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THURSDAY January 8,2015
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
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Buried in a pineboxA small business owner promotes the old-fashioned coffin as eco-friendly.A4
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CanCer —It hasmanycauses,butbadluckmay beamajor one, a recent study says.A3
oir.
Plus: Health section-
'o
Fitness, nutrition and more.D1
And a Wed exclusiveMexico City frequently orders taxis repainted, annoying drivers. But this time they're protesting even harder dueto the choice of color: pink. bendbulletin.cemlextras
8 OF WIAS
a new eFm
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BEND
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By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Despite a contentious
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election season and an extended debate over the
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qualifications of a winning candidate, the first meetr rrl
EDITOR'SCHOICE Bulletin file photos
From dirt, a powerful antibiotic?
Residents move their belongings out of homes on McCann Avenue threatened by the flooding Deschutes River on Dec. 23, 1983.
By Dylan J. DarlingeThe Bulletin
The recent flood scare along the Deschutes River in Bend was not without precedent, and luckily the high water last week did not reach levels seen 31 years ago.
By Denise Grady
"At one point on Dec. 23 (1983) the water
for producing antibiotics may help solve an urgent global problem: the rise in
was running two feet deep on Riverfront Street," The Bulletin reported on Jan. 1, 1984,
infections that resist treat-
ment with commonly used drugs, and the lack of new antibiotics to replace ones that no longer work.
in a collection of follow-up stories. The paper Kelly O'Grady wears waders to retrieve firewood from his shed.
tracts drugs from bacteria that live in dirt, has yielded
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a powerful new antibiot-
severe infections, with no
side effects.
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returning councilors also voted Sally Russell in as
dubbed the flooding, which caused damage to
a position responsible for leading the council when the mayor is absent.
Councilor Doug Knight had pondered an insurgent run for mayor and spent the preceding weeks "wrangling votes," but at the outset of the meeting
announced he knew he
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Source: Deschutes Historical Society
flood of 1983."
and offered his support to Clinton, who has served as mayor for two years. SeeMayor/A4
the Bend Fire Department, said this week. He's been in
Bend since 1978. Ice was the main culprit in the minor flooding last week, which sent water onto riverside lawns behind homes along
is t983
P
a 10-block section of the city, "the Christmas
"It was the only time I've seen the river encroach onto
Area of flooding
ers said, the drug works in a way that makes it very
TODAY'S WEATHER
newcomers and the four
city streets," Dave Howe, a 66-year-old battalion chief for
y ajg 0 " Q '
Better still, the researchunlikely that bacteria will become resistant to it. SeeAntibiotic /A4
Campbell, Nathan Boddie and Casey Roats. All three
was "one councilor short"
The method, which ex-
ic, researchers reported in the journal Nature on Wednesday. The new drug, teixobactin, was tested in mice and easily cured
new councilors — Barb
the new mayor pro tem,
New York Times News Service
An unusual method
ing of the new Bend City Council featured no signs of disagreementasJim Clinton was unanimously re-elected mayor Wednesday night. The meetingbegan with the swearing in of three
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Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Riverfront Street, and in the flooding of 1983. Subzero temperatures led up to both events. While last week was cold, the nights leading up to the flooding of 1983 were frigid. "We had a string of 20-below nights," Howe said. A massive ice jam brought by the cold that December clogged the Deschutes River channel in Bend and diverted
the river through the part of the Old Bend neighborhood flanking its eastern bank along the river between the Colorado Avenue and Galveston Avenue bridges. See Flood /A4
Paris attack sparks a manhunt By Dan Bilefsky and Me'ia de laBaume New York Times News Service
Partly cloudy High 44, Low29 Page B6
PARIS — The police
organized an enormous manhunt across the Paris region Wednesday for the men they said were
INDEX Business C5-6 Calendar B2 Classified E1-6 Comics E3-4 Crosswords E4 Dear Abby 06
involved in a brazen
Health D1-6 Horoscope D6 Local/State B1-6 Obituaries B5 Sports C1-4 TV/Movies D6
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. B, 30 pages, 5sections
and methodical midday slaughter at a satirical newspaper that had lampooned Islam.
'I ggW
P'
-30o
The terrorist attack
by masked gunmen on the newspaper, Charlie Hebdo, left 12 people dead — including the top editor, prominent cartoonists and
"kv' ur
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postwar France.
The killers escaped,
Q l/i/e use recyclednewsprint
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88 267 02329
police officers — and was among the deadliest in traumatizing the city and
Employees of Mountain View Mall stores mop up water that seeped into the building as the Deschutes River flooded in1983.
sending shock waves through Europe and beyond. SeeAttack/A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
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REDMOND BUREAU
s asi e o u o ot e a OI1 By Michael S. Schmidt, Nicole on the anonymous posting site International Conference on Perlroth and Matthew Goldstein Pastebin. Their anger appeared Cyber Security in New York. New York Times News Service to be directed at the Sony film The four-day event, coordinatWASHINGTON The "The Interview," a comedy ed by the FBI, brings together FBI's director, James Comey, about the assassination of the law enforcement officials and said Wednesday that the Unit- North Korean leader Kim Jong Internet security experts from ed States had concluded that Un co-directed by Seth Rogen around the world to discuss North Korea was behind the and Evan Goldberg. and analyze techniques hackdestructive attacks on Sony Responding to critics who ers use to breach corporate Pictures partly because the have questioned why the Unit- computer networks. hackers failed to mask their lo- ed States thinks North Korea Shortly after the FBI blamed cation when they broke into the was the source of the attacks, the North Korean government company's servers. Comey said Wednesday that for the Sony attack, some digComey said that instead of thehackersbecame"sloppy"as ital security experts began to routing some of the attacks and they tried to cover their tracks. raise doubts about the govmessages through decoy serv- He acknowledged that the ernment's claim. Working off ers, the hackers sent them di- North Koreans had used de- a sliver of the digital evidence rectly from Internet addresses coysbut didnotelaborate about from the attack — samples of in North Korea. the specific mistakes the hack- malware that were distributed While Comey did not offer ers made that gave him "high to security researchers — sevmore details in a speech in confidence" the country was eralsecurity researchers said New York, senior government behind the attack they were skeptical of governofficials said that FBI analysts Comey urged the U.S. intelli- ment claims that the attackers found that the hackers quickly gence community to declassify were North Korean. recognized their mistake. Af-
all the information that showed
ter logging into Sony's systems that the hackers had used such and websites like Facebook servers, something that could from North Korean addresses, take months. Comey's remarks the hackers quickly switched came a little more than three to software that camouflaged weeks after ~sident Barack their whereabouts by sending Obama took the unusual step of their attacks through comput- publicly naming the North Koers in countries induding Bo- reans as the culprit. Last week, livia, Singapore, Poland and U.S. officials imposed a series Italy, the officials said. of sanctions on senior North Before the attacks in NoKorean officials as retaliation vember, Sony Pictures was fortheattack. threatenedin a series of m esThe Sony breach has besages posted to a Facebook come a focal point for the FBI account set up by a group and other federal officials becalling itself "Guardians of cause it was one of the rare atPeace." After Facebook closed tacks on a big corporation that that account in November, the
the United States has attributed
C ritics noted that an
ex-
tortion letter posted by the attackers suggested that they may have been criminals or embittered employees, not a nation state. They suggested that the fact that the attackers
coded malware off computers with Korean language settings could have been faked, and
they said that the IP addresses used in the attack were also used in other attacks. But the FBI and other security experts say those critics have
had access to only some of the evidence. They saythe accumulation of the evidence collected bythe FBI, Sony and Mandiant,
group changed its messaging to a foreign government. Com- a security firm hired by Sony, platform and began sending ey madehis remarks aboutthe makes dear that North Korea threats in emails to Sony and Sony breach in a speech atthe was the culprit.
~ IR ~
~ ~
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Street address.......226NWSixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box786 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
~4
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
Q >4gsQ4>Q 4sQ ss ©i The estimated jackpot is now $162 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
014027030040046048 The estimated jackpot is now $6.1 million.
MeaSleS linked tODiSneyland —SevenCalifornians andtwo people in Utahhaveconfirmed casesof measleslikely contracted on trips last month to Disneytheme parks in California, state officials said Wednesday.Threemore California residents aresuspected of having measles. All patients with confirmed orsuspected casesof the illness visited Disneyland orDisneyCalifornia Adventure betweenDec.15 and Dec.20, according to the state's Department of Public Health. The seven Californians with confirmedcasesarefrom different areas of the state and rangefrom 8 months to 21years old. Sixwere not vaccinated against the disease,including two whowere too young to be vaccinated. NeW YOrk VaCCine laW —NewYork state's requirement that children be vaccinated before attending public school does not violate their constitutional rights, a court in Manhattan said Wednesday. In affirming the requirement's constitutionality, a three-judge panel of the 2nd U.S.Circuit Court of Appeals also upheld a ruling that students exempted from the requirement for religious reasons can be barred from school whenanother child has a disease preventable by a vaccine. Thedecision wasthe latest to go against three parents from New YorkCity who saytheir religious rights were violated. An appeal to the U.S.SupremeCourt is planned.
KeyStOne pipeline —TheRepublican-led Congressappears ready to approve theKeystone XLoil pipeline, but no matter what actions are taken inWashington, the entire1,179-mile project could be delayed until Nebraska signs off on the route. After several years of intense debate, the routing process is before the NebraskaSupreme Court, and depending on howthejustices rule, months or years could pass before construction begins in that state. Even if approval comes from Washington and the high court, opponents are looking for new ways to block the project, including filing a federal lawsuit on behalf of Native American tribes in Nebraskaand South Dakota over the possible disruption of Indian artifacts.
