Bulletin Daily Paper 04-05-15

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $2

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EGG HUNTS AND OTHER EVENTS, B1 PLUS:UNUSUALCELEBRATIONS, A3 MORE $ THAN

IN CO UPONS INSIDE

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD TraVel —Puerto Rico comes into its own with a thriving arts and culinary scene —and it still has the beachesand colonial architecture.CS

IN SALEM

REDMOND AND BUTLER AIRCRAFT

Tax Dispute has historic relationship

ic er e ate is ac

Plus: Closer tohome

— Revisiting Seattle amid a grunge revival.C1

By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — Talk of keep-

Womenentrepreneurs

ing the tax rebate known

— It's a big trend across the nation — andevenmore so in Central Oregon.E1

as the kicker rather than

giving it back to taxpayers resurfaced in recent weeks as the Oregon Legislature prepares to pass a K-12 education budget that both

'Gertie's Babies' —Sold at birth, these adopteesare finding links to their past with DNA tests andwebsites like Ancestry.com.A7

sides say is too small.

House Democrats passed a $7.3 billion budget, $200 million shy of what school districts statewide say they need. The budget is scheduled for a vote in the Senate on Monday.

And a Web exclusiveA retired World War II Japanese fighter pilot sees anold danger on the horizon. bentlbulletin.cam/extras

But Democrats pointed

to two places to get that money: Republicans could agree to raise taxes, or they A Butler Aircraft air tanker drops fire retardant on the1990 Awbrey Hall Fire west of Bend that destroyed 22 homes. The company's

could vote to keep the projected $350 million income

founder, Cal Butler, was a pioneer in firefighting and agricultural aviation and helped turn RedmondAirport into a modern facility.

tax rebate known as the

The Bulletin file photo

EDITOR'5CHOICE

kicker. Democrats say if that

When live

By Beau Eastese The Bulletin

al Butler had no time for

college

the 2015-17 budget to levels

One of the driving forces behind the growth of the Redmond Airport, Butler was

dealt a severe financial blow near the end of his life in 2004 when federal authorities,

outside Butler's basketball

amid safety concerns, grounded the use of large air tankers on wildland fires on federal land. Butler Aircraft — the company Cal Butler founded and devoted most of his life towas primarily a firefighting operation then, with the bulk of its business coming from its tankers and the contracts they earned to

court, Hinkle Fieldhouse.

fight fires on federal land across the country.

By Marc Tracy New York Times News Service

INDIANAPOLIS — Butler Blue III toddled about in the morning sun last week

Butler Blue III, known as

Trip, has wrinkles over his eyes, speckles of brown on the backs ofhis ears and a burnt sienna dot atop his skull, part of his red brindled coat. He smelled like a damp towel, though not in an unpleasant way. Trip was outgoing and, above all, curious: about his surroundings, about a photographer's equipment, about passers-by. He alternated among panting, making a sound like an ambulance siren and emitting loud, tenor barks.

"He's just doing it to fight

boredom," said Michael Kaltenmark, his caretaker

to taxpayers as a credit,

they could bump education and other spending up for

failure or self-pity.

mascots live no more

He drooled slightly. A 60-pound, 3-year-old purebred white English bulldog,

money was available for spending rather than given

Submitted photo

Cal Butler worked as a flight instructor at Gardner Field in Taft, California, during World War II and later flew combat missions. Below: Butler in 2003.

"When they canceled those contracts, I was furious," said Nan Garnick, Butler Aircraft's longtime operations manager who bought the company with her husband, Travis Garnick, in 2006, two years after Cal Butler's death. "But he came in and

When the federal gOVernment CanCeled the firefighting COntraCtS "... I WaSfuriOuS. But (Cal Butler) Came in and Said, 'WOrSe thingS Can haPPen. We'll get thrOugh

said, 'Worse things can happen. We'll get through this.' "I was shocked he was so calm and asked

him why," Garnick added. "'After spending (time) in a POW camp, everything else is pretty easy,'he said. 'We'll make this work.'" A decorated World War II pilot who was a pioneer in agricultural and firefighting

thiS.' I WBS ShOCked t7e WaS SO

calmand asked him why. "'After spending (time) ina POW camp, everything else is pretty easy,' he said. 'We'll make this work.'"

aviation, Butler helped transform the Red-

mond Airport from a military base to a modern airport, Oregon's only commercial airport on the east side of the Cascades. The Redmond Airport's increasingly bitter dispute with Butler Aircraft, though,

may sever the city's relationship with a business that has played a prominent role in shaping Central Oregon.

— Nan Garnick, Butler Aircraft's longtime

operations manager, nowco-owner

SeeAir /A4

The Bulletin file photo

supported by Republicans and school districts. "When we talk about the tax structure in Ore-

gon, understand we are the only state in the union

with a kicker," said House Majority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugene. SeeKicker /A6

Reducing water use vo untari y By Chris Mooney The Washington Post

The water situation in

California is getting downright scary. Last week, the Department of Water

Resources found "no snow whatsoever" in its Sierra Nevada snowpack survey and Gov. Jerry Brown declared mandatory reductions in water usage in

the state. In particular, the

and Butler's director for ex-

more than 400 agencies

ternalrelations. Trip thrives when he is excited. His star turn came last month at the Big East tournament, when he

supplying water to urban areas will have to cut total usage by 25 percent below

threw up on the court and watched Kaltenmark wipe

up afterward. "Oops. I go hard," Trip posted to his Twitter (which Kaltenmark manages). On this morning, Trip seemed particularly inter-

ested in sniffing a large bronze bust of a dog that looked very much like him. In fact, the sculpture was of Trip's predecessor

Islamic State expansion may bedeceptive By Laura King, Shashank Bengali and Alexandra Zavis Los Angeles Times

Septemberthe55-year-old was captured and beheaded. Gourdel's executioners came

out inthenameof Islamic State. Across a swath of N orth Africa and beyond, militant

from a group of Islamist mil- groups are rebranding themloved nothing more than to ex- itants calling themselves Sol- selves as local affiliates of the plore rugged peaks, journeys diers of the Caliphate. The lit- Sunni Muslim extremist group thatover the decades had tak- tle-known group had seized on that controls a large section en him from his native France a way to grab headlines around of Syria and Iraq. One of the CAIRO — Herve Gourdel

to Nepal, Jordan, Morocco-

and finally Algeria, where in

be expanding. In the sixmonths since Gourdel's decapitation, declarations

of allegiance to Islamic State have hopscotched over thou-

sands of miles, from Egypt to Tunisia, to the chaotic battlegrounds of Libya, Yemen, Nigethe world: by asserting that his world's most bloodthirsty ter- ria and Afghanistan. grisly death had been carried rorist organizations appears to See Islamic /A4

2013 levels. You might think this means draconian rules and

rationing — telling people they can't water their lawns most days of the week, for instance. And there will,

most assuredly, be such enforced measures. But a crucial part of the

savings may not have to be mandatory at all, say several California water experts. See Water /A5

Blue II. It sits on a granite

platform that also hosts a large A-frame doghousered-brick front and marble

back. This is the Bulldog Memorial, though techni-

cally it is also a mausoleum. SeeMascots /A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Snow and rain High 43, Low23 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

E1 - 6 Community Lite C1-8 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Opinion/Books F1-6 Stocks C6 N'/Movies G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1-6 Puzzles

D1-6 E4-5 C7

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol. 113, No. 95, 46 pages, 7 sections

Q We use recycled newsprint

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WOmen ilI SpeCial OiIS —Surveys find that men in U.S.special operations forces do not believe womencan meetthe physical and mental demands of their commandojobs, and they fear the Pentagon will lower standards to integrate womeninto their elite units, according to interviews anddocuments. Studies that surveyed personnel found "major misconceptions" within special operations about whether womenshould bebrought into the male-only jobs. They also revealed concerns that department leaders would "capitulate to political pressure, allowing erosion of training standards," according to one document. Some ofthose concerns were not limited to men, researchers found, but also werefound amongwomen in special operations jobs.

FBIl Illlt Bcll'OLl IM By Michael R. Gordon

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sides are entirely on the same them that we would have to WASHINGTON — N e go- page, especially on the ques- say some things,"said a senior tiators at the nuclear talks in tion of how quickly sanctions administration official who Switzerland emerged from are to be removed. The Amer- could not be identified under marathon talks last week with ican and Iranian statements do the protocol for briefing reporta surprisingly detailed outline not clarify some critical issues, ers. "We didn't show them the of the agreement they now such as precisely what sort of paper. We didn't show them the must work to finalize by the research Iran will be allowed whole list." end of June. to undertake o n a d vanced The official acknowledged But one problem is that there centrifuges during the first 10 that it was "understood that we are two versions. years of the accord. had different narratives, but "This is just a work in prog- we wouldn't contradict each The only joint document issued publicly was a statement ress, and those differences in other." from Mohammad Javad Zarif, fact sheets indicate the chalNo sooner were the negotiaIran's foreignminister, and Fed- lenges ahead," said Olli Hei- tions over Thursday, however, ericaMogherini,the European nonen,former deputy director than Zarif sent out a tweet that Union foreign policy chief, that general of th e I nternational dismissed the five-page set of was all of seven paragraphs. Atomic Energy Agency. U.S. parameters as "spin." The statement listed about Obama administration offiIn an appearance on Iranian a dozen "parameters" that are cials insist that there is no dis- state television Saturday, Zarif to guide the next three months pute on what was agreed be- kept up that refrain, saying of talks, including the com- hind closed doors. But to avoid that Iran had formally commitment that I r an's Natanz time-consuming deliberations plained to Secretary of State installation will be the only on what would be said publicly, John Kerrythat the measures location at which uranium is the two sides decided during listed in the U.S. statement enriched during the life of the Wednesday's all-night discus- were "in contradiction" to what agreement. sions that each would issue its had actually been accepted in But the United States and

Iran have also made public

Dtsouies rr

more detailed accounts of their

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own statement.

SuppOrt fOr ISrael —Republicans are more pro-Israel than ever, partly a result of ideology, but also a product of a surge in campaign spending on their behalf by agroup of wealthy donors. Republicans in the Senate raised more moneyduring the 2014election cycle in direct, federally regulated campaign contributions from pro-Israel individuals and political action committees than their Democratic counterparts, according to data compiled by theCenter for Responsive Politics and analyzed byMapLight. The alliances in Congress that pro-Israel donors havebuilt will be tested asthey lobby lawmakers to oppose thedealwith Iran, despite objections from the Obama administration. Yemell VIOIOIICO — At least nine people from a single family were killed when what appeared to be anairstrike by the Saudi-led military coalition struck a homeoutside Sanaa, Yemen's capital, officials said Saturday. Theairstrike may havebeenintended for an air defense base. Bombings attributed to the coalition have killed dozens of civilians since the start of the Saudi-led air offensive intended to cripple the Houthis, a Yemenimilitia that has gained control of parts of Yemen. TheSaudi intervention has exacerbated the fighting in Yemen's civil conflict and effectively blockaded the country, making it difficult for civilians to flee.

Lausanne.

U.S. officials acknowledge that they did not inform the

agreements in Lausanne, and Iranians in advance of all the those accounts underscore "parameters" the United States their expectations for what the would make public in an effinal accord should say. fort to lock in progress made A careful review shows that there is considerable overlap

Gay rightS —Gayrights advocates are hoping to parlay the momentum from their legislative victories in Indiana andArkansas this week into further expanding legal protections for gays andlesbians in those states andothers. Facing widespread pressure, including from big businesses such asApple andWal-Mart, lawmakers in Indiana and Arkansas rolled back their states' new religious objections laws, which critics said could be used to discriminate against gays. Amid the uproar, the Republican governors of Michigan andNorth Dakota urged their own legislatures to extend anti-discrimination protections to gays. Twenty-nine states currently don't include protections for gays and lesbians in their nondiscrimination laws, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

so far, as well as to strengthen

Zarif, however, did not challenge any nuclear provisions in the U.S. document. Instead, he

complained that the paper had been drawn up under Israeli and congressional pressure, and he restated Iran's insistence on fast sanctions relief,

the White House's case against between the two accounts but any move by members of Con- including the need to "termialso some noteworthy differ- gress to impose more sanctions nate," not just suspend, Europeences — which have raised the against Iran. an Union sanctions.

Germaowiogs crash —Thecrashof Germanwings Flight 9525 in France hasheaped intense pressure on Lufthansa's CEOCarsten Spohr, who in less than a year at the helm hashadto grapple with weak earnings, labor unrest and tough competition from lower-cost carriers. Analysts say hehas madethe correct moves, notably in his swift expressions of sympathy for the149 victims and the relatives of those who died last week. Frenchofficials say co-pilot Andreas Lubitz locked the pilot out of the cockpit and deliberately flew the Airbus A320 into a mountainside in the FrenchAlps.

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DeVaStatiOn ilI Tikrit —In Iraq's Tikrit, liberation from the Islamic State group comes at aheavy price, both in loss of life and in the sheer devastation the militants leave in their wake. Muchof Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown and once a bustling city north of Baghdad, now lies in ruins. Islamic State extremists captured it during a blitz last June that also seized large chunks of northern and western Iraq, along with a hugeswath of land in neighboring Syria. After a nearly10-month Islamic State occupation, it took Iraqi forces and their allies, including Iranian-backed Shiite militias, a month of ferocious street battles to win the city back.

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Mabel Gantt, from left, Denise Benedetto and Malanna Henderson, all of Fredericksburg, Virginia, prepare to march to the StateCapitol dressed as women of the Civil War to commemorate the fall of

Richmond, Virginia, on Saturday. Saturday wasthe150th anniversary of Confederacy abandoning its capital of Richmond, aprelude to Robert E. Lee's surrender just days later in Appomattox.

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Kenyansidenti family memberskiled at college By Isma'il Kushkush New York Times News Service

NAIROBI, Kenya — They gathered by the hundreds outside the Chiromo funeral home and morgue, where the bodies of their loved ones had been brought. Some sat waiting for their turn to go inside, while others stood in a long line. Their faces went pale and their eyes teared up every time

someone emerged, wailing, weeping or collapsing on a companion's shoulder. "Why?" one man cried, moving his hands up and

Oumah shouted as she ran to hug her brother, Vittalis Opiyo. "I am so happyhe is safe." Roselyne Oganogo waited with relatives for hours for her

19-year-old sister, Eunice, a freshman at Garissa University College. "Thank God she is safe," Oganogo said a s E u nice emerged from the crowd of students.

• •

• •

,

.

In a statement published Saturday on the website of Radio

Andalus, a station affiliated with al-Shabab, the group said the attack on the university

was in retaliation for killings ers, holding both of his arms, carried out by Kenyan troops took him to a tent to meet a fighting the militants in Somacounselor. lia. The violence will continue, The families were at the al-Shabab warned. " Kenyan cities w i l l r u n morgue Saturday to identify relatives killed Thursday by red with blood," said a statearmed men from al-Shabab, ment that appeared on other the Somali Islamist extremist al-Shabab-affiliated websites group, who stormed a universi- and Twitter accounts. ty campus in Garissa, separatPsychologists, welfare working Muslims from Christians ers and volunteers were also at and shooting the Christians. the morgue Saturday. "They are in grief, traumaIn the end, nearly 150 students were killed in the massacre. tized," said Terry Wachira, At the Nyayo National Stadi- from the Kenya Counselors um, in another part of Nairobi, and Psychologists Association. a caravan of eight buses carry- "Some havebroken down." ing hundreds of survivors arIn a televised address Satrivedfrom Garissa,about 230 urday, President Uhuru Kenmiles northeast of Nairobi, un- yatta called the massacre "an der heavy rain as their relatives attack on our humanity" and anxiously waited. declared three days of national "That's my brother," Conny mourning. down. Kenya Red Cross work-

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SUNDAY, APRIL 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 Sunday, April 5, the 95th

day of 2015. Thereare270 days left in the year.

Easter: unusualways Europe celebrates

HAPPENINGS Greek daileiit —Thecoun-

try's finance minister will be in Washington for meetings with Treasury officials and the International Monetary Fund.

By Rick Noack

eggs into beautiful oval paintings. Some of the artists have worked with eggs for more

The Washington Post

Today,and in thecoming EaSter —Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus.

HISTORY Highlight:In1965, "My Fair Lady" won the Academy Award for best picture, and one of its stars, RexHarrison, was namedbest actor; Julie Andrews won best actress for "Mary Poppins." In1614,Indian Chief Powhatan's daughter Pocahontas married Englishman John Rolfe in the Virginia Colony. England' sKingJamesIconvened the secondParliament of his rule; the "Addled Parliament," as it came to beknown, lasted only two months. In1764, Britain's Parliament passed TheAmerican Revenue Act of 1764, also known asThe Sugar Act. In1887, in Tuscumbia, Alabama, teacher AnneSullivan achieved a breakthrough as her 6-year-old deaf-blind pupil, Helen Keller, learned the meaning of the word "water" as spelled out in the Manual Alphabet. British historian Lord

Acton wrote in a letter, "Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men arealmost always bad men." In1895, Oscar Wilde lost his criminal libel caseagainst the Marquess of Queensberry, who'd accused the writer of homosexual practices. In1925, a tornado estimated at F-3 intensity struck northern Miami-DadeCounty, Florida, killing five people. In1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed anexecutive order creating the Civilian Conservation Corps andan anti-hoarding order that effectively prohibited private ownership of gold. In1955, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill resigned his office for health reasons. In1975, nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek died in Taipei at age87. In1976, during an outdoor demonstration against court-ordered school busing in Boston, a white teenager swung a pole holding anAmerican flag at a blackattorney in a scene captured in aPulitzer Prize-winning photograph by Stanley Forman of the Boston Herald American. In1986,two American servicemen and a Turkish woman were killed in the bombing of a West Berlin discotheque, anincident which prompted aU.S. air raid on Libya more than a week later. Ten years age:ABCNews anchorman Peter Jennings revealed he hadlung cancer (he died in August 2005 at age67). Five years ago: An explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine near Charleston, West Virginia, killed 29 workers. In atelevised rescue, 115Chinese coal miners were freed after spending eight days trapped in aflooded mine, surviving an accident that had killed 38. One year age:Millions of Afghans defied Taliban threats and rain as theywent to the polls to choose President Hamid Karzai's successor. (Ashraf Ghani emergedthe winner.)

BIRTHDAYS Movie producer RogerCorman is 89. Former U.S.Secretary of State and former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell is 78. Country singer Tommy Cashis75.Singer Agnetha Faltskog (ABBA) is 65. Rock musician Mike McCready (Pearl Jam) is 49. Country singer TroyGentry is 48. Singer PaulaColeis 47. Actress Krista Allen is 44. Country singer PatGreen is 43. Rapper-producer Pharrell Williams is 42. Rapper/producer Juicy J is 40. Actor Sterling K. Brown is 39. Actress Hayley Atwell is 33. — From wire reports

days, Christians around the world will celebrate Easter

than 10 years and

Related

are able to copy

and their belief in the res- • 'Bible'

While STEM is a buzzword in education right now — it stands for science,

m iniature v e r sequel airs sions of rehgtous tonight,C7 paintings onto

urrection of Jesus. In the

By Barbara Brotman

Philippines, intense Catholic passionplays enacted there the surfaces of yield photo essays year after eggs. According to Euronews, year. knives are used to scratch the Whereas authorities in patterns.

Chicago Tribune

Manila have banned for-

Eugenia Cheng had just cut a bagel into a Mobius strip and was explaining why a liquid could not assume the same shape, when a student posed a question: "That bagel looks like water coming from a waterfall," Nico Camargo said.

eigners from volunteering celebrate Easter with another, for the bloody tradition this yet more controversial tradi-

technology, engineering and math — some schools add art for STEAM.

'

!

, t'I

Cheng considered, delighted at the proposaL "A frozen Mobius strip," she mused. "Why didn't I think of that?" "Art school," Camargo Art school — but one that

is increasingly exploring the intersection of art and science.

Brian Cassella/ Chicago Tribune

Eugenia Cheng, a mathematician and visiting scientist, teaches

a combined physics and art class called "Articulating Time and Space" at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

The School of the Art Insti-

tute of Chicago already offers science and math classes. But series that recently featured can do that." now the school is enriching Cheng. Students and faculty For one of his project s, the content and connecting it worked on data visualization Shields made a stained glass to art. Cheng, a mathematician in a course taught in collabo- work depicting rectangles of making a presentation to the

ration with Northwestern Uni-

class on topology, is SAIC's versity's McCormick School of scientist-in-residence — t he Engineering. "It's amazing," Massey said. school's second. The class, the first incorpo- "I feel like I just stumbled into rating an academic subject into this." an art symposium, combines To Cheng, a concert pianist studio art and physics. At the as well as a mathematician, graduate level, SAIC students there is a strong connection are working with University between math and art. "I work with abstract ideas; of Chicago graduate students in physics, astrophysics and a lot of artists work with abanthropology on projects like stract ideas as well," she said. creatinga 3-D fabricrepresenIn the "Articulating Time tation of the dark matter in the and Space" class, student Zoe universe.

Nyman sat perched on a stool

color spelling out "I+1=1."

Cheng initially did a double

defined by a container or could

be assumed by the material inside a container.

work together. The NEA has funded some 30 arts-science

"Why can't coffee be a Mo-

and arts-technology projects a bius strip?" she asked at one year since 2011. point. 'Tm asking seriously." "Artists and scientists are Cheng and physicist Kathboth looking to advance un- ryn Schaffer, the faculty memderstanding and meaning," ber who teaches the course said Bill O'Brien, the NEA's

with artist Paola Cabal, took

senior adviser for program

the question seriously. The

innovation. The Rhode Island School of

conversation deepened into a discussion of the nature and

Design, another of the nation's limitations of mathematical premier art schools, is heavily theory. involved with efforts to enrich Nyman finds physics and the STEM fields — science, its abstract ideas of space and technology, engineering and time deeply relevant. Her art, mathematics — by adding art, she said, "has a lot to do with a concept called STEAM. the space around me and moAnd at the Museum of Sci-

ments that I am within and ex-

ence and Industry, the Art of periences I am living in." Science Learning project is Schaffer finds that art studeveloping ways to teach sci- dentsareeagertoengage with ence by using art. The initia- the philosophical questions tive, which is funded by the that first drew her to physics. National Science Foundation,

"They're interested in know-

brought together scientists, ing for knowing's sake," she artists, educators and students said. in 2014 to develop projects like For Cheng, teaching at SAIC a healthy eating video contest, is an extension of her work in which were launched in 2015. bringing mathematics to widIn a way, it is a return to

er audiences. Her short math

dassical tradition. Through videos on YouTube have been much of history, artists were viewed more t han 8 00,000 scientists, a role epitomized

by Leonardo da Vinci. Only

times, and her new popular math book, "How to Bake I'?:

within the last 200 years have the two diverged into separate

An Edible Exploration of the

academic disciplines.

will be published in May. She doesn't expect SAIC

At SAIC, the efforts have

Mathematics of Mathematics"

b een championed by t h e students to master complex school's president, Walter mathematics. But that frees Massey, a physicist. her, she said, to introduce the "There's a lot of science in

art," he said, from the reflec-

she finds most exciting about her field.

es to the technology of materials used in making art.

class we don't have the rigor-

"Although it's true that inthe

But he wanted to explore the

ous techniques to be able to re-

conceptmore deeply. Hebegan convening faculty meetings to

ally get to full grips with them, I always say you can appreci-

examine the similarities in the

ate listening to music even if

ways artists and scientists see you can't play it yourself," she the world and express what said. The school now has a scientist-in-residence program. The first one, preceding Cheng, was David Gondek, a computer scientist who helped develop IBM's supercomputer,

Watson, which is known for beating two champions on the "Jeopardy!" quiz show. SAIC offers Conversations on Art and Science, a public lecture

prints crime stories on their

systems where I plus I does

Venetians who threw out

not equal 2," she said. "There are some in which it's zero."

old items at thebeginning of known as "Easter-Thrillers" or a new year. Others think it Paskekrim." has biblical origins. It is believed that the custom • Some Portuguese col- goes back to 1923, when a publect food and money for lisher advertised a newbook on those in need. the front page of a Norwegian Like in Spain, Easter cel- newspaper in a way that made ebrations in Portugal are many believe that a train had dominated by century-old been looted the night before. rules. Many locals dress up Although the ad — presented to re-create scenes related to like a news story — turned out

"There are mathematical

With graduate students, SAIC's involvement is with the

University of Chicago's Arts, Science 8t Culture Initiative.

The initiative funds research projects in which science students team up with those in the

arts. Isaac Facio, a Master of

ers churn out series of books

the story of the resurrection

to be a fake, the book it adver-

of Jesus. Members of the tisedbecame ahuge success. Misericordia brotherhood organize processions in villages and towns to collect EY donations which are then

Chicago, to create a 3-D textile work that will represent the universe's dark matter. The collaboration has chal-

offered to w idowers and wtdows.

I

• In Poland, Easter eggs are turned into art. Painting Easter eggs can be fun for kids, but in

lengedand entranced them. Visual depiction of Diemer's data was inherently thorny.

Facio found himself asking,

Poland it is art. Following

"If dark matter is i nvisible, then what are we doing? If it's not visual, what are we

traditional rules and depictions, Polish artists are able to transform thousands of

rendering?" "Artists ask

v er y d i ff erHEARING AIDS

ent questions," Diemer said. "Isaac's first question (on looking at Diemer's 2-D rendering) was, 'What's the perspective

DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?

here?' It was a totally different way to look at it, a visual way."

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they consider truth.

what the origins of this cus-

tom are:Some argue the cartons.In orderto cash in on tradition is copied from the this national pastime, publish-

and pushed herself to under- Fine Arts candidate in fiber interest around the nation. The stand the relationship of ab- and material studies at SAIC, National Endowment for the stract concepts to p h ysical is working with Benedikt DiArts and the National Science objects — specifically, wheth- emer, a doctoral student in asFoundation held a summit in er a Mobius strip's shape was trophysics at the University of and technology experts can

tion. According to the BBC, it

take, but loved it.

The work reflects growing

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year, local customs else-

w here have become tourist is custom in this eastern Euroattractions. A closer look at pean country that women and five European countries and girls are soaked with water by how their Christian citizens boys and men. While this trawill spend Easter: dition was originally used by • In the Greek city of Cor- men as a rather odd way to flirt fu, pots are ceremonially at Easter, it has since become a destroyed. national water pistol fight. Easter plays an important The BBC describes women role in predominantly Or- as hiding beneath rain coats thodox Greece. The festiv- and behind umbrellas on Easities that take place in mid- ter Monday. April are carefully sched• Norwegians read crime uled — but one local custom novels. might make foreign observThis tradition has absoluteers especially curious: Ac- ly nothing to do with the relicordingto the governmental gious origins of Easter — but website Visit Greece, "peo- Norwegians are obsessed with ple hurl clay pots from win- it, as the website The Nordic dows and balconies which Page described in 2011: "Each crash noisily on the streets year, nearly every TV and radio below," in the city of Corfu. channelproduce acrime series It is not entirely clear for Easter. The milk company

"What if you froze water?"

shrugged, grinning.

Besides artworks, the Polish

C harles Shields, a student in her math dass, said

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Accommodation lnformation for People with Disabilities.To obtain this information in an alternate format such as Braille, large print, electronic format and audio cassette tape please contact Karin Morris at 541-693-2141 or email kmorrisobendoregon.gov.


A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Islamic

m ake themselves appear to be far more powerful players in

Continued fromA1 their chosen arena of conflict, Like an accelerating drum- while the media-savvy Islamic beat, the deeds of groups pur- State can depict itself as havporting to be linked to Islam- ing dramatically widened its ic State have mounted, each geographic spread, an asserseemingly designed to exact tion that fits neatly with the a toll crueler than the last: the group's grandiose claimthat its bombing of a luxury hotel in "caliphate" is destined to hold Libya's capital, Tripoli; the sway across the Muslim world, dumping of headless corps- while also diverting attention es of supposed spies in lonely from its struggle to hang on stretches of the Sinai Desert;

to territory seized in Iraq and

impoverished Egyptian Chris-

Syria.

tian laborers in Libya forced to their knees on a Mediter-

Following a script

ranean beach to have their heads hacked off on video;the

slaughter last month of foreign museum-goers in Tunisia; and two days later, a pair of mosque bombings in Yemen's capital, Sanaa, that ranked among the country's deadliest attacks in

modern memory. But many intelligence officials and academic experts are skeptical that the parade of gore represents a leap in the degree of command and controlbeingexerted across theregion by the group's leadership in Syria and Iraq. "Considering the scale of what gslamic State) is facing in Syria and Iraq, I find it really hard to believe that the central leadership is actually coordinating operations in multiple countries," said Charles Lister,

Although Islamic State does not appear to be expending many resources on supporting its allies, the countries involved face a new peril, not only from Islamic State-inspired attacks, but also from hardened fight-

Refugee Camp SeiZetl —Islamic State militants have seized most of a sprawling Palestinian refugee district in the southern part of the Syrian capital, Damascus, anarea that has been under siege and bombardment for nearly two years, according to Palestinian and U.N.officials and residents. The officials called for quick action by international organizations, the Syrian government andall armed groups to headoff an unfolding catastrophe. Reports of killings were beginning to circulate Saturday, worsening what is a longstanding humanitarian nightmare for the18,000 residents of the Yarmouk refugeecamp. By seizing much of the camp,the Islamic State terrorist group made its greatest inroads yet into Damascus, asignificant step for a group that rose largely in the northern andeastern provinces of Syria, far from the capital. Yet at the sametime, the move suggests that as the Islamic State loses ground in Iraq andnortheastern Syria, the most daring response it could muster on the ground was to attack one of the most vulnerable populations in Syria. Most of all, the attack was aperverse answer to the question of how life in Yarmouk could get worse. Many residents' very presence there is ascar from a previous war; they are descended from Palestinians who fled or were driven from their homes in the1948 war over Israel's founding. — New Yortr TimesNews Service

ers returning home from the

battlefields in Syria, Iraq and now Libya. The gunmen who

treatment of Yazidi women

not yet in a state to take action"

and girls captured in Iraq. The conflicts in Yemen and Libya — which involve a tangle of antagonists, a virtually nonfunctioning central gov-

on its own in the region. The man appointed as the governor of "Khorasan," Hafiz Saeed Khan, is a former commander in the Pakistani

Taliban, also known as Tehunsecured weaponry and the r eek-e-Taliban Pakistan, o r flight of Western institutions TTP. He broke with the TTP — are providing Islamic State after being passed over for with the conditions in which the role of leader and pledged it best flourishes: chaos and loyalty to Islamic State in late armed groups that are too busy 2014. He has since attracted fighting one another to notice several top commanders to his the Sunni group's encroaching srde. Khan's men have reportedly presence. Although the footprint of Islamic State-affiliated sought haven in southern Afgroups in the countries is rel- ghanistan' sHelmand province, atively limited, especially in putting them in direct conflict Yemen, both offer major prizes with the Afghan Taliban and for an aspiring state: Libya's oil its well-established network of wealth and Yemen's position fighters and political figures. next to key shipping lanes. Already, the two groups have reportedly clashed in other Looking east eastern Afghan provinces. "IS's declaration of a move The group's declaration in January of a franchise in"Kho- into 'Khorasan' may have been rasan," an area that comprises over-hasty," wrote Borhan Osparts of Afghanistan, Paki- man of the Afghanistan Anastan and parts of surrounding lysts Network, a Kabul-based countries, signaled its desire to research group, in a recent "Afghanistan expand operations into Central commentary. and South Asia, the first time and Pakistan are a long way it had set its sights beyond the from thegroup'sheartland and Arab world. it may have miscalculated its Small groups of fighters appeal." therehave dedared allegiance Government officials in Euto Baghdadi, but Afghan and rope believe that a number of Pakistani officials describe recent plots and attacks there them mainly as disgruntled were also inspired by Islamformer members of the more ic State, including a deadly established Taliban in Afghan- hostage standoff at a kosher ernment, huge amounts of

Zelin, a fellow at the Washingall but one of them Egyptian ton Institute for Near East PoliNational Bardo Museum in Tu- Copts, outside the Islamic State cy who studies the groups' onnis had trained in Libya, gov- stronghold of Derna was ren- line communications. "Islamic ernment officials say. dered in sickening cinematic State is focused on territorial In the recent spate of attacks, detail; in contrast, the video control and governing." the daims of responsibility and of Gourdel's killing was more That makes Nigeria's Boko pledges of loyalty have been like a grisly version of a home Haram group a natural ally. strikingly similar in language movie. B oko H a r am's e ff ort s t o and tone, as if adhering to an Other pledges have come carve out an Islamic state in exacting script. Using one of from groups that were not pre- northern Nigeria predate the the group's favored mediums, viouslyknown, suggestingthat declaration of a caliphate by Twitter, supporters have dis- some fighters may be glom- Baghdadi, to whom thegroup tributed audio messages from ming onto the Islamic State pledged allegiance last month. fighters vowing slavish feal- brandtopromote themselves. In terms of b r utality, Boko a visiting scholar at the Brook- ty to Islamic State's self-proAlthough Islamic State may Haram equals and may have ings Doha Center who studies d aimed r u l er, A b u Ba k r appear to be following the even inspired Islamic State, istan and Pakistan, not milithe group. Baghdadi. model established by al-Qaida, said J. Peter Pham, an expert tants trained or sent by Islamic Some evidence points inThere are i nconsistencies, there are differences in how on the group at the Washing- State. "There are definitely some steadto looser arrangements however, that speak to the de- the groups approach franchise ton-based Atlantic Council that nonetheless carry signifi- greeofcloseness— ordistance building. think tank. Islamic State, he Talibs who have decided to join cant benefits for Islamic State — between Islamic State's leadAl-Qaida built its network noted, invoked the Nigerian Daesh," said Abdul Salam Raand it sprofessedoffshoots. ership and its affiliates. One of with the goal of attacking the militants' abduction of hun- himi, chief of staff to Afghan Under such informal pacts, thegroup'shallmarks hasbeen West. "You don't need to con- dreds of schoolgir ls, who President Ashraf Ghani, using opportunistic bu t r e l atively slick video productions depict- trol territory for that, you just were forced into marr iage and the Arabic acronym for Islamic obscure militant groups can ing its atrocities. In Libya, the need a safe haven," said Aaron slavery, as justification for the State. But he said the group "is Februaryexecution of 21 men,

carried out the attack on the

Ail'

market in Paris and a pair of

shootings in Copenhagen. Islamic State leaders have urged Westerners who can't join the fight in Syria to launch attacks in their own countries. But ex-

perts say there is no evidence that the group is looking to set up franchises outside the Muslim world.

Continued fromA1 Butler Aircraft currently

to stop using large air tankers to fight wildland fires, a move that changed the direction of Butler Aircraft. (The govern-

ment for tankers (with Erickson) ends in November, so we'll see. We're always looking at different options."

handlesservices such as fuel-

ment had concerns about the

ing and mechanical support for the airport, but the two sides

safetyof aging tankers after ed list of minimum standards three high-profile crashes.) the Redmond City Council

have been at odds for almost

At that time, Butler Aircraft's tanker contracts with the fed-

adopted last year has threat-

a yearover the city's updated minimum standards for aviation-service providers.

for asmuch as 80 percentof its

ler filed a multimillion lawsuit

business, about $6 million in some years. State firefighting

against the city of Redmond, claiming, among other things,

The dispute over an updat-

ened Butler's nearly 70-year eral government accounted relationship with the city. But-

"Dad would be rolling over in his grave if he knew about

this," said Jean Wells, 71, But-

ler's oldest daughter, in a recent interview.

Eagyears Redmond born and raised, Cal Butler caught the aviation

buginthe early 1930s as ateenager after riding in an airplane at the Deschutes County Fair.

"Every time an airplane

flew over Redmond, I watched it," Butler told The Bulletin in

The Bulletin file photo

2003."If it looked like it was go- A Butler Aircraft DC-7 retardant tanker sits ready on the tarmac at the Redmond Air Center in 2012, ing to land, I would get on my the same year the company sold its tanker operations. Butler now acts as a fixed-base operator at the bike and ride down to the air- Redmond Airport, providing services like fueling andmaintenance. strip to watch."

contracts partially filled the

fraud and breach of contract.

void of Butler's federal deals in the following years, and the company began to focus more on aviation services, such as small-plane repair, fuel sales and flight lessons. "The states (Oregon and California) really s tepped up," said Garnick, 58, who has been with Butler Aircraft

Likewise, the city has ordered

since 1975. "But we went from

and be part of Redmond and the Redmond Airport. We've

flying 400 hours to 50 or 60 hours a year on fires." Two months after its tank-

ers were grounded, as Butler Aircraft transitioned into a

Before graduating from

Butler Aircraft to stop all aviation-related services by May

26. Tempers appear to have cooled, though, as Butler is submitting a new application to the city to provide FBO services.

"I'm very hopeful," Garnick said. "We want to stay here been here too many years not to.

"Cal put a lot of sweat, blood and tears out there to make

began taking flying lessons C orps, Butler r e t urned t o persuadethe Forest Service to

ler Aircraftemployees near

smaller, regional company, the airport successful," GarCal Butler passed away at the nick added. "It's our hope to age of 85 from complications make the Redmond Airport

at the Redmond Airport. He

Klamath Falls. After the 1969 fire, Butler sold more than

of pneumonia an d c a ncer. just as successful as can be." TBM Inc., which still owned — Reporter: 541-617-7829,

spraying business, one of the initial crop dusting operations

locate its Pacific Northwest regional aviation center — what is now the Redmond Air Center on the north side of the air-

lesson, his 2004 Bulletin obit-

in the country, according to a

port — in Central Oregon in-

in part to fulfill his firefighting

uary said, and he eventually

history of the airport Butler

stead of La Grande. With But-

wrote in 1984. Butler Farm Air College of Aeronautics and Or- Co. also served as one of the egon State University. In 1940, Redmond Airport's first fixedhe enlisted in the Army Air base operators, companies Corps, the precursor to the Air that provide aviation services

ler leadingthe way, air tankers and their ability to carry large

contracts at the time with Forest Service.

Redmond High in 1937, Butler

bought weekly 15-minute intervals because he couldn't afford the entire $5-an-hour

charge from the Army Air Redmond and started Butler Farm Air Co., an agricultural

attended Sacramento Junior

Force, serving first as a state- such as fueling, flight instrucside flight instructor and then tion and mechanical support. as a pilot flying Lockheed's Butler hired a handful of pilots twin-engine P-38 Lightnings for his ag-business — includover Europe as an escort fight- ing Redmond Mayor George er during long-range bombing Endicott's father, Everett "Jigruns. On D-Day, June 6, 1944, ger" Endicott — and trained

airplanes and even helped

loads of fire retardant became

standardized practice in fighting wildland fires. "For him, (fighting fires) was about being able to save lives and forests, too," Wells said. "My grandma, his mom, had a two-bedroom cabin on the Metolius (River). When D ad came home from t h e

in 1979 that killed 12 But-

50 percent of his company to the controlling interest in the TBM Inc. of Tulare, California,

beastes@bendbuIIetin.com

company, operated Butler Air-

craftfortw o years before the Garnicks purchased the company. The couple got out of "During our peak, between the tanker business altogether 1990 and 2004, we operated in 2012 when they sold their up to eight air tankers and had tanker operations to Erickson closeto 40 or 45 employees," Aero Tanker. "We're still doing FBO said Nan Garnick, Butler Aircraft's current owner. (fixed-base operator) services, such as fueling and mainteTime of transition nance," Garnick said. "We've In May 2004, the Forest got two airplanes for fire reService and the Bureau of connaissance and air attack. Land Management decided And our noncompete agree-

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prison camps, he stayed out for ground troops landing on there for about six months and Omaha Beach, and eventually and publisher Mary Brown. fished every day." "He was an early pioneer in participated in bombing runs For roughly the next 50 deep intoGermany. On June those kind of things," Wells, years, Butler Aircraft made 17, flying his fourth mission of his daughter, said about But- its name fighting wildland Butler provided air support

various others, notably former Redmond Spokesman owner

the day, Butler was shot down

ler's agricultural aviation in-

fires. And as Butler Aircraft

in German-occupiedFrance, novations. "He was a very cre- grew, so did the Redmond badly injuring his back after ative person that could figure Airport. In 1972, in response his parachute had been hit things out. He probably should to the Forest Service seeking and his window was jammed have been an engineer." even larger air tankers, Butler during a previous flight. Not long after starting his Aircraftpurchased a Douglas "I tried to break the window spraying business, Butler DC-7 plane that was capable loose, then all the sudden I bought an old Navy surplus of hauling 3,000 gallons of fire was out and hit the tail (of the plane with the idea of turn- retardant. The airport later inplane)," Butler said. "It felt like ing it into a super-sized crop creased the length of one of its I was hit by a giant swinging a duster. runways, in part to accommo2-by-12. I thought my back was "We went out to the airport date Butler's DC-7.

-

broken."

to meet him and the plane

Captured by a patrol that literally walked on top of him

looked like it was about to fall apart!" Wells recalled. "But

"He went about 10 feet in

• •

' 'l l

the airport from an old World the guts out (of the plane), put War II base to an airport that German soldier that stepped tanks in and spray larger ar- could support operations in on him — Butler spent the next eas.... He was one of the first Central Oregon for firefight10 months in various German people to have the vision to ing," former Redmond mayor prisoner-of-war camps. He take a larger plane that could and current Deschutes Couneventually was sent to Stalag do that kind of work." ty Commissioner Alan Unger VII-A prison outside of MuBy the late 1950s, Butler ex- said. "Cal felt like he owned the nich, a massive 86-acre com- panded his business interests airport. But we needed strong pound that housed more than to include wildland firefight- leaders like t hat t hen t h at a 100,000 prisoners. In April ing, a relatively new field for helped grow operations." liberatedby U.S. troops.

blazer in aerial firefighting, Butler landed some of the

several tragedies, including a

first U.S. Forest Service contracts to fight wildfires with

that burned its hangar and planes, and an airplane crash

Backhome After his honorable dis-

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he figured out how to t ake

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Mascots

Complicated water politics loom

Continued from A1

By Reid Wilson

threatens reservoirs that gen-

guaranteed the final 9 percent,

Trip's predecessors, Blue I

The Washington Post

erate much of the state's power.

with the rest going to Nevada, Wyoming and New Mexico.

and Blue II, reside in a small

The crematedremains of

Nearly 60 percent of the West is experiencing moderate Western states have zealousdrought or worse, affecting 52 ly guarded their right to govern ofresources:gold,tim ber,coal, million people. water usage. While the federal oil. But the explosive growth As the West grew over the government has some control of Western states in the 20th last century, states spent years over water, the regulation of century has taxed what has — and billions of dollars — on groundwater, stored over the become the region's most pre- massive infrastructure projects centuries in underground aquicious,and increasingly scarce, aimed at saving as much water fersspread across the West ,is resource: Water. as possible. But states resisted left tothestatesthemselves. Now, as a de vastating taking other steps that could Some of those states, induddroughtparches California and have mitigated the crisis now at ing California, have no groundother Western states, lawmak- hand. water management rules at ers are confronting a century of The main water source for all. As a consequence, farmers conflicting interests and polit- Western states, the Colorado drawing on underground waical mismanagement that sets River, has been heavily ra- ter supplies have pulled an esstates, interest groups, cities tioned since 1922, when seven timated 65 cubic kilometers of and rural areas against each states agreed on allocating the water — the equivalent of two other. In the West, nothing sets water among them. The Unit- Lake Meads — out of the Colpolitics aflame as quiddy as ed States signed a treaty with orado River Basin, according water. Mexico guaranteeing a cer- to a recent study. That's made The drought is forcing states tain amount of the river would the ground itself change: Parts to take drastic steps. This week, cross the international border. of California's Central Valley California Gov. Jerry Brown, And the water is so heavily have sunkmore than an inch. "We're long overdue in Calia Democrat, took the unprece- usedthat,in the average year, dented step of issuing manda- none of it reaches the Gulf of fornia to treat groundwater as tory restrictions on water use. California. an integral part of our water Officials in Texas, Colorado California and Colorado get supply system," California Asand Oregon are reporting re- the g reatest apportionment semblyman Roger Dickinson, cord-low water stores. Utili- of Colorado river water, while a Democrat, said in 2014. "The ties in Washington state are Utah and Arizona each get oldphrase ' neverletagood criconcerned that low snowpack more than 11 percent. Mexico is sis go to waste' applies." Throughout the 19th century, Americans flooded to the western United States in search

Water Continued from A1 Instead, savings can emerge from finding more voluntary ways to change people's water-use habits. That may in-

clude both pricing water differently, especially beyond a

The extent of drought in California California Gov. Jerry Brown imposed the state's first-ever mandatory water restrictions this past week. After four years of severe drought conditions, water agencies will be required to cut output by 25 percent. DROUGHTSEVERITY Data as of March 31 • Exceptional

• Ext r eme • Sev e re • Mod e rate 0

Abn o rmally dry

certainbase levelof use, and

also "nudging" people, in the popularparlance ofbehavioral economics, to adopt different

MARCH 2014

MARCH 2015

water-use behaviors. "We think that's the biggest way that we will achieve the

savings that we need during the drought," says Peter Brostrom, the water-use efficiency

section chief at the California Department of Water Resources. Indeed, a recent presen-

tation by Long Beach Water, which has been a leader in cut-

ting water use — claiming a 34 percent reduction in the Long

The Washington Post

Source: National Drought Mitigation Center

much more for water use get a sense of home layout and deemed "excessive" or "waste- yard size, not only tell people "behavior change is key to our ful." Using data provided by how much water they're using past and future success." the utility, the studytracked the — in useful units like gallons, accounts of 13,565 water users and also dollars and centsPricing to see how they behaved before but, critically, how their usage The first key innovation and after the launch of the new compares to that of their neighinvolves pricing water differ- pricing system. It found that af- bors. Thus, the reports leverently. Indeed, the governor's ter the new prices took effect, agethetried-and-truepower of executive order explicitly calls water demand dropped steadi- peer pressure and social norms for water utilities to adopt "rate ly, so much so that it was 17 per- to getpeople to use less water. It's not just the peer comstructures and other pricing centlower afterthreeyears. mechanisms" that will drive There's one drawback in the parison. The reports also tell more conservation. current drought context, how- people where they're using One of the most interesting ever. "The effect was not im- water in their homes and how pricing ideas out there has mediate," explains Baerenklau. they can cut back, and connect already been adopted by the It played out gradually over them with water-saving pro-

Beach, California, area since the 1980s — emphasizes that

Irvine Ranch Water District

three years. So if utilities want

serving Irvine, California, which says it has achieved "a 156 percent greater savings than would have occurred if

really fast changes to comply with the governor's order, changing pricing alone may not be enough.

the District had implemented

Still, Baerenklau says, it

rrsll

~srrrs l

panelintheback.Someday, Trip will join them. "There's room," Kalten-

I

mark said. "III can go here. Probably IV as well." Trip, not entirely unlike Hamlet contemplating his former jester's skull, stood

Related

at

K al t e n-

mark's side • Final a nd d r ooled. Photos byChris Bergin/New YorkTimes News Service Four, 03 The l ive an- Michael Kaltenmark, a Butler University official, shakes with his nnal mascot charge, Butler Blue III, the schooi's mascot, at the Bulldog Memoriis increasingly prevalent in al on the Indianapolis campus. BELOW: In death, as in life, mascots college sports. Sometimes,

that devote themselves to faithful service are beloved symbols.

the animal is impressive but necessarily distant, like Mike the Tiger of Louisiana State. Kentucky's last live

mascot, also nicknamed Blue, was a bobcat.

But others — especially canines — are accessible. They become fixtures of

campus life, and with the aid of social media, they establish distinct identities.

In short, they can become beloved. And some colleges have decided to treat them

the way they treat other "My senioryear was theyear beloved figures who have passed on. All dogs go to Blue II retired," Couch said heaven, but some have elab- in a telephone interview. "He orate restingplaces on earth walked across the stage with as well. the whole class. He got an honGeorgia's bulldogs Ugas orarybone." I through VIII are buried at Sanford Stadium. Sev-

The class of 2013 and Blue II also watched their universi-

en Reveilles, most of them ty's jump in public recognition collies, are interred at the together. north entrance to Texas Despite hailing from IndiA&M's Kyle Field. The first ana, Couch had barely heard of Reveille was buried in Jan- Butlerbefore applying. uary 1944 with full military Butler's first Final Four run honors. — the last time the event was L ast month, Victor E . staged at Lucas Oil Stadium, a Bulldog II, Fresno State's fewmiles southof Butler's camlive mascot, died after being pus — was Couch's freshman stung by a bee. He was pri- year. vately owned and is notburButler's hardcourt success ied on campus. His untimely has paid off for the university. demise has led Fresno State Applications increased nearly to contemplate whether 50 percent after the 2010 Final future Victor E. Bulldogs Four, according to Associate should be owned by the Athletic Director Mike Freeuniversity. man, and have held steady "I never thought I'd be around 10,000 for about 1,000 having the discussion of spots per year, including the figuring out what we're go- year after Butler's second coning to do for Victor E. III, j ust because Victor E. I I

secutive Final Four.

title game, Kaltenmark said, a CBS producer told him that the

dog would be featured prominently if Butler won. The Bull-

dogs were edged by Duke in the 2010 championship, 61-59, and lost to Connecticut in the 2011 title game, 53-41.

Kaltenmark, originally a public-relations and journalism major, masterminded the cur-

rent Blue program. He wears socks with little bulldog cartoons onthem. He lives on cam-

pus with his family (and Trip), which is convenient during September football games, because bulldogs have trouble with heat — the reason Geor-

gia's bulldog has an air-conditioned doghouse. After running onto the field with the team, Trip will often retreat to Kalt-

enmark's apartment for a cold bath. In addition to the breed's is-

sues with temperature, one other limitation stands out: Bull-

dogs tend not to live very long — around a decade. Blue II was

It also put Blue II onthe map. 9 when he died; Blue I, who had "We don't have big-time foot- aprivate owner, waspractically Ladwig, a senior associate ball, but I want our dogs tobe of ancient at 13th. athletic director. "I thought that caliber, that recognition," On the side of the Bulldog we would have him for 10 Kaltenmark said. "Throw in a Memorial are plaques comyears." couple Final Fours, a little mag- memorating its current resiFresno State could do ic,and it happened. We were dents. Blue I is the "Matriarch worse than to follow But- able to do with Blue II what I of a Legacy." Blue II is "Butler's ler's example. The Bulldog thought might happen with Mascot, America's Dog." Memorial, which was Kalt- Blue VI or VII." How will Trip's plaque deenmark's idea, was made These are the paws Trip has scribe him? "When I look at possible in part by the class to fill. Blue II held America's these, I wonder what his epiof 2013, which raised more attention and affection during taph's going to be," Kaltenmark than $10,000 for it. the 2010tournament, and when said. "It might just be 'Puke and Michael Couch, the dass Butler returned to the Final Rally.'" president, said his dass- Four the following season, the If Trip was offended, he did mates had a special relation- charismatic Blue II was again not let on. Standing at Kaltenship with Blue II. must-see television. Before one mark's side, he drooled. was 3 years old," said Paul

grams that their utilities are runnlIlg.

In an

i ndependent 2013

analysis of consumers receiv-

ing WaterSmart's reports in the East Bay Municipal Utility

mandatory two-day per week m akes agreat deal of sense. District, two groups of cuswatering restrictions only." "Historically, there has been a tomers receiving the reports The approach involves set- lot of prescriptive mandates" saved 4.6 and 6.6 percent more ting "water budgets" or, more to get Californians to use less water than members of control wonkily, an "allocation based water, he notes, "but there's groups who did not receive conservation rate structure," good economic reasons to pur- reports. The company itself based on the individual char- sue flexible, incentive-based claims the ability to reduce usa cteristics of h omes i n a n approaches." age by 5 percent, which is conarea. sistent with these figures. "What you're doing is you're Such budgets typically take Behavior into account factors such as Another approach involves pushing for water conservation home and family size, outdoor taking a page from the electric purely with better information landscaping area and local utility industry, which for some for people," says Spang. "So climate. Then utilities charge time has been implementing it can be implemented rapidquickly escalating prices per behavioral programs to get ly and it can be implemented unit of water once the house- people to use less power — pro- widely." hold gets beyond what is grams that have shown docuOnly a fraction of California's water utilities currently deemed to be an "efficient" lev- mented success. "The energy utility space use this program, says Waterelof use. "We've seen more and more tends to move a little bit ahead Smart's Lipton, although he interest in this kind of r ate of the water space," says Ed- also adds of the worsening structure over the last decade ward Spang, associate director drought, "This will certainly and since the late 2000s," says of the Center for Water-Energy generate more business for us." Ellen Hanak, an economist Efficiency at the University of The non-mandatory apwho directs the Public Policy California at Davis. "There's a proaches don't end t here. Institute of California. Hanak lot of study on behavior-based Utilities will also certainly be says an approach that con- energy conservation, and peo- offering more price incentives siders the individual circum- ple are now studying the water to get people to swap out less stances of each home is much implications of behavior-based water-efficient a p p liances, preferable to a blunter one in conservation." such as washing machines which prices rise in the same If you talk to California wa- and dishwashers, says Andrew way for everyone as use levels ter-policy types about chang- Fahlund, deputy director of the increase,because itdoesabet- ing people's behaviors and California Water Foundation. terjob ofrewarding people for habits, it isn't long before you And for the cheaper stuff, they being water-efficient. hear about the company Wa- might even give it away. "We'll probably see a lot of It has also been shown to t erSmart S o f tware, w h i ch work. In a study recently pub- provides individualized home utilities even giving away lowlished in th e j o urnal L and water reports reminiscent of flow shower heads, or even Economics, Kenneth Baeren- the better-known home energy helping people install them klau of the University of Cal- reports provided by Opower, and that kind of thing," he says. ifornia at Riverside and two a customer engagement firm EPA-certified low-flow shower colleagues demonstrated big that works with electric utili- heads can save 2,900 gallons water savings with such an ties. WaterSmart, for its part, annually for a typical family, approach. works with water utilities and theagencysays. The researchers studied providers and currently has 38 The bottom line is that the Southern California's East- clients across the United States, more California can push its ern Municipal Water District, about 80 percent of them in residents to voluntarily change which switched over to water California, says spokesman their w a t er-use b ehaviors, budgets in April 2009, putting JeffLipton. the less painful adapting to in place a pricing structure The reports, which combine the drought will be — and the that took into account various utility-provided data about more it will feel like a choice. "It's a big human behavior household factors in setting individual water use with an budgets and then charged analysis ofproperty recordsto experiment," says Fahlund.

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Elections in scarred Ferguson carry hope of 'new tomorrow' By John Eiigon

black man who moved toFer- parts of Ferguson tattered and

New York Times News Service

guson about a month ago and

FERGUSON, Mo. — After

said he planned to vote.

months of racially charged unMuch is at stake in the elecrest over the police killing of tion. The Aug. 9 killing of a black teenager, activists are 18-year-old Michael Brown by making a final push to attract Darren Wilson, a white police a new generation of voters to officer, unleashed sometimes the polls 'Ibesday in the hopes violent demonstrations that left of changing the face of the predominantly white political leadership in this mostly black city. The effort has transformed the normally sleepy races for City Council in Ferguson, a community of 21,000 people just outside St. Louis.

of wrongdoing in the shoot- tionately targeted blacks. ing of Brown, fierce criticism Currently, in a city that is these areas, the next council has lingered over the city, in- 67 percent black, only one of must select key officials — a cluding from the Justice De- the seven councilmembers city manager, a police chief and partment. Last month, the de- is A f r ican-American. T h at a municipal judge — who will partment released a scathing number is poised to double: In be responsible for ushering in a report accusing Ferguson of theracesforthree open seats, new era of law enforcement. running an unjust law enforce- four of the eight candidates Though Wilson was cleared ment system that dispropor- are black, including both cancharred. Beyond revitalizing

didates in Ward 3.

"This is how every municipal election should be," said Councilman Dwayne James of Ward 2, the sole African-American on the council and onlythe

second in the city's history. "I'm excited about people being engaged in their community."

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"It's special to me because if

l

/i

this goes, if everybodyplans on making the election and doing what we supposed to do, this

canbe the start of a newtomorrow," said Latrez Davis, 24, a

Kicker

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8

Continued from A1 Under the kicker system, Oregon economistspredict how the state economy will perform

intwo-yearbudgetcycles.They estimate the revenue available for legislators to spend, and lawmakerspass abudgetusing that estimate. When revenue collections

from income taxes and other fees are at least 2 percent higher than the estimate, the sur-

plus money is sent back to taxpayers as a kicker refund. S tate economists say i t 's

likely Oregonians will receive a portion of the projected $349 million revenue surplus created

by a strong economic rebound from 2013-2015.

