Bulletin Daily Paper 3/5/13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75l t

TUESDAY March 5,2013

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ou arsse ors a eQhge FLin WithSChOOIgear SPORTS• C1

BUSINESS• C6

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Choosing a pope —with the cardinals gathering, how does itall work?A3

By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

K-9 forceBend's new police dogs are making an impact.B1

SALEM — The Legislature's top budget writers unveiled a budget proposal Monday that boosts spending for K-12 schools but would likely mean tough votes for lawmakers on

both sides of the aisle. The 2013-15 proposed budget funnels $6.55 billion to K-12 schools, with an additional $200 million factored in with assumed savings from cutting public employees retirement, for a total of $6.75 billion. It

also includes $275 million reached by ending tax breaks. The proposed $16.5 billion budget serves as a framework to guide lawmakers until the final budget is passed. "We're trying to give the Legislature pathways to ac-

complish things we all want to accomplish, and they aren't extreme," said Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland, who helped craft the budget. "I know

people who are going to say the tax pathways are extreme, and the PERS cut is extreme.

We're trying to say, we can do this without extreme steps if we choose to do it together. Democrats will have to vote on moderate PERs cuts, and Republicans will have to vote on moderate tax expenditures." See Budget/A5

Ivorlf —Despite efforts to the contrary, conservationists say trade in illicit tusks is thriving in China.A6

Internet

StoW Otl —The investment

TVshows jockey for

is time; the reward is flavor.D3

eyeballs World's richest man

By Brian Stelter

— It's still Carlos Slim, but

New York Times News Service

someotherbignamesmoved around on the list.C6

Crime —Many theories try

In the television pilot that Cheyenne Jackson taped recently, he played an

to explain the decline in violent

aggressive young

deaths, but nothing seemsto

news anchor whose ascendancythreatened an older colleague. It was a fitting metaphor for the industry itself, because while Jackson had taped pilots for ABC, NBC and USA before, this was his first time doing one for a new challenger to those alphabet networks: Amazon. com. When Amazon sizes up the television marketplace, it sees opportunity, and it is far from alone. Internet-delivered TV, which until recently was unready for prime time, is the new front in the war for Americans' attention spans. Netflix is following up on the $100 million drama "House of Cards" with four more series thisyear. Microsoft is produc-

capture the whole picture.A4

And in national newsThe GOPaims to ease acrunch in Pentagon readiness.A2

EDITOR'SCHOICE

Stealth tax subsidy faces new scrutiny

a .2'

1

By Mary Williams Walsh

and Louise Story

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Tumalo Falls from a helicopter late last week. The local snowpack was at 91 percent of normal on Monday.

New York Times News Service

The last time the nation's tax code was overhauled, in 1986, Congress tried to end a big corporate giveaway. But this valuable perk — the ability to finance a variety of business projects cheaply with bonds that are exempt from federal taxes — has not only endured, it has grown, in what amounts to a stealth subsidy for private enterprise. A winery in North Carolina, a golf resort in Puerto Rico and a Corvette museum in Kentucky, as well as the Barclays Center in Brooklyn and the offices of both the Goldman Sachs Group and Bank of America Tower in New York — all of these projects, and many more, have been built using the tax-exempt bonds that are more conventionally used by cities and states to pay for construction such as roads, bridges and schools. In all, more than $65 billion of these bonds have been issued by state and local governments on behalf of corporations since 2003, according to an analysis of Bloomberg bond data by The New York Times. During that period, the

single biggest beneficiary of such securities was the Chevron Corp., which last year reported a profit of $26 billion. SeeSubsidy/A5

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

The Central Oregon snowpack is below normal for this time of year, but a boost is likely in store as snow is expected to fall this week. Overall, the snowpack in the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin was 91 percent of normal as of Monday, according to the Natural Resources Conservation Service. At the end of January the snowpack had been at 103 percent. "We just had a real dry January and a pretty dry February, and that's what caused us to have the lower than average snowpack," said Peter McManus, an NRCS technician in Redmond. McManus last week measured snow levels at three sites the agency maintains on

the Cascade Lakes Highway. The NRCS tabulates snow data around the West, rely-

Snowpackfor water year2013 The Upper Deschutes and Crooked River basin snowpack is at 91

ing on daily readings from automated sites and monthly manual surveys. McManus found below-normal snowpack for this time of year. There was no snow at a site at Hungry Flat, about five miles from Bend, 82 percent of normal at a site near Wanoga Sno-park and 90 percent of normal at a site at Dutchman Flat Sno-park. At each survey site, McManus and other NRCS workers plunge a metal pipe into the snow to measure the snow depth at a series of predeterm ined spots. There are five locations at the sites at Hungry Flat and near Wanoga and 10 at Dutchman Flat. SeeSnow/A6

ing programming

percent of median andabout 96 percent of peak. Snowpack is at 113 percent of 2012 levels.

KEY 2013 — 2012 2011 — 2010 — Median 1981 to 2010

March4

30 inches

for the Xbox video game console with the help of a former CBS president. Other companies, from AOL to Sony to Twitter, are likely to follow. The companies are, in effect, creating new networks for television through broadband pipes and also giving rise to new rivalries — among one another, as between Amazon and Netflix, and with the big but vulnerable broadcast networks as well. See TV/A5

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Note: Water years begin in October Source. Natural Resources Conservation Service Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

Questions raised onnatural gas leaks' climate impact By Juliet Eilperin The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Two guys in a black Pontiac Vibe cruise the streets of Washington's residential neighborhoods. The only sign of what

TODAY'S WEATHER Showers possible High 46, Low 27

Page B6

they are up to is a gray plastic tube hanging out of the trunk. And the fact that they get out of the car frequently to place a black box on manhole covers and study its readings. Measuring how much meth-

ane gas is leaking from pipes under the District of Columbia could help answer a key policy question. As natural gas production expands in the United States, do its benefits for the climate far outweigh its dangers?

Methane,the main component of natural gas, is about 25 times more powerful as a heat-trapping gas than carbon dioxide, the largest human contributor to climate change; the atmospheric concentration of

4 P We userecycled newsprint

INDEX At Home D1 - 5 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal & StateB1-6 TV/Movies

methane has doubled since the start of the Industrial Revolution. While it largely dissipates in a few decades and there is far less of it than CO„ it continues to drive global warming. See Leaks/A4

AnIndependent

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Vol. 110,No. 64, S sections

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A2 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 20'I3

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NATIoN 4% ORLD

ouse aims oease eensecu s would award the Defense and The Associated Press Veterans Affairs departments WASHINGTON — Repub- their detailed 20D b udgets, licans controlling the House giving those agencies more m oved Monday t o e ase a flexibility on where money is crunch in Pentagon readiness spent, while other agencies while limiting the pain felt by would be frozen at 2012 levels such agencies as the FBI and — and then bear the acrosst he Border Patrol from t h e the-board cuts. across-the-board sp e n ding The impact of the new cuts cuts that are just starting to was proving slow to reach the take effect. broader public as Obama conThe effort is part of a huge vened the first Cabinet meeting spending measure that would of hissecond term to discuss fund day-to-day federal opnext steps. erations through September T he Pentagon did say i t — and head off a potential gov- would furlough thousands of ernment shutdown later this militaryschoolteachers around month. the world and close commisThe measure would leave in saries an extra day each week. place automatic cuts of 5 per- And Homeland Security Seccent to domestic agencies and retary Janet Napolitano said 7.8 percent to the Pentagon the spending cuts were causordered by President Barack ing delays in customs lines at Obama Friday n i ght a f t er airports including Los Angeles months of battling with Repub- International and O'Hare Interlicans over the budget. But the national in Chicago. House Republicans' legislation Obama said he was con-

tinuing to seek out Republican partnersto reach a deal to ease or head off the cuts, but there was no sign that a breakthrough was in the works to reverse them. The new GOP funding measure isset to advance through the House on Thursday. It's aimed at preventing a government shutdown when a sixmonth spending bill passed lastSeptember runs out March 27. The latest measure would provide a $10 billion increase for military operations and m aintenance efforts an d a boost for veterans' health programs, but would put most the rest of the government on budget autopilot. Military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq would be cut to $87 billion — down from $115 billion last year — reflecting ongoing troop withdrawals from Afghanistan.

WIDESPREAD TURNOUT AS KENYA VOTES

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Monday night are:

070sOzoO aoO a4 04' The estimated jackpot is now $1 1.6 million.

heightened concerns that the country could be drawn into Syria's civil war. The fact that the soldiers were on Iraqi soil at all raises questions

about Baghdad's apparent willingness to quietly aid the embattled regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Knraa SanCflnnS— The United States and China havereached agreement on a new draft sanctions resolution to punish North Korea for its latest nuclear test, U.N. diplomats said late Monday. The

U.N. Security Council announced late Mondayevening that it would hold closed consultations on North Korea and nonproliferation this morning.

ChaVeZ SetdaCk —President Hugo Chavezis breathing with greater difficulty as a newand severe respiratory infection has taken hold, Venezuela's government said, describing the cancer-stricken president's condition as "very delicate." A brief statement read on national television by Communications Minister Ernesto Villegas late

ImmigratiOn pOliCy — Former Florida Gov.JebBushwrites in a new book that the nation needs to completely overhaul its immigra-

tion policies but cautions against providing a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants, a position that puts him at odds with some Senate reformers within his own party. In "Immigration Wars: Forg-

ing an American Solution," Bush writes that the immigration debate holds serious consequencesfor the nation and members of his Republican party. Iran inSPSCtinnS —Thehead of the U.N. nuclear regulatory body urged lran on Monday to permit access by international inspectors to a military site nearTehran to ascertain whether tests have beencarried out there on nuclear bomb triggers. Yukiya Amano, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, was speaking at the body's

headquarters as its board of governors began aroutine meeting just weeks after IAEA inspectors returned from talks in Tehran that failed to obtain access to the Parchin site, 20 miles south of Tehran. pete Muller / New York mmes News Service

Millions of Kenyans poured into polling stations

the countrywide vote, but Kenyatta's lead remained

Drug patent — India's patent appeals office has rejected international drug makerBayerAG's plea to stop an lndian company from manufacturing a cheapergeneric version of a patented cancer drug.

Monday to cast their ballots in a crucial, anxiously awaited presidential election, and as the voting pro-

strong from the moment the first tallies came in. The United States and other Western allies of Ke-

The ruling Monday by India's Intellectual Property Appellate Board is being hailed as an important precedent for getting inexpensive life-

ceeded relatively smoothly a real chanceemerged

nya havewarned of "consequences" if Kenyatta wins,

saving drugs to the poor.

that a candidate charged with crimes against humanity could win the race.

though few Western officials have been willing to dis-

a political family who has been accused by the International Criminal Court of financing death squads, held

Voter turnout Monday was tremendous, election officials said, starting hours before dawn, with lines

trial of Gilberto Valle, the New York City police officer charged with plotting to kidnap, kill and cannibalize women. For his part, a defense

a commanding lead of 57percent to 39 percent over

of voters stretching nearly a mile long.

lawyer asked the judge for an immediate judgment of acquittal, argu-

Voters head to polling stations at dawn Monday in the Kibera area of Nairobi, Kenya.

prime minister. Election observers cautioned that the preliminary results might not be representative of

cuss exactly what kind of repercussions or sanctions In the early vote count, Uhuru Kenyatta, the scion of this could bring.

— New YorkTimesNews Service

the second-place candidate, Raila Odinga, Kenya's

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Syria COnfliCt — Dozens of Syrian soldiers who hadcrossed into Iraq for refuge wereambushed Mondaywith bombs, gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades in anattack that killed 48 of them and

neighboring Philippines by slipping by boat past naval patrols last month and storming an obscure village.

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at which cardinals organize the election, discuss the problems of the church and get to know one another before voting.

members of a Philippine Muslim clan that shockedMalaysia andthe

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voting-age cardinals attended the first day of pre-conclave meetings,

firefights in Malaysia's eastern Sabah state this past week that killed eight police officers and19 Filipino gunmen, some of whom were

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administrator. All three positions are subject to Senate confirmation.

socialist leader's deteriorating health.

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ronmental Protection Agency, asEnvironmental Protection Agency

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Burwell, the president of the Walmart Foundation in Arkansas, to be the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget; Ernest Moniz, the director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Energy lnitiative, as energy secretary; and Gina McCarthy, the assistant administrator in charge of air and radiation at the Envi-

Next pOpe — Cardinals said Mondaythey want to talk to Vatican By Andrew Taylor

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Cadinat nnminatinnS — President Barack Obamaon Monday made three Cabinet nominations. Obamapicked Sylvia Mathews

Cannibal plnt CaSe — After offering grisly images into evidence, federal prosecutors in Manhattan rested their case Monday in the

ing that the government had failed to prove the officer's guilt. — From wire reports

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

Calls to chargeNewYork driver By J. David Goodman and Joseph Berger

Paul Browne, t h e c h i ef ing under the influence of alspokesman of the New York cohol, he was released on his New York Times News Service Police Department, said Ace- own recognizance. He is to NEW YORK — M i n utes vedo had not yet contacted the appear in court April 10. before the crash, they were police and would face, at the In th e a c cident Sunday, strangers inhabiting vastly minimum, charges for fleeing Browne said, Acevedo was different Brooklyns. the scene of an accident. driving the BMW "at least 60 Raizy and Nathan Glauber, The BMW's owner, Takia miles an hour when it hit the a recently m a r ried c ouple Walker, 29, of the Bronx, was other vehicle." filled with the worry of firstarrested Sunday on charges T he d e cision t o br i n g time parents-to-be, climbed of insurance fraud. Hamilton strong charges will probably into a livery cab and headed said the woman and Acevedo depend onthe reconstruction to the hospital to check on her did not know each other and of the crash by investigators pregnancy. that Acevedo had probably from the Police Department's J ulio A cevedo, 44, w h o borrowed thecar from a mu- vehicular crime detectives. struggled with alcohol and tual friend. The baby was buried near a history of serious criminal Two weeks ago, when Ace- his parents in K i r yas Joel, activity, took the wheel of a vedo was charged with drivN.Y. borrowed BMW, the police satd. In the early Sunday mornA Free Public Service ~> < Orepan Newspeper i ng d a r kness, t h e B M W QIQ~+ numishera aseocwtion slammed into the side of the I livery car, causing injuries d that claimed the lives of the Glaubers, who were both 21. The couple's newborn son, delivered prematurely in an

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Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties,

emergency procedure, succ umbed to th e t r auma o n Monday. The baby's death strengthened calls i n t h e c o uple's tight-knit O r thodox Jewish community in Williamsburg to b r in g s e r ious c r i m inal charges against the d r iver. He had served time in prison for a 1987 killing and was c harged l ast m o nt h w i t h drunken driving.

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TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

M ART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, March 5, the 64th day of 2013. There are 301 days left in the year.

PICTURE THIS HAPPENINGS China —Communist Party leaders begin their annual legislative meeting.

Car —The most powerful Lamborghini ever, the 220m ph Veneno, isscheduled to

be unveiled at theGenevaauto show.

HISTORY

In the coming days, the College of Cardinals is expected to set a date for the conclave to choose a successor to Pope Benedict XVI. Pope Benedict will not be involved in the selection. The conclave follows precise rules developed and refined over centuries. The name comes from "cum clave," meaning "with a key," signifying that the cardinals are locked in for the election.

Highlight:In1963, country music performers Patsy Cline,

Cowboy Copasand Hawkshaw Hawkins died in the crash of their plane, a Piper Comanche,

near Camden,Tenn., along with pilot Randy Hughes (Cline's manager).

Who iseligidle tovote

INSIDE VATICANCITY Benedict's retirementhome

Under a change of rules stipulated by Pope Paul Vl, only cardinals who have not yet reached their 80th birthday on the day of the pope's death may enter the conclave. Those over 80 may

participate in preliminary meetings. Cardinals whoare underage 80 andwill be voting: EUROPE 61

In1770, the Boston Massacre took place as British soldiers who'd been taunted by a crowd of colonists opened fire, killing

NORTH AMERICA 14

Location of conclave p

Mater Ecclesiaemonastery The 8,600-square-foot complex on ahill, not far from the grotto whereBenedict likes to take his afternoon walk, is where heplans to while away AF RICA ASIA OCEANIA the rest of his days. 11 9 1

LATIN AMERICA 19

Sistine Chapel The election for a new MaP: Card~nals Walk to and from pope happenshere. the Sistine Chapel.

Vatican Museums

five people. In1868, the Senate was organized into a Court of lmpeach-

ment to decide chargesagainst President Andrew Johnson, who was later acquitted. In1933, in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi Party won 44 percent of the vote; the Nazis joined with a conservative nationalist party to gain a slender majority in the Reichstag. In1934, the first Mothersin-Law Day celebration and

parade took place inAmarillo, Texas. In 1946, Winston Churchill delivered his "Iron Curtain"

St. Peter's Basilica Accommodations

About g F o rty-eight cardinals were g They g Ita l y has g Th e QI appointedbyPope John Paul g comefrom g 2 8cardinals, II average II. Sixty-seven were appointed by Pope Benedict XVI.

INSIDE THE SISTINE CHAPEL

48 c ountries. t h e most.

St. Martha's House The cardinals live in a five-story building, a Vatican residencewith105 two-room suites and 26single rooms, during the conclave.

age is 72.

Note Two additional cardinals are eligible, but have declared they will not participate in the next conclave. Ninety cardinals are age 80 or older and are ineligible to

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vote for a new pope.

Balcony wherenewly elected popewill appear

Twelve panels depict the life of Christ, six on opposite walls of the chapel.

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CONCLAVERULES

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Cardinals andassistants swear an oath of absolute secrecy. Leaking information would result in excommunication.

in Fulton, Mo. 101953,Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died after three decades

in power. ComposerSergei Prokofiev died in Moscowat age 61. In1960,Cuban newspaper photographer Alberto Korda

took the now-famous picture of guerrilla leader Ernesto

"Che" Guevara during amemorial service in Havanafor vic-

Altar

The cardinals arenot permitted any contact with the outside world: No cellphones, newspapers, television, messages, letters or signals.

Three vote counters called scrutineers

The chapel is swept for listening devices beforeandduring the conclave.

tims of a ship explosion. Elvis

Presley was discharged from the U.S. Army. In1970, the Treaty on the

Non-Proliferation of Nuclear

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Weapons went into effect after 43 nations ratified it. In 1979, NASA's Voyager 1

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space probe flew past Jupiter, sending back photographs of

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the planet and its moons. In1982, comedian John Belushi was found dead of a drug

Locking the chapel Once all voting cardinals are inside the chapel andall unauthorized assistants have left, the doors are locked and then sealedwith ribbons andwax.

overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood; he was 33. In1983, Country Music Televi-

sion (CMT) madeits debut with the video "It's Four in the

Morning," performed byFaron Young.

VOTINGBEGINS Ballot cards with Eligo in summumpontificem ("I elect as supremepontiff") printed at the top Ballot cardexample are given to thecardinals. Eachcardinal Eligo in summumpontificem secretly fills in the name of his preferred candidate in away that disguises his pfvyrf gf® v4'ytS l handwriting. In order of seniority, they walk to the altar, hold up the folded ballot and place it in When folded, the ballot is only one inch wide a silver and gilded bronzeurn (above).

Stoves

warning to the United States and Britain, the foreign min-

1302 NE Prd St. Bend www.mtmedgr.com

Ballots are threadedandtied together to form a necklace before burned in thestove.

isters of France,Germany and Russia said they would block any attempt to get U.N.

approval for war against Iraq. Thousands of students around the U.S. walked out of classes to protest a possible war. A

suicide bus bombing in Haifa, Israel, killed17 people, includ-

ing an American teenager. Five yearsago:John McCain, having sewn upthe Republican presidential nomination,

BALLOTS ARE COUNTED

HOW BALLOTING TAKES PLACE

DETERMINING A WINNER

A NEW POPE IS ANNOUNCED

The Cardinal Camerlengo andhis three assistants tally the ballots and readaloud the name of the cardinal who receivedeachvote. The ballots andany notes are thenburned. A record is keptfor the Vatican archives.

Voting begins the first afternoon. If no onereceives the required two-thirds of ballots cast, voting takes place twice eachmorning and afternoon. If after the third day no pope iselected, a one- day breakfor prayer can be taken.This process repeats after every seven votes.

A two-thirds majority of the cardinals present is required to win. After 33 rounds, a runoff will occur between the top two vote-getters, according to a tweakin the rules made byPope Benedict XVI.

Smoke signals After each voting session, all ballots, tally sheets and notes are burned in a small stovejust off the chapel. An official record of the voting is sealedand put in the Vatican archives.

4 Central balcony at St. Peter's Basilica looks out to the square.

got a White House embrace

from President GeorgeW. Bush, who praised the Arizona senator's "incredible courage and strength of character and perseverance." One yearago:President Barack Obamaand Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met at

the White House,where Obama urged pressureanddiplomacy

Actor James Noble is 91.

Rock musician AlanClark (Dire Straits) is 61. Magician Penn Jillette is 58. Actor Kevin

Connolly is 39. Actress Eva Mendes is 38. — From wire reports

rdu a~ B~ Bend Redmond

John Day

Black:If no one hasbeen elected, black smokefrom the burning papers signals that to the waiting crowd.

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INTRODUCINGTHE POPE

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Once acardinal has receivedthe required number ofvotes, the deanof the College of Cardinals asks him if heaccepts, and hechooses aname. The cardinals then pledge their obedience to thenewpope. Thepope puts on awhite cassockandskullcap;varioussizesarekepton hand. The senior deacon ofthe cardinals steps onto the main balcony ofthe Vatican and declar es:"Habemus papam" — "We haveapope."

nuclear bombwhile Netanyahu

BIRTHDAYS

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Observers canseethe cardinals only when they travel between the ir lodging and the chapel. Vatican City workers who encounter themare not allowed to speak to them.

Sources: "When a Pope Dies," by Christopher M Bellitto; "Papal Transition" by the Rev. Thomas JReese;Woodstock Theological Center at Georgetown University; www.AmericanMagaztne.org: www. catholic-pages.com; Vatican; BBC; National Cathoiic Reporter; staff reports Todd Ltndeman andBonnie Berkowttz The Washington Post

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

IN FOCUS: CRIME

ioen ea s own, u reasons are eusive By Marc Fisher• The Washington Post

WASHINGTON-

But after two decades of consistent and dramatic declines in homicides and

Back in the crack-infused 1980s, young men with guns and drugs ruled the gun violence in Washington and many other major cities, Hanover Place is single block of Hanover Place NW in Washington, D.C. People who lived in mostly quiet these days. Complaints to the police tend to be more about kids the two-story rowhouses one mile north of the Capitol fell asleep year round shooting craps on the sidewalk than about drug dealers shooting at rival street to the sounds of the Fourth of July, a pop-pop-pop that they hoped was fire- crews.On a block where houses were unloaded foras little as $30,000 in the crackers. It rarely was.

1990s,the most recent saleshave ranged from $278,000 to $425,000.

As welcome as such changes have been, explanations for the nation's plummeting homicide rate remain elusive, stymieing economists, cr i m i nologists, police, politicians and demographers.Have new policestrategies made a difference,or have demographic shifts and population migrations steered the change? Could the reasons be as simple as putting more

in crime, and anyone living in New York or Washington sees it," said David Greenberg, a New York University sociologist who has tested theories for the decline. "In principle, we should be able to explain it, but it's easier to determine what factors don't contribute than it is to say what does." On Hanover Place, residents are quick to name two reabad guys behind bars, or does sons why the nights when they credit go to changes made a heard as many as 75 gunshots generation ago, such as taking are a fading memory: The cast the lead out of gasoline or legal- of characters has changed and izing abortion? the police cleaned out the place. Mass shootings such as last Starting in the mid-'80s, D.C. year's searing i n cidents in police focused on the open-air Newtown, Conn., and Aurora, drug market Hanover Place Colo., have put gun and men- had become. Emptying onto tal-health policies back atop North Capitol Street, Hanover the nation's agenda. But the could not have been better denarrative of crime over the past signed for drug dealing and the two decades runs in a different gun violence it spawns. Entered direction. Law and order has through a warren of alleys, largely vanished as a political the street gave bad guys any issue — in 1994, more than half number of quick exit routesof Americans called crime the through backyards, walkways nation's most important prob- and unmarked alleys — but lem; by 2012, only 2 percent of preventedpolicein squad cars those surveyed by Gallup said from seeing anything from adso. jacent streets. "It's not an easy place to get Today, there are more theories about why crime has fallen into, even though it's the perfect than there were slayings on Ha- walk-in spot for drug sales," noverPlace in the pastdecade. said Andy Solberg, police comThe drop in deaths from fire- mander for the 5th District, arms and in slayings overall which includes Hanover Place. — over the past two decades, homicide declined by 80 per- Different population cent in the District of ColumSo when the city got serious bia and overall crime fell by about takingdown dealers such 75 percent in New York City as drug kingpin Cornell Jones, — has come even as the has whose family home was on the economy tanked,the number block, they set up a trailer on a of guns owned by Americans vacant lot and created at least has soared and the number of the illusion that the cops were youngpeople intheprime crime always there, always watching. demographic has peaked. Then the D.C. government, us"There has been a real drop ing federal, local and private

Leaks Continued from A1 Depending on how much leaks out in the journey from wellhead to homes and factories, some experts say, it could be enough to offset the advantages natural gas has over coal. "We don't have enough data

to develop sound policy going forward," said Steven Hamburg, chief scientist of the advocacy group Environmental Defense Fund. He noted that natural gas has a complex supply chain with "different geog-

raphies and geologies" along the way. Hamburg is spearheading a $10 million, two-year effort to measure methane emissions alongthe nation's supply chain. As activists and energy executives debate the natural gas industry's impact and the Environmental Protection Agency weighs whether to impose new regulations, Hamburg s aid, "it's critically important" the country develops a better data set on methane leaks. The group has brought together academics, environmentalists and industry representatives to track different stages of natural gas extraction, production and transmission and will issue its initial report in May. Other teams are also working to unlock the puzzle. Bob Ackley spent J anuary driving the city for 10 to 12 hours a day, usually with a

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Bob Ackiey, a gas leakage specialist, tests the outpouring of methane gas from a manhole In the affluent Spring Valley neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Ackiey's drive-by air testing equipmentshowed an extremeiy high gas leakage reading.

ane escaping from a single manhole. Last fall, the team published the results of a similar survey of Boston, which showed the city's aging infrastructure had 3,356 leaks. "Washington is at least as leaky as Boston, if not more," Jackson said. "It looks like it has both more leaks and bigger leaks than Boston." Researchers disagree about how much methane is leaking into the atmosphere. Cornell University's Robert Howarth has estimated somewhere between 3.6 percent and 7.9percent ofmethane escapes during the production life cycle of shale gas; the Massachusetts Institute of Technology countered with a study saying it is just a fraction of that amount. University of Colorado reresearcher riding alongside. search scientist Gabrielle PeAckley, who runs a methane- tron, who also works in the detection company, is part of National Oceanic and Atmoa six-person group financed spheric Administration's globby Duke University's Nicholas al monitoring division, said the School of th e E n vironment rate of increasing atmospheric that has collected data on thou- methane concentrations has sands of methane leaks under accelerated tenfold since 2007. Washington's roads. She said it will take a few more On a recent trip through the years to determine whether city, Ackley took the wheel the natural gas boom helps exwhile Duke professor Rob- plain the change. "All we've done now are ert Jackson tracked real-time methane concentrations that snapshot measurements,"she an instrument stashed in the said. car's trunk fed into a computTheir findings have major er. Periodically the readings safety a n d en v i r onmental would spike to unsafe levels, implications. Gas leaks conwith as much 32 percent meth- tribute to smog and can lead

shootings and killings. It didn't happen. The number of young people did rise, but crime fell. What did happen in many cities was gentrification. On Hanover Place, some rentershad to move when they could no longer afford the soar-

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Hanover Place In Washington, D.C., was the scene of regular gunfire in the1980s but is mostly quiet now. Explanations for the nation's plummeting homicide rate remain elusive. money, worked with a community development corporation to buy vacant properties, build houses and sell them at cost to people with jobs and clean records. The result is a very different population, said Joyce Robinson-Paul, a 32-year resident and the advisory neighborhood commissioner for t h e a r ea. "The new neighbors are very quiet," she said. But "the real crime problem didn't leave until many of the dealers were arrested and went to jail." Since Solberg became a police off icer 25 years ago, the prison population has tripled nationally, the result of antidrug and anti-gun enforcement efforts, mandatory minimum sentencing, and the widespread elimination of p a role. Most studies agree that increases in incarceration explain part of the decline in violent crime,

ed of nonviolent crimes causes as many social problems as it solves. Police and residents also credit community policing, in which officers meet with local activists and keep close tabs on known bad guys. But studies of police tactics such as New York's s top-and-frisk c a m paign or the "broken windows"

emphasis on enforcing minor infractions conclude that those measures have little impact on crime. P opulation change i s n o slam-dunk explanation, either. Through most of the 1990s, criminologists and politicians, including President Bill Clinton, predicted that crime rates were about to soar, that a generation of super-predators — part ofthe population bulge created when the baby boomers had children — would reverse the decline in

subsided markedly as the crack cocainecraze ofthe 1980s faded. Similarly, homicide rates for young black men nationwide spiked as demand for crack expanded, then they fell in the 1990s as crack use declined. (Hospital admissions related to ing price of housing. And some cocaine use fell by two-thirds longtime owners cashed out. between 1992 and 2009.) They moved to Prince George's Levitt's a b ortion t h e ory County for better schools, safer proved more provocative. His streets and eyepopping profits, data show violent crime dropgetting $300,000 or $400,000 ping two decades after the Sufor houses they had bought for preme Court's 1973 decision a few thousand dollars. legalizing abortion. More abortions, he concluded, led to fewer Crimeand the economy unwanted births and f ewer Policymakers and scholars children growing up in situlong assumed that crime and ations that would have made economic healthwere organi- them greater crime risks. cally connected — tough times, Legalizing abortion reduced t herefore, should d r ive u p the nation's birth rate by about crime. But that didn't happen 5percent, and twice that among after the 2008 financial collapse teen and non-white mothers. and the resulting recession. Levitt showed that states with Propertycrime does some- the highest abortion rates expetimes track the state of the rienced the sharpest declines in economy, but not always. In the crime; in high-abortion states, 1960s, despitepowerfulgrowth, homicidesdropped 26 percent crime soared. It is clear, how- from 1985 to 1997 while inever, that violent crime does not creasing4 percent in low-aborcorrelate with the unemploy- tion states. ment rate. Some criminologists quesSo researchers have looked tion Levitt's narrative and stafor other explanations. Steven tistical analysis. Killings did L evitt, an economist at t h e drop dramatically in New York University of Chicago, argued City, which had an abortion that four key factors explain rate three times the national the decline of violent crime: average, concluded economist more police, more criminals Theodore Joyce in a 2009 study in prison, the ebbing of crack's for the National Bureau of Ecopopularity and the legalization nomic Research. But the timing of abortion. and degree of the decline in On Hanover Place, men still homicides did not line up with hang out drinking from bottles what Levitt's theory w ould in paper bags, but violent crime have predicted.

though Solberg and many criminologists say the warehousing of young men convict-

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to explosions and fires, including the one that leveled a Kansas City, Mo., restaurant Feb. 19, or the 2010 San Bruno, Calif., pipeline explosion that killed more than half a dozen

people. And leaking gas can also weaken and kill trees in urban areas by replacing oxygen in their roots and drying them out; Ackley has helped organize a lawsuit by five communities surrounding Boston against the region's gas company, National Grid, and he is consulting with Montgomery County, Md., r esidents concerned about tree deaths there. National Grid spokesman David Graves said that while his company has addressed individual tree deaths, "There is no evidence to support the claim that underground gas leaks cause widespread damage in vegetation." While aging infrastructure contributes to leaks, so does the fact that utilities in Boston and the District can pass on the full cost of unaccounted losses — whether through leaks or theft — to customers. In the District, this charge makes up 3 percent of Washington Gas customers' monthly costs; in Boston it represents 1 percent of residents' monthly bill, the companies say. Phillips said gas exploration wouldn't have to expand so rapidly if we didn't waste our

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TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Budget Continued from A1 Buckley and Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin, worked together on the spending plan. It includes capping a cost-of-living adjustment for public employees. They are still working on where the cap would be, Buckley said. But they estimate they can reach $400 million in

Planningthe2013-15 dudget The Oregon Legislature Joint Committee onWaysand Means released the 2013-15 Co-chairs' Budget Monday with spending

estimates for aii essential state programs. Beloware the program area expenditures for the 2013-15 biennium, aswell as the percentage changefor each program from the previous biennium. Thebudgetalsoincludesadd-backsandemergencyfund expenditures totalling $176 million. The budget estimates total available resources of $16.4 billion.

savings by doing so. They have also suggested ending an out-of-state retiree tax break that some employees on the Public Employees Retirement System receive. In addition, they suggest asking the PERS board to "collar" payroll increases, which could temporarilysave $350 million. House Republican Leader Mike McLane, of Powell Butte, called the PERs changes "cosmetic." Rather than making the system more sustainable, Democrats are merely "kicking the can down the road," McLane said. On the heels of the 2012 legislative session in w h i ch both parties enjoyed a historic 30-30 split in the House and governed together, Republicans Monday clearly were not pleased with being left out of the budget writing process. "Bipartisan doesn't mean we all come together to implement their agenda," McLane said. Without m a k in g d e eper changes to the retirement system, McLane said he's not willing to consider ending individual and corporate tax breaks.

Subsidy Continued from A1 At a t i m e w h e n W a shington is rent by the politics of taxes and deficits, select companies are enjoying a tax break normallyreserved for public works. This style of financing, called "qualified private activity bonds," saves businesses money, because they can borrow at relatively low interest rates. But those savings come atthe expense of American taxpayers, bec ause the i nterest paid t o bondholders is exempt from taxes. What is more, the projects are often structured so companies can avoid paying state sales taxes on new e quipment and, at t i m es, avoid local property taxes. While some of these deals might encourage businessesto invest where they might otherwise not have invested, there are few guarantees that job creation or other economic benefits actually occur. Budget analysts say these bonds amount to a government subsidy, in the form of forgone tax revenue. While it is difficult to calculate the precise dollar amount of the subsidy, given the n u mber and variety of these bonds, experts say the annual cost to federal taxpayers could run into the billions. "The federal government doesn't cut a check for this, but it costs the government in terms of lower tax revenue," said Lisa Washburn, a managing director at Municipal Market Advisors, an i n dependent municipalresearch firm in Concord, Mass., that assisted The Times with its analysis. "If these companies were to issue taxable bonds instead, then the federal government would receive tax revenues on them." W ashburn a d d e d th a t the gain to companies, and bond buyers, can be big and long-lasting.

Where some of the money goes Chevron used most of its federally tax-free borrowings to expand a refinery in Pascagoula, Miss. Archer Daniels Midland, t h e a g r i business giant, used about $180 million in tax-exempt bonds to improve its grain-processing facilities in Indiana and Iowa. Alcoa raised $250 million to renovate an aluminum plant in Iowa.

Such financing arrangem ents ar e n o w w o r r y i n g some state and local officials. Many are concerned that the budget battles in Washington will mean less federal money for them, and that the federal government might try to limit the scope of their own tax-

free financing. Some of t h e s u b sidized business projects are almost indistinguishable from public works. A m erican A i r l ines, forinstance,another big user of tax-exempt bonds over the

Program Education Education — State School Fund

Human Services Public Safety

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Totalfunds allocated Percent (in millions) change . :~$ 1,902 +13.2%I $6,550 +14.6% ~$ 4 ,261 ~+8.8% $1,085 +6.1% $157 $334 +10.3%

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the sole source of the problem for schools and the rest of our budget, and I don't agree with that," Kotek said. "This is a reasonable step to find a savings in PERS, and I'm not interested in going any further," she said. Democrats, who have the majority of both chambers of the Legislature, did not say which tax expenditures need to go. But they have said they will target ones that benefit the wealthy. "Oregon gives tax breaks to companies that operate overseas? Is that the best expenditure from Oregon? ... We're not talking about raising taxes for someone who is making

$50,000 or $60,000 and trying

to keep their family together," Buckley said. Democrats coined the name Consumer 8 Business Spending "turning point" for their budget. Their K-12 budget includes Administration a 14.6 percentincrease from Legislative the current biennium. "We all know we can't afJudicial J $6 46 ford for our schools to lose any Subtotal $16,337.5 moreteachers, to lose any more Source: Oregon's Turning Point Budget school days, so we are looking at this as a turning point, as an investment of education," Dev"I'm not supportive of tax any more from the state pen- lin said. increases on families and busi- sion system. The governor said in a statenesses and cuts to vital servicThe p r oposed b udget, ment thebudget is a"very good es that threaten the safety of she said, is a combination of starting point." "I am pleased to see pubour communities, unless there changes to PERS, analyzing are first and foremost signifi- the state's tax system and other lic safety reform, PERS savcant reformsto cost drivers of changes such as curbing state ings and a continuation of our our budget," McLane said, re- prison costs. health car e t r a nsformation "I have always said this ferring to PERS changes. effort included in this budget," H owever, Speaker of t h e would have some adjustment he said. — Reporter, 541-554-1162, House Tina Kotek made clear to PERS. ... I think what I she was not inclined to trim heard from Republicans is it's Idalzewbendbulletin.com Transportation

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$98 +31.3% $12 +7.7% $204 $88.5 +7%

meeting its obligations. The Liberty Bond program allowed for a limited amount of tax-exempt financing for projects beyond Lower Manhattan. That's how One Bryant Park LLC was able to use $650 million of taxexempt bonds to build the Bank of America Tower in Midtovm. In 2005, Congress created a similar program to spur rebuilding in areas of Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi that were ravaged by Hurricane Katrina. The Times' data shows that much of the bond proceeds New York Times News Service file photo went to the oil and gas indusThe Barclays Center in Brooklyn was built using the tax-exempt try, or to showcase projects like bonds that are more conventionally used by cities and states to hotels or the Superdome. pay for roads, bridges and schools. In 2008, Congress passed the Heartland Disaster Tax Relief Act, a bond program to last decade, used $1.3 billion public benefits to federal tax- help 10 Midwestern states hit of these securities to finance payers," the GAO stated in its by flooding and tornadoes. The a new terminal at Kennedy report. goal wasto help businesses reInternational A i r port. T h at build their destroyed property. Changes since'86 terminal is owned by the City But by the time the program of New York; American is the In the years since 1986, was set to expire at the end builder, the borrower and a Congress had lifted the caps of last year, the criteria had tenant. on some states' or cities' al- been expanded to include new As p o litical c o ntroversy lotments, often in response to businesses. over the federal deficit has natural disasters and other One of those businesses was mounted, some fiscal experts emergencies. Orascom Construction Indushave taken aim at this sort of After the terrorist attacks in tries of Egypt, which raised $1.2 tax-exempt borrowing. The 2001, for example, Congress billion of tax-exempt bonds to team at the Bipartisan Policy approved $8 billion worth of build a fertilizer plant in Iowa. Center led by Alice Rivlin, a tax-exempt L i berty B o nds, Another was the Fatima Group former member of the Federal which were in addition to New of Pakistan. In December, a Reserve, and Pete Domenici, York state's normal allotment Fatima subsidiary raised $13 the former Republican sena- and could be used to keep com- billion, tax exempt, to build a tor, has called for ending it. A panies from moving out of the fertilizer plant in Mount Verspokeswoman for the center neighborhood near ground non, Ind. said that such a change could zero. Goldman Sachs used But weeks later, Indiana bring in $50 billion for the around $1.6 billion of tax-ex- received alarming news: Penfederal government over 10 empt bonds under the program tagon officials said that fertilyears. to help pay for its headquarters izer from Fatima's operations The Obama a d m inistra- in Lower Manhattan. In a relat- in Pakistan had been turning tion would take a d i fferent ed program, Goldman agreed up in Afghanistan, in homeapproach, capping the value to keep 8,900 jobs in the city made bombs used against U.S. of the tax break that wealthy but has not met that level for troops. Gov. Mike Pence of Inbond buyers enjoy, whether the last three years, according diana has delayed the project they bu y p r i v ate a c t ivity to public records. while the Defense Department bonds or conventional muA spokesman for Goldman investigates. The $13 billion is nicipal bonds. Some of the Sachs did not dispute that its now sitting in escrow, and will bonds in the Times analysis jobs levels have been below have to go back to the bond are subject to the alternative 8,900 but said the bank was buyers if the project is rejected. minimum tax, but taxpayers who incur the AMT typically don't buy those bonds. There are also tax-exempt private activity bonds that are used for hospitals and universities. The Times did not i n clude those in the analysis, because they do no t b enefit profitmaking companies. Finally, in 1986, in a sweeping tax reform signed by President Ronald Reagan, Congress set limits on qualified private activity bonds, giving each state a yearly allotment. Some projects, like airports and wharves, were not subject to the yearly limits. 0thers could not be financed with tax-exempt bonds at all, including golf courses, stadiums, hotels,massage parlors and tanning salons. But over time, Reagan-era concerns about budget deficits faded, and so did some of the limits on tax-exempt DESIGN AND HOMEFURNISHINGS private activity bonds. The Government A c countability Monday II a.m.- 4 p.m. Office reported in 2008 that Tuesday-Friday 8a.m.- 5 p.m. use had risen to a record high Saturdayl0 a.m.- 5 p.m. and that once-forbidden projSundayI I a.m.- 4 p.m. ects like stadiums, hotels and golf courses were back. 382 E HOODAVE. • SISTERS,OR 97759 • (541) 549-6406 "It i s n o t c l ear w h ether 'I I I facilities like these provide

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according to people involved in their production, which is Continued from A1 less than the $2 million invest"These are the very first lab ed in a broadcast comedy pitests in a very grand experi- lot, but more than is typically ment," said Jeff Berman, the invested in cable pilots. president of BermanBraun, a Not only are the budgets media company that makes comparable, so are the perks p rogramming fo r NB C , foractors and creators — like HGTV, AOL and YouTube, trailers and car-service pickamong others. ups. The writers are guild The competition has only members. The actors have just begun. Amazon is mak- what the people involved say ing pilot episodes for at least are standard television consix comedies and five chil- tracts, with options for several dren's shows, with more to be seasons if the shows succeed. "There's absolutely no difannounced soon. Sometime this spring it will put the epi- f erence" between TV a n d sodes on its Amazon Prime these new productions, said Instant Video service and ask Jeffrey Tambor, who starred its customers which ones they in HBO's "Larry Sanders like, then order full seasons of Show," then Fox's "Arrested some of them. Development." Now, at 68, he Netflix has been ordering is an online pioneer: Earlier entire seasons of its shows thisyear he reprised his charwithout seeing pilots first. acter for Netflix's new seaReed Hastings, Netflix's chief son of "Arrested," which will executive, said last week that make its premiere in May. "House of Cards," the political While taping that show, he thriller starring Kevin Spacey read the script for "The Onand Robin Wright, had been ion Presents: The News," an a "great success" for the com- Amazon pilot. He signed up, pany. Its next program, a hor- and played the older rival to ror series called "Hemlock Cheyenne Jackson. Grove" from the film director 'Leap of faith' Eli Roth, premieres in April. The"Onion"producerstook Microsoft has said comparatively little about its plans. over half of the newsroom of But all three companies are NYI, a New York news chanc ommissioning T V s h o w s nel, in m i d-February and because they have millions reimagined it as the headof subscribers on monthly quarters of an unscrupulous or yearly subscription plans. news corporation. (In the pilot Though the shows may be episode, a reporter kidnaps a loss leaders,executives say child to boost ratings.) NYI that having exclusive content had rented out its space to the — something that cannot be producers of "Gossip Girl," "Damages" and "The Good seen anywhere else — increases the likelihood that Wife" before — but never to a existing subscribers will keep showbeing made for the Web. paying and that new ones will For most of the actors there, Slgll Up. like Jackson, a Broadway star The proliferation of shows whose TV credits include "30 is generally seen as a good Rock" and "Glee," the taping thing for viewers, who have was their one pilot of the seamore choices about what son — and thus represented to watch and when, and for a bet on Amazon over the producers and actors, who broadcasters. have more places to be seen Jackson recalled that his and heard. But the trend may manager calledabout "The inflame cable c o mpanies' Onion" with a note of apconcerns about cord-cutting prehension in her voice. "It's by subscribers who decide online," she said. "We have to there's enough to watch on- talk about this." But when he line. At the same time, the rise read the script, he said, he felt of Internet-only shows may confident — the tone of it remake viewers more depen- minded him of "30 Rock." "This is kind of a leap of dent on the broadband cord. In many cases, though, both faith," he said between tapcable and broadband are sup- ings. "We're all taking a leap plied by the same company. together." Analysts say they expect More TV-like more TV investment to come, Unlike the early stabs at In- including from c o mpanies ternet television, these shows that do not have monthly look and feel like traditional subscribers to please. YouTV. That is partly because Tube, for instance, the biggest more viewers are watching video website of all, makes Internet content on big-screen its money from ads, not from TV sets, but it is mostly be- subscriptions. But it has paid cause the companies involved dozens of outside producers are throwing money at the to start channels so that it has screens: Each of the Amazon original, professional content. comedy pilots cost the com- And its owner, Google, can pany upward of $1 million, afford to pay many more.

