Serving Central Oregon since190375
FRIDAY February 6,2015
iserswiner o <conce senesoc<so PLUS: A FULLWEEK OFEVENTSIN GO! MAGAZINE
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Railroads —Drivers who get stuck on tracks often hesitate — a deadly mistake.A3
DO NOT STOP
~~ +o O'N ++ TRACKS
By Abby Spegman
president. In the next week, COCC
resources at McHenry County Col-
The Bulletin
officials, including a board member, a faculty member and two
dates: Leah Bornstein, president of Coconino Community College
members of the President's Advisory Team, will visit Miksa at his current campus. He is the vice president of academic and student
lege in Illinois. COCC spokesman Ron Paradis said the board liked Miksa's emphasis on student success and thought he would fit in w ith the culture at COCC, which he called
its top candidate to be the college's affairs and also oversees human
student-centered and collaborative.
success at Northwest Vista College in San Antonio. SeeCOCC /A4
The board of directors at Central Oregon Community College thinks it found its man — again. The board on Thursday announced it chose Tony Miksa as
Miksa beat tw o
o t her candi-
in Flagstaff, Arizona, and Jimmie
Bruce, vice president of academic Miksa
Moms' depressionForget the post in postpartum depression. A study finds it's more complicated.A3
ews e er anne or wam s no- ar
Harper Leeupdate —The author addresses skepticism over whether she really wanted another novel published.A5
Typewrlters —A gallery in Bend opens a show featuring them — andart inspired by them.GO!
WES COOLEY 1932-2015
Lawmaker beset by controversy has died
And a Wed exclusiveObama's unlikely pick for drug czar — a recovering alcoholic — is emblematic of a new approach to drug enforcement based on rehabilitation. bendbulletin.cem/extras
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Congressman Wes Cooley, repeatedly hounded by controversy for the last two
decades of his life, died Wednesday in j„.et
EDITOR'5CHOICE Cooley
Incoming freshmen party less, eye success By Larry Gordon
death Thursday. She said her mother, Cooley's wife, Rosemary, is preparing a public statement. Elected to Congress to represent thesprawling2nd District covering Central and Eastern Oregon in 1994, Cooley served out
I
his two-year term, buthe dropped his re-election bid inmidcampaignbecause of allegations he'd lied about
5
his military record and academic credentials. In retire-
LOS ANGELES — The
ment from politics, Cooley's
currentcropofcollege freshmen showed up at school as less experienced older peers but with more mental health and emo-
business practices attracted Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
Central Oregon Nordic Club member Susan Sullivan looks over the shelter a few miles from the Swampy Lakes Sno-Park west of Bend. The club wants to replace the aging shelter, possibly in a new location, at a cost of about $30,000.
tional issues, according to a
national survey by the University of California, Los Angeles, researchers. At the same time, the new
college students — who entered their teens when many
of their parents grappled with the recession's economic fallout — are more
concerned about financial successand aspiretoattend graduate schools to enhance
their career prospects, the annual American Freshman study found.
The survey suggests that the incoming freshmen "were buckling down prior to college and taking their academics more seriously," said Kevin Eagan, interim managing director of UCLA's Higher Education
By Dylan J. Darling eThe Bulletin A swift kick of the
logs holding up the roof at the Swampy Lakes Shelter reveals rotted
wood. The aging shelter's foundation is weak, too, so the time has
come for a replacement. "It's falling apart," said Gary Kelley, co-president of the Central Oregon Nordic Club. Built in the early
Current Swampy lakes Shelter
,=-. 0 Possidle newlocation --.~ I
Ii~~
By Joshua Brustein
ter and summer, nordic
Nathan Hill learned a lot about entertaining himself I
o< tl
Related
O
structure will have a concrete foundation, metal reinforcement in the walls and a metal
roof, Kelley said. SeeSwampy/A4
T
t
h or
during 2013 suburban Phoenix. It was dull, but Hill, a 19-year-old
P'g
computer science student,
Wano
didn't mind getting paid to play video games orbrowse
Qo
. Mnn
the Web.
"On some nights I would
go from six to nine, three whole hours, without seeing Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Source: Central Oregon Nordic Club
months
and 2014, he worked at stores in two strip malls in
6
bikers when it does not.
The new larch log
C6
= "Swampy/Lakes ' Sno=p.ark'
skiers and snowshoers
during his time asa
• RadioShack RadioShack files for employbankruptcy, ee. For 15
e ~o
when snow covers the ground and mountain
The slow collapseof RadioShack Bloomberg News
I
s trai l s
Forest Service officials,
However, it remains
constraints of home.
Qo
ting roof supports and weak foundation. The club, working with U.S. beefier shelter. The shelter sees visitors in win-
high school may mean they couldbe more tempted to binge drink and get into other trouble as social newbies away from the
D
stove, as well as the rot-
plans on building a
relative abstinence during
The Central Oregon Nordic Club and the Deschutes National Forest plan to build a new Swampy Lakes Shelter, potentially at a new location. The new shelter would be about 1 1/2 miles from the Swampy Lakes Sno-park parking lot while the current shelter is about 2 miles.
a deteriorating wood
has administered the poll for 49 years.
similar scrutiny, earning him aprison term of one year and one day for his participation in a scheme that defrauded investors out of $10 million. SeeCooley/A4
New shelter atSwampy
1980s, the shelter has
Research Institute, which
unclear whether these students will prove on average to be a tame group, Eagan said. In fact, he said their
C arl i n , Cooley's
stepdaughter, confirmed the
Los Ange(es Times
party animals than their
Be n d. He was 82. Linda
That risk, along with reportedly higher levels of
a single customer," he said. SeeRadioShack/A5
depression and other emo-
tional problems, will challenge colleges to provide enoughcounselingsupport and substance abuse education, he said. SeeFreshmen/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER Periods of rain High 50, Low40 Page B6
INDEX Aii Ages Business Calendar
D1-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby D5 Obituaries B5 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D5 Sports C1-4 in GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies D5, GO!
The Bulletin AnIndependent
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
Vol. 113, No. 37,
s sections
0
88 267 0 23 29
1
A2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
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01' BI15 i'I BS
al e SinSi e By Nabih Bulos and Patrick J. McDonnell
taken prisoner by I slamic Statewhen hisplane crashed
Los Angeles Times
in December in militant-con-
AMMAN, Jordan — Jordanian F-16 warplanes struck
trolled northern Syria. The pi-
Islamic State targets Thursday in retaliation for the gruesome slaying of a military pilot, officials said, signaling
lot, a national hero in Jordan since his capture, was shown
in the video being burned alive in a cage last month. He was on a mission as part
of the U.S.-led bombing camkingdom's role in the U.S.-led paign when he was captured. coalition against the militant Jordanians have r eacted group. with shock and revulsion to "The eagles of the royal air al-Kaseasbeh's slaying, with forceexecuted several strikes King Abdullah II promising against the lairs of the terrorharsh retribution. ist Daesh organization," state Amman announced the exTV reported, referring to the ecutions Wednesday of two militant group by its Arabic militants long held on death acronym. row. Thursday's reported atIn a statement, the Jorda- tack would appear to mark the nian army said that "tens" next stage of Jordan's vow to of airforce planes attacked strike back forcefully against various Islamic State targets, Islamic State, an al-Qaida including training centers and breakaway group that conweapons and ammunition trols territory in neighboring depots. The airstrikes were Syria and Iraq. conducted "in loyalty to our On Thursday, state televian apparent escalation of the
martyr hero," the statement said, referring to the slain Jordanian pilot, Lt. Muath al-Ka-
sion reported that the fighter jets that bombed the Islamic
seasbeh. All of the aircraft
the Jordanian capital as well
returned safely to Jordan, it
as over the southern city
sard. Jordan isa member of the
of Karak, home to al-Kaseasbeh's influential tribe.
State targets would fly over
FIB
stressed that "the war on ter-
ror is ongoing" in defense of the Muslim religion as well as Jordan and its people. Safi Kaseasbeh has called
The father expressed satisfaction wit h t h e a i r strikes
Slain JapaneSe —In Japan, where conformity takes precedence over individuality, one of the most important values is to avoid "meiwaku" — causing trouble for others. And sympathy aside, the two Japanese purportedly slain by the Islamic State group arenowwidely viewed as troublemakers. So is Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.Many Japanese feel that if the hostages hadnot ignored warnings against travel to Syria, or if Abe hadnot showcasedTokyo's support for the multinational coalition against the Islamic State militants, Japan wouldn't have beenexposed to this new sense of insecurity and unwelcome attention from Islamic extremists.
against the militant group. "God willing, we will end
Child SeXdeath penalty — A Utahlawmaker hassaid heplans
on Jordan to "annihilate" Islamic State, and other family
members also called for vengeance against the militants.
their existence in Syria," he
told reporters. Tribes are a c rucial part
of Jordan's governing structure, providing key support to the monarchy. Kaseasbeh's
clan appears to have rallied around government actions and welcomed the king's plan to ramp up attacks against Islamic State. But the strategy can also
be a dangerous one for Jordan, which is home to many Islamic militants, including supporters of Islamic State and al-Qaida. In addition, the kingdom is a gateway for many militants headed to Syria to join groups fighting
Farm animal prnteCtinnS —Farmanimals usedin federal experiments to help the meat industry would receive newprotections against mistreatment and neglect under legislation introduced Thursday by a bipartisan group of lawmakers from both houses of Congress. The bill aims to extend the federal Animal Welfare Act to shield cows, pigs, sheepand other animals used for agricultural research at federal facilities, including the U.S.Meat Animal Research Center in Nebraska. Sponsors of the legislation said they wereprompted by a New York Timesarticle that raised concerns about the treatment of animals at the center. Interviews and records showedthat experiments and handling often subjected animals to illness, pain and premature death.
Abdullah visited Karak on bombings and other attacks. say has conducted more than Thursday, paying his respects Besides Jordan,three other 2,000 airstrikes on Islamic to the tribe. Arab nations — Saudi Arabia, State positions in I raq and Speaking to al-Kaseasbeh's Bahrain and the United Arab Syria since August. The coa- father and accompanied by a Emirates — have participatlition Thursday reported three coterie of high-ranking gov- ed in the attacks on Islamic airstrikes in Syria and nine in ernment officials, Abdullah State in Syria, U.S. officials Iraq. declared that Muath al-Kase- say. The Emirates pulled out The strikes came two days asbeh's name would remain in December after the pilot after a v i deo was released printed with pride "in the was captured, apparently out showing the brutal slaying of book of the nation and the of concern about the safety of al-Kaseasbeh, 26, who was hearts of its sons." He also downed air crews. U.S.-led coalition that officials
1
— From wire reports
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high-level diplomacy to end what Hollande called a war on Europe's edge.
U.S. andEuropeworking toward peaceful settlement in Ukraine
r
~'
•
•
By Michael R. Gordon and David M. Herszenhorn New York Times News Service
ern Ukraine and the White
House weighing w hether to send arms to bolster the
government'sforces, Western leaders embarked on a
concerted diplomatic effort Thursday aimed at ending a conflict that has strained relations with Russia.
Despite the burst of activity, the prospects of achieving a new peace plan have been clouded by deep suspicion of
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in Kiev on Wednesday of a seniorofficer on charges of spying for Russia has raised
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were carrying a newpeace initiative to the Ukrainian and Russian capitals this week, amid a flurry of
KIEV, Uk raine — With
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fighting intensifying in east-
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Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, center, French President Francois Hollande, right, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet in Kiev, Ukraine, on Thursday. The leaders of France and Germany
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Harvard: Nn Sexwith undergraduateS —Harvard University has adopted aban onprofessors having sexual or romantic relationships with undergraduate students, joining a small but growing number of universities prohibiting such relationships. Themovecame as the Obamaadministration investigates the handling of accusations of sexual assault at dozens of colleges, including Harvard. Thebanclarifies an earlier policy that labeled sexual and romantic relationships between professors and thestudents they teach asinappropriate, but did not explicitly prohibit professors from having relationships with students they did not teach. Thepolicy also bans such relationships between teaching staff, such asgraduate students, and the students under their supervision or evaluation.
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REDMOND BUREAU
TeaCh far AmeriCa —Teach for America, the education powerhouse that has sent thousands of handpicked college graduates to teach in some of the nation's most troubled schools, is having recruitment problems. For thesecond year in arow, applicants for the elite program havedropped. Applications are down about10 percent from ayear earlier on college campusesaround the country, as of the end of last month. Thegroup, which has sought to transform education in close alignment with the charter school movement, hasadvised schools that the size of its teacher corps this fall could bedown by as much as aquarter.
viously targeted Jordan in
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to introduce a bill that would allow the state to execute criminals convicted of child sex trafficking, calling it a necessary protection for defenseless children. Thehardline plan from state Rep. Paul Ray faces several legislative hurdles before it could becomelaw, and it would test the boundaries of a recent U.S.SupremeCourt decision on the death penalty, a challenge theClearfield Republican said hewelcomes. "I'm sure we'll have to have that discussion with the Supreme Court," Ray said. "I'd like to push it, absolutely."
there. Extremists have pre-
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NATO deefS np —NATOdefense ministers agreed Thursday to more than double the size of the alliance's ResponseForceand create a newquick-reaction force of 5,000 troops to meet simultaneous challenges from Russia andIslamic extremists. NATOSecretary-General JensStoltenberg said the decisions madeduring a daylong meeting at alliance headquarters in Brussels will "ensure that we have the right forces in the right place at the right time." NATO wil now"be able to defend all allies against any threat, from the east or from the south," he told reporters. NATO'stotal Response Forcewas increased from 13,000 to 30,000 troops, and its new rapid reaction force should start to deploy within 48 hours, Stoltenberg said.
concerns that the Ukrainian military has been infiltrated,
•
"Very often one cannot tell
sands over the past year. where the FSB stops and one The German and French of our military units begins," moves were announced as said Semyon Semenchenko, a Secretary of State John Kerry pro-government paramilitary arrived in Kiev for high-level l eader and member of t h e talks. Ukrainian Parliament, referVice President Joe Biden ring to the Russian successor prepared for parallel consulto the KGB. tations today with European Chancellor Angela Merkel leaders in Brussels. of Germany and President T he Western distrust of Franqois Hollande of France Moscow's aims in Ukraine traveled to the Ukrainian cap- has its roots in what diploital, Kiev, on Thursday, where mats say is the Kremlin's role they met for more than five in the arming, financing and hours with President Petro guiding of rebel separatists in Poroshenko of Ukraine. In the current surge in fighting a statement issued early this in eastern Ukraine, even after morning, Poroshenko's office helping forge a cease-fire in saidthe leadershad discussed September. h ow to i m plement a t r u ce S ince the a ccord w a s agreement in the conflict be- signed, the Russian-backed tween the government in Kiev separatists have taken conand rebel separatists in the trol of about 200 square miles country's east. The accord in the east, including the air-
complicating plans for send- was brokered in September ing arms to Kiev. but never held. While th e U n ited States Today, Merkel and Holhas provided weapons to lande are to continue to Mosallies in similarly unstable cow, to meet with President circumstances, including in Vladimir Putin to d iscuss Afghanistan and Iraq, Rus- a new i n i tiative f ro m t h e sia's long historical ties to the Kremlin to end the fighting Ukrainian military and secu- in Ukraine, which has killed rity apparatus present an un- more than 5,000 people and usual challenge. displaced hundreds of thou-
port at Donetsk, and they are
currently threatening Debaltseve, a town that sits astride a crucial rail hub.
Kerry did not mince words in a news conference Thursday in K iev: "We talked
about the largest threat that Ukraine faces today, and that
is Russia' s continued aggression in the east."
l wAItrYOU Tpsee ~ IN TABikdoD
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Friday, Feb. 6, the 37th day
of 2015. Thereare 328 days left in the year.
NEED TO KNOW
HAPPENINGS
on Ugion i$ (QmmQn
Ukraine —GermanChancellor Angela Merkel andFrench President Francois Hollande will meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin with a peace plan.
HISTORY Highlight:In1952, Britain's King George Vl died atSandringham House inNorfolk, England; hewas succeededas monarch by his elder daughter, who became Queen Elizabeth
Treating depression By Pam Belluck
point from pregnancy to a year after giving birth. The A large new study has study could aid efforts to documented une x p ected find causes and treatments. links in the timing and seThe study participants verity of symptoms of mater- were all mothers. Some had nal depression, which could been found by clinicians to help mothers and doctors have postpartum d e presNew York Times News Service
w enina rain's a Obvious: Crash through the gates or ditch your car. Not obvious: If you've
better anticipate and treat the condition.
assessed via a widely used questionnaire. (Some partic8,200 women from 19 cen- ipants fell into both groups.) ters i n s e ve n c o u ntries, Each group could be sepp ublished last month i n arated into three subgroups: Lancet Psychiatry, f o und women with severe, modthat in those with the sever- erate and either mild or est symptoms — suicidal clinically insignificant dethoughts, panic, frequent pression, said Dr. Samantha crying — depression most Meltzer-Brody, the director often began during pregnan- of University of North Carcy, not after giving birth, as olina's perinatal psychiatry is often assumed. program and the study's corModerately d e p ressedresponding author. women often developed Meltzer-Brody said the their symptoms postpartum finding that two-thirds of and were more likely than severe depression began severely depressed women during pregnancy raised to have experienced com- scientific questions. The bioplications during pregnan- logical factors at work could cy, including pre-eclamp- differ from those affecting sia, gestational diabetes or women with classic postparhypertension. tum depression, which sciSeverely depressed wom- entists think might be linked en, however, more often re- to plummeting hormone levported complications during els after delivery. delivery. She also wondered wheth"This is the largest study er the finding that 60 percent to date on postpartum de- of moderately depressed pressive symptoms," said women reported i ssues Leah Rubin, a n a s sistant such as diabetes suggested professor in the Women's that immune system probMental H e alth R e search lems might underlie their Program at University of Il- symptoms. linois, Chicago, a co-author Meltzer-Brody and her of a commentary about the colleagues will begin seekstudy. "This is definitely a ing answers this year by first step in the right direc- collecting DNA from thoution, knowing that depres- sands of women through an sion isn't one-size-fits-all." international online registry. "Ideally, you could deterTen to 20 percent of mothers experience depression, mine who's at risk," she said. anxiety, bipolar disorder "What we do now is wait for or other symptoms at some people to get sick."
left your car, run toward the train (but off the tracks) to avoid flying debris.
The study of more than
II.
In1788,Massachusetts became the sixth state to ratify
'+
s
the U.S. Constitution. In1815, the state of New
Jersey issued the first American railroad charter to John Stevens, who proposed arail link betweenTrenton and New Brunswick. (The line, however, was never built.) In1899, a peacetreaty between the United States and Spain was ratified by the U.S. Senate. In1922, Cardinal Archille Ratti was elected pope; he took the name Pius XI. In1933,the 20th Amendment to the U.S.Constitution, the so-cal led"lameduck"amendment, was proclaimed in effect by Secretary of State Henry Stimson. In1943, a Los Angeles jury acquitted actor Errol Flynn of three counts of statutory rape. In1958, British European Airways Flight 609 crashed on takeoff from Munich, West Germany, killing 23 of the 44 people on board, including members of the Manchester United soccer team. In1973, Dixy Lee Raywas appointed by President Richard Nixon and becamethe first woman to headtheAtomic Energy Commission. In1987,Wall Street Journal reporter Gerald Seibwas released after being detained six days by Iran, accusedof being a spy for Israel; Iran said the detention was aresult of misunderstandings. In1995,the space shuttle Discovery flew to within 37 feet of the Russian spacestation Mir in the first rendezvous of its kind in two decades. In1998, President Bill Clinton signed a bill changing the name of Washington National Airport to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Ten years ago: The NewEngland Patriots won their third NFL title in four years, defeating the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX. Five years ago:Former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, delivering the keynote address at the first national convention of the tea party coalition, in Nashville, Tennessee, declared, "America is ready for another revolution." American missionary Robert Park headedhomeafter North Korea released him from six weeks' detention for crossing its border on Christmas to protest religious suppression in the totalitarian regime. One year ago:House Speaker John Boehner all but ruled out passage of immigration legislation before the fall elections. A suicide bomber blew himself up at the gates of aSyrian prison and rebels stormed in behind him, freeing hundreds of inmates. Jay Lenosaid goodbye to NBC's"The Tonight Show" for the second time, making way for JimmyFallon.
BIRTHDAYS Actress ZsaZsaGabor is 98. Actor Patrick Macnee is93. Actor Rip Torn is 84. Actress Mamie VanDoren is 84. Actor Mike Farrell is 76. Former NBC News anchormanTom Brokaw is 75. Singer Fabian is 72. Actress Gayle Hunnicutt is 72. Producer-director-writer Jim Sheridan is 66. Singer Natalie Cole is 65. Actress Kathy Najimy is 58. Rockmusician Simon Phillips (Toto) is 58. Actor-director Robert Townsend is 58. Actor Barry Miller is 57. Actress MeganGallagher is 55. Rock singer Axl Rose is53. Singer Rick Astley is 49. Actress Alice Greczyn is 29. — From wire reports
,"II,
:I DO NOT, STOP ON TRACKS
2 TRA
I 0
Seth Wenig/TheAssociated Press
Emergency personnel, including National Transportation Safety Board employees, examine the intersection where an SUV was struck by a Metro-North Railroad train in Valhalla, New York.
By Meghan Barr and Jennifer Peltz
The crash happened in the tracks with flashing lights dark, in traffic backed up be- that a train could be on the The Associated Press cause of an accident. Investi- way. Stop well before the NEW YORK — Your car is gators said there were no im- gates and wait. "Turn off your radio, roll trapped between the crossing mediate indications of probgates, and a train is speeding lems with the crossing gates. down your windows. At this down the tracks, its horn blarEvery year, 230 to 250 peo- point, you're listening," he said. ing, its lights blazing in your ple die in collisions at high- "You're listening to see if you way-grade rail crossings in hear that train whistle." direction. What do you do'? the U.S., according to the FedHit the gas pedal and crash eral Railroad Administration. through the gate, or ditch your Sometimes the cause is car and start running, experts driver confusion: A 2012 study say. And don't waste any time
KiENSALL
for the Florida Department of
deliberating over it. Transportation said that signs The fiery collision between and traffic signals sometimes a train and an SUV that killed
c onfused drivers s o
sion, whereas others were
m uch
six people in suburban New that they turned onto railroad York this week has no doubt tracksinstead ofroads. left
d r i v ers c o ntemplating
In other cases, the problem
such a chilling question — one can be mechanical. A 2005 that many of them might not report for the Texas Departknow how to answer.
Experts say that lack of a wareness has led al l t o o many times to hesitation, pan-
ic and death. "Bash through the gates," said Robert Sinclair, a spokesm an for A A A N e w Y o r k .
"They're like b r eakaway gates. They're usually wood or some sort of heavy foam material, and they'll easily snap away." If the car is stalled or you can't move it for any reason,
abandon the vehicle and run, experts say. Many people make the fatal error of worry-
ing about wrecking their car or trying to retrieve important items before escaping, Sinclair said.
ment of Transportation noted
there can be lags in syncing up track signals and traffic lights, so sometimes crossing gates come down around drivers. Then the human element kicks in: "panic, confusion or other unsafe actions." And sometimes the problem is foolish driver behavior — ignoring the warning lights and bells and trying to drive around crossing gates, for example. Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut said safe driv-
ing at rail crossings needs to be addressed through public education campaigns similar to the ones waged against drunken driving. "Drivers need to know that
And move away from the tracks, in the direction from
these lights and bells and crossinggrade rails are nota
which the train is coming, said Libby Rector Snipe of
drill. They're the real thing," Blumenthal said. "And that
trying to get around them or profit group that educates beat them can cause death, the public about safety at rail tragedy, not only for themcrossings. selves but for innocent victims "It may seem counterintu- on the train." itive to run toward the train," Drivers have died in railshe said. "But if you run in the road crossing crashes in same direction as the train, the last month i n M a c unyou could be hit by flying gie, Pennsylvania; Holgate, debris." Ohio; and Kelso, Washington, In the crash in Valhalla, among other places. New York, Ellen Brody, 49, A day after the incident in was driving home Tuesday Valhalla, a commuter train night when, according to a hit an 18-wheeler stuck in the driver behind her, the cross- snow at a crossing in Braining gates descended around t ree, M a ssachusetts. T h e her Mercedes SUV. One of the truck driver jumped out of the gates came down on the back cab seconds beforeimpact, end of her vehicle. and a few train passengers Brody got out to check on suffered minor injuries. her vehicle, then got back in In December, an 80-yearand, with no apparent ur- old woman was killed by an gency, pulled forward on the Amtrak train after her mini-
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
COCC
leave, a fact he did not disclose In an interview with The did not reach a decision. There to COCC. Bulletin last month, M i k sa the board heard from repreShirley Metcalf was made said he is interested in becomsentatives of e ach c ampus interim president for the cur- ing a college presidentbecause group and listened to a report rent school year. She previ- the job is about bringing peoon the candidates'references ouslyserved as the college' s ple together. "The first thing is, from Julie Golder, a consultant dean of extended learning. you've got to listen. You've got with the Association of Com- COCC's previous president, to hear what the people have munity College Trustees who James Middleton, retired in to say," he said. is assisting in the search. September. In a statement, Laura CrasThis is the second consecMiksa, 44, started in com- ka Cooper, the board's chairutive year the board has con- munity colleges teaching math woman, said the board had a ducted asearch for the col- at Kishwaukee College in Illi- strong group of candidates but lege'spresident.Lastyear,af- nois and was later made dean that it concluded Miksa "is the ter interviews with three can- of the math, education, science right person for this position at didates, the board announced and health department there. this time." "He will bring vision and Patrick Lanning, an adminis- He went on to serve as dean trator from Chemeketa Com- of a similar department at El- great ideas to COCC, but most munity College in Salem, as gin Community College, also importantly he will be a listenthe finalist. The board later in Illinois, before landing five er and a team builder," Craska learned Lanning had been years ago at McHenry County Cooper said in the statement. accusedof raping a colleague College, about 50 miles north— Reporter: 541-617-7837, and placed on administrative west of Chicago. aspegmanCbendbullet in.com to discuss the candidates but
Continued from A1 Paradis said the board does have a second choice that it is
keeping under consideration should Miksa fall through. He declined to say who the second choice is. The board learned Thurs-
day that a fourth candidate, Jerrilee Mosier, chancellor of Ivy Tech Community College-Northeast in Fort Wayne, Indiana, w i t h d re w fro m consideration. Each candidate visited the
college last month for two days of interviews with the
board and meetings with faculty, staff, administration, students and community mem-
bers. The board met Saturday
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
A rock supports the shelter as Central Oregon Nordic Club member John Mowat looks over its foundation.
Swampy
Servingupinfo
Continued fromA1 T he total cost o f
eMy thoughts and prayers are with the family
Cooley Continued from A1 Born in California, Cool-
ey served in the Army, then worked as a pharmaceutical executive before moving to
of Wes Cooley during this difficult time of loss. Despite his various legal issues over the last 20 years, I know he cared deeply about the rural West and the country."
Perry Atkinson. Later that year, Cooley was
nominated as the candidate of the Reform Party but was blocked from appearing on the November ballot under the state's "sore loser" law,
Central Oregon in the 1980s.
— Statement from Congressman Greg Walden which bars the loser of a ma-
From his ranch near Alfalfa, Cooley raised cattle and ran a small vitamin and nutritional
jor party nomination from seeking the same seat under ber interests.
Former Deschutes Coun-
supplements business. Cooley's 1996 campaign for t y D i strict A t t orney M i k e C ooley joined th e D e - re-election got off to a rocky Dugan was the Democrats' schutes County Farm Bureau start, with the congressman nominee in the 1996 race for and eventually became its reading an April Fool's Day the 2nd Congressional Dispresident. In 1992, he mount- gag column as though it were trict. A s C o oley's troubles ed a campaign for a state true at a gathering of timber mounted and his chances for Senate seat. executives. Questioned about re-election slipped, polling Questions about Cooley's the episode by an Oregonian showed Dugan with a 3-to-1 truthfulness marked his first reporter,he threatened to as- lead in the strongly Repubcampaign in Central Oregon. sault her — she claimed he lican district. Summoned to His home in A l f alfa was a
threatened to punch her in
Washington, D.C., to m eet
few miles outside the bound- the nose, whereas he said he with top Democrats in Conary of the Senate district, but would "whip" her were she gress, Dugan found himself Cooley set up a trailer on a not a woman, according to in the midst of a circus atmofriend's property inside the news reports at the time. sphere, surrounded by nadistrict and claimed it as his Not long afterward, Cool- tional political reporters eahome. Despite the questions ey's statements in the Voters' ger to ask him about Cooley's about his residency, Cooley Pamphlet were again ques- unravelingcampaign. "What I remember mostly defeated Hood River Dem- tioned. He had claimed he'd ocrat Wayne Fawbush and served in the Army Special about that time is, I walked won the seat. Forces during t h e K o r ean out and there were more mi-
the
design and materials for the new shelter should be about $30,000. "It's a very expensive little hut, but it should last 100 years once we build it,"
he said. The club has brought in about $20,000 for the
project, Kelley said, and is still fundraising. Donors to the cause include brew-
a different party banner.
eriesaround Central Oregon, said James Cagney,
Walden won the seat and continues to represent the
Volunteers from theCentral Oregon Nordic Club plan to beattheSwampy Lakes Sno-Park from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Feb.15, pouring cups of hot chocolate and providing information about the plans for the old and new shelters. Trips to the current proposed new shelter sites should be available. For more information about the club's effort go to saveourswampy. com.
co-president of the nordic
club. Also, a foundation has offered to match any
2nd District today.
Thursday, Walden's office issued a brief statement marking Cooley's passing. "My thoughts and prayers
close to a major trail junction.
t o $ 5 ,000 The new location would offer received by the club by views of South Sister, Broken March 1. Top and Mount Bachelor. donations up
"So it is a hard choice," he said. building site next winter To hear from the public and, once the snow melts, about the options, the club build the shelter in spring plans to serve hot chocolate and summer 2016. the Sunday of Presidents Day The old shelter probably weekend, Feb. 15, at both the
Volunteers hope to drag the larch logs into the
are with the family of Wes
Cooley during t hi s d i fficult time of loss. Despite his various legal issues over the last 20 years, I know he
cared deeply about the rural West and the country," read Walden's statement.
Sno-Park and at the current will be torn down, with some of t h e d e teriorat- Swampy Lakes Shelter.
Finished with politics af-
ed wood possibly burned there, Kelley said. Plans for
ter 1998, Cooley's business ventures landed him in new
trouble. In 2005, a federal jury in St. Louis found Cooley had Dennis Luke served with War, but a review of his milicrophones a n d te l e vision defrauded investors by perCooley during his tenure in tary files indicated otherwise, cameras out there than there suading them to buy stock Salem. A Republican repre- and soldiers who'd served were in the whole 2nd Con- in a startup online auction senting south Bend and parts with him c laimed Cooley gressional District, and they company calledBidbay.com. south in the House, Luke said never left the country during were all pointed at me," Du- Investors were wrongly told Cooley showed talent as a his Army service. gan said. eBay was buying the compalegislator. Cooley claimed the records Greg Walden, then a state ny, and Cooley was ordered "Just from what I observed, supporting his version of senator and Cooley's 1994 to pay $1.1 million of a $2.1 I think he represented his dis- events were destroyed in a campaign manager, launched million settlement awarded trict well when he was in the fire, but the revelations about his own t h ird-party can- to 11 plaintiffs. Legislature," Luke said. "He his military service opened didacy for Cooley's seat in In 2009, Cooley was indicthad some good support over the floodgates to f u rther July. Maintaining his inno- ed in federal court for monthere and tried to help his scrutiny. cence, Cooley bailed out of ey laundering in connection constituents when they had It was revealed that Cool- the race the next month unwith hi s i n volvement with a problem with government." ey's wife, Rosemary, had for der pressure from his fellow Bidbay.com and othercomW ith R e p ublican C o n - years collected military wid- Republicans. panies. Prosecutors agreed gressman Bob Smith opting o w's benefits on b ehalf of Smith, who represented the to dismiss the money launnot to run for re-election in her deceased first husband districtfor 12 years before dering charges in exchange 1994, Cooley decided to run even though she lived with declining to run for re-elec- for a guilty plea on charges of for the seat. and then m a r r ied C ooley, tion in 1994, was nominated tax evasion. In his plea agreeThough Cooley won with and that the Cooleys had not to take Cooley's place on the ment, Cooley admitted to little d i f f i culty, q u e stions sought county building per- ballot and easily defeated Du- transferring more than $1.7 began emerging aboutthe mits before constructing var- gan in November. million in investor money to truthfulness of statements in ious buildings on their ranch. In 1997, Cooley accepted a his own accounts for personLuke said Cooley's down- pleadealon charges he'd lied al use. the Oregon Voters' Pamphlet. Cooley acknowledged he had fall illustrates how quickly in the Voters' Pamphlet, and In December 2012, Cooley one lie or misstatement can he was given two years' pro- was sentenced to a year and a n ot been a member of t h e elite academic honor society destroy a career in politics. bation, ordered to perform day in prison. "You need to be as truthPhi Beta Kappa, as he'd stat100 hours of community serCooley was released from ed in the Voters' Pamphlet, ful as possible. Some things vice and fined $5,000. federal custody in November claiming instead he'd been a you forget, but forgetting In 1998, Cooley attempted 2013, according to F ederal member of a separate, simi- you weren't in Korea, that's a comeback,running in the Bureau of Prisons records. larly named honor society. probably a little difficult," Republican primary in the Survivors include his wife, In Congress, Cooley was Luke said "Once that starts, 2nd District. He tallied 9 per- Rosemary, and stepdaughter, part of the first Republican people start looking for other cent of the vote, finishing a Linda Carlin. majority in 40 years and was things, and that's a problem," distant third behind Walden — Reporter: 541-383-0387, a voice for ranching and tim- he said. and Christian broadcaster shammers@bendbulletin.com
"We are just planning on
h aving refreshments at t h e
trailhead," Sullivan s a id. "(And) maps that show the new and old shelter." The new shelter probably
dismantling the structure
also need to be finalized. The Deschutes National Forest has about 50 logs,
cut in February 2014 from will be similar to the Nordeen woods along the Metolius Shelter, a log shelter built by River, in storage and set to
the club in 2007. It took about
be the bulk of the new shel- five weeks to build, Kelley ter. Volunteers peeled bark s aid. He e xpects the n ew off the logs last summer, Swampy shelter to take lonand this summer a cabin ger to build because the two builder in La Pine will cut potential building sites are not them while devising a plan close to roads. "We are goingto have to of how to stack them and form a shelter, numbering haul it all in by Sno-Cat," he the logs while doing so. sald. "Think of a Lincoln Log T he new shelter wil l b e kit that we can assemble cleaner and brighter than the at the site," said Susan current one, while also being Sullivan, a member of the sturdier, said Kevin Larkin, nordic club who is helping Bend-Fort Rock District rangwith the fundraising. er for the Deschutes National The location for the new Forest. "Ultimately a safer place for shelter has yet to be finali zed, with th e c lub a n d folks to be as they stop to take Deschutes National Forest a rest," he said. officials considering two — Reporter: 541-617-7812, possibilities — the same ddarling@bendbulletin.com spot as the current shelter or a spot up on a near-
by ridge. The current one is about 2 miles from the Swampy Lakes Sno-Park; the potential new location is about I t/2 miles away, Sullivan said.
There are good reasons to build at either location, Kelley said. The current
location i s
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Freshmen
As a result of living
Continued fromA1 Nearly 11 percent of respondents said they spent six
economy crash, students are entering early adulthood believing "they need more money
hours or more a week at par-
ties during their senior year of high school, down from 23 percent a decade ago, the sur-
vey found. Additionally, 61 percent reported that they spent an
hour or lessa week atparties, up from 39 percent 10 years ago. Along the same lines, those who said they occasionally or frequently drank beer dropped to 33.5 percent, compared with 45.5 percent a decade before and 69 percent in 1984.
T hirty-nine p ercent
of
current freshmen said they
drank wine or hard liquor in
through the 2009
to be comfortable
and seeing that a bachelor's degree may not be the end of their educational
journey."
TV.APPLIANCE
TheBulletin
Yet whatever problems the
freshmen have, a lack of ambition is not one of them. A record 82 percent said that it
was very important or essential that they become well-off financially, compared with nearly 77 percent in 2008 before the recession hit and al-
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most double what it was 40
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about 44 percent, also a record and up from 28 percent — Kevin Eagan, four decades ago. Freshmen interim managing director who indicated they wanted of UCLA's Higher Education to earn a doctorate or proResearch Institute fessional degree also was at a new peak: nearly a third, compared with 2 1 p e rcent four decades ago. Interest in
most others their age; that compared with roughly 7 per- medicalschool has increased about 52 percent 10 years ago cent about a decade ago and in the last decade while the and 68 percent in 1987, when 3.5 percent in 1985, when the popularity of law school has the poll addressed the issue. question was first asked. dropped a bit. Colleges around the counIn addition, 9.5 percent Freshmen saw the econotry are struggling to meet said they frequently felt de- my crash in 2009, and many higher demands for psycho- pressed, up from the 6 per- knew of c o llege-educated logical and crisis counseling, cent low point, recorded in people who lost jobs. As a heightened by fears that their 2009. result, they are entering ear"This is signaling that stu- ly adulthood believing "they campuses could face incidents of violence and suicide. dents are bringing with them need more money tobe comThe survey, which was some emotional struggles, fortable and seeing that a taken by 1 53,000 students some mental health issues," bachelor's degree may not be mainly during last summer's and those issues could make the end of their educational orientations at 227 four-year it harder for students to stay journey," Eagan said. Plus, c olleges, b o l stered t h o s e in school and earn a college worries about college costs concerns. Nearly 12 percent degree, said Eagan, who is an and student debt heighten deof the freshmen rated their assistantprofessor of educa- siresfor a good salary after mental health as worse than tion at UCLA. graduation, he said.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
Harper Leerespondsto suspicions, saysshe's excited for new novel By Alexandra Alter and Serge F. Kovaleski New Yorh Times News Service
Harper Lee has issued a
happy as hell with the reactions to 'Watchman,'" Lee, 88, said in a statement that she is said to have given to her law-
yer, Tonja Carter, on Wedneshappiness with the publication day when Carter visited her of her second novel, "Go Set at an assisted-living facility in a Watchman," amid growing Monroeville, Alabama. speculation that the fiercely Carter, who has declined inprivate novelist might have terview requests, delivered the been pressuredinto signing new remarks to Lee's internaover publication rights for the tional literary agent, Andrew book. Nurnberg, who sent it to her "I'm alive and kicking and publisher in Britain. new statement expressing her
RadioShack
this is before he stripped naked
Continued from A1 For each hour of solitude, he was paid $7.80. If someone came in and actually bought something, he made a 2percent commission. That usually added up to an additional $6 or so before taxes. The few customers who did
Former RadioShack executives who spoke to Bloomberg
The emphatic s t atement and readers rejoiced at the from the author of "To Kill a news that she would finally Mockingbird" arrived as some publish another book. "Go Set fans, biographers and schol- a Watchman," which will be
trouble seeing and has almost completely lost her hearing.
said Lee had often expressed
She recently put C a rter, a
lishing a second book and said she feared it would be c ompared unfavorably t o "Mockingbird."
longtime family friend, in charge of her estate.
her reservations about pub-
ars expressed excitement and released in July, shot to No. skepticism over Lee's involve- 1 on Amazon, and "To Kill a Some Monroeville residents ment in the decision to publish Mockingbird" climbed to No. said they had long suspected Karen Hare, the owner of another book. 3. that Lee had written another David's Catfish House on the More than 50 years after But some scholars and peo- book, but they expressed sur- edge of Monroeville, said Lee "To Kill a Mockingbird" was ple who knew her in Monroe- prise that she had consented to had remarked severaltimes published, it remains one of ville r emained suspicious publishing one now. during her visits that were the most beloved and influen- about the circumstances of Sue Sellers, who lived near she ever to publish another tial works in American litera- the book's publication. Lee, Lee's home for 48 years and book, she would want it done ture, and many of Lee's fans who had a stroke in 2007, has frequently visited with h er, posthumously.
and tried to rob the library."
"4lili<II;~'
)~gggglC
Businessweek, mostly on the
condition of anonymity, didn't put it quite that way. They did acknowledge, however, that
many stores were staffed for in dedine ever since. long stretches by one employee. Mobile carriers stopped relyCustomers seeking help regu- ing on the chain to sell phones larly left in ~ ati o n, and foot and negotiated deals where traffic began dropping, says they didn't have to pay the comClaire Babrowski, the com- pany monthly residual fees. pany's chief operating officer All the major wireless carriers from 2005 to 2006. operate their own retail loca"It felt like it was time to
tions now, often adjacent to Ra-
make a decision: Is mobile going to be the predominant
dioShack stores. Cellphones helped kill the
show up tended to be sullen
business, and if so what other
rest of RadioShack's business
hardware enthusiasts who blamed sales clerks like him
things do we need to change?" by destroying the market for says Babrowski. so many of the gadgets it used
the company hadmade massive mistakes. None of them thought that RadioShack's ruin
was inevitable. Asked to pinpoint when everything went wrong, they fell into two main for the emptiness of the stores, groups: those who argued that Hill says. Others had reached it happened right after they left, an impasse in their technolog- and those who say the damage ical lives. "They come in with was already done when they DanielAckerI Bloomberg News file photo a problem that Best Buy can't alTlved. An employee arranglng a display at a RadloShack in San Francisco solve," said Hill. "They're on ln 2012. The company was founded In1921 In Bostonby two LonDIYorigins their last straw." don-born brothers targetlng ham radlo enthusiasts; they named it RadioShackis there, too. The RadioShack was founded in after the compartment that housed the wireless equipment. company has filed for Chap- Boston by two London-born ter 11 bankruptcy protection
brothers, Theodore and Milton
and says it will sell up to 2,400 Deutschmann, in 1921. The stores. targetaudience was ham radio
which all could be marked up
enthusiasts; they named it after
even ran a battery dub, where members were entitled to one
Aslowdecline
the compartment that housed The chaos has been building the wireless equipment. for years. The company had By 1962 the company was three chief executives between running nine stores and bring1963 and 2005; since then it has ing in $14 million in annual
heavily. For decades, the chain free battery each month.
RadioShack also became so convenient that customers couldn't ignore it: In 1966 there
were 100 stores nationwide; by
had six. Many executives were
sales. But it a lso lost more
fired or fled. A group of employees is suing RadioShack for putting company shares into their 401(k) accounts. Hourly employees in Pennsylvania suing the company for $3.9 million in unpaid overtime wages recently said they'd be willing
than $4.5 million that year and 1971 there were 1,000. faced $7 million in debt. RaIn 1975 Tandy described the dioShack's main creditor, the ideal RadioShack customer to First National Bank of Boston, a group of financial analysts. began looking for someone to "We're not looking for the guy buy the company and prevent it who wants to spend his entire from defaulting on its loans. paycheck on a sound system," One of the bank's executives he said, according to Irvin was friendly with Charles Tan- Farman's account in "Tandy's dy, an ambitious businessman Money Machine: How Charles
to accept $513,000 in an attempt
to getpaidbefore creditors start pickingoverthecompany. RadioShack has stood by as customers began buying their gadgets at Best Buy, or
from Texas who negotiated
Tandy Built RadioShack Into
a deal to buy the business for the World's Largest Electronics about $300,000 and moved the Chain." Instead, the company Boston company's headquar- went after customers lookingto Amazon, or the Sprint store. ters to Fort Worth. save money by buying cheapRadioShack has spent the last The strategy that Tandy laid er goods and improving them 20 years trying on a number out in 1963 served it well for through modifications and acof identities, none of w hich decades: Appeal to hobbyists. cessories, and who needed one it has been able to convinc- Each store was small, staffed small piece of equipment every ingly adopt, all while testing by people who knew electron- week. the patience of investors, em- ics, and stocked with merchanployees and, most markedly, dise with healthy margins. Tan- Computers and cellphones customers. dy eschewed national brand Perhaps the high point in There are still potential Ra- names, instead setting up his the company's history was dioShack customers out there. own manufacturing network the TRS-80, one of the first Some need HDMI cables and to sell private brands. But even mass-market personal comaren't willing to wait for a deliv- more than stereos, RadioShack puters. The TRS-80 looked ery from Amazon; others have wanted to move accessories, like a swollen version of toa professional need for a dis- batteries and a w i d e r ange day's desktops, with about 16K posable cellphone. of transistors and capacitors, of memory; a 12-inch square Then there are the tinkerers,
RadioShack lost in e-com-
to sell, such as voice record-
merce, too. Theytried a ship-to- ers, GPS devices, answering store model with Radio Shack machines and camcorders. Unlimited, which Roberts says Early last year, Steve Chichon, was a way to develop the skills a writer for the website Trendit would need to build an Am- ing Buffalo, sifted through a azon-likee-commerce service. But in the meantime, Amazon built its system on its own. RadioShack's executives never
RadioShack ad from 1991 and
the company's market value
Sun arhen you wantit, shade when you needit.
found that his iPhone had negated any need for 13 of the 15 products being sold. The listed monitor with no graphics; and committedtoe-commerce, says price on those items: $3,054.82. a cassette player on which you Babrowski, in p ar t b ecause Turning the stores into a could save information while they worried about diverting chain of cellphone kiosks alienyou waited for someone to in- attention from the difficulties at ated the DIYers — a particuvent a hard drive. The TRS-80 the stores. larly cruel irony: RadioShack used software designed by a missed a trend it started. In the little-known startup n amed Leadership changes last several years, tinkering beMicrosoft. Longtime CEO Len Roberts came cool again with the rise The TRS-80 was a huge retired in 2005 and was suc- of Maker Fairs, 3-D printing, risk. There was no market for ceeded by David Edmondson. personal drones and tiny, dirtpersonal computers, and at The following years were a cheapcomputerslike Raspber$600 it was the most expensive self-reinforcing cycle of failure ry Pi. product RadioShack had sold. and instability at the top ranks The latest RadioShack news Tandy justified an initial order of management. After less than can seem like an obituary for of 1,000 units by saying the a year, Edmondson had to step someone you thought was long stores could use them for inven- down after getting caught lying dead. "I wouldn't even call this a tory management if customers about his education. Babrowsweren't interested. Instead, the ki became interim chief exec- failure. I'd call it an assisted company ended up selling the utive for several months until suicide," says Scott Galloway, a computers faster than it could thecompany hired Julian Day, professor of marketing at New make them, and, in early years the former chief executive of York University's Stern Busiat least, the TRS-80 was more Kmart. Babrowski resigned, ness School. "It's amazing it's popular than Apple's machines. saying that Day was too fo- taken this long for this compaOver the next decade Ra- cused on cutting costs. Ed- ny to go out ofbusiness." dioShack succeeded at man- mondson declined an interview ufacturing and selling its own request, and Day couldn't be computers, while also serving reached for comment. See us for retractable as the first stop for manypeople Day arrived after a six-year awnings, exterior solar looking to build or modify their sttetch in which two-thirds of screens, shade structures. own devices. But the TRS-80
couldn't keep up with compet- was lost. He spent most of his itors, and RadioShack stopped energy assuring Wall Street making personal computers in that the company was getting 1993. It needed a new anchor, its house in order, according and found one: cellphones. to people who follow the comThis was a profitable area pany. This led to a period of for a time, but signing some- cost-cutting at the stores and at one up for a mobile contract headquarters. By any financial took about 45 minutes, and measure, RadioShackhas been
IRI I Q
V CI
O >N DEMA N D
541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com
once RadioShack's core con-
stituency. Back and thriving, they're now known as the maker community. But the com-
and tried to re-establish ties to DIYers. L i t tleBits,
which makes kits for building gadgets, and Quirky, where people collaborate to create
SHORTNESS OFBREATH JAW,THROAT 8 ABDOMINAL PAIN
NUMBIIESS IN LEGS
WEAKNESS
OUI'
consumerelectronicsproducts. He launched services to fixpeo-
ple's cracked cellphone screens at several hundred stores. He began a program called "Do It Together," where employees help customers withprojects.
DON'T SMOKE
GET SCREENEB
is enin o
He forged partnerships with startups such a s
EXERCISE
are ou
pany has failed to capture that market, despite the efforts of Joseph Magnacca,the former chief executive of Walgreen's who took over in February 2013
CHEST
Hill, who quit late last year, found thesheer number of new
strategies dizzying. Managers were constantly rearranging the stores, so employees had trouble keeping track of where things were. No one he knew
•
g •
was trained for the Do It Your-
selfcampaign. When asked whether he thought custom-
ers even wanted something like that from RadioShack, he paused. "It's really hard to tell because so few customers come in," he said. RadioShack
Complete cardiovascular care:
decined to comment for this
•
artide. Former employee Joe Bois remembers being required to report for work at a mall out-
•
post at 4:30 a.m. on Black Fri-
day in 2004, only to sit idle for hours waiting for customers who never arrived. Bois, now a writer for the sports website
SB Nation, wrote a piece in Novemberarguing thatsearching for coherence in RadioShack's strategic decisions was futile. "It's like retracing the steps
and doings of a drunk person," he wrote. "Okay, here's where he keyed the cop car. Wait, why'd he do that'? I don't know,
but his pants are lying here, so
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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY6, 2015
BRIEFING WinterFest events scrapped Oregon WinterFest organizers announced Thursday theyhave scrapped plansfor ski and snowboard competition this yearbecauseof a lack of snowanda forecast of warmweather. In past years, dump trucks hauled 55loads of snowdown from Mount Bachelor for the competition, according to Lay It OutEvents, the Bend-basedcompany that puts on theannual mid-Februaryeventin the Old Mill District.
"While we're disappointed not to beable to produce snowfor the competition, the warm weather is actually great for festival-goers," Aaron Switzer, owner of Lay It Out Events, said in a news release. Organizers said the forecastcalls for some of the warmestweather on record for the festival, set to run from Feb.13 to Feb. 15,according to the release.Twoevening performances of the Metal Mulisha, atraveling motocross stunt team, aswell as morelive music havebeenadded to the schedule to replace the ski andsnowboard competitions. Woebegone is nowset to open for the MarchFourth Marching Band onFeb. 13, andTheAutonomics will open for Filter on Feb.14.
DESCHUTES COUNTY FIREDISTRICTS
Poi
rin a e revenue
c an ecou
By Ted Shorack
districts are losing more than
Butte Ranch, La Pine, Rural
Rescuepresented Deschutes
The Bulletin
$500,000because of the distinc-
Fire District No. 2 surrounding
County commissioners with
Rural fire protection districts hope the Legislature will revise a state policy so that they will be able to obtainthousands
tion, based on the current annual assessed value of forestland
Bend city limits and Cloverdale.
draftlegislation forthe desired change Monday and asked for
"We thinkthere'sbeen a significant change to the fire problem in Oregon in the last 46 years," said Johnson, alluding
the board's support when the
to rural development and lon-
of dollars in additional tax
the land eventhough owners aren'tpaying for the service.
proposalgoes to the Oregon Legislature. Thebillis sponsoredby theOregon FireChiefs
ger fire seasons."Things have dramahcally changed."
Association.
can't distinguishbetween what
The district tax rates range from $1.09to $3.03per$1,000of
within districtboundaries. The districts fight fires on
revenue. The change would allow
assessed value.
Theproposal wouldnot change the annual assessment fees collected bythe Oregon Department of Forestry for wildland fire protection. The state agency collects $1.62 per acrefortimberland and$0.69 per acre for grazing land,
"It's a significant impact to rural fireprotection districts all
undeveloped, private forestlandwithinthe fire districts to
over the state," Fire Chief Roger
betaxed. The currentpolicy
Johnson of the Sisters-Camp Sherman Fire District said
requiresonly structures and a
portion of surroundinglandto be assessed andtaxed forfire
Monday.
protection and other district
services. Deschutes Countyfire
The current state policy for rural fire protection districts
was passedin 1969. It states that a fire district may not tax forestland unless a home is on
theproperty. The district can levytaxes onthe value of the
There are five rural fire protection districts with for-
which arethe two forestland
estland in Deschutes County:
Johnson and Fire Chief Tim Moor ofRedmond Fire and
dassifications.
Sisters-Camp Sherman, Black
structure and 5 surrounding
might be within their district
boundariesbutwhose owners are not payingtaxes for fire protection. See Fire /B5
imi e By Dylan J. Darlinge The Bulletin
Starting Monday, the Deschutes National Forest plans to close Tumalo Falls Road so the
Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
Madras High School senior Gabrielle Morales
city of Bend can replace the Bridge Creek pipeline.
is one of six students in the state to win the
Horatio Alger college scholarship.
