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Shootingdeath Bend Police say31-year-old David Andrew Ryder was shotandkilled ata home on Will Scarlet Lane in
Southeast Bendearly Monday. I
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By Sheila G. Miller
wound, accordingto Bend Police Lt. Ben Gregory. Bend Police arrested aloAround6:30p.m.,police /r cal man Mondayevening on arrested Luke Anton Wirksuspicionofmurder, kala,32, andbooked alleginghe shotand himintothe Deschutes killed a31-year-old Countyjail without NlM ~ Bendmanearlythat bond allowed,basedon morning. theirbelief thatheshot Policewere called andkilled Ryder. Wirkto20753Will Scarlet Wirkkala kala l i v e dattheWill Lane around 2:30 a.m., Scarlet Laneaddress, onareport thatsomeone andpolice say Ryderhadbeen RobKerr/The Bulletin there hadbeen shot. They arinvitedthereas aguest. Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty, left, and Bend rived to find David Andrew Police declinedto sayhow policeat the home where a manwas fatallyshotearly Monday. Ryder,31, dead of a gunshot manyshots were fired or TheBulletin
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AfriCa eXtremiSm — Analysisandinterviewsshowaseries of U.S. missteps in dealing with the region.A4
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Test yourdeer-ography Thinkyouknow where beer is madeeverywhere in Central Oregon? Match Central Oregon's 21 brewers to the mapbelow. Somebrewing companies have separate brewing facilities andbrewpubs, so as a hint, both are marked with the same letter. Also note that some brewery locations aren't open to the public.
what type of gunwas used. According to court records, Wirkkalapreviouslylived in Chinook, Wash., and Pullman, Wash. His onlypolice records in Oregon are two minor alcohol-related misdemeanorsfrommorethana decade ago. According topolice, Wirkkala's girlfriendwas in the home at thetime of the shooting, aswell as two children. All were asleep duringthe altercation. SeeShooting/A5
Legislature gets down to work By Lauren Dake TheBulletin
SALEM — The77th Oregon Legislaturestarted work Mondaywithout the ceremonypresent Jan. 14, whenlawmakerswere swornin andthegovernor gavehis State of the State address. Instead, itwasbusiness asusual. Bothchambers metbrieflyinthemorning, andcommitteehearings wereheldintheafternoon. Protesterssporting red,pushingforuniversal healthcare, ralliedinfront of thestatehouse, andthe Capitolhallwaysbuzzed withlobbyistsindarksuits. Democrats controlboth chambersthis session,unlikethehistoric30-30split inthe Houseduringthe short2012session. House Republican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte, saidtheminority
partyis gearinguptoplay "defense"thissession. SeeLegislature/A5
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GOming Friday GO! Magazine has a review of Smith Rock Brewing Co., Redmond's newest brewpub.
AndyZeigert/The Bulletin
Bankof Americahaslong rueditsdecisionin2008to acquire Countrywide Financial,thesubprimemortgage giant. Todate,thebankhas setasidesome $40billion tosettleclaimsofmortgage misconductthatoccurred beforeitacquiredthefreewheelinglender. Ithasbeenaregular refrainat Bankof America. Lastmonth, Brian Moynihan,thebank'schief executive,told Bloomberg televisionat theWorld EconomicForumin Davos, Switzerland,thatcarrying Countrywidewaslike climbingamountainwith"a 250-poundbackpack." Butaccordingtonew documentsfiledinstate Supreme Courtin Manhattan lateonFriday, questionable practicesbythebank'sloan servicingunithavecontinuedwellafterthe Countrywideacquisition. See Bank/A4
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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M IDLAND CI T Y , A la . — Authorities stormed an underground bunker Monday in southeastern Alabama, freeing a 5-year-old boy and leaving hiscaptor dead after a week of fruitless negotiations that left authorities convinced the child was in imminent danger. Jimmy Lee Dykes, 65, had taken the child off a school bus after fatally shooting the driver, authorities said. He was known by neighbors for his anti-government rants and for patrolling his property with a gun, ready to shoot trespassers. He had stayed for several days in the tiny bunker before. "He always said he'd never be taken alive. I knew he'd nev-
er come outof there," said an acquaintance, Roger Arnold. Dykes had been seen with a gun, and officers concluded the boy was in imminent danger, said Steve Richardson of the FBI's office in Mobile. It was not immediately clear how authorities determined the man had a gun, or exactly how Dykes died. Monday evening, officers w ere sweepingthe property to make sure Dykes had not set up any bombs that could detonate. Full details of the bunker raid had not yet emerged. However, neighbors described hearing what sounded like gunshots around the time officials said they entered the shelter. At a late Monday news con-
ference, authorities declined to elaborate on how they had o bserved Dykes or on h ow he died, citing the pending investigation. Dale County Sheriff Wally Olson said Dykes was armed when officersentered the bunker to rescue the child. He said the boy was threatened but declined to elaborate. "That's why we went inside — to save the child," he said. Authorities said the boy has been reunited with his mother and appears to be OK. Richardson said he had been to the hospital to see the boy eating and "doing the things you'd expect a normal 5- or 6year-old to do."
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:
O fo Oz sO zoO ss 04704s The estimated jackpot is now $10.4 million.
ficials were responsible for mishandling or covering up allegations
ofsexualabuse. Mali COnfliCt —French warplanes bombed Islamist militant bases and depots deep into northern Mali to disrupt their supply
routes, French officials said Monday, as secular Tuareg rebels in
greeted with a torrent of criticism inside the Syrian opposition movement, his colleagues in the National Coalition of Syrian
IIIII
Revolutionary and Opposition Forces basically endorsed it over the weekend.
h) w
MBXICO 8XplOSIOII —A gas buildup ignited by an electrical Ramon Espinosa/TheAssociated Press
French daredevil Alain Robert reaches into his
In the end, the 50-year-old Frenchmanmadeshort
chalkbag Monday as he scalesthe Habana Libre hotel work of the building, climbing confidently and so without using ropes or asafety net in Havana, Cuba. quickly he could have almost been riding a slow-mov-
Robert, who hasscaled some of theworld's tallest
ing elevator.
Building and San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge. Two years ago he took six hours to summit what currently is the world's tallest building, the 2,717 foottall Burj Khalifa in Dubai, though for that ascent he
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
survivors of abuse and the public will ever learn which church of-
was by his own admission a personal gambit and was initially
The climber had said his main concern was not the height of the 413-foot-tall hotel, but that a bit of the
Oregon Lottery results
tions were redacted by the archdiocese. At issue is whether the
ment that he could avoid trial if he resigned and left the country. Although the offer made by the opposition leader, Mouaz al-Khatib,
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incomplete and many are unaccounted for. In addition, on many documents the names of supervisors informed of abuse allega-
him to respond definitively and even offering the added induce-
Sears Tower in Chicago, NewYork's Empire State
and news or ad illustrations. Theymaynot
finally abiding by a settlement it signed with victims six years ago. But it now appears that the files the church released are
backing Monday to its leader's surprise offer last week for a dialogue with President Bashar Assad to end the civil war, pressing
followed years of other hair-raising feats.
Postmast er:SendaddresschangestoThe Bulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR97708. TheBulletin retains ownership andcopyright protection of all staff -prepared news copy,advertising copy
priests accused of sexually abusing children, saying that it was
Syria COnfliCt —Syria's opposition coalition gave qualified
Robert, known as "Spider-Man," has scaled much taller structures in his career, including the former
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Los Angeles released12,000 pages of internal files Thursday on
every child, to be educated."
buildings, clambered onto the roof of the 27-story hotel just after1:30 p.m. after a death-defying stunt that
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technology, Pyongyang is subject to new sanctions if it detonates its third nuclear device since 2006.
old, who was shot in the head as she left school in the Swat Valley in Pakistan four months ago, promised in the video that she would
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that the U.N. and others call a disguised test of banned missile
with the words, "Today you can seethat I'm alive." The15-year-
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devices simultaneously. Under a U.N. Security Council resolution last month condemning a North Korean long-range rocket launch
first time since she survived an assassination attempt by the Pakistani Taliban last year, the young activist Malala Yousufzai began
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Korea is punished if it carries out its threat to conduct a nuclear test. Amid signs that such a test is coming, South Korea's presi-
depots" in northern Mali on Sunday to prevent the Islamists from regrouping in the mountainous region.
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Kerry WarlIS KOrea —New U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and his South Korean counterpart have agreed to make sure North
for questioning. The French foreign minister, Laurent Fabius, said Monday that at least 30 French jets had bombed "bases and fuel
DARING CLIMB IN HAVANA
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sent it to Obama, who signed it Monday.
by a patrol and brought to the northern city of Kidal on Sunday
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to borrow about $450 billion to meet interest payments and other obligations. The Senate gave the bill final approval last week and
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on federal borrowing. Experts say that will allow the government
northern Mali said they had captured two lslamist commanders near the Algerian border. The two men were captured Saturday
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and delaying the next clash over the nation's debt until later this year. The legislation temporarily suspends the $16.4 trillion limit
building's brittle facade might break off. Like many city landmarks, the hotel is in disrepair after more than half a century of Communist rule on the island.
used somesafety equipment.
spark or other heat source caused the blast that killed 37 people and wounded dozens of others last week at the state oil company's
headquarters, Mexico's attorney general said. But Attorney-General Jesus Murillo Karam said investigators were still looking for
the source of the gas, and revising records of building inspections to determine why Petroleos Mexicanos had not discovered the gas accumulation. As a state company, Pemex is responsible for inspecting its own buildings.
Iranian OffiCial arreSted —Iran has arrested a senior government official, two years after a parliamentary probe found him
responsible for deaths by torture of at least three jailed anti-government protesters. State media say Saeed Mortazavi — an ally of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad — was taken to Tehran's Evin
prison late Monday night but gave no details.
Veteran suspected inTexasshooting
had beenin mental hospital, recordsshow
Bup SCOut mcctillg —A proposed shift by the Boy Scouts of America to drop its national ban on gay leaders and Scouts, and allow local Scout units to decide for themselves, was the center of attention as the organization's national board gathered in lrving,
Texas, on Monday for a three-day meeting. But the undercurrents of the debate — a drop in participation in the Scouts over the last decade and a deep division between conservative and
liberal church groups over the proposal — are raising the stakes
even higher for the vote as a kind of proxy on the question of how told authorities he was a Ma- and numerous guns were at Scouting stays relevant in a changing social climate, Scout volunrine veteran who was suffer- the scene, according to the teers involved in the discussions said. The Associated Press — From wire reports ing from post-traumatic stress affidavit. FORT WORTH, Texas disorder. "Eddie stated he was hurting The Iraq War veteran charged with killing a f ormer Navy and that his family does not IT S IN TH E B AG! LU NCHTIME LECTURES AT OSU-CASCADES SEAL sniper and his friend understand what he has been on a Texas shooting range had through," the report says. Explorethe range of researchand scholarship underway at OSU-Cascades. been taken to a mental hospital Routh's mother told police n n nIInInInInIn InIn nnnnInInInInInInI IIn nIInInInInInI nI nnInInInInInInInInI n nnII nI nI III nI III III III n nn II nI nI nI I twice in the past five months her son had been drinking and and told authorities he was became upsetwhen hisfather suffering from post-traumatic said he was going to sell his stress disorder, police records gun. She said Routh began arshow. guing with them and said he Eddie Ray Routh, 25, also was going to "blow his brains told his sister and brother-in- out." law after the shootings that Police took Routh to Green he "traded his soul for a new Oaks Hospital for psychiatric truck," according to an Erath care. Feelings guide our decisions more than most of County arrest warrant affidaDallas police records show us will admit. The purchases and investments vit obtained by WFAA-TV. Po- Routh was taken back to the lice said Routh was driving the same mental hospital in midwe make, and our willingness to help others truck of victim and ex-Navy January aftera woman called are often determined by feelings rather than SEAL Chris Kyle at the time of policeand said she feared for his arrest. Routh's safety. real information. Jesse King will examine recent Routh is charged with one G reen Oaks will n o t r e research on the mental shortcut for decisioncount of capital murder and lease patient information, citmaking, called the affect heuristic, and how it two counts of murder in the ing privacy laws. Most people shooting deaths of Kyle, author brought by police to the hospiaffects oLfr evaluation of risky decisions. of the best-selling book "Amer- tal are required to stay at least ican Sniper," and his friend 48 hours. hlm Chad Littlefield at a shooting In another brush with auItC A Jesse KingI Assistant Professor, range Saturday in Glen Rose. thorities, Lancaster police in Business Administration, OSU-Cascades He is on suicide watch in the May responded to a burglary Erath County Jail, where he's reported by Routh's mother being held on $3 million bail, that included nine pill bottles. Cascades Hall, Rm. 117-118 Sheriff Tommy Bryant said. Police say Routh was involved Routh, a member of the Ma- but no o t her d etails w ere 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend rine Corps Reserve,was first available. FREE,no RSVP necessary taken to a mental hospital Sept. Authorities say Routh, Kyle 2 after he threatened to kill his and Littlefield arrived at the Bring a bagged lunch and beverage. 12:00-1:00 P.M. family and himself, according sprawling Rough Creek Lodge to police records in Lancaster, about 3:15 p.m. Saturday, and a 541-322-3100 where Routh lives. Authorities hunting guide called 911 about OSUcascades.edu found Routh walking nearby two hourslaterafter discoverwith no shirt and no shoes, ing the bodies. Kyle and Littlefacebook.com/osucascades and smelling of alcohol. Routh field were shot multiple times, By Angela K. Brown and Jamie Stengle
Helpful E safe vs.useless E dangerous:
Research on the Affect Heuristic
WEDNESDAY
FEB. 6
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Tuesday, Feb. 5, the 36th day of 2013. There are 329 days left in the year.
SCIENCE Q&A
SCIENCE HAPPENINGS
Pesticide
ImmigratiOn —TheHouse
residues
Judiciary Committee holds its first hearing on immigration
as congressional Republicans begin to grapple with the hot-
on fruit skin
button political issue.
Budget —Lawmakers from By C. Claiborne Ray
both parties fan out for closeddoor retreats to plot strategies
for dealing with the budget sequester, the deal they reached in 2011 that forces tens of bil-
lions of automatic across-theboard government spending cuts absent a bipartisan deal to avoid them.
New Yorh Times News Service
Highlight:In1973, services were held at Arlington National
Cemetery for U.S. ArmyCol. William Nolde, the last official
American combat casualty before the Vietnam cease-fire took effect. In 1783, Sweden recognized the independence of the United States. In1811, George, the Prince of
Wales, was namedPrince Regent due to the mental illness of his father, Britain's King
George III. In1887, Verdi's opera "Otello" premiered at La Scala. In1922, the first edition of Reader's Digest was published. In 1937, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt proposed increasing the number of U.S. Supreme Court justices; the proposal, which failed in Congress, had
critics accusing Roosevelt of attempting to "pack" the nation's highest court. In1940, Glenn Miller and his orchestra recorded "Tuxedo
Junction" for RCA Victor's Bluebird label. In 1953, Walt Disney's animated feature "Peter Pan" was first released. In1971, Apollo 14 astronauts
Alan Shepard andEdgar Mitchell stepped onto the surface of the moon in the first of two
lunar excursions.
. Are people at r i sk . from pesticide residue on the skin of citrus fruits? . Residues from vari. ous pesticides may be found on the skin of many fruits, including citrus fruits, but there are official regulatory efforts to keep the levels low in the U.S. market, and there are ways to remove most of the chemicals before the fruit is consumed, said Lambert H.B. Kanga, professor of entomology at Florida A8 M University in Tallahassee. The concentration of residues depends on the class of pesticide and frequency of applications, Kanga said, and severalfederalagencies work toprotect consumers by setting tolerance limits and regulating use and exposure. Residues become a concern when repeated exposure to potentially harmful compounds lets them accumulate and gradually increase in concentration to a harmful level, he said, adding that some individuals may be more susceptible than others. As for removal, the ¹ tional Pesticide Information Center points out that no washing method is 100 percent effective. Still, Kanga said, "there are some valuable techniques that provide the best possible outcome when cleaning your fruits and vegetables." Washing w it h s l i ghtly warm water, 80 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit, is most effective for firm fruits and vegetables, he said.
recently, she had a panic attack. Scientists say this can teach us about panic attacks and the nature of fear. By James Gorman New York Times NewsService
HISTORY
Q
Whether in scientific experiments or regular life, nothing scared the woman known as SM. Then,
In the past few years, scientists have learned a lot about fear from a woman who could not experience it. A rare illness had damaged apartofherbrain known as the amygdala and left her eerily unafraid. Both in experiments and in life, the woman, known as SM, showed no fear of scary movies, snakes, spiders, or very real domestic assaults, death threats and robberies at knife and gunpoint. Although she lived in an area "replete with crime, drugs, and danger," according to an earlier study, without a f unctioning amygdala, an ancient part of the brain long known to process fear, nothing scared her. But recently SM had a panic attack. And the fact that she was able to know fear without a working amygdala, experts say, illuminates some of the brain's most fundamental processes and may have practical value in the study of panic attacks. SM's moments of fear occurred during an experiment that involved inhaling carbon d ioxide through a m ask i n amounts that are not harmful but create a momentary feeling of suffocation. Not only SM, but two other women, identified as AM and BG, identical twins with amygdala damage similar to SM's, showed all the physical symptoms of panic, and reported that, to their surprise, they felt
Thinkstock
The test subject known as SM showed no fear of scary movies, snakes, spiders, domestic assaults, death threats or armed robbers. intense fear. The researchers, who report on the experiment in the current issue of Nature Neuroscience, had hypothesized that SM wouldnotpanic. John Wemmie, a neuroscientist at the University of Iowa and the senior author of the paper, said, "We saw the exact opposite." Antonio Damasio, of the University of Southern California, who had worked with SM and some of the researchers involved in this study on previous papers, but did not participate in this research, said he was delighted with the results. It confirmed his own thinking that while the amygdala was central to fear generated by external threats, there was a different brain path that produced the feeling of fear generated by in-
ternal bodily experiences like a heart attack. This idea was put forth in a 2011 paper about SM on which he was a co-author. "I think it's a very interesting and important result," he said SM scores in the normal range on IQ and other tests, and voluntarily participated in this and earlier studies, all of which showed her lacking in any sort of fearresponse untilnow. In one, for example, she walked through a Halloween haunted houseandnevergasped,recoiled or screamed when a person in a costume leaped out of the dark. She also did not seem to learn fear from life experiences. So what was so u nusual about carbon dioxide? The answer seems to lie in the way the brain monitors disturbances in the world outside
the body — snakes and robbers — compared with the way it monitors trouble inside the body — hunger, heart attacks, the feeling of not being able to breathe. Externalthreats clearly are processed by the amygdala. But she had never been tested for internal signals of trouble. In the experiment SM and others participated in, they took one deep breath with plenty of oxygen but much more carbon dioxide than air usually contains. (Humans are actually not sensitive to how much oxygen they are breathing, but to how much carbon dioxide is accumulating in the body, since it builds up quickly when one cannot breathe.) The researchers suggest that excess carbon dioxide produces signals that maybe picked up in the brainstem and elsewhere, activating a f e a r-generating system in the brain that a venomous snake or a mugger with a gun would not trigger. One puzzling aspect of the results is that SM and the two other women all reacted so strongly. Among people with normal brains, only those with panic disorder are reliably terrified in carbon dioxide experiments. Most people are not so susceptible, suggesting, said Colin Buzza, a co-author of the study and a medical student at the University of Iowa's Carver College of Medicine, that perhaps the amygdala is not functioning properly in people with panic disorder.
In1983, former Nazi Gestapo official Klaus Barbie, expelled from Bolivia, was brought to
Lyon, France, to stand trial. (He was convicted of war crimes and sentenced to life in prison; he died in1991.) In1988, the Arizona House im-
peached Gov.Evan Mecham, setting the stage for his trial in the state Senate, where he
was convicted of obstructing
RESEARCH
Siberiansadapt to cold, and so dotheir genes
•
State Colin Powell urged the U.N. Security Council to move
against Saddam Hussein,saying lraq had failed to disarm,
was harboring terrorists and was hiding behind a "webof lies."
Five yearsago: John McCain seized command of the race for the Republican presidential nomination, winning delegaterich primaries from the East
Coast to California on Super Tuesday; Democratic rivals Hillary Clinton and Barack
Obama traded victories. One year ago:Josh Powell, long identified as a person of interest in the 2009 disappear-
ance of his wife, Susan, set fire to his home in Graham, Wash., killing himself and his
two sons, 7-year-old Charles and 5-year-old Braden, who had shown upfor a supervised visit. Eli Manning and the Gi-
ants one-uppedTom Brady and the Patriots again, coming
back with a last-minute score to beat New England 21-17 for New York's fourth NFL title in
Super Bowl XLVI (46).
BIRTHDAYS The Rev.Andrew M.Greeley is 85. Baseball Hall-of-Famer Hank Aaron is 79. Football
Hall-of-Famer RogerStaubach is 71. Actress Charlotte Rampling is 67. Actress
Barbara Hershey is 65. Actor Christopher Guest is 65. Actor Tom Wilkinson is 65. Actress
Jennifer Jason Leigh is 51. Actress Laura Linney is 49. Actor-comedian Chris Parnell is
46. Singer Bobby Brown is 44. Actor Michael Sheen is 44. — From wire reports
By Michael Balter ScienceNOW
CAMBRIDGE, United Kingdom — Siberia may not be everyone'sidea ofa touristdestination, but it has been home to humans for tens of thousands of years. Now a new study of indigenous Siberian peoples reveals how natural selection helped people adapt to the frigidnorth. Siberia is home to only about 0.5percent ofthe world'spopulation. This is perhaps not surprising, since Januarytemperatures average as low as -13'F. Geneticists have sampled only a few of the region's nearly one
dozen indigenous groups. Previous research on cold adaptation included two Siberian populations and implicated a coupleof related genes. For example, genes called UCPI and UCP3 tend to be found in more active forms in populations that live in colder climes, according to work published in 2010 by geneticist Anna Di Rienzo and her colleagues. These genes help the body's fat stores directly produce heat rather than producing chemical energy for muscle movements or brain functions, a p r ocess called "nonshivering thermogenesis." The new study sampled Siberians much more intensely, including 10 groups that represent nearly all of the region's native populations. University of Cambridge Graduate student Alexia Cardona and her colleagues analyzed 200 DNA samplescollected by researchers at the Institute of Biological Problems of the North in Magadan, Russia, s eeking genes that help humans adapt to the cold. Cardona used several techniques that detect signs of
natural selection in the human genome — that is, genes that have been favored by evolution because they helped humans to survive. She found three genes. One was UCPI, confirmingprevious studies. Variants of two new genes, called ENPP7 and PRKGI, also appeared to have undergone positive selection. These findings make sense, Cardona told attendees at the a recent meeting on human evolution. PRKGI, for example, is involved in the contraction of smooth muscle, key to shivering and the constriction of blood vessels to avoid heat loss. And ENPP7 is implicated in the metabolism of fats, especially those in meat and dairy products — a staple of the fat-laden diets of Arctic peoples. The degree to which coldfriendly versions of these three genes were favored by evolution differed in th e v arious Siberian groups. Thus selection for UCP1 was strongest in southern Siberian groups, while selection for PRKGI was greatest in northeastern and central Siberia. ENPP7, on the other hand, showed strong selection throughout Siberia. Taken together, Cardona's findings include the many elements researchers seek when trying to prove natural selection: an i dentified selection pressure, variation in different populations, specific DNA changes and a sense of what those changes actually do. She concluded that the study shows how, over the more than 25,000 years that modern humans have lived in Siberia, various peoples have adapted to the region's cold weather and meaty food sources through selection on multiple genes that control several biological mechanisms.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
AlVALYSIS: COUNTERTERRORISM
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. secun e o sin rica eine
m isse s
By Craig Whitlock » The Washington Post
The U.S. military was closely tracking a one-eyed bandit across the Sahara in 2003 when it confronted a hard choice that is still reverberating a decade later. Should it try to kill or capture the target, an Algerian jihadist named Mokhtar Belmokhtar, or let him go'?
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Belmokhtar had trained at camps in Afghanistan, returned home to join a bloody revolt and was about to be blacklisted by the United Nations for supporting the Taliban and al-Qaida. But he hadn't attacked Americans, not yet, and did not appear to pose a threat outside his nomadic range in the badlands of northern Mali and southern Algeria. Military commanders planned to launch airstrikes against Belmokhtar and a band of Arabs they had under sur veillance in the Malian desert, according to three current and former U.S. officials familiar with the episode. But the The Associated Press file photo
ambassador to Mali at the time said she vetoed the plan, arguing that a strike was too risky and could stir a backlash against Americans. Since then, Belmokhtar has graduallybuilt a Qaida-branded network while expanding his exploits as a serial kidnapper, smugglerand arms dealer.Last month, his group, Signatories in Blood, took dozens of hostages at a natural-gas complex in Algeria. At least 38 foreign captives were killed, including three Americans. In addition to r aising his global profile, the spectacular attack turned Belmokhtar into a symbol of how the United States over the past 10 years bungled an ambitious strategy to prevent al-Qaida from gaining a foothold in North and West Africa. The U.S. government has invested heavily in counterterrorism programs inthe region, spending more than $1 billion since 2005 to train security forces, secure borders, promote democracy, reduce poverty and
and rebellious tribesmen seized control of the northern half of Mali last year. In March, a U.S.trained Malian offlcer carried out a coup, further plunging the country into chaos. "We had this great program and we put hundreds of millions of dollars into it, and it failed. Why did it fail'?" said a member of the U.S. Special Operations Forces who worked in Africa until he retired lastyear. "Fundamentally, we missed the boat." Todd Moss, deputy assistant secretaryofstate forAfrican affairsfrom 2007 to 2008,blamed "a wholly inadequate policy response." He said U.S. officials placed their faith in a flawed model to promote development andbuild institutions, especially in northern Mali, a Texas-sized territory with little government presence. "There was no consensus on the sizeor seriousness of the threat," he added. "We were looking through both c i vilian and military rose-colored glasses. And that should give us pause as we try to figure out howto move forward." By 2003, U.S. officials were becoming alarmed about the potential for Islamist extremists to establish a haven in North or West Africa. Radicals who failed to topple
Algerian soldiers stand guard by wrecked vehicles at the natural gas facility in Algeria that was the site of a hostage crisis last month. Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the leader of the group behind the crisis, has proved to be a growing threat in the region.
"We were looking through both civilian and military rose-colored glasses. And that should
give us pause as we try to figure out how to move forward." — Todd Moss, deputy assistant secretary of state for African affairs, 2007-08
the Algerian government in the 1990s had moved deep into the Sahara, hidinginthehinterlands of impoverished countries such as Mali, Mauritania and Niger, where they turned to smuggling and other criminal rackets. Among them was a former paratrooper known as Abderrazak Al Para, who kidnapped 32 Europeans and collected $6 million in ransom. No American hostages were involved in that k idnapping, but the incident drew the attention of commanders at the U.S. European Command in Stuttgart, Germany. Using satellite imagery and other sources, the U.S. military tracked Al Para and shared the intelligence with African governments, which pursued him across the desert. After an epic chase, he was captured in Chad. Around the same time, the U.S. military also started to track Belmokhtar and floated a plan to fire missiles into an
Arab camp in northern Mali. V icki Huddleston, then t h e U.S. ambassador to Mali, said she blocked the operation. It was unclear if Belmokhtar was actually present, and he was considered a minor figure, she recalled in an interview. "I said no. First, you don't know who these people are, and second, it's a bad idea," she said. "We had a big fight over this." The four-star Air Force general in charge of the operation, Charles Wald, now retired, acknowledged that he wanted to nab Belmokhtar, but insisted airstrikes were not a serious option. He said the U.S. military wanted to share intelligence and gear with A l geria and Mali so they could arrest or kill Belmokhtar, but that civilian U.S. leaders refused. "The answer at that time was, 'Not our business.'" Wald is still angry at what he sees as a missed opportunity, saying the military had
tate t r ansaction c o nducted across the United States during Continued from A1 the last decade. "We're confident that our apThey paint a picture of a bank that continued to put its proach will be successful for inown interests ahead of invesvestors and that the facts speak tors as it m odified troubled for themselves," said Thomas mortgages. Priore, founder of ICP Capital, The documents were subwho is overseeing the Triaxx mitted by three Federal Home analysis. "These are just a few Loan Banks, in Boston, Chiexamples of the negligence we cago and Indianapolis, and mortgage. found." Triaxx, an investment vehicle By slashing the amount the Triaxx's loan analysis has that bought mortgage securi- borrower owes on the first been acceptedin another mortties. They contend that a pro- mortgage, Bank of A merica gage suit involving claims posed $8.5 billion settlement increases the potential for full against Residential Capital, the that Bank of America struck repayment of its home equity bankrupt mortgage company in 2011 to resolve claims over line. Bank of America carried that is a unit of Ally FinanciaL Countrywide's mor tg a ge $116 billion in h ome equity I nvestor recoveries in t h a t abuses is far too low and short- loans on its books at the end of case, being heard in bankruptchanges thousands of ordinary the third quarter of 2012. cy court in Manhattan, will be investors. The filing contains three ex- based in part on Triaxx's work. The filing raises new ques- amples of such modifications, In the aftermath of the fitions about whether a judge all from 2010, well after the nancial crisis, investors in will approve the settlement. If it Countrywide purchase. mortgage securitieshave had is denied, the bank would face One example shows inves- difficulty identifying improper steeper legal obligations. tors sufferinga loss of more loan modifications and other Lawrence G r a y son, a than $300,000 on a $575,000 servicerabuses like those despokesman for Bank of Amer- loan made in 2006. In May scribed in this filing. Servicers ica, denied the bank was put- 2010, Bank of America reduced have kept under wraps the deting its own interests ahead of the principal owed on a first tailed loan data that could point investors. mortgage to $282,000, but at to these kinds of practices and "Modifying mortgages for the same time, real estate re- have forcedinvestors to sue to homeowners in severe distress cords showed, Bank of Amer- get access to these files. is critical to the ongoing eco- ica's $110,000 home equity line Included in their court filnomic recovery and is encour- of credit on the property reing was a letter Triaxx and aged by the government at all mained intact and unmodified. the other investors wrote to levels," he said. "It is difficult Another example indicates Bank of New York Mellon, the to see how federally regulated that Bank of America kept its trustee that was hired to overentities like the Federal Home $170,000 home equity line in- see the Countrywide securiLoan Banks would seek to at- tact on a property while modi- ties to ensure that investors in tack that practice which helps fying the first mortgage held them were treated fairly. The families to stay in their homes by investors. In that case, the investors asked Bank of New and in no way violated the con- investorstook a $395,000 loss. York Mellon to explain why it tracts at issue." Bank of America, the filing had not pursued claims against Among the new details in noted, "may have engaged in Bank of America relating to the filing are those showing self-dealing and other misconthat Bank of America failed to duct, including in connection buy back troubled mortgages with modifications to first lien in full once it had lowered the loans held by the Trusts where payments and principal on the BofA or Countrywide held secloans — an apparent violation ond lien loans on the same sub8 8 of its agreements with inves- ject properties." tors who bought the securities Triaxx conducted the analythat held the mortgages. sis by combing through the An analysis of real estate thousands of loans adminisHYUllDRI records across the country, the tered by Bank of America in filing said, showed that Bank 530 securitiesissued by Counof America had modified more trywide from 2005 through than 134,000 loans in such se- 2007. Triaxx then ran the loans curities with a total principal through an extensive database balance of $32 billion. it has created of every real es-
the modifications on behalf of investors in the Countrywide securities. Kevin Heine, a spokesman for Bank of New York Mellon, said in a statement: "As trustee, we have complied with our duties under the agreements and will follow any direction the court issues in connection with the letter." The letter and the underlying analysis were filed in New York State Supreme Court where Justice Barbara Kapnick is overseeing the $8.5 billion settlement reached in June 2011 by Bank of America and a handful of Countrywide mortgage securities holders. That settlement, which covers the same 530 Countrywide s ecurities examined by T r iaxx, would generate roughly 2 cents on the dollar to the investors who agreed to it. When the securities were sold, they contained loans totaling some $425 billion. The investors include the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and Pimco and BlackRock, two large asset management companies. Bank of New York Mellon has also agreed to the settlement, releasing Bank of America from any future claims by investors trying to recoup their losses. "Despite its knowledge of the Trusts' Loan Modification Claims," the letter said, "the Trustee agreed to release such claims in the Settlement, apparently without any investigation of the extent or merit of
spread propaganda. The strategy was portrayed as a soberinglesson from the costly invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. By stabilizing weak African countries, the goal was to keep al-Qaida out and obviate the need to send U.S. combat forces into the Sahara. Despite those efforts, Belmokhtar's group and a hazy array of other jihadist factions
Bank
Even as the b ank's loan modifications imposed heavy losses on investors in these securities, the documents show, Bank of America did not reduce the principal on second m ortgages it owned on t h e same properties. The owner of a home equity line of credit is typically required to take a loss before the holder of a first
C: M
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"about a thousand" chances to get the bandit. "We allowed Belmokhtar tobecome largerthan life," he said in an interview. "He was well within reach," he added. "It would have been easy." Ten years later, the general and ambassador still disagree over whether they should have seized that chance to eliminate Belmokhtar. But they concur the dispute foreshadowed flaws in the forthcoming U.S. strategy to prevent al-Qaida from planting roots in the region. "I'm really frustrated right now because I think we blew it," Wald said, speaking in general about U.S. counter-terrorism policy in Africa. "We've gone backwards, frankly." Huddleston was later appointed by President Barack Obama as the top Africa policy official in the Pentagon, where she earned a reputation among her former d i plomatic colleagues as a zealous hawk on security matters. She said the U.S. government never overcame divisions over how aggressively it should respond tothe emergence of alQaida's North African affiliate. The Pentagon was often too eager to take direct military action, she added, while the State Department was too willing to tolerate al-Qaida's presence.
"The issue has come up again and again," said Huddleston, who retired from the Pentagon at the end of 2011. "The Defense Department wanted to h elp the countries in the region to confront the threat, and State wanted to contain." The failure to keep Islamist extremists from taking over northern Mali was not for lack of money or attention from Washington. In 2005, the U.S. government started the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership — the innovative, $1 billion collection of programs designed to prevent the spread of radicalism. It delivered humanitarian aid and security assistance to 10 countries in North and West Africa, drawing on the combined resources of the military, the State Department and the Agency for International Development. The partnership was dogged by problems from th e outset, however, as U.S. agencies squabbled internally and struggled to u nderstand an unfamiliar cultural and political terrain.
such claims, and without any compensation for the Trusts with respect to such claims." Priore said: "We're mystified how other managers would allow these institutions to ignore their responsibility when it has such a significant impact on investors." Trusteeshave been reluctant to take action against servicers on behalf of the investors in mortgage securities. Such actions would be costly, according to those in the industry, and would reduce profits in what is already a low-margin business.
But this has left investors to fend for themselves with little information.
Read more, including events from 2007 to the
O
present at benddulletin. com/extras
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
AS
IN FOCUS:RICHARD III
IN FOCUS:FIREARMS
Wit ositivelD, er a s
Obama indicates varied expectations ongun laws
ret in in avi aino istor
By Michael D. Shear
New York Times News Service
LEICESTER, England — Until it was discovered beneath a city parking lot last fall, the skeleton had lain unmarked, and unmourned, for more than 500 years. Friars fearful of the men who slew him in battle buried the man in haste, naked and anonymous, without a winding sheet, rings or personal adornments of any kind, in a space so cramped his cloven skull was jammed upright and askew against the head of his shallow grave. On Monday, confirmingwhat many historians and archaeologists had suspected, a team of experts at the University of Leicester concluded on the basis of DNA and other evidence that the skeletal remains were those of King Richard III, for centuries the most reviled of English monarchs. But the conclusion, said to have been reached "beyond any reasonable doubt," promised to achieve much more than an end to the oblivion that has been Richard'sfate since his death on Aug. 22, 1485, at the Battle of Bosworth Field, 20 miles from this ancient city in the sheep country of England's East Midlands. Among those who found his remains, there is a passionate belief that new attention drawn to Richard by the discovery will inspire a reappraisal that could rehabilitate the medieval king and show him to be a man with a strong sympathy for the rights of the common man, who was
because weapons of war have no place on our streets." MINNEAPOLIS — PresiOn Monday, White House dent Barack Obama traveled aides again said the president to the nation's heartland Mon- was still pushing for the three dayto presshiscasefortough- measures, along with changes er national gun laws, even as to the nation's mental health he appeared to acknowledge system. But Obama, top lawthat expanded background makers in Congress and gun checks on gun sales were far control advocacy groups apmore likelyto pass Congress pear nervous about the pothan a ban on military-style litical chances of the assault assault weapons. weapons ban and eager to In a city once called "Mur- push for a better background derapolis" for it s h omicide check system. "There definitely seems to rate in the 1990s, the president cited successful gun vio- be a significant convergence lence prevention efforts here around the idea of universal as evidence that new national background checks," said laws are needed to reduce the Dan Gross, the president of number of shootings across the Brady Campaign to Prethe country. vent Gun Violence, though he " The only wa y w e c a n added: "I think there is still a reduce gun violence in this significant outcry on the part country is if the American of the American public to talk people decide it's important," about assault weapons." Obama said, standing in front On Sunday, Sen. Harry of asea of police officers and Reid of Nevada, the Demosheriff's deputies at the Min- cratic leader, said he might not neapolis Police Department even personally support an Special Operations Center. assault weapons ban, though Obama renewed his call for he promised that senators Congress to pass a series of would get a chance to vote on measures, including a ban on it. During the Super Bowl on the manufacture and sale of Sunday, an important gunnew assault weapons, limits control group broadcast a on high-capacity magazines television advertisement in and an expansion of the crim- Washington focused excluinal background checks that sively on pushing for better currently covers only about background checks. 60 percent of gun sales. T he ad , f r o m Ma y o rs But he openly demonstrat- Against Illegal Guns, noted ed different expectations for that the National Rifle Assothe measures as Washington ciation once supported such wages a bitterly divisive de- checks. The a d c o ncludes bate over the role of guns in with a child saying, "America society. can do this. For us. Please." Obama declared "univerThe focus on background sal background checks" to be checks reflects a broad politisupported by a "vast majority cal calculation in Washington of Americans" and called for that there is more public suptheir quick passage in Con- port for requiring the checks gress. "There's no reason why than for limits on guns and we can't get that done," he told ammunition. A recent New the gathering of law enforce- York Times/CBS News surment officials. vey found that 92 percent of But of the potential for a those polled supported broadnew assault weapons ban, er background checks. the president said only that it The same survey found "deserves a vote in Congress that 53 percent supported a New York Times News Service
By John F. Burns
Universityof Leicester via TheAssociated Press
Remains found underneath a car park last September at the Grey Friars excavation in Leicester, England, have been declared "beyond reasonable doubt" to be the long lost remains of England's King Richard III, missing for 500 years. Richard was immortalized in aplay by Shakespeare as a hunchbacked usurper who lefta trail of bodies — including those of his two young nephews, murdered in the Tower of London — on his way to the throne. "we can rebury him with honor, and we can rebury him as a
king."
Richard Taylor, the University of Leicester official who served asa coordinator for the project, said the last piece of the scientific puzzle fell into place with DNA findings that became availableon Sunday, five months after the skeletal remains were uncovered. At that point, he said, members of the team knew that they had achieved something historic. "We knew then, beyond reasonable doubt, that this was Richard III," Taylor said. "We're certainnow, as certain as you can be of anything in life." Even before the DNA findings came in, team members deeply wronged by his venge- said, evidence pointed conful Tudor and Elizabethan suc- clusively at the remains becessors. Far from the villainous ing those of the king. These character memorialized in Eng- included confirmation that the lish histories, films and novels, body was that of a man in his far from the damning repre- late20s or early 30s— Richard sentation of him as the limping, was 32 at his death — and that withered,evil-spiritedmurderer an analysis of his bones showed of his two princely nephews in that his high-protein diet had Shakespeare's Richard III,these been rich in meat and fish, charenthusiasts believe the recovery acteristic of a privileged life in of hisremains can be a spring- the 15th century. board to a new age of scholarAlso s t rongly i n d icative, ship and popular reappraisal. they said, was the radiocarbon "I think he wanted to be dating of two rib bones that found, he was readyto be found, showed that they were those of and we found him, and now we somebody who died between can begin to tell the true story the years 1455 and 1540. In adof who he was," said Philippa dition, team members said, the Langley, a vviter who has been remains showed an array of a longtime and fervent member injuries consistent with historiof the Richard III Society, an or- cal accounts of the fatal blows ganization that has worked for R ichard III suffered on t h e decadesto bring what they see battlefield, and other blows he as justice to an unjustly vilified was likely to have suffered after man. "Now," Langley added, death from vengeful soldiers of
the army of Henry Tudor, the Bosworth victor who succeeded Richard as King Henry VII. The fatal wound, researchers said, was almost certainly a large skull fracture behind the left ear that was consistent with a crushing blow from a halberd, a medieval weapon with an axlike head on a long pole — the kind of blow that was describedby some who witnessed Richard's death. The team also identified nine other wounds, including what appeared to be dagger blows to the cheek, jaw and lower back, possibly inflicted after death. But perhaps the most conclusive evidence from the skeletal remains was the deep curvature of the upper spine that the researchteam saidshowed the remains to be those of a sufferer of aform ofscoliosis,a disease that causes the hunchback appearance, with a raised right shoulder,that was represented in Shakespeare's play as Richard III's most pronounced and
unappealing feature. Members of the Richard III Society have said in the past they believedhe should be reburied, once found, alongside other British monarchs in Westminster Abbey in London, traditional venue for most royal weddings and burials. But in Leicester, officials said that plans were in hand to bury the bones early next year in the city's Anglican cathedral,barely200yardsfrom where the skeleton was found, and a new visitors' center dedicated toRichard to be opened in the cathedral grounds at the same time.