FOrt BliSS Shaatihg —Authorities in El Paso,Texas, onWednesday releasedthe namesof two menwho died in ashooting at a Department of VeteransAffairs mental health clinic at Fort Bliss onTuesday. An Army veteran, Jerry Serrato, 48, killed apsychologist, Timothy Fjordbak, 63, before shooting himself, theauthorities said. Serrato had worked at the clinic in 2013 asascheduling clerk. At the time, according to an FBIspokesman, hethreatened Fjordbak at asupermarket. The spokesman, whosaid Fjordbakdid not recognizeSerrato, paraphrased the threat as, "I knowwhat youdid and Iwill take care of it."
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CraShed AirASia plaila —The tail section of the AirAsia passenger jet that crashed late last month is upside downand partially buried in the seafloor, and experts are trying to figure out how to remove the plane's black boxes from it, an Indonesian official said. Divers and an unmanned underwater vehicle onWednesday spotted the tail of the plane that crashed into the JavaSeawith162 people on board. It is an important finding becausethejet's black boxes — which should help pinpoint the cause of the crash —are located in that part of the aircraft. At least six ships with equipment that can detect underwater objects and the plane's black boxes, back up bynine warships, are working in the areawhere the tail of was spotted.
GOP infighting —House Republicans began the newCongress with old divisions on display Wednesday, bitter fallout from a failed rebellion against SpeakerJohn Boehner. Boehnertook swift action against two of the dissenters, knocking them from akeycommittee. But some of his allies demandedmore, furious at the two dozen lawmakerswho opposedtheOhioaninTuesday'sspeakervote.Inthe process, the GOP is starting the year with party infighting instead of a unified challenge to President BarackObama."All of us think that they should have retribution," Boehner loyalist Devin Nunes ofCalifornia said of the rebels. "They put the conservative agenda at risk with their wanting to be ontelevision and radio."
The Bullotin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-383-0356.
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NAACP blaSt —The FBIis investigating the possibility that a homemadeexplosive set off near a Colorado NAACPoffice was a case of domestic terrorism. Investigators also are considering many other possible motives andhavenot determined whether the nation's oldest civil rights organization was targeted, DenverFBIspokeswoman AmySanderssaidW ednesday.Theblasthappenedatabout11 a.m. Tuesdayoutside a barbershop that shares abuilding with the NAACP's Colorado Springs chapter, about an hour south of Denver. There were noinjuries and only minor damage. While local chapter members said they werewaiting for more information from law enforcement before drawing anyconclusions, speculation washed across social media about whether the explosion was ahate crime. Sanders said investigators havenot ruled out any possibilities.
Hussein Malla/The AssociatedPress
A Syrian man removes snow from his tent at a refugee camp in Deir Zannoun village, in the Bekaa
valley, east Lebanon, onWednesday. While the storm disrupted life for everyone, it proved particularly difficult for the hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees who live in tents and makeshift shelters in the Bekaa.
Fi'aCkiiIg quakeS —After two mild earthquakes occurred outside Youngstown, Ohio, in March, geologists decided hydraulic fracturing operations, or fracking, at newoil-and-gas wells had set off the tremors. Now adetailed study has concluded that those earthquakes were among scores that rattled the areaaround the wells. The study indicates fracking built up subterranean pressures that repeatedly caused slippage in anexisting fault. The number and intensity of fracking-related quakeshaverisen as the practice has boomed. In Oklahoma, for example, quakeshaveincreased sharply in recent years, including the state's largest ever, amagnitude 5.7 tremor, in 2011. — From wire reports
tron winterstorm, ea sno a it t e i e ast By Hussein Mallaand DiaaHadid
wi, died in the storm Wednes-
•
•
S k •
a
g
k
from the tin roof.
"We dragged the mattress day as they made the dangerANJAR, Lebanon — Snow ous trek through the rugged, to that corner, it's the only fell in parts of the Middle East snow-covered moun t a ins dry place in the house," she on Wednesday as a powerful from Syria to the Lebanese said, adding she hoped the winter storm swept through border town of Chebaa. The cold wouldn't make her sicker the region, killing two Syri- officials spoke on condition of — she has throat cancer and an refugees in Lebanon and anonymitybecause they were relies on charity for medical forcing thousands who have not authorized to speak to the care. fled their country's civil war media. Nearby, Abu Hussein, 32, to huddle for warmth in tents Near the town of Anjar, on huddled under blankets in his in refugee camps. the border with Syria, refu- tiny one-room home with his In Syria, the guns fell silent gees used brooms and sticks two children. "This is how we as snow fell in the cities of Da- to try to clear heavy snow keep warm," he laughed. mascus and Aleppo and gov- from the tops of their tents, Elsewhere, Palestinian auernment warplanes remained fearing the shelters would col- thorities in the West Bank and on the ground because of bad lapse. Inside, adults huddled Gaza Strip declared a state of visibility. around wood-burning stoves emergency over the storm. An eight-month-old Palestinian The storm dumped rain to try to keep warm. and hail on Lebanon's coast In Beirut's slum of Shatila, infant in the Tulkarem refua nd heavy snows in t h e residents waded through dirty gee campdiedin afirecaused mountains and central Bekaa water and floating garbage by a heating stove, said PalesValley. Gas stations, schools, that clogged the narrow alleys tinian civil defense ministry banks and shops shuttered while children played, trying spokesman Louay Bani Odeh. and power was cut through- to catch hail. Snow also accumulated in out Lebanon, but it was parIbtisam Mohammed, a the Golan Heights and northticularly trying for the hun- 37-year-oldmother of seven, ern Israel .Jerusalem schools dreds of thousands of Syrian managed to get her rusting closed ahead of a forecast refugees who live in tents and diesel stove working again warning of 10 inches of snowmakeshift shelters. on Wednesday, in an effort fall. The weather dominated In eastern Lebanon, securi- to warm her home. The wind Israeli media newscasts as ty officials said a Syrian shep- had ripped away the plastic snow fell in repeated bursts in herd, Ammar Kamel, 30, and sheet used for windows and Jerusalem, with media proma 7-year-old boy, Majed Bada- water dripped on the floor ising more snowfall later. The Associated Press
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FREE SEED RAFFLE Make Any Purchase To Enter~ 'Make any purchase at the Bend WBU to enter the raffle to win one free 10 lb. bag of No Mess seed per month in 2015. Offer expires I/18/15.
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, Jan. 8, theeighth day of 2015. Thereare357 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS FrallCS —A national day of mourning has beendeclared after12 people werefatally shotWednesday inasuspected terror attack at asatirical newspaper.
HISTORY Highlight:In1815, the last major engagement of theWar of1812 came to anendas U.S. forces led by Maj. Gen.Andrew Jackson defeated the British in the Battle of NewOrleans. (Given the slowness of communications at the time, the battle took placeeventhough the United States andBritain had already signed apeace treaty.) In1642,astronomer Galileo Galilei died in Arcetri, Italy. In1790, President George Washington delivered his first State of the Unionaddress to Congress in NewYork. In1863,America's First Transcontinental Railroad had its beginnings asCalifornia Gov. Leland Stanford broke ground for the Central Pacific Railroad in Sacramento. (The transcontinental railroad was completed in Promontory, Utah, in May 1869.) In1912, the African National Congress was founded in Bloemfontein, South Africa. In1965,the Star of India and other gems stolen from the American Museum ofNatural History in NewYork the previous October were recovered from a bus depot locker in Miami. In1975,Judge John Sirica ordered the early release from prison of Watergate figures John Dean, Herbert Kalmbach and Jeb Magruder. In1982,American Telephone and Telegraph settled the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit against it by agreeing to divest itself of the 22 Bell Systemcompanies. In1998, Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of the1993 World Trade Center bombing, was sentenced in NewYork to life imprisonment. In2011,U.S. Rep.Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., was shot and critically woundedwhen a gunman openedfire as the congresswomanmetwith constituents in Tucson; six other people were killed, 12 others also injured. (GunmanJared Lee Loughner wassentenced in Nov. 2012 to sevenconsecutive life sentences, plus140 years.) Ten years age:TheUnited States acknowledged dropping a 500-pound bomb onthe wrong house during a search for terror suspects outside the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. (The military said that five people were killed; the house's owner said14 people died.) Five years age:Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, accused of trying to blow up aU.S. airliner on Christmas, appeared in federal court in Detroit; the judge entered a not-guilty plea on his behalf. One year ago:Emails and text messages obtained byTheAssociated Press andother news organizations suggested that one of NewJersey Gov.Chris Christie's top aides engineered traffic Iams in Fort Lee inSept. 2013 to punish its mayor for not endorsing Christie for re-election; Christie responded by sayin ghe'dbeen misled by the aide, and hedenied involvement in the apparent act of political payback.
CUTTING EDGE
a 'snewwea on issrai o u o sci-i
Actor-comedian Larry Storch is 92. Actor Ron Moody is 91. CBSnewsman Charles Osgood is 82. Singer Shirley Basseyis78.Gameshow host Bob Eubanks is 77.Physicist Stephen Hawking is 73. Rock singer David Bowie is 68. Movie director John McTiernan is 64. Actress Harriet Sansom Harris is 60. Actress Michelle Forbes is 50. Singer R.Kelly is 48. Reggaesinger Sean Paulis 42. Actress-rock singer Jenny Lewis is 39. Actress Rachel Nichols is 35. Actress Gaby Hoffman is 33. — From wire reports
By Denise Grady
to cure them.