Madras senior earns coveted
scholarship
Crook County School with an online charter school.
By Abby Spegman
Since 2012, the
The Bulletin
A Madras High School student is one of six Oregon high school seniors to receive a college scholarship this year from the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans for commitment to education, serving the community and overcoming adversity. Gabrielle Morales, 18, plans to study business and marketing in the coming year at George Fox University in Newberg. She applied for the $7,000 scholarship in October and learned she got it in January. "I was really surprised because it was a thin letter, I thought maybe it was a re-
l~
~N
I48
n
jection letter.... I opened it up and I was
reading it and it said congratulations and I just died. In a good way," she said. "I had to stop for a second and ask, 'Is this really
• i%4
happening?'" Morales is being raised by a single mother, Kimberly Morales, who is earning her associates degree online in psychology to become a marriage counselor. Gabrielle Moralessaidthathasn'tbeen easy— money is tight with her mom in school and it is hard
4
|k
to ask for homework help when her mom
I
has her own homework. The family is in transitional housing and living on less than $500 a month, Morales said. SeeScholarship/B5
r 'I>'
)
' i„'y : ,
TumaloFalls Roa0close0 -
'~ 4
L
T u maloFallsRoadisclosingMondayandwillremaincloseduntil work is completed on a water pipe. Parking will not beallowed at the parking lot at theeastendof Tumalo Falls Roador along Forest Road 4601. Parking is allowed atthe Skyliner Sno-park andalong Skyliner Road betweenthe trailhead andSkyliner Lodge. TumaloFalls canstill be accessed byfoot or bicycle from Skyliner Sno-park or the surrounding trail system.
Cg
Parkiue lOt CIOSIII Nttparking along Rd. 4
Tltmalo FallsRoad closed
lhmalo .' la:
."""t -
"
-
.
-
:
-
.
.
.
.
.
:
:
.
.
'
.
takes astep back By Ted Shorack The companyhoping to develop Thornburgh resort west of Redmond has hit another snag in the land use appeal process. Opponents of the resort have won an
Skyliner Sno-parkoyen Source: Deachutea National Forest
Thornburgh resort The Bulletin
.
: "'Tumalo GreekTIall oj
Cougar reportedly seen in Sunriver
SeeBriefing/B5
when responding to a fire. They don't have the option of not respondingto fires on land that
uma o a s access
District is cutting ties
A reported sighting of a cougar lateThursday morning in Sunriver caused ThreeRivers School, a public K-8 school, to hold recess indoors as aprecaution. Bend-La PineSchools Director of Communication and Safety Julianne RepmansaidtheSunriver Police Department notified the school as"a courtesy."
land is taxed and what isn't
acres. The rest is off-limits.
District cuts ties with chafter
district has sponsored Insight School of Oregon Charter Option, which has more than500 students inkindergarten through12th gradefrom across the state. About 30 students arefrom Crook County. On Wednesday,the school board voted 4-to-1 to not renewthe school's charter, according to StacySmith, the district's director of curriculum andinstruction. Smith hadrecommended not renewing the charter. District officials were concernedwith the school's academicperformanceandfinances. Insight had a four-year graduation rate of16.2 percent in 2013-14,which brought the district's rate down to 30.5percent. In Oregon, charter schools are privately run, publicly fundedschools that exist within a school district. Now, Insight can appealtheschool board's decision to state officials or look for another sponsor district. Smith said the district will work with local students enrolled in Insight on their options, including returning to traditional school or enrolling in another online school. "It was a difficult decision," Smith said. "In the end the boardsaidthe risks and disadvantages outweigh theadvantages."
Johnson said the fire districts
Greg Cross I The Bulletin
appeal that throws the validity of a decade-old conceptual master plan into limbo. The document provides a framework
for the proposed development and was submitted to Deschutes County to make sure construction would comply with
"This is the last piece of the project for the pipe-
Forest. During the con-
line," Justin Finestone,
a portion of the road, also known as Forest
million project to replace an aging pipe diverting drinking water from Bridge Creek — the road will be closed to all public access, including skiing and snowshoeing. During the closure,
Road 4603, starting at
Tumalo Falls and the
the east end and working west, according to
surrounding trail system may be accessed by foot or bicycle from the Sky-
city spokesman, said Thursday. Contractor Mortenson
Construction plans to install the pipeline under
the Deschutes National
struction — part of a $24
liner Sno-park or the 2mile trail along the south
line. In response, Central Oregon LandWatch of
side of Tumalo Creek, ac-
Bend and WaterWatchof Portland, two conserva-
cording to the Deschutes National Forest.
Legal challenges in recent years delayed the city's Bridge Creek pipeline replacement project. U.S. District Judge Ann
tion groups, filed an appeal late last month in the
county code. Creditor and banker Terrence Larsen through his company Royal Land LLC bought the resort in 2011 when it went
bankrupt under Kameron DeLashmutt, who had the initial vision of golf courses and residential homes on the former family-owned ranch.
San Francisco-based 9th
There have been seven appeals of coun-
Circuit Court of Appeals.
ty decisions related to the conceptual and final master plan since 2006. Past appeals
They argue the Forest Service did not properly Aiken ruled in favor of study how the pipeline the city and the U.S. Formight change the water est Service, which has is- levels and fish. sued a permit for the pipeSeeClosure/B5
dealt with whether the plan complied with
state and county requirements, such as the appropriate ratio of residential housing to overnight lodging. SeeThornburgh/B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
REGON
'n o e r us 'i ea ues e a ein ama o u n • Until Tuesday, anideato put that motto on a hearing roomwall waswell-received By Samantha Tipler
God, or tell others to do so or
Klamath Falls Herald and News
do not," said Austin Folnagy,
KLAMATH FALLS — Not
a homeowner i n
K l a m ath
everyone agrees with the
County and member of the motto "In G o d W e T r u st." Klamath Community College And a contingent of Klam- board. ath County residents doesn't He said he wanted to atwant to see it on the commis- tract more homeowners to sioners' hearing room wall. the area, and he thought the "If 'In God We Trust' is go- "In God We Trust" sign would ing to be placed on that wall, hinder that. "I want young families and shall we then place 'Allahu Akbar' on this wall for our young people to come and fall Muslim citizens? Or ' Y a h- in love with this county," he weh is God, you shall have no said. "I want that regardless other god before him' on that of their race, their religion or wall for our Jewish citizens? creed." Or 'We bow down to our Seiler also urged the comMother Earth at this time of missioners to focus on ecosolstice' on the back wall for nomic development, job creour Wiccan citizens? Then we ation, efficient g overnment have the Buddhists, the Ba- and other issues that would ha'i, the Jehovah's Witnesses,
the Orthodox Catholics and so on. "God knows what we'll do
with the atheists," said Trish S eiler, Klamath Falls C i t y "Choosing Councilwoman.
help unite the community, not divide it.
"This issue is dividing our
community," she said. "We need to work on issues that
bring us together." Commissioners said they
say. She didn't state a position would want to get in the way, in any way shape or form, of on the topic. On Jan. 28, David and Car- our good neighbors being ol Warren came to a com- able to put a cross on their missioner work session and door, worship on Friday, worannounced they were raising ship on Saturday, worship on private funds to pay for an "In Sunday at any church of their God We Trust" plaque for the choosing." "A lot of our problems that hearing room wall. "I know there are some we do have, have a moral people that don't want it, but basis to it, or lack of a moral you'll be just thrilled to know basis to it," Mallams said. "A how many people do," Car- moral country is one that will ol Warren said at Tuesday's survive longer than any other town hall, adding they have country." raised $414. Putting the words "In God "This is generic. God is We Trust" in view of the comwhatever people think he is. missioners while they do their It doesn't say you have to wor- business does not guarantee ship my God; I don't have to morality, citizens argued. "Morality is not exclusive worship your God," Warren sard. to those who believe in God. She was one of two people Absolutely not," said Jennifer who spoke in favor of the "In
Turner. "I find it a little bit in-
God We Trust" sign at Tues- sulting that the commissionday's town hall, whereas sev- ers would need to see that to act in a moral way." en people spoke against it. "I am really tired of the maLiz Schmitt said she rejority in this country being membered before "under forced to bend to the minori- God" was added to the Pledge ty. When it comes to religion, of Allegiance and before "In those who believe in God are God We Trust" became the definitely in the majority," she national motto. said. "It doesn't matter to me
less moral or less patriotic
commission chairman Tom
Trust" motto, they offered a
the Civil War.
Mallams suggested putting the words "In God We Trust" on the wall of the public hear-
faith," Mallams said, adding he believed the motto didn't
Wells spoke about the history
ing room. It has come up several times in meetings since, mostly with citizens speaking in favor of the motto. At Tuesday's meeting, the tune
changed, and more spoke against it. "I am a Christian. I love my
God and Ilove my government for giving me the constitutional right that it gives
me. I don't want my government — federal, state or county — to tell me how to love my
AngrlI OWI —Theangry owl in a Salem park has struck again. Brad Hilliard said hewas jogging early Monday in Bush's Pasture Park when hefelt a scratch on the back of his neck, andsomething swooped off with his favorite running cap.When hesawsigns warning park visitors of aggressive owls, he realizedwhat happened. The (Salem) StatesmanJournal reports it was the fourth owl attack in the park since last month. Keith Keeverwith the Parks Operations Division said it's a barred owl that might be protecting a nest. Officials hope the owl will be less territorial after mating seasonends next month. 3rd ill Student —A Lane County public health official said a third University of Oregon student doesnot have acontagious bacterial blood infection. The (Eugene)Register-Guard reports spokesman Jason Davis said Thursday that the youngwomanhadflu symptoms, buttestsshow shedoesnothavemeningococcemia.Earlysymptoms can resemble flu. Davis said the two female UO students with confirmed cases of meningococcemia —one inmid-January andthe other this week —arerecovering. The university notified a total of 2,000 students who were at risk of being infected by thetwo students and has provided antibiotics to about 400 of those students. COaSt Guard reSCue —A CoastGuard helicopter crew picked up three injured crew members from acargo ship 50 miles off the north Oregon coast and brought them toAstoria for medical treatment. Petty Officer 3rd ClassAmandaNorcross said the injuries included apparent chemicalburns,andoneman hadapossiblebrokenbone.The men reportedly were injured while refueling andcleaning the ship's holds. After the 623-foot commercial vessel Almasi requested help, the helicopter crew flew to the shipThursday afternoon, assessedthe injuries, hoisted the menaboard and flew them backto Astoria, where they were taken to alocal hospital. Weather in the area included 19foot seas andwinds gusting to 38 mph.
Fishing vessel sinks —Acoast Guardspokesmansaid aderelict 69-foot fishing vessel hassunk at the Port of Astoria. Petty Officer 3rd Class Jonathan Klingenberg said theCap'n Oscar wassubmerged up to the pilothouse byThursday evening. It has anunknown amount of fuel aboard. Anagency team is working with Port of Astoria personnel to minimize anypollution. Klingenberg said the port and the Coast Guard hope topumpthe water out of the boat and remove it today.
"I don't think we were any
one faith over another by were surprised the "In God who your God is, but I would placing the proposed plaque We Trust" issue became the like to see it there where the in this room is not only un- dominant topic Tuesday eve- commissioners can see it. constitutional, it is morally ning. They had anticipated And hopefully it'll be there wrong. It is not the American talking about the county bud- many years after we're all way." get or public safety. But "In gone." Seiler joined about 40 other God We Trust" came up again President Dwight D. Eisencitizens who attended a town and again. hower signed the law putting "In God We Trust" on all curhall Tuesday evening hosted The issue brought f orth by the county commissioners. arguments about the First rency in 1955, according to a The commissioners didn't set Amendment andthe separa- webpage on the U.S. House's an agenda or topics for the tion of church and state. History, Art 8: Archives web"The Founding Fathers felt site. It also was a part of the meeting, but the majority of people spoke about the "In very strongly we need to have anti-Communism sentiment God We Trust" issue. a moral compass of some of the 1950s. The motto has At the end of December, sort. They didn't say 'In God been on some currency since We Trust' the God of the Bible or the God of the Muslim
AROUND THE STATE
than we are now," she said.
"If you look at the moral values in 1956 compared to our moral values in 2015, I
would see a marked change," Mallams said, implying he thought morals were better in
the 1950s than today. "I do; and as a female, I tell you I lived that, and it stunk
for everybody but w h i te males," Schmitt shot back. While the majority of cit-
izens at Tuesday's town hall shot down the "In God We
Doug Matheson and Chuck few alternatives. Turner said she found a of the Founding Fathers and website s t a tin g Kl a m a th violate church and state divi- the McCarthyism era of the County's motto is "Working sion. "Even atheism is consid- 1950s that brought "In God for You," which she thought would be best. ered a religion by many now." We Trust" to U.S. currency. "Our Founding Fathers Schmitt suggested "In God Bellet said he d i dn't see a problem with putting the said, 'We're going to go out We Don't Trust," for contrast words on the wall. of our way to have our laws and "for those who don't," she "It's on all our money, it's based not on any faith of any sard. Folnagy said a friend of his, on all our coinage," he said. kind.' We embrace a Catholic "I don't see anything wrong as much as a Jew as much as a 3-year-old girl, had a good with putting it on a govern- a Muslim as much as an athe- suggestion: "Rather than 'In God We ist," Matheson, a teacher and ment building." C ommissioner Kell e y founder of Klamath Basin Trust,' why don't we say 'In Love We Trust,'" he said, "beMinty Morris said she wanted Youth Without Borders, said. "No one — not an atheistcause God is love?" to hear what residents had to
SerieS Of StarmS —Thehigh winds hitting the coast of Oregon and southwest Washington on Thursday morning are leading aseries of storms in what forecasters call an atmospheric river. TheNational Weather Service says the rain storms will arrive in surges through the weekendwith breaks in between. Rainfall totals through Monday couldreach5to7inchesontheOregoncoastandCascadesand2or 3 inches in the valleys. TheWeather Service says it also will be windy through the weekend.Forecasters say the storms should endand let the region dry out by the middle of next week. PedeStriankilled —Police said a busstruckandkilled a woman at 3:30 a.m. Thursday in the northbound lanes of Interstate 205 in Portland. The buswascarrying the baseball team from George Fox University in Newberg. Theteam was bound for a flight to take them to Texas. — From wire reports
Police officer's killer will not be released The Associated Press SALEM — The state pa-
role board decided not to release a former logger convicted of smashing a piece of firewood on the forehead of a police officer responding to a report of domestic violence. The decision means the
"As a company policy,to gourmet food and gift compaMedford Mail Tribune ny acquired Harry & David respect the privacy of all our MEDFORD — The prom- Holdings last September. associates, both current and ised integration and changLast October 1-800-Flowers. former, we do not comment By Greg Stiles
e s of H arry & D a v i d i n t o 1-800-Flowers.Com after the
Com CEO Jim McCann spoke
in glowing terms of Johnson holiday selling season came and the local management quickly and forcefully as CEO team. "The reason why we got Craig Johnson and other executives were axed. more interested this time and "We didmakesome changes the reason we're so excited effective Tuesday," 1-800-Flow- about merging these compaers.Com spokesman Joe Pititto nies is that the company has said. "Harry & David will now
been fixed by a talented man-
be reporting directly to David Taiclet, president of the Gourmet Food and Gift Baskets division. Craig Johnson is leaving by mutual decision." Other unspecified mem-
agement team," McCann said
bers of the executive team that
at the time. "It's not like it was in the past when we would say,
'Are we up to this task'? Are we up to cleaning this whole thing up and righting this ship?' That's already been done and
worked with Johnson in leading Harry & David Holdings following the company's exit of Chapter 11 Bankruptcy in
that's what made it palatable for us. The recession punched
September 2011 were also let
We're both doing much better
us in the nose and clearly had an impact on Harry & David.
go. Johnson came onboard the now." following month. The Carle Apparently Place, New York-based floral, changed.
that
has
on personnel matters," Pititto
A phone message to Johnson was not i mmediately
years. Alpine Confection was named Candy Industry Magazine's "Manufacturer of the
erate growth across our entire
enterpriseby leveraging our Year" in 2005. In May 2006, combined assets, experience I -800-Flowers acquired h i s and skill sets." holding company, Alpine ConPititto said Taidetwillbe"on fections Inc., and two of the the ground" in Medford work- five Alpine subsidiaries, Faning with the existing team at nie May Confections and HarHarry & David for some time ry London Candies going forward, after which he He now oversees more than will be in Medford frequently. 2,000 manufacturing plant "We may add a new brand and distribution facility emleader at some point in time ployees for Harry 5 David, who would report directly to Fannie May Fine Chocolates, Dave," Pititto said, "similar to Harry L o ndon, C h eryl's, the structure we have with all of our other gourmet foods and
The Popcorn Factory, Stock-
gift baskets brands."
1-800-Baskets.com.
b e f or e th e
hand. A neighbor called 911after hearing a woman's cries for help,and Ward came to the house and pepper-sprayed
Porter was sentenced for the slaying of John Day police officer Frank Ward in 1992.
The board had decided to objections from Gov. John
to $120 million in sales in 10
Testimony
board portrayed Porter as
reported.
Taiclet is a former Army infantry captain who earned
vid we are increasingly excited by the opportunities to accel-
truth," and shows only limited remorse.
driving limit when he struck
release Porter, in 2013, but
the integration of Harry & Da-
tendency to manipulate the
date for Sidney Dean Porter is in 2020, The Oregonian
returned.
said. degrees at Notre Dame and The parent company issued Harvard. He was the co-founda statement that shed little light er and co-owner of Alpine on the changes: "As we launch Confections, which he grew
turity ... Iack of self-awareness, as well as an asocial
drunk with a blood-alcohol p o ssible r e l ease content three times the legal
earliest
Medford's Harry 5 Davidgets major makeover
sion, demonstrates "imma-
Kitzhaber and law enforcement officers prompted the
his wife with the back of his
the
6 - f oot-5, 2 2 5 -pound
logger. Porter told the p arole board he and Ward fought through three rooms, but
board to reconsider and re- Ward stopped moving afverse itself. ter the two slammed into a In September 2013, the wood stove and a stack of board said it would hear firewood. another release appeal this Grant C o unt y D i s t rict month. Attorney J i m Ca r p enOn Thursday, the board ter saidPorter smashed a concluded that Porter "por- pieceof firewood on Ward's trays himself as one who forehead. broke up fights and only enWard died shortly aftergaged in violence to protect ward of a broken neck and others." extensive head trauma. He But, it said, Porter has a left a wife, a daughter and record of assault and aggres- twin 2-year-old sons.
5pectacular Ocean Views
From Every Room.
yards, DesignPac Gifts and
•
•
' l
•
XEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update Items Inthe Police Log whensuch a request Is recelved. Any new Informatlon, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Informatlon, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 1 2:46p.m. Jan. 21, In the 19600 block of Hollygrape Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11:32a.m. Feb.3, in the1800 block of NE Carson Way. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 1:44 p.m. Feb. 3, in thearea of IIE Glenshlre Placeand IIE HlddenValley Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11:51a.m. Feb.4, in the 2300 blockof NW
Marken Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 8:47 p.m. Feb.3, In the 2300 block of NEDivision Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:03 p.m. Feb.4, In the 300 block of NEEmerson Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:38 p.m. Feb.3, in the 61300 blockof S. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:30 p.m. Feb.3, In the 400 blockof NE Greenwood Avenue.
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GET THEREWeston SkyiinersRd.,
I
)I7
right on NW Lemhi PassDr., right on
NW DmuilhrdAve.
>
/
1820 NWHarfford Ave.
p
I
NORTHWESTCROSSING
• Bright interior • Contemporarystyling • Great room plan • High end finishes • Priced at$517,000
as
IR .EI%"
1881 NWHarfford Ave. NORTHWESTCROSSING
sl
/
ial Wi
• Main level mastersuite • Open greatroomplan • Stylish finishes • Large recreationroom • Priced at$53$,$00
Il
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*
661 NE Vale Ln.
19165 Park Commons Dr.
a
• 3 beds, 2.5 baths • Great room plan • Bonus room • Selection of finishes • Priced at$351,$00
SHEVLINPINES
•Magnlcentfin ishes • Main level guestsuite • Den plus bonus room • Gourmetkitchen • Priced at $54$,$00
I
I SI N
is.dlj'i
— Qmeaasm
2948 NE Conners Ave. NE BEND • Luxurious finishes • Formal dining room • Superb kitchen • Across from park • Priced at$374,900
*
62782 Imbler Dr. SHEVLINPINES
•CascadeMountainview • Master on main level • Stainless Deer appliances • Hardwood & tile flooring • Priced at $574,$00
•1
.I
Qmsaasm
GET THERE FromHwy. 20 East, nofth on NE 27th SI., right on NEConners Ave.
Orchard Hill Townhomes
GET ToSHEVLINPINESWest on Shevlin ParkRd.,dght on NWPark Commons Dr.
/
= : '- -' lP=
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• • • •
1547 to 1BBO sq ft Great room plans Selection of finishes Priced from $25$,900
e're our
OUTLYINGAREA
Sunriver 13 Quelah
1946 NWBalitch Ct.
• End condominiumunit • Upgradedkitchen, baths • Tennis courts, pool • Vacation rentalprogram • Priced at$252,$00
• Guest suite with bath • Exquisite detsil work • 0.6 5 acre lot on cul-de-sac • Large central living room • Soundproof windows • Spacious master suite • Priced at $77$,000 AWBREY BUTTE
GET THEREFmmN. 3rd SI. (Business 97), west on Mt. Washingk>nDr., left on NW Safview Dr., left on NWBalilch Ct.
Hidden Hills;," — "'
1(
This tranquil newhomeneighborhood in southeastBendfeatures a collection of livable andattractive one- andtwo-story homesbyhand-selected builders.Somehomes have Cascademountain views andall are Earth Advantage certified for energyefficiency.
Southwest Bend s
S. s inds its way
I I.
along the majestic Deschutes River and features The Old Mill District along with some ofBend's newest neighborhoods, schools and conveniences.
I
GET THERESouthon BrosterhousRd. past MurphyRd., left on Marble Mountain Ln.
~. Q !
HIDDENHILLS
Q~
61076 Ruby Peak Ln.
sl
eGa e
r o u p e al Estat
• Zero energy design • Solar pcwer, hot water • Sustainable materiah • Great room, islandkitchen • Priced at$388,900
R MESSSBI SFME
NQIIS GNIIP
OLD MILLDISTRICT
874 SW Crestline Dr. •OeschutesLandingtownhome • Old Mill, river, mountain views • Guest suite with bath • Deluxe finishes, materials • Priced at$539,900
hegarnergroup.com
541 383 4360 '
61081 Ruby PeakLn. HIDDENHILLS
Visit our Sales Office at
• Bright greatroom • Vaulted ceiling • Island kitchen • Secluded master suite • Priced at $314,$00
Office Open
NorthWest Crossing
Open Weekdays9-5 Weekends 12-3
2762 NWCrossing Drive
61060 Ruby PeakLn. HIDDENHILLS
-I
OS 0
OS
NWX Lot 751 LemhiPassDr. NWX 13 lots near Discovery Park NW Lot 28 North Rim NW 19097 NWChiloquin Dr. NW 2911 NWCelilo Ln. NW 2702 NW Three Sisters Dr. SE 20971 Avery Ln. OA 56865 Enterprise Dr. sUNR IVER OA 56291 Tree Duck sUNR IVER
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ii
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61093 Ruby PeakLn. HIDDENHILLS
construction NWX 1595 NWMt. Washington Dr. NWX 2397 NWDrouillard Ave. NWX 2372 NWDrouillard Ave.
• Energy-efficient features • Master on main level • Formal living room • Game room with deck • Priced at$379,000
• Exceptional finishes • Many owner upgrades • Hardwood floors • Full tile mastershower • Priced at$284,$00
20939 Miramar Dr.
20979 Avery Ln.
NW 1148 NW 18th St.
ORIONGREENS
NW NW19169 Chiloquin Dr. SE SE 20394Penhollow Dr. SE 60157 RubyPeakLn. SE 60190 RubyPeakLn. SE 20628 CougarPeakDr. SE 20616 CougarPeakDr.
• Half-acre landscaped lot • Two masler sufies • Hardwood, granite & tile • Signature appliances • Priced at$519,000
GET THEREEaston SE
y
ReedMarketRd.,right on SE Fargo Le a right on SE
Pemganor., left on SE AvefyLn.
• Quiet 0.35-ac setting • Family room w/fireplace • Upslsirs bonus room • Hardwoodti& le floors • Priced at $4$7,500 GET THEREFromSE16th SI.,
east on SE Ferguson Rd., right on
s
-.
: - s eatures a blend of old and new, residential and
acreage properties. Anup-and-coming areaof Bendwith positive growth underway in the form of newneighborhoods, parks and schools.
Ladem Rd., right onSky HarborDr., left on MiramarDr.
SE
B4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
Protect snowri ers an t es iareas
l8V&~ o ~
~
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%l6 I6 BRIAH lLLfAhW.
hat Oregon ski areas once thought was a shield protecting them from legal liability has been transformed into a question mark. Legislation to be introduced by state Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, seems to be on track to a solution. The Oregon Supreme Court declared in December that a seriously injured skier did not forfeit his right to sue because of a blanket liability waiver at Mt. Bachelor ski area. The courtsaid such release agreements are"unconscionable." The legal challenge is no mystery. Skiers and snowboarders voluntarily participate in a sport with inherent risks. Even the best snowriders can catch an edge and crash. They don't have to be trying a jump or whippingthrough the trees. At the same time, ski areas want to give people the opportunity to participate in snowsports and to be a successful business. Lawsuits in the wake of injuries and deaths could force ski areas to close, when they shouldbear no responsibility. States with ski areas have generally provided that liability protectionin one of two ways. Some states, such as Oregon, have used release agreements. The idea is that the agreement is clearly communicated to people who buy lift tickets. They are giving up some of their rights to sue. The
language is on the lift ticket. Warnings are posted at the ski area. But with the court's decision, it's not clear that ski areas or anyone else who hosts recreational activities with inherent dangers have adequate protection under the law. Other states use a statutory approach. They spell out in the law that there are inherent risks in snowsports. Skiareasare protected as long as they are not willfully or wantonly negligent. One example of that would be if ski area employees were to build a jump in a terrain park, knowsomethingis wrong and don't fix it. We have not seen Knopp's bill. It hasn't been introduced. But local attorney Andy Balyeat, who represents Mt. Bachelor, helped draft the language. Balyeat said his goal is to strike the right balance for protecting skiers and snowboarders and ski areas. Skiers and snowboarders need to assume the inherent risks of their sports. And ski areas can't have a "come what may" approach to safety.
Need to change law regonians knew even before voters here approved Measure 91, which legalizes the growth, sale and use of recreational marijuana, that state legislators were likely to make changes. Lawmakers have at least 14 marijuana bills to consider. They cover thelegal weed gamut, everything from barring sales near schools to studying marijuana taxes. There's another ordering courts that are asked to set aside convictions to treat pre-July 2013 marijuana offenses as if they had occurred after legalization. It will take the Legislature time to work through all the proposals, clearly, but at least one bill already makes good sense. That's Senate Bill 542, introduced at the behest of the League of Oregon Cities. It makes two particularly important changes to Measure 91. It would give cities and counties the right to tax marijuana for themselves. As 91 was written, only the state has the power to tax weed, andlocal governments were specifically barred from doing so. In hope of being given a grandfathered taxing power once the m easure was adopted, at least 70 cities, including several in Central
W re
Oregon but notBend, and three counties in the state passed taxing legislation last fall. There's good reason for wanting to impose a tax. Oregon's cities and counties rely heavily on property taxes to support their general-fund operations, and they are constitutionally prohibited from askingvoters for more money except under limited conditions. That means they, like the state, are particularly v u lnerable in economic downturns. Being able to tax marijuana might not make them rich, but it would give them the opportunity to pick up a bit of badly needed extra revenue. Too, SB 542 would allow cities and counties to prohibit the sales of recreational marijuana. That's no small matter in a state where voters in 22 of 36 counties rejected the pot legalization measure in November. Clearly, rural Oregon was against legalization — Deschutes was the only county east of the Cascades in which it passed — and counties and communities should be allowed to ban pot shops, if they don't want them. SB 542 is a good place to start a serious look at tweaking Measure 91. It should be approved.
M 1Vickel's Worth Our savior is pot?
anthem. The singing is not for the performer's self-aggrandizement. As reported by The Oregonian, The applause that follows is not for Oregon Liquor Control Commission the artist but for America! member Marvin Revoal declared Please stop using our national that legalization of marijuana will
be "an economic engine. This is our Silicon Valley, our Napa Valley. We and its heritage, its unity and heroic have a great opportunity to be the women and men, past and present, leader in the country." who serve and preserve it! So we will be able to say, hey, we Dale E. McCoig might be last in the nation in high Bend school graduation rates but we're
Driver'sphotobill needed
number one in pot! Something we
can all be proud of. Pete Stoefen Bend
A star-spangled flop I'm sure no disrespect is ever in-
Your recent editorial regarding
opted by our nation as a serious melodic tribute to the unity of the Unit-
LawrenceJones Bend
Enough lawsuits Regarding the Casey Roats lawsuit. Really'? Oh my goodness! Enough already. Don't you have better things to do with your time and money? Pleasemove on!
Mr. Roats was elected to his position by the people of Bend and the council. Like I said before, 5-yearolds play nicer and they aren't such sore losers. Please do us all a favor
Senate Bill 461 did not speak to
and focus on more important issues
a major issue/concern regarding state policy on new license photos. Anyone who is a parent of early 20-year-olds knows what a hassle this is. Kids get their licenses at age
such as child abuse, elder abuse, homelessness, criminal activity, etc. Enjoy life! And let others enjoy theirs. God bless! Julia Oldham
tended by these performances of The Star-Spangled Banner — often 16, before basically the onset of the at sporting events such as the Super adolescent/pubescent physiologiBowl. But please stop doing what cal growth spurt, when their facial so many of you do to our national features change radically into their more "adultself" (face broadens, anthem! Almost every time our nation- hair line changes, nose and eye feaal anthem is presented at import- tures rebalance, etc.). ant events it is performed rather Parental discussions regarding than sung by the artist, and its fine this issue are omnipresent. The and historic melody and lyrics can "child" gets the license at age 16, barely be recognized and joined in then the DMV will not redo their because of the highly stylized, and photo image for eight years (age 24). individualized, way it is presented. The state-issued license photo at age "The Star-Spangled Banner" was 21 becomes a major identification conceived, composed and then ad- issue at airport TSA check-in, international travel border crossings,
Bend
Drop the lawsuit I am dismayed to see yet another lawsuit has been filed regarding the election of Casey Roats to the Bend City Council. I will admit that I vot-
ed for Mr. Roats because I believe he will be a good city councilor. I have never met the man, nor have I met any of the individuals bringing the lawsuits. However, as a resident
and taxpayer in the city of Bend, I believe it is time to stop these frivolous court battles. They seem to
at the door IDs for liquor establish- merelyadvance someone's personal ed States of America and to its patri- ments, etc. These now-adults end up agenda and are costing the city preotic citizens. It should be presented havingtocarry a m ore recent pass- cious time and dollars, which could that way and should not be sung in port photo just to be considered to be used on other more important a manner more intended to bring have valid photo identification. things. attention and credit to an individual Two relatednotes:Passports for The Secretary ofState has cerartist's style, voice range or volume. youngerpersons arevalid forshort- tified his election, something she Artists: When you sing "The Star- er periods than adult photos (same would not have done had there been Spangled Banner," you are leading rationale). A female's adolescent an impropriety. It is time to move on all American citizens hearing the growth occurs somewhat earlier and let City Council get on with the presentation to stand, face our flag, than males. Thus this is more prob- business of running the city. place hand over heart or salute and lematic in photo identification for Robin Bankofier join in the singing of our national early 20ish males. Feature-wise they Bend
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 submiss!ons 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 column!sts. Wr!ters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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o r terscaNtstan t e W i iamssto
By Dan Lamothe
in an interview with Stars & Stripes,
The reaction is in part a result of
The Washington Post
saying he actually was in another Chinook that was not under fire. Then he apologized on air.
the nature of the scandal. Covering combat in person is a significant — and potentially life-changingevent. At least 61 journalists were killed in 2014 doing their jobs, ac-
W ASHINGTON — Sitting i n a dark suit and tie on "The Late Show with David Letterman" in 2013, "NBC
anthem to attract attention to yourself rather than credit to our nation
are not the same person.
The anchorman — one of the na-
Nightly News" anchorman Brian Williams recalled the scary day that
tion's most recognizable journalists — has been widely mocked online
the Chinook helicopter he was in pur-
since by Internet jokesters. But he
portedly took enemy fire during the also has taken criticism from felU.S. invasion of Iraq. low journalists, particularly those "We were in some helicopters, and who have spent time in dangerous what we didn't know is that we were countries. north of the invasion," Williams reConsider the following Tweet from called. "We were the northernmost David Kenner, who works from LebAmericans in Iraq. We were going to anon as the Middle East editor for dropsome bridge portions acrossthe Foreign Policy magazine: Euphrates (River) so the 3rd Infantry This Brian Williams story is crazy. (Division) could cross on them.Two You don't "misremember" whether of our four helicopters were hit by your helicopter was shot down by an ground fire, including the one I was RPG in Iraq. in." Or this from Michael Yon, a former
mation. Building trust is a significant challenge, especially in a unit that is working withan unknown embedded journalist in a dangerous place. Williams,
an
Letterman. He added that he is "not
terribly good" at being a war correspondent but liked to go out on patrol and "get out in it" when he covered
i nte r n ationally the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.
known journalist with enough ce- Then he recounted the attack on the cording to the Committee to Protect lebrity to spawn mashup videos, Army aircraft. "No kidding!" Letterman interJournalists. Twenty-three of them now saying that he "misremembers" died while covering combat in 2014, what appears to be such a memorable rupted the newsman, who quickly compared to 26 in2012 and 25 in event does nothing to help the prob- continued. "RPG and AK-47," Williams said,
2013, the committee said. And that's to say nothing of situations such as the executions of James Foley, Steven
lem. His actions will be added to a long list of incidents that the troops
bring up when talking about military
referring to rocket-propelled grenadesand gunfirefrom assaultrifles.
Sotloff and other journalists at the
journalism, from Fox News Chan-
He added that the helicopters were
hands of militant groups such as the Islamic State.
nel's Geraldo Rivera being kicked out of Iraq in 2003 for revealing fu-
As someone who has spent sever- ture troop movements to Dan Rather resigning as a CBS News anchor covering the U.S. infantry, walking in 2004 after acknowledging that he foot patrols and occasionally coming had used unverified documents in a under fire, I cringed when I saw the story questioning President George That story — and variations of it Special Forces soldier who later spent story about Williams. Virtually any W. Bush's military service. that Williams has told over the years years embedded with U.S. troops in time a journalist is invited to speak Williams acknowledged the dif— unraveled Wednesday under scru- Iraq and Afghanistan as a freelance before a group of U.S. troops or vet- ficulties that some of his more seatiny from soldiers who were there j ournalist: B r ian W i l l i ams M u st erans, we are asked where we get our soned colleagues face while covering that day. Williams recanted the story Resign. stories and how we verify our infor- combat in his 2013 interview with al months in southern Afghanistan
about 100 feet off the ground and traveling more than 100 mph when hit — a low altitude that would make
it remarkable that a powerful RPG didn't take any of the aircraft down. Williams added that "our captain
took a Purple Heart injury to his ear in the cockpit," but that everyone else was otherwise OK. That also would
appear to be untrue. — Dan Lamot!I covers national security for The Washington Post.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Conducting an underwater census Thornburgh The Associated Press
Charles A. Bigelow, of Bend Sept. 26, 1919 - Feb. 3, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.nlswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A funeral Mass will be held Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2015 at 12:15 PM in the Historic St. Francis Catholic Church on Lava St. Contributions may bemade to:
St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701.
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. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obils@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
PUGET SOUND, Wash. — To check on the health
of the giant pacific octopus population in the Puget Sound, an unusual census takes place every year. Vol-
theworld:
Aldo Ciccolini, 89: Pianist who combined virtuosity with
elegantreserve and for more than six decades of performing drew acclaim for his interpretations of underappreciated compositions and composers. Died late Jan. 31 or early
Feb. 1 at his home in Asnieressur-Seine, outside Paris. His manager announced the death
without revealing the cause. Mary Healy, 96: Versatile actress and singer who starred with Orson Welles on
Broadway and opposite her husband, Peter Lind Hayes,
for nearly 60 years on stage, screen and radio. Died Tuesday at a health care facility in
Calabasas, northwest of Los Angeles, of natural causes, her daughter said.
from various agencies, and the
another interpretation.
ed, described as "substantially exercised" in the county de-
velopment code. If the county found the conceptual plan
unteer divers, enlisted by
the company's attorney was
the Seattle Aquarium, span over Washington's inland
not returned Thursday. The proposed resort would
waters and look for their
sit on nearly 2,000 acres next to Cline Butte with a community
would be expired and the company would have to submit
of 1,000 homes, 475 overnight
another.
unitsand three golfcourses. Annunziata "Nunzie" Gould,
20 of the conditions had been
eight-tentacle neighbors.
The biggest in the world Weighing as much as 150 Manuel Valdes /The Associated Press pounds with tentacles that Seattle Aquarium staffers Tim Carpenter and Kathryn Kegel can span up to 20 feet, the gi-
ant pacific octopus lives up to its name. It's the biggest
check their gear while volunteer diver Kevin Tower puts on his flippers before entering the waters of the Puget Sound near Seattle. Every year, the Seattle Aquarium enlists the help of
volunteer divers to search andcount giant pacific octopus in calls the waters off Seattle the Puget Sound for an underwater census. home, part of its vast range octopus in the world, and it over the Pacific Ocean.
"The Puget Sound offers looked for the giant pacifgood habitat, water tem- ic octopus, or GPO as it's
community.
Diving community
perature and an abundant
called, at 11 sites around
food source for them," said Kathryn Kegel, a Seattle Aquarium biologist. Known as one of t he smartest creatures in the oceans, the giant pacific octopus leads a relatively short
the Puget Sound last month. The Puget Sound hosts a The aquarium asked the healthy scuba diving comdivers to count how many munity, and the giant pacific octopuses they saw, note the octopus is one of the main depth of their finding as well attractions, even though the as the type of hiding spot. water is cold and dark. "It's always a night dive This year, the census counted 2 8 oc t opuses, in the Puget Sound," half-
life, between three and five
years. They are terminal whereas the year before the maters, meaning once they divers found 17. "We'vebeen watching the mate, they die soon after. "They are big hunters of numbers go up then kind crab, clams, scallops, things of go down, then kind of go like that," Kegel said. back up. That could be havBecause the giant pacif- ing to do with population ic octopus is not on federal and mating. As they all peak endangered or t h reatened and mate, they slowly die species lists, there aren't off, then they start to grow current studies on the pop- back up again," Kegel said.
joked volunteer diver Carl
ulation in the Puget Sound. In fact, it's unknown how
The volunteer nature of the census meansthe count
there is here just teeming underneath the ocean," Har-
many live in here, Kegel
is not rigidly scientific, Kegel said. Two years ago, after a diver killed an octopus, state wildlife officials changed
rington said, adding one of
sard. That's where the Seattle
Aquarium and its troops of volunteer divers step in.
Informal, informative From the waters off Seattle to the maritime border with Canada, 27 divers
Harrington, who has been diving for 15 years here. Harrington didn't see an
octopus during his census dive, but he did see plenty
wasn't initiated, then the plan
Commissioners
d e cided
a resident of Deschutes County, challenged the county's July decision, which validated the company's conceptual master plan. Development proposals undergo a three-step process: a conceptual master plan, final masterplan andthen a siteplan for subdivisions on the property. Construction doesn't begin until after the final master plan is approved. The conceptual plan has
followed or substantially exercisedbut separated the re-
to be "initiated" within a two-
ty decision because of how
maining conditions that were not followed. The county com-
missioners decided in a 2-1 vote that the unfulfilled conditions
were not the company's fault and part of the final master plan process. The decision validated the conceptual plan, an important step before Loyal Land could move forward.
The Land Use Board of Appeals sent back the coun-
year period. That window was commissioners interpreted the between 2009 and 2011, after conditions by assigning them appeals were settled over the to either the conceptual or ficonditions for development.
nal plan. The initiation of the
There were 38 conditions laid out pertaining to road
plan was contingent on the 38 conditions as a whole and not
individually, the land use board ments and a water supply plan ruled in aprevious decision. as well as others that would — Reporter: 541-617-7820, construction, housing require-
have to be at least started on in
tshorack@bendbulletirt.com
of other creatures, includ-
ing a ratfish (a relative of the shark), sculpins and others. "Diving here, it's just amazing how much life
ThorndurghDestination Resort property /
To Sisters I
oMadrs4:
yes'
the rare sights for divers is the massive bottom-dwell-
TT •
ing six-gill shark, which sometimes makes a trip to
,
+llgitTand,'e. , l
als , Eagla01SSI ' er.Cliae,F' .state paik
J( g •
the shallows. tected habitat for octopuses. Octopuses t h emselves They used the data from can be challenging to spot. the census as well as in- They are nocturnal and hide f ormation from t h e d i v e in their dens during the day. the rules to carve out pro-
fitte&ttis
>~" Tiiornbttrgit Resort j+4+
Oiiiiol40 • / /
To Bqnd Greg Cross 1 rhe Bulletin
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bt
The personwhocalled Sunriver Police atabout11 a.m.said the cougarwasstanding on South Century Drivejust east ofthe Sunriver boundary,accordingto a news release from the police. The animal reportedly moved northwest towardSunriver inthe direction of therailroadtracks and power line road.Policesearched the areaextensively but did not
spot the cat. This is thethird sighting of a cougar in this location, policesaid.
Daddies, daughterswill dance inRedmond The Rotary Club ofRedmond will hold its secondannual Daddy Daughter Dance6 to 9 p.m. Saturday, atRidgeview High School in Redmond.Thedance is for girls, kindergarten through eighth grade,andtheir dadsor
another malerelative or guardian. Festivities will include a live DJ and dancing, horse- drawn carriage rides, portraits with a photographeranda buffet of kid-friendly food, according to the Rotary website. Proceeds benefit RedmondSchool District programs. Tickets cost$36 per father/daughter couple, plus$18 per additional guest, andcan be purchased atwww.redmondoregonrotary.com. — Bulletinstaffreports
Closure Continued from B1 The city has completed the
Scholarship "It's hard when you're fi-
nancially challenged to find a solution to that, considering I'm younger and can't support myself," said Morales, who has three older siblings. But seeing her mom work so hard at school is also encouraging. And the situation has forced her to become more independent. Some nights she is in charge of dinner, and next year she won't be that kid going home every weekend for help with her laundry. In her essay for the scholarship application, Morales wrote about volunteering
hallways as a Valentine from the student government. For
"It's the fact that someone
believes in me to give that. It the past three years, she has feels good." worked after school as an assistant at a local law firm.
"She's an amazing kid,"
we can get that road open as
more than a half-mile section
or along Forest Road 4601.
in January. The latest section of pipeline will pass under close
Parking will be available at the Skyliner Sno-park and along Skyliners Road, between the trailhead and Skyliner Lodge.
Road, he said. changed her perception of in their ciassroom." homelessness. This year, 619 students At school, Morales plays from across the country rethe French horn in the con- ceived scholarships from the cert band, is vice president of Horatio Alger Association, the National Honor Society which administers one of chapter and in student gov- the nation's largest privately ernment. She spent hours funded, need-based scholarthis week cutting out 900 ship programs. paper hearts and writing the Morales said for her, it isn't names of each student, teach- just about the money. Knower and staff member at Ma- ingsomeone out there is willdras High School on them, ing to invest in her future at then hanging them in the college is a confidence boost.
reopening. " Obviously we'll do t h e work as quickly as practical so
first two segments of the pipe- soon as possible," he said. line, Finestone said — a nearly Along with the road clo6'/~-mile section under Sky- sure, parking will not be alliners Road installed between lowed at the parking lot at the March and November and east end of Tumalo Falls Road
to 2 t/~ miles of Tumalo Falls
Continued from B1 Deathsof note from around
mits also had to be obtained
Continued from B1 The Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals sent back the Deschutes Countycommissioners'
A request for comment from
DEATHS ELSE%THERE
order to initiate the plan. Per-
company hadto gain approval of an emergency evacuation plan. latest decision last week. Loyal In July, county commissionLand could choose to take the ers had to figure out whether decision to the Oregon Court of the conditions had been fully Appeals or ask the county for complied with or at least start-
By Manuel Valdes
DEATH NOTICES
B5
T he city
d oes no t h a v e
a firm date for the road's
Fire Continued from B1 "Everybody receives the
— Reporter: 541-617-7812 ddarling@bendbulletirt.com
The additional tax revenue
could potentially reduce the overall tax rates collected by
districts because of more availfi r e p r o tection, able money. "They could lower their rate. but not everybody is paying for that fire protection," said They could use it to enhance benefit o f
Johnson. the services they provide in Johnson told commission- these areas," Johnson said. "It ers the districts are sensitive
would be up to that board to
and aware of the potential effects on taxpayers if the bill is
determine what's in the best
ger scholarship, Morales re-
passed by state lawmakers.
ceived another scholarship
But he said analysis has shown increases could be minimal depending on whether the forestland is being actively managed. Ruralpropertiesare eligible for tax deferrals if timber is beingharvested.
The proposed revision is under a final legal review. The
On top of the Horatio Al-
from George Fox. She plans teacher at Madras High to get a job on campus and School who has known Mo- take out loans to cover the with Madras Gospel Misrales for three years. "She's rest ofher college costs. sion baking bread for home- the kind of student that — Reporter: 541-617-7837, less people and how that teachers dream about having ospegman@bendbuiletttt.com said Juanita Payton, a health
interest of their district." fire chiefs association will then shop for a state lawmaker to
sponsor the bill and present it to the Legislature. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletitt.com
— From wire reports
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Among the last of Doolittle's Raiders,wboflew ris raid in WWII By Steve Chawkins
lin Air Force Base in Florida
Los Angeles Times
named a hangar after him. "We just did what we had D o o little's to do," he told The New York
Edward Saylor, one of the four r e m aining
Raiders who bombed Japanese cities in a bold daylight attack four months after Pearl
Harbor, has died. He was 94. Saylor's family said his Jan. 28 death at an assisted living
facility in Sumner, Washington, was from natural causes. For years, Saylor talked to students and civic groups about his audacious mission, hinting at it s significance with wry understatement. "My reaction when I found out we were bombing Japan from an aircraft carrier was that it was too far to swim
back home so we might as well go ahead with it," he said in 2013, when officials at Eg-
Saylor was born on March 15, 1920, in B r usett, Montana, and grew up on a cattle ranch. Until he joined the
as the Hornet made its way across the Pacific. On a vio-
get away with it." a step ahead of Japanese paSaylor w a s eng i neer trols, hiding them in a cave, and gunner on a plane that in a Buddhist temple and un-
lently pitching deck, he spent days disassembling and reas- bombed an a i r craft f a cto- der fetid mats in the hold of a Times. "It was a job." military in 1939, he had never sembling pieces of the huge ry and waterfront targets in fishing boat. After weeks of In fact, it was more than seen a train or a bus, except machine. Kobe, Japan. Fifteen other perilous travel, they made it to "I didn't have any parts left planes, including one piloted safety. that. M any h i storians see in the movies. He signed up, the 1942 U.S. attack as a cru- he later said, because he was when I was done," he said, by Doolittle, hit strategic sites Saylor received a Distin"but I wasn't sure all the parts in Tokyo and elsewhere. cially dispiriting event for a sick of cows. guished Flying Cross and othJapanese public steeped in A sergeant in the Army Air were in the right place." Eight Raiders wound up er honors. The Doolittle Raidthe myth of the empire's in- Forces, he heard that Lt. Col. The planes were to take off in Japanese prison camps, ers were awarded a Congresvulnerability. It also was cru- James H. "Jimmy" D oolit- at night, but Japanese ships where three were executed sional Gold Medal in 2014. cial for Americans, who were tle, was looking for 80 crew spotted the Hornet early on and one died of malnutrition. After the war, Saylor rereeling from the devastation members on a mission whose the morning of April 18. This Two drowned off the China mained in th e m i litary, retop-secret goal he couldn't forced Doolittle to send his coast, and one died while tiring from the Air Force as of Pearl Harbor and other losses in the Pacific at the be- disclose. Saylor volunteered. men up earli er, and farther bailing out. a lieutenant colonel. He was ginning of World War II. The secret idea, it turned f rom Japan, than h e h a d Running out of fuel, Say- also involved in real estate "It was a p sychological out, was to launch 16 heavy planned. lor's plane ditched in the East and construction. "I didn't expect to survive raid," historian and r etired bombers — B-25s — from the China Sea. Lorraine Saylor, his wife of colonel CV. Glines told the aircraftcarrier Hornet 400 the mission," Saylor told the Saylor didn't know how to 69 years, died in 2011. Saylor's Times in 2001. "FDR wanted miles off Japan. D allas Morning News i n swim but struggled to a near- survivors include his daughsome real effort to show the A master mechanic, Say- 2012. "You just don't go bomb by Chinese island on a rapidly ter, Charlotte, son, Rodney, Japanese that we could and lor found p otentially f a tal the enemy in the middle of the deflating life raft. Villagers eight grandchildren and nuwould fight back." flaws in his plane's engine day from a low altitude and kept him and his crew mates merousgreat-grandchildren.
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Go l f, C4 College basketball, C3 Skiing, C4 NHL, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY6, 2015
BASEBALL/ SOFTBALL
PREP WRESTLING
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Umpires to meet Fed. 19 in Bend
Ducks'
The first meeting of the 2015 seasonfor the Central Oregon Baseball/Softball Officials Association (COBOA/ COSOA) is scheduled for Thursday, Feb.19, in Bend. Themeeting will take place starting at 6:30 p.m. in the library at Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th
new crop already at work
St.
Current association members and prospective new members are encouraged to attend the meeting. No umpiring experience is required to join COBOA/ COSOA;the association will provide training. COBOA/COSOA serves all of Central Oregonand provides officiating for all levels of high school baseball and softball. The meeting will include orientation for new members and first-, second- and third-year returning umpires. Also, Oregon School Activities Association and national federation rules interpretation will be covered in asession that all Central Oregon high school baseball and softball coaches are encouraged to attend. For more information, contact Ron Berg, association president, at 541-647-8701, or Bob
Reichert, association commissioner, at 541-
By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Oregon's top football recruits did not hold
news conferences. They did not put on hats or gloves. And they did not make the coaching staff hold its collective breath waiting for a
8
and were attending classes atUO.
frich said of the lack of television time his recruits received
compared with some of the blue-chip prospects who fell to USC and UCLA. "We couldn't
View coach Les Combs.
O0
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbnlletln.com/sports
tling dual match of the season. In the penultimate match of the night, Edelblut pinned Bend High's Sage Farnworth in 58 seconds to seal Mountain
onships in Hood River, the Cougars, Combs said, "just showed up and wrestled well tonight."
View's 42-33 victory over the
Chase Misener (145 pounds), Kaleb Winebarger (152) and Dylan Grell (160) gave Mountain View an 18-0 advantage, the Cougarsforfeited fourof
visiting Lava Bears Thursday night. "It was a big win for us, a really big win for us," Combs said. "We've been struggling off and on all year."
— Bulletin staff report
the next five matches to fall behind 24-21.
SeeCougars/C4
With a little more than a
By Kevin Hampton Bend's Damarea Dunnigan attempts to get Mountain View's Evan Mclean in a hold during the113-pound match Thursday night at Mountain View.
Corvaltis Gazette-Times
CORVALLIS — Gary Andersen did not have a moment season. Andersen was left with a small window of time after taking over as Oregon State's
Redmondpowers tovictory over Ridgeview
head football coach in December, and he was busy working the phones late Tuesday night before the letters of intent
Bulletin staff report wins by forfeit propelled Redmond High to a 59-12 road wrestling dual meet win over Ridgeview on Thursday night, the Panthers' final event of the regular season before next week's district championships. Tanner Boatman (106 pounds), Austin Doescher (113), Matthew McCain (132) and Jacob Brauchler (285) each logged a pin for Redmond, which will begin
preparations for the Class 5A Special District 4 championships in Hood River
a 14-10 win at 120 for Ridgeview, and Cohen Merritt booked a 7-3 victory at
scheduled for next Friday and Saturday. "We had nothing to be ashamed of,"
145 pounds. "Physically ,we'vebeen preparing
Ridgeview coach Dan Elliott said. "Our
pretty hard for two weeks," said Elliott,
kids competed their hearts out tonight. They just got beat by a team with more experience." Brent Yeakey recorded the Ravens' lone fall of the night, pinning Redmond's
whose team travels to Albany Saturday
Bunker Parrish in 1 minutes, 42 seconds
at 195 pounds. Abraham Nonato posted
were signed and delivered on Wednesday. "It was hectic up to last night on the phone. I was on the phone until midnight communicating with family and parents and kids," Andersen said Wednesday. "Whenyou'relateonthe processlikethis,itgoesright
for the Mid-Valley Classic before the
district championships. "This weekend will be more of a mental mindset. A pretty rough score against Redmond is not because we're a bad team. It's because they're a tough team."
down to the wire."
