I don't leave my training pion Martin Buser was the first to leave the Rohn check- compound if I can help it," point Monday.The jockey- said Dallas. "If I leave, it's by ing for the lead remains fluid dog team, not by vehicle." until mushers began taking When asked if the Seaveys a mandatory 24-hour layover are the first family of mushand two eight-hour rests. ing, Dallas told a reporter, "I'll Besides Mitch and Dallas, leave that to your type." there is another Seavey in But five family members, this year's race: Dallas' older including another son, Tyrell, brother Danny, 31. He joking- have raced in the Iditarod, ly told Anchorage television and they are not done yet: station KTVA during the cer-

Conway, 17, last month won

emonial start on Saturday the Junior Iditarod, adding that if he were to finish ahead to his title from 2012. And he of either Mitch or Dallas, Plan will be eligible for the full IdiA for both of t hose mush- tarod next year.

I '

e

I

e

I

I

title.

Stats of theweek Three, 76.5, 102.5. On Saturday, CrookCounty rolled to a second straight Class 4A wrestling state title at Portland's Veterans

Memorial Coliseum. On the way, the Cowboys posted 405.5 team points, more than the next three teams' scores combined anda new all-classification state record. The previous mark was 303, which Crook County had eclipsed by 76.5 points even before the championship finals. The Cowboys scorched the previous record — by102.5 points.

the number 303 was written on

the whiteboard in the Crook County High wrestling room. "It's a once-in-a-lifetime

So yes, we are better because

group of athletes," said Trevor

I found that compares to

Rasmussen, the Cowboys' 220-pound winner. "We'vebeen

Crook County's is 401 points, put up by Blair Academy (New

together since sixth grade, and

Jersey) at the 2001 National

we could always see this com-

Prep School Wrestling Championships. According to Inter-

ing. We knew it would come eventually." Throughout the season, that"303" remained onthat

whiteboard as the Cowboys piled up wins at prestigious tournaments such as the North

Bend Coast Classic, the Reser's Tournament of Champions, and the 4A division of the Or-

I

they're great." Nationally, the closest mark •

Mat, a wrestling website that and wrestling teams nationally, Blair is currently the No. 1 while the Cowboys are No. 39. "We're Prineville, Oregon,"

HUNTINGt FISHING sponsoredbr

point total — 303 — has stood

kids in the school. And we

FREENDS'

as anoverridinggoalforCrook County as it placed fifth at the

don't care. We just go about our business and be the best

12 II under, all gear provided

110-team Reno Tournament of

we can be, and we go out and

Champions and later putup an unheard-of 551.5 points at the Special District 2 regionals.

beat people that we shouldn't."

ber, as the Cowboys piledup

and mindfulness of each of

his wrestlers, as well as their second-, third- and fourth-place noticeable, almost tangible, finishers combined. desire to win. "We knew we were coming Berger called the Cowboys' for the record, but, man, we just program a family, one with an went way over it," said Trayton unparalleled coaching staff Libolt, the 113-pound champion and backed by an incomparafor Crook County. "We were ble community. "That's the most special just going to keep extendingit to where nobody's going to beat thing about it," Berger said. "It's a wrestling communithis. I don't think anybody's going to beat this record in my ty. They know and love the lifetime." sport. There'snotmany places Crook County qualified23 around here like that." "I couldn't be more honored wrestlers for the state championships. Twenty went on to to be on this team," Libolt addplace (top six), 11were finalists, ed. "It's so special. I've never and five took home individual seen a team like this before. titles — one off the state record We all love each other. We're for a single team and a feat just brothers. We all joke that only five other high school around and know when to get wrestlingprograms in Oregon serious, pick each other up, tell have ever achieved. each otherwhen something's "It's a one-of-a-kind, once-in- wrong. We're like a family, a-lifetime kind of team," said and that's why this team is so Crook County senior Tyler good. Berger, a transfer from HermThe Cowboys are the undisiston who became a four-time puted champs of Class 4A. By individual champ by winning at least one measure — in the the 152-pound bracket Saturrecord books — they are the day night. "Nobody's going to top high school wrestling team beat this record that we put ever in Oregon. up. It's a magical kind of thing "Memories fade, but this that hasn't been done before feeling, I'll never forget this and won'tbe done again. It's feeling," Berger said Saturday a beautiful, beautiful thingnight while still catching his team, coaches, everything. It's breath after his championship top-quality." match. "It's a once-in-a-lifeOther Central Oregon protime thing. It's going to be a grams havebegun reapingthe definite mile-marker in my rewards of having a highly suc- career in wrestling." "Success breeds success," cessful foe. "They're elite, and I'll nevsaid Huffman, the Cowboys' er, ever take that away from sixth-year head coach. "Being them," said Combs, whose here and putting on this disteam placed seventh in the play will only build excitement

Sponsoredby

in our community and continue the tradition. We have a lot to work for next year if we

tains, every single town, wrestling is important. And wres-

want to keep improving." The Crook County coach

tling hasn't been important

adds: "The record is now 406." —Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.

in Bend. In the last five years, it's now become important.

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C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

+

NASDAQ

16,168.03

4,277.30

+

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

S &P500 ~ 1 3 7 2

30 02

TOdap t,s40

RadioShack reports fourth-quarter financial results today. The struggling electronics retailer has been cutting costs, shuffl ing management and updating its stores and offerings in response to tough competition from online retailers and discount stores. Investors will want to know whether the turnaround plan is reviving the retailer's slumping sales.

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F

Ford Motor

14,500

HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 16321.71 16071.25 16168.03 -153.68 DOW Trans. 7341.28 7245.87 7302.93 -45.44 DOW Util. 518.77 513.24 514.19 -4.58 NYSE Comp. 10358.81 10276.13 10329.79 -96.07 NASDAQ 4284.15 4239.65 4277.30 -30.82 S&P 500 1854.11 1834.44 1845.73 -1 3.72 -9.06 S&P 400 1372.75 1357.06 1366.27 Wilshire 5000 19946.84 19676.85 19810.73 -136.11 -6.67 Russell 2000 1179.62 1164.77 1176.36

DOW

%CHG. WK -0.94% V -0.62% V -0.88% V -0.92% V -0.72% V -0.74% V -0.66% -0.68% V -0.56%

Mo QTR YTD L L L L L L L L L

L L L L L L L L L

-2.47% -1.32% +4.81% -0.68% +2.41% -0.14% +1.77% +0.53% +1.09%

NorthwestStocks

$

AVAV

$30.72

$35 30

$22.12

25 20 15

Operating EPS

' '14

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',".'„",";,Winter hurts GM and Ford It was a tough February for General Motors and Ford Chevy Silverado pickup, GM's top-selling vehicle, fell 12 as winter storms hit much of the nation. The country's percent for the month. top two automakers noted that Ford sold nearly 184,000 vehicles, but weather had an impact but said sales sales of cars fell almost 14 percent. Sales started to thaw toward the end of the of the F-Series pickup, its top-selling month. vehicle, rose just under 3 percent. GM says it sold just over 222,000 Industry analysts expect auto sales cars and trucks, led by the Chevrolet overall to rise about 1 percent for the Cruze compact car, with sales up month as most companies report almost 22 percent. Sales of the declines or modest increases. MONDAY'9 CLOSE

Price-earnings ratio: Lost money based on past 12 months' results Source: Facteet

Ford Motor(F)

$15.20

General Motors (GM)

$36. 2 1

AP

AmdFocus

52-WEEK RANGE

ONE DAY CHANGE

-.0089

— TOTAL RETURN1 -YR 3-YRS '

3D Systems

DDD

Close:$74.86 V-1.10 or -1.4% Preliminary earnings for 2013 and guidance for this year from the 3-D printing company overshadowed strong organic growth. $100 80

15

D J 52-week range $12.1$~

F $1$ .$2

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D J 52-week range

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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.4 7 - . 1 2 +0.2 +16.7 +11.5+18.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.55 -.61 0.0 +11.7 +8.9+15.3 C A C CpWldGrlA m 45.45 -.73 +0.3 +20.4 +10.0+20.1 C 8 D EurPacGrA m 48.67 -1.09 -0.8 +16.5 +5.7+18.1 8 8 C FnlnvA m 51. 7 3 - .47 -0.5 +23.8 +12.2+22.9 C C C iShEMkts 944249 38.78 -.70 GrthAmA m 43.94 -.41 +2.2 +29.7 +14.1+22.8 C 8 D BkofAm 849891 16.30 -.23 Ivy ScTechA m WSTAX IncAmerA m 20.86 -.16 +1.0 +15.0 +10.6+18.6 8 A A PlugPowr h 829057 5.82 +1.15 InvCoAmA m 36.99 -.32 +0.8 +26.5 +13.1+21.4 8 C D VerizonCm 553679 47.31 -.27 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.59 -.56 +0.1 +21.3 +10.6+21.9 8 8 C Facebook 546296 67.41 -1.05 WAMutlnvA m39.41 -.29 -0.1 +24.3 +14.6+22.9 8 A C 8 iPVix rs 499781 46.28 +2.41 SPDR Fncl 487552 21.53 -.17 Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 6 + .02 +2.4 + 2.7 + 5.0 +7.9 A 8 8 iShR2K 470212 116.89 -.63 IntlStk 4 2.71 - . 9 6 -0.8 +21.6 +6.9+23.7 A A A Penney 466819 7.96 + .68 Stock 168.8 4 -1.84 0. 0 + 31.0 +15.4+27.1 A A A Fidelity Contra 97.29 - . 9 1 +2.2 +29.8 +14.7+23.3 C 8 C Gainers GrowCo 125 . 85 -.93+5.6 +38.3 +17.7+28.2 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.49 -.40 +0.1 +27.5 +14.7+27.3 8 A C Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg65.62 -.49 +0.2 +24.1 +13.9+24.1 C 8 8 Vimicro h 4.24 +1.28 + 4 3.2 500ldxlnstl 65 . 63 -.48+ 0.2 +24.1 N A N A C FateTher n 8.98 +2.01 + 28.8 «C PlugPowrh 5.82 +1.15 + 2 4.6 $$ FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC x 2.48-.02 +2.4 +13.6 +8.8+18.6 A A A ChiCache 26.07 +4.97 + 2 3.6 IncomeA x 2.4 5 -. 03 +2.5 +13.9 +9.3+19.1 A A A DrxRsaBear 20.98 +3.67 + 2 1.2 Intl I 26.14 -.58 -0.7 +22.2 +10.5+27.2 A A A Co Oakmark CleanDsl 3.27 +.57 + 2 1.1 RisDivA m 19 . 84 . . . +0 .6 + 20.2 +11.9+18.7 Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer RadNet 2.29 +.35 + 1 8.0 RisDiv8 m 17 . 73 . . . +0 .5 + 19.1 +10.8+17.6 Highpwrlnt 6.06 +.88 + 1 7.0 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17 . 63 . . . +0 .5 + 19.4 +11.0+17.8 BioFuelEn 3.39 +.48 + 1 6.5 average of stock holdings SmMidValAm 44.76 -.29 +0.9 +27.2+10.2+24.2 8 E E Dndreon 3.31 +.43 + 1 4.9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValBm 37.68 -.24 +0.8 +26.1 +9.2+23.2 C E E Losers CATEGORY Technology T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.4 4 - . 2 7 -1.2 +19.5 +12.1+24.4 D C A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR GrowStk 54.0 1 - . 45 +2.7 +35.8 +16.7+26.0 A A A RATING™ * ** * f t HealthSci 64.5 8 - . 45+11.7 +53.6 +31.8+34.6 8 A A -9.91 -23.6 EPAM Sys 32.02 Newlncome 9. 4 6 +.01+2.2 -0.1 +4.0 +6.2 D D D Luxoft n 28.83 -8.60 -23.0 ASSETS $1,795 million -3.58 -19.5 DxRssaBull 14.74 Vanguard 500Adml 170.72 -1.26 +0.2 +24.1 +13.9+24.2 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.37% QIWI n 38.82 -7.81 -16.7 500lnv 170.69 -1.26 +0.2 +24.0 +13.8+24.0 C 8 8 MANAGER Zachary Shafran -5.27 -14.1 Yandex 32.23 CapOp 49.13 -.45 +6.4 +37.3 +16.6+26.8 A A A SINCE 2001-02-09 Eqlnc 29.48 -.27 -0.9 +19.6 +15.0+24.5 D A A RETURNS 3-MO +8.4 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 30.98 -.18 +3.3 +34.2 +17.6+30.2 A A A YTO +3.0 TgtRe2020 27.36 -.16 +0.9 +13.0 +8.4+17.1 8 A 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +45.9 Tgtet2025 15.87 -.11 +0.8 +14.6 +8.9+18.5 8 8 C Paris 4,290.87 -117.21 -2.66 3-YR ANNL +20.1 TotBdAdml 10.76 +.03 +2.3 +0.2 +4.0 +5.0 C C E London 6,708.35 -1 01.35 -1.49 5-YR-ANNL +27.0 Totlntl 16.48 -.33 -1.6 +10.8 +3.2+18.3 E E C Frankfurt 9,358.89 -333.19 -3.44 TotStlAdm 47.06 -.33 +0.8 +25.7 +14.2+25.2 8 A A Hong Kong22,500.67 -336.29 -1.47 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.64 Micron Technology, Inc. TotStldx 47.03 -.33 +0.8 +25.5 +14.1+25.1 8 8 A Mexico 38,534.82 -248.07 8.28 Milan 19,759.69 -682.72 -3.34 USGro 29.53 -.23 +2.9 +31.0 +15.3+23.7 8 8 C Cree, Inc. 5.23 -1 88.84 -1.27 Tokyo 14,652.23 Welltn 38.26 -.22 +0.8 +15.3 +10.6+17.5 8 A 8 4.95 Stockholm 1,335.56 -33.57 -2.45 Alliance DataSystemsCorporation Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -18.00 -.33 Aspen Technology, Inc. 3.85 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Sydney 5,397.40 Zurich 8,281.01 -1 94.32 -2.29 Acxiom Corporation 3.47 redemption fee.Source: Mcrningstac

F $ $7.2$

Vol.:42.8m (1.0x avg.) P E: 8.7 Vol.:5.1m (0.9x evg.) P E : 105.4 Mkt. Cap:$58.87b Yie l d: 3.3% Mkt. Cap: $7.69 b Yield: ... TYC Close:$43.02%0.84 or 2.0% The fire protection and security company is selling its South Korean security business to The Carlyle Group for $1.93 billion. $45

Darden Restaurants

DRI

Close: $48.33 V-2.73 or -5.3% The owner of Red Lobster and Olive Garden restaurants warned that weather and legal fees will trim earnings in the third quarter. $55 50

40 D

J

D

F

52-week range $30.62 Vol.:4.0m (1.4x avg.)

J

F

52-week range $43.15

$44.7$ ~

$55.25

PE:1 9 .0 Vol.:3.8m (2.2x avg.) PE:1 7 . 8 Yie l d: 1.5% Mkt.Cap:$6.34 b Yield: 4.6%

Mkt. Cap:$20.92 b

Yandex

YNDX Dendreon DNDN Close:$32.23 Y-5.27 or -14.1% Close:$3.31 L0.43 or 14.9% Russia's biggest search engine took The biotechnology company will bea big hit as the nation's troops engin selling its prostate cancer treattered the Ukraine, raising chances of ment Provenge in Europe, starting in Western sanctions. Germany and the U.K. $45 $3.5 40

35 30

3.0

D

J

F

D

52-week range $$$$$~

$4$ 42

V ol.: 21.8m (6.4x evg.) Mkt. Cap:$5.98 b

F

J

52-week range PE: . . Yield:..

$$.2$ ~

$6.20

Vol.:25.9m (6.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$521.28 m

P E: . . . Yield : ...

Perion Network

PERI PNC Financial Svcs. PNC Close:$13.14%1.21or 10.1% Close: $80.98V -O.BOor-1.0% Revenuejumped more than 70 perThe Pittsburgh bank says it has recent at the Israeli Internet company ceived federal subpoenas over busiand its adjusted net income doubled ness practices related to federally in the fourth quarter. backed mortgage loans. $14 $85 12

80

10

75

D J 52-week range

F $14 .$4

D J 52-week range $$2.42~

F $ $4.4$

Vol.:2.1m (10.2x avg.)

PE: 62.6 Vol.:1.7m (0.8x avg.)

Mkt. Cap:$158.07 m

Yield : ... Mkt.Cap:$43.09 b

PE:1 0 . 9 Yield: 2.2%

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU

HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.60 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 . 0 7 .07 ...

52-wk T-bill

.10

.10

2-year T-note . 3 0 .3 3 5-year T-note 1.46 1.51 10-year T-note 2.60 2.65 30-year T-bond 3.56 3.59

BONDS

w

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...

~

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.35 3.39 -0.04 W L

Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.78 4.80 -0.02 w $12 ~ ~ ~ ~ 18 -1.2% 24% 3% Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.27 +0.01 w PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.14 5.17 -0.03 w $27 W W E 3 W 42 0.0 33 RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.32 4.33 -0.01 w w *annuallzed Total returns through March 3 Sour ce: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.70 1.72 -0.02 W 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 3.00 2.99 +0.01 w w 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds

Ivy Science & Technology invests in companies both in and FAMILY MarhetSummary outside of the tech sector (such AmericanFunds Most Active as Monsanto), which has worked NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG to its benefit, according to S&P500ETF 1456795 184.98 -1.31 Morningstar. A. Velga, J. Sohn • AP

16

$$.1$~ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rata which wasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrata which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash value on ex-distrittuticn date.pEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no p/E ratio shown. cc —p/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months.

