Serving Central Oregon since190375
THURSDAY March 6,2014
reWne SeVeS a nr nu~Preproundup HEALTH• D1
PREPS • C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
oinve i e
Insurance reprievePlans that don't meet the health care law's standards are extended for two years.A2
Over re on
• Congressionaldelegation soughtto look into useof taxpayer funds
of its authority and, as agreed
cluding Chairman Fred Upton,
with your staff, will undertake
R-Mich., Walden wrote Feb. 12
Plus: Deadlines —Aflnal
By Andrew Clevenger
push to sign people upfor insurance before March 31.D2
The Bulletin
to the GAOrequesting an investigation into Cover Oregon's handling of more than $300 million of federal funds. The following day, Merkley and Wyden followed suit. SeeCover/A4
Fitness at the office-
WASHINGTON — The Gov-
ernment Accountability Office will investigate Cover Oregon after members ofbothhouses
of Congress asked the govern-
Wednesday to Rep. Greg
this work as part of abroader study planned to examine
ment watchdog to look into the
Walden, R-Hood River, and
states' health exchange web-
troubled health care exchange's Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron use of taxpayer funds. Wyden, both D-Ore. The GAO confirmed its
decision in separate letters
sites, "thelettersread. Together with three other "GAO accepts your request members of the House Energy as workthat is within the scope and Commerce Committee, in-
Ideas for adding workouts to the workplace.D4
Plus: Nutrition
— How to turn off your body's "hunger alarm."
irr r
DS
n
WATER RIGHTS
mrni
Tentative
l(lamath Basin deal reached
Land Sale —The city of Bend is one step closer to selling the former location of TheBulletin — at a $2.9 million loss.B1 HIV —Another newborn clear of the diseasesraiseshopes. A4
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
And a Web exclusive-
WASHINGTON — The Klamath Basin Task Force has reached atentative
California immigrants fear new driver's licenses could beused to deport them. bendbnnetin.cnm/extras
water-sharing agreement that would allow more
water to flow into Upper Klamath Lake, providing downstream irrigators with
EDITOR'5CHOICE
amore stable water supply, Gov. John Kitzhaber an-
nounced Wednesday. The deal centers on a Water Use Program, which would limit enough upstreamwater consump-
News sites' top draw: quizzes and games
tion to allow an additional 30,000 acre-feet to flow into
D,o
Upper Klamath Lake. In exchange for the Klamath Tribes agreeing not to pre-emptively exercise their senior water rights above the lake, local landowners
By Leslie Knufman
will commit to helping re-
gO
New York Times News Service
store plant and fish habitats
Which of the following
in riparian areas. The agreement also calls
interactive features drove
record traffic to its respective news sites in recent months: a) How Much
for the establishment of a
Tribal Economic Develop-
.C /
Time Have You Wasted on
ment Fund for the Klamath Tribes.
I
Facebook? for Time; b) The interactive dialect quiz for
The New York Times; c) The Adele Dazeem Generator: Travoltify Your Name,
which appeared on Slate; or d) all of the above? Congratulations if you answered d) all of the above. News organizations are
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
The committee looking into what should be done with Mirror Pond got an
up-close look at the leaking dam there Wednesday, joining representatives of PacifiCorp on a tour of the more than 100-year-old facility. The ad hoc committee, formed last fall, includes
est Internet traffic day ever, 3.8 million unique visitors
representatives from the city of Bend, the Bend Park & Recreation District and the
December, was the most
viewed and most emailed article last year for The New York Times. And the
dam and other alternatives.
The group's tour came
changing their formats in the digital age, with quizzes and games havingbecome popular offerings that audiences find hard to resist. The Facebook quiz helped lead Time to its highin January. The dialect quiz, which appeared in
"I am very pleased with
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
PacifiCorp's vice president of renewable resources, Mark Tallman, points out portions of the Mirror Pond dam during a tour Wednesday afternoon for members of the Mirror Pond ad hoc committee and representatives of PacifiCorp. See a video of the committee touring the Mirror Pond dam at Hbendbulletin.com/damtour.
general public. It will weigh in on the relative merits of dredging the pond, keeping the dam, which is owned by PacifiCorp, removing the
one day before a team of consultants hired by the
were to acquire the dam from PacifiCorp. PacifiCorp
park district is due to arrive
a hole that opened up in the dam last fall, dropping
in Bend to inspect the dam.
water levels to nearly 7 feet
PacifiCorp has been lowering the level of Mirror Pond
below seasonal normals, but is looking to divest itself
in recent days to allow for
of the dam as a generation
a safe inspection, but water levels should be headed back up this weekend. Jim Figurski, the head of the park district's efforts
facility. "Part of the analysis is
on Mirror Pond-related matters, said the inspection
should provide a better idea of what kind of maintenance
costs the city or park district would have to bear if they
IfyOugo
has committed to repairing
The City Club will present a public discussion on each of three alternatives for Mirror Pond. What:City Club of Central Oregon monthly forum When:11:30a.m.-1 p.m. March 20 Where:St. Charles Center for Health and Learning To register:Visit http:// cityclubco.org. Registration closes at noon on March18.
what would we need to do
for a 50-year or more fix, not just a 10-year fix or a nearterm fix," Figurski said. He expects the consultants will have a complete report for the committee by
the end of the month. SeeDam/A4
Adele Dazeem name gen-
the Klamath Tribal Coun-
cil's support of the ~posed Agreement," said Don Gentry, Chairman of Klamath Tribes, in a prepared statement."If approved, we will see an increase in water flows, unproved habitat for
current and future fish populations, and economicopportunities for our Tribe and
Tribal members. Itwillhelp us restore our homeland and honor the Treaty our ances-
tors signed 150years ago." The Klamath Basin is 16,000 square miles that drain into the Klamath River as it wends more than 250 miles from its headwa-
ters in Southern Oregon through Northern Californiato the Pacific Ocean.
The demands onthe basin's water outstrip supply. See Water /A5
erator, which Slate put up Monday after John Travolta
mangled the introduction of the singer Idina Menzel at
the Oscars ceremony, calling her Adele Dazeem, was the most viewed article ever
in Slate's 18-year history. SeeQuizzes/A5
Correction In a story headlined "Digging into the Deschutes," which appearedWednesday, March 5, on PageA1,the location of sampling on the Deschutes River was incorrect. The sampling site was just north of the Colorado Avenue Bridge. The Bulletin regrets the error.
SAT'smajor changesinclude dropping arcanevocabulary By Tamar Lewin
guessing wrong, cutting ob-
New York Times News Service
scure vocabulary words and
Saying its college admission exams do not focus enough on
making the essay optionaL nounced programs to help The president of the College low-income students, who Board, David Coleman, critwill now be given fee waivers icized his own test, the SAT, allowing them to apply to four and its main rival, the ACT, colleges at no charge. And saying that both had "become even before the new exam disconnected from the work is introduced, in the spring
the important academic skills,
the College Board announced on Wednesday a fundamental rethinking of the SAT, ending the longstanding penalty for
TODAY'S WEATHER Chance of rain High 52, Low34 Page B6
of our high schools." In addition, Coleman an-
of 2016, the College Board, in partnership with Khan
Academy, will offer free online practice problems and instructional videos showing how to solve them. The changes are extensive: The SAT's rarefied vocab-
sis." The math questions, now
scatteredacrossmany topics, will focus more narrowly on linear equations, functions
and proportional thinking.
ulary challenges will be
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
replaced by words that are common in college courses, like "empirical" and "synthe-
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 S oI E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 IV/Movies
B5 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 65,
30 pages, 5 sections
SeeSAT/A5
Q i/ttreuserecycled newsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
How to reachUs
oma ice 0 s
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F i., r6:30a.m .-noonSat.-Sun.
i 'BIM 8 e f
OI1
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL
bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business.....businessobendbulletin.com Ciiy Desk..........newsobendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street ........... 1777S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706
By Michael R. Gordon and Steven Erlanger
CIA inVeStigated —The CIA is investigating whether its officers improperly monitored members of the Senate Intelligence Committee, which oversees the intelligence agency, U.S. officials said Wednesday. TheCIAinspector general is looking into the circumstances surrounding the committee's investigation into allegations of CIA abuse in aBush-era detention and interrogation program, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman DianneFeinstein, D-Calif., told reporters. The allegations include whether CIAofficers improperly monitored Senate investigators and possibly accessed the computers they were using, two officials familiar with the investigation said.
New York Times News Service
PARIS — An effort by the United States to broker the
first face-to-face diplomatic meeting between Russia
and Ukraine over the Crimea crisis failed Wednesday, but Secretaryof State John Kerry
and his Russian counterpart announced more discussions in the days ahead. Their remarks left open the possibility of progress toward
AmbaSSadOrS reCalled —Tensions between Qatar and neighboring Persian Gulf monarchies broke out Wednesdaywhen Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates andBahrain withdrew their ambassadors from the country. The concerted effort to isolate Qatar was a rebuke of its strategy of aligning with moderate Islamists in the hope of extending its influence amid the ArabSpring revolts. Wednesday's breach, some intheregionsaid,wasQatar'scomeuppance."The other gulf states seeQatar asthis extremely rich child that has got all this money andall these big toys and wants to play but doesn't know how to do it," said Michael Stephens, a researcher for the London-based Royal United Services Institute.
a solution to de-escalate one
of the most serious East-West confrontations since the Cold War. But while Kerry assert-
ed Wednesday night that his deliberations here had yielded creative ideas and planned to
resume talks with the Russian foreign minister in Rome to-
day, there were also signs of how acute the crisis remained. In C r i mea, u n i dentified armed men threatened the
Si sil.AvL
U.N. special envoy, Robert Serry, forcing him to leave the region by plane. And the Pentagon took its first military steps
Dtsouiesrv
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54t-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt.....541-363-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-365-5605 FinanceHolly West..........54t-363-032t HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-363-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Ooran.........54t-363-0360 CiiySheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-363-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home,All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-363-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............541-363-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou...........541-410-9207
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box766 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-546-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356.
TO SUBSCRIBE
Home delivery and E-Editien:
Ivan Sekretarev I The Associated Press
since the crisis erupted to reassure Eastern European NATO
An armed Ukrainian seaman crosses himself Wednesday during a religious service conducted by an Orthodox priest, right, on
members by announcing that
the deck of the corvette Ternopil, standing at port in Sevastopol, Ukraine. Since last weekend, Russian troops have taken control of
six U.S. F-15 fighters and one
KC-135 refueling plane would be sentto reinforce the four
much of Ukraine's Crimean peninsula on the Black Sea.
F-15s that police the airspace
of Baltic nations. A program to carry out joint training with
ethnic Russians in Crimea were under threat and Rus-
Ukraine's acting foreign minister, Andrii Deshchytsia,
sianforces were acting to proexpanded, the Pentagon said. tect Russian military assets. The moves follow Poland's In Paris, Kerry's emphasis request that NATO hold emer- was on diplomatic efforts to gency discussions on the cri- defuse the crisis and bring sis under Article 4 of the alli- Russian diplomats together ance'streaty, which provides with representatives of the for consultations if a member new Ukrainian government. feels threatened. On Wednesday morning, In Washington, President Kerry and his British and Barack Obama consulted fur- Ukrainian counterparts met ther with allies, speaking by on the 1994 Budapest memotelephone to Prime Minister randum, an agreement signed
who flew to Paris on Tuesday night on Kerry's plane, said at the session that he was prepared to have "consultations
David Cameron of B r i tain, by Russia, the United States whose government has resist- and Britain obliging them to ed any trade sanctions against refrain from the "threat and Russia. Vice President Joe use of force,"or "economic Biden called with reassuranc- coercion" against Ukraine, es to President Andris Berz- which also signed the agreeins of Latvia, one of the Baltic ment and agreed to give up the states unnerved by Moscow's nuclear weapons inherited af-
Deshchytsia, who Ukrainian
Poland's air force will also be
military occupation of the Crimean Peninsula. In a blunt move, the State Department issued a list of 10
claims by President Vladimir
COnfirmatiOn blOCked —President Barack Obama's choice to lead the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division was blocked by bipartisan Senate opposition Wednesday in anemotional postscript to the long-ago murder of a Philadelphia policeman andthe legal help his killer received. Thevote against advancing Debo Adegbile toward confirmation was 47-52, shy of the majority needed under new procedures Democrats put in place late last year to overcome Republican stalling tactics. In this case, though, to the dismay of civil rights organizations and theWhite House, Democratic desertions played a decisive role in the outcome. Eight members of Obama's party joined all 44 Republicans in preventing a final vote.
with Russia, bilaterally and
multilaterally." After Kerry met with Lavrov later that day at the Rus-
sian ambassador's residence,
ISraeli naVal raid —Israeli naval commandos intercepted and boarded a civilian ship in the southern RedSeaearly Wednesday, preventing an attempt to smuggle an Iranian shipment of advanced rockets destined for Gaza,according to senior Israeli officials. The ship, identified as the Klos-C, wasseized in international waters between Eritrea andSudan, about1,000 miles from the port of Eilat, Israel's most southern point. It was carrying Syrian-manufactured M-302 rockets with a range of about100 miles, according to Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a spokesmanfor the Israeli military. The takeover took place without violence.
afterward.
COal COmpany fineS —Oneof the nation's biggest coal companies will pay a record civil penalty and will spend tens of millions of dollars to clean upwater flowing from mines in five states, the Environmental Protection Agency andthe Justice Department announcedWednesday.Thecompany, AlphaNaturalResources, and 66 of its subsidiaries including the former MasseyEnergy, will spend $200 million under a consent decree to reduce pollution from coal mines in Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia andWest Virginia. The companywill also pay $27.5 million, the largest civil penalty ever for permit violations under the CleanWater Act.
But a d irect meeting between Lavrov and Deshchyt-
Military SeX aSSault CaSe —Hopingto narrowhis court-mar-
the two diplomats went to the
French Foreign Ministry for further discussions on the crisis with European envoys. officials said had left for the airport only to be called back, arrived at the ministry soon
sia, who was in the same
ter the Soviet Union's breakup. building but no t t h e s ame Kerry said he regretted that room, did not happen. The Russia's foreign minister, Ser- failure reflected the tensions gei Lavrov, had not attended. William Hague, the British for-
Syria human rightS —A commission of inquiry established by the United Nations to investigate human rights abuses in Syria singles out the government and its allied militias for "systematically committing murder, torture, rape andenforced disappearance," while pointing a sharp finger at the U.N.Security Council for allowing both sides in the war to continue breaking international laws with impunity. "The warring parties do not fear being held accountable for their acts," the three-member panel wrote in its seventh report, released Wednesday.Thereport listed jails and government offices where people weredetained andtortured, and accused the government of using sieges aspart of its strategy, withholding water, food and medical care.
over Russia'srefusal to recognize the interim government
eign secretary, said the group in Kievthat replaced President false, rebutting each. The would make "every diplomat- Viktor Yanukovych, who fled statement rejected Putin's as- ic effort today to bring Russia last month but is regarded by sertions that Ukraine's new and Ukraine in direct contact Russia as Ukraine's rightful government was illegitimate, at the ministerial level." leader. Putin of Russia that it called
tial to a showdown with a womanwho accused him of sexual assault, Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Sinclair said Wednesday that hewould plead guilty to other, less-serious counts of misconduct, including adultery, soliciting explicit images and impeding an investigation. The decision by Sinclair and his defense teamcame after Army prosecutors made it clear Wednesday that they wanted to show the military jury reams of pornography that they said Sinclair had illegally watched in Afghanistan. By pleading guilty to possession of pornography and other charges, the general and his defense team may change the courtroom narrative. — Fromwirereports
One mOnth: $17 <Prinonl t y:$16)
Bymail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only: Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-365-5609 Advertising fax..................541-365-5602 Other information .............541-362-1611
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-363-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7625 Back issues ......................54t-365-5600
All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
©
QsQvQsQzsQ s4
The estimated jackpot is now $50 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
08018021039041048 The estimated jackpot is now $2.7 million.
Obamagivesnoncompliant insuranceplansmoretime By Robert Pear WASHINGTON
Jonathan Turley, a law profesmuch-debated law, which was sor at George Washington Unisupposed to eliminate what versity. "Democrats will rue White House officials called the day if they remain silent in substandard insurance and the face of this shift of power to junk policies. the executive branch." The extension could help Turley said Obama was Democrats in tight midterm setting precedents that could election races because it may be used by future presidents avoid the cancellation of poli- t o delay other parts of t h e cies that would otherwise have healthcare law or to suspend one of the central tenets of the
New York Times News Service
-
The
Obama administration, grappling with continued political fallout over its health care law, said Wednesday that it would
allow consumers to renew health insurance policies that did not comply with the new
law for two more years, pushing the issue well beyond this occurred at the height of the fall's midterm elections. political campaign season this The reprieve was the latest fall. in a seriesof waivers,deadIn announcing the new tranline extensions and unilateral sition policy, the Department actions by the administration of Health and Human Services that have drawn criticism from said it had been devised "in the law's opponents and sup- close consultation with memporters alike, many sayingthat bers of Congress," and it gave President Barack Obama was testing the limits of his powers.
The action reflects the difficulties Obama has faced in try-
credit to a number of Demo-
crats in competitive races, including Sens. Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire and Mark
laws dealing with taxes, civil rights or protection of the environment.
unworkable.
insurers to continue existing
would otherwise be terminat-
well into 2017.
policies with renewals as late as Oct. I, 2016, so individuals
and small businesses could have noncompliantcoverage
In addition, the administra-
686 NW YorkDrive, Ste.150 Bend,ORl 541-306-3263
of Obamacare," the House ma-
jority leader, Rep. Eric Can-
ALL,NEW STATEOF — THE ART DEALERSHIP!
tor, R-Va., said. "It is not fair to
what. Under pressure from Dem-
that exists under the law.
The move reflects the adocratic candidates, who are ministration's view that a distruggling to defend the pres- vided Congress would not be ident's s i gnature d o mestic willing to make changes to the policy, Obama in November law, but lawyers questioned the announced a one-year reprieve legitimacy of the action and for insurance plans that did not said it could have unintended meet the minimum coverage consequencesinthelongrun. "I support national health requirements of the 2010health carelaw. care, but what the president is Wednesday's action goes doing is effectively amending much f u rther, e ssentially or negating the federal law to stalling for two more years fithispreferred approach,"said
Wednesday that it would allow
policies. Under the transition policy announced by Obama in November, insurers "may choose to continue coverage that
"President Obama is once tion said, insurers could conagain trying to hide the effects
pick and choose which parts Udall of Colorado. of an unpopular law should be Kathleen Sebelius, the secre- enforced." tary of health and human serThe Senate Republican leadvices, said Obama was trying er, Sen. Mitch McConnell of new system, using flexibility
protections not found in older
ed or canceled." Insurers were Republicans said the move allowed to renew existing policonfirmed t h eir c o ntention cies even if they did not provide that parts of the health care the "essential health benefits" law were ill conceived and prescribed by law.
ing to build support for the Affordable Care Act andthe furor overhispromise — which he later acknowledged had been overstated — that people who liked their insurance plans could keep them, no matter
to "smooth the transition" to a
tinue charging women more than men for those policies and dozens of federal standards for couldcharge higher premiums insurance, requiring coverage based on a person's health staof services in 10 specific areas tus, in violation of the new law. and providingmany consumer A White House official said in the next two years. The health care law sets
Kentucky, said the announcement Wednesday represented
"a desperate move to protect vulnerable Democrats in national elections later this year."
The number of people with noncompliant coverage is not
I
notices last fall, but some of the
I
SUPERIO RSELKTIONOFNEW8 USEO
VOLVO SEDANSAHDSUV'S i
I
i •
known. Insurers sent out per-
haps 4.5 million cancellation
I
i ]
s
(
/
i
/
•
i
policyholders have bought new coverage that complies with the law. Administration officials said that the number of
people with noncompliant policies would shrink by attrition
SMOLlt:HVOLVO.cow
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
TODAY It's Thursday, March 6, the 65th day of 2014. Thereare 300 days left in the year.
SCIENCE
HAPPENINGS Ukraine —The ELIwil discuss the possibility of sanctions against Russia over its actions in Crimea.A2
Venezuela —ThePerma-
NEED TO KNOW
n ursui o a on er, ea ier ie
Study: Too muchmeat
A wealthy entrepreneur has entered the arena of anti-aging research.J. Craig Venter announced
may leadto early death
Tuesday he was starting a new company, Human Longevity. Its aim: Figure out how people can
nent Council of the Organization of American States will discuss the country's unrest.
live longer, healthier lives by creating what Venter says will be the largest human DNA sequencing operation in the world.
HISTORY
By Brady Dennis The Washington Post
By Andrew Pollack
Highlight:In1836, the Alamoin San Antonio, Texas,fell to Mexican forces after a13-day siege. In1834, the city of York in Llpper Canadawas incorporated as Toronto. In1853, Verdi's opera "LaTraviata" premiered inVenice, Italy. In1857, the U.S.Supreme Court ruled in DredScott v. Sandford that Scott, a slave, was not an American citizen and could not sue for his freedom in federal court In1912, Oreosandwich cookies were first introduced bythe National Biscuit Co. In1933, a national bankholiday declared by President Franklin D. Roosevelt aimed atcalming panicked depositors went into effect. ChicagoMayorAnton Cermak, wounded in anattempt on Roosevelt's life the previous month, died at aMiami hospital atage 59. In1944, U.S. heavybombers staged the first full-scale American raid onBerlin during World War II. In1953,GeorgyMalenkovwas named premier of theSoviet Union a dayafter the deathof Josef Stalin. In1984, heavyweight boxing champion CassiusClayofficially changedhis nameto MuhammadAli. In1967,the daughter of Josef Stalin, SvetlanaAlliluyeva, appeared atthe LI.S.Embassy in New Delhianddeclared her intention to defect to theWest. Ten yearsage:President George W.Bush, playing host to Mexican President Vicente Fox at his Texasranch, backed off on plans to require frequent Mexican travelers to theU.S. to be fingerprinted andphotographed before crossing the border, a reversal welcomed by Fox. Five yearsage:Thegovernment reported the jobless rate reached 8.1percent in Feb. 2009. While acknowledging an "astounding" numberof job losses, President Barack Obama told critics of his $787 billion economic recovery plan in Columbus, Ohio, that it was saving jobs andsaid, "I know we did the right thing." One yearago:Sen. RandPaul, R-Ky., a critic of theObama administration's drone policy, launched anold-style filibuster to block Senateconfirmation of John Brennan's nomination to be CIAdirector; Paul lasted nearly13 hours before yielding the floor. Syria's accelerating humanitarian crisis hit a grim milestone asthe number of LI.N.-registered refugees topped1 million, half of them children.
New York Times News Service
Could too much protein
J. Craig Venter is the lat-
put you on the path toward an early grave'? For middle-aged people who consume lots of meat,
est wealthy entrepreneur to
think he can cheat aging and death. And he hopes to do so by resorting to his first love: sequencing genomes. V enter a nnounced o n
milk and cheese, the answer
could be a resounding yes, according to a new study published 'Ibesday in the journal Cell Metabolism.
Tuesday that he was start-
ing a new company, Human Longevity, which will focus on figuring out how people can live longer and healthier lives.
• esg r
To do that,the company will build what Venter says
will be the largest human DNA sequencing operation in the world, capableofprocessing 40,000 human genomes a year. The huge amount of DNA data will be combined with other data on the health and
body composition of the peoSandy Huff aker/ForThe New YorkTim es ple whose DNA is sequenced, J. Craig Venter announced Tuesday that he is starting a new company, Human Longevity, which will in hopes of gleaning insights focus on howpeople can live longer and healthier lives by building what hesays will be the largest into the molecular causes human DNAsequencingoperation intheworld,capableofprocessing 40,000 human genomes ayear. of aging and age-related illnesses like cancer and heart "Your age is your No.1 risk factor for almost disease. sequencing, not counting all Slowing aging, if it can be every disease, but it's not a disease itself." the other studies it wants to done, could be a way to predo. That is a large expense to vent many diseases, an alter— J. Craig Venter offset, and it means that the native to treating one disease $70 million it has raised so far a time. will not go very far. "Your age is your No. 1 ceuticals announced an effort tests derived from its f i ndObtaining the genomes to risk factorfor almost every to sequence 100,000 human ings. It is also considering of- sample could also take time. disease, but it's not a disease genomes in January. fering stem cell therapy. H uman Longevity said i t itself," Venter said in an interJust this week, scientists Dr. Eric Topol, director of would collaborate with the view. Still, his company will reported that a genetic study the Scripps Translational Sci- Moores Cancer Center at the also work on treating individ- of 150,000 people revealed ence Institute, said that while University of California, San ual diseases of aging as well. a mutation that reduces the the new company might well Diego and offer to sequence Human Longevity said it risk of developing Type 2 expand knowledge, "translat- the DNA of the tumors of all had raised $70 million, most diabetes. ing that to meaningful drug patients, as well as the DNA of it from wealthy individIllumina says that with its therapies is likely a long ways from healthy cells. At first, u als, some of w h o m h a ve new X Ten system, the cost to off." patients would not be charged backed his existing company, sequence one human genome He added, "We have no for this; eventually, the comSynthetic Genomics. Ven- will be below $1,000. way of k nowing whether pany hopes to sell such a ter said the largest of those Venter said his company longevity will be favorably service. investors is K.T. Lim, a Ma- planned to sequence the ge- influenced." Many cancer centers are laysian billionaire who runs nomes of both healthy and already testing selected genes Genting Berhad, a gambling sick people, from children to A mixed record in tumors looking for muconglomerate. centenarians. The company While Venter is known for tations that could suggest But a " not i n significant" will also sequence the peo- groundbreaking science which treatments would be part of the funding comes ple's microbiomes — the mi- and for his flair for publiciz- best for patients. It is not yet from Illumina, the dominant crobes living on and in them. ing his efforts — his track re- clear how much more would m anufacturer o f D N A s e - And it has signed a contract cord in business is mixed. Al- be gained by sequencing the quencing machines.Human with another company, Methough his previous company, entire genome of the tumor Longevity has ordered two of tabolon, which can measure Celera Genomics, succeeded cells. Illumina's new top-of-the-line chemicals in their blood. in sequencing one of the first The company will be based HiSeq X Ten systems, each of Some outside s c ientists human genomes, it failed to in San Diego, also the locawhich has a list price of $10 praised the effort. make a business of selling its tion of Synthetic Genomics, "I feel strongly that is a data to pharmaceutical com- which is trying to use sophismillion. Venter is known most for wonderful scientific thing to panies because data from the ticated genetic engineering having run a privately fund- do," said Dr. Thomas Perls, a rival Human Genome Project techniques to create organed effort to sequence the first professor at Boston Univer- was available free. isms that can produce fuel, human genome,racing to a sity School of Medicine who Maintaining a proprietary chemicals and medicines. tie against the publicly fund- has been studying the ge- edge could be a problem for Venter's nonprofit research ed Human Genome Project netics of centenarians. "He's Human Longevity as well, center, the J. Craig Venter Inin 2000. More recently, Ven- looking at throwing a lot of since many other companies stitute, also has a branch in ter has laid claim to creating money at this to do a lot of and academic institutions are San Diego. what some have called the science quickly." doing genomic studies. Venter will be chairman first synthetic cell. Perls said most people While Venter may be corand chief executive of Human should be able to live to their rect in saying his new compa- Longevity. His co-founders, The anti -agingmovement ny's human genome sequenc- who will be vice chairmen, late 80s, and if they do not it Last year, Google's chief is probably because of un- ing capacity will be greater are Dr . P e ter D i a mandis, executive, Larry Page, an- healthy lifestyles, not genet- than that of others, it does c hairman o f t h e X Pri z e nounced that his company ics. But the ability to live to not appear to be that much Foundation, and Dr. Robert was creating an anti-aging 105 or longer is strongly driv- greater. The Broad Institute Hariri, founder and chief scicompany, Calico, which is en by genetics, he said. These in Cambridge, Mass., for in- entific officer of cell therapy being run by Arthur Levin- people seem to have genetic stance, recently bought the operations at the biotechnoloson, a former chief executive variations that protect them equivalent of 1.4 Illumina X gy company Celgene. of Genentech. Oracle's chief from the diseases of aging. Ten systems. Diamandis said the goal executive, Larry Ellison, has It is not clear how quickly, was not to make people live financed anti-aging research if at all, this data sifting will Costly effort forever but rather to m ake through his foundation. yield usable insights and how Venter said his company "100 years old the next 60." With the cost of sequenc- the company would make hoped to increase its capaciVenter, who is 67, sounds ing falling r apidly, other money. Human Longevity ty to 100,000 genomes a year. like he personally might not groups are also undertak- said it planned to sell data to But even at $1,000 per ge- need the company to succeed. ing large sequencing efforts pharmaceutical c o m panies nome, that would mean the "I feel like I have at least 20 or aimed at finding clues to dis- and eventually to b enefit company would be spending 30 years left in my career," he eases. Regeneron Pharma- from drugs and diagnostic $100 million a year just on said.
BIRTHDAYS Former Federal Reserve Chairman AlanGreenspanis 88. Singer Mary Wilson (The Supremes) is 70. Actor-director Rob Reiner is 67.Actor D.L. Hughley is 50. NBAplayer Shaquille O'Neal is 42. — From wire reports
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM
at the NEWStCharlesHealthGare.org/quit Register online for great community dasses, includingsmoking cessation, to start making healthy life changestoday!
U.S. and Italian researchers tracked thousands of
adults for nearly two decades and found that those who ate a diet high in animal proteins during middle age were four ti mes more likely to die of cancer
than contemporaries with low-protein diets — a risk factor comparable to smok-
ing. They also were several times more likely to die of
diabetes, and nearly twice as likelyto die in general. "The great majority of Americans could reduce their protein intake," said one of the study's co-authors, Valter Longo, a Uni-
versity of Southern California gerontology professor and director of the school's Longevity Institute. "The best change would be to
lower the daily intake of all proteins, but especially animal-derived proteins."
That advice comes with a caveat. Even as researchers warned of the health risks of
high-protein diets in middle age, they said eating more protein actually could be a
smart move for people over 65. "At older ages, it may be important to avoid alow-pmtein diet to allow the main-
tenance of healthy weight and protection fmm frailty,"
another co-author, USC gerontology professor Eileen Crimmins, said in a release
detailing the findings. Exactly how much protein belongs in the average diet has proven a topic of perpetual debate, one com-
plicated by popular diets such as Atkins and Paleo, which rely heavily on animal-based proteins to help people shed weight. While such diets might succeed in
that short-term goal, Longo said they could be leading to worse health down the road.
Longo said many middle-aged Americans, along with an increasing number of people amund the world, are eating twice and sometimes three times as much
protein as they need, with too much of that coming from animals rather than
plant-based foods such as nuts, seeds andbeans.
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066
Adjustable Beds-
IJIATTRESS
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4
A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
UPDATE:NEWBORN'S HIV TREATMENT
n sLiccessraises o e or awa tori a ieso By Donald G. McNeil Jr. BOSTON — When scientists made the stunning announce-
l'.®g- ~s,-
ment last year that a baby born with HIV had apparently been cured through aggressive drug treatment just 30 hours after
"I
/
birth, there was i m mediate skepticism that the child had
3
ever been infected in the first place. But on Wednesday, the exwas revealed at an AIDS conference here, leaving l i t tle doubt that the treatment works.
By David Streiffeld
shielded from minors.
New York Times News Service
Facebook wants to unite
the world so everyone can talk about everything. One of the big things people want to talk about, it seems, is guns. The social network is one
New York Times News Service
istence of a second such baby
Facebookcurbinggunsales
of the world's largest marketplaces for guns. A DoubleStar AR-15 is offered for $650. A raspberry-colored T a urus pistol can be had for $239.95, a Bushmaster M4 "fresh from
the box" for $1,200. "We've got over 550 guns and we need buyers!" posts a Louisi-
ana seller. Under pressure from law enforcement an d
t >llMP
a d v oca-
cy groups, Facebook took stepsWednesday to regulate gun sales on its site and on
its photo-sharing app Instagram. Pages advertising guns for sale, for instance, will be
A leading researcher said there might be five more such cases in Canada and three in South
been achieved.
"I wouldn't even call this a meaningful first step," Gross said. "There's a simple soluate users. Nor does it want tion here. Facebook should to squelch free speech. But be prohibiting any post that if the company hoped its an- advertises the unlicensed sale nouncement would satisfy or transfer of firearms in the everyone and make the issue disappear, the plan backfired. Some large Internet sites Gun control groups ap- have gone further. Craigsplauded the changes. So did list, the informal community Michael Bloomberg, who is website for all sorts of transmaking gun control one of actions, prohibits the sale of the most visible elements of weapons, as does the auction his career afterserving as site eBay. New York mayor. But the ¹ Facebook and Instagram tional Rifle Association said are not e-commerce sites, the changes were so insig- but with over a billion users nificant that Bloomberg had they encourage a lot of con"failed." versations that establish a And Daniel Gross, pres- framework for offline deals. ident of one of the largest In some ways, the lack of an gun control groups, the actual storefront promotes a Brady Campaign to Prevent willingness to believe there Gun Violence, said little had are no rules. Facebook does not want
its growing prominence as a private gun mall to alien-
Africa. And a clinical trial in which
up to 60 babies who are born infected will be put on drugs
PeggyPeterson Photography/ Penn Medicine via TheAssociated Press
within 48 hours is set to be-
A technician removes a case of modified T cells genetically
gin soon, another researcher added.
modified to resist HIV infection from storage in an ultralow temperature freezer for testing at the Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia.
If that trial works — and it
will take several years of following the babies to determine whether it has — the protocol
for treating all 250,000 babies born infected each year worldwidewillno doubtbe rewritten.
"This could lead to major
changes, for two reasons," said Dr. Anthony Fauci, executive director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious
Diseases. "Both for the welfare of the child, and because it is a huge proof of concept that you can cure someone if you can treat them earlyenough." The announcement was the
third piece of hopeful news in two days about a virus that causes AIDS.
Alteredgenescouldhelp preventHIV The idea of genetically altering people's cells to makethem resist the AIDSvirus may seem like a pipe dream, but a newreport suggests it can bedone. The research involves the first use in humans of "geneediting," a treatment that zeros in on aparticular geneand disables it. In12 people infected with HIV, scientists Usedthetechnique to get rid of a protein on thepatients' immune cells that the virus must latch onto to invadethe cells. Cells were removedfrom the patients, treated andthen dripped back into their bloodstreams through an intravenous line. In theory, if enough cells could beengineered to repel the virus, patients might no longer needantiviral drugs, and might in effect be cured. Theexperiment was a pilot study, meant to test safety, not efficacy. It found that immunecells could be altered, and that doing so did not harm patients. Thegeneediting also seemed to help fight the infection in somecases, but the findings are preliminary and researchers cautioned that widespread use of the technique is a longway off.
On T uesday, s cientists — New YorkTimes NewsService reported that injections of long-lasting AIDS drugs fended off infection in monkeys, the meds." Fauci's institute and be part of "I'd heard of the Mississippi the Impact series of trials conand on Wednesday researchers announced a "gene editing" baby, I'd watched the video," centrating on preventing viral advance that might enable im- she added. "I knew that if you transmission to newborns. "When we described the mune cells to repel the virus. want to prevent infection, early treatmentis critical." Mississippi baby, we were met The first case The Long Beach baby is now with some skepticism," she The first infant to make an in foster care, she said. The said. The Long Beach baby "was definitely infected." apparent recovery from HIV mother is stiII alive as well. infection, now famous as the It is incorrect to describe the The Mississippi baby was "Mississippi baby," was de- baby as "cured" or even as "in born to a mother who got no scribed last March at the Con- remission" because she is still p renatal care and wa s u n ference on Retroviruses and on the drugs, Persaud said. aware that she was infected. Opportunishc Infections, the But because the most sensitive Worried doctors at a local hossame annual meeting where blood tests can find no virus pital transferred the baby to the new case was reported capable of replicating, she de- the University of Mississippi Wednesday. scribes the baby as "having se- Medical Center, where a pediaThe Mississippi child, now ro-reverted to HIV-negative." trician, Dr. Hannah Gay, startmore than 3 years old, is still Both DNA and RNA of the ed aggressive antiretroviral virus-free, said Dr. Deborah virus were found in the baby's treatment about 30 hours after Persaud, a virologist who has early blood and spinal fluid birth. run ultrasensitive tests on both samples, so Persaud said it was Then, 18 months later, the children in her lab at the Johns virtually certain she was infect- mother stopped taking the Hopkins Children's Center in ed at birth. The virus began to baby to a p pointments and Baltimore. disappear six days after birth stopped giving the drugs. Five The second baby, a girl born and was undetectable within 11 months later,when shecame to at Miller Children's Hospital days. an appointment, doctors feared in Long Beach, Calif., is now 9 It is considered medically the baby would be teeming months old and apparently free unethical to stop the baby's with virus. of the virus that causes AIDS. drugs now, but Deveikis and Instead, to their astonishHer mother, suffering from Dr. Yvonne Bryson, a pediatric ment,they found none. And both advanced AIDS and men- AIDS expert at the University Persaud's testing has found tal illness, arrived in labor; she of California, Los Angeles, who none, despite using tests norhad been prescribed drugs to is also working on the case, mally able to detect dormant protect her baby but had not said they would consider stop- virus in adult patients on suctaken them. ping them briefly to see what cessful treatment. Four hours after the birth, happens if the baby is still viAlthough antiretrovirals prea pediatrician, Dr. Audra De- rus-free at age 2. vent the virus from replicating, veikis, drew blood for an HIV Bryson is one of three inves- a small amount usually persists test and immediately started tigators who will lead the clini- in reservoirs throughout the the baby on three drugscal trial seeking60babies. body, integrated into the DNA AZT, 3TC and nevirapine — at
the high doses usually used for
Expanding the treatment
Obstetricians and pediaThe normal preventive reg- tricians in the United States, imen for newborns would be South Africa and Brazil will lower doses of two drugs; doc- be alerted to watch for babies tors usually do not use the more being born to mothers who aggressive treatment until they have not taken drugs to prevent are surethe baby is infected, mother-child transmission and and then sometimes not in the to get them on full antiretrofirst weeks. viral treatment immediately, "Of course I had worries," even before the first blood test Deveikis said in an interview has been finished. gn the Unithere. "But the mother's disease ed States, fewer than 200 chilwas not under control, and I dren each year are born with had to weigh the risk of trans- HIV) mission against the toxicity of The trial will be funded by treatment of the virus.
of cells. Persaud's test can acti-
vate those cells and force them to "spit out" the virus, where it
canbe detected. Dr. Steven Deeks, an AIDS expert at the University of Cal-
ifornia, San Francisco, said the Long Beach baby offered more convincing evidence that
starting therapy virtually at birth seems to kill the virus be-
Cover Continued fromA1 Walden told The Bulletin
Wednesday he is pleased the GAO responded so quickly. "My hope is that the GAO will get the facts of what hap-
pened to the $300-plus million dollars the taxpayers have given to Oregon to build a website that doesn't work," he SBld.
Walden said he hopes the
investigation will a n swer questions as to why the website was unable to enroll on-
line users when it launched Oct. 1, who was responsible for its failure and whether any
unspent taxpayer funds can berecouped. "Oregonians are demanding, as I am, an independent, comprehensive look at the biggest spending debacle in state history," he said. Through his spokesman, Matt McNally, Merkley said he is looking forward to read-
corporating technology from other states and Healthcare. GAO has responded to our gov, the federal exchange, request to carefully examine Cover Oregon spokesman Miwhat has gone wrong with the chael Cox wrote in an email. GAO's quick response is Cover Oregon website," Merkleysaid. probably because it is already According to the Centers for involved in investigating the Medicaidand Medicare Ser- troubled rollout of Healthcare. vices, Oregon received more gov, and it has a team in place, than $300 million in federal said Walden. "This just expands their grants to create the Cover Oregon exchange. scope," he said. That indudes a $226.4 milThe House Energy and lion phase two grant in Jan- C ommerce Committee, of uary 2013 to cover expenses which Walden is a member, related to testing, training and may also conduct its own implementation of the online oversight, he said, but that exchange. decision is up to Chairman Earlier this week, Cover Upton and Oversight and InOregon announced that it vestigations S u bcommittee had reached an agreement Chairman Tim Murphy, R-Pa. with Oracle, its primary ven- Murphy also signed the Feb. dor in developing the website, 12 letter to the GAO requestthat would keep the company ing an investigation. "We're very concerned, and working on the troubled exed its investigation. "It is great news that the
change. In the meantime, Covthe parts of the site that are
working and moving forward oncetheagency has complet- with a different vendor and ining GAO's recommendations
Dam Continued fromA1 On the backdeck of the powerhouse, members of the
taxpayers are concerned, and
er Oregon will consider sever- people who were promised to al options, including keeping use this site are very upset," Walden said. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbuIIetin.com
said he only had a hazy idea for PacifiCorp, said the seep- of what went on at the Mirror age is a cosmetic problem Pond dam. "I grew up in Bend, and this more than a safety issue. "The dam is just like a is the closest I've ever come to dent of renewable resources
tour group learned Wednes- drafty house, it's ]ust old," he day how the gates at the base SBld. of thedam can be manipuVisitors donned fireproof lated to control how much suits before venturing inside water flows out, allowing the the powerhouse, where three dam operator to m aintain large generating wheels sat Mirror Pond at a consistent idle Wednesday on account elevation. of the lowered water levels. They peeked into buckets When turning, the three genof bottles, cans and old tennis erators can produce enough balls that are scattered across electricity to power 300 to 400 the dam property, all of them homes. retrieved from the pond Tallman told tour members above the dam with the help the powerhouse is still potenof a long-handled net. tially dangerous even when Descending a ladder to the generators aren't spinning a wide lawn hemmed in by due to a live power line runthe dam on th e upstream ning across the ceiling thatside and barbed wire on the under the right circumstancdownstream side, the group es — can throw off high-voltexamined a now rarely used age arcs. The controls for the gate at the north edge of the adjacent substation are also spillway, where boards can inside the powerhouse, Tallbe removedto discharge ice man said, cautioning the visand debris into a crudely con- itors to avoid touching any of structed rock and concrete the equipment. "It is possible, if you accisluice gate. Water seeps through sev- dentally touch or move the eral points along the concrete wrong handle, you could put dam face, nourishing thick Bend in the dark," he said. cushions of moss sprouting Scott Wallace, a member from the stained walls, and of the park district board and as suggested by the foot- a member ofthe ad hoc comprints dotting the mud below, mittee, said he expects the a handful of raccoons and behind-the-scenes tour will other small animals that find prove useful once the engitheir waythrough the fences. neering report is complete. Mark Tallman, vice presi- Until Wednesday, Wallace
the powerhouse," he said.
City Councilor and committee member Victor Chudowsky
said he was impressed by the architecture of thepowerhouse. If the city or the park district
acquires the dam someday, it would be ideal if the powerhouse could be preserved, he said, possibly as some kind of small museum where visitors could learn about how electric-
ity is generated and about a notable piece of Bendhistory. Chudowsky said the tour
confirmed much of what he already knew — that the dam is old, and in places, starting to
fail. Though its days as a power generation facility may be numbered, the dam may still be
the easiest and least expensive way to preserve Mirror Pond into the future, he said.
"Really, what we need to be deciding is, is this an asset or a liability, then go from there," Chudowsky said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
1 ((
Plae Well, Retire Well
fore it establishes a permanent
reservoir. "But it sure would be nice to have a way to decide when to
stop" the treatment, he added. "That's the next question."
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM
at the NEWStGharlesHealthGare.org/heal Study up oneverything from allergies to tennis elbow inour comprehensiveonline health library.
I I
I
541382-6447 ~ 2090NEWy ttC n ~ S it' 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
I
'
•
SU mlo S~
775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ~www.elevationcapital.biz
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Quizzes Continued fromA1 The feature, which allows readers to enter their name and find out how John Travolta might mispronounce it, had
ing. If users can put their own name and information into a template and come out with
an amusing answer, it often
At first Slate's editor, David Plotz, was not sure this devel-
generator is the most popular story in Slate history," he posted on Twitter. Later in a
its f i rst
d i g ital i n t eractive
graphics editor last August. tom-made bracket competition to coincide with March Madness, the NCAA m en's basketball tournament, where
tions have relied on addictivenot, in these tough times news ly shared content of dubious
organizations are prepared to news value — like quizzes to take advantage of a strategy determine which c h aracter that allows them to charge of the Downton Abbey telemore for advertising — rates vision series the user most are based on monthly visitors resembles. to the site — and to potentialPlotz of Slate says that as ly attract new readers who long as his magazine runs might become loyal followers. serious journalism alongside "It is the gamification of the name generators and othcontent," said Joshua Benton, er interactive tools, he sees director of the Neiman Jour- no reason to worry. He point-
way to connect to content."
ed out that before Travoltify
Your Name was posted, an 18,000-word article about the
woman Ronald Reagan made famous by calling her the welfare queen had been getting
Games have been part of the newspaper business for the most attention. "We will do anything that a long time. The New York Times hasfeatured its cross- is interesting, journalistically word puzzle since 1942, while worthy," Plotz said. "Travolta other newspapers have car- is explosive, but we published riedcomics,word puzzlesand 50 other articles that day, inacrostics. But the digital age cluding one on the Crimean has allowed for interactivity, Tatars. If we had a great idea which makes for an especial- we'd do another interactive ly alluring form of game-play- today and tomorrow."
Water
pened. I look forward to final
Continued fromA1
ing one, the redesigned read-
ratification by the parties and to working with the Governor,
In March 2013, after 38 years Senator Merkley, and my colof litigation, the Oregon Water leaguesin CongresstopasslegResources Department adjudi- islation that makes this agreecated the competing claims to ment a reality." the water. Essentially, under the Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., principle of first in time, first in said the agreement should right, the Klamath Tribes were be celebrated by all who care awarded top ciaim on much of about Southern Oregon's ecoUpper Klamath Lake and por- nomic and social vitality. "People have been fighting tions of its tributaries. But ranchers and irrigators over water in the Klamath Baworry that when high-priority sin for decades, but this historic rights holders exercise a "call" agreement is a vision for sharon their water claim during ing water in a manner that benparticularly dry years, they efits everyone," Merkley said. won't have enough water for But not all members of the their livestock and crops. task forcesupported the proUnder the new agreement, posed deal. the Water Use Project would WaterWatch of Oregon, a be overseen by representatives Portland-based nonprofit, isfrom landowners, the Klamath sued a statement calling for Tribesand state and federal of- continued negotiations. One ficials, who will work to assure area of concern is the water the additional water is distrib- available to the Lower Klamath uted equitably. and Tule Lake national wildlife The Klamath Basin Task refuges. "It is clear that the amount of Force was convened in July demand reduction identified in Wyden, D-Ore.,then chair- the agreement announced to-
ing test will include a science
The use of a calculator some of the math sections. The new exam will be
And whether they like it or
games and social sharing to be addictive and use them in
Continued fromA1
others through social media, contributing to the holy grail of virality.
phone interview, he said "be- users vote to narrow the field mused" was abetter descrip- in categories like the best tion of his feelings. college, the best city, the best "Readers will go high or seat in a movie theater. low with us," he said. "It was The problem for media oroff the news and it was fun ganizations is where, if anyand shareable. All p ubli- where, to draw the line becations are aspiring to that tween amusing content and direct connection to their the mission of reporting the audience." news. Many digital publica-
nalism Lab at Harvard. "Take the same dynamics that lead
also includes a science section, and while the SAT is not add-
will no longer be allowed on
opment was an entirely good The Wire, part o f A t l antic thing: "Definition of ambiva- Media, has introduced a cuslent: The John Travolta name
SAT
prompts them to share it with
been viewed by 9.5 million unique users by Wednesday While such a m usements afternoon and was adding are not new, the trend toward roughly 100,000 people an interactivity is only accelerhour. ating. Time magazine hired
passage. But beyond the particulars, C oleman emphasized t h at the three-hour exam — three hours and 50 minutes with the
available on paper and computer,and the scoring
essay — had been redesigned with an eye toward reinforcing the skills and evidence-based
will revert to the old 1,600
scale — from 2,400 — with top scores of 800 on math and 800 on what will now
thinking that students should
be called "evidence-based reading and writing." The optional essay, which strong writersmay choose to do,
be learning in high school, and moving away from a need for test-taking tricks and strate-
will have a separate score.
Eric Gay/The Associated Press
College Board President David Coleman, in announcing changes
The SAT'sdecline
to the SAT, said that the test and its mein competitor, the ACT, hed
Once the pre-eminent col- "become disconnected from the work of our high schools." lege admissions exam, the ACT, which is based more directly on high school curriculums and is now taken by a slightly higher number of students. Last year, 1.8 million students took the ACT and 1.7 million the SAT. The new SAT will not
quell all criticism of standardized tests. Critics have
long pointed out — and C oleman admits —
t h at
high school grades are a better predictor of college success than standardized test scores. More colleges
have in recentyears become "test optional," allowing students to forgo the exams
and submit their grades, transcripts and perhaps a gradedpaper. For many students, Coleman said, the t ests are mysterious and "filled with
unproductive anxiety." And,
Natural Resources Commit-
of the water demand reduction
tee, bluntly told stakeholders necessary to achievea sustainthat Congress would not en- able level of farm and fisherdorse 2010's Klamath Basin Restoration Agreement at a
ies production in the severely over-allocated Klamath Basin,"
cost of $800 million. Congress must still fund the new agreement, but its proponents hope the $545 million price tag will prove more acceptable. "I am pleased that the par-
the statement reads. "We urge Senators Wyden and Merkley
tieshave been able to reach a
proposedfi nal agreement by working through the Klamath Basin task force process that
was established following the Senate hearing last summer," saidWyden in aprepared statement. "The charge of the task force was to build on the good work of the KBRA and (Klamath Hydroelectric Settlement Agreement) to resolve water rights in the Upper Klamath Basin. That's exactly what hap-
to inciude additional water de-
mand reduction in any related federal legislation, including some downsizing of the Klamath Irrigation Project and the voluntary retirement of other
water rights throughout the basin."
gies. Sometimes, students will be asked not just to select the right answer but to justify it by choosing the quotation from a text that provides the best
SAT has lost ground to the heartfelt "damn the torpedoes,
supporting evidence for their answer. The revised essay, in partic-
he acknowledged, they inspire little respect from classroom
full speed ahead" approach to ular, will shift in that direction. improving the SAT and appre- Students now write about their teachers: only 20 percent, he ciatedthe effort to tame thetest- experiences and opinions, with said, see the college-admission prep industry. no penaltyforincorrectasser"It's absurd, and that's the tions, even egregiously wrong testsas a fair measure of the work their students have done.
nicest thing I can call it, how
ones. In the future, though,
The suggested changes were much test prep has grown and well-received among many how guilt-ridden parents have educators, but Coleman's com- become about tryingto prepare ments about the ACT drew their kids for the test," Ballinger harsh words from an executive said. "If this helps test prep beof that company. come learning, not gaming, "David Coleman is not a well, shoot, that's great." spokesman for the ACT, and I acknowledge his political More like the ACT gamesmanship but I don't apSome changes will make the preciate it," Jon Erickson, pres- new SAT more like the ACT, ident of ACT's education divi- which for the last two years sion, said. "It seems like they're has outpaced the SAT in test mostly following what we've takers. Thirteen states adminalways done." ister the ACT to all public high Philip Ballinger, the director schooljuniors,and three more of undergraduate admissions are planning to do so. The at the University of Washing- ACT has no guessing penalton, said he admired Coleman's ty, and its essay is optional. It
students will receive a source document and be asked to analyze it for its use of evidence,
reasoning and persuasive or stylistic technique. The text will be different on
each exam, but the essay task will remain constant. The re-
quired essay never entirely caught on with college admissions officers. Many never figured the score into the admis-
sion decision and looked at the actualessays only rarely,as a raw writing sample to help detecthow much parents,consultants and counselors had edited and polished the essay submitted withthe application.
zo>4
ARTS CULTURE EVENTS
A SEASONAL 1L4GAZINE DEDICATED TO SPECL4L EVENTS, THE ARTS AND CULTUR'E IN THE TOKV OF SISTERS o n't m iss ou t o n t h i s e xcitin g m a g a z i n e
d el i v e r e d to n early 7 0 , 0 0 0 r e a d e r s throughout Central Oregon. A lso
d i s t r i b u t e d at
participating businesses and The Sisters Chamber
@gs 3 i'
rI
of Commerce.
