Bulletin Daily Paper 03-05-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

THURSDAY March 5,2015

' nine uiz o ran nui' uSineSSPreIIooIS BUSINESS • C6

SPORTS • C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD TermiteS — Thinkthey're only destructive? Think again — these insects are builders, and guardians of the soil.A3

• Top choice for presidentwithdraws from processafter death in the family By Abby Spegmnn

date in two years.

The Bulletin

The board a nnounced last month it had selected Tony Mik-

Central Oregon Community College's board of directors will meet Friday to regroup after losing its second presidential candi-

were moving forward. The board learned over the weekend that

"Now just isn't the time to move

my family 2,000 miles across the 'ii ~ country," Miksa said in a phone I

Miksa had withdrawn after his fa- everyone for all that they did for me Miksa ther-in-law died unexpectedly. The while I was out there. I wish the colCounty College in Illinois, as its top news was announced on campus lege the best." choice and contract negotiations Wednesday. SeeCOCC/A6 sa, an administrator at McHenry

Climate change bill

Fossil discovery — A jawbone mayshed light on humanity's earliest origins, over 3 million years ago.AS

squeaksby

Openly gayathletesThey thought their college was welcoming. A public statement has them thinking otherwise.AS

Legislature

Tho 'ylps' —Afunnyname, buta serious problem for many athletes.O1

By Taylor W. Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — Oregon moved closer to becoming

And a Wedexclusive

— In Nevada, acowboy commissioner rides acareer as a political maverick. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Obama counting on Wyden in tradedeal By David Nnknmurn The Washington Post

WASHINGTON-

Three weeks ago, Sen. Ron Wyden got an unlikely phone call. On the line was President Barack Obama,

who last year helped foil the Oregon Democrat's plans to shepherd a modest tax bill through Congress. Obama was calling to thank Wyden for his support of the president's

sweeping trade agenda, which, in a reflection of the topsy-turvy politics of the issue, has drawn support from Republican leaders and staunch objections

from many Democrats. Enter Wyden, 65, a fourterm senator who has con-

sistently supported trade. He has become the White House's most important

ally to woo skeptical members of Obama's own party

the second state in the na-

tion to allow its agencies to combat climate change by changing its fuel supply orrequiringcompanies to buy carbon credits af-

By Dylan J. Darling ~ The Bulletin

The first case of bird flu in Central Oregon, and only the

Bird flu puarantinearea

Following the Feb. 13announcement of a bird second case in the state, has resulted in a quarantine zone flu case nearTumalo, the Oregon Department of Agriculture established aquarantine areawithin a covering the northern half of Bend and questions from back- 6.2-mile radius. Thequarantine means people need a permit to move backyard birds into or out

yard chicken owners about how to protect their birds. A flock of about 90 birds, including chickens, ducks and turkeys, kept on a property near Tumalo was found to have bird flu, the Oregon Department of Agriculture announced Feb. 13. The agency has not reSee video coverage leased the on how to protect name of the your birds:bend er. S i n ce bnlletln.cem/blrdfln

ofthe

quarantine area in Central

area.

Oregon, she said. "Chick sales are still going on," she said. "They are not halting, we just have to

sard. Eggs produced in the quarantine til the quarantine is lifted. If there area may also still be sold. The Deare no more cases detected in the partment of Agriculture has stated area, the quarantine should be lift- that this strain of bird flu, which ed Wednesday, said Madeline Ben- presents a low risk to public health, oit, avian health coordinator for the does not taint eggs or meat from doDepartment of Agriculture mestic birds. in Salem. Wild waterfowl, such as ducks, People may still buy carry the strains of bird flu that chicks in a nd showed up near Tumalo. The outside the virus doesn't affect the wild waterfowl, but may quickly move birds in or out of the area un-

kill domestic birds. The first

case of bird flu infecting backyard birds in Oregon was in December in Douglas County. The property near Tumalo and the property in Douglas County have ponds and the domestic birds at both mingled with wild

his foreign policy legacy. "He called to express appreciation with my work," Wyden said in an interview Wednesday. SeeWyden /A6

waterfowl, Benoit said.

While chicken owners often like to give their birds free

range, she recommended keeping chickens and other backyard birds locked up for now, particularly if there are ponds or places where migrating birds gather on the property.

Correction

Senate Bill 324, which

lifts a sunset on the program created in2009, passed the Democratic-con-

trolled House 31-29. It now heads for the desk of Gov. Kate Brown, who is expect-

Democrats joining all Republicans voting against the bill. The bill's passage has also created a roadblockin a transportation bill that would include taxhikes to

pay for road maintenance and building. Lawmakers held a five-hour debate that

culminated with House Republican Leader Mike McLane, R-Powell Butte,

shouting on the floor. See Legislature /A5 Greg Cross/ The Bulletin

ANALYSIS

"We're OK to sell birds," King

area must acquire a permit from the Department of Agriculture to

complete a massive 12-na-

the program go forward Wednesday.

was the tightest this session in the House, with four

This time of year is when r a nch supply shops and other chicken venthen the dors sell chicks. birds have As the popularity been killed, the property cleaned up of backyard birds and a nearly 120-square-mile quar- has grown in reantine area established, said Bruce cent years, so have Pokarney, spokesman for the De- the sales, said Joel partment of Agriculture in Salem. King, lawn and gar"We haven't seen any indication den specialist at High of any spread," he said. Desert Ranch & Home in But that does not mean there is northeast Bend. The shop no more danger of bird flu. Peo- has already sold 1,400 chicks ple who have chickens and other so far this year and last year sold domestic birds in the quarantine 3,100.

tion trade deal in the Asia Pacific that is important to

ter the House voted to let

edto sign the bill. The vote

be careful."

as the president races to

A graphic that appeared with a story headlined "New schools going up," which appeared Wednesday,March 4, on PageA1,William E. Miller Elementary was identified incorrectly on a map inrelation to Pacific Crest Middle School The new middle school is being built between Summit High School andWilliam E. Miller Elementary. A corrected map appears onPageA5. The Bulletin regrets the error.

i'

interview following the announcement. "I do really want to thank

This is just the first in a list of

"biosecurity" steps Benoit said chicken owners should take. See Bird /A6

TiP to iIroteCtyOuriIirdS Bird flu spreads quickly by direct bird-to-bird contact. The virus mayalso becarried by manure, tools, equipment, vehicles, egg flats, crates, clothing and shoes. • Restrict access to birds and keep your birds away from other birds. • Regularly clean anddisinfect equipment. Wash hands before andafter handling birds. • Buy birds from a reputable source and keep any new birds separated from your birds for 30 clays. • Do not share equipment or supplies with other bird owners. • Check birds frequently for the warning signs and do not touch adeadbird if you find one. • Report sick or dead birds to the Oregon Department of Agriculture by calling 800-347-7028.

Signsinbirds • Lack of energy • Decreased eggproduction, soft-shelled or misshapen eggs • Purple discoloration of wattles, combs and legs • Runny nose, coughing and sneezing • Stumbling and falling down • Diarrhea • Sudden death without any clinical signs source: oregon Department of Ageculture

Health care divide could grow By Margot Sanger-Katz New York Times News Service

The Supreme Court has the potential to radically reshape the Affordable Care

Related • No change profoundly for Oregon, different A4

from that

imagined by President Barack Obama and the law's drafters in Congress. Threeyears ago, the court essentially limited the law's ability to expand

health insurance to low-income Americans in red states. The case it consid-

ered Wednesdaymight result in taking away insuranceaccessform iddle-income people, too. SeeDivide /A4

Photos from Thinkstock

TODAY'S WEATHER ~r r

Mostly sunny High 58, Low27 page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Df-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State Bf-6 N'/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. e4, 30 pages, 5 sections

Q l/l/e use recycled newsprint

o

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh US BenghaZi prOde —A House committee investigating the Benghazi, Libya, attacks issued subpoenasWednesday for the emails of Hillary RodhamClinton, who used aprivate account exclusively for official business whenshewas secretary of state — and also used a computer email server now traced back to herfamily's NewYork home. Thesubpoenas from the Republican-led Select Committee on Benghazi demandedadditional material from Clinton and others related to Libya, spokesmanJamal Waresaid. Thepanel also instructed technology companies it did not identify to preserve any relevant documents in their possession. Thedevelopment on Capitol Hill came the sameday The Associated Press reported the existence of a personal email server traced back to theChappaqua, NewYork, home of Clinton. The unusual practice of aCabinet-level official running her own email server would havegiven Clinton — who isexpected to run for president in the 2016campaign — significant control over limiting access to her messagearchives.

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Gina Gowdy joins protesters on the street outside a Ferguson, Missouri, fire station Wednesday. The Justice Department on Wednesday cleared a white former Ferguson police officer in the fatal shoot-

ing of an unarmed black18-year-old, but also issued a scathing report calling for sweeping changes in city law enforcement practices it called discriminatory and unconstitutional.

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- er usono icer ceare ins ooin

48 county probate offices that had beenissuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples decided they could no longer do so,according to survey by the HumanRights Campaign, a gay rights group. The night before, the AlabamaSupreme Court issued a ruling ordering the probate judges to comply with anexisting state ban onsame-sex marriage — eventhough the banhad beenruled unconstitutional by a U.S. District Court judge. The134-page ruling Tuesday,derided by gayri ghtssupportersand cheeredbyopponents,onceagainpushed this state into confusing and largely uncharted legal territory. AmbaSSader attaCked —U.S. Ambassador Mark Lippert was in stable condition after a manscreaming demands for a unified North and South Koreaslashed him onthe face andwrist with a knife, South Korean police andU.S. officials said Thursday. Media imagesshowed a stunned-looking Lippert examining his blood-covered left hand and holding his right handover acut on the right side of his face, his pink tie splattered with blood. TheU.S. State Department condemned the attack, which happenedat a performing arts center in downtown Seoul as theambassadorwas preparing for a lecture about prospects for peace onthe divided Korean Peninsula. TheU.S. Embassy later said Lippert was in stable condition after surgery at aSeoul hospital. In a televised briefing, ChungNam-sik of the SeveranceHospital said 80 stiches wereneededto close the facial wound, which was just more than 4 inches longandjust more than1 inch deep.

AuStralia/IndOneSia priSOner SWap —Australia has offered By Erik Eckholm and Matt Apuzzo

W ilson killed Brown in t h e

New York Times News Service

teenager for a possible theft

WASHINGTON — Offering the most definitive account yet

of some cigarillos from a convenience store. Several wit- ness accounts."

of the shooting of an unarmed

nesses said Brown, 18, had

street as he tried to stop the

his hands up in surrender cially charged protests across when he died, leading to viothe country, the Justice De- lent clashes in Ferguson and partment has cleared a Fer- nationwide protests featuring guson, Missouri, police officer chants of "Hands up, don't of civil rights violations in the shoot." death last August of Michael But federal agents and civBrown. il rights prosecutors rejected In an 86-page report re- that story, just as a state grand leased Wednesday that de- jury did in November when it tailed and e valuated the decided not to indict Wilson. testimony of more than 40 The former officer, who left witnesses, the Justice Depart- the Ferguson Police Department largelycorroborated or ment late last year, said that found little credible evidence Brown had leaned into his pato contradict the account of the trol car, punched him, reached officer, Darren Wilson, who is for his gun and then, after white. running away, turned and V ersions o f e v ents t h a t charged at him, making Wilsharply conflicted with Wil- son fear for his life. son's were largely inconsistent "There is no evidence upon with forensic evidence or with which prosecutors can rely to the witnesses' previous state- disprove Wilson's stated subblack teenager that stirred ra-

ments, the report said. And in

prosecution because their accounts cannot be reconciled with the DNA bloodstain evidence and other credible witIn a w r i t te n s t atement, Brown's parents, Lesley Mc-

Spadden and Michael Brown, said they were saddened and disappointed with the news t hat "the k iller of ou r s o n

Indonesia aprison swap deal in an11th-hour bid to savethe lives of two Australian drug smugglers whohavebeentransferred to an island prison where theyare to bekilled by firing squadwithin days. Foreign Minister Julie Bishop saidThursday shemadethe proposal to her Indonesian counterpart Retno Marsudi whohadagreed to convey it to President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo. Bishop said shehadyet to hear back. TheAustralian newspaper reported Bishop had offered to repatriate three convicted Indonesian drug criminals in return for the lives of the Australians, AndrewChanand Myuran Sukumaran. TheAustralians are amongnine foreigners who are to beexecuted soon.

wouldn't be held accountable

China military dndget —ChinaannouncedThursday that its

for his actions."

official military budget will grow by10.1 percent in the coming year, amid uneaseamong Beijing's neighbors about its growing might and territorial ambitions. The increase toabout $145 billion in spending would mark the fifth year in a row of double-digit increases despite the country's slowing economic growth, which fell to 7.4 percent last year from 7.7 percent the previous year.Thespending reflects China's growing power anddesire to assert itself in the region and globally.

But the couple praised the second Justice Department report released Wednesday that

found systemic discrimination against African-Americans by the Ferguson Police Depart-

— From wire reports

ment and municipal court.

jective belief that he feared for

some cases, witnesses whose his safety," the report said. At accounts supported Wilson the same time, it concluded said they had been afraid to come forward or tell the truth

that the witnesses who said

that Brown was surrendering becausethey feared reprisals were not credible. "Those witness accounts from the enraged community. The decision ended a stating t ha t B r ow n n e v er lengthy investigation into the moved back toward Wilson shooting in August, in which could not be relied upon in a

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

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

QsQaQ> sQ ssQ so6 The estimated jackpot is now $100 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q4QsQsQ nQmQ ss The estimated jackpot is now $12 million.

Boston: Defense attorney says herclient is guilty New York TimesNewsService B OSTON — A l most t w o

yearsafterapairofhomemade bombs brought terror and carnage to the Boston Marathon,

the trial of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev opened Wednesday with the dramatic admission by his lead defense lawyer that her client

death.Clarke argued that her client was a fairly normal teenager who was under the heavy sway of his older brother. Thejudge, George O'Toole of Federal District Court, limited

the degree to which the defense could bring up the defendant's

e are conducting ACOUSTICS — a clinical research study looking at an investigational asthma medication in 12 to17 year olds who are having trouble controlling their asthma. All participants will continue to receive their current asthma medication throughout the study and study-related medications/ procedures are provided at no cost.

older brother in this phase of

the trial, which decides guilt killed three people and injured or innocence.But Tamerlan scores of others. Tsarnaev seemed to h o ver "It was him," Judy Clarke, over the proceedings, present the lawyer, said bluntly of her even in death, as the families client, who sat slouched in a of victims who died and survichair at the defense table. She vors who were maimed by the added that Tsarnaev, 21, would blasts crowded into the packed not sidestep responsibility courtroom. for his actions, which she deClarke's blunt, even surprisscribed as "inexcusable." ing admission about her cliBut, she argued, he did ent's actions seemed to be an not act alone. All the horror effort to telegraph to the jurors and grief of the bombing was that she would not waste their "caused by a series of sense- time with falsehoods, in part to less, horribly misguided acts earn their trust. carried out by two brothers," Nancy Gertner, a f o rmer she said, naming Tsarnaev and judge who teaches at Harhisolderbrother,Tamerlan, 26, vard Law School, called it "brilliant." By conceding that who is dead. The stark admission of cul- her client had committed the pability was made in service crimes, Gertner said, Clarke of her ultimate goal — to per- was trying to limit the painful, suade the jury to spare Tsar- graphic details the government naev the death penalty. could bring up to undermine In the opening statements, any sympathy for Tsarnaev. two p ortraits o f T s a rnaev Because Clarke is not disemerged. Prosecutors argued puting the crimes, Gertner that he was an intellectually said, those details are no lonand emotionally committed ger relevant. "The question "terrorist" bent on avenging now is, how far will the govU.S. military campaigns in the ernment go to prove what she Muslim world, partly to help has essentially conceded'?" him reach "paradise" after his Gertner said. had in fact set off the blasts that

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THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, March 5, the 64th day of 2015. Thereare 301 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Ih D.C. —Congress will be out of session in advanceof a home district work period next week —and to escapethe snow expected to blanket the capital today.

HISTORY Highlight:In1770, the Boston Massacre took place asBritish soldiers who'd beentaunted by a crowd of colonists opened fire, killing five people. In1766, Antonio de Ulloa arrived in NewOrleansto assume his duties as the first Spanish governor of the Louisiana Territory, where he encountered resistance from the French residents. In1868,the Senate wasorganized into a Court of Impeachment to decide chargesagainst President Andrew Johnson, who was later acquitted. In1933, in Germanparliamentary elections, the NaziParty won 44 percent of the vote; the Nazis joined with a conservative nationalist party to gain a slender majority in the Reichstag. In1946, Winston Churchill delivered his "Iron Curtain" speech at Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri. In1953, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died after three decades in power. In1955,Elvis Presley madehis television debut on "Louisiana Hayride" carried by KSLA-TV Shreveport (although audio recordings exist, there is no known video footage of this appearance). In1960, Cubannewspaper photographer Alberto Korda took the now-famous picture of guerrilla leader Ernesto "Che" Guevara during a memorial service in Havanafor victims of a ship explosion. In1963, country music performers Patsy Cline, Cowboy Copas andHawkshawHawkins died in the crash of their plane, a Piper Comanche, nearCamden, Tennessee,along with pilot Randy Hughes(Cline's manager). In1970, the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons went into effect after 43 nations ratified it.

In1979, NASA'sVoyager1 space probe flew past Jupiter, sending back photographs of the planet and its moons. In1982, comedian JohnBelushi was found dead of adrug overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood; hewas 33. In1994, a jury in Pensacola, Florida, convicted anti-abortion activist Michael F.Griffin of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Dr. David Gunn; Griffin was immediately sentenced to life in prison. Tee years age:Syrian President Bashar Assadannounced a two-stage pullback of his country's forces from Lebanon. Five years age:Secretary of State Hillary RodhamClinton, visiting Guatemala, told reporters that demandfor narcotics in the United States wasfueling drug violence in Central America as sheacknowledged a measure of U.S. responsibility for what she called "a terrible criminal scourge." Oneyear age:President Barack Obama'schoicetolead the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, DeboAdegbile, was blocked by bipartisan Senate opposition over his legal work at the NAACPLegal Defense Fund onbehalf of Mumia Abu-Jamal, who's serving life in prison in the 1981 shooting death of Philadelphia police officer Daniel Faulkner.

SCIENCE

ermi es: soi uar

Actor James Noble is 93.Actor Dean Stockwell is 79. Actor Fred Williamson is 77.Singer Eddy Grant is 67.Actress-comedian MarshaWarfield is 61. Magician PennJillette is 60. Actress Adriana Barraza is 59. Rock singers Craig andCharlie Reid (The Proclaimers) are 53. Actor Kevin Connolly is 41.Actress EvaMendes is40. Model Niki Taylor is 40. Actor Jake Lloyd is 26. — From wire reports

Live from Beijing, ians it's'Saturday Night'?

Termites have a reputation for being a pest, but they're much more than that. Only a handful of the 3,000 or so known termite species are pests to

By Natalie Angier The giant termite mounds that rise up from the sands of

the African savanna are so distinctive it's tempting to give them names, like "Art Deco

Skyline" or "Trumpeting Elephant" or "Flagrantly Obvious Fertility Totem." Whatever the metaphor, the

charismatic megaforms dominate their landscape, and not

just visually. As scientists are just beginning to appreciate,

robustness of a broad array of

ecosystems:deserts and semideserts; tropical and subtropicalrain forests;warm, temper-

ate woodlands; possibly your local park. Thinkstock

Termites aren't only valuable for what they do for soil. They're also proving worthy as a se-called model system for understanding the origins of social life and the division of labor.

mite mounds may serve as sources. The termites in turn offer

disturbed is act panicky. "Ants can be selfish," said their fungal partners plenty quired and to bounce back Gregg Henderson, an ento- of water, nourishment and after a w ithering drought. mologist at the agricultural a clean, safe, temperate and The mounds could thus prove center and an author of the well-ventilated haven free of potential bulwarks against cli- report, which appeared in the competing fungal s trains. mate change, preventing frag- journal Insect Science. "Ants The mounds also protect their ile dryland from slipping into will crowd over each other and builders — against the sun that lifeless wasteland. get trapped at exits or intersec- would desiccate them, the sea"Even when you see desert- tions. But I've seen no evidence sonal rain that would drown ification start to happen be- of selfishness in termites." them, and the many predators tween the mounds, the vegetaThat may be because they that would happily devour tion on or around the mounds have had a lot of practice. Ter- them. is doing so well it will keep re- mites, Henderson said, "were seeding the environment," said the first animals to form sociCorina Tarnita, an author on eties," starting down the comannual rainfall otherwise re-

the new report and an assistant

munal path about 200 million

professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton. And while the public may view termites as pale, blind, half-inch vermin that can gen-

years ago, some 50 million years earlier than the ants and

uinely eat you out of house and

the same policy: a strict divi-

their hymenopteran cousins,

thebees. All eusocial insects share

home, only a handful of the

sion of labor, and the assigning of colony breeding privileges cies are pests to people. Many to a single large, long-lived, of the rest, you can thank for perpetually egg-laying queen. the ground beneath your feet, Yet while the overwhelming which is where the majority majority of individuals in an of termites live and tireless- ant nest or beehive are sterile, ly work. The closer scientists closely related females, a terlook, the longer grows the list mite colony is pretty much 50of subterranean tasks that ter- 50 malesand females,brothers mites take on. and sisters. 3,000 orso known termitespe-

"They're the ultimate soil

a termite expert and emeritus

professor of zoology at Queen Mary University of London. By poking holes, or macropores, as they dig through the ground, termites allow rain to

t ightly w i t h

the

a n a n nual affair that is the

mat have been made in Italy, year's most widely watched Spain, Japan, South Korea, TV show — said propaganBrazil and Russia. da officials had decreed Sohu announced plans "threeno's"fortheprogram: Tuesday to adapt the format no vulgar content, no lowb r o w content and no artists

ing with Lorne Michaels' w ith histories of drug use Broadway Video Entertain- or other personal problems. ment, which handles licens- (Such red lines, if in effect for ing for "SNL." The portal "SNL," would have chased said it would be recruiting the program off the air long comedians and writers in a go.) China, but would have "con-

Th e W a l l S t reet Journal

sultants" from the original r eported that propaganda "SNL" team.

officials monitored every re-

Producers have yet to de- hearsal for this year's gala cide whether the show will a n d nixed a number of acts be taped or streamed live,

d e emed to be "too entertain-

and whether it will be 90 i n g," according to a CCTV minutes like the American staffmember.

You're invited to join us at a Novartis MS Education Link Event Hear Leah Gaedeke, FNP-BC share information about multiple sclerosis (MS), learn about a prescription treatment option, and connect with people tn your community living with MS.

'A superior kind of mckroach' Why termite society turned eusocial in the first place, an

evolutionary leap that denied nearly all its citizenry the seemingly Darwinian right soak deep into the soil rather to personalreproduction, rethan running off or evaporat- mains an active topic of reing. Termites artfully mix in- search. By some calculations, organic particles of sand, stone the driving force was the sheer and clay with organic bits of efficiency of scale. If the terleaf litter, discarded exoskele- mites in a given colony are sibtons and the occasional squir- lings, or at least close cousins, rel tail, a blending that helps they can do a better job of fosthe soil retain nutrients and tering their genetic legacy by resist erosion. stoking their egg-laying queen The stickiness of a termite's mother than by bothering to feces and other bodily excre- mate on their own. tions lend structure and coAnd termiteshave been herence to the soil, which also enormously successful. Taxoprevents erosion. Bacteria in nomically, they're considered the termite's gut are avid nitro- "a superior kind of cockroach," gen fixaters, able to extract the as Bignell puts it, but termites vital element from the air and accountfora far greater porconvert it into a usable sort of tion of the world's insect biofertilizer, benefiting the ter- mass than do all th e other mite host and the vast under-

cockroaches combined. In the

ground economy.

tropics, where social insects

"Overall, termites are ex-

~~

for mainland China, worknot do when experimentally

to persist on a fraction of the

engineers," said David Bignell,

of

versions of the "SNL" for-

Pri n c e-

oases in the desert, allowing the plants that surround them

pe c ted to debut late this year

"SNI.; bu t t h e tai l O red fOr Commu n ist P arty's c urrent an show lags behind CQ jIIese „ t i- g r aft campaign many other Amerd. ' ican p r o grams and pla n n ed in terms of popin co n junction ularity, p erhaps with propaganda because the comedy is so a uthorities. culturallyspecific. Localized Or g anizers of the gala-

are crucial to the health and

the journal Science that ter-

nese version of "SNL" is ex-

i can v ersion

termites and the often elaborate habitats they construct

ton University and their colleagues recently reported in

version, or shorter. The Chi-

imagine a Chinese version orearlyin2016,Sohusaid. of "Saturday Night Live" Soh u saidithopedtheChi— could mainland censors nese version of "SNL" would really abide sharp satires have "international appeal of President Xi Jinping or w h ile still being tailored for private-parts-inChinese audiences." But political a-box jokes? Nevertheless, online (S Ojl U COPl) humo r i n C h i na video portal Sohu. Sgjg jt Qpped r em a ins t i g h tly • com is going to controlled. try to make a go t j le Ct)lriese The recent new y ear's gala o n of it by producing Vel'SjOA its own Manda- pf "S Nt " s tate-run C h i n a rin-language verCentral Television j gye sion of the late- ®OUjd som e ,"internatiOnal f eatured a nti-corr u p t i o n night NBC show. Sohu already g p p eg/ ~Q jle bits , b u t th o s e carries the Amerwere ali g n ed

New York Times News Service

R esearchers a t

By Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times

BEIJING — It's hard t o

people. The rest you can thank for the ground beneath your feet.

rule, the termites outweigh the ants hundredfold.

tremely good for the health of the soil" on which everything With the help of symbiotic else depends, Bignell said. bacteria and protozoa packed

Behavioral study

BIRTHDAYS

DID YOU HEAR?

into the termitic paunch at

what might be the highest

Termites are also proving

microbial densities in nature,

worthy as a so-called model

termites thrive by eating what

system for understanding the origins of social life, the divi-

others can't or won't: wood,

dung, lichen, even dirt.

sion of labor, and the sort of al-

The great termite artists of

truistic, self-abnegatingbehavior that we humans applaud in others but generally avoid engaging in ourselves. In a new study of "panic escape" behavior among termites as they seek to flee from danger, researchers at Louisi-

Africa, the mound builders,

ana State University Agricultural Center determined that

the fungal spores and use the fungal enzymes to help break

have alsorecruited an exter-

nal symbiont, a fungus, which they cultivate in tunnels and galleries deep inside vast palaces built of sand, clay and termite excretions. The termites eat a small portion of

the one thing the termites do down their more fibrous food

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

0 icials: Rulin onhealthlawwon'ta ectOre on health insurance carriers and the exchange's remaining

credit: $203 per month. Experts agreed with state care of all outreach, marketing ment of Consumer & Business officials' assessment on the safety of Oregon's subsidies. and consumer assistance, in- Services. Approximately 74,000 Orcluding running a call center. Nevada and New Mexico also "We are a state exchange," egonians received financial use HealthCare.gov but have Cover Oregon spokeswoman assistance in 2014 to purchase exchanges that were approved Amy Fauver said. "The feder- private health insurance plans as "federally supported, stateal government considers us through Cover Oregon, state based marketplaces." All three states are doing a state exchange and our leg- figures show. That's about islature has reaffirmed this 80 percent of the total 93,000 everything required of a state enrolled. marketplace, except for hanstatus." As of Feb. 15, more than dling eligibility and enrollThe status of Oregon as a state insurance marketplace 110,000 Oregonians had select- ment, said Larry Levitt, an exis enshrined in statute, Fauver ed plans via HealthCare.Gov, pert on health insurance marsard. according to the U.S. Depart- kets at the nonpartisan Kaiser ment of Health and Human Family Foundation. It was reaffirmed in a bill If the court rules for the that dissolves Cover Oregon Services. More than 85,000 — sent to Gov. Kate Brown people qualified for financial challengers and upends subsiTheir average tax dies, Oregon, Nevada and New last week. The measure moves assistance.

By Gosia Wozniacka

spring, the state ditched its exchange and switched to the PORTLAND — O r e gon's federal portal HealthCare.gov health insurance marketplace for all 2015 health insurance is a s tate-based exchange eligibility and enrollment. The Associated Press

and would not be affected by

certifies plans, and it t akes

If successful, the l awsuit

the U.S. Supreme Court case would upend federaltax credagainst president B arack its for low- and middle-income Obama's health care law, state peoplein some three dozen officials say. states that rely on HealthCare. T he S u preme C o u r t gov. Independent studies estiheard arguments in the case

mate that could cause 8 million

Wednesday. The lawsuit seeks peopleto lose insurance covto limit financial assistance to erage, because they no longer people who live in states that

will be able to afford it.

created their own health insurOfficials say Oregonians' ance marketplaces. subsidiesare safe,because the O regon built it s ow n e x - state has retained many funcchange, Cover Oregon, but tions of a state-run exchange. it never fully launched. Last Oregon still contracts with

Divide Continued from A1 Taken together, the two cases could lead to a sharp nation-

al division in access to health insurance, based on what state you live in. Instead of providing universalhealth insurance coverage

law's mandates, which may be good news for people who wishedtoremain uninsured or didn't want to offer insurance

PLQSE.

to the country, the law would widen an existing rift in health

power to choose their health

care future than they would have under the original, broad dictates of th e f ederal law.

And the resulting differences will reflect local political preferences. Overwhelmingly, it will be Republican-governed

care access. Perversely, the states where

the court could wind up reducing insurance coverage the

states that will choose to forgo

most have the largest share

of residents who would otherwise benefit. Many of the states with the largest num-

Doug Mills/New YorkTimes NewsService

ber of uninsured residents James Cook,ofCleveland, and his son Jumaane, 5,demonstrate could be shut out of the bulk Wednesday outside the Supreme Court building in Washington. of Obamacare's insurance ex-

pansion while continuing to pay the law's taxes and other costs. Meanwhile, richer states

The fight over the Affordable Care Act has returned to the Supreme Court as the justices hear arguments in a conservative chaiIenge that could determine the future of the insurance program for

millions of people.

of their residents would reap the benefits of federal dollars

to expand further. We've described the result

who could afford health insurstandard, by setting national

the uninsured who can't afford

and that number would rise

definitions of what counted as health insurance and by prosidies there. viding federal dollars to help With one exception, Idaho, low-income people across the every state that has declined country get covered. to expand Medicaid also risks But a ruling for the King losing subsidies for its mid- plaintiffs could make things d le-income r esidents. C u r even more disparate than they rently, the Internal Revenue were before the law passedService is providing the tax in addition to the new taxes, credits to residents of every new insurance regulations state. But the plaintiffs argue could mean skyrocketing indithat the language of the law vidual insurance premiums in allows people to get the money states that lose their subsidies. only if their state is managing That could cause even people its own exchange. There are who had bought their own in-

health plans unassisted. The Supreme Court's 2012

further if the court cut off sub-

before: "Two Americas on decision in National Federation Health Care." Or, as John Hola- of Independent Business v. Sehan of the Urban Institute said, belius made Medicaid expan"It will be essentially health re- sion optional for the states. If form for the blue states." it rules for the plaintiffs in the The health law was devised current case, King v. Burwell, as a series of interlocking poli- it will make the middle-income cy pieces. It provided universal insurance subsidies optional, Medicaidcoverage for poor too, by limiting them to states Americans across the country, that manage their own insurand sought to set up subsidized ance marketplaces. insurance marketplaces in the

Obamacare's federalprograms — no Medicaid expansion, no subsidies. Of course,healt h care access was deeply unequal in the years before Obamacare, when a hodgepodge of state laws and financial conditions dictated ance. The law sought to make insurance and access more

that had always insured more

But neither decision wi ll

states where middle-income make all the taxes or hospital Americans could buy their cuts optional. For i n stance, own health plans. hospitals in Mississippi, the To pay the high costs of that country's poorest state, will new health insurance, the law c ontinue footing part of t h e set up aseries of taxes — on insurance bill for residents of wages, health insurance and Connecticut, the richest. Conmedical devices — and cut necticut has an uninsurance back the payments it would rate among adults of only 6 make to hospitals that cared percent, according to a recent for Medicare patients. The tax- Gallup survey. Nearly 19 peres are universal, while the fi- cent of Mississippi's adult resnancial benefits flow mostly to idents lack health insurance,

34 to 37 states where residents

could lose subsidies if the court agrees. The law's challengers argue, in part, that this outcome was desired by Congress. The language that jeopardizes the subsidies in some states was written, they say, to encourage

states to manage their own marketplaces. The ruling will also effectively undermine the

surance before the law to be priced out of the market.

The new policy universe created by the law means the court can't just turn the clock

back to 2009.Ifinsurance subsidies are eliminated, a new era

will begin in which, instead of a more uniform health care system, Obamacare will wind

.e,

<

<

• •

— even if the individual in-

surance market were to melt down in other states, Levitt

said. But a court ruling upending subsidies could unleash a debate in Congress about the health care law's future, and

that could have unpredictable consequences, he added.

— New YorkTimesNews Service

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Because insurance pools

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continue using H ealthCare.

up bringing one that is more unequal than ever before.

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fected by the ruling could set up their own marketplaces but

WASHINGTON —TheSupreme CourtonW ednesdaytookup the Affordable CareAct, and it seemed closely divided over the fate of President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement. The court's four liberal members voiced strong support for the administration's position. But Chief Justice John G.Roberts Jr., who cast the decisive vote to savethe law in 2012, said almost nothIng on Wednesday,anddid not indIcate his position. In a pleasant surprise for the administration, however, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, whowas in dissent in 2012, made several comments indicating that his vote was in play. "Perhaps you will prevail in the plain words of the statute," he told a lawyer for the challengers. But, he added, "there's a serious constitutional problem If weadopt your argument." Wednesday's arguments suggested that the next several months will be tense onesfor the administration, as it waits to hear whether roughly 7 million low- and middle-income people in some three dozenstates will continue to receive subsidies to help them buy health insurance. Should the court rule that the subsidies were not authorized by the health care law, most of those people would no longer beable to afford insurance. And insurance markets in those states could collapse. Michael Carvin, who represented the plaintiffs in the 2012 case, was back at the lectern Wednesday, again facIng the administration's top appellate lawyer, Solicitor General Donald Verrilli. Carvin faced a barrage of questions from the court's liberal wing focusing on the health care law as awhole. "We don't look at four words," Justice ElenaKagansaid. "We look at the whole text, the particular context, the more general context, try to makeeverything harmonious with everything else." Justice Sonia Sotomayor said Carvin's reading of the law would havedevastatingconsequences."W e'regoingtohavethe death spiral that this system wasenacted to avoid," she said. Those kinds of observations from those justices wereUnsurprising. Kennedy's comments were another matter. "Your argument raises a serious constitutional question," he told Carvin. Kagan made a similar point, saying that a properly drafted law would have made the choice starker. "That's not the clarity with which we require the government to speakwhen it's upsetting federal-state relations like this," she said. Justices Samuel Alito and Antonin Scalia were consistently critical of the adminIstration's position. Justice ClarenceThomas asked no questions but was in dissent in the 2012case. Scalia said the law "meanswhat it says" even if that has "disastrous consequences." "How can the federal government establish a state exchange?" he asked. "That is gobbledygook."

rent case, states will have more

Q LA|TH cesE

Levitt said. Those states af-

Justices appearsharply split

to their workers. If the plaintiffs win the cur-

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THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A5

oe esviewon sin' ots a at etes jaw fossil shows

turning point in human evolution

By Jere Longman New Yorh Times News Service

DUE WEST, S.C. — It has

been a year since Juan Varona and Andrew Davis, volleyball teammates at Erskine College, a conservative Christian institution, came out as gay in an interview with Outsports.com.

During that time, Varona said, he has been embraced

ml ~ I- Ls -

by teammates, coaches, teachers and fellow students. The

-

-

-

- I-I ( II:

gg I I

rian Church.

So it was jarring to many last week when Erskine publicly condemned same-sex relationships, calling them Mike Belleme/New YorkTimes News Service sinful, in what was widely in- Andrew Davis, an openly gay player for Erskine College, spikes a volleyball during warm-ups in Due terpreted as a direct or indirect

West, South Carolina. The rural and conservative Christian school publicly condemned same-sex mar-

response to the two volleyball riages last week, jarring many on a campus where Davis and another openly gay player are well-liked. players. Hayley Rogers, 21, the editor of Erskine's student paper, volleyball anyway at Erskine, what to." what did we believe'?" The Mirror, said that if she he said, after its stand against Pete Savarese, the student Kooistra, 72, said, "When I were in the position of Varo- same-sex relationships. government president at Er- came here, I said we were go"I wouldn't feel right repre- skine, said that while college ing to be a Christ-centered inna and Davis, she would have felt "personally attacked" and senting Erskine knowing they officials had the right to state stitution. The only way I know "discriminated against," even don't represent or support me," their position on sexuality, the to be Christ-centered is to be if that was not the college's Varona said. statement seemed unneces- biblical." intention. Davis, 20, a junior who con- sary, giventhat everyone at the Mark Peeler, Erskine's athThe situation at Erskine iltinues to play volleyball for college knows what the Bible letic director, said it would be lustrates that sports still pro- the Division II power, declined says. He echoed others in ex- regrettable if recruiting was vide uncertain acceptance for through a college spokesman pressing regret that a college affected. "That statement was not inmany gay, lesbian, bisexual to be interviewed. that considered itself to be in"It was really surprising to clusive had suddenly gained a tended to keep anybody out," and transgenderathletes,even as high-profile performers hear from the administration reputation for intolerance. Peeler, 52,said."W e are a lov"I know the school did not ing and caring environment." like Brittney Griner and Jason a hateful statement," said AlanCollins in basketball, Abby na Carvalho, 18, a freshman la- intend this, but it did alienate A number of private ChrisWambach and Robbie Rogers crosse player at Erskine who is and it did hurt a lot of peo- tian universities have institutin soccer, and Michael Sam in openly gay. "It's a bit threaten- ple," Savarese, 22, said. "If you ed policies on sexuality that football have helped to over- ing. It's scary. I'm going to have know Erskine, we're a very have caused tension within t ight-knit c o m munity, a n d their athletic teams. During come long-held resistance. to watchmy back,ma ybe?" E rskine's p r esident

said

The final sentence of the

that's not what we're about.

Tuesday that the private col- statement said that those at Er- We're about supporting each lege's position on sexuality skine were expected to adhere other and accepting people." was developed over the past 2A to scriptural teachings about Believing that its position years and had everything to do sexuality and that "institution- was misunderstood, Erskine with the Bible and nothing to al decisions will be made in issued a second statement Frido with the volleyball players. light of this position." day. Its stance on sexuality Still, Erskine has d r awn The vague wording left was not intended as policy and widespread attention a nd some gay students, athletes no students would be barred criticism in juxtaposition to among them, confused and from attending or asked to increasingly tolerant public worried about what would be leave because of their sexual attitudes in the United States. permitted: Could they hold orientation, the statement said. Thirty-seven states, including hands on campus, touch a Erskine did not discrimiSouth Carolina, and the Dis- partner's shoulder'? Would nate against "any protected trict of Columbia have legal- they bewelcomed any longer? categories of individuals," the izedsame-sex marriage. Might they be expelled? second statement said, adding "I was shocked," said VaroCaitlin Bullock, 22, a se- that "all types of students are na, 21, a junior from Toa Baja, nior who starred on Erskine's welcome." Puerto Rico. "I had never had women's volleyball team and is Its position should not be any hints from the college that dating Carvalho, the lacrosse considered "unusual or unthey would release a statement player, said she found it "kind expected" for an evangelical like that. I've always been of sad that people still think Christian college, Erskine treated well. I feel everybody the way they do and are so said, adding that it simply esis moving toward equality and close-minded." tablished "a point of reference" getting more accepting. It's Bullock said, "At home, I'm for discussion that should be like they're putting it in bold still not widely accepted. I conducted with "civility and that they don't like it." come here for people that love respect." Varona quit the volleyball me for who I am. I canbe open P aul Kooistra, wh o w a s team severalweeks ago for about it and talk about it. I was named Erskine's president in personalreasons that he said taken aback.Maybe Ican'tgo July, said the college felt it was were unrelated to the current up to people and talk about it. necessary to issue a statement controversy. He is seeking to I thought everybody was OK on sexuality because "there transfer to another university. with it. It m akes you think was some confusion about us He could not have continued in twice about who you're telling as a Christian institution-

similarities with both Australo-

The Washington Post

A lower jaw found in Af-

pithecus and Homo. The researchers report that a sloping

rica could mean that the

chin links the set of teeth to the

Homo genus — the one we ape-like Australopithecus, but belong to — evolved some narrow, symmetrical molars 400,000 years earlier than and jaw proportions place it previously assumed. The dearlyinthe Homo genus. 2.8 million-year-old fossil According to the geologists is from a crucial time in the who dated the fossil by analyzevolution of our ancestors, ing the volcanic ash and sedibut one that has yielded ment it was found in, these earfew skeletal remains to re- ly hominids lived in a dimate searchers eager to fill the not unlike today's Serengetigaps of our knowledge. dry with lots of grass, probably

president of Erskine's student

government association called Varona and Davis "some of the most-liked guys on campus" at the rural liberal arts college of about 600 undergraduates, founded 176 years ago by the Associate Reformed Presbyte-

By Rachel Feltman

the 2011-12 basketball season,

Griner, the all-American center, led Baylor to an NCAA women's title and a 40-0 re-

cord. But she said she felt pained as a lesbian by having to remain publicly closeted for appearances' sake. Last December, two former

women's basketball players at Pepperdine in Malibu, California, filed a discrimination

lawsuit against the university and their coach. The players said they had been harassed for dating each other and had been told that their relationship would cause the team to

lose games. Pepperdine has denied the accusations. "We're seeing this stuff happen across the nation," said Helen Carroll, the sports proj-

Until now, t h e o l dest with rivers, but few trees.

member of the Homo genus was thought to be Homo habilis ("handy man") who lived some 2.3 million years ago. But the new fossil, describedin a pair ofpapers published Wednesday in Science, is significantly old-

There's some evidence that climate change around 2.5 to 3 million years ago may have left the region extremely dry

er, and seems to link more

struggled. It now looks as though the first examples of Homo probably came before dramatic climate shifts, so it's hard to say how much thismay have had

recent members of the genus to the primates that pre-

cededthem. "One of the most important time intervals for

event led to the appearance of hominids as Australopithecus

understanding the emer- to do with the emergence of the gence of our evolutionary first members of the genus. "What we do know is that lineage, Homo, is the period between 3 and 2 million

years," William Kimbel, author of one of the studies and director of the Institute

early Homo could live in this fairly extreme habitat," Arizona State professor and study

of Human Origins at Ari-

author Kaye Reed said, "and that apparently Lucy's species,

zona State University, said

Australopithecus

time periods in the human

in Nature, researchers pres-

fossil record." The period is important

ent a new reconstruction of Homo habilis, the former oldest because it represents the known example of the genus. gap between the time when In what's believed to be a more Australopithecus (the genus accurate reconstruction of the thatindudes individuals like

skull of the species, the shape

the famous Lucy, a member was surprisingly primitive. of the species A. afarensis) This may further indicate that flourishedand when Homo

the first ancestor of the genus

hit the scene. But ironically, lineage appeared quite early, while researchers can find giving the genus time to diversiclear evidence of Australo- fy into multiple species — some pithecus 3 million years ago more distinctly "human" from and multiple, co-existing the ape-like Australopithecus species of Homo 2 million than others — by the time habiyears ago, they don't usually lis came along. find much in between. This new fossil isn't just

These discoveries, the re-

searchers said during a news special because it falls into teleconference, help narrow the right date range, how- down the period during which ever. The piece of lower jaw, archaeologi sts should search whichwas found in the Afar for clues about the transition region of Ethiopia, shares from ape to man. Visit Central Oregon's

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director and basketball coach, "I think it's a little worse be-

cause there's a happening."

b a cklash Mill

I Carli Krueger/The Bulletin

Legislature Continued from A1

and wouldtherefore require some bipartisan support.