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

TODAY'S READ: TRAIL OF BLOOD

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By Dan Levin ~New York Times News Service

of carved ivory products as tusks, floating in nylon sacks "souvenirs" in their luggage, a along the shoreline near a golf policy that confuses potential course. collectors, say c o nservation Here in Puzhai, residents groups. still talk about the raid of April The Chinese government 2011, when a routine inspecsays it is doing all it can to stop tion yielded one of China's ivory smuggling. Officials say l argest seizures ever: 7 0 7 that about 900 seizures are tusks, 32ivory bracelets and made annually within China, a rhino horn, all hidden inside some 90 percent of them involv- cardboard boxes in the back of ing Chinese travelers conceal- a truck. ing ivory in their suitcases. To conservationists, such Some cannot resist turn- huge confiscations are proof ing their hobby into a revenue that the legal ivory experiment stream. In 2012, a woman was is a failure. "Seizures are not given an eight-year prison sen- an indication of success," said tence for selling 19 pounds of Grace Ge Gabriel, Asia direcivory online. Government of- tor for the International Fund ficials said 32 smugglers have for Animal Welfare. "This is been given life sentences. just the tip of the iceberg." Chinese officials deny that Legal versus illegal corruption plays any role in But critics say the govern- the illegal ivory trade. Rather, ment's efforts have l argely they say, their country's huge failed to t a ckle th e s y ndi- size and enormous population cates responsible for moving make it i mpossible to wipe vast quantities of smuggled out the trafficking. "There are ivory into China. After the always fish that slip through authorities began t a rgeting the net," said Meng Xianlin, shipments from certain Afri- executive director general of can countries, the smuggling China's endangered species rings started sending the ivory trade authority. through intermediate ports so The Chinese government that it appears to come from has not responded well to critielsewhere. Officials say they cism. At a CITES meeting two are able to check less than I years ago, China forced all percent of containers arriving nongovernmental o r g anizaon Chinese shores each year. tions to leave the room when W hen they do find a b i g word spread that two groups haul, it is big news. In Janu- were planning to issue reports ary, customs officials in Hong highlighting Beijing's failings. Kong, a special administraA Foreign Ministry spokestive region of China, confis- man said last month that Chicated nearly 3,000 pounds of nese law e nforcement had ivory, worth $1.4 million, hid- " effectively c u r bed" i v o r y den under rocks in a shipping smuggling. container that came from Kenya through Malaysia — their third large ivory seizure in three months. 541-548-2066 In 2010, the authorities in Macau found 2,200 pounds of Adjustable ivory, including some 6~/z-foot Beds

PUZHAI, ChinaChinese investors have anointed it "white gold." Carvers and collectors prefer the term "organic gemstone." Smugglers, however, use a gruesomely straightforward name for the recently harvested African elephant tusks that find their way to this remote trading outpost on the Vietnamese border. "We call them bloody teeth," said Xing, a furniture maker and ivory trafficker who is part of a shadowy trade that has revived calls for a total international ban on ivory sales. To the outrage of conservation groups trying to stop the slaughter of African elephants and the embarrassment of Chineselaw enforcement agencies, Xing's thriving ivory business is just one drop in a trail of blood that stretches from Af-

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rica, by air, sea and highway, to Chinese showrooms and private collections. "The Chinese hold the key to the elephants' future," said Iain Douglas-Hamilton, founder of Save the Elephants. "If things continue the way t hey are, many countries could lose their elephants altogether." Critics say the Chinese government is not doing enough to stem the illicit ivory trade, w hich has exploded in t h e five years since conservationists and governments agreed to a program of limited ivory sales intended to stifle poaching and revive a centuries-old handicraft. Since the beginning of 2012, more than 32,000 elephants have been illegally killed, according to the Born Free Foundation, a wildlife organization, and conservationists say the majority of ivory sold in China, which sells for more than $1,300 a pound on the black market, is of questionable origin. Legalized ivory sales have been a boon to carvers and brokers, who have helped fuel the demand for evergreater supplies. But those who investigate the trade in China say the skyrocketing sales — and the incentive for poaching — can be tied to a combination of incompetence by law enforcement and official corruption, especially by the military. The only way to save the African elephant, conservationists say, is to outlaw the sale of ivory entirely. Though the clandestine nature of ivory smuggling makes it difficult to fully map out, experts say Africa's elephants are being slaughtered at the highest rate in two decades, largely to satisfy soaring demand among China's growing middle class. "China is clearly driving the illegal ivory trade more than any other nation on earth," said Tom Milliken, an elephant expert with the wildlife trademonitoring network Traffic. Things were meant to turn out differently. In 1989, the U.N.-

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Adam Dean / New York Times News Service

A vendor offers ivory and other animal parts for sale at a store In Beijing. Legalized ivory sales have been a boon to China's carvers and brokers, but conservationists say the majority of ivory sold in the country Is of questionable origin. backed Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES, banned the sale of ivory in an effort to stop what conservationists say was an elephant "holocaust." But as h e rd s r ecovered, CITES officials in 2008 agreed to a contentious one-time auction of stockpiled African ivory to Japan and China, with the money going toward wildlife conservation. As part of the arrangement, t h e Ch i n ese government introduced a complex documentation system to track every trinket and carving producedfrom the 68 tons of auctioned ivory it won. Supporters hoped a flood of cheap, regulated ivory would undercut the illegal trade, saving more elephants. T he sale, h owever, h a s proved to be a colossal failure. Like the forest canopy that protects poachers from detection, the regulated ivory trade has providedunscrupulous Chinese carvers and collectors with the ideal legal camouflage to buy and sell contraband tusks. Things went wrong from the start, and wildlife groups say theChinese government is partly responsible. After obtaining th e a u ctioned ivory at artificially low prices, state enterprises in China began selling limited

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Ivory carvings for sale at a hotel in Guangzhou, China. Though the clandestine nature of ivory smuggling makes It difficult to fully map out, experts say Africa's elephants are being slaughtered at the highest rate in two decades.

amounts to carving factories for up to eight times the winning bid. Instead of smothering the sale of illicit ivory, the spike in pricesmade poaching even more attractive. In 2011, for example, auctioned ivory fetched about $94 million, double the previous year's total, according to the China Association of Auctioneers. "Buyers wouldn't even take home the carvings they bought before putting them up for bid again," said an employee with a major Beijing auction house who asked for anonymity because of the sensitivities involved. Even though the Chinese government in 2 011 barred auction houses from selling ivory,sales continue — as does the bloodshed.

I million Chinese nationals, Chinese Embassies send text

messages warning against buying ivory, according to a government report. In Beijing and other cities, public service campaigns, including one that features basketball star Yao

5

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Ming, link poaching to smuggled ivory. The Chinese news media frequently report the arrests of Chinese smugglers. But the government's antiivory message is muddled. In

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A cultural tradition Ivory is etched deeply into the Chinese identity. Popular loretell s of emperors who believed ivory chopsticks would change color upon contact with poisoned food. In Chinese medicine, ivory powder is said to purge toxins from the body and give a luminous complexion. As part of its public relations effort to legitimize the trade, the government in2006 added ivory carving to its official Intangible Cultural Heritage register, along with Beijing opera, kung fu and acupuncture. " Love for ivory is i n o u r blood," said Wu Shaohua, president of the Shanghai Collectors Association. In a society where Louis Vuitton bags and Rolex watchesare sometimes bought by the dozen, many Chinese believe that giving a trinket carved from elephant tusk confers the highest honor. "It says this relationship is as precious as ivory," he said. Wu said he thinks the prestige and artistry of ivory may outweigh, for enthusiasts, any p otential concerns over i t s provenance. International c onservation groups and the Chinese government have tried to raise awareness. In Africa, home to at least

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in Central Oregon, Kyle Gorman, regional manager for the Continued from A1 Oregon Water Resources DeSnow depths near Wanoga partment, said 91 percent for a ranged from 38 to 52inches, basinwide percentage sounds with an average of 47 inches; at good to him. "We haven't had a whole lot Dutchman, depths ranged from 97 to 112.5 inches, with an aver- of stormscome in,"he said. age of 106.4 inches. In contrast, Still, he said the reservoirs the snow depths at the end of around Central Oregon will January near Wanoga ranged be ready to supply water come from 37.5 to 48,w ith an average growing season. Thanks in part of 44inches, and Dutchman Flat to water held over from last fall, ranged from 96 to 105.5, with an Crescent Lake, as well as Crane average of 101 inches. Prairie and Wickiup reservoirs While the depth of snow on are close to full. Gorman also the ground went up from the said Ochoco and Prineville resend of January to the end of ervoirs, while only about half February, the percentage of full now, should fill this spring. normal dropped because FebA cold front moving today ruary received less than typical into Central Oregon is more a "weather disturbance" than a snowfalL Given the dry winter year storm; it should drop snow in

the mountains around Bend, said Josh Smith, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Pendleton. About a foot of snow could fall between today and Wednesday around Mount Bacheloraround where McManus did the Dutchman Flat survey — Smith said. The cold front may even lower the snow level enough to produce snow in Bend. Sunshine should return Friday in Bend and last through the weekend, Smith said. The weather service is calling for highs in the 50s. "It is definitely going to be clearing out this weekend," he said. "We are looking at a nice weekend." — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbuiietin.com

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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

Flahe aims for lawsuit's

BRIEFING

Utah man jailed in marijuana case

WHATEyER

~

A Utah manwas ar-

Follow i n g up on CentralOregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. O To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.

rested east of Bend last weekafter police found

16 pounds of marijuana in his car, the Oregon State Police said.

BEND POLICEDEPARTMENT'S NEW CANINES

quick

Jarred Ron Bowers, 36, was arrested during a traffic stop along U.S. Highway 20east

Iemlse

of Bend. Police stopped

Bowers' Toyota Corolla for equipment and lane use violations, the OSP sald.

• 3 ex-prosecutors' suit claims DAfired them unlawfully

Police discovered an estimated $35,000 worth of marijuana in

the trunk of Bowers' car, according to the OSP.

He was arrested on suspicion of the unlawful manufacture, posses-

By Sheila G. Miller The Buuetin

The Deschutes County District Attorney has asked a federal judge in Eugene to grant a summary judgment in his favor, claiming the three former prosecutors who are suing him have histories of misconduct and poor performance, and that various aspects of the law protect him being sued for their firings. Former deputy district attorneys Phil Duong, Brentley Foster and Jody Flaherty Vaug h an filed the lawsuit in April 2011, claiming Flaherty unlawfully fired them when he took office because they tried to form a union. The lawsuit asks for more than $22 million

sion and distribution of

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subsidies to help payfor it once the federal health

care overhaul requires most Americans to have insurance beginning next year. Cover Oregon staff will use an interpretation service to reach

people who speakother languages,spokeswoman Lisa Morawski said. Also, people will

be able to search on the Cover Oregonwebsite for someone whoprovides services in their language.

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Zoey

Breed:Bloodhound

Breed:Belgian Malinois

Career:Ranger has beendeployed 27 times since Sept. 26, according to Sgt. Nick Parker of the BendPolice

Career: Zoeyhasbeendeployedon52incidentssinceNov. 21. Shecan detect drugs or items that came incontact

Department. Ranger successfully trailed two missing

with drugs. So far, she has located 27"drug items," according to Sgt. Nick Parker. This included $4,000 in

people: a 68-year-old person with Alzheimer's and then a 10-year-old girl. Ranger also helped police to locate

in damages.

Photos courtesy Bend Police Department

Ranger

Flaherty was elected DA in May 2010. He took office in January2011. In the motion for summary judgment filed Friday, Flaherty and his attorney, Keith Bauer,

argue the federal judge should

cash,onehandgun,63ouncesofmarijuana,5.5gramsof

stolen property that was evidence in a crime, Parker said.

rule in Flaherty's favor for several reasons. A summary judgment in this case would find the law favors Flaherty and dismiss the case short of trial. First, a memo by Bauer in support of summary judgment states, the fired prosecutors claim they were not reappointed to their positions because of their political stance. Bauer arguestheirroles as deputy district attorneys made them "policymakers" who made decisions in the office, communicated with the media and other groups on behalf of the DA and had other responsibilities. As a result, the memo states, the First Amendment should not protect their political opinions. See Flaherty/B3

methamphetamine and nearly 2 grams of heroin, he said.

• RangerandZoeyhavebeenbusyfinding drugs,missing peopleandmore

— Staffand wire reports

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Have astoryIdea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348 Deschutes ......541-617-7837 crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184 Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456

Business ........ 541-383-0360 Educatiort .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831

The Bend Police Department's four-legged rookies hit the streets just a few months ago, but already they've racked up a series of successes. A b loodhound named R anger worked his first shift with Officer Kyle Voll in September. Zoey, a Belgian Malinois, started working with Officer Don Barber in November. Ranger is a trailing dog and Zoey is a drug dog, said Sgt. Nick Parker, who oversees the department's canine program. Zoey has sniffed out drugs, cash and a handgun, and Ranger has located a couple of missing people and stolen evidence in a crime. "It was a travesty that we didn't have a drug dog before," Parker said. "As we're busier with less officers,

(Zoey) helps us search a car more quickly." People often transport drugs

along U.S. Highway 97 through Bend, Parker said. Ranger helps police to locate missing people more quickly, which is critical during the cold winter months. "Ranger's smell exceeds any human or other dog's," Parker said. "Even up to days later, a bloodhound can continue to track." Police officials hope to bring on another drug-sniffing dog, but the department needs to raise more money. "It was near $100,000 to get the two dogs on the road and trained and equipped," Parker said. It cost roughly $40,000 for each of the two patrol vehicles outfitted with mobile data terminalsand separate areas for the dogs, Parker said. Normally, a K-9 police vehicle has room to transport one suspect. However, Ranger is such a large dog that he left no room foranother passenger.

"We ended up having to get a full cage in the back for Ranger," Parker said. The Police D epartment spent $6,500 to purchase Zoey, who was already trained, and Ranger was donated by the Polk County Sheriff's Office after the agency laid off his handler. The dogs live with their handlers, so there are also costs such as dog food, leashes, home kennels and veterinary services. The Police Department raised a majority of the funding for Zoey and Ranger by refinancing the police station. There were also community donations and police fundraisers, at which the department sold pulled pork sandwiches prepared in t he smoker barbecue police car that Chief JeffSale brought when he moved to Bend. SeeDogs/B3

Watch for

your TVbil

"It was a travesty that we didn't have a drug dog before. As we're busier with less

to increase

officers, (Zoey) helps us search a car more quickly.... Ranger's smell exceeds any human or other dog's. Even up to days later, a bloodhound can continue to track."

Sudmissions:

— Sgt. Nick Parker, who oversees the Bend Police Department's canine program, on its two newest additions

By Elon Glucklich

• Letters and opinions:

The Bulletin

Mail:My Nickel's Worth

or lnMyview p.o. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Detailsonthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin©bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendar notices: Emaileventinformation to ttewsObettdbulletitt.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, attd includea contact name andphonenumber. contact: 541-383-0354

• Community events: Emaileventinformation to communitylife@bend bulletirt.com or clickon "Submitan Event" atwww .bettdbulletitt.com. Allow atleast 1 0 days beforethe desired date of publication. Details:Thecalendarappears inside this section. contact:541-383-0351

• Births, engagements,

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. contact:541-383-0358

www.bendbulletin.com/local

Car chasesuspect tracked downby Bend policedog

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Bulletin staff report A briefbut hectic car chase ended in a neighborhood cul-de-sac in east Bend early Monday, and the fleeing driver was brought to heel by a police dog, according to law enforcement authorities. Zlatan, a Belgian Malinois from the Bend Police Department, and his handler, Officer Erick Supplee, tracked Braxton M. Monson, 27, of Redmond, from the driveway on Blue Bush Court, where Deschutes County sheriff's deputies said he abandoned his car and fled to a backyard just two blocks away. The Sheriff's Office reported taking three people into custody following a brief car chase that started at 2:52 a.m. on U.S. Highway 97. SeePursuit/B5

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DeschutesCounty Road Department employees deconstruct the wooden deck of a bridge over the Central Oregon Irrigation District canal on Gribbling Road between U.S.Highway 20 and Ward Road east ofBend on Monday. The bridge is getting a new deck, and guardrails will be added to improve safety. It will be closed due to construction through Thursday.

The new year brings rate increases for cable and satellite television subscribers. BendBroadband is raising the monthly bill on most of its television packages by 3 to 3.5 percent, effective this month. It joins satellite television providers Dish Network, which added $5 to all monthly bills in January and additional charges for certain packages, and DirectTV, which increased rates last month by 4.5 percent on average, according to the services. BendBroadband's 2013 price hikes vary based on subscriber packages, but will cost many customers an extra $1 to $2 per month, according to a letter sent from BendBroadband CEO and President Amy Tykeson to customers. The company's family programming package is set to go

up by $1, to $30.99 per month. The essentials and preferred cable packages will tick up by $1.50 and $2 respectively. SeeTV /B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5,2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

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

JOHNSONCREEKSTRANGLERS: The Portland-basedcountryact performs; $5;8p.m.; The Horned Hand,507N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend;541-728-0879orwww. facebook.com/thehornedhand.

comedian performs; $10includesa drink;7:30p.m., doorsopenat6:30 p.m.; The OriginalKayo's Dinner HouseandLounge,415N.EThird St., Bend;541-323-2520. DAVID HAAS: TheCatholic composerperforms;$10suggested donation;7: 30p.m.,doorsopenat 7p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School,2450N.E.27th St., Bend;541-280-9744or www. stfrancisbend.org. ELIOTLIPP: The Brooklyn-based electronicaartistperforms, with Nick Nyquil, Zebual, Prajektand Codi Carroll; free;9p.m.; Liquid Lounge,70N.W. Newport Ave., Bend;541-389-6999or www. slipmatscience.com. DIEGO'SUMBRELLA: The San Francisco-based pirate polka band performs; $8plusfeesinadvance; 10p.m., doors openat9p.m.; The Annex,51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-788-2989or www.p44p. biz.

scholarship saccepted;2-7 p.m.; CentralOregon Community College, Wille Hall,2600N.W. College Way, PORTRAITSOF COURAGE: Bend;541-318-3726. NATIVE VOICES: Learnabout CASCADECHORALE: The group Native Americans whohavemade performsclassicalworksby Bach, animpact; free;3-5p.m.; Central Handeland Mendelssohn,under Oregon Community College, the direction of James Knox; Hitchcock Auditorium,2600N.W. THURSDAY free;7p.m.; Bend Church of the College Way, Bend;541-383-7412. Nazarene, 1270N.E.27th St.; www. KNOWSHAKESPEARE: CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'S cadcadechorale.org. SHAKESPEAREONSCREEN:A SHOW: Featur ingvendorsanda TRIVIABEE:The Education screening of the 1996PG-13rated varietyofresourcesforoutdoor Foundation for the Bend-La Pine film"Hamlet"; free;6p.m.; Tin Pan recreation, withaheadandhorns Schoolsholdsatriviacompetition Theater,869N.W. Tin Pan Alley, competition,akidstroutpond, betweenthree-personteams; Bend;541-312-1032or www. cooking demonstrationsandmore; withhors d'oeuvres; ages 21 and deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. $10, $5ages 6-16, freeages 5and olderonly; proceedsbenefit the GREENTEAMMOVIENIGHT: younger, $15foratwo-day pass; foundation; $21 plus fees;7p.m., Featuring ascreening of"Surviving noon-8p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair InvisionviaTheAssoaatedPress doors open 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, Progress," a documentaryfilm & Expo Center,3800S.W. Airport Andrew Lincoln, fromleft, Norman Reedusand Danai Gurita, stars 835N.W. Wall St., Bend;541-317about the implications ofhuman Way, Redmond;503-246-8291 or of AMC's"The Walking Dead," take part in a Q&A at the Paley Cen- 0700orwww.towertheatre.org. progress; free;6:30-8:15p.m.; First www.thesportshows.com. ter for Media's PaleyFest in Los Angeles on Friday."The Walking "OKLAHOMA!": The Mountain Presbyterian Church,230N.E Ninth AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Stephen Dead" Q&A willbeshown at Bp.m. Thursdayat the RegalOld Mill View High Schoolmusicand drama St., Bend;541-815-6504. Greenblatt, Pulitzer Prize winning Stadium 16 & IMAXin Bend. Tickets cost $15. departmentspresent thestory author of"The Swerve" and"Will oftwo cowboysin 20th-century in the World: How Shakespeare Oklahoma Territoryseeking the WEDNESDAY Became Shakespeare" speaks; andchildrenages6andyounger; thetelevisionhorrorseries"The hearts of thewomentheylove; $20-$75;7p.m., doors open at6 7:30p.m., doors openat6:45p.m.; Walking Dead"; $15;8p.m.; Regal "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: $8, $6MVHSstudents, seniors p.m.; Bend High School,230N.E. Mountain View High School,2755 Old MillStadium 16 & IMAX,680 andchildrenages 6andyounger; RIGOLETTO": Starring Diana Sixth St.;541-312-1027or www. N.E.27th St., Bend;541-383-6360 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541- 7:30p.m., doors openat6:45p.m.; Damrau, Oksana Volkovaand Piotr dplfoundation.org. or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. 382-6347orwww.fathomevents. Mountain View High School,2755 Beczalainanencore performance IGNITE BEND: Aseries offiveN.E.27th St., Bend;541-383-6360 of Verdi's masterpiece; opera "THESHADOWBOX": Preview com. minute presentations onarange or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. performancetransmittedinhigh nightof Cascades Theatrical definition; $18;6:30p.m.; RegalOld oftopics,eachchosenbythe "PARANORMAN":Ascreening of Company's presentation ofthe Mill Stadium 168 IMAX,680S.W. presenter; SOLDOUT;7p.m., doors dramaabout the lives of three FRIDAY the PG-rated 2012film; free;7:30 Powerhouse Drive, Bend;541-382open6:30p.m.; Tower Theatre, terminallyill people; $10;7:30p.m.; p.m.; Jefferson County Library, 6347. 835N.W. Wall St.;541-317-0700or CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'S Rodriguez Annex, 134S.E. E St., Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W. www.ignitebend.com. SHOW: Featur ingvendors anda Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-389Madras;541-475-3351 or www. THE BLACKBERRYBUSHES varietyofresourcesforoutdoor 0803or www.cascadestheatrical. STRINGBAND: TheSeattle-based NATHANIELTALBOTQUARTET: jcld.org. Ol'g. recreation, withaheadandhorns alternativefolkactperforms; The Portland-based folkartist "THE SHADOW BOX":Opening competition,akidstroutpond, free;7p.m.; McMenamins Old St. performs;$10,$7students;7 ROLLER RUMBLERACESERIES: nightof Cascades Theatrical cooking demonstrationsandmore; Francis School,700N.W. Bond p.m.; The Belfry,302 E. Main Ave., Competitors race asprintonbikes Company's presentation of the St., Bend;541-382-5174or www. $10, $5ages6-16, freeages5and Sisters;541-815-9122or www. attachedto fork-mountedrollers, dramaabout the lives ofthree mcmenamins.com. younger, $15foratwo-day pass; belfryevents.com. withmusicandraffles; $5to race, terminallyill people; witha noon-8p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair champagneanddessertreception; RYANSTILESAND FRIENDS:The "OKLAHOMA!": The Mountain $3spectator s;7p.m.,6:30p.m. & Expo Center,3800S.W.Airport improvisational comedian performs, View High Schoolmusicand drama sign-up; Silver Moon Brewing 8 $24, $18seniors, $12students; with Northwestimprovall-stars; $50 departmentspresent thestory Taproom,24N.W. Greenwood Ave., Way, Redmond;503-246-8291 or 7:30p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, www.thesportshows.com. plus fees;7:30p.m.; Tower Theatre, of two cowboys in 20th-century Bend;541-382-2453. 148N.W. Greenwood Ave., 835N.W. Wall St., Bend;541-317LATINODANCE FESTIVAL: Learnto Bend;541-389-0803or www. Oklahoma Territoryseeking the PALEYFEST:"THE WALKING 0700or www.towertheatre.org. cascadestheatrical.org. DEAD":Apre-recorded Q&A hearts ofthe womentheylove; dancethebachataand cumbia;$5 JOHNNYOUTLAWANDTHE $8, $6MVHSstudents,seniors withstarsand producersfrom minimum; donationsto Latino Club COMEDYWITHGARYWILSON: The

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 Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:45p.m. Feb.5,in the 2400 block of Northeast Fourth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10 a.m. Feb. 25, in the 1800 block of Southwest Troon Avenue. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 11:30 p.m. Feb. 27, in the 100 block of Northwest Greenwood Avenue. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:56 p.m. Feb. 28, in the 2500 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:02 p.m. Feb. 28, in the 1700 block of Northeast Wells Acres Road. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:47 a.m. March 1, in the 1000 block of Northeast Butler Market Road. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:11 a.m. March1, in the 20700 block of Angora Court. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 12:45 p.m. Feb. 27, in the 2800 block of Northwest Clearwater Drive. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 9:23 a.m. March1, in the 20100 block of Reed Lane. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:24 p.m. March1, in the 1300

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block of Northeast 27th Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 12:36 p.m. March 1, in the 61200 block of Kwinnum Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:34 p.m. March 1, in the 200 block of Southeast Miller Avenue. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:05 a.m. March 2, in the 1400block of Northwest Hartford Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:02 a.m. March 2, in the 1100 block of Southwest Silver Lake Boulevard. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 10:11 a.m. March 2, in the 61600 block of Southeast 27th Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 10:43 a.m. March 2, in the 21200 block of Hurita Place. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:12 p.m. March 2, in the 2000 block of Northeast Monterey Avenue. Burglary— A burglary was reported at 1:07 p.m. Feb. 22, in the 700 block of Northwest Portland Avenue. Criminalmischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 4:36 p.m. March 1, in the 100block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. DUII — Sharrah Marie Sicocan, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:38 a.m. March 3, in the 2700 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT DUII — Timothy Erickson Jr.,25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:02

is the la r gest expense for BendBroadband," T y k eson Continuedfrom B1 wrote. "Programming comThe e ssentials p a ckage paniesincreasetheir pricesto now costs $49.99 per month, cable companies every year, and the preferred package is usuallyby 6to 10percent." $58.99per month. This ye a r ' s in c r e ases The premium packagewould have been bigger had which includes networks like BendBroadband retained reHBO and Showtime — will gional sports network Root go up 26 cents per month. Sports, which was dropped The limited package price is on Jan. 1 after the two sides unchanged, as are Internet could not ag ree o n a n e w andphone service prices. contract. "The price of th e EssenCustomers will see the increasesin their March cable tials and Preferred packbills, s ai d J o h n F a r w ell, ages would have gone up by BendBroadband's vice presi- a pproximately $3-$4 h a d dent of businessoperations, we continued to carry Root in an emailto The Bulletin. Sports," Farwell wrote. The increases come as varPricing on the company's iousnetworks raisetheprices essentials and preferred they charge cable companies packages has increased 16.4 to air their programming, ac- percent and 23 percent, recordingto Tykeson's letter. spectively, since2008, accord"Cable TV programming ingto The Bulletin's archives.

SATURDAY CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW: Featur ingvendorsanda varietyofresourcesforoutdoor recreation, withaheadandhorns competition, akids'trout pond, cooking demonstrationsandmore; $10, $5ages 6-16, freeages 5and younger, $15foratwo-day pass; 10 a.m.-8p.m.; DeschutesCounty Fair 8 Expo Center,3800S.W. Airport Way, Redmond;503-246-8291 or www.thesportshows.com. GRINAND BEAR ITRUN:5K, 10K and 1-mile run/walks to benefit Healthy Beginnings; races begin andendat theamphitheater; costs vary, see website for details; free forspectators; 10a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater,344S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend;541-383-6357or www.myhb.org.

PUBLIC OFFICIALS a.m. March 1, in the area of Northeast Laughlin Street. Unauthorizeduse — A vehicle wasreportedstolenat5:14 a.m. March 1, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:44 a.m. March 1, in the area of Southeast Court Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:59 p.m. March 1, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:15 p.m. March 3, in the area of Northeast Yew Street.

For The Bulletin's full list, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.

CITYOF SISTERS

City Council • DavidAsson

520 E.CascadeAvenue, RO.Box39 Sisters,OR97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax:541-549-0561

Phone:503-913-7342 Email: dasson©ci.sisters.or.us • WendyHolzman Phone:541-549-8558 wholzman@ci.sisters.or.us • BradBoyd

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The company has raised prices between 80 cents and $3.24 on its main cable packages eachyear since2009, according to the archives. Those increases have come with new program offerings like the Pac-12 Network for regional college sports coverage, as well as TV Everywhere, which lets customers stream select ch annels on computers, smartphones and t ablets. The c ompany h a s also upgraded its wi r e less network to bo o st In t e rnet speeds. " I u n derstand t ha t a n y priceincrease, nomatterhow small, is frustrating," Tykeson wrote to customers. Anyone w i t h qu e stions should call BendBroadband at 541-382-5551. — Reporter:541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

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OREGON STATE POLICE DUII — Denise Lynn Goss, 53, wasarrested onsuspicionof driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:50 p.m. March 3, in the area of Rosland Roadnear Roseland Recreation Area in La Pine. DUII — Kambrea M. Johnson, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:50 a.m. March 3, in the area of Yew Avenue and Southwest 27th Street in Redmond. DUII — Quinn William Weaver, 30, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:54 a.m. March 2, in the area of Southwest ObsidianAvenue and Southwest 58th Street in Redmond. DUII — Thomas Paul Guitar,31, wasarrested onsuspicionof driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3 a.m. March 2, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 and Northeast 27th Streetin Bend. DUII — Timothy S. Phanco, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants March 1, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 163.

Phone:541-549-2471 Email: bboyd@ci.sisters.or.us • Catherine Chlldress Phone:541-588-0058 Email: cchildress@ci.sisters.or.us • McKibben Womack Phone:541-598-4345 Email: mwomack@ci.sisters.or.us

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SUMMER VOUTH ACTIVITY GUIDE NEVER BEBORED DURING SUMMER AGAIN

Find the summer's hottest activities for kids in this guide. Summer is the time of the year kids look forward to most. It is when they are free to explore, play and be who they want to be. The Summer Youth Activity Guide provides parents with information about the youthoriented programs that take place in Central Oregon — from away-from-home camps to daytime activities, sports to arts and crafts. There's no excuse to have bored kids at home. Find what suits them best in The Bulletin's Summer Youth Activity Guide

PudliShing Date: Friday, April 12

G RADUATION 20 1 3 HONORING OURLATEST HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES

One of life's greatest accomplishments, high school graduation, is celedrated in this annual publication. Every Central Oregon high school graduate is listed in this annual publication profiling each of the area's high school graduating classes. Graduates and parents alike look forward to this keepsake publication, which includes the names and photos of Central Oregon's newest graduates. Congratulations Graduates!

PudliShing Date: Wednesday, June12

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TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON COLUMBIA RIVER BRIDGE PROJECT

ena e s

AROUND THE STATE MiSSing girl —Medford police say a 14-year-old girl who disappeared over theweekendunder suspicious circumstances has been found at aMedford residence andappears to be fine. Lt. Mike Budreau says detectives found Starla Carrero on Mondayevening as

in ons

they were following up on people who knew her. Police said earlier

the girl had been at askate park Saturday with her brother and his By Lauren Gambino The Associated Press

SALEM — The Oregon Senate on Monday approved $450 million in bonds to help pay for two new side-by-side Interstate 5 bridges over the Columbia River following nearly two decades of discussions in Oregon and Washington over replacing twin bridges that are aged and become bottlenecks as traffic has increased over the years. The Senate's bipartisan 1811 vote sends the message to Washington state and Washington, D.C. that Oregon is ready to move ahead. Oregon will be able to sell the bonds only if Washington state comes up with its $450 million share,the federal government agrees to contribute more than $1 billion and the U.S. Coast Guard issues building permits by Sept. 30, 2013. There is skepticism in Washington state over the costs of the project and using the new spans to extend light rail from Portland to Vancouver. Some Oregon senators also had qualms, including concerns that the plan lacks a definitive revenue source to repay the bonds. Sen. Elizabeth Steiner Hayward, D-Beaverton, who voted for the plan, pressed the bill's sponsors for

The Associated Press flle photo

An Interstate 5 bridge spans the Columbia River between Oregon and Vancouver,Wash., on e oftw o side-by-side, aging spans that have been targeted for replacement. assurance that all the requirements would be met before any state money would be spent. Still, there are enthusiastic supporters of the project in the Oregon Legislature who say the current structures must be replaced and now is the time to do it. "We're committed to building a safe river crossing for cars, bikes, pedestrians and light rail," said D emocratic Sen. Lee Beyer, of Springfield, a sponsor of the bill. "Replacing the bridge will create jobs and

her harassment claim against Vaughan. Continued from B1 Bauer in th e m emo also Second, Bauer argues the points to a 2009 incident involvfired prosecutors' claim that ing Vaughan, in which the OrFlaherty "aided and abetted egon State Police complained the county" or i n tentionally she "made false accusations interfered with economic rela- about astatetrooper,screamed tions wouldn't hold up since the at troopers, and t hreatened federal court already ruled the troopers." And in 2010 a jucounty was not the employer. ror wrote a letter to complain And third, the memo states, about Vaughan's conduct in even ifthe judge doesn't agree the courtroom. with those two pieces, their As for Foster, many of the firingswere not improper "be- details surrounding her alleged cause there were substantial misconduct were redacted in justifications for not appoint- the public version of the memo. ing plaintiffs as DDAs." But the memo states that as a "Essentially, a District Attor- Jackson County deputy district ney is tasked with appointing attorney, Foster had sex with deputies to exercise the power of a state trooper while he was his office on his behalf," Bauer on duty. When the Jackson argued in his memo. "As such, County District Attorney questhe District Attorney needs to tioned her about the incident, have the utmost trust and con- the memo states, "she lied and fidence in the skill, judgment, was dismissed for lying during and character of his deputies." an internal investigation." Flaherty did not have that Foster, responding by Faceconfidence in the three fired book, declined to comment. prosecutors,the memo states, Baueralso noted in the memo because of misconduct and that Foster on various occaperformance issues. sions said derogatory things .. The evidence shows that about Flaherty, including callFlaherty would h ave b een ing him among other names a completely justified in not ap- liar, cheater and a jerk. pointing them even absent A nd D u ong, t h e m e m o their protected activities," the states, along with his wife was memo states. publicly discussing and potenFor example, th e m e mo tially organizing a recall effort states, in 2008 an investigator against Flaherty. The memo from the Oregon Department further states that Flaherty had of Justice investigated Vaughan watched and worked on triafter other deputy district at- als against Duong and found torneys complained she was him to be arrogant, overzealdisproportionately hostile to ous and a poor trial lawyer. female attorneys in the office. Duong's attorney, Judy Snyder, Ultimately, the DA's office paid did not return a call for comformer deputy district attor- ment Monday. "I am disappointed that (Flaney Jo Mongan $125,000 for .

Dogs Continued from B1 Both K-9 teams spent approximately one month training with the dogs before they were deployed, Parker said. "Zoey came to us trained," Parker said. "However, the handler was not trained (to work with a K-9) and they weren't trained together. They trained for 160 hours, or four weeks, exclusively to pass state standards, which they did." The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office helped out, donating the time of a trainer who works there. Barber, Voll and their canine partners continue to work on their skills. "They train every day, whether it's 30 minutes in the morning when getting ready for work or a few minutes on shift," Parker said. The dogs and handlers also go through four hours of formal training every week, to keep up with police dog standards and stay informed on the latest case law regarding searches. Both dogs and handlers are

OVer a Cliff —Authorities in Lincoln County say an intoxicated woman accused of assaulting her boyfriend andanother woman inan Oregon Coast pub, then driving off a cliff onto the rocks andsurf below, has been hospitalized for treatment of serious injuries. Sheriff's

Deputy Jeremy GautneysaystheEugenewoman hasbeencitedfor DUI and facesseveral other criminal charges. Gautney identified the woman as 41-year-old MayaThomas. North Bend sinkhole —Officials in the Oregon coastal town of North Bend say a16-foot-deep sinkhole that opened up in a restaurant parking lot partially swallowed a garbage truck. City Administra-

tor Terence O'Connor tells TheWorld newspaper that the truck needed to be towed out of the hole Monday morning. O'Connor says the hole opened up in the parking lot of a Sizzler restaurant about 4:30

a.m. He saysthe property, like many in the area, is built on dredge fill. POliCe Chief —ThePortland suburb of Hillsboro says its police chief has resigned. TheOregonian reports that Chief Carey Sullivan told City Manager Michael Brown on Friday that he was resigning from the department, effective March 9. The city announced the

jobs.

Flaherty

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friend, but when their mother arrived to pick them up, she was nowhere to be found. Officers said the girl was seen talking to two men.

includesnew bridge and freeway interchanges on both sides of the river. The existing crossing consists of two side-by-side bridges. The northbound bridge was built in 1917, and the southbound bridge was built in 1958. The current structures become swollen with traffic, and experts say they are vulnerable to damage in the event of a major earthquake. The current spans have narrow paths for cyclists and pedestrians. The project has forged a rare alliance between business groups that hope to speed the flow of freight into and out of ports in Portland and Puget Sound and labor unions looking forward to constructions

assigned to the Patrol Division, where they respond to reports of burglaries, thefts, shoplifting and other incidents. "Then, when somebody pulls over a car where we think there are drugs involved or there's a missing Alzheimer's patient, all of a sudden they refocus on those," Parker said. The department already had two patrol dogs that trail and apprehend suspects. "But they'realso a use-of-force option," Parker said. "Depending on what we're dealing with, they can potentiallybite the person." Voll and Barber could not be reached for comment, but the handlers who work with the two older police dogs testified to their importance in responding to crimes. The officers also described the strong bond between offi cersand theirdogs. "Haras is my second police dog," Officer James Kinsella wrote of his patrol dog in a recent email. "I had a narcotics detection dog I handled for four years in California. I brought her with me to Oregon and ended updonating her to Redmond

move Monday in astatement. No reason was given. The statement

secure long-lasting economic advantages for the region into the future." Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber, who strongly supports the proposal, said in a news release Monday that he will sign thebill. The proposed new crossing, which right now has a price tag of $3.4 billion, would consist of twin bridges that each have two decks: an upper deck for cars and trucks, and a lower deck for light rail, bikes and pedestrians. The project also

It will cost Oregon taxpayers roughly $30 million per year for three decades to pay down the bridge debt. Funding for the project will come from threemain sources, including $450 million from both Oregon and Washington, federal transit money and tollingfeespaid by bridge users. In Washington, the path to approve funding for the Columbia River Crossing is less certain because of concerns over the light rail extension, tolling and a proposed gas tax.

herty) has chosen to distract attention from his i mproper actions by attacking my clients with irrelevant and distorted claims about their past," Andrew Altschul, attorney for Foster and Vaughan, wrote in an email. "Ironically, his attack on Ms. Foster, who resigned from Jackson County with a letter of recommendation almost 10 years ago, smacks of the sexism he falsely accuses Ms. Vaughan of engaging in," Altshcul replied. "No smear campaign nor the destruction of evidence, however, can change the fact that ( Flaherty's) decision not t o hire plaintiffs, all of whom are unquestionably qualified, was unlawfully motivated." The memo in support of the motion for summary judgment states Flaherty wa s s imply acting within the scope of his job and chose not to rehire Vaughan, Foster and Duong because he didn't believe his office could effectively function if they continued to work there. Altschul said he would file a motion asking the judge to delay a briefing on the motion for summary judgment until discovery of all the evidence has been completed. "It appears the premature filing of this motion, which we contest, was done primarily for the purpose of trying to distract from plaintiffs' motion for sanctions," Altschul said, referring to a motion the fired prose-

Bauer said he's been clear for months about his plan to ask for summary judgment. "We've been very up-front and straightforward a b out wanting to get the three (plaintiff) depositions completed," he said, noting that since Foster currently lives in Palau he was not able to take her deposition until December. "It's not a secret of where we were going,

cutors filed in January alleging Flaherty destroyed evidence. Flaherty denied the claim in a

autopsy showed 52-year-old Lori Lynn Erp died of her wound. Her husband, 56-year-old Lloyd Erp, is recovering in the hospital. Police

say they haven't madeany arrests. They got a report Saturday aman at the house was considering suicide. The man later surrendered after calling 911. Family members told The Oregonian that the couple had

struggled financially: Lori Lynn Erpmade apersonal bankruptcy filing in 2011, and Lloyd Erp lost his job as a mechanical engineer more

than a yearago. — From wire reports

and that we thought legally the case should be dismissed by summary judgment." On Friday, the fired prosecutors filed a reply to Flaherty's response to the motion for sanctions, alleging Flaherty may have produced everything he had, but he hadn't properly preserved evidence. "The production of everything he had does not alter the

fact that he knowingly and willfully destroyed relevant evidence," Altschul wrote in the reply. The reply asks the court again to sanction Flaherty for getting rid of evidence and rule in the fired prosecutors'favor. A c ourt-mandated settlem ent conference in the case is scheduled for March 15. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com

Pleasejoin us in honoring our local lifesavers

HEROES' BREAKFAST March 20 at 7:30 a.m. • Doors open at 7:00 a.m. Riverhouse Convention Center2S50Rippling River Court, Bend

vk HOTFL ttt CQNYFNTION CFNTFR

American Red Cross Presented by: Military Hero 1" Lt. Justin Wilkens Died while serving his country in Africa.