See Beavs/C4 PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Now Open for Play!
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Unafraid of change, Manfred faces pitches onpace of play, gambling By Barry Svrluga WASHINGTON — Baseball hinges on so
Daily Shotgun Startat 11:00am
Sh ou l d drastic defensive shifts be disal-
lowed? — people listen. So, listen.
or a strike. He's safe or out. You win or
gers itself," Manfred said Wednesday. He has been commissioner less than
"Anything that stands still endan-
two weeks, and it is clear in all his pub-
Manfred
now runs. He is 56 years old, a Harvard-trained lawyer hardened by baseball's labor wars going back more than a quarter of a century, now entrusted with overseeing a $9 billion business that also happens to be a civic institution. While he's still growing accustomed to the somewhat ridiculous honorific of "Mr. Commissioner" — "I've been
Rob for a long time" — his word now carri es weight it did not a year ago. So when Manfred dives into baseball's
On Our Beautiful Greens
gray areas — Does the game need to speed up? How well does instant replay work?
many black-and-white issues. The ball was fair or foul. The pitch was a ball
determine a victor. Either/or. This is the world Rob Manfred
Jarmal Reid leadsOregon State to a55-50 win over Washington State,C3
first class with Beavs to spare during this recruiting
lose. There are no ties, even if it takes 18 innings on a cold October night to
Beavers hangon to deat Cougars
completes
After three straight falls by
The Washington Post
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Andersen
week before the Class 5A Special District 4 champi-
REDMOND — Four falls and four
The John DayCitizen's Cross Country Ski Race, originally scheduled for Feb. 15at Diamond LakeResort, has been canceled due to a lack of snow. According to a press release from the Southern OregonNordic Club, which organized the event, much of the course is completely bare. TheNational Weather Service is calling for rain — but no snow — at Diamond Lake over the coming weekend.
be happier with this group of guys. To not have surprises is the key." See Ducks /C4
• Mountain View takes 42-33 a victory over BendHighwith districts on the horizon
ately needed in their final wres-
Ski race in John Day canceled
"A bunch of those guys already on campus are the ally," Ducks coach Mark Hel-
There, Cody Edelblut provided a result the Cougars desper-
SKIING
with their new teammates.
buzz-type of situations nation-
HOCKEY
— Bulletin staff report
No hype, just hard at work
Photos by Ryan Brennecke 1 The Bulletin
Mountain View's Toby Arndt works on an arm hold on Bend's Logan Blake during the182-pound match Thursday night in Bend.
Bulletin staff report The 132-pound matchup was "magic," according to Mountain
The Portland Winterhawks professional minor league hockeyteam will host a viewing party tonight in Bend for its Western Hockey League game against the Seattle Thunderbirds in Seattle. The gathering will take place at Riverbend Brewing Sports Pub, 2650 NEDivision St. Live broadcast of the game via Root Sports begins at 7:30 p.m. Winterhawks teammemorabilia will be given away during the party.
man 2015 class the Ducks
unveiled on Wednesday had already signed letters of intent
382-3180 or 541-5936222. — Bulletin staffreport
Winterhawks viewing party
last-second fax to roll in. Fivemembers ofthe22-
4'
lic proclamations since he took over for t he retiring Bud Selig that Manfred will not stand still, even when the is-
suesarenot assim pleasfairorfoul,black or whi te .
Take, for instance, the pace of play. Acco r d ing to data provided by Baseball Prospectus, major league games took an average — an average — of 3.13 hours last season.
Ten years earlier, the average was 2.85 hours. T h a t is an increase of almost 17 minutes per game. SeeManfred /C4 •
•
C2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY GOLF
LPGA Tour ,Bahamas Classic PGA Tour,Farmers InsuranceOpen HOCKEY College, Wisconsin at PennState College, Ohio State at Minnesota WHL, Portland at Seattle
Time T V /Radio 8 :30 a.m. G olf noon Golf 3:30 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m. Bi g Ten 7 :30 p.m. R o ot
BASKETBALL
NBA, Los AngelesClippers at Toronto Men's college, Dayton at GeorgeWashington Men's college, Siena at lona Women's college, Oregon atWashington State Women's college, Providence atSeton Hall Men's college, High Point at Coastal Carolina NBA, Miami at SanAntonio High school, Mountain View atBend Women's college, Stanford at Arizona St. Women's college, OregonState at Washington
4 p.m. ESP N 4 p.m. ES P N2 4 p.m. ES P NU 5 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 5 p.m. FS1 6 p.m. ES P NU 6:30 p.m. ESPN 6:50 p.m. COTV 7 p.m. Pa c -12 7 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.)
BOXING
Sergio Mora vs. Abie Han
6 p.m.
ES P N2
ON DECK Today Boys basketball: MountainViewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview, 7 p.mcCotage Groveat Sisters,715p mcMadrasatCrookCounty,7p m.; Coquille atLaPine, 6:30p.m.; Weston-McEwenat Culver,4:30p.m.;PaisleyatCentral Christian,7:30 p.m.;NorthLakeat Gilchrist, 7 p.m. Girls basketball: Bend at Mountain View,7 p.m.; Redmondat Ridgeview,5:15 p.m.; CottageGrove at Sisters,5:45p.mcCrookCountyat Madras,7 p.m.;Coquigeat LaPine,5 p.m.;Weston-McEwen at Culver, 6p.m.;Paisleyat Central Christian,6 p.m.; TrinityLutheranat Triad, 4 p.m.; NorthLake at Gilchrist, 5p.m. Wrestling: SistersatJunction City, 6 p.mcMadras, Gilchrist atCottageGrove Invitational, TBD
rr
r
p
,Rz
p
I
Wrestling
Australian, Perth at Adelaide 1 2:30 a.m. M L B SOCCER Australia, Melbourne Victory vs. Melbourne Ci t y12:30 a.m. F S 2 England, TottenhamHotspur vs. Arsenal 4:45a.m. NBCSN England, Aston Villa vs Chelsea 7 a.m. NB CSN England, Everton vs Liverpool 9 :30 a.m. NBC England, Burnley vsWest Bromwich Albion 4 a.m. (Sun.) NBCSN BASKETBALL
Men's college, Delaware atNortheastern 9 a.m. CSNNW Men's college, lllinois at Michigan State 9 a.m. ESPN Men's college, Tennessee atGeorgia 9 a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Baylor at West Virginia 9 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, WakeForest at GeorgiaTech 9 a.m. Root Men's college, Notre Dameat Duke 10a.m. CBS Men's college, Temple atMemphis 10 a.m. ESPNN Men's college, Providence atXavier 10a.m. FS1 Men's college, Georgetown at Villanova 11 a.m. Fox Men's college,JamesMadisonatTowson 11 a.m. CSNNW Men's college, Kansas atOklahomaState 11 a.m. ESPN Men's college, Texas-Arlington at La.-Lafayette 11a.m. ESPN2 Men's college, TexasTechat lowa State 11 a.m. ESPNU Men's college, Wyoming at Air Force 11 a.m. Root Men's college, VCU at St. Bonaventure 11 a.m. NBCSN Men's college, Purdue at Minnesota noon Big Ten Men's college, Oklahoma atTexasChristian noon ESPNN Men's college, DePaul atButler 12:30 p.m. FS1 Men's college, Texas atKansas State 1 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Syracuse at Pittsburgh 1 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Nebraska atPennState 1 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, BYU at Loyola Marymount 1 p.m. Root Men's college, Mississippi State at Arkansas 1 p.m. SEC Men's college, St. Louis at Fordham 1 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, Arizona atArizona State 1:30 p.m. Fox Men's college, Northwestern at Wisconsin 2:30 p.m. Big Ten Men's college, Alabamaat LSU 3 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, TexasA&M at Missouri 3 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Utah State atNewMexico 3 p.m. Root Men's college, Mississippi at Auburn 3:30 p.m. SEC Men's college, Louisville at Virginia 4 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Missouri State at Wichita State 5 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Southern Methodist at Tulsa 5 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, UCLA at California Pac-12 5 p.m. CSNNW, NBA, Portland at Dallas 5:30 p.m. KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM,96.9-FM Men's college, Kentucky at Florida 6 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Hawaii at UC Santa Barbara 7 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Utah atColorado Pac-12 7 p.m. Men's college,GonzagaatSan Francisco 8:30 p.m. ESPN2 GOLF
10 a.m. noon noon
Golf CBS Golf
F ed Cup, first round, Poland vs. Russia 1 p.m . F ed Cup, first round, Poland vs. Russia 3 a.m . EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, Gulfstream Park;SantaAnita Park 2:30 p.m.
Tennis Tennis
TENNIS
FS1
HOCKEY
5 p.m.
Big Ten
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL MagiC fire COGCh Vaughn after 2-PluS SeaSOnS—The Orlando Magic fired JacqueVaughn as coach after two and half seasons, ending the tenure of the first-time headcoach brought in to help rebuild the franchise. General managerRobHennigan announced the move Thursday, following a15-37 start to the seasonandafter a series of lopsided losses during a10-game losing streak. It is the Magic's second skid of at least five gamessince the start of 2015. Assistant James Borrego hasbeennamed interim coach. Orlando was also15-37 through52games lastseason.The39-year-oldVaughn ends his Orlando tenure with a 58-158overall record.
FOOTBALL Seattle'S ThOmaS haStorn ladrum, Will needSurgeryTheSeattleSeahawks'vauntedsecondarywasabeatenupgroupinthe Super Bowl. Three ofthefour starters in Seattle's defensive backfield played with significant injuries in the28-24 loss to NewEngland. The latest to beconfirmedwas All-Pro free safety Earl Thomas,who hasa torn labrum in his left shoulder and isscheduledfor surgery. Thomas' agent, David Mulugheta, confirmed theinjury and needfor surgery in an email Thursday toTheAssociated Press. Surgery wasthe likely outcome after Thomassuffered adislocated shoulder in the first half of the NFCchampionship game. Hereturned to play thesecond half in the victory over GreenBayandplayed in last Sunday's Super Bowl against New Englandwearing abrace. Thomaswas in for every defensive play of the loss to thePatriots andmissed only four plays of the NFCtitle game. — From wire reports
Redmond69, Ridgeview12 At Ridgeview 166 —TannerBoatman, Red, pins StevenBryant, RV, I:48. 113 —Austin Doescher, Red, pinsMike Potter,RV,3:00. 126 —AbrahamNonato, RV,def. Bailey Fisher,Red,14-10.126 —AustinRystedt,Red, wins byforfeit. 132 — MatthewMccain, Red,pins Micah Cupp,RV,I:45.138 — DaytonWoodward, Red,def. CarsonDedmon, RV,13-4. 146— Cohen Merritt, RV, def. JordanChristiansen, Red,7-3. 162 —MitchelWi l Hett, Red,winsbyforfeit. 160—Hunter Smith, Red,wins byforfeit.176 —GabeBrauchler, Red,winsbyforfeit. 162—BrennanYates, Red, def. Austin Hill, RV,11-0. 196— BrentYeakey, RV,pins BunkerParrish, Red,I:42. 226 — MarioNonato, Red, def.ConnorSperling, RV,4-3. 286 — Jacob BrauchleRed, r, pinsSean Hancock, RV,4;37.
BASKETBALL Men's coiieg Pac-12 AR TimesPBT
Arizona Utah Stanford
W L PcL W L Pct. 8 I .888 20 2 .909
7 2 .778 17 4 .810 7 3 .700 16 6 .727 Oregon 6 4 .600 16 7 .696 O regon St. 6 4 .6 0 0 15 7 .681 UCLA 6 4 .600 14 9 .608 Colorado 4 5 .444 11 10 .524 C alifornia 4 6 .40 0 14 9 .608 Washington St. 4 6 . 400 10 12 .454 A rizona St. 3 6 .33 3 11 11 .500 Washington 3 7 .30 0 14 8 .636 S outhern Cal I 9 .1 0 0 9 13 .409
Thursday'sGames
UCIA 69,Stanford67 Oregon St.55, Washington St. 50 California 70,SouthernCal69
Saturday'sGames
Arizonaat ArizonaSt.,1:30 p.m. UCIA atCalifornia,5 p.m. Utah atColorado, 7p.m.
Tbursday'sSummary
OregonSt. 55,WashingtonSt. 50 WASHINGTO NBT. (10-12) Iroegbu 4-112-411, Railey3-41-2 7,Hawkinson 7-13 2-2 16,Lacy2-10 0-25, Johnson2-7 0-0 6, Redding 0-1 2-22, Kernich-Drew0-00-00, Longrus 1-11-43, Boese 0 40 00. Totals19-61 6-1666. DREGDN ST. I16-7) Payton II 3-60-0 6,Duvivier 6-172-515, Morris-Walker 2-5 0-0 6, Gomis 1-62-6 4, Schaftenaar 1-81-1 3,N'diaye0-01-21, Sanders0-00-00, Reid 8-12 4-820,Livesay0-0 0-00. Totals 21-6416-22 65. Halftime —Washington St. 32-30. 3-Point Goal— s Washington St. 4-21 (Johnson2-4, Iroegbu 1-6, Lacy1-6, Hawkinson0-1, Boese0-4), Oregon St. 3-14(Morris-Walker2-4, Duvivier1-5, PaytonII 0-1, Schaftenaar 0-4). FouledOut—Longrus, Railey. Rebounds —Washington St. 43(Hawkinson10), OregonSt. 34(PaytonII 11).Assists—Washington St. 16 (Hawkinson 5), OregonSt. 12(Duvivier 4). Total Fouls—Washington St.18, OregonSt. 14.A—5,502.
TENNIS
Wo m e n's college TDP 26 No. I SouthCarolina 58,No.22Georgia35 No. 4NotreDame75,Virginia 54 No.5Maryland77,PennState62 No.25Syracuse61, No.13 North Carolina 56 No.14Te xasABM 55,Missouri48 No. 15Duke70,WakeForest 53 No. 16lowa73,Ohio State65 No. 21Rutgers46, No.19Nebraska43 No.24GeorgeWashington52,Davidson35 EAST Bosto nCollege68,Clemson53 Delaware 70,Northeastern 61 Elon84,Towson70 Fairfield63,Canisius54 Fordham 54, St.Bonaventure 51 George Washington52,Davidson35 lona60,Manhattan41 Marist 75,Niagara66 Maryland77, PennSt. 62 Monmouth(NJ)67, St. Peter's 52 Rutgers46,Nebraska43 Siena65,Rider43 Syracuse61,North Carolina56 SDUTH Campbel61, l CharlestonSouthern47 Dayton84,George Mason73 Duke70,Wake Forest53 GeorgiaSt.82, GeorgiaSouthern54 LSU60,Auburn49 Liberty61,Gardner-Webb48 Louisiana-Lafayette 70, AppalachianSt.66 Miami42,VirginiaTech39 MurraySt. 86,SEMissouri 81 NewOrleans90,McNeeseSt.86,30T Pittsburgh60, NCState50 Presbyterian78,HighPoint 59 Radford52,Coastal Carolina 43 SouthCarolina58, Georgia35 SouthernMiss.70, MiddleTennessee65, OT Stephen F.Austin 69,NorthwesternSt. 61 Tennessee St.68, E.Kentucky62 UAB63,LouisianaTech54 UNCAsheville 88,Longwood77, 20T Vanderbil58, t Mississippi 54 MIDWEST Hlinois95,Minnesota69 lowa73,OhioSt.65 Michigan72, MichiganSt.59 NorthDakota67, S.Utah52 Northwestern75,Indiana69 NotreDam e75, Virginia 54 TexasA&M 55,Missouri48 SOUTHWE ST ArkansasSt.91,Troy72 FAU68,UTEP63 Housto nBaptist59,TexasA8M-CC54 Lamar73,AbileneChristian 58 Marshal72, l Rice69 Texas-PanAmerican69, UMKC51 UALR 68, Louisiana-Monroe44 UTSA74, FIU56 W. Kentucky77, North Texas49 FARWEST BYU 77,Pepperdine58 E.Washington65,Montana64 Gonzaga 76, SantaClara49 LongBeachSt.62,UCIrvine 46 Montan aSt.76,Idaho65 N. Arizona 51, N.Colorado49 NewMexicoSt.70,ChicagoSt.53 SanDiego68,LoyolaMarymount49 SanFrancisco79,Portland44 Seattle59,GrandCanyon56 UC Davis73, CSNorthridge67 UC Riversid77, e CalSt.-Fugerton 69 utah Valley70, CSBakersfield 58
HOCKEY
TOP 26
No. 2Gonzaga77, SantaClara63 Cincinnati62,No.23SMU54 Holy Cross 70,Colgate 60 LIU Brooklyn72,Robert Morris 65 LaSalle64,Richmond62 Mass. -Lowell67,UMBC51 Quinnipiac72,Monmouth (NJ) 52 Rider54,Fairfield 52,OT St. Francis(NY)90, CCSU81 SOUTH Auburn81, LSU77 Chattanooga74,Furman71, OT E. Kentucky 81,Belmont 69 Georgia Southern58,GeorgiaSt. 54 Louisiana-Lafayette 81,Appalachian St.66 Marshal69, l Rice55 Mercer76, TheCitadel 53 MiddleTennessee61, SouthernMiss. 51 Morehead St.72,TennesseeSt. 57 MurraySt.82, SEMissouri 72 Samford76,W.Carolina 72 UAB80,LouisianaTech60 UT-Martin76,AustinPeay64 UTEP63, FAU56 OTSA74, FIU63 W. Kentucky65,North Texas59 Wofford74, ETSU64 MIDWEST GreenBay81, Milwaukee70 IPFW84,S. DakotaSt.74 lowa72,Michigan54 N.DakotaSt.64,Nebraska-Omaha57 NewMexicoSt.69, ChicagoSt. 61,OT Oral Roberts78, IUPUI68 SouthDakota75, W.Ilinois 61 UMKC70,Texas-PanAmerican45 SOUTHWE ST Cincinnati62,SMU54 Louisiana-Monroe 77,UALR61 Troy69,ArkansasSt.64 Tulsa57,Houston 44 FARWEST CS Bakersfield72, UtahValley 69 Cal St,-Fugerton 69, CSNorthridge 53 California70,SouthernCal69 E.Washington75,Montana69 Gonzaga77,SantaClara63 GrandCanyon66, Seattle 64 Hawai59, i CalPoly56 Idaho80, MontanaSt. 71 LongBeachSt.68, UCRiverside 63 LoyolaMarymount70, SanDiego61 N. Arizona 65,N. Colorado60 NorthDakota89,S.Utah 85,OT Oregon St.55, Washington St. 50 Pepperdine80,BYU74 Portland69,SanFrancisco57 UC Davis75,UCIrvine 56 UCLA69,Stanford67
37-39—76s 36-40—76 s
39-38—77 s 38-39—77 s
Leaderboard SCOR E -8 -7 -6 -6 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5 -5
38-39—77s 36-42—78 s 38-41 —79s 37-42-79n 40-41WIs WD
THRU F
15 15
BahamasLPGA Classic
Tbursday'sGames
EAST Bryant55,MountSt. Mary's53
38-37 —75s 37-38 —75s 39-36—75 s 39-37—76 s 40-36—76 s 37-39—76 s 38-38—76 s
LPGA Tour
Mountai nView42,Bend33 At Mountain View 166 —CalebDuhn, MV,winsbyforfeit. 113Damare aDunnigan,B,pinsEvanMclean,MV,6:56. 126 —TravisMartin, MV,def. CyrusTadjiki, B,11-6. 126 —HadenKingrey, MV,pins Maitiu Milar-Sanchez, B,:37.132 — CodyEdelblut,MV,pinsSage Farnworth, B,:58.138 —ChanceBeutler, 8, def. Holde nKingery,MV,9-8.146— ChaseMisener,MV, pins Dalton Lickteig, B,309.162—KalebWinebarger, MV,pinsJacobDupuis,B,:59.160— DylanGreg, MV,pinsHaakonKjegesvik,8,3:36.176 — Cade Foisset, B, wins byforfeit. 182 — TobyArndt, MV, def. Logan Blake, B,10-5.196 — JordanGentner, B, wins byforfeit. 220 —Michael Hageman,B,winsby forleit.285 —David O'Connor,B,wins byforfeit.
MichaelBlock SungJoonPark BrianDavis KyleStanley EricAxley JustinLeonard BenCrane KyleIhompson DanielMiernicki ScottBrown DerekErnst CharlieBeljan ZackSucher CarlosSainzJr ChrisGigey DavidLingmerth TigerWoods
1. Nicholalhsompson 2. Michael Thompson 3. Brooks Koepka 3. Cam eronTringale 5.Jhonattan Vegas 5.FredrikJacob son 5. Brendon deJonge 5. Chad Campbell 5. ChrisKirk 5. IanPoulter I1. J.J. Henry I1. MartinLaird 11.GaryWoodland 11. Jonas Blixt 11.Spenc erLevin 11. HarrisEnglish 11.ScottPinckney
PREPS
BASEBALL
College, Michigan State at Michigan
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Saturday Boys basketball: Culver atPilot Rock,5:30p.m.; CentralChristianat NorthLake,3:30p.m. Girls basketball: Culverat Pilot Rock,4 p.mcCentral Christian atNorthLake,2 p.m.;Gilchrist at Trinity Lutheran,5:30p.m. Wrestling:Ridgeviewat Mid-VageyClassic in Albany, TBD;Madras, Gilchrist at CottageGrove InvitationalTBD , Alpine skiing: OSSA atMt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, 1-5, 10a.m. Nordic skiing: OISRA classic andbiathlon at Mt. Bachelor,11:30a.mcOHSNOpursuit, classicand skate ,atMt.HoodMeadows,TBD
SATURDAY
PGA Tour,Farmers InsuranceOpen PGA Tour,Farmers InsuranceOpen LPGA Tour ,Bahamas Classic
IN THE BLEACHERS
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPST
EasternConference TampaBay Detroit Montreal Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 53 33 15 5 71 172 138 51 30 12 9 69 152 129 50 32 15 3 67 132 114 51 27 17 7 61 136 127 50 23 17 10 56 125 142 50 20 21 9 49 138 140 52 22 26 4 48 147 160 52 15 34 3 33 97 184
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA N.y.lslanders 51 33 17 1 67 163 145 P ittsburgh 5 1 2 9 14 8 66 147 129 N.Y.Rangers 49 30 15 4 64 148 117 Washington 52 27 15 10 64 153 130 Philadelphia 52 22 22 8 52 142 154 New Jersey 51 20 22 9 49 115 139 Columbus 49 21 25 3 45 121 155 C arolina 5 1 1 8 2 6 7 43 111 135
WesternConference Central Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA 51 33 12 6 72 155 123 51 34 13 4 72 165 121 51 31 18 2 64 155 118 53 26 18 9 61 146 140 52 22 19 11 55 134 146 50 24 20 6 54 138 140 51 23 20 8 54 162 167 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA A naheim 5 2 3 4 12 6 74 157 140 S anJose 5 3 2 8 1 8 7 63 149 144 C algary 52 2 9 2 0 3 61 152 132 Vancouver 50 28 19 3 59 135 131 Los Angeles 51 21 18 12 54 136 139 A rizona 52 1 9 2 6 7 45 121 173 E dmonton 5 2 1 4 29 9 37 120 172
Nashville St. Louis Chicago Winnipeg Colorado Minnesota Dallas
Thursday'sGames N.Y.Islanders3,Philadelphia 2, SO Carolina2, Arizona1,SO St. Louis3, Buffalo0 Washington2,Otawa1 Florida 3,LosAngeles 2 Anaheim 5, Nashville 2 Tampa Bay5, Dallas 3 Detroit 3,Colorado0 SanJose5, Vancouver I Today'sGames Torontoat NewJersey,4 p.m. AnaheimatWashington, 4p.m. St. LouisatColumbus,4p.m. ChicagoatWinnipeg,5p.m. Pittsburghat Calgary, 6p.m.
ATP OpenBuddeFrance Thursday,Montpellier, France SecondRound PhilippKohlschreiber(3), Germany,def. Paul-Henri Mathieu,France,3-6, 7-6(5), 6-4. SteveDarcis, Belgium,def.JarkkoNieminen,Finland,6-2,7-6(3). GaelMonfils(1), France,def. KennydeSchepper France,6-4,7-6(3). DenisIstomin(6), uzbekistan,def. DudiSela, Israel, 7-6(1), 6-2. ZagrebIndoors Thursday,Zagreb, Croatia SecondRound GuigermoGarcia-Lopez(3), Spain, def. Damir Dzumhur,Bosnia-Herzegoyina, 6-1, 6-1. Ricardas Berankis, Lithuania,def.GigesMuller (4), Luxembourg, 3-6, 7-6(5), 6-4. Andreas Seppi (5), Italy, def.JamesWard, Britain, 7-5, 6-7(4),6-3. Viktor Troicki(7), Serbia,def. GoSoeda, Japan, 6-3, 6-1. MarcelGranogers(8), Spain,def.lvanDodig, Croatia, 7-6 (8), 4-6, 6-3. Igor Sijsling,Netherlands,def. AdrianMannarino (2), France, 7-6(3), 4-6, 6-1. EcuadorOpen Thursday,Quito, Ecuador SecondRound FelicianoLopez(1), Spain, def.AlejandroGonzalez Colombia,7-5,6-2. Dusan Lajovic(7), Serbia,def.NicolasJarry, Chile 6-4, 3-6,6-3. Paolo Lorenzi(5), Italy, def.AlejandroFaga,Colombia,7-5,6-1. FernandoVerdasco(3), Spain, def. Gerald Melzer Austria,7-6(2), 6-4.
GOLF PGA To4r Farm ers InsuraneOpen Thursday s-TorreyPines, SouthCourse I7,698yards, par 72) n-Torrey Pines , North Cours e (7,662yards, par 72) Ban Diego Purse: $6.3 milion l Ia-amateur) Parlial First Ro ulld 32-32—64n NicholasThompson 34-32—66n BrooksKoepka 32-34—66n Cameron Iringale 34-33—67s Jhonattan Vegas 32-35—67n Freddie Jacobson 33-34—67n Brendon deJonge ChadCampbell 33-34—67n ChrisKirk 34-33-67n J.J. Hen ry 35-33—68n MartinLaird 35-33—68 s GaryWoodland 36-32-68n Jonas Blixt 34-34—68n SpencerLev in 35-33—68 s ColtKnost 35-34-69n RickieFowler 35-34—69n Woody Austin 34-35—69n Brendan Steele 34-35-69n ChrisWiliams 32-37—69n Jim He rman 35-34—69n AndresGonzales 34-35-69n lom Gigis 35-34—69n 33-36—69n Padraig Harrington 35-34-69n LukeDonald 34-36—70n KevinChappell 34-36—70n Luke Guthrie 34-36-70n Blake Adams 36-34—70n JasonGore 35-35-70s DavidToms 35-35—70 s LucasGlover Seung-Yu lNoh 35-35—70s CamiloVilegas 34-36—70n AlexPrugh 36-34—70 n RyanArmour 34-36—70n Tyrone VanAswegen 35-35—70n AndrewPutnam 34-36—70n RobertAge nby 34-36—70n GregChalmers 35-35—70n BrianStuard 37-33—70n Bill Lunde
AaronBaddeley ErikCompton MartinFlores K.J.Choi Danny Lee MaxHom a ByronSmith CarlPettersson SeanO'Hair James Hahn ChezReavie JamieDonaldson RyoIshikawa MattEvery Charles Howel III Billy Horsc hel Jordan Spieth JustinThomas Hudson Swafford ZacBlair GonzaloFdez-Castan RussellKnox HeathSlocum JohnSenden RobertGarrigus CharleyHoffman Stewarl Cink HidekiMatsuyama Sang-Moo nBae a-Jake Knapp SteveWheatcroft Cameron Smith RogerSlona BryceMolder Jarrod Lyle JohnHuh Jim Re nner RetiefGoosen DayisLoyeIII MikeWeir PaulCasey BenjaminAlvarado Jonathan Randolph SamSaunders Chad Collins PatPerez
36-35—71n 37-34—71n 37-34—71n 35-36—71n 33-38—71 s 34-37—71n 39-32—71n 34-37—71n 38-34—72 s 39-33—72s 36-36—7 s2 37-35—72s 37-35—72s 38-34—72 s 35-37—72n 37-35—72n 34-38—72 n 38-34—72n 37-35—72n 34-38-72n 35-37—72s 37-35—72s 34-38-72n 34-38—72n 39-33—72n 37-36—73 s 34-39—73s 37-36—73s 34-39-73n 33-40—73s 36-37—73n 37-36 —73s 35-38 —73n 37-36-73s 36-37—73n 34-39—73n 39-35-74s 36-38—74n 35-39—74s 37-37-74s 34-40—74 s 37-37—74s 36-38—74n 37-37—74 s 35-39—74s 35-40-75s 39-36—75 s
Thursday At OceanClubGolf Course Paradise Island,Bahamas Purse: $1.3 million yardage: 6,660;Par: 73(36-37) Parlial First Round 66 golfers didnot finish therouriil 36-31 —67 Brooke Pancake 33-35—68 NatalieGulbis 34-34—68 BrittanyLincicome 34-34—68 Inbee Park 35-34—69 AriyaJutanugarn 32-37—69 Azahara Munoz 33-36—69 Gerina Piler 33-37—70 0 Baek 32-38—70 Sandra Gal 37-33 —70 DanielleKang 33-37 —70 SeiYoung Kim 34-36 —70 SeonHw aLee 36-34—70 JiYoung Oh 36-34—70 HeeYoungPark 34-37—71 ChristelBoeljon 34-37—71 llhee Lee 37-34—71 PernillaLindberg 36-36—72 MarinaAlex PaulaCreamer 37-35—72 LisaFe rrero 35-37 —72 JayeMarie Green 36-36—72 36-36—72 MinaHarigae WeiLingHsu 34-38—72 Katherine Kirk 35-37—72 MeenaLee 35-37—72 Min Lee 36-36—72 KristyMcPherson 35-37—72 AnnaNordqvist 35-37—72 AmyYang 36-36—72 SarahKemp 35-38—73 Rebecca Lee-Bentham 36-37—73 Ai Miyaza to 37-36—73 DewiClaireSchreefel 36-37—73 Ashleigh Simon 34-39—73 AngelaStanford 35-38—73 Kellylan 36-37—73 LineVedel 36-37—73 KatieBurnett 37-37—74 MinjeeLee 37-37—74 LizetteSalas 35-39—74 Thidapa Suwannapura 37-37—74 NicoleCastrale 35-40—75 PazEcheverria 40-35—75 Kathleen Ekey 38-37 —75 Brooke M.Henderson 36-39—75 MoriyaJutanugarn 35-40—75 SooBin Kim 38-37—75 MinSeoKwak 37-38—75 Sydnee Michaels 40-35—75 MorganPressel 39-36—75 BeatrizRecari 38-37—75 Laura Diaz 38-38—76 JennyGleason 37-39—76 CristieKerr 39-37—76 DemiRunas 38-38—76 Michege Wie 38-38—76 AlenaSharp 39-38—77 KrisTamulis 39-38—77 MalloryBlackwelder 38-40—78 MiJungHur 41-37—78 Leaderboard SCORE 1. Brooke Pancake -6 -5 2. Inbee Park -5 2. NatalieGulbis 2. Brittany Lincicome -5 5.Joanna Klatten 5. GerinP ailer 5. Azah araMunoz 5. Ariya Jutanugarn -3 9. Amy Anderson -3 9. Sei-Youn gKim -3 9. Mirim Lee -3 9.IJaniege Kang -3 9. JiYoun gOh -3 9. BeleM nozo -3 9. Sandra Gal -3 9. Hee youngPark -3 9.Seon Hw aLee -3 9. 0 Bae k -3 9. Christina Kim
THRU F 12
F F 6
F 9
F 9 9
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague
BOSTON REDSOX—Agreed to termswith LHP WadeMileyonathree-year contract. NEWYORKYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP Scott Baker,INFCole Figueroa, INFJonathanGalvez, CJuanGraterol, INFNick NoonanandCEddy Rodriguez on minorleaguecontracts. National League COLOR ADO ROCKIES — Named Jil Campbel vice presidentof communications 8 marketingand Warren Miler directorofcommunications. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA— FinedTorontoG DeMarDeRozan$15,000 for makinex gcessivecontact with BrooklynG-FBojan BogdanovicduringaFeb. 4game. NEW YORKKNICKS— Assigned FCleanthony Early toWestchester (NBADL). ORLANDOMAGIC— FiredcoachJacqueVaughn. NamedJames Borregointerim coach. PHILADE LPHIA76ERS—Signed GTimFrazierto a10-daycontract. FOOTBA LL National Football League CHICAGO BEARS—Agreestotermswith running backscoachStanDrayton. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS—NamedButchBarry assistantoffensiveline coachand AndrewWeidinger and MilesSmith quality controlcoaches. TENNESSEETTA INS— NamedDickLeBeauassistant head coachin chargeof defense.Promoted Mike Mularkeytoassistantheadcoach alongwith coaching tight ends. NamedJasonTuckerwidereceiverscoach. Waived-injuredOTMichael Oher. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES— Recaled FAlex Bolduc from Portland (AHL). DALLAS STARS—RecalledRWBrett Ritchiefrom
Texas(AHL). FLORIDA PANTHERS— RecalledDStevenKampfer from SanAntonio(AHL). MONTR EAL CANADIENS — Signed Hamilton G MikeCondontoatwo-yearcontract extensionthrough the2016-17season. Recalled FJacobdel laRosefrom Hamilton(AHL). WINNIPEG JETS— Recalled F Patrice Cormier from St.John's(AHL). PlacedFEvander Kaneon injuredreserve.
COLLEGE COLOR ADO—NamedJimLeavitt defensivecoordinatorandJoeTumpkin safeties coach. ILLINOIS— Announcedassistant football coach Mike Begamywassuspendedforonegamenextseason aftertheNCA A ruledthat he improperly helpeda recruit get an associate's degree.AnnouncedsophomoreQBAaronBailey is transferring. NORTHCAROLI NA — Announced defensive assistantfootball coachDanDischwon't returnnext season.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
NHL ROUNDUP
eaverss a e e The Associated Press Oregon State struggled shooting the ball, reserve Jarmal Reid proved indispensable. "Got us some big baskets and then he was a physical presence defensively," said Beavers coach Wayne Tinkle. "He asked me a couple of times to take
a om e w i w i n Hues «W««« «««'.; ' ',"'::««"« i:,'
'Pk~ '
CORVALLIS — On a night when
and committed two turnovers in the
.iP,«@'~>J
opening three minutes of the game. «4F;.,'«
e+y~4
«««'« ~«
««
.«;
.;:.'p4 «,
Thursday night. Malcolm Duvivier added 15 points for the Beavers (15-7, 6-4 Pac-12), who improved to 13-0 at Gill
96.9-FM
The Associated Press
He had six points and 11 rebounds on
is Blues have goalie Jake
Thursday. DeVonte Lacy was averaging 17.7
Allen to thank for extending their point streak to a
points to lead the Cougars, but scored
franchise-best 13 straight games. Though the Blues were far from perfect, Allen was unbeatable in stopping 23
Pac-12
«',
Reid said he saw
t e team's usual scoring options having t rouble against t h e
Co "Malcolm and I, we saw that we needed to pick it up a little bit
California 70, USC 69: BERKELEY,
shots in a 3-0 win over the
Buffalo Sabres on Thursday night. "We're not going to put
The Golden Bears (14-9, 4-6 Pac-12) led most of the game but trailed 66-65 with 1:04 left before rallying to win their
a bow on it and send it to
third straight. UCLA 69, Stanford 67: STANFORD, Calif. — Norman Powell had 20 points
es said. "We had phenomenal goaltending once again
and eight rebounds, Isaac Hamilton scored 18 points and UCLA survived to
long enough for where we
beat Stanford for its third straight win.
Bryce Alford added 18 points to help the Bruins build a 22-point lead early in the second half before holding off a furious Cardinal comeback. Chasson Randle's running 3-pointer missed as
. -j
« .2' '
leaders out there on
the court," Reid said. Neither team was able to pull away until the Beavers went on an 8-0 run,
time expired.
with Reid's jumper putting Oregon
BUFFALO, N.Y.— David Backes and the St. Lou-
Calif. — Tyrone Wallace made a deep 3-pointer at the buzzer to lift California to a win over Southern California.
«
don ' t loseathome."
Radio: KICE 940-AM; more, not just scoring, KRC0690-AM, but also just being
Sa res
Entering the week, Gary Payton II was leading the Beavers with 12.8 points and eight rebounds per game.
only five against Oregon State. Also on Thursday:
Coliseum this season. "We don't even talk about it," Tinkle said. "We're at home. We
TV:FS1
s utout
30 at halftime.
State past Washington State 55-50
1:30 P.m., Sunday
11-2 run capped by Reid's lay-in to tie it forth contest, and the Cougars led 32-
«
Usually a low-post banger, Reid came offthe bench to score a career-high 20 points and lead Oregon
Washingtpnat 0ragpn State
The Beavers clawed back with an
at 23-all with 4:44 left in the half. The game turned intoa back-and-
him out. I said, 'We can't.'"
NeXtuP
C3
anybody. But we're going to take the two points," Backthat kept us in the game were able to capitalize on a few chances."
Dmitrij Jaskin scored on a wraparound late in the
second period, and Vladimir Tarasenko tapped in Backes' pass in the third period for St. Louis, which
improved its run to 12-0-1.
State up 51-44 with 2:27 left.
Top 25
The Cougars (10-12, 4-6) trimmed the lead to four points, but Reid's driving lay-in with 47 seconds left made the score53-47 and helped sealthew in. "I thought Reid just took the game to us, physically man-handled us on his drives," said Washington State coach
No. 2 Gonzaga 77, Santa Clara 63: SANTA CL A RA , C a lif. — Byron Wesley scored 17 points and keyed a
empty-netter as the Blues won their seventh straight. Allen did the grunt work
crucial second-half run that helped
in preserving the shutout,
Gonzaga rally for its 16th straight win
his third this season and
with a victory over Santa Clara. Kyle Wiltjer led the way with 22 points, in-
fourth of his career.
i
Ernie Kent. Josh Hawkinson had 16 points, 10
cluding a dunk at the buzzer that drew boos from the crowd and Gary Bell Jr. added 16 for the Bulldogs (23-1, 11-0 West Coast Conference), who shot a season-high 69 percent from the field.
~i:. o
rebounds and three steals and Ike Iroegbu scored 11 for the Cougars.
Jaden Schwartz added an
Kent said the Cougars have been
hurt by a lack of consistency. "We need Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press Cincinnati 62, No. 23 SMU 54: DALmore guys to be on their game," he Oregon State's Jarmal Reid (32) shoots against Washington State's Junior Longrus LAS — Jermaine Sanders scored added. during the second half of Thursday night's game in Corvallis. Reid had a team-high 15 points, including one of two huge Washington State outrebounded Or- 20 points as Oregon State won 55-50. 3-pointers for Cincinnati as they startegon State 43-34, but had 12 turnovers, ed to pull away late in a win over SMU. compared to the Beavers five. Both Sanders swished a 3-pointer from the "We aren't scoring a bunch of points. Tinkle said. teams shot poorly, with the Cougars right corner with 4:40 left to put the hitting 37.3 percent and the Beavers We have to play a certain pace, but if WSU o p ened up with an 8-0 lead as Bearcats (16-6, 7-3 American Athletic) shooting 38.9 percent. we defend, we'llbe in everyball game," Oregon State missed its first four shots up 53-46.
First, he got his left pad out to stop former Blues teammate Chris Stewart
on a breakaway with 7:32 left in the second period. Stewart was foiled again on a one-timer 3:45 into
the third period. Some t hree minutes later, A l -
len stopped Brian Flynn on two chances during a short-handed breakaway.
"I was just trying to wait him out as long as I could and got a stick on it," Allen
said of Flynn's chances.
NBAROUNDUP
NBA SCOREBOARD
The Associated Press Aldridge had 19 points and 13 reboundsforhisteam-record
12 rebounds for the Blazers,
. I «I
.«x
(
)(
who won their second straight after a three-game skid. M arkieff Morris ha d
18
points for the Suns, who dropped their third in a row. Phoenix climbed back into
the
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Portland guard Wesley Matthews, left, works the ball in against Phoenix guard Goran Dragic during the first half of Thursday
night's game in Portland.
g a me
in the third
p eriod af -
The Suns struggled with
t er
NSXt llP
tr ai l - turnovers, committing eight i ng by 1 9 in the first quarter alone, and in the f irst trailed 46-35 at halftime. The half , but first-half point total was a
Also on Thursday: Cavaliers 105, Clippers 94: C LEVELAND — L e B r o n James scored 23 points, Kevin Love had 24 and Cleveland
season low for Phoenix. pushed its winning streak to the Blazers The Suns closed the gap to 12 games with an easy win 52-46, but there was a scary over the Los Angeles Clipt hw a r t e d t he ra i i y m oment when A l e x L e n pers, who also lost their comwith a dom- crashed into the base of the posure. The Clippers were TV:CSNNW inant fourth basket and appeared toinjure whistled for five technical Ratiio:KBND q u a r t e r. his right ankle. He was able fouls, including four in a conportland at pallas When: 5:30 P.m., Saturday 1110-AM,
All Times PST
d-Toronto d-Cleyeland Washington Chicago Milwaukee Charlotte Miami Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
PORTLAND — LaMarcus
ultimately
Portland
to walk it off. 100.1-FM; ope n e d t he M orris' 3-pointer and a K RCO 690-AM, fourth w i t h free throw from Miles Plum96.9-FM a 9-2 run to lee pulled the Suns to 54-53
tentious third quarter when
go up 75-67. midway through the third Batum's 3-pointer stretched quarter. the lead to 86-75 with 6:03 The Suns briefly took a 63left. 62 lead after Eric Bledsoe's Portland went 6-9 in Jan- layup with 1:20 left in the third uary after ascending to the quarter, but Batum answered top spot in the Western Con- with a 3 on the other end.
Hornets 94, Wizards 87: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Ger-
ference standings earlier this
the Hornets beat the Wizards for the fifth straight time.
they lost their California cool and forward M att was ejected.
B a rnes
ald Henderson scored 27
points and Charlotte defeated Washington for the second time this week. Henderson
was 10 of 15 from the field as
Ttp-tns Suns: Phoenix assigned Charlotte won at Washington Jazz, the Blazers had lost five T.J. Warren and Tyler Ennis on Monday night, 92-88. of six. to their D -League affiliate Mavericks 101, Kings 78: The Suns were one of the Bakersfield on Wednesday. SACRAMENTO, Calif. teams that beat the Blazers ... The loss snapped a three- Monta Ellis had 21 points and last month, 118-113 in Phoe- game winning streak over six assists to lead Dallas, miseason. Before a 103-102 victory Tuesday night over the
nix on Jan. 21.
the Blazers.
But the Suns are struggling Trail Blazers: Matthews on the road, with six straight will compete in the 3-point losses, and they were coming contest at the All-Star Game. off a 102-101 loss at home to
Memphis on Monday.
He went into Thursday with an NBA-leading 151 3s this
nus Dirk Nowitzki and Rajon
Rondo, over struggling Sacramento. The Mavericks broke
open a tie game in the second quarter when they made nine straight shots, including four
season.... It was Aldridge's 3-pointers, in a 3I/2-minute 25th double-double of the span as they outscored the thews' 3-pointer. Portland got season.... Ex-Blazer Rasheed Kings 22-6. Dallas had a 37a spark off the bench from C.J. Wallace was at the game, and 20 edge in the second to take McCollum, who had 12points. the crowd chanted his name. a 60-43 halftime lead. The Blazers jumped out to a 25-13 lead on Wesley Mat-
Mavericks101, Kings 78
Standings
d-Atlanta
Thursday night. NicolasBatum scored 20 points and Robin Lopez, playing his second game after missing 23 with a broken right hand, had 11 points and
guys step up and fill a role." Allen carried the load
Aldridge SetSreCOrd, BlaZerSbeat SLlnS 220th double-double, and the Portland Trail Blazers beat the Phoenix Suns 108-87 on
"We've had our moments where we've not been at our best. But that's where other
EasternConference W L 41 9
33 17 31 20 31 20 30 20 27 22 22 27 21 28 20 28 19 31 18 30 18 32 15 37
608 10i/2
608 10'/2 600 11 551 13i/2
449 18'/z 429 19'/a 417 20 380 22 315 22 360 23 288 27 u 39 220 30 10 39 204 30'I~
WesternConference
d-Golden State d-Memphis Houston d-Portland LA. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio Phoenix NewOrleans Oklahoma City Denver Sacrame nto Utah LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
Pct GB 820 660 8
W L 39 8 37 12 34 15 34 16 33 17 34 18 31 18 28 23 26 23 25 24 19 31 17 31 17 32 13 36 9 40
Pd GB 830 755 3 694 6 680 6'/z 660 P/2 654 TA 633 9 549 13 531 14 510 15 380 21'/z 354 22'/a 347 23 265 27 184 31
Thursday'sGames Charlotte94,Washington 87 Cleveland105,LA,Clippers94 Dallas101,Sacramento 78 Portland108,Phoenix87 Today'sGames LA. Clippers atToronto, 4p.m. LA. Lakers atOrlando, 4p.m. Clevelandat Indiana,4 p.m. NewYorkatBrooklyn,4p.m. GoldenStateatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. DenveratDetroit, 4:30p.m. PhiladelphiaatBoston, 4:30 p.m. NewOrleansat OklahomaCity, 5p.m. Milwaukee atHouston, 5p.m. Memphisat Minnesota,5 p.m. Utah atPhoenix 6p.m. Miami atSanAntonio,6:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames ChicagoatNewOrleans,4 p.m. BrooklynatWashington, 4 p.m. Charlotteat Philadelphia,4:30p.m. GoldenStateatNewYork,4:30 p.m. PortlandatDalas, 5:30p.m. BostonatMilwaukee,5:30 p.m. Sacramentoat Utah, 6p.m.
Summaries
Blazers108, Suns87 PHOENIX (87) Tucker2-70-0 6, Mark.Morris8-191-318, Len 2-31-1 5,Bledsoe5-106-717, G.Dragic4-u 0-09, awrigh t1-3002,Thomas2-9226,Green4u 00 9, Marc.Morris4-80-08,Plumlee0-41-21, ZDragic 1-20-02, Bullock0-00-00, Goodwin1-12-24. ToIals 34-88 13-1787. PORTULND (108) Batum6-13 6-620, Aldridge 7-185-619, Lopez 5-101-211, Lillard6-151-213, Matthews5-15 2-2 14,Leonard3-52-28,Blake2-50-05,McCollum4-7 3-312, Barton1-10-03, Crabbe0-00-00, Robinson 0-00-00, Claver1-1 0-03. Totals40-9020-23108. Phoenix 15 20 30 22 — 87 Porlland 27 19 20 42 — 108 3-PointGoals—Phoenix 6-23 (Tucker 2-3, Bledsoe 1-2,G.Dragic1-3, Mark.Morris1-4, Green1-6, Z.Dragic0-1,Marc.Morris 0-2,Thomas0-2), Portland 8-31 (Batum 2-6, Matthews2-8, Barton1-1, Claver 1-1, Blake1-3,McCollum1-4,Leonard0-1,Aldridge 0-2, Lillard 0-5). FouledOut—None. ReboundsPhoenix 46(Mark.Morris8), Portland65(Aldridge 13). Assists —Phoenix 20 (G.Dragic 5), Portland21 (Batum7). TotalFouls—Phoenix 21, Portland 14. A—19,48809,980).
DALLASI101) Parsons 2-90-06, Aminu1-60-0 2,Chandler7-9 2-316, Barea 7-120-015, Ellis 9-160-021, Powell 2-5 0-0 4,Smith0-10-0 0, Vilanueva4-14 0-0 8, Harris 4-84-415, Jefferson5-111-314, Felton 0-3 0-00, Ledo 0-20-00. Totals 41-967-10101. SACRAME NTO(78) Gay2-137-811, Thom pson0-1 0-0 0, Cousins 8-167-823,Collison3-30-06,McLemore2-90-0 5, Stauskas1-10003, Sessions3-41-2 7, Wiliams 3-40-07, Casspi 2-31-1 5,Landry1-31-33, McCallum 2-100-04, Miller 0-10-00, Hollins2-20-04. Totals 29-7917-2278. Dallas 23 37 23 18 — 101 sacramento 23 2 0 17 18 — 78
Cavaliers105, Clippers 94 LA. CLIPPERS (94) Barnes 2-5 0-04, Griffin 7-172-316, Jordan3-4 248, Paul4-141-210,Crawford 6140 013, Rivers 4-11 1-210,Hawes4-62-2 11, D.Jones2-41-2 5, Turkoglu 00000, Davis391-27, Wilcox261-1 6, udoh1-12-24. Totals 38-9113-2094. CLEVELAND (105) James8-146-723, Love6-1410-1224,Mozgov5-7 2-612, Irving1-57-710,Smith6-100-016, Shumpert 1-52-24, Thom pson2-45-69, Dellavedova1-22-24, Miller0-51-21,Marion1-30-02,Haywood 0-10-00, JJones 0 20-00. Totals 31-7235-44105. L.A. Clippers 20 2 2 21 31 — 94 Cleveland 30 35 29 11 — 105
Hornets 94, Wizards 87 WASHINGTO N(87)
Pierce7-133-419, Nene5-101-211, Gortat2-10 448,Wall6133415,6eal051-21, Temple35 0-07, Humphries2-90-04,Blair2-50-04, Porter3-5 017,Butler590-0u. Totals358412-1787.
against the Sabres, as St. Louis (34-13-4) won its seventh straight and moved into a tie w ith Nashville atop the Central Division standlIlgs.
St. Louis' 13-game point streak is the NHL's longest since the Boston Bruins went 15-0-1 last March, according to STATS. With the NHL's worst re-
cord, the Sabres (15-34-3) understood the missed op-
portunities were what cost them against one of the NHL's elite.
Also on Thursday: Islanders 3, Flyers 2: P HILADELPHIA —
Cal
Clutterbuck scored the deciding goal in the seventh round of the shootout. Clutterbuck also scored in regulation for the New York
Islanders, as did Mikhail Grabovski. Panthers 3, Kings 2: SUNRISE, Fla.— Brandon Pirri scored with 3:05 remaining to lift Florida over
CHARLolTE(94)
struggling Los Angeles. Capitals 3, Senators 2:
10-157-827,stephenson4-11 0-0 u, M.williams 3-70-08, Maxie3-45-611, l Neal3-70-06. Totals
OTTAWA — Alex Ovech-
Kidd-Gilchrist2-47-811,Zeller0-3 0-0 0, Jefferson3-122-4 8, Roberts 5-131-1 12, Henderson 33-76 22-2794. Washington
Charlotle
30 2 4 20 13 — 87 34 15 20 25 — 94
Leaders ThroughThursda Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 49 405 384 1324 27.0 James,CLE 41 376 251 1071 26.1 Westbrook,OKC 35 310 238 890 25.4 Davis,NOR 44 417 246 1080 24.5 Anthony,NYK 38 343 176 919 24.2 Cousins,SAC 36 297 257 852 23.7 Aldridge,POR 44 410 196 1041 23.7 47 386 191 1110 23.6 Curry,GOL Griffin, LAC 50 439 237 1123 2z5 Thompson,GOL 46 372 143 1032 2z4 Bryant,LAL 35 266 196 782 2z3 Irving,CLE 48 373 192 1039 21.6 Lillard,POR 50 365 219 1074 21.5 35 291 153 750 21.4 Wade,MIA 41 319 171 867 21.1 Bosh,MIA Rebounds G OFFDEF TOTAVG Jordan,LAC 50 223 458 681 13.6 Drummond,DET 50 250 398 648 13.0 Cousins,SAC 36 uo 339 449 iz5 Randolph,MEM 40 158 325 483 izi Chandler,DAL 50 200 403 603 izi Gasol,CHI 47 140 423 563 1zo Vucevic,ORL 46 148 371 519 0.3 Love,CLE 49 108 407 515 10.5 Davis,NOR 44 119 340 459 10.4 Aldridge,POR 44 08 337 455 10.3 Assists G AST AVG Wall, WAS 51 521 10.2 Lawson,DEN 48 479 uio Paul, LAC 50 477 9 . 5 Rondo,DAL 43 374 8.7 Curry,GOL 47 319 8.i Teague,ATL 46 347 7.5 Westbrook,OKC 35 264 7.5 James,CLE 41 304 7.4 Carter-Wiliams,PHL 41 302 7.4 Lowry,TOR 50 368 7.4
kin scored the winning goal, Evgeny Kuznetsov also scored for Washington and Braden Holtby picked up his 25th win of the season by stopping 25 shots. Ducks 5, Predators 2: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Ja-
kob Silfverberg scored two goals, and Anaheim took the top of the NHL standings for themselves with a
win over Nashville. Lightning 5, Stars 3: DALLAS — Tyler Johnson
scored two t hird-period goals, lifting Tampa Bay over Dallas.