Unless Democrats gained a Republican vote in the House, money of Oregonians when the only way revenue could they go to the gas pump. Not be raised for transportation one dime for a road. Not one would be through a referendime for a bridge. And to what dum, where voters historically end?" McLane said. reject tax increases. "The decision is (Brown's)," "I cannot understand it. I McLane said later, referring to do not, I don't understand it," whether the governor would said Rep. Cliff Bentz, R-Onsign the bill. tario, who was a member of an She said when asked last eight-member work group dismonth that she supports the cussing transportation. "The bill but refrained from saying need for bridges and roads whether she would sign it. and streets in my area is huge. "For me, clean fuels trans- I don't get it." lates into cleaner air for OreThe Department of Envigonians. I think that's a good ronmental Quality estimated thing," Brown said last month. the full low-carbon fuels proRepublicans had hoped to gram could increase the price block the bill by highlight- of a gallon of fuel between 4 ing the potential increases in cents and 19 cents by 2025. the price of gas once suppli- Republicans now say they are ers change fuel blends or buy unwilling to couple that with a credits and pass the costs onto gastaxincrease. consumers. During the debate WednesRepublicans also said the day, lawmakers developed program would have little im- a theme that there were two pact on climate change, and Oregons, one urban and one the money generated through ruraL the carbon credit program Two Democrats said during would go to out-of-state com- the debate they were conpanies and not to building and cerned the potential cost inrepairing roads. creasesofthe program would But Democrats said low-car- disproportionately impact rubon fuel standards will mark ral Oregonians who have less another step toward fighting access to public transportation global climate change. and have todrive greater dis"We should do what we're tances for work. "It's little wonder that so capable of doing to address it every chance we have," many rural Oregonians have said Rep. Peter Buckley, so many problems with this "We are about to spend the

Bill in Salem —Senate Bill 324 would allow the state to require fuel suppliers to decreasecarbon intensity for most fuel sold in Oregon by10 percent in a decade. Sponsors:Sen. LeeBeyer, D-Eugene; Sen.Michael Dembrow, D-Portland; Sen. Sara Gelser, D-Corvallis; Sen. Chris Edwards, D-Eugene History:The standards are modeled on those in California, which has put its program in placeand studied some of the costs. Republicans say the price of a gallon of gas would rise under the program, though researchers say it's difficult to predict by how much. What's next:After passing the House 31-29, the bill is

now headed toGov.Kate Brown's desk. Online:Readthe bill at http://bit Jy/1CGllf7

egon to universities to study solutions to climate change. That measure failed along party lines. "The costs of this bill are local, real an d

i m mediate,"

tain, long-term and will mostly go to those outside of Oregon."

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Buehler said. "And unfortunately the benefits are uncer-

a f a r ensis,

Wednesday. "Ironically, it is could not." one of the least well-known In a related paper published

ect director at the National

Center for Lesbian Rights, who is assisting Varona in transferring to another college. As more states legalize same-sex marriage, said Car-

and difficult to live in, and some have suggested that this

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er the program was, indeed, a taxhike. "The answer is no," wrote Dexter Johnson, legislative

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ocrats to figure out how to get Democrats who also vot- the transportation talks back ed against the bill were Reps. on the rails. Deborah Boone, of Cannon Kotek said in a statement Beach; Jeff Barker, of Aloha; Tuesday that lawmakers need and Caddy McKeown, of Coos to get past the bill and work on Bay. transportation. "Oregonians need us to put Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, voted against the measure and partisan differences aside said during debate that "global and come up with a transporclimate change surely is real," tation package that will get but that the program was "nei- much-needed projects done D-Ashland. bill and can't understand why ther smart nor effective" at throughout our state, put peoRepublicans now say they the other Oregon continues to combatingthechange. ple to work, and maintain the are no longer talking with inflict so much economic pain He said he would have pre- infrastructure we have," her Democrats about a transpor- upon them," said Rep. Brad ferred the proposed move by statement read. tation package that would Witt, D-Clatskanie, who voted Republicans to divert money — Reporter: 406-589-4347, likely include a gas-tax hike against the bill. from the Energy Trust of Ortanderson@bendbulletin.com

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

COCC

president, James Middleton, retired in September.

Continued from A1

Miksa is the vice president

The board met Monday to of academic and student afdiscuss next steps but did not fairs at McHenry County Colmake a decision and plans to lege about 50 miles northwest continue that discussion Fri- of Chicago. He was selected day. Options include redoing over two o t her c andidates: the search, revisiting other Leah Bornstein, president of

Bird Continued from A1 Other steps include lim-

iting the number of people who visit the birds, keeping n ew birds away f rom t h e

flock for30 days before introducing them to the coop

candidates or making an interim appointment, according to Ron Paradis, the director of college relations. "We are very disappointed as we felt Dr. Miksa would be

Coconino Community College in Flagstaff, Arizona, and

and not borrowing tools and

Jimmie Bruce, vice president

owners. Benoit also said bird own-

an outstanding president for

Jerrilee Mosier, chancellor of Ivy Tech Community Col-

COCC," Laura Craska Cooper, board chairwoman, said in a statement. "Having seen the tremendous talent and dedication of faculty, staff and the board during the search process, I'm confident that COCC is in a position of strength

of academicsuccess atNorthw est Vista College in S an Antonio. Another candidate, lege-Northeast in Fort Wayne, Indiana, withdrew her name before the board announced its decision.

Democrat, has been la r gely

Continued from A1

skeptical of trade

"The president and I have

Cash. The downtown Bend

The fifth annual tour of chicken coops around Bend isstill looking for more coops to highlight. People interested in having their coop included in the tour should contact RebeccaCharlton at

boutique is the title sponsor

541-678-5162.

coop tour this year will include shoe-washing stations at each stop, she said, "because you don't want to

for the tour. Due to the bird f lu, t he

s pread sickness from o n e

person's coop to another person's coop." Having owned chickens for three years, Charlton said she, like other chicken owners around Central Or-

egon, has been studying up recently on bird flu and taking the steps recommended by agriculture officials.

Source: Oregon Department of Agriculture

nesses, Benoit said. She noted that the strain of bird flu

" The worst thing i n t h e world would to be to go out

detected in Central Oregon

Bird flu's appearance in but the organizers decided to your coop and find a dead Central Oregon nearly post- this week to hold the early chicken," Charlton said.

is not a risk to people, cats or

p oned an a n nual t ou r

dogs.

chicken coops around Bend,

of

May event. The fifth annual

— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarlinglbendbulletin.com

Bend's Chicken Coop Tour

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deals. W y den said his addition-

talked a number of times about this. We are very much

Wyden

committed (to) getting trade done right."

at answering concerns from

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f ellow Democrats for m o re

Obama is one signal of how much a White House not

public accountability in trade agreements.

c ourtship of

shoes. These tips could also promestic birds from other ill-

Wyden

known for it s

with them," she said of the tect chickens and other do-

BEND'SCHICKEN COOP TOUR

CHICK RAISINGANDBIRD FLU The Oregon Department of Agriculture is set to hold presentations about chick raising and bird flu later this month in Bend and Prineville. Bensl: 6 p.m. March 17 atthe BendWilco at 2717 East U.S. Highway 20, Bend. Prineville:10a.m.March 21 atthe Prineville Wilco at1225 NW Gardner Road, Prineville.

ers should have a designated pair of shoes they use when entering their coop. "They stay at home and you don't do anything else

Miksa was named the top

4 p.m. May 9, said Rebecca Charlton, owner of Cowgirl

The tour is set for10 a.m. to 4 p.m. May 9,with guide books selling for $10. Proceeds go to charity. The bookswill be available in late April at Cowgirl Cash, Newport Market and High Desert Ranch andHome.

equipment from other bird

choice early last month. At the

time, Paradis said the board and will continue to provide a had a second choice it was quality, supportive education- keeping under consideration al experience for students and should Miksa fall through. He members of the community." declined to say who the secThis is the second consec- ond choice is. "We're working with our utive year the board has conducted a searchfor college consultant on that option," president. Lastyear,the board Paradis said Wednesday. picked Patrick Lanning, an adThis is the second shake-up ministrator from Chemeketa in COCC administration in Community College in Salem, a week. Last Friday, Charles as the finalist. The board lat- Abasa-Nyarko, the college's er learned Lanning had been vice president for instruction, accused of raping a colleague resigned after less than two and placed on administrative years on the job. On Tuesday, leave, a fact he did not disclose M etcalf a n nounced D i a na to COCC. Shirley Metcalf was Glenn, who retired as dean of made interim president for instruction in 2011, had agreed the current school year while to fill the role on an interim bathe board conducted another sis through June. Glenn was a search. faculty member and dean at Metcalf previously served COCC for 25 years. as the college's dean of extend— Reporter: 541-617-7837, ed learning. COCC's previous aspegman@bendbullet in.com

is set to run from 10 a.m. to

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

BRIEFING School board seeks applicants The RedmondSchool District is accepting applications for three openings onits school board. Applications are due March19. The board hasfive members, electedto serve overlapping fouryear terms asnonsalaried trustees of theschool district. Membersare responsible for quality of education anddistrict policy-making. Any registered voterwho has been aresident within the school district for one year immediately preceding the Mayelection and who is notanemployee of the district is eligible to

serve as aboard member. Applications are available from 8a.m. to 5 p.m. at the DeschutesCounty Clerk's Office,1300 NW Wall St., Suite 202, in

Bend. Thefiling period closes March19 at 5p.m. Elections for thepositions will be May19.Questions about the boardshould be directed toTrish Huspek at 541-923-8247.

Fire damages Bendhome

Reservoir ro ect must start over • Deschutes Countycommissionersuphold reversal of pastdecision inTumalo By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

KC Development Group and the Tumalo Irrigation District will have to start over

on their water reservoir project northeast of Bend.

Deschutes County commissioners agreed on Wednesday that transferring water to two

reservoirs lastsummer needed to meet additional conditions before being approved. The reservoirs don't have to completely go away, but KC Development andthe

irrigation district will have to obtain conditional use per-

Potential waterstorage KC DevelopmentGroupandTumalo Irrigation District will haveto secure conditional usepermits before storing water at two reservoirs northwest of Bend.

u ai

same conclusion. TomaloReservoir Rd.

The project included and placing a lining on the bottom. A permit was not obtained for the change and should have been, the board

neededforrecreation atthe

The Bend City Council

STA )E

welcomed a proposal to

PARK

determined. The commissioners also found that a permit would be

The Bulletin

u TumaloCreekRd,r

replacetheMirrorPond Dam and develop sec-

New storage reservoirs

tions of the riverfront at a

Wednesday night meeting, though concerns were

site. Water skiing took place there over the summer, the

raised about the future

board concluded, but would need to be approved through areview process instead of allowed outright.

cost of maintaining the Deschutes River. The council's reaction,

which did not entail any formal action, followed

The site is off of Johnson

The board's action affirms

project as a way to save water

was kept at the tw o r eser-

a decision made in December

because of the leaky nature of the Upper Tumalo Reservoir.

voirs, the amount needed to would pay the district $6,250 irrigate 22 acresoffarmland. per year to store the water. KC De v elopment, the SeeReservoir/B6

About 125 acre-feet of water

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

company that owns the site,

devising a plan for the fu-

e w ar o

e n s in s r i n

CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineville, OR 97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration© co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us

Crook County Court • Mike McCabe (Crcgk Countyjudge) Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe© co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgrett Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@ co.crook.or.us • Seth Grawford Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: seth.crawford© co.crook.or.us JEFFERSON COUNTY 66SE D St., Madras,OR 97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson. OI'.Us

Jefferson County Commission •MikeAhern,Mae Huston, WayneFording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email:commissioner© co.lefferson.or.us

The vision proposes replacing the aging PacifiCorp hydroelectric dam and filling in small pockets of Mirror Pond to deter future silt buildup,

a process which is threatening the appearance of the iconic Bend attraction.

Instead of a dam, the ad hoc committee envisions a structure that resembles a

natural rapids and maintains the pond's current water level.

SeeCouncil /B2

Future of conservation funds unsure By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — Inte-

rior Secretary Sally Jewell pressed Senate appropriators Wednesday to approve the Obama administra-

tion's 2016budget request of $13.2 billion for the agency, including $900 million Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Deschutes County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email:TammyBaney© co.deschules.orus • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@ co.deschutes.or.us • TonyDBBone, R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email:Tony DeBone@ o. deschutes.ol.us

Victor Chudowsky, two members of the ad hoc ture of the pond.

— Bulletin staffeports

DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR 97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

a presentation by Bend Park & Recreation District Executive Director Don Horton and City Councilor committee charged with

Cigarettes thrown away in aplastic container sparked afire Wednesdaythatcaused about $1,000 inestimated damagesto a home and contents onBend's south side. No onewasinjured, according to anewsrelease from theBendFire Department. Bend firefighters arrived at 20337Sonata Way about 2:30p.m. and found light smoke coming from therearof the houseand neighbors using a gardenhoseto spray water on afire on the rear patio, according to the newsrelease. The fire hadbrokena windowand wasspreading into thehome.Firefighters put out theblaze, confining thedamageto the living roomandpatio, according to therelease.

PUBLICOFFICIALS

praised, questioned By Tyler Leeds

tiPPER NALO RESERl/ IR

Source: Tumalo Irrigation District

by a Deschutes County hearings officer who reached the

proposal

constructing the reservoirs

Road and is about 80 acres. The irrigation district saw the

mits before storing water at the site.

Pond

This is a view looking south over Discovery Park, Bend's newest park, located in the NorthWest Crossing neighborhood. It will include an

off-leash dog park and3-acre lake.

• West BendProperty sells, donatesland for community park inNorthWest Crossing By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

The Canada geese have already discovered Discovery Park; humans and canines must wait until May.

Developed on land sold and donated by West Bend Property Co. in the NorthWest

12 acres for about $1.9 million, said Lindsey Lombard, park district finance director. The

purchase money came from property taxes collected by the district. The district made another

district and sold the remaining

Connection to trail system >z

NorthWest Crossing donated land to Bend Parks 8 Recreation for a new community park west of the subdivision. The new park includes a lake, trail links and an off-leash dog park.

"This is, dollar for dollar, one of the most effective government programs we have," Jewell told members of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related

Agencies, including Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.

Lake

I•

Lakeside path

First enacted in 1964, the Land and Water Conservation Fund uses gas and

oil receipts from drilling on the outer continental shelf

to conserve national parks, forests, wildlife refuges,

Zy

$3.33 million worth of improvements to the park, money

Crossing subdivision, Discovthat came from system develery Park at 15 acres will be one opment charges collected from of the city's larger community developers, Lombard said. Another 17acres ofadjacent, parks, said Brian Hudspeth, construction manager for undeveloped land willbe addBend Park 5 Recreation ed to the park after five years, District. said David Ford general manOpening day is set for ager of NorthWest Crossing. That's 32 acresforthepriceof spring, after the landscaping has had time to take hold. 12, he said. The park includes a 3-acre The 10-foot-wide trail paved lake that's 15 feet deep in placin asphalt through the park is es and a fenced-in, landscaped, part of a trail that will eventuoff-leash dog park of about 1.75 ally link Shevlin Parkto the acres. A small, natural play north with the West Bend Trail area fashioned from logs and along Skyliners Road to the pink welded tuff is situated south. next to apavilion on the lake's Youngtrees, includingponsouth end. derosa and lodgepole pine, The lake, filled with about maple, aspen, birch, oak and 4million gallons of water mountain ash, still just a few pumped from a 455-foot-deep feet high, dot the expansive on-site well, as well as runoff lawn. Sod grass makes up the from the surrounding area, area around the lake; the park's willbe open to reasonable rec- south end is seeded. The sod, reational use, Hudspeth said. laid down in November, is alThe lake serves as a natural ready taking hold. The seeded drainageforstormwater cours- portion will need time. "By July, people willbe able ing in from north and south. "At this point in time, we're tobe out on the sod," Hudspeth not goingto restrict use of the said. 'We'll probably have lake, per se," he said during a to keep them off this (seedsite tour last week. ed area) until the following West Bend Property Co. summer." donated the lake acreage to the

Newpark opens inMay

for Land and Water Conservation Fund projects.

r et DQQ <'"'a

Doc

Lawn

wilderness and Civil War

battlefields, and to develop and support state and local parks. SeeFunds/B5

Q u E Hightakes~

gP-

lemsstsr

Nature

school

playgarea

~ ~0 Discovery

Pavilion/ restr~o.om

Officers

0

receive crisis training

park

Sk liners Rd.

Concrete entry plaza

Drainage cgrrldgr

The Bulletin

Connection to trail system

Lawn

Sidewalk

Fenced dog park

Dryland platttmg/ native pumice surface

NW CrossingDr. Connection tg trail system

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

By Claire Withycombe

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Before Central Oregon law enforcement can become certified in crisis intervention, they must work with a certain lady with quite a few water bottles.

Hillary Hurst, a chemical dependency specialist at Sage View Psychiatric Center, played the role of a woman undergoing a manic bipolar episode as part of a 40-hour training course in recognizing and responding to people experiencing a mental health crisis held in Bend last week. SeeTraining/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

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

$16 for students and seniors; 2nd St. Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S "THE WIZARD OFOZ":A SHOW:Featuring gear and more performance of the classic musical for outdoor sports enthusiasts of by the MVHS Music and Drama all ages; noon; $10, $5 for children departments; 7:30 p.m.; $8, free for ages 6 to16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and children 6 and younger; Mountain Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; 541-355-4400. Redmond; www.thesportshows. com/shows/central-oregon or HOPE NFEARARTSHOW:Music, 503-246-8291. visual art and more, headlined by B. Dolan and Rubedo; 8 p.m.; $8; COMMUNITY RESOURCEFAIR: Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Featuring health organizations, Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329. activities, parenting information, food and more; free; 5-8 p.m.; FAIRY BONES: The Phoenix rock RedmondProficiencyAcademy, band performs, with Don Quixote; 2105 W. Antler Ave.; http:// 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theater, 70 t, pe,~p, . <i,, +tt,, www2.redmond.k12.or.us/isc/, SW Century Drive, Bend; www. hillary kirk©rpacademy.org or volcanictheatrepub.com or Submitted photo 541-633-0311. 541-323-1881. Hobo Nephews of Uncle Frank plays at 7 tonight at McMenamins BILLYSTRINGS& DON JULIN:The Old St. Francis School in Bend. folk and bluegrass duo perform; FRIDAY 7 p.m.; $20; String Theory Music, 541-504-3600. 541-389-0803. 1291 NW Wall St., Bend; www. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTSMEN'S stringtheorymusicbend.com/ or "COMEDY OFERRORS": "GONE GIRL":A screening of SHOW:Featuring gear and more 541-678-0257. A performance of William for outdoor sports enthusiasts of the 2014 psychological thriller; all ages; noon; $10, $5 for children Shakespeare's shortest comedy; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, "THE DROPBOX": The story of 7 p.m.; $5, $3 for seniors and Jefferson County Library, 134 SE Lee Jong-rak, a pastor dedicated to ages 6 to16, free for children 5 and embracing and protecting hundreds younger; Deschutes County Fair and students; Crook County High School, E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, 1100 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 41-475-3351. of newborn babies abandoned 541-416-6900. Redmond; www.thesportshows. on the Streets of Seoul, South "THE WIZARD OFOZ":A com/shows/central-oregon or Korea; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old THE RUMANDTHESEA:The performance of the classic musical 503-246-8291. Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 folk-rock band performs; 7-9 p.m.; by the MVHS Music and Drama SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW FIRST FRIDAY ARTWALK: Event departments; 7:30 p.m.; $8, free for 541-312-2901. includes art exhibit openings, artist Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. children sixand younger; Mt. View talks, live music, wine and food in "COMEDY OFERRORS": High School, 2755 NE 27th St., "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTO downtown Bend and the Old Mill A performance of William Bend; 541-355-4400. BABY JANE?":A play about Jane, District; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. her older sister, Blanche, and a Shakespeare's shortest comedy; 7 p.m.; $5, $3 for seniors and AUTHOR!AUTHOR!:Ann Patchett, suspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; $19, SATURDAY students; Crook County High author of "The Patron Saint of Liars," $16 for students and seniors; 2nd School, 1100 SELynn Blvd., UPSCALE INDOORGARAGE SALE: will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; Bend High St. Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Prineville; 541-416-6900. An indoor garage sale including School, 230 NESixth St.; www. Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com. dplfoundation.org or 541-312-1027. more than 30 tables, to benefit The HOBO NEPHEWS OFUNCLE "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A RonaldMcDonald House in Bend; FRANK:The Americana brother duo HAMLET:A performance of the playabouta man consumed with 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old classic Shakespeare play bythe preserving and documenting 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; St.FrancisSchool,700 NW Bond Ridgeview theater department; 7 languages who is at a loss for 541-526-1876. St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com. p.m.; $10, $5 for children in grades 6 words when it comes to his own "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTO to12, $3 for grades 5 andyounger; life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S Ridgeview High School,4555SW BABY JANE?":A play about Jane, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, SHOW:Featuring gear and more for her older sister, Blanche, and a Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; outdoor sports enthusiasts of all suspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.; $19, ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or www.cascadestheatrical.org or ages; 10 a.m.; $10, $5 for children

TODAY

Organizations inCentral Oregon get grants fromFacebookcenter The Facebook data center attractions in order increase dinics for Crook County chilin Prineville on Wednesday tourism. dren ages 1-5 years old. • Heart of Oregon Corps announced the recipients of its • Crook County Foundation 2015 Local Community Action — $5,000 to help hire perform- Inc. — $9,000 to help fund four Grants. ers and bands so the annual crews of local youth for eight An e m ployee committee Picnic in the Park celebration weeks of summer employment. • Humane Society of the picked 22 applications to re- can remain free to the public. • Crook County H i g h Ochocos —$5,000 forsecurity ceive a total of $100,000 in grants. The data center anSchool — $2,500 for a venue and floodlights at the shelter. • Oregon MayorsAssocianounced the recipients on its for the alcohol- and drug-free Facebook page: 2015 High School Senior All tion — $2,700 for the "If I were M ayor" contest, which i n • Advantage Smiles for Night Party. Kids — $3,000 for orthodontic • Crook County High School cludes elementary, middle and treatment for low-income, at- (Computer Science Class)highschool students. • Prineville Honey Bee risk children inCrook County. $2,000 to purchase 30 licenses Brace Place of Central Oregon so studentscan access the self- Haven — $5,000 for the new will match the award as inpaced CODE HS program for Prineville Honey Bee Haven kind treatment. the 2015/2016school year. garden, a community resource • Crook County H i g h that will offer learning oppor• Big Brothers Big Sisters of Crook County — $2,520 to School (Science Department) tunities to children of all ages. • Re demption H ouse hire a local Web designer to — $10,000 for equipment to update website, making it a us- add both aconceptual chem- $3,500 for a security system for er-friendly tool for volunteers, istrycourse and off er yearly the organization, the only shelfamilies and children. physics classes. ter for women and children in • Central Oregon Trail Alli• Crook County Historical Crook County. ance — $7,500 to assist in con- Society — $2,621 to assist in • Rimrock Trails Adolescent struction of the new Prinevilie digitizing the Crook County Treatment Services— $8,659 Bike Park and obtain addition- Journal from 1901 through for four smart TVs for use in al grants from other sources. 1921so Crook County can par- conference and group therapy • Christmas in the Pinesticipate in the Oregon Historic rooms. • Soroptimist International $5,000 for further enhance- Newspapers program. • Crook County School of Prineville Charitable Trust ment of the lighting and speaker systemsof the local holiday District (Special Education)(Prineville Senior Center)event. $4,000topurchase the technol- Donation of three computers • Crook C o unty 4 - H ogy needed to help special edu- for gueststo use for research, $3,000 for tablets and acces- cation students learn alongside Internet browsing and to consories, which will enable 4-H their nondisabled peers. nect better with family and • Crooked River Roundupyouth to accesseducational refriends. • Younity (formerly Serensources,fulfill record-keeping $5,000 for national-level rodeo requirements and more. acts and athletes, to improve dipity West Foundation)• Crook County Chamber grandstand seating and to $5,000 for bullying-prevention of Commerce — $7,500 to help make electrical upgrades. programming in Crook Coun• Healthy Beginnings put on the 4th of July celebraty Middle School and Powell tion and to develop a new web- $1,500 for support of two health Butte Charter School. site that highlights regional and developmentalscreening — Bulletin staff report

Council

T he vast majority of t h e details have yet to be worked

Continued from B1 According to the plan, some of the work would be paid for by selling or leasing riverfront property controlled by the

out, in part because negoti-

to begin designing the project in greater detail and conduct

ations with P acifiCorp ar e

economic studies.

on-going. "If PacifiCorp doesn't play ball, the whole plan will need city, the park district and the to change," Horton said. "We electric utility. A large share need them in our camp, and to of the land slated for develop- date they have been." ment is currently two parking Councilor Doug K n ight lots. praised the proposal, and said Councilor Nathan Boddie he hopes the City Council recsaid he was concerned Bend's ognizes Mirror Pond's importaxpayers would be on the tance to the community and hook for removing the old "is very deserving of maintedam, re-dredging siltation nance money." and maintaining the new Knight also noted the sale structure, obligations Boddie and leasing of land should said could be "disastrous" to help to fund any work needed the city's finances. to keep the river in shape. "I have misgivings, but At its March 18 meeting, they're not fatal ones, espe- the council is scheduled to cially at this early stage," Bod- formally consider a resolution die said. endorsing the plan and to au-

thorize the ad hoc committee

In other business, City Manager Eric King offered

ages 6 to 16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www. thesportshows.com/shows/ central-oregon or 503-246-8291. LATINO DANCE FESTIVAL: Learn ladies' salsa styling, in salsa,

bachata andmerengue in one-hour workshops, to benefit the Latino Club Scholarship Fund, workshops noon to 4:45 p.m.,socialdance and performance 6:30-9 p.m.; 12-9 p.m.; $5; Wille Hall, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ Latino-Events or 541-318-3726. HAMLET:A performance of the classic Shakespeare play by the Ridgeview theater department; 2 and 7 p.m.; $10, $5 for children in grades 6 to12, $3 for grades 5 and younger; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.ridgeviewhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-504-3600. "CHAMBER MUSIC": A play about a mental hospital in the1930s where eight women must fight for their freedom, recommended for children middle school aged and older;2and 7p.m.; $10, $8 for students; Victor School of Performing Arts, 2700 NE Fourth St., ¹210, Bend; 541-419-5558. CASCADECHORALECONCERT: Featuring "W.A. Mozart: The Man & His Music" performed by the chorale; 3 p.m. donations accepted; Nativity Lutheran Church, SE Brosterhous Road, Bend; www.cascadechorale.org or 541-647-8720. "COMEDY OFERRORS": A performance of William Shakespeare's shortest comedy;

7 p.m.; $5, $3 for seniors and students; Crook County High School, 1100 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-416-6900. "A 'WILD' NIGHT IN BEND": Featuring two films, "Only the Essential" and "The Meaning of

Wild," celebrating the Pacific Crest Trail and the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act; 7 p.m.; $10; The Old Stone Church,157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-389-9531. "WHAT EVERHAPPENEDTO BABY JANE?":A play about Jane, her older sister, Blanche, and a suspicious accident; 7:30 p.m.;

$19, $16 for students andseniors; 2nd St. Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE":

A playaboutamanconsumed with preserving and documenting languages who is at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE WIZARD OFOZ":A performance of the classic musical by the MVHS Music and Drama departments; 7:30 p.m.; $8, free for children six and younger; Mt. View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; 541-355-4400. CARAVAN OFGLAM: ThePortland

gay cabaret showcomesto Bend with burlesque, acrobats, live singers and more; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

SUNDAY CENTRALOREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring gear and more for outdoor sports enthusiasts of all ages; 10 a.m.; $10, $5 for children ages 6to16, free for children 5 and younger; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.thesportshows. com/shows/central-oregon or 503-246-8291.

Find It All Online

NEWSOF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch arequest is received.Anynewinformation, such as thedismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT

reported at916a m. March 3,inthe area of N.MainStreet andSecond Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at12:37 p.m.March 3, inthe area of N.MainStreet andSeventh Street. DUII —Robert Brock, 54, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 2:59 p.m. March3, intheareaof NEElm Street.

Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:28 p.m.Feb.6,inthe63400 blockofU.S. Highway 97. BEND FIRE RUNS Theft — Atheft was reportedandan arrest madeat 3:50 p.m. March 2,in Monday the1600 block of NE Third Street. 5:45 p.m. —Unauthorized burning, PRINEVILLE area of AaronWay. POLICE 30 —Medical aid calls. DEPARTMENT Tuesday

Vehicle crash — Anaccident was

25 —Medical aid calls.

bendbulletin.com

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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

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All proceeds benefit: obe '

TR I VIA B E E Celebrating 10 Years!

EDUCATION FOUNDATION FOR BEHD-LA PINESCHOOLS

Saturday, March 14, 2015 - 6 pm Tower Theatre - Tickets $21 tOWertheatre.org ( 2 1 and OVer eVent)

an update on the status of the

city's reworking of its policies governing vacation home rentals. The Planning Commission is scheduled to deliberate Monday on a set of rec-

ommendations designed by a volunteer task force.

Title Sponsors

EIIRTH IO.

SGA

certtfled publt«atxountants 8 consultants

The city is scheduled to host

a hearing March 30, which King said will be held at the Deschutes County Administration Building in order to

accommodate the anticipated crowd. Thecouncil will deliberate on what policies to adopt at its April 1meeting. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

Scoreboard Sponsor:

BEND RESEARCH' ACHIEVE VAi.ueTHROUGH SCIENCE

Round Sponsors: MODA Health Bluefish Dental Deschutes Brewery Miller Lumber

Media Sponsors: Nosler Inc. Selco Community Credit Union Umpqua Bank US Bank

The Bulletin The Source Weekly Cascade Publications Horizon Broadcasting Group


THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

ommission ssu ra e e, merican n ianc ie sa ues By Sheila V Kumar SALEM — Nez Perce leader

Chief Joseph and pioneering woman rights activist Abigail Scott Duniway should replace two other symbols of Oregon

the inventor Thomas Edison.

California replaced Civil War abolitionist Thomas Starr King

among the statues on display at The Statuary Hall tributions t o

,:l'

with a bronze statue of Ronald Regan in 2006.

/

commission, created by former Gov. John Kitzhaber last

Oregon's

S t udy

Commission decided it was time to update Oregon's con-

Q

r

Statuary Hall Collection in Washington, D.C., where each as symbols. The final decision on which statues will be representing Oregon still rests with state lawmakers. Since 1953, Oregon's two fig-

longest-serving senator in Oregon's history. It i n stead

ures have been pioneer Jason

Lee, a 19th century missionary who founded what became W illamette U n iversity, a n d

l

known as the father of Oregon.

"Much more Oregon his-

Denis Paquin/The Associated Press file photo

A statue of Oregon pioneer Rev. Jason Lee in the Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill, can be seen in the House Chamber in Washington D.C. A commission tasked with evaluating which two statues Oregon should send to the National Statuary Hall Collection to replace statues of Lee and John McLoughlin made their final recommen-

two equally worthy individuals who representdifferent chapters in Oregon's history," said Jerry Hudson, chair of the dations Wednesday. commission. So the commission decided to recommend that the Mc-

ure," said Amy Platt, a project and publisher of "The New Loughlin and Lee statues come manager at the Oregon Histor- Northwest," a newspaper deback to Oregon, and that they ical Society. voted to women's rights. She "I would say that most also wrote the Oregon Woman be replaced by Chief Joseph

a band of the Nez Perce that was forcibly removed from the

Wallowa Valley by the U.S. government. Joseph's band was among those that resisted

removal during the 1877 Nez Perce War.

Chief Joseph is "Oregon's only truly mythical heroic fig-

HILLSBORO — Three days

spoke in favor of keeping them in their current homes during a public hearing preceding the commission's vote, induding one man who testified as though he were McLoughlin himself. The commission has been gathering input from scholars and the public about who best represents Oregon, and

the cause of death, but the af-

fidavit suggests they believe

He said he parked, got out and didn't look back. He had

Mother blamesdeputies, stun guns insuit The Associated Press

from jail just a few days before. When Deputy Sam Clayton responded, McKelvey told him he didn't call the sher-

Kelvey yelled for help. "Several w i t nesses were

at the scene and also reported that McKelvey was crywho died during an encounter ing out for help," the lawsuit with law enforcement officers iff's office. Instead, he asked says. "Some witnesses even has sued the Douglas County Clayton for a ride to the local begged the deputies to stop Sheriff's Office, saying depu- casino. discharging their T asers." tiesused excessiveforce. The deputy denied the The lawsuit does not identify The federal lawsuit f i led request and tried to leave. the witnesses. in Eugene on behalf of Ann McKelvey, however, flagged McKelvey stopped breathMcKelvey, who represents him down, saying he was be- ing at the scene. An autopsy the estate, says deputies dis- ing harassed by people. The found that meth intoxication, charged Tasers at least a half deputy saw no one harassing a brain cyst and excited delirium — a condition in which dozen times when trying to McKelvey. stop Walter Ray McKelvey, Another deputy, Jayson the heart races during a peri26, from running into traffic Forte, arrived. As Forte con- od of stress,often after drug on March 3, 2013, including f erred w it h C l a y ton, M c - use — caused McKelvey's after he was restrained and Kelvey went to the edge of the death. told deputies his heart hurt. road and tried to hitch a ride The lawsuit says the depuM cKelvey's a t t orney, J . to the casino. ties should have known not to Randolph Pickett, declined The deputies went to the use a Taser on someone who comment Wednesday. The street to speak with McKel- had taken meth. sheriff's office did not imme- vey, who toldthem he had A grand jury ruled in 2013 diately return a phone mes- used methamphetamine ear- that the force used against sage seeking comment. lier in the evening. McKelvey w a s leg a l ly According to the complaint Forte tried to pull McKel- justified. and prior news accounts, vey away from the street, but The lawsuit seeks an unthe case began when Walter he broke away and went into specified amount of money McKelvey called police for traffic, leading the deputies to for the beneficiaries of McKelvey's estate, including his parhelp from Ray's Food Place fire their stun guns. on Main Street in CanyonMcKelvey f e l l to the ents, two daughters and a son. ville, which is 200 miles south ground, and the deputies got Besides the sheriff's office, of Portland. McKelvey had on top of him. The complaint the lawsuit names the depumany prior run-ins with au- says deputies continued firing ties and Taser International thorities and w a s r e leased their Tasers, even after Mc- Inc. as defendants. PORTLAND — The mother of a southern Oregon man

Fatal hOuSe fire —Authorities said an early-morning house fire killed three peoplenear Brookings. Curry County Sheriff JohnWard said the blazewas reported Wednesdayshortly before 4 a.m. A Brookings police officer was first on thescene. Hesawa10-year-old girl walking awayfrom afully engulfed mobile home while holding an infant who had serious burns. Thesheriff said 54-year-old Douglas Landers had helped the10-year-old crawl through asmall bedroomwindow and then handedherthe baby. Landers, however,could not make it out. Also killed were52-year-old Kelly Landers andthe couple's 4-year-old granddaughter. Wardsaid thetwo survivors wereflown to a hospital. The babywaslater transferred to a hospital in Sacramento, California. The cause ofthefire remains under investigation, but the sheriff says aspace heater might be toblame. Themother of the children wasnot home whenthe fire started, but she flew to Sacramentowith the baby.

it narrowed a list of 10 candi-

— From wire reports

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet • ss • •

-

i e ClassIfleds

0

after the death of a 6-month- it was related to the tempera- lunch with a co-worker and old girl left for six hours in a ture in the car, The Oregonian went to meetings. Later in car last fall with the windows reported. the day, his wife called him rolled up, Hillsboro police did No charges have been filed. and said she was on her way an experiment. Prosecutors in W a s hington to pick up their kids. He still With the weather slightly County are waiting for ev- didn't realize what he'd done, cooler than it had been when idence analysis at a f ederal he told police. the girl died, they parked the crime laboratory. His wife called him a second car in the same spot in an Intel According to the affidavit, time when Jillian wasn't at the Corp. parking lot and left it. Joshua Freier, 38, left work day care. Then Freier ran outAfter two hours, the outside to go to daughter Jillian's side to find her not breathing, temperatureranged from 58 6-month checkup and then her lips blue. Attempts to reto 64 degrees. Inside the car, it drove her from the doctor's vive the girl failed. was 116. appointment. The affidavit says an ofThe test was described in a He was supposed to drop ficernoted Freier's face was search warrant affidavit un- her off at her day care, but he pale and he appeared to be in sealed 'Tuesday that provides told investigators he started to shock. It quoted him as saying: the first detailed look at the in- think about work and drove "I don't know what I'm going to vestigation of the Oct. 16 death. straight back to Intel's Jones say to my wife and son. I totalThe police haven't released Farm campus. ly forgot she was in my car."

By Steven Dubois

Bakery fined —An Oregonworkplace safetyagency has imposed a fine of more than$28,000 on aPortland bakery where aworker's hand wascrushedinadoughchunkermachine.TheOregonOccupational Safety and Health Division saidWednesdaythat it cited Portland Specialty Baking for willful safety violations. The agency says the injured worker placed apiece of dough over asensor, lifted a machineguard andreachedintotherunningmachinewhendoughbecame jammed. The state agencysaysthe bakery had ahistory of similar injuries. OSHA cited thebusiness for not providing adequatetraining to workers, many of themnot nativeEnglish speakers. Thecompany has 30 days to appealthecitation.

dates down to four in December. Along with Hatfield, Chief Joseph and Duniway, former schoolchildren in the country Suffrage Proclamation in 1912, governor Tom McCall was a know his name, which is ex- said Eliza Canty-Jones, a pub- contender. It's unclear where the Mctraordinary," Platt said. lic outreach manager at OreDuniway, who lived from gon Historical Society. Loughlin and Lee statues will 1834-1915, was known as "the There are 90 men and 10 go if the Legislature decides to pioneer woman suffragist women in the National Statu- bring them home to Oregon. of the great Northwest." She ary Hall Collection. It wasn't Local communities and museand her family moved to Ore- until 2000 that Congress de- ums can apply to house them, gon in a wagon train, and she cided states could switch out said Kerry7ymchuk, executive wrote about that experience in their statues. Seven states have director of the Oregon Histornovels. already done so, including ical Society and a non-voting For 16 years, she was editor Ohio, which is in the process member of the panel.

Affidavit unsealed inbabydeath The Associated Press

r e commended

both Lee and McLoughlin shouldbe returnedto"places of honor" in Oregon. Though the commission had already endorsed removal of the two statues, several people

John McLoughlin, a fur trader

Chief Joseph lived from 1840-1904 and was leader of

nin e -member

that of the late Mark Hatfield, World War II veteran and the

state has two figures to serve

and Duniway.

Veterin8ll8ll FStUlllS —A globe-trotting veterinarian held for six months in aSoutheast Asian country has returned to Portland, landing Wednesday night at Portland International Airport. StaceyAddison told reporters she's thrilled to bebackandthankful for all the support she received. Addison's mother, Bernadette Kero,Oregon lawmakers and U.S. officials worked towin her releasefrom EastTimor. The 41-year-old womanwasarrested in September after sharing ataxi with a stranger whoaskedthe driver to stop so hecould pick up apackage. Police stoppedthe vehicle, determined the packagecontained methamphetamineandtook everyone tojail. Addison wasreleased after a few days, but wasordered to remain in EastTimor during the investigation. In October, shewastaken to a women's prison despite not being charged with a crime.Shewas released from prison in late December, but she couldn't immediately leavebecauseauthorities kept her passport. She got it back onFriday.

August, was initially tasked with deciding whether Lee's statue should be replaced with

t h e N a t i onal

tory has been written, and it was time to send statues of

Bl'OWll 8ppOllltmOlltS —Gov.KateBrown hasaskedthe state Senate to approveherpredecessor's nominee to headthe Oregon Health Authority. TheSenate is scheduled to vote today onconfirming LynneSaxtonasheadoftheagency,whichoverseestheMedicaid program, public health, addiction treatment, the state hospital and more. Saxton wasappointed late last year by Gov.John Kitzhaber. The Senatehalted action on Kitzhaber's nomineeswhenheresigned two weeksago. Saxton waspreviously executive director of a social services organization for youth. She'sheadedthe HealthAuthority as its interim director sinceJanuary. Brown also requestedconfirmation of John Swetnam, aKitzhaber appointee tothe Psychiatric Security Review Board.

of replacing Governor William Allen, a 19th century congressman who supported the rights of southern slave owners, with

The Associated Press

the U.S. Capitol, apanel recommended on Wednesday.

AROUND THE STATE

'i

lf V

Oregon Community Credit Union is proud to sponsor a complimentary seminar hosted by the Oregon Community Investment Services Team and LPL Financial. When

Q Where

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling RiverCourt, Bend

Lunch Session: 12:00 p.m. - 1:30 p.m. Dinner Session: 5:45 p.m. - 7:15 p.m. Lunch and dinner will be provided

Learn the complexity of the retirement process, the importance of personal circumstances and how avoiding mistakes can be just as important as managing risk in retirement. o IRA rollovers o Withdrawing income Beneficiary planning

To reserve your seat: CAU. 541.382.1778 I E-MAIL Serninars@oregonCornmunityCU.org

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B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

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problem in the state of Oregon's supply of solutions. Three Deschutes County legCons i der this: There is almost a islators — State Sen. Tim Knopp c omplete lack of rental housing in and State Reps. Knute Buehler and Bend — not just affordable rental Gene Whisnant — are sponsoring h ousing — but all rental housing. Senate Bill 516. The bill is sched- The vacancy rate is less than 1 peruled for a public hearing today cent . T hat means that at any one e idea for the biII grew from time there are fewer than 18 units the peculiar way a state program available to rent at any rent level. for affordable housing works. The SB 5 1 6 would require that an Legislature set up the program. a m ount equal to 75 percent of the It is funded by a fee on real estate monies deposited in this state aftransactions. fordable housing program would be used for the benefit of the counDeschutesCounty has contrib uted about a quarter of the money ty where the fees were charged. for the program. Since 2009, it's Kno p p e xpects there will be put in about $4 million, Knopp told some negotiation about that 75 perus. cent figure. The state is not in the at's not so pecuiiar. But what habit of distributing state revenue if we toMyou that Deschutes Coun based on where the revenue came tygotbackonly$65p,pppinmoney from. It's the state. It's trytng to

make decisions on spending based

Does somebody at the state think there is no affordable housing problem here? There is. Ordotheythinkit'sjustnotserious? It is.

on the needs of the entire state. But if the state is not funding affordable housing solutions in the county with some of the most acute affordable housing problems, it's not trying hard enough.