New Yorh Times News Service
"Cancer leaves signals of its
It may sound flippant to presence, so we just have to basaythatmany casesofcan- sically get smarter about how cer are caused by bad luck, to find them," Tomasetti said. but that is what two scienTheir conclusion comes tists suggested in an article from a statistical model they published last week in the developed using data in the journal Science. The bad medical literature on rates of luck comes in the form of cell division in 31 types of tisrandom genetic mistakes, sue. They looked specificalor mutations, that happen ly at stem cells, which are a when healthy cells divide. small, specialized population
A new ship-mounted laser weapon recently tested in the Persian Gulf is part of the Pentagon's push for high-tech weaponry. By Christian Davenport The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — One of t he newest weapons in t h e
Random mutations may
in each organ or tissue that di-
a laser that zaps and burns, delivering destruction by the
account for two-thirds of the risk of getting many types of cancer, leaving the usual suspects — heredity and environmental fac-
vide to provide replacements for cells that wear out. Dividing cells must make copies of their DNA, and errors in the process can set off
kilowatt, as if in "Star Wars."
tors — to account for only
the uncontrolled growth that
Under development for years by the military and the
one-third, say the authors, leads to cancer.
Pentagon's vast arsenal is a concentrated beam of l i ght,
Cristian Tomasetti and Dr. Bert Vogelstein, of Johns
defense industry, lasers have
moved from science-fiction fantasy to the laboratory and,
Hopkins University School of Medicine. "We do think this is a
just recently, to the Persian
Gulf. They sizzle rather than go boom, providing pinpoint
fundamental mechanism,
accuracy that proponents say
there's been a measure of it," said Tomasetti, an ap-
and this is the first time
can prevent the kind of collateral damage that is unavoid-
plied mathematician.
The researchers wondered
if higher rates of stem-cell division might increase the risk of cancer simply by providing more chances for mistakes. Vogelstei n said research of this type became possible only in recent years, because of advances in the understanding of stem-cell biology. The analysis did not include breast or prostate cancers, be-
And they represent the Pentagon's most aggressive push
Though the researchers suspected that chance had a role, they were surprised cause there was not enough
to use technology to bolster
at how big it turned out to
bruteforce,alongside eff orts to develop helmets allowing a fighter pilot to see through the body of the plane, uniforms
be. sion in those tissues. "This was definitely beA starting point for their yond my e xpectations," research was an observation Tomasetti said. "It's about made more than 100 years ago double what I would have but never really explained: thought." Some tis sues arefarm ore canThe finding may be good cer-prone than others. In the
able with missiles or bombs.
with f a bric t h a t c o n ducts electricity, and Iron Man-like
exoskeletons. In announcing the Defense I nnovation Initiative in N o -
vember, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that to keep its battlefield edge, the military needs to move with the
John F. Williams/ U.S. Navy via The Washington Post
The laser mounted on the deck of the USS Ponce is used in an operational demonstration of the Office of Naval Research-spon-
urgency of a Silicon Valley start-up in developing break- sored Laser WeaponSystem while deployed to the Persian Gulf. throughs i n te c hnologies such as robotics, autonomous
systems, big data and 3-D printing. While th e
U n ited States
has focused on fighting wars for more than a decade, Hagel said, potential enemies have taken the time to innovate. "Countries like Russia
and China have been heavily investing in military modernization programs to blunt our military's technological edge," he said.
Testing theweapon In December, the Navy an-
nounced a big step in that direction. For months, sailors tested a $40 million, 30-kilow att laser mounted on t h e
deck of the USS Ponce in the Persian Gulf. Using a video gamelike controller, service members practiced taking out drones and small boats. And
now the weapon, which looks like a big telescope, is ready to take out real threats if nec-
essary, officials said, meaning the Pentagon could soon record its first kill with a laser.
it is raining, or even cloudy, could envision the day when a moisture in the atmosphere drone spots a terrorist on the can make them less effec- ground next to a playground tive. Smoke and pollution can filled with kids. cause problems, as well. You can't "fire a Hellfire And the enemy does not al- missile and blow up the 50 ways attack on clear, sunny kids on the playground," Capdays. tain said. But a laser could "If you want to know the be quick and deadly — withproblem with lasers, try using out the collateral damage, he a flashlight in the fog," said sard. Loren Thompson, a defense Developing the rules of analyst and consultant. engagement for lasers took For years, lasers have been top Pentagon officials a year, a key focus for many of the Klunder said. And he said biggest defense contractors, the D e f ense D e p artment including BAE Systems, Boe- will comply with the Geneva ing, Lockheed Martin, Ray- Convention, which prohibits theon and Northrop Grum- weapons that blind. "We are going to honor the man. And the industry has been making advancements conventions with t hi s l aser toward mounting them on system," Klunder said. "We're t rucks, tanks, aircraft a n d not going to use it to directly even drones, analysts said. In point and kill people." recent years, laser technology The weapon is more effechas reached a "tipping point" tive, he said, when it is used to and soon couldbe widespread, destroy the engines or sensors said Rick Hunt, director of of ships and drones. Raytheon's Navy and Marine Patrick Wilcken, a t r a de Corps programs. and human rights researcher Tom Captain, a vice chair-
at Amnesty International, said
"The captain of that ship has man at Deloitte who leads the lasers should be "very strictly all of the authorities necessary consulting firm's aerospace regulated and controlled so if there was a threat inbound and defensesector,said:"This that it is never used against a to that ship," Rear Adm. Mat- isn't something in a Buck Rog- human target where there is a thew Klunder said last month ers comic book. It's being de- risk of eye damage." before stepping down as chief ployed now." Despite the advancements, of navalresearch. "To protect many think lasers will not likely our sailors and Marines, we Widespreaduse is replace guns, cannons or would defend that ship with As scientists and engineers missiles, but rather augment this laser system." make them smaller, more ef- them. Unlike missiles, lasers trav- ficient and powerful, lasers That is a problem at a time el at the speed of light, so they will become a "top-10 acquisi- when the defense budget is hit their target almost instan- tion" priority for the Pentagon, shrinking — not growing. "The main budgetary drawtaneously. Once a system is predicted Ray Johnson, Lockbuilt, its expense is essentially heed Martin's chief technolo- back is that no one is prolimited to the cost it takes to gy officer. posing they replace existing fuel it. Navy officials said the Boeing has developed a weapons," said Thompson, USS Ponce's laser, for exam- massive truck it calls a High the defense analyst. "They're ple, costs 59 cents a shot, while Energy Laser Mobile Demon- saying, 'Why don't we have the cost of some missiles that
BIRTHDAYS
A ma or eaneer r is: a u c ?
would perform the same attack can cost in the millions of dollars. As long as there is power, lasers can also keep firing with
strator for the Army, with a laser designedto take out rock-
lasers, too?' But it's an addition
in a budget that can't grow." ets, mortar shells and drones. That has not stopped comDuring a recent demonstra- panies from developing lasers, tion, the laser targeted a dime- which many think will besize beam on the 10-inch mor- come a must-have technology an "unlimited magazine" that tar shell and fried it until the for the Pentagon. never needs to be reloaded, shell exploded midair. BAE Systems, for example, which is especially helpful for It could also protect against has showcased what it calls a a ship at sea. rockets and missiles that trav- Future Technology DemonThe power of lasers can also el even faster, officials said. strator, a tanklike vehicle that be changed. A low-energy While many of the lasers in has a laser and a machine gun. pulse may disable a drone's development would be used In other words, it can go sizsensors, a maneuver known for relatively short distances, zle and boom. as "dazzling." Crank it up, within a few years compathough, and the drone be- nies will start producing far TE R R E B OX N E i ' more-powerful weapons cacomes fireball. XKWM But laser beams fire dead pable of much longer ranges, LJLNDSCJ LPuie CLRDEI PAINT straight and cannot bend or officials said. FEMIIC PLUXBING ELECTRICdL I METdL BUILDINGS easily change directions, so And their precision could I I there has to be a clear line make them valuable in coun5 41-5 4 8 - 8 7 0 7 of site to the target. And if
terterrorism. Captain said he
I
TERR EBONNE OR EGO N
i
data on rates of stem-cell divi-
news to some people, bad
large intestine, for instance,
news to others, he added. Smoking greatly increases the risk of lung cancer, but for other cancers, the causes are not clear. And
the lifetime cancer risk is 4.8 percent — 24 times higher
"For the average cancer patient, I think this is good
other tissues, rates of stem cell division also correlated strong-
news," Tomasetti said.
ly with cancer risk. Some cancers, includi ng certain lung and skin cancers, are more common than
than in th e small intestine,
where it is 0.2 percent. The scientists found that the yet many patients wonder if large intestine has many more they did something to bring stem cells than the small intesthe disease on themselves, tine, and that they divide more or if they could have done often: 73 times a year, comsomething to prevent it. pared with 24 times. In many
"Knowing that overall, a lot of it is just bad luck, I think
in a sense it's comforting." Among people who do not have cancer, Tomasetti
would be expected just from their rates of stem-cell division
two camps.
known importance of environ-
said he expected there to be — which matches up with the "There are those who would like to control every single thing happening in their lives, and for those,
mental factors like smoking and sun exposure in those diseases. Others more common than expected were linked to
this may be very scary," he said. "'There is a big component of cancer I can just do nothing about.'
cancer-causing genes. To help explain the findings, Tomasetti cited the risks of a car accident. In general, the longer the "For the other part of trip, the higher the odds of a the population, it's actual- crash. Environmental factors ly good news. 'I'm happy. I like bad weather can add to the can of course do all I know that's important to not in-
basic risk, and so can defects in the car.