0.17 3Q '12 3 Q '13

F

Close: $15.20 V-0.19 or -1.2% Winter storms chilled consumer desire to shop for a new car and the automaker's sales in February slumped by 6 percent. $17

Tyco International

52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L 4Q '12 4 Q '13 NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV A LK 50.31 ~ 87.44 8 6. 1 1 -.53 -0.6 V L L + 17. 4 +6 9 .3 5 3 7 1 2 1 . 00f Price-earnings ratio: LOSt mOney Alaska Air Group L +4.7 +17. 7 45 4 16 1. 2 7f Avista Corp A VA 25.36 ~ 30.25 2 9. 5 1 -.09 -0.3 V L based on past 12 months' results +4.7 +47 . 4 84989 16 0 . 0 4 BAC 11 . 22 t -t 17.4 2 16 . 30 -.23 -1.4 W W L Source: Factset Bank of America V V - 24.6 +61.7 BarrettBusiness B BS I 4 4 . 62 ~ 102.2 0 69 . 9 5 -.05 -0.1 V 73 29 0. 7 2 Boeing Co BA 7 6 .17 ~ 144. 5 7 12 8.22 -.70 -0.5 V L V -6.1 +70.5 4830 21 2.92f L T Cascade Baacorp C A C B 4 . 31 ~ 7.00 4.79 -.09 -1.8 T -8.4 -19.1 32 4 L W -4.7 +3 3.3 3 0 9 2 1 0 . 48f ColumbiaBokg COL B 19.84 ~ 2 8.5 6 26.19 -.03 -0.1 W Columbia Sportswear COLM 54.86 ~ 88.25 83 . 2 4 + . 1 5 +0.2 L L L +5.7 +50 . 9 92 31 1. 1 2f Costco Wholesale CO ST 101.01 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 5.75 -1.05 -0.9 V L V -2.7 +16.5 1628 2 5 1 . 24 Auto supply bellwether 18.70 16. 4 7 +. 1 4 +0.9 L L L + 0.3 +1 4 7.0 1 2 8 c c AutoZone has been adding stores, Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.55 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ 34.28 34. 2 2 +. 0 8 +0.2 L L L + 13. 7 +3 1 .1 1 947 22 0 .40f a move that has helped boost the +6.3 +51. 2 12331 11 0.58 Hewlett Packard HPQ 19 . 07 — 0 30.71 29 .73 -.15 -0.5 W L L auto-parts retailer's revenue. HomeFederal Bocp ID HOME 11.54 ~ 1 6.03 1 5. 0 8 -.01 -0.1 V L L +1.2 +33 . 8 36 dd 0.2 4 The company also has been Intel Corp I NTC 20.75 ~ 27.12 2 4.5 0 -.26 -1.1 V L V -5.6 +22.9 25144 13 0 . 90 able to drive sales growth at stores Keycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ 14.14 1 3. 0 4 -.13 -1.0 V L V -2.8 +43.1 10128 13 0 .22 open at least a year. The figure is Kroger Co K R 2 9 .26 ~ 43.85 41.9 9 +. 0 5 + 0 .1 L L L $.6.2 +45 . 7 7 2 52 1 4 0. 6 6 closely watched in the retail Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 — 0 7.86 7 . 6 8 + . 1 1 +1.5 L L L +39. 9 +6 1 .8 87 5 cc businessbecause itexcludes LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 22.55 1 8. 3 2 -.47 -2.5 V L V -1.0 -10.4 2298 15 potentially distorting results from MDU Resources MDU 2 3.37 tt - 35.10 33.55 -.41 -1.2 W L L +9.8 +43 . 4 67 4 2 3 0. 7 1 newly added stores. Did the trend MentorG raphics M EN T 1 5.53 ~ 24.31 21. 6 4 ... ... L V -10.1 +23.2 8 2 2 1 7 0 . 20f extend into AutoZone's fiscal Microsoft Corp MSFT 27.64 ~ 38.98 3 7. 7 8 -.53 -1.4 V L L +1.0 +41 . 5 28863 14 1 . 1 2 second quarter? Find out today, Nike Iuc 8 N KE 53.27 ~ 80.26 7 7.3 9 -.91 -1.2 V L V - 1.6 +45.4 3022 2 6 0 . 96 NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ 63.72 6 1. 2 1 -.27 -0.4 V L V -1.0 +15.6 1478 16 1.32f when the retailer reports its latest L V Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 45.89 4 2. 0 1 -.86 -2.0 V -1.9 - 1.9 20 9 1 9 1 . 8 4 quarterly earnings. PaccarIoc PCAR 45.87 — o 66.46 65 .08 -.76 -1.2 W L L +10. 0 +4 2 .3 1 782 20 0 .80a Planar Systms P LNR I 55 ~ 2 93 2 28 -.04 -1 5 T W T -104 +2 06 28 dd Plum Creek P CL 41.63 ~ 54.62 4 3. 0 1 -.28 -0.6 V L V -7.5 -7.1 1040 32 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 25 6.04 -1.84 -0.7 V L V - 4.9 +38.3 5 8 9 2 2 0 . 1 2 Safeway Ioc SWY 22.26 ~ 38.06 38. 0 2 +. 5 7 +1.5 L L L +16. 7 +6 0 .2 5 765 3 0.8 0 Schoitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 3.3 2 24.94 -.43 -1.7 V V V -23.7 - 8.7 25 2 d d 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 161.81 ~ 201. 5 0 19 9.50 -.98 -0.5 V L L + 8.7 +25 . 3 55 8 2 7 2 . 20f StaocorpFocl S FG 38.97 ~ 69.11 6 5. 6 4 -.54 -0.8 V L V -0.9 +69.0 1 6 7 1 3 1 . 10f StarbucksCp SBUX 54.66 ~ 82.50 7 0. 4 7 -.49 -0.7 V L V -10.1 +31.1 6037 2 9 1 . 04 Triquiot Semi TQNT 4.45 — o 12.59 12 .33 + . 0 9 +0.7 L L L +47.8 + 1 61.0 10107 dd Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 9.65 17. 9 7 + . 2 0 +1.1 L L W -6.1 +46.4 1672 20 0.60a +0.6 +23. 7 7 4 34 1 4 0.92 US Baocorp U SB 31.99 ~ 41.86 4 0. 6 5 -.49 -1.2 V L L Washington Fedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.3 5 22.13 -.29 -1.3 W L W - 5.0 +29.9 2 8 9 1 5 0 . 40 Better quarter? WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 5.33 — o 46.84 46 .15 -.27 -0.6 V L L +1.7 +35. 7 15930 12 1 . 2 0 Wall Street predicts that Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 2 9. 2 8 -.23 -0.8 w w w -7.3 + 3 . 3 4 749 2 5 0 . 88

AeroVironment's latest quarterly earnings and revenue improved from the same quarter last year. The drone manufacturer, which is due to report third-quarter financial results today, designs, develops, produces and supports an advancedporff olio ofunmanned aircraft systems for the U.S. military and its allies.

1.3734+

StoryStocks

16,000::"

6

+2.33 '

Investors sent major stock indexes lower on Monday amid rising global tensions after Russia sent troops into the Ukraine. The move heightened the possibility of sanctions by Western governments. The Dow Jones industrial average fell nearly 1 percent. Traders turned to safer assets, driving up the price of Treasurys and gold. Concerns over the situation in the Ukraine outweighed some economic reports. Among the positives: U.S. manufacturing expanded at a faster pace last month as new orders stockpiling rose. Meanwhile, the Commerce Department said that consumers spent more in January than in December.

"

''

+

Dow jones industrials

16,500 ' .

1,650

$1 04.92

Close: 16,168.03 Change: -153.68 (-0.9%)

"

Vol. (in mil.) 3,357 2,033 Pvs. Volume 3,793 2,435 Advanced 1 058 9 6 1 Declined 2026 1624 New Highs 86 70 New Lows 20 20

2

16,200 "

+ +.25

$21.45

.

NYSE NASD

3

.

GOLD $1,350.10

"

1,700::"

1 600''

ii5

1 7,000 '."

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1,850::"

4

Operating EPS

16,400"

........ Close: 1,845.73 Change: -13.72 (-0.7%)

Turnaround update?

RSH

+

S8tP 500

Tuesday, March 4, 20t4

$5

10 YR TNOTE 2.60%

1,845.73

Commodities The price of crude oil climbed to $104.92 a barrel Monday amid concerns over Russia's seizure of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula. Gold rose as investors put money into safer assets.

Foreign Exchange The ICE dollar index, which measures the strength of the

U.S. currency against six currencies, declined slightly on Monday as traders reacted to rising global political tensions.

55Q QD

FUELS

CLOSE PVS. 104.92 102.59 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.27 2.28 Heating Oil (gal) 3.08 3.09 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.49 4.61 UnleadedGas(gal) 3.02 2.79 METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1350.10 1321.40 21.45 21.20 1460.70 1446.80 3.22 3.24 749.80 743.85

W 2 .77 w w 4. 0 3 w w 1. 8 4 w w 5. 7 8 w 3. 8 4 L L 1.04 w 2 . 74

%CH. %YTD + 2.27 + 6 . 6 -1.10 +1 8.5 + 2.08 + 0 . 1 - 2.54 + 6.2 + 1.54 + 8 . 4 %CH. %YTD +2.17 +1 2.3 +1.15 +1 0.9 + 0.96 + 6 .5 -0.56 -6.4 + 0.80 + 4 .5

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.44 1.52 - 0.56 + 7 . 2 Coffee (Ib) 1.93 1.80 +7.12 +74.0 Corn (bu) 4.64 4.58 +1.42 +1 0.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.88 0.87 + 1.47 + 3 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 357.00 350.00 +2.00 -0.9 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.49 1.48 + 1.15 + 9 . 5 Soybeans (bu) 14.07 14.14 - 0.49 + 7 . 2 Wheat(bu) 6.27 5.99 + 4.63 + 3 . 6 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6659 -.0098 -.59% 1.5018 Canadian Dollar 1.1 082 +.0016 +.14% 1.0285 USD per Euro 1.3734 -.0089 -.65% 1.3017 -.38 -.37% 9 3 .58 JapaneseYen 101.43 Mexican Peso 13. 3 287 +.0565 +.42% 12.7693 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4898 +.0021 +.06% 3.7237 Norwegian Krone 6 . 0480 +.0531 +.88% 5.7574 South African Rand 10.9030 +.1479 +1.36% 9.0643 Swedish Krona 6.4 7 7 6 + .0767 +1.18% 6.4353 Swiss Franc .8834 +.0049 +.55% . 9 436 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1199 -.0004 -.04% .9811 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1464 +.0011 +.02% 6.2275 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7620 +.001 0 +.01% 7.7546 Indian Rupee 62.045 +.270 +.44% 54.91 0 Singapore Dollar 1.2711 +.0034 +.27% 1.2406 South KoreanWon 1 072.43 + . 8 0 +.07% 1089.25 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.33 + . 0 2 +.07% 29.71


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

BRIEFING TODAY • Twitter forBusiness: Learn to useTwitter to market andadvertise your business andcreate online brand presence; registration required; $49; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • Bend Chamber of Commerce, What's Brewing? Hearfrom the candidates for Deschutes County District Attorney; registration required; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive; 541-323-1881 orwww. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • BusinessStartup Class: Learn what it takes to run a business, how to reach your customer base, funding options, how much money you need tostart and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Women's Roundtable Series:2014 kickoff; registration required; $10 for members, $15for nonmembers; 5:30 p.m.; Lavabells Vacation Rentals - Skyliner Retreat, 18350 N.W. Skyliners Road,Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. THURSDAY • Coaching Course: Learn to fine-tune important coaching and feedback skills; registration required; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • BeginningPhotoshop: Learn to transform photographs with Photoshop CS5.5; registration required; $95; 1-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. FRIDAY • Build YourWebsite with Dreamweaver:Learn to create awebsite with Dreamweaver; registration required; $89; 9 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270. • Putting your best face forward onvideo: Learn what to sayon video, howto say it and how to connect; registration required; $27; 10 a.m.-noon; Eloquent Expression LLC,1685 N.W. Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-617-0340, diane© eloquentexpressions.com or www.facebook.com/ events/207181822810340/ • MUSE Conference: Three-day event in celebration of International Women's Dayand Women's History Month; includes social events, keynote speakers, panel discussions and workshops; registration required; $75 for conference pass, $125for all activities; 9:30 a.m.5:30 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-410-5513, info@ museconference.org or www.museconference.org. SATURDAY • Creating YourBusiness Plan: Learn to create a business plan; registration required; $50 per farm/ ranch, one time fee; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC - Crook County OpenCampus,510 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-480-1340 or tcf@ cbbmail.com. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbugetin.com/bizcal

DEEDS • William A. VanVactor Jr. to Matthew J. Shinderman, Sagewood, Lot 68, $375,000 • Peter E. and Kathy L. Palacioto Garrett B. Wales, Partition Plat1993-47, Parcel 2, $735,000 • Rivers Edge Property Development LLCto Pahlisch HomesInc., Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase 14, Lots13-15, $255,000 • Shannon Tully, formerly known as ShannonM. Boyd, also appearing of record as ShannonBoyd, to Tod andKristina Jolly, Phoenix Park, Phase 3,Lot 40, $260,000 • Doris J. Hethcote and Robert E. Starkie to Daniel A. and Elzina L. Marsh, Crooked River RanchNo.

EXECUTIVE FILE What:Central Oregon Breeze What it does:Provides daily bus service betweenBendand Portland and charter services Pictured:Joseph Widner Where:62995 Plateau Drive, Unit1 Bend Employees:19 Phone:541-389-7469 Wehsite:http://cobreeze.com

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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

By Hugo Martin Los Ange(es Times

As another harsh storm

reeze- A us usiness

What makes • your transportation service different? • Drivers • enjoy their customers and their customers enjoy the drivers, whether their favorite driver is Lyle the Cowboy, who's been herefor 14,15years, orif it's Captain Kirk the fishing boat captain who works seasonally and comesback with new fishing stories from the Bering Seaevery year... They engage the passengers as much as they do take care of the rest of their job and position. Safety is their number one joband their number two job is just making sure the passengers get a better experience than just some place to sit for a three-anda-half or four-hour

Q•

By Rachael Reese The Bulletin

When Joseph Widner took over the Central Oregon Breeze from his parents in 2005, the company operated four buses with service from Bend to Portland. Today, he owns eight buses, sales have more than doubled, and he is looking for a larger location from which to operate the business. It's currently on Plateau Drive in northeast Bend. The Breeze runs 362 days a

While Widner wouldn't disclose

year and has 11 regular stops being the airports in Redmond and

how many passengers ride his bus every year, he said,"For the amount of times I go back and

Portland and Union Station, home

forth to Portland, and the amount

to Amtrak. General adult fares cost $52 one-way and $95 roundtrip, according to the website. During peak season, from

of people that ride my bus, I save the state of Oregon more than 2.5 million road miles, if all the passengers on my bus had driven their own vehicles." A new 25-passenger bus costs between $150,000 and $200,000. And each year, Widner said he spends tens of thousands of dol-

tween Bend and Portland, includ-

mid-November through the

first week ofJanuary and June through the week of Labor Day, he said a second bus operates to

keep up with demand. "I myself have driven back and forth to Portland for years ... and

there's that point where you only remember those curves where you have to pay attention, where

the bathroom breaks are and the rest is just trees going by while you're trying to get to your destination," he said. "The neat thing

lars to maintain his buses.

"Safety's your number one job," he said. "So if you're buses aren't being maintained regularly and you aren't spending thousands of dollars maintaining each and every bus every year, you're not running a legitimate operation."

about our service is I can get 10,

In addition to the shuttle service to Portland, he said, the Breeze

15 people on a bus that get to sit there and enjoy the view and relax

alsooperatesacharterservice locally and throughout the Pacific

for two or three hours and get to make that time their own. Take a

Northwest.

nap. Get some work done on your

in our business over the last five

laptop. Look out the window." Widner said ridership has in-

years has been charter business," he said, adding charter sales dou-

creased every year since he took over. His parents originally started the company in 1992.

bled in both 2012 and 2013.

"The majority of the growth

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

trip to Portland.

The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Ap-

ple is accelerating the race to make smartphone applications easier and safer to use

in cars. Ferrari, Mercedes-Benz and Volvo are previewing Apple's iPhone technology for cars this week at an auto

company in the next five years? • We'dbeina • new location that was ideal for the services we provide. I would see new equipment, new buses ... The reality of the regular route is it's a service that's always going to be neededand is going to grow as time grows andthe population grows here and asthe dynamics of travel change. As fuel costs go up, there's less motivation for people to drive their cars back andforth

A

to Portland.

show in Geneva.

are behind the wheel. Apple's ing system that powers the iOS mobile software and iPhone and iPad. Google's Android operating Now that the idea is movsystem power most of the ing closer to reality, Apple smartphones in the world. is renaming the technology "CarPlay." Just two months ago, Google Inc. announced it is The system announced working with several major Monday enables iPhones to automakers to turn Android plug into cars so drivers can phones into an essential call up maps, make calls and part of cars. Google hopes to request music with voice finish work on its system for tethering Android phones to

The partnerships give Apple an early lead over Google's loosely knit family of Android phones in a duel to make mobile applications

cars by the end of this year. Apple Inc. announced its

more accessible while drivers

— a referenceto the operat-

5, Lot 65, $150,000 • RD Building and Design LLC to William L. andMary J. Cole, Breckenridge, Lot 19, $350,000 • Roy HaneyJr. and Robin Garner to Pacific Coast Construction Inc., Amber Springs, Lot10, $161,500 • Secretary of Housing and Urban Development of Washington D.C.to Richard L. andGayle M. Austin, Neal Addition Lot 5, Block1, $220,100 • Rivers Edge Property Development LLC to

automobile ambitions nine

months ago when it unveiled its "ioS in the Car" initiative

Pahlisch HomesInc., Rivers EdgeVillage, Phase 14, Lots 13-15, Tract A, $255,000 • Curtice W. andHeidi H. Martin to Keith A. and Barbara L. Powell, Tetherow Crossing, Phase 2, Lot 3, Block 3, $295,000 • Darryl W. and Patricia A. Doserto Scott J. and Dianne Milum, Reed Market East, Second Addition, Lot10, Block3, $235,000 • Ernest J. and Linda C. Webb to Rogerand

Cathern Allen, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase6, Lot 29, Block4, $465,000 • F and P LLC to Brandon Ortega andCalli Sanell, Partition Plat 2008-27, Parcel1, $188,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Gail Slowikowski and Susan R. Mesenbrink, Eighth Street Cottages, Lot 10, $240,000 • Kenneth J. Walker, personal representative for the Estates of Carma Jean Walker, to Michael A. and Kristina L. Spitz,

new study estimates that se-

vere weather has cost airlines and passengers $5.8 billion this winter. More than 2,800 flights

were canceled Monday and an additional 2,900 were de-

layed, mostly from airports on the East Coast, because of another severe winter storm

that was moving east from the Tennessee Valley and the Mid-Atlantic states.

It has been an unusually tough winter for the Midwest and East Coast. A study

released Monday said flight delays and cancellations have cost travelers and airlines $5.8

billion from Dec. I to Feb. 28. About I million flights have been canceled or delayed during that period, affecting 90 million travelers, according to a study by MasFlight, an aviation operations technology company based in Bethesda, Md. For passengers, the cancellations and delays have cost $5.3 billion in lost productivity

and money spent on hotels, rental cars and food during holdovers, the study said.

Q •• Wheredo you see the

Apple racing into car integration By Michael Liedtke and Tom Krisher

delays thousands of flights across the United States, a

commands or a touch on a

vehicle's dashboard screen. By making smartphones

Sprint sued

by U.S.over claims of ovejbilling Karen Gullo Bloomberg News

SAN FRANCISCO-

Sprint, the third-largest U.S. wireless carrier, was sued by the government over claims it overbilled the FBI and other

law enforcement agencies by $21 million for the cost of assisting in court-ordered wiretaps. Sprint overbilled agencies including the FBI; the Drug Enforcement Administration; and the Bureau of Alcohol,

Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, U.S. Attorney Melinda

Haag said in an email. The company inflated its charges by 58percent from 2007 to 2010, the U.S. said in a com-

plaint filed today in federal court in San Francisco.

The government asked for triple damages and unspecified civil fines. "'Under the law, the government is required to reimburse Sprint for its reasonable costs

incurred when assisting law enforcement agencies with electronic surveillance," John

work more seamlessly with

Taylor, a company spokes-

automobiles, both Apple and Google are hoping to

man, said in an email. "The invoices Sprint has submitted to

immerse their services even

the government fully comply

deeper into peoples' lives.

with the law."

Windsong, Lot 8, $220,000 • Maria del CarmenArenas Guerrero to John W.Eakin, Bluffs at River Bend,Phase 5, Lot 7, $400,000 • John H. Frankto Sharon Taylor, Village Point, Phases 2 and 3,Lot 59, $157,500 • Sharon J. Taylor to Patrick D. andLeeann Kinnan, CascadeView Estates, Phase 4,Lot163, $249,900 • Floyd W. Taulbee Jr. to Joshua R. Broady, Laurel

Springs, Lot 40, $232,000 • Tammy L Ohlde to Harl T. Hawkins Jr., Stonehedge on Rim, Phase 3,Lot 8, $194,900 • Tennant Family Limited Partnership to Gregory L. and Cristin W.Tolan, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 5, Lot170, $455,000 • Dana L and Nancy L. Bratton to Sarah L. Bratton, TamarackPark East, Phase 4,Lot17, Block 6, $191,500 • Michael B. andSusan

BRIEFING Boeing develops smartphone Boeing Co., the aerospace giant that makes fighter jets, airliners and satellites, is now looking at getting into the cellphone business. The Chicago company said it has developed an ultra-secure smartphone that's marketed toward U.S. defenseand security communities. Few details havebeen released. What is known is the Boeing Black smartphone runs off an Android operating system, contains encrypted storage for sensitive data and has a self-destruct mode. If someone tries to pop openthe device, it is automatically wiped of its data and made inoperable. "Designed to meetthe evolving security needs of defense andsecurity customers, Boeing has released amodular smartphone to enable secure accessandexchange of critical data andcommunicationson a trusted mobile device," Becky Yeamans, acompany spokeswoman, said in a statement.