Hurricanes 2, Coyotes 1: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Eric
Lindholm scored the only goal of the shootout as Carolina beat Arizona.
R ed Wings 3 ,
A v a-
lanche 0: DENVER — Petr
Mrazek had 28 saves for his first shutout of the sea-
son and Detroit scored twice into empty nets. Sharks 5, Canucks 1: V ANCOUVER, Br it i s h Columbia — Antti Niemi m ade 33 saves as S a n
Jose defeated the listless Canucks.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
Beavs Continued from C1 As far as Andersen was concerned, that was a good sign. "I believe this. If late in the pro-
cess you're recruiting kids and a lot of people are recruiting them, that's a pretty good identification
Manfred
The Beavers landed cornerback
Jay Irvine (6-1, 175) out of Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Continued from C1
"Jay Irvine was quite a recruit-
So in the winter after the
ing battle as we went through there," Andersen said. "He's a big, physical corner. Very good athlete. Return skills are very impressive also. So he'll come in and compete
Arizona Fall League — a circuit to which franchises send their top prospects to compete
against one another — experimented with a 20-second "pitch clock," Manfred is not
for you that you're onto some good early at that spot." kids," he said. Offers started to fly for junior "That was definitely the fact.
It got more competitive as time went on. Every time one of our kids turned around and commit-
ted there was more schools that jumped into the mix. So it was a
hectic, hectic morning as those faxes rolled off." Andersen and his staff lost a few recruits, but they put together a
shy about expressing that baseball has an issue. The
college transfer Treston Decoud as well. Decoud has size for a corner at 6-3, 205. He played two seasons at Chadron State in Nebraska.
batter steps in the box, the
pitcher steps off the rubber, the batter steps back out, the pitcher climbs back on. Rinse,
"His recruiting process got cra-
zy late. It went from a few offers to
repeat. This
a whole bunch of offers," Andersen said. "His word was always there
Somehow. "It's important in terms of
and he held strong to that in the
providing an entertainment
class of 21 signees, including three end." transfers. It is balanced, with 11 offensive
With one four-star recruit (linebacker Christian Folau) and 14
cha n g e.
product that is consonant with
the kind of society in which we
Receivers coach Brent Brennan
helped bring in speedy receiver
players, nine defensive players and Paul Lucas out of Phoenix, who one specialist.
mu s t
was coveted by Arizona State and recruited by most of th e Pac-12
Conference. three-starprospects, the class is Lucas was ranked the No. 1 runranked a relatively low 64th by ning back in Arizona. "Very fast," Andersen said. Scout.com. "There's a lot of track guys that Andersen is unconcerned about stars and rankings. play football and he's a football "When we go about recruiting, player that runs track." we're a little bit different," he said. Andersen said the Beavers were "We don't listen to anybody else, quite impressed with what they we listen to ourselves and we eval- saw of safety Jalen Moore (6-1, uate theyoung men how we want 190) out of Upland, California. "We flipped the tape on him to evaluate them and if they fit our criteria, then we're going to move early and I was amazed and surforward regardless of how many prised that he did not have a numpeople are recruiting them, how ber of offers and I'm very glad that many people are not recruiting he didn't," Andersen said. "He's a them, how many offers they do physical, talented, big safety." have and how many offersthey The Beavers a ls o s i gned don't have." Brayden Kearsley out of Aloha Folau is a 6-foot-l, 240-pound High. He played two seasons at l inebacker f r o m S a l t La k e Brigham Young before deciding to City who will go on a Mormon transfer. mission. Kearsley (6-4, 300) will have to " I've known C h r i stian fo r a sit out a season but should be able number of years and recruited him to step in and compete for a starthard and was excited for him and ing spot. "We'veallknown aboutBrayden for his family to accept the fact that Oregon State wanted him bad- for a long time. We competed ly and the vision we had to be here against him when he was at BYU, for a long time," Andersen said. many people on the staff competed "He understands that. against him," Andersen said. "So it "He'sa great linebacker. Physi- was a no-brainer when he reached cal, tough young man." out to us and said that's what he Defensive tackle Elu Aydon (6- wanted to do. I think potentially, if 3, 335) out of American Samoa he takes care of his business, he's decommited from Wisconsin and a true difference-maker on the ofchose OSU. fensive line. "Big, physical, t ough-mind"I believe that this is a quality ed defensive tackle," Andersen class and I'm excited to get these said. "I'm excited to see how he young men here in June and move progresses." forward with it."
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Mountain View's Holden Kingery fights to get control of Bend's Chance Beutler during the 138-pound match Thursday night et Mountain View.
live," Manfred said. "There's a certain flow to the game that
I think people appreciate, but we've developed some habits where we have down time that
113, Travis Martin logged an 11-6 vic-
we just don't need. "Secondly, I think it's sym-
tory at 120 for the Cougs. In the ensu-
bolic. People talk about the
Continued from C1 ing match, Haden Kingery recorded a Their lone victory, however, proved 37-second fall at 126 pounds, putting
length of the games, worry
Cougars pivotal for M ountain View, Combs
Mountain View on top 36-30 and set-
noted, as Toby Arndt, wrestling up at ting up Edelblut's "magic" at 132. Bend's Chance Beutler wrapped 182 pounds, defeated Bend's Logan Blake 10-5.
"Our goal was to get to even and
turn it into a duel from 106 to 138," Combs said of his team's approach afterthose forfeits."That's what we dld.
about the time of games, and I think it's important for the
institution to be responsive to
up the dual meet with a 9-8 win over
those concerns and to show, 'Yes, we hear you.' Consistent
Holden Kingery at 138 pounds, but
with our history and tradi-
it was Mountain View coming away with the 42-33 victory.
tions, we're trying to be re-
"It was big for our program and for our kids," said Combs, mentioning his Following a Mountain View win by program's struggles against Bend in forfeit at 106 pounds and a fall by the recent years. "It was just a really cool Lava Bears' Damarea Dunnigan at night."
sponsive to it." There's the gray. No American sport respects and reveres
its history more than baseball. Even ardent basketball junkies do not know that Michael
Jordan scored 32,292 points, and it takes Steve Sabol-level football knowledge to know that Joe Montana threw 273
GOLF ROUNDUP
touchdown passes. Baseball
Thompsontakesearly lead; Woods exits with back issue
fans, though, just know that Babe Ruth hit 714 home runs,
that Joe DiMaggio hit safely in 56 straight games, that Ted Williams hit.406 in 1941. They
just do. When a history is so un-
derstood and treasured by those both inside and outside
the game, letting it go can be more difficult. Manfred be-
The Associated Press SAN DIEGO — Tiger Woods walked off the course after 11 holes Thursday
lieves that Selig "taught the institution how t o c h ange," and that's true in the advent
at the Farmers Insurance Open be-
cause of tightness in his lower back that he attributed to a fog delay.
of the wild-card playoff berth, divisional realignment and interleague play. Now, Man-
It was his third straight PGA Tour event that he missed the cut or withdrew, and the sixth time since 2010 that
fred seems willing to tweak not just the competitive for-
he withdrew because of injury. Nicholas Thompson had an 8-under 64 on the North Course and had a
mat, but the on-field product as well. In his first day on the job, he gave an interview
Ducks
Washington senior-to-be Ver-
one-shot lead over Michael Thompson
to ESPN's Karl Ravech, in
non Adams a
Continued from C1 The only changes to the list of verbal commitments Oregon had entering the week were the loss of
FCS star is not expected to decide whether to make the jump to the
when play was suspended by darkness. Brooks Koepka, the Phoenix
Pac-12 until next week. "It's not v i t al," H elfrich said
The best score on the tougher South Course belonged to Jhonnatan Vegas
defensive back James "P.J." Locke
when asked about the possibility of adding to Wednesday's haul of
at 67.
new talent. "By the same token, if there's a situation where we can make our team better, we're going
time since his six-month leave for "per-
Nicholas Thompson reacts es his eagle
sonal challenges," holed out for eagle on No. 4 on the South Course as his lone highlight. He was 2 over with one hole remaining. The scene is becoming familiar. Bil-
chip lips out on the par-5 14th hole of the north course at Torrey Pines during the first round of the Farmers Insurance
which he brought up the idea of eliminating extreme defensive shifts — embraced as advanced thinking by the sabermetric crowd — as a way to potentially boost offense, which has been in steady decline for a decade. He did not say he would do it. He merely suggested thinking about it. The Internet's in-
to Texas and the addition of junior college linebacker Jonah Moi. Two elite prospects, defensive
tackle Rasheem Green and line-
s cholarship. The
to make our team better." dena, Calif., predictably chose Oregon's coaching staff has USC over Oregon live on ESPNU traveled to 42 states and visited shortly before Helfrich's press m ore than 3,000 high schoolssince conference. Helfrich replaced Chip Kelly after The Trojans' class is ranked sec- the 2011-12 season. His third class ond nationally behind Alabama as head coach includes nine playbacker John Houston from Gar-
by 247Sports. UCLA is No. 7, and
ers from California, three each
Oregon is third in the Pac-12 at No. from Hawaii and Washington, two 16. from Georgia and one each from "We got and lost guys in the Florida, L o u isiana, M i n nesota, class because we deal with guys Missouri and Tennessee. very honestly," Helfrich said. "I There were no in-state prospects think we're honest, is a very simple signed this year. "Geography, demographics is way to put it. I think there's a lot of guys that love the sales aspect and always going to be our challenge. We're not moving Eugene, Orethe recruiting aspect." Cornerback Ugo A madi, of gon," Helfrich said. "Distance is Nashville,Tennessee; running still the No. 1 reason why people back Taj G r iffin, o f P o wder pick a place, but the second is winSprings, Georgia; defensive end ning,and we can make a pretty Canton Kaumatule, of Honolulu; good argument about that. The wide receiver Alex Ofodile, of Co- third thing is having a plan for lumbia, Missouri; and offensive these guys. We think we have a relineman Zach Okun,of Newbury ally good plan, whether it's an earPark, California, are the early en- ly enrollee, a JC transfer or whatrollees who were sold on Oregon ever that is." long ago. Oregon is coming off a historic Helfrich said Okun, who is listed 13-2 season, which included a Pacat 6 feet 5 and 340 pounds, needs 12 championship, a dominating to get in better shape to play at victoryover defending BCS chamthis leveL The other four mem- pion Florida State in the Rose Bowl bers of the class participating in and an appearance in the College the winter strength an d c ondiFootball Playoff national champitioning program figure to be early onship game. contributors. It was evident during the BuckJalen Brown was the only mem-
ber of the 2014 class to leave high school early to get a head start at Oregon. The widereceiver from Phoenix ended up redshirting last season.
eyes' 42-20 victory on Jan. 12 at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Tex-
"I think I lean more toward be-
as, that the Ducks still needed to get deeper and stronger along the front lines. The program signed 10 linemen (five offensive, five defensive) who are listed from 6-3
ing a high school kid," Helfrich
to 6-7 and from 241 pounds to 340
said of the trend. "Lean toward being a three-sport athlete, do your
pounds. The class includes 20 high school players and two junior college transfers — Moi (Riverside City College) and fellow linebacker Paris Bostick (Santa Monica College). Helfrich said keeping his entire coaching staff together allowed the Ducks to reload. "We have no idea how good they'll be long term," Helfrich said when asked to compare the group
deal, be the prom king, whatever it is ... that only happens once." Oregon will have to replace a once-in-a-lifetime quarterback in Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota.
Helfrich said his dual-threat signal-caller in this cycle, Travis Waller, of Anaheim, California, also plans to graduate and arrive early to start competing during spring practice with Jeff Lockie, Morgan Mahalak, Ty Griffin and Taylor Alie. Oregon has offered Eastern
with other classes he has recruit-
ed. "But we know the power of our coaches in terms of developing guys."
Open winner, had a 66 on the North.
Dustin Johnson, playing for the first
Lenny Ignelzi /The Associated Press
Open Thursday in San Diego.
stant reaction: He said what?! "The reason those proj-
ly Horschel noticed some discomfort
ects are difficult is you have
with Woods early in the round. Before round since a career-high 82 last week long, Woods was reaching for his low- in the Phoenix Open to tie for last with
to balance the need to move
er back, and the grimace became more pronounced. On their 10th hole — the
a club pro and miss the cut by 12 shots.
Also on Thursday: par-5 first on the North Course at TorPancake tops field et suspended Berey Pines — Horschel picked up the tee hamas event: PARADISE ISLAND,
forward against the really significant history and traditions in the game," Manfred said W ednesday. "Forexample:On instant replay, we took a little
for Woods and took the ball out of the
Bahamas — Brooke Pancake shot a 6-under 67to take a one-stroke lead in
extra time to roll it out. I think
cup for him when Woods made birdie.
the suspended first round of the Baha-
it was time well-spent because most of that time focused
of the green on the par-3 third hole. When it was his turn to play, he had caddie Joe LaCava pick up his ball marker. Woods waited for Horschel and Rickie Fowler to finish before shaking their hands, getting into a cart and driving to his car. Woods was 2-over par through 11
mas LPGA Classic. Play was suspend-
on making sure we had that
ed forthe day at 2:47 p.m. and more
balance just right. Change it,
than an inch of rain fell on Atlantis Resort's Ocean Club course. In May
but don't interfere with the traditions."
2013,the inaugural eventwas reduced to three12-hole rounds because of flooding. Westwood, Mcooweii share lead in
tions. Adam Silver, who has been the NBA's commissioner
holes and in a tie for 130th when he withdrew.
Malaysia: KUALA LUMPUR, Malay-
Woods hit a safe shot to the middle
Woods now has gone 12 straight PGA Tour events without a top 10, dat-
sia — Defending champion Lee Westwood and Graeme McDowell each shot 6-under 66 to share the first-round lead
ing to his runner-up finish in The Bar- in the Malaysian Open. Westwood also clays in 2013 when back pain dropped won the 1997 tournament at Kuala him to his knees. This was his first Lumpur Golf and Country Club.
So expect more suggesjust more than a year, has embraced the idea of legalizing sports gambling, and he has discussed that with his counterparts in baseball, football and hockey. Manfred characterized that
c o nversation
as "part of my process of getting ready to have a dialogue with the owners," but he said he was not prepared to speak publicly on the matter. Still,
SKIING
he is aware that the NBA and
AListria's Reichelt win sLiper-G,
NHL have partnered with daily fantasy sports sites — es-
sentially, a version of legalized gambling — and he is not going to cede that territory.
"I think that you will see
Miller out of worldswith injury
us have relationships in that
The Associated Press
seconds — 0.11 seconds faster than
we will continue to be involved
Canada's Dustin Cook, who made a
in that space." When Manfred is asked what his top priority as commissioner is, there is no gray. "No. 1 is the issue of youth and young fans," he said,
BEAVER CREEK, Colo. — Bode
Miller smacked a gate so hard he surprise run from back in the pack. crashed, opening a deep gash on his Adrien Theaux of France earned the right leg and tearing a tendon that bronze. required surgery Thursday night Everyone was talking about Millafter the super-G race at the world er's horrific crash, including the championships. winner. "If you know Bode, sometimes it Norway's Kjetil Jansrud hit another panel and needed his left shoulder looks really bad, then he stands up checked out. and nothing happened," Reichelt This demanding and daunting said. "I hope he's safe and nothing course took a toll on some of the big- happened." gest names in skiing. Not Hannes ReNo such luck. M i ller underwent ichelt, though. The Austrian tamed surgery on Thursday and is done for this tricky terrain, winning the su- worlds. Miller said on his Twitter acper-G after Miller tumbled down the count after the operation: "Feeling hill. lucky since things could have been Reichelt finished in 1 minute, 15.68 way worse."
fantasy space," Manfred said. "Fantasy started with us, and
adding that " I
t h in k y o uth
participation, getting youth in the ballpark is a huge part of maintaining the position of baseball and growing the game long-term." He is not yet a month into
his tenure. Change is afoot. It will be change that respects
and honors the past, because this is baseball. But little by little, it will come.
C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY6, 2015
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O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
N ASDAQ ~ 4 0 40
17,884.88
+
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2g 0g
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Friday, February 6, 2015
Racking up debt
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Economists predict that U.S. 1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS 17,000" ""' 10 DAYS " consumers took on more debt in 2,160 " 18,500" December. The Federal Reserve is 18,000" expected to report today that 2,080 " consumer borrowing climbed $15 17,500" billion last month. That would be a 2,000 " bigger increase than the $14.1 17,000 " billion gain that pushed consumer 1,920 16,500 debt excluding real estate loans to a record $3.3 trillion in November. 1 840 ' 'A' ' 'O' 'S ' 16,000 An improving economy and strong D J S 0 employmentgains may be making HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK consumers more comfortable with StocksRecap racking up debt. DOW 17889.58 17677.26 17884.88 +211.86 $.1.20% DOW Trans. 8972.56 8892.59 8966.58 +81.64 $.0.92% NYSE NASD DOW Util. 640.69 632.00 639.32 +5.47 $.0.86% T Vol. (in mil.) 3,694 1,974 NYSE Comp. 10901.22 10820.57 10896.06 +121.02 $.1.12% Pvs. Volume 4,005 2,084 NASDAQ 4767.38 4722.80 4765.10 +48.40 $.1.03% Advanced 2388 2022 S&P 500 2063.55 2043.45 2062.52 +21.01 $.1.03% Declined 7 73 7 1 3 S&P 400 1482.71 1470.02 1482.04 +1 4.60 $.0.99% New Highs 148 93 Wilshire 5000 21785.25 21536.44 21774.50 +238.06 $.1.11% New Lows 15 37 Russell 2000 1209.90 1195.41 1208.71 +1 7.27 $.1.45% "
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CRUDEOIL $50.48
MO QTR YTD L +0.35% -1.90% L L L L +3.44% L L +0.52% L L +0.61% L L +0.18% L L +2.04% L L +0.48% L L +0.33%
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Stocks rallied again on Thursday, and the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index rose by at least 1 percent for the third time this week. Health care stocks helped lead the way after pharmaceutical giant Pfizer said that it would buy Hospira for $90 per share. Energy stocks were also strong, benefiting from the rising price of oil, and all 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500 rose. Big moves for stocks have beenmuch more common recently,and the S&P 500 index has swung up or down by at least 1 percent in six of the last eight trading days. The index has climbed 3.4 percent this week, tying it for the best performance in the last 16 weeks. HSP
Closo:$8764~22.84 or 3 Pfizer is buying the provider of injectable drugs and developer of generic biotech-based drugs for about $15.23 billion. $100 80
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S Close: $4.82L0.24 or 5.2% The wireless carrier reported a loss on hefty charges during its third-quarter, but the results beat Wall Street expectations.
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NAME
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Dow jones industrials
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10 YR T NOTE 1.82%
TDC Close:$42.19 V-4.79 or -10.2% The datamanagement company reported mixed fourth-quarter financial results and set a weaker-than-expected outlook for 2015. $50
P E: . . . Yield: ...
N at. Bank ofGreece N S G Close:$1.40T-0.04 or -2.8% The bank's shares lost ground as Greece faces obstacles in Europe over potential changes to its five-year bailout program.
Alaska Air Group A LK 36.31 ~ 71.40 66. 8 2 +. 1 2 +0.2 T L L + 11. 8 +7 8 .1 1 352 15 0 .80f Avista Corp A VA 28.00 ~ 38.34 37.2 7 +. 4 2 + 1 .1 L L L +5.4 +34. 8 21 2 12 1. 2 7 Dominion Resources reports Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 15. 9 7 + . 1 8 +1.1 L T T -10.7 -2.7 74849 46 0 .20 fourth-quarter financial results $3 B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 79.21 38 . 5 3 +3.23 +9.2 L L L +40. 6 -53.7 379 d d 0 .88f today. Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 148. 3 9 14 8.60 +1.38 +0.9 L L L + 14. 3 +2 3 .0 4 171 20 3 .64f Wall Street expects the 45 Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 11~ 5.82 4.77 +.0 3 + 0.6 L T T -8.1 + 1 .1 29 80 company'searnings improved COLB 2 3.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 27.39 +.54i2.0 L L T -0.8 + 9 . 5 3 3 7 1 8 0 .64a from a year earlier. Dominion has ColumbiaBnkg N D J F N D J F 45.87 43 . 21 -.12 -0.3 L T T -3.0 +1 9.6 3 7 7 2 6 0 . 60f been spending heavily on power C olumbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 52-week range 52-week range Costco Wholesale CO S T 109.50 ~ 1 56.8 5 14 9.69 -1.83 -1.2 L L L + 5.2 +41 . 8 6 8 10 31 1 .42a $$7.$$ ~ $49.57 $$.$$ ~ $5.83 projects, including development of Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 17.89 12. 8 3 +. 4 0 + 3.2 L L T -3.8 -13.7 3 7 80 a new nuclear reactor in Virginia, FLIR Systems Vol.:10.3m (5.7x avg.) PE : 1 8 .8 Vol.:13.5m (2.0x avg.) P E: . . . F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 31.8 0 +. 6 1 $ .2.0 L L T - 1.6 + 1. 3 7 3 5 2 9 0 . 4 0 Mkt. Cap:$6.46 b Yield:... Mkt. Cap: $4.95 b Yield: ... offshore wind power operations Hewlett Packard H PQ 27 . 89 ~ 41.10 37.9 5 +. 0 5 +0.1 L T T -5.4 +36.0 6185 14 0 . 6 4 and solar energy projects. Intel Corp I NTC 23.50 ~ 37.90 33.9 4 +. 3 4 +1 .0 L T T -6.5 +45.8 20203 15 0 .96 21ST Century Fox FOXA Glu Mobile GLUU Investors will be listening for an Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 13.8 0 +. 2 5 +1 .8 L L T -0.7 +10.6 11981 13 0 . 26 Close: $32.80T-1.86 or -5.4% Close: $5.02L1.18 or 30.7% update on when the company Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 71.61 71. 5 5 +. 2 0 +0.3 L L L +11. 4 + 1 03.1 3408 22 0 . 7 4 The media company reported betThe mobile game maker reported expects the various projects to T T Lattice Semi LSCC 5.52 ~ 9.19 6.25 -.29 -4.4 T - 9.3 +16.8 4325 1 5 ter-than-expected fiscal secbetter-than-expected fourth-quarter contribute to its earnings. LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.88 17. 0 4 +. 0 2 +0.1 L L L +2.9 +3.4 23 8 4 d d ond-quarter financial results, but cut profit results and plans to develop a MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 o — 36.0 5 22. 35 + . 3 2 +1.5 T T T -4.9 -29.2 1663 14 0 .73f its guidance for the year. Katy Perry game. D $78.69 Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 — o 23.95 23 .99 + . 09 +0.4 L L L +9.4 +20 . 8 77 7 2 0 0. 2 0 $40 $6 M icrosoft Corp MSFT 3 5.69 ~ 50.05 42. 4 5 +. 6 1 +1.5 L T T -8.6 +1 8.3 35902 17 1 . 2 4 $65.85 Nike Inc B N KE 69.85 ~ 99.76 93.3 4 +. 8 0 +0 .9 L T T -2.9 +32.7 2765 28 1.12f 35 Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — 0 80.54 78 .76 -.14 -0.2 L T T -0.8 + 4 4.9 9 3 8 2 1 1. 3 2 72 Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ 52.57 51.0 7 +. 7 4 +1 .5 L L L +2.3 +29. 3 60 23 1.86 N D J F N D J F '14 ,' PaccarInc PCAR 53.59 ~ 71.1 5 6 2. 2 5 -.21 -0.3 L T T -8.5 +1 6.8 2271 16 0 .88a 52-week range 52-week range 62 Planar Systms PLNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 7.61 +. 6 4 +10.0 T T T -16.2 +1 60.0 1083 25 $$1.$$ ~ $$$.27 $$.2$ ~ $7.60 Plum Creek PCL 38.70 — 0 45.45 45 .21 + . 6 5 +1 .5 L L L + 5.7 +9.9 902 38 1.7 6 Operating Vol.:37.7m (3.3x avg.) PE: 18.0 Vol.:26.5m (9.1x avg.) PE: 502.0 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 26 4.95 + . 21 +0.1 L T T -14.9 -17.0 1062 16 0 . 12 EPS Mkt. Cap:$44.53 b Y i e ld:0.8% Mkt.Cap:$536.88 m Yie ld: ... 4Q '13 4 Q '14 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 6 .25 o — 30.0 4 17. 10 + . 3 3 +2.0 L T T -24.2 - 30.2 376 4 0 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 174.29 — o 27 7.29277.90 +3.80 +1.4 L L L +5.6 +55 . 3 53 2 3 1 2. 2 0 Cadence Design Sys. CDNS QuickLogic QUIK Price-earnings ratio: 31 StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 65.4 7 +. 9 3 +1 .4 L T T -6.3 + 7 . 4 1 7 6 1 3 1 . 30f Close: $17.21 T-0.89 or -4.9% Close: $2.19 V-0.74 or -25.3% based on past 12-month results StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 89.5 9 89. 6 4 +. 9 4 +1.1 L L L t 9.3 +27. 2 3 7 51 2 7 1 . 2 8 The maker of hardware and softThe maker of chips for mobile and Dividend: $2.40 Div. yield: 3.0% Umpqua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 9.6 0 16.53 +.36+ 2.2 L L T -2.8 - 1.1 1024 2 2 0 . 60 ware products for validating chip de- portable electronics manufacturers US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 44.0 0 +. 4 2 +1 .0 L L T -2.1 +13.9 6532 14 0 . 98 signs reported worse-than-expected reported a $4.1 million loss during source: Factset its fourth quarter. WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.89 +.37+1.8 L T T -5.7 -1.4 45 3 1 3 0 . 52f fourth-quarter results. $20 $3.5 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 4.17 ~ 5 5.9 5 53.67 +.64+ 1.2 L L T -2.1 +22.2 12953 13 1 .40 Monthlyjobssnapshot Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 37.04 35.5 1 +. 2 2 +0 .6 T T T - 1.1 +23.5 2572 2 7 1 . 16 19 3.0 Economists anticipate that 18 2.5 nonfarm employers added N D J F N D J F 230,000 jobs last month. 52-week range 52-week range That would be down from $1$.$$~ $1$ $4 $2.0$~ $ $.$7 252,000 in December and the DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:14.4m (5.0x avg.) PE: 40.0 Vol.:3.4m (11.2x avg.) P E: . . . second monthly decline in a row. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —sum of dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap: $5.04 b Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$122.33 m Yield : ... The U.S. economy added nearly 3 dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m —Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP million jobs in 2014. That helped value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. bring down the nation's unemployCaesars Entertainment shares rose 2 percent Thursday after the casino operator Compa ment rate to 5.6 percent in NET 1YR named former Hertz rental car CEO Mark Frissora as its next chief executive officer. InterestRates December, the lowest it's been TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO Frissora will replace Gary Loveman, a former Harvard University business since 2008. Still, wage growth has professorwhojoined Caesam in19$$, when $was known as Harrah$ Entertain3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 ... lagged hiring. The Labor Depart.05 ment.He became CEO in2003.Loveman willstay on as chairman ofthe company ment reports its January jobs data 6 -month T-bill . 0 5 .0 6 -0.01 T T T .06 and its Caesars Entertainment Operating subsidiary, which today. 5 2-wk T-bill .19 .19 ... L T L .10 recently filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. The departure was characterized as being Loveman's decision. 2-year T-note . 5 0 .49 + 0 .01 T T T .32 Nonfarm payroRs The yield on the seasonally adjusted change Caesars said Frissora's experience with complex and highly 5-year T-note 1.30 1.25 +0.05 L T T 1.49 10-year Treasury companies will be strengths in the new position. rose to 1.82 360 thousand 353 10-year T-note 1.82 1.75 +0.07 L T T 2.67 QQ leveraged The sale of Harrah's Entertainment to two private equity percent on 30-year T-bond 2A3 2.35 +0.08 L T T 3.65 firms in200$leftthecompan$saddled $$ debt, e entua$$ Thursday. Yields leading to the bankruptcy of a division weighed down by the affect rates on NET 1YR 271 261 most debt — some $18.4 billion. Mark Frissora mortgages and BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO 255
SU HS
r
CEo
230
Caesars Entertainment (CZR) Thursday's close:$11.51 p
203
52-WEEK RANGE
$9
150 A
S
0
N
D
J
2014 source: Facts$
Price - earnings ratio: Lost money CZR 27
*annualized
AmdFocus
SelectedMutualpunds
Fidelity Advisor Small Cap is managed by James Harmon, Marhetsummary who's been at the helm since Most Active 2005. The fund's 10-yr annualNAME VOL (60s) LAST CHG ized returns ranks in the top 26 S&P500ETF 858786 206.12 +2.06 percent of its peers.
Cemex US OilFd CSVLgCrde Twitter Apple Inc s
748490 729186 590617 553157 495457 485852 437137 418915 407166
15.97 +.18 3.31 +.46 3.69 +.08 32.99 +.92 9.98 +1.19 19.03 +.75 3.47 +.35 41.26 +.54 119.94 +.85
Fidelity AdvisorSmcapA m FSCDX VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME QKL Strs
L AST CHG 3 .06 +1 . 3 6 Bostprv wt 6 .50 +1 . 8 6 E2open 8 .54 +2 . 4 3 Hospira 8 7.64 + 2 2.84 GluMobile 5 .02 +1 . 1 8 Liquidity 1 0.27 + 2 .24 Conns 2 0.72 +4 . 0 7 AurisMed n 5 .25 +.97 SandRdge 2 .20 +.36 DonegalB 2 6.82 + 4 .3 2
Losers
%C H G +7 9 .6 +4 0 . 1 CL cC Qe +3 9 .8 $$ +3 5 .2 +3 0 .7 $1$ +2 7 .9 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ +2 4 . 4 e Fund target represents weighted +22 . 7 Q +19 . 6 average of stock holdings +1 9 .2 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
CATEGORY Small Blend C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ***w w -.74 -25.3 QuickLog AdeptTech -1.67 -19.1 ASSETS $1,046 million -13.74 -18.6 ClearwPpr 60.02 EXP RATIO 1.01% Imunmd 4.01 -.88 -17.9 MANAGER James Harmon -5.03 -16.6 FarmerBrs 25.20 SINCE 2005-10-31 RETURNS3-MO +3.2 Foreign Markets YTD +1.2 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +17.9 Paris 4,703.30 +7.00 + . 15 3-YR ANNL +13.4 London 6,865.93 +5.91 + . 09 5-YR-ANNL +13.7 -5.91 -.05 Frankfurt 10,905.41 Hong Kong24,765.49 + 85.73 + . 35 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 42,453.64 +742.82 +1.78 Community Health Systems Inc Milan 20,81 9.05 -1 22.68 -.59 Tokyo 17,504.62 -1 74.1 2 -.98 VeriFone Systems Inc Stockholm 1,586.13 + 6.82 + . 43 Global Payments Inc Sydney 5,765.50 +31.80 + . 55 Primerica Inc Zurich 8,544.32 -63.92 -.74 Darling Ingredients Inc NAME
L AST 2.19 7.06
-26.6%
(B a sed on past 12-month results)
AP
AP
BkofAm AMD SiriusXM Pfizer
rrc e changeYTD
other consumer loans.
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.30 2.27 +0.03 L T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.15 4.14 +0.01 L T T Barclays USAggregate 2.01 2.00 +0.01 L T T PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.33 6.37 -0.04 T T L RATE FUNDS Source: FactSet Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.43 3.42 +0.01 L T T YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.59 1.57 +0.02 L T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.86 2.86 ... L T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
1 yr - 47.0
2 y r* 17.1
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 96 +.14+0.8 +13.9 +13.1+12.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.87 +.34 +2.2 +14.1 +10.9+10.4 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 47.27 +.35 +2.6 +12.2 +13.7+11.5 8 8 C crude oil rose EurPacGrA m 48.51 +.27 +2.9 +6.1 +9.2 +8.2 C 8 C by more than FnlnvA m 52. 5 3 +.50+0.9 +16.2 +16.3+14.8 D C C $2 per barrel, GrthAmA m 43.27 +.41 +1.4 +15.0 +17.5+15.0 D 8 D recouping nearIncAmerA m 21.92 +.16 +1.6 +13.5 +12.2+12.2 A A A ly half its loss InvCoAmA m 37.32 +.31 +0.6 +18.4 +17.3+14.6 C 8 D from the prior NewPerspA m37.61 +.31 +2.0 +11.0 +13.7+12.4 C 8 8 day. It was the WAMutlnvA m41.60 +.36 +0.1 +17.4 +16.6+15.8 8 8 A fifth straight day Dodge &Cox Income 13.91 -.61 +0.9 + 5.1 +4.3 +5.1 D 8 8 that oil has IntlStk 43.10 +.32 +2.4 + 8.8 +12.4 +9.8 A A A Stock 177.83+1.59 -1.7 +14.0 +19.4+15.9 E A A moved at least Fidelity Contra 99.32 + 1.69+1.4 +15.7 +17.2+16.4 C 8 8 $1 per barrel. ContraK 99.2 5 + 1.69+1.4 +15.8 +17.3+16.6 C 8 8 LowPriStk d 50.26 +.43 0. 0 + 13.6 +16.0+16.2 D D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.69 +.76 +0.3 +20.1 +17.8+16.5 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.45 +.62+1.6 +7.0 +9.3 +9.6 C A A IncomeA m 2. 4 2+.62 +1.7 + 7 .6 + 9.8+10.2 B A A Oakmark Intl I 24.61 +.69 +2.9 + 2 .3 +13.1+11.5 D A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 86 +.18 -0.7 +17.5 +13.8+14.0 C E D RisDivB m 17 . 65 +.16 -0.8 +16.5 +12.8+13.0 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 43 +.16 -0.7 +16.5 +12.9+13.1 D E E SmMidValA m49.17 +.65 +0.9 +17.7 +16.2+14.4 8 D E SmMidValB m41.34 +.55 +0.9 +16.8 +15.3+13.5 8 D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.7 3 + .30 -0.2 +13.5 +14.9+14.2 E D C Exchange GrowStk 63.2 1 + .62 +2.4 +15.7 +18.8+18.1 C A A The dollar HealthSci 71.6 6 +1.18+5.3 +35.0 +34.8+29.4 A A A slumped against Newlncome 9. 7 1 - .61+ 1.6 + 6 .0 + 3.3 +4.5 8 C C the euro, British Vanguard 500Adml 190.52+1.98 +0.3 +20.2 +17.8+16.5 A 8 A pound and 500lnv 190.50+1.98 +0.3 +20.0 +17.6+16.4 A 8 A Canadian dollar. CapOp 53.38 +.54 +1.2 +21.9 +22.9+17.4 A A A It was more Eqlnc 31.27 +.31 +0.2 +18.5 +16.5+16.9 8 8 A resilient against IntlStkldxAdm 26.85 +.27 +3.3 +5.1 +6.7 NA 8 D the Japanese StratgcEq 33.69 +.40 +2.8 +22.4 +20.8+20.6 A A A yen. TgtRe2020 28.88 +.16 +1.5 +11.6 +10.1+10.6 A A A TgtRe2035 18.69 +.15 +1.4 +13.4 +12.6+12.6 A 8 8 Tgtet2025 16.77 +.11 +1.5 +12.2 +10.9+11.3 A A B TotBdAdml 11.63 -.62 +1.7 +6.0 +3.0 +4.3 8 D D Totlntl 16.65 +.16 +3.2 +5.0 +6.6 +6.7 8 D D TotStlAdm 61.90 +.67 +0.6 +19.1 +17.6+16.8 8 8 A TotStldx 61.88 +.67 +0.6 +18.9 +17.5+16.7 C 8 A USGro 30.31 +.36 +1.3 +19.7 +18.4+16.9 A A B FAMILY
PCT 2.76 2.11 2.08 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.08 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 1.96 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
3.45 4.89 2.31 5.70 4.42 1.72 3.08
CLOSE PVS. 50.48 48.45 1.43 1.42 1.81 1.77 2.60 2.66 1.52 1.48
%CH. %YTD +4.19 -5.2 -0.70 -12.1 +2.22 -2.2 -2.33 -10.0 + 2.91 + 6 . 2
CLOSE PVS. 1262.00 1263.80 17.18 17.38 1249.70 1238.90 2.61 2.61 796.00 790.50
%CH. %YTD - 0.14 + 6 . 6 -1.15 +10.4 + 0.87 + 3 .4 -8.0 +0.70 -0.3
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.4 1.53 1.53 +0.27 Coffee (Ib) 1.65 1.65 -0.09 -1.1 -3.0 Corn (bu) 3.85 3.84 +0.46 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.61 + 0.91 + 2 . 5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 311.90 309.60 +0.74 -5.8 -1.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.38 1.38 -0.25 Soybeans (bu) 9.81 9.72 +0.95 -3.7 Wheat(bu) 5.26 5.11 +2.89 -1 0.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5332 +.0110 +.72% 1.6312 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 42 -.0124 -1.00% 1.1077 USD per Euro 1.1472 +.0054 +.47% 1.3535 JapaneseYen 117.57 + . 2 1 + .18% 1 01.31 Mexican Peso 14. 7948 -.0384 -.26% 13.2818 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8545 -.0378 -.98% 3.5358 Norwegian Krone 7 . 5272 -.0507 -.67% 6.2321 South African Rand 11.2783 -.1890 -1.68% 11.1446 Swedish Krona 8.2 5 35 -.0144 -.17% 6.5258 Swiss Franc .9229 -.0008 -.09% . 9034 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2814 -.0038 -.30% 1.1225 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2524 +.0061 +.10% 6.0605 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7515 -.0005 -.01% 7.7619 Indian Rupee 61.683 -.078 -.13% 62.590 Singapore Dollar 1.3442 -.0035 -.26% 1.2683 South KoreanWon 1086.15 -2.14 -.20% 1077.66 -.01 -.03% 30.38 Taiwan Dollar 31.46
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY6, 2015
CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED: • Fred Meyer,61535 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend........ ... $1.93 • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend.......... $2.00 • Chevron,3405 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend........ ... $2.16 • Chevron,1745 NE Third St., Bend.. $2.20 • Chevron,1095 SE Division St., Bend.......... $2.20 • Chevron,2100 NE U.S. Highway 20, Bend.......... $2.20 • Chevron,61160 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend.......... $2.20 • Texaco,2409 Butler Market Road, Bend.......... $2.20 • Shell,981 NW GalvestonAve., Bend .. $2.26 • Shell, 1144 NE Third
St.,Bend ...... $2.26 • Shell,2699 NE U.S. Highway 20, Bend.......... $2.30 • Shell, 51511 U.S.
Highway 97, LaPine........ $2.20 • Shell,16515 Reed Road, La Pine... $2.20 • Shell, 15 NE Fifth St.,
Madras........ $2.20 • Snfewny,80 NE Cedar St., Madras .... $2.20 • Texaco,178 SW Fourth St.,
Madras........ $2.26 • Chevron,1210 SW U.S. Highway 97, Madras........ $2.26
a io ac i es or an ru The Associated Press NEW YORK — Strug-
stores. The Fort Worth, Texas, com-
glingelectronics retailer RadioShack has filed for Chapter
pany said Thursday that it has filed a motion to proceed with
11 bankruptcy protection and
dosing the rest of its 4,000 U.S.
says it will sell up to 2,400 stores.
stores. It is also having discus-
General Wireless, a sub-
sions to sell all of its remaining assets.
oo
tioned the chain might not be
less business slowed. It has sufferedyears of losses.
able to find a long-term plan to stay in business.
The New York Stock Ex-
RadioShack worked hard on
change suspended trading of its shares Monday and sought to delist it.
The NYSE requires companies to meet certain market
sidiary of Standard General, RadioShack Corp. inRadioShack's largest sharetroduced one of the first holder, has agreed to buy 1,500 mass-market personal comto 2,400 of the company's U.S. puters and used to be the go-to stores. As part of the bankstop for consumers' home ruptcy plan, Sprint might open electronics needs. But it strugminishops in as many as 1,760 gled as shoppers increasingly of the acquired RadioShack shifted to making purchases
0
online and growth in its wire-
its turnaround efforts, hiring Walgreen Co. executive Joseph Magnacca as its CEO and formerTreasury Department adviser Harry Wilson as chief
that it also has more than1,000
dealerfranchise storesin 25
ular brands such as Beats Au-
countries, stores operated by
dio and redesigned almost half of its U.S. locations — some
its Mexican subsidiary and operations in Asia operations,
2,000 stores — in an effort to
which are not included in the
Still, its CEO recently cau-
entice younger shoppers.
Chapter 11 filing.
BEND, REDMOND
ot s ot
Area homepricesrose after slow start to 2014
ets a ma eover
Bulletin staff reports Residential real estate in Bend and Redmond began 2014 shaking off the lingering effects of the recession, but in
percent in Bend from 2013 to
buildinghas been restored to
both cities, the market finished
its former glory, buttressing the ongoingrevival of the legendary intersection of Hollywood and Vine. The Taft Building, opened in 1924, has undergone a $15
withyear-over-year increases in median prices and signifi-
board president, said short and bank-owned sales — col-
million renovation that shored
up its seismic strength and un-
2013 to 2014 and about 12 percent in Redmond, according to
covered historic architectural
figures from the Central Ore-
details that were under wraps for decades. The 12-story building has been home to major film studios, the Academy of Motion
gon Association of Realtors. Short sales, in which the property is sold for less than the amount owed, dedined 62 percent in Bend year over year
Picture Arts and Sciences and
and 67 percent in Redmond,
such showbiz luminaries as Charlie Chaplin and Will Rogers. Scores of agents and publicists setup shop there when
the figures show. Bank-owned
By Roger Vincent Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Holly-
wood's first high-rise office
cant declines in short sales.
The median price of a single-family home increased nearly 8 percent in Bend from
sales, essentially sales of fore-
closed properties, dropped 4
Bend 2,500
St., Redmond... $2.24 • Chevron,1501 SW Highland Ave., Redmond...... $2.26 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters.... $2.20 DIESEL: • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend.......... $2.44 • Conoco,62980 U.S. Highway 97, Bend.......... $2.50 • Texaco,2409 Butler Market Road, Bend.......... $2.60 • Snfewny,80 NE Cedar St., Madras .... $2.54 • Texaco,178 SW Fourth St.,
Madras........ $2.60 • Chevron,1210 SW Highway 97, Madras......... $2.60
Correction A story headlined, "Panelists discuss affordable housing," which appeared Thursday, Feb. 5,on Page C6, contained an incorrect attribution. The comment that a recent presentation aboutsystem development charges that Bend city officials made to a Bend Park & Recreation District subcommittee went over "like a lead balloon," should have been attributed to Bend
City Councilor Victor Chudowsky. The Bulletin regrets the error.
2014but increased nearly 37 percent in Redmond.
Scott Halligan, Central Oregon Association of Realtors lectively known as distressed
sales — drive down home prices. Fewer distressed sales al-
low prices to rise and bring the market closer to normal. A shortage of homes for sale, especiallyin Bend, has also pushed up prices. However, home construction
has picked up, he said. Interest rates remain low, and the federal government recently start-
ed programs to help first-time homebuyers. "I think we're going to see a healthymarket," Halligan said.
the storied Brown Derby Hol-
Property Owners Alliance.
• Shell, 722 NW Sixth
Exchange Commission. RadioShack said Thursday
revitalization officer. It also de-
tive director of the Hollywood
Redmond...... $1.99 • Texaco,539 NW Sixth St., Redmond... $2.20 • Chevron,2005 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond...... $2.20
to its last annual report filed with the U.S. Securities and
veloped relationships with pop-
Third St.,
Ninth St.,
and employs about 27,500 people worldwide, according
remain on the exchange. RadioShack had warned of a possible bankruptcy in Septemberbut receivedrescue financing that kept it afloat.
Prineville...... $2.20 • Chevron,398 NW Prineville...... $2.26 • Fred Meyer,944 SW
operates nearly 5,500 stores
capitalization thresholds to
lywood restaurant was a few stepsfrom thefrontdoor. "I definitely feel a sense of connection tohistory," said tenant Kerry Morrison, execu-
• 76, 1717 NE Third St.,
The company, which has not turned a profit since 2011, still
HomesalesinBendandRedmond2013-14 •
"I wonder who was in our
office 20, 40 or 60 years ago — and sometimes I wonder what it was like here in the 1930s when there was no air
conditioning." A 1980s renovation by
improvements at the time,
such as dropped ceilings, new flooring and wall coverings. But the changes obscured the
building's original features. Owner DLJ Capital Partners restored the building
inside and out, exposing windows and brick walls that
had been hidden for years. Decorative marbleandterra cottafeatureswere restored,
Andy Rifkin, managing partner of DLJ Capital Partners, recently
800
2,242 600
1,500
completed a comprehensive restoration of the Taft Building, Hollywood'e first high-rise office building, to ite former grandeur. authentic materials."
Taft set out to build the city's
DLJ bought the building for $28.5 million in late 2011, he
first high-rise outside of downtown Los Angeles.
During Prohibition, Hollyments in Hollywood's real es- wood and Vine was abucolic tate landscape reminded him spot occupied by an ivy-dad of successful pockets oftrans- Methodist Church, a large formation in such New York house and a 5-acre orange neighborhoods as the Bowery, grove. Williamsburg and the Flatiron Thebuilding was designed District. in Neo-Renaissance style by said, in part because improve-
"Our investment strategy is to look for those pockets,"
The first phase of 535 units
"We exposed concrete ceil-
hasbeen completed, and an
Beverly Hills.
additional507units are set to
The first three office floors of the Taft Building were
area," Rifkin said.
favor in the 1980s, but they
The Taft Building has a space on the ground floor
arebackinvogue with many tenants in creative fields such
that DLJ hopes to rent to an upscale restaurant. A door on
Hollywood Boulevard leads ment — exactly the group DLJ to a basement that could be hopes to reach. turned into a speak-easy-style "What we found is what ev- bar, he said. erybody wants," Rifkin said. Such abar would have been "It's got this historic feel and illegal when developer Alfred as technology and entertain-
200
500 0
2013
0
2014
I
2013
2014
Source: Central Oregon Association of Realtoe
BendandRedmond medianhomeprices 325
the Fine Arts Building and
the James Oviatt Building in
297
$300K
and dentists, the Los Angeles Times reported in 1924. Ithad
252 offices and suites,684
290
267
x2sox
266
R d
"If all the bricks were placed
endto end in a single linethey would reach from Hoiiywood to Santa Barbara," The Times
218
o d
210
$200K
windows and 10 stores.
It was built of concrete and bricks.
298
Bn
intended to house doctors
190
165 $150K
189
158
DEC JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUNEJULY AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC 2013 2014 2014 Source: CentralOregon MLS via Bratton and Beacon appraisal groups Greg Cross/The Bulletin
said, "a distance of 105miles."
DISPATCHES hospice andhomehealth organization. • The Oxford Hotel, in downtownBend,has added threeelectricvehicle chargingstations for hotel guestuse.Two Tesla charging stations are available forTeslavehicles, and the third will chargeall plug-in vehicles. • Newport Avenue Marketwon the Unified Grocers 2015BenSchwartz retail grocery visionary award. Theaward isgivento an independentretail grocer or grocery companythat is a leaderandaninnovator in
1,000
Eisen and Albert Walker, who are also known for designing downtown Los Angeles and the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in
openin2017. "We are verybullish onthe
400
$350K
prominent architects Percy
Rifkin said. The Taft Building is also nearalarge-scaleapartment complex DLJ is developing.
• Northwest Quality Roofing LLCof Bend, won theCentral Oregon Builders Association 2014 ExcellenceAwardfor subcontractor of theyear. • Bend Heatingwon the Central OregonBuilders Association 2014Excellence Award for green-building subcontractor of theyear. • Partners In Care has selected NealHuston ofNeal Huston & Associates, Archit~, to provide masterplanning services for a4.44-acre Bend campus.Partners In Care is anot-for-profit
2,262
Gary Friedman/Los Angeles Times via Tribune News Service
and new lighting and plumbing were installed. Central heating and air conditioning arebeingphasedinastenants move. ings, found polished concrete floors and beautiful brick," said Andy Rifkin, managing partner of DLJ. Such features were out of
Bank-owned sales
Redmond
2,000
previous owners added win-
dow-unit air conditioners and other changes considered
Standard home sales S h o rt sales•
the retail grocery industry. Newport AvenueMarket is owned byRudyandDebbie Dory andtheir daughter, Lauren Johnson. • Tumalo Garden Market,19879Eighth St., Tumalo, appliedJan. 28to the OregonLiquor Control Commission for anew limited on-premisessales license, whichallows the sale of malt beverages,wine and cider for consumption on the licensedpremises and the sale ofkegsof malt beveragesfor off premises consumpti on,andanoff premises saleslicense, which allows thesaleof malt
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR beverages,wineandcider in factory sealedcontainers for consumption off the licensed premisesand allows approvedlicenseesto offer sampletasting of malt beverages,wineandcider. • The Cottonwood Cafe,now knownas Jen's Garden,403E.Hood Ave., Sisters, appliedJan. 26 to theOregon Liquor Control Commission for a greater privilege, full on-premisessales license, which allowsthe saleand service of distilled spirits, malt beveragesandwine for consumption onthe licensed premises.
SUNDAY • RockyourBusinesswith Mantrapreneur Mastery: Join Bend-basedZan Kavanah inaMantrapreneur BusinessSalon;five-week series; $22per week,or call in for $11,registration requested byFeb.7;4:30-6 p.m.; Namaspa,1135NW GalvestonAve., Bend; 530-539-4493, zan@ mantrapreneurmastery.com or www.mantrapreneurmastery.com. TUESDAY • Enhance YourWebsite with Javascript:Overviewof the Javascript programming language.Enhanceweb
pagesfor animations,form validation andmore.Class runsthroughFeb.25;$129, registration required;6:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.;Central OregonCommunity College, Redmondcampus,2030 SE CollegeLoop, Redmond; 541-383-7270or www.cocc. edu/continuinged. • BuildYourBusiness WebsitewithWordPress — Beginning II: Forthose with a WordPresswebsite who needto learn howto use it. Musthaveahosted WordPresswebsite. Class runsthroughFeb.26; $199, registration required; 6-9 p.m.;Central Oregon
Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend;541383-7270or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • SCORE Iree business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs;checkin atthelibrarydeskonthe second floor; 5:30-7p.m.; DowntownBendPublic Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCOREC entral0regon. org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-Plus, D2 Parents & Kids, D3 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY6, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages
BRIEFING
Deaf dog
Financial fitness worksllopdctteset
comforts patients at
Sherpa Wealth Strategies and The Athletic Club of Bend are holding a free panel discussion Saturday that will look at ways children can help their aging parents stretch their retirement savings and plan for some of the challenges associated with old age. The discussion will feature representatives from Sherpa Wealth Strategies, Paul Battle Senior Care Advocates, Home Instead Senior Care, Oregon Legacy Law and Coldwell Banker-Morris Real Estate. It will take place from 9 a.m.tonoonat486SW Bluff Drive in Bend. RSVPs are requested due to limited space. Contact judy©sherpawealthstrategies.com or 541-633-7728.
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By Andrea Castino (Newport News, Va.) Daily Press
NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — As Lothair, a white
sheltie therapy dog, makes his way in to United States
Air Force Hospital Langley in Hampton for his weekly visit to meet with patients, .f
he walks tall and proud into the building and is immediately greeted with a hug from a receptionist at
s 0
~gi
the front desk.
. + g:4+a Pj =";<..
„ : ;
,
,
'Q
; 4g+A4, . Andy Tullis1rhe Bulletin
Lothair continues walking down the hall, carrying himself like royalty, appropriate for a dog named after a French monarch.