"This is a good picture of crease my risk of cancer, like a good diet, exercise, how I see cancer," he said. "It's avoiding smoking, but on really the combination of inthe other side, I don't want herited factors, environment to stress out about every
and chance. At the base, there
single thing or every action is the chance of mutations, to I take in my life, or every- which we add, either because thing I touch or eat.'"
of things we inherited or the
Vogelstein said the ques- environment, our lifestyle." tion of causation had haunted himfordecades, sinc e he
Dr. Kenneth Offit, chief of the clinical genetics service
was an intern and his first
at Memorial Sloan Kettering
patient was a 4 -year-old Cancer Center in Manhattan, girl with leukemia. Her par- called the article "an elegant
ents were distraught and
biological explanation of the
wanted to know what had
complex pattern of
c ancers
caused the disease. He had observed in different human no answer, but time and tissues." time again heard the same He said the hypothesis "apquestion from patients and pears to be correct," but added their families, particularly that it is "just a first approxparents of children with
imation," and he noted that
cancer. "They think they passed on a bad gene or gave them the wrong foods or exposed them to paint in the garage," he said. "And it's just wrong. It gave them a lot of guilt."
certain types of cancer did not fit the model. One form of thy-
Tomasetti an d
roidcancer,for instance, has a
much bigger hereditary component than the model would suggest, he said. Although the artide focused on factors in cancer beyond
V o g el- people's control, Offit said that
stein said the finding that so many cases of cancer
about half of cancer deaths could be avoided.
occur from random genetic
accidents means that it may not be possible to prevent them, and that there should
be more of an emphasis on developing better tests to find cancers early enough
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
Mayor
it. The issue of whether Roats hoping we can bury the hatch"I appreciate the vote of qualified as a candidate was et collectively." Continued from A1 confidence to continue in the taken up by the City Council Both Campbell and Boddie, After the meeting, Knight position for the next couple of and the courts after a political who respectively unseated said he was moved to attempt years," he added. "Certainly activist argued that because Councilors Scott Ramsay and a run at mayor "to improve it's a benefit, or perhaps not, of the candidate resided outside Mark Capell, echoed Roats' communication with staff' and having served in the position of the city limits for almost a conciliatory tone. "We're on the shoulders of because he felt his leadership for a number of years." year he was ineligible to run. skills are well-suited to the job. After her election, Russell, The case, originally filed by all the councilors who came He cited a number of groups like Clinton, said it was her Campbell's partner, was later before us," Campbell said, focused on livability as having goal "to make Bend the best dismissed, and the City Coun- referencing a photo of the old encouraged him to run, in- city in the United States." cil last month voted five to council, on which she imposed cluding Truth In Site, which is Councilor Victor Chudowsky two in favor of finding Roats the enlarged heads of the new opposed to the west-side loca- noted Russell "listens to every- qualified. council. "Given the bang I came in tion of the proposed four-year body and then makes up her Boddie noted he was availOSU-Cascades campus. mind, ratherthan the reverse." with, those of you on the oth- able to all residents, "not just After being elected, Clinton Despite the cheery feel to the er side of the issues, let's find my supporters." said he has "personally never meeting, there was reference something new to fight over," — Reporter: 541-633-2160, felt more optimistic about the to a controversy that preceded Roats said to laughter. "I'm tleeds®bendbulletin.com future of the city."
|
David Zucchino / Los Angeles Times
Don Byrne works on a handmade pine coffin in his outdoor
studio on a 32-acre homestead in Bear Creek, North Carolina. Behind him is his son Niko, 4. Byrne lives off the grid, with no electricity and running water. He builds the coffins with antique hand tools, selling them for about $875 to $1,000 to people who want a simple, "green" burial.
Flood
Pineco inma er eieves in amore uria
Continued from A1 Last week, th e N a tional Weather Service reported a
low of 4 degrees Tuesday in Bend and minus 5 degrees Wednesday. The cold nights caused a quick freeze of the Deschutes River, an ice jam like 1983 and high water along
u
v
the same the stretch of river.
1
"It was a short cold spell gast week)," Howe said. "(But) it wasn't that super cold." He said the differences in how cold it was in 1983 and
By David Zucchino
last week, and how long the chill lasted, could help explain the difference in the flooding. "Ithinkthe length and depth of the cold snap will determine
Los Angeles Times
B EAR C R EEK ,
how bad it will be," Howe said.
In 1983, it was bad. The flooding forced residents liv-
Dylan J. Darling /The Bulletin
ing close to the river out of
A partially frozen Deschutes River spreads into the backyards of homes along Riverfront Street last
their homes temporarily. They
week. The high water was similar, but not as severe as flooding along the same stretch in1983.
t hen returned to deal w i th
flood damage. 'Tm scared toeven think what it's going to cost," Hazel Ray, who lived on Riverfront Street, told The Bulletin for a Jan. 1, 1983, article. "It sure
cause the flooding. Silt build-
records. In 1987, under a plan
up in M i rror Pond and the
approvedby thecorps,the city began seasonally installing and removing an iceboom upstream of where the river flooded. The goal was t o s t op
river being narrow shortly upstream of the pond both contributed to the flooding, ac-
spoiled my Christmas." cording to the paper. Ray told the paper she had Three decades later, these been in Bend since 1927 and factors have not changed. The had lived in her riverside home city of Bend, the Bend Park & since 1955. She also said she Recreation District and other owned five other houses along stakeholders are in ongoing Riverfront Street, which she talks about what to do about rented out. The basements in silt buildup in Mirror Pond,
cavator was usedto remove ice buildup in the river. In 2007, frazil ice again bypassed the ice boom and collected in Mirror Pond. The city stopped installing the ice boom in 2008,
and there had not been a floodthe formation of f r azil i ce, ing problem along the stretch which forms in turbulent su- of the Deschutes between the per-cooled water, according to Colorado Avenue and Galvescity records. ton Avenue bridges until last The iceboom, made up of week. 12-foot-long rough beams of Mingus, who grew up in wood strung together, ran the Bend and started working for
two of the rental homes as well
and the river still narrows be-
as in her own home all filled
tween the Colorado Avenue width of the river and was in-
the city in 1995, said the flood-
stalled in the fall and removed ing in 1983 was worse than the Following the flooding of in the spring, said Rod Mingus, recent flooding. "I remember it getting up 1983, the city of Bend tried to water operations supervisor find a way to prevent a similar for the city of Bend. and flooding up to doorsteps event from occurring, consultDespite the ice boom, the and houses," he said. The paper reported in 1983 ing with the Army Corps of problem persisted, according — Reporter: 541-617-7812, that an ice jam alone did not Engineers, according to city to city records. In 1997, an exddarling@bendbulletin.com with water. "I've never seen it like this," she told The Bulletin. "If I had I never would have moved here."
and Galveston Avenue bridges.
thousands of dollars on elab-
orate factory-made coffins. N . C . Their coffins sell for about
— Don Byrne is only 45, but he's already planned his burial. He wants to be lowered into a shovel-dug grave in one of his own handmadepinecoffins. Byrne lives off the grid on a North Carolina homestead with no electricity or running water. Pounding away with antique hand tools, he builds pine coffins for families who want to re-
turn to the days when burials were cheap and simple: a shovel and a plain pine box. He intends to die the way he lives, too — as close to
$875 for a simple pier-andpanelcoffin and about $1,000 for one with dovetail corners. The couple started the busi-
nessinsummer 2013tospread their vision of living — and dying — simply and in tune with nature. They promote so-call ed green burials and a greater involvement for families in the
process. Some families ask to pound
in the last few wooden pegs or nails. Some write messages or draw pictures on the cof-
fins. Others cover them with wreaths, flowers or personal mementos. Children s ome-
nature as possible. Byrne times dip their hands in paint builds his coffins from raw and leave handprints. pine in an outdoor workRecently, Byrne drove a cofshop a few steps from a fin to South Carolina to deliver rustic cabin where he lives with his wife and their two
it to a man who didn't want his family to have to deal with or-
small children.
dering one when he dies. "It's in his living room, ready to bending raindrops side- go," Byrne said. ways as Byrne worked on a Byrne builds most coffins new coffin one chilly day. A a standard size,just under 30 man from nearby Raleigh inches wide to accommodate had just died. His widow the concrete burial vaults A stiff winter wind was
ordered acustom pine cof- many cemeteries require. The fin for the funeral, which vaults prevent the ground
Antibiotic
promising candidate isolated
bottom. With an old hand
from 10,000 strains of bacteria
plane, he smoothed the rough edges of the tonguea nd-groove design a s the boards fit snugly into place. This coffin was a bit longer than most — 76 inches,
fin in the back of a pickup, but the business is not lucrative, at
pounds produced. Lewis is a
of as-yet-unrecognized, potent, Continued from A1 And the method developed to biologically-active compounds producethe drughas thepoten- made by the microbial worldtial to unlock a trove of natural some of which may have real compounds to fight infections clinicalvalue." and cancer— molecules that He added, "We've been blind were previously beyond sci- to the vast majority of them entists' reach because the mi- because of the biased and incrobes that produce them could s ensitive methods we use to dis-
that the researchers screened. In test tubes, it killed various types of staph and strep, as well as anthrax and tuberculosis. William Fowle / Northeastern University via The New YorkTimes
notbe growninthe laboratory. cover drugs." The methods are A previously uncultured bacteTeixobactinhasnotyetbeen flawed, he said, because they rium, Eleftheria terrae, makes tested in humans, so its safe-
m i s s microbes that will n ot teixobactin, a new antibiotic.
ty and effectiveness are not growinthelab, andsubjectothknown. Studies in people will ers to artificial conditions that not begin for about may alter the array two years, according of potential drugs . to Kim Lewis, the TeiXObactiri is the yproduce. seruo autho .o he g ( gg g (gStDr ug res i s a n article and director bacteria infect at of the Antimicrobiai t u b e anCI the least 2 miliion peoDiscovery Center at ir IDUSBlGVt-'I, p l e a y e ar in t he N ortheastern U n i - clgd 1T1 jC8 gr8 United States and .
versity i n
from sinking on top of the
paid consultant to the company. T eixobactin i s t h e m o s t
was just three days away. Byrne used a wooden mallet to pound together pine boards to form the body board, or the coffin
.