Factory growth up in Fedruary Factory growth picked up last month after a January plunge,but still appeared to behampered by bad weather inmuch of the country, the Institute for Supply Management saidMonday. The group's widely watched purchasing managers indexrose to 53.2 in February, up from 51.3 theprevious month. A readingabove 50 indicates thesector is expanding. The Januaryfigure was down sharply from 56.5 in Decemberand marked aseven-month low.

Citigroupreceives subpoenas Citigroup and its Mexican subsidiary have received grand jury subpoenas from federal prosecutors over issues of compliance with anti-money-laundering and bank secrecy laws, the bank disclosed on Monday. The disclosure, in the bank's annual securities filing, comes after Citigroup said its Mexican unit Banamexhad been defrauded of asmuchas $400 million. The grand jury subpoenas were issuedby the U.S. attorney's office in Massachusetts. Banamex USA also received a subpoena from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. related to the BankSecrecy Act and anti-money-laundering program, Citigroup said. The purported fraud stems from a $585 million accounts receivable program Banamexhad offered to an oil supply company,Oceanografia, in Mexico. Invoices for work Oceanografia was supposed to havecompleted were falsified, according to Citigroup. —Fromwirereports

L. McKay, trustees of the McKayFamilyRevocable Trust, to Jessica L. and Douglas C.Mohr, trustees forthe Jessica L. Mohr Living Trust, Township 15, Range 9,Section13, $2,400,000 • Verson Pandian, trustee for the V. Pandian Living Trust, to John C.and Beverlee R.Jackson, Partition Plat1998-69, Parcel1, $719,000 • Robert D. Cole to Tammy L. Ohlde, Credenda,Lot16, $159,900

• Timberhawk Investments LLC to Douglas C.and Dera S. Olsen, trustees for the Olsen RevocableTrust, Caldera Springs, Phase1, Lot156, $150,000 • Michael L. and Allison F. Hocker to Dick W.and Gayle L. Sikel, Hayden Acres, Phase 5,Lot 6, $199,900 • Federal National Mortgage Association, also known asFannie Mae, to Mark French, Forest Meadow, Phase1, Lot 6, $300,000


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

FOOD

Sca op I/OU d

r'

ike your

I

attention Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

By JanRoberls-Domingunz

Jaime Aguirre, co-owner of Ginger's Kitchenware, cuts carrots during a knife-skills class at his store in the Old Mill District.

For The Bulletin

At a time of year

HOME

when we're celebrating fresh Dungeness crab in all its seasonal

glory, let's not forget a culinary gift being pulled from East Coast

waters this time of year: scallops. There are two main choices you'll encounter: the large Atlantic sea scallops, caught miles from shore, and

the tiny bay scallops, which are harvested from shallow coastal

Home cookslearn to handle their kitchen bladesat a class off eredbya Bendstore

bays and estuaries as far north as Cape Cod all the way down to the

Gulf of Mexico. You can always find both sizes in their frozen state, but

between November and March, you might ac-

By Penny Nakamura

F

For The Bulletin

tually be able to obtain

freshly harvested ones.

admit it, I had knife envy. Well, knife

skills envy anyway. As the home cook for my family, I've gotten by with my lack of knife skills, but I was always in awe of those who could perfectly chop an entire on-

Just beware, it

has become a common practice to soak shuckedscallopsina water/tri-polyphosphate solution that improves

ion in less than a minute, without tears

or an injury.

shelf life and moisture retention. Besides the fact that it's yet another chemical we don't really

My own J apanese mother, who

made a lot of stir-fry dishes, was a master knife-handler, as was my grandmother, but this particular skill set didn't pass down to

need to consume, scallops soaked in a phos-

me. So inept are my knife skills, I managed

phate solution won't

brown properly without overcooking due to the

I had to go to the emergency room for several stitches. Going to Ginger's Kitch-

inside

• T echniques enware r ecently f or a foronions, k n ife-skills course was an squash and eye-opening e x perience, awhimsical as store owner and skilled centerpiece, knife-handler Jaime Agu-

scallops were sourced from and if they are preservative-free. The

terminology to keep in mind is "dry-packed,"

irre explained how chop-

B4

ping, slicing and dicing

don't have to be difficult. Aguirre first acquired his knife skills as

which means that the

scallops have NOTbeen dipped in the dreaded

an apprentice butcher when he was just 17 years old. He says this skill paid his way

solution.

through college. He says knife skills are

Of course, asIsaid, "fresh" isn't all it's

one of the most important parts of the culinary arts.

cracked up to be if the scallops have been

Aguirre hosts many cooking classes at

sitting around in a

his Old Mill District store in Bend. He jokes

fishmonger's casefora couple of days. Indeed, if you can't get your hands on truly fresh out-of-the-bay bay or sea scallops, then your

that this is one class where he doesn't offer wine.

"The cocktails only come out when the knives are put away," said Aguirre. "When you're chopping, slicing or cutting with a knife, you can't lose focus or concentration."

next best option is to

buy them while they're

Five students gathered around the store's

still frozen. That way,

kitchen counter, with knives and cutting boards at the ready. Practice vegetables sat

on the spotless stainless steel counters. Aguirre spent time first explaining why a good knife should last a lifetime if

it's properly taken care of and regularly sharpened.

Aguirre cuts a potato into large juliennes. Uniform cuts are important to ensure everything is done cooking at the same time, he says.

See Knife skills /D4

GARDEN

Aguirre demonstrates grip — pinch the blade between forefinger and thumb — and technique — free hand holds the celery down using the claw technique.

TODAY'S RECIPES

Considering panting trees? Consider caretu y By Liz Douville

'

to cut my left pointer finger so deeply that

excess moisture. So it's important to ask at the time of purchase where the

you'll be guaranteed a good quality offering. Then, simply thaw in your refrigerator overnight, rinse and dry thoroughly before cooking. See Scallops /D2

1

Grillett Snn Scallops with Raspberry-ThymeBnnrre Blanc: Eiegant and colorful, and frozen raspberries work just fine,B2

National Tree Benefit Calculator

For The Bulletin

Beta

If the early farming settlers to Central Oregon knew then what we know now about

trees, I'm sure there would have been far fewer cotton-

omre senerie

m nw weaer

H slormwaler • Electncdr ol er Qually

e op e ay vituI ~

0 aropwty veue Cl eatuts oas • CO2

$86.62

have envisioned the invasive root systems causing damage

tto.eo

to concrete foundations and

drivewaysplusthedegree of frustration we face trying to eliminate the saplings that

seem toappear overnight? You can always identify original farmland by the grove or line of cottonwoods and poplar trees. For nearly

ar ouaoay ~

au

i asoua ae wocw

This 10 inch Quaking aspen provides overall benefits of: $113 every year. While some functional beneets of trees are welt documented, others are difficult to quantify (a.g., human social and communal health). Trees' specifio geography,cli mate, and interactions with humans and infrastructura is highly variable and makas precise calculations that much more difficult. Given thesa complexiti es, the resulu: presented here should be

woods, poplars and aspens, all members of the Populus genus planted. How could they ever

zae r gy

$7.59

considered initial approximations — a general accounting of thebenefits produced by urban street-side plantings.

Morn scallop recipes: SeaScallop Mulligatawny, BayScallops in Creamy Sauce ofSherry, Garlic and Lemon,B2

Benefitsof trees do not account forthe costs associatedwith trees'long-term care and maintenance.

$453

sreakdown of yourtrae'e beneflts Clidc on ona of tha tabs abova for mora deteil

If this tree is cared for and grows to 15 inches, it will provide $135 in annual benefits.

Quaking aspen Populus tremulaides

Scratch Pancakes:Whole-wheat pastry flour gives them some heft; consider serving with Spiced Piioncilio Syrup, Coffee Maple Syrup or Blueberry AgaveSyrup, D3

Courtesy www.treebenefits.com

The Tree Benefit Calculator — www.treebenefits.com — will provide an estimate of the energy savings and the added economic value of your trees.

The Flexitarinn:Mark Bittman lightens up stew with three recipes: Provengal FishStew, Ribollita, Gingery ChickenStew, DS

1,000 miles travelers along the

Oregon Trail looked to the cot- looked at the cottonwoods on tonwood trees for shade and our property and wondered comfort. Many times I have

what their history is. This

springI will look at them in a w e had a stretch of unseasondifferent context.

Remember last spring when

ably warm weather?

See Trees/D5

Recipe Finder:Gooeybutter cake — if it doesn't ooze when you cut it, then something went wrong,D2


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

FOOD

Next week: Moving side dishes to front and center

Gooe utter ca e By Julie Rothman

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

Linda Lahey from East

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman,Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

Baltimore was looking for the recipe for gooey butter cake that her father used to bring home every Sunday from the Marquad bakery when she was growing up.

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipesfor them to bepublished.

Michelle McManus from

Pine Grove, Pa., said her husband, who is now 77 years old and grew up in Baltimore, also was very fond of this cake. Her sister-in-law had the recipe for this Phila-

delphia-style German butter worry, the center is meant to cake that they think is rem- ooze when you cut into itiniscent of the one from the you haven't m ade am istake. Marquad bakery. McManus said she finds Requests the cake turns out better if Amy Dickeman from Owshe rolls out the crust rather ings Mills, Md., is desperate than patting it into the pan. for the recipe for the garlic She also said that when she

herb cheese that was served

can't find the extra-fine sug- with breadsticks at Harvey's ar the recipe calls for, she just restaurant that used to be processes regular sugar in located in Green Spring Stathe blender or food processor tion on Falls Road. She said until it becomes finer. This recipe is a little time

Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Grilled sea scallops are served with Raspberry-ThymeBeurre Blanc.

that it was made of cream cheese and a l i t tle butter

Scallops

consuming because the base whipped together and flalayer or crust is made with a vored with garlic and dried yeast dough that needs time herbs. to rise before you can roll it Fran Klees of Dowagiac, out. It's very important not to Mich., is looking for a Poloverbake this cake. The cake ish recipe for sausage and should be golden brown but sauerkraut with vinegar and still wobbly when you take sugar that is made in a slow it out of the oven. And don't

Grilled Sea Scallops with Raspberry-Thyme Beurre Blanc

Continued from 01 This time of year, I like to

pull from my frozen cache of scallops and drop them into simmering stews and chowders. Their sweet and

cooker.

tender character is a sublime addition.

The only caution I'll add

is not to overcook these special morsels or they become fairly tough. In f act, my most favorite approach are simple sautes with a bit of

Makes 4 servings.

butter and a splash of wine.

Vegetable spray

— Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbook author and artist. Contact: janrdS proaxis.com.

Sea Scallop Mulligatawny

1(/4-oz) packet active dry yeast /2 C warm milk (105-115

degrees) /4 C granulated sugar /4 C butter flavor shortening or t/4 C butter /4 tsp salt

1 TBS vanilla extract

Makes 4 servings.

TOPPING: 1 C unsalted butter, at room temperature 10 TBS flour

2 C jasmine or basmati rice

3 TBS curry powder, moreto

4 C water 2 TBS butter 1 tsp salt 2 C finely chopped yellow onion 2 TBS olive oil 3 C half-and-half

taste '/2 tsp salt 4/4 tsp ground white pepper

2 C super-fine sugar 2 Ig eggs

1lgegg 2'/4 C flour, (plus some for

1 tsp vanilla, optional 4-5 TBS milk

kneading surface)

1 (14-oz) can coconut milk 3 apples, peeled, cored, chopped into4/2-inch pieces 2 TBS freshly grated ginger

Dissolve yeast in warm milk. Let stand in warm spot until bubbly, about 5 to 10 minutes. Mix sugar, shortening and salt in a bowl. Add egg, and beat together for1 minute. To egg-sugar mixture, add flour, then yeast mixture and vanilla, beating about 3 minutes (with dough hook or byhand). Turn dough onto lightly floured board andknead 1 minute. Place in a lightly greased bowl, cover with a towel and let stand in a warm place to rise1 hour or until double. For the topping, cream butter in a mixer. Mix together flour and sugar; gradually beat into butter. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add vanilla. Gradually add just enough milk to bring mixture to aneasy spreading consistency, being careful not to make it too runny. Set aside until dough is ready for use. When dough is doubled in size, punch it down and divide in two sections. Roll or pat halves into bottom of two well-greased 8-inch square pans or one13-by-9-inch pan. Crimp edges halfway up sides to hold topping. Prick dough with a fork to reduce bubbling. Spread topping evenly over dough. Let stand 20 minutes. Bake in a preheated 375 degree oven for 25 to 30 minutes for the 13-by-9-inch pan or 20 minutes for the 8-inch pan or until top is just golden and crusty, but still gooey. Do not overbake. Let cool in pan before cutting.

1 (8-oz) can water chestnuts, sliced 14/2 Ibs Ig, dry-packed sea

Raspberry-Thyme Beurre Blanc Makes about1 C. This time of year, consider using frozen raspberries rather than fresh. Look for them in your supermarket freezer section in bags marked "IQF" (individually quick frozen).

chopped cilantro

2 TBS fresh thyme leaves, finely 4/2 C fresh raspberries (or frozen; thaw before

t/2 tsp sugar 2 TBS minced shallots 1 C (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into16 pieces

preparing the sauce)

Salt and groundwhite pepper

chopped

1 C dry white wine (such as

Mash the thyme and raspberries together in a small bowl. Stir in the wine and sugar, cover, andlet macerate for1 hour at room temperature. Strain the raspberry mixture through a fine meshstrainer into a medium-sized heavy, nonaluminum saucepanand stir in the shallots. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce the heat to low and simmer until the mixture has reduced to /3cup, about15 minutes. If you want the sauce to bevelvety smooth, then you will need to strain the mixture again to remove the shallots. But I like them in the sauce, so consider skipping that step andleaving them in. Over low heat, start whisking in pieces of the butter, 1 or 2 at a time, until they are just melted into the sauce. Continue whisking in the butter until you have used it all and the sauce is smooth and rich. Whisk in salt and pepper to taste. Keepwarm while you grill the scallops (don't let the sauce boil at this point or it may separate; keep it warm by placing the pot over another pot containing a bit of simmering water, like adouble-boiler). — Adapted from "Fish andShellfish Grilled and Smoked,"by Karen Adler and Judith M Fertig

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Prepare the Raspberry-ThymeBeurre Blanc and keepwarm until ready toserve. Generously coatboth sides ofthescallops with vegetablespray,then season with salt andpepper. Placethe scallops on apreheated grill and cook until nicely searedandcaramelized onthe bottom side. This will takeabout 24/2 minutes. If the scallops aresticking, then continue cooking until they release from the grill. Turn the scallops andcontinue cooking until the scallops are just opaqueandfirm, but not overcooked(they get pretty tough). To serve, divide the prepared beurre blanc among 4 warm dinner plates. Place the grilled scallops on top of the sauce and garnish with sprigs of thyme andraspberries.

— Adapted from "Cooking with the SeafoodSteward,"by Gary Rainer Puetz

even she's no match for Anso® nylon carpet.

Garnish: fresh thyme sprigs

scallops Garnish:4/2 C sour cream,4/2 C

In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, combine the rice with the water, butter and salt over high heat. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly, then reduce heat to a simmer, cover, and cook for18 minutes. Fluff the rice with a fork to make sure the water has been absorbed. If not, return to heat and cook for another 2 minutes or just until all of the water is absorbed. Place a paper towel over the top of the pot, then cover the pot with the lid (the paper towel will absorb water so the rice doesn't get soggy). Saute the onion in the olive oil in a large, heavy-bottomed pan over medium heat until the onion is translucent, stirring often. Whisk in the half-and-half and coconut milk, then bring the liquid to a simmer and cook until it begins to thicken, about 5 minutes. Add the apples, ginger, curry powder, salt, pepper and water chestnuts and continue to simmer until the apples are barely tender, about 8 minutes. Add the scallops and continue to simmer until the scallops are plump, opaque and just firm (but not overcooked). Adjust seasoning, adding additional curry powder, salt and pepper to taste. To serve, spoon hot rice into the bottom of each large, wide soup bowl, then ladle on a serving of the soup. Garnish each serving with some of the sour cream and cilantro.

So PROVEN, so soft. so tough. so proven.

14/2 Ibs sea scallops

Heaven!

Gooey Philadelphia Style German Butter Cake Makes16 servings.

Raspberry-Thyme Beurre Blanc Salt (see recipe below) Freshly ground black pepper

Bay Scallops in Creamy Sauce of Sherry, Garlic and Lemon Makes 4 servings. This is one of my favorite ways to enjoy the tender little bay scallop. It's simple and satisfying. Yes, the sauce is rich, but it is such a delightful backdrop to the delicate flavors in the scallops that I feel it's worth the extra fat-calories. 1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 1 Ib bay scallops 3 cloves garlic, finely minced

2 tsp lemon zest Pinch of red pepper flakes /4 C dry sherry

1 C heavy cream

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t/4 tsp salt /8 tsp ground white pepper

2 TBS fresh-squeezed lemon juice 8 oz spaghetti, cooked al dente

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and drained In a large heavy-bottomed skilled, heat the olive oil over medium-high heat. Addthescallops and quickly saute until browned, about 2 minutes. Add the garlic, lemon zest and red pepper flakes and cook another 30 seconds, thenadd the sherry and simmer just to heat the sherry through. Whisk in the cream, saltand pepperand simmer gently for about 5 minutes so the saucecan thicken.Remove from heat and whisk in the lemonjuice. To serve, place a portion of the cooked and drained pasta on each of 4 warm dinner plates. Spoon a portion of the scallops and sauce over each serving.


TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

... and goodbye to the same o droutine By Nevin Martell •Special to The Washington Post

"Pancakes or waffles?" That's what my father asked me almost every Saturday morning of my childhood. I usually voted for the pancakes. They weren't fancy: Dad simply added water, and sometimes an egg, to a few cups of Hansmann's Mills buckwheat mix. If he was feeling particularly inspired, he would dot the griddled rounds with fresh blueberries or slivered strawberries. But I didn't care what he put in or on them. His pancakes were just an excuse for me to drown my plate in maple syrup (the real deal, not the fake stuff in the aunt-shaped bottle). It's been a long time since my

Scratch Pancakes

father manned the stove and

cooked me bre~ . T he spat- Makes 2 to 4servings (makes eight 6-inch pancakes). ula has been passed, and I'm These fluffy pancakes possess some heft, courtesy of whole-wheat pastry flour. Serve them on their own or now cooking for my I-year-old with any of the related syrup recipes. son. I wanted to share my fami- Make nbend:Theflour mixture can be refrigerated in a zip-top bag for up to 3 months. ly's pancake tradition with him, but I didn't want my flapjacks to

come out of abox.