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groups. R. T. Rybak Jr., the mayor of Minneapolis, mocked politicians in Washington who are unwilling to support an assault weapons ban. "Oh, it's not going to pass," Rybak said. "Well, guess what? People are dying out here, and I'm not satisfied w ith the lame kind of r e sponse that we've gotten from some of the people in Washington who look at this like some kind of game." Rybak, a Democrat, said he would not be satisfied by a compromise on gun control measuresthatdid no taddress assault weapons and focused only on background checks. " I don't think any of u s should accept anything other t han complete effort a n d knocking of f t h e p o l itical wimpsmanship that I think too often takes place around these issues," he said. "Get a spine. Get a backbone, because people are losing their lives." In the 1990s, Minneapolis experienced an explosion of drug- and gang-related violence, which led to a series of local measures aimed at reducing gun violence that has brought down the city's murder rate. The city has developed programs aimed at rehabilitation for young people who have committed violent c r imes. And its leaders are pushing for fasterand more comprehensive state b a ckground
checks for people buying guns.
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ban on some semiautomatic weapons, and that 63 percent would support limits on magazines. Some advocates of tougher gun laws say that Obama and his allies in Congress should not give up on pushing for all three measures, regardless of the opposition that the measures arelikely to face from the NRA and other gun rights
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Continued from A1 An autopsy is scheduled to take place today. Gregory saidthe men were friends, but didn't know how long they'd been acquainted. The home, atthe end of a cul-de-sac in a small, Robin Hood-themed n e ighborhood bordered bya canal offSoutheast 15th Street, was cordoned off with police tape on Monday afternoon as police executed a search warrant and the Oregon State Police Crime Lab worked to collect forensic evidence at the house. "It's a quiet neighborhood," said DoloresGraves, who lives next door. The owner of the home on Will Scarlet Lane, Dorothy Wylie, of Bend, said the property is a rental. She declined to name who lives there. Ryder, who had no criminal history in Oregon, was a software engineer at G5 Search
Legislature
makers will be sure to tackle this session include reforming the state pension and prison systems. The governor has
Her son called her around 5:30 a.m. to tell her what he'd seen, Graves said. Graves said a man and woman lived at the home, but she didn't know much about them. "All I know is somebody got killed and it was a friend of the people who live there," she said. "They were extremely private. I didn't even know their names." Les Lambert, who also lives onthe street, said he heard what he thought might be a car door slamming around 4:20 a.m., but went back to sleep. When his wife went out to get the paper Monday morning, she saw police tape strung around the neighbors' home. Another neighbor, Charlotte Martinez, also said she didn't knowthe man and woman who lived in the home. "I didn't hear anything, not until I took my dog out around 8," she said. "Police were all around." — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
it comes to mandatory-minimum sentencingmeasures. Continued from A1 Schools will also fight for a It will be up to the Demolarger chunk of the state budcrats, he said, to set the agen- proposed capping a cost-of- get. The governor's budget da and continue the spirit of living adjustment for PERS for K-12 education is $6.15 bilbipartisanship. members and curbing a tax lion, but Democrats said they And unlike l ast s ession, benefit some retirees receive. are hoping to increase that during which much of the ac- He hopes his reforms in the amount. tion occurred in the House, 2013-15 p r oposed b u d get There will also be a range of many speculate this session would generate $865 million in other topics for lawmakers to will see more drama in the up- savings. The pension system is battle over this session, from per chamber, where the mar- facing an estimated $16 billion guns to plastic bags to the best gins are tighter. In the Senate, unfunded liability. way to create jobs to immigraDemocrats have a t w o-seat Gov. John Kitzhaber has tion issues. edge, 16-14; in the House, they also ensured sentence reforms Lawmakers are aiming to enjoy a 34-26 advantage. will be a topic of debate, by adjourn the 2013 legislative "I think we'll be a backstop projecting a near-flat inmate sessionby June 28, but constito a lot of bad legislation from population over the next de- tutionally can continue until the House," said Sen. Tim cade. Lawmakers will likely July 13. Knopp, R-Bend. c onsider w h ether t o gi v e — Reporter,541-554-1162, The big-ticket items law- judges more flexibility when Idake@bendbulletin.com
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Marketing in Bend. "Ourthoughts andprayers are with David's family and friends," G5 CEO Dan Hobin said in a written statement. "David's vast experienceas a senior software engineer, his professionalism and his humor had a profound impact on our organization. David was a valued member of the G5 engineeringteam and will be dearly missed." G5 Human Resources Director Keeli Hyde said Ryder was married and had a 2-year-old son. According to a p r ofile on Linkedln, R y de r a t t ended Northern Kentucky University. A background check indicates Ryder previously lived in Utah. Graves lives next door to the home where the shooting allegedly took place. She didn't hear or see anything suspicious, but said her son, who lives two doors down, saw spotlights around 2:30 a.m. "That's when the police were here already," she said.
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W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear Wednesdays: April 17, June 19, August 28, November 13
DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER From itsheritage tothearts, there's somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals who work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.
SISTERS M AGAZ I N E WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSiSTERS
Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniquenessof this mountaintown. Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlig ht Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.
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W HEN TO LOOK FOR iT: pudlishing four editions ayear
Fridays. March 29 (My OwnTwo Hands), May 24 (Sisters Rodeo), June 28 (Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show), August 23 (September in Sisters), November 15 (A Cowboy Christmas)
A6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays,
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Getaways Travel and The Bulletin. This fabulous trip for two includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights'accommodation at Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort 8c Spa. You'll discover the sparkling magic of the lagoon, admire the awe-inspiring Mount Otemanu while luxuriating in the peace and tranquility of the surroundings. A prize package valued at $7,000
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL THE BULLETIN AT
For complete rules and regulations, visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacationrules or stop by The Bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Additional entry forms are available in newspapers for sale across Central Oregon and in the lobby of The Bulletin. Entry forms should be delivered or mailed to The Bulletin. Last day to enter is March 22, 201 3 at noon. Winner will be drawn March 25, 201 3. *Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELES and Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required.
OIPIPIICIIAIL IILIILILIRI'IIM CIRMWAVS tI'IRAVR VACAtI'IIOIMIMMWAV SWIRRIS PMKIRS RIMtt'IRV IPOIRN Sign me up to win The Bulletin's Sixth Annual Subscriber Vacation Getaway Sweepstakes! O fficial entry form o n ly. No ot he r rep ro d u c t i o n s are a c c e p t e d
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RULES:This award is valid for travel April 1 —May 31, 2013 & November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-transferable, non-refundable, not redeemable for cash and may not be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional insurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes and fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or not directly specified above. Travel is subject to availability and some restrictions may apply.Winner must be at least 21 years old. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are not eligible to win. The Bulletin reserves the right to deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacation. Email addresses will not be sold but individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN,GETAWAYSTRAVELand PLEASANT HOLIDAYS.One coupon per edition.
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
Senators press for details on targeted killings
BRIEFING
Mediation group dissolves
~
WHATEVER
Fol low i n gup on Central Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com.
•
The Florida company
o
tasked with managing
Oregon's foreclosure mediation program has closed.
SOUTH SISTER BULGE
Officials at The Col-
lins Center for Public
OSO
Policy said late last week that they don't have
the finances to keep operating. The think tank
BB, I
was tapped lastyear to run the newmediation program for Oregonians
• Merkley, Wyden among signatories of letter to Obama
at risk of foreclosure,
passed by theLegislature.
The program has been slow to catch
Jf ~
on, with many lenders refusing to mediate
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
1
and starting to move foreclosures through the courts. Only a small
fraction of at-risk borrowers who applied
s
have gotten into the
program. An Oregon Depart-
ment of Justice spokesman said the state is moving ahead with a
stop-gap measure. Housing officials hope
sL I
to tap one of The Collins
Center's managers to keep the Oregonprogram running.
Lane closures on ReedMarket Several lane closures are scheduled on aportion of Southeast Reed Market Road starting
Courtesy U.S. Geological Survey
Volcanic activity
Wednesday andlasting through Friday.
Since1997, a bulge has lifted in the Cascadeswest of Bend. It is ten miles across and is centered three miles west of South Sister. The bulge has risen more than nine inches, but its growth has slowed in recentyears. '. m + To Redmond
Construction to relocate water facilities
will take place onReed Market at Southeast
MILES
Fargo Lanefrom 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. Flaggers will be pres-
i
ent at all four legs of the intersection to facilitate traffic flow. — From staff reports
"2fI
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Sisters DESCHUTES COUNTY
LANE COUNTY
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A 2002 maintenance visit to a U.S. Geological Survey sensor near The Husband, with Middle Sister prominent in the background. The sensor is among an array tracking the South Sister bulge.
• Ground swell's movement is a ' lmost undetectable,' theUSGS says after years of monitoring By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Husband .; — North Sister Middle Sister
Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin
outh Sister CascadeLakesRwy.
Call a reporter:
46
i South Sister dulge
Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348
To Bend
Slow growing Bulge growth has slowed since 2006
Deschutes ......541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184
4 ro
Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456
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0
Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831
2002
2 004
200 6
2008
2010
Source: U.S. Geological Survey
201 2
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
The growth of the South Sister bulge had slowed evenbefore the 80-square-mile ground swell west of Bend was first detected more than a decade ago, federal scientists now say. And the movement continues to slow, said Dan Dzurisin, a research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey at the Cascade Volcano Observatory in Vancouver, Wash."The rate now is low enough now that it is almost undetectable," he said. The USGS announced in2001 that ground near South Sister, a 10,358-foot volcano about 20 miles west of Bend, was rising. A pooling of magma, molten rock, about four miles below the Earth's surface likely caused the bulge, Willie Scott, another USGS research geologist, told The Bulletin that year. He told the paper that such activity was common near volcanoes. "It just shows that it's alive and kicking," Scott told the Bulletin. USGS scientistsset up an array of sensors tied into the Global Positioning System around the 10-mile-diameter uplift and collected years' worth of data. The data shows the diminishing growth. See Bulge/B5
Mail: My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.D. Box 6020 Bend, DR 97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com
January2013weather for Bend DAILY HiGHS AND LOWS Averagetemperature: 31.5'(0.3 above normal) H H H H H KI H H KI EHt E HEHEHEHHE3 EHE3E3K3 H 32 32
Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354
1 6 3 2 38
42
42 46
48
44
33 29
28
29 42
55 58
52
58 58
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53 48
50 50
51
45
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FREEZING
48
Email event information to communitylife©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351
•
III
• School news andnotes:
• Community events:
cans during counterterrorism operations. When Americans take up arms against the U.S. as part of an opposing force, as they did during the Civil War, there is clearly justification for using deadly force against them, the letter states. "It is vitally important, however, for Congress and the American public to have a full understanding of how the executive branch interprets the limits and boundaries of this authority, so that Congress and the public can decide whether this authority has
been properly defined, and whether the president's power to deliberately kill American citizens is subject to appropriate limitations and safeguards," the senators wrote. See Killings/B5
City weighs expressway designation The Bulletin
• Civic Calendar notices:
Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens'a cademicachievements to youthObendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
WASHINGTON — On the eve of a confirmation hearing for John Brennan, President Barack Obama'spick to head the CIA, 11 senators, including Oregon Democrats Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley, are asking the president for more information about targeted killings of Americans. In a letter to Obama on Monday, the bipartisan group urged him to release classified legal opinions written by the Merkley Depar t m ent of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel that explain the government's authority to use lethal force Wyden against Ameri-
By Hillary Borrud
Sudmissions: • Letters and opinions:
www.bendbulletin.com/local
7
3
1
-2
17 22
1 7 3 5 38 u
PRECIPITATIONTOTAL: 0.4
18
12
4
8
4
13
23 25
24
26 22
22 21
23 34
33
30
22 22 30
Historical averageprecipitation for the month: 1.78"
35
30
T= Trace
t«RH
R R R R R R R R H EHR R R R R R R R R R R R R H R R H R R H
i«RH
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R H
SNOW TOTAL:0u
Historical average snow for the month: 10.67"
T = Trace
ALMANAC
Lowest tempe rature
Average high
Average low
Highest recorded temperature for the month:
Lowest recorded
Monthly average
Monthly average
temperature for the month:
high temperature through the years:
low temperature through the years:
67'
-26'
40.6'
21.7'
Dn Jan. 31,1971
Dn Jan. 31, 1950
Highest
temperature ~
* Monthly averages calculated from t928 through 2005, Western Regional Climate Center Sources: NOAA, Western Regional Climate Center, Bend Public Works Department
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
State and federal agencies might not want to invest in fixing traffic problems on the north end of Bend, if the city successfully lobbies for the removal of an expressway designation on that section of U.S.
Highway 97. That was the message from L Oregon Department of TransinSide portation Region 4 Manager Rob• Map of ert Bryant at a affected recent Bend City are a B6 , Council meeting. ODOT is in the midst of reclassifying its highway system, and some city officials and businessesin the areaworry that the existing expressway designation could limit access to the highway after a future reroute. Routes designated as expressways fall just beneath interstates in terms of importance, Bryant said. "So when it comes to funding, it does make a difference." ODOT has proposed to reroute Highway 97 to improve traffic flow in the future, but Bryant said the current expressway designation would not determine which roads might connect to the new section of highway. SeeExpressway/B6
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vrrvrrw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. THE HELIOSEQUENCE:The indie-rock act performs, with Talkdemonic and All You All; $15 plusfees;7:30 p.m.,doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. EXCISION:The dubstep act performs, with Paper Diamond, Vaski and Lyfe; CANCELED; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. slipmatscience.com.
Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES:A screening of the best films from the 2011 The Archaeology Channel International Film and Video Festival, including "The Lord of Sipan"; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. archaeologychannel.org. SHOOKTWINS: The quirky folk trio performs; $14 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
VALENTINESPAGHETTI DINNER: A meal of spaghetti, salad and bread; proceeds benefit youth camps and IGNITE FOOD:A series of quick conferences; $5, $20 per family; and energized presentations about 4:30-7:30 p.m.; Holy Redeemer the theme of food from different Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess academic perspectives; followed Road, La Pine; 541-536-1992. by a panel discussion; free; 4-5:30 BEND GAME NIGHT: Play available p.m.; Central Oregon Community board games or bring your own; College, Hitchcock Auditorium, free; 6 p.m.-midnight; East Bend 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend;541Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift 383-7786 or http://www.cocc.edu/. Road; 541-318-8459. BUNCO FUNDRAISER:Play bunco, SWEETHEARTBALL: Featuring with instructions; reservations a dinner and a dance; $15, $5 for requested; proceeds benefit dance only; 6 p.m., 7 p.m. dance; Soroptimist lnternational of Bend's Eagles Lodge 8 Club, 235 N.E. projects; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Jake's Fourth St., Prineville; 541-447-7659. Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway AN EVENINGWITH HOT TUNA: 20, Bend; 541-382-1753 or www. The bluegrass rock band performs; sibend.org. $41-$53 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Sara Krulwich / New York Times News Service open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 Featuring a screening of Elza van den Heever, left, as Queen Elizabeth I, and Joyce DiN.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 "Everything's Cool," a documentary Donato, as Mary Stuart, star in the Metropolitan Opera's "Maria or www.towertheatre.org. film about global warming; free; Stuarda," which is being shown in high definition at Regal Old Mill "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Stadium 16 & IMAX at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Theatrical Company presents Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-8 I5-6504. SATURDAY Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn SENSATIONALSATURDAY:Learn rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 FRIDAY Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600. about hummingbirds and discover students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood WEDNESDAY how their body parts are designed "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood THURSDAY "THE REDVELVETCAKEWAR": for an active lifestyle; included in the Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. KNOW CLUE:MURDER MOST Theatrical Company presents The Ridgeview High School theater "IT'S A DISASTER":BendFilm price of admission; $12 adults, $10 FOUL:Deschutes Public Library Shakespeare's comedy about cascadestheatrical.org. department presents a comedy ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM presents the R-rated, 2012 festival librarians suggest and discuss mistaken identities and merry as its premiere performance; ages 4 and younger; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; SERIES:A screening of the riveting mystery books; free; 6 p.m.; winner for best script; $10; 6 p.m.; rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 reservations for Feb.14 show McMenamins Old St. Francis School, students; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S.U.S. bestfilms from the 2011 The Downtown Bend Public Library, 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood requested; $5; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or Archaeology Channel International 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn www.highdesertmuseum.org. or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ 3378 or www.bendfilm.org. Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600. Film and Video Festival, including cascadestheatrical.org. calendar. RELAY FORLIFEKICK-OFF WRITE NOW!:Brainstorm, playword "The Fate of Old Beijing" and "Bitter AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Gr egory "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: CELEBRATION:Learn about the CELTICCROSSROADS: A stage games and more in acasual setting, Roots"; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open MARIA STUARDA":Starring Joyce fundraiser for the American Cancer music show featuring Irish singers, Martin reads from his book, "Stories to help creative writing; free; 1 p.m.; 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community for Boys"; free; 7 p.m.; Barnes & Society; with refreshments, games dancers and instrumentalists; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 College, Boyle Education DiDonato, Elza van den Heever Noble Booksellers, 2690 E. U.S. and entertainment; free; 6 p.m.; $35-$55 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Venture Lane; 541-312-1081 or www. Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, and Matthew Polenzani in an Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. Central Oregon Association of deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. encore performance of Donizetti's Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. "DIAL MFOR MURDER": A Realtors, 2112 N.E. Fourth St., masterpiece; opera performance St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. archaeologychannel.org. CHINESENEWYEAR screening of the PG-rated1954 film; CELEBRATION:Featuring a live transmitted in high definition; $18; Bend;541-948-0447. towertheatre.org. BEND COMMUNITY free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium "THE REDVELVET CAKEWAR": performances, traditional Chinese THE TWANGSHIFTERS:The CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E games,ping-pong and dumplings; 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse The Ridgeview High School theater Portland-based Americana act Ron Bell-Roemer and music by St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. free admission; 4-7 p.m.; Oregon Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. department presents a comedy performs; free; 8 p.m.; Maverick's Scottish Heart; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's WORLD'S FINEST:The Portlandas its premiere performance; Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson jcld.org. Tai Chi Wushu, 2115 N.E. Highway workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys based reggae, funk and bluegrass reservations for Feb. 14 show Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades 20, Bend; 541-639-8898 or www. 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W.Wall act performs; free; 7 p.m.; requested; $5; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview maverickscountrybar.com. Theatrical Company presents oregontaichi.com. St.; 541-330-8943.
TODAY
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen at 5:14 p.m. Jan. 23, in the 20600 block of Brinson Boulevard. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:53 a.m. Jan. 29, in the area of Brosterhous and Parrell roads. Burglary —A burglary was reported at1:43 p.m. Jan. 29, in the 62500block ofEagle Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:13 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 19600 block of Mountaineer Way. DUII —Jeff Leo Mondry, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:47 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 1200 block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at11:25 a.m. Jan. 31, in the 500 block of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:48 p.m. Jan. 31, in the 900 block of Northwest Wall Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:21 a.m. Jan. 29, in the1000 block of Southeast Ninth Street.
REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unauthorizeduse —A vehicle was reported stolen at1:26 a.m.Jan.28,in the 500 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:17 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:49 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 1700 blockof Southwest Lava Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:59 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 2800 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:22 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:37 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 300 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at10:43 a.m. Jan. 28, in the
2200 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at10:46 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 2000 block of Northwest Elm Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:20 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 1400 block of Northwest Ninth Street. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen at1:09 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 2200 block of Southeast Jesse Butler Circle. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at1:22 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 1800 block of Northwest Fir Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:13 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 1100 block of Northwest Elm Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:26 p.m.Jan.28 ,in the 400 block of Northwest 24th Place. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 3:29 p.m.Jan.28 ,in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:39 p.m. Jan. 28, in the 1900 block of Southwest 35th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:45a.m. Jan.29,in the 200 block of Southeast Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at10:51 a.m.Jan.29 ,in the 300 block of Northwest 27th Court. Theft —A theft was reported and arrests made at 2:48 p.m. Jan. 29, in the 300 block of Southwest Sixth Street. DUII —Kristoffer David Gittins, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:34 a.m. Jan. 30, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Xero Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6:41 a.m. Jan. 30, in the 1600 block of Southwest First Street. DUII —Rachelle Lynn Barnes, 45, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:29 a.m. Jan. 30, in the 900 block of Southwest 23rd Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:51 a.m. Jan. 30, in the 1200 block of Northwest Upas Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 12:24 p.m.Jan.30 ,in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at1:09 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 1900 block of Southwest 33rd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:04 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 100 block of Southwest 26th Street.
Burglary —A burglary was reported at 5:32 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 2300 block of Southwest 30th Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:22p.m. Jan.30,in the 3000 block of Southwest lndian Place. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 7:45 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:09 a.m. Jan. 31, in the 300 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:13 p.m. Jan. 31, in the 800 block of Northeast Crow Court. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 12:18 a.m. Feb. 1, in the 2700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:02 a.m. Feb. 1, in the 1600 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at12:20 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 3200 blockof Southwest Lava Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at12:29 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 1700 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:54 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 2200 block of Northeast Arapahoe Court. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:35 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 2600 block of Southwest lndian Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:59 p.m. Feb. 1, in the area of Southwest Eighth Street and Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:15 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 100 block of Southwest Cascade Mountain Court. DUII —Jeffrey Lee Davis, 29, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:06 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 700 block of Southwest Kalama Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:45 p.m. Feb. 1, in the 1600 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. DUII —Ryan Duane Moore, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:18 a.m. Feb. 2, in the 1200 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:46 a.m. Feb. 2, in the 2300 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief —An
act of criminal mischief was reported at11:32 a.m. Feb. 2, in the 1700 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 12:18 p.m. Feb. 2, in the 1900 block of Southwest 33rd Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at12:25 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Veterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at1:55 p.m. Feb. 2, in the 1700 block of Southwest Odem Medo Road. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 8:26 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest Canal Boulevard. DUII —John Roger Dallas, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:40 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of Southwest Ninth Street and West Antler Avenue. DUII —John E. Swanson, 30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:45 p.m. Feb. 3, in the 400 block of Southwest Fifth Street.
p.m. Jan. 31, in the area of Northwest Lamonta Road. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at11:57 a.m. Feb. 1, in the area of Northeast Pippen Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:42 p.m. Feb. 1, in the area of Southeast Dunham Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:41 p.m. Feb. 1, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief and a theft were reported at 8:52 p.m. Feb. 1, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Burglary —A burglary with an estimated loss of $2,380 was reported at 5:57 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of Southeast Third Street. DUII —Tamara Clem, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 9:39 p.m. Feb. 2, in the area of Northwest Deer Street. DUII —Lisa Gagermeier, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
ofintoxicants at 5:04 p.m. Feb. 3, in the area of Northeast Third Street.
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Burglary —A burglary, an act of criminal mischief and a theft were reported at 9 a.m. Jan. 28, in the 2300 block of South Adams Drive in Madras. Theft —A theft was reported Jan. 28, in the 1500 block of South Culver Highway near Madras. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 11:34 a.m. Jan. 29, in the 2300 block of Southwest Bear Drive in Culver.
Contlnued next page
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Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:53 a.m. Jan. 31, in the area of Northeast Ridgeview Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:11 p.m. Jan. 31, in the area of Northwest 10th Street. DUII — Michelle D. Walters, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:43 p.m. Jan. 31, in the area of Northwest Lamonta Road. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at11:43
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The Mirror Pond Management Board, appointed by Bend City Council, is launching a threephase process to reach a conclusion on what to do with the silt build-up in Mirror Pond. For the first phase, your input is needed. I
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Attend a Ublic resentation TOMORROW Februar 6th or 12th at Bend Park &Recreation District, 799 SWColumbia, 6:30 pm.
OR Call (541) 706-6152 tohavea questionnaire mailedto you. In the following two phases, several actions will be presented to the community for comment and then a preferred course of action will be decided in June.
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
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in i e i n'
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By Steven Dubois
From previous page DUII — James F. Moyses Jr., 20, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants Jan. 29, in the area of Southwest Gem Lane and Southwest Elbe Drive in Culver. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 2:59 a.m. Feb. 1, in the 1600 block of Southwest Quail Drive in Crooked River Ranch.
Valantina'S harOin — Oregon State Police say atraffic stop on Interstate 84 in Eastern Oregon yielded a surprise: five pounds of
heroin packed into two Valentine's Dayteddy bear gift baskets. Lt. Gregg Hastings said Monday the heroin was valued at $200,000. He said two young women from Phoenix, Ariz., were arrested for
a car recklessly and kill someone, you'd have a manslaughter charge. You endanger the safety of an aircraft — you knowingly did so, you reck-
The Associated Press
PORTLAND Federal prosecutors announced fraud charges Monday against two helicopter company employees accused of lying about the performance capabilities of helicopters hired by the U.S. Forest Service to fight wildfires, including one that crashed in 2008 in Northern California, killing nine. The 2 5-page i n d ictment from a federal grand jury in Medford alleges that Steven Metheny, with help from Levi Phillips, submitted false information to win more than $20 million in contracts for seven helicopters. Metheny, 42, th e f o rmer vice president of West Coast Operations for Carson Helicopters Inc., and Phillips, 45, the director of maintenance, were charged with conspiracy to defraud the Forest Service. Metheny also faces charges of mail and wire fraud, making false statements to the Forest Service and endangering the safetyof an aircraft. Metheny did not i mmediately return a phone call seeking comment. Phillips does not have alisted phone number. No attorney is listed for Metheny or Phillips on the court docket The men face a maximum of 20 years in prison, if convicted
AROUND THE STATE
investigation of unlawful possession anddistribution of a controlled substance and booked into the Malheur County Jail. Hastings said a senior trooper stopped the Honda Accord with Arizona license plates
for failing to signal lane changes.
lessly did so and people died
The Associated Press
The wreckage of a Sikorsky S-61N is seen on Aug. 7, 2008, after it crashed on a flight from a helipad in Trinity County to a base camp near Junction City, Calif., killing one crew member and eight firefighters. An indictment from a federal grand jury in Medford accuses two men of falsifying the weight and takeoff power of the helicopter. on th e c o nspiracy charge. Metheny could potentially get decades more on the other charges. The indictment states that when the Forest Service solicited bids for helicopters to
be used in firefighting operations, Metheny submitted proposals with a ltered performance charts and falsified weight and balance charts. Then, after winning the contract, the incorrect information was given to pilots who had to calculate the maximum
payload capacity during fire-
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII — Meghan Stoll Kaufman, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:52 p.m. Jan. 31, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and Evergreen Avenue in Redmond. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:55 a.m. Feb.
f ighting o p erations. W h en asked why the specifications were different than those on similar helicopters, the indictment says Matheny told the Forest Servicethe company had modified the engines to be more powerful. "I'm glad they're stopped; what I'm not glad about is that my son died to make this become apparent," said Paul Steele, of Ashland, whose 19year-old son David Steele died in the crash. "I think it falls a little short," he added. "If you were to drive
1, in the 100 block of Southeast Division Street in Bend. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4 p.m. Feb. 3, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 74.
BEND FIRE RUNS Thursday — 2:45 a.m. Smoke odor reported, 20240 Reed Lane.
Rang8land Bl'SOn —Lawyers for two ranchers convicted of setting fire to Eastern Oregon rangeland aretrying to block a bid by federal prosecutors to get anappeals court to impose tougher
— and they're not facing manslaughter charges." Through a spokeswoman, Assistant U.S. Attorney Byron Chatfield declined comment beyond what's included in the indictment. Carson Helicopters, which recently decided to close its Oregon facility and consolidate operations in Pennsylvania, said in a statement it has fully cooperated with the investigation. "During the course of the investigation, Carson Helicopters learned information about the conduct of Steve Metheny, and the company terminated his employment in 2009," the statement said. The company said it suspended Phillips on Monday after learning he had been indicted. The Aug. 5, 2008, crash near Weaverville, Calif., killed the pilot, a Forest Service safety inspector and seven firefighters with Grayback Forestry of Merlin, Ore. The co-pilot and three firefighters were hurt. Witnesses said the helicopter took off more slowly than normal before clipping trees and then crashing into a hillside.
9:20 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, in the area of Butler Market Road. 16 — Medical aid calls.
sentences. Steven Dwight Hammond, 43,wa s sentenced to a yearin
prison, and his father, 70-year-old Dwight Lincoln Hammond, to three months. Prosecutors have told the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the judge was too lenient when he failed to impose the five-year
minimum. TheHarney County menwereconvicted in June for a 2001 fire set near Steens Mountain. They had been unhappy with the rate
at which federal range managerswere doing controlled burns. WrOng-WayCraSh —An 88-year-old driver caused a wrong-way crash on Interstate 84 in northeastern Oregon, according to Oregon
State Police. Senior Trooper Michael Holloran said Jocelyn Gay, of The Dalles, was driving her Toyota east on 1-84 on Monday but missed her exit. When she realized her mistake, Holloran said, Gay
made a U-turn and started driving west in the left eastbound lane, apparently thinking she was on a two-lane highway. She collided nearly
head-onatabout65 mphwithaDodgeCaravandrivenbya65-yearold Umatilla woman. Both vehicles hit the medianand the Dodge then sideswiped a commercial truck. State police said both women suffered minor injuries.
MiSSing dOy —Attorneys for the father of missing Portland boy Kyron Horman have asked a judge to delay his divorce from the child's
stepmother. Noarrests have beenmade, but the father, KaineHorman, believes Terri Horman knows what happened. He said after Monday's hearing that he wants the delay to allow the criminal investigation to
proceed without interference,and toprotect his 4-year-old daughter. Kyron was last seen at Skyline School on June 4, 2010. His stepmother had driven him there for a science fair. Kaine Horman filed for divorce
24 days later, after investigators told him that six months earlier hehad been the target of a murder-for-hire plot discussed by Terri Horman and
a landscaper. He has hadsole custody of their daughter since then. — From wire reports
Wednesday 6 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 10 — Medical aid calls. Friday 5:24 a.m.— Trash or rubbish fire, contained, 601 E. Antler Ave., Redmond. 9 — Medical aid calls. Saturday 3:41 p.m.— Authorized
REDMOND FIRE RUNS Jan. 28 12 — Medical aid calls. Jan. 29 4 — Medical aid calls.
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PULSE':.-'-;:;=:.".~ Healthy Living inCentral Oregon~~ t
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The Bulletin PudjjCatjon that anSWerS tOugh queStianSabOut lOCal heajthCare tOPiCS. High Desert PUI SE is a quarterly magazine createdto help promote, encourage and maintain an active and healthful lifestyle. Each issue features local stories that seek answers to tough questions about local health topics, with in-depth reporting that Central Oregonians expect. The magazineis distributed in The Bulletin and at health outlets, medical offices and on area racks.
avjgatin
Sunday 10:16 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 8164 S.W. 61st St., Redmond. 11:54 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 2125 S.W. Canal Blvd., Redmond. 8 — Medical aid calls.
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controlled burning, 904 N.E. Yucca Ave., Redmond. 7 — Medical aid calls.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
rot erss ou etitssc oo ac he cost ofbringing back the Brothers School District
AN LNDEPENDENTNEwsPAPEB
BETsY McCooc
Chairaomnn
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46w coNc'RESs i6 IN RVESe>
should be within reach. State Rep. Mike McLane, R-
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Powell Butte, hopes to persuade the full Legislature
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that's true in the months ahead; we hope he's successful. The Brothers School District merged withthe "nearby" Crook County School District in 2005, when the number of s tudents enrolled in Brothers fell to zero. The previous two years, Brothers boasted three students in its K-8, one-room school, well below the 18-student minimum the state said it had to have to stay open. It still doesn't have the magic 18 students, but supporters of the effort to reopen the school believe they can put about a dozen kids in seats in the school, and they'd like the chance to try. There are v alid a r guments to be made on both sides of the issue. It costs more per student to educate a handful of students than it does to educate several hundred. Teacher salaries and benefits can be spread over a greater number of kids, as can t ransportation costs, forexample. For the 2003-04 school year, the district's last in operation, it cost about $25,138 per student in direct classroom dollars. The statewide average that year was $3,656 per student. Brothers was also paying off a 10-year mortgage on its school building at about $35,000 a year. On the other hand, the school in Brothers served students from one of the most isolated regions
The school in Brothers served students from one of the most isolated
regions in Oregon, a sprawling area where neighbors are few and far between.... With luck, McLane will be able to convince fellow lawmakers
reopening the school is money well spent. in Oregon, a sprawling area where neighbors are few and far between. Now the children from those homes face an h ourlong ri de twice a day to and from school, plus travel time from home to the single school bus stop in the area. That sort of bus ride cannot do anything to make learning easy. And as safe as school buses are, that is a lot of hours on the road. Reopening t he Brot h e rs school will also allow the students tosleep past 5:30 a.m. and to get home before 4:30 in the afternoon. With luck, McLane will be able to convince fellow lawmakers reopening the school is money well spent.
A victory against
governmentsecrecy halk one up for the Sierra Club and the people of Oregon. A Coos County circuit court judge ruled recently that the Oregon International Port of Coos Bay cannot charge the Sierra Club more than $19,000 to collect records the environmental group seeks as part of its campaign to bar coal exports from Northwest ports. In fact, the judge said, port officials violated the club's rights to free speech and association in their dealings with the Sierra Club. The club and the port have been wrangling over the fees since 2011. Oregon law allows agencies to charge for gathering information; it also allows those agencies to waive fees when those requesting the information are acting in the public interest. In its ostensible effort to determine if the Sierra Club's request was in the public interest, the port went way overboard. It asked for everything from a list of the club's directors, including places of e mployment and sources of income, to a list of donors to a list of club members who live within port district
boundaries or who recreate "at or near the Coos Bay estuary." It did so, it said, to determine if the documents the club sought would actually benefit the club, not the public, financially. That was too much for Judge Paula Bechtold. "The strong inference can be drawn that the port's actual intent was to force the Sierra Club to fold its tent and go away," she said inher Jan.25ruling. Theport,she said, acted in bad faith in its dealings with the Sierra Club and two smaller environmental groups. Bechtold recognized the argument for what it was — hooey. And, she said, the whole issue could have been resolved more quickly and cheaply had port officials been reasonable about the matter. Oregon's public records law works as intended only if those seeking information can get it in a timely fashion and at reasonable cost. Public agencies cannot thwart the law by attempting to discourage the public — be it the Sierra Club, The Bulletin or your next-door neighbor — by requesting information to which they are not entitled.
M Nickel's Worth Meet the needs of seniors Make schoolssafer
Teachersshouldcarryguns
In a recent Bulletin editorial, you took me to task for making a flippant reference to Jerry Sandusky in a meeting between the boards of United Senior Citizens of Bend and the Bend Park & Recreation District. Your criticism was spot on. My flippancy was q uite i nappropriate, especially in light of the BPR board's willingness to meet with us.
I'm a sixth-grader at Cascade Middle School. I've been hearing a lot about the gun control issue. The news reportersare introducing the
I r ead w i t h i n t erest M elissa Gianopolus' letter regarding making schools more secure. Recently, my son and I had a meeting at a high school in Bend which he does not attend. As we approached the main doors of the school, I saw the standard "please check in with the office" placard. As I e ntered through the glass doors, I was watching the ladies in the office through the glass walls. They were chatting and no one looked over. We entered the office and stated we were there for a meeting. The office attendant said, "Please sign in." She did not ask for identification or look to see what I had written when I signed in. She told us our meeting was at the opposite end of the school. She told us where to go and we took off completely unsupervised, wandering the halls of this local high school during school hours. Neither of us was asked to wear a visitors badge. I saw several adults and students in the halls and no one asked who we were or what we were doing there. At the end of our meeting, we left through a door in the back. We walked around the outside of building, back to the front where we had parked. No one saw us and certainly no one asked what we were doing. My point is we could be doing a LOT more to secure our schools locally by installing buzz-in systems, having staff ask for identification, etc. Lisa Smith Bend
That being said, my inappropriate comment does not diminish the message that many older seniors have not felt welcome at the Bend Senior Center. Your editorial comments suggest that USCB was not cooperative at the joint meeting of the boards and unwilling to offer program ideas to BPR. The problem i s a c tually t h at there are n o s i m ple "program" fixes. A given facility cannot be a multigenerational, fee-based activity center and at the same time be a welcome home to older seniors of moderate to low income with possible health or physical limitations. USCB has asked for the return of its investment in the Bend Senior Center so that it can serve this dis-
enfranchised group of people. Finally, The B ulletin editorial questioned ahow far those feelings extend beyond the USCB board." This is a fair question. Does the community of Bend feel any obligation to s erving older senior citizens of moderate to low income with possible health or p hysical limitations? Tom Gunn Bend
anti-gun people as pro-safety people and the others as pro-gun people. I don't really think that's fair. My opinion is that a gun is a tool. In this country, guns are not allowed on school grounds; the man who caused the shooting in Connecticut broke that law, so what stops him from breaking a law not to have gun at all? And if you take guns away from good people, how will they defend themselves against bad people that will get guns anyway? Police can't protect us; they show up after the crime is over. I wish my teachers carried guns. I'd feel a lot safer. Drake Buckmaster Bend
Guns do kill people I would like to address the National Rifle Association's proposition that "guns don't kill people;
people kill people." Using the ancient philosophical Latin tenet of "reductio ad absurdum" (reduce the proposition to an absurdity and see if it still holds), suppose that the only weapon we could use to kill people would be toothpicks — toothpicks! How many people doyou think would be killed by toothpicks in a
given year'? People don't kill p eople; guns
kill people. Harlie Peterson Bend
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Let qualified, armed retirees volunteer to guard schools By Dennis Fiannery uns no more kill people than knives stab, pillows suffocate, b aseball bats b l udgeon o r spoons make people fat. It's the users — the humans behind these tools — that are entirely responsible. This hue and cry for stricter gun laws is, for the most part, perpetuated by the ill-informed, narrow-minded or agenda-driven, or political hacks who are simply in it for the votes. It's important to note that the two cities with the worst gun violence are also the two cities with the strictest gun laws. Strict gun laws have little effect on criminals and none on the insane, but do severely restrict the honest citizen's ability t o p r otect himself.
G
No firearm laws or r egulations past, present, or proposed for the future would have prevented, or likely will prevent, a single mass killing. Not one mass murderer has acquired his f i r earm b ecause of lax background checks or lack of registration. I n my o p i nion, there are t w o things that will help curtail this horrible violence. First, we need to get a handle on persons, of any age, with violent mental health issues. We have all heard stories of h i g hly u n stable children who cannot be controlled by their frightened parents — parents who cannot get these deranged youngsters the psychiatric help they desperately need or, in extreme cas-
IN MY VIEW es, get them committed to a secure facility. These are the laws that need to be addressed. Many, including myself, believe violent movies and video games have little or no effect on a normal, healthy mind but have a monstrous effect on an unbalanced young mind. However, the chances of curtailing the entertainment industry's continued production of these incredibly violent but profitable products are nil. This is a First Amendment issue and you can rest assured politicians will not propose legislation to restrict this segment of their favored industry. There are a lot of people suggest-
ing we arm teachers and there are a lot of people who think that is a crazy idea. I fall somewhere in between. To arm unqualified teachers is a really bad idea. That concept is bound to create a far bigger threat than it would prevent. But to allow highly qualified and trained teachers or administrators to be armed may be a good idea. As a possible alternative, I suggest we, as part of the diaIogue and analysis we are presently engaged in, look to our retired law enforcement officers, both civilian and military. Determined by the size of the community, there could be dozens, maybe hundreds of highly qualified retirees who would jump at the chance to volunteer to h elp p r otect our
children. They might be a parent, a grandparent, aunt or uncle or simply a concernedcommunity member. Many of these qualified retirees seek out activities that would both benefit their community and fill their time. A high population density in an area may allow these volunteers to dedicate as little as a day or two a week, depending on their available time. Maybe local police departments or sheriff's offices would be willing to set upcomprehensive screening and training programs for these volunteers. It is possible our children could be protected by a highly dedicated, qualified and trained security force at little or no cost. — Dennis Flannery lives in Bend.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
OREGON NEWS
Report saysdamremoval
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Elvin 'Jack'Mearl Adams Donald Eugene Nored,
The Associated Press Lavonne "Pepper" Paire-Davis,
Feb. 22,1923- Jan. 29,2013
of Redmond Mar. 23, 1930 - Jan. 20, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond. 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A celebration of life will take place sometime this summer at the residence of Lavada 'Bobbie' Wren.
John Scott Michel, of Prineville Jan. 15, 1950 - Jan. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend541-382-0903H Services: Celebration of Life in his honor will be held Saturday, February 9, 2013, at 4:00 p.m., at LDS Church, SE 2nd Street, Prineville. Contributions may be made to:
Charity of ones choice.