"What happens when you get the kicker money flow in is you've got more money now than you expected," said Paul Warner, who heads the nonpartisan Legislative Revenue

Office. To hold onto the kicker and use it for the 2015-2017 biennium, Democrats would need

votes from Republicans who have made clear they have no intention to offer support.

During a debate on the

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House floor over the K-12 bud-

get, several Democrats talked about using the pot of money that will otherwise likely go to taxpayers as a kicker. That's when House Republican Leader Mike McLane, of Powell

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slightly higher.

Hear it clear. They've passed

a budget today, and they want your kicker," McLane said. Conservatives point out the

kicker is in place both to give taxpayers some of their high income taxes back during good times and to hold down state spending. Voters solidified the kicker in the state Constitu-

tion in 2000, in part because of efforts from Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, who was a representative at the time.

The kicker has effectively held down state spending by about2.5percent,W arnersaid.

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Rep. John Huffman, R-The Dalles, said"the very most" the

Legislature should do is send the question of changing the personal income tax kicker to the voters on a ballot, as they did successfully with a 2012

ballot measure for the corporate income tax kicker. That rebate now funds K-12. "I'm a firm believer in the

spending limitation," Huffman said. "I've told people ever since

I got in the Legislature the only

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way I would vote to do away with the kicker, and I would do

it in a heartbeat, (is) if we implemented a spending limitation." For all the talk in the House,

it's not likely lawmakers will take a politically challenging vote to keep the surplus this

session. "The kicker d iscussion I

think makes good political rhetoric," said Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dallas, who sits on the Senate Finance and Revenue Committee."But in all actuality ... I've not heard any of that." Instead, tax-reform-minded

lawmakers like Boquist and Sen. Mark Hass, D-Beaverton,

• 0

are working behind the scenes to make the state's revenue

streams more stable and soften the blows when the state has

economic downturns. Hass has worked on pro-

posals like one to siphon some money the state collects from capital gains, opting to put that into a rainy day savings account for downturns. "There's no ne w

m o ney;

there's no tax increase, yet it would ease volatility," Hass sald. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A7

eo eso at irt use to recover ost ast By Kirk Johnson New York Times News Service

COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho — Sue Docken's start in

life, in 1951, with a no-ques-

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descript office building Photos by Nathan Hunsinger / Dallas Morning News

A West African green mamba is one of many species at the Dallas Zoo.

ensna es ie,zoo comes 0 e rescue ByClaireZ. Cardona e The Dallas Morning News

in Butte, Montana, where she met with the midwife, G ertrude Pitkanen, a n d was handed the hours-old infant and the afterbirth,

offered a peek through a curtain at the young moth-

Dallas Zoo was ready to strike. A1Ong With One Of the COuntry'S mOSt imPreSSiVe COlleCtiOnS Of VenOmOuS SnakeS, theZOOalSO haS One Of the largeSt SuPPlieS Of antiVenom.

to leave. The afterbirth was thrown out the window on

Do's and don'ts

tive species and bad judgment, jokes Bradley Lawrence, the zoo's reptile and amphibian supervisor.

Rattlesnakes arefound in Central Oregon, too. As the weather warms, more snakescome outofbrumation, similar to hibernation. If you comeacross one, leave it alone. But if you are

"Most of the time it's native

venomous snakes that somebody has decided to mess around with, late at night, prob-

ably because they've had a few too many," he said. "Like, 'Oh, look, there's a snake. Let's pick itup! Is Most native snakes' antivenom is stocked in hospitals, but west, from Louisiana to California, needs an antidote for

Bradley Lawrence, reptile and

an exotic snakebite, the zoo is amphibian supervisor, shows often called to help.

an antivenom that comes in

Such acallmay come only two parts at the Dallas Zoo. The once a year, but Lawrence said zoo keepsthousands ofvials the calls often come about 3

— about $200,000 worth — on

a.m. and he is usually the per- hand to treat exotic snakebites son who answers. across the Southwest. The zoo will deliver at least

half of its supply of the necessary antivenom through police withblood clotting. or CareFlite, which carries the For bite s from copperheads, vials by helicopter or plane. rattlesnakes and other native The hospitals that receive the species, hospitals stock the anantivenom pay to restock whatever isn't returned.

The zoo keeps thousands of vials — about $200,000 worth

— in a small refrigerator. The most recent call for help came in January, when a man in the Dallas-Fort Worth area

tivenom CroFab. When treating a bite, doctors determine the kind of snake involved and familiarize themselves with the venom's effects,

the best antivenom to use and the risks. Some people can be allergic to antivenom, which

was bitten by his African bush is made by a few national viper, an exotic species without suppliers. its own antivenom.

In such cases, the zoo sends enough of a reason to stay away from venomous snakes, pers have shown could work, the cost for bite treatments Lawrence said. shouldbe. The African bush viper is ilPrices for a n t ivenom legal to own in Dallas and Fort before a hospital's markup Worth, but "laws are always — range from $200 a vial for broken," said Mark Pyle, pres- Asian snakes to $2,500 a vial ident of the Dallas-Fort Worth

Herpetological Society. The Texas Parks and Wild-

life Department sells controlled exotic snake permits for ven-

omous snakes and five of the constrictor species. But cities often ban the possession of venomous snakes, wildlife permits

specialist Megan Russell said. But shesaid the number of

permits issued doesn't reflect thenumber ofpeoplewho own venomous snakes without fol-

lowing the rules. Privacy laws prevent the health care workers who treat-

ed the man who was bitten by the bush viperfrom discussing the case. But typically anyone bitten by such a snake in the Dallas area is treated at

Parkland Memorial Hospital — which senior toxicology fellow Dr. Nancy Onisko calls "the Snakebite Center of

Excellence." Parkland doesn't treat many exotic snakebites. In 2014, it

treated one or two — compared with about 50 bites involving native species such as copperheads and rattlesnakes. Copperhead bites are the most common,and they generally involve only pain and swelling. The hospital occasionally treats rattlesnake bites, which can cause tissue death, blisters

and other symptoms such as a rapid heartbeat and problems

for Australian species.

Therapy usually begins with

performed abortions — and

two sons, half-brothers to Livmostly evaded legal conse- ergood, who met them for the

answers, in some cases last-

m id-20th century, from t h e

ing decades.

Wasserman ring in New Jersey, to the Cole Babies of Miami. But the aging cohort of Gertie's adoptees say they believe they are unique in having never found any living biologicalparents,so securely were the secrets locked down.

222-1222

have started to come to light through DNA-matching research sites like Ancestry. com and 23andMe.com,to T heories about wh y a r e which people can send a thorny and thick. Some of the cheekswab inhopes of find- Gertie's Babies said old-timers ing a match with relatives in Butte had told them that Pitwho have also submitted kanen worked with the local a DNA sample. Tales have business andpolitical elite, and emerged of desperati on, kept a black book full of blackbetrayal and secrets taken mail-worthy intelligence. to the grave, but also of joy Brought up several times and newfound connection, on criminal charges related like Heather Livergood's. to botched, fatal abortions, Livergood, 69, a retired those old-timers said, Pitkanen secretary, lives on a tidy waved her black book, and street here in this northern each time a judge threw out Idaho community with her the case.

• If bitten on an extremjty,

try to avoid moving it so the circulation of the venom might be slowed. • Take a picture of the snake thatbityou ortryto remember its markings. DON'T • Don't try to suck the venom out like they do in movies. It doesn't work. • Also, never make acut where the snakebite is and try to draw thevenom out. Don't use electricity, tourniquets, heat or suction devices. Sources: Dr. Nancy Onisko, Parkland Memorial Hospital, Bulletin reporting

husband, Steve, also 69, in a home that smells of fresh

Unearthed secrets

"The details of how these coffee and muffins. She grew up loved, she said, no things happened, I don't think question about that — the

will ever be found," said Rob

parents who bought her

Derrick, a computer scientist

from Pitkanen in February 1946 could not have been

at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Derrick, 59, is not a Gertie's

better. But she was also

Baby, but he found out recentthe fragments of the story ly to his huge shock — after she had: her father's mem- sending his DNA to one of the ories, the day he bought websites, looking for cousins her in a motel room for or other relatives — that he has $100 and the mostly false a half-brother and half-sister haunted until last year by

annual tests. In the zoo's 127-year histo-

ry,handlers have been bitten only three times. All of the bites

were dry bites, meaning no venom was injected. The zoo's snake handlers are

aware of the almost entrancing lethal power snakes can have. Lawrence is a fan of the co-

"The

n arrative I 'v e

had

about my origins, all my life, is wrong," he said. In a tale that Derrick knew well, but that Drake did not, their mother

was betrayed by her husband, who came back from World

War II having fathered a son in France, and seeking a divorce. Antoinette Derrick never re-

married, and died of a heart attack at age 44. "She led a really hard lifereally hard,"Rob Derrick said. But with the Pitkanen ring, there are stories within stories.

Livergood's connections, for first time in September. example, were partly traced 1920s through the 1950s. Baby sellers like Pitkanen through an ancestor with a disThe secrets she left have fu- are part of American subcul- tinctive name, Ulrich Winegar. eledasearch fororiginsand ture, especially through the Members of Winegar's family,

Now, some of the back stories of the Gertie's Babies

•Ifyouhavenomeansto get to an emergency facility, or if you areextremely djzzy or havetrouble breathing, call 911.

Drake, 61, the special projectsdirector for a rescue mission in Billings, Montana, said the news had been a shock to him as well.

quence — in Butte from the

DO

bras andmambas, but assistant supervisor Matt Vaughan is a cases. pit viper guy. "I can't imagine the hospital "The Ferraris of the predabill on a snakebite," Lawrence tors on the planet," Vaughan sald. said. They get their name from At the Dallas Zoo's reptile the two heat-sensing pits behouse, each cage is labeled tween their nostrils and eyes. w ith information about t he Vaughan grew up in Weathsnake and its corresponding erford, Texas,neara laketeema ntivenom. About 65 of t h e ing with reptiles and amphibbuilding' s 90 species ofsnakes ians. For a kid who was fasciare venomous, said Ruston nated with dinosaurs, "I was in Hartdegen, the zoo's curator of heaven," he said. herpetology. Lawrence, who has a green Perhaps the nastiest of the lot mamba tattoo swirling up his is the inland taipan, one of the arm and a bearded dragon belt deadliest species in the world. buckle, got his first snake — a "One drop is plenty to prob- green snake — fromhis science ably kill everybody at the zoo teacher father when he was 10. "He was like, 'You'll never today," Lawrence said of the taipan, aptly nicknamed the be able to make a living doing "fierce snake." "Thirty min- this,'" Lawrence said. 'What he utes without antivenom is bad should have said was, 'You'll news." never be able to make a lot of All staff m embers are money doing this.'" When people are reckless trained to work with the venomous snakes, but not all can with venomous snakes, the handle the cobras and other es- zoo's snake keepers are also peciall y dangerous species.To put at risk, Lawrence said. work with those snakes, hanIf someone is bitten by a dlers must have a second tier death adder, for example, the of skills that requires frequent zoo provides all six of its vials training, Hartdegen said. of antivenom for t reatment. On the walls where the That means zookeepers can't snake keepers work are sever- handle their own death adders al red buttons labeled "snake- — because there would be no bite alarm." Covered with a way to treat anyone who was thin coat of dust, the buttons bittenuntil there's a new supply are rarely used except during of antivenom. four to six vials, but up to 30 vials may beneeded in extreme

war and the dark secrets her

delivered and sold babies, mother never whispered to her

DNA matches

If the potential for pain isn't

an antivenom that scientific pa-

1945, with World War II wind-

members call themselves ing down but her husband still "Gertie's Babies." (More away in the Army Air Corps are believed to be out there, in the Pacific, she became unknown perhaps even to pregnant with another man's themselves) Their lives are child. "Poor Violet," Livergood diverse, connected onlyby a common thread, Pitkanen. said. She said learning the stoAlso sometimes known ry had given her new insight more grandlyas Gertrude into the lonely years of the

bitten:

• Call poison control, 800-

when someone in the South-

found a Violet who had lived in

the drive home, Docken the small town of Grantsville, was later told by her adop- Utah, about a 45-minute drive tive parents, who paid $500 from Salt Lake City. for her that day. The rest of the story slowly Docken is one of about spilled out over months: how two dozen people, most- Wilson's real last name was ly in the West, belonging Sandberg, and how in mid-

Pitkanen Van Orden, she Most snakebites involve na-

An article from The Montana Standard from March 15, 1992, is about Gertrude Pitkanen Van Orden, a midwife who was responsible for the sale of dozens of newborn babies on the black market.

er lying in a bed, and told

to a self-styled club whose

DALLAS — When a Texas man was bitten by an African bush viper, the

itr. U.

Rajah Bose / New York Times News Service

birth c e r t ificate s i gned who are. by Pitkanen that said her The siblings were given up mother's name was Violet by their mother, Antoinette JoWilson. sephine Derrick. Rob Derrick Through an Ancestry. and the man he calls "my new

com match last year, Liver- brother," Gary Drake, along good found a cousin, who with their wives, plan to meet began combing family re- for the first time this weekend cords and memories and in Butte.

• •

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early Mormon converts, went west to Utah in the 1800s and became the foundation of a giant but easily traceable lineage

that included Livergood and her mother.

Sherry Keller, 62, a Gertie's Baby in Texas, just got a DNA hit in the last few weeks, con-

necting her through a cousin to a family in Montana. Mable Deane, 65, who was

given up in a Pitkanen adoption in 1949, learned that the woman who had adopted her also had worked for Pitkanen

as a kind of go-between, setting up other adoptions. Pitkanen, who died in 1960,

left a complicated legacy with the adoptees themselves.

Some found a depth of character. Deane became pregnant at age 19 in 1968 in a small town in Montana, a time and

place, she said, "when single mothers just didn't have babies." Knowing only that h er mother had given her up, Deane decided to keep her own child, a course she said she might not have had the

strength to follow without the crucibleof her past.She has never found a clue to her own orlglns.

Docken is also among the unsuccessful searchers. About a month ago, she went back to Butte from her home near Boz-

eman, Montana, and drove by the office building where she was born, just to see it.

The building stands empty and sagging with age, she said, and still holding on to its

secrets.

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THE RESURRECTIONAND THE LIFE.HE WHO BELIEVES IN ME, THOUGH HEMAY DIE, HE SHALL LIVE. —John11:25

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© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

BRIEFING Man accusedof rape, kidnapping A Bend manwas arrested early Saturday, suspected of raping and sexually assaulting a former girlfriend. Brett A. Vanscoy, 31, was being held at the Deschutes County jail, according to a news release from Bend Police. A 35-year-old Bend woman contacted police Friday to report incidents involving Vanscoy that started Feb 28. Officers determined he hadheld her in her residence in northeast Bend against her will, assaulting her, strangling her, raping her and committing additional sexual-related crimes over a period of just over a month, the news release said. The alleged victim had applied for a restraining order against Vanscoy last month, but it had not been served to him. Vanscoy is being held on suspicion of first-degree rape, first-degree kidnapping, first-degree unlawful sexual penetration, first-degree sex abuse, strangulation, fourth-degree assault, harassment, menacing and being a felon in possession of a firearm, police said.

5 liners Road, Phil'sTrailhead to get overhauls By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Construction set to start later this month will widen

Skyliners Road and add considerably wider bike lanes. It will be much more than a

ly the road only has about 1-foot-wide shoulders. While some people argued for 8-foot-wide bike lanes during planning for the road rebuild, Kolb said planners decided to go with 6 feet

repaving. "They are actually going to grind the existing road up and use the old road as

to save money. Standard

a base for the new road,"

April 20 and wrap up in mid-October, Kolb said. The

said George Kolb, county engineer with the Deschutes County Road Department.

Once remade, Skyliners Road will be wider, 34 feet across including across 6-foot-wide bike lanes on each side, he said. Current-

bike lanes, like those found around Bend, span 6 feet. Construction should start

Constructionahead A rebuild of Skyliners Road and an overhaul of the Phil's Trailhead parking lot are set to start April 20 and continue through the summer. Once complete, Skyliners will be wider, with a pair of 6-foot-wide bike lanes, and Phil's Trailhead will have room for 75 to 80 cars or trucks and an new vault toilet.

Roafi constructlon

,9a.

Tumalo Falls

SV'Iu

sr a

I

Tumalo Creek

cost of the Skyliners Road

rebuild is $7.9 million, with a Federal Highway Adminis-

co

NATIONAL FOREST

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

SISTERS

BS BI IBBSL1IB

roundabout By Jasmine Rockow The Bulletin

The design for a multilane highway roundabout in Sisters has been truck-driver tested and approved, resurrecting a plan held in limbo for the past four years. The Oregon Department

of Transportation has been having extensive conversations with the freight industry

about plans to construct a roundabout at the intersection

of Barclay Drive and U.S. Highway 20. The department finally received the green light after testing its design, and the city of Sisters will hold an open house April 16 for

26.

community members to view

it, ask questions and provide feedback. ODOT halted the project in

2011, after hearing concerns from the freight industry about large trucks having difficulty maneuvering through Photos by Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

Portland

Pendle n

Eugene

• On the coast:Sardine fishing likely to be shut down in West,B3 • Eugene:Uberstops services today,B3 • Portland:Oregon's 2014 Teacher of the Year fired,B3 • Pendleton:Prisoners get opportunity to train dogs,Bo

Well shot! Reader photos

Send us your best outdoor photos at bendbulletin.coml readerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include aa much detail aa possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — aa well aa your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print muat be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

the roundabout. It would be the first built on an Oregon

Brody Parker, 10, of Redmond, scoops up some plastic Easter eggs beneath the surface during the underwater egg hunt at Cascade Swim Center in Redmond on Saturday afternoon. The Cascade Swim Center pool was filled with plastic eggs that kids could retrieve

highway in nearly 20 years,

snd return for candy and prizes.

traffic manager, said Friday. Construction would begin

• I(ids in Redmond chase eggsbelow the pool surface

next year. in February at the Deschutes

Nore hunts BEND ELKSEASTEREGG HUNT:Park will be divided

The Bulletin

for age groupsfor ages1-2,

REDMOND — Candy and pool water are, in the words

of Cascade Swim Center aquatics manager Jessica Rowan, "not such a great mix." In a nod to the unsuitabil-

ity of combining chlorine with chocolate, Rowan and her co-workers filled the Redmond pool with empty plastic eggs for Saturday's underwater Easter egg hunt,

Ella Marquis, 8, of Redmond, sits around a pile of Easter eggs she collected with her sister and step-siblings during the underwater egg hunt at Cascade Swim Center.

and more than 50 local kids

took the plunge, whipping the water in the shallow end into a froth in their pursuit of

the colorful treasures. Egg-seekers traded in their finds for a bag of candies, or

Joel McCarroll, an ODOT

To alleviate industry concerns, ODOT tested its design

By Scott Hammers

STATE NEWS

ODOT resumes

long-stalled

The Crook County Sheriff's Office has been continuing to hunt for a Powell Butte woman missing for more than a week. Shauna Fowler, 27, has not beenseensince around10 p.m. March

— Bulletin staff reports

IBII Klosk

Source: Deschutea County, Deschutea National Forest

Search for missing woman

In an email, Undersheriff John Gautney said Saturday his office has employed search dogs and searchers on foot, on horseback and on ATVs throughout the last week, aswell as aerial searches with help from the local Civil Air Patrol. Gautney said searchers were not actively hunting for signs of Fowler on Saturday, but the sheriff's office is continuing to investigate tips received from the public.

•0

46

REDMOND

ivin

Resfleoiita

Phil's Trailhoai oEscFIUTEs

tration grant covering most of it. Deschutes County plans

to pay $815,000 of the cost. SeeConstruction/B2

P hil's Trailhead,", • improverhe@s,

Shevli p

if they found one of 10 "golden eggs" hidden elsewhere Isaac Tickel, 10, of Red-

eggs Saturday. "I like having the golden eggs not in the water, because it'd be pretty obvious if they were," he said.

mond, found one of those

See Easter/B2

around the aquatic center, for

a 10-visit pass to the pool.

3-5, 6-8 and 9-12; 9 a.m.; Juniper Park, 800 NESixth St., Bend; 541-282-4367. GOOD NEWS EASTER HUNT:Children will learn about Jesus' resurrection and find eggs, candy, and prizes; 9:30 a.m.; free; Trinity Lutheran Church, 2550 NE Butler Market Road, Bend; 541-382-1832. THE GREATSUNRIVER RESORTEASTEREGG HUNT:Featuring an egg hunting license, candy, toys andmore;10a.m.;$15; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive, Sunriver; www.sunriver-resort. ticketbud.com.

County Fairgrounds. Eight truck drivers tested the roundabout with a variety of over-

the-road trucks. A second test was conducted in March at Portland Meadows, a horse

racing venue in Portland. SeeRoundabout/B2

To Eugene, Salem

Proposed rouofiahout location

SIS Ca

e

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

YESTERYEAR

Master fish wardenannouncesnewstate fish hatchery in Bendin 1915 Compiled by Don Hoiness

from archived copiesofThe Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending April 4, 1915

To build fish hatchery soon The state fish hatchery

to be established here this spring will be begun within

the next few weeks. This announcement was made by Master Fish Warden Clan-

favorable situation on the Deschutes River making it

selection of a site. With Clyde McKay, district

desirable. The hatchery will be built

an especially desirable site for a hatchery, while the in-

necessary. Announcement

deputy warden, Mr. Clanton spent a large part of the day Saturday going over the tentative sited selected by him when here in January. The choice finally made is the upper end of the Sisemore place

on the unit system, the plan

ton when here on Saturday. Formal approval of the plan is expected from the commission at its meeting tomorrow

of the intention to build here

on the east side of the river.

was madeby Mr. Clanton

According to Mr. Clanton, this will be an ideal situation, the proximity of the irrigation ditch being especially

with Mr. Blanton for the state hatchery at Bonneville where he will observe that

and as soon thereafter as de-

tails can be settled construction will be begun. A fish hatchery at Bend

creasing number of anglers up and down the river and in the nearby lakes have made artificial renewal of the fish

has been under consideration for a number of years

when in Bend last winter and his visit on Saturday was for

past, its central location and

the purpose of making final

being to provide for 500,000 trout the first year, later increasing the capacity to a million. Mr. McKay will

supervise the construction, leaving Saturday night

operation. SeeYesteryear/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "STRATFORD FESTIVAL HD: KING JOHN":Ashowing of the play abouta hedonistic and mercurial king, rebellion, assassination and excommunication, performed at the Stratford Festival; 7 p.m.; $18;Regal Old Mill Stadium16and IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. fathomevents c. om or844-462-7342. MASTERS OF SOUL:Performers pay tribute to the iconic names inthe history of Motor City and Motown; 7:30 p.m.; $30-$45 plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. THE GIVINGTREEBAND:The rock 'n' roll band performs, with The Cerny Brothers; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TODAY

"THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM COUNTY SPELLINGBEE":A musical comedy about a fictional spelling bee set in a geographicallyambiguous Putnam Valley Middle School; 3 p.m.; $22, $19 for students andseniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. METALSUNDAYMATINEE: Featuring Vanquish the King, Existential Depression andGravewitch; 4 p.m.; free; JC's Bar 8 Grill, 642 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/metalmatinee or 541-383-3000. GROUND SCOREWILLIE: The psychedelic jamband performs; 7 p.m.; free; BrokenTopBottle Shop, 1740 NWPenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. THE SWEETWATERSTRINGBAND: The California bluegrass band performs; 7 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre THURSDAY Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or THETALBOTTBROTHERS:The 541-323-1881. rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, MOMDAY 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins. com or541-382-5174. IAMSU!:TheCalifornia hip-hop "THE 25TH ANNUAL PUTNAM artist performs, with RomeFortune, COUNTYSPELLINGBEE": A doors open at 7 p.m.; 8 p.m.; $20 musical comedyaboutafictional plus fees inadvance,$23at the door; spelling beeset in ageographically Domino Room,51 NWGreenwood ambiguous PutnamValley Middle Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19for 800-922-8499. students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., TUESDAY Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. GREEN TEAM MOVIE NIGHT:A film "FOUR BLOODMOONS: about climate change science and SOMETHINGISABOUTTO skeptics, and shows the organizing CHANGE": Afilm based on the book efforts for the international climate about the rally last September; 6:30 p.m.; free; by Pastor John Hagee supernatural connection of certain First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE celestial events to biblical prophecy; Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; RegalOld Mill BEYOND THEWORLD OF Stadium16 and IMAX, 680SW "INTERSTELLAR":Seethe 2014 film Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. with exclusive material and behindc. om or844-462-7342. the-scenes footage; 7 p.m.; $15;Regal fathomevents THE BROTHERS COMATOSE:The Old Mill Stadium 16and IMAX, 680 Americanaandbluegrass band SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. fathomevents .com or844-462-7342. performs, with Marty O'Reilly 8 The Old Soul Orchestra; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees inadvance, $15 atthe WEDNESDAY door; The Belfry, 302 E.MainAve., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or ALBATROSS: The acoustic artist 541-815-9122. performs, with TheQuiet American; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. CALAMITY CUBES: The thrash Francis School,700 NW Bond St., band from Kansasperforms; 8

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.

live music, a silent auction and more to benefit the Waldorf School of Bend; 7 p.m.; $25 perperson; Old Stone Church, 157 NWFranklin Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-330-8841. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRA DANCE: Featuring caller Ric Goldman and live music by theEugeneCity Barnstormers, beginner's workshop at 7p.m.,dance beginsat7:30 p.m.; 7 p.m.; $9; Boys 8 Girls Club of Bend, 500 NWWall St., Bend;

www.bendcontradance.orgor 541-330-8943. "THE LARAMIE PROJECT":A dramatization of the aftermath of the 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard,

who wasbeatenandabandoned on the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming; 7 p.m.; $10 plus fees inadvance, $12 at the door, $5 for students; Submitted photo Redmond High School Auditorium, The Giving Tree Band, a rock 'n' roll band from Illinois perfoms, with The Cerny Brothers, at 8 p.m. 675 SW Rimrock Way,Redmond; Wednesday at Volcanic Theatre Pub. www.redmondhs.seatyourself.biz or 541-610-6248. "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, spring Upper School Traveling School "LYNN HARRELL BACHCELLO 24 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; COUNTYSPELLINGBEE": A to Washington, D.C.; 9a.m.; Cascades SUITES":Featuring ascreening www.silvermoonbrewing.com or musical comedy about afictional Academy,19860 Tumalo Reservoir of cellist Lynn Harrell performing 541-388-8331. spelling beeset in ageographically Road,Bend;www.cascadesacademy. two Bach cello solos on aStradivari ambiguous PutnamValley Middle org or 541-241-4990. instrument made in1713, School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19 for SPRING FESTIVAL: Theweekend FRIDAY nicknamed the "Bass of Spain"; students and seniors; 2nd Street lineup of events includes theArt 7:30 p.m.; $15, $25 for VIP,$10 Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., SPRINGFESTIVAL:The weekend and Wine Bop,Street ChalkArt for students; TheOxford Hotel,10 Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or lineup of events includes theArt Competition, Conscious Living NW Minnesota Ave., Bend;www. 541-312-9626. and Wine Bop,Street Chalk Art Showcase, Spring into FunFamily highdesertchambermusic.org or "MONSIEURLAZHAR": Ashowing Competition, Conscious Living Areaand live music performances; 541-5-306-3988. Showcase, Spring into FunFamily of the 2011 dramaabout an immigrant 11 a.m.; NorthWest Crossing "THE 25THANNUALPUTNAM Area and live music performances; of Algeria taking over aCanadian Neighborhood Center, NW COUNTY SPELLINGBEE": A 5 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing classroom; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Crossing Drive, Bend;www.j.mp/ Neighborhood Center, NW Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SpringFest2015. musical comedyaboutafictional Crossing Drive, Bend;www.j.mp/ SE E St., Madras; 541-475-3351. spelling beeset in ageographically WALKTOCURE DIABETES:A2.4SpringFest2015. ambiguous PutnamValley Middle THE BOOM BOOMS:TheVancouver, mile family-friendly walk to raise School; 7:30 p.m.; $22, $19for "LEE ATAPPOMATTOX":AoneBritish Columbia, indie-soul band awarenessofdiabetes, proceeds students and seniors; 2nd Street man-show set moments before Gen. performs; 9 p.m.; $3; TheAstro benefit diabetes research, check inat Lee's surrender to Gen.Grant in1865, Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; 1 p.m.; 2 p.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 or in celebration of the150th anniversary www.astroloungebend.com Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or SW Columbia St., Bend;www.walk. of the end of theCivil War; 7 p.m.; $23 541-388-0116. 541-312-9626. jdrf.org or 503-643-1995. plus fees, $13for students; Tower JERRYJOSEPHANDTHE KEEGAN SMITH8tTHE FAMILY: KEEPERSOFTHEFAITH QUARTET: Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. JACKMORMONS: The California rock The Southern gospel group performs; The Vancouver, British Columbia, towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. 'n' roll group performs, with Failure indie-soul band performs; 9 p.m.; $5; 6 p.m.donationsaccepted;Redmond "THE LARAMIEPROJECT":A Machine 9 p.m.; $10;Volcanic Theatre Assembly of GodChurch, 1865 W. The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; dramatization of the aftermath of the Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-923-3085. Bend; www.astroloungbend.com or wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 1998 murder of Matthew Shepard, 541-388-0116. JAZZ AT JOE'S,VOL .53:Featuring 541-323-1881. who was beatenandabandoned on The Dave Tull Quartet; 7 p.m.; JERRYJOSEPHANDTHE the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming; $29 plus fees in advance, $15 for JACKMORMONS: The California rock 7 p.m.; $10 plus fees inadvance, SATURDAY students; CascadesTheatre,148 NW 'n' roll group performs, with Miss $12 at the door, $5 for students; Greenwood Ave., Bend;www.jazzjoes. Lonely Hearts; 9 p.m.; $10;Volcanic Redmond High School Auditorium, CASCADESACADEMY RUMMAGE com. SALE:Featuring books, clothes, Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, 675 SW Rimrock Way,Redmond; www.redmondhs.seatyourself.biz or children's toys, sports equipment, THE WALDORFSCHOOL OF BEND Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com 541-610-6248. furniture, and more to benefit the WANDERLUST BALL: Featuring or 541-323-1881.

Construction

ut

g. og

Ifyou go

Contlnued from B1

f

c

T he rebuilt road w il l

What:Public meeting When:7 to 8 p.m. April13 Where:Skyliner Lodge, 16125Skyliners Road Deschutes County, the Deschutes National Forest and theFederal Highway Administration, as well as contractor High Desert Aggregate 8 Paving, plan to provide project details for the rebuild of Skyliners Roadandthe Phil's Trailhead parking lot. For more information, call Paul Akehurst, project engineer for the highway administration, at 541-408-9335.

sit

over the new drinking water pipeline at the heart of Bend's

Bridge Creek water project. The project has been facing legal challenges that delayed replacement of an old pipeline under the road. Also

s t a rting l a t er t h i s

month a n d con t i nuing through summer, construction crews plan to overhaul

the Phil's Trailhead parking lot by improving its surface, make parking spots more apparent and redoing the Forest Service roadlinking it to Sky-

Bulletin archives. In all the lot will have room

outhouse at the trailhead. "I'm sure that will be better

for 75 to 80 cars or trucks, she for folks," Nelson-Dean said. said. The project includes a — Reporter: 541-617-7812, new toilet to replace the old ddariing@bendbulletin.com

liners Road. While Deschutes

National Forestofficials decided not to pave the parking lot, Jean Nelson-Dean, spokes';I

man for the national forest, Joe Kline i The Bulletin

Kids gather their plastlc Easter eggs to removefromthe pool during the underwater egg hunt at Cascade Swim Center in Redmond on Saturday afternoon.

said the revamped lot w i l l

!'tt >'

have "more parking and safer parking." The U.S. Forest Service has

Easter Contlnued from B1 Brody Parker, 10, of Red-

Stepbrothers and sisters haulforthesame bag oftreats and part-time Redmond resi- — Bailey said it was exciting dents Bailey and Owen Smith to gather up abigpile ofeggs. "It's just to have fun, we're and Rylie and Ella Marquis made a planbefore the egg all really competitive," she

mond, said he battled a lot of jostling in the pool, with hunt. Ella, 8, would sit by the his fellow egg-hunters often edge of thepool to guard their coming up straight into him eggs, while the other three following a dive to the bottom.

Nonetheless, he managed to drag 20 to 25 plastic eggs to the edge of thepool, and said if he had it to do over again, he thinks hecould have done even better.

"I would bring shorts with actualpockets,"Brody said.

i

ll

';;," Extra biscoaet on 2015 orders ',' ,'jjjj, for SPring Delivery

a $250,000grantfrom the Federal Highway Administration for Phil's Trailhead and plans to spend about $25,000 as a partial match, according to

saldL

Rowan said the egg huntis always a fun day, but its chaot-

ic nature keeps lifeguards and search of more. others on their toes. "It's good hazing for our Clutching a beach towel stuffed with 40 or moreeggs, staff," Rowan said. "Going Bailey, 13, said the plan had into the summer, when we'll ventured into the water in

been a success.Even though

have 160people in thepool, it's

there was no candybonus for collectingthe most eggs —all

goodpractice forthem.

participants turned in their

'

"Early Bird Speeinl":;,„.;,i„i„,~„„',,' II

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, sltammers@bendbulletin.com

Smile Driv Success! Thantzs to our wonderful community partners who supported the 2015 Smile Drive!

STORES and PHARMACIES

WALMART in Bend and Redmond WALGREENS in Bend and Redmond WESTSIDE Pharmacy inBend

Our successful event raised over 3,600 tools for children's dental health!

E-AID in Bend, Redmond and Prineville SAFEWAY in Bend SL Vincent de Paul in Prineville

Roundabout Contlnued from B1 "(The truck drivers) compared this one as favorable

"Traffic lights can cause accidents, mainly of the rear-end variety. The roundabout design is much safer and effective." — PeterMurphy, ODOT spokesman

to others they have to drive,"

McCarroll said. ODOT spokesman Peter

$360,000 of the bill, which to a traffic light. "Traffic lights can cause co me f r o m t r a n s porwork to do acquiring right- tation system development accidents, mainly of the rearof-way for a bypass that will charges, Murphy said. City end variety," Murphy said Friprovide an alternative route officials deferred to Murphy day. "The roundabout design f or o v ersized t r u ck s t h a t for comments. is much safer and effective." can't make it through the Sisters wanted to build the The only ro u ndabout on roundabout. roundabout when it launched an Oregon state highway is The entire project, in- a seriesof design improve- in Astoria, connecting state cluding e n gineering a n d ments on Cascade Avenue in Highway 202 and U.S. Highconstruction co s ts, c o m e s 2013, according to B u lletin way 101. to about $3.2 million. The archives. Public input at that — Reporter: 541-383-0354, city of Sisterswill pay about time preferred a roundabout jrockow@bendbulletin.com Murphy said there's still some

will

Kemple Clinic fulfills its mission of eliminating pediatric oral disease by providing free dental treatments to at-riskyouth combined with a campaign of education and preventative clinics.

Nemple

M E M 0 R I a t.

Children's DentalClinic www.hempleclinic.org

Anmuctvs

/

TooTHFAIRY + -~e'Pi

Natianal Chilchwes Owl Hcalth %undation

DENTAL PRACTICES

Deschures Pediatric Dentistry Dr/s Steve and Stephanie Christensen Shevlin Dental Center Dr/s David Cauble and Matt Falhenstein Clarh Family Dentistry Dr. Ed Clarh

Shyline Dental Dr/s Medhi Salari, l<aren Coe, Zach Porter Distinctive Dentisty Dr. 1<elley Mingtjs Bichler-West Orthodontics Dr/s James Bichler and James West



B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTIt ES Doris Clair Dix, of Redmond

Dorothy E. Hufnagel, of Bend

June 14, 1933 - Mar. 31, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

May 3, 1925 - Mar. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private family services will be held at a later date.

lsabell Mae Hansen, of Bend

to:

Central Oregon Council on Aging Dial-A-Ride Program, 373 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend, OR 97701.

Sept. 22, 1924 - April 1, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will be at a later date. Contributions may be made

Ronald "Ron" Kay Ames, of Redmond Feb. 2, 1952 - April 2, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made

to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

to:

Ronald L. DeVine

The Leukemia 8

June12,1939- March 27, 2015

Donor Services, P.O. Box 4072, Pittsfield, MA 01202, www.lls.org

Ronald L. DeVine, 75, of B end passed away M a r ch 2 7, 2015 after a l o n g i l l ness. Ronald was born June 12, 1 939 to M a r vi n an d D o r -

Lymphoma Society

Melody Ann Sechrist, of Redmond

othy (Negus) DeVine.

Mar. 31, 1954 - Mar. 27, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please

Ronald ear ned a bachelor's degree in criminal justice. He s erved i n th e U ni t e d States Air Force and was a D eputy S h e riff f o r De s chutes County. He r etired in 1994.

sign our guest book at

www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: At Melody's request she wanted no service. Contributionsmay be made to: Partner's In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97756 541-389-3910.

Ronald married Peggy S.

Debra Lynn Cronen March 23,1951 -March 23, 2015 D ebra L yn n Cr on e n p assed a wa y o n M ar c h 2 3rd, 2015 f r o m n a t u r a l causes. She was 64 y ears old. Debra was born in L akev iew, O r egon to K eith a n d Phyllis Harris. H er f a m ily m ov ed to Bend in 1953 where she attended Debra Cronen n ior H i g h School. In 1968 she married Gary Cronen. T h e y h ad tw o b eautiful c h i l d re n L i b b y and J e r r y w hom she a dored. She e n j oyed h e r family and trips to the Oregon Coast. Debra is survived by her mother, Phyllis Harris; her sisters, Camilla Greth and Laura Fishel; her daughter, Libby C r onen; son, J erry C ronen; an d f i v e g r a n d c hildren: Ju s t i n , Zac k , M iah, C h a se, a n d K i m berly. A memorial service will be held A p ri l 1 1 a t 1 1 :00 a.m. in S alem, Oregon at St. T i m o t h y' s E p i s copal C hurch, 3295 L ad d L a n e NE Salem, Oregon.

4$P

+

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In 1987, Adweek magazine dedared him "America's most Rudolph Perz, an advertising loved character." executive who pondered a soulPerz, who lived in Glenview, less, squishy, cylindrical mix- Illinois, was the creative directure of flour and water on his tor of the Leo Burnett agency kitchen table 50 years ago and in Chicago when he imagined conjured up the genial Ms- a blue-eyed Poppin' Fresh bury Doughboy, died Thursday springing from atube of dough, in a suburban Chicago hospital. like a f a st-forward version He was 89. of evolution from primordial The cause was cardiac ar- ingredients. rest, his daughter Martha Nora To distinguish him from a sald. plumper incarnation of Casper The pudgy Pillsbury mas- the Friendly Ghost in cartoon cot, known as Poppin' Fresh, illustrations, the Doughboy bebecame instantly recognized came a three-dimensional clay as the symbol of the company's figure designed by Milt Schafline of refrigerated biscuit, roll fer, an animator. "We made two and cookie dough that popped Doughboys," Perz said in an out of a cardboard tube. interview in 1972. "One was a He made his debut in a 1965 rubber Doughboy with an arcommercial for crescent rolls. mature inside, and you could Within three years the figure, move his arms a little bit at a sporting a kerchief and toque time. And the other was a hard and always tickled by a signa- Doughboy." ture tummy poke, claimed an The hard version had many 87 percentbrand recognition heads carved with different among American consumers. expressions, "and you shiftThat was enough to immortal- ed the head or you shifted the ize it in the pantheon of other body," Perz said. The tummy anthropomorphic hucksters, poke, he said, was shot using induding the Jolly Green Giant, a frame-by-frame stop-motion Tony the Tiger and Morris the technique. "Then whenyou ran Cat. them together it looked very Since then, the Dough- pliable." boy has rescued cooks both General Mills, Pillsbury's fledgling and overwhelmed, parent, said the first Doughspawned dolls and play sets, boy television commercial reand joined the cast of giant bal- quired five bodies and 15 heads loons in the Macy's Thanksgiv- and cost $16,000 to make. ing Day Parade. Thirty seconds of Poppin' New York Times News Service

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary

gie) Negus; six grandchil-

dren, five great-grandchildren. He was preceded in d eath by hi s m o ther D o r o thy H o r t on, f a t her M a r vin De V i n e , ste p f a ther Virbil H o r t on , s t e pfather Orin Bowman. M emorial S e r v i ces w i l l b e held a t a l a t e r d a t e . Contribution s may be made to St . C h arles Hos-

policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

Mail:Obituaries

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com

Autumn F u n erals, B end w as honored to serve th e family . 54 1- 38 2 -0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Fax: 541-322-7254

P.O. Box 6020

Bend, OR97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE William D. Enyart

Deaths ofnote from around

April 28, 1947 - March 17, 2015

the world:

Robert Burns Jr., 64:Founding drummer of Lynyrd Skynyrd,the Southern rock band

known for the power ballad "Free Bird" and the anthem

"Sweet Home Alabama." Died Friday in an automobile crash in Georgia. Andrew Porter, 86: Music critic celebrated for his stylistic elegance, immense erudition and polymathic command. Died Thursday night or early Friday in London. — From wire reports

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Oregon State University College Football Hall of Fame player, William "Bill" D. Enyart, died of cancer, Tuesday, February 10, 2015 in Turner, OR at the home of his mother, Betty Enyart Harty. Bill was born in Pawhuska, OK on April 28, 1947. • His family moved to Hood River, OR in 1958 when hewas 11years old • and then relocated to Medford, OR in 1961 where Bill attended high school. As a sophomore Bill helped lead the Medford Black Tornado football team to a State Title in 1962. He was an outstanding baseball player and received All-State honors in both football and basketball during his high school career. Colleges from across the nation recruited Bill, but he chose to stay in-state and attend Oregon State University. He proved to be an outstanding student athlete, achieving All-America status in both athletics and academics. During his time as a Beaver at OSU, he was the fullback of the legendary "Giant Killer" football team andset single game records for both rushing yards andnumber of carries by a player that still stand to this day, 48 years later.

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After graduating from Oregon State, Bill was drafted in 1969 by the Buffalo Bills and was the 27th overall pick in the draft that year. He played two seasons for the Bills and was then traded to the Oakland Raiders in 1971. In his first year with the Raiders, during an exhibition game against the New York Jets, he sustained a career ending knee injury. Following his football career, Bill moved to Bend where he lived and worked for the next 30 years. He married JoAnn Slechta and together they had two children, Benjamin and Elizabeth. He had a long-time career working for the State of Oregon. He genuinely loved Oregon and the outdoors. In 2011, Bill "Earthquake" Enyart was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in NewYork City, and was proud to share this honor with his teammates and Oregon State University. He will be missed.

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Spencer Kling Giesea, 44, of Klamath County, passed away from hypothermia on Quartz Mt. in Lake County, Oregon. He had been missing since February 14th and his dog Angel remained by his ' side for 31 days until his body was found. Spencer was born with his twin, Heather, in San Rafael, California . ' on August12, 1970to John and Roberta Giesea. After graduating from high school in Stamford, CT and attending the University of Northern Colorado, he traded stocks on Wall Street before movingto Sonoma County in 2000.With blue eyes and endless smiles, Spencer enjoyed canoeing, travel, dogs, genealogy, and photography. He brought a sense of warmth and beauty wherever he went. He is survived by his wife, Helena as well as his parents, step parents, five siblings, four nieces, three nephews and beloved ' dogs Bella and Angel. A graveside service will be held at 3 pm April 11th at the New Pine Creek Cemetery in Lakeview, Oregon ' ., followed by a reception at Hunter's Hot Springs Resort. In lieu of . flowers, contributions can be made to the National Alliance on Mental lllness at Nami.org or the Lakeview Sheriff's department who conducted a valiant search and rescue effort.

Bill is survived by his two children, a son, Ben, of Bend, OR, daughter, a Eliza Groff, of Okinawa, Japan, his mother, Betty Enyart Harty of Turner, g OR, his two sisters, Jodi Hines and Marcia Schuh, and the mother of his children, former wife, JoAnn Grant. A memorial celebrating Bill's life will be held at Reser Stadium (Club Level) on the campus of Oregon State University on Saturday, April 11, 2015 at 3pm. Medford and OSU teammates, family and friends will be participating. Attendees areencouraged to wear orange &black gameday attire. The family is requesting that in lieu of flowers, donations be directed to the Oregon State University Athletic Department's "Beavers Without Borders" Fund with checks made payable to the OSU Foundation, noting Enyart memorial gift and sent to 850 SW35th Street, Corvallis, OR 97333. Memorial donations in Bill's name mayalso be taken over the phone by calling Our Beaver Nation at 541-737-2370.

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Fresh on camera required 720 Martha, he is survived by anphotographs. other daughter, Laura Matlin, Rudolph Robert Perz was and sixgrandchildren. Poppin' Fresh has appeared born in Chicago on Dec. 6, 1925, to immigrants from what

in more than 600 commercials;

became Yugoslavia. His father, in the most recent, he wears also named Rudolph, was a jeans. Perz's work will be featured

carpenter. His mother was the

formerLucy Opperman. He graduated from the University of Illinois in Chicago. His wife, the former Lois Wagberg, died in 1971. In addition to

in "A Salute to Advertising's Greatest Icons," an exhibition

opening in May at the Chicago Museum of Broadcast Communications.

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September 3, 1928 —March 19, 2015 Mary Elizabeth "Polly" Hewitt departed this life March 19, 2015 in Austin, Texas. She was determined to defeat cancer to the very end. She was 86 years old.

Mary Elizabeth was born to Arthur and Pleasant Higbee in Chicago, Illinois and grew up in Detroit, graduating from the University of; Michigan where she met the love of her life, Richard M. Hewitt. They • .' married February 2, 1951. A creative and loving homemaker and . mother of three children, she moved with her family from Illinois to : Central Oregon in 1968 where she began her career as a teacher of: ; English and Mythology in Redmond High School. A member of P.E.O. : for more than fifty years, she pursued her interests in gardening, bridge, ; reading, walking, traveling the world, being with her family and her : many friends. Polly will always be remembered for her incredible : generosity, unwavering optimism and her engaging interest in other . people. : She is survived by Richard, her husband of 64 years, and her three children, Barbara (and George) Tate of Redmond, Marshall (and : Kristy) of Portland, and Jason (and Anne) of Austin, Texas; her ; three granddaughters,Maddy, Audrey and Emily; her brother, : Arthur (and Alice) of Paris, France, and sister, Jane (and Hal) Sager : of Tucson, AZ, as well as numerous loving nieces and nephews. : A Celebration foLife for Polly will be held June21 from 3 to 5pm at the Unitarian Universalists Fellowship in Bend.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

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BySamRoberts

B arbeau, F e b r u ar y 14 , 1987 in Sisters, Oregon. He loved hunting, fishing, c amping and t r i p s t o t h e Oregon coast. Ronald is survived by his wife, Peggy of B e nd , son Rodney M e l i nda) DeVine, stepson N a t ha n ( D e b bie) Barbeau, daughter Michelle (Bryan) H a nson, s ister D e b o r a h (Cu r t i s ) G uerin, brother L yl e ( A n -

k

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He created the famousPillsbury Doughboy

; In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may b~esent to PE.O. Program of ContinuingEducation, P.E.O. Executive 0'ffi ce,3700 Grand Ave., Des Moines, IA 50312.

ThomasLangdonOblizalo - Tom"0" Feb. 22, I94T — March 26, 20l5 Husband, father, grandfather, son and brother, Thomas Langdon Oblizalo, fondly known as, "Tom "0," died March 26, 2015 after a swift battle with cancer. With a zest for life and a love for the outdoors, Tom worked and played hard, enjoying every moment. Many, after spending time with him, were challenged to focus on what is really important,"not sweat the small stuff", and to be thankful for what we have, even when it doesn't look how we thought it might. Tom was born and grew up in Seattle, Washington. He was the second child of Nicholas and Katherine Oblizalo. As a child, Tom was very inquisitive, researching, learning and figuring out how things work. His natural curiosity and intelligence continued into his young adult years, where he discovered a love for woodworking. He built two homes, one in Fall City, Washington and one in Cave Junction, Oregon. One of the homeswas built using only hand tools; splitting logs into lumber and shingles. With the help of his trusty I944 "Green Eddie" Chevrolet ton 6 a half WWII dump truck, he used unique materials to creatively finish his hand-built home. Tom moved to Bend in 1981. He worked for Sun Forest Construction in customer service for many years. For the past I5 years he has beenTom 0 Handyman Services,a business he loved and put his heart and soul into. He loved the challenge of remodels and unique, custom projects. His honesty, integrity and "keeping it real" style created an enduring legacy that inspired many.

In his spare time, he loved to downhill ski and road bike. He formed many special friendships with his "bike and ski buddies," who he did many memorable adventures with through the years. Tom lived for "freshies" and was happiest up on the mountain. He loved his garden and his self-made waterfall and pond and put his creative talents to work, making a beautiful landscape for all to enjoy. Each December, along with his wife and daughter, he would lovingly make his famous Christmas cookies, sharing them with friends and family. Through his love of coffee and friendship, Tom met his best friend, wife and soul mate, Judy. They were the wind beneath each other's sails, sharing many interests and bringing comfort to anyone who was lucky enough to spend time with them as a couple. Tom gave his two daughters, Zephyr and Mara, his unconditional love. He taught them many important life skills and instilled selfconfidence and values of honesty and hard work. He was their greatest cheerleader and his deep commitment to them formed a bond that will never be broken. Tom loved his four grandchildren and enjoyed spending time with them, making memories that they will hold dear. During Tom's last few weeks of life, he made the choice to see the silver lining, embarking on a journey of wonderful memories, good times shared, enjoying days with loved ones, inspiring many with his strength, dignity and peaceful spirit. "Threads" were woven during this special gift of time, threads that have made these days the best ofhis and his loved ones' lives. He truly won the battle of life, living life to the fullest and sharing his amazing smile with everyone he knew. Tom is survived by his wife, Judy, his daughters Zephyr (Oblizalo) Kamph and Mara(OblizaloJ Stephens; sons-in-law Benjy Kamph and Brian Stephens; and his grandchildren, Bryson, Moriah, Kehian, and Finlee. He is preceded in death by his parents Nicholas and Katherine Oblizalo and his sister, Susan Oblizalo Pipo. His family would like to thank Partners In Care Hospice for their compassionate and loving care. We are thankful to the many who provided food, flowers, care for the grandchildren, and blanketed us in thoughts and prayers during this time. A celebration of life will be held Wednesday, July 22, 3-8pm in Tom and Judy's garden. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Partners In Care, Tour des Chutes, or Bank of the Cascades, Judy Meier.


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B5

re onwomenvowe notto e oor,o, aone By Mark Baker

linedance,"Weaver said.

just qualified for Section 8, low-income housing.

EUGENE — The first pho-

"Sing!" Snyder said. This all began one day

to album in Susan Connolly's

in the winter of 1985, when

Health and Human Services

top-floor apartment in down-

Weaver and Snyder were having coffee at the Oregon

report on older Americans

town Eugene is labeled "The BLOWS ¹I — 1985-1989." Close to the front is a group

Electric Station after seeing the movie "Starman," starring

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

A 2012 U.S. Department of

photograph of a dozen or so Jeff Bridges. "I never heard that story," 30-something women — ti-

says that in 2011, the median income for older men was $27,707, while for older women it was just $15,362. So when the Bag Ladies of

tled "1st Gathering!" — taken

the World began those month-

said Evans, a retired attorney

on April 28, 1985, in the back- who joined the group in 1986, ly potlucks at group members' yard ofEllen Weaver'sformer sitting Thursday in the apart- homes three decades ago, home on West 12th Avenue. ment that Connolly shares theybegan collecting $2 dues. Meet the Bag Ladies of the with her husband, Dan Solitz, Why? World, whose acronym is, yes, on the 13th floor of the WillaSo they could one day afBLOW. mette Towers complex on Lin- ford a "BLOW house," of " Mostly, we're still o u r coln Street. course, where they all could "This is the story!" said- live and g r o w w r i nkled same selves," said Martha Evans, 70. Weaver, 68, a s e veryone together. "Grayer," said Martha Sny- shares another giggle. But they h aven't exactly "I mean, you think it's a raised enough money to pull der, 71. "And floppier." They all burst into laughter. joke," she says. "And then it it off .They do have $25,000 They do this often. becomes not a joke." to $30,000, though, which If being Bag Ladies hasn't Sure, it was just a joke that they've divvied up among kept them young, it's kept day at the restaurant in 1985, three funds, including a "lifethem young at heart. when Snyder, responding boat" fund that members can They first came together to Weaver's concern about access if in need. 30 years ago this month to their economic futures, said, In the past couple of years, support one another, through "We could all be bag ladies the group has come togethmarriages an d d i v orces,together." er to support member Debra births and deaths, vowingthat A few months later, there Nunez, whose husband, local they would never let each oth- t hey were at t h e h ome of activist David Oaks, fell and er grow old, poor and alone, Weaver, then a granola-maker broke his neck in December never let a single one become at Wildtime Foods in Eugene. 2012, causing paralysis from a "bag lady on the street." Weaver since has mar- the chest down. "It's very, very hard, beT his weekend, 12 of t h e ried and divorced, and has original 13 members (nine no mortgage of her own. She cause they're both in need of still live in Eugene) will cel- splits time between renting support," Snyder said. "Some people have had ebrate with a retreat up the a room in a friend's condo in M cKenzie River atW ayfarer's Eugene, and staying in South health problems, and we've Resort in Vida. Carolina and Olympia, Wash- been able to provide for that," Call it another "BLOW out," ington, where her children added Connolly. because they do. and grandchildren live. Member Catherine Cascade "I'm a minimalist," she said. has pneumonia right now and One of the "founding mothers," Olive Bowers, is even These women have been will miss the trip up the river coming all the way from New- lawyers, schoolteachers, en- this week. "We're really lucky with castle, England, where she trepreneurs and struggling moved a few years back. artists. They have been mar- our collective health," Evans And what will they do up ried, divorced, single, gay and said. "We made a pactwith each there? straight. Some are or have "Eat," someone said. been affluent,some have other, that if w e w ere sick, "Laugh," another said. come close to dipping below we'd tell our 'health buddy,'" "Drink," yet another said. the poverty line. said Anita Engiles, 68, anoth"Maybe line dance, if I can Snyder, a sculptor and local er "founding mother." teach these people a simple museum volunteer, said she Evans wondered who her

Yesteryear Continued from B1

Playgrounds prepared A dditional

fu nds

hav -

ing been voted for the play grounds by the Parent-Teacher Association at its meeting on Thursday. The work is going forward and the grounds will soon be in condition for use. The Wall Street lot has

ing a restroom. The meeting also listened to an interesting

)

Photos by Andy Nelson/The (Eugene) Register-Guard

Five of the original 13 Bag Ladies of the World, from left, Anita Engiles, Martha Snyder, Ellen Weaver,

MarthaEvans and Susan ConnollygatheratConnolly'shome in Eugene onThursday. "health buddy" is. "You d on't

h a v e o n e ?"

Weaver said. Evans started laughing again. "I'll just be on the floor (dying)!" The Bag Ladies' goal from here on out? "Stay together," Snyder

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sald.

'/

"I think our goal is still just to support each other," said. Connolly, also an attorney.

"We're glad that no one has dropped out!" Evans said, as "We're still there for each

other," Weaver said.

"I have a new boyfriend," Evans said. "She fell in love at the Coun- Bag Ladies of the World memberSusanConnolly has been collecttry Fair," Connolly whispered. ing pictures and memorabilia of the group including photos from "She's one of the 'Big Girls' the first anniversary of the group, lower left, and the last time the now." entire group wastogether in 2013, upper right.

may tomorrow, be kind to him.

is that the president should

It isn't his fault that he will

be prepared to send 350,000

On this 173-acre section of wildlife needs in the area," said the experimental forest about Forest Service Silviculturist 25 miles southwest of Bend the Gladys Biglor. "You will be able Forest Service is re-creating to see 250-year-old trees that the look of the natural forest by are living legends of the 1800s." dearing the young lodgepole The smaller trees grew up and ponderosa pines that have amid the pine stands here grown up under the boughs because naturally occurring of the taller old-growth pines, forest fires, which once swept most of which are 200 to 350 through the pine forests evyears old. ery eight to 10 years, have All the lodgepoles will be been suppressed by man. The removed except a few small natural fires killed off brush, dumps that will be left for wild- small plants and young seedlife cover and scenery. Pon- lings, but never burned hot derosa pines less than seven or high enough to reach the inches in diameter also will be lofty crowns of the old-growth removed. pines. "All the big trees will be left To mimic the effects of nat-

If he wants to know whether

to order a mobilization of re-

if you make a clean breast of it, the enumerator won't come

50 YEARSAGO For the week ending

pointwhere we mayhaveto

sendin ourlandarmies, by

For the week ending April 4, 1940

Walter Uppman

Goering boasts of Nazi

reached the point where the

The war i n

V i etnam has

president is wrestling with mo-

Bend'swater pageant to have newlook

visers. The crucial fact today is

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t

B esides maintaining

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ety show format, according to Hugh McNair and Bill Hatch

to Central Oregon Forest Ser-

vice Ecologist Bill Hopkins. "There needs to be some kind of a demonstration place

for people to come and look," Biglor said. "People can come here and see how an oldgrowth forest would have looked."