Mark Lindner uses a computer tolook upresearch books requested by a student. Lindner, 55, is a part-time librarian at the Barber
From the time the dog was
Library at Central Oregon Community College. He was unable to find full-time work in Bend.
a puppy, he had a proud, dignified air about him, his
Older people need less sleep
owner, Hampton resident
Healthy people who are 65 or older need less sleep than teenagers and younger adults, according to a series of recommendations the National Sleep Foundation published this week in its Sleep Health journal. Based on a review of existing research, the foundation found people in this age group should need sevenor eight hours of sleep each night, though between five and nine hours could be considered appropriate for some people. It also found: • Newborns (less than 3 months old) should get14to17 hours of sleep each night, though 11 to 19 could be considered appropriate. • Infants (4 to 11 months old) should get 12 to 15 hours, though 10 to18could be considered appropriate. • Toddlers (1 to 2 years old) should get 11 to14 hours, though nine to 16 could be considered appropriate. • Preschoolers (3 to 5 years old) should get 9 to 11 hours, though seven to12 could be considered appropriate. • School-aged children (6 to 13 years old) should get nine to 11 hours of sleep, though seven to12 could be considered appropriate. • Teenagers (14 to 17 years old) should get eight to 10 hours of sleep, though seven to 11 could be considered appropriate. • Young adults (18 to 25 years old) should get seven to nine hours of sleep, though six to 11 could be considered appropriate. • Adults (26 to 64 years old) should get seven to nine hours of sleep, though six to10 could be considered appropriate.
said. "He was like a king." Watching the way
— Mac McLaan
Contact us! Events: Email event information toevents© bendbunetin.comor click on "Submit an Event" at www.bend bulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Reader photos: Submityour photos showing "spring in full swing" tpbendbulletin.com/ spring2014andwe'l pick the best for publication in another special version of Well shot! in the Outdoors section.
Melanie Paul, said. "He was beautiful," she
Lothair moves and interacts with patients at the
hospital, it is not obvious that Lothair has been deaf since birth.
• Boomers are finding jobs, but the fit might not be ideal
Unemployment Last year, the average annual unemployment rate for 55- to 64-year-olds marked its fourth straight year of decline since it peaked in 2010 at 7.2 percent. Oregon's unemployment rate for older workers also fell during this time period.
By Mac McLean sThe Bulletin
12%
ark Lindnerknew he might have
11.1%
Oregon Aii ages
problems finding a job when he
National Aii ages
moved to Bend three years ago. But he didn't count on the only work he could find being a part-time job that had him working
5. % 4. %
seven hours a week. "I'm not really looking (for a full-time job) but I am looking," said Lindner, 55,
ployment Department.
by AARP's Public Policy younger baby boomers have Institute finds that beyond figured out a way he can these statistics lies two trouwho like thousands of other
N a t ional
55 to 64
55 t o 64
2o/, 2.9% 2007 2000 2009
cording to the state's EmBut a new report issued
Oregon
2 010 2011 2012 2013
Source: Oregon Employment Department, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
bling facts: First, both the
income and has for the time being abandoned his search for a full-time job. A recent report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Sta-
state and the country have
Bend-based career counselor said others have found a way
seen continued decreases in
to make a fresh start and get
their workforce participation rates for older people.
back into the workforce even though the odds might seem
Workforce participation rates measure the number
to be stacked against them.
tistics shows the average
national unemployment rate for 55- to 64-year-olds has
of people who have a job or are looking for work. Sec-
fallen steadily over the past
ond, it can now take more
"At the higher-income, higher-education level, what I'm seeing is a rebirth," said Kathy Hoyt, who has helped
four years and is almost
than a year for the average
older workers start their own
half what it was in 2010. Or-
55- to 64-year-old to find a
over this time period, ac-
new job. Though some older workers are struggling, one
businesses in the region's entrepreneurial climate and
i ra By Jayna Omaye The Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel
homes and other settings
— several years ago. He is registered with New Jersey-based Therapy Dogs International, which has dogs registered in all 50 states and Canada.
6.9%
Along with tests required by the organization to be-
5 1'/
dog, deaf dogs must also undergo a startle test.
come a certified therapy During the test, someone
will come up behind the dog and pet and touch its rear quarters, and the
survive on just his spouse's
egon's unemployment rate followed a similar trajectory
"Deafness is an invisible disability," Paul said via email. Lothair began serving as a therapy dog — providing emotional support to patients in hospitals, nursing
helped others switch career
fields completely.
2 014
Greg Cross l The Bulletin
dog must not be startled or react negatively, TDI's websitestates.
The statistics
Paul has had therapy dogs for more than 15 years. She started a pet therapy program at Sen-
After serving in the U.S. Army for 20 years, Lindner
tara CarePlex Hospital in Hampton more than a
went to the University of Illi-
decade ago and started the same program at Langley
nois to get his master's degree in library science in 2006. He worked on a contract basis
with a library in Sioux City, Iowa, for two years while his wife, Sara Thompson, worked at Briar Cliff University and moved to Bend in 2012 when
she got a job working at OSU-Cascades. SeeEmployment/D2
Air Force Base about five
years ago. She usually brings Lothair and another therapy dog to Langley once or twice a week, and she
makes regular visits to local hospitals and nursing homes.
SeeTherapy dog/D4
r o rams e autistic i s itin for him. If this program was not here, it would be very
<P
little bit." Barto said autistic kids are
ORLANDO, Fla. — Derek Alexander looks forward to story time at the East Lake
difficult." This spring, the University
sensitive to certain lighting
of Central Florida's Center for
County Library because he
Autism and Related Disabil-
fits in with the other kids.
ities is launching a training program geared to teach li-
many choices and people, and their parents sometimes feel uncomfortable in the quiet
The 9-year-old has autism, attention-deficit hyperactivity
and overstimulated by too
library environments where
whispering is the norm. Some of the problem stems
brary staff about autism, such
other week to the Sorrento,
as breaking down instructions into shorter sentences, providing more individualized settings and compiling a book list for kids with autism.
Florida, library allow him and
And Florida State University
pilot program she is spear-
other youngsters with autism
recently developed an online training tool that includes ways library staff, specifically those in rural areas, can communicate with and offer
headingaimsto addressthose
disorder and a noncancerous brain tumor that hinders his
ability to control his actions and speech. His visits every
and related medical conditions to not worry about the "social boundaries" of other
libraries during a program geared just for them. "This is the only exposure he gets to a library," Derek's
alternatives to visitors with
autism. It's a major challenge for
from staff and other visitors
who don't know how to communicate with and support autistic visitors. Barto said the
challenges, which she can relate to firsthand. Her son Ori, Stephen M.Dowell /The Orlando (FltL) Sentinel
Derek Alexander, 9, left, gets help from his mom, Kandi Alexander, as the two make modeling clay during an "Autism Friendly Storytime" event at the East Lake County Library in Sorrento, Florida.
Asperger's syndrome, which is similar to autism. "It widens (the staff's and other visitors') horizon toward
a population that is rather
mother, Kandi Alexander,
libraries: One in 68 children in
said of her son, who in addition to attending the specialized story time enjoys playing with Legos and watching Discovery Channel documen-
the U.S. has autism, a condi-
warrants a need for services
stantly under fire," said Gesa
tion that ranges on a spectrum
at libraries that accommodate
from severely challenged to gifted and can affect the ways
kids who sometimes cannot adhere to the expected "be-
Barto, a coordinator at UCF's autism center. "It is almost
kids behave, interact and
taries. "When he comes here,
learn. Local officials say the growing prevalence of autism
havior code." "A family with one or more
he knows it's accommodating
who died in 2008 at 17, had
children with autism is con-
looked at with caution," she said. "With informed per-
sonnel there, they can easily
compared to a combat situa-
defuse the tension that is there
tion. A child that appears to
and ask everyone to go on
be unruly or different stresses (Iibrary workers') nerves a
with their lives." SeeAutism /D3
D2 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
-PI,US
Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
uccession ans s ou inc u e By Erica Curless The (Spokane, Wash.) S pokesman-Review
CALENDAR
responsibility of the cats. Chloe, a long-haired black cat with a
TODAY
w h it e f ace and
a
ns
If Shirley Alexander and paws, is friendly and playher husband die unexpected- ful, prone to showing off ly, they know exactly what for guests. After all, she is will happen to their three be- a queen — she starred as loved cats. the cat queen of t h e 2013 Chloe, Oliver and Sophie SCRAPS auction. It's hard to are included in their will, just imagine she was once a stray like their Spokane Valley kitten found near the Spohome, valuablesand money. kane County courthouse. It directs that the cats, all adOliver weighs 20 pounds, opted from local shelters, go and his orange and cream to SpokAnimal for adoption. coat puffs with anxiety when "People just don't realize Alexander introduces him to how important it is," said Alexander, 73, who has loved cats her entire life and has
ACTIVITIES
GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle, aii ages welcome;11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club,40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
SATURDAY FIELD TRIP: WINTERING BIRDS: Join Damian Fagan on a field trip to several birding hot spots in the Bend area to look for wintering birds such as songbirds, waterfowl and raptors; $10 for members, $20 for nonmembers, registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754.
newcomers.
Sophie, the recluse, refuses to come out of hiding when
sponsored more than 500 visitors arrive. Yet all three cats in local shelters. "They're greet Alexander at the door like kids. You have to have when she gets off her late a plan for them if something shift at Holy Family Hospital, happens." where she works in patient Local animal shelters en- support in the emergency courage everyone — not just room. seniors — to have a succesThese are all traits Spoksion plan for their pets, be- A nimal must know t o f i n d cause tragedy could strike the best possible home for any time. If there isn't a plan each cat if its pet parents die. for a pet, often it causes a Both SpokAnimal and the family crisis or a whole lot of Spokane Humane Society guilt in addition to an unsure can help people plan for the future for a pet who is used to future of their pets. If no famtop-notch care and love. ily or friend is willing to take "The problem is so many the animal, then both organipeople just assume their fam- zations are willing to rehome ily will take their pets, and the pet or even in some inthat's not necessarily the way stancesprovide care for the it goes," said Gail Mackie, pet at the shelter. executive director of SpokThe shelters also can assist AnimaL "We think everyone families in euthanizing pets should have a will." after an owner dies, if that's Alexander also has created the person's desire. a scrapbook detailing care SpokAnimal's succession instructions, medical needs program is called Guardand each animal's likes and ian Angel. Participants are dislikes. The shelter has a asked to fill out an in-depth copy, as does Alexander's pet profile, outlining daily grown daughter, who lives in routines, food, favorite toys Alaska and doesn't want the and other specifics that can
SUMDAY GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle,
aiiageswelcome; noon-4 p.m.; Dan Pell e/The (Spokane, Wash.)Spokesman-Review
Shirley Alexander is planning ahead for her cats, including, in her arms, Chloe, age 5. She has made a will with instructions for their care. Alexander works at Providence Holy Family Hospital in Spokane,
Washington, and volunteers with hospice and ends up counseling people on what to do for pets. help the group find a compat- includes them. She does the ible, comfortable home for a same when she volunteers grieving pet. Pet owners are with hospice. She sees eduasked to share the informa- cating people about the need tion and their wishes for the for pet wills as important future of their pets with fami- work. "So many people have nevly, friends, the executor of the will and their attorney. er thought about it," she said, Spokane Humane Soci- adding she has witnessed ety's program is called For- some ugly fights among famever Friends and has similar ily members over the fate of requirements. pets. At the hospital, Alexander Besides having a will that often asks patients if they includes her cats, Alexander have pets and if their will is also included in a will of
Golden Age Club, 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
an elderly friend in assisted living. The woman has des-
MONDAY
ignated Alexander to inherit her cat, Marshmallow, when
CRIBBAGECLUB: Newcomers welcome; 6-8:30 p.m.; Elks Lodge, 63120 NE Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-382-6281.
she dies. "She's a prepared woman," Alexander said. Richardson said he hopes more people start thinking about their pets' futures and consider making a legal will that includes the animals.
"Do your homework and research before," Richardson said. "It's definitely wise."
TUESDAY BINGO: 6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge 8 Club, 235 NE Fourth St., Prineviiie; 541-447-7659. HIGH DESERTCORVETTE CLUB: 7 p.m.,dinnerat6 p.m.; Pappy's Pizzeria, 20265 Meyer Road, Bend; 541-549-6175.
WEDNESDAY
Depressionamongseniors provesagrowing concern By Jessica Inman Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel
"It certainly isn't a normal consequences than those who The presence of depression part of aging," said Dr. George have dealt with it off and on might make the treatment of
Along with t h e t y pical Niederehe of t h e N a t ional health issues that a ging Institute of M e ntal H ealth. Americans face, more than "Most older adults aren't suf6.5 million people older than fering from depression. So it's 65 are also dealing with the a cause for concern when it repercussions of depression, does happen. It's as common experts say. for other age groups, but not "Sometimes, de p r ession more so." "Depression is very tied to occurs for no one clear reas on," said T i n a K r e nn , a people's overall health condimarket p r a ctice s p ecialist tion," Niederehe said. in WellMed's Winter Park,
Florida, office. Krenn notes that contributing factors can
Ken Duckworth, a m edical director at the National Alliance on M ental I l lness,
include anything from hormones to drug or alcohol in-
said that seniors dealing with
take, a loss or an illness.
might face more negative
Employment
farlesscommon fordisplaced workers between the ages of 55 and 64 (than it is for those 65 or older)," Sarah Rix with
Continued from 01 "I went to graduate school to be a full-time librarian and retire as a f ull-time librari-
an... but that didn't happen,"
depression for the first time
the AARP Public Policy Institute wrote in a January report about the labor market for old-
h a s n't er adults. "However, they are been able to find a full-time nonetheless more likely than said L i ndner, w h o
job since he came to Central Oregon because there aren't
prime age workers to exit (the workforce)."
Rix's report also found the many openings in his field. He started the part-time job, number of people who were where he works seven hours a 55 or older and said they w eek asa reference librarian wanted a job but were curat Central Oregon Communi- rently not taking part in the ty College, in January 2013. workforce grew from 826,000 According to the Bureau when the G reat Recession of Labor Statistics and the started in December 2007 to Oregon Employment Depart- 1.7 million in December 2014. ment, more than 7 percent of The percentage of people Americans between 55 and 64 in this age group who were and 9 percent of Oregonians working a part-time job due in this age group were out of to economic reasons climbed a job and actively looking for from 2.4percent to 4.2 perwork after the Great Reces- cent during this period. sion ended in 2010. These numbers have fallen
The national workforce p articipation rate fell f r o m
64.9 percent to 64.1 percent over this four-year period. "Labor force withdrawal is
age," he said. complex, Niederehe said. Duckworth said depression "One component is proba- might even look like dementia Such a management tech- bly that people with depres- in some cases: pseudo demennique might include yoga, sion are less adherent with tia. Medications such as beta medicine or faith, Duckworth treatment recommendations blockers can create symptoms said. that they are given and don't of depressionin some cases. He called such an approach take medication r egularNiederehe cited a clinical a "portfolio of strength." He ly," he said. "If they are told trial of 18 medical practices identified a full social life they needexercise,they may in three cities, where, in foland a purpose as other key not do it and so forth, and low-up studies, there was a components. there may be other factors lower mortality r ate w h en "It's all a b out l i f e style involved." a "depression-management and the total wellness picOnce an older adult begins specialist" was assigned to ture," said Kim Lett, district to struggle with depression, the practice to ensure that pahealthy-living director. "This Niederehe said, a hardship is tients were getting the treatis just one component of that." attaining the right treatment. ment they were prescribed. throughout their lives.
other medical conditions more
"They never developed a core plan," he said.
working the same job where-
ered by most health insurance
plans, as other counseling seror more years at the same vices might be, so the people employer, according to the she sees have enough money report. to pay for them out of pocket. But rather than seeing these Hoyt said people need to as those 55 or older spent 10
statistics as a deterrent, Hoyt
come to terms with the fact
some work at a brewery, for example — even though he
"If I found something that
sees them as an opportunity they might have to change I liked, I'd do it full time," he and said she has helped doz- their career paths to find a said. "We could use the extra ens of older Central Oregon new job in t oday's market. money to say the least." residents make the transition That often means learning — Reporter: 541-617-7816, from one careerto another or new skills, particularly when mmclean@bendbulletin.com start their own business from
it comes to using social me-
scratch. "People are finding ways to cope in this economy," Hoyt said, acknowledging she might have a selection bias be-
dia, updating their resumes and improving their interview techniques. Lindner said he's also looking at making a career change — he's interested in doing
cause her services aren't cov-
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qfferis notwalid w+ether $isooonts,) I -: . c,
aii ages welcome;11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club,40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf Course, 1938 SW Elkhorn Ave.; 541-548-5935 or www. redmondkiwanis.org. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post No. 44, 704 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
THURSDAY GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle, aii ages welcome; 11:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; Golden Age Club,40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. DEATH BY CHOCOLATE BUNCO NIGHT: Featuring a night of bunco and desserts, prizes and more to benefit Soroptimist International of Bend charities; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; 541389-8940 or www.sibend.org.
and his wife are comfortable
where they are and he's found several advantages to working a part-time job.
Finding opportunity?
by more than 40 percent over Hoyt, the career counselthe past four years, and at the or, said these statistics can end of 2014, the national un- seem depressing because it is employment rate for this age not the atmosphere that baby group was 4.3 percent, while boomers grew accustomed to the state's was 5.1 percent. when they were growing up One reason for this de- and just getting started with crease could be that fewer their careers. "Our parents had one people in this age group are actively looking for work if job until they were 65," she they don't have a job. That's said. "That's not the way it is especially the case in Oregon, anymore." where the workforce particiA September 2014 report pation rate for 55- to 64-year- from the Bureau of Labor olds fell from 66.6 percent in Statistics found half of the 2010 to 62.5 percent in 2014.
"(There is a) stereotype that d epression comes with o l d
GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle,
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Get a taste of Food. Home 8 Garden In
AT HOME • • TheBulletin
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
PARENTS + KIDS
D3
Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife®bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
FAMILY CALENDAR
TODAY STORYTIMES —PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5 years; 10:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. BLIND DATE WITH ABOOK:Ages 12-17, find a great book and write love letters to your favorite author; 4-6 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. "HAROLDANDTHEPURPLE CRAYON":A play with life-sized puppets about Harold's world of drawings, productionby Philadelphia's Enchantment Theatre Company; $23, $13 for children12 and younger; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. SUNRIVERCHILL OUT:Featuring a glow skating party, dummy downhill, K-9kegpull,mushermadness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment and more, various locations; free for spectators, registration prices vary per event; 7 p.m.; TheVillage at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriver-direct.com or 541-593-8704.
SATURDAY VERT FEST: A backcountry festival featuring races, drinks, music, demos and more; free for spectators, various pricing for participants; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com/winter or 541-382-2442. STORYTIMES —FAMILY SATURDAY STORIES: Allages;
Autism Contlnued from D1 FSU's approach, funded by a federal grant, is an online interactive four-session prolect that will guide staffers to be aware of signs and behaviors of autistic library visitors, usesupportive tactics to offer such patrons alternatives and
designatean area where over-
9:30a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES — FAMILY GAME DAY:All ages, play board games; 10a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. SUNRIVERCHILL OUT:Featuring a glow skating party, dummy downhill, K-9kegpull,mushermadness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment and more, various locations; free for spectators, registration prices vary per event;10:30 a.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriver-direct.com or 541-593-8704. STORYTIMES — FAMILY BLOCK PARTY:LEGO UNIVERSE:Allages; 1-2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —FIZZ! BOOM! READ!:Ages 3-5 years, stories, songs and science;1 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090. BEND CIRCUSCENTER FAMILY FUN DAY: Watch a performance by Bend Circus Center Artists followed by lessons in a variety of circus skills; SOLD DUT; 2p.m.; Bend Circus Center, 909 SEArmour Road, Bend; 541-408-1092. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON WINTERCONCERT:The group performs traditional jazz, gospel and Broadway classics; $10; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.
bend.k12.or.us or 541-385-0470.
SUNDAY VERT FEST: A backcountry festival featuring races, drinks, music, demos and more; free for spectators, various pricing for participants; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com/winter or 541-382-2442. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: A fiddle performance, all ageswelcome; free, donations accepted;1-3:30 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road; 541-410-5146.
MONDAY STORYTIMES —FIZZ! BOOM! READ!:Ages 3-5 years, stories,
songs andscience;10:30-11:30a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES — ROCKIETALES PUPPETSHOW:Ages 3-5 years; free; 10:30a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —FAMILYBLOCK PARTY: LEGO UNIVERSE: All ages; 11:30a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050.
TUESDAY STORYTIMES —FIZZ! BOOM! READ!:Ages 3-5 years, stories, songs and science; 9:30a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.
whelmed kidscan retreat. The market programs as inclusive goalis tohelp foster an inviting to all children. spacefor visitors with autism. The idea behind all-incluThe effort will launchin the sive programming is to allow Florida P anhandle with t h e
autistic kids and their families
goal of expanding it statewide. to feel comfortable while interNot ev eryone p r ovides acting with other youngsters special programs for autistic of all abilities. "It's twofold. Everyonebenchildren. Orangeand Osceola county libraries, for example, efits in the inclusion setting," don't offer story times geared saidDonna Lorman, president to autistic kids but instead of the AutismSociety of Great-
The
WEDNESDAY BACKPACKEXPLORERS: Investigate science, art, body movement
stations, storiesandsongs,ages 3-4; $10 per child for members, $15 per child for members; 9:3010:30a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. STORYTIMES—TODDLIN'TALES: Ages0-3;9:30a.m .;EastBend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES — MOTHERGOOSE 5 MORE:Ages 0-2; free; 10:15 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES—TODDLIN'TALES:
saturate the marketplace with morethan
TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!
62080 DeanSwift Road; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES —FAMILY FUN: Ages0-5;10:30 a.m.;La PinePublic Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090.
THURSDAY
STORYTIMES —FAMILY FUN: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. CedarSt.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. STORYTIMES —LISTOS PARA ELKINDER(READY FOR KINDERGARTENIN SPANISH): Ages 0-5, interactive stories with songs, rhymes andcrafts; free; 11 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —BABYSTEPS:Ages 0-18 months; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. CHILDREN'STHEATERCOMPANY DINNERSHOW:Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; $20; 6-8:30 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024.
STORYTIMES— PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary. org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES —ROCKIETALES PUPPETSHOW:Ages3-5 years; free; 9:30a.m.; East BendPublic Library,
VIRGINIA RIGGSCHILDREN'S CONCERT:TheCentral Oregon Symphony performs music by Wagner and Delibes, featuring an instrument petting zoo; free; 7 p.m. concert, 6:30 p.m. instrument petting zoo; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.cosymphony.com or 541-383-6290.
er Orlando, which advocates
exander said niche programs
"A lot of parents want their
for inclusion of peoplewith autism in all aspectsof life.
for kids with autism are vital,
kidsincluded in a lot of things,
especially becauseeach child hasspecific needs. opportunity for our children Alexander, 43, co-foundwith autism as it is with chil- er of a local support group of "It's just as much as alearning
but they need to be realistic
and have the stuff in place that if they have achild come
in, they can accommodate families wi th sp e cial-needs that child," she said. "I would
dren without autism."
But Barto, who plans to launch UCF's training program in Lake County with the goal of expanding to other areas in the region, and Al-
kids and adults, drives about 50 miles round trip from her
hope that more things come
Minneola home so Derek can
have theseprograms because there's aneed. What I can get for Derek helpsmehelp him."
attend the East Lake County Library program.
from this and other libraries
I '
• •
• •
~ • )I
•
m a r keting package is designed to reachYourbusinesslsimportanttousandwewant nearly everyone inCentral Oregon. it to grow and be assuccessful as possible.
The SaWy adVertiSerS iII thiS unique PrOmOtiOnWill
Ages18-36 months;10:15a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —BABYSTEPS: Ages 0-18 months; 11:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —OLD-FASHIONED FAMILY GAME DAY:All ages; 2:304 p.m.; East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. TEEN ADVISORY BOARD:Ages 12-17, cometell the library what you want; 3:30-4:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ redmond or 541-312-1050. MUSEUM8 ME: Museumis open after hours for children andadults with physical, cognitive or social disabilities; free; 4-7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. STORYTIMES —PAJAMA PARTY: Ages 0-5 years, wear your pjs; 6:45p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050.
tln
I iII
org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES—TODDLIN'TALES: Ages18-36 months;10:15a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —FAMILY FUN:Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane;www. deschuteslibrary.org/sunriver or 541-312-1080. STORYTIMES—TODDLIN'TALES: Ages18-36 months; 11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES —PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages3-5 years; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050.
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D4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
PETS
Email information for the Pets Calendar at least 10days before publication to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Pi eon a eant is es'ratswit win s' and strutting in their cages, which sent feathers and feed ONTARIO, Calif. — Dogs flying. But the well-behaved
PETS CALENDAR
By Sue Manning
90 percentofthe members are
The Associated Press
over50. "We are up against computers and computer games," he said.
aren't the only animals that vie
show birds wouldn't let one
SATURDAY Feb.14 VALENTINE'8DAY DOGGIE SOCIAL: Pets are invited for treats and greets; Bend Spay and Neuter will host a photo booth; free; 1-3 p.m.; Westside Bend Pet Express,133 SW Century Drive; 541-389-4620.
for best in show. Hundreds of drop of waste fall on a judge's breedsof pigeons compete in shoe as they were examined for Bob Nolan of Dana Point, a their own version of the West- build, color and weight. historianand a 60-year memminster show, struttingon long, There were birds in blacks, ber of the Los Angeles Pigeon thick legs or fluttering curly, whites and browns with feathClub, which hosted the show, lacy feathers in their bid to be ers on their feet, circular crests said new variationsare rare bestbird. framing their faces and 8-inch because "kids aren't much inThese pigeons aren't the necks. Some looked like street terested inbreedinganymore." "All these pigeons are mannuisance flocks that swarm pigeons but bigger and stronfood scraps at outdoor restau- ger, with massive shoulders made. Noneofthem occur in rants. They are genetically rich and thick necks. nature like this," said Nolan, birds, including variations bred 7yson, the four-time heavyNick Ut/The Associated Press who raises English trumpeters, to look like turkeys or sound weight world champion, kicked Showing pigeons is one of the oldest end largest hobbies in the known for their acoustic sound like trumpets, that drew thou- off the three-day event by re- world. It thrives at a time pets are becoming a more important part of distant trumpets. "All of sands of enthusiasts — includ- leasing 100 white pigeons. He of people's lives. these breeds have evolved from man's creative genius." ing ex-boxer and pigeon lover agreed with the mostly older Mike Tyson — to the National Pigeon Association's 93rd an-
male owners about the need to
infuse youngblood in the aging nual Grand National Pigeon hobby. Show.
"Take this opportunity at
Showing pigeons is one of a young age to enhance your the oldest and largest hobbies responsibility and enjoy it," he in the world. It thrives at a time told youngsters who asked for pets are becoming a more im- photos and autographs. portant part of people's lives 7yson, 48, who had pigeons and animals kept as compan- as a kid, keeps 1,800 birds. He ions range from the traditional said he was 10 when he won his to the unusual, such as rats and first fight because a bully killed tarantulas. one of his birds in front of him. "They teach you a lot about Morethan7,800birdspacked the Ontario Convention Center yourself," Tyson said of pigeons. in Southern California, cooing Nearly a thousand breeds
ADOPT ME
Samantha Wendell of North
of pigeons exist. Not only can these birds become pam-
pered pets, but they also can be raised for racing and stunt p erformances. Racing p i geons can fly for hundreds of miles a day and flap as fast as 80 mph, and performers will unleash death-defying stunts midair. "Racing pigeons are the Ben Johnsons of the world and fancy pigeons are the Naomi Campbells of the world," said
Fadiel Hendricks, president of
the National Fancy Pigeon As- Hollywood and her fantail sociation of South Africa. Francis, who looks like a turThe performers are dubbed key, are inseparable. "Pigeons are just like dogs. rollersand tumblers because of their motion during flight. The They love you like a dog if you popular Birmingham roller spend time with them and love dives into a series of backward them back," she said. "He is all somersaults, stops the roll be- hugs and snuggles." fore hitting the ground, then 7yson says he will watch heads back up and performs his birds for hours. The fightthe feat again. er, who bit off part of Evander Hendricks, who traveled 36 Holyfield's ear, explained his hours from Cape Town, South softer, pigeon-loving side by Africa, said age is a problem in saying: "What I am just wasn't his country too. In his group, what I did for a living."
Submitted photo
June, a cute kitten June is a cute 7-month-old kitten found abandoned in Eastern Oregon. Originally very shy, she hasfound her confidence and is now interacting with people. She isone of just a few older kittens still available at Cat Rescue,Adoption and Foster Team. If you would like to visit June, call 541-3898420, e-mail info@craftcats. org or visit www.craftcats.org.
es,t e ieto o scertain asevove overt e ears By Marc Morrone Newsday
Q
• When I was a child, it • seems that we were able
to feed our dogs any food my mother happened to buy on sale at the supermarket that
week, and they all lived long and uneventful l ives. Now
both my dogs — a sheltie mix and a golden retriever — have food allergies. I cannot feed them anything that has chicken in it and have to feed them
a special food that has fish as the protein source. Friends'
dogs also seem to have many of these same issues. Why have things changed so much with dogs in the last 40 years? Has dog food changed so
we were decades ago. — just as one child in a classA dog with a food allergy room might have a severe al- 40 years ago might have had lergic reaction to peanuts and that allergy all its life, and the the other children can eat pea- scratching and biting at its nut butter all day long. Nutri- skin were attributed to fleas or ent-sensitive issues occur not hot spots rather than a sensiwhen there is a defect in the tivity to the ingredients in the diet but rather when there is a food. At the time, there were sensitivity in the dog. fewer dog food options and Dog foods have improved none of the premium pet foods d rastically i n t h e p a s t 4 0 available today. years. Back then, I clearly rePeople take their dogs to member feeding my dogs a the vet a lot more now than type of food that was basically they did when I was a kid, so cornstarch and red food dye many other medical issues that was ground up to look that dogs suffered from back can tolerate almost any food
like hamburger meat. It must
have been like feeding my poor dogs Play-Doh. (They sure liked it, though.) There much sincethen? also was a dry food that, when • I do not think dogs have water was added, produced a • changed that much. I "rich and meaty gravy" that just think we are more aware must have been anything of their husbandry now than but real beef broth. Dog food we were 40 years ago. Each manufacturers today have a dog is a unique individual with much better understanding of its own idiosyncratic respons- what dogs need to eat to stay es to the foods it eats. Some healthy. Plus, pet keepers are dogs develop a variety of food much more sensitive to and intolerances, whereas others aware ofourpets'health than
A
York, you can always find a One thing you should have practice that's open, even on in the house, though, is some weekends and holidays. So if kind of styptic powder that one of my pets had eaten poi- you can put on a broken nail son or was bleeding profusely, to stop the bleeding right I would not be in the correct away in both mammals and frame of mind to do anything, birds. Another item that evanyway, and, apart from ap- ery bird keeper should have plying pressure to a bleed- is some type of clamp lamp
of a bird that is ill or hurt to 90
degrees or so will allow it to rally enough to give you some time to get it to a vet.
Ihave had many, many different animals over the last
half century, and I have never really had anything in my m edicine chest other t h an
more I could do. If I did muck
some Band-Aids, gauze, hying bulb that can be attached drogen peroxide, styptic pow-
about with the animal, then
to the cage of a bird that is not
ing wound, there is not much
with a 100-watt reptile heat-
der and a heat lamp, but other
most likely I would have been feeling well. Many times, in- pet keepers may be better in a severely bitten or scratched. creasing the air temperature crisis than I am.
then were never discovered or
diagnosed. •
•
What household items • should I have in my kitchen to use as an emergency first-aid kit for my pets? We have dogs, birds and cats in ourhome. • I will be honest with you
Q•
•
a
a
• on this issue, as I panic
totally when something happens to one of my pets, and I just rush it right to the vet. For-
tunately, in my area of New
Therapy dog Continued from 01 Paul decided to acquire a
deaf dog as she prepared to retire from Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind in 2009 af-
ter a 30-year career in education, intending to use the dog to help deaf children improve their literacy skills, she said. She ended up taking in Lothair as a 3-month-old puppy. Both of his parents are blue merle sheltie champion show dogs, and breeding them together increases the likelihood at least one of their puppies will be deaf or deaf and blind, she said. Paul,who became deaf at 12 after incorrectly being diagnosed with an illness and being prescribed the antibiotic
.w r Judith Lowery/(Newport News, Va.) Daily Press
Lothair, a deaf therapy dog whom owner Melanie Paul takes to Langley AFB weekly, waits to be petted by patient Rebecca Bennett-Jordan as Steven Jordan watches in Hampton, Virginia. Paul
says this is the first deaf therapy dog who understands and uses American Sign Language. •
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streptomycin, said there tends
to be some hesitation among some deaf people to have a deaf dog, as they end up relying on the dogs to hear for
thair, her other dogs learned to reminisce about pet dogs the signs too. the family used to have. "It's nice theybring the dogs During a trip to Langley on
them. However, because her husband as well as her other
the hospital all day." Staffers at the hospital enjoy
a recent Wednesday, Lothair paid a visit to Rebecca Ben-
nett-Jordan, who underwent dogs can hear, that wasn't an a hysterectomy that morning issue for her. and was waiting to see when "In fact, maybe because of she'd be able to go home. the affinity that the puppy B ennett-Jordan, who h a s would also be deaf, 'just like three cats, said Lothair's visit me,' I enthusiastically looked was unexpected but welcome. "I love it," she said as she forward tothe experience of adopting and raising a deaf petted Lothair in her bed. "I'm dog," Paul wrote in a 2011 arti- an animal person." cle about Lothair published in Next, Lothair spent ti me Sheltie Pacesetter magazine. with Abygale Morris, who When she didn't see results was in the hospital for asthfrom traditional obedience ma treatment on the eve of her school, Paul taught Lothair
10th birthday.
"Hope you'll be feeling betAmerican Sign Language and created her own signs, apply- ter," Paul told Abygale. "We're trying," responded ing techniques used to teach deaf children, Paul explained Abygale's mother, Rebecca, as in the article. she knitted a sock. In the course of training LoLothair's visit led Abygale
in," she said. "It sucks to be in
FF
Lothair's visits as much as the
ROSES
patients do. "The therapy is not just for the patients, it's for us too,"
said Monique Rolle, a civilian registered nurse. "I wish they came moreoften." Knowing that those at the hospital look forward to see-
ing the dogs motivates Paul week after week.
this Valentine's Day! : to order call 1.800.929.0916 or visit:: vrwnv.fromyouflowers.com/roses *50% Off Our Line of Roses Offer applies only to a select line of rose products and does not apply to florist delivered arrangements. See item-level product description for details. *Orders for flower delivery today must be placed by 3pm in the delivezy zip code. Next day delivery options or dates in the future are also available. Cut off time for delivery same day varies on weekends and during peak holidays.
"It warms my heart when I
see patients, staff and visitors smile, their faces light up and are so happy to see my dogs when we do visits," Paul said via email.
"The individual happiness of patients stays with me long after I have completed the visit."
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
Newseriesset or Win re sOWN TV SPOTLIGHT
movies.
By Lynn Elber
utive producer and will play a recurring role, the network said. DuVernay will write, di-
The Associated Press
rect and executive produce the
the idea of a modern woman 1965 voting rights campaign wrestling with identity, famled by Martin Luther King Jr. ily, culture and the echoes of Production on Winfrey and history." DuVernay's drama series is Winfrey, who boosted many scheduled to begin this year, an author's fortunes with her OWN said. The contemporary talk show's book club, said she series will follow a woman loved Baszile's book and "im-
Winfrey's recent movies include "Lee Daniels' The Butler" and DuVernay's film about the
drama, her first TV series. Winfrey and the director of the Former talk show queen Oscar-nominated movie "Sel- Winfrey increased her presma" arecreating a drama se- ence on OWN's nonscripted ries for Winfrey's TV channel. programs (including "Oprah The project from Winfrey Presents: Master Class") to g/' and filmmaker Ava DuVer- help steady the channel after Evan Agostini I The Associated Press nay is inspired by the Natalie its rocky start. The new drama Ava DuVernay, director of "Selma,n and Oprah Winfrey are creating Baszile novel "Queen Sugar," will mark her acting debut on a drama series for Winfrey's TV channel. The project is inspired by the OWN channel said. OWN after several big-screen Natalie Baszile's novel "Queen Sugar." Winfrey will serve as exec- p rojects an d n e t work T V LOS ANGELES — Oprah
i
who leaves her affluent Los
Angeles life to move with her teenage daughter to an inherited sugar cane farm in the
B p.m. on 2, 9, "Last Man Standing" —In a new episode called "Big Brother," Mike (Tim Allen) is beside himself after a neighbor's security camera
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitablefor children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance.
rude humor. What it' sabout:Spongebob has to venture from his cartoon world of Bikini Bottom into the "real" world to recover a stolen burger recipe. The kid-attractor factor:Spongebob. Patrick.
Parents' advisory:Suitable for all ages,butaime d atB-and-unders. »
"PROJEOT AI.MANAQ
Rating: PG-13 for some language and sexual content. What It's about:Teens stumble across plans for a time machine Goodlessons/bad lessons: and proceed to build it and use it "Nothing's impossible when we're to improve their lives. a team." The kid-attractor factor:Teens, Violence:Cartoon combat, involv- dealing with bullies, tricky high ing french fries and condiments. s c h ool quizzes, cash shortages
catches Vanessa(Nancy Travis)
and the need for a girlfriendwith a time machine.
Goodlessons/bad lessons: "There are nosecond chances." So get your life right the first time
s
Sex:Teen sex is discussed and suggested. Drugs:None. Parents' advisory:Take the PG-13 seriously, OK for 13-and-up.
Courtesy Nickelodeon Movies
SpongeBob Squarepants and friends venture from the sea in the 3-D animated"The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out ofWat er."
Suitabe for all ages.
and said how thankful she is to have my sister and me to take care
What started as a "let's do lunch"
— Uncertain in Maryland
friendship has developed into a
Dear Uncertain:Your daughters
close, affectionate r elationship. Neither of us wants to take this to the next level, but we do want to spend as much time togetheras
have told you they don't want you to share what you do with your
care of herself. The two of us gave each other the "Not me... you!" look. While we love her dearly, when
lady friend and where you go, and I am advising you to abide by their wishes. If word should get back to
of her when she's too old to take
the time comes, Aunt Lil will be
off to a nursing home or have private home health care. Should we approach this with her now or
them that you were
wait and blindside her if/when it
in town and they ask about it, be honest please, live every moment of your life to the fullest
becomes an issue'? — Careful Planning in California Dear Careful Planning:Having been so close to you and your sister
other city and rarely visit, profess
in the time God allows, and don't
since you were children, I can un-
to like her and say they are happy
permit your family to diminish one minute of it. Dear Abby:My older sister and
derstand why Aunt Lil might have expected some kindness in return.
life with friends and who live in the same town.
My daughters, who live in anthat I have someone in my life. But they have asked that I be sensitive
a nd don't lie. A n d
However, because the two of you
aren't up to the task, she should be She has always jokingly told us we told now. It may provide an incen-
to their feelings of loss for my late wife, who died four years ago.
I are very close to our "Aunt Lil."
They don't want me to share what
are "her children, too" because she
we do and where we go, which is
tive for her to take better care of never had any of her own and was her health. Even if it doesn't, it may
hard when Diane is such a part of
active in our lives growing up.
my life. Myproblem is Diane and I want to spend a weekend in the city in which my children live to attend
the theater. We will be sharing a hotel room. Do we tell them our
Aunt Lil is in her late 60s and in
declining health. Now single, she smokes two packs of cigarettes a day, but counts it only as one be-
cause they are slims. She also has high blood pressure, high choles-
plans and that we would like to see terol, etc. them while there, or not? Diane The other day, while visiting isn't comfortable going behind with my mom, Aunt Lil started their backs, but she also doesn't complaining about getting older
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, FEB. 6, 2015:This yearyouwill have
spur her to think about her assets and planning for her care or supervision should she need it in the future. Because you don't want the bother, suggest she involve another trusted family member or a social worker to watch out for her if she's no longer competent to manage her affairs. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box69440,LosAngeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
spraying an annoying feline with a hose. His concern over this breach of family privacy turns to something else, however, after his perusal of the recorded footage also reveals Mandy (Molly Ephraim) in a compromising situation. Kaitlyn Dever and Amanda Fuller also star.
profanity.
Dear Abby:I am a widower in want to cause a rift in my famimy mid-80s and have met a love- ly. Neither do I. What would you ly widow, "Diane," also in her 80s. advise'?
with Diane's family
sI
ta,
Language: Scattered moments of
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
DEP,R
~
Violence: Bullying, accidents, deaths.
Dad'sgirlfriendgivesdaughters pause
we can in the years left to us. We have a very active social
mediately saw it as a series for OWN." A debut date for the series was not announced.
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: L a nguage: Spongedclean. SPONGE OUT OF WATER" S e xNot : a hlnt Rating: PG for mild action and Drugs Nope
South. In a statement, DuVernay said she was "captivated by
energy and direction. Take a class in By Jacqueline Bigar communication, and learn how to think and speak more positively. Curb a tenmust, but opt for a quietevening atyour dency to get into arguments. Exercise and meditation will help you have the place. Address your concerns a different self-control you desire. If you are single, day. Tonight: Make a favorite dinner. carefully check out anyone you meet pri- CANCER (June21-July 22) or to September; ** * * * S peak your mind early in Stars showthe kind people might not the day. A partner is likely to become of dayyou'Ilhave be what they seem. controlling, regardless of whether you ** * * * D ynamic If you are attached, choose to stay mum. A financial matter ** * * Positive th e two of you be more costly than you originally *** Average ha ve a tendency could had thought. Decide how important this ** So-so to overspend. Be venture is. Tonight: Hang out with a pal. * Difficult careful not to withhold thoughts that LEO (July 23-Aug.22) could affectyour relationship. Share, but ** * Take a hard look at your budget choose the right words. VIRGOoften can before youmakeany plans. Yourfeelings about the costs of adventure could be be uptight. different from those of a friend or partner. ARIES (March21-April 19) Know when to say "enough is enough." ** * * Watch what happens when Sometimes, taking off is the solution. you let go of your need to control. You Tonight: All smiles. could be surprised by several offers that come forward as a result. If a friend or VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) acquaintance goes on the warpath,do ** * * You'll feel empowered, though whatever you can to avoid him or her. To- you inadvertently could trigger quite an night: Squeeze in some kind of exercise. argument. Be aware of your limits when dealing with a friend who constantly TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * Y ou have unusual creativity. distorts reality. Find a unique way to open the door for this person to see this distorWhat makes your ideas unique is how grounded and practical you are when im- tion. Tonight: Do your own thing. plementing them. Others often seekyou LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) out for advice because of this quality. You ** You could feel as if something is off. might need to set boundaries with some- Whether you aren't seeing a situation one. Tonight: Start the weekend in style. clearly or someoneelse keeps changing his or her opinion, it would be in your GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * Many of your friends could be best interests to say little and observe more. You might want the feedback of taken aback by your decision to play it low-key. You might not be in the mood a trusted friend. Tonight: Make it OK to for TGIF celebrations. Focus on whatyou vanish.
** * * * Y ou know what you want. You will be upfront about your desires, but others still might not follow through. If you want something to unfold a certain way, you'd better plan do it yourself. Otherwise, you could be disappointed. Tonight: A new friend intrigues you.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * You might feel as if someone is pushing you into a money matter or some other kind of agreement that could affect you financially. Extremes mark your spendinghabits.Take an overview and
detach beforemakingany major decisions. Tonight: Out late.
GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You might want to put terms on a situation, because you are more comfortable when you feel totally in control. Try not to give in to this impulse. If you step back, you will open up new possibilities, some of which might really please you. Tonight: Go to a hip spot for music.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You like your freedom, but sometimes you must bend in order to make a relationship work. A little discomfort won't hurt you, and ultimately, it will allow you to relax more. Curb spending today, as you could unwittingly go overboard. Tonight: Get to know someone better.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * F riends and loved ones will be full of suggestions, all of which seem to appeal to you. You might not be as sure of yourself as you would like to be. Take note of the confidence others have in you. You makegood choices;countonthat ability. Tonight: Dance away frustration. © King Features Syndicate
I
ica Celaya) to wonderwhere her visions really comefrom.
Charles Halford also stars.
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11a.m., 12:15, 2:15, 3:45, 6:15, 7:20, 9, 9:40 • AMOST VIOLENT YEAR (R)6:I0,9:50 • BLACK OR WHITE(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6, 9:25 • BLACKSEA(R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:40, 10:20 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:10, 6:50,10:10 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 6:25, 9:05 • INTOTHEWOODS(PG) l2:50,3:50 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 3:30, 7:30 • JUPITERASCENDING3-D (PG-13) 12:30, 9:45 • JUPITERASCENDINGIMAX3-D (PG-13) 3, 10 • THE LOFT(R) 10:35 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 9:45 • PROJECTALMANAC (PG-13)11:40a.m.,2:25,5,7:45, 10:25 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 3:15, 6:30 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 10:05 • SEVENTHSON IMAX 3-D (PG-13)noon,7 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m.,12:05, 2:45, 6:45, 9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:35 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG) 1, 3:40 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 7:50, 10:30 • WILD(R) 11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:20 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
B p.m.on 5,8,"Constantine" — A phrase from Shakespeare's "Hamlet" — "Angels and Ministers of Grace"serves as the title of this new episode, in which John (Matt Ryan) heads to a hospital to investigate a mysterious attack with the unwitting assistance of Manny (Harold Perrineau). Back on the homefront, a personal health scare leads Zed (Angel-
B p.m. on CW, "Hart of Dixie" — In the new episode "Bar-Be-Q Burritos," Zoe and Wade (Rachel Bilson, Wilson Bethel) do the math and realize they need to generate more money before the baby comes. Noticing how worried Zoe is, Wade lies to her about how well
the RammerJammer is per-
forming. Later, hoping to draw customers back, Wade books a
surprise musical performance. After running into each other at a singles hoedown, Lavon and Lemon (Cress Williams, Jaime King) realize it won't be easy to move on from their relationship.
ct zap2it
ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications
r
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE GAMBLER (R) 9:30 • INTERSTELLAR(PG-13) 5:30 • Younger than 21 mayattend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED ANIMATION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 3:30 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (no MPAArating) 8 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTIONSHORTS (no MPAA rating) 5:15 I
I
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICANSNIPER (R) 3, 6:05, 9 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • JUPITERASCENDING (PG-13)4:20,6:55,9:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4, 6:15, 8:30
DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT
a03 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 4: I5, 7 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 7:15 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 5, 7:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:30, 6:45 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)4:45 • t
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:45, 6:40, 9:30 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:05, 6:50 • JUPITERASCENDING3-D (PG-l3) 9:20 • PROJECTALMANAC(PG-13) 5:05, 7:30, 9:50 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 7,9:25 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 4:45 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50, 7:10, 9:25 •
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Upstairs — R) 4:15, 7:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GD! Magazine
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 •
•
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
kfl
Call for package rates
=a
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
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Subscribe or manage your subscription
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T he
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B ug I e t I n : 208
Pets & Supplies
German Shepherds
177g
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210
w . Q hh, a g d l e 210
Furniture & Appliances Furniture & Appliances Refrigerator - white 22 cu. ft. Maytag, French door with icemaker and bottom freezer, only 2 years old, and has been stored for most of that time. Paid $1500,asking $1000. 541-923-7360.