Marian Grijalva July12, 1924- Jan. 30, 2013 Marian Grijalva, 88, died at O c h o c o Cen t e r i n Prineville, on W e dnesday, January 30, 2013. Born m Bend, on July 12, 1924, to A rthur W . and L au r a ( Pearl) Johnson, she w a s t he granddaughter o f O l iver an d J e n ni e J o h nson and g r e a t -granddaughter of Arnt a nd An n a Aune, Norweg ian i mmigrants v~~ who s ettled i n t he B e n d area. Marian Marian Grijalva l ived i n Oregon before studying nursing in Chicago and California. Marian chose to become a n u r se , b e g i n n in g b y c aring f o r s o l d i er s f r o m t he WWI I b a t t lefront a n d followed by t im e i n s u rgical nursing an d a d m i n i st ration. M a r i a n ma r r i e d WWII 101st Airborne war h ero, Leonard Gr ijalva i n 1 947. O f M ar i a n ' s l o n g nursing career, she liked to r ecount th e c h a l l enge o f t aking th e Cal i fo r n i a then-Reagan ad m i n i stration to task to allow nurses to wear pant suits. I n 1968, Marian and L e onard moved to A l aska in their camper. She worked until retirement in nursing administratio n at t he A laska P s y chiatric I n s t i tute. Marian had a life-long love o f t r a v el , e specially e njoying No r w a y , D en m ark, Greece, Spain a n d Portugal. She loved her life in Alaska before returning to Oregon. Marian is survived by her d aughter, K a r e n (G a r y ) H inton, C a l i f o r nia ; s o n , Leonard Grijalva, Jr. (Lex McKenzie), A n ch o r a g e; brother, Bruce ( Charlene) J ohnson, N e v a da ; t h r e e grandsons; and tw o g r e at grandchildren. S h e w as r eceded in death by h e r u sband, L e o n a rd ; s o n , Mark; and brother, Art. A private family celebrat ion o f h e r l i f e i s b e i n g planned. P rineville Funeral H o m e i s i n c h a r g e o f t h e ar rangements. 541-447-6459.
Ronald Elden Cordis Mar. 22, 1942 - Jan. 28, 2013 R onald Elden C o r di s o f Terrebonne, OR , di ed J anuary 28 , 2 0 13, a t t h e a ge of 7 0 . Ron a l d w a s b orn M a rc h 2 2 , 1 9 42, i n Mountain View, CA, to E l den and Clara
(Wells)
Cordis. R on w a s b orn a n d r aised i n Californ ia, atRonald Cordis tended high school i n S a n J o s e, CA, and received an Associates Degree from SUNY. Ron served i n t h e U S Navy f r o m 1 9 6 0-1967 on Nuclear Submarines. On November 11 , 1 967, R on mar r i e d Beve r l y Burns in Portland, OR. Ron worked in computer repair as an IBM service manager. In his spare time Ron enjoyed camping, fly fishing, bow hunting, auto mechanics, rebuilding c ars, carpentry an d h o m e building. He was a member of Mis-
Elvin " Jack" M e ar l A d ams, died Tuesday, January 29, 2013, in Nampa, ID, at the age of 89. Born February Z2, 1923, t o A la n son and ,R Nancy
seen here on June 11, 2010, at Yankee Stadium in New York, was a star of the All American Girls Professional BaseballLeaguein the 1940s and an inspiration for the movie "A League of Their Own."
(Draine)
A dams i n Nampa, he w as one of 22 children including s tep h a l f Elvin 'Jack' and f ul l Mearl Adams brothers a nd sis t ers. He g re w u p i n " A l falfa", outside of Bend, OR. I n C a l i f ornia, i n 19 4 1 , Jack married Myrna 'Faye' Norwood. H e worked i n t h e s h i p a rds i n C a l i f o r nia, a n d a ter m o v e d t o Or e g o n , w here h e j o i ne d t h e A i r Force in 1943. In 1947, he worked as a policeman in P rineville. T he fam i l y moved to Klamath Falls in 1949, where he worked for M ountain S t a t e s P o w e r Company as a lineman. He transferred t o S p r i n gfield where the c o mpany l a t er became Pacific Power and Light. Around 1955, recovering from a s e v e r e e l e ctrical shock as a l i n eman, Jack continued h i s ed u c a tion a nd worked his way up in t he company. A fter m a n y transfers an d p r o m o tions he retired in Medford, OR, i n 1983, as D i strict M a n a ger. Prior t o r e t i r ing, h e w as d i v o rced, a n d l a t e r m arried Iv a D e w h u rst i n 1981. After he retired they m oved to B end w h er e h e volunteered for M e a ls-onWheels for 18 years. J ack wa s a c t iv e i n R o tary and real estate. They traveled coast to coast residing for s everal w i n t ers in Ar izona. I n 2 0 05, they moved to Nampa, ID, to be close to Iva's daughter. J ack loved t o g o c a m p i ng in h i s y o u th, p lay p i n ochle and g o lf . H e a l s o e njoyed creating and p u t t ing u p d e c o r ations f o r C hristmas. He w il l b e r e m embered fo r h i s m a n y jokes and stories, his beautiful blue eyes, his generosity to others, his faith in G od and hi s l ov e f o r h i s family. J ack is s u r v ived b y h i s w ife, Iv a; d aug h t e r , Darlene (Larry) Goates of Springfield , OR; so n , Harvey Adams of La Pine, OR; step-daughter, JoAnn ( Gene) Koozer of N a m p a, ID; s t e p -daughter-in-law, T erry D e w h urst o f H i l l s boro, OR ; b r o t hers, Paul ( Verla) A d a m s o f Po c a t ello, ID an d C ar l A d a m s of La Quinta, CA; numero us cousins, n i e ces a n d nephews; seven grandchildren; e i gh t g r e a t -grandchildren ; an d tw o great-great-grandchildren. F uneral services w il l b e held at I : 0 0 p . m., Friday, February 8, 201 3 , at N iswonger-Reynolds Fu n eral Ho m e , 1 05 N W I rving A v e . , B e n d , OR (541-38Z-Z471). G r aveside services will f o llow i m m ediately. A rrangements i n I d a h o , h ave b ee n p r o v i de d b y Z eyer Fu n e r a l Ch a p e l , Nampa. 208-467-7300.
salmon good fort',Iamath I
FEATURED OBITUARY
GRANTS PASS — A federal report says removing four hydroelectricdams on the Klamath River in Oregon and California and restoring ecosystems will produce a big increase in salmon h arvests and b oost f a r m revenues. The 400-page report was produced by federal scientists to help the secretary of Interior evaluate w hether it is in the public interest to go ahead with the $1 billion project, which is considered the biggest dam removal in U.S. history if it goes through
as planned in 2020. The report notes that wild salmon runs have dropped more than 90 percentfrom the dams, overfishing, poor water quality, disease and habitat loss. It said there was a moderate to high probability that removing the dams and restoring the environment would improve water quality, fish habitat, and water quality, and reduce fish disease a toxic algae blooms. The project would also improve the ability of fish to cope with global warming,
by opening up more access to cold water.
The Associated Press file photo
Killings
Base a star wasina ea ue 0 er own The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Lavonne "Pepper" Paire-Davis, a star of the All American Girls Professional Baseball League in the 1940s and an inspiration for the central character in the movie "A League of Their Own," has died, her son said. Paire-Davis died of natural causes in the Van Nuys section of Los Angeles on Saturday, her son, William Davis, told The Associated Press. She was 88. Paire-Davis was a model for the characterplayed by Geena Davis in the 1992 hit "A League of Their Own," which also starred Rosie O'Donnell, Madonna and Tom Hanks as the crusty manager who shouted the famous line, "There's no crying in baseball!" In 1944, Paire-Davis joined the league, created out of fear that World War II would interrupt Major League Baseball, and played for 10 seasons. She was a catcher and shortstop, and helped her teams win five championships. She chronicled her baseball adventures in the 2009 book "Dirt in the Skirt." "I know what it's like for your dream to come true, mine did," Paire-Davis said in an AP story in 1995, when she was 70. "Baseball was the thing I had the most fun doing. It was like breathing." After graduating from high school, she enrolled at UCLA as an English major, worked as a welder's assistant at the shipyards in Long Beach, and spent
every spare moment playing in local softball leagues. Her heart, however, belonged to hardbalL "Don't get me wrong, I was
glad to be playing softball," she said in 1995. "But I'd rather have played competitive basebalL" The Al l A m e rican G i rls Baseball League was founded in 1943 by Chicago Cubs owner Philip Wrigley. Most of the league's talent came from greater Chicago, but PaireDavis was one of a half-dozen players scouted and chosen from California. The players wore skirts and the teams often had cutesy names, but the players maintained a genuine big league lifestyle, playing 120 games over four months. "We played every night of the week," Paire-Davis said, "doubleheaders on S u ndays and holidays." She wo n c h a mpionships with the Racine Belles, the Grand Rapids Chicks and the Fort Wayne Daisies, but she never actually played for the team featured in the film, the Rockford Peaches. "That's Hollywood," she said. "They had to take 10 teams and 12 years and make it into two hours." The league was "temporarily suspended" in 1954. Play was never resumed. Davis said his mother spent much of the rest of her life as a sportsfan — she rooted for the Dodgers, Angels and Lakers — and an advocate for her favorite game. "She taught me how to switch hit when I was 3 years old," said Davis, one of two sons, a daughter, four grandkids and an older brother who survived Paire-Davis. "She touched a lot of people around the world with her baseball exploits. She was a great ambassador for the
game."
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:
Logs and the Slinky. Diane Wolkstein, 70: ChilAndre Cassagnes,86: French dren's author and folkloristwho electrical technician w h ose once upon atime served as New chance inspiration involving York City's official storyteller, metal particles and the tip of sparked a storytelling revival a pencil led him to develop the and helped set off a national s ouri Sy n o d L uth e r a n Etch A Sketch in the late 1950s. wave of interest in the ancient Church and Emm au s L utheran Church i n R e d - The mechanical drawing toy art of the yarn. Died Thursday became one of the brightest in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, while mond, OR. stars in the constellation of undergoing emergency surgery He is survived by his wife midcentury childhood amuse- for a heart condition. o f 45 years, Beverly C o r — From wire reports dis; four children, Kimberments that included Lincoln lie Burns, Kari Cordis, Bill ( Kaelin) Co r d i s , Mar t y ( Debbie) Cordis; tw o s i s t ers, C l a u di a C o r d i s o f Redmond, OR, and R o chelle Lidstrom of P o r tland, OR; n i n e g r a n d children. Death Notices are free and will Deadlines:Death Notices He was preceded in death be run for one day, but specific are accepted untilnoon by h i s p a r e nt s a n d hi s guidelines must be followed. Monday through Friday for brother, Ken. next-day publication and by Local obituaries are paid A funeral service will b e advertisements submitted by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday h eld W e d n esday, F e b r ufamilies or funeral homes. and Monday publication. ary 6, 2013, at 10:30 a.m., They maybesubmitted by phone, Obituaries must be received at Emm a u s L uth e r a n mail, email or fax. by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Church, in Redmond, OR. The Bulletin reserves the right Thursday for publication on the Contributions c an b e to edit all submissions. Please second day after submission, m ade t o E m a n ue l B u r n include contact information by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Center Foundation-Legacy in all correspondence. Monday publication, and by Oregon Burn Center, 3001 For information on any of these 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday N. Gantenbein, P o r tland, services or about the obituary publication. Deadlines for OR 9 7Z2 7, ph on e policy, contact 541-617-7825. display ads vary; please call 503-415-4700, or L ym for details. phoma Research Foundation 115 B r oadway, Suite 1301, New York, NY 10006 Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries phone 212-349-2910. Email: obits©bendbulletin.com P.O. Box 6020 P lease sig n o u r on l i n e Fax: 541-322-7254 g uestbook w w w .r ed Bend, OR 97708 mondmemorial.com.
Obituary policy
gress, according to Monday's letter. Continued from Bl Brennan is scheduled to I n a ddition t o Wy d e n appear Wednesday in a rare and Merkley, the letter was public meeting of the Senate signed by Sens. Patrick Lea- Intelligence Committee, the hy, D-Vt., Dick Durbin, D-III., latest in a series of nominaMark Udall, D-Colo., Tom tion hearings as the Obama Udall, D-N.M., Mark Begich, administration moves to reD-Alaska, Al F ranken, Dplace outgoing members of Minn., Chuck Grassley, R- the Cabinet and other key Iowa, Mike Lee, R-Utah, and leadership positions. Suzanne Collins, R-Maine. While the letter does not Leahy and Grassley are the include a specific threat to chairman and ranking mem- filibuster any o f O b ama's ber, respectively, of the Sen- pending nominees, it does ate Judiciary Committee, of suggest that "cooperation in which Durbin, Franken and this matter could avoid an Lee are also members. unnecessary confrontation" The White House did not over selections for national respond toa request for com- security positions. ment on Monday. The letter quotes a speech F or years, W yden h a s Obama gave at the National pressed the Obama adminis- Archives in May 2009, when tration to reveal as much of its he said, "Whenever we caninterpretations of areas of the not release certain informalaw around national security tion to the public for valid naand terrorismas possible.As tional security reasons, I will a member of the Senate Intel- insist that there is oversight ligence Committee, Wyden is of my actions, by Congress or privyto classified information the courts." "We applaud this p r inabout the intelligence community, although he is barred c ipled commitment to t h e by law from revealing it. C onstitutional s y stem o f In February 2012, in the checks and balances," the wake of a September 2011 letter continues, "and hope CIA drone strike in Yemen that you will help us obtain that killed th e A m erican- the documents that we need born cleric Anwar a l-Aw- to conduct the oversight you laki and magazine editor and have called for." publisher Samir Khan, who The New York Times has was also an American citi- filed a lawsuit fighting the zen, Wyden asked Attorney Obama administration's reGeneral Eric Holder for simi- fusal to release the legal opinlar information. ions under the Freedom of Last month, Wyden wrote Information Act. Last month, to Brennan, Obama'shome- a federal judge ruled in favor land security and counter- of the Obama administraterrorismadvisersince 2009, tion, and the opinions remain again asking for the legal secret. memos. To date,they have — Reporter: 202-662-7456, not been provided to Conaclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Bulge Continued from B1 "Right now it is very, very difficult to detect that there is any motion going on at all," Scott said recently. The rise likely started in late 1997, according to the USGS. It wasn't recognized until 2000, when a federal scientist noticed the uplift after comparing radar images taken by satellite. "We got our first groundbased measurements to confirm it in 2001," Dzurisin sard. The bulge was once growing about an inch or two per year and caused scientists to wonder if volcanic activity was coming. But Dzurisin said it is now moving up at about '/to of an inch per year and an eruption is unlikely.
"We know now, in hindsight, that the rate has been declining since the very be-
ginning," he said. I n all, th e g r ound h as moved up more than nine i nches, according t o t h e USGS. D zurisin also s aid t h e name for thephenomenon, "South Sister bulge," is a misnomer. The heart of the rising ground is closer to The Husband, a l e sser-known peak of 7,524 feet, and about three miles due west of South Sister. He also said calling it a bulge gives the impression that the rise could be seen by people on the ground. "It is a very, very subtle, very, very broad uplift of the surface," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
FUNERALsI BURIALs I CREMATIQN I PRE-pLANNING MQNUMENTsI AIR HEARsE
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S41. S48.3219 www.redmondmemorial.com
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© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
SOCCER
PREP BASKETBALL
Inquiry:
PREP WRESTLING
OSAAdenies Sisters' appeal WILSONVILLE
Fixing
— The OregonSchool Activities Association's executive board denied
suspected
Sisters High's appeal of its decision to force the school to forfeit13 girls basketball games this season — 11 of which were victories — Monday at the association's fourth meeting of the
eu'strpM
rr e
in 680 matches
schoolyear. The state's governing body for high school athletics deemed a student-athlete at Sisters High ineligible after
5
By Sam Borden New York Times News Service
receiving improper
Soccer is known throughout much of the world as the beautiful game. But the sport's ugliest side — the scourge of match-fixing — will not go away. With next summer's World Cup in Brazil drawing closer, a European police intelli-
"athletic or activities instruction" before she transferred to the school. The athlete in
question has beengiven a hardship waiver by the
Sky-Em Leagueand is
still eligible to play basketball this season. The Outlaws girls basketball team was 13-3 before the forfeits were mandated. Their record now is 4-14 as they have won two
gence agency said Monday that a 19-month investigation revealed widespread occurrences of match-fixing in recentyears,with nearly 700 games globally deemed suspicious. The list of matches is
.5
el
games since theOSAA's initial ruling. Sisters High, which can still advance to the
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
Kris Davis, right, looks on as Redmond battles Crook County in a dual meet last week.
about 380 games in Europe, covering World Cup and European championship qualifiers, as well as Champions
Class 4A girls play-in round with a top-three finish in the Sky-Em, hosts Sweet Home
League games, including one
today. — Bulletin staff report
NBA
• Redmond High brings in I(ris Davisto take overthe Panthers' wrestling program, yearsafter his father andgrandfather madecoaching contributions By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
Minnesota's J.J. Barea (11) attempts to steal the ball from Portland's LaMarcus Aldridge (12) during Monday night' s game in Minneapolis.
Blazers holdoff Timberwolves Portland extinguishes a late charge by
It takes something special to pull a dedicated coach away from a program building toward trophy contention. Kris Davis was in Coos Bay last year, in what he describes as a "pretty good situation." He was constructing a competitive wrestling program at Marshfield High School, one that had improved from 25th place in the Class 5A state championships to eighth in the five years Davis coached the Pirates. Last spring, though, something special came in the form of a phone call from then-Redmond High wrestling coach Nathan Stanley, who told Davis that a counseling position at the school had opened up and that he was stepping away from wrestling to take over as head coach of the Panthers' football team. Stanley said he hoped Davis would apply for the job opening and carry the wrestling
program forward. "It kind of caught me off guard a little bit," says Davis. "I was kind of settled in over there in Coos Bay, but once I started thinking about it, the position I was in, I have five children of my own, so coming back home (to Redmond) close to my parents so they can have a relationship with their grandkids was key. Obviously, coming back to my
hometown is kind of a dream come true." It had been 21 years since Davis was last at Redmond High. He had graduated as a Panther in 1991, and now he was back, ready to take over the wrestling program and continue the family legacy. For 10 years, spanning the mid-1980s and mid-1990s, Kris' father, Kurt Davis, was the frontman for Redmond wrestling. Kurt assumed control nearly 20 years after his father, Gale Davis, stepped away from coaching both football (as head coach) and wrestling (as an assistant) at Redmond High. It was during Gale's tenure — in 1959, to pinpoint it — that the Panthers secured their first and only state wrestling championship. "They have that picture (of the state championship team) up on the wall (in the wrestling practice room at Redmond High), and I see my grandfather there in the picture, and I'm just like, 'Holy cow. This is really strange,' " says Kris Davis, 40, who wrestled for his father for four seasons. "It's really cool to know that we as a Davis family have made a big impact so far on the sport of wrestling here in Redmond, and I'm just starting that journey. I plan on staying here awhile, as long as they'll have me and keep-
ing that going." SeeLegacy /C4
Minnesota for a100-98
road victory,G3
NHL NFL NlhC
t ' e'
e
IIIN5
Batimore re arestocee rate Ganucks deat Oilers in overtime Vancouver gets its third straight victory after beating Edmonton,C3
CORRECTION A story headlined
"Local golfers set to spring into the college
season"thatappeared on Saturday, Feb. 2, on page C1 omitted two Prineville golfers who
are playing for NAIA Northwestern Christian University in Eugene. Sarah Crofcheck, a
senior, leads the Beacon women with a scoring
average of 83.9 strokes per round. Junior Jake Shinkle has played in all 11 rounds and is third on the men's team with
a scoring averageof 82.1. The Bulletin re-
grets the omission.
staggering and encompasses
By Julie Scharper
SuperBowlfalls short ofsetting ratingsrecord
and Luke Broadwater The Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — Dizzy with the thrill of a Super Bowl victory — and latenight revelry — Ravens fans spent Monday stocking up on purple gear and planning to close offices and pull children out of school for today's victory parade.
NEW YORK — Between a
partial power outage, an overly excited quarterback
andagame thatsuddenly turned from snoozer to sizzler, CBS had its hands full with the Super Bowl. The game fell short of setting a viewership record, but it stands as the third
Women heaped on purple ringsand bracelets,couples slapped purple paint onto the family car and parents dragged children into school a few hours late, explaining they had stayed up late for the Super Bowl. From time to time, Marylanders marveled at the news that, for many, felt like a dream come true:After 12 years, the Ravens were again world champions. Today, the Ravens will travel through downtown streets in the city's first major victory parade since the team won the Super Bowl in 2001, when 200,000 gathered to
most-watched program in Jose Luis Magana/The Associated Press
Baltimore Ravens fans celebrate at a local pub in Baltimore after their team won the Super Bowl over San Francisco on Sunday. Baltimore prepares to celebrate with a parade today, the city's first since 2001.
celebrate. "This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience," said Courtney Creamer of Stoneleigh, Md. "Especially this year, it's
just magicaL" Customers bustled Mon-
day into With Gratitude, the gift shop Creamer owns, to pick up Ravens shirts, flags, headbands and even wine glasses emblazoned with the team's logo. SeeBaltimore/C4
U.S. television history. The Nielsen Co. said an estimated 108.4 million
people watched the Baltimore Ravens' 3431 victory over the San
Francisco 49ers. The most-watched events in U.S. TV history were
last year's game, seenby 111.3 million, and the 2010 game, with111 million
viewers.
— The Associated Press
match played in England. Officials of Europol, an agency that works with countries across the continent, offered details that strike at the sport's core: Nearly $11 million in profits and nearly $3 million in bribes were discovered during the investigation, which uncovered "matchfixing activity on a scale we have not seen before," said Rob Wainwright, the director of Europol. Fixers typically seek to dictate a game's result by corrupting the players or the on-field officials, and officials said Monday that roughly 425 people were under suspicionbecause ofthe investigation, with 50 people having been arrested. The scope of the investigation covered games from 2008to 2011. SeeFixing /C4
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
National audience anticipates signing day By Michelle Kaufman The Miami Herald
The ESPNU cameras will roll for 10 consecutive hours Wednesday as dozens of reporters and analysts scrutinize teenagers' whimsical decisions about where they plan to play college football. National signing day, the day high school recruits fax in their signed scholarship offers, has evolved into an NFL draftlike extravaganza. Recruiting junkies have spent months sifting through the "leans," the "soft verbals," the "silent commits" and "decommits."They have been speculating about who will flip at the last minute, because recruits always do. They are, after all, 17 and 18 years old. On signing day two years ago, All-Everything offensive tackle Cyrus Kouandjio announced he would be attending Auburn. Later in the day he had a change of heart, and three days later he signed with rival Alabama, where his brother also played on the line. There will be live remote reportsfrom 13 campuses coast to coast Wednesday.
SeeSigning day/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION
COREBOARD
ESPN2.
TODAY
6:30 p.m.:Men's World Cup
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Florida at Arkansas, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Villanova at DePaul, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Wake
Qualifier, Mexico vs. Jamaica, ESPN2.
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Baylor at Oklahoma State, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Men's college,
Forest at North Carolina, ESPNU. Marquette at South Florida, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Women's college, Notre Dame at Villanova, CBSSN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Ohio State at Michigan, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, South Carolina at Kentucky, ESPNU.
HOGKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Tampa Bay Lightning at Philadelphia Flyers, NBCSN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Connecticut at St. John's, ESPNU.
5 p.m.:Men's college, Saint Louis at Fordham, CBSSN. 5:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Dallas Mavericks, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 6 p.m.: NBA, San Antonio Spurs
at Minnesota Timberwolves, ESPN.
WEDNESDAY
6 p.m.:Men's college, Kansasat Texas Christian, ESPNU.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Air Force
FOOTBALL 4:30 a.m.:College, National
Signing DaySpecial, ESPNU. 11 a.m.:College, National
at New Mexico, Root Sports. 7 p.m.: Men's college, Utah at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.
Signing DaySpecial, ESPNU.
7 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado
SOCCER 11:55 a.m.: Men's international friendly, Francevs. Germany,
HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Boston Bruins
State at Nevada, CBSSN.
at Montreal Canadiens, NBCSN.
ON THE AIR:RADIO WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL 5:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Dallas Mavericks, KBNDAM 1110. 7 p.m.: Men's college, Utah at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940. Listings are the mostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVorradio stat ions.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
ON DECK Today Boys basketball: MountainViewat Bend, 7p.m.; Summit atCrookCounty, 7p.m.; Madrasat North Marion,5:30p.m.; LaPineatCottageGrove, 7:15 p.m., WesternMennonite at Culver,6.30p.m., Central Christian at Horizon Christian, Hood River ,7:30 p.mc Redmond atRidgeview,7 p.m. Girls basketball: Bendat MountainView,7p.m., CrookCountyat Summit, 7p.m.; Madrasat North Marion, 7 p.m;WestemMennonite at Culver,5 p.mc Central Christian at Horizon Christian, HoodRi ver,6 p.m.;Ridgeview at Redmond,7 p.mc Sweet Homeat Sisters, 5:45p.m.; LaPine at Cottage Grove,5:45 p.m.
Friday Boys basketball: Ridgeview at Bend, 7 pm.; CrookCountyat MountainView,7 p.m.; Molala at Madras, 7p.m.; Sisters atJunction City, 7:15 p.mc Elmira at La Pine,7:15 p.m.; Culver at East Linn Christian, 8 p.m; Trinity Lutheranat Gilchrist, 5:30 p.m.; lone at Central Christian, 5:30 p.m.;SummitatRedmond, 7p.m. Girls basketball: Bend at Ridgeview, 7 p.mc MountainViewat CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Madras at Molaffa, 7p.mcSisters atJunction City, 5:45 p.mc Elmira at La Pine,5:45 p.m.; Culverat East LinnChristian, 6:30p.m; Trinity Lutheran at Gilchrist, 4 p.m.; lone at Central Christian, 4 p.m4 Redm ondat Summit, 7 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Redm ond, Summit, Mountain View regionalat s Juniper Swim8 Fitness Center, TBD; Sisters,Ridgeview atregionals inAlbany, TBD,Madrasat regional in LaGrande, TBD Wrestling: Redmond,Mountain View, Bendand Summit atRegionasin Eugene,TBD Saturday Boys basketball: Gilchrist at Triad, 5:30 pm.; Central Christian atSouthWascoCounty, 3:30 p.m; Prospectat Trinity Lutheran,4p.m. Girls basketball: Gilchrist atTriad,4 pmc Central Christian atSouth Wasco County, 2 p.m.; Prospect atTrinity Lutheran,5:30 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Redm ond, Summit, Mountain View regionals in Bendat Juniper Swim8, Fitness Center, TBD;Sisters and Ridgeview at regional in Albany,TBD;Madrasat regional in La Grande,TBD Alpine skiing: OSSA at Mt. Bachelor,Giant Salom, Ed'sGarden,TBD Nordic skiing: OISRA classic andbiathlon racesat Walt HaringSno-park nearChemult,11:30 a.m. Wrestling: Redmond,Mountain View, Bendand Summit atRegionals inEugene,TBD,Gilchrist, Culver atPre-District in Culver, 9a.mcMadras at Ridgeview,7 pm.
PREP SPORTS
Rodriguez from the Houston
Class 2A Monday's Summaries
Astros for first baseman Chris
LOCal doarderS qualify fOr Carter and two minor leaguers U.S. OPBll —Bend's BenFer-
on Monday. Right-hander Brad
gusonfinished second,and Kent Callister, also of Bend, finished
PeacockandcatcherMax Stassi also went to Houston in the deal
fourth on Sunday in thehalfpipe
between franchises that will be
event at the Burton U.S. Open Snowboarding Qualifiers in Sev-
playing in the same division for the first time following the As-
en Springs, Pa. Byvirtue of their
tros' move from the NLCentral
top-10 placings, both boarders qualified for the 31st annual
to the AL West in 2013. Lowrie batted.244 with16 homers
Burton U.S. OpenSnowboarding
and 42 RBls in 97gameswith
Championships in Vail, Colo., Feb. 25 to March 2. Callister also
Houston, missing two months with ankle and thumb injuries.
finished fourth in slopestyle to
Despite the limited playing time,
qualify in that event as well. Fer-
Lowrie tied for the fourth most
guson and Callister will compete homers among all shortstops in Vail alongside world-class last year. confirmed riders, including Kelly Clark, Mark McMorris, Torah
Bright, Jamie Anderson, louri Podladtchikov and more.
BASKETBALL IndianamOVeS daCk to No. 1 in AP POII — Forthe
CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING Waxing tourprep event slated for Thursday —we-
fifth straight week there is a new No. 1 in The Associated Press'
bCyclery/WebSkis in Bendis
the top spot for the first five
staging a free waxing event on
Thursday to helpwomenprepare their skis for Sunday's Tourfor
weeks of the regular season, moveduptwoplacesMonday, following their weekendwin
the Heartat Mt. Bachelor ski
over No.1 Michigan and No. 2
area. Thetour raises awareness for heart disease.Thewaxing
Kansas' loss to OklahomaState. Oregon dropped to No. 19after
event is scheduled from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. and will begin with a brief
consecutive losses to Stanford and California over the weekend.
clinic on waxing. Four or five
Complete rankings are in the
waxing stations and assistance will be available. The shop will
Scoreboard, right.
offer waxing tables, irons, wax, scrapers, brushesand light re-
— Sports fans bet a record $98.9 million at Nevadacasinos tallies show183 sports books made $7.2 million on the action. The San Francisco 49ers started out as a 5-point favorite but the Baltimore Ravens won 34-31.
good fight against a tough Regis Odds makers sayCalifornia squad on Monday night, accord- fans drove the unprecedented ing to coach Scott Fritz, but suffered a 56-24 Tri-River Confer-
handle, flooding LasVegas and northern Nevada with wagers
ence loss in Stayton. Chantelle
on the hometown team.The
Seehawer led the Bulldogs (7-15
49ers hadn't been in a Super Bowl since1995. The previous
overall, 5-7 conference) with seven points. Culver hosts West- Nevada record wasset in 2006, ern Mennonite tonight. when gamblers wagered$94.5 million.
RegiS doySdaSketdall deatS CulVer — Regis
Cal reachessettlement
jumped early on theCulver boys basketball team onMonday
With TedfOrd —California reached asettlement with former
night en route to a 76-20 Tri-Riv-
football coach Jeff Tedford on Monday that will pay him up to
er Conference victory in Stayton. Gerson Gonzalezledthe Bulldogs with five points. Culver
(10-12 overall, 5-7 conference) returns to action tonight when they host Western Mennonite.
$5.55 million for the final three seasons of his contract. Under terms of his contract, Tedford
had beenguaranteed $2.3 million a year for the final three seasons of his contract. With the settle-
mentannouncedbytheschool
BASEBALL AthletiCS aCquire L0Wrie —The Oakland Athletics
acquired infielder Jed Lowrie
and right-hander Fernando
Class 2A Monday's Summaries
Tri-Rtver Conference CULVER (20) — Gerson Gonzalez 5, Gibson4, l.eeper 3,Lofting 2, Fritz 2, Rumbarger2, Slaght1, LeQuieu1, McDonaldDaugherty, , Knapp.Totals 6
5-9 20. REGIS (76) — Picciriffi 13, More 9, V.Rodrlgue z 8,D.Rodriguez 8,Reynolds 7,Kdueff6, Guesaher6, Minten5, Frith 4, Woodcock4, Moll 4, Sessler 2.Totals 81 11-16 76. Culver 6 6 4 6 — 20 Regis 16 21 18 21 — 76
Three-pointgoals —Culver: Leeper.Regis Picciriffi.
Men's college Monday'sGames East
Fairfield 64,Siena54 Pittsburgh 56, SetonHall 46
Syracuse63,NotreDame47 Towson 81, UNCWilmington 68 WestVirginia60, Texas58 South AabamaSt.73, MVSU65 Alcorn St.78, GramhlingSt. 53 Ark.-PineBluff 76,AlabamaA8M67 De awareSt 53, NCABT44 George Mason85, OldDominion 74 Hampton 59,CoppinSt.53 Howard57, SCState45 NC Central82, Md.-EasternShore54 Norfolk St.64,MorganSt.59 SouthernU.78,JacksonSt.58 Midwest lowaSt.83,Oklahoma64 Wright St.62,Loyolaof Chicago59 Far West N. Arizona62,SacramentoSt. 61 San Diego 69, Loyola Marymount68, OT
on Monday, Tedford will get $1.8 million in 2013, $1.8 million in
2014and $1.95millionin 2015, saving Cal at least $1.35 million
over the threeyears. — From staff andwire reports
Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST
Conference Arizona
W 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 4 4 2 2 1
L 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 7 7 8
Oregon ArizonaSt UCLA Stanford California Washington Colorado SouthernCal WashingtonSt. Utah Oregon St. Wednesday'sGames Stanford atArizona,6 p.m. Utah atOregonState, 7p.m. Thursday's Games Washingtonat UCLA,6 p.m. Cahfomiaat ArizonaState, 6:30 p.m. Coloradoat Oregon,7 p.m. Washington Stateat USC,8:30 p.m. Saturday's Games Stanford atArizonaState, 4 p.m. Utah atOregon,5p.m. Washington Stateat DCLA, 7p m Sunday's Games California atArizona,4 p.m. Coloradoat OregonState, 6 p.m. Washingtonat USC,7 p.m.
Overall W 19 18 17 16 14 13 13 14 9
L 2 4 5 6 8 8 9 7 13
11 11
10 11 11 11
Polls The APTop25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press'college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, recordsthroughFeb.3,total pointsbasedon25 points fora first-place votethroughonepointfor a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: Record Pts Pr v 1.1ndiana(58) 20-2 1, 61 5 3 2. Florida(7) 18-2 1, 5 3 6 4 3. Michigan 20-2 1,490 1 4. Duke 19-2 1,41 3 5 5.Kansas 19 2 1,350 2 6.Gonzaga 21-2 1,249 7 7.Arizona 19-2 1,248 8 8. Miami 17-3 1,132 14 9. Syracuse 18-3 1,091 6 10.OhioSt. 17-4 1,033 11 11. Louisville 18-4 1,01 8 12 12. MichiganSt. 1 8 4 994 13 17-4 78 2 18 13. Kansas St.
54. BryceMolder 55.JohnHuh 56. Cameron Tringale 57. GaryWoodland 58. BoVanPelt 59. ErikCompton 60. DavidHearn 60. VijaySingh 62. J.J.Henry 63. HarrisEnglish 64. TedPotter, Jr. 65.JohnSenden 66. LukeGuthrie 67. JonasBtixt
68.JohnsonWagner 69. Casey Witenberg 70. MattEvery 71. JustinHicks 72. JasonKokrak 73.JasonDay 74. Stephen Ames 74. DickyPride 76. PadraigHarrington 76. lanPoulter 78. JeffKlauk 79. Sang-MoonBae 80. BudCauley 81. RichardH.Lee 82. Graham DeLaet 83. MarkWilson 84. BenCurtis
85. LucasGlover 86. TagRidings 87. StewartCink 88. BenCrane 89. SteveMarino 90. BrianHarman 91. JerryKelly 92. JeffMaggert 93. RossFisher 94. DougLaBege0 95. ScottGardiner
wYou want a bun, too? That'll
be another five bucks."
14. Butler 18-4 7 7 4 15. NewMexic o 1 9 - 3 660 16. Creighton 20-3 57 8 17. Cincinnati 18-4 5 5 2 17-5 4 5 4 18. Minnesota 18-4 39 0 19. Oregon 20. Georgetown 1 6 - 4 36 4 21. Missouri 16-5 24 5 22. OklahomaSt. 15-5 235 23. Pittsburgh 1 8-5 2 0 7 15-5 13 7 24. Marquette 1 8-4 1 3 2 25. NotreDame
21 24 23 10 17 25
Dthersreceivingvotes:Mississippi 75, NCState 64, ColoradoSt. 49, WichitaSt. 49, Memphis 44, Wisconsin28,Saint Mary's(Cat)27,LouisianaTech 24, Kentucky21, SanDiegoSt. 17, UNLV13, Saint Louis 8,UCLA8,VCU8, Akron 4,Virginia 4, Uconn 2, Belmont1. USA TodayTop26 Poll The top 25teamsin the USAToday men's college basketballpoll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughFeb.3, points basedon25 points for a first-placevotethroughonepoint for a25th-place vote and last week's ranking: R ecord Pts Pvs 1. Indiana(25) 20 2 766 3 2. Florida(6) 18-2 742 4 3. Michigan 20-2 6 9 0 2 4. Duke 19-2 68 3 5 5.Kansas 19-2 65 4 1 6.Gonzaga 21-2 6 1 4 7 7. Arizona 20 2 6 0 1 8 8. MichiganState 18- 4 518 9 9. Syracuse 18-3 5 1 4 6 10. OhioState 17-4 5 0 2 11 11. Miami 17-3 48 5 15 12. Louisville 18-4 4 7 0 13 13. Creighton 20-3 36 9 17 14. Butler 18-4 3 2 5 10 15. KansasState 1 7 - 4 314 21 16. NewMexic o 1 9 - 3 295 22 17. Cincinnati 18-4 26 5 23 18. Minnesota 17-5 19 4 24 19 Oregon 18 4 179 12 20. Missouri 16-5 14 3 18 21. Georgetown 1 6-4 1 3 8 22. WichitaState 1 9 - 4 83 14 23. Mississippi 17 - 4 69 16 24. Oklahoma State 15-5 57 25. Pittsburgh 1 8-5 5 4 25. SanDiegoState 16-5 54 20 Dthersreceivingvotes: NotreDame47, Colorado State38,Marquette38,VCU33, Wisconsin 25, N.C. State 24, Memphis19,Saint Mary's18, Southern Miss. 13, UNLV12, Belmont 7, LouisianaTech6, Kentucky4, MiddleTennessee4, UCLA4, Akron2, Oklahoma 2,Saint Louis1. Monday's Games East Bryant66, FairleighDickinson53 Monmouth(NJ)69, CCSU63 PennSt. 69, Purdue61 Quinnipiac78,MountSt. Mary's55 SacredHeart76, Wagner47 South Alabama A8M59, Ark.-Pine Bluff 48 AppalachianSt.67, Georgia Southern54 Belmont59,MoreheadSt.45 Chattanooga 63, Wofford 44 Coll. of Charleston63, UNC-Greensboro 43 Elon 60,W.Carolina 51 FloridaGulfCoast66, NorthFlorida 50 Furman59, Samford 55 GramblingSt.57, Alcorn St.46 Hampton68, CoppinSt. 59 MVSU53,AlabamaSt.48 Md.-EasternShore72, NCCentral 53 MorganSt. 57, Norfolk St 48 N. Kentucky77, ETSU76 NC ABT75, DelawareSt.53 SC State54 Howard53 SC-upstate78, Lipscomb62 SE Missouri69,Austin Peay51 Southernu.56,JacksonSt.54 Stetson72,Jacksonville 51 Tennessee Tech71,TennesseeSt.68, OT TexasA8M74, LSU57 UT-Martin 75, E.Kentucky60 Midwest MichiganSt. 61, Michigan46 Far West N. Arizona76, S. utah 74,OT Utah Valley87,WallaWalla 27
NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE All Times PST
6 3 0 4 1 3 4 3 1 4 4 0 3 6 0
12 11 9 8 6
Northeast Division
30 22 20 19 27 26 19 22 21 26
GP W L OT PtsGF GA 8 6 1 1 13 24 19 8 6 2 0 12 26 17 9 5 3 1 11 25 16 9 4 5 0 8 22 27 9 3 5 1 7 27 33 Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA TampaBay 8 6 2 0 12 39 21 Carolina 8 4 4 0 8 22 24 Winnipeg 8 3 4 1 7 24 32 Florida 8 3 5 0 6 20 30 Washington 9 2 6 1 5 21 33
Boston Montreal Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
Western Conference Central Division
96. RobertStreb 97. GregChalmers 97. BobEstes 99. TroyMaffeson 100 JasonDufner 101. Peter Tomasulo 102. WilliamMcGirt 102. Lee Wiliams 104. Y.E.Yang 105. Chez Reavie 106 CharieBejan 106. MartinFlores 106. Tom Giffis 109 BooWeekley 110. Kyle Stanley 111. Tim Herron 112. FabianGomez 113. Hank Kuehne 114. DanieSum l merhays 115.Seung-YulNoh 116. Geoff Ogilvy 117 JohnMaffinger 118. DavidLynn 119. AlistairPresneg 120. ColKnost t
97 97 96
93 92 92 90 90 89 89 88 87 87 86 86 86 85 84 83 80 78 78 78 78 76 73 73 71 71 68 67 66 66 64 63 63 62 61 60 60 57 55 53 52 52 52 51 51 50 50 49 48 47 47 47 46 44 43 42 42 41 41 40 38 35 34 34
$138,733 $133,801 $83,761 $125,645 $130,812 $127,758 $117,373 $102,147 $158,058 $182,378 $114,973 $94,344 $96,728 $119,076 $142,800 $122,494 $186,593 $123,590 $178,976 $160,164 $83,067 $158,558 $173,600 $175,000 $102,169 $73,822 $70,373 $137,339 $157,824 $155,000 $101,725 $53,332 $106,982 $124,133 $136,400 $106,646 $53,886 $55,542 $43,185 $73,432 $49,214 $101,190 $89,424 $42,007 $78,560 $84,165 $87,600 $37,072 $48,315 $36,221 $72,757 $61,000 $73,000 $45,240 $48,721 $56,106 $84,216 $41,440 $47,040 $34,006 $47,928 $41,480 $35,728 $46,802 $31,476 $37,184 $43,399
MO TO R SPORTS IndyCar
2013 Indycar Schedule GP W L OT PtsGF GA March 24 —HondaGrandPrix of St. Petersburg, Fla., 1.8-milestreet course Chicago 9 7 0 2 16 28 20 April 7 — HondaIndy GrandPrix of Alabama,BirSt. Louis 8 6 2 0 12 31 19 mingham,Ala.,2.38-mile roadcourse Detroit 8 4 3 1 9 22 24 April 21 ToyotaGrandPrix of LongBeach, Calif., Nashville 8 3 2 3 9 14 20 1.968-milestreetcourse Columbus 9 3 5 1 7 18 28 May 5 —SaoPaulo Indy 300, SaoPaulo, Brazil, Northwest Division 2.6-mile streetcourse GP W L OT PtsGF GA May 26 — Indianapolis 500, Indianapolis Motor Vancouver 9 5 2 2 12 24 22 Speedway,Indianapolis, 2.5-mileoval Edmonton 9 4 3 2 10 22 24 June 1 —Chevrolet Detroit Belle IsleGrandPrix Minnesota 9 4 4 1 9 21 24 —Race1, Detroit, 2.07-milestreetcourse Colorado 9 4 5 0 8 21 23 June 2 — ChevroletDetroit Belle Isle GrandPrix Calgary 6 1 3 2 4 16 24 —Race2, Detroit, 2.07 mile street course Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA June 8 — x-TexasMotor Speedway, Fort Worth, Texas,1.5-mile oval San Jose 9 7 1 1 15 31 16 June 15 — MilwaukeeIndyFest, WestAllis, Wis., Anaheim 8 6 1 1 13 29 23 1-mile oval Phoenix 10 4 4 2 10 29 27 June 23 lowa Com Indy 250, Newton, lowa, Dallas 10 4 5 1 9 20 25 .875-mileoval Los Angeles 7 2 3 2 6 16 23 ay, Long NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime July 7 — Pocono Intemational Racew Pond,Pa., 2.5-mileoval loss. July 13 — HondaIndy Toronto—Race 1, Toronto, Monday's Games 1.75-milestreetcourse Carolina 4, Toronto1 July14 — HondaIndy Toronto—Race2, Toronto, Dallas 3,Colorado2 1.75-mile streetcourse Phoenix2, Minnesota1 Aug. 4 —HondaIndy200 at Mid-ohio, Lexington, Vancouver3, Edmonton 2,OT Dhio, 2.258-mileroadcourse Anaheim 2, SanJose 1 Today's Games Aug. 25 —GoProIndyGrandPrix of Sonoma,Calil., 2.303-mileroadcourse N.Y.Rangersat NewJersey, 4p.m. Sept.1 — Grand Prix of Baltimore, 2.04-milestreet PittsburghatN.Y.Islanders, 4 p.m. course TorontoatWashington, 4p.m. Oct. 5 — Grand Pri x of Houston- Race1, 1.7-mile Los Angeleat s Columbus, 4p.m streetcourse Buffalo atOttawa,4:30 p.m. Oct. 6 —GrandPrix of Houston—Race2, 1.7-mile TampaBayat Philadelphia, 4:30 p.m. Calgaryat Detroit, 4:30p.m. streetcourse Florida atWinnipeg 5p.m. Oct. 19 — x-MAVTV 500, Fontana, Calif., 2-mile Nashville atSt.Louis, 5 p.m. oval x-night race ChicagoatSan Jose,730p.m Wednesday'sGames BostonatMontreal, 4:30p.m. DEALS Anaheim at Colorado, 6:30p.m. Dallas atEdmonton, 7 p.m.