/

/

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t

4 •

Jr., co-chairmen.

25 YEARSAGO For the week ending

Re-creating a forest It's been 70 years since loggers punched the first railroad lines into Central Oregon's vir-

gin ponderosa pine stands and began shipping the big trees to local mills. Over those decades, the region's forests have lost the open, park-like character that

help of American munitions, the first frontiersmen found, to Germany is determined to put money and 25,000 military ad- be replaced by thick stands of small second-growth trees.

that for all practical purposes But now the U.S. Forest Seras Britain announced a new the Saigon government has lost vice is planning to put part of attempt to strangle the Nazi control of the countryside and the Pringle Falls Experimental Reich by closing its supply ar- its followers are increasingly Forest back in its original state, teries, Goering said, "We are holed-up in the cities. clearing away second growth not weakened as the result of The roads and the railroads and setting occasional fires to the Polish campaign but we connecting the cities have been mimic the natural blazes that are stronger. cut by the Viet Cong. The cities clearedbrush from the forest "With their back and their nowhave tobe supplied ingreat floor. flanks free, the great German measure by air and by sea. This This "turn-of-the-century"

Addressing German youth

a rmed forces on l and a n d water and in the air stand as

condition of affairs has been

forest — as the service calls

a closed iron block against

well reported by Richard Dud- it — will give visitors a taste of man in a series of reports to the the Central Oregon landscape

B ritain and F r ance i n t h e

St. Louis Post Dispatch, and his

of the 1800s according to David

west. Here the decisive blow must fall. For this decision

findings are confirmed in all Frewing, operations managessentials, though not yet pub- er for the experimental forest the Fuhrer has mobilized all licly, in the well informed quar- portion of the Bend-based Depowers." ters in Washington. schutes National Forest. "It's going to be a little bit of "As we won one victory so The surest evidence that •

will we when the time comes, will that German determina-

tion shall put an end to the war

Dudman's reports are substantially correct is that in the

a shock to people to see what it

was like," Frewing says. "Most Pentagon and the State De- people are used to seeing a lot partment there is m ounting of vegetation on the ground,

the

open character of the historic forest, clearing off the undergrowth with low-burning fires will allow scientists to study natural pine stands, according

spectacular will have a vari-

the official theory of the war as

an end to the war."

r

forest every eight years, beginning in the late 1990s.

Bend's Water Pageant will have a new look this year. The 25th edition of the river

b lock" against Britain a n d France in the west, will win the

South Vietnam even with the

r

"turn-of-the-century"

in the

superiority.

mentous and fateful decisions. Aprtl 4, 1990 For what has happened is that

strike against the allies when the time comes "to show that

ural fires, the Forest Service plans to set small ground fires

to meet the visual quality and

rilla war has ever been subdued with such a low ratio of

Germany's armed f orces standing as "a closed iron

propounded by General Maxwar and theGerman people well Taylor to president Kennewill become "once again" the dy and by Defense Secretary greatest people on earth, Field Robert McNamara to presiMarshal Hermann Goering, dent Johnson, has proved to be Nazi No. 2, proclaimed today. unworkable. As Germany struck in PoThe government of Saigon land, Goering said, so will it has not been able to pacify

"s l

r

more laughter ensues.

and there really wasn't much.

ask questions which you may American s oldiers, e v en think are none of his business. though this would compel him

(

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to Southeast Asia of American infantry. The current estimate

Vietnamwar hasreached

might

t

pressure for the commitment

talkby Mrs.J.W. Norris of Ore- April 4, 1965 gon on club work.

75 YEARS AGO

'1

When the census enumerator visits your home, as he

McKay and Mrs. T.H. Foley, back for another tenyears. was appointed to confer with the Commercial Club concern-

'}p~: — 5'

Come clean (editorial)

you have running water, reas- serves and draftees. sure him. If he inquires about This call fo r A m erican electric lights, turn them on. ground forces is the logical and If a query is put as to whether inevitable consequence of the you have a bathtub, admit it virtual collapse of the Saigon been fenced and benches and without hesitation or equivo- government in the villages. play apparatus put in while cation. Then tell him frankly Having lost the countryside, the Wiestoria playground has and forthrightly that you use Saigon has lost the sources of been prepared for use and the it. A demonstration need not be military manpower. This delumber for benches ordered. given. prives it of the means of winArrangements will be made Some of the things you will ning the war. The official estito have some one in charge of be required to go into may mate today is that the Saigon the Wall Street play ground seem a bit personal, but what governmentcommands forces fortwo hours every afternoon of it? You've probably told most superior to the Viet Cong by during the summer. of them, at one time or another, a ratio of not quite five to one. At Thursday's meeting a to lots of people. And besides Experience shows that no guercommittee consisting of Mrs. H.H. De Armond, Mrs. C.M.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided by ACCU Weather, lnc. ©2015

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TODAY

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TONIGHT

HIGH 43' Chilly with periods of snow and rain

I f' I

ALMANAC

i

MONDAY "'" 44'

LOW 23'

o

TUESDAY

27'

Mostly cloudy with snow showers, 1-3"

WED NESDAY

"'"

46' 27'

I,

Cloudy and chilly with a couple of showers

Mostly cloudy andchilly

50' 25'

i

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

SKI REPORT In inches ss ot 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base 0 43-S S Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 1 31-7 0 2 2S-4 5 Timberline Lodge Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 44-71 Park City Mountain, UT 0 49-49 Source: ouThsSnuw.cum

* isiparck )

5

Blulugs 52/32 P

M qe

5 37: *

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the stairs and coaxed her up

Hi/Lo/W 88/67/pc 62/49/c 56/40/sh 75/44/s 46/36/r 69/61/1 59/51/s 79/64/pc 70/51/s 46/30/sh 71/62/r 41/24/sh 56/36/sh 46/39/sh 51/45/c 52/37/sh 42/31/sn 34/10/c 78/63/1 70/58/1 69/61/r 67/33/s 61/45/c 62/55/t 61/51/sh 74/38/s 71/60/1 75/62/t 72/59/t 63/54/c 46/33/sh 79/69/pc 80/66/sh 63/54/c 72/39/pc 69/52/t 60/46/c 38/27/c 84/57/s 46/29/pc 49/31/sh 59/30/s 59/40/c 41/35/sh 70/57/1 68/49/s 58/43/c 42/23/sh 82/70/t 84/68/pc 69/61/r 61/55/c 80/64/r 80/62/t

50/38/s 62/57/c 71/59/sh 83/58/s 96/80/s 63/39/s 69/59/s 50/32/pc 66/49/r 51/31/pc 76/53/s 89/64/s 79/60/s 37/21/c 86/71/s 54/39/pc 59/39/pc 48/31/pc 78/60/1 83/74/pc 58/50/c 67/51/s 74/51/pc 80/67/pc 71/53/s 55/40/pc 71/43/s 90/78/t

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 52/31/0.02 50/35/pc 47/39/c 62/29/0.00 65/50/pc 73/58/t 51/21/0.00 54/35/sh 60/40/c 82/49/0.00 79/54/s 73/51/s 54/35/0.00 66/47/s 64/56/1 67/32/0.00 73/46/s 76/46/1 64/43/0.00 61/54/r 78/64/sh 84/59/0.00 71/53/pc 66/53/s 57/38/0.00 68/50/pc 65/59/1 59/27/0.00 61/36/pc 57/38/c 64/45/0.00 68/56/r 76/65/1 85/70/0.00 84P2/pc 8393/pc 58/23/0.00 55/37/c 50/39/c 52/32/0.00 52/37/c 44/35/r 61/41/0.00 69/51/pc 69/60/1 73/59/Tr 77/69/1 8390/sh 51/47/0.01 60/45/pc 65/50/pc 57/49/Tr 60/41/pc 67/50/pc

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litus Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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

68/56/Tr 66/39/0.00 67/33/0.00 87/63/0.00 89/59/0.00 63/26/0.00

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Psoris Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Rsnu Richmond Rochester, NY

50/36/c 67/53/pc 73/62/pc 87/59/s 98/81/pc 57/35/c 72/60/s 48/31/pc 67/49/r 50/34/sh 70/57/s 90/67/s 84/63/s 35/22/c 86/73/s 58/39/pc 60/41/pc 51/31/s 78/60/1 84/73/r 63/46/pc 73/53/s 75/53/s 80/68/c 66/56/sh 60/40/pc 66/45/pc 93/77/t

1

65/48/s 71/55/s 64/56/1 85/65/pc 72/47/s 71/50/1 83/67/pc 87/67/pc 85/56/s 78/51/s 67/47/s 67/55/1

58/51/Tr 63/45/pc 68/53/s 89/62/0.00 89/61/s 84/58/s 48/33/0.20 61/39/pc 64/50/pc 49/42/0.17 45/30/pc 43/35/sn 55/43/0.01 53/36/pc 54/40/c 73/57/0.00 67/47/s 74/58/s 62/22/0.00 62/29/c 52/30/pc

67/35/0.00 68/59/Tr 42/34/0.11 Sacramento 73/45/0.00 St. Louis 63/32/0.00 Salt Lake City 68/39/0.00 Ssn Antonio 68/59/0.00 San Diego 76/59/0.00 Sau Francisco 63/50/0.00 San Joss 66/41/0.00 Santa re 64/32/0.00 Savannah 81/64/0.00 Seattle 55/39/0.00 Sioux Falls 67/26/0.00 Spokane 51/34/0.00 Springfield, Mo 60/28/0.00 Tampa 82/67/0.00 Tucson 88/55/0.00 Tulsa 65/33/0.00 Washington, DC 68/55/0.05 Wichita 65/25/0.00 Yskims 61/26/0.00 Yuma 89/59/0.00 i

Amsterdam Athens

O

53/31/c 55/37/c 69/46/s 75/57/s 41/34/sn 50/36/sh 60/40/sh 66/48/c 67/51/pc 71/62/c 69/43/c 58/39/sh 76/65/c 80/66/pc 69/60/pc 66/57/pc 61/48/sh 65/51/c 59/43/sh 61/49/c 71/34/s 70/36/pc 73/60/s 77/63/1 56/42/c 56/43/sh 67/37/pc 53/36/c 53/35/c 48/33/c 58/48/c 74/61/1 8600/pc 8590/s 88/51/s 85/51/s 61/54/1 78/66/t 69/50/s 72/58/s 67/51/pc 85/57/pc 56/33/pc 61/36/c 87/57/s 81/53/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

100/75/0.00 102/75/s 77/57/0.00 77/52/pc Montreal 41/23/0.20 34/22/st Moscow 41/32/0.04 41/30/c Nairobi 79/61/0.29 79/60/1 Nassau 84/69/0.00 83/70/s New Delhi 77/64/0.14 85/64/pc Osaka 73/57/0.28 69/58/r Oslo 43/27/0.00 46/36/c Ottawa 34/25/0.10 35/22/pc Paris 50/46/0.08 51/34/pc Rio de Janeiro 84/69/0.00 87/75/pc Rome 61/48/0.41 57/43/sh Santiago 81/52/0.00 84/52/s Sau Paulo 82/66/0.00 81/63/1 Sapporu 55/39/0.00 51/45/r Seoul 64/44/0.05 56/43/sh Shanghai 68/57/0.26 65/53/1 Singapore 88/79/0.02 90/80/1 Stockholm 41/32/0.15 41/29/r Sydney 67/63/0.75 74/60/pc Taipei 89/73/0.00 87/74/s Tel Aviv 69/55/0.01 71/58/s Tokyo 54/53/0.14 60/54/r Toronto 41/30/0.02 39/29/si Vancouver 54/37/Tr 55/39/c Vienna 50/27/0.00 47/32/pc Warsaw 45/30/0.16 45/32/sh

103/77/s 78/51/pc 41/29/pc 42/29/pc 81/60/r 83/71/s 88/65/pc 66/50/r 49/40/c 41/30/pc 54/35/s 82/72/r 58/40/s 81/52/s 73/61/pc 54/40/r 55/36/c 57/45/r 91/79/t 48/36/c 77/59/r 85/67/sh 74/57/s 70/53/c 44/32/sh 55/38/pc 46/34/sh 45/32/r

' ' IPTLPP.

nma es rain 0 Sin as ern re on rison By Kathy Aney

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ronto /29

48/37/0.57 4s, to Boston 59/50/0.00 m uke da/2 /35 Auckland 66/57/0.05 w York Baghdad 88/58/0.00 k CiW Che u 1/48 Bangkok 98/79/0.00 /tsI 65/3 gadetphis Beijing 64/46/0.00 lcag eo/35 Des M Ines C 6 41 oco /45 Beirut 68/60/0.00 CISCO Omah 71/4tr Oma Berlin 49/32/0.08 et/48 6 42 ington Dimve Lav V ss 69 Bogota 66/52/0.42 Loul 72/41 79/5 Kansas Ctty St. u Budapest 50/23/0.00 * 66/SO 65/so 67/ Buenos Ai r es 82/61/0.02 • svbvtt Chsrt Los An lm Csbo SsnLucss 84/66/0.00 * 69/5 1/53 • vww+++ ' Cairo 73/59/0.00 Phoen M,t 'matb ~ v e 4 *„ * Anch o rage *„ Atbuque ue • At Calgary 41/19/0.07 • 89/51 • ~ 24/3 n 4 76/45 * 59/51 Cancun 86/66/0.00 ujr ihuhs 6 /eo <va h * tuumu al Ps Dublin 59/43/0.00 71/ 5 6/5 Edinburgh 57/36/0.00 sd/35 Geneva 50/43/0.35 Harsre 78/55/0.21 < < k X X 5/67 w Orleans Hong Kong 82/76/0.02 Honolulu 77/69 Chlhushusyyyyy ~~ ' I Istanbul 50/41/0.00 83/70 'e" se/57 wg Mismi ' Jerusalem 62/49/0.01 y'' 84/Ttt,- 'z . 8 Johannesburg 70/59/0.36 6 Lima 79/68/0.00 Lisbon 81/55/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 50/46/Tr T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 72/46/0.00 Manila 91/77/0.00 N ~N~ N •

27

Sunny

Yesterday Today Monday

City Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W Abilene 68/44/Tr 77/62/t Akron 48/32/0.05 60/40/pc Albany 45/40/0.36 44/33/pc Albuquerque 68/40/0.00 76/45/s Anchorage 44/27/0.00 44/35/pc Atlanta 68/52/0.34 69/51/s Atlantic City 56/48/0.04 55/45/pc Austin 68/56/0.00 72/63/c Baltimore 57/50/0.01 65/43/s Billings 58/28/0.00 52/32/c Birmingham 67/49/0.34 71/55/pc Bismarck 58/22/0.00 49/22/c Boise 57/40/0.00 57/36/sh Boston 52/40/0.39 48/36/pc Bridgeport, CT 55/42/0.01 51/38/pc Buffalo 39/32/0.27 39/33/sn Burlington, VT 38/28/0.41 38/24/si Caribou, ME 39/21/0.26 26/4/sn Charleston, SC 78/63/Tr 72/57/s Charlotte 68/58/Tr 68/49/s Chattanooga 65/49/0.31 69/50/s 5 9 • Fort Rock Riley 45/22 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 44/20 Cheyenne 56/21/0.00 65/35/s 43/22 42/19 Chicago 58/28/0.00 64/41/pc High: e1' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 54/33/0.00 65/47/s Jordan V gey Apr 11 Apr 1a Apr 25 M ay 3 at The Dalles 52/41 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 55/35 Cleveland 48/30/0.25 60/41/pc Low: 24' 48/27 Marsh Lake 46/26 ColoradoSprings 64/22/0.00 72/38/s Touight's ulty:Easter Sundayis the Sunday 42/20 at Redmond 44/21 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 61/30/0.00 65/50/pc • Paisley 1/ following the full moon(April 4) after the a Columbia, SC 74/66/0.01 73/54/s • 52/27 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 73/58/0.08 72/56/s Medfo d vernal equinox (March20). Gold ach 47 Rome 0' Columbus,OH 51/32/Tr 62/42/pc 51/ • ' 4 52/27 Klamath Concord, NH 48/39/0.06 46/29/pc Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • FaRS • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 74/64/0.03 77/69/pc - Bro ings 4S/2 42/20 49/41 43/18 50/2S Dallas 68/47/0.00 66/59/1 Dayton 53/31/0.00 63/44/s Denver 63/28/0.00 72/41/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Dss Moines 68/31/0.00 71/49/s 2 I~ 4 ~ 4 I 2 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 54/25/0.00 60/35/c The highertheAccuWsalbervmmtiv Index number, Asturis 55/34/Tr 54/39/c 58/40/sh Ls Grande 52/37/0.00 45/27/st49/29/c Portland 56/4 1/Tr 57/39/sh 59/44/ c Duluth 44/24/Tr 39/26/c the greatertheneedfor eyesudskin protsdius. 0-2 Low, Baker City 52/33/0.00 44/23/si 48/22/sf Ls Pine 47/26/0.00 44/22/sn 42/28/c Prinevige 50/ 26/0.0045/23/sn42/29/ c El Paso 72/50/0.00 85/59/pc 35 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extrems. Brookings 54/39/0.03 49/41/t 50/41/sh M e dtord 59/4 3/0.01 51/34/t 5 4/39/sh Redmond 53 / 24/Tr 44/22/sn 47/27/c Fairbanks 36/19/0.00 37/21/pc Bums 54/31/0.00 45/22/si 47/26/pc N ewport 54/3 4/0.00 51/41/sh 54/42/sh Roseburg 59 / 41/0.04 55/35/t 56/41/sh Fargo 48/1 8/0.00 49/26/c Eugene 58/33/0.00 55/34/sh56/40/sh NorthBend 55/39/0.02 52/39/t 54/44/sh Salem 57/37/Tr 55/37/sh 58/42/ c Flagstaff 62/24/0.00 61/32/s Klsmsth Falls 52/26/0.00 42/20/sn 45/29/sh Ontario 59/39/0.00 56/32/sn 57/29/sh Sisters 48/26/0.00 46/21/sh 47/30/pc Grand Rapids 52/22/Tr 54/36/sh G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lakeview 54/28/0.00 43/1 8/sh 47/26/c Pendleton 55/34/0.04 49/33/pc 56/34/c The Dsges 6 1 /33/0.00 57/34/sh 61/39/c Green Bay 53/25/0.00 43/34/si Greensboro 66/54/0.01 67/48/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rsin, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data ssot 5 p.m. yesterday W L s t~ Hi h • Ab t Harrisburg 54/46/0.06 64/37/pc Source: OregonAgergyAssociatss 541-683-1577 Hsrffurd, CT 52/46/0.54 49/36/sh Helena 51/27/0.02 43/30/sh Honolulu 84/71/0.24 83/70/sh ~ g s ~ f e s ~ 2 03 ~ 303 ~ dgs ~ 50s ~ egs ~ 703 ~ ags ~ 90s ~f ccs ~ff Os Houston ~ 103 ~gs 73/63/Tr 75/67/c As ur 7 s.m.yesterday Huntsville 65/47/0.21 70/54/pc Catus Indianapolis 55/30/0.00 64/46/s Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL Que c 5 i i 37/21 i nlpe Ttrunder Bay 22/3 4 4 a Jackson, MS 69/51/0.51 72/59/t EXTREMES u <O~ C rane Prairie 549 S O 99% 55/42 30 14 33 7 Jacksonville 83/59/0.07 73/61/pc YESTERDAY (for the

4S contiguousstates) National high: 91 at Death Valley,CA National low: 3 at Spincich Lake, Ml Precipitation: 0.73" at Harlingen, TX

~pyq~

0

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: There will be a na /3 good deal of clouds Umatilla Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 55/32 Sunday andrain and 52/41 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus • ermiston snow showers. Snow High 50 54 S2' in 2000 showers will continue Cannon lington 54/33 Portland 56/36 Meac am Losti ne 52/42 2S' 29' 11'in 1955 Low / /35 9 • W co dl + 4 0/ 2 41/2m5 Enterprise Sunday night. • • he Dall • • 40/25 Tigamo • PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Mostly andy • Mc innv • 57/34 JosePh 4/3S Goveu • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" cloudy Sundaywith n t • u p i Condon 6/30 45 27 Cam • 52 Record 0.24" in 1940 showers of rain orwet Lincoln Union 23 44/ Month to date (normal) Tra ce (0.09") snow. CloudySunday 52/42 Sale • pmy Graniteu Year to date(normal) 1.54 " (3.44") night with snow 55/3 • /33 'Baker C Newpo 35/23 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 2" showers. 4/35 51/41 • Mitch tl 44/23 CamPSh mau Red I\ WEST:Plenty of 44/26 OrV R S I SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 46/25 • John clouds Sundaywith 54/34 60/40 • Prineville oay 1/23 Today Mon. tario showers in the north 45/23 • Pa lina 40/ 2 8 Sunrise 6:40 a.m. 6 : 3S a.m. 5 32 and a steady rain and Floren e • EUgelle • Re d Brothers 41 25 Sunset 7:37 p.m. 7: 3 S p.m. snow in the south. Valee 51/40 20 Su iveru 43/23 Moonrise 9 :05 p.m. 10:05p.m. 55/32 Nyssa • 43/ 0 Ham ton Moonset 7:2 0 a.m. 7:5 2 a.m. La pjne Juntura Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES last New Fir s t Full 48/26 53/33 /32

Wickiup 199322 100% Crescent Lake 7 5 4 05 S7% Ochoco Reservoir 33S47 76vo Prineville 1241SS S4vo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 171 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 3S7 Deschutes R.below Bend ss5 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 977 Little Deschutes near LaPine 151 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 33 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 247 C rooked R. below Prineville Res. 21S Crooked R. near Terrebonne 222 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 4

54

More clouds thansun

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

c Q

THURSDAY

yg@ l sg

iI I

Fewer received invites for a

East Oregonian

one step at a time. round of second interviews. P ENDLETON — I f Z o ey During training sessions, The inmates say having could talk, she would likely Zoey learns basic obedience dogs among the prison poputell a sorrowful tale. and manners. Each week, lation is healing. David KeevPolice confiscated the bor- her trainers take her through er, a sitter, said he witnessed a der col lie crossseveralweeks a different scenario. One tattooed lifer get down on his ago during a drug raid on a week, the visiting room be- knees and bury his face in a Umatilla County house. They came a farmers market. This dog's fur. "A lot of Us haven't seen took the dog to the Pet Res- week, Schill er-Munnemann cue animal shelter, where she and Zoey visited a pretend a dog for a long time," Keevshied away from strangers. veterinarian's office w h ere er said. "They do a lot for A month later, Zoey is a Hill examined the dog by your soul. They mend a lot of changed pooch. She greets running her h a nds over holes." people with her tail wagging her soft brindle, black and Schiller-Munnemann takes and her brown eyes free from white fur. Afterward, Schil- Zoey when he visits a friend in ler-Munnemann stoppedby a the prison hospice program. fear. "Everyone in the infirmary The transformation took makeshift receptionist's desk place in what might seem and pretendedtowr ite a $250 lights up when Zoey comes the unlikeliest of places — a check. Zoey sat patiently. in," he said. "One guy with prison. Inside the Two Rivers Schiller-Munnemann slipped tears in his eyes said he hadn't Correctional Institution, 18 her a kibble from his pocket. petted a dog for 20 years." inmates train rescue dogs for By the end of the training, Members of the public will adoption. Richland dog train- the six dogs should be able have a chance to interact with er Tracy Hill runs weekly ses- to pass the American Kennel the six dogs during a meet sions in the prison's visiting Club Good Citizens test. The and greet April 16 at 1:30 room. Six dogs each have a canines must sit politely for p.m., on the lawn near the team of three inmates at its petting, react calmly to the TRCI administrative o f ficbark and calL One i nmate approach of a friendly strang- es. Those who want to adopt servesas primary trainer and er, walk on a loose lead, come one of the dogs may fill out the other two (a secondary when called and behave po- adoption papers. If more than trainer and a "sitter") fill in litely around other dogs. They one person requests the same the gaps. must react to unexpected dis- dog, a name will be picked The program kicked off tractions without panicking, from a hat. The owners will about a month ago. If all goes barking or running away. have the opportunity to go to plan, the dogs will be ready Hill distracted the dogs inside the prison and watch for adoption eight to 10 weeks duringthisweek's session by their dog interacting with its from when they arrived at the doing jumping jacks and hav- trainer. Owners will receive prison. ing inmate trainers and assis- t raining logs kept by t he Zoey spends the bulk of tant instructors whistle, clap trainers. The adoption fee is her days with her primary andyell. $150. trainer, inmate Justin SchilHill said all the dogs have The trainers are keeping ler-Munnemann. He picks her come far, butnone have come their mission in m i nd. Z oup at the recently constructed out of their shell more than ey's secondary trainer, Philip prison kennels each morn- Zoey. Florek, came up with a cre"When she came in, she ative slogan for the program: ing and takes her back each "From no house to the big evening. w anted nothing to d o w i t h "She goes wherever I go," anybody," Hill said. "She house to your house." Schiller-Munnemann said. cowered." After the current batch of When he needs a break Hill, who runs 4 Paws Dog- dogs leaves, another group or has a conflict, either sec- Works in Richland, said the will arrive. Roles among each ondary trainer Philip Florek inmate trainers benefit as dog team member will switch. or sitter Geoff Hendrickson much as the dogs, or more. S chiller-Munnemann s a i d "I've watched the relation- he will miss Zoey when she takes over. At first, Zoey was timid. ships between dogs and in- leaves, but he's determined to She was startled when pris- mates grow to the point where remain philosophical. "We've all gotten attached," on doors clanked open and I'm amazed," she said. shut. She refused to climb The men each had to apply he said, "but the whole point the metal staircase leading for their positions, like any of the program is to rescue to his second-floor cell. Schil- job in the real world. Some the dogs and make sure they ler-Munnemann sat down on were invited for interviews. go on to a better life."

Now fhaf we each have our Belfone hearing aids • Our neighbors don't have to listen to our TV shows • We can visit with our grandchildren and our friends

But best of ali, it is the end of "What??" and "Pardon me???" Emmitt and Joanne Bend, OR •

25%-40% Off MsRP Trial Periods with

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Denise k Michael Underwood

r • • ' •


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

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Photos by Don Bartlstti / Los Angeles Times

Twilight settles over Seattle and its

waterfront in a view fromthe Space Needle. Ferry boats from Pier 50 cross Puget Sound to Bainbridge Island. The Seattle Ferris Wheel is on Pier 57.

• With its '90s alt-rock history, Seattle holds a special place inthe hearts of manyGenXers By BoothMoore sLos Angeles Times

runge was the soundtrack of my Gen X college life. We knew every word to Nirvana's 1991 album, "Nevermind." "I'm

so happy 'cause today I found my friends." And the day we found out that Kurt Cobain had died, April 8, 1994, there was a candlelight vigil in the quad. Twenty years later, I'm feeling nostalgic for the raw alt-rock style that got its start in Seattle with bands such as Mudhoney, Alice in Chains, Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Soundgarden, many of which were first signed by local record label Sub Pop.

A fifth-floor room in the Hotel Max in downtown Seattle has a working record player and a small selection of vinyl disks to play. All fifth-floor rooms are decorated thematically in celebration of Seattle's grunge rock history and the Sub Pop Records label.

Indeed, grunge seems to be making a so I booked a weekend trip with my hus- a new visitor center, and the sparkling band. What I discovered is that the end- Chihuly Garden and Glass museum, one is wearing flannel shirts and com- of-the-continent isolation and blue-col- which opened in 2012 at the foot of the bat boots. Brett Morgen's documentary lar attitude that laid the groundwork for Space Needle,have enhanced the city's "Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck" pre- grunge in the 1980s, according to Justin sheen. miered at the Sundance Film Festival Henderson's 2010 book, "Grunge SeatOne of Bon Appetit's best new restauin January and will be shown May 4 on tle," are now distant memories. For the rants of 2014, Westward, is here, as is HBO. Seminal L.A. girl grunge band L7 last 20 years, Seattle has been booming. Canon, the sixth-best bar in the world, is planning a reunion this spring. And The influx of money from Amazon, according to Drinks International magcomeback, and not just because every-

ing Room, which sells artisanal mugs, brews exclusive beans and has a line out the door. In search of what's left of the grunge experience, we checked into the boutique Hotel Max, which is in the thick of downtown and in 2013 opened a floor

of rooms dedicated to Sub Pop Records. The lobby decor is industrial chic with

Pop Art prints by Andy Warhol, John Seattle-area corporations has led to a Ballard and Fremont neighborhoods ri- Baldessari and others adding color. of art from the 1990s titled "Come As proliferation of luxury condos, high-rise val Brooklyn, New York, and Los Ange- There isalso free local beer for guests You Are," after the Nirvana song. office buildings, farm-to-table restau- les' Silver Lake for cool shops and eats. during happy hour (Seattle's Stoup It seemed like an interesting time to rants and craft cocktail bars. The Bill & Even Starbucks has upped its game Brewing was featured). revisit Seattle, ground zero of grunge, Melinda Gates Foundation, which has with a new high-end Roastery & TastSeeGrunge/C4 the Montclair Art Museum, in New Jer-

Microsoft, Starbucks, Costco and other

azine's ranking of the top 50. And the

sey of all places, has mounted a survey

Central Oregon isabloom with wildflowers By Mac McLean

them call this part of the state

The Bulletin

home.

and stubby purple monkey-

"We've got lots of different plants within a 50-mile radius

flower to the tall and graceful

of Bend," said Stu Garrett, a

Cascades lily that's found on

local wildflower expert and former president of the Native Plant Society of Oregon. "We have a lot of diversity, and we

From Pilot Butte's short

Black Butte, more than 1,000 Submitted photo

Simpson's hedgehog cactus in the Painted Hills of Eastern

Oregon.

species of wildflowers live in Oregon, according to the Oregon State University's Oregon Flora Project, and many of

have species that can be found nowhere else in the world."

OO

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhnlletin.cnm/wildflnwnrs

to discuss wildflowers during a Tuesday night lecture at the Oregon Natural Desert Association's headquarters in Bend

(See "If you go"). Garrett said Central Oregon is home to so many different types offlowers because its

climate, elevation, geology and soil chemistry vary wildly from place to place. He plans

During an interview last week, Garrett said a few types

of Central Oregon wildflowers can be found nowhere else on Earth, including: SeeWildflowers/C6

Ifyouoo What:Botanyand Geology in the High Desert When:7 p.m. Tuesday Where:ONDAHeadquarters, 50 SWBond Street, Suite 4, Bend Cost:Free Contact:E-mail elisa@ onda.org or call 541-3302638


C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

as e as i esa aseu aceu isseeve By Kitty Bean Yancey

nese/South American fusion

Special to The Washington Post

dishes under whimsical light fixtures inspired by Japanese

LAS VEGAS — M ention at a typical dinner party that

tea whisks. I t' s

Las Vegas is a favorite destination, an d stops.

c eleb-chef

Nobu Matsuhisa's biggest outpost. The small plates, meant

c o n versation

to be shared, start at $7, but

Suddenly you morph from sophisticated world traveler to shallow lover of all-youcan-scarf buffets, yard-long strawberry margaritas and penny slot machines. So when I and my favorite vacation mate, Barry, promise pals Paula and Patrick a long weekend of delectable dining, super shopping and hiking in

many are $25 and up. Picasso at Bellagio 3600 S. Las Vegas Blvd. 702-693-8865

www.bellagio.com/picasso Surrounded by original Picasso masterpieces,guests fork up foie gras, veal chops

, II /I,' III,. ll'

and warm chocolate fondant

with banana caramel ice cream. Diners on its terrace overlook the Bellagio fountains. Tasting menus only, starting at $75 a person pret-

addition to turns at the tables,

they're understandably skeptical. But willing. Real estate investor/devel-

heater; $115 afterward.

oper Patrick did Vegas years ago, before the invasion of

What to do: The Shops at Crystals 3720 S. Las Vegas Blvd.

ultra-luxury hotels and ce-

leb-chef restaurants. Paula, who works for a global firm

702-590-9299

theshopsatcrystals.com The fashionista fantasy

that works with developing

countries, is a newbie who envisioned "strippers on every corner." A couple of months lat-

t empts with m ore t han 4 0

high-end boutiques, from Balenciaga to Van Cleef & Arpels, The contemporary

er, we check into the MGM

Grand resort's recently renovated rooms. I had lobbied for more ex-

art-museumlikesurroundings

are worth a stroll, even if you don't possess an American

Biondo Productions Photos Studio / Bellagio via The Washington Post

Retreat to a subdued dinner at Picasso at the Bellagio Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.

travagant lodgings — say, casino perfectionist Steve

Express Platinum card.

Wynn's Encore resort tower

mate Cromwell has 188 rooms

Exotics Racing 6925 Speedway Blvd.

suites, Bellagio rooms overlooking fountains that dance

w ith h ardwood fl oors a n d

702-405-7223

vintage-stylish f u rnishings. Guests have easy access to

exoticsracing.com

to music, the elegant tranquil-

ity of the nongaming Mandarin Oriental. But (to Paula's and my disappointment) the men prefer comfortable but not super-luxe digs so that we can indulge instead in diversions such as racing Ferraris and Lamborghinis and enjoying expensive meals. "If you want to talk about high-end restaurants per

the High Roller observation for instruction and five laps. wheel. Rates start at $145 plus Porsche Caymans start at tax. $199. Red Rock Canyon National Where to eat: Conservation Area Andrea's at Encore 3205 Nevada Route159 3121 S. Las Vegas Blvd. 702-515-5350 702-770-5340 http://on.doi.gov/18ActfX wynnlasvegas.com/andreas Less than 20 miles from the Designed with a feminine Strip, sienna-colored sandsensibility with creamy decor stone arches and other rock as homage to resort owner formations offer a rugged esSteve Wynn's second wife (a cape. Drive or bike a 13-mile Warholesque image of her scenic loop, hike more than eyes hangs over the bar). The 30 miles of trails. Hike This! menu is heavy on light sushi, (www.hikethislasvegas.com) but there's Wagyu beef for is a recommended outfitter.

linear mile, I don't think it's

possible to beat Las Vegas," says Anthony Curtis, founder of the Las Vegas Advisor newsletter and website. With world-renowned chefs st ir-

I II1~IWr l " r l

ring the pot, choosing where to dine is a delicious struggle. We start at

Shannon Keene/501 Studios via The Washington Post

hearty appetites. Small plates

Tours also are listed at viator.

start at $8; entrees at $28. com. Nobu Las Vegas at Caesars Vegas Uncork'd by Bon Palace Appetit group that George Clooney recently have been renovated. 3570 S. Las Vegas Blvd. At resorts all over town is among those who've dined If you don't splash out for digs 702-785-6674 vegasuncorked.com here; sadly, he's not in sight overlooking the waterworks, noburestaurants.com/ Taste fare f ro m G o rdon tonight. you can see them in real time las-vegas-caesars-palace/ Ramsay, Michael Mina, EmerLater, we sit under crimson on in-room TVs. From $199. experience il L a gasse, Jean-Georges Venetian glass chandeliers MGM Grand Hotel & Casino Sip rare sake and savor su- Vongerichten, Guy Savoy and in Encore's casino and play 3799 S. Las Vegas Blvd. shi, sashimi and other Japa- more. April 23-26. blackjack with fervor. Barry, 877-880-0880 Patrick and I are more expemgmgrand.com rienced, but Paula is on a roll This 5,044-room resort ofand delightedly exits with a fers options for luxury lovfistful of dollars. ers, including Vegas' MicheWe return to the MGM to lin-worthy, ultra-pricey Joel enter cowboy heaven. Nation- Robuchon French restaurant al Finals Rodeo is in town, and trendy Hakkasan nightand a sponsor is throwing a club. Recently r e novated party open to all. We grab Grand Kings give good value. plastic cups of Crown Royal Done in a sleek, boutique-howhiskey and cheap wine and tel style, they boast pillowtop attempt to two-step alongside mattresses and start at $75 polite, square-jawed gents in plus tax. Like most every Veboots and cowboy hats. One gas lodging, MGM Grand dis6-footer pulls up his "Don't plays online month-by-month Enduring, Artisan, Handmade

M a d rid-born The 5,044-room MGM Grand Hotel& Casino in Las Vegas offers options for Iuxury lovers.

Julian Serrano's Picasso at the Bellagio, a dimly lit den of romance where originalsof hits at Caesars Palace in the Pablo's art hang on the walls, requisite 90-minute act (deserversanticipate your need signed to get gamers back to for a Manhattan and the pi- the casino as quickly as posgeon is served medium rare, sible). It includes multiple cosas requested. P8 P pronounce tume changes and two horsthe fare b etter t ha n m o st es. A little cheesy, I think, but $250-per-coupleWashington in Caesars' Colosseum, where restaurants. the sound is super-size and Then it's on to the blackjack special effects over the top, tables, where Patrick reminds we're on our feet with the rest Paula of the rudiments of the of the audience at show's end. game before we — jet-lagged Tonight's eatery is Nobu at — call it a night. Caesars Palace, a celeb fave Friday morning, I d r ive from renowned chef Nobu the group t o

Rev a Ferrari or L ambo-

rghini on a track, from $299

its hot nightclub, Drai's, and

E x otics Rac- Matsuhisa i n w h i c h a c t or Robert De Niro is a partner.

ing, a half-hour from the Strip at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Barry and Patrick are entranced by the lineup of gleaming Maser-

Struggling to catch our busy s erver's attention amid t h e buzz of VIPs and wannabes,

we drop a few Benjamins on

atis, Porsches, Ferraris and

sushi and sashimi. Yellowtail

Lambos.

tuna with jalapeno and black cod miso are memorable, but we decide we're paying a pre-

After an orientation, they don helmets and nervously

DELIBHTElJL BIFTS '

Mess With Texas" T-shirt to

display a huge tattoo of John Wayne on his belly. rev red Ferrari F430s as in- mium for the A-list vibe. structors in t h e p a ssenger Saturday, we go separate Nope, it i sn't city-slick, seats guide them through ways, only to coincidental- but we're on our last night cornering and roaring down ly end up in Red Rock Can- in Vegas, baby, having an straightaways at 125 mph. yon, within 30 minutes of after-hours high time singWhile they're occupied, I our hotel. Barry and I drive ing along to "Friends in Low drive super-shopper Paula to the 13-mile scenic loop and Places." We dance till 2, guarLas Vegas North Premium hike wind-whipped rock for- anteeing bleary eyes at the Outlets, where tourists roll

empty suitcases to fill with designer bargains. I give her an hour, only enough for her to survey the Coach store

mations on our own. But ev-

er-efficient Paula has done research and lined up a private guide. He picks Paula and Patrick up at the hotel, hands out jackets, water and snacks,

alrport. Cut to amonth ago, when

rate calendars showing the

cheapest nights. Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas 3752 S. Las Vegas Blvd. 702-590-8888

www.mandarinoriental.com/ LasVegas The discerning bed down in what is touted as "discreet luxury and Oriental harmony" at

a tranquil nongaming haven. Even standard rooms, starting at $229 plus tax in slow periods, are divine. So is the spa,

Paula and Patrick were over for dinner, and I was telling them Vegas had a record year bar with Strip view and the and pickout presents for her (41.1 million visitors in 2014), popular afternoon tea service. daughter and nieces. No time, and soon he has both of the new upscale hotels (the CromThe Cromwell Las Vegas alas, for the deals at Armani, heights-averse duo c limb- well, Delano, SLS Las Vegas), 3595 S. Las Vegas Blvd. a l a a ga 8• Burberry, Dolce & Gabbana ing rosy-hued sandstone and new shopping ops at the Linq 702-777-3777 • 4 and Tory Burch. inching along narrow ledges open-air mall and a terrific www.caesars.com/cromwell I • 4 44 • Back at the track, the guys with noses pressed against restaurant from star chef GiaOpened in 2014, the intiare giddy after doing five laps the rock. They celebrate with da De Laurentiis. "So," said Patrick, pullin fantasy cars. They wish a kiss and high-five. they had bought more time, I persuade shopping-averse ing out his iPhone calendar. "When are we going back?" but we're on a schedule. Barry to cruise the Shops at Paula and I have a date at Crystals, a stunningly dethe Encore resort's spa — for signed temple of commerce Where to stay: my money, Vegas' best. It's in the CityCenter complex. A Encore Las Vegas decorated like an opulent but salesman at Ermenegildo Ze3131 S. Las Vegas Blvd. tasteful stage set, with every gna tells us high rollers drop 877-321-9966 detail perfect, from h eated six figures on the high-end wynnlasvegas.com/encore stone chaises by hot and cold menswear. Now think-tankThe newer sister property If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or plunge pools to locker fronts er Barry feels better about to elegant Wynn Las Vegas anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, designed like vintage suit- spending double what he takes you far f rom the capick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) cases, to Moroccan lanterns would at Brooks Brothers on rousing crowds from $199. or from any of these valued advertisers: that light the way to treatment an Italian version of a navy Upgrade to a 745-square-foot AAA Travel Meadow Lakes rooms. blazer and tan pants. Tower Suite in the gleaming Nicole Michelle Awbrey Glen Golf Club After a soothing oxygen For our last supper, I've bronze-colored high-rise and Northwest Medi Spa facial (Paula) and expert chosen Andrea's restaurant, get a private check-in area, Bad Boys Barbecue deep-tissue massage (me), it's at the Encore resort. Encore plus a lounge serving compliPhoenix Picture Framing Bend park 6z time to break out the spike is a favorite because it's a cos- mentarybreakfast from $299. Professional Airbmsb Tanning Recreation District heels and dress for a show. seting cocoon on the raucous As with most Vegas resorts, Revive Skin Services Bend Wedding S. Formal I had suggested Cirque du Strip. Paula settles happily joining the players club wins Salon Je' Danae Soleil's risque combo of ac- into a creamy beige banquette lower rates. SHARC Aquatic S. Recreation Center Cordially Invited Bridal robatics and comedy called to order spicy tuna rolls from Bellagio Hotel & Casino The Bend Trolley "Zumanity." B u t ma j o r ity a server who could win Miss 3600 S. Las Vegas Blvd. Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center The Bridal Suite S. Special Occasion rule dictates a Vegas star Congeniality at a pageant. 888-987-6667 Faith Hope 6z Charity Vineyard The Dress spectacle, this one featuring Over the bar, a huge screen www.bellagio.com The Soap Box Illuminate Your Night country-music legend Shania shows a mesmerizing image Famed for fountains that Widgi Creek Golf Club Twain. The g lossy-maned of theeyes of Wynn's sec- sway and spurt to music, brunette trots out her greatest ond wife, Andrea. I tell the rooms and suites at Bellagio •

The Bulletin

MI LESTONES

GUIDELINE


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

e rave se ie: r uin a ains se — ocumen a ion T

By Stephanie Rosenbloom

lhv, y

New York Times News Service

SelfiePal, a steel stick with a clamp to secure a smart-

membered fewer objects and

details about the objects when they photographed them as a whole than if they simply observed the objects without photographing them.

phone, arrived in the mail on

a recent afternoon along with some advice. "Shoot down from a slightly elevated viewpoint for a more flattering effect," said an a c companying p o stcard from Kimpton Hotels

I

I

French literary and social critic Roland Barthes the-

.t/i' a:

orized in "Camera Lucida" that a photograph "blocks memory, quickly becomes a counter-memory." After sifting through some of his old photographs, he finds himself robbed of the richness of memory because the images are all too concrete. "I could no longer console myself

R estaurants, which h a s

begun loaning guests selfie sticks as if they were as practical as umbrellas and tooth-

paste. Guests who borrow one and then post their selfies on Instagram or Twitter with

the hashtag ¹AdoreThySelfie may win a stick of their own, a $150 Kimpton gift card and — for aspiring Dorian Grays — a framed enlargement of

4

h

with Rilke's line: 'Sweet as

memory, the mimosas steep the bedroom,'" he wrote, re-

I'fn

f

ferring to the poet. "The Pho-

their selfie.

tograph does not 'steep' the bedroom: no odor, no music,

,,' 'if.

Kimpton, which owns more than 60 boutique hotels, is

nothing but t h e

brands trying to parlay selfie culture into tourist dollars. JW Marriott Desert Springs

Mandarin Oriental in Paris and La Concha Renaissance Resort in San Juan, Puerto

Rico. Over the past few years,

during which the word "selfie" (or "selfy") was added to the Oxford English Dictionary, there's been a steady stream of selfie contests from travel companies and organizations as varied as Turkish

Airlines and the city of Pagosa Springs, Colorado. Cheaptickets.com currently has a contest for the best spring break "trelfies" (travel selfies), with vacations going to the winners in various cat-

journalist, I am sympathetic to, and tempted by, the im-

pulse to record. As a frequent JW Marriot Desert Springs Resort & Spa via The New York Times

The JW Marriott Desert Springs Resort & Spa in California is offering a "Your Spring Selfie" package that includes a selfie stick and map

of scenic "selfie spots" around the resort. Many hotels and travel sites have embraced the selfie trend by offering selfie packages and hosting contests.

vacation you want to spend looking inward. In the 19th century, early travel photography was about looking outward. It brought the worldthe land, culture and customs

of other people and places — to those who could not experience it firsthand. Where

do you want to place your

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remarkable that they encounter." What happens when the

SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD

S P I N

of you. And there is reliefand dare I say pleasure — in letting a moment go undocumented, in deciding to be member what we have seen. there instead of proving you One such study, published were there. I think it's called in the journal Psychological living.

0

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CHOOSElsoM HUNDREDSOF

E D B R O A S E L L E A L L 0 R E A T Y S E C U T N E M A I N I R S T

selfies will do to your memory of your trip. Some studies suggest that taking snapshots may hurt our ability to re-

DOESNOT INCLUDESEASONALDEPARTMENT

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"Most tourists feel compelled to put the camera between

the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture

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SUDOKU IS ON C6

R E B I D

sweet about the fleeting ex-

• Framed Art

"The very activity of taking pictures is soothing, and assuages general feelings of disorientation that are likely

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU

3 2 8 1 9 5 4 7 6

attention?

drawbacks.

Categories Listed

86 39 42 24 57 18 73 65 91

a selfie stick allows you to be in your own vacation photos But then, there's something

er purposes. They have been rary Art i n C hicago have forms o f s e l f-expression,banned the sticks (which typways to explore or reveal ically extend 3 feet or so and identity, h i storical r e cords could damage works of art) and a means for artists to even as the practice of taking hone their craft. selfies with art is encouraged. Let's say you really want That said, the travel selfie — snapped while standing to take travel selfies. It seems before Bosch's "Garden of that one thing to ask yourself Earthly Delights" or t rek- should be how much of your king amid the Amazon rain forest — has some particular

And although self-portraits are hardly devoid of vanity, Garden in Washington and they have long served deep- the Museum of Contempo-

5 7 1 9 6 3 2 8 4

solo traveler, I appreciate that without the unintended funhouse mirror effect.

egories such as Road Trip and tourist is both spectator and Beach/Pool. L i t tl e w o n der subject? To stop watching a that there's a nascent muse- sunrise or hiking a mountain um, Art in Island in Quezon to try to immortalize the moCity, the Philippines, designed ment is like trying to catch for visitors to take selfies in fireflies. You typically end up front o f t h r e e-dimensional killing the very thing you're artworks, some of which are striving to preserve. Then there's the matter of meant to resemble masterpieces such as Van Gogh's how selfie-taking affects oth"Church in Auvers-sur-Oise" er travelers and locals. For and Leonardo's "Mona Lisa." centuries, the process of creWith the practice now ubiq- ating self-portraits was done uitous among travelers, self- in the solitude of studios or ie-hating is also in vogue. Yet private homes. But the selto dismiss all selfies as artifie stick, i n discriminately facts of modern narcissism is extended and held aloft like to dismiss the centurieslong a golf club in front of monhistory o f se l f -portraits, uments and in museums, is which stretches to antiquity visually disruptive and, deand flowered in the Renais- pending on its wielder, presance, as James Hall points carious. Museums including out in "The Self-Portrait: A Cultural History."

e x orbitant

thing." I'm about to begin packing for another trip. SelfiePal won't be tagging along. As a

a mong the l atest wave o f

Resort 8 Spa in California is offering a "Your Spring Selfie"vacation package through May that starts at $399 and includes a selfie stick and map of scenic "selfie spots" around the resort. (Those who share their selfies on social media using hashtags such as ¹SpringSelfie may win an upgraded return visit.) The promotion comes in the wake of several others around the world, including selfie packages offered atthe

Science in 2013, found that

people touring a museum re-

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C4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

Pedestrians walk past the Hotel Max in downtown Seattle.

Photos by Don Barttetti / Los Angeles Times

A pedestrian crosses Pine Street, a block fromSeattle's landmark neonsign at the Pike Place Market.

Grunge Continued from C1 Upstairs, the Sub Pop floor

has cheery, striped carpeting and large-scale black-andwhite images on the guest room doors, the work of photographer Charles Peterson, who helped define the Sub Pop aesthetic on the label's record covers. The images are a ction-packed shots of N i r -

vana, Hole and other grunge bands — dirty Converse high-

Ifyou go

canonseattle.com • Radiator Whiskey, 94 Pike

STAY Hotel Max, 620 Stewart St.; 206-728-6299, www.hotelmaxseattle.com Doubles from $129.

St., Suite 30; 206-467-4268,

Way; 206-552-8215, http://

Ave. N.; 206-709-3100, www.

www.radiatorwhiskey.com

SHOP • Essenza, 615 N.35th St.; 206-547-4895, http://essenza-inc.com EAT • Anchored Ship Coffee Bar, • Horseshoe, 5344 Ballard Ave. 5306 Ballard Ave.NW;206NW; 206-547-9639, www. 484-5143 shophorseshoe.com • Ba Bar, 55012th Ave.; 206• Les Amis, 3420 Evanston 328-2030, http://babarseattle. Ave. N.; 206-632-2877, www. com lesamis-inc.com • Beecher's HandmadeCheese, • Lucca Great Finds, 5332 Bal1600 Pike Place; 206-956lard Ave. NW;206-782-7337, 1964, www.beechershandwww.luccagreatfinds.com madecheese.com • Prism, 5208 Ballard Ave. NW; • Britt's Pickles, 1500 Pike Place templeofcairo.com/prism No. 15; 253-666-6686, www. • Sub Pop at Sea-Tac,Central brittsliveculturefoods.com Terminal, 17801 International • Canlis, 2576 Aurora Ave.N.; Blvd. 206-283-3313, http://canlis. • Uncle Ike's, 2310 E.Union com St.; (844) 420-4537, http:// • Chukar Cherries, 1529-B Pike unclei kespotshop.com Place; 206-623-8043, www. SEE chukar.com • Bill 8 Melinda GatesFounda• Westward, 2501 N. Northlake tion Visitor Center, 440 Fifth westwardseattle.com DRINK

tops, crushed Budweiser cans,

swinging hair and all — in the years before they hit it big and were signed by L.A.-based record labels to multimillion-dollar contracts. We stayed in a Max King room, which was about 250 square feet. The furnishings

• Bathtub Gin 8 Co., 2205

Second Ave.; 206-728-6069, http://bathtubginseattle.com • Canon, 92812th Ave., www.

were modern and spare but

gatesfoundation.com/Visitor-Center • Chihuly Garden andGlass museum, 305 Harrison St.; 206-753-4940, www.chihu-

lygardenandglass.com

cessories by Brooklyn's Coral Comey and Giada Forte cloth& Tusk; teas from Mariage ing, delicate earrings by RockFreres, as well as custom Stella and Tai, fragrances by cards). And Prism has modern Parfums DelRae and others. arty jewelry, clothing and obI wished I'd had more time jets (marble necklaces by Rill to explore Ballard, Fremont oysters, all from Washington, Rill, Wonders of Washington and the rest of Seattle. I had were delicious, as were the patches, Herbivore Botanicals a flight to catch, but not bewood-fired trout and Greek beard tonic and the like). fore visiting the Sub Pop store white wine. A wedge-shaped building at Sea-Tac Airport. Opened We skipped the olive oil on Leary Way in Ballard was in May, it's one part record cake in favor of liquid dessert home to music producer Jack store, one part upscale Northat Canon on Capitol Hill. The Endino's Reciprocal Record- west gift shop. Not only are sixth-best bar in the world ing studio, where he record- there albums for sale by Sub must be one of the most exact- ed Nirvana's first demos and Pop's indie bands of old (Nir"Bleach," the band's debut vana, Soundgarden) and new ing, too. But it was worth the 45-minute wait in the rain (I've album on Sub Pop.Fremont (Sleater-Kinney, the Shins), never seen more lines than I used to be the center of Seat- but there are also cool Sub Pop did in Seattle) for the Milk N' tle's counterculture but now is logo T-shirts, knit caps, LightCookies cocktail in a ceramic filled with vintage stores and house Roasters Sub Pop coffee milk carton filled with Cognac high-end boutiques such as Les beans and more. Landy, Ardbeg, chocolate, Amis and Essenza. Both are I left with a sweatshirtmilk, Angostura bitters and owned by Becky Buford and and memories of a S eattle Fernet-Branca. It was served have a French country vibe, that's about grunge and so in a Betty Boop lunch box, with Isabel Marant, Rachel much more.

with fun touches, including a People visit Starbucks Coffee Roastery 8 Tasting Room in the Capitol Hill neighborhood. Starbucks' Crosley record player,a collec- flagship retail outlet has pneumatic copper tubes on the ceiling that deliver coffee beans from the tion of vinyl Sub Pop records roaster ovens to the barista bar. Thestore also features a coffee bagging line, gift shop andrestaurant. for listening and a special TV channel that plays current and

classic Sub Pop videos. The hotel is a short walk from the Pike Place Market. It was a nice afternoon when we

arrived, so we headed there. Before sampling the food stands, we stopped in Post Alley to take selfies in front of the drips and dots on Gum

Wall. (We didn't contribute to the collective artwork, though there is a gum-ball machine in the lobby at Hotel Max with

a sign that suggests that visitors do just that.) We snacked

on macaroni and cheese from The Space Needle towers over the Chihuly Garden andGlass Beecher's Handmade Cheese, museum in the Seattle Center. The museum showcases the studio sampled Cabernet chocolate

glass of artist Dale Chihuly.

cherries from Chukar and ginger pepper pickles from seen (if you can even call it zation aims to reduce poverty happy hour upstairs at Radi- urban). Cobain's century-old, and improve heath care, eduator Whiskey, which serves four-bedroom house looks cation and access to informabarrel-aged, smoked maple small compared with most tion technology globally. Old-Fashioneds. of the other mansions now The five-gallery v i sitor For dinner, we called Uber occupied by tech chief exec- center explains the foundaand headed to Canlis, one of utives and other masters of tion's work through a series Seattle's old-school dining the universe. Ttttro benches in of interactive exhibitions that institutions, open since 1950. nearby Viretta Park serve as delve into its history and exLocated in a Northwest-style, de facto memorials, with graf- plore the partnerships and Midcentury Modern structure fiti messages carved into the i nnovations that i t s f u n d s with cavernous rooms and wood and love notes tucked support. There are heavy stone walls, it looks like a lair between the slats. With a light buckets to l i f t , s o v i s itors for a James Bond villain. The rain falling, the place seemed can get a sense of how hard bar was a draw, with a pianist peaceful. it is for people in developing who can play anything from T he drizzle put us in t h e countries to walk miles every Cole Porter to Coldplay. The mood for something warm, day for clean water, and new food was nothing special (sal- so we headed to Ba Bar, a inventions to explore, such ad prepared table-side, over- Vietnamese noodle shop and as coolersthatkeep vaccines salted steak and predictably bakery. The oxtail pho, chick- cold for 30 days. And don't delicious truffle fries). But the en wings and Vietnamese miss the bathrooms, which to-die-for views of Lake Union coffeefortified us for the af- might be the best part. The were worth the pricey tab. ternoon. But before we turned door to each stall is disguised And the peanut-butter-and-jel- our attention to sightseeing to look like a latrine in Africa, ly chocolates to take home at Seattle Center, we wanted India or elsewhere, to highwere a nice touch. to check out one of the city's light the need for sanitary faOn the way backto the ho- newly legal recreational pot cilities around the world. shops — merely for research tel, we went to Bathtub Gin Afterward, we walked to & Co., one of Seattle's secret purposes. Washington state the nearby Chihuly Garden bars. Open since 2009, it's a legalized marijuana in 2012, and Glass, which showcases to speak-easy in the basement and, since July 2014, a handful spectacular effect the colorful of what was an old brick ho- of licensed shops have opened glass sculptures of Northwest tel, now the Humphrey Apart- in Seattle, each with a differ- artist Dale Chihuly. I'm so glad ments, that you enter through ent vibe. Uncle Ike's, in the we saw it after dark; walking a back alley. (Hint: Look for Central District, is the most through the electric-looking t he silver plaque near t h e slickly merchandised, with installations, inspired by Naentrance — and the line of a security guard and velvet tive American blankets, hotpeople waiting to get in.) Su- rope out front and TV moni- house flowers and the ocean, prisingly, the place was cool tors inside displaying the day's was like falling down the without trying too hard, with flavors. There's even an Uncle rabbit hole. The views of the cozy tables and friendly ser- Ike's goods-and-glass store Space Needle through the susvice. My husband ordered the next door that sells knockoff pendedsculpture in the greenDealer's Choice. Not only did Starbucks-themed vapes and house-style Glass House space the bartender make him a be- pot leaf socks. Altogether, it were unforgettable. spoke cocktail based on his was quite an operation, with a It was still drizzling when preference for a savory drink, clientele that was upscale and w e arrived f o r d i n ner a t but he also wrote down the in- with a variety of ages. Westward, chef Zoi Antonitgredients on a piece of paper It was a strange leap from sas' Mediterranean seafood delivered to our table. Uncle Ike's to the new visitor restaurant. It is on the north center at the Bill 8 Melinda shore of L ake Union, with Strange contrasts Gates Foundation, but we did a dock and outdoor seating The next morning, we de- it, moving from self-indul- suitable for better weather, cided to drive by the house gencetoboundless generosity. and campy seafaring-themed where Cobain died. The lush, Launched in 2000 by Microdecor inside. We were ushgreen Denny-Blaine neigh- soft co-founder Bill Gates and ered past a wall of portraits of borhood with views of Lake his wife, Melinda, and report- popular seamen to our seats Washington is one of the most ing an endowment of more at the bar, which has a 25-foot beautiful urban areas I've than $42 billion, the organi- boat hull for a backdrop. The Britt's. Then we settled in for

with a straw, a cookie and a comic book.