2 C whole-wheat pastry flour

(see above)

I'm not the first cook with 2 TBS baking powder such an impulse, ofcourse, 2 TBS cane sugar

but I also didn't want just any from-scratch pancake. I wanted a jacked-up version of the pancakesIhad asakid.So Ilooked at recipes to get a general idea of ingredients and ratios (flour plus baking powder plus eggs, milk, a little sugar and some vanilla) and then set to work playing around with types of flour. All-purpose didn't give deep enough flavor. Buckwheat and whole-wheat created pancakes

1 tsp kosher salt

2 Ig eggs 1/4C whole milk ~/2 tsp vanilla extract

4 TBS (~/ stick) unsalted butter, melted Vegetable oil, for the griddle

Place a parchment-paper-lined baking sheet on the middle ovenrack; preheat to 200 degrees. Whisk together the flour, baking powder, sugar andsalt in a medium bowl. Lightly beat the eggs in aseparate bowl, then whisk in the milk, vanilla extract and melted butter. Pour the eggmixture into the flour mixture and stir until thoroughly incorporated. Heat the oil on a griddle over medium-high heat, being careful not to let it come to a smoking point; it's ready when a few drops of water sizzle whenflicked onto the griddle. Pour /2 cup of batter onto the center of the griddle. Cook, undisturbed, for about 2 minutes, until bubbles and air pockets form on the top of the pancake, then turn it over. Cookfor 2 minutes, until golden brown. Transfer to the baking sheet in the oven.Repeatwith the remaining batter. Serve warm. Nutrition informationperserving (bnsedon4pancakes): 450 calories,13 g protein, 57 g carbohydrates, 18 g fat, 10 g saturated fat, 145 mgcholesterol, 1,290 mg sodium, 8 g dietary fiber, 10 g sugar. Spiced Piloncillo Syrup's rich, burnt-caramel flavor of the dark sug-

with a rustic texture perfect for "Little House on the Prairie,"

ar spiced with cloves, star anise and cinnamon makes a sophisti-

cated pancake topper.

but not for my house. I even experimented with coconut flour,

and thefl apjacks had a nice natural sweetness — and the texture of lead. Ultimately,

Spiced Piloncillo Syrup Makes 6 to 12servings (about1~/2cups). Make ahead:Thesyrup can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to1 year. Piloncillo is sold in firm blocks. It is available at Latin markets, in the international aisle of large grocery stores and onthe Internet.

w ho l e-wheat

pastry flour came out on top of the stack by creating fluffy pancakes with a slight touch of grainy richness. I filled them

1 Ib block piloncillo sugar (see above) 2 sticks cinnamon(3-inch)

out with diced fruit, chopped

nuts or chocolate chips, but to avoid pockets of uncooked goo I sprinkled them on top of the batter afteritwentontothegrid-

Combine the block of sugar, cinnamon sticks, star anise and cloves (to taste) in a small saucepan. Pour the just-boiled water over them, then bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Stir until the sugar has dissolved, then reduce the heat to medium and cook for about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally, to create the consistency of a good-quality maple syrup. It should coat the back of aspoon, but becareful not to reduce the syrup too much or it will not pour easily once it has cooled. Strain through a fine-mesh strainer, discarding the solids. Servewarm, or cool completely before storing. Nutrition information per serving (bnsed on 12servings): 140 calories, 0 g protein, 38 g carbohydrates, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 45 mg sodium, 0 gdietary fiber, 38 g sugar.

dle and settled. When it comes to the driz-

zling options, there will always be a jug of New York state maple syrup in our fridge, plus a few fancier possibilities, accented with whiskey, and Noble's vanilla-chamomile

2 whole star anise 6 to 8 whole cloves 2 C just-boiled water

inf u s ed

number. ButIwantedtotakemy pancakes to the next level with some house-made toppings. Thefirstofthosewasinspired by a trip to Oaxaca, Mexico, where I tasted piloncillo, unre-

fineddarkcane sugarthat' ssold in hardened cones and boasts a

deep caramel flavor with hints of stone fruits. I cooked it with water to make syrup and infused it with cinnamon, doves

and star anise. For the second, I wanted the taste of coffee,

and after some experimentation with whole beans (barely discernible flavor) and finely ground espresso (gritty goop), I settled on instant coffee, which gave the syrup a jolt as robust as that of my favorite cup. For the third, I wanted something summery, so I lightly reduced golden agave syrup with a bounty of fresh blueberries, then pureed the result with a little vanilla.

Itwas alltoo easy,bytheway, to over-reduce the syrups, resulting in something too sticky to pour and be absorbed. The age-old lightly-coating-a-spoon

4'.. t Iglg+ "+Aya.~ Coffee Maple Syrup is away to supplement your morning coffee fix — or enjoy coffee flavor without n hint of bitterness.

indicator works here, and if

after cooling your syrup isn't thick enough, all it needs is a lit-

Coffee Maple Syrup

tle more time on the burner. Soon it was time to test the

Makes 4 to 8servings (1 cup). The author recommends a medium-amber maple syrup, to keep strong flavors from competing against each other. But dark amber may besub-

recipeson more than my own palate. I griddled up a few silver-dollar pancakes for my son, drizzlingeach with only a small spoonful of syrup (so he could get a taste without being wired for the rest of the morning). He gobbled and smashed each of them with equal enthusiasm: A family tradition was reborn.

stituted.

Make ahead:Thesyrup can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up to1 year. 1/4 C maple syrup, preferably

medium ember (see above)

(do not use instant espresso)

Photos by Deb Lindsey/ For The Washington Post

Whole-wheat pastry flour creates fluffy pancakes with a slight touch of grainy richness.

r "

2 TBS plus1 tsp instant coffee

, ff'P:'jl;

Add s splash of summer toyour stack of flapjncks. Agave syrup acts as e mild canvas for the blueberries to take center stage.

Combine the syrup andcoffee in a small saucepanover medium-high heat; cook, whisking vigorously, until the mixture comes to a boil. ReBlueberry Agave Syrup duce the heat to medium-low; cook ' NQRTHWEsT Makes10 to14 servings (1/4 cups). for10 minutes, stirring afew times. CROSSING Make ahead:Thesyrup can be refrigerated in an airtight container for up Strain through a fine-mesh to 2 weeks. Warmbefore serving. strainer; skim/discard any foamon Aauard-aeinning the top. Serve warm. neighborhood 1/4C agave syrup /4 tsp vanilla extract Nutrition informationper serv1 /2 C fresh or frozen blueberries ing (bnsed on 8 servings):130 on Bend's calories, 0 g protein, 34 gcarbohyteestside. Combine the agave syrup and fruit in a medium saucepan over me- drates, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 dium-high heat; once the mixture comes to a boil, reduce the heat to mg cholesterol, 0 mg sodium, 0 g www.northwestcrossinII".com medium or medium-low (barely bubbling) and cook for about 8 minutes, dietary fiber, 30 g sugar. stirring often, until all of the blueberries havepopped. Remove from the heat; cool until lukewarm, then stir in the vanilla extract. Transfer to a blender andpureeuntil smooth. Strain, if desired. Return the saucepan to the stove over low heat to rewarm, or cool the syrup completely before storing. Nutrition information per serving (bnsed on 14servings): 90 calories, 0 g protein, 25 g carbohydrates, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cho541 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE Wyatt Court ~ Suite 101 lesterol, 0 mg sodium, 0 gdietary fiber, 24 g sugar. Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com S U r olo S~


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014

HOME ck

AR D EN

Next week: Redo your kitchen backsplash

Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Jaime Aguirre, co-owner of Ginger's Kitchenware, cuts butternut squash during a class at his store in the Old Mill District. Aguirre recommends softening the squash in s hot oven for five to10 minutes snd cutting it to create flat sides for stability.

Knife skills

push harder to cut and chop. If While it sounds basic, Aguyou're pushing hard on a knife, irre says many home cooks it's easy to slip, and that's do not hold their knives corContinued from D1 "A dull knife is infinitely dangerous." rectly. The best technique inmore dangerous than a sharp Fortunately, in this k n ife- volves actually pinching the knife," stressed Aguirre sever- skills class, Aguirre let all the blade with your forefinger and al times during the course. "If students use his already sharp- thumb, while the rest of the your knife is dull, you have to ened andhonedknives. hand rests on the handle. "You get better control with

Knife skills101 When:April 26, 2 to 4 p.m. Where:Ginger's Kitchenware in the OldMill District Cost:$25 Details:Learn knife techniques, including care and handling. Bring onestraight kitchen knife to haveit sharpened for free. Contact:541-617-0312

this method," said Aguirre, as he began to chop celery. He demonstrated the claw technique with his other hand, holding the celery down. "The claw is slightly curling the fin"Actually, anything round gertips on your off-hand; if you see your fingernails, you risk you want to make it flat first," cutting your fingertips. Keep added Aguirre. them curled, and use your knuddes as a guide for the Beyondvegetables knife blade." Aguirre took out a w hole Anothercommon chopping chicken and began to trim the mistake of home cooks is the fat from the chicken, using his improper arm motion. all-purpose chef's knife. "The knife is not a machete," "You can do 90 percent of said Aguirre. "You want the ef- all your chopping, slicing and ficiency of what the blade can cutting with the chef's knife," do for you, and you get that by said Aguirre, who says a chef's keeping the tip of the knife on knife's blade is usually 8 or 9 the board, and using that as inches long. a fulcrum, while using an up Aguirre gave a quick lesson and down motion." on chicken anatomy, saying If you watch the Food Net- if you are carving a chicken work, the television chefs are correctly, you will never cut usually chopping at such a through bones. lightning pace you never realAguirre made a few more ly catch this technique. Agu- fast cuts and pulled out the irre showed the daw and arm wings and took the tips of the motion in a precise and slow wings to save andmakebroth. "Save those wing tips in a demonstration. "Maintain the claw," cau- freezer bag, and when you tioned Aguirre, as students have enough you can make a started chopping. "This is not delicious broth," said Aguirre, a race. It's like yoga. Pay atten- as he maneuvered the chicken tion to your forward motion. around his cutting board and The right hand moves with the made a few more well-placed left hand in harmony." cuts to make a perfect skinless Like a coach, Aguirre en- chicken breast. "Now that's the couraged the adult students to

chicken breast, and that's $4.99

be mindful of their chopping

a pound at the store, and if I cut it into chicken tenderloin pieces, s ounds, it goes up to about $9 apound." Aguirre also cautioned his By knowing your k nife students to "never, never cut skills, Aguirre says, home method. As obvious as it

towards the body."

E

PJ

cooks can save a lot of money.

After the celery was all But Aguirre wasn't finished. chopped, Aguirre took out the He taught his students how to carrots and demonstrated a ju- make a vegetable centerpiece, lienne cut in a variety of sizes. which is a mock palm tree, usJulienne cuts are also known ing a carrot and a green bell as matchsticks. Aguirre put pepper. a potato on his cutting board, Aguirre is clearly the rock ready to make larger juliennes. star of knives in this class, "Now you know why they and students applauded him charge so much for hand-cut as the hour-and-a-half dass (french) fries. There are four concluded. "I have all these knives in my cuts on this potato," said Aguirre as he expertly removed knife block, and I didn't know most of the potato skins, and how to use them, until now," started the labor-intensive ju- said Vickie Minor, who attendliennes. "I can sell you gadgets ed the class."I thought it was all night long to do this, but this interesting to find out that there is something you should know areknivesforspecificpurposes, how to do with a basic knife." like the slicing knives for roast After he finished, he stacked

beef. You want to slice the meat

up the sliced potato and cut correctly, so you're not smashdown vertically to start dicing. ingthe meat down, because that The once long matchstick cuts

wrin@ all the juices out of the

became perfect small cubes. "Dicing will make a good breakfast hash," said Aguirre. "Notice the uniformity of the cuts."

meat and dries out each slice." Brenda Johnson says vegetable prepping is very important to her, and she wanted to know

more about chopping and slicing with accuracy and speed. ''Wow this dass has been ant because this will ensure that all the potatoes, or what- yeat," said Johnson. "I've been ever you've chopped, will be cutting onions all wrong, I refinished cooking at the same ally liked the trick he taught time. us tonight, that makes it easier The price of this class at and safer." Ginger's is $25. Also includAt the end of class, as prome d in that price is a k n i f e ised, Aguirre brought out his sharpening. many blade-sharpening tools One tip that I found extreme- and started working on dull ly helpful involved cutting but- knives, bringing them back to ternut squash and pumpkins, life. which always seem to be hard Steve Provence brought his as rocks. knife to class for sharpening "The trick to this monster and honing. Aguirre confirmed is to heat your oven to 425 de- that the knife was very dull, grees, and then put your but- barelyusable. "I know, I haven't used that ternut squash in the oven for about five to 10 minutes," said knife in probably 10 years," Aguirre, as he placed the al- saidProvence. Aguirre teaches students in his class to create a mockpalmtree ready hot squash on the cutAguirre ran t h e b l ade from a bell pepper snd acarrot. ting board. "This softens up through an electric sharpening Uniformity of cuts is import-

Aguirre shows atechnique for cutting an onion.

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the outside surface enough to

tool, careful not to take off too

make it a lot easier to cut." Because butternut squash is an odd shape, Aguirre suggests cutting it directly in half to make it a flatter piece on your cutting board, which makes it more stable for chopping.

much metal. After a few passes, Aguhm, and to punctuate the Aguirre took the honing stick point, he swiftly and deanly cut to it. through a magazine page. 'Thisisprobablya$100knife, Aguirreexplainedtothedass and Ican sellyou another one, that this is a good way to test the but as you can see, with a little sharpness of one's knife."If your attention, this knifeis asgood as knife looks like it's tearing the new once it's sharpened," said page when you do this and it's

notadeancut, it'stimetosharpen that knife," said Aguute.

"Home cooks probably need to sharpen their own knives, or have their knives sharpened by aprofessional twice ayear." — Reporter: pnakamura@ bendbulletin.com


TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

THE FLEXITARIAN

D5

ASK MARTHA

Nurturing plants t roug t ewinter testing at the Drycleaning and =-"

—MARTHA

*

STEWART

Laundry Institute. If the item

is machine washable, launder. Dry-clean any fabric that is not machine-washable.

Shoes:Wipe dry leather with • Can you recommend a doth dampened with a I-to-I

Q

• any houseplants that will thrive through winter'?

mixture of water and vinegar.

in Stewart, Ohio. Waterthem

ciates Technical Flooring Ser-

thoroughly when the soil feels dry about a half inch belowthesurface(exceptfor the peace lily, which prefers constantlymoist soil). 1. Snake plant: H a s

vices, in Dalton, Ga. Then spray

beautiful

Q

Rub suede with a dean, dry • These popular plants cloth, then apply undiluted vin• are easy to care for and egar, says Steve Klinke, owner hardy enough to stand up to of Klinke Cleaners in Mitwauchanges in temperatute and kee. Blot with a dry doth. humidity, common in winter Carpets and rugs: Vacuum months, says Ken Frieling, up dried salt, says Lewis Miglioowner of Glasshouse Works re, president of LGM and Asso-

arch i t ectural

leaves. Can tolerate infrequent care and grows best

in bright indirect light. 2. Peace lily: Produces Photos by Melina Hammer/New YorkTimes News Service

pretty white flowers — and

according to NASA, tops the list of plants that reduce indoor volatile organic compounds, or VOCs. Prefers bright indirect light.

Provenqal Fish Stew with shrimp and squid is a dish that leaves room for plenty of vegetables.

3. Pothos:

Lo v es t o

1 C cooked or canned chickpeas

2 or 3 anchovy fillets, finely

This occasional feature explores healthy and delicious

4 TBS olive oil 1 C fresh breadcrumbs

food ideas from the New York Times' food columnist. here is an extreme ver-

Salt and ground black pepper

2 TBS tomato paste 1 Ib spinach 2 C fish or vegetable stock, or water

sion of just about every

stew you can namebeef stew, Irish stew, curry,

pitted and chopped 1 TBS capers, chopped

A your pet's teeth daily says • Your best bet is to brush

veterinarian Josephine Ban-

yard, author of"Healthy Mouth, Healthy Pet: Why Dental Care Matters." You'll need a tooth-

brush andtoothpaste specifically designed for pets. Never use human toothpaste — fluoride

Q

Cleaning a bird feeder • What's the best way to

• clean a bird feeder'?

• How do I remove rock-

A • grain, and wash out any leftover seed with a garden

• s alt spots from m y

hose. Scrub the feeder inside

• F irst e m p ty o u t

the

A

water-soluble, so a thorough

and prevent the spread of dis-

rinsing is often most effec- eases. Rinse with the hose tive. Read on for at-home and let dry. To reduce disease,

Pinch red chili flakes (optional) 8 oz squid, roughly chopped 8 oz shrimp, roughly chopped

cassoulet, bouillabaisse — in Drain chickpeas. If you used dried, reserve cooking liquid; if they are which vegetables are used, if canned, discard the liquid and rinse the chickpeas. Put 2 tablespoons at all, as "aromatics." You may oil in a large skillet over medium heat. When it's hot, add breadcrumbs, start by sweating a little bit sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook, stirring frequently, until they're of onion, carrot, celery, may- crisp and toasted, 3 to 5 minutes. Removefrom pan. be garlic, with a bay leaf and Add the remaining 2 tablespoons oil to the skillet; increase heat to a thyme sprig, and then you medium-high. When oil is hot, add garlic, olives, capers and anchovies. proceed to brown your main Cook, stirring occasionally, until fragrant, a minute or two. Add tomato ingredient, usually chunks of paste and cook, stirring occasionally, until it darkens slightly, 2 to 3 minmeat, and add some liquid. utes. It's difficult to believe that Start adding spinach ahandful at a time; keepstirring until all the spinthis tradition goes back much ach fits in the panandstarts to release its water; sprinkle with a little more before the '50s, because so pepper, then add the stock, chickpeas and red chili flakes if you're using few people had access to the 2 them. Adjust the heat so the mixture bubbles gently but steadily, then pounds or more of meat that it stir in the squid and the shrimp. Cook until the seafood is just cooked takes to make a stew contain- through, 2 to 3 minutes. ing little else. From Henry IV Taste and adjust the seasoning. Divide among bowls, sprinkle with to Herbert Hoover, the prombreadcrumbs andserve.

• my dog and cat have good dental hygiene?

dothing, shoes and carpets? and out with a stiff brush and • Rock salt, used to dish detergent. Mix one part • de-ice sidewalks and bleach with nine parts water pavement inthe winter, often in a bucket, and soak the feedleaves rings behind. Salt is er in it to disinfect the surface

chopped

1 TBS minced garlic /4 C niqoise or oil-cured olives,

• How can I ensure that

a miniature tree. Keep near

Q

Makes 4 servings.

Keeping pets'teethhealthy

canupset yourpet's stomach.

Removing salt stains

Provenqal Fish Stew

drytowel.

climb or cascade. Place in bright indirect light. 4. Jadeplant:Resembles a window with bright light.

MARK BITTMAN

the spot with water to flush it out. Blot the area with a dean,

removal techniques based

the National Audubon Soci-

onmaterial. (If spotsremain, ety suggests cleaning feeders contact aprofessional.) once or twice a month. Clothing:

Chicken stew with winter

su r e

— Questions of general interest

dothes are dry. Remove any salt crystals with a dothing brush, says Lorraine

M a ke

can be emailed to msIIetters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

Muir, director o f

t e x tile

squash and daikon radish uses one chicken thigh per person.

Gingery Chicken Stew

Trees

west walls, keeping buildings

Makes 4 servings.