Transactions
Professional ATP WorldTourVTROpen Monday
At ClubNayat deCampoLasSalinas Vina del Mar, Chile Purse: $467,800(WT260) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia,del. Martin Alund,
Argentina, 4 6,7-5, 6-3.
FilippoVolandri, Itay,def. LeonardoMayer,Argen-
tina,6-2, 6-1.
GOLF PGA Tour
8 12 9 14 16 15 11 18 17 20 25 22 19 21 23
Others receivingvotes:GreenBay31, Nebraska 20, WestVirginia 20,MichiganSt. 19,Michigan13, Toledo11,Kansas7, UTEP5, Viffanova4,Washington 4, Miami 2, MiddleTennessee 2, Pacilic 2, SMU2, Creighton1, lowa1Wyoming1.
HOCKEY
Pittsburgh 9 NewJersey 8 N.Y. Islanders 8 N.Y.Rangers 8 Philadelphia 9
TENNIS
Poll AP Women'sTop26 The top 25teamsin theTheAssociated Press' women'scollegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotes in parentheses,recordsthrough Feb. 3, total points based on25 points for afirst-place votethrough one point for a25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking: R ecord Pts Pr v 1. Baylor(37) 20-1 997 1 2. NotreDame 20-1 9 5 5 2 3. Uconn(3) 20-1 928 3 4. Stanford 20-2 8 6 2 4 5. Duke 20-1 8 4 5 5 6. Calilornia 19 2 80 7 6 7. Maryland 18-3 75 3 10 8.PennSt. 17-3 64 2 7 9. Georgia 19-3 6 3 2 13 10. Kentucky 19-3 63 0 11. Louisville 19-4 5 5 3 12. Tennesse e 17-5 51 2 13. Purdue 18-3 50 2 14. TexasA&M 1 7 - 5 497 15. SouthCarolina 19- 3 480 16. NorthCarolina 20- 3 458 17. UCLA 17-4 4 0 9 18. Dayton 19-1 39 7 19. FloridaSt 18-4 22 3 20. Delaware 18-3 2 0 5 21. Colorado 16-5 16 2 22. Oklahoma St. 1 5 - 5 128 23. Oklahom a 16-5 12 7 24. Syracuse 18 3 80 25. lowaSt. 15-5 71
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA
9 20
Women's college
BASKETBALL
milliOn on SuPerBOWI on the Super Bowl. The Gaming Control Board says unaudited
girls basketball team put up a
Boys basketbalI
the preseason No.1 who held
The shop is located at 550 S.W. Industrial Way, Suite150. For questions, call 541-318-6188.
fallS tORegiS —The Culver
Lorenz (2); Morris (2);Rickman.
time it's Indiana. The Hoosiers,
supply their own pair of skis.
PREP SPORTS Gulver girls dasketdall
Trt-Rtver Conference CULVER (24) — ChanteffeSeehawer 7, McKinney 5,Lewis4, Sandy4, Hoke2, Slaght1, Martinez 1, Fritz, Johnson,Harrison,Robinett. Totals 7111724. REGIS l56) — R.Lorenz15, Morris11 Malcom10, Rickman 7, R. Lorrenz6, Vandeen2, Webb 2, Chamber in 3, Stuckart, K Webb Totals 17 411 56. Culver 4 7 8 5 — 24 Regis 17 16 11 11 — 66 Three-point goals — Culver:McKinney.Regis:
college basketball poll. This
FOOTBALL Fans det record$98.9
freshments. Participants should
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore Drst. by Unrversal Ucrrck www.gocomrcs.com/rnthebleachers
Thursday Boys basketball: Cu ver atEastLinn Christian, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball: Culver at EastLinn Christian, 6:30 p.m Alpine skiing: OSSA atHoodoo, Slalom, 4 p.m. Nordic skiing: ONSNO freestyle andrelay racesat Hoodoo, 6 p.m. Wrestling: Sistersat RidgeviewJV 6p.m.
Girls basketball
SNOWBOARDING
IN THE BLEACHERS
FedExcup Leaders Through Feb.3 Rank Player Points YTD Money 1. BrandtSnedeker 782 $1,689,920 2. BrianGa y 582 $1,089,181 3. Phil Mickelson 546 $1,152,525 4. DustinJohnson 516 $1,154,125 5. RusselHenl l ey 515 $1,033,080 6. CharlesHowell ffl 507 $991,944 7. TigerWoods 500 $1,098,000 8. TimClark 320 $620,102 9. ScottPiercy 300 $631,600 10. SteveStricker 300 $665,000 11.JoshTeater 299 $626,400 12. DavidLingmerth 283 $526,008 13. MattKuchar 230 $457,960 14. Jimmy Walker 228 $375,620 15. RyanPalmer 210 $454,248 207 16. RobertGarrigus $419,310 17. BiffHaas 207 $427,100 18. NickWatney 204 $408,681 19. BrianStuard 194 $353,543 20. RickieFowler 187 $416,850 21. Keegan Bradley 186 $365,793 181 22. Brendon deJonge $329,136 23. ScottStagings 179 $366,800 24. BubbaWatson 179 $415,600 25. Ryan Moore 178 $360,600 177 26. James Hahn $352,796 27. Billy Horschel 172 $298,367 28. NicholasThompson 169 $274,668 29. JohnRoffins 168 $205,203 30. ScottLangley 163 $324,800 31. HunterMahan 150 $245,715 32. Brendan Steele 145 $261,612 144 33. ChrisKirk $252,373 34. CarlPettersson 140 $236,040 35. AaronBaddeley 137 $253,036 36. JeffOverton 133 $234,659 37. Tomm yGainey 128 $238,876 38. Kevin Chappeff 126 $215,973 39. PatPerez 120 $206,600 40 MarcLeishman 120 $218,600 41. Webb Simpson 116 $215,667 42. CharlieWi 111 $128,158 43. George McNeiff 108 $117,320 44. KevinStreelman 107 $165,573 45. RobertoCastro 105 $124,569 46. BradFritsch 104 $184,200 47. KevinStadler 103 $172,128 48. JustinLeonard 101 $95,578 49. RickyBames 101 $139,227 49. MattJones 101 $141,120 51. K.J.Choi 100 $1 74,344 52. CharleyHoffman 99 $155,609 53.ZachJohnson 98 $139,120
BASEBALL
American League DETROITIG T ERS Agreedtotermswith RHPMax Scherzeronaone-yearcontract. HOUSTONASTROS— Traded SS Jed Lowrie adn RHPFernandoRodriguezto Oaklandfor 1B Chris Carter,RHPBradPeacockandCMaxStassi. National League COLORADO ROCKIE S— Named Bob Apodaca assistant minor leaguepitching coordinator, Mark Strittmatterminorleaguecatching coordinator; Andy Stoverassistantminorleaguerehabilitation coordinator; Andy McKayminor leaguepeakperformancecoordinator;GlenaffenHil mana ger, DaveSchuler pitching coach, DaveHajekcoachandMikeJaspersonstrength and conditioningtrainer lor ColoradoSprings (PCL); DuaneEspydevelopmentsupervisor, Kevin Riggs manager,Darryl Scott pitching coach, Darin Everson hitting coach,Chris Doveymedical trainer and Brian Buck strengthandconditioning trainer forTulsa (TL); FredNelsondevelopmentsupervisor andDave Burbapitching coachfor Modesto(Cal); MarvFoley developmentsupervisor andFredOcasio manager of Asheville(SAL);RonGideondevelopmentsupervisor, DrewSaylor manager, FrankGonzales pitching coach, WarrenSchae fer coachandCasey Papas medlcal trainerforTri-City (NWL);andTonyDiaz development supervisor,AnthonySanders manager, LeeStevens hitting coach andJohn Duff medica trainer forGrand Junction(Pioneer). SAN FRANCI SCO GIANTS Cl aimed INF Tony AbreuoffwaiversfromKansas City.
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONIO SPURS— RecalledC AronBaynes from Austin (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League CINCINNATIBENGALS—Reinstated LBBrandon Joiner from thereserve/did not reportlist. DALLAS COWBOYS—Reassignedreceivers coach Jimmy Robinson to senior coaching consultant. NamedDerekDooley wldereceivers coach. DETROIT LIONS— ReleasedWRTitusYoung. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague BOSTONBRUINS— Recalled FRyanSpoonerfrom Providence (AHL)onanemergency basis. COLUMBUS BLUEJACKETS—Placed D Adrian Aucoin oninjuredreserve,retroactiveto Jan.29. RecagedDCodyGoloubeffromSpringfield (AHL). DALLASSTARS—Activated F DerekRoyand G Cris Nilstorpfrominjured reserve.AssignedNilstorp and DJordieBennto Texas(AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS—Recalled GPetr Mrazek and FToma s Tatar fromGrand Rapids (AHL). Reassigned G ThomasMccol umto GrandRapids.Placed DBrendanSmith oninjured reserve. NEW YORKRANGERS— Traded F Mike Rupp to Minnesotafor F DarroffPoweand F Nick Palmieri. Recalled J.T. F Miler andFBrandon Mashinter from
Connecticut(AHL).
COLLEGE BOISESTATE—Suspended SLee Hightower and TE HaydenPlinkefromschool. CINCINN ATI—Named Dan McNal y men's assistantsoccercoach. JOHNJAY NamedCarmen Pagan-Colon assistantsoftballcoach. NORTHLAND — NamedKim Falkenhagenwomen' s volleyballcoach. STEPHEN F.AUSTIN— Named Lance Guidry
defensivesecondary coach, JeremyMoses quarterbacks coachandDevinDucotedefensivebackscoach. Promotedoffensive line coachChris Truaxoffensive coordinator.Reassignedassistant headfootball coach Ar ingtonNunnto running backscoach.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
Bazers an onto eatT'woves The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS — With Portland on the vergeofa massive collapse,LaMarcus Aldridge leaped to swat away Minnesota's comeback. The Trail Blazers started their six-game
road trip by remedying a sloppy perforJason Franson /The Associated Press
Vancouver Canucks' Alexandre Burrows, left, and Edmonton Oilers Ladislav Smid scrap for the puck as Jordan Schroeder looks on during the first period of Monday night's game in Edmonton, Alberta.
Canucks get win over Oilers in OT The Associated Press EDMONTON, AlbertaChris Tanev picked a perfect time to score his first NHL
goal. Tanev scored at 4:40 of overtime, and the Vancouver Canucks rallied for their season-high third straight victory, 3-2 over the Edmonton Oilers on Monday night. Tanev beamed after h e
finally scored a goal in his 63rd NHL game. "It took a while, but I'm happy I was able to get it," he said as he teammates chanted his name in the dressing room. "There was a l i t tle give-and-go, and al l t h eir guys were watching them. "I was able to come in off the blue line and I shot it. I think one of our guys screened the goalie and it went in. I'm pretty happy." Vancouver coach A l a in Vigneault was thrilled to see the 23-year-olddefenseman scored his first goal in such clutch fashion. "He's a young player who has been with us for quite some time now," he said. "For him to get that goal at the time that he did to win was very good for the whole group. Everybody was really happy for him." With just 2:17 remaining in regulation, and the Oilers holding a 2-1 lead, the Canucks tied it with a long shot from Kevin Bieksa that beat goalie Devan Dubnyk sticksideand forced overtime. Taylor Hall was awarded a penalty shot for the Oilers with 2:47 gone in OT, after he was hooked down by Daniel
NHL ROUNDUP Sedin on a breakaway, but Hall was stopped by Roberto Luongo, who finished with 23 saves. Jannik Hansen also scored i n regulation for t h e C a -
nucks (5-2-2), who extended their lead atop the Northwest Division. Also on Monday:
Coyotes......... . . . . . . ... 2 W ild..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 G LENDALE, A r i z . Mike Smith stopped 21 shots, Lauri Korpikoski and Martin Hanzal both scored, and Phoenix extended its point streak to five games with a win over Minnesota. S tars ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Avalanche..... . . . . . . . . . . . 2 DENVER — Jamie Benn scored his first two goals of the season, and Dallas beat Colorado, spoiling the night for Milan Hejduk as the Avalanche forward was honored
for playing in his 1,000th NHL game. Hurricanes...... . . . . . . . . . . 4
Maple Leafs.......... . . ... 1 TORONTO — Jordan Staal scored his first goal with the Hurricanes, and his brother Eric added the winner in Carolina's victory over Toronto. D ucks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 S harks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 ANAHEIM, Calif. — Saku Koivu scored the tying goal early in the third period, defenseman Sheldon Souray netted the winner with 6:39 left, and rookie Viktor Fasth made 25 saves as Anaheim handed San Jose its first regulation loss of the season.
MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
No. 25 Notre Dame
falls to No. 9Syracuse The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Syracuse's Jim Boeheim is just like any coach — lose a couple ofconference games and it's time to start looking for those worry beads. N o n e e d to sea r c h
Hannah Foslien /The Associated Press
Minnesota Timberwolves' Ricky Rubio, rear, defends Portland Trail Blazers' Damian Lillard (0) during first quarter of Monday night's game in Minneapolis. Portland won 100-98. Pacers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Bulls ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 INDIANAPOLIS — David West scored 29 points and Paul George had 21 points, 11 rebounds and five assists, leading Indiana past short-handed Chicago for a share of the Central Division lead. The Pacers have won three straight and extended their home winning streak to 14, matching the team's longest since 2002-03. H eat...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 B obcats ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 MIAMI — L eBron James scored 31 points and Chris Bosh added 23 to lead Miami to its 10th consecutive victory over Charlotte. Dwyane Wade had 20 points and 12 rebounds for the Heat, who have won nine of their last 10 at home. James was 13 for 14 from the field, for a careerbest 93 percent shooting. The Heat improved to 19-3 on their home floor. K nicks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 P istons..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 NEW YORK — Tyson Chandler tied a franchise record with his third straight 20-rebound game, Carmelo Anthony scored 27 points, and New York cruised to its fifth consecutive victory. In a game that was decided early, Chandler played long enough to grab his 20th rebound midway through the fourth quarter. 7 6ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Magic .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61 PHILADELPHIA — Spencer Hawes had 21 points and 14 rebounds and Jrue
Holiday had 13 points and 14 assists to lead Philadelphia to its third straight win. Nick Young had 15 points for the Sixers, who won three straight games for the first time since the final three games of November. J azz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 K ings...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 1 SALT LAKE CITY — Randy Foye had 20 points, including six in overtime, and Utah defeated Sacramento. Paul Millsap added 14, with a key block, step-back jumper and rebound in the extra session for the Jazz, who used an 8-0 fourth-quarter run to take the lead with 2:40 left in regulation. Thunder..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 M avericks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 1 OKLAHOMA CITY — Russell Westbrook scored 24 points, Kevin Durant had 19 points and 10 rebounds, and Oklahoma City blew out Dallas while avoiding a third straight overtime game between the teams. W izards ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Clippers ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..90
WASHINGTON — M a rtell Webster scored 21 points, and Washington broke a four-game losing streak against a Los Angeles Clippers team missing Blake Griffin and Chris PauL With Griffin nursing a strained left hamstring and Paul still dealing with a bruised right kneecap, the Wizards pulled away with a 7-0 run late in the fourth quarter, spurred by a pair of big offensive rebounds by Nene.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
anymore. C.J. Fair had 18 p oints and 10 rebounds, freshman Jerami Grant scored aseason-high 14 points, and No. 9 Syracuse beat No. 25 Notre Dame 63-47 o n M o n day night to snap a two-game losing streak that had dropped the Orange three spots in the rankings. "This was a big win," Boeheim said. "Obviously, Notre Dame beat u s l a s t y e ar. When you lose two games in a row in this league, you get nervous. Everybody does. This is a real good bounceback win." Syracuse (19-3, 7-2 Big East), which wa s c oming off consecutive road losses against Villanova and Pittsburgh, has only three conference losses in its past 32 Big East games and has won a school-record 36 straight games at home, the longest active streak in Division I. Notre Dame (18-5, 6-4) had won three straight. It was the first meeting between the teams since the Irish handed Syracuse its only conferenceloss lastseason, 67-58 at Purcell Pavilion last January. The Orange, unbeaten at the t ime and ranked No. I, were missing shot-blocking, 7-foot center
mance with a large dose of their All-Star big man. Aldridge had 25 points, 13 rebounds and a blocked shot in the closing seconds to help the Blazers hang on to beat the Timberwolves 100-98 on Monday night for their fifth win in their past seven games. "Teams are going to pressure us, so I think it's learning," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "But winning on the road is not easy and we needed this one." Wes Matthews scored 22 pointsand Damon Lillard added 21, but they each had five of Portland's 28 turnovers, the most in regulation by any NBA team all season. The Blazers never trailed in the game and led by 19 points with 12 minutes left, but the Wolves went to a small lineup and scored on20 of their first 22 possessions in the fourth quarter until misfiring on their final two. Lillard had two turnovers in the last 63 seconds, and the second one turned into a fast-break layup for J.J. Barea that cut the lead to 97-96 with 36.9 seconds left. Aldridge calmly swished a 21-footer, and Dante Cunningham answered with a dunk on the other end. Luke Babbitt missed one of two free throws, giving the Wolves a chance to tie the game. Aldridge walled off the pick-and-roll with Nikola Pekovic, followed Ricky Rubio across the court and deflected his fade-away with 7.9 seconds left. Asked to describe his clutch shot and block, Aldridge said, "I'll go defense first, because defense wins games." He added: "He tried to lull me to sleep, and I kind of waited on it and blocked it." Aldridge missed two free throws on the other end, but Cunningham's 18-foot tying attempt fell short. "Even though we turned the ball over a lot, we let it go. We didn't let it bother us," Lillard said. "We just stayed in the moment and when it came time to get the job done andwin the game, we did." Rubio had 10 of his career-high-tying 14 assists in the fourth quarter and finished with 15 points in 34 minutes, both season highs.Cunningham scored a career-high 23 points on 11 for 17 shooting, and Barea added 17 points. "If we play like that, we can play with anybody," Pekovic said. "It was great that at the end we got a chance to tie the game, but we didn't and probably that's some way of punishment. We didn't play hard for 48 minutes." Aldridge was 12 for 17 from the field. All but one of his makes were 15-foot jumpers or further out. Matthews has 78 points in three games against the Wolves this season. He hurt his right ankle on Friday at Utah and was still too sore to play in the rematch against the Jazz on Saturday, but he bounced back just fine. "The only thing we have to do is bring the energy. Today it was awful in the first quarter. Nobody had any," Rubio sa>d. Nicolas Batum, his sore right wrist clearly still bothering him, finished with four points and a team-high seven turnovers. He has only 39 points in his last five games, lessthan half of his season average of nearly 16 points per game. "If he or the trainer says he can't play, then I can't play him, but he's very important to what we do," Stotts said. Also on Monday:
NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPST
Eastern Conference sr
Kevin Rivoli /The Associated Press
Syracuse's C.J. Fair grabs a rebound next to Notre Dame's Zach Auguste during the first half of Monday night's game in Syracuse, N.Y. Fab Melo in that game because ofan academic issue, and on Monday night senior James Southerland, the team's most consistent outside threat and third-leading scorer, missed his sixth straight game because of an eligibility matter related to academics. Also on Monday: No. 23 Pittsburgh...... . . . 56 Seton Hall ...... . . . . . . . . . 46 PITTSBURGH — Lamar Patterson scored 12 points and Pittsburgh pulled away late from Seton Hall. Freshman center Steven Adams added eight points, 15 rebounds and two blocks for the Panthers (19-5, 7-4 Big
East).
d-Miami d-New York d-Indiana
Chicago Brooklyn Atlanta Milwaukee Boston Philadelphia Detroit Toronto Orlando Cleveland Washington
Charlotte
W t 31 14 31 15 29 19 29 19 28 19 26 20 25 21 24 23 21 26 18 31 17 31 14 34 14 34 12 35
.674 tit .604 3 t/t .604 3tit
.596 4 .565 5'/t .543 6 t/z
.511 8 .447 11 .367 15 .354 15t/t .292 18'it
.292 1st/t .255 20 36 .234 21
u WesternConference
d-SanAntonio d-Oklahoma City d-LA. Clippers Memphis GoldenState Denver Utah Houston Portland LA. Lakers Dallas Minnesota Sacramento Phoenix NewOrleans d-divisionleader
Pct GB .689
W
L
Pct GB 776
36 34 30 30 30
12 16 16 17 18
.750 1'/t 680 4'/t
38 u
27 22
26 25 22 20 18 17 16 15
23 23 26 28 27 33 32 33
Mottday'sGames Philadelphia 78, Orlando61 Washington 98, LA. Clippers90 Indiana111,Chicago101 NewYork99,Detroit 85 Miami99,Charlotte94 Portland100,Minnesota98 Oklahoma City112, Dalas 91 Utah98,Sacramento91,OT
Today'sGames
Atlantaat Indiana,4 p.m. LA. LakersatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. GoldenStateatHouston,5 p.m. Phoeni xatMemphis,5p.m. Milwaukee at Denver,6 pm. WedtIesday'sGames
CharlotteatCleveland,4 p.m. IndianaatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. BostonatToronto, 4p.m. LA. Clippers at Orlando,4p.m. NewYorkatWashington, 4 p.m. MemphisatAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. Brooklynat Detroit,4:30 p.m. Houstonat Miami,4:30 p.m. Phoenixat NewOrleans, 5 p.m. GoldenStateatOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Portlandat Dalas, 5:30p.m. Milwaukee atUtah,6 p.m SanAntonioatMinnesota, 6p.m.
.652 6'/z 638 7 .625 7'/z .551 11 .531 12 .521 12'/t .458 15'/t .417 1Tr''t
.400 18 ,340 21t/t
.333 21'/z 313 22t/t
Summaries Mottday'sGames
Blazers100, Timberwolves 98 PORTLAND (100)
Batum2-40-04, Aldridge12-171-525, Hickson 4 60 08, Lillard9-173-321, Matthews7-114-422, Claver1-2 0-02, Leonard1-2 0-02, Smith2-3 2-2 7, Barton1 40-0 Z Babbitt 2-41 2 7.Totals 41-70 11-16 100.
MINNESOT A(98) Kirilenko1-40-02, DWilliams0-51-21, Pekovic
5-11 3-313, Rubio4-9 7B15, Ridnour 5-90-010, Shved3-101-2 8, Barea7-132-2 17,Cunningham 11-17 1-223, Stiemsma2-2 0 04, Gelabale25 0-0 5.Totals 40-8515-1998. Portland 25 24 28 23 — 100 Minnesota 18 20 20 40 — 98 3-PointGoais—Portland 7-18 (Mathews4-8, Babbit 2-4, Smith1-1,Ba tum0-t Barton0-1, ClaverQ-1, Lilard 02), Minnesot313 a (Gelabale 12, Ba Iea1-4, Shved 1-4, D.Williams0-1, Ridnour0-2). FouledOu t—None. Rebounds —Portland45(Aldridge13), Minnesota38(Petovic 11). Assists —Portland23(Lilard 6), Minnesota23(Rubio 14). TotalFouls—Portland24, Minnesota20.A—13,446
(19,356).
Thunder112, Mavericks 91 DALLAS(91) Marion 10-14 2-2 23, Nowitzki 3-11 4 4 10, B.James1-3 0-0 2, D.Collisori 3-7 2-2 8 Mayo410 0-0 8, Brand2-7 0-2 4, Crowder3-11 3-3 10, M.James 0-2 0-0 0,DaJones 0-3 0-0 0,Wright24 0 0 4, Do.Jones5 8 5-7 15, Beaubois3-7 0-0 7 Totals 36-8716-20 91. OKLAHOMA CITY(112) Dttrant 6-0 5-619, Ibaka 4-73-412, Perkins2 3 3 4 7, Westttrook 8 168 9 24, Sefolosha3-9 0-07, Martin 7-120 017, NCollison2-30 04,Thabeet3 5
0-06, Jackson 3-70-28, Liggins2-41-25, PJories Cole 2-60-0 4. Totals 41-8116-24 99. 21 22 20 31 — 94 0 40 00, Maynor1-50-03, Drton 0-10-00. Totals Charlotte 41-87 20-27 112. Miami 22 25 19 33 — 99 Dallas 22 22 23 24 — 91 Oklahoma City 2 9 3 9 24 20 — 112
76ers78, Magic 61
Wizards 98, Clippers 90
ORLANDO (61)
Harkless 4-13 2 2 10, McRoberts 212 0 0 5, L.A. CLIPPERS (90) t/ucevic 3-103-4 9, Smith2-10 0-0 4, Moore9-17 Butler6-162-215,0dom1-31-23,Jordari3-41-2 0-018, O'Quirin 1-30-0 2, Nicholson5-91-2 u, 7, Biedsoe7-143317, Green 3-6006,JaCrawford Tttrkoglti 0-3 0-0 0,Ayon1-30-0 z Totals 27-80 10-205-628,Barnes4-100-08, 1'uriafO-t 0-00, HiI 6-8 61. 3-5 0-0 6 Totals37-7912-15 90. PHILADELPHIA(78) WASHINGTON (98) Turner2-6 0-04, T.Young3-5 0-06, Hawes9-17 Webster6-104-4 21, Nene5-11 5-7 15, Okafor 2-3 21, Holiday6-151-213, N.Young7-150-015, 4-9 1-4 9, Wall 6-181-3 13, Temple 7-12 1-2 15, Allen 5-9 0-0 10,Ivey2-4 0-0 5,Wright 0-3 0-0 0, Price 2-41-2 5,Seraphin1-61-2 3, Ariza3-7 3-310, Wilkins 0-20-0 0,Moitltrie 2-3 0-0 4,Mack0-0 0-0 Jo.Crawford1-30-0 3, Singleton2-4 0-04. Totals 0.Totals 36-79 3-5 78. 37-8417-27 98. Orlando 16 19 11 15 — 61 LA. Clippers 16 3 0 20 24 — 90 Philadelphia 28 1 41 8 18 — 78 Washington 24 27 21 26 — 98
Knicks 99, Pistons 85
Pacers 111, Bulls 101
CHICAGO (101) Deng4-185-513, Boozer4-12 2-210, Gibson5-9 0-210, Robinson7-152-219, Hamilton 5-90-010, 131-213, Calderon7-120-015 Knight2-10 0-05, Teague1-20-02,Belinelli 9-13 5-624,Butler 3-84-4 Stcckey6-152-414, Jerebko4-7 0-08, Drummond 10, Cooit1-21-1 3 Totals 39-8819-22101. 1-6 0-2 2, Bynitm5-8 3-413, t/illaniteva3-90-0 6, INDIANA(111) Kravtsov1-10-0 2,English 0-00-0 0.Totals 38-90 George6-147-821, West11-187-1029, Hibbert 6-12 85. 3-11 0-0 6,Hill 7-105-522, Stepherison6-9 2-315, NEWYORK(99) THansbrotIgh3-72-48, Johnson0-02-2 2, Augltstin Anthony 10-17 44 27, Shumpert 2-3 2-2 8, 0-12-22 Mahinmi3-40-06,Young0-00-00.ToChandler4-90-2 8, Kidd1-70-0 3, Felton 2-50-0 tals 39-7427-34111. 4, Smith 5-151-216, Stoudemire8-144-4 20, PriChicago 29 25 22 25 — 101 gioni1-20-03, Novak2-50-06, Copeland1-I 2-2 Indiana 28 32 27 24 — 111 4, White0-1 0-00, BrewerO-00-00. Totals36-79 13-16 99. Detroit 13 23 22 27 — 85 91 (OT) New York 28 29 19 23 — 99 Jazz 98, Kings SACRAMNT E O(91) Salmons190-02,Thompson9-185-B23,Cottsins 5-8 0-0 10,Thomas6-133-3 17,TEvans7-15 Heat 99, Bodcats 94 6-10 20, Thornton3-12 2-2 9, FredeIte0-5 2-2 2, CHARLO TTE(94) Johnson1-1 0-0 2, Robinson2-4 0-04, Hayes1-2 Taylor 4-80-010, Adrien4-7 0-18, Biyombo1- 0-0 zTotals 35-8718-25 91. 40-0 2,Walker4-9 2-2 11,Henderson5-112-2 12, UTAH (98) Sessions4-910-1018, Mullens5-140-012, Gordon Ma.Williams 2-52-2 8, Miisap6-112-214, Jef6-16 2-316,WiliamsI-2 0-03, Haywood0-02-2 z ferson 7-171-2 15,Tinsley 0-1 0-0 0 Foye6-12 Totals 34-8018-20 94. 56 20, Burks5-722 14, Favors5 73 413, Kanter 2-4 0-0 4, Carroll 5-8 0-010.Totals 38-72 15MIAMI (99) James13-145-6 31,Haslem1-2 0-02, Bosh11- 18 98. 181-3 23,Chalmers1-61-1 3, Wade7-19 6-1020, Sacramento 22 2 1 23 18 7 — 91 Andersen 2-30-1 4,Batier250-05, Allen 283-37, Utah 20 24 18 22 14 — 98 DETROIT (85) Maxiel 1-4 0-0 2,Singler2-5 0-0 5, Monroe6-
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 20'I3
Signingday
Top national recruits
Continued from C1 Seventeen players plan to 1. Robert Nkemdiche, DE, announce their decisions on live TV. Some will put three Loganville, Ga., 6-5, 260 schools' ball caps in front of (LSU or Mississippi) them on a table to spike the 2. Vernon Hargreaves drama factor. III, DB, Tampa, 5-11, 185 We will learn, once and (Florida commitment) for all, at exactly 7:35 a.m. 3. Jaylon Smith, LB, Eastern time (4:35 a.m. in the Fort Wayne, Ind., 6West), whether consensus 3, 212 (Notre Dame No. I recruit Robert Nkemcommitment) diche, a 6-foot-4, 282-pound 4. Carl Lawson, DE, defensive end from LoganAlpharetta, Ga., 6-2, 253 ville, Ga., will join his older (Auburn commitment) brother, Denzel, at Ole Miss. 5. Laquon Treadwell, Word is Nkemdiche had canWR, Crete, III., 6-3, celed a planned visit to Loui198 (Mississippi siana State but then decided commitment) to go this past weekend. 6. Kenny Bigelow, DT, At 9:10 a.m., defensive end Elkton, Md., 6-3, 295 Carl Lawson is expected to (USC commitment) announce hiscollege choice. He committed to A u burn 7. Max Browne, QB, last spring, but Tigers coach Sammamish, Wash., 6-5, Gene Chizik was fired and 215 (USCcommitment) now Lawson is saidtobe con8. Derrick Green, RB, sidering Tennessee, Clemson Richmond, Va., 6-0, 220 and North Carolina. (Michigan commitment) Five minutes later, ac9. Kendall Fuller, DB, cording t o t h e p u b lished Olney, Md., 5-11, schedule, Matthew Thomas, 189 (Virginia Tech a linebacker at Booker T. commitment) Washington in Miami, will 10. Jalen Ramsey, DB, make his announcement. Nashville, 6-0, 190 (USC Will it be the University of commitment) Miami? He has been leaning — Rivals.com. toward Miami over Florida State, Florida, Alabama and Georgia. One of the biggest story- c ruiting e x pert f o r E l i t e lines this signing day is that Scouting Services, said both it is now cool for football schools benefit from playing players to go to Vanderbilt in the SEC. "Kids want to play in the and Ole Miss. Never mind that Vandy SEC, and if they're not getjust posted its first nine-win ting c alled b y A l a b ama, season since 1915, that it has Florida and LSU, they want been to the postseason just to play for their opponents," six times since the program's he said. " Vandy and O l e inception in 1890, or that this Miss are definitely reaping past season was the first time rewards. Even Kentucky is." the Commodores won five Fishbein s a i d Fl o r i da, Southeastern C o n f erence Ohio State, USC and UCLA games since 1935. That new- are all having great recruitfound success, and charis- ing years. matic coach James Franklin, Through the process, the are the reasons they landed a thletes get w r a pped u p quarterback John a t han in the hype. Lemming has McCrary f ro m E l l enwood been arecruiting guru for34 Cedar Grove (Ga.). It is also years. Of their top 2,000 ratwhy their upcoming class is ed prospects, Lemming said ranked between Nos. 15 and he sees 1,990 of them in per25. son. A few weeks ago, he met "Vandy has been a patsy with South Florida recruits for all time, and now, you've outside Coral Gables High. got some of the best high He has learned that kids are school kids in the nation tak- impressionable and change ing visits there and commit- their minds often. "Some kids flip schools ting there," said Tom Lemming, a r e cruiting expert three or four times, or hold with CBS Sports Network. out until the last minute even "A lot of r ecruiting comes if they know where they're down to perceptions, and the going because they love the perception right now is that attention from media and reVandy is a program heading cruiting websites," Lemming up. They had a winning re- said. "The Internet makes cord in the toughest confer- money off uncommitted kids ence and are reaping the ben- because they're c r eating efits of that, and their coach, news and drama about their James Franklin, is a v ery announcements. It seems the personable guy who's knock- longer a kid waits, he turns ing things out of the park." into the greatest player who The same is true at Ole ever lived. I know of kids who Miss, which was 2-10 two commit early and then take seasons ago and this season visits late to get back into the improved to 7-6. Experts say media because they're jealthis is the best Ole Miss re- ous of the attention other cruiting class in 30 years. players are getting heading "Hugh Freeze is a tremen- into national signing day." dous recruiter," said Mike One thing to keep in mind Farrell, national recruiting as the recruiting craze winds analyst at Rivals.com. "He down: In 2008, Robert Grifrelates well to the parents fin III w a s th e 12th-rated and the kids. It also helps high s c hool q u a rterback that they might get the No. I on Scout.com, behind such player in the country (Nkem- names as Star Jackson, Sean diche). When other kids hear Renfree, N ic k C r i ssman, he is leaning there, it influ- Tommy D o r m an , B l a i ne ences their decision." Gabbert, Landry Jones and C harles Fishbein, a r e - Mike Glennon.
Fixing
Baltimore
Qa i
~t4
Continued from C1 Creamer plans to close the shop today and head to the parade, which kicks off in front of City Hall at 10:45 a.m., with her three children and other neighborhood families. The group will squeeze into a black van — decorated
with purple flags and banners for the occasion — to go downtown for the festivities. The parade w il l t r a v el s outh from C it y H a l l o n Commerce Street, then wind a long Pratt a n d H o w a r d streets before ending at M8 T Matthew Hinton/The Assoaated Press Bank Stadium, said city officials, who warned that nu- Fans hoist a sign of Baltimore Ravens' Ray Lewis as they walk merous streets would close down Bourbon Street while celebrating the Ravens' victory over and more than a dozen bus the San Francisco 49ers in New Orleans on Sunday. lines would be diverted. The parade will culminate in a celebration at th e stadium of fans. "This is going to be about 12:30 p.m., featuring even bigger than last week," celebrity entertainers, and, he said of the Ravens rally of course, the team. before the team left for the "It's Ravens players, the RaSuper Bowl in New Orleans. "This is a moment of civic sigvens band, Ravens cheerleadNEW ORLEANS — The ers, Ravens coaches and the nificance. This is a moment cause of a 34-minute Ravens mascot," said Tracy of cultural significance." blackout at the Super Bowl Many parents said they felt Baskerville, a spokeswoman remains under investigafor the Baltimore Office of it was worth it for children tion, but public records reP romotion an d t h e A r t s . to missa day of classes for a leasedMonday show that "And confetti. Of course, you celebration they would likely Superdome officials were can't have any event without neverforget. worried about a power confetti." Sara Waire of Stoneleigh outage several months Admission to the stadium, said she told her daughter's before the big game. which will open at 10 a.m., kindergarten teacher MonAn Oct.15 memo reis free. Fans may also park day that she wouldn't be comleased by the Louisiana for free in the stadium lots, ing to school today. Stadium 8 Exposition "Our plan is to trek down which will open at 9 a.m. District, which oversees In 2001, people packed the there as a family," said Waire. the Superdome, saystests Her husband, John Waire, is roofs of d o w ntown o f fice on the dome's electrical buildings despite a cold rain a photographer who plans to feeders showed they had to watch the champions padocument theevent; daugh"some decayand achance rade in 73 Humvees through ter Mady, 5, and son, Liam, 3, of failure." will wear pint-sized Ravens downtown streets. Today's Entergy New Orleans, forecast calls f o r m o s t ly jerseys. the company that supplies cloudy skies with a high of Sara Waire, a native of the stadium with power, 41. upstate New York, said she and the structure's engiBaskerville said the city had never gotten into football neering staff "had conuntil she moved to Baltimore is setting up bicycle racks cerns regarding the relias barriers along the route, nine years ago. ability of the Dome service so that fans can watch the In contrast, her children from Entergy's connection players before they enter the could not be more excited point to the Dome," the stadium. She said the start about the Ravens. The direcmemo says. Thoseconof the parade at City Hall tor of their school, Ascension cerns were due inpart would make a great place for Lutheran N u rsery S c hool to "circumstances that and Kindergarten in Towson, a quick stop for busy workers have previously occurred who need to get back to the has been greeting children with the electrical service office. with a raven puppet for the regarding transient spikes Kirby F owler, p r esident past week and the children andloads." of the Downtown Partnerhave made Ravens-themed The memoalso cites ship of Baltimore Inc., said crafts. 2011 blackouts that struck "Our son has a Flacco jerhe believedmany downtown Candlestick Park, where businesses would close for sey, and when Flacco threw the San Francisco 49ers the parade. The celebration is the touchdown, he jumped were playing a nationally likely to cause traffic to grind up and said, 'I'm Flacco too,' " televised Monday night to a halt, as many downtown Waire said. football game, as areason Monica Beeman, a stay-atstreets are closed. for ordering the tests. "It ought to be a national home mother from Severn, The board later authoholiday," said Fowler. Md., said she also planned to rized spending nearly $1 Endodontist Tim S k ane, take her sons, ages 3, 6 and 8, million on Superdome 37, is closing his office, Harout of school for the parade. improvements, including "This is an experience I bor Endontics, for the day bemore than $600,000 for cause of the parade. want them to have," said Beeupgrading the dome's "We arevery excited about man, who will take the light electrical feeder cable the Ravens, but I almost don't rail with another mother and system. her children. "This is somehave a choice," he said."We're An attorney for the state at the corner of Charles and thing they're going to rememboard that oversees the Lombard. Everything around ber forever." Superdome said the Tommy Sinbazo, astandus is going to be shut down." blackout did not appear Like many area parents, up comedian, plans to attend to be related to the Skane is pulling his 4-yearthe parade wearing a cosreplacement in December old daughter, Stella, out of tume that will both keep him of electrical equipment warm and amuse other fans. preschoolforthe event. connecting the stadium to "We very highly value Sinbazo,35, of Joppatowne, Entergy. education, but there's certain Md., said he would wear a — The Associated Press events in life that have a cerpurple robe, a purple and tain importance and this is black cape, a gauntlet and full face mask — like a knight one of them," he said. "To be able to support the city and to happen than force them to templar — to the event. " You don't wear that to the team, it's incredible." call in sick," he said. "Even Michael Evitts, spokesman if they're at the office tomor- Walmart," he said. "But it's for the Downtown Partner- row, they're not concentrat- events like this that I'm pretship, said his organization is ing. Nothing unites this town ty sure I won't get stared at. granting its employees leave across all demographics like How many times in your life to attend the parade. the Ravens." do you get to say you're go"Our feeling is it's better Evitts said he expected the ing to a victory parade for the to acknowledge what's going parade to draw t housands Ravens?"