FredMever.

Health & Safety Hero Damien Bianchi

Tickets:$25

Saved the life of a friend in a home brewing accident.

To order tickets visit: www.redcross.org/bend or call 541-749-4195

all the documents he had.

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrudC<bendbulleti n.com

POrtland ShOOting —Police have identified a Portland couple shot over the weekend in their home. Police said Mondaythat an

Heroes are made in a blink of an eye.

response, saying he produced

(Police Department) when I just couldn't bear to see her not doing what she loved to do. It was crushing to give her away, but it was the absolute best thing for her." The dog, Tanja, died last year, but just before that, Kinsella stopped by the home of Tanja's police handler. "It was a sad night, but I was able to say she had a great life serving two communities in two different states for over eight years," Kinsella wrote. Officer Erick Supplee, who works with a Belgian Malinois named Zlatan, said many suspects have told him they were about to run away until they realized that a K-9 would chase after them. "In addition, while Zlatanhas no formal training in drugs, he has located methamphetamine, marijuana and other drugs numerous times," Supplee wrote. "Zlatan has also located numerous items of evidence related to various crimes such as robberies, drugs, and burglaries."

said Sullivan joined the department in July 2010 after spending eight years as chief in Woodland, Calif. The city has hired former Hillsboro Police Chief Ron Louie to help with the transition.

All donationsfrom this event support the work of your local Red Cross and help provide assistance to nearly 13,000 people each year and allow us to collect more than 18,000 units of blood.

The Bulletin

Blood Services Heroes Barbara 4 Bob Frazier Coordinated blood drives in Culver for 25 years.

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Health & Safety Hero Deputy David Crump Saved the life of a heart attack victim.

Health & Safety Heroes Officers Troy McClintock 4 Dave Dalton Helped save the life of an auto accident victim.

Community Service Hero Chuck Hemingway Past Executive Director of Central Oregon Veterans

Outreach (COVO).

Health & Safety Heroes Boy Scout Troop 23 Health & Safety Heroes Travis 4 Tina Howell Saved a family from a burning house.

Put out an abandoned campsite fire that avoided a wildfire.


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEwsPAPEB

BETsY McCooc

Chairaomnn

Gottoott Bcnctt

Palll&lter

Jotttt Cosmn

Fditur in-Clnrf Editor of Edttorials

RICHABD CoE

Forest Service onri t trac wit wi erness ire a entury-old photos of the forests near Bend and Sisters show a patchwork of burned and unburned woods, the result of fires that were naturally caused and allowed to burn without human interference. A century of fire suppression has dramatically changed the picture, however, leaving forests packed with fuel that can make natural fires far more extensive and dangerous. As forest managers seek to restore the balance, they run into a peculiar problem: Federal law says we should leave designated wilderness areas alone, allowing nature to take its course. But the forests' current condition is anything but natural, so the natural processes don't work naturally.

southwest of Sisters along the McKenzie Highway. The area along the McKenzie is in the Mount Washington Wilderness Area,and the fires could be set as early as this fall. The Cascade Lakes section is in the Three Sisters Wilderness Area, with action likely a year later in fall 2014. Opposition is coming from environmental groups such as the Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project in Fossil, which says the plan violates the idea of wilderness and that the fires won't burn the same Human interference is needed way as ones that start naturally now to correct for human interfer- from lightning. ence in the past. The Forest Service counters that That's the argument for planned forests need tobe returned to a state prescribed burns in w i lderness where natural fires can be allowed areas of the Deschutes and Wil- to burn. They say they will start lamette national forests. Despite small, a couple of hundred acres at the apparent conflict in the idea a time, in a process that will take 20 of managing forests in the wilder- to 30 years to complete. ness, it makes sense. Extensive wildfires in recent The U.S. Forest Service has years, in Oregon and other states, chosen two wilderness areas for testify to the risks of inaction to adprescribed burns, one west of Bend dress the legacy of misguided fire along the Cascade Lakes Highway suppression in the past. The Forest and another near Scott Mountain, Service is on the right track.

KlCKIN| The ROAP NW The CAN...

M Nickel's Worth Progressive taxation supports our strengths Jonathan Kahnoski said in hi s Feb. 10 In My View that he believes progressive taxation is bad public

Proceed with caution on veterans specialty court pecialty courts — d r ug courts, mental health courts and the like — can be life-altering for the men and women who take part in them, their families and the community at large. They generally offer treatment for underlying problems like drug addiction, in addition to providing close supervisionand other services aimed at getting an offender back on his feet and functioning in society. Because they do offer so many services, and because participants must appear in court far more often than they otherwise would, specialty courts can be expensive to operate. Knowing that, those behind the idea of creating a specialty court aimed at military veterans in Deschutes County should move ahead with caution. Like other specialty courts, veterans courts around the country can genuinely make a difference. The nearest one to D eschutes County, in Klamath Falls, is just over 2 years old. A total of 39 veterans have been selected to participate; 14 have graduated, one died and 21 still are participating. Three veterans were removed from the court because they could not follow the strict conditions under which it operates.

None of the 14 graduates has committed another crime. The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office is p r omoting the idea of a veterans court here and is seeking funds from federal grants and nonprofit agencies to get it off the ground. It cannot go to the Deschutes County Circuit Court for funds because the court doesn'thave them, according to Alta Brady, presiding judge. And therein lies the problem. While a v eterans court surely would be good for veterans, it's not clear it could be sustained without funding from the state, and that simply isn't available. In fact, as Brady noted, judges in Deschutes County already are overworked, and there's no indication that will change anytime soon, particularly with the recently enlarged burden of judicial foreclosures. Before those hoping to establish a veterans court here get too far down the road, they should do themselves, veterans and the courts a favor. They should be able to assure all involved that money will be available not only to establish a court but to keep it operating without draining vital resources from other courts in the county.

economics and U.S. history and government. Robert Hickman Sunriver

Fair Tax Act would solve problems

Congressman G re g W a l den's town hallmeeting on Jan. 25brought Misinformed on questions from the audience about policy, bad social policy and im- Second Amendment how the Medicareand Social Secumoral. I disagree. rity trust funds will be kept solvent I've read severalcomments re- and what can be done about the 11 It is public policy adopted by our elected representatives to fund the cently about Second Amendment million illegal immigrants who take government we A m ericans have language and they're all slightly advantage of our medical and social chosen for ourselves. Are we our- misinformed. A great read would be programs, but in many cases do not selves evil and corrupt for choosing that of David Hardy of the Universi- contribute to them through taxes. to fund government this way? Is our ty of Virginia Law and Politics, "The A bill pending in the House Ways taxation system corrupt because Second Amendment and the Histo- and Means Committee, the Fair some try to avoid taxes? riography of the Bill of Rights." Tax Act, would help resolve all of This i s f a l lacious, backwards The term "a well regulated mili- these issues. This bill, after doing tia" goes back to 13th century Eng- away completely with income taxlogic. It is social policy that has allowed land, when all l andowners were es, aswell as several other forms us to create the strongest, most required to possess a longbow and of taxation, would impose a tax on stable nation in the world. It has en- be "regulated," or be accurate and consumption. As such, everybody, abled us to create the world's most trained with it, and teach all sons including the 11 million illegal imsecure middle class, built i n fra- the "regulated" use of it beginning migrants, would be participating structure, provided education, jobs at age 7. And "militia" referred to the in funding the federal government, and a social safety net to avoid riots, able-bodied citizenry, not a military and a portion of those funds would revolution and economic collapse body. The reference and meaning be directed to funding the Medicare found elsewhere under less "pro- of "regulated" has changed over and Social Securitytrust funds. gressive" taxation systems. Results the centuries, but still maintains By broadening the tax base to indetermine value. the original meaning with regard to clude everyone who spends money, And we are all i m moral, too? watchmakers. a largerand more stable source of The "well regulated militia" state- funding just makes good sense. The When the Declaration of Independence was written, it was moral to ment was fashioned from the Vir- bill would also catch many who now own slaves and women couldn't ginia folks, while "the right to keep pay little or no taxes, such as foreign vote. So what, exactly, is immoral'? and bear arms" was derived primar- tourists, tax evaders and the rich Apparently, K a h noski p o s i ts ily from Massachusetts and Penn- who derive income from nontaxable a taxation system where his less sylvania. They were quite separate sources. However, out of compasf ortunate neighbors w o uld n o t terms which became combined in sion, the bill provides relief for lowonly pay more taxes, because the the Second Amendment. income families. rich would pay less, but also could Make no mistake: the Second Passing the Fair Tax Act would not receive relief from a nonexis- Amendment was meant to mean constitute the biggest transfer of tent social safety net. So, the poor that the able-bodied citizenry shall power from government tothe peowould starve to death in the cold always possess the right to keep ple in the history of this republic. An and dark. and bear arms, which shall not be extensive grassroots movement is This is hardly Christian morality. infringed on. Remember, crazy under way to do just that. Please join And since the rich need the poor to people don't care at all about more in making this a reality by indicatbuy the goods the rich produce, it is laws that infringe on law-abiding ing your support on the www.fair also very bad economics. citizens. tax.org website. Kahnoski should stop r elying Lance Neibauer Patrick R. Burkett on Fox News and learn real logic, Bend Bend

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Support Sisters schools by voting for the Local Option By Rob Corrigan ately it seems that there are few things about which we can collectively agree. The Bulletin reminds us daily, however, of one local institution that draws our communities together: our schools. In Sisters, our schools are where service organizations and community groups, arts supporters and community-league athletes come together in well-maintained public facilities. School fields and gyms draw out-oftown visitors with annual sports tournaments that bring families and athletes from around the Northwest. Nationally known musicians frequently take the high school stage, entertaining audiencesfrom across the region. Hundreds of quilters from around the nation arewelcomed each summer, taking classes and overnighting in the homespun B & B at the middle school. Each of these events helps drive Sis-

L

ters' retail and tourism economy, and sends visitors home with wonderful stories of Central Oregon. And through our schools, we come together as a community to celebrate

young people' s successin academics, athletics, the arts and community service. Sisters students achieve remarkable successbecause all of Sisters supports their efforts. When we buy raffle tickets, contribute to bake sales or helpsponsor concerts or sporting events, we remind ourselves that we were youngsters once, and that the current crop of students is both our community's pride and our hope for the future. Currently, Sisters residents have an even more meaningful and urgent reason to come together in support of our schools. We need to renew the Local Option by voting yes on Measure 9-88. The state of Oregon now contrib-

IN MY VIEW utes 10 percent less funding per K-12 student than the national average, has one ofthe shortest school years in the country and has a worse high school graduation rate than Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama. Since the Great Recession began in 2007, state funding for schools is down 13.5 percent.Throughout Oregon, school districts have had to cut school days, cutteachers,cutprograms and lower expectations for their students. Sisters' schools have felt the pain, with 30 percent cut from our local district budgetover the pastthree years. But things could have been worse. In Sisters, the loss of state funds (compounded by rising fixed costs and unfunded mandates) has been partially offset by the Local Option. Since it was first passed by voters in 2000,

this levy has consistently provided between 9 and 10 percent of the district's budget,ata steady rate of75 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value. In fact, because the district has recently retired some of its capital bonds, our local school-related property tax rates are on the decrease. Local Option revenues are raised in our community and stay local. They have been essential to maintaining lower class sizes, a full school year, sports, art, music, P.E., shop and outdoor education programs. With the L ocal Option, Sisters schoolshave been consistently recognized as among the best in the state. In 2012, all three schools in the district were rated "outstanding," and Sisters High School won the Oregonian Cup, which honors the top 4A school in the state for overall excellence in academics, activities and athletics. The attraction of strong schools remains a cru-

cial factor for the real estate market in Sisters country, helping stabilize property values during the ongoing economic distress. The Sisters community u nderstands that the benefits of Local Option extend to our town overall. That's why the Sisters Area Chamber of Commerce, the Sisters City Council, local businesses and hundreds of community members from across the political spectrum have all endorsed renewal. Sisters residents, please join together as a community united in support of the Local Option. Every vote is essential, because in order for the Local Option to pass, at least 51 percent of registered voters must cast a vote. Please vote yes on Measure 9-88 before March 12. — Rob Corriganserved as a Sistersschool board memberfrom 2005 to 2007and now teaches science at Sisters High School.


TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES

tate u ates iSt0 ams t at OC IS

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Donald D. Campbell MD, of Sunriver Dec. 31, 1925 - Feb. 26, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynoldsicom

Services: A gathering of family & friends will be announced at a later date.

Mary Lou Brlgham Ringering Long, of Crooked River Ranch April 25, 1935 - Mar. 1, 2013 Arrangements: Burns Mortuary, Pendleton, OR, 541-276-2331 Services: Burns Mortuary, 336 SW Dorion Avenue, Pendleton, OR, Friday, March 8, 2013 at 1:00 p.m. Burial: Olney Cemetery, Pendleton, OR. Contributions may be made

La +

ALES' , jX' '

r

to:

Alzheimer's Association in Mary Lou's memory, 1135 SW Highland Avenue, Redmond, OR 97756, 541-548-7074, www.alz.org.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Mcclatchy-Tribune file photo

Smokey Robinson, from left, Pete Moorie, Claudette Robinson and Bobby Rogers, all of the Miracles, are honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2009. Rogers, a founding member of the Motown group, died Sunday atage 73.

e iraces' o ers wasa oown e en • Vocalist/songwriter was inductedinto Rockand Roll Hall of Fame By Brian Mccollum Detroit Free Press

DETROIT — As a v ocalist, songwriter and choreographer, the Miracles' Bobby Rogers embodied the eclectic Motown spirit from the company's earliest days. Rogers died at about 6:30 a.m. Sunday at his longtime suburban Detroit home after a lengthy illness, succumbing to complications from diabetes. He was 73. R ogers, wh o h a d ke p t v arious incarnations of t h e Miracles going into the new century,was a well-decorated f igure with t h e g r oup: i n ducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, honored with a Rhythm & Blues Foundation PioneerAward, memorialized with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Rogers was preceded in death by f o unding M i racle Ronnie White, who died in 1995. The strapping singer was remembered by friends and family members as a warm, congenial figure who made DEATHS i nstant c o n nections w i t h others. ELSEWHERE "He had the sparkling personality that was loved by everyone," said the Miracles' Deaths of note from around Claudette Robinson, a f i r st theworld: cousin of Rogers. "People alMuslum Gurses, 59:Popu- ways commented on the tall lar Turkish singer nicknamed one with the glasses. He was " Muslum Baba," o r "Papa personable, app r o achable Muslum," who recorded more and he loved talking to the than a dozen albums and was women, loved talking to the best known for hi s mourn- guys, loved to dance, loved to ful tunes blending Turkish sing, loved to perform. That folk instruments with Arabic was the joy of his life." melodies. Died of heart failure That upbeat spirit is capSunday at Istanbul's Memorial t ured among th e a r ray o f Hospital. voices o n M a r v i n G a y e's Nancy Cooke de Herrera, 90: "What's Going On," with RogPioneering meditation teacher ers heard early on uttering, who studied in India in 1968 "It's just a groovy party, man, alongside Mia Farrow and the I can dig it." "If people want to rememBeatles and taught the practicefor the remainder of her ber him, they should put that life. Madonna, Sheryl Crow, record on and listen to BobJudd Apatow and Paula Abdul by," said the Supremes' Mary were among the students who Wilson. "That's who he was." learned Transcendental MediWilson last saw him when tation techniques at de Her- she and the Miracles toured rera's home in Beverly Hills, Australia in 2010. "When he walked out on Calif. Died Feb. 28. Marie-Claire A l a in , 86: stage, he walked out with a Master French organist and zest, even though he had his teacher with a d mirers and walker," she r ecalled. "He distinguished former students walked out in time (to the muaround the world whose interpretations of Bach, Francois Couperin and Dieterich Bux-

"He had the sparkling personality that was loved by everyone.

People always commented on the tall one with the glasses. He was personable,

approachable and he loved talking to the women, loved talking to the guys, loved to dance, loved to sing, loved to perform. That was thejoy of his life." — The Miracles' Claudette Robinson

sic), and he was just great. He still loved what he did." While he was best known as one of the Miracles' five voices, Rogers was particularly proud of his songwriting contributions, including credits with Smokey Robinson on hits such as "The Way You Do the Things You Do" (the Temptations), " First I L o o k at the Purse" (the Contours) and the Miracles' "Going to a Go-Go." " He loved to w r it e w i t h Smokey," said Claudette Robinson. "Bobby would often say how happy he was to be a llowed to wr ite w ith h i m . Smokey would say, 'I'm not just allowing you — you're a great writer.'" "Another soldier in my life has fallen. Bobby Rogers was my brother and a really good friend," Robinson said Sunday in a statement. "... I am really going to miss him. 1loved him very much." Working a n d p e r f o r ming together was something of destiny for the two childhood friends: They were born just an hour apart on Feb. 19, 1940, in D e troit's H erman Kiefer Hospital. R ogers was a m ong t h e handful of people privy to Motown's rise from the ground up: The Miracles — then the Matadors — were discovered by Berry Gordy Jr. in 1959, and became the first artist on

the Tamla imprint. The group had started as the Five Chimes, rehearsing doo-wop tunes in the basement of C l audette Rogers' home, learning material from old 78-r.p.m. records. With Rogers' tenor joining Pete Moore, Ronnie White and Claudette Robinson in the harmonies around Robinson's lead vocal, the Miracles' " Shop Around" went on t o become Motown's first million-seller, and the first of 30 Miracles hits to make the Top 40. Wilson knew Rogers from the S u p remes' f o r m ative years, when the teen group — then the Primettes — auditioned for the Miracles and began the path to Motown. They both attended Northeastern High School. "He was like a c elebrity there," she recalled.

Rogers' biggest starring role came with "You've Really Got a Hold On Me" in 1962, singing t w o-part h a r mony with Robinson. "Bobby liked to call it his duet with Smokey," recalled Paul Barker, a friend of the group. "He'd tell you, 'Hey, I sang lead on that!'" Rogers' role became more pronounced after the departure of Robinson in 1972, as he toured with Moore, White and a series of lead singers into the 1980s. Rogers and White revived the group in the early'90s after a decade hiatus. In more recent years, Rogers was the main engine for the Miracles, trademarking the name and nurturing the legacy as he toured North America and Europe under the group's banner. "He wanted that to be something he was remembered for: keeping the Miracles' name alive," said Barker. Rogers is survived by his wife, Joan Rogers, and children Bobbae Rogers, Gina Hughes, Kimberly H u ghes and Robert Rogers III, along with his granddaughter, Brandi Williams, of the RscB group Blaque. Daughter Robin Yopp is deceased. — This story includes reportsfrom The Associated Press.

The Associated Press WIMER — An 8-foot-tall concrete dam built in Jackson County to divert irrigation water but abandoned more than three decades ago has made it to the state of Oregon's top-10 list of dams and other f i sh-blocking st ructures that should be fixed or removed. The list is updated every five years, and the state Fish and Wildlife C ommission will meet Friday to adopt the newestversion,The Medford Mail Tribune reports. The listings are required by state law, pushing along dam removal and improvement projects. For example, the Gold Ray Dam on the Rogue River was among the top 10 in the last listing and has since been r emoved, coming down in 2010. Under the law, the state can require dam owners to complete fish-passage work at a top-10 dam if it comes up with 60 percent of the money to do the work. The listings can also attract grants for work to make it easier for threatened fish to get past. The Wimer Dam along Evans Creek north of the town Rogue River has an a ntiquated fish ladder that works only under the best of conditions, said Dan VanDyke, the district fish biologist for the Department of Fish and Wildlife. "There are times fish can pass it and other times when

"There are times fish can pass it and other times when they can't pass it at all." — Dan VanDyke, Department of Fish and Wildlife, on the Wimer Dam fish ladder

they can't pass it at all," he sa>d. Like the smaller Fielder Dam six miles down Evans Creek, it is listed as abandoned, "so they really should come out," VanDyke said. The Fielder Dam also is in the top-10 group, which doesn't rank the structures on a 1-through-10 basis. That list is at the top of 534 developments that block fish passage and that state biologists would like to see fixed or removed. Some are much bigger, such as the Snake River's Hell's Canyon Dam and the North Santiam's Detroit Reservoir. M ore than h al f o f t h e s tructures on th e l ist a r e dams, and slightly more than a third are culverts. The rest are tidegates, fords,bridges and similar structures. Oregon has more t h an 27,800 documented artificial obstructions to fish passage. More than 23,000 ofthose do not provide an adequate way for native fish to make it past them, according to state

figures.

Pursuit

uty gave chase, following the Chevrolet southbound to the Continued from B1 Butler Market Road offramp Taken into custody were and back onto the Parkway Monson, o n ou t s tanding northbound to Empire Avwarrants for probation and enue and then east, according parole violations, along with to sheriff's Sgt. Dan Bilyeu. suspicion of eluding a police Meanwhile, two O regon officer, m e t hamphetamine State Police troopers and a possession, manufacture Bend Police officer joined the and distribution, and reck- calL Reaching speeds of 80 l ess driving; B randi L y n mph, the pursuit entered Lava Lindquist, 22, of Bend, on Ridges subdivision on Brookwarrants for probation parole stone Lane and turned onto violations and suspicion of Blue Bush Court, authorities methamphetamine p osses- sald. sion; and Benjamin R. WatThe Chevrolet driver, idenson, 22, of Bend, on a warrant tified by Bilyeu as Monson, for parole violation. crashed the car in a driveway None of the three were in- and fled on foot; passengers jured when the car crashed to Lindquist and Watson stayed a halt. Monson was not bitten with the car, according to the by the police dog, according Sheriff's Office. The crash to sheriff's deputies and Bend resulted in minor property Police Lt. Chris Carney. damage. The chase veered onto Blue Zlatan found Monson hidBush Court off Empire Av- ing in a backyard on Marsh enue at random, said sheriff's Orchard Drive, where he was Lt. Paul Garrison arrested, according to Bilyeu's "Typically, on these, they report. just drive to try and get away The parole an d p r obaand they end up in a dead tion warrants are n o-bail end," Garrison said. "Obvi- warrants. ously, they were unfamiliar Little or no traffic was interwith the area." rupted, according to Bilyeu. The pursuit began when Garrison said officers have a sheriff's patrol deputy sig- discretion about whether to naled a white Chevrolet sedan continue a pursuit or curtail it, to stop on the Bend Parkway, depending on several factors, U.S. Highway 97, according including weather, traffic, the to the Sheriff's Office. The pursuit location and the bedriver sped away and the dep- havior of the fleeing driver.

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tehude— precise yetengaging and colorful — were widely considered authoritative. Died March Feb. 26 in a retirement home in Le Pecq, outside Paris.

mosques. Died Monday after a

long illness.

John Wilpers, 93: The last known surviving member of a Rabbi Menachem Froman, team of Army intelligence of68: An Israeli settler known ficerswho captured the Japafor hisefforts to promote co- nese prime minister, Hideki existence between Arabs and Tojo, after World War II, foilJews, Froman served as the ing his attempted suicide so rabbi of the West Bank settle- he could be brought to trial ment of Tekoa, had ties to for his role in the attack on many Palestinian leaders and Pearl Harbor and other war was an outspoken opponent of crimes. Died Thursday in Silattacks by Jewish settlers on ver Spring, Md.

Mary Ellen Moore-Richard, 58: A member of the American Indian Movement during the 1970s, she married one of the group's leaders, Leonard Crow Dog, and gave birth to their first child during AIM's violent occupationof Wounded Knee, South Dakota, which began in February 1973. She later wrote a well-received memoir, "Lakota Woman,"under the name Mary Crow Dog. Died Feb. 14 in Crystal Lake, Nev.

Roy Brown Jr., 96: Defiantly proud designer of the Ford Edsel,the chrome-encrusted, big-grilled set of wheels that went down as one of the worst flops in automotive history, but that generates deep nostalgia among auto enthusiasts for a bygone era ofAmerican motoring. Died Feb. 24 at a hospice in Ann Arbor, Mich., of complications from pneumonia and Parkinson's disease. — From wire reports

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B6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013.

Today: A few showers are possible

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 635 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 5 59 p.m N ew First F u ll Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:33 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 6:01 p.m Moonnsetoday.... 2:02 a.m Moonset today ...11:34a.m Mar. II Mar.19 Mar. 27 April 2

Pi •

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:07 a.m...... 5:40 p.m. Venus......6:30 a.m...... 5:28 p.m. Mars.......6:59 a.m...... 6:46 p.m. Jupiter.....1001 a.m...... I:07 a.m. Satum.....10;31 p.m...... 8:58 a.m Uranus.....7:23 a.m...... 7:45 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 50/14 24hours ending4pm*. . 000" Recordhigh........73m1929 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Record low.......... 6 in 1955 Average month todate... 0.1 2" Average high.............. 48 Year to date............ 1.80" Average low .............. 26 Average year to date..... 2.74" Barometric pressure at4 p m2997 Record 24 hours ...066in1991 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

S K IREPORT

for solar at noon.

Snow accumulation in inches

1

Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . . . . 74 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 77 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .71-110 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .112-120 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . 107 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......63-69 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 146

L 0

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:T.T. =Traction Tires.

Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .40-95

Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T.Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T.Tires

Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 26 at OchocoDivide..... Carry chains or T.Tires

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX......86/55/0.00...59/29/s. 62/38/pc Grand Rapids....33/II/0,00..34/26/sn.. 39/26/c RapidCity.......36/19/000..37/22/pc. 58/37/pc Savannah.......60/29/0 00..70/44/pc.. 55/39/s Akron ..........36/14/000.. 36/29/rs. 37/25/sn GreenBay........28/2/0 00..28/21/sn..32/20/si Reno...........59/33/0 00..60/34/pc. 46/27lsh Seattle..........55/32/0 00...48/39lr. 49/38/sh Albany..........68/25/0.00..41/28/pc..40/29/rs Greensboro......52/25/0.00...51/34/r..41/30/rs Richmond.......49/27/000... 50/35/r ..41/31/rs SiovxFalls.......34/26/001 ... 26/6/sn.. 29/I9/s Albuquerque.....64/49/000...58/35/s. 63/40/pc Harasbsrg.......38/27/000..46/32/pc. 37/31lsn Rochester, NY....30/22/0.00..34/28/pc. 38/29/sn Spokane........42/26/0.00...44/34/c. 46/32/sh Anchorage ......35/23/0.00...35/25/c. 35/27/sn Hartford,CT .....40/28/0.00..44/31lpc...43/31/r Sacramento......63/44/0.00..67/46/pc. 61/41/sh Springfield, MO ..64/38/0.00..39/23/pc. 42/26/pc Atlanta .........59/28/000...62/33/t. 47/32lpc Helena..........29/20/0 00...42/28/c..44/24/rs St. Louis.........53/35/002 .. 38/26/rs .. 40/25/s Tampa..........63/43/000...76/61Is.. 67/46/s Atlantic City.....43/30/0.00..44/35lpc...43741lr Honolulu........80/70/0.00..81/67/pc.. 81/68/sSalt Lake City....39/31/000... 47/35/s. 56/34/sh Tscson..........74/58/000... 79/50/s .. 80/48/s Austin..........87/53/0.00...68/36/5.. 65/39/s Houston ........80/56/0.00...70/40/s.. 65/42/s SanAntonio.....87/44/O.CO... 69/37/s. 67/41/pc Tulsa...........73/45/0.00... 50/26/s .. 50/32/s Baltimore .......42/27/0.00...45/34/r..38/31/rs Huntsville.......61/31/0.00...59/31/t.. 47/32/5SanDiego.......63/57/O.II... 62/53/s. 61/51/pc Washington,DC..46/30/0.00... 46/34/r..38/32/rs Bifings.........30/20/0 00...40/23/5..54/31/rs Indianapolis.....38/21/0 00.. 36/27/is. 35/25/pc SanFrancisco....56/47/OII...59/47/c. 55/45/sh Wichita.........$0/38/000...40/21/s.. 46/31/s Birmingham .. 65/29/0.00...61/32/I.. 47/31/s Jackson, MS.....71/34/0 00 63/33/t.. 55/34/s SanJose.......60748IOC0..61/44lpc 56/41/sh Yakima.........52/20/000 . 46/31lr.51/30/sh Bismarck........34/24/022..20/10/pc. 31/I8/pc Jacksonvile......63/29/000..73/46/pc.. 63/37/s SantaFe........59/44/O.II... 53/30/s. 56/35/pc Ysma...........80/56/0.00... 80/54/s .. 80/50/s Boise...........47/23/0 00...56/39lc. 49/32/sh Juneau..........42/22/0 00...39/20/s.37/27/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........41/31/000...43/34/c...41/32/r KansasCity......45/33/0 00..36/20/pc.. 39/22/5 80dgepoit,CT....45/29/0.00..43/33/pc...42/32/r Lansing.........32/II/0.00..31/25/sn.. 37/26/c Amsterdam ...52/28/000 .. 56/38/s 54/42I< Mecca..........97/77/000 .97/75ls ..95/72/s Buffalo .........30/17/000..35/27/pc. 38/29/sn Las Yegas.......72/53/000...74/53/s. 72/49/pc Athens..........57/40/000... 57/41/s .. 55/48/c Mexico Cily .....73/37/000... 79/41ls ..71/41/s BurlingtonYT....29/24/004..39/26/pc. 41/29/sn Lexington........45/I/O00... 46/30/r ..37/26/rs Asckland........73/64/000..70/60/sh.70/60/sh Montreal........25/19/000..37/28/sn.39/23/pc Caribou,ME.....39/33/003..37/26/sa. 35/22/sn Lincoln..........41/25/000.. 37/14/sl.. 42/24/s Baghdad........77/64/0.00... 74/56/c. 68/45/pc Moscow.........21/7/0.07 ..18/10/pc. 29/23/sn Charleston, SC...57/27/0 00..68/44/pc .. 55/40/s Little Rock.......68/37/0 00 ..56/30/pc .. 51/30/5 Bangkok........79/75/1.88 ..94/78/pc. 97/78/pc Nairobi.........86/59/000... 84/58/5...84/59/I Charlotte........55/21/000... 54/35/r. 49/33/pc LosAngeles......64/52/0 00...63/51ls. 60/50/sh 888<09..........63/28/0.00...49/46/c. 61/46/pc Nassau.........68/61/0.00..75/68/pc. 75/62/pc Chattanooga.....54/27/0 01... 59/32/t. 42/32/pc Louisvile........45/23/0 00... 44/31/r. 39/29/pc Beirst..........64/59/006 ..60/48/pc .. 58/48/s New Delh<.......84/55/000...85/60/s .. 86/58/s Chsyenne.......42/20/005...41/24/s. 55/30/pc Madison WI......31/7/001 ..30/Iisn. 33/19/pc Berlin...........48/23/000...49/32/s. 47/32/pc Osaka..........50/30/000..51/46/pc.. 56/48/s Chicago.........32/18/0 00 ..32/28/sn. 34/28/pc Memphis....... 69/39/0 00 .55/31/sh.. 48/32/s Bogota .........64/52/0.03... 75/55/t...75/56/t Oslo............36/23/0.00... 33/24/c .. 33/22/c Cincinnati...... 44/16/000 ..41/31/sn.37/29/pc Miami..........70/45/000...77/63/s. 79/50/pc Sudapest........46/23/O.C0... 46/32/s ..53/37/c Ottawa.........27/16/0.00 .. 37/28/rs. 41/21/pc Cleveland.......34/15/000 ..33/30/sn. 35/26/pc Milwaukee......31/14/000..32/27/sn. 34/26/pc SuenosAires.....72/48/000... 76/59/s .. 83/61/s Paris...........57/28/000..58/44/pc. 52/44/sh ColoradoSpnngs.48/24/008...46/24/s. 55/29/pc Minneapolis.....29/23/010 ..30/11/sn. 32/14/pc CaboSanLucas ..84/54/O.II... 86/66/s. 82/63/pc Rio de Janeiro....99/75/0.00... 87/75/t...85/74/t Colsmbia,MO...50/34/000 .. 34/22/rs. 39/21/pc Nashv<8 8........58/33/000... 56/33/t. 43/30/pc Cairo...........70/59/0.00... 70/47/s .. 71/49/s Rome...........59/36/0.00... 55/52/c. 57/52/sh Colsmb<a SC....59/24/000... 66/39/r. 52/33/pc New Orleans.....70/40/000..72/45/pc .. 59/42/s Calgary.........21/18/019..21/12/pc.. 21/16/c Santiago........88/52/000...85/59/s. 82/62/pc Columbus,GA....63/29/0.00... 68/36/t. 54/34/pc NewYork.......42/27/0.00..46/37/pc...41/36/r Cancsn...........75//0.00 ..78/66/pc.79/67/pc SaoPaulo.......90/72/0.00... 81/68/t...80/68/t Columbus OH...41/I8/000 ..38/30/sa. 37/26/sn Newark NJ......44/27/0 00 ..47/35/pc ..41/35/rs Dublin..........4500/000 ..46/39/pc.47/45lsh Sapporo ........32/18/007 ..36/27/pc. 41/23/pc Concord,NH.....34/27/0.01...42/27/c. 40/29/sn Norfolk, VA......47/32/0.00...51/39lr...49/35lr Edinburgh.......4660/000... 39/31/c. 46/40/sh Seoul...........46/27/000 ..44/42/pc. 51/41/pc Corpus Christi....93/59/000...69/41/s. 67/49/pc OklahomaCity...68/48/000...51/26/s. 54/32/pc Geneva.........46/25/0.00 ..50/39/pc.. 44/39/c Shangha<........66/37/0.00... 52/48/s .. 59/52/s Dallas Ft Worth...88/55/000...60/34/5 .. 59/39/s Omaha.........44/30/000 ..33/I7/sn .. 37/22/5 Harare..........77/61/043 ..75/62lsh...73758/t Singapore.......88/79/000... 88/77/t...88/76/t Dayton .........40/17/000 ..37/29/sn. 35/25/sn Orlando.........66/30/000...76/58/s .. 69/42/s HongKong......68/55/OCO..70/64/pc.70/64/pc Stockholm.......39/19/000...35/29/c.. 34/22/c Denver..........49/24/0.09... 52/24/s.59/32/pc PalmSprings.... 80/56/0.00... 78/50/s.. 73/4ms Istanbul.........50/34/000..46/34/pc. 50/44/pc Sydney..........79/66/000 ..79/66/sh.. 81/64/c DssMoines......39/29/0.00..31/17/sn.. 34/15/s Peoria..........37/27/0.02..33/24/sn.. 33/21/c lerusalem.......60/50/O.C0..55/44/pc.. 55/39/s Taipet..........66/4!/0.00 ..67/61/pc.. 71/62/s Detroit..........37/16/0 00 ..32/27/sn. 38/27/pc Philadelphia.....42/31/000..47/34/pc...42/34/r Johannesburg....79/57/000... 77/60/t...80/59/t Tel Aviv.........66/57/000 ..64/52/pc .. 64/43/s Duluth..........27/21/000 ..26/11/sn.27/13/pc Phoenix.........77/53/000...79/57/s .. 80/54/5 Lima...........84I70/0.00...77/70lc.7N70/pc Tokyo...........46/39/0.00 ..54/37/pc. 56/48/pc El Paso..........79/53/000...63/42/s. 68/45/pc Pittsburgh.......39/23/000... 41/30/r. 36/25/sn Lisbon..........57/52/000 62/56/r 62/56/sh Toronto.........28/18/001 .32/32/pc 39/25/pc Fairbanks.......19/17/000...27/0/pc... 24/3/c Portland,ME.....37/32/000...42/30/c ..39/30/rs London.........48/34/0.00 .. 53/39/pc. 5474 4lsh Vancouver.......45/32/0.00...45/36lr.49/34/sh Fargo...........29/25/020... 23/0/sn. 25/l 5/pc Provideace......43/28/0 00 ..43/33/pc...42/31/r Madrid .........55/41/000..59/48/sh.56/45/sh Yienna..........46/30/000...49/38ls.41/36/pc Flagstaff........53/35/0.00... 56/26/5 .. 52/28/s Raleigh.........50/26/0.00... 55/37/r ..41/32/c Manila..........84/75/007..84/76/pc. 82/74/pc Warsaw.........41/28/000...44/32/s.. 37/29/s

o www m ' Vtncouver

HIGH LOW

49 24

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

40 22

Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . .36-43 Mammoth Mtn., California...... 6 . . . . . 85-185 ParkCity, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . . 7 . . . . . .48-62 Squaw Valley, California..... .. . 2 . . 2 1 - 95 Hwy. 58 at WiRamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-52 Roseburg.......63/30/0.00....50/38/sh.....49/35/sh Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .57 73 Salem ....... 55/27/000 . . 46/38/r . . .50/35/sh Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 5 . . . . . . . . 45 Sisters......... 50/I 5/0.00....46/23/sh..... 44/24/rs For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dages...... 55/23/0.00.....44/34/c.....52/34/sh www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c clouds,h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-log, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

• 64'

5S/34

Paisley

weekend!

HIGH LOW

Astoria ........57/30/0.00.....45/39/r.....48/39/sh Baker City......44/I4/000.....44/33/c..... 45/27lrs Brookings... MMIMMI0.00.....47/41/r.....47/36/sh Burns..........44/14/0.00....48/29/pc..... 43/25lrs Eugene........55/28/0.00.....47/37/r.....49/35/sh Klamath Falls .. 55/22/0 00 ....46/27/c ...40/23/sn Lakeview.......50/21/0.00 ... 46/30/rs.....40/25/sn La Pine........51/15/0.00.... 45/20/rs.....40/21/sn Medford.......64/29/0.00.....52/36/r.....49/32/sh Newport.......52/34/0.00.....45/39/r.....47/37/sh North Bend......55/34/NA.....49/38/r.....47/37/sh Ontario........48/22/0.00....55/39/pc.....52/35/sh Pendleton......51/23/0.00.....50/35/c.....52/33/sh Portland .......57/29/0.00.....46/40/r.....49/37/sh Prinevige.......50/I8/0.00....45/25/sh..... 46/26lrs Redmond....... 54/I 0/0.00..... 51/27/r..... 45/24/rs

Nyssa

f~+ r , 4 dorove d d d d oHam tm I 4 La Pinels /20 43z,p • d 4 7mz 'd ~dqddcrescenr,4r , • FortRock46/ • 4 4 d,d,d 4 4T- k<8"bW ' ' 4 4 4 d 48/i 4 4 < 0 0 q f/79 4 Rosebug 4 - d C< • Cbri s tmasilgey ltdfnglt 4

Coosaa 4

start to the

41 26

City Precipitation values are24-hovr totaIs through4p m

Valeo 54/38

• BrvtherS4S/2O

A sunny and nice

Y esterday Tuesday W e d . The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

52/37

Drier and warmer, with more sunshine.

HIGH LOW

OREGON CITIES

EAST Mostly cloudy skies.

•John

I~

'

a chance of rain.

44/33

• Mitchel 47/26

43/2~

4 8/40 ~ 47/3 7 4" 4" 4 4 4 4 4 45unrlver• vend • t 44/2'! 6 646/27 • 4 <' 44 4 4 0 4 4 G d d 4 COttage 4 O akridge 1

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BEND ALMANAC

I

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A few flurries will linger into Thursday.

'* * * * * *

+

W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain F l urnes Snow

Ice

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 College basketball, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 NBA, C3 Golf, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL: CLASS 5A STATE TOURNAMENT

TRIATHLON

Area athletes excel in S.F. race

,+,T

SAN FRANCISCO — Three triathletes with

Central Oregon ties were among the top finish-

Zags go to No.1

i

ers Sunday in the 2013

Escape from Alcatraz Triathlon. Placing first among

the womenwas parttime Bend resident

Jgj /fg

Heather Jackson. Her time over the three-

fg

event course — including a 1.5-mile swim starting at Alcatraz

Island in SanFrancisco

By Bud Withers

Bay, an18-mile bike ride, and an 8-mile run

The Seattle Times

through GoldenGate

National Recreation Area — was 2 hours, 18

minutes, 8 seconds. Jackson, 29, finished 18th overall in a field of

more than 2,000 professional and amateur athletes.

2J

Aformer Bend resident, Jesse Thomas, finished third overall.