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241
245
246
253
260
Bicycles & Accessories
Golf Equipment
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
TV, Stereo & Video
Misc. Items
Get The Big Deal from Are you in BIG trouble Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 DirecTV! Act N o w- with the IRS? Stop %%KTX Free wage & bank levies, ga. - immac., 28" full $19.99/mo. NEW choke, field mdl $750; 3-Months of HBO, liens & audits, unfiled Win. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 starz, SHOWTIME 8, tax returns, payroll issi n g Cleveland Irons! FRE E sues, & resolve tax tt • l 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in ga. immac., 30" full C INEMAX. N EW Marin A r plastic,$325 ohoi choke field mdl $750; GENIE HD/DVR Up- debt FAST. Seen on 202 g rade! 2 01 4 N F L CNN. A B BB . C a ll r 7mm Rem. mag genta Nev er ridNew Adams r 1-800-989-1278. Want to Buy or Rent HVA action. improved S unday Ticket. I n den 2010 m o del Idea cluded with S e lect (PNDC) Shimano 105 thruMauser 98 M o n te HAVANESE PUPS, 3,4,5 HB,6-PW, WANTEDwood dressAKC non-shedding, o ut. 6 06 1 a l u m. Carlo stock, Leupold Packages. New Cus- Baby crib, dark wood Find It in senior, $525 obo! ers; dead washers. hypo-allergenic, great triple- butted Hydro 4x scope $600; Win. tomers Only. IV Sup- with mattress, excellent Desk, NEW, solid Sa/e ends 2/10/15 The Bulletin Clessifieds! Edge Road main 541-420-5640 mdl 43 - .218B (1952) port Holdings LLC- An cond, $95. 541-771-7716 family pets, UTD shots/ wood, compact, byn 951-454 2561 e 541 385-5809 wormer. $850. frame with carbon Weaver 2.5X scope authorized D i recTV Bassett, 32" W x 17 (in Redmond) 205 Breville juice 541-460-1277 s eat-stay and E 4 $550. Win. Mdl 75- Dealer. Some excluD x 60" H, hanging file extractor, $60. sions apply - Call for Items for Free anti-flex chain-stay. .22 LR (1942) Exc. storage ottoman, n 541-312-2393 A KC LA B 3 bla c k Sleep Comfort Twin 246 details Fits 5'8n- 6'1 $750 cond., Weaver 2.5x $325. In SE Bend, XL adjustable bed 1-800-410-2572 Gas R a nge, b l a ck males, 8 wks, dew ($825 if you want PD Guns, Hunting s cope $750; W i n. Buylng Dlamonds ca/I 541-508-8784 with vibrator, with or w/four burners, 7 yrs. claws, shots, wormed. 5 700 B l ac k S h i Pre-64 Mdl 70 nfeath- (PNDC) /Gold for Cash & Fishing without mattress & old, oven needs work. $500. 541-410-3635 mano 105 pedals) erweight" .243, (1955) Just bought a new boat'? Saxon's Fine Jewelers foundation, clean, 54'I -480-2483 Your haul. 541-389-6655 Bend local pays CASHII E xc., Bushnell 3 x Sell your old one in the needs new air pump. 541-388-3555 Find exactly what scope, $1250. 1944 classifieds! Ask about our for all firearms & $600 BUYING 242 Mauser Mdl 98K-44, Super Seller rates! you are looking for in the ammo. 541-526-0617 541-382-7072 or 208 Lionel/American Flyer Military rifle w/sling, 541N85-5809 541-410-5165 Exercise Equipment CLASSIFIEDS trains, accessories. Pets & Supplies CASH!! good cond., $250. 541-408-2191. Wall-mount for TV, For Guns, Ammo & Leupold VariX11 scope Lifecore elliptical cross Reloading Supplies. holds up to 40" TV, Malemute/Husky pups, BUYING & SE LLING Drexel 3x9, $175. Call Bob, trainer, used very little The Bulletin recomThe Bulletin 541-408-6900. blue eyes 3 females, $45. 541-312-2393 All gold jewelry, silver 541-419-5126. Woodbrldge mends extra caution $200. 541-515-4799 recommends extra ' 5 males. Can send and gold coins, bars, pecan coff ee table I caution when purwhen purc h as- photos. $500 & up. 255 247 rounds, wedding sets, and two pecan end ing products or serchasing products or, 541-977-6150. Computers class rings, sterling silSporting Goods tables. End tables vices from out of the services from out of I ver, coin collect, vinarea. Sending cash, have pull-out shelf. - Misc. the area. Sending I tage watches, dental T HE B ULLETIN r e DO YOU HAVE checks, or credit ina cash, checks, or $300 set. quires computer ad- gold. Bill Fl e ming, SOMETHING TO f ormation may be Basketball Hoop, I credit i n f ormation 503-317-9668 vertisers with multiple 541-382-9419. SELL outdoor, portable, subjected to fraud. may be subjected to Like new h igh-end ad schedules or those Chef's Choice k nife FOR $500 OR For more informa$25. 541-383-2062 I FRAUD. For more quality Sole F80 moselling multiple sys- sharpener, LESS? tion about an adverinformation about an I torized treadmill, 3.0 tems/ software, to dis- 541-312-2393 $65. G ENERATE SOM E Non-commercial 248 tiser, you may call Cute, Smart & No advertiser, you may I H P motor. Wid e , EXCITEMENT in your close the name of the advertisers may Shed. Min-Schnauzer the O r egon State Health & Ore g onI quiet deck. LED disbusiness or the term DID YOU KNOW 7 IN neighborhood! Plan a I call t h e place an ad Schnoodles. Tails Attorney General's ' State Atto r ney ' plays include speed, "dealer" in their ads. 10 Americans or 158 Beauty Items garage sale and don't with our docked, 1st shots, & Office C o n sumer adj. incline, fan, disPrivate party advertis- million U.S. A d ults forget to advertise in I General's O f f i ce "QUICK CASH wormed. $350-$450. Protection hotline at Consumer Protec- • tance and more. Easy read content f rom Compare Me d i care ers are defined as classified! SPECIAL" Good homes only! 1-877-877-9392. tion h o t line at I folding an d l i f ting 1 week3lines 12 m e dia 541-385-5809. S upplement P l a ns those who sell one n ewspaper 541-322-0609 i 1-877-877-9392. d eck. $ 9 50 . Ca l l each week? Discover ol' and Save! Call NOW computer. The Bulletin 541-410-8849 the Power of the Paduring Open EnrollServing Centrel Ongon sincetggg Pomeranian male, small, Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded I TheBulletin I ~ee eke 2 N 257 cific Northwest Newsment to receive Free Ad must brwn lono-hair, trained. glass doors & mirror Sererng Central Oregon since ntcg Good classified adstell paper Advertising. For at back, 3 cupboards Medicare Quotes from Musical Instruments include price of Adopt a rescued cat or $200. 541-233-9604 the essential facts in an a free brochure call Trusted, A ff ordable below. Exc. c o nd. e n le iem ot gaoo kitten! Altered, vacci- POODLE or POMAPOO ~ interesting Manner. Write 212 916-288-6011 or Companies! Get cov$400. 541-318-8797 or less, or multiple nated, ID chip, tested, from the readers view -not email toy. Adorable! ered and Save! Call Antiques & items whose total more! CRAFT, 65480 puppies, the seller's. Convert the 541-475-3889 877-363-2522. cecelia©cnpa.com NEED TO CANCEL does not exceed 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Collectibles facts into benefits. Show (PNDC) (PNDC) YOUR AD? $500. 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 QueenslandHeelers the reader howthe item will The Bulletin www.craftcats.org Dishes, service for 12, Antiques Wanted: Lowest P r i ce s on Standard & Mini, $150 help them in someway. Classifieds has an Call Classifieds at includes serving pcs, Tools, furniture, marbles, & up. 541-280-1537 Health & Dental InBoxer/bulldogpups, 7 "After Hours"Line This 541-385-5809 coin-op machines, beer $75. 541-312-2393 surance. We have the 1981 Yamaha mo. 2M, 1F , $ 350 www.rightwayranch.wor www.bendbulletin.com advertising tip Call 541-383-2371 cans, pre-'40s B/W phodpress.com best rates from top Console Piano obo. 541-460-3026. Fireproof file cabinet, brought to you by 24 hrs. to cancel tography. 541-389-1578 companies! Call Now! with bench, 2 drawers, $125. your ad! Shih-Tzu Dogs 3-yr old 877-649-6195. 1 owner, rich tone, The Bulletin 541-312-2393 Antique Victorian rocker Smith & Wesson Sen'ng Cent al Ong n since lget Male $400, Female excellent condition, (PNDC) from 1800s, exlnt cond, M&P15-22 with Puppy ready Feb 10 How to avoidscam currently tuned $190. 541-923-1615 Pro-Form XP Whirlwind 4x1 6x44 BSA Cats $500. 541-589-4948 by Jana. and fraud attempts 280 bike exerciser, $75 Eye scope, Fieldline Get your blossomhutOgmail.com VBe aware of internaobo. 541-318-0129 Tactical carrying TURN THE PAGE business $1700 obo. tional fraud. Deal loChihuahua mix, tiny, cute! Siberian Husky purebred case. Excellent con541489-1966 243 For More Ads cally whenever pos1st shots, dewormed, pups! & Husky-Wolf pups! dition, was used in Ski Equipment sible. $250. 541-771-0956 $400. 541-977-7019 The Bulletin National Finals QUEEN BED e ROW I N G Y Watch for buyers Rodeo for target with Chihuahua Toy pups, Wheaten Terrier, pure- Complete Snowshoes MSR Dewho offer more than Comes cute 9 wks, 2 shots, bred, soft no-shed coat, d ouble pillow t o p The Bulletin reserves nali classic as new, 3 competition. with an ad in your asking price and with original sights woo d the right to publish all sets f lotation t a ils, $150. 541-977-7766 tail docked, dewclaws, mattress, who ask to have The Bulletin's and 25-round magaads from The Bulletin $110. 541-526-5164 headboard, all linshots. 12-wk female, money wired or Donate deposit bottles/ crate & d oggy door ens, and a 13 n TV zine. $850 obo. "Call A Service newspaper onto The cans to local all vol., trained. Family pet only! included! Must sell 541-410-0841 Bulletin Internet webYamaha E-flat Alto Sax, handed back to them. 245 Professional" Fake cashier checks non-profit rescue, for 1977, excellent cond, by Feb. 15. site. Golf Equipment Directory feral cat spay/neuter. $875. 541-447-8970 only played senior year in and money orders Best offer takes it! Spring/Fall Chinook are common. T railer a t Jak e ' s college, $1000 obo.AND The Bulletin 541-389-0340 210 Fishing Special Serving Central Oregon sincetgttg u'Nevergive out perCHECK YOUR AD D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; 253 with Capt. Greg. sonal financial inforPetco in Redmond; Furniture & Appliances 1 day Spring Chinook, TV, Stereo & Video 240 mation. donate M-F at Smith $125 p/p; 2 dark blue swivel/rocker YTrust your instincts Crafts & Hobbies Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, arm chairs, exc cond, 1 day Fall Chinook Digital cable box and be wary of Bend; or CRAFT in $100 p/p. converter, $35. someone using an Tumalo. Can pick up $20 / pair. 541-548-6642 g Two person minimum. 541-312-2393 escrow service or large amts, 389-8420. King Trombone,1941 on the first day it runs 541-379-0362. The Bulletin www.craftcats.org HN White, 7-1/2" bell, agent to pick up your to make sure it is corDISH T V Ret a iler. ponshers • Saws To Subscribe call $500, obo. 541-388-2045 merchandise. Range, Jenn A i r, rect. nSpellcheckn and Check out the Starting ai 541-385-5800 or go to down draft, black, human errors do occlassifieds online $19.99/month (for 12 or 541-280-1912 eves Repair & Supplies The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com with four burners, cur. If this happens to www.bendbulletin.com mos.) & High Speed Serving Central Oregon sincetgga i 260 ! convection oven with I nternet starting a t your ad, please con~z Updated daily Luggage, 4 assorted three shelves, great Misc. Items tact us ASAP so that $14.95/month (where A1 Washers&Dryers pieces, with wheels, cond. corrections and any available.) SAVE! Ask FIND IT! Wanted: Collector seeks $150 ea. Full war$95. 541-312-2393 22" 2 stage Craftsman Paid $2290. adjustments can be About SAME DAY Inhigh quality fishing items French Bulldog AKC pup- ranty. Free Del. Also BII Y I7' Asking $1600. made to your ad. stallation! CALL Now! Snow Blower, elect. MOVING Boxes, ap& upscale fly rods. Call pies, great Valentine's wanted, used W/D's SELL IT! 503-866-8858 start like new, $300 prox. 35, various sizes 541-385-5809 541-678-5753, or 1-800-308-1563 gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 541-280-7355 The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classified 541-548-3928 503-351-2746 chrisandcyndi @yahoo.com (PNDC) $35. 559-960-3906 www.sherman-ranch.us $1900+. 541-281-6829
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YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS &ENTERTAINMENT
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E2 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
325
476
Hay, Grain & Feed
Employment Opportunities
Quality orchard mixed grass hay, $190-$235 ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 betwn Bend/Redmond
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
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KNO W Malntenance Newspaper-generWhispering w anted t o j o i n a ted content is s o valuable it's taken and Winds our caring condensed, Retirement Wheat Straw for Sale. m emory c a r e repeated, broadcast, t weeted, is seeking a full-time Also, weaner pigs. 528 c ommunity. A l l discussed, p o sted, and a par t -time 541-546-6171 shifts a v ailable. Loans & Mortgages copied, edited, and maintenance tech. Must be reliable. emailed c o u ntless W ages s tarts a t WARNING times throughout the $ 11.50/hr. Looking for your Mus t Also needed part The Bulletin recomday by others? Dis- have some basic next employee? t ime c hef. F o r mends you use caucover the Power of plumbing, Place a Bulletin more in f o rma- Newspaper Advertis- electrical, tion when you procarpentry and help wanted ad tjon, or a ny vide personal ing in SIX STATES painting experience. today and information to compaquestions, with just one phone Apply in person at reach over nies offering loans or call. For free Pacific 2920 NE Conners please call 60,000 readers credit, especially Northwest Newspa- Ave., Bend., 541-385-4717 each week. those asking for adper Association Net- Pre-employment Your classified ad vance loan fees or work brochures call drug test required. will also companies from out of Call The Bulletin At 916-288-6011 or appear on state. If you have email 54t -385-5809 Manufacture Tech bendbulletin.com concerns or quesceceliaocnpa.com Bend company seeks Place Your Ad Or E-Mail which currently reliable manufactur- tions, we suggest you At: www.bendbulletin.com (PNDC) receives over ing tech for full time consult your attorney or call CONSUMER 1.5 million page position. Must have Place a photo inyour private party ad Client Service Assoc. PRIVATE PARTY RATES HOTLINE, views every experience w/basic JOURNEYMAN for only $15.00par week. for Financial Starting at 3 lines 1-877-877-9392. month at no hand tools, can lift PLUMBER Planning Firm *UNDER '500in total merchandise extra cost. 20lbs regularly, 40lb BANK TURNED YOU OVER'500 in total merchandise Successful i n d epenneeded for to 60lb on occasion. DOWN? Private party Bulletin dent financial planfull time position. 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $16.50 P ay is D O E a n d will loan on real esClassifieds ning firm looking for a Must have service 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 qualifications. tate equity. Credit, no Get Results! highly motivated perknowledge and be Pre-employment & *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 problem, good equity Call 541-385-5809 son to join our team. suited for subsequent random is all you need. Call 28 days .................................................$61.50 or place your ad M ust h av e go o d customer service. Garage Sale Special FAA D O T drug Oregon Land Morton-line at communication and 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) Some new conscreening r equired. gage 541-388-4200. bendbulletin.com problem solving skills, struction and Send resume & cover LOCAL MONEY:Webuy be able to multi-task remodel work exl etter to: PO B o x and work i ndepensecured trustdeeds & 341 perience helpful. 7168, B e nd , OR note, A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: dently, and be techsome hard money 97708. Good pay & benHorses & Equipment loans. Call Pat Kellev Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. nologically savvy. Seefits. Start ASAP. 541-382-3099 ext.18. * curities lice n sing BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Please call Marketing Sales preferred. Ple a se 573 541-815-2355 REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well e mail r esume t o : Manager .•, Ni , Business Opportunities akgpositionogmail. Experience in the as any out-of-area ade. The Bulletin com health care field bendbulletin.com YOU KNOW that reserves the right to reject any ad at preferred, but not DID Take care of not only does newsany time. is located at: The Bulletin's required. Must be 3-horse Silverado paper media reach a "Call A Service your investments outgoing and per1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel HUGE Audience, they Professional" Directory s onable. Mus t trailer. Deluxe showwith the help from a lso reach an E N Bend, Oregon 97702 man/semi living is all about meeting have reli a ble GAGED AUDIENCE. The Bulletin's quarters, lots of exDiscover the Power of transportation. your needs. "Call A Service tras. Beautiful condiNewspaper AdvertisPLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction For more i nfortion. $21,900. OBO Call on one of the ing in six states - AK, is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Professional" Directory m ation, o r a n y 541-420-3277 ID, MT,OR, UT, WA. professionals today! to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these questions, please For a free rate bronewspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Circle Y mens saddle call 541-385-4717 chure call Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. leather saddle bags, Maintenance 916-288-6011 or all related tack, $500. email Mental Health 260 262 266 270 541-385-6021 ceceliaocnpa.com Associate Misc. Items Commercial/Office • Heating & Stoves Lost & Found (PNDC) Community Coun375 Equipment & Fixtures seling Solutions has Printer, HP8600, NOTICE TO Meat & Animal Processing an opening for a copy/fax/scan/print, ADVERTISER part-time, weekend $125. 541-312-2393 Since September 29, REMEMBER: If you Buermann's Ranch Qualified Me n t al 1991, advertising for M eats. Annual Hog Sale Maintenance Supervisor have lost an animal, Health A s s ociate Reduce Your Past Tax t/s hog fully processed used woodstoves has don't forget to check Bill by as much as 75 (QMHA) at our Junidelivered to your area been limited to modResponsible fo r a l l Pr o duction C enter per Ridge A cute The Humane Society $240. Percent. Stop Levies, Call 541-573-2677 (Retread Plant) machinery and equipment, els which have been Bend Liens and Wage GarCare Center located certified by the Ormaintenance a n d rep a ir . Su p ervises in John Day, OR. 541-382-3537 nishments. Call The 5-drawer Hon egon Department of maintenance and storeroom staff and works Redmond Tax DR Now to see if S tarling wage i s Industries Environmental Qualwith management to troubleshoot and resolve 541-923-0882 $11.15-$16.73/hour you Qualify commercial file s s 627 ity (DEQ) and the fedissues, including nights and w eekends. Madras 1-800-791-2099. DOE. For more incabinet, eral E n v ironmental Vacation Rentals Requires High School Diploma or GED along 541-475-6889 formation g o to (PNDC) 43" wide, 66" high. Protection A g e ncy with two y ears' experience in g eneral www.worksourceoPrineville & Exchanges Originally $1000; (EPA) as having met SOCIAL S E C URITY maintenance and the ability to recognize 541-447-7178 regon.org, Job Listasking$450. smoke emission stanD ISABILITY BEN electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical ing ID ¹ 1 3 14562. or Craft Cats :) Oceanfront house dards. A cer t ified 541-948-1824 E FITS. Unable t o malfunctions or equipment failures. Formal 541-389-8420. Download an appli- beach walk from town, w oodstove may b e work? Denied bentraining in related field is a plus. Requires cation at www.com2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, efits? We Can Help! Ibico Ibimatic binding identified by its certifi280 experience managing crew a n d s t rong munitycounselingfireplace, BBQ. $95 WIN or Pay Nothing! machine, exc. cond. cation label, which is maintenance background. 421 Estate Sales solutions.org or per night, 3 night Min. permanently attached Contact Bill Gordon & includes su p plies, to the stove. The Bulcontact Human ReSchools & Training Gift? 208-369-3144 Associates at $120. 541-526-5164. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent sources at letin will not know- Gerdes Estate Sale 1-800-879-3312 to customer service and over 400 stores in the (541)676-9161. PoFri. Feb. 6 & IITR Truck School ingly accept advertisstart your application 263 western United States. We offer competitive sition is open until REDMOND CAHPUS Apt JMultiplex Generali Sat., Feb. 7, 9-4 ing for the sale of today! (PNDC) pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash Tools filled. EOE. 61486 Duncan Lane, Our Grads Get Jobs! uncertified bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to Bend. 1-888-438-2235 Suede Jacket mens CHECKYOUR AD woodstoves. apply. No phone calls please. WWW.HTR.EDU Italian XL, new w/ tags Craftsman 10" radial arm Entire household, vinSales Associate saw on rolling stand, tage toys, fridge, John $50. 541-306-6539 267 Les Schwab is proud to be an Miller Paint C om$200. 541-598-7636 Deere snow blower, 470 • equal opportunity employer. Fuel & Wood The Bulletin Offers pany is looking for tools, furniture, 2004 Domestic & an individual who FreePrivate Party Ads TOOL SALE. A s hop Wilderness Tr a v el full of wood working In-Home Positions enjoys working with • 3 lines - 3 days Trailer. Mill Workers WHEN BUYING machinery, hand held on the first day it runs • Private Party Only the public, working Too much to list! power tools & hand FIREWOOD... flexible hours and to make sure it is cor• Total of items adverSee plx and descrlp- Exp. caregiver, will work EXPERIENCED FINGER JOINT tools. Too much to rect. "Spellcheck" and or state pay. exp who is positive and tised must equal $200 To avoid freud, tlon af farmhousees- priv. AND LAMINATION PRODUCTION list. Sat. & Sun., Feb. with end of life & resolution f o c used. human errors do ocor Less tatesales.com The Bulletin 7th & 8th.9am-3pm, cur. If this happens to spite care. Avail. most Paint and home imFOR DETAILS or to recommends payWe are seeking experienced Operators, FeedNo early birds please. h%. 541-419-4343 your ad, please conPLACE AN AD, provement experi286 ment for Firewood ers, Graders and Stackers in our Fingerjoint 1357 Koyoda St., Ma- only upon delivery tact us ASAP so that ence is preferred but Call 541-385-5809 Sales Northeast Bend and Lamination plants. dras. Turn East on corrections and any 476 not required. This is Fax 541-385-5802 and inspection. Brush Ln., just North • A cord is 128 cu. ft. adjustments can be a full time position Employment If you have a g o o d w ork h istory and of Sonny's Motel and Wanted- paying cash a nd benefits a r e made to your ad. 4' x 4' x 8' ** FREE ** Opportunities attendance record, please come and apply follow for Hi-fi audio & stusigns. • Receipts should 541-385-5809 available. with us. Starting pay is commensurate with 541-460-1853 dio equip. Mclntosh, Garage Sale Klt Qualified candidates The Bulletin Classified include name, experience $10.50 to $15.00 or more. Medical, JBL, Marantz, DyPlace an ad in The will clear a b a ckCAUTION: phone, price and Senior ApartmentPeople Lookfor Information dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 naco, Heathkit, SanBulletin for your gaground check, DMV kind of wood Ads published in Independent Living days. Vacation after 6 months. Profit sharing About Products and sui, Carver, NAD, etc. rage sale and recheck, r e ferences "Employment OpALL-INCLUSIVE also. Services Every Daythrough • purchased. Call 541-261-1808 and pr e -employceive a Garage Sale Firewood ads portunities" include with 3 meals daily The Sulletln Claasiffeds Kit FREE! ment drug screen employee and indeMUST include Month-to-month lease, 261 We are a family owned wood remanufacturer prior to being hired. pendent positions. species & cost per check it out! in business for over 50 years. Learn more 265 KIT INCLUDES: Medical Equipment Bring your resume Ads for p ositions cord to better serve Call 541-233-9914 • 4 Garage Sale Signs aboutourcompany and the products we make and apply now at Building Materials our customers. that require a fee or • $2.00 Off Coupon To at www.brightwood.com. Please apply in Pride Go-Go Ultra X 2121 NE Division St. upfront investment Uae Toward Your person at our main office located in the 3-wheeled scooter, like Or e-mail your AptJMultiplex NE Bendl La Pine Habitat must be stated. With The Bulletin Next Ad Madras Industrial Park. new, $425. 541-318-0567 resume to: RESTORE servInycenrral oregonance rae any independentjob • 10 Tips For "Garage careers© millerpaint. Building Supply Resale opportunity, please Call for Speclals! Sale Success!" Bright Wood Corp. com Quality at i nvestigate tho r Limited numbers avail. All Year Dependable 335 NW Hess St. LOW PRICES oughly. Use extra 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Firewood: Seasoned; Madras, OR97741 52684 Hwy 97 PICK UP YOUR caution when apW/D hookups, patios Say "goodbuy" Lodgepole, split, del, Meet singles right nowl 541-536-3234 GARAGE SALE KIT at plying for jobs onor decks. Must pass pre-employment drug screen. B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 1777 SW Chandler No paid o perators, Open to the public. line and never proto that unused MOUNTAIN GLEN, or 2 cords for $365. just real people like Ave., Bend, OR 97702 vide personal infor541-383-9313 item by placing it in Prineville Habitat Multi-cord discounts! you. Browse greetmation to any source NEWSPAPER Professionally 541-420-3484. ReStore The Bulletin ings, exchange mesyou may not have The Bulletin Classifieds managed by Norris & serans centraloregon since r903 sages and connect Building Supply Resale researched and Stevens, Inc. live. Try it free. Call 1427 NW Murphy Ct. Dry lodgepole firewood, deemed to be repu1 cord $195, 1/2 cord 541-447-6934 541-385-5B09 now: 877-955-5505. 292 table. Use extreme $100. Split and delivOpen to the public. (PNDC) c aution when r e - The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journalHouses for ered. Bend a r ea. Sales Other Areas s ponding to A N Y ist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps 541-408-2996 Rent General online employment ESTATE SALE assistant. This position is ideal for a journalism ad from out-of-state. Housefull & antiques student with interest in a broad range of sports. caution when purPUBLISHER'S 269 We suggest you call Fri. & Sat., 9-4 NOTICE Duties include taking phone and email informa- chasing products or I Gardening Supplie the State of Oregon tion from sources and generating accurate, con- services from out of • All real estate adver610 NE Ochoco Ave Consumer H otline • & E q uipment cise accounts of local high school sports events. l the area. Sending tising in this newspaPrineville • • C al l 5 4 I -385-5809 at 1-503-378-4320 Hours vary; most work shifts are weeknights c ash, checks, o r per is subject to the For details go to For Equal OpportuF air H ousing A c t and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and profes- l credit i n f ormation www.atticestatesanBarkTurfSoil.com to ro m o te ou r s ervice nity Laws contact sional-level writing ability are essential, as are a • may be subjected to which makes it illegal dappraisals.com Oregon Bureau of background and a working knowledge of I FRAUD. to a d vertise "any 541-350-6822 Labor & I n dustry, sports PROMPT DELIVERY traditional high school sports. preference, limitation Handyman For more informaI Adoption Rights Division, 542-389-9663 disc r imination tion about an adver-• or TOOL SALE. A s hop Civil 971-673- 0764. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an l tiser, you may call based on race, color, full of wood working PREGNANT? CON I DO THAT! machinery, hand held opportunity employer. Pre-employment the Oregon State religion, sex, handiSIDERING ADO P Home/Rental repairs The Bulletin equal drug screen required. TION? Call us first. Small jobs to remodels For newspaper power tools & hand l Attorney General's cap, familial status, delivery, call the 541-385-5809 Office C o n sumer t marital status or naLiving exp e nses, Honest, guaranteed tools. Too much to To apply, please emailresume and any Circulation Dept. at list. Sat. & Sun., Feb. Protection hotline at l tional origin, or an inhousing, medical, and work. CCB¹151573 541-385-5800 7th & 8th.9am-3pm, Add your web address relevant writing samples to: tention to make any continued support af Dennis 541-317-9768 I 1-877-877-9392. s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com such pre f erence, To place an ad, call No early birds please. to your ad and readt erwards. Cho o se limitation or discrimi541-385-5809 1357 Koyoda St., MaiTh Bull a doptive family o f Landscaping/Yard Care on The Bullefin's No phone inquiries please. nation." Familial staor email dras. Turn East on ers your choice. Call 24/7. web site, www.bendBrush Ln., just North tus includes children 855-970-2106 NOTICE: Oregon Land- classitiedstbendbulletin.com TRUCK DRIVER bulletin.com, will be under the age of 18 of Sonny's Motel and (PNDC) scape Contractors Law The Bulletin WANTED able to click through living with parents or follow signs. (ORS 671) requires all Must have doubles automatically to your legal cus t odians, 541-460-1853 businesses that adendorsement. Sertrlng Certtraf Oregon since f903 website. pregnant women, and vertise t o pe r form Local run. Building/Contracting 270 people securing cusLandscape ConstrucTruck is parked in AVON - Earn extra in- General tody of children under tion which includes: • Lo s t & Found Madras. 541-475-4221 come with a new caNOTICE: Oregon state p lanting, The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur18. This newspaper deck s , reer! Sell from home, day night shift and other shifts as needed. We law requires anyone fences, arbors, will not knowingly ac1 (one) ring on Looking for your next w ork, online. $ 1 5 currently have openings all nights of the week. who con t racts for water-features, and in- Found: cept any advertising 1/28/15, area of Mary startup. For informa- Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts employee? construction work to for real estate which is repair of ir- Rose Place & Watt Way. Place a Bulletin help be licensed with the stallation, tion, call: start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and systems to be Please call 541-848-1657 in violation of the law. Construction Contrac- rigation 877-751-0285 wanted ad today and l icensed w it h th e to identify. end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoO ur r e aders a r e reach over 60,000 tors Board (CCB). An Landscape Contrac(PNDC) sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. hereby informed that active license tors Board. This 4-digit readers each week. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a all dwellings advermeans the contractor number is to be inNeed to get an Your classified ad minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts tised in this newspaBanking will also appear on is bonded & insured. cluded in all adver316 ad in ASAP? are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of per are available on Verify the contractor's tisements which indibendbulletin.com loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackIrrigation Equipment an equal opportunity You can place it ) fir8t COmmunit CCB l i c ense at cate the business has which currently ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup basis. To complain of www.hirealicensedonline at: receives over 1.5 a bond, insurance and and other tasks. For qualifying employees we FOR SALE d iscrimination cal l contractor.com We are excited to million page views workers c ompensawww.bendbulletin.com offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Tumalo Irrigation HUD t o l l-free a t or call 503-378-4621. tion for their employannounce an every month at short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Water 1-800-877-0246. The The Bulletin recom- ees. For your protecavailable position for no extra cost. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required toll free t e lephone 541-385-5809 $5,000/acre mends checking with tion call 503-378-5909 a full-time teller in Bulletin Classifieds prior to employment. Call 541-419-4440 number for the hearthe CCB prior to con- or use our website: Bend, Oregon. Get Results! ing i m p aired is tracting with anyone. www.lcb.state.or.us to Found college student's Call 385-5809 Please submit a completed application atten'I -800-927-9275. 325 Some other t rades check license status physiology book & notes. Salary Range: or place tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available also re q uire addi- before contracting with Call Lani, COCC RedHay, Grain & Feed $11.00 - $18.00 your ad on-line at at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chantional licenses and mond, 541-504-2901. the business. Persons bendbulletin.com dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be certifications. Houses for Rent 1st Quality, 2nd cutting doing lan d scape First Community obtained upon request by contacting Kevin grass hay, no rain, Credit Union is an Redmond maintenance do not Found transit coins near Eldred via email (keldredobendbulletin.com). Just too many r equire an LC B l i - Crooked River. Call to barn stored, $225/ton. equal opportunity No phone calls please. Only completed appliCall 541-549-3831 cense. identify, 541-977-4490 employer of collectibles'? Available Soon! SW Debris Removal cations will be considered for this position. No Patterson Ranch, Sisters Redmond 3 bdrm, 2 bath protected Veterans resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reGet onthe list now for Lost: male English Bulland individuals with home, 2-car garage, Sell them in JUNK BE GONE quired prior to employment. EOE. Weekly Serviceand dog Feb. 1. Much loved, Premium orchard grass, disabilities. For more fenced backyard w/extra The Bulletin Classifieds I Haul Away FREE Spring Clean-ups! 1-yr old, has black collar barn stored no rain, parking. No smoking. details please For Salvage. Also Free estimates! 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. with skulls. NE Bend off The Bulletin $800/mo. + security dep. apply online: serving cenrrar oregons/nce rsw Cleanups & Cleanouts COLLINS Lawn Maint. Deschutes Mkt Rd. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 www.myfirstccu.org. Taking applications. 541-385-5809 Ca/l 541-480-9714 Reward! 541-848-1448 or 541-948-7010. Call 541-419-1 917 Mel, 541-389-8107
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEB 6, 2015
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz
C L U B F riday,February6,2015
Agony of de feet
ACROSS 10ne at the head of the class, informally 6 "Fearless" star, 2006 11Green yardstick 14Theymay be
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Cy the Cynic says you can show him a man with both feet firmly on t he ground, and he'll s how y o u someone who can't get out of his pants. In today's deal, South had no doubts about how to handle his game contract. He ruffed the third heart, took the A-K of diamonds and led a third diamond. When East won and led a trump, South won and ruffed his last diamond with dummy's ten of trumps. He next led a c l u b and finessed with his queen, but West produced the king for down one. S outh p l ayed r e solutely b u t inflexibly — and inaccurately. How would you play four spades? THIRD HEART South must ruff the third heart with the ace of trumps. He takes the king of trumps and next leads the queen of clubs. Say West takes the king. To play low won't help him since South could then shift to diamonds and ruff his fourth diamond in dummy. If West returns a club, South wins and draws trumps with the queen and ten. He can discard his low diamonds on the J-10 of clubs and claim the rest. DAILY QUESTION
your partner bids four clubs. What do you say? A NSWER: T h i s p r o blem i s stressful; opposing preempts will bring that about. Bid four spades. You might miss a slam if partner passes despite having ideal values, but your first duty is t o score game. Your bidding suggests a powerful hand, so he may bid again. South dealer N-S vulnerable
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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
E N T P I C K U R T S I R A I S O H AS L A N D E S T E N O N H E R O E EG EON E MA N Y A LPA R T Y H A B L A I T D EL E O NE WA T E R P A R 8 Y E B Y EO N E N E ARS ANA T I MA GO FOR T H E C O U R S TTO O VE R R U L A I N P E E K A BO
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PUZZLE BY DAVID STEINBERC
12 Disinclined to move 13Take3a second? P 20 It's a dive
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOUTH
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42 Member of Clinton'6 cabinet for all eight years
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41 YouTube upload
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44 Part of 5-Down
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, witha creditcard, 1-800-8145554.
28 High-five request
Annual subscriptions ars available for ths best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzlss, or visit nylimes.com/ mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nysmes. com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytfmes.com/wordptay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
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By Paul Coulter CZ015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
64
02/06/15
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860
675
RV Parking
Iiotor cycles & Accessories
Complete RV hook-up near trails 8 shops in Bend. Winter rates! Call 541-408-0646 for more info.
Qoo 732
HIGH PROFILE LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN REDMOND
This commercial building offers excellent exposure along desirable NW 6th Street. Currently housing The Redmond Spokesman newspaper offices, the 2,748 sq. ft. space is perfect for owner/user. Two private offices and generous open spaces. Three parking places in back+ street parking. $259,000. Call Graham Dent 541-383-2444 COMPASS Commercial 738
Multiplexes for Sale West side 10 units near old Mill, owner carry for qualified principals only. Broker, 541-460-9947 745
Homes for Sale
Motor h omes
Harle Fat Bo 2002
IWP MIQ
Commercial/lnvestment Properties for Sale
880
14k orig. miles.. Excellent cond. Vance 8 Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind 0 vest, 12 rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/back rest, hwy pegs 8 many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. In CRRarea call 530-957-1865
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $21,995. 541-383-3503
Completely
Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner
Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000
Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated shop. $79,995 obo. 541-447-6664
541-548-4807 870
Boats & Accessories
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome
Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
The Bulletin
.
860
Canopies & Campers
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Adventurer2013 86 FB truck camper, $19,800. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 Heartland P r owler watts rooftop solar, 2 2012, 29PRKS, 33', deep cycle batteries, like new, 2 slides-liv- LED lights, full size i ng area & la r ge q ueen bed. n i c e closet. Large enough floorplan. Also availto live in, but easy to able 2010 Chevy Silverado HD, tow! 15' power awning, power hitch & $15,000. 360-774-2747 stabilizers, full s i ze queen bed, l a rge No text messages! shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571
•
Gem Top Outfitter Canopy for 8' bed truck(presently on 97 Dodge). Double doors in rear. Lined inside. Opening window on one side; sliding window on the other. Boat rack on top. $650 obo. In Redmond, OR Call 541-548-7154
Keystone Laredo31' RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Camper 1995, Slide-through s t or- Lance on e o w n er, a ge. E a s y Li f t . 10.9, electric jacks, awning, $29,000 new; AskFantastic fan, winter ing $13,600 package, Honda 1000 541-447-4805 enerator, exc. shape 7500. 541-410-9851 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
541-548-5254
935
0
Qoo
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp,
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
CAL LW
Nlountaineer2004
®,
I 1I!I
TODAYW
Chevy Prckup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3689 or 541-420-6215.
1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up
restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.
541-892-3789
BMW X3 35i 2010
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg8 technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170 Ford Escape2005
A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup
Good runner
1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop
o. ~
BEND 541-382-8038
na aaa
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15
sults! Call 385-5609
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
$125,000
541-288-3333
+seei
LICCOL C ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Pnce good thru2/28/15
Subaru Forester 1998 170k miles., red, two sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no pets. Dependable car. $4200.
541-598-3750
ROBBERSON
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
m CE CI
Toyota Highlander
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5
1965 Mustang
Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
Ford 2004 F-250 XLT 4x4
Ford Expedition 2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977
Extended Cab 94K miles, excellent cond, many extras. $10,900. Call 541-233-3281
ROBBERSON
2006 This is a nice one! Vin¹A18610. 9,977 ROBBERSON
Ford F350 2002
II IR K R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5
7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623.
$12,977
GMC 2004 Yukon
ROBBERSON LIOCOLO ~
4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K
miles, mud& snow tires, 1 owner, well maintained, $7850. 541-389-3316
Cmmm C
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/26/15
LICCOL C ~
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale Toyota RAV4 2011 4WD, only 10,849 mi. ¹156908 • $19,695
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Advertise your car! Add A Prcture!
975
Automobiles
The Bulletin Classifieds
Pickups
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/15
Reach thousands of readers! Call 541 C385 C5809
933
~
4x4 ready for adventure! ¹D11893. Bargain Corral priced @ $6,977 LIIIC0LII ~
/4
1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
(located O Bend)
ROBBERSON y
541-647-0657 Subaru Outback 2014 Prem. pkg, 20,500 mu ¹258971 • $24,995
ROBBERSON ~
V W CONV.
Columbia 400,
Only $7,977
$3,977
908
Financing available.
4x4, lots of room! Vin¹J21627.
Vin¹ 672057
1932 DeSoto 2dr
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3interestin
935
Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
LICCOLO ~
workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEIII/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
®
Motorcycles 8 Accessories
Travel Trailers
Redmond:
g a~-
4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $6500. 541-379-3530
933
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
The Bulletin
.
932
Dodge Ram 2003
All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any pref2007 Bennington erence, limitation or Pontoon Boat discrimination based 2275 GL, 150hp on race, color, reliHonda VTEC, less gion, sex, handicap, than 110 hours, familial status or naoriginal owner, lots tional origin, or intenof extras; Tennestion to make any such see tandem axle preferences, l imitatrailer. Excellent tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly condition,$23,500 .Rk 503-646-1804 accept any advertising for real estate • I• I which is in violation of this law. All persons Where can you find a are hereby informed helping hand? that all dwellings adJAYCO 1993 27' From contractors to vertised are available 50k miles, excellent on an equal opportu- yard care, it's all here condition. $9300 obo. nity basis. The Bullein The Bulletin's 541-573-7131 tin Classified "Call A Service 750 Professional" Directory RV CONSIGNMENTS Redmond Homes Ads published in the WANTED "Boats" classification We Do The Work ... Looking for your next include: Speed, fishYou Keep The Cash! emp/oyee? On-site credit ing, drift, canoe, Place a Bulletin help house and sail boats. approval team, wanted ad today and For all other types of web site presence. reach over 60,000 watercraft, please go We Take Trade-Ins! readers each week. to Class 875. Your classified ad 541-365-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV will also appear on Bend: 541-330-2495 bendbulletin.com Redmond: SCIOI'n Central OIC On SinCe 1903 541-548-5254 which currently receives over Bayiiner 185 2006 1.5 million page open bow. 2nd owner views every month — low engine hrs. at no extra cost. — fuel injected V6 Bulletin Classifieds — Radio & Tower. Get Results! Great family boat Call 385-5809 or Priced to sell. place your ad on-line $11,590. RV PACKAGE-2006 at 541-548-0345. Monaco Monarch, 31 ', bendbulletin.com Ford V10, 28,900 miles, Check out the auto-level, 2 slides, classifieds online 775 queen bed & hide-a-bed www.bendbuiietin.com sofa, 4k gen, conv miManufactured/ crowave, 2 TV's, tow Updated daily Mobile Homes package,$66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep 875 List your Home Wranglertow car, 84K Watercraft JandNIHomes.com miles, hard & soft top, 5 We Have Buyers O speed manual,$1 1,000 ds published in Wa Get Top Dollar 541-8154319 tercraft" include: Kay Financing Available. aks, rafts and motor 541-548-5511 Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se :0. Class 670. 541-385-5609 Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago SCIVIOg Cenfral Oregan Iinre 1903 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 880 18,800 miles, auto-levelMotorhomes ing jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk 850 beds, micro, (3) TVs, Snowmobiles sleeps 10! Lots of storCO~ age, maintained, very 2000 Yamaha 700 3 cleanlOnly $67,995! Excyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 tended warranty and/or fiPolaris Fusion 900, nancing avail to qualified REDUCED! only 788 mi., new mirbuyers! 541-388-7179 rors, covers, custom 2007 Winnebago skis, n e w rid e -on Outlook Class "C" 881 r ide-off t r ailer w i t h 31', solar panel, Travel Trailers spare, + much more. catalytic heater, $6,995. Call for deexcellent condition, tails. 541-420-6215 more extras. Asking$54K. Ph. 541-447-9268
L'
885
HDFatBo 1996
NOTICE
00
881
Honda CRV2007, (exp. 2/8/15) BNfyy 330c2003 C all me i f y o u a r e GMC 1974 Vin ¹064947 1/3 interest in wellthinking about tradingugly but reliable! equipped IFR Beech BoStock ¹44696A 882 95% tread on nanza A36, new 10-550/ in to a dealer or sell$13,999 or $175/mo., Fifth Wheels ing your current Full siped tires. prop, located KBDN. $2900 down, 72 mo., Size late model 4WD $895. 4 .49% APR o n a p $65,000. 541-419-9510 pickup and want to proved credit. License www. N4972M.com 541-480-0527 get more cash then and title i ncluded in Convertible, seadealer trade-in. Pripayment. sonal special vate party looking to © s u a aau Vin¹U96242 purchase for c a sh Want to impress the $7,977 sale one nice condirelatives? Remodel 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Alpenlite 28 ft. tion pickup directly 877-266-3821 your home with the ROBBERSON 1987,New stove, from o w ner. NO help of a professional Dlr ¹0354 fridge. Good furDEALERS PLEASE! Fl this beautiful 162 from The Bulletin's nace, AC. Stereo, Call ( after 6 p.m.) or 541-312-3986 DVD player. Queen One owner last 25 "Call A Service Text with pictures to Need to get an ad Dlr ¹0205. Price bed WITH bedding. years, always hanBill 541-420-5318. Professional" Directory good thru 02/26/15 20 ft. awning. gared, rigorously in ASAP? maintained, no damGood shape. $4500 541-977-5587 age history. Fax it te 541-322-7253 Buick LeSabre 2005 Sensibly priced at super clean, senior CHECKyOUR AD $44,500. The Bulletin Classifieds owned, always gaCall Don Wilfong for raged. 74,000 miles. more information $7,000. 541-389-1456 or NissanTitan 2006, H yundai Santa Fe Ltd, 360-774-2747 wilfong.dOgmail.com Lifted, crew cab, 4x4. 2008 leather, moon 2005 crew cab great No text messages! looking! Vin¹972932 VIN ¹501106. $17,998. (exp. 2/8/1 5) DLR ¹366 on the first day it runs HANGAR FOR SALE. $19,977 30x40 end unit T to make sure it is0 corC hanger in Prineville. rect. Spellcheck and ROBBERSON Dry walled, insulated, human errors do ocLICCOLC~ I C0 I 0m C 541-598-3750 and painted. $23,500. cur. If this happens to www.aaaoregonautoTom, 541.786.5546 your ad, please con541-312%986 source.com tact us ASAP so that Dlr ¹0205. Price 541-546-1448 Cadillac STS2006, corrections and any good thru 02/26/15 smolichmotors.com fully loaded. adjustments can be VIN ¹165692. $9,998. made to your ad. (exp. 2/8/1 5) DLR ¹366 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Save money. Learn Jeep Patriot 2008, to fly or build hours /~ at Iexp. 2/8/15) with your own airVin ¹693843 Ram 3500 2010, c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o Chevy Duramsx 541-548-1448 Stock ¹44853A crew cab, diesel, Commander, 4 seat, Diesei LTZ2008, smolichmotors.com low miles $12,679 or $145/rn., 150 HP, low time, crew cab, 4x4. $2500 down, 84 mo., full panel. $21,000 VIN ¹103310. $35,998. VIN ¹159101. $39,888. Keystone Everest 5th 4 .49% APR o n a p - USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! (exp. 2/8/1 5) DLR ¹366 obo. Contact Paul at (exp. 2/8/1 5) DLR ¹366 Wheel, 2004 proved credit. License 541-447-5184. Model 323P - 3 slides, and title included in Door-to-door selling with rear island-kitchen, payment. 0~ 00 fireplace, 2 TV's, fast results! It's the easiest 916 CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner ® s u a aau way in the world to sell. ~ Trucks & w/surround sound, A/C, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. custom bed, ceiling fan, Heavy Equipment The Bulletin Classified 541-548-1448 541-548-'I 448 877-266-3821 W/D ready, many extras. 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354 smolichmotors.com smolichmotors.com New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available. 541-923-6408 LICCOL C ~
~
I
Laredo 2006 31'
Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
S ell you r s t u f f f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds
M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038 925
Utility Trailers
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
2007 Jayco Jay Flight CargoMate tr a i ler 8'x12' with large rear 29 FBS with slide out & awning - Turn-key ready approval team, door and extra side to use, less than 50 todoor, additional web site presence. tal days used by current We Take Trade-Ins! hauling rack on top, owner. Never smoked in, very good condition. 24' Mercedes Benz no indoor pets, excellent BIG COUNTRY RV $3800. Call Stan Bto Prism, 2015 Model G, cond., very clean. Lots of see 541-420-1916 541-330-2495 Mercedes Diesel engine, bonus features; many Bend:Redmond: 18+ mpg, auto trans, have never been used. F latbed t r a iler w i t h 541-548-5254 fully loaded with Asking $16,500. C a l l ramps, 7000 lb. cadouble-expando, Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r pacity, 26' long, 8'6 and only 5200 miles. more info / more photos. Sliding 5th wheel hitch wide, ideal for hauling Perfect condition for short-bed pickup, hay, materials, cars, $500. 541-923-4338 only $92K. exc. cond. $2800. What are you Call 541-526-1201 541-420-3788 or see at: looking for? 3404 Dogwood Ave., 929 You'll find it in in Redmond. Automotive Wanted The Bulletin Classifieds DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO Snowbird Special! HERITAGE FOR THE 541-385-5809 Open Road 36' 2005 BLIND. Free 3 Day model is like new w/3 slides!! King V acation, Tax D e Dutchman Denali Allegro 32' 2007, like ductible, Free Towing, bed, hide-a-bed, 32' 2011 travel new, only 12,600 miles. All Paperwork Taken glass shower, 10 gal. trailer. 2 slides EvChev 8.1L with Allison 60 water heater, 10 Care O f. CALL transmission, dual exerything goes, all 1-800-401-4106 cu.ft. fridge, central haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- kitchen ware, linens vac, satellite dish, (PNDC) eling system, 5kw gen, etc. Hitch, sway 27" TV /stereo syspower mirrors w/defrost, bars, water & sewer 931 tem, front power lev2 slide-outs with awhoses. List price eling jacks & scisAutomotive Parts, nings, rear c a mera, $34,500 - asking sor stabilizer jacks, Service 8 Accessories trailer hitch, driyer door $26,800Loaded. 16' awning. 2005 w/power window, cruise, Must see to apprecimodel is like new! 2006 Chrysler 300 grill, exhaust brake, central ate. Redmond, OR. $25,995 vac, satellite sys. Asking new in box, $150 obo. 541-604-5993 541-419-0566 541-536-3889 $67,500. 503-781-8812
S ell your st u f f f aster w i t h c o l o r .
C
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance& Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 54'I -516-8684
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,500.
541-548-2872.
AFTER
NEFORE
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it aii! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough VS engine will get the job done on the ranch!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
assi je s
www.bendbulletin.com
WW W . b e
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PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
in ez
US
EDITOR
Cover design by Tim Gallivan/The Bulletin; Submitted photo
Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmonObendbulletin.com
REPORTERS
• More news from the local dining scene
MUSIC REVIEWS • 9
David Jasper, 541-383-0349 dlasper©bendbulletin.com Kathleen llllcCool, 541-383-0350 kmccool@bendbulletin.com Jasmine Rockow, 541-383-0354 Irockow@bendbulletin.com Sophie Witkins, 541-383-0351 swilkinsObendbulletin.com
• Diana Krall, Bob Dylan and Vijay lyer Trio
OUT OF TOWN • 22 ARTS • 11
DESIGNERS Tim Gallivan, 541-383-0331 tgallivan@bendbulletin.com Carli Krueger, 541-817-7857 ckrueger@bendbulletin.com
MUSIC • 3 • COVER STORY: Foghorn Stringband in Sisters • Felix Martin, guitar god • Carolyn Wonderland visits The Belfry • Isles, Corner Gospel Explosion at VTP • It's Starship, man! • Mbrascatu brings Old World fusion tunes •BethW ood pl ayshouse concert • Rob Larkin and TheWayward Ones make three appearances
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life U.S. Illlail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
ADVERTISING 541 -382-1811
• Portland Jazz Festival retums • A guide to out of town events
• A6 opens show about typewriters • First Friday Gallery Walk • "Junie B. Jones" opens at 2nd Street • Central Oregon Symphony Children's Concert • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
MOVIES • 25
• "Jupiter Ascending,""Black Sea,""The SpongeBobMovie:SpongeOutofW ater" and "Seventh Son" open in Central Oregon • "Dracula Untold," "John Wick," "Ouija" and four others areout on Blu-ray and DVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon
DRINKS • 14 •Lookahead:Zw ickelmania
CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events
PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting
GOING OUT • 8 • Jelly Bread at Volcanic • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e
et tn
g •
RESTAURANTS • 20 • A review of Jackson's Comer's new eastside location r
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
musie • Foghorn Stringband has gonefrom duo to trio to its current incarnation quartet By David Jasper The Bulletin
S
isters Folk Festival kicks off its Winter Concert Series tonight wit h t h e o l d-time string tunes and sweet harmonies of Portland quartet Foghorn
Stringband. GO! caught up with founding m ember and mandolin player CalebKlauderastheband neared the Canadian border. The four were en
route to Victoria and Vancouver, British Columbia, for the first stops on their promotional tour for their new album, "Devil in the Seat,"
i
Q i 'P iq
which brings them to Central Oregon tonight for a 7 p.m. show at Sisters High School (see"If you go"). The 16-song album was recorded in Hawaii in the late fall,
Klauder said. "We had a great time down there. We know a f r iend there
who moved from Nashville and is just a big music enthusiast," Klauder said. "He just wanted
to host us ... and let us relax and focus on music, which is exactly
what happened." After a few days soaking in the Hawaiian sun and scenery, Klauder set to work with the rest
of the group — which includes another founding member, Stephen "Sammy" Lind (fiddle), along with Reeb Willms (guitar) and Nadine Landry (bass). Continued Page 5
!
t
Ifyou go What:Foghorn Stringband w/ Beth Wood When:7 tonight Where:Sisters High School, 1700 McKinney Butte Road Cost:$20, $10 youth; $50 or $25 youth for entire series Contact:www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4045
I
tt
Betse Ellis I Submitted photo
Foghorn Stringband will bring their classic string tunes to Sisters High School tonight.
music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
aro n on eran, ve eran ues s re er ltra-talented blues singer,
songwriter and guitarist Carolyn Wonderland
married writer, comedian and former "Saturday Night Live" player A. Whitney Brown in Austin, Texas, in 2011.
•
•
blues-focused organizations in least professionally. Which is un- both Austin and Houston. And derstandable. If your last name those places have a few solid was Wonderland, would you vol- blues singers bouncing around. untarily change it'? Not to menWonderland also has nine altion the fact that, matrimonial bums to her name; her most retraditions aside, Wonderland cent in 2011's "Peace Meal." She not take Brown's last name, at
We know this for sure because The New Y ork
r •
has spent the past 15 or so years T i mes, making her name as one of the
for one reason or another, cov- eye-poppingest axe-wielders in ered the ceremony, which was the blues world. officiated by Michael Nesmith, Wonderland is a redheaded best known as the guy in '60s Texan who can absolutely wail pop band the Monkees who on the six-string in a way that sometimes wore a h a t ( even recalls big names like Derek though he has had a long and Trucks, Kenny Wayne Shepherd productive post-Monkees music and the late Stevie Ray Vaughan. She's got a strong set of pipes, career). Anyway, I bring this up to note too; she's has been named best that Wonderland apparently did female vocalist b y r e p utable
has performed on "Austin City
Limits" and at last year's 4 Peaks Music Festival near Tumalo. And
on Wednesday night, she'll stop in and light up The Belfry with her electrified blues-rock. Carolyn Wonderland; 7 p.m. Wednesday;$17 plus feesin advance at www.bendtichet.com,
$20 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.bel-
fryevents.com. — Ben Salmon
S
here are people who love of Music in Boston. He designed guitar-powered rock 'n' roll. and built the 14-string guitar, Then there are people who which essentially looks like two just love the guitar. Then there normal guitars stuck together like are guitar geeks, who seek out two strips of Velcro. And he plays technically skilled players and this distinctive instrument in a plant themselves in front of the variety of ways, most strikingly stage to gawk at their six-stringed using a quick two-handed tapping acrobatics. technique. But there is another level of guiMartin applies that technique tar fetishism, one where Venezue- to a dizzying array of styles, taklan guitarist Felix Martin is a god ing hard rock and bending it and among men. shaping it using bits of prog, world It's at this level where the lines music, jazz and fusion. His music between ability and art begin to is rooted in guitar-rock — may-
T
blur. Where nebulous concepts be even metal — but it runs the
like "feel" and "vibe" are sometimes sacrificed in the name of simply playing more and more notes as quickly and with as much complexity as possible. Where a guitar player ceases to sound like a human being and starts sounding more like a computer program. Felix Martin ably walks the line
between skilled man and soulless machine. He is a relatively
young, ambidextrous guitarist who moved to the United States when he earned a scholarship to
attend prestigious Berklee School
aesthetic gamut, from mellow to heavytomind-bending. It's always mesmerizing, especially if you dig guitars. Bend's Third Street Pub will be an ex-
cellent place to watch him play up close and personal. Felix Martin, with Barishi, Halo Haven and Ironhart; 8 p.m.Monday; $5 in advance at the website below, $6at thedoor; Third Street Pub, 314 SE T h ird S t., Bend; w ww j.mpifelixmartinbend or 541-306-3017. — Ben Salmon
musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
res,
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 5
omema e unes
ere is an opportunity for an exploratory mis-
Valentine Dinner Sc Concert
H scene: On Sunday night, Volcanic Theatre Pub will host one fine local band showcasing new material, sion into an interesting corner of the local music
as well as one promising new band that has sprouted out
of a great local band. First up, Isles is a local trio (Tyson Vandenbroucke, Elijah Lee, Allyn Dubief) that formed in late 2012 and has been creatingli the, effervescent post-pop-rock (think Explosions in the Sky) ever since. The band's de-
featuring
Salem Big Band Saturday, February 14• 5pm Sunriver Resort Great Hall
but album was one of the best local releases of 2013, but
even when they released it, they were already looking ahead to their second record. Well, that record is almost here. It's called "Wound-
I•
•
I
•
I
575each Reserve your table today!
I
ed Tropic," and the band will be "premiering a full set of songs" from the album Sunday night, according to a
Enjoy a happy hour, a specially crafted four-course meal
site, where two songs — "Ticking" and "White and Blue" — reveal a sound that's something like dusky indie rock three dudes have cooked up. Next, Corner Gospel Explosion is a new band in town gussied up with twinkling synths and echoes of guitar. that revolves around the songs of Bradley David Par- Also, Tyler Parsons plays (and perhaps writes?) excelsons, heretofore known as the drummer in one of Bend's lent bass lines. Hear for yourself at www.cornergospelbest rock groups, Wilderness. Guitarist Nick Graham is explosion. bandcamp.com. also a member of both bands, and the two are joined in Isles, with Corner Gospel Explosion and Blue Eyed CoGoExplo (as I've just dubbed them) by bassist Tyler Lucy;8 p.m .Sunday;$5;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SW post on Facebook. Nifty! Can't wait to hear what these
Parsons and guitarist Andrew Harris.