Continued from 01

trees onthe southside allowthe

cooler. In w i nter deciduous

It felt so good to shed a

sun to warm interior spaces. If

2 TBS olive oil

layer of clothes. Trees start- southern walls are shaded by ing breaking bud and then dense evergreen trees, there

chicken thighs / tspsalt /2 tsp ground black pepper

the cold weather and frost

ise was made that every Sun-

1 Ig onion, chopped 2 C chopped daikon radish /4 C minced ginger

the buds started breaking and then froze. I think that

to our property. Think about

day, there would be a chicken "in every pot." No one ever said "a half-pound of meat per person per day," which is

cottonwoods as th e l eaf

area for sittin' and sippin'. Con-

Makes 4 servings.

about what we eat. Politics and even nutritional

5 TBS olive oil

Ribollita 4 C vegetable stock orwater 1 fresh rosemary sprig

1 sm onion, chopped 1 carrot, chopped 1 fresh thyme sprig rots is not exactly a paradigm 1 celery stalk, chopped 1 Ib chopped kale or escarole of complexflavors,nordoesit 1 TBS minced garlic 4 Ig, thick slices whole-grain have the tiniest hint of fresh- Salt and ground black pepper bread, toasted ness. There's more complexity 2 C cooked or cannedcannellini 1 sm red onion, thinly sliced and interest in a stew of vegebeans /2 C freshly grated Parmesan tables, with or without a little 1 (15-oz) can whole peeled meat, than there is in the typtomatoes ical American version of "beef stew." Put 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large pot over medium heat. When it's The whole thing needs to hot, add onion, carrot, celery and garlic; sprinkle with salt and pepperand be rethought, and those feel- cook, stirring occasionally, until vegetables aresoft, 5 to10 minutes. ings are particularly strong in Heat the oven to 500 degrees. Drain the beans; if they're canned, rinse the midst of stew season. I set them as well. Add them to the pot along with tomatoes and their juices about to do that a few years and stock, rosemary and thyme. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat so the ago; the first recipe along soup bubbles steadily; cover and cook, stirring once or twice to break up those lines that I remember the tomatoes, Until the flavors meld,15 to 20 minutes. publishing, and one that reFish out and discard rosemary and thyme stems, if you like, and stir in mains one of m y f a vorites, kale. Taste and adjust seasoning. Lay bread slices on top of the stew so is "Cassoulet With Lots of they cover the top andoverlap as little as possible. Scatter red onion slicVegetables." es over the top, drizzle with the remaining 3 tablespoons oil and sprinkle It is exactly what it sounds with Parmesan. like, a dish in which vegetaPut the pot in the ovenand bakeuntil the bread, onions and cheeseare bles (in this case, beans) are browned and crisp, 10 to 15 minutes. (If your pot fits under the broiler, emphasized over your duck you can also brown the top there.) Divide the soup and bread among 4 confit, your stewed lamb, your bowls and serve. argumentsaside, a beef stew

with a few token peas and car-

1'/ Ibs (4 whole bone-in)

2 C vegetable or chicken stock, or water, more asneeded /4 C soy sauce 2 TBS lime juice

3 pieces star anise 1'/ Ibs any winter squash, cut into1-inch chunks

Put the oil in a large pot over medium-high heat. When it's hot, add the chicken, sprinkle with the salt and pepper, and cook, turning the pieces as they release easily from the pan, until they're well browned on both sides, 8 to 12 minutes. Removethe chicken from the pot. Add the onion, daikon and ginger to the pot and cook until they begin to soften, 3 to 5 minutes. Add the stock, soy sauce, lime juice and star anise and bring to a boil, stirring to scrape up any brown bits from the bottom of the

pot. Return the chicken andadjust the heat so the mixture bubbles gently but steadily. Cook the chicken, covered, until very tender, about 30 minutes. Stir in the squash. Simmer, stirring occasiona lly and adding enough sausage and so on. It doesn't stock to keep it from sticking, mean those things can't be inuntil the squash is tender but not cluded, only that they become be eating less meat, which is s emivegetarian for a m e a t mushy, 10 to 15 minutes. If you special treats to b e f i shed generally a good thing, and dish (although that is a bit like, remove the chicken thighs, out, rather than the main fea- you'll probably be saving of the idea), but you still get cut the meat from the bones and ture. Think of a vegetable money. Even more import- chicken to eat. And there are return it to the pot. Fish out and stir-fry with pork, as opposed ant, I think, you'll be lighten- a variety of flavors, which of discard the star anise. Adjust the to a pork stir-fry with token ing and brightening dishes course you can incorporate seasonings to taste andserve. vegetables. that are otherwise fairly dull i nto a m eat-heavy dish a s You can apply this kind of standards. well. But the bonus is bright, thinking to almost any stew It may take some getting creamy winter squash and a but also enough variety so or braised dish you like. (In used to. For one thing, you big hit of daikon radish, both that there's a sense that this is theory, a stew has more liquid may think you need "protein," of which are not only unex- something different. than a braise, but in practice, which we've been convinced pected but also substantial. The paradoxical thing is you can use the words inter- is synonymous with animal Fish stews tend to be gen- that even many vegetable changeably.) The benefits are products but isn't, to feel satis- erally lighter and more inter- stewscouldhave more vegetamyriad, and they start with re- fied. But satiation comes from esting than those with meat, bles, and this ribollita achieves specting tradition; choucroute many factors, including fat but there'sroom for more that by adding a small boatgarnie, for example, means and, not surprisingly, quanti- vegetables as well. The one load of kale to what is typicalessentially "garnished sauer- ty, and I'm not proposing ver- here, which features chick- ly beans, tomatoes and a little kraut," or, really, "sauerkraut sions of dishes that are either peas, spinach and a puttanes- bit of green. It's not vegetarca-esque seasoning combi- ian in principle — if you had with stuff on i t." I t d oesn't low fat or dainty. mean 3 pounds of meat with In my g i ngery chicken nation, turns proportions on a piece of prosciutto, it would some sauerkraut as garnish. stew, for example, I use one their heads. There is enough go a long way — but it's fully If you apply the more-vege- chicken thigh per person. shrimp and squid so that you loaded with vegetables. That's tables principle to stews, you'll This may seem downright know you're eating a fish stew, the difference.

may be an increase in winter

moved back in.Many trees heating costs. suffered from bud damage; Trees add enhanced value tree canopies eventually wide may have happened to my enough to provide an inviting development was pretty sider the beauty of ornamental sparse, smaller in size and trees that either produce a flush fewer in quantity. of spring flowers or a colorful I have started to prepare display of fall leaves. mentally for the fact the Consider how tall and wide a trees may have to come

tree will be at maturity. Where

down if I don't see any im- are the utility locations? The provement. Three research Call Before You Dig number is resources have come off

800-332-2344;better to be safe

the bookshelf: "Trees to Know in Oregon," an Oregon State University publication; "Xeriscaping in the High Desert," a landscaping guide published under the combined cooperative

than sorry you didn't take the time to check. A partnership between the U.S. Forest Service, the National Arbor Day Foundation, the International Society of Arboriculture and the Davey Tree Ex-

effort o f t h e D e schutes pert Co. developed a program County OS U E x t ension titled The Tree Benefit Calcu-

Service and local agencies; plus back issues of High Desert Gardening, a newsletter published

lator. The online calculator will

fer reliable information on

a measurement or estimate of the diameter of the tree and

provide an estimate of the ener-

gy savings and the added economic value of your trees. by the Deschutes County You provide your ZIP code OSU Extension Service. and from a drop-down menu These three resources of- select the tree species, add in what will grow well in our tri-county area with limited careand low moisture.

from another drop-down menu select information about its lo-

Three days of b eing cation. Press the calculate butsnowbound gave me lots ton and before you can blink of time to peer out the win-

an eye, a colorful calculation

dows and wonder what else might need attention come spring. Several shrubs look damaged from the snow load and may need replanting. Trees are abiginvestment and should be chosen with

will appear with interesting information. Pick your existing favorite tree or one that is on your wish list, and check out the calcula-

care and

tor at www.treebenefits.com. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.com

c o nsiderations.

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TV SPOTLIGHT By Meredith Blake Los Angeles Times

After d ecades c hasing young viewers, the broadcast networks are starting to shift

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tactics — peppering their lineups with shows and actors who

appealto the growingaudience of agingbabyboomers.

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"The Millers" on CBS fea-

tures 72-year-old Beau Bridges and Margo Martindale, 62. NBC has James Spader, 54, in

"The Blacklist" and is considering a new family sitcom with Bill Cosby, 76. ABC, stuck in

The Associated Press file photo

last place, is developing a show Seventy-two-year-old Beau Bridges, left, and 62-year-old Margo about basketball buddies in Martindale appear on the CBS comedy "The Millers" with Will their 60s.

Arnett. The median age of a broadcast television viewer is now the

The trend is being driven highest ever at 54. by demographics. Members of the baby boom generation will all be 50 or older this year, and pha boomers." The 50-and-up ber of households watching. they watch a disproportionate amount of TV.

crowd of today, they contend,

is far different than the frugal The median age of a broad- and brand-loyal group that cast television viewer is now came of age during the Great the highest ever at 54. Twenty Depression and World War II. "These people are more acyears ago, it was 41. The mostwatched scripted series in the

1993-94 season was "Home

tive, healthier and much more likely to still be in the work-

But as the first wave of Americans bornafterWorld War II entered adulthood, third-place

network ABC saw an opportunity to promote this audience as super consumers and

pushedforadvertisersto focus on viewers younger than 50.

force," said David Poltrack, B y the 1970s, ABC w a s an viewer age of 34. Today, it's chief research officer at CBS. booming with youth-oriented "NCIS," with a median viewer "It's certainly a much more vi- hits such as "Charlie's Angels" who is 61. brant and economically active and "Happy Days." Improvement," with a m edi-

Confronted with these re-

audience than it used to be."

Now CBS, NBC and ABC

alities, the networks are agIronically, it was the baby gressively making the case to boomers who first led TV net-

are pointing to research that

advertisers that older viewers

are valuable — especially the ers in the 1960s.

spend some $90 billion a year on cars alone. By 2017, they

affluent and influential 55-to-

will control 70 percent of the

works to cater to younger viewUntil then, network ad rates

s hows consumers over

50

64-year-olds they're calling "al- were based simply on the num- nation's disposable income.

TV TODAY

VIB W B lS

"Boomers have been mar- tiations and there is no indusketed to since they were 5, be- try-wide rate standard. cause they were the first generA decade ago, networks priation raised in front of the TV," marily sold ad inventory for said Matt Thornhill, founder of prime-time shows based on the marketing think tank the how many 18-to-49-year-olds Boomer Project. were watching at home. Now, In contrast, their children, network sales teams are emknown variously as millen- phasizing other metrics, such nials, Gen Y or echo boom- as income and education level ers, are living at home longer of viewers. and making fewer key purFor example, ads on CBS' chasing decisions than their "The Good Wife," ABC's"Modpredecessors. ern Family," and NBC's "Parks In theory, that should make and Recreati on" command a them less attractive to adver- premium because they draw tisers. But in reality, they are more affluent viewers, indusmore prized than ever. try experts say. "Everyone over 50 has esYounger adults, busy with school, careers, socializing sentially been given away for and child-rearing, have always freeto advertisers," said Jack watched less TV. Now they're MacKenzie, president of Magid even harder to find, thanks to Generational Strategies, a contechnology that allows them to sulting firm that advises Forwatch TV whenever and wher- tune 500 companies. "What ever they want and to skip over we're telling our media clients is you've got to find a way not commercials. Since these viewers are so to give them away anymore." elusive, advertisers will pay Executives atNBC, CBS and more to reach them. ABC are especiallykeen onthe "Television naturally skews tech-savvy alpha boomers, acolder, and that's why advertis- cording to Alan Wurtzel, presiers have historically paid a pre- dentofresearch and media demium for a younger audience," velopment at NBC Universal. said Neil Ascher, managing As consumers, they spend director of Zenith Optimedia, considerably more on home which advises companies that improvement, credit c a rds, buy TV advertising. travel and beauty products Network ad sales executives than do y ounger cohorts. are working to change those Their i m age-consciousness calibrations, but it's hard to makes them ideal consumers, quantify their success. Buying said Wurtzel: "If alpha boomtime on network television is ers aren't vain, I don't know a complicated series of nego- who is."

eart ro enovera a o as a mom of four little princesses.

When I fantasized about having children, I imagined fairy tales, ballet, cheerleading, dress-up, tea parties — all g i rl things. Now I'm expectDEP,R ing a little boy, and I feel heartbroken. When I learned my first was a girl, I couldn't wait to meet her. I bought her everything pink and frilly. Here I am eight weeks from my due date, and I have yet to buy this baby a single thing. When I look at baby boyitems, Ibecome severely depressed. I'm no longer with the baby's father. He and his family are very

against it. My dad says I shouldn't I urge you to get it before doing even allow my ex to visit our son in anything you might later regret. the hospital after he's born. No one Dear Abby:I received a restauwill listen to how I feel. They keep rant gift card from some friends. saying my feelings will change af- When I presented it at a restauter the baby is born, but I doubt it. I rant, it was refused as "never just need some guidance. having been activated through — Undeserving purchase." Title of Mommy I called my friends to let them Dear Mommy: I know, thinking it was a mistake don't think you are a monster. I DO think you are not t h ink-

ing objectively right now. Let me point out that life doesn't always go the way we fantasize. Because you imagined that you'd be the mother of four little

on the part of the restaurant at

the time it was purchased. They said they would come by and pick up the card. I have heard nothing from them since, and I h aven't written a thank-you note or made any further attempt to c ontact them.

Was I right in calling them? Do I you WILL be. now ignore the whole thing? I see no need to rush into sign— Gift CardDenied ing any papers right now, regardDear GCD: You did nothing less of how eager your boyfriend wrong in calling your friends to excited about the baby, as he will and his parents are about the tell them what happened. They be the only male grandchild for baby. There will be time for that may not have picked it up because this generation. The truth is, the later, if you still want to. they were embarrassed, or bemore I think about it, the more I For now, ask your parents to cause they really never intended to am pulled in the direction of sign- help you select some baby boy out- activate it. I don't think it's necesing over my parental rights to my fits, and tell your doctor about all sarily worth ending a relationship ex. At least he really wants him, of your feelings because they may over — IF you want to continue whereas I don't. be hormonal. a friendship with people whose I know this sounds terrible and You might benefit from some credibility you question. selfish. I feel like a monster, but I professional counseling right now — Write to Dear Abtfy at dearabby.com can't help it. My family is totally — more than I can offer you — and or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 princesses doesn't guarantee that

9 p.m. on TNT,"Rizzoli 8 Isles"

—As Jane(Angie Harmon) and

her colleagues investigate the stabbing of a singer-guitarist in a bar, it soon becomes clear that the victim had something to hide.

Jane's father(ChazzPalminteri) resurfacesafter a longabsence

and drops a bombshell in the new episode "Just Push Play." Sasha Alexander also stars. 9:01 p.m. on 29, "The Goldbergs" —When jewelry belonging to Beverly's (Wendi McClendon-Covey) mo thergoes missing, Adam (SeanGiambrone), who's obsessed with "The Goonies," rallies his siblings (Troy Gentile, Hayley Orrantia) and some friends (Jacob Hopkins, Stephanie Katherine Grant, Natalie Alyn Lind) for a treasure hunt like the one in the movie in thenew episode"Goldbergs Never Say Die." Jeff Garlin also stars. 10p.m. on29, "MindGames" — Clarkand Ross (SteveZahn, Christian Slater) and their team are hired to help anexecutive at a consulting firm who lost a promotion to ayounger, less

experiencedcandidate. Rosshires a con woman to find out what Beth's (Katherine Cunningham) intentions toward Clark are inthe new episode "Asymmetric Domi-

nance."GregoryMarcel alsostars.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby:I'm a single mother of a beautiful 2-year-old daughter. I have always pictured myself

8 p.m. on (CW), "The Originals" — With flashbacks to1919, Klaus (Joseph Morgan) tells Cami (Leah Pipes) the details of the secret that Marcel and Rebekah (Charles Michael Davis, Clare Holt) were trying to keep from him. Elijah (Daniel Gillies) asks Monique (Yasmine Al Bustami) to help him find Sabine (Shannon Kane), while Thierry (Callard Harris) is reluctant to get involved with Marcel and Rebekah's plan to take down the witches in the new epi sode "LeGrand Guignol."

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10 p.m. on FX, "Justified"Raylan (Timothy Olyphant) is on the hunt when one of the Boyd (Walton Goggins) and his new partners attempt to make it backacross the border in the new episode "Whistle Past the Graveyard." 10 p.m. onTBS, "CougarTown"

— Jules (CourteneyCox)gets a

hefty commission check andtalks Andy (lan Gomez) into investing with her in a get-rich-quick scheme. Grayson (Josh Hopkins) tries to look cool to Travis' (Dan Byrd) hipster pals. Bobby(Brian Van Holt) attempts to adjust to his new bag inthe newepisode"Too Much Ain't Enough." © Zap2it

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ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * You might sense that you have an edge, and you do in a keysituation. You'll have little tolerance for settling for anything less than what you want. Your temper could erupt at any given moment. By mid-afternoon, you'll become far more poised. Tonight: Treata loved one.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

what you judge to be insignificant details. Hold your tongue, and keep your own counsel. Tonight: Get some extra Rand R.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * You seem to offer a perspective that many people do not have. Your feedback is valued, even if you encounter difficulties with a higher-up. This person simply tends to be a bit of a curmudgeon. Refuse to let this person get to you. Tonight: Do what you want.

LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You could be overwhelmed by everything that is going on. Your temper could rise as others aggressively seekyou out. Screen your calls rather than blow a fuse. Dealing with work matters might preoccupy your afternoon. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * Deal with a partner, associate or friend directly. Both of you could be the victim of a misunderstanding. Limit the TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * You could go from being somewhat rhetoric, as you attempt to clear the air. Someone else will appreciate your ability blue or quiet in the morning to being Mr. or Ms. Personality by the afternoon. You'll to detach and see the big picture. Tonight: express a real sense of direction and draw Paint the town red. othersin closer.Evensomeone who does LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) not usually agree with you could emerge. *** Though generallyyou're known Tonight: Among the crowds. as the sign of diplomacy, latelyyou seem to be specializing in putting your foot in GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Use the morning for a key project, your mouth. Do not let today be another example of this behavior. In the afternoon, when your leverage and ability to draw in others is high. By the afternoon, you listen to a loved one's saga. Tonight: Dinmight resent being bogged down by ner for two.

** * Dive into work and clear out as much as possible in the morning. Interpersonal interactions will take up alarge part of the afternoon. You'll enjoy the change of pace. Talk with a loved oneabout what you want for the two of you. Tonight: Go with the flow, but accept an invitation.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * You could be frivolous in the morning and efficient in the afternoon. You suddenly might realize how much is on your plate and decide to concentrate on what must be done. Create the possibility

of working at home,where you canfocus. Tonight: Head home and relax.

GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * You could be more in tune with a child, a new project or a loved one in the

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AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * You are likely to speakyour mind and cause quite a hullabaloo. By the afternoon, you might wish that you had stayed a little more contained. Consider what might be the best peace offering

or at least anexpression of your caring. Tonight: Settle in at home.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Check out a financial offer or an investment in the morning. The research that you do could prove to be most worthwhile by the afternoon. A discussion could reveal a lot more about what is being offered. Fortunately, you will ask the right questions. Tonight: Hang out. © King Features Syndicate

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • •

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

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Pets & Supplies

Antiques & Collectibles

Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Misc. Items

Medical Equipment

Manx Kittens WANTED! 2 females, of breeder quality. 541-408-6869

CHECKYOUR AD

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POODLE pups, toy,teacup.Also, 5 mo. male,

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Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com

$195. 541-475-3889

Queensland Heelers Standard 8 Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537

www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com

Rodent problems? Free barn/shop cats, fixed, shots. Will d e liyer. Iqd-Ce tutg U ique 306-451 9, leave msg. Yorkie pups AKC, 4 baby doll boys, potty training, UTD shots, health guar., $850 & up. 541-777-7743

on the first day it runs to make sure it isu coru rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens Io your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Natural gas Ruud Taurus PT140 Millentankless water nium Pro, 40 cal. SS heater, brand new! over Black, 4 maga199 Btu, $1800. zines, custom holster, Also brand new 80 case and papers, 200 gal. electric water rounds. $425. heater, $500. 541-639-6401 In Sunriver area. Wanted: Collector seeks 530-938-3003 high quality fishing items & upscale bamboo fly rods. Call 541-678-5753, Shoes w m n 8%- 1 0 or 503-351-2746 boots , d r e s s y ,S2prs u g41-6 3 9 - 6 6 5 6

Winchester Model

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Yorkie Pups, AKC, born 1/11. Male $550; female, $650. 541-241-0518

Good classified adstell the essential facts in an 541-480-6162 interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -nol 264 the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show Snow RemovalEquipment the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.