A Mountain View High School graduate, Thomas, 33 andnow of Springfield, posted a time of 2:06:40. The overall winner of

the 33rd annual event was Javier GomezNoya of Spain, who wassilver medalist in the men's

Photos by Rob Kerr i The Bulletin

Mountain View players Ments Haugen, left, John Carroll (center) and Grant Lannin have helped lead the Cougars to a 21-3 record and a spot in the Class 5A state tournament for the sixth time in seven years. The Cougars will begin play on Wednesday against Wilsonville.

triathlon at the 2012

Summer Olympics in London. His time was 2:04:27. Placing 10th overall

was another Bendentry, Matt Lieto. The 35-yearold finished in a time of 2:13:58. A 46-year-old Texas man died during the

swim portion of the triathlon, apparently of a heart attack, according

to reports. — Staffand wire reports

• Mountain View receives contributions acrossthe board as it returns to theClass5A state tournament By Beau Eastes

for the second season in a row is just hitting his basketball stride after a long Mountain View coach Craig Reid gridiron campaign. And one of the squad's leaders, senior wing Matt Lolaughs when asked about the identity of his team this season. gan, is just returning to form after se"It's an eclectic mix of kids," says verely injuring his knee last summer. Reid, whose Cougars are 21-3 and As th e C ougars have evolved headed back to the Class 5A boys bas- throughout the season, the lone conketball state tournament in Eugene stant, according to Reid, has been for the sixth time in seven years. Mountain View's sophomore point Mountain View plays Wilsonville guard, Ments Haugen. "He's been rock solid," Reid says on Wednesday in the state quarterfinal round. about Haugen, the Cougars' third"It's a mix of older and younger leading scorer who is averaging 8.5 kids," Reid adds. "A lot of kids con- points per game and a team-high 3.5 tribute on any given night." assists per contest."H e's helped make Reid's not just trying to make ev- the transition from last year (when eryone feel good. No one on his team Mountain View was 22-6 and took averages more than 14 points a game, fourth at state) to this year. Some of but four players contribute eight or the pieces have been a little more inmore a night. consistent this year, but ... if you have Arguably his most complete play- a solid quarterback, it makes everyer, 6-foot-4 wing Grant Lannin (11.9 thing else look a little more stable." points per game and 6.72 rebounds The Cougars' backup point guard per game), is a junior still finding con- last year as a freshman, Haugen took sistency on both ends of the court. The over the position with the graduaCougars' leading scorer, senior Mitch tion of three-year starter James Reid, Modin (13.6 points) is more of track whom he and current freshman Daathlete — he recently signed to com- vis Holly, the team's resident sharppete in the decathlon at the University shooter who is averaging 6.5 points of Oregon. One of the team's top de- per game, practiced with for most of fenders,senior forward John Carroll, the summer. is a future college football player who See State/C4 The Bulletin

NBA

Charlotte Bobcats' Jeff Adrien (4) looks to pass against Portland Trail Blazers' J.J. Hickson (21) during the first half of Monday night' s game in Portland.

Blazers roll over falling Bobcats

Class 5A doysdasketdall state tournament When:Wednesday through Saturday Where:Matthew Knight Arena, Eugene

Who:Wednesday's quarterfinal matchups — Churchill vs. Sandy, 1:30 p.m.; Wilsonville vs. Mountain View, 3:15 p.m.; Silverton vs. Milwaukie, 6:30 p.m.; West Albany vs. Jefferson, 8:15 p.m.

Cost:$12 persession for adults and $7for students Mountain View(21-3 overall) and Wilsonville (18-8) notes:TheCougars were co-champions of the Intermountain Conference with Redmond after going 7-2 in league play. The Wildcats tied for fourth in the Northwest Oregon Conference with St. Helens, as both teams went 8-6 during league. Wilsonville is one of three NWOCteams at the state tournament: League-champion

Milwaukie andNWOCrunner-up Sandy arealso in Eugenethis week....Pendleton and Redmond are the two school's common opponents from this

season. Mountain View blewout Pendleton 7652 in December and went1-2 against Redmond, recording a 67-56 victory over the Panthers on Feb. 12, the last time the Cougars played them. Wilsonville beat Pendleton 64-50 in the 5A play-in round on Feb. 26 and upset Redmond 59-47 on the road last week in the state playoffs to earn a spot in the 5A tourney.... The Wildcats are led

by senior Dylan Livesay, a6-foot-4 senior guard who was the runner-up for the NWOC's player of

the year award. Senior RyanWalsh also is a major contributor for the Wildcats.

LaMarcus Aldridge leads Portland with 23 points and 14 rebounds in a victory over Charlotte,C3

By Bob Baum The Associated Press

Evgeni Malkin returns from injury to lead Pittsburgh to a 4-3

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Baseball was invented in the United States, but the World Baseball Classic has been dominated by Japan. U .S. manager Joe Torre h a s taken a different approach in the WBC's third e d ition t h i s y e ar. Rather than stock his entire roster with h i gh-profile stars, he's got a basic starting nine with utility players, three catchers and 15 pitchers filling ou t t h e 2 8 -man

victory over Tampa Bay,C3

CORRECTION Results for the Bach-

elor Butte DogDerby that were listed under the Winter Sports head-

group.

ing in Scoreboard on page B2 of Monday's

C2.

fought game at Brigham Young, 70-65, last week before throttling Portland 81-52 on Saturday. Afterward, coach Mark Few conceded that a vote of his team to No. 1 would be "pretty cool." SeeZags/C3

Inside • A complete list of the Associated Press and USA Today top 25 polls in

Scoreboard,C2

U.S. motivated to break Classiedrought

Pengninspull off win over Lightning

complete information as provided by event organizers. A revised version of those results appears in today's Scoreboard,

SPOKANE, Wash. — Gonzaga's men's basketball program attained a milestone Monday when it was voted No. 1 in the nation in the weekly Associated Press poll of writers and broadcasters. The Zags, 29-2 and winners of 12 straight, rose from second in both the AP and USA Today coaches polls. They had also been ranked No. 2 by the coaches late in the 2003-04 season. Gonzaga received 51 of 65 first-place votes. Indiana, which received seven first-place votes, was No. 2. Duke got three first-place votes and was third. Kansas was fourth and Georgetown, which received the two other firstplace votes, was fifth. Gonzaga took over the top spot after a week of attrition by the rest of the AP top five. No. 1-ranked Indiana lost at Minnesota and third-ranked Duke fell at Virginia. Fourth-ranked Michigan was upset at Penn State, and No. 5 Miami lost at Duke on Saturday. The victory by Duke over Miami loomed as a possible threat to Gonzaga rising to the top, as Blue Devils forward Ryan Kelly returned from a foot injury after being out since January and scored 36 points. Duke is unbeaten when Kelly is in the lineup, and there was some sentiment that his return, coupled with Duke's tougher schedule compared with Gonzaga's, might vault the Blue Devils to the No. 1 spot even after a week in which they lost. Gonzaga won a hard-

WORLD BASEBALLCLASSIC

NHL

Bulletin contained in-

• For the first time, Gonzaga takes control of the AP top 25

MarcioJose Sanchez/The Associated Press

United States' David Wright, left, and Jimmy Rollins joke during a training session on Monday in Scottsdale, Ariz., in preparation for the World Baseball Classic. The United States is scheduled to face Mexico in a first-round game on Friday in Phoenix.

"I t h in k i t ' s a d vantageous. I think you need role players," said Milwaukee outfielder Ryan Braun, who was part of the 2009 team that made it to t h e semifinals. "You look at regular teams throughout the course of the season, those role players are instrumental in teams finding a way to win games.

It's certainly i mportant t o h a ve versatility." The Americans went t h rough their only pre-tournament workout Monday, a light, two-hour session at Salt River Fields, the spring t raining home o f A r i z ona a n d Colorado. They have exhibitions against the Chicago White Sox and Rockies before their opener Friday against Mexico at Chase Field, which could draw an enthusiastic and not necessarily pro-U.S. crowd. Although t h e t e a m i n c l udes Braun, New York Mets third baseman David Wright and New York Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira,Torre chose only one player at each infield position. Philadelphia's Jimmy Rollins is at shortstop and Cincinnati's Brandon Phillips will play second. SeeClassic/C4

WorldBasedallClassic GROUP 0 BRACKET Thursday, March 7

At Scottsdale, Ariz. Italy vs. Mexico, noon Friday, March 8 At Scottsdale, Ariz.

Canada vs. Italy, 11:30 a.m. At Phoenix Mexico vs. United States, 6 p.m.

Saturday, March 9 At Phoenix Canada vs. Mexico, 11:30 a.m. United States vs. Italy, 6 p.m.

Sunday, March10 At Phoenix United States vs. Canada,1 p.m.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY SOCCER 4 a.m.:English Premier

BASEBALL 6 a.m.:MLB, spring training,

League,Tottenham HotspurFC

Cincinnati at Los Angeles

vs. Arsenal FC(taped), Root Sports.

Dodgers (taped), MLBNetwork.

11:30 a.m.:UEFA Champions

League, Roundof16, Borussia Dortmund vs. FC Shakhtar Donetsk, Root Sports. 7 p.m.:UEFA Champions

League, Roundof16, Manchester United FC vs. Real

Madrid CF(same-day tape), Root Sports.

10a.m.: MLB, spring training, Dominican Republic at New York

Yankees, MLBNetwork. 1 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Italy at Los Angeles Angels

(taped), MLBNetwork. 6 p.m.: MLB, spring training, Washington at Philadelphia

(taped) MLBNetwork.

SOCCER

BASEBALL 10 a.m.:MLB, spring training,

11:30 a.m.:UEFA Champions

Dominican Republic at Philadelphia, MLB Network. 1 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Los

vs. Celtic FC, Root Sports.

Angeles Dodgers atSanDiego (taped), MLBNetwork. 6p.m:MLB, spring training,

Germain FC vs. Valencia CF

Mexico at Arizona, MLB Network. 9 p.m3 MLB, spring training, Atlanta at New York Yankees

(taped), MLBNetwork. LACROSSE 2 p.m.: Men'scollege,Mount St. Mary's at Johns Hopkins, ESPNU.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Arkansas at Missouri, ESPN.

4p.m.:Men's college, St. John's at Notre Dame, ESPN2. 4p.m.:Men's college, Virginia Tech at Duke, ESPNU.

4p.m.:Men's college, Southern Miss at Marshall, CBSSN. 4p.m.:NBA, Boston at Philadelphia, TNT.

6 p.m.:Men's college, Ohio State

League, round of16, Juventus FC 9:30 p.m.:UEFAChampions League, round of16, Paris Saint (same-day tape), RootSports. LACROSSE 2 p.m.:Men's college, MarylandBaltimore County at Maryland, ESPNU.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Men's college, North Carolina at Maryland, ESPN.

4 p.m.:Men's college, Georgetown at Villanova, ESPN2. 4 p.m.:Men's college, Oklahoma State at lowa State, ESPNU. 5 p.m.: NBA, Portland at Memphis, Comcast SportNet Northwest.

5 p.m.:Men's college, Richmond at VCU, CBSSN.

6 p.m.:NBA, Chicago atSan Antonio, ESPN.

6 p.m.:Men's college, West Virginia at Oklahoma, ESPN2.

6 p.m.:Men's college,

at Indiana, ESPN.

6 p.m.:Men's college, Alabama

6:30p.m.:Men'scollege,UCLA

6 p.m.:Men's college, Memphis at UTEP, CBSSN. 6:30 p.m.:NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Oklahoma City, TNT.

HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Philadelphia at

New York Rangers, NBCSN. CYCLING 9 p.m.:Paris-Nice, Stage 2

(same-day tape), NBCSN.

at Washington State, Pac-12 Network.

Mexico at Nevada, CBSSN. 8 p.m.: Men's college, Stanford at California, ESPN2.

8:30p.m.:Men'scollege,USCat Washington, Pac-12 Network.

HOCKEY 5 p.m.:NHL, Colorado at

(same-day tape), NBCSN.

ON THE AIR:RADIO TODAY

WEDNESDAY

BASEBALL 2 p.m.:College, Oregon State at

BASKETBALL 5 p.m.: NBA, Portland at Memphis, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.

Listings are the mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changes made by 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF out of the starting chute and

has the early lead in the nearly

Ducks pull awayfor win

1,000-mile race from Anchorage to Nome. Buser pulled into the

to a12-4 victory over Cal State

at5:38a.m. Monday, spending just two minutes there before

Northridge in Eugene onMonday night. The Ducksfell behind 2-1 through the third inning

before opening up thegamewith five runs in the fourth inning. Oregon (8-3) then added arun

scenicRainy Passcheckpoint getting back on the trail. Hewas followed byanother musher with impressive Iditarod credentials

— four-time champion Lance Mackey.

in the fifth and five in the eighth

for the final margin. RyonHealy hit three for five with four RB(s

TENNIS

for Oregon. RyanHambright and SevenPackard eachadded

HingiS to enter HOF — Five-

two hits for the Ducks. The two teams end their series today at

time Grand Slam singles champion Martina Hingis leads the

noon at PKPark in Eugene.

2013 class for the International Tennis Hall of Fame. The other

GOllege fall gameS? — The new members of the Hall anBig Ten is measuring support

nounced MondayareCliff Dry-

for a proposal that would give baseball teams the option of

sdale, Charlie Pasarell and lon Tiriac. Australian player Thelma

playing non-conferencegames

Coyne Long's election wasannounced earlier.

in the fall that would count toward determining the NCAA

tournament field the following spring. Big Ten coaches voted to continue studying the possibil-

ity, and deputy commissioner Brad Traviolia said Monday the

HOCKEY New rules for NHL draft

Traviolia wrote in an email to

— The NHL is increasing the number of teams eligible to make the No. 1 pick in its draft to14, and announced that all seven rounds of the draft will

The Associated Press that he

take place June 30. The league

couldn't predict when, or if, the conference would submit the

announced Monday that all 14 teams that miss the playoffs, or the teams that hold the rights to the top 14 picks, will be eligible for the No.1 draft pick. The lottery, which will be held Apri(29, will be weighted with the teams having the

conference is in the process of explaining the concept to coaches across the country.

proposal to the NCAAlegislative process.

WINTER SPORTS BuSer leadS Iditarod — Four-time Iditarod Trail Sled

Dog Racechampion Martin Buser was the first musher

In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers

als

25. NotreDame 26.OklahomaSt. 27. VirginiaTech. 28. Rice 29. Arkansas 30. Maryland

Friday Boys basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat MatthewKnightArena,Eugene,TBD Girls basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat MatthewKnightArena,Eugene,TBD Saturday Boys basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat MatthewKnightArena,Eugene,TBD Girls basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat MatthewKnightArena,Eugene,TBD

Adv Skijor (9 miles) — 1, JoelMyers,Bend,37:39, 45:23, 1:23:02.

8-Dog (9.6 miles) — I, Thad McCracken, Mosier,

35:56, 35:57,I:11:53.2,JaneDevlin, Bend,39:53, 42:34, 1.22:27.

7-Mid (16 miles) — 1, SharonCarpenter, Portland, I:11:49, I:13:25,2:25:14. 2, NickSalerno, Bend, 1.16:56, 1:17.18,2.34:14 3, TimCurley,Sandy, 11555, 1:2425, 240:20 4, MattHamel,Seattle, I:20: 45,I:20:43,2:41:28.5,GabeDunham,Bend, 1.23:59, 1:21:20,2:45:19. 6, DinaLund, Okanogan, Wash.,1:31:29, 1:33:56,3:05:25. 7, Laura Crocker,Trail, 1:36:47, 1:35:22,3:12:09. 8, JiI Wilson, Athol, Idaho, 1:36:47, 1:37:57, 3:14:44. 9, SteveMadsen,Cougar,Wash.,1:37:50,1:41:16, 3'19'06

Open (25miles) — I, GraceIbsen, Helena, Mont., 1.51.31,1:55.46,3:47:17.2,Jerry Scdoris, Bend, 154:51,1:56:17, 351:08.3, MontePearson, Trout Lake,Wash.,2:15:10, 2:19:33,4:34:43.

BASKETBALL

fewest points in the regular season having the best chance of winning. — From wire reports

Men's college Monday's Games South Coppin St63,Md.-EastemShore 60 Hampton 75,Bethune-Cookman66 Louisville 67,Cincinnati 51 MorganSt. 66,DelawareSt. 47 NC ABT 59, SavannahSt. 57 Nc Central62,SCState54 Norfolk St 69,FloridaA8M58 Midwest Kansas79,TexasTech42 Southwest Texas 79, Baylor 70 Far West Montan8a6,S.Utah74,OT Polls AP Top25 The top25teamsinTheAssociated Press'college basketball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records throughMarch 3, total points basedon25 points for a first-placevotethrough onepoint lor a 25th-place voteandlastweek's ranking: R ecord Pts P r v 1. Gonzaga (51) 29- 2 1, 607 2 25-4 1,517 2.lndiana(7) 25-4 1,471 3. Duke(5) 4.Kansas 25-4 1,433 5 Georgetown (2) 2 3 4 1, 384

1 3 6

7 5 4 10 13 9 8

23-5 1,245 24-5 1,240 2 4-5 1,217 2 4-5 1,040 22-7 1,006 23-5 99 3 25-4 9 5 0 14 22 - 6 833 15 21-7 76 3 16 21-7 68 7 22 23-5 67 5 18 22-7 58 9 12 23 6 3 9 4 11 19. Oregon 23-6 33 2 24 20. Pittsburgh 23-7 32 6 23 21. VCU 23-6 2 77 22. Wisconsin 20-9 2 1 7 17 23. UCLA 22-7 1 96 24.NotreDame 22-7 16 4 21 25. Memphis 25-4 14 9 19 Others receiving votes:NorthCarolina109 LouisianaTech103,Saint Mary's(Cal) 47, UNLV43, California 33,Butler26, Rlinois25, Minnesota10,Creighton 6. Miami 7. Michigan 8. Louisville 9. Kansas St. 10. Michigan St. 11. Florida 12. New Mexico 13. Oklahoma St. 14. OhioSt. 15. Marquette 16. SaintLouis 17. Syracuse 18 Arizona

7, MiddleTennessee5,Akron 4, Missouri 4, Belmont 3, Colorado St.1.

USA TodayTop26 Poll Thetop25 teams intheUSA Todaymen'scollege basketballpoll, with lirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughMarch 3, points basedon 25 points fora first-place votethroughonepointlor a 25th-place vote and last week's ranking: R ecord Pts P v s 1.Gonzaga(29) 29-2 773 2 25-4 7 1 0 1 2.lndiana 25-4 7 0 7 25-4 66 8 23-4 64 9

5 3 8

24-5

614

9

23-5 24-5 23-5 24-5 25-4 12. MichiganState 2 2 - 7 13. OhioState 21-7

56 8 56 6 52 2 49 4 45 3 430 39 9

7 4 6 13 14 10 15

3. Kansas(1) 4. Duke 5. Georgetown 6.Louisville(1) 7. Miami 8. Michigan 9. Florida 10 Kansas State 11. New Mexico

14. Oklahoma State 22- 6 3 6 6 18 15. SaintLouis 23-5 33 8 19 16. Syracuse 22-7 2 7 7 12 17. Marquette 21-7 2 5 3 22 18. Arizona 23-6 23 3 11 19. VCU 23-6 17 3 25 20. Memphis 25-4 1 7 2 17 21. Wisconsin 20-9 13 5 16 22. Pittsburgh 2 3-7 1 1 8 23. SaintMary's 26-5 8 4 23 24. NotreDame 22-7 7 3 20 25. Oregon 2 3-6 5 9 Others receiving votes: Middle Tenne ssee 51, UCLA42, LouisianaTech41, North Carolina28, Butler18, Creighton10,UNL V9,Oklahoma7,SanDiego State 7,Akron6, Rlinois 6, ColoradoState5, Belmont 4, Minnesota 3,California 2, Virginia2. Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST

Conference Oregon UCLA

W 12 12 12 11 9 9 9 8 8 3 3 2

L 4 4 5 6 7 7 8 8 9 13 13 14

California Arizona Colorado SouthernCal ArizonaSt. Washington Stanford OregonSt. Utah Washington St. Wednesday'sGames UCLAatWashington State,6 30p.m. StanfordatCalifornia, 8p.m. USC at Washington, 8.30p.m. Thursday'sGames Oregon atColorado,6 p.m. OregonStateat Utah, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames UCLAatWashington,11 a.m.

Overall

W L 23 6 22 7 20 9 23 6 19 9 14 15 20 10 16 13 17 13 13 16 11 17 11 18

"Well, so much for Hugo. But we'd better warn the fans about tossing paper airplanes from the upper decks."

OregonatUtah,11:30a.m. ArizonaStateat Arizona,I:30 p.m. OregonStateatColorado,1:30 p.m. USC atWashington State,3:30 p.m.

Women's college Monday'sGames

East Bryant61,RobertMorris 56, OT CCSU73,St. Francis(Pa.)71 FairleighDickinson59, Wagner 54 LIU Brooklyn73,SacredHeart 68 Monmouth(NJ)71, Mount St.Mary's63 Quinnipiac73,St. Francis (NY)54 Rutgers65,Pittsburgh 44 SouthFlorida63,Georgetown35 St. John's67, DePaul 54 Syracuse 68, Louisville 57 Villanova72, Providence38 South Coll. of Charleston70,Furman58 CoppinSt.69, Md.-EasternShore60 Davidson72,W.Carolina 46 Elon 76,Georgia Southern65 Florida A8 M84, Norfolk St.76, OT Hampton74,Bethune-Cookman28 MorganSt.59, DelawareSt.49 NC ABT58, SavannahSt. 47 SC State70, NCCentral 50 Samford63, AppalachianSt.60 UNC-Gre ensboro68,Woff ord50 Midwest lowa St.73, OklahomaSt. 70 Marquette72, Cincinnati 58 NotreDam e96, Uconn87, 30T Youngstown St.72 Valparaiso50 Southwest Baylor90,KansasSt.68 Oklahoma77,TexasTech73 Far West Montana St.56,S.Utah48

Polls AP Women'sTop25 The top 25 teamsin theTheAssociated Press' women'scollegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotes in parentheses,recordsthroughMarch 3, total points based on25 points lor afirst-place votethrough one point for a25th-placevoteandlast week's ranking R ecord Pts P r v 28-1 1,000 I 1. Baylor(40) 2. NotreDame 27-1 95 7 2 27-2 91 6 3 3. Uconn 4. Stanford 28 2 8 8 1 4 27-2 8 4 0 6 5. California 27-2 79 7 5 6. Duke 25-4 74 2 10 7. Kentucky 8.PennSt. 24-4 7 0 9 7 23-6 67 3 8 9.Tennessee 10. Maryland 23-6 62 2 9 26-1 5 6 5 12 11. Dayton 24-5 49 9 11 I2. Georgia 23-6 49 0 16 13. Louisville 23-6 4 8 4 17 14.UCLA 15. NorthCarolina 2 6 - 5 43 6 15 16. Delaware 26-3 38 0 18 17. SouthCarolina 2 3 - 6 37 6 14 24-5 35 4 19 18. Colorado 21-9 30 5 13 19. Texas A8M 20. Green Bay 24-2 22 3 21 21. Nebraska 22-7 21 3 20 22. LSU 19-10 122 21-8 93 24 23. FloridaSt 22-6 7 0 22 24. Syracuse 2 6-2 6 4 25. Toledo Others receivingvotes. IowaSt. 60,Purdue38, Gonzaga19,SanDiegoSt. 13,OklahomaSt.11,Texas Tech11,MichiganSt. 10,Vanderbilt 8, Chattanooga 3, Okahoma 3, Viganova3, Charlotte 2, DePaul2, FloridaGulf Coast2,Miami2, West Virginia 2.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GPW LOTPts GF GA

Pittsburgh 2 3158 0 30 81 67 NewJersey 22 10 7 5 25 54 60 Philadelphia 23 1 1 11 2 13 66 68 N .Y.Rangers 20 1 0 82 22 51 51 N.Y.lslanders 2 2 9 1 1 220 64 75 Northeast Division GPW LOTPts GF GA Montreal 22 14 4 4 32 68 53 Boston 19 14 3 2 30 57 42 Ottawa 23 12 7 4 28 52 44 Toronto 23 14 9 0 28 68 57 Buffalo 23 9 12 2 20 60 73 Southeast Division GPW LOTPts GF GA Carolina 2 1128 1 25 63 59 Winnipeg 21 10 10 1 21 55 64 TampaBay 22 9 12 1 19 76 71 Florida 22 6 11 5 17 55 82 Washington 20 8 11 1 17 55 59 Western Conference Central Division G P W L DTPts GF GA Chicago 22 19 0 3 41 70 41 Detroit 2 2108 4 24 61 59 St. Louis 21 11 8 2 24 60 61 Nashville 239 9 5 23 47 59 Columbus 22 6 12 4 16 49 66 Northwest Division GPW LOTPts GF GA Vancouver 2 111 6 4 26 61 58 Minnesota 2 1118 2 24 49 51 Calgary 208 8 4 20 57 68 Colorado 2 0 8 8 4 20 50 60 Edmonton 21 8 9 4 20 51 58 Pacific Division GPW LOTPts GF GA Anaheim 21 15 3 3 33 75 60 Phoenix 22 11 8 3 25 67 63 Dallas 22 11 9 2 24 61 63 L os Angele s 20 1 17 2 24 54 48 SanJose 20 10 6 4 24 47 44 NOTE:Twopoints lor a win, onepointfor overtime loss. Monday's Games Phoenix 5,Anaheim4, SO Toronto 4,NewJersey 2 Pittsburgh4, TampaBay3 Los Angeles5, Nashvige1

Today'sGames TampaBayat NewJersey, 4p.m. Montreal atN.Y.Islanders, 4 p.m. Boston atWashington, 4p.m. Buffalo atCarolina, 4p.m.

8-3 7-5 11-1

10-0 6-5 10-3 10-2 8-2 7-2 11-2 12-0

20. Arizona 21. UCIrvine 22. NotreDame 23. ArizonaState 24. VirginiaTech 25. Virginia

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER All Times PST

EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA

Phoenix atAnaheim,7p.m

Scoring Leaders Through Sunday GP G A PTS SidneyCrosby,Pit 22 10 24 34 15 12 11 11 5 13 12 9 6 10 7

12 15 16 14 3 18 19 13 20 21 22 NR 25 NR

11-1

19. Rice

Edmonton at Columbus, 4p.m Philadelphiaat N.Y.Rangers,4:30 p.m. WinnipegatFlorida,4:30 p.m. Coloradoat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Minnesotaat Chicago,5:30 p.m. San Jose atVancouver,7 p.m. St.LouisatLosAngeles,7:30pm Wednesday's Games Ottawa at Toronto, 4p.m. Coloradoat Chicago,5 p.m. San Jose atCalgary, 6:30p.m.

StevenStamkos,TB 2 1 ThomasVanek, Buf 2 0 Chris Kunitz,Pit 22 PatrickKane,Chi 22 Martin St.Louis, TB 2 1 John Tavares, NYI 22 Eric StaalCar , 21 JakubVoracek, Phi 23 HenrikZetterberg,Det 2 2 Matt Moulson,NYI 22 Mike Ribeiro,Was 20 5tied with 22pts.

8-2 9-2

12. UCLA 13. Stanlord 14. GeorgiaTech 15. Oregon 16. Arkansas 17 Oklahoma I8. FloridaState

SkiJor (6 miles) — I, Shawn Bresler, Bend,25:08, 27:50, 52:58.2, GenevaLyon, Brightwood,34:01, 39:36, 113:37.3,DanielSolbach,Lake Oswego,

3539. 3, KenziMyers, Bend,21:15,1949, 41:04 4, Rick Johnson,Sisters, 22:23, 20:53, 43:16. 5, Sheryl O'Rourke,Prinevile, 24:48, 25.08,49:56. 6, Jill Harrel, Bend,25:49,24:11, 50:00. 7, Reggi Lombar di,Salem,27:26, 27:28,54:54.8,Dan Silvertree,Portland, 29:28, 28:06, 57:34. 9, Buck Yockey, Helena,Mont.,27 23,3059,5822.10,Jan Purkeypie, ShadyCove,29:19,3524,1:0443.

13 2

ball Americapoll withrecordsthrough March 3 and ranking(votingbythestaff of Baseball America): R ecord Pv s 1. NorthCarolina 10-0 1 12-1 2 Vanderbdt 2 15-0 3. MississippiState 5 12-0 4. Oregon State 6 9-2 5.Louisvile 4 8-2 6. SouthCarolina 7 11-1 7. Mississippi 8 10-1 8. LouisianaState 9 10-1 9. NorthCarolinaSt. 10 10-1 10. CalStateFugerton 17 10-1 11. Kentucky 11

Local

5-Dog (5miles) — 1,DebbieLyman,Sandy,17:43, 17:32, 35:15. 2,TomRiley, Bend,1846, 16:53,

12 6 18 19 24 15 23 26 27 21 25 20

Baseball AmericaTop26

Sled DogRacing Bachelor Butte DogDerby Saturday, Sunday At WanogaSno-Park (Day1 time, Day 2time, total time) Junior (1 mile) — 1,Isabel Max,Bend,4:53,5:20, 10:13. 2, FionaMax,Bend,5:53,6:07,12:00. 3,

40;07, DNS.

8-2 468 8-3 467 10-0 46 5 11-1 4 6 2 12-0 46 0 10-3 45 7 9-2 454 7-2-1 45 2 9-1 448 10-2 44 5 8-3 441 10-2 43 9 8 -2 438 9 -2 435 11-2 4 32 6-5 429 7-5 428 9 -3 424

DURHAM, N.C.—Thetop25teamsin theBase-

WINTER SPORTS

7 p.m.:Men's college, New

9 p.m.: Paris-Nice, Stage 3

— A pair of five-run innings led the Oregonbaseball team

13. UCLA 14. Oregon 15. FloridaSt. 16. GeorgiaTech. 17 Virginia 18. Arizona 19. Louisville 20. ArizonaSt. 21. CalPoly 22. U.C.Irvine 23. FloridaGulfCoast 24. Miami,Fla.

IN THE BLEACHERS

Thursday Girls basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat Matthew KnightArena,Eugene, Bendvs. Hermiston, 315 p.m.

State at Wyoming, Root Sports.

CYCLING

BASEBALL

Wednesday Boys basketball: Class5Astate tournamentat Matthew KnightArena,Eugene, MountainView vs. Wilsonvige,3:15p.m.

7 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado

Chicago, NBCSN.

Portland, KICE-AM 940.

ON DECK

Erin Madsen, Cougar, Wash., 6:41,12:30,19:11.

Connecticut at South Florida, ESPNU.

at Mississippi, ESPNU.

COREBOARD

WEDNESDAY

17 15 16 15 21 12 13 16 19 14 17

32 27 27 26 26 25 25 25 25 24 24

BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

Spring Training

Monday'sGames

Detroit 8,Houston5 Philadelphia 5,Pittsburgh0 Minnesota7, St.Louis0 Atlanta 4,N.Y.Mets 2 Boston 5,TampaBay1 Oakland13,L.A. Angels5 Cleveland13,ChicagoCubs5 Texas5,SanDiego 4 Seattle16,Colorado6 ChicagoWhiteSox6, SanFrancisco 2 Arizona 7,Cincinnati 2

Today'sGames

Baltimorevs.Torontoat Dunedin, Fla., 10:05a.m. Houstonvs.Washington at Viera, Fla.,10:05a.m. Tampa Bayvs. Minnesotaat Fort Myers,Fla., 10:05

a.m.

Clevelandvs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., 12;05 pm. Cincinnati vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe,Ariz., 12.05

p.m.

Oaklandvs. KansasCity at Surprise, Ariz., 12:05

p.m.

L A. Dodgersvs. SanDiegoat Peoria,Ariz., 12.05

p.m.

Chicago Cubsvs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz., 12:10 p.m. Atlantavs.N.Y.YankeesatTampa, Fla., 4:05p.m.

WBC World Baseball Classic Glance All Times PST FIRST ROUND GROUP A W L Pc t GB Japan 2 0 1. 000 Cuba 2 0 1. 000 Brazil 0 2 .0 0 0 2 China 0 2 .0 0 0 At Fukooka,Japan Sunday, March3 Japan 5,China2 Monday, March4 Cuba12,China0 GROUP8 W L Pc l GB Taiwan 2 0 1. 000 Netherlands I I .50 0 SouthKorea 1 1 .5 0 0 Australia 0 2 .0 0 0 At Taichung,Taiwan Sunday, March3 Taiwan 8, Netherlands3 Monday, March4 SouthKorea6, Australia 0 GROUP0 W L Pc t GB DominicanRepubli c 0 0 .000 PuertoRico 0 0 .0 0 0 Spain 0 0 .0 0 0 Venezuela 0 0 .0 0 0— At San Juan,PuertoRico Thursday, March7 Venezu elavs.DominicanRepubiic,3:30p.m. Friday, March8 Spainvs.PuertoRlco, 2.30p.m. Saturday, March 9 DominicanRepublic vs.Spain, 8a.m. Puert oRicovs.Venezuela,2:30p.m. Sunday, March10 Spainvs.Venezuela, 9:30a.m. DominicanRepublic vs PuertoRico, 4:30p.m. GROUP D W L Pc t GB Canada 0 0 .0 0 0 Italy 0 0 .0 0 0 Mexico 0 0 .0 0 0 UnitedStates 0 0 .0 0 0 Thursday, March 7 At Scottsdale, Ariz. Italy vs.Mexico,noon Friday, March8 At Scottsdale, Ariz. Canada vs.Italy,II:30 a.m. At Phoenix Mexicovs.UnitedStates,6p.m.

Columbus 1 0 SportingKansasCity 1 0 0 Houston 1 0 Montreal 1 0 NewYork 0 0 NewEngland 0 0 Toronto FC 0 1 Philadelphia 0 1 D.C. 0 1 Chicago 0 1

0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0

3 3 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 0

3 3 2 1 3 0 0 1 0 0

WesternConference W L T Pts GF Los Angele s 1 0 0 3 4 RealSaltLake 1 0 0 3 2 Vancouver 1 0 0 3 1 FC Dagas 1 0 0 3 1 Portland 0 0 1 1 3 Colorado 0 1 0 0 0 Seattle 0 1 0 0 0 SanJose 0 1 0 0 0 ChivasUSA 0 1 0 0 0 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.

0 1 0 0 3 0 1 3 2 4

GA 0 0 0 0 3 1 1 2 3

Saturday's Games SportingKansasCity atToronto FC,10:30a.m. PhiladelphiaatColorado,3 p.m. RealSaltLakeatD.C.United, 4p.m. NewEnglandatChicago,4:30p.m. Coiumbus atVancouver,4:30p.m. Montrealat Portland,7:30p.m. Sonday's Games FC DallasatChivasUSA,2 p.m. NewYorkat SanJose, 7p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BOSTON REDSOX—OptionedI.HP DrakeBritton to Portland (EL). Reassigned INF/OFJustin Henryand SS DevenMarrerototheir minorleaguecamp.Agreed to termswith LHPDrakeBritton, RHPRubby De La Rosa,LHPFelix Doubront, RHPClayton Mortensen, RHPJunichi Taza wa, RHPAllen Webster, RHPAlex Wilson,RHPStevenWright, C Daniel Butler, CRyan Lavarnway,CChristian Vazquez INFMikeCarp, INF PedroCiriaco,INFMauroGomez,INFBrockHolt, INF Will Middlebrooks,OFAlex Hassan, OFRyan Kalish and OF Daniel Navaonone-yearcontracts. LOSANGELESANGELS—OptionedStevenGeltz to Salt l.ake (PCL). ReleasedHiroyuki Kobayashi. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS— Reassigned INFJon Griffin, RHP Warner Madrigal, RHPEvanMarshaI and OF Jeremy Reedto theminor leaguecamp. CHICAGO CUBS—Named Justin Piperasgeneral manager, Mesaspring training operations.Agreedto termswith RHPMichael Bowden,RHPAlberto Cabrera, RHPRafael Dolis, RHPTrey McNutt, RHPHector Rondon,RHPArodys Vizcaino, RHPRobert Whitenack LHP BrooksRaley, LHPChris Rusin, LHPTravis Wood, CWelington Castigo, C SteveClevenger, INF DarwinBamey, INFJunior l.ake, INFAnthony Rizzo, INF ChristianViganueva, INFJosh Vitters, INFLogan Watkins, OFBrett Jackson, OFDaveSappelt andOF Matt Szczur onone-year contracts. ST.LOUIS CARDINALS— Reassigned C Adam Ehrlich, CJesusMonteroand INFStarlin Rodriguez to theirminorleaguecamp

FOOTBALL National Football League BALTIMORERAVENS Si gned QB JoeFlacco toa six-yearcontract. DALLASCOWBOYS— Released S Gerald Sensabaugh. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—Signed DTFili Moalato acontractextension. KANSAS CITYCHIEFS SignedPDustin Colquitt to a five-yearcontract. DesignatedOTBrandenAlbert as their franchiseplayer. Agreedto termswith WR Dwayne Boweonamultiyear contract. MIAMIDOLPHINS—Designated DTRandyStarks as theirfranchiseplayer. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS Rel easedOLKyleHix and FB Spencer Larsen. PITTSBU RGH STEELERS—Agreed to terms with CB Wiliam Gayonathree-year contract. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUEBOMBERS— Released DB Brady Browne HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL Suspended Bufialo F Patrick Kaleta five gamesforboardingNewYorkRangers FBradRichards during aMarch3 game. ANAHEIMANGELS Recalled LW Brandon Mc MiganfromNorfolk (AHL). CAROLINAHUR RICANES—Recalled G Justin PetersfromCharlotte (AHL).PlacedGCamWardon injuredreserve. COLUMBUS BLUEJACKETS—Placed D John Moore on injured reserve. DALLAS STARS—Signed F Taylor Peters to a three-yearentrylevel contract. OTTAWASENATORS Reassigned F Derek Grant to Bingham ton(AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES— Assigned F RobKlinkhammer toPortland(AHL). SANJOSESHARKS—Recalled FBrackenKearns fromWorcester(AHL). TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS Traded FMike Brown to EdmontonOilers for a conditional 2014 fourthrounddraftpick. WASHINGTONCAPI TALS Signed D Steven Oleksy to a one-yearcontract andrecalled himfrom

College Polls Collegiate Baseball Poll Hershey(AHL). — The CollegiateBaseball poll TUCSON,Ariz. COLLEGE with recordsthrough March3, points andprevious BUFFALO STATE—Named Mark I-lowlett men's rank. Voting isdonebycoaches, sports writers and soccercoach. sports informationdirectors: CULVER-S TOCKTON— NamedBlakeOrdellmen' s R ecord Pts P vs soccercoach. 1. NorthCarolina 10 - 0 497 I JOHNJAY—Named Carol Kashowdirector of ath12-1 49 4 3 2. Vanderbilt letics, effective March11. 12-0 4 9 1 5 3. Oregon St. MICHIGAN —Named Roy Manning outside line10-1 49 0 4 4. Louisiana St. backerscoach. 5. MississippiSt. 15-0 487 9 MICHIGAN STATE— NamedJimBogmanco-off en6. SouthCarolina 8-2 486 7 slve coordinatorandtight endscoach. Addedthe title 10-1 48 4 8 7. Kentucky of assistantheadcoachto defensivecoordinator Pat 10-1 48 2 11 8. N.C.State NarduzziAnnou . ncedquarterbackscoachDaveWarner 9-2 4 7 9 14 9. Stanford wi I be a co-olfensive coordinatorandshift to running 11-1 4 7 5 10 10. Oklahom a backscoach.Announcedrunning backsBradSalem 11-1 4 7 2 16 11. Mississippi will moveto quarterbackscoachandnamed himthe 12. Cal.St.Fugerton 10-1 4 6 9 17 recruitingcoordinator.


TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

NHL ROUNDUP

azersrou s ru in o ca s „r-iTAT4i ,-.

The Associated Press

But immediately he knew he was in trouble with Stotts: "He's like, 'You're lucky. You're lucky on this one,' " Batum said. Lillard, who has won the West's rookie of the month honors for four straight months, hit a 3-pointer that put Portland ahead 66-51 late in the first half, and the Blazers went on to lead 68-55 at the break. Also on Monday: H eat..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 7 Timberwolves..... . . . . . . . . . 81 M INNEAPOLIS — D w y ane Wade had 32 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists, LeB-

y'>>jy' w i > j ~, 4 p~lp

PORTLAND — The Trail Blazers were only in the first quarter against the w oeful Bobcats when Nicolas Batum took off and lobbed the ball off the backboard into the hands of charging rookie Meyers Leonard for a dunk. The play d idn't g o o v er well with Blazers coach Terry Stotts, who warned the duo about sportsmanship during halftime of P o rtland's 122105 victory over Charlotte on Monday. "I didn't care for it. In fact, it was kind of messing with the game a little bit," Stotts said afterward. The pass-off-the-glass dunk had no impact on the outcome. LaMarcus Aldridge had 23 points and 14 rebounds, leading seven Blazers in double

ii i

ron James shrugged off a sore

figures. Batum and rookie Damian L illard each f i n ished w i t h 20 points and Portland shot a season-best 59.8 percent from the field. Leonard had a season-high 15 points off the bench — including that dunk from Batum. " It was p robably a l i t t le risky, bu t he y , " L e o nard

shrugged. R amon Sessions had 1 8 points off the bench for the Bobcats, who have lost seven straight games. Rookie Michael Kidd-Gilchrist added 17 points. The Bobcats were p l aying the second of a back-toback and looked like it. They lost 119-83 at Sacramento on Sunday night after the Kings scored 43 points in the third quarter. One thing that i m proved for Charlotte was rebounding. After they were outrebounded 61-30 against the Kings, the Bobcats finished with a 44-41 advantage over the Blazers. "One thing is true — you have got to know how you lost. They are strong at the

pick-and-roll game and they

Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press

Charlotte Bobcats' Kemba Walker (15) shoots against Portland Trail Blazers' LaMarcus Aldridge, rear, and J.J. Hickson, right, during the first half of Monday night's game in Portland. found their 3-ball, that's what hurt us," Charlotte coach Mike Dunlap said. "We changed some schemes in the second half, and they still shot well." The Bobcats, who lost 18 in a row earlierthis season, have only 13 wins — a league low. The Blazers, still fighting for a spot in the playoffs, won three of four games on their homestand but now head out on the road with games at Memphis, San Antonio and New Orleans. Portland is 3'/2 games back of Utah for the eighth and final Western Conference playoff spot, while the Lakers are two games back of

the Jazz. "It's gut-check time," Lillard said. "If we're going to make this push for the playoffs we've got to win on the road." Batum hit a 3-pointer that gave the Blazers an early 24-16 lead. His lob off the backboard for Leonard's dunk made it 30-21. The French forward said the move is something he does with Leonard and some of the other players in practice. Although Sessions was on him, Batum said that had nothing really to do with it. "I don't know why I did it in a game," Batum said.

left knee to score 20 points and grab 10 rebounds, and Miami earned its franchise-record 15th straight victory with a win over Minnesota. Knicks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 C avaliers ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 C LEVELAND — A m a r e Stoudemire scored 22points, J.R. Smith added 18 and New York overcame a22-point deficit without All-Star Carmelo Anthony to beat Cleveland. Magic ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Hornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 N EW ORLEANS — A r ron Afflalo scored five of his g ame-high 26 points in t h e final 38 seconds, and Orlando snapped a three-game skid. Bucks ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Jazz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 MILWAUKEE — Monta Ellis scored 34 points, Brandon Jennings added 20 points and 17 assists, and Milwaukee beat Utah in overtime. Nuggets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 H awks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 8 DENVER — Corey Brewer scored 22 points and Ty Lawson had 18 in Denver's win over depleted Atlanta. Warriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125 Raptors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 OAKLAND, Calif. — David Lee had 29 points and 11 rebounds to b ack A n d rew Bogut's strong return, and Golden State snapped a fourgame losing streak by outlasting Toronto.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PST

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

EasternConference W L Pct GB 44 14

38 22 36 21 34 26 34 26 33 26 31 27 30 28 23 35 23 38 23 39 20 40 19 39 17 44

.759 .633 7 632 7i/p

.567 11 567 11 559 u i/z .534 13 .517 14 .397 21 .377 22'/i .371 23

13 47 .217 32 WesternConference W t Pct GB d-SanAntonio 47 14 .770 d-Oklahoma City 43 16 .729 3 d-L.A.Clippers 43 19 .694 4'/i Memphis 39 19 .672 6'/i Denver 39 22 .639 8 GoldenState 34 27 557 13 33 28 .541 14 Houston utah 32 28 .533 14'/z L.A. Lakers 30 30 .500 16'/i Portland 28 31 .475 18 Dallas 26 33 .441 20 Minnesota 20 37 351 25 Phoenix 21 39 .350 25'/~ NewOrleans 21 40 344 26 Sacramento 21 40 .344 26 d-divisionleader

Monday's Games NewYork102,Cleveland97 Miami97,Minnesota81 Orland0105Neworleans102 Milwaukee109,Utah108, OT Denver104,Atlanta88 Portland122,Charlotte105 GoldenState125,Toronto 118

Today's Games Bostonat Philadelphia, 4p.m. LA. Lakers at OklahomaCity, 6:30p.m. Denverat Sacramento, 7 p.m.