My Oum Tue Hands
s sttt t p ~
Publishes March 28
patst1+
t
~
$gf QSr efit
Sales Deadline 8 Mamh 13
2013, the month after Sen. Ron
man of the Senate Energy and day will provide only a fraction
A5
•
Call Michelle O'Donnell at 541-383-0347 to advertise
:Wa ggg
cotlgtteu
ic:, s'
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
,Ssto
ENDORSED BY:
:i®'st~w Area ~
T he proposal still has t o
be approved by the Klamath Tribes' General Council, irrigators,the state of Oregon and
the federal government. After that, Congress must also pass legislation formalizing the arrangement. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletirt.com
St. Charles HEALTH SYSTEM
at the NEWStGharlesHealthGare.org/watch Get an inside look atwhat's going on in Central Oregonhealthcare by clicking onourlocal videolibrary.
Of Co m merce
4
go
zs yittsutu
A6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
IN FOCUS:AFGHANISTAN'S PRESIDENTIAL RACE
Kanai's brother expected to drop out By Rod Nordland
zai would most likely throw race was said to have defied his support — and consider- the president's wishes from KABUL, Afghanistan able campaign financingthe start. President Hamid Karzai has behind Zalmay Rassoul, the That became more clear vowed to stay out of Afghan- former foreign minister. late last month, when peo" Negotiations a r e st i l l ple close to the president istan's presidential race, and not to show preference or taking place — we still have convened a jirga, or gatherprejudice toward any of the things to talk about — but ing of elders, of 170 mostly 11 contenders, but it is now it will b e f i nal tomorrow," Pashtun tribal leaders whose clear that he has made an ex- Habibi said Wednesday. main focus was to negotiate ception in at least one case: An official i n R a ssoul's between the Qayum Karzai his own brother. campaign, speaking on con- and Rassoul campaigns to After what Afghan of- dition of anonymity because persuade one or the other to ficials have described as the announcement was not back out. "We have met with both months of beh i n d -the- yet official, confirmed that scenes pressure from the account. "It is going to hap- candidates, and they both president, Qayum Karzai is pen, but it i s not f i nalized promised that t hey w ould expected to pull out of the yet," he said. accept any decision that the election today. Despite the vocal support unity jirga takes," said Qazi An aide to Qayum Karzai, of other f amily m embers, Mohammad Amin W eqad, Aminullah Habibi, said Kar- Qayum Karzai's entry to the one of the group's leaders.
That jirga initially voted overwhelmingly to support Qayum Karzai's candidacy,
New York Times News Service
Ng Han Guan/The Associated Press
China's top leaders bow their heads Wednesday to observe a minute of silence to commemorate the victims of the recent knife attacks in Kunming during the opening session of the annual Na-
tional People's Congress in Beijing's Great Hall of the People.
C ina: Moremiitary spen ingisnee e to eept epeace By Stuart Leavenworth McClatcky Foreign Staff
BEIJING — China's plans
I
'
e
I
e
but when they met with Ha-
mid Karzai, he persuaded them to change their decision in favor of Rassoul, ac-
cording to Weqad. "President Karzai's intervention doesn't mean that he wants to intervene in the election," Weqad said. "It was for the good of the count ry. He believes that if h i s brother wins, then the entire country an d w o rl d w o u ld think that the president has
helped him, and will accuse Qayum of rigging the election as the president was accused in 2009.
I
'eP
Ss
I
-
•
Qian Lihua,a major general and a former head of the Defense Ministry's Foreign
to increase its military spend- Affairs Office, said conflict ing by 12.2 percent this year, with neighboring countries a boost over 2013, will surely couldn't be ruled out, with Jaagitate some neighbors but pan as a particular problem. "Japan has lost its direction, please Chinese nationalists who want their country to as- and has been taken advantage sert itself as a dominant Asian of by right-wing forces to chalpower. lenge the international order The jump in military spend- created after World War II," ing, announced Wednesday Qian was quoted as saying. on the first day of the National People's Congress in Beijing, Tensions with Japan comes amid a war of words Friction between Japan and between Japan and China other Asian countries has inover disputed islands in the tensified during the adminisEast China Sea. Relations tration of Japanese Premier between the trading part- Shinzo Abe, a politician with ners have soured, and some a history of making stateanalysts fear that a maritime ments insensitive to nations mishap could spiral into full- that were victims of Japan's blown war.
past war crimes. The mount-
I
China spends less per capi- ing tensions prompted U.S. ta on defense than the United Secretary of State John KerStates and many other coun- ry to visit South Korea and tries do, but it's steadily built China last month. Top State up its armed forces, even as its Department officials remain economic growth has slowed. concerned about the potential Last year, the world's largest for conflict. "I do not believe that any nation spent 10.7 percent of its budget on the military. This party seeks armed conflict in year's 12.2 percent increase the East China Sea," Daniel means that China will spend
nearly 808 billion yuan, or roughly $132 billion, on defense, although many experts think the true figure is higher. For comparison, the U.S. Defense Department budget for
this year is about $600 billion.
Neighbors'response
•
All this week, the Chinese
government has sent mixed
THEBEST OF THE NEST
to a Senate Foreign Affairs subcommittee Tuesday. "But
CONPETITION
F EDE R A L
unintended incidents or acciI
dents may lead to an escalation of tensions or a tit-for-tat
--" "
•
'
I
exchange that could escalate."
I
I I
FRESH NATER
m0llTpOND ~'
'
*
SHON HOURS
Suo/tsorsd//r
DEMO TANK B I. SENINAR SER/ES
"
Redllljjfll. CANP COOKING
SENINARS
SPORTSMEN'S LOVNGE
-
ADMISSION
NEEKDAY D/SCOUNT
Thurs-Fri ...12 noon — 8 p.m Adults.......................... $10 gggP 0 g at participating Baxter Saturday .....10 a.m.—8 p.m 2-day pass .................$15 Auto Parts stores, Les SchwabTire Sunday........10 a.m.-4 p.m Juniors (6-16) ............... $5 Centers, Bi-Mart stores or by using your
Jayco Swift
Children 5 & under....FREE Fred Meyer Rewards card. Discounts may not be combined. jN . lESSNWA8
145RB Trailer
cards t/i/e/come. $1rse will FREE PARKING! Credit be chargedper irdnsac5on.
ott/ritrsr of
RV+~N®E
ff<~'""" ~
f4 s'S raS dtrre srrs ~r s usrV!"
Sss t/sat Ne showibr one oi5M ss/tttch tickets daily.
Rektil ValueS15,325
•
BlI / I /
Jg
i /
Q
knife attack in the south Chi-
on all violent crimes of terror-
ny, at home and abroad — as the nation holds the line on
ism as they violate the dignity oflaw."
other government spending. Authorities have b l amed China is expecting a growth the Kunming bloodbath on rate in its gross domestic assailantsfrom a farwe stern product this year of 7.5 per- region of China, Xinjiang, cent, the same as the target
which is home to millions of
last year. Speaking in the Great Hall
Uighur people, one of China's
f•
•)
presented by
f
SE L C O
SELCO
Presented by • •
•
I
' •
I'
• I'
I
'
•
•
•
'
I
I I
• •
•
Following the speech, a delmier Li Keqiang said "the egate from Yunnan province Chinese people love peace said she welcomed stronger and cherishdevelopment, and government efforts to weed China needs a long-term sta- out terrorists such as those ble international environment who'd attacked Kunming, for its modernization." which is Yunnan's capitaL Yet earlier in his speech Li The delegate — Yang Jinsong, talked about the need to "build a member of the Naxi ethnic China into a maritime power." group — compared the shock "We will strengthen nation- of the attack to what the Unital defense mobilization and ed States experienced after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. "Just like A mericans, we
the Chinese will definitely make big progress on anti-ter3,000 delegates. President Xi rorism as well," said Yang, Jinping and other top govern- standing outside the Hall of ment leaders sat behind him. the Peoplebedecked in a Naxi The same day Li spoke, the robe with a beaded headpiece. state-run China Daily news- "We will collaborate with paper published a provocative American people and peointerview with a top Chinese ple around the world to fight military adviser. The adviser, against such actions."
I
•
I
•
' II •
I
' •
I'
many ethnic minorities.
of the People, Chinese Pre-
said, speaking before roughly
Bl i ahiiellIIIR~a13r, fONj'NOL
12 8 under, all gear provided
fair, the annual "work plan"
is gaining increasing scruti-
coastal and air defenses," Li
You could win valuable prizes from
FREENDS'
While the meeting of the
na city of Kunming. Li broke from his prepared text to say, "We will firmly crack down
terpreparations on a regular footing and enhance border,
r
THE OFFICIAL CHAFT BEER HUNTING, FISHING,„,„~, AND BOATING Th g~~ SENINARS
HEAD 8 HORNS
BACKBY OPlllAR DEMAND
cific affairs, said in testimony
messages about the need for its military buildup — which
the reserve forces, place wa-
I'
I
•
808tlHV Show®
Russel, the assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pa-
speech by the premier is military spending "will rein- watched closel y for signs of force the image of China be- China's growth plans and priing 'assertive,' of preparing to orities, much as the State of force its will upon some of its the Union address is tightly neighbors." parsed in the United States. Roy noted t hat C h i nese Much of Li's speech was leaders chafe at this kind of devoted to China's economic perception, arguing they're reforms — the transition to a just building a military that's consumer economy with less proportional to China's size dependence on exports and and global interests. "But heavy industry. He also noted countries with strategic dis- China's myriad challenges, agreements with China, par- ranging from air pollution to ticularly Japan, the USA and insufficient services for the some of the Southeast Asian elderly to, more recently, docountries, will continue to ask mestic terrorism. what is the compelling need The session started with a on China's part," Roy said moment of silence for the 29 in an email exchange with people killed and 140 injured McClatchy. Saturday in a n o rganized
I
I
Denny Roy, who special- National People's Congress izes in Asia security issues is largely a ceremonial affor the East-West Center in H onolulu, said the h ik e i n
I
• I' r
I
•
sIo
I I'
* 3 99%/tPR
Il r
•
I I
IFYOU PRE-QUALIFY" FOR A BOATORRV LOAN WITHSELCO.
•
.
•
I t
Visit your local branch.
' I o
SHON HOURS
ADNISSION
Thurs-Fri ......12 noon — 8 p.m. Adults.............................$10 Saturday ....... 10 a.m.—8 p.m. 2-day pass ....................$15 Sunday.......... 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Juniors (6-16) ..................$5 Children 5 & under.......FREE
FREE PARKING!
I
I I
ADMISSION
as lowas
e
•
FREE
•
BOATS 8 RVs II
•
'
I I
II
'
Cn.dit cards welcome.$1 ibe wil be chargedper transaction.
ADMISSION
SHOIfHOVRS
Thurs-Fri ......12 noon -8 p.m. Adults.............................$10 Saturday ....... 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 2-day pass ....................$15 Sunday.......... 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Juniors (6-16) ..................$5
FREE PARKING!
Children 5 & under.......FREE Credit cardswelcome.$1rse wil be chargedper transaction.
"Qualifiedborrowersonly. Membershiprequirementsapply. Rangeofrates39996-172496APRbasedoncreditquallcations, repayment petiod, RV/b oatage, loan-to-value, automaticpayments andeStatement enrollment. Otherresttictionsmayapply. Ofer subject to changeat anytime, without notice.SeeSELCOfordetails. I
I
I
I
I
I I
I
I
I
II
I
I
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
BRIEFING
BEND CITY COUNCIL
an saema ne ci
Hikers find human remains A hiker reported finding humanremains Tuesday afternoon ona remote portion of a plateau south of Prineville, police saidWednesday. However, investigators do not suspect foul play, although the investigation is ongoing, according to a newsrelease from the Prineville Police Department. When authorities responded around 2p.m., police andmembers of the CrookCounty Sheriff's Office found the remains were of amale and had beenat the location for several months, the news releasestated. Investigators have a tentative identification of the man, but additional tests are needed to besure. An autopsy is plannedthis week, the releasestated.
• The Bulletin previouslyowned the parcel of land
ing up against the Bend Parkway, was once envisioned as
The 3.1-acre property, on
OSS
Getz Properties LLC will have proposal for a mixed-use until late this year to back out development incorporating a of the deal, but would sacricombination of housing, retail fice $50,000 in earnest money and off ice space on theone-
when the market was high, paid way too much money for it, for a purpose it turned out
the site of a future city hall
were it to do so. Getz Properties, headed
he said. Ramsay said though the
By Scott Hammers
or mixed-use development. Near the height of Bend's real
by Mel Getz, is best-known locally as the developer be-
The Bulletin
estate boom, the city bought
hind The Forum, the east-side
The Bend City Council has agreed to a deal to sell the "Bulletin property," home of this newspaper between 1966 and 2000, for $1.9 million.
the property in 2005 for $4.8 million.
complex anchored by Costco,
Northwest Wall Street across from Pioneer Park and back-
Safeway, Pier 1 and other ma-
jor chains. Councilors said Getz approached the city with a
Under the terms of the deal
agreed to by city councilors Wednesday evening, buyer
time Bulletin property. Under
current zoning, structures up to 55 feet tall may be built on
city will take a sizable loss on
the sale, he's been impressed Announcing the sales by the illustrations shared by agreement Wednesday, Coun- Getz, describing his proposal as "really well-designed" and cilor Scott Ramsay lamented "an attractive addition to the the past council's decision to city." purchase the land. "They bought it at a time SeeCouncil/B2 the site.
A 2010 sex abuse case set for retrial
GILCHRISTSTATE FOREST
Suspect arrested in shopliftingcase A Redmondmanwas arrested Mondayon suspicion of shoplifting and assaulting a store employee, according to a news releasefrom Redmond Police Sgt. Curtis Chambers. Matthew Romine,37, allegedly walkedout of Home Depot onFeb.21 without paying for more than $1,000 in merchandise, Chamberssaid in the news release.Romine allegedly assaulted an employeewhocontacted him, though the employee didn't require medical attention, Chambers said. Romine left the areain a car, leaving someof the items behind, Chambers said. An investigation later identified him asa suspect. On Monday, police located Romine inthe vehicle seen inthealleged shoplifting andassault incident, Chambers said. After his arrest, police obtained asearch warrant for his homeon Northwest Way.Officers saytheyfoundsome of the stolen merchandise and a small marijuana-growing operation when they searchedthe home, Chamberssaid. Romine wasarrested on suspicion of first-degree theft, second-degree theft, third-degree robbery, fourth-degree assault, possession of methamphetamine, manufacture of marijuana andendangering the welfare of aminor. He was beingheld inthe Deschutes County jail Wednesdayevening.
was not feasible for that site,"
By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
A Redmond man convicted
in 2010 of sex abuse is back in the Deschutes County jail to be tried again for the same
charges. Patrick Higgins, 56, who also goes by Elmer Chobo, according to court records, was sentenced to 10 years in prison after a jury found him guilty of forcibly raping a minor female in a Bend hotel room in 2009.
The Oregon Court of Appeals in August 2013 reversed and remanded the The forest takes its name from a family that purchased 60,000 acres of pine in Klamath County during 1938, according to the book
jury's decision based on testimony from the alleged
"OregonGeographicNames."
victim's mother.
Courtesy Oregon Department of Forestry
Court documents indicate
orestwi Bulletin staff report With the Oregon Board of Forestry giving its blessing Wednesday, the state may now start buying land to add to the Gilchrist State Forest south of La Pine.
ow to
The OregonBoardofForestry on Wednesday approved the purchase of 28,800 acres for the Gilchrist State Forest, bringing its total size to 72,200 acres.
~w~ 7 Resdrvoir
plans to buy an additional 28,800 acres 6.:,
plans to purchase the property incrementally over the next twoyears, according to
the release, withthe firstpurchases possibly being made next month.
28,800 acres to de acquired
District Attorney Kandy Gies
e~ Gilc rist
said Wednesday could have been intentional. "Often the defense attor-
10 miles south of La Pine. The forest gets its name from the fami-
ney will make a decision not to object, because when the judge tells the jury not to consider the information, he's actually highlighting
ly who bought 60,000 acres of ponderosa pine in northern Klamath County and The Bulletin's archives and the book "Or-
STATE NEWS
egon Geographic Names." See Forest/B2
an opinion on whether he the truth." The defense attorney didn't object to the testimony at the
County, touching state Highway 31 about
built a sawmill and a company town in 1938 to house its workers, according to
egon law, "a witness, expert or otherwise, may not give
time, a move that Deputy
U.S. Highway 97 in northern Klamath
— Bulletin staffreports
tion, indicating she believed her daughter was telling the
believes a witness is telling
With the new land, the Gilchrist State
Nore briefing, B2
question and then volunteered additional informa-
The appellate court's de-
Gilchrist StateForest
Forestwillbe about 72,200 acres total, the release stated, and stretch eastward from
on the stand answered the
cision states that, under Or-
DESCH TE OUNTY KL ATH UNTY
/.
Attorney Jody Hig gins Vaughan, asked
truth.
Davis
from the Forestry Department. The state
Deputy District the mother what her daughter had told her. The woman
Expanding theGilchrist State Forest
The Oregon Department of Forestry for the forest, using $10 million in bonds and moneyfrom the federalForestLegacy Program, according to a new release
acres
,
the prosecuting attorney, former
NATIONAL FOREST
f
MILE
/'
To Kismath i
Falls
0
Source: Oregon Department of Forestry
I
e
Greg Cross i The Bulletin
it," she said. "The statement
gets said three or four times, while he's telling him it's not
admissible." See Trial /B2
Portland
Corvallis
• Csrvallis:OregonState University is working to address its parking concerns,B3 • Portland:Mailing letters containing white powder results in aman heading to prison,B3
Bend'sTruckStopSkate Parkonthe lookout for a newfacility By Monicia Warner The Bulletin
James Stewart took his first drop into the halfpipe at Truck
Stop Skate Park when he was 5.
Clarification In a story headlined "Redmond's longest-serving mayor believed in community," which appeared Wednesday, March 5, on Page B1,the name of Robert Riggs' wife of three years, Gloria Riggs, was not included in the list of surviving family members.
"I was pretty excited about
that," Stewart said. "It went pretty well. Lots of practice; I
slipped down a coupletimes, but now it's on lock." Stewart, 12, of Bend, is now
an assistant at Truck Stop, helpingskate instructor Gabe Triplette teach other kids the
basics of skateboarding. On Wednesday afternoon, 16 kids arrived with skateboards in
hand, readyto ride. It's the last week of an after-school skate camp sponsored by the Bend
Park & Recreation District. At the camp on Northeast First Street, the kids learn basic
skateboardingtechniques, such as where to place their feet on the board and even a few tricks.
Triplette, 37, said it's gratifying to see the kids' progression. "This has been a longtime coming," he said."Righthere is the next generation." But the next generation of
Bend skateboarders is scrambling to find a newpark space. When Triplette told the kids
atskatecamp Wednesday about Truck Stop's impending move, the disappointmentwas clear. "Is it going to be far?" a youngskater named Matthew
asked. Triplette was unable to answer, because Truck Stop's
future remains uncertain. The owners recently sold the property, and the facility has to be vacatedby May11. The 9,000-square-foot indoor skate facility was originally an emptywarehouse. Ithasbeen operating as a nonprofit since 2008. It indudes a few ramps
and rails, ahalfpipe, abowl and evenaprojectorscreenforkids to hang out and watch movies.
'The goal, really, was to have
a safeplace forkidsto skate because the outdoor facilities
sometimes aren't thebest influence on kids," said Don Wells,
director ofTruck Stop. SeeSkate /B2
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Don Wells, director of the Truck Stop Skate Park, stands at the
copingofthe park'sbowlon Wednesday.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
EvxNT
ENm a rock from a member of Hillstomp; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons,875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066 or www.
TODAY LATE MODELRACECAR VIEWING:View a race car signed by Central Oregon veterans or sign it if you are a veteran; T-shirt sales benefit race car maintenance; free; 8 a.m.; Elks Lodge, 151 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-5304 or kim. phillipp©co.crook.or.us. CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring
crowsfeetcommons.com.
"FOOTLOOSE THEMUSICAL": The Redmond High School drama department presents its winter musical; $12, $10 seniors in advance; $15, $12 seniors at the door; $8 students; 7 p.m.; Redmond High School,675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. BEND COMEDY:Comic Dan Farley
ke c
vendors and resources for outdoor recreation, a head and horns competition, a kids' trout pond, camp cooking demonstrations and
more; $10, $5ages6-16, free ages 5 and younger, $15 for a two-day pass; noon-8 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503552-5003 or www.OTshows.com. "FOOTLOOSE THEMUSICAL": The Redmond High School drama department presents its winter musical; $12, $10 seniors
in advance; $15,$12seniors at the door; $8 students; 7 p.m.; Redmond High School,675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.rhs.redmond.k12.or.us. BURNING QUESTIONSAND BEER WITH LINSEYCORBIN:A Q-and-A with the Ironman Champion; free, reservation requested; 7 p.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or www. footzonebend.com/events. HANZARAKI DUO:The Portland Celtic band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
mcmenamins.com.
NATHANIEL TALBOT: The folk-pop artist performs, with
Council Continued from B1 "We certainly will not re-
coup what was invested, but for many years we haven't collected property taxes on that site, and it's been kind of an eyesore and a blight," he sard. Finance director Sonia Andrews said last week the city
Courtesy of Deschutes County Sheriff's Office
The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office is currently housing a lost, 225-pound pig that was found near Tumalo.
LOCAL BRIEFING
performs; $10; 7 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive; 541-323-1881 or www. bendcomedy.com. Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo "CAPTAIN PHILLIPS":A screening From right, Susan Benson, ScottBurch, Rachel Deegan and Tess of the 2013 film (PG-13) starring Anderson rehearse a song from "The World Goes 'Round," which Hanks; free, refreshments is being presented at 2nd Street Theater. For more information, call Tom available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez 541-312-9626 or visit www.2ndstreettheater.com. Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. Jeffery Martin and Anna and the Hall, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; "THE WORLD GOES'ROUND": Underbelly; $10; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 541-318-3726. A play about celebrating life and 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815- CENTRAL OREGON the fighting spirit; $22, $19 for 9122 or www.belfryevents.com. SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; "THE WORLD GOES'ROUND": vendors and resources for outdoor 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. A play about celebrating life and recreation, a head and horns Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312the fighting spirit; $22, $19 for competition, a kids' trout pond, 9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; camp cooking demonstrations and com. 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. more; $10, $5 ages 6-16, free ages TRIAGE:The improv comedy 5 and younger, $15 for a two-day Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m., 9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. pass; noon-8 p.m.; Deschutes com. County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 doors open 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. 552-5003 or www.OTshows.com. cascadestheatrical.org. FIRST FRIDAYGALLERY FRIDAY SUNNY LEDFORD:The North WALK:Event includes art exhibit Carolina country artist performs; openings, artist talks, live music, LATINO DANCEFESTIVAL: Learn $15 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Latin dances in various workshops; wineand food in downtown Bend Maverick's Country Bar8 and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 proceeds benefit Latino Club Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., p.m. scholarships; $5 per day; Central Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. Oregon Community College, Wille HONG KONG BANANA: Garage maverickscountrybar.com.
property. Aprincipal payment in downtown Bend were highClinton said with the real of $700,000 is due in June, she er than in any other down- estate market showing signs said, along with an i nterest town i n t h e s t ate, Clinton of recovery,Getz's developpayment of roughly $75,000. said, and there was pressure ment could get that redevelopMayor Jim Clinton, the to find a way to expand the ment process moving again. "Always the idea was that only councilor who was on downtown corridor. The Bulthe council when the city pur- letin property appeared to be this property was deserving chased the property, said that worth taking a chance on, he of a really good project. So while th e p u rchase seems said, one that could spur the now, we have a buyer that's foolish in retrospect, it made redevelopment of other prop- committed to doing a good sense at the time. erties along Wall Street be- project," he said. At the time, property val-
still owes $2.1 million on the ues for office and retailspace
tween Greenwood and Port-
land avenues.
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Continued fiom B1
Sheriff's Office holdinglost pig A"miniature" pig weighing more than225 pounds waswaiting for its owner Wednesday atthe Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, according to a newsrelease. The pig, which is aminiature breed, rather than astandard or pot-belly, according to the newsrelease,was found wandering Tuesday northeast of Tumalo in theLong Butte areabetweenU.S. Highway 97 and theOldBend-Redmond Highway. The pig is being held at theSheriff's Office's large animal rescue facility in Bend. The owner or anyonewith information on a possible owner can call the county's nonemergency dispatch line at 541-693-6911and reference CAD¹14-060229, according to the newsrelease.Callers claiming ownership will be askedfor additional descriptive information about the pig.
Crash knocksout power, dlocksroad A single-vehicle, noninjury crash Tuesdayafternoon in Crook County blocked traffic and knockedout power to several residences, according to anews release from the Crook County Sheriff's Office. Deputies responding to areport of a car hitting a power pole about 3:50 p.m. found Doris Spencer,67, of Prineville, trapped in hervehicle on LamontaRoadnearStahancykRoad,Sgt.JamesSavage,wrote in the news release.Thecar was pinnedagainst a fence nearseveral downed power lines. Crook County Fire andRescueCrews got Spencer out of her car. Investigators determined Spencerwastraveling north on Lamonta, when her tires drifted onto the shoulder, according to the newsrelease. Sheovercorrected, and her car fish-tailed, hitting a power pole and severing it, Savagesaid. The pole fell across Lamonta, blocking both lanesfor nearly an hour. Several residenceswerewithout power for about two hours, while crews repaired the lines, Savage said. Spencer did not receive a citation. — Bulletin staffreports
PUBLIC OFFICIALS CONGRESS U.S. Senate
Forest Continued from B1 In 1991, the Gilchrist fam-
ily sold the timber holdings to Crown Pacific, which filed
Concerned the land would
ally totaled 28,800 acres, and
bonds. It was the first new state forest in nearly 70 years,
ment under Gilchrist family
ownership, fell into rough tually went out of business. the Forestry Department said. shape, according to an ODF F idelity N a t i onal Ti m b e r The Conservation F und, report. Loggers cut timber R esources Inc. bought t h e a national nonprofit, bought on virtually every acre in Gilchrist tract in 2006. adjacent land, which eventu- the 1990s, according to the bankruptcy in 2003 and even-
Skate
the nonprofit to support and a
munity involvement. He said
ly on revenue from communi- the timeline is short and the ty sponsorships and the park to-do list includes finding andistrict's various programs to other building, figuring out keep the doors open. This time, how tomake themove and getWells and the park's board ting crews to move and build members are asking for more ramps. "It's going to take us a month than donations. "Just a couple of months to
figure out what we're going to do; explore moving to a new facility, which is going to take another pretty good size building
for deer and other species,
generaterevenue from logging and thinning, as well as provide hunting, off-road riding and other recreational activities.
U.S. House of Representatives and rent that is affordable for
Continued from B1 team of people that really want "We want a place where par- to get involved," Wells said. ents can come in, feel comfortWells said the board will able. They drop their kids off, go hold a meeting next week to dotheirthing andknowthat the let parents and kids know the park's status and ask for comkids are goingtobewatched." Truck Stop has relied main-
report.
be broken up and developed, agreed to hold it until the state With the land under state the state bought about 43,400 could make the purchase. ownership, the Forestry Deacres starting i n 2 010, usThe forest, once considered partment argued, it can be ing Oregon Lottery-backed a model of private manage- m anaged to preserve habitat
Neetingdetails The TruckStopSkatePark board membersaremeeting to plan amoveto anew location. Theyarelooking for a local facility to housethe skate parkandfor volunteers to help movethe rampsand build new rampsata new site. Thepublic meeting is set for 6 p.m.Mondayat the skate park, located at1307 N.E. First St.
move could be accomplished within a few months with com-
munity support.
"It's not impossible, but it takes a team to make it hap-
pen," Wells said. L eo Walterscheid, 18, of
'Ibmalo, has been a park regular for seven years and is now the captain of the Truck Stop Skate Team. He's thinking
about the move as a positive experience. "I prefer to look at it as an opportunity. It gives us a chance to remodel, redo some of the stuff that could be redone and
to at least move, and that's
working eight hours a day," Wells said they'll figure out createa better skate environTriplette said. "The task at plans for the park after next ment," he said. hand is extremely huge and week's meeting. Barring zon— Reporter: 541-633-2117, we're goingto needvolunteers." ing issues from the city, the mwarneribendbulletirt.com
Trial
lawful to try him for the same was signed by a judge Feb. 18. sodomy, first-degree sexual crimes, because a reversal Higgins was then transported penetration, third-degree rape Continued from B1 makes it "as if the trial never back to Deschutes County by and third-degree sodomy. He Now that the conviction is happened." the state Department of Cor- is being held in lieu of $100,000 reversed, the Deschutes CounThough the reversal came rections and booked into jaiL bail. ty district attorney's office will last year, the memorandum Higgins i s a c cused of — Reporter: 541-383-0376, retry Higgins. Gies said it's of reversal making it official firstdegree rape, first-degree skingNbeftdbulletin.com
XEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will updateitems inthe Police Logwhensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges oracquittal, must beverifiable. For moreinformation, call 541-383-0358.
BEMD POLICE DEPARTSIIT Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at5:20p.m. Feb.17, inthe 400 blockof Northeast GreenwoodAvenue. DUII —JayFrederick Fix,66, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at1:54 p.m. Feb.25, inthe 61100 block of U.S.
• Sen. Jeff Merkley,D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend oflice: 131 N.W.HawthorneAve., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend oflice: 131 N.W.HawthorneAve., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
Highway97. DUII —Michael RyanFinn, 34,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 2:03 a.m. Feb. 27, in the1400 block ofNortheast Third Street. Burglary —Aburglary was reported at 7:43 p.m.Feb.27,inthe1200 block of Northwest Ogden Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at8:40 p.m.Feb.27, in the100 block ofNorthwest Oregon Avenue. DUII —RyanTaylor Crain, 22,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 2:57 a.m. March 2, inthe areaof Northwest Harmon BoulevardandHartford Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests weremadeat4:54 p.m. March
2, in the 20100block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUII —Anthony Daniel Duran,25,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at11:53p.m. March 2, intheareaof Northeast Olney AvenueandFirst Street. DUII —Nichole BrenayeTurpin,28, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at11:35p.m. March 3, intheareaof Northeast Third Street andDekalbAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:46 a.m. March 4, inthe1600 block of Northeast ForbesRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported at4:54 p.m. March 4, inthe19800 block of Southwest VillanoPlace. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:24p.m.Feb.27,
in the 2000block ofNortheast Third Street. DUII —Margaret AnnKoch, 52, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at12:40 a.m. March 4, inthe 61400block of South U.S. Highway97. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at9:49a.m. March2, in the1400 block ofNortheast Tucson Way.
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —SusanAdair Walker, 56, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence ofintoxicants at 3:26 p.m. March 4, inthe areaof U.S. Highway 97 and VandevertRoad.
• Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bend oflice: 1051 N.W.BondSt., Suite400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
900 Court St.N.E.,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state. OI;us
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
House efRepresentatives • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St.N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E.,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state. Ol;US
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. MikeMcLsne, R-District 55 (Crook, portion ofDeschutes) 900 Court St. N.E.,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. GeneWhisnant, R-District 53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St.N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state. OI;us
STATE OF OREGON
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
• Gov. John Kitzhsder, D 160 StateCapitol, 900Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • SecretaryofState KateBrown,D 136 StateCapitol Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. oi;us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E.OregonSt., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
DESCHUTES COU5ITY
LKGISLATURE
• Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us
Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District30 (Jefferson, portion ofDeschutes) 900 Court St. N.E.,S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E.,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion ofDeschutes)
1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend,OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
CountyCommission • Tammy Baney,R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@ co.deschutes.or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@co.deschutes. ol'.Us
• TonyDeBone,R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone©o.deschutes. ol'.Us
CROOK COU5ITY 300 N.E.Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration@co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
CountyCourt •MikeMc Cabe,CrookCountyjudge Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@co.crook. OI;us
JEFFERSON COU5ITY 66 S.E. 0St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Welx www.co.jefferson.or.us
CountyCommission • Mike Ahern • JohnHsffield • WayneFording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner©co.iefferson. or.us
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
a resses ar in issue • Altering its fee structure, the Corvallis university hopes toalleviate frustration
Parking permits now cost and neighborhood livability," $267 annually for faculty and Clark said. staffmembers and $195 for The fees could go into efstudents, no m a tter w h ere fect this fall, Clark said, after they park. a seriesof presentations and The Associated Press ties are another. The new plan would charge recommendations from a task CORVALLIS — Or e g on The variable permit fees far more, perhaps $550 an- force. He said it's important State University is consid- could raise prices for close- n ually, for permits in t h e any decision mesh with the ering new parking fees it in spots and cut them steeply congested northern part of city's work on expanding reshopes could make it attrac- forlotswhere spots are rarely campus and far less, perhaps idential parking districts. OSU's plan also includes tive for staff and students used, said Steve Clark, vice as low as $50 or $100, for selnot to park in surrounding president for university rela- dom-used lots. promotingthe increased use "We know that parking of the Oregon State shuttle neighborhoods. tions and marketing. That's been an irritant in OSU has about 7,000 park- on campus is frustrating for and other t r ansit i mprovetown-gown relations that both ing spaces, but only 75 percent our students and staff, and ments, as well as encouraging the school and the city have are used each day. Hundreds as parking spills out into sur- faculty, staff m embers and been working on in recent of spaces are empty in farlots, rounding neighborhoods, it s tudents to bike, walk a n d years. Noise and rowdy par- such as behind Reser Stadium. affects both commuter traffic carpool.
AROUND THE STATE OffiCer takeS plea deal in ShOOtOut — Anoff-duty Hilsboro police officer who exchangedgunfire with officers during a domestic dispute in Forest Grove reportedly has pleadedguilty to three counts of aggravated attempted murder. A pleadeal could send Timothy Cannon to prison for10 years. The46-year-old resigned from the Hillsboro department after the shooting in January in which dozens of shots were fired as officers responded to a911call from his wife, who said she hadbeenthreatened. Cannon surrendered. His wife and 6-year-old daughter were unharmed.Cannonandanother officer suffered minor injuries. Rail trail prOpOSal —A proposal to develop an 85-mile trail along an old railroad bed in northwestern Oregon is gaining steam in Salem. Theold Pacific Railway andNavigation Company line linking the towns of BanksandTillamook was devastated in a 2007 flood and never reopened. Afewyears later, state officials began looking to convert it into a trail for hikers, bikers, horseback riders and the Oregon Coast Scenic Railroad. TheHouseapproved a bill Wednesday directing state agencies to work with local governments andother partners to develop a planfor constructing the trail, which would run along the railway line. It also authorizes fundraising efforts and establishes a fund to payfor the plan's development and implementation. The bill goes next to the Senate.
Man SentenCed fOr killing half drether — AnOregonjudge
Ontari o atopa listofthestate'sleastsafeci ties By Zachary Chastaine
gent manslaughter, rape, rob- had similar crime statistics, acbery, aggravated assault, prop- cordingto the FBI records. That ONTARIO — In a r e cent erty crime, burglary, larceny, suggests that if Ontario were article by Movoto Real Estate, vehide theft and arson. bigger or smaller, its crime rate Ontario was listed as the least West Linn, which was rated likely would change to reflect safe city in Oregon. But does the safest city in Oregon, has a the population size. the report offer a fair picture of population of about 25,000 peoOntario has a smaller poputhe city? ple and has a statistically very lation than Pendleton by about The simple answer is, kind low crime rate.'Ibalatin, by con- 6,000 and Oregon City by of. While statistics do show trast, has a similar population 21,000. However, those three Ontario has a higher crime — about 26,000 people — but cities have very similar numrate than some cities with sim- has significantly higher crime bers ofproperty crimes, burilar populations, that might not numbers in each category. This glaries and robberies, which make it the least safe city in makes Tualatin statistically means statistically, Ontario Oregon. much less safe than West Linn. has a higher crime rate in those The article used statistics However, Turner has a pop- categories. from cities listed by the Fed- ulation of about 1,800 and had However, of those three citeral Bureau of Investigation three murders in 2012. There ies, Ontario was the only one as having a population of at is no way to tell if that data is a w ith nomurders or arsons in least 10,000 people in the year fluke or not. So while Turner is 2012. 2012. This means the majority probably very safe most of the The only category in which of towns and cities in the state time, it has a very high murder Ontario was notably higher were not included in the study, rate. than other cities in Oregon was as most of them have small A quick look at the FBI data aggravated assault. Ontario repopulations. used by Movoto reveals some portedlyhad 64assault cases in The study looks at violent interesting findings. Cities 2012. That's as many as Forest crime, murder and non-negli- about the same size as Ontario The Argus Observer
Online To view FBIdataand make your owndecision, visit www.fbi.gov. Grove, which has twice the population of Ontario. That rate is triple the number of ag-
gravated assaults in Ashland, which also has roughly twice Ontario's population.
City officials aren't in the dark about Ontario's shadowy
side. City Manager Jay Henry is moving forward with plans to try and put a dent in the statistics.
"Both Ontario Police Chief
M ark Alexander and I a r e aware of the crime statistics,
and that is why we recommended moving forward with (a safety study), which is currently underway," Henry said.
has sentenced aLaneCounty man to 10 years in prison for killing his half brother last fall. Judge Martin Stone sentenced LaddRobson on Tuesday for first-degree manslaughter under the terms of a plea agreement. Robson hadbeencharged with murder in the Nov. 20 deathofLanceLuceroata homeowned byRobson'sparentsinthe southern Oregon community of Myrtle Point. Police and firefighters say they found Lucero lying on the floor with severe headand facial injuries when they responded to a911call about an injured man. He was pronounced deadshortly after arriving at a hospital. Neighbors told police they hadheard the brothers fighting inside the housethat morning. COaCh in COurt On SeXChargeS — The WestSalem High School girls basketball coach accused of sexually abusing a player was in Polk County Circuit Court Tuesday to hearthat he nowfaces additional sex abusecharges. The lawyer for 30-year-old Emrance Berger said hewould hold off entering a plea. He's next due in court on March17. Berger wasarrested Feb. 11after a girl reported him to her parents. He remains free onbail. Berger reportedly has beenput on unpaid leave bytheSalem-Keizer School District. He also works with the Department of HumanServices and hasbeenput on paid leave by theagency.
Mlsslng Gresham man found — Authorities saya76-yearold Greshammanmissing for two weeks hasbeenfound in Seattle. Police in Greshamsaid it's not known what he's been doing, but one witness said heappeared to have been in Seattle for several days, looking for a home to rent. Police hadsaid the man,Gary Gochnour, may suffer from dementia. Hewas seen leaving Gresham driving a U-Haul truck on Feb. 27and said to havebeenmoving to live with his sister. — From wire reports
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
"Being Di a b e t ic, I n e v e r h ad p a i n - f r ee f e et - U N T I L N O W ! "
Letters net
man 2-year prison term By Steven DuBois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — A federal judge on Wednesday sentenced a Washington man to two years in federal prison for sending threatening letters laced with a suspicious powder to members of Congress, journalists, as well as comedians
Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert. Christopher Lee Carlson, 41, apologized Wednesday, telling the judge he was having a manic episode two years ago when he mailed more than 100 letters that
warned of a deadly pathogen, but turned out to be a mixture of celery salt and corn starch.
"I'm not the type of person who wants to hurt or scare anyone," said Carlson, a former nurse who
was ~
at e d that the Occupy
movement and President Barack
Obama did not bring greater change. Carlson faced a maximum of
five years in prison after pleading guilty in October to mailing one of his letters to U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski, of Maryland. Other counts
were dropped in exchange for the plea. Federal prosecutors sought a three-year sentence. Judge Michael Simon, whose wife is a con-
gresswoman, went a year less, because Carlson is a first-time offenderand was diagnosed with bipolardisorder after the arrest. Carlson did not commit a crime while on pretrial release and a psychiatrist testified he is responding well to a combination of Prozac and Zyprexa. Roughly two dozen letters from the mass mailing were opened, and the contents alarmed congres-
sional offices in Washington, D.C., and field offices across the country. In the charge related to Mikul-
ski, all 10staff members inher Baltimore office were evacuated to an empty room for about two hours.
U.S. Attorney Stephen Peifer said Carlson appeared to have fun during the episode. Besides the threats and mysterious substance, the letters included a photo
of young Johnny Cash flipping his middle finger toward a camera. Carlsonwas ordered to reportto
prison by April 17.
Pain Doctor Discovers Blood Flow-Busting Material Into 'Miracle Socks' for Diabetics and Foot Pain Sufferers! Breakthrough circulation-boosting fibers improve blood flow, relieve swelling, bOOSt OXygen flOW, and eliminate fOot fatigue - naturally in aS little aS 5 minuteS! What part of your swollen, tired, or "Circulatory dysfunction affects achy feet would you l ike to se e MOST of the adult population in the 'go-away'? United States. Heart Disease, Strokes and Diabetic conditions are at epidemic If you suffer from poor circulation, levels; anything that improves circulainjury, swelling or any condition that tion improves cellular health and vitalleavesyour feetfatigued and sore,then ity. I use the Bambusa product myself read on to discover the breakthrough and recommend it to my clients. It rethat can change your life. ally works!" states Dr Jahner.
Good news comes in the form of a 'pain-busting microfiber' that is used to weave a circulation-boosting sock, called Bambusa™.
Results Ia Miautes? John G. Df California claims he felt immediate results with hi s t i red, swollen feet. "Without exaggeration the relief was almost instantaneous. It is Better Blood Flow like a heating pad set to low and The 'miraclesock' ism ade from a wrapped around my calf. I will be ree new, patented anion-technology that is placing my entire set ofdresssocks with w eavedinto every strand ofthread used thesesocks!" to make a Bambusa™ sock. This special micro-fi ber thread ism ade &om revoluRelief for Tired, Swollen Feet 'Miracle Socks" Reunite Man and Best Friends tionary bamboo charcoal to stimulate Bambusa™ socks are not a medical "My feet were conetantly hurting. I have a very physical job that requires my blood flow andrevitalize feet. When device or compression socks because this material comes in contact with they don't restrict blood flow. Utilizing to be on my feet all day. I would come home and couldn't wait to get my shoes off body-heat it is proven to release circu- the special negative-anion technology, and put my feet up. They were hot, swollen and sometimes I got "pin pricks" for lation-boosting ions. they comfortably increase blood flow hours at a time. It became a dally issue and I started to avoid walking whenever and oxygen to tissues. "My feet felt possible. Ieven stopped walking my dogs everyday because my feetwere so The 3D-weave technology used in wonderful, cool, and I never got that wrecked at the end of the day. It wasn't even two days of wearing the socks when the material has been compared to in- pins andneedles feeling anymore. I love frared light therapy to help revitalize my Bambusa~ socks," says Nancy, I felt an amazing difference. I got home and my feet just didn't hurt. I took my dogs stiff and sore muscles. The manufac- &om NJ. for a walk for 45 minutes and my feet still felt great. And when I took my shoes turer, who also makes a back and wrist off my feet weren't sweaty. I wear my Bambusa™socks everyday. I know my dogs sleeve, says the material provides alThey are ideal for diabetics and those areas happy as my feetlThankyou!" -Tom F.,New Jersey most instant relief to any part of the suffering from neuropathy or injury body it touches, making it ideal for dia- from repeti tive use. Bambusa~ socks "I went out on the golf course for 18 IDEAL FOR: betics, athletes, inflammation, stifRess can also bring comfort to tired legs • Neuropathy and swelling. within minutes of putting them on, en- holes of golf, and when I got home my • Raynaud's Syndrome ergizing individuals who spend long feet weren't swollen, they weren't sweating and my feet didn't hurt," says • Cramping Anne M. from California agrees. hours on their feet. Lou B. from New York. • Cold Feet "Bambusa socks are absolutely the most comfortablesocks I have ever worn! Goodbye toPain and Numbness Tom from NJ reports, "I suffer from My feet are no longer fatigued!" Marilyn H. has suffered persistent BENEFITS: • Increasedblood f low and chronicfoot cramps. My feetwere footproblems foryearsand noticed fast oxygen sore for days after the cramping. My Therapy Without A Prescription! results. "The issue for me was persistent • Reduced swelling and pain wifegave me the Bambusa™ socks, I When the socks were photographed numbness in my toes - it was gone com• Anti-microbial wore them, and the foot cramps using a thermographic imaging camera, pletely after a few days of wearingthese • Wicks away moisture stopped. I replaced all my socks with resultsshowed up to a 17% to 22% in- socks! Being diabetic, I never hmt pain• Increasedrange ofm otion Bambusa™. My feetfeeigreatnow." crease in blood flow. This helped to im- &ee feet - UNTIL NOW!" provemuscleoxygenation and decrease T hermogra p hi c I m a g i n g %y Bambusa Risk Free! footfatigue. The socks have been Order Bambusa~ at no risk and proven to provide extended relief &om receivetwo bonus pairs of socks abcold, swollen and fatigued feet. solutely free! The technology used in Bambusa™ socks is independently Doctor tested to boost circulation, blood flow Recommended and oxygen,These circulation-boostPain specialist of ing socks allow you to wrap yourself 30 years, Dr. Jaimer in relief. comments on the 3Dweave technology. '~ "Infrared therapy has Bambusa™ is backed by a satisfactionguarantee so you can expertbeen used for years at ence the short and long term results medical clinics to treat risk free. as a Nabonel Board VaSCular and Cireulatory conditions. Physpalhic Physician ical therapists use i zes in naturalpain infrared t heraPy t O
speed recovery. Better blood flow equals lesspain.This microfiber works much the same way."
The infrared anions generated by the charcoal bamboo increase blood flow and deliver oxygen to the tissues. After wearing for only minutes there is an increase in temperature due to the increased blood flow, resulting in improved comfort and reduced swelling. Twenty minutes after using the anion-fiber infused socks, patient has betler blood flow and less numbness.
Receive 2 Free Pairs of Socks!
1-SOO-298-6215
This pmduct has not been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. It is not intended to cure, treat or prevent any disease or illness. Individual results will vary. Dr. Ronald Jahner is compensatel for bis opinioas.
B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
i e-ran in o ions vi a
I i y ~'
. '
'
,
',' a', I. •
NNTNINN- LP UcsNolNNTNIIY ANTAIN 'FSPIIA PLAY Iljl'IIILB %. RK6%N SOQ,IIIloRD %RLV AleNS.
orsae
%&P@I
8n 10YARN . Polt, "NIIolsAToRY" Al& f5 fog "QSSSAN(86" OR Vg,6. VE85A®
'"~ qsB.I '„WIIIS
hen the state of Oregon was strapped for cash a couple of years ago, officials made a decision. The state's Driver and Motor Vehicle Services Division — DMV — put an endto Saturday service hours. Now Oregon has a bit more money, andlawmakers are poised to reconsider the matter. Representatives have approved House Bill 4047 by a substantial majority. The bill is awaiting second and third readings in the Senate and seems headed for approval by week's end. Rather than simply order the DMV to reopen offices on Saturday, HB 4047 sets up a task force to study the agency's customer service and make recommendations about ways to improve it. That's good. A simple restoration of Saturday hours maynot be what serves Oregonians best. In some areas of the state, additional hours, no matter when they were scheduled, would be a major improvement. Eastern Oregon counties, for example, are huge, and DMV offices few and far between. As a result, residents of Maupin, in Wasco County, must drive 40 miles to visit the DMV office in The Dalles or nearly 50 to visit the one in Madras. Residents of other rural communities face similar hurdles.
A return to Saturday hours would improve the situation, but the task force should not stop there. Are extended weekday hours feasible, and is there a demand for them? In an era when taking time off from work to wait at the DMV while your child obtains a learner's permit is less acceptable than it used to be, staying open beyond 5 p.m. some weekdays may be valuable. Washington state, meanwhile, has turned over a chunk of its drivers' testing to driving schools, a move that has cut wait time dramatically. Is that feasible here? Probably not so much in rural Oregon, but it's worth considering for larger cities. The task force will be composed of lawmakers, citizens and business representatives. It will give lawmakers recommendations in time for the 2015 legislative session. Ratherthan focus narrowly on one thing — Saturday hours — it should take a far broader look at what might work in Oregon.
Investmentstructure change to save money
w
e don't often support the creation of n e w s t ate agencies, but the one that would be created by House Bill 4144 is different. In this final week of the Legislature's 2014 session, it should be approved. The bill would make the Oregon Investment Council — now a part of the treasurer's office that invests all state funds, including Public Employee Retirement System and State Accident Insurance Fundan independent state agency. The treasurer's investment d ivision would move tothe new agency, and the council would take over many investment oversight and risk management duties that currently are handled by third-party contractors. Finally, the council would takeover management of a portion of its multibillion-dollar investment portfolio. The changes would do a variety of things, not the least of which is save PERS and SAIF money they now must spend on fees for contractors. Current estimates are that PERS alone would save $2.8 billion over the next 20 years. The plan would put at least
some distance between the politics of lawmaking and the arcane business of investing, with an eye toward both safety and return. Politics and investing do not mix well, generally, and the new distance is valuable to everyone who has a PERS retirement account. Meanwhile, state Treasurer Ted Wheeler acknowledges that the change would diminish his power somewhat, because the investment staff would be responsible not just to the treasurer but to the council as a whole. That's important, Wheeler notes, because the council members are and would remain p ersonally responsible for a n y breach of fiduciary duty. Another issue in the legislation also involves the role of the treasurer. What should the treasurer's position be on the investment council? We believe the treasurer should be chairman. Having an elected official in the position gives voters a means to hold the council more accountable. Lawmakers have until Sunday to complete action on the bill. It's a deadline they should meet.
SX.+ OAS
~,H
, VV ®i, •
h
IP
Bill may help suicide prevention By Susan Keys IN MY VIEW uicide is a critical public health problem facing the nation and cil has recognized the importance the state of Oregon. of treatment, making training in Among all states, Oregon has the evidence-based treatment practices ninth highest rate of suicide, and for clinicians working with suicidal with the age-adjusted rate of 17.1 patients a priority in the county's deaths by suicide per 100,000, its suicide prevention plan. rate is 41 percent higher than the naTreating only those with identitional average. fied needs as the state's principal Although rates increase with age, prevention strategy, however, falls suicide is the second leading cause short of what is required for a comof death among our state's youth. prehensive plan. Primary prevenThe recent death of a young per- tion, aimed at reducing the risk of son from Bend High School brings suicide for those not yet in crisis, is the pain of such tragic losses all also a critical component. too close to home. Many of us have Supported by funding under the probably been asking ourselves Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act, why has this happened? How could Oregon created a plan for youth suithis happen here in our commu- cide prevention that emphasizes 15 nity? What are we missing? What primary prevention strategies, incould we have done differently? cluding developing public education There are no easy answers to campaigns to increase knowledge these questions. Suicide by its very of suicide and promote help-seeknature is complex and its prevention ing; training for members of the requires a multifaceted approach community and students in how that involves a wide array of pre- to identify those at risk of suicide vention and treatment strategies. and refer services; educating meAs part of the 77th Oregon Leg- dia to reduce suicide contagion; and islative Assembly, Rep. Sara Gelser skill building for youth and family introduced House Bill 4124, which members. she hopes will help stem the tide Gelser is working hard to assure of youth suicide in Oregon. Her bill that the state's strides on the preasks that greater focus be given to vention side of suicide will not fall "developing strategies for interven- by the wayside as the Addictions tion with suicidal, depressed, and Mental Health Division responds at risk youth." Providing greater to its new charge under HB 4124 of emphasis to the treatment side of developing strategies for interventhe suicide prevention equation is tion and treatment for those already a critical component of a compre- identified as suicidal. To this end, hensive plan for suicide prevention. Gelser has asked that funding be In Deschutes County, the county's made available for two youth suiSuicide Prevention Advisory Coun- cide prevention positions — one to
S
remain under public health staff to
lead primary prevention efforts and one within Addictions and Mental Health Services to lead the expand-
ed mandate of tertiary prevention. As the former branch chief for prevention initiatives at the Sub-
stance Abuse and Mental Health S ervices Administration, a
divi-
sion of the federal Department of Health and Human Services, I provided oversight for the initial development of the Garrett Lee Smith
Memorial Act suicide prevention program that has awarded funds to
states, tribes and college campuses. Recognizing the importance of a comprehensive approach to suicide prevention, the federal mandate was clear — funds awarded to states and tribes were to be expend-
ed for prevention programs, such as those mentioned above, and direct services, including treatment
for those identified as suicidal. As a community, as a state, as a nation, we will never get ahead of the problem of suicide if our only approach is treatment for those identified as suicidal or prevention aimed at
those who are not yet in crisis. We must commit to robust prevention programs and to providing direct services to those in need. It is not a question of one or the other. We need both.