B o ston.
Those studies will take several years, M/OmBA, BAd so even if the drug Sp ITipyjgg passes K the m- g e On d
kill 23,000, according to the Centers
the microbes' natural arsenal, often by mining soil samples, and discovered lifesaving antibiotics like penicillin, streptomycin and tetracycline, as
well as some powerful chemotherapy drugs for cancer. But disease-causing o r ganisms have become resistant to many existing drugs, and there has
Tested in mice, it cleared strep
infections and staph, including a strainthatwas drug-resistant. It works against bacteria in a
group known as "Gram-positive" but not ~ mic r obes t hat a r e "Gram-negative," which indude some that are
m ajor causesof drug resistant pneumonia, gonorrhea
and infections of the bladder and bloodstream. Lewis said r esearchers were t r ying
to
modify the drug to make it work against Gram-negative infections.
Twenty-five other drug canfo r D isease Control been a major obstacle to find- didates were also identified, but and P r evention. The ing replacements, Lewis said: most had drawbacks like toxWorld He a lth Orga- About 99 percent of the mi- icity or insolubility, Lewis said, quired tests, it still nization warned last crobial species in the environ- adding that one, though toxic, will not be available th at iS a year that such infec- ment are bacteria that do not may work against cancer and for five or six years, lgrgg S~gp' tion s were occurrmggrow under usual laboratory willbe tested further. hesaidduringateleall over the world, conditions. Teixobactin attacks bacteria d ~ phone news conferand that d r ug-reLewis and his colleagues by blocking fatty molecules ence Tuesday. If it is COmPOUriCfS sis t ant s trains of found a way to grow them. The needed to build cell walls, approved, he said, it ggVg fgilgd many d iseases wereprocess involves diluting a soil which is different from the will probably have to T . . emerging fa s ter sample — the one that yield- way most antibiotics work. 4 beinjected. than new antibiot- ed teixobactin came from "a Those molecules are unlikely to Experts not in- Of t e n t he ics cou l d be made grassy field in Maine" — and change and make the microbes volved with t h e A C A jl/gS Aggl t o f i ght them. Com- placing it on specialized equip- resistant, the researchers said. research said the pounding the prob- ment Then, the secret to suc- But ifresistance does occur, t echnique for i s o Of drugS. lem is the fact that cess is putting the equipment Lewis predicted, it will take a lating the drug had — Dr William many drug comPa- into a box full of the same soil long time to develop. Relman said the argument "trai They gr P Schaffner mes backed away that the sample came from. "Essentially, we're tricking againstresistance was reasonalso said teixobactin trymg a n infectious f r able. But he cautioned that "unlooked Pm~mg the bacteria," Lewis said. dlseasespeclallst OP newantblotcsm but exPressed cauBack in their native dirt, they suspectedmechanismsofresisatVanderbilt f avor of other, more ton bemuse it has divide and grow into colonies. tance" sometimes develop, and Unlverslty p rof table, types of notyetbeen tested in drugs. Once the colonies form, Lewis that the only way to tell would humans. The new research said, the bacteria are "domes- be to monitor carefully what Dr. William Schaffner, an i s based on the premise that ticated," and researchers can happens as the drug is used infectious disease specialist at everything on Earth — plants, scoop them up and start grow- more and more. Lewis said he hoped the reVanderbilt University, called soil, people, animals — is teem- ing them in petri dishes in the search would point the way to a the research "ingenious" and ing with microbes that compete laboratory. said, "We're in desperate need to survive. Trying to keep one The research was paid for by new approach to searching for of some good antibiotic news." another in check, the microbes the National Institutes of Health novel antibiotics. Until now, he Regarding teixobactin, he s ecrete biological weapons: and the German government said, scientists have assumed said:"It's atthetest-tubeandthe a n t ibiotics. (some co-authors work at the that resistance would inevita"The way bacteria multiply, University of Bonn). Northeast- bly develop, and that the only mouse level, and mice are not men or women, and so moving i f t h ere weren't natural mech- ern University holds a patent solution would require scrambeyond that is a large step, and anisms to limit their growth, on the method of producing blingto develop new antibiotics many compounds have failed." they would have covered the drugs and licensed the patent in hopes of keepingup. "This gives us an alternative Headded,"Toxicityisoftenthe p l a net and eaten us all eons to a private company, NovoBiago," Schaffner said. Achilles'heel of drugs." otic Pharmaceuticals, in Cam- strategy," he said. "Develop Dr. David Relman, a profesS c i entists and drug compa-bridge, Massachusetts, which compounds to which resistance sor of medicine at Stanford, n i es have for decades exploited owns the rights to any com- will not develop."
coffin.
Nicole Byrne drums up sales by v i siting f uneral homes with a model pine cofleast not yet. For now, Don By-
rne is holding on to his day job, teaching English as a second language in a nearby public school. The Byrnes live in two simto accommodate the dead ple 12-by-12 cabins. They rely man's height. Because the on wood stoves for heat, lanwidow planned a viewing, terns for light, a well for water, Byrne built only half a and an outhouse and indoor wooden lid instead of the sawdust toilet for sanitation. usual full-length pine top. They grow vegetables and As he p laned down herbs while raising chickens, the boards, Byrne saved ducks, sheep and a milk cow the shavings. The widow named Buttercup. wanted her husband to rest The other day, a lamb died on them inside the coffin. in a pasture of bloat, Byrne Byrne also planned to save said. The carcass was still the final few nails so the
man's family could ham-
warm w hen
h e b u t chered
the animal. That evening, as
mer them home as a way to
he built a coffin on his work-
say goodbye. "We want to go back to when people handled their own funerals instead of having the funeral industry do it," Byrne said as he spun a hand drill to make dowel holes in another coffin. "The grieving process is enhanced by that personal touch and a more natural
bench, thearoma of lamb chops with Dijon mustard and
end, dust to dust."
olive oil wafted from a tiny
cabin kitchen where Nicole was preparing dinner. At his workbench, the cof-
fin ordered by the widow was nearly finished. The next day, Byrne drove the coffin to a funeral home, then attended the
service a day later. He
w a t ched s u r v ivors,
Byrne's wife, Nicole, 39, many of them children, draw handles marketing for the hearts, stars and flowers on couple's m o m -and-popthe plain coffin. They wrote Piedmont P in e C o ff ins, messages, too: "I love you," "I which promises to "help will miss you" and "You shall families reclaim the pow- always be in my thoughts." er of caring for our own The next day, Byrne was dead." back at his workshop, building Like her husband, Ni-
cole Byrne plans to be
another coffin from slabs of
fresh pine.
"The last one in stock," he buried on t h ei r 3 2 -acre homestead on a handmade said, "will be for me."
"trundle coffin," a pine board with heavy ropes attached for lowering a body into a grave. She wants her body shrouded in African cloth.
The couple say they offer an alternative to spending
SchnitzerRecystesCentral Oegsn's Netsl We pay TOP DOLULR www.schnitzersteel.cem I 541-382-8471 110 SE 5th St Bend, OR97702
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe's'tcrossing'.com
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
ANALYSIS:FRANCE ATTACK
wou terrorists tar et oitica cartoonists? By Adam Taylor The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — At least
12 people have been killed after gunmen stormed the offices of Charlie Hebdo, a French satirical newspaper,
mad in History, Thought, and Culture: An Encyclopedia of the Prophet of God," Koranic versescan be interpreted to suggest that any punishment should be meted out by God, not byhumans.