Bucks109, Jazz108 (OT)

Summaries

.333 25 .328 25 279 28i/z

Tolliver 3-7 0-Ij 9, Smith 6-17 1-1 15, Horford 9-16 0-2 1B,Teague6-17 3-3 15,Jones2-7 0-0 4, Jenkins4-123-312, Petro2-20-04, Harris 4-102-2 11, Johnson 0-10-00,Tyler 0-00-0t. Totals 36-89 9-11 88. DENVER (104) Gallinari 3-60-Ij 7 Faried 5-0 0-010, Koufos341-2 7, Lawson 6-0 4-418, Iguodala 5-80-012, chandler6-131-1 13,Brewer0-20 0-0 22, McGee 4-5 1-2 9, A.Miller 2-4 0-0 4, Mozgov1-2 0-0 2, Fournier0-00-00, Hamilton 0-00-00, Randolph0-2 0-00. Totals 46-86 7-9104. Atlanta 27 23 23 15 — 88 Denver 28 30 23 23 — 104

Wednesday'sGames Utah atCleveland,4 p.m. Brooklynat Charlotte, 4p.m. BostonatIndiana,4p.m. PhiladelphiaatAtlanta, 4:3II p.m. NewYorkat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Orlandoat Miami,4:30p.m. Portland at Memphis,5 p.m. WashingtonatMinnesota, 5p.m. LA. Lakersat NewOr eans,5 p.m. Houstonat Dalas, 5:30p.m. Torontoat Phoenix, 6 p.m. ChicagoatSanAntonio, 6p.m. Sacramentoat Golden State, 7:30p.m. Milwaukee at LA. Clippers,7:30p.m.

Monday'sGames

UTAH(108)

CHARLOTTE (105)

Kidd-Gilchrist 8-0 1 2 17, Mullens0-0 0-0 0, Biyombo4-10 0-0 8, Walker 5-205-5 15,Henderson 6-162-2 14,Adrien2-5 0-0 4, Diop 1-10-02, Sessions8-112-318, McRoberts4 91-1 9, Gordon 6-12 1-2 14,Taylor 1-2 2-3 4. Totals 45-97 1418 105. PORTLAND (122) Batiim 8-0 0 020, AldridgeB-167-923, Hickson 7-9 1-2 15, Lillard 8-151-2 20, Matthews5-100-0 14, Maynor5-80-010, l.eonard6-83-415, Claver250-05, Freeland 0-00-00, Barton0-00-00. Totals 49-8212-17122. Charlotte 25 30 24 26 — 105 Portland 31 37 23 31 — 122 3-Point Goal— s Charlotte 1-10 (Gordon 1-2, Sessions 0-1, McRoberts 0-1, Henderson 0-2, Walker 0-4), Portland 12-24 (Batum 4-6, Matthews 4-7, Lillard 3-8, Claver 1-2, Maynor0-1I. Fouled Out — None Rebounds—Charlotte 48

(Kidd-Gilchrist10), Portland46(Aldridge14). Assists — charlotte 21 (walker 0), portland 29 (Lillard 7) Total Foul— s Charotte 16, Portland 16. A—18,330(19,II80).

NtlggetS 104, HaWkS88

Zags Continued from C1 "It's out of our control," he said. "Nobody in that (locker) room has a vote, I don't have a vote. All we can do is do what we do. If it happens, we're not going to take it lightly, because it's never happened here before. It'd be an honor, and we'll treat it as such." Keeping the No. 1 ranking has been a challenge for those who have received it this winter. In one four-week stretch starting in January, Louisville, Duke, Michigan and Indiana held the spot. Those four teams have shared the No. 1 spot all season. Kansas had the top spot for a week in the coaches poll. Gonzaga plays in t h e W est Coast Conference tournament that begins this week at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas. The Zags, who went 16-0 in WCC play, have a double bye into the semifinals and play Saturday night.

Knicks 102, Cavaliers97 NEWYORK(102) Anthony1-54-4 6,White1-2 0-02, Chandler 4-8 0-0 8, Felton3-9 1-2 8, Shumpert3-60-0 8, Stoudemire10-15 2-2 2z Smith 6-17 5 61B,Kidd3-7 3-412, Novak 4-73-315, Camby0-0 0-0 0, Prigioni 1-20-03 Totals 36-7818-21 102. CLEVELAND (97) Gee3-93-4 10,Thompson6-9 2-414,Speights 10-143-4 23,Irving9-202-422, Ellington2-72-27, Walton1-10-02, Livingston3-52-28, Miles3-73-4 u, Gisb on0-10 00.Totals 37-7317-2497. New York 24 25 21 32 — 102 Cleveland 34 27 13 23 — 97

Warriors 125, Raptors 118

Ma Williamst-5 0-0 0, Milsap7-178-1222, Fa-

Blazers 122, Bodcats105

ATLANTA (88)

C3

TORONTO (118) vors 0-201-3 23,watson0-4 0-00, Foye0-6 0-0 Gay10-225-526, Bargnani8-185-6 26, Valanci0, Hayward3-16 6-613, Kanter7-13 4-418, Burks unas1-71-23, Lowry29 6711, DeR ozan613 3 3 7-104-419, Carrol 5-81-213. Totals 40-99 24- 15, Johnson10-103-723,Ross0-40-00, Lucas1-4 31 108. 2-24, Fields0-10-00, Anderson3-61-1 9, Gray0-0 MILWAUKEE (109) 1-21. Totals 41-94 27-35118. Mbaha Moute 3-5 0-0 7,llyasova 3-13 0-0 7, GOLDEN STATE(125) Sanders3-92-4 8, Jennings 8-140-0 20, Ellis 15Barnes463312, Lee1221 5529, Bogiit24021 3-5 34,Diinleavy1-7 4-4 6,Dalembert4 8 0 0 8, 04, curry8-168-826, ThompsonB-u 2-222, Ezeli Redick 7-140-017, Ijdoh1-4 0-0 Z Totals 45-95 1-1 0-02,Jack6-133-616,Landry 6-70-212,Green 9-13 109. 0-2 0-0 0,Jefferson0-0 2-22, Bazemore 0-1 0-00. Utah 24 24 1i7 34 9 — 108 Totals 47-82 23-28125. Milwaukee 20 2 5 30 24 10 — 109 Toronto 28 26 36 28 — 118 GoldenState 31 31 21 42 — 125

Heat 97, Timberwolves 81 MIAMI (97) James9-161-1 20, Haslem1-10-0 2, Bosh355-611, Chalmers1-41-2 4,Wade15-232-3 32, BaNier1-40-0 3,Allen4-103-313, Cole1-6 2-24, Andersen 2-2 2-26, Lewis0-1 0-00, Miler 0-0 0-0 0, Jones0-00-0 0,Anthony1-2 0-0z Totals 38-74 16-1997. MINNESOT(81) A Gelabale 2-8 2-2 6, Williams 10-22 4-4 25, Stiemsma 0-1 0-00, Rubio6-110314, Ridnour4-14 1-1 9 Cunningham 4-10 0-1 B,Johnson1-30-0 2, Shved5-B2-213, Barea1-111-2 4. Totals 33-88 10-15 81. Miami Minnesota

Magic105, Hornets102 ORLANDO (105) Haikless6-131-113, Nicjiolson4-70-0 8,Vucevic 3-6 3-4 9,Nelson6-151-1 15, Afflalo 10-205-6

26, Harris 6-92-4 15,Udrih 1-40-0 2, Moore3-6 0-07, Harrington 4-70-010, Jones0-00-00. Totals 43-8712-16 105. NEWORLE ANS(102) Aminu 2-73-3 7, A.Davis6-135-9 17, Lopez34 3-3 9, Vasqiiez7-171-1 17, Gordon7-14 0-0 17,

Anderson4-9 3-413, Rivers4-7 1-1 9,Thomas0-0 0-0 0, Mason1-32-3 5, Henry3-62-2 8, Sims0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-80 20-26 102. Orlando 20 16 34 35 — 105 New Orleans 23 2 3 30 26 — 102

MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

No. 4 Kansasrolls over TexasTech The Associated Press LAWRENCE, Kan. — The last thing Kansas' four seniors wanted to think about was their senior night. Determined not to get caught up in the emotion of their final appearance in perpetually amped-up, sold-out Allen Fieldhouse, all four seniors had big games Monday night to lead the fourth-ranked Jayhawks to a 7942 rout of Texas Tech. "Today's been kind of crazy," said center Jeff Withey, who had 22 points and nine rebounds. "You try not to think about what's really going on, playing for the last time in the fieldhouse. For me personally, it hasn't really hit me. I don't think it will for a while." Kevin Young had 14 points and fellow senior Travis Releford added 13 while point guard Elijah Johnson, the fourth member of the class, had seven points and 12 assists. The Jayhawks (26-4, 14-3 Big 12) took a halfgame lead over No. 9 Kansas State in their

quest for a ninth straight conference title. "It's time to rock out. It's time to get to business, and I think we all knewthat," said Johnson, who has 22 assists the past two games. "I honestly think the reason it hasn't hit all of us as far as this being the last (home) game is cause we're so focused on what we've got to do. So we're not dwelling on the moment. We know there's stuff to be done. That's where our heads are right now." Redshirt freshman Ben McLemore, a potential NBA lottery pick who was probably

also playing his last game in Allen Fieldhouse, had 13 points. In anothergame on Monday: No. 8 Louisville..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Cincinnati..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Russ Smith scored 18 points and Louisville gave Rick Pitino his 300th victory with the Cardinals. Pitino earned his 650th career win earlier this season.

Penguins rally in third, top Lightning The Associated Press PITTSBURGH The puck ended up on Evgeni Malkin's stick, and Tampa

Bay Lightning coach Guy Boucher could feela sense of dread. It didn't matter that the Pittsburgh Penguins center hadn't played in more than a week due to a concussion. Give the reigning NHL MVP a sheet of open ice in a tight

game and things typically aren't going to end well. " We gave i t t o hi m , " B oucher sa i d . "That's unacceptable." So was the result for Tam-

pa Bay. Seconds later, Malkin split two defenders and tucked the puck into a wide-open net to tie the game, sparking a furious third-period rally as the Penguins beat the Lightning 4-3 on Monday night. Malkin later added an assist on James Neal's emptynet goal, punctuating the R ussian's return 1 1 d a y s after suffering s hort-term memory loss and headaches when he slammed into the e nd boards during a w i n over Florida on Feb. 22. The 26-year-old was cleared to return to p ractice Sunday and was given the OK to play after passing the litany of NHL-mandated tests. Considering the way Malkin dominated hi s t e ammates d u r in g wo r k outs, Penguins coach Dan Bylsma wasn't stunned to see Malkin

Gene J.Puskar/The Associated Press

Pittsburgh Penguins center Evgeni Malkin (71) gets off a slap shot in the second period of Monday night's game againstthe Tampa Bay Lightning in Pittsburgh.

kos scored twice to boost his league-leading total to 17, but it wasn't enough to prevent the Lightning from dropping their fifth straight. "It's the little things sometimes you get away with in the game and nobody ever talks about it, and right now it's costing us," Stamkos said. "When you're on a streak like that, those little things, it's almost like you have to play a perfect game." The Lightning did for the better part of two periods, taking a 2-1 lead before giving it away. "We sabotaged ourselves with two turnovers," Bouchplay so brilliantly. er said. "There's no excuse. "He had guys shaking T here's no r eason for i t . their heads at how strong he They're easy plays. Make the was yesterday," Bylsma said. easy play and that's it." "They were pretty amazed Marc-Andre Fleury helped at how physical and strong shore up a leaky Pittsburgh he was on the puck, so to see defense by making 25 saves him come out and play that as the NHL's two highestway and be confident, I'm scoring teams kept things not real surprised." in check until the final 20 Neither w a s t e a mmate minutes. Sidney Crosby, who knows Also on Monday: a thing or two about coming Maple Leafs.......... . . ... 4 back from concussions after Devils ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 the injury cost him the maTORONTO — T oronto's jority of two seasons. Nazem Kadri continued his "He looked really good, I points streak with a goal and think, for a first game back," an assist against struggling Crosby said. "I don't know if New Jersey. he was doing any stick-han- Coyotes .......... . . . . . ... 5 dling while (he was out) but it Ducks ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 looked pretty sharp. It's fun. GLENDALE, Ariz. — DeWhen he's going like that it's fenseman Oliver E k m anLarsson scored in the fifth pretty tough to stop him." The Penguins, too. round of the shootout and Less than 2 minutes after Mike Smith stopped Bobby Malkin put the puck by An- Ryan to help Phoenix beat ders Lindback, Crosby gave Anaheim. Kings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Pittsburgh the lead for good P redators..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 with a one-timer from the slot. Crosby also collected LOS ANGELES — Jeff his NHL-leading 25th assist Carter completed his fifth as the Penguins remained c areer hat trick w it h t w o unbeaten against the Light- goals in a 19-second span ning a t Co n so l E n e rgy of the third period, and Los Center during the regular Angeles beat Nashville deseason. spite taking only 16 shots on Tampa Bay'sSteven Stam- net.

MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR

NRA to be title sponsor

for upcomingCuprace The Associated Press FORT WORTH, T e x as — The National Rifle Association is taking its relationship with racing to a new level as the title sponsor of a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race. Texas Motor S peedway announced Monday that its April 13 race, the first night race on the Cup schedule this season, will be known as the NRA 500. It is a one-year agreement with a r enewal option. T MS p r e sident E d d i e Gossage said the NRA has been involved in racing for several years and a gener-

ous supporter of Speedway Children's Charities, donating more than $500,000 to the charity's Texas chapter since 2000. "This race entitlement is just another extension of that business relationship," Gossage said. "We look forward to another successful partn ership with the NRA f o r our April race week." The deal comes at a time when the NRA is involved in a renewed debate on gun violence in the wake of the

December shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. This is not the NRA's first t itle sponsorship in N A S -

CAR. The group sponsored a Nationwide race last September at Atlanta, which like Texas is owned by Speedway Motorsports Inc. W ayne L a P ierre, th e NRA's executive vice president and CEO, expressed his excitement about the deal

in a video message played during th e t r ack's media day. Gossage said LaPierre wasn't able to attend because of a scheduling conflict. "The NRA 500 is the latest announcement in the long history of a growing partnership between the NRA, Speedway Motosports and the NASCAR community," LaPierre said. "NRA members and NASCAR fans love their country and everything that is good and right about America. We salute our flag, volunteer in ou r c h urches and communities, cherish our families and w e l o ve racing. On April 13, we'll all come together at Texas Motor Speedway."


C4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

GOLF COMMENTARY

A bruisedego isno excuse incodeof golf By Karen Crouse

New York Times News Service

DORAL, Fla. t age 9, Rory Mcllroy conducted a television interview that his longtime coach, Michael Bannon, calls up occasionally on his laptop. It makes him smile to see a wee McIlroy exhibiting the poise and promise that would carry him to international stardom a decade later. W hat also catches one's eye is McIlroy's choice of clothing. In a clear foreshadowing of the mega deal he signed with Nike this year, McIlroy was wearing a V-neck wind jacket with a large red swoosh across his chest. F riends o f M c I l roy, t h e world's t o p-ranked p l ayer, believe he is heaping pressure on himself to prove he is worthy of his blockbuster endorsement contract. They say those expectations, not the equipment,are the root cause of his 2013 struggles, which culminated with hi s a brupt withdrawal from the Honda Classic on the ninth hole of his second round Friday. Mcllroy's failure to complete his round throws into sharp relief the PGA Tour's policy on withdrawals, and the unwritten code of conduct for playing on while in considerable mental or physical anguish. The tour rules state that a player must have a persuasive reason for withdrawing during a round — an injury that requires medical attention, or a serious personal emergency — and must provide the tour commissioner with proof of his distress. McElroy'sseverely bruised -

A

clunker of a round is an occupational hazard, akin to a baseball slugger's striking out four times in four at-bats. The difference is the struggling hitter can be replaced, delivered from his misery in the middle ofa bad day by a merciful manager.

A golfer having a bad round

is in a fish bowl, shadowed by his caddie and swimming in dark thoughts for as many as five hours. After completing a round, a player can withdraw for any reason. Last year, Phil Mickelson cited "mental fatigue" when he pulled out of the Memorial after an opening 79 in front of a swarming gallery rife with camera-clicking fans. Where the tour's blanket policy on withdrawals ends is where a player's conscience carries on. "You don't have to finish your second round, but it is probably considered to be sort of in poor taste if you just say, 'I'm out of here' after shooting a big number,' " said Stewart Cink, a six-time tour winner. Cink, 39, has made more than 400 starts since joining the tour full time in 1997. He said he had withdrawn only once, from last year's Phoenix Open, when a frost delay prevented him from finishing his second round after an opening 83. Rather than return Saturday to complete his final few holes, Cink pulled out so he could catch a redeye flight home to spend the weekend with his family. "That's the only time I've ever done that in my career, and I wasn't proud of it," he said. "Probably violated whatego from giving back seven ever unwritten code there is." Meg Mallon, a f o ur-time strokes to par on the first eight holes Friday does not qualify major champion and 18-time as a compelling reason. An champion onthe LPGA Tour, hour after he left the course, takes pride in her playing reMcIlroy, 23, released a state- cord, which she said included ment through hi s m anage- no withdrawals. Mallon, who ment group saying that he had attended the Honda Classic, a sore wisdom tooth that made said she would have liked to it impossible for him to contin- have seen McIlroy finish. "If you withdraw once, for ue, an explanation he presumably will back up with a note whatever reason," she said, "it becomes easier to do it the from his dentist. Failing to finish is not un- next time." precedented on t o ur. T iger There were times, Mallon Woods limped off the course said, when she was playing so here last year on th e 12th poorly she was walking from hole of the final round with hole to hole repeating to heran Achilles' heel injury. But self, "Don't cry." "You feel like the bad rounds it does not happen nearly as often as in tennis, a sport Mc- are never going to end," she Ilroy has become immersed in said. "You just want to crawl since he began dating Caro- into a hole and disappear. You line Wozniacki. start adding up y our score Before Novak Djokovic rose before you're done, and it's to No. 1 in the world in men's embarrassing." tennis, he retired from four There is a good reason to Grand Slam matches. Woz- persevere, Cink said. niacki, ranked 10th, last year " You never k n ow when withdrew from two matches something will click in your in which she was trailing. swing," he said, "or you'll have All t o uring p r ofessionals a putt and a few years down have days when their swings the road you'll have the same go missing. The occasional putt, and it'll be meaningfuL"

State Continued from C1 "Those three worked out four to five hours a day," Craig Reid says. "Theyput in the time and their skills developed." While Haugen has become the spark behind Mountain View's offense, the Cougars' defense has been defined by its almost exclusive use of the 2-3 zone. With the 6-4 Lannin, 6-4 Carroll, 6-2 Logan and 66 Erik Siefken taking turns on the bottom of the zone, Mountain View has plenty of length to frustrate teams in the paint. And with the 6-2 Modin

surprising amount o f s t ate experience. Modin and Carroll both started all three of Mountain V i e w' s t o u r ney

Classic

"We're all here to win it, and we all have gotten ourselves to th e p oint w h ere we can go out there as if it's Game 7 of the World Series," Atlanta closer Craig Kimbrel said. "We're out there to win. We're going to put it all on the line. That's what we're here to do. We're not here to show up and just play and say we played for Team USA. We're here to say 'We played for Team USA and we won.' I had that feeling in the clubhouse that that's what we're all here to do."

vice president, wouldn't announce s t a rting p i t chers other than Dickey, although he pointed out Texas' Derek Holland is starting Tuesday's exhibition against the White Sox. That puts Holland in line to start Sunday. Wright said that players went through their offseason preparation with the knowledge they would need to be in shape for the WBC. "The four or f ive games I've been in, I've tried to play into the sixth or seventh inning each time," he s aid. "Just kind of speeding up the process, playing a few more innings earlier in the spring than I normally would and obviously getting those extra at-bats is important to get

cludes with the Canada-U.S. game on Sunday,the top two Continued from C1 nations advance to the second Their backups are Arizo- round in Florida. The semina's Willie Bloomquist and finals and finals will be held Tampa Bay's Ben Z o brist the following week in San with Minnesota catcher Joe Francisco. Mauer expected to fill in some Texiera called the competiat first base as well as a desig- tion "an exhibition." " While we want to w i n . nated hitter. The outfielders are Braun, Baltimore's Adam The important thing is to put Jones and Miami's Giancarlo on a great tournament for evStanton, with Boston's Shane eryone to enjoy it, for the fans Victorino another option. to enjoy it," he said. "It doesn't The other catchers are Mil- mean we don't want to win waukee's Jonathan Lucroy it and Toronto's J.P. Arencibia, Japan has won the first two who gets to catch knuckle- WBC titles. While American baller R.A. Dickey — his new fans may not be w atching teammate on the Blue Jays intensely, Braun said play— in Friday night's opener. ers should expect h eated Under pitch-count r ules, competition. "It's certainly challenging," s tarters can't t h row m o r e than 65 pitches in opening he said. "I know the last time round games. I played just the atmosphere, The Americans' group also the environment, felt like the includes Canada and Italy. intensity of a playoff game." After round-robin play conTorre, an MLB executive 1I

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ready." Several players mentioned their motivation is to become the first U.S. squad to gain the title.

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8 p.m. Adults...................................510 participating Baxter Auto Parts stores, Les SchwabTire Centers, BI-Mart stores Thurs-Fri ..............12 noon — or'by Using your Fred Meyer Rewards card. Discounts may not be combined. Saturday................10 a.m. -8 p.m. 2-day pass............................515 Sunday .........,........10 a.m. — 4 p.m. Juniors (6-16)..........................55 %.i (hildren 5II under.............. FREE L ES SC H W A B gsih'PLRTS ~ e/ jgpRT

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games in 2012 and Logan logged at least 10 minutes off the bench during the same stretch. Lannin, Haugen and Siefken, who is averaging 8.2 points and 5.3 boards a game this season, also saw minutes in Eugene. "You can tell the difference between older and younger

Presented by COMMUNITY <REDIT UNION

Presented by

players (at state)," says Logan,

and 5-11 Haugen playing at

who is averaging 4.4 points a game for the Cougars. "The first time playing on that big of a stage is nerve racking. I remember being nerve racked

the top, the Cougars are more than athletic enough to get out on shooters on the perimeter. Mountain View is allowing just 47.2 points per game this season employing the 2-3 zone, the third-best mark in Class 5A. (Wilsonville statistically has the best team defense in 5A this year, allowing just 43.6 points per game.) "It's about knowing what the guy next to you is going to do," Carroll says. "If a guy is closing out somewhere, you take his spot. It's having top guys drop down if a corner

even play." After going 0-2 at state in 2011 and 2-1 last year, Logan says his team is ready to take the next step at this week's c hampionship. Moun t a i n View's top finish at the 5A tourney came in 2010 when the Cougars took second to a Jefferson squad that featured future NBA lottery pick Terrence Jones. "The guys returning, we've gone through all the stages," Logan says. "We've been through the worst we could

guy goes out.... Long arms

play (2011) and the middle

help (with the zone) and we've got quite a bit of those." Despite graduating 10 seniors from last year's team, the Cougars return to Matt hew Knight A rena with a

ground (taking fourth in 2012). This year we're ready to come out strong. I don't think there will be any hesitancy."

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FREE PARKING!

Credit cards welcome.$1fee will be charged per transaction.

'Qualifiedborrowersonly Membership requirementsapply.Rangeofrates 399%-20 24%APRbasedoncredit qualifications,repayment period, RV/boatage, loan-to-value, automaticpayments,andeStatement enrollment. Otherrestrictionsmayapply. Offersubject toChangeat anytime, without notice.SeeSELCOfordetails. I

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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.com/business. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

+'

NASDAO

14127.82

3,182.03

Toda+

+

S&P 500

+

] 2 2g

1,560

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Firearm law boost?

7.639~

Gun sales often jump when it seems more likely that tighter gun controls will be passed. It happened again in the weeks following the December shooting at a Newton, Conn. school that resulted in the deaths of 20 children and six adults. President Barack Obama responded by calling on Congress to enact stricter gun-control laws. Investors find out today whether Smith & Wesson's firearm sales increased in its latest quarter.

1,480 '

10 YR T NOTE ~ 1.88%

7 pp

1,525.20

S&P 500

t-

Close: 1,525.20

Change: 7.00 (0.5%)

10 DAYS

1,550

14,500 .

1,500

14,000

1,450

13,500

1,400

13,000 . S ' ' " '0 " '' ' N

1 350

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,331 1,688 Pvs. Volume 3,607 1,826 Advanced 1688 1320 Declined 1340 1126 New Highs 2 50 164 New Lows 41 41

CIQQQ: 74,737.83

.

-

Change: 38.16 (0.3%)

1 0 DA Y S

D

J

.

N

CHG. +38.16 $-59.77

+4.39 +26.85 +12.29 +7.00 +3.81 +75.20 +1.95

D

%CHG. WK +0.27% +1.00% +0.91% +0.30% +0.39% +0.46% +0.35% +0.47% +0.21%

MO OTR L L

L L

L

YTD +7.81% +13.90% +7.21% +5.42% +5.38% +6.94% +7.99% +7.39% +7.93%

NorthwestStocks NAME

ALK 31.29 — A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 72 BBSI 16.90 — BA 66. 8 2 — CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 CascadeCp CASC 42.86 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 CostcoWholesale C OST 81.98 ~ Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 ~ FLIR Systems FLIR 17 99 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 ~ Home Federal Bucp ID HOME 8.67 ~ 1 Intel Corp I NTC 19.23 ~ Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — Lattice Semi LSCC 3 .17 ~ LA Pacific L PX 7 , 73 — MDU Resources MDU 19.59 — Mentor Graphics M ENT 12.85 ~ Microsoft Corp M SFT 26.26 ~ Nike Iuc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ NordstromIuc JWN 46.27 ~ Nwst NetGas NWN 41.01 ~ OfficeMux Iuc DMX 4. 10 ~ PeccurIuc PCAR 35 21 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 35,43 — Prec Custperts PCP 1 50.53 ~ 1 Sefeway Iuc SWY 14,73 — Schuitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 101,80 — Staucorp Fucl SFG 28.74 ~ SterbucksCp SBUX 43 04 ~ Triquiut Semi TQNT 4.30 o —

Back to black? Wall Street expects that Checkpoint Systems returned to profitability in the fourth quarter. The company, which makes radio-frequency identification tags used to help stem retail theft, has launched an initiative to sharply reduce costs and boost revenue. It's also trying to become a pro-

vider of inventory management services.The company is due to report its latest quarterly results today. CKP

$11.59

$$2

6

'12

$11.06

Operating EPS

4Q i

i

4Q '12

Price-earnings ratio: lost money based on past 12 months' results

Dividend: none Source: Facteet

Nutrisystem's struggles Weight management company Nutrisystem reports fourth-quarter financial results today. The tougheconomy and intense competition in the weight-loss sector have been hurting Nutrisystem's finances, despite the company's efforts to draw in more clients. Wall Street predicts Nutrisystem's will report that its quarterly loss expanded from the same period a year earlier. S12

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+0. 3 65 2 1 8 0. 2 8 -18.2 19088 dd 0 .53 +22.8 7 89 0.2 4 a -18.4 46498 10 0 .90 +17 .8 15431 11 0 . 2 0 +23 , 0 4 1 02 2 4 0, 6 0 - 30.8 758 d d + 1 64.4 1724 c c +13 .9 62 4 0.69 +11. 0 1 3 59 1 5 -10.8 36751 15 0. 9 2 +2.3 26 1 0 2 3 0. 8 4 +2.1 18 3 9 15 1 . 20f + 4 . 9 19 6 2 0 1. 8 2 + 1 15.2 2320 3 0.08 +5.5 27 0 1 1 5 0 . 80a L +37.1 -8.1 1 2 dd L + 10.7 +27 .7 6 5 0 3 9 1. 6 8 w -1.3 +10.5 6 8 2 2 0 0. 1 2 L +32. 1 +1 4 .4 5 699 1 0 0. 7 0 w -9.8 -38.2 3 0 2 4 0 0. 7 5 +7.5 +58.5 8 2 1 2 6 2 . 00f L L

w L L L L L L

Monday's close:$68.84

Total return this year:31% 3-YR*: 5% AP

5-YR *: -5%

Total returns through March 4

+7 4 +3.9 -7.7 +7.1 +7.3 +4.0 +4.9 + 6 .7 +7.7

+0 6 173 13 +14. 2 5 0 34 3 0 -27.2 2930 +3.9 442 14 +17. 1 8 5 33 1 2 +10. 0 54 6 13 +15. 4 1 6187 11 + 3 6 .9 37 21 +41. 9 2 8 85 4 2

0 93f 0. 8 4

0.3 6 0. 7 8 0.3 2 1 . 00f 0.20 0. 6 8

52-WEEK RANGE

$40 ~ 10-YR *: 18%

~

~

~

$71

Di v i dend: $0.40 D iv .yield: 0.6%

*annuaiized

SOURCE: FactSet

Dividend: $0.70 Div yield: 8.5%

FundFocus

Source: Factset

SelectedMutualFunds

This fund's 10-year record ranks within the top 1D percent among its world stock peers. The portfolio Most Active is about equally split between LLS VOL (Dgs) LAST CHG and foreign stocks, with plenty of 1127469 11.41 + . 07 tech names.

MarketSummary NAME BkofAm S&P500ETF SiriusXM NokiaCp BariPVix rs

Zynga

Intel MGIC Groupoh iShEMkts

857529 623411 594423 493837 468858 464980 446160 433575 415494

152.92 3.20 3.47 23.06 3.64

+.81 + . 07 Oukmark Global I OAKGX —.12 -1.27 VALUE B l ruo G R OWTH + .21 21.27 $ .24 4$ 0 69 4.18 + . 39 6c 5.42 + . 32 QL 42.91 -.41

Gainers NAME HMG S&W wtA Ferro MBIA ChinaHGS

L AST 1 6.50 2.46 6 .80 1 2.78 5 .41 CharmCom 5.75 NQ Mobile 8 .07 TigerLogic 2.15 Theravnce 2 4.29 DutdrChan 8 .65

cC 33

CH G %CHG C3 +9 . 6 0 $.139.1 +.6 4 +35.2 «C +1 . 60 +30.8 33 +2 . 4 7 +24.0 «8 +1. 0 0 +22.7 4t3 +.91 +18.8 Mornlhgslar OwnershipZone™ +1. 1 7 +17.0 +.30 +16.2 O 8 Fund target represents weighted +3. 3 7 +16.1 average of stock holdings +1 . 1 0 +14.6 • Represents 75% offuhd'sstock holdings

Losers NAME LAST GMX Rs pf8 6.71 G MX Rs rs 2 . 53 AtlPwr g 5.91 S elCmfrt 17 . 2 8 XinyuanRE 5 . 04

QL

CHG %CHG -4.48 -40.0 —.57 -18.4 -1.21 -17.0 -3.23 -15.7 -.86 -14.6

CATEGORY World Stock MORNINGSTAR

RATING™ * ** * r r

ASSETS $2,268 million EXP RATIO 1.16% MANAGER Robert Taylor SINCE 2005-10-01 RETURNS3-MD +11.7 Foreign Markets YTD +6.3 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +11.5 Paris + 9.85 + . 2 7 3,709.76 3-YR ANNL +9.2 London 6,345.63 -32.97 —.52 5-YR-ANNL +4.3 Frankfurt -16.48 —.21 7,691.68 Hong Kong 22,537.81 -342.41 -1.50 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico -.29 Daiwa Securities Co., Ltd. 43,869.29 -126.43 Milan 15,542.17 -133.20 —.85 Tokyo + 45.91 + . 4 0 Oracle Corporation 11,652.29 Stockholm 1,203.47 + 4.26 + . 3 6 MasterCard Incorporated Class A Sydney -72.35 -1.42 Daimler AG 5,028.53 Zurich 7,590.86 -11.13 —.15 Snap-on, Inc.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 21.41 +.08 $5.0 +12.1 $-11.4 + 60 A A A BondA m 12.8 9 - .81 -0.1 +3.8 +5.7 + 41 D D E CaplncBuA m 54.44 +.15 +3.2 +1 0.3 +9.4 $33 A A C CpWldGrlA m 38.75 +.87 +4.2 +12.4 +8.6 + 1.9 8 C C EurPacGrA m 42.22 +.87 +2.4 +8.6 +6.2 + 09 C B A FnlnvA m 43.3 3 + .21 $6.3 +1 3.5 $-11.5 + 38 8 C C GrthAmA m 36. 38 +.17 +5.9 +13.8 +10.7 + 38 A D D IncAmerA m 18 . 81 +.85 $4.2 +11.7 $-11.3 $57 A A A InvCoAmA m 31 .91 +.10 +5.8 +12.1 +10.1 + 38 0 D 0 NewPerspA m 32.88 +.18 $5.2 +13.7 $-10.3 + 41 A 8 B WAMutlnvA m 33.27 +.17 +6.6 +13.2 +13.3 + 48 0 A B Dodge &Cox Inc o me 13.92 ... + 0. 4 +5 . 1 + 6 .2 +7.0 C C 8 IntlStk 35.69 -.81 + 3 .0 + 10.5 +6.6 +1.0 8 8 A Stock 131.55 +.80 + 7 .9 + 19.2 +12.1 +3.3 A 8 C Fidelity Contra 81.70 +.48 + 6 .3 + 11.3 +12.9 +5.5 B 8 8 GrowCo 98.57 + . 60 + 5 . 7 +7 . 2 +14.5 +7.7 D A A LowPriStk d 41. 6 7 +.04 + 5 .5 + 1 2.1 +13.1 +7.5 D C B Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 54 . 20 +.25 +7 .3 +13.9 +13.1 +5.1 B A B FruukTemp-Fruukliulncome A m 2.2 8 +.01 +3 .3 + 11.8 +10.6 +6.1 A A 8 Oppeuheimer RisDivA m 18.6 7 +.89 + 7 .3 + 11.0 +11.8 +4.5 D 0 0 RisDivB m 16.9 0 +.88 + 7 .1 + 10.0 +10.8 +3.6 E 0 D RisDivC m 16.8 2 +.88 + 7 .1 + 10.2 +11.0 +3.8 D 0 D SmMidvalA m 35.52 +.10 + 9 .6 + 11.6 +9.3 +1.5 D E E SmMidVal8 m 29.96 +.88 +9.5 +10.6 +8.4 +0.6 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 4 . . . + 0. 3 +7 . 0 + 6 .6 +7.4 A 8 A T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 28.48 +.10 + 7 .7 + 16.3 +12.5 +4.8 A 8 8 GrowStk 4 0.11 +.32 +6.2 +10.3 +13.6 +6.4 8 A B HealthSci 45.89 +.49 $.11.3 +29.1 $.21.7$.14.2 A A A Vanguard 500Adml 141.83 +.65 $7.4 +13.9 $-13.1 $5.2 8 A 8 500lnv 141.80 +.65 $7.3 +13.7 +13.0 +5.1 8 A 8 CapDp 37.31 +.14 +11.0 +20.9 +10.3 +6.2 A D 8 Eqlnc 26.16 +.14 +8.3 +16.4 +15.8 +6.7 A A A GNMAAdml 10.87 -.81 0.0 $-2.1 +5.1 $5.7 C A A STGradeAd 10.83 -.81 +0.3 $-3.3 +3.5 +3.8 8 8 8 StratgcEq 23.51 +.14 +9.6 +16.3 +15.9 +6.2 8 A 0 Tgtet2025 14.15 +.83 $4.1 $9.3 +9.8 +4.7 0 8 A TotBdAdml 11.83 -.81 -0.1 +3.0 +5.4 +5.6 D D 0 Totlntl 15.29 -.81 $2.1 +6.8 +5.5 -0.6 D 0 8 TotStlAdm 38.34 +.17 $7.5 +14.0 +13.4 +5.8 8 A A TotStldx 38.32 +.17 $7.5 +13.9 $-13.3 $5.7 8 A A USGro 22.76 +.13 $7.1 +10.0 +12.3 +6.3 8 8 B Welltn 35.51 +.10 $4.9 +11.2 +10.5 +6.1 A A A WelltnAdm 61.33 +.17 $4.9 +11.3 +10.6 +6.2 A A A FAMILY

HES Close:$68.84%2.30 or 3.5% The oil and gas company said that it will exit the retail business to focus more on its exploration and produciion business. $76 ~

FUND

PCT 5.54 4.54 3.94 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 3.92 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee andeither 8 sales or 3.91 redemption fee. Source: Mornngstar.

Ferro FOE Close:$6.80%1.60 or 30.8% The chemical maker rejected a $563 million cash-and-stock buyout offer from A. Schulman, a supplier of plastic compounds. $8

50

D J 52-week range $39.67~

F $76.77

D J F 52-week range $3.36 ~ $6.93

Volc10.3m (2.3x avg.) PE: 1 5 .4 Volc14.9m (7.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$23.51 b Yiel d : 0. 6% Mkt. Cap:$588.46 m TRLG Close:$27.85 A1.11 or 4.2% The high-end denim and clothing company disclosed that it would not be renewing its CEO's employment contract, which ends June 30. $30

P E: . . . Yield :...

Select Comfort SCSS Close: $17.28 V-3.23 or -15.7% The mattress maker warned that sales were weak in February, and it will likely fall short of its own goals for the current quarter. $30 25

25-

20

-1.4 +6 . 6 1 dd + 0 .4 + 2 3 .0 47 14 1.4 0 +3.7 +14 . 2 12 7 19 0.8 8

V

getting out of gas HESS (HES)

based on past 12 months' results

L L

Hess announced several QOmpany May. It also named a sixth steps it's taking in order to Sp otllgbt di rector that will stand for become a pure play election at the 2014 meeting. exploration and production Six of the company's current company by 2014. Those moves d i r ectors will leave the board. include getting out of the gas Hess has already announced station business, as well as its plan s sell U.S. oil storage terminals energy trading and marketing and c l ose a New Jersey refinery as businesses. Shares rose 3.5 it exits the volatile refining percent Monday to close at $68.84. business. Murphy Oil, ConocoPhilThe company also said Monday lips and Marathon Oil Corp. have that it will nominate a slate of five a l l split off their refining businesses independent directors for election i n recent years to focus on to its board at its annual meeting in exploration and production.