Besides a handsome name (which you, too, can shorten to CoGoExplo if you'd like), they have a Bandcamp
From Page 3 The band set up a home studio and recorded live, a tradition they
prepared by the Sunriver Resort and music by the 18-piece Salem Big Band. Markyour calendar for the 38th Season
2015 SUMMER FESTIVAL August 2-19 •
•
Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. — Ben Salmon
After a couple of years, they met Landry and made a Foghorn Trio record, 2010's "Sud de la Louisiane." established with their previous al- stuff that I'm excited about." And You can see where this might be bums, Klauder said: "What we play unless they sell out, concertgoers headed: "There's this joke going out is what you hear." will be able to buy it at the show. that, like, 'Foghorn Octet releases The recording process was "a lot Klauder divides his time between octetrecord, confuses fans even of fun. We actually recorded enough Foghorn and his honky-tonk side more,'" Klauder said, laughing. "Just songs for two records. The hardest project, the Caleb Klauder Country because we were ... a duo, then a part was trying to figure out what Band. trio. Since Reeb Willms joined the "It's always tricky when you have band, we've decided to just keep it not to put on the record," he said. Having an abundance of songs to a new record like this for a band that simple and just be called Foghorn choose from is not unusual for them. really deserves a lot of energy, but Stringband again." Past Foghorn albums have had 18 at the same time the other project, I The four aim to entertain, and and 20 tracks, Klauder said, but really want to keep it going," he said. have a bit of a joke mantra, Klaudthis time the band took into considHis Country Band is "having a er said: "Every night is a Saturday eration that if they went that route good surge of energy as well, just night with the Foghorn Stringband." "Our live show is pretty high eneragain, they wouldn't have quite from people being interested in it enough songs and tunes — "songs and people asking us to come play gy, like a musical journey (through) American music, Klauder said. have words, tunes don't," notes places." Klauder — to complete a second Not just a crooner and mando Landry is from Quebec and speaks album from the Hawaii sessions, player, Klauder's country act serves French, and has become well acwhich is something they're mulling as an outlet for his songwriting skills. quainted with Cajun music. She and The juggling act that comes with Willms have also worked up a few a over. "If we ended up with a few left two bands can be tough, but Klaud- capella duets. "There will be a little bit of Ca(over), we'd have enough for a sec- er likes having two outlets, and each ond one. So that left a few ... I want- comes with a benefit: the chance to jun music, a lot of singing, a lot of ed to put there, naturally, but we play originals and the opportunity high-energy fiddle tunes, or just took off. So it's tricky, but it's fun, to help keep traditional repertoire a melody and no singing," Klauder said. "There will be some really the process of trying to get a good alive. flow going and finding things we all Foghorn's lineup has fluctuated nice, sweet ballads (and) maybe want to put on there." over the years. "Originally, it was some murder ballads in there, part The band boasts a v ariety of five guys, but that band didn't con- of our tradition." "We just try to keep it lively and tastes and talents, and Foghorn tinue very long," he said. "We made aims to give them all a say. four records, and then Sammy and I fun and happy," he said. "There are a lot of elements that — Reporter: 541-383-0349, continued and we made a record as we all bring to it. It's just trying to Foghorn Duo, just the two of us." djasper@bendbulletin.com get all the colors that the band has to
offer on theCD,"he said. The result is "a good variety of
Mardi Gras Party With Summit ExpressJazzBand BavnSuRaERv
f i
•
CsahLOys
FEBRUARY 13 Brett Dennen 14 High Desert Chamber Music 17 Mardi Gras Party 18 Midnite 21 Nelson lllusions 22 Clint Black -SOLDOUT! 25 Nature Night 27-28 Telluride Mountain Films
'MARCH 2 In The Mood -TIjjl SHOWS! 5-6 Ruby On Ales 7 MUSE 81940 Opening Night -NEW! 541-317-0700
g TheTowerTheatre ~ www.towertheatre.org f h eTowerTheatre y ©t o wertheatrebnd
musie
PAGE 6 e GO! MAGAZINE i
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I
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
I
Feb. 13 —TheStray Birds (roots music),Sisters High School, www.sistersfolkfestival. ot'g. Feb. 13 —Brett Bennen (pop), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Feb. 13-14 —March Fourth Marching Bandand Filter (festrock),Oregon WinterFest, Bend, www.oregonwinterfest.com. Feb. 14 —Shirin (pop), The Astro Lounge, Bend, www. astroloungebend.com. Feb. 15 —Capsula (fuzz-rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.actiondeniroproductions.
Swee> your swee wzth a heart
Friday th
com.
ada Ranc
rday the zzd Su d ay the 15th $70p r erson
541.383.8825 www.flybend.com
Sunriver Eooks L Music AUTHOR EVENTS
I
Presents
Garth Stein Stkf
~r favy14 SHARC facility in Sunriver
A S u d de n lig h t , is Garth Stein's first novel, since the award winning i nternational bestseller The Art Ot Racing in The Rain.
A vulnerable 14 year ol d m e ets t he ghost of his ancestor when he visits the crumbling family estate north of Seattle for the first time. When the obligations of the past meet the desires of the future in the hands of a confused teenage boy this novel shines. Please RSVP Light refreshments 8 drawings for prizes at this free event.
541-593-2525 • SUNRIVERBOOKSOSUNRIVERBOOKS.COM
More information at sunriverbooks.com
Feb. 18 —Midnite (reggae), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Feb. 18 —The Blackberry Bushes (Americana), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Feb. 19 —Blue Lotus (funk),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. Feb. 19 —Cage andSadistik (hip-hop),Domino Room, Bend, www.bendticket.com. Feb. 20 —Slaid Cleaves(folk), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com Feb. 20 —Luke Sweeney (psych-pop),The Astro Lounge, Bend, www.astroloungebend. com. Feb. 20 —The Helio Sequence (indie rock),Crow's Feet Commons, Bend, www.
crowsfeetcommons.com.
Feb. 20-21 —Soul Vaccination (funk and soul),The Oxford Hotel, Bend, www. jazzattheoxford.com. Feb. 22 —Clint Black (country), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. Feb. 22 —Swingle Singers (a cappella),Ridgeview High School, Redmond, www.
redmondcca.org. Feb. 24 —Catharsus (death metal), Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. Feb. 26 —KungFu(funk jams), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.p44p.biz. Feb. 27 —Willy Porter (folk), Sisters High School, www. sistersfolkfestival.org. Feb. 27 —Crystal Bowersox (rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub. com.
'80s hit-makers Starship play Tower Theatre H ey everyone, look up . I t ' s Starship! No, not up in the sky. Look up on the stage! Yes, that Starship, featuring Mickey Thomas, is coming to the Tower Theatre in Bend.
Don your shoulder pads, leg warmers and prepare for liftoff. This is the band that built that city on rock
'n' roll.
Now, let's see if w e
h ave this
straight. The psychedelic band Jefferson Airplane was born in the mid1960s and broke up by 1972. But from
its ashes rose Jefferson Starship, with several but not all original Jef-
• 1
/ •
ferson Airplane members.
Accordingto a press release for the show, Thomas joined in 1979, and Prineville will open the show. helped score a hit with 1979's "Jane." Starship featuring Mickey ThomAfter the 1984 departure of Paul as, with special guest Bern Smith; Kantner, an O.G. Jefferson Airplane 730 p.m. Sunday; Tower Theatre, member, Thomas led the band, which 835 NW Wall St., Bend; $40-$50, dropped "Jefferson" and recorded a plus fees; www.towertheatre.org or slew of '80s hits as Starship, including 541-317-0700. several duets with Grace Slick, who
had rejoined Jefferson Starship in 1981 and stayed in Starship until 1988. After that Thomas sangleadfull-time.
Remember the 1980s hits'? The 1985 Starship album "Knee Deep in the Hoopla" spawned two Billboard
— David Jasper
Rob Larkin cooksup a richmusical stew Rob Larkin & The Wayward Ones are a soulful Americana band based
in Los Angeles. They're playing not haps the most polarizing song ever to one, not two, but three gigs in town crack the top 40, "We Built this City," this week. Looks like they figured if which hit No. 1 in 1986. they were making the trek up here, But 25 years later, "We Built this they would make it worth their while. City" reached the top spot on a very L arkin's s o u n d "successfully different list: a Rolling Stone Readers walks the line between old and new Poll of the 10 worst songs of the 1980s. with plenty of soul to spare," accord"This could be the biggest blowout ing to the Paso Robles Press. victory in the history of the Rolling While Larkin tours as a solo act Stone Readers Poll," Rolling Stone occasionally, he typically tours with Hot 100 No. 1 hits: "Sara," and per-
wrote. "It crushed the competition."
Oh well. Starship can take comfort in all its other smash hits, including
The Wayward Ones, with whom he
releaseda debut album in December 2013. The band describes it as "a rich
"Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" and musical stew, with ingredients from "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)." righteous organ to down-home harSoulful singer-songwriter and monica, and everything in between." maritime engineer Bern Smith of Continued next page
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
musie
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7
From previous page That sounds delicious. So
take your pick of venues and don't miss these guys. Rob Larkin & The Wayward Ones • 7 p.m. Sunday; Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; free; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. • With Micah Peterson; 8 p.m. Monday; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Ce n t ury D r i ve, B e nd ; w w w . v olcanictheatrepub.com o r 541-323-1881. •8 p .m. Thur sd a y , Northside Bar k Grill, 62860 Boyd A c res Ro a d, Be n d ;
j "
"-""*' ="Io /SrE '.
-
.
'
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:
www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. — Sophie Wilhins IE
M brascatu draws from sounds old andnew If it's world music you seek, aly) and Florence. His journey
the fact that Algieri sings his
day; F r ee ; Mc M e namins Old S t . Fra n c is Sc h o ol, 700 NW B o n d St . , Be n d; w ww.mcmenamins.com o r 541-382-5174. — David Jasper
Italian lyrics in a w i nsome, throaty croon, nor have we
Beth Woodplays
it's Mbrascatu you should try.
to the U.S. landed him in Port-
If you like the way their name, pronounced "Mm-
land, where he put together
b rah-ska-too," rolls of f
the
tongue, wait until you hear the way the Portland quintet rolls out its fusion of New World and Old World, as it
the band in 2010. We haven'teven mentioned
told of the band's inventive use Bendhouse concert will Wednesday when it plays of ukulele, banjo, drums, lap at McMenamins Old St. Fran- steel, viola, violin, bass, elecBeth Wood, a rootsy folk cis School in Bend. Theirs is a tric and acoustic guitar. artist, will play Saturday at versatile sound that can pair M brascatu r e cently re - House Concerts in the Glen at a mournful fiddle conjuring leased a very solid sophomore Newport Hills. images of cobbled European record, the 10-song "Tempo," The Texan folk singer and avenues with brooding indie building on the foundation of guitar player is no stranger to rock replete with electric gui- their promising debut. the area, having proclaimed tar and echoey vocal effect. The five have earned a her adopted home as EuSee "La Nave Tiene la Rot- strong live reputation, so po- gene. Wood has won multiple ta," a song from Mbrascatu's
recorded in Eugene with producer and singer-songwriter
Beth Wood featuring Ann Weiss;7p.m. Saturday,6p.m .
Tyler Fortier.
potluck; House Concerts in the Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NW S tannium Road,
Wood will perform with Anne Weiss from Portland,
known for her bluesy chops. Weiss combines such genres as blues, funk and gospel with the occasional nod to Latin and classical genres.
Bend; $15-$20,suggested donation; houseconcertsinthe-
glen@bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830. — Sophie Wilhins
I O Q A
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/ /
/
/
Ch
CHILL OUT
$' SUNRIVER BREW ING CO M P A N Y 'j/R
~' E-9 KE8PULL "'
awards, including the Sisters that the rhythm and melodies Folk Festival Dave Carter Me-
morial Songwriting Contest,
Fe5ruury7, /TOIS
and even worked on the staff of the Sisters Folk Festival.
Noon -8Wp.m..
Wood grew up studying classical music in Texas, in-
~~ TheVEiisge
cludingpiano, violin and harp.
N
It wasn't until she moved to Austin, Texas, and got a de-
gree in literature and guitar that she started writing her own music. The Washington
Post deemed her"a musical triple-threat — a th o u ghtful songwriter and talented multi-instrumentalist with a
supple, soulful voice." Now, 16 years and nine albums later, Wood is comfortably immersed in the music scene the Pacific Northwest
provides. She started a Song of the Month Club, engaging her fans and surrounding herself with new ideas — ideas that led to her ninth studio album, released in June 2014,
/
SUNRIVER
tent that they themselves warn
self-titled 2012 debut, for an example. are gonna get you. MbrascaThe group's name was the tu writes in its press kit, "The nickname of I t a lian-born rhythm, which can be porfrontman Andrea Algieri's tentous, energetic and catchy, grandfather, who gave him sometimes all at the same his first guitar, according to time, will get you dancing, McMenamins. the singing will resonate in Algieri grew up dividing your chest and the strings and his time between Luzzi (in the drums will carry you away." Calabria region of southern ItMbrascatu,7 p.m. Wednes-
RC
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AMERICAN CANCERSOCIETY
BARK FfpR LIFE' AIIIayiIifie Cascade Sotheby's MmMm NmM o
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FridaV Feb. 6>
r.o'pm Skaters receive fun flashing and glow novelty items to e ar while they rock out to the tunes of a live DJ.
Games & giveaways! ALPINE
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Entry Is free. Check-in from
Night trek along the Osgood Nature trail Please register at ' 541-593-4394
10-10E30 a.nL
Regtstratton
encouraged.
0 K Q O
PAGE 8 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents.
• ROLL WITH JELLYBREAD You may haveseen them at a local fest or two, but tonight's your chance to seelocal Americana-style funk-rockers Jelly Bread in amore pub-like setting, and who doesn't like something with the adjective "pub-like" appended to it? Jelly Breadhasperformed on stages including BendSummer Festival, Fall Festival, Deschutes Brewery's famous Halloween partyand more, but over the pastyear the band has kicked up its touring schedule acouple notches, O 0 playing pretty major regional music fests and opening for the likes of Robert Cray, Robert Randolph gE and the Family Band, DragonSmoke(members of
Galactic), The Motet, Ivan Neville's Dumpstaphunk andothers.Now,theyalso haveanew EPout, "Lessons Learned." Catch themtonight at Volcanic Theatre Pub. Details in the listing. • BIRTHDAY PARTY FORBTBS Broken TopBottle Shop on Bend's west side is celebrating its third birthday! Yay! Youcanget in on the fun tonight, Saturday andSunday by raising a pint while you listen to somefine musicians. Tonight it's Sink & Swim, a bluegrass Americanaoutfit, and Saturday it'll be Blackflowers Blacksun's roots blues. On Sunday, checkoutthesoul-AmericanaofRob Larkin & TheWayward Ones.Details below.
CO
TODAY BOBBYLINDSTROM: Rock; free; noon-2 p.m.;FatTuesdays,61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rock;$5;6-9 p.m.; Faith, Hope andCharity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Bridge Way,Terrebonne; www.faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner - Eastside, 1500 NE Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-647-2198. DEREK MICHAELMARC AND DOUBLE AA:Rock; 6 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588. ALLAN BYER:Americana; 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Velvet, 805 NWWall St., Bend; 541-728-0303. RED DIESEL:The country and bluegrass band performs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. SINK &SWIM: The Portland bluegrass and Americana band performs; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. OUTOFTHE BLUE:Rock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 7:30 p.m.; Velvet, 805 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-728-0303. CHEYENNE WEST: Country-rock; free; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or
541-388-8331. DJ CODICARROLL:Featuring an art presentation by Natalie Fletcher; free; 8 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. THE BADCATS:Classic rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DJ WICKED: 9 p.m .;Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. JELLYBREAD:The Reno, Nevadaalt-funk band performs, with Tim Snider; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. STAND UPCOMEDY: Livecomedy hostedbyTony G;free;9 p.m .; Cabin 22, 25 SWCentury Dr., Bend; bendcomedy@traughberproductions. com or 541-419-0111.
SATURDAY COYOTEWILLOW:Chamber-folk; 3 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; www.strictlyorganic.com or 541-647-1402. BEAUTYANDTHEBEARDCHARITY SHOW:Featuring Central Oregon Patriot Pin Up Inc. and the Central Oregon Mustache Beard Society for a pin up and beard contest, a raffle, live music and more to benefit Central Oregon Veterans Outreach; free, donations accepted; 6 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-647-0154. BLACKFLOWERS BLACKSUN: Roots, blues and punk; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop& Ale Cafe,1740
NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. TERRENCE NEAL: Folk-pop; 7-9 p.m.; Portello Winecafe, 2754 NWCrossing Drive, Bend; www.portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. OUT OFTHEBLUE: Rock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. THE BADCATS:Classic rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. CASCADERYE: Roots-rock; free; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing. com or 541-388-8331. DJ MARKBRODY:9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. THE RUM 8THE SEA: Folk-rock;ladies free, $5 for men; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
SUNDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rock;1-3 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Co., 6 SWBond St., Bend; 541-330-6061. PAUL EDDY: Twang-pop; 3 p.m.; Strictly Organic Coffee Bar, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 400, Bend; www.strictlyorganic.com or 541-647-1402. CALICOLEAF:Free; 8 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW Minnesota, Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. ISLES:The indie-rock band performs, with Corner Gospel Explosion and Blue
EyedLucy;$5;8 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881
MOMDAY BOBBYLINDSTROM: Rock; free; noon-2 p.m.;FatTuesdays,61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. FELIX MARTIN:The jazz-metal guitar wizard performs, with Barishi and Halo
Haven; $5plus fees inadvance, $6 at the door; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/ felixmartinbend or 541-306-3017. EYES UPHERE COMEDY SHOW: Featuring live comedy by Chelsea W oodmansee and Shanan Kelley;$10; 7:30p.m.;TinPanTheater,869 NWTin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271
TUESDAY BOBBYLINDSTROM: Rock; free; noon-2 p.m.;FatTuesdays,61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. LISA DAEANDROBERTLEEDUO: Jazz; 7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www. northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. EYES UPHERE COMEDY SHOW: Featuring live comedy by Chelsea W oodmansee and Shanan Kelley;$10; 7:30p.m.;TinPanTheater,869 NWTin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271
WEDNESDAY BOBBYLINDSTROM: Rock; free; noon-2 p.m.;FatTuesdays,61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; free; 7 p.m.; The Stihl Whiskey Bar,
550 NW Franklin Ave, Suite 118, Bend; 541-383-8182. VICTORJOHNSON: Folk;free;9:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
THURSDAY BOBBYLINDSTROM: Rock; free; noon-2 p.m.;FatTuesdays,61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. THE SUBSTITUTES:Rock; $5; 6-9 p.m.; Faith, Hope andCharity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Bridge Way,Terrebonne; www.faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. TOM ANDHEATHER:Pop; 6-8 p.m.; The Lot, 745 NWColumbia St., Bend; 541-610-4969. AYRONJONESANDTHEWAY:The Seattle rock guitarist performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. COMEDY SHOW:Featuring "TheHe & She Comedy Show" with Doug and Teresa Wyckoff, the married NYC comedyduo;$8 plusfees inadvance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com,
bendcomedy©traughberproductions. com or 541-419-0111. THE REVANDBOB:Try to stump this improv songwriters; $5; 8-10 p.m.; Platypus Pub, 1203 NEThird St. (downstairs), Bend; www. platypuspubbend.com or 541-323-3282. DJ NB:Free; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. • SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevents@ bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
musie reviews Spotlight: Diana Krall
Bob Dylan
ball that gathered a glittering
"SHADOWS IN THE NIGHT" Columbia Records It's not a put-on. Bob Dylan's
assortment of 1960s celebrities,
including Sinatra and his new
Thepianist VijayIyer publishes Dylan holds a Sun Records sin- his compositions under the name gle, a touch of rock; its title is too Multiplicity Music, and that word grainy to decipher. goes to the heart of his enterprise
bum of 10 songs that were all
recorded by Frank Sinatra, is a tribute from one venerated
But there's no posing in the
music. Dylan went to a studio
American musician to another,
Claude Paris /The Associated Press file photo
Canadian jazz pianist and singer Diana Krall released her album "Wallflower" Feb.3.
Diana Krall "WALLFLOWER" Verve Records
David Foster, whose lush but static
Diana Krall sounds glum and string arrangements, written by fatigued on "Wallflower," a collec- William Ross, couch each song tion of '70s and '80s songs associ- on a soft feather bed. Where Krall ated with the Eagles, Elton John, usually plays vigorous keyboards the Carpenters and others, that on her albums, here her pianism sustains a mood of quiet despera- is all but absent. Most of the fills, tion. The muted, wistful played by Foster, are tone is established with strictly routine. It's all the opening cut, "Calthe more mystifyingbeifornia Dreamin'," the cause Krall, whenprodMamas and the Papas' ded by a rhythm secfirst hit in which Krall's tion, can really swing. somnolent deli v ery But on "Wallflower," suggests a snowbound drums are minimal. New Englander longThe record, whose tiing for brighter days and happier tle song is an obscure, country-intimes on a frigid winter evening. flected Bob Dylan number, has the It is deepened by her rendition of feel of a sullen concept album by a "Desperado," the Eagles' ballad woman who feels abandoned. It is comparing a rock star's grueling tempting to imagine that it reflects life on the road to the exhaustion the frustrations of her marriage of an aging cowboy reluctant to to Elvis Costello. These two great come in from the range. musicians, after all, are driven The most evocative cut is the Carpenters' hit "Superstar," the
workhorses who are on the road
much of the time on separate tours.
plea to a rock star by a besotted Loneliness is such a sad affair. — Stephen Holden, New York Times
fan to remember her long after their dalliance.
as an artist. He's led an important jazz-tradition trio for most of the
a reconsiderat ion of a school of where Sinatra o f ten r e cordsongwriting, a feat of technical ed, Capitol Records' Studio B, nostalgia and a reckoning with and he sang the songs with his five-man touringband. They relove and death. Dylan devotes the album to a corded live and listening to one particular subset of the another in the room Sinatra legacy. It's not without he a dphones;
last decade, but he's also been writing music inspired by other
Sinatra th e a i r borne swinger or Sinatra the
sation at Harvard; he makes mu-
turn the album up too
traditions and functions, working
with poets and emcees and string quartets. He doesn't just improvise, he teaches a class in aesthet-
ic and social theories of improvi-
loud and you can hear sic that not only intersects differamplifiers humming as ent strategies but lingers over the songs begin and end. places of intersection. "There was no tunThe trio makes sense in aphysing and there was no ical way, moving together as one fixing," the album's en- unit. And it's good how evolved gineer, Al Schmitt, said that motion can sound in a piece in an online interview. as strange as "Hood," a song "Everything is what it inspired by the Detroit techno
voice of confidence. It's the Sinatra who made thematic albums about
separation and heartache — albums like "Wallflower" was produced and arranged by the megahit maker
"BREAK STUFF" ECM Records
wife, Mia Farrow. In the photo,
"Shadows in the Night," an alt
Vijay lyer Trio
"Where Are You'?" in
1957, which included four of the songs Dylan revives, and "No One
was. The
producer Robert Hood, because a r r a ngements over the course of the record, are largely of a piece. the strength of the track takes
Cares" (1959) and "All Alone" (1962), which each supply one. They are ballads, mostly Tin Pan Alley standards, sophisticated enough to be utterly succinct. They never move faster than midtempo and
The young, suave Sinatra found tragedy and melodrama in these songs, which he often sang as slowly as Dylan does. And for these songs, Dylan presents yet they often luxuriate in melananother changed voice: not the choly; they testify, above all, to wrathful scrape of his recent alloneliness. bums, but a subdued, sustained "Shadows in the Night" (Co- tone. It's still ragged; he is 73. But lumbia) offers bait for trivia seek- he carefully honors the melodies,
the heat off Iyer's versions of songs by his heroes (Thelonious Monk's "Work," Billy Strayhorn's
ers. Sinatra was born in 1915, 100
even the trickier chromatic ones,
rhythmic logic and a coordinat-
years ago. The opening track,
and he fully inhabits the lyrics. Not every song thrives under
ed bustle of breaks and intersec-
"I'm a Fool to Want You," is one
of very few songs with a Sinatra Dylan's treatment. "Some Ensongwriting credit. The front chanted Evening" is stiff, and cover emulates the vertical-bar "Why Try to Change Me Now" design of the jazz trumpeter denies the song's humor. But Freddie Hubbard's album "Hub- even when it falters, "Shadows in the Night" maintains its singular Tones," which was releasedlike Dylan's debut album — in mood: lovesick, haunted, sus1962. The photo on the back pos- pended between an inconsolable es Dylan and a masked woman present and all the regrets of the in formal wear at a nightclub ta- past. — Jon Pareles, ble, alluding, perhaps, to the 1966 Black and White Ball, a masked New York Times
"Bloodcount," John C oltrane's
"Countdown"). Those versions aren't formal stunts — least of all
the slow, elegant "Bloodcount." They're just more refined representations of the way Iyer and his trio perform in real time, with a
tions. The band's refractive language makes sense of whatever material it plays. You don't hear
the record and seize on its sense of rupture or argument. Instead, it sounds whole.
ON TOUR: Feb. 19 —The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.
org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 20Winningstad Theatre, Portland;
www.portlandjazzfestival.org. — Ben Ratliff, New York Times
WiVE NIVKI'. 1 lV NW OREGON JLVE D OW N T O W N B E N D
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Eh) .f. EHI
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
rz u e
ewx'2 ex's
0
• Atelier 6000 hosts an exhibit featuring typewriter artwork and actual typewriters By David Jasper
4
The Bulletin
L
ong before the advent of tablets, laptops and, heck,
fax machines, the sound of clacking typewriters, with their
9'
telltale DINGs and w h ooshing
carriage returns, filled offices across the land. Not so much anymore. However,
the nearly obsolete machines are gettingsome love — and a chance to make some old-school racketthis month at Atelier 6000 Print-
making Studio and Gallery in the Old Mill District of Bend.
Manual typewriters including Underwoods, Smith-Coronas and Remingtons will be on display when"The Typewriter Returns!"see what they did there? — opens tonight at A6 during First Friday Gallery Walk(see"If you go"). The exhibit, which will be up through Feb. 28, is both visual and tactile. First, the v i sual component: The show features contemporary
prints of antique typewriters by printmakers Ben Rosenberg and Carol Wax, who use centuries-old printmaking techniques to create their works.
Continued next page
Ifyou go What:"The Typewriter Returns!" W hen: Opens 5-9tonightand displays through Feb.28 Where: Atelier 6000, 389 SW Scalehouse Court, Bend Cost:Free Contact:www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759
ComingSaturday See Page B2of The Bulletin for a photo page ofAtelier 6000's "The Typewriter Returns!" exhibit.
Submitted photo
"Inside Scoop," a mezzotint by Carol Wax, will show at Atelier 6000 during its February exhibit, "The Typewriter Returns!"
arts
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
Batteries • Crystal • Bands
WATCH BATTERY
's-
Submitted photo
"Jefferson Sunset," an oil on linen by Janice Druian, can be seen in "Taking the Long View," a show of Druian's oils of the high desert landscapes opening tonight at Tumalo Art Co. in Bend.
541-728-0411 61383 S.Hwy.97, Bend, OR97702 Oftce: 541.728.0411• CelL 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner Stem & Cr o wn s o Movements
First Friday Gallery Walk First Friday Gallery Walk returns to downtown Bend and the Old Mill District tonight, with food, art re-
ceptions, drinks and music from approximately 5-9 p.m. at participating galleries and cafes. At Red Chair Gallery, 103 NW Or-
egon Ave., this month's featured artists are potter and raku wall mural-
ist Michael Gwinup and silver and gemstone jewelry maker Gabrielle Taylor. Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minneso-
ta Ave., will continue its display of Bend resident and world trav-
eler Bernard Gateau's portrait photography. stjl
Tumalo Art Co., 450 SW Pow-
e
l
'Junie B. Jones'opens at 2ndStreetTheatre Bend Experimental Art Theatre's black box presentation of "Junie B.
No ticket is required for the free event, inspired by a former Central
Oregon Symphony cellist who had a passion for educating young people. Accordingto a press release for
Jones," the tale of a kindergartener the event, the concert aims to inspire who struggles to followthe rules, will an interest in classical music and show at 7 tonight and Saturday and learning to play a symphony instru2 p.m. Sunday at 2nd Street Theatre, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend. Tickets are $10, $5 for students 18 and under at www.tickettails.com.
Contact: www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558.
Central Oregon Symphony Children's Concert Central Oregon Symphony will present the Virginia Riggs Chil-
ment, and will be interactive, with
plenty of audience participation. The concertwillbe preceded by an Instrument Petting Zoo in which
kids can have an up-close experience with the instruments of the
orchestraasthey areplayed by symphony musicians. The symphony's Winter Concert, with guest piano soloist Kotaro Fukuma, will be held Feb. 14-16. Contact: www . cosymphony. com infol cosymphony.com or
erhouse Drive, opens "Taking the Long View," featuring panoramic oil paintings by Janice Druian.
dren's Concert at 7 p.m. Thursday at
From previous page
whites. Wax wrote a book on mezzotint, "The Mezzotint: History and
exhibit."
Technique," first published in 1990.
to participate in the story-writing
Bend High School Auditorium, 230 541-317-3941. — David Jasper
NE Sixth St.
I
Visitors will see nine of Wax's
SATURDAY F E B R UARY 20TH FROM 5:00 — 7:00 PM Featuring local artists from the High Desert Art League, live music by Michael Martinez R a com p l i m e n t ary w in e tasting.
Make a night of it and stay for dinner featuring new NF' Cuisine and award winning u t n e li st.
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"Like" us on Facebook 9 541-383-8200 • re c e p tion@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. • www.brokentop.com
pieces, seven of Rosenberg's, in "The Typewriter Returns!" To create his painterly prints,
"It's kind of fun, because it's the same subject matter, but two totally
Ben Rosenberg favors monotype, different processes. One's very cona processdescribed on his website, trolled and meticulous, and the other b enrosenbergillustration.com, a s is very loose and impressionistic," singular works created by painting Boone said. images on a plate surface, which Along with the prints, there will are then transferred to paper using be about nine antique typewriters on an etching press. They are either a hand. single color or hand colored using Atelier 6000 holds its Students to watercolors or gouache. A6 program severaltimes a year, "It's a completely unique, one-of- and is in contact with several Cena-kind print," said A6's executive tral Oregon schools about visiting director, Dawn Boone, who expects during the exhibit. Rosenberg to be present at tonight's Those who'd like to learn more opening. about mezzotint, visiting artist Leigh Artist Wax, who lives on the East Knowles Meeter will give an "Intro Coast, originally trained to be a clas- to Mezzotint" Art Talk at 7 p.m. Feb. sical musician but fell in love with 13. printmaking, according to her biogAdditionally, Boone said, "Classraphy at www.carolwax.com. es will be coming in, and we'll be Boone calls Wax the queen of explaining the difference between mezzotint, a laborious intaglio tech- monotype and mezzotint, and then nique developed in the 17th century the kids will have a creative writing in which the artist works a plate to
exercise writing six-words stories
reveal a range of blacks, grays and
on the antique typewriters in the
The community is also invited exercise. Grant money has enabled the gallery to purchase typewriters, said gallery director Julie Winter. "We will use them long after this exhibit, which is exciting, for showing kids machines and the return is not down here. It's this motion," she said, moving her hand in a nearly forgotten way, "and the ding, and the noises." Boone said, "I think there's a little
bit of nostalgia around (typewriters). There's such a fun, tactile quality to them. The experience feels more authentic."
There's also a beauty to them, she added. "They're practical, but now it's an art form to type with them because it's all done by hand again. And then of course (there's) the sounds they make. They're a relic, but I think people don't want to see them disappear." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
arts
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
Ave.,Suite B, Bend;541-728-0527. RED CHAIR GALLERY:"Passion = Emotion," featuring jewelry by Gabrielle Taylor and raku by Mike Gwinup; reception 5-9 tonight; through Feb. 28; 103 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Photography 2015," featuring photographs by various artists, through Feb. 13; "Infinity in the Palm of Your Hand," featuring art by Shari Crandall in the silent reading room through March; 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING AND GALLERY:"Fur and Feathers," featuring works inspired by animals and birds; reception 5-8 tonight; through March 28; 834 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884.
ART E XH I B I T S ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www.artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFRED DOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 541-526-1185 or www.alfreddolezal.com. ATELIER 6000:"The Typewriter Returns!," featuring six-word stories created with vintage typewriters; through Feb. 28; 389 SW Scalehouse Court, Suite 120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito; 1024 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYON CREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc. com or 541-549-0366. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Pets 'r' Us," featuring works by various artists; through March 2; 601 NW Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring paintings by inmates of Oregon correctional institutions to benefit Ugandan orphan children of Otino-Waa Children's Village; reception 5-8 tonight; through Feb. 28; 550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: Featuring photography by Stacie Muller and Michael Wheeler; 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HOOD AVENUE ART: "Pieces of Winter," featuring various works by local artists; through Feb. 23; 357 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; www.hoodavenueart.com or 541-719-1800. HOP N BEANPIZZERIA: Featuring landscapeartby Larry Goodman; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'SWILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAUL DESIGNS:Featuring custom jewelry and signature series with unique pieces;1006 NW Bond St., Bend; www. johnpauldesigns.com or 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ART GALLERY:Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 NE Hemlock St., Suite13, Redmond;
Submitted photo
"Stars at Night," an oil painting by Ann Ruttan, will be on display at the Pronghorn Clubhouse through March 21. 360-325-6230. LA MAGIE BAKERY &CAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors and pastels by Patricia W. Porter; 945 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. LUMIN ART STUDIOS:Featuring resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie Mendel, Lisa Sipe and Natalie Mason; by appointment;19855 Fourth St., Suite 103, Tumalo; www.luminartstudio.com. MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY:"Oregon Adventures," featuring paintings by Norma Holmes; reception 5-9 tonight; through Feb. 28; 869 NW Wall St., Bend; www.mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. THE OXFORDHOTEL: Featuring photography by Bernard Gateau; reception 5:30-8 tonight; through Feb.26;10 NW Minnesota Ave.,Bend; 541-382-9398. PATAGONIA I BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PEAPOD GLASS GALLERY:Featuring oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Salisbury; 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-312-2828. PRONGHORNCLUBHOUSE: Featuring oil paintings by Ann Ruttan; through March 21; 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend; 541-693-5300. GUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by Phyllis Van Etten; reception 5-7 tonight; through March 4; 926 NE Greenwood
SISTERS AREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERS ARTWORKS: "Discovery — A Series," featuring works by the Journeys Art Quilters; through Feb. 27; 204 W. Adams Ave.; www.sistersartworks.com or 541-420-9695. SISTERS PUBLIC LIBRARY:"Sisters Library Annual Art Exhibit 2015"; through Feb. 26; 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www.sistersfol.com. SUNRIVER AREAPUBLIC LIBRARY: Featuring pastels by Nancy Misek and baskets by Dorene Foster; Tuesday through March 27; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
Our artists are cleaning out their studios... fabulous deals on the art you love!
( D
Saturdpy,'February 21 .>t
In the Old Mill Dlstrlct between Desperado 6 JimmyJohn's & %of sales wilbedonatedtoBendCommunity Center
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SYNERGY HEALTH &WELLNESS: Featuring metal scupltures by Steve Lawson; reception 5-8 tonight; through February; 244 NE Franklin Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.synergyhealthbend.com or 541-323-3488. TOWNSHEND'S BENDTEAHOUSE: "Native Soul," featuring works by Liz Burum, aka "Zoeylane"; through March 4; 835 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www.townshendstea.com. TUMALO ARTCO.:"Taking the Long View," featuring panoramic oil paintings by Janice Druian; reception 4-8 tonight; through March 3; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www. tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTA BONITAGLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.com. WERNER HOME STUDIO& GALLERY: Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541815-9800 for directions.
Find It All Gnllne
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TOURNAMENT 11AM-2PM! Just $5 0 0 i uy i . Re-buy for the same price to try for a higher score. Tournament sessions 11AM and 12PM, re-buy rounds at 1PM, play-offs at 2PM Must be at least 55andaBonus Club member to participate. Limitonebrunch perguest per Monday.Illtanagement hasthe right to revise,review,or cancel this promotionat anytime. Restrictionsapply:seeBonusClub for completedetails.
' '83 FREE SLOTPLAYCOUPON LEAllETHEDRIVINGTOUS! Bendbusrunsthe first Mondayofthe month : :Call for reservations, location & times: 541.783.7529 ext.209 Valid forBend,LaPine and Redmond guestsonly;localztpcodesdo notapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires March 52015
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PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
rinks o
I
e
h
The Bulletin file photo
Guests sample beers and mingle in Goodlife Brewing Co.'s production room during last year's Zwickelmania. The brewery will be participating again this year with a release party for G-Two Imperial Red Ale, the product of a collaboration with Terminal Gravity Brewing.
•
• Breweries across Oregon will open their doors for samplesand tours aspart of Zwickelmania By Kathleen McCool
at that date so you can plan your
The Bulletin
Zwickelmania festivities at partic-
T
here's a lot happening on Feb. 14 this year. Not only
is it Valentine's Day, but it's also Presidents Day weekend, and to top it off, Zwickelmania is in-
ipating local breweries. Z wickelmania is a "brewery open house," explains Brian
openingtheir doors so beer fans can meet the brewers, tour the fa-
•
•
chose Presidents Day weekend for Zwickelmania was because
cilities, sample thebeers and more. it would give people who may be Zwickelmania w a s st a r t ed traveling during the long weekby the Oregon Brewers Guild in end a chance to experience brew2008. The guild, a nonprofit trade eries around the state. (There's association, was founded in 1992 even a map of all the participating and is made up of 126 brewing breweries on the guild's website: companies, 100 associate or sup- wwworegoncraftbeerorg). plier members and more than Butenschoen, who joined the
found that statewide, more than
36,000 people visited the 105 participating breweries in a five-hour perlod.
By now, you may be wondering: What is a zwickel? A zwickel "attaches to a sam-
pling port on fermentation and conditioning tanks," explained Butenschoen. They allow samples
of the beer to be taken during the the Oregon Brewers Guild. More SNOBs (Supporters of Native Or- said Zwickelmania has been fermentation and conditioning fecting breweries statewide. than 100 breweries around Ore- egon Beer). growing in popularity each year. process. So we are taking a look ahead gon take part in the one-day event, One of the reasons the guild The guild took roll last year and Continued next page Butenschoen, executive director of
3 ,400 enthusiast members o r
Oregon Brewers Guild in 2004,
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
From previous page The beer poured from a zwickel, "zwickelbier" in German, is usually not as carbonated as other beers and has creamy head when poured into a glass. So far, eight Central Oregon breweries are participating in Z wickelmania, and some of them will actually serve samples
ples straight from the zwickel on
ifyou go What:Zwickelmania When:11a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb.14 Where:Various breweries Cost:Free Contact:www.oregoncraftbeer.org
chances to talk with the brew-
ers and free samples from the zwickel. Goodlife Brewing is celebrating Zwickelmania with its Terminal Gravity Brewing/GoodLife Brewing Collaboration party, releasing G-Two Imperial Red Ale and pouring new specialty beers
what's happening?
their conditioning tank. Wild Ride Brewing Co. will provide tours of the brewery and
a chance to meet head brewer Paul Bergeman. Free samples will be provided throughout the day, including tastes directly from the zwickels. Last but n o t l e ast, Worthy
Brewing will release a Graham
straight from the zwickel.
Boneyard Beer is having a "Pickles and Zwickels" parking lot party, pouring full pints of beer and serving tacos from El Sancho. Deschutes Brewery is opening the doors of its production facility on Simpson Avenue for tours,
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
McMenamins Old
Cracker Stout from it s s mallSt . F r an- batch pilot b r ewing system
cis School's Mike "Curly" White will provide samples of his newest creations, and McMenamins
Passport holders can get special Zwickelmania stamps. McMenamins will also be offering discounts on growler fills. Riverbend Brewing will release Right Said Red and provide free samples of its latest creations. Sunriver Brewing's entire team of brewers will be hosting tours
paired with a small bite in honor
Nation Double IPA, a test batch of
Ale and Comatose IPA.
their SUP Summer Ale plus sam-
Butler Market Road, Ste.120, Bend; www.oregonspiritdistillers.com or 541-382-0002. WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2-5 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; wwwtraderjoes.com or 541-771-3148. SUNDAY SECONDSUNDAY:Jon Abernathy will speak about his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ bend, lizg@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2-5 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-771-3148.
WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2-5 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-771-3148. FIRKIN FRIDAY:Sample various beers; free, $3 pints; 4 p.m.; Worthy Brewing Company, 495 NE Bellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. SATURDAY DISTILLER'S WORKSHOP: Learn how to turn raw materials into spirits; $60; 8:30 a.m.-noon; Oregon Spirit Distillers,490 NE
of Valentine's Day as well as a pouring from Randall — IPA with
whole-flowered Meridian hops. Zwickelmania will take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Feb. 14 at
various local breweries, as well as breweries statewide. The event
is free, and the Oregon Brewers Guild is providing free shuttle buses from brewery to brewery. More information and maps of participating breweries can be
and answering questions. They will be pouring samples of Cocoa found at w w w .oregoncraftbeer. Cow Chocolate Milk Stout, Resin- org.
Puffy Coat Porter, 29'er Brown
TODAY JUBEL 2014 RELEASE CELEBRATION:Sample the third vintage release of Jubel, a12-month barrel-aged beer; free; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend; www.deschutesbrewery.com or 541-382-9242.
— Reporter: 541-383-0350, jqmccool@bendbulletin.com
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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
TODAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. "HAROLDANDTHEPURPLE CRAYON": A play with life-sized puppets about Harold's world of drawings, production by Philadelphia's Enchantment Theatre Company; $23, $13 for children12 and younger; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. FOGHORN STRINGBAND:The Portland roots band performs for Sisters Folk Festival's winter concert series, with
Beth Wood;$20, $10(youth), $50 or $25 (youth) for series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-
4979.(Page3) SINK 8 SWIM:The Portland bluegrass and Americana band performs; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. SUNRIVERCHILLOUT:Featuring a glow skating party, dummy downhill, K-9 keg pull, musher madness, glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainmentand more, various locations; free for spectators, registration prices vary per event; 7 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www. sunriver-direct.com or 541-593-8704. "MONUMENTSMEN": Showing of the film about saving art during World War II; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.;CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. JELLY BREAD: The Reno, Nevada alt-funk band performs, with Tim Snider; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
SATURDAY VERT FEST:A back-country festival featuring races, drinks, music, demos and more; free for spektators, various pricing for participants; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area,13000 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com/winter or 541-382-2442.
THE BULLETIN• FRID
BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. SUNRIVERCHILLOUT:Featuring a glow skating party, dummy downhill, K-9 kegpull ,musherm adness,glowshoe trek, prizes, entertainment and more, various locations; free for spectators, registration prices vary per event; 10:30 a.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriver-direct.com or 541-593-8704. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Jon Abernathy will speak on his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; 1-3 p.m.; Costco, 2500 NEU.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.costco.com or 541-385-9626. VEGASCASINONIGHT: Featuring a dance party, a Texas Hold 'Em tournament, a silent auction and more to benefit Family Kitchen; $30-$120, registration requested; 4-7 p.m. dinner, 4 p.m. poker check-in, poker starts at 5:15 p.m.,
/
ih
casinoopensat6p.m.;BendGolfand Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive;
www.mtbachelorrotary.org, gwend© bendbroadband.com or 541-382-5978. BEND BASEBALL BASH: Featuring dinner, a raffle, live and silent auctions and more to benefit the Bend High School baseball program; SOLDOUT; 6 p.m. dinner, doors open and silent auction begins at 5 p.m.; Fieldhouse of Bend, 401 SERoosevelt Avenue; www.bendhighbaseball. com, adam.randall©bend.k12.or.us or 541-730-9922. A NIGHTOF JAZZ WITH WARREN ZAIGER AND FRIENDS: A concert to benefit the Summit High School music program; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. BETH WOOD:TheOregonsingersongwriter performs, with Anne Weiss; $15-$20 suggested donation, registration requested; 7 p.m., potluck starts at 6 p.m.; The Glen at Newport Hills,1019 NW Stannium Road, Bend; houseconcertsintheglenIIbendbroadband. com or 541-480-8830. (Page 7) YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON WINTER CONCERT: The group performs traditional jazz, gospel and Broadway classics; $10; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www.bend.k12.or.us or 541-385-0470. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.;CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
SUNDAY VERT FEST: A back-country festival featuring races, drinks, music, demos and more; free for spektators, various pricing for participants; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com/ winteror 541-382-2442. OREGONOLDTIME FIDDLERS: A fiddle performance, all ages welcome; free, donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road; 541-410-5146. ROB LARKINA THE WAYWARD ONES:
The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703. STARSHIP:The classic rock'n' roll band performs, with Bern Smith; $40-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.;Towe rTheatre,835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. (Page 6)
MONDAY NATIVE VISIONS:A two-person show that depicts the lives and experiences of Native Americans who impacted our
nation's history; free; 5-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-318-3726. FELIX MARTIN:The jazz-metal guitar wizard performs, with Barishi and Halo Haven; $5 plusfees inadvance,$6atthe door; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/felixmartinbend or 541-306-3017. (Page 4) ROB LARKIN8ETHE WAYWARD ONES: The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs, with Micah Peterson; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7
AY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
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s com or 541-323-1881.
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THURSDAY
SATURDAY Youth Choir ofCentral Oregon:Hear the kiddos sing classic arrangements.
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MONDAY Native Visions:A two-person show about important moments in history.
WEDNESDAY Author! Author!:Garth Stein comes to Bend High.
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THURSDAY Virginia Riggs Chiltlren's Concert: Interact with the instruments and listen!
or 541-323-1881. (Page 6)
TUESDAY NATURALHISTORYPUB:Jay Bowerman will present"The Oregon Spotted Frog" discussing the most aquatic North American frog and how it is listed as "threatened" under the Endangered Species Act; free; 5:308:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org, info© highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. FLY FISHINGFILM TOUR:A film tour
featuring fly fishing films, to benefit Trout Unlimited, Wild Steelhead Coalition, Bonefish Tarpon Trust, Utah Stream Access Coalition, Stop Pebble Mine and more; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. (Page 29)
highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!:Garth Stein, author of "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.dplfoundation.
WEDNESDAY
singer andguitarist performs; $17plus
MUSEUM 8 ME:Museum is open after hours for children and adults with physical, cognitive or social disabilities; free; 4-7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.
(Page 4)
org, suzyo©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1027. CAROLYNWONDERLAND:The blues fees in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. FLY FISHINGFILMTOUR: A film tour featuring fly fishing films, to benefit Trout
Unlimited, Wild Steelhead Coalition, Bonefish Tarpon Trust, Utah Stream Access Coalition, Stop Pebble Mine and more; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. (Page 29) MBRASCATU:Thefusion indie-rock band performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541382-5174. (Page 7) AARON LARGET-CAPLAN:The Colorado Latin guitarist performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.
BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by AnnPatchett;noon;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. CHILDREN'S THEATER COMPANY DINNER SHOW:Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; $20; 6-8:30 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024. DEATH BYCHOCOLATE BUNCO NIGHT: Featuring a night of bunco and desserts, prizes and more to benefit Soroptimist International of Bend charities; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend.org or 541-389-8940. REMEMBERINGTHE LEGACY OF PETE SEEGER:Featuring a sing-a-long to honor the first anniversary of Pete Seeger's passing; 6:30-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. AYRONJONESANDTHE WAY:The Seattle rock guitarist performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. VIRGINIA RIGGSCHILDREN'S CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs music by Wagner and Delibes, featuring an instrument petting zoo; free; 7 p.m. concert, 6:30 p.m. instrument petting zoo; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www. cosymphony.com or 541-383-6290. ROB LARKIN& THE WAYWARD ONES: The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-
0889.(Page6) • SUBIINTAN EVENTatwww bendbulletin coml submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.
PAGE 18 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
planning ahea FEB. 13-19 FEB. 13-14, 19 — BENDINDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. FEB. 13-15 — "BEAUTYANDTHE BEAST":A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in
advance, $18.50for seniors andchildren 12 and younger; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13-14, 3 p.m. Feb. 15; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod.com or 541-322-3300. FEB. 13-14 — CHILDREN'S THEATERCOMPANYDINNER SHOW:Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; $20; 6-8:30 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024. FEB. 14-16 — CENTRALOREGON SYMPHONY WINTERCONCERT: Featuring pianist Kotaro Fukuma performing Piano Concerto in F by Gershwin, as well as music by Wagner and Delibes; free, ticket required; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 14, 16; 2 p.m. Feb. 15; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www. cosymphony.com or 541-383-6290. FEB. 13 — AUTHORPRESENTATION: Garth Stein, author of "A Sudden Light" and "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; free; 6 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. com or 541-549-0866. FEB.13 — THE STRAY BIRDS: The Americana group from Pennsylvania performs, with Cahalen Morrison & Eli West; $20, $10(youth) or$50, $25
(youth) for three-concert series; 7p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4947. FEB.13— "MARNIE":Showingof the psychological thriller by Alfred Hitchcock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. FEB. 13 — BRETTDENNEN:The California pop-rock artist performs;
$34.50 plus fees; 8p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. FEB.13— DIVINE GODDESS FASHION SHOW:Featuring a lingerie fashion show byRescue Collective;$5;8-9:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com
Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. highdesertchambermusic.com, info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-317-0700. FEB. 15 — CAPSULA: The Spanish
psych-rock bandperforms; $8 plus
fees in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. FEB. 16 — "CESARCHAVEZ: HISTORY ISMADE ONE STEP AT A TIME":Featuring a film about the famed civil rights leader and labor organizer, in the Technology Center, Room 209;4-6 p.m.;CentralOregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.redmondcampus.cocc.edu or 541-318-7412. FEB. 17 — LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss "Truth and Beauty: A Friendship" by Ann Patchett; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. FEB.17 — "CESARCHAVEZ: HISTORY IS MADEONE STEP AT A TIME": Featuring a film about the famed civil rights leader and labor organizer; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-318-7412. FEB.17 — "ROYALBALLET: THE WINTER'S TALE":A screening of Christopher Wheeldon's ballet based on Shakespeare's play and performed at the Royal Opera House; $18, $12 for seniors and children; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. FEB. 18 — "TELL IT ONTHE MOUNTAIN":A screening of the film about six hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail; $3 suggested donation; 6:45 Submitted photo p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Texas folk singer Slaid Cleaves will perform at The Belfry In Sisters Feb. 20. Kansas Ave., Bend; www.envirocenter. org or 541-389-0785. FEB. 18 — 18THANNUALCOFFEE or 541-388-0116. perform; $15-$20 suggested donation, HOUSE: Featuring an art gallery, art registration requested; 7 p.m., potluck FEB. 14 — VALENTINESPAGHETTI demonstrations, live entertainment starts at 6 p.m.; The Glen at Newport DINNER:Featuring spaghetti, salad, from Sisters High School music Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive, garlic bread, dessert and more, with programs, creation stations, silent Bend; houseconcertsintheglen@ live music by Nick Wavers, to benefit auction and student art to benefit arts bendbroadband.com or541-480-8830. the Holy Redeemer Youth Program; programs andscholarships; $5; 7-9 $10, $30 per family; 4:30-7:30 p.m.; FEB. 14 — CHICKSWITH PICKS p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. Holy Redeemer Catholic Church,16137 BENEFIT:A concert by Broken Down McKinney Butte Road; www.outlawnet. Burgess Road, La Pine; www.holyrdmr. Guitars, Tone Redand Kim Kelley and com or 541-549-4045. org or 541-419-9110. friends to benefit Saving Grace; free, FEB.18 — MIDNITE:The St. Croix donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Volcanic FEB. 14 — AUTHORPRESENTATION: roots-reggae band performs; $34.50 Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Garth Stein, author of "A Sudden plus fees; 8 p.m.,doors openat 7 Light" and "The Art of Racing in the Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall 541-323-1881. Rain" will speak; free; 5 p.m.; Sunriver St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or Homeowners Aquatic& Recreation 541-317-0700. FEB. 14 — HIGHDESERTCHAMBER Center, 57250 Overlook Road; MUSIC SERIES:Featuring the Crown FEB. 18 — PROFESSOR GALL: The 541-549-0866. City String Quartet; $42, $15 students Portland folk/jazz band performs; FEB. 14 — ANNA TIVEL ANDJEFFREY and children18 and younger; 8 p.m., $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, MARTIN:The Portland folk musicians pre-concert talk 6:45 p.m.; Tower 70 SW Century Drive, Bend;
www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. FEB. 19 — LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090. FEB.19 — "THE PILLOWMAN":A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. FEB.19 — CAGE: The underground rapper performs, with Sadistik and DJ Oliver Klozzoff; $10, plus fees in advance; 8 p.m .;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket. com or 541-408-4329. FEB. 19 — ROSE'8 PAWNSHOP: The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
FEB. 20-26 FEB. 20-21, 26 — BENDINDOOR SWAP MEETANDSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. FEB. 20-22 — "BEAUTYANDTHE BEAST":A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children 12 or younger; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 20-21, 3 p.m. Feb. 22; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod.com or 541-322-3300. FEB. 20-21 — JAZZ ATTHE OXFORD: Featuring Soul Vaccination, with Chester Thompson; allshows are SOLD OUT;8 p.m. Feb. 20; 5 and 8:15 p.m. Feb. 21; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford.com or 541-382-8436. FEB.20-22 — "THE PILLOWMAN": A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m. Feb. 20-21, 2 p.m. Feb. 22; Cascades Theatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. FEB. 20 — THEHELIOSEQUENCE:The Portland indie rock duo performs, with Pluto The Planet; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's FeetCommons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728-0066.
planning ahead
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 FEB. 20 — SLAIDCLEAVES:The Austin, Texas folk singer performs; $18 plus fees in advance, $23 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents. com or 541-815-9122. FEB. 21 — HAVEAHEART FORBEND: Featuring a beer and wine tasting, dinner and live music by Out of the Blue to benefit St. Vincent DePaul; $35; 6-10 p.m.; Bend Elks Lodge ¹1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Road; www. stvincentdepaulbend.org, stvincentbend© integra.net or 541-389-6643. FEB.22 — SWINGLE SINGERS: Thea
cappella groupperforms, presented bythe Redmond Community Concert Association; $60, $25 for students 21 and younger, $125 for families, season subscriptions only; 6:30 p.m.;
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19
Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.redmondcca.org, redmondcca©hotmail.com or 541-350-7222. FEB.22— CLINT BLACK: Thecountrymusic singer performs, with Burnin' Moonlight; SOLD OUT; 7:30 p.m.;Towe rTheatre,835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. FEB. 25 — NATURENIGHTS — AN OBSESSIONWITH ODONATA: Learnabout dragonfly and damselfly ecology, life history and conservation with the Deschutes Land Trust and entomologist Celeste Searles Mazzacano; free, registration required; 7-8:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org, event@ deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017.