world began to republish the cartoons, saying they supported a fight against self-censorship, and faced their own backlash. Other cartoonists, inspiredby the controversy, began to draw similar images: Gregorius Nekschot, a pseud-
in Paris on Wednesday. PresDepictions of Muhammad ident Francois Hollande has by non-Muslims have caused onymous Dutch cartoonist, called the attack a "terrorist offense for centuries, whether received both support and attack without a doubt" and
in Dante's "Divine Comedy"
criticism for his own cartoons
early indications point to it (where the Islamic prophet is regarding Islam (he was arbeing carried out by Islamist depicted in hell), or in a stat- rested for "insulting people" extremists. ue of Muhammad that had in2008). The attack is horrifying no stood on the roof of New York Charlie Hebdo, an irrevermatter what way you look at City's State Appellate Divi- ent weekly that had a history it, but it's almost bewildering sion courthouse for 50 years of mocking just about every w hen you considerthetarget. (it was removed in 1955 after religion and ideology, placed The attackers weren't fighting protests from Islamic coun- itself at the center of the dethe French state. They weren't tries, though a depiction in the bate. In 2007, it republished killing soldiers and appear to U.S. Supreme Court in Wash- the Jyllands-Posten cartoons have only incidentally killed ington remains). and added one of its own. In policemen. They weren'teven In 1977, a film about the 2011, it published a number attacking a far-right group life of Muhammad titled "The of images of Muhammad and that pushes an anti-Islam line. Message" attempted to avoid renamed itself Charia Hebdo, Instead, they were target- the problem by never actually a play on the word "sharia," ing satirists and cartoonists, showing the prophet. It didn't for an issue. After its offices such as the newspaper's ed- work: After Islamic groups were firebombed in 2012, it itor, Stephane Charbonnier, took hostages in a Washing- published yet more cartoons and Jean Cabut, better known ton siege that left two dead, showing Muhammad. In a as Cabu. The terrorists want- the filmmakers canceled the country with an often turbued to kill people who make Washington premiere and lent history of relations with drawings for a living. halted screenings. theIslamicworld and France's Stranger still, that doesn't However, in the past few own Muslim minority, it was even seem that unusual. Char- years the issue of depiction provocative. Writing in the Filie Hebdo had been targeted of Muhammad ha s i n ter- nancial Times after Wednesbefore. In 2012, its offices twined with debates about day's killings, Tony Barber were firebombed and its web- free speech, with cartoonists said the newspaper needed site was hacked. While no often leading the charge. In some"common sense." one was harmed, the perpe- 2005, the Dutch newspaper Regardless, the attempts by trators were never caught. It Jyllands-Posten asked illus- a small minority of Islamist was widely assumed that the trators if they would be will- extremists to kill cartoonists attacks were committed by ing to draw Muhammad after are strikingly illogical. Even extremist Islamists. writer Kare Bluitgen said he if the cartoons are insulting to Then there's the case of was unable to find anyone many Muslims (including the Kurt Westergaard,a Dutch to illustrate his book on the vast majority who don't supcartoonist who was the sub- prophet. port violence), there are far ject of a murder plot in 2008. In the end, 12 cartoons greater injustices and outragOr the case of Swedish art- showing Muhammad were es in the Muslim world that ist Lars Vilks, who received published by Jyllands-Posten, surely merit more attention. death threats and was the includingone by Westergaard So why cartoons'? The abilsubject of a number of as- that showed t h e p r o phet ity of the Internet to spread sassination attempts after a wearing a bomb as a turban. anger likely plays a part: It drawing of his was published The publication of the car- allows media to spread quickin the Swedish newspaper toons sparked controversy ly and internationally, often Nerikes Allehanda. among Dutch Muslims, who without much context. It was In each case, the threats said the action was designed a terribly made, low-budget stemmed from controver- specifically to insult Islam. It film shot in California that sial depictions of the Muslim soon spiraled into an interna- almost no one had ever seen prophet Muhammad. Graph- tional incident. The 57-nation ("The Innocence of Muslims") ic depictions of the proph- Organization of the Islamic that sparked huge protests et are considered taboo by Conference issued a state- across the Middle East in 2012 many Muslims, in particular ment condemning the car- after appearing on YouTube, Sunni Muslims, largely be- toons, and Saudi Arabia with- for example. Perhaps most importantly, cause they could be consid- drew its ambassador to the ered a form of idolatry (simi- Netherlands. despite the repeated threats lar traditions have existed in However, there was also against it and police proteca number of faiths). Blasphe- significant support for Jyl- tion, Charlie Hebdo was still my against the prophet is a l ands-Posten. On e Du t c h a relatively soft target: The considered a crime, though poll showed that 62 percent policeoff icer who had been religious teaching on how it of those surveyed said the assigned as Charbonnier's should be punished varies paper should not apologize. bodyguard was among those widely: As noted in "Muham- Newspapers all around the killed.
I
Thibault Camus/The AssociatedPress
People gather to pay respect to the vlctlms of a terror attack against a satirical newspaper Wednesday
ln Paris. Masked gunmen shouting "Allahu akbar!" stormed the Parls offices of the newspaper, killing 12 people, including the paper's editor, before escaping in a getaway car. It was among the deadllest terrorist attacks in postwar France.
Attack Contlnued from A1 Officials said late Wednesday that two of the suspects
were brothers. They were identified as Said and Cherif Kouachi, 34 and 32. The third
suspect is Hamyd Mourad, 18. French news reports said the brothers, known to intelligence
services, had been born in Paris, raising the prospect that
U.S. reaCtS — World leaders expressed outrage over the attack on aFrench magazine office in Paris which killed at least 12 people, with several countries calling emergency meetings of anti-terrorism officials to review security. "I strongly condemn the horrific shooting," President BarackObamasaid in aWhite House statement. "France is America's oldest ally, and hasstood shoulder to shoulder with the United States in the fight against terrorists who threaten our sharedsecurity and theworld." Obama said the United States is in touch with French officials and "I have directed my administration to provide anyassistance neededto help bring these terrorists to justice." — Bloomberg News
homegrown Muslim extrem-
ists were responsible. Early today, a spokeswom- clared today a national day of an for the Paris prosecutor mourning. said that Mourad had walked He also raised the nationinto a police station in Charlev- wide terror alert to its highest i lle-Mezieres, a b o u t 145 level, saying several terrorist miles northeast of Paris, and attacks had been thwarted in surrendered. recent weeks as security offi"He introduced h i m self cials here and elsewhere in Euand was put in custody," said rope have grown increasingly the spokeswoman, Agnes wary of the return of young Thibault-Lecuivre. citizens from fighting in Syria The assault threatened to and Iraq.
killed Charlie Hebdo!" The video, thesource of which could not be verified, also showed the
gunmen killing a policeofficer as he lay wounded on a nearby slreet. The v i ctims a t Ch a r l ie Hebdo included some of the
country's most revered and iconoclastic cartoonists. The weekly's editorial d i r ector, Stephane Charbonnier, had
French authorities put some already been receiving light large Muslim population, com- schools on lockdown for the police protection after earlier ing at a time when Islamic rad- day, and added security at threats, the police and Molins icalism has become a central houses of worship, news media said. An officer assigned to concern of security officials offices and transportation cen- guard the newspaper's offices across Europe. In the space of ters, and conducted random and its top editor was among a few minutes, the assault also searches on the Paris Metro. the victims. crystallized the culture clash The P a ri s pr o secutor, As news o f t h e a t t ack between religious extremism Franqois Molins,said accord- spread, an outpouring of grief and the West's devotion to ing to witnesses, the attackers mixed with expressions of disfree expression. Spontaneous had screamed "Allahu akbar!" may and demonstrations of rallies expressing support for or "God is great!" during the solidarit y for free speech. By Charlie Hebdo sprung up later attack, which the police char- the evening, not far from the in the day in Paris, throughout acterized as a "slaughter." site of the attack in the east Europe and in Union Square in Corinne Rey, a cartoonist of Paris, an estimated 35,000 New York. known as "Coco," who was at gathered at Place de La ReOfficials and witnesses said the newspaper office during publique — young and old, at least two gunmen carried the attack, told Le Monde that and various classes — some out the attack with assault the attackers had spoken flu- chanting, "Charlie! Charlie!" weapons and military-style ent French and had said they or holding signs reading, "I am precision. were part of al-Qaida. Charlie" — the message posted President Franqois Hollande An amateur video of the as- on the newspaper's website. of France called it a display of sailants' subsequent gunfight Spontaneous vigils of hun"barbarism" with the police, showed the men dreds and thousands formed extraordinary that was "without a doubt" shouting,"Wehaveavengedthe in other cities around France an act ofterrorism. He de- Prophet Muhammad. We have and elsewhere. deepen the distrust of France's
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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
BRIEFING Women sentenced in stabding A La Pine woman charged with attempted murder and assault for stabbing a man inSeptember was sentenced to 7t/a years in prison
Wednesday. Heather Leigh Chapman, 26, of La Pine, accepted a plea agreementand pleaded guilty to first-degree assault in Deschutes County Circuit Court on Wednesday. Shewas arrested Sept. 13 on suspicion of stabbing Victor Evangelista, 52, of La Pine. Deschutes County Circuit Judge Walter "Randy" Miller sentenced Chapman to 90 months in prison and 36 months post-prison supervision. Ninety months is the mandatory minimum guideline set by Measure11 for a first-degree assault. Once released, Chapman must haveno contact with Evangelista, abstain from alcohol and avoid places where alcohol is the chief item for sale and must possess no weapons. Chapman's attorney, Terry Rahmsdorff, said alcohol was a driving
REDMOND SCHOOL BOARD
- an o icia By Dylan J. Darling nce a on« P «
aps e .
i s ami a r enow Store e oue ac director
named
See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bentfbugetin.cem(rsguepack
most famous wolf in Oregon is now leader of a pack. The Oregon Department of a gencies define a pack as a Fish and Wildlife announced g r oup of wolves, usually a Wednesday that the agency ma l e, female and their offand the U.S. Fish and spring from one or more MaP g e nerations, she wrote Wildlife Service have designated OR-7, his mate Oh B2 in an email. A pack may and their pups as the also be a group of four or Rogue Pack. more wolves traveling togeth"We only have a collar on er i n winter. one ... but you can assume
f
to board
r
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
REDMOND — Rhonda
Etnire is set to become the newest member of the Red-
mond School Board. Etnire, 43, was chosen
By either definition, OR-7,
by the school board late
that they are together," said hismate and their pups are a Michelle Dennehy, spokes- pack — the Rogue Pack. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife/Submitted photo "It's a good name," Dennehy The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife announced that it and woman for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. s aid. "It's very Oregon." the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had designated OR-7, above, as The wildlife management See Rogue Pack/B2 part of the Rogue Pack, along with his mate and their pups.
rrai nment in anima ne ectcase • 2 Bend women appeared Wednesday in court in the caseof 36 dogskept in squalor
Ol'g.
school from Faith Christian
School in Valley, Washington, north of Spokane, and attended but did not grad-
uate from Lower Columbia College in Longview, W ashington. Shestarted working in retail and quickly advanced at stops in the
Eugene area, Brookings and Medford before moving to Redmond in June 2006.
See School board /B5
--; -j~
7.'