Price-earnings ratio (Based on past12 months' results):12

Price-earnings ratio:

L

28.05 2 6. 1 7 -.83 -0.1 V L 12.42 11.41 +.87 +0.6 L w 4636 44.88 + .27 $-0.6 L L 78.02 77.89 19 -0.2 w L 7.18 6.17 +.83 +0.5 L V ~ 65.45 64.58 +.87 +0.1 L 58.63 55.36 -.58 -1.0 V L 105. 9 7 103.43 +2.01 +2.0 8.92 6.76 +.85 +0.7 L 27 16 26.87 14 -0.5 w L 25.40 19.97 18 -0.9 W L 4.0 0 11.62 -.20 -1.7 w w 29.27 21.2 7 +. 2 4 +1 .1 L L 9.64 9.4 9 +.1 6 + 1 .7 L L 29 53 29 .47 -.86 -0 2 w L 6.60 4.52 -.81 - 0.2 w L 22,13 21 .60 + . 29 +1,4 L L 24.35 24 .43 + . 2 3 +1.0 L L 17.91 17.1 0 +. 3 0 +1 .8 L L 32.95 28.1 5 +.2 0 +0 .7 L L 57.41 5 4.7 3 -.89 -0.2 V L 5 8.44 5 3.8 2 -.25 -0.5 W W 50.80 4 3. 7 4 -1.99 -4.4 V W 14.92 12.17 +.22 +1.8 L L 48 75 46.84 -.13 -0.3 V V L 2 60 1.96 +.82 + 1.0 L L 49 69 49.11 +.42 +0.9 L L 94.9 5 187.81 +1.20 +0.6 L 24,43 23.90 -.20 -0.8 V L 44.90 27.36 39 -1.4 w w 16 7 ,27165.38 +2.90 +1.8 41.99 39.39 +14 + 04 L L 62 00 55.70 +.83 +1.5 L V 72 .6 4.46 -.18 -3.9 w w 3.88 1 2. 6 3 +.10 + 0.8 L V 35.46 3 4. 2 8 +.27 +0.8 L L 18.42 17 . 54 +.11 + 0.6 L V 36.60 35 .85 +.46 +1.3 L L ~ 24,06 23 .64 +.16 +0.7 L 31.74 29. 9 5 +.38 + 1.3 L w

DividendFootnotes: 8 -Extra dividends werepaid, hut are nct included. h - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 8 - Amountdeclared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whuh was mcreased bymost recent diudend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pau after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum cf umuends pau th>$year. Most recent uudend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pau th>$year, 8 cumulative issue with dividends m arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprc78matecash value on excustribution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 8 closed-end fund - nc P/6 ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds Sa dd - Loss in last12 months

4 Q' 12

-$0.04

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West CoastBcpOR Weyerhueuser

'12;

Operating FPS

0

WFC 29 . 80

$8.20

$11.29

0 0

Wells Fargo & Co

10

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True Religion

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

Alaska Air Group Avistu Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

+.ooos

1.3022

Stock indexes rose Monday, bringing the Dow Jones industrial average closer to its record high. Stocks struggled for much of the morning amid worries about the strength of China's economy and the effects of automatic government budget cuts on the U.S. economy. But the market turned higher in afternoon trading, and the Dow climbed to within half a percent of its all-time closing high, set in October 2007. If the Dow has another gain like Monday's, it would reach its record. Stocks of utilities had some of the biggest gains for the day. They helped offset drops for energy stocks, which were hurt by the falling price of crude oil. Hess

HIGH LOW CLOSE 14128.21 14030.37 14127.82 6045.84 5969.42 6044.67 486.60 480.20 485.78 8901.17 8832.42 8901.04 3182.27 3154.79 3182.03 1525.27 1512.29 1525.20 1102.09 1092.17 1101.96 16103.89 15967.60 16103.47 916.69 908.64 916.68

DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

$90.12

.

12,500 . "S

F

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$28.46

D ow Jones industrials

I-

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GOLD $L57210 ~

i)4

D J 52-week range $36.33~

F $36.66

Vol.:367.3k(1.0x avg.) P E : 1 4.9 Mkt. Cap:$718.14 m Yi eld: 2.9%

Vera Bradley

VRA Close:$23.92 V-1.45 or -5.7 L A Sterne Agee analyst started coverage of the handbag company with an "Underperform" rating, saying it

may face inventory issues $28

15-

F

D J 52-week range $76.63 ~

Vol.:8.3m (6.4x avg.)

$35.60 PE: 12.2 Yield: ...

Mkt. Cap:$964.14 m

Outdoor Channel

OUTD

Close:$8.65 %1.10 or 14.6% The hunting cable channel said that it will start talks with Kroenke Sports & Entertainment after it submitted a takeover bid.

$9

26 24

22 — D

J 52-week range

D

F

J

F

52-week range

$19.97 ~

$36.49

Vol.:802.8k (1.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$970.24 m

PE: 1 5 .1 Vol.:984.7k (11.4x avg.) PE:123.6 Yield :.. Mkt. Cap:$220.12 m Yield :...

Stratasys

SSYS Close:$68.82 %4.56 or 7.1% The maker of three-dimensional "printers" posted a loss during the fourth quarter, bui its results beat Wall Street expectations. $90 80

$3.97~

$8.83

Arena Pharma.

ARNA Close:$8.19 V-0.15 or -1.8% The drugmaker posted a smaller fourth-quarter loss and said it is waiting for a federal decision about its weight loss drug Belviq $11 10 9

70

D J 52-week range

F

9~

D J 52-week range $1.73 ~

$33.87~

$93.33

Vol.:3.8m (4.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.5 b

P E: 80 .0 Vol.:9.5m (1.2x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.78 b

F $13.33

P E: .. . Yield:... 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 rose to 1.88 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 08 .10 . 1 2 .12 .15 .15

-0.02 W L ... W L ... ~ L

2 -year T-note . 2 4 .24 ... 5-year T-note . 76 .74 +0 . 02 10-year T-hote 1.88 1.84 + 0.04 L 30-year T-bond 3.09 3.05 +0.04 L

BONDS

W W T W

-

W V

.07 .11 .15

T .28 L .84 L 1.98 L 3.1 0

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK Mo OTR AGO

Barclays Loog T-Bdldx 2.80 2.77 +0.03 W L L 2.63 BondBuyerMuni Idx 4.03 4.03 ... W L L 4 .58 Barclays USAggregate 1.85 1.84 +0.01 W W L 2 1. 5 PRIME FED B arclays US High Yield 5.76 5.78 -0.02 w w w 7.0 1 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.83 3.84 -0.01 W W L 3 8. 7 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.05 1.04 +0.01 W W L 1 0. 7 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .74 2.74 . . . W W L 3 31 . 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities The price of crude oil fell below $90 per barrel to its lowest level of the year on worries that demand could weaken from the U.S. and China. Wholesale gasoline prices also fell.

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the

Japanese yen and British pound. It was little changed against the

euro ahead of the European Central Bank's meeting scheduled for later this week

h5N4 QG

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 90.12 90.68 -0.62 -1.9 Ethanol (gal) 2.40 2.41 + 0.04 + 9 . 8 Heating Dil (gal) 2.92 2.93 -0.38 -4.1 $- 5 . 3 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.53 3.46 $ -2.1I Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.10 3.13 -0.97 +1 0.2 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1572.10 1571.90 28.46 28.45 1566.20 1573.50 3.48 3.48 712.50 718.65

%CH. %YTD -6.1 +0.01 +0.02 -5.7 - 0.46 + 1 . 8 -4.3 +0.04 - 0.86 + 1 . 4

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.30 1.30 + 0.31 + 0 . 4 1.46 1.43 + 2.13 + 1 . 5 7.23 7.24 - 0.17 + 3 . 5 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.84 +1.47 +13.0 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 387.20 395.40 - 2.07 + 3 . 6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.24 1.21 + 2.65 + 6 . 8 Soybeans (bu) 14.90 14.65 + 1.76 + 5 . 0 Wheat(bu) 6.96 7.13 -2.42 -10.5 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5112 +.0094 +.62% 1 .5832 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 79 —.0006 —.06% .9881 USD per Euro 1.3022 +.0005 +.04% 1 . 3204 —.16 —.17% 81.81 Japanese Yen 93.42 Mexican Peso 12. 7 497 —.0196 —.15% 12.7509 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7380 +.0143 +.38% 3.8013 Norwegian Krone 5.7209 —.0365 —.64% 5.6096 South African Rand 9.0894 +.0251 +.28% 7.5023 6.4210 —.0143 —.22% 6.6798 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9412 —.0024 —.25% .9136 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9811 -.0000 -.00% . 9 311 Chinese Yuan 6.2295 +.0020 +.03% 6 .2988 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7557 +.0011 +.01% 7 .7589 Indian Rupee 54.931 +.021 +.04% 4 9 .515 Singapore Dollar 1.2457 +.0051 +.41% 1 .2513 South Korean Won 1091.14 +1.89 +.17% 1117.35 Taiwan Dollar 29.72 + .01 +.03% 29 . 45


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

BRIEFING

Blacksmith to reopen

The basics

The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W.

What it does: Manufactures

Greenwood Ave., plans to reopen Thursday under new ownership, according to a newsrelease issued Monday. Renovations have

Top Fe

EXECUTIVE FILE

o icials e ate u les

What: Skullastic school supplies and clothing with alternative designs

Pictured: Don Rich, owner Where: Moving to Powell Butte

+

Employees: 25, expected total,

been under waysince Nekol Olsen andTodd

California and Oregon Phone: 888-758-5548

Bardwell, of Eugene, bought the restaurant Feb. 1.

Website: www.skullastic.com

By Neil Irwin

Some of the changes will be a larger staff,

including many former Blacksmith employees, return of the outdoor

Rotr Kerr/The Bulletin

patio, a newbar and revamped cocktail and

food menus,according to the release.

. Wheredo

• you see the company in

BOTC joins ATM network

the near future?

My goal • is to make

Bank of the Cascades has joined the MoneyPass ATM network,

which will give customers access to more than 23,000 surcharge-free

ATMs nationwide, according to a newsrelease. Thebankhas also replaced or upgraded all branch ATMs so they provide additional

n ri m

this a national

n

companyand one day go global. I've definitely conquered the state

of California. The first two years was establishing

By RaChaelReeo • The Bulletin

the business, figuring out what it was and getting

From "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" notebooks to

services, and bythe

"Nightmare on Elm Street"-themed glue, Redmond native

spring, it plans to have a mobile ATM available at

Don Rich makes school supplies that help put the "cool

community eventssupported by the bank.

Boeing is ready to implement fix Boeing said Monday that it is set to move quickly to get its 787s back in the air if it gets

federal approval for a fix for the batteries that have grounded the

planes. The Federal Aviation Administration is considering a plan that Boe-

ing submitted on Feb. 22 for fixing the batteries. The FAA has said it

expects its experts to recommend this week whether to accept the

plan.

Apple loses title to Exxon Mobil Apple's most recent

stock weakness on Monday cost the tech giant its title of most

valuable U.S. company in terms of market capitalization. In Monday's trad-

ing session onWall Street, Apple lnc. shares dropped 2.4 percent to about $420, giving the

back into school" and let students express themselves. "If our company had a recipe, it would be one part education, with one part monstrous aliens and rock 'n' roll," he said. "Our school supplies make fun of education in a positive way. We use monsters, aliens and pop culture as a way to celebrate education by making fun of it, but not hurting it. We kind of pick at the scabs of education." Rich, 48, said he's always had a passion for education. Both parents were teachers. Redmond High School's stadium is named for his father, a former athletic director and social studies teacher. For the younger Don Rich, school was one of the best times of his life. In an effort to reach students and help schools raise money, he created Skullastic, which offers "create-your-own" notebooks, as well as supplies and gear featuring skeletons, other fun creatures and popular-culturecharacters and references. He started the company in Los Angeles on Halloween 2008. The

one-man operation bringing in about $5,000 annually has grown to a team of designers, both adults and children, that earned $50,000

in revenue last year. While Rich, a full-time advertising art director, said he plans to stay in L.A., he's moving the company's headquarters to Powell Butte. All the Skullastic products will be made and shipped from Central Oregon, he said. And to introduce his products to Central Oregon, he said, he's hosting a Skullastic fundraiser for local schools at Ray's Food Place in Redmond from 3-8 p.m. Wednesday. "There is a plan to grow this company and have it stay in Central Oregon, no matter what size it becomes," he said. Seeing the state of the economy and the need for job creation in Central Oregon, he said, he wanted to bring Skullastic back to his roots. "I made the decision immediately that I didn't want to outsource

my company," he said. "And (I)

people to become aware that the

company even existed. Last year was about growing the business in the state of California. This year, it's all about

growing nationally.

• Whydo . you have student design-

ers? . My goal is • to someday have a board of directors between

(the ages of) 8 and14 running this company so they can learn about business. Kids are so smart. We don't give

them enough credit. I hope to continue to bring

more kids into the mix.

thought, why not create jobs in the community where I was raised'? Since it's all about education, why not bring the company to the place where I was educated'?" — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rreesC©bendbultetin.com

companya marketcapitalization of $394 billion. Shares of Exxon Mobil Corp. fell 0.5 percent to $88.95, but the oil giant

Slim is still world's richest man

still managed to over-

The Associated Press

compared with $4.6 trillion a

NEW YORK — Mexico's Carlos Slim remains the world's richest man for the fourthyearin a row, according to Forbes, while Warren Buffett dropped out of the top three for the first time Slim since 2000. And Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg saw his ranking drop 31 spots as his net worth declined by $4.2 billion. A record 1,426 people around the world made Forbes magazine's latest annual tally of billionaires, up 16 percent from last year.Their average net worth was $3.8 billion, rising 3percent from 2012.The total net worth for the list's billionaires was $5.4 trillion,

year ago.

take Apple with a market

cap of $400.5 billion. — From wire reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Georgia V. Cornell,

trustee for Georgia V. Cornell Trust, to Mark S. and Nancy G.Beach, Broken Top,Phases4A,48 and 4C, Lot436, $795,000 • Ramsay Group LLC to SH25 LLC,Spring Homesite Section, $550,000 • Andrew B. Spittle to James A. andNancy R. Blake, Estates at Pronghorn, Phase 2, Lot 173, $430,000 • David J. and Tammy E. Cummings to Kevin P. Furey, Aspen Rim, Lot41, $273,000 • Paul D. and Debra L. Withrow to Todd M. and Rikki M. Fernald, Conestoga Hills, First Addition, Lot7, Block3, $242,000 • Julianne D. Repmanto Bayen L. Miller andSarah E. McCloskey, Pheasant Run, Phase1, Lot20, $325,000 • Richard D. and Pauline L. Winchell to Dan J. Maricich, First Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot 15, Block 8, $247,500 • IFS Properties LLCto

Kenneth andConnie Miller, Township17, Range12, Section11, $320,000 • Rocky and Trudy Smith to Patricia A. SaundersWhite, Township 15, Range12, Section 26, $303,300 • New Era Homes LLCto David N. and Kristina B. Johnston, Cambria P.U.D., Lot 8, $360,000 • Nicole Chamberlain to Russel K. andLeslie

The U.S. continued to house the most billionaires in the world, with 442 of them. It was followed by the Asia-Pacific region, with Europe rounding out the top three. There were 210 new faces on the list, with Forbes saying many were helped by rebounding equity markets and strong consumer brands. Slim's net worth increased to $73 billion from $69 billion a year earlier. Bill Gates of Microsoft Corp. held on to second place with a net worth of $67 billion. Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s Buffett slipped to the fourth spot with a $53.5 billion net worth. Buffett was surpassed by Spanish clothier Amancio Ortega, who jumped two spots

I. Hopper, trustees for Russel K. and Leslie I. Hopper Family Revocable Living Trust, RiverRim PU.D., Phase1, Lot66, $208,750 • Hayden HomesLLCto Robert Halderman, Aspen Rim, Lot 91, $197,959 • Merlin L. and Diana L. Irvine,trustees for Merlin L. Irvine and DianaL. Irvine Revocable Living Trust, to Michael J. and

from 2012 with a net worth of $57billion. While Buffett dropped in the rankings, he added $9.5 billion to his net worth — making him the secondbiggest gainer of the year. The largest gainer was Ortega, who added $19.5 billion to his net worth. There were 138 women on the list, up from 2012's 104. Liliane Bettencourt — whose family owns a stake in L'Oreal — is the world's richest woman with a net worth of $30 billion. Brazil's Eike Batista had the biggest drop in his net worth, with it declining $19.4 billion from theprevious year.Facebook's Zuckerberg saw his net worth fall to $133 billion from $17.5 billion. His ranking fell to No. 66 from No. 35 in 2012.

Cathy B. Wynschenk, Awbrey Glen Homesites, Phase 6, Lot120, $660,000 • Roger Kriebel to Gregory N. McKeeverand Beth A. Massingill, Unit 8, Part1, Oeschutes River Recreation Homesites Inc., Lots 27 and 28, Block 88, $165,000 • Davidson investment Properties LLCto Michael J. and Terri J. Conlin,

trustees for Conlin Family Revocable Living Trust, Township15, Range10, Section18, $530,000 • Cherie M. and Garrett Blaylock andCherie M. Nesbitt to John R.and Rene R.Stevens, Diamond Bar Ranch, Phase 2,Lot 75, $152,500 • Khanh Bao Le and Tho Han to BodeeW. Ward and Stefanie J. Ward, Juniper Glen, Lot11, $175,000

BRIEFING

White House backs unlocking An Obamaadministration adviser says the White House believes smartphone and tablet

users should beallowed to unlock their phones and use the devices on the network of their

choosing. In a blog post, R. David Edelman, White House adviser on Internet, innovation and

The Washington Post

privacy, responded to a

WASHINGTON — Three speeches by top Federal Reserveofficials offera preview of what is likely to be the most important debate over U.S. monetary policy in the years ahead. And they set the stage for the most important single decision President Barack Obama will make this year to shape the future of the U.S.

petition about the issue by saying the adminis-

tration feels consumers should be allowed to unlock their phones without civil or criminal

penalties, especially if the phones werepurchased secondhand or as gifts. — From wire reports

economy. On one side of the debate there is Jeremy Stein, a Fed governor since last May. He argued in a Feb. 7 speech that there are already signs of overheating in the markets for certain kinds of securities, including junk bonds and real estate investment trusts that invest in mortgages. And if those or other potential bubbles get so large that if they popped the whole U.S. economy could be in danger, he argued, there is a case for using the Fed's most blunt tool to combat them — raising interest rates across the economy. Stein isn't ready to do that just yet — he has been voting to maintain the Fed's ultra-low interest rate policies — but some of his colleagues are taking the same logic further. Kansas City Fed President Esther George dissented at the central bank's January policy meeting because she thought easy money policies "increased the risks of future economic and financial imbalances." The nub of the argument that George and Stein are making is that when financial bubbles arise, it's hard to know with certainty where they are and how big a risk they pose, so it's not enough for regulators to try to stamp them out. Higher interest rates may be a blunt tool, but at least you know they will be effective. The two most powerful Fed offici als have offered, in speeches Friday night and Monday morning,what amounts to a riposte to these arguments. "Long-term interest rates in the major industrial countries are low for good reason," Chairman Ben Bernanke said Friday at an event in San Francisco. "Premature rate increases would carry a high risk of short-circuiting the recovery, possibly leading — ironically enough — to an even longer period of low long-term rates." Vice-chair Janet Yellen chimed inMonday at a National Association for Business Economics conference. "At this stage," she said, "there are some signs that investors are reaching for yield, but I do not now see pervasive evidence of trendssuch as rapid credit growth, a marked buildup in leverage or significant asset bubbles that would clearly threaten financial stability." So where does Barack Obama come in? Bernanke's term as chairman ends Jan. 31, 2014, less than a year from now. In determining whom to appoint to the job, Obama will have to decide which broad philosophy around this question he finds most persuasive.

• Don A. and JoanneM. Christensen to Joseph P. and Merle D.Sanchez, trusteesforJoseph P. and Merle D.Sanchez Revocable Trust, Mountain High, Lot5, Block3, $406,000 • Nathan L. and Debra L. Barshofsky to Patrick and Mary Strobel, Deschutes River Acres, Lot14, Block 1, $150,000 • Henry R. and Vicki J.

Melhorn to Gorilla Capital WA6 LLC, Partition Plat 2005-65, Parcel 2, $180,000 • Markand Darla Farstvedt to Garrett and Cherie Blaylock, Yardley Estates, Phase 6, Lot137,000 • Leslie E. Morreseyto Catherine E.Cushman, Awbrey Village, Phase3, Lot t89, $412,00 • NW Bend RealEstate Holdings Butler Market

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Young Professionals Network: 5:30 p.m.; Cross Creek Cafe, 507S.W. Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-2883 or www. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • Leader Lunch: Bend Chamber membersand leadership lunch centered around what's happening in your industry, what's happening in Bendand how the Chambercan help; cost of lunch plus gratuity; noon; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; 541-388-8526. • Women's Roundtable Series Kickoff Bash: Networking, music, food and cocktails; registration required; $10 for members, $t5 for nonmembers; 5:307:30 p.m.; Studio 3, 50 S.E. Scott St. Suites1 and 2, Bend; www.bendchamber. OI'g.

• Launch Your Business: For local companies that are just starting up; participants work with a business adviser, as well as with peers in the classroom; course combines four one-hour coaching sessions with three three-hour evening classes on March 6, March 20 and April 3; registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council Executive Committee meeting: Free; 4-5 p.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 E.Antler Ave. • Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council board meeting: Free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 E. Antler Ave. FRIDAY • Funding Your Business: Central Oregon Business Education Network March meeting; SharonCalhoun with Home Federal Bank will discuss traditional/ SBA lending options, and Steve Westberg of Westberg Consulting will discuss nontraditional funding options such as equityfunding, crowd funding, grants and more; registration requested; $5; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 503-805-6524,Lynn@ ALJ-LLC.com or www. meetup.com/COBEN12/ events/107095182/. To find freeincometax preparation help, visit the Events Calendar atnrww. bendbuiietin.comlevents.

For the completecalendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbuiietin.comrbizcai.

Road LLC toBarr Family 7 LLC, Partition Plat 199654, Parcel 2, $650,000 • Guy L. and Sandra P. Cooke to GeneH.and Susan C. W.Nesbitt, trustees for Nesbitt Living Trust, Pheasant Hill, Lot 12, Block 2, St55,000 • Donald M. Schriver and Sheri L. Spores-Schriver to Ronald E.and Colette B. Meister, Mt. Vista, Lot 6, Block 2, $287,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

HOME

ove

Wl

f.

• Claudette Wirkkula's home in Eagle Crest has a touch of Hollywood's goldenera, thanks to wrought-iron gatesmadeby herfather

5ii

An antique gate designed by Wirkkula's father now serves as a headboard in one of her guest bedrooms.

Editor's note:The At Home section features a profile of a local home each month. Tosuggest a home, email athome@ bendbulletin.com.

By PennyNakamura •For The Bulletin

laudette Wirkkula has brought a little bit of old Hollywood to the High Desert. Entering the front porch on her 3,300-square-foot home in Eagle Crest, you must first turn a handle on a beautiful black wrought-iron gate that is craftedto resemble a feather. Wirkkula's gate was designed and built by her father, John Selak, in the 1930s. He designed wrought-iron gates in Southern California. According to Wirkkula, 78, he wasn't just any gate designer. Back in the day, he was the Photos by Andy Tutlis l The Bulletin

One of the gates made by Claudette Wirkkula's father, John Selak, on the exterior of her home.

master artist who designed the iconic East Bel Air gate that stands on Sunset Boulevard. This Bel Air enclave is home to some of the wealthiest Hollywood celebrities. "He designed and built the gates on Conrad Hilton's home, Bing Crosby's home and on Claudette Colbert's home," said Wirkkula, who brought all her personal antique gates built by her father from her home in California. "I'm named after Claudette Colbert because my father and her became friends after he designed the gates on her Beverly Hills mansion." Once you pass through the gates that front Wirkkula's peach-colored home, you must push down on another ornate knob on the front of her entry door. Anything in her home made from metal or iron, odds are Wirkkula says her father probably made it. Wirkkula says she left Southern California after her children were grown and made her first Oregon home in Astoria 15 years ago. She bought a small bungalow that she remodeled, and during that renovation she met her husband, Jim Wirkkula. She says they've been happilymarried now for almost 13 years, but she had to leave Astoria for her health. SeeWrought/D4

'I

.~ct<YiX'X+A%>+S~.

MXI?XOXIWittEWXOR(OIt,

The living room in the Wirkkula home features many metal objects. For any such items in the home, odds are her father made it, Claudette Wirkkula says. "He designed and built the gates on Conrad Hilton's home, Bing Crosby's home and on Claudette Colbert's home. I'm named after Claudette Colbert because my father and her became friends after he designed the gates on her Beverly Hills mansion."

GARDEN

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bundbullutin.com/athomutour

TODAY'S RECIPES

FOOD

+

Fedupwith lawns,some Creamed spinach turn to an artificial answer goes for a makeover

CreamedSpinach:A different takeontheclassicandaneasy last-minute offering,D2

By Marielle Gallagher

Spiced Grapefruit Compote:A little bit sweet, a little bit tangy; try

The Bulletin

Growing a thick, green lawn in the High Desert is a constant battle. There is soil amending, aerating, re-seeding and watering that must be done to grow an emerald lawn worthy of badminton and barbecues. Turns out, some Central Oregon homeowners have thrown in the towel and turned to artificial grass instead. The synthetic blades of grass never need watering or mowing and can't be torn up from dog and foot traffic. Kyle Landon, owner of Alpha Turf NW, an artificial grass installation company based in Eugene, said 80 percent of his clients are dog owners who want

something more durable than grass. "Dogs are horrible to lawn," said Landon. "They tear things up, and they create urine stains. A lot of customers have replaced their sod several times, and they finally decide to do artificial turf." For Tumalo resident Bonnie Darling, her reason for installing artificial grass was environmentally motivated. Because Darling's home is situated on a riverbank, she says she doesn't use fertilizersbecause of toxic runoff. "That was my main incentive for getting artificial grass. You have to be careful about the runoff into the river." SeeArtificial /D5

By Jan Roberts-Dominguez For The Bulletin

I've always embraced spinach salads. They're fresh, with a nice amount of crunch andflavor.But combine this hearty green with a little heat and moisture, and the results can be a little

more challenging to appreciate. Cooked spinach has a tendency to get so darned

slimy. For years, it was an extreme bias. Then I encountered a plateful of creamed spinach that was pleasantly textured. Instead of long,

slippery strings of dark green foliage, the mixture was light and fresh with

emerald flecks mingling against a creamy base. Even

the flavor was superior: rich and elegant, with no bitter aftertaste. It so inspired the inner cook in me that I decided to devote a little time with the raw product to see if I could duplicate the recipe. The first try involved sauteing a bit of onion in a bit of oil, then piling on a mountain of fresh, well-rinsed spinach, and stirring until the leaves shrivelled and shrank. I then combined the mixture with a bit of cream in my blender. From my days in a San Francisco test kitchen, I've learned that the first goround may appear doubtful but usually provides the most insight into the solution. SeeSpinach/D2

Plus anotherspinachrecipe: Creamed spinach soup,D2 it with pancakes or ice cream,D2

Chickenund AndouilluSmokedSausage Gumbo: ChefPaul Prudhomme's recipe for Louisiana-style comfort,D3

Y

More stew recipes:Oxtail Daube (DaubedeQueue deBoeuf), Spiced Butternut Squash Stew,D3

Recipe Finder:Cookedcabbage like from the old country, D2


D2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

Fooo

Next week: How to choose fruits and vegetables

Creamed Spinach Makes about 2'/3 cups, which is enough for 6 servings.

This really is a wonderful dish. And because you can prepare it in two steps, it's a convenient offering for a last-minute meal.

/Q u

.

2 to 3 Ibs fresh spinach /2 C chopped yellow onion 1 clove garlic, pressed or finely minced 2 TBS butter or olive oil (or combination of both)

ee

1 TBS flour 1 C heavy cream t/2 tsp salt (more or less to taste) /8 tsp white pepper Pinch of nutmeg

Wash the spinach thoroughly in a largeamount of water to removethe grit; trim away tough stems and withered or yellowed leaves. Bring 6 quarts of salted water to a rolling boil. Add the spinach, a hand-

ful at a time so that the water will remain at a boil. Onceall of the spinach has been added, boil for1 to 2 minutes (if the leaves seem old and tough, give them the full 2 minutes, otherwise, 1 minute is fine). Remove the pot .r

from the burner and carefully place it in the sink and run cold tap water

e' z

into the pot. Continue doing this until the spinach is floating in very cold water, which will stop the cooking and set the color.

Strain the cold spinach into a colander, then firmly squeezethe leaves to remove all of the water (if you can't bring yourself to allow so many nutrients to escape, do this last process over a bowl and save the liquid for

*

soup or stew). At this point, the spinach can becovered and refrigerated for later preparation.

W hen ready toproceed,chopenoughoftheblanched spinachtomeasure about 2 cups; set aside. Saute the onions and garlic in the butter over medium heat until the onions are soft and translucent, about 5 minutes. Add the chopped spinach

and continue cooking for a fewminutes, then sprinkle on the flour and stir to blend into the spinach. Add the cream, salt and pepper and continue cooking and stirring over medium to medium-high heat until the cream Roh Kerr /The Bulletin

Keys to creamed-spinach success: blanch then wring dry and use a food processor rather than a blender.

sauce has reducedand thickened slightly. Remove the spinach from the heat, carefully scrape it into a food pro-

cessor (without burning yourself), and process the mixture using the "pulse" switch or an "on-off" action to avoid over-processing the mix-

Spinach

ture. The idea is to bring the mixture to a stage in which some dark-green flecks of spinach remain; it shouldn't look like cream of spinach soup.

Finishingtouches

Continued from D1 M y y o ungest s on , w h o hadn't fledged the roost yet, wasn't bringing similar prof essional experience to t h e dinner table. But thankfully, his critique was brief: eHow can you even consider eating that? It looks gross." True, it seemed a little too green (more of an Andy Warhol interpretation of creamed spinach than the real deal), and simply too smooth and

Serve immediately or gently reheat.

Taking my creamedspinach to another level is quite simple; beyond that, consider the creamed spinach

soup that I'm also providing. It's a great meal in and unto itself:

Cream of Spinach Soup

"I

• Scrape the creamedspinach into a shallow oven-proof

Makes 6 to 8 servings.

dish and sprinkle with a mixture of grated Swiss and Parmesan cheese (about'/4 cup of each). Broil until

Here's a creamy version of spinach that IS a soup. And just like my creamed spinach recipe, no long strands of slimy spinach are created because the leaves are chopped. It's very delicious I might add, so you may want to give it a try. What can gowrong with a dish that incorporates

golden and serve. • For a simple make-aheadspinach casserole, whisk1 lightly beaten egg andt/~cup shreddedcheese (cheddar, Swiss or Monterey jack, for example) into abatch of cooled CreamedSpinach (seerecipe, may beprepared up to 24 hours aheadandrefrigerated). Bake in a350degree

soupy (unless I was developing

potatoes, chicken broth, a bit of cream, shredded Jarlsberg cheese and fresh spinach? It's a perfect dinner option for late winter.

t>e'

2 to 3 Ibs fresh spinach 4 TBS butter 1 C finely chopped yellow onion 6 C chicken broth 2 C (2 med) diced Yukon Gold potatoes (peeled or unpeeled)

oven until lightly puffed and a thin knife inserted in the center comes out relatively clean, about 25 minutes. • For a calorie-and-fat-reduced version, substitute milk, light cream or chicken broth for the heavy cream and reduce the butter/oil to1 tablespoon.

recipes for Gerber's). But the flavor was good, which was encouraging. So the following day I did a little more research to learn how creamed spinach is approached from a classic-

The Associated Press file photo

cooking sense.

Trim spinach, then stack the leaves together and slice into slender

strips. In a large skillet, melt the butter and saute the onions until soft

I n "Mastering the Ar t o f French Cooking," Child, Bertholle and Beck encourage the reader to first blanch the leaves, and then, when all of the water is pressed out, to simmer the vegetable in butter, meat stock or cream. Well I tried that, even though I suspected that it was exactly this c lassic treatment that I h a d gone to great lengths to avoid

all through childhood. My instincts were correct. Simmering the spinach in a liquid — even after coarsely chopping the leaves — in no way alters the unalterable fact that the key ingredient will be slimy. This dish would have

the spinach then wringing it dry was an i mportant first step. Finally, real progress was made when I switched from blender to food processor in the all-important act of de-sliming the long strands of spinach. The short-but-powerful bursts gagged any youngster with a from the blade in my food prokeen imagination. cessor effectively minced the However, further r e view leaves into small-but-visible convinced me that blanching specks rather than soup.

In between the blanching and processing came a bit of sauteing of onions and garlic and simmering of cream. Ultimately, I was uttering the cry of victory: Voila! That's French for "It's not slimy, the color is good, and it tastes marvelous." — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a Corvallis food writer, cookbook author and artist. Contact: janrd@ proaxts.com.

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and golden. Add the spinach and continue to saute until the leaves have wilted, about1 minute; set aside.

In a large pot, heat the broth to boiling, along with the potatoes, reduce the heat, cover, and simmer until the potatoes are very soft, about 20 minutes. Scrape the spinach mixture into the pot to combine. Using a

hand-held blender or your food processor, blend the mixture to creamthe

potatoes and spinach, but don't over-process; you want bits of spinach

and potato to remain as apart of the soup's texture. Add the half and half and gently re-heat the soup, then drop the shredded cheese into the pot, a little at a time, stirring after each addition until the cheese melts. Add salt and pepper to taste.

n easy cabbagedish By Julie Rothman

By Lauren Chattman

brought to the West Indies Newsday f rom Indonesia early in t he If you thought that grapefruit 1600s. was just for breakfast, you've Because of its flavor profile been missing a big kitchen op- — tart and sweet at the same portunity. There's still time to time — grapefruit can be used make agrapefruitand avocado in both s weet an d s avory salad, a spicy grapefruit and dishes. A salad of grapefruit mint chutney or a grapefruit and fennel in a mustard vincustardtart before the season aigrette is a lively way to start ends in early spring. a late winter meal. Or arrange Grapefruit is a d e cidedly grapefruit sections and thinly New World fruit. Discovered sliced prosciutto over baby in Barbados in the 17th cen- arugula and drizzle with oltury, it is believed to be an ac- ive oil. Briny sauteed scallops cidental hybrid of the orange or shrimp pair well with secand the pummelo, which was tioned grapefruit.

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was looking for an easy recipe

To section a grapefruit while removing the tough membranes: With a sharp chef's knife, cut off the stem and blossom ends and stand the section along the edge of one membrane. Cut along the other side of the section near the opposite membrane and remove. Repeat with remain-

for making Polish cabbage. Brown said that she is 82 years old and doesn't have much of an appetite anymore, but that certain foods, like good

ing sections.

cooked cabbage, still appeal

grapefruit on an end. Cut away the rind and bitter pith. Slice into one

'/4 C water '/4 C sugar 1 cinnamon stick

1 (2-inch) piece fresh ginger, peeled and thinly sliced 4 pink grapefruits, peeled and sectioned

Combine water, sugar, cinnamon stick and ginger in a medium saucepan over high heat. Bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve sugar. Reduce heat to low and simmer until thickened, 25 to 30 minutes. Place grapefruit sections in a large mixing bowl. Pour syrup through a strainer and into the bowl. Serve immediately over pancakes, waf-

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Viola Brown from Indiana

Makes 6 servings.

Run - Walk Sunday

B~ dU presents

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The Baltimore Sun

Spiced Grapefruit Compote

fles, hot cereal or ice cream. Or refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 2 days and rewarm briefly (don't boil) in a microwave before serving.

"8hind.ig" t The Village •

1 C half and half 1 C shredded Jarlsberg cheese t/2 tsp salt t/4 tsp ground white pepper

APRIL 21, 2013

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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 publlshed.

School and Forest Park High School in the 1950s. He and his wife both went to those schools and they have been

looking for years for someone

who has the recipe. Lola Mae Hill from Bel Air, Md., would like to have the recipe for the "scrumptious" chicken dish that was served as a special when she and her husband dined at the PepperRequests mill restaurant in Lutherville, Jeff Clayten f ro m B a l ti- Md. As best she can recall, the more is looking for the recipe chicken breast was served in for the sticky buns that were a richwhite sauce or creamed served in th e c afeterias at s pinach topped w it h c r a b both Garrison Junior H i gh imperial.

Polish Sweet Cabbage

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to her. Jeanette Lehman from Glen Burnie, Md., shared her recipe for Polish sweet cabbage. She saidthe recipe comes from her mother, who emigrated from Poland, married and began making the dishes she remembered from her childhood.This recipe is straightforward and not difficult to make. Lehman suggests making it a day ahead if possible as the dish improves in flavor when reheated. The dish is tasty on its own but also very delicious served over buttered noodles or potato dumplings.

RECIPE FINDER

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Makes 4-6 servings.

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3 to 4 slices of bacon 1 med onion, chopped 1 16-oz can diced tomatoes '/2 tsp salt

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Dash of black pepper 1 tsp sugar /2 med head cabbage, coarsely

chopped

Cut bacon into '/4-inch pieces and cook in a frying pan until almost brown; drain off a third of the bacon grease. Add onions to bacon and re-

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maining grease andsaute until onions begin to become translucent. Add tomatoes, seasoning and sugar to panand simmer together until cooked

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through and blended, about10 to15 minutes.

Placecabbage ina saucepan.Pourcooked sauce overcabbage,stir-

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ring to combine. Simmer covered, stirring occasionally, until cabbage is wilted and blended with the tomatoes about 20 minutes.


FOO D

TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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Chicken and AndouilleSmoked Sausage Gumbo Makes 6 servings. Total time: 1 hour, 40 minutes.

By Noelle Carter Los Angeles Times

The first time I met chef P aul Prudhomme, he w a s peering over the stove in his narrow test kitchen, a converted shotgun house just outside the French Quarter in New Orleans. Chef was heating oil in a large cast-iron skillet, and when he saw me, he invited me over to watch him fix gumbo. When the oil was smoking hot, he quickly whisked in flour to form a roux — "Cajun napalm," he called it — the bubbling mass darkening to a deep chocolate brown in minutes. He stirred a trinity of vegetables into the roux to stop the cooking — onions, celeryand bellpeppers — then added the roux to a pot of boiling stock. Chopped andouille sausage and garlic went in as he patiently watched the stew, tasting occasionally, over a slow, quiet hour while it gently simmered away. Whenthe rich aroma was almost too much to bear, Chef added chopped chicken, and soon the gumbo was ready. Unlike a typical weeknight dinner rushed to the table after a long day, stews are patient, as much about the sheer pleasure of cooking as the finished dish itself. It's the simple alchemy of time and ingredients layered in a pot to form something lush and rich, with a depth of flavor that cannot be duplicated with a shortcut. I spent a recent rainy weekend fixing Paula Wolfert's oxtail daube, a provincial French stew. It's a two-day project, re-

peppers

Remove excess fat from the chicken pieces. Sprinkle 1 teaspoon salt and one-half teaspoon each garlic powder and ground red pepper over the chicken, rubbing the seasoning over both sides of each piece. Set

aside at room temperature for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, combine the onions, bell peppers and celery in a bowl. Combine the flour, remaining /~ teaspoon each salt, garlic powder and

ground red pepper in a paper or plastic bag. Add the chicken pieces and shake until the chicken is well coated. Reservet/~ cup of the flour mixture.

In a large, heavy skillet, heat1/~ inches of oil until very hot (375 to

(optional: for extra body)

towels. Carefully pour the oil into a glass measuring cup, leaving as

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many of the browned particles in the pan as possible. Scrape the pan bottom with a metal whisk to loosen any stuck bits, then return /2 cup

hot oil to the pan (discard the remaining, or strain and save for another use). Place the pan over high heat. Using a long-handled metal whisk, grad-

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ually stir in the reserved flour. Cook, whisking constantly, until the roux is a dark red-brown to black, about 3'/2 to 4 minutes, careful not to let it

scorch or splash on your skin. Remove from heat and immediately add the vegetables, stirring constantly until the roux stops darkening. Return the pan to low heat and cook until the vegetables are soft, about 5 minutes, stirring constantly and scraping the pan bottom well.

Meanwhile, place thebroth in a5/2 quart saucepan or large Dutchoven, and bring to a boil. Add the roux by the spoonful to the boiling broth, stirring until dissolved between each addition. Return to a boil, stirring and

scraping the pan bottom often. Reduce the heat to a simmer and stir in the andouille and minced garlic. Simmer, uncovered, for about 45 minutes, stirring often toward the end of the cooking time.

While the gumbo is simmering, bone the cooked chicken and cut the meat into one-half-inch dice. When the gumbo is cooked, stir in the chick-

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en and adjust the seasoning as desired. Serve immediately. (To serve, mound one-third cup of cooked rice in thecenter of a soupbowl and ladle

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about1'/4 cups gumbo around the rice.) — Adapted from "ChefPaul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen"by Paul Prudhomme

Food writer Paula Wolfert serves her Oxtail Daube with noodles, followed by a salad of bitter greens. quiring several hours of gentle braising. The weather w as cold and wet, a perfect winter weekend for laboring over

the dish. A bottle of red wine here, a little prosciutto there, a handful of fresh herbs, the building aroma gently waft-

Makes 5 to 6servings. Total time: 2 hours, 15 minutes, plus 7 hours braising time andovernight chilling time.

s/4 Ib slab of lean salt pork 1 TBS olive or peanut oil Salt and freshly ground pepper

400 degrees). Fry the chicken until the crust is brown on both sides and the meat is cooked, about 5 to 8 minutes per side; drain on paper

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Oxtail Daube (Daube de Queue de Boeuf)

4'/2 to 5'/2 Ibs oxtail, cut into pieces 1 calf's foot or pig's foot, split

s/4 C finely chopped celery 1t/4 C flour Vegetable oil for deep frying About 7 C chicken broth /2 Ib andouille sausage, or any good pork sausage (such as Polish kielbasa), cut intot/4inch cubes 1 tsp minced garlic Cooked white rice, for serving

1 sm (2- to 3-Ib) chicken, ort/s of a Ig (5- to 6-Ib) chicken, cut up 1'/2 tsp salt, divided 1 tsp garlic powder, divided 1 tsp ground red pepper (preferably cayenne), divided 1 C finely chopped onions 1 C finely chopped green bell

4 onions, coarsely chopped 1 bottle full-bodied red wine, such as Syrah /s C red wine vinegar Herb bouquet: 3 sprigs parsley, 1 sprig thyme and1 imported bay leaf tied with a string

2 cloves garlic, peeled 2 oz jamon de Bayonne, prosciutto or Serrano ham, cut into '/2-inch dice s/4 oz dried French cepes or Italian porcini, crumbled

The day before you plan to serve the daube, heat the oven to 275 degrees. Trim off all excess fat from the pieces of oxtail.

Blanch the calf's foot and salt pork in a saucepan of boiling water for 3 minutes, then drain. Slice the rind off the salt pork and reserve. Cube the salt pork and divide into 2 batches. In a heavy, nonreactive skillet, heat the oil and slowly cook half of the salt pork, stirring often, until the cubes turn golden brown and a great deal of their

ing through the house. Sunday evening, I served the finished daube spooned over fresh pasta, the fork-tender meat coated in the most beautiful thick reduction. While a good stew demands patience, not all of them demand a lot of time. The other night I fixed a spiced butternut squash stew, the cubed squash simmered with browned onions, raisins and roasted peppers. It came together in about an hour.