DoNt pass new policy to kill the state kicker regon's income tax kicker law, enshrined in the state constitution in 2000, has its problems. Thatsaid, Oregonians do not deserve the full-throttle assault on the provision now taking place in the state Legislature. There are five — count them, five — measures that would repeal the kicker entirely or, in one case, limit it to $500: • Senate Joint Resolution 2 would amend the constitution to send the state's excess income-tax revenues to a new school fund. Today, if income tax revenue exceeds state projections by 2 percent, everything above the projection is returned to taxpayers. That would end under this measure. • House Joint Resolution 2 would amend the constitution to establish a state rainy day fund and send what are now personal kicker revenues to it. • HJR 8would simplyremove the kicker language from the constitution, eliminating the potential for rebate in the process. • HJR 18 also amends the constitution. While it would not eliminate the kicker, it would cap the rebate at $500.The remaining amount over

projections would go into an Oregon Fund. • HJ R 1 9, a co n s titutional amendment,would change the way revenue projections are made. Revenues that exceeded projections would go to a rainy day fund. We agree that the current kicker provision in the constitution is not perfect. It requires the state to estimate revenues every two years for the comingtwo years.When more than that amount comes in, the state keeps the extra — but only as long as revenues exceed projections by no more than 1.99 percent. Tip over to 2 percent extra, and everything abovetheprojection goes back Yet, projecting future income exactly is difficult, at best, as any business person will tell you. A better system would allowthe state to keep any overage through 1.99 percent even if the total is greater than that. Everything from 2 percent extra on up would gobackto taxpayers. Voters will get a chance to vote on any of these proposals that make it through both houses of the Legislature. That's a good thing. Better would be to have them die beforethey ever leaveSalem.

III l III"

M 1Vickel's Worth Why isforgiveness odd?

any circumstance? Your spouse,

the editor written by Marilyn Ber-

and his family did exactly what Sister Mary Catherine taught us in

your child, co-worker or boss'? nal of Terrebonne about "wild" How about a multimillion dollar horses. She thinks that feral horsnews anchor at the top of a world es should be "managed by knowlwide news agency holding a posi- edgeable horse people" and "genettion of trust? ically selected for traits that made It isn't harsh to punish a continu- them popular with riders, namely ing fabrication; in his position it is soundness, color and trainability." necessary. Will people continue to Wow! And who is going to pay for

catechism class.

believe his personal anecdotes? I

I was struck by an article in the Feb. 22 Bulletin entitled, "Son of

Slain Man: 'I forgive you.'" Why in a "so called" Christian country is this an oddity? Adam Damiano

don't know, but he isn't just a regular fellow. He held a coveted posi-

This family's act of forgiveness reminded me of the kindness, forgiveness and mercy shown by the brother of the three slain in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, recently. Ad-

tion of respect and "authority." And

he fabricated and distorted real events while in a position of trust and continued it for years. He has

mittedly I'm not a religious man, however this not to say that I don't

received the consequences for his have beliefs and that the basic te- actions. nets of what Sister Mary Catherine What happens in regular life taught don't run deep. when a person is found out to have I'm dismayed and confused lied for years? Usually people don't when culture gets intertwined and

believe the liar anymore. His net-

this?

Feral horses as we know them are notnative.We do not manage feral dogs, feral cats or feral pigs. Why are we spending so much money taking care of feral horses? They shouldbe removed from public land altogether. If some people want them and to breed them selectively let them do it on their own

land and at their own expense. After all, Bernal thinks that there would be a market for them. This

confused with religious teachings. work cannot place a liar in an ul-

is not something that I (through the Bureau of Land Management) lose viewers. Call it what you may: should be paying for. poetic license, fabrication, distorAccording to BLM there are over tion, misstatements or white lies. It 50,000 horses on public land, apwas wrong and he got caught. proximately 25 percent more than Don't worry about "poor Brian in 2013. Additionally, there are an-

You see I believe kindness, mercy,

timate position of trust; they will

forgiveness, compassion and empathy are the basic tenants of all religions. However, by saying this I'm not following what Sister Mary

Catherine also taught, and that's not to judge.

Williams. I'm sure another com-

pany that isn't so picky about truth will hire him. I, for one, do not trust what he says any more. Here is the perfect lesson for all of us. Do not "embellish" the truth. I read with interest Joel Corley's Nancy KIrkland Phil PhIIIben Bend

Do not lie or embellish

letter of Feb. 21. I disagree that Brian Williams told a "little white lie."

LaPine

How not to manage wild horses

Rather, Mr. Williams repeated his lieover many years to anyone who would listen, including the American public. Is lying acceptable in

other 47,000 in short-term corrals

and long-term pastures. BLM is spending more than $80 million a year on holding feral horses and burros. I don't want anybody to think that I want them off public land

because they interfere with cattle grazing because I would like all cattle to be off all public land as well.

JIm PersIng

This is in response to a letter to

Redmond

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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

What the Great Recession taught us about people By Anne Michaud Newsday

car household, a mortgage and college savings plans for two teenagers.

hen my nephew graduated But I wonder whether my nephew from high school, he decid- and my friend are on to something: ed not to enroll in college. savoring life without all the expense. The family thought, well, he'll maStudies say people under 35 are ture. Then he'll want to get serious. But he's taken a sharp turn that

coming to terms with being the first

generation to do worse econom-

we didn't expect. He qualified as a ically than t heir p arents. Secure home health aide, fell in love and is careers, pensions and even rising raising two boys. When I see him, wages seem to be things of the past, he shows me his artwork and talks while the cost of a university degree about making money "selling stuff continues to climb. So, owning a online." home or a car isn't a priority or even This choice — to slow way down a long-term goal for many. in one's 20s instead of speeding onto This trend goes by d i fferent the career highway — is foreign to names: living simpler, slower, smallme. But I thought, maybe he's an er. But lowered expectations don't exception. entirely explain the shift — which I Then I spoke to a friend, an aspir- observe in individuals of every gening filmmaker in her early 30s who eration. For many, the prolonged just went on "sabbatical" for a month Great Recession cut monthly inin Mexico. She worked on afarm by comes drastically, and people have day and edited film during her off had to live with less. hours. Too, daily news about terrorism I thought, that must be nice, as I here and abroad reminds us how turned back to my two-income, two- fleeting life can be.

Studies say people under 35 are comingto terms with being the first generation to do worse economically than their parents. Secure careers, pensions and even rising wagesseem to be things of the past, while the cost of a university degree continues to climb. So, owning a home or a car isn't a priority or even a long-term goal for many. Slower living has baffled econo mists. Consumers — d o n't y o u

love that term for human beings? — didn't bump up spending in January, even though low gasoline prices were giving everyone's wallet a bit of a break. Analysts at Visa Inc. found that we're mostly saving that

unspent money or using it to pay down debt. With job growth in 2014 the stron-

Some people seem to be resetting their priorities. As we learn about

what makes for a happy human, we're valuing experiences over things. If you want to feel really good, go someplace beautiful with people you love. It will net you more bliss than a designer jacket or an heirloom watch. C onspicuous c o nsumption,

in

places, is giving way to minimalism. gest it's been since 1999, you would Consider the tiny-house movement, think people would feel confident to where people live in single-room spend. But January sales fell more dwellings of less than 200 square than expected at many clothing feet, some of them on wheels. I found stores,department stores and furniture outlets.

a virtual tour of one home on You-

Tube, built for about $33,000 in four

months to accommodate two people. What comes with a tiny house is

freedom. Owners can do a lot more in terms of both cash and time. And the environmental footprint is far

smaller. Tiny-house enthusiasts are still a

small minority, about 1 percent of home buyers — and I expect they'll remain so. The average size of new homes has nearly doubled since 1970, despite a decrease in family sizes.

My grandmother was one of 17 kids. When her parentsgave the family home to her brother instead

of her, she got angry and never spoke to her siblings again — even though they all lived within blocks of each other. That's a poor trade-off of dear relationships for material wealth. The

Great Recession has warned us how devastating it can be to look for happiness in possessions. — Anne Michaud is a member of the Newsday editorial board.



B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

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

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH

TEMPERATURE 4S 26'

73' in 1 929 6' in 1 9 55

PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.66" in 1991 Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.12") Year to date(normal) 1.11 " (2.74") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1S" Fri. 6:34 a.m. 5:59 p.m. 7:16 p.m. 6:51 a.m. First

Sunrise 6:36 a.m. Sunset 5:5S p.m. Moonrise B:1 S p.m. Moonset 6:2 4 a.m. Full La s t New

r ® r Q Mar 5 Mur 13

EAST:Plenty of sunshine today; a cold start, then mild this afternoon. Partly cloudy tonight.

Mar 20 Mar 2e

Tuuight's ulty:Sundaymorning full "Worm" moon (10:05 a.m.).

Cannon

Lincoln

Mild with clouds and limited sun

Partly sunny andmild

T

The highertheAccuWeafrer.rxrmiiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.

ROAD CONDITONS Fcr web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-G4 at Cabbage Hill: Partly sunny todaywith good travel. Patchyclouds tonight. US 20 atSuntiumPass:Mostly sunnytoday with no weather-related travel problems. US 26atGov'tCamp: Times ofcloudsand suntoday;drypavement.Partly cloudytonight. US 26 atOchocoDivide:Mostly sunny today with dry pavement.Partly cloudytonight. ORE Ba at Willamette Puss:Goodtravel today with sunshine.Partly cloudytonight. Timesof

clouds andsuntomorrow. ORE13B atDiamondLuke:Mostly sunnytoday with dry pavement.Patchy cloudstonight.

SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 50-5 0 1-5 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 27-5 6 0 50-9 4 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 33-70 1-5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 2S-5 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA A spen / Snowmass, CO 11 46-S 1 Vail, CO 7 65-6 5 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 3 30-60 Squaw Valley,CA 1 30-5 B ParkCityMountain,UT 3 BB-BB Sun Valley, ID 0 31-6 1 Source: OnTheSnow.com

$8M more needed for tunnel The Associated Press EUGENE — It will cost the state $8 million more than expected to have con-

tractors rebuild a tunnel on Highway 58 in the Cascade Range between Eugene and south-cent ralOregon. The route through t he Willamette National Forest

is one of the major mountain highways in Oregon. The Salt Creek Tunnel is east of Oakridge.

59/28

mostly sunnyacross

I'S

59/42

c

65/38

Bandon

57 6

/37

59/41

Yesterday Today Frlday

60/21

55/24

50/27

56/21

• Burns Juntion • 59/26

Rorne Fields • 56/21

Yesterday Today Friday City Portland Prinevige Redmond Roseburg Salem Sisters The Dages

62/22

McDermi 53/18

Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 59/3 0/0.0061/36/pc 64/39/pc 54 / 1 4/0.00 59/28/s 60/32/pc 55/ 1 1/0.0061/23/s 63/24/pc 62 / 31/0.00 65/38/s 67/40/pc 58/27/0.00 63/36/pc65/37/ pc 54/1 4/0.00 62/24/s 62/24/pc 5 7 / 23/0.00 62/34/pc 67/35/pc

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 109 ~ g s

~g s

NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the 48 contiguousstates) National high:88 at Fernandina Beach,

~1 0s

~ 209

~s g s ~4 0 s ~ 50 s ~e c s ~7 09 Calge 43/26

9 55/40

36/19 • Billings 44/31 P 44/2

51/3e

~ag s ~e g s ~ 10 0s ~ 1 10s

• i nipeg Tffqnder uay 1d 12 14 uismsrck

Que c 11/Pok

Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W 53/27/0.33 36/1 7/s 35/32/0.01 17/-4/c 39/24/0.06 21/4/c 50/30/0.00 49/25/s 37/32/Tr 41/32/sf 78/50/0.01 53/32/r 46/34/0.26 33/14/sn 70/42/0.03 41/25/c 45/30/0.16 33/11/sn 30/6/0.00 44/31/pc

Baltimore Billings Birmingham 79/61/0.30 Bismarck 7/-4/Tr Boise 45/20/0.00 Boston 43/35/0.09 Bridgeport, CT 39/25/0.67 Buffalo 33/31/0.05 Burlington, VT 39/22/0.06 Caribou, ME 34/17/0.24 Charleston, SC 81/52/0.01 Charlotte

69/41/Tr 74/53/0.05 20/1/0.03 31/16/0.00 Cincinnati 36/35/1.12 Cleveland 34/32/0.01 ColoradoSprings 21/10/0.11 Columbia, MO 24/19/0.04 Columbia, SC 81/44/0.01 Columbus,GA 74/58/0.01 Columbus,OH 36/33/0.63 Concord, NH 45/23/0.11 Corpus Christi 78/67/0.00 Dallas 52/31/0.48 Dayton 35/34/0.46 Denver 17/1 0/0.08 Des Moines 30/12/0.00 Detroit 35/25/0.00 Duluth 3/-8/Tr El Paso 62/48/Tr Fairbanks 36/19/0.00 Fargo 7/-5/0.00 Flagstaff 38/23/Tr Grand Rapids 26/23/0.00 Green 6ay 14/8/0.00 Greensboro 73/37/0.15 Harrisburg 43/29/0.22 Harfford, CT 43/24/0.41 Helena 39/3/0.00 Honolulu 78/70/0.13 Houston 83/69/Tr Huntsville 77/62/0.1 0 Indianapolis 32/31/0.39 Jackson, MS 82/65/0.02 Jacksonville 85/63/0.00

Chattanooga Cheyenne Chicago

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

58/19

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 56/30/0.00 57/37/pc59/38/c La Grande 48/1 2/0.00 54/25/s 60/25/pc 46/8/0.00 52/21/s 59/24/pc L a Pine 57/10/0.00 58/26/s 60/28/pc Brookings 61/40/0.00 59/41/s 59/43/s Me d ford 65/3 0 /0.00 67/34/s 68/36/s Bums 45/11/0.00 57/22/s 61/24/pc N ewport 57/3 0/0.00 57/41/s 58/41/pc Eugene 57/26/0.00 62/36/s 63/36/pc NorthBend 57/32/0.00 60/41/s 59/41/pc Klamath Fags 54/16/0.00 60/21/s 63/23/s O n tario 50/19/0.00 55/26/s 61/30/s Lakeview 54/18/0.00 58/19/s 62/19/s Pe ndleton 54/ 2 2/0.00 58/31/pc 62/34/pc

Nyssa

Riley 57/22 57/19

• Lakeview

City Astoria Baker City

tario

• Burns Juntura 54/23

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 57/20 Lake 59/21 59/24 • Paisley • Chiloquin 59/16 60/23

Klamath 'Falls

Atlantic City Austin

5 26

Valee 54/29

Beaver Marsh

67/34 • Ashl nd 65/

Bro ings

52/21 eU 3/23

City Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage

Aeanfa

'Baker G

57/27

Ham ton

FortRock

Medfo

58/

• La Pine

58/27

65/38

Gra 60/ a Gold ach eg 7

• Pa lina

Crescet • 58/24

Roseburg

60/42

Low: a' at Meacham

Grove Oakridge

OREGON EXTREMES YESTERDAY High: 65' at Medford

e

• John Day

' Be d Brothers 26 Su Were 58/27

62/36

Joseph Grande • Union

64 26

Granitee 53/29

/26 • Mitch ll 57/23

59/26

5~5/27 Enterprise • 5 3/24

dlehn 53/ •

• W co 6 /34

• Prineville

62/2

• Etlgelle

afternoon.

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

I

he Oall

• 58/ 1 • 62/34 • He ppner Gove nt • upi Condon 8/29 • 59 53/

• Bo 36 Camp Sh manRed n

1/37

Yach

Flo ren e

• ermiston Meac am Losti ne

pmy

57/41

the south. A chilly start, then a mild

sW

Bois

M ne 1 /S

'

The site is now zoned as ru- irrigation systems" without

Continued from B1 zoned for surface mining and Some nearby residents op- excavation. KC Development posedthe project forvarious and the i r r i gation d i strict reasons including the effect argued that the reservoirs water skiing might have on were formed in part by past the surrounding wildlife. activity. Tom and Dorbina Bishop, County commissioners dewho live near the site, ap- termined that wasn't the case pealed the Deschutes County and thatthe reservoirs were planning division's approv- new to the site. "The record shows there al of the water transfer to a hearingsofficer. was a t r emendous amount The board's decision on

of work that needed to be

p ermit a p proval. B u t

the

board decided the reservoirs didn't fit within that scope. Commissioner Alan Unger said he agrees that the district can make changes on its

47/38/pc 61/56/pc 78/65/pc 72/44/s 97/78/pc 47/27/pc 67/55/s 45/30/pc 68/46/t

46/33/pc 80/66/s 82/55/s 72/53/s 43/26/pc 86/70/pc 50/40/c 49/42/c 42/29/c 78/51/s 73/68/c 55/47/c 59/47/s 82/56/s 78/68/pc 64/46/s 52/38/pc 57/31/s 89/72/pc

48/39/pc 60/47/sh 75/64/sh 73/46/s 95/77/s 52/31/s 74/60/s 47/36/pc 68/47/c 46/28/pc 81/68/s 84/58/s 78/55/pc 48/20/pc 87/69/pc 51/46/c 50/46/sh 47/29/s 79/57/pc 75/67/r 59/46/c 68/49/s 80/56/pc 78/67/pc 66/47/s 53/43/pc 63/34/s 90/73/s

Yesterday Today Friday

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wf Memphis Miami

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando

Palm Spdings Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 39/37/0.06 43/35/r 43/34/c 29/18/Tr 29121/s 50/32/s 29/27/0.00 60/44/Tr 41/40/2.06 32/10/0.03 52/51/1.67 72/48/0.00 42/39/1.90 18/10/0.00 64/34/1.07 82/73/0.00 21/14/0.00 12/-1/0.00 53/51/2.05 82/67/0.01 45/31/0.39 44/29/0.37 70/42/0.20 32/30/0.04

Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose

24/4/sn 36121/s 34/12/pc 76/52/s 27/8/pc 15/1/s

29/18/s 54/27/s 34/22/s 81/52/s

32/21/s 30/21/c

28/12/sn 32/21/s

85/71/pc 8490/pc 15/5/s 28/24/c 14/8/s 34/24/c 30/13/sn 33/21/s 61/34/r 52/40/c

29/15/sn 26/20/s 29/12/sn 27/1 7/s 39/21/i

28/1 9/s

75/49/s 78/51/s 15/3/s 33/27/s

32/12/sn 73/49/s 19/0/sn 28/4/c 28/9/sn

29/1 5/s

77/54/s 25/17/pc 24/1 3/s

26/1 3/s

54/23/i 36/22/s 44/24/s 52/26/pc 60/24/s 61/25/s 38/17/i 32/17/s 16/2/sf 23/16/pc 70/39/s 72/41/s 21/11/pc 41/32/s

40/25/Tr 47/29/s 53/30/s 69/51/0.02 44/30/c 51/38/pc

68/51/0.00 66/45/0.00 68/43/0.00 Santa re 46/22/Tr Savannah 84/57/0.00 Seattle 55/31/0.00 Sioux Fags 12/0/0.01 Spokane 45/19/0.00 Springfield, MO 28/25/0.17 Tampa 81/67/0.00 Tucson 63/47/0.00 Tulsa 44/25/0.03 Washington, DC 51/39/0.08 Wichita 30/20/0.08 Yakima 55/21/0.00 Yuma 69/49/0.00

e

15/2/s 21/19/pc 65/43/s 71/47/s

37/20/s 49/27/s 32/15/Tr 33/22/s 52/29/s 86/64/0.00 87/65/pc 78/56/c

73/52/Tr 23/13/0.01 43/32/0.46 70/47/0.00 35/32/0.86 46/27/0.27 Providence 43/25/0.52 Raleigh 75/38/0.02 Rapid City 17/-3/0.00 Reno 54/22/0.00 Richmond 62/35/0.03 Rochester, NY 38/32/0.01 Sacramento 68/36/0.00 St. Louis 25/22/0.17

i

Amsterdam Athens

*e

ral residential, but was once

Hi/Lo/W 48/28/s 24/1 8/s 23/10/pc 57/29/s 40/36/sf 47/32/pc 26/14/s 49/32/s 26/10/s 51/28/pc 40/24/i 47/27/pc 36/19/pc 46/28/pc 57/30/s 60/33/s 28/13/sn 26/17/s 26/9/sn 25/13/s 13/2/sf 19/17/pc 19/-3/c 23/13/pc 10/-11/pc 16/9/pc 78/40/r 40/30/c 59/29/r 43/26/s 40/24/sn 43/25/pc 39/24/s 44/23/pc 14/2/s 26/21/pc 22/-3/pc 29/21/s 17/-3/s 24/1 9/s 37/20/s 49/22/pc 23/1 3/s 45/31/s 74/36/r 44/28/pc 66/34/r 53/32/c 21/-5/sn 25/1 8/s 26/3/c 26/9/s 46/34/r 48/40/c 37/21/s 45/27/s 21/-2/s 26/21/s 39/21/s 49/21/pc 19/15/s 42/29/s 20/4/s 22/1 9/pc 14/5/pc 30/19/c 46/28/s 55/35/s 37/21/c 32/24/sf 20/13/pc 35/24/c 45/15/s 48/1 8/s 18/3/sf 23/20/pc 13/1/s 30/20/c 49/23/i 38/24/s 30/7/sn 26/12/s 26/4/sn 28/12/s 48/28/pc 53/31/pc 79/68/sh 77/67/c 45/29/r 54/34/pc 32/22/sn 38/21/s 19/-4/pc 25/22/s 37/22/i 45/24/s 85/53/r 53/40/sh

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Reservoir

Partly sunny andmild

Yesterday Today Friday

BO/31

lington 59/27

63/

Newpo

WEST:Partly sunny in the north today;

/35

Sale

58/44

32'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Rufus

Portland andy •

Mc innvill

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

~ S

1/34

Tigamo •

sunny today; acold start, then a mild afternoon.Patchy clouds tonight.

63o

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55/43

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64o

29' Partly sunny

Hood

55/40

UV INDEX TODAY S 1~ 4

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MONDAY

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

ria

CENTRAL:Mostly

SUN ANDMOON Today

~

27'

SUNDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Yesterday Normal Record 54 1S'

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Patchy clouds

ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

High Low

~

Mostly sunny

I

SATURDAY

LOW

5 8' I 1'

FRIDAY

72/51/s 77/51/s 69/48/s 69/48/s

72/43/s 72/43/s 44120/s 54/23/s 81/44/r 44/31/c 55/40/pc 58/41/c 26/17/s 39/25/pc 50/27/pc 53/32/pc 28/11/s 42/28/s 81/66/pc 77/58/c

68/45/s 72/48/s 37/20/s 47/27/s 33/17/sn 32/1 8/s 39/21/s 53/27/s

60/28/pc 64/33/pc 75/51/s 78/54/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

97/77/0.00 82/56/0.00 Montreal 36/21/0.00 Moscow 34/31/0.53 Nairobi 86/56/0.00 Nassau 82/71/0.00 New Delhi 73/54/0.00 Osaka 55/46/0.00 Oslo 39/22/0.00 Ottawa 34/18/0.15 Paris 48/32/0.02 Rio de Janeiro 90/73/0.00 Rome 61/45/0.65 Santiago 86/57/0.00 Sao Paulo 82/66/0.00 Sapporo 39/30/0.25 Seoul 34/20/0.00 Shanghai 42/31/0.00 Singapore 88/79/0.26 Stockholm 36/32/0.01 Sydney 80/70/0.00 Taipei 60/57/0.19 Tel Aviv 66/55/0.08 Tokyo 61/39/0.00 Toronto 32/25/0.00 Vancouver 47/29/0.00 Vienna 46/28/0.06 Warsaw 41/30/0.26

95/74/pc 78/45/pc 14/-3/s 35/24/sn 88/56/pc 83/71/s 78/56/pc 46/35/pc 40/36/s 13/-6/s 49/31/pc 91/75/s 50/42/sh 87/55/s 84/68/1 36/24/c

40/24/pc 44/41/r 90/76/pc 39/33/s 80/61/s 68/61/r 69/58/s 53/40/c 16/0/sf 50/38/c 45/32/pc 40/26/pc

98/75/s 74/47/pc 19/12/pc 33/23/c 88/57/s 83/69/pc 80/57/s 52/36/pc 45/36/pc 19/12/pc 50/33/c 92/76/pc 53/40/pc 87/56/s 82/68/t 37/30/sf 46/28/s 47/42/r 89/76/pc 42/31/sf 82/66/s 69/63/sh 78/59/s 48/41/pc 23/16/pc 52/37/c 44/31/pc 41/29/pc

hearings officer's decision to "It's just that there should be categorizethe reservoir as a conditional use so that we a recreation facility, which can take into account some of r equires

c o n d itional U s e the considerations with such a

permitting. development." Baney said the idea to store The decision on Wednesday and conserve water at the site will be finalized in writing becanals and reservoirs with- was a "noble effort" and "new fore being officially approved out county approval, but said and creative," but the pro- by the board. Opponents and this change was different. " This reservoir wa s n o t

cess toget there needed to be different.

proponents of the reservoirs

could choose to appeal the de"It isn't as though there cision to the Oregon Land Use said. "It was created to commay not be apathway for- Board of Appeals. plement its system." ward and a successful per—Reporter: 541-617-7820, The board agreed with the mitting process," Baney said. tshOraCkCmbendbulletin.COm part of that system," Unger

W ednesday primarily f o - done in order to actually facused on whether the reser- cilitate the reservoir itself," voirs existed before w ater said Commissioner Tammy was transferred or were new- Baney. ly developed, which would Irrigation districts are alrequire a l an d us e r eview lowed "operation, mainteprocess. nance and piping of existing

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Preps, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C4 NBA, C3 College basketball, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

SOCCER MLS, players agree to contract Major LeagueSoccer and its players' union agreed in principle to a five-year labor contract, averting a possible strike ahead of Friday's season opener. The deal, the culmination of talks that began last weekend in Washington, D.C.,was announced Wednesday night and would replace the contract that expired Jan. 31. Under the agreement, players 28 and older could becomefree agents if they haveeight seasons of MLSservice and their contracts have expired, a person familiar with the details said. The person spokeon condition of anonymity because thedetails had not yet beenannounced. The minimum salary would rise to $60,000, the person said. The minimum generally was $48,500 last year, but the prior deal contained a provision in which some players could be paid as low as$36,500. "This agreement will provide a platform for our players, ownership and management to work together to help build Major LeagueSoccer into one of the great soccer leagues in the world," MLS Commissioner Don Garbersaid in a statement. MLS's 20th season begins Friday, with the defending champion Los Angeles Galaxy hosting Chicago in the opener. Portland opens its season when it hosts Real Salt Lake at 7:30

p.m. Saturday. — The Associated Press

NFL Manningreturning for 18th season ENGLEWOOD,Colo. — Hold that gold watch. Peyton Manning is taking one moreshot at the silver trophy. Weeks of speculation about the five-time MVP's future ended Wednesday with word that he's returning for an 18th season in the NFL and fourth in Denver. A person with knowledge of the situation told The Associated Press that Manning will take a $4 million pay cut, from $19 million to $15 million, but that he can make it all back through performance incentives. The person spokeon condition of anonymity because there wasno official announcement of the deal. Manning, who is still scheduled to make $19 million in 2016 in the final season of the five-year contract he signed in 2012, will take his physical and sign his revised contract today. Manning mulled retirement after the Broncos' playoff loss to the Indianapolis Colts. But he determined he still had the health and hunger to keepplaying at age 39, when hetries to become the oldest QB to win a SuperBowl. "We're just excited to have him back," Pro Bowl running back C.J. Anderson told the AP. "Of course, hejust wants to go out there and win that ring. And we're just trying to go out there and help him win it.... If he said he's mentally and physically ready to play, that doesn't mean it's at a subpar level. It means it's at a high level." — The Associated Press

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

Duc win att e over Beavers • Oregon gets pushed before pulling awaywith a victory over OregonState Inside

The Associated Press CORVALLIS — ElginCook

scored 17 points to lead Oregon past Oregon State65-62 on Wednesday

night in a hotly contested rivalry game. Joseph Young added 15 points, sixrebounds and six assistsforthe Ducks (23-8, 13-5 Pac-12), who have won five in a row.

Malcolm Duvivier scored 18 points and Gary Payton II had 13

starters took the floor 28 seconds in.

• Pac-12 women's tournament kicks off today,C4 • Men's top 25 roundup,C4

The Ducks pushed the lead to 8-0

layup, but Oregon made six free

and Oregon State led 28-19 with

throws in the final 30 seconds to

5:05 left, but Young responded with eight straight points.

before Duvivier sank a 3-pointer at the 17:58 mark.

secure the win. The Beavers committed two costly turnovers in the final 1:30.

"j

The score was tied 32-all at half-

The Beavers have no seniors

points, 10 rebounds, nine assists

and six steals for the Beavers (17-13, 8-10), who have lost six of

for the final home game of the regular season. Those players might not

seven.

be on the team next season due to a

with 34 seconds left after a Duvivier

r

time, and the second half was a back and forth affair.

on the roster, but first-year coach Wayne Tinkle started five walk-ons

Oregon State pulled to within one

t

Oregon went cold from the floor,

DE I • • '

With the score tied at 52, Dwayne

Benjamin sank a 3-pointer for the Ducks with 3:48 left. Oregon State turned the ball over near halfcourt

Don Ryan/The Associated Press

Oregon State guard Malcolm Duvivier, middle,

on the next possession, leading to a shoots as Oregon's DwayneBenjamin, left, and Dillon Brooks layup. Dillon Brooks defend during the first half of See Ducks /C4 Wednesday night's game in Corvallis.

strong recruiting class. Oregon State trailed 3-0 when the

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL

Ravens earn irst

• Win over Putnam has Bendmoving on to the first roundof the 5A state playoffs

aO

By Grant Lucas

ert

.4

The Bulletin

It was not that Sophia

• A 56-37 play-in win over Sandyhas Ridgeview heading to the 5A playoffs

+. s>' .s 4~". E

Jackson expected Bend High to erupt the way it did. She and therestofthe Lava Bears

knew they HAD to go on a tear. In the second quarter of a

Class 5A play-in contest on Wednesday night, the Bears did just that.

Bulletin staff report

Leading by just a single point after the opening period, Bend went off in the second

SANDY — This was what Randi Davis expected. This is what she anticipated. Her Rid-

quarter, outscoring visiting

geview squad dominated.

Putnam 19-5 over the first 6/2 minutes to propel the Bears to a 47-38 girls basketball win and advance them to the first round of the 5A state playoffs.

leadingthe way, offensively and defensively, the Ravens routed Sandy56-37ina Class5A girls

With their three captains

basketball play-in contest and

"It all happened so fast," said Jackson, who scored nine

earnedthe three-year-oldprogram's first state playoffberth. "I think they're learning how to consistentlyplayto their potential," said Davis, the Ridgeview coach. "They're finding out what the magic ingredients are and the magic recipe to

of her 15 points in that pivotal I/

second period. "You're kind of, like, running on adrenaline. You know you're on a mission, so you just have to get it done." The Lava Bears (15-10) seemingly could do no wrong heading into the half. Nearly every shot splashed through the net. Passes were crisp. Their defense was stout. The

!,

trri f

!' :

-re'

play at their best all the time."

>~

ey<"'p."'>

Chloe Ross logged 16points and 15 rebounds for the Ravens

I

''ter'";",, r '

Kingsmen were outnumbered, t.'

outmanned and out of rhythm. Bend opened up a 32-19

sanna Wilder had 11 points.

"Our three captains really showed up to play — Shae, Chloe and Hosanna," Davis said."Two of them are seniors, so I think they're also realizing

to bury Putnam after the break.

SeeBears/C3 See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/sports

state playoffs as a No. 15 seed. Ridgeview willvisit No. 2 La

Salle. Shae Wilcox added 14 points for Ridgeview, and Ho-

halftime lead and were poised

O

(15-10 overall), who advance to Saturday's first round of the 5A

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Bend's Allison Parker (23) shoots over a Putnam defender during the first quarter of Wednesday night's Class 5A play-in g ame inBend. The Lava Bears beatthe Kingsmen 47-38.

that it's do-or-die right now. They want to continue on this season.

WINTER SPORTS

U.S. aerialspipeline producestitles By Eddie Pells The Associated Press

The crystal globes sit on countertops at their parents' houses in Connecticut. Kiley McKinnon tookhome the

women's and Mac Bohonnon,

"The national team is full,

The audaciously captured trophieswere awarded tothe

the development program is full. People are coming out every summer. It creates bottompressure. The kids in the development programs, it's inspiring for them to see us winning, to realize they're in the same program we came up m. It was at Bohonnon's urging

who became the 2014-15 world aerial skiing champions. The Mac Bohonnon, center, is kissed by Ashley Caldwell, right, and Kiley McKinnon, all of the U.S., as they stand on a podium celebrating their victory in the FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup 2015 event in Minsk, Belarus, Sunday. Ashley Caldwell took gold, Mac Bohon-

non and Kiley McKinnon took silver.

said the 19-year-old Bohonnon, who is among those who got their training in the U.S. ski team's 7-year-old Elite Aerial Development Program.

the men's. elementary school classmates

Sergei Grits/The Associated Press

"This is sort of the first wave of developmental athletes,"

rewards speak as much to the talent that came out of Island

Avenue Elementary School in Madison, Connecticut, as from

America's aerials pipeline, which is producing champions that McKinnon took her first after years in start-up mode. look at aerials — a daredevil

sport that demands fast trips

down an icy ramp that sends skiers flying 50 feet in the air while they perform a number of flips and twists and hope to stick the landing. Her background is not unlike those of the dozens who take up the sport. She was a high-level gymnast who was good on skis and looking for a way to parlay that into something more. "Mac said, 'We're looking for girls, you should come try aerials,'" the 20-year-old McK-

innon said. "That summer, I went to Lake Placid to check it out." SeeAerials/C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

Time

T V /Radio

MLB preseason, LosAngeles Dodgers at Chicago White Sox MLB preseason, SanDiego at Seattle MLB preseason, Boston at Minnesota

noon noon 4 p.m.

MLB

Root MLB

BASKETBALL

Women's college, ACC tournament, Syracuse vs.TBA 8 a.m. Root Women's college, BigTentournament, Michigan vs. Michigan St. 9:30 a.m. Big Ten Women's college, SEC tournament, Arkansas vs. Mississippi 10 a.m. SEC Women's college, Pac-12tournament, 11:30 a.m. Pac-12 Colorado vs. Southern Cal Women's college, BigTentournament, Rutgers vs. TBA noon Big Ten Women'scollege,SEC Tournament, Texas A8 M vs. TBA noon SEC Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Arizona vs. UCLA 2 p.m. Pac-12 Women's college, BigTentournament, lllinois vs. Nebraska 4 p.m. Big Ten M en's college, Wisconsin at Minnesota 4 p. m . ESPN Men's college, Arkansas at South Carolina 4 p.m. ESPN2 M en's college, Temple at East Carolina 4 p.m . ESPNU Women'scollege,SEC Tournament, Georgia vs. Missouri 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. TNT NBA, OklahomaCity at Chicago Men's college, California at Arizona 6 p.m. ESPN Men's college,MemphisatUConn 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's College,VCU atDavidson 6 p.m. ESPNU Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Pac-12 Oregon vs. Washington St. 6 p.m. Women'scollege,SEC Tournament, Kentucky vs. TBA 6 p.m. SEC M en's college, Colorado at Washington 6 p. m . FS1 Women's college, BigTentournament, Minnesota vs. TBA 6:30 p.m. Big Ten 7 :30 p.m. T N T, NBA, Dallas at Portland KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

Men's college, Utah atWashington St. Men's college, Stanford at Arizona St. Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Utah vs. Washington

8 p.m. 8 p.m.

ES P NU FS1

8:30 p.m. Pac-12

GOLF

PGA Tour,WGCCadilac Championship 10 a.m. Golf EuropeanTour, Africa Open 4:30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf SOCCER North America, U-17Championship, Guatemala vs United States 3 p.m. FS2 North America, Champions League, Herediano (Costa Rica) vs. Olimpia (Honduras) 5 p.m. FS2

FRIDAY BASKETBALL

Women's college,ACCtournament,Dukevs.TBA Women's college, BigTentournament, Maryland vs. TBA Women's college, SEC tournament, South Carolina vs. TBA Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Arizona State vs. TBA. Women's college, BigTentournament, Northwestern vs. TBA Women's college,SECtournament,LSUvs.TBA Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Stanford vs. TBA Women's college, ACC tournament, Florida State vs. TBA Women's college, BigTentournament, lowa vs. TBA Men's college, Akron at KentState Women's college, SEC tournament, Tennesseevs. TBA Men's college, OhioValley tournament, TBA vs. Murray State NBA, Phoenix at Brooklyn Men's college, TexasTechat Baylor Women's college, Pac-12tournament, Oregon State vs. TBA Women's college, SEC tournament, Mississippi State vs. TBA Women's college, BigTentournament, Ohio State vs. TBA Men's college, OhioValley Tournament, TBA vs. Eastern Kentucky High School, TeamsTBD NBA, Dallas at GoldenStat Women's college, Pac-12Tournament, California vs. TBA SOCCER Women's, Algarve Cup,U.S. vs. Switzerland U-17Championship ,CanadavsMexico Australia, Wellington vs. Adelaide United FA Cup, Bradford City vs Reading

Ba.m.

Root

9:30 a.m. Big Ten 10a.m.

SEC

11:30 a.m. Pac-12 noon noon

Big Ten SEC

2 p.m.

Pac - 12

3 p.m.

Root

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

Bi g Ten ES P N2

4 p.m.

SEC

4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. ESP N 6 p.m. ES P N2 6 p.m.

Pac-12

6 p.m.

SEC

6:30 p.m. Big Ten 6:30 p.m. ESPNU 6:50 p.m. COTV 7:30 p.m. E S PN

9 a.m. 5:30 p.m. 10 p.m. 4:30 a.m.

FS1 FS2 FS2 FS1

10 a.m.

MLB

10 a.m. 4 :30 a.m.

Golf Go l f

GOLF

PGA Tour,WGCCadilac Championship EuropeanTour, Africa Open AUTO RACIiiG

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, LasVegas 400, practice noon NASCAR,XFINITY, LasVegas 300, practice 1:30 p.m. NASCAR,XFINITY, LasVegas 300, practice 3 p.m. NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Las ivegas 400, qualifying4:30 p.m.

FS1 FS1 FS1 FS1

HOCKEY

College, Minnesota at OhioState WHL, Seattle at Portland

Friday Boys basketball: 5A first round, Parkroseat Mountain View, 7 p.mc 5Afirst round, Sandy at Summit, 7 p.mc 4A first round, Sisters at Scappoose,5:30p.m.; 4Afirst round,Madrasat Sutherlin, 7p.m. Alpine skiing:OSSAFinals, giant slalomat Mt. Bachelor,Cliffhanger,10a.m.

HOCKEY

IN THE BLEACHERS

NHL In the Bleachers © 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers

Saturday

Girls basketball: 5Afirst round,Pendletonat Summit, TBD;5Afirst round,Bendat Silverton, TBD; 5A first round, Ridgeviewat LaSalle, TBD;4Afirst round,Madrasat Cascade,7 p.mc4Afirst round, SistersatHenley, 6p.m. Alpine skiing:OSSA Finals, slalomatMt. Bachelor, Cliffhanger,10a.m.

)g'P]EI.t)

@f4rtIEIB +

S NO W B O A R D I N G USCSA 2015 NationalChampionships At Mt. Bachelor

Men's Bnewboard Railjam Team —Westminster 6, WesternState Colorado 24, SierraNevada25, Liberty 32,SacramentoState51, Vermont53,Virginia 117,OSU-Cascades124, Duke 125, AirForce131,SanDiegoState141, LongBeach State147,UCDavis159, AppalachianState165, Idaho167, NorthCarolina171, Emerson177, Michigan State 177,Northwestern 177, UCLA177, California 177, Michigan 177, Nevada177, RhodeIsland 177,

vl

"Yes. I am positive that it came right out of that direction."

62 36 15 11 83 182 160 62 31 22 9 7 1 165 161 64 28 23 13 69 156 181 62 28 23 11 67 176 167 64 26 33 5 57 173 195 64 19 40 5 43 123 215

Metropolitan Division

Nashville St. Louis

WeslernConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA

65 41 17 7 89 193 158 63 40 18 5 85 197 159 64 38 21 5 81 188 152 65 32 21 12 76 180 175 63 34 22 7 75 179 163 64 28 25 11 67 170 183 64 28 26 10 66 199 212 Pacific Oivision GP W L OT Pls GFGA Anaheim 66 42 17 7 91 196 179 Vancouver 63 36 24 3 7 5 182 173 Calgary 63 34 25 4 7 2 178 162 Los Angeles 63 30 21 12 72 171 164 SanJose 65 32 25 8 72 185 183 Arizona 64 20 37 7 47 139 218 Edmonton 64 18 36 10 46 145 213

Wednesday'sGames

BASKETBALL Men's college

Pac-12 Individual (toptive) — 1, TrentLodge,WestAH TimesPBT minster. 2, Aidan Melen,Westminster. 3, Owen Golden,Westminster. 4, GradyShoop, WesternState Overall Conference Colorado.5,Frederick Mccarthy, SierraNevada. Also: W L Pct W L Pct 6, Mikey Klautzsch,OSU-Cascades. Arizona 14 2 . 8 75 26 3 .897 Utah 12 4 .750 22 6 .786 Women's AlpineSkiing Oregon 13 5 . 7 22 23 8 .742 Giant Slalom 11 7 .611 19 12 .613 Team — SierraNevada6:04.28 (teamtime), UCLA tanford 9 7 .5 6 3 18 10 .643 Rocky Mountain6;05.92, St. Dlaf 6;14.63, Clark- S St. 8 1 0.444 17 13 .566 son 6:25.34,SaintAnselm6:28.40, CastletonState Oregon alifornia 7 9 .4 3 8 17 12 .586 6:29.26,Brown6:31.46, HobartandWiliamSmith C rizona St. 7 9 . 4 38 15 14 .517 6:39. 25,Cornell6:41.02,Syracuse6;44.03,Minneso- A Colorado 6 1 0 .375 13 15 .464 ta-TwinCities6:44.27, Washington 6:52.42, Lafayette Washington St. 6 10 .375 17 .414 6:55.02,Air Force6:55.50, Collegeof Idaho7:13.55, Washington 4 1 2 .250 12 15 13 .536 Neyada 7:14.86, PennState7:16.14,Stanford7;17.50, Southern Cal 3 15 .166 11 19 .366 Wisconsin7:27.34. Individual (top live) —1, Frida Svedber g, Wednesday'sGames RockyMountain,1;58.25.2,JohannaTikkanen,Si- UCLA85,SouthernCal74 erra Nevada,2:00.46. 3, FrancescaCurtolo, Sierra Oregon65,OregonSt. 63 Nevada,2:01.39. 4, Melissa Daniels, SierraNevaToday'sGames da, 2;02.43. 5,Emilie Lamo ureaux, Sierra Nevada, CaliforniaatArizona,6 p.m. 2:03.00. ColoradoatWashington, 6p.m. StanfordatArizonaSt., 8p.m. Women'sFreestyle Skiing Utah atWashingtonSt., 8 p.m. Railjam sGames Team —SierraNevada10, Vermont17, Colorado CaliforniaatArizSaturday' onaSt., 11:30a.m. 36, Northwes tern38,WesternStateColorado40, Ohio StanfordatArizona,1 p.m. State42, SanDiegoState43, UCSantaBarbara 43, Utah atWashington,1:30 p.m. CollegeofIdaho48,JamesMadison48,Saint Anselm ColoradoatWashington St.,3:30p.m. 48, Minnesota-Duluth48, Pennsylvania48. Individual (fopfive) — 1, Allison Perotti, SiWednesday'sSummary erra Neva da.2, JamieWanzek, Sierra Nevada. 3, Lexi Hanks, Vermont.4,RebeccaMace,Colorado.5,Gina Oregon 65, OregonSt. 62 Miele,Vermont.