Still, the breadth of the investigation was significant, and it inspired Continued from C1 strong reactions from global fans. An o r ganized c r im e s y n dicate Even as the news conference conbased in Asia is believed to be the tinued, fans took to social media to driving force behind the fixing activ- speculate on which matches might ity, which stretches across at least 15 have been fixed, with a particular countries, officials said. Individual fascination as to what English Chambribes were,in some instances, up- pions League contestdrew the invesward of $136,000, and fixers would tigators' scrutiny. Indeed, the notion place bets on the tainted matches that corruption has been identified through bookmakers in Asia. Vari- in British soccer, home of the English ous matches in Africa, Asia, South Premier League, the world's most America and Central America were popular grouping, will r everberate identified as suspicious, though the globally. "It would be naive and complacent European element of the investigation is the most significant. of those in the U.K. to think such a "This is a sad day for European criminal conspiracy does not involve football," Wainwright said at a news the English game and all the football conference in the Netherlands, add- in Europe," Wainwright said. ing: "It is clear to us this is the bigEuropol and Interpol officials said gest-ever investigation into suspected an international arrest warrant had match-fixing in Europe. It has yielded been issued for the ringleader of the major results, which we think have Asian syndicate so that he can be exuncovered a big problem for the in- tradited to Europe to face fraud and tegrity of football in Europe." bribery charges. But officials at the news conferEuropol did not publicly identify ence repeatedly dodged questions the ringleader, but several knowlfrom reporters on how many of the edgeable law enforcement officials 680 matches cited were previously later said on condition of anonymity known and how many were newly that it was a man based in Singapore known as Dan Tan. They said Tan discovered. Nor would they identify any of the had been implicated in match-fixing teams and individuals newly linked cases dating to 1999. to match-fixing, citing the need to The conclusion of Europol's investiguard the confidentiality of p olice gation comes after a slew of high-proprocedures. file incidents. Last month Federation
Officialsworried adoutpossible poweroutage
International de Football Association
and Organized Crime," cautioned
(FIFA), the sport's governing body, too that North American fans of the barred 41 players for fixing matches in South Korea; in December 2012 the president of the South African Football Association was suspended after FIFA determined that four exhibition matches before the 2010 World Cup had been fixed; and last summer a complex match-fixing network was discovered in Italy, rocking that country's high-profile professional
game should not assume match-fixing is a problem only overseas. There have been instances of match-fixing in a lower-level league in Canada, and Hill said his reporting has indicated that several players in Major League Soccer have been approached by gamblers in recent years. According to Hill, there have been no instances of fixed games in MLS, leagues. though there have been reported inIn addition, German prosecutors cidents in the Concacaf Champions had previously identified dozens of League, a regional tournament in cases, although it was not clear how which MLS teams participate. There many of those, or the ones also previ- h ave also been instances of M L S ously cited, were included in the tally players giving gamblers information of 680. that could affect a game's outcome, The country with the most cases like an unreported injury to a key identified by Europol was Turkey, player, Hill said. with 79; Germany was next, with Dan Courtemanche, a spokesman for MLS, said that last year the league 70, followed by Switzerland, with 41. Cases were also cited in Belgium, enrolled in an early warning system C roatia, A u stria, H u n gary, B o s- that monitors betting worldwide for nia and Herzegovina, Slovenia and indicators of potential match-fixing Canada. and that this year the league is instiTo rig the matches, officials said, tuting rules that ban the use of cellthe criminals operated a sophisti- phones and electronic communicacated organization, employing some tion from the locker room beginning people to deal with players and refan hour before kickoff of games. "While we have faith in the integerees, others to handle money and placebets,others to carry out money rity of those associated with MLS, laundering, on up to a strategic com- we will not ignore what has already mand at the top. transpired around the world," CourDeclan Hill, a Canadian journalist temanche said. "We are not so naive and the author of"The Fix: Soccer as to think we are immune."
Legacy Continued from C1 Each one of the Davis men looks like Gale, says Craig Walker, the former longtime head football coach and current athletic director at Bend High, who played football for Gale Davis at Western Oregon University (then Oregon College of Education) in the late 1970s. Over the years, Walker has gotten to know the progeny of Gale Davis, who passed away in 1998. They are all cut from the same cloth, Walker says, and he sees a sparkle in each one's eyes. It is the same sparkle, Walker observes, as Gale's. "They have great competitive spirit," Walker says. "I see that in Kris now when I see him coaching wrestling (at Redmond). You see that c ompetitive spirit t hat w a s not unlike his father and his grandfather." While Kris Davis, who is also a counselor at Redmond High, wants to establish his own identity and leave his own stamp on the Panther wrestling program, certain t hings from h i s d a d h a v e stuck with him. Things like what Kris calls "technique intricacies," and high expectations that he is passing on to the Panthers today. Those "basic core" elements, as Kris describes them, were instilled in him by his father. "What I t ake away fr om them is their ultimate wisdom and their personalities," Erik D avis, K r is ' y o unger brother and a 1994 Redmond
High graduate, says of the elder Davises. "I take away from them ... just their presence. Their personalities are so larger than life but so humble. That's the best way to put it. For that, I r espect them tremendously." The opportunity to bounce ideas off their father is extremely beneficial, according to both Kris and Erik Davis. How to handle certain situations, how to handle people are among many topics the Davises discuss. "You raise a kid, and you
hope you do a good job," says Kurt Davis, now 63 and a Culver resident who assists with the Culver High School wrestling program. "I'm just proud of the fact that he chose to chasethe same profession as I did. A lot of people, they don't want t o d o a n y thing n ear what their dad did. . . . More than anything, I'm just proud — proud of what (Kris
and Erik) have done. (Kris)
has got a good team this year, and they're wrestling well. They're solid." In his debut year in leadi ng Redmond, K ri s D a v i s has seen the Panthers win the 35-team Pacific C oast Wrestling Championships in Vancouver, Wash. His team has also placed third in Class 5A — a 16-team field — at the Oregon Wrestling Classic in Redmond and fourth at the 24-team Reser's Tournament of Champions in Hillsboro. Coaching is in Kris Davis' b lood, according to hi s f a ther, who guided the Culver football team between 2004 and 2008 and won a s t ate t itle w it h t h e B u l ldogs i n 2007. Along with the line of Davises who have coached at Redmond High, there are D arrel "M ouse" Davis, a n Oregon Sports Hall of Fame football coach wh o h elped popularize the run-and-shoot offense at the collegiate and professional levels, and Erik, who is c u rrently th e h ead football coach at Pendleton High. Coaching "is their calling," Kurt says. "I'm sure it's not like Kurt told Erik and Kris to be coaches," Walker says. "I just think that that's what they grew up knowing, and they saw the passion in their father, and somehow that kindles a spirit within them." Kris Davis cherishes the m oments shared w it h h i s father, the times he had spoken wit h h i s g r a n dfather, when they would talk about coaching philosophies. It has shaped who Kris is today, he
says.
"It's a c r eature of h a bit kind of thing, and it's been instilled in me all th e w ay from my grandfather down to my father," Kris says. "It's the same constants,same ideas, same ideals that we're trying to instill in other kids.... It's shaped who I am and where I'm at r>ght now. "And," he adds, "I wouldn't have it any other way." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.
C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
NASDAO 3,131.17
Toda+
S&P500~
47 g3
Tuning in to Sirius earnings
1,500 ' '
Satellite radio company Sirius XM Radio is due to report fourthquarter results today. The company hasgiven indications that its earnings and revenue grew compared with the same period a year earlier. Sirius XM has said it anticipates meeting or exceeding its forecasts for 2012. It ended the year with 23.9 million subscribers, reflecting a gain of 2 million. $3.17
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 14009.79 13866.83 13880.08 -129.71 5868.19 5800.30 5820.31 -36.92 474.53 471.00 471.36 -3.17 8910.00 8848.10 8852.82 -112.30 3169.63 3130.57 3131.17 -47.93 1513.17 1495.02 1495.71 -17.46 1101.59 1089.12 1091.27 -10.32 15979.16 15786.19 15794.41 -184.75 911.18 898.36 899.28 -11.92
quarters. Today investors find out if that trend continued in the fourth quarter. The online travel agency's core business is selling hotel stays through sites including Expedia and Hotels.com. While revenue has grown, so have Expedia's costs. The company has been spending more on technology and content, hiring more people in the process.
McDonald's is offering its first new Happy Meal entree i in a decade: Fish McBites. The launch marks the start of what the world's biggest hamburger chain says is a bigger pipeline of new limited-time offers for the year ahead. Fish McBites will be widely available at U.S. restaurants starting this week through March, to coincide with Lent. The Happy Meals
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chan es
$32.93
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30
MCDOnald'S (MCD)
4Q ' 1 2
T otalreturnthisyear:7%
Dividend: $0.52 Div. yield: 0.8%
AP
Source: FactSet
Total returns through Feb. 4
FundFocus
AP
This fund's small stake in financial services stocks hurt its performance in 2012, as the sector Most Active posted big gains. This fund's VOL (00s) LAST CHG risk-averse approach emphasizes 1340326 11.48 —.23 consumer staples stocks.
MarketSummary
149.54 -1.71 28.11 -1.62 Legg Mason/Western EplncA m SOPAX 14.98 +1.96 5.74 + . 05 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 3.81 -.19 -.07 3.17 cC o 17.41 —.20 03 27.44 —.49 co 6L 43.92 -.59
Gainers
cC o 63
CHG %CHG +1.37 +.44 +5.66 +.46 +.78 +2.80 +.53 +1.96 +.68 +1.46
LAST 3.97 2.59 50.30 9.32 5.15
C3
+ 2 8 .4 + 2 5 .8 «C + 2 3 .7 63 + 2 0 .2 «C + 1 8 .7 6o + 1 7 .5 Morniugstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 5 .6 + 1 5 .0 O o Fund target represents weighted + 1 4 .2 average of stock holdings + 1 3 .7 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
Losers NAME BioLineRx SED Intl McGrwH Kimballlnt
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YTD
+5.92% +9.68% +4.03% +4.85% +3.70% +4.87% +6.94% +5.33% +5.88%
CHG %CHG -.78 -16.4 —.42 -14.0 -8.04 -13.8 -1.46 -13.5 -.78 -13.2
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CATEGORY Large Value MORNINGSTAR
RATING™ * ** * f r ASSETS $2,446 million
EXP RATIO 1.15% MANAGER Peter Vanderlee Synacor n SINCE 2009-08-06 RETURNS 3-MD +6.0 Foreign Markets YTD +4.9 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +14.5 Paris 3,659.91 -113.62 -3.01 3-YR ANNL +14.0 London 6,246.84 -100.40 -1.58 5-YR-ANNL +3.7 Frankfurt 7,638.23 -195.16 -2.49 Hong Kong 23,685.01 -36.83 -.16 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico Exxon Mobil Corporation Milan 16,539.00 -779.94 -4.50 Apple Inc Tokyo 11,260.35 + 69.01 + . 6 2 Stockholm 1,161.19 -12.19 -1.04 Procter& Gamble Co Sydney + 33.54 + . 6 9 HJ Heinz Company 4,929.14 Zurich 7,362.72 -57.63 —.78 Microsoft Corporation
will come with seven pieces of Fish McBites, french fries, apple slices and a drink. Fish McBites, which are fried pieces of fish, will use the same Alaskan pollock used in the fast-food chain's Filet-O-Fish. By adding more variety to its menu, the company is hoping it can fend off intensifying competition and tempt customers to eat out more at a time when many are being more careful about their spending.
StoryStocks
PC Close $7.72%0.84 or 12.2% Shares of the electronics maker continued to rise after it said last week that it returned to a profit in the third quarter.
$8
Cash America CSH Close:$47.56 V-1.25 or -2.6% A Janney Capital Markets analyst downgraded the pawn shop and payday lender's shares to "Neutral" from 0 Buy6 citing its valuation. $50 40
N
D 52-week range
$4.61~
J $9.46
Vol.:1.3m(1.8x avg.)
PE: . Yield:.
SYY Close: $31.23V-0.86 or -2.7% The food distributor'3 fiscal secondquarter net income fell 11.6 percent due to higher costs related to turning around the company. $34 32
N D J 52-week range $34.21 ~ $49.42
Vol.: 487.4k (2.2x avg.) P E: 12.6 Mkt. Cap:$1.38 b Yiel d : 0. 3 %
Humana HUM Close: $78.86 %3.51 or 4.7% The health insurer posted a 3.5 percent drop in fourth-quarter net income, but its results still beat Wall Street expectations. $80
30 N
D 52-week range
$67.05~
J $36.40
60-
N D 52-week range $59.96 ~
FUND BalA m
PCT 3.3 3 2.79 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 2.44 fee. f - front load (satescharges). m - Multiple fees arecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 2.37 redemption fee. Source: Morn1ngstat.
J $93.36
Vol.:10.2m (3.3x avg.) PE: 1 6 .6 Vol.:5.7m (2.7x avg.) P E: 10 . 5 Mkt. Cap:$18.36 b Yie l d : 3.6% Mkt. Cap:$12.48 b Yiel d : 1. 3%
BlackBerry
BBRY Close: $14.98 %1.96 or 15.0% Citing its new BlackBerry10 phone, a Sanford Bernstein analyst upgraded the smartphone maker's stock rating to "Outperform." $20
Deckers Outdoor DECK Close: $41.39%1.47 or 3.7% A Jefferies analyst kept his 0 Buy6 rating on the footwear maker's stock, saying that its Ugg boots are still a winter favorite. $50 40
15 10
30
N
D 52-week range
$6.22~
J $16.32
Vol.:82.2m (1.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$7.85 b
P E: 2 . 7 Yield: ...
Acme Packet
APKT Close: $29.59 %5.66 or 23.7% Oracle, the software maker, is acquiring the network gear company for $2.1 billion to boost its communications services. $30
N D J 52-week range $26.53 ~ $92.27
Vol.:2.7m (1.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.46 b
Columbia Sportswear COLM
$60
25
55
20
50
N
D 52-week range
$13.26~
Vol.:33.7m (14.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2 b
P E: 10 . 3 Yield:...
Close: $48.76 V-1.84 ol' -3.6% A Citi analyst downgraded the outdoor gear maker's stock to a "Sell" rating, citing brand weakness and winters that are less cold.
J
N D J 52-week range $36.27 $45.37 ~ $56.47 PE:109.6 Vol.:276.0k (1.9x avg.) P E : 17.2 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.66 b Yiel d : 1. 8% AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 1D-year Treasury note fell to 1.96 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
. 06 . 11 .13
.06 .10 .13
2-year T-note . 2 5 .27 5-year T-note . 8 3 .89 10-year T-note 1.96 2.02 30-year T-bond 3.16 3.22
BONDS
w
. 08
-
W
.09
W
T
.11
-0.02 V -0.06 W
V A
T L
.23 .77
-0.06
L
a 1.92
-0.06 a
a
a 3.12
+0 . 01 V
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
52-WEEK RANGE
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds 21.09 -.18 $ 3.4 +12.0 $-12.1 +5.0 A A A BondA m 12.87 +.03 - 0.4 +4.1 +5.8 +3.8 D C E CaplncBuA m 54.10 -.38 + 2.5 +11.8 +10.1 +2.5 A 8 C CpWldGrlA m 38.52 -.52 + 3.5 +14.3 +9.8 +1.3 A C C EurPacGrA m 42.60 -.57 + 3.3 +11.9 +7.7 +0.6 8 8 A FnlnvA m 42.58 -.56 + 4.4 +13.5 +12.9 +3.0 8 C C GrthAmA m 35.83 -.45 + 4.3 +14.2 +12.3 +3.0 A D D IncAmerA m 18.58 -.15 + 2.9 +11.6 +11.9 +4.6 A A B InvC0AmA m 31.35 -.35 $ 3.9 +12.2 $.11.2 $2.7 C D C NewPerspA m 32.68 -.43 + 4.5 +15.0 +11.9 +3.5 A 8 A WAMutlnvA m 32.39 -.42 + 3.8 +11.9 +13.8 +3.4 D 8 B Dodge & Cox In c ome 1 3.87 +.01 +0.1 + 5 . 9 + 6.2 +6.7 8 C 8 IntlStk 3 6.03 -.60 +4.0 +14.1 +8.1 +0.3 A 8 A Stock 128.90 -1.73 + 5.7 +17.9 +13.1 +2.0 A 8 C Fidelity Contra 80.35-1.05 + 3 .6 + 11.9 +14.2 +4.8 8 8 8 G rowCo 96.6 8 -1.26 + 3.7 + 9 .4 +16.7 +6.5 C A A LowPriStk d 41 . 31 -.39 +4 .6 + 12.8 +15.2 +6.8 C C A Fidelity Spartan 500ldxAdvtg 5 3 .02 -.62 + 5.0 +13.7 +14.4 +3.9 B A B FrankTemp-Franklin lncome A m 2.2 8 - .02 +2 .8 + 12.4 +11.2 +5.2 A A 8 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18.2 6 - .22 +4 .9 + 10.1 +12.8 +3.4 D C C R isDiv8 m 16. 5 4 -.20 + 4. 8 + 9 .0 +11.8 +2.5 E DD R isDivC m 16 . 4 6 -.20 + 4. 8 + 9 .2 +11.9 +2.6 E DD SmMidValA m 34.63 -.26 +6.8 +9.1 +10.9+0.1 E E E SmMidVal8 m 29.22 -.21 +6.8 +8.2 +10.0-0.7 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 1 +.03 -0.1 + 7 .2 + 6 .6 +7.2 A 8 A T Rowe Price GrowStk 39.08 -.51 $3 . 4 + 1 1.9 $-15.4 $5.3 8 A 8 HealthSci 4 4.45 -.55 $.7.8 +25.6 $.22.7$.12.4 A A A Vanguard 500Adml 137.96 -1.61 +5.0 +13.7 +14.4 +3.9 8 A 8 500lnv 137.95 -1.61 +5.0 +13.6 +14.3 +3.8 8 A 8 CapDp 36.25 -.34 +7.8 +16.5 +11.9 +4.9 A D 8 Eqlnc 25.40 -.26 $5.2 +14.7 +16.5 +5.1 8 A A GNMAAdml 10.86 +.01 -0.2 +1.8 +5.1 +5.6 C A A MulntAdml 14.40 +0.4 $-4.1 +5.7 $5.2 8 8 8 STGradeAd 10.83 +.01 +0.2 +3.6 +3.5 +3.8 8 8 8 StratgcEq 22.87 -.25 +6.6 +13.6 +18.1 +4.8 8 A C Tgtet2025 14.00 -.12 +3.0 $9.5 +11.0 +3.9 C 8 A TotBdAdml 11.00 +.02 -0.6 +3.0 +5.3 $5.4 E D C Totlntl 15.36 -.23 $2.5 $9.2 +7.2 -1.0 D C 8 TotStlAdm 37.55 -.43 $5.3 +13.4 +15.0 +4.6 8 A A TotStldx 37.53 -.44 $5.3 +13.3 +14.9 +4.5 8 A A USGro 22.36 -.28 $5.2 +12.5 +14.0 +5.2 8 8 B Welltn 34.97 -.23 $.3.3 +11.0 $.11.2 $5.5 A A A WelltnAdm 60.40 -.39 $.3.3 +11.1 +11.3 +5.6 A A A FAMILY
-.0142
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.76 2.80 -0.04 L L BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.02 4.00 +0.02 < W $63 ~ ~ ~ ~ 101 Barclays USAggregate 1.93 1.90 +0.03 L L PRIME FED B arclays US High Yield 5.88 5.87 +0.01 < w 10- Y R*:24% Div i dend:$3.08 D iv.yield:3.2% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.93 3.90 +0.03 L L *Annuallzed SOURCE: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.12 1.13 -0.01 W L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 2 .85 2.82 +0.03 L L 1 YR AGO 3.25 . 1 3 SelectedMutualFunds
Mond a y's close: $94.51
PriCe-earningS ratiO (Based on past12 months' results): 18 * :18% 5 -Y R* :16% 3- Y R
27
based on past 12 months' results
LAST 6.19 RenewE rs 2.14 AcmePkt 29.59 Sonus 2.74 Iridex 4.95 HyperTh n 18.81 RIT Tech 3.93 RschMotn 14.98 ChinaNRes 5.48 PrUVxST rs 12.10
-0.93% -0.63% -0.67% -1.25% w -1.51% w -1.15% w -0.94% -1.16% w -1.31% w
annual rate, wbtctt was mcreased by most recent divtdend announcement. i - Sum ct dividends patd after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dtvidends ttatd tttts year. Most recent dtvtdend was omitted or deferred k - Declared cr patd tht$ year, acumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - tmtiat dividend, annual rate nct known, yteld nct shown. 7 - Declared cr paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprctcmate cash value cn ex-distribution date. Fe Footnotes: q - Stock is 6 closed-end fund - nc 8/5 ratio shown. cc - 8/5 exceeds 9a dd - Loss in last12 months
50
NAME GenFin un
%CHG. WK Mo OTR
Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but are nct included. 5 -Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declared or paid in tact12 months. 1 -Current
$65.16
NAME BkofAm S&P500ETF 1242451 Facebook 0 890212 RschMotn 806685 SprintNex 612193 NokiaCp 596040 SiriusXM 537247 SPDR Fncl 474054 Microsoft 468456 iShEMkts 464252
D
1.3520+
Stocks fell Monday and the Standard & Poor's 50D index had its biggest drop since November. Stocks in the technology and financial industries had some of the steepest losses, helping to pull the S&P 5DQ down from the five-year high that it reached last week. Stocks fell as soon as the day's trading began, following European markets lower. Italian stocks had their worst day since August amid worries about political uncertainty there and in Spain. Both countries are at the heart of the region's debt troubles. A separate report also showed that growth in U.S. factory orders during December was weaker than economistsexpected.
Sysco
ALK 31.29 — 0 47.83 46 .51 -.06 -0.1 w i A VA 22.78 ~ 28.05 2 5. 7 8 -.26 -1.0 W A BAC 6 . 72 12.20 11.48 -.23 -2.0 w w BBSI 15.68 — 0 4202 39.81 -.42 -1.0 w 4 Mouse house BA 66. 8 2 78.02 75.21 +. 34 $.0.5 w Investors are curious to know how Cascade Bancorp CACB 4.23 — 0 7,06 6.79 -.27 -3.8 V A Walt Disney's TV network Cascade Cp CASC 42.86 65.45 64.60 +.01 w advertising sales fared in the Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 58.47 48.76 -1.84 -3.6 V V company's latest quarter. Costco Wholesale COST 81.98 105.97 102.48 -1.67 -1.6 w a The media giant said in Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 8.92 6.63 -.33 -4.7 w v FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 26.65 23.31 -.31 -1.3 w w November that it was seeing a Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 30.00 16.18 -.28 -1.7 V A slowdown in advertising as Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 8.67 14.00 11 .74 -.81 -6.5 w w viewers tuned into election Intel Corp INTC 19.23 29.27 21 .16 -.20 -0.9 V V coverage rather than Disney Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — 0 9.57 9 .3 7 -.10 -1.1 w L channels such as ESPN. The Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — 0 28 00 27 .67 -.22 -0 8 w i sports network represents a Lattice Semi LSCC 3 .17 ~ 7.05 4.46 -.17 - 3.6 w A significant source of revenue for LA Pacific L PX 7 . 6 6 $$- 21. 6 0 1 9 .9 6 + . 1 7 +0.9 A V the company. Disney reports fiscal MDU Resources MDU 19.59 ~ 23.52 2 3. 0 6 -.42 -1.8 w 4 first-quarter earnings today. Mentor Graphics M ENT 12.85 ~ 17.50 17 . 0 0 -.12 -0.7 V A Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ 32.95 27.44 .49 -1 8 w 4 Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 2 55 ~ 57 41 53.66 . 04 -0.1 V A 4y Nordstrom Inc JWN 46.27 58.44 54.50 62 -1.1 w L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.01 ~ 50 80 45.22 83 -1 8 V A OfficeMax Inc DMX 4. 1 0 — 0 11.19 10.99 +.22 +2.0 4 4 PaccarInc PCAR 35 21 ~ 48 75 46.97 -.58 -1.2 V A Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ 2.60 1.55 -.10 - 6.1 w L Plum Creek PCL 35.43 ~ 49.69 4 8. 1 4 -.05 -0.1 V A Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 ~ 194. 9 5 1 84.50 -2.12 -1.1 w w Safeway Inc S WY 14.73 ~ 23.16 19 . 2 3 -.04 -0.2 W A Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 ~ 47.45 29.11 42 -1.4 w w Sherwin Wms SHW 96,96 — 0 16 7 ,24163.24 60 -0.4 V A Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 ~ 41.99 38.16 .95 -2.4 w 4 Starbucks Cp SBUX 4 3 04 ~ 6 2 00 56.09 .77 -1.4 V A Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 ~ 7.26 5.26 .23 -4 2 w L Umpqua Holdings UMPQ 11.17 ~ 13.88 12.64 .24 -1.9 V A US Bancorp USB 2 8.26 ~ 35.46 3 2. 9 6 44 -1.3 w 4 Profitable journey? W ashington Fedl W A F D 14.30 ~ 18.42 17 . 70 04 -0.2 W A Strong bookings in Europe, Asia and WellsFargo8 Co WFC 29.80 ~ 3 6.6 0 34.76 .37 -1.1 w North America have helped drive WestCoastBcp OR WCBD 15,90 — o 23,97 23 .64 .25 -1.0 W A Expedia's revenue upward in recent Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8 .60 — o 31.74 38.47 + 08 +03 4 L
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co
Price-earnings ratio:
N
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
NAME
+ -1.60 '
Panasonic
NorthwestStocks
Source: FactSet
4 Q '11
$96.17
Mkt. Cap:$17.85 b
Dividend: none
Operating EPS
Close : 1 3,880.08 Change: -129.71 (-0.9%)
1,450 1,400
-.24
$31.70
' D ow jones industrials
.!
,
5 gp
14,000
1,500
6
EXPE
+
$1,675.30
10 DAYS
based on past 12 months' results
$70
GOLD
'p 6
14,400
1,550
NYSE NASD
Operating EPS
•'
Close: 1,495.71
'
2.50
1.50
+
1.96%
S&P 500 t' 6
$2.08
12,'
10 YR T NOTE
17 46
1,495.71
1,520
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
SIRI
+
Commodities The price of crude fell with global stock markets. Signs that the U.S. and Iran may restart nuclear negotiations also calmed worries about potential disruptions to oil supplies.
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 96.17 97.77 - 1.64 + 4 .7 Ethanol (gal) 2.44 2.49 +11.4 Heating Dil (gal) 3.15 3.16 - 0.21 + 3 . 6 -1.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.32 3.30 +0.42 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.01 3.05 - 1.38 + 7.1 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE
Exchange The euro fell against the dollar amid worries about political uncertainty in Spain and Italy. Spain's prime minister is facing allegations related to secret cash payments.
h5N4 QG
CLOSE PVS. 1675.30 1669.40 31.70 31.94 1698.10 1687.70 3.76 3.78 757.40 756.00
%CH. %YTD + 0.35 + 0 . 0 - 0.76 + 5 . 1 +0.62 +10.4 - 0.45 + 3 . 2 + 0.19 + 7 . 8
CLOSE
PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.2 1.27 -0.02 1.48 - 2.43 + 0 . 4 Corn (bu) 7.36 - 0.24 + 5 . 2 Cotton (Ib) 0.82 0.83 - 1.49 + 8 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 369.00 362.70 $-1.74 -1.3 + 3 .8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.20 1.22 - 1.11 Soybeans (bu) 14.89 14.74 + 0.98 + 4 . 9 Wheat(bu) 7.63 -1.9 7.65 -0.26
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
Foreign
L 2.61 W 4 .54 L 2.05 w 7.4 5 L 3.79 L 1.02 L 3 38 .
1.27 1.44 7.34
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5766 +.0052 +.33% 1 .5824 Canadian Dollar . 9981 +.0010 +.10% .9 9 32 USD per Euro 1.3520 —.0142 -1.05% 1.3153 —.36 —.39% 76.55 Japanese Yen 92.38 Mexican Peso 12.6 832 + .0688 +.54% 12.6766 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6951 +.0206 +.56% 3.7078 Norwegian Krone 5.4781 +.0281 +.51% 5.7996 South African Rand 8.8961 +.0536 +.60% 7.5355 6.3276 +.0210 +.33% 6.6816 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9084 +.0006 +.07% .9178 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9584 -.0021 -.22% . 9 274 Chinese Yuan 6.2375 +.0055 +.09% 6 .3046 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7537 -.0019 -.02% 7.7542 Indian Rupee 53.336 +.146 +.27% 4 8 .615 Singapore Dollar 1.2386 -.0006 -.05% 1.2420 South Korean Won 1091.48 -2.82 -.26% 1114.48 Taiwan Dollar 29.65 + .02 +.07% 29 . 50
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
BRIEFING
Gasoline prices drag on incomes Fuel costs are taking a big biteoutof household budgets,
according to separate reports Monday from the Energy Department and from the Union of Concerned Scientists.
The Energy Department says U.S. households spent anaverage of $2,912 on gasoline in 2012, or almost 4
EXECUTIVE FILE
BRIEFING
What: The Reptile Zone What it does: Sells reptiles, habitats, food and supplies
aces rau awsuit
Pictured: Jeff Jensen, owner of The Reptile Zone, with Strangler, an albino Burmese
python Where: 542 N.E. Greenwood Ave.
Employees: One Phone:541-728-0620
Web: http://thereptilezone.com
By Andrew Ross Sorkin and
percent of their pretax
Michael J. de la Merced
income, the highest percentage in 30years.
New York Times News Service
v%
That's despite the fact
that Americans consumed less fuel in 2012 for a variety of reasons,
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
including more efficient
driving habits and higher-mileage vehicles. "The effectof the
higher prices in 2011 and 2012 outweighed the effect of reduced
consumption," the Energy Department said.
In fact, researchers at the University of Michigan said Monday that
the average fuel economy for new vehicles sold in the U.S. reached
a record 24.5 mpg in January — up 0.4 mpg from a revised figure for
December.
Factory orders up in December Orders placed with
U.S. factories increased less than forecast in
December, reflecting a drop in nondurable goods that overshad-
owed gains in construction equipment and computers. Bookings climbed1.8
percentaftera revised 0.3 percentdrop in November that was initially
reported as unchanged, figures from the Com-
merce Department showed Monday.Demand for durable goods increased 4.3percent, little changedfrom the 4.6 percent gain estimated last week, while
nondurables dropped0.3 percent on declines in
petroleum andtobacco. "Manufacturing is growing again, and if overseas demand recovers, it will grow
. Howdid
ee in
• you get into the business? • I was a • teacher
(at Morning Star Christian School
CO
in Bend). I've always worked with animals of some
OO
sort, whether it's
teenagers or others. I have a lot of
experience with exotic animals, previously working at the San Antonio Zoo and
By Rachael Reese The Bulletin
About a dozen people filled The Reptile Zone on Saturday, many holding snakes or lizards, some
the Southwest Foundation in San
watching the giant tortoises walk around and others
Antonio. When I decided I didn't
asking questions about the cold-blooded creatures. This ishow JeffJensen, owner of the Bend reptile store, likes it. "To have a store full of people that are excited to see the animals is what it's about," Jensen said. "Having someone come into the storethat's never held a snake, seeing the wonderment in their eyes, or getting someone over being frightened of snakes" is his favorite part of operating his business. Jensen,aformer science teacher, started his business in February 2008, and in August he tripled its size when he moved into his current location on Northeast Greenwood Avenue. More than 100 reptiles of about 50 different species live within The Reptile Zone. Some, like the venomous Mexican beaded lizard and rattlesnakes, are part of his private educational collection, but many are for sale. "Anything I have in the store is obtainable," he said. Depending on the reptile, Jen-
he sells in his store do not require special permits to own. "My big thing is I do not do wild-caught animals," he s aid. "My ethics prevent me from buying animals that have been taken from the wild." While Jensen might not have as many reptiles as other pet stores, he said, he knows the ones he sells are bred in captivity. He only purchases from specific breeders, who will often present genealogies, and from reputable wholesalers who have a good reputation within the herpetology community. Jensen also breeds six snake species and fourlizard species so he can show customers the parents of the reptile they are purchasing. In addition to selling reptiles, he said, he offers a pet-sitting service and conducts more than 10 educational presentations a year to schools, 4-H groups and scouting troops.
sen said, purchase prices range
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC<bendbulletin.com
from $55 to$1,000. The animals
faster still," Chris Low, chief economist at FTN
want to teach any longer, I already had a hugecollection of reptiles of
my own, so it was the thing to do.
• Where do . you see The Reptile Zone
in five years? . Mygoal . istohave
By Ricardo Lopez
DEEDS Deschutes County
• Linda Stowell to Timothy A. and Traci L. Stowell, Shevlin Crest, Lot19, $370,000 • Kevin M. and Marcinda L. Mcvaugh to Justin D. and Nicolette J. Zink and Henry J. Hogstrom, Barton Crossing, Phase1, Lot 6, $285,000 • M. Lorene Bateman, trustee for LeeandLorene Bateman Family Trust, to Ross G.andDeborah M. Gobel, Ladera First Addition, Lot8, Block3, $290,000 • Columbia Bridge and Geer Inc. to Edward Gcer LLC, Stone Ridge Townhomes atSunriver, Lot 26, $155,000 • L. C. and JereneWebb, trustees for WebbLiving Trust, to Nora M. and William D. Ross, Mountain Glenn, Phase 3, Lot12, $185,000 • St. James Park Investments LLC toJeryl and Janelle L. Detweiler, Ridge at EagleCrest 56, Lot118, $185,000 • Michael B. Hendrie, claiming successor forthe small Estate of Leslie J. Hendrie, to Josie O.Lucas, Savannah Estates, Phases 1 and 2, Lot 6, $175,000 • Sandra R. Clausen to Vonda L. Larsen, Tanglewood, Phase 3,Lot 16, $236,000 • Linda M. Heath and Letha L. Powell, personal representative for the Estate of Arrene Powell, to Sandra R.Clausen,
American and Mexican tomato growers appear to have avoided a trade war — the U.S. Commerce Department has releaseda draftofan agreement governing the price of tomato imports from Mexico. U.S. growers in Florida had accused their Mexican counterparts of selling their tomatoes below fair market value, a practice known as
dumping. The new agreement, which sets a minimum wholesale price for tomatoes, would replace a trade pact that went into effect 17 years ago. Francisco Sanchez, the undersecretaryof commerce for international trade, said in a statement Saturday that the agreement puts in place
Holliday Park, Third Addition, Phase1, Lot 2, $215,000 • Justin C. Yaxto Dallas W. Holmes andCelina A. Thornton, Deschutes, Lots 7 and 8, Block10, $385,000 • James L. Eckstein Construction lnc. to Cameron T. Miller, Suntree, Lot 20, Block 3, $220,000 • Douglas S. and Laurie A. Jackson to ToddB. and Tiffany Q.Berliner, Township15, Range12, Section 23, $374,300 • Mary L. Delaney, trustee
"robust enforcement that will allow American workers and the U.S. tomato industry to compete on a level playing field." In the past decade, U.S. growersfound themselves competing heavily with Mexico. That country's exports of tomatoes to the U.S. reached $1.81 billion in 2011, more than quadruple the $412 million worth of exports in 2000. Eager to continue exports and sales of their tomatoes, Mexican tomato growers and importers worked with Commerce Department officials on drafting an agreement. The plan, open to public comment until Feb. 11, would raise the wholesale price for tomatoes and strengthen anti-dumping enforcement. One provision of the agree-
for Mary Lou Delaney Trust, to Jeffrey P.and Jeanne E.Reaves, Broken Top, Phases1Cand1D, Lot 15, $641,000 • Michael G. andMarilyn J. Ward to Ronald M. and Carrie M. Huffman, Broken Top, Phases1A and1B, Lot 66, $1,225,000 • Elizabeth W. Montserat, trustee for Elisabeth Wertz Montserat Revocable Living Trust, to Michael G. and Marilyn J. Ward, Golf Townhomes atBrokenTop, Phase 3, Lot 27, $450,000 • John C.and Jane M. Livingston, trustees for
John C. andJanel M. Livingston Revocable Family Trust, to Jeffrey N. and Anna E.Phelps, River Terrace, Lot 9, Block15, $182,000 • Jason A. Mendell to C.W. and Mary M. Zilk, Hunters Highland at High Pointe, Phases 4 and 5, Lot105, $265,000 • J. Swanson andJ. Swanson to Jonathan D. and Sara K.Fogarty, Shevlin Ridge, Phase6, Lot 90, $712,500 • Peter J. and Barbara C. Stoefen, trustees for Stoefen Family Revocable
By bringing a civil suit, as opposed to a criminal case, the Justice Department's burden of proof will be less, perhaps lowering the bar for a successfulprosecution.
animals that you
can't even go to a zoo and see.
I'm working on a prohibitive species
permit right now. The permit will al-
low me to display animals (thatj are illegal for individuals to have,
in an educational format.
FAA to OK
test flights The Seattle Times
ment, expected to take effect March 4,creates a reporting mechanism to monitor the price of production by Mexican growers. Martin Ley, a Mexican tomato grower involved in the negotiations, said the agreement was made possibleby steep concessions on the part of Mexican tomato producers. "Getting to this moment no doubt required significant compromise by the Mexican growers," he said in a statement. "Even though no dumping or injury to the U.S. industry was demonstrated by our competitors, over the last year our growers worked with our government to overhaul the whole Mexican industry, broaden the coverage and develop tough enforcement schemes."
Trust, to William M. and Bristol D. Kelley, Grandview, Lot 6, Block 2, $275,000 • D.A. Builders LLC to Barry A. andAnnB. Schnabel, NorthWest Crossing, Phase13, Lot 616, $285,000 • Charles D. and Sheila R. Schulmerich, trustees for Schulmerich Family Revocable Trust, to James D. Taylor, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 3,Lots 28 and 29, $360,000 • Steve De Patie to Timothy P. Morris, Awbrey Village, Phase 2, Lot 21,
Boeing asks
By Dominic Gates
U.S., Mexice averting a trade war Los Angeles Times
bubble.
a selection of
Financial in NewYork, said in a research note before the report. — From wire reports
The Justice Department, along with state prosecutors, plans to file civil charges against Standard & Poor's Ratings Service, accusing the firm of fraudulently rating mortgage bonds that led to the financial crisis, people briefed on the plan said Monday. Up until last week, the JusticeDepartment had been in settlement talks with S&P, these people said. But the negotiations broke down after the Justice Department said it would seek a settlement in excess of "10 figures,"or at least $1 billion, these people said, which would wipe out the profits of S8 P's parent, the McGraw-Hill Co., for an entire year. McGraw-Hill earned $911 million in 2012. A suit against S&P would be the first the government has brought against the credit ratings agencies related to the financial crisis, despite continued questions about the agencies' conflicts of interest and role in creating a housing
SEATTLE — Boeing Co. said Monday that it has asked the Federal Aviation Administration for permission to fly test flights of its 787 Dreamliner. The FAA said it is evaluating the request. The FAA is likely to grant Boeing's request as early as Monday evening and a 787 could fly again later this week, according to sources with knowledge of the matter. The initial flight tests will gather data on the operation of the troubled lithium ion battery system, the cause of the worldwide fleet grounding that's now into its third week. Boeing also wants to test a potential fix, the sources said. But 787 passenger flights won't resume soon. In airline service, the Dreamliner is still likely to stay grounded for weeks, if not months, two sources said. Even when Boeing arrives at a workable fix, its engineers will have to design, build and thoroughly test the solution. The FAA ordered the grounding after two serious 787 battery incidents just over a week apart.
$370,000 • Carolyn D. Bird to Catherine J. Emick and Ronald J. Emick Jr., Reed Market East, Second Addition, Lot14, Block2, $160,000 • Luke and TaraMacSween to Donald and Carolyn James Weistoria Lots11 and12 Block29 $157434 • Encand Linnea E.Huson to James M.andTeresa S. Rowan, Hillside Park, Phase5, Lot12, Block4, $780,000 • FC Fund LLC to Pacwest 2 LLC, EaglesLanding, Lots 26, 27, 29 and 34,
$260,000 • Brookswood BendLLC to Hayden HomesLLC, Aspen Rim, Lots 67,69, 75 and 80, $240,000 • U.S. Bank N.A. to Ivan A. andTammieT. Grossen, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit6, Part1, Lots12and 13, Block 69, $170,000 • Morris L. and LenaM. Norton to Dave A.Schoch, Justin Glen, Phase 2, Lot 26, $169,000 • Robert L. and Vivian G. Carpenter to KenMarks, Tamarack ParkEast, Phase 7, Lot16, Block 9,
Oracle makes $2.1B acquisition Oracle will buy Acme Packet lnc., which
makes equipment for telecommunications companies, for about $2.1 billion.
Acme's gear is used
by more than1,900
service providersand enterprises around the world. Its technol-
ogy will complement Oracle's offerings for telecoms providers, said Citigroup analyst Walter Pritchard.