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fat has rendered out, about10 minutes. Line aflameproof earthenware or enameled cast-iron 5- to 6-quart cas-

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serole with the pork rind, fat side down. Transfer the browned salt pork to the casserole. Season the oxtail pieces with1t/~ teaspoons salt and one-half teaspoon pepper. Brown the oxtail pieces over

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batch. As they brown, transfer the pieces to the casserole. Remove and discard half the fat in the skillet. Cook the onions in the remaining hot fat until golden brown. Add

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Deglaze the skillet with1 cup of the wine. Boil down to aglaze. Add another cup of wine and repeat. Add the remaining wine, vinegar and 1t/~ cups water. Bring just to a boil and skim carefully. Pour over the meats. Add the

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calf's foot, herb bouquet and garlic. Cover tightly and place in the oven to cook very slowly for 3 hours without disturbing. Carefully remove the oxtails to a deep bowl, cover and keep moist. Remove the meat from the calf's foot while

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still warm and place in afood processor. Add the remaining salt pork cubes, the cooked pork rind, cooked garlic and the ham. Grind to a smooth paste. Strain the cooking liquid, pushing down on the onions to extract all their juices. Remove as much fat as pos-

sible and pour the juices into a largesaucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to medium, andboil slowly, skimming from time to time, until reduced by one third.

Carefully return the pieces of oxtail to the casserole andspread the meatpaste on top. Addthe reduced liquid. Rinse the cepesunder running water, drain andadd to the casserole. Coverand bake in a275 degree oven for 2/2

BIGGER

hours without disturbing.

kND BETTE R THAN EVER !

Remove the casserole from the ovenand transfer the oxtails to a work surface, discarding any loose bones. Season with salt and pepper, pour into a bowl and cover and refrigerate. Separately, cover and refrigerate the cooking liquid. About 2t/~ hours before serving, heat the oven to 275 degrees. Remove the jellied liquid from the refrigerator,

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and lift off and discard all congealed fat. Combine the liquid andadd the meat in the casserole, cover and reheat

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the daube without stirring for 1t/~ hours. To serve, remove the oxtails to a deep heatproof platter. Cover with foil and keep warm in the turned-off oven.

Strain the sauce into asmall saucepan, pressing down on thesolids. Bring the sauce to a boil and cook at aslow boil, with the pan half off the heat, skimming, until the sauce lightly coats a spoon, about 20 minutes. Adjust the

seasoning. Pour over the meatand serve hot. — Adapted from 'The Cooking of Southwest France" byPaula Wolfert

Spiced Butternut Squash Stew Makes 6 to 8 servings.

PublishingDate:

Total time: About1 hour, plus cooling time for the chiles. 2 poblano chiles 4 TBS t(/s stick) butter 2 TBS oil 2 onions, diced 5 Ibs butternut squash (2 med or1 Ig), peeled, seeded and cut intot/2-inch cubes /3 C dry white wine

6 C vegetable broth /2 tsp smoked paprika 1 tsp New Mexico chile powder t/4 tsp ground cinnamon t/4 tsp grated nutmeg Freshly ground black pepper t/4 C maple syrup, divided /2 C raisins, coarsely chopped

6 to 8 pieces stale bread, preferably dark whole-grain, coarsely chopped 1 C heavy cream Fine sea salt Tabasco sauce, optional 1 bunch green onions, thinly sliced on the bias

Roast the poblano chiles over high heat on a rack over a stove-top burner. When the skin is charred all over,

place the peppers in a paper bag. Leave them for about10 minutes, then remove and peel the skin — do not rinse. Discard the stem and seeds, and chop the peppers into a one-fourth-inch dice. Set aside. In a Dutch oven or small stock pot, combine the butter and oil over medium-high heat. Add the onion and

cook until the onion just begins to brown, 6 to 8 minutes. Add the cubed squash and cook, stirring frequently, until the squash begins to soften, 10 to12 minutes. Add the wine and scrape all the cooked bits from the bottom of the pan, and cook until almost all of the wine is absorbed. Stir in the broth, the diced chiles, the paprika, chile

powder, cinnamon andnutmeg, and seasonwith1 teaspoon salt and /~ teaspoon pepper. Stir in 3 tablespoons maple syrup and the raisins. Adjust the heat so the stew reaches a low but steady simmer. Cover and cook, stirring occasionally, until the squash is very soft and tender, an additional10 to15 minutes.

Uncover thesoup, andladle 2to 3 cups broth, with somesquash, into ablender. Addthe chopped breadandblend until the bread is pureed and the mixture is thickened. Pour back into the Dutch oven, stirring to thicken the stew. Slowly stir in the cream, and gently heat the stew. Taste and adjust the seasoning as desired. Add the remain-

ing tablespoon maplesyrup to sweeten, if needed (depending on the sweetness of the squash) and afew dashes of Tabasco if desired. Remove from heat. Pour the stew into bowls, and garnishing each serving with a little of the sliced green onion. Serve immediately.

16-18 2012

Friday, August 9

BEND BREWFEST THECOMPLETEGUIDETOTHE BREWE RIES,THEBEERSANDALL THEFUN. The Bend Brewfest is a celebration of the craftsmanship and artistry of beer making across the Northwest, offering fine brews, food and entertainment while supporting Big Brothers Big Sisters of Central Oregon. Held in Bend's Old Mill District, the event honors the success of local brewers and spotlights their roles in the vitality of Central Oregon's economy. This official booklet, designed as an interactive reference guide as well as a beer lover's keepsake, is distributed to all Bulletin readers and the thousands who attend the festival.

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OREGON FESTIVAL OF FESTIVA L+ C A R S CARS THEGUIDETOCENTRALOREGON'S EXCLUSIV EEXOTICCARSHOW

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The Oregon Festival of Cars features the world's most rare and exotic automobiles. Both new and vintage models are featured in this show that attracts spectators from across the region who dream of sitting behind the wheel of such sophisticated machinery. The guide includes photos and descriptions of each car featured in the show as well as additional event details.

>L J< CARS • FOOD • MUSIC • FUtttFOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

www.eregosfestlvalofcsrs.«om

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PudlishingDate: Friday, August 9

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D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN

Next week: DIY appliance maintenance

John Selak, Claudette Wirkkula's father, fought in World War I in the Austro-Hungarian army before coming to the United States. He settled in New York, then Los Angeles, where he started his wrought-iron

4 EB

company.

Wrought Continued from D1 "It rains so much there, and I was getting sick all the time," said Wirkkula, who has severe asthma."Ineeded dry air, and a doctor friend mentioned Central Oregon." Wirkkula eventually bought a lot in Eagle Crest and had architectural plans drawn up, but the economy tanked, and the couple decided to hold off on building their dream home. But as fate would have it, an Eagle Crest home that had been sitting on th e m arket for years caught Wirkkula's eye late last year. The price of the home had dropped considerably over the years, and Wirkkula realized she could move right in and not have to wait for something to be built. "It's a beautiful home; it has vaulted ceilings, even in the kitchen, and there's all this wood paneling," said Wirkkula. "The story I heard when this home was built, the wife was allowed to have whatever she wanted in the kitchen, and the husband could have w hatever he wanted in t h e master bathroom. So she put in this giant kitchen island made of al l b utcher block, and he got a marble claw-foot tub. But something happened,

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A 67-foot mahogany deck wraps around the entire back part of the Wirkkula home in Eagle Crest.

and this couple never moved into this house." The only hitch in the plan for the house was the tall countertops in the kitchen, Wirkkula, a petite blonde, must use a small step to comfortably reach the stove and sink area. » "It's a chef's kitchen, and I love to cook, but these counters are not your standard 36 r inches; they're 38'j2 inches y} tall, and for me, I'd really prefer 33 inches, but to get this kind of kitchen, I can stand on a step," said Wirkkula. This Eagle Crest home has many custom touches, and Wirkkula points out the varnished pole logs that stand as III I y ~« Ig/===I supporting c olumns i n side u .ttat and outside the home. The millwork in the home is evident even in the powder room, where the floors have wood inlaid with slate tiles in geometric patterns. " What I l o v e about t h i s home is that in every room there are views of the mountains," said W i r k kula. The four-bedroom h om e b a cks up to the golf course. "If we The marble claw-foot tub in the master bathroom and the butcherhad built a home on our lot, it block island in the kitchen were compromises the husband and would've cost a lot more, and wife who originally had the house built made to each other. we wouldn't be able to afford all the extra things they put into this home." It was the Golden Age of The tri-level home has its Hollywood, and movie stars F R I 6 I DLI R E three guestbedrooms on the were building mansions, and lower level. A central fam- those mansions needed gates, Compact ily room on this level houses says Wirkkula, and her father Refrigerator Wirkkula's husband's prized was there to build and design Adjustable Glass pool table. them. Shelves One of the guest bedrooms Right off t h e d ownstairs Crisper Drawer has another antique gate de- family room is the backyard, signed by her father. The gate where Wirkkula has several now serves as a unique iron more garden gates made by headboard. her father. "I b r ought t h ese r a n ch In a hallway adjacent to this bedroom is a large se- and garden gates from my TV.APPLIANCE p ia-toned p h o t ograph o f home in Malibu. But because j ohnsonbrotherstv.com John Selak as a young man I've just moved here (Eagle i n uniform f ro m w he n h e Crest), I still need to figure fought in t h e A u stro-Hun- out where to put them," said garian army. Wirkkula. "My father fought in World F inding a h om e fo r h e r War I a n d w a s m u s t ard father's other ironwork ar t gassed, but he survived. He pieces was easier because i mmigrated t o t h i s c o u n - they were made for the intetry with almost nothing. He rior of a home. "My father made that canstowed away on a boat and came to New York where he delabra and that lamp and met my mother," said Wirk- those iron tables over there," kula. "He learned his art on said Wirkkula. "When I was his own, self-taught, and he a little girl, I was kind of emeventually came out to Los barrassed because we had all Angeles and go t f i n ancial these ironwork pieces everybacking to start his wrought- where in our house, and they iron company." seemed a l i ttle heavy and

Thor the German shepherd and his owner, Claudette Wirkkula, sit on the front steps of their home in Eagle Crest behind a wroughtiron gate made by her father.

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The master bedroom, above, and a collection of bird paintings from Nepal on the bedroom's wall, right. dark, but now I really appreciate the artistry in them." Wirkkula's a p p r eciation of art is evident by the art pieces she has collected from all over the world. As a world traveler, she collects art that speaks toher.In her master bedroom, she has a special collection of bird paintings. "I was in Nepal and saw these students painting in an art studio, and I loved these birds this student was painting, so I asked if I could buy them," said Wirkkula. Upstairs, Wirkkula stepped onto her 67-foot mahogany deck that wraps around the

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entire back area of the home. The views are magnificent.

Large pole logs are used as supporting columns along the deck. Her large German shepherd, Thor, is at home on this deck. W irkkula l o oked ou t a t the mountain views from her deck and seemed quite content here, too. — Reporter: pnahamura~ bendbul jetin.com


TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Artificial

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Continued from D1 After an application of sod didn't survive, Darling began researching various artificial products and found an artificial grass by TURF-N Central Oregon that she liked so much she eventually became a distributor for the company. Now

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. MARTHA STEWART

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For the home composter, a diverse collection of ingredients creates the best, most nutrient-rich compost. Aim for a ratio of one-third

Darling's lawn is perma-green from edge to edge. "People

nitrogen (moist greenmaterials) to two-thirds carbon (dried brown

don't know it's not real. Mine looks like it's three days from needing to be mowed," said Darling. .

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When considering artificial grass, homeowners should researchthe color,length and feel of the blades. Landon's

Both Landon and Webb said the artificial grass is designed to last more than 20 years. "We sell a field turf product," said Landon. "It's the same brand as in Autzen Stadium and Summit High School. It's original intention was to be put in sports fields for cleats racingback and forth, and they've brought that research into landscaping." L andon pointed out t h at when choosing a product, research the drainability and permeability. Rather than big holes punched in the backing, look for a p roduct that has

a fully permeable backing, which provides better drainage. Artificial grass won't stain from pet defecation and can be hosed off for easy cleaning.

Investment

use the contents of yoursecurity shredder, aslong asyou remove bits of plastic or foil.

• Vegetable discards:Wilted vegetables from the refrigerator are a good addition. • Kitchen waste:Rinds, peelings, leftovers and bread from the kitchen are very active decomposers. Eggshells will also degrade but not as completely. Avoid adding dairy, animal fat, or meat to the pile, since they will attract vermin.

(except meat or fat) were

company, for example, sells

Durability and drainage

or paper materials) to obtain an optimal bacterial decomposition. • Paper:Shred or tear sheets of newspaper to allow plenty of aeration, so that the beneficial organisms can thrive. Also feel free to

s long as I can remember, composting has been a part of my life. When I was a child, my family kept a s m all bucket next to the kitchen sink where all food scraps

Far from AstroTurf

artificial grass from I t o 2'/~ inches long. Both Darling and Landon pointed out that some of their most popular types of artificial grass contain bits of thatch to incorporate shades of brown inthe green to create a more natural look. "(For Central Oregon) we tend to install a lot with the browns in it because it matches with the natural landscape," said Landon. Kelli Webb, owner of TURFN Central Oregon, says the blue rye artificial grass is the most popular seller for them. "It's got different length and widths of blades, and it's got t he green an d t h e b r o w n thatch built right in."

Submitted photos

Bonnie Darling had artificial grass installed at her Tumalo home because she was concerned about fertilizer runoff into the river.

Company info

on. "(The homeowner) will spend more money up front (for artificial grass) that will pay for itself over four to five years."

Contact information for the

artificial grass companies referenced:

Installation

Alpha Turf NW www.alphaturfnw.com 541-719-8584

Installation of t h e g r a ss varies by company. In general, artificial grass can be installed anytime of the year as long as the ground isn't frozen since installation requires that about four inches of earth below the grass be removed. Rock is placed beneath the artificial grass. The grass is secured with long spikes, and a fine layer of sand is applied "to make the grass blades stand up," said Darling. Ron Webb, owner of TURFN Central Oregon and the installer for the company, says they are able to install about 500 square feet per day. "So generally they're about a day to a day and half installation. It takes acouple weeks from the consultation to have the grass delivered," said Webb.

TURF-ff Central Oregon

www.turfncentraloregon. com 541-788-2131

Webb said that at T URF-N Central Oregon, putting greens

are priced from $18-$22 per square foot, installed, because a cementbase is required. Darling said she didn't mind the initial investment because of the savings she's had over time. "I save 70 percent of the water bill, and in Central Oregon that's our big deal," said

Darling

Landon knows many of his clients previously spent $400 a chased from $8-$15 per square month to maintain their lawn. foot, installed, depending on "Lawns are extremely expenthe type o f g r ass selected. sive to take care of," said LandArtificial turf can be pur-

deposited. The bucket was emptied every day onto the compost heap at the back of the yard. My dad talked • Coffee and tea: Grounds from the morning coffeepot or tea bags with excitement about the add important nitrogen to the mix. t ransformation o f th e s e • Plants:Use only healthy dried leaves and stems from the lawn and scraps into "black gold," a garden. Discardanydiseased leaves or those near plants infested substance he said would with pests; they may carry insect eggs. Add unwanted but healthy revitalize his backyard garcuttings from houseplants. dens, adding nutrients back to the soil. This early inspiration instilled in me a set of organic-gardeningpractices waste as possible, to recycle as year, we hire the tub-grinder and good habits for healthy much as I possibly could, and to man to bring his equipment soil and plants that I regu- use as many natural materials for three to five days to doublelarly employ. in building and construction as grind the wooden pieces. These At my former home on we could manage. are then combined with the Turkey Hill, in W estport, I have certainly been helped two-, three- or four-year-old Conn.,Ihad a modest comin my composting endeavors piles of mulch to continue the posting operation. Into two by an angry Mother Nature, decompositionprocess. Leaves big wire bins I layered the es- who for the past five years has and othervegetable matter are sential ingredients for good sent devastating storms our mixed into the manure pile, compost: green, nitrogenous way — hurricanes, a tornado which is then covered with gimatter and brown, carbon- and asevere October ice storm ant tarps to maintain a temrich materials, to which I — each of which has felled hun- perature of 126 to 141 degrees; added granular lime and dreds of trees and damaged the pile is also turned regularly the manures of the back- many shrubs. None of the wood and screened once it's decomyard l ivestock, including has gone to waste, however. posed. The act of turning and chickens, goats,sheep,even Hardwood tree trunks have the high temperature eliminate a pig or two. The piles were been milled into lumber boards the weeds. turned periodically for even for f u rniture an d f l o oring. In the past seven years, we decomposition, and in dry Limbs, roots, boughs, leaves have created a t r emendous weather I watered them. Ev- and needles have been ground, amount of "black gold." My faeryyear, we had many cubic to greatly diminish the volume ther would be proud. I love my yards of rich, dark compost and jump-start the process of compost, and the farm needs to work into the gardens and bacterial decomposition. the compost, but I hope the perennial borders. I have devoted a field at the change inweather patterns we In Bedford, composting farm to this operation: Useless have been experiencing is temhas become a more serious boughs, branches and stumps porary, and bad storms go back business. This is due to the are stacked in one long mound; to being a rare occurrence, not fact that I have much more livestock manure is piled in an- yearly or twice-yearly events. "stuff" to compost from a other. Extra topsoil from any — Questions of general interest m uch bigger pieceofproper- building excavation is saved in can be emailed to msfletters@ ty. When I took on the farm another pile, and weeds, plants marthastewart.com. For more more than 10 years ago, I and othergreen matter are colinformation on this column,visit vowed to be as careful with lected in yet another. Once a wwwmarthastewart.com.

— Reporter: 541-383-0361 or mgallagher~bendbulletin.com

De

Stencils a style to any ecor

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By Mary Beth Breckenridge Alzron Beacon Journal

Stenciling has gotten sassy. No longer is the craft limited to fusty designs and Colonial borders. Today's stenciling is

bigger, bolder and fashionably fresh. "It's become more of a decorator statement," said Jane Gauss, a n a tionally r ecognized stenciling expert who has written multiple books on the subject. She said simple, graphic motifs are especially popular,often used to create overall patterns on walls, floorsand other surfaces. Subdued metallics are big in stenciling, too, and so are raised designs created with plaster or similar materials. Gauss, a former Hudson, Ohio resident, used both looks in her current home in North Port, Fla. — a damask pattern done in metallic glazes on the master bathroom walls, and three-dimensional acc e nts on her formerly plain kitchen cabinets. S tenciling h a s m a d e a comeback a s h a n dcrafting has gained new appreciation, said Gauss and Melanie Royals, founder of stencil maker Royal Design Studio in Chula Vista, Calif. (www.royal

designstudio.com). The craft allows do-it-yourselfers to put a personal stamp on their projects, even if they lack the artistic ability to paint freehand. "So you still have

the bragging rights," Royals sard. All-over patterns in designs such as chevrons, Moroccan motifs, oversized florals and typography are a hot trend, creating the look of wallpaper without the commitment. Those newer stencils are "a little more simplistic, a little more geometric" than older motifs that required multiple layers of stencils for different colors, Royals said. Gone are the shading and subtle coloring that characterized stenciling in the '80s, she said.

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Akron Beacon Journal

Stenciling has become bolder and more of a statement. This Springtime in Paris Letter stencil is by Royal Design Studio in Chula Vista, Calif. The simpler stencils allow a design to be completed quickly, she noted, which appeals to people with more artistic ambition than time. Especially popular is a subtle tone-on-tone look, created by stenciling the design in a slightly lighter or darker hue of the background color. "It's really very l i vable," Royals sard. Often stenciling is used on feature walls, such as a fireplace wall or the wall behind a headboard, she said. Ceilings, hard-surface floors and floor coverings such as sisal or short-napped rugs are sometimes decorated with stencils, as arematerials such as glass, tile and fabric. And of c ourse, stenciling fits right in with the current painted-furniture craze. Hudson a r t isan S a n dra Camp used a reverse stenciling technique to dress up a few secondhand furniturepieces she repainted for a recent Homegirl barn sale organized by her neighbor, Gina Bishop

(( www.homegirlshop.com). Camp used stenciling paper with a low-tack adhesive to create floral and aquatic

designs, which she adhered to the furniture before painting the pieces. When she removed the stencils, the original wood g rain showed t hrough t h e designs. Camp c r eated f r eehand stencil motifs for one project and used a purchased stencil for another. For a third, she photocopied and enlarged a fabric design, transferred it to the stencil paper and then p ainstakingly cu t o u t th e i ntricate stencil u sing t i n y scissors. She wasn't sure whether the pieces would appeal to buyers, so she was pleased they all sold. "I'd like to do some more," she said. "It was so much fun." At Funky Junk Boutique in Seville, Ohio, owner Michele Venus sometimes uses stencils to adorn her repurposed furniture. She might use an overall pattern to add interest to a desk top or dress up drawer fronts, she said. Stenciling is a l ittle more t ime consuming t ha n j u s t painting, so she doesn't use the technique as often as she'd like, she said. But when she does, the pieces sell quickly.

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

's urs a woes TV TODAY

ec a en ein TV SPOTLIGHT By Meg James Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Thursday was once the most profitable night of the week for NBC. But the network's prime-time ratings and fortunes have eroded dramatically in recent years, forcing network executives to rethink their strategy. Last fall, NBC's schedule contained a curious recruit for the marquee time slot of 10 p.m. Thursday: "Rock Center With Brian Williams." The news magazine show occupied the spot once reserved for the hallmark NBC dramas "ER," "LA Law" and "Hill Street Blues." Ratings for Williams' show were weak, attracting fewer than 4 million viewers an episode. Worse, NBC advertising executives struggled to sell the show's commercial time to Hollywood film studios that long have spent lavishly on Thursday to promote their weekend movie releases. This month, NBC executives shifted "Rock Center" to Friday, and its ratings grew 10 percent. NBC filled the Thursday-night slot with the medical drama "Do No Harm." Executives figured that it could do no worse — but it did. "Do No Harm" scored record-low ratings and was yanked after just two episodes. NBC's crumbling Thursday lineup — ratings are down 20 percent from last season — il-

Maltby, a top advertising buyer with the ad agency Mindshare, said in an interview. "It is a key The four major broadcast networks have all experienced ratings night for marketers looking to upsand downs on Thursday nights,butnonehasstruggled drive their weekend sales." more than NBC. Average number of viewers for each network on From the late 1990s to about Thursday nights, in millions: 2003, NBC generated as much as $800 million in annual profit from its "Must See TV" lineup, ABC CBS which boasted such defining 18-- - - - -- - - - - -- - - - - 18 " shows as "Friends," "Seinfeld" J and "Will & Grace." "Friends" drew more than 17 million .---- 9.0 1 2--------------12 .. viewers an episode in its last two seasons. Back then, the T hursday l ineup generated nearly 6 0 percent of NBC's prime-time revenue, according to people '02- '04-'06- '08- '10- '12'02- '04- '06- '08- '10- '12familiar with the network's fi'03 '05 '07 '09 '11 '13 '03 '05 '07 '09 '11 '13 nances who did not want to be identified divulging i nternal NBC Fox information. 18 ------------.~~- -----Now, by some estimates, NBC's entire prime-time schedule loses substantially more 12 — — 12-than $150 million a year. "They really need something that can ignite a night," said TV historian Tim Brooks. "But in 5.3 an odd way, maybe losing 'The Office' and '30 Rock' was what '02- '04- '06- '08- '10- '12'02- '04-'06- '08- '10- '12needed to happen to help NBC '03 '05 '07 '09 '11 '13 '03 '05 '07 '09 '1l ' 13 start to turn things around." Indeed, allowing the comedies to gracefully retire was © 2013 MCT Source: Nielsen part of NBC's strategy. lustrates the challenges facing Two of the network's primary After the Philadelphia cable the C o mcast C o r p.-owned Thursday comedies, "The Of- giant Comcast took control of broadcast network as it labors fice" and Tina Fey's "30 Rock," NBCUniversal two years ago, to reverse a decade of audience are ending their runs, leaving new programming executives declines. NBC now attracts 5.2 NBC with even more holes on were installed at the broadcast million viewers Thursday, a the most profitable night of network. The team inherited fraction of its audience a decade television. a prime-time schedule full of "Thursday night has to be holes and a cupboard that was ago, according to Nielsen. Things could get w o rse: a priority fo r N B C," Jason bare.

NBC's prime-time plummet

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in oo com an insoitu e Dear Abby:My husband and I are

spaceship.(You may find he prefers in a hotel during our visits from now expecting our first child (a boy) later it to whatever toy the carton con- on. The problem is, my husband is this year. How do I teach my sonto tained.) If he's encouraged to use it, unable to stand up to his father. He enjoy solitude and his own compa- his imagination will flourish. told me that when he tried talking to ny? Too many people today turn on Dear Abby: My f a t h er-in-law, him about his concerns, Earl called him a "wimp." the radioor TV because they can't "Earl," is an alcoholic and an avid appreciate the quiet. gun enthusiast. He Please tell me how to get through I want m y l i t t le owns many weapons; to my husband. I don't know the exact — Gun-Shy in South Carolina one to have loving DEAR friends, but also penumber. He has been Dear Gun-Shy: I'm sorry to say ABBY riods of quiet, reflecaccumulating ammu- that your father-in-law may have tive fun time by himnition at an acceler- your husband pegged accurately. A self. My husband and ated rate because he's man who would allow his small chilI grew up with siblings, but he hates afraid that large clips will soon be dren to stay in the home of an alcosolitude while I find lots of activities banned. He drinks to excess and be- holic who keeps unsecured, loaded to do by myself. I am never lonely. comes belligerent and angry when weapons around IS a wimp. There What's the difference between soli- drunk. are responsible gun owners, and tude and loneliness? Last summer, during one of his there are individuals like your alco— Solitary Womanin Ottawa, Canada moments of inebriation, he shot a gun hol-soaked in-law, who seem to have Dear Solitary Woman: The differ- into the air as a"surprise" to the eight never learned that a bullet fired into ence between solitude and loneli- family members who were sitting the air must fall down somewhere ness depends on how an individual within two to 10 feet of him. He takes and could kill or injure someone. handles being alone. Some people pride in the fact that his guns are kept Your husband doesn't have to find silence threatening, while oth- loaded, as "what good is an unloaded "stand up" to his father. All he has to ers — like yourself — need it to re- gun?" On two separate occasions, I do is make a hotel reservation and charge their batteries. know for a fact that a loaded gun was be sure the children spend no unFor your son to be at ease when found unsecured in his home. supervised time with Grandpa. To he's alone, ration his television time. When my husband and I travel do anything less is child endangerRead to him so he'll learn to appre- with our children, ages 7, 5 and 4, ment. Because your husband is unciate the entertainment books pro- to visit his family, we stay in Earl's willing to be the strong one, the revide. Give him items to play with home. I feel the combination of al- sponsibility for your children's lives that foster creativity, such as clay, cohol and loaded, unsecure guns is now falls to you. — Write toDearAbbyatdearabbycom paints and paper, a cardboard box not safe for my children. I have sughe can pretend is a playhouse or a gested to my husband that we stay or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

NBC soon began ramping up development to mount a turnaround, which Comcast has estimated could take five years. A year ago, as NBC put together its fall schedule, programming executives made a d ecision to not worry about Thursday. They worried that new shows would get flattened because the aging "30 Rock" and "The Office" were not bringing new viewers to the night. Instead, they marshaled their meager resources during the first half of the week when the network had stronger shows, including "Sunday Night Football" and the hit s i nging competition "The Voice." The gambit paid off in the fall with two new 10 p.m. dramas. J.J. Abrams' "Revolution" a ttracted nearly D mil l i on viewers an episode, while Dick Wolf's "Chicago Fire" averaged nearly 8 million. Even the veteran Tuesday family drama "Parenthood" experienced a lift. NBC rocketed to first place in the important advertiser category of viewers ages 18 to 49 in the fourth quarter. But when "Sunday Night Football" ended its season and "The Voice" and "Revolution" went on hiatus, NBC's schedule came crashing down. CBS took over the top spot, and NBC is expected to end the TV season in third or fourth place. Now, NBC executives are focusing on next fall. The network has ordered 10 drama pilots, and 17 comedy pilots — more than any of its rivals.

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MARCH 5, 2013:This yearyou often can be challenging or difficult. You have accepted so much responsibility thatyou could feel overburdened. Others seeyou as a role model — that is, until you lose your temper. If Stars show the kind you are single, ofdayyou'llhave you could push ** * * * D ynamic away a potential ** * * P ositive s w eetie with your ** * A verage spo n taneous ** So-so outbursts. Find a * Difficult different way of expressing your irritation. If you areattached, your sweetie won't appreciate being astand-in for someone else inyour life with whom you might be angry. Listen carefully to his or her concerns, and youwill feel better as a result. CAPRICORN proves his or her friendship. ARIES(March 21-April 19) ** * * M ost people go on tirade a every onceinawhile.W hywould youbeany different? Others might not know howto respond when you are like this. You'll need to makethe first move in order to clarify your actions. You will come up with the right approach. Tonight: At work late.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * P lan on dealing with an irate associate in the near future. In the interim, stay on top of everything you must do. Don't worry or let this situation mar your mood. A me eting provokes unusualideas, which provide a newopportunity. Tonight: Why not enjoy yourself?

GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * Y our inclination to defer to someone else is the right move to make. Your ability to deal with an angry boss

YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

or superior will be tested. Know what is appropriate to do in this situation. Do not lose your sense of humor. Tonight: Let others do all the talking.

CANCER (June21-July22)

SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)

Bp.m. onH H,"Go Dn" — Ryan (Matthew Perry) drowns his sorrows in gambling after his breakup with Simone (Piper Perabo), a habit that escalates whenhe gets his wife's life insurancecheck. Lauren (Laura Benanti) snaps him out of it by beating him soundly at poker. Afterward, he finds a kindred spirit in Anne (Julie White), who's just suffered her own romantic disappointment, in the new episode "Double Down." 9 p.m. onLIFE, "Dance Moms" — Before leaving for a competition in which their group number has a love theme, the moms try to make a lovematch for Abbyat a speed-dating event, hoping that if she's in a relationship, she'll be easier to work with. Jill tries to get private lessons for Kendall so she'll outdo Nia in the newepisode "All's Fair in LoveandWar." 10 p.m. onA f3, "Smash" — Tom (Christian Borle) shares his suspicions about Peter (Daniel Sunjata) with Julia (Debra Messing), and he's not alone: Karen (Katharine McPhee) also wonders if she can trust him. Jimmy and Kyle (Jeremy Jordan, Andy Mientus) are on pins and needles as "Hit List" gets its first reading. Ivy (Megan Hilty) meets her new co-star, Terry Falls (Sean Hayes, "Will 8 Grace"), in the new episode "The Read-Through." 10 p.m. on USA, "White Collar" — Neal and Peter (Matt Bomer, Tim DeKay) are one heist away from retrieving the evidence box hidden inside the Empire State Building. Meanwhile, Sen. Pratt (Titus Welliver) has enlisted a small army of FBI agents to find the box before Neal does in the season finale, "In the Wind." ©zap2u

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** * T ry not to get too irritated by a risk that backfires or by a challenging individual in your life. Decide to carefully question more of your choices. Go with the tried and true, and walk away from anything that is iffy. Tonight: Join a friend or loved one for dinner and a movie.

• THE GUILTTRIP (R) 9:15 • JACK REACHER (PG-13) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f ando/der only. Younger than 21 mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm .ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)

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** * Express yourself clearly, and don't ** * * Y our day-to-day life could keep leave anything to chance. You will make you busy. Today is a passage — nothing a big impression as a result. Sometimes more, nothing less. Take a walk to relax. it's necessary to establish boundaries. Do By late afternoon, someone will become just that, but also explain your reasoning. much clearer, and a discussion will Tonight: Keep to your budget. become possible. Tonight: Try out others' CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ideas or suggestions. ** * You have held back from doing LEO (July23-Aug. 22) something for a long time, and you might ** * * You know more than many about wonder if you have other options. You an evolving situation. Know that you do,butyou seem tokeepcoming up with won't get clarity unless you stay focused negative outcomes no matter which way on one issue at a time. Don't try to multiyou turn. Consider that you might like the task. Someone's difficult personality status quo. Tonight: Nap, then decide. could evolve into a most intoxicating AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) personality. Tonight: Tryastressbuster. ** * Use the daylight hours to push a VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) project through to completion. Others ** * You could have difficulty with a might not be supportive and could become child or loved one. This person seems to obstacl es.Remember,everyonehasa want a reason to get angry. You might different thought process and sees life want to ignore this situation until he or from his or her own perspective. Tonight: she has worked through it. Feelings run Get some extra R andR. deep on both sides. Give impulsiveness a PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) rest. Tonight: Use your imagination. ** * * M any people make assumptions, LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) and no matter whatyou say, they might ** * * F igure out where would be best not hearyou. You could feel as ifyou can't to focus your high energy. Others might impact their thoughts. Whether there is a be touchy and feisty. You know how to backfire or a success, accept responsibility. handle this situation, but you'd prefer to You might be able to drive your point home pull back and not be involved. Late day later. Tonight: Step outside. plans could change at the last minute. Be flexible. Tonight: Head home and relax. © 2013 by King Features Syndicate

8 p.m. on l3, "NCIS" —When a case involving an unidentified perpetrator captures the media's attention, Gibbs (Mark Harmon) is approached by his barber,whose son is at the top of the list of suspects. Hewants the NCISteam to investigate andclear his son's name in the newepisode "Prime Suspect." Michael Weatherly, Cote de Pablo, SeanMurray andPauley Perrette also star.

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E LEVATIO N Klevation Capital Strategies 400 sw BluA Drive suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz

Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505

• ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH3-D (PG)5:05, 7:10 • AGOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)4:30 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-13) 4:25, 7 • PHANTOM(R) 5: IO,7:20 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4:20, 6:50 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 6:40 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • JACK THE GIANTSLAYER(PG-13) 6 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (UPSTAIRS — R)6:15 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.

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2 ROOMS & HALL FOR )UST

Agordable • Acc«rate •Qaick Service Individual ~ Business ~ Prior Years ~ AIIStates x

Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap

FREE Electronic Filing

CARPET TI ILE & GROUT IHARDWOOD I FURNITURE

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TILE & STONE CLEANING

How clean is your tile? Dirt and grime begin to absorb into the pores of grout. Over time, the grout coloring becomes uneven which makes the entire floor

look worn and dirty. Call Chem-Dry today and let our professional technicians

INCI.UDES:

Hand Wash &Dry Wash System Applied Wax

Don't forget, we also clean carpet, area rugs & upholstery too!

Chem Dry -of Central Oregon 54 I -388-7374

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717 S.W. 5TH st, Madras 541-475-3654

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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 Pastini Sunday Supper. Valid in Bend only. Pleasehonor your server with a gratuity based on the amount before discount. Offer expires 3 /31/13.

Old Mill District • Next to REI 375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 9770Z

(541) 749-1060

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The power of oxygen is undeniable; MotherNature has used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets! I

CARPET CLEMlrtlllglG "

of Central Oregon I 541-593-1 799

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s/ Convenient Appointments s/ FREE Estimate Over the Phone s/ IICRC Certified Technician

Oxi Fresh uses a combination of its one of a kind Oxi Sponge Encapsu/ator, ond Oxi Powder.This three part cleaning solution creates a powerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so thatthey can be efficiently removed from the carpetpile. It is safe for children and pets, leaves no sticky residue, reduces returning stains and has an one hour average dry time.


ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbLllletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 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

T h e

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free 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

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

Su,. VV . C h a n d I e r 210

246

261

Furniture & Appliances

Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing

Medical Equipment

GENERATE SOME excitement i n you r neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Recl!ner/Loveseat

sofa, $300. Queen 4-post bed frame & mattress, $300. Vintage 5 - d rawer dresser & m i r ror $200. Elect. exercise bike, $50. Text 541-639-2479

DON'TMISSTHIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 OI'

Refrigerator: W hirlpool and Amana over-therange microwave, hardly used, white, $400 both. 541-848-9180

Washer/dryer Irg cap. Amana, white, n ew, $500. 541-848-9180

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or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809

The Bulletin recommends extra

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ResMed Pro M-Series CPAP machine, $200. 541-408-5118

• B en d

O r e g o n

Gardening Supplies • & E q uipment www.hershe sodandbark.com

Screened, soil & compost m i x ed , no 265 rocks/clods. High huBuilding Materials mus level, exc. f or flower beds, lawns, Bend Habitat gardens, straight RESTORE creened to p s o il. Building Supply Resale sBark. Clean fill. DeQuality at LOW liver/you haul. PRICES 541-548-3949. 740 NE 1st 541-312-6709

Open to the public. Sisters Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale Quality items. LOW PRICES! 150 N. Flr. 541-549-1621

Open to the public. 266

Heating & Stoves

Los t & Found

Found keys, off China Hat Rd near Mtn High,

call to I.D., 541-382-1490

$..!

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Garage Sale Klt

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 • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

1777 SW Chandler Found pres c ription Ave., Bend, OR 97702 tinted glasses on side of road, Hwy 20 W and Old B end/Redmond Hwy. The case was b r o ke n but glasses appear intact. Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 logo says "29 Below" Coffman Vision Clinic. Place Your Ad Or E-Mall Call 541-388-7510. At: www.bendbulletin.com Found sunglasses in dressing room at Lydl's Place, call to i dentify,

The Bulletin

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, chasing products or • Marlin mdl 917vs 17 hmr 1991, advertlsing for services from out of I used woodstoves has SS fluted brl, scope, y the area. Sending y $350. been limited to mod541-815-4901 • c ash, c h ecks, o r • els which have been 541-385-3102 l credit i n f o rmation MEC9000 shotshell 12 c ertified by the O r - Lost male orange tiger may be subjected to ga. reloader, RCBS egon Department of cat, short hair, Scottsl FRAUD. For more model scale, $400. Environmental Qual- dale Dr. area, Bend. Shy, information about an g 541-389-8563 or ity (DEQ) and the fed- but lovable; answers to advertiser, you may I yukonwillyOmsn.com eral E n v ironmentalBarney. 541-330-6923 I call t h e Ore g onI R uger Mini 1 4 SS , Protection A g e ncy Ifyou ' State Attor ney ' (EPA) as having met REMEMBER: w/scope, 2 maqs (25 smoke have lost an animal, l General's O f f i c e emiss!on stan40 r nds) $1000. don't forget to check Consumer P rotec- • & dards. A cer t ified Humane Society t ion ho t l in e at I 541-480-2265. w oodstove may b e inThe Bend 541-382-3537 l 1-877-877-9392. Ruger P-95 9mm 15 identified by its certifiRedmond, shot, like new $475. cation label, wh!ch is 541-923-0882 541-815-4901. permanently attached Prineville, to the stove. The Bul541-447-7178; Wanted: Collector letin will no t k n owOR Craft Cats, seeks high quality ingly accept advertis541-389-8420. fishing items. Antiques & ing for the sale of Call 541-678-5753, or uncertlfied Collectibles 503-351-2746 woodstoves. $•

www.bendbulletin.com

325

Hay, Grain & Feed

Next Ad

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Dachshund AKC minia- FREE Male Black Lab ture, b l ac k & tan (9 yrs) & Male Chlwelong-hair male, $325. nee (6 yrs) both neuInfo/pix, 541-420-6044 tered, current shots. Dachshund AKC mlni pup Moving 8 can't take www.bendweenies.com with us. Must go together!! 541-233-3534 $350. 541-508-4558 German Shepherd/ Black Lab Puppies ~ Want to Buy or Rent ThePerfect Mlxl Ready March 15. WANTED: Tobacco Purebred parents have pipes - Briars, Meerexc. demeanors. 2 shaums and smoking Dachshund Mini AKC sets of shots/dewaccessories. Choc. long-haired F. ormed. Females $225, WANTED: RAZORSIIscttrrt $ 600. 20% off if w i ll Males $175 Gillette, Gem, Schick, Visit our HUGE 541-350-3025 spay. 541-598-7417 etc. Shaving mugs home decor and accessories. Doberman AKC pups consignment store. Falr prices paid. Find exactly what champion lines, black New items Call 541-390-7029 & rust, 1 male red, 6 you are looking for in the arrive daily! between 10 am-3 pm. wks now ready 3/24. CLASSIFIEDS 930 SE Textron, $2000F, $1800M. Bend 541-318-1501 WANT TO RENT OR bbest242@yahoo.com Labradoodles Mlni & www.redeuxbend.com BUY: Garage size 541-659-9058 med size, several colors space for my wood541-504-2662 turning shop, need Donate deposit bottles/ The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all 220. 541-389-3992 cans to local all volun- www.alpen-rldge.com teer, non-profit rescue, to Labrador Pups, AKC ads from The Bulletin help w/cat spay/neuter Chocolate/Yel!ow/White newspaper onto The vet bills. Cans for Cats Hips OFA guaranteed. Bulletin Internet webPets 8 Supplies trailer at Grocery Outlet, $300-$400. site. SE 3rd/Wilson, 2/261-541-954-1727 3 /1 2. Donate M-F O The Bulletin recompupsAKC toys. $err ns Central Oregon Snce l90$ mends extra caution Smith Siqns, 1515 NE Poodle CRAFT, Tumalo any Lovlng, cuddly companwhen purc h as- 2nd; 215 ions. 541-475-3889 541-389-8420; ing products or ser- time. Coins & Stamps www.craftcats.org Queensland Heelers vices from out of the standard 8 mini,$150 & Prlvate collector buying area. Sending cash, up. 541-280-1 537 checks, or credit ino stage stamp a l rlghtwayranch.wordf ormation may b e ums & c ollections, press.com subjected to fraud. world-wide and U.S. For more i nformaRodent control experts 573-286-4343 (local, tion about an adver(barn cats) seek work cell ¹) tiser, you may call Doxie pups! Adorable In exchange for safe the O r egon State 11-wk-old short hair. basic c are. A few red's and wild shelter, Attorney General's Fixed, shots. Will deGuns, Hunting Office C o n sumer boar/red & chocolate liver! 541-389-8420. & Fishing mix. Asking $300. Call Protection hotline at 541-508-2167 if y o u Seniors & Veterans! 1-877-877-9392. are ready to give one Adopta companlon cat Bend local pays CASH!! for all firearms & of these little ones a from Tumalo rescue, fee ammo. 541-526-0617 $ew ng Central Oregon ence $903 good home! waived! Tame, fixed, shots, ID chlp, tested, Beretta92FS 9mm $595. more! 389-8420. Photos DO YOU HAVE Springfield Armory Adopt a nice CRAFT cat etc: www.craftcats.org. SOMETHING TO XD-45, $695. or kitten from Tumalo Like us on Facebook. SELL 541-815-4901. sanctuary, Pet Smart, or FOR $500 OR Yorkie pup small fePetco! Fixed, shots, ID Check out the LESS? c hip, t e sted, m o r e! male, shots, docked, classifieds online Non-commercial 541-389-8420. Open Sat/ 8 weeks, ready for Sun 1-5pm 65480 78th St advertisers may great home! $ 6 50. www.bendbulletin.com place an ad with Photos & info at 541-536-3108. Updated daily www.craftcats.org our 210 CASH!! & like us on Facebook. "QUICK CASH e For Guns, Ammo & SPECIAL Furniture & Appliances Reloading Supplies. Australian She p herd 1 week 3 lines 12 541-408-6900. mlnls, purebred, no pa2~ $ 20 ! A1 Washers&Dryers pers, 1 blue female, 1 red Ad must include Colt 357 Python, 8" barmale. 541-604-6060 $150 ea. Full warprlce of single item r el, w / s c o pe, 5 0 ranty. Free Del. Also of $500 or less, or rounds, cleaning kit, wanted, used W/D's Bengals TICA R e g., multiple items n ever fired. Al l i n 541-280-7355 Champion lines, takwhosetotal does locking case. $3300. ing deposits NOW! not exceed $500. 541-771-4970 bengalcatspride.com. Bakers rack, black metal $800-$1200. R eady Call Classifieds at w/brass trim, cstm glass Dan Wesson Model 15 4/5. Call Kim 541-385-5809 shelves, 80x60x16, beau- revolver, .357 magnum, 503-860-8974, R e d- www.bendbulleun.com tiful cond, very elegant. 6" barrel, like new, 95%, mond. $950. 541-923-5089 $425. 541-280-2868

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247

Sporting Goods - Misc. Yakima Skybox, comp!ete w/racks & locks, $350. 541-678-2906 255

267

Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood T HE B U LLETIN r e - only upon delivery quires computer adand inspection. vertisers with multiple • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' ad schedules or those selling multiple sys- • Receipts should tems/ software, to dis- include name, close the name of the phone, price and business or the term kind of wood pur"dealer" in the!r ads. chased. Private party advertis- • Firewood ads ers are defined as MUST include spethose who sell one cies and cost per computer. cord to better serve our customers.