Women'sNordic T.BK Classic Team —Wyoming11, St. Olaf13, ColoradoMesa 42, Clarkson45, Cornell 48,WesternStateColorado 58, Maine-Farmington79, Air Force85. Individual ltep five) —1, EliseSulser,Wyoming,25:55.5.2, NoraGilbertson, St.Dlaf,26;54.3. 3, PiperBain,St.Olaf,27:46.6. 4, SierraJech,Wyoming, 27:47.0. 5,SarahNadeau, Cornell, 28:03.7.Also:12, HellenCutting,DSU-Cascades, 29:28.2.

Montreal TampaBay Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo

Chicago Winnipeg Minnesota Colorado Dallas

Viterbo177.

Men'sFreestyleSkiing Railjam Team —SierraNevada7, Colorado 20,Western State Colorado 31, Vermont40, Oregon73, North Carolina 86, Nevada99, Lafayette101, UCSanta Barbara108,Sacramento State 109, Penn State111, Minnesota-Duluth113,Collegeof Idaho117,Liberty 117, DSU -Cascades117, SaintAnselm117, Air Force 117, UCLA117. Individual(topfive) — 1, RaleighWhite, Sierra Nevada.2, BenMerrill, Sierra Nevada.3, Connor O'Brien,Colorado.4,JaimeMelton, SierraNevada. 5, Karl Munthe, Colorado.

EasternConference Atlantic Oivision GP W L OT Pls GFGA 64 41 18 5 87 172 142 65 39 20 6 84 213 171

GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y.Rangers 63 39 17 7 8 5 197 155 N.Y.Islanders 65 41 21 3 85 207 182 Pittsburgh 6 3 3 6 18 9 8 1 182 158 Washington 65 35 20 10 80 193 162 Philadelphia 64 27 25 12 66 170 186 NewJersey 64 27 27 10 64 144 165 Columbus 63 26 33 4 5 6 163 201 Carolina 6 2 2 4 3 1 7 5 5 144 167

SKIINGI

Tuesday'sresults Women'sBnowbeard Railjam Team —Westminster 8, SierraNevada 22, Liberty 32,Western StateColorado50, Virginia 63,Air Force67,UCDavis 70, NorthernMichigan 77, Ohio State 78,Vilanova84, UCSantaBarbara 87, Long BeachState89, San DiegoState89, College of Idaho 91, Boston College96,JamesMadison 96, Michigan State96,California96, NorthCarolina 96, Pennsylvania 96,SouthernCalifornia 96. Individual (topfive) — 1, Haile Soderholm, Westminster.2, Emm aCrosby,Westminster. 3, Felicia Sturgeon,Air Force.4, EmmaRomo, SierraNevada.5, JaimeVincent,Westminster.

NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPBT

OREGON (23-8)

Bell 0-1 1-21, Young 4-13 6-615, Abdul-Bassit 2-86-712,Cook7-12 3-517, Brooks2-82-2 6,Benlamin 4-91-212,Benson0-30-0 0, Rorie1-1 0-02. Totals 20-5519-2465.

OREGON BT. (17-13) Sanders0-00-0 0, Hedgecock 0-00-00, Stangel 0-0 0-0 0,Livesay0 000 0,Dahlen 0-0 0-00, Payton I 5-132-213, N'diaye0-10-00,Duvivier 8-180-018, Morris-Walker0-40-20, Gomis2-40-04, Schaftenaar 470011, Reid 596716. Totals 2456 811 62. Halftime —Tied 32-32. 3-Point Goals—Oregon 6-22 (Ben jamin 3-7, Abdul-Bassit 2-6,Young1-5, Benson0-2,Cook0-2),OregonSt.6-18(Schaff enaar3-5, Duvivier2-6, Paylon 111-4, Morris-Walker 0-3). Fouled Out—Gomis. Rebounds—Oregon39 (Bell 9), Oregon St. 34(PaytonII 10). Assists—Oregon14 (Young 6), OregonSt. 16(Payton II 9). Total Fouls—Oregon14, OregonSt.18.Technical—PaytonII. A—9,339.

Wednesday'sGames

TOP 25 No. 3Duke94,WakeForest 51 No.12 NotreDame71, No.16Louisville 59 No. 23OhioState77, PennState67 No. 24Providence79, Seton Hall 66 Men's Nordic EAST 7r5K Classic Team —Wyoming 10, St. Olaf24, Cornell 32, Duquesne81,Fordham66 Colorado Mesa41, Clarkson50,Air Force59,Western Miami67,Pittsburgh63 OhioSt.77,PennSt. 67 StateColorado63,Maine-Farmington73. 79, SetonHall 66 Individual (top five) — 1, Mason Vincent, Providence Wyoming,22:54.8. 2,BenjaminAnderson,Cornell, Richmond56, UMass53 alle 50 23:18.5. 3, Leif Hanson,St. Dlaf, 23:23.2. 4, Wil SaintJoseph's55, LaSSOUTH Timmons, Wyoming,23:30.9.5,Kyle Bochanski, Duke94,Wake Forest51 Wyoming, 23:44.4. Also: 18, Imran Wolfenden, George Washington67,GeorgeMason51 DSU-Casca des, 25:31.1; 27,NolanKing,DSU-CasHouston68,Tulane63, OT cades,26:48.0. NotreDam e71, Louisville 59 SouthFlorida74, UCF45 Tennessee 78, LSU63 BASEBALL Vanderbilt66,MississippiSt.56 MIDWEST MLB preseason lllinois 69, Nebraska57 MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL MichiganSt. 72,Purdue66 AH TimesPBT St. Bonaven ture64, Saint Louis 48 St. John's67 Marquette51 Wednesday'sGames SOUTHWE ST Philadelphia3, N.Y.Yankees1 Cincinnati56,Tulsa47 Toronto4,Pittsburgh 1 NewMexicoSt.69,Texas-PanAmerican48 Detroit 5,Baltimore4 Oklah omaSt.82,TCU70 N.Y.Mets8, Atlanta2 FARWEST Cleveland 4,Cincinnati 2 BoiseSt.68, SanJoseSt. 51 Seattle 4, SanDiego3,10 innings ColoradoSt.78, Nevada62 Oakland 9,SanFrancisco2 FresnoSt.68,Air Force66 Kansas Ciiy 13,Texas2 Oregon65,OregonSt. 62 Chicag oWhiteSox6,L.A.Dodgers4 SanDiegoSt. 60,UNLV58 Arizona 6, Colorado2 UCLA 85, Southern Cal74 Wyoming76,UtahSt. 53

Tournament AmericaEastConference First Round Albany(NY)83,Maine66 NewHampshire67,Harff ord63,DT Stony Brook62,Binghamton57 Vermont66, UMBC39 Big SouthConference First Round Gardner-W ebb72,Campbell 64 Longwood 65, Presbyterian61 UNCAshevile 80,Liberly70 NorlheastConference Quarlerfinals Bryant91,SacredHeart 85,20T RobertMorris91,Wagner 68 St. Francis(NY)79, LIUBrooklyn 70 St. Francis(Pa.)73,Mount St.Mary's58 Ohio ValleyConference First Round E. Illinois78,SIU-Edwardsville 66 Morehead St. 79,SEMissouri 74

Women's college Pacific-12 Conference At KeyArena Seattle First Round

Today'sGames WashingtonStatevs. Oregon,11;30 a.m. UCLAvs. Arizona,2p.m. SouthernCalvs.Colorado, 6p.m. Washin gtonvs.Utah,8:30p.m. Ouarlerlinals Friday's Games ArizonaStatevs. Washington State-Oregon winner, 11:30a.m. Stanford vs.UCLA-Arizonawinner,2 p.m. OregonStatevs. SouthernCal-Colorado winner,6 p.m. Californiavs.Washington-Utahwinner, 8:30p.m. Bemifinals Saturday'sGames Arizona State—Washington State-Oregonwinner vs. Stanford —UCLA-Arizonawinner,6 p.m. OregonState—Southern Cal-Coloradowinner vs. California—Washington-Utahwinner,8:30p.m. Championship Bunday'sGame Semifinalwinners,6p.m. Wednesday'sGames

EAST Drexel58,Northeastern42 SOUTH Elon77,Delaware 76,OT James Madison107, Coll. of Charleston58 UNCWilmington76, Hofstra 75 William 8Mary68,Towson56 MIDWEST Akron67,Miami(Ohio) 55 Ball St.85,Cent. Michigan69 Buffalo55,Bowling Green47 Cleveland St.73,YoungstownSt.62 Detroit 60,Milwaukee56 E. Michigan 74, W.Michigan65 N. Illinois68,Toledo64 Ohio69,KentSt.56 WrightSt.74, Ill.-chicago54 TOURNAMEN TB

Atlantic 10Conference First Round La Salle74,Davidson63 UMass 55, St.Bonaventure 49 Atlantic CoaslConference First Round Georgi aTech80,Clemson53 VirginiaTech57,NCState 56 WakeForest69,Boston College53 Big TenConference First Round Indiana68, PennSt. 63 Purdue 58,Wisconsin56 Ohio ValleyConference First Round SIU-Edwardsville72,Austin Peay69 UT-Martin68,E.Illinois 35 Patriot League First Round Colgate58,Boston U.48 Lafayette 58, Loyola(Md.)46 SoutheasternConference First Round Auburn71,Florida49 Vanderbilt 66,Alabama56

Ottawa 3, Winnipeg1 Detroit 2,N.Y.Rangers1, DT Colorado3, Pittsburgh1 Anaheim 3, Montreal1

Today'sGames

Calgaryat Boston, 4p.m. St. Louisat Philadelphia4 p.m. MinnesotaatWashington, 4p.m. Toront oatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Dallasat Florida,4:30p.m. N.Y.IslandersatNashvile, 5p.m. Vancouverat Arizona,6p.m. Montrealat LosAngeles,7:30p.m.

TENNIS WTA Malaysi anOpen W ednesday atKualaLumpur,Malaysia SecondRound JarmilaGajdosova(4), Australia, def. LuksikaKumkhum,Thailand,7-5,6-2. ElizavetaKulichkova,Russia, def. Yulia Putintseva, Kazakhstan, 6-0,6-2.

KurumiNara(6), Japan,def. MagdaLinette, Poland,7-5,5-7,7-6(6). AlexandraDulgheru, Rom ania, def. DuanYingYing,China,6-4,6-1. Julia Goerges (8), Germany,def. KaterynaKozlova, Ukraine,6-1,6-2. Abierlo MonterreyAfirme WednesdayatMonterrey, Mexico SecondRound KristinaMladenovic,France,def. VeraZvonareva,

Russia,6-4,6-2.

MagdalenaRybarikova (8), Slovakia, def. Polona Hercog,Slovenia,7-5,3-6,7-6(9). SaraErrani(2), Italy,def.TimeaBabos, Hungary, 6-3, 6-3. Ana Ivanovic(1), Serbia,def. PaulineParmentier, France,6-3,6-2.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague DETROITI TGERS— ReleasedRHPJoelHanrahan from aminorleaguecontract. TEXAS RANGERS—Agreed to termswith RHPs Luke Jackson,Phil Klein, Nick Martinez, Rom an Mendez, TannerScheppersandCRobinsonChirinos on one-yearcontracts. Renewed the contract of RHP Shawn Tolleson. National League MILWAUKEE BREWERS— AssignedRHPBrooks Hall outrighttoColoradoSprings (PCL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES— Agreed to termswith RHPsArquimedesCaminero, Gerrit Cole, Brandon Cumpton ,John Holzdkom,Nick Kingham,Stolmy Pimentel,CaseySadler, RobScahil and Jameson Taillon;OFsJaffDecker,Wily Garcia,AndrewLambo andGregoryPolanco;CsEliasDiazandTonySanchez; SSsPedroFlorimon, AlenHanson, Justin Sellers and JordyMercer;andLHPs BobbyLaFromboiseandJeff Lockeonone-yearcontracts. BASKETB ALL

National Basketball Association NBA—Finedthe NewYorkKnicksanundisclosed amountfor comments madebyteampresident Phil Jacksonforpublicly discussingaplayer notyeteligible for theNBAdraft. FOOTBALL

National Football League DALLAS COWBOYS—SignedWRCole Beasleyto afour-yearcontract andLBKeith Rivers. HOUSTONTEXANS— ReleasedCChrisMyers. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS—Re-signedCTylerOtt. NEWYORKJETS— SignedDERonaldTalley. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Terminatedthecontract of STyvonBranch. PHILADEPLHIAEAGLES— ReleasedLBTrentCole. WASHIN GTONREDSKINS— Re-signed S Duke Ihenacho. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —Suspended NewYork Islanders FMat Martin foronegame,for kneeingDallas DTrevor Daley during agameonTuesday. FLORIDAPANTHERS — Recalled GsDanEllis from SanAntonio (AHL)andSamBrittain fromCincinnati(ECHL). SANJOSESHARKS—SignedGAaronDell forthe remainderoftheseason. TAMPA BA Y LIGHTNING— RecalledCVladislav NamestnikovfromSyracuse(AHLL WASHING TONCAPITALS— SignedDTyler Lewington toathree-year,entry-level contract.

8:30 p.m. Pac-12

BASEBALL

MLB preseason, Detroitat New YorkMets

ON DECK

2 p.m. 7 p.m.

ES P NU Root

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL BeaverS Set SChOOI reCOrd with win Over PilOtS — Kyle Nobach tallied four hits and Jeff Hendrix, GabeClark and JoeGilette all hit home runs to sendOregon State to a14-2 win over Portland Wednesday afternoon at JoeEtzel Field in Portland. Thewin marked OregonState's 22nd straight over the Pilots, setting a newschool record for the most consecutive victories over oneopponent. The previous record was 21 straight over the Pilots from 1959-69. OnWednesday, it vvas Nobach vvho led the Beavers enroute to the team's18 overall hits. Seven of the team's18 went for extra bases.

NCAAreports dig jumpIn homeruns with newdall —The new flat-seam ball in college baseball is having the desired effect, with teams hitting 40 percent more homeruns so far this season. The NCAA announced Wednesdaythat teams are hitting a home run about every other game. Lastyear, teams homeredabout once every three games through the first three weeks of theseason.

SOCCER U.S. defeatS NOrWay2-1 at AlgarVOCiip —Carli Lloydscored two goals and the U.S.women's national teamopenedthe Algarve Cup in Portugal with a 2-1victory over Norway onWednesday. Trailing 1-0 at the half, Lloyd evened the match with a left-footed goal in the 56th minute before putting the United States ahead on apenalty kick about six minutes later at the Municipal Stadium in Vila Real deSanAntonio. Hope Solo made her first appearance in goal for the second-ranked U.S.vvomen this year following a 30-day suspension from the team.

BASKETBALL Allen SayS heWill not Play thiS IIIBASeaSOn— RayAllen

BOXING

Boxing, JosephDiazJr. vs. JuanLuis Hernandez 7 p.m. Boxing, TonyHarrison vs. AntvvoneSmith 8 p.m.

and took advantage of four Longvvooderrors. Relief pitcher Taylor Cotton picked up the winafter throwing tvvo innings andrecording two strikeouts. Senior Dani Gilmore andC.J. Chirichigno pacedthe Oregon State offense with three hits. Gilmore also addedtvvo doubles.

FS1 ESPN2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TI7'or radio stations.

SOFTBALL Oregan State PullS aWay, beatS LongWOOd —With four runs in the top of the seventh inning, OregonState broke open a3-3 tie en route to the 7-3 victory over LongvvoodWednesday in Honolulu. The Beavers (16-5), competing in the Hawaii Spring Fling, racked up 12hits

might return to the NBA — just not this season. The league's all-time leading 3-point shooter who playedfor two NBA championship clubs announced Wednesdaythat he decided not to sign with any franchise for the remainder of this season, although heleft the door openfor a possible return in 2015-16. — From staffand wire reports


THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

Batum ea s Bazer ra over The Associated Press

and the Suns overcame a 15-point deficit

LOS ANGELES — Nicolas Batum hit a 3-pointer that forced overtime, then set

to beat Orlando. Hornets 115, Nets 91: NEW YORK-

up three alley-oop baskets and added a

Al Jefferson and Gerald Henderson each

clinching 3 in the final minute to rally the

scored 19 points, Marvin Williams had 18

Portland Trail Blazers past the Los Angeles Clippers 98-93 on Wednesday night. LaMarcus Aldridge had 29 points and

and Charlotte routed Brooklyn in a key matchup in the Eastern Conference play-

Batum added 20 for the Northwest Divi-

off race. Pacers 105, Knicks 82: INDIANAPO-

sion leaders, who have won four straight

LIS — GeorgeHillscored a season-high

after a 6-11 stretch that began with a

21 points, and Rodney Stuckey had 17 to

100-94 loss to the Clippers on Jan. 14 at

help Indiana rout New York. Pelicans 88, Pistons 85: NEW ORLE-

Portland. Damian Lillard was 1 for 13 from the

%%KIIgg

.'lf-

field, finishing with five points, five turnovers and a career-high 18 rebounds in 43 minutes. The third-year guard missed his first 12 shots before making a layup off a lob pass from Batum to give the Blazers a

Lillardhas played 223 regular-season games in the NBA and 11 more in the

Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press

passes the ball to DeAndre Jordan under

playoffs, and he's never gone through an pressure by Portland's Robin Lopez (42) entire one without a field goal. The two- during the first half of Wednesday night's time All-Star was a career-worst I for 16 game in Los Angeles. at Orlando on Feb. 10, 2013.

Chris Paul had 36 points and 12 assists for the Clippers, who played short-hand- back shot in the final second of regulation. ed again without Blake Griffin (right elNeither team ledbymore than five until bow), Jamal Crawford (bruised calf) and Redick's 3-pointer increased the Clippers' Matt Barnes (right hamstring strain). J.J. margin to 56-49 with 8:58 left in the third Redick scored 26 and DeAndre Jordan quarter. grabbed 19 rebounds. Also on Wednesday: Paul scored eight points during a 3:33 Cavaliers 120, Raptors 112: TORONstretch to help the Clippers take an 83-75 TO — LeBron James scored 29 points lead with 4:27 to play. The Blazers started and matched a season high with 14 asfouling Jordan in an attempt to get back sists, Kevin Love had 22 points and 10 rein the game, and Jordan missed his next bounds and Cleveland held on late to beat six free throws before coach Doc Rivers the Toronto. took him out of the game for the rest of Celtics 85, Jazz 84: BOSTON — Tyler regulation. Zeller banked in a shot from under the The Blazers narrowed the gap to 85-82 basket as time expired to lift Boston past on Batum's two free throws, a 19-footer

by Aldridge and a 3-pointer by Wesley Matthews with 1:06 to play. After Batum tied the score at 87, Paul missed a running

son, a sophomore, said of

"This team surprises me

all the time — good and bad," Lava Bears coach Todd Ervin said. "We do

some really good things and it's kind of a surprise we're playing so well, like in that second quarter at times. And then we play poorly at times, and it really surprises me because I thought we were really beyond that, some of the mistakes we made. But

PORTLAND (98) Batum6-u 4-420,Aldridge12-305-729,Lopez 4-6 3-411, Lillard1-133-45, Matthews3-9 4-612, W L Pct GB Afflaloz72-27, Kaman 4-60-08, Blake1-1 1-23, x-Atlanta 48 12 .BOII 0-00-00, Wright1-4 0-0 3. Totals 34-87 d-Chicago 38 23 .623 10'/2 Leonard 22-29 98. d-Toronto 38 23 .623 10'A LA. CLIPPERS (93) Cleveland 39 24 .619 10'/~ Hamil ton1-30-03,Hawes3-90-08,Jordan2-5 Washington 34 27 .557 14'/z Milwaukee 32 29 ,525 16i/i 2-106, Paul14-296-636,Redick0-270-026, Turkoglu 3-100-08, Rivers1-70-02, Davis2-60-2 4, Miami 27 33 .450 21 Jones 0-00-00. Totals37-96 8-18 93. Charlotte 26 33 441 21'/a Portland 28 18 20 21 11 — 98 Indiana 26 34 .433 22 Clippers 2 4 24 20 19 6 — 93 Brooklyn 25 34 424 22'/a LA. 3-Point Goal — s P or t l a nd 8-32 (Batum4-8, MatBoston 24 35 .407 23'/2 Detroit 23 37 .383 25 thews 2-8, Wright 1-3, Afflalo 1-4, Aldridge0-2, Orlando 19 43 .306 30 Lillard 0-7),LA.Clippersu-31 (Redick4-12,Hawes Philadelphia 13 48 .213 35'A 2-5, Paul2-6, Turkoglu2-7, Hamilton1-1). Fouled —None.Rebounds—Portland70(Lilard18), LA. NewYork 12 48 .200 36 Out Clippers59(Jordan19).Assists—Portland19(Batum WesternConference 8), LA. Clippers25(Paul12). TotalFouls—Portland W L Pct GB 21, LA. Clippers 26. Technical— s LA. Clippers d-Golden State 47 12 .797 Coach Rivers. A—19,060(19,060). II-Memphis 43 17 .717 O'I~ d-Portland 40 19 .678 7 Houston 41 20 .672 7 Pelicans 88, Pistons 85 LA. Clippers 40 22 .645 8'/2 Dallas 4II 22 .645 8i/~ OETROIT (85) SanAntonio 37 23 .617 10'/~ Prince3 82 28,Monroe6151-213, Drumm ond Oklahoma City 34 27 .557 14 6-13 1-2 13,Jackson7-16 0-0 14,Caldwell-Pope NewOrleans 33 28 .541 I5 4-14 Ij-08, Dinwiddie1-5 0-0 2,Tolliver 2-60-Ij 5, Phoenix 32 30 516 16'/z Butler 0-10-00, MeeksIj-143-3 20,S.Wiliams1-I Utah 24 36 .400 23'I~ 0 02, Anthony 0-00-00. Totals38-937-985. Denver 22 39 .361 26 NEWORLEANS(88) Sacramen to 21 38 .356 26 Pondexter2-40-04, Davis17305-739,Asik1-7 LA,Lakers 16 44 .267 31'/z 0-0 2, Evans 8-20 4-521, Gordon1-51-2 4, Aiinca Minnesota 13 47 217 34'/a 5-100-010,Cole2-8 0-04, Cunningham1-52-24, d-divisionleaderx-clinchedplayoffspot Babbitt 0-10-0 0, FredetteIj-0 0-00. Totals 37-90 12-16 88. Wednesday'sGames Detroit 24 22 17 22 — 85 Phoenix105,Orlando1IIO Neworleans 17 25 23 23 —88 Indiana105, NewYork82 Cleveland120,Toront0112 Nllggets100, Timberwolves 85 Boston85, Utah84 Charlotte115,Brooklyn91 DENYER I100) New Orleans88, Detroit 85 Chandler4-100-09, Gallinari5-103-316, Faried oklahoma city123, philadelphiau8, OT 8-142-318, Lawson 0-90-00, Foye4-70-010, BarMemphis102,Houston100 ton 6-0 3-417,Arthur3-40-06, Hickson 3-60-06, Denver100,Minnesota85 Nelson6-10II-012, Lauvergne3-8 0-Ij 6, Green0-0 Miami IOO, LA. Lakers94 0-00, Harri0-30-00. s Totals42-92 8-10100. sanAntoniou2,sacramento85 MINNESOT AI85) GoldenState1II2, Milwaukee93 Wiggins 8-16 4 820, Gametj 5-61-211, PekovPortland98, LA. Clippers93,OT ic 2-62-2 6,Rubio4-13 2-210, Martin3-152-3 9, Today'sGames Dieng2-5 4-48, Payne1-43-4 5, Neal6-130-013, Oklahoma City atChicago,5 p.m. LaVine1-40-0 3.Totals 32-82 18-2585. Dallas atPortland,7:30p.m. Denver 26 34 17 23 —100 Minnesota 27 16 22 20 — 85

Summaries

Celtics 85, Jazz84 UTAH (84)

Hayward5-0 1-2 I3, Favors7-102-3 I6, Gobe rt 3-9 4-6 10,Exum1-40-0 3, Ingles1-51-1 3, Burke 7-172-416,Booker4-73-411, Hood4-70-0II, Milsap 0-20-00, Evans 2-30-1 4. Totals 34-7513-21 84.

BOSTON (85) Turner1-80-02, Bass3-61-2 7, Zeller4-80-2 8, Smart3-141-1 7,Bradley5-130-013, Crowder 8-1t 1-518,Thoma s6-127-821, Jerebko2-51-26,Olynyk 0-30-00, Young1-20-03.Totals33-8811-2085. uiah 19 14 22 29 — 84 Boston 18 16 27 24 — 85

Grizzlies102, Rockets100 MEMPHIS(102) Je.Green 5-120-012, Randolph7-121-1 15,Gasol 10-14 1-221,Conley6-9 4-417, Lee2-82-2 6, Udrih 2-80-0 4, Leuer0-22-2 2, Allen6-9 0-012, Calat hes2-62-27,Koufos2-32-46.Totals42-83 14-17102. HOUSTON (100) Ariza 4-90-0 8, Jones10-141-1 21,Motielunas 4-120-010,Beverley5-90-012, Harden7-162-218, Brewer 2-5 0-05, J.Smith6-142-216, Terry3-60-0 8, Dorsey1-1 0-02. Totals42-865-5100. Memphis 24 30 25 23 — 102 Houston 31 28 20 21 — 100

Aerials Continued from C1 That trip to the Olympic Training Cen-

ter, home of the development program, came in 2010, a few months after Jeret

"Speedy" Peterson produced America's most electric single moment in the sport — landing his trademark, five-spinning "hurricane" jump to win an Olympic silver medal.

H aley Brandel had a game-high 19 points to go along with nine rebounds, while C a rl y Bo l ander, Maggie Batz and Kanani

"You know, we're not even

Brian Shaw, beating Minnesota. Grizzlies 102, Rockets 100: HOUSTON

— Marc Gasol made a jumper with 0.1 seconds left to give Memphis a victory over Houston. Thunder 123, 76ers 118: OKLAHOMA CITY — Russell Westbrook set career

highs with 49 points and 16 rebounds, and added 10 assists for his fourth consecutive triple-double, helping Oklahoma City defeat Philadelphia. Spurs 112, Kings 85: SAN ANTONIO — Kawhi Leonard had 21 points and San Antonio punctuated its return from

six seasons.

going to worry about Satmakings ofa game-chang- urday for at least 24 hours," ing rally. That is, until the Ervin chuckled. "We're goLava Bears collected them- ing to enjoy this and then selves and put the game we'll be really challenged away for good. Saturday." Eight straight points proEnjoy the moment, Bend vided Bend with its largest did after its play-in victory, lead of the night, 42-27, and as shown by the Bears' jukept the Bears' season alive. bilant roar erupting from "We just kept pushing," within their l ocker room. Jackson said. "We knew that After struggling early in this could be the last time we the season, Ervin noted, afplayed together as a team, so ter not knowing who would since 1987, Putnam had the

we knew that we had to put it all out there."

start and losing a starter ance was well-deserved.

Sacramento.

To go along with her 15 points, Jackson logged 10

Heat 100, Lakers 94: MIAMI — Dwyane Wade scored 25 points and added six

rebounds and a b l o cked this season," Sophia Jackshot. But it was not her own son said. "And just to see it

assists, Hassan Whiteside grabbed 25 rebounds and Miami rallied to beat the Los Angeles Lakers.

performance that impressed pay off like that, just having her the most. It was that of us all come together as one her sister, Alexa Jackson, and keep going, it's just a rewho scored just three points ally good feeling. It's hard to and had only three boards describe." but blocked seven shots. — Reporter: 541-383-0307,

a nearly monthlong road trip with the largest home victory of the season over

Warriors 102, Bucks 93: OAKLAND,

"Honestly, w e

c o u l dn't

during the year, that exuber"We've worked so hard

glucas@bendbulIetin.com.

PREP SCOREBOARD

Cavaliers120, Raptors112

Pacers105, Knicks 82

CLEVEL AND(120) James9-16 8-1329, Love6-106-9 22, Mozgov 4-9 2-210, Irving9-17 7-726, Smith6-12 0-015, Shumpert1-40-0 2, Thompson0-1 0-00, Dellavedova 1-2 0-0 2, Jones4-7 2-3 14. Totals 40-78 25-34120. TORONTO (112) J.Johnson5-9 0-0 11,A.Johnson1-62-2 4, Valanciunas 12-172-226,Vasquez2-7 1-26, DeRozan IO-I9 3-3 25,Wiliams7-88-826, Ross5-9 0-Ij12, Hansbrough 1-1 0-0 2, Paterson 0-3 0-0 0. Totals 43-79 16-17112. Cleveland 28 29 27 36 — 120 Toronto 25 18 31 38 —112

NEWYORK(82) Early1-52-44,Amundson4-60-2 II, Bargnani1017 3-325,Galloway5-120-011, Harda way Jr. 5-17 2-313, Thomas 1-41-2 3, Aldrich1-2 4-4 6,Smith 1-32-34, Shved 2-72-28, Larkin 0-30-00. Totals 30-7616-23 82. INDIANA (105) S.HIII1-3 0-0 2,West6-91-213, Mahinmi3-7 0-1 6, G.Hill 8-132-2 21,Miles4-95-516, Allen 1-6 3-4 5, Stuckey7-12 2-2 17,Scola4-9 1-2 9, Sloan 1-30-0 3, Rudez2-4 0-0 6, Copeland1-3 0-0 2, Whittington0-2 5-6 5. Totals 38-80 1924 105. New York 19 22 23 18 — 82 Indiana 30 35 23 17 —105

Hornets115, Nets 91

Thunder123, 76ers118 (OT)

CHARLO TTE(115)

Kidd-Gilchrist 4-7 2-210, Ma.Wiliams5-8 4-4 18, AJefferson8-163-419, M. Wiliams6-13 O-I 14, Henderson7-11 4-619, Zeller5-9 3-313, Biyombo1-15-6 7, Roberts 2-9 0-04, Stephenson2-5 2-2 6, Taylor0-2 0-0 0, Maxiell 1-2 0-0 2,Daniels 1-2 0-0 3,Vonleh0-0 Ij-0 0. Totals 42-85 23-28 115.

BROOK LYN(91) Anderson1-5 0-02, Johnson1-60-0 2, Plumlee 591-2 u, DWiliams395612, Brown4-u 1-29, Lopez2-74-4 8,Jack 4-131-1 9, Young3-5 I-2 8, Bogdanovic4-73-511, C.Jefferson3-60-06, Jordan 2-62-26, Karasev3-30-07,MorrisO-10-00. Totals 35-8818-24 91. Charlotle 35 21 32 27 — 115 Brooklyn 15 29 22 25 — 91

Suns105, Magic100

PHILAOELPHIA (118) MbahaMoute6-216-91II,Sampson2-33-37, Noel 3-102-48,Richardson8-199-929, Canaan1016 3-331,Grant2-7 8-1014, Thompson1-6 0-0 3, Robinson0-62-22, Sims1-32-24, Smith1-50-22. Totals 34-96 35-44118. OKLAHOM ACITY (123) Singler0-22-22,Ibaka1-50-02, Kanter4-80-0 8, Westbrook16-3316-2049, Roberson0-0 0-0 0, Waiters9-151-3 20,Collison2-5 4-48, Morrow3-8 2-211, McG ary3-70-06, Augustin 6-133-317. Totals 44-9628-34123. Philad elphia 34 25 31 20 8 — 118 Oklahoma City 37 19 28 26 13— 123

Spljrs 112, Kings 85

PHOENIX (105) Tucker7-10 4-5 19, Mark.Morris 11-171-2 23, Len1-50-02, Bledsoe3-76-613,Knight7-1510-12 28, Wright2-60-04,MarcMorris2-82-27, Goodwin 1-40-03, Warren 2-5 0-04, Thornton1-20-02. Totals 37-79 23-27105. ORLANDO (100) Harris 5-8 0-011, Dedmon 3-3 2-3 8, Vucevic 8-16 2-2 18, Payton4-u 1-2 9, Oladipo 15-25 4-4 38, A.Gordon0-1 0-0 0, W.Green1-8 0-0 2, Frye 1-42-2 4, Harkless0-2 0-0 0, B.Gordon1-3 0-02,Nicholson3-62-28.Totals 41-87 1315 100. Phoenix 22 21 34 28 — 105 Orlando 25 27 17 31 — 100

SACRAME NTO(85) Gay 4-162-410, Thompson3-8 0-0 6, Cousins 5-124-714, McCallum6-120-1 I2, McLemore 3-8 2-4 9,D.Wiliams1-4 8-811, Casspi2-6 1-2 5, Miller 1-3 2-2 4,Stauskas3-6 0-0 7, Hollins 1-3 3-4 5, Landry0-0 2-2 2. Totals 29-78 24-34 85. SANANTONIO(112) Leonard9-0 1-4 21, Duncan2-41-2 5, splitter 2-40-04, Parker 8-143-319, Green3-75-513, Mils 2-70-05, Ginobili 5-91-113,Diaw4-7 II-08, Baynes 2-5 0-0 4, Belinelli 5-120-0 13,Joseph1-30-0 2, Ayres I-1 1-I 3, Bonner 1-I 0-0 2. Totals 45-85 12-16 112. Sacramento San Antonio

Heat100, Lakers 94

Warriors102, Bucks93

LA. LAKERS (94) Boozer5-0 3-413, Kelly1-21-24, Sacre1-3 0-0 2, Clarkson3-11 3-4 10, Ellington 6-15 0-0 14, WJohnson5-10 0-Ij 12, Lin 5-121-212, Davis 7-100-114, Hill 5-143-413.Totals 38-88 11-17 94. MIAMI I100) Deng5-115-6 15,Haslem1-4 0-0 2, Whiteside 6-106-1318,G.Dragic6-108-Ij 2I, Wade7-1711-12 25, Walker3-100-08, Chalmers1-30-02, TJohnson 0-0 1-2 1,Andersen2-8 0-0 4, Beasley1-6 2-24. Totals 32-7933-43 100. LA. Lakers 25 26 22 21 — 94 Miami 28 18 30 24 — 100

MILWAUKE E(93) Antetokounmpo 6-13 4-4 16,Dudley1-5 0-0 2, Pachulia5-9 3-4 13,Carter-Wiliams5-14 6-6 16, Middleton5-94-514, Ilyasova5-130-1 13,Henson 021-21, Bayless36229, Ennis4 901 9. Totals 34-80 20-2593. GOLDEN STATE(102) Bames3-7 0-26, Green9-141-6 23, Bogut3-3 1-2 7, Curry6-161-219, Thompson5-164-417, Iguodala2-53-38, Holiday0-02-22, Lee1-10-22, Livingston 7-102-216, Ezeli1-I 0-02. Totals37-73 14-25102. Milwaukee 19 34 18 22 — 93 GoldenState 25 28 19 30 — 102

previous Olympics. It was the endgame of at the season-ending event in Minsk, a messy, bureaucratic selection process in which the U.S. ski team must divvy up

Belarus.

Olympic spots among several freestyle events: aerials, moguls, halfpipe, slopestyle and skicross. The ultimate goal is to send athletes with the best chances of winning medals in their respective disciplines. Bohonnon almost came through.

cance of the moment for a U.S. team that has been trying to restore its standing in

The only U.S. man in the aerials contest and in only his first year of doing tri-

points.

Without a state playoff berth

Still, there is no denying the signifia growingly competitive sport. Bohonnon is the first American man to win the crystal globe since Peterson in 2005. McKinnon is the first American woman to take it since Nikki Stone in 1998.

Stone also won Olympic gold that year. an earlier, successful generation of U.S. ple-flipping jumps that are more or less In second place this year was American jumpers who were slowly being overtak- required at the top level of the men's com- Ashley Caldwell, a one-time gymnast en by skiers in China, Australia and Be- petitions, he finished fifth in the moun- who was the first aerialist in the developlarus. Skiing leaders in those countries tains above Sochi. ment program. "It was an eye-opener and a confisaw medal opportunities and started lurTogether, it is the first time the Ameriing legions of gymnasts and divers over dence-builder for me," he said. cans have swept the aerials trophies in 20 to the mountain. Outside of Peterson's silBohonnon kept building through this years, and the repeat came sooner than ver, those three countries have won every season. Skeptics will note that the sec- expected. "It's an amazing start to the next Olymaerials medal in the last two Olympics. ond- and third-place finishers in the race Meanwhile, the U.S. sent only three for the crystal globe were both from Chi- pic cycle," McKinnon said. "Hopefully, we jumpers to Russia, down from eight in the na, and neither competed last weekend progress from here." But Peterson was one of the last in

each contributed with eight

playoffs, a Saturday contest coach on edge. The Kings- at Silverton, as they eye a men (10-13) began the sec- trip to the state tournament

Girls basketball All TimesPST

Kinkade and Alexa Evert

for the fifth time in the past

Calif.— Stephen Curry shook off a rough shooting night to make three straight — Brandon Knight had 28 points and sev- 3-pointers early in the fourth quarter to en assists in his best game for Phoenix, help Golden State beat the Milwaukee.

EasternConference

picked up its fifth win in seven games, while Awbrie Elle

ond half with an 8-2 run to cut the lead to seven points.

Utah. Suns 105,Magic 100: ORLANDO, Fla.

Blazers 98, Clippers 93(OT)

Allison P a rker s c ored nine points for Bend, which

to the first round of the state

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings

her senior sister. "Next year, we're going to miss her a lot. But I'm really proud of what she did tonight."

At the start of the third quarter, Bend indeed put its

points and 14 rebounds to help Denver win its second straight since firing coach Los Angeles Clippers' Hedo Turkoglu (15)

Continued from C1

13 rebounds and eight blocks in his first game back from a right shoulder sprain,

NEAPOLIS — Kenneth Faried had 18

ing in the fourth quarter. Batum tied it at 87 on a 3 with 25.1 seconds left.

have done it without her defense tonight," Sophia Jack-

ANS — Anthony Davis had 39 points,

in seven games. Nuggets 100, Timberwolves 85: MIN-

Portland trailed by 10 with 2:40 remain-

Bears

that's what happens when you're young, especially in a postseason game. As they say, they keep me on edge Kremers each recorded five on the bench. They really points. do." The Lava Bears advance

and New Orleans won for the sixth time

91-89 edge with 3:04 left in overtime.

C3

Class 5A Play-in

Bend 47, Ptltnam 38 Putnam(38)—HaleyBrandel19, Bolander5, Batz 5, Kremers5, Spaulding 4.Totals15 3-4 38.

Bend (47) —SophiaJackson15, Parker9, Evert 8,Kinkade8, Wheeler4, A.Jackson3. Totals 189-17 47. Putnam 10 9 8 tt — 38 Bend 11 21 10 5 — 47 Three-poingoal t s— Putnam:Brandel 2, Kremers, Batz,Bolander;Bend:S.Jackson, Parker.