• Psychic fraud: A woman whohelpedher mother con atimber heir out of millions pleads guilty,B3
- - t, )
n s r
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
More than 30 dogs were found in late November living in tight quarters and in their own waste in this kennel east of Bend, according to a
Forest landowners could see fee hikes
news release from the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Two women were indicted in the case on 36 counts of animal neglect.
By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
A costly fire season,
Two women accused of second-degree felony neglect of 36 dogs at ahome east of Bend appeared Wednesday in De-
which started with the Two Bulls Fire in Deschutes Coats
Hende r s on
schutes County Circuit Court.
Goldie Coats, 55, of Bend, and Sonya Henderson, 71, of
found 30 dogs and 5puppies at the house Nov. 24, living in tight quarters and intheir own
Tacoma, Washington, were in-
torney MaryAnderson, who is prosecutingthe two cases,
STATE NEWS
/ f i Lm .') s" •r
Housing Works will open the waiting list for its Housing Choice Voucher program at noon on Monday. The program, formerly known as Section 8, is open to low-income residents of Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties. Applicants should apply online at Housing Works' website, www. oregonhousingworks. org. Technical assistance is available from Housing Works for those needing help with the online form. Those who were on the 2014 wait list need to reapply for the 2015
— Bulletin staff reports
mond School District. "And
represent them as well. Etnire graduated high
dicted on 36charges of animal neglect.
The list will close to applicants at11:59 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 16.
volved with what's going on with your kids," said Etnire, who has three children — an eighth-grader, a sixth-grader and a second-grader — in the Red-
in the district. I'm excited to
Housing waiting list opens Monday
list.
Jan. 28, which ends June 30. "It's important to be in-
as a large employer in the Redmond area, I have a lot of employees who have kids
City offers tips on saving water
The kit and other
in November. The store director for Redmond's Fred theremainderofM unkres' four-year term, starting
and requested provisions for no alcohol and no knives.
resources for tracking and understanding water use are available at www.waterwisetips.
vacated by Ron Munkres Meyer, Etnire will serve out
factor in the incident
As the city of Bend shifts how it charges for water and sewer services, the city is offering to help residents conserve and save on their bills. Beginning this summer, water and sewer rates will be tied more closely to use. To help residents reduce their use and save money, the city is offering free conservation kits that include an EPAWaterSense shower head, faucet aerators, toilet dye tabs and other items. Conservation during the winter is especially important, as the city will base its sewer fees on the average amount of water a residence uses during the winter months.
Wednesday at a special meetingto replace the seat
waste, according to a news release from the sheriff's office. A searchwarrant was executed
Chief Deputy District Attold the court that each woman
will go to the Humane Society of Central Oregon to identify
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
This home east of Bend is where some of the dogs were kept.
the animals and released them
for any evidentiary value,"
terriers and two were bas-
set hounds, accordingto a
animals who may have other
owners. "The defendanthas forfeited
by sheriff's deputies that night. Twenty-four of the dogs seizedfromthe house were brittany spaniels, nine were
"Randy" Miller. mentwasbeingreviewedby Desc h utes Countyfield Deschutes Circuit Judge Walter law enforcement technicians
Anderson said as Coats' indict-
search warrant return written
by Sheriffs Deputy Casey Karpstein. See Neglect/B2
DESCHUTES COUNTY CIRCUITCOURT
Greshampastor indicted on sexabuseallegations By Claire Withycombe
trict Attorney Brigid'Ittrner.
The Bulletin
In all, Worley faces 37 charges, including two counts
A Gresham youth pastor is being held on $1 million bail after being indicted in Deschutes County on Wednesday in connection with allegations
of fi rst-degree rape,20 counts
offirst-degree sexualabuse, ll counts of first-degree
sodomy, one count of attempted sodomy and
and allegedly tookplace while Worley's son was 2 to 4 years old and while his stepdaughter was 6to 8years old. Worley told the court he had an attorney from Portland.
The attorney, Rich Cohen, did not appear Wednesday, that he sexually abused fs ~ f,% 0, t h ree counts of using a although Worley said Cohen his son and stepdaugh~ child i n display of sexu- was aware of the arraignter more than a decade ally explicit conduct. ment. Daniel Yeager of Crabago. Worley Worley was terminat- tree & Rahmsdorff Defense James Worley, 42, ed for misconduct from Services was appointed allegedly abused the children h i s position as a police officer to handle the procedure consistently between 2002 and in Tillamook in 2007 and Wednesday. 2004 while he was director of cur r e ntly works as a youth Deschutes County Circuit recreation at a facility in Sun- p a stor at a church in Gresham. Judge Walter "Randy" Miller river, where he had contact T u r ner said the abuse was set bail at $1 million. If re"repeated" and "continuous" with minors, said Deputy Disleased, Worley must have no
contact with minors, avoid places where minors congregate and wear a GPS monitor. He must also have no contact with the alleged victims or their mother.
Worley has been in county custody since Jan. 6, according to the Deschutes County jail. A bench warrant was issued by the Deschutes County Circuit Court on Dec. 19 after
Worley was indicted Dec. 17, according to the Oregon Judicial Information Network.
Worley is scheduled to enter a plea Jan. 29. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletincom
County, squeezed Oregon Department of Forestry funds and probably will result in increased feesfor forest landowners in the coming fiscal year. George Ponte, the Central Oregon district forester for the department, spoke
with Deschutes County commissioners about the costs Wednesday along with federal forestry officials. "It was a very busy season for the state and the Central Oregon district," Ponte said.
Ponte said the particularly bad fire season is going to have an effect on forest landowners in the district by increasing fire protection assessment fees. In Deschutes County, the cost is $1.62 per acre for timberland and 69 cents per acre of grazing land. Both are considered forestland by the Forestry Department.
Ponte did not say how much the increase would be.
Most of the money to fight large fires is taken from the state's Oregon Forest Land Protection
Fund, although the initial response is part of individual districtbudgets. The Two Bulls Fire started June 7 and burned
nearly 7,000 acres west of Bend. An investigation is still ongoing to find who caused the fire. The total price tag for the fire is about $5.8 million. See Forests /B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
E VENT TODAY LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss "The Art of Racing In The Rain" by Garth Stein; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss "The Art of Racing In The Rain" by Garth Stein; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. THE JUNEBUGS: The Portland pop-folk trio performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
ENDA R subjecttochangebendtogmail.com or 541-543-5383. DEVICEGRIPS: The Portland
"THE LASTWAVE": Showing of the 1977 Australian film about a murder case; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. 1 MAN, 3 BANDSBENEFIT: Featuring live music by Five Pint Mary, The Gentlemen Callers and Subject To Change, a raffle and more to benefit Central Oregon Veterans Outreach; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 7:30 p.m.midnight; Armature, 50 NEScott St., Bend; www.j.mp/1man3bands,
Rogue Pack Continued from B1 Wolf packs are typically designated by the area or wildlife management unit where they are found, accord-
ing to ODFW. After earning fame for a long, multistate trek a couple of years ago, OR-7 now spends much of his time in the Upper Rogue River Basin and Rogue Wildlife Management Unit. Originally born into the Imnaha Pack in Oregon's northeast corner in 2 009,
LINDLEY:The eclectic rock musician performs; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 7-10 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.
funk-hop bandperforms; free; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331.
Bend; www.dojobend.comor
SATURDAY POLAR BEARRUN & EXPO: Fam il yfriendly 5K or10K run or walk; all
agesandlevelsarewelcome;$30
541-548-3785. BEND COMMUNITYCONTRA DANCE:Featuring a live caller and band; $9; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance begins; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 NW Wall St.; www.bendcontradance.org or 541-330-8943. TEASE:BURLESQUEREVUE:The Portland burlesque group performs, featuring Dee DeePepper, Wanda Bonesand more; $8 plusfees in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m.,
doors open at 8p.m.; Volcanic
or 541-323-1881.
SUNDAY "THE WIZARD OFOZ":Seethe classic film on the big screen; $12.50; 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. VICTORIAROBERTSON: The
soprano singerperforms, presented
Cascades between
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20
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KLAMATH COUNTY
ROGSE RIVER NATIONAL
FORE'Sr
JACKSON couNTv
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NATilo AL
for the U.S. Fish and Wild-
He returned to Oregon in March 2013, apparently to
Video turned into the Fish
N ational Forest in a n
Q Chilopuin FREMONT NATtjlIQNJAL F8 RIEST
'I
Medford
RoguePack territory
lamathFall 'I
Ashlan,
and Wildlife Service in late November showed five pairs of tracks together, he said.
stay,and last May research- The video was shot Nov. 22 ers said he appeared to have on the Rogue River-Siskiyou found a mate and established
N ATI eN AL 'F 0 lRlas iT
I
C'R' A'T R+L A KE
thousands of miles wandering through Central Oregon
90 years, OR-7 drew national media attention.
I
f•
Medford.
D uring hi s t r avels, i n life Service. State and federal which he became the first researchers hope to update wolf in Central Oregon in the number later this year as about 70 years and the first part of a statewide survey of wolf in California in nearly wolves.