Fortunately for Oregon, Gelser understands this. — Susan Keysisan associate professor and senior researcher at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus and vice chairwoman oftheD eschutes County Public Health Advisory Board.
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 brevlty, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submltted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter Or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My
View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin.
Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com
City staff has misled the public on its water project By Peter Schnelder
in light of the public's feelings? What
end's water department staff, hold does this consulting company including T o m Hi c k m ann, have on our city officials? engineering and infrastruc- For example: The HDR contract ture planning director, seems com- was for approximately $10 million,
IN MY VIEW
from numerous other cities facing similar regulation — and also accessing their water from forested mitted to completing the surface or 15 percent, of stated project costs. watersheds — shows they have water improvement project exact- The American Society of Civil En- chosen the much less expensive UV ly as proposed by HDR, regard- gineers Manual 45 (Compensation treatment system. less of cost or public opposition. It forBasicServices)suggests afeefor When some of these cities were has prevented any examination of consulting services based on con- asked why, the cities explained UV is alternatives. struction cost. Suggested fees for en- much cheaper and gives exactly the Normally, the staff might be jus- gineering services on a $65 million same results for cryptosporidium retified in believing they have more projectare between 4.7 percent and duction as the membrane system. knowledge than the general public 5.7 percent of the construction cost When Bend established a citiwhen it comes to public projects. — less than $4 million. zens panel in late 2013 to look at the However, in this case there is wideResearch by qualified experts and choice of treatment, the only data spread public opposition to the HDR experiencefrom other communi- the panel received was from the project and some of the most qual- ties has proven that the exact same city staff and consultants hired by ified and knowledgeable people water treatment results could be the city staff. They never received in Bend have grouped together in achieved for less than half the cost of meaningful and objective data on opposition. the HDR project. the UV alternative. The city staff has made misstateFor example: The city has repeatFor example: Hickmann told City ments, distributed biased informa- edly insisted that the HDR memCouncil in November 2013 that there tion and acted irresponsibly. brane treatment system is absolute- was no restriction on the value enWhy has the staff fought so hard ly necessary. However, experience gineering review of the city's mem-
ner, the former mayor, pointed out
• In early 2013, city staff prematurely, again, moved pipes into po-
the city had, in actual fact, excluded
sition off Skyliners Road prior to
the costly and controversial membrane filtration from any value engi-
construction without required per-
brane filtration system. Alan Bruck-
mits. When permits were denied, the
pipes were removed at a significant cost. • In 2012, Hickmann appeared scrutinized by the team, because they represent elements ... that can- before the council saying the city not bechanged .. .must have mem- needed another million dollars in neering review as an "aspect of the project that the city does not want
brane filtration." Not only has the city staff sought
order to hire a consultant to monitor the consultants that were to do the
to mislead the public, it has apparently created a culture where they
construction of the new systemeven though planning for the system
rely on consultants that have been
wasn't finished at that time.
selected, directed and paid by the city staff for all answers. • In 2012, a city consultant said it
These are just a few examples of the city staff's behavior. Is there anything th e
c i t izens
would be a good ideato buy the nec- of Bend can do to rein in this outessarysteelfortheproposed pipe at of-control staff between now and that time, even though the plans for the upcoming council election this the pipeline were not completed. The November? city spent several million dollars For Bend's future I certainly hope on this premature and speculative we can find something. purchase. — Peter Schneider lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WEST NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES Iris Edith Ratz, of Bend May 4, 1923 - Feb. 24, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471
Services: A Celebration of Life will be held 1:00 PM March 9, 2014 at Trinity Lutheran Church, 2550 NE Butler Market Rd., Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Trinity Lutheran Church and School, 2550 NE Butler Market Rd., Bend, OR 97702.
Marsha Ann Eynon, of Redmond July 20, 1943 - Mar. 3, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life will be Saturday, March 8, 2-4, the family home, 2323 SW Reindeer Ave., Redmond. Contributions may be made to:
Brightside Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond, OR 97756, www.brightsideanimals.org or Meals on Wheels C/0 COCOA, 373 NE Greenwood Ave., Bend, OR 97701.
Carole Ann Motl, of Redmond Sept. 17, 1958 - Mar. 1, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place at a later date. Contributions may bemade to:
American Cancer Society Relay for Life, 2350 Oakmont Way, Suite200, Eugene, Oregon 97401.
Roxie Orleva Grant, of Prineville June 2, 1925 - Mar. 3, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will be announced at a later date.
Olive "Pat" Irene Nixon, of Bend June 3, 1908 - Feb. 27, 2014
Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: At Pat's request, no formal services will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
John Henry Tillman, Jr., of Bend April 28, 1922 - Mar. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Wednesday, March 12, 2014, at 2:00 PM at Brookside Place in Redmond. A second Memorial Service will be held on May 18, 2014, from 1:00 to 5:00 PM at McNary Yacht Club near Hermiston, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, 541-382-5882, www.partnersbend.org
Randall"Randy" Trautman, of La Pine May 27, 1960 - Mar. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service was held March 5, 2014 at High Lakes Christian Church in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:
Humane Society of Central Oregon, www.hsco.org.
Dixie Ann Manzano, of Crooked River Ranch Nov. 8, 1946 - Mar. 2, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Brightside Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Avenue, Redmond, Oregon 97756, www.brightsideanimals.org
helped to wage war on poverty By Emily Langer
Same E. Taylor,of Bend Jan. 17, 1922 - Mar. 1, 2014 Arrangements:
Niswonger-Reynolds is
honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: At his request there will
be no service.
Bill Adler, 84: Pursued his
goal of being the PT. Barnum Gmff Edwards, 83:An em- of books by conceptualizing, cee of game shows, including writing, editing, compiling and "Treasure Hunt" and "Jack- hustling hundreds of thempot." He also worked as a radio prompting one magazine to DJ and made appearances on anoint him "the most fevered TV series, including "Petticoat mind" in publishing. Died FriJunction," "I Dream of Jeannie" day in New York City. and "Diff'rent Strokes." Died Don Singleton, 77:A former Wednesday in Los Angeles reporter whose byline was faMarilyn Riseman, 86:A so- miliar to readers of The Daily cialite and former party plan- News, often writing investiner who at one time owned a gative articles that examined chain of avant-garde clothing corruption in high places. Died storesacrossthe country.Died Sunday in Hoboken, N.J. Tuesday in Boston. — From wire reports
Obituary policy
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
On Monday, its information team visited Astoria High
tives to improve the lives of the poor, died Feb. 26 at his home
eral ofthese differenttraining
in Santa Barbara, Calif. He
was 86. The cause was complications from Parkinson's disease
and testing areas and add additional activity," said John Mosher, Northwest Environ-
Training and Testing Study and other vessels using acArea. tive, midrange sonar, which The training area covers a has been shown to affect maswath of ocean more than 100
rine mammal behavior.
miles wide along the Washington, Oregon and Northern
ability to perform up to 100
California coastlines. Navy
The Navy is requesting the midrange sonar tests a year, along with up to 30 bombing
officials have said 90 percent of the testing will occur off the Olympic Peninsula, where testing goes right up to the coast, south to the Long
In fall 2015, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Navy will provide a final
Beach Peninsula in W ash-
statement.
exercises.
ington. Testing in Oregon and The draft environmental Californiaoccurs no closer impact statement is a v ailmental program manager for than 12 miles from the shore. able for download at www. the U.S. Pacific Fleet. Beginning to a dvanced Nwtteis.com.
and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, said his son Wade Boone. R ichard Boone came t o
Washington to join the staff of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy in the early 1960s. In
1964, after the establishment of the Office of Economic Opportunity under the leader-
ship of R. Sargent Shriver Jr., Boone helped conceptuali ze and lead what became known
as the Community Action Programs. Boone became one of the most forceful proponents of the philosophy that grassroots efforts — as opposed to top-down initiatives carried out by social workers and oth-
er profess ionals — were more likely to alleviate urban blight and other social ills.
He "was the most radical of
the Kennedy Administration
poverty fighters, but he was a radical in the Kennedy spirit," journalist Nicholas Lemann wrote in a history of the War
Poverty as an opportunity to be seized." Boone helped popularize the concept of "maximum feasible participation" — a catchphrase of the era that
referred to the empowerment of local communities — and helped establish Head Start,
Upward Bound and numerous health and legal services for underserved communities,
Frank Mankiewicz, a former top aide to Kennedy, said in an
CALIFORNIA NEWS
GOP gubernatorial candidateuses role in TARP to garnish credentials By Seama Mehta
leaders in both parties supported the bailout in 2008.
Los Angeles Times
"If you don't grab the bat and try to hit the ball," he ex-
Similar bipartisan efforts plained, "your opponents are could reduce unemployment going to grab the bat and beat ifornia's governor is staking and poverty in California and you over the head with it." his bid on having run the $700 improve its beleaguered pubThey are trying. billion federal bank bailout lic schools, he told the group. Although nearly all of the — even as GOP candidates He is in an awkward spot. state's Democrats in Washacross the nation distance I n t h e 20 1 0 ington — including thenthemselves from the highly elections, GOP House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unpopular program. politicians who and Sens. Dianne Feinstein As he courts voters, former s upported t h e and Barbara Boxer — voted U.S. Treasury official Neel b ailout w e r e for TARP, Democrats began Kashkari rarely mentions pilloried. And hammering Kashkari about the Troubled Assets Relief Kashkari r ece ntly, t he it even before he officially Program by name. But he issue has been launchedhiscampaign. "He claims to be a n ew says that it staved off anoth- raised against GOP candier Great Depression, and he dates in Virginia, Kentucky California Republican, but cites his work on the program and Louisiana. he said that bailing out Wall as proof of what he could do As aresult, Republicans are Street banks was the great"running as fast as their legs est economic policy in histoin Sacramento. "You know what we did, can carry them in the other ry," Dan Newman, a political and it almost never happens? direction," said Larry Sabato, spokesman for Gov. Jerry We got Republicans and director of the University of Brown, said in November. Democrats to work together," Virginia's Center for Politics. Congress authorized $700 Kashkari said. But b e cause K a s hkari billion in taxpayer funds for LOS ANGELES — A Republican who wants to be Cal-
H is work s p anned t w o administrations, those of Re-
helped draft the framework
for the bailout and then ran publican George W. Bush and the program, he has no choice Democrat Barack O bama, except to embrace it, Sabato he noted, and congressional said.
TARP. Ultimately, $422 billion was distributed. All of
it was repaid, and the government made a $13 billion profit.
interview.
In 1965, Boone left the government to b ecome executive director of the Citizens'
Crusade Against Poverty, a group with funding from labor
Richard (Rick) Clyde Margeson Ir.
unions and the Ford Founda-
tion. He focused on a variety of issues related to poverty, in
particular hunger, malnutrition and the food stamp program — causes he would continue to pursue throughout his career. He worked with the Cen-
ter for Community Change in Washington and as director of the Robert F. Kennedy Me-
morial before joining the Field F oundation in New York i n 1977. He served as director of
that grant-giving organization until it shut down in 1989. In 1981, Boone helped found
the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington. He continued working as a policy adviser until his death. Richard Wolf Boone was born on March 29, 1927, in
Louisville, Ky., and grew up watching his father, a doctor, serve destitute communities.
Boone served in the Navy in the Pacific during World War II. He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1948 University of Chicago. After college, Boone worked in Chicago as a captain in the Cook County Sheriff's Office, where he gained experience in the prevention — rather than
the punishment — of juvenile delinquency, his son said. In W ashington, Boone worked closely with Kennedy on juvenile-crime matters
and helped launch the Appalachian Volunteers, a precursor to Volunteers in Service to
America. Survivors include his wife of more than si x
Phone: 541-617-7825
national security.
solidate and pull together sev-
launch President Lyndon B.
and a master's degree in social sciences in 1959, both from the
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
tends is critical to protecting
later led private-sector initia-
Richard Boone, who helped
training exercises include
with th e N a tional M a rine work on vehicles, weapons The U.S. Navy is seeking to Fisheries Service for reau- systems, locating submarenew its federal permission t horizations and t h e U . S . rines, finding and removing to continue the controversial Fish and Wildlife Service on underwater mines and othtesting of sonar and weapons mammals listed on the Ener explosives and training systems in the Pacific Ocean dangered Species Act and divers. from Northern California to Marine Mammal Protection The testing side includes the Canadian border between Act that pass through what's practicing with ships and 2015 and 2020, training it con- known a s t h e N o r t hwest planes to f in d submarines
Johnson's War on Poverty and
The Washington Post
in 1988. He "saw the War on
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
The Navy must consult
The Daily Astorian
part of a public review process to inform people about the project and give them a chance to comment. "The effort here is to con-
Oct. 21, 1929 - Feb. 28, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family memorial has been held. Contributions may be made to:
By Edward Stratton
School's commons area as
on Poverty, published in the Atlantic Monthly magazine
the world:
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. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Roone
Anna "Ann" Blanchard, of Bend
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnotefrom around
FEATURED OBITUARY
Navy looking to maintain testing along thecoastline
d ecades,
Chloris Robinson Boone; five children, Steven Boone, Wade B oone, Brent
B o one, J e d
Boone, and Laurel Boone Nelson; and six grandchildren.
IN .-
Richard (Rick) Clyde Msrgeson Jr. passed away Tuesday, February 25th; his wife Diane, and his daughters Elizabeth and Caitlin by his side. Rick lost his four year battle with Merkel Cell Carcinoma. He was 59years old. Although he lost his battle with cancer,the way Rick lived, and died is something we can all strive for and respect. Before his cancer, Rick was alwayslooking for ways to make this world a better place for others. Whether it was delivering Christmas presents to needy families through Redmond Rotary, calling every person he knew to wish them a
Happy Birthday,helping families to set themselvesup effectively through financial planning, or lending an ear and a hugto a friend in need. Once Rick's cancer returned, he lived everyday more passionately than thelast. No one really even knew he was sick, because he focused his energy on the positive things, the people around him and what he could do toimprove their lives. Last April, he took his familyto Maui, his dream vacation spot, where hisfamily enjoyed every minute together, including watching his oldest daughter, Elizabeth and her husband, Theodore get married on the beach, and snorkeling all day with his youngest daughter Caitlin. Rick lived and diedon his terms, with dignity, grace, kindness,a sense ofhumor and most importantly, helived and died with no regrets. Originally an Atlanta native, Rick and Diane moved their family to Bend, 26 years ago, in search of a smaller, close knit community, away from the hustle and bustle (and traffic) of Atlanta. Rick completely embraced Bend ashis home, and thrived in this city until his death. Rick began his career trackin Bend at JT Millers Men's Clothing Store on Wall St. as a SalesAssociate. After a few years, Rick found his true calling with Northwestern Mutual Life, as apassionate and dedicated Financial Advisor. He recently achieved the certification of CFP (Certified Financial Planner). Many of Rick's friends became clients, and many of his clients becamefriends. 'Ihis was Rick Msrgeson; joyous (with his southern accent andinfectious laugh), thoughtful, avid golfer whose golfhandle was "Phil" for Phil Mickelson, loyal friend, and most importantly a wonderful husband andfather (his ¹1 priority). Over the years,yoa have probably seen Rick on the golf course having the time ofhis life (always meeting new friends), in his officehelping someone take control of their financial future, at his daughters' volleyball games at Bend High (he wasthe one filming every game, and cheering louder than anyone else). Wherever Rick was, hewas enjoying every day the good Lord gave him .'Ihat's Rick... living for his family, striving for greatness, cherishing and growing friendships and always,that loud contagious laugh ofhis. This worldis mourning the lossof a truly great man. Rick, we will always remember one of your daily creeds, "make it a great day for a person in need". May you be at peace and remain forever in our hearts. Rickis also survived byhis Mother, Gloria Margeson, of Atlanta; and seven siblings, Kathy (and Tom) Cotney of Atlanta, Tim (and Bridget) Margeson of Cumming, GA, Kevin (and Sara) Margeson of Lakeland, FL, Jan (and Lane)Savage of Birm ingham, AL, Tommy Margeson, Ste ve Margeson and Melanie MargesonHam, all of Atlanta, GA, and many nieces and nephews, who will all missRick very much. /
I
A Celebration of Life hasbeen planned for April 11th, tentatively. Please contact Rick's Assi tant Kevin Soderberg at (541) 323-4000, or go to Rick's Caring Bridg Page P wwwcarnngbridge.org/visitlrickmsrgeson, for all of the details.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014
I
i
i
'
I
• I'
iI
'
»gs
'
Today:
Tonight:
Chance of B h lhh h rain showers. HIGH W i ndy.
LOW
FORECAST: 5TATE ~
~
o o o 0 o o o 0 o o o 0 o o o 0 o o o 0 o o o 0 '2 o o
d < gouh<~4 tz'~II»)ys 4 4 4 8 8 d 4 8 3
4 q IIk ~ 4 4 <I . 8 4 4 d d d d d d g g <4 4 4 » ~ ~ d dd d g y igovk led
4
d 44
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
58 40
54 34
52 31
4 8 4 8 4 4 4 4 4 EI 4 4 4
dwd<gdd 2 2 2 2 2 dil ddd 2
REGON CITIES
d d 4 < 2 <7.~5 36 4 d 4 ; ;d 4 Cloudy. A chanceof o d 8 d d d d d d i d showers in the
4 4 4 EI 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 44
Asioria Baker City Brookings Bums
ux<212 «tx
Redmond Roseburg Saie Sisters The Oalles
www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html L<9»nd:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, shehowers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
< I d 4 4 4 4%% 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
YesterdayThursday Friday Hi/Lo/P<p Hi/Lo/yyHilko/W City
City
4 OS ~35 ~2 5
~
5 ~ 05
~I Q S ~ )05 ~3 0 ~ 05 ~ 5 QS 6 PS ~ 7 5
anCouver
Yesterday's extremes
[gg5] ~9 QS ~IOO ~
12/-2
Quebe«•
Wilsz/
• 89o Immokalee, FL
, "~
2
,' • Vt . Paul 6 e
8
''
Halif x
8'ost. n 24/4 27/<t'7 '„..
'tro ew York 27/1 • 29/25 uffalo Des Des Moines oines. $""(" ~, +gheyqnne . 28/1 8 • Phil a delphia I" -40/30 59/tIS• » Chicago .... 0 ha ' Columbus ""'"': . shington, DCIJ Lake City ' $ /27 • ';....... 31/20 43/26 58/38,: nver i an sas City .. Ih st. Luuis Las Vegas ""C'harfe Louisvillg. '.58/38" 67/31 ' 49/34 :I 81/54x• ". ,
-31'
...: "'"- ... Bapld' ity'"" 59/27 •
FIhnc< fs
Babbitt, MN
36/20
•
v
'
"
-
-
.
,
Tillamook, OR
"
"
"
®
'
-
. .
. .
vO
• Ck
Honolulu 62/43
3/
sy/38 ~ IJ IJ 0
4 4/3
HAWAII
8/57
chorage 9/17
82/64
CKEZS
CONDITIONS
FRONTS
ALASKA
Readers' Choice
<22<2
az
uneau 9 17
2013
Monterrey 69/48
* *** *
Cold W arm Stationary
2
42 <a
+<u+4<+ Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
61/43 0.00 62/43 F< 76/42 p< ew<ld R»pld<, IA ZZ/140.00 27/16 p< 41R6 p< BapidCI</,SO 51/1300D 59/27 p< 35<22 Il Sea<6»SI Wa 26/l 6 0.00 35/Zz p< 45/29 p< GreenBay,Wl 14/60.00 25/18 p< 36/is 58/31 ih 58/30 p< Sioux Falls,SO Reno, NV 65 / 44 0.00 Albany, NV 26/I 8 0.00 24/5 2 36/ZZ p< Greensboro, NC 4WZ80.00 4VZB <8 39/33 Richmond, VA 43/29 O.OD 41<3)<d 4584 r Spokane, WA Albuquerque,NM63/40 0.02 66/43 p< 66/36 p< Ham<bv<9,PA 37/160.00 3$21 p< 42/25 p< Rochester, NY Zi/16 0.06 25/16 p< 4)/ZB p<Springfield, 140 Anchorage,AK 35/Z9 0.07 ze/18 il 30/19 p< Harfford, cr 29/Zz 0.00 288 2 37/27 p< Sao»ments CA 68/54 O.im 70/47 sh 7C<46 pc St Louis, 140 Au»<v»,6A 5984 0.08 44/35 r 54/43 ib Helena, tut 52/300.00 45/26 < 42/23 p< salt lake city, ur 60/39O.m 58/38 is 5$35 il Tampa, FL Au<»6< Ciiy, Ni 41/I 6 0.00 3427 p< 45<33 r Honolulu, Hl 79/65 0.00 81/68 sh 79/68 ib S»n A<nv< rxd, TX 62/41 O.O O 68/44 p< 73/53 p< ru«ddn,Az Austin, TX 53/38 0.00 6z/42 p< 71/52 p< Houston,Tx 53/37O.OZ 62/43 p< 68/54 p< San Diego, CA 68/55 0.00 6»56 p< 65/55 p<Tulsa, OK Bau<22 <2<e, Mu 44n 5 0.00 33/Z6 <8 44/33 p< Huntsville, AL 55/300.00 51/38 < 60/40 p< San Francisco, CA68/55 0.00 59/51 < 59/51 p< Washington,Dc Billings, IJT 47/36 0.00 51/Z7 sh 4ll26 II Indianapolis, IN 32/170.00 4$26 p< 51/32 p< San lose, CA 74/52 0.00 66/48 < 67/48 p< Wichita, KS Birmingham,Al 62/34 0.00 4488 56/41 p< Jackson,tuS 62/31 0.00 51/38 sh 59/41 p< Sania Fe, NM 55/33 0.00 65/34 pc 63/29 p< Yakima, WA Bismarck,NO 27/11 0.00 4»nI sn 20/5 p< Jacksonville, FL uv41 0.13 68/45 ih 58/40 Savannah, 6A 45/370.17 45<4Or 5388 < YU<<Q, AZ Boise, iu 59/44 0.00 56/38 ii 55/33 p< Juneau,AX 31/4000 29/l7 < Ze/ZS sn Boston, MA 29/23 0.00 27/17 38/30 p< Kansas city, Mo 4VZ» 0.01 48/33 p< 56/Za p< Buffalo, NV 21/I4 0.01 2»na P<4»/30 p< lansing, Ml 20/130.00 26/13 p< 41/28 p< Amsterdam 53/35 O.OD si/33 p< 55/39 Mecca Bvdingi»n, Vr 17/II 0.01 zu/5 2 35/23 p< l»s V»gac NV 73/st 0.00 81/54 pc 74/49 p< Athens 62/42 0.00 62/46 p< 6c<48 Iz»X<od c<<v Caribou,tuz 8/-I 9 0.00 IW-5 F< 32/ZO p< Luvhgi»h, XY u»190.00 47/29 p< 56/37 p< Avddand 68/55 0.00 71/57 73/57 2 Montreal casper,WY 51/25 0.00 58/20 p< 45/19 8 Lincoln, NE 35/200.00 52/27 p< 45/19 r Baghdad 82/59 O.OD 82/60 2 Buez p<Ixo<«dw chari»ivw, sc 4487 0.16 4u41 r 53/39 liule Rock,Aa 34/270.00 49/30 p< 60/39 p< Bangkok 95/75 0.00 93/75 <8 91/75 p<Nairobi Charioue,Nc 52/31 0.00 4u34 r 45/35 uds Angeles,CA 65/550.00 67/55 i 67/55p< 8<iling uVZIO.OD 4i/ZZ s 4u)6 Nassau Chatlano<dga,TN 5981 0.00 53/41 p< 60/40 p< louisville, KV 44/230.00 48/29 p< 57/38 p< Beirut 69/57 0.00 71/62 s 73/59 p< New Delhi Cheyenne,WY 47/26 0.00 59/25 p< 38/22 sn Madison, Wl 2M40.21 28/5 p< 38/18 r Berlin 50/39 0.00 53/35 p< 5O/33 p< Osaka Chicago, IL 23/I 9 0.15 31RO p< 44/26 p< Memphis,TN 4II300.00 4682 r 58/45 p< 8<29< 2<» 68/51 0.00 64/50 is 64/46 is Oslo cinonnae,ou 38n 9 0,0045/28 p< 54/34 p< Miami, FL 84//20.00au/0 u' 80/60 p< Budapest 53/390.00 53/41 P<55/39 p< cm»wa Cleveland, OH 24n 9 0.00 34)3 p< 45/28 p< Milwaukee,Wl Ien/0.02 27/la p< 39/23 p< BuenosAires 84/66 0.00 80/66 77/60 p< Pans Colo. SP9<,CO 53/Za 0.00 6984 p< 44/25 sn Minneapolis, MN24/iz 0.00 36/ZO <8 33/9 p< Cab<2 San lu<a< 78/60 0.00 82/60 s au62 P<Rio deJaneiro Columbia, 140 49/27 0.00 4580 p< 59/34 p< Nashville, TN 42/30 0.00 49/zt <8 60/40 Cairo 86/60 0.00 84/64 s 8460 2 Rome Columbia, SC 48/35 0.06 4$36 45/36 r N»w Ori»anc IA 55/420.00 58/44 ih 58/46 p< Calgary 5/-5 0.00 12/-2 p< 6/-2 sn Santiago Columbus,64 61/36 0.06 46/36 r 55/40 sh New Y< 2< k Nv 39/270.00 29/25 p< 42/31 p< Can<un 84/770.00 84/69 is 84/66 is S»<2 Paulo Columbus,OH 3t/ta 0.00 43/)6 p< 52/32 p< Newark, Ni 4M50.00 29<Z3 p< 47/Zs p< Dublin 50/390.00 51/42 r 53<44 r S»PP<d nd C<2»odnt NC 22/I 7 0.02 25/-9 2 36/17 p< Norfolk, VA 37/310.03 42/4» p< 51/41 r Edinburgh ui<390.0D 4ivet p<51/42 r Seoul CorpusChristi, IX 61/43 0.00 67/48 p< 73/60 p< Okla. Oir, OK 4%31 0.00 51/35 p< 65/38 p< Geneva 51/37 O.OD 51/33 p< 51/32 Shanghai Dallas, IX 5581 0.00 5787 p< 68/49 p< Omaha, NE 33/200.00 45/27 p< 42/la r Ha<a<e 82/640.00 88/64 is 82/64 p< Singapore Dayton,ou 33/I 6 0.00 38/24 p< 47<33p< oll»2<duFL 76/590.11 78<59 is 74/49 p< Hong Kong 64/60 0.00 68/62 p< 68/62 p<Sed<kb< dlm Denver,CO SZ/27 0.25 67/31 p< 4trzs in PalmSprings,CA at/570.0083/59 P< BZ/57 P< Istanbul 64/500.00 55/ui < 5»/46 2 Syuh»y uei Moines,IA 27/Zz 0.00 4»<30p< 44/zo Peoria, il 28/230.00 35/Zz p< 47/30 p< Jerusalem 84/51 0.00 78/60 78/59 Taipei Detroit, Ml 24n 7 0.00 27/14 p< 41/29 p< Phiud»lphia,PA 42/190.00 33/26 p< 47/34 p< Johannesburg -/-0.00 71/62 is 71/62 i< Tel Aviv Duluth, tuu 15/-II 0.00 27/Zi p< 32/3 <4 Phoenix, AZ 82/550.00 83/56 p< 81/55 p< uma 78/68 O.im 88/69 p< 82/71 p<Tokyo El Paso,TX 71/52 0.00 71/52 p< 76/53 <8 Pkubu<ghPA 31/180.00 37/24 p< 47/29 p< lisbon 59/50 0.00 60/ul p< 66/50 s Vancouver Fal<b<hkcAK lano 0.1712/-13 8 13/-13 p< F<2< uand, ME Zi/150.07 24/4 2 35/23 p< u<lld<22 2 55/33 0.00 53/41 2 57/44 i Vienna Fargo,uu zz/-I 0.00 36/4 p< ie/-8 p< Providence,Rl 33/250.00 2»nz 2 39/30 p<Madrid 62/42 0.00 62/39 p<68/44 2 wa<s»w Flag<i»ff, AZ 56/26 0.00 58/31 p< 54/27 p< Raleigh, NC 44/300.00 uazi <8 43/34 r Manila 89/77 O.oe 89/73 p<azm <
YesterdayThursdayFriday Hi/Lo/P<p Hilko/yyHi/Lo/W 60/51 1.43 53/45 54/46 sh 24/13 0.02 37/l6 p< 30/4 p< 53/38 O.ZZ 48/36 <h 49/35 p< 4%21 0.00 4%31 p< 60/36 p< 42/23 0.00 43/29 p< 5886 p< 76/61 0.00 74/59 is 67/53 F< 78/48 0.00 83/54 p< 7851p< evz8 0.00 54/32 p< 66/37 p< 46/24 0.00 36/30 <d 4584 p< 41/27 0.00 5M2 p< sme F 66/42 0.03 56/37 58/34 F< -/- 0.00 87/59 p< 85<58p<
INTERNATIONAL
'
.
• 2.35u
YesterdayThursday Friday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City
Akron,Ou
•
(in the 48 contiguous states):
Yesterday Thursday Friday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City
Abilene, TX
5
a gary
2
ROAD CONDITIONS
la Pine lak»24»w M»rilord Newport North Bend Ontario Pendleton Portland Prin»ville
Burns
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Amionykake'.....................0"......................63" Hoodoo................................ 0" ...................... 48" Mt Ashlanri p
56/49 1.39 54/45 i s 5 5 /44 sh LOW UM HIGH HIGH 51/37 0.08 54/30 i s 52 /27 pc 56/53 0.67 52/44 is 57< 41 i s 0 2 4 6 8 10 58/31 O.OO 53/27 is 5 3 / 26 pc 62/53 0.17 57/40 is 5 9 /39 sh Mt. HoodMeadows.............3"....................110 5 2 /42 0.03 47/29 sh 5 4/31 s Snow level and road conditions representing condiM t. Hood Ski Bowl............... 0" ...................... 37" 53<43 0.03 47 /27 ts 4 9 / 27 pc tions at5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires. T i mberline............................1"......................73" 5 0/35 O.OO 47/31 sh 5 2 /31 s Warner Canyon pass Conriitions 67/51 0.04 57/39 sh 6 5 /38 pc Willamette Pass................... I "...................... 26" 59/51 2.15 55/45 ts 57/45 sh 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit................. Carry Chains / T.T. 62/ 5 6 0.79 5 6/45 ts 5 9/45 pc 1-84 at CabbageHill..................... Carry Chains / T.T. 4 Aspen CO 58 61/41 0.03 59/36 i s 5 7 /32 pc Hwy. 20atsantiamPass..............CarryChains/TT. Mammoth Mtn CA p 6 2/45 0.02 56/41 r 56/ 3 5 pc Hwy.26atoovernmentcamp.. . . . car r ychams/T.T . Parkoly, UT........................S .................--.82 57/47 1.14 57/45 t s 5 8 /41 sh vide............CarryChains/T.T. Squaw Valley,CA.................O"......................20" 59/41 0.01 56/34 sh 5 48 1 pc Hwy.26 atOchocoDi S u n Valley, ID.......................O"......................41" 59/47 0.01 55/34 r 53 /30 pc Hwy. 58 atWigamette Pass......... Carry Chains/TT. 6954 0.04 56/43 ts 6 3/41 pc Hwy.138atDiamondLake. .........CarryChains/T.T. Taos, NM.............................I"......................522 69" 60/52 1.35 57/41 is 60/ 42 sh Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass...........................Closed Vail, CO................................2"..... 58/36 0.11 52/34 sh 5 2 /32 pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: 5 1/43 0.55 55/41 r 59/ 3 7 pc
Eugene Klamath Falls
u 31
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 EI 4
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX E KI REPORT
Yesterday Thursday Friday The higher the UVIndex number, the greater City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totalsthrough4 p.m.
Hermiston
I d 2 2 d~sg<2 2 d 2 2 442/7 <i2 d 2 <2» /2 2 2I Jd/kO
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
2
$(
• 8 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 8(
HIGH LOW
52 32
2
4 4 d d 4 jkWd 4 8 8 dcgj d d 4 4 4 8 h d d 4PBUIB<ad 4 4 d d 4 4 d 4 d,d d 4 BB/34d Flol'eiiced d <Et8@glp4 4 4 d d 4 8 d q 4 4l g ogdJ4 4 dtg)31J 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4 dg~p 4 4 • 2 4 4 Mostly cloudy. A 56/47 d 4M7I/ p8 d 4 d 4 d H It/4 d 4 <8 3$ 4 d 4 d 4 d 4 4 4 4 4 4 Ig 8 el 4 4 4 Pd d 4 4 4 II 4 4 40/3144ntk 4 d g f og< 4~ <r 8 ~ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 dvd 4 4 chance of rain d dd d »8 4 8 8 8 4 8 4 4 8 $ d d d 4 d Bit)r8544 8 d 4 d 4 d b lvslsad , 4 d 4 d gwtt d 4 " 8"" gy d d 4 d4d4 8 4 4 4 d 82/29d d d d N/n4urri4 4 454/zg 4 showers in the ddd d ddb d 4 8 8 4 428 8 4 4 8 58 / zk 8 4 4 < 8 d morning. Highs 50 4 P A c< rittd.agea d g 4 78221 4 4 d I)a<8pt8<nd d 4 IBI»g d 4 4 d d 4 4 d"d d 4 d d 4 4 to 58. Windy. d 444 d ~ < fed ik d 4 4 4 d 4 d 4 86/43<4 d <87/2nd d 4 4 4 4 44d 4 4 < d 4 @/4 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 8 3 8' <f/ 448 4 ql 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 8 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 $ Yesterday's d d 8-m 8.II d4 28 4 4 4 <I 4 Ilr 4 j 4 4 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4 di<g< I47<yaileyd 4 4 8 8 8 4" 8 4 8 dly 8 3 ig~ /4II4 8 8 4 J VPqg 8 8 8 4 II fl 8 4 8 8 8 4 d 4 d 8 8 4 8 12/38 6 8 8 stateextremes dd4dd4 4 4 q f i d d I~k~h~d d d 4 4 d d d 4 d P/gn<3<9!p/8 d 4 d d 4 4 d d d 4 t'"3 d 4 4 4 d 4 8 4 4 4 d 4 4 fyzd 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 45)F)gd 4 4 4 el 4 4 4 d 4 4 IVd 4d444 d 4 4 d 4 dpif 14 d 8 4 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4< d 4 4 4 • 69o Id3d4 3 d 4 4 d d 4 C<h'll< 4jnd 4 d 4 $X II 4 4 d 4 4 4 d d 4 4 d 4 4 <I L<4 44dd 4 Ii')4 4 4
HIGH LOW
4 d I /q<graririri ded 4 4 d 49/44</ CENTRAL
QQQ II4 4 4 )Qgh' dd 4 4 d 8"4 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4 d d 4 4 d d 8/IId 8 4 4
h>t/Ihiht< h cloudy.
2
morning. Windy conditions. Highs around 55.
EAST
Qg IIgd„d 4
Rain. Partly
i did
A~
~
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
morning. Windy. 55/45»dd d d k qy d d d ' , I d d g Q WWdd d d , l d d d d I ddddddd~ g~IWdd tion d 4 d .d /4 4 Chrripgh<kmhnd d '5~ ded N l itd ull d d 4 d g 4 4 4Y 4 d 4 Snow accumula d 4 3I)d 4 d dfg qy< dpp~ d 4 d d 4 4 around I inch. d d BV H Id 4 dd 4 49/II d 4 4 d 3 d 4 4 ded /33 <BSd <| 4 8< P p4 th
4 ~~
Chan ce of
h h hlh h rain
I )
Tomorrow Ris e Set Yesterday' sweather through 4p.m .in Bend Mercury..... 9:18P.m..... 7:33a.m. High/ux»..............57'/46' 24hoursenriingqp.m.*.. Trace Sunrisetoriay...... 6:33 a.m.MOOn phaSeS Venus.........807pm.....605am. Remrrihigh....... 70 in1986 Monthtodal».......... 018 Sunsettoday...... 6:00 p.m. F irst F u l l Las t Mars.......... 1:06pm....1214am. Remrdlow......... -I'in1955 Averagemonthtodale... 010 Sunrise tomo/mw 6,31 a m Jupiter........ 3 58 a m..... 7 20 p m. Average high.............. 51' Yearlo date............ 2 31 Sunsettomorrow... 6:01 p.m. g Saturn........ 3:23p.m..... I:20a.m. Averagelow............... 25' Averageyeartoriate..... 1.72 Moonrisetoday....9:32 a.m. Uranus......11:18pm....ll:58am. Barometricpressure4pm.2968" Remrd24hours..049in1989 Mara Mar16 Mar23 Mar 30 *Melted liquid equivalent
0
J
8»d
~~
BEND ALMANAC
o o 0 o zc~
d 4 d 4 4 d d d 4 d 4 4 d 4 d 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 d 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d 4 WEST qtgjg ~ dd d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d d sd d 1 d 4 d dd 4 d 4 d 4 d d d 4 d d dtgnat/IB<d.4 d d d 4 d 4 d 4 d d d I d d Skies will be Seaside I d qp<fl 52/45Bcanqu ed 4 4uepcb Jd 4 d444d4d444f 4oottdth/1 8 82 4 3rd 4 d d4 4 4I d dd4444858/< H • dr <gr qystpr hut 4 ',' <I Mvgl dp<I444d8 o 4 4II444484 I14d 4 cloudy. Rain in the
Lincolncit 50/43 II4
Partly i-dy.
i
Slight chance of rain s h owers.
34 o o 0 o
•
•
4 d d ' * *** * *
24 x
Ic e
98/78 0.00 96/77 p< 96/78 78/53 0.00 77/44 s 71/48 2 14/3 0.00 17/-il pc 15/6 2 39/30 0.00 41/Za p< 37/Ze <4 az/60 0.00 BZ/59 is 82/59 is 84/68 0.00 82/73 p< 82/71 Is 77/57 0.00 7usl p< 73/53 2 58/42 0.00 42/28 44/28 r 46/41 0.00 46/44 p< 51/48 F< 17/8 0.00<7/-16 <8 17/4 2 53/37 0.00 53/35 55/33 2 sins o.oo87/75 is 86/73 i< 64/33 0.00 60/42 p< 67/39 p< 84/53 0.00 84/51 2 84/51 2 75/69 O.OD82/69 is BQ<68 ii 30/26 0.00 26/13 in 24/Is in 41/26 0.0» 41<ZZp< 41/)6 51/42 0.00 4»/39 s 44/37 91/69 0.00 91/68 2 91/68 p< 38/33 0.00 38/JO p< 42/37 p< 86/65 0.51 75/64 is 80/66 2 60/55 0.00 62/51 p< Q/53 r 84/51 0.00 78/59 s 78/53 2 58/41 0.00 46/32 p< 42/32 r 51/39 0.00 51/42 48/42 r 53/39 0.00 53/39 p< 50/37 p< 42/35 0.00 42/32 p< 4uzz P<
Oli nily ait M. JACODBS FIINE FURNITURE C~aniyOiu~ OPEN 1'Oe D I' 'I II I ' I I I I - iez EVERV ITEM IN SYOCK*
8] g] II '
,I c'5
Available in BurntOrange,
BlackandBrown. , ~
s271ss
~ 7<mw~cABM ~
8
BROYHILLTIMELESS
TRADITIONA LSTYLES
Soft Touch Vinyl Taupe,Black.
4 PIECE SET: SOFA, LOVESEAT,
CHAIR& OTTOMAN
I
•
I•
60
I
•
•
•
•
•
o
I •
• •
In The Bend River Promenade 541-382-5900 • Toll Free 'I-800-215-1214 * Comfort & iSeries beds excluded. **
$999 or more.
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NH L, C3 College basketball, C3 Prep sports, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
SNOWBOARDING Bend rIders at U.S. Open Four snowboarders from Bend areset to compete in the U.S. Open Snowboarding Championship stoday through Sunday inVail, Colo. Ben Ferguson, Gabe Ferguson, KentCallister and Nate Jacobson will all compete in the U.S. Open halfpipe competition. The event begins with semifinals today. The finals are scheduled for Saturday. Callister is coming off a ninth-place finish in the halfpipe at the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, where hecompeted for Australia. Ben Fergusonjust missed qualifying for the U.S. Olympic team in the halfpipe. Hefinished fifth in the halfpipe competition at the Winter X Games in Aspen,Colo., in late January. Gabe Ferguson, Ben's younger brother, and Jacobson qualified for the U.S.Openvia a qualifying event staged in Pennsylvania last month. For more information on the U.S.Open,visit www.burton.com. — Bulletin staff report
PREP ALPINE SKIING
• Local alpine skiers ride into high schoolstate championships on wave ofSochiexcitement
OregonSchoolSkiAssociation alpinestate championships What:Tenteamsand more than100 skiers competing in giant slalom andslalom races. When:Giant slalom Friday at10 a.m.; slalom Saturday at10 a.m. Where:Mt. Bachelor's Cliffhanger Run nearthe Skyliner Express chairlift. I Spectators:Welcomefreeofcharge expectashorthlketo bottom j of slalom course.
By Mark Morical The Bulletin
/ Ia!tft -'," i j l
Every four years, it seems much of the nation suddenly takes a keen interest in alpine ski
racing. But even those deeply involved in the sport get
I,'
an extra jolt of enthusiasm during the Winter
Olympics. Last month, many Central Oregon alpine
/
skiers followed intently the performances of
Bend's Laurenne Ross and other U.S. skiers at the 2014 Sochi Games. The recently completed Olympics have added a tinge of excitement going into the Oregon School Ski Association (OSSA) alpine state championships, set for this
Friday and Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area. "It definitely provided for the enthu-
siasm of parents and the racers, when the Olympics were going on," says Greg Bend High's Keenan Seidel is one of the top skiers in the OSSA this season.
., Timm, the longtime alpine ski coach at
Bend High. "There was a lot of watching of the races, there was a lot of watching the results and how skiers did. Especial-
ly new kids seemed to be a little more
Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo
enthusiastic and e nergized because here it was, right on TV, and they were
TRACK 8. FIELD
able to watch it."
Eaton set for Indoor Worlds
Bend and crosstown foe Summit fig-
Bend's Ashton Eaton is set to compete Friday and Saturday in the hep-
,f
USA for the14th IAAF
world indoor championships. The reigning Olympic champion andworld-record holder in the decathlon, Eaton won the gold medal in the heptathlon at the 2012
world indoor championships in Istanbul, Turkey.ln the process, he broke his ownworld record for the event with 6,645 points. Currently a resident of Eugene,Eaton, 26, won the gold medal in the decathlon at the 2013 World Track 8 Field Outdoor Championships in Moscow. The world indoor championships can be viewed live online at universalsports.com. For more information on the event, visit www. sopot2014.com. — Bulletin staff report
.i
on the Cliffhanger run near the Skyliner Ex-
press chairlift. OSSA also includes teams repre-
tathlon at the 2014 In-
ternational Association of Athletics Federations World Indoor Track & Field Championships in Sopot, Poland. Friday's heptathlon events include the 60 meters, long jump, shot put and high jump. The heptathlon concludes on Saturday with the 60-meter hurdles, pole vault and1,000 meters. Eaton was one of48 athletes named toTeam
f
ure to battle for boys and girls individual and team titles as skiers compete in giant slalom on Friday and in slalom on Saturday senting Mountain View, Sisters, Redmond, Rid-
geview,Crook County, Lakeview and Klamath Union high schools, and Redmond Proficiency Academy. Summit coach David Wallace says his skiers learned much from watching U.S. skier Ted Ligety, who won the gold medal in the giant slalom at the Sochi Games. SeeOlympic/C3
WINTER SPORTS: PARALYMPICS
PREP BASKETBALL
u erstar ta es onnewc a en e teams """"".aim
By Childs Walker
for state tournaments
The Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — You start with a l i ttle girl,
dropped in an orphanage and afflicted with a spinal condition that has paralyzed her below the belly button. She is cared for, yes, but none of the well-meaning adults look at this child, scooting around the facility on her hands, and imagine a future ripe with possibility.
Bulletin staff report
How do you get from there to a 24-year-old wom-
After a week of waiting, Central Or-
an nicknamed "The Beast," a fearsomely muscled athlete who believes her body can fulfill the most
egon teams are set for the first round of the girls and boys basketball state playoffs. Friday at 6 p.m., the Bend High girls,
outlandish ambitions her mind concocts?
Given her biography, the latest story starring Tatyana McFadden, of Clarksville, Md., is almost
who were fifth in the final OSAA Class
5A rankings, will play host to No. 15 Springfield, which Bend defeated 53-37 on the road in December. The Millers posted a 60-44 home play-in win over Ashland on'Ibesday night to advance to the state playoffs.
too rich.
Starting Friday, she will compete in at least three events at the winter Paralympics, a brand new arena for an athlete who has already conquered the
summer Paralympics and the wheelchair marathon circuit. She will take on the best in the world after just 50 days of training on snow, a daunting challenge but one that exhilarates her.
The Bend boys, No. 7 in the 5A rank-
ings, have a 1 p.m. meeting on Saturday with 11th-ranked Liberty of Hillsboro,
She will do so in Russia, the very country where, in that orphanage, her horizons once seemed so
which defeated Dallas 62-51 in the play-
limited. And she will perform in front of her birth mother andthe director ofhe r former orphanage, both in Sochi on McFadden's dime.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
SeeChallenge/C4
JoelKoweky/The New York Times
Tatyana McFadden exercises at the Rehabilitation Education Center at the University of Illinois in Urbana, III., in September 2013.
in round on Tuesday. The Summit girls, ranked eighth in Class 5A, and the No. 3 Mountain
View boys will host first-round games. Summit will host Wilson on Friday, although game time had not been deter-
mined by late Wednesday night. Mountain View will host Madison on Satur-
WOMEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
day at 6 p.m. In the 4A girls bracket, Madras goes the Far West League. The White Buffaloes, who last Friday logged a 58-45 playin road win over Ontario to improve to
By Tim Booth The Associated Press
Oregon State's Eric
SEATTLE — Stanford is going
Moreland shoots
to the NCAA w omen's basketball
during Wednesday night's game.
tournament again, likely as a No. 1
OSU'supset of Arizona falls short Beavers fall at hometo Wildcats 74-69,C3
seed. California, Oregon State and
way into the NCAAs with a strong performance in the conference tournament this week at KeyArena in Seattle.
"There's a lot of good teams in this
conference," California coach Lind-
Arizona State are almost assured of say Gottlieb said. "I mention those joining the Cardinal after all finished two (Oregon State and Arizona State) with at least 21 wins in the regular
and that's not to mention the talent
season. The question for the Pac-12 is whether anyone else can play their
of UCLA and USC andWashington State and Washington." SeePac-12/C2
Pacific-12Tournamen t Today's Games UCLAvs. Colorado, noon Southern Calvs. Arizona, 2:30 p.m. Washington State vs. Oregon, 6 p.m. W ashington vs.Utah,8:30 p.m. All times PST
16-9 overall, are scheduled for a 6 p.m. tipoff against the 23-0 Bulldogs, whose narrowestwin allseason hasbeen a 4838 vict ory overRegisin December. This weekend's playoff winners advance to state championship tournaments next week.
Inslde • A notebook of prep sports in Central Oregon,C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radio Women's college,Syracusevs.TBA 8 a.m. Root Women's college, Miami vs. Florida State 11 a.m. Root Pac-12 Women's college,Coloradovs.UCLA noon Pac-12 Women's college,Arizonavs.USC 2:30 p.m. Women's college, GeorgiaTechvs. TBA 3 p.m. Root Men's college, Memphis at Cincinnati 4 p.m. ESPN Men's college, LSUat Vanderbilt 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, PennState at Northwestern 4 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Villanova atXavier 4 p.m. Fox Sports1 Women's college, North Carolina vs. TBA 5 p.m. Root NBA, Miami at SanAntonio 5 p.m. TNT Men's college, GeorgeMason at La Salle 5 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, lowa at Michigan State 6 p.m. ESPN Men's college, UCLAat Washington 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, Hawaii at UC Santa Barbara 6 p.m. ESPNU Women's college,Oregonvs.WashingtonSt. 6 p.m. Pac-12 Men's college, Butler at DePaul 6 p.m. Fox Sports1 NBA, L.A. Clippers at LA. Lakers 7:30 p.m. TNT Men's college, USC at Washington State 8 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12 Women's college, Utah vs.Washington 8:30 p.m. GOLF PGA, WGC Cadilac Championship 10 a.m. Golf BASKETBALL
Women's college, ACC Tournament, N.C. State vs. TBA Women's college, ACC Tournament, Notre Damevs. TBA Women's college, Pac-12Tournament, Stanford vs. TBA Women's college, Pac-12Tournament, Arizona State vs. TBA Women's college, ACC Tournament, Duke vs. TBA NBA,Memphis atChicago Men's college, Kent State at Akron Men's college, OhioValley Tournament, Belmont vs. TBA Men's college, Harvard atYale Women's college, ACC Tournament, Maryland vs. TBA NBA, Portland at Dallas
2:30 p.m.
Pa c -12
3 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m.
ESPN ESPN2
4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
E S PNU N B CSN
6 p.m. 6:30 p.m.
Pac-12
6:30 p.m.
E S PNU
8:30 p.m.
Pac-12
ESPN
8 a.m.
NBCSN
10 p.m.
NBCSN
10 a.m.
Golf
11 a.m. Fox Sports1 12:30 p.m. FoxSports1 2 p.m. Fox Sports1 3:30 p.m. Fox Sports 1 6 p.m.
ESPN2
7 p.m.
Root
HOCKEY
WHL Hockey,Seattle at Portland SOCCER A-League, Newcastlevs.Melbourne
L 2 5 7 7 6 6 6 6 6 10 14 15
Wednesday'sSummary
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, LasVegas, practice NASCAR,Nationwide, LasVegas, practice NASCAR,Nationwide, LasVegas, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, LasVegas, qualifying BOXING Rustam Nugaevvs. Marvin Quintero
W 15 11 10 10 9 9 9 9 6 7 2 1
Arizona UCLA ArizonaSt. Colorado
Pac-12
5 p.m. Root 5:30 p.m. CSNNW,
10:30 p.m. FoxSports 2
Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TV or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL rules committee tabled a proposal Wednesdaythat would have penalized offenses for snapping the ball before10 seconds had runoff the 40-second play clock. After a conference call, the panelagreednot to send the so-called10-second rule to the playing rules oversight panel for approval Thursday. NCAA national coordinator of officials Rogers Redding says withdrawing the proposal allows "time to gather more information from the medical community and allow time for a broader discussion of the implications of that change."
SuSPended BrOwner reinStated dy NFL — Former Seattle
Seahawks cornerback Brandon Browner hasbeen reinstated by the NFL following his suspension in Decemberfor violating the league's policy onsubstanceabuse.TheNFLand NFLPlayersAssociation announced the decision in a joint statement Wednesday, a day after Browner revealed the news onTwitter. Browner was suspendedindefinitely without pay by the leagueDec. 18.
SOCCER Ukraine deatS U.S. 2-0 in friendly —Ukraine's national football team gaveits troubled country something to cheer about on Wednesdaywhen it beat the United States 2-0 in an international friendly in Larnaca, Cyprus. Thematch had beenovershadowed by the turmoil in Ukraine andits players said before the gamethat they were dedicating it to their people backhome. Ukraine's opener first came in the 12th minute whenAndriy Yarmolenko pounced onthe rebound after an initial shot by DenysGarmashwas parried by goalkeeper Tim Howard.