70 - SA.308 Win. Classic Featherweight, Monte Carlo Stock, Burris 3x9

scope and case.

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Iuedicei Equipmeut 16u Breezy Ultra w heelchair, H u g o Elite walker, Invacare electric hospital bed, power-lift recliner, Optlec Clearview+ viewer, tub/ shower chairs, walkers, all new condition. In Bend, call

Very clean and well cared for. $875. 541-420-4183

Head 8 Footboard, with wood-grain look, double size has no 3 Winchester p r e-64 This Model 709: (2) 30.06 side rails. Could be 255 advertising tip Snowblower 210 repurposed into a transition guns; and 1 Computers brought Io you by Craftsman electric or .270. 541-548-4774 Furniture & Appliances garden bench, or a pull-start, 29" wide, u nique item. U s e The Bulletin Compaq computer 9HP, 5 forward CASH!! Stmthg Cehtlei Olegtm Iihte Igtd your imagination! monitor, works like new For Guns, Ammo & 2 reverse speeds. A1 Washersc Dryers Asking $75. u Reloading Supplies. 19 $10 541-548-6642 $400 cash. $150 ea. Full war541-419-6408 541-408-6900. 541-815-6319 ranty. Free Del. Also T HE B ULLETIN r e wanted, used W/D's quires computer ad541-280-7355 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Desert Baby Eagle vertisers with multiple WANTED: Snow blower .40 caliber handgun, ad schedules or those tire chains, size 13x4. Door-to-door selling with selling multiple sys2 holsters, Rail Call 541-408-0846 fast results! It's the easiest Flashlight, 50 rounds Sunvision Pro tems/ software, to disclose the name of the 28LX Tanning Bed way in the world to sell. ammo, $650 obo. 265 Has only 300 hours, 916-952-4109 business or the term 208 208 Building Materials "dealer" in their ads. (lamps have average The Bulletin Classified Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies Private party advertis- Ilfe of 800-1000 hours 541-385-5809 g of effective tanning Bend Habitat ers are defined as Armolre for sale, IOW'~MI TMIII Aussie AKC Mini, Blue Dachshund Very RARE usage). 1 owner, RESTORE those who sell one Cherry/wrought iron Merle, M/F, blue eyes Longhaired Standard great condition, Building Supply Resale computer. Oak Showcase Perfect condition, parents on site, shots/ Size, AKC SWEET includes manual, Quality at LOW handmade, 60 u long, 24" wide DO YOU HAVE wormed. 541-598-5314 Female, $500. D e257 goggles & head PRICES solid wood. 42" high. Great SOMETHING TO tails O 541-316-8382 pillow. $900. 740 NE 1st Musical Instruments Aussie Mini, 5 mo male, 69 ex39ux23.5". SELL counter case, Call to seel 541-312-6709 black tri, good w/kids & Donate deposit bottles/ FOR $500 OR $650. plate glass top. Open to the public. cows, crate/leash trained, cans to local all vol., kcaravelli@gmail.com Kohler Digital 165 Piano, 541-385-9318in Bend LESS? 202 $300. 541-460-9600 $475 all the bells & whistles, non-profit rescue, for Non-commercial Want to Buy or Rent hardlv used, glossy Wanted- paying cash Sisters Habitat ReStore 541-382-6773 advertisers may Border Collie/New Zeal- feral cat spay/neuter. black. $5000 obo. Cans for Cats trailer place an ad for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- Building Supply Resale and Huntaway pups, great 541-633-8235 Wanted: $Cash paid for Quality items. Dining table at Jake's Diner; or People Look for Information with our dio equip. Mclntosh, dogs, workinq parents, vintage costume jsw- $225. 541-546-6171 LOW PRICES! Beautlful round donate M-F at Smith "QUICK CASH 260 JBL, Marantz, DyAbout Products and elry. Top dollar paid for 150 N. Fir. oak pedestal table Services Every Daythrough Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or SPECIAL" naco, Heathkit, SanMisc. Items Gold/Silver.l buy by the Canaries, 2 Bronze 541-549-'I 621 with 4 matching at CRAFT, Tumalo. 1 week3lines 12 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Estate, Honest Artist The Bvllefin Classifierfs males, $45 ea. Open to the public. chairs, table is 42" Call for Irg. quantity OI' Call 541-261-1808 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Buying Diamonds 541-548-7947 in diameter and in The Bulletin reserves pickup, 541-389-8420. u e eke E N ~ /Gold for Cash Just bought a new boat? brand new condiWant to buy upright www.craflcats.org Ad must the right to publish all Saxon's Fine Jewelers WHEN YOU SEE THIS Sell your old one in the tion, as are the freezer in good cond. include price of ads from The Bulletin 541-389-6655 classifieds! Ask about our chairs. Priced at 541-548-6642 uh le tem cigeou newspaper onto The ~ Super Seller rates! $400. 541-447-3342 BUYING or less, or multiple Bulletin Internet web541-385-5809 206 e Lionel/American Flyer items whose total site. s On a classified ad trains, accessories. Pets & Supplies does not exceed 266 G ENERATE SOM E 541-408-2191. go to Cavalier King Charles $500. Bulletin EXCITEMENT in your The www.bendbulletin.com geiulhg Central Oregon Iihte fgttg Heating & Stoves Spaniel puppies, AKC HAVANESE PUPPIES BUYING & SE L LING to view additional The Bulletin recom- Champion neighborhood! Plan a P e d igree. Call Classifieds at All gold jewelry, silver mends extra caution Gorgeous Tri & B len- AKC, Dewclaws, UTD photos of the item. garage sale and don't Wanted: Old Oriental 541-385-5809 NOTICE TO and gold coins, bars, when purc h as- heims. $1800 includes 1 shots/wormer, non-shed, forget to advertise in rugs, any size or con- www.bendbul!eun.com ADVERTISER rounds, wedding sets, dition, call toll free, ing products or ser- ear health guarantee, hypoallergenic, $850 classified! 261 Since September 29, class rings, sterling sil541-460-1277. 1-800-660-8938 vices from out of the 541-385-5809. arents' OFA & CERF ver, coin collect, vin- Medical Equipment 1991, advertising for area. Sending cash, C ertificates. Reloading equipment & tage watches, dental Rea d y used woodstoves has Russell mix/Fox 240 supplies, Sonic cleaner, gogld. Bill checks, or credit in- March 16th. Reserve to- Jack been limited to modF l e ming, t errier p uppies, 9 The Bulletin Crafts 8 Hobbies f ormation may be day! 541-848-7605 presses, primers, car541-382-9419. Falcon 4-w h e el els which have been weeks old (2) © $125 recommends extra tridges, numerous acsubjected to fraud. power scooter with certified by the O r(541) 323-1787 or I ceuttc I e pu cessories. 541-678-5740 Cemetery space: al For more informa- Chihuahuas, 8 weeks, 1 ea. accessories, gently egon Department of chasing products or s male, 1 female, both (541) 419-6485 tion about an adverused, in mint condiEnvironmental Qualservices from out of I brown & black, $150 SIG P938 with crimson double depth intertiser, you may call t ion. $ 4 00 . C a l l Lovebirds (4) with cage I ment grave space ity (DEQ) and the fedeach. 541-408-7858 the area. Sending I trace, black with rose the O r egon State 5 41-389-1821 f o r eral E n v ironmental $100; two hand-fed cash, checks, or red grip, 3 clips. $750 with outer b u rial Attorney General's details. lovebirds, $60 each. l credit i n f ormation c ontainer built l n , Protection A g e ncy chi-pom 541-604-4203. Office C o n sumer Tiny White Male $250 541-6389-7810 i located in Meadow(EPA) as having met may be subjected to Alderwood Quiltworks Protection hotline at park area of Dessmoke emission stan541-815-8234 l FRAUD. For more machine quilting 1-877-877-9392. Stag Arms AR-15: i chutes M emorial dards. A cer t ified Madras information about an I frame for sale, locally Full size power w oodstove may b e Model Stag15, l Gardsns, $900. Call advertiser, you may made in Prineville, adjustable bed The Bulletin identified by its certifi5.56/223, Stainless geiuihg CeutielOngch since tgttg I c all t h e Oregon / easy to use, makes w/memory foam cation label, which is steel barrel. LeState Attor ney ' quilting a dream! mattress, $800.Porpermanently attached upold Firedot G l General's O f f i ce Comes with Handi table wheelchair, Adopt a rescued cat! to the stove. The Bul3-9X40 Scope, handles, includes. Fixed, shots, ID chip, 4 leg walker, Malti-Poo tiny designer Consumer Protec- • letin will not knowMagPul PRS manual, exc. shape, Quadri-Poise cane, tested, more! 65480 pups, mom 8 Ibs, dad tion h o t line at I ingly accept advertis541-639-6656 only used to quilt 4 buttstock, Hogue bathroom assist 78th, B e nd/Tumalo, Cockatiel & XL cage, 3 lbs., hypoallergenici 1-877-877-9392. ing for the sale of tops, like new. grip, Bipod.$1875 chair, all for $200. Thurs/Sat/Sun, 1-5, $40. Gray male less than no m atting/shedding, ClothinggomenSJ6-20 uncertified I $600. 541-549-1273 Call 541-410-3568 389-8420, 598-5488. a yr old; orange, yellow boy $750/girl $925. 541- I TheBulletin Call 541-526-5737 s ki r t s P r e s s e s , SK Eetuhg Cehvei OregonIhte tggg woodstoves. or 541-419-2160 www.craftcats.org markings. 541-633-0164 233-6328/ 541-390-5401 u yt41-63 9 - 6 6 5 6

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E2 TUESDAY, MARCH 4, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .NoonMon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

325

Hay, Grain & Feed

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbuHetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results!

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Can be found on these pages:

476

Employment Opportunities

476 CAUTION: Employment Ads published in "Employment OpOpportunities portunities" include employee and inde- Add your web address pendent positions. to your ad and readAds for p ositions ers on The Bulletin's that require a fee or web site, www.bendupfront investment bulletin.com, will be must be stated. With able to click through any independentjob automatically to your Call 541-385-5809 opportunity, please website. or place your ad i nvestigate tho r on-line at oughly. Use extra Place a photo inyour private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES bendbuHetin.com caution when ap- Driver for only $15.00per week. Starting at 3 lines Night Driver needed plying for jobs onApply at Owl Taxi, *UNDER '500in total merchandise line and never proOVER'500 in total merchandise 341 1919 NE 2nd St., vide personal infor7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Bend, OR 97701 Horses 8 Equipment mation to any source 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 you may not have work saddle, researched *illiust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 Rowell-built and Where can you find a n 16 seat, 7/8 double riq, deemed to be repu28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special helping hand? $250 obo. 541-389-5741 table. Use extreme 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) From contractors to c aution when r e Call The Sugetin At s ponding to A N Y yard care, it s all here 541-385-5809 online employment in The Bulletin's A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Place Your Ad Or E-Mail ad from out-of-state. "Call A Service Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. At: www.bendbulletin.com We suggest you call the State of Oregon Professional" Directory * BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Consumer H otline 358 at 1-503-378-4320 REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well Farmers Column For Equal OpportuThe Bulletin as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin nity Laws contact 10X20 Storage Buildings Oregon Bureau of bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at when purfor protecting hay, Labor 8 I n dustry, caution any time. is located at: chasing products or I firewood, livestock etc. Civil Rights Division, services from out of e $1496 Installed. 971-673- 0764. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. I the area. Sending (other sizes available) Bend, Oregon 97702 c ash, checks, o r 541-617-1133. The Bulletin I credit Senring Central rnegen since tgte i n formation CCB ¹173684 541-385-5809 kfjbuilderstgiykwc.net I may be subjected to PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction FRAUD. is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right For more informa- I to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Call a Pro tion about an adver- • Get your newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Whether you need a I tiser, you may call business Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. the Oregon State fence fixed, hedges I Attorney General's trimmed or a house Office C o n sumer t 267 267 270 e ROW I N G Protection hotline at I built, you'll find Fuel & Wood Fuel & Wood • Los t & Found I 1-877-877-9392. professional help in with an ad in 1 Cord dry, split Juniper, The Bulletin's "Call a LThe Bull@in The Bulletin's WHEN BUYING $190/cord. Multi-cordService Professional" discounts, & t/g cords "Call A Service FIREWOOD... REMEMBER: If you available. Immediate Directory have lost an animal, Professional" To avoid fraud, delivery! 541-408-6193 don't forget to check 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Directory The Humane Society recommends pay- All year Dependable Bend ment for Firewood Firewood: Seasoned; 541-382-3537 308 only upon delivery Lodgepole 1 for $195 SALES Redmond and inspection. or 2 for $365. Cedar, Farm Equipment • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-923-0882 Seekin EX erienced split, del. Bend: 1 for & Machinery 4' x 4' x 8' Prine ille $175 or 2 for $325. t est-sct-ttre; • Receipts should 541-420-3484. (4) 5'x12' horse panels, or Creit Cate include name, $75/ea. Assorted wa54t-389-8420. phone, price and Pine & Juniper Split ter and feed tubs, call kind of wood for prices. purchased. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 541-923-9758 PROMPT DELIVERY • Firewood ads • Reliable • Money Motivated Search the area's most 541-389-9663 MUST include • Professional • Team Player comprehensive listing of species & cost per Need to get an classified advertising... • Goal Oriented • Consistent cord to better serve 269 ad in ASAP? real estate to automotive, our customers. merchandise to sporting Gardening Supplies You can place it If so, come join a winning team of positive goods. Bulletin Classifieds Sales/Promotion Men & Women & Equipment online at: The Bulletin appear every day in the Serelng Cenenl Oregon since Sta making "$600-$800Per Week" www.bendbulletin.com print or on line. working FULL TIME covering sponsored BarkTurfSoil.com Call 541-385-5809 special events & trade shows 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

476

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MX

528

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have

concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

GarageSales

1-877-877-9392.

GarageSales

Qarage $ales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

I

I I

I

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEyiWe buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.

THE PAGE 541-385-5809TURN For More Ads

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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

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RBEIIDBI

Employment Opportunities

The Bulletin

s~

ARE YOU?

PROMPT D ELIVERY

541-389-9663

To the community of Bend, OregonI, Bryan Bliss, with good heart, apologize for any wrong doings and trespasses I have in the past committed. I ask you, the community, for forgiveness. To my parentsI am truly sorry, I knew better. Love and light.

Fornewspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email

claggified@bendbulletimcom

The Bulletin gereing Central Oregen sincefaa

The Bulletin 286

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• •

1 Call 54 /-385-5809

to r o m ote

ou r s ervice

Building/Contracting L andscapingfyard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to Serving Central be licensed with the Oregon Since 2003 Construction ContracResidental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An active license Sprinkler means the contractor is bonded & insured. Activation/Repair Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing CCB l i c ense at Maintenance www.hirealicensedeThatch & Aerate contractor.com • Spring up or call 503-378-4621. eWeeklyClean Mowing The Bulletin recom- & Edging mends checking with the CCB prior to con- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly tracting with anyone. Maintenance Some other t rades •Bark, Rock, Etc. also req u ire addi~Landsca in tional licenses and •Landscape certifications. Construction eWater Feature USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI Installation/Maint. Pavers Door-to-door selling with ••Renovations fast results! It's the easiest •Irrigations Installation way in the world to sell. Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured The Bulletin Classified 541-815-4458 541-385-5809 LCB¹8759 Debris Removal

JUNK BE GONE I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Domestic Services A ssisting Seniors a t Home. Light housekeeping 8 other serv ices. L icensed 8 Bonded. BBB Certified. 503-756-3544

Handyman I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768 ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home &

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

9N Ford with 2N Sherman 2-speed rear end, 52" snow machine, Estate Series 300E, subcompact, $3400. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 swather, 14' header with conditioner, cab heat/A/C, 1300 orig. hrs. $29,000 obo. 1486 International, cab heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 Pto, 3 sets remotes, nice tractor. $18,000. 541-419-3253

The Bulletin

325

picK Up YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

Serrrng Central Oregon since fgOS

Hay, Grain & Feed Just bought a new boat? First quality Orchard/TimSell your old one in the othyiBlue Grass mixed classifieds! Ask about our hay, no rain, barn stored, Super Seller rates! $250/ton. Patterson Ranch 541-385-5809 Sisters, 541-549-3831

Pressman The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time pressman. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will have prior web press experience and be able to learn our equipment (3 t/a tower KBA Comet press) and processes quickly. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live, let us hear from you. Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager 'baisin er@wescom a ers.com with your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employ-

NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o p e r form The Bulletin Landscape ConstrucServing Central Oregon since fgle tion which includes: Equal Opportunity Employer p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be Auto Renew Coordinator l icensed w it h th e Immediate opening in the Circulation departLandscape Contrac- ment for a full time Auto Renew Coordinator. tors Board. This 4-digit Job duties primarily encompass the processnumber is to be in- ing of all subscriber Auto Renew payments cluded in all adver- through accounting software, data entry of new tisements which indi- credit card or bank draft information, and cate the business has resolution with customers of declined Auto a bond, insurance and Renew payments, as well as, generating subworkers c ompensa- scriber renewals and refunds. Other tasks intion for their employ- clude entering employee subscription adjustees. For your protec- ments, transferring funds from subscriber tion call 503-378-5909 accounts for single copy purchases, dispatchor use our website: ing of all promotional items associated with www.lcbistate.or.us to new subscriptions and upgrades, as well as check license status tracking/ordering Circulation office supplies. before contracting with Responsibilities also include month end billing, the business. Persons invoicing and collections for Buffalo Distribudoing lan d scape tion and back up to the CSR and billing staff. maintenance do not Ability to perform all these tasks accurately and r equire an LC B l i - with attention to deadlines is a must. cense. Work shift hours are Monday through Friday Aeration/Dethatching 8:00 AM to5:00 PM. Please send resume to: 1-time or Weekly Services ahusted Ibendbulletin.com

Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guar- Ask about FREE added anteed. 541-389-3361 svcs w/seasonal contract! or 541-771-4463

Bonded & Insured.

Bonded & Insured

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/l 541-480-9714

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WE OFFER:

More Advancement Opportunity Weekly Awards and Bonuses Full Training & Support Opportunity for Growth

Serving Central Oregon sincefges

The Bulletin Serving Cenval Oregon since 1903

EOE/Drug free workplace

With TheBulletin in print and online.

if you want a serious opportunity, and you can close the sale, Call M-F 10am-3pm, 541-410-5521

Now its easier and more affordable than ever to Iet your ad noticed with these additional features:

Registered Nurses C ommunity Counseling Solutions i s recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedinJohn Day, OR.

Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential Treatment Facility providing services to individuals with a severe mental illness.

These positions provide mental health nursing care including medication oversight, medication r e lated t r e atment, f o l low physician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , temperature and respiration to provide daily information, educate and train staff on medication administration, and e n sure documentation is kept according to policies.

IL)CGIR P

2012 Dodge 1500 PICKUP,

4x4,tow package,42,000 m iles, leather, air, custom wheels, bed liner $19,000

This position works with the treatment team to promote recovery from mental illness. This position includes telephone consultation and crisis intervention in the facility.

Qualified applicants must have a valid Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's license at the time of hire, hold a valid Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal history background check. Wages dependent upon education and experience, but will be between $48,000 to $72,000.

IS

I

Excellent benefit package, including signing bonus.

Please visit th e O regon Employment Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for an application or contact Nina Bisson a t 5 4 1-676-9161, nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Heppner, OR 97836. •

The Bulletin

DINING TABLE, oak, w/8 chairs $400: 5 piece oak dinstte $100; Gold La-Z-Boy sofa slepsr & rocker recliner $200; 4-pisce dble, maple bdrm set $100. All items must go now!