Oracle, a database software maker based in Redwood City, Calif.,
will pay $29.25 per share for Acme. — From wire reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Young professionals network: 5:30 p.m.; The Pig and Pound, 423 S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-526-1 697. • Bunco fundraiser: Play bunco, with instructions; reservations requested; proceeds benefit Soroptimist International of Bend's projects; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-1753 or www.sibend.org. • 13 Hot Home Buyer Trends for 2013 Join Jim Mazziotti, principal managing broker and franchise owner of Exit Realty Bend, for his live Internet TV show; watch at http://goo.gl/RtnJe free 7 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. GreenwoodAve., No. 100; 541-480-8835. WEDNESDAY • Central Oregon Farm Fair and Trade Show: Educational programs; presentation groupings about wheat, alfalfa, precision application technology, the role of organic matter in the soil and where nitrogen goes in the soil and plants; two hours of pesticide recertification credit will be provided Thursday afternoon from1:30-3:30 p.m.; for crop consultant advisers, there will be 7t/~ hours of recertification credit available during the two-day event; free; 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Fair Complex, 430 S.W. Fairgrounds Road, Madras; 541-475-7107. • Howto Select the Right Franchise: This workshop is designed to help participants decide whether franchise ownership is right for them; participants will learn about howto choose a franchise, howto arrange financing and other critical details; registration required; free; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Meeting of the Central Oregon Area Commission On Transportation executive committee: Free; 4-5 p.m.; city of RedmondPubli cWorks Training Room, 243East Antler Ave. • Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council board meeting: Free; 5:30-7 p.m.; city of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243East Antler Ave.
To find freeincome tax preparation help, visit the Events Calendar at yirww. bendbuiletin.comlevents.
For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendttu//etin.com/ttizca/
$210,000 • William H. andJane G. Scott to David J. and Kathleen S.Voves, Fairway Village Condominiums, Unit12, $187,500 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Jeffrey L. andHyun Birdsall, Bridges at Shadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 59, $255,000 • Donald Runnels to Brae D. Runnels, Ridge atEagle Crest 53, Lot 22, $150,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to Leslie Bushnell, Mountain Peaks, Phase 2, Lot41, $158,500
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
OÂť www.bendbulletin.com/athome
HOME
Photos by Joe Kline iThe Bulletin
The dining room in the home of Gabrielle Taylor and Chris Eckberg near downtown Bend shows the home's curved ceiling.
hris Eckberg and Gabrielle Taylor's midcentury
By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin
modern home is one of those unique houses you see near downtown Bend and always hope you'll get
Editor's note:The At Home section features a profile of a localhome each month. To suggest a home, email athome@bendbulletin.com.
li
as we were given that tour right after Eckberg and Taylor completed a renovation.
See additional photos
on The Bulletin's website: O bendbulletin.com/athometour
I
to tour someday. The Bulletin got lucky this year,
RR
Built in 1946, at the beginning of the midcentury modernism movement, it looks like it could be a set home for "Mad Men," and at any time Don Draper might walk through the door. To enter the 2,600-squarefoot house, one must pass the locally quarried lava retaining walls
and go up a long
th
walkway, with steps that are inlaid with wellworn lava rocks. Because the home is perched on a small rolling hill, once inside, you are elevated well above street level. Fromthelarge bank of living room windows,
" IL"""" C|
! t
you see only
s'v
/
Taylor and Eckberg in their living room. "It's a beautiful home, and you don't see this kind of attention to detail nowadays. It's Old World craftsmanship," says Eckberg. " ... You probably couldn't get this type of millwork done now becauseitwould be too expensive."
GARDEN
treetops,as if you're perched in a treehouse. This is a hallmark of midcentury modernism, where the objective is to bring the outdoors in, through the use of ample wlndows. "I think because we're well above the street, it's very quiet and private up here. When the *,'I trees are green in the spring and summer, it's just beautiful," said Eckberg, whose family has owned the house that sits on the double
The kitchen cupboards are original, repainted white. Gabrielle Taylor opted for white subway tiles for the backsplash, feeling it kept with the era of the home. lot since 1963. "It's a beautiful home, and you don't see this kind of attention to detail nowadays. It's Old World craftsmanship, and the details can be very subtle, like in the angles of
this fireplace." Eckberg gestured toward the beautifully paneled walls in the living room and the brickwork that angles in toward the fireplace and the detailed millwork of the mantel area. "This is 9-inch clear pine paneling;every piece of wood was hand-built," said Eckberg. "You probably couldn't get this type of millwork done now because it would be too expensive." Eckberg recently researched his family home, which his mother and father bought when Eckberg was 12. SeeMidcentury/D4
TODAY'S RECIPES
FOOD
Time to panyouryard Roastedpolenta By Marielle Gallagher The Bulletin
In the dead of winter, when plants and trees are dormant, is the perfect time to be busy brainstorming landscape ideas. The winter season shows us the bones of the garden and allows an opportunity to evaluate challenges, like a bare spot or a tree that's grown too big. Chris Hart-Henderson, owner and landscape designer at Heart Springs Landscape Design in Bend, says winter is the perfect time to begin plotting and planning landscape details. In planning a landscape, "people want something tangible and winter is very intangible, but it produces the most incredible results for people," said Hart-Henderson. Molly McDowell, a land-
scape construction professionaland service professional at Ewing Irrigation in Bend, suggests just observing the outdoor space for an entire year. "The space will almost start to tell you what it wants. Like this is a nice sunny place for a garden. . .. Whenyoutrytoput a landscape out there without diving into your needs, you
may end up tearing things Up. The tendency for most people is to begin a landscaping project by listing the plants they want to incorporate in their yard, but HartHenderson made it clear that the plants are the very last thing to consider. "Plants are so far off the page they're not even in the discussion," said Hart-Henderson. See Planning/D5
can saveyour day By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin
The other night, in need of a fast-but-tasty dinner concept, I remembered my frozen cache of homemade polenta. I grabbed a couple of the frosty squaresfrom the zippered bag,plopped them onto a baking sheet and shoved them into the toaster oven where they would change from solid chunks of cornmeal mush to something quite alluring and soul-satisfying. During the transformation I produced a simple little tomato-based sauce with a couple cans of diced tomatoes, some chopped onion and garlic, a splash of chicken broth and a generous glug of
balsamic vinegar. By the time I was pulling the polenta from the oven, the sauce had simmered itself into a rich and complex-tasting sidekick. Perfecto! My freezer to the rescue once again. Italy's answer to grits caught on decades ago as a trendy sort of side dish, paired up with designer mushrooms, imported cheese and newstyle salsas or corn relishes. Still, polenta's humble, less pretentiousroots are unshakeable. As comfort foods go, it's as good as it gets. In oldcountry Italy, a simmering pot of polenta, set over a red-hot w ood fire, was atthe centerof every household. See Polenta/D2
Roasted Polenta:This recipe makesenough for you to stock your freezer with leftovers,D2
Plus, polenta toppings:Zesty Tomato and Balsamic Sauce, Marinated and Roasted Vegetables, A Simple Grilled Vegetable Melange, Winter Vegetable Saute,D2
Buckwheat pasta:Served with clams and broccoli rabe pesto; several cloves of garlic stand up to the noodles'
assertive flavor,03
-L
More bockwheat recipes:Dolmas (Stoffed Grape Leaves), KOD's Granola,03 Recipe Finder:LookingforConeydogsauce?03
'l'+
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
Fooo
Next week: Simple and romantic for Valentine's Day
Polenta Continued from D1 The resulting disk of sunny, yellow cooked cornmeal was said to soften the hard edges of life. Not unlike a healthy dollop of perfect mashed potatoes or fresh-from-the-ovenbread. My first experience with polenta came at the age of 12 or so. Mom's favorite pot-luck casserole was Tamale Pie, and one of the main ingredients in it was a cornmeal topping we now know as polenta. It was always my job to stand by the stove and stir the cornmeal until it boiled and thickened. As much as I loved to cook, this was not my favorite task because the boiling lava-thick bubbles had a t endency to erupt right out of the pan. The only way to avoid a painful scorching was to wrap a kitchen towel around my stirring arm and place the rest of my body out of line with the flying globs of lethal mush. These days, as in centuries past, polenta is enjoyed in two basic ways: soft, with the texture of Cream of Wheat, served in a bowl and eaten with a spoon; or firm, cooked until stiff and then sliced and eaten warm, or chilled and then sliced and roasted until a crisp crust forms around its creamy innards. I learned from Michael Chiarello, renowned Napa Valley celebrity chef, that the secret to a smooth and creamy polenta is semolina. Semolina, in combination with the traditional cornmeal, provides the velvet touch. Since then, I keep a premixed batch of e qual parts c o rnmeal a n d semolina in a plastic container, so when I have a polenta attack, I'm ready to go. Also, Ipreferto use chicken or vegetable broth instead of water, which gives a richer flavor (Chiarello's version even uses equal parts heavy cream and
broth).
Ryan Brennecke/Tite Bulletin
Polenta can be enjoyed in two ways: at a porridge-like consistency in a bowl or, as above, in firm squares with your choice of toppings.
Polenta Topping No. 1: Zesty Tomato and Balsamic Sauce Makes 4 servings. This is the simple tomato-based sauce I put together the other evening. It's a good vegetarian concept as is. But for those evenings when you can't figure out what to do with some chicken breasts or pork chops, try this:
brown the meat until lightly golden on both sides, then remove from panand proceed with this recipe; add the til firm, cut into desired size pieces, freeze the pieces individually on a baking sheet just until firm and then pack into a freezer bag to roast at a later date. S o, I'm letting you in o n my frozen polentamaneuver. The basic Roasted Polenta recipe that f o llows m akes enough polenta for several meals. Just cook until firm, cut into serving-size pieces and freeze. For those harried evenings ahead, simply roast abatch of those frozen chunks of polenta and while that's happening, make one of the simple sauces here (or one of your own favorites).
The marvelous thing about polenta is that you can prepare it to the "soft-and-mushy" stage in a pot on your stovetop, and then consider three different options: 1. Take it right to the roasting phase to serve immediately. 2. R e f rigerate — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a for up to 24 hours ahead, and Corvallis food writer, cookbooh roastabout 40 minutes before authorand artist. Contact: janrd~ serving. 3. Or refrigerate unproaxis.com.
meat back to the skillet after the sauce is prepared, cover, and cook just until the meat has finished cooking. 1 C chopped yellow onion 4 Igcloves peeled and minced garlic 2 TBS extra-virgin olive oil 2 (14.5-oz) cans diced tomatoes in juice
/2 C chicken or vegetable broth 1 TBS balsamic vinegar 2 TBS finely chopped fresh basil (or 2 tsp dried) t/atsp ground white pepper (or
'/4 tsp red pepper flakes Salt to taste
Roasted polenta squares (as prepared in recipe, below left) Shredded Parmesan cheese
freshly ground black pepper)
1 C polenta meal (see note) 1 C semolina meal (see note)
a serving of the tomato sauce. PassParmesan atthe table.
Polenta Topping No. 3: A Simple Grilled Vegetable Melange Makes 4 servings. This is a simple concoction to throw together becausethevegetables can even begrilled the day before serving. Great as alight supper when served over bakedsquares of polenta (or pasta, or in apita sandwich). It also makes a wonderful first coarse served with French bread. 1 sweet bell pepper, pierced in two places with a knife 2 Anaheim chiles, pierced in two places with a knife
4 cloves garlic, unpeeled (snip
Extra-virgin olive oil
Roasted polenta squares (as prepared in recipe at left) Freshly-grated Parmesan
cheese
off the tips, and then secure all four cloves on a bamboo
skewer)
Brush the onions, tomatoes, and mushrooms with olive oil and then place all of the vegetables (including the toes as they brown. As the tomatoes brown on the bottom and become very soft, remove to a bowl. Continue cooking the onions, turning often, until theyare tender, about10 to12 minutes. The bell peppers and
chiles need to beturned several times so they will brown evenly on all sides.
In a heavy-bottomed pot, over medium-high heat, combine thechicken broth and pepper (if using homemade chicken broth, you might want to add up to 1 teaspoon of salt). While this liquid is coming to a boil, whisk
pieces. Mince the garlic cloves. Return the vegetables to bowl and set aside. Drizzle with additional olive oil and season with salt and pepper to taste.
in the polenta/semolina mixture in a steady stream. Continue stirring and cooking over moderate heat. The mixture will be-
coal or a gas grill. This requires a special grilling pan with medium (about /ta-inch) holes so that
ally with a wide spatula.
Remove the browned vegetables and store in the bowl with the tomatoes, refrigerated, for up to 24 hours, or
together the polenta and semolina. When the broth begins to boil, whisk
two, I drain the vegetables and simply stir-fry them over char-
egar and continue cooking to meld the flavors. Adjust seasonings, adding salt and additional pepper to taste. roasting pan and roast them in a To serve, remove the roasted polenta from the oven and place1 to 2 pieces on each plate. Top the polenta with very hot oven, turning occasion-
proceed with recipe. Cut each onion quarter into thin slices. Dice the tomatoes and mushrooms. Peel and cut the peppers into
Oil a 9- by13-inch baking dish; set aside.
zesty marinade for an hour or
flakes and white pepper. Simmer, uncovered, until the liquid has reduced and thickened. Add the balsamic vin- marinated vegetables in a large
skewer of garlic cloves) on agrill 4 to 6 inches above abedof medium coals or gas flame. Theonions should be /2 C grated Jarlsberg cheese (or placed with a cut side down; tomatoes should be placedcut-side up. Turn all of the vegetables except the tomasharp cheddar) 1'/4 C grated Parmesan
roast or grill a pile of fresh vegetables. After marinating in my
small pieces of food won't fall
of all polenta or cornmeal). Healso taught me that a reliable ratio of liquid 6 C chicken or vegetable broth '/4 tsp ground white pepper
Makes 4 servings. This is my all-time favorite way to
In a medium-sized skillet or heavy-bottomed pot, saute the onion and garlic in the olive oil over medium heat through during cooking. Alternauntil the onion is soft and translucent. Add the tomatoes with the juice, broth, balsamic vinegar, basil, pepper tively, you could simply place the
1 Ig unpeeled sweet onion (or red onion), cut lengthwise through stem and root ends Roasted Polenta into quarters Makes enough polenta for a 9- by13-inch baking dish, producing12 to15 4 or 5 med Roma-style 1-inch thick pieces. tomatoes, cored and cut in I learned from Chef Michael Chiarello that a very tender and moist polenta half lengthwise can be created by using equal parts polenta meal and semolina (instead 8 to 10 med fresh mushrooms and dry ingredients is 3-to-1. Try it, and I think you'll agree.
Polenta Topping No. 2: Marinated and Roasted Vegetables
To serve, remove the roasted polenta from the ovenand place1 to 2 pieces on each plate. Topthe polenta with a serving of the grilled vegetables. Pass additional Parmesan at the table.
gin to thicken after a few minutes. Continue stirring. The polenta is ready when it is very thick and begins to pull away from the sides of the pot (approximately 7 to 10 minutes).
Polenta Topping No. 4: Winter Vegetable Saute
Remove from heat and stir in the Jarlsberg and '/4 cup of the Parme- Makes 6 servings.
FOR THE MARINADE: /3 C of red or white wine vinegar t/4 C dry red wine (such as zinfandel, cabernet, shiraz, or pinot noir) 2 TBS soy sauce 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce t/4 tsp salt t/4 tsp freshly ground black
pepper 3 cloves peeled and finely minced garlic /3 C extra-virgin olive oil VEGETABLES FOR GRILLING: t/4 Ib mushrooms (halved or whole, depending on size) 1 red sweet bell pepper, seeded and cut in thin strips 1 yellow sweet bell pepper, seeded and cut in strips 1 whole yellow onion, cut into thin strips or rings Roasted polenta squares (as prepared in recipe at far left)
Combine the vinegar, wine, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, salt, pepper, garlic and olive oil. Place the vegetables in one large container or tw o
r e -sealable
plastic bags. Pour the marinade over the vegetables and marinate
san. With a spatula, immediately scrape the polenta out into the prepared baking dish. Cool at room temperature, then cover with plastic wrap and 2 C broccoli florets '/4 C extra-virgin olive oil /a C fresh chopped herb refrigerate up to 48 hours in advance of roasting. 2 C julienned carrots 3 Ig cloves fresh garlic, peeled combination (basil, chervil, Cut the firm polenta into squares, triangles or diamonds. 2 C julienned turnips and minced and parsley is a nice mixture) To roast, cut the cooled polenta into squares, triangles or diamonds. 2 C cauliflower florets 2 C sliced leeks (white and pale /2 C freshly grated Parmesan Using a spatula, transfer the pieces onto a lightly oiled baking sheet, 6 to 12 pieces of prepared green portions; about 2 med cheese sprinkle generously with the /2 cup of grated Parmesan, and place in a polenta (frozen or fresh, as to Ig leeks) Additional Parmesan to serve at pre-heated 500 degree oven. Roast until golden brown and slightly puffy, prepared in recipe at left) the table about 7 minutes. If preparing for the freezer to roast and serve at a later time, place the You could omit the following step (blanching the vegetables), and just saute the vegetables (starting with the cut pieces of polenta on a plastic or parchment-lined baking sheet and firmest ones and adding the more tender vegetables a little later in the process) but the step helps make the final
for up to1 to 2 hours.
freeze just until the pieces arethoroughly frozen (overnight, for example).
preparation go quickly and seamlessly.
the vegetables and let them cook,
Store the individually frozen pieces in a resealable plastic bag.
Blanch the broccoli, carrots, turnips and cauliflower separately in a large pot of boiling water. You can do this turning and tossing the veggies by lowering each batch into the water in a strainer and lifting each batch out as soon as the vegetables are tender sort of as you would for a stir-fry,
When ready to cook, remove the vegetables from the marinade (the marinade will keep for a couple of weeks, so refrigerate in a sealed jar for another round of veggies within that time-
frame). Place the grill pan on top of the grill grate over hot coals or gas flame and let it heat through. Add
To roast, remove thedesired number of pieces from the bag and place on a lightly greased baking sheet. Roast (while still frozen) in a 350 de- but still holding their shape (broccoli will only take about1 minute; carrots and turnips, about 3 minutes; cauli- only slower, until they're lightly gree oven for 20 to 30 minutes, until lightly golden and puffy and thor-
oughly heated. Note onpolenta andsemolina: Bob's RedMil, a Portland-based com-
flower, about 2 minutes). Using a large slotted spoon, remove each batch to drain in a colander and rinse under bronzed and cooked through. cold running water to set the color and stop the cooking process; set aside. Remove from heat.
In a largepan,heatthe olive oil overmediumheat. Addthe garlic andleeksandsaute until the leeksaretender, about
To serve, remove the roasted
pany, makes both and they are available in the baking section of most
10 minutes. Add the herbs and blanched vegetables, and saute just until heated through, about1 minute. Transfer the polenta from the oven and place
supermarkets. For a richer alternative:prepare as above, but substitute 3 cups of half and half (or heavy cream) for 3 cups of the broth.
vegetables to awarmed bowl, sprinkle with theParmesancheeseand toss; cover tokeepwarm; set aside. To serve, remove the roasted polenta from the ovenand place1 to 2 pieces on each plate. Topthe polenta with
ASK A COOK
Table salt is made with very fine grains. Minerals are reI see recipes that spec- moved, but it usually includes .ify either table salt or an anti-caking agent, such kosher salt. Is there really a as calcium silicate. If it's iodifference? dized, iodine has been added • At the most basic level, all to prevent thyroid diseases in . salt — plain ol' table salt regions where people'sdiets or fancy flakes of fleur del selare low in iodine. Not all table is simply sodium chloride. The salts are iodized, however. difference is in texture and the Kosher saltcomes from the addition or lack of minerals. same source as table salt, but
Q.
A
a serving of the sauteed vegetables. Pass additional Parmesan at the table.
it's made with larger grains. It's not necessarily a kosher product, but it's used in the process called koshering — removing blood to purify meat or make itkosher — because the larger grains dissolve more slowly and are better at removing moisture from meat. Cooks like to use kosher salt because the larger grains make it easy to grab a pinch
A•
when you're cooking. C oconut comes in s o You can swap the two in . many forms, it can be cooking, but taste carefully. confusing. There are green Because table salt i s f i ner, coconuts and brown coconuts, more grains will fit in a mea- fresh coconut,frozen coconut suring spoon. and dried coconut.
By "regular packaged coco-
Q•
I saw a cookie recipe that • called for thawed, frozen coconut instead of regularpackaged coconut. What makes one better than the other?
nut," I'm guessing you mean the sweetened coconut that comes in a bag, sometimes called angel-flake. It's harder to find, but you also can find
1 to 2 pieces on each plate. Top the polenta with a serving of the vegetables.
it unsweetened. The sweetened kind is usually soaked in a sugar syrup. It sometimes comes in a can instead of a bag, and it's often used in baking because it's so easy to find. I like to use frozen coconut in cooking for two reasons: It's not sweetened, and it has a softer, more natural texture. — Email questions to kpurvis@charlotteobserver com
FOO D
By Jane Touzalin
ing gluten-free diets or more
The Washington Post
whole grains has been good farmers to ramp up production
A little earthy, a little nutty, a little bitter: The flavor of buckwheat can be intense. But roast buckwheat seeds, or mix buckwheat flour with other flours, and the taste is tamed. It's a taste more of us are getting to know. The increase in the number of people eat-
forthe buckwheat business. "It's unbelievable," s ays John McMath, a director of Birkett Mills, one of the two major bu c k w h eat-producing companies in the United States. "It's growing by leaps and bounds." He says the mill, in the Finger Lakes region of
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
New York, has had to push to keep up with the demand. McMath, who also heads the National Buckwheat Institute, ticks off a list of selling points: Besides being glutenfree, buckwheat is a nutritional powerhouse; it helps lower cholesterol; it can fight adultonset diabetes.
D3
Buckwheat Pasta with Clams and Broccoli Rabe Pesto Makes 4 servings. Garlic lovers will be thrilled with this dish; several cloves of it stand up nicely to the assertive tastes of the broc-
coli rabe andbuckwheat noodles. Non-garlic fans can simply delete aclove or two (or more), andall will be well. You'll have leftover broccoli rabe pesto, which can be used to sauce any kind of pasta. The recipe calls for vitamin C crystals, which are available from vitamin and natural-foods stores. They will help
the pesto retain its nice greencolor. FOR THE PESTO: 1 qt blanched, chilled broccoli rabe (from a1-Ib bunch; see
note)
Sah Freshly ground black pepper
/2 C chanterelle mushrooms (stem bottoms trimmed), cut into 1-inch slices if large (may substitute cremini or oyster mushrooms) 3 cloves garlic, or to taste, minced 1 shallot, minced Freshly ground black pepper 20 littleneck clams, scrubbed /2 C bottled clam juice 1 scant teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, or to taste Chopped parsley, for garnish
FOR THE CLAMS AND PASTA:
2 TBS capers (preferably saltpacked), rinsed and drained 4 cloves garlic, or to taste /2 tsp vitamin C crystals (optional; see headnote) 4 anchovy fillets, rinsed and patted dry 1 TBS whole-grain mustard 1 TBS Dijon-style mustard /4 C extra-virgin olive oil
San 16 oz dried buckwheat linguine or other thin buckwheat pasta 4 TBS olive oil /2 C grated ParmigianoReggiano cheese, plus curls of the cheese for garnish
For thepesto:Pulse the broccoli rabe in a food processor until it is finely chopped; transfer to a mediumbowl. Combine the capers, garlic, vitamin C crystals and anchovy fillets in the food processor. Pulse to achieve a me-
dium-fine consistency, then add the mustards and pulse Photos by Deb Lindsey/ For The Washington Post
Toasted buckwheat groats replace the traditional rice in these stuffed grape leaves. Rolling the grape leaves takes time, but you can't beat the satisfaction of seeing 48 plump little packets ready to go into the oven. Serve them on their own, with yogurt or with lemon wedges for squeezing.
just to incorporate. Return the broccoli rabe to the food
processor and gradually add the oil while pulsing to incorporate. Season with salt and pepper to taste. The yield is 2 cups; reserve1 cup for this recipe. Theremaining pesto can be frozen for up to 3 months.
For the clams andpasta: Bring a large pot of salted
Delmas (Stuffed Grape Leaves) Makes 48 dolmas.
water to a boil over medium-high heat. Add the pasta and cook until al dente; start checking after 4 minutes. Do not
overcook, or the pasta will becomemushy. Drain in acol-
E.
I
Toasted buckwheat groats, a.k.a. kasha, replace the traditional rice in this Middle Eastern mezze, or appetizer. ander, then return the pasta to the pot (off the heat) and Kasha is sold in 3 granulations; for this one, use medium. stir in 2 tablespoons of the oil and the grated Parmigiano-
Reggiano until evenly distributed. Cover to keep warm. 2 TBS olive oil 1 C chopped onion 3 cloves garlic, minced 1 Ib lean ground lamb 1 C kasha (medium granulation) 1 Ig egg, at room temperature,
lightly beaten 2/s C low-sodium chicken broth, heated /2 C fresh squeezed lemon juice /4 C minced fresh parsley 1 tsp dried dillweed
1 tsp crushed dried mint leaves /2 tsp ground coriander '/4 tsp ground cinnamon /s tsp salt
While the pasta is cooking, heat the remaining 2 table-
spoons of oil in a large, heavy saute pan or skillet over medium heat. Once the oil is hot, add the chanterelles, garlic and shallot; cook until the mushrooms' moisture
1 Ib jarred grape leaves, packed has evaporated, stirring frequently so as not to burn the inbrine garlic. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Add the clams,clamjuice andcrushed redpepperflakes;
Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Once the oil is hot, add the onion, garlic and lamb. Cook cover and cook just until the clams open. Remove from the
until the lamb loses its pink color, using a spoon to breakthe meat into small pieces.
heat and stir in the reservedcup of broccoli rabepesto.
Combine the kasha and egg in a small bowl and add to the mixture in the skillet along with1 cup of the broth,t/t Divide the pasta among individual wide, shallow bowls cup of the lemon juice, the parsley, dill, mint, coriander, cinnamon and salt. Heat until the liquid just begins to bubble or plates. Arrange 5 clams on each portion. Spoon the
gently; then cover, reducethe heat to mediumandcook for 5 minutes. Removefrom the heatand allow to cool. Plunge the grape leaves briefly into hot water to separate them, then transfer to a colander to drain. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Grease a 7-by-11-inch baking dish with nonstick cooking oil spray.
pan sauce over the clamsand pasta; garnish with parsley and with the Parmigiano-Reggiano curls, if desired. Serve right away.
Place a grapeleaf, shiny side down, on awork surface. Use asharp knife or scissors to trim off the bare stem
Note:To prepare the broccoli rabe, slice off and dis-
at the bottom of the leaf. Place 2 tablespoons of the filling at the stem end and shape roughly into a log about1 /2 inches long. Fold the sides of the leaf over the filling. Starting at the stem end, roll the leaf up tightly. Transfer
card the bottom 1t/t inches or so from the bunch's tough stems. Cut the remainder of the bunch into 3-inch lengths;
to the prepared baking dish, seam side down. Repeat to fill 48 leaves. You will be able to snugly fit in 3 rows of 8 dolmas, topped by asecond layer of 3 rows of 8 dolmas.
use 4 packed cups for this recipe (best to use a 1-quart container for measuring). Reserve anyexcess for another To get a leg up on cooking, the broccoli rabe Pour the remaining 1/2 cups of broth and /t cup lemon juice over the dolmas. Cover the baking dish with foil use. Cook the 4cups of broccoli rabe pieces in alarge pot needs to be blanched, drained and chilled beand weight the top with a heatproof pan or dish to keep the dolmas from unwinding. Bakefor 1 hour, then turn of boiling salted water for 5 minutes, then plunge them fore being used for the pesto. Leftover pesto off the heat and leave the dolmas in the oven for 30 minutes. Remove the dolmas from the cooking liquid before serving them warm or chilled.
into ice water, rinse and drain.
can be frozen for up to 3 months.
KOD's Granola Makes about12 cups (twenty-four /s-cup servings). This recipe by cookbook author Kim O'Donnel is advertised as "kid-friendly," but really it's for everyone. The gra-
nola can bestored in anairtight container at room temperature for a week. If it begins to get too sticky, spread it out on a baking sheet and bake at 300 degrees for10 minutes, then let cool completely before storing. 4 C old-fashioned rolled oats 2 C unsalted nuts, any /s C untoasted buckwheat groats combination of walnuts, /4 tsp ground cinnamon almonds, pecans, pistachios 1/2 C dried fruit, any combination or cashews, coarsely of raisins, cherries, chopped if the pieces are cranberries, blueberries, large apricots, figs, etc.
Serving the community since 1915
1 C raw, hulled sunflower seeds /4 C sesame seeds /2 C honey, preferably local /4 C good-quality maple syrup /4 C neutral oil, such as canola,
+ rrrrrX trr $r trrcrtt rrrrrrrert rtnrt rrprrranrt since rryry
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vegetable or grapeseed oil
Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Line a roasting pan or 2 rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper.
Stir together theoats, buckwheat groats, cinnamon,dried fruit, nuts andseeds in alarge mixing bowl. Heat the honey, maple syrup and oil in a small saucepan over low heat until the mixture thins, 2 or 3 minutes, stirring frequently to keep it from burning. Do not allow it to boil.
February7, 8 and 9, 2013
Pour the warmmixture overthe dry ingredients, stirring until the dry ingredients arewell coated. Spread the granola evenly on the prepared pan or baking sheets. Bake for 45 minutes, stirring every15 minutes to prevent burning and sticking. The granola is done when it's glistening and golden. It may still be somewhat damp.
Allow the granola to cool completely; it should crisp upwithin 30 minutes. Break it into smaller pieces, if desired. Store in an airtight container.
"Whole In-Bagn
"Whole In-Bag"
Angus
Extra Lean Boneless Beef BonelessBeef BonelessBeef GroundBeef New YorkStrip Ribeye CrossribRoasts
S 99 S 99 S 2 5 $ gg
Coney dogsaucestraight from the '60s By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun
Harold Lauer from Spearfish, S.D., was looking for a recipe for the Coney dog sauce that was served at many AstW drive-ins in the 1960s. John Van Meter from Baltimore's Dickeyville neighborhood sent in a recipe for the sauce that was given to him by his late sister. He said the recipe is attributed to Hank's A8W root beer stand in Wabash, Ind. He sent the recipe to me exactly as it read, but he thought it needed a little tweaking, which I did without much difficulty. I tested his recipe on a day when my house was full of hungry foot b a ll-watching boys, and it was a resound-
RECIPE FINDER Looking for a hard-
to-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email
baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.
ing success. I served the sauce over good-quality grilled hot dogs, and I put out bowls of grated cheese and diced onions for everyone to use as
toppings. This made for great
football food and would be ideal to take tailgating because the sauce can be made in advance and reheated or kept warm in a slow cooker. The recipe makes a large quantity of sauce, and if you run out of hot dogs, it makes for a very tasty, albeit beanless, bowl of chili.
Requests Mary Ki lby f r om T i monium, Md., would like to have the recipe for the banana cream pie that was served at the now-closed Toddle House restaurant chain in the 1950s. Ellen Priebe from Baltimore is looking for the recipe for the chicken chow mein that was served at Jimmy Wu's or the White Rice Inn in Baltimore.
Cut and wrapped In 1 Package
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"Whole In-Bagn
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S 75 S as S 95 S as
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101
16 Oz Pkg
12 Oz Pkg
Coney Dog Sauce No Rain Checks • Quantities While Supplies Last
Makes 14-20 servings. 2 Ibs ground chuck, fine grind 2 Ig onions, finely diced 4 tsp chili powder
4 pinches of red pepper flakes 1
t s p ground cumin (optional) 24 to32 oz tomato sauce 2 TBS prepared yellow mustard Salt and pepper to taste
(or more to taste)
Saute ground chuck and onions in a saucepan. Add remaining ingredients once the meat has browned. Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally until the sauce thickens, 30 to 40 minutes. May be served immediately or kept warm in slow cooker until ready to serve.
Serve sauceover hot dogs, "Coney Island style." Top with shredded cheeseand onions if desired.
I
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t
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LOCALLY OWNED &. OPERATED, SERVING CENTRAL OREGON SINCE 1915 Bend
Madras
Prineville
Burns
725 NE Greenwood
556 1 4th Street
3 15 W. 3 r d
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541-382-4421
54 1- 4 75-3637
54 1- 4 47-6291
541- 5 73-3004
D4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
H OME 4
A R DEN
Next week: Organize your winter gear
Midcentury Continued from 01 "I found out that it was designed and built in 1946 for Jeannette K eyes J o hnson. She was the daughter of one of the principals of one of the lumber companies, probably John Keyes, who was an executive with Brooks Scanlon
Company." What really excited Eckberg was finding out that his family home was designed by the prominent Portland architectural firm of Lawrence and Lawrence. Ellis Lawrence was the founder and first dean of the University of Oregon School of A r chitecture and Applied Arts. "Ellis Lawrence also designed a number of prominent buildings on (the University of
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Oregon) campus, including the library and the museum of art there," said Eckberg. He pointed out that the millwork along his mantel carries the same geometric design that can be seen on the campus museum exterior w alls. "Ellis Lawrence also designed the Trinity Episcopal Church, behind our house." Eckberg, who grew up in this house, has many fond memories. The location was stellar, as he was walking distance to the old Bend High School, the library, Drake Park, and several churches surrounding the house. Though the high school has moved, Eckberg and his wife, Gabrielle Taylor, still take advantage of being walking distance to Drake Park and downtown. But because the house was built in 1946 and had not been renovated in decades, Eckberg and Taylor decided it was in need of a major face-lift. "We wanted to be faithful to the era of this home, so we didn't want to rip out things that added to the character of it," said Taylor, a silversmith artist wh o m a kes j ewelry. "The house had been worn down with more than 66 years of living. I took off three layers
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Photos by Joe Kline / The Bulletin
Windows line the front of the home of Gabrielle Taylor and Chris Eckberg near downtown Bend. A hallmark of midcentury modernism is to bring the outdoors inside through the use of ample windows. "When the trees are green in the spring and summer, it's just beautiful," says Eckberg. of wallpaper, and the flooring in the kitchen was really dated, and the vinyl was hideous. But it would've been a shame if someone gutted the kitchen; I think the original design is fun." Eckberg said the flooring in the kitchen was so worn it had areas where it was down to the subflooring. They used another modern laminate for the counters, opting against the commonly seen granite countertops because they wanted to keep with the era. They also went with a
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simple laminate for the flooring, which keeps the kitchen lines and color scheme clean looking. In tackling the renovation, Eckberg and Taylor had to learn to relish the gems that came their way because the cost of renovating was more than double what they had originally estimated. One of the gems they love are the parquet floors throughout most of the home. " This parquet flooring i s original, and it was all cut and groove by hand. It was cut on
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the spot," said Taylor. "When they came to refinish these floors, they couldn't believe the craftsmanship of these handcut parquet floors." In the hallway of the house, where redcarpeting was wallto-wall, Taylor and Eckberg, had a hunch there might be something more. Their hunch paid off — once they tore out the carpeting, they found more of the beautiful parquet floors. The living room is an exp ansive open r o o m a n d , though they haven't furnished it with midcentury furniture, the architectural features are evident by the bank of windows that extends along the entire front wall. The clean structural l ines also i ncorporate built-in bookshelves, made with pine. The kitchen walls are painted a beautiful lavender hue. The cupboards are all original, repainted white. Taylor said she opted for white subway tiles for the backsplash, feeling it kept with the era of the home. The original porcelain farm sink fronts a l a rge kitchen window that looks to the backyard, where grapevines grow along the fence. "Chris' mom used to make d olmades wit h t h e g r a p e leaves that grew out there. She was a great cook," said Taylor. F rom t h e k i t c hen, w e stepped into the dining room, where another fireplace is set into a brick wall. Taylor said she painted the red b r icks white to open and brighten the room. Eckberg jokingly said, eMy mom is probably rolling in her grave; she loved those red bricks." Just off the dining room is a glass door with an equally sized transom, which allows in more natural light and allows one to step into a covered patio dining area. "This house does have a lot of modern features, like this covered patio and the wide eavesthat keep the house cool in the summer," said Eckberg. "We also have two m aster suites, which is something you see today, but back then it was new." Following Taylor, we passed t hrough th e h a l lway, w i t h the newly restored parquet floors and into their master bedroom. Like the living room, this room has ample natural lighting through the many windows. Adjacent to the bedroom is Taylor's workshop. " Originally, before it w a s my art studio, it was a sleeping porch," said Taylor. "They used to open all the windows in here and let in the summer breeze, and they could sleep here." On the other side of the master bedroom, an entire wall is dedicated to closet space that has beautifully crafted sliding wooden doors. The original bathtub and bathroom sink sit in the bathr oom. Though T aylor h a d
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story, the couple has owned five other Bend homes in the last 20 years. What they like best about this home is the good spatial sense that t h e m i dcentury modern naturally includes by The original parquet floor. being connected to its landscape on the exterior and carrying it through to the inside. to have them re-glazed, she The couplesays their design loves the way they turned out challenge was pickingthe right — looking like new, but totally surfaces and colors for the true original. midcentury feel. "We tended to gravitate toBetween the living r oom and the k itchen is another ward blues, which is a cool small hallway that leads to the color, and it turned out to be a dedicated powder room. good choice because the wood Eckberg says the large pow- paneling that is in half of the der room with a built-in desk house is a warm color," said area and a w i n dow above Eckberg. "The rooms all work it was where they had their because it balances the colors." home phone. T he renovation took s i x The couple has a natural weeks, and they made it a talent for picking the palette goal to be in the house for of colors, which come from Christmas. their backgrounds as artists. While their renovation budEckberg is responsible for get doubled, they say they have the many paintings displayed no complaints about the way it throughout the house. turned out. But Eckberg does Moving out of the powder laugh when he thinks that the room, we ascended a few steps renovations actually cost a lot to the second master suite, more than what his parents which is the large bedroom originally paid for the home in Eckberg shared with his older 1963. "My dad paid $27,000 for this brother while growing up. The 9-inch pine paneling home back then," says Eckberg is also on display throughout with a hearty laugh. "Originally he w a nted to this room, but to get the wood's luster back took a lot of elbow build on Awbrey Butte, but grease. back then, our family couldn't "There was a b oiler that find a home to rent, so we had blew up in this house. It was to buy this house. It turned out obviously an old boiler, and well. My dad, who was retired when it blew there was steamy Air Force, had been a carpenblack soot everywhere, three ter himself at one time and he inches deep," said Taylor. She also appreciated the woodrecalled scrubbing down the work and the construction of wood paneling, inch by inch. this home." Though this family home — Reporter: pnakamura@ has beenpartof Eckberg's life bendbulletin.com
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Planning Continued from 01 Instead, first consider your lifestyle and what you want from your yard. "Starting on paper is a good way to start whether (the yard) is a blank slate or it's a yard that's been in for 30 years, and it just totally doesn't work for them."
Starting on paper H art-Henderson say s t o start by identifying how the outdoor space will be used. Ask questions: Do you want a place for the kids to play'? Do you want a vegetable garden? Is there a view you want to preserve? Are there neighbors you want to screen? Is there urban noise you want to muffle? These questionsare aimed at identifying what homeowners want to accomplish with their landscape. Other items to identify are the paths of consistent foot traffic around the home. This will help determine where walkable surface is needed. On a map of your home and yard, draw lines that follow the walking patterns of routine tasks like taking out the garbage, walking to the clothesline, entering the house and turning out pets. "Then (the homeowner) knows those areas need to be a clean, walkable surface, so something like small pebbles, gravel or pavers might work," said Hart-Henderson.
Consider the elements Sun, shade, wind, wildlife, noise and view are all important elements to consider when plotting a landscape. Hart-Henderson contemplates wind and
Tips toconsider • Take a year to evaluate plant cycles. A yard that looks boring in the
winter mayyield wildflowers in thesummer. • Use winter to take noteof what seemsimbalanced or missing in yourlandscape. • In winter, pinpoint flat, boring areaswhere gentle mounding and anchor elements, like an evergreen shrub and a boulder, might work.
• Always place anchorelements andplants, including boulders, trees and plants, in odd numbers. "Nothing is ever in a row in nature
... you will almost neversee nature doing anything in evens,"said Maureen Klecker, anOregonlicensed landscaper. • For any retrofitting, check city requirements for necessary
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infrastructure to handle storm water. • Before planting anything, break up the ground12 inches deep and enrichthe dirt with amendments, including manure, compost, lawn
clippings andleaves. • Round and curve the borders of plant beds and the lawn. "A square
lawn with squaredoff bedswon't look aspleasing as a rounded off lawn," said Klecker.
• Research tree typesbefore planting to makesure the spacecan accommodate the tree in10 and15 years. • Plant something for every season, including flowers, mums, asters
Submitted photo
A poplar tree dwarfs a house. When planting a tree, plan for how it will look as it grows.
and ornamental grasses, to keepvisual interestyear-round. • Incorporate ornamental grasses and other textured plants, like of interest throughout the winter.
wind or put in a screen," said Hart-Henderson.
• Install wires for landscape lighting whenirrigation ditches are
Importance of soil
sumac andredtwigged dogwood, into aflower bed toprovide points open, even if you don't plan on installing lights now.
sun exposure when planning the landscaping around any home. "If a home is exposed to wind, they're going to have
a high energy bill, so planting evergreen trees on the northwest side can really reduce heat loss ... and if you have big evergreens already existing on the south side of your home, you're going to be missing the free heat that the sun offers in the winter." Hart-Henderson advises choosing deciduous trees forthe south side of the home, which will lose their leaves in the winter.