TRACK AND FIELD Donor givesBeavers $2million towardtrack centerThe Oregon State Beavers havereceived a $2 million challenge gift to help complete the school's Whyte TrackandField Center. Thegift by a donor who wishes to remain anonymous will go toward the second phase of the facility's construction, which includes grandstands, a hammer throw areaand a scoreboard. The total budget for the phase is estimated at $4.5 million. All previous donations and pledges to the project, totaling $550,000, will be counted toward the challenge. The deadline for donations is Dec.31. — From wire reports
I,/
Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague CHICAGOWHITESOX— ReassignedRHPsChris Bassitt,ParkerFrazierandBrianOmogrosso;INFMike McDade;OFDenis Phipps; LHPMauricio Robles; and CKevanSmith to minor leaguecamp. CLEVEL AND INDIANS — Agreedto termswith INFs JoseRamirez andJesusAguilar on one-year contracts. SEATTLEMARINERS — Optioned LHP Danny Hultzento Tacoma(PCL) andLHPAnthonyFernandez
/
and OFJulio Morbanto Jackson (SL). Reassigned RHPsJonathanArias, Andrew Carraway, Stephen Kohls cheen,MarkRogersand ChanceRuff in;LHP JamesGillheeney;CsJohnHicksandManuelPina; INF GabrielNoriega;andOFBurtReynolds to minor league camp. TEXASRANGERS— DesignatedINF/OFAlexCastellanos forassignment. Agreedto termswith LHPJoe Saunders onaone-yearcontract.
W L 26 2 22 7 21 9 21 9 21 6 20 9 16 11 16 12 16 13 15 14 9 19 10 19
No. 3 Arizona74, OregonSt. 69 ARIZONA (26-2) Gordon3-9 2-4 6,Tarczewski 3-4 6-912, York 4-9 0-0 12,Mcconnell 2-9 0-0 4, N.Johnson6-16 6-925, Mayes 0-10-00, Hollis-Jefferson4-75-613, Pitts 0-0 0-0 0,Korcheck0-0 0-00. Totals24-57 19-30 74. OREGON ST.(16-14) Moreland 2-4 0-34, Brandt2-52-2 6, Cooke4-7 0-0 10, Morris-Walker0-2 0-00, Nelson7-22 9-13 25, Duvivier2-21-25, Gomis1-1 0-0 2, Schaftenaar 1-2 0-03, Collier5-9 4-914. Totals 24-5416-29 69. Halftime—Arizona36-33. 3-Point Goals—Arizona 7-19 (York 4-9,N.Johnson3-6, Hollis-Jefferson0-1, Mcconnel0-3), l OregonSt. 5-13(Cooke2-2, Nelson 2-7, Schaftenaar1-1,Morris-Walker0-1, Brandt0-2). Fouled Out —Gomis, Gordon. Rebounds —Arizona 34 (Tarcz ewski 9), OregonSt. 43(Moreland12). Assists —Arizona 15 (Mcconnell 6), OregonSt. 6 (Nelson3). TotalFouls—Arizona16, OregonSt. 21. Technical—Gomis. A—5,651.
Wednesday'sScores Easl George Washington76, Saint Joseph's 71 RhotPe Island77,Fordham65 Uconn69,Rutgers63 UMass76, Duquesne74 South Georgia 66, MississippiSt. 45 Tennessee 62, Auburn54 WakeForest62,Duke72 Midwest Dayton 72, Saint Louis67 Kansas62,TexasTech57 Missouri57,TexasA&M56 Nebraska 70, Indiana60 Wisconsin76, Purdue70 Southwest Arkansas110,Mississippi 60 Louisville 64,SMU71 Oklahoma 72,West Virginia 62 Texas66, TCU54 Far Wesl Arizona74, OregonSt. 69 Colorado 59, Stanford 56 Colorado St. 76,SanJoseSt. 66 Nevada 63, BoiseSt.61, 20T NewMexico60,Air Force52 San DiegoSt.73, UNLV64 Utah63, California59 UtahSt. 65,Wyoming54 Tournament
Big SouthConference First Round Charleston Southern61, Campbell 71 Gardner-Webb 61,Longwood65 Radford 76, Presbyterian73
Winthrop77, Liberly 65
NortheastConference First Round MountSt.Mary's72,St.Francis (NY)71 RobertMorris60,Fairleigh Dickinson53 St. Francis(Pa.)55, Bryant54 Wagner63,CCSU59 Ohio ValleyConference First Round SE Missouri79,E.Illinois 61 Tennessee Tech74, SIU-Edwardsville 67 Patriot League Ouarterfinals AmericanU.59,Colgate 50 Army72,Bucknell 71 Boston U. 91,Lafayette 54 Holy Cross54,Lehigh46
10-SeCOndrule withdrawn by MCAA—TheNCAAfootball
DEALS
Conference Overall
noon
Root
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers
Pacific-12Conference All times PST
Root
TV / Radio
Texasvs.SanDiegoat Peoria, Ariz.,12:05p.m. Oakland vs. ArizonaatScotsdale, Ariz.,12:10 p.m. Washington vs. AtlantaatKissimmee, Fla., 3:05p.m.
Men's College
11 a.m.
Time
p.m.
IN THE BLEACHERS
BASKETBALL
Root
NBCSN
1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Women's college, Pac-12Tournament, California vs. TBA NBA, Indiana at Houston Men's college, OhioValley Tournament, TBA vs. Murray State Women's college, Pac-12Tournament, Oregon State vs. TBA OLYMPICS 2014 Paralympic Winter Games, Opening Ceremony 2014 Paralympic Winter Games, Alpine Skiing GOLF PGA Tour,WGCCadilac Championship
Saturday Boysbasketball:5Astate playoffs, first round,Liberty at Bend,1 p.m.; Madisonat Mountain View, 6p.m. Alpine skiing:OregonSchool SkiAssociation alpine statechampionships(slalom) atMt. Bachelor, Cliffhangerrun,10a.m.
8 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY BASKETBALL
Friday Girls basketball: 5A state playoffs, first round, Springfield atBend,6 p,mcWilsonat Summit, TBD; 4Astate playoffs,first round, Madrasat Sutherlin, 6p.m. Alpineskiing:OregonSchool SkiAssociationalpine statechampionships (giant slalom)at Mt.Bachelor, Cliffhanger run,10 a.m.
Oregon Utah Stanford California Washington Oregon St. WashingtonSt. SouthernCal Wednesday'sGames Colorado 59, Stanford56 Utah63,California59 Arizona 74, OregonSt. 69 Today'sGames UCLAatWashington,6p.m. Southern CalatWashington St.,6 p.m. Saturday'sGames Utah at Stanford,11:30 a.m. Arizona at Oregon,1 p.m. ArizonaSt. atOregonSt., 1:30p.m. Southern CalatWashington,1:30 p.m. Colorado at California,3:30 p.m. UCLAatWashington St.,6 p.m.
HOCKEY
NHL, Pittsburgh at SanJose
ON DECK
Women's College Wednesday'sScores East Akron79,Buffalo 71 Drexel62,Towson40 JamesMadison66,Nort heastern49 South Coll. ofCharleston65, UNCWilmington 77 FAU96, UTEP62
Hofstra60,Wiliam &Mary77, 2OT Louisiana Tech67,FIU65 Marshall61,UTSA76, OT MiddleTennessee64, Tulane52 Old Dominion 67,East Carolina 76
BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association BROOKLYNNETS— SignedCJasonCollinstoa second10-day contract. CLEVE LANDCAVALIERS—AssignedG/F Sergey KarasevtoCanton (NBADL). TORONTORAPTORS— ReassignedGDwightBucyks toBakersfield (NBADL). FOOTBALL
"Minkoffwon't come out, coach. He says the new uniforms make his butt look big."
Rice61,UAB51 TexasSt.64,SouthAlabama60 Troy66,Texas-Arlington 72 W. Kentucky 60, Louisiana-Lafayette71 Midwest Ball St.67,N.Illinois 57 BowlingGreen73,Miami(Ohio) 56 Cent.Michigan64,W. Michigan75 KentSt. 69,Ohio64 Toled o66,E.Michigan52 Valparaiso94, Milwaukee60 WrightSt. 65,YoungstownSt. 70 Southwest ArkansasSt.107, Louisiana-Monroe57 SouthernMiss.60, NorthTexas77 Tulsa66, Charlotte57 UALR 64, GeorgiaSt.56
Tournament Atlantic10 Conference First Round George Mason65,UMass75,OT Atlantic CoastConference First Round Clemson69, VirginiaTech56 Virginia74,Boston Colege 59 WakeForest72, Pittsburgh56
Ohio ValleyConference First Round E. Kentucky 75, E.Illinois 52 JacksonvilleSt.71,SIU-Edwardsville 59 SoutheasternConference First Round Mississippi63,Arkansas62 MississippiSt. 73,Missouri 70 Pacific-12 ConferenceTournament AH timesPacific First Round Today'sGames UCLA vs.Colorado,noon SouthernCalvs. Arizona,2:30p.m. WashingtonStatevs. Oregon,6 p.m. Washin gtonvs.Utah,6:30p.m.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPST
EasternConference Boston Montreal Toronto lampa Bay Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 61 39 17 5 63 192 136 64 35 22 7 77 164 157 64 33 23 6 74 169 195 62 34 23 5 73 179 160 61 26 21 12 66 162 169 63 27 25 11 65 177 206 62 23 32 7 53 152 201 61 16 35 6 44 124 163
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Pittsburgh 6 1 4 1 16 4 66195 150 Philadelphia 63 33 24 6 72 160 164 N.Y.Ran gers 63 33 26 4 70 164 160 Columbus 6 2 3 2 25 5 69164 172 Washington 63 29 24 10 66 166 192 NewJersey 6 3 2 7 23 13 67 152 156 Carolina 62 2 7 2 6 9 63154 175 N.Y.lslanders 64 24 32 6 56 176 217
WesternConference Central Division
St. Louis Chicago Colorado Minneso ta Dallas Winnipeg Nashvile
GP W L OT Pts GF GA 61 41 14 6 66 204 141 63 36 13 14 66 215 170 62 40 17 5 85 192 166 62 34 21 7 75 153 150 62 29 23 10 66 175 175 63 30 26 7 67 176 161 62 26 26 10 62 151 166
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA A naheim 63 4 3 1 4 6 92 205 154 San Jose 6 3 3 9 17 7 85190 154 Los Angeles 63 35 22 6 76 152 134 Phoenix 62 2 6 2 3 11 67170 160 Vancouver 6 4 2 8 26 10 66 150 167 Calgary 62 24 31 7 55 145 166 Edmon ton 6 3 2 1 34 6 50157 206 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime
loss.
Wednesday'sGames Montreal4, Anaheim3, SO Toronto3, N.Y.Rangers2, OT
Pac-12
This s eason, S t anford raced through conference Continued from C1 play, going 17-1 behind the The tournament gets start- performance of player of the ed today with UCLA facing year Chiney Ogwumike, who Colorado; USC against Arizo- finished the regular season na; Washington State against averaging 27 points and 12 Oregon; and Washington tak- rebounds per game. The Caring on Utah in the nightcap. dinal's only loss since Nov. Stanford, California, Oregon 11 came in Seattle in an 87State and Arizona State all receivedfirst-round byes after
82 setback to Washington in
February. "I'm not sure any of us have finishing in the top four of the conference standings. a blueprint for stopping ChinRight now, those four are ey," Washington coach Mike almost locks for the NCAAs. Neighbors said. But the next tier — USC and While California (21-8) will Washington especially be the No. 2 seed for the concould play themselves into ference tourney a year after
Philadelphi6, a Washington4 Calgary4, Ottawa1 Today'sGames Washington atBoston,4 p.m. Los AngelesatWinnipeg,4p.m. Buff aloatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Colorado at Detroit,5 p.m. Columbus atChicago,5p.m. St. LouisatNashvile, 5 p.m. Vancouver at Dallas, 5:30p.m. MontrealatPhoenix, 6p.m. N.Y.Islandersat Edmonton,6:30 p.m. PittsburghatSanJose, 7:30p.m.
BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Spring Training All TimesPST
AMERICANLEAGUE W 6 4 6 5 4 5 5 4 3 3 4 4 2 1 1 NATIONALLEAGUE W Pittsburgh 6 Miami 5 Washington 4 SanFrancisco 4 Arizona 5 Milwaukee 4 Los Angeles 3 St. Louis 2 Cincinnati 3 Colorado 3 Chicago 2 NewYork 2 SanDiego 2 Atlanta 1 Philadelphia 1
Cleveland Tampa Bay Seattle Kansas City Baltimore Detroit Oakland Minnesota Houston Los Angeles NewYork Toronto Chicago Boston Texas
L 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 3 5 5
Pct .65 7 .60 0 .75 0 .71 4 .66 7 .62 5 .62 5 .57 1 .50 0 .50 0 .50 0 .50 0 .40 0 .16 7 .16 7
L 1 2
Pct .65 7 .71 4 .66 7 .57 1 .50 0 .50 0 .42 9 .40 0 .37 5 .37 5 .33 3 .26 6 .26 6 .14 3 .14 3
2 3 5 4 4 3 5 5 4 5 5 6 6
NOTE;Split-squadgamescount in the standings;games against non-major leagueteamsdonot.
Wednesday'sGames
Philadelphi2, a Atlanta2, tie Washington11,N.Y.Mets (ss) 5 Tampa Bay5, N.Y.Yankees4 St. Louis6,Boston6 Detroit 3,Houston0 Pittsburgh 6,Toronto4 Miami 5,N.Y.Mets (ss) 2, 10innings Cleveland 6,Seatle 5 SanDiego6,ChicagoWhiteSox0 SanFrancisco3, LA. Angels2
Colorado(ss) 6, Texas2 Colorado (ss) 7, ChicagoCubs5 Milwau kee7,Oakland2 Kansas City6,Arizona5 Baltimore11,Minnesota5 L.A. Dodgers10, Cincinnati 3 Today'sGames St. Louisvs.Minnesotaat Fort Myers, Fla., 10:05a.m. Philadelphia(ss)vs. Detroit at Lakeland,Fla., 10:05 a.m. N.Y.Metsvs. Houston atKissimmee, Fla.,10;05 a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs. Philadelphia (ss) at Clearwater, Fla., 10:05a.m. Bostonvs.Miamiat Jupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Tampa Bayvs. Baltimore atSarasota, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Torontovs.Pittsburghat Bradenton, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Cincinnativs.SanFranciscoatScottsdale, Ariz.,12:05 p.m. Chicago Cubsvs. ClevelandatGoodyear, Ariz.,12:05 p.m. Seattlevs.ChicagoWhite Sox (ss) at Glendale, Ariz.,
12:05p.m. Colorado vs. Milwaukeeat Phoenix,12:05 p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(ss) vs. Kansas City at Surprise, Ariz., 12:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers vs. L.A. Angels at Tempe, Ariz., 12:05
the final standings, their highest conference finish since 1995-96. Oregon State has
National Football League NFL — Conditionally reinstated CBBrandon Brownerfromindefinite suspension. BUFFALO BILLS—Signed DBAaronWilliamstoa
four-year contract extension. CHICAGO BEARS —Terminated thecontract of PAdamPodlesh.Agreedto termswith DTJeremiah Ratliff onatwo-yearcontract. CLEVELAND BROWNS — ReleasedWRsDavone BessandBrianTymsandLBPaulHazel. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Terminated thecontract of TEJohnCarlson.
NEW YORKJETS — Claimed CBJohnny Patrick off waiversfromtheSan Diego Chargers. Agreedto termswithCBElis LanksterandCBDarrin Walls. PllTSBURGHSTEELERS— SignedSTroy PolamaluandTEHeathMiler to three-yearcontracts. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ANAHEIM DUCKS—TradedDAlexGrant to Ottawa for FAndre Petersson. BOSTON BRUINS— Claimed DCory Potter off waiversfromEdmonton. BUFFALOSABRES— ClaimedFCoryConacher off waiversfromOttawa. Traded DBrayden McNabb, RW JonathanParker and 2014 and 2015 second-rounddraftpicksto LosAngeles for Fs Hudson Fasching andNicolas Deslauriers. CALGAR YFLAMES—TradedGRetoBerrato Coloradofor a2014second-rounddraft pick,andFLee Stempniato k Pittsburghfor a 2014third-round draft pick. RecalledFs CorbanKnight andMaxReinhart from Abbotsford(AHL). AssignedDDerek Smith to Abbotsford. CAROLINAHURRICANES — Traded LW Tuomo Ruutu toNewJerseyfor C Andrei Loktionovanda conditional2017third-rounddraft pick. COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— TradedRW Marian Gaborikto LosAngelesfor RWMatt Frattin, a2014 second-round draft pickanda conditional third-round draft pick,andCJonathanAudy-MarchessaultandLW DaltonSmithto Tampa Bayfor DMatt Taormina and CDanaTyrell. DALLAS STARS—Reassigned FChris Mueller to Texas(AHL). EDMONTONOILERS— TradedFAlesHemskyto Ottawa fora2014third-round draft pick and2015fifthrounddraftpick,andDNick, Schultz to Columbusfor afifth-rounddraft pick. FLORIDAPANTHERS — Traded G Tim Thomasto Dallasfor GDanEllis, andFMarcel Gocto Pitsburgh for 2015third- andfifth-round draft picks. Recaled F VincentTrocheckfromSanAntonio (AHL). AssignedF DrewShoreand GScott Clemmensento SanAntonio. LOSANGELESKINGS— SignedGPatrikBart osak to a three-year, entry-level contract.AssignedFLinden Vey toManchester (AHL). MINNES OTAWILD—Traded RWTorrey Mitchell and 2014and2016second-rounddraft picksto Buffalo for LW Matt MoulsonandCCodyMccormick. MONTREAL CANADIENS — Acquired F Thomas Vanekanda 2014 conditional fifth rounddraft pick from theN.Y.Islandersfor FSebastienColberg anda conditional2014second-round draft pick.AssignedG DevanDubnykto Hamilton(AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Traded GDevanDubnyk toMontrealforfutureconsiderations, andFDavid Legwandto Detroit for RWPatrick Eaves, C Calle Jarnkrokand aconditional 2014third-rounddraft pick. NEWYORKISLANDERS— RecalledF MikeHalmo and DMattDonovanfromBridgeport (AHL). OTTAW ASENATORS—SignedDChris Philips to atwo-yearcontract. LoanedDJoeCorvoto Chicago (AHL).AsignedDAlexGrant to Binghamton (AHL). PHILADE LPHIA FLYERS — Traded D Andrej Meszaros to Boston for2014third-rounddraft pick. PllTSBURGHPENGUINS — AssignedF Chuck Kobasew to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton(AHL). SANJOSESHARKS— TradedFJamesLivingston to LosAngelesfor aconditional 2016seventh-round draft pick. TAMPA BAYLIGHTNING—TradedRWMartin St. Louis to theN.Y. Rangers for RWRyan Calahan, a conditional2014second-rounddraft pickanda2015 first-rounddraft pick.RecalledFRichard Panik from Syracuse (AHL). ReassignedFVladislavNamestnikov to Syracuse . TORONTOMAPLELEAFS— RecalledFsCarter AshtonandPeter HollandfromToronto (AHL). Assigned FFrazerMcLarentoToronto (AHL). WASHIN GTON CAPITALS — TradedG Michal NeuvirthandDRostislav Kleslato Buffalofor GJaroslav Halaand k a 2015third-round draft pick. Recalled GPhilippGrubauerandCRyan Stoa from Hershey (AHL). WINNIPEG JETS— Agreedto termswith D Mark Stuart on afour-yearcontract. COLLEGE NCAA — Named Neyada senior associate athletic directorRhondaLundin Bennett andSoutheastern Conference assistant commissionerLeslie Claybrook to the Division Wo I men's Basketball Com mittee, effectiveSept.1. FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON—Named Germaine Fairchild wom en'sassistant softball coach. SAMFORD— NamedRonnieLetsonwidereceivers coach. SMU —Name d SteveBroussard runningbacks coach.
the only setback being a 64-
to gain out of the weekend if they can win their first-round games and possibly pull an upset in the quarterfinals. Washington — the only team
62 loss at Arizona State in late January. Otherwise, the Bea-
to beat both Stanford and California — needs three wins to
vers have been on a roll.
get to the 20-win mark, while USC, now coached by Cynthia Cooper-Dyke, needs only
won ll o f its last 12 games,
"I think the wins are a by-
product of just playing right all the time," Oregon State coach Scott Rueck said.
two.
because of our y outh, that we can be at that level. And
"I thought this was a really good season for us. We're still trying to implement a mentality and culture of winning, and how to prepare for a game, and even how to prepare for
I think that's probably been
a second half and close out
"That's one of the strongest
attributes of this team, day in and day out and even more
games," Cooper-Dyke said. consistent growth through the "We're still a work in progress is the Nos. 3 and 4 seeds that year." but I thought my team really Stanford is again the favor- had the most surprising reguArizona State s t aggered played hard on both ends of ite as it was a year ago when larseasons. to the finish, losing five of its the floor." the tournament made its deOregon State (21-9) and Ar- final seven games, including T he quarterfinals will b e but in Seattle. The Cardinal izona State (22-8) were picked being swept by the Oregon played on Friday, and the won the tournament title but to finish eighth and 10th in schools last weekend. semifinalsare scheduled for saw their NCAA q uest cut the league, respectively, in the USC and Washington6 and 8:30 p.m. on Saturday. short when they lost to Geor- preseason. The Beavers fin- both under first-year coach- The championship game is set es — would have the most for Sunday at 6 p.m. gia in the regional semifinals. ished tied with California in NCAA consideration with a good tournament run.
reaching its first Final Four, it
the reason for our growth, our
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
C3
NBA ROUNDUP
Batum leads Blazers in rout of Hawks The Associated Press
All-Star forward Paul Millsap missed ton dug out of a double-digit, first-half his fifth straight game for the Hawks hole to beat Orlando. points and a career-high 18 rebounds and because of a right knee contusion. His Warriors 108, Celtics 88: BOSTONthe Portland Trail Blazers routed Atlanabsence hurts Atlanta, which is already Klay Thompson and David Lee scored 18 ta 102-78, a loss that marked the end of without big men Al Horford and Gustavo points each and Golden State went a seaHawks guard Kyle Korver's NBA-record Ayon for the season. son-high 14 games over .500 with a romp streak of 127 games with a 3-pointer. Lillard's 3-pointerput the Blazers up 20- over Boston. Korver had surpassed Dana Barros' 17 in the first quarter. Dorell Wright made Wizards 104, Jazz 91: WASHINGTON record of 89straight, set from 1994-96, a 3-pointer and two of three free throws — Trevor Ariza scored 26 points, Bradley earlier this season. He was zero for 5 from to give the Blazers a 29-19 lead going into Beal added 22,and Washington took an 3-point range against the Blazers. the second. early lead and never lost it, shooting 54 Portland, which led by as many as 29 Portland pushed the lead to 42-28 on percent in a win over Utah. points, has won six of its past seven games Wesley Matthew's 3-pointer midway Nets 103, Grizzlies 94: NEW YORKwhilekeeping pace as one of the teams thought the second quarter. Batum made Joe Johnson scored 21 points, Marcus PORTLAND — Nicolas Batum had 14
yCj-
7"
pN Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press
Arizona's Nick Johnson (13) defends a shot against Oregon State's Eric Moreland (15) during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Corvallis.
Beavers' upset falls short as No.3
Wildcats pullaway The Associated Press CORVALLIS
-
73, UNLV 64: LAS VEGAS Nick
Johnson scored 25 points and No. 3 Arizona beat Ore-
— Xavier Thames scored 19 points to lead San Diego
game that wasn't decided until the final minutes.
State to a win over UNLV. No. 11 Louisville 84, No. 18 SMU 71: DALLAS — Russ Smith scored 22 of his 26 p oints after h a lftime, i n -
Kaleb Tarczewski added
cluding six 3-pointers, and
gon State 74-69 on Wednesday night in a back-and-forth
12 points and nine rebounds
Louisville became the first
for the Wildcats (28-2, 15-2 Pac-12), who had already clinched the regular season conference title. The Wildcats have won five straight
opponent to win in SMU's renovated home.
with their last loss on Feb. 14 at archrival Arizona State.
all 10 of his points in the sec-
Dayton 72, No. 17 Saint Louis 67: ST. LOUIS — Re-
serve Jalen Robinson scored
ond half, including two key Roberto Nelson scored 25 3-pointers in the put-away points and Devon Collier had run, helping Dayton upset 14 points and 11 rebounds for Saint Louis, the Billikens' the Beavers (15-14, 7-10). third straight loss. Arizona built several leads No. 19 Connecticut 69, during the game but couldn't Rutgers 63: STORRS, Conn. pull far away from a feisty — Shabazz Napier scored Oregon State team. 26 points in his final home The Wildcats forced 17 game, leadingUConn to a turnovers and only commit- win over Rutgers. ted eight. No. 21 New Mexico 80, Air Arizona wo n i t s 1 0 8th Force 52: ALBUQUERQUE, game in the past four years, N.M. — Seniors Cameron the best four-year stretch in
Bairstow and Kendall Wil-
school history.
liams put on a show in their final home game for New Mexico, combining for 34 points to lead the Lobos to a victory over Air Force.
Oregon State hasn't beaten a top-5 team since it upset No. 3 Arizona 70-69 in Corvallis in 2000. It hasn't
beaten a top-25 team in more No. 23Oklahoma 72, West than three years. V irginia 6 2 : NOR M A N , Also on Wednesday: Okla.— Cameron Clark had Wake Forest 82, No. 4 19 points and 10 rebounds Duke 72: W I N STON-SA- in his final home game to LEM, N.C. — Tyler Cava- help Oklahoma defeat West naugh scored a career-high Virginia. 20 points and Wake Forest Colorado 59, Stanford 56: pulled away to upset Duke. STANFORD, Calif. — Josh No. 8 Kansas 82, Texas Scott had 17 points and 11 Tech 57: LAWRENCE, Kan.
rebounds, Xavier Johnson
— Tarik Black scored 19 scored 14points and Colorado points on perfect shooting in boosted its chances of a firsthis final game at Allen Field- round bye in next week's Pachouse, and Kansas managed 12 Conference tournament just fine without injured cen-
ter Joel Embiid in a romp over Texas Tech.
with a victory over Stanford.
Utah 63, California 59: BERKELEY, Calif. — Bran-
No. 9 Wisconsin 76, Pur- don Taylor converted the godue 70: M A D ISON, Wi s.
ahead free throws with 1:46
— Frank Kaminsky scored
remaining and hit a 3-point-
22 points, Traevon Jackson
er with 51.2 seconds left, and
added 14 and Wisconsin fin- Utah held off California to ished off its home schedule give coach Larry Krystkowiwith a victory over Purdue.
No. 10 San Diego State
Olympic
it 51-33 with a 3-pointer late in the half,
battling for the top four seeds in the West.
lig4% '~
ak his first 20-win season in
three years at the school.
The Hawks have lost four straight and and the Blazers went to the break with a 12 of their past 13 as they fight to stay in 56-38 advantage. the Eastern Conference playoff picture. The Hawks struggled in the first half, Batum has had at least 11 rebounds in shooting just 25 percent (11 of 44) from the hispast three games, and he has seven floor for their lowest first-half percentage double-doubles this season. Mo Williams of the season. added 15points off thebench for Portland, Portland forward LaMarcus Aldridge which had six players in double figures. was also having a tough start, going zero Cartier Martin had 16 points off the for 6 from the floor with three rebounds. bench for Atlanta. The three-time All-Star went into the Portland is coming off a 107-106 loss game averaging 23.7 points and 11.2 to the Lakers on Monday that snapped a rebounds. five-game winning streak. In other games on Wednesday: All-Star Damian Lillard started for the Bobcats 109, Pacers 87: CHARLOTTE, Blazers despite missing practice because N.C. — Al Jefferson scored 34 points in of a stomach bug, but the Blazers were Charlotte's victory over Indiana that gave still without forward Thomas Robinson, the Bobcats their fifth straight home win. who has a sore left knee. Rockets 101, Magic 89: ORLANDO, Portland also was without forward Joel Fla. — James Harden scored 31 points, Freeland because of a right knee injury. including 25 in the second half, and Hous-
Thornton came off the bench for 20, and
Brooklyn powered its way above .500 for the first time this season by beating Memphis. Bulls105, Pistons 94: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — D.J. Augustin scored 26 points offthe bench and Joakim Noah had a tri-
ple-double as Chicago beat Detroit. Knicks 118, Timberwolves 106: MINNEAPOLIS — Carmelo Anthony scored
33 points to help New York snap a seven-game losing streak with a victory over Minnesota. Kings 116, Bucks 102: MILWAUKEE
— Isaiah Thomas scored 25 points and had six assists to lead Sacramento past Milwaukee.
Nuggets 115, Mavericks 110: DENVER — Wilson Chandler scored 21 points, Ty
Lawson had 20, and Denver snapped a six-game losing streak by beating Dallas.
NBA SCOREBOARD estandings All TimesPST
EasternConference W L Pct GB x-Indiana 46 15 754 d-Miami 43 15 741 1'/r d-Toronto 33 26 559 12 Chicago 34 27 557 12 Washington 32 29 525 14 Brooklyn 30 29 508 15 Charlotte 28 33 459 18 Atlanta 26 33 441 19 Detroit 24 37 393 22 Cleveland 24 38 387 22'/r Newyork 22 40 355 24'/r Boston 20 41 328 26 Orlando 19 44 302 28 Philadelphia 15 46 246 31 Milwaukee 12 48 200 33'/r WesternConterence W L Pct GB d-Oklahoma City 46 15 754 d-SanAntonio 44 16 733 t'/r Houston 42 19 689 4 d-LA. Clippers 42 20 677 4'/r Portland 42 19 689 4 Golden State 38 24 613 8'/r Phoenix 35 25 583 10'/r Dallas 36 26 581 10'/r Memphis 34 26 567 1 1'/r Minnesota 30 30 500 15'/r Denver 26 34 433 19'/r NewOrleans 24 37 393 22 Sacramen to 22 39 361 24 Utah 21 40 344 25 LA. Lakers 21 40 344 25 d-divisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
Wednesday'sGames Houston101,Orlando89 Washington104,Utah91 Charlotte109,Indiana87 Brooklyn103,Memphis 94 GoldenState108, Boston88 Chicago105,Detroit 94 Denver115,Dallas110 NewYork118,Minnesota106 Sacramento116,Milwaukee102 Portland102,Atlanta78
Today'sGames Miami atSanAntonio, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City atPhoenix, 6 p.m. LA, Clippers atLA. Lakers, 7;30p.m. Friday's Games Memphis atChicago,4p.m. Sacramento atToronto,4 p.m. Cleveland atCharlotte,4 p.m. BrooklynatBoston, 4:30 p.m. Utah atNewYork,4:30 p.m. Detroit atMinnesota,5 p.m. Milwaukee atNewOrleans,5 p.m. PortlandatDalas, 5:30 p.m. LA. Lakers atDenver, 6p.m.
Indiana atHouston,6:30 p.m. Atlanta atGoldenState, 7:30p.m.
Summaries Wednesday'sGames
Blazers102, Hawks78 ATLANTA (78) Carroll 3-112-29,Scott2-60-04, Brand3-60-0 6, Teague4-122210, Korver1-93 35, Muscala26 0-0 4, LWigiams 0-14-4 4, Mack2-111-1 5, Antic 3-52-210, Schroder 2-71-35, Martin 7-141-216. Totals 29-8816-19 78. PORTLAND (t 02) Batum5-9 1-2 14,Aldridge1-138-8 10,Lopez 4-5 4-412, Lillard4-9 2-212, Matthews3-82-210, M.Williams6-9 0-015, Leonard2-3 0-0 4, Wright 1-4 2-3 5, McCollum4-9 0-0 9, Barton4-7 0-09, Claver0-10-0 0, Crabbe1-2 0-0 2. Totals 35-79 19-21 102. Atlanta 19 19 17 23 — 78 Porlland 29 27 23 23 — 102 3-Point Goal— s Atlanta 4-27 (Antic 2-4, Martin 1-5, Carroll 1-5, LWilliams0-1, Scott 0-1, Teague 0-1, Schroder0-2, Mack0-3, Korver0-5), Portland 13-29 (M.Wiliams3-3, Batum3-5, Matthews2-4, Lillard 2-5,Barton1-2, Wright1-3, McCollum1-5, Claver 0-1, Crabbe0-1j. Fouled Out—None. Rebounds —Atlanta42 (Martin, Carroll 6j, Portland66 (Batum18). Assists—Atlanta20 (Mack7), Portland 23 (Ligard6). Total Fouls—Atlanta17, Portland21. A—20,043(19,980j.
Kings 116, Bucks102
Fournier3-5 1-2 9,Miler 0-0 0-0 0,Hickson8-10 0-1 16,Randolph0-00-00, Brooks2-60-04, Arthur 3-54-410. Totals37-7930-36115. Dallas 34 17 22 37 —116 Denver 41 27 11 36 — 116
Knicks118, Timberwolves106 NEWYORK(118) Anthony14-27 2-433,Stoudemire 8-182-3 18, Chandler6-83-315, Felton5-86-818, Smith 6-11 0-014, Shump ert1-4 0-0 2,Hardaway Jr. 4-100-0 11, Prigioni 1-20-0 3, Aldrich0-0 0-0 0, Clark0-0 0-00, Murryg-00-00,Tyler2-20-1 4.Totals47-86 13-19 118. MINNESOT A (1BB) Brewer5-11 6-6 16,Love6-17 4-6 19,Pekovic 8-121-117, Rubio 4-63-311, KevMartin3-104-4 12, Cunningham 3 61-2 7,Budinger 3-100 07, Barea1-92-25,MbahaMoute0-00-00,Muhammad 5-50-010, Shved0-10-00, Dieng1-20-02, Price 0-1 0-00.Totals 38-9821-24106. New york 38 28 22 36 — 118 Minnesota 24 31 31 26 — 166
Nets103, Griulies 94 MEMPHIS (84) Princ e0-00-00,Davis0-20-00,Gasol7-144-5 18, Conle0-82-22, y Lee2-70-04, Ja.Johnson3-7 4-412, Allen5-94-615, Koufos6-90-212, Calathes 4-82-210, Miller0-40-0 0,Leuer6-104-419, Udrih 1-1 0-0 2.Totals 34-79 28-2694. BROOKLYN (103) Jo.Johnson 6-130-021, Pierce3-66-614, Plumlee 2-5 0-0 4,Wiliams 7-130-0 16, Livingston1-2 0-0 2, Blatche4-6 4-512, Kirilenko1-20-02, Teletovic 3-90-0 8,Anderson0-32-2 2, Thornton8-13 0-020, Collins0-00-00, Teague1-20-0 2. Totals
SACRAME NTO(t 16) Gay 6-166-6 22,Thompson4-90-0 8, Cousins 7147 921,Thoma s9-164 425, McLemore2 50 0 38-7412-13 103. 4, McCallum 7-100-015, Acy2-52-26, Wiliams1-2 Memphis 18 26 16 34 — 84 0-1 2,Evans3-47-1013, Johnson0-1 0-00. Totals Brooklyn 36 24 33 16 — 163 43-82 26-32116. MILWAUKEE (102) Middleton4-14 1-2 11, llyasova3-6 3-4 9, Pa- Bttlls105, Pistons 94 chulia 2-5 0-0 4,Knight7-13 9-1025, Wolters 4-6 0-0 8, Antetokounmpo 2-5 0-05, Henson2-62-46, CHICAGO (106) Mayo3-9 2-26, Sessions2-54-4 9,Adrien 6-93-3 Dunleavy3-8 0-0 7, Boozer5-10 0-0 10, Noah 5-70-1 10,Hinrich4-8 0-010, Butler7-15 4-618, 15, Raduljica0-0 0-0 0, Mitchell1-2 0-0 2.Totals 36-82 24-29162. Augustin7-1410-10 26,Gibson11-160-0 22, MoSacramento 28 3 3 34 21 — 116 hammed1-20-02,Snell0-00-00.Totals43-86 Milwaukee 26 22 26 28 — 102 14-17166. DETROIT (94) Smith 6-212-215, Monroe12-203-427, DrumNuggets115, Mavericks110 mond 7-81-1 15,Jennings4-7 0-1 9, Singler 5-11 6-716, Stuckey 4-90-08, Bynum1-11 2-24, CaldDALLAS (116) well-Pope 0-00-00. Totals 39-8714-17 94. Marion 7-12 0-0 15, Nowitzki 13-20 0-0 27, Chicago 18 33 19 34 — 166 Dalembert0-30-0 0, Calderon2-50-0 5, Ellis 7-13 Detroit 26 22 23 24 — 84 1-1 16,Blair0 00 00, Carter5124 417, Harris 05 2-22, Crowder 2-22-28, Wright9-130-018, Larkin 1-1 0-02,James0-10-00. Totals 46-879-9110. Warriors108, Celtics 88 DENVER (116) Chandler6-176-621,Faried5-106-616, Mozgov GOLDEN STATE(108) 0-5 3-4 3, Lawson5-12 8-9 20, Foye5-9 2-2 16, Iguodala5-9 0-011, Lee9-170-018, Bogut2-4
0-04, Curry6-101-1 14, Thompson7-153-318, O'Neal3-61-1 7, Blake2-6 0-04, Barnes1-8 0-03, D.Green3-7 1-2 7, Crawford 7-12 0-015, Speights 1-45-57. Totals46-9811-12168. BOSTON (88) J.Green 2-70-04, Bass4-53-311, Humphries1-5 0-0 2, Rondo 6-141-414, Bayless3-8 4-510, Sullinger 1-79-1011,Johnson2-8 0-0 5, Pressey3-4 0-0 7, Olynyk6-12 4-419, Babb2-50-05, Anthony 0-1 0-00.Totals 30-7621-26 88. GoldenState 30 31 23 24 — 108 Boston 22 18 14 34 — 88
Rockets101, Magic 89 HOUSTON (101)
Parsons8-201-319, Jones8-100-217, Howard 8-12 3-619, Beverley1-8 2-2 4,Harden11-197-7 31, Asik0-1 2-22,Hamilton1-40-03, Lin1-40-2 2,Motiejunas2-30-04,Canaan0-00-00,Casspi 0-10-00,Daniels0-00-00.Totals40-8216-24 101.
ORLANDO (89)
Harkless6-101-215, Harris3-124-410, Vucevic 7-91-215, Price4-60-0 8, Afflalo 8-16 2-218,
O'Quinn4-130-0 8, Moore3-62-29, Nicholson1-5 0-0 2, Lamb 0-4 0-00, Thomas 1-2 0-0 2, Dedmon 1-1 0-02.Totals 38-8410-1289. Houston 19 22 34 26 — 101 Orlando 32 16 17 24 — 89
Bodcats109, Pacers 87 INDIANA (87)
George0-92-2 2, West4-14 2-310, Hibbert2-8 0-0 4, G.Hill 6-102-317, Stephenson4-9 2-212, Sloan0-20-20, Turner9-122-222, Mahinmi0-01-2 1, Scola3-52-28, Butler000-00, Copeland3-52-2 11, Allen 0-20-00. Totals 31-7616-2087.
CHARLOTTE (109) Kidd-Gilchrist 1-3 1-2 3, McRoberts5-12 2-3 12, Jefferson16-25 1-2 34, Walker7-14 4-4 19, Douglas-Roberts4-71-212, Zeller4-6 3-411, Neal 3-10 2-210,Tolliver3-50-1 8, Biyombo0-1 0-00, Ridnour0-10-0 0, Pargo0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-84 14-20109. Indiana 8 36 19 30 — 87 Charlotle 28 19 26 36 — 109
Wizards104, Jazz91 UTAH(91)
Jefferson3-7 0-0 8, Wiliams3-9 0-0 7, Favors 2-41-2 5, Burke 5-142-214, Hayw ard 5-122-512, Kanter4-83-311, Burks6-115-1019, Evans4-80-0 8, Garrett3-50-07. Totals 36-7813-22 91.
WASHINGTO N(t 04) Ariza 9-144-4 26, Booker1-12-2 4, Godat 7-11 2-216, Wall7-150-014, Beal9-19 2-222,Porter Jr. 0-1 0-0 0,Singleton0-0 0-0 0, Miler 1-4 0-02, Gooden6 70 012, Harrington 4 80 08, Temple 0-1 0-00. Totals 44-8110-10104. utah 23 21 27 20 — 91 Washington 28 26 26 26 — 104
NHL ROUNDUP
Maple Leafs need overtime to overtake Rangers The Associated Press
Toronto built a 2-0 lead on Bozak's
had two goals, and Michael Raffl and Steve
second-period goal and Nazem Kadri's Downie also scored to lead Philadelphia. a penalty shot and then got the winning tally in the third. The Rangers tied it on Flames 4, Senators 1: CALGARY, Algoal 1:51 into overtime to lift the Toron- short-handed goals by McDonagh and berta — Markus Granlund scored his first to Maple Leafs to a 3-2 victory over the Dominic Moore 1:19 apart. NHL goal and fellow Finnish rookie Joni Rangers on Wednesday night, spoiling L undqvist bounced back f rom t w o Ortio picked up his first career victory as the New York debut of Martin St. Louis. straight losses in which he gave up 10 Calgary beat Ottawa. Bozak got to a loose puck in front goals, finishing with 26 saves. ToronCanadiens 4, Ducks 3: ANAHEIM, Cathat bounced past Rangers defensemen to's Jonathan Bernier had dropped two lif. — Andrei Markov scored in the sixth Dan Girardi and Ryan McDonagh and straight after regulation while allowing round of the shootout, and Montreal beat slammed a shot past Henrik Lundqvist to nine goals. He stopped 35 shots. NHL-leading Anaheim for its sixth victosnap the Maple Leafs' three-game losing Also on Wednesday: ry in eight games. Brendan Gallagher had streak (0-1-2) and stretch New York's skid Flyers 6, Capitals 4: PHILADELPHIA a goal and an assist for the Canadiens, tyto three (0-2-1). — Claude Giroux and Jakub Voracek each ing it late in the second period. NEW YORK — Tyler Bozak scored on
was going to do," Timm says. In addition to 2014 Olympian Ross, Nils Eriksson, alpine director for Bend's Tommy Ford also grew up MBSEF, says skiers in his program Continued from C1 "We've looked at some of the vidskiing for the Mt. Bachelor Sports — ranging in age from 7 to 21 — reeos of Ted Ligety, which was really Education Foundation (MBSEF). late to Ross because she is a local interesting, because his techniques Ford, aSummit graduate who com- and she grew up skiing for MBSEF. "And she's super good about comare some of the stuff we've been peted in the 2010 Olympics in Vanworking on this year," Wallace says. couver, did notrace thispastseason ing back and visiting the program," "While we're not at the same profi- after suffering a broken leg last year. Eriksson says. "All the kids know ciency as Ted, we're kind of working Ligety and six-time Olympic med- who she is. To me, that's the biggest that way, with regard to his skills alist Bode Miller have trained at thing, the kids following her and beand technique. So that was real inter- Bachelor in past years during the ing excited for her. Because they're esting for us." spring. So, of course, has Ross, who all dreaming about being able to Timm says that several of his ski- finished 11th in the downhill at the make it to the national team and to ers got together to watch the Olympic Sochi Games and also raced in — but the Olympics." ski racing, trying to glean as much as did not finish — the super combined About 230 alpine skiers are racing possible from the best in the world. or the super-G. for MBSEF this winter, with a sig"Some kids question things, like "If you were a ski racer in Central nificant increase in numbers in the why did this happen or why did they Oregon, you had a heightened inter- younger age groups, according to do that?" Timm says. est and awareness (in the Olympics) Eriksson. Connections between the U.S. Ski because of Laurenne and how she More than 100 skiers race in the Team and Mt. Bachelorrun deep.
OSSA, and Bend High boasts 38
Cutter are two of the top Lava Bear
girls. says it is the biggest team he has ever Summit's Jared Schiemer is the fielded in his 24 years as coach of the defending overall boys champion, skiers while Summit has 17. Timm
Lava Bears. Of course, he does not actually credit the healthy turnout to
and Thomas Wimberly is another
the excitement of the Winter Olym-
and Britt Hanson lead the Summit
pics, as the skiers registered for the team last November — some three
girls. Timm notes that ski racing in general is making somewhat of a
months before the start of the Sochi
strong Storm skier. Natalie Merrill
Games. "But it certainly helps the future,
comeback.
because it gives ski racing more exposure," Timm says of the Olympics, adding that there is "way more of a chance of it having an effect for next
thusiasm," Timm says. "We'd like to think that it's back on the rise, and
"There's definitely a bump in en-
the exposure of the Olympics cer-
tainly doesn't hurt. The more kids year, down the road." we get, they talk their friends into Keenan Seidel a n d M a t t h ew it. I think we're on a good upward
Scheaferare expected to lead the swmg. Bend boys this weekend, according to Timm. Elinor Wilson and Shelby
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
PREP NOTEBOOK
Cougarshighlight all-IMCbasketball teams Bulletin staff report
Scoreboard, below. Grant Lannin and Ments Haugen Bend, Summit dominate Interhave been named tothe Intermounmountain eii-league squad: In leadtain Hybrid all-league team after ing Bend High to a 20-4 overall rehelping Mountain View to the 2013-14 cord and a 9-0 mark in IntermounIntermountain Conference boys bas- tain Conference play, senior guard ketball title. Delaney Crook has been selected the The all-league team was selected Intermountain Hybrid player of the
season, was chosen as the conference's player of the year for 2013-14, and sophomore Emily Eidler also was voted to the first team. North
Lake also landed a player on the first team, freshman Kendra Murphy.
Two Storm players commit to coilege football: Blake Garrison and Orlando Garcia, a pair of offensive and
by a vote of Intermountain Hybrid
year for the 2013-14 season. Also vot-
coaches. The Intermountain Hybrid
ed by league coaches to the first team defensive linemen who helped 20thwas the Lava Bears' Lisa Sylvester, ranked Summit upset No. 13 Sandy and Bend High's Todd Ervin was on the road in a Class 5A play-in footchosen as the league's coach of the ball game this past fall, have comyear. Summit, which went 17-7 for the mitted to play football at the college regular season, landed senior guard leveL Garrison will attend NCAA Raja Char and freshman guard Sar- Division III Lewis & Clark College ah Reeves on the first team as Bend in Portland, and Garcia will enroll at and Summit combined to fill seven of College of the Siskiyous, a communithe 10 spots of the all-league first and ty college in Weed, Calif. second teams. Mountain View senior Former Hawks shine at OIT: Kas-
consists of Bend, Mountain View,
Summit and Redmond high schools of the Class 5A Intermountain Con-
ference, and Crook County and Ridgeview high schools of Class 4A Special District 1. Lannin, a senior, was voted the
league's player of the year as a forward, and Haugen, Mountain View's junior point guard, was chosen to the first team. Davis Holly,
guard Emma Platner rounded out the first team.
si Conditt and Maria Ramirez, two
Voted to the Intermountain Hy-
Conference first team. But this year,
stitute of Technology in K l amath
brid first team along with Lannin and Haugen was Bend High senior
the junior guard can add a conference player of the year honor to her resume. After guiding Madras to a 15-9 regular-season record, Stacona was voted the TVC player of the year,
Falls. Conditt, whose career-high 26 points propelled the Owls to their
choices included three players from while teammate sophomore Venessa Bend: guards Wyatt Beaumarchais, Esquivel received honorable mena senior, and J.J. Spitler, a junior, and tion. Mikaela Simac of Gladstone senior forward Jaylin Robinson. was named defensive MVP for the
CCC first team. The senior averages
a sophomore, was chosen to the second team for the Cougars, who
finished the regular season 19-3 overall and ranked No. 3 in the final OSAA Class 5A rankings.
forward Connor Scott, who led the Lava Bears to a 16-7 record and a No. 7 state ranking. Second-team
Also named to the first team were
La Pine High graduates who guidStacona voted TVC player of the ed the Hawks to the Class 4A girls year: For the third straight season, basketball state championship in Madras standout Mariah Stacona 2009,have received all-conference has been selected to the all-Tri-Valley honors as players at the Oregon In-
TVC, and Gladstone's Pat Scott was
Summit senior wing Nick Moyer and voted the coach of the year. Ridgeview sophomore guard George Trinity Lutheran's Murphy, Eidier Mendazona. Ridgeview senior guard named aii-MVL: After Trinity LutherJack Bowman was named to the sec- an amassed a 16-9 overall record ond team. and posted a third-place finish in Mountain View's Craig Reid and the Mountain Valley League to earn Bend's Scott Baker w ere chosen a spot in the Class 1A state playoffs, co-coaches of the year. two Saints were selected to the allFor a complete list of the all-In- league first team. Junior Katie Murtermountain Hybrid team, see Prep phy, a first-team all-MVL player last
first Cascade Collegiate Conference
women's basketball championship on Monday, was chosen to the allteam highs with 12.8 points and 9.1 rebounds per game and was third in the NAIA with a total of 115 blocks
duringthe regular season.Ramirez — who posted 10 points, eight rebounds and six assists in OIT's 88-
72 championship win over Southern Oregon — was an honorable mention choice with averages of 5.7
points and six rebounds per game. Conditt and Ramirez will lead the 28-5 Owls into the NAIA Division II
national tournament, set for March 12-18 in Sioux City, Iowa.
Class 5A IntermountainHybrid All-league Player ot theyear —Grant Lannin, sr., MountainView. Coaches of theyear —CraigReid, Mountain View;Scott Baker,Bend. Firstteam —Ments Haugen,jr., MountainView;Grant Lannin, sr., MountainView;Nick Moyer, sr., Summit; ConnorScott, sr., Bend;GeorgeMendazona,so.,Ridgeview. Secondteam—Wyatt Beaumarchais, sr., Bend;Jaylin RojIinson,sr.,Bend;J.J. Spitler, jr., Bend;Davis Holly, so., Mountain View;JackBowman, sr., Ridgeview. Honorablemention —Seth Kessi, so.,CrookCounty; Blake Bartels,so., CrookCounty; Garrett Roth, sr., MountainView;Brandon Benson,so., Redmond; DerekBrown, so., Redmond; Tanner O'Neal,jr., Ridgeview;MaxMichalski, jr., Summit; IsaacDerman, jr., SummJacob it; Parsons,ir., Summit. CLASS6A Playoffs Round 1
Wednesday'sGames
WestLinn80,Century 39 Grant58,Lakeridge53 Tigard59,Westview 39 CentralCatholic60,Tualatin 51 Jesuit64,Barlow47 Reynolds49, Grants Pass34 Southridge77, Forest Grove65 SouthMedford68, Beaverton52 SouthSalem71, David Douglas59 Thurston57,McKay45 McMinnville59,OregonCity 51 Sunset71, McNary53 Sheldon68, Canby57 SouthEugene47, North Medford 42 LakeOswego60, Lincoln52 Clackamas 59,Aloha50 Round 2
Saturday'sGames GrantatWest Linn Tigard at Central Catholic Reynoldat s Jesuit Southridge at SouthMedford Thurston at SouthSalem McMinnvilleatSunset SouthEugeneat Sheldon LakeOswegoat Clackamas ChampionshipTournament At ModaCenter, Portland March 13-15 CLASS5A
Play-in Round Tuesday'sGames
Hermiston65,Summit 46 Liberty62,Dallas51 Wilson75,Pendleton35 Cleveland67,Sandy58 Madison 73, Corvallis 55
Wednesday'sGames Crescent Valley56,Ashland44 Silverton47,Marist 28
Springfield69,Benson65
Playolfs Round 1 Saturday'sGames SpringfieldatJefferson Wilson at Wilsonvile HermistonatWest Albany Crescent ValleyatEagle Point Madison at Mountain View SilvertonatSherwood Liberty at Bend Cleveland atChurchil ChampionshipTournament At MatlhewKnight Arena, Eugene March 13-15 CLASS4A
Playoffs Round 1 Saturday'sGames SweetHomeat Philomath NorthValleyatMarshfield Cascade at Henley Yamhill-CarltonatLaGrande Seaside at Central Brookings-Harbor atTilamook Sutherlin atCotageGrove Newportat LaSalle Prep
ChampionshipTournament At Gill Coliseum,Corvallis March 13-15 CLASS3A
ChampionshipTournament At Marshfield/NorthBendHighSchools Today'sGames Guarlerlinals Creswelvs. l ValleyCatholic,1:30 p.m. Harrisburg vs.BlanchetCatholic, 3:15p.m. Amityvs. PortlandAdventist Academy,6:30 p.m. De LaSaleNorthCatholic vs.CascadeChristian, 8:15p.m. Friday's Games Consolation Semitinals Creswell/ValleyCatholic loservs. Harrisburg/BlanchetCatholic loser, 9 a.m. Amity/PortlandAdventist Acad emy loser vs. DeLaSalle North Catholic loser,10:45a.m. Semifinals Amity/Portland Adventist Academy winnervs. DeLaSalle North Catholicwinner,3:15p.m.