Talks 5 classes For a full list, visit bendbulletin.com/ events. DISTILLER'S WORKSHOP: Learnhow to turn raw materials into spirits; $60; 8:30 a.m.-noon Saturday; Oregon Spirit Distillers, 490 NE Butler Market Road, Ste. 120, Bend; www.oregonspiritdistillers.com or 541-382-0002. REFLEXOLOGY WITHESSENTIAL OILS: Learn about oils with Elyse Williams; $45, registration requested; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www. hawthorncenter.com or 503-329-2343. KNOW MYTH:JAROLD RAMSEY AND THE NATIVEAMERICAN LEGENDS: Learn about the legends of the Indians of Central Oregon with folkloristand poet Jarold Ramsey; free; 3 p.m. Saturday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend, lizgO deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. AROMATOUCH TECHNIQUETRAINING: Learn aboutaromatouch with Elizabeth Mara; registration required; 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; www. hawthorncenter.com or 503-329-2343. SECONDSUNDAY:Jon Abernathy will speakabout his book"Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon"; free; 2 p.m. Sunday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.
deschuteslibrary.org/bend, lizg© deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. WORKSHOP FORLA PINE NONPROFITS: Learn about the OCF grant process from the Oregon Community Foundation and The Nonprofit Association of Oregon; free, registration required; 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday; La Pine Senior Activity Center, 16450 Victory Way; www.
nonprofitoregon.org, cpuddy©oregoncf.
org or 541-382-1170. MAKER MONDAY:REPAIR CAFE: Bring a small household appliance that needs a little work; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m. Monday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend, lizg©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. KNOW MYTH:JUNG, FREUD AND THE
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Poet Jarold Ramseywill present on legends of the Indians of Central Oregon at the Downtown Bend Public Library Saturday. ORIGIN OF MYTH: Learn about the archetypes of myth and what they mean with Terry Kreuger, COCC professor; free; 6 p.m. Tuesday; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond, lizg© deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032. THE ANTHROPOLOGY OFMYTH: TALL TALES,FISH STORIES 5 THE MAGIC OF WORDS:Learn about myths created by different cultures with cultural anthropologists Amy Harper and Elizabeth Marino; 6 p.m. Tuesday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend, tinad© deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1034. STEWARDS OF CHILDREN: Training for adults on how to recognize the signs of sexual abuse in children, how to respond to suspicions of abuseandmore; free; 5:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.kidscenter.org, kbohme©kidscenter. org or 541-306-6062.
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PAGE 20 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
restaurants
• -M IF= % '=
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.
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
The dining room starts to fill up during dinner at the east-Bend Jackson's Corner.
• The new east-side location delivers thesame comfort food in a larger,family-friendly space
mixed greens tossed with roasted carrots, pistachio nuts, feta cheese
By John Gottberg Anderson
A'yes-taurant'
cious, family-style restaurant,
and house-made cardamom vin-
aigrette. She was a lucky woman.
For The Bulletin
H
which servesthree meals a day Palmer Noble, manager of the ere's a disclaimer, of sorts: seven days a week. east-Bend location, heard my I recently hired a personMy regular dining companion, carb concerns. I expressed to him al trainer to help me shed
fortunately for her, doesn't have
some pounds. There are hazards the same dietary limitations as I to being a restaurant critic. do. So while I focus on meat and Besidesincreased exercise,I'm
my disappointment that I found nothing I could eat on the dinner
menu, save one of several salads offered. Everything else was pasable to enjoy the wonderful pasta ta, pizza or sandwich. plates produced by the large open To his credit, and that of his greens at supper-time visits, she is
making a special effort to watch my diet. To that end, I am closely monitoring my carbohydrate con- kitchen. sumption — potatoes, pasta and so At arecentdinner she partook forth — especially in the evenings. of a mushroom pancetta dish, the Jackson's Corner isn't a lot of aroma of which I could barely rehelp in this regard. The popular sist. I allowed myself a taste of the restaurant has added a second lo- crimini mushrooms and chunky
staff, Noble made every effort to
improve my experience. "We like to think of ourselves as a 'yes-taurant,'" he said. He suggested a sandwich without the bread, for instance. He offered the hanger-steak entree with melted leeks
cation on Bend's east side, near St.
Italian bacon, blended with flat
Charles Bend and Bend Memorial Clinic in the part of town where I
noodles, garlic, shallots, marsala but, whoops, that's available only wine, cream and Romano cheese. on Fridays. She also had a special salad of Continued next page
live. I am often drawn to the spa-
Jackson'sCorner Location:east-side at1500 NE Cushing Drive, Bend;west-side at 845 NW DelawareAve., Bend Hours:Breakfast 7 to11 a.m. Monday to Friday, 7 a.m. to12:30 p.m. Saturdayand Sunday; lunch 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.every day; dinner 4 p.m. to close every day Price range:Breakfast $6 to $13; lunch $5 to $16; dinner $10 to $16 Credit cards:American Express,
Discover, MasterCard, Visa Kids':Yes. Vegetarian menu:Every menu category offers veggie options Alcoholic beverages:Fully licensed Outdoorseating: Yes Reservations:No Contact:541-382-1751 (eastside), 541-647-2198 (west-side), www.jacksonscornerbend.com
Scorecard Overall:AFood:B+.Comfort foods are well prepared but not every dish is star quality. Service:A-. Minor shortcomings may be overlookedthankstoa
"can-do" staff attitude. Atmo-
sphere: A. Bright and open, the custom-designed restaurant has a community appeal. Value:A-. Modestly priced menu is affordable for almost everyone.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
restaurants
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21
•
0
•
•
0
•
SINK & SWIM •
BLAC~K<FLO eWERS BLAC~K~ SUN
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Local wheat linguine at the east-Bend Jackson's Corner.
From previous page I finally settled on a daily smallplate special. The blackboard description — "warm kale salad, Cal-
NEXT WEEK:SIP WINE BAR For readers' ratings of more than 150Central Oregon restaurants, visit H beudbulletiu.ceml restaurants.
abrian chilies and brioche simmered in house-made broth, topped with shaved Manchego cheese" — sounded wonderful. The Sparrow Bakery brioche, delicious though I knew it would be, could easily be separated from the rest of the meal. The best part of lunch was a Thai Alas, the bread, not the kale, salad. A blend of spring greens with dominated the dish. A sort of decabbage and scallions, it was topped constructed salad, it featured crou- with peanuts, sesame seeds and ton-like cubes saturated in the sa- a curry vinaigrette that gave the vory broth. It was not what I was
looking for. I enjoyed the steamed kale with
greens an Asian accent.
My companion was less thrilled with her winter kale Caesar. The
•
blueberry jam, it carried me until dinner. My companion ordered the light "Classic" breakfast of two eggs with a side of Redmond Smokehouse sausage links, and accompanied it with French toast made from brioche and
topped with whipped cream and maple syrup. Everything was perfectly prepared.
'•
•
•
•
dren often make new friends in a toy kitchen area in the heart of the din-
damage. Founding owner Jay Junkin and managing partner Aaron Christenson opened the new Jackson's Cor-
er, with a yeasty crust and a topping of mushrooms and chicken sausage, mozzarellacheese and a back-ofthe-house marinara recipe. I've had
just west of 27th Avenue, and shares a building on Cushing Drive with a
better pizzas, to be sure, but pizza is
caramelized onions and two over-
new Cafe Yumm, which had its own
slice of toasted baguette with fresh
I
i •
m a i n-
that accidental spills leave no lasting
more lunches.
•
tains a cottage-like intimacy and a true community feel in its spacious surroundings. Few Central Oregon restaurants are as family-friendly. Young chil-
when its espresso bar gives me an injection of caffeine to stir me into sensibility. On my last visit, I followed my excellent coffee with pulled pork and eggs — a braised pork shoulder with house-made barbecue sauce, roasted red bell peppers,
pizza, and I've had far worse. What's easy eggs upon a bed of skin-on more, the leftovers provided two house potatoes. Served with a thin
I
•
larger, seating about 100 diners in a bright, open, custom-built space
ing room. A concrete floor assures
vidual pizza; instead, I got a 12-inch-
•
•
aware and Broadway. It certainly is
I like Jackson's best at breakfast,
a pizza from among nine choices. For $14, I had expected a small indi-
•
the same as, the original at NW Del-
Luncheon choices
Best at breakfast
RO'B LARK'IN & THE WAiYWARD' OoNES
The new Jackson's Corner is at once very different than, and much
i n northeast Bend. But i t
At lunch, with less concern about carbs than I have at night, I ordered
•
Communityfeel
curly leaves were very dry, despite I was glad that I had also ordered a a distinctive Caesar dressing made side of house meatballs. Plump and with no eggs but plenty of anchovy delicious, three of the savory treats paste. Topped with a thinly sliced were simmered in a moderately chicken breast, it also had croutons spicy marinara sauce. My appetite and a sprinkle of shredded Romano was satisfied. cheese. mild, imported Italian chilies, but
•
ner on Nov. 5. It stands at the corner of Neff and Medical Center roads, •
•
grand opening on Jan. 12. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
CONCERTS Feb. 6 —Eric Johnson & Mike Stern, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 6 —"Feeling Groovy" starring Jim Witter,Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Feb. 6-15 —Jazz Kings, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 6 —Lettuce, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Feb.6— London Grammar, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW Feb. 6 —Marcia Ball, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 6 —Sabertooth Micro Fest, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Feb. 6 —Sleep, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Feb. 7 —Josh Feinberg, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.
com.
Courtesy PDX Jazz l Submitted Photo
More than 35 artists will perform at the Portland Jazz Festival Feb. 18-March 1.
By Kathleen McCool
ucation and outreach programs to Portland
The Bulletin
r ammy-nominated B r azilian
G
schools and community centers. m u sic
According to PDX Jazz, jazz has thrived in
legend Bebel Gilberto will headline the Portland since the World War II era. At that
12th annual Portland Jazz Festival, set to take over the Rose City Feb. 18-March l. PDX Jazz, a nonprofit cultural arts organization, has been putting on the festival since 2003, when the organization was founded. Its
mission: "to inspire, educate and develop future jazz audiences for generations to come." The Portland Jazz Festival, held each Feb-
ruary,is a m ulti-venue series ofjazz-focused events, from performances, both paid and
free, to lectures, films, exhibitions and jam sessions. This year's festival celebrates Frank
time, thousands of African Americans came
to the city to work in the Kaiser shipyards as part of the war effort. When the war ended, the black population settled in the part of Portland that runs north from the Willamette River to Northeast Fremont Avenue, between North Interstate and what is now Martin Lu-
ther King Jr. Boulevard. Because of Portland's location between
Seattle and Los Angeles, it became a resting place for many jazz musicians traveling between the two cities. Williams Avenue in Port-
landbecame one of the most popular places for vocalist Kurt Elling and pianist Bill Charlap. jazz musicians, with venues hosting big names Alsoscheduledtoperform atthisyear'sfes- like Wardell Gray, Johnny Hodges, Earl Bostic, tival are Becca Stevens, Benny Green, Billy John Coltrane, local trumpeter Bobby BradChilds, Charnett Moffett, Christian McBride, ford, George Shearing and Oscar Peterson. Cyrille Aimee Stanley Jordan, St. Paul & The There will be 30 headlining concerts at the Sinatra's 100th birthday with performances by
Broken Bones and many more.
Portland Jazz Festival this year, the most in
The festival takes place in February to hon- the event's history. A list of headlining artists or Black History Month. PDX Jazz is dedicat-
and the dates of their performances can be
ed to "preserving America's indigenous art found at www.portlandjazzfestival.org. More form by presenting internationally recognized information about the festival and ticketing jazz masters alongside local jazz musicians," can be found at wwwpdxjazz.com. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, according to the organization, which also observes Black History Month by providing edIzmccool@bendbulletin.com
Feb. 7 —Kurt Vile and TheViolators, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Feb. 7 —Logic, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* Feb. 8-9 —Lucinda Williams, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 10 —Overthe Rhine, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 11 —Dr. Dog, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Feb.11 —Over The Rhine,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 12 —RedBull North America Thre3Style Qualifier,McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 13 —Hozier, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www. etix.com. Feb. 13 —Meghan Trainor, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* Feb. 14 —Portland Mardi Gras Ball, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 14 —Ramble On &Barracuda, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb.14 —Zeds Dead, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 15 —BenHoward, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW* Feb. 15 —JudyCollins, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 17 —Kate Voegele, Alberta Rose Theatre, Portland; www. albertarosetheatre.com. Feb.17 —St. Paul & The Broken
Bones,Roseland Theater, Portland; OFF * SALE; TF Feb. 18 —Bebel Gilberto, Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Feb. 18 —Gregory Alan lsakov, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 18-March1 —Portland Jazz Festival, PDX Jazz, Portland; www. pdxjazz.com. Feb. 19 —Cold WarKids, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix. com. Feb. 19 —Gov't Mule, McDonald Theater, Eugene; TW* Feb. 19 —Iration, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 19 —Vijay lyer, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 20 —Karl Denson's Tiny Universe, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom; www. etix.com. Feb. 20 —Kurt EHing,Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* Feb. 20 —Robert Cray Band,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 20 —TommyEmmanuel, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Feb. 21 —Christian McBride Trio, Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Feb. 21 —HoneyWhiskey Trio, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 21 —Lotus, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 21 —Stuart, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 21 —Taylor Eigsti, Classic Pianos, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Feb. 22 — AnitaO'Day & CoolJazz,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 22 —The Church, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 22 —Flight Facilities, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 24 —Steep CanyonRangers, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 24 —TommyCastro & The PainkiHers,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 25 —AndyGrammar/Alex & Sierra,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* Feb. 25 —Crystal Bowersox,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 25 —Marc Cary, Classic Pianos, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Feb. 26 —Black Veil Brides, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW*
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015 Feb. 26 —Chico Schwall, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb.26— Joe McBride,Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com. Feb. 27 —Hailey Niswanger, Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com. Feb. 27 —Hapa, Aladdin Theater, * Porltand; TF Feb. 27 —RonnyCox, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.com. Feb. 28 —Galactic, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. Feb. 28 —Hapa, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb.28— LuisConte,Jim my Mak's, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Feb. 28 —Martin Sexton, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 28 —TonyPacini, Classic Pianos, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com.
LECTURESSK
COMEDY Feb. 7 —Gabriel Iglesias, Rose Quarter, Portland; TM* Feb. 8 —Gabriel Iglesias, Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb.17 —Terrance Hayes:Part of the Portland Arts8 Lecture subscriptionbased series; Winningstad Theater, Portland; www.literary-arts.org or 503-227-2583. Feb.19 —John Mulaney,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF Feb. 19 —Ruth Ozeki: Part of the Portland Arts 8 Lecture subscription-based series; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; SOLD OUT;www.literary-arts.org or 503-227-2583. Feb. 21-22 —Jay Leno, Spirit Mountain Casino, Grand Ronde; www. spiritmountain.com.
*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.tickets west.com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or 877-435-9849
CT:CascadeTickets, www .cascadetickets.com or 800-5143849 PS:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5.com or 800273-1530 org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 21-23 —"Beethoven's Fifth," Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Feb.21 — YouthSymphony ofSouthern Oregon Winter Concert,Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Feb. 28-March 1 —"Let's Dance!": You'll be dancing in theaisles when sixdancers, two vocalists and the entire orchestra light up the Schnitz with a dazzling display of your favorite dances and dance music-the Waltz, Cha Cha,Tango, Swing, and more! Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. Feb. 28 —Mozart Repuiem and Choral Ballet:Presented by Eugene Concert Choir; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 28 —RogueValley Symphony Masterworks IV,Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org.
THEATER 5 DAMCE
Through Feb. 8 —"Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike":Winner of the 2013 Tony Award for Best Play; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Feb. 15 —Skippyjon Jones: Oregon Children's Theatre; Newmark * SYMPHONY 5 OPERA Theatre, Portland; P5 Through March1 —"Tribes": A Portland Feb. 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 —"Carmen": Opera premier of a drama by Nina Raine; Artist by Bizet; Portland Opera; Keller Auditorium, Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage; Portland; Portland; www.portlandopera.org or www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. 866-739-6737. Through March 8 —"Threesome": Feb 7-9 —"Carmina Burana": Orff's Leila and Rashid attempt to solve their monumental workfor orchestra, chorus relationship issues by inviting a relative and soloists; Arlene Schnitzer Concert stranger into their bedroom; Portland Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the 800-228-7343. Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Feb.14 —Chuck ReddQuartet, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. Feb. 9 —"Seven Brides for Seven org or 541-434-7000. Brothers,"Craterian Theater at the Collier Feb. 14 —Valentine's Day with Smokey Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Robinson,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or Feb. 10 —"Cuff Me! The Fifty Shades 800-228-7343. of Grey Musical Parody,"Winningstad Feb.15 —Stefan Jackiw, Beall Concert Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or Hall, Eugene; www.oregonbachfestival.com. 800-273-1530. Feb.19 — "Ohlsson PlaysRachmaninov": Feb. 11 —Nederlands DansTheater 2: Eugene Symphony; Hult Center for the Presented by White Bird Dance; Arlene * or Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter. Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5
out of town 800-380-3516. Feb. 12-14 —"Love Letters," Brunish Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Feb. 12 —Metales MS- Mexican Brass, Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. Feb. 12-21 —skinner/kirk Dance Ensemble,BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www.bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. Feb. 13, 15 —"Casablanca": Presented by Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. radioreduxusa.com or 541-682-5000. Feb. 14-15 —"Carmen": Presented by Eugene Ballet Company; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter. org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 14 —"City Walk": Presented by Le Cirque Centre's Aerial Theatre; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian. Ol'g.
Feb. 17-22 —Rodgers+ Hammerstein's "Cinderella":U.S. Bank Broadway in Portland; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800.273.1530. Feb. 19 —"Broadway's Next H!t Musical":An unscripted theatrical awards show; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. Feb. 19-March 8 —"Ruthless! The Musical":Eight-year-old Tina Denmark knows she was born to play Pippi Longstocking and she will do anything to win the part in her school musical, including murdering the leading lady! Brunish Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Feb 20-Oct. 31 —OregonShakespeare Festival:The following productions are part of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival: "MuchAdo aboutNothing"(Feb.20-Nov. 1), "Fingersmith" (Feb. 21-July 9), "Guys and Dolls" (Feb. 22-Nov.1), "Pericles" (Feb. 26-Nov. 1), "Long Day's Journey into Night" (March 25-Oct. 31), "Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land" (April15-0ct. 31), "Antony and Cleopatra" (June 2-0ct. 9), "Head Over Heels" (June 3-Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (June 4-0ct. 11), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (July 7-Nov.1) and "Sweat" (July 29-Oct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Feb. 20-March 14 —"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Feb. 21 —A Mechanical DancerREINVSNTION!:A one-of-kind dance show using everything from high tech video visual effects, lighting, props, and costume changes; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.radioreduxusa.com or 541-682-5000. Feb. 21-March 22 —"Other Desert Cities,"Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs. org or 503-445-3700.
Continued next page
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23
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PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE
Oyifn
From previous page Feb. 23-24 —"Memphis": Presented by Theater League, "Memphis" celebrates a radio DJ who wants to change the world
and a clubsinger who isreadyfor
0 flf V0 %a
her big break; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb.26-28 — Alonzo King LIMES Ballet,Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* or 800-380-3516.
Feb. 27-28 —"The Odyssey": Ballet Fantastique's translation of Homer's spectacular story through dance; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 27-28 —"Asail on the Seven
Seas:TheMagicalMoombah," The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 28 —A Choral Ballet Tribute
to JuanCarlosAmy-Cordero:
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
Presented by EugeneConcert Choir; Hult Center for the Performing Arts for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 28-March 7 —"Cinderella": Oregon Ballet Theatre, Portland; www.obt.org or 503-222-5538. Feb. 28 — MozartRequiem and Choral Ballet:Presented by Eugene Concert Choir; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.
hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 28-March 22 —"Timmy Failure:Mistakes Were Made": Presented by Oregon Children's Theatre; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* or 503-228-9571.
EXHIBITS Through May 3 —Portland Art Museum:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Forbidden
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Fruit: Chris Antemann at Meissen" (through Feb. 8), "Callahan to Warhol" (through Feb. 15), "The Enclave" (through Feb. 15)," "APEX: Cris Bruch" (through March 22), "MasterworksjPortland: El Greco" (through April 5), "Breaking Barriers" (through April12) and "Italian Style" (Feb. 7-May 3); Portland; www.portlandartmuseum. org or 503-226-2811. ThroughMay 6 — Oregon Museum of Science and Industry:The following exhibits are currently on displ ay:"M azes"(Feb.7-May 6); Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through May16 —Museum
of ContemporaryCraft: The
following exhibits are currently on display: "Living with Glass"
(Feb. 20-May16); Museumof
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Contemporary Craft, Portland;
www.museumofcontemporarycraft. I»
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PAULSCOTTGALLERY Introducing Randaii Tipton Specializing in contemporary works from the Northwest and beyond! Come celebrate, February 6'", 5-gpm
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"Fur and Feathers" Show runs - February 3" through March 28'" Reception - First Friday February 6~, 5-opm
org or 503-223-2654. Through June 21 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum ofArt: The following exhibits are currently on
display: "JapaneseImpressions from the Vault: The Rare, the Beautiful, and the Bizarre" (through Feb. 8), "Laura Heit: Two Ways Down" (through March 29), "Under
Pressure" (throughMarch 29), Masterworks on Loan (through April19), "Moris Graves' Goats: Heroes and Fantasies" (through April19) and "The Word Became Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox Devotional Objects" (through June 21); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu.
MISCELLAMY Through Feb. 21 —38th Portland International Film Festival:NW Film Center; Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Feb. 7 —The Fly Fishing Film Tour, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF Feb. 21 —Harlem Blohetrotters, Moda Center, Portland; www. ticketmaster.com. Feb. 24 —"Alton BrownLive! The Edible Inevitable Tour,"Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. Feb. 25 —"Alton Brown Live! The Edible Inevitable Tour,"Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Feb. 28 —Professional Bull Riders Bluedef Velocity Tour,Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.com. March 3-6 —Marvel Universe LIVH:Watch your favorite Marvel Super Heroes including Spider-Man, Iron Man and Hulk and threatening villains come to life in an actionpacked arena extravaganza; Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster. com.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
movies a
Warner Bros. Picture I Submitted photo
Channing Tatum stars as Caine, a genetically engineered interplanetary hunter with DNA that's half-wolf, half-human, and Mila Kunis stars as Jupiter Jones in "Jupiter Ascending."
I • • The Wachowskisiblings' $175Mspaceopera is such atrain wreckthat it's almost worth seeing "My mother never cleaned a movie theaters before it was too late! "Maybe that vttas her problem." This epic, ridiculous and con— Exchange between the evil founding space opera from the Balem and the heroine Jupiter Wachowskis is so bad I almost
toilet in her life."
Jones, who might be the evil Balem's mother reincarnated, in
the fantastically awful "Jupiter Ascending."
want you to see it. Almost.
RICHARD ROEPER Zero stars "Jupiter Ascending" 127 minutes PG-13, for someviolence, sequences of sci-fi action, some suggestive content and partial nudity
There'sno defending "Jupiter Ascending." There's no explaining "Jupiter Ascending." There's is the subject of a comedic roast. here are the Guardians no way "Jupiter Ascending" isn't Compared to this dreck, "Step of the Galaxy when we making an appearance on my list Up" is "Singin' in the Rain." need them? If only they of the worst films of 2015. This is Mila Kunis is Jupiter Jones, had prevented the disastrous a $175 million intergalactic train who has a superhero-esque oratrocity that is "Jupiter Ascend- wreck sure to be invoked whenev- igin story. (SPOILER ALERT!) ing" from i nfiltrating Earth's er and wherever Channing Tatum In a prologue set in Russia, Jupi-
w
ter's mother, Aleksa (Maria Doyle piter, her mother and various othKennedy), is close to giving birth er relations work for the family to Jupiter when Jupiter's father cleaning service. Every morning (James D'Arcy) is murdered. at 4:45, the alarm goes off and JuSo Mama does what any griev- piter moans "I hate my life" before ing, nine-months-pregnant wid- she spends her days scrubbing ow would do: She boards a ship toilets. for the United States and gives birth to Jupiter at sea, with the
help of a bevy of stout Russian
Ah, but like Sarah Connor in
"The Terminator" and Thomas
women. You'd think this was tak-
Anderson in "The Matrix," Jupiter holds mankind's future in her
ing place in 1910, but given the timeline, it's more like the mid-
hands. She just doesn't realize it yet.
1980s. But that's the least of our
From that point forward, I had
problems as we settle in with our 3-D glasses for a film that actu-
a nagging suspicion my popcorn was laced with acid. Channing ally looks pretty spectacular at Tatum plays Caine, a genetically times but never, ever feels like it's engineered interplanetary huntin 3-D.
er with
D N A t h a t's half-wolf,
Cut to present-day (or perhaps half-human. near-future) Chicago, where JuContinued next page
movies
PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
a ain u enee sa e
e r crew
man! If only t his movie didn't have SO MANY moments when Robinson talks about sticking it to the man. At times it felt like the film should have been titled, "Oc-
RICHARD ROEPER
cupy Submarine." Conveniently, one of Robinson's buddies has an inside tip
"Black Sea" 114 minutes R, for languagethroughout, some graphic imagesandviolence
that could make everyone rich. Turns out there's at least $40 million in gold aboard a sunken Nazi U-boat in the Black Sea, there for the finders-keepers' taking. Scoot McNairy plays Daniels, a classic Sniveling Corporate Weasel, who puts Robinson in touch
fter a p r omising start, "Black Sea" takes a jarring, hard port into Looney Tunes Land and never recovers.
A
with a mysterious kazillionaire
SPOILER A L ER T e x ample: One of the men on the sub wants another man dead, but he's too
much of a pansy to do it himself, so he attempts to persuade the
Submitted photo
Jude Law stars as a submarine captain on a mission to retrieve sunken treasure in "Black Sea."
resident psycho to do it.
(Tobias Menzies) who agrees to fund the mission in exchange for a beefy percentage of the profits. Robinson staffs a ri c kety Russian-made submarine with
lows the guy and his knife to join the expedition.
And, ohyeah, there's an 18-yearold (Bobby Schofield) who's never been on a submarine in his life, yet Robinson hires him and becomes an instant father figure to the lad,
because Robinson was a failure as a father to his own son. As the body count piles up and the submarine begins to break down, Robinson keeps on railing against the wealthy and continu-
ally puts his crew at risk because he wants that gold and nothing will get in his way! That'll show the ex-wife!
It's a startling change of direction for Robinson, who seemed strong and capable and focused at the outset, and is now rubbing the
bloodybump onhis head, sweating profusely and barking orders like a mad dog.As much as Ienjoyed Russians. Of course, the moment we're Law's performance, he's at the submerged is the moment things mercy of a screenplay that grows start to go wrong. There's a lot increasingly bizarre and unbelievof tension between the Russians able with each passingmoment. and the English-speaking crew; "Black Sea" director Kevin the Sniveling Corporate Wea- Macdonald is a t a l ented filmsel is forced to come along, even maker who ventures from fiction though he's claustrophobic and ("The Last King of Scotland") he'sa Sniveling Corporate Wea- to documentary ("Touching the sel; one of the crew members has Void") with aplomb. There's some emphysema and can't walk two first-rate camerawork aboard the steps without breathing heavily; sub, that strong lead performance and the best diver on the sub is a from Law and one nifty plot twist. straight-out psychopath. It's a shame the script gives us How do we know he's a psycho- one of the most incompetent and path? Because one of Robinson's ridiculous submarine crews this pals tells Robinson the guy's a side of "Down Periscope." — Richard Roeper is a film critic psychopath BEFORE they board six Brits and/or Scots and six
At first the instigator throws out a couple of not-so-subtle hints.
porting characters are straight Then he finally says, "You should out of the Book of Cliches; the kill (Iet's call him Mr. X)." And underwater sequences are so reTHEN, when Mr. X isn't looking, alistically murky they're ... well, the instigator looks at Mr. X, looks murky; there's a heavy-handed faat this patsy and gives an exag- ther-son metaphor that just won't gerated nod, like something out of quit; and about halfway through a silent movie. the story,our hero seems to have We get it! He wants Mr. X dead. lost his bloody mind. All right already. Jude Law plays Robinson, a The positives in "Black Sea" in- Scottish submarine captain who clude a rousing performance from spent 15 years in the navy and 11 Jude Law, an intriguing setup and years working in the private secsome well-choreographed action tor. (Law's attempt at a Northeast scenes within the claustrophobic Scottish brogue comes and goes confines of a creaky old subma- from scene to scene. I can't think rine on a dangerous mission in of a single reason why they didn't the deeps of the sea. just have him play a British subThe negatives? Most of the sup- marine captain. The Royal Navy
has submarines, no? Maybe it's because the director is Scottish....)
From previous page
because Jupiter holds the key to
who look like descendants of the
nearly eternal life for Kalique; Titus (Douglas Booth), a smarmy snake who talks (and behaves) as if he's the junior bad guy in a
like much more attention was given to makeup and wardrobe than
zil," "The Wizard of Oz" and God
They have names such as Fam-
and tumbled and hurtled through
Caine has lupine ears, a tre-
mendous sense of smell and super-cool boots that enable him to levitate and then zip through the air like an NHL player in the fast-
many times are we gonna have to rebuild?!) Every three scenes or so, "Jupiter Ascending" takes a breather from all the CGI action for an
Robinson was so dedicated to
the job it cost himhis wife and son. ("Black Sea" is the second movie in the last month, after "Still Alice," to
resort to the obligatory That Perfect Day on the Beach flashback to
encapsulate happier times.) After Robinson gets sacked by a slick twerp who explains, "We don'tneed submarine captains anymore. We don't even need submarines," he drowns his mis-
ery at a local pub with a couple of pals who have already been dismissed by the same evil, heartless
corporation. If only they could stick it to the the sub, and yet Robinson still al-
exposition scene, where one alien Bond movie; and the dominant being or another explains the dif- Balem (Eddie Redmayne), who In the f irst o f m a ny, many, ferences between their culture wants Jupiter dead dead dead and many battle sequences in which and Earthling culture, defines a NOW! the score is so loud we can practi- term Jupiter doesn't understand In one of the odder and more cally see the orchestra, and thou- or tells Jupiter why she's so im- disastrous choices in recent memsands of rounds are fired without portant in the grand scheme of ory, Redmayne speaks like an old any of the main characters suffer- things. British woman. I kid you not, he ing serious injury, Jupiter clings As is the case with many a sounds like Maggie Smith's Dowto Caine as they dodge alien fire thriller set on Earth, the heads of ager Countess in "Downton Abwhile darting around the sky- an all-powerful corporation are bey." Only a great actor could give scrapers of Chicago. (Some of the villains. There are three heirs a performance so terrible. the same buildings destroyed to the Abrasax Industries dynasThe Wachowskis populate the in "Transformers 3" and "Man ty: Kalique (Tuppence Middle- "Jupiter Ascending" universe with of Steel" get blasted again. How ton), who tries to befriend Jupiter dozens of thinly drawn characters est-skater competition.
for The Chicago Surt-Times.
"Soylent Green," "Star Wars," bar patrons in "Star Wars." It feels "Star Trek," "Men in Black," "Braknows what else. Every time to actual character development. Tatum and Kunis flew and fell ulus and Sargon and Plinth and the skies above Chicago or someFalqueand Greegan, and ifyou where in deep space, I pictured put them in a lineup and asked me these two game actorsstrapped to identify them and their reason into harnesses in some greenfor being in the movie, I'd be lucky screen studio, doing their best to to bat .500. All I know is there sell this shiny, sparkling, awemust be a planet filled with cows somely horrible hot mess. somewhere near Jupiter, because Tatum and Kunis are likable nearly everyone, even creatures enough, but the young Robert De that look like Godzilla, wears a Niro and Meryl Streep couldn't have prevented this bomb from fabulous leather getup. The Wachowskis pay tribute to exploding. — Richard Roeper is a film critic and/or cherry-pick story elements from their own "Matrix" films,
for The Chicago Sun-Times.
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27
w I>,' 'tr .
•
Paramount Pictures I Submitted photo
From left, Patrick Star (as Mr. Superawesomeness), SpongeBob SquarePants (as The Invincibubble), Squidward Tentacles (as Sour Note), and Mr. Krabs (as Sir Pinch-A-Lot), in "SpongeBob: Sponge Out Of Water."
o n e o se sou o pongeBob Squarepants goes
S
where Homer Simpson and
others have gone before, an animated character who steps out of his colorful 2-D world and into
our 3-D one, in "The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge out of Water." But what his movie lacks in originality or freshness it compensates for in loopiness. A battle to defend The Krabby
Patty burger shack is fought "with relish." And french fries. And ketchup and mustard.
"Unleash the condiments!" Bubbles, a pan-dimensional
dolphin who monitors the Earth
and protects it from mid-space collisions, takes a potty break, and comes back with toilet paper
"The sandwich gods are angry
ew a e r
sings, annoying one and alL It's a up, not that kids will pick up on sappy song about teamwork. that. ROGER MOORE "It's better when you plus me A bit, yes. But also amused by The gags, puns mostly, skew you, just a little. equals ... WEEEEee!" quite young. And those things First, SpongeBob (the voice of Squidward squirts a little ink, SpongeBob does that drive his Tom Kenny) and pal Patrick (Bill seagulls sing and poop, and Mr. onscreen castmates nuts — the Fagerbakke) must fend off their Krabby (Clancy Brown) frets shrieks and giggles and songs"The SpoogeBohMovie: one-eyed nemesis, Plankton (Mr. about all the cash he'll lose if he are pitched to be a lot more irritatSponge Oot of Water" Lawrence), who wants that secret loses his recipe and his legendary ing to adults than to small fry. Per90 minutes sauce to save his Chum Bucket burger flipper Spongebob. haps not as irritating as the 3-D oYou were like an underpaid ticket prices demanded for what PG, for mild action and rudehumor eatery from Bikini Bottom bankruptcy. As usual. Then, when that SON to me!" is essentially an extended epistuck to his tail. recipe vanishes into thin sea-waSo very childish. But halfway sode of the TV show. But if "nau"That's kinda gross!" ter, the three rivals must team up into the film, SpongeBob and Pat- tical nonsense" and that fingerAnd that pirate who sings the to recover it from a different reali- rick cross over and things turn a nails-on-an-underwater-blacktitle tune? He becomes Burg- ty, a 3-D world that looks a bit like tad trippy. A visit inside Sponge- board voice are something you er-Beard, who pirates the Krabby Venice Beach, California (actually bob's cotton-candy-packed skull wish, drop off the kiddies and Patty secret sauce recipe, and is Georgia). is only half of it. Ideas borrowed give 'em some cash. — Roger Moore is a film critic played by high-camp counselor SpongeBob giggles. Gratingly. from "The Simpsons" and "HitchAntonio Banderas in full bellow. SpongeBob shrieks. SpongeBob hiker's Guide to the Galaxy" pop for Tribune News Service. withus!"
movies
PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
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Submitted photo
Ben Barnes and Jeff Bridges star as apprentice and knight in "Seventh Son."
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apprentice toward a final fight with the witch queen, her allies (Djimon Hounsou among them) and their minions. Alicia Vikander of "Anna Karenina" is Alice, a temptation to
A sword-and-sorceryepic built "Seventh Snn" around Jeff B r idges, Bridges' 104 minutes curmudgeonly accent, Bridges' "Wild BilVR.I.P.D." goatee and Ben PG-13, for intense fantasy violence and Barnes, it has Moore as the villain, action throughout, frightening images a witch whom Bridges' character and brief strong language
Tom, and possibly a witch. She's a looker with little screen presence. Sergey Bodrov ("Mongol: The Rise of Genghis Khan") directs and stages some splendid if repetitious fights and flights, most of them involving digital dragons and
must kill.
such. This is strictly by-the-num-
Playing a witch, as Meryl Streep amulet from his mother (Olivia Wilor Susan Sarandon will tell you, liams) as his protection. calls for "big." Moore is the queen The old knight is full of wisdom, of small — intimate, internal. So as which he shares. They're entering Mother Malkin, out to avenge her- a world "where legends and nightself on the "spook," Gregory (Bridg- m ares are real."There are allsorts es), Moore is miscast. of spirits, monsters and witches, and That's OK , t h o ugh, b e cause Gregory knows all their names. "Stone chuckers," he mutters. Bridges is big enough for the both of them. Gregory is a grizzled, Falstaf- "Cattle rippers. The names are fairly fian knight, all tight-lipped boozy ... self-evident." bluster and wit. He's in need of a He exorcises children and van-
bers movie-making, genre work that makes the most of our lowered
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is whether this all-star B-mov-
the answer to that is, "Not really."
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ie is bad enough to cost Julianne Moore her "Still Alice" Oscar. And
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he only question that's worth
new apprentice, a "Seventh Son" of a seventh son. That's where Tom
quishesmonsters — fora price.
expectations.
Still, it's great seeing Bridges give fair value in a part befitting an aging warhorse reduced to pitching, on the Super Bowl, a "Dreaming with Jeff" album designed to put us to sleep. Gregory, gumming his zingers like a classic coot from any number of Westerns, manages to keep us awake for the 104 minutes of "Seventh Son." Barely.
"Flattery is fine," he growls, "gold "When you dealwith dark," he says, "dark gets IN you." (Barnes of "Prince Caspian") comes is FINER." — Roger Moore is a film critic in. He's a pig farmer's son, handy The plot, taken from a Joseph with a knife, carrying a magical Delaney novel, drives spook and for Tribune News Service
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
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O N LO C A L S CREEN S Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens. Forshowtimes, see listings on Page31.
Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Moore, unlessothenvisenoted.
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HEADS UP "Fifty Shades ofGrey" — "Fifty Shades ofGrey" is thehotly anticipated film adaptation of the best-selling book thathasbecome aglobalphenomenon. Since its release,the "Fifty Shades" trilogy has beentranslated into 51 languagesworldwide andsold more than100 million copies ine-bookand print — making it one ofthe biggest and fastest-selling bookseries ever. This film opensFeb.13with early screenings Thursday. (R) — Synopsis from FocusFeatures Fly FishingFilmTour2015 — The F3T is a one of akind experience. Eachyear fishy folk of all agesgather at premieres to soak upfilms from around the world, spin afewyarns amongstfriends and dream about casts still unmade. In addition to showcasingworld-class fly-fishing films, TheF3Tis dedicated to supporting the local fly shopsand conservation groups that form the backbone of thesport's educational and environmental efforts. Discount F3Ttickets areavailable at morethan 150 fly shopsacross thecountry. A portion of those ticket sales go directly to support fishing andhabitat-related conservation groups. In 2014,the film tour raised over$300,000 for its conservation partners andusedits voice to bring greater attention and support to groups likeTrout Unlimited, Wild SteelheadCoalition, Bonefish Tarpon Trust, UtahStream Access Coalition, Stop PebbleMineand many more. TheFly Fishing FilmTour2015 will be held at 7p.m.Tuesdayand Wednesday atTowerTheatre in Bend. Tickets are$15plus fees. (No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from TowerTheatre "Kingsman: TheSecret Service"Basedontheacclaimedcomicbook and directed byMatthewVaughn ("Kick Ass," "X-Men:First Class"), "Kingsman: The SecretService" tells astory of a super-secret spyorganization that recruits an unrefined butpromising street kid into theagency's ultracompetitive training programjust asa global threat emergesfrom atwisted tech genius. This film opensFeb.13 with earlyscreeningsThursday.(R) — Synopsis from 20th Century Fox
WHAT'S NEW "Black Sea" —A laid-off submarine captain (a rousing JudeLaw)leads an underwater mission to recover Nazi gold in an action film that, after a promising start, takes ajarring, hard port into LooneyTunes Landand never recovers. Rating: Twostars.114 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Jupiter Ascending" — A half-man, half-wolf interplanetary hunter (Channing Tatum) rescues a Chicago house cleaner (Mila Kunis) who
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Jamie Dornan and Dakota Johnson star in "Fifty Shades of Grey." This film opens Feb. 13 with early screenings Thursday. unwittingly holds mankind's fate in her hands. This epic, ridiculous and confounding spaceopera from the Wachowskis is so badal I most want you to seeit. Almost. This film screens locally in 3-D andIMAX 3-D. Rating: Zero stars. 127 minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper "SeventhSen" —Asword-andsorcery epic built around Jeff Bridges, Bridges' curmudgeonlyaccent, Bridges' "Wild Bill/R.I.P.D." goatee and BenBarnes, it hasJulianne Moore as the villain, a witch whomBridges' character must kill. Bridges is Gregory, a grizzled, Falstaffian knight, all tightlipped boozy bluster andwit. He's in need of anewapprentice, a"Seventh Son" of a seventh son.That's where Tom (Barnes) comesin. Sergey Bodrov ("Mongol: TheRise of Genghis Khan") directs and stagessome splendid if repetitious fights and flights, most of them involving digital dragons and such. This is strictly by-the-numbers movie-making, genreworkthat makes the most of our loweredexpectations. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 104 minutes. (PG-13) — Moore "TheSpengeBob Movie:Sponge Out of Water" —SpongebobSquarepants goes whereHomerSimpson and others havegone before, ananimated character who stepsout of his 2-D world and into our 3-Done, in "The SpongebobMovie:Spongeoutof Water." But what this movie lacks in originality or freshness it compensates for in loopiness. Thegagsskewquite young. And thosethings Spongebob does that drive his onscreencastmates nuts — the shrieks andgiggles and songs — arepitched to be alot more irritating to adults than to small fry. Perhaps not as irritating as the3-D ticket prices demandedfor what is essentially an extendedepisode of the TV show. But if "nautical nonsense" and that fingernails-on-an-underwaterblackboard voice aresomething you wish, drop off the kiddies andgive 'em some cash. This film screens locally in 3-D. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 90 minutes. (PG) —Moole
STILL SHOWING 2015 OscarNominatedShorts
— The Tin PanTheater in Bend is screening Oscar-nominated shorts in the following categories: Animation, Documentary and LiveAction. (No MPAA rating) — information from TinPanTheater "AmericanSniper" — Clint Eastwood directs a powerful, intense portrayal of Navy SEALChris Kyle, hardly the blueprint candidate to become the most prolific sniper in American military history. And yet that's whathappened.Inmaybethe best performance of his career, Bradley Cooper infuses Chris with humanity and dignity. And vulnerability. Rating: Three and ahalf stars.132 minutes. (R) — Roeper "A MostViolent Year" — Oscar Isaacbecomes abonafidemovie star playing a1981 NewYorker with a business drawing unwanted attention from ruthless rivals and a wife (Jessica Chastain) with her own ideas of howto help. Striking and unforgettable. Rating: Four stars. 125 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Big Hero 6" —Disney's animated story about a teenagerbefriending a health care robot is a big, gorgeous adventure with wonderful voice performances, somedark undertones that give the story more depth, an uplifting messageandmorethan a few laugh-out-loud moments. Rating: Three and ahalf stars.108 minutes. (PG) —Roeper "Black or White" — Oneof the most complex characters Kevin Costner has played is ahard drinker fighting for custody of his granddaughter in this uneven but provocative movie that dares to raise issues and address situations that still make a lot of people uncomfortable. Rating: Three stars.121 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "The Gambler" —This remakegives the JamesCaanself-destructive gambler role to MarkWahlberg, asa narcissistic brat, and not the complex kind. Supporting characters played by John Goodman,Brie Larson and others are more interesting. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 101 minutes. (R) — Roeper
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PAGE 30 + GO! MAGAZINE
give him life. Rating: Threestars. 94 minutes.(PG) —Moore "The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five "Project Almanac" — High on fun Armies" — Peter Jackson's "Just but low on depth, "Project Almanac" Give the PeopleWhat They Want," is told entirely from the perspective aka"The Hobbit: TheBattle of the of a video camera, which instantly Five Armies," sends this not-reallymade me regret I ate dinner before a-trilogy off in style. That means the screening. The film is directed by stuffing in everything the fanswant, Dean Israelite but ultimately bears or that Jackson thinks the fans the imprint of producer Michael Bay, want out of these films madefrom who has elevated visual overload the novel that camebefore "The and quarter-baked storytelling to Lord of the Rings." There is death a new art form. "Project Almanac" and destruction, forbidden love generously borrows from a host of and treasure, honor andslaughter. time travel movies andeven mentions Jackson's camera, which is all digital a few of them. I suppose the film's crane shots covering aseaof digital hook is the use of avideo camera soldiers in hand-to-hand combat, to document all of the mayhem. moves in for close-ups for the deaths Unfortunately, the resulting visual here. Not that this adds impact. A lot gymnastics supplants any real of the digital riding stock — rams, empathy we might have for these elk, trolls — havethe jerky movement characters. I find it hard to care about of critters from the stop-motion anybody when I'm too busy trying animated "Jasonandthe Argonauts" not to get sick. Rating: Twoand ahalf 50 years ago. "TheHobbit" has never stars. 106 minutes. (PG-13) overcome the handicaps of its plot — Thomas Lee, Submitted photo andcasting.Jackson made some of San Fisncisco Chronicle Nicole Kidman stars alongside Paddington (voice of Ben Whishaw) in "Paddington." the dwarfs characters SnowWhite would adore, andothers look like "Strange Magic" — "Strange Magic" hunky, hirsute alumni of heavymetal is a cartoon fantasy cooked upfrom J.R.R. Tolkien enjoys, this overdone defeat theGermans inWorld WarII. build an electronic devicethat cansift bands,and noneofthem popped off a half-baked ideafrom George Lucas. "There andBack Again" never quite the screen thewaythe players did in Benedic tCumberbatch managesan through thecodedMorse Codeletters The hook in this tale of fairies fighting "Lord of the Rings." Theoneclassic got us there. Rating: Twoand a half efficient, brittle andbrooding turn of Germantransmissionsfastenough to goblins over a lovepotion is that every stars. 140 minutes.(PG-13) — Moore as Turing, working with ascreenplay save convoys, headoff attacks andfoil hero here is Bard, the dragon slayer, minute or three, somefairy, elf or the fascists, whowerewinning the war and he hastoo little to do. It's the best "The Imitation Game" — "The that, on manyoccasions, turns him goblin bursts into song. There isn't a pretty much right up tothat moment. film of this trilogy, but truthfully, none Imitation Game" is anentertaining, into an object of fun, aWWII-era laugh in this thing, not one. However, Sheldon Cooper ofTV's "TheBig Bang Graham Moore's script does apoor it does play as anice proof-of-concept of the "Hobbit" thirds havebeenany sometimes riveting andyet quite job of showing thetragedy of Turing's reel for lndustrial Light and Magic. The better than middling "Hunger Games" conventional film biography ofAlan Theory." Turing's brainstorm: Onlya hidden life but abetter job at makinga or "Harry Potter" installments. machine can defeat another machine, animation — butterfly-winged fairies Turing, the glumBrit who inventedthe bigger case —unconventional people of great detail, skin so translucent Considering the vaunted reputation first electronic computerandhelped the GermanEnigmaencoder. Hewil make unconventional thinkers. Rating: you can seelight through it, skin with three and ahalf stars. 114minutes. freckles — is impressive. Andthat (PG-13) —Mools story is a reminder that whenyou're "Interstellar" — What abeautiful as big a deal asLucas, it's hard to find c s i s somebody who will tell you that new and epic film is "Interstellar," filled with great performances, tingling our ideafor a movie needsmoretime in senses with masterful special effects, the mixing bowl, andoven, before filming begins. Rating: Oneand ahalf daring to be openly sentimental, asking gigantic questions about the stars. 99 minutes.(PG) —Moore meaning of life and leaving us drained "The Theory of Everything" — Playing and grateful for the experience. Rating: the young StephenHawking from Four stars.169 minutes. (PG-13) reckless Cambridge student to brilliant •0• — Roeper physici st,EddieRedmayne undergoes "Into the Woods" — Adapted from a remarkable transformation. But it's the sensational musical by Stephen a memorable performance in arather SARAH GRAHAM ALEX SEPKUS SondheimandJames Lapine,Meryl ordinary love story about his romance Streep andEmily Blunt head anA-list with future wife, Jane(Felicity Jones). cast. "Into the Woods" rumbles onfor Rating: Twoand ahalfstars.123 toolong and hassomedrypatches minutes. (PG-13) —Roeper here and there, but just whenwe're "The Wedding Ringer" — "The growing fidgety, weget another Wedding Ringer" is"Wedding rousing musical number or another Crashers Redux," a "Hangover Lite" dark plot twist, and we're back in that softens manic funnymanKevin business. Rating: Threestars.124 Hart's persona into someonealmost minutes.(PG) —Roeper as funny, but more sentimental than "The Loft" — "The Loft" is a stylish abrasive. That helps"Ringer" work whodunit that struggles to stitch the as a bromantic comedy that feels like label "Hitchcockian" right on the inner a romantic comedy. Sothere's not pocket, where it would be on aman's much new here. But asavvy, sassy sports coat. But a quick glancedown script, smart casting and genuine at that label, underneath the pulsating "I feel sorry for this white boy" violins, the supposedlytwisty plot chemistry between Kevin Hart and and the convenient apartment full JoshGad make "Wedding Ringer" an R-rated bromancethat will touch of suspects, reveals it's just a cheap knock-off, probably misspelled to boot you as often as it tickles you. Rating: — "Hitchcopying." Rating: Twostars. Two and ahalf stars. 101 minutes. 108 minutes.(R) — Moors (R) — Moore "Paddington" — "Paddington" brings "Wild" — The more time wespend children's book heroPaddington Bear with former heroin addict Cheryl to the screen in amovie as sweet as Strayed, the more wefeel the change orange marmalade, assentimental in this young woman's heart and as a stuffed toy from childhood. It's spirit as she hikes1,100 miles of the an utterly charming andendlessly Pacific Crest Trail by herself. It's a inventive way of bringing atalking raw, beautiful performance byReese bear into present day London, a Witherspoon, and LauraDern iswarm film that uses all of the magic of the and wonderful as hermother. Rating: medium andour fond memories Three and ahalf stars. 115 minutes. of Michael Bond's beloved bearto (R) — Roeper
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2015
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