Maureen Klecker, an Oregon licensed landscaper,stresses that creating excellent soil is the Another example is a home- paramount component to creowner who might have an in- ate a thriving landscape. "The credible westward view of the soil is where the task begins, mountains and wants a large, and the soil is where success west-facing patio. Because the is buried," said Klecker. Her wind will be a problem every approach to creating good soil afternoon, H a r t -Henderson entails rototilling the ground says she would probably sug- 12 inches deep and then adding gest a small west-facing patio 6 inches ofweed-free organic to accommodate the view and amendment,which can include then a larger patio on a difmanure, leaf mold, perennial ferentside of the house where debris, lawn clippings, clean the homeowners can enjoy yard debris, tree berries, neebarbecuing and entertaining dles or duff. without the wind. "Or we figMcDowell uses a b a king ure out how to create a sunken analogy to illustrate the same patio to get them out of the point: "I can make the best
frosting in the world, but it won't taste good if the cake isn't done right." Without amending the soil, Klecker says, there is no nutritional value in the dirt. "The sand that w e h ave around here won't g ro w a n y thing other than native plants." McDowell explained that it's the added organic material that traps water and nutrients for a landscape. Without amending soil "water has nowhere to hang out to be available to the plants." McDowell pointed out that spending time and money on the underground part of a landscape will pay off hugely in the form of less water and fertilizer used,less pest and disease issues and less plant loss.
Irrigation As part of the initial planning stages, an irrigation system should be plotted, "which will save you a small fortune over time," said Klecker. And while you have the irrigation ditchesopen, McDowell recommends adding the necessary
wiring for lighting, even if you don't plan to initially have landscape lights. "Think about putting the wire in the ground for $70 so that down the road when you want to do the lighting you aren't going to have to go backward to install the wire," said McDowelL Landscape lighting adds visual interest and creates the feeling of lengthened daylight hours. Backlighting a pine tree helps to create visual interest in the winter, said McDowelL
importance of researching anything you're considering planting and to believe a plant label when it says the tree in the one gallon container will grow to more than 100 feet tall and 30 feet wide. "So many people put a cute little forest tree next to their mailbox or two feet from their sidewalk, and in every single case that tree has to get cut down in five years orneed to be trimmed up." Klecker says if you're interested in planting a forest tree, first take a walk in the forest to get a realistic idea of what the tree is going to look like in 10 to 15 years. A lthough it's hard not t o want instant gratification when planting, McDowell advises having patience with a landscape. "I helped design a cottage garden, and we worked within our budget so we had to put in a young baby landscape, but give it three seasons and it will grow into the space," said McDowelL Another t r ick t o c h o osing the right plants for your landscape is to take note of the plants and trees in your neighborhood. "I would say one of the first places to start is to just start looking around at other places and see what
you like, especially close by so it's in a similar climate," said McDowell. — Reporter: 541-383-0361or mgaliagher@bendbulietinLcom
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.Why do my popovers de-
. flate when I take them out of theoven? How can Iprevent this problem? • If y o ur p o povers lose • volume when they come out of the oven, they are probably underbaked. When these airy baked goods aren't cooked enough, too much steam stays trapped inside. That moisture condenses once they're r emoved from the oven, causing them to collapse. The perfect popover, however, is easy to master. First, make sure your ingredients are at room temperature. To make one dozen popovers, preheat your oven to 450 degrees, and greasetwo standard six-cup popover pans with unsalted butter. It's best to use a tulip-shaped popover pan because it allows the hot air in the ovento circulate entirely around each popover, and the lipped rim helps the popover batter form a large crust dome, or top. If you don't have a popover pan, use a large 12-cup muffin tin. Popover pans must be piping hot before you pour batter into them. So place the oiled pans on a r i mmed baking sheet, and heat them in the oven for 20 minutes. Remove the pans
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For perfectly puffed popovers, it's crucial to get the timing and temperature right. You can also try piercing the side of each popover with a knife when you remove it from the pan. from the oven and pour in the room-temperature batter, filing each cup two-thirds fulL Bake for 15 minutes, and resist the urge to open the oven door while baking, since that will lowerthe temperature. Reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees, and continue to bake the popovers until they are well browned and crusty, about 20 minutes more. Finaiiy, remove the popovers from the oven to cool, invert them to unmold, and transfer them to a bowl lined with a clean kitchen towel. An additional trick for keeping popovers crisp is to gently poke a hole in the side of each one with a sharp knife when you remove it from the pan to allow extra team to escape without deflating the crust dome. For our no-
fail popover recipe, visit marthastewart.com/popovers.
Removing stains from jadeite What is the best way to Q ..remove stubborn, stuckon stains from vintage jadeite bakeware? • Jadeite, a sturdy milky• green molded glass, was commonly used in the 1940s and'50s. it canwithstandthe extreme heat of an oven or a stove and was therefore quite popular in homemakers' kitchens. The first rule of caring for jadeiteor any glassware — is to wash it by hand. As tempting as it may be to use the dishwasher, the hot water and detergent inside can etch the jadeite's surface, casing permanent damage. While hand-washing, avoid abrasive
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D6 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 20'l3
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
rimsi comou oo TV SPOTLIGHT By Jake Coyle The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The void you're looking at on your DVR is the sitcom landscape post"30 Rock." When Tina Fey's bright, bouncy, irreverent showbiz send-up aired its last episode Thursday night, a light (Kenneth's toothy grin'?) went out in broadcast television. "30 Rock" was not perfect: It sometimes spun its wheels and its writing was often too showy. But "30 Rock" was the clear sitcom heir to "Seinfeld,"
pushing comedy forward by fusing the relationship set-up of "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" wit h t h e f l a shback jump-cutting of t h e s i nglecamera "Arrested Development." Its snappy, joke-packed universe was b ot h t i g htly controlled and capable of going anywhere — a fiction funhouse version of Fey's "Weekend Update" social satire. Oh, and it had Alec Baldwin. With "30 Rock" leaving the air, the sitcom again finds itself at a crossroads. Though acclaimed an d a w a rd-winning, "30 Rock" was never highly rated. Sitcom fans and creatorsalike can reasonably wonder that if such a show as "30 Rock" had trouble finding viewers, what chance do other quality sitcoms have? At least since the resolutely c ynical "Seinfeld" and t h e
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But there are actually quite a lot of broadcast sitcoms running now, including "The Big Bang T h eory," "Whitney," "Happy Endings," r2 Broke Girls," "The Mindy Project" and the recently premiered and s o mewhat p r o m ising White H ouse f a r ce "1600 Penn." Two Fox shows in their second seasons appear to have hit their stride: the animated "Bob's Burgers" and Zooey Deschanel's "New Girl." "Bob's Burgers," created by many of those involved with the improAli Goldstein / NBC via The Associated Press vised 1990s Comedy Central TinaFey as Liz Lemon, left,and Jane Krakowski as Jenna Maroney series"Dr. Katz, Professional appear in a scene from the series finale of "30 Rock," which aired Therapist," has coalesced into Thursday on NBC. the funniest family portrait on TV. H. Jon Benjamin voices a fry cook, and comedians Krisabsurdist (and u n d errated) Sliding into a rut has never ten Schaal and Eugene Mir"NewsRadio," the sitcom has been a problem for another man, as two of his adolescent been self-reflexive, a parody of NBC comedy, "Community." It kids, steal the show. "New Girl," easily dismissed itself. Laugh tracks and simple has manic inventiveness going sets before studio audiences for it, but not much else. at first as cloying hipsterism, gave way to wider-ranging has also found a b a l ance, A grand tradition single-camera freedom. But thanks partly to t h e excelaside from "30 Rock" and "ArThe end of "30 Rock" her- lent Jake J ohnson, whose rested Development," this has alds a sitcom shift, particu- chemistry with Deschanel is, led to little more than better larly in N BC's long-running for better or worse, TV's new decorated interiors. T hursday night block — a Ross-Rachel. M any would sa y A B C 's grand tradition that includes Whatever the value of the "Modern Family" is the stron- "Cheers," "The Cosby Show" shows, it's a great time for indiand "Seinfeld." Both "Parks vidualcomedic performances: gest current sitcom, but, like many comedies today, it 's and Recreation" and "Com- Rainn Wilson on "The Office"; better at being charming and munity" have cloudy futures, Julia Louis-Dreyfus on "Veep", heartwarming than funny in a and the long-running "The Chris Pratt on "Parks", Neil fresh way. The same issue has Office" will finally end soon. Patrick Harris on "How I Met crept into NBC's "Parks and Elsewhere, CBS's "How I Met Your Mother"; Julie Bowen on Recreation," the likable small- Your Mother," a studio audi- "Modern Family." town government sitcom from ence vestige, is preparing its The flight to cable hasn't Fey's cohort Am y P o ehler. final season. been as pronounced in sitcoms
Wi e is intoeranto s ouse'sness i Dear Abby: Mywife andI areboth schoolteachers. She hates to call in sick and oftenteaches class when she says she feels ill. I don't argue with her. The problem arises when I am not feeling well. When I am sick and feverish, I'm notinclinedto rise • EAR from my sickbed and go to work. On those few occasions, my wife objects strenuously. She interrogates me about my symptoms, then makes her own "diagnosis" on the spot. Apparently, her gold standard for staying home is the inability to stand. This createsa problem for me at work because co-workers are concerned about catching my obvious illness. The last time I felt sick, my wife ordered me to go to work. When I saw a doctor afterward, I was told I had a virus and should be in bed. My wife still objected to my missing work becauseshe considered it to be "just a cough." I missed a grand total of two days because of it. On one of them I wasn't able to stand, the other because I refusedto get out ofbed. Then, since I was staying home "doing nothing," my wife insisted I care for our two
children (ages 3 and 1), rather than send them to my mother-in-law who baby-sits while we work. Today a staff member called in sick with the same virus I had. Everyone looked at me as the responsible party. If I stay home, my wife will dump the kids on me and give me the cold shoulder. If I go to work, I expose my co-workers
ABBY Q
and perform poorly. Help! — At a Total Loss in Corpus Christi Dear Total Loss: It appears you married a woman who is not only lacking in empathy, but also is a controlling, slave-driving w i tch. Unless you can find the backbone to take control of the situation and stop acting like a victim, your wife will continue to punish you when you're least able to defend yourself — and nothing will change. P.S. A teacher with a virus can not only infect co-workers and administrative staff, but also his students — not to mention his own children. Please point that out to "Simone
Legree." Dear Abby: The adage, "If you don't have anything nice to say ..."
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, FEB. 5, 2013: Thisyearyouemphasize
is easier said than done. When I am tired or stressed, I have a tendency to be less tolerant of others' quirks, and sometimes I voice my annoyance. While my opinions do have a basis, I sometimes feel guilty about insulting or hurting the person's feelings. I envy those who are strong enough to not allow the stress of certain situations to affect them. I have never been a believer in "killing them with kindness" because that seems to enable their behavior. My intolerance is probably due to unhappiness about my own life. So how do I allowthese annoyances to roll off my back and bite my tongue'? — Can't Tolerate Fools in Des Moines Dear Can't Tolerate Fools: One way to do that would be to remind yourself that the more you take your unhappiness out on those around you, the more you will isolate yourself. When you are tired or stressed, and before shooting off your mouth, ask yourself: Is it true'? Is it kind? Is it helpful? And if what you were about to say is not all three, bite your tongue, zip your lip, or walk
away until you get a grip. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
your long-term goals. Youalso have awide By Jacqueline Bigar collection of friends, all of whom seem to be strong supporters. This powerful team is instrumental to your success, and be overwhelmed by others, especially if you it provides you have a lot to do. Screen calls. Tonight: Try Stars showthe kind with emotional something unusual. of day you'll have security. You might ** * * * D ynamic decidetofocus on CANCER (June21-Jufy 22) ** * * P ositive e s t ablishing some ** * * You have a lot to do. Getting ** * A verage fin a ncial security. everything done could take arather large effort, as your mind keepswandering to ** S o-so If you are single, yonder lands. Youcould be takenaback by * Difficult you could meet asuggestion.Detach,andseeifyoucan someone through a friendship. This friendship will play a strong get the messagemore in the manner it was meant. Tonight: Go for a brisk walk. role in your year. If you areattached, make sure thatyou focus on the friendship as LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Your imagination can either resolve well as the romance. SAGITTARIUScan be a problem or distort it. You will know the impulsive. outcomeonceyou hearothers'feedback. ARIES (March21-Aprif 19) Financial dealings will be highlighted. Sharp ** * * * D o yourself a favor and start comments are likely. You donot have to do listening to your inner voice more often. more than listen to them. Tonight: Havefun How you see apersonal matter could with a loved one. change dramatically as a result. Beaware VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) of a tendency to beslightly defensive. Don't ** * * O t hers demand a lot from you. takesomeone'scomment thewrong way. Listen, but also recognize thatyou need Tonight: Try a newrestaurant. to make your own decisions. Friends have TAURUS (April 20-May20) excellent insights, but they don't know ** * * L isten to news with a grain of the specifics of what you aredealing with. salt. Rethink a situation more carefully. Understand what is happening within your Trust your judgment when it comes to your personal life. Tonight: Anchored in. immediate group of friends. Know what LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) needs to happen in order to keepyou more ** * You could have difficulty getting content. Honor a friend's request. Tonight: and/or giving a clear message. Maintain Let someone elsechoose. a sense of humor. Youmight not always GEMINI (May21-June20) have the control you desire. Your drive and ** * * D t hers' dynamic energy could follow-through makeyou astar wherever push you over the edge if you aren't careful. you choose to putyour energy. Tonight: A superior might thinkthat he or shehas a Happily head home. novel idea. Indulge this person. Youcould
** * * Keep conversations about a key matter within a certain circle of friends or colleagues. Confidentiality is necessary. Adapt to fast changes in the workplace. Tap into your ingenuity if you find that you're hitting a roadblock. Tonight: Add more spice to your personal life.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * T he unexpected occurs. Understand that finances could be involved. Do not commit to any expenses just yet. If you are feeling negative or pessimistic, you could be creating more of a problem for yourself. Detach, and walk awayfrom the issue. Tonight: Payyour bills.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)
But there are only two mustwatch comedies on TV now that "30 Rock" is over. Both are on cable and both draw more from independent film than from sitcom history: Louis C.K.'s "Louie" (currently on hiatus for FX) and Lena Dunham's "Girls" on HBO (maybe you've heard a thing or two
about it). A comedian interested in a TV series now is less likely to strive for the large broadcast audience of "30 Rock" than follow in the personal storytelling of Dunham and C.K. (C.K., after all, already tried u pdating th e s i t com w i t h "Lucky Louie," which kept the traditional multi-camera, studio audience formula but built episodes around real adult problems and mature jokes. It lasted one season on The most anticipated upcoming sitcom premiere isn't on broadcast or even cable. Netflix will debut a new season of " A r r ested Development" in May, years after it was canceled on Fox. Sitcom nostalgia may already be in full swing.
10 p.m. on COM,"Tosh.0" — Daniel Tosh's razor-sharp humor is back for another season of this series that comments on all things Internet, including viral videos, bizarre bloggers and social-media morons. Plus, a whole new group of poor souls who achieved Internet infamy will get a chanceat"W eb Redemption."
• There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. Regal Old Mill Stadium t6 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • BROKEN CITY (Ri 3:45, 9:30 • BULLET TO THEHEAD (R) I: I0, 3:50, 6:20, 9:40 • DJANGO UNCHAINED (R) 12:50, 4:25, 8 • GANGSTER SQUAD (R)I2:20,3:05,6:05,9:10 • HANSEL &GRETEL:W ITCH HUNTERS (R)11:40a.m., I2:05, 6:45 • HANSEL &GRETEL:W ITCH HUNTERS IMAX (R)12:40, 3:55, 7:25, 9:45 • HANSEL 8 GRETEL: WITCHHUNTERS3-0 (R) 3:15, 9:25 •THE HOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY3-0 (PG-13)6 •THE HOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)2, 9:35 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 11:55 a.m., 3:25, 7:35 • LIFE OF PI (PG)12:15 • LIFE OF PI 3-0 (PG) 3:35, 6:30, 9:30 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3, 6:15, 9:30 • MAMA (PG- I3) I:40, 4:20, 7:10, 9:50 • MOVIE 43 (R) 'I:50, 4:45, 7:50, 10:10 • PARKER iR) 1:20,4:10, 7:05, IO • THIS IS 40 (R) 1, 4:05, 7:15, 10:20 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) I2:30, 1:30, 4:35, 6:55, 7:45, 10:15 • ZERO DARK THIRTY lR) 11:45 a.m., 3:10, 6:35, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. l
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347
• ARGO (R)12:15, 3, 6 • HYDE PARK ONHUDSON(R) 1:15, 3:45, 7 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13)12:30, 3:30, 6:15 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) l2:45, 4 • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) Noon, 3: i5, 6:30 • STAND UP GUYS (R) 1,4:15, 6:45 McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 • THE MAN WITH THEIRONFISTS iR) 9:15 • SKYFALL (PG- l3) 5:30 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 21 mayattend screenings before7 pm.ifaccompanied bya legalguardian.
10 p.m. on TBS, "Cougar Town" — As Jules (Couiteney Cox) decides it might be time to get out of real estate, Bobby (Brian Van Holt) finds a dream job of his own: running a burger truck. Now all he has to do is keep Ellie lChrista Miller) from driving his customers away with her rudenessinthe new episode "Runnin' Down a Dream." Josh Hopkins also stars. ©Zap2it
5
IN !
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds
NIXtTREss
G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084
DOUBLE SAVINGS NOW! $25-50 rebates on select Hunter Douglas products, and matching instant dealer rebates (thru 4/2/1 3)
dya glASSIP COVERINGS
541-388-4418 www.classic-coverings.com
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271
• No movies are scheduled foscreen today.
Pbethlehem shelter • help h op e
Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777
• Sisters Movie Houseis closed today.
©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
10 p.m. onl3, "Vegas" — As Jack (Jason O'Mara) delivers some very bad newsto Mia lSarah Jones), he struggles to keep another crucial bit of information from her and Ralph lDennis Quaid) in the new episode "The Third Man." Michael Chiklis, Carrie-Anne Moss and Taylor Handley also star.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
** * * Express your feelings with clarity, especially when dealing with an authority figure. The communication style you use could be the issue. Askfor confirmation or repeat what the other party said. It might be an effective technique. Tonight: At afavorite haunt with friends.
9 p.m. onE3, "NCIS: Los Angeles"— An ambush connected to a cartel kingpin with terrorist ties has Sam, Callen, Kensi and Deeks lLL Cool J, Chris O'Donnell, Daniela Ruah, Eric Christian Olsen) working under cover as an elite tactical unit to investigate. Linda Hunt, Barrett Foa and Renee Felice Smith also star in the new episode "Kill House."
HBO.)
• HANSEL flr GRETEL:W ITCH HUNTERS (R)4:30,6:45 • PARENTAL GUIDANCElPG)4:15,6:30 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 4:45, 7 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 3:45, 7
PISCES (Feb.19-March20)
8 p.m. onf5, "Pioneers of Television" — Miniseries still rank among the top-rated programs in television history. "Roots" was the biggest, and the season finale has interviews with some of its stars, including LeVar Burton, Louis Gossett Jr., Leslie Uggams, Ben Vereen, John Amos, Georg Stanford Brown and Ed Asner. Also weighing in are key players from "The Thorn Birds" — which marks its 30th anniversary this year — including Richard Chamberlain, Rachel Ward and Bryan Brown.
Must watch
** * * You hit one of your power days. A friendship might be very important to you, but know that sometimes it also can weighyoudown.This personoften can be demanding. Your efforts do not go unnoticed, and they could turn a problem around. Tonight: Do whatever feels right. * *Take some timeoff.Eventhough you might thinkyou are needed —andyou very well couldbe — you arebetter off resting or handling a personal matter right now. Someone could bevery difficult to deal with. This person carries authority with him or her. Tonight: Not to be found.
8 p.m. onE3, "NCIS" — Gibbs lMark Harmon) and his colleagues are on a mission to take down the world's most wanted cyberterrorist. To accomplish that, they need to find a certain hackerwho may holdthe key to tracking down their quarry in the new episode "Canary." Michael Weatherly, Sean Murray, Cote de Pablo, David McCallum and Pauley Perrette also star.
as it has been in hour-long dramas, but the trend is going that way. On cable, niche sitcoms like "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia," "The League" and "Archer" have pushed the boundaries of taste, reveling in their freedom.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOUR HOROSCOPE
TV TODAY
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800
Donate your
redeemable bottles cfnd cans
today! www.bethleheminn.org 541.322.8768 ext. 21
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 4:35 • HANSEL 8rGRETEL:WITCHHUNTERS3-0 (R) 5:25, 7:30 • THE LAST STAND (R) 7 • MAMA(PG-I3) 5:05,7: IO • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) 4:15, 6:50 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 5:20, 7:25 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014
• ARGO (Rl6 • LINCOLN (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6: I5 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibi/ity.
Q NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aceard-cuinning
neighborhood on Bend's westside. www.northwestcrossing.com
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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NEW CLIENT OFFER
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F REE E l e c t r o n i c F i l i n g w ith E v er y R e t u r n 15 Years Experience
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541-388-7374 Bend Offer validwith coupononly. Excluding Rys&stairs. Notvalid withother offers. Minimums apply. Paymentdueat time of service. Expirationdate:Feh.28, 2013.
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SW Hwy 97 8 Bard. . . 54 1 4 7 5 - 1 5 5 5
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• Next Day Installation I
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Valid any day of the week. Bring in this voucher to redeem. Must buy two regularly priced entrees and two beverages to receive$7 discount. Limit one coupon per table. Cannot be combined with any other offers, discounts, or specials. Does not apply to the Mezzo Menu or Pastini Sunday Supper. Valid in Bend only. Please honor your server with a gratuity based on the amount before discount. Offer expires/28/13. 2
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Vacuum Interior
Tires 8 Wheels Cleaned & Center Console Door Jams Wiped Out Clean Glass Tit Pr hin Treat Dash-Vinyl & Leather SERVICEHOURS M-F 7C45am to 5C30pm Expires 2/28/13
REDMOND....SW10th & Highland.... 5 41 548-7 2 7 2
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BEND(souTH)... S Hwy 97 & Murphy... 5 41 382-6 7 6 7
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MURRAYIHOLT 541-382-2222 •
¹1 RATED
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Providing you with a fun shopping experience is our priority, so please come in and see us at any of our locations!
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, '$299
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MA INTEN AN CE Install new disc pads/shoes, resurface ldrums/rotors. Most cars per axle. CeramicI I or carbon metallic pads extra if required.I
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Welcome to The Outpost! The Outpost is a Oregon retailer.
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If Convenient Appointments
ofCentral Oregon 54 j 593 $ 799
Starting At
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The power of oxygen is undeniable; Mother Nature has used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets! I
' Crab Fest
1230 NE 3RD • BEND, OR
Steak-Lobster Shrimp
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Using Chem-Dry resists re-soiling so your carpet fibers stay cleaner, longer! Don't forget your area rugs & upholstery too!
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Chem Dry of Cen-tral Oregon 54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated
STANLEY STEEMER.'Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap
Stanley Steemer' Carpet Cleaning Special
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$
541-706-9390• 1-800-STEEMER
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Schedule Online at www.stanleysteemer.com
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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbLllletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013
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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Includeyour name, phone number and address
: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Place, cancel or extend an ad
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264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 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 Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood 208
Pets 8 Supplies a
00 I Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
O r e g o n
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246
260
267
269
Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Fuel & Wood
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
SELL
FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with oul
"QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 1 2
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Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulle!In.com
Husky-Wolf female, 3 mos, beautiful blue eyes! $250. 541-977-7019
Labrador Pups, AKC Chocolate/Yellow/White Hips OFA guaranteed. $300-$400. 1-541-954-1727
Lost: Cardigan Corgi female, from Pine Nursery Dog Park, Fri 2/1, blue merle very cute, $500 reward. 541-633-9056 or
Refrigerator: 26 cu.ft., WHEN YOU SEE THIS withicemaker, HFrench AK-47 (10) 3 0 -round doors, bottom freezer, magazines, new & used, ~Oo $400. 541-771-8996. $50 ea. 541-788-8852 On a classified ad ~!,,t4 Bend local pays CASH!! go to for all firearms 8 www.bendbulletin.com ammo. 541-526-0617 to view additional Bushmaster AR15-E2S, photos of the item. 2 mags, shells, case, Solid oak dining table, 68 $1450. 541-480-0824 x 48, 6 highback chairs, • Tools 2 mos. new! $950 obo, CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 cash only. 541-549-1089 Reloading Supplies. (3) 3500-watt gas generators, $220 ea, obo. 541-408-6900. The Bulletin 541-419-9859 recommends extra Desert Eagle 50 cal. n • o -I w/case, 200 rnds, 8 Check out the chasing products or, reloading dies, $2100. classifieds online services from out of I call Rob 406-560-6684 www.bendbufletin.com i the area. Sending I Updated daily c ash, c hecks, o r '
M orePixatBendbuletin,com
I
i i information about an ~
i credit i n f o rmation may be subjected to i FRAUD. For more
DON'TMISSTHIS
Craftsman 10e Table
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL e call the Or e gon / FOR $500 OR ' State Attor ney ' LESS? i General's O f f i c e Non-commercial Consumer P r otec- • advertisers may t ion ho t l in e at I place an ad i 1-877-877-9392. with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12
Saw, $199; Yamaha 2600 Portable Generator (never used) $450; Craftsman rotating bench, $75.
advertiser, you may I
i
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LThe Bulleting
OI'
Antiques & Collectibles
~ee eke eet
Mike, 541-923-2953.
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
For newspaper
delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
claaaified@bendbulletin com
The Bulletin gerrrng Central Oregon arnte t903
P oulan rider 42" c ut 18t/a hp, $650 obo. 541-389-9268. SUPER TOP SOIL www.herahe aotlandbarlccom Screened, soil 8 compost m i x ed , no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight s creened to p s o il. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949.
Lost & Found 1 cord dry, split Juniper, $190/cord. Multi-cord • Building Materials discounts, & t/~ cords Found mountain bike in Bend. To claim, send available. Immediate Bend Habitat serial ¹ to P .O. Box delivery! 541-408-6193 RESTORE 1269, Redmond, OR Building Supply Resale 97756, by April 25, A-1 DRY JUNIPER Quality at LOW $190 split, or $170 rnds 2013. PRICES multi-cord discount, del. Found piece of silver, SE 740 NE 1st Call 541-977-4500 or Bend, call to identify; will 541-312-6709 541-350-1809 hold u n t i l 4/3 0 /13. Open to the public.
Ad must include price of Poodle Pups, AKC toys. il e tte ot aacc a~ Loving, cuddly compan- Antiques wanted: furnior less, or multiple ions. 541-475-3889 ture, marbles, beer items whose total 541-639-7767 cans, early B/W phodoes not exceed Queensland Heelers Sisters Habitat ReStore All Year Dependable tography, old hardware/ $500. Firewood: S plit, Del. standard & mini,$150 & LOST since Fri. eve, Building Supply Resale fixtures. 541-389-1578 up. 541-280-1537 Bend. Seas o ned B aker R d . are a , Quality items. Call Classifieds at rightwayranch.wordLodgepole: 1 for $175 N ewfoundland L a n LOW PRICES! Divorce Liquidation 541-385-5809 or 2 for $335. Cash, seer black 8 w h ite press.com Autographed guitar col- www.bendbulletin.com 150 N. Fir. Check or Credit Card male 3 mo. old. Re541-549-1621 Saint Bernard puppies, lection: Clapton, McCartOK. 541-420-3484. ward. 541-388-5859 Open to the public. 1st shots, w ormed,ney, Eagles, others. Valued over $2500 each; M&M AK-47 rifle NIB, $400. 541-280-1840 asking $475 each, with a sking $1500 o b o. Scottish Terrier puppies, authenticity 8 appraisal. 541-771-9902. AKC, male & female, 1st Call cell, 561-880-7352. SKS Rifle, good condishots, wormed, 8 weeks, tion, some shells also. ready to go now! Call 541-317-5624 $425. 541-504-1704 541-788-2849
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most gen ng Cem al 0 egon t nte rggg each. 541-388-5418 comprehensive listing of classified advertising... Tzu female, 8 Ibs, real estate to automotive, Adopt a nice CRAFT Chihuahua Pups, a s - Shih 16 mos, to senior home, merchandise to sporting cat or kitten from Tu- sorted colors, teacup, $275. 541-788-0090 goods. Bulletin Classifieds malo sanctuary, Pet 1st shots, w o rmed, appear every day in the Siberian Husky females: Smart, & now Petco! $250, 541-977-0035 print or on line. 10wks, $300; 15 mo AKC Fixed, shots, ID chip, t ested, m ore! 3 8 9 $400. 541-977-7019 Call 541-385-5809 8420. Photos, info: www.bendbulletin.com www.craftcats.org 8 Price like us on Facebook. Reduced Serving Centrat Oregontate tgta Adult companion cats "aa Wanted copy of Sept. 5, FREE to seniors, dis- DACHSHUND AKC 2012 Bulletin; will pay abled & ve t e rans! female mini longhaired $20. 541-516-8681 Tame, altered, shots, $600 541-598-7417 Springer Spaniel Pups ID chip, more. Will already 2/17,Champion WANTED: Tobacco ways take back if cirlines, $400. Now taking pipes - Briars, Meercumstances change. Find exactly what dep, 541-604-6232 shaums and smoking 389-8420. Visit Sat/ accessories. 4. Sun 1-5. Photos, info: you are looking for in the WANTED: RAZORSCLASSIFIEDS www.craftcats.org. Gillette, Gem, Schick, Yorkie/Chihuahua pupetc. Shaving mugs A merican Eskimo, 5 1st shots, $200, and accessories. mo. oid maie, pure Dachshund, AKC mini pies, cash. 541-678-7599 female, $250. Fair prices paid. white, AKC/UKC reg. black/tan 541-633-3221 Call 541-390-7029 $800.541-610-2286 Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl, between 10 am-3 pm. 2 boys, potty training, A ussies, A K C m i n i ,Donate deposit bottles/ health guar., pixs avail, shots/wormed, family cans to local all vol- $550 8 up. 541-777-7743 raised, parents on site unteer, non-profit resI Ite m s for Free cue, to help with cat 541-598-5314 210 spay/neuter vet bills. Furniture & Appliances Loveseat, m u l ti-color, See Cans for Cats Automatic cat litter box, good condition, free! You used, great cond. $50. trailer at Ray's Marpickup. 541-848-7525 ket, Century Dr, thru 541-815-2737 A1 Washers&Dryers 2/10, Sheriff's parking Just bought a new boat? $150 ea. Full warlot 2/11-22, PetSmart Sell your old one in the Barn/shop cats FREE, ranty. Free Del. Also classifieds! Ask about our some tame, some not. 2/23-25. Donate M-F wanted, used W/D's We d e liver! F i xed, @ Smith Sign C o , Super Seller rates! 541-280-7355 shots. 541-389-8420 1515 NE 2nd; or at 541-305-5809 Tumalo sa n c tuary BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! anytime. 3 8 9 -8420;Curio cabinet, antique www.craftcats.org. oak replica, c u rved The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are still over 2,000 folks in our community without glass case, l ighted, permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift perfect cond. $475. Call a Pro 541-318-8130 camps, getting by as best they can. The following items are badly needed to Whether you need a Dining table, 6 chrs, 2 help them get through the winter: fence fixed, hedges leaves, oak Ethan Allen n @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ 42 x72 e exc. cond. trimmed or a house New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. $875. 541-318-8130 built, you'll find e WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. GENERATE SOME exprofessional help in PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT citement i n you r The Bulletin's "Call a THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER neighborhood! Plan a 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. Service Professional" garage sale and don't forget to advertise in For Special pick up please call Directory Ken @ 541-389-3296 classified! 541-385-5809 PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 541-385-5809.
The Bulletin
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210
Chain link dog run 8 The Bulletin recompanels, 6x10. $400. mends extra caution Misc. animal cages all when purc h as- sizes. 541-771-8996. ing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inf ormation may b e subjected to fraud. For more i nformation about an adver- Chesapeake AKC pups, tiser, you may call shots, good lines/hips the O r egon State parents on site $500, Attorney General's 541-259-4739. Office Co n s umer Protection hotline at Shiba Inu Reg'd male 1-877-877-9392. puppies, ready now, vet checked, 1st shots, $600
The Bulletin
,
208
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 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,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty 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 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
A v e .
R n BBlISC Davltzn Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com
Secretary, drop front, mahogany, w/chair, babied 8 beautiful! A steal a t $ 2 5 0 . 541-322-6281.
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
The Bulletin ger tng Central Oregon a nte l903
Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 255
Computers T HE B U LLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple
ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer. 260
Private collector buying
p ostage stamp a l bums 8 c o llections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell ¹) 240
Crafts & Hobbies Ashford spinning wheel, brand new, unfinished. $500 originally; asking $300 obo. 541-548-4461 242
Exercise Equipment Help for lower back relief Inverter B oard, w/rolling platform $125 obo. 541-382-6816. 246
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
Easy, flexible, and affordable cld packages are also available on our Web site.
Misc. Items
215
Coins & Stamps
Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.
Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad"
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
and follow these easy steps:
541-389-6655
BUYING &
SE L LING
All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419.
C emetery p lo t De chutes Memorial Gardens. $500 or b est offer. 541-408-1477
Mens Pea coat, brand new, never worn XXL $30. 541-508-3886
Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & stu6t/a boxes Winchester dio equip. Mclntosh, A ccubond 300 W i n J BL, Marantz, D y mag, 180 gr., $50 box naco, Heathkit, Sanor $45 if buy all. Call sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 Rob (406)560-6684
Choose cl category, choose ct classification, and then select your ad package. Write your cld ctnd upload your digital Photo. Create your account with any major credit card. All ads appear in both print and online Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online. To place your photo ad, visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions 541-385-5809
Classifieds akkw.trcntttauuctitt.cum
E2 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •
Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
fg,iF~>Jir ) Jf,jj JliIJjjJ~ Jg Can be found on these pages:
FLOORING Experienced Hardwood Finish in Ads published in "EmPlace Installers ployment Opportuni- Looking fo r ex p erit ies" i n c lude e m - enced craftsmen to ployee and start work i m medii ndependent pos i - ately. Work will be in tions. Ads for posi- both the Tri-Cities and tions that require a fee Walla Walla, WashCAUTION READERS:
or upfront investment
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
ington areas. V a lid
be stated. With 476 driver's license and Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. must any independent job reliable transportation Employment p l ease are required. Contact Opportunities Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. opportunity, investigate thorBrian o r Jim at oughly. Benjamin's Ca r p et Richland, WA; yyatermaster Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Use extra caution when One, The Oregon Water 509-946-4506 Resources Deapplying for jobs onSaturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. line and never pro- Manager partment is recruitvide personal infor- Now Hiring at Juniper ing to fill a Waterto any source • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • mation Sunday. • • • • Mad r as. master position in you may not have re- Motel i n
a
Starting at 3 lines
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ad
For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B ureau of Labor & Industry, C i vil Rights Division, 971-673-0764
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
C®X
541-385-5809
The Bulletin
readers on The Look at: Bulletin' s web site will be able to click Bendhomes.com through automatically for Complete Listings of to your site. Area Real Estate for Sale
r.=.-"-,.— .a I I I I
I
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day ii appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is Carpeting, Vinyl and needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right io accept or Tile Installers I reject any ad ai anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher Looking for full-time inshall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days stallers to start work I will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. immediately. Work will be in both the Tri-Cit-
I
Lost: S t ainless s t eel wedding band w / diamonds all around, north
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through The Bulletin Classifieds
Beautiful and healthy t angerine m i l k snake. 6' tank and accessories. Bargain at $500. (541) 610-2363 4'
308
Farm Equipment & Machinery
421
Schools & Training
TRUCK SCHOOL REMEMBER: If you www.llTR.net USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! have lost an animal, Redmond Campus don't forget to check Student Loans/Job Door-to-door selling with Y F The Humane Society Concrete Finisher/ Waiting Toll Free fast results! It's the easiest in Bend 541-382-3537 Foundation 1-888-387-9252 way in the world to sell. Redmond, Form Setter 541-923-0882 454 needed, for Bend/ Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, The Bulletin Classified Prineville, Redmond area. Looking for Employment virtually new, less than 5 541-447-7178; 541-385-5809 Full-time employhrs. $7500 new; asking OR Craft Cats, Would love to do child ment. Musthave $5000. 541-421-3222 541-389-8420. 358 care or in-home adult reliable transportaFarmers Column c are, p a r t tim e . tion and clean 286 325 Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-
rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" pICK up YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
•
10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net
1st quality grass hay, 70- Ib bales, barn stored, $250/ ton. Also big bales! Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831
Retired male RN seeks live-in long-term care oportunity. 30 yrs exp ICU/ R, total patient care, Lambs corn-fed, taking living assistance, nutriorders now for March tion, therapies. Professional, compassionate. delivery. Call 270-629-5788 541-475-7479
This is a relaxed environment and approach involving business to business sales. Mid-South offers a brief paid training program but the ideal candidates will possess business to business sales experience.
Dental Assistant
I'm seeking motivated, energetic and articulate people with excellent communication skills. Please call Melanie at 541-383-0399.
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
470 with EFDA needed. Send resume & cover letter to Domestic 8 W heat S t raw: s m a l l 375 Box 20277396, c/o The In-Home Positions bales $2 bale or $65 Bulletin, PO Box 6020, t on. After 6 p.m . Meat & Animal Processing 541-546-9821 Culver. Looking for a respon- Bend, OR 97708. Grain-fed beef $2.88/lb. sible, reliable, positive, and expe r ienced DO YOU NEED hanging weight, half or whole to be probabysitter? 21yrs old. Looking for your A GREAT cessed m i d-march. Will interview & has next employee? EMPLOYEE tons o f r e f erences. RIGHT $500 deposit. Place a Bulletin NOW? Half Hog Sale, $190 in- Call 970-819-0946! help wanted ad Call The Bulletin cludes cutting wraptoday and before 11 a.m. 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!
I I
CaII 541-815-8075
dnvrng record.
ping and cure.
get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809.
WHILE THEY LAST! 541-573-2677
Your future isjust a page away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your bestsource. Every daythousands of buyers andsellers of goods and services dobusinessin these pages.Theyknow you can't beatTheBulletin Classified Sectionfor selection andconvenience -every item isjust a phone call away. The ClassifiedSectionis easy touse.Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegory is indexedonthe section's frontpage. Whetheryouare lookingfor ahome orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.
WARNING The Bulletin recom-
mends 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,
BANK TURNED YOU
I
Average salesperson earns between $400 -$700 for less than 30 hours weekly. The dress code is relaxed and casual. This is not ad or subscription sales, however if you have previous experience in advertising sales, I will give you priority consideration.
541-383-2851
Hay, Grain & Feed
I I I I
QO~I~
ci,.
side of Bend, Jan. 30. Call 712-314-3541
Loans & Mortgages
1-877-877-9392.
I
Llamas/Exotic Animals wa
employee?
FIND YOURFUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
528
chasing products or I
ies and Walla Walla, I 1-877-877-9392. or place WA areas. Requireyour ad on-line at ments include reliable iThe Bulletin g bendbulletin.com transportation & valid driver's license; privately owned tools are a plus. Vinyl installers Independent Contractor position should be proficient in Daytime inside sales. cove welding or willing to become so. Contact Brian o r Jim at Mid-South Sales Promotions is seeking to hire B enjamin's Car p et two sales people to work fromThe Bulletin One, Richland, WA; circulation offices as Independent Contractors 509-946-4506 to secure sponsorships for the Newspaper in Education program. This is not selling subCONCRETE scriptions or advertising, but involves having local businesses support The Bulletin's Experienced Newspaper in Education program.
347
Lost & Found
Looking for your next
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and services from out of reach over 60,000 the area. Sending readers each week. c ash, checks, o r Your classified ad credit i n f o rmation will also appear on may be subjected to bendbulletin.com FRAUD. which currently For more informareceives over 1.5 tion about an advermillion page views tiser, you may call every month at the Oregon State no extra cost. Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds Office C o n sumer s Get Results! Protection hotline at I Call 385-5809
LOCAL MONEyrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13.
KOjj0rj
our Burns office. To v iew the job a n nouncement go to Oregonjobs.org and search under the Oregon Water Resources DeWe suggest you call partment. c l osing the State of Oregon Remember.... F e bruary A dd your we b a d - date i s Consumer Hotline at 12, 2013. 1-503-378-4320 dress to your ad and
If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin
The Bulletin bendbullerin.com
528
Loans & Mortgages
Looking fo r l i v e-in searched and deemed full-time man a ger. to be reputable. Use Position includes 3 extreme caution when bdrm, 2 bath home r esponding to A N Y and living expenses. online e m p loyment For information call ad from out-of-state. 541-639-9936.
Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00 per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
I
The Bulletin rervrg centraloregon rnce ra03
Independent Contractor
* Supplement Your Income*
Operate Your Own Business
++++++++++++++++++
Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
® Call Today ® We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Terrebonne *
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at online © bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
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DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200.
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REMODELING DESIGN & OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW
•
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C all 54/ - 3 85-5809 t o r o m o t e our service Building/Contracting
i Q :IX .