Not ready to call it a night, we strolled up East Pike S treet, which wa s

GARDENING.

-

• s s s .

q u ite a

scene with revelers hopping from one hot spot to another.

Hipster central The next day, I wanted to

check out the Ballard and Fremont neighborhoods before we left. Ballard, once the center of Seattle's Norwegian seafaring community, is now hipster central. Strolling along Ballard Avenue, we stopped into the Anchored ShipCoffee Bar

for locally brewed Herkimer coffeeand salted Rice Krispies treats. Women's boutique

Horseshoe has clothing and accessories with a nod to Americana style (dresses by Prairie Underground, earmuffs by Pendleton, boots by Frye). Lucca Great Finds has just that

(ceramics by Astier de Villatte; embroidered pillows and ac-

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

By LuisIta Lopez Torregrosa

C5

led with starlight, well-heeled

I could hardly find the front door. Up a flight of stairs, Justin, a friendly young manager wearing an El Blok T-shirt, of-

arts patrons and civic leaders

fered to take me on a tour. He

spilled out of the opulent lob-

started by saying that El Blok, which opened in August 2014,

New York Times News Service

Beneath indigo skies speck-

by of the Condado Vanderbilt, where they'd turned out as much for a pop-up shop of designer fashions and jewelry as for the scene itself. Sun-kissed guests draped in elegant clothing sipped Champagne, chatted and air-kissed.

is LEED-Gold certified. The

rooms are furnished plainly, although in a concession to comfort, they do have flat-

screen TVs. The second-floor communal lobby is open to wind, sun and rain and furnished in handmade wooden

The hotel, a newly restored

palatial resort with a legendary pedigree dating to 1919,

chairs and tables and a few

works of art.Splashes ofcolor and flowering greenery break the gray monotone of polished plaster.

had just reopened to much

fanfare, and it seemed poised to again become the epicenter of refined San Juan social life.

As I surveyed the crowd, I was

Old San Juan

transported to my own past,

For me, no visit to Puerto Rico is complete without a

when girls like me swanned at debutante parties in grand

walk up and down the steep cobblestone streets of Old San

b allrooms and w omen l i k e my mother attended fashion

Juan, the 500-year-old Spanish colonial city that is Puerto Ri-

shows in hats and gloves.

co's heart. These days the old city is having a bit of a revival, too. Weathered two-story casas with ornate wooden balco-

Later that night, 20 minutes away, I attended a different

sort of opening, at La Productora, where the excitement was rooted in the promise of the fu-

A guard post stands at the entrance of Puerta de San Juan In San Juan, Puerto Rico. Much of old San Juan's Spanish colonial arohItec-

nies, high doors and shutters

ture rather than the glamour of

ture has been preserved, even as the American terrItory's self-identity constantly shIfts, seekIng to be all things to all comers.

are getting new coats of paint in tropical blues and greens, yellows and pinks. Old-time coffee shops such as La Bombonera, where as a child I had countless puffy mallorca buns, were being rebuilt on the remnants of the 1902 original.

Photos by Robert RauschI New YorkTimes News Service

thepast.

At this gallery, in a former warehouse on a side street in a dodgy neighborhood of low-cost houses and cut-rate shops, people were in their 20s and early 30s, and the drink

of choice was Medalla Light. Upstairs, in four high-ceilinged rooms crammed with paint cans, brushes, tools and screens, a sm attering ofpieces were hung and others simply leaned against the walls. Asked why he had chosen this space, the gallery owner, Martin Albarran, said, "Why here? One reason, cheap rent." These two openings exemplify the variegated landscape

A few streets down, La Mal-

jI DjI I<

The commonwealth has in

of the first grown-up restaurants I'd gone to as a child, was

back in business, replicating its 19th-century architecture and

design, with tiled floors, high arches, an interior courtyard and a classic Spanish menu including asopao and paella that made going to the restaurant a ~

that visitors to Puerto Rico can expect when they touch down

nowadays.

lorquina, built in 1848 and one

t '

Casa Cortes, an art gallery and chocolate bar in the historic old district of San Juan, is part of a thrIvIng visual arts scene In Puerto Rico.

recent years been seeking to replace spring breakers and middlebrow clientele with a

ranging from bomba to salsa its debt rating has spiraled to ury golf course and resort;the to reggaeton. junk status, unemployment Four Seasons, which is set to stands at 13.5 percent, and

open in 2017; and the restored

and restaurants with hot chefs in San Juan and Vieques, too.

home to a thriving visual arts thousands of professionals a community. yearleave forrosier economic

$1,799-a-night Dorado Beach

high-end set, enticing them with newly restored resorts Ithas embraced it s faded for-

Now, though, it has become La Productora, for example,

dimes such as those in Flori-

is part of a Calle Cerra col- da. The exodus of middle- and it has supported an upstart laborative, a group of young upper-income professionals artistic community that some- aspiring artists and gallerists. and blue-collar workers has how is thriving just beyond the But a similar conversion is drained some sectors gaw, historic, museumlike center of happening on Calle Loiza, a education, small businesses, Old San Juan. potholed commercial artery health services) and deprived But can Puerto Rico be a full of abandoned buildings, the island of tax revenues. Bushwick, Brooklyn, by the gas stations and old-time beau- High crime rates, heavy drug sea, a Palm Springs set in ty parlors. trafficking, corruption and the tropics and a p reserver They are being joined by governmentincompetence add of Spanish colonial architec- quirky bars, modish specialty to the picture. ture all at the same time? That shops and galleries. At night, Yet mainland and foreign seems to be its aim, and per- Sanjuaneros hop from Funky investors are taking advanhaps it's only natural that a Buddha and Bar Bero, to the tage of financial opportunities place that has been trying to Art d'Chocolat, to the Argen- and tax breaks, backing hoteredefine its status and relation- tine bodega Agarrate Catalina liers who are opening lavish ship with the United States for and spots such as the inexpen- resorts, boutique hotels and more than a century would of- sive outdoor Cafe Tresbe, the restaurants. Some creditgoes fer a shifting identity, seeking pizza and whiskey bar Loiza to a 2012 Puerto Rican law to be all things to all comers. 2050. Other formerly sleepy ar- offering tax breaks to high-inIt's in permanent limbo, too eas of town are gentrifying. A come mainland citizens who far-flung to feel American and new design district anchored buy property in the commonyet too familiar to feel like a by the Walter Otero Contem- wealth and move there.Hundifferent country. porary Gallery is springing dredshave taken up the offer. Whatever Puerto Rico has up off Avenida Constitucion, In addition to t hat b enefit, become, I saw signs on my trip breathing new life into a mar- there are other incentives for there this winter that being too ginal industrial area. investors in tourism. A govcomplicated to label had reviThis is not by happenstance. ernment tourism promotional talized it. Old, new, colonial, With government and private leafletreads "Sol, arena y cero anti-establishment — t r avel- backing, graffiti artists and impuestos," "Sun, sand and ing through the islands was muralists who operate under zero taxes." like attending a cocktail party names such as the all-female It seems to be an easy sell. with a very eclectic guest list. Morivivi collective and Bikis- The PuertoRican government Murals on underpasses gave mo, a solo muralist who exhib- has signed up a Virginia deway to glistening hotel towers, ited work at Miami's Art Basel veloper, Clark Realty Capital, which gave way to the rustic in 2014, have become celebri- to turn the 3,000-acre former beaches of Vieques. ties there. Roosevelt Roads Naval Station "It's a new manifestation of I'd gone there to see what into a multibillion-dollar seahad become ofa homeland I' d art," Ninah Aymat, a Chris- side residential-entertainment left at 14 and returned to spo- tie's-trained assistant director project with hotels, an airport, radically, in time to see the cos- at the Otero Gallery, told me. a marina and a harbor. The mopolitan surge that eventu- While collectives including Roosevelt Roads project will ally soured after the recession Calle Cerra play a role, street be financed entirely by private of 2007, when rampant crime art "is effervescent all across investors, including Clark, an pervaded previously upscale the island." She doesn't see it official of the redevelopment areas. as a shift but as a "movement authority, Freddy de Jesus, I wouldn't find an easy an- within the ar t w o rld t hat's wrote in an email. Clark estiswer. Now, Puerto Rico is per- more appealing and accessible mates that the project would haps more difficult to pin down to a diverse crowd." involve an investment of $3.2 than destinations of a similar Street art has pretty much billion over 30 years. size — the archipelago that taken over congested Santurce, The project is part of the includes the island for which spilling over into nearby neigh- push to draw luxury clienthe commonwealth is named borhoods. There are no bound- tele: celebrities, fashionistas, has a land mass smaller than aries. Murals pop up along one-percenters, h i gh-flying Connecticut's — but it seemed freeways, on cruddy streets, on singles. Hotels are the main more self-assured than it has abandoned storefronts, on old magnet, but high-end shopbeen in a long time. That much and new buildings, near hotels ping such as the new Mall of was clear from the moment I and on billboards. San Juan, near the internationarrived, and I couldn't wait to al airport, is part of the mix. An easysell see more. The man behindmuch ofthe mer glory at the same time as

'A new manifestation of art'

The redamation of t hese

long been music. Spain lost

neighborhoods is all the more surprising because Puerto Rico, like so much of the Caribbean, seeks to hide its

the islands in the 1890s, rather

economic woes from visitors,

The main cultural asset associated with Puerto Rico has

late in the colonial scramble presenting a glossy exterior for the Caribbean, and as a re- rather than street art in runsult Puerto Rico has retained

down districts. It has a lot to

effort to revitalize San Juan is

Ritz-Carlton Reserve — where

I played in the water slides and the roiling surf those many Sundays of myyouth — willput Puerto Rico on par with glamorous St. Bart's and Anguilla.

Culinarytrailblazers It already has the cuisine to compete. A very vocal culinary vanguard seeks to resurrectPuerto Rico's pastagrarian glory and transform the islands into a farm-to-table ha-

ven. The chef of Le Bernardin, Eric Ripert, is an unabashed fan who credits the Puerto Ri-

can chefs Alfredo Ayala, Wilo Benet, Jose Santaella and Ma-

rio Pagan as trailblazers who fused international and criollo dishes to create a contemporary Puerto Rican cuisine.

Some of the best food in Puerto Rico canbe found these days at Jose Enrique, a modest

pink casita a block from the nearly century-old farmers' market Placita de Santurce, a

neighborhood of produce and meat stands and down-home

criollo bodegas. Named for its celebrated 37-year-old chef and owner, the restaurant has

memorable occasion for more

San Juan.

murals of Santurce and the nontraditional hotels are all

than a century. The upstart galleries, the

wonderful. But for me, Puer20-minute flight to the island to Rico is Old San Juan, and a on an aging eight-seater Cess- drink and a hotel. I've been going to the Carina. But once I landed, I found an understated iteration of the be Hilton nearly all my life. I capital's luxurious digs paired wore my first ballgown there, with its madcap experimental at a formal children's party. I artistic sensibility. was 6. I learned to swim there Vieques has gone from mil- in the old Olympic-size pool. I itary testing site to Fantasy Is- danced there, celebrated birthland, with locals living simply, days and toasted the publitourists lounging on sparsely cation of my first book there. populated beaches, and wild Now more than half a century horsesgrazing on lush farms. old, the Hilton has undergone Small planes land every day multiple face-lifts, renovations, on the hour, flying in supplies, expansions and annexes. But groceries and tourists from the I still feel a jolt when I arrive. Puerto Rican mainland 7 miles The flowers seem eternally away. in bloom, and I can see all the The taxi van that I took from way through the glassed-in the airport traveled a two-lane lobby to the seabeyond. road of hairpin turns, passOn this trip, I did what I usuing horse stables and farms, ally do: I went to the Hilton, brightly colored cinder block walked to the Oasis bar and and wood-framed homes, new ordered a pina colada, not belarge houses on sloping lawns cause it is my favorite drink and hillside mansions front- but because the story goes ing the sea. Many of those are that it was invented there beowned or rented by seasonal fore I was born, and it always visitors such as the New York- seems the right glass to raise to ers and New Englanders who mark my visit. Everything has make up a sizable number of changed, but then nothing reVieques regulars. ally has. I've kept to my ritual, But no structure was more that and dipping in the sea as striking than El Blok, a new the waves roll in. inn set back on a corner lot of the malecon in Esperanza, a www.AgateBeadIMotel.coIn seafront strip of quaint restaurants and stores. An exotic

Private, vintage,oeeanfront getaway' ewport, O~R , 1-. ~ ~-7S- -S6754

oddity with a round cast-iron and concrete facade, sculp-

'

no sign and no set menu and tural perforations and open takesno reservations.Thedin- floors, El Blok is so unusual ing room is set up with bare tables and a small bar, and the V v staff is friendly if harried, trot-

.

,at eBea{hmotel

ting plates to a festive and loud

lunch-hour crowd of business people, lawyers, executives and tourists. On a white chalkboard is a simple one- or-two-

word menu: mahi mahi, scallops, tuna and so on, with entreepricesrunning up to$30. I went there with my cous-

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of pure delight. Fried yellowtail snapper, perfectly grilled churrasco, avocado and papaya salad all came so quickly I couldn't keep track of what I was eating. Two hours later,

when the crowd dispersed and

billionaire John Paulson, pres- the restaurant went into siesta ident of the New York-based mode, we finished off a dish of investment firm P aulson & coffee flan, a dessert my mothCo., who has a majority stake er would've swooned over. in the Condado Vanderbilt and Jose Enrique, of course, has in La Concha Hotel next door. branched out and has a restauThe industry hopes that rant in El Blok inn in Vieques, s uper-expensive coastal r e sorts such as the St. Regis

A pIna colada served at the CarIbe Hilton — which claims the cocktaII's InventIon — in

the North Fork of Puerto Rico.

a Latin-infused language and paper over: Puerto Rico is apAfter three days in busy metheritage, evident in music proximately $73 billion in debt, Bahia; the Royal Isabela lux- ro San Juan, I took a bumpy

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One couple who were holding hands looked just married, but it turned out they'd

been wed 25 years. I saw another silver-haired couple can come to Hawaii for the kissing on Kapalua Beach, same price that you go somebut it turned out they weren't where else. If we had known, yet married. we would have come to Maui Then on a w h al e w atch earlier. We always thought it near Lahaina, I ran into Chad was too expensive." and Jen Berg, of St. Paul, MinNearing the end of their 10nesota, who qualify as almost day trip, the Bergs had drivn ewlyweds. Married t w o en the Road to Hana. They'd years, they were on their first been snorkeling, shopping trip to the Aloha state. and on a north shore scenic Standing near the swaying drive. They'd gone golfing. rail of a catamaran, hump-

And to the beach. And out to

dinner lots of times. Now they

more than 624,000 were hon-

back whales spouting and leaping nearby, Chad said

eymooners, up 4.3 percent

romantic Maui was definite-

from 2013.

ly worth the 12-hour journey from Minnesota. "You're going to get three times asgood a vacation here as Orlando or San Diego,"

were on a whale watch boat.

The only thing they'd run out of time for was renting a Here in Maui (the secmoped. ond-most visited island after Is there anything they reOahu) the scenery alone is gretted? Chad Berg nodded. "When we come again," so romantic that you feel as if you are starring in your own Chad said, uand you don't he said, "we will try to chill exotic movie. Lush g r een- have to pay $500 a night: You more."

18

•the green-tinged paintbrush (Castilleja chlorotica), which is found in the sagebrush areas that surround Bend, • P eck's mariposa l i l y , which is found only in the Ochocos, and •the pumice grape-fern (Botrychium pumicola), which can be found in the area surrounding the Newberry Desert buckwheat in the Badlands outside of Bend.

Submitted photos

Volcano.

He said each of these flowers, particularly the greentinged paintbrush and the mariposa lily, have figured out

But whatever the reason for

a way to thrive in an area that gets little rain because of its

location in the Cascades rain shadow. He said the region's volcanic soils also play a role in determining what types of Bitterroot at Smith Rock State flowers can grow here. Park. "Bend's soil is about 18 to 24 inches of Mount Mazama ash,n he said, referring to the volcano that erupted and created

the state's wildflower abundance, Garrett said Oregonians are lucky because they can go out and see hundreds of different wildflower types without having to drive too far

from home. "There'slots of areas in the state that have interesting flowers," he said. uWe can

appreciate and enjoy them ago. "Some plants do just fine aesthetically." in that type of conditions, oth-

Crater Lake some 7,700 years ers don't do well at all.n

— RePorter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletirLcom

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the road to Hana,n she said. "We're up at 7 or 7:30, but we want to take our time." Take their time? With that schedule?

north shore and inland.

Continued from C1 • the purple-flowered Peck's penstemon (Penstemon peckii), which lives in the low-

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD 24 Like a fantasy land? 26 Beethoven's " Adieux" sonata DOWN 29 Bubbly 1 Bridge action beginning? 2 LastOldsmade 34 Yearned 3 Where 37 Manhattan part 4 pick e, for one 38 Bailout key n 5 Language that 39 Like, With "IO 40 Slightly gave us "galore" 4i Remedyfroma -eyed doctoi? e 7 Cast selection? 42 "Alfred" 8 Nicknamefor composer baseball's 43 Buster Brown's

ried three weeks, they were in Maui for a 10-day honeymoon to rest after their big wedding back home. "We did book snorkeling, and a luau, and we're going to go golfing, and today we're on

Getting around: Youneed a car on Maui. Where to stay: Maui is pricey. Try acondo or apartment rental (try the Lahaina or Kihei area, but book far ahead); or try a big resort along pretty Kaanapali Beach or in expensive Wailea. For a funky surfing vibe, check out Paia.

Wildflowers

(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

121 The Carolinas' Dee River 122 Strengths

IF YOU GO

ery nestles against crashing eyes. waves. Dreamlike islands in Except that they might be the distance seem i mportmissing something. ed just for the visual effect. "We are not really big Towering resorts line the planners," said Lacy Ruether west coast with its sugar sand of Grande Prairie, Alberta, beaches, while more modest whom I met w it h her huslodgings are scattered on the band, Kris, at scenic Twin Falls on the Hana road. Mar-

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A postcard-perfect beach scene in Wailea, Maui.

beach chair and shut their

By FRANK STEWART

It was an imperfect plan. West won with the queen and led a second trump, and the Cynic won and conceded another club. West won with the nine and led a third trump, leavingdummy with none, and Cy was checlanated. His last club was a loser, and he also lost a diamond. Down one. "We should have been at 3NT," Cy reproached himself. "If I bid three clubs over your raise to two spades, you can bid three diamonds next, and I'll try 3NT. We would have nine top tricks." True, perhaps, but Cy could also make four spades by reversing the dummy. He wins the first trump with the ace, takes the A-K of hearts, leads

loved new spouse clutches the armrest in terror. M aui, often n a med t h e most beautiful island in the that honestly, it's a bit intim-

Checkmated at game Cy the C y nic, wh o d i strusts marriage even more than most institutions, says that courtship has a lot in common with playing chess: One wrong move, and you may find yourself mated. Most people don't get married on their first date, but when you're declarer, you may getcheckmated on the first trick if you neglect to plan your play with care. When I watched today's deal in a penny game atmy club, Cy became declarer at four spades and proved yet again that he isn't the greatest at planning. When West led a trump, Cy won, took the ace of clubs and led a second club, pursuing a club ruff in

think the wedding was exhausting, wait till you get to the honeymoon. Whale watching. Zip lines. Luaus. Snorkeling. Driving a hairpin road on the edge of seaside cliffs while your be-

world in travel polls, is so overwhelming in its charm

JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

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"SEEING STARS" 87 Acquisition By KURT KRAUSS transaction, briefly ACROSS 89 Tuxedo

A honeymoon in Maui is a sun-kissed adventure

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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TV SPOTLIGHT

"This is probably

"A.D. The Bible Continues"

the broadest story you can think ofin

9 tonight, NBC

America. Clearly, not everybody knows this story. Not everybody

By Emily Yahr The Washington Post

Producer Mark Burnett fig-

ured "The Bible" miniseries

believes the story. But 150 million Americans

would do well when it pre-

miered on History in 2013, as did many people in the TV industry — it is the best-selling

go to church on a

We

bookof all time. But no one, not even Burnett, thought it would

monthly basis." — Producer Mark Burnett

capture 13 million viewers: a

v

giant number for any TV show, let alone one on cable. Unsurprisingly, NBC came along and snatched up the rights to the sequel. And now

weaved in accurately the acts of the apostles, and between

the moments in the acts of the apostles, filling in what was probably going on with the authorities and the surrounding

the 12-episode "A.D. The Bible

Continues" premieres on the network tonight — Easter SunJoe Alhlas / LightWorkers Media/NBC via The Washington Post day, as it happens. Adam Levy, left, plays Peter and Juan Pablo di Pace plays Jesus in nA.D. The Bible Continues." The So we can expect pretty 12-episode series is the sequel to 2013's "The Bible," which drew13 million viewers on the History good ratings for this premiere, channel. The sequel's home on NBC means it could draw e much larger network audience. too — or even bigger numbers, since it has the much bigger "A.D. The Bible Continues" there's a race to find thebody. platform of broadcast TV. Bur- to Burnett, who in addition to nett says that the network al- his many reality show hits also has an almost entirely new cast Still, even though this is his ready wants him to get started produced last year's theatrical from the History channel mini- third Bible story, Burnett says writing another season. release, "Son of God," an ad- series and picks up at the cru- it's a challenge to strike the "This is probably the broad- aptationof the Jesus-focused cifixion, a scene that required right tone between biblical lanest story you can think of in parts of the miniseries. (It made a visual effects and stunt team. guage and modern dialogue. It's a much shorter crucifix- (Sample lineyou maynot recall America," said Burnett, the about $67 million at the box British reality TV super-pro- office.) He co-produced with ion scene than the intensely from the Bible: "Why couldn't ducer behind such hits as "Sur- his wife, Roma Downey, the detailed sequence in the first this Jesus just stay dead?") "It takes very skilled writers, vivor," "The Voice" and "The "Touched by an Angel" actress miniseries; Burnett said that Apprentice." "Clearly, not ev- who is also a co-creator on earlier one took a whole week you know, tomake dialogue erybody knows this story. Not "The Bible" and "A.D." Burnett to shoot. But this time, the fo- sound real and conversational, everybody believes the story. was recently in Washington for cus is on the aftermath. In the but they'vedone an amazing But 150 million Americans go the National Prayer Breakfast, second episode airing Sunday job," Burnett said, who added to church on a monthly basis." as he and Downey are frequent night, the disciples discover that there was a team of theoIt's a familiar subject matter attendees at the annual event. that Jesus' tomb is empty, and logical advisers on staff. "They

Da saysgirsmustpay orsc oo

characters. And no, unlike "The Bible"

controversy, in "A.D.," you won't see the character of Satan. Back in 2013, there was a minor Internet furor when s ome viewers thought t h e character looked a little too

much like President Barack Obama. Burnett and Downey also cut the character out of

"Son of God" so it wouldn't be a distraction.

"I think someone made a joke and turned it into a story," said Burnett, who called the

controversy "utter nonsense" at the time. "It ended up (as) the big discussion — making more people tune in and watch it anyway."

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

Dear Abby:We have two grand- themselves, but where should we daughters who will be going to col- drawthe line? — Grandma In Troy, Ohio lege soon. We are in a position to help them with expenses, but we are Dear Grandma:Stand pat before asking you if we should. writing any checks; look at your We put our daughter through granddaughters' grades and ask college, and she has a career in the yourselves if they take after your medical field. Her daughter or her hushusband has a partband. If they take aftime, low-paying job ter him, they might be DF p,R and has shown no more interested in a ABBY ambition to find other trade schoolinstead. employment to assist Depending upon with college expenses their ambition and for the girls. aptitude, they might qualify for He's into electronics, and when he

scholarships or student aid. They

ing handfuls of dothing out of their backpacks and attempting to take the sensors off the clothes. I heard a couple of them exdaim how excited

they were about their new clothes, and one of the boys said, "I'm never paying for any clothes ever again." Now I feel guilty that I didn't report anything to the authorities, or at least tell the boys the consequenc-

es of their actions weren't worth the possible repercussions. However, because I was a female traveling alone at sunset, I didn't want to in-

volve myself in apossibly dangerous situation.

wants anewitem, he has our daugh- could also get part-time jobs to What would your advice be on ter work overtime to buy it for him, help pay for books or tuition, which how to handle this encounter should and she does! He has told our grand- would help them to grow into inde- it happen again? — Metro Rider daughters they must pay for their pendent young women. own education because that's what By now it should be apparent that Dear Reader:You handled the he had to do, although he never it's time to draw the line. If you de- situation correctly. If you are ever graduated. (His father told us it isn't cide to pay for your granddaughters' again alone in a situation in which true — that they would have helped.) education, be sure that any money you feel unsafe, particularly if you We have helped them out fi- they'll be getting goes to the school. are outnumbered by individuals you nancially over the years, which of Deer Abby:I'm a 21-year-old fe- think are up to no good, you should course enables our son-in-law to not male living in Washington, D.C. get away as quickly and quietly as improve himself. We realize that Today, while on the Metro coming possible. they quite often play us and think home from work, a group of eight P.S. If you have any idea where we are too ignorant to realize we are high school kids hopped on, ex- the clothes might have come from, beingtaken advantage of. cited about what they had in their call the store and the police and tell I believe that further education for backpacks. them what you saw. their girls is a no-brainer because After they sat down across the — Write toDearAbt«yatdearabbycom we want them to be able to support aisle from me, I saw they were pull- or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

I

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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5 p.m.onTCM, Movie: "Easter Parade" —Hurt and humiliated after his partner (Ann Miller)

unceremoniouslydumpshim in favor of a Ziegfeld gig, dancer Don Hewes (FredAstaire) takes on Hannah Brown (Judy Garland) as his new protege, vowing to make her a star within ayear. Peter Lawford and Jules Munshin also star in this1948 musical. 7p.m.on2,9, Movie:"The Ten Commandments" — Though this is one of the few theatrical movies that still gets an annual telecast, rarely is it shown exactly on Easter. Charlton Heston, Yul Brynner, Anne Baxter and Edward G. Robinson star in director Cecil B. DeMille's final film, the 1956 biblical epic about the life of Moses. Oscar-winning visual effects include the parting of the Red Sea. 8 p.m. on 7, "Call the Midwife" — As newcomer Phyllis Crane (Linda Bassett) struggles to make a place for herself among the other staff members, a problematic birth generates many personal and professional concerns in the new"Call the Midwife, Season 4: Episode 2." Sister Julienne (Jenny Agutter) has an earlier connection to a potential benefactor.

Trixie's (HelenGeorge)desire for a lavish engagementcelebration

is quashed byTom(Jack Ashton). Judy Parfittalso stars. 8:30p.m.on10,"Family Guy" — She didn't envision becoming a model, but Meg (voice of Mila Kunis) is enlisted for that pursuit in "This Little Piggy." Someof the excitement wears off when she realizes what she's wanted for specifically: her feet. Stewie (voice of Seth MacFarlane) wants to experience the great outdoors,

so Brian(alsovoiced byMacFar-

lane) takes him on a trek. Seth Green and Patrick Warburton also are in the voice cast. 10 p.m. on AMC, "Mad Men" — As the Emmy-winning period drama returns for its last seven episodes, story details — including such mundane details as whatyear the characters are

now in —arebeing kept under

tight security by spoiler-phobic executive producer Matthew Weiner. Jon Hamm, who has won a GoldenGlobe and received

seven Emmynominations for his searing work as Don Draper, won't divulge specifics but freely acknowledges, "There is no version of this ending that is not

super painful for me." © Zap2it

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HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015:This year youarevery quiet and reflective, yet you also demonstrate the vitality and sharpness that your sign is known for. People have difficulty relating to you, as you tend to be so idealistic. Be more understanding of others. If you are single, you are likely to meet

someonewhomakesyou daydreamand

YOURHOROSCOPE

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) *** * Sleep in as late asyou want, or

can be charming, but remember to express your nurturing personality as well. Tonight: Put up your feet and relax.

dedicate your morning to a special activity. Make plans for later in the day, and decide whether you want to host at your place or head off to a movie. For your sign, relaxation is very important to your well-being. Tonight: Let loose.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

want to commit. ** * * You might handle certain per- ** * * Use the morning to touch base 8tsfs show the kind Take your time sonal matters quickly this morning. Make with various people at a distance whom of dsy yon'I hsve dating this Person plans to join a loved one for a late brunch you don't get to see often. You could ** * * * D ynamic to be sure he or and a movie. You could find that a partner hear news that will make you rethink a ** * * p ositive sh e is right for you.or associate feels left out. You might be decision. Take the afternoon just for you, ** * Average If y o u are attached, surprised by the firework display that rewhether you need time to go shopping or ** So-so the two of you ofsults. Tonight: Add some naughtiness. doyour taxes. Tonight: Treatyourself. * Difficult ten disagree.Agree to disagree on LEO (July 23-Aug.22) GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * Keep reaching out to someone various topics to avoid making a big deal ** * Speakyour mind, and consider a out of your differences. SCORPIOcan be different outlook. Understand that others at a distance whom you care about. This might not be receptive to making an acdifficult at times. person is important to your well-being, commodation that would work better for as he or she gives you powerful feedback ARIES (March21-April 19) you. Trust in your ability to bring others without being offensive. Be careful about *** * Loved ones surroundyou. One giving flak to someone you live with. Toperson will request some extra time with over to your way of thinking. Tonight: night: Hang out. you. Make it your pleasure, but schedule Order in. the visit for later in the day. Avoid a difVIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ficult older person who will do whatever ** * Even if you just decide to run out ** * * Tap into your imagination when it takes to achieve his or her desired rethe door for breakfast, make sure you deciding what to do. Reach out to a loved suits. Tonight: Time to be a duo. know where you stand financially. Use one and listen to his or her ideas. You this morning and early evening to work might decide to head out for a day trip. If TAURUS (April 20-May20) so, get out of town ASAP.Expect some** * * Remember, Sunday is a day of on your budget. In the afternoon, get together with a close friend or neighbor. one to put in a demand at the last minute. rest. You easily could find your temper Tonight: Don't take every word you hear Tonight: In the limelight. rising, so schedule the perfect day for as gospel. you, and make sure to spend time with PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) an adored group of friends. Be careful if ** * * * M ake special time for a loved LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) someone challenges you. Tonight: Paint ** * * Be spontaneous, and go for what one. Do what this person wants, and the town red. watch as he or she lights up. In the afteryou want. A loved one might be equally impulsive. Hopefully your paths are not noon,reach outto someone who gives GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * You'll sparkle in the morning, on a collision course! Dote on a child you important feedback. Be careful when or loved one in the late afternoon. This speaking with someone who is volatile. and others will respond accordingly. A loved one might take offense if he or she might be as simple as treating him or her Tonight: Use your imagination. doesn't get enough time with you. You to ice cream! Tonight: Out late. © King Features Syndicate

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

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(541) 388-3537


CS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

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Scoreboard, D2 N BA, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D3 MLS, D2 Preps, D4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

NORDIC SKIING

RUNNING Bak sets Horse Butte record Bend resident Ryan Bak won the Horse Butte 10-Mile Trail Run for the second year in a row Saturday, finishing the race staged southeast of Bend in 53 minutes, 23.8 seconds. Bak, 33, beat the previous record on the course, set by Bend's Max King in 2012, by more than40 seconds. Jared Bassett, 24 and of Bend, finished second in 55:55.4. Morgan Arritola, 28 and also of Bend, was the first woman to cross the finish line at1:03:34.8. Lauren Johnson, 35, was close behind, finishing in 1:04:46.0.

A total of 194 runners finished the10th annual running of the10-mile trail race.

en's

e ea e o e r ic • Bend skier, fresh off two junior national titles, is part of a group from Bendthat will help teachcross-country skiing in rural Alaska By Mark Moricel

to Barrow, Alaska — the

tion classes. Hyde's group also

The Bulletin

northernmost city in the

will offer after-school ski clin-

Emily Hyde recently capped country — with several other ics to children and to adults, her impressive nordic ski sea- skiers and coaches from Bend. many of whom work for oil son with two titles at the U.S. The skiers are travelcompanies.

Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin

Emily Hyde is traveling to Barrow, Alaska, on Friday with other nordic skiers and coaches from Bend to help teach nordic skiing to residents of the United States' northernmost city.

— Bulletin staff/eport

Junior Nationals — but the

ing there as part of the

Summit High School senior is not done skiing just yet.

NANANordic and Skiku programs, which have the mis-

There is lots of snow north

sion of creating a sustainable

of here, and Hyde is preparing

nordic ski program for isolat-

to travel about as far north as

ed communities in Alaska. Hyde and the other athletes

one can go to help spread the joy of cross-country skiing. This week Hyde, 18, will venture into the Arctic Circle

and coaches will teach nordic skiing to schoolchildren as part of their physical educa-

PREP LACROSSE

"I'm very excited for that,"

Hyde says. "We stay on the school floor and you teach

each PE class for a week. The idea is, there's not a lot to do up there ... so there's a lot of

drug and alcohol problems. The idea is to get the kids active."

SeeHyde/D4

MLB: AL PREVIEW

Online • View a slideshow from Saturday's race at hendhnlletin.cnm/ hnrsehntte10

Can M's handle the pressureas favorites'?

Inside • Complete results in Scoreboard,D2

ComingMonday • The Horse Butte 10-Miler serves asthe unofficial beginning of the Central Oregon trail running season. A lookat upcoming races and why trail running is so popular here.

By Tim Booth The Associated Press

SEATTLE — Robinson

Cano is one of the few players on the Seattle

Mariners' roster

GOLF

Fll'S'l IIP

who can

Bulletin seeks tournament info

speak with authority

The Bulletin's sports department is seeking 2015 golf tournament information to be published May10 in our annual Central Oregon Golf Preview. The submission deadline is Monday, April 27. Thetournament calendar is for golf events to be held in Central Oregon during 2015 and should include date and time of the event, tournament format, host golf course, cost and what is included, and contact information. To submit a golf calender item, senddetails to the Bulletin by email at sports©bendbulletin. com or centraloregongolfguy@gmail.com. For more information, call 541-383-0359.

playoffs. In his pre-

— Bulletin staff report

COLLEGE BASKETBALL FINAL FOUR Duke

Michigan St. isconsin

Kentucky

1

61 1 64

aboutthe vious stop — with the New York

Yankees C~p

the postseason seven times

and hoisted one World Series trophy. When Cano looks at the

roster the Mariners have Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

Bend's Chance Beutler advances toward the Sherwood goal during the second half Saturday at15th Street Field in Bend.

TV:CBS

NBA Blazers pull away from Pelicans LaMarcus Aldridge and Chris Kamaneach have double-doubles in Portland's 99-90 win over New Orleans. NBA roundup,D3

put together for the 2015

season,heseesfamiliar traits.

• Undefeated No. 12 Bendnevertrails in a 14-10 victory over No. 4Sherwood Bulletin staff report Bend High sent quite a statement to the rest of the state's lacrosse teams

Saturday. Facing fourth-ranked Sherwood at 15th Street Field, the

ce

Bend's Cohl Johnston looks for a shot on the Sherwood

Inside

goal during the second

Eli Pite and Sean Joyce

• Hawks boys, girls track teams take second at Madras Invite,D4

"On paper we look like world champions," Cano said. "But hopefully, God help us, we stay healthy and it's not how we look

on paper, we have to go out and prove it every day." This time it is different

lead the Bend attack, while each posted three goals and two assists. Chance Beutler

for Seattle. Before the regular season begins, the M ariners areviewed asfa-

Lava Bears opened the contest with two straight goals,

half Saturday. The Lava

and the Bowmen never drew

Bears won

scored twice and dished out two assists for the Bears,

even as Bend secured a fifth

14-10.

Cade Hinderlider had a goal

most of Seattle's history for the Mariners to be the

consecutive win with a 14-

and an assist, and Quinn Fet-

favorites, and when they

10 nonleague boys lacrosse

tig scored once. Nikos Skoufos improved to 4-0 as the Bend goalkeeper, coming up with several sig-

have been, they have typically fallen short. SeeMariners/D5

vlctory. The 12th-ranked Lava

Bears (5-0) held a 7-4 advantage at the half and extended their lead to six goals by the fourth quarter on their way

nificant saves to thwart any

to snapping Sherwood's fourgame winning streak.

Cohl Johnston recorded four goals and an assist to

breakthrough by Sherwood

(4-2).

vorites in the AL West. It has been a rarity for

Inside • Capsule previews for every American League team, D5

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

• Coverage from the national semifinals,D3

National title game: Wisconsin vs. Duke When:6 p.m. Monday

When:1:10 p . m. Monday TV:Root

played in

Inside

Nextup

L.A. Angeis

Beaversputting in work installing new3-4 defense By Kevin Hampton Corvallis Gazette-Times

"There's a little different tweaks here, it's not all the

CORVALLIS — Jalen Grim- same," Grimble said. "There's ble played in the 3-4 scheme a little bit of differences in it, during his final year of footbut all in all it's the same." ball at Miami, so the junior deIt is an addition that has fensive lineman was familiar

been in the works since new

with the concepts that Oregon Statedefensiveplayerswere

coach Gary Andersen arrived in Corvallis.

starting to learn this week.

Defensive coordinator Ka-

Grimble said there are some lani Sitake said it is an opporminor differences, mostly tunity for the Beavers to get a with the terminology, but for different look on defense from the most part it has been simi- the 4-3 that they have been lar to what he learned with the using for years. Hurricanes. SeeBeavers/D4

Springgames OREGON

Ducks DEBucknei sits

out springwith injury

STATE When: 1 p.m. April18

By Steve Mims

TV:Pac-12

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

For more coverage of the Beavers:hendhulletln. cnm/spnrts/heavers

OREGON When:11 a.m. May 2 TV:Pac-12 For more coverage of the Ducks:hendhnlletin. cnm/spnrts/dncks

and running mechanics, and all that stuff again," the 6-footEUGENE — DeForest 7, 290-pound Buckner said. Buckner is not able to practice "I'm taking it easy during the during the spring, but Orespring, rehabbing and everygon's senior defensive end said thing, but I'll be ready for the he will be ready for the fall. fall." Buckner said he had"just a Buckner has been on the minor scope" on his knee after sideline duringpractices helplast season and added that it ing out his younger teammates. "Coach (Mark) Helfrich's is feeling "better." He was on crutches last month, but he rule is that if you're not going is now walking without any full, you're a coach," Oregon assistance. defensive coordinator Don "I just started rehabbing Pellum said. everything, strengthening SeeDucks /D4


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

ON THE AIR

COHKBOARD

TODAY SOCCER England, Burnley vs. TottenhamHotspur England, Sunderland vs. Newcastle United MLS,RealSaltLakeatSanJose MLS, Philadelphia at Sporting KansasCity

Time TV/Radio 5:30 a.m. NBCSN 8 a.m. NBCSN 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. FS1

BASEBALL

College, Vanderbilt at Georgia College, Texas atOklahomaSt. MLB, St. Louis at ChicagoCubs HOCKEY NHL, Pittsburgh at Philadelphia NHL, St. Louis at Chicago

9 a.m. SEC 11 a.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. E SPN2 9 a.m. NBC 4:30 p.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA, Houston at OklahomaCity NBA, Chicago atCleveland Women's NCAA tournament, national semifinal, Notre Damevs. South Carolina Women's NCAA tournament, national semifinal, UConnvs. Maryland

1 0 a.m. AB C 12:30 p.m. ABC 3:30 p.m. ESPN 5:30 p.m. ESPN

GOLF

PGA Tour, Houston Open PGA Tour, Houston Open LPGA Tour,ANAInspiration

1 0 a.m. noon 2 p.m.

Go l f NBC Golf

TENNIS

Miami Open, men's final

10 a.m. E S PN

SOFTBALL

College, Michigan at Minnesota College, Alabama atKentucky College, Mississippi St. at Arkansas

10 a.m. Big Ten 12:30 p.m. SEC 3 p.m. SEC

LACROSSE

Women's college, Stanford at Colorado Women's college, California at Oregon Men's college, Johns Hopkins at OhioSt.

11 a.m. Pac-12 1 p.m. P a c-12 3 p.m. B i g Ten

MONDAY BASEBALL

MLB, Toronto at N.Y.Yankees 10 a.m MLB, N.Y.Mets at Washington 1 p.m. MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle 1 p.m. MLB, Cleveland at Houston 4 p.m. College, Louisville at Virginia 4 p.m. MLB, SanFrancisco at Arizona 7 p.m. SOCCER E ngland, Crystal Palace vs. Manchester City n o o n

ESPN ESPN

Root ESPN ESPNU ESPN2 NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA, Portland at Brooklyn

4 p.m.

CSNNW,

KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM

Men's NCAA tournament, national championshi pgame,Dukevs.W isconsin 6 p.m.

CBS

SOFTBALL

College, Mississippi St. at Arkansas

4 p.m.

SEC

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is notresponsiblefor late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL UCLA PullS aWay fOr Win OVerBeaVerS —UCLAscored five runs in the eighth inning to break a5-all tie and take a10-5 win over Oregon State onSaturday in Los Angeles. TheBeavers (22-9 overall, 5-4 Pac-12j held a 5-3 leadthrough the fourth inning, but the Bruins (23-6, 10-2j added runs in the fifth and sixth to tie the gamebefore pulling away in the eighth. Brett Stephens' double to left field with the bases loadedgavethe Bruins their five-run cushion. Elliott Cary had a two-run home run for OregonState, while Kyle Nobach had atworun single. UCLAreliever David Berg (3-Oj threw two perfect innings, while Beavers reliever LukeHeimlich (1-3j allowed two runs.

MiChigan StateOVertakes DuCkS —Oregon jumped outto

a 2-0 lead through the second inning before Michigan State pulled away for a 9-4 nonconference victory Saturday in Eugene.TheDucks (18-14j lost the three-gameseries with the Spartans (13-14j after falling Saturday and2-1 in11 innings Friday night. Matt Eureste, Phil Craig-St. Louis andScott Heineman each hadtwo hits for Oregon.

SOFTBALL DUCkS I'ally tOdeat UCLA —Five runs in the top of the seventh inning allowed Oregon to take a6-4 victory over UCLA in LosAngeles. The Bruins (31-7 overall, 6-2 Pac-12) jumped to the early lead 4-1 in the second, but a Lauren Lindvall three-run home run to left field and a Hailey Decker sacrifice fly allowed the Ducks (31-5, 8-3) to earn a split in the three-game series. Alyssa Gillespie led Oregon at the plate with a 3-for-3 performance. Nikki Udria andJenna Lilley each had two hits. Ducks reliever Karissa Hovinga (8-1 j struck out four. BSGVSi'S RO m8tCll fOi'Ai'IZOlll — Oregon State lost both ends of a doubleheader onSaturday to Arizona in Corvallis, 7-2 and 22-3. Oregon State scored first in the second inning of Friday night's makeup game for the early1-0 lead, but Arizona rattled off four runs in the third and two in the fourth to pull away. Mikela Manewahadtwo of the Beavers five hits. Arizona started quickly in the secondgamewith six runs in the first inning, followed byeight in the fourth and sevenin the fifth. Pitchers Taylor Cotton andRainey Dyreson combined to give up 22 runs off 14 hits for OregonState.

TENNIS Serena WinS 8th Key BISCayne title — Serena Wiliams won her eighth Key Biscayne title Saturday and remained unbeaten this year by drubbing Carla SuarezNavarro 6-2, 6-0 in the final of the Miami Open. Williams becamethe fourth woman to win the same WTA event at least eight times. Martina Navratilova won Chicago 12 times, the most titles by a womanat anytournament. Williams claimed her second title this year. Shewon her19th Grand Slam championship at the Australian Open inJanuary and has nowwon 12 consecutive finals.

SOCCER U.S. women dominate NewZealand in friendlyMeghan Klingenberg scored anearly goal Saturday before the United States women's teambusted the exhibition gamewide openwith three more in the secondhalf for a dominating 4-0 victory over New Zealand in St. Louis. Lori Chalupny, Julie Johnston andMorgan Brian all scored in a span of five minutes in the secondhalf for the U.S. in the World Cupwarmup. U.S. goalie HopeSolo had alight workload, as New Zealandwas limited to two harmless corner kicks. — From staffand wire reports

RUNNING

GOLF

BASKETBALL

Local

PGA

Men's college

MLB

Horse Butle1GK Saturday inBend

Horrston Open Saturday atGolfClub of Houston,The

NCAAtournament AN TimesPDT

MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

(Hometowns whereavailable) Women 1, MorganArritola, Bend,1:03:34.8. 2, Johnson Lauren,1:04:46.0. 3, AndyYoung, Bend, 1:06;59.2. 4,Jody Chinchen,Eff ensburg,Wash.,1:10:52.7.5, DeniseBourassa,Bend, 1:12:23.1. 6, RyanLevering, Bend,1:13:27.5.7, Kaitlin Green,Bend,1:14:03.3. 8, Kari Strang,Bend,1:15:52.8. 9, EricaJohnson, Bend, 1:17 050.10,AmyJaggard, Bend,1:17258. 11, CourtneyDrewsen, Bend, 1:18;20.5. 12,Karly Nash,Bend,1:19:28.8. 13,KathyFecteau, Bend, 1:20:03.3.14,KarlyWa de, Bend, 1:20:10.3. 15,Pam Orton, Bend,1:21;25.6.16, Allyson Orton, Bend, 1:22:10.8.17,BrookeLawrence, Bend,1:23:23.6. 18, MerielDarzen,Bend,1:23:40.5.19, SarahHash, Bend, 1:24:50.8.20,JaneClevenger, Bend,1:26:24.1. 21, Ronda Sundermeier, Bend,1:26:36.6. 22, Margaret Lee,Bend,1:27:17.8. 23,AmyBahrman, Bend, 1:27:47.5. 24, Sam anthaJenson, Bend, 1:28:02.9. 25, AnneAurand,Bend,1:28:20.6. 26,WiliamsRebecca,

1:28:22.6. 27,SueDougherty, Bend,1:28:32.9. 28, Allison Miles,Bend,1:29:02.6.29,LauraFritz, Bend, 1:29:13.7.30,HannahTanler, Bend,1;29:14.3. 31, Megan Larkin, Redmond, 1:29:57.3. 32, AmieWulff ,Bend,1:30:09.4.33,LauraFlood,Bend, 1:30:11.7.34, MaeganKunlz, Bend, 1:30:17.2.35, JaneWard, Bend, 1:30:19.4. 36,Emily Feenstra, Bend, 1:30:22.7.37,KirstenNaito, Bend,1:30:58.3. 38, Maggie Akerberg, Prinevige,1;31;10,8, 39,AngelaShatting, Bend,1:31:26.8. 40,Julie Simpson,London,1:31:29.6. 41, KatieBanks,Bend,1:31:48.7. 42,HaileyLystad, Sunriver,1;31:52.0.43, AimeeSmith, Bend, 1:32:14.2.44,Terri Siffiman,Eugene, 1:33:15.6. 45, Shannon Ostendorff, Bend, 1:33:49.8.46, Cari Bailey, Bend, 1:34:11.8.47, Erin Dugan, Bend,1:34:13.2. 48, KerryWitterschein,Bend,1:34:16.3.49,Maranda Schossow,Bend, 1:34:23.3. 50, CarolynHunsmann, Bend,1:34:52.7. 51, Maureen Schlerf, Bend,1:35:53.3.52,RuthAnn Clarke,Bend,1:37:17.3.53, DeanaSweeney,Portland, 1:37:33.6. 54, LauraJacobs, Bend, 1:38:38.6. 55, MakaelaBigley,CarsonCity, Nev., 1:38:40.0.56,Lisa Goodman, Bend,1:39:20.7.57,JamieSullivan,Bend, 1:39:21.9.58,StephanieKrause, Bend,1:39:29.6. 59, LaurieKutter,Bend, 1;40:49.9. 60,LoganBigley, Carson City,Nev.,1:42:48.0. 61, Sara Schaefers,Redm ond, 1:42:53.3. 62, SusanZimmermanr Bend, 1:43:08.0. 63, Caroline Schoonveld, McMinnviffe, 1:45:01.1. 64, Danieffe Bower, Bend,1:45:02.8. 65, Angie Hubler, Bend, 1:45:12.3. 66, JennyHartley, Bend, 1:45:23.9. 67, Kelly Vuletic,Bend,1:45:25.2. 68,Molly Blackburn, Stayton,1:47:15.8.69,MorganIdalia, 1:47:16.6.70, ElisaCheng,Bend, 1:48:00.3. 71, LouiseWilson, Bend,1:50:16.8. 72,Lindsay Freudenberg,Bend,1:50:21.6. 73, Margaret Barry, Newberg ,1:50:39.5.74,Kelly Maccoy,Redmond, 1:50:55.4. 75, Tam mie Bigley, CarsonCity, Nev., 1:51:39.2.76,BjornstadCaitlin, 1:51:40.5.77, Kathy Harshburger, Bend,1:52:58.9. 78,JenniferWhite, Molaffa, 1;53:26.6.79,Christina Kirby,PostFalls, Idaho, 1:54:48.2.80,Jenninfer Landers, Bend,1:55:22.7. 81, Sheens Olivas, MapleValley, Wash.,1:55:51.8. 82, CarolSpaw,La Pine, 1;55:54.1. 83,MandyBonahoom,Bend,1:57:22.0.84, Lori Peterson,Bend, 1:57:23.6.85, JenneffKiser, Milwaukie,1:57:47.0.86, CarrieRam oz, Bend,1:59:23.7. 87,TinaMendel, Oregon City,2:01:10.4.88,CatAddison, Bend,2:01:31.8. 89,HonoreMaccoy-Patty,Renton,Wash,2:02:15.4. 90, KayWinters, Canby,2:04:17.6. 91, JenFloyd, Bend,2:21:58.6.