Ridgeview 56, Sandy37 Ridgeview (56) —ChloeRoss16,S.Wilcox 14, Wilder11,Whitney6, Epps5, McFetridge 2,

Class 6A Round 2 Friday's Games No. 16SheldonatNo.I West Linn,TBD No.9LakeOswegoatNo.8Southridge,7p.m. No.12SouthMedford atNo.5SouthSalem,7 p.m. No.13 SouthEugeneatNo.4Jeff erson,7;30p.m. No.14Clackamasat No.3Jesuit, 7p.m. No.11 LakeridgeatNo.6 David Douglas, 7p.m. No.10 McNary atNo.7 North Medford, 6:30 p.m. No.18TualatinatNo.2Central Catholic, 7 p.m. Class 5A Round 1 Friday's Games No.16ParkroseatNo.I MountainView,7p.m. No. 9corvallis atNo.8pendleton, 7p.m. No.12 church>latl No.5 uberty,7:15 p.m. No.13 LaSalle atNo.4 Silverton, 7p.m. No.14 Dallesat No.3 Wilsonvile, 7 p.m. No.11CrescentValleyat No.6Springfield, 7p.m. No.10 Centralat No.7Marist,7 p.m. No. 15Sandyat No.2 Summit, 7p.m.

woodward z Totals 2211-16 56. Sandy (37) —RaquelPellecer17,Wels 6, Seipert 5,Valitski 2, Nutt 2, Burns2, Barnett 2, Holliday1.Totals1212-1637. Ridgeview 1416 12 14 — 56 Class 4A Sandy 8 6 7 16 — 37 Round 1 Three-pointgoals— Ridgeview: Whitney; Sandy: Friday's Games Seipert. No. 16Yamhil-Carlton at No.1 NorthBend, 6:30 p.m. Class 6A No. 9Cascadeat No.8LaGrande,7p.m. State playoffs No.12 SistersatNo.5Scappoose,5:30p.m. Round1 Wednesday'sResults No. 13ValleyCatholic atNo. 4 Marshfield, 8:30 No. 1SouthMedford 98,No.32Westview59 p.m. No.16 Glencoe 54, No.17 Centennial 3II No.14SeasideatNo.3North Valley, 7p.m. No. 9WestLinn 71,No.24Wilson 24 No.u Nort hMarionatNo.6Gladstone,7p.m. No. 8Roseburg 5II, No.25Sunset47 No. 1IIMadrasatNo.7 Sutherlin, 7 p.m. No. 5Jesuit47,No.28Sherwood28 No.15 Tilamook at No.2 philomath, 7p.m. No. 12West Albany52, No.21Canby43 No. 13Grant64, No.20Newberg48 Class3A No.4SouthSalem 5II,No.29LakeOswego31 State tournament No. 3Beaverton 59, No.30Forest Grove27 Today'sGames No.14Tigard47, No.19NorthMedford 36 at North BendHS No. u clackama s56, No.22McNary43 No.6Sheldon53,No.27WestSalem 48 Quarlerlinals No.7StMary' s70,No.26Gresham 36 No 9Amityvs No1Dayton130pm No. 10CentralCatholic 68,No.23Tualatin 47 No. 12SalemAcademy vs. No.4 Creswel, 3:15 No.15Southridge56,No.18 Lincoln 50 p.m. No. 2OregonCity 97,No.31 Roosevelt 49 No. 6BlanchetCatholic vs.No.3DeLaSalle North Catholic, 6:30p.m. Class 3A No. 7 Nyssa vs. No.2 Horizon Christian, Tualatin, State tournament 8:15 p.m. Today'sGames Friday's Games at Marshfield HS,CoosBay at Marshfield HS,CoosBay Quarlerfinals No. I6 Ranievs. r No.9 St Mary's, Medford, 1:30 Consolationsemifinals, 8a.m., 9:45a.m. p.m. Semifinals,I;45p.m.,6p.m. No. 5Amityvs.No.4SalemAcademy, 3:I5 p.m. Saturday'sGames No. 11PortlandChristian vs. No.3 Dayton, 6:30 at Marshfield HS,CoosBay p.m. Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. No. 7PortlandAdventist vs.No.2Vale, 8:15p.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Friday's Games Final, 8:30p.m. AI North BendHS Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m., IO:45a.m. Class 2A At Marshfield HS,CoosBay State tournament Semifinals,noon,4:15p.m. Today'sGames Saturday'sGames at Marshfield HS,CoosBay at PendletonHS Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Guarlerlinals Third-place game,1:3II p.m. No. 8Burnsvs. No.I Irrigon,1:30 p.m. Finals,6:30p.m. No.5Regisvs.No.4Oakridge,3:15p.m. No. 6Knappavs. No.3Heppner,6:30p.m. Class 2A No. 7 WesternMennonite vs.No.2 Toledo, 8:15 State tournament p.m. Today'sGames Friday's Games at PendeltonConvention Center at PendeltonConventionCenter Guarlerfinals No. 8 MyrtlePointvs. No.1Western Mennonite, Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,10:45 a.m. Semifinals3:15 , p.m., t:15 p.m. I:30 p.m. No. 5Monroevs. No.4Union,315 pm. Saturday'sGames No. 6Burnsvs. No.3 Vernonia, 6:30p.m. at PendletonConventionCenter No.10Regisvs.No.2 Kennedy, 8:15p.m. Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Friday's Games Third-placegame,3:15p.m. at PendletonHS Final, 8:30p.m. Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,1045 a.m. at PendletonConvention Center Class1A Semifinals,I;30p.m.,6:30p.m. State tournament Saturday'sGames at BakerHS,BakerCity at PendletonConvention Center Wednesday'sResults Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Guarlerfinals Third-place game,1:30 p.m. Final, 6:30p.m. No. 1 HorizonChristian, HoodRiver 59, No. 9 Crosshill Christian,44 Class1A No. 5Nixyaawii 51, No.4 HosannaChristian46 State tournament No. 6SiletzValley45, No.3Yoncalla 43 at Baker HS,BakerCity No. 2CountryChristian50,No.IOSherman40 Today'sGames Today'sGames Guanerfinals Consolation semifinals No.9Adrianvs.No.1DamascusChristian,1:30pm. No. 9Crosshi l Christianvs.No.4 Hosanna ChrisNo. 5 Chiloquim vs. No.4 Condon/Wheeler, 3:15 tian, 9a.m. p.m. No. 11 Elktonvs. No. 3 Country Christian,6:30 No.10Shermanvs.No.3Yoncalla,10:45a.m. Friday's Games p.m. No.7McKenzievs.No.2NorthDouglas,8:15p.m. Semifinals Friday's Games No. 5 Nixyaawivs. i No.1 Horizon Christian, Hood Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,1045 a.m. River,3:15p.m. Semifinals,1:30p.m.,6:30 p.m. No. 6 SiletzValleyvs. No. 2 CountryChristian, Saturday'sGames 8:15 p.m. Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Saturday'sGames Third-place game,1:30 p.m. Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Final, 6:30p.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Boys basketball Champi onship,8:30p.m.


C4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

WOMEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Oregon State, Arizona State favorites for Pac-12tourney By Tim Booth The Associated Press

SEATTLE — For the first time in the 14-year

history of the Pac-12 Conference women's basketball tournament, Stanford will not be the No.

1seed. That fact alone makes the 2015 version noteworthy.

At least for one year, Stanford is not the power of the Pac-12. The Cardinal are not even the No. 2 seed. Those top two positions belong to

Oregon State — ranked No. 8 in the latest Associated Press Top 25 — and No. 9 Arizona State, with both trying to strengthen their NCAA

tournament position with a good showing in the conference tourney. "I think what the conference has prepared

all of us for is a deep run in the NCAA tournament," said California coach Lindsay Gottlieb, whose Golden Bears are the No. 4 seed. "I think

we've faced all styles of play, I think we've faced

Pac-121ournament

[ tt

At KeyArena, Seattle (Seeds in parentheses)

[

TODAY'S GAMES Oregon (10) vs. Washington St. (7), 11:30 a.m. Arizona (11) vs. UCLA(6), 2 p.m. Colorado (9) vs. USC (8), 6 p.m. Utah (12) vs. Washington (5), 8:30 p.m. FRIDAY'S GAMES Oregon-Washington St. winner vs. Arizona St. (2), 11:30 a.m. Arizona-UCLAwinner vs. Stanford (3), 2 p.m. Colorado-USC winner vs. OregonSt. (1), 6 p.m. Utah-Washington winner vs. California (4), 8:30 p.m. (All live on Pac-12Networks)

some of the best guards in the country in our

own conference. And that's a good thing for all of us."

have everything you need: perimeter game, post game, (offense), defense, rebounding,"

The conference tournament opens today

Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said. "I'm re-

with Washington State facing Oregon, UCLA taking on Arizona, Southern Cal against Col-

ally excited for Scott (Rueck) and their teambecause they've got the Pac-12 tournament com-

orado, and Washington facing Utah. The tour-

ing up and then the NCAA tournament, which

e •

I a •

e

I

ney will likely determine just how many Pac-12 they should be hosting. I think they can go a teams will end up hosting games for the first long way in it." two rounds of the NCAA tournament. The top

The surpriseof the year has been Arizona

four seeds in each region will have the opportunity to host first- and second-round games on campus. Oregon State and Arizona State appear to be solid bets to get top-four seeds no matter

State after the Sun Devils were picked to finish

itself with a top-four seed if the hometown Hus-

as VanDerveer called it, the Cardinal won at

seventh in the preseason poll. And they have

I'I I

proven to be quite good in close games. The Sun Devils have eight wins this season decided by five points or fewer. how they fare in the conference tournament. Stanford so far has not been the powerhouse Stanford and California are both in position to that reached the Final Four in six of seven potentially host. Even Washington could find years. But despite being in a "transitional year,"

kies can put together a deep run this week. Oregon State last week, the Beavers' only home Oregon State's rise began a year ago when loss of the season. "It gives a big boost, just knowing that we the Beavers made theconference tournament championship game and advanced to the sec- can execute like that, we can follow a game ond round of the NCAAs before losing to No. plan like that," Stanford sophomore Erica Mc1 seed South Carolina. The Beavers went 16-2 Call said. "It shows us we're prepared for the in conference play this season and ended Stan- Pac-12 tournament. It might have taken us a ford's 14-year run of winning at least a share of while to figure out our identity, but I think we the conference regular-season title. definitely figured it out, and we know where "Oregon State is legit. They are for real. They we're going."

I• •

I•

! •

II •

I•

No. 3 Duke routs Wake Forest

II•

DURHAM, N.C. — No. 3

Quinn Cook had 13 points in Top 25 his Cameron Indoor Stadium No.12Notre Dame71, No.16

Duke has been carried all sea- farewell and Justise Winslow son byone ofitsfourfreshmen. also had 13. Just never this one. Jahlil Okafor finished with Grayson Allen scored a sea- six — his first single-digit scorson-best 27 points, and Duke ing game — after some early routed Wake Forest 94-51 on foul trouble. Wednesday night for its 10th The Blue Devils didn't need straight win. much from him at all. "It wasn't really me waiting Okafor has been the biggest for a chance — it was me be- name in a gifted freshman ing able to translate it into the dass of possible one-and-dogame from practice," Allen nes that also includes Winslow said. "Coach has been giving and 7yus Jones. One of those me opportunities, and I was three has led the team in scorable to capitalize today. This is ing in 21 of the first 29 games. the type of game to get my conAnd then Allen got hot and fidence going." upstaged everyone. "He kills," Okafor said of AlMatt Jones added 17 points for the Blue Devils (27-3, 14-3), len in practice. "Aggressive, freak athlete, who shot 58 percent and forced 19 turnovers in locking up strong guy," he added. "He had

straight home victory in the ACC's oldest series. Codi Miller-McIntyre scored

he hit two 3-pointers and con-

e

Louisville 59: LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Demetrius Jackson

over Louisville that clinched third place in the Atlantic

I•

Coast Conference. No. 23 OhioState 77, Penn State 67: STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — D'Angelo Russell scored

I•

28 points and coach Thad Matta tied the school record for wins in Ohio State's victory over Penn State.

e

' •

No. 24 Providence 79, Seton Hall 66: NEWARK, N.J. — Ben Bentil scored a ca-

reer-high 21 points and added 10 rebounds and Providence

II• I• • II •

fornia 74: LOS ANGELES-

verted a four-point play — one Bryce Alford scored 23 points, of two by the Blue Devils in the including five 3s, Tony Parker opening 20 minutes. added 22 and UCLA defeated the Bruins lock up the No. 4

17, 5-12), which has lost four of Allen said. five. Also on Wednesday:

seed in the Pac-12 tournament next week.

II•

Southern California to help

I

I • e

0

I•

.500 in conference play for the second time in 25 years.. Pa yton received a technical foulfora fore-

I•

Continued from C1 armduring arebound scrum late inthe first half. The Beavers pulled to within one, but Cook Oregon: The Ducks can finish no worse scored a layup with 1:45 remaining, though he than third place in the Pac-12, and Oregon has missed the ensuing free throw.

clinched a bye in the conference tournament..

Entering the game, Young ranked fifth in the

Tip ins

I•

nation in free throw percentage at 91.3 per-

Oregon State: The Beavers needed a win to go cent. He made 6 of6on W ednesday.

II•

~ •

NHL ROUNDUP

OT goal lifts RedWingsover Rangers The Associated Press Marek

punched the puck past goalie Cam Talbot in a scrum to give

Zidlicky's power-play goal

the Red Wings their second

1:09 into overtime lifted the Detroit Red Wings to a 2-1 victory over the New York Rang-

straight win. Also on Wednesday: Senators 3, Jets 1: WIN-

DETROIT

Dame made its final seven shots to pull away for a victory

"From that moment, I kind of 20 points for Wake Forest (13- knew I was feelingit a little bit,"

Ducks

I•

II•

scored 21 points and Notre

shot 67 percent from the field the No. 2 seed in next week's no fear when he's on the court." in the second half in rallying Atlantic C o ast C o nference Allen's previous scoring best from a big first-half deficit to tournament. was 18 points — but he blew defeat Seton Hall. Duke had a d o uble-fig- past that by halftime, with 19 Pac-12 ure leadbefore the Demon in just eight minutes. Deacons managed their first In the opening 20 minutes, UCLA 85, Southern Calibasket, scoring the f irst 12 points and rolling to their 16th

I•

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

-

ers on Wednesday night. NIPEG, Manitoba — Rookie Zidlicky, making his Red Andrew Hammond made 35 Wings debut after being ac- saves, and Kyle Turris had a q uired at t h e N H L t r a d e goal and assist as Ottawa beat deadline from New Jersey, Winnipeg.

Avalanche 3, Penguins 1: DENVER — Gabriel Landesk-

og had a goal and two assists, Semyon Varlamov made 28 saves, and Colorado beat Pittsburgh. Ducks 3, Canadiens 1: ANAHEIM, Calif. — John Gibson made 37 saves, and Anaheim

moved back atop the overall NHL standings withthe victory.

e

g

e

• •

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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

+

NASDAQ ~

18,096.90

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

S&P 500

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TOdap Card deal update?

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... Close: 2,098.53 Change: -9.25 (-0.4%)

2,080' " ""'10 DAYS

2,160 " 2,080 "

18080

"

" "" " ............. Close: 18,096.90 Change: -106.47 (-0.6%)

17,840" ""' 10 DAYS " "

18,500"

"

17,500"

"

"

"

18,000"

"

'

.

"

2,000 17,000

1,920 "

16,500"

1 840

J

D

StocksRecap

$147.17

$115.75

.

3 40

NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,327 1,781 Pvs. Volume 3,184 1,963 Advanced 1194 1110 Declined 1911 1580 New Highs 107 81 New Lows 37 54

F

16,000

0

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18203.37 18029.50 18096.90 -106.47 DOW Trans. 9058.36 8963.11 9017.11 -41.25 DOW Util. 587.19 582.13 584.10 -3.09 NYSE Comp. 1101 8.80 10941.14 11004.68 -46.54 NASDAQ 4973.33 4938.90 4967.14 -1 2.76 S&P 500 2107.72 2087.62 2098.53 -9.25 -6.38 S&P 400 1509.70 1496.99 1503.35 Wilshire 5000 22255.79 22048.83 22158.52 -97.27 -4.03 Russell 2000 1232.62 1224.63 1230.73

N

D

%CHG. WK -0.58% T -0.46% T -0.53% T -0.42% T -0.26% -0.44% T -0.42% T -0.44% T -0.33% T

MO QTR YTD L L +1.54% -1.34% L -5.50% L +1.53% L L +4.88% L L +1.92% L L +3.51% L L +2.26% L L +2.16%

EPS

NorthwestStocks

Price-earnings ratio: 31

$51.53

+

ANF

Close:$20.27 V-3.72 or -15.5% The teen clothing retailer reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit, but its revenue results fell short of forecasts. $30 25

l::;;"."Wayfair shares soar

Wayfair (W)

A

8

0

N

D :J '14 i '15

39

Source: FactSet

AP

AmdFocus

AP

D J F 52-week range $20.1$~ $45.50

831419 770717 485469 401021 398299 397902 376486 364185 359101

3.29 + .26 15.84 -.15 39.93 -.44 6.18 -.23 8.49 + .85 14.59 -.59 15.49 -.71 27.22 -.06 85.49 +3.91

Fidelity AdvisorGrowlncA m FGIRX VALUE

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

LAST InfoSonic h 2.71 CorMed wt 2.73 Novogen h 3.36 SuprtlH pfA 7.30 MIX Tele 6.64 AtaraBio n 26.55 NatHITr n 15.88 CareerEd 6.00 Capnia n 8.75 Capnia wt 2.19

CHG +1.01 +.73 +.85 +1.59 +1.15 +4.53 +2.39 +.87 +1.25 +.30

%CHG + 59.4 + 3 6.5 ccC + 3 3.6 $$ + 2 7.8 + 20.9 co + 20.6 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 7.7 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 7.0 Q + 16.7 average of stock holdings + 1 5.9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

Losers CATEGORY Large Blend L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ -2.67 -29.4 Bazaarvce 6.41 BobEvans 46.36 -13.28 -22.3 ASSETS $276 million -6.97 -21.3 VeevaSys 25.72 EXP RATIO 1.03% CDI 14.68 -3.75 -20.3 MANAGER Matthew Fruhan -8.29 -17.5 Foster 39.20 SINCE 2011-02-04 RETURNS3-MO +1.2 Foreign Markets YTD +2.3 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +12.2 Paris 4,91 7.35 +48.10 + . 99 3-YR ANNL +17.2 London 6,91 9.24 +30.11 + . 44 5-YR-ANNL +15.1 Frankfurt 11,390.38 +110.02 + . 98 Hong Kong24,465.38 -237.40 -.96 TOP 5HOLDINGS -.70 JPMorgan Chase& Co Mexico 43,296.55 -303.82 Milan 22,131.08 +1 43.90 +.65 -111.56 -.59 Apple Inc Tokyo 18,703.60 Stockholm 1,664.50 + 2.63 + . 16 Microsoft Corp -31.40 -.53 General Electric Co Sydney 5,871.50 Zurich 8,992.50 +37.82 + . 42 Chevron Corp NAME

W

Close:$28.90 L3.65 or 14.5% The e-commercecompany reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and gave a positive fiscal outlook. $40 30

0

N D J 52-week range

$1$74 ~

AEO Close:$15.96%1.14 or 7.7% The clothing and apparel retailer reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and a positive fiscal outlook. $16 14

F $$ $ $0

Vol.:23.1m (8.6x avg.) PE: 21.3 Voi.:5.4m (6.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.41 b Yie l d : 3.9% Mkt.Cap:$365.59 m

P E: .. . Yie ld: ...

Avalon Holdings

AVOL Close:$20.50 %0.48 or 2.4% The aircraft leasing and lease management company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit and revenue results. $21 20 19

12 D

J

D

F

52-week range $1$.12~

Mkt. Cap:$3.1 b

J

F

52-week range $1$ $$

Vol.:20.2m (4.0x avg.)

$1$00 ~

$ 2$ $$

PE: 9 9.8 Vol.:474.3k (2.5x avg.) P E : 1 4.8 Yiel d : 3 .1% Mkt. Cap:$1.66 b Yield: ...

Smith &Wesson

SWHC Close: $14.34L1.29 or 9.9% The firearm maker reported better-than-expected fiscal third-quarter financial results and a positive financial outlook. $20 15

Bob Evans Farms

BOB E

Close:$46.36 T-13.28 or -22.3% The chain restaurant operator reported worse-than-expected fiscal third-quarter results and won't spinoff its foods unit. $60 50

10

D

J

F

D

52-week range $$.$$~

J

F

52-week range $$7.2$

Vol.:6.5m (4.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$770.13 m

$422$~

$$$. $$

P E: 12.6 Vol.:6.6m (16.0x avg.) PE: 53.9 Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$1.09 b Yie l d : 2.7%

Bazaarvoice

BV Close:$6.41 V-2.67 or -29.4% The commercesoftware company reported better-than-expected earnings results, but it provided a disappointing revenue outlook. $10

Ambarella

AMBA Close:$67.49%4.44 or 7.0% The video-compression chipmaker reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and a positive fiscal outlook. $70 60 50

D J F 52-week range $$.$$~ $$.$$

Vol.:6.2m (1 3.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $504.05 m

PE:.

D J F 52-week range $21.$0~ $ $$.$0

Vol.:8.2m (3.9x avg.)

PE:5 6 . 3

Yie ld:. Mkt. Cap:$2.05 b

Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU HS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury held steady at 2.12 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

1-mo

3-mo 38.3%

Fidelity Advisor Growth & Income FAMILY carries a bronze-medal analyst MarhetSummary rating from Morningstar, which AmericanFunds Most Active cites the fund's low costs, diversiNAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG fication and experienced S&P500ETF 990707 210.23 -.89 manager. CSVLgCrde BkofAm iShEMkts Petrobras Orexigen Alcoa ChesEng B iPVixST Alibaba n

Wayfair

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 8 .07 + 0 .01 L L

L

.05 .08

52-wk T-bill

.26

.12

.26

L

L

L

2-year T-note . 6 6 .6 8 -0.02 L 5-year T-note 1.59 1.61 -0.02 L 10-year T-note 2.12 2.12 ... L 30-year T-bond 2.72 2.72

L L L L

L .33 T 1.54 T 2.70 T 3.6 5

BONDS

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.60 2.59 +0.01 L L T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.28 4.28 . . . L L T 37.4% Price - e arnings ratio: Lost money Barclays USAggregate 2.23 2.20 +0.03 L L T *IPO in October 2014 PRIME FED Barclays US (B a s edonpast12-monthresults) High Yield 5.93 5.88 +0.05 T T T RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.73 3.70 +0.03 L L T Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.91 1.92 -0.01 L L L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.04 3.01 +0.03 L L T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds

Wednesday's close:$26.90 Price change'

52-WEEK RANGE

$17

-10

-.0104

20

Economic beltwether The stronger U.S. dollar and global weakness have hurt American exports in recent DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current months. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Orders to U.S. factories dropped dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m —Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash for a fifth consecutive month in value on ex-distrittuticn date.FEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no p/E ratio shown. cc —p/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months. December, the biggest drop since a 10 percent plunge in August. The Commerce Department reports January factory orders Wayfair shares soared 14 percent 38 percent to $408.6 million, data today. Economists expect Wednesday after the online which beat market forecasts of that orders declined by just 0.3 retailer reported better-than-ex$371.7 mtlhon. percent versus December. pected financial results for its The company, whose brands Factory orders include Wayfair.com, Joss & Main, fiscal fourth quarter. seasonally adjusted percent change The seller of home decor and DwellStudio and Birch Lane, said furniture reported a loss of 18 it was helped by strong holiday ooy sales and repeat business. est. cents per share for the quarter -0.5 0 7 -0.3 on anadjusted basis,much Wayfair said that it expects -1.7 better than the 28 cents per revenue between $375 million and -3.4 share analysts were anticipating. Its revenue jumped $390 million for the current quarter.

1.1 074+

Stocks retreated Wednesday, pulling indexes further below recent records. The drop was modest but broad: nine of the 10 sectors in the Standard & Poor's 500 index fell. Investors have their eyes turned to Friday, when the government will release its jobs report. Economists forecast the economy added 240,000 jobs last month and the unemployment rate fell to 5.6 percent from 5.7 percent. On Monday, the S&P 500 struck an all-time high and the Nasdaq crossed 5,000 for the first time in nearly 15 years. In a separate jobs-related report, payroll processing company ADP said U.S.businesses added more than 200,000 workers to their payrolls in February.

American Eagle

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L based on past 12-month results NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV Dividend: $1.42 Div. yield: 1.0% Alaska Air Group L +10. 1 +5 5 .3 1 306 15 0 .80f A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 6 5. 7 7 -.39 -0.6 L T Avista Corp AVA 29.03 ty— 38. 3 4 33 . 1 9 -.37 -1.1 T T T -6.1 +18.1 3 4 9 1 1 1 . 32f Source: FactSet Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 5. 8 4 -.15 -0.9 L L T -11.5 -0.9 77072 45 0 .20 Barrett Business B BS I 18 . 25 ~ 71.76 39. 1 9 +. 3 5 + 0.9 L L L +43.0 - 43.3 108 d d 0 . 88 Eye on Kroger Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 15 4.35 -1.22 -0.8 L L L + 18. 7 +2 3 .7 4 425 21 3 .64f Wall Street predicts that Kroger's Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 11 ~ 5.82 4.72 +.0 3 + 0.6 T T T -9.1 - 2.1 18 7 7 9 L L +0.7 +11 . 4 18 3 1 8 0 . 64a latest quarterly earnings and ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 27.80 - .26 -0.9 T revenue grew versus a year Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o 56.70 56 .64 + . 2 5 +0.4 L L L + 27.2 +37 .2 3 7 0 2 9 0. 6 0 Costco Wholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 56.8 5 147.17 -.20 -0.1 L T L +3.8 +32 . 9 2 1 39 3 1 1 .42a earlier. Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ty 17.89 12 .54 + . 4 5 + 3.7 L L T -6.0 -26.6 7 2 78 The operator of Kroger, City F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 1. 7 9 -.94 -2.9 T L T -1.6 -3.2 75 2 2 3 0 .44f Market, Ralphs, Food 4 Less and FLIR Systems H PQ 28 . 75 ~ 41.10 3 4.1 9 -.38 -1.1 T T T -14.8 +1 8.4 13300 13 0 . 6 4 other supermarkets has benefited Hewlett Packard I NTC 24.30 ~ 37.90 34. 1 2 +. 0 3 +0.1 L L T -6.0 +42.9 22370 15 0 .96 from improved sales at its stores Intel Corp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 1 3. 9 0 -.10 -0.7 T L ~ ... + 9 . 4 11066 13 0 . 26 over the past year. That's because Keycorp L +8.5 +68 . 3 5 4 11 22 0 . 7 4 Kroger Co K R 4 1 .20 ~ 73.60 6 9. 6 5 -.33 -0.5 T T more people are shopping at the Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ 9.19 6.71 +. 0 1 + 0.1 T L T -2.6 - 12.8 72 0 1 6 company's supermarkets and L PX 12.46 ~ 18.83 16. 6 8 +. 0 7 +0.4 T T L +0.7 -9.3 2677 dd they're doing so more frequently. LA Pacific MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 o — 36.0 5 21 . 8 9 -.12 -0.5 T T T -6.9 - 32.3 1130 1 4 0 . 73 Did the trend continue in the L +6.4 +10 . 9 77 2 1 9 0 . 22f MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 23.32 -.47 -2.0 T T fourth quarter? Find out today Microsoft Corp MSFT 37.49 ty— 50. 05 43 . 0 6 -.23 -0.5 T L T -7.3 +17.7 25419 17 1 . 24 when Kroger reports its financial Nike Inc B N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 9 7. 5 2 -.45 -0.5 L L L +1.4 +27 . 9 2 3 92 29 1 . 1 2 results. Nordstrom Inc JWN 59.97 — 0 81.78 79 .95 -.02 . . . T L L +0.7 +33. 4 1 1 56 2 1 1 . 48f Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.58 ~ 52.57 4 5. 8 6 -.71 -1.5 T T T - 8.1 +15.3 83 21 1. 8 6 PaccarInc PCAR 55.34 ty— 71. 15 62 . 7 1 -1.84 -2.8 T L T -7.8 + 2 . 1 2 275 1 6 0.88a Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6.16 -.05 -0.8 L T T - 26.4 +173.0 358 2 2 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 2. 9 4 -.29 -0.7 T T L +0.4 +4.6 757 36 1.7 6 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 21 3.52 -2.17 -1.0 T L T -11.4 -15.7 1151 17 0 . 12 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 5 .53 o — 30.0 4 16. 25 + . 6 1 +3.9 L T T -28.0 - 34.3 467 3 8 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 ~ 291. 2 7 28 5.91 -.02 . . . L L L t 8.7 +44. 5 68 8 32 2. 6 8f StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 5. 8 5 -.43 -0.6 T L T -5.7 + 3 . 0 92 13 1. 3 0f StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 94.8 3 9 3. 0 6 -.94 -1.0 T L L +13. 4 +3 5 .0 3 840 28 1 . 2 8 umpqua Holdings UM P Q 14.70 ty 19.60 16 .66 + . 0 1 +0.1 L L T -2.1 - 4.0 1107 2 2 0 . 60 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 4 1 -.34 -0.8 T L T -1.2 +12.5 5483 14 0 . 98 WashingtonFedl WA F O 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.16 -.09 -0.4 L L T -4.5 -1.8 31 3 1 4 0 . 52f WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 5.96 ~ 5 5.9 5 54.82 -.63 -1.1 L L ... +23.2 16124 13 1 .40 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 37.04 3 4.2 7 -.54 -1.6 T T T - 4.5 +22.6 2642 2 6 1 . 16

+1.01 '

StoryStocks

Abercrombie & Fitch

"

DOW

2Q '14 2 Q '15

-.13

$16.13

""." "" "" " "" "" Dow jones industrials

18,320"

SstP 500

Thursday, March 5, 2015

GOLD ~ $1,290.60 ~

10-YR T-NOTE 2.12% •

2,098.53

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 25 . 24 -.86+2.0 +9.7 +13.0+12.2 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.83 -.27 +2.1 +7.5 +10.2 +9.7 A A A Crude oil rose CpWldGrlA m 47.87 -.15 +3.9 +6.0 +13.3+10.7 8 8 C by more than EurPacGrA m 49.69 -.10 +5.4 +1.7 +9.3 +7.6 C 8 C $1 per barrel, FnlnvA m 53. 8 8 - .23 +3.5 +11.5 +16.6+14.1 D C C its fourth gain in GrthAmA m 44.56 -.14 +4.4 +10.0 +17.9+14.4 D 8 D the last six IncAmerA m 22.86 -.85 +2.2 +8.4 +12.0+11.6 8 A A days. The price InvCoAmA m 37.94 -.14 +2.3 +12.2 +17.2+13.9 C 8 C of gold fell for a NewPerspA m38.86 -.14 +4.9 +6.2 +14.1+11.9 8 A 8 third straight WAMutlnvA m41.65 -.17 +1.7 +11.5 +16.6+15.3 8 8 A day to settle at Dodge &Cox Income 13.89 +.81 +0.8 + 4 .1 +3.8 +5.0 C 8 B just above IntlStk 43.84 -.10 +4.1 +3 .0 +12.2 +9.1 A A A Stock 181.90 -.65 +0.5 + 9 .3 +19.9+15.3 D A A $1,200 per Fidelity Contra 101. 6 8 - .19 +4.8 +10.5 +17.3+15.8 C C B ounce. ContraK 101 . 62 -.19+4.8 +10.6 +17.4+16.0 C 8 B LowPriStk d 51.39 -.13 +2.3 + 8 .7 +16.3+15.2 C D C Fideli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 74.53 -.31 +2.3 +14.3 +17.7+15.7 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.46 ... +2.4 +3.5 +9.2 +9.3 IncomeA m 2. 4 3 ... +2 . 5 + 4 . 1 + 9.7 +9.8 Oakmark Intl I 24.78 -.81 +6.2 -0.3 +12.9+11.0 C A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 31 -.84+1.6 +10.9 +14.1+13.3 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 94 -.84+1.4 +10.1 +13.1+12.4 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 81 -.84+1.4 +10.0 +13.2+12.5 D E E SmMidValAm 50.80 -.24 +2.6 +10.7+16.7+13.2 B D E SmMidValBm 42.81 -.20 +2.5 +9.8 +15.8+12.3 C D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.8 0 - . 17 +0.6 + 8 .0 +14.9+13.2 E D C Exchange GrowStk 55.5 0 - . 15 +6.8 +11.4 +18.9+17.5 C A A The dollar rallied HealthSci 76.1 3 +.46+12.0+29.6 +37.4+29.3 A 8 A against the euro Newlncome 9. 6 3 ... +0 .9 + 4 .7 + 2.8 +4.3 B C C and British Vanguard 500Adml 194.27 81 +2.3 +14.3 +17.7+15.7 A 8 A pound, but it 500lnv 194.23 81 +2.3 +14.1 +17.6+15.6 A 8 8 dipped against CapOp 55.83 83 +4.3 +14.7 +24.5+16.4 A A B the Canadian Eqlnc 31.52 14 +1.0 +11.9 +16.2+15.9 8 C A dollar and was IntlStkldxAdm 27.21 12 +4.7 +0.2 +6.5 NA 8 D nearly flat StratgcEq 33.47 19 +4.0 +12.4 +21.1+18.9 A A A against the TgtRe2020 29.10 88 +2.2 +7.6 +10.0 +9.9 A A A Japanese yen. TgtRe2035 18.34 86 +2.8 +8.3 +12.5+11.7 A 8 8 Tgtet2025 16.93 85 +2.4 +7.8 +10.8+10.5 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.90 +0.7 +4.7 +2.5 +4.1 8 D D Totlntl 16.27 87 +4.6 +0.1 +6.4 +5.8 8 D D TotStlAdm 52.95 22 +2.6 +12.8 +17.8+15.9 C 8 A TotStldx 52.92 22 +2.6 +12.6 +17.7+15.8 C 8 A USGro 31.59 87 +5.6 +14.1 +18.5+16.4 8 A 8

PCT 4.17 3.63 3.11 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 3.09 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.44 redemption fee.Source: Morningstac

h5Q HS

FUELS

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

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

3.43 4.78 2.28 5.17 4.29 1.76 3.01

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -3.3 51.53 50.52 +2.00 -7.8 1.50 1.48 1.90 1.94 - 1.97 + 3.0 -4.2 2.77 2.71 +2.10 1.93 1.95 -1.24 +34.2

CLOSE PVS. 1200.60 1204.00 16.13 16.26 1181.70 1189.60 2.68 2.67 830.40 831.15

%CH. %YTD - 0.28 + 1 . 4 - 0.78 + 3 . 6 -0.66 -2.3 +0.13 -5.7 - 0.09 + 4 . 0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.0 1.54 1.51 +1.99 Coffee (Ib) 1.34 1.26 +6.18 -1 9.5 -3.9 Corn (bu) 3.82 3.82 -0.13 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.64 - 0.19 + 5 . 5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 290.70 294.40 -1.26 -12.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.18 1.16 +1.37 -1 5.7 Soybeans (bu) 9.89 10.09 -1.96 -3.0 Wheat(bu) 4.93 5.09 -3.00 -16.3 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5261 -.0105 -.69% 1.6674 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 14 -.0073 -.59% 1.1110 USD per Euro 1.1074 -.0104 -.94% 1.3735 JapaneseYen 119.71 + . 0 2 + .02% 1 02.27 Mexican Peso 15. 0 493 +.0563 +.37% 13.2712 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9900 +.0144 +.36% 3.4880 Norwegian Krone 7 . 7912 +.0777 +1.00% 6.0149 South African Rand 11.7918 +.0294 +.25% 10.7657 Swedish Krona 8.3 3 3 5 + .0563 +.68% 6.4506 Swiss Franc .9629 +.0018 +.19% . 8 875 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2787 +.0003 +.02% 1.1182 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2715 -.0070 -.11% 6.1433 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7556 +.0008 +.01% 7.761 5 Indian Rupee 62.280 +.498 +.80% 61.850 Singapore Dollar 1.3681 +.0053 +.39% 1.2693 South KoreanWon 1101.15 +3.11 +.28% 1070.61 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.44 + . 1 1 +.35% 30.33


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

BRIEFING

Smallcompany branding made easy with 'Genie'

The Riverhouse sale complete The sale of The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center in Bendis adone deal, the parties announcedWednesday. The new owner,Vesta Hospitality, a Vancouver, Washington, firm, plans upgrades to the 220-room hotel and Crossings Restaurantat Mt. Washington Drive

By Joseph Ditzler When Elicia Putnam showed her Web-based system

— Bulletin staff reports

PERMITS City of Bend • GRPVC III LP,790 NE Isabella Lane, Bend, $201,378 • GRPVC111 LP,780 NE Isabella Lane, Bend, $201,378 • Bryan F. Smith, 62726 NW MehamaDrive, Bend, $299,799 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21238 SEGolden Market Lane, Bend,$244,325 • Jack D. Robson,619 NW Powell Butte Loop, Bend, $250,497 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20800 Boulderfield Ave., Bend, $254,202 • Creative RealEstate Solutions, 2250 NWHil St., Bend, $203,980 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20944 NE High Desert Lane, Bend, $177,593 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20936 NE High Desert Lane, Bend, $177,593 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20940 NE High Desert Lane, Bend, $177,593 • Glenco Investments Inc., 21112 Azalia Ave., Bend, $154,271 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21225 SEGolden Market Lane, Bend, $220,462 • Triad Homes Inc., 21330 Livingston Drive, Bend, $206,442 • Richard L. Shrode, 2801 NE Great HornedPlace, Bend, $190,033 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership, 20804 Boulderfield Ave., Bend, $254,202 • FC Fund LLC,600 SE Gleneden Place,Bend, $214,175 • Bryan F. Smith, 62731 NW MehamaDrive, Bend, $281,608

to Lisa MacKenzie, a sometime business associate and marketManu Fernandez/The Associated Press file photo

ing consultant, MacKenzie did more than offer a critique. She became a customer. "When I saw ~stoBox, I

The newGalaxy S6 and S6 Edge phones aredisplayed duringa Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2015 event on the eve of the Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona, Spain. Phone makers worry that making them too big will make them too hard to use.

Phone size maxe out or easy, one-han use By Anick Jesdanun

than hands," said Rick Oster-

The Associated Press

loh, Motorola's president.

NEW YORK — There was

a time you could count on phones getting larger each year. Samsung's runaway success with the big-screen smartphone even spurred Apple to release asupersized model last fall. But if phones get anybigger will theybe too

The company's new Moto E phone is just slightly larger — with a display measuring 4.5inches,compared with 4.3

president and head of mobile product planning at LG Electronics Inc., said the 6-inch

display of the original G Flex was both a chief compliment and a chief complaint.

That said, what's acceptSamsung's Galaxy S6 stays at able "has been in flux to some 5.1 inches, while the new HTC degreeforthepastfewyears," HTC's Bamford said. A few One remains at 5 inches. It might not be a coinciyears ago, the "sweet spot" hard to use? dence that Android phone was closer to 4 inches. Now, That's the worry of some it's at about 5 inches. He said makers are playing down smartphone makers, and the phone size just as Apple has that as people see what they reason why many of the new caught up by making its can do with larger screens, models this year didn't grow. iPhones bigger, a move that they are willing to put up with LG even shrank the G Flex 2 eliminated a key advantage more. to a 5.5-inch screen, as meaAndroid phones had long Shoneel Kolhatkar, senior sured diagonally, compared enjoyed. director of U.S. product marwith 6 inches before. Now, Android phone keting at Samsung, said that So, how much does size makers are looking at other while the company believes matter? ways to persuade consumers the phone's size is right for "The size of the phone toupgrade.FortheFlex,it's now, he will "never say it will really is at the sweet spot," acurvedscreen,alongwith never increase." self-repairing capabilities said Drew Bamford, corpoThere are some regional rate vice president of HTC when the back gets scratched. variations, too. Bamford said Creative Labs, which studies Camera improvements are Asian markets tend to accept how consumers use phones. touted in the new Samsung bigger phones, possibly beBamford said a larger phone and HTC phones. The new cause people there are more would be too cumbersome to Samsung S6phones also likelyto carrybags, rather use with one hand. have better screen resolution than use pockets to carry That was also the thinking even as the size remains the phones. at Samsung, which has long same. One trick to giving consumpromoted its phones as "the Consumersdo likelarger ers a larger display without next big thing." displays as they rely increas- decreasing comfort: Shrink Hong Yeo, a senior design- ingly on mobile devices for the phone's frame so that the er at Samsung, said those entertainment and informaoverall size isn't bigger. But who really need a larger tion.The largerscreens also the frame is already minimal, screen could turn to other make typing easier. Preferand doing more poses an models, such as the 5.7-inch ences for larger phones can engineering challenge — and Galaxy Note 4. For the S6, 5.1 be seen in the high demand could make phones more inches was "the perfect size for both the iPhone 6 and 6 expensive. "The key innovation that for what we want to do," he Plus, which made Apple the sald. world's top smartphone mak- we're driving toward is more IDC analyst Ramon Llaer in the final three months of screen as a percentage of mas said the ideal display size 2014, according to Gartner. thesurface area,"M otorola's tends to be 4.5 inches to 5.5

inches these days. "Screens have grown faster

inches for last year's model.

But consumers want something comfortable to hold. Ramchan Woo, a vice

are astronomical, Putnam said.

"We've seen from focus groups and market research

w as in theprocessofredoing my own website,"

said MacKenzie,

that 80 percent of users feel like it's a match when they get to

of Portland. "This is the fast

the end," she said. The process begins with a quiz onthe website"Brand Genie" that helps clients define

path to getting something done. It helps me re-en- Putnam

ergize my brand and provides me with all the

the look and feel of their busi-

tools I need in terms of market-

nesses. The user selects from multiple answers provided

ing myself."

to questions such as, 'Which

PrestoBox is an online tool that mimics the same

adjective best describes your company?" and "If your company were a shoe, which would

experience that aprofessional marketing agency undertakes itbe'?" when it designs andbuilds a Putnam and her three busibrand for a dient, said Putnam, ness partners — Sara Conte of Bend. It's a 12-step online and Michael Verdine, both of program that helps clients cre- Portland, and Clay Givens, ate an image based on answers of Grants Pass — launched a to a series of questions and version of PrestoBoxtwo years then project it on a website. ago; an improved version with Think Wix, WordPress or Weebly, but with more options;

the InDesign Server went on-

line in January.

50,000 options for logos alone, Putnam said.

"Branding for the masses," Putnam said Tuesday. "That's

PrestoBox has a great po-

tential to generate revenue for its creators while helping small businesses increase their own

what we call it." Putnam based PrestoBox on

presence online, said MacKenzie. Unlike websites like

her 12 years of experience as a marketing consultant. The system, with Adobe InDesign

WordPress or Wix, PrestoBox

Server software at its heart,

re-creates the one-on-one process that takes place between a

marketing agency and a client, which can cost thousands of

gives clients choices, as well as an entrypoint to what canbe a daunting task — creating a brand and a website to match. Larger names in Web-hosting and website design are taking notice. Putnam has written

dollars, and boils it down to a

blog posts about PrestoBox on

do-it-yourself system that ends with three branding options.

the Weebly"Inspiration Cen-

The system chooses fonts,

What was once an overlooked sector — marketing for

colors andpatterns thatbecome the online face of a business based on answers sup-

pliedby the dient. PrestoBox also creates a website. The entire process costs less than

$100to get started. With so many options, the odds ofbe-

ter" page, for example.

smallbusinesses — is becomingthe scene of aland grab, she said. "We're actually first to market in automatic branding," Putnam said. "We're just tak-

ing a different door."

ing matched to the same brand

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

designoff ered anotherdient

•$$$

12/12IIII

prestoBiztX

br and genie

Osterloh said. "We just try

to make it more and more screen."

If your company were a shoe, which would ithe'r CHOOSE z

Fewer consumers to celebrate St. Patrick's Day, retail group says By Corilyn Shropshire

brate the traditional Irish

Chicago Tribune

holiday in 2015, down 4.7

February. Despite a blooming econ-

The brutal winter could be taking its toll on St. Patrick's

percent from the expected

omy, the winter doldrums

133 million revelers last year.

could be keeping consumers

Day revelry. Fewer consumers are ex-

pected to celebrate the green holiday that ushers in the arrival of spring, according to new research commissioned

At the same time, total

spending on the holiday is predicted to be slightly lower at $4.2 billion compared to $4.6 billion last year. The survey, commissioned by

by the National Retail Federation. But, those who do are

the NRF and conducted by

expected to spend more. Nearly 127 million Americans are planning to cele-

consultancy Proper Insight and Analytics, polled 6,186 consumers for a week in

Prestosox.com

This image from Prestoeox shows one of 12 questions customers answer as part of the company's do-it-yourself branding process.

I I • • f •

down, according to NRF

officials. Those who do plan on

s, 'td

celebrating St. Patrick's Day

this year are expected to spend, on average, slightly more than they did last year.

The NRF is predicting consumerswillspend $39.70 on average — 75 cents more

than they did last year.

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Coaching — Giving 8 Receiving Feedback: Finetune important coaching and feedback skills. Part of the Essential Leadership Series; $95; registration required;8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Facebook Strategy & Analytics for Business: Learn to integrate Facebook into the marketing mix and discuss use ofFacebook analytics. Class runs through March12; $89, registration required;

For more information, visit prestobox.com To see awebsite created with PrestoBox, visit www. mackenzie-marketing.com

for branding smallbusinesses

and NE Third Street. Im-

provements will begin in fall and finish by spring 2016, according to a news releasefrom Vesta Hospitality. The purchase price was not disclosed. Wayne Purcell, whose family and Arnie Swarens built the original hotel in1974, in anews release thankedthe hotel and convention center employees who"make The Riverhousewhat it is today." Swarenssold his share in the1990s. Purcell, who announced the pending sale a month ago,said his family will continue to operate the River's Edge Golf Courseand develop residential lots nearby. Vesta also plans to upgrade technology in the property and enhance sales to bring tourists to the hotel and convention center on the Deschutes River, according to the company release.