Creswell/ValleyCatholicwinnervs. Harrisburg/BlanchetCatholic winner,8:15p.m.
Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Consolationsemifinal winners,9:45a.m. Third/Fiflh Place Semifinallosers,1:15p.m. Final Semifinalwinners,9p.m.
CLASS2A ChampionshipTournament At PendletonConventionCenter Today'sGames Guarlerlinals CanyonvilleChristianAcademyvs. Irrigon,1:30 p.m. Regisvs.Central Linn,3:15p.m. DaysCreekvs. Stanfield, 6:30p.m. WesternMennonitevs. Oakland, 8:15 p.m. Friday's Games Consolation Semifinals Canyonville ChristianAcademy/Irrigon loser vs. Regis/Central Linn loser,9a.m. DaysCreek/Stanfield loservs.WesternMennonite/Oakland loser, 10:45a.m. Semifinals CanyonvilleChristianAcademy/Irrigon winnervs. Regis/Central Linn winner, 3:15p.m. Days Creek/Stanfield winnervs. WesternMennonite/Oakland winner,8:15p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Consolationsemifinalwinners,10:45a.m. Third/Fiflh Place Semifinallosers 315p m Final Semifinalwinners,8:30p.m.
ClASS1A ChampionshipTournament At BakerHigh School Today'sGames Guarlerlinals Imblervs.HorizonChristian (HoodRiver),1:30 p.m. Crosshill Christianvs.JordanValley, 3:15 p.m. TriangleLakevs. ColumbiaChristian, 6:30p.m. lone vs.Powder Valley, 8:15p.m. Friday's Games Consolation Semifinals Imbler/HorizonChristian (HoodRiver) loser vs.Crosshil Christian/Jordan Valley loser,9a.m. TriangleLake/Columbia Christian loservs. lone/Pow der Valey loser,10:45a.m. Semifinals Imbler/Horizon Christian (HoodRiver)winnervs. Crosshil Christian/Jordan Valley winner,3;15 p.m. TriangleLake/Columbia Christianwinnervs. lone/Powder Valey winner,8:15p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourlh/SixthPlace Consolationsemifinal winners,10:45a.m. Third/Fiflh Place Semifinallosers,3:15p.m. Final Semifinalwinners,8:30p.m.
GIRLS BASKETBALL Class 5A Intermountain Hybrid All-league Player oItheyear—DelaneyCrook,sr., Bend. CoachOItheyear— ToddErvi m,Bend. First team —DelaneyCrook,sr., Bend;LisaSylvester, sr., Bend;SarahReeves, fr., Summit; RajaChar, sr., Summit; Emma Platner,sr., MountainView. Secondteam—SarahHeinly, so.,Summit; McKenzie Hidalgo, sr.,Ridgeview;ChloeRoss,jr., Ridgeview; JessicaMcClay,sr., Bend;BrydieBumham,sr., Bend. Honorable mention —Marta Rodes, sr., Ridgeview;Chantel Dannis,ir., Redmond; Kimmer Severance,so., CrookCounty; Jessie Goetz, sr., Mountain View;Jacquelyn Manley,sr., Summit; SophiaHam ilton, fr., Redmond; MichaelineMalott, jr., CrookCounty; HaileyGoetz, so.,MountainView; Kendall Kramer,sr., Bend;Emily Hasenoehrl,sr.,Summit; CiaraLennie, sr., Redmond. Class4A Tri-Valley Conference All-league Player OIthe year—Mariah Stacona,jr., Madras. DefensiveMVP—MikaelaSimac,jr., Gladstone. Coach oItheyear —PatScott, Gladstone. First team —MariahStacona,jr., Madras; MikaelaSimac, jr., Gladstone;AndreaNovak, sr., La Salle; Molly Webster, jr., Gladstone; MikaelaMeeuwsen, sr., NorthMarion; Sterling Swift, sr., La Salle. Secondteam—MorganmcSmith, sr., LaSalle; AleahGoodman, fr., LaSalle; ToriJohnson,jr., Estaca da; FionaBurrel, sr., Gladstone; KileyFlorez,so., NorthMarion. Honorablemention—Katie Buerk, sr., LaSalle; Venessa Esquivel, so., Madras;MelissaCam pos, jr., Gladstone; Josie Child, sr.,Molala;Mackenzie Cook,jr., La Salle; JessicaOliver, so., NorthMarion;MadelineThompson, fr., Estacada;Audrey Reiskamp, fr., Molala;KendellSchumaker, sr., Gladstone;Nicole Peterson,sr., Gladstone;Allison lg, sr., LaSale; Emm a Kirchoff, sr., Estaca da. CLASS6A Playoffs Round 2 Friday's Games Roseburg at SouthMedford WestLinnat SouthSalem Sheldon at Beaverton Tualatinat Clackamas Hillsboroat St Mary'sAcademy Canby atWestview Jesuit atTigard Craterat OregonCity
couldn't even afford to give her a wheelchair. Maybe she learned it
Continued from C1
from her adoption, that miraculous
Her adoptive mother, Deborah
McFadden, shakes her head in disbelief at this unfolding chapter. She could not have imagined all this when she first glimpsed 6-yearold Tatyana while traveling on an
CLASS 5A Play-in Round Nesday's Games Sherwood 46, Churchil 29 Wilson37,Sandy34 WestAlbany64,Roosevelt 38 Pendl eton60,Putnam44 Silyerton50, NorthEugene32 Milwaukie49,Cleveland46 Springfield60,Ashland44 Wednesday'sGam e EaglePoint56,Dalas 49(2OT) Playoffs Round 1 Friday's Games PendletonatWilamette Wilson atSummit Springfieldat Bend MilwaukieatLebanon SilvertonatHermiston Sherwood atMarist WestAlbanyatThe DallesWahtonka EaglePointat Corvallis
ChampionshipTournament At MatthewKnight Arena, Eugene March 13-15 CULSS 4A Playoffs Round 1
Friday's Games
MadrasatSutherlin, 6 p.m. Brookings-HarboratCottageGrove,7 p.m. Elmira atHenley,6 p.m. Phoeni xatSeaside,6p.m. BanksatPhilomath, 7p.m. GladstoneatMazama, 6p.m. Centralat LaGrande, 6p.m. Cascade atLaSalle Prep,7p.m.
ChampionshipTournament At Gill Coliseum,Corvallis March 12-15 CLASS 3A ChampionshipTournament At Marshfield/NorthBendHighSchools Today'sGames Quarlerlinals Corbett/CorbettChartervs. Vale,1:30 p.m. St. Mary's,Medfordvs. Wilamina, 3:15p.m. Glidevs.Nyssa,6:30p.m. Creswelvs. l ValleyCatholic, 8:15p.m. Friday's Games Consolation Semifinals Corbett/CorbettCharter/ Valeloservs. St Mary's,Medford/Willaminaloser,9 a.m. Glide/Nyssa loservs. Creswel/Valley Catholic loser,10:45a.m. Semifinals Corbett/CorbettCharter / Valewinnervs. St Mary's, Medford/ Willaminawinner,1:30p.m. Glide/Nyssa winnervs. Creswell/Valley Catholic winner,6:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourlh/SixthPlace Consolationsemifinal winners,8a.m. Third/Fiflh Place Semifinallosers,11;30a.m. Final Semifinalwinners,7p.m. CLASS 2A
ChampionshipTournament At PendletonConventionCenter Wednesday'sGames Ouarlerlinals Regis42,PortlandChristian31 Lost River48,Pilot Rock43 WesternMennonite66, Union40 Santiam 41, North Douglas37 Today'sGames Consolation Semitinals PortlandChristianvs.Pilot Rock,9 a.m. Unionvs.NorthDouglas, IO:45 a.m. Friday's Games Semifinals Regisvs.LostRiver,1:30 p.m. WesternMennonitevs. Santiam, 6:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Consolationsemifinal winners,9a.m. Final Semifinalwinners,6:30p.m. CLASS1A ChampionshipTournament At BakerHigh School Wednesday'sGames Guarlerlinals Condon/INhee ler 67,Crane34 St. Paul42,Dufur 33 TriangleLake44, Prairie City40 Damascus Christian 50,Country Christian18 Today'sGames Consolation Semifinals Cranevs.Dufur, 9a.m. PrairieCityvs.Country Christian,10:45a.m. Friday's Games Semifinals Condon/jjjtheelevs. r St Paul,1:30p.m. TriangleLakevs. DamascusChristian, 6:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Consolationsemifinal winners,9a.m.
Semifinalwinners,6:30p.m.
Final
fortable suburban home where she
could try anything "What can I do next?" she says, describing her ethos. "I think that's
the fun part." of Health and Human Services. McFadden had enjoyed downDeborah had no plans to adopt at hill skiing as a child but believed the time but could not get the girl the speed of that sport would be with the fierce, bright eyes out of too much for her. So she broached her mind. the cross-country idea with coachMcFadden's evolution dropped es from the U.S. Paralympic team. the jaws of staffers at Orphanage They also said she would be per13 in St. Petersburg, who met her fect for t h e s p ort an d e ncourduring a return visit in 2011. aged her to travel to Colorado for "I was the first person with a training. disability to come back, and they The transition was not instant, were absolutely amazed — from McFadden says. Though h er scrawny to how strong I've be- strength made her competitive, the come," McFadden says. "And very ideal skiing motion requires harindependent, getting out of the car, mony between the upper body and transferring to my chair, hopping the core muscles. That is hard for down steps, picking up children. McFadden because of the extent of It amazed them, because they've her paralysis. never seen someone with a disabilShe was also unaccustomed to ity become so successful and so the vagaries of snow, which can independent." be powdery one day and a slushy These Paralympics come as mess the next. She learned how tensions rise between Russia and hard it was to guide her skis preUkraine. Th e R u ssian m i l itary cisely given such uncertainty. seized control of Ukraine's Crimea Winter competitors even use difregion on Saturday in response to ferent types of wax on their skis, ongoing political upheavaL depending on the conditions. "The endurance, strength and W ire servi ces reported on Saturday that the International Paralym- power she has earned on the track pic Committee said in a statement and in her training are her greatit hopes "a peaceful resolution can est assets in nordic skiing," says be found in the spirit of the Olym-
her winter coach, John Farra. "But
pic Truce, which has covered the otherwise, skiing is very different Paralympic Games since 2006." from track." "We want the story here to be The subzero temperatures prethe great festival of sport that has sented yet another challenge, as already taken place in Sochi and McFadden costherself speed by will continue now that athletes are trying to pile on too many layers. "Everyone was saying I looked arriving for the start of the Winter Paralympics," the statement said. l ike a m a r s hmallow w i t h t h e amount of layers I had on," she "Never saysno" says. "I'm just not used to being so It is a Friday in late February, the cold." day before she will depart for Italy McFadden is not yet the domion her way to Sochi. The long, sleek nant force on snow that she is on skis that attach to her racing seat the track or a marathon course. A are splayed across Deborah's kitch- top-10 finish is a good result for her "She just never says no," her mother muses.
ChampionshipTournament At ModaCenter, Portland March 12-15
experience of being plucked from a hopeless circumstance to a com-
aid mission for the U.S. Department
en floor in Clarksville.
PREP SCOREBOARD Boys basketball
Challenge
Deborah recalls a recent chat in
at the world-class level, with her best chances for victory coming at
the shorter distances. Farra says
M c Fadden m ain-
which a friend said Tatyana could tains a realistic view of where she next try the Iditarod sled race in stands, given the fact she has not Alaska. "Put a piece of tape over
won at the World Cup events she
your mouth before she hears you," has entered. "She is still very new Deborah replied. in the sport," he says. "But I would Doing the far-fetched is old hat
for McFadden at this point. She won herfirstParalympic medals before she even entered high school. As a student at Atholton in Columbia, Md., she won a groundbreaking
not count her out in any event she e nters. They d on't m ak e t h em
much tougher than this one." McFadden has also taken up bi-
athlon, adding a target-shooting rifle to the array of titanium raclawsuit that paved the way for dis- ing seats, carbon wheels and $300 abled prep athletes to compete side tires (she once blew six in a single by side with their able-bodied peers. week of training) that already clutWhile at the University of Illinois, ter her mother's garage. she traded off between dominating the summer sprint circuit and win-
"A way ofsayingthankyou"
ning some of the world's most competitive marathons.
Though McFadden is focused on Sochi as an athletic compe"Very few women in the world tition, there is little question the are asfi t as she is orcan generate Games will carry an extra layer the power that she does, no mat- of emotion because of her Russian ter what the sport," says her track heritage. coach, Adam Bleakney. After she won the London MaraAll of her previous achievements thon in 2011, she asked Deborah if merely set the stage for 2013, when they could visit St. Petersburg beM cFadden becamethefirstperson fore returning to the U.S. to win four major marathonsShe returned to Orphanage 13, Boston, London, Chicago and New taking in the modest space that had York — inthe same calendar year, seemed so huge to her when she sandwiching those victories around was a tiny kid, navigating the halls a world championship performance on her hands. in which she won every race beAfter touring the orphanage, tween 100 and 5,000 meters. Tatyana met her birth mother. Oh, and she also graduated from Some articlesdescribe McFadcollege. den as having been "abandoned" Asked if she had time to enjoy it, in the orphanage, but she does not McFadden smiles at the absurdity regardthe experience thatway.Her of her schedule. "I had a few days birth mother, Nina Polivikova, was to myself after New York," she says, young and had no means to care for referring to her crowning marathon a baby with spina bifida. "Her mother was told that her victory in November. One of her Illinois professors even gave her a child would die, that there was no cake in class. hope for her," Deborah says. "My birth mom, she had to do the Of course, two weeks later, she was in frigid Canada, racing on hardest part," Tatyana adds. "Just to skis. give me life and then put me in the Even as her remarkable 2013 un- orphanage, because I was extremefolded, McFadden had her eye on lysick." the next hurdle — winter.
'Whatcan Ido next?'
She wanted their reunion to be
devoid of guilt. "Goingback and showing her the
McFadden had hatched her
person I've become was almost a t r y c r o ss-country s k i - way of saying thank you to her," she ing — known as sit skiing in the says. "I wanted her to know, 'It's not
p lan t o
Paralympics — after her 2012 sum- your fault. You did what you could. You did the best that you could at competed in winter sports, and that time and moment.'" they always told her she would be She has remained in touch with perfect for cross-country skiing, Polivikova since their meeting and given her one-in-a-million combi- looks forward to racing in front of nation of upper-body power and her and various cousins in Sochi. mer season. She had friends who
cardiovascular endurance. "I think I want to do Russia," she
"That's the first time they get to
way or not, McFadden seems to thrive on a t tempting feats that
slow down when the Sochi Games
sound impossible to most. "I guess I do," she says. "My mom was like, 'Why do you want to do a winter sport? You've al-
on the last day of competition, fly back tothe U.S. the next day and
physically see me compete," Mctold her mother. Fadden says. "For me, that's going " To do w h at?" Deborah M c - to be fulfilling. I'm sure I'll never Fadden replied, not contemplat- forget being able to see them at the ing the breadth of her daughter's starting line or being there when I ambitions. cross." Whether she would put it this Just do not expect McFadden to conclude. She is scheduled to race hop an immediate flight to Illinois so she can resume marathon train-
ing. On April 13, she will line up a new challenge and it's fun. Yeah, to defend her title in the London it's crazy to deal with the changes. Marathon. "I asked her coach, 'Is that huBut it's also fun." Maybe she needed that kind manly possible?'" her mother says. "He said, 'No, but for Tatyana ... of optimism to survive her early years in the orphanage, where they maybe.'" ways been a summer athlete.' It's
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
+
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugotin.com/business. Also sooarecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
NASDAQ ~ 4,357.97
16,360.18
+
Todap
10 YRTNOTE ~ 2.71% ~
gp
1,873.81
GOLD
01
$1,340.20I
S8$P 500
Thursday, March 6, 2014
Strategic update?
t,s4o
Staples has been facing tough competition from discounters and online retailers. To cope, the office supply company, which is due to report fourthquarter earnings today, has been investing more in its online and mobile efforts and expanding the product assortment that it offers to business customers. Investors will be listening today for an update on how the strategy is working.
1,800' " ""'10 DAYS
1,900 "
"
"
"
.
.
.
16,220"
Change: -0.10 (flat)
17,000"
16,000"
"
1,750
15,500
1,700 "
15,000 J
NYSE NASD
.
.
....... Close: 16,360.18 Change: -35.70 (-0.2%)
F
'
"
"
"
16,500"
Vol. (in mil.) 3,322 2,150 Pvs. Volume 3,624 2,379 Advanced 1490 1251 Declined 1571 1316 New Highs 1 96 2 0 0 New Lows 8 11
"
"
"
StocksRecap
"
16,000 ' ""' 10 DAYS "
1,650
.
"
14,500
0
HIGH LOW CLOSE 16406.55 16343.96 16360.18 DOW Trans. 7506.99 7466.57 7489.65 DOW Util. 518.57 514.21 514.93 NYSE Comp. 10498.72 10466.09 10482.83 NASDAQ 4362.50 4344.15 4357.97 S&P 500 1876.53 1871.11 1873.81 S&P 400 1389.75 1383.47 1385.54 Wilshire 5000 20156.74 20102.18 20131.39 Russell 2000 1207.41 1203.06 1205.91
DOW
N
MO QTR YTD L L -1.31% L L +1.20% L L +4.97% L L +0.79% L L +4.34% L L +1.38% L L +3.20% L L +2.16% L L +3.63%
dollar stores with expanding food sections. In January, Kroger completed its acquisition of regional upscale food retailer Harris Teeter Supermarkets.
$22 67
$50
Kroger (KR)
$43.68
$29.47 40
30 20
Operating EPS 4 Q '12
Brown-Forman(BF.B)
4 Q ' 13
F $71 97
Vol.:74.5m (1.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$141A b
PE 121.3 : Yield:...
Arch Coal
ACI Close:$4.57 V-0.01 or -0.2% The miner is selling its Hazard facility as well as its infrastructure and 38 million tons of coal reserves in eastern Kentucky. $5.0 4.5
Federal Signal FSS Ooso $14 33L1 19 or 9 1 /o The company that produces everything from street sweepers to toll booth technology had a fivefold jump in quarterly profit. $16
D J F 52-week range $725 ~ $ 75 89
Vol.:785.9k (2.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$898.12 m
PE: 6.6 Yield : ...
Honeywell HON Close:$94.66 %0.06 or 0.1% The conglomerate released its fiveyear plan, saying it expects sales to increase organically by as much as $12 billion. $95 90
4.0 D
J
D
F
52-week range $3.47~
$5 .8 3
Mkt. Cap:$970.12 m
J
F
52-week range
Vol.:7.2m(0.8x a vg.) P
$7D.85~
$ 95.85
E: . . . Vol.:4.2m (1.4x avg.)
Yi eld: 0.2% Mkt. Cap:$74.23 b
Smith &Wesson
SWHC Close: $13.74L1.94 or 16.4% The gunmaker surprised Wall Street with a very strong quarter after sales growth at rival Sturm, Ruger appeared to trail off. $16
PE:1 9 . 2 Yie l d: 1.9%
FuelCell Energy FCEL Close:$3.13L0.42 or 15.5% A deal with Wal-Mart to provide fuel cells for its forklifts continues to drive shares of the alternative energy company higher. $4
14 12
D
J
F
D
52-week range $8.25~
J
F
52-week range $75.55
Vol.:12.7m (7.1x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$768.86 m
$D.84 ~
$3.45
PE : 1 0.0 Vol.:107.6m (11.1x avg.) Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$740.13 m
Canadian Solar
CSIQ Close:$39.02 V-4.66 or -10.6% Harsh winter storms are slowing the construction of power plants and the solar company warned that it may affect revenue. $50 40
PE: ... Yield : ...
Bob Evans Farms
BOB E
Close:$47.51 V-4.23 or -8.2% Another company citing terrible weather, the restaurant missed third-quarter earnings estimates and cut its outlook for 2014. $55 50
30 D J F 52-week range $3.72~ $44 55
Vol.:16.3m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.95 b
P E: . . Yield:..
D J F 52-week range $39.53~ $ 5D.22
Vol.:1.8m (5.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.26 b
P E: .. . Yie l d : 2. 6%
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
three months ended Jan. 31. That's up from $157 million, or 73 cents per share, a year ago. Quarterly net sales rose 5 percent to nearly $1.08 billion. Analysts expected earnings of 75 cents per share on revenue of $1.08 billion. Brown-Forman reported that net sales for its flagship Jack Daniel's brand increased 8 percent in the first nine months of its 2014 fiscal year, when excluding currency swings.
-.O OO4
1.3731
12
D J 52-week range
Brown-Forman raises outlook Sales of Jack Daniel's whiskey helped Brown-Forman boost third-quarter earnings by 12 percent and raise its full-year earnings outlook. The Louisvi lle,Ky.-based Company company raised its earnings SP Otligllt outlook to a range of $2.95 and $3.05 per share, up from $2.80 to $3 per share. The company reported net income of $177 million, or 82 cents per share, for the
'""' /
14
60
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TO 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
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.
FB
Close:$71.57%2.77 or 4.0% Shares of the social network jumped after Jordan Rohan, an analyst at Stifel, raised his price target to $82 from $72. $80
D
CHG. %CHG. WK -35.70 -0.22% +23.57 $.0.32% -3.64 -0.70% V -7.14 -0.07% +6.00 $.0.14% -0.10 -0.01% -3.67 -0.26% -1.63 -0.01% -2.74 -0.23%
-i '. ss
Major stock indexes ended mixed Wednesday, registering little change from a day earlier. Payroll processor ADP said businesses added 139,000 jobs in February, up from 127,000 the month before. January's figure was revised sharply lower from an original estimate of 175,000. Even so, the report did little to stir the market. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and the Dow Jones industrial average each notched slight declines, while the Nasdaq composite finished higher. Half of the sectors in the S&P 500 fell, with energy making the biggest drop. Financials posted the biggest gain. Investors were looking ahead to the government's latest jobs report Friday. Facebook
Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 89.61 89. 4 7 +. 3 6 +0.4 L L L + 21. 9 +6 4 .6 54 0 1 2 1 . 00f L +5.4 +19. 3 27 8 16 1. 2 7f Avicta Corp A VA 25.36 ~ 30.25 2 9. 7 2 -.28 -0.9 L L Bank ofAmerica BAC 11 . 22 — o 17.42 17 .25 + . 53 +3.2 L L L +10. 8 +4 6 .8204358 17 0 . 04 Eye on manufacturing B B S I44 . 62 $y — 102.20 70 . 76 + . 5 5 + 0 .8 L L V -23.7 + 5 7.8 7 4 30 0.7 2 Economists anticipate that orders Barrett Business Booing Co BA 7 6 .17 ~ 144. 5 7 12 8.79 -1.44 -1.1 V L V -5.6 +71.8 4060 22 2.92f to U.S. factories edged higher Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 .31 ~ 7.00 4.83 -.15 -3.0 T L T -7.6 -19.3 15 4 from December to January. ColumbiaBnkg COL B 19.84 ~ 2 8.5 6 27.16 -.21 -0.8 L L W -1.2 +3 8.1 1 8 4 2 2 0 . 48f Frigid weather and snowstorms ColumbiaSportswear COLM 54.86 ~ 8 L L + 6.9 +55. 4 8.2 5 84.21 - .85 -1.0 L 69 31 1.12f have cut into factory output in Costco Wholesale CO ST 101.01 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 6.47 -.18 -0.2 V L V -2.1 +14.0 2270 2 5 1 . 24 recent months. Factory orders fell Craft BrowAlliance B R EW 6.55 ~ 18.70 16. 7 8 +. 0 2 +0.1 L L L +2.2 +1 4 7.9 6 0 cc in December amid a sharp drop in FLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ 35.19 35.8 0 +. 3 0 $ .0.9 L L L + 16.3 $. 3 4.5 2 124 23 0 . 40f demand for commercial aircraft. L L + 7.0 +53. 7 6434 11 0 . 58 Hewlett Packard HPQ 19 . 07 — o 30.71 29 .94 - .18 -0.6 L The demand for basic goods that Homo Federal Bncp IDHOME 11.54 ~ 1 6.03 1 5. 3 6 - .16 -1.0 L L L +3.1 +3 5 . 6 51 dd 0. 2 4 drive broader economic growth Intel Corp I NTC 20.75 ~ 27.12 2 4.5 0 -.11 -0.4 V L V -5.6 +19.9 19402 13 0 .90 alsoplunged in December. The Koycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ 14.14 1 3. 3 6 -.05 -0.4 L L V -0.4 +43.6 8515 14 0 . 22 Commerce Department reports Krogor Co KR 2 9 .26 — o 43.85 43 .68 +1.29 +3.0 L L L +10.5 +46 .0 10290 15 0 . 6 6 L L +43. 4 +7 4 .8 80 7 cc January data on U.S. factory Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 — o 8 .00 7 . 8 7 -.03 -0.4 L LA Pacific LPX 14.51 $y — 22. 55 18 . 3 1 -.33 -1.8 V L V -1.1 -13.7 1963 15 orders today. +9.9 +41 . 6 53 0 2 3 0. 7 1 MDU Resources MDU 23 . 37 ~ 35.10 3 3. 5 8 -.32 -0.9 W L L Factory orders MentorGraphics MEN T 15.53 ~ 2 4.3 1 22.45 +.08+ 0.4 L L V -6.7 +31.9 6 0 1 1 7 0 . 20f percent change, seasonally adjusted Microsoft Corp MSFT 27.64 ~ 38.98 3 8. 1 1 -.30 -0.8 V L L +1.9 +40 . 1 19651 14 1 . 1 2 Nike Inc 8 N KE 53.27 ~ 80.26 7 7.4 2 -1.20 -1.5 V L V -1.6 +4 5.3 3330 26 0 . 9 6 2% 18 NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ 63.72 6 1. 5 8 -.07 -0.1 L L V -0.4 +16.8 1476 17 1.32f 1.5 L V Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 45.89 4 2. 2 0 -.53 -1.2 V -1.4 + 1.9 83 20 1.84 PaccarInc PCAR 45.87 — o 66.46 65 .31 -.60 -0.9 W L L +10. 4 +4 4 .3 1 986 20 0 .80a Planar Systmc PLNR 1.55 ~ 2.93 2.38 +.1 0 + 4 .4 L L W -6.3 +16.3 5 3 dd -.16 -0.4 V L V -0.1 -0.5 Plum Crook PCL 41.63 o — 54.6 2 42 . 8 0 -8.0 - 8.9 84 8 3 2 1 . 76 0 Proc Cactpartc PCP 180.06 ~ 274. 9 6 26 0.21 -.25 -0.1 L L V - 3.4 +39.4 5 7 0 2 3 0 . 1 2 SafowayInc SWY 22.26 ~ 38.73 39. 4 8 +. 8 3 +2.1 L L L +21. 2 +6 5 .0 10271 3 0.8 0 Schnitzor Stool SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 3.3 2 25.88 -.05 -0.2 L L V -20.8 - 2.5 37 1 d d 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 161.81 — o 20 3.38283.28 + .11 +0.1 L L L + 10. 8 +2 4 .1 59 4 2 8 2 . 20f StancorpFncl SFG 38.97 — o 69.11 67 .94 + . 5 7 +0.8 L L L +2.6 +73. 8 33 6 13 1. 1 0f A S 0 N D I J StarbucksCp SBUX 54.66 ~ 82.50 7 1. 3 0 -.36 -0.5 L L W -9.0 +30.3 4814 3 0 1 . 04 '13 I'14 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.45 — o 12.59 12 .69 + . 1 8 +1 .4 L L L + 52.2 + 1 80.5 4210 d d source: Fastset Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 9.65 1 8. 3 3 -.07 -0.4 L L W -4.2 +50.4 5 7 6 2 0 0 .60a US Bancorp USB 31.99 — O 41.86 41 .44 + . 02 ... L L L +2.6 +23. 4 5 0 93 1 4 0. 9 2 WashingtonFodl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.3 5 22.71 +.13+ 0.6 L L W - 2.5 +30.9 1 9 4 1 5 0 . 40 Atniuisition boost? WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 5.33 — o 46.84 47 .09 + . 3 5 +0.7 L L L +3.7 +33. 7 13265 12 1 . 2 0 The nation's largest traditional Woyorhaousor W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 29. 8 2 +. 2 0 +0.7 L L W -5.5 + 1 . 8 5 031 2 6 0 . 88 supermarket operator reports its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings today. Kroger, which owns Ralphs, Fry's, DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate pius stock. 5 -Liquidating dividend. 5 -Amount declaredor paidin last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, ss regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent Food 4 Less, and its namesake dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend markets, has been trying to adapt as 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
shoppers increasingly buy grocedes at big-box retailers, drugstores and
$1 01.45
StoryStocks
NorthwestStocks NAME
'"""'" /
+.Os
$21.24
Dow Jones industrials
......... CIOSe:1,873.81
1,850 "
1,800 "
+ 2 40
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.71 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 5 .05 . 0 8 .08
... ...
L L
5 2-wk T-bill
.12
...
L
.12
2 -year T-note . 3 3 .33 ... 5-year T-note 1.55 1.54 +0.01 L 10-year T-note 2.71 2.70 +0.01 L 30-year T-bond 3.65 3.65 ... L
BONDS
V
L L L
L .25 L .78 V 1.90 W 3.11
Annua l dividend:$1.16 P ri c e -earnings ratio Div. yield: 1.3% (irailing 12 months):30
~
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.44 3.43+0.01 L
W W 2 .81
Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.78 4.78 .. . w w Wednesday's close:$87.11 Barclays USAggregate 2.33 2.28 +0.05 L L Price-earnings ratio: 1 5 PRIME FED Barclays US based on trailing 12 month results High Yield 5.14 5.17 -0.03 w w 5-Y R* : 30% Total return YTD:16% 1-Y R :30% 3-YR*: 29% Market value:$18.5 billion RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.37 4.29 +0.08 w w Dividend: $0.66 Div. yield: 1.5% AP Total returns through March 5 *Annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.78 1.76 +0.02 L L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 source: Factset Barclays US Corp 3.06 3.01 +0.05 L W 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 Am d FOCtSS SelectedMutualFunds 52-WEEK RANGE $6 6 ~ ~ ~ ~ 88
.08 .11 .15
L L
w W w w L W
4.0 5 1.8 6 5. 7 3 3 . 85 1.06 2. 7 6
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.7 5 + .83 +1.4 +16.8 +12.0+19.2 A A A CaplncBuA m 59.23 -.87 +1.2 +12.0 +9.4+15.6 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 46.16 -.83 +1.9 +20.8 +10.7+20.5 C 8 C EurPacGrA m 49.49 -.84 +0.9 +17.2 +6.4+18.4 8 8 C BkofAm 2043577 17.25 +.53 FnlnvA m 52. 6 0 +.86+1.2 +24.1 +13.0+23.5 C C C FuelCellE 1004560 3.13 + .42 GrthAmA m 44.62 +.82 +3.8 +29.8 +14.8+23.4 C C 0 SiriusXM 868396 3.55 -.04 INVESCO GrowlncA m ACGIX IncAmerA m 21.11 +2.2 +15.3 +11.2+19.2 8 A A S&P500ETF 750234 187.75 +.17 InvCoAmA m 37.49 -.82 +2.2 +26.7 +13.8+21.9 8 C 0 Facebook 735804 71.57 +2.77 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.29 +1.9 +21.7 +11.5+22.3 8 8 C PlugPowrh 531437 6.75 + .06 WAMutlnvA m40.81 -.81 +1.5 +24.5 +15.4+23.9 8 A 8 SPDR Fncl 445436 22.20 +.23 iShEMkts 402007 39.47 +.03 Dodge &Cox Income 13.82 .. . +2 .1 + 2 .4 +4 .8 +7.9 A 8 8 VerizonCm 374265 47.38 -.52 IntlStk 43.64 +.12 +1.4 +22.8 +7.9+24.2 A A A PeregrinP 360553 2.82 + . 91 Stock 171.94 +.39 +1.8 +31.1 +16.4+28.0 A A A Fidelity Contra 99.80 + . 10 +4.0 +30.0 +15.5+24.1 C 8 C Gainers GrowCo 128 . 36 +.11+7.7 +38.4 +18.6+29.0 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.88 -.81 + 1.3 +27.6 +15.2+28.1 8 8 C Fidoli S artan 500l d xAdvtg 66.64 +.81 +1.8 +24.2 +14.8+25.0 C 8 8 xG Techwt 2.75 +2.13 +343.5 xG Tech n 4.98 +2.80 $-128.4 «C FrankTomp-Franklin Income C m 2. 50 .. . + 3 .2 + 13.6 +9.1+19.3 A A A PeregrinP 2.82 +.91 + 4 7.6 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 7 ... +3 .4 + 13.8 +9.6+19.8 A A A ZBB En rs 2.40 +.77 + 4 7 .2 Oakmark Intl I 26.50 . . . +0 .7 + 22.2 +11.0+27.7 A A A HarvAppR 8.87 +2.68 + 4 3.3 573 Opponhoimor RisDivA m 20 . 84 . . . +1 .6 + 19.5 +12.3+20.2 E 0 E OriginAg 3.37 +.86 + 3 4.3 RisDiv8 m 17 . 90 .. . +1 . 4 + 18.4 +11.3+19.1 E E E Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ Tekmira g 24.92 +5.71 + 2 9.7 RisDivC m 17 . 80 . . . +1 .5 + 18.6 +11.5+19.4 E 0 E Datarm rs 3.50 +.77 + 2 8 .2 OsFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 45.46 -.81 +2.5 +27.5+11.0+25.0 8 E E ArrowRsh 26.31 +5.17 + 24.5 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 38.27 -.81 +2.4 +26.3+10.1+24.0 C E E Agria Cp 2.05 +.39 + 2 3.5 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowo Price Eqtylnc 32.89 + .82 +0.2 +19.6 +12.9+25.5 0 C A Losers CATEGORY Large Value GrowStk 54.8 8 + .81 +4.4 +35.6 +17.6+26.6 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 65.7 1 - . 20+13.7 +53.0 +32.5+35.5 8 A A RATING™ * **o o Newlncome 9. 4 4 +.81+2.0 - 0.2 +3.8 +6.2 0 C 0 -2.62 -27.8 XOMA 6.82 Endvrlntl 3.93 -1.21 -23.5 ASSETS $5,186 million Vanguard 500Adml 173.35 +.82 +1.8 +24.2 +14.8+25.0 C 8 8 -1.16 -20.9 USEC rs 4.40 500lnv 173.32 +.83 +1.7 +24.1 +14.6+24.9 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 0.82% HCI Grp 40.39 -9.49 -19.0 CapOp 49.94 -.82 +8.1 +37.0 +17.5+27.2 A A A MANAGER Mary Maly -.88 -18.6 MecoxLane 3.86 Eqlnc 29.83 -.86 +0.2 +19.4 +15.7+25.4 0 A A SINCE 2008-07-31 IntlStkldxAdm 28.83 -.81 +0.1 +11.8 +3.9 NA 0 E RETURNS 3-MO +6.0 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31.52 -.83 +5.1 +34.2 +18.5+31.2 A A A YTO +2.0 TgtRe2020 27.61 +.81 +1.8 +13.1 +8.9+17.6 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +24.0 Tgtet2025 16.84 +1.8 +14.7 +9.4+19.0 8 A C -4.65 -.11 Paris 4,391.25 3-YR ANNL +13.0 TotBdAdml 10.72 +.81 +2.0 -0.1 +3.8 +4.9 C C E London 6,775.42 -48.35 -.71 5-YR-ANNL +23.6 Totlntl 16.76 -.81 +0.1 +11.7 +3.8+18.6 E E C -47.13 -.49 Frankfurt 9,542.02 TotStlAdm 47.81 -.81 +2.4 +25.9 +15.1+26.1 8 A A Hong Kong22,579.78 -77.85 -.34 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.16 JPMorgan Chase &Co TotStldx 47.79 -.81 +2.4 +25.8 +15.0+26.0 8 8 A Mexico 39,021.07 -63.29 4.19 Milan 20,756.95 +281.83 +1.38 USGro 30.81 -.81 +4.6 +30.8 +16.1+24.3 8 8 C 3.37 Tokyo 14,897.63 +1 76.1 5 +1 .20 Citigroup Inc Welltn 38.58 +1.7 +15.2 +11.0+17.9 8 A 8 2.89 Stockholm 1,364.92 + 1.48 + . 1 1 General Electric Co Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.57 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,457.30 +45.60 + . 84 Viacom, Inc. Class 8 Zurich 8,459.61 +14.39 + . 17 Avon Products Inc 2.47 redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.
Invesco Growth and Income finished in the top 28 percent of the FAMILY Marhetsummary AmericanFunds large-cap value fund category Most Active last year, but its 5-year record is NAME VOL (80c) LAST CHG near the middle of the pack.
Commodities The price of crude oil fell nearly 2 percent Wednesday as concerns over the crisis in Ukraine eased and U.S. supplies continued to increase. Gold and silver rose, but copper fell.
Foreign Exchange The ICE dollar index, which measures the strength of the
U.S. currency against six currencies, edged lower as traders digested disappointing U.S. private sector jobs data.
55Q QD
FUELS
CLOSE PVS. 101.45 103.33 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.28 2.34 Heating Oil (gal) 2.99 3.04 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.52 4.67 UnleadedGas(gal) 2.94 2.99 METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. 1340.20 1337.80 21.24 21.19 1476.60 1464.10 3.25 3.26 772.75 763.70
%CH. %YTD - 1.82 + 3.1 +0.13 +1 9.4 -1.60 -2.8 - 3.09 + 6 . 9 - 1.51 + 5 .6 %CH. %YTD +0.18 +11.5 + 0.24 + 9 .8 + 0.85 + 7 .7 -0.26 -5.5 + 1.19 + 7 .7
CLOSE 1.44 2.01
PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.46 - 1.34 + 6 . 8 Coffee (Ib) 1.85 +8.37 +81.3 Corn (bu) 4.75 4.77 -0.31 +1 2.6 Cotton (Ib) 0.88 0.88 - 0.48 + 3 . 9 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 356.50 357.50 -0.28 -1.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.56 1.55 +0.65 +1 4.0 Soybeans (bu) 14.20 14.18 + 0.14 + 8 . 2 Wheat(bu) 6.37 6.40 - 0.39 + 5 . 3 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6720 +.0046 +.28% 1.5115 Canadian Dollar 1.1 0 39 -.0071 -.64% 1.0277 USD per Euro 1.3731 -.0004 -.03% 1.3040 JapaneseYen 102.32 + . 0 5 + .05% 9 3 . 29 Mexican Peso 13. 2405 -.0307 -.23% 12.7066 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4885 +.0005 +.01% 3.7325 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9990 -.0159 -.27% 5.7003 South African Rand 10.6895 -.0762 -.71% 9.0435 Swedish Krona 6.4 3 20 -.0186 -.29% 6.3841 Swiss Franc .8877 +.0002 +.02% . 9 417 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1131 -.0051 -.46% . 9762 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1287 -.0146 -.24% 6.2210 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7614 -.0001 -.00% 7.7558 Indian Rupee 61.765 -.085 -.14% 54.930 Singapore Dollar 1.2703 +.001 0 +.08% 1.2461 South KoreanWon 1072.26 +1.65 +.15% 1086.70 -.05 -.17% 2 9.67 Taiwan Dollar 30.28
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
BRIEFING Sunriver Resort to hold job fairs Sunriver Resort, one of Deschutes County's largest employers,is planning to fill nearly 400 jobs through two upcoming job fairs. Job fairs occur both annually and seasonally as needed, but always take place in the spring, said Corinna Fabre, spokeswoman for the resort. The firstjob fair is scheduled from 4-7 p.m.
ormer o
i cia c oosessi enc
By StephenOhlemacher
properly singled out tea party
ment rights at least nine times
The Associated Press
and other conservative groups
in responseto questionsby committee Chairman Darrell
Ms. Lerner would be given a fair opportunityto speak, to answer questions or to tell the
mer Internal Revenue Service
for extra scrutiny when they applied for tax-exempt status
official at the heart of the con-
during the 2010 and 2012 elec-
Issa, R-Calif. Later, Lerner's lawyer told
troversyovertheagency'stargetingofconservativegroups
tions. On Wednesday, shewas
reporters she didn't testify,
Taylor said the whole ordeal, whichbegan last May
recalled to testify before the House Oversight Committee
because "we completely lost
when Lerner first disclosed
for the secondtime in ayear.
confidence inthe fairness and impartiality of the forum."
the targeting at a Washington law conference, has been un-
But just like the first time,
"This matter has become
WASHINGTON — The for-
once again refused to answer
questions at a House hearing Wednesday amid signs that a congressional investigation into the affair maybe stalling. Lois Lerner headed the IRS division that is said to have im-
she dedined to answer quespolarized," said the lawyer, tions about her involvement. William Taylor III. "It is comAppearing with her lawyer, Le- pletelypartisan. There was rner invoked her Fifth Amendno possibility, in my view, that
truth."
settling for his client. Lerner
he said. After Wednesday's hearing, Issa suggested his committee's investigation may become stalled without Lerner's testimony. "At this point, roads lead to Ms. Lerner," Issa said. Without her testimony, he said, "it may dead-end at Ms. Lerner."
has received a total of six death Two other congressional threats by email and regular committees, the Justice Departmail, Taylorsaid. Theyhave ment and the IRS's inspector been turned over to the FBI, general are also investigating.
March13 at the Great
Hall at Sunriver Resort. The second is planned for April 23 from 4-7 p.m. at the Homestead, also at the resort. Positions available include chefs and other kitchen and restaurant staff, housekeeping, golf-course related jobs, recreation-activities staff and front-office personnel, according to a news release. Information about open positions at Sunriver Resort may befound at www.destinationhotels.com/careers-search or by calling 541-593-
2 million missedout on jobless benefits By Jake Grovum Stateline.org
WASHINGTON — Almost 2 million Americans who have been out of work for
4600. — Bulletin staff report
longer than six months have missed out on extended unemployment benefits since
Congress allowed the program to expire in December, according to a new analysis of U.S. Department of Labor
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Coaching Course: Learn to fine-tune important coaching andfeedback skills; registration required; 395; 8a.m.-noon;Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Beginning Photoshop: Learn to transform photographswith Photoshop CS 5.5; registration required;$95; 1-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend;541-383-7270. FRIDAY • Build Your Website with Dreamweaver: Learn to create awebsite with Dreamweaver; registration required; $89; 9a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, Redmondcampus, 2030S.E. CollegeLoop, Redmond;541-383-7270. • Putting Your BestFace Forward onVideo: Learn what to say on video, howto say itand howto connect; registration required;$27; 10a.m.-noon; Eloquent Expression LLC,1685 N.W. GalvestonAve.,Bend; 541-617-0340, diane@ eloquentexpressions.com or www.facebook.com/ events/207181822810340. • MUSE Conference: Threeday event incelebration of International Women's DayandWomen'sHistory Month; includessocial events, keynotespeakers, panel discussionsand workshops; registration required; $75for conference pass, $125for allactivities; 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-410-5513,info@ museconference.orgor www.museconference.org. SATURDAY • Creating YourBusiness Plan: Learn tocreatea business plan;registration required; $50perfarm/ ranch, onetimefee; 9a.m.noon; COCC - Crook County Open Campus,5t0 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-4801340 or tcf©cbbmail.com. • Law Essentials of Business: Learnabout businessentities, making contracts, warranties, security andmore; registration required;$45; 9 a.m.-f p.m.; CentralOregon Community College,2600 N.W. CollegeWay,Bend; 541-383-7270. MONDAY • Communicating with Color: Learnhowcolor impacts consumer behavior, perceptionsand sales to better promote your businessandbrand; registration required;$89; 6-9 p.m.; CentralOregon Community College,2600 N.W. CollegeWay,Bend; 54 I-383-7270. • Howto Buyor Sell a Business: Learnabout successful business investing, buying orselling and analyzingpotential investment options;
data. In seven states, at least
100,000 unemployed workers have missed out on unemployment benefits they would have Photosby Ryan BrenneckeiThe Bulletin
While Michele LeBlanc sends the majority of her fleece to a mill in Canby to be made into yarn, she also spins fleece in her Bend home.
otherwisereceived,according to the analysis from the National Employment Law Project, a group that advocates for workers and has lobbied for an extension of the benefits.
By Rachael Rees
fleece. The wool is bagged and picked up by LeBlanc,
The Bulletin
eyond couches and a coffee table, you'll find two spinning wheels and most likely abag of fleece when you walk into the living
who teases it apart to prepare
B
room of Michele LeBlanc's
Bend home. "I've been knitting since where in my early 20s I got a spinning wheel and I learned how to make my own yarn," said LeBlanc, the owner of Toots LeBlanc & Co. "It's creative; it's meditative;
r/' '
I
LeBlanc prides herself on purchasing fleece from family farms.
to collect aid for up to 99
weeks, instead of the normal
ready, she sends it to a small mill in Canby, where it is
26weeks. The White House and some
washed and spun into differ-
lawmakers from both sides
Democrats last month to al-
and properties with various
most pass an extension, and House Speaker John Boehner,
sheens and levels of softness that are good for different items. For example, Angora rabbit has no elasticity to its
activity, but it also challenges
The cost of the yarn dif-
fiber, she said.
R-Ohio, has said he's open to
an extension, provided the cost is offset with other budget cuts. But so far, disputes over
fers based on the strength or weight of the yarn and the
LeBlanc knits items in-
of the aisle are interested in
reinstating the benefits. Four Republicans joined Senate
bers have unique textures
... it's emotionally soothing. ... It's a nice, peaceful, restful the brain."
sion. The extended benefits allowed unemployed workers
and twigs. Once the fleece is
She said the different fit
ment during the Great Reces-
it for the mill, removing hay, pine needles, grass seed
ent blends based on LeBlanc's specifications.
I was a little kid, and some-
Extendedunemployment benefits began during the George W. Bush administration in 2008 as a response to a spike in long-term unemploy-
how to pay for continuing the measure and how long to extend the benefits have derailed
cluding scarves, socks and teacoziesfrom fourdifferent blends of yarn she has formu-
type of fibers it contains. The
price ranges from $12.50 to $35 for a 250-yard skein that
have the most people who
lated over the years that in-
averages 2.5 ounces,accord-
havebeen aff ected bythe
dude various kinds of sheep, angora rabbits, goat and alpaca wool. And accordingto bloggers, her yarn is soft and supple, and the angora rabbit blend doesn't shed, which is a typical problem associated
ing to her website (www.toots leblanc.com). She said her prices are a lot higher than, for example, a Wal-Martyarn, but the quality is also higher. A 4-ounce package of Caron Simply Soft Yarn ranged from $3.27 to $7.19 on Wal-Mart's
expiration of the benefits. But states such as New Jer-
with angora items. LeBlanc uses no harsh
works as a full-time nurse at
soaps, chemicals or dyes,
Toots LeBlanc & Co isn't
which makes her yarn stand
out to consumers, and she sources her wool from small farms. Her creations and yarn
canbe purchased online and at fiber shows, such as the Fiber Market Day in Prineville
scheduled for March 29. LeBlanc started her business in 2003 in Seattle and re-
cently moved to Bend. In addition to making yarn, she also
registration required;$39; 6-9 p.m.; CentralOregon Community College,2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. TUESDAY • Real Estate Forecast Breakfast: Learnwhat's in store for Deschutes County in 2014;registration required; 7:30a.m.The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend;541-382-
St. Charles Medical Center. her first fiber company, though. She operated several
running through my hands ... the personal expression, went away whenitbecame ajob, when I was knitting for other
people or I was knitting X number of things for a job." before adding in the compoLeBlanc prides herself on nent of making her own yarn, purchasing raw wool from which she says gives her more family farms in Oregon, freedom and enjoyment. Washington and California. "I found if you make your She purchases a clip, a passion pay, it becomes work," whole season's wool from a she said. "The things that are singlefarmer'sentireherdof meaningful to me about it ... sheep, and has aprofessional the pure enjoyment of wool sheep shearer cut off their other knitting businesses
322f or www.bendchamber. olg. WEDNESDAY • Launch YourBusiness: Business ownerscanfind help developing aworking plan; coachingsessions will take placethe week before thecoursestarts; course runsthrough April 9; preregistration required; $119 includesworkbook; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027N.W.Trenton
Ave., Bend;541-383-7290. • Website Traffic Course: Learn to generatetrafficto your website usingGoogle AdWords; registration required; $89;6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. MARCH15 • Crook County Stock Growers Annual Business Meeting andBanpuet:
Stock Grower ofthe Year and Carcass ofMerit awards will bepresented; registration required; $f 0 per person, includesdinner and 20f4 membership dues; toa.m.-9p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,Carey Foster Hall, f 280 S.Main St., Prineville; 541-477-3484. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendhugetin.com/hizcal
website.
"It's a successful, little-small business, and I want
any deals. The most populous states
sey and Florida have been hit disproportionately hard with high levels of long-term unemployment. States largely are responsible for regular unemployment benefits, but the federal government covered the cost of the extended benefits. From
to keep it small," she said.
2008throughthefirsthalfof 2013, Washington spent $252
that I make because I am able do some small part to keep
billion on extended benefits
"I'm really proud of the yarns family farms alive. I wish I could say that I could become the Whole Foods of the yarn
world, but I don't see that happening." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
for at least 24 million unemployed Americans. If the program is not reinstated before April, states and their unemployed workers will have missed out on more than $5 billion in federal money, according to the analysis.
PERMITS City of Bend • Stephen T.Wells,61389S.W. Campbell Court, $332,664 • Paul Daumit, 2367 N.W. Drouillard Ave., $216,170 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21376 N.E.Evelyn Place, $226,559 • Long Term BendInvestors LLC, 21372 N.E.Evelyn Place, $245,80t • True North Associations, 2675 N.E. U.S. Highway20, $150,000
• Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61132 S.E.Ambassador Drive, $294,487 • Rose River LLC,63244 Logan Ave., $192,930 • Triad Homes Inc., 21150S.E. Kayla Court, $231,759 • West Bend Property Company LLC, 2379 N.W.Drouillard Ave., $256,776
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MEDICINE
NUTRITION
ae ro OSaS e ici raise '
•
• Local dietitians say the changeswould help peoplemakehealthier food choices By Tara Bannow The Bulletin
More realistic serving sizes. Labeling added sugRyan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Dave Stalker places a log into his wood stove to heat his home in Bend. Wood stoves can create comforting heat, but they also contribute to poor air quality.
takes on the highlights:
counts. Chances are, you got an
More realisticserving sizes
earful on those topics last
es to its Nutrition
Guidelines, a chart issued two decades
ago that s slapped on the back of packaged food items to
Bend reacted to last Thursday's news with excitement
and praised most of the proposed tweaks as things that
will help people make better food choices. Michael Taylor, FDA's deputy commissioner for foods and veterinary medicine,
hot spot," said Brian Moench,
ing in people's lungs or flowing
group seeking to educate people about the health effects of
causing everything from asth-
wood smoke. "Therefore, you're creating some real localized victims."
heat their homes, according to
prompted the U.S. Environmen-
a 2009 Oregon Department of
tal Protection Agency to consider tightening its emissions
Problems in Utah
limits on new wood-burning stoves as well as expanding its existing regulations to include things such as pellet stoves and fireplaces. Nationally, the EPA says resi-
and the type of wood you use,
campfire smell — especially on a cold winter's day. For others, especially those in rural areas,
it's cheaper and more feasible than natural gas or propane
and,from a broader perspective,
decreases the country'sreliance on oil. But wood stoves have also received a lot of attention in recent years for their potential to
dential wood burning accounts fornearly 25 percent of allcancer risk from air toxins and 15 percent of noncancerous respiratory effects. "The bottom line is, if
someone is burning wood ... you're creating a real pollution
Depending on the weather heatingyour home with awood stove for a mere hour could emit
the same amount of chemicals into the air as driving your car from Bend to Denver.