Men

1, Ryan Bak, Bend,53:23.8. 2, JaredBassett, Bend, 55:55 .4.3,ThomasMorgan,Lexington,57:03.7.4, RyanMcLaughlin, Bend,58:08.3. 5,JasonIrby, Bend, 58:33 .4.6,RyanMatz,Eff ensburg,Wash.,59:59.8.7, EthanLinck,Seatle,1;00;06.1. 8, PeterInnes,Portland,1:00:23.5.9, StefanRedfield,1:02:28.6.10, Matt Briggs,Bend,1:02:49.8. 11, PeterCurran,Bend, 1;03:49.6. 12,ChadCarroll, Bend,1:05:11.2. 13, SeanMeissner, Flagstaff, Ariz., 1:05:53.4.14,KevneyDugan,Bend, 1:05:57.1. 15, DaveHarms, Bend, 1:06:16.8. 16, JoeWelke, Bend,1:08:21.7.17,PaulHenry, Bend,1:09:35.7.18, Ken Sinclair,Bend,1:09:39.3. 19,Paul Etter,Madras, 1:10:00.7.20, Eric Kutter,Bend,1:10:35.9. 21, Neil Baunsgard,Bend, 1:11:58.0. 22, Mark Robins ,Salem,1:12:24.3.23,SteveJenevien,Bend, 1:12:26.1.24, DanRowlands, London, 1:12:43.5. 25, DannyHarris, Bend,1:13:02.3. 26, Calvin Knight, Bend, 1:13:36.3.27,RyanManies, Bend,1:14:32.4. 28, Alex Enna,Bend,1:14:40.7. 29, SteveHorne, Bend,1:15;25.8. 30,David Lawrence,Bend,1;15;46.5. 31, JackStrang,Bend,1:15:48.4. 32,ToddGrover, Bend, 1:15:56.3.33, TimmRyan, Bend,1:16:04.7. 34,Tom Blanchette,Redmond,1;16:42.7.35,Tommy Jordan,Bend,1:16:45.5. 36, LeeRandaff, Bend, 1:16:52.4.37, Eric Peterson,Bend,1:16:54.6. 38, Dirk Renner,Bend, 1:16:56.0. 39,Scott White, Bend, 1:17:003.40,ScottAbrams,Bend,1:17:01.9. 41, RichardRendon, Daylon, 1:17:28.0. 42, Ethan Fags,Livermore,Calif., 1:17:30.9. 43,JohnSwenson, Bend,1:17:46.0.44, AaronHesket, Prinevige,1:17:47.4. 45,Rich Mithoff ,Bend,1:18:30.5.46,Jason Poweff , Bend,1:18:31.1.47, TeagueHatfield, Bend,1:18:40.2. 48, Thom Rout, Bend,1:19:05.5. 49, RobWitterschein, Bend,1:19:16.7. 50,BrianLevering,Bend,1:19:32.6. 51, JordanGregory, Bend, 1:19:54.9. 52,Andrew Emerson ,Bend,1:20:25.9.53,ScottDumdi,Yamhiff , 1:20:33.1.54,NeilKelly, Bend,1:20:41.1. 55, Chuck Arnold, Bend,1:22:08.2. 56, Chris Gassner,Bend, 1:22:12.4. 57, Chris Cheng,Bend, 1;22;32.5. 58, Wilson Levi,1:22:43.9.59,DJFox,1:22:49.7.60, MichaelNyberg,Bend,1:22:56.0. 61, JakeBell, Bend, 1:23:51.0. 62,Alan Smith, Bend,1:24:01.8. 63, Dominic Surina,Bend,1:24:59.1. 64, DavidVaron,Bend, 1:25:42.4.65, DavidVisiko, Bend,1:26106.66,MarkHubler,Bend,1:2611.7. 67, JeremyBoethin,Bend,1:27:03.0.68,AdrianReyes, Bend,1:27:14.9.69, NatePedersen, Bend, 1:27:20.1. 70, KevinBigley,CarsonCity, Nev.,1:27:41.0. 71,DavidSchwendiman,Bend,1:27:51.8.72,Gabe Sheerer,Bend,1:27:53.5. 73,JohnWagner,Prineviffe, 1:28:19.8.74, ChrisBurdon,McMinnviffe,1:28:42.2. 75, Noah Heilbrun, Bend,1;30;54.6. 76,Matt Fisher, Bend,1:31:06.9.77,StephenCrozier,Bend,1:31:28.2. 78, James Parker, Bend,1:31:44.2. 79,GreenBryant, 1;32:15.2.80,RickJacobs,Bend,1:32;16.2. 81, KevinFarron,Bend,1:32:56.3. 82,DaveZimmerman, Bend,1:32:57.6.83,Tom Walker,Bend, 1:33:09.6. 84, Ken Mucha,Bend,1:33:10.8. 85, FredDagg ett, Union,1:35:52.8.86,DanHarshburger,Bend, 1:36:09.5.87, Matthew Dimond, Bend, 1:36:21.9.88, BrandonWiliams, Bend,1:36:45.0. 89, GaryWinter,Bend,1:37:15.9. 90, Bill Sunderm eier, Bend,1:37:29.5. 91, lanBerg,1:37:32.4.92, Nils Martinsson,Portland, 1:38:15.6.93,DavidLenhart, Bend,1:38:52.0. 94, PatShields, Bend,1:40:47.1. 95,WiliamBrower, Bend, 1:44:11.0. 96, William Johnson,Bend, 1:45:40.3.97, DavidVaughan, Portland, 1;46;17.4. 98,JohnOstendorff ,Bend,1:46: 23.8.99,MikeFoster, Bend,1:46:50.5.100,JPMccarthy, Bend, 1:51:07.8. 101, DaleSmith, Bend,1;52;43.9. 102,Charles Seipt, UniversityPlace,Wash., 1:53:37.7. 103, Ron Thompson,Bend,2:01:59.5

Tournam ent,Humble, Texas yardag e:7,441;Parr 72 Third Round 69-66-67—202 JordanSpieth 63-74-66—203 Scott Piercy 69-68-66—203 Johnson Wagner AustinCook 68-65-70—203 Shawn Stefani 66-69-69—204 KelvinDay 68-69-68—205 PaulCase y 68-69-68—205 Charles Howell ffl 66-70-69—205 RusselHenl l ey 69-68-68—205 PatrickReed 68-71-67—206 KeeganBradley 70-66-70—206 Cameron Tringale 68-70-69—207 67-71-69—207 SergioGarcia 65-72-70—207 AlexCejka 68-68-71—207 MichaelPutnam 67-68-72—207 HunterMahan LukeGuthrie 66-68-73—207 ChadCoffins 69-69-70—208 KevinStreelman 70-69-69—208 Brendon deJonge 73-67-68—208 K.J. Choi

71-69-68—208 70-70-68—208 65-70-73—208 67-65-76—208 66-67-75—208 70-68-71—209 69-69-71—209 69-69-71—209 71-68-70—209 69-68-72—209 70-70-69—209 67-67-75—209 70-68-72—210 71-67-72—210 67-72-71—210 69-68-73—210 68-68-74—210 68-72-70—210 68-68-74—210 70-70-70—210 71-69-70—210 74-66-70—210 71-69-70—210 71-67-73—211 68-70-73—211 73-66-72—211 69-68-74—211 71-68-72—211 67-69-75—211 69-66-76—211 70-70-71—211 69-70-73—212 71-68-73 —212 68-72-72—212 70-70-72—212 72-68-72—212 69-71-72—212 68-72-72—212 72-66-75—213 71-68-74—213 67-68-78—213 69-71-73—213 69-69-76—214 69-68-77—214 70-70-74—214 71-69-74—214 69-69-77—215 68-71-76—215 69-70-76—215 71-69-75—215 71-69-75—215

DanielBerger J.B. Holmes Andrew Putnam Phil Mickelson GonzaloFdez-Castano CodyGribble Jhonattan Vegas Jim Herman JustinRose J.J. Henry GrahamDeLaet CharlSchwartzel JasonBohn Matt Kuchar NickWatney JonasBlixt ScottBrown ChrisStroud WheeKim CharlieBeljan Bo VanPelt KyleReifers Brendan Steele JohnHuh Erik Comp ton Charl eyHoff man Pat Perez Alex Prugh MarkWilson AdamHadwin DavidHearn JustinThom as S.J. Park ErnieEls StewartCink BenCrane ChezReavie ChessonHadley PadraigHarrington VictorDubuisson SamSaunders RyanMoore TonyFinau Francesco Molinari DerekErnst RickieFowler Michae lThompson TomHoge OscarFraustro BlayneBarber

LPGA Ana Inspiration Saturday atMissio n Hills Cou ntry Club, Dinah Shore To urnamentourse C Ranch o Mirage, C alif. yardag e: 6,769; Pa r:72 ThirdRoundleaders 72-65-69—206 Sei Young Kim 72-69-68—209 StacyLewis AriyaJutanugarn 71-73-66—210 BrittanyLincicome 72-68-70—210 MorganPressel 67-72-71—210 ShanshanFeng 71-70-70—211 71-70-70—211 MoriyaJutanugarn 71-69-71—211 JennyShin 71-72-69—212 AnnaNordqvist Pat Hurst 71-71-70—212 Mi HyangLee 74-68-70—212 So YeonRyu 69-72-71—212 Lexi Thom pson 72-69-71—212 74-72-67—213 KarrieWebb 74-71-68—213 CarlotaCiganda 73-71-69—213 MarinaAlex InbeePark 74-69-70—213 Mirim Lee 71-70-72—213 Teresa Lu 76-69-69—214 fheeLee 76-68-70—214 StephanieLMeadow 76-68-70—214 71-69-74—214 CatrionaMathew 71-74-70—215 HyoJooKim BrittanyLang 73-72-70—215 Ha Na Jang 72-72-71—215 ChristinaKim 73-70-72—215 Charley Huff 70-72-73—215 71-71-73—215 AlisonLee 76-70-70—216 QBaek 74-72-70—216 KarineIcher I.K. Kim 75-70-71—216 CarolineMasson 72-73-71—216 SuzannPettersen 76-68-72—216 AmyYang 71-72-73—216 Na Yeon Choi 70-72-74—216 74-73-70—217 PaulaReto 76-70-71—217 Katherine Kirk 71-74-72—217 In Gee Chun Haeji Kang 71-74-72—217 AyakoUehara 72-73-72—217 MariaHernandez 74-70-73—217 KatieBurnett 72-71-74—217 SandraGal 75-68-74—217 73-70-74—217 Wei LingHsu Eun-HeeJi 73-70-74—217 PerniffaLindberg 71-71-75—217 AngelaStanford 72-69-76—217 Kris Tamulis 74-72-72—218 PaulaCreamer 76-69-73—218 71-73-74—218 LydiaKo 71-73-74—218 MeenaLee 75-67-76—218 CarolineHedwaff Mo Martin 74-72-73—219 AustinErnst 70-75-74—219 SakuraYokomine 73-72-74—219 Pornanong Phatlum 72-72-75—219 DaniegeKang 75-67-77—219 JodiEwartShadoff 74-73-73—220 72-75-73—220 CandieKung 74-73-73—220 MikaMiyazato a-HaleyMoore 73-74-73—220 GerinaPiler 75-72-73—220 MariajoUribe 74-73-73—220 Micheffe Wie 73-73-74—220 CristieKerr 75-70-75—220 Ai Miyazato 68-74-78—220

FINAL FOUR National Semifinals

Saturday'sGames Duke81, MichiganState61 Wisconsin 71, Kentucky64 National Championship Monday'sGame Duke(34-4) vs.Wisconsin(36-3), 6p.m.

Women's college NCAAtournament All TimesPDT FINAL FOUR

National Semifinals Today'sGames NotreDam e(35-2) vs.SouthCarolina(34-2), 3:30p.m. Uconn(36-1)vs.Maryland(34-2), 5:30p.m. National Championship Tuesday'sGame Semifinalwinners,5:30p.m.

BASEBALL All TimesPDT

Preseason Saturday'sGames

Detroit1, Tampa Bay0 Philadelphia6, Pittsburgh4 N.Y.Yankees4, Washmgton 3 Boston 4Minnesota2 Toronto 9, Cincinnati 1 Texas4, N.Y.Mets 4,tie Milwaukee 4, Cleveland3 Atlanta5, Baltimore3 Seattle 6,Colorado3 SanFrancisco2,Oakland1 Kansas City3, Houston1 Arizona4, ChicagoCubs2 L.A. Angels6, L.A.Dodgers 6

Regularseason Today'sGame St. Louisat ChicagoCubs,5 p.m. MondayrsGames Torontoat N.Y.Yankees,10a.m. MinnesotaatDetroit, 10:08a.m. ColoradoatMilwaukee,11:10a.m.

BostonatPhiladelphia, 12:05p.m. Baltimoreat Tampa Bay, 12:10p.m. N.Y.Metsat Washington,1 p.m. Championship ChicagoWhite Soxat KansasCity,1:10p.m. Saturday'sGame L.A. AngelsatSeattle,1:10 p.m. UCLA62, WestVirginia 60 Pittsburghat Cincinnati,1:10 p.m. San Diego at LA. Dodgers,1:10 p.m. Atlantaat Miami,1:10p.m. HOCKEY Clevelandat Houston, 4p.m. SanFranciscoatArizona,7 p.m. Texas atOakland,7:05p.m. NHL Tuesday'sGames NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Atlantaat Miami,4:10p.m. AN TimesPOT Baltimoreat Tampa Bay, 4:10p.m. St.LouisatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. EasternConference ColoradoatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Atlantic Division anFranmsco at Anzona,6;40 p.m. GP W L OT Pts GF GA S Texas atOakland,7:05p.m. x-Montreal 79 4 7 22 10 104 209 182 LA. AngelsatSeatle, 7:10p.m. x-TampaBay 80 48 24 8 104 255 206 San Diegoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p.m. Detroit 78 41 2 4 1395 226 213 Boston 79 41 2 5 13 95 209 201 Ottawa 78 4 0 2 6 12 92 226 208 College Florida 79 3 6 2 8 1587 198 215 Pac-12 T oronto 79 2 9 4 3 7 65 205 251 AN TimesPDT B uffalo 79 22 4 9 8 52 155 265 Metropolitan Division Conference Overall GP W L OT Pts GF GA W L Pct W L Pct y-N.Y.Rangers 78 50 21 7 107 240 182 10 2 .833 23 6 .793 N.Y.lslanders 79 46 27 6 98 241 219 UCLA 7 2 .778 25 6 .806 Washington 79 43 25 11 97 235 198 SouthernCal Arizona St . 9 3 .750 21 8 .724 Pittsburgh 7 8 4 2 25 1195 214 199 California 8 4 .667 21 9 .700 Columbus 78 39 35 4 82 219 240 Arizona 7 4 .636 22 9 .710 Philadelphia 78 31 29 18 80 204 223 OregonSt. 5 4 .556 22 9 .710 NewJersey 79 32 34 13 77 174 205 Washi n gton 5 7 .417 18 12 .600 Carolina 7 8 2 9 38 11 69 180 216 utah 4 8 .333 10 19 .345 WesternConference WashingtonSt 3 9 .250 14 16 .467 Central Division 2 7 .222 18 14 .563 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Oregon Stanford 0 9 .000 11 17 .393 x-Nashvile 79 47 22 10 104 227 197 x-St. Louis 78 48 23 7 103 240 196 Saturday'sGames x-Chicago 78 48 24 6 102 224 180 Cal10, Arizona9 Minnesota 78 44 26 8 96 223 192 Southern California 6, W a shi ngton St.2 Winnipeg 78 40 26 12 92 222 208 St. 9,Oregon4 Dallas 79 38 31 10 86 248 258 Michigan Colorado 79 36 31 12 84 212 223 UCLA10,OregonSt. 5 Arizona St.6, utah5 Pacific Division 5,Stanford0 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washington Today'sGame y-Anaheim 80 50 23 7 107 234 221 MichiganSt.at Oreg on, noon Vancouver 79 45 29 5 95 229 216 C algary 79 4 3 2 9 7 93 234 208 Los Angeles 78 39 25 14 92 212 195 TENNIS S anJose 7 9 3 9 31 9 87 223 222 Edmonton 79 2 3 43 13 59 188 272 Professional A rizona 79 2 4 4 7 8 56 167 262 x-clinched playoffspoty-clincheddivision Miami Open Saturday'sGames Saturday,KeyBiscayne, Fla. Carolina 3, Philadelphia2, SO Women Boston 2, Toronto1, SO Championship Detroit 3,Minnesota2,SO SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. CarlaSuColumbus 5, Pittsburgh3 arezNavarro (12), Spain,6-2, 6-0. Winnipeg 5,Vancouver4 Ottawa4,Washington 3, OT DEALS Tampa Bay4, Florida 0 N.Y.Islanders3, Buffalo 0 N.Y.Rangers6, NewJersey1 Transactions Dallas 4,Nashville 3, OT BASEBALL Arizona5,SanJose3 AmericanLeague Calgary4,Edm onton0 HOUSTO NASTROS — Selected thecontract of Los Angele3, s Colorado1 RHPRoberto HernandezandLHPJoeThatcher.DesigToday'sGames natedRHPAlexWhite for assignment. PittsburghatPhiladelphia, 9:30a.m. KANSASCITY ROYALS— Signed RH P Yordano Washington at Detroit, 2 p.m. Venturato afive-yearcontractthroughthe2019season. MontrealatFlorida,2 p.m. NEW YORKYANKEES — Designated C Austin OttawaatToronto, 4:30p.m. Rominefor assignment. Selectedthe contract of St. LouisatChicago,4:30p.m. INF GregorioPetit fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). PlacedINFJose Pirela onthe 7-dayconcussion DL, retroactive toApril 2. PlacedINFBrendan Ryan on SOCCER the15-dayDL,retroactive to April1 andRHPsChris Capuano andIvan Novaonthe15-day DL,retroactive MLS to March27. MAJORLEAGUESDCCE OAKLAND ATHLETICS — PlacedRHPJarrod All Times PDT Parker,LHPSeanDoolittle, LHPSeanNolin, INFNate Frei man,OFCocoCrispandOFJoshReddickonthe EasternConference 15-dayDL Reddick wasretroactive to March27.ReW L T Pls GF GA assigned LHPBarry Zito, RHPBrockHuntzinger, RHP D.C. United 3 1 0 9 3 2 PatVenditte,CBryanAndersonandOFJasonPridie to NewYork 2 0 1 7 5 2 their minor leaguecamp. NewEngland 2 2 1 7 4 6 SEATTLE MARINERS— SelectedLHPTylerOlson Chicago 2 3 0 6 5 7 from Tacom a (PCL). PlacedINFChris Taylor onthe NewYorkCity FC 1 1 2 5 3 2 15-dayDL. OrlandoCit y 1 2 2 5 4 5 TEXASRANGERS— Optioned LHP Alex Claudio Columbus 2 0 3 3 3 and RHP Jon Edwardsto Round Rock (PCL). ReasTorontoFC 1 3 0 3 6 8 signed CChris Gimenezand INFThomas Field to Montreal 0 1 2 2 2 3 minor league camp. Philadelphia 0 2 2 2 3 6 National League WesternConference ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Optioned LHP W L T Pls GF GA Vidal NunoandLHPRobbie Rayto Reno (PCL). Sent Vancouver 4 1 0 12 7 4 RHPEnriqueBurgos to Mobile(SL). ReassignedC FC Dallas 3 1 1 10 7 4 BlakeLaffrto their mmorleaguecamp. Seattle 2 1 1 7 6 3 MILWAUKEE BREWERS— PlacedRHPJim HenSanJose 2 2 0 6 6 6 dersononthe15-day DL,retroactiveto March 26. Portland 1 1 3 6 6 5 NEWYORKMETS—Selectedthecontract of RHP RealSaltLake 1 0 2 5 5 4 BuddyCarlylefromLasVegas (PCL). Optioned INF LosAngeles 1 2 2 5 5 6 Eric CampbellandRHPErik Goeddel to LasVegas. S porting KansasCiy 1 1 2 5 3 4 Re-assigned INFsDanny Munoand Matt Reynolds, C 1 2 2 5 2 3 Houston JohnnyMoneffandRHPZackThornton to LasVegas. Colorado 0 1 3 3 0 2 PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Signed RHP Dustin McGowan to aone-year contract. SANFR ANCISCOGIANTS—PlacedOF-18 Travis Saturday'sGames Chicago 3, TorontoFC2 Ishikawa onthe15-day DL. NewEngland2, Colorado0 WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Reassigned 18 Seattle1,Houston0 MikeCarpandLHPtominor leaguecamp. Vancouver 2, LosAngeles0 BASKETBALL Portland 3, FCDaffas1 National Basketball Association Today'sGam es ATLANTA HAWKS— Signed FAustin Dayeto a Real SaltLakeatSanJose,2p.m. multiyearcontract. Philadelphiaat Sporting KansasCity,4p.m. HOCKEY Wednesday'sGame National HockeyLeague NHL — Fined New Jersey F Scott Gomez Columbus atVancouver,7p.m. Friday's Game $1,478.49for elbowingMontreal D Alexei Emelin Coloradoat FCDallas, 4p.m. during an April 3 game. National Invitation Tournament All TimesPDT

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

Timbers beat Dallas for1st win of the season The Associated Press

Nextup

PORTLAND — Maximiliano Urruti scored the winning

Orlando City at Portland goal for the Portland Timbers as they defeated FC Dallas 3-1 When:2 p.m. April12 TV:ESPN2 on Saturday night. The win is the first of the season for Portland (1-1-3), first Timbers goal in surpriswhile Dallas (3-1-1) lost its irtgly easy fashion in the 23rd •

"Feels good. Feels really good. We'reoffand running now," Timbers coach Caleb Porter said. "The weight's lift-

minute. Off a corner kick, the

defender found himself unguarded six yards from goal, allowing him to measure his shot artd drive a header into

ed. We'llplay evenbetter now." the ground artd past Dallas On a night celebrating him, goalkeeper Chris Seitz. with fans given cutouts of his

W hen a sked

ron Asprilla into the net. Di-

decide. "Both were pretty surreaL I

ego Chara put the game out of reach with four minutes re-

don't get to score too often, so

maining with a counterattack

'

first.

the crowd, Borchers couldn't

w h ic h h e

head — and beard — on a found more unusual, scoring stick, Nat Borchers scored his or seeing his face throughout

getting to score was fun," said goaL the defender, who played for The three goals doubles Real Salt Lake the past seven seasons. "Kinda get that

Portlartd's output for the sea-

son. With last season's leading weight off of our shoulders. scorer Diego Vaieri still recovArtd getting to see a bunch of ering from a knee injury, Por'Nat's beard' photobombs in ter hopes to continue finding the crowd was kinda surreal goals from multiple sources. "Three different goals in as well." Dallas responded seven three different ways. And minutes later with a T esho three different guys and that's Akittdele goaL The Timbers great to s ee," Porter said. "With Vaieri out, we're going retook the lead in the 62nd minute when Urruti directed to need that. We're going to do a cross from substitute Dai- it by committee."



D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

0 S, I I ' S

n a

a I a s nVie

Bulletin staff report M ADRAS — T h e t w o - second game, and Alesha time Class 4A pole vault state Freeman and Elly B autista champion put on quite a show had two hits each, Bautista

on Saturday.

driving in three runs. In the

La Pine's Justin Petz won

first game, Culver committed

2 inches — the best mark this

Freeman each drove in a run

ond in the top doubles championship bracket. In the Nos.

3 and 4 singles bracket, Bend's Grace Perkins placed third.

the boys pole vault at the Ma- eight errors and surrendered Boys tennis dras Invite by clearing 16 feet, 11 unearned runs. Aldred and Storm second at tourney: season in the state, regardless in the opener for the Bulldogs of classification, by more than (0-2 SD6, 3-8 overall). a foot. Petz also placed second West Albany 11-13, Bend the in the javelin, with the sec- 0-0: West Albany's Kelsey ond-best distance in 3A, and Broadus allowed three walks was runner-up in the long and two hits but struck out jump to help the Hawks post 20 in the front end of the dou146 points and finish second in bleheader. In the next game, the eight-team track and field

meet. Tyress TurnsPlenty was second in both the 1,500- and

3,000-meter runs for La Pine. Madras' Brent Sullivan (high jump) and Zephaniah Phillips (discus) each claimed wins, Culver's Corey Sledge was second in the pole vault, and Gilchrist's Hunter Nelson finished third in the 1,500.

Julia Smith-Harris allowed three hits and struck out 10.

the Storm.

Baseball

Madras tandem is runner-up: M ADRAS — T h e

West Albany 11-5, Bend 2-6:

White Buffaloes' No. 2 doubles

The Lava Bears (7-3) wrapped team of Omar Dominguez and up it s n o nconference slate Simon Sangha recorded 42 with a split in a doubleheader. points to take second in the Crook County 11-15, Mc- nine-team field of the White

two hits and two RBIs. Dylan Wilson also had two hits and in both the high jump and the struck out six on the mound

the 400. Culver's Andrea Retano (800) and Hannah Lewis (high jump) each finished second, and Gilchrist's Sierra Shuey finished second in the

ished third with four points.

Buffalo Invitational. Joseph

Calica was fifth at No. 2 singles for Madras, which totaled 100 points to f i nish fourth.

Crook County, which was eighth with 90 points, was led by a second-place finish by the tandem of Jack Stubblefield and Garrett Harper at No. 1 doubles. Gabe Willitts and

in four innings. In the second Ben Johnson placed fourth game, CrookCounty piled up at No. 2 doubles for Sisters, 15 runs on 11 hits to complete

which rounded out the nine-

the sweep. Jared McGuire, team standings with 89 points. John Tolmsoff and Keenan Henley won the round-robin Mozingo each had two hits for

tournament with 165 points.

discus and third in the triple

the Cowboys. Grant Union 15-10, Cul-

Boys lacrosse

jump.

ver 5-0: JOHN DAY — The

Summit 16, Canby 3: The Bulldogs slipped to 3-7 with Storm jumped out to a 9-1 standings, winning the boys back-to-back nonconference halftime lead to rebound afcompetition with 153.5 points setbacks. ter their first loss of the seaand the girls meet with 213. son Friday. Stu Bledsoe led Girls tennis Also on Saturday: the way for Summit (5-1) with Bend singles place high at three goals and an assist, and Softball tourney: ROSEBURG —Sier- C harlie Stuermer had t w o Burns13-8, Culver 2-7:CUL- ra Winch placed second in the goals and an assist. Nick RasVER — After being beaten in Nos. 1 and 2 singles champi- mussen and Brint MacDonald five innings in the opener of onship bracket, highlighting each had a goal and two asa Class 2A/IA Special Dis- Bend High's performance sists, and goalie Reid Yundt La Grande swept the team

trict 6 doubleheader, Culver

at the eight-team Roseburg

took Burns to eight innings before falling in the second game. Josi Harrison and Cheryl Aldred had three hits apiece for the Bulldogs in the

Tournament. Jesse Vezo took Sisters 17, Hermiston 5:SISfourth in the same bracket TERS — With a High Desert for the Lava Bears, and the

had nine saves.

West Albany

Bend WestAlbany Bend

Track and field

Noncottference First Game 12 2 002 4 — 11 14 0 000 000 0 — 0 2 7

SecondGame (5 innings)

42214 — 13 131 0 00 00 — 0 3 1

Class2A/1A Special District6 First game

Burns Cttlver

Culver Burns

(5 innings) 071 50 101 00

— 136 4 — 25 8

Secondgame (8 innings)

012 030 10 — 7 11 5 230 01011 — 8 6 4

Baseball McLoughlitt

CrookCounty

Noncottference First game (5 innings)

001 00 111 44

13 6

118 3

Secondgame (5 innings)

M cLoughlin 1 2 0 02 — 5 3 6 Crook County 027 33 — 15 11 5

Hyde

really know something and ily's strength is she's really, you can teach it. These are really consistent." Continued from 01 some pretty isolated villages, A B en d n a t i ve, H y d e The program, which also and they're trying to provide learned to cross-country ski donates ski gear to villag- outlets for them." from her father, a former ski es, was founded by former Last month marked Hyde's patroller at Anthony Lakes Olympic nordic skier Lars fifth appearance at junior na- M ountain Resort near L a Flora, a former Bend resident tionals. In 2014 she posted Grande. She started skiing at who now lives in Anchorage, two top-10 placings there, so a very young age and joined Alaska. this year she was hoping for MBSEF in 2005. According t o www. a top-three podium finish. Hyde draws m o tivation nananordic.com, in 2 0 14 Instead, she claimed two im- from Simoneau and her felNANANordic and Skiku vis- pressive victories, as well as low MBSEF skiers but also ited 27 villages from Aniak a third place in the 5K skate. from the women's national "I've kind of been build- team, which has raised the to the Bering Straits region, ing up," Hyde says. "I felt bar over the past few years. Northwest Arctic and North " They're just so cool t o Slope, bringing 80 coaches to like it just all came together work with 3,000 students. in that one week, which was watch," Hyde says. "Their H yde wa s s elected f o r awesome." coach (Matt Whitcomb) has the program shortly after Hyde plans to attend Dart- been at a couple of camps her victories at the U.S. Ju- mouth this fall, and she will that I've gotten to go to, and nior Nationals in the skate compete on the Big Green's he is incredible. He's so motisprint and the 10K classic NCAA Division I cross-coun- vating and hard-working." last month in Truckee, Cali- try ski team. Hyde mightone day make fornia. She will be traveling She also has long-term a bid for the national team, to Alaska with friend and goals of making the U.S. but for no w sh e ha s h er fellow Mt. Bachelor Sports Cross Country Ski Team and sights set on northern AlasEducation Foundation skiqualifying for the Olympics. ka, where it is cold (temperaer Casey Shannon, as well Simoneau sees that poten- tures below zero), but also as a few other coaches from tial in Hyde. light for most of the day. In "What stands out about Bend. They plan to stay Barrow in early April, the in Alaska for about one her is her focus," Simoneau sun sets around 10 p.m. "It's just going to be a week. says. "Her results have got"What a cultural experi- ten better every single year. whole different experience," ence," says Dan Simoneau, She was ready to win and Hyde says. "I don't k now Hyde's coach a t M B S EF. she won. The last Olympic anything about the lifestyle "There's so many good sides team had five skiers from the or anything. But I just love to it. Learning about the cul- Northwest, and none of those skiing, so it's just teaching tures, and traveling to new five ever one two races at kids what I love to do." places. And then the whole junior nationals in the same — Reporter: 541-383-0318, side athletically, when you year. That's pretty cooL Emmmorical@bendbuIIetitt.com

Conference win, the Outlaws

tandem of Kyla Collier and improved to 3-0 in league play Lauren Handley finished sec- and 3-2 overall.

PREP SCOREBOARD Softball

Meg Roussos/ The Bulletin

Emily Hyde skis to a first-place finish for Summit during the nordic state championships at Mt. Bachelor in Bend in February. Hyde, who won a pair of junior national championship in March, is headed to Barrow, Alaska, as part of a group that will teach locals how to ski.

The No. 3 doubles team of

(5-5).

for the Hawks. Mariah Stacona placed first

long jump for Madras, while

2-0 at Nos. 1 and 2 singles, respectively, helping Summit post nine points and place second at the Oregon Episcopal Tournament. Lakeridge topped the three-team field with 11 points, while OES fin-

Awbrie Elle Kinkade had one Andy Jones and J onathan hit in each game to lead Bend Wimberly also finish 2-0 for

For the girls, freshman Jor- Loughlin1-5: PRINEVILLEdynn Slater won the shot put The Cowboys scored a run in and the discus for La Pine, every inning in the first game which totaled 98 points to take of a nonleague doubleheader, second place. Caitlyn Muhle- forcing the 10-run rule in the man (800) and McKenna Boen fifth inning. Chase McCall (100 hurdles) each had wins led Crook County (6-2) with

teammate Kalan Wolfe won

PORTLAND — Daniel Pino and Thomas Wimberly went

LG,18-10.

Girls MadrasInvite Teamscores—LaGrande213, LaPine98, Burns Boys 74.5, Madras66,SouthWascoCounty60,Culver41, Team scores — LaGrande153.5, LaPine146, Gilchrist36.5,Riverside26. Burns97,SouthWascoCounty91, Madras78, Culver Top threeplacers 30.5,Gilchrist29.5,Riverside25.5. 400-mete rrelay— t,LaGrande,53.93,2,Soulh Top threeplacers Wasco County,58.54.3,Madras,1:Ot80.1,500— t, 400-meterrelay — 1,LaPine,46.21.2,Riverside, Amanda Welch,LG,5:07.44.2,BrittanyHanson,LG, 4t.t0.3, Madras,48.88. 1,500 —1,ToddKeniry, LG, 5:t8.28. 3,Heather Keniry, LG,5:3.07. 3,000 — t, 4:26.94.2,TyressTurnsPlenty, LP,4:30.63.3, Hunter Nel- AmandaWelch, LG,11:00.91. 2, Heather Keniry, LG, son, G,4:39. 29.3,000— t,ToddKeniry,LG,9:41.26. u;26.79. 3, MaryLetham,B, 12:56.76. 100 — 1, 2, Tyress TurnsPlenty, LP,t0:05.04. 3, Keegan Dutto,LG, JustyceSmith, R,13.28. 2, KelseyBrown, LG,13A4. 100629.100—t, LoretoMoreli, SWC ,11A8.2, Kte- 3, McKenna Boen, LP,13.80. tIO —t, KalanWolfe, ganKriz,LP,12.0t 3, FernBadilo, C,12.tz 400—1, M, t:09.50. 2,TatumHahn, SWC , 1:10.01. 3, Nicol LorstoMorelli, SWC,51.47. 2, D.J. Holoway,LG,54.32. Gahley ,B,t:10.38.100h — 1,McKennaBoen,LP, 3,TravisHayes,SWC,54.79.110h— 1,JefDaviss, 17.14. 2,LaurenMarch, LG,17.7g. 3, Ally Muhlema n, B, 16.63.2, Chandler George,LP,17.56. 3,CadeReed, SWC, 18.16.800—t, CaitlynMuhleman,LP,23887. LG,1818. 800—1,Scott Davies,6,2108z 2, Ksegan 2, Andrea Retano, C,2:39.3t 3, Brittany HIIson, LG, Dutto,LG,2:13.30. 3, D.J.Hollgway,LG,2:15.58. 200 2:40. 26.200 — 1,JustyceSmith,R,27.66.2,Cas—t, LoretoMorelli, SwC,2z98.2, BryantCardenas,R, sandr aBrownell,LG,27.75.3,KelseyBrown,LG,28.46. 24.74.3,KeeganKriz, LP,24.92.300h—1,CadeReed, 300h —1,LaurenMarch,LG,50.39. 2,Ally Muhleman, LG,43.51.2,JeffDavies,B,44.37.3,ChandlerGeorge, SWC,5Z87.3,LaurenWoodworth,LG,53.49.1,600 LP,46.77.1,600relay— t,SouthWascoCounty, relay — 1, EaGrande, 4;26.74.2,Lapine, 4;26.9z 3, 3:39.76.2,LaGrande,3:49.40. 3,LaPine,3:50.08. La Gran de,444.13. HJ —t, BrentSullivan,M6-z 2, Jeff Dav ies, B, HJ —t,MariahSIacona,M,5-0.2,HannahLewis, 5-10. 3,lanJohnson, LP,5-8. Discus—1, Zephani- C,410. 3, JustyceSmith, R,46. Discus—t, Jordynn ah Philips, u, 133-4.2, DerrickWagoner, LG, 124-5. Slater,LP,113-6. 2, SierraShuey,G,96-Z 3, Maddison 3, Tanner Hanson, LP,119-9. PV—1,Justin Petz, LP, Henshaw ,LP,86-4.PV— t,LaurenWoodworth,LG, 16-Z 2, Corey Sledge,C, 14-0. 3, EthanMathews, LP , 8-0. 2,AllyMuhleman, SWC, 7-6. 3, BrittneyManson, 1t-6. Shot — 1,DerrickWagoner, LG,42-11. 2, Ellis LP, 7-3.Shot — t, JordynnSlater, LP,37-3. 2, Cera RagerSWC,427. 3,Tanner Hanson, LP41-10.Javelin Clay, M, 32-7. 3,SydneyBright, LP,29-0. Javelin — t, —1, Blaine Kreulz, LG,175-4. 2,Justin pelz, Lp,168-Z Shayna Cooper,LG,120-0. 2, ElleRenault, u, tu-Z 3, 3,Jaco bBlackburn,B,t57-0.TJ— 1,JefDavies,B,39- Rebecc aMcLean,LG,108-5.TJ— t,laurenMarch,LG, 9.5. 2,FredyPovis Ruiz,M,39-4.5. 3,BlaineKreulz, LG, 32-1.5.2,RachelAlexander,LG,31-0. 3,SierraShuey,G, 3H. LJ — 1,BlaineKreutz, LG,t9-4. 2,Justin Petz, LP, 3H.25. LJ —1, MariahStacona, u, 15-4.25.2, Ana 19-3.T3,FredyPovis Ruiz, M,18-10. T3,SkylerRussell, Popchock, SWC,15-Z75.3, Ele Renault, M14-I0.5.

NHL ROUNDUP

Beavers

the tackle and if you're lucky you'll get a tight end and that makes it even easier."

Continued from 01 "Back when coach AnderT he coaches are in t h e sen was the (defensive coor- process of looking at where dinator) at Utah he had the each player fits in the 3-4. On odd-man front back then, Thursday, Grimble, Lavonte too," Sitake said. "So the Barnett and Jaswha James goal is to get the best 11 on were at end, along with playthe field and we'll see how ers such as redshirt freshit works out, whether we're

man LaMone Williams.

an odd-base team or an even James said he likes the base. I think we're going to end spot in the 3-4 because it have to be able to do both." allows him to use his speed. "It's just using our athletiGrimble, a tackle in the 4-3, was at end on Thursday. cism to our advantage, realIt is a spot he said he enjoys ly," James said. "And at the because he can go one-on- same time they believe that one with a tackle. us (using a) three defensive "There's a lot of single front, we can hold five lineblocks that you get from the men, so overall I think it 's tackle," Grimble said. "I'd working good." love to take on the tackle Some of the linemen movrather than the guard any ing inside to n ose tackle day. So there's benefits, you were Kyle Peko, Ali'i Robins get to rush off the edge, it and Kalani Vakameilalo. gives you a little more freeP eko is 6 f e e t 1 , 3 0 6 dom in pass rushing. pounds, Robins is listed at "Anybody that's played 6-2, 289, and Vakameilalo at defensive line knows that 6-3, 318, so they have the size rushing from the three-tech- to fill space but also have nique is a quicker path to shown they can move. "Guys like those, they're the quarterback but also it's the toughest path. You've just hard to move. They're got the most blockers to go big, strong and they're also through, you usually get the athletic, so it's just a nightdouble team if you're a nose. mare for a center, whoever's So playing off at the end you got to block them," James get a lot of one-on-ones with said. "So, really, that's an

ideal fit for them because it's one-on-one with a center and they're going to win 100 percent of the time." Playing nose tackle is a new experience for Robins,

and he said he is still getting used to playing inside. "It makes you open up your eyes to like if you get double-teamed you've got to stay low," Robins said. "Back then I didn't know that and

so if you get double-teamed you got pushed back. But now I'm starting to hold my ground and do better."

The Beavers have plenty of linebackers with a variety of abilities, which will help in getting four out on the field at the same time. Sitake said the linebackers are a factor in the addition of

the 3-4, and how much the Beavers will be able to use

it will also depend on what t hey want to d o w i t h t h e ends.

"And also depending on who our opponent is that week," Sitake said.

"In order to get it all done, we have to be able to lay a good foundation of first, fundamentals and technique, and then working our base defense and then adding some pressure."

Red Wingssnap losing skid in shootout The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — Dar-

saves for New York. Lightning4, Panthers0:SUN-

and an assist, and Mike Smith made 42 saves for Arizona.

ren Helm scored in the eighth RISE, Fla. — Steven Stamkos Blue Jackets 5, Penguins 3: round of a shootout, and the scored two goals and added an COLUMBUS, Ohio — Nick FoDetroit Red Wings outlasted the Minnesota Wild 3-2 on Sat-

assist to lead Tampa Bay.

urday night. Gustav Nyquist and Riley Sheahan scored in both the shootout and regulation for

BOSTON — Patrice Bergeron scored the only shootout goal to keep Boston in the hunt for a

Detroit, which ended a three-

game losing streak. Jimmy Howard stopped 22 shots. Also on Saturday:

Bruins 2, Maple Leafs 1:

playoff spot. Islanders 3, S abres 0: UNIONDALE, N.Y. — New York's Jaroslav Halak made 21 saves for his sixth shutout of

Senators 4, Capitals 3: OT- the season. Stars 4, Predators 3: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Dallas' Cody Eakin scored on his first caRangers 6, Devils 1: NEW reer penalty shot in overtime. YORK — Rick Nash scored Coyotes 5, Coyotes 3:GLENhis career-best 42nd goal and DALE, Ariz. — Oliver EkHenrik Lundqvist made 35 man-Larsson had two goals TAWA, Ontario — Kyle Turris scored on a breakaway at 3:14 of overtime to lift Ottawa.

ligno scored three times, and

Columbus set a franchise record with its ninth consecutive

Ducks

"The nice thing about spring football is you just Continued from 01 rotate guys so everyone gets Buckner has been men- a ton of reps," Pellum said. tioned as one of the expected "That is good for coaches leaders of Oregon's defense because you get a chance to next season and he is work- evaluate guys. During the ing on that role while unable season, the ones are with the to take the field.

Humcanes 3, Flyers 2: RALEIGH, N.C. — Nathan Gerbe and Chris Terry scored in the shootout to lift Carolina.

Jets 5, Canucks 4: WINNIPEG, Manitoba — LeeStemp-

niak scored twice and Mathieu Perreault had three assists for Winnipeg. Kings 3, Avalanche 1:LOS ANGELES — Alec Martinez

scored the tiebreaking goal in the second period for Los Angeles.

"I can't really do much, so I am trying to be more vocal and help out guys with whatever they need," Buckner said. "That can be technique

ones, twos with the twos, and

threes with the threes, so if you have a guy not as expe-

Buckner was fourth on the team last year with 81 tack-

les, including a team-leading 13 for loss, and is a returning starter along with Alex Balducci on the line. Oregon will need to replace Arik Armstead, who left after his

junior year for the NFL draft. Buckner also considered

rienced with the threes and

leaving early for the NFL before deciding to stay for his

nobody else is real experi-

senior season.

"At the beginning of the they can do. Now you take season, I wasn't thinking Buckner and Pellum both a guy going with the threes about it but toward the end cited senior Tui Talia and T.J. and put him with the ones of the year, I had a hard deDaniel as defensive linemen where they all know what cision to make," Buckner who have impressed during they are doing, all he has to said. "I went over it with my the first week of spring prac- do is focus on his job and you family and thought coming tice and said freshman Can- get a chance to see what he back was the right decision. I ton Kaumatule is picking up can do because he can relax love Oregon and I'm having a the defense. and cut it loose." great time here." or just motivating them."

enced, it is hard to see what


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

Teams listed in order of predicted finish

ALEast

AL Central BOSTONREDSOX

AL West CHICAGOWHITE SOX

Rotation:Clay Buchholz, Rick Porcello, Joe Kelly, Wade Miley, Justin Masterson Keyadditions:RHPPorcello, RHP Miley, RHP Masterson, 3B PabloSandoval, OFHanley Ramirez Outlook:Forall the overhaul of the Boston roster in the offseason — a new third basemanfrom SanFrancisco in World Serieshero Sandoval, new left fielder in formerRedSoxshortstop prospect Ramirez, new starting pitchers in Porcello, MileyandMasterson (the last a former Sox prospect aswell) — theystill have oneglaring hole: ace.The RedSox never matchedtheCubs' $155-million offer to Jon Lester, andtheir main holdover, Buchholz, is comingoff a season in which hehada5.34 ERA and1.386 WHIP. What they don't have infront-of-the-rotation performance theyreplacewith excellent depth, and it is possible Porcelloout from theshadows ofJustin Verlander and MaxScherzer in Detroit — rises to acestatus in his lastyear before free agency. Offensively, the most intriguing development isn't the arrival of theestablished stars, but the blistering spring of center fielder MookieBetts, who hit .346/.431/.529 atTriple-A lastyear. Oneblow: the loss of catcher ChristianVazquez,whomayhavetoundergoTommy Johnsurgery.

Rotation:Jeff Samardzija, Chris Sale, Jose Quintana, John Danks, Hector Noesi Key additions:RHPJeff Samardzija, Closer David Robertson, 1B/DH Adam LaRoche,OFMelky Cabrera, RPZach Duke Outlook:Pundits should learn lessons about picking the team that made the splashiest offseason moves. But in awide-open division with several intriguing and plausible options, can ateam that won 73 games ayear agowin the15 or16 more it will likely take to become division champs?Well, consider the backbone with which the Sox begin: Sale andthe underappreciated Quintana (3.32 ERAin 200'/ innings) in the rotation. Add Samardzija in his final year before free agency, and that is the best1-2-3 combination in the division. Add Robertson and lefty Duke asfree agents to the bullpen, and they could have enough to overcomethe fact they ranked third-to-last in the American League inERAa year ago. LaRoche, too, arrives to add lefty pop in a lineup that is anchored byJose Abreu and his leaguebest.581 slugging percentage.

KANSASCITY ROYALS BALTIMORE ORIOLES Rotation:Chris Tillman, Wei-Yin Chen,BudNorris, Miguel Gonzalez, KevinGausman Key additions:OFTravis Snider Outlook:Is there a less-respected 96-win team? By some measures, the Orioles' offseason seemedtepid — other than the flirtation of General ManagerDanDuquette with the Toronto Blue Jays andthe departure of home runchamp Nelson Cruz(Seattle) and franchise mainstay Nick Markakis (Atlanta). Snider, who has neverhadmorethan359plateappearancesinaseason,mayprove to be another shrewd Duquette pickup. Therearetwo reasons for optimism, even if the roster doesn't seem to havemoved forward: the return of catcher Matt Wieters (eventually) and third baseman Manny Machado from injuries and first basemanChris Davis from a PED suspension (Adderall). Wieters, coming off TommyJohn surgery, should be back inJune after playing just 26 games in 2014, and Machado is readyafter knee problems limited him to 82 games.The rotation is sneaky good: after the all-star break last year,Gonzalez (2.19), Tillman (2.33) andChen(2.76) all ranked in the top13 in the American League inERA— andthis year comes the intrigue of Gausman, one of the best prospects in the division, for a full season rather than the 20 starts he received ayear ago.

TORONTO BLUEJAYS Rotation:Drew Hutchison, R.A. Dickey, Aaron Sanchez, Mark Buehrle, Daniel Norris Keyadditions:C Russell Martin, 3B Josh Donaldson, 1B Justin Smoak Outlook:At some point, after so manydifferent machinations, don't the Blue Jays have towin? Thelineup, which scored the fifth-most runs in baseball last year, should beelite given the additions of Martin (.832 OPSfor a catcher) and Donaldson (second in the AL inwins above replacement in 2013, third in 2014). Giventhe presence of Jose Bautista and EdwinEncarnacion — acombined 69 homers last year — there should beenoughexperience around to let 22-year-old rookie Dalton Pompeydevelop asthe starting center fielder. The rotation isn't flashy and needsHutchison to step forward and be better than his 4.48 ERA in 32starts last year. But the real concern could be in the bullpen, which hadthe sixth-worst ERA in baseball last year. Brett Cecil will be the closer despite the fact he hassix saves in his career. Given the BlueJays' lineup, he could be called on to protect more than his share of 7-6 leads.

Rotation:Yordano Ventura, Danny Duffy, Edinson Volquez, JasonVargas, Jeremy Guthrie Key additions:RHPEdinson Volquez, OFAlex Rios, DH Kendrys Morales Outlook:TheRoyals ranked last in the majors in home runs — which doesn't concern them given their spacious ballpark. So their offensive additions come in theform of Rios, who they believe will hit 40 doubles, and Morales, aswitch-hitting presencewho struggled a year ago after sitting out spring training. The rotation loses workhorse James Shields, but KansasCity believes both Ventura (3.20 ERAin 183 innings) and Duffy (2.53 ERAin149'/ innings) are on thecusp of being front-of-the-rotation starters. But for no team, it seems, is the bullpen more important. The late-inning combination of Kelvin Herreira, WadeDavis and Greg Holland gives KansasCity three relievers with closer's ability and stuff, and the impending return of Luke Hochevar from TommyJohn surgery adds another power arm

CLEVELAND INDIANS Rotation:Corey Kluber, Carlos Carrasco, Trevor Bauer, TJHouse, Zach McAllister Keyadditi ons:OFBrandonMoss Outlook: Kluber'semergence— asaCyYoung Award-winner who beatout Felix Hernandez —has madethe Indians something of a trendy pick. But keep in mind that asgood asKluber was (18-9, 2.44 ERA,269 strikeouts in 235'/ innings), he hadnever thrown more than 189innings in a pro season. Plus, those evaluations of the Indians' ascent likely included thedevelopment of promising right-hander DannySalazar, who struggled this spring and was sent to the minors. VeteranGavinFloyd, signed to provide stability, is instead out until at least August following elbow surgery. Though Carrasco wasexceptional after the all-star break (1.72 ERA,.197 batting averageagainst), only Bauer madeas many as 20major league starts among the rest of the rotation. And the offense is, by definition, middling among ALteams, ranking seventh in runs, eighth in batting average andseventh in slugging percentage —with only Moss to try to truly upgrade it. Optimism? After 85 wins, that is reasonable. World Series? Maybenot.

DETROITTIGERS •

Rota t ion: David Price, Justin Verlander, Anibal Sanchez, Alfredo Simon, ShaneGreene Keyadditions:OFYoenisCespedes,OFAnthony Gose Outlook:Somehow, the team that is coming off four straight division titles is starting to feel like Philadelphia Phillies West. Thevaunted rotation, now fronted by Price, heads into the seasonwithout Max Scherzer or Rick Porcello and with very significant questions about Verlander, who will not start on Opening Dayfor the first time since 2007. The bullpen, which wastheteam's absolute undoing in a threegame division series sweep atthe hands of Baltimore, returns largely intact. Joe Nathan, he ofthe4.81 ERA,1.534 WHIPand seven blown saves, remains the closer. Detroit even re-signed JobaChamberlain, who suffered perhaps theworst playoff meltdown. Yes, the lineup — which scored the most runs in theAmerican League ayear ago — should produce again with the experience of Miguel Cabreraand Victor Martinez helping to bring along newcomerCespedes. But this team feels old and crumbling in a division with so manyteams onthe rise.

TAMPA BAYRAYS Rotation:Chris Archer, Nate Karns, Jake Odorizzi, Alex Cobb, DrewSmyly Keyadditi ons:OFStevenSouzaJr.,DH JohnJaso Outlook:TheRayswere tipped ontheir axis in the offseason whenGMAndrew Friedman left to run the Dodgers andmanager JoeMaddonsubsequently departed totake over the Cubs.Andthey were already listing following theJuly trade of ace David Price, whom theyfigured theycouldnot sign once he becomesafreeagentfollowing this season.Now,they enter the seasonwith two key pieces of what could be afine rotation facing questions —Cobb hastightness in his forearm, Smyly tightness inshoulder. Theoffense replaces the potential of Wil Myers (traded toSanDiego) with the potential of Souza—who, at 25, is actually ayear older than Myers —andalso loses baseball's most versatile player,BenZobrist, traded to Oakland.

MINNESOTA TWINS Rotation:Phil Hughes, Ervin Santana, Ricky Nolasco, Kyle Gibson, TommyMilone Key additions:RHPSantana, OFTorii Hunter, Manager Paul Molitor Outlook:TheTwins have much to be excited about. Unfortunately, it's just about all in the future. Outfielder Byron Buxton andthird baseman Miguel Sanoremain two of the game's best prospects, and right-hander Alex Meyer gives Minnesota hopethat it has an eventual ace already in the system. Fornow, though, all three are in theminors, and it is difficult to see themajor league club competing in such a deep division. Hughes, though, hadthe best season of his career (16-10, 3.52 ERA),and hewill now have help in the rotation from Santana, signed to a four-year, $55-million contract, which suggests the Twins think they cancontend at some point soon. Soon, though, won't come until Buxton, Sanoandthe kids get to the big leaguesmaybe this summer.

Mariners

Getting to 87 wins in 2014 was a surprising

Marinersodds

Continued from 01 That is what makes this sea-

son equal parts exciting and concerning. Theycould be the team that reignites the fire in

Seattle fans, or one that provides another disappointment. " There's more of a

b uzz

around the team from an outside perspective. Internally, we expected a lot out of ourselves

lastyear and wedid that for the most part, obviously coming one game short," third base-

man Kyle Seager said. "But this year it's a different feeling in the locker room. There's more

of a confidence. There's more of a general trust in the guy next to you and confidence in

the guy next to you." Cano's signing a year ago brought validitytowhat Seattle

was trying to create. That was supplemented by the develop-

LOS ANGELES ANGELS Rotation:Jered Weaver, Garrett Richards, C.J. Wilson, Matt Shoemaker,Hector Santiago Key additions:OF/DHMatt Joyce Outlook: TheAngelswonamajorleague-best98 games a yearagoand, despite asweep by Kansas City in the division series, basically stood pat. Thereare reasons: Richards should return to the rotation after knee problems, andthat will give them apotential hard-throwing counter to Weaverandhis soft-tossing control, and a shrewd trade for prospect Andrew Heaneygives them another promising young arm to join Shoemaker, Richards andSantiago. Their lineup scored the most runs in the ALandtrailed only the Tigers, Blue Jaysand Orioles in OPS.They have baseball's best player in center fielder Mike Trout, whose MVP finishes in his three full seasons are second, second and first. And Albert Pujols still hit 28 homers and105 RBls last season. With Josh Hamilton escaping leaguediscipline for what has reported to be a relapse into substance abuse, there is enoughhere to believe another playoff appearance is in the offing.

to that mix.

I~

NEW YORKYANKEES Rotation:Masahiro Tanaka,CCSabathia, Michael Pineda, NathanEovaldi, AdamWarren Keyadditions:SSDiDi Gregorius, RP Andrew Miller, DHAlex Rodriguez, RHPEovaldi Outlook:In this first post-Derek Jeter season, it is hard to take one's eyes off Rodriguez, who will play for the first time since 2013after sitting out a year because of his unprecedented PED suspension. Where will he play (DH?), andwhat, if anything, does he have left? Beyond that soap opera, though, theYankees havereal issues. While Tanaka appears healthy andshould provide asuperb front to the rotation if that's the case,Sabathia had aniffy spring and it seems as if his chronic knee problems could worsen his performance for the rest of his career. Eovaldi, acquired in atrade with Miami, has a powerful arm but allowed the most hits in the NLlast year. Theoffense should be better without Jeter atop the lineup, but it has other major problems. TheYankeesscored 633 runs last year; only once since 1970 have they scored fewer in aseason not shortened by labor discord.

SEATTLE MARINERS Rotation:Felix Hernandez, Hisashi Iwakuma, J.A. Happ, JamesPaxton, Taijuan Walker Keyadditi ons:OFNelsonCruz,RHP Happ,OFJustin Ruggiano, OFSeth Smith Outlook:There hasn't been this much optimism in the Pacific Northwest since the 2001 Mariners won116 games.Theobvious components are Hernandez, theperennialCyYoungAward candidate,andsecondbaseman Robinson Cano,the perennial all-star, not to mention the newcomer Cruz, who wasthe only 40-home run hitter in the majors last season. But there is also acore of home-grown players who are maturing as onethird basemanKyle Seagerand shortstop Brad Miller and catcher Mike Zunino, who popped 22homers lastyear. There is experience in the bullpen, though roles — other than closer FernandoRodney(league-leading 48 saves last year) — need to bedefined asthe season takes off. Iwakuma is already one of the best No. 2starters in the league, andthe Mariners believe both Paxton andWalker could end up astop-of-the-rotation arms, too. October in Seattle? It will probably rain, but who will notice?

OAKLANDATHLETICS Rotation: SonnyGray,JesseHahn,ScottKazmir,Kendall Graveman, DrewPomeranz Keyadditions:2B/UT BenZobrist, RP Tyler Clippard, DH Billy Butler, 3B Brett Lawrie Outlook:There seemedto be mixed messages in GMBily Beane's offseason moves. When hetraded right-hander Jeff Samardzija for a package that included shortstop prospect Marcus Semienandthird baseman Josh Donaldson for four players, including Gravemanand Lawrie, he seemed to beplaying for the future. When hetraded for Zobrist and Clippard, each with oneyear left on their deals, and signed Butler, heseemed to be playing for now. Whatever the moves,Beanealways has aplan, i

and the Athletics intend to contend for a fourth straight playoff berth this

summer. For that to happen,Clippard will have to hold the fort for injured closer SeanDoolittle, Gray will have to continue his ascent to becoming one of the league's best pitchers, Kazmir (15-9, 3.55 ERA)will have to pull off another similar season, and anoffense with as many newparts as old will have to cometogether.

HOUSTONASTROS Rotation:Dallas Keuchel, Scott Feldman, Collin McHugh, Brett Oberholtzer, Roberto Hernandez Keyadditions:OFEvan Gattis, SS Jed Lowrie, RP Pat Neshek Outlook:It is difficult for a 70-win season to feel like a major step forward, but after averaging 108 losses for three seasons, that is what 2014 felt like in Houston. Wasthat enough to warrant the offseason moves that involved trading prospects for the present? It remains to be seen. To landGattis and his 22 homers from the Braves, the Astros had to part with infield prospect Rio Ruizand power arm Mike Foltynewicz. They paid Lowrie $23 million over three years to bethe shortstop on what they hope will be awinner — the only reason to sign all-star setup man Neshek to atwo-year, $12.5-million deal. Now, there is still young talent around, led by ALbatting champJose Altuve (.341), who is established, and first basemanJon Singleton and outfielder GeorgeSpringer, who are less so. Keuchel, McHughand Oberholtzer all had important seasons for their development ayear ago. Now, it is time to seewhether they can deal with the prospect of pitching in meaningful games over the course of the summer —assuming a run at.500, or even better, is possible. TEXAS RANGERS Rotation:Yovani Gallardo, Derek Holland, Colby Lewis, Ross Detwiler, Nick Martinez Key additions:RHPGallardo, LHP Detwiler Outlook:In a Murphy's Law stretch, the Rangers lost more gamesthan they hadsince1985 — and then openedthe spring with the evenworse news:AceYuDarvish, the tone-setter for everything in Texas, is out for the yearwith TommyJohn surgery, and perennial prospect Jurickson Profar will also miss all of 2015 following shoulder surgery. Still, there must bemorestability ahead — particularly given that16 different pitchers started gameslast year. Gallardo, who has thrown at least180 innings in six straight seasons, comes inafter a trade from Milwaukee. Detwiler, back in the rotation for the first time since 2012, comes via trade fromWashington — and is pitching for a new contract. Plus, first basemanPrince Fielder, limited to 42 gamesafter surgery on a bulging disc in his neck, appears healthy again, andfans get to see whether hecantake advantage of that powerful left-handed swing in a park fit for lefties. — The Washington Post

in Seattle'sorder a gaping hole.

Good to be the King

as many options as it does at those positions with Smith and

Ruggiano in right field and Hernandez is already driven Dustin Ackley and Weeks in by the desire to make the post- left field. With the strengths of short. Getting to 87 wins was a that experience last year, being season. He may have gotten each player, it is likely Smith surprising achievement, but it in a little bit of a race, I think just a little more motivation and Ackley will play against left Seattle wanting more. this team'sprepped and ready by finishing second in the Cy right-handed pitching and The Mariners have created a to make a run at the postsea- Young voting to Cleveland's Weeks and Ruggiano against roster that has Cano optimistic son," Paxton said. Corey Kluber. He set a major lefties. McClendon has said he about what Seattle can accomleaguerecord last season when does not view either situation plish. Nelson Cruz, the major Cruz-ing along he pitched 16 straight games of as aplatoon. leagueleader in home runs The addition of Cruz is a seven or more innings while last season, adds punch and m assive upgrade for Seattle's allowing two or fewer earned Best bullpen protection in the middle of the offense. While with Baltimore, runs. It was a brilliant stretch Fernando Rodney was the lineup. The Mariners upgraded Cruz was the only hitter in from May to early August, but anchor of the best bullpen in their outfield with the additions baseball to reach 40 homers it was not good enough to get baseball last year. He led the Source: America's Line of Justin Ruggiano and Seth last season, and while that Seattle to the postseason or majors in saves with 48, but he Smith and the late signing of came in the friendly hitting win the Cy Young Award. was just part of what made SeRickie Weeks. confines of Camden Yards he attle successful late in games. ment of Seager into an All-Star And while Hernandez re- has always been a strong hitter Platoon or no platoon? Most of that bullpen crew is and GoldGlovewinner, andthe mains the ace, Seattle's pitch- at Safeco Field. One of Cruz's How manager Lloyd Mc- back, and for as good as Sebest pitching staff in baseball ing staff could be even better biggest impacts is the trickle- Clendon handles his situa- attle's starters are expected led by AL Cy Young Award because of youngsters James down effect on Seattle's batting tions in right and left field will to be, its relievers need to be runner-up Felix Hernandez. Paxton and Taijuan Walker. lineup. He will hit behind Cano be worth watching early in equal to last season if the Mar"With the additions we made and in front of Seager and no the season. Ultimately, it is a iners are going to match their But it was not enough. The Mariners ended one game this offseason and guys getting longer leaves the cleanup spot good thing for Seattle to have expectations. To win WorldSeries: 10/1 (Favorite: Washington, 5/1) To winAmerican league: 5/1 (Tied with Boston as favorites) To win AL West: 6/5 (Favorites) Over/under ofwins: 87.5 Felix Hernandez towinAL Cy Young:6/1 (Favorite) RobinsonCanoto win AL MVP:5/1 (Favorite: Mike Trout, 6/5)

achievement, but it left Seattle wanting more.