Onthe Weh

The Bulletin

6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon cocc.edu/continuinged. Community College, 2600 • Video Editing with NW Coll egeW ay,Bend;541- Premier Elements: Learn 383-7270 or www.cocc.edul basic editing skills, remove continuinged. unwanted portions, add • Beginning InDesign music, titles and more. for Macintosh: Learn Class runs through March to use the design and 19; $99, registration layout program to create required; 6-9 p.m.; Central different documents, Oregon Community College, from single-pageads and Redmond campus, 2030 flyers to multipagecolor SE College Loop,Redmond; 541-383-7270 or www. publications. Class runs through March19; $99, cocc.edu/continuinged. registration required; FRIDAY 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon • Construction Contractors Community College, Board Test Preparation: Two-day course that Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; satisfies the educational 541-383-7270 or www. requirement to take the

test to becomealicensed contractor in Oregon; $359, registration required; 8:30a.m.-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop,Redmond; 541-383-7290,ccb©cocc. edu or www.cocc.edu/ccb. • Grant Writing for Nonprofits: Learn to select grant opportunities and write successful applications. Discover tips on research, effective writing, board involvement, grant management and reporting.Classruns through March 13;$89, registration required; 9

a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged. • Search Engine Strategies I: Learn about search engine optimization froma professional searchengine marketer.Classruns through March 20; $99, registration required; 9-11a.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend;541383-7270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged.

P riv a t e R e t r e a t i n i h e O ch o c o ' a Log cabin on 49 acres. 3 creeks with over 3,000' of Mark's Creek frontage. Meadows, corral, timber, power, private well, fenced and surrounded by National Forest. One-of-a-kind forest property in the Ochoco's.

- fillwo o o o • n

• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal

I I I

I

••/•


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Medicine, D3 Nutrition, D4 Fitness, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

State OKshigh-cost Hep C drugsfor more patients on Medicaid 12-week regimens. It was approved by the U.S. Food

By Tara Bannow The Bulletin

During the latter portion

8z D r ug Administration in

of 2014, Oregon officials and October 2014 as the first Hepatitis C patient advocombination drug for pacates debated who would be

ti e nts with the most common

able to receive a new, highly f o rm of Hepatitis C infection. effective yet prohibitively Pati ents who take Sovaldi, expensive drug under the app r oved at the end of 2013, state's Medicaid program. mus t take other drugs along Officials approved criteria w ith it to complete their regthat restricted the drug, So-

i me n . With Harvoni, that's

valdi, to very sick patients,

n o t the case. "This is the true gametakeup theissueagain once changer everyone was waitnew, perhaps more afing for, the one pill," fordable drugs hit the M O N E Y s a id Lorren Sandt, with the caveat that they'd

market.

executive director of

That appears to have hap- the Oregon City-based Carpened sooner than expected. ing Ambassadors Hepatitis The director of the Oregon C p r ogram, which advocates Health Authority, which

V

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Shelley Palmer, pictured in her home in Bend, has multiple sclerosis and uses a power wheelchair. She says it can be difficult for people with disabilities to receive cancer screenings. "I'm an outspoken advocate for accessibility," Palmer says.nl have squeaky wheels and I squeak them rather loudly from time to time."

for pa t i ents with Hepatitis C.

oversees the state's Medicaid So v aldi and Harvoni program, the Oregon Health boast dramatically higher Plan, approved new criteria c u r e rates than their prethis month that permits

deces s ors, which caused

some OHP beneficiaries f lu-li k e symptoms and other with Hepatitis C to access a s ide effects so severe they new drug: Harvoni. Hepati- p r evented most people from tis C is a disease that causes inflammation of the liver and can lead to liver failure or liver cancer.

f o l l owing through with the tr eat m ent regimens. But s t ate officials are not

saying whether the state wil l be able to attain a lower

Made by the same company as Sovaldi, Harvoni

pr ice on Harvoni with the

is actually more expensive dr u g's manufacturer, Gilead than its counterpart: $94,500 Sciences Inc. comparedwith $84,000 for See Hep C /D2

Why youshoud rethink any pansfor a 'ceanse'

By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin

There are doctors in Central Oregon Shelley Palmer will never go to again. Palmer, 65, has multiple sclerosis that's left her wheelchair-bound for the past three decades. She's finally found doctors who are adept at treating patients with disabilities, but it wasn't easy. She'sbeen turned away because regular cancer screenings, including clinics didn't feel comfortable transfer- mammography, although she realizes ring her onto an examination the barriers keep many inditable. She's been in rooms she MEDICINE v i duals with disabilities, both wouldn't be able to escape on physical and mental, from doher own if there were a fire. She's been in g so. A project that's just taking off in

dressed by personnel who had never Oregon aims to change that. dressedapatientbefore. State and national statistics show And the Bend resident has been

Now, a project taking off in Oregon

I remember my first ed to embark on our first cleanse vividly. After months cleansing journey together. of gorging on French bread Hours later, we were back brie, potato chips and more in our flat with countless beer than I care to admit, lemons, a huge tub of Grade

my pants no longer fit. Even my spandex felt tight — a

B maple syrup, cayenne, several jugs of purified water and a

the past two years, compared with 74

testament to my

bottle of sea salt (for

percent of women without disabilities, according to 2012 data from the U.S.

willingness to consume anything and everything while studying abroad.

what I fondly started

around plenty of doctors who didn't cancer screenings at lower rates than veillance System. know how to talk to a person with th o se without disabilities. That, couScreeningsfor cervical cancer foldisabilities. pled with the fact that the roughly 50 low a similar trend, with 76 percent "I have no mental cognition prob- million Americans with disabilities of women with disabilities having received the screening in the past three

ed as being less than intelligent and factors, such as smoking, poor nutri- years compared with 81 percent of marginalized." tion and physical inactivity, puts them nondisabled women. Despite her struggles, Palmer gets at a higher risk for developing cancer. See Accessible/D3

to call the salt water

flush from hell). Game on. The first glass was fine: The spicy-sweet mixture was oddly satisfying. The prospect of dropping 20 pounds in 10 days probably helped

That's when I knew it was time

for a change. And I wanted a quick fix. One simple search on the Inter-

net for "lose weight NOW" led me to a

Thinkstook

10-day liquid diet consisting only of "lemonade." Apparently, Beyonce drank

2012CDCcancer anddisadilites survey

the Kool-Aid (err, lemon-

ade) and lost 20 pounds. It's perfect, I thought. My roommate agreed, and we decid

Despite potentially being at greater SCREENINGDISPARITIES risk for cancer, people with 1000/0 disabilities sometimes less likely to be screenedfor it. In a CDC survey from 2012, Oregonian 80 respondents, 29 percent of whom 69% qualified as disabled in 2011, answered questions about 60 screenings andwhat cancer risk factors they might have.

71%

—OISABLEQ

The Dallas Morning News

The ball was a mere 5 W OMEN (AGES 50-70jW HOHAD SCREENINGS INPAST2 YEARS

CERVICALCANCER WOMEN (AGES21-65) WHOHAD SCREENINGS INPAST3 YEARS

COI.ORECTIII.CIINCER MEN OR WOMEN (AGES50-75j WHO HADSCREENINGS

CANCERRISKFACTORS 100%

85% 80

7P

60

40

33% 21%

23%

20

0

PHYSICAL INIICTIIIITT OBESITT PEOPLEWHO RECEIVEDANYEXERCISE PEOPLE WHO QUALIFIEDASOBESE

Source: Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System survey, 2012

ca m e and went. It wasn't bad, but it wasn't what I was

ho p ing for, either. I didn't feel to r t u red or skinnier.

See Cleanse/D4

'Yips': Funny name, but serious problem By Elizabeth Hamilton

20

BREASTCANCER

make it taSte eVen

sweeter. A full day of cleansing

St%

40

— MOTDISABILED

Special to The Washington Post

In Oregon, 69 percent of women with disabilities received mammograms in

hopes to change that.

Centers for Disease Control and Prep e o ple with disabilities tend to receive vention's Behavioral Risk Factor Sur-

lems," she said," but I was often treat- t e nd to have higher rates of cancer risk

NUTRITION

By Tara Fuller

SNOKING CURRENT SMOKERS

POOR NUTRITI ON PEOPLEWHO SOMETIMES OROFTEN COULDNOTAFFORD BALANCED MEALS Carli Krueger/The Bulletin

feet from the hole, but when

the hands rightbefore impact, says Dr. Debbie Crews, a sports psychology consultant for Arizona State University

Chey Castro raised his putter women's golf team and a facfor what should have ulty research assistant b een a clean shot, his F I T N ESS in the professional hand spasmed and he golf managementpromissed the putt that would gram. Crews has helped Cashave won him $180 at the tro and others treat theyips. tournament. She recently spoke in Dal"I know I'm good and las about the brain science I know I can make these behind golf and the yips at the Center for BrainHealth's putts," said Castro in a call from his home in Scottsdale, public lecture series at the Arizona. "I used to always University of Texas at Dallas. make them and never had an The yips affect many issue." kinds of athletes, including Castro is among those excricket and baseball players, periencedgolfersplaguedby and even piano players, but an inexpli cablephenomenon the condition is most dosely known as the yips. The name associated with golfers. Tiger might make the condition Woods' poor game at the resound trivial, but the yips can

cent Phoenix Open led some

ruin a professional athlete's career.

fellowplayers to speculate that the great golfer himself

For golfers, it's an uncontrollable spasmthat occurs in

has it.

See Yips/D5


D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

MONEY HEALTH EVENTS 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. NO PAIN — LIFEGAIN: Explain Pain: Learn how your brain and

TODAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 8 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 8:30 a.m.; Cascade Middle School, 19619 Mountaineer Way, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. KNOW THE10 SIGNSOF ALZHEIMER'S:Early Detection Matters: Learn about the difference between memory loss and Alzheimer's and what to do; 10:30 a.m., registration required; Downtown Bend Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn about

nervous systemare involved in persistent pain; 5:30 p.m.; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 NE Penn Ave., Bend or 541-318-7041.

TUESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Hydro Flask, 561 NW York Ave., Bend; www.redcrossblood.orgor 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Lowe's Home Improvement, 1313 SW Canal Blvd., Redmond;

managingday-to-daysymptoms of chronic pain and improving quality of life; $10 for six-week series, registration required; 2:30-5 p.m., Thursdays through April 9; Redmond Senior Center, 325 NW Dogwood Ave.; www.livingwellco. org or 541-322-7430.

INSURANCE PLAN REPORT

Health costs'slowrisenot helping employees By Noam N. Levey

for Americans. That is one

Tribune Washington Bureau

of the reasons many policymakers hoped the slowdown

Employers still pick up the lion's share of workers' health costs, paying more

in health care costs would

than two-thirds of the av-

bring some relief. Overall health care spend-

erage worker's insurance premium in2013,or $7,238, according to the report. But the employer share is shrinking.

WASHINGTON — Amer-

ican workers already struggling with stagnant wages are being saddled with higher medical bills even as employers reap the benefits of a sustained slowdown in the growth of health care costs,

ing in the U.S. has risen at

the slowest pace on record in recent years. The Center for American

think tank.

Cost Institute on how much

Public opinion surveys regularly show affordability as a top health care concern

employees pay in co-pays, deductibles and other out-ofpocket health spending.

include: requiring employers to more clearly tell employees how costs are rising in their health plans; mandat-

ing that employers return some savings to workers if employers' costs rise more slowly than overall health care costs; and expanding employees' access to primary care visits that are not subject to cost-sharing.

Spiro acknowledged that large employers and major employer groups are unlikely to back any additional requirements. But he said that increased

focus on the issue may put pressure on employers, just as sustained calls to raise the

minimum wage may have influenced decisions by WalMart and other businesses to

boost pay. "This is a n i ssue that squeeze middle-class families are facing," he said in an needs to be on th e table," interview. Spiro said. ly important to address the

www.redcrossblood.org or

FRIDAY

800-RED-CROSS.

AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.

WEDMESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 2 p.m.; humm kombucha, 1125 NESecond St.,

MONDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Lowe's Home Improvement, 20501 Cooley Road, Bend; or www.redcrossblood.org 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; noon; American Legion Post No. 45, 52532 Drafter Road, La Pine; www.redcrossblood.org or

Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or

800-RED-CROSS. FAMILYCAREGIVER WORKSHOP: Learn how to better care for a loved one with dementia; 4 p.m.; registration requested; Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St., Bend; www.helpfor alzheimersfamilies.com or 541-548-7483.

Hep C

egon and receives insurance tions over other counties in through the Public Employees' Oregon, with an average of

Continued from 01 Oregon does not negotiate directly with drug manufacturers; rather, it's part of the so-called Sovereign States Drug Consortium, an eight-state group that receivesrebate offers from

drug manufacturers on behalf of those states, OHA spokeswoman S tephanie

Tripp wrote in an email. "Oregon is willing to consider all offers presented to

SSDC members, including any offer Gilead may have presented," Tripp

w r o te.

"(However, Oregon cannot discuss who the SSDC negotiates with/about or the

terms of rebates offered to SSDC members.)" Gilead, which has been heavily criticized for its pricing on Sovaldi, recently

PEOPLE • Jeff Meyrowitzhas joined Central Oregon Pediatric Associates asa pediatrician. Meyrowitz earned his degree from Michigan State University, completed his residency at Doernbecher Meyrewitz Children's Hospital at Oregon Health & Science University in Portland, and is a certified provider of Pediatric Advanced Life Support. • Mark Sternfeld, M.D., Ph.D., FACP,hasjoined Bend Memorial Clinic's Internal Medicine Department. Sternfeld received his degree and Ph.D. from Oregon Health & Science University, completed his residency at ProvidenceMedical Center in Portland and is board certified in internal medicine.

How to submit

announced it will negotiate

Events:Email event information to healthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 daysbefore the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact:

50 percent with state Med-

EPf1'

second-highest rate of infec-

cy and Therapeutics Com-

S ECT I O Pf

541-383-0358.

session, committee mem-

eoa sw Industrial way, Bend, OR

Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents@bend bulletin.com. Contact:

bers performed acost eval-

GROWLER RUN:Group run of 3-5 miles from Fleet Feet. Share a growler of beer from Growler Phil's after the run; 6 p.m.; Growler Phil's, 1244 NW Galveston Ave; Bend; www.growlerphils.com or 541-390-3865.

FOOTZONE'SPUB RUN TO RIVERBEND BREWING:A 3.25-and 5.09-mile route option, beginning at FootZone and finishing at Riverbend Brewing; 5:30 p.m.; FootZone to Riverbend Brewing, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.fo otzonebend.com/events/footzo ne-pub-run-to-riverbend-brewing.

TUESDAY HEALTHYKNEEPARTY: Burke Selbst from Focus Physical Therapy and Mary Skrzynski of Deschutes Orthopedics will speak on how to prevent knee injuries; 6:30 p.m.; free, registration requested; Recharge: The Athlete's Lounge, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; www.rechargesport.com or 541-306-6541.

WEDNESDAY

LATINDANCING WEDNESDAYS: GRIN & BEARITRUN:Afun5K Learn a different Latin dance style and 10K run for the whole family! every week in salsa, bachata, Benefiting Healthy Beginnings; 10 merengue, cha cha cha and more; a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 7 p.m.; $5; SEVENRestaurant 8 322 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend. Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St., Bend.

uation on both drugs. In March, the committee will consider yet another

716 SW11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732

not a single pill, but daily regimens come in individualpackages. Sandt — whose organization receives unrestricted grants from a number of pharmaceutical companies, including Gilead, the

HIGH LAKES WELCOMES

maker of Sovaldi — said

internist who is committed to taking your

she hopes Viekira Pak is approved because it would be nice for patients to have options, as each drug affects individuals differently. She said she also hopes the state loosens its restrictions around who can re-

ceive the Hepatitis C drugs, especially if it's able to negotiate lower prices. Salem resident Liz Graham is among the Hepatitis

Dr. Mark Thibert is a board c e rtified health to the next level! Dr. Thibert is

looking forward to practicing medicine and getting out into the c o m m u n ity to

meet the people of Central Oregon, the culture and the great outdoors.

To schedule an appointment, call

541-389-7741

C patients who would not be considered sick enough to receive the new drugs.

Diagnosed in 2005 after a new doctor performed a routine blood test, the drugs available at the time didn't

ridherofthe disease. She's currently at stage

1 — the earliest stageof fibrosis, or scar tissue build-up in the liver. Her insurance provider, however, requires patients be far sicker before they can

receive Harvoni. Graham works in vocational rehabilitation for the state of Or-

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet -

• • Classifieds

I

-

Vour laeal eppusnae experts

Hepatitis C drug, this one called Viekira Pak by the manufacturer AbbVie. It's

Whtch us growand change! 541-aez-e223johnsonbrothersafcom

HI IAKES H ea l t h C a r e DEDICATED TO SERVING CENTRAL OREGON

Bend Upper Mill Redmond Sisters

CRATCN

CoNSTRUCTION

Jefferson County has the

Blemhhed pmducts that wmk Sne.

MONDAY

SATURDAY

came in a closed-door session of the OHA's Pharma-

SUN FoREsT

PAtNT

TODAY

FLEET FEETWEDNESDAY RUNS:Fleet Feet's Run this Town runs, usually 3-5 miles; 6 p.m.; Fleet Feet Sports, 1320 NW Galveston Ave; Bend; www.fleetfeetbend.com. REDMOND RUNNING GROUP:Tuesday group runs in Redmond. Meet at 314 SW Eleventh St. All abilities welcome; 6:30 p.m.; Redmond; www.runaroundsports.com.

icaid programs that agree are unaware they contracted it to make their Hepatitis C until decades later, the actual treatments their drugs of number of people infected in choice. Oregon's decision to Oregon is estimated to be closcover Harvoni under OHP er to 95,000.

DESIGN 1 BUILD 1 REMODEL

541-383-0358.

FRIDAY

discounts of up to around

disease through sharing needles with infected people, beBenefit Board. about 50 new infections each ing born to infected mothers Similarly, OHP beneficia- year, the new data show. The or from needlestick injuries ries would need to be at least highest rate occurs in Malheur in health care settings. More at stage 3 fibrosis in order to County, where there are about rarely, it can be transmitted r eceive Harvoni u nder t h e 91 new infections per year. through sexual contact. new criteria, which take effect Dr. Ann Thomas, the public Graham, 62, contracted 60 daysafterthey were signed. health physician who com- Hepatitis C through intraveIn Graham's opinion, stage 3 is piled the research, said people nous drug use, which she entoo late. tend to think urban counties gaged in during a period in "When you've got stage 3, like Portland's M u ltnomah her late teens and early 20s. you're already the banana peel County will see more Hep- She eventually quit and nevsliding down the hill," she said. atitis C cases, but that's not er looked back, and has since Several private insurance true in Oregon, where rural worked for the state for the carriers have put similar recounties topped the list. Mult- past three decades. She said strictions in place to limit their nomah County came in ninth much of the stigma around spending on the expensive place. Hepatitis C is because it's asnew drugs. N ationwide, H epatitis C sociated with drug use, a habit New data from the Oregon affects an estimated 3.2 mil- peopletend to be embarrassed Public Health Division show lion people, according to the to admit. "I'm mildly embarrassed rates of Hepatitis C cases in Centers for Disease Control the state were more than two and Prevention. The disease that I did it, but I did it," Gratimes higher than the U.S. av- is slow-progressing, so baby ham said. "I can't undo it, and erage between 2007 and 2011. boomers who contracted it that's what happened. I think There were more than 47,000 decades ago are just finding the stigma needs to be erased, cases of Hepatitis C infection out by developing serious liv- not that it will be." in Oregon in 2013. But given er problems such as cirrhosis — Reporter: 541-383-0304, the fact that at least half of or cancer.People contract the tbannow@bendbuiietin.com people who have the disease

mittee, which sets d r ug policies for OHP. In that

FITNESS EVENTS

At the same time, workers'

Progress report, provided ex- out-of-pocket costs are risWhile employees' insur- clusively to the Los Angeles ing as employers boost deance premiums and out-of- Times, offers additional ev- ductibles and co-pays in the pocket m e dical e x p enses idence this slowdown is not health plans they offer. shot up 21 percent from helping workers, however. From 2007 to 2013, the av2007 to 2013 to an average Researchers analyzed na- erage worker's annual outof $3,273 a year, employers' tional survey data from the of-pocket medical spending total health care costs rose federal Agency for Health- rose to $800 from $665, reonly 14.5 percent. care Research and Quality searchers found. " Almost everyone in t h e that measure how much emThis trend is particularly health system is realizing ployers and employees pay troublesome at a time when savings, bu t e m ployees' for health plans that workers paychecks are stagnating, costs are rising," noted the get through their jobs. said Topher Spiro, the cennew report from the CenThey also looked at data ter's vice president for health ter for American Progress, gathered from major health policy and lead author of the a left-leaning Washington plans by the Health Care report. "This issue is criticala new report indicates.

The report suggests three potential responses. These


THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

MEDICINE Accessible Continued from D1 Screenings for colorectal cancer, by contrast, are actuallyhigher among men and women with disabilities than

among those without disabilities: 76 percent compared with

71 percent, according to the

"The radiologist was really rude to(a patient) and really hurt her feelings because she has a developmental disability and didn't

understand everything. She swore she would never get another mammogram because of that, and so she just never did." — Angela Weaver, Oregon Office onDisability and Health

CDC data.

A handful of groups in Oregon that help individuals with disabilities live independently are teaming up, aided by a grant from Oregon Health & Science University's Knight

Learning about cancer screenings from someone who understands what it's like to have a disability can make all the difference, Sub-

keep people with disabilities from getting screened, as can

Cancer Institute, for a project

lett said.

depression, which tends to

they hope will help turn the trend around. It will work by training so-called peer support specialists, people whose own disabilities provide common ground with the organizations' clients, to ask about Thinkstock

Mindfulness meditation has long been recognized as a treatment for stress, anxiety, pain and trauma. It hes its roots in Buddhism.

cancer screenings and stress their importance.

'Clueless'doctors Those behind the project

Hos ita treats nursin stress wit courses in 'min Ljness'

recognizemuch of whatkeeps people from getting screened is the simple fear of having a bad experience or coming across a provider who isn't

By David Templeton

totally clueless and don't

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PITTSBURGH —

C a r i ng

for patients can be "organized chaos," nurses say. As the foot soldiers of health care, they

function at the pressure point, the front lines of the war zone, where"you have tobe flawless."

"You can't make one mistake," said Daniel Griffiths, 47, of Greenfield, a nurse at Uni-

versity of Pittsburgh Medical Center Montefiore. "It's physicallydraining. You're on your feet for a 12-hour shift." It helps explain why stress levels in nursing can lead to mental and physical exhaustion, burnout, anxiety, depression, high blood pressure and sleep disorders. These occupational hazards, in turn, trespass onto one's free time.

"When stress is high, it be-

comes difficult to make easy

choices," Griffiths said, noting his recent trouble deciding among loops, flakes or pops. "After work, if I go to get cereal at the grocery store, it's hard to make a choice."

Stress levels among its ranks have prompted the University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing to sponsor training workshops in mindfulness meditation for regional nurses. About 50 participated in two daylong training sessions recently at a local facility. Mindfulness, with r o ots in Buddhism, long has been accepted psychotherapy for stress, anxiety, pain and trauma. It allows a person to enter

Practicingmindfulness During training workshops on mindfulness meditation, Katie Hammond Holtz provides participants with a pouch of10 practical items to serve asreminders to usethe skills they have learned. The chief skill is Using one's breath "to keep in touch with the moment" while allowing thoughts to pass through the mind. But, in reality, the fits and starts of a stressful day cancause aperson to restrict breathing andallow badthoughts to seize the mind as stress wells up, resulting in angerandfrustration. Mindfulness provides methods to transform that, said Hammond Holtz, who collaborated with University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing officials to custom-design a retreat for nurses to include a strong focus on thevalue of everyday mindfulness in the workplace. Making mindfulness occur seamlessly andautomatically are key goals. Cuescaninclude every encounter with water, passage through a doorway, atrip on an elevator, or evenevery time you sit down. Birds chirping, a smudge onone's eyeglasses or the first touch of the computer keyboard can remind the person to improve posture, focus on breathing, embrace themoment and let troublesome thoughts pass out of mind on asoft breeze. "You need afoundation, support and a nourishing community to support it, and you need to learn it from anexperienced mindfulness trainer," said HammondHoltz. "At first you have to pay attention purposefully to it. But over time it becomes soautomatic thatyou take apeaceful breath whenever youenter the office or reach your desk. "You need to stop andrest andtake aSabbath — 20 minutes, an hour or three hours — or practice five minutes of slow-walking in the office," she said. "Being aware of breathing, no matter what we are doing, makes usaware of what's happening inside of us and around us." Mary Rodgers Schubert, the tension generally resolves, you nursing school director of con- have a sense of greater calm tinuing education, in promo- and relaxation." tional material for the work-

shops. "There are too many

educated on working with a patient with a disability. " You'd think t h a t t h e y would, but some doctors are know how to interact with

"It's not that clinical model that says, 'I have the educa-

tion. Let me tell you how to live,'" he said. "It's like, 'You know, I've lived it. I've expe-

on 45 artides on the subject. In addition to the barriers mentioned, she found cost can

occur athigher rates among women with disabilities compared with women without

disabilities. The study was published in January's Dis-

rienced it. Let me tell you my ability and Health Journal. story.'" Through her r e search, Often, it's logistical barri- Merten said she was surers that keep people out of the prised at the level of providdoctor's office, whether they er discomfort she observed be inaccessible hallways or among the physicians she doorways or the difficulty of i nterviewed. Several s a i d gettingout of one's wheelchair they were hesitant to bring up and onto a table. Many people cancer screenings and risk are afraid of ending up in an factors when more pressing uncomfortable or dangerous issues were discussed. "They almost want to be situation, such as being lifted onto an examination table by gentle with them," she said, people who aren't properly "because they're already equipped to do so. bringing so much bad news The project will kick off and so many things you can in Bend in May with the first and cannot do. The visits training session, hosted by were already so d i shearteducators from the American ening sometimes that they

somebody (who has an autism spectrum disorder)," said Cancer Society, the breast didn't want to add one more Greg Sublett, the director of cancer foundation Susan G. thing for them to h ave to operations and independent Komen and OHSU. consider." living for Abilitree, a Bend Once the peer support speIn Palmer's experience, nonprofit that assists people cialists are trained, they'll though, having a disability with disabilities in achieving take their message to every provides even more reason independence and one of the new person who makes con- to get screened for cancer. groups participating in the tact with the organization, Her MS symptoms, including current project. and those who return for ser- weakness and fatigue, alAngela Weaver, a project vices later on. All seven Cen- ready bring her down. She'd coordinator for the OHSU- ters for Independent Living in prefer to nip a problem like based Oregon Office on Dis- Oregon are participating in cancer in the budbefore it creability and Health and an the project, but only threeates a "double whammy" that academic collaborator on the including Abilitree in Bendseverely impacts her life. project, said she used to work are reporting the number of The doesn't mean getting a with a woman with a devel- people they talk to about can- mammogram is a walk in the opmental disability who was cer screenings to the Knight park.She likesthe providers deeply impacted by the expe- Cancer Institute. at Central Oregon Radiology rience of receiving her first In total, the project will like- Associates, who dismantle mammogram. ly touch somewhere between parts of her wheelchair and "The radiologist was real- 700 and 800people statewide bring the machine down to ly rude to her and really hurt during the year it takes place, her so she can stay in her her feelings because she has said Barry Fox-Quamme, wheelchair during the screena developmental disability president ofthe board ofdirec- ing. But she still has to contort and didn't understand ev- tors for the Association of Or- her body in an uncomfortable erything," Weaver said. "She egon Centers for Independent way to make sure there's no swore she would never get an- Living, which oversees all sev- cheek or elbow in the image. other mammogram because en CILs in Oregon. It doesn't get her down anyof that, and so she just never more, though. Palmer is conPreventing a dld. fident, and she wants to help When the woman was in

'double whammy'

other patients with disabilities

her early 50s, she felt a lump Julie Merten, an assistant be confident, too. "I've been at this game for ontheundersideofherbreast. professor of public health in By the time she saw a doctor, the University of North Flor- quite some time," she said. it was too late. She died within ida Brooks College of Health, — Reporter: 541-383-0304, 18 months, Weaver said. performed a literature review tbannow@bendbulletin.com

She teaches an eight-week mindfulness meditation course

that includes homework The swiitly c hanging environ- center also offers a mindfulness ments. The nursing profession yoga dass and other programs. can do more to help nurses take "Individually, I'm blessed to better care of themselves and, get to hear from patients and into the present moment by therefore, theirpatients." class participants about how it's helping them," Greco said, focusing on breathing and the H ammond Holtz said r esenses, leading to insight and search shows that the key is- describing one patient who said mindful action. The ultimate sue for nurses is their ability to mindfulness helped her withoutcome canbe acceptance and focus, with mindfulness help- stand cancer treatments. transformation of suffering. ing to improve concentration. The Center for Traumatic The U.S. military, athletes, Stopping and pausing regularly Stress in Children and Adohealth care professionals and to take mindful breaths fosters lescents at Allegheny Genereven corporate CEOs have continuous awareness of your al Hospital uses mindfulness adopted mindfulness medita- breath. In time, you become meditation to treat children, tion. And it's no wonder. While "your own v i brant portable from grade-school age through benefiting mental and physical mindfulness sanctuary," with 20, who've experienced trauhealth, relaxation and keener any activity involving mindful- ma, domestic violence, sexual focus improve decision-mak- ness,according to her website, abuse and other problems. "They are stuck in the past ing, productivity, negotiating www.katherineholtz.com. powers and conflict resolution. Studies show t ha t n u r s- and are worried and scared Katie Hammond Holtz, a es who practice mindfulness about the future. They are Pittsburgh-based li c ensed cope better with stress, reduce afraid it will happen again," psychologist, conducts mind- exhaustion,decrease rumina- said the center's director, Anfulness retreats, induding the tion, enhance relaxation and thony Mannarino. "When they recent sessions for n u rses, improve life satisfaction, with connect with mindfulness, they nursing educators and lead- measured improvements in pa- disconnect their focus on the ers. Among other practices, tient care and satisfaction, she past and future. The focus is she teaches mindful sitting, sard. the here and now. "We don't tell them the bad walking and movement, along Nursing school A ssociate with gentle yoga and deep re- Dean Susan Albrecht, whopar- stuff won't come in, but we tell patients, not enough time, and

laxation. Participants during her retreats remain silent, with

ticipated in the retreat, said it was extremely helpful in teach-

them to let it pass and try to fo-

"We come into the world with a breath and leave this world with a breath. But let's

care for others.

the mind."

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Ben 's est e at c u offers more for members...

cus on the present. If you try to minds and senses alive to the ingher how to pause, focus and get it out of the way, you've lost moment. careforherselfbeforetrying to the moment. Let it pass through

not forget the breaths in-between," said Hammond Holtz,

a doctor of psychology and mindfulnessbased stress reduction teacher. As a starting point, she rec-

ommends putt ing one hand on the abdomen andthe other over

the heart. 'We're taking refuge in our in-breath and out-breath because it can change us, if we are fullypresent in our breath." Keep one's appointment with the moment, she advises. Take

"My stresslevels dropped," Laura Schubert, 23, took one she said. "After the first half, I of the recent dasses. The mafelt like a rag doll." ternit y-ward nurse, described UPMC an d Al l egheny the time she was caring for Health Network psychologists two pregnant women who dehave long used mindfulness to livered their babies simultanetreat people with post-traumat- ously. "I was like a ping-pong ic stress syndrome, attention ball," she said. "You can't be at deficit disorder, chronic pain two places at one time as your and concussions. patients progress through labor When using it, a whole lot at the same rate." drops away, induding judgSuch situations, she said, ment and commentary as emphasize the benefits of the you focus attention on your techniques she learned to prebreath," said Carol Greco, as- serve her mental and physical sistant professor of psychiatry well-being. "Mindful moments slow you and a licensed psychologist at

refuge in one's breathing. Respond to the challenge rather the UPMC Center for Integrathan react emotionally to the tive Medicine. "The body just says 'thank you' and lets go of suggestion or assignment. "Nursing is sttessful," said musde tension. When muscle

more weekly youth and family activities in addition to... 4 pools, Pilates, 25 yoga classes aweek, over 40 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.

down so you can breath and

check in with yourself and hopefully prevent future burnout," she said.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

TION

nsiete a a t By Kevin Quealy, AmandaCox and Josh Katz New York Times News Service

M any restaurants in

i ot e A oo att e ro ose U.. Dieta u i e ines

the

By Nancy Stohs

fast-growingsector known as "fast casual" have built their success largely on a simple promise:Our food isfresher, more humanely raisedand

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

It's time again to anticipate

the release ofa new setofofficial U.S. Dietary Guidelines. The guidelines, which inform federal food and nutritioneducation programs, are updated every five years. A government advisory committee submitted its re-

better for you. These chains

also sell freedom of choice; at Chipotle Mexican Grill, for instance, you can have a bur-

rito made many thousands of ways. So we set out to answer ques-

tions that pique our interest each time we walk into a Chipotle: What do people actually order? How healthful is a Chipotle meal'? Today, thanks to a large sample of online orders, we have a ballpark estimate. The median

port last week, and a few of

sSam Hodgson / New York Times News Service

"Fast casual" restaurants like Chipotle, an increasingly popular sector in the restaurant business, often market their food as a healthier option, but the calorie counts don't bear that out. ABOVE: A chicken bowl with fresh tomato salsa, rice, black beans, sour

cream and guacamole is a meal in the range of 850 to 880 calories. BELOW: The chips and flour tortilla pile on the calories — A barbacoa burrito, with fresh tomato salsa, rice, black beans, cheese and

orderper person at Chipotle sour cream, along with chips and guacamole, is a meal in the range comes to about 1,070 calories. of 1,770 to1,795 calories — a full day's worth for some adults. (Half the orders in our data that, and half had fewer.) Most adults should eat 1,600 to 2,400

calories a day. That median order was also

ment of Agriculhm will take into account when they draft

The first Dietary Guidelines were issued in1980. In1990, Congress mandated that a newedition be published at least every five years. The guidelines provide authoritative advice for people 2 years and older about how gooddietary habits can promote health and reduce risk for major chronic diseases. Theyserve as the basis for federal food andnutrition education programs. Health and HumanServices andthe U.S. Department of Agriculture will draft the final 2015 guidelines later this year, taking into consideration the recommendations of a government advisory committee, issued last week. The public is encouraged to read the advisory committee's report and provide written comments at www.dietaryguidelines. gov, where thecurrent (2010) guidelines also can beaccessed. Previous versions of Dietary Guidelines, through 2005, canbe viewed at www.health.gov/dietaryguidelines/history.htm. The very first guidelines, published 35years ago, were written around sevengeneral directives: Eat avariety of foods. Maintain ideal weight. Avoid too muchfat, saturated fat and cholesterol. Eat foods with adequate starch and fiber. Avoid too much sugar. Avoid too muchsodium. If you drink alcohol, do so in moderation.

grumble about the commit-

tee's condusion that consuming three to five cups of coffee a day can be good for you — reducing the risk of 7ype 2 diabetesand cardiovascular

likely to have about 75 percent

of the daily allowance of saturated fat and almost a full day's serving of sodium, as recommended by the Food and Drug Administration. (The

disease.

Nor will many argue with the assertion that moderate amounts of alcohol are benefi-

percentages listed here are

based on a 2,000-calorie diet.) Chipotle said it does not track

cial for some people. Dietary cholesterol: It's

information on each customer

order, so we obtained a data setof about 2,000 meal orders placed on GrubHub from July to December 2012, and looked But the patterns we found up the nutritional information broadly match those that Chifor each based on the numbers potle has publidy discussed. Chipotle publishes on its web- These online orders represent site. Almost all of the orders some of the most detailed information ever published into

ces Moore Lappe first pub- erage 126 grams of sugar a lished "Diet for a Small Plan- day, a whopping 500 calories' et," in which she states that

search, which no longer pur-

chocolate truffle

w h enever

offered). who now embrace concerns However, limiting conabout sustainability and car- sumption only makes these bon footprint (my two vegetar- goodies taste that much betian daughters among them). ter when we do indulge. And Yet there's lots of controver- the advisory is a reminder sy swirling around it, especial- that for those of us who love

ture the flour tortilla in regular

ports a direct link between

burritos. That is a 300-calorie savings. • 1,045 calories: One way to get a Chipotle meal near the medianorderis to ordera

cholesterol in food and cholesterol in a person's blood. The current dietary guidelines advisethateveryone consume less than 300 mg of cholesterol ly within the meat industry. aday. And it remains to be seen Takeaway'? No more vilify- what folks following a meating of the humble egg. Quiche heavy, low-carb diet will do

brands, cleanse types, phase- nutrient-rich outer layer cuts in and phase-out strategies, down on the fiber that makes Continued from 01 exercising and not exercising it into your cup. The one thing On Day Two, I was miser- — you name it, I've tried it. But you're still getting plenty of in able. I had no energy. I felt as just like my personality, my juices is sugar. Which leads though I was suffering from body is stubborn. And every me to my next point ... a rare disorder in which a time I've limited my intake to 2. Eating fruit is much more parasite eats at you, and my liquids, my body simply want- healthful than drinking it. patience level was at an all- ed food — real, solid, nutriWhile juice cleanses may time low. After walking two ent-dense food. seem like an easy way to load miles to work, I thought I was up on vitamins and minergoing to collapse. On top of Why not to do it? als, they're often full of addmy lack of physical stamina, So why did I continue to tor- ed sugars and devoid of the I had close to zero brainpow- ture myself? good stuff (such as fiber and er. Staring at my blank comFor one, I love trying new antioxidants). Juicing fruits puter screen felt as strenuous trends, diets and means of does tend to preserve some as running a marathon in a reaching my full physical and vitamins, but why guzzle sevsnowstorm; hilarious email mental potential. I also love eral hundred calories' worth chats were the most annoying food, eating a lot of it and hav- of fruit when you can eat one things I'd ever read; I hated ev- ing a few drinks to help wash serving and actually feel full? eryone; I hated the cleanse; I it all down. Naturally, that can Plus, all that juice can actuhadn't lost weight. lead to weight gain, and in- ally lead to Type 2 diabetes, By Day Four, my friends stead of being patient and get- whereas eating fruit reduces abandoned me, my spandex ting back on track, sometimes the risk. still felt as though it was going I want an easy way to get back 3. Juice is expensive. to burst at the seams and the to the body I'm used to (and to Cleansing, whether you're sight of anything edible made get out of elastic pants). Plus I making the juice at home or me hallucinate. have a history of injuries, and buying a prepackaged one, Then I found evidence of as an athlete, it can be difficult can cost a pretty penny. In sandwich consumption under to adjust food intake to a body fact,for the price of the avermy roommate'sbed. She had that isn't hitting the gym six age cleanse (around $180 for been cheating. And she wasn't days a week. three days), you can buy two ashamed. "You're insane and Cleansing will solve all w eeks' worth ofgroceries for this is stupid," she said. She those problems, right? yourself — even at a high-end had a point. An hour later, we Wrong. And here's why: grocery store. Why not cut were in a bar, beers in hand 1. Your body needs protein back on booze and caffeine and burgers in our mouths. and fiber. for a week and splurge on a Life was good again. Protein is often associated massage or class package at with gaining serious muscle, your favorite fitness studio inA body wants food but it's necessary for every stead of hopping on another I tried that cleanse again body type — weightlifters and cleanse? And because studies three more times and followed yogis alike. Not only does pro- have found few actual health the rules more closely: The tein help muscles recover, but benefits to detox diets, includfirst go-round, I'd skipped it also helps promote a healthy ing cleanses, you're essentially prep, didn't listen to my body weight by keeping you full and throwing your hard-earned when it was tired, gave up af- fueled. Protein also provides cash to the wind. ter four days and skipped the essential amino acids the body 4. Crash diets don't work. phase-out process, too. But the can't produce on its own. And, Losing 12 pounds in two results were the same: I was sadly, juice provides little to weeks may sound great, but hungry, irritable, weak and no protein (unless you're do- it's tough to keep it off. When low on brainpower. Many who ing a cleanse that includes nut you deprive yourself of sugar have cleansed say those feel- milk, but that still has a low and carbohydrates, the likeliings pass and are replaced by amount). hood of eventually returning energy, stamina and blissAs for fiber, most people to old habits, and binging in but that wasn't the case for me. don't get enough as it is. If the process, is high. The better I did lose a few pounds, but constipation, low energy and option: Make small, meaningthey came back (plus more) as frequent hunger pangs aren't ful changes, such as cutting soon as I started eating solid reason enough to up your in- back on processed foods and food. take, consider this: A high-fi- drinking more water, one at a Maybe it was that particular ber diet also reduces risk for time. cleanse, I decided. I needed to heart disease. Many f r u its 5. Cleansing makes you feel try something else. have a healthful serving of crummy. At t hi s p o int, I 'v e d o ne fiber, but the process of juicSure, several cleansing tesseven. I experimented with ing them and discarding their timonies say that the results

worth.

for every 16 pounds of grain The committee advises and soy fed to beef cattle in that added sugars be kept to the U.S., we get only 1 pound about 200 calories a day, the of meat back. My worn paper- amount in a 16-ounce sugary back copy lives somewhere in beverage. I don't drink sugary drinks, myhouse. This env i r onmentally but I do love homemade treats based recommendation from and desserts (and a good

about time t h e g u idelines the committee should resocatch up to heart-health re- nate with the many citizens

Washington and in East Lan- what people actually order. steak burrito with white rice, sing, Michigan. And they offer help for custom- tomatillo green chile salsa, sour Admittedly, it's a data set ers who want to tailor their in- cream,guacamole andlettuce. that comes with caveats. Some take of calories, salt and fat. • 1,795 calories: It may not menu items, like sofritas and Here are examples from be surprising to learn that peobrown rice, have been intro- across the spectrum of light ple order truly huge meals at duced nationwide since then and heavy eaters: Chipotle, but it is rare; only 5 and are not in our sample data. • 545 calories: Light meals at percent of meals reached this It's possible that ordering pat- Chipotle aren't very common; threshold. The easiest way to terns have changed since then about 95 percent of meals had get there is quite simple: eat an or that customers at these two more than this. But if eating order of chips and guacamole locations behave differently light is your goal, order a bur- along with your meal. Together from those elsewhere. rito bowl, which does not fea- they add 770 calories.