IRllIS •

DINING TABLE, oak, w/8 chairs $400: 5 piece oak dinette $100; Gold La-Z-Boy sofa sleper 8 rocker recliner $200; 4-piece dble, maple bdrm set $100. All items must go now!

CllIR •

MINI BEAGLE PUPPIES

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Home Delivery Advisor The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

MINI BEAGLE PUPPIES $350 AKC registered. Cute! •

ll •

WOlf l i!

To place your ad, call 541-385-5809 or visit us at www.bendhulletin.com

The Bulletin

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller©bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE

MINI BEAGLE PUPPIES 2females,$250,2 males, $350 AKC registered. Cute!

G •

BSSl 1C S

www.bendbulletin.com



E4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MAR 4, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Tuesday, March 4,2014

NEW YQRK TIME5 CRQ55WQRD will shprtz ACROSS 1 Stem's opposite S Varieties 9 Exercise unit 140ne of the Smurfs 1SFather of Ham 16Monastery wear 17 r oc k 18F it k i n g 19Archaeological site 20 Celebration dance after a goal? 23 Sr.'s challenge 24 "Stop!" 250odles 27 Combat engineer 30 Separated, as a couple 33 Degree in math? 34 Get through to 37 Part of a drum kit 38 Many millennia 40 Sag

Solid judgment By FRANK STEWART At the Fall Championships, Curtis Cheek, now of Las Vegas but once a fellow A l abaman, an d I s hmael Del'Monte of Australia won the Life Master Open Pairs. The pair judged well in today's deal. Del'Monte's opening bid of one club wa s s trong an d a r t ificial, Cheek's one - heart res p onse conventionally showed eight to 11 p oints. A f ter f o u r m o r e b i d s , Del'Monte made a winning decision to play at four hearts. West led a club: ten, jack, king. Cheek, thedeclarer,returned a club to dummy's ace, took the king of d iamonds, ruffed a cl u b an d discarded dummy's last club on the ace of diamonds.

spade. What do you say? ANSWER: The problem is not a good advertisement for "Standard" methods. A jump to three hearts, showing about 16 points with a sixcard suit, would be acceptable. I would choose a flexible bid of two clubs — clubs might be the best trump suit — but responder might p ass when a g ame c ontract i s desirable. North dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH 4A8 9 A J1073 2 OK 4A1097

PERCENTAGE

WEST EAST 41K J75 41Q43 'vI Q6 Declarer took the ace of spades and 9 K 9 8 4 next led the ace and a low trump, the 0 J 7 0Q832 correct technical play. If the missing 4 4 3 2 4QJ85 trumps broke 3-3, any approach might work, but declarer gained SOUTH 4910962 when East's queen fell. When Cheek Q5 got back in, he forced out West's king of trumps and lost only one more 0 A 1 09 6 5 4 trick in spades. Making four. 4K6 Many pairs went down at 3NT, so Sout h West Chcek-Del'Monte scored most of the N orth Ea s t 14 Pass 19 Pass matchpoints on the deal. 29 P ass 30 Pass 39 Pass 3 NT Pass DAILY QUESTION 49 All Pa s s

47 Network that airs the Soul Train Music Awards 48 Find, as at an

archaeological site 50 Hardships 52 Stuff in a muffin 53 Goddess of the hunt 55 Letter before omega 57 Punched out a Disney elephant? 62 Ration out 64 Slender reed 651tmay be checked, in more ways than one 66 "Fiddler on the Roof" character 67 Rural route

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE S TA B U H OH T RU E S OL O A I R T R A V E L

MA C H O A L L E N G E E S E

L EA S E I D U N N L DS P E A C E K E E P EN N ME T L I F E L I N E OA

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Youhold: 49A8 Q A J 1 07 3 2 Opentugiead +4 <> K A A 1 0 9 7. You open one heart, and your partner bids one (C) 2014TribuneContentAgency,LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg. BIZARRO

42They're tapped 68 Politico Gary 43 Like many traffic 69 Impassive violators in court 70 It's just one thing 45 E.M.T.'s cry after another before using a 71 Not duped by defibrillator

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PUZZLE BY JEFF STILLMAN

36 Rank above maj. 39 In the vicinity 41 One known for talking back? 44 Extreme, as measures 46 Orange exterior 49 Channel with the catchword "Drama"

51 South American cowboy

58 Cinnabon purchase

53 Home of the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest building

59 Haunted house sound

54 Desktop pictures

60 Former baseball commissioner Giamatti

55 Fours on a course, often

61 Comics canine

56Thin strip

63 Kimono sash

For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nylimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriplions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nylimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nylimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nylimes.com/learning/xwords.

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Print answer here: (Answers tomorrow) B LIND MI N GL E SAI L O R Yesteda 9 ~ Ju mbles:After VIDEO Answer. working all day at the funeral home, he was happyio get backto his — I IVING ROOM

DOWN 1 "Consider this scenario ..."

2 Must 3One with pressing chores? 4 One in a pool 5 Pal 4 life 6 "Xanadu" band 7 Loughlin of "Full House" 8 Crude shed 9 Support for a broken digit 10 Power unit 1 1 "Give me ! " : start of a Hawkeye's cheer 12 Philosophy suffix 13 Bill, the "Science Guy" 19 Waikiki feast 21 This and this 25 " miracle!" 26 Beach bucket 28 Villagers below the Grinch's cave 29 Have a yen for 30 Oz. and kg. 32 Steep-walled canyon 33 Creature 34 Pearly whites 37 Turn, as pancakes 38 Electrical particles

L E E S C R O C E S P H O S T E L S A P S E S S T A T E D E P H I T O N I A M E R W A N P E U T A R A E X P R E S S C E N T H L A S S O E R U T T E R F O O N O O N U T N A P P T L E E xwordedltor@aol.com

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50 Tourist attractions 55 News piece 56 Actress Falco 58 Food trIJck offering 59 Snorkeling aid 60 Year, south of the border 61 Tunnelei's explosive 62 Ruckus 63 Evergreen with elastic wood

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: B E A D S A U D I T

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By Jeffrey Wechsler (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

03/04/14


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 4 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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875

880

882

882

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Watercraft

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

tercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-365-5809

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes

I

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

. .

8

Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANY features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text 541-325-1956. CHECKYOUR AD

'

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. 172 Cessna Share Buick Skylark 1972 Top living room, 2 bdrm, IFR equipped, new Please see Bend has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, avionics, Garmin 750 Craigshst for details and entertainment center, more photos. touchscreen, center fireplace, W/D, $18,900. stack, 160hp. garden tub/shower, in 541-323-1898 great condition $36 000 Exceptionally clean 8 economical! or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422, $13,500. in La Pine ) Hangared in KBDN ILL DELIVER Call 541-728-0773

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service on the first day it runs Professional" Directory to make sure it is cor-

1974 Bellanca 1730A

Cadillac Eldorado, 1976

New brakes, tires, Winnebago Aspect axles, needs paint 8 2009 - 32', 3 slidevinyl top. Very good outs, Leather interect. nSpellcheckn and 2160 TT, 440 SMO, condition. $2200 rior, Power s e at, RV human errors do oc160 mph, excellent obo, cash. Call for locks, win d ows, cur. If this happens to CONSIGNMENTS condition, always full details! Aluminum wheels. WANTED your ad, please conhangared, 1 owner 541-678-5575 17e Flat Screen, tact us ASAP so that We Do the Work, for 35 years. $60K. Surround s o u nd, You Keep the Cash! corrections and any camera, Queen bed, On-site credit adjustments can be In Madras, Foam mattress, Awapproval team, made to your ad. call 541-475-6302 ning, Generator, In541-385-5809 web site presence. verter, Auto Jacks, We Take Trade-Ins! Fleetwood Discovery Air leveling, Moon The Bulletin Classified Price Reduced! Free Advertising. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all roof, no smoking or BIG COUNTRY RV Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 options - 3 slide outs, p ets. L ik e n ew, engine, power everyBend: 541-330-2495 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, $74,900 Redmond: thing, new paint, 54K etc., 32,000 miles. 541-480-6900 541-546-5254 orig. miles, runs great, cg. Wintered in h eated exc. cond.in/out. $7500 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Save money. Learn obo. 541-480-3179 541-447-6664 Fleetwood Prowler to fly or build hours 32' - 2001 with your own aira 2 slides, ducted c raft. 1968 A e ro nt~X~ + M ssas1 heat 8 air, great Commander, 4 seat, WINNEBAGO condition, snowbird 150 HP, low time, BRAVE 2003 full panel. $23,000 ready, Many up604 850 • 34D, 2 slides grade options, fiobo. Contact Paul at 745 Forest River Sunseeker GMC Sierra 1977 short • Tires 80% nancing available! 541-447-5184. Storage Rentals Snowmobiles Homes for Sale Class C, 24-ft -Double bed, exlnt o r iginal $14,500 obo. • Just completely bed, roomy bath/shower, cond., runs 8 drives For rent, 8'x20' container Arctic Cat 560 1994, T-Hangar for rent serviced lots storage, oak wood, NOTICE great. V6, new paint in secure facility. Dry, EXT, in good Call Dick, at Bend airport. 908 dining area slide-out w/ • 39,000 miles and tires. $4750 obo. clean, only $90/mo. Call All real estate advercondition, $1000. 541-480-1687. Call 541-362-6998. new awning. Micro, air, Aircraft, Parts tised here in is sub• No trades 541-504-1050 9th Street RV Storage Located in La Pine. new flat screen TV & RV 916 ject to th e F ederal Center, 541-420-6851. • $48,000 firm & Service Call 541-406-6149. batt. On-board gen/low F air Housing A c t , Fleefwood Trucks & 541-815-3150 hrs, arctic pkg, full cover. Good classified ads tell 880 which makes it illegal Wilderness2000 Heavy Equipment Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, the essential facts in an to advertise any pref- Motorcycles & Accessories tow pkg, leather seats, no model, 28', 1 slide, ~ A aae g interesting Manner.Write erence, limitation or good condition, with smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 from the readers view - not discrimination based awning and A/C, $31,500. on race, color, reli- Harley Davidson 2009 the seller's. Convert the $7500. 541-419-6176 Plymouth B a r racuda Super Glide Custom, gion, sex, handicap, 541-383-8270 facts into benefits. Show 1966, original car! 300 Stage 1 Screaming 1/3 interest in wellfamilial status or nathe reader howthe item will hp, 360 V8, centerEagle performance, equipped IFR Beech Botional origin, or intenhelp them in someway. Winnebago Suncruiser34' too many options to nanza A36, new 10-550/ Peterbilt 359 p otable lines, 541-593-2597 tion to make any such This list, $8900. 2004, 35K, loaded, too water truck, 1 9 90, prop, located KBDN. preferences, l i mitaadvertislng tip 541-386-8939 much to list, ext'd warr. Ii • ~ • 3200 gal. tank, 5hp $65,000. 541-419-9510 tions or discrimination. e brought to you by thru 2014, $49,900 Denpump, 4-3 hoses, www.N4972M.com We will not knowingly nis, 541-589-3243 camlocks, $ 25,000. accept any advertisThe Bulletin Gulfstream S u n541-820-3724 ing for r eal e state Keystone Challenger sport 30' Class A 881 which is in violation of 2004 CH34TLB04 34' 932 1966 new f r idge, 632 Travel Trailers this law. All persons fully S/C, w/d hookups, TV, solar panel, new Rolls Royce 1992 SilAntique & Apt./Iiilultiplex General are hereby informed new 18' Dometic awver Spur H,excellent! refrigerator, 4000W Classic Autos that all dwellings adning, 4 new tires, new Midnight Blue exterior, generator, w h eelCHECK YOUR AD vertised are available Kubota 7000w marine Parchment leather intechair lift avail. Good Harley Davidson 1/5th interest in 1973 on an equal opportudiesel generator, 3 rior, 15-inch chrome RR cond. $11,500 obo 2011 Classic LimCessna 150 LLC nity basis. The Bulleslides, exc. cond. inwheels, Alpine Sirius 541-447-5504 ited, Loaded! 9500 150hp conversion, low tin Classified DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS side & out. 27" TV miles, custom paint 1921 Model T time on air frame and navigation system, dvd/cd/am/fm e n ter"Broken Glass" by engine, hangared in Delivery Truck 77,200 miles, dealer749 KeystoneLaredo 31' tain center. Call for Nicholas Del Drago, Bend. Excellent pership maintained, alRV 20 06 w ith 1 2' more details. O n ly Restored 8 Runs on the first day it runs Southeast Bend Homes new condition, formance & affordways garaged. New, slide-out. Sleeps 6, used 4 times total in $9000. to make sure it is corheated handgrips, about $250,000; sell a e able flying! $6,000. queen walk-around last 5 3/g years.. No 541-389-8963 rect. Spellcheck and Nottingham Square 1300 auto cruise control. 541-410-6007 $19,500. 541-480-3348 bed w/storage under- pets, no smoking. High human errors do oc- sq ft nicely updated 3/2, $32k in bike, neath Tub & shower retail $27,700. Will sell cur. If this happens to backs to canal, 2 car gar. onlv $20,000or best 2 swivel rockers. TV. KOUNTRY AIRE for $24,000 including your ad, please con- 20747 Canterbury, FSBO, offer. 541-318-6049 Air cond. Gas stove & sliding hitch that fits in 1994 37.5' motortact us ASAP so that $204,900. 541-390-1579 refrigerator/freezer. home, with awning, your truck. Call 6 a.m. corrections and any Microwave. Awning. to 10 p.m. for appt to and one slide-out, 750 adjustments can be Outside sho w er. see. 541-330-5527. Only 47k miles made to your ad. Redmond Homes Slide through storand good condition. 541 -385-5809 a. a ge, E a s y Li f t . $25,000. The Bulletin Classified Tick, Tock $29,000 new; Looking for your next 541-548-0318 Asking $18,600 Look at: (photoabove is of a emp/oyee? Tick, Tock... 541-4947-4805 Harley Davidson similar model & not the Bendhomes.com Place a Bulletin help Dyna Wide Glide actual vehicle) ...don't let time get wanted ad today and for Complete Listings of 2013, black, only 1000 1000 1000 reach over 60,000 away. Hire a Area Real Estate for Sale 200 miles, brand readers each week. Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices new, all stock, plus professional out G R E AT 634 Your classified ad after-market exMINATE YOUR PAto appear personally. will also appear on of The Bulletin's I RX JV ! LEGAL NOTICE pt./Multiplex NE Bend haust. Has winter bendbulletin.com I F YOU AR E O R IN T H E CI R CUIT RENTAL RIGHTS to cover, helmet. National RV "Call A Service abo v e-named DERED TO APPEAR, which currently reCOURT O F THE the Call for Specials! Selling for what Tropical, 1997, Professional" child either ON THE YOU MUST APPEAR ceives over Orbit 21' 2007, used STATE OF OREGON Limited numbers avail. I owe on it: $15,500. 35-ft, Chevy Vortec IN 1.5 million page only 6 times, A/C, Directory today! FOR D E SCHUTES DATE SPECIFIED IN PERSONALLY 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Call anytime, engine, new tires, views every month oven, tub shower, COUNTY J u v enile THIS SUMMONS OR THE COURTROOM, W/D hookups, patios 541-554-0384 new awnings, 12-ft O N A FUTU R E UNLESS THE at no extra cost. micro, load leveler D epartment. In t h e or decks. Laredo 30' 2009 Bulletin Classifieds slide-out, queen HAS hitch, awning, dual Matter of CHEVELLE DATE, and may make COURT MOUNTAIN GLEN, Get Results! bed, Italian leather batteries, sleeps 4-5, KIM FRANCES BUE- such orders and take GRANTED YOU AN 541-383-9313 HDFatBo 1996 Call 365-5609 or couch and recliner, EXCELLENT CONHNER, A Child. Case such action as autho- EXCEPTION IN ADProfessionally place your ad on-line DITION. All accesexcellent condition. No. 707366. Petition rized bv law. RIGHTS VANCE UNDER ORS managed by Norris & at sories are included. Ready to travel„ No. 13JV0330. PUB- AND OBLIGATIONS: 4 19B.918 T O AP Stevens, Inc. P EAR BY O T H ER bendbulletin.com $1 4,51 1 OBO . LISHED SUMMONS. ( 1)YOU HAVE A towing hitch in541 -382-9441 TO:Luke Ken n eth RIGHT TO BE REP- MEANS INCLUDING, cluded.$19,900. Garage Sales RESENTED BY AN BUT NOT LIMITED overall length is 35' Dale Buehner. IN THE 541-815-4811 771 ATTORNEY IN THIS TO, TE L EPHONIC has 2 slides, Arctic NAME O F THE Completely Garage Sales MATTER. If you are OR OTHER ELECLots package, A/C,table STATE OF OREGON: RV Rebuilt/Customized currently represented TRONIC MEANS. AN & chairs, satellite, A petition has been CONSIGNMENTS Garage Sales 2012/2013 Award MAY Arctic pkg., power SHEVLIN RIDGE filed asking the court by an attorney, CON- ATTORNEY WANTED Winner awning, in excellent 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apto terminate your pa- T ACT Y OU R A T - NOT ATTEND THE We Do The Work ... Find them Showroom Condition TORNEY I M M E D I- HEARING(S) IN condition! More pix proved plans. More r ental rights to t h e You Keep The Cash! Many Extras in at bendbulletin.com UPON Y OUR PLACE . details and photos on On-site credit above-named child for ATELY Low Miles. R ECEIVING T H I S PETITIONER'S ATcraigslist. $149,900. the purpose of placapproval team, $28,000 The Bulletin Navion RV 2008, $77,000 541-389-8614 541-419-3301 ing the child for adop- NOTICE. Your previ- TORNEY: Whitney web site presence. 541-546-4607 Classifieds Sprinter chassis 25'. ous attorney may not Hill, Assistant A t tortion. YOU ARE REWe Take Trade-Ins! Mercedes Benz diesel, be representing you in ney General, Depart775 Free Advertising. QUIRED TO Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 24,000 miles, pristine 541-385-5809 t his matter. IF Y O U ment of Justice, 1162 BIG COUNTRY RV 2 slides, AC, recliners, P ERSONALLY A P Manufacturedl cond., quality throughwalk-around queen bed, PEAR BEFORE the CANNOT A F FORD Court Street NE, SaBend: 541-330-2495 out, rear slide-out w/ Mobile Homes 648 Redmond: sliding glass door closet, Deschutes C o u nty T O HIRE A N A T - lem, OR 97301-4096, queen bed, deluxe (503) 541-548-5254 new tub & 10-gal water C ourt at 1 100 N W T ORNEY and y o u Phone: Houses for captain swivel front 934-4400. ISSUED FACTORY SPECIAL heater, good tires. Brand Bond, Bend, Oregon, meet the state's fiRent General seats, diesel generator, New Home, 3 bdrm, nancial g u idelines, this 13 day of Februnew 20' screen room 97701, on the 19th awning, no pets/ smok$46,500 finished ary, 2014. Issued by: available. Super clean, 1 day of March, 2014 at you are entitled to PUBLISHER'S ing.$77,500 or make on your site. Triumph Daytona Hill owner, n o n -smokers.9:00 a.m. to admit or have an attorney ap- Whitney NOTICE an offer. 541-382-2430 J and M Homes 2004, 15K m i l e s, $12,995. 541-447-7968 deny the allegations p ointed for yo u a t ¹093649, Assistant All real estate adver541-548-5511 Attorney General. perfect bike, needs of the petition and to state expense. TO tising in this newspaAPnothing. Vin personally appear at REQUEST LEGAL NOTICE per is subject to the 780 ¹201536. any subs e quent POINTMENT OF AN SECOND NOTICE F air H o using A c t Mfd./Mobile Homes 1976 Silver Streak ATTORNEY TO $4995 court-ordered hearing. OF BUDGET which makes it illegal Here /tis! Dream Car YOU MUST APPEAR R EPRESENT Y O U COMMITTEE with Land to a d vertise "any Perhaps the cleanest AT S T A T E EXAutoSales PERSONALLY IN MEETING original vintage 30-ft preference, limitation YOU MUST 1801Division, Bend Providence 2005 trailer, in incredible con- MONTANA 3565 2006, THE COURTROOM PENSE, or disc r imination 3 bdrm, 2 bath mobile IMMEDIATELY CONDreamCarsBend.com ON THE DATE AND Fully loaded, 35,000 exc. cond., 3 slides, NOTICE IS HEREBY dition! A/C, full bath, based on race, color, home for sale or rent. 541-678-0240 king bed, Irg LR, AT THE TIME TACT the Deschutes GIVEN, pursuant to miles, 350 Cat, Very kitchen, twin beds, many religion, sex, handi- Private, along COI caJuvenile Department Dlr 3665 LISTED ABOVE. AN clean, non-smoker, Arctic insulation, all ORS 294.401 that a nal. 541-369-2636 extras. Call for details. cap, familial status, options $35,000 obo. ATTORNEY MAY at 63360 Britta Street, meeting of the Bud3 slides, side-by-side $12,700 obro. marital status or naBldg. 1, Bend, OR 541-420-3250 NOT ATTEND THE refrigerator with ice e t CC ommittee o f Dave, 208-255-2407 tional origin, or an inJust too many 97701, phone numHEARING IN YOUR maker, Washer/Dryer, (in Terrebonne). e ntral Oreg o n tention to make any Need help fixing stuff? ber (541) 317-3115, P LACE. THE R E collectibles? Flat screen TV's, In Startyour Community College such pre f erence, between the hours of Call A Service Professional memories today! FORE, YOU MUST motion satellite. District will be held on limitation or discrimi6:00 a.m. and 5:00 the find the help you need. A PPEAR EVEN I F 12th day of March $95,000 Sell them in nation." Familial stap.m. for further infor- 2014 at 6:00 p.m. in 541-460-2019 www.bendbulletin.com YOUR A T TORNEY tus includes children The Bulletin Classifieds mation. IF YOU WISH the ALSO APP E ARS. Chri s tianson under the age of 16 This summons is pub- T O HIRE A N A T - Board Room of the living with parents or V ictory TC 9 2 ci RV TORNEY, please relished pursuant to the Boyle Edu c ation legal cus t odians, 541-385-5809 2002, runs great, CONSIGNMENTS order of th e c ircuit tain one as soon as C enter, 2 60 0 N W pregnant women, and 40K mi., Stage 1 WANTED possible and have the c ourt judge of t h e College Way, Bend, people securing cusWe Do The Work ... Performance Kit, above-entitled court, attorney present at FIND YOUR FUTURE for the purtody of children under Tango 29.6' 2007, You Keep The Cash! the above hearing. If Oregon n ew tires, r e a r d ated February 7 , pose o f r e c eiving 18. This newspaper HOME INTHE BULLETIN Rear living, walkOn-site credit OPEN ROAD 36' you need help finding 2014. The order dibrakes. $ 5 0 0 0. budget message and will not knowingly acaround queen bed, approval team, 2005 $25,500 an attorney, you may rects that this sumYour future is just a page budget document of 541-771-0665 cept any advertising web site presence. central air, awning, King bed, hide-a-bed the Oregon State said District for the mons be p ublished call for real estate which is away. Whetheryou're looking Bar's Lawyer Referral We Take Trade-Ins! 1 large slide, sofa, 3 slides, glass once each week for Fiscal Year 2014-15. in violation of the law. for a hat or aplace Io hangit, 870 Free Advertising. shower, 10 gal. wa$12,000. (503) three con secutive Service at O ur r e aders a r e The Bulletin Classified is ter heater, 10 cu.ft. BIG COUNTRY RV 684-3763 or toll free 541-280-2547 or Boats & Accessories weeks, making three your best source. This is a public meethereby informed that Bend: 541-330-2495 fridge, central vac, 541-815-4121 publications in all, in a in Oregon at (800) ing where deliberaall dwellings adverEvery daythousandsof Redmond: s atellite dish, 2 7 " 452-7636. IF YOU published newspaper tions of the Budget tised in this newspa- buyers andsellers ol goods 541-548-5254 TV/stereo syst., front REPRE- Committee will take of general circulation ARE front power leveling per are available on and services dobusinessin SENTED BY AN ATin Deschutes County. Looking for your and any person an equal opportunity these pages.They know jacks and s cissor Date of first publica- TORNEY, I T IS placeappear next employee? and disbasis. To complain of you can't beatTheBulletin stabilizer jacks, 16' YOUR R ESPONSI- may tion: F e bruary 16, Place a Bulletin help cuss proposed protr awning. Like new! d iscrimination ca l l Classified Section for B ILITY T O M A I N 2 014. Date o f l ast wanted ad today and grams with the Bud541-419-0566 HUD t o l l-free at selection andconvenience 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, TAIN CONT A CT reach over 60,000 publication: March 4, get Committee at that 1-800-677-0246. The - every item isjust a phone inboard motor, g reat 2014. NOTICE: READ W ITH Y OU R A T - time. Copies of the readers each week. toll f ree t e lephone call away. cond, well maintained, T ORNEY AND T O T HESE PAP E RS Your classified ad Have an item to Budget document will number for the hearCAREFULLY. IF YOU K EEP Y OU R A T - be available at t he The Classified Section is $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 TIFFINPHAETON QSH will also appear on ing im p aired is sell quick? TORNEY A DVISED Christianson B oard 2007 with 4 slides, CAT DO NOT A P PEAR easy to use. Every i t em bendbulletin.com 1-800-927-9275. Ads published in the 350hp diesel engine, OF YOUR WHERE- Room at the time of If it's under P ERSONALLY B E is categorizedandevery which currently re"Boats" classification $125,900. 30,900 miles, FORE THE COURT ABOUTS. (2) If yo u cartegory is indexed on the ceives over 1.5 milthe meeting. 654 include: Speed, fish- new Michelin '500 you can place it in tires, great O R DO N O T A P - contest the petition, section's front page. lion page views eving, drift, canoe, Houses for Rent the court will schedcond! Dishwasher, w/d, The Bulletin PEAR AT ANY SUBery month at no James E. Middleton house and sail boat . central vac, roof satellite, Whether youarelooking for ule a hearing on the Chief Executive and SE Bend SEQUENT extra cost. Bulletin For all other types of aluminum wheels, 2 full Classifieds for: a home orneeda service, allegations of the petiCOURT-ORDERED Budget Officer watercraft, please go slide-thru basement trays Classifieds Get ReN ewer 4 b d r m S E , your future is inthepageso! HEARING, the court tion and order you to sults! Call 385-5809 to Class 875. '10- 3 lines, 7 days The Bulletin Classified. & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towappear personally and master main l evel, may proceed in your or place your ad 541-365-5809 Look at: bar and Even-Brake in2100 SF, large yard, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days absence without fur- may schedule other on-line at hearings related to the fOrBendhcsmee.ccsm very n i ce. $ 1 595. The Bulletin cluded. ther notice and TERCOmPlete LiStingS Of bendbulletin.com (Private Party ads only) Seinng Central Oregonsince taea 541-460-9200 Call 541-977-4150 petition and order you Area Real Estate for Sale ~e r v rng Central Oregon slnce190