TUESDAY
CALIFORNIA Source: Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
a r ea
territory in the southern Cas- OR-7 and his pack frequents. eso that's a pretty strong cades between Klamath Falls
pack and affix a new collar pack to be tracked. "OR-7's collar is still workwere unsuccessful, Stephenannounced they had photo- three pups," he said. son said. Researchers plan to ing, but it is old," he said. "It is graphed pups born to OR-7 Efforts this fall to trap OR-7 try again this spring. doing extra duty." and his mate, making them and replacehiscollarorcapKeeping an activecollar on — Reporter: 541-617-7812, the first breeding pair of ture another member of his one of the wolves allows the ddarling@bendbulletitt.com and Medford. In June they indication that they still have
Neglect
three to a single kennel. Dogs Henderson wasn't capable of were kept outside without ade- taking care of the dogs beContinued from B1 quate bedding in below-freez- cause of dementia, but Coats There were two kennels ing temperatures. allowed Henderson to lo o k and an outbuilding outside Deschutes County field law after them anyhow. One of the main house, according to enforcement technicians were the dogs died in August due to the search warrant affidavit. dispatched to the house on a Henderson's poor care, Coats Each ancillary structure had a report of possible animal ne- told a field technician, accordfenced-in dog run. glect the morning of Nov. 24. ing to the affidavit. Conditions were poor: ac- Henderson told a technician The seized dogs were cording to field technicians, she cared for t h e a n imals housed at the Humane SociKarpstein wrote, the dogs whenCoatswas at work. ety of Central Oregon's shellackedaccessto clean, fresh According to the affidavit, ter. Dog number 36, a brittany water, did not have bedding Coats told another technician spaniel, was at a veterinarian and were sometimes crowded on another visit Nov. 27 that appointment when the others
"MATISSE: FROMMOMA AND TATE MODERN":Tour the Henri Matisse exhibit, see interviews and more; $15, $12.50 for children; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. NATURALHISTORYPUB:Marli Miller will present "Oregon Geology, One RoadataTime"discussing the geologic history of Oregon; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org, infotohighdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754.
U.S. SENATE
• Sen. JeflMerkley,D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR 97701
STATE OF OREGON • Gov.JohnKitzhaber, D 160 StateCapitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretaryof State KateBrown, D 136 StateCapitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
••
TheB u lletin
made into clothes; proceeds benefit REALMS Charter School's arts program; $20, $10 for students; 6 p.m. all ages, 8:30 p.m. ages 21 and older; Bend Armory, 875 SW Simpson Ave.; www.rubbishrenewed.com or 541-322-5323.
Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:14 p.m. Dec. 24, in thearea of NWSixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:34 p.m. Dec. 29, in thearea of SE Edgewater Drive andWilson Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11:23 a.m. Jan. 2, in the500 block of NW Franklin Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:15 a.m. Jan. 3, in the1500 block of SE Virginia Road. DUII —ThomasTheodore Taelour, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:10 a.m.Jan. 4, in the 2400 block of NE 27th Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:10 a.m. Jan. 4, in the2400 block of NE 27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:38 p.m. Jan. 4, in the 1100block of NW Newport Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 4:14p.m. Jan.5, in the 20200 block of Ellie Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:52 p.m. Jan. 5, in the 900 block of NW Galveston Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:04 p.m. Jan. 5, in the 600 block of SW Powerhouse Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:19 p.m. Jan. 5, in the 20400 block of Robal Road. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:33
warrant was executed tobring it to the shelter, according to Burns, operations manager at the Humane Society of Central Oregon, said Wednesday all 36 dogs remain at the shelter. Coats is scheduled to enter
PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:01 p.m. Jan. 6, in thearea ofSE Fifth Street.
OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at10:15 a.m. Jan. 5, in the area of U.S.Highway 97near milepost164.
BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 2:42 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 1888 NEWichita Way. 26 —Medical aid calls.
NAIL ART PEDICURE MANICURE Call Gina 541%80-7993
were seized and a separate the Humane Society.Karen
p.m. Jan. 5, in the100 block of NW Minnesota Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 6:44 a.m.Jan. 6, in the1100 block of NWHarmon Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:38 a.m. Jan. 6, in the 200block of NE Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:42a.m. Jan. 5, in the 3000 block of N.U.S.Highway 97. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 2:51 p.m. Jan. 4, in the800 block of SW Industrial Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:23 p.m. Jan. 6, in the1900 block of NE SamsLoop.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT
5 sg,
C om p l e m e n t s
1052 NE 3rd Street Bend,OR
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
a plea Feb. 24. Henderson is
awaiting evaluation, Anderson said, and is scheduled to enter
a plea March 6. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombeI/bendbttfletincom
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Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159OregonState Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney GeneralEllenRosenblum,0 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissioner BradAvakian 800 NEOregonSt., Suite1045 Portland, OR 97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Email: boli.mailtostate.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
featuring repurposedmaterials
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
'
Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sert. Ron Wydert, D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
RUBBISHRENEWED ECO FASHION SHOW:Sustainable fashion show
POLICE LOG
•
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HeedRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-389-4408
LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "RavenStolethe Moon"by Garth Stein; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090.
NEWS OF RECORD
Since returning toOregon inMarch 2013, OR-7set upaterritory between Klamath FallsandMedford. Now, he,his mateandtheir pups are knownas the new RoguePackandare roaming the territory together.
Klamath Falls and
wolves in Oregon's Cascade Range since the mid 1940s. How many pups the pair and into Northern California. currently has with them is Oregon, California and feder- unclear, but last year they al wildlife managers tracked were confirmed to have his movements using a GPS three, said John Stephenson, collar placed around his neck Oregon's wolf coordinator
JAN. 15
Where theRoguePack roams
OR-7 set out as a lone wolf in September 2011 and covered
in February 2011.
students 21 and younger, $125 for families, season subscriptions only; 6:30 p.m.; 2 p.m. SOLDOUT; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. redmondcca.org, redmondccatI hotmail.com or 541-350-7222. "OUR ROOTS— THEBLESSED TREE":Short film made in Palestine by Jesse Roberts about the olive harvest; $10; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin Pan Alley, Bend; www. tinpantheater.com or 541-241-2271. AN EVENINGWITH DAVID
'U~l MP) ItIJrA
in the southern
THE BANNER DAYS:The Americana-folk band performs featuring Bradford Loomis and Beth Whitney; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
McMenamins Old St. Francis School will host a free watch party Monday whenthe Ducks take on the Buckeyes in the College Football Playoff National Championship.
Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, by the Redmond Community Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com Concert Association; $60, $25 for
(OR-7)returned to Oregon in March, apparently to stay, and last May researchers said he appeared to have found a mate and established territory
"THE WIZARD OF OZ": See the classic film on the big screen; $12.50; 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
COLLEGEFOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIPGAMEUNIVERSITYOF OREGON DUCKS VS. OHIO STATEBUCKEYES: Watch the big game on the big screen; kickoff is at 5:30 p.m; free; 4:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
541-706-9091.
for race, registration required; 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m.; St. Thomas Academy, 1720 NW19th St., Redmond; www.
WEDNESDAY
MONDAY
RIPPIN' CHICKEN:The Seattle electro-funk band performs; free; 9 p.m.;Dojo,852 NW BrooksSt.,
redmondacademy.com/polarbearor
FRIDAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvM/.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
STATE SENATE • Sen. TedFemoli,R-District30 (Jefferson, partof Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferriolicostate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp, R-District 27 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopptostate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, part ofDeschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsetttostate.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
au
ero ormer s c ic 0 e a ora e IIl
UI
• Mother RachelLee,whoownedapsychic shop in Bend,will be sentenced next month By Steven Dubois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — A w oman
who wore a blond wig and faked a British accent as part
of an elaborate con that duped an Oregon man of millions of dollars pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Porsha Lee, 25, is expected to get about three years in
prison at her April 15 sentencing. She declined comment after Wednesday's hearing before a federal judge in Portland. Her mother, Rachel Lee,
pleaded guilty in the same case last fall and will be sent enced next month. As t h e
mastermind, she is expected to spend seven to nine years in
prison. According to prosecutors, the scheme began a decade ago when Ralph Raines Jr., the heir to a timber fortune,
During her arrest, authorities found $36,000 in her underwear drawer. Beyond the financial loss,
tional Airport. The two hit it
off and Marks, supposedly a travelingbookkeeper, helped Raines with money matters. Raines Jr. eventually told people he married Marks so she could stay in this country legally.
the "personal and emotional
toll" on Raines has been tremendous, Maddux said. The prosecutor noted that
even today, with the guilty to be Porsha Lee in disguise. pleas, Raines believes he has a Rachel Lee Porsha Lee She not only fooled him into wife named Mary Marks and t hinking there was a m a r - a son. met Rachel Lee at her psychic riage, but she convinced him A l a wyer r e presenting shop in Bend. they had a son named Giorgio. Raines attended the hearing, Raines, now 67, was living Another daughter of Rachel but did not make a statement. with his father on a 1,200-acre Lee allowed her child to play He declined comment outside tree farm west of Portland the role of Giorgio. the courtroom. while the father was in declinActing as Raines' wife, PorPorsha Lee has three chiling health due to a stroke. sha Lee negotiated the sale of dren between the ages of Lee eventually moved in properties totaling millions of 2 months and 5 years. The to become his caregiver. Her dollars, with the money going terms of her plea agreement then-teenage daughter, Por- into bank accounts controlled state that she will spend no sha Lee, joined them. by her mother. less than two years in prison Rachel L e e eve n tually Assistant U .S . A t t o rney and no more than three. U.S. gained control of the family's Donna Maddux said in court District Court Judge Robert E. financial and business affairs Wednesday that Porsha Lee Jones said three years is more and started siphoning money used her portion of the ill-got- likely than two. before the elder Raines died in ten gains to buy expensive There's also the matter of February 2011. clothes in Beverly Hills, stay restitution, a process Jones In 2007, Raines Jr. met a at luxury hotels in Las Vegas predicted would be "elaboBritish woman named Mary and lease vehicles from a Mer- rate and expensive and time Marks at Portland Interna- cedes dealership in Fresno. consuming." Marks, however, turned out
AROUND THE STATE CargO plane emergenCy landing — A Port of Portland spokeswomansaidaBoeing 757 cargoplanemadeanemergency landing Wednesdayevening at Portland International Airport after at least five ducks hit the plane, causing enginedamage