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SPOR T S -



E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

BUSINESS MONDAY Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County; 9 a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834.

TUESDAY Aquila Tax-Free Trust of Oregon Outreach Meeting: Local economist John Mitchell and fund manager Chris Johns will discuss Oregon economic and investment outlook for the state and the Aquila Tax-Free Trust of Oregon; 10 a.m.; free; Hilton

Garden Inn,BrokenTopRoom, 425 SW Bluff Drive, Bend; www. aquilafunds.com or 800-437-1020. Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County; 9 a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834. Open Computer Lab: Free time to practice your computer skills or get your questions answered. Bring your own device or use one of our laptops; 1:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-617-7089. Small Business Counseling: Learn business planning, organization and startup, finance, marketing and other critical business issues with SCORE volunteers in private, confidential sessions. No appointment necessary;5:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.

scorecentraloregon.org.

WEDNESDAY COBEN Meeting: Ed Weiser will speak on "Delivering Effective & Engaging Group Presentations"; 11:30 a.m.; $19 for annual membership dues, registration requested; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift

E ND

Road, Bend; www.meetup.com/ COBEN12/events/221135475/ or 541-728-3875. Daring Teams: Unlocking Results through Trust, Healthy Conflict & Peer to Peer Accountability: Learn about peer to peer accountability; 11:30 a.m.; $35 registration required; DoubleTree by Hilton, 300 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.oppknocks.org or 541-480-4180. Enhance Your Visual for Websites: Improve the appearance of your existing website through advanced graphic enhancements. Learn techniques to shoot optimized photos for the internet. Explore the integration between graphic elements and text in relation to the overall message, with emphasis on increasing SEOfunctionality and effectiveness. Designed as an intermediate class for advancing digital camera and computer graphic skills. Held in a computer lab. Registration required. Class runs through April 22, Wednesdays; $99; COCCBend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/ or 541-383-7270.

Free TaxPreparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County; 9 a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834. Training Design & Delivery: If you are new to creating training programs, want to learn or review best practices or want more knowledge to support your staff who deliver training, this course is for you. Learn best practices in classroom training design, delivery and evaluation that lead to effective transfer of skills and knowledge from the classroom to the workplace. Registration required. Class runs through May 6, Wednesdays; $475; COCCBend Campus,2600 NW CollegeWa y, Bend; www.cocc.edu/continuinged or 541-383-7270. What's Hot in Franchising!: Explore the possibility of owning your own franchise. In this highly interactive

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.

two-hour workshop, find out about the top trends, the best industries and 'What's Hot' in franchising for 2015; 6 p.m.; $29, registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-382-7290.

payroll issues and penalties; 9 a.m.; $180, $165 for 2-5 people, $155 each for six or more people; Shilo Inn, 3105 O.B. Riley Road, Bend; www.oregon.gov or 971-673-0824.

THURSDAY

Build a Business Website with WordPress Beginning I: We take you through the basics and explain domains, hosting, websites and blogs, and the difference between WordPress.org and WordPress. com. Then, we helpyou to register your domain, set up your hosting and install WordPress, the popular website and blog development program. This class will give you the starter website needed to continue with Build your Business Website with WordPress, Beginning II. Held in a computer lab. Registration is required; $99; COCCBendCampus, 2600 NWCollegeWay ,Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/or 541-383-7270.

Central Oregon RV Dealers Spring Show and Sale: The 26th annual show will feature trailers, fifth-wheelers, campers, motor homes and tent trailers. New 2016 RV models will be on display with manufacturers representatives on handtoanswer questions;9a.m .; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County; 9 a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834. MTA Networking Fundamentals: Get an understanding of how networking works, the OSI model, protocols, wireless 8 wired networks, security and more. Explore whether a future in computers is for you with this Microsoft Technology Associate certification Prep class. Held in a computer lab. Registration required. Class runs through May 7, Thursdays; $229; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/or 541-383-7270. Science and Wellness Event: Come learn about the science of Redox Signaling, aging, athletic endurance and recovery, and overall health; 6 p.m.; Coldwell Banker Realty, 486 SW Bluff Drive, Bend; 971-506-2178. Wage and Hour Laws: What You Need to Know: This intensive fullday seminar will focus on federal and state wage and hour laws that

affect Oregonemployers, including meal and rest periods, timekeeping, overtime, independent contractors,

FRIDAY

Central Oregon RVDealers Spring Show and Sale: The 26th annual show will feature trailers, fifth-wheelers, campers, motor homes and tent trailers. New 2016 RV models will be on display with

manufacturers representativeson handtoanswerquestions;9a.m .; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. Excel 2013 Level I: Create, edit, format and save aspreadsheet using Excel 2010. Write formulas, create charts and customize the appearance of worksheets to meet

your needs.Prerequisite: Basic Windows experience. Cost includes textbook for the class. Held in a computer lab. Registration required; $89; COCCBend Campus, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/or 541-383-7270. Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Wayof Deschutes County; 9a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834.

Sage Awards Gala: The Bend Chamber of Commerce cordially invites you to attend our 26th Annual Sage Awards Gala. Anextraordinary

$89; COCCBend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/or 541-383-7270.

organizations and individuals for their outstanding achievements. Sunriver Resort Great Hall, Friday, April10, 6 p.m. cocktail reception featuring live jazz; 7 p.m. awards, dinner, entertainment; $59-$69; Sunriver Resort, 17600 Center Drive, Sunriver; www.bendchamber.org or 541-382-3221.

Central OregonRVDealers

evening recognizingbusinesses,

SATURDAY

April 12 Spring Show and Sale: The 26th annual show will feature trailers, fifth-wheelers, campers, motor homes and tent trailers. New 2016 RV models will be on display with manufacturers representatives on hand to answer questions; 10 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840.

April 13

Central Oregon CAIBoot Camp: CORC presents a series of detailed seminars that provide specific resources and knowledge to homeowner and condominium boards of directors; 8 a.m.; $35 for CAI Members, $45 for Non Members; The Oxford Hotel,10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. caioregon.org or 503-635-0742. Central Oregon RVDealers Spring Show and Sale: The 26th annual show will feature trailers, fifth-wheelers, campers, motor homes and tent trailers. New 2016 RV models will be on display with

manufacturers representativeson handtoanswer questions;9a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; 360-903-8840. HomebuyerEducationWor kshop: A homebuyer education and coaching service to help households understand the home buying process, accesssafemortgage loans and prepare for the responsibilities ofhomeownership;9a.m .;$45 per household; Neighborlmpact Office, 422 Beaver St., Prineville; www.neighborimpact.org or 541-323-6567. QuickBooks Pro 2014 Beginning: Do your own bookkeeping and make it manageable andefficient using QuickBooks. Setup new customer and vendor accounts, create invoices,

Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARPFoundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County; 9 a.m.; RedmondNeighborlmpact,2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. deschutesunitedway.org/tax-aide or 541-526-3834. Photoshop Beginning: Transform ordinary photographs into extraordinary pictures with Photoshop CS5.5, the professional image editing software for manipulating digital photographs for Web production and for print. Hands-on exercises will give you a solid understanding of the basic

tools and conceptssuch aslayer

Prerequisite: Basic Windows experience. Course fee includes textbook for the class. Held in a computer lab. Registration required;

manipulation and effects. Held in a computer lab. Registration required. Class runs through April 20, Mondays; 6 p.m.; $99; COCCBend Campus,2600 NW CollegeWa y, Bend;www.cocc.edu/continuinged/ or 541-383-7270. Pinterest for Business: Pinterest is the fastest growing social network and an affordable and effective way to promote your business. This course will teach you how to set up a Pinterest business account, engage your customers, implement analytics for measurement, and employ best practices from successful brands on Pinterest. Held in a computer lab. Registration required. Class runs through April 27, Mondays; 6 p.m.; $75; COCC BendCampus,2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ continuinged/ or 541-383-7270.

record sales,andenter payments.

DEEDS Deschutes County • Hayden HomesLLCto Dustin C. Mayfield, Emily Estates, Lot 29, $178,990 • Hayden HomesLLCto Jason and Elisa Grant, Emily Estates, Lot12, $229,900 • Maria C. Guerrato Jose J. and Lauran J. Torres, Village Pointe, Phase 1, Lot1, $172,950 • William E. andKaye E.Gooding, trustees of the Gooding Living Trust, to Robert W. Kohrt III and RebeccaL. Kohrt, trustees for the Kohrt Family 2005 Trust, Paladin RanchEstates, Lot 8, Block 2, $365,000 •MaryA.Leeto SteveC.Yeomanand Carol C. Nowell, Hinkle Park, Lot 3, $159,000 • Kathleen E. St. Clair, trustee of the Norman & KathleenSt. Clair Trustand the Kathleen E.St. Clair Revocable Living Trust, to Wickiup Rose Properties LLC,Township 21, Range, 10, Section 36, $225,000 • Charlotte L. Gumpto Raul P.and Janet Ainardi, Homestead,Third Phase, Lot 20, Block 2, $285,000 • Carlos Quinonezto Amanda M. and William L Fox, OregonWater

Wonderland, Unit1, Lots 7 and8, Block 4, $235,000 • Jerold 0. and Ardell M. Green, trustees of the GreenFamily Trust, Mark L. andSusan L. Shunk, Homes of Vardon Court, Lot1, $575,000 • CP SRMOF II 2012 Trust and U.S. BankTrust N.A. to Milton I. Kowalewski Jr. andDarleneN. McGown, HaydenAcres, Phase1, Lot 36, $184,000 • Richard and Linda Cookto Shanelle Vega-Haux, TamarackPark East, Phase 5, Lot 25, Block 7,$285,000 •BarryHelm toAmyN.andThomas E. Sorenson, Desert Woods III, Lot12, Block13, $228,040 • John A. and Marise D. Morrow, Morrow RevocableTrust, to Dioniso Martin, Fairway Point Village 5, Lot11, Block 22, $348,300 • Polarstar LLC to RD Building and Design LLC,Shevlin Court, Lots1-6 and 8-11, $300,000 • RD Building and Design LLC to John Taylor, Shevlin Court, Lots 9and10, $175,000 • James P.and Julie 0. Watts to Travis R. and Carly B.Mersereau, Shevlin Ridge, Phase 4,Lot 49, $635,000

•HaydenHomes LLC to SteveG. Barlowand Deborah A.Meier, Village Meadows, Lot 23, $275,305 • Federal National Mortgage Association, akaFannieMae, to Daniel J. Holloway, BraydonPark, Lot7, $165,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Cathy Bezek, McCall Landing, Phase 1,Lot19, $212,900 • Lands BendCorp. to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada, Phase1, Lot57, $304,000 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Rowanand Alicia Anderegg, Mirada, Phase1, Lot 57, $304,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Kim P. Henneman, AwbreyWoods, Phase1, Lot 11, $334,000 •MonteC.and RoxanneDahlmanto Scott Hogg andSandra Harris, Pine River Estate, Lot3, Block1, $346,000 • Kevin M. Crespo to Kenneth Wachtman Jr. andCodyWachtman, Pines at Pilot Butte, Phases1 and2, Lot 5, $299,900 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Bryan R. PayneandJeanneMoir-Payne,McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot18, $208,000 • Jordan K. andAmy J. McCormack

to John P.and Natasha Dempsey, Westbrook Meadows P U.D., Phase1, Lot15, $353,000 • Michael A. Jackson to Timothy D. and Rebecca S.Crawford, River Bend Estates, Lot 68, $385,000 • Shirley E. andGlenMantych, trustees of the Edward & Shirley Mantych Revocable Trust, to Jim W.,JannaL. and Andrew P.Littles, Avonlea Estates, Lot3, Block1, $210,000 • Terry A. and Bonnie L. Lenke, trustees of the LenkeFamily Trust, to Katherine L. andWesley Chancellor, Oregon WaterWonderland, Unit 2, Lot 34, Block 27, $199,900 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Craig R. Dumont, Rivers Edge,Phase12, Lot 145, $699,950 • Gorilla Capital OR 201 LLC to Lindsay E. and Nicholas V. Buccafurni, Partition Plat1995-23, Parcel 13, $184,900 •Custom Estates LLC to Rhonda Abellera, trustee of the Rhonda Abellera Trust, Deschutes River Crossing, Phases 3 and 4, Lot 98, $255,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to John M. Van Krieken, Village at Cold Springs,

Phase 4, Lot105, $179,990 • Glenn R. and Betty J. Ashford to Benjamin H. and Cassie C.Cavallaro, Replat of Lots 2-7, Block 3, Sunshine Addition, Lot 9, $206,500 • Thomas J. Hueneke, trustee of the Thomas J. Hueneke Revocable Living Trust, and Patricia L. Heuneke, trustee of the Patricia L. Heuneke Revocable Living Trust, River Village Condominiums, Unit 21, $430,000 • Tina M. Bollman to Rachel Follett, Oakview, Phase 3, Lot 9, $249,900 • Barbara J. Pederson to Mark R. Quinn, Township 18, Range 13, Section 18, $215,000 • Lynda F. Hardwick, formerly known as Lynda F.Albers, and Ronald J. Albers, to Jordan K. and Amy J. McCormack, Wallace Acres, Lot1, Block 3, $325,000 • Christine M. Cameron to Matthew and Jill Toepfer, Township 22, Range 10, Section16, $190,000 • David L. and Karen E. Kruger to Adam D. and Sally A. Audette, Parks at Broken Top, Lot 56, $385,000

• Robert E. Tennant and the Michael J. Tennant Charitable Fund to Toni A. and David E. Campbell, trustees of the Campbell Family Trust, and Sally A. Crowe and Susan A. Doke, McKay Townhomes, Lot1, $322,220 • Brenda Feitler to Juan G. Hernandez-Ambriz, Larkspur Village, Phases 5 and 6, Lots138189, $215,000 • MacArthur D. Pilkenton to Jason D. and Lacy C. Cordes, Antler Ridge, Phase 2, Lot 58, $193,000 • Brian W. and Leslie F. Hole to Dylan C. Wood and Angela C.Tye, Partition Plat 2001-31, Parcel 1, $203,000 • Kim and Janese Larsen to Marva A. Eberhard, Oregon Water Wonderland, Unit 2, Lot 20, Block 58, $340,500 • Susan M. and Steven J. Haney to Rory L. and Amparo I. Muscatell, Southfork Village, Lot 6, Block 2, $410,000 • Leila E. Thompson to The Doherty Group LLC, RoanokeAvenue Replat, Lot 5, $235,000

Women

unique," Lord said. "In Bend, it seems like men play a much larger role in caregiving than I've seen in other places, which allows the women to

Hicks said. "We're running a

Danek said that support from the community helped offset

in the country, according to

said. "We asked for a lot of help when we started, and we got it."

women-owned

pursue a career."

both locally and nationally.

Simply Baked, founded by Christy Hicks and Dana Black, is evidence of this dynamic.The company, which beganthree years ago by designing paper cups for baked goods, employsseven full- and part-time employees, all of

The NerdWallet st udy r e vealed that less than 30 per-

Continued from E1 "To be honest, it was rare

to see women entrepreneurs when I f i rst started," Worrell-Druliner said. "But we've

been seeing a lot more in recent years." In addition, Corey Schmid, a n i nvestment p a rtner a t

Seven Peaks Ventures, a local investment group, noted

that Bend's sizeis an asset as

welL With more than 160,000 whom are mothers. "I think it affords us the oppeople in De schutes Coun-

corporation, and it's a pretty

large one." There arestill issues facing

any li mited am enities. The

company built a taproom-

busi n esses, one of the first for kombucha

Danek — in 2013 in order to bring the drink to more locals.

"This company was absolutely built by Bend," Danek

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbuftetin.com

cent of businesses examined in the study are owned by women. There's a dearth of

women on the investment side

• •

as well, as Schmid, of Seven Peaks Ventures, said that 4

percent of venture capitalists are women.

"We're like unicorns that portunity to have amazing talent, because we'd rather have sparkle, "Schmid said. "W e're resourcesand access tocapital good peoplethat work flexible that rare." that help new entrepreneurs hours," Hicks said. Hicks added that the city get started, while still being Sheaddedthatthecom pany lacked special services to small enough that those re- has made motherhood a part help women-owned businesssources are in terconnected of its business model, with es that are looking to grow enough to support businesses workers coveringhours when- quickly. "Ifthere was an area for astheygrow. ever someonehad a sick child. "We have all the amenities "Overall, we want to create improvement, it wo uld b e of a big city, but we're still a company environment that for companieslike us, that small enough that the network is exciting but flexible," Hicks are small but have a pretty is very tight," shesaid. Sald. quick trajectory," Hicks said. NerdWallet's study seems to So far, it seems to be work- "Whether it be rent control, asbear that out as well. Just five ing. Hicks said that Simply sistance or training." of the top 20 metropolitan ar- Baked has doubled in size Schmid added that a dedeas on thelist were larger than twice, and Blacksaid the com- icated mentoring program 1million people. pany is on pace todo so again could go a lo ng way t oJessi Lord, marketing man- in 2015.Moreover, the compa- ward inspiring more female ager for Ec onomic Devel- ny nowships its product line to entrepreneurs. "Women a r e col l a boraopment of Central Oregon, five countriesoutsidethe Unitaddedthat Bend's culture has ed States. tive by nature," Schmid said. "A lot of times, moms are "They're connectors, so I think helped draw aspiring entrepreneurs with families to the thought to have little fun,bou- having moreresourcesto supregion. tique businesses, and we just port themis valuable." "Work-life balance here is play around and have shows," Still, Hu mm K o m b ucha's

••gg

•Jg •

I •

ty, Schmid said, the region is large enough to support the

CHECKOUTTHELOT: Call Jeff Jernstedt at Sun Forest Construction for more infonnation.'

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E3

o-oun er eu ss ow ow an s a e eas can ow U ByPareshDave eLos Angeles Times

LOS ANGELESwo Stanford University undergraduates •

shook hands in their dormitory in early 2011, agreeing to partner on what they hoped

4

would be the next big technology startup. But as their dream came true, their simple exercise of trust became a liability when one co-

' )4~

founder was dumped. A flimsy foundation of oral

'"'sII

OKs, napkin scribblings and youthful haste, it

:-

turns out, is a dangerous mix. And a common one. Snapchat Inc., the Stanford residence hall creation that later moved to Los Angeles' Venice Beach, is on a growing list of hot startups that I

have faced bitter lawsuits or wrenching behind-

r'

r

the-scenes battles over who played an essential

e j5

role in a company's birth and how much money

K

wv

and respect they deserve as a result.

F

Genaro Molina/LosAngeles Times

Co-founder disputes are According to Tran — who Bobby Murphy, 24,left, and Evan Spiegel, 22, co-creators of Snapchat, are seen through a windowof the company's offices on Ocean common in t h e b u siness is embroiled i n a n other Front Walk in Venice, California. In 2013, co-founder Reggie Brown sued his former colleagues and venture capitalists, alleging breach of world, whether in television co-founder squabble involv- contract. production, restaurants or ing a nonymous message real estate, lawyers say. But board app Yik Yak — a comToo many founders the staggering sums at stake mon denominator underlies "You don't think not to trust people you know a nition is somewhat arbitrary. for early employees when nearly every dispute: The lot, and you don't think they are going to screw When Tim Sae Koo start- But investors and customers a technology company be- co-founders are friends or ed his company Tint, advice a fford m or e c r edibility t o comes a worldwide hit push family, and they expect the you. It's good to trust, but it's much better to from a l a wyer prevented "co-founders" because it sugthe industry's drama to the close relationship to substi- memorialize your trust in a document." some headaches during a gests an appetite for risk and top of pop culture. tute for a b i nding business co-founder divorce. Sae Koo a mind full of ideas. — Luan Tran, the LosAngeles attorney whobrought graduated from USC a semesIt's "the naive" who award T he b l o ckbuster m o v i e contract. the co-founder case against Snapchat ter early in 2011 so he could the title and "the smart" who "The Social Network" high"You don't think not to trust lighted Facebook's internal people you know a lot, and work full time on a class proj- push for it because of its value drama. Twitter's squabbling you don't think they are going ect that evolved into an app on a LinkedIn profile, Morris inspired a book, "Hatching to screw you," Tran said. "It's Bobby Murphy, who remains ware for c al l c e nters that for companies to display so- said. Twitter." As the Los Angeles good to trust, but it's much Snapchat's chief technolo- analyzes voice data to decide cial media content. Whitney Wolfe sued t he tech economy strives to mirbetter to m emorialize your gy officer, to do the comput- when to connect an agent. The team of five founders dating app Tinder after Chief ror Silicon Valley's success, trust in a document." er programming. An oral He wanted to sign more cus- — including Willy Wang, Sae Executive Sean Rad wrote to it's producing its own tales of Plenty o f en t r epreneurs agreement cemented their tomers before developing Koo's friend since elementary her that she could call herwoe, with strife at Snapchat, have not, judging by the calls triumvirate. new features. But two of his school — disagreed on their self a co-founder, but then Tinder, Maker Studios and Tran has received since filBut soon after, Spiegel de- co-founders opted to burn sales strategy and whether to allegedly changed his mind Beats Electronics providing ing the Snapchat case two cided that Brown's abilities through cash on computer move from Wang's parents' a year later. The suit was setearly chapters. years ago. He recently signed didn't measure up, accord- programmers. Two years in, home to office space in San tled in September. Wolfe still "As Silicon Beach business- two clients who plan to bring ing to Spiegel's deposition. Rashti quit rather than see Francisco. In some cases, describesherself as a Tinder es grow and become more c o-founder cases, and t w o Spiegel and Murphy locked the company fold over the their skills overlapped, caus- co-founder as she runs a comsuccessful, you'll definitely new inquiries a week arrive Brown out of the company's discord. ing unnecessary duplication peting dating app, Bumble. "It took us a while to get to see more co-founder dis- from co-foundersconsidering systems and disavowed him. on such a small team. Beats Electronics in SepAs Brown worked an un- a final agreement, and still no Wang decided to quit, and tember sued Steven Lamar, putes," said Luan Tran, the lawsuits, many in Los AngeLos Angeles attorney who les, compared with a call once paid position elsewhere, Snap- one is past resentment," said another co-founder left soon the founder of competitor brought the co-founder case every three or four months chat received $1 billion-plus Rashti, who regrets writing after because of a separate Roam who called himself a against Snapchat. and rarely one from Los An- takeover offers from Facebook the company's founding doc- conflict. Both still hold shares Beats co-founder. He's reAttorneys, venture capi- geles before. Inc. In February 2013, Brown uments himself rather than in the company. moved that title from online That's because Los Ange- sued his former colleagues seeking more outside counsel. talists and other technology The early legal assistance, profiles and is seeking a leaders in Los Angeles hope les is emerging as a world- and venture capitalists who "Not everyone's on their mer- which Tint didn't pay for un- dismissaL the trend toward disruptive class center of technology. It's helped fund Snapchat's de- ry way." til it r aised venture capital, Maker, a Walt Disney Co.disagreements ends soon. alsobecause ofthe nature of velopment, alleging breach Nima Hakimi, a SafeSoft saved Sae Koo from a night- owned online video studio, With all the publicity about startups in an app economy, of contract. They reached an co-founder and its CEO, said mare. But he still acknowl- was sued by four founders co-founderdisputes,they say where an item can go viral undisclosed settlement l ast they could have avoided the edges making a "rookie mis- who allege that their power there's no excuse for ending overnight with little financial summer. Tran and Snapchat trouble by setting goals be- take" by hiring too many peo- was fraudulently stripped up in a lawyer's conference investment. declined to comment. sides "Let's make money." ple too fast. by two founders and several "You can't plan everything, "I just thought more people board members who wanted room across from a onetime The disagreements are alThe Snapchatdillema friend. most always precipitated by but there should be some equals a stronger team and to quickly sell off the compaThe Snapchat situation, as some climactic event involv- common understanding over more opportunity to succeed ny. In March, a Los Angeles Get it in writing laid out in a lawsuit by jilted ing money — either receiv- where you want to go and as a business," Sae Koo said. County Superior Court judge " Entrepreneurs ar e s o co-founder Reggie Brown, ing a lot of it, as in the case of by when," Hakimi said. "As Veteran venture capitalist ruled against most of the psyched about their product began when the English lit- Snapchat, or running out of much as you can, manage John Morris, who also runs a plaintiffs' claims. and business that they don't erature major t old p r oduct it, as in the case of Ari Rash- based on objectives." management consulting firm, Hassanabadi, the attorney, think about the worst case," design student Evan Spiegel, ti and his company SafeSoft SafeSoft weathered the dis- says too many co-founders says newer clients have read said Amir Hassanabadi, who now Snapchat's 24-year-old Solutions Inc. ruption and now has about can result in "three muske- the news about these cautionrepresents 15 startups as an chief executive, about an idea 15 workers and millions of teers" who each feel entitled ary tales. Still, he makes a attorney at Fenwick 5 West. in which people could share Runningout ofm oney dollars of annual revenue, to morepower than they de- sternrequest to co-founders But founders must spend time a photo that quickly self-deIn 2006 as a senior at USC, Hakimi said. Rashti started serve. A co-founder desig- on day one: Go out for dinner, and some money to set a com- structs after viewing. They Rashti teamed with three ac- his own digital marketing nation holds no legal signif- settle who's who and what's pany's "bedrock," he said. recruited a t h ird p artner, quaintances to create soft- agency, ReDesign Digital. icance, and its cultural defi- what. Then put it in writing.

Immigration

yogurt, which is denser and s creamierthan regularyogurt. s "You've got to have really, Continued from E1 Without new immigration really good milk. That's the laws, he and other farmers key to great yogurt," Chobani say, the nation will lose dairy spokesman Michael Gonda producers, because farmers said as he led a visitor through will switch to growing crops the Chobani factory in the 9 s whose workers are eligible for hamlet of New Berlin. temporary guest-worker visas. In a 1 50,000-square-foot "The U.S. dairy industry warehouse, which is kept at absolutely cannot s urvive a steady 34 degrees, more without this," said D ale, a than 1.5 million cases of yodairy farmer who has moved gurt in flavors ranging from toward robotic milking to the usual, l ik e s t r awberry avoid the labor problem. Like and blueberry, to the unusumany dairy farmers, he did al, like green tea, waited to be not want his full name or his shipped to retailers. Machines farm's name used because he worked at dizzying speeds, was concerned that immigra- slapping labels on white yotion officials would target his gurt cups that made their way Tina Susman / Los Angeles Times business. via conveyor belts into filling Chobani's Greek yogurt arrival in New York in 2005 is credited with Robotics are too expensive rooms. There, more machines fueling a nationwide boom in Greek yogurt's popularity, which also for most farmers; each machine costs about $250,000.

squirted fruit into each cup

was a salvation for New York dairy farmers. The state is now the

and topped the fruit with dol- nation's No. 1 yogurt producer, surpassing California. They also cannot do the tasks lops of creamy, white yogurt. that farmers say humans must Chobani is now one of more "Nobody wants to go out handle, including cleaning than 40 yogurt producers in tried to stick to local labor but teats and udders, and basic the state, and it is by far the succumbed to hiring migrant there and deal with cows and farm maintenance. largest. In 2000, the state had workers as their workloads get manure up their sleeves," The problem has simmered about 14 yogurt processing increased. said McMahon, who once adfor years, but it became more plants. Both men, a n d N o r t on, vertised three straight weeks urgent with the Greek yogurt Dairy farmers say the yo- blame the problem more on to find workers. Three locals boom since yogurt maker gurt boom has been a bless- attitudes than on economics. applied, and only one worked Chobani's arrival in upstate ing. "It happened overnight," McMahon, for example, said out, he said. He now depends New York i n 2 0 05. Seven said Dale, who watched the his farmworkers all started on Latino workers, most of y ears later, New York w a s state's dairy industry shrink at $2,000a month and get a them members of an extended the nation's yogurt capital, through the 1980s and '90s. three-bedroom house plus family from Mexico. surpassing California to be- "All of a sudden, New York utilities and other benefits. Keeping them safe from come the No. 1 producer. That had all these great yogurt Even so, McMahon said at- immigration is a constant consuccess was fueled in large things going on." tempts to hire locals have cern. Anyone obviously foreign-born sticks out in these part by the demand for Greek He and McMahonsaidthey failed.

largely white communities. The area is about 100 miles from the U.S.-Canada border, and there is a 360-bed immi-

gration detention center in the region. Mary Jo Dudley, who heads the Cornell Farmworker Program at Cornell University, said in a r eport in October

that the state would need more than 2,200 additional farmworkers and about 100,000

more cows to ensure the steady production of sufficient

milk to satisfy yogurt makers' needs. "Most people think of border and immigration issues as happening in the Southwest,

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ed worker, Antonio, who got word from his wife in Mexico that their young son had a

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Gluten-free +AQj;.|r

Tips forsellingto large grocerychains

Continued from E1 They hired part-time em-

ployees and hosted school field trips. Their own chil-

Ron Tanner ofthe NewYorkbasedSpecialtyFoodAssociation spokewith the Charlotte Observer aboutwaysbusiness owners cangettheir products into large grocery chains. Seek certifications:Several chains do notchargewoman-owned or minority-owned small businessesslotting and shelving fees.Seekthose certifications, if you can.Prato and Paeper wereplanning toseek

dren wore bumblebee outfits to advertise their moms'

products. Prato and Paeper didn't want to compete with Bet-

ty Crocker or

D u ncan

Hines. Instead, they tried

carving their own niche in the $109 billion specialty foods industry. For a time,

Kristoptter Skinner / Bay Area News Group

Steven Greenlee, senior public information officer for the California Independent System Operator, describes the work being done in the grid operation center in Folsom, California. The flow of electrici-

ty from power plants to Pacific Gas and Electric Companyand other power utilities across most of the state is maintained in this state-of-the-art facility.

Energy Continued from E1 Since the late '90s, public utilities such as Pacific Gas and Electric have largely gotten out of the business of running power plants. They now buy most of t h e e lectricity

their customers use from the wholesale energy market. Roughly 140 companies sell to the market, resulting in about27,000 transactions per day. The ISO makes sure the

purchased electricity makes it to the utilities' substations. To help explain how the increases in renewable energy affect the amount of electricity available, grid operators have produced a graph they've nicknamed the Duck Curve because of its tail-belly-neck

shape. The lines track California's demand for electricity

over a single day, subtracting out the electricity supplied by solar and wind. In the morning, electricity

demand rises as people wake up and turn on appliances, lights and electric toothbrush-

es. And as the day wears on, the state is increasingly dependent on solar plants, especially in the afternoon. A recent record was set

March 6, when solar peaked at 5,812 megawatts, five times what it was three years ago.

All this solar power is allow-

ing California to cut back on winds — which usually drop natural gas — which now pro- off in the early morningvides about 60 percent of the kept blowing. Grid operators state's energy needs — and had to order a decrease of other traditional sources of 1,700 megawatts of energy or electricity. risk damaging power lines. "We have to take immediate But this can be a problem because the sun sets at the actionwhenever the grid goes same time that people are re- out of balance," Greenlee said. turning home. That causes "We can't just wait and see." electricity use to surge, and Nancy Rader, executive dithe power plants that were rector of the California Wind turned down or even off need Energy Association, says that to start producing — fast. wind generation is usually a The majority of California's balancing force on the grid bepower plants, however, ar- cause it normally gets windier en't up for the abrupt on-and- as the sun is setting. "It's going off chall enge. "A big portion in the right direction at the of our fleet is not flexible," right time," said Rader, who said Steven Greenlee, an ISO doesn't see over-generation spokesman. "It cannot be of wind energy as much of a ramped up fast. It cannot start problem because it's easy to and stop multiple times." turn off a wind turbine. It can take up to a day for a And Joe Desmond, senior typical electrical generator to vice president of marketing go from "off" to being able to for BrightSource, predicts that add electricity to the grid. And solar energy generation will as more solar comes online, ultimately prove to be more the ramp-up curve each eve- flexible. The Oakland-based ning is getting steeper. company that built Ivanpah Greenlee saidthegrid needs in the Mojave Desert — Calinatural gas plants that can fornia's largest solar plantrespond to increased demand is designing plants for China within 10 minutes. This could that can store solar heat and mean building new plants or save it for afterdark. retrofitting old ones. Schmitt is also optimistic. While theenergy ramp-up The grid operators, he said, may look like the most intimiare up to the challenge. "In California, we're out dating problem, a more immediate one is too much electrici- in front, setting the pace," he ty on the grid. said. "We're showing folks Four times last year, the how to do this."

it worked. The owners said they landed their products in 400-plus small local and neighborhood stores, including Whole Foods. They faced a tough choice. "What we thought we were sold their mixes online and at trade shows. Last year, going to need to continue to they started scoring meet- grow was going to be almost ings with corporate food what we already put in," Prato execs. said. "It didn't make sense, es"We made areally good pecially since the risk was so run of it," Paeper said. "We high." were so convinced that this They officially closed in Febwas it, that this was the ruary. Some products were still path." instores as of March. Once they In order to get on big run out, they won't be replaced. "Closing the business was shelves, food makers typically must pay larger retail- one of the most difficult deciers "slotting fees" for shelf sions we've ever had to make," space. I n Bu m b alooza's Prato said. "We had to put our case, the owners said they paid grocery chains more than $20,000 each. They assumed payments for their products would follow. It rarely happened. Some larger retailers wait 90 days to pay smaller suppliers, said Chris Reedy, executive director of Blue Ridge Food Ven-

COMPANY

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catamarancorp CarMax Inc Credicorp Ltd IHS Inc CBRE Group sthwstn Energy Contl Resources Cabot oil & Gas Macy's Inc

ADI

59. 2 6 74. 73 150 . 8 8 120. 3 3 3889 24. 0 4 46.04 30. 7 6 67.85 17.46 20.91 62.24

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22. 6 12.1 8.9 8.4 82 77 77 73 6 .6 6.3 6.1 5 .8

19.5 15.6 1.0 4.3 12 6 -2.0 4.4 7.9 7.4 -1.6 7.3 6.5

Cenovus Energy Western Union Co Analog Devices concho Resources DR Horton Inc EQT corp

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119. 3 5

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Bumbalooza is the

f i rst

business to dose so soon after

winning the 3-year-old Power Up Challenge, said chamber spokeswoman Natalie Dick.

"Many of the finalists over the last threeyears have continued to advance intheir business

plans," she said. "That said, (entrepreneurship) is no doubt a challenging environment, and that's something that needs to

be acknowledged."

turned over three cases of product to chain stores before they ever see a payment, he said. uYou can be in the hole for

three or four runs (of product) before you ever get your first check," he said. For months, Bumbaloo-

+/- 101,930.4 square Feetil +/- 2.34 Acres • Sewer and Water on Property • Shared Access to Business 97 (3rd Street) • Located Across from South Les Schwab store and immediately South of Suba Guru • First Commercial Property on right side of road entering Bend from South • New roads create remarkable exposure

za's checks were either delayed or a fraction of what

they expected, the owners sald. They started runnlllg out of money as they used

30 percent of their sales to keep the brand visible in the

Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker 541-389-4212 5 4 1-585-2446

stores. Affording their over-

head was a struggle. By January, Bumbaloo-

dan(kcolmcommercial.com

za's seams came undone.

Licensed Broker in the State of Oregon Since 1997

Thousands of dollars in the hole, Prato and Paeper

Globalmarkets INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

FRIDAY C L OS E

IC E L T RI L NWY

16.46 25.02 3.07

8.52 6.65 0.71

1073

1 92 . 9

9.4

36.2

75.3

73.4

30.1

39.5

-44.4

31. 5 3

6.88

279

29.0

-32.1

0.40

0.08

25.9

-52.4

-91.8

8.50

1.71

25.2

6.3

0.65

0.13

24.8

41.3

4. 4 6

0.8 7

24.2

-6.7

7.85

1.50

23.6

95.3

48 .47 36. 8 7 58. 5 7 9.01 5.28

8. 7 9 6.41 10.0 1 1.52 0.89

22.2

27.6

1 5 .6 5

zeo

21.0

9.6

20.6

19.9

20.3

21.9

20.2

-21.0

19.0

41. 0

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

LAST FRI. CHG 2066.96 +7.27 11967.39 -33.99 6833.46 +23.96 25275.64 +19Z89 5074.14 +11.92 19312.79 +277.95

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +0.35% L +0.39% -0.28% L L >22.05% 0 35% +4 07% +Q 77% +7.08% +0.24% L t18. 7 6% +1.46% +10.67%

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

0.0 B uenos Aires Merval 1 1 07068 +258.58 + 2 .39% X L -30.9 MexicocityBolsa 44202.94 +478.16 +1.09% sao Paolo Bovespa 5 3 2 82.22 +960.46 + 1 .84% 4 -83.3 Toronto s &P/ TSX 1 5 026.62 +84.07 +0.56% L 43.6 /AFRICA 260.2 EUROPE 18.4 Amsterdam 64.4 Brussels Madrid -11.6 Zurich -71.6 Milan 393.3 Johannesburg Stockholm

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

down to the decision. We went by numbers and facts."

some small businesses have

TICKER

8.2 New York & co -7.5 Movado Group Mov 40.4 Molycorp lnc MCP -50.1 Tantech Hldgs Ltd TANH -25.7 CAMAC Energy CAK -12.2 sungy Mobile Ltd G OMO 12.1 Gordmans Stores GMAN - 37.4 Eagle Pharmaceutical EGRX 25.8 orthofix OFIX 18.5 Nathans Fam N ATH -5.0 Genie Energy Ltd GNE 28.7 Layne Christensen LAYN -15.9 Advaxis Inc ADXS

emotions aside when it came

and manufacturing facility near Asheville. By then,

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

FRIDAY C LOS E

T ICKER

certification as awoman-owned business this year. Start local:Start selling your products locally first. Tanner advises businessessell their products to10 local storesand then to smaller grocery chains with10 to 20 storesbeforetackling larger chains. Make pl aan:Haveaplanto grow gradually andsaveenough money to stayafloat. While each situation is different, Tannersaid each businesswill need tohave money reserved if it is pursuing some of the larger retailers.

tures, a shared-use kitchen

Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

E5

492.38 3773.31 1180.76 91 30.60 23308.53 52229.32 1675.52

+2.34 +30.69 +6.47 -6.66 -50.46 -51.82 +6.03

+0 48'/ L +0.82% L +0.55% L -0.07% -0.22%

-0.10% +0.36%

X

4 L V 4 T Y L

L L

+ 29.0 6 %

+2.4 5% + 6.55% +2.6 9%

+16 00'I +14.86% +13.27% +1.64% +22.60% +4.94% +14.41%

ASIA

crso

7.71

-6.59

-46.1

-28.6

Bosi Mvo

10.03

-3.86

-2ze

-33.0

1zoo

-4.36

-26.7

-21.9

CERU

7.25

-z48

-25.5

-9.1

EGY

z47

-0.75

-23.3

-50.8

-4.8

36.5 Cytosorbents Corp 33.7 Biouelivery Sciences 76.3 Mv oil Trust 30.1 Cerulean Pharma 9.1 Vaalco Energy 21.9 Ovaecience Inc

OVAS

3e.oe

-8.41

-19.3

-20.1

-3.5

ea.a AchaogenInc

AKAO

7.86

-1.84

-19.0

-24.6

17.5 World Wrestling Ent

WWE

13.73

-z79

-16.9

-1 9.7

EBIO

7.66

-1.56

-16.9

-33.9

Seoul Composite 2029.07 + 0 .62 +0.03% +5.92% Singapore Straits Times 3453.75 + 6 . 73 +0.20% +z63% -41.8 Sydney All Ordinaries 5869.70 +36.80 +063% 4 V 8 93% 0.0 Taipei Taiex 9600.32 +9zee +0.97% V 3 15% -69.4 Shanghai Composite 3825.78 +1 5.49 +0.41% +18.27% 23z4 Quotable -48.3 ''VVe believe that Cuba could become one oi Airbnb's biggest -5z4 markets in Latin America." -49.0

EGLT

11.ae

-z16

-16.0

-25.2

-18.3

U AL

61.8 8

-5.87

-8.7

-8.9

AAL

49.18

-3.49

-6.6

1.6

BMRN

1 2 0.38

-8.40

-6.5

6.1

M AC

80.6 6

-5.49

-6.4

-8.4

ALXN

16 9 . 94

-10.65

-5.9

-8.5

DAL

4Z25

-Z63

-5.9

I NCY

88.7 9

-5.57

-5.9

M YL

58.1 0

-3.54

-5.7

K ORS

63. 3 9

-3.58

-5.3

A LKS

60.1 0

-3.23

-5.1

z5 -5.6 -15.6

-3Z7 Eleven Biotherap 34.7 Egalet Corp

60.4 17.1

— Kay Kuehne,regional director for online home-rental service Airbnb, which is now allowing American travelers to book lodging in Cuba

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion Ilarge).

The future of cable 'I

Adam Ilkowitz

i sder Who he Is: Analyst, Nomura Securities What he thlnks: The news isn't all bad for investors in cable companies.

The cable industry Is undergoing big change. The TV and Internet service providers are merging to deal with rising content costs even as they lose TV subscribers. Adam Ilkowitz, an analyst with Nomura Securities, predicts that regulators will approve the latest megadeals — Comcast buying Time Warner Cable and AT&T buying DirecTV. And, he says, It may not be that bad for cable providers In the long run if more customers drop cable service but keep paying for Internet.

owning more assets, you'll see Charter bulking up In this deal and looking to do more. (Charter on Tuesday said it's buying How mlght they react If the deal isn't cable operator Bright House Networks.) II approved? the deal doesn't go through, we think Shares of Time Warner Cable and Charter Charter would still become a consolidator. Communications (which has a related Buying Time Warner Cable seems like transaction In the deal) would probably be something they might want to try again. more likely to de:line from how wevalue And there are other cable companies out them asstand-alone companies,whereas there: Cablevision on the public side, and Comcast stock Is more likely to rise. If we on the private side, Cox, Mediacom, go back to fundamentals we think Suddenlink. And Cable One, a division of Comcast Is undervalued. Graham Holdings that's being spun out. comfortable about the merger being approved or think it's getting closer.

Some analysts are lowering their Do you expect further consolidation? expectatlons on whether the Comcast It depends a little bit on how the Federal and Time Warner Cable deal will be Communications Commission rules. If approved. Are Investors nervous? they approve the Comcast-Time Warner I don't think there's a change In people's Cable merger and say there's no expectations. They either feel more material, or significant, conditions to

How does cord cuttlng affect traditional TV providers? If customers are leaving video, then cable companies will have to evaluate the content they carry. Larger cable companieshaven'tmade the decision

to drop channels. But if cord cutting were to accelerate — and we haven't seen that yet — these types of decisions start needing to be made.

Could cord cuttlng be good for cable companies? Video Is still the dominant revenue ddiver. But content costs are also the largest portion of costs. If you start cutting them Intandem, youcan maybe have a good outcome. But it will be a difficult transition perhaps In the stock market. Companies and stocks are two different things. The outcome for the company might be a good outcome, but the outcome for the stock will be messy. interviewed by Tali Arbel. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changes for the week ending Thursday, April 2, 2015

DOW 17,763.24 ~

NASDaa ~ 4,886.94

4 28

S&P500 M 2,066.96 ~

RUSSELL2000 1,255.66

+

WILSHIRE 5D00 21,946.62 ~


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

UNDAY D

R

ia's so i crossover

Take a chanceon emissions-failing car?

By Larry PrIntz Tribune News Service

Let's face it: Big crossover

By Brad Bergholdt

Q

• I am considering the • purchase of a used car from a neighbor. It's a nice car and runs well but has been sitting for a while. One of several reasons she prefers driving her

ers and Cadillac Escalades

to name three — most are like the 2016 Kia Sorento: just stylish enough to avoid being bland but not exactly exciting. Even a Super Bowl ad starring

the lameness factor. Of course, this is all per-

manner since the last time the

spot detection, rear cross traf-

test failed. There's always

fic alert and a handy 360-degree view monitor system.

the chance of the car hav- a hundred more possibiliing modified, missing or ties. A flashing check engine disconnected e m i ssion light indicates a catalytic concontrol components. verter threatening misfire is There can be quite a few occurrlng. reasons for a vehicle failUnless you are a gambler ing an emissions inspec- and can purchase the car at tion. Possibilities include a a sizable discount, I'd advise problem with the engine, asking to take it to a differing the engine management facility that can evaluate the system — which includes emissions fault and give the

A

,

tion of the Sorento is a decent

p-'

ride, with a modicum of style,

'

any option you'd care for in a modern vehicle and a driving experience that's firmly middle of the pack. And it's these traits that stand out more than Kia's traditional value: a low

Courtesy Kia viaTribune News Service

The 2016 KIa Sorento offers newtechnology previously unavailable on the Sorento, including vehicle m ight b e stability control, forward collision warnIng and smart cruise control.

Despite the v e hicle's in-

also possible that the car has not been driven in the needed

speed automatic transmission.

'5

O'

ception, for the latest itera-

creased length, the overall look is similar to last year's

ered an emissions issue. It is

and 260 pound-feet of torque. new technology previously Finally, there's also 290-horse- unavailable on the Sorento, power 3.3-liter V-6 offered on including vehicle stability conLX, EX, SX and SX Limited trol, forward collision warntrim. All engines mate to a six- ing, smart cruise control, blind

the needle. In fact, it may have only added to

a price tag of $46,000. Astonishing? Yes, until you look at the competition and realize that finding a comparably equipped competitor could cost even more.

may also illuminate the check engine light and is consid-

batterywas disconnected or couldn't pass an emissions diagnostic trouble codes were inspection. How large of a cleared for the emissions monproblem could this be'? Is it itors (on-board self tests) to run prudent to buy it, as is, for to completion. This would be a discount? She's hesitant the most easily resolved issue. to spend any money on it An engine fault is the least right now, so it's sort of a likely cause but could be extake-it-or-leave-it deal. pensive to fix. Mechanical • Oh, boy. This might be faults such as incorrectly ad• a simple issue or one justed or leaking valves, inthat's expensive to resolve. take manifold leakage, head Does your neighbor pos- gasket leakage, piston ring issess a copy of the vehicle's sues or variable valve control inspection report or any faults are possibilities. Cars paperwork indicating the built after 1996 will call out nature of repair attempts? any defect that is believed to The inspection report raiseemissions 50 percent or will list, in general terms, more above allowable by lightthe reasons for the emis- ing the check engine light. sions test failure. Causes Common causes of a glowing could be a n i l l uminated check engine light include a check engine light and ac- faulty oxygen sensor, EVAP companying d i agnostic system leakage, a tired catatrouble code, or a visual in- lytic converter, ignition coil or spection finding. Depend- spark plug faults, a contamiing on where you live, it's nated mass airflow sensor and also possible tailpipe emis- faults in the exhaust gas recirsions exceeded allowable culation system (faulty valve levels or that a functional or sensor, clogged passages).

Pierce Brosnan

shocked to know that a fully loaded 2016 Kia Sorento I testdrove this week flirted with

system. A transmission fault

other car is that this one

REVIEW couldn't move

price. I n fact, you

evaporative emissions system or exhaust gas recirculation

Tribune News Service

SUVs are not objects of lust, mostly due to their reputation as family vehicles. While there are exceptions — Jeep Grand Cherokees, Range Rov-

2016 KiaSorento Base price:$24,900 As tested:$46,000 Qpe:crossover SUV Engine:3.3-liter DOHCV-6 Mileage:18mpg city, 26 mpg highway

come with a new 2.0-1iter tur-

anti-lock brakes, roll over mit-

bocharged four-cylinder en-

igation and cornering brake

gine rated at 240 horsepower

control. In addition, Kia offers

Four-cylinder models come with a choice of front-wheel drive or all-wheel drive, while V-6 models come only with allwheel drive.

but with more sophistication

up front. The 2016 Sorento it still seems novel. doesn't seem larger on the outKia also has updated its side, despite a wheelbase that's Uvo eServices infotainment grown by more than three system, adding a host of new The test model, an SX Liminches. Instead, you'll find the features, including geo-fenc- ited V-6, provided the mix of increased length is apparent ing, speed alert, curfew alert, ample power and good fuel inside, where a roomy cab- Google local search and Siri economy you'd expect. Kia in graciously accommodates "Eyes Free." While the suite says the engine can tow up to up to seven passengers and of apps offered is appreciat- 5,000 pounds. 11 cubic feet of their stuff; 73 ed, the navigation system is Driving experience was cubic feet with the seats fold- annoying. It always reverts to fairly refined, if unremarked. While I was never brave a standardized view, one that able. Ride comfort is much enough to try out the third providesfew details.Yes,you better t h a n t h e ou t g oing row, the first two rows proved can zoom into a closer, more model, although there was comfortable enough. The front detailed view, but the system still some road noise evident. seats are wide, if flat, but pro- always zooms out again to Body motions are fairly well vide enough support during a the featureless view. In addi- controlled over pockmarked half-day highway drive. tion, like other Kias that I have pavement, and bump absorpAnd this car is awash with driven, the Sirius XM satel- tion is respectable. You would serious content such as a large lite radio signal constantly never call the Sorento fun to panoramic sunroof, leath- drops, more so than any other drive, but it doesn't feel as big er trim, rear seat sunshades, automaker. as it is, and is more maneuverheated and ventilated front The Sorento is offered in able than you might expect. seats, heated steering wheel four ascending trim levels: L, Kia offers a number of elecand a fairly decent 630-watt, LX, EX and SX Limited. Base tronic safety and driving aids, 12-speaker Infinity s ound L and LX models come with a including electronic stability system and slick outside mir- 185-horsepower double-over- control, traction control, brake rors that fold when the car is head-cam 2.4-liter engine, assist, hill-start assist, eleclocked. It's not a new idea, but while EX a n d S X L i m i ted tronic brake force distribution,

It adds up to a package that

is enticing and competitive, but somehow not quite compelling. For in the end, while I appreciate the vehicle's muscular power, its hefty equipment list, refined manners and

updated styling, the Sorento never felt as opulent as its

price suggests, nor did it feel particularly engaging to drive. Instead, it is a good compet-

itor in a class with some great ones.

This list trails downward with

the fuel, ignition, idle/throt-

rest of the vehicle a lookover. If

tle and other systems — or improperly operating emission control devices such as the catalytic converter,

previous repair attempts were made and they were unsuccessful, I'd tread very carefully, employing a fresh set of eyes.

,

c~ iig

aj :

'I ' •

•J

i•

i

P

i

Do e Duran 0's inconsistent Startin remainS a ITI Ster By Paul Brand

self-diagnostic c a pabilities V-8 engine, but both appear to to identify the problem. This • My 2004 Dodge Duran- utilize a geared starter motor. may lead to pinpoint testing of • go with 170,000 miles You could have the starter test- the speed control switch, serhas recently developed start- ed for amperage draw on or vo, deactivator switch, brake ing problems. It will start up off the car. Once the starter is switch and other components. with the 4.7-liter or 5.7-liter

Star Tribune(Minneapolis)

Q

in one of three ways: 1. Start fine. 2. Start with a knock and

removed,the teeth on the flex

Also, make sure al l

go right to idle rpm. 3. Start

plate ring gear can be inspected for damage. I found reman-

lights are operational. Please note that Ford issued

with a knock and stall. I then

ufactured startersfor under

a recall back in 2000 address-

have to crank the motor for 5-10seconds beforethe motor slowly starts and goes right to idle rpm. I have no dashboard warning lights, the battery is OK and the engine runs fine with no detectable power loss or knocking. My mechanic

$100.

ing potential corrosion or binding in the speed control

One final thought: Years

ago we had a Malibu wagon that developed an intermittent but very loud knocking noise. After

m u c h k n u ck-

b r ake

cable.

Ford Fusion has Q •• My about 85,000 miles on

le-busting, teeth-gnashing and it. It has a set of Goodyear head-scratching, it turned out

to bea loose torque converter on them. Both right side tires was not able to diagnose the mounting bolt that intermit- leak air enough that the "Low problem, even after replacing tently hit the inside of the bell tire" light comes on every two the cam and crank sensors housing. weeks or so. The tires have and disconnecting various been removed and resealed sensors, cables, etc., trying to My wife's 2001 Ford Es- to their aluminum rims by identify the problem. Could • cape has a problem with the tire shop where I bought this be an issue with the start- the cruise control. On a recent them and bymy Ford dealer. er motor since the engine op- trip, when I turned on the Nothing seems to work. I've erates fine once it is running? cruise, the green light went on thought of buying new tires or • I wonder if the knock- but when I attempted to set the even trading the car, but I like • ing noise is tricking the speed control it would not set. it alot. knock sensors into retarding The light to indicate that the • Typically, there are two ignition timing to protect the speed control was set did not • possiblecauses for air engine. Knock sensors are ef- come on. Repeated attempts leaks from replacement tires fectively small microphones also failed. Then the green on alloy wheels — corrosion that listen for the sound of det- light indicating that the speed around the bead contact area onation in the cylinders and control was on also went off on the rim or porosity of the

Q•

signal the ECM, which retards

A

and wouldn't come back on.

wheel itself. Shops remove the

the timing. Mechanical noises Yesterday my wife informed that mimic the sound of deto- me that the green light did

corrosion and apply a special sealant to the bead to seal the

nation may fool the ECM. The

tire.

come on but the speed control

retarded ignition timing might explain the engine's idle rpm

would not activate. Could you You have three choiceshelp us diagnose this problem? have a tire specialist try reand restart characteristics. • Your b e st d i a g nostic sealing the tires again, replace You didn't identify wheth• strategy is to use a scan the wheels or replace the car. er your Durango is equipped tool and the cruise control's I'd go with option one.

A

t ali c181'll

tires with about 12,000 miles

looked at it and drove it but

A

I

NAY 1, 2 & 3 • 2015 FOR SHOW INFORMATION VISIT:

www.connectiondepot.com Reach more than 70,000 CentralOregon readers in the official Home 8 Garden Show guide. Official Show Guide Publishes: in The Bulletin Saturday, April 25

Advertising Deadline: Wednesday, April 8

ci>~~ I

The Bulletin


INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

JOHN COSTA

Realizing the OSU

dream t

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arrived at The Bulletin nearly 18

years ago.

Bend then was a city of about

35,000 souls, but shortly thereafter climbed to more than 50,000 through annexation.

It was — still is — a beautiful city, but like now, had reminders of a fading industrial past. One, of course, was the riverside deserted mill site just south of a prosperous downtown that could

have come right out of central casting. A nd oneday,a ma n named Bill Smith described what he had in mind for what would become the Old Mill District.

The site resembled something out

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

The fall of Richmond, Virginia, in1865. Fires began to burn out of control after the Confederate government and troops left Richmond at the end of the Civil War. Union troops helped put the fires out when they arrived April 3, 1865.

of post-industrial Gary, Indiana, or

Toledo, Ohio. My first thought was that this man has more dollars than sense. At The Bulletin, one of my col-

leagues predicted that there would be a mobile missile emplacement before a retail operation at the site.