That's according to a Univer-
sity of Utah study cited by the state's governor in his recent State of the State address, in which he called for limits on residents' ability to use wood-burning stoves in the winter. See Wood stoves /D3
Mixed success sofar for new health I-ops The story of HealthyCT and its disappointing enrollment figures illustrates how
By ReedAbelson,KatieThomas and JoCraven McGinty
By Seth Stevenson Slate
Recently, Fitbit abruptly stopped selling its new fitness tracking wristband, the Fitbit Force, due to com-
Instead, I've had to scramble
and name a new champion, non-skin-rash-causing division. want one?
Lawmakers were hoping for that newcomer's zeal when they added a provision to the federllluatration by James Beat/New York Times
"Our goal was five times that, by this
folks who want to motivate themselves to walk more.
who has kids and not much
time to exercise sets a
How the co-ops fare will be a key indicator of the success of President Barack Obama's highly charged health care law because they are crucial in determining whether the law can inject more compe-
and pendants — promise to monitor your physical activity during the day and, in some cases, the night. They link up via Bluetooth to special apps on your phone or tablet. They keep a careful log of how many
tition into the nation's insurance market.
steps you've taken, how
him moving. Yes, you could buy a sim-
up for plans through the co-op, about The co-ops were a late addition to the 3 percent of those who have bought cover- Affordable Care Act, proposed as an al-
point," Lalime said.
temperature,your choles-
These devices — varia-
"We've got a great story to tell," Ken Lalime, the chief executive of HealthyCT, age in the state's new insurance market- ternative to the so-called public option, a said recently from his office in Walling- place, where other carriers, Anthem and plan that would have been offered directford, Conn. ConnectiCare, have outpaced it. ly by the federal government and that was But so far, few in Connecticut are listening. Just 1,700 customers have signed
of personal data — your blood composition, your
tions on wristbands, watches
nation's largest insurers, WellPoint.
are a 10-minute drive away.
will measure all manner
The trackers do a fabulous job of tallying your steps, urging you to rack up higher daily counts and congratulating you when you hit your goals. One co-worker
the co-op in Maine, Maine Community Health Options, has grabbed the majority of enrollment, outpacing Anthem, its sole competitor, which is owned by one of the
• Enrollment nant insurer whose offices
trackers is surely bright. Eventually, wearables
terol, your mood — reliably and unobtrusively. They'll smoothly sync with your just for the scale, your toothbrush and FITNESS co mpanybut your toilet. They'll offer ac— call me a tionable reports about your narcissist — for me. I'd been body. This is already close to putting the finishing touchhappening. es on my review of several But for now, as I see it, fitness tracking devices and the only people who will had been poised to declare truly benefit from these the Fitbit Force my winner. fitness trackers are the
Times shows. In contrast to Connecticut,
takes pride in noting that HealthyCT is a
surance market.
See Labels /D5
causing skin rashes. This was a major setback not
tracker, and why would you
the energy of a startup. The sales force
al health care law setting up 23 nonprofit cooperatives intended to shake up the in-
entire chips and soda were single serving containers.
plaints that the device was
more thanhalfwaythroughthe sign-upperiod in the first year of the new insurance exchanges, an analysis by The New York
inajdo
snacks, she realized that the mother assumed that the
Tracking downthe best fitnesstrackers
uneven the co-ops' performance has been
a for-profit behemoth like Anthem, the state's domi-
pretty high. In another case, Brizee said she knew a kid who would often have a snacksized bag of chips and a
WEARABLE TECH
The rented offices of HealthyCT, a new insurer in Connecticut, bustle with
MONEY
her chicken hot dogs until
sodium content was actually
New York Times News Service
truly local outfit, governed by m e mbers, rather than
ent recently boasted about the low sodium content in
for a Healthy Environment, a
egonians use wood stoves to
for the cozy feel it exudes — the sound of crackling wood, the
Lori Brizee, a registered
dietitian in Bend, said a cli-
for a single hot dog, and the
are now in a 90-day comment period,and the FDA
president of Utah Physicians
ma tocancer or heart attacks. Increased research has
Environmental Quality survey. Many cherish the heat source
people actually eat from a container.
es to nutrition labels since 2003, but it's a complicated
depth of analysis." The proposed changes
harm people's health. Experts say the tiny, toxic particles they emit into the air wind up collectthrough their bloodstreams,
would need to reflect what
FDA has been eyeing chang-
uct of this complexity and
air — that's all too obvious.
in the neighborhood," he said. "You walk out and you go, 'It smells like a forest fire.'" Roughly 1 in 5 Central Or-
or 3 servings. Under the proposed rule, serving sizes
of urgency about it for quite 20-ounce bottle of soda. some time," he said. "It just When she talked to the kid's takes time to produce a prod- mother about her daughter's
stove. And on some days — such as during last week's bout of stagnant
belching wood stove chimneys
hold a single serving in 2t/z
Brizee pointed out that the nutrition content listed was
"I think we've had a sense
"It's pretty bad when you've got a bunch of people with
advocates as a positive one,
said in a conference call with reporters last week that the
process that requires gathering input from a variety of stakeholders.
ave Stalker isn't the only one in his Bend neighborhood with a wood
Among the biggest changes, and the one that's being widely hailed by nutrition
is the promise of d8 more realistic serving ' Seewhat sizes. Many experts the labels say serving sizes are rnight wildly misleading, k like, often listing foods in 05 smallpackages people would normally think
let people know how healthy or unhealthy they are. Registered dietitians in
By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
Here are the local experts'
ars.Larger fonts for calorie
week after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration unveiled proposed chang-
• Research increasingly points to woodsmoke'sharmful health effects, but there's little agreementabout the appropriate level of regulation
says the changes won't be implemented for at least two years.
met with political resistance.
SeeCo-ops/D2
But first, what is a fitness
many flights of stairs you've climbed, how many calories you've burned. Should you slack off, they'll note the idle hours you've wickedly wasted.
The future for fitness
target of 15,000 steps per
day. If he sees he's coming up short as the day winds down, he'll force himself to take a constitutional
around the block and make up the difference. It keeps ple, dedicated pedometer for
$6. But it wouldn't record digital logs for you, letting you riffle through your data on your phone. SeeTrackers/D4
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
HEALTH EVENTS FOOTAND NAILCARE CLINIC: Hosted by United Citizens of Bend; free, donations accepted; noon-2 p.m. Monday; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-323-3344. HOW TO SAVEON YOUR HEALTH INSURANCEDEDUCTIBLE: Learn about a nationwide grass-roots movement by primary health care providers; free, reservation requested; 6:30-7:30 p.m. Monday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-8714. "NAVIGATINGTHE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM":Cover a variety of topics presented by health care professionals in three classes March 11,18and 25; $45, registration is required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. EFFECTS OFSLEEP DEPRIVATION ON WEIGHTLOSS: Part of the Healthy Living Series; $15, registration required by March 14; 10:30 a.m.-noon March 21; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ community-learning.
How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents©bend bulletin.com orclick onuSubmitan Event" atwww.bendbulletin.com.Allow at least 10 days beforethe desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updatedmonthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses.Contact: 541383-0358. People:Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents©bendbulletin. com. Contact: 541-3830358.
MONEY Insurancedeadlinenears Federal officials want to sign up 2 million people for health insurance under
in final pushbefore deadline ',",", '."."„",.'.".",.,",.".".,."""""'""'."",.".,"....„ By Tony Pugh
target states over the last two
McClatchy Washington Bureau
weeks of the month. "We will be pushing right
AfWASHINGTON ter a horrendous start and
up until the March 31 deadline
months of playing catch-up to make sure as many Ameragainst a barrage of political icans as possible are able to attacks, the Affordable Care get covered," said Anne FilAct and its supporters havehit ipic, the president of Enroll the homestretch in their six- America. month effort to educate and The Obama administraenroll millions of Americans tion had hoped to enroll 7 in health insurance. million people by the end of March 31 is the last day to March. But those plans quickbuy health insurance for this ly unraveled after technical year that meets the law's man-
chusetts and elsewhere, that many people would choose to wait until the deadline to
eThrive Bend, aprivate practice that integrates talk therapy andexercise, recently opened in Bend.Owner Katie Steele is a licensedmarriage and family therapist and yogateacher. The practice is located at 550S.W. Industrial Way,Suite 120, Bend. Contact www.thrivebend.com or 541-729-3337 for more information.
Newtool
sharpens surgeons' YISIOA By Blythe Bernhard St. Louis Post-Dispatch
ST. LOUIS — W hich su-
perhuman power would you choose for help on the job? For Dr. Julie Margenthaler, it's a technology that brings to mind X-ray vision, used for the first time last month during an operation to remove a patient's
lymph node. "It's like I'm in a sci-fi movie," Margenthaler said after
she put on goggles that allowed her to see the patient's lymph node light up with a fluorescent blue glow invisible to the naked eye. A video camera projected the surgeon's visual field onto the screen inside the goggles and on a computer screen in the operating room.
The new technology developed at Washington University may eventually be used to see microscopiccancer cells during surgery and enable a more thorough removal of tumors. For now, the research team is testing the goggles on
Co-ops consumers more
earlier," Margenthaler said after the one-hour hospital
procedure.
: Your own experience
:~
Don't k ow 18%
• What should Congress do to the health care law?
~
48'I Repeal it, not replace it
• Have you, your family been negatively affected by the law? Yes 29%
a l s%
No 69%
Don't know 2%
Replace with GOP version ~ 12% Keep law as it is
~
fss
: Other, Don'tkncw;15%
Keep it, work to improve it
t
ssr
, :From friends, family
Sources: White House, Census Bureau, Kaiser Family Foundation poll of 1,501 adults, Feb. 11-17, 2014; margin of error:+/- 3 percentage points G r aphic: Judy Treible e 2O14 MCT
8%
Other, Don't know; 12%
ers. CoOpportunity Health,
say they are counting on the
the co-op in Iowa and Nebraska, has enrolled more than
eventual success of their ent erprises but that they w i l l
50,000 people in both states by aggressively selling to business owners and enlisting insurance brokers to sell their plans.
need to achieve more than just financial goals. The Connecticut co-op began selling plans to large employers this week,
nWe really thought we had
to be in all the segments," said
members.
Cliff Gold, the chief operat-
ing officer of CoOpportunity Health.
Co-op leaders like Lalime
in an effort to further lift sales. uIf we start being a little Aetna or a little Anthem, that's not going to work for us,n he said. uAt the end of the day, it's more than just a job. There's a passion behind it.n
warned that many of the
co-ops could fail, putting at risk the nearly $2 billion in government loans that helped create them. Dem-
insurers. u I personally felt
ment. In Kentucky, New
including those with low enrollments, said they were still in good financial shape and have not yet tapped all their loans. However, the fiscal condiby the Office of the Inspector
getting a larger share of the General of the Health and market. In all, the co-ops offered
able merit," Sen. Orrin Hatch,
R-Utah and ranking Republican member on the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement.
l ESeetively Manaqpag Diabetes free informational program
'More than a job'
Presented by
Mark Hall, a professor and health care expert at the Wake
Dr. Anne Killingbeck
Forest University School of
Law, said not every co-op would succeed. "Some of them will probably fail, and fail fairly quickly," said Hall, who has advised the government on the program. Some co-ops have added to their rolls by going outside
Internal Medicine Associates of Redmond
Wednesday
March 19s 2014, 12 Noon — 1:00 pm
the i ndividual m a rketplace
(Light Lunch Served)
and selling plans to employ-
Hospice Community Room, 732 SW 23rd Street, Redmond Please register by March 14
OSPICE Of RedXnOnd
EVERGREEN ln-Home Care Servtces
Care for loved ones. Comfort for au. 541-389-0006
541e548e 7483
www.evergreeninhome.com
e
e
e
s-
•
•
-
•
Executives of several co-ops,
York, New Mexico and tion of many of them is uncerMontana, the plans were tain: Last summer, a report more competitive and are
Living Life Well
priced well above competitors,
l i k e including a handful of casthe insurancecompanies es where they are double the were one of the causes of priceofothercarriers. the high health care costs," Dennis Litos, the chief exsaid Aaron Verbrigghe, 28, ecutive of Consumers Mutual, an actor and waiter from said being a newcomer was Chicago, who chose a plan a disadvantage in the state's through Land of Lincoln crowded marketplace. In DeHealth, the co-op in Illinois. troit, eight insurers are comMany insurers and in- peting for customers. The big dustry experts say that carriers "had prior m a rket simple market forces, like knowledge, as well as prior price, are the main factors experience," Litos said. He dedetermining the co-ops' clined to provide enrollment success so far. In Maine, figures but said the co-op was for example, the co-op is behind in its goals. offering the cheapest plans E stablished insurers p r i in nearly every category, vately question whether some while in Connecticut, the co-ops that priced their plans co-op charged as much too low could end up strugas 29 percent more than gling if they end up with unrivals. expectedlyhigh medical costs. The story is the same
To Your Health
Christopher Capozzieflo/New York Times News Service
Ken Lalime is the chief executive of HealthyCT, a new nonprofit health insurer that has signed up1,700 policyholders.uOur goal was five times that, by this point," Lalime said.
ocrats point to the co-ops as agents of change, saying they have driven down November. prices in areas where there Evergreen Health Co-op, in was little competition. Maryland, whose state-based Figures released by the exchange continues to flounObama administration last der, has signed up a meager week show that about 4 600 people because of the difmillion people have signed ficulty of signing up through up for health care cover- the website, according to Dr. age in the state and federal Peter Beilenson, the co-op's exchanges. About 300,000 chief executive. nWe're doing have chosen a co-op, ac- everything we can to increase cording to John Morrison, enrollment," he said. the former president of the Because the marketplaces National Alliance of State are new, insurers were left to Health Co-Ops. guess about what they should charge, and some of the co-ops A market alternative — as well as some established Some customers are insurers — may have guessed seeking out co-ops be- inaccurately. In Michigan, the causethey are gratefulfor co-op, Consumers Mutual, is an alternative to the big offering several plans that are
struggling with low enroll-
ultimately find cancer cells
• Overall opinion What is your opinion based on? Favorable Un f avorable .:From rV, radio, newspapers 35% 47
federal loans, and must be largely governed by their
with other insurers and are
finding some way to perfect our surgical technique and
Views on the health care law
problems with th e w ebsite
ington, where congressional Republicans recently
•
u
Enroll America has recruited more than 20,000 field volunteers, who, along with staff,
heatedly debated in Wash-
•
ae
That work is paying off.
The program is being
O e
•
®•
u
in areas then dominated by just one or two insur-
nIt was a lot less cumbersome than I thought it would
nWe're a ll i n terested i n
Oe
Qe
meet the needs of consumers in this final critical month.
c h oice
•
•
the capacity that we need to
Continued from 01 The idea was to offer
possible spread ofthecancer. be," Margenthaler said of the lightweight goggles that telescope the surgeon's visual field. "When I had (the patient's) lymph node between my two forceps it was lighting up very welL" After the surgical staff helped Margenthaler put on the goggles, theteamcheered when the process worked as planned.
•
over the past manymonths we have taken the time to build
ssl
nodes that will be tested for
anoma patients to find lymph
Oe®
have contacted more than datorycoverage requirement HealthCare.gov slowed sign- 660,000 people about getting for most Americans. Those ups inthe 36 statesserved by coverage. More than 180,000 who don't comply with the so- the federal marketplace. The confirmed that they were eicalled "individual mandate" nonpartisan Congressional ther under-insured or uninface a fine when they file their Budget Office now expects sured and interested in find2014 income taxes nextyear. 6 million Americans to enroll ing health plans, Filipic said. Across the country, scores nationwide. In December, the group beof volunteers will be out in About 4 million people have gan reconnecting with many force, knocking on doors, signed up on state and federal of these people by cards, sending emails and visiting marketplaces since open en- emails and phone calls. They public gatherings to make rollment began Oct. 1. Land- plan to quadruple their weeksure that those who need cov- ing 2 million more in 31 days ly follow-up calls in the final won't be easy, even with the weeks. erage know how to get it. "Early data shows that the Enroll America, a national crush of buyers that's expectsupport group, will organize ed as the end-of-the-month likelihood that a consumer more than 3,000 enrollment deadline nears. will enroll goes up with every "We've always assumed, time they're contacted," Filipic events nationwide this month. That includes one each day when we looked at past en- said. nSo we are really stepin every major city of their 11 rollment efforts, like Massa- ping on the gas here."
in Michigan and Illinois, where the co-ops failed to offer low prices compared
20 to30 breastcancer and mel-
•
ing in a plan," Filipic said. uSo
ers. The co-ops received
DISPATCHES
•
make a decision about enroll-
Screening can prevent colorectal cancer or catch the ¹2 cancer killer early when it's highly treatable. Most people get screened because they're encouraged by someone they know and trust. So if you've been screened, please talk about your experience. And encourage others to get screened too.
Human Services Department found that 11 of 16 co-ops that
the lowest price in about had been licensed at that point one-third of the markets had estimated startup expenswhere they were operating, es that exceeded the funding according to the analysis provided to them. While some by the Times. have since raised outside money, others said they had not. Early setbacks Republicans in Congress As startups, the co-ops have q u estioned w h e ther were among the hardest some co-ops will default on hit by the technical fail- their loans. "Given its track ures that marred the law's record,I'd say this Obamacare rollout in O ctober and loan program is of question-
•
•
www. TheCancer YouCanPrevent.org Vn'Efs C
e'3 t
StFCharles
Authority
A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded campaign
HEALTH SYSTKM
4r 0
O~
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MEDjCtNE
a's unn a ou auism? en, arenssa By James A. Fussell K ANSAS CITY, M o .
There's nothing funny about autism. Wait a minute. Yes there is
— especially when Chris Long tells the "boob" story. But let's back up. Last month several Kan-
sas City, Mo., area parents — coached by local comicspracticed routines about the humorous side of living with autistic kids. They were pre-
paringto take the stage for real at the Mission Theatre for the all-in-fun, over-21 autism fundraiser "An Evening With the
Allison Long /Kansas City Star
Chris Long, of Kansas City, Mo., talks about the funny side of 'Rents," (short for parents). The autism at the Mission Theatre in Mission, Kan., last month. show benefits Camp Encour-
age, a local summer program "Note to self," she seemed to
for autistic kids.
As music played, Long walked to the microphone in a lime-green hoodie. She told a story about visiting McDonald's with her husband, Scott, and
where they're comfortable." He knows they're scared.
"Youknow you're an autism parent when you own cleaning products with names like Urine Destroyer. It really works. I should know because my couch is coated in it."
The Kansas City Star
be thinking. "The boob joke kills!"
parents of autistic children to overcome their stage fright, and then got local comedians
to help focus their material and hone their delivery. "How many fundraisers do frustrating, and often humortheir 11-year-old autistic son, ous, realities parents have to you go to that are a walk'?" he Dakota. While Dakota doesn't deal with when living with a said. "I don't have anything talk, Long explained, he does child "on the spectrum." against those, but it could be a love to rub people's skin. Autism — known as a spec- lot more fun when people are "He'll rub your arms or your trum disorder — affects I in 88 swearing and drinkingbooze." back," she said. "Any warm people, and I in 54 boys. No Youknowyou're an skin. He just loves it. So we're two cases are exactly alike. "People with autism just autism parent when ... at McDonald's (Play Place) and he's doing great. But pret- process the world a little difThe show's headliner will ty soon he starts rubbing this ferently," said Keenan Stump, be Lou Melgarejo, a Chicalady's arm, and she's turning a therapist who works with au- go blogger who won the 2011 "Speak Out" award from Auredder and redder. tistic kids in their homes. "It's summertime, and she's The disorder often impairs tism Speaks, a national advogot this huge chest, and a very judgment over what's socially cacy and awareness group. low-cut top. And he just reach- acceptable. Theyearly award honors those es in and grabs this woman's Stump, 37, an adjunct pro- who go above and beyond in boob. And he just starts rub- fessor at Rockhurst Universi- promoting the organization. bin', and I don't know what to ty, got the idea for the comedy At rehearsal, as the next do. I'm like, 'Scott?' And he's night after hearing parents parent waited her turn, Stump like, 'What? You want me to go share funny stories at another grabbed the mike. "Allyou have to worry about grab the other one?'" fundraiser. "By the end of the night my tonight, really, is just getting The dozen or so people in the room exploded with laugh- wife and I were in tears," he a feel for being up here, walk ter. A smiling Long took it all said. "It's absolutely cathartic." around, test it out, grab the in. He persuaded a handful microphone, pace if you want. Except it was more than just
a joke. It's was one of the many
"It's one thing to get up there
and tell knock-knock jokes," he said. "It's quite another to share intimate family experi-
ences and risk judgment. I give — Olivia Cytrynowicz, mother of a 4-year-old autistic son them so much credit." How will they do on show night'? "It's possible we witness a "You know you're an autism Therearelightson,and people will be staring." parent when the school calls to microphone train wreck," he "I'm really nervous right let you know that your autis- said. "We're living on the edge now," said Olivia Cytrynowicz, tic child pushed another child here, and that's what makes a Hallmark greeting card ed- over a toy, and you're so flip- this so exciting. I just want itor whose 4-year-old, Otto, pin' excited that your kid ini- them to know it's not all about is autistic. "I've coined a little tiated play with the other kid, one-liners. Tell your story, and phrase for how I feel. It's called you almost forget to ask if the people will laugh along the pee-vomit. I could pee my other kid's OK." way. Anyway you look at it, pants or puke right now. After many laughs, she end- these parents are just giving " But I f i g ure t his i s t h e ed on a tender note. such agift to their community." "You know you're an autism crowd I could probably do that Jennifer Smith, the execuin front of and it wouldn't be
parent when it takes a lot to
tive director of Autism Society
— The Heartland, knows how much that means. "I get daily calls from families, and I hear the desperation in their voices," she said.
too shocking, right?" (Some shock you or surprise you or autistic children have gastroin- freak you out. But it takes very testinal issues, and many have little, like appropriate eye conproblems learning to relieve tact, an initiated conversation themselves appropriately, par- or an 'I love you, Mom' to melt ents said.) your heart." "OK. A little bit about myStump can hardly believe self. I grew up with a nonver- the improvement. "To see these parents transbal autistic brother. His name is Roger. In a time when people form into comedians, instead really didn't know what auof just a mom telling a story, is tism was I'd say, 'Don't make mind-blowing," he said. "The fun of him. He's autistic.' And delivery, the timing, the little they'd say, 'Artistic?' No. No. gestures. It's like they've been No. Autistic. So now, being doing it their whole lives." a mother of a 4-year-old son with autism, it is so gratifying A'gift'for the community to live in a time when people After parents performed, know what autism is, and we
"There is such a sadness when
a family member is diagnosed. But there's another side that doesn't get shared. There are
so many things that we laugh a bout. It's not that w e
are
making fun of our children. You have to have humor to survive." And, on cue.
"Take my (autistic) son," she said, switching to comedian mode. "On Sunday he was running. And how many times
each consulted with a mentor
— local comics Brady Goodeach other in a night of love man and Steve Moser (a finaland laughter." ist on "Last Comic Standing"), "Here here!" someone shout- who also will host the show. ed. "Yeah!" "The area where I can (offer) "You know you're an autism the most help is a tiny bit of parent when you own clean- writing, stage awareness and ing products with names like mobility and what to do with Urine Destroyer," she said. "It the mic," Goodman said. "They really works. I should knowbe- have so much material. I'm just cause my couch is coated in it." trying to get them to a place
have I said, 'Don't run in your
buy her two wood stoves for her 4,000-square-foot home about a decade ago was fi-
secondhand cigarette smoke because its particles are so tiny they can easily seep into neighboring homes in addition to the home they're heating.
nationwide. When homes are profit group that researches years tested the effects of expo- al climate campaign 350.org, sold, Oregon's law requires toxicity data, said while there's sure to large amounts of wood have celebrated the use of that any u n certified w ood no question that wood smoke smoke for three hours. Neither wood stoves, Moench said. stoves inside be removed and is toxic, banning it altogether found evidence of long-term A necdotally, S t alker, o f destroyed. is the wrong strategy for re- damage, only the mild inflam- B end, said h e t h i nk s t h e Oregon also has a program ducing harm. mation that would be expected. amount ofwood smoke hov"At some level, if you drink that constantly monitors air Asthma in general seems ering over Bend has signifiquality and issues green, yel- too much water, you will kill to be worse in the winter, but cantly decreased from when low and red ratings that can yourself," he said. "Just ban- it's unclear exactly why that is, he first moved to the area in correspond with local calls ning things because they're Mangat said. the 1970s. Back then, it was "That might be because the noticeably smoky in the eveto cease wood burning, said wood smoke or water or viCarrie Capp, who coordi- tamin C or potato chips, just indoor all ergens are higher," nings. He said he thinks many nates the Oregon Department saying, 'We're going to ban he said. "It might be because people have transitioned to of Environmental Quality's it' is not the right approach to the air is drier and it might be natural gas because it's easier. HeatSmart Program, which things.... All chemicals are that they're exposed to more Stalker, who has heated regulates wood stoves. toxic and there are safe levels irritants inside. Any of those his homes with wood stoves "It's a source that is close to for all chemicals and there are are possible. It's hard to pin- for nearly 40 years, said he where we work and live and safe levels for wood smoke." point which one that is." thinks people can dramaticalplay and breathe, so it's somely reduce the emissions from Burnhot, burn clean thing we can go after, have a Not enough evidence their wood stoves by simply collective impact on reducing for local doctors Bend resident Heidi Renoud paying attention to their fires. a pollution source that's in our Allergists in B en d o f t en grew up in a house with a big, His mantra is "burn hot, burn immediate environment that hear complaints from patients old cast-iron wood stove. Her clean." If he notices his chimwe're exposed to every day," who say th e w oo d s moke family would get the fire roar- ney is "belching smoke into that's common in winter exac- ing before bed and the heat the neighborhood," Stalker she said. Air quality can be dramat- erbates their asthma. would last well through the said it's because he needs to ically worsened by weather When it comes to allergens night. beef up the fire, either by adThat's not possible any justing the wood or the dampinversions, when cold air gets like dogs or pollen, doctors trapped low to the ground and can run tests to pinpoint the more, now that Oregon law er, a device that regulates air warm air rises high into the at- exact source of the problem, requires new wood stoves be flow. He also makes sure not mosphere, which is the oppo- said Dr. Adam Williams, an EPA-certified. to close the wood stove door "These ones they produce until the fire is roaring. site of what usually happens. allergist at Bend Memorial During inversions, emissions Clinic. Wood smoke, however, now with all the regulations, Renoud's advice is similar: get trapped near the Earth, is an irritant, which doctors you can't keep a fire over- Don't let the fire smolder. "It's either burn hot or it's and smoke from wood stoves can't test for. night," she said. "To an allergist, those are is known to hover over homes. Renoud said she's irritat- not burning at all," she said. Bend saw 44 days of weath- frustrating things, because we ed by all the rules around For Renoud, the decision to er inversions between Nov. 1 want to be able to test for what wood stoves. She's been using and Feb. 26, said Dennis Hull, it is," Williams said. them since she was a kid and a National Weather Service Ripdeep Mangat, an aller- knows how to make a proper m eteorologist. Hull s aid h e gist at the Allergy and Asth- fire that's not going to send couldn't comment on how that ma Care Center in Bend, has a cloud of black smoke out of compared with otheryears the same gripes about wood her chimney. She and her fam-
Some studies have found the
but said about one-third of the
Wood stoves Continued from D1 Utah's Wasatch Front, a
metropolitan region in t he north-central part of the state,
is particularly hard-hit by air pollution, including from wood-burning stoves, due in large part to its topography. Cities are more susceptible to lingering air pollution if they're within abasinbetween areas of high elevation. Klamath Falls, for example, is simi-
larly known for its tendency to see periods of stagnant air. Studying the 35,000 wood stoves in the Wasatch Front,
researchers at the University of Utah found that heating
one home with a conventional wood stove released an amount of fine particles equiv-
alent to heating more than 200 homes with natural gas.
Using an EPA-certified wood stove was equivalent to heating more than 130 homes with
natural gas. C iting
t h a t a nd
oth e r
research, a group of doctors is calling for a ban on wood-burning stoves. Moench, an anesthesiologist at L DS Hospital in S alt L a k e
City, said wood smoke can be even more dangerous than
can get together and support
•
wood smoke concentration in neighboring homes that
winter days being inversion days seemed high. Most of the a ren't burning wood t o b e DEQ's air pollution warnings 50 to 75 percent as high as last year were for Southern the outdoor concentrations, Oregon, but it issued warnings Moench said. Older homes for areas that included Central typically have less of a seal be- Oregon on Nov. 21, which was tween indoor and outdoor air, also a weather inversion day. Air-quality regulations are he said. Moench draws parallels necessary, Capp said, because between society's slow acceptance of the dangers of wood
the particles in wood smoke can be 2.5 micrometers in di-
which it took 40 years of re-
parison, a human hair is about
smoke. He said he often asks patients whether they have
noleum and — boom! Then he yelled, 'My butt! My butt!' And
he's a big boy. Six feet tall. And I'm trying not to laugh, but it's hard. You just look at all these
situations, and you can either cry or laugh. And I choose to laugh."
nancial. Her electric bills were
through the roof. Now, she said she saves about $300 per month to heat her house using
the wood stoves. But Stalker, who buys his
wood and supplements his wood stove with electric heaters, said it's a ton of work and
it doesn't really save money. For him, it's more of a feeling. " It's just a really nice warmth, you know?" he said. "Once you get it really going good, it just permeates the
whole place and it's just really nice." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
We beat ~y&~g
~0+
Come check us out!
OHNSON TV.APPLIANCE
johnsonbrotherstv.com
•
ily cut the wood themselves
or live near a wood stove
and dry it for at least a year before using it. She's even got
but hasn't seen sufficient re-
one pile that's been sitting for
search on the subject to issue a strong condemnation of the appliances. If patients say their symptoms are worsened when
two years. The Oregon DEQ recommends chopping wood
they're around wood smoke,
"You have to stay on top of it." In 2009, nearly 22 percent of
Mangat said, he simply tells them to avoid being around
socks! You're going to fall'? And sure enough he hit the li-
haler in case an asthma attack strikes.
"It's a process," she said. •
•i• I '
'
I '
,
e
I
I '
I
e I
said it was their main heat
source, according to a DEQ survey. The survey's central region covered eight counties, including Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson. "and that's probably the case from premature death in peoMoench, however, said the here as well and it may even ple with heart or lung disease, problems. In one case, Wil- number of Americans using be the case with physicians." irregular heart beats, ag- liams said, he did ask a patient wood-burning stoves increasgravated asthma, decreased with serious asthma to stop es about 3 percent per year, a Regulations inOregon lung function and increased using his wood stove. Once the trend he called "disappointIn 1986,Oregon became the respiratory symptoms such patient did that, his symptoms ing." Some advocates tout first state in the U.S. to require as coughing and difficulty improved. wood-burning stoves as a way that all new wood stoves meet breathing, she said. Some research has found to get "back to nature," he said. emissions standards. The EPA Michael Dourson, director little effect from wood smoke Even prominent environmenlaunched a similar testing of the Toxicology Excellence on human health. Two Danish talists like Bill McKibben, the program in 1988 that applied for Risk Assessment, a non- studies performed in r ecent co-founder of the internationLikewise, Williams said he's wary of supporting any regulatory changes around wood stoves until there's clear data linking the smoke to health
I
and letting it dry for six to 12 months before burning it.
CentralOregonians surveyed wood stoves. He also recom- said they use a wood-burning smoke with that of cigarettes, ameter or smaller. (For com- mends they carry a rescue in- stove, and nearly 15 percent
search to regulate. 70 micrometers across.) When "There is a big gap between inhaled, those particles carthe medical literature and pub- ry carcinogens like benzene lished articles and society's ac- and black carbon deep into ceptance of an issue," he said, the lungs, causing everything
r
I
I
e
'
e
I
n
1<00-MEDICARE (140043S~22 Nlhl • DF BENERCNIIY
JOHNDss
MEOICAIIECLAIMNUMSBI
SEK
OIIHN4000-A INas ER'ECTIVEOAYE IOSPITAL IPART Al 074tnsss IHEOINL (PANN O l i N.1$86
SENIIILEDIO
CONTACT: i-855-QRE-ADRC (i-fl55-fr>3-2>>2)
)tOHS
Oregon Department of Human Services
* Aging and Disability Resource Connection ofOREGON
Oregon
MP
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
FjTNEss iiettinII hored?Introduce intervals into yourworkout routine • I've been exercising since the first • of the year and getting good results, but my workouts are getting stale. I'm definitely ready for the next step but not sure what to do. Any ideas? • Whatever style of training you • choose, your muscles will eventually adapt and progress will level off, referred to as aplateau. Whenthis happens, workouts usually begin to feel more like a"been there, donethat" experience rather than something you are excited about. Interval training is oneway to take your fitness routine to the next level.
Interval workouts involve breaking up your aerobics/cardio sessions into two or three segments, eachwith increasing effort/intensity. An examplewould be to walk for a minute, then jog for a minute and finally, run or sprint for a minute, and then repeat this cycle for the duration of the workout. If using an elliptical, treadmill, bike or other piece of cardio equipment, options would be tovary the resistance, speed and/or incline for each interval throughout the session. At the end of the workout, finish with the lowest intensity
interval as acool down.
This type of training can havemajor benefits over regular aerobics. Interval training helps to recharge themetabolism, and morecalories can beburned in a shorter amount of time. Depending on degree of effort, it is possible to get the same caloric burn with a15-minute interval workout as youwould in a 30-minute conventional aerobic workout. Interval training can betailored to fit almost any form of cardio activity, from machines to jump roping, to swimming to climbing stairs. Why pay so muchattention to staying fit? As the saying goes, use it or lose it.
While there is no need to befanatical about exercise, our bodies are meant to be moved regularly and on a daily basis. Doing so prepares you to deal more effectively with what life may throw your way. Lifting and pulling muscles of the upper body include the back, shoulders and biceps. The legs, absand low back are needed for nearly all daily movement, making it important to keep them strong. Safety tips:Thosewhohavemedical issues, particularly heart or joint problems, should get clearance from a physician before beginning or altering an
i,amore i wor a ce By Rene Lynch Los Angeles Times
Nearly all of us need to make more time for fitness. Finding that time, though, can seem impossible. But what if you could wedge
•
$
/ •
\
l
,yl
0 A',
that workout in at work? If it
soundsfar-fetched (or a great way to get yourself fired), listen up.
Dr. James Levine, an obesity expert at the Mayo Clinic, says Americans don't need
to log more time at a gym. Instead, they need to banish their sedentary ways by incorporating easy bursts of activity from dawn to dusk. He calls it N EAT f itness,
44,
which stands for non-exercise activity t h ermogenesis. In layman's terms, it means
cranking up the body's calorie-burning abilities by weaving in near-constant movement — such as standing, Don Bartletti i LosAngeles Times walking, even pacing — at Employees of Stance, a designer sock company inSanClemente, Calif., use the company's indoor every opportunity. Becoming basketball court. Stance also has agymand encourages employees to exercise several times a day. a body in motion that stays in motion could help you burn 500 or more extracalories a keep health costs in line when lunches. (On a recent Friday, like Kearl's or will h ire the day. Combine that with smart employees are healthier, and a employees rolled in to an ar- likes of a Levine to revamp food choices, and we could be healthier workforce is a more ray of freshly blended juices their culture and facilities to well on our way to reversing productive workforce, he said. and homemade yogurt. Lunch make health and f i tness a the nation's ever-expanding "A healthy workplace is the revolved around a crunchy priority. So we asked Levine waistline. way of the future." kale salad.) A gym, personal to help us come up with some And Levine said he believes Such a future might resem- trainersand classes are com- ideasto try now. Forfree.(See "How to add a workout at the the best place to start is in the ble the San Clemente, Calif., ing shortly. workplace. headquarters of Stance, an And it's not unusual for workplace.") If you're rolling your eyes, upscale sock company that employees to clear out and We realize all these ideas you might be guilty of what tailors its line to Southern Cal- head for the beach (just up the won't work for you. Levine calls "1930s thinking, to ifornia's snow, skate and surf street) when the waves are just But maybe a third of them see employees (and the work- culture. right. will. And that would help you "It may be hard for people meet the U.S. Department of Chief Executive Jeff Kearl place) as merely tools of productivity." But "the really cool says the 4-year-old company to believe, but we have zero Health and Human Services companies" — Google,Yahoo, has spent more than $100,000 abuse," said Kearl, whose of- recommendation that adults Apple — "take the health and on employee perks such as fice runs by a "freedom and get at least 150 minutes a the happiness of their employ- a basketball court, a skate- accountability" p h i losophy week of "moderate-intensity ees seriously," Levine said. board half-pipe, game tables that loosely translates as: Just exercise" — the equivalent of It's not just for altruistic rea- and showers. A chef prepares get your work done, OK? walking at a pace of 20 minsons, of course. It's easier to h ealthful b r eakfasts a n d Not every company is run utes per mile.
Find It All Online
Trackers
FuelBand: l) N ik e i nsists cable. It has a watch-style on scoring your activity in battery. Of course, you'll
Continued from 01
terms of "Fuel" points and
some point. But I prefer this to recharging the device every four to seven days, which
wrist.
was my favorite tracker that,
If you're willing to shell out for a fancy device, these borrowed from the compa-
TheBulletin
TOUCHMARK SINCK 1980
is what most other f i tness
trackers require. The Shine
— Marlie Gilliam, Cox Newspapers
Howtoaddaworkout «t theworkplace
12. Boss won't spring for a standing desk? Thenjust stand while you're sorting mail. Ways to add moremovement 13. Stand while you're reviewto your workday include taking ing your schedule for the day. the stairs, pacing while on the 14. Stand while you're reading phone andmarking walking paperwork or riffling through trails. files. 1. Walk or bike to work once 15. Need to catch upwith a cola week. league to dissect a hot date? 2. Don't park your car in the Do it over a walk, not while spot closest to the front door. standing at the water cooler. Instead, find the parking stall Speaking of walking andgosfarthest away. (Of course, take siping, how about: security into consideration.) 16. Walk-and-talk meetings. 3. Stairs; no elevators. 17. Standing meetings. 4. Stop the impulse to email. 18. Create "walking trails" in Instead, get up off your duff your building. Levine suggests andwalktoacolleague'sdesk different colored pieces of to deliver a work message. duct tape, and signs, to let 5. Walk15 minutes before trail walkers know just how far they've gone. work. (That's 7~/2 minutes in one direction, and then turn 19. Relocate your mailbox around.) to the opposite side of the 6. Walk15 minutes at lunch. building. 7. Walk15 minutes after your 20. Use the bathroom onthe shift ends. opposite side of the building. 8. Walk15 minutes after you 21. Samegoesfor the micropark your car at home.Boom. wave. You just put in an hour's worth 22. Ditto for the refrigerator. of walking. 23. Repeat for the water cooler. 9. Consider commuting at least 24. And the coffee maker. onceaweek.W alkingto and from a bus or train stop could 25. And the trash can. 26. Find a coffee spot that's be a nice way to break upthe a brisk10-minute walk away. routine. Make a point to walkthere 10. Geta headset, ora long three times aweek. handset cord, and pacewhile talking on the phone or listen- 27. Bosses! Takeyour employees for coffee at aforemening to a conference call. tioned coffee shop. Conduct a 11. No room to pace?Then walk-and-talk meeting along stand at your desk. the way.
Ageless Beauty Innovations with Dn Rebecca Nonweiler, M.D.
Join us Monday, March 10th, 10:00 am - 6 pm Learn how you can look younger, for longer, naturally.
need to replace the battery at
"Hours Won," which ar e I t wouldn't send you a n alert when you've hit your proprietary metrics that nodaily step goal. Perhaps most body cares about. Just give important, it w ouldn't look us our step counts and leave nearly as cyborg-y on your it at that. 2) Nike also insists on branding the exterior of the wristband. The device I
bendbullefin.com
exercise program. Individuals with little to no prior training experience should always start slowly and build strength and endurance gradually. Onceyou've gotten into the swing of things, you can up the intensity of the workout so that it still feels like agood challenge. To avoid injury and burnout, be sureto allow for adequate time betweenworkouts for recovery and repair. A general rule of thumb is to allow 36 to 48 hours of rest before working the samemuscle group if workouts are intense.
Mention this ad and receive special pricing.
are my recommendations, ny was emblazoned with a
so far, has not been shown to c ause d e rmatological problems.
ordered from weakest to strongest. All of them will
N ORT H W E S T
Fitbit Force
M ED I
Prior to seeing the skinr ash news, the F itbit w a s
l ase r
lurid, orange Swoosh, which made me want to leave it at
home when I was trying to look vaguely stylish in the evening. The other bands with the form of the device it- offer plain-black o ptions self, or ancillary capabilities, and tend to call less attenor the user-friendliness of its tion to themselves. I should associated app. note I did like it when, on a day of particular sloth, the Jawbone UP24 FuelBand encouraged me The central flaw with the by scrolling "GO SETH GO" Jawbone is t hat yo u c a n't across my wrist three times. check your step count on the measure steps taken and cal-
ories burned, so the differentiating factors have to do
device itself. The wristband
has no digital readout, which means you have to bring up the app on your phone if you want to find out how many steps you've taken. Especially annoying during a jog, when you might have ditched your phone at home.
w ristband i s
s t y l is h a n d
sleek, with clear readouts of everything you want to know right there on your forearm. I liked its silent alarm: It can vibrate on your wrist to wake
a beefy watch,which may not be what some folks are
forthe other trackers.
The Basis has the look of
So, if you are willing to gamble that you're not prone and calories. Most intrigu- to skin rashes (only 1.7 peringly, it constantly measures cent of Fitbit Force users had your heart rate via an opti- rash problems), maybe find cal reader on its back, which yourself a used Force, go Withings Pulse takes your pulse through forth, and self-quantify. The Pulse, as its name sug- your wrist. I found it interestIf, on the other hand, you gests, lets you check your ing to watch my heart beat are worried about a skin heart rate by pressing your change in different circum- reaction, your options are index finger to an optical stances — after a workout, these: l) Get the previous reader. I found the results I say, or during a date. With its Fitbit, the Flex, which has a got were inconsistent, even big readout and its pulse-tak- limited readout display on from moment t o m o m ent. ing abilities, the Basis is the its band but is otherwise a And the Pulse often failed to
c en t er
541-318-7311 www.northwestmedispa.com 447 NE Greenwood • Bend
the easy winner for me. The
you up at an assigned hour, not bothering whoever might be next to you in bed. The Fitbit app is also beautifully designed and a joy to usemuch more so than the apps
Basis
SPA
Your Life's Been Turned Upside Down! Now W'hat?
after, stylewise. It does an excellent job tracking steps
best conversation starter of
fine alternative. 2) Get the
take a heart rate reading at the bunch. Misfit Shine, as mentioned all. Worse, the app provided above. 3) Wait. The Samsung Misfit Shine by Withings is a total messGear Fit will release in April hard to navigate, overly comTwo nice things about and looks great, and Apple the Misfit: l) You can clip it is rumored to be cooking up plex, visually confounding. anywhere, using a built-in a smartwatch w it h f i t ness Nike FuelBand SE magnet pendant. 2) You don't tracking capability. Patience, Two problems with the need to charge it with a USB like fitness, is a virtue.
Friday, March 14; noon to 1 pm 6 How to handle challenges 6 How to continue to care for yourself in the face of challenges 6 Coping skills for life's challenges
Partners In Care
Presented by:
2075 NE Wyait Court
Wendy Duncan Wendy DuncanPersonalDevelopment Coaching
Bend, OR 97701
541-382-5882
No-cost, light lunch provided with RSVP. Please call (541) 382-5882 to get signed up. • •
www.partnersbend.org
' •
•
THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
TION GOOD FOR YOU
Eat the right foods to turn off your body's hunger alarm So am I wakenedfrom my deepsleep by a chirp-chirp-chirping noise coming from the fire alarm on theceiling above my head. Not aterribly urgent alarm that would spring meout of bed to call 911. This was an intermittent yet irritating "chirp" to remind me tochange the battery in the fire alarm at 5:30 in the
morning. I tried to ignore it and return to sleep mode, burying my headwith pillows. But the signal continued to prod until I got up, hauled aladder upstairs and changed the battery. Eventhough I was wide awake, the chirping — thankfully — stopped. Our bodies canwake us to other signals as well. Somearenecessary and some can beannoying. Like whenwe think we're hungry but we really don't
need to eat. If only we could changethe batteries so our hunger alarms would not chirp incessantly. Herearesome proven strategies from a recent article in the newsletter Environmental Nutrition: • Eat solid foods over beverages. Form really affects how afood turns hunger signals off or on, evenwhen calories remain the same,say researchers. A whole apple, for example, turns off hunger cuesbetter than applesauce or apple juice. Anddon't trust those chirps that urge you to pack in morefood even when you've gulped downseveral hundred calories in a soda orother high-calorie drink. Research hasshown thatthebodybecomes confusedand may continue to sound the hungeralarm when we drink our calories instead of eating whole foods.
• Begin meals with foods that take up more roomnnd less calories. Salad or vegetable-based soup, for example. When wefill our tummies with high-volume, low-calorie foods, guess what? Our hunger alarm stops chirping, making it easier for us to eat sensibly. Careful, though. To loseweight, we need to eat these lower-calorie choices in place of — not in addition to — higher-calorie fare. • Ent more fiber-rich foods. Recent studies confirm that higher-fiber diets help turn off hunger signals andhelp us to eat less when weneedto loseweight. And remember, boysand girls, fiber is only found in foods that began life in the ground, plant-based foods such as whole grains, fruit, vegetables, legumes andnuts.
Labels
said he hoped the FDA would bels with vitamin D and poget rid of the line that lists the tassium, a move local experts Continued from 01 number ofcalories from fat, applaud. Actually, the nutrition facts which he said would make the Julie Hood Gonsalves, ason the bag of chips broke it labelseasier to comprehend. sociate professor of human into 3 servings and the bottle The proposal eliminates that biology at Central Oregon of soda was 2t/2 servings. line. Community College and a LuAnn Lehnertz, a regisregistered dietitian, said that tered dietitian with St. Charles New line for added sugar while including potassium Health System, said food manPerhaps due to accumu- is a great change, she would ufacturers want to make their lating research around the like to see sodium and poportions as small as possible detriments of consuming too t assium listed next t o o n e on the labels so that the food much sugar, the FDA has pro- another to get a sense for the can appear healthier. A good posed adding a new line to its ratio between the two. This is example is spray butters, nutrition labels for sugar that because potassium can blunt which say "0 calories" and was added to the food as op- the hypertensive effects of "0 grams of fat," yet a major in- posed to occurring naturally sodium, and she thinks peogredient is oil. in things like milk or fruit. ple should try to eat the same "Well, how could it be fatN utritionists a r en't g e n - amounts of potassium and free? It's because they only say e rally worried about t h e sodium. "If you're eating a lot of pofive pumps," she said. "If you natural sugar in m i lk , f r uit actually poured a teaspoon or other foods, but they are tassium, it negates what the out, it would not be the same." concerned about foods with sodium is doing," she said. When the package is small- large amounts of sugar added er, most people will just as- to them to make them taste Percentage of daily value m oves to the left sume the nutrition facts cover better. the entire package, which they As far a s w hat people The proposed changes inshould, Lehnertz said. should do with that number, clude updating the daily val"I think o nce t hey start Lehnertz said, it's all about ues for various nutrients based looking at the serving size and balance. You don't need to on new research, and would what the label says, it's a feel- avoid foods with added sugar shift the percent of daily valing of being tricked," she said. altogether, but perhaps pick ue, which tells people what the yogurt that contains only proportion of each nutrient is Bigger calorie labels the natural sugar from black- contained in the food based on The FDA is proposing a berries over the one that con- a 2,000-calorie diet, to the left greater emphasis on calories tains added sugar. on the labels. by making the number of calThe American Heart A sBut some local dietitians ories per serving bigger and sociation recommends wom- said they'd just as soon see the bolder on nutrition labels. For en consume no more than FDA get rid of the percentage calorie counters, that may be 25 grams or 6.5 teaspoons of of daily value altogether. In all they need to read, Lehnertz added sugar per day. For men, Lehnertz's mind, it's just too sard. the AHA says no more than 38 confusing for people. In ev"If they don't want to spend grams or 9.5 teaspoons. ery class she teaches, people their calories on it, there's no Brizee said she thinks the tend to think the percentage reason to look on the rest of added sugar number will be measures the content within a the label," she said. especially important when it serving of that food, not withThis was among the first comes tobreakfast cereals.In in their total daily needs. things Michael Jacobson, di- a cereal like Raisin Bran, for She would like to see somerector of the Center for Sci- example, much of the sugar thing much simpler. "If they were to put a perence in the Public Interest, comes from the raisins, a natlisted in a p anel discussion ural source. cent of daily value, it should last week as something his CSPI was pushing for sug- say 'significant' or 'not signiforganization wants to see in ar contentto be expressed in icant,'" she said. "Like, 'Yes, the new labels. The White teaspoons — a measurement it's a good one,' or, 'No, it's not House, especially under the Jacobson said people tend to a source.' That might be a litleadership of first lady Mi- better understand — as op- tle bit easier than a percentage chelle Obama, has advocat- posed to grams. The FDA did number. I think those percented for reducing the dramatic not propose changing the sug- ages do not do much for most obesity levels in the U.S., and ar measurement. people." Jacobson said this would be Likewise, Brizee said, she one way to help address that New lines for potassium, thinks percent of daily valvitamin D ue — while maybe helpful to issue. In addition to t h e l a rger The FDA wants to replace some — for mostpeople is calorie numbers, Jacobson vitamins A and C on its la- "useless." That's because the
• Gut your protein. It may bethe most helpful of all thenutrients for turning off hunger signals, sayexperts. Besides including protein-rich foods with meals — lean meat, poultry, fish, eggs, beans andlow-fat dairy — plant some protein into snacksto prevent betweenmealhunger chirps. That ought to wakeusup.
Lehnertz's, in w h ich p ack-
ages would get more sim-
science, and it would be difficult to simplify foods to that
person to person.
ple classification labels that
level.
"The scary thing to that Hood Gonsalves said she tell consumers whether the actually doesn't put too much foods are healthy overall — a is, 'Who's in charge?,' you weight into nutrition labels green star for a good food, for know?" she said. "If somebody and would rather see an example. is paying, for example." emphasis placed on a more But Hood Gonsalves said — Reporter: 541-383-0304, h olistic view o f
f ood t hat
there's always controversy in
would emphasize one's overall health. She thinks a good strategy might be to place a MyPlate chart on food packages that includes perhaps a
Servmg size
2/3 cup (55g)
4awsae Pw Oeeelay
calo~ a30
CaKsieStttktt Fat40 %WaNI Velue 18%
TelVI Fal Itt SI4yt4'l0d t'It t rQsS iF&IOI
$%
Otteesterot o
0%
Settttlttt 16$tttt
7%
Telal oadmhttclral» 37 e IXetsy Flber4y
1$% t4%
SltottIS 1o
IRroleis Q VeamktA %lttmlnC
t0% 8%
Clltlum
set
tHXI
'FSCenlIMr velea ee bssod eno t 000eeWo4es. Vwr4shg«Ae aegbf Hglw orloaer Ayel4hy os 1Nr OAAI INWIL
Tekl Fal telF4l • SSse
Cslorfos: tN O lessIhaa ttl l ess Ihaa l%
1$00 Ns Re
lea Ihal 4 4 $ey SNy
tAN S g %5y
laalun %5ms 4 Nma tto
calories
231 ~
c olored-in portion with t h e
I
category it fulfills. MyPlate is a chart produced by the U.S. Department of
Svgsrs t g Added SugarsOtt Protsin 3g 10% VltlminD2mcg 20% CIICIUIll260IAg 45% tfoh Smg
5% POtttttSIINt 235mtt ' Faotnole «n Daily Volues (DVj andcaforles IQfltllllCOto bQIIISlll0d hQfO.