Cleanse

Department of H ealth and Human Services and Depart-

the 2015 guidelines: Beverages: Few Americans (myself included) are likely to

set had more calories than

are from two restaurants, in

its recommendations drew praise or raised eyebrows (or ire), depending on the reader's point of view. Here's my take on some of the key suggestions, which are not binding but which the

U.S. DietaryGuidelines primer

to bake,many dessertrecipes

could stand to have the sugar cut by at least half, sometimes more, without any sacrifice in

quality. (Some of us never much ten into the guidelines. Now if only someone could worried about this "incredible, Added sugar: No one has a persuade the food manufacedible" food — not when, as bigger sweet tooth than I, but turers to leave out high-frucin my case, my farmer grand- advising people to cut back is tose corn syrup and other parents lived into their late 90s a good thing and probably a sweeteners from p r o ducts eating eggs for breakfast ev- long time coming. According where they really don't beeryday) to Euromonitor Internation- long, like pasta sauce, salMore plant foods, less meat: al, a market intelligence firm, ad dressings, even chicken and omelets for all!

with this directive, if it's writ-

It's been 44 years since Fran-

Americans consume on av-

were incredible: "My body has never looked better," "My

long walks, restorative yoga and 15-minute steam room or

mind has never been clearer," sauna sessions. "I have more energy than a By the end of my "cleanse," puppy." And while that may be I feel energized, healthy, haptrueforsome, forothers— like py and fit — even if I'm not me — it isn't. fitting into my skinny jeans The lack o f n u t rients in perfectly. I've also found that juice cleanses can cause hun- it helps to "detox" my mind, at ger, fatigue, lightheadedness, the same time. Taking time to dizziness, a rapid heartbeat, meditate and write, and ignortemperature fluctuations, im- ing social media and mindless patience and a whole slew of Web browsing, help me feel discomfort. And to think: This more focused, and I sleep like is what you're choosing to do ababy. and paying for. Thanks, but no It may not be double-digit thanks. I'll take feeling awe- weight loss, but I'll take it. some for free. — This story was excerpted 6. Your body detoxes itself

naturally. After y o u o v erindulge, purging your system of toxins with a cleanse sounds appealing. But that's what our organs are for. The liver is constantly working to help purify the body. Our kidneys

broth.

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s

s

from Greatist.com.

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO

do the same every time we uri-

nate. And so do our intestines: Every time we defecate, we're getting rid of things our body doesn't need (or want). Eating healthfully can help our organs do their jobs more efficiently: We don't need to drink liquid for days on end to accomplish that.

A cleanse alternative

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Instead, I have identified the things that make me feel bad

feeling good when I need it. For seven to 10 days, I remove caffeine, alcohol, dairy, meat and anything processed from my diet. I fuel up on whole foods such as f r u it,

vegetables, lentils, eggs and a

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cramps, fainting spells and a lack of focus, but I also never accomplishedmy goalsoffeeling better and losing weight.

plan that helps me get back to

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and those I tend to overindulge in, and I have created my own

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D5

FrmEss Shirt makes any workout a stretch Former world boxing champ Keith Holmes recognizes ahit when he sees one. Sowhenhe came upwith the idea for a"resistance shirt," he knew it could bea knockout. "Resistance bandsare in almost every gym," he said, noting howhelpful the stretchy tools are for training. But people frequently havetrouble adjusting them,andthe bands lying aroundgym floors don't always seem sanitary, Holmesadds. So Holmesasked his dry cleaner to dohima favor: sewa resistance band into the back ofa compression shirtand let the endsdangle byhis hands. Assoon asshe delivered it, he slipped his palms into the handles and shadowboxed his way through ajog. "My muscles were burning," ravesHolmes, who exercised with this prototype for three years, shortening the band andadding padding for comfort. The result is the RS-1($100), the first product from Holmes' apparelcompany, Ripflexxx. It debuted at January's NBC4 Health & FitnessExpo in Washington, where Holmes demonstrated how he could jab, hook and uppercut, all with the benefit of 35 poundsof resistance. Holmes' sales pitch? The RS-1 is asuseful for boxers as it is for mall walkers, or anyonewho wants to up thecalorie burn of a workout. "Anything with resistance will make youperspire faster," Holmessays. Good thing the shirt's machine washable. — Viokey Hallett, The Washington Post

Sammy Mayo Jr. / The Washington Post

Former boxing champ Keith Holmes created an exercise shirt that

has resistance bands sewn into it.

P re- re nan wei t ossis eat or a , t o o By LeslieMann eChicago Tribune

Before she got pregnant in 2014, Lizzy King, 28, of East Lansing, Michigan, gave herself a "lifestyle overhaul." She started running and lost 50 pounds. She eschewedprocessed food and ate herfirst banana. King became "hyper-aware of the effects of too

much weight gain before and during pregnancy," she said. "That was fuel to keep exercising and turn down that extra bowl of ice cream." The result: King's pregnancy and childbirth were smooth sailing, her baby is healthy, and she Fotolia via Tribune News Service

quickly returned her pre-pregnancy clothes.

Maintaining a healthy diet during your pregnancy will help prevent unhealthy weight gain — and you shouldn't stop exercising either. Scientists have found that moms who carry more excess weight

during pregnancy affect their baby's propensity toward obesity by rewiring its brain. know Mom's excess pounds also affect the baby's propentors would not be alarmed by sity toward obesity by rewir- New Y o r k -based T r e n ds An obese mom's fetus is "bathed in the the effects of obesity on preg- ing its brain. Journal. hormones leptin and insulin, which control "One way we've learned "There used to be one fat nancy. But according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Con- this is by studying babies kid in the class, and, yes, we weight. His brain is programmed for obesity trol and Prevention, 22.1 per- born to moms before and af- said, 'fat,'" he said."Now we by having different appetite set (hungry or cent of women giving birth ter gastric bypass surgery," have a generation of fat peo- full) points." are obese (175-plus pounds said Dr. Lisa Neff, an endo- ple who have grown up on — Dr. Lisa Neff, endocrinologist for a 5-foot-4 woman) before crinologist at N o rthwestern junk food, with sedentary they become pregnant. Medicine in Chicago. "The lifestyles." "Obesity can adversely babies born after their moms O besity is part o f t h e " I affect fertility, pregnancy, lost weight have fewer prob- don't care" trend, Celente learn from her doctor and Ignore websites that urge childbirth, postpartum re- lems associated with obesity said. "The loss of pride and make changes," said Michael you to dismiss doctors' warnself-respect is endemic." covery and the baby," said Dr. themselves." Goran, director of the Univer- ings, King said. "It's fine to Raul Artal of the American An obese mom's fetus is The blame has shifted sity of Southern California's be 'bold and beautiful,' if it's College of Obstetricians and "bathed i n t h e h o r m ones from "personal responsibil- Childhood Obesity Research just you, but it's not fair to the baby," she said. Gynecologists. leptin and i nsulin, which ity" to "a community prob- Center. Just getting pregnant can control weight," Neff said. lem," according to a 2014 Use an activity device that Consider these tips be thwarted by o besity. A "His brain is programmed for study of 38,625 adults and reminds you to "keep active common fertility enemy for obesity by having different 3,518 healthcare professionFirst, achieve mental health. all day," Neff said. "Take the obese women is polycystic appetite set (hungry or full) als, said co-author Diana Liza Vismanos, 36, of Los An- stairs, get off the bus a stop ovary syndrome, which can points." Thomas, director of the Cen- geles, worked with a trainer to early, park in a farther spot." "These babies have gene ter for Quantitative Obesity get "in shape physically mendisrupt ovulation. Aim for a realistic weightAfter a woman becomes m utations that w i l l a ff e c t Research in Montclair, New tally and spiritually" pre-preg- loss goal, Neff said. "Even five pregnant, obesity increas- generations to come," Artal Jersey. nancy, she said. During preg- or 10 percent can significantly es her chances of gestation- added. Preceding the shift, Thom- nancy, she "gained weight affect your pregnancy," she al diabetes, hypertension, The first trimester is espe- as noted, was the American gracefully. Afterward I lost sald. preeclampsia, long l a bor, cially crucial, according to a Medical Association's classi- it because I had gone from Take an o n l ine exercise labor interventions, miscar2014 study of 3,000 women by fication of obesity as a "dis- the crazy cardio exerciser to class from a n i n structor riage and ultrasound test the University of Southamp- ease" in 2013. calm." who has been there, done difficulties. ton in England. Fortunately, i n t e rvention Consult the scale. A nor- that, like Kelly Coffey, 35, of Obesitycan cause macroIn addition to a propensity helps. Obese pregnant wom- mal-weight woman, for ex- Northampton, M a s sachusomia, having too large of a for obesity, the obese mom's en who participate in inten- ample, should gain 25 to 35 setts, who became a personbaby, which in turn increases baby is more likely to have a sive nutritional diets and expounds during pregnancy, de- al trainer after having gasa woman's chances of having neural-tube or heart defect, ercise in their first trimesters pending on her height, accord- tric-bypass surgery, then hava cesarean section, and that is be stillborn or suffer birth are less likely to gain excess ing to the American College ing children. more dangerous than a vagi- injuries. weight or have macrosomia, of Obstetricians and GynecolBottom line, we have only nal birth. The baby is more likely to C-sections, preeclampsia or ogists. Obese women should begun to understand the efAnesthesia is more prob- be premature,too,according hypertension than peers with gain 11 to 20 pounds. fects of obesity on pregnancy, lematic for the obese woman, to the Seattle Children's Hos- standard prenatal care, acListen to your body. "Just the doctors said. It's no longer just about whether she has a vaginal de- pital's Global Alliance to Pre- cording to a 2014 study by the as you stay away from alcolivery or C-section. vent Prematurity and StillCapital Medical University in hol and sushi, stay away from losing your post-prego baby After pregnancy, the obese birth. Prematurity increases Beijing. sugary beverages,too," Goran bump. "It's about t a k i ng It's all about educationmom is more likely to hem- the baby's chances of becomsard. charge of your health for the orrhage and less able to drop ing obese, so a vicious cycle not just for pregnant women Pregnancy is not a time to sake of your baby," Coffey her "baby weight." begins. but also for the medical com- indulge, according to Artal. tells her students. "Lose the "Just continue to exercise and weight now, before you get Until recently, researchers Obesity in pregnancy is munity, Neff said. said children's obesity was part of a g r eater societal The obese woman should eat well," he said. pregnant, or I'm going to tell primarily a reflection of a problem, said Gerald Celente, view pregnancy as "a great Include your partner in your you to do it before you have family's lifestyle. Now they publisher of the Kingston, window of opportunity to exercise-and-diet team. another baby." If only every new mom were this conscientious, doc-

Yips

he went to college, he stopped tournament ... I kind of someplaying so frequently. That's times put too much pressure Continued from 01 when he first experienced the and mess it up." Around 40 percent of golf- yrps. Anxiety doesn't cause the ers will experience the yips Castro, 37, attributes it to yips, Crews says, but it can at some point in their career, a lack of confidence. In high make th e p r oblem w o rse. says Crews. In the past, most school, he was practicing ev- Crews helped ease Castro's golfers refused to admit they ery day. Now, he just plays for anxiety through a variety of had it. Today, scientists like fun several times a week. The exercises, including focusing Crews are trying to under- lack of practice makes him his attention past the ball and stand what causes the yips, as less confident when he steps making minor position adjust-

brain in a way that overcomes the yips. When a golfer putts, his or her brain relies on a template it created to determine what signal is sent to which muscles to tell them what to do. With the

trol the motion.

says Crews. "There's many hand position and it seems ways." like there's an adjustment and E ven after working w i t h a detour in the brain," said Crews, Castro still struggles Crews. with the yips. He's not alone. This is similar to a t reat- Some golfers come out of

yips, this template becomes ment for focal dystonia when dysfunctional. writing. Place paper on the "What often interferes with desk, and people with focal performance is when the left

one way, but that's not true,"

"Just that small change in

dystonia can't write. Place it

treatment completely cured.

Others are not so lucky. Castro loves the game, so he doesn't let the yips keep him off the course.

side of the brain becomes on the wall, though, and all of "When I just play with some It's not fun, "but what do Scientists separate the yips Crews also suspects that overactive," says Crews. That a sudden, they can. "People think they've got to you do?e he said. "I'm not one into two categories: neurolog- buddies I play the best," says making slight hand and feet analytic, verbal side can't shut ical and psychological. Castro. "But when it's for a adjustments can re-circuit the down, and it tries to over-con- do this one perfect motion this to get too frustrated." A small number of golfers

well as how to treat it.

up to even the simplest putt.

ments in his setup.

who come down with the yips

have focal dystonia, or a neurological problem in the brain that causes involuntary mus-

cle contractions, says Crews. For most,

t h ere's n othing

neurologically wrong. This is what makes the yips so mysterious. Except for the spasm itself, there doesn't seem to be

anything wrong with these golfers. Some golfers have the yips only under certain conditions, say, if they're playing a game with thousands of dollars rest-

ing on a single putt. Others might have it i ntermittently for a few months. For some, it

might be chronic.

"It's very h ar d t o

w a t ch

somebody miss the hole by 5 feet when a little kid at 3 years old could do it just fine," says Crews. A nd if

i t ' s h ar d f o r t h e

viewer, imagine the golfer's frustration.

Castro first experienced the yips more than 10 years ago. He had played golf since he was 6 and was especially active in high school, but when

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' own on'crea or re ec s on ina e TV SPOTLIGHT "Downton Abbey" 9 p.m.Sundays, PBS

strange feeling when you realize that people don't like you

them in the finale. Is this a de-

because of what you are.

liberate strategy on your part? It's a reluctance on my • part to allow a real — or

• Are you a pproaching • your NBC drama,"The realish — narrative to develop Gilded Age," differently for an into a soap opera. A soap op- American audience? • I'm going to do the pilot era has many, many incidents. People are being shot and • this year. I've got a list of stabbed and knifed. They're potential advisers, and I am a dying in childbirth, having big, big fan of Edith Wharton

A•

By DaveItzkoff New Yortt Times News Service

The fifth-season finale of

"Downton Abbey" at many

and then there's a tidal wave of

ments on "Downton Abbey,"

tugged

h e artstrings, and

we're not talking about Lord Grantham's mistaken case of angina. (Stop reading here if you wish to avoid spoilers.) In one fell swoop, the Dowager Countess (Maggie Smith) abandoned any thought of Jonathan ShortI rhe Associated Press rekindling a past infatuation "Downton Abbey" writer and creator, Julian Fellowes, believes with the Russian Prince Kur- his show should portray reality, which maynot always provide the agin, and Isobel Crawley (Pe- happyendings people wouldexpect. nelope Wilton) closed the door on her engagement to Lord Merton. Love bloomed in the many of the show's potential With Violet, what she servants' quarters, where the romantic pairings. How do you • enjoyed from seeing Kustately Mr. Carson (Jim Car- decide who gets a happy end- ragin again was that sense of ter) at long last proposed to the ing and who doesn't'? being loved, of being a desirkindly Mrs. Hughes (Phyllis • Happiness is quite a dif- able woman. It reminded her Logan). • ficult concept when you of her great passion for him These turns of fate, seen on have anongoing drama. What when she was young, but also Sunday's installment of this you can't do is have everything the nearness that she came to PBS "Masterpiece" period dra- go right. Then you're just left making a great mistake that ma, are only the latest to have with a couple saying, "Did you would've wrecked everything. been flung at the noble Craw- have a good day, darling?" For Isobel and Lord Merton, leys and their household staff "Terrific, why don't you sit they're very well-suited, but by Julian Fellowes, the cre- down while I get dinner'?" when people are in love with ator and writer of "Downton each other and the children of Abbey." So we shouldn't assume one of them are being impossiSpeaking by telephone from • it will all go smoothly for ble, very often they do not unhis home in Dorset, England, Mrs. Hughes and Mr. Carson'? derstand how important this is Fellowes discussed the devel• Well, you know, "Down- going to be to their relationship • ton" is abumpy path. opments of the past season and in the coming years.

A

Q•

what the future might hold for "Downton" and its characters.

Q

A

Q • Were there larger points Q • It can sometimes feel,

• The s e ason f i n a le • you were trying to make • week to week, that there • brought resolutions to with these couplings? are not many plot develop-

abortions, having their houses

and Henry James and that pe-

broken into, being attacked by

riod of history after the Civil

vandals. We do, on"Downton," have extreme cases, but not

War — the Vanderbilts and the Whitneys and all of those

very many of them. And we

people. As for adapting what I write for American audienc-

have a lot of reaction to them, becausethatseems tome truer

es, American audiences have

to life. That's what I would like to tell myself, anyway.

enjoyed "Downton." I try and make TV shows that I'm going to want to watch. And when

This season, we saw I'm reading it, I'm saying to • Lady Rose's Jewish suit- myself: "Is this boring? Are or and his family contend with you still enjoying this scene? anti-Semitism. Was that plot Shouldn't it be over by now?" inspired by real history? (Iaughs) I can't imagine my • There was, here, at that departing from that principle • time, a kind of universal, very far. upper-class assumption of superiority. People didn't mind Are you starting to think if you came to their house or • about how "Downton you shot their pheasants, you Abbey" might end? • It's not really my deate their dinners or went to their daughter's dances. But, • cision. I don ' t ow n my God, they didn't want you "Downton Abbey" now. NBC to marry her. I felt it as a Cath- Universal (which owns Carolic when I was young. One of nival Films) owns "Downton my first girlfriends was from Abbey." So I could walk away, a fairly senior Jewish family. but I wouldn't walk away. It's They were a very nice family too much my baby. It won't go — I'm still friendly, actually, on forever — I'm not a believer

Q•

A

Q•

A

with the girl and her brother.

in that. But I can't immediate-

But her parents wanted a Jew- ly now tell you where the end ish husband. And it's a very willbe.

TV TODAY • More TI/listingsinside Sports 7p.m.onSHO,Movie:"That Gal ... WhoWasin ThatThing" — Filmmakers BrianVolk-Weiss and lan Roumainfollow up their 2012 documentary "ThatGuy ... Who Was inThatThing" with this 2015companion piece, which featureseight character actresses sharing their experiences making it in themovie industry. Thefeatured performers include PagetBrewster ("Criminal Minds"), RomaMaffia ("Nip/ Tuck") and RoxanneHart ("Chicago Hope"). 8 p.m.on 2, 9,"Grey's Anatomy" —It's all about Amelia (Ca-

terina Scorsone)—well, almost all — in the newepisode "The Distance." She undertakes the operation on Dr. Herman(guest star GeenaDavis), but the surgery is trickier than anticipated. Compounding the pressure onAmelia is the audience of doctors observing the procedure. Maria Sokoloff ("The Practice") also guest stars. 8p.m. on5,8, "The Slap"The new episode"Manolis" finds that character — played by Brian Cox — doing what hecan to resolve things for all concerned in the aftermath of the slap. Hetries to bring Harry and Aisha (Zachary Quinto, Thandie Newton) back together, and when his efforts fall short, he goes on adrinking binge thathas anunexpected outcome. Peter Sarsgaard, Uma Thurman, Melissa GeorgeandThomas Sadoski also star. 8 p.m. onCW,"TheVampire Diaries" —Ontheir birthday, Liv and Luke (guest stars Penelope Mitchell and Chris Brochu) make

an appeal tosomeonevery specif-

ar -risin uest in erssee

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

Dear Abby:A family member, "Bill," likes to come visit in the

afternoons and, because he's not comfortable driving in the dark, he always plans to stay overnight. When he does, he wakes up very early, often before 6 a.m. Bill tries to be as

quiet as possible, but we know when he is up. Our dog hears someone m o ving

DFP,R

around and t h i nk s

it's time to go out and eat. My husband or I will get up to take care of our dog, but

at that point, it seems rude to go back to bed. My husband likes to go backto sleep, but I feel I should get up and entertain our guest. Is it bad manners to go back to sleep

even though it is still very early? — To Sleep, or Not to Sleep

Dear T.S. or N.T.S.:If you need your sleep, go back to bed. The right amount of sleep is important, and not getting it can ruin

him where the cereal i s k e pt. ers have a different view. Read

That's not being a bad hostess, on: and I'm sure Bill will be just fine. Dear Abby: Drivers on cellDear Abby:My letter is in re- phones — even hands-free — are sponse to "A Mom in Connecti- four times more likely to crash cut" (Dec. 27), who feels she is be- and hurtthemselves or someone ing "fitted in" because her daugh- else within five minutes of makter calls her only ing a call. Texters are 23 times while driving in her more likely to crash. More than car. 3,000 people are killed this way My daughter calls each year and 300,000 to 500,000 me almost every are injured. The daughter should morning on her way not be using a phone at all while to work. She calls driving. me her "commute buddy." It gives How do I know the statistics? us 10 to 15 minutes to catch up, My son was killed by a driver on vent about "stuff" on both ends a cellphone. of the phone or just chat. I can tell — Gary in Kenosha, Wis. when she arrives at work or very Dear Gary: Please accept my nearly, and we always end with condolences for the tragic loss "Love you." of your son. You are generous to I love our conversations and

have written. Too often people

the fact that although she has take the privilege of driving for an extremely busy schedule, she granted, forgetting that if they finds the time to chat with me.

don't concentrate fully on driving,

She uses her hands-free phone, so they place themselves and those I don't worry too much about her around them in danger. I see this one's entire day. being distracted. happen often, and I'm afraid that If you're concerned about Bill — Sheilain Prescott, Ariz. unless the consequences are dranot having a good breakfast, beDear Sheila: You may not be conian, it will continue. fore going to bed, put the coffee- worried about your daughter us— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com maker on "automatic" and show ing a hands-free phone, but oth- or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015:This year youareopento manyfastchanges. Others sometimes express frustration at your tendency to go back and forth with some issues. Use your sixth sense to determine what stance you should take. If you are single, you are likely to meet someone important to your life sometime after mid-August. Make sure this person accepts you as you are. If you are attached, you 8tarsshowtheging oftenmightbeon of dayyoo lt have the other side of ** * * * D ynamic an issue from your ** * * Positive significant other. Accept and em*** Average brace your differ** So-so ent views. Remain * Difficult

spontaneous,

and the romance will continue to blossom. VIRGOcan be quite picky.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * You'll have a lot of ground to cover with new, unexpected items popping up. You easily could spread yourself too thin. You might need to pay extra attention to a boss or loved one who dominates your daily life. Tonight: Stay in the neighborhood.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

dent on a partner's goodwill, sense of humorand suggestions. Tonight: Invite

a friend over for munchies. CANCER (June21-July 22)

** * * You could be in a situation where you need to look at your alternatives. Pressure builds around communication as you attempt to deal with a changeable situation. Double-check meeting times and places. Misunderstandings are likely. Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Tension surrounds your finances. It would be wise not to make any decisions in this highly pressured moment. You could feel as if a day-to-day matter has been blown out of proportion. Be one of the few who decides to remain nonreactive. Tonight: Think"weekend."

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

** * * You are a key figure in today's full moon. You might want to handle a creative endeavor or a new relationship with care. Be aware of how little you know about the situation. Stay TAURUS (April 20-May 20) and avoid making snap ** * * * Y ou know how to deal with a open-minded, judgments. Tonight: Let others act out. loved one who seems intent on stirring LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) up some controversy. However, understand that this type of behavior could ** You might look around and wonder resurface. Friends surround you with what is going on. Lie low, and try to advice. Tonight: Express your caring in steer clear of controlling people. Your your own terms. senseofhumor emerges when you walk into a similar situation with someone GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * Stay close to home. There could you consider to be profoundly logical. Tonight: Getas m uch sleepas need be. be an unusual amount of activity bubbling up around you. Juggling the differ- SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ent forces in your life might be depen*** * Keep your eye onthe big pic-

ture, even if you don't agree with what is going on. You would be well-advised to keep your opinions to yourself for now. When things calm down, then you might be in the position to have this discussion. Tonight: Where all your friends are.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * L isten to a higher-up, as you aren't likely to be able to avoid him or her. You might want to rethink your decisions involving this person. You have a lot going on around you thatyou'll need to gain a different perspective on. Tonight: Try to juggle different people's needs.

GAPRIGORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * You'll be taken aback by news that heads your way. You might need to make a call or clarify information. There could be some facts that are missing. Be sensitive and listen well. Adjust your plans accordingly. Tonight: Meet a friend at a preferred hangout.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ** * * * B e aware of how much you cangiveto someone else.This person might be subtle about asking for what he or she wants. Be bold and clarify. You'll needtokeepcommunication open.You don't need to agree to anything right now, even if you feel pressured. Tonight: Your treat.

PISCES (Feh. 19-March20) ** * * B efore people and situations demand your attention, askyourself how you feel. If you feel tired or pressured, that could explain your recent lack of patience. Try not to get too wound up in today's full moon tales. Tonight: Start the weekend now. © King Features Syndicate

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANSNIPER (R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:45, 9:50 • BIRDMAN(R)12:05, 3:05, 6:10, 9:20 • CHAPPIE(R) 7, 10 • CHAPPIEIMAX(R) 7:25, 10:15 • THE DROP BOX:DON'TTHROW THEM AWAY. BRING THEM HERE (no MPAArating) 7 • THE DUFF(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:15 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) noon, 3, 7,10 • FOCUS(R) I2:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:05 • FOGUSIMAX (R) 1:15, 4 • HOT TUBTIMEMACHINE2 (R) 12:45, 3:20 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 2:55, 10:20 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 12:25, 8:55 • JUPITERASCENDING 3-D(PG-13)3:40,9:50 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:30, 10:25 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) I:10, 4:15, 7:45, 10:05 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:35, 3:50, 7:10, 10:10 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:45a.m. • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG)7 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:55 a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:55,6,9 • STILL ALICE(PG-13) I2:15, 3:10, 6:15, 9: IO • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13) 12:10, 3:30, 6:50,9:55 • UNFINISHEDBUSINESS(R) 8, 10:30 • WHIPLASH(R)12:20, 3:35, 10:30 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •

ic — their father — to let Jo and Kai (guest stars Jodi Lyn O'Keefe and Chris Wood) substitute for them in the merge ceremony in "Prayer for the Dying." Elena, Stefan and Damon(Nina Dobrev, Paul Wesley, lan Somerhalder)

share Caroline's(CandiceAccola)

vigil over her mother at the hospital. Michael Trevino also stars. 8:31 p.m. on 6, "TheOddCouplen —Wanting to score points with Casey (guest star Leslie Bibb), Oscar (Matthew Perry) hastily puts a surprise party together for Felix's (Thomas Lennon) birthday in a newepisode aptly titled "The Birthday Party." The upshot is that Oscar almost forgot completely about Felix's special day. NBAstar Dwight Howard of the Houston Rockets guest stars as himself. © Zap2it

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FOGUS(R) 4:45, 7 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)6:30 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 4:30, 6:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)4:15, 7:05 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • FOCUS (R)6:30 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 4:15 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)6 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 4:15 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)6 • WHIPLASH(R) 6:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • BIRDMAN(R) 6:50 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R)4:10, 7 • FOCUS (R)4:50, 7:10 • HOTTUB TIMEMACHINE2 (R) 7: I5 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)4 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 5:20, 7:25 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • FOCUS (R)6:15 • MCFARLAND,USA(Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe'stcrossing.com

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun t/t/hen you wantit,

shade ehen Jouneedit.

ISI I Q

V CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate ait onl

Call for package rates

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Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

. Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

The

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

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242

255

260

262

Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Pets & Supplies

Furniture 8 Appliances

Exercise Equipment

Computers

Misc. Items

Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures

Adopt a rescued cat or Power Plate machine, The Bulletin recomexercises for musclekitten! Altered, vaccimends extra caution nated, ID chip, tested, strengthening, stretching, when purc h as- more! CRAFT, 65480 massage & relaxation, ing products or ser$500. 541-504-3869 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, vices from out of the 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 245 area. Sending cash, Brittany Spaniel/ www.craftcats.org Armoire checks, or credit inWhoodle mix puppies, Golf Equipment Upright Dresser202 f ormation may b e only 1 male left! Reddish Custom quality, excelCheck out the subjected to fraud. hypoallergenic coat. Want to Buy or Rent CHECKYOUR AD lent condition, crafted classifieds online For more i nforma$650. 541-408-0490 walnut & swirly walnut Wanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adver- www.bondbullefin.com Donate deposit bottles/ burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call Updated daily cans to local all vol., cedar-lined drawers plus elry. Top dollar paid for the O regon State non-profit rescue, for 3 other drawers (2 partiGold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General's Adopt a rescued cat or feral cat spay/neuter. tioned for socks). Size: Estate, Honest Artist Office C o n sumer kitten! Altered, vacci- T railer a t Jak e 's 73"H x 36"W x 16" D. on the first day it runs Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Protection hotline at If new, $5,500; nated, ID chip, tested, D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; to make sure it is cor1-877-877-9392. more! CRAFT, 65480 Petco in Redmond; Now Reduced to$980I rect. "Spellcheck" and Wanted- paying cash 541-312-2393 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, donate M-F at Smith human errors do ocfor Hi-fi audio 8 stu- The Bulletin 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, D ESK: 55"high, 2 9 " cur. If this happens to dio equip. Mclntosh, www.craftcats.org Bend; or CRAFT in wide, 19" deep, $75. your ad, please conJBL, Marantz, DyTumalo. Can pick up 541-382-3487 tact us ASAP so that naco, Heathkit, Sanlarge amts, 389-8420. Dryer, Kenmore, good corrections and any sui, Carver, NAD, etc. www.craftcats.org adjustments can be 3 male Dachshunds 2 Call 541-261-1808 cond. $150. You haul. made to your ad. fawn, 1 black & tan. Aussie/Mini puppy Blue Donate deposit bottles/ 541-279-1930. 541-385-5809 $300 each. Ready cans to local all vol., Merle male, 7 wks, WANTEDwood dressThe Bulletin Classified 3/26. 541-447-0113 non-profit rescue, for $320 cash. For Sale 2 chairs. ers; dead washers. feral cat spay/neuter. An oversized dark 541-678-7599 541-420-5640 246 T railer a t Jak e ' s brown recliner for Guns, Hunting D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; $85; and a small Petco in Redmond; gray Stress-Less re& Fishing donate M-F at Smith cliner with foot stool, Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, like new. $450. Bend local pays CASH!! Bend; or CRAFT in for firearms & ammo. 541-350-0381 Tumalo. Can pick up please call between 541-526-0617 large amts, 389-8420. 8 & 8 only. Browning 1885 High Wall www.craftcats.org octagon barrel, .45/70, Labrador mix, chocolate G ENERATE SOM E $1200. Pedersoh Howmale, free to good home. EXCITEMENT in your dah double 20-ga, black 541-977-7439 after 2pm neighborhood! Plan a powder, engraved ani286 288 290 sale and don't mal scene, $600. RemSales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area LOOKING FOR A NEW garage forget to advertise in ington 1100 shotgun 3", COMPANION? 18~/4 barrel, $450. 3-Bay Garage Sale! Garage Sale! Fri 3/6-Sat Mar. 7th-8th, 9-3 p.m. Cute, healthy small dogs classified! Call 541-550-7189 541-385-5809. for adoption. Sat. & Sun. 9-4. 1078 NE 3/7 9-4, 61640 Ward Rd., House and contents Visit resqac.com Francis Ct. Household Bend. Old jewelry glass- must go! Bowflex, exCASH!! Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded For Guns, Ammo & goods, tools, clothes frig, ware, picture frames, ercise machine, fur- Malemute/Husky pups, glass doors & mirror Reloading Supplies. treadmill, garden, books, bedding lots of misc. niture, dishes, odds & blue-eyed males. Can at back, 3 cupboards 541-408-6900. kitchen. Cash or card! tools, camping items, ends. 2115 NE 6th St. below. Exc. c o nd. send photos. $500 8 lawn mower, Stihl power $400. 541-318-8797 up. 541-977-6150. saw, mtn bike, big wheel III'IIIISHHH Where can you find a Refrig. 60"x28" Magic wagon, patio furniture. ** FREE ** Chef fits small studio helping hand? Sat-Sun 3/7-8, 10amGarage Sale Kit $100. 805-677-6670 DO YOU HAVE Place an ad in The 4pm. Kitchen, electronFrom contractors to SOMETHING TO Bulletin for your ga- ics, clothes, tools, more. yard care, it's all here Sleep Comfort Twin 20549 Peak Ave. SELL rage sale and reXL adjustable bed in The Bulletin's FOR $500 OR ceive a Garage Sale with vibrator, with or Parson Russell Terriers, 290 "Call A Service LESS? Kit FREE! without mattress & AKC, show/pet/agility, Sales Redmond Area Professional" Directory Non-commercial foundation, clean, 10 wks. 360-914-0366 KIT IN CLUDES: advertisers may needs new air pump. • 4 Garage Sale Signs 2nd annual indoor gaplace an ad POODLE or POIIIIAPOO $400 cash • $2.00 ff Coupon To rage sale at Eagle with our 292 puppies, toy. Stud also 541-382-7072 or Use Toward Your Crest Resort, a por- • Sales Other Areas 541-475-3889 "QUICK CASH 541-410-5165 Next Ad tion of proceeds doSPECIAL" • 10 Tips For "Garage nated to Ronald Mc- Large Sale in Silver What are you Washer, Ken m ore, 1 week3lines 12 Sale Success!" Donald House. Sat. or h eavy duty, g o o d Moving, everylooking for? March 7, 10-3, Eagle Lake! ~2weeks 2N cond. $150. You haul. thing must go! Guns, Crest Con v ention Ad must You'll find it in 541-279-1930. PICK UP YOUR Center, 1522 C line ammo, reloading supinclude price of GARAGE SALE KIT at plies, knives, antiques Falls Rd, Redmond. The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin sin le item ot S5DO ~ 1777 SW Chandler of all kinds including or less, or multiple recommends extra Ave., Bend, OR 97702 antique ammo, sewTURN THE PAGE items whose total lcaion n e n p r ing machine, 1930s 541-385-5809 does not exceed The Bulletin For More Ads chasing products or • bulk Chevron oil tank, Serving Centraf Ore9onsince 1903 $500. services from out of I The Bulletin early 1900s kids toys, Queensland Heelers and other household Standard 8 Mini, $150 8 the area. Sending 8 Call Classifieds at Steve Chapman goods this weekend, 8 up. 541-280-1537 • cash, checks, or • 541-385-5809 F ri. thru Sun. 9 - 5 , www.rightwayranch.wor l credit i n f o rmation www.bendbulletin.com MOVING SALE may be subjected to follow signs. dpress.com

T HE B U LLETIN

r e - BUYING & SE LLING quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver vertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, ad schedules or those rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silselling multiple systems/ software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vinclose the name of the tage watches, dental Bill Fl e ming, business or the term gold. 5-drawer Hon "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-9419. Industries Private party advertiscommercial file ers are defined as cabinet, those who sell one 43" wide, 66" high. computer. Originally $1000;

asking$450.

257

541-948-1824

Illlusical Instruments 2006 Breedlove SC22 w/Fishman p/u; 1964 Gretsch Classic; practice amp. 541-647-1510

Drum Kits:Specializing in High Quahty New & Used Drum Sets! Kevin, 541-420-2323 The Drum Shop For Sale: Piano Technician tools & supplies, with rolls of piano string, $725. Call 971-219-9122 in Redmond

Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 1977, excellent cond, only played senior year in college, $1000 obo.AND

King Trombone,1941 HNgWhite, 7-1/2" bell, $500, obo. 541-388-2045 or 541-280-1912 eves 260

Misc. Items

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville. Call 541-447-7820

265

Building Materials Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale 54'I -312-6709 224 NE Thurston Ave. Open to the public.

How to avoid scam and fraud attempts Habitat ReStore YBe aware of interna- Sisters Supply Resale tional fraud. Deal lo- Building Quality items. cally whenever posLOW PRICES! sible. Y Watch for buyers who offer more than your asking price and who ask to have money wired or handed back to them. Fake cashier checks and money orders are common. YNever give out personal financial information. VTrust your instincts and be wary of someone using an escrow service or agent to pick up your merchandise.

150 N. Fir.

541-549-1621

Open to the public. 266

Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

Since September 29,

The Bulletin ServmgCentral Oregon since l%8

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

MoreP ixatBendbjletin,com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the O regon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.

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I

1197 NW Elliot Ct.

l

Friday March 6 • Saturday March 7

MOVING SALE 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Everything in the house CROWD CONTROL NUMBERS at 8 a.m. Fri. oes! Too much to list. PARKING IS DIFFICULT - PLEASE WALKIN!!!! rhurs-Sun, 3/5-6-7-8, Unusual Sale - Unique Items 8am-4pm.1357 Koyoda Becker Surfboard: Mounted "Dall"?? Sheep St. in Madras (turn east BERNARDS head; African rug, woven and framed; King Bed, on Brush Lane, just north SAINT Brandy & Bruno's 6 queen Bed, Futon Mattress; Air Bed; Side-by of Sonny's Motel & beautiful full-mask pup-side refrigerator with ice and water; Whirlpool follow signs) pies, 1 male, 3 females, Washer and Dryer; Chest freezer; Metal cabinet born Jan. 11; ready for

and Lateral file; Dog Kennel about 8' by 24', dog crate; Four TV's; Blue Ray players; CD's; Harley Davidson Clothing; Feragamo shoes and other very nice shoes, Mens Suits high quality; Most mens clothing is 2X; Harley helmets and misc. items; Two Humidors for cigars; 9'x12' wool rug; Lots of Pictures and enlarged photos; Four 1/2" steel swing targets; Steel weights for "snow" time pickup bed; Patio sets; Nice Weber bbq; Portable Fire Pit; Growlers; Dinette set with four chairs and pop-up leaf; Dishes; Large variety of Plants, many sizes; Older Dell computer and two large monitors; Keyboards; Lots of Electronic wiring pieces; Kenwood Stereo unit; Three large bedroom dressers; night stands; Linens, Linens, Linens; 2 hunting stands; camp kitchen on wheels; Quick stand canopy; Antique wood planes nice variety; Exceptional hardwood boards; Board supports for table saw; Shop vacuum; Two Honda generators, both 2000i'; Nice compressor; Misc. garage items; Ladder; boxing gloves; Huge anchor; Gorilla racks; Portable display Unit; Tried to list a good variety!!! See youthis weekend! Deedy Norm & Kenny Handled by

Deedy'8 Estate Sales Co.

Info Call 541-419-4742 deedysestatesales.com estatesales.net for pictures and info

NOTICE

Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKSI

From The Bulletin and your local utility

companies.

The Bulletin servInycencral oregondnce 1$8

www.bendbulletin.com

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe itemwill help them in someway. This sdvertisin9 tip brought toyou by

The Bulletin ser 'ng cent~to~n since r9e

l FRAUD. For morel information about an 8

I advertiser, you may l $ call th e ' State

Old Marlin lever-action .32 special rifle, $550. 541-420-4183

Or e gon $ Atto r ney '

l General's O f f i ce l

Consumer Protec- • ORVIS Hydros Fly Rod h o t line at I Fine fishing gear, new or like new. 541-549-6036 i 1-877-877-9392.

I tion

> TheBulletin >

serving centraloregon since a03 Need to get an ad adoption 3/8 (photo taken in ASAP? 2/27). Dew claws re212 moved, 1st shots. $500. Antiques & For appointment, call Fax it to 541-322-7253 541-548-3520 Collectibles Siberian Husky champion The Bulletin Classifieds Antiques Wanted: bloodline Stud Service. Tools, furniture, marbles, Call 541-977-7019 sports equipment, beer Smith & Wesson Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 cans, pre-'40s B/W phoM&P15-22 with Fs, 1 M, 12 wks old, UTD tography. 541-389-1578 4x1 6x44 BSA Cats shots, health guar, pics. The Bulletin reserves scope, Fieldline $1100.541-777-7743 the right to publish all Eye Tactical carrying Yorkie mix, 8 wks, beau- ads from The Bulletin case. Excellent contiful, shots & dewormed, newspaper onto The dition, was used in Bulletin Internet web$300. 541-977-0035 National Finals site. Rodeo for target 210 competition. Comes The Bulletin Furniture & Appliances servlngcentral oregon sfncefae with original sights and 25-round maga241 2 dark blue swivel/rocker zine. $850 obo. arm chairs, exc cond, Bicycles & 541-410-0841 $20 / pair. 541-548-6642 Accessories A1 Washers&Dryers Wanted: Collector seeks Full warranty, FREE KHS rapid 18spd town high quality fishing items bike liteweight w/fend- & upscale fly rods. Call delivery! Also, used washers/dryers wanted. ers, rack, mid-sz, $200 541-678-5753, or

541-280-7355

805-677-6670

503-351-2746

rouR AD WILL RECBVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLYS250! o g C I ~ Ad t

ge n k

f rho g

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P bl h

Weekof March 2, 2015

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregonsince 1903

541-385-5809

DIVORCE $155. Complete p reparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorcedin1-5weekspossible.503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com legalalt@msrkcom

MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train at home to process Medical Billing 8 Insurance Claims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training at Bryan University!! HS Diploma/GED & Computer/Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880


E2 THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

icsll for commercial line sd rates)

*tlllust state prices in sd

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour 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 moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

''I

I Call 54 I-385-5809

to promote your service

267

325

Fuel & Wood

Hay, Grain & Feed

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft.

Quality orchard mixed grass hay, $190-$235 ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 betwn Bend/Redmond Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin NOTICE: Oregon state help wanted ad law requires anyone today and who con t racts for reach over construction work to Serving Central be licensed with the 60,000 readers Oregon Since 2003 Construction Contraceach week. Residental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An Your classified ad active license will also Sprinkler means the contractor appear on Activation/Repair is bonded & insured. bendbulletin.com Verify the contractor's Back Flow Testing which currently The Bulletin CCB l i c ense at servInycenrral oregonsnce rss Maintenance receives over www.hirealicensed~Thatch & Aerate 1.5 million page contractor.com All Year Dependable Spring Clean up views every or call 503-378-4621. •.Weekly Mowing Firewood: Seasoned; The Bulletin recommonth at no Lodgepole, split, del, mends checking with & Edging extra cost. B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 the CCB prior to con- •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Bulletin Maintenance or 2 cords for $365. tracting with anyone. Classifieds • Bark, Rock, Etc. Multi-cord discounts! Some other t rades Get Results! 541-420-3484. also re q uire addi- Landsca in Call 541-385-5809 ~ tional licenses and •Landscape or place your ad Pine & Juniper Split certifications. Construction on-line at ~Water Feature bendbulletin.com PROMPT DELIVERY Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care

4' x 4' x 8'

• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

Debris Removal

JUNK BE GONE

I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Courier Service We will distribute locally in C.O. or do line hauls between C.O. and PDX area. Looking for loads for our 26' Freightliner Box truck (26,000 GVW) with 4K l ift ate. Lic. Ik Bonded. ontact Bill at wsdahl©bendbroadband.com. etetieide Ces>vee .

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

EMPLOYMENT RESTAURANT CAUTION: HIGH SCHOOL Ads published in "Employment OpJUNIORS ONLY porlunities" include If you're a junior in high school, you can join employee and indethe National Guard pendent positions. Sp l i t Ads fo r p o sitions t hrough t h e Training Option and that require a fee or Pastini Pastaria be back from Basic upfront investment Combat Training in in theOld Mill District is must be stated. With hiring talented time for your senior any independentjob ear. Next year, you'll Line Cooks opportunity, please to join the team. e back in time for i nvestigate tho r college. Joining the oughly. Use extra Apply online at Guard will open many c aution when a p doors for you with www. astini.com/careers plying for jobs onbenefits like college or stop by between line and never pro2pm-4pm daily. tuition assistance and vide personal inforexcellent tra i ning.RESTAURANT mation to any source Plus, it's one of the you may not have best part-time jobs researched and ou can have while in deemed to be repuigh school. g freS+ s table. Use extreme The 2015 Split Training c aution when r e Option season ends SUBWAY - BEND s ponding to A N Y April 30. Applicants must be 17 years old online employment CREW LEADER and have p a rental 62929 N HWY 97 ad from out-of-state. consent prior to obWe suggest you call Mainly Day Shift taining a contractual Seeking experienced, the State of Oregon obligation. E l igibility dependable employee Consumer Hotline r estrictions ap p l y. who has good cusat 1-503-378-4320 Contact your l o cal tomer service skills. For Equal OpportuNational Guard Rep- Hours mainly Mon.-Fri. nity Laws contact resentative and se- 7:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m./ Oregon Bureau of your future now. flexibility a plus. Crew Labor 8 I n d ustry, cure SSG Jason Bain Civil Rights Division, leaders help supervise (541) 325-1027 97'I -673- 0764. staff and perform all Ore on uard.com crew duties. H ourly The Bulletin rate can be as high as Advertise your car! $12/hr. Complete & 541-385-5809 Add A Prcture! submit an application Reach thousands of readers! at the restaurant beCall 541-355-5509 Accounting Assistant The Bulletin Classileds fore 10:00 a.m. or after 2:00 p.m.