When asked why, he listed his reasons: The site is an environ-

mental disaster, and if developed it will despoil the Deschutes River and it will kill the downtown, not to

mention generating road-choking traffic. It took Smith nearly five years

to get the first permit for development for the district, but today we all have better access to the river, the old downtown remains vibrant,

and the environmental debris field has been cleared up on the way to

a remarkable addition to Central Oregon. Do we today, do you suppose, have the same imagination, tenacity, skill and political will to see beyond the challenges that come with

every dream'? Of course, I am referring to the west-side expansion plans of

OSU-Cascades. Though it is being challenged, OSU has purchased 10 acres to be-

gin its expansion and has an option on 46 adjacent acres, the site of a

mining pit. It's fair to say it also has an eye on a larger county dumpsite next door. It's also fair to say it has its crit-

By Michael E.Ruane s The Washington Post

RICHMOND, Va. -

he arsenal blew up early on the morning of Monday, April 3. The explosion shattered windows across town, lofted ordnance into the sky and knocked down tombstones in the Shockoe Hill Cemetery. Much of the city already was on fire, the blaze spread by flames from burning tobacco warehouses. Mobs were looting. The inmates had gotten out of the prison. And a man was seen torching a pile of worthless money in the street. It was the spring of 1865 and, after almost four years of civil war, the Confederacy was dying.

ics, who have been nothing if not vociferous.

Their points range from insulting to debatable to sound. We've heard that the OSU lead-

ership doesn't know what it's doing or is purposefully deceptive. Or the students represent nothing but Fri-

day night drunks. This from folks w ho, to my knowledge, have notrecently created a new university. We've heard that better sites are

available, though they are hard to envision when all costs are included

or when desirability from a student perspective is considered Like it or not, future students will

be the ultimate deciders of the wisdom of our decisions. The most salient questions from

my perspective remain housing and parking. They were critical when the plan was proposed, and they remain critical today. But are these really the central questions on the path to realizing the

decades-long dream of a university? Would it not be better to focus on

what community qualities — educational, social and cultural — would be enhanced by a four-year university in our midst'?

Do we have the imagination to

The governmenthad fled by remained of its gold and silver, headed southwest for Danville. Desperate people had packed onto the departing rail cars. But many were turned away. One was Robert Lumpkin, the city's notorious slave broker. He

had failed to get passage for himself and 50 shackled men, women and children. "Hell is empty, and all the devilsarehere,"a reporterforthe

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Shakespeare. Richmond diarist Judith Brockenbrough McGuire wrote that day:

,f': , '

rI

London Times wrote, quoting

I

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.s aa'

"Oh, who shall tell the horror of the past night!" About 100 miles to the south-

• ' 4'

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west, the starving remnants of

' 'i'

the main Confederate army under Gen. Robert E. Lee were being run

is)

down by Union Gen. Ulysses S.

i

Grant's Army of the Potomac.

The Confederates staggered on for six more days before capitulating in the carpeted parlor of a home in the village of Appomattox Court House. But in Richmond, the real death

and tenacity to solve the problems inherent in this development?

is an open mining pit and an adjacent, environmentally corrupted

'"r,j..;-':4, j~, ~ j : (p~:.:i.":

train the previous night with what

agony of the Confederacy played out in apocalyptic scenes of fire and bedlam. The city was overcrowded and had experienced food shortages and hardships. But it had always

foreseea campus where today there

"

F

Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

Confederate soldier Andrew Chandler and his slave Silas look like brothers in arms here, but what about before and after the war? Assassination, Reconstruction, Jim Crow: The Civil War was just a chapter in a tragic tale.

trusted in Lee to protect it. Now,

Manassas, Virginia, in July 1861. That battle had been a disaster

whole contest ... to us, shivering our thunderbolts against it for ... four years." Watching from afar, Frederick Chesson of the Union's 29th Con-

Or, by God, are we going to rally behind the preservation of the pit

with Lee in flight, Richmond was

for the Union, and it was followed

necticut Regiment recalled: "We

left to the depredations of the

began to realize as we had not till

two hotels, three newspapers (the

and the dump? Or is it that some are afraid, not

Yankees. "This town is the Rebellion,"

by many others as Yankee armies assailed the Rebel capital from

then ... that this was one of the

Enquirer, the Dispatch and the Ex-

of the potential failure of the future

a New York newspaper reporter wrote.

multiple directions. Now, at least 600,000 deaths lat-

great days of the Lord. "Right out there in the open in sight of the flaming city we went

aminer), a flour mill, a paper mill, railroad depots, bridges over the

clunlp? Do we have the skill, political will

The cry, "On to Richmond!" had

been raised in the North before the first major battle of the war, at

on what Central Oregon is and what

since 1861 and the target of Union

er, Grant had driven Lee out of his lines, and Richmond was being evacuated.

it stands for?

armies that had smashed themselves against its defenses in a

"It is all that we have ... striven for," the New York reporter

dozen battles, the city was falling at last.

George Alfred Townsend wrote. "Its history is the epitome of the

campus, but of its likely success and the inevitable influence it will have — John Costa is publisher of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, j costa@bendbulletin.com.

The capital of the Confederacy

wild with excitement," Chesson

wrote, according to historian Ernest Furgurson's study of Richmond during the war. "We yelled, we cheered, we sang, we prayed, we wept, we hugged each other

and threw up our hats." The fire, started by Confederates to wreck anything of use to

the enemy, raged all night and into the morning. It destroyed Richmond's banks,

James River and the Confederate Post Office.

"The entire business part of

the city on fire," eyewitness John

Leyburn wrote a year later, a "sea of flame." SeeCivil War IF5


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

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The Bulletin

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end has an affordable-housing problem. It's not new, but the situation hasn't improved much in recent years. The city of Bend is looking at a variety of ways to ease the situation, among them by reducing its system de-

velopment charges for qualifying projects. The city assesses system development charges to help pay for the growth-driven cost of i m provements to streets and water and sewer systems. The Bend Park 8.. Recreation District, which largely overlaps the city, also collects SDCs to help defray the cost of growth to that district. Combined, fees assessed by the two can increase the cost of a single-family home by more than $15,000. City officials believe that by giving affordable-housingdevelopers a break on SDCs, they'll encourage the building of more affordable housing in the area. Tom Kemper, the executive director of Housing Works, which helps low- and moderate-income families in the area find housing,agrees. In February, he told the Bend Affordable Housing Committee that reducing SDCs is the "single most important thing the city can do" to improve the situation. The park district would not have to waive all SDCs for affordable housing for eternity. It could possibly choose not to collect them for a defined period. It could possibly set an amount that it would exempt each year and have a process for projects to apply for those exemptions. The park district has notbeen enthusiastic. Whichbrings us to May 19.

That's election day, and three positions on the park district board will be filled. Between now and then, incumbents and challengers alike will be laying out their positions on the issues facing the

b

dlstrIct.

System development charges should be front and center in those discussions. While it may be true that the park district has no direct stake in the cost of housing in Bend, it clearly has an indirect one. As things now stand, far too many of the people who work in our stores, restaurants and other businesses cannot afford to move to Bend, assuming they can find potential housing in the first place. That, in turn, makes it difficult for businesses to find and keep workers. And that isn't good, either for the people who turn down jobs they might otherwise want, or for the businesses that are unable to hire them. Tax-supported institutions such as the park district need healthy economies todo well,and Bend's housing difficulties are a threat to the health of the local economy. Park districtboard candidates must make their thoughts about the district's role in solving the current problems clear before voters are asked to choose among them.

A tricky enrollment picture By Megan McArdle

Don't abandon hydro he hydroelectric project initially planned for the end of Bend's water supply pipe from Bridge Creek was scrapped. But there's reason for the city to think about it again. The 10-mile pipe has an elevation chop of about 1,009 feet. The water that the city diverts through that pipe builds up a lot of pressure. It's disstpated Quough valves. The pressure could generate dean electricity and revenue. And aswe'llexplain, itcould also leadto water conservation. In 2012, a consultant estimated the hydroproject couldbe built for $5 million or $6 million. The revenue estimates were about $500,000 ayear. Ptesumably, most of that revenue would at first pay off the debt for the project. Operations and maintenance costs were not estimated to be significant. After several years, the hydro

newwater filtrahon and alsobecause of the questions about the availability of incentives. There is another possible concern, as welL The existence of the hydm plant would provide an additional reason to keep diverting water into the pipe. Opponents of the Bridge Creek pipeline are not going to like that. They wanted the city to stop taking water from the diversion altogether. But one way to make this project work might be for the city to find a companythatisinterestedinbuilding and operating the hydm plant itself. The revenue the city earns from that arrangement could in turnbe used to help pay for water conservation projects, suchaspiping'Hjmalo Irrigation District canals to enable the dislrict to take less or no water from Ttmalo Creek. couldbe making nicepiles of money. Clean energy. Revenue. And waThe city dropped the hydm be- ter conservation. That's a gveat comcause of how much it would add to bination if the city can find a way to the initial cost of the pipeline and the make ithappen.

T

less likely this becomes.

Bioomberg News

Even worse, the smaller the pool,

al), only 2 percent of those eligible have signed up. Avalere says that 83

Is Oba m acare en r o l l ment the more likely it is that you're get- percent of2015 enrollees make less stalling? ting adverse selection. Who is most than 250 percent of the federal povThat's the suggestion of a recent likely to g o w i t hout i n surance'? erty line, which equates to less than New York Times article that basi- That's right: people who aren't $30,000 a year for an individual. cally looks at the enrollment differ- spendingvery much on health care What does that tell us? People ences between the Affordable Care right now. A few of those people don't seem to want exchange poliAct's state and federal exchanges. deciding to forgo insurance doesn't cies unless there's a substantial subMany states that had good enroll- matter much. sidy. Which means that at higher inment for the 2014 season saw little But if you end up enrolling 50 come levels, there could be substanincrease in 2015. The federal ex- percent of the eligible population, tial adverse selection. changes did better — but that might it's a fairly safe bet that the missing But it's a little early yet to worry. just be catch-up as they enroll folks 50 percent are disproportionately Obamacare isn't all carrots; there they would have picked up earlier healthy, and that number is large are also some big sticks, in the form had the exchanges not melted down. enough to throw off your projec- of mandate penalties. And many of Robert Laszewski, author of the tions. This is potentially a recipe for those higher-income folks, who are Health Care Policy and M arket- the dreaded "death spiral," in which actually calculating the expected place Review blog, argues that if t he healthiest people drop o u t , value of buying a policy rather than true, it will have pretty serious im- raising the average cost of health snapping up a nearly free good, haplications for the long-term health of care for the remaining sick people, ven't yet heard about the mandate the exchanges. Remember, the pric- forcinginsurers to raise prices,so penalties. es we're seeing right now don't nec- the healthier folks decide to drop They'll find out when they file essarily reflect what the price will out. So if the fears expressed in the their taxes — and they'll probably be over the long term, because there Times are correct, it's potentially a find that the penalty is bigger than they're expecting. are all sorts oftemporary cross-sub- very big deal. sidies that will expire at the end of But are they correct? Moreover, that penalty will con2016. The future path of prices will One potential piece of supporting tinue to get bigger for several years, depend on a lot of things, but one evidence: A new report from consul- because it was designed with a very important factor is the size of tancy Avalere says the exchanges phase-in; it starts low, then rises to the insurance pool. are struggling to sign up the middle something significant. As more peoThe magic of statistics tells us class. People with incomes close to ple get hit with bigger penalties for that larger insurance pools make for the poverty line and who can buy going without insurance, at least more stable outcomes, because the exchange policies for a few dollars some of them will sign up. larger the population in the pools, a month are eagerly snapping up Will that be enough to make the the more that random variances theproduct.More than three-quar- insurance pools stable? It's way too in outcomes will tend to average ters of the eligible folks making early to say. But by the same token, out. If your market has a few thou- less than 150 percent of the federal it's way too early to say that enrollsand people in it, it's easier to get a poverty line have enrolled. But as ment is falling short. We'll find out few more cancer patients than you you get north of 150 percent of the in three or four years, when the temexpected, whacking you with big, poverty line, the numbers start rap- porary subsidies and the phase- ins unexpected costs. The more people idly declining: Less than half the have ended, and the program has you add, the larger the number of eligibles between 150 and 200 per- settled down into something more people it will take to make your out- cent have enrolled, and by the time like its final form. comes measurably different from you get to 400 percent of the poverty — Megan McArdie is a columnist actuarial expectations ... and so the line (about $47,000 for an individufor Bloomberg.

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: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

I you want more voters, pay them to turn out I'm uninformed. But given that my vote can't possibly make any differresident Barack Obama recent- ence to the outcome, I'm hard-pressed ly mooted the idea of making to come up with a reason to go to the voting mandatory as a means polls. Our political parties and their

By Stephen L. Carter

tion voters to the polls might actually

Bloomberg News

heighten the influence of money in pol- ally so important, why signal that fact itics — at least if, as I suspect, low-in- by punishing people who don't go to

p

of increasing turnout. It's true that

supporters, with their adolescent slo-

U.S. citizens are less likely to go to ganeering and emotional appeals, the polls than those of many (not all) make the prospect of participation in other d emocracies. Nevertheless,

their nonsense entirely unenticing.

with all due respect to the president, Still, the debate over whether voting I don't much like his idea. And if get- should be compulsory has a great deal ting more people to the polls is the of academic currency. Supporters often argue that those who are staying goal, I have a better suggestion. Let me spell out my biases. I'm a away from the polls tend to be political happy nonvoter. More to the point, outsiders whose views policy rarely I find that I am more at peace when I reflects. Others contend that low-indon't bother following electoral politics formation voters, if required to go to than when I do. Staying away from the the polls, might be transformed into polls helps me to focus on my work, to high-information voters. President take arelaxed attitudetowardlife, even to be a better husband and father than

Obama put the case that mandatory

voting could reduce the influence of I otherwise might. So naturally I'm dis- money in politics. tressed at the thought that my governThese seemingly strong arguments ment would even consider using coer- have equally strong rejoinders. For excionto disturb mypeace of mind. ample, as the lawprofessor Ilya Somin This isn't apathy. And it's not that has pointed out, forcing low-informa-

Besides, if increasing turnout is re-

nicipal election from 14.9 percent to 19.2 percent — no small increase. Are you appalled at the notion of

paying people to vote? Ask yourself ward them instead. If voting is such why. After all, the program would As to the claim that the outsiders an unadorned good, let's pay people to increase turnout. And if, as Brennan who stay away from the polls would show up. Surely paying people to do a suggests elsewhere, the true objection make a crucial policy difference, the good thingisn't abad thing. to paid voting is that we think "votphilosopher Jason Brennan offers a Social scientists have understood ers shouldalways be volunteers," the sharpri poste:"The argument seems for some time that cash payments same objection should apply to forcto presume that voters vote for their alter people's incentives, sometimes ing people to vote. Like those who are self-interest. But we have overwhelm- drastically. For example, paying peo- paid, those who are coerced also aren't ing empirical evidence, drawn from ple money to quit smoking greatly en- volunteers. I've long been mystified by our bihundreds of studies, that they don't hances the chances of success. Paying vote their self-interest. Instead, they students to keep a certain grade-point partisan national determination to vote altruistically, for what they per- average seems to make a difference. achieve what we think is best by punceive tobe in the nationalinterest." Paying teenage girls not to get preg- ishing people who won't go along. You won't be surprised to learn nant greatly decreases the chance that Rewardsforgood behavior are better that I'm with the dissenters. Call me they'll get pregnant. than punishments for bad. They force old-fashioned if you like, but I actually These are all behavioral changes us to discover how much we reall y valdo believe that my fundamental liber- we want to encourage. Why not treat ue what we claim to want. If increasty includesa freedom notto becoerced voting the same way? It's likely to ing turnout is really as important as except for the most important of rea- work. An experiment conducted by supporters say, let's give nonvoters a sons. Otherwise, I'd be grateful to be Fordham political scientist Costas Pa- real incentive to go to thepolls: cash. left alone, to live according to my own nagopoulos found that paying cash — Stephen L. Carteris a columnist values and preferences. rewards of $25 raised turnout in a mu- for Bloomberg and a law professor at Yale. formation voters tend to watch a lot of television.

the polls? Maybe we'd do better to re-


SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

e o L

e as mess

0

et's recap the state of America's commitments in the Mid-

dation for a new U.S.-led order that

dle East. Our military is fight-

ROSS

ing in a tacit alliance with Iranian

DOUTHAT

proxies in Iraq, even as it assists in a campaign against Iranian-backed forces in Yemen. We are formal-

ly committed to regime change in are considered rogues and threats, Syria, but we're intervening against to be restrained and coerced by our the regime's Islamist enemies. Our overwhelming military might. Idestrongest allies, officially, are still ally, over time, our clients become Israel and Saudi Arabia, but we're more prosperous and more dembusy alienating them by pushing for ocratic, the benefits of joining the detente with Iran. And please don't network become obvious, and the mention Libya or al-Qaida — you'll military canopy both expands and confuse everyone even more. becomes less necessary. Is there a method here? A MetterIn an offshore balancing system, nichian master plan discernible only our clients are fewer, and our comto President Barack Obama and his mitments are reduced. Regional advisers'? Not exactly: This admin- powersbear the primary responsiistration has been persistently sur- bility for dealing with crises on the prised by Middle East developments, ground, our military strategy is oriand its self-justifications alternate ented toward policing the sea lanes between the exasperated (why don't and the skies, and direct intervenyou try it if you're so smart?) and tion is contemplated only when the the delusional (as soon as we get the balance of power is dramatically Iran deal, game changer, baby!). upset. But there is a strategic element in Since the Cold War, and especialhow the Obama White House ended ly since 1991, the Pax Americana up here. Haltingly but persistently, idea has predominated in our forthis administration has pursued a eign policy thinking. But in the Midparadigm shift in how the United dle East, there has been no real evoStates relates to the Middle East, a lution toward democracy among our shift from a Pax Americana model network of allies; instead, their pertoward a strategy its supporters call sistent corruption has fed terrorism "offshore balancing." and contributed to al-Qaida's rise. In a Pax Americana system, the Hence the Bush administration's United States enjoys a dominant po- post-9/ll decision to tr y t o s t art sition within a network of allies and afresh, by transforming a rogue clients; actors outside that network state into a regional model, a foun-

THOMAS FRIEDMAN r

ments are truly minimal, but it's

would be less morally compromised very hard for a hegemon to simply than the old. sidle offstage, shedding expectaThat order did not, of course, tions and leaving allies in the lurch. emerge. Instead, it took all the king's And when you're still effectively inhorses and all of David Petraeus' volved everywhere, trying to tip the men just to hold Iraq together; a dif- balance of power this way and that ferentbad actor,Iran, ended up em- with occasional airstrikes, it's easy powered; and the old problem of re- to end up in a contradictory, six-depression led to the Arab Spring and grees-of-enmity scenario, with no the civil wars that followed. clear goal in mind. Sticking to the Pax Americana Second, multipolar environments model after these developments are often more unstable and violent, would have required keeping U.S. period, than unipolar ones. So offtroops in Iraq for decades. It might shoring U.S. power and hoping that have forced us to choose between Iran, Iran's Sunni neighbors and Isbombing Iran and extending a Cold rael will find some kind of balance War-style nuclear umbrella over on their own will probably increase most of the Arab world. And there the riskofarms races,cross-border still would have been no easy an- invasions and full-scale regional swers about how to deal with cor- war. The conflicts we have now are rupt allies or with the zealots who ugly enough, but absent the restraint move in when they fall. still imposed by U.S. military domSo it's understandable that the inance, it's easy to imagine someObama White House has sought a thing worse. different role. Our withdrawal from If we could actually escape Middle Iraq and light-footprint approach to East entanglements entirely, even counterterrorism, our strange dance that "something worse" might be with Bashar Assad, our limited inless costly to the United States than tervention against ISIS — they all trying to sustain the Pax Ameriaim at a more "offshore" approach cana. And if we had a trustworthy to the Middle East's problems. Like- hegemon in the wings to replace us, wise, the long-sought detente with all of this might be moot. Iran, which assumes that once the

Tell me how this ends well t H ONG K O N G -

've been in China for the last week.

It's always instructive to see how the world looks from the Middle

Kingdom. Sometimes the best insights come just from readingthe local papers. On March25,The ChinaDa il y published an essay detailing how "Beijing authorities" had "launched inspection tours of kindergartens this week to ensurethat children are not overbur-

dened with schoolwork. Although Chinese, mathematics and English are supposed to be taught to primary school students, it is not uncommon to seepreschool-age children across China being forced to study these subjects." In the same paper, there was also

But in the world as it exists, what

an article about the latest fighting be-

nuclear issue is resolved, Tehran can we have is an administration that gradually join Riyadh, Cairo and Tel wants to believe it's getting us out, Aviv, in a multipolar order. but a region that's inexorably, ineviBut there are two problems. tably pulling us back in. First, offshore balancing offers the — Ross Douthat is a columnist

tween Shiite pro-Iranian and Sunni

most benefits when your entangle-

workingon adocumentary abouthow Yemen was becoming an environ-

for The New York Times.

pro-Saudi factions in Yemen. Clashes there have focused on Yemen's second-largest town, Taiz. Taiz? Wait a minute! I was in Taiz in May 2013 mental disaster. We focused on Taiz

Stop giving a student loan to everyone By Megan McArdle

relief. They should. Happily, we already have a system for dealing with people who are burdened

Bloomberg News

A group ofstudent-loan borrowers has declared

with excess debt: the bankruptcy system. The gov-

that they're not going to repay their student loans, and they are asking the Department of Education

ernment should change the law to make it easier to bankrupt student loans.

because, as a result of Yemen's devastated ecosystems, residents of Taiz get to run their home water faucets for 36

hours every 30 days or so. So there you have it. The news out of China is the crackdown on kinder-

gartens teaching math and English too early, and the news out of Yemen is that Sunni and Shiite factions are

fighting over a town that is already so cracked up the water comes on 36 hours a month, and the rest of the

But at the same time, this case points to the need

time you have to rely on roving water

They are former students— perhaps Ishould say "victims" — of a for-profit college operator that lost eligibility for federal student loans last year and has been purchased by a company that specializes in ... collecting student-loan debts. The students

for better underwriting in student loans. Simply allowing students to borrow large amounts of money and then bankrupt it is a recipe for big government losses. We should allow people to bankrupt student loans, but the corollary to that is that we need to be

trucks. And that was before the latest

claim that before the denouement, the school did

more carefulabout the loans we make.

everything but turn them upside down and shake the loose change out of their pockets. They're now

Right now, the system indiscriminately lends to any marginally well-equipped institution that can daim to be teaching anyone any skill, even if that skill isn't going to increase a student's ability to repay his loan. It's no wonder that institutions are

tially came to their people and said, "My people, we're going to take away your freedom, but we're going to give y ou the best education, in~ ctu r e and export-led growth policies money can buy. And eventually you'll build a big middle class and win your free-

to cancel their debt.

deeply in debt, with degrees that don't seem to be

worth much. Andthat's those who graduated; those who didn't are in worse shape. So they want the Department of Education to forgive their loans and

setting up lots of useless programs to collect those

+RANKI I

allowthemto getbackon their feet. I feel theirpain acutely. Years ago, Ipaid a five-fig-

tuition checks; the real wonder is that there aren't

fighting. Again, the comparison with Asia is instructive. After World II, Asia was ruled by many autocrats who essen-

dom." Over that same period, Arab autocrats came to their people and

ure sum in today's dollars for technical training to a

more stories like these. So yes,we need to off er debtors like these some

for-profit school, financed not by student loans but by my dayjob as a secretary and my creditcard.

relief. But we also need to stop making loans for programs that have poor graduation records, high

That's how I discovered what too many students

default rates and little evidence of economic ben-

have learned since then: My impressive-sounding certification (CNE, for tech types who want to People get taken by scams every day, often with cringe in sympathy) was basically worthless with- thehelpofgovernment money. Should FannieMae out work experience. Happily, I lucked into a job forgive the mortgages of people if the buyer mis-

efit to degree holders. I'm not just talking about

Asian autocrats tended to be modernizers, like Singapore's Lee Kuan

for-profit colleges here, but also about the wide ar-

Yew, who died last month at 91 — and

rayofprograms ataccreditedfour-yearschoolsthat allow students to amass substantial debt without that was mostly secretarial, with a bit of network represented the condition of the house? Should the givingthem anything of value in return. The easiest admin thrown in, and that gave me just enough Small Business Administration forgive the debt of way to do this is to stop making the loans directly, experience to get a full-time job in tech consulting some guywho pledged hishousetoback ano-hope then invite private companies back into the stu-

you see the results today: Singapor-

when that company went out of business. But most

franchise operation'? For that matter, what about

dent-loan market — and force them to eat some of people who go to abig, public party school and ma- the losses. Let them do the job the government has

of my dassmates were not so lucky. They basically paid a lot of money, much of it borrowed, for a cre- jor in sports marketing or tourism? The taxpayer failedto de Assess which schools and programs dential they never used. It was a terrible scam, and

cannot bemade responsiblefor every unwise de-

actually add economic value, and refuse to fund the

it has permanently tainted my view of for-profit ed- cision every individual makes, even if the govern- ones that don't. ucation services. But I still have to ask: Should the ment finances it. That's not to say these students shouldn't get governmentreally havemade uswhole'?

— Megan McArdleis a columnist for Bloomberg.

said, "My people, we're going to take away yourfreedom and give you the Arab-Israel conflict."

eans waiting in line for 10 hours to

pay last respects to a man who vaulted them from nothing into the global middle class. Arab autocrats tended to be predators who used the conflict

with Israel as a shiny object to distract their people from their own misgovernance. The result: Libya, Yemen, Syria and Iraq are now human-development disaster areas.

Some sawthiscoming. In 2002, a group of Arab social scientists produced the U.N.'s Arab Human De-

Money managers can't resist herd instinct By JustIn Fox

a few fretful pages on the "ascent

Bloomberg News

of the asset management sector" in

It was once widely believed that the 2014 annual report of the Bank the rise of professional investors for International Settlements, the inwould make financial markets less ternational club for central bankers. prone to manias, panics and crashes.

And in March, the Financial Stabil-

Lately, the opposite belief has begun ity Board, the international club for to take hold. the people at central banks who care Take it f ro m t h e I n ternational about financial regulation, and the Monetary Fund's Bradley Jones: International Organization of Secu"Itshould perhaps serve as a shot rities Commissions together issued across the bow that the rise of the in- a set of proposed "Methodologies for stitutional investment management Identifying Non-Bank Non-Insurer industry — populated with what are Global Systemically Important Fipresumably the most sophisticated,

nancial Institutions." The main p roblem with

temically important" — regulatorit continued to inform financial reg- speak for too big to fail — seems pretulation, monetary policy and other ty silly, given that, as the FSB/IOSCO pursuits up to the financial crisis of report acknowledges, "asset manag2008. ers tend to have small balance sheets to lose adherents in academia, but

and the forced liquidation of their

autocrat was also a modernizer), that

own assets would not generally cre-

paper, there's a growing body of theory and evidence that the incentives faced by professional money managers push them to run with the

ate market disruptions." There was a

awakening fizzled out. I read President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi of Egypt dedaring that "the challenges facing our national Arab security are grave, and we have succeeded in diagnosing the reasons behind it."

time (1998) when a hedge fund could pile on enough debt that its failure endangered the global financial system, but that doesn't seem to be the case

incentives aren't new. "Worldly wisa sset dom teaches that it is better for rep-

thatregulators are concerned about

-

ment, and, if it did not turn around, it

would get where it was going. It was ignored by the Arab League. In 2011, the educated Arab masses rose up to force a turnaround before they got where they were going. Except for Tunisia (the only Arab country whose

Now, as the IMF's Davis explains in his entertaining and informative

herd and inflate bubbles rather than making their own decisions and bet-

well resourced and rational speculators in the world — has coincided managers, one learns from reading with three of history's largest bub- these papers and reports, is that they bles in the last twenty five years: the behave too much like other asset Japanese Heisei bubble of the late managers. That is, they "herd" 1980s, the global equity bubble of the buying into particular securities or late 1990s, and the structured credit asset classes mainly because lots of bubble of the mid 2000s." other asset managers are doing it. In That's from a working paper, titled the process, they make market highs "Asset Bubbles: Re-thinking Policy go higher and market lows go lower. for the Age of Asset Management," This acknowledgment that profesthat's been making the rounds sional investors don't automatically during the past few weeks. It's part drive prices toward something close of a burgeoning new official litera- to their correct levels is a welcome ture on the problems with asset man- shift in economic consensus. In the agers.There's "Asset Management 1960s and 1970s, empirical evidence and Financial Stability," published that financial market prices moved in 2013 by the U.S. Treasury Depart- very quickly to reflect new informent's Office of Financial Research. mation led most people in academic There's a 2014 speech — "The Age of finance and many in economics to Asset Management'?" — by the Bank conclude that the prices were thus of England's great thought-provok- in some fundamental way right. By er, Andy Haldane. There were also the 1980s, this view was beginning

velopment Report. It said the Arab world suff ered deficits of freedom, knowledge and women's empower-

now, and the giant asset managers ting that bubbles will deflate. These such as BlackRock and Vanguard aren't really leveraged at all. A more promising approach might to succeed unconventionally," wrote be to look at the ways in which regJohn Maynard Keynes in 1936, as- ulatorshave been pressuring asset sessing the state of professional in- managers to behave conventionally, vesting at the time. What's different and maybe dial some of them back is that professional money managers a bit. In his speech, the Bank of Ennow control a much bigger share of gland's Haldane mentions risk-based the world's financial assets than they capital rules and mark-to-market acdid in the 1930s, and that the pres- counting as forces that have driven sure they face to behave convention- pension funds and insurance compaally (that is, buy the same things ev- nies to buy and sell assets in a procyerybody else is buying) is so explicit. clical, boom-and-bust way. The performanceofactivem anagers Still, I'm having trouble imagining is now measured against the bench- how we could get to a world where marks of conventionality known as asset managers felt encouraged to market indexes, while index funds follow the path less traveled. Better and mostexchange-traded funds are to acknowledge that there will ineviconventional by design. tably be asset bubbles and busts, and What, if anything, should regu- figure out how to keep them from dolators do about this? The notion that ingtoomuch damage. some asset managers are so big that — Justin Foxis a columnist they should be designated as "sysfor Bloomberg. utation to fail conventionally than

And that was? Too little Arab cooper-

ation against Persians and Islamists. Really? Some 25 percent of Egyptians are illiterate today after $50 billion in

U.S. aid since 1979. (In China, illiteracy is 5 percent; in Iran, 15 percent.) My heart goes out to all the people in this region. But when your leaders waste 70 years, the hole is really deep. In fairness, el-Sissi is trying to dig Egypt out. Nevertheless, Egypt may send troops to defeat the rebels in Ye-

men. If so, it wouldbethe first case of a countrywhere 25percentofthepopulation can't read sending troops to res-

cue a country where the water comes through the tap 36 hours a month to quell a war where the main issue is the

seventh-century struggle over who is the rightful heir to the Prophet Muhammad — Shiites or Sunnis.

Any Chinese preschooler can tell you: That's not an equation for success. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Sunday, March 22.

HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 2. "The Stranger" by Harlan Coben (Dutton, $27.95) 3. "NYPD Red 3" by James Patterson and Marshall Karp (Little, Brown, $28) 4. "All the Light We Cannot

See" by Anthony Doerr (Scribner, $27) 5. "Last OneHome" by Debbie Macomber (Ballantine,

$26)

6. "Prodigal Son" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte, $28) 7. "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin's, $27.99) 8. "The Assassin" by Clive Cussler (Putnam, $28.95) 9. "A Spool of BlueThread" by Anne Tyler (Knopf, $25.95) 10. "The Buried Giant" by Kazuo Ishiguro (Knopf, $26.95) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "DeadWake" by Erik Larson (Crown, $28) 2. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 3. "Back in the DayBakery, Made with Love" byCheryl Day and Griffith Day (Artisan, $24.95) 4. "Get What's Yours" by Laurence Kotlikoff, Philip Moeller and PaulSolman (Simon 8 Schuster, $19.99) 5. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil

McGraw (Bird Street, $26) 6. "Becoming SteveJobs" by Brent Schlender andRick Tetzeli (Crown, $30) 7. "Better than Before" by Gretchen Rubin (Crown, $26) 8. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan, $26) 9. "Pioneer Girl" by Laura Ingalls Wilder (South Dakota Historical Society, $39.95) 10. "Killing Patton" by Bill

O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold, $30) — Tnbune NewsService

rown-u s rea ou By Alexandra Alter It might surprise fans of Johanna Basford's intricately hand-drawn coloring books

'Boyhood' actress

planning memoir The Associated Press NEW YORK — Academy Award winner Patricia Arquette has a lot more to

say off screen than her Oscar acceptance speech. The actress cited in Feb-

ruary for her performance in "Boyhood" has a deal with Random House for a

memoir abouther "unconventional family," single parenthood and life in Hol-

lywood, the publisher said Wednesday. The book is untitled, and

a release date has not been set. Arquette, who turns 46

this week, is the granddaughterof character actor

and "Hollywood Squares" celebrity Cliff A r quette (aka "Charlie Weaver") and the daughter of actor Lewis Arquette. She has been married twice, including to fellow

actor Nicholas Cage, and has two children. Her other films include "True Ro-

mance" and "Bringing Out the Dead."

was silly and itwas justme that wanted to do it," she said. It turns out she was far from

admission, "pretty bad" at coloring. "I can't stay in the lines," she said sheepishly.

alone. Other entries to this small but growing category include Patricia Wynne's lavish, nature-themed Creative

Not that it matters. Basford's

coloringbook"Secret Garden," a 96-page collection of elabo-

Haven coloring books — discreetly described as being "designedforexperienced col-

rate black-and-white ink draw-

ings of flowers, leaves, trees and birds, has become a global

orists" — and the more explic-

itly titled "Coloring Books for Grownups," released by Chiquita Publishing. A subspecies of these books, including "Color Me Calm" (subtitle: "A Zen Coloring Book") and books that promise "Easy Meditation through Col-

best-seller.

Since its release in spring 2013, "Secret Garden" has sold more than 1.4 million copies

in 22 languages. It shot to the top of Amazon's best-seller list last month, overtaking books

by authors such as Harper

oring," promote meditative as-

4r"

Lee, Anthony Doerr and Paula Hawkins. Her follow-up, "En-

Laurence King Publishing via The New York Times

chanted Forest," which came Johanna Basford, a Scottish illustrator, has sold more than 1.4 million copies of her coloring book out in February, is briskly sell- for adults, "Secret Garden." What makes Basford's success more surprising is her target audience: ingthrough its first print run of adults who like coloring books. nearly 226,000 copies. What

m a k e s Ba s ford's

breakout success all the more surprising is her target audience: adults who like coloring books. There are, it seems, a lot of them. Though it is tempt-

Igg'g®4~~Itf II

lades flowed on social media, as people posted images from their coloringbooks. Hard-core fans often buy

activity. Rebekah Jean Duthie,

deenshire, Scotland, has quickly outgrown that label. Like playing with PlayDoh, climbing jungle gyms and singing nursery rhymes, coloring books have always seemed like an activity best suited for the preschool set. So Basford and her publisher were surprised to learn that there was a robust — and lu-

who lives in Queensland, Aus-

crative — market for coloring

books aimed at grown-ups. When they first tested the waters with "Secret Garden" a

year ago, they released a cautiously optimistic first printing of 16,000 books.

on the trend. This year, Little,

Brown will release four illustrated coloring books for adults, all subtitled "Color Your Way

to Calm." The books, "Splendid Cities" by the British artists Rosie Goodwin and Alice the French illustrator Zoe de

Las Cases, feature detailed cityscapes with famous landmarks,

several copies of her books at a time, to experiment with dif-

31-year-old illustrator in Aber-

pects of coloring and doodling. Major publishers are seizing

Chadwick and three titles by

ing to describe the market for ferent color combinations. 0thher books as niche, Basford, a ers have turned it into a social

Surging demand caught Basford and her publisher off guard. Fan mailpoured in from busy professionals and parents who confided to Basford that they found coloring in her books relaxing. More acco-

Oscars.

worried that coloring for adults

that the artist is, by her own

a real shock."

The AssociatedPress file photo

night and freelancing as an illustrator during the day. Occasionally she had doubts. "I was

New York Times News Service

"I thought my mom was going to have to buy a lot of copies," Basford said. "When the sales started to take off, it was

Patricia Arquette at the

e i rcra ons

AK 'iW

tralia, and works for the Aus-

kAi~i;

tralian Red Cross, says she regularly gathers with friends for Illustrations from "Secret Garden." "coloring circles" at cafes and in one another's homes. "Each page can transport "And coloring is not as scary a children's coloringbook. "I came back and said I you back to a gentler time of as a blank sheet of paper or life," she said in an email, refer- canvas. It's a great way to would like to do a coloring de-stress." ring to Basford's books. book for grown-ups, and it got Basford has become a quaBasford started out in fash- a bit quiet for a moment," Bassi-celebrity in South Korea, ion, working on silk-screen ford said. "Coloring books for where "Secret Garden" has designs. Then she opened a adults weren't as much of a soldmore than 430,000 copies, studio on her parents' trout and thing then." she says. The craze was kicked salmon farm in Scotland and To convince them that it was off in part, it seems, by a Kore- began designing hand-drawn a viable market, she drew five an pop star, Kim Ki-bum, who wallpaper for luxury hotels sample pages of detailed, moposted a delicately colored-in andboutiques. saiclike illustrations. The pubfloral pattern from Basford's When the financial crisis hit, lishers were sold. "When Johanna first apbook on Instagram, where he her business evaporated. She has 1.8 million followers. closed the studio and found proached us with the idea, we Part of the apparent appeal work as a commercial illustra- knew that people would love is the tactile, interactive na- tor for companies such as Star- her illustrations as much as we ture of the books, which offer bucks, Nike and Sony. did but could never have prerespite to th e screen-weary. Her publishing break came dicted just how big the adult "People are really excited to in 2011, when an editor at coloring trend would be," said do something analog and cre- Laurence King Publishing dis- Jo Lightfoot, editorial director ative, at a time when we're all covered her work online. The of Laurence King Publishing. so overwhelmed by screens editor thought her graceful ilBasford spent the next nine and the Internet," she said. lustrations could work well as months working on the book at

cafes and sheet life. Promotional mate r i a ls

for the books emphasize the health benefits of "mindful coloring," noting that the activity

"has been shown to be a stress reliever for adults."

Basford is working on her third book, after soliciting suggestions for themes from fans.

A vocal faction has requested an ocean-themed coloring book. "I've been drawing starfish and seahorses this afternoon," she said. In the meantime, "Secret

Garden" has sold out in many markets, to the consternation

of fans. Laurence King is reprinting 75,000 copies for the United States, Last month, Basford tried

to calm her followers with a post on her Facebook page, promising that newly printed books would be shipping in a few weeks: "Don't panic! New stock of Secret Garden and En-

chanted Forest is on its way!" Some were not placated. "WEEKS?" one frantic follow-

er replied. "I can't possibly wait WEEKS!"

etais, not i umination, on eanie a craze "The Great Beanie Baby Bubble: Mass Delusionand the Dark Side of Cute" by ZacBissonnette (Portfolio, 272 pages, $26.95) By Jeffrey Weiss The Dallas Morning News

dollars on what ended up as they started: perfectly nice stuffed animals worth

l ess

than $10. That's the bones for a pretty good tale, even before getting to the guy behind the craze. And the guy is also a pretty

This book shares some of the good tale. A salesman with a strengths and weaknesses of gift for charming customers one of the central characters in yet hacking off co-workers, the story: Ty Warner, the man Warner falls into "plush" at behind Beanie Babies, who a time when the industry is was astonishingly attentive to tanking. He comes up with a detail yet emotionally opaque. way of stuffing his creations A book that promises in its that allows them to be posed, subtitle the story of "mass delumakes them small sion and the dark enough for a kid side of cute" ends to carry and pays up long on detail obsessive attenboy howdy, tion to the look of long on detail!eachtoy. but doesn't deliver In fact, it's that anything like a obsession rather good explanation than any i n tent for the delusion. that turns Beanie • For anybody Babies into coleither not a l i ve lectibles: Warner or not paying atstarted c h a n gtention just before ing his designs. t he turn o f t h e He decided his century, Beanie bears needed a B abies were an

better face; enter

inexplicable thing for a couple bear 2.0, aka New Face Tedof years. On the one hand, they dy. And Humphrey the Camel were perfectly nice little stuffed didn't pose well enough to satanimals selling for less than isfy Warner. So no more Hum$10. On the other hand, far too phrey. And so on. many adults treated them like As Zac Bissonnette explains, artifacts from 'Ibtankhamen's afewparents whogot obsessed tomb, scramblingto collect and with the toys through their kids preserve every new variety of noticed there were changes Beanie in the sure knowledge in the lineup. They hooked up that they would become only with the larger community of more valuable. collectibles and collectors. And Except, of course, they did suddenly, the boom took off. not. And collectors spent hunWhat possessed otherwise dreds and even thousands of sane adults to view these toys

Ty Warner, from their account, is a singularly selfish, calculating and generally unpleasant fellow with a fondness for cosmetic surgery and the potential for the occasional surprising act of generosity.

ents pushed their kids to grab the "good" ones. She's using the toys again. As Bissonnette explains: "Today's kids know them only as toys because they're too youngto remembertherewas a

time when peopleabandoned their senses over beanbag animals."

as an investment? Give the au-

thor credit: He tracked down

is a singularly selfish, calculating and generally unpleasant

some of the first and some of the most fervent of the collec-

fellow with a fondness for cos-

what became their obsession

sell today, absent the collectible

metic surgery and the potential tors. But here's what he said he for the occasional surprising got: act of generosity. And he has an "As I talked to the early col- unmatched focus on the quallectors, their lack of insight into ity of his products. Which still was fascinating. Beanie Babies, gloss. almost from the beginning, There was a time, Bissonseemed to have people doing nette writes, that a psychotherthings they didn't even really apist tried to use the Beanies want to do — and more than in her children's practice but 15 years later, they struggled to had to quit when collector-parexplain their thinking." So instead of the beating

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heart of the matter, we get a

notebook dump. Do you want to know exactly which other Beanies got "retired" early? Slither the Snake, Web the Spider, Peking the Panda and Trap

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION

the Mouse. Are you interested

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for around $2,000. Each. We do learn a bit about Warner. He refused to grant an in-

••

g )

terview but did nothing to stop others from talking. Bisson-

nette got to former employees, business partners and ex-girlf riends, all o f w h o m w e r e central to what Beanie Babies

became. Warner, from their account,

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SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F5

oo o ers ittenewa out oston om sus ects "The Brothers: The Road to an AmerIcan Tragedy" by Masha Gessen(Riverhead Books, 273 pages, $27.95) By MichIko KakutanI New York Times News Service

Since the bombings on April

edge of Soviet and Russian history, and her reporting on cials, journalists and the Tsar- the ground in Dagestan, Kyrnaevs' neighbors and friends gyzstan and Chechnya, lend have been engaged in a similar a resonanceand weight to the 15, 2013, law enforcement offi-

effort to construct a narrative that might explain the calami-

tous trajectory of the brothers' cused Boston Marathon bomb- lives. How do the dots connect er Dzhokhar Tsarnaev began in the lives of Tamerlan, the big his defense last month with a kid his mother compared to blunt and dramatic statement: Hercules, who once dreamed The lead attorney for the ac-

"It was him."

of representing the U.S. on the

The lawyer, Judy Clarke, conceded her client's role in setting off the blasts that killed three people and wounded more than 260. But she argued that he had been led on the path to violence by his older, "self-radicalized" brother, Tamerlan,who she said planned

Olympic boxing team, and Dzhokhar, the star high school student, described by many friends as a sweet, "superchill" pothead who had seemingly

the attacks and bought the

so wrong for the Tsarnaevs is

adapted to American life with

fluency and ease. The latest attempt to explain how the American dream went

pressure cookers and explo- "The Brothers," by the Russives used to make the bombs. sian-American journalist MaWhereas prosecutors assert- sha Gessen, the author of an ed that the younger Tsarnaev astute 2012 study of Vladimir was a committed terrorist in-

Putin and his rise to power

ContInued from F1

Nosurrender ... yet

Lee'sarmy broken

O utside P etersburg

t h at

Sunday in 1865, after months

The previous day, Sunday, of trench vmf m a n d a cruApril2, 1865, had brought beau- cial victory at the Battle of Five tiful spring weather, witnesses Forkstheday before,Granthad remembered.

launched an a l l-out assault,

"Thetemperaturewooedpeo- breaking Lee's lines in several ple abroad," Stephen Maiiory, places. the Confederacy'ssecretary of

Subordinates urged him to

the navy, recalledlater."Apleasant air swept the foliage and flowers of the Capitol grounds. ... The oldcityhadnever, during the war, worn an aspect more

press the attack on the town itself. But he guessed that Lee

serene and quiet." But 25 miles to the south, at

ter, wrote later. Plus, Grant wrote inhis memoirs, "I had not the heart to turn the artilleryupon such a mass of

the besieged city of Petersburg, Lee's army had been stretched

would pull out and head west.

He wanted to save his men for the pursuit, an aide, Horace Por-

and finally broken by Grant's defeated and fleeing men, and I forces. hoped to capture them soon." That morning, Lee sent a teleGrant had guessed right. gram to the Confederate War That night, Lee withdrew and Department: "I see no prospect

the chase was on.

of doing more than holding our It continued for a week, the position here till night. I am not two forcesradng side by side certain I can do that.... I advise and dashing at Namozine that all preparation be made for Church on April 3, Sayler's leaving Richmond tonight." Creek on April 6, Cumberland Many people, induding Con- Church on April 7 and Appofederate President Jefferson mattox Court House on April9. Davis, were in church when There, Grant caught up and the telegram arrived at 10:40

blocked Lee's escape route.

a.m. An official walked down The Confederate Army of the aisle of St. Paul's Episcopal Northern Virginia had dwinChurch, tapped Davis on the dled to a hungry mob of about shoulder and handed him a 25,000 men, a shell of the fearcopy. some 60,000-man host that had Davis rose and left, ash-

en-faced, somethought.

Thefall

beaten and tormented a parade

of Uniongenerals. Gone were its great commanders, Thomas J. "Stone-

On a drizzly day last month, wall" Jackson, killed in 1863, the brown waters of the James

J.E.B. Stuart, killed in 1864, and

River roared over the rocks at Ambrose Powell Hill, who had the fall line here. justbeenkilledApril2. Out in the river stood the The army's ranks had been abandoned bridge piers of the thinned by death, disease and Richmond & Petersburg Rail- deserlion. Its legendary Texas road, over which Davis entered Brigade was down to 130men. the city in May 1861 to make it Grant knew all this and had the capital of the Confederacy. made an overture to Lee on Downstream were the re- April7. "The results of the last week mains of the Richmond 8: Danville Railroad bridge he used to must convince you of the hopeflee in 1865. lessness of further resistance," Just upstream was Holly- he wrote. He urged Lee to surwood Cemetery, where Davis, render to avoid"further effusion many otherConfederates and ofblood." generations of the city's resiLee showed Grant's dispatch dents are buried. to his veteran subordinate, Gen. Elsewhere, elegant St. Paul's James Longstreet. "Notyet," Longstreet said. Church still stands on Grace S treet. The Museum of t h e

Confederacyhas meticulously cared for the Confederate White House, where Davis and his

family lived. And 10 years ago, the remains of Lumpkin's slave compound were found, after being buried under an iron foundry, a freight depot andthenaparking lot for more than a century.

Raising StarsandStripes

TD *

C

t hat t oo k r o o t there — might have affected

a population that is half Afric an-American, Richmond i s

manyyearslater. "By noon, one vast, livid

stillthe conquered capital of the flame roared and screamed beConfederacy. fore the wind, from Tenth ~ Its fall is the most dramat- to Rockett's," he rememberei. ic event in the city's history, Ammunition from the arsenal said Nelson Lankford, author continued to explode, tossing of "Richmond Burning: The shells into the air. "Richmond burning," resiLast Days of the Confederate Capital." dent Mary Fontaine wrote, and "In three days, you've got the nobodyto douse the flames. Confederate government fleeThenthe Yankees arrived. ing, the Southern army retreats, At first, just one"rose overthe the city burns, slavery ends,

and Abraham Lincoln himself walks through the smoking ruins," he said. "It doesn't get any

hill, standing transfixed with astonishment at what he saw,"

ly indebted to

The Boston Globe in Decem-

ber 2013 (based on months of reporting by that paper's staff), and "Jahar's World," a July 2013 article in Rolling Stone (which came under fire for its cover, featuring a photo of the younger Tsarnaev, which critics contended glamorized him as a celebrity). The portrait of the Tsarnaevs that emerges from this

lar (it induded two students from Kazakhstan, who were prosecuted for their roles in re-

moving a backpack and a laptop from Dzokhar's room after they realized he was a suspect

in the bombings), and Gessen writes that he had begun a process of "re-Russifying himself." But, although she notes that he was spending "an increasing amountof time on Russian-lan-

guage social networks," she p rovides little

u s eful n e w

analysis of his online life and sheds equally little light on his evolving relationship with his brother, Tamerlan, who seems

to have been radicalized (or at least found a new sense of iden-

tity) after spending six months in Dagestan in 2012.

sisters, Bella and Ailina, "had

Regarding the brothers' carrying out of the bombings, she concludes that "no extraordi-

neither graduated from high

nary event is necessary to ex-

plain what happened." marriages." Only Dzhokhar, "One had only to be born in she adds, "was still in his the wrong place at the wrong cloud of sweetness and light," time,as many people are, "she continuing in high school to writes, "to never feel that one "make good grades and good belongs, to see every opportufriends and make everyone nity, even those within reach, happy." pass one by — until the opporThat changed as the young- tunity to be someone finally, er Tsarnaev brother increas- almost accidentally, presents ingly struggled with his grades itself. This is where the small in college, where he'd become story of the Tsarnaevs joins a campus pot dealer. His social the large story of the War on circle had become more insu- Terror." school nor succeeded in their

historian Burke Davis' account. Lee readies tosurrender sent a note saying he was will"Another and another sprang On the road to Appomattox, ing to discuss the surn.nder. up as if outoftheearth." an exha~ an d b egrimed And it was arranged that the "Some advanced infantry Grant was suflering from what two would meet in a private followed," she wrote. "Compa- sounded like a migraine head- home at Appomattox Court ny after company, regiment af- ache. He and his staff stopped House. ter regiment, they poured into in a local dwelling for the night A distraught Lee put on his the doomed city, an endless April 8. It was called Clifton best uniform and sword for the stream. House, and it was deserted ex- meeting. F ew whites were on t h e cept for a fewblackservants. Grant told an aide that his streets, but Richmond's black Grant sought relief by "bath- headache had gone away. citizens poured outside. ing my feet in hot water and 'The slaves seemed to think mustard, and putting mustard 'All, all jubilaat' that the day of jubilee had ful- plasters on my wrists and the Back in smoldering Richly come," wrote H.S. DeForest, back part of my neck," he re- mond, Union s oldiers h ad chaplain of the Union's 11th countedinhis memoirs. helped put out the fires and reConnecticut Regiment. "How He took off his coat and boots store order. they danced, shouted ... shook and lay down on a sitting room And five days earlier, on April our hands ... and thanked God, sofato tryto sleep. 4, the city had witnessed one of too, for our coming.... It is a day He and Lee had been ex- the most striking scenes of the never to be forgotten by us, till changing notes, with Grant days shallbe no more." urging surrender and Lee A haggard President AbraAnd some of the Yankee heskating. ham Lincoln, who had been liberators were black — memAnother note from Lee arfollowing events from nearby bers of the U.S. Colored Troops rived at midnight. A member of City Point on the James River, (USCT) regiments. Grant's staff softly pushed open stepped off a Navy barge with For decades before the Civ- his door."Comein, Iam awake," his son Tad to see the devastated il War,Richmond had been a thegeneralsaid.His headache major hub for the nation's slave was no better. Lee's note was It was Tad's 12thbirthday. trade. By 1850, slaves constitut- evasive. He wasn't ready to surWord spread quiddy among ed the city's biggest interstate render but was willing to meet Richmond's A f r ican-Amerexport, according to a report Grant. icans, many of them newly done for Richmond's City CounThe Union general shook freed slaves,and Lincoln was cil in 2010. his head. "Looks as if Lee stiII mobbed. "Glory hallelujah!" Robert Lumpkin, who had means to fight," he said. "I will people cried. "I know that I tried to leave town with his reply in the morning." He went am free, for I have seen father slaves, had operated an exten- backto the sofa. Abraham!" sive and lucrative slave depot, About 4 a.m. on April 9, his Lincoln walked the streets, called "the devil's half acre," in aide, Horace Porter, rose to taking off his eet in the warm the city's Shockoe Bottom dis- check on him, and fount Grant weather and the press of the trict for almost20years. pacing the yard in pain, hold- crowd. He took off his stovepipe He had holding pens, a whip- ing both hands to his head. The hat when a man said a prayer ping room and lodging and a staff suggested some coffee, and forhim. tavern for owners. Grant improved slightly. When another man knelt, On "evacuation Sunday," He composed a reply to Lee, L incoln said to h i m, "Don't dinging to the doomed in- saying a meeting without sur- kneel to me.... Kneel to God stitution, he had failed to get render was pointless, buthe was only and thank him for your away, according to Lankford's still willing to meet if Lee would hberty," according to historian book, and took his slaves back giveup. Davis' account. "My poorfriends, " the presto his jail for their last night in On the Confederate side, Lee bondage. realized he had reached the ident told the crowd. "You are And now, to the dismay of end. He had no food and no re- free— freeasair.You can cast Richmond's white citizens, here inforcements. He thought about off the name of slave and tramcame black Union soldiers in just riding out in the open along ple uponit. It will come toyou no triumph. the front lines and "all will be more." "I looked down the street and over." On April 9, Linmln arrived "But it is our duty to live," he byboatbackin Washington. He to my horror beheld a Negro cavalryman yelling, 'Richmond said. He must go see Grant. He learned of Lee's sunender that at last!' " recalled Fannie Walker, a government derk.

night. The cityheard about it the nextday. "Guns are firing, bells ringing, flags flying, men laughing, children cheering," wrote Gideon Welles, the Union secretary of the Navy."All, alljubilant." Sixdays later, a shabbygroup of horsemen riding in the rain crossed a pontoon bridge over the James River into Richmond.

The entourage was headed by Lee, who was going to his temporary home on F~ Street. (His estate in Arlington had been seized by the Union Army) He and his horse were splattered with mud, an observer re-

membered, 'his garments were worn m se1vlce Blld stalIled withtravel." "Even in the fleeting moment

of passing by my gate, I was awed by his incomparable dignity," the observer, a minister named William Hatcher, wrote,

according to Douglas Southall Freeman's biography of Lee. "His majestic composure, his rectitude and his sorrow, were

so ... beautiful and impressive to my eyes that I fell into violent weepmg. Crowds gatheredto cheer Lee and touch him. He lifted his hat in return.

Here, amid the ashes of the Confederacy, was a hero for a defeated people and their lost

cause — a cause that continues to resonate and divide the country, a century and a half later.

Pure. &md.6 Co.

aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond

John Day Burns Lakeview

La Pine 541.382.6447

bendurology.com

Another A f rican-American outfit entering town was the 28th USCT. Its chaplain was the Rev. Garland White, who had

been born a slave in Richmond but had escaped to the North.

Not far away, at the capitol

building, Union soldiers hauled down theConfederate flag and raised the Stars and Stripes.

"We covered our faces and criedaloud," remembered resident Nellie Grey. "All through the house was the sound of sobbing. It was as the house of

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mourning, the house of death."

''Was it to this end we had

fought and starved ... that the

wives and children of many a dear gallant friend were husbandless and fatherless? To this end that our homes were in ru-

hospitalnurse Phoebe Yates ins, our state devastated'?" Pember wrote, according to

0 k l (t

earlier reports, most notably family members, and she also two long articles — "The Fall brings an understanding of of the House of Tsarnaev," in

"It appeared to me (that) all In Richmond, on Monday, colored people in the world had April 3, Rebel soldiers and of- collected," he recalled of his joyficials were gone, but the fire ous greeImg. raged on. Some of his men brought him "A dense pall of smoke hov- an old woman, who questioned ered over the entire city, and him about hisbackground, and through it shone huge eddies of then said: 'This is your mother, flames ... carrying great blaz- Garland, whom you are now ing planks and rafters whirling talking to, who has spent 20 over the shriveling buildings," years of grief abouther son."