Adds advice such as "avoid too much" and "get enough" for some ~ nutrisnts.
Servingsize
VOLVO SEDANSANONV'S
sizedaccording to the proportion of one's diet they should constitute.
Others, such as Jacobson, have proposed ideas like
t
c alories % 0 Ny V
23 0
I
QUICK FACTS: 12'
T o t a l Carbs37g
Sugars Ig
70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
SMOLICHVOLVO.coM
Effective A.lternatives to knee,shoulder and other surgeries alternative to cortisone shots.
Prolotherapy and
PRP (platelet rich plasma) Chronic Headaches • Neck Injuries • Shoulder Injuries Back Injuries and Pain • Tennis Elbow W r i st Injuries Knee Injuries • Ligament Tears • Arthritis Other Musculoskeletal Issues
Ronald D. Rosen, MD,PC Board Certified Internal Medicine & Medical Acupuncture
541-388-3804 What people say: "7 months ago I was told by a doctor in the Center I needed a
"Had acute Aquiles tendinosis and had surgery with persistent pain for I I/2 years. 2 PRP treatments and swelling and all pain went away."
knee replacement" Dr. Rosen did PRP and prolotherapy and within 5 days I could start hiking pain free. In two weeks I was hiking 20 miles a week" - Carlos Wysling, Bend
s ~s ~ ~ ~ « llsns Fal Oy Ott CkolestoselOmtt
minerals will change according "' to which ones
IOa v ltamlnD2Ncg
studiss show Americans are lacking.
sk% cslelum2somit ~ a ene 9 ' Fov o:eo Dakvalues(Dha:dcaee • ',ee ae<ote setedsee
"I was diagnosed with tennis elbow. I had cortisone shots, physical therapy and acupuncture for 2 years with no help. I had prolotherapy and was better in a matter of weeks. I recommend prolotherapy it really works."
"Both my knees were worn out, bone on bone. Chronic pain and could only walk with a cane. Within a week of PRP I could walk without it and play golf
again"
— Peg A. Bend
— Brent Dattke, Bend
PROPOSED
20 calories
1 pint
pen, 40 calories
Integrative Medicine Source: Food and Drug Administration
•
mplements tf e n c, '3 wI c,~ t.s r ~
— Nelda, Bend
FOOD SERVINGSIZES GET A REALITY CHECK Serving sizes will be more realistic to reflect how much people typically eat at one time. CURRENT SERVING SIZE
/
t
t ]
2/3 cup (55g)
Amount per 2/3 cup
The Associated Press
I
SUPERIO RSEI.ECTIONOFNEW 8USED
p rotein and dairy t hat a r e
8 servings per container
Displays calories more prominently.
Sls
1 pint
I
A g r i culture
that's divided into sections for grains, vegetables, fruits,
Nutrition Facts
% OV*
12% Total Fat Sg 5% Satursted Fat 1g TransFal Og 0% CholesterolOmg 7% Sodium 180mtt 4mti Total Carbs37g 14% Oletary Rbsr 49
tbannow@bendbulletin.com
ALL,NEW STATE OF THE ART DEALERSHIP!
PROPOSED 8 servings per container
the brain. Thinkstock
number of carbohydrates and daily needs vary wildly from
The proposed overhaul of the 20-year-old nutrition facts label comes asnutritionists have shifted their focus from fat to overall calorie consumption.
Nutrition Facts Nutrition Facts
hunger signals in
— Barbara Ouinn, TheMonterey CountyHerald
A makeover for food ladels CURRENT
Vegetables, fruit and other fiber-rich foods help turn off
I
•
I
I
'
I I
I
DG THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
rime- imeso ives' i ers'ane e TV SPOTLIGHT
How 'The Millers' is put together
"The Millers"
The laughs on "TheMillers" may seem to comeeasy, but the process leading up the final product can bequite anendurance test. Star Will Arnett went over details of a typical weekthat's anything but typical. "You really do have to be onyour toes," he explained last month. Monday:Thecast goes through a table read, a standard practice for TV shows in which everyone sits in a squareandgoes over the dialogue with scripts in hand. Whentheactors are done, the behind-the-scenes teamevaluates what worked and starts rewriting
8:30 tonight, CBS
ByNealJustin Star Tribune(Minneapolis)
LOS ANGELES — A few
minutesbefore rehearsal for "The Millers," the season's No. 1 new comedy, Will A r nett
was spotted taking a smoke break with the episode's spe-
the material that fell short.
cial guest star: Tommy Chong. A 1970s staple best known
Tuesday:Thecast is given what is largely new material. They go through the dialogue onset with scripts in hand andthe director starts blocking scenes. About11 p.m., the performers get yet another rewritten script at homevia email. Wednesday:Network and studio executives stop by to see arehearsal and offer their thoughts. Thursday:Cameracrews shoot exterior shots, followed by yet another run-through inside. Friday:The bulk of the show is taped in front of a live audience.
for stoner bits may seem like
an odd intruder on a mainstream sitcom with characters whose idea of cutting loose is
Sonja Fiemming /CBS Entertainment
having a second glass of white From left, Nelson Franklin, Will Arnett, Jeyma Mays, Mergo Martinzinfandel after a meatloaf din- dale, Beau Bridges and Lulu Wilson star in the CBS comedy "The ner. But, in many ways, his Millers." appearance fits snugly into the show's formula, which appears to be that there is no ling a few minutes later at her ory," a show that benefitted formula. clever ability to manipulate from debuting between "How I Met Your Mother" and "7tvo
and a Half Men" before es-
lead-off position — and almost immediately began to
ed couple (Beau Bridges and stuff going on these days, and Margo Martindale) who move we're kind of silly," said Bridgin with different adult children es, heaping praise on show (Arnett and Jayma Mays), has creatorGreg Garcia and resian everything-and-the-kitch- dent directorJames Burrows, en-sink philosophy, which the Steven Spielberg of the sitmeans that the dialogue tran- com world. "They know how
tablishing itself as TV's most
lose viewers. It was canceled
sitions from smart zingers to bathroom humor at the drop
them for five or six years before letting us fly out on our
to do their jobs. There's lots of
confidence all around." of a whoopie cushion. But knowledge of craft isn't The approach threatens to why "The Millers" is a hit. give viewers a severe case of The main reason for their sucwhiplash, but if you find your- cess? Time slot, time slot, time self groaning over a 60-some- slot. thing mother unable to control The new sitcom has the her flatulence, you can be good fortune of immediately pretty certain you'll be chuck- following "The Big Bang The-
offering "protected" for longer, especially since the net-
next year, it was put in the
The series, which revolves her son/roommate. "There'sa lot of serious around a r e cently separat-
work owns the show. "Look, I t r ust them very
popular sitcom. after four seasons. "'Big Bang' has been a huge "Raising Hope," w h ich help to us, because they've
10a.m. onGOLF,"PGATour Golf" —The PGATour's Florida swing is in full, well, swing as it touches down near Miami for the WGC-Cadillac Championship. A field including Adam Scott, Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk, Jason Day, Keegan Bradley and Hunter Mahan will tee it up on Trump National Doral's Blue Monster Course, which should seem even more monstrous to golfers since a recent redesign lengthened it from 7,334 to 7,450 yards. Tiger Woods won this tournament a year ago by two strokes over Steve Stricker. 8 p.m. on 5 8, "Community"Isn't social networking supposed to bring people closer together? When two designers beta-test a
new networking appatGreen-
dale, a battle for the top ranking breaks out. Jeff and Shirley (Joel McHale, Yvette Nicole Brown) are in the thick of it, while Britta
(Gillian Jacobs)wants nothing to do with the concept, and Hickey (Jonathan Banks) decides to go underground until it blows over. Danny Pudi also stars in the new
episode "AppDevelopmentand Condiments."
much. I've never been happier with a studio or a network," he
said. "But I understand people have to move things around.
he also created,debuted after "Glee" in 2010, when that
gotten people to sample us," Garcia said. "I'd love it if the show was a pop-culture phenetwork k eeps u s
TV TODAY
I'm absolutely fine with what-
ever they think is best."
b e h i nd nomenon for Fox. The very
next season, "Hope" was
For now, J.B. Smoove, who
plays the wisecracking best
forced tolead offWednesday
night programming, a posiGarcia knows all too well tion it clearly wasn't ready to about the perils of leaving the handle. It's still on the air, but nest too soon. His NBC series on Friday nights, otherwise "My Name is Earl" premiered known in the business as the in 2005 on Thursdays, the "graveyard shift." same night as "Will & Grace," Garcia sounded confident "The Office" and "ER." The that CBS would keep his latest own.
friend to Arnett's character, is
just relishing the moment. "We got dealt a great hand," said Smoove, previously best known for his work on "Curb Your Enthusiasm." "They've set us up real nice. All you've got to do now is hit the ball."
8:30 p.m. on 5 8, "Parks and Recreation" —Leslie's (Amy Poehler) attempt to get the wall between Pawneeand Eagleton taken down has unexpected results. Tom and Ben (Aziz Ansari, Adam Scott) try to secure some corporate sponsorship for the department's benefit concert. Ron (Nick Offerman) finds a new workplace hobby in the new episode "The Wall."
9 p.m. on(CW), "Reign"Mary (AdelaideKane)tries to balance herpersonal desires and the good of the nation in deciding whom to marry, but she wasn't counting on Francis
ituaries a source o com ort
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and /MAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby: "Still Alive in San Diego" (Nov. 22) said she reads the obituaries every day and feels somehow disappointed when she doesn't see a name she recognizes. She asked if it was "weird" and you
ill, disabled or elderly or has out- some of the person's biography is lived most of her companions, it included, provides the opportunimight explain her "letdown" when ty to feel compassion toward that
told her yes, that it seemed like a
ter times and make her feel more connected to the out-
lack of empathy. I d o n' t a g r ee. What's happening is t iswo a i s o e y and the activity has
no one she knows appears in the
side world. — Julie in Wisconsin
DFP,R
Aggy
become the hub of
her day. It gives her something — sadly — to look forward to and a sense of closeness to
her acquaintances when she recognizes their names. My advice to her would be to find
another way to fill the void and not obsess about the obits. Joining a
club or taking up a physical activity would allow her to meet people. I'm betting she will feel less of a need to connect to the obituaries if
she expands her social circle to include the living. — Been There, Too, in RhodeIsland
Dear Been There, Too:Yourpoint is well-stated, and it was echoed by
other readers who, like you, read between the lines of "Still Alive's" short letter. Read on: Deer Abby:If the letter-writer is
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014:This year detaching from difficult situations in order to find a resolution becomes an art. You often see the problem, but the challenge remains to find the right path that will make the most parties happy. Go to the gym, relax and learn to let go of tension. If youaresingle,you could meetsomeone very intriguing. A Sters showthe kind reiationship couid of dayyou'llhave deveiop, and the ** * * * Dynamic caring will be p I' mutual and deep. If you are attached, you structure your lives very differently in one area. Be wise. Accept your sweetie rather than try to change him or her. When the two of you are more compassionate, you really enjoy each other. GEMINI often pressures you tomake adecision.
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * You could be discouraged by someone else's resentment of you. Your frustration could come to the surface. Consider how to express your feelings without judging the other party. Tonight: Nap, then decide.
individual or even feel grateful to
obituaries. Seeing a familiar name still be alive. Not finding a familiar may bring back memories of bet- name can seem like a missed op-
D ear Abby: A n o bituary i s mor e t han a d e at h a n -
portunity to experience that. — Loyal Reader, Arlington, Va.
Dear Abby: Please tell "Still Alive" she isn't alone. I have often
wondered why I look through the obituaries half-hoping to see someone I know. I suspect it may be
similar to how people slow down to view a car wreck. I'm a sympathetoften the last memory loved ones ic, caring person; I don't consider have of someone cherished, and it's myself weird or cold-blooded. the deceased's introduction to a sea — Empathizing in Honolulu of strangers. Dear Abby:I, too, am a daily obit Obituariesare scrapbooked and reader. I have lived in this town for prized, and researched for gener- more than 50 years, and I know ations by genealogists, historians a lot of people here. When I see a and relatives looking to complete name Iknow, orthename ofafam their family tree. A well-done obit- ily member of a friend, I take the uary is the final word on how a per- opportunity to send a card to exson is remembered. press my condolences. — Sandy in Pennsylvania And, by the way, your column Deer Abby:Some people, wheth- appears on the same page as the er or not they live and associate obituaries in my local newspaper, with friends and family, feel a and I'd never want to miss a day of certain emptiness in their l ives Dear Abby! and look for different ways to feel — Big Fan in 7hcson SOMEthing emotionally. Finding Dear Big Fan:Bless you! nouncement. It tells a story. It's
the name of someone they know,
especially in an obituary, where
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
The results will be far better for you, as
well as for others. Keep your opinions to yourself, as they could change rapidly in the next few days. Tonight: Go out and join friends. Be yourself.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You naturally will shine in a meeting. On some level, you'll like what you hear or see, even if a disagreement dominates the moment. You might want to seehow youcan movepastthis problem — perhaps not today, but in the near future. Tonight: Kick back and relax.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * You could be in the midst of some tension thatyou would like to forget about. Consider eliminating this pressure, and try to resolve the problem soon. Use the late afternoon for meetings and other interpersonal matters. Tonight: Get into weekend mode early.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
** * If no one is talking or one party is closed down, resolving a misunderstanding could be close to impossible. If you TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You'll dominate to an unusual ex- are the party who is closed down, it would be better to talk. If it's the other person, tent, partially becausesomeonerefuses to discuss the issue at hand. Communica- keep reaching out. Tonight: Join favorite tion easilycould getmessedupandcause people at a favorite place. a misunderstanding. Make your choices LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) your own. Let others know where you are ** * * You might want to come to an coming from. Tonight: Out and about. understanding with a loved one before everyone has gotten too involved with a GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Pretend that you are not in the particular issue. Refuse to get stuck. A room. Just listen and take in information. special friend will try to lighten your mood.
— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
Before you know it, you could be laughing. Tonight: Try something totally new.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * Your moods could have a bigger impact than you might realize. Be more forthright if you want a problem resolved. Let a partner air out his or her ideas without becoming judgmental. Tonight: Say "yes"to someone's whims.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * * Go with the moment, and know what you desire. You might have kept a lot of your thoughts to yourself, despite your gregarious personality. Others could be stunned by how sensitiveyou canbe. Tonight: Toss yourself into a fun scene.
CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Upon hearing certain conversations, your mind could jump to better ideas and new ways of handling a personal matter. Follow through on these thoughts more often. Stay open. Tonight: Run some errands on the way home.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh.18) ** * * You might opt to stay close to home. You could find others in a strange mood, which will make it difficult to deal with them. A conversation with someone at a distance might make you feel uneasy. Try not to let this get to you. Tonight: Let your spontaneity out.
PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * Take an overview. Conversations will be about the story, not the real issues
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 3 DAYS TO KILL (PG-13) 1, 3:45, 7:20 • 12 YEARS A SLAVE(R) 6:10, 9:25 • 300 DOUBLE FEATURE (R) 5:30 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE (R) 9 • 300:RISEOFANEMPIRE3-D(R)8,10 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE IMAX3-D (R) 8 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 1:35, 4:50, 8 • ANCHORMAN 2:THE LEGEND CONTINUES SUPERSIZED R-RATED VERSION(R) 1:25, 4:40, 7:55 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 3:25, 9:45 • FROZEN(PG) 1:15, 4:10 • GRAVITY 3-O(PG-l3) 1:05, 6:40 • THE LEGO MOVIE(PG) Noon, 310, 6:25, 9 05 • THE LEGO MOVIE 3-D (PG) 12:20, 3:30 • LONE SURVIVOR(R) 12:10, 6:35, 9:30 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)11:40a.m.,2:50,6:05 • NON-STOP(PG-13) 12:40, 3:55, 7:30, 10:10 • THE NUTJOB(PG) 3:20 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 12:50, 6:45 • POMPEII(PG-13) 12:15, 9:40 • POMPEII 3-D(PG-13)3:05, 6:55 • RIDE ALONG (PG-13) 3:35, 9:35 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:40, 10:15 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 11:30a.m., 2:45, 6, 9:10 • STALINGRAD IMAX3-D (R) 12:30 • THE WINDRISES(PG-13) 11:50a.m.,3, 6:15, 9:15 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
I
t
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)5:30 • NEBRASKA (R) 9:15 • After7p.m., shows are2f and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian. Tjn Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tln PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • A FIELD INENGLAND(no MPAArating) 8 • THE PAST(PG-13) 3:15 • SOME VELVET MORNING (noMPAArating) 6 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 3 DAYS TO KILL (PG-13) 4, 6:30 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)4:30,6:45 • NON-STOP(PG-13) 4: I5, 6:45 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 4:15, 7:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 3 DAYS TO KILL (PG-13) 4:15, 6:45 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 6 • THE MONijMENTSMEN(PG-13) 4:15, 8:45 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 4 • SON OFGOD (PG-13)3:45,6:30 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 3 DAYS TO KILL (PG-13) 4:45, 7:10 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)4:40,7 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)4:05,6:40 • NON-STOP(PG-13) 5, 7:20 • SON OFGOD (PG-13)3:30,6:30 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE MONUMENTS MEN(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE (R) 8 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
below thesurface. Aclose associate, friend or loved one could be more than difficult. At present, he or she might seem more fiery than you have witnessed in a while. Tonight: Head home early. © King Features Syndicate
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
(Toby Regbo)returning to court with Lola (Anna Popplewell) at his side. The arrival of Mary's mother (Amy Brenneman), who has her own agenda for her daughter, complicates things further. Torrance Coombs also stars in the new episode "The Consummation." 10 p.m. on 58, "Parenthood" — Kristina (Monica Potter) goes in for a checkup and embarks on a new adventure. Julia and Drew (Erika Christensen, Miles Heizer) struggle to move on from their pasts. Carl (Josh Stamberg) makes Sarah (Lauren Graham) a tempting offer, but she turns it down. Hank
(Ray Romano)admits he's still carrying a torch for an old flame in the new episode "The Enchanting Mr. Knight." Ct Zap2it
Purc 6(r()rt 6 t"o.
>j B~ dU Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.ngrthwestcrossing.com
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouglas See 100 life-sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions! See us also for Retractable Awnings, Exterior Solar Screens, Patio Shade Structures
eeeeeCIASSI
r
COVERINGS
54'I -388%418 1465 SW Knoll Ave. Bend www.clessic-coverings.com
ON PAGES 3%4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com 24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel, or extend an ad
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253 Subscri b er services:541-385-5800 Include your name, phone number Subscribe or manage your subscription and address
Classified telephone hours: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. To place an ad call 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 208
240
Pets & Supplies
• Crafts & Hobbies
Yorkie Pups, AKC, born 1/11. Male $550; female, $650. 541-241-0518
202
A1 Washers8 Dryers $150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelfy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
Elizabeth,541-633-7006 WANTED good rebuildable 1K-gallon propane tank. 541-318-1233
Alderwood Quiltworks machine quilting frame for sale, locally made in Prineville, easy to use, makes quilting a dream! Comes with Handi handles, includes. manual, exc. shape, only used to quilt 4 tops, like new. $600. 541-549-1273 or 541-419-2160
205
242
Armoire for sale, Cherry/wrought iron Perfect condition, handmade, solid wood.
Items for Free Light teal rounded arm skirted sofa, 70", free! You haul 541-923-7491
Exercise Equipment
$650. kcaravelliOgmail.com
Pets & Supplies
260
265
269
Misc.ltems
Building Materials
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
Wanted- paying cash Sisters Habitat ReStore for Hi-fi audio & stu- Building Supply Resale of Unique Treasures! dio equip. Mclntosh, Quality items. BarkTurfSoil.com Stag Arms AR-15: 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. LOW PRICES! JBL, Marantz, D yModel Stag15, 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. naco, Heathkit, San150 N. Fir. 5.56/223, Stainless PROMPT DELIVERY 541-549-1621 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. steel barrel. LeBrrylng Diamonds 541N89-9663 Call 541-261-1808 Open to the public. upold Firedot G /Gold for Cash 3-9X40 Scope, Saxon's Fine Jewelers WHEN YOU SEE THIS WANTED good rebuildFor newspaper MagPul PRS 541-389-6655 able 1K-gallon propane delivery, call the buttstock, Hogue tank. 541-318-1233 BUYING Circulation Dept. at grip, Bipod. $1875 Lionel/American Flyer 266 541-385-5800 Call 541-410-3568 trains, accessories. On a classified ad To place an ad, call Heating 8 Stoves 541-408-2191. go to 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com or email Wanted: Collector seeks BUYING 8i SE LLING NOTICE TO to view additional claagifiad@bendbulletin.cam high quality fishing items All gold jewelry, silver ADVERTISER photos of the item. & upscale bamboo fly and gold coins, bars, Since September 29, The Bulletin rods. Call 541-678-5753, rounds, wedding sets, ServingCentrel Oregon sincergta 261 1991, advertising for or 503-351-2746 class rings, sterling silused woodstoves has ver, coin collect, vin- Medical Equipment been limited to mod270 tage watches, dental els which have been Winchester Model Lost & Found gold. Bill Fl e ming, certified by the OrFalcon 4-w h eel 70 - SA.308 Win. 541-382-9419. egon Department of Found nice women's power scooter with Classic FeatherEnvironmental Qualaccessories, gently weight, Monte Carlo Cemetery space: al ity (DEQ) and the fed- sweater, March 3rd used, in mint condiStock, Burris 3x9 double depth intereral E n v ironmental p.m.,NW Bond St. in t ion. $ 4 00. C a l l scope and case. grave space I 5 41-389-1821 f o r Protection A g e n cy Bend. Call to identify, Very clean and well I ment with outer b u rial details. (EPA) as having met 541-389-2896 cared for. $750. container built in, smoke emission stan- BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 541-420-4183 I located in Meadowdards. A cer t ified park area of DesSearch the area's most w oodstove may b e tsu I chutes M e morial 255 identified by its certifi- comprehensive listing of I Gardens, $900. Call cation label, which is classified advertising... Computers permanently attached real estate to automotive, to the stove. The Bul- merchandise to sporting T HE B U LLETIN r e letin will not know- goods. Bulletin Classifieds Flatscreen Magniquires computer adingly accept advertis- appear every day in the Clothing boys size fier Optlec Clearvertisers with multiple print or on line. ing for the sale of 10-14, $1-$2. view+ viewer, magad schedules or those Call 541-385-5809 541-639-6656 uncertified nifier for reading, selling multiple syswoodstoves. www.bendbulletin.com writing and viewing tems/ software, to dis- Clothing womens 16-20 for those who have close the name of the skirts, dresses, $2 & 267 The Bulletin vision loss. $900 business or the term Sernng Cenfrel Oregonsince ata up 541-639-6656 Fuel & Wood "dealer" in their ads. obo. (other items listed previously Private party advertis1 Cord dry, split Juniper, Natural gas Ruud ers are defined as havebeen sold) $190/cord. Multi-cordtankless water In Bend, call those who sell one REMEMBER:If you discounts, & t/gcords heater, brand new! 541-480-6162 computer. have lost an animal, available. Immediate 199 Btu, $1800. don't forget to check delivery! 541-408-6193 Also brand new 80 256 The Humane Society Full size power gal. electric water All Year Dependable Bend Photography heater, $500. adjustable bed 541-382-3537 Firewood: Seasoned; w/memory foam In Sunriver area. Lodgepole 1 for $195 Redmond Minolta QTSI Maxxum 530-938-3003 mattress, $800. Por541-923-0882 camera, includes 100or 2 for $365. Cedar, table wheelchair, 300mm zoom lens + filPrineville split, del. Bend: 1 for 4 leg walker, ters 8 c a se , $ 195. Shoes wmn 8t/~-1 0 54s-ccr-rsre; $175 or 2 for $325. Quadri-Poise cane, Yashica Microtec Zoom boots, dressy, $2 pr & 541-420-3484. or Craft Cats bathroom assist 90 camera & case, like 54s-389-8420. up 541-639-6656 chair, all for $200. new, $20. 541-383-1629 Pine & Juniper Split Call 541-526-5737 People Lookfor Information 257 About Products and PROMPT DELIVERY 264 Services EveryDaythrough Musical Instruments 542-389-9663 The Bulletin Classineds Snow RemovalEquipment Bend Indoor Swap
The Bulletin recomDining table mends extra caution Beautiful round when purc has- oak pedestal table ing products or serwith 4 matching vices from out of the chairs, table is 42" area. Sending cash, in diameter and in checks, or credit inbrand new condif ormation may b e tion, as are the subjected to fraud. chairs. Priced at For more informa$400. 541-447-3342 tion about an adver• tiser, you may call the O regon State G ENERATE S OME Attorney General's EXCITEMENT in your Office C o nsumer neighborhood! Plan a Protection hotline at garage sale and don't 1-877-877-9392. forget to advertise in classified! The Bulletin 541-385-5809. Serving Cenfrel dregon sincefgta
high, 12 lights, bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights on each arm), $300 obo.
I
f /
• Weslo Cadence Treadmill,folds up for easy storage, light use, works great. $150. 541-923-7491
L""
245
G olf Equipment CHECK YOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
I
/I
Canaries, 2 Bronze males, $45 ea. 541-548-7947
> TheBulletin > Antiques & Collectibles
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel puppies, AKC Champion P e d igree. Gorgeous Tri & Blenheims. $1800 includes 1 1940's Bell & Howear health guarantee, eU Smm Projector, Illlodel L Design arents' OFA & CERF C ertificates. Rea d y 122. Comes comMarch 16th. Reserve toplete with hard carday! 541-848-7605 rying case, in immaculate condition, Chihuahuas, 8 weeks, 1 $100. Tripod projecmale, 1 female, both tion screen, $100. brown 8 black, $150 541-383-1629 each. 541-408-7858
Cockatiei 8 XL cage, $40. Gray male less than a yr old; oran e, yellow markings. 541433-01 64 Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. Cans for Cats trailer at Jake's Diner; or donate M-F at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tumalo. Call for Irg. quantity pickup, 541-389-8420. www.craftcats.org e
1940's Cine-Kodak Eight Model 60 Movie Camera, includes carrying case, instructions and film splicer, $75. 541-383-1629
J
Has only 300 hours, (lamps have average life of 800-1000 hours of effective tanning usage). 1 owner, great condition, includes manual, goggles & head pillow. $900. Call tosee! 541-385-9318 in Bend
1957 00-18G Martin Guitar
Desert Baby Eagle .40 caliber handgun, 2 holsters, Rail Flashlight, 50 rounds ammo, $650 obo. 916-952-4109
A dd c o l o r p h o t o s a nd s e l l y our s t u f f f a s t .
In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds A dd c o l o r p h o t o s f o r p e t s , real e s t a t e , a u t o & m o r e !
Ilatf!IPI
GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005.This truck are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a tough Vs engine will get the Iob call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.
uid-Centory Unique
I
I
I
I r
Head & Footboard, with wood-grain look, double size has no Malti-Poo tiny designer side rails. Could be pups, mom 8 Ibs, dad repurposed into a 3 lbs., hypoallergenic garden bench, or a no m attinq/shedding, unique item. U se bov $750/gir~l$925. 541- your imagination! 233-6328/ 541-390-5401 Asking $75. 541-419-6408 Manx Kittens WANTED! 2 females, of breeder quality. 541-408-6869 The Bulletin reserves right to publish all POODLE pups, toy,tea- the ads from The Bulletin cup.Also, 5 rno. rnale, newspaper onto The $1 95. 541-475-3889 Bulletin Internet webQueensland Heelers site. Standard & Mini, $150 8 up. 541-280-1537
The Bulletin
Serving Cenfrel dregon sincefgaf www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com Wanted: Old Oriental Rodent problems? Free rugs, any size or conbarn/shop cats, fixed, dition, call toll free, shots. Will d e liver. 1-800-660-8938 306-4519, leave msg. Just bought a new boat? Yorkie pups AKC, 4 baby Sell your old one in the doll boys, potty training, classifieds! Ask about our UTD shots, health guar., Super Seller rates! $850 8 up. 541-777-7743 541-385-5809
• I I
316
Irrigation Equipment 1/4 mile wheel hne, 7-ft wheels, $4950. 541-389-8963 325
Hay, Grain & Feed First quality Orchard/Timothy/Blue Grass mixed hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton.Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831 341
Horses & Equipment Rowell-built work saddle, 16n seat, 7/8 double r!0, $250 obo. 541-389-574T 358
Farmers Column 10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. (other sizes available) 541-617-1133. CCB ¹I 73684 kfjbuildersOykwc.net
265
www.redeuxbend.com
HAVANESE PUPPIES AKC, Dewclaws, UTD shots/wormer, non-shed, hypoallerqenic, $850 541-460-1277.
541-923-9758
N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 swather, 14' header with conditioner, cab heat/A/C, 1300 orig. hrs. $29,000 obo. 1486 International, cab heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 Pto, 3 sets remotes, nice tractor. $18,000. 541-419-3253
Building Materials
RG GILX L dot!S!grt Cuttcapt Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501
(4) 5'x12' horse panels, $75/ea. Assorted water and feed tubs, call for prices.
WANTED: Snow blower tire chains, size 13x4. Call 541-408-0846
(2) new 3' wide x 6' tall vinyl Low E single hung windows, $150 ea. 1 4x8 280 new Low E fixed window, $350. 541-233-3500 Estate Sales Bend Habitat 541-383-1629 ESTATE SALE RESTORE Building Supply Resale Beautiful furn, all like WANTED: Able-bodied Kohler Digital 165 Piano, new. Cal King bedcrew members to sail Quality at LOW all the bells & whistles, Winchester Bay Oregon room set, living room, PRICES hardly used, glossy dining set & sideboard, to San Francfsco in 740 NE 1st black. $5000 obo. glass & iron dining set, June or July, 2014. 541-312-6709 541-633-8235 deluxe treadmill, gaMark, 541-233-8944 Open to the public. rage storage cabinets & Gorilla shelves, tools, yard & ou tdoor, antique lawyers bookcase/rockers/harrow, lots of books, Abe Lincoln collection, kitchenware, jewelry, bedd ing, h o usehold & more! F r l-Sat., 9 - 4 (numbers, Fri 8a m ) Baker Rd/Lakeview/ River Woods to 19215 Choctaw Attic Estates & Appraisals Excellent condition, beautiful tone, well cared for. Includes carrying case. $2000.
CASH!! For Guns, Ammo 8 Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
308
Farm Equipment & Machinery
sutsvaloss
.270. 541-548-4774
isrvlng Central Oregon since 190S
212
-
Sunvision Pro 28LX Tanning Bed
I
$225. 541-546-6171
-
I
Adopt a rescued cat! The Bulletin Fixed, shots, ID chip, recommends extra ' tested, more! 65480 f caution when pur78th, B e nd/Tumalo, chasing products or • Thurs/Sat/Sun, 1-5, services from out of I 389-8420, 598-5488. the area. Sending I~ www.craftcats.org cash, checks, or • i n f ormation Aussie AKC Mini, Blue f credit 541-385-5809 Merle, M/F, blue eyes may be subjected to parents on site, shots/ / FRAUD. For more The Bulletin Classified information about an s wormed. 541-598-5314 advertiser, you may I 246 Aussie Mini, 5 mo male, I c all t h e Oregone black tri, good w/kids & State Guns, Hunting Attor ney ' cows, crate/leash trained, / General's & Fishing O ff ice $300. 541-460-9600 Consumer Protec- • Border Collie/New Zealtion h o t line at I 3 Winchester p r e-64 Model 70s: (2) 30.06 and Huntaway pups, great i 1-877-877-9392. dogs, working parents, transition guns; and 1
f
SR
MorePixatBendboletin.corn
r-
• Chandelier,
22" diameter x 17n
69 ex39ex23.5".
206
260
Misc. Items Meet - A Mini-Mall full
210
Furniture & Appliances
246
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
I
•
'
I I
*Specjal private party rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories.
BSSl 1C S
www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit Us online at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions,
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
286
286
Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend
** FREE ** Garage Sale Klt
Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT IN CLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your
Multi Family Garage Sale Office & home furniture, household, clothes, tools, china, lots of misc. Fri-Sat, 9-4, 3155 NE Nathan Dr. No earlybirds! Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLABSIFIEDB 292
Next Ad
Sales Other Areas
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
Flea Narkef af Crescent Community Center! Sat., 8-5, and Sun. 9, 10-3. Free admission. Lotsof Good Stuff! Support Crescent Community!
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
1777 SW Chandler
The Bulletin
NOTK;E Servrng Cenrrel Oregon srncel903 541-350-6822 Remember to remove For pics and more info your Garage Sale signs go to atticestatesand HUGE MOVING SALE (nails staples etc ) ~er e s als.com F ri.-Sat., 8 -4 . 7 4 2 after your Sale event Tierra Rd., E. of 27th is over! THANKS! Awbrey Butte Estate on Hwy 20, offDalton. From The Bulletin Sale! Fri & Sat,3/7& and your local utility 3/8, 9am-4pm. People Look for Information companies. 707 NW Sonora. About Products and Leather furniture, washer/dryer, decor, Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classifieds kitchen items, clothing www.bendbulletin.com etc. Numbers given at 8a.m. See pixand de- Weldonand Marlene Hagen scriptions www.farm houseestatesales. com
MOVING SALE 2855 NW Horizon
(off Mt. Washington Drive) BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Friday, March 7, Saturday, March 8 Search the area's most 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. comprehensive listing of (Take Newport/Shevlin Park Road west to classified advertising... Mt Washington round-about — turn north at first exit real estate to automotive, and follow to second street — Summit merchandise to sporting Go up Summit 1 block to Horizon — go to sale site.) goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the Lexington Dining table, 6 chairs and 2 leaves; print or on line. Matching china cabinet-all in cherry wood; 5 Call 541-385-5809 beautiful Oriental rugs; Wedgwood Mirabelle www.bendbulletin.com set of china; Wedgwood Peter Rabbit items; Large art gallery with prints-oil paintings and The Bulletin watercolors; two Rolex watches; some jewelry; SernngCenlrel Oregon srnceigig Balance and plafform scales; Louis Vitton Purse; Super antique clock; Tea Cart; Couch; ESTATE SALE Two Loveseats; Two side chairs; Large sofa Nice furniture including 2 table; Massage chair; Mirrors; 2012 freezer; china cupboards, beau- White metal and brass queen bed frame; White tiful oak table with six, dressers and chiffarobe; Cedar chest; Two lawcouch & ottoman, end yers bookcases one old one new; Drum roll tables, garden art, outstyle desk; 1 Roll top desk; Inlaid table; Relidoor furniture, housegious Dish Network disc and controller; Proform hold misc, lots of petite treadmill; Life cycle bike; Lots and lots of kitchen clothinq. Thur. 2-6; Fri. ware; Wrought iron patio table and chairs; 10-5, Sat. 9-1. No earlies! Cash only. 2238 NE Xmas items; Planters; Antiquity; 19n LG TV; Antique youth bed; Cleaning supplies; office supWintergreen, Bend. plies; Steam cleaner; Old Trunk; Garage cabinets; Old Dental drill circa 1940; Dental cabinet 282 full of tools; Shop vac; Tools and tools and more Sales Northwest Bend tools; Two tool storage cabinets; small tool boxes; Drill Press; Chop saw; Tile cutter; Small compressor; Pressure washer; dog crate; Two Neighborhood Sale, Fri.- Sat., 8-5, 64695 Cignal bikes; Hundreds of books; Hundreds of Wood Ave. off 5th St. in Beanie babies; Hundreds of men's ties; 9" by Tumalo. Queen bed, fur- 12' garage rubber floor mat; and clothing and niture, oak barrel, tools, lots of nice tablecloths and other linens; Double and lots of misc. size antique feather bed; and more and more!!! Just bought a new boat? Handled by .... Sell your old one in the Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC classifieds! Ask about our 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves Super Seller rates! www.deeedysestatesaies.com 541-385-5809
E2 THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
Employment Opportunities
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • T uesday.•••••• • • • •... . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. Wednesday • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Frlday. • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • 11:00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • • • • • • • Sunday. • • • • • • • • • •
• 3:00 pm Fri. • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*tlllust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
pp Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541.395.55Q9
GarageSales
GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541 385 5809
Pressman The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time pressman. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will have prior web press experience and be able to learn our equipment (3 t/a tower KBA Comet press) and processes quickly. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live, let us hear from you. Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager 'baisin er@wescom a ers.com with your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employ-
The Bulletin
servinscenrraroreron since r903
Equal Opportunity Employer
Auto Renew Coordinator
Immediate opening in the Circulation department for a full time Auto Renew Coordinator. Job duties primarily encompass the processing of all subscriber Auto Renew payments through accounting software, data entry of new credit card or bank draft information, and resolution with customers of declined Auto Renew payments, as well as, generating subscriber renewals and refunds. Other tasks include entering employee subscription adjustments, transferring funds from subscriber accounts for single copy purchases, dispatching of all promotional items associated with new subscriptions and upgrades, as well as tracking/ordering Circulation office supplies. Responsibilities also include month end billing, invoicing and collections for Buffalo Distribution and back up to the CSR and billing staff. Ability to perform all these tasks accurately and with attention to deadlines is a must. Work shift hours are Monday through Friday 8:00 AM to5:00 PM. Please send resume to: ahusted ©bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin 5erring Central Oregon since1903
EOE/Drug free workplace
0@NLSiedi Ade~ I I fj gel%©lfllt
476
476
Employment Opportunities
CAUTION:
The Bulletin
Ads published in "Employment O p porfunlfies" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline
CHECK YOUR AD
pp
servingcentrel oregon sincerse
541-385-5809
Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Bulietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Driver Night Driver needed
Apply at Owl Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd St., Bend, OR 97701 EMPLOYMENT Now taking applications!
A newBehavioral Health Centeris opening in the Bend/ La Pine area. All positions available, incruding: • Counseling Staff • Dietary • Housekeeping • Maintenance • Support staff • Clerical Competitive benefits and wages. Please email your retter of interest and resume to Emil ©kleancenter.com
ExposvREsFQRoNLYslset Va oe0 Nmsnr nsai
A m a lo
Weekof March 3, 2014
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809 DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-7725295. www.paralegalalternatives.com legalalt@msn.com
DRIVERS-Whether you have experience or need training, we offer unbeatable career opportunities. Trainee, Company Driver, LEASE OPERATOR, LEASE TRAINERS. 877-369-7104 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com NEED CLASS A CDL TRAINING? Start a CAREER in trucking today! Swift Academies offer PTDI certified c ourses and o f f er "Best-In-Class" training. New Academy Classes Weekly; No Money Down or Credit Check; Certified Mentors Ready and Available; Paid (While Training With Mentor); Regional and Dedicated Opportunities; Great Career Path; Excellent Benefits Package. Please Call: (866)315-9763
Tony's Auto Removal Pays CASH for ALL vehicles in ALL conditions including cars, trucks, big rigs, agriculture equipment &more. Free Towing! 503-283-3095 $$
604
Loans & Mortgages
Storage Rentals
WARNING
For rent, 8'x20' container in secure facility. Dry, clean, only $90/mo. Call 9th Street RV Storage Center, 541-420-6851.
The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,
Juniper Ridge is a S ecure Residential Treatment Facility providing services to individuals with a severe mental illness. These positions provide mental health nursing care including medication oversight, medication r elated t r eatment, f o llow physician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general physical condition s uc h a s pul s e, temperature and respiration to provide daily information, educate and train staff on medication administration, and e nsure documentation is kept according to policies.
caution when purposition works with the treatment team chasing products or I This promote recovery from mental illness. services from out of e to position includes telephone consultal the area. Sending This tion and crisis intervention in the facility. c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f ormation l may be subjected to Qualified applicants must have a v alid Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's FRAUD. For more informa- I license at the time of hire, hold a valid tion about an adver- • Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal
I
l l l
I
l tiser, you may call l
history background check. Wages depenthe Oregon State dent upon education and experience, but l Attorney General'sl will be between $48,000 to $72,000. Office C o n sumer e Excellent benefit package, including signing
I Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. I LThe Bulleting
Call The a t a lletin At 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
bonus.
Please visit th e O regon Employment Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for an application or contact Nina Bisson a t 5 4 1-676-9161, nina.bisson@gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Heppner, OR 97836.
For Equal OpportuCentral Oregon Community College has openings listed below. Go to nity Laws c ontact https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Oregon Bureau of Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. Labor & I n dustry, Newberry For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. Civil Rights Division, COCC is an AA/EO employer. 971-673- 0764.
The Bulletin
.pp
528
at 1-503-378-4320
YOUR/tD WILLRECEIVECLOSETO 1,000,000 oso cl r a&Ad h ~ N ~ v ge
® lRIARCQ©
Community Counseling Solutions is recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedinJohn Day, OR.
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
Employment Opportunities
Apt./Multiplex General
Lookat:
Bendhom es.com for Com pleteListingsof AreaRealEstateforSale
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to
your ad, please contact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Small studio downtown area, $495 mo., $475 dep. No pets/smking.
Director of Library Services Provide administrative direction in planning, implementing, and supervising Library programs. Allocates staffing, financials, and resources to a chieve accreditation standards. Masters + 5- y r s e x p . r e q . $65,224-$77,646/yr. Closes Mar 17 EMT Practical ExamTest Proctor Seeking test proctor for EMT testing stations, during National Registry EMT practical exam. Test date is April 12. Current CPR+ EMT Certifications req. $20/hr. Temporary, non-benefited position.
Financial Aid Veterans Certification Specialist Serve as certifying official for veterans' education benefits. Act as resource to students, community, faculty and staff for financial aid related needs.Assoc+ 1-yrexp. req.$2,440-$2,905/mo. Closes Mar 16 AssistantProfessor 1of Economics Provide instruction in Economics, including a full range of courses offered in Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, and Contemporary Economic Issues. Masters + c o l lege l evel t eaching exp. r e q. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Mar 6 AssistantProfessor 1, of Engineering and Physics Create and implement learning activities for majors and non-majors in physics and engineering courses. Assess and evaluate student development. Masters + 1-yr teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Mar 6
WE OFFER:
lf you wanta serious opportunity, and you canclose the sale, Call M-F 10am-3pm, 541-410-5521 SALES
Invigorate your career at MacDonald-Miller Facility Solutions!
As a major design/build mechanical contractor, our comprehensive capabilities allow us to help our customers with HVAC/piping system concepts, full installation and ongoing services. Sim-
ply put "We Make Buildings Work Better!" Do you strive to work for a company that values integrity, fun, and superior service? If so, we are looking for an eager & innovative Maintenance Sales Account Manager withtwo years of suc-
cessful sales and cold-calling experience to sell HVAC contracts to existing buildings in our Redmond, OR location. High emphasis is being placed on being able to develop new relationships in order to be successful. Salary DOE. For moreinformation, visit www.macmiller.com
Submit resume to hr@macmiller.com
All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any
such
pre f erence,
limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children
under the age of 18
Call 5 4 1 -330-9769, living with parents or or 541-480-7870.
More Advancement Opportunity Weekly Awards and Bonuses Full Training & Support Opportunity for Growth
Fax 206-768-4115 or mail to: Attn: HR
Houses for PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
Registered Nurses
MX
GarageSales
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Rtmfji Ce)
Call a Pro SALES Whether you need a Seekin Ex erienced 1-877-877-9392. fence fixed, hedges BANK TURNED YOU S~ l DOWN? Private party trimmed or a house will loan on real esbuilt, you'll find ARE YOU? tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity professional help in is all you need. Call • Reliable • Money Motivated The Bulletin's "Call a Oregon Land Mort• Professional • Team Player gage 541-388-4200. Service Professional" • Goal Oriented • Consistent LOCAL MONEY:Webuy Directory secured trust deeds & If so, come join a winning team of positive note,some hard money 541-385-5809 Sales/Promotion Men & Women loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13. making "$600-$800Per Week" working FULL TIME covering sponsored special events & trade shows
Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad foronlySf 5.00per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
632
476
legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination ca l l HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll f ree t e lephone number for the hearing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275.
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily 654
Houses for Rent SE Bend
N ewer 4 b d r m S E , master main l evel, 2100 SF, large yard, very n ice. $ 1 595. 541-480-9200
Tick, Tock TiCk, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
CU~
MacDonald-Miller FAcILITY soutTIoNse
po Box 47983 Seattle, WA 98146 Equal Opportunity Employer
The Bulletin
Serving Cenfral Oregon since 1903
Home Delivery Advlsor The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
Houses for Rent SW Bend Prime location on Bend's west side! S pacious floorplan features great room design. 3 oversized bdrms, 2.5 baths, near schools, Tetherow Golf Club, Mt. Bachelor, River Trail & shopping; adjacent to park. Movein ready; yard maint. incl. 19424 SW B rookside Way. No pets considered. $1495. 541-408-0086
Where buyers meet sellers. Every day thousands of buyers and sellers of goods and services do business in these pages. They know you can't beat The Bulletin Classified Section for selection and convenience - every item is just a phone call away.
The Bulletin
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmullerObendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE
Classifjeds Thousandsof adsdaily in print andonline.
Call54I 3855809tsprcmcteyourservice• Advertise for 28dap stortingattl4I Ittarfrrtrt~atr t rrrtarrtrvr e er rrrtart
AssistantProfessor 1 of Sociology Provide instruction in S ociology. Provide student advising and Building/Contracting Handyman assistance. Masters + college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Mar 7 NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY law requires anyone SERVICES. Home & AssistantProfessor 1of Manufacfuring Technology who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, construction work to (Tenure Track) Carpentry-Painting, Provide instruction in Manufacturing Technology, a self-paced learning be licensed with the Pressure-washing, environment with a mentorship model. Provide small group discussion Construction ContracHoney Do's. On-time tors Board (CCB). An and lectures, testing, advising and assistance. Associates in MATC or promise. Senior active license Discount. Work guarrelated field + 5-yrs industry exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. means the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 Closes Mar 15 is bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 Verify the contractor's AssistantProfessor 1 of Non-Desfrucfive Bonded & Insured CCB l i c ense at Testing and Inspection (Tenure Track) CCB¹f sf 595 www.hirealicensedProvide instruction in the Non-Destructive Testing and Inspection (NDTI) contractor.com program at the Manufacturing and Applied Technology Center (MATC) in or call 503-378-4621. LandscapingNard Care Redmond. Provide small group discussion, lectures, hands-on The Bulletin recomdemonstration, student advising and assistance. 10-yrs NDTI exp+ 5-yrs mends checking with using NDTI techniques req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes the CCB prior to conMar 15 tracting with anyone. Some other t rades AssistantProfessor 1 of Veterinary Education DVM (Tenure Track) also re q uire addi- Serving Central Provide instruction to students in Veterinary Technician training. Place tional licenses and Oregon Since 2003 and supervise clinical practicum, provide student advising and evaluate certifications. Residental/Commercial student development. Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree + 3-yrs exp as Licensed Veterinarian. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Check out the Sprinkler Mar 21 classifieds online Activation/Repair www.bendbulletin.com Back Flow Testing AssistantProfessor 1 of Veterinary Education CVT (Tenure Track) Updated daily Provide instruction to students in Veterinary Technician training. Place Maintenance and supervise clinical practicum, provide student advising and evaluate Thatch & Aerate Debris Removal student development. AAS in Veterinary Technology or Veterinary • Spring Clean up Technician degree + 3-yrs exp as Certified Veterinary Technician. ~Weekly Mowing JUNK BE GONE $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. Closes Mar 21 & Edging I Haul Away FREE •Bi-Monthly & Monthly AssistantProfessor 1 of Anthropology For Salvage. Also Maintenance Provide instruction in all four fields of Anthropology. Provide advising, Cleanups & Cleanouts •Bark, Rock, Etc. curriculum development, and participate in projects. Masters + 1-yr Mel, 541-389-8107 college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo contract. ~Landsca in Closes Mar 21 Domestic Services •Landscape Construction Feature AssistantProfessor 1 of Pharmacy Technician Education A ssisting Seniors a t ~Water Installation/Maint. [Tenure Track) Home. Light houseProvide instruction, curriculum development and program leadership to keeping & other ser- •Pavers the Pharmacy Technician Training Program. Maintain course planning, v ices. L icensed 8 •Renovations budget, scheduling, and supervision to program. Assoc/Bach's + 3-yrs Bonded. BBB Certi- •Irrigations Installation Pharmacist or Pharmacy Tech exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo fied. 503-756-3544 Senior Discounts contract. Closes Mar 24 Bonded & Insured Handyman 541-815-4458 Part Time Instructor LCB¹8759 New! Chemistry, Emergency Medical Services, I DO THAT! Fire Ecology, Recreation Resource Management Home/Rental repairs Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of Call The Bulletin At disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Small jobs to remodels 541-385-5809 Honest, guaranteed Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional Place Your Ad Or E-Mail work. CCB¹151573 perks. Dennis 541-317-9768 At: www.bendbulletin.com
Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r form Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing land scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i -
cense.
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 Aeration/Dethatching 1-time or Weekly Services
Ask about FREEadded svcs w/seasonal contract! Bonded & Insured.
COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/l 541-480-9714
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAR 6, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
TUNDRA
E3
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
AFTER SE(NG MI5TAKEId FOR A 5EAL, SILLY IREALIZE5 THAT MAKHdG A 5hlOW Ahl&EL IN A SLACK 5NOWSLIIT MAY NOT HAVE SEEhl THE SE5T IDEA
O
NEVI 801fcRSF- •
I
I3l>SINESS
0C IB I0 C
• gg
SLF(CKS,SHOES, R NIGHTGoldN FIND R ORCKRT!
ITs F08 MV TP(IP.
Qo
0
I PILSO Gctl FI NEW SKIFtT,
PIEIUIEIUIBBR-THIS
DONT LCOK PITPIIE L IKE THRf,
TtAIO ISLOOSES,SOME
'AIP ISN'CCD6liNG UEACNT If
HONFy! E
0 0U L
3-6
ft / EV
~
ms
/Is
IEEHH
'ER.
0
www.tttttdracomlcs.com
HEART OF THE CITY IHRS. ANC AELIAII,
SALLY FORTH ffoat I/O 'Ttttl Khk7g/Hft(AT IT SACIISP
Irs AIY PRoGR EsS REftofcr!
It lglrIS IT>
PLGSE! ~ OHFT LET IHCN SEE THA,'
IT'S UNCIPEhlEP! AIAYBE 'T>OSI
IF I DID SAD /AlJHA72f/ MOMt S( OAfA(A itIAICE NIEtAET A TUTOg,!
ll
PID WIRL! Y00R OITPSHSIIA/ I
' ' HIHILE AIIGCytl!DEP,
I
.I
HIL/ YOU DO THIS EVERY TIME o THEN YOU TURN THAT SIG : INTO A HUGE ORDEAI. YOU TAKE SOMETHING FUN AND -DEAL THEN YOU THEN MAKE ITA BIG DEAL... KNOW WHAT HAPPENSK
IN SEVERAL WE SCORE HELP YEARS WHE GINORKHlS ME ON GET MY MD~PHD RESULTS ' HERE' UNTIL THEN I CAN ONLY DOCUMENT.
III
IS REFRESHI AIIA.
O 6 0
D 0 V E
0
8 C
0
RAZZ
ROSEIS ROSE PorHOLE.
PMNI ES'tLII&MSANI, t IPAOIU G kl,B,DhA%'TO) ~ITL(e
FYtazS/rHAV- CYC LE
Yf((AT IIPIPPE%V 'TO PILICZZY
' &OL!0!%800th(' ' igg!I,[!HI %0Qf&ET't0 i' IP'DTot LIN' L46AR(h(NI !@WtTO I ~O@<
ACCIDENT.
NttI1
8
0
I
0
'3
'&LSQi~ -
tf
-
F
I'MNOT A CPRt4UAt, g T@Cqot4,
' E
m I0
50CI'&.
LUANN
TONE SOUP I.'ItA A I-ITI& ' OIC. LET5 &Ct HUNG!R.'(, d: , PINPA AIzNOLP. :::.":b CAFP,
OH ...THPt+THE &HARK FLAG 1HEONETHEY PUT UP I>VEN H A svHAR!Ca &EN +POTTE:P.