McMenamins Old St. Francis Noyy HIRING

McMenamins historic Old St. Francis hotel property located in downtown Bend, is now hiring a PT ( 20-25 hours p e r week) Accounting Assistant. Qualified applicants must have previous related experience an d e n j oy working in a b u sy, customer service oriented e n vironment. Please apply online @ www. m cmenamins.com. Please, no phone calls to individual loca t ions. E.O.E.

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bullefin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

Newsroom Assistant

The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and self-motivated full-time employee to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred. Organization, flexibility, and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. Ability to work for long periods doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties. Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

TELEFUNDRAISING

r.=.-"-,.— .a

Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels •Defeat Diabetes Foundation •Veterans (OPVA) Seniors and a/I others welcome. Nlon-Thur. 4:30- 8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour. Call 541-382-8672

products or I I chasing services from out of • I the area. SendingI c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormationI • may be subjected to I FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI a Office C o n s umer a l Protection hotline atl

I 1-877-877-9392.

LT Digital Advertising Sales Manager

The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral. Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-plafform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Management experience aplus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skills level of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required.

Please email your resume to: jbrandtObendbulletin.com No phone calls please.

The Bulletin serving central on eon since rt03

The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer

Human Resources Assistant

To apply, please send a resume and any writing samples to: nolson@bendbulletin.com. No phone inquiries please.

The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of pre-employment drug testing, preparing paBanking perwork for newly hired employees, orientaServing Central Oregon tince t903 tion; benefit enrollment and helping employ) first communjt ees keep t heir personnel and b enefit information current. Maintains personnel files We are excited to Accounting and records for the purpose of providing announce an up-to-date reference and audit trail compliavailable position for ance. Assist with payroll processing as the a full-time teller in back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides adBend, Oregon. vice to employees on matters in designated human resources areas. Establish and mainSalary Range: tain favorable working relationships within all $11.00 - $18.00 Inventory Accounting Analyst WesCom departments to assist in effectively achieving department objectives, while reFirst Community Les Schwab is l ooking for a n I nventory sponding to requests for reports, records and Credit Union is an information in a professional and timely manAccounting Analyst to work closely with store equal opportunity management t o id e ntify a n d a n a lyze ner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to employer of support employee actions such as promotions, variances within their inventory and gross protected Veterans margin results. T h e I nventory Accounting transfers, hires and terminations while mainand individuals with taining the highest level of data integrity. Analyst performs month-end financial close Installation/Maint. disabilities. For more duties including account reconciliations and Other duties include, processing paperwork for 541-389-9663 •Pavers details please journal entries an d p r epares monthly unemploymentand worker's compensation as 341 •Renovations apply online: inventory reports. This position also provides well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves 269 Horses & Equipment •Irrigations Installation www.myfirstccu.org. of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the assistance to store personnel on their daily Gardening Supplie responsibilities such a s p o sting/receiving Reception desk when necessary. Senior Discounts & E q uipment purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, Bonded & Insured • Director of Dining "a, and analyzing and correcting certain system Minimum two years human resources experiIS, 541-815-4458 Services ence (payroll and benefits knowledge pretransactions. LCB¹8759 For newspaper Job Summary: ferred) in a support capacity. General knowlDirects food service delivery, call the edge of applicable state and federal laws. Qualifications: Circulation Dept. at operations w i t hin Call a Pro • Ability to both work independently and California experience a plus. Working knowl3-horse Silverado 541-385-5800 the community inedge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong comcontribute to overall team performance Whether you need a 2001 29'xe' 5th wheel To place an ad, call c luding al l fo o d • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft puter skills with the ability to proficiently use trailer. Deluxe show- preparation, dining fence fixed, hedges 541-385-5809 Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. Excel man/semi living or email room o p e rations trimmed or a house • Prior accounting coursework or experience Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able to claeeiiied4tbendbulletimcom quarters, lots of exand dining delivery maintain highest degree of confidentiality, disPreferred: built, you'll find tras. Beautiful condiservices. Pur• Four-year degree in accounting, finance, cretion and tact. The Bulletin tion. $21,900. OBO professional help in chases all food and serviny central oregon rlnceets business administration or equivalent 541-420-3277 manages inventory The Bulletin's "Call a • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP For qualifying employees we offer benefits ininsuring e ff ective cluding life insurance, short-term & long-term 270 systems Service Professional" Oarage Sales cost controls and • Experience working in teams that disability, 401(k)t paid vacation and sick time. • Lo s t & Found Directory vendor service Drug test is required prior to employment. implemented new accounting systems Garage Sales quality. Ensures the 541-355-5809 Found: 1 (one) ring on highest nutrition and EOE/Drug Free workplace Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent 1/28/15, area of Mary Garage Sales food quality for the customer service, with over 450 stores and NOTICE: Oregon Land- Rose Place & Watt Way. health and pleasure If interested please submit resume 7,000 employees in the western United States. scape Contractors Law Please call 541-848-1657 Find them of th e r e s idents. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, and salary expectations to (ORS 671) requires all to identify. Complies with a ll in hrresumesOwescom a ers.com retirement and cash bonus. Please go to businesses that ad- Found Cat, black & federal, state and w ww.lesschwab.com to apply.No phone calls No phone ca//s p/ease. vertise t o pe r form white, Eagle R oad The Bulletin local regulations to please. Landscape Construc- area in Bend, Call to ensure sanitary and Classifieds tion which includes: identify 541-388-1322 safe op e rations. Les Schwab is proud to be an p lanting, deck s , Plans and executes 541-385-5809 serving central oreyonsince 1903 equal opportunity employer. fences, arbors, Found stamp collection entertaining dining water-features, and in- book in Sunriver area. events and themes stallation, repair of ir- Call Sunriver police to 356 in conjunction with rigation systems to be identify. 541-593-3911 Farmers Column Activities D irector, l icensed w it h th e Lost woman's gold ring Landscape Contrac- with topaz stone & 2 10X20 Storage Buildings Marketing Director and other administors Board. This 4-digit diamonds, in Sunriver for protecting hay, trative staff to optinumber is to be in- between SHARC & Vil- firewood, livestock etc. mize the life and cluded in all adver- lage Mall. 360-423-3519 $1616 Installed. ' tisements which indipleasure of the resi(other sizes available) I I I I I i I d ents. May a l s o cate the business has 541-617-1133. cater events as rea bond, insurance and CCB ¹173684 workers c ompensa- REMEMBER:If you quested by r e s ikfjbuilders©ykwc.net dents or staff. Must I I tion for their employI have lost an animal, ees. For your protec375 h ave at l e ast 8 don't forget to check tion call 503-378-5909 The Humane Society Meat & Animal Processing years experience. or use our website: For more informaBend I www.lcb.state.or.us to tion, or any ques541-382-3537 1/2 Beef, all natural, no check license status tions, please call hormones or antibiotics, Redmond before contracting with 'I 541-923-0882 $3.50/lb., cut 8 wrapped. 54'I -385-4717 I the business. Persons 541-480-2200 Madras doing lan d scape 541-475-6889 maintenance do not Need to get an Prineville r equire an LC B l i ad in ASAP? 541-447-7178 cense. or Craft Cats You can place it 541-389-8420. Aerate I Thatching online at: Weekly Service and www.bendbulletin.com Spring Clean-ups!

The Bulletin

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The Bulletin

Handyman I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

andscapingNard Care

Zarrer'rQua/itp

Ldrr/lr gPP8 /err.

Full Service

Landscape Management Spring Clean Up •Leaves •Cones •Needles •Debris Hauling

MfeedFree Bark & Flower Beds

Lawn Renovation Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost Top Dressing

Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing ~Edging • Pruning ~Weeding Water Management

Fertilizer included with monthly program

Weekly,monthly or one time service. Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006 Senior Discounts

541-390-1466 Same Day Response

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Free estimates!

541-385-5809

COLLINS Lawn Maint Call 541-480-9714

EastCascades M/orkforce Get your Schools & Training Investment Board business TransitionProject IITR Twck School Manager REDMOND CAMPUS 316 Provide T e chnical Our Grads Get Jobs! a ROW I N G Assistance and Irrigation Equipment 1-888-438-2235 management of the WWW.HTR.EDU with an ad in activities related to FOR SALE the creation of the The Bulletin's Tumalo Irrigation 454 newly formed East Water "Call A Service Looking for Employment C ascades W o r k$5,000/acre Professional" force In v estment Call 541-419-4440 Woman willing to er- Board serving a 10 Directory rands for the elderly 325 c ounty region i n for s l ight f e e in Central Oregon. EnHay, Grain & Feed Bend/Redmond. sure the timeline, lePainting/Wall Covering 541-280-0892 gal requirements of First Quality, 2nd cutting WIOA, policies and KC WHITE grass hay, no rain, PAINTING LLC barn stored, $225/ton. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! processes are addressed. I n s t ate Interior and Exterior Call 541-549-3831 Family-owned Patterson Ranch, Sisters Door-to-door selling with travel and excellent fast results! It's the easiest Residential 5 Commercial communication skills 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts Premium orchard grass, way in the world to sell. required. G o to barn stored no rain, 5-vear warranties http://www.tocowa.org 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. The Bulletin Classified SPRING SPECIAL! u nder About T O avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 Call 541-337-6149 COWA for more info. 541-385-5809 or 541-948-7010. CC8 ¹204918

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAR 5, 2015

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thursday ,March5,2015

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz

A signal's purpose

ACROSS 1 Maria's "those" S General who became a secretary of state 9 Bird that's the lead character in II

29Servicebreak at 63 Piece in a Wimbledon? rockhound'5 31 Like collection 32Offer? 64 Certain dress 65" 33OnetimeRoad now" Runner rivals Rio 34 6 37 Drama set in New York's DOWN 14It might contain Last Chance a sandwich and 1 Caribbean Saloon an apple vacation, e.g. 39 Butler, e.g. 16Bula: Fiji:: 2 Gulf War ally Hawaii 40 Procrastinator's time 3 2014 Broadway 17With 58-Across, play based on buy or sell direct 435panof or what to Moss Hart'8 attention? do in this puzzle autobiography 44 Where Forrest three times? Gump attended 4 Women's hybrid 18Upright type college attire 19Trims 46Twit 5 "Survivor" 20 Best Picture 49 Faithful servant quarters between "The

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

one spade. What do you say? ANSWER: Expert opinion would v ary. S om e w o u l d re b i d tw o diamonds, although that call would suggest a longer suit. A few would be willing to "reverse" with a bid of two hearts despite the minimum highcard strength. I believe a majority would support a raise to two spades despite the lack of a fourth trump. South dealer Neither side vulnerable

The arrayof defensive signals can be confusing. A principle: A signal's intent is not t o c o nfirm o r d e ny h olding c e rtain h i g h c a r d s o r distribution; it is to suggest a line of defense. In today's deal (reported by Barry Rigal) from the Blue Ribbon Pairs at the ACBL Fall Championships, most North-Souths got to four spades, and West led the king of hearts. Since East didn't l i k e h earts, he o f ten signaled with the deuce. Then West feared he might need to cash his ace of hearts and ace of diamonds to hold South to nine or 10 tricks. After all, South might have held the queen of clubs and no king of diamonds. But whenever West did that, South claimed, making four.

QQ97 094 41AK J 103 EAST 45

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DISCARDS When Doug Doub sat East, he knew declarer couldn't get limitless discards on dummy's clubs. To save his partner from going wrong, Doub signaled high on the first heart. West continued with the ace and a third heart, and with both black suits splitting unfavorably, South had to lose two diamonds. Well defended!

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(C) 2015 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

OV E L R A P I L C ON Y H I G

SA EC T R H E

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Antique & Classic Autos

YAMAHA 700 2000 NOTICE Dutchman Denali cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 All real estate adver- 3Polaris 32' 2011 travel Fusion 900, tised here in is subtrailer. 2 slides Evonly 788 mi., new mirject to the Federal rors, covers, custom erything goes, all F air Housing A c t , skis, n e w rid e -on kitchen ware, linens Local run. which makes it illegal r ide-off t r ailer w i t h 24' Mercedes Benz etc. Hitch, sway Truck is parked in to advertise any pref528 + much more. Prism, 2015 Model G, bars, water 8 sewer 632 908 Madras. 541-475-4221 erence, limitation or spare, hoses. List price Call for de- Mercedes Diesel engine, Loans & Mortgages AptiMultiplex General discrimination based $6,995. 1950 Mercury Aircraft, Parts tails. 541-420-6215 $34,500 - asking 18+ mpg, auto trans, Look at: on race, color, reli4-dr Sedan & Service fully loaded with $26,800 Loaded. WARNING CHECKYOUR AD ion, sex, handicap, Ground-up Bendhomes.com 860 Must see to apprecidouble-expando, The Bulletin recomamilial status or narestoration, beautiful! for Complete Listings of and only 5200 miles. ate. Redmond, OR. mends you use cautional origin, or inten- Motorcycles & Accessories Call for details. Perfect condition 541-604-5993 Area Real Estate for Sale tion when you protion to make any such $35,500 only $92K. vide personal preferences, l i mitaor bestoffer. Call 541-526-1201 information to compations or discrimination. or see at: nies offering loans or Wildland Fire3404 Dogwood Ave., 541-892-3789 on the first day it runs We will not knowingly Cooper Contracting credit, especially accept any advertisin Redmond. to make sure it is cor1/3interest in those asking for adhas limited openrect. "Spellcheck" and ing for real estate ings for exp. timber vance loan fees or Columbia 400, is in violation of human errors do oc- which fallers, engine companies from out of cur. this law. All persons Financing available. Harley Davidson If this happens to Heartland P rowler bosses and squad state. If you have are hereby informed 2001 FXSTD, twin $125,000 your ad, please con- that 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', concerns or quesbosses for the 2015 all dwellings adcam 88, fuel injected, (located O Bend) tact us ASAP so that like new, 2 slides-livfire season. Not entions, we suggest you vertised are available Vance 8 Hines short 541-288-3333 i ng area & la r ge corrections and any try level positions. consult your attorney on an equal opportu- shot exhaust, Stage I Allegro 32' 2007, like closet. Large enough adjustments can be VW CONV. 1 9 78 Must be qualified, or call CONSUMER nity basis. The Bullewith Vance & Hines new, only 12,600 miles. to live in, but easy to made to your ad. $8999 -1600cc, fuel HOTLINE, we will be hiring entin Classified fuel management Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 541-385-5809 tow! 15' power awinjected, classic 1978 1-877-877-9392. try level firefighters system, custom parts, transmission, dual exThe Bulletin Classified ning, power hitch 8 Volkswagen ConvertSingle Level - $385,000 soon. Please wait for BANK TURNED YOU extra seat. haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- stabilizers, full size ible. Cobalt blue with • 4 bed, 3 bath, 2456 sf ad. Call Sean at $10,500 OBO. eling system, 5kw gen, DOWN? Private party queen bed , l a r ge a black convertible 5 41-948-7010 f o r • Great room with gas Call Today power mirrors w/defrost, will loan on real esHouses for shower, porcelain sink top, cream colored fireplace 541-516-8684 more info. 2 slide-outs with awtate equity. Credit, no & toilet. 1/3 interest in wellinterior 8 black dash. Rent General • Bonus Room nings, rear c a mera, equipped IFR Beech BoThis little beauty runs problem, good equity • Paver Patio in private trailer hitch, driyer door $26,500. 541-999-2571 nanza A36, new 10-550/ and looks great and is all you need. Call PUBLISHER'S backyard w/power window, cruise, Call The Bulletin At prop, located KBDN. turns heads wherever Oregon Land MortLooking for your next NOTICE Rinehart, Dempsey exhaust brake, central 544 -385-5809 $65,000. 541-419-9510 it goes. Mi: 131,902. gage 541-388-4200. employee? All real estate adverand Phelps vac, satellite sys. Asking Place Your Ad Or E-Mail www.N4972M.com Phone 541-382-0023 Place a Bulletin help tising in this newspa541-480-5432 $67,500. 503-781-8812 wanted ad today and People Lookfor Information At: www.bendbulletin.com HANGAR FOR SALE. per is subject to the Windermere About Products and reach over 60,000 F air H o using A c t Central Oregon 30x40 end unit T 933 Harley Dyna Wide Glide Services EveryDaythrough which Pegasus 27' 2005 FQS, readers each week. makes it illegal hanger in Prineville. Real Estate 14' slide, lots of extras & 2003 custom paint, Pickups The Bnlletin Classiffeds to a d vertise "any Your classified ad Dry walled, insulated, extras, 13,000 orig lots of storage in and out. will also appear on LOCAL fI//ONEYrWebuy preference, limitation 747 and painted. $23,500. Pantry next to frig. Almiles, like new, health bendbulletin.com or disc r iminationSouthwest Bend Homes forces sale. Sacrifice Tom, 541.788.5546 secured trust deeds & ways stored in heated Chev Silverado which currently note, some hard money based on race, color, arage when not in use. $10,000 obo. Fleetwood D i scovery receives over 1.5 loans. Call Pat Kellev religion, sex, handi- Open Sat, 3/7, 1-4 p.m. 541-633-7856. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 15,750. 541-526-1361 million page views 541-382-3099 ext.13. cap, familial status, Broken Top Townhome! options - 3 slide outs, every month at marital status or na- 19425 Ironwood Circle RV satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, 573 no extra cost. tional origin, or an in- 2003 2-story, 2310 sf. HD Fat Bo 1996 etc., 34,000 m i les. CONSIGNMENTS Bulletin Classifieds Business Opportunities tention to make any Enjoy 3 private suites Wintered in h eated WANTED Get Results! such pre f erence,w/own bath, library, of2005 crew cab great We Do The Work ... shop. $78,995 obo. Save money. Learn Call 385-5809 For sale a small tax and limitation or discrimi- fice, Irg private wood looking! Vin¹972932 You Keep The Cash! 541-447-8664 or place to fly or build hours bookkeeping b u s i- nation." Familial stadeck. Comfy, quiet, On-site credit $19,977 with your own airyour ad on-line at ness in La Pine. For tus includes children convenient! Sam Rawlapproval team, bendbulletin.com c raft. 1968 A e r o info call evenings at under the age of 18 ins, Broker, Rim Rock ROBBERSON Pa r web site presence. Commander, 4 seat, 541-508-0124. living with parents or Investments, Completely We Take Trade-Ins! uvroa» ~ ~m a aa QS~Q 150 HP, low time, legal cus t odians, 541-620-4242 Rebuilt/Customized full panel. $21,000 pregnant women, and 2012/2013 Award 541-312-3986 Executive Director BIG COUNTRY RV obo. Contact Paul at people securing cus749 Winner www.robberson.com BrightSide Animal Center Bend: 541-330-2495 541-447-5184. tody of children under Showroom Cond. Four Winds 32' Dlr ¹0205. Price Southeast Bend Homes Redmond: seeks key leader. Ideal 18. This newspaper Many Extras 2010 541-548-5254 good thru 03/31/15 candidate has history of will not knowingly acLow Miles. T-Hangar for rent Triton V-10 with success in fundraising, cept any advertising $519,000 By Owner: at Bend airport. $15,000 13,000 miles. Large donor development, for real estate which is Fabulous SE home 541-548-4807 Call 541-382-8998. slide, Sleeps 7. Lots Looking for your managing staff, volunteers; excellent commuC A L LW in violation of the law. on manicured parknext employee? of storage. 5000lb nication, problem-solving, management and 916 TODAYW O ur r e aders a r e l ike .58 a cre. 4 hitch. Like new. Place a Bulletin help analysis skills; loves animals, supports our 870 Chevy Pickup 1978, hereby informed that B drm, 2. 5 B a t h , wanted ad today and Trucks & $51,900 high-save mission; experienced in animal long bed, 4x4, frame Boats & Accessories all dwellings adver- Master Main, 3 car reach over 60,000 541-325-6813 welfare. Willing to work evenings or weekHeavy Equipment up restoration. 500 tised in this newspa- garage all h a rdreaders each week. ends when needed. Society of Animal WelCadillac en g i ne, per are available on wood and tile acYour classified ad fare Administrators cert a plus. Salary DOE. fresh R4 transmisan equal opportunity cents, AC, Gas, RV will also appear on Visit brightsideanimals.org/executive-director sion w/overdrive, low basis. To complain of Pad, Electric Dog bendbulletin.com for details. Submit letter of interest and remi., no rust, custom d iscrimination cal l fence and so much which currently resume to brightsideboard@gmail.com . interior and carpet, HUD t o l l-free a t more. Call ( 541) ceives over 1.5 miln ew wheels a n d 1-800-877-0246. The 420-1777 for your lion page views ev17.5' Seaswirl 2002 tires, You must see toll f ree t e lephone private s h o wing. ery month at no Digital Advertising Sales Ford F550 1999 Wakeboard Boat Freightllner 1994 it! $25,000 invested. number for the hearView at extra cost. Bulletin 7.3 Diesel Truck Coordinator/Trafficker I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Custom $12,000 OBO. ing i m paired is www.21030kellerct. Classifieds Get Re2-Door tons of extras, low hrs. 541-536-3889 or Motorhome 1-800-927-9275. com sults! Call 385-5809 1.5 ton crane 8 The Bulletin is seeking an individual experiFull wakeboard tower, 541-420-6215. Will haul small SUV or place your ad enced in the role of digital advertising schedwelder, light bars, Polk audio or toys, and pull a on-line at uler, utilizing inventory systems (AdJuggler, speakers throughout, 227,000 miles 750 trailer! Powered by Bsnl] bendbulletin.com OAS, or DFP) to deliver ad exposures for the completely wired for New tires, radiator, 935 8.3 Cummins with 6 Redmond Homes amps/subwoofers, unwater pump, glow Bulletin's online commercial accounts. This [Pp op ~Q Sport Utility Vehicles speed Allison auto derwater lights, fish position will: 882 plug relay. trans, 2nd o wner. 3 bedroom, 2 b a t h, finder, 2 batteries cusAsking $1 7,900 Fifth Wheels Very nice! $53,000. 1605 SF single-story tom black paint job. • Prepare scheduling, creative requests, and 541-480-1868 541-350-4077 home in NW Red- $12,500 541-815-2523 review billing for each order. CHECK YOUR AD mond. .20 acre lot. • Employ the ad inventory system (DFP) to inGas fireplace, pantry, dividually and collectively ensure that all ondouble garge. Built in line ad impression requirements are met in 2002.MLS¹ too new! the allotted timeframes. BMW X3 35i 2010 • Review contracts for completeness, correct- Commercial/Investment $229,999. Call Pam Exc cond., 65K Lester, Principal Broness, and deliverability. • Properties for Sale miles w/100K mile on the first day it runs ker, Century 21 Gold • Assist Digital Sales Manager in responding M.F. 230 DIESEL transferable warHOLIDAY RAMBLER Country Realty, Inc. to make sure it is corto RFP's. VACATIONER 2003 CASE 200 GAS ranty. Very clean; 541-504-1338 rect. "Spellcheck" and HIGH PROFILE • Work closely with both in-house salespeople 2007 Bennington 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, FORD 2N GAS loaded - cold LOCATION IN human errors do ocand outside clients to gather information and Pontoon Boat workhorse, Allison 1000 cur. BEND 541-382-8038 weather pkg, preIf this happens to DOWNTOWN assets necessary for campaign fulfillment. 2275 GL, 150hp Looking for your next 5 speed trans., 39K, mium pkg & techREDMOND your ad, please con• Deliver accurate tracking and reporting of Honda VTEC, less NEyI/ TIRES, 2 slides, tact emp/oyee? nology pkg. Keyless us ASAP so that This commercial 925 online ad performance to our advertising clithan 110 hours, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS Place a Bulletin help access, sunroof, building offers excorrections and any ents. original owner, lots brakes, steel cage cockUtility Trailers wanted ad today and navigation, satellite cellent exposure adjustments can be of extras; Tennespit, washer/dryer, firereach over 60,000 radio, extra snow along desirable NW made to your ad. Qualifications include experience with online see tandem axle lace, mw/conv. oven, F latbed t r ailer w i t h tires. (Car top carreaders each week. 541-385-5809 6th Street. ad inventory and placement systems, camree standing dinette, trailer. Excellent ramps, 7000 lb. caYour classified ad rier not included.) Currently housing was $121,060 new; now, The Bulletin Classified pacity, 26' long, 8'6" paign performance reporting, and Google condition,$23,500 will also appear on $22,500. The Redmond Analytics. The successful candidate must be $35,900. 541-536-1008 503-646-1804 wide, ideal for hauling bendbulletin.com 541-915-9170 Spokesman newscommitted to exceptional customer service hay, materials, cars, which currently repaper offices, the and quality, and be able to balance multiple exc.cond. $2800. ceives over 2,748 sq. ft. space is Ads published in the C hevrolet HHR 2008, projects with equal priorities. High degree of 541-420-3788 1.5 million page ~ ~ e e "Boats" classification perfect for accuracy, foresight, and follow-through reLT, red, 78,870 miles, views every month owner/user. Two include: Speed, fish931 quired. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace at no extra cost. private offices and ing, drift, canoe, and pre-employment drug testing is required. Bulletin Classifieds Keystone Everest 5th Automotive Parts, generous open house and sail boats. Wheel, 2004 Get Results! JAYCO 1993 27' Service & Accessories spaces. Three For all other types of Please email your resume to: Model 323P 3 slides, Call 385-5809 or 50k miles, excellent parking places in watercraft, please go jbrandtObendbulletin.com rear island-kitchen, place your ad on-line condition. $9300 obo 541-598-3750 Studded snow t i r es back + street parkto Class 875. No phone calls please. fireplace, 2 TV's, at 541-573-7131 235/70R16 on 17" rim, www.aaaoregonautoing. $259,000. 541-385-5809 CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner bendbulletin.com source.com good cond. $200 obo. w/surround sound, A/C, RV 541-312-7042 Serving Central Oregansince 1903 Call Graham Dent custom bed, ceiling fan, CONSIGNMENTS Serv>n Central Ore on since 7903 541-383-2444 W/D ready, many extras. Studded truck tires, (4) The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer 771 WANTED COMPASS New awning & tires. Bayliner 185 2006 almost Lots We Do The Work ... Excellent condition. LT-245/75Rx16, Commercial open bow. 2nd owner You Keep The Cash! new $500. 541-388-1686 $19,750. More plcs — low engine hrs. 5 1881 Fordham D r . On-site credit available. 541-923-6408 — fuel injected V6 932 $ 29,950. Ready t o approval team, Have an item to The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expe— Radio & Tower. Honda CRV 2007, build, Crescent Creek. web site presence. Antique & BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS rience in the Printing industry. Two years of sell quick? Great family boat High Lakes Realty & (exp. 3/8/1 5) We Take Trade-Ins! Classic Autos Search the area's most prior web press experience is beneficial, but Priced to sell. Vin ¹064947 Property M a n ageIf it's under training can be provided. At The Bulletin you comprehensive listing of Stock ¹44696A ment 541-536-0117 $11,590. BIG COUNTRY RV classified advertising... can put your skills to work and make our '500 you can place it in 541-548-0345. Bend: 541-330-2495 $13,999 or $175/mo., real estate to automotive, products and services jump off the page! In Awbrey Butte .48 acre Redmond: $2900 down, 72 mo., The Bulletin merchandise to sporting addition to printing our 7-day a week newspa4 .49% APR o n a p lot withCascade Mtn. 541-548-5254 The Bulletin's goods. Bulletin Classifieds per, we also print a variety of other products Classifieds for: proved credit. License views,3275 NW Hori"Call A Service appear every day in the for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 and title included in zon Dr. $249,900. Professional" Directory /2 tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman print or on line. payment. Call 714-510-7388 s10 -3 lines, 7 days A Private Collection must become knowledgeable and familiar is all about meeting Call 541-385-5809 © s uSUBARUOPSEHD.COM e a a LL ' 1 6 3 lines, 14 days working with. Lot f/5 Phase 33, one yourneeds. www.bendbulletin.com 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr We put a premium on dependability, timeli- (Private Party ads only) acre. NW Baltch at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call on one of the 1930 Ford A Coupe 877-266-3821 ness, having a positive attitude and being a Starview/Mt. W ashThe Bulletin SevingCenWI Oregonsince f9$ 1929 Ford A Coupe team player. We offer a competitive compen- Old Mill District - Prime ington. 541-948-1219 Dlr ¹0354 professionals today! RV PACKAGE-2006 sation plan and career growth opportunities. 1923 Ford T Run. commercial site, just Monaco Monarch, 31', All good to excellent. This position primarily works nights, with a one lot off corner of 773 Laredo 31' 2006, HONDA CR-V 2011 875 Ford V10, 28,900 miles, 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. Inside heated shop EXL 33,634 mi. Bond and Bluff. Ap5th wheel, fully S/C auto-level, 2 slides, Acreages Watercraft BEND 541-382-8038 If you are interested in fostering your talent as prox 26,000 sq ft. MR ¹031805 • $21,995 one slide-out. queen bed & hide-a-bed a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourzoning allows many Hard-to-find 5-acre flat sofa, 4k gen, conv miAwning. Like new, age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, uses. MLS201500280 buildable corner lot crowave, 2 TV's, tow hardly used. Pressroom Manager, at $650,000 package, $66,000. located in Lake Park Must sell $20,000 anelson@wescom a ers.com Call Kit Korish, OPTION - 2003 Jeep Estates with mature or take over pay541-598-3750 with your resume, references and salary his541-480-2335 Wranglertow car, 84K landscaping. MLS¹ ments. Call www.aaaoregonautotory/requirements. No phone calls please. Duke Warner Realty miles, hard 8 soft top, 5 201406959 source.com 541-410-5649 Drug testing is required prior to employment. 541-382-8262 speed manual $11,000 $135,500. Call Pam 16' Cata Raft The Bulletin is a drug free work place and 541-815-6319 Buick Electra 225 Lester, Principal Bro- 2 Outfitter oars, 2 738 EOE. Reese 20,000-lb 5th 1964Classic cruiser Mercury Mariner ker, Century 21 Gold Cataract oars, 3 NRS Multiplexes for Sale with rare 445HP V8. Country Realty, Inc. 8" Outfitter blades and Tioga 24' Class C wheel receiver hitch, I The Bulletin Runs good, needs Bought new in 2000, $400 obo. 541-610-3119 541-504-1338 Serving CenrrafOregon since t903 l ots of gear, all in interior work, 168K currently under 21K "very good to exc." exc. shape, miles. $9,995. 775 RV condition plus custom miles, tires, profesDonated to Equine CONSIGNMENTS Manufactured/ camp/river tables and new sionally winterized Outreach. Call Gary General WANTED bags, more!. $2,700 Mobile Homes every year, cut-off 541-480-6130 2010. Only 56k mi.. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturWe Do the Work, 541 318 1322. switch to b a ttery, Vin ¹J20929 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We DUPLEX by owner SE You Keep the Cash! Additional information List Your Home plus new RV batcurrently have openings all nights of the week. Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath 16,977 On-site credit and photos on JandMHomes.com t eries. Oven, h o t Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts approval team, request, too! ea., 14yrs old. Great We Have Buyers ROBBERSON water heater 8 air start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and cond. web site presence. $219,900 .karenGet Top Dollar cond., seldom used; end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo- michellen ds published in "Wa We Take Trade-Ins! Ohotmail.com. Financing Available. just add water and sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. tercraft" include: Kay 541-815- 7707 541-548-5511 it's r eady to g o ! 541-312-3986 Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a aks, rafts and motor BIG COUNTRY RV www.robberson.com obo. Seriminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts 745 Bend: 541-330-2495 Ized personal $22,000 1965 Mustang Dlr ¹0205. Good thru ous inquiries, only. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of watercrafts. Fo Redmond: Hard top, Homes for Sale 3/31/1 5 Stored in T errebloading inserting machines or stitcher, stack"boats" please se 541-548-5254 6-cylinder, auto trans, onne. 541-548-5174 ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup 26 acres with Timber - 4 Class 670. power brakes, power and other tasks. For qualifying employees we steering, garaged, 541-385-5809 edroom, 2 bat h , 885 Mountaineer 1999 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, b well maintained, 2464 sq ft home with Canopies 8 Campers short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid engine runs strong. 4-car garage. Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 vacation and sick time. Drug test is required 74K mi., qreat condi$415,000. prior to employment. tion.I12,500. MLS201208278 Adventurer 2013 86 880 Must see! Call Duke Warner FB truck camper, Please submit a completed application atten541-598-7940 Motorhomes Realty Dayville at $18,800. 2205 dry Ready to make memories! tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available 850 541-987-2363 Top-selling Winnebago weight, 44 gallons 4x4 and ready for at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanSnowmobiles 31J, original owners, non- f resh w ater. 3 1 0 fun! Vin ¹J28963 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Bank owned 3 bdrm, 2 smokers, garaged, only watts rooftop solar, 2 Bargain Corral obtained upon request by contacting Kevin bath, 1090 sq. ft., tile 18,800 miles, auto-leveldeep cycle batteries, Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). price $4,998 entry, kitchen pantry, ing jacks, (2) slides, upLED lights, full size No phone calls please. Only completed applioak cabinets, fenced graded queen bed, bunk q ueen bed. n i c e ROBBERSON y cations will be considered for this position. No yard. Move-in ready. I' beds, micro, (3) TVs, floorplan. Also availLI II c 0 I5 ~ I M RDR resumes will be accepted. Drug test is re$59,900. MLS 2007 Winnebago sleeps 10! Lots of storMercedes 380SL 1982 able 2010 C hevy quired prior to employment. EOE. 201410945 Call Pam R = Outlook Class "C" age, maintained, very Roadster, black on black, Silverado HD, 541-312-3986 31', clean, nonLester, Princ. Broker, 4-place enclosed Interclean!Only $67,995! Exsoft 8 hard top, excellent www.robberson.com $15,000. C entury 2 1 Gol d state snowmobile trailer smoking exc. condi- tended warranty and/or fiThe Bulletin condition, always ga360-774-2747 Dlr ¹0205. Good thru ServinyCentral Oregon since 19IB Country Realty, Inc. w/ RockyMountain pkg, tion. More info nancing avail to qualified m i l es, No text messages! raged. 1 55 K 3/31/1 5 541-504-1338 541 -447-9268 buyers! 541-388-7179 $8500. 541-379-3530 $11,500. 541-549-6407 TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Must have doubles endorsement.

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E6 THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935

975

Sport Utility Vehicles Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200. 541-647-0657

Toyota Highlander

Auto m obiles

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

ROBBERSONX

Chrysler Pacifica 2005, (exp. 3/8/1 5) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A

Subaru Forester2012, 1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$5,977

$10,733 or $135/mo.,

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SUS A R Ll

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

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$6,977!

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Vin¹ 178487

$6,977 LINCOLN ~

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541-312-3986

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$3800 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title included in payment.

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975

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$10,379 or $149/mo.,

Find exactly what you are looking for in the custom, exc. cond., CLASSIFIEDS tires 40%, 3800 Series II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., Dodge SRT-4 2 0 05. Scion XB2013, 2nd owner. $7700 obo (exp. 3/8/1 5) Mopar Stage 3 sus541-430-7400 or Vin ¹034131 pension, Stage 1 en541-815-8487 Stock ¹83065 gine. 88,000 mi. New Turbo. $6500. Phone $15,979 or $199/mo., $2000 down, 84 mo., 541 420 2239

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in

ma aa a

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good thru 03/31/15

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VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

Dlr¹0354

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Subaru Legacy

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Honda Accord2005

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Looking for your next employee'?

LL Bean 2006, $2800 down, 60 mo., $13,979 or $195/mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p (exp. 3/8/1 5) $2000 down, 72 mo., Vin ¹203053 proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p - and title included in Stock ¹82770 proved credit. License payment. $16,977 or $199/mo., and title included in $2600 down, 84 mo. at payment. S US ARu 4 .49% APR o n a p ONNONNONNNNN.OOLI proved credit. License SUS A R Ll 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and title included in 877-266-3821 payment. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 S US A R U . Dlr ¹0354

Buick LeSabre 2005

$13,979 or $195/mo.,

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

(exp. 3/8/1 5) Vin ¹198120

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Chrysler200 LX2012, (exp. 3/8/15) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

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Scion TCcoupe 2007,

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Fully restored Vin ¹359402

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Subaru Legacy 3.0R 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Limited 2008, 877-266-3821 (exp. 3/8/15) Dlr ¹0354

877-266-3821

(exp. 3/8/1 5) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015

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(exp. 3/8/15) Vin ¹053527 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Stock ¹83072 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 $15,979 or $199 mo., FIND IT!

$21,979 or $259/mo.,

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

Dodge Avenger2013,

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Toyota Corolla2013,

S UBA R U .

Vin ¹207281 Stock ¹82547

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$7,998

$2500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.

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Automobiles

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BIIQ ITI $2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p SELL IT! proved credit. License The Bulletin Classifieds and title included in payment. WHEN YOU SEE THIS

A lun 2 0

Looks 8 runs great!

Vin¹133699

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

I/MfBUG 1971 ..C~

$18,399 or $225/mo.,

oncorde2002

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

Automobiles

541-598-3750

(exp. 3/8/15) VIN ¹466408 Stock ¹83037

www.robberson.com

This is a nice one! Vin¹401035 $12,977 ROBBERSONX

Automobiles

:

541-312-3986

Tribeca 2009 AyyD

975

T oyota Avalon Touring 2008, 57k mi.,

ROBBERSON $2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p LINCOLN ~ I M ROR proved credit. License and title included in 541-312-3986 payment. www.robberson.com

2008 Sport, 3rd row, lots more! ¹024803 $19,977

975

SUS A R Ll

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

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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

A RE P U B L I C NOTICES I MPO RTA N W An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible inorder for the electorateto make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowww.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classi%ed Ads".

Or go to www.publicnoticeoregon.com

The Bulletin

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY. KEYBANK NATIONAL A S SOCIATION, Plaintiff, vs. BONNIE L. JOHNSON, AS PERSONAL REPRESENT ATIVE FOR T H E E STATE O F BI L L DEHAKALA, CEASED; UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF BILL DEHAKALA, CEASED; BRADLEY HAKALA; AND PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN C LAIMING AN Y R I G HT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INT EREST I N THE PROPERTY DES CRIBED I N T H E COMPLAINT HEREIN, Defendants. NO. 1 4 C V0885FC. P LAINTIFFS S U M MONS BY PUBLICATION. TO:BONNIE L. JOHNSON, AS PERSONAL REPRESENT ATIVE FOR T H E E STATE O F BI L L DEHAKALA, CEASED, UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF BILL DEHAKALA, CEASED, AND PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOW N C L AIMING AN Y R I GHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INT EREST I N THE PROPERTY DES CRIBED IN T H E COMPLAINT HEREIN, IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON:

You are hereby required to appear and defend against t he allegations contained in the Complaint filed a gainst you in t h e above entitled proceeding within thirty (30) days from the date of service of this Summons upon you. If you fail to appear and defend this matter within thirty (30) days from the date of publication specified herein along with the required filing f e e,

KEYBANK NATIONAL A SSOCIATION will apply to the Court for the relief demanded i n the Complaint. The first date of publication is February 19, 2015. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ T HESE PAP E R S

CAREFULLY! You

must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear" you must file with the court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i thin thirty days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff' attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n a t t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. IF YOU HAVE ANY Q UESTIONS, YOU S HOULD SEE A N A TTORNEY IMMEDIATELY. If you need

LEGAL NOTICE help in finding an at- The contents of the torney, you may call following storage units the O regon S t ate at Empire Mini StorBar's Lawyer Referral age located at 20428 S ervice a t (503) Cady Way, Bend, OR 684-3763 or toll-free w ill be sold to t h e in Oregon at (800) p ublic o n Fri d ay 452-7636. The object March 6th at 1 1:00 of the said action and AM unless fees are the relief sought to be paid prior t o s a le: obtained therein is T racy S c ot t F1 9 , fully set forth in said L inda Ryburn F 9 , complaint, an d is Jessica Parker AA5. briefly stated as follows: Foreclosure of a LEGAL NOTICE Deed of Trust/Mort- The following unit(s) will be sold at Public gage. Grantors:Bill Hakala. Property ad- Auction on Thursday, dress:54768 Pin- March 19th, 2015 at ewood Avenue, Bend, 10 a.m. at A-1 WestOR 97707. Publica- side Storage, Bend tion:The Bend Bulle- 97702. Unit ¹ 283 & t in. DATED this 3 0 286 Shawn Ryan. day o f D e cember, PUBLIC NOTICE 2014. Brandon Smith, OSB ¹124584, Email: PURSUANT TO ORS bsmith@robinsontait.c CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given om, Robinson Tait, P.S., Attorneys for that the following vePlaintiff, Tel: ( 2 06) hicle will be sold, for 676-9640, Fax: (206) cash to the highest 676-9659. bidder, on 3/17/2015. The sale will be held LEGAL NOTICE at 10:00 a.m. by DlNotice of a bandon- RECT DRIVE GEAR, ment & sale 4/4/15. 4 60360 C H EYENNE old c o uc h w / p ee DR., BEND, OR. 2003 stains, broken table, Ford F350 P/U. VIN = stained m attresses. 1FTSW31P23ED15992 2121 NW Cedar Ave., .Amount due on lien Redmond. Larry Mal- $3747.50. R e puted one, 714-369-7290. owner(s) M i c helle Baker-O'Keefe, AnLEGAL NOTICE thony O'Keefe, Ford Notice of Permit Motor Credit Co. Amendment T-11901 T-11901 f i le d by David Roth, PO Box 358, Christmas Valley, OR 97333, pro-

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the poses a change in help of a professional point of appropriation from The Bulletin's and place of use un"Call A Service der Permit G-17122. Professional" Directory The permit allows the

In print and online with The Bulletin'5 Classifieds. A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e ! I

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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

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The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n c i bu l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,

5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9

use of 10.7 cubic feet per second from 6 wells within Sects. 4 and 10, T 22 S, R 20 E, WM for irrigation in Sects. 3, 4, 9 and 10. The applicant proposes to move one point of appropriation t o w ithin S ec . 9 , T22S, R20E, WM and to change the place of u se within Sec. 9 , T 22S, R20E, W M . The W a t e r Resources Department has concluded that the proposed permit amendment appears to be consistent with the requirements of ORS 537.211. The last date of newspap er p ublication i s 03/1 1/2015.


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