Handyman
NOTICE: Oregon state Margo Construction law req u ires anyLLC Since 1992 one who co n t racts • Pavers• Carpentry for construction work • Remodeling • Decks to be licensed with the • Window/Door C onstruction Con - Replacement • Int/Ext tractors Board (CCB). Paint • CCB 176121 An active lic e n se 541-480-3179 means the contractor Need help fixing stuff? i s bonded an d i n - Call A Service Professional s ured. Ver if y t h e find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com contractor's CCB c ense through t h e CCB Cons u mer Landscaping/Yard Care Website www.hirealicensedcontractor. N OTICE: OREGON com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Law (ORS 671) The Bulletin recom- r equires a l l bu s i mends checking with nesses that advertise the CCB prior to con- to p e r form L a n dtracting with anyone. scape C o n struction Some other t rades which incl u des: also req u ire addi- p lanting, deck s , tional licenses a nd fences, arbors, certifications. w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of I D e bris Removal irrigation systems to be licensed with the JUNK BE GONE Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s I Haul Away FREE 4-digit number is to be For Salvage. Also included in all adverCleanups & Cleanouts tisements which indiMel, 541-389-8107 cate the business has I Han dyman a bond, insurance and workers c ompensaERIC REEVE HANDY tion for their employSERVICES. Home 8 ees. For your protecCommercial Repairs, tion call 503-378-5909 Carpentry-Painting, or use our website: Pressure-washing, www.lcb.state.or.us to Honey Do's. On-time check license status promise. Senior before co n t racting Discount. Work guar- with th e b u s iness. anteed. 541-389-3361 Persons doing landor 541-771-4463 scape maintenance Bonded 8 Insured do not require a LCB CCB¹f 81595 license.
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PublishingDate: Tuesday, August 20
Get great deals On all kinds of sports equipment and more in The Bulletin Classifieds.
The Bulletin
BSSl 1C S www.bendbulletin.com
54i-3S5-5S09
ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION The Central Oregon Builders Association (COBA) presents the Remodeling Design 8 Outdoor Living Show just jn time for autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and js a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
THE NATURE OF WORDS THEGUIDETOCENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
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TheNatureofWordsannualljteraryfestjval celebrates the literary arts jn Central Oregon during a multj-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and contests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports creative writing t hrough o utreach programs for both students and adults jn Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide js distributed to all Bulletin readers
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THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 E3
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E4 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DA ILY
BRIDGE CLU B
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD w'll shO rtz
Tuesday,February 5,2013
ACROSS
Employment contract
leaders
31 Art movement for Picasso 34 Scrooge player Alastair 36 Stockyard call 37 a 39 Signer of the DOWN 23-/51-Across 1 Mountain ridge 42 Jetsam locale 2 Big-bosomed 17 End-of43 Rapper with the 3 Time's Person semester ¹1 album "Hip of the Year for doings Hop Is Dead" 2008 and 2012 ts With 61-Across, 4s Almost 4 Loss of goal of 4s -Detoo of faculties Frederick "Star Wars" s Beginning of Douglass and 49 Signs of spring summer? Harriet Beecher s1 See 23-Across Stowe s Fruity iced ss Acquired with beverage zo Big book little or no 7 Runners of 21 Disclosure to a effort experiments loan applicant: ss TV's Sue Abbr. s Nuptial vow Langdon 9 Old-time 22 U.S. capital and so Romance environs actress Nita 23 With 51-Across, s1 See 18-Across 1o Knit fabric in 63 "Holy Toledo!" lingerie and presidential swimwear order signed s4 "It's f-fon January 1, freezing!" 11 Like a fly ball 1863 off the foul pole ss Salsa singer zs Hit it off with Cruz 12 Tnbe encountered by Lewis and Clark ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 13 Lucy Lawless H A I R 8 E V E L S G P S title role A L O E O L I V I A R O M 19 Bronzes G I N G E R S N A P S A P E 21 Quarterback I AN E NO S V A L Troy G E T S S ET O V E R T 24 Legal tender A S H T O A S T P O I N T S zs Labor GPA C H I AN T I 2S Omnia vinCit
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
"I know you won't talk about your former job," I said to Cy the Cynic, "but at least tell me why you gave it
rebids two hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: This decision is close. If partner has a sound minimum with prime values, such asA3,AQ 107 65, UP. "Bad timing," Cy shrugged. "I fell 7 2, A 5 4, four hearts will be a good victim to the Law of Employment: If spot, but if h e has an unsuitable you work late, nobody notices; if you m inimum — 3,KQ 1 0 7 6 5 , Q 7 2 , leave early, you meet the boss in the A 5 4 — nine tricks may be out of parking lot." reach. Pass, but if vulnerable with C y's timing wa s n o b e tter i n more to gain by bidding game, you today's deal, where he was declarer at might risk a raise to three hearts. 3NT. (Plan the play before you read North dealer N-S vulnerable on.) Cy took the ace of clubs and started the diamonds, losing to the king. Cy NORTH expected a club return, but East led 41 Q 10 the nine of hearts: jack, queen, king. QAK3 2 He won the nextdiamond and led O Q J109 7 3 another heart, and Cy had to lose two AA hearts, two diamonds and a spade. WEST EAST TRICK THREE 4752 4A63 9 Q 10 6 Q 987 5 Cy succeeds with careful timing. O 6 2 O AK After he wins East's heart shift at 4 J 10963 48542 Trick Three, he leads dummy's queen of spades. SOUTH East must play low: If he wins, the 4K J 9 8 4 Cynic has four spades, three clubs 9 J4 and two hearts. Cy overtakes with his O 854 king, cashes one high club and leads 4KQ7 a diamond. He wins four diamonds, two clubs, two hearts and a spade. North East S outh Wes t I 0 Pass I 41 Pass 2Q Pass 3 NT All P a ss DAILY QUESTION
A NT T C H E R OA EA R ER S PS I YE T
Youhold: 4 K J 9 8 4 9 J 4 Opening lead — 4 J O85 4 A K Q 7 . Y ourpartneropens one heart, you bid one spade and he (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
ss Lectern s7 Jazz style ss Rickover known as the Father of the Nuclear Navy ss Imbeciles
27 Old Russian
1Dacha or villa s Rock used to make sparks 11 Equine: horse :: vulpine: 14 Unsophisticated sorts ts Storm tracker 1s Dined
S A E E T E S E S T E O F I A C NE
T A L L I ME C U R L S A I E U N G E R T O N E L S O N
S U R F
A M A G C E L O O D U S T
P S A A
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Puzzle by JOHN FARMER
3s Role for diminutive Verne Troyer in "Austin Powers" films 3s Artist Chagall 4o "99 Luftballons" singer, 1984 41 Made a random selection, in a way 44 Sunny rooms
ss All-time career batting average leader s7 Early Michael Jackson so Canopy tree hairstyle sz Comment from ss Car sticker fig. a kvetcher s3 Early Great sz Tree in many Plains residents street names s4 Sheeplike 63 When doubled, ss Imperatives a Gabor 47 German auto make 4s Jerry of stage and screen
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
29 Move on
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytirne.ccmrn/wdrdpl. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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3o LG Electronics competitor D S 31 House in Havana N K 32 Above, in Berlin A Y 33 Misbehaver
DENNIS THE MENACE
SUDOKU Complete the grid so that
Wb.elk. Lawrence Wh.elk.
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LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
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SAFE HAVENS IT qoglz. ' ll'ol) T'ECADF5 fo (410/zg /70T qttE q e cHI4tcAI DETIAIL& /Jf
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ACROSS 1 Iraq's main port 6 Nonspecific feeling 10 Ukr. and Lith.,
DOWN 1 Go on and Dn 2 Like an American in Paris 3 Some linens 4 Howl with laughter 5 First animal shelter 6 Like superpopular YouTube
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14 Find repulsive 15 Waffle maker 16 Be on the men 17 Dine 19 Hathaway Dfuh Miserables " 20 Afrikaans spea 21 Creator Df Q an M 22 Chicks togethe 23 Back muscle, familiarly 24 Commonly controlled
substance
27 '50s flop 29 His 44 was reti by the Giants i 1948 30 Social suffix 31 Sink below the horizon 33 Public hanging 34 Pontiac muscle cars 35 Roy Orbison classic 39 e v en keel 40 Glasgow veto 41 Shelley's "To a
Skylark," e.g.
clips 7 Goodnight girl Df
song 8 Fluffy wrap 9 Terminate 10 Broken piece 11 Title for Miss Mexico? 12 Deserted 13 Big hammers 18 Cartoonist Keane 22 Lunch menu letters 24 Robert of "The
34 FBI guys 35 Being walked, say 36 Deli order 37 After-shower powder
49
P o st, first pilot tD fly solo around the world 50 Sweetie pie 51 Bo o k end? 52 "Life of Pi" director
38 Pigged out (on)
Ang 56 Sow's supper
39 Quirky 43 Ink holder 45 Volga region natives 46 "Yeah, but ..." 47 Hit-or-miss
58 Four-time All-Pro Patriots receiver Welker 59 C h o ose (to) 60 Numbered hwy.
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
AG I C R A L ER O E G U MA N D S U M S T O T E B A R S C R I M P A S A L O N A D P L OW B R A Sopranos" Y E T F E M M 25 Like many S HO R T A N gangster movies 26 When tots F A S become terrible? T A F F Y L E 28 "Pardon the S T R E S S A N Interruption" A M E R A V I channel WA D 32 Opera hero, often R O T S 33 Gobbled up xwordeditorteaol.com 1
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J A A R I A L Z A N B S T A N C S E L I A E NE N D S A V E A G E A X K E B L E E T R U R D SW EE T 0 I L A N T P H D S T R A I D E U L E R E E S S
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff KIIurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter lo each square, 10 form four ordinary words.
SHAYT 02013 Tnbune Media Services, Iec. „ All Rights Reserved.
place where you
UNDEC
METLUB
WYSLAA
THE &ARI5A&E PUMP TURNEP THE LANDSCAPE INTO A —Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
0 Laughegotock Interneional Inc. Dist Dy Un versal UClck for UF8, 20I3
"We bought you two toasters in case the marriage doesn't work out."
Print your answer here: Yesterday'8
44 Inviting door sign 48 1967 Human BeIn attendee 53 Gardner of the silver screen 54 Country bordered by Niger and Nigeria 55 Binary digit 56 WWII British gun 57 G r ey tea 58 Awe-inspiring
(Anowero tomorrow) J umbles: CRYPT M A D L Y ME D LE Y A P P E AR Answer: She thought the new glasses were"EYE-DEAL"
might find the ends of 17-, 24-, 35- and 48Across? 61 " sow, so shall ..." 62 Sword with a bell-
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64 65 River down under? 66 English Derby site By C.C. Burnikei
(c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
02/05/13
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
648
750
Houses for Rent General
Redmond Homes
Rent /Own 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes $2500 down, $750 mo. OAC. J and M Homes
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541-548-5511 652
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Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale
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630
Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. Utils & linens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885
G reat Floor P lan i n this 3 B drm/3 Bath Sale/Leaseback NW Home - 1896 sq. Opportunities ft. C o zy , c h e erful, bright 2-story CraftsMedical/Office man-style. Oversized Building- Bend dbl. garage. Fenced Cap Rate 8%, at yard w/raised garden. Price $345,000 860 870 bendbulletin.com Den area off dining 5-Year NNN Lease Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories room. Corner kitchen. Walk-in pantry. Gas 771 'at Special Purpose Harley Davidson Softfireplace, A/C. Trex Bldg-Redmond r ~' Lots Tail D eluxe 20 0 7 , Deck. Pets? $1800.00 Cap Rate 8.5%, white/cobalt, w / pasKOZAK Property Price $650,000 (2) Bend City lots, 2851 senger kit, Vance 8 Management CO. 10-Year NNN Lease & 2857 Huettl St., off Hines muffler system 541-382-0053 Butler Mkt. All utils under & kit, 1045 mi., exc. round $89,900 for both. Contact c ond, $16,9 9 9 , 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 658 all Ron, 541-206-7995 Peter Lowes, Volvo Penta, 270HP, 541-389-9188. Houses for Rent Principal Broker low hrs., must see, 775 541-312-2113 $15,000, 541-330-3939 Redmond Advertise your carl Manufactured/ Lo iVl E S Add A Ptcfure! Reach thousands of readers! 18.5' Sea Ray, 2000, Eagle Crest - B ehind COMME RCIAL Mobile Homes Call 541-385-5809 the gates. Beautiful 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 2100 s q .ft., 3 / 2 .5, FACTORY SPECIAL The Bulletin Classifieds hp Bowrider w/depth 745 Reverse living. Large New Home, 3 bdrm, finder, radio/CD player, Harley Heritage garagetworkshop. Hot $46,500 finished rod holders, full canHomes for Sale Softail, 2003 tub. $1400/mo. Lease on your site. vas, EZ Loader trailer, $5,000+ in extras, J and M Homes exclnt cond, $14,500. option. $36 5 ,000. BANK OWNED HOMES! $2000 paint job, 636 648 541-548-5511 707-484-3518 (Bend) Sec/dep.541-923-0908 FREE List w/Pics! 30K mi. 1 owner, 541-480-7863 Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Houses for www. BendRepos.com For more information LOT MODEL bend and beyond real estate t t t t t t t t I I Rent General please call LIQUIDATION Pristine 3 bdrm, 2 bath 20967 yeoman, bend or Townhome style apt. 541-385-8090 Prices Slashed Huge in NW Redmond close in NW complex. 2 PUBLISHER'S or 209-605-5537 Savings! Full Warranto s c hools/shopping 20.5' 2004 Bayliner B drm/1 Bath. H a s NOTICE ties, Finished on your quiet n e ighborhood, TiCk, TOck 205 Run About, 220 wood stove. Private HD Screaming Eagle All real estate adver- large fenced yard, RV site. 541-548-5511 HP, V8, open bow, rear deck. O n -site tising in this newspa- pad, 2-car garage, Electra Glide 2005, JandMHomes.com Tick, Tock... 103" motor, two tone exc. cond., very fast laundry. Woodsy feel- per is subject to the laundry room, bright w/very low hours, ing close t o t o w n. F air H o using A c t kitchen, A/C, gas fireOwn your own home for candy teal, new tires, ...don't let time get lots of extras incl. $550.00 yyST incl. less t ha n r e n ting. 23K miles, CD player, which makes it illegal place, walk-out patio, away. Hire a tower, Bimini & KOZAK Property Centrally located in hydraulic clutch, exto a d v ertise "any beautifully maint. Avail. custom trailer, Management CO. professional out Madras. In- h ouse cellent condition. preference, limitation 3/1/13 $1050 mo. an$19,500. 541-382-0053 f inancing opti o ns Highest offer takes it. or disc r imination nual lease. For showof The Bulletin's 541-389-1413 available. Call now at 541-480-8080. based on race, color, ing 541-350-9188. "Call A Service 541-475-2291 religion, sex, handiGarage Sales 671 cap, familial status, Professional" marital status or naGarage Sales ATVs Mobile/Mfd. • Directory today! tional origin, or an in' for Rent : t . Iaw v al Q Garage Sales tention to make any 20.5' Seaswirl Spysuch pre f erence,Cozy 2 Bdrm/1 Bath NOTICE der 1989 H.O. 302, Find them limitation or discrimiAll real estate adver285 hrs., exc. cond., Mfd. ho m e on nation." Familial stain tised here in is substored indoors for tus includes children shared land in DRW, ject to t h e F e deral life $11,900 OBO. good use of space. F air H o using A c t , The Bulletin under the age of 18 541-379-3530 P olaris 4 x 4 , 200 7 , living with parents or W/D included. on well which makes it illegal Classifieds & septic system. Covwinch, heated bars, legal cust o dians, to advertise any pref850 un scabbard,loaded, pregnant women, and ered parking + 2 stor- erence, limitation or 541-385-5809 age sheds. $600. 41 00. 541-923-0854 people securing cusSnowmobiles discrimination based KOZAK Property tody of children under on race, color, reli642 Management CO. 18. This newspaper gion, sex, handicap, 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade 541-382-0053 Apt./Multiplex Redmond will not knowingly acfamilial status or na- 600 w/513 mi, like new, cept any advertising 22' Custom Weld Jet, tional origin, or inten- very fast! Reduced to The Bulletin 2 bdrm, 1 bath duplex for real estate which is tion to make any such $5000. 541-221-5221 2002 350 Vortec 210 unit, $550 mo.+ $635 in violation of the law. To Subscnbe call preferences, l i mitahrs, garaged, loaded. d ep. 1326 SW O b - O ur r e aders a r e 541-385-5800 or go to tions or discrimination. Yamaha Banshee 2001, 541-923-0854. sidian, Redmond. Call hereby informed that www.bendbulletin.com We will not knowingly custom built 350 motor, for applications. Avail all dwellings adveraccept any advertis- Snowmobile trailer race-ready, lots of extras, Find It in Feb. 1. 541-728-6421. tised in this newspa687 ing for r eal e state $5500/obo 541-647-8931 The Bulletin Classifiedsl 2002, 25-ft Interper are available on which is in violation of Commercial for Good classified ads tell state & 3 sleds, an equal opportunity 541-385-5809 this law. All persons 870 the essential facts in an Rent/Lease basis. To complain of $10,900. are hereby informed interesting Manner. Write Boats & Accessories 541-480-8009 discrimination cal l Ads published in the that all dwellings adfrom the readers view- not HUD t o l l-free at 3000 sq. ft. commercial "Boats" classification vertised are available space @ 30C sq. ft. the seller's. Convert the 1-800-877-0246. The include: Speed, fishon an equal opportu- • Yamaha 750 1999 17' 1984 Chris Craft 61510 (¹120) facts into benefits. Show toll f re e t e l ephone American nity basis. The Bulle- Mountain Max, $1750. - Scorpion, 140 HP ing, drift, canoe, Lane. the reader how the item will number for the hearhouse and sail boats. tin Classified Call 530-305-0104 • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 inboard/outboard, 2 help them in someway. ing im p aired is For all other types of depth finders, trollEXT, $1250. 1-800-927-9275. This watercraft, please see Off Empire: $1310/mo. FIND IT! • Zieman 4-place ing motor, full cover, advertising tip Class 875. 1 770 SF , 5 off c s , EZ - L oad t railer, BUY IT! trailer, $1750. People Look for Information brought to you by 541-385-5809 20'x20' room; strg., 2 $3500 OBO. About Products and All in good condition. SELL IT! Services Every Day through rstrms; shades; fiber. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-382-3728. Located in La Pine. The Bulletin
634
8 GREAT wINTER a
DEAL! 2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 8 $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 383-3152
Cascade Rental Management. Co. Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313
Professionally managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc. 636
Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Small studio close to library, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870
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The Bulletin Classfffeds
Boats & Accessories
~rt
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Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 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
NOIIO I Rooms for Rent
•
541-280-7489.
I YOURBOAT ... I
with o u r sp e c ial rates for selling your I I boat or watercraft!
I Place an ad in The I B ulletin w it h
ou r
I 3-month p ackage I which includes: *5 lines of text and a photo or up to 10 I lines with no photo *Free online ad at I bendbulletin.com *Free pick up into I The Central Oregon I Nickel ads.
GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon smre 7903
Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435
Watercraft
2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.
$10,000 541-719-8444 Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For
"boats" please see
Class 870. 541-385-5809
servng cenrral oregon smce 1903
a s"-
ines"
and yOur ad aPPearS in PRINTand ON-LINEat denddulletin.COm
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ALL 541-385-5809 F R Y URFREE LA IFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad.
The Bulletin
11
Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit1 ad per item per 30 days.
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The Bulletin The Bulletin
Call 541-408-6149.
I
E6 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
882
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
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U t i lity Trailers •
Antique & Classic Autos
935
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Chevy Tahoe LS 2001, Buick Lucerne CXL 4x4, 120K mi, Power 2009, $12,500, low seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd low miles; 2003 LeBig TexLandscaprow seating, e xtra Sabre, $4000. You'll v ing/ ATV Trailer, tires, CD, privacy tintnot find nicer Buicks dual axle flatbed, ing, upgraded rims. One look's worth a Econoline RV 1 989,Fleetwood Wilderness 7'x16', 7000 lb. Fantastic cond. $7995 thousand words. Call fully loaded, exc. cond, 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, BKGVW, all steel, Tim m at Bob, 541-318-9999. — Plymouth B a r racuda Contact 541-408-2393 for info 35K m i. , R e duced rear bdrm, fireplace, for an appt. and take a • $1400. Legal Notices L e g al Notices Legal Notices • 1966, original car! 300 $15,250. 541-546-6133 AC, W/D hkup beauor to view vehicle. drive in a 30 mpg car! 541-382-4115, or hp, 360 V8, centertiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. 541-280-7024. org or by calling (503) nate all interest of Oclines, (Original 273 LEGAL NOTICE Dodge Caliber SXT Chevy Cobalt 2 0 05, 541-815-2380 cupants/Unknown CAN'T BEAT THIS! eng & wheels incl.) 2007 sportwagen, A/C, white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K IN T H E CI R C UIT 684-3763 ( in t h e Parties, Unk n own Look before you Portland metropolitan 541-593-2597 COURT O F THE ¹112925. $9,995 miles, over 35mpg, auto buy, below market area) or toll-free else- Successor in Interest STATE OF OREGON trans, AC, CD player, ll.h vafue! Size & milePROJECT CARS:Chevy to David I. Epstein, dual airbags, manual FOR THE COUNTY where in Oregon at aqe DOES matter! Service & Accessorie 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & Unknown Successor (800) 452-7636. OF DESCHUTES locks & windows, good Class A 32' HurriChevy Coupe 1950 Oregon Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ T rustee to D avid I . JPMorgan Chase Bank, cond in/out, runs/drives cane by Four Winds, K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 rolling chassis's $1750 AutoSource A. Craft James Epstein, deceased, as great, non-smkr, always National Association, James Michelin tires (4) 2007. 12,500 mi, all ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, rustee of th e E p 541-598-3750 slide, AC, TV, awning. $4950. successor in interest A. C r af t ¹ 09 0 146 T exc. cond.size amenities, Ford V10, NEW: tires, converter, complete car, $ 1949; aaaoregonautosource.com maintained. stein Family Trust A Call 541-350-9938 by purchase from the [jcraft@logs.com] P225/65R17's $150 Cadillac Series 61 1950, Ithr, cherry, slides, batteries. Hardly used. dated September 24, SHAPIRO & S UTHFederal Deposit Incall 390-1755. like new! New low 2 dr. hard top, complete F ord F reestyle S E L 1990 and Unknown ERLAND, LLC, 1499 surance Corporation price, $54,900. w/spare f r ont cl i p .,2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, eneficiaries of t h e as Re c eiver of S E T e c h Cen t er B 541-548-5216 front & side airbags, 25 People Look for Information $3950, 541-382-7391 Epstein Family Trust Place, Suite 255 VanWashington M u t ual mpg, 3rd row seating, About Products and c ouver, W A 9 8 6 83 A dated September B ank, Plaintiff, v s . pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, Gulfstream Scenic 24, 1990 and all other Services Every Daythrough U NKNOWN PER - ( 360)260-2253; F a x traction control, new tires Pickups Cruiser 36 ft. 1 999, interests in the propThe Bulletin Classifieds SONS C LA IMING (360)260-2285 S&S & brks, maintained exCummins 330 hp dieerty. t remely well, runs & "My Little Red Corvette" RIGHTS OR INTER- No. 10-105874 sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 MONTANA 3585 2008, "motion" or "anThe Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, 1996 coupe. 132K, ESTS THR O U GH LEGAL NOTICE in. kitchen slide out, swer" (or "reply") must 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. LAURIE A. DOERR, exc. cond., 3 slides, 1971 new trans, 2 $7200. 541-604-4166 IN T H E CI RCUIT new tires,under cover, be given to the court new t i r es , new $1 2,500 541-923-1781 DECEASED, AS COURT O F THE clerk or administrator hwy. miles only,4 door king bed, Irg LR, ArcG RANTOR OF T H E tic insulation, all opbrakes, 2nd owner, STATE OF OREGON fridge/freezer icewithin 30 days of the tions $37,500. r uns/drives g o o d . D EED O F T R U S T FOR THE COUNTY maker, W/D combo, Kia Optima EX 2004 date of first publica541-420-3250 RECORDED Make good w o od OF DESCHUTES 2.7L V6, all power Interbath tub 8 truck. $2395 OBO 6/25/2002 A S IN- JPMorgan Chase Bank, tion specified herein shower, 50 amp pro- Just bought a new boat? options, moonroof, 541-350-2859 STRUMENT NO . National Association, a long with th e r e 1921 Model T spoiler, leather, pane gen & more! Sell your old one in the 2 002-34430; R I C H - successor in interest quired filing fee. The Infinity AM/FM/CD, classifieds! Ask about our Delivery Truck $55,000. GMC Envoy 2002 4WD A RD M . DOE R R ; by purchase from the date of first publica541-948-2310 Super Seller rates! alloys, Michelin & Restored & Runs $6,450. Loaded, tion of the summons BANK OF AMERICA, Federal Deposit In541-385-5809 studded tires, Leather, Heated is February 6, 2013. $9000. N.A., OTHER P E Rsurance Corporation, meticulously mainseats, Bose sound If you have questions, 541-389-8963 Nuyya 29 7LK Hi t chSONS OR PARTIES, as Re c eiver of tained, $6500. system. Ext. roof rack Hiker 2007, 3 slides, i ncluding OCCU - Washington M u t ual you should see an Bend, 760-715-9123 (218) 478-4469 immediately. 32' touring coach, left PANTS, UNKNOWN Bank, formerly known attorney If you need help in kitchen, rear lounge, CLAIMING ANY Chevy Silverado 4x4, as Washington Mu- finding Mitsubishi 3 00 0 G T an a t torney, many extras, beautiful Jeep Wrangler 4x4 RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, tual Bank, FA, Plain2001, 2500 HD ext'd c ond. inside & o u t , 1 999, a u to., p e a r l O R I NTEREST I N tiff, vs., U NKNOWN you may contact the cab, 87,600 mi, asking 1997, 6-cyl, soft top, Immaculate! $32,900 OBO, Prinevw hite, very low m i . Oregon State Bar's $9800. 541-410-6179 roll bar, front tow THE PRO P E RTY SUCCESSOR(S) IN Beaver Coach Marquis ille. 541-447-5502 days Lawyer Referral Ser$9500. 541-788-8218. DESCRIBED IN THE bar, new tires, INTEREST AND/OR 40' 1987. New cover, & 541-447-1641 eves. 1966 GMC, 2nd owner Dodge Dakota Club Cab, vice onl i n e at chrome rims, 103K COMPLAINT HEIRS OF DAVID new paint (2004), new too many extras to list 4WD SLT, 2001, 4.7L www.oregonstatebar. HEREIN, Defendants. miles, gd cond, EPSTEIN, DEinverter (2007). Onan $8500 obo. Serious buy V8, 5-spd man., canopy, No. 12CV1243 UN- org or by calling (503) 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, $5700 obo. CEASED; ers only. 541-536-0123 extras, 36K miles. KBB, 684-3763 ( in t h e 541-504-3253 or CIVIL SUMMONS KNOWN S U C CESparked covered $35,000 $8500; asking $8000. Portland metropolitan 503-504-2764 T O T HE DEFE N obo. 541-419-9859 or SOR TRUSTEE TO 541-923-0286 area) or toll-free elseDANTS: Un k nown E PSTEIN 541-280-2014 FAM I L Y where in Oregon at Persons cla i ming T RUST A Nissan Sentra 2012, DAT E D (800) 452-7636. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h rights o r in t erests SEPTEMBER 12,610 mi, full warranty, 24, Attorney for Plaintiff, /s/ wheel, 1 s lide, AC, PS, PB, AC, & more! through Laurie A. Do- 1990; UNK N OWN J ames A. Craf t TV,full awning, excele rr, d eceased, a s BENEFICIARIES OF $16,000. 541-788-0427 ames A. Craf t lent shape, $23,900. Chev Camaro, 1969, fully Grantor of the Deed of THE EPSTEIN FAM- J ¹090146 restored, factory Glacier 541-350-8629 Trust recorded ILY TRUST A DATED Blue, HO-350, 4-spd, Ford 250 XLT 1990, (jcraft I logs.com] 6/25/2002 as InstruPorsche Cayenne 2004, SEPTEMBER 24 , SHAPIRO & SUTHMonaco Dynasty 2004, brand n e w in t e nor. 6 yd. dump bed, ment No. 2002-34430 86k, immac, dealer 1990; THE EPSTEIN loaded, 3 slides, dieERLAND, LLC, 1499 $32,900. Here in Bend, 139k, Auto, $5500. NOTICE TO D E FEN- F AMILY TRUST A maint'd, loaded, now sel, Reduced - now call Scott, 406-839-1299 S E T e c h Cen t e r 541-410-9997 DANT: READ THESE $17000. 503-459-1580 DATED S EP T EM$119,000, 5 4 1-923P lace, S u it e 25 5 , i P APERS CA RE - BER 24 , 1990 , Vancouver, 8572 or 541-749-0037 FORD RANGER XLT WA Toyota Landcruiser, Porsche 911 1974, low FULLY! OTHER P E RSONS 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 2000, 85K mi, leather, mi., complete motor/ A lawsuit ha s b e e n O R P A RTIES, i n - 98683 (360)260-2253; Pilgrim In t e rnational speed, with car alarm, Fax I' C' tow pkg, beautiful! trans. rebuild, tuned started against you in cluding OCCU- S&S No.(360)260-2285 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, CD player, extra tires $17,700. 541-389-3769 10-104649 suspension, int. 8 ext. the abo v e -entitled PANTS, UNKNOWN X7A Ii Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 on rims. Runs good. -I refurb., oi l c o o ling, Court by J PMorgan CLAIMING ANY Fall price $ 2 1,865. Clean. 92,000 miles shows new in & out, L~ Chevy C-20 Pickup 940 Chase Bank, National 541-312-4466 TITLE, LIEN, LEGAL NOTICE p erf. m e ch. c o n d. Association, succes- RIGHT, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; o n m o t or . $2 6 0 0 Vans O R I NTEREST I N SUB-BIDS Southwind 35.5' Triton OBO. 541-771-6511. Much more! auto 4-spd, 396, model sor in interest by pur- THE PROP E RTY REQUESTED 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du $28,000 541-420-2715 CST /all options, orig. chase from the FedDESCRIBED IN THE o pont UV coat, 7500 mi owner, $22,000, 96 Ford Windstar & eral Deposit COMPLAINT PORSCHE 914 1974, Bend Water Bought new at 541-923-6049 2000 Nissan Quest, D0 • I Insurance CorporaHEREIN, Defendants. Reclamation Facility Roller (no engine), $132,913; both 7-passenger '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn tion as Receiver of I nternational Fla t No. 12CV1213 lowered, full roll cage, asking $93,500. Secondary vans, high miles, low P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 5-pt harnesses, rac- Washington M u t ual CIVIL SUMMONS Call 541-419-4212 Expanslon Including prices, $1200 & small block w/Weiand ton dually, 4 s pd. Bank, Plaintiff. T O T HE DEFE N ing seats, 911 dash 8 SCADA $2900, and worth dual quad tunnel ram trans., great MPG, i s DANTS: Occuinstruments, d e cent Plaintiff's c l ai m Improvements every cent! with 450 Holleys. T-10 could be exc. wood stated in the written pants/Unknown Parshape, v e r y c o ol! 541-318-9999 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, hauler, runs great, Complaint, a copy of ties, Unknown $1699. 541-678-3249 Scope Due: Weld Prostar whls, ex new brakes, $1950. which is on file at the 908 Successor in Interest February 8, 2013, tra rolling chassis + Deschutes C o u nty 541-41 9-5480. to David I. Epstein, Aircraft, Parts Have an item to extras. $6000 for all. by 10:00 a.m. ChevyAstro Courthouse. You Unknown Successor 541-389-7669. & Service must "appear" in this Trustee to David Sub Bids Due: Winnebago 30A Cargo Van 2001, sell quick? Sightseer 2012, 31 ft., pw, pdl, great cond., case or the other side Epstein, deceased, as February 12, 2012, If it's under all options, 2 slides, business car, well will win automatically by 10:00 a.m. T rustee of t h e E p 362HP V10, 10K mi., maint'd, regular oil '500 you can place it in To "appear" you must stein Family Trust A Bids Due: mint cond., $105,900. changes, $4500. file with the court a le- dated September 24, February 13, 2012, The Bulletin 541-330-5516 Please call gal paper called a 1990 and U nknown by 2:00 p.m. "motion" or "answer." B eneficiaries of t h e 541-633-5149 Classifieds for: RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L Chevy Wagon 1957, hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise, The "motion" or "anEpstein Family Trust Requesting Sub 1/3 interest in Columswer" must be given 4-dr., complete, A dated September Bids: AC Pa v i ng, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days bia 400, located at $7,000 OBO, trades. 541-420-3634 /390-1285 7 -pass. v a n wit h '16 - 3 lines, 14 days to the court clerk or 24, 1990. NOTICE TO Concrete Surface ReSunriver. $ 1 38,500. Please call w i t hin DEFENDANT: READ pair, Concrete SideCall 541-647-3718 p ower c h a i r lif t , (Private Party ads only) administrator 541-389-6998 30 days along with the T HESE PA PE R S walks, Coat i ngs, Winnebago Suncruiser34' $1500; 1989 Dodge required filing fee. It CAR E F ULLY! Fencing, Demolition, Chrysler 300 C o upe 2004, only 34K, loaded, Turbo Van 7 - pass. must be i n p r oper A lawsuit ha s b e en Earthwork, Electrical, too much to list, ext'd 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, has new motor and Toyota Camrysr form and have proof started against you in Erosion Control, Ex1983, 8000-Ib Warn warr. thru 2014, $54,900 auto. trans, ps, air, t rans., $1500. I f i n o f service o n t h e winch, 2 sets of tire 19S4, $1200 obo; the abo v e-entitled cavation 8 G r ading, Dennis, 541-589-3243 frame on rebuild, reterested c a l l Jay plaintiff's attorney or, Court by J PMorgan Joint Sealants, Grout painted original blue, chains, canopy, 22R 503-269-1 057. 1985 SOLD; if the plaintiff does not Chase Bank, National Injection, Landscapblue interior, motor, 5-spd t rans1 986parts car, 1/3 interest i n w e l l- original have a n at t orney, Association, succes- ing 8 Irrigation, MetTravel Trailers hub caps, exc. mission, $2495 obo. 975 $500. equipped IFR Beech Bo- original proof of service on the sor in interest by pur- als Fabrication, Rechrome, asking $9000 541-350-2859 Automobiles Call for details, nanza A36, new 10-550/ plaintiff. chase from the Fed- bar, Roofing, Flashing RV CONSIGNMENTS offer. prop, located KBDN. or make 541-548-6592 935 The object of the com- eral Deposit & Sh e e t met a l , WANTED 541-385-9350 $65,000. 541-419-9510 plaint is to foreclose a Insurance C o rpora- Structural Concrete, We Do The Work ... Sport Utility Vehicles deed of t rust dated tion, as Receiver of Structural Steel, SurYou Keep The Cash! Find exactly what April 11, 2002 and reWashington M u t ual vey, Temp Fencing, On-site credit you are looking for in the corded as Instrument Bank, formerly known Trucking, Lo u vers, approval team, Chrysler SD 4-Door No. 2002-34430 given as Washington Mu- Doors and hardware, web site presence. CLASSIFIEDS BMW 328i, 1998, sun1930, CD S R oyal by Richard M. Doerr tual Bank, FA, Plain- Glass & Gla z i ng, We Take Trade-Ins! roof, white/grey interior, Standard, 8-cylinder, and Laurie A. Doerr Plaintiff's claim is Bi-folding Doors GypFree Advertising. body is good, needs all electric, auto trans, Toyota Corolla 2004, on p roperty c o m- tiff. stated in the written sum Board, Bridge BIG COUNTRY RV 1/5th interest in 1973 some r e s toration, Buick Enclave 2008 CXL c lean, 1 6 8,131 m i , auto., loaded, 204k monly known as 742 Complaint, a copy of Bend 541-330-2495 & Por t able Cessna 150 LLC runs, taking bids, miles. orig. owner, non S outhEast Su n L n , which is on file at the Crane AWD, V-6, black, clean, $3200. 541-419-6176 Redmond: 541-548-5254 Gantry Cranes, Inte150hp conversion, low 541-383-3888, smoker, exc. c ond. mechanicall y sound, 82k Bend, OR 97702 and Deschutes C o u nty rior and Buried Protime on air frame and 541-815-3318 $6500 Prin e ville legally described as: miles. $20,995. Courthouse. You cess Piping, H e at 503-358-8241 engine, hangared in Call 541-815-1216 L ot 20 , B l oc k 3 , must "appear" in this Tracing, HVAC, Bend. Excellent perCLEAR S K Y ESWHEN YDU SEE THIS TATES, D e s chutes case or the other side Plumbing, Electrical, formance & affordwill win automatically. Instruments, Controls able flying! $6,500. County, Oregon. To "appear" you must and SCADA system, Oo BMW 740 IL 1998 orig ~ 541-382-6752 The complaint seeks to file with the court a le- Temp Toilets. o wner, e xc . c o n d Springdale 2005 27', 4' and termiPixatII(t,j](It]]]lleti]],com foreclose gal paper called a slide in dining/living area, AIRPORT CAFE 101k miles, new tires More nate all interest of Un- "motion" or "answer." Slayden Construction On a classified ad loaded, sunroof. sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 (Bend Municipal Airport) FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, known Persons The "motion" or "ango to Group, Inc. obo. 541-408-3811 Novv open 7 daysivvk! door panels w/flowers Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, $8900. 541-706-1897 www.bendbulletin.com claiming rights or inswer" must be given P.O. Box 247, most options, new paint • Daily Specials & hummingbirds, QO terests through Lau~ to view additional to the court clerk or Stayton, OR 97383 • New Management Need to get an white soft top & hard & tires, 159K mi., $4250. r ie A . D o e rr, d e - administrator w i t hin photos of the item. Phone: (503) MOrepjXajj]tII]j)lfljetjn.COm OPEN DAILY, 8-3 top. Just reduced to Call 541-233-8944 ad in ASAP? ceased, as Grantor of 30 days along with the 769-1969 Call 541-318-8989 $3,750. 541-317-9319 the Deed of Trust rerequired filing fee. It You can place it Fax: (503) 769-4525 or 541-647-8483 corded 6/25/2002 as must be i n p r oper Location, Location, online at: Instrument No. form and have proof Questions - Call Jeff Location! www.bendbulletin.com 2 002-34430 and a l l o f service o n t h e Wall at 503/769-1969 Executive Hangar MOTORCYCLE: Custom Harley other interests in the plaintiff's attorney or, or email jeffw@slayat Bend Airport (KBDN) Davidson 1997 Sportster 1200 XL. property. 541-385-5809 if the plaintiff does not den.com 60' wide x 50' d eep, "motion" or "an5000 Miles. Lots of chrome. $1 0,000. The have a n at t orney, w/55' wide x 17' high biswer" (or "reply") must Great ride, but noroom for the softball proof of service on the Contract documents: fold dr. Natural gas heat, Ford Galaxie 5001963, be given to the court plaintiff. http://www.plansonoffc, bathroom. Adjacent 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, team. Contact Cheryl at 000-0000. clerk or administrator The object of the com- file.com/ to Frontage Rd; great 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 within 30 days of the plaint is to foreclose a visibility for aviation busi- radio (orig),541-419-4989 YCLE:Gently s date of first publica- deed of t rust dated Slayden Construction ness. 541-948-2126 or tion specified herein June 6, 2006 and reemail 1jetjock©q.com Ford Mustang Coupe is an EEO employer a long with t h e r e - corded as Instrument and requests sub bids Springdale 29' 2 0 07, Piper A rcher 1 9 80, 1966, original owner, quired filing fee. The slide,Bunkhouse style, V8, automatic, great No. 2006-41453 given from al l i n t erested date of first publica- by David I. Epstein on firms, including small sleeps 7-8, excellent based in Madras, al- shape, $9000 OBO. tion of the summons property c o mmonly business enterprises, condition, $ 1 6 ,900, ways hangared since 530-515-8199 new. New annual, auto is February 6, 2013. 541-390-2504 known as 61198 For- disadvantaged busipilot, IFR, one piece If you have questions, est Meadow Place, ness enterprises, miFord Ranchero windshield. Fastest Aryou should see an Bend, OR 97702 and nority business enter1979 cher around. 1750 toattorney immediately. legally described as: prises, and w omen with 351 Cleveland tal t i m e. $68,500. If you need help in Lot 1 3 of For e st business enterprises. modified engine. 541-475-6947, ask for finding an a t torney, M eadow, Phase 1 , Body is in Rob Berg. you may contact the City of B end, Des- OR CCB ¹ 157045 excellent condition, Oregon State Bar's chutes County, Or918 $2500 obo. Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 Lawyer Referral Ser- egon. TURN THE PAGE 541-420-4677 29', weatherized, like Trucks & v ice onl i n e at The complaint seeks to For More Ads n ew, f u rnished & www.oregonstatebar. Heavy Equipment foreclose and termiT he B u l l e t i n ready to go, incl Wineard S a tellite dish,
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An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must beaccessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions.
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in classified advertising!
Hysfer H25E, runs Fifth Wheels
I MPO RTA N T
541-480-3179
%%%JY T well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724
NOTICES
eng, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500.
GMC Vi ton 1971, Only $1 9,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171
Newspaper classified advertising leads the pack when it comes to connecting buyers with sellers. Whether you're at a fork in the road or
" ' '<'"""9"' " ' * " " " " " ' " ' " ~ can fuel the journey.
Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slide- Peterbilt 35 9 p o table outs, inverter, satelwater t ruck, 1 9 90, Jeep Comanche, 1990, lite sys, fireplace, 2 3200 gal. tank, 5hp original owner, 167K, flat screen TVs. pump, 4-3" h o ses,4WD, 5-spd, tags good $60,000. camlocks, $ 2 5,000. till 9/2015, $4500 obo. 541-480-3923 541-820-3724 541-633-7761
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Oper 1,000 NEW Chech Out Our HeIII
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BEEF TOP SIRLOIN STEAK
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$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, FEB 05,2013 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND
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