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E6 TUESDAY MARCH 4 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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935

975

975

975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Nazda3 2012

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

S ubaru Forester 2008, black, 33,271 mi.,

Ford Expedition Limited 2012

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

935

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

933

933

933

Pickups

Pickups

Pickups

less than 25k mi., heated leather seats, Vin¹F01898 $41,944 ROBBERSON y LIIICOLII ~

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbuiietin.com Updated daily

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aged or abused. $12,900.

Ford F250 Camper Special 1966, AT w/limited slip rear end. A few issues but runs good. Full steel rack w/drs. $1950 firm, cash. 541-420-0156 Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Ford Ran er XLT

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991

with camper shell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504. FORD F-150 2010

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Jeep Wrangler 2011 Unlimited Rubicon Ii!Iii

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Leather trimmed seat, 4 spd auto, Vin¹611550 $32,977

The Bulletin Classifieds

FORD F-150 XLT

ROBBERSON y Ford Supercab 1992, 541-385-5809 brown/tan color with m atching ful l s i z e 935 canopy, 2WD, 460 Sport Utility Vehicles over drive, 135K mi., full bench rear seat, slide rear w i ndow, bucket seats, power seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver & trailer brakes, good t ires. Good cond i tion.BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K $4900. 541-389-5341 miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panSay "goodbuy" oramic moo n roof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xeto that unused non headlights, tan & item by placing it in black leather interior, The Bulletin Classifieds n ew front & rea r brakes @ 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-385-5809 541-388-4360

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2013 S u percrewcab! le ss than 8k mi., 5.01 V8, 4WD. Vin¹E12866 $30,977 ROBBERSON y urcoa» ~

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

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Porsche 911 Turbo

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On a classified ad go to 2003 6 speed, X50 www.bendbulletin.com added power pkg., to view additional 530 HP! Under 10k photos of the item. miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, Get your and battery, Bose business p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. a ROW I N G Garaged, p e rfect condition, $59,700. with an ad in 541-322-9647 The Bulletin's

Sport, 5 spd, Bluetooth, remote pwr locks, less than 25k mi., vin¹368668 $17,977 I s sm s

541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205

Advertise your car! Add A Prcture!

"Call A Service

Reach thousands of readers!

BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Call 541 -385-5809 Professional" The Bulletin Classtfieds Search the area's most Directory comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, (car is in Bend) Looking for your merchandise to sporting next employee? goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Place a Bulletin help Hyundai Sonata wanted ad today and Limited 2010 - leather, print or on line. 975 Mazda Miata 1997 reach over 60,000 nav. ¹187981 $19,995 Call 541-385-5809 Automobiles Illl-edition www.bendbulletin.com readers each week. Mica Green, 5-spd, Your classified ad original interior & will also appear on The Bulletin exterior. All power servingcentral ore9onsince se bendbulletin.com 541-598-3750 options, leather, which currently rewww.aaaoregonautoconvertible boot, Porsche Carrera 911 ceives over 1.5 milsource.com Tonneau Cover 2003 convertible with lion page views 114K miles, synhardtop. 50K miles, every month at The Bulletin's thetic oils, new timnew factory Porsche no extra cost. BulleCorvetteCoupe "Call A Service ing belt © 81K, motor 6 mos ago with 1996, 350 auto, tin Classifieds & more! $5995. 18 mo factory warProfessional" Directory Get Results! Call 135k, non-ethanol 541-548-5648 ranty remaining. 385-5809 or place fuel/synthetic oil, is all about meeting $37,500. your ad on-line at garaged/covered. your needs. 541-322-6928 Bose Premium Gold bendbuiietin.com Find It in Call on one of the system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! The Bulletin Classifiedsl professionals today! Toyota Ceiica $10,500 OBO. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin recoml Convertible 1993 Retired. Must sell! Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr mends extra caution I 541-923-1781 (longer style) sedan, when p u r chasing • silver, black leather, 4.2L f products or services V8, AT, AC, fully loaded from out of the area. Audi A4 2001 1.8T moonroof. Runs great, 4 door sedan, rebuilt + f S ending c ash , reliable, always garaged, trans w/19K miles, q checks, or credit in116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. newer clutch, brakes, GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 I formation may be I Front/side airbags, manifold, extras & reOlds 98 Regency 1990 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, J subject toFRAUD. non-smoker. $7900. exc. shape, runs as ceipts. Excellent mpg; nicest c o nvertible For more informa541-350-9938 Carfax. $5,800. new, one owner, 20 around in this price f tion about an adver541-390-6004 mpg in town. New range, new t i res, tiser, you may call battery, stud snow wheels, clutch, tim- I the Oregon Statef Need to get an ad tires. $2000. ing belt, plugs, etc. Attorney General's I Cadillac Deville in ASAP? 541-389-9377 111K mi., remarkOffice C o nsumer DHS 2000. Most able cond. i nside I Protection hotline at options, exc. cond. The Bulletin 1-877-877-9392. and out. Fun car to Fax it to 641-322-7253 93,000 mi.. New To Subscribe call drive, Must S E E! tires. $6,500. $5995. R e dmond. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-385-5800 or go to serving centra/ oregon sincetsrs 541-233-8944. www.bendbulletin.com 541-504-1993

Fully loaded, 4 door, V6, tow p ackage, hard top and soft top, silver, excellent condition, 2 4 , 000 miles.$30,000. 541-598-3750 Call (541) 306-8711. aaaoregonautosource.com

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looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

Nazda CX-Ti 2011

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with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

viced, garaged,

BIIT ITI SELL ITr The Bulletin Classifieds

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

541-593-2312

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

1999. Very good cond. Runs well, Two sets of tires on rims - summer and winter. $2500.

Jeep Wrangler 2011 Rubicon Unlimited

Nissan Titan 2004 4x4 King Cab LE, 4-dr, black, 141K miles, $6000. 541-815-4121

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503-358-1164.

Honda Odyssey

DLR¹0205

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

Lariat Supercrewcab! less than 53k miles heated seats Vin¹D04934 $32,977 ROBBERSON ~

541-382-4521

PM& Nl

loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.

~

928-581-9190

2011 S u percrewcab! less than 12k mi., 4WD, Ford certified. Vin¹PA76782 $21,947 R OBBER

LIIICOLII ~

CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

ROBBERSON y

possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call

LINCOLN~

541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205

Hummer H2 2006

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles,

Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-

FI¹ID IT!

SUT au to 4 - spd. 6.0L V-8, less than 88k mi., 4x4, leather seats. VIN¹ 101123 $26,977

2 0 05 AWD, sunroof, lux/winter pkgs, new tires, more! $6775 obo.541-330-5818

1996, 73k miles,

ROBBERSON

Vans

DLR¹0205

1R

Chevy 3500 Crew Cab, 2005 4x4 Dually Duramax Allison, 4' lift, Edge Chip, only 66,000 miles. LS trim pkg, split-bench front seat, tow pkg, brake controller. Very good condition - looks good, pulls better! Original owner needs to sell - $35,000. 541-408-7826

Sport, 5 spd, leather seats, hatchback, FWD. 68,398 mi. vin¹532282 $17,977

Dave, 541-350-4077

940

541-382-4521

V olvo S40 T 5

Corvette 1979

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

~~

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

I

Lincoln MKZ 2009

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Leather seat, Bluetooth, auto 6 spd, F WD 54 k mi l e s

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vin¹613915

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The Bulletin

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DLR¹0205

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Bambi

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My name is Bambi and I am a 6 year old Chihuahua mix. I made the long trip from Southern California to hopefully find my forever home with you! I've already become a staff favorite because I love to snuggle and give as many kisses as I can! If you think you can give me the forever home I'm looking for, come by HSCO and ask to meet me!

ttr cantra1 oregon Toadopts pet,call541-382-3537 www.hsco.or S1170 SE 21th, Bend,OR 91102

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Penny

Spike

Gina

Fiona

Kate

Penny was brought to the shelter as a stray. Penny is a sweet and loving hamster but has not had all the socialization that she needs. She is searching for a home that will take her out of her cage daily and play with her. If you are looking for a hamster to add to your family, come down and check her out today!

Meet Spike! He is a very sweet and loving one year old Chihuahua in search of his forever home. He was sadly brought to HSCO because of landlord issues. Spike tends to be a little shy at first but once he warms up he is very fun and outgoing. Spike is housetrained already but would greatly benefit from a basic training course. Come down to HSCO and meet Spike today!

My name is Gina and I am a one year old Terrier mix. The Humane Society we came from has so many little dogs that they just didn't have any more space for us. We ali seem to get along with other dogs and are social with people. We may be little but we still have a iot of energy to burn! Come down and adopt one of us today.

My name is Fiona and I am a 2 year old Poodle. We made the long trip from Southern Califomia to hopefully find our forever home with you. We all seem to get along with other dogs and are social with people. We may be little but we still have a iot of energy to burn! If you think we are just want you've been waiting for, don't wait!

My name is Kate and I am a one year old Terrier mix. We made the long trip from Southern California to hopefully find our forever home with you! We ali seem to get along with other dogs and are social with people. I am very high energy! We may be little but we still have a lot of energy to bum! Come down and adopt one of us today.

Mable

Lance

Ebu

Ruth

1

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BC

BC is a beautiful 8 year old long haired M abie is a sweet girl who was brought to Lance is meek, but also sweet and sensitive. My name is Ebu! I am an 8 year old Calico Hi there, my name is Ruth. I arrived at the kitty waiting patiently for her purr-fect the shelter because her owner sadly had He is 7 years old and in search of a quiet kitty that was brought to the shelter HSCO after someone in the home became family to take her home. She has lived with t o move. She tends to get nervous around home where he can blossom. He loves because sadly my family lost their home allergic to me. I am sad to have to leave other cats and dogs and gets along well small children and other animals. Mabie attention and rolls around while getting and could no longer care for me. I would them but I know that now I will find my withkidsandstrangers.Sheisaisousedto h as been indoors only her whole life and p et. Once he knows you're a friend, he l o veto find a quiethometolivemyyears true and forever home. I've been around being indoors only and would appreciate will need to stay that way to be most enjoys sitting on iaps and chasing toys. If out snuggling with my family. Come down dogs and I think they are just fine. If you the same from her new home. If your c o mfortable. ff you think you have the y o u thinkyouhaveahomeforLancetocali t o the shelter and let's get to know each think I am the perfect feline companion for family is looking for a mature cat, look no purr-fect, home for this wonderful girl then his own then come by the shelter and adopt other. I am sure you will want to adopt me you, stop on by and let's meet! further than BC! come by the shelter to meet Mable today! h i m today! today!

We need your help! ( YESI Please accept my gift of $ r

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Mimi'S TriVia

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HUMANE SOCIETYOF CEN T RAL OREGON I Address 6) I70 SE 27th St. Bend, Ctty

released when you pet or cuddle a cat which helps

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lower heart rate, reduces wounds heal?

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per month for

months for animal care,

State

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Signature Check ¹

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Precious Hello my name is Precious. I am an 11 year old Maine Coon mix kitty that was brought to the shelter because sadly my family could no longer care for me. I am deciawed, so I will have to be an indoor only cat. If you are looking for a sweet kitty to add to your family then come down to the shelter today and adopt me!


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BEEF TRI TIP ROAST

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WESTERN FAMILY PICKLES

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8 pack, 20 oz. Selected Varieties

Natural & Cinnamon

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FRANL ENGLISH MUFFINS EA

13-14 oz. Selected Varieties

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64 oz. Selected Varieties

15 oz. Selected Varieties

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PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, MAR 4, 2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

SEATTLE INTERNAT IONAl SOURDO UGH BRHLD

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EA

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70 oz. Party Size!

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16 oz.

Sc YOGURT

EBERHARD'S COTTAG E CHEESE

56 oz. Selected Varieties

16 oz. Regular & Light

UNPQUA ICE CREAIN

FRESHBAKED FRENCH BREAD EA

DELI VALIIES

K L A I 4 I N ONNNG

FROZ EN VALUE S

DAIRY VALIIES— ,.~-,I

I~~A OLIGINAL

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EGG BEATERS

7 oz. Selected Varieties

16 oz. Original

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FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, MAR 4, 2014 IPAGE 3


i •

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P~ G~, SPECIALS.'

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LARGE CHOICE LEMONS

8' ji

C ertiA e d

Rg~id,

JUMBO

REDa YELLOW

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TEXAS RUBY GRAPEFRUIT

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WE ACCEI%

• Food Stamps

$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, MAR 4, 2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

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