Computers

Q7~

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE **

SUPER TOP SOIL

9

286

1st quality qrass hay, 70- Ib bales, barn stored, $250/ ton. Also big bales! Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Horses & Equipment l

l

0

The Bulletin

A v e .

316

Irrigation Equipment 3-inch & 4 -inch plpe, Nelson 100 Big Gun w/ cart, 3hp pump & control panel, misc. All $3200 obo. 541-420-2382

Horse Boarding In NW Redmond. M o n thly rates starting at $195 per horse. Paddocks, stalls with t u r nouts avail., indoor/outdoor ridlng arenas, trainer on site. 541-504-4282

Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.

260

Misc. Items

The Bulletin

$$ sc cent al 0 eeon $ nre $$0$

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Saxon's Fine Jewelers $190/cord. Multi-cord 541-389-6655 discounts, & $/s cords available. Immediate BUYING Lionel/American Flyer delivery! 541-408-6193 trains, accessorles. 541-408-2191. AH Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned BUYING & S E L LING Split, Del. All gold jewelry, silver Lodgepole, Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 and gold coins, bars, for $335. Cash, Check rounds, weddlng sets, or Credit Card OK. class rlngs, sterling sil- 541-420-3484. ver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, Seasoned Juniper, $200 spilit & deliv541-382-9419. ered. 541-977-2040

Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & stu269 dio equip. Mclntosh, Gardening Supplies J BL, Marantz, D y & Equipment naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 For newspaper delivery, call the WHEN YOU SEE THIS Circulation Dept. at

~ Oo

More PixatBendbulletin,coltj

On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

541-385-5800

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809

or email

classified@bendbulletin com

The Bulletin

$rwicg Central Oregon enre 190$

Easy, flexible, clnd affordable ad packages

are also available on our Web site. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PlaCe an ad" Cind fOIIOW theSe eaSy StePS: Choose a category, choose cl classification, clnd then select your ad package. Wr!te your ad and upload your digital photo. Create your account with any major cred!t 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

ClaSSiffedS www.benrlbuuctin.com


E2 TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 476

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • •

Tuesday•••• Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 a

P/T Assistant Leasing Agent needed in Bend. Must be able to work Mondays & weekends as needed. QUALIFICATIONS • Customer service or

Noon Tuess

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No on Wed. Fri d a y . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • •• • • •• • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • •. . . . 3: 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri• Sunday. • • • • Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES 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

C®X

bendbulletin.com

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

& j' JIJTJ IJJ~

Can be found on these pages :

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions Farmers Column 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684.

FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities

Independent Contractor

* Supplement Your Income*

Operate Your Own Business

Employment Opportunities DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809.

I I I I I I I Attorney General's I Co n s umerI I Office Protection hotline at I I 1-877-877-9392. I iillettTt gThe B

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 466

Independent Positions

Sales

Daytime Inside Sales

XOrj0rj

Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV wl cable, micro & fridge. Utils 8 l i nens. New owners. $145-$165/wk

745

Homes for Sale

541-382-1885

BANK OWNED HOMES! 634 FREE List w/Pics! AptJMultiplex NE Bend www.BendRepos.com bend and beyond real estate e GREAT WINTER s 20967 yeoman, bend or

DEAL! FIND ITr 2 bdrm, 1 bath, BUY IT! $530 & $540 w/lease. SELL IT! Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS. The Bulletin Classifieds

(541) 303-3152

Cascade Rental Management. Co. Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks.

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 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 745

773

Homes for Sale

Acreages

on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

Looking for your next

Garage Sales

emp/oyee?

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000

GarageSales

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

MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313

v

NOTICE

630

Rooms for Rent

I

)

All real estate adver- CHECK YOUR AD tised here in is sub- Please check your ad ject to t h e F e deral on the first day it runs F air H o using A c t , to make sure it is corwhich makes it illegal rect. Sometimes into advertise any pref- s tructions over t h e phone are misundererence, limitation or discrimination based stood and an e rror can occur in your ad. on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, If this happens to your familial status or na- ad, please contact us tional origin, or inten- the first day your ad tion to make any such appears and we will preferences, l i m ita- be happy to fix it as tions or discrimination. s oon as w e c a n . We will not knowingly Deadlines are: Weekaccept any advertis- days 11:00 noon for ing for r ea l e s tate next day, Sat. 11:00 which is in violation of a.m. for Sunday and this law. All persons Monday. 541-385-5809 are hereby informed Thank you! that all dwellings advertised are available The Bulletin Classified

NOIO rj

J

RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

sales exp. • Strong computer skills WARNING • Property management The Bulletin recomexp. is a plus mends you use cau• Loan processing exp. is tion when you proa plus vide personal • Strong attention to detail information to companies offering loans or To apply, send resume credit, especially to recruiter@princthose asking for adetonproperty.com vance loan fees or The Bulletin companies from out of state. If you have To Subscribe call concerns or ques541-385-5800 or go to tions, we suggest you www.bendbulletin.com consult your attorney or call CONSUMER Remember.... HOTLINE, A dd your we b a d 1-877-877-9392. dress to your ad and readers on The BANK TURNED YOU Bulletin' s web site DOWN? Private party will be able to click will loan on real esthrough automatically tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200. LOCAL MONEY: Webuy chasing products or I secured trustdeeds & services from out of note,some hard money I the area. Sending loans. Call Pat Kelley 636 541-382-3099 ext.13. c ash, checks, o r Apt./Multiplex NW Bend I credit i n f ormation I may be subjected to Small studio close to liFRAUD. brary, all util. pd. $550, For more informa$525 dep. No pets/ I tion about an adversmoking. 541-330I tiser, you may call 9769 or 541-480-7870 the Oregon S tate

QOrj0rj 476

528

Loans & Mortgages

I

PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

JZI: ~ M

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PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

• • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • • • • • • • •Noon Mon.

v

PSMII6CI

Employment Opportunities

Garage Sales

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

Take care of

Professionally Find them in your investments managed by Norris & The Bulletin kfjbuilders@ykwc.net VIEW the Will hire t w o s a lesStevens, Inc. with the help from ++++++++++++++++++ Classifieds at: people to work from Classifieds! 636 www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin newspaLook at: The Bulletin's p er office f o r t h e Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Bendhomes.com Get Results! Newspaper In Educa"Call A Service Call 385-5809 or for Complete Listings of tion sales campaign. Drake Park luxury apt., place your ad on-line Need help fixing stuff? Area Real Estate for Sale Call A Service Professional This is a part-time, in- 1 bdrm, w /d , d / w , Professional" Directory at dependent contractor cable, $950 / m o. bendbulletin.com find the help you need. sales position, and 541-788-0087 Rafter L F Ranch & www.bendbulletin.com you will not be emFarm Svcs.- Custom We are looking for independent conployees of The BulleHaying & Field Work tractors to service home delivery tin. We offer a short Human Resource Call Lee Fischer, routes in: r 541-410-4495 paid orientation proI I I' Representative I gram. The average s alesperson e a r ns Woodgrain Millwork is 375 Must be available 7 days a week, early mornseeking a highly moti- $400 t o $ 7 0 0 p er Meat & Animal Processing ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. v ated H uman R e - week, for a 27-hour wee k . T h e s ource Rep at t h e w ork I All Natural g r ain-fed Prineville, Oregon, lo- dress code is casual Please call 541.385.5800 or beef $2.88/lb. hangand this is soft, recation. In this role you 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or If I I ing wt, half or whole will be responsible for l axed business t o II I' I to b e pro c essed apply via email at I II I providing comprehen- business sales. We I I I mid-march. $500 dep. / online © bendbulletin.com sive HR expertise as prefer a background Half Hog Sale, $190 inwell as ensuring com- in "business to busiI r l' r I cludes cutting wrapp liance w it h l a w s , ness" selling. This is ping and cure. policies, and procenot ad or s ubscrip' il I I r I WHILE THEY LAST! dures. Monitor and tion sales, however, if 541-573-2677 administer w o r kers' you have p r evious comp claims and experience in adver'I ' ' r ' I r I I OSHA recordkeeping. tising sales, I will give Must possess excel- you priority considerlent c o mmunication, ation. I'm looking for I ' 'I I r interpersonal and de- motivated, energetic, cision making skills. articulate people with 8 ra • Experience in recruit- excellent communicaing, interviewing, new tion skills. Call MelaCall54I385$809topromoteyourservice Advertisefor28daysstartingat'lt0lnsrterralparkageiraiovarlrbleonorrweuiel hire orientation, ben- nie at 541-383-0399. efit coordination, payroll. Proficient in Mioffice (Word, The Bulletin is your Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care crosoft Excel, Outlook), SAP E mploy m e n t NOTICE: Oregon state Margo Construction N OTICE: ORE G O N experience a p l u s. degree in Marketplace law req u ires anyLLC Since 1992 Landscape Contrac- Bachelor's field preferred. one who c o n tracts • Pavers• Carpentry tors Law (ORS 671) related M inimum of 1 y e a r Call for construction work • Remodeling • Decks r equires a l l bus i in HR. We to be licensed with the • Window/Door nesses that advertise experience offer competitive salC onstruction Co n - Replacement • Int/Ext to p e rform L a n d- ary, benefits including 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 tractors Board (CCB). Paint • CCB 176121 scape C o nstruction m edical, l i fe , an d TOWNHASTOOFFER A n active lice n se 541-480-3179 which inclu d es: dental insurance, and to advertise. ' means the contractor p lanting, decks , 401k. To apply, send FrOm itSheritage to the artS, there'S IIZ i s bonded an d i n fences, arbors, resume to www.bendbulletin.com s ured. Ver if y t h e Landscaping/Yard Care w ater-features, a n d jtoholsky I woodgrain. contractor's CCB installation, repair of com r r l 54 1 gR c ense through t h e irrigation systems to We are an equal Four times a year, Redmond Magazine CCB Cons u mer be licensed with the opportunity employer. serv<ng central oregon sm<e r903 Website Landscape ContracIS published to highlight the esbval ofTre e s www.fnreahcensedcontractor. Z~odtz QuaEiip t ors B o a rd . Th i s com 4-digit number is to be businesses and individuals Zau«gaf.e r,. or call 503-378-4621. included in all adverThe Bulletin recom- More Than Service who work to build a strong tisements which indiPeace Of Mind mends checking with cate the business has community. The the CCB prior to cona bond,insurance and tracting with anyone. Spring Clean Up publication features workers compensaSome other t r ades •Leaves tion for their employCheck a calendar of comalso req u ire addi•Cones ees. For your protec•Needles The Bulletin Classified tional licenses and tion call 503-378-5909 munity events, personalcertifications. •Debris Hauling Wednesdays: April 17, June 19, or use our website: ity features and insight www.lcb.state.or.us to Debris Removal Weed free Bark August 28, November 13 check license status into "hidden treasures" & flower beds before con t racting JUNK BE GONE around Redmond. with th e b u s iness. I Haul Away FREE Lawn Renovation Persons doing landAeration - Dethatching For Salvage. Also scape m a intenance Overseed Cleanups 8 Cleanouts do not require a LCB Compost Mel, 541-389-8107 license. Top Dressing Excavating BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Landscape Levi's Dirt Works Search the area's most Maintenance for all your dirt & excavacomprehensive listing of Full or Partial Service tion needs. Concrete, classified advertising... •Mowing ~Edging Driveway Gradingreal estate to automotive, • Pruning «Weeding Low cost! ccb¹ 194077 merchandise to sporting Sprinkler Adjustments 541-639-5282 goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Fertilizer included Handyman print or on line. with monthly program

Newspaper Delivery

Independent Contractor

541-385-5809

® Call Today ©

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Job HuntingP

W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear

SISTERS M AGAZ I N E

WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS

I DO THAT!

Weekly, monthly Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels or one time service. Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 EXPERIENCED Dennis 541-317-9768 Commercial & Residential ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES. Home 8 Free Estimates Commercial Repairs, Senior Discounts Carpentry-Painting, 541-390-1466 Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time Same Day Response promise. Senior Discount. Work guar- Just bought a new boat? anteed. 541-389-3361 Sell your old one in the or 541-771-4463 classifieds! Ask about our Bonded 8 Insured Super Seller rates! CCB¹181595 541-385-5809

Sisters Magazine honorsthe uniquenessofthis mountaintown.

Call 541-385-5809

www.bendbulletin.com

Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businesses that make up

The Bulletin SPRING CLEAN-UP! Aeration/Dethatching

Weekly/one-time service avail. Bonded, insured. Free Estimates!

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/I 541-480-9714 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough

The Bulletin Classifieds

Classificds www.bendbuHetin.com

541-385-5808

Allg g % 51CIISCEMStRIS EHBI %

the baCkbOne Of thiS Small mOuntain

town. In the coming year, each edition will highlight Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.

W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudiishing 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)



E4 TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY B R I D Q E

CLU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiII shortz

2013 T uesday,March5,

ACROSS

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

Someone should edit the book of defensive "rules" and delete every occurrence of "always" and "never." Should you always return your partner's lead? It's often desirable, but not if you have a reason to shift. Judge each case on its own. Today's West led a spade against 3NT, and Southwon with the queen and took dummy's A-Q of c lubs.

doubles, you bid one spade and he raises to two spades. What do you say? ANSWER: If your king of hearts were a minor-suit king, you might have jumped to two spades to invite game. As i t w a s , y o u c h ose a minimum response. Now that partner has raised, showing about 17 points, bid three or four spades. He may hold When East threw a heart, South next A Q 10 6, 7 6, A Q 8 7, A Q 3, and led the A-K and a third diamond (not minor-suit finesses should win. best). This time West pitched a spade, South dealer and East took the jack and queen. Both sides vulnerable Declarer threw a heart, West another spade. NORTH 41 A63 Q74 SPADE EXIT 0 1 085 2 4AQ43 East then led the queen of hearts. South played low, won the next heart, EAST took the ace of spades and exited WEST 410 5 with a spade. West had to lead a club 41 K J972 Iv/ Q J 10962 from his J-9 to the K-10, and South Ivl K5 063 OQJ9 7 made 3NT. 45 Bridge is not a game of always, but 4 J9 8 6 here East must lead a spade after he SOUTH takes his high diamonds. South needs 4Q84 the ace of hearts for his bid (and will Ivl A 83 surely fail if he doesn't have it). If C A K4 East preservesan exit card for West 4 IK 10 7 2 in hearts, South will go down.

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Opening lead — 4 7 (C) 20I3 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

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Annual subscripfions are available for the best of Sunday

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By Mel Rosen (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Ine.

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03/05/13


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 2013 E5

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

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Motorhomes

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880

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Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

20.5' Seaswirl SpyYou Keep The Cash! On-site credit der 1989 H.O. 302, L approval team, 285 hrs., exc. cond., Harley Limited 103 2011, stored indoors for 2003 Fleetwood Disweb site presence. many extras, stage 1 & air life $11,900 OBO. covery 40' diesel mo- We Take Trade-Ins! 850 cushion seat. 18,123 mi, 541-379-3530 torhome w/all Free Advertising. Snowmobiles $21,990. 541-306-0289 options-3 slide outs, BIG COUNTRY RV satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Bend: 541-330-2495 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade HD Screaming Eagle e tc.32,000 mile s . Redmond: 541-548-5254 Electra Glide 2005, 600 w/513 mi, like new, Wintered in h e ated 103" motor, two tone now reduced to $4500. shop. $89,900 O.B.O. candy teal, new tires, Call 541-221-5221 541-447-8664 23K miles, CD player, (2) 2000 A rctic C at hydraulic clutch, ex22' Custom Weld Jet, Z L580's EFI with n e w cellent condition. covers, electric start w/ 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 Highest offer takes it. reverse, low miles, both hrs, garaged, loaded. 541-480-8080. Southwind 35.5' Triton, 541-923-0854. excellent; with new 2009 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuTrac-Pac 2-place trailer, 865 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, Ads published in the no slide-out, Triton eng, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. drive off/on w/double tilt, ATVs "Boats" classification Bought new at lots of accys. Selling due amenities, 1 owner, include: Speed, fish- all $132,913; to m e dical r e asons. perfect, only 17K miles, asking $93,500. ing, drift, canoe, $8000 all. 541-536-8130 Call 541-419-4212 house and sail boats. $21,500. 541-504-3253 I For all other types of 800 Polaris, less than watercraft, please see Good classified ads tell 250 mi, like new. ()j Class 875. the essential facts in an 700 Polaris with less 541-385-5809 interesting Manner. Write Yamaha Banshee 2001 that 900 mi, like new. from the readers view - not custom built 350 motor RMK; tag good until the seller's. Convert the 2015. Asking $6000 race-ready, lots of extras Country Coach Intrigue facts into benefits. Show $4999/obo 541-647-8931 for both, you will not 2002, 40' Tag axle. the reader how the item will believe how nice they 400hp Cummins Die870 help them in someway. are. (541) 350-6865 sel. two slide-outs. Boats & Accessories This 41,000 miles, new with o u r spec i al advertising tip tires & batteries. Most • Yamaha 750 1999 rates for selling your I options. brought to you by $85,000 OBO Mountain Max, $1400. I boat or watercraft! 541-678-5712 • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 The Bulletin EXT, $1000. I Place an ad in The • Zieman 4-place B ulletin w it h ou r trailer, SOLD! I 3-month package All in good condition. 16' SeaSwirl 1980 I which includes: Located in La Pine. 1990 4-Stroke 45hp Call 541-408-6149. Honda Outboard, I *4 lines of text and Econoline RV 19 8 9 , $3000. Text a photo or up to 10 860 fully loaded, exc. cond, Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' 541-639-2479 I lines with no photo. 35K m i. , R e duced2004, onfy 34K, loaded, Motorcycles & Accessories *Free online ad at $15,250. 541-546-6133 too much to list, ext'd 17' 1984 Chris Craft I bendbulletin.com warr. thru 2014, $54,900 B MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 - Scorpion, 140 HP *Free pick up into Dennis, 541-589-3243 Four Winds Class 52k miles, b r onze, inboard/outboard, 2 I The Central Oregon A 3 2 ' Hu r r icane extra wind s hield, depth finders, troll- I Nickel ads. 2007. CAN'T BEAT trailer hitch, battery motor, full cover, Call a Pro THIS! Look before charger, full luggage ing EZ - L oad t railer, I Rates start at $46. I y ou b u y , b e l o w Whether you need a hard bags, manuals $3500 market value! Size Call for details! and paperwork. Al- 541-382-3728. OBO. fence fixed,hedges 8 mileage DOES 541-385-5809 ways garaged. $3200. matter! 12,500 mi, trimmed or a house Don, 541-504-5989 all amenities, Ford built, you'll find 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, gThe Bu,!jet, V10, Ithr, c h erry, Harley Davidson Heri- 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 professional help in slides, like new! New tage S oftail C l assic, hp Bowrider w/depth low price, $54,900. The Bulletin's "Call a 2006. Black cherry pearl/ finder, radio/CD player, GENERATE SOME ex541-548-5216 b lack p e a rl , ext r a rod holders, full cancitement in your neigService Professional" chrome, stage one tune, vas, EZ Loader trailer, borhood. Plan a gaDirectory Gulfstream Scenic Vance & Hines pipes. exclnt cond, $13,000. rage sale and don't Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, 541-385-5809 excellent cond„ always 707-484-3518 (Bend) forget to advertise in Cummins 330 hp dieg araged, never l a i d classified! 385-5809. sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 down. 4100 mi, $11,900. 881 in. kitchen slide out, Home, 541-548-2258; Serv>ng Central Oregon since 1903 new tires,under cover, Travel Trailers Cell, 503-970-3328 hwy. miles only,4 door Advertise your car! fridge/freezer iceRV CONSIGNMENTS Used out-drive Add A Picture! maker, W/D combo, WANTED parts - Mercury Reach thousands of readers! Interbath tub & We Do The Work ... Call 541-385-5809 18'/2' G l a stron 2005, OMC rebuilt mashower, 50 amp proYou Keep The Cash! The Bulletin Classifieds Volvo V6, h i gh-end rine motors: 151 pane gen 8 more! On-site credit $1595; 3.0 $1895; equipped, less than 60 $45,000. approval team, Harley Davidson Soft- hrs, garaged, as close 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-948-2310 web site presence. Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , to new as you can get! 541-389-0435 We Take Trade-Ins! white/cobalt, w / pas- $12,500. 541-550-7189 Free Advertising. Find It in senger kit, Vance & BIG COUNTRY RV I >I I I Hines muffler system Bend: 541-330-2495 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. = • Wat er c r aft • 54$ 385 5QQ9 Redmond: 541-548-5254 c ond, $16,9 9 9 , 20.5' 2004 Bayliner 541-389-9188. Ads published in "Wa205 Run About, 220 tercraft" include: KayHarley Heritage HP, V8, open bow, ks, rafts and motorSoftail, 2003 exc. cond., very fast Ized personal $5,000+ in extras, w/very low hours, watercrafts. For $2000 paint job, lots of extras incl. • "boats" please see 30K mi. 1 owner, tower, Bimini 8 Class 870. Monaco Dynasty 2004, Springdale 2005 27', 4' For more information custom trailer, loaded, 3 slides, die- slide in dining/living area, • 541-385-5809 please call $19,500. sel, Reduced - now sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 541-385-8090 541-389-1413 $119,000, 5 4 1-923- obo. 541-408-3811 or 209-605-5537 8572 or 541-749-0037

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The Bulletinl

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BOATS & RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 881 - Travel Trailers Door-to-door selling with 882 - Fifth Wheels fast results! It's the easiest 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent way in the world to sell.

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , $19 999 firm 541-389-9188

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

Fifth Wheels

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

Fifth Wheels

Fifth Wheels RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Laredo 2009 30' with 2 P ilgnm 27 , 2 00 7 5 t h wheel, 1 s lide, AC, slides, TV, A/C, table 2011 4-season pkg, & c hairs, s atellite, TV,full awning, exceldual pane windows, Arctic pkg., p o wer lent shape, $23,900. large picture window in awning, Exc. cond! 541-350-8629 rear, super slide, $28,000. 541-419-3301 Redmond: 541-548-5254 foam/air sofa sleeper, 26" LCD TV. Garaged. NuWa 297LK H i t ch~ QD Hiker 2007,3 slides, MOre PiXatt)IItt)!ftletbt.tbm 32' touring coach, left Canopies & Campers l $25,900. 541-408-2111 kitchen, rear lounge, many extras, beautiful Pilgrim In t e rnationalCanopy, fits '99-'07 Ford c ond. inside & o u t , 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, 7-ft bed, white, exc cond, Looking for your $32,900 OBO, PrinevModel¹M-349 RLDS-5 call for details, $1100 next employee? ille. 541-447-5502 days Place a Bulletin help Fall price $ 2 1,865. obo. 541-593-3331 8 541-447-1641 eves. 541-312-4466 wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad l on-line at bendbulletin.com

Wind River 250 RLSW

882

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Fifth Wheels

The Bulletin

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I'

The Bulletin

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000.

¹ .8

541-480-3923

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin

Wt'ettches. Qn e of the r5 thin gs that make up a D isaster Su p p l i e s K i t . w w w . P r e p a r e F o r L i f e . o r g

Classifieds

541-385-5809

Build a kit ~ Make a plan Get trained Prepare Oregon

Time to deCIUtter? Need SOme eXtra CaSh? Need SOmeeXtra SPaCethe garage?

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List one Item* in The Bulletin's

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Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and

ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com c

The Bulletin

To reCeiVe yOur FREECLASSIFIED AD, Call 385-5809 or ViSit The Bulletin OffiCe at: 1777 SW Chandler AVe. (0(I Beftd'S WeStSide) *Offer allows for 3 lines of text only. Excludesall service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must be anindividual item under $200.00 andprice of individual item must beincluded in the ad. Ask your Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longerrunschedules andadditional features. Limit1 ad per item per30 daysto be sold

American Red Cross Oregon Chapters


E6 TUESDAY MARC H 5, 2013 • THE BUL

00

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Antique & Classic Autos

I

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 located © Sunriver. H o urlyFIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, rental rate (based upon door panels w/flowers 8 hummingbirds, approval) $775. Also: white soft top & hard S21 hangar avail. for sale, o r le a s e I top. Just reduced to $15/day or $325/mo. $3,750. 541-317-9319 541-948-2963

or 541-647-8483

~ S uu

1/3 interest i n w e l l- Ford Galaxie 500 1963, equipped IFR Beech Bo- 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, nanza A36, new 10-550/ 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & prop, located KBDN. radio (orig),541-419-4989 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-81 99

Ford Ranchero 1979

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-382-6752

Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)

60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, al-

Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com

ways hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for Rob Berg.

I

541-385-5809

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

$6900, 541-548-6812

A T

I%%.JV!

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500,call 541-749-0724

Jeep Comanche, 1990, original owner, 1 67K, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good till 9/2015, $3900 obo. 541-633-7761

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp

pump, 4-3" h oses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-820-3724

I

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

Eclipse an season tires,

P235/60R-16 99T, (4) $150. 541-678-2906 Stud tires P265/70R16, l ow mi., l i k e n e w $400. 541-815-1523.

Antique & Classic Autos •

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Buick Enclave CX 2010 AWD, incl factory warr anty, like new, 3 1 K miles, white e x terior/

Mercedes Benz CLK 320 Coupe, 1999. sunroof, dark blue with grey leather, chrome rims, o rig. o w ner, 104k, exc. cond, very 1000 c lean. $5,50 0 . MorePixattie t nrtt)oletin.eom 541-593-2597 541-306-0499 Legal Notices • L e g al Notices Legal Notices • From contractors to PROJECT CARS: Chevy Buick LeSabre 2004, Mercedes E-class E430, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & yard care, it's all here a Resident Bidder as with the highest qualiLEGAL NOTICE 30 mpg, 75k, heated 2002, AWD 4-dr sedan, defined in ORS fied proposers after Chevy Coupe 1950 in The Bunetin's ADVERTISEMENT seats, nice wheels, Special Edition, $15,000 scoring, 4) seek clarirolling chassis's $1750 279A.120. "Call A Service FOR BIDS auto, white, leather, obo. Call 12-5pm (Iv fications of any or all ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Almost like n e w !! msg), 541-350-0215 complete car, $ 1949; Professional" Directory proposals, and 5) to Notice is hereby given T he Contract is f o r Bring $6000 and it's Cadillac Series 61 1950, public work subject to select the p r oposal that sealed bids for yours. 541-318-9999 2 dr. hard top, complete 2013 W A T ERLINE O RS 2 7 9C.800 t o which appears to be or 541-508-9133. w/spare f r on t cl i p ., in the best interest of IMPROVEMENTS will 279C.870. No bid will $3950, 541-382-7391 b e c o nsidered o r the City. be received by the Camry Hybrid 2011, City of Sisters, Sis- received by the City of 25k miles. ¹133303 ters, Oregon until bid Sisters or any officer Publish: March 5, 2013 $22,995 Nissan Sentra 2012 Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, closing time of 2:00 thereof unless the bid Gwen Chapman contains a statement most options, new paint Pull warranty, 35mpg, P.M. Pacific Time by the bidder as a part Purchasing Manager & tires, 159K mi., $4250. 520 per tank, an power. Tuesda M a rch 12 Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 541-385-6677 Oregon their bid that the $13,500. 541-788-0427 2013. Bids to be sub- of 1971 new trans, 2 Call 541-233-8944 Autogource provisions required by LEGAL NOTICE mitted to the City of new t i r es , ne w 279C. 8 4 0 Public Meeting Notice541-598-3750 T oyota Avalon X L S, S isters, 5 2 0 Eas t O RS brakes, 2nd owner, aaaoregonautosource.com 2005, an XLS options Cascade CET Regional Av e n ue, (relating to prevailing r uns/drives g o o d. including n avigation. S isters, s h al l be Public Transit Advisory Oreg o n wages) Make good w ood $14,200. 541-548-1601 included in this Committee 97759. A t w o h o ur truck. $1995 OBO Contract. R e q uire541-350-2859 period shall follow in ments for Bidders and There will be a meetwhich an bidders shall Honda CRV 2004, Toyota Camrysr Contractors under this ing of the Cascades submit to the City of $10,495. Just bought a new boat? 1984, SOLD; I order are detailed in East Transit (C ET) Sisters a Su b c onSell your old one in the Call 541-610-6150 or see 1985 SOLD; Contract Regional Public Trantractor Dis c losure the classifieds! Ask about our http://bend.craigslist.org Chrysler Sebring 2004 1986 parts car sit Advisory Commit/cto/3617273265.html 84k, beautiful dark gray/ Form p e r ORS Documents. Super Seller rates! brown, tan leather int., only one left! $500 279C.370, identifying The City o f S i sters tee o n Tue s day, 541-385-5809 $5995 541-350-5373 March 19, 2013, from Call for details, any first-tier subconmay reject any bid not 1 :30-3:30pm in t h e S0/ery 8AST/ tractor that will be fur541-548-6592 Chevy Sil v erado in compliance with all Just too many conference room at nishing labor or labor 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, p rescribed publ i c the CET R e dmond and material on the collectibles? 8' box, bed liner, std Subaru wagon bidding p r ocedures Toyota Corolla 2004, maintenance facility at C ontract. R e f e r t o 1991 Loyale 4x4, cab, auto, 4x4, 54k re q u irements, 343 E. Antler Ave., auto., loaded, 204k Disclosure Form and and 5-spd, updates, mi., e xc . co n d., Sell them in miles. orig. owner, non I nstructions to B i d - and may reject for Redmond, OR. $9000. $1950 obo. good cause any and The Bulletin Classifieds smoker, exc. c ond. ders within the Con541-977-6653 541-420-3277 a n bids u po n t h e $6500 Prin e ville tract The regular meeting Docu m ents. of the City of 503-358-8241 schedule for the RPBids submitted prior to finding 541-385-5809 Sisters that it is in the TAC is e very t hird o pening will be r e Toyota 4Ru n ner WHEN YOU SEE THIS ceived by the City Re- public interest to do Tuesday of odd-num1 993, blue, 4 d r . , so. The City will use bered months, from corder, City Hall, 520 OO 4WD, V6, 5 speed, weighted criteria as ~ 1:30 to 3:30 pm. E ast Cascade A v t ow pkg., plus 4 described i n the e nue, Sisters, O r studs tires on rims, egon 97759. Bid Instructions to Bidders The meeting agenda On a classified ad Ford 250 XLT 1990, r uns g reat. W a s contract award. includes d i scussion opening will be con- for go to 6 yd. dump bed, $ 5500, no w o n l y No Bi d de r may and recommendation ducted in the Conferwww.bendbunetin.com 139k, Auto, $4500. $4000.541-659-1416 "MyLittle Red Corvette" withdraw or m o dify of changes to CET's ence Room of the City to view additional 541-410-9997 bid after the hour fare policy. The pub1996 coupe. 132K, of S isters i m medi- their photos of the item. set for the bid closing lic may make com26-34 mpg. 350 auto. ately thereafter, and thereafter until m ents t o RPT A C publicly opened and and Vans • $12,500 541-923-1781 the lapse o f f o rty- during the "General read aloud. F ord F reestyle S E L Looking for your five (45) days from the Public Co m ments" next employee? I nternational Fla t 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, 96 Ford Windstar & Place a Bulletin help This project involves, bid opening. portion of the agenda. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 front 8 side airbags, 25 2000 Nissan Quest, mpg, 3rd row seating, wanted ad today and The meeting agenda but is not limited to, t on dually, 4 s p d. infor m ation and materials will be both 7-passenger reach over 60,000 D istribution line r e - For trans., great MPG, pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, regarding this project vans, 160K miles, posted to the COIC placements of PVC or could be exc. wood traction control, new tires readers each week. low prices, $1200 & 8 brks, maintained exat: Your classified ad ductile iron materials, and t h e inc l uded website hauler, runs great, Work, contact HGE $2900, and worth http://coic2.org/transwill also appear on approximately 92 0 INC., new brakes, $1950. t remely well, runs & A rch i t ects, portation/ptac/ every cent! bendbulletin.com lineal feet of 12" pip541-419-5480. drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, Surveyors 541-318-9999 which currently re$6700. 541-604-4166 ing, 285 lineal feet of Engineers, & Planners, 375 Park The 10" piping, and 332 r e c ommended ceives over 1.5 milAvenue, Coos Bay, changes to CET's fare lion page views lineal feet of 8" piping, Oregon policy will then be deChevy Astro every month at waterline app u rte no extra cost. Buneliberated by the COIC Cargo Van2001, nances, a g g regate 541-269-1166. Board at their regular tin Classifieds base, asphaltic surpw, pdl, great cond., By order of the City meeting on April 4, business car, well Get Results! Call facing, and 16 water Council, C i t y of 2013. 385-5809 or place service lines. maint'd, regular oil RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L Ford Taurus wagon 2004 Sisters. changes, $4500. your ad on-line at hemi Vs, hd, auto, cruise, very nice, pwr everything For more information, bendbulletin.com Plans and specificaam/fm/cd. $8400 obro. Please call 120K, FWD, good tires Brad Boyd contact Scott Aycock, 541-420-3634 /390-1285 541-633-5149 tions may be seen at $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 Mayor 541-548-9520 or t he Office o f H G E scottaocoic.org. An INC., Architects, EnTake care of Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 Published: Regional Public Trangineers, S u r veyors 7 -pass. v a n wit h your investments sit Advisory Commitand Planners, 3 75 Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, p ower c h a i r lif t , Daily Journal of tee meetings are pubHyundai Sonata 2007 Park Avenue, Coos with the help from 1983, 8000-Ib Warn $1500; 1989 Dodge Commerce GLS, 64,700 miles, l ic m e etings, a n d Bay, Oregon 97420, winch, 2 sets of tire Turbo Van 7 - pass. excellent The Bunetin's Portland, Oregon cond, good interested persons are and at the following chains, canopy, 22R has new motor and February 25, 2013 tires, non-smoker, encouraged to attend. "Call A Service locations: motor, 5-spd trans- t rans., $1500. I f i nMarch 4, 2013 new tags, $9500. LEGAL NOTICE mission, $1795 obo. terested c a l l Jay Professional" Directory 541-280-7352 City of Sisters 541-350-2859 503-269-1057. SECOND NOTICE OF The Bulletin Sisters, Oregon BUDGET Bend, Oregon Central Oregon COMMITTEE February 26, 2013 Builders Exchange MEETING March 5, 2013 Bend, Oregon NOTICE IS HEREBY The Nugget One copy of the ConGIVEN, pursuant to Newspaper tract Documents may ORS 294.401 that a Sisters, Oregon be obtained by promeeting of the BudFebruary 27, 2013 spective Bidders upon g et C o mmittee o f March 5, 2013 r eceipt of c a s h o r C entral Orego n check in the amount LEGAL NOTICE Community C ollege of $100.00 made payCity of Bend District will be held on able to the Engineer. Request for Proposals the 13th day of March Deposit made upon Co/orado Sewer Lift 2013 at 6:00 p.m. in procurement of drawStation SI/I/1 3EA the Chri s tianson ings, s p ecifications, The City of Bend re Board Room of the and forms of contract quests proposals from Boyle Educ a tion d ocuments wil l b e qualified consultants Center, 2 6 0 0 NW non-refundable. Indi- for professional engi- College Way, Bend, v idual s heets a n d neering services for Oregon for the purs pecification p a g e s the Colorado Lift Stapose o f re c e iving may be purchased for t ion P r oject. T h i s budget message and the cost of reproduc- project will design and budget document of tion: Drawings $2.00 construct a new said District for the per sheet; Specifica- (Colorado) lift station Fiscal Year 2013-14. tions $0.25 per sheet. and new force main to divert flows from the This is a public meetBidders must C olumbia Stre e t ing where deliberaprequalify with Owner sewer line to an extions of th e B udget under ORS 279C.430, isting trunk line east of Committee will t a ke on Standard Oregon the Deschutes River. place and any person Review Board It will also increase may appear and disPrequalification forms, the capacity of inad- cuss proposed profor the class of work equate gravity sewer grams with the Budto be encountered on s egments down - get Committee at that the project, at least stream of the force time. Copies of the ten (10) days prior to main discharge point. Budget document will bid opening. b e available at t h e Prequalification forms Sealed pro p osals Christianson B o a rd may be obtained from must be submitted by Room at the time of t he E n gineer a n d March 19, 2013, 3:00 the meeting. should be submitted PM, at City Hall, 710 to the Owner via the NW Wall Street, 2nd E. Middleton Engineer. If a Floor, Bend, Oregon, James Chief Executive and prequalification form 9 7701, Attn: G w e n Budget Officer i s on f i l e w it h t h e Chapman, Purchas/ LEGAL NOTICE Engineer and is not ing Manager. ProposDeschutes over one year old, a ls will not b e a c - The OQ /or18, refiling is not cepted after deadline. C ounty R ural F i r e >nO 5-py n ecessary unl e s s T he outside of t h e Protection District ¹2 Cd@@ t here has b een a package c o ntaining will be holding a spesubstantial change in the proposal s han cial work session with C lty o f B e n d C i t y Contractor's status. identify the firm and ," ~ E eO the project: Colorado Council to receive the ~ frrr/'tf No b i d will be Sewer L if t S t a tion presentation of a Fire 8r r26 ~ r8 District Fea s ibility considered un l e ss (SW13EA). Study by Emergency fully completed in the a/7 80~ manner provided in Solicitation p a c kets Services C onsulting The the "Instructions to may be obtained from International. ~6>p OP@11 + Bidders" upon the bid C entral Oreg o n meeting will be held + o', e o r o form provided by the Builder's E x c hange on March 6, 2013 at h Engineer and (COBE) at www.plan- 6:00 p .m . a t t he 8g accompanied by a bid sonfile.com (click on Council Chambers of bond, cashier's check Public Works) or 1902 Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall St., Bend, or c e rtified c h e ck NE 4th Street, Bend, executed in favor of Oregon. P r oposers OR. The meeting lothe City of Sisters in m ust r egister w i t h cation is accessible to an amount not less COBE as a document persons with disabilithan t e n per c ent holder to receive no- ties. A request for in(10%) of t h e t o t al tice of addenda. This terpreter for the heari ng impaired or f o r a mount of t h e b i d . can be done on the other a c c ommodaB id bond i s t o b e COBE website or by f orfeited pe r OR S phone at tions for person with 279C.385as a f i x ed 5 41-389-0123. P r o - disabilities should be and liquidated posers are r espon- made at least 48 hrs. damage should the sible for checking the before the meeting to: Fay b idder n e glect o r website for the issu- Tom refuse to enter into a ance of any addenda 5 41-318-0459. T T Y 800-735-2900. contract and provide prior to submitting a suitable bond for the proposal. P r oposal faithful performance of results are available the work in the event from COBE. Garage Sales the con t ract is a warded them. T h e The City of Bend res uccessful Bid d e r serves the right to: 1) must be r e gistered modify, revise or withwith the Construction draw this request for Contractor's Board as proposal, 2) reject any required b y ORS or an proposal not in Find them in 701.035 to 7 0 1.055. compliance with pubBidder is not required lic solicitation proceThe Bulletin to be licensed under dures and r e quireClassifieds! ORS 468A.720. Each m ents, 3 ) sel e ct bid must contain a consultant on the bastatement a s to sis of the proposals or whether the Bidder is to conduct interviews

More PixatBendbuletit,com

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Diamond Reo Dump Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 yard box, runs good,

E+K E

975

ttMf,M!

GMC b ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171

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975

beige interior, seats 7, Chrysler SD 4-Door factory loaded + extras. BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. 1930, CD S R oyal Excellent cond, always owner, exc. c o n d. Standard, 8-cylinder, You will be 2nd body is good, needs Plymouth B a r racudagaraged. miles, new tires, of t his beauty! 101k some r e s toration, 1966, original car! 300 owner loaded, sunroof. $31,500. 541-312-2393 runs, taking bids, hp, 360 V8, center$8900. 541-706-1897 541-383-3888, lines, (Original 273 Where can you find a ~Oo 541-815-3318 eng & wheels incl.) helping hand?

Aircraft, Parts & Service

- ~

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 935

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

1966 GMC, 2nd owner, too many extras to list, $8500 obo. Serious buyers only. 541-536-0123

WOW!

8>ep

+508

:..'('.-ur"i':

' :

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Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, an orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $22,000, 541-923-6049 '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar wheels, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6000 for all. 541-389-7669.

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO, trades. Please call 541-389-6998

Chrysler 300 C o upe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. 541-385-9350

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The Bulletin

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Garage Sales

Garage Sales

541 -385-5809


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$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, MAR 05,2013 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

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