~K + LII/E THPREsv A LllTLE P(NH PLACE OAI1HE SCACH. OEE THE FlAG?
5HE 5OUND5 YEAH. I 'l.l. WOQRIED UNLOCK'THE DOOQ l 'TONIP SQAD7 AQE
I GIVE UP! WHERE JIAPE
YOU IN HEREP n
not>
II o
3
IIIIIP © 0
Yout!
I
Hl
/ IP(ti(II
3 0 O FD
H-
MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM
DILBERT 8 E
RGCALCULATIQS RGGA!-|'.ULATINS „ RSCALCULAl1N8„.
HOW'5 OUR. NEW FLATTENED MANAGEMENT STR.UCTUR.E WOR.KING OUT?
I'M SEEING AN UPTICK IN FOR.K ATTACKS AND INSIDER TRADING
5
3
CC
H EEI E
,I
.o
Dm d
'
I
DOONESBURY 2 A cli/ADW lit0VE'A CCB/Sr T//1E! S /IIVVER /fEtr AN V G/AL! s/ODV / J/0 8O . E VER t A L k ' //A' //t/t c> Go//ucD?!
aOV nOZ JJAVW
~
rt/> CERSI
SOV IFVD I' / / AVEA
s.ousr T//tw!
U'
8IC 0
poe GPS
I
MY SCIATICA NOIJJ TELL NO LONGER. ME THE HUR.TS, AND ll BENEFITS. MY STOCK POR. TFOLIO 'B •I IS WAY UP. 0
id
ICKLES HI, &RAIVII'A. ARE ME5,Scf ICIOfSECAOSE, I'VE (OCtrlA AI/YYIIfl 4V IAIEARlN(o I NAQf tO. AI.L !VIV TMEV ARE PREfftt'
Z Oy /JAJTh/AAIT to 00 ltC/7 /tl ' A OCV///ATG JVD. AGBCIAKSD/VG
t5 &RAIVMIAA
A' / /Atw / / r
COIVIFY, fiAaeI,
PAIIHtf5 ARE
8W%>
AOD/SJCATW 0IED,
rl/AT 1 33 //AVE A GOOD r//YE....
Ihl fHE
CQTE I!hlTLICAA,
THERES LOfSOl= LAUNORV, ROOMIQ1WESEAf,
3/6
IUdmo i g I DE.E T d
DAM I'M HOT CVRC ABOVT CLAYTOC IDEO 4ANF"
I fAIQK VCtu LOOK REALlY
WCSPONT ALLHIST NILHTBO PPIN4AHHOYIN4 PSOPLBOVBRIHE HEAO.
WHY'S THATt.
THENTODAYTHE4VYAT THED(14STOR E CHECICCD NEOVTWHILETEXTIN4 ON HISPHONE. Il
I ALNOLT BEANCD HIM WITH ABA4 OF 'IW(22LE a!
IZARD OF ID OK, 5UDDY,tIVST
WO'VE AL
BEENTHCBC, HONBY .
DIST. BY CREATORS
A PRACON ONTH8 LO~P!! !IIY BNDLE HSRE Ir 5000 AFRkD OF TH0%!
I'Ltt(Y IT COO(- kt!P
ACT NATWAL. du
,0
CCHU N(/'! /
I
0
3 WIZARDOFID COAI
BC
SHOE
IN fHE' SPIEtf oF
ENCI Cy( I T 1t4 &X7D o F - &I C E
oHARthI&, I'D LIICE To OFFE R YPUI IS C ( /HY Lt/HtrED EDl TioN
WOW! THANK+I PBfFRI
/
/IIY FRIEN O>!
AIARK% HLINl tN& Bot>CI.
Quiz: Climate change is responsible for an
0
Arguments.
H' increase in what'? 5E
Y Z
Zig
Lf'
0 P(;
I
>ohoitaltStudios.tom
Dist. by Cmato/I
ARFIELD WHY, HELLO, SARFIELD
I WANT THEREMOTE
MY, MY, HOW PISAPPOINTINCv...
0
0
(o~
Q
0
/
B
t3
0
Ci
Cg
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE THAT POLARBEAR'S SO FIHALIY GOHf, MORTY. LIHAT TURNSOUTPOLARBfARS POE'S POHTLIYf IH THESOVTH THAT POLK AFl'fR ALL. MEAN.D
ITMEAHS Nf 'REIN LIOLI SAUL' THECLEAR,MORTY. THIS CALLS HOMOREPREPATORS. FORA TOAST. NO MOR ELfVING IBIHAT SHOULP INFEAR. Nf TOAST TO.o
TO FAT, FCIGHTLE'SS BIRPS. E 0 0dl Cl Cl 0.
E
8
0
0
lo
D
0
0
O
Cr
0
NO CHEESE, NO REMOTE
0
0
00
a
EDW ~
0
0
Sl
Cl Cl 0
u.
(l'
„F F~
s„,
'
0ssi .+%
.S+v, i /
I'C + i "
0
EANUTS
"0/
iii E
Ii
F/,F.
'FCF s K
MARY WORTH A5 'TEAM 9RXESMAN,
HEV, MANAGER!
IVE BEEN RECIE U5TEP TO ASL'tIOU FOR MORE TIME OFF
(IIHAT 5ORTOF TIME OFF (IIOULD
la SHO(tf UPFOR THE GAMES!
VOU LIKE7
MAYSE I CAN STILI- " HEI.P TQMMY C0ET ' A SOS.
T HAN K S , WlLSUR.
HE cAN USE ANY
HELP HE CAN GET.
M't 5 ON HAS MAPE SOME SAP MlSTAKES IN Hle I. IFE ) SUT HE'5 PAlP FOR THEM-
ANP THEN SOME!
(~>~
3 E
I
C •C
(tIE Ct PREFERNOT
@
•) 3-6
GET FUZZY
NON SEQUITUR I TDLI> HlM TOI>'RS 'AT
WHttt 3 WBDNCT
WITH
tAICICY
WtXKINcT R>R HIIJI Attlrtttotts PNP HE FllrPED ct>T.
>z~ppprrw.' I'ew~goghg
gg0I!I|P ~PI I I
66 E
I
. ': - "
»,"
.:,'".'":IDF ,"':
RT %'S HAVINCc
I WSH HE ItutSHAVI G AN CIIT-tf-APARTM EKPERIEHCE.
PONI t TSLtTR
EVEN
rHINK
AS-tJT
ANON'-
CF- BODY EXPERIENCE
/0IRwtlo'i IICKIEE.CA
VCIBBV UCKG&ACEITIIIKK.K0'T
E4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAR 6, 2014
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Wjii Shortz
T hursday,March6,2014
Harlow the Halo
ACROSS 34 In this matter Bea c h, city 37 Key of near San Luis Beethoven's Obispo Svmphony No. 7: Abbr. 6 Hide 39 Flop 10"It follows that 41What lemon adds to a dish, in food 14Totallystoked lingo 15Metro 42 rl won't miss it" 16Naughty look, 45Takeoff maybe 48 Kerfuffle 17 With 27-Across, 49Answerto one an old riddle spelling of the 20 U.S. city known nddle to some locals as 52 1998 Sarah Siqnazuaq McLachlan hit 21 Girl's name that 53 Similar sounds like French for 54Authorof the rshe has it" quote "I am not what you callr a 22 Microscopic, civilized man! informally 57AIIthe 23 Starting words at many a sporting 59 Capital in 2004-05's event? Orange 25 Rich soil Revolution 27 See 17-Across 63Answer to 1
By FEIANK STEWART "Harlow pulled off some more e scape artistry," U n l ucky L o u i e grumbled to me. While Louie labors under a dark cloud of bad luck, good luck shines on the player we call Harlow the Halo. His finesses always win. His errors go unpunished. In a team match, Louie and Harlow both played at four hearts. Harlow took the king of clubs and led a spade to dummy's king. East won and returned a club, and Harlow won, took the queen of spades, led a trump to his hand and ruffed his last spade. He drew trumps with the ace and led a diamond to dummy's queen. O n t h e n e x t di a m ond E a s t discarded, but Harlow played low from his hand. When West won, he was end-played. BETTERPLAY "My play was better," Louie said. "After I ruffed a spade in dummy and drew trumps, I played a low diamond from both hands. I could lose only two diamonds no matter how the suit lay." Poor Louie. He plays well but g ains nothing. Harlow fails if t h e East-West diamonds are reversed. Louie always makes the game.
DAILY QUESTION
spade and he bids two diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: If your hand had been any weaker, you w o uldn't h a ve r esponded t o t h e o p e ning b i d . Nevertheless, you must bid again to get your side to a playable trump suit. Bid two hearts. Partner should not treat this bid as showing any extra strength. Arebid of two spades would be more speculative than safe. South dealer N-S vulnerable
9 K J1053 0Q742 475 EAST 4 iA J 9 8 2
992 0AJ98 4Q J106
986 0 10
4 9843 2 SOUTH 43754
9AQ74 0K653 4AK S outh 1 NT 29 49
We s t Nor t h Pass 2O Pass 3 NT A ll Pa s s
Eas t Pass Pass
E NO W D EB E NO W AX
Youhold: 4 9 A J 9 8 2 9 8 6 Opening lead — 4 Q 0 10 4 9 8 4 3 2 . Y our partner opens one heart, you respond one (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridgs.org. BIZARRO
B I T O O D R I E A L A C Y S K
3
4
5
6
8
9
10 1 1
18
19
20
21
22
27 2 8
24
25
29
34
38
39
42
43
44
49
5
36
31
33
37
13
26
30
32
12
16
17
23
DOWN 1 Hostage 2 Modern "methinks" 3 Filter target 4 Luminary in a late-night show? 5 Has more than enough, briefly
7
15
40
41
46
45
47
50
48 51
V E I O IL S T ER MO T I I A L OR T RA
L O P E Z
S 30 No-goodnik N 31 Sports segment that often E includes E highlights R 35 'Bama,with "the"
crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX Io 388 to download puzzles, or visit nyiimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscripiions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past
puzzles, nyiimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nyiimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nyiimes.com/learning/xwords.
SUDOKU
lCXR NAMX and PAKWORT'.
Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains everydigitfrom1 to9 inclusively.
Pleaae allow Yrte t,o CniR' again.
+'
2
14
DENNIS THE MENACE
There wag an. error in BioLLr
r'r
1
Shakespeare 69 Plunks (down) 70 Head-turning night fliers 71 Detroit'8 county
52 53 6Home is one corner in it 54 55 56 57 58 59 6 0 61 62 7 Russian river 8 Special election 63 65 9 Gab 66 67 68 10Time-sensitive items 69 70 71 deer another spelling 11Santa's 32rTo Kill a leader? of the riddle Mockingbird" PUZZLE BY DAN SCHOENHOLZ 12Savvies author 66 Locks in the stable? 13 -dokey 36 Cleaner's target 47 Sch. near Albany, 60 May race, 330ne on informally N.Y. probation, maybe 67 Dark genre 18 Like a rat's eyes 38 Artist Vermeer 50 Constrained 19 Drive drunkenly, 40 Violet Crawley 61 Genesis place ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE of "Downton say 51Siteof the Abbey," and Museum of 24 Box S AL A F E D U P j P E G others Anatolian 62 Weather r Civilizations indicator E MI T IL O S E O A S T 26 rWowl 43 Elvis's "Viva r Las Vegas, 54 Seductress R OB E V I T A E H Y P O 270ne of the men recordwise on "Two and a 64 Start for a U LY S S E S S G R N T 55 Genesis man Half Men" Spanish count 44 Fed. stipend M EA T Y ES O N E 56 Little sucker? 28 Fictional 46 Established the S N E A K UN P I N character who price of 58 Blue dye source 65 Manhandle says "I am not P RS E L G I Y LO R what you call a For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit H OH O 5 IN A I C A B O civilized man!" card, 1-800-814-5554. A DA M S A N D E R Y E N 29 Handled, with Annual subscripiions are available for the best of Sunday 5 I D EA S A L A D "with"
NORTH 4iKQ
WEST 481063
68 Where Rosalind becomes Ganymede, in
No. 0130
u
r«5 p 06 •
4
«ff <I / 'I I/Kz/ ,V i
'4//1
u
1 1
lr ru
SOLUTION TO Ol
YESTERDAY'S
'Ct'
8 71 D
SUDOKU
«I(/,"/
45
8 42
W Haatf4~ 4 8 r 4 6
5'6 I4
8
9-4
44.
LOOKS LIKE YOU t4EBP /AOIZS FMT NCrr MOlZK+//OE5 7NIOM.U
QZAIIIBOC UNIICECoiA F849baok4981/Risarroco8u41 aEE ISE r6er41
CANDORVILLE / TI/0//Gf/7YOV 4KlK 4VPPOP rEP 70 SE IN Tl/EEAPY f(INT NOk/
MC 700.
C4 0 o
SPTTIK TNFEAPIPT NEI/N Pl/01/EP UP.
I/EVERE Pf/PPOPEP 70 TALK ASOUT MY FEAE OF ASANPONMCIVT.
DIFFICULTY RATING: ** *
* 4
•r
LOS ANGELESTIMES CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce NicholsLewis AFE HAVENS
" pggg'
6Aiy)P,NHA, fulzdbD ie~ A
&z7O6E, Fi(4D& HGI258LF iH A H()KW!5 5I6HTS.
I'A()l. AIlP6 FK iHG
gl.OCQ!
+~™1] r
I ji
Ji © 2014 by King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved
E-mail:bholbrook1 gmail.Com
h697/WWW.SafehaVen500mi0.00m
SIX CHIX
TNSTRCRAfvl LISSRS-
+
+
C
r
Ri.f' gl Sk~ v
FftCESOOK uSEWS:
U/ l43
0'kV
Iif I +
I/ l/
~//
l/1l~y
ZITS i('! P55&T! AFIZEjA CHFGKoVT NY' NFW FAKF I.P.!
CCyNIT To
SEFF' I'liii AL5GA
1WE ISIT.
CHIQCI
WA<TO
PUPE,"NIICHISarA" IS NGI ARFAIWATF. F~ i p FAKF5fATS!
You" on
4
u
HERMAN
THAT SCRAIHBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
CI
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
0ne letter to each square,
8
to fOrm fOur Ordinary WOrdS.
1 E
59""5.9
GALIE
do that
8 64014 THbune Content Agency,LLC All Righls Reeenred.
POLEE
E
I j
lASI4467.
You're 9oln9 to whoh floor, ASAP.
/
/
r6
8
HAWYON
E
rE
RUYSPY
36
C La4 Ilr ockr e
HERMAN~
r r r I c , IX8L by Ih r88I UC'CkI UFS.20r
"WAIST EIGHTY-TWO."
19 Frisks, with down 20 Asian holiday 21 Letter-shaped fastener 22 Land at Orly? 23 Confederate 24 *Lunchbox item 26 Smallish crocodilians 28 Portal toppers 29 100-eyed giant of myth 30 Word of greeting 31 Points a finger at 32*"I'll Be There for
WHEN 714E KIN& ~ TO GD TD THE HOSPlTAL IT WA5 A —Now arrange the circled letters 10 fOrm the SurPriSe anSW60 as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer here: (Answers tomorrow) I Jumbles: GRAPH KIT T Y C UST O M ENGU L F I Answer. After buying shares in a company that went bankrupt the next day, the bnker was 8 — LAUGHING STOCK
"Friends," e.g. 36 date 38 Levy 39 Brought about 43 Southeast Asian honey lover 45 Oporto native,
e.g. 47 *Children's literature VIP 49 Brandy label letters 50 Cream of the
43 Cuarenta winks? 44 Tongue suffix 45 "Click T i c ket": road safety
slogan 46 Quantum gravity particles 48 More timely 52 Painter van 54 French pronoun 55 t ent 56 CPA'8 office,
perhaps
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
maintenance officer 7 Disgusted 8 Back-and-forth flights 9 Navy hull letters 10 Empty threat 11 Afraid 12 Platoon activities 13 Look over carefully 18 Burden 22 X, sometimes 23 V i c t or 24 Window part 25 Silver opening? 1
6
6 Church
2
3
4
5
B A D E R
A S T T O U N D E Y
7
8
9
18
O S C A R
T H S E E R
C E R O R E I N G L I A SE N 03/06/S4
11
12
40
41
25
24 27
26
28
29
30 32 38
47
T R O V E
22
23
53 Director Gus
P A R T H E N O N
19
20
43
S U H P E I R S RO T Y O R N I T E P I C H E EGO S R A E NC FL E M A M E R
16
17
51 CNBC topics 52 Breadbasket, so to speak
A S T A B
10
14
Cl'OP
Van 54 *Daily Planet setting 57 Palm smartphone 58 Celebratory poem 59 Valuable lump 60 Bldg. annex
27 Remote control 30 Spell 33 Floride, par exemple 34 Many couples 35 Cub or Card 36 Simpleton 37 Like some looseleaf paper 40 Reveal 41 More to one'8 liking 4 2 Plastic B a n d
ER A F L E B L E D A E A R C E S O H S O P B O R R O W E D O R E O E L A A D D U P M E T U I S E V E N S E A A C E T A R P L 0 L A I A N A LO E A T E D I P S H O A xwordedltoreaol.com
emigration
Q.S. IYIA IL USKR S :
0ikOt
ACROSS 61 Beersheba'8 1 Elementary land: Abbr. fellow? 62 Word that can 7 Chief Osceola follow five riding Renegade pref i xes hidden introduces its sequentially in home games: the answers to Abbr. starred clues 10 Daddy 14 Longtime DOWN 1 "Tell ": 1962Hawaiian senator Daniel '63 hit 2 Winning steadily 15 Ottowan interjections 3 Get clobbered 4 It's not an option 16 Woeful cry 17*Large 5 Observe
37
33
31
34
35
38
39
45
46
48
50
49
51
52
53
54
57
58
59
60
61
62
By John Guzzetta (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
42
55
56
03/06/14
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860
Kaeij &iRRs op gggg [pp
llotorcycles & Accessories
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 6 2014 E5 880
Motor h omes
881
882
908
932
933
935
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
'ppo o 745
Homes for Sale
River View Condo- Mt Bachelor Village, 20% Equity Share, AD¹1542
TEAM Birtola Garmyn High Desert Realty 541-312-9449 www. BendOregon RealEstate.com 749
Southeast Bend Homes Nottingham Square 1300 sq ft nicely updated 3/2, backs to canal, 2 car gar. 20747 Canterbury, FSBO, $210,000. 541-390-1579 771
Lots
• i
KOUNTRY AIRE Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$17,000
541-548-4607
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 54 1 N385-5809
SHEVLIN RIDGE 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap-
proved plans. More details and photos on craigslist. $149,900.
1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a
similar model & not the actual vehicfe)
G K E AT
m xrv ~
National RV
Tropical, 1997,
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811
541-389-8614 773
Acreages $155,000 -
Triumph Dayfona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin
Private ¹201536. gated community! 20 Acres! Powell $4995 Butte w/easy acDream Car cess t o a i r ports, Auto Sales shopping, r e c re- 1801 Division, Bend ation. All C e ntral DreamCarsBend.com Oregon has to offer. 541-678-0240 Well, septic feasibilDlr 3665 ity done. Ready for your dream home. MLS¹201303502
Call Charlie or Virginia, Principal Brokers 541-350-3418 Redmond RE/MAX Land & Homes Real Estate 541-771-7786 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
Navion RV 2008, Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality throughout, rear slide-out w/ queen bed, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ smoking. $77,500or make an offer. 541-382-2430
V !ctory TC 9 2 c! Providence2005 2002, runs great, Fully loaded, 35,000 40K mi., Stage 1 miles, 350 Cat, Very Performance Kit, clean, non-smoker, n ew tires, r e a r 3 slides, side-by-side brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. refrigerator with ice 541-771-0665 maker, Washer/Dryer, 870
Boats & Accessories
Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
780
Mfd./Mobile Homes with Land
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, approval team, 3 bdrm, 2 bath mobile inboard motor, g reat well maintained, web site presence. home for sale or rent cond, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 We Take Trade-Ins! Private, along COI caFree Advertising. nal. 541-389-2636 Ads published in the BIG COUNTRY RV "Boats" classification Bend: 541-330-2495 include: Speed, fishRedmond: ing, drift, canoe, 541-548-5254 :S. house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go People Look for Information About Products and to Class 875. 541-365-5809 Services Every Daythrough
®
03
The Bulletin
The Bulletin Classifieds
SOrVin Central OCNUn SinCe 19D3
850
Arctic Cat 580 1994,
EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. 541-480-9638 cell, or 541-516-8684home.
WANTED: Able-bodied crew members to sail Winchester Bay Oregon to San Francisco in June or July, 2014. Mark, 541-233-8944 875
Watercraft N Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-385-5809
ds published in
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregonsince 1903
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 880
Motorhomes
• Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000 or best offer. 541-316-6049 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin SUNog CentralOregOnSinCe19lS
Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide 2013, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384
•
I!II ~
c-
Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34' RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' fully S/C, w/d hookups, slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around new 18' Dometic awbed w/storage under- ning, 4 new tires, new neath. Tub 8 shower. Kubota 7000w marine 2 swivel rockers. TV. diesel generator, 3 slides, exc. cond. inAir cond. Gas stove & s ide & o ut. 27" T V refrigerator/freezer. dvd/cd/am/fm enterMicrowave. Awning. Outside sho w er. tain center. Call for more details. O nly Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . used 4 times total in last 5y2 years.. No $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 pets, no smoking. High 541-447-4805 retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to see. 541-330-5527. Keystone Laredo31'
I nternational Fl a t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
Rolls Royce 1992 Silver Spur II,excellent! Midnight Blue exterior, Parchment leather inte2180 TT, 440 SMO, rior, 15-inch chrome RR wheels, Alpine Sirius 160 mph, excellent DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS condition, always naviqation system, hangared, 1 owner 77,200 miles, dealerfor 35 years. $60K. ship maintained, always garaqed. New, In Nladras, about $250,000; sell Nissan Titan 2004 4x4 call 541-475-6302 $19,500.541-480-3348 King Cab LE, 4-dr, black, 141K miles, 933 Just bought a new boat? $6000. 541-815-4121 Pickups Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
1974 Bellanca 1730A
Laredo 30' 2009 Orbit21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
Chevy 3500 Crew Cab, 2005 4x4 Dually Duramax Allison, 4' lift, Edge Chip, only 66,000 miles. LS trim pkg, split-bench front seat, tow pkg, brake controller. Very good condition - looks good, pulls betterl Original owner needs to sell - $35,000. 541-408-7826
'igg overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
$28,000
iilili
Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/ prop, custom panel, S-Tec 30+ altitude hold, Garmin 430, GPSS, oversized tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint 8 interior. Must see to appreciate. Asking $66,000. Bill, 541-480-7930
541-419-3301
Leather trimmed
seat, 4 spd auto, Vin¹611550 $32,977 R OBBER LINCOLN ~
N
IM ROR
541-382-4521 DLR¹0205
Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 20 07, Automatic, hard top, ToyotaTundra 2012, t ow pk g . , all o y V-S, 6 spd. auto. wheels, running VIN ¹244868. $39,995. boards. Vin ¹120477 $25,986
SMOLICH V Q LV Q
®
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
s u s A Ru SUSCSUOSSSCSI.INSC
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
935
Lincoln MKZ 2009
Sport Utility Vehicles
Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 with camper s hell, ood cond., $1500 BO. 541-447-5504.
Leather seat, Bluetooth, auto 6 spd, Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, BMW X3 2 0 07, 99 K F WD 54 k mi l e s Find exactly what 2 slides, AC, recliners, miles, premium pack- vin¹613915 walk-around queen bed, you are looking for in the age, heated lumbar $15,977 sliding glass door closet, supported seats, panCLASSIFIEDS new tub 8 10-gal water oramic moo n roof, ROBBERSON'L Save money. Learn heater, good tires. Brand Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe« oL ~ mSI US new 20' screen room to fly or build hours non headlights, tan & FORD F-1502010 Bend: 541-330-2495 available. Super clean, 1 with your own airu black leather interior, 541-362-4521 Redmond: owner, n o n-smokers.c raft. 1966 A e r o n ew front & re a r 541-548-5254 DLR¹0205 $12,995. 541-447-7968 Commander, 4 seat, brakes @ 76K miles, 150 HP, low time, one owner, all records, full panel. $23,000 very clean, $16,900. obo. Contact Paul at 541-388-4360 541-447-5164. Lariat Supercrewcab! Iess than 53k T-Hangar for rent miles heated seats at Bend airport. MONTANA 3585 2006, Vin¹D04934 NiazdaCX-9 2010, 1976 Silver Streak Call 541-362-6998. exc. cond., 3 slides, $32,977 V-6, 6 spd. auto. Hereitis! king bed, Irg LR, 916 VIN ¹219910. $16,495. Perhaps the cleanest ROBBERSON Arctic insulation, all (Photo for tttustratton only) original yintage 30-ft Trucks & $35,000 obo. Chevy 1500 Extended SMOLICH trailer, in incredible con- options 541-420-3250 Heavy Equipment cab 1997, bed liner, dition! A/C, full bath, 541-382-4521 V Q LV Q tow pkg, alloy wheels. kitchen, twin beds, many DLR¹0205 541-749-2156 Vin ¹196666. extras. Call for details. smolichvolvo.com $6,966 $12,700 obro. DLR ¹366 Daye 208-255-2407 FORD F-150 XLT ® s uSUSCSUOSSSSU.COU s A Ru BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS (in Terrebonne). Start your 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend Search the area's most memories today! Peterbilt 359 p otable 877-266-3821 comprehensive listing of OPEN ROAD 36' water truck, 1 990, Dlr ¹0354 2005 - $25,500 classified advertising... 3200 gal. tank, 5hp real estate to automotive, King bed, hide-a-bed Check out the p ump, 4 - 3 N hoses, merchandise to sporting sofa, 3 slides, glass camlocks, $25,000. 2013 S u percrewclassifieds online goods. Bulletin Classifieds shower, 10 gal. wa541-620-3724 wwvvbendbuffetin.com cab! Iess than 8k ter heater, 10 cu.ft. appear every day in the mi., 5.01 V8, 4WD. Updated daily fridge, central vac, Look at: print or on line. Vin¹E12666 s atellite dish, 2 7 " Bendhomes.com Call 541-385-5809 Tango 29.6' 2007, TV/stereo syst., front $30,977 www.bendbulletin.com for Complete Listings of front power leveling Rear living, walkArea Real Estate for Sale ROBBERSON i jacks and s cissor around queen bed, The Bulletin "«o. ® SOIUNSCMUCI OfNSONSSCO f9t8 mama stabilizer jacks, 16' central air, awning, 925 awning. Like new! 1 large slide, Utility Trailers 541-382-4521 541-419-0566 (photo forillustration only) $12,000. DLR¹0205 Chevy Silverado 1500 541-280-2547 or 2001, Extended cab, Call The Bulletin At 541-815-4121 Bed liner, tow pkg., 541-385-5809 alloy wheels. V i n¹ Place Your Ad Or E-Mail (photo for illustration only) 165469 Looking for your At: www.bendbulletin.com Subaru Forester XT $8,866 next employee? Limited 2007, 4 Cyl., 4'x8' tilt utlity trailer, ATV/ Place a Bulletin help Ford F250 Camper Spe- ® s u s A Ru auto, AWD, leather, SUSCSUOSSSSU.COU garden tractor, etc. New wanted ad today and 1966, AT w/limited moon rof, p r ivacy tires & lights $495. Call cial 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend reach over 60,000 slip rear end. A few isglass, roof rack, alloy Bill, 541-480-7930 877-266-3821 readers each week. sues but runs good. Full wheels. Vin¹710326 Dlr ¹0354 Your classified ad steel rack w/drs. $1950 932 $15,886 will also appear on firm, cash. 541-420-0156 Antique & bendbulletin.com Recreation by Design © s U s A R U. Classic Autos which currently re2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Ford Ran er XLT 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ceives over 1.5 milTop living room, 2 bdrm, 677-266-3821 has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, lion page views evDlr ¹0354 entertainment center, ery month at no fireplace, W/D, extra cost. Bulletin (photo for itlustretion only) Call The Bulletin At garden tub/shower, in Classifieds Get Re1921 Model T Dodge Durango2005, 541 N385 N5809 great condition.$36,000 sults! Call 385-5809 Delivery Truck 4WD, V8 5.7L, Tow Place Your Ad Or E-Mail or best offer. Call Peter, or place your ad 2011 S u percrewpkg., running boards. At: www.bendbulletin.com Restored & Runs 307-221-2422, on-line at third row seat, mooncab! Iess than 12k $9000. in La PineE') bendbulletin.com mi., 4WD, Ford certiroof. Vin¹ 534944 Subaru Impreza 2009 541-389-8963 ILL DELIVER fied. Vin¹PA76762 $10,999 AWD Sportwagon, $21,947 auto, 46k mi. Check out the © s U B A R U RV ¹807782 • $'I4,995 classifieds online ROBBERSON y 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend CONSIGNMENTS www.bendbuffetin.com WANTED 877-266-3821 Updated daily We Do the Work, Dlr ¹0354 541-382-4521 You Keep the Cash! 541-598-3750 DLR¹0205 882 On-site credit aaaoregonautosource.com Buick Skylark 1972 Ford Expedition approval team, Fifth Wheels Please see Bend Limited2012 web site presence. Craigslist for details and We Take Trade-Ins! more photos. LI Free Advertising. %$18,900. BIG COUNTRY RV I • • 541-323-1898 Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: People Look for Information Ford Supercab 1992, 541-548-5254 Volvo XC60T6 2010, About Products and less than 25k mi., brown/tan color with 6 cyl., 6 spd. auto. Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Services EveryDaythrough heated leather m atching ful l s i z e VIN ¹096513. $30,995. Weather Model 34 5B, The Bulletin Classifieds seats, Vin¹F01698 canopy, 2WD, 4 60 licensed thru 2/15, exlnt $41,944 S over drive, 135K mi., cond. 3 elec slides, solar SMOLICH panel, 10 gal water htr, full bench rear seat, ROBBERSON 4 SS V Q LV Q 14' awning, (2) 10-gal slide rear w i ndow, ~ mam a 541-749-2156 propane tanks, 2 batts, bucket seats, power smolichvolvo.com catalytic htr in addition to seats w/lumbar, pw, 541-382-4521 central heating/AC, genDLR ¹366 HD receiver & trailer DLR¹0205 tly used, MANY features! brakes, good t ires. 940 Must see to appreciate! Good cond i tion. $19,000. By owner (no Vans $4900. 541-389-5341 Hummer H2 2006 dealer calls, please). Call 908 or text541-325-1956. Cadillac Aircraft, Parts 1H Eldorado, 1978 CHECK YOUR AD & Service New brakes, tires, axles, needs paint 8 vinyl top. Very good condition. $2200 SUT au t o 4 - s pd. Chrysler Town & FORD XLT 1992 obo, cash. Call for 6.0L V-8, less than Country LXI 1997, full details! 3/4 ton 4x4 88k mi., 4x4, leather beautiful inside 8 matching canopy, on the first day it runs 541-678-5575 seats. VIN¹ 101123 out, one owner, non30k original miles, to make sure it isN cor$26,977 N 1/3 interest in wellsmoker,. Ioaded with rect. Spellcheck and possible trade for equipped IFR Beech Booptions! 197,892 mi. human errors do oc- nanza A36, new 10-550/ classic car, pickup, ROBBERSON y Service rec o rds motorcycle, RV cur. If this happens to ~ CCUSI U prop, located KBDN. available. $4 , 950. your ad, please con- $65,000. 541-419-95i0 $13,500. In La Pine, call Call Mike, i541) 615tact us ASAP so that 541-382-4521 Price Reduced! www. N4972M.com 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 928-581-9190 DLR¹0205 corrections and any Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 adjustments can be engine, power everymade to your ad. thing, new paint, 54K 541-385-5809 orig. miles, runs great, The Bulletin Classified exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179 You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV
L
541-548-5511
Snowmobiles
Jeep Wrangler 2011 Unlimited Rubicon
HDFatBo 1996
t' ,+' I
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La P!ne, call 541-602-8652
Fleefwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/afl options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 miles. Wintered in h eated shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664
Forest River Sunseeker Class C, 24ft - Double bed, roomy bath/shower, lots storage, oak wood, dining area slide-out w/ new awning. Micro, air, newflatscreen TV & RV batt. On-board gen/low hrs, arctic pkq, full cover. Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, tow pkg, leather seats, no smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 $31,500. 541<t 9-6176
TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT
350hp diesel engine,
$125,900. 30,900 miles,
new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150 Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541 -548-51 74
LINCOL N ~
~
LINCOL N ~
~
,
U
00
Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. N 17 Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd,
camera, Queen bed,
Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900
WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003 • 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely
U
ALL,NEW STATEOF THE ART DEALERSHIP!
/
/
I •
I
serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
-il l ' Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1968 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, 4000W generator, w h eel- Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' chair lift avail. Good 2004, 35K, loaded, too cond. $11,500 obo much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Den541-447-5504 nis, 541-589-3243
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001
2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1 687. Fleefwood Wilderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500. 541-383-6270
1/5th interest in 1973
I
Cessna 150 LLC
150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellentper- GMC Sierra 1977 short formance & affordbed, exlnt o r iginal cond., runs 8 drives able flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007 great. V8, new paint and tires. $4750 obo. 541-504-1050
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! Plymouth B a rracuda $13,500. 1966, original car! 300 Hangared in KBDN hp, 360 V8, centerCall 541-728-0773 lines, 541-593-2597
I
I
SIIPERIGR KELECTIOMGFNEWif UKEO
VONOSE DANSANDSUV'S I
]
i
s • I
/
I
]
•
KMOLICHYOLVO.cow
E6 THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
940
975
975
975
975
975
975
975
975
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Sell an Item
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
Honda Odyssey 1999. Very good cond. Runs well, Two sets of tires on rims - summer and winter. $2500. 541-593-2312
or 541-977-7588
fphoto forillustration only)
®
Honda Odyssey EX-L 2008, FWD, Loaded. VIN ¹402054. $19,995.
SMOLICH
fphofo for iiiusiration only)
Kia Forte SX Hatch- Subaru Legacy 3.0 R back 2013, 4 Cy l , Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., m oon r o of , re a r auto, AWD, leather, m oon r o of , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels. spoiler, alloy wheels. Vin¹684485 Vin ¹207281 $17,988 $22,988
s u s ARu. ©
s u s A Ru
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 L incoln MKS 2009
FAST! If it's under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: 6f 0 • 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days
AWD, Nav., loaded.
V Q LV Q
(Private Party ads only)
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366 975
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Automobiles
Mazda3 2012
CorvetteCoupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil,
garaged/covered.
Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781
Sport, 5 spd, leather seats, hatchback, FWD. 68,398 mi. vin¹532282 $17,977
eROWING
V-6, 6 spd. auto. VIN ¹500414. $11,997.
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
it
Get your business
Toyota Camry2007,
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156
I
GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside lphoto forillustration only) and out. Fun car to Volkswagen Jetta 2.0L 2013, 4 Cyl., Turbo drive, Must S E E! diesel, 6 speed w/tip$5995. R e dmond. t ronic FWD m o o n 541-504-1993 roof, alloy wheels. Vin ¹356856 $22,988
Toyota Avalon2010, V-6, 6 spd. auto. VIN ¹358729. $23,495.
SMOLICH
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
WHEN YOU SEE THIS Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's VolvoS60 T5 2012, "Call A Service 5 cyl., 6 spd. auto. VIN ¹08'I145. $21,997 Professional" Directory
with an ad in
SMOLICH
The Buiietin's
V O LV O
"Call A Service Professional" Directory
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
©
s u s A Ru
I The Bulletin recoml
I mends extra cautionI
I when p u r chasingI MoreP i x a t B e n d b t j ll e t i n .c o m I products or servicesI On a classified ad from out of the area go to I s ending c ash ,I www.bendbulletin.com checks, or credit in- I to view additional I formation may be I
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
photos of the item.
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
I subject toFRAUD. For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon StateI g Attorney General's g I Office C o n sumerI I Protection hotline at
I
1-877-877-9392.
I
The Bulletin Servrng Central Oregonsince tgta
VolvoXC90 2006, AWD, Loaded. VIN ¹276223. $20,495.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
Checkoutthe classifiedsonline V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 behdbulletih.Com AwD, sunroof, lux/winter WWW pkgs new tires, more! $peg775 b 541 330 5818
Updated daily
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin is your Employment
Marketplace Call 5 4 1 n3 85-5 8 0 9
to advertise. www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since tgta
ROBBERSON vlncovv~
~
0
541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205
Mazda CX-7i 2011
Acura TL 2012, V-6, 6 spd. auto. VIN ¹000126. $31,995.
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $6,500. 541-233-8944.
Chevy C r uz e LT Sedan 2012, 4 Cyl., Turbo, auto, FWD, running lights, alloy wheels. Vin ¹103968 $13,988
®
s unonvnnovnvon.oovr s A Ru
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Corvette 1979
L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never dam-
aged or abused. $12,900.
LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
jr Sport, 5 spd, Bluetooth, remote pwr locks, less than 25k mi., vin¹368668 $17,977 ROBBERSON vlncovv~
Sealed bids will be received by Angus Eastwood, Facilities Development Supervisor, Administrative School District ¹1 — Bend-La Pine Schools at the Administration Building located at 520 NW Wall Street, Room 330, Bend, Oregon, 97701, until 2:00 PM, Prevailing Local Time, Thursday, March 20, 2014 for the construction of the BLPS 2014 Construction Projects:
~
541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205
Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior & exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt I 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648
MINI Cooper 201 1, 2dr.4cyl., FWD. VIN ¹183621. $17,495.
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366
Dave, 541-350-4077
CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 201 0 Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000. 503-358-1164.
1.01 NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000. 541-389-9377
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
Summit Hi h School Bend Athletic storage building addition. Computer Lab and work shop addition. Resealing of Auditorium CMU.
Buckinham Elementa School Bend Restroom Upgrades. Playground Upgrades. Demolition of existing administration area and constructing a new administration area with additional area. Parking lot crack sealing and seal coating. New gymnasium floor, paint and wall tables.
Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-
viced, garaged,
Dodge Avenger SE Sedan 2012, 4 c y l , auto, FWD, MP3. Vin ¹293948
looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647 Porsche 911 Turbo
$12,988
®
S UBA R U .
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original,
very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700. 541-322-9647
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
cash o r ca s hier's LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Bank o f A m e rica, check, the real prop- Notice of Receipt of erty commonly known N .A., P laintiff/s, v . Ballot Title Nichole J. Wilder-Ely a s 2487 N W 1 s t Street, Bend, Oregon and William D. Ely; A prospective initiaU.S. Bank, National 97701. Conditions of t ive petition h a s Association N.D.; and Sale: P otential bid- been received by Persons or P a rties ders must arrive 15 the City of B end. Unknown c l a iming minutes prior to the T he B a llot T i t l e any right, title, lien or auction to allow the reads: Deschutes C o u nty interest in the propSheriff's Office to reerty described in the Caption complaint her e in, view bidder's funds. Restriction on Use D efendant/s. C a se Only U.S. currency of City Funds for cashier's Mirror Pond Projects No.: 1 3 C V1103FC. and/or NOTICE OF S A LE checks made payable U NDER WRIT O F to Deschutes County Question EXECUTION - REAL Sheriff's Office will be Prohibit using City PROPERTY. Notice is accepted. P ayment funds o n Mi r r or hereby given that the must be made in full Pond peri o dic immediately upon the Deschutes C o u nty dredging or Mirror Sheriff's Office will on close of the sale. For Pond projects that more information on don't improve redM arch 18, 2014 a t 10:00 AM in the main this s al e g o to: band trout habitat'? l obby of t h e D e s- www.oregonsheriffs.c c hutes Coun t y om/sales.htm Explanatory Sheriff 's Office,63333 Statement W. Highway 20, Bend, TURN THE PAGE T his measure, i f Oregon, sell, at public adopted, would reFor More Ads oral auction to t he sult in the following The Bulletin h ighest bidder, f o r p rohibition b e i ng
Mt. View Hi h School Bend Parking lot crack sealing and seal coating. Repair and re-coat existing tennis courts. Widening of stadium roadway to 27th Street. Replacing track and field area with new. Replacing stadium lights on the new field layout. New practice field area. New coveredcanopy atgym exit. Replacing locker room lockers with new. Resurfacing existing main gym wood floor. Resurfacing existing upper vct gym floor with urethane floor. Replacing elevator with new. New culinary classroom. Removing some classroom walls, installing new walls.
1.01 NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Three Rivers School Sunriver Enlarge the existing stage area. Relocate existing folding door. New music practice room. New casework for music equipment storage. New side and back curtains. New main curtain.
Sealed bids will be received by Angus Eastwood, Facilities Development Supervisor, Administrative School District ¹1 - Bend La Pine Schools at the Administration Building located at 520 NW Wall Street, Room 330, Bend, Oregon, 97701, until 2:00 PM, Prevailing Local Time, Tuesday, April 1, 2014 for the construction of the New Elementary School: including a new wood frame two-story school building and associate site improvements.
LEGAL NOTICE ADVERTISEMENT FOR BID
The bids will be publicly opened and read aloud in Room 314 of the Administration Building at 2:00 PM, Thursday, March 20, 2014. 1st Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Statements are due at 4:00 PM on Thursday, March 20, 2014 in order for bids to be considered for award. Bids received after the time fixed for receiving bids cannot and will not be considered. Bids for which the 1st Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Statement is not received by the time fixed cannot and will not be considered. The work for this project shall be executed under a single general construction contract. Only bids submitted in writing on the Bid Form supplied with the Bidding Documents will be considered.
The bids will be publicly opened and read aloud in Room 314 of the Administration Building at 2:00 PM, Tuesday, April 1, 2014. 1st Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Statements are due at 4:00 PM on Tuesday, April 1, 2014 in order for bids to be considered for award. Bids received after the time fixed for receiving bids cannot and will not be considered. Bids for which the 1st Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Statement is not received by the time fixed cannot and will not be considered. The work for this project shall be executed under a single general construction contract. Only bids submitted in writing on the Bid Form supplied with the Bidding Documents will be considered.
A MANDATORY pre-bid conference and project site-visit will be held on Wednesday, March 12, 2014 at 1:00 pm, Prevailing Local Time at the project location, Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Dr., Bend, then at 2:00 pm, Prevailing Local Time at the project location Mt. View High School, 2755 NE 27th Street, Bend, then at 3: 0 0 p m a t Buckingham ElementarySchool,62560 Hamby Road, Bend, followed up by 4:30 pm at Three Rivers School, 56900 Enterprise Dr., Sunriver, rain or shine. The purpose will be to answer any questions bidders may have, review the scope of work, tour the site, and to consider any suggestions Bidders wish to make. The conference is held for the benefit of bidders.
A MANDATORY pre-bid conference and project site-visit will be held on Friday, March 21, 2014 at 10:00 am, Prevailing Local Time at the Administration Building located at 520 NW Wall Street, Room 314, Bend, Oregon, 97701 followed by a site visit to the project location, Brentwood Avenue, rain or shine. The purpose will be to answer any questions bidders may have, review the scope of work, tour the site, and to consider any suggestions Bidders wish to make. The conference is held for the benefit of bidders.
1.02 BIDDING DOCUMENTS
Just too many collectibles'?
1000
Legal Notices
Bidding documents for the work are those prepared by BLRB Architects, 404 SW Columbia Street, Ste. 200, Bend, OR 97702, (541) 330-6506. Bidding Documents may be obtained from Central Oregon Builders Association, 1051 NE 4th St., Bend, OR 97702, (541)389-1058. The District will not reimburse bidders, subcontractors or suppliers for the cost of r eproduction. Bidding Documents will b e a v ailable for examination during the bidding period at the Office of Facilities Development located at 520 N.W. Wall Street, Room 330, Bend, OR, 97701, (541) 355-1170; at the offices of BLRB Architects, 404 SW Columbia Street, Ste. 200, Bend, OR 97702, (541) 330-6506; online at Central Oregon Builders Association (http://www.projectcx.com/Portal/?hbaid=2 ) and at the following Builders Exchanges and Plan Centers: Central Oregon Builders Exchange Eugene Builders Exchange 1902 NE 4th Street 2460 W. 11th Avenue Eugene, OR 97402 Bend, OR 97701 (541) 389-0123 - Phone (541) 484-5331 - Phone (541) 389-1549 - Fax (541) 484-5884 - Fax www.plansonfile.com www.ebe.org Salem Contractors Exchange 2256 Judson Street S.E. Salem, OR 97302 (503) 362-7957 — Phone (503) 362-1651 — Fax www.sceonline.org
Oregon Contractor Plan Center 14625 S.E. 82nd Drive Clackamas, OR 97015 (503) 650-0148 - Phone (503) 650-8273 - Fax www.orcontractor.com
Daily Journal of Commerce 921 SW Washington Ste. 210 Portland, OR 97205 (503) 274-0624 - Phone (503) 274-2616 - Fax
McGraw-Hill Construction 3461 NW Yeon Avenue Portland, OR 97210 (503) 225-0361 - Phone (503) 223-3094 - Fax http://construction.com/
www.djc-ol'.Com
1.03 PREVAILING WAGES No bid will be received or considered unless the Bid contains a statement by the bidder, as part of the bid, that "Contractor agrees to be bound by and will comply with the applicable provisions of 279C.838, n 279C.840 or 40 U.S.C. 3141 to 3148.
BULLETIN CLASSIFIE0S 1.04 BID SECURITY No bid will be considered unless accompanied by bid security in the form Search the area's most comprehensive listing of of a certified or cashier's check, irrevocable letter of credit or surety bond executed by a State-licensed surety company, payable to the Bend La classified advertising... estate to automotive, Pine School District in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the Base Hyundai Santa Fe Sport real Bid together with all additive alternates. No interest will be paid on bid merchandise to sporting 2013, white, 25,274 goods. Bulletin Classifieds security. Return or retention of bid security shall be subject to the mi. ¹045738 $22,495 provisions of ORS 279C.385. appear every day in the print or on line. 1.05 REJECTION OF BIDS Call 541-385-5809 to ORS 279C.395, the Administrative School District ¹1 may www.bendbulletin.com Pursuant reject any bid not in compliance with all prescribed bidding procedures 541-598-3750 and requirements and may reject all bids if, in the judgment of the www.aaaoregonautoThe Bulletin Svning Central Oregonsince Sig District, it is in the public interest to do so. No bidder may withdraw its source.com bid after the hour set for the opening thereof and before award of the Contract, unless award is delayed beyond thirty (30) days from the bid Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr Porsche Carrera 911 (longer style) sedan, opening date. 2003 convertible with silver, black leather, 4.2L hardtop. 50K miles, V8, AT, AC, fully loaded By order of: Administrative School District ¹1 factory Porsche + moonroof. Runs great, new By: Angus Eastwood, Supervisor- Facilities Development motor 6 mos ago with reliable, always garaged, 18 mo factory warBend-La Pine Schools 116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. ranty remaining. 520 N.W. Wall Street Front/side airbags, Bend, Oregon 97701 $37,500. non-smoker. $7900. 541-322-6928 Publish Date: March 5th, 6th and 7th, 2014 541-350-9938
1.02 BIDDING DOCUMENTS
enacted into law:
No City o f B e nd funds s h al l be spent, nor City taxes levied, nor City mun icipal bonds i s sued f o r any projects that would impact that section of the D e schutes River now occupied by Mirror Pond unless (1) aquatic and streamside conditions that result from the project contribute to a habitat that would enable a key indicator s pecies, n ative re d b a n d trout, to spawn, be reared, and thrive, (2) no total obstruction of the passage of fish into and out of the current site of Mirror Pond would result f r o m th e project, a l t hough construction of fish passages would be permitted, if necessary, (3) no periodic dredging would be required as a result of the project, and (4) no restrictions on access to the river for recreation, such as swimming, fishing an d b o ating, would be imposed as a result of the project. The ballot title complies with constitutional requirements. Any elector of the City of Bend may file a petition to review the ballot title in Circuit Court. The deadline to file a petition to r e view the ballot title in Circuit Court is March 'l1, 20'I4. ROBYN CHRISTIE CITY RECORDER CITY OF BEND
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Bidding documents for the work are those prepared by Steele Associates Architects, 760 NW York Drive, Suite 200, Bend, OR 97701, (541) PUBLIC NOTICE Wellness & 382-9867. Bidding Documents may be obtained from Central Oregon Builders Association, 1051 NE 4th Street, Bend, Oregon 97702, (541) Education Board of Central Oregon 389-1058. The District will not reimburse bidders, subcontractors or suppliers for the cost of reproduction. Bidding Documents will be availMonthly Board Meeting able for examination during the bidding period at the Office of Facilities Development located at 520 NW Wall Street, Room 330, Bend, Oregon, D ATE:March 13, 97701, (541) 355-1170; at the offices of Steele Associates Architects, 760 NW York Drive, Suite 200, Bend, OR 97701, (541) 382-9867; on2014 line at Cent r a l Oreg o n Buil d er s Asso c iation TIME:10:00 a.m. to www.connectiondepot.com/coba-plan-center/ and at the following Build12:00 p.m. LOCATION:Desers Exchanges and Plan Centers: c hutes Coun t y Health Services Central Oregon Builders Exchange Eugene Builders Exchange 1902 NE 4th Street 2460 W. 11th Avenue Stan Owen Room, 2577 NE Courtney Bend, OR 97701 Eugene, OR 97402 D rive, Bend, O R (541) 389-0123 - Phone (541) 484-5331 - Phone 97701. (541) 389-1549 - Fax (541) 484-5884 - Fax www.plansonfile.com www.ebe.org PURPOSE:Agenda Salem Contractors Exchange Oregon Contractor Plan Center i tems: Mont h ly meeting to discuss 2256 Judson Street S.E. 14625 S.E. 82nd Drive tri-County b e havSalem, OR 97302 Clackamas, OR 97015 ioral health matters, (503) 362-7957 — Phone (503) 650-0148 - Phone budget report, con(503) 362-1651 — Fax (503) 650-8273- Fax tract update. www.sceonline.org www.orcontractor.com Daily Journal of Commerce 921 SW Washington Ste. 210 Portland, OR 97205 (503) 274-0624 - Phone (503) 274-2616 - Fax www.d)c-or.com
McGraw-Hill Construction 3461 NW Yeon Avenue Portland, OR 97210 (503) 225-0361 - Phone (503) 223-3094 - Fax http://construction.com/
1.03 PREVAILING WAGES
No bid will be received or considered unless the Bid contains a statement by the bidder, as part of the bid that "Contractor agrees to be bound by and will comply with the applicable provisions of 279C.838, n 279C.840 or 40 U.S.C. 3141 to 3148.
1.04 BID SECURITY No bid will be considered unless accompanied by bid security in the form of a certified or cashier's check, irrevocable letter of credit or surety bond executed by a State-licensed surety company, payable to the Bend La Pine School District in an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the Base Bid together with all additive alternates. No interest will be paid on bid security. Return or retention of bid security shall be subject to the provisions of ORS 279C.385. 1.05 REJECTION OF BIDS
Pursuant to ORS 279C.395, the Administrative School District ¹1 may reject any bid not in compliance with all prescribed bidding procedures and requirements and may reject all bids if, in the judgment of the District, it is in the public interest to do so. No bidder may withdraw its bid after the hour set for the opening thereof and before award of the Contract, unless award is delayed beyond thirty (30) days from the bid opening date. By order of: Administrative School District ¹1 By: Angus Eastwood, Supervisor — Facilities Development Bend-La Pine Schools 520 N.W. Wall Street Bend, Oregon 97701 Publish Date: March 6, 7, & 10, 2014
For additional inform ation, ple a s e contact the WEBCO o ffice a t (541) 923-9698 or email WEBCO.calendar@ webcohub.org. Additional items may be discussed that arise too late to be included as part of this notice. For inf ormation ab o u t a dding age n d a items, please cont act W E BCO a t (541) 92 3 -9698. Assistance to handicapped individuals is provided with advance notice.
Get your business
sROWING With an ad in The Bulletin's
"Call A Service Professional" Directory