Now a city o f c ommerce, medicine and education, with eyewitness T.C. DeLeon wrote

book, like many other accounts, is that of a restless, fractious family that found its immigrant dreams dissolving, after a decade, into disappointment and dysfunction; a family

Americathathaven't appeared to the Tsarnaev family's per- in newspapers, magazines whose personal woes and conegrinations in that region be- or o n the W e b, and the fusions seem to have played fore they decidbook sheds lit- as large a role, or even a larged to immigrate tle fresh light on er one, in paving the brothers' to th e U n i t ed Dzhokhar's rela- road to violence than any sort States. (Dztionship with his of coherent, informed ideology hokhar arrived brother, which is or religious commitment. in Cambridge, so central to his As Gessen tells it, Anzor, Massachusetts, trial. the family patriarch, "was fixwith his parents Though Ges- ing clunkers in the street"; his in 2002, when sen takes issue wife, Zubeidat, was getting h e was 8 ; h i s with some of less and less work as a beautibrother, the next the assumptions cian; and by the second half of year) G e ssen and conclusions 2009 or so, their small aparte xplains h o w reached by oth- ment (which some nine people the history of er j o u r nalists, calledhome) "resembled a ref"The Brothers" Chechnya — and ugee camp." Tamerlan, Gessen the r a dicalism remains high- says, was dealing drugs; his

("The Man Without a Face") the dislocations often faced by and a critically acclaimed book immigrants to her account of about Pussy Riot ("Words Will the family's struggles to make Break Cement"). new lives for themselves in Her o w n ba c kground Cambridge. would seem to make her an But the book went to press ideal author for this story: An before the trial started, and it immigrant, she was a Russpends a lot of time describing Just which portrait of Dz- sian-speaking teenager when conspiracy theories that hovhokhar Tsarnaev the jury buys she moved with her parents to ered around the case (includwill help determine whether he the Boston area. ing the possibility that Tamergets life — or death. As it turns out, her knowllan might have been an FBI

more dramaticthan that."

about the brothers' lives in

sections of this book devoted

tent on avenging U.S. military campaigns in th e M uslim world, Clarke depicted him as a loyal younger brother and fairly typical teenager, interested in girls and cars, who fell under the sway of his domineering sibling.

Civil War

recruit "gone rogue") without providing persuasive evidence to support them. At the same time, there are few new details

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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin

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288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- IrrigationEquipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood 20a Pets 8 Supplies

German Shepherds www.sherman-ranch.us Quality. 541-281-6829

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in202 f ormation may b e Want to Buy or Rent subjected to fraud. more i nforma- Golden Retrievers, AKC Wanted: $Cash paid for For about an adverEnglish Creams, 6 M's, Grandmas old/newer jew- tion you may call all certified, taking elry. Top $ paid for gold/ tiser, $500 deposits, ready silver. I buy by the es- the O regon State General'9 4/20. 541-815-8456 tate/load. Honest Artist Attorney Office C o n sumer Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. Protection hotline at Lab Pups AKC,black & Wanted- paying cash 1-877-877-9392. yellow, Master Hunter sired, performance pedifor Hi-fi audio 8 sturee, OFA cert hips & eldio equip. Mclntosh, The Bulletin ows, 541-771-2330 JBL, Marantz, Dywww.klnnamanretrlevers.com naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Adopt a nice rescued cat! A l tered, vacciCall 541-261-1808 nated, ID chip, tested, Want to buy SunSetter more! CRAFT, 65480 P eople giving p e ts awning accessories. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, away are advised to 541-408-0846 1-5pm. 541-389-8420 be selective about the www.craftcats.org new owners. For the 205 of the aniItems for Free Canary Males. protection mal, a personal visit to Yellow or white. the home is recomFree 3O $45 each. mended. moving boxes. Excellent singers. Call 541-604-6358

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240

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Furniture 8 Appliances

Crafts & Hobbies

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

TV, Stereo & Video

541-548-7947.

The Bulletin

(2) 90-inch Couches Cane bamboo with silk upholstery,$1000 each,obo.

Mahogany Media Armoire,2 drawers, 2 shelves,$500 obo. 619-884-4785(Bend) Bid Now!

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Pets & Supplies

Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com Dick Idol 2-pc armoire, elk design, $700. 286

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Your d eposit c a ns/ NEED TO CANCEL Ashford 23t/~n rigid bottles help! Donate YOUR AD? heddle loom used once to local all volunteer, The Bulletin $200. 541-279-8908 non-profit cat rescue. Classifieds has an 264- Snow Removal Equipment At Jake's Diner, Hwy "After Hours"Line 265 - Building Materials 20 E, Petco in RedCall 541-383-2371 mond; Smith Sign, 266- Heating and Stoves 24 hrs. to cancel Poushers • Saws 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; your ad! 267- Fuel and Wood or CRAFT in Tumalo. 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Repalr JIJSupplles Can pick up l arge Recliner/therapy chair, 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment amounts, 389-8420. new, electric, infinite positions, c o mpact 270- Lost and Found www.craftcats.org size, tan color, $600. GARAGE SALES 241 210 541-389-1336 275 - Auction Sales Bicycles & Furniture & Appliances 280 - Estate Sales Refrigerator Accessories 281 - Fundraiser Sales Frigidaire brand 282- Sales Norlhwest Bend new side-by-side with icemaker. Bid Nour! 284- Sales Southwest Bend www.BulletinBidnBuy.com Paid $1200 286- Sales Norlheast Bend

20a Pets & Supplies

Quilters' Cotton Fabrics 100's of Pieces From 50C Fat Quarters to multi yard pieces. Thurs, Fri, Sat 10 — 5 Bend Indoor Swap Meet Corner Wilson & 3rd St. 541- 633-3108 292

Sales Other Areas FRI.-SAT., 9-4, Furn-

iture 8 so much more! 69961 Stardust Lane off of Wilt Rd., Sisters

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St. Bernard female pup "Putt" Putnam autofrom Brandy & Bruno's graphed giclee printof beautiful full-mask pups. rodeo clown,$600. born Jan. 11; dew claws Rocking S custom removed, 1st shots. book case, $75.Cash $500.541-5484520 only, you pick up, near Fossil, OR.541-468-2269 Toy American Eskimo, 3yrs old, F, shots, mi- Electric bed twin size, good cond., $300. crochip, AKC, spayed, 541-385-6168 $500. 541-408-1616 Furniture ... couch, love seat,coff ee table, end table and lamp, all oak or trimmed in oak. You haul. $500. Call 541-389-3890 after 4:00 p.m.

Whoodle Pups, 10 weeks, 1st shots, deTake care of wormed. Hypoallergenic /no shed, 2 males left O your investments SOM E $1000 ea. Health guar- G ENERATE with the help from antee. 541-410-1581 EXCITEMENT in your neighborhood! Plan a The Bulletin's garage sale and don't Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, "Call A Service forget to advertise in 1F, adorable, UDT shots, health guar., pix, classified! Professional" Directory $500/up. 541-385-5809. 541-777-7743

31 n Panasonic TV with

9 7 $02 25a Travel/Tickets

Bid Now! Berretta AR-70 pre-ban, stand, $105. C e ll¹ www.BudetinBidnsuy.com NIB. Serious collec- 303-946-69'I 4 tors o n ly . $ 3 800.Dish TV Retailer- SAVE 541-420-7526. 50% o n q u a lifying packages! S t a rting B rowning Citori 1 2 g $19.99/month (for 12 over-under shotgun. Invector plus chokes. In months.) FREE PreMovie ChanBuy Hegg...Buy Local great condition. $850. mium nels. FREE InstallaYou Can Bid On: Call 503-320-3008 tion! CALL, Uncurbed COMPARE L O CAL CASH!! Adventure Stay & For Guns, Ammo & DEALS Play Package Reloading Supplies. 1-800-308-1563 (Ocean View) 541-408-6900. (PNDC) Valued at $1,129. Florence Area CZ mod455 American GRAND OPENING! Chamber of 17HMR, extra nice wood 50% off all computer Commerce $495. 541-815-4901 services! 541-233-8447 (Bidding closes www.thecomputerselling for $850. Tues., April 14, sourceredmond.com 541-410-5956 at 8:00 p.m.) Switch 8 Save Event from DirecTV! Pack260 Sofa, converts to chase, DO YOU HAVE a ges s t a rting a t v ery c l ean, $ 1 1 5 SOMETHING TO Misc. Items $19.99/mo. Free cash. 541-719-0016 SELL 3-Months of HBO, FOR $500 OR Buy Negg...Buy Local Starz, SHOWTIME 8 3 T i ered c o ncrete The Bulletin LESS? C INEMAX. FRE E waterfall w / pump. You Can Bid On: recommends extra Non-commercial KHS Mountain Bike GENIE HD/DVR Up- $50. 541-504-3833 Ioaion na n p c advertisers may r ade! 2 01 5 NFL Valued at $2,899. chasing products or • place an ad Bid Now! u nday Ticket. I n Mountain Water services from out of I with our cluded with S e lect www.BudetinBidnsuy.com Snow "QUICK CASH 8 the area. Sending 8 Packages. New Cus(Bidding closes • cash, checks, or • SPECIAL" tomers Only IV SupTues., April 14, I credit i n f o rmation 1 week3lines 12 at 8:00 p.m.) port Holdings LLC- An OI' may be subjected to authorized D i recTV aa aka ao! I FRAUD. For more ~ Dealer. Some exclu242 information about an c Ad must sions apply - Call for include price of advertiser, you may I Exercise Equipment details Buy Hegg...Buy Local g call the Or e gon 8 ~sl e t a o i paoo 1-800-410-2572 ' State Atto r ney ' Elliptical, Air Strider E60 or less, or multiple You Can Bid On: (PNDC) items whosetotal I General's O f f i ce Health Rider, $250. 4 Person White255 Consumer Protec- • 541-504-1993 does not exceed water Raft Trip tion h o t line at I $500. Computers Valued at $172. Seventh Mountain i 1-877-877-9392. Power Plate Call Classifieds at T HE B ULLETIN r e Resort machine 541-385-5809 > Serving TheBulletin > Vibrational exer(Bidding closes quires computer adCentralOregon since Sgpg www.bendbulletln.com vertisers with multiple Tues., April 14, cises for musclead schedules or those at 8:00 p.m.) strengthening, 212 Leather takedown shot- selling multiple sysstretching, massage Antiques & gun scabbard, cus- tems/ software, to dis& relaxation, $500. Bid Now! Collectibles t om m a de, $ 2 5 0. close the name of the 541-504-3869 www.BuuetinBidnBuy.com business or the term 541-815-2505. "dealer" in their ads. I LOP tags for big game Private party advertisHow fo avoid scam 245 hunting; access In Conand fraudattempts ers are defined as Golf Equipment don, OR. 541-384-5381 those who sell one YBe aware of interGilt computer. national fraud. Deal Ruger M77 Hawkeye, Certilrieate Bid Nour! locally w h e never 300 WIN mag., wal257 www.BulletinBidnBuy.com Buy Hegg...Buy Local possible. nut/blued, NIB, $675. Musical Instruments You Can BId On: Y Watch for buyers VX-L Leupold $50 Gift Certificate who offer more than 4 .5-14X50mm n e w Drum Kits:Specializing Sidelines Sports your asking price $860, asking $675. in High Qua!Ity New & Bar & Grill and who ask to have 541-815-2505. I Used Drum Sets! (Bidding closes m oney wired o r VALID FOR saoc PLAY 541-420-2323 Gokp CARD Tues., April 14, handed bac k to Ruger mdl77 17HMR bolt Kevin, The Drum Shop at 8:00 p.m.) action laminated stock, them. Fake cashier Buy Negg...Buy Local checks and money You Can Bid On: exc. $595 541-815-49011 Have an item to BUYING orders are common. $100 Gift Certificate Wanted: Collector Lionel/American Flyer s/ N ever give o u t SmithRock Golf sell quick? seeks high quality fishtrains, accessories. Course personal f i nancial If it's under ing items & upscale fly 541-408-2191. information. (Bidding closes rods. 541-678-5753, or '500you can place it in BUylNG & SE LLING Y T rust y o ur i n Tues., April 14, 503-351-2746 at 8:00 p.m.) All gold jewelry, silver stincts and be wary The Bulletin and gold coins, bars, of someone using an 247 Classifieds for: rounds, wedding sets, escrow service or CHECK YOURAD Sporting Goods class rings, sterling silagent to pick up your ver, coin collect, vin- Misc. '10 -3 lines, 7 days merchandise. tage watches, dental '16- 3 lines, 14 days gold. Bill Fl e ming, Coleman E l ite 7 The Bulletin gavvingCentral Ocagonsince fgie screened tent $115. (Private Party ads only) 541-382-9419. 541-410-0463 China cabinet, o a k; on the first day it runs 24e trunk; 2 chairs, oak, to make sure it is corupholstery no arms; rect. nSpellcheckn and Health & small drop front desk, human errors do ocBeauty Items cur. If this happens to oak; redwood burl is t/~'x3t/~'; round table 4x your ad, please conend table; bookcase tact us ASAP so that Bid Nou/! Ebony Baby Grand mahogany.Must See! corrections and any www.BulletinBidnBuy.com 54'I -388-3532 Chainsaw-carved piano, great condiadjustments can be Momma and Baby tion. Professionally made to your ad. Old Gas Pumps/Soda Bear. Momma is 541-385-5809 maintained. Vending Machines over 5-ft tall; baby is $3500. WANTED! Will pay cash. The Bulletin Classified 23" tall. May con541-215-5991 Kyle, 541-504-1050 Men's Callaway woods, sider selling separately; both $850. The Bulletin reserves 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies Can be seen in the right to publish all C allaway woo d s , Buy New...Buy Local For Sale: Piano Technician Prineville. ads from The Bulletin 3-13, $25 ea. Ladies You Can Bid On: newspaper onto The Taylor Made Miscela tools & supplies, Call 541 -447-7820 One Hour of Perset, $75. sonalized Instruction with rolls of piano Bulletin Internet web- full site. 541-382-6664 string, $725. Children's Swing Set, Valued at $70 Call 971-219-9122 metal, good cond., lyengaryoga 246 in Redmond The Bulletin $75. 541-595-2003 Serving Central Oregon sinceSgse (BiddIng closes Guns, Hunting Tues., April 14, DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Look at: Hohner/Lee Oskar har- 10 Americans or 158 & Fishing at 8:00 p.m.) monicas, 15 different million U.S. A d ults Bendhomes.com k eys, e xc . co n d . r ead content f r o m for Complete Listings of AR15 scope mount rail, 251 w/case; The Hohner n ewspaper m e d ia Area Real Estate for Sale new, $25; 3boxes 64 Chromonica 28, each week? Discover Hot Tubs & Spas (100ct ea.) Nosler pref. cond.; Astatic 215 the Power of the PaBallistic tip bullets (for JT 30 VC, like cific Northwest Newsreloading), .338 200 Marquis 2005 S i lver mic Coins & Stamps new with cord + plugs. paper Advertising. For grain, $60 ea or $175 Anniv. Hot Tub, gray M ake off e r . and black, 6-8 person 541-382-8205 a free brochure call Private collector buying all! 208-255-2407 seating, new circuit 916-288-6011 or postagestamp albums 8 collections, world-wide Bend local pays CASHII board. Delivery avail- Piano, Yamaha, por- email and U.S. 573-286-4343 for firearms & ammo. able, $2000. table, wit h b e nch. cecelia©cnpa.com 541-526-0617 541-815-2505 (local, cell phone). $195. 541-385-5689 (PNDC)

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G2 SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

CALIFORNIA, HERE I COME

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1 Small drums 7 Leaves of grass 13 Folded like a fan 20 East Coast national park 21Early stone tool 22 Go wild 23 Ancient Peruvian using Netflix? 25Washington post? 26 Newbie: Var. 27 Senator Mike from Wyoming 28 196$hitmakers Dino, & Billy 30 Start to lose it 31Exactly 72, maybe 33 "No fishing here!"? 38Beup 39 Ending with Vietnam 40 Vietnam 41 Like the headline "ELVIS

62 "Is that so?" 117 They might grab some food before a 64 A minimus is a little flight one 118 Hard and unyielding 65Comment toan annoying blackjack 119 Bar order that's not dealer? drunk 71 TV ET 120 "Me as well!" 72 Pub fixture 121 Isn't completely truthful 73 "Ta-da!"

74 Up-to-the-minute 77 Letters after Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand's name 78 Less deserving of a laugh, say 81Sealer, maybe 82 Part of a jumbo trail mix? 87 Sorry sort 88 Lit $0 Marie Antoinette, par exemple 91 First name on the "America's Got Talent" panel FATHERED MY 93 State on the Miss. ALIEN BABY" 94 Bouncer's 42 Sheer concern 44 Lines from Homer 96AAA offering: Abbr. and Erasmus 97 Agent for Bogart's partner? 47 Some art projections 102Wild 51Dog whose rocket went off course? 104Declare 55 Make thepodium 105 Filmmaker Riefenstahl 56Some black-tie events 106 Hold it! 57 Refrain syllable 108 "When I was 58 "Network," for one

5$ Never Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords

($39.95 a year).

108President John Tyler's wife lll "12-PointType: A History"? 116Tied up

DOWN

I It maybeonthetipof your tongue 2 Put in play 3 It holds a lock in place 4 Classic theater 5 Marshy place, perhaps 6 Identical to 7 Auto pioneer Karl 8 "When dealing with people, let us remember we are not dealing with creatures of Dale Carnegie 9 Will Smith biopic 10When repeated, a child's meal 11Yadda, yadda, yadda 12Tangerine or peach 13 Force divided by area, in physics 14 brot h e rs, inventors of the motion picture (189$) 1$ Having five sharps 16 Cause of a great loss? 17 Option for a quick exit 18 Quaint letter opener

18 Classic British 23 Jaguar 24 Concerning 26 29 Sharp turn 31 32 32 Projected image 34 High-tech 36 39 surveillance 42 43 acronym 3$ Major account ss 36 Site of a 1776 George Washington victory 56 in the Revolutionary 59 60 61 War 37 Rudo l ph, U.S. 65 sprinter who won three golds in the 71 1960 Olympics 75 76 43 Britishracetrack site 61 44 Hardw a re 67 45 It'sin the 60s 46 Rock singer? si 48 Photoshop user, e.g. 9Z 95 99 49 Egyptian king overthrown in a 19$2 revolution 50 Wintry mixes 119 52 Barely touch, as a 116 meal 53 Visibly stunned 119 54 Grp. with a launch party? 58 Criticism 69 One calling foul? 5$ Spiral-horned 70Mess (around) antelopes 60 "C'est magnifique!" 75 Catholic rite 76 "Delphine" author 61 Like some titmice 62 Fist bump, in slang Madame de 63 It might say "Happy 78 Waxing and waning, Birthday!" e.g. 66 Ancient Assyrian foe 7$ U.K. honour 67 Old lab burners 80 Free 68 Ambushed

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103Tasty

97 Maryland'slargest city, informally $8

107"In that case ..."

Fis h er Hall, longtime venue at Lincoln Center

110China's Lao112Sufferedfrom

$$ Whale constellation 100 Capone henchman

113Jeff Lynne's band, for short

101 Something you might get a charge out of

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

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Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place aphoto in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260

260

Misc. Items

Misc. Items

266

• Heating & Stoves

267

270

325

Fuel & Wood

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

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PREV E NT SOCIAL S E C URITY NOTICE TO C.O. mixed wood, Wheat Straw for Sale. F ORECLOSURE 8 E D ISABILITY BEN ADVERTISER semi-dry, split, del. in Aiso, eaner p'gs. 541-546-6171 Save Your Home! Get E FITS. Unable t o Since September 29, Bend. 290 cf loose REIIIIEMBEFb If you FREE Relief! Learn work? Denied ben1991, advertising for stacked for $270; Central Oregon Community College has have lost an animal, 541-312-4355. about your legal op- efits? We Can Help! used woodstoves has don't forget to check openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to tion to possibly lower WIN or Pay Nothing! been limited to modTiCk, TOCk https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply The Humane Society your rate and modify Contact Bill Gordon 8 els which have been Pine & Juniper Split Bend online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, Tick, Tock... mortgage. Associates at certified by the Oryour 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; 541-382-3537 421 800-971-3596 1-800-879-3312 to egon Department of Redmond (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, ...don't let time gei DELIVERY Schools & Training (PNDC) start your application Environmental Qual- PROMPT Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. 541-923-0882 542-3S9-9663 away. Hire a today! (PNDC) ity (DEQ) and the fedMadras COCC is an AA/EO employer. How to avoid scam IITR Truck School eral E n v ironmental The Bulletin Offers 541-475-6889 professional out REDMOND CAMPUS and fraud attempts Free 269 Prineville Financial /Iid Specialist - Verifications and Private Party Ads Protection A g e ncy of The Bulletin's Our Grads GetJobsl sv'Beaware of interna- • 3 lines (EPA) as having met Gardening Supplie Customer Sevic (Part-Timei - 3 days 541-447-7178 I-ssa438-2235 smoke emission stan"Call A Service tional fraud. Deal lo- • Private Party Only or Craft Cats V erify Financial Aid a wards. Serve a s & Equipment WWW.IITR.BDU cer t ified cally whenever pos- • Total of items adver- dards. A resource for FA information to students and 541-389-8420. Professional" oodstove may b e sible. staff. Associates required. Part Time benefited tised must equal $200 w Directory today! sv'Watch for buyers identified by its certifi454 position 30hr/wk. $14.17-$17.23/hr. Closes or Less BarkTurfSoil.com cation label, which is who offer more than Looking for Employment April 12. FOR DETAILS or to permanently attached 341 your asking price and PLACE AN AD, PROMPT DELIVERY to the stove. The Bulwho ask to have Senior Test Proctor Call 541-385-5809 Horses & Equipment Woman willing to do er542-389-9663 letin will not knowmoney wired or rands for the elderly Provide assistance with m ultiple testing Fax 541-385-5802 ingly accept advertishanded back to them. for s l ight f e e in programs for COCC students and service 263 ing for the sale of Have Tiller Will Travel Fake cashier checks Bend/Redmond. district. Maintain schedule logs, records, and $ , uncertified and money orders Redmond/ Terrebonne 541-280-0892 Tools testing f i l es . Assoc i ates r e q uired. woodstoves. are common. Get your spring tilling $2,508-$2,987/mo. Closes April 12. YNever give out perdone, call Dennis, Air compressor 4hp 267 Get your 541-420-6524. sonal financial inforCampbell-Hausfeld Custodian (Fulf-Time Night Shiftl • 308 Fuel & Wood mation. 120-240, exc. cond. Deluxe showman Responsible for cleaning assigned College business Farm Equipment 3-horse trailer Silbuildings. Assist in the security of campus YTrust your instincts $140 541-31S-1233. For newspaper & Machinery verado 2001 29'xs' buildings. 40hr/wk $2,014-$2,325/mo. Closes and be wary of delivery, call the WHEN BUYING BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS April 12. someone using an 5th wheel with semi Circulation Dept. at FIREWOOD... Search the area'3 most living quarters, lots of escrow service or 541 -385-5800 comprehensive listing of Part TimeMazama Gym agent to pick up your To avoid fraud, extras. Beautiful conTo place an ad, call classified advertising... The Bulletin dition. $21,900. OBO Open Hours Supervisor merchandise. 541-385-5809 real estate to automotive, 541-420-3277 Provide supervision of the Mazama Gym and recommends payor email With an ad in The Bulletin merchandise Io sporting ment for Firewood classifiedstbendbusetin.com Fitness Center. Hours are 9:00am-12:30pm Sereng Cenvaf Oregon since r9IB goods. Bulletin Classifieds only upon delivery Mon-Fri. Non-benefited position 10-1 shrs/wk. 375 The Bulletin's The Bulle6n 1991 John Deere Die- Meat & Animal Processing and inspection. $9.57/hr. Open Until Filled. Rainbow - super sized appear every day in the Servlae Ceneal Oregonslnca Saea sel Tractor, model print or on line. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. castle, $4000 new, "Call A Service 4' x 4' x S' 855, front angle blade. Part Time TestProctor needs some care, you Call 541-385-5009 Buermann's Ranch Prompt Delivery New tires, $ 5 500. M eats. Assist Testing and Tutoring Center with mulhaul, $800. www.bendbulletin.com • Receipts should Professional" Annual Hog Sale Rock, Sand & Gravel 541-420-0235 541-815-2505. include name, tiple testing programs. Hours vary Mon-Fri. /2hog fully processed Multiple Colors, Sizes Non-benefited pos i tio n 10- 1 shrs/wk. The Bulletin phone, price and delivered to your area Directory serving Central Oregon si n ce nat Instant Landscaping Co. 316 Reduce Your Past Tax kind of wood $11.37-$12.44/hr. Open Until Filled. $240. Call 541-573-2677 541-309-9663 Bill by as much as 75 purchased. Irrigation Equipment Percent. Stop Levies, HILTE TE22 • Firewood ads Assistant Professor of HIT 270 Delivery Liens and Wage Gar- I Concrete Hammer I Provide classroom and lab instruction in the MUST include FOR SALE nishments. Call The ~541.788.2047 $12~0. Lost & Found species & cost per Health Information Technology Program. ProTumalo Irrigation Tax DR Now to see if vide student a dvising an d a s sistance. cord to better serve Water a you Qualify POWERMATIC Lost: 3/29, S yrs old feour customers. Bachelor's + 2-yrs exp. in HIT profession. Cer$4,$00 per acre 10 $upplement Your Income 1-800-791-2099. male Blue H eeler, Call 541-419-4440 tified RHIT or RHIA required. $42,722-$49,202 t ablesaw. 5 H P , 3 (PNDC) near Deschutes Marfor 9mo contract. Open Until Filled. phase. 30 " f e n ce The Bulletin ServIne Central Oregon nnceSaaa ket Rd. and Dale Rd. 325 Sell your s t ructured $600. Call Brad for Now taking bids for an Independent ConChipped an has collar Hay, Grain & Feed Part-Time Instructor Positions settlement or annuity details. 541 480-7032 Alf year Dependable w/ tag s . Call tract Hauler to deliver bundles of newspaLooking for talented individuals to teach payments for CASH 265 541-480-7622 pers from Bend to Medford, Oregon on a part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Firewood: Seasoned; First Quality green grass NOW. You don't have weekly basis. Must have own vehicle with employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Lodgepole, split, del, hay, no rain, barn stored, to wait for your future Building Materials e license and insurance and the capability to Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 egoodbuy Say $250/ton. payments any longer! REDMOND Habitat class credit), with additional perks. haul up to 6000 lbs. Candidates must be or 2 cords for $365. Call 541-549-3831 Call 1-800-914-0942 to that unused RESTORE Multi-cord discounts! Patterson Ranch, Sisters able to lift up to 50 lbs. Selected candidate (PNDC) Building Supply Resale 541-420-3484. item by placing it in will be independently contracted. Premium orchard grass, People Look for Information Quality at To apply or for more info contact Find exactly what Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin Classifieds TURN THE PAGE barn stored no rain, LOW PRICES About Products and y o u are looking for in the Tony Giglio Sell your old one in the 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. For More Ads 1242 S. Hwy 97 Services Every Day through classifieds! Ask about our t i lio©bendbulletin.com avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 CLASSIFIEDS 541-548-1406 Super Seller rates! 5 41-385-580 9 yfi6ffpffstja 0fassjffads The Bulletin or 541-948-7010. Open to the public. 541-385-5808 H ELP

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YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS &ENTERTAINMENT

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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

I:: ~vUPFS IJNj~~MJLB JM Can be found on these pages:

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 -Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Construction Laborers & Dump Truck drivers needed for underground u t i lity work based out of our B end office. C D L preferred. C ompetitive pay & local work. Benefits 8 401k available. Pre-employment drug screen, physical & background check required. C-2 Ut ility Contractors, LLC is an Equal Op p ortunity E mployer. Mail r e sumes to: C-2 Utility Contractors, PO Box 7585, B e nd , OR 97708 o r f ax to 541-389-8445.

T A C T I V A T E

A Drivers for FARM WORKER, Nfoving Company LABORER - 2 Tempo- S rary Positions. Class A, Class B drivers, & Lumpers Employment dates are T as follows: 05/12/2015 needed. No e x p. through 11/12/2015. E necessary, will train the right p erson. G uaranteed 3/4 o f B c ontract hours. A l l Must be able to lift tools provided at no U 50 Ibs or more. Must be able t o p a ss cost. Free housing D p rovided for N o nbackground check and p r e -employ- commuting workers. T ransportation a n d ment drug screenS ubsistence re i m - N ing. Bring resume to bursed to worker upon Y Prestige Moving & completion of 50% of Storage, 1006 SW contract. Pay rate of A Emkay Dr., Bend. $12.42/hour. Hufford L C ontact Bryan o r Estate Fort Rock, OR. Bill. 541-383-3362. Duties include plant- A ing, cultivating, & harGarage Sales vesting h a y/alfalfa. S Apply for this job by Garage Sales contacting the nearest State Workforce B Garage Sales Agency Office at 5 41-388-6070 an d A Find them mention Job O rder L ¹1342505 in T General The Bulletin

B A R R E T T E

O D E O N

E P S O T O 0 U M L F A T E L E U A D C H A C A V E R E T I R U S O Y S T

R S I A A M I E N P A R E S E R S P A O I R N C E A K E A L S T T R A S E E I D L L H L E T I A S E D E R S

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A D E S L I T H I N C A D A S T E W A R D A G E S E C A N I E S T R D O E E W A N N T A P N Y C O A L L Y B S A U C E I L L N D L E R I H T H E L I T A L O N I D O T O

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N A S S I T A C A I T R N I I G C D A G B E I L T F E O S F O F

I C A T N R I O B A S S S L I W H E R I D L I E F M E D A A T I R T O S H 0 U WO R K E R A S H E R E I N E R T R S E R A L A F P I C L I N T U D G E

E T Y P E S L E E T S

CAUTION: S UB A R U City of La Pine Ads published in Auto Sales "Employment O p Rerfuest for W professional to portunities" include Sales Resumes and Join Central employee and indeE ProposalsOregon's l a r gest pendent positions. Planning new ca r de a ler I E Ads for p o sitions Subaru of B e nd. Services/Planning Customer Service that require a fee or Director A K Offering 401k, profit H orizon Air N O W upfront investment sharing, m e d ical The City of La Pine HIRING Customer N D must be stated. With plan, split shifts and Service Agents any independentjob is soliciting resumes A - REDpaid vacation. ExpePart-Time opportunity, please and proposals from rience or will train. MOND - For more Y i nvestigate tho r qualified persons or 90 day $1500 guarinfo and to apply, oughly. Use extra firms t o pr o vide a ntee. Dress f o r S please visit: caution when apservices for Classifieds success. P l e ase planning http://horizonair.jobs plying for jobs onand on behalf of the apply at 2060 NE PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 line and never proCity of La Pine. The 541-385-5809 Bend Parka Hwy 20, Bend. See vide personal inforestimated hours re- DID YO U Recreation Bob or Devon. KNO W 476 476 476 mation to any source q uired are 8 - 1 0 Equipment operators Newspaper-generIs Accepting you may not have h ours. Fo r a d d i- a ted content is s o needed for u nderEmployment Employment Employment Applications For: researched and tional details, inforvaluable it's taken and ground utility work Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities deemed to be repuGet your mation and the full b ased out o f o u r -Lifeguard repeated, condensed, table. Use extreme Request for Proposbusiness B end office. C D L -Swim Instructor broadcast, t weeted, c aution when r e als and Resumes Maintenance TELEFUNDRAISING discussed, p o sted, preferred. Competi- -Park Maint. Worker Wildland Fire s ponding to A N Y along with instrucWhispering copied, edited, and tive pay and local -Swim Coach Fightersonline employment a ROW I N G tions on how to reTele-funding for emailed c o u ntless work. Benefits and -Youth Rec. Leader Winds Cooper Contracting ad from out-of-state. spond, please see 401k avai l able. -Tennis Instructor times throughout the • Meals On Wheels Retirement is now hiring entry We suggest you call www.ci.la-pine.or.us with an ad in day by others? Dis- Pre-employment drug is seeking a full-time For complete job level fire f i ghters. the State of Oregon or call screen, physical & cover the Power of maintenance tech. Seniors, students The Bulletin's announcements (No exp. needed). Consumer Hotline 541-536-1432. If you background c h eck Newspaper AdvertisMust have some baand all others welor to apply go to at 1-503-378-4320 Must be least 18 yrs "Call A Service have any questions required. C-2 Utility bendparksandrec.org sic electrical, pluming in FIVE STATES come. No exp. of age. Starting pay For Equal Opporturegarding this s oContractors, LLC is Professional" with just one phone bing, carpentry and necessary, will $ 10.10/hr., plu s nity Laws contact licitation, ple a se call. For free Pacific an Equal Opportunity Equal Opportunity painting experience. Directory train. $4.02/hr. hazardous Oregon Bureau of contact Rick Allen at Employer. Mail r eEmployer Northwest Newspa$12.50/hr plus benPART TIME pay on the first 40 Labor & I n dustry, 541-536-1432. per Association Net- sumes to: C-2 Utility Housekeepers wanted. efits. Apply in perhrs. Cal l S h awn Civil Rights Division, C abinetmaker. Mon-Thur. Hi g h Contractors, PO Box work brochures call Full time opening. Aps on at 2 92 0 N E 541-948-7010 to 971-673- 0764. end custom s hop 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 O R ply in person, at The Conners 916-288-6011 or 7585, B e nd, Ave., schedule and interlooking fo r e x periFind It in 97708 o r f a x to p.m. $9.25/hour. Pines at S u nriver. Bend., Pre-employThe Bulletin view or fo r m ore enced hands. Seek- The Bulletin Classigeds! email 541-389-8445. ceceliaocnpa.com 541-593-2160. ment drug test reinfo. ing self starter with Call 541-382-8672 541-385-5809 (PNDC) quired. 541-385-5809 ACCOUNTING good people and time management s k ills. The Bulletin's Staff Accountant Good classified adstell Shop and field work. Accounting "Call A Service the essential facts in an Mill Workers Min 5 years experiThe Staff Accountant is responsible for maintainProfessional" Directory interesting Manner. Write ence, par t icularly ing multiple aspects of the general ledger to en- We are looking for is all about meeting from the readers view not caution when purcustom and f ramesure accurate and timely reporting. This posi- experienced Moulthe seller's. Convert the less cabinetry. Pay I chasing products or8 yourneeds. tion will be responsible for the preparation of der Oper a tors • services from out of • facts into benefits. Show DOE. 541-330-3960 monthly financials, journal entries, balance and Moulder Set up Call on one of the f the area. Sending the reader howthe item will sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and people, as well c ash, checks, o r professionals today! help them insomeway. month end accruals. Inventory Accounting Analyst Call a Pro as experienced Fini n f ormation This We seek a motivated individual that will bring a gerjoint operators. If f• credit Whether you need a be subjected to advertising tip fresh perspective to our systems and proce- you have these skill I may WILDLAND Les Schwab is looking for an I nventory FRAUD. brought to you by fence fixed, hedges dures. An ideal candidate will learn current pro- sets please come to FIREFIGHTERS Accounting Analyst to work closely with store For more informa- 8 GFP cedures, while taking a proactive approach to t erprises trimmed or a house management t o id e ntify a n d an a lyze the Pers o nnel about an adver-• Inc./ ASPEn The Bulletin find efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with Department in Ma- f tion Fire - curServingCentral Oregonsince ISB variances within their inventory and gross built, you'll find tiser, you may call financial analysis. rently seeking qualimargin results. Th e Inventory Accounting dras to fill out an apthe Oregon State professional help in Analyst performs month-end financial close The position requires a detail-oriented individual plication. S t a rting I Attorney General's fied applicants for AddiCtionS with strong general accounting, organizational, wage DOE. We ofRWB, ENGB , The Bulletin's "Call a duties including account reconciliations and Office C o nsumer s C FFT1/ICT5 AND Counselor journal entries a n d p r e pares m onthly communication, and time management skills. fer medical, dental, Service Professional" Protection hotline at I We seek a positive individual that enjoys work- vision and life insurFFT2. No exp. necat Serenity Lane inventory reports. This position also provides I 1-877-877-9392. Directory ing in a fast-paced team environment in beauti- ance. essary: Entry level assistance to store personnel on their daily Vac a t ion and advanced train541-385-5809 responsibilities such a s p o s ting/receiving ful Bend, OR. a vailable after 6 gThe Eh4eting For complete job ing provided. $14 to purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, months. Must take descriptions and -$32/hour DOE. For and analyzing and correcting certain system Essential job functions & responsibilities and pass a pre-emapplication process, • General ledger maintenance: detailed under- ployment drug test. more in f ormation transactions. Caregivers visit standing of each account and proper posting Need to get an please r eply to www.sereni lane.or w anted t o j o i n • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and hr©gfpenterprises.c Qualifications: ad in ASAP? Apply at: and click on our caring balance sheet reconciliations om or call • Ability to both work independently and Employment Bright Wood You can place it memory car e • Fixed Asset additions, disposals 8 depreciation 541-967-8425. Visit contribute to overall team performance Opportunities. Corp. • Cost reporting and forecasting online at: us and apply on the c ommunity. A l l • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft 335 NINHess St. web www.gfpemerExcel www.bendbulletin.com shifts a v ailable. Drug Free Madras, OR 97741 Experience & skills g ency.com D rug • Prior accounting coursework or experience Workplace. EOE. Must be reliable. • General ledger accounting required Free workplace Preferred: 541-385-5809 Also needed part • 4-year degree in Accounting EOE - Veterans en• Four-year degree in accounting, finance, Plumber Journeymen t ime c hef. F o r • Advanced Excel and data entry skills couraged to apply. Add your web address Neededfor new conbusiness administration or equivalent to your ad and readmore inf o r ma- • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus struction. Start immedi• Newspaper experience preferred ers on The Bulletin's ately! Good pay/benefits systems tion, o r any Field Service Technician Call Gary, 541-410-1655 web site, www.bend• Experience working in teams that questions, To apply, please submit both a cover letter and bulletin.com, will be implemented new accounting systems please call KEITH Mfg. Co. has an immediate resume to hwrightowescompapers.com or by able to click through opening for a Field Service Tech. 541-385-4717 mail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi RN - I NFECTION automatically to your Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent CONTROL/ Wright, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. website. customer service, with over 450 stores and EMPLOYEE Minimum Qualifications: 7,000 employees in the western United States. Western Communications, HEALTH/ • Previous maintenance experience RESORT We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, inc. is a drug free workplace OUTPATIENT • Demonstrate knowledge in fields such as retirement and cash bonus. Please go to and EOE.Pre-employment THERAPY welding, electronics and hydraulics www.lesschwab.com toapply.No phone calls Slack Butte drug testing is required. • Able to: please. Ranch Waffowa Memorial -Pass a background check -Have a valid Oregon driver's license Hospital Les Schwab is proud to be an We are hiring! -Be awayfrom home up to 3 w eeks equal opportunity employer. For immediate consideration -Obtain a U.S. passport Located in The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expecome to our Enterprise, OR rience in the Printing industry. Two years of Career Extravaganza Apply at prior web press experience is beneficial, but General keithvvalkingfloor.comiaboutuslcareers training can be provided. At The Bulletin you WHEN?Mon., 4/6, 3-6pm & Sun., 4/12, 3-6pm. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturBSN Preferred can put your skills to work and make our day night shift and other shifts as needed. We WHERE?Black Butte Ranch Community Ctr products and services jump off the page! In Current currently have openings all nights of the week. WHAT?Employment opportunities: BLS/ACLS/TNCC/ addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts SPA/SPORT, BIKE SHOP, CPR Required gYES C per, we also print a variety of other products start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and FACILITIES GOLF, FOOD & BEVERAGE, Oncology for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 O~ end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoRECREATION. Cg Expenence ya tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. yyHO?You!!! Managers avail. for interviews. Preferred must become knowledgeable and familiar 0 Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a Chemo Cert. within working with. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts For more information2 mos. of hire We put a premium on dependability, timeliare short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of visit our website and apply on line at Min. 10 yrs. ness, having a positive attitude and being a loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackwww.BlackButteRanch.com or contact Human Experience in Acute team player. We offer a competitive compening product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Resources at 541.595.1523 Care Preferred sation plan and career growth opportunities. and other tasks. For qualifying employees we position primarily works nights, with a BlackButte Ranch offers a offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, This 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. Visit our website at Drug-Freework environment / short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid www.wchcd.org If you are interested in fostering your talent as nreare an equal opportunity employer. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encouror Contact prior to employment. Linda Childers at age you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, 541-426-5313 Pressroom Manager, at General Deschutes County job Please submit a completed application attenEOE CROOK COUNTY anelson©wescom a ers.com tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available with your resume, references and salary hisopportunities are listed online. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chantory/requirements. No phone calls please. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Please visit wvrw.deschutes.org Drug testing is required prior to employment. Crook County HumanResources Roofers Wanted obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Human ResourcesDirector The Bulletin is a drug free work place and Eldred via email (keldredobendbulletin.com). Call River Roofing, for currentopenings, to sign up EOE. $54,746.22 - $59,213.51 DOE 541-383-3569 No phone calls please. Only completed appliFull-time with Benefits for recruitment notifications, and or applyin person at cations will be considered for this position. No The Bulletin Closes: April 20, 2015 697 SE Glenwood resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reserv/ngcencral oregon since a09 Drive, in Bend. BWb' quired prior to employment. EOE. Position Overview: Plan, direct, and coordinate human resource management activities of Deschutes County is an Equal Opportunity The Bulletin SALES the County to maximize the strategic use of 5erving Central Oregon itnCe 1903 Electrical Supenrisor Employer. Women, minorities, veterans and Freight Broker/ human resources and maintain functions such Logistics Manager as employee compensation, recruitment, perthe disabled are encouraged to apply. A well-established 3PL sonnel policies, and regulatory compliance. company is seeking PHR/SPHR and public sector experience preDeschutes County provides reasonable A Forest Pnxlucts Company Digital Advertising Sales Manager qualified candidates ferred. Applications and full job description for this f a st-paced accommodations for persons with can be found at www.co.crook.or.us. Full job The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Electrical Supervisor transportation s ales description and application can be found at disabilities. Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive position. ResponsibiliDillard Lumber www.co.crook.or.us. online advertising revenue growth. This poties include developing new and existing Roseburg is a leader in the wood products Please apply a t the Cr o o k C o unty sition will manage the department's digital business to arranging Treasurer's/Tax Office at 200 NE 2nd Street, projects, and will: industry. We are growing and looking for for the transportation individuals to grow with our company. This Prineville, Oregon 97754; 541-447-6554; EEO of customers' freight • Study the local market and make recommenperson will provide leadership in safety and shipments. This posidations on best opportunities for online revquality; sets expectations for crewmembers; tion offers unlimited Circulation enue growth. identify and implement continuous improvecommission-based inThe Bulletin Circulation department is look• Work in collaboration with department manment; maintain focus on customer needs; Public Services Specialists ing for a District Representative to join our agement in the ongoing training and coaching strive to incr e as e qua l ity/efficiency; come for a committed individual with a pasSingle Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour of Bulletin advertising salespeople. i nterpret/enforce company p olicies a n d Would you like a chance to grow in a sion to succeed. per week position. Overall focus is the repre• Contribute to building local digital revenue by procedures; development and enforcement of sentation, sales and presentation of The Bulleregularly going on joint sales calls with adversafety work rules including NFPA 70E Electri- To apply please call fun environment and to make a Bend WorkSource at tin newspaper. These apply to news rack locatising staff. cal Safe Work Practices; supervise shift difference in the lives of children, 5 41-388-6070 a n d tions, hotels, special events and news dealer • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to enelectricians, project planning and repairs; be reference J L ID outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a sure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, involved in procurement of electrical compoteens, and adults? The library is the 1330418. company vehicle to service a defined district, nents; monitor parts inventories/supplies; work and customer reporting functions are perplace to be! Three positions are ensuring newspaper locations are serviced formed in a timely and accurate fashion. closely with Engineering and controls group and supplied, managing newspaper counts for • Assist in the development of online and with new components and technology; daily available. Check us out! Deadline: SALES the district, building relationships with our curcross/sell advertising packages and attendant coordinating of work activities, monitoring Immediate Opening! z:oo on April 9. rent news dealer locations and growing those department performance, responsibility for sales collateral. Farm Equipment locations with new outlets. Position requires decisions, setting strategic goals and training Salesman. total ownership of and accountability of all Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at employees; on call for emergency breakBurns, Oregon. http://www.deschuteslibrary.orgi single copy elements within that district. Work least 3 years' experience and a proven track downs and assist when needed. Experience Reemployment for more details, schedule will be Thursday through Monday record of success in selling multi-platform or quired. Full Time. w ith Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires digital advertising to major accounts and The Minimum Qualifications are: proven track Benefits. Send reapplication, and supplemental good communication skills, a strong attention agencies. Management experi ence a plus, record of machinery troubleshooting, repair sume w/ references questionnaire. Or call (54t) 3tz-tozS to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility with the ideal candidate being able to demonand installation; skills to train or get training in to hollingsospro.net of motion and the ability to multi task. Essenstrate a history of success in implementing intechnology to keep in forefront of industry; for assistance. EOE Position to be filled tial: Positive attitude, strong service/team orinovative ideas and developing the skills level strong PLC skills, and extensive knowledge of by April 15, 2015 entation, sales and problem solving skills. of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug relay logic; five years supervisory experience Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. free workplace and pre-employment drug a plus; working knowledge of all sawmill Send resume to: mewingIbendbulletin.com testing is required. operations and associated equipment is Just too many Applications are available at the front desk. desirable; PC operation and experience; 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 Please email your resume to: ability to coach and lead a diverse workforce, collectibles? D csc w u T c s p U B L l c No phone inquiries please. jbrandtobendbulletin.com with emphasis on leadership. For more job No phone calls please. information go to Roseburg.applicantpool.com Sell them in to apply and attach your resume. Serving Cenrral Oregon since1903 The Bulletin Classifieds 5erving Central Oregon since1903 Pre-employment drug testing required. An Equal Opportunity Employer EOE/Drug Free Workplace The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer including Disability and Veterans 541-385-5809 S

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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats 6 Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 • •

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

gage Trust 2006-3 by annum be g inning ing the performance Assignment recorded 0 5/01/11; plus l a t e r equired under t h e as 2010-02371, cov- charges of $ 4 7.31 o bligation o r tr u st ering the following de- each month begin- deed, and in addition Tamarack Trailer for scribed real property ning 06/1 6/1 1 until to paying said sums sale. 2 bedroom, 1 situated in said county paid; plus prior ac- or tendering the perbath, single wide, and state, to wit: Lot crued late charges of formance necessary Home ID ¹ 190333. 11, Block 4, Choctaw $16.67; p l u s ad- to cure the default, by Title indi c ating 97754. Notice of reasons for Village, D e schutes vances of $2,544.80 paying all costs and Deborah Johnson Forfeiture: The prop- County, Ore g o n. that represent prop- expenses actually inas owner. The moerty described below PROPERTY AD- erty insp ections, curred in enforcing the bile home is located was seized for forfeiDRESS: 2895 North- property valuation and obligation and t rust at 64900 Hunnell ture because it: (1) east L o tno D r i ve paid foreclosure fees deed, together with Rd. Sp ¹ 21 in Constitutes the proBend, OR 97701 Both and costs; together trustee's and Bend, OR, 97701. ceeds of the violation the beneficiary and with t itle e x pense, a ttorney's fees n ot S ealed bids a c of, solicitation to vio- t he t r ustee h a v e costs, trustee's fees exceeding the cepted 10:00 a.m.late, attempt to vio- elected to sell the real and attorneys fees in- amounts provided by 2:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri., late, or conspiracy to property to satisfy the curred herein by rea- said OR S 8 6 . 778. until April 8, 2015 violates, the criminal obligations secured by son of said default; Requests from perat Crystal River Asany further sums ad- sons named in ORS set Management, laws of the State of the trust deed and a Oregon regarding the notice of default has vanced by the benefi- 86.778 for reinstate148 NW 2nd S t ., manufacture, distribu- been recorded pursu- ciary for the protec- ment quotes received Redmond, OR tion, or possession of ant to Oregon Retion of t h e a b o ve less than six days 97756. controlled substances vlsed Statutes described real prop- prior to the date set LEGAL NOTICE (ORS Chapter475); 86.752(3); the default erty and its interest for the trustee's sale NOTICE OF SEIZURE and/or (2) Was used for which foreclosure therein; and prepay- will be honored only at FOR CIVIL or intended for use in is made is grantors' ment penalties/premi- the discretion of the FORFEITURE TO ALL committing or facili- failure to pay when ums, if a p plicable. beneficiary or if r ePOTENTIAL tating the violation of, due th e f o l lowing W HEREFORE, n o - quired by the terms of CLAIMANTS AND TO solicitation to violate, sums: monthly pay- tice hereby is given the loan documents. ALL UNKNOWN attempt to violate, or ments of $ 1,269.36 that the undersigned In construing this noPERSONS READ THIS conspiracy to violate beginning 06/01/11; trustee will on July 1, tice, the singular inCAREFULLY the criminal laws of plus late charges of 2015 at the hour of cludes the plural, the the State of Oregon $47.31 each month 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in word " grantor" i n If you have any inter- regarding the manu- beginning 06/16/11; accord with the stan- cludes any successor est i n t h e s e i zed facture, distribution or plus prior accrued late dard of time estab- i n interest t o t h e property d e s cribed possession of con- charges of $ 16.67; lished by ORS grantor as well as any below, you must claim trolled su b stances p lus a dvances o f 187.110, at th e f o l- other person owing an that interest or you will (ORS Chapter 475). $2,544.80 that repre- lowing place: inside obligation, the perforautomatically lose that sent property inspec- the main lobby of the mance of which is seinterest. If you do not IN THE MATTER OF: tions, property valua- Deschutes C o unty cured by said trust file a claim for the tion and paid Courthouse, 1164 NW deed, and theUwords property, the property (1) $2,892.00 in US foreclosure fees and Bond, in the City of "trustee" and benefimay be forfeited even Currency, Case No costs; together with Bend, County of Des- ciary" include their reif you are not con1 5-601 66 sei z e d title expense, costs, chutes, State of Or- spective successors victed of any crime. March 5, 2015 from t rustee's fees a n d egon, sell at public i n interest, i f a n y . To claim an interest, Jeremiah Wright. a ttorney's fees i n - auction to the highest Without limiting the you must file a written curred herein by rea- bidder for cash the trustee's disclaimer of LEGAL NOTICE claim with the forfeison of said default; i nterest in th e d e - representation or warture counsel named TRUSTEE'S NOTICE any further sums ad- scribed real property ranties, Oregon law below, Th e w r itten OF SALE File No. vanced by the benefi- which the grantor had requires the trustee to claim must be signed 7236.25584 R e f e r- ciary for the protec- or had power to con- state in this notice that ence is made to that by you, sworn to untion of t h e a b ove vey at the time of the some residential der penalty of perjury c ertain t rust d e e d described real prop- execution by grantor p roperty sold at a before a notary public, made by Julie Ann erty and its interest of the trust deed, to- t rustee's sale m a y and state: (a) Your Novak, as grantor, to therein; and prepay- gether with any inter- have been used in true name; (b) The Western Title & Es- ment penalties/premi- est which the grantor manufacturing methaddress at which you crow, as trustee, in ums, if applicable. By or grantor's succes- a mphetamines, t h e will a c cept f u t ure favor of Long Beach reason of said default sors in interest ac- chemicalcomponents m ailings from t h e Mortgage Company, the beneficiary has quired after the ex- of which are known to court and forfeiture as beneficiary, dated d eclared all s u ms ecution of the trust be toxic. Prospective 02/06/06, r e c orded counsel; and (3) A owing on the obliga- deed, to satisfy the purchasers of r e sis tatement that y o u 02/15/06, in the mort- tion secured by the foregoing obligations dential prop e rty have an interest in the gage records of Des- trust deed i mmedi- thereby secured and should be aware of seized property. Your chutes County, Or- ately due and pay- the costs and ex- this potential danger deadline for filing the egon, as 2006-10838 able, said sums being penses of sale, in- b efore deciding t o claim document with and subsequently as- the following, to wit: cluding a reasonable place a bid for this forfeiture cou n sel signed to Deutsche $238,021.21 with incharge by the trustee. property a t the Bank National Trust named below is 21 terest thereon at the Notice is further given trustee's sale. T he Company, as Trustee days from the last day rate of 2 percent per that for reinstatement trustee's rules of aucof publication of this for Long Beach Mortor payoff quotes re- tion may be accessed quested pursuant to at ww w .northwest1000 1000 1000 O RS 8 6 .786 a n d trustee.com and are Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices 86.789 must be timely incorporated by this c ommunicated in a reference. You may written request that also access sale stacomplies with t h at tus a t ww w .northstatute addressed to westtrustee.com and the trustee's "Urgent www.USA-ForecloRequest Desk" either sure.com. For further by personal delivery information, p l ease to the trustee's physi- contact: Kathy TagThe Deschutes County Sheriff's Office has in its physical possession the cal offices (call for ad- gart Nort h west unclaimed personal property described below. Per ORS 98.245, if you d ress) or b y fi r s t Trustee Services, Inc. have any ownership interest in any of this unclaimed property, you must class, certified mail, P.O. Box 997 Bellefile a claim with the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 West r eturn r e ceipt r e - vue, WA 98009-0997 Highway 20, Bend, Oregon 97701, phone (541) 388-6640, within 30 quested, addressed to 586-1900 Novak, Julie days from the date of publication of this notice, or you will lose your inthe trustee's post of- Ann (TS¹ terest in that property. Persons filing a claim must present proof, satisfice box address set 7236.25584) factory to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, that the person is the forth in t his n otice. 1002.278383-File No. lawful owner or security interest holder of any property described in this Due to potential conPUBLIC NOTICE notice. flicts with federal law, persons having no BPRD BOARD OF 1) 03-65433Mossberg, 12 gauge shotgun record legal or equiDIRECTORS 2) 03-65433Madison Import .22 w/holster, Model 10 table interest in the MEETING 3) 06-66891Mossberg .22 caliber rifle subject property will CANCELLATION 4) 06-66891Ruger 10/22 caliber rifle only receive informaNOTICE 5) 09-61935Ruger M77 .270 Winchester w/telescopic sight in green case tion concerning the 6) 10-62234BB rifle, Pumpmaster lender's estimated or The Bend Park & 7) 10-64297Braztech shotgun, 12 gauge, camo scabbard actual bid. Lender bid Recreation D i s trict 8) 10-65670Marlin rifle, 30-30 with Bushnell scope i nformation is a l s o Board of D i r ectors 9) 10-65670Marlin rifle, 30-30 in soft case available a t the T uesday, April 7 , 10) 10-66777Ruger.22 long rifle with scope trustee's web s ite, 2015, meeting has 11) 13-48773Hi Point 9mm pistol w/magazine www.northwestcancelled. The 12) 13-179545Winchester 1300 shotgun trustee.com. Notice is been next regularly sched13) 13-190856Mossberg 835 12 gauge shotgun further given that any uled meeting will be 14) 13-19403512 gauge shotgun person named in ORS conducted Tuesday, 15) 14-45100LR revolver, .22 caliber 86.778 has the right, A pril 21, 2015. F o r 16) 14-184793Mossberg .22 caliber 715T at any time prior to more information call 17) 14-211670Marlin.22 long rifle with wood stock five days before the 541-706-6151. 18) 14-285803Ruger single six revolver date last set for the 19) 14-285803Remington model 100 12 gauge shotgun PUBLIC NOTICE s ale, to h a v e t h is 20) 14-285803Remington model 700 bolt action rifle foreclosure proceed- Redmond Fire & Res21) 14-285803Remington model 514 .22 caliber rifle ing dismissed and the cue is looking for a 22) 14-285803lthaca model 37 12 gauge shotgun co m m ittee trust deed reinstated budget 23) 14-285803Remington model 700 rifle member volunteer. If b y payment to t he 24) 14-285803StevensBrowning 12 gauge shotgun, model 620 ple a se beneficiary of the en- i nterested, 25) 14-285803Bolt action rifle, unknown brand Meli n d a tire amount then due c ontact 26) 14-285803Remington model 7600 .270 caliber win rifle at (other than such por- Nichols 27) 14-285803Ruger model 10-22 semi auto rifle tion of the principal as 541-504-5041 by April 28) 14-285803Ruger model 10-22 rifle 13, 2014 for further would not then be due 29) 14-297032lnterarms MarkX 7mm rifle, TK1, no scope information. had no default oc30) 14-332928New England Firearm Co Pardner model SB1, 20 gauge curred) and by curing shotgun any o t he r d e f ault Need help fixing stuff? 31) 14-332928Beretta Storm 9mm semi auto rifle with vortex crossfire complained of herein Call A Service Professional scope that is capable of be- find the help you need. 32) 14-339676Springfield Armory.45 ACP with four magazines ing cured by tender- www.bendbulletin.com LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE: A bandoned 1 9 7 5

notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: D a i na Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office 30 0 N E T h i rd Street, Prineville, OR

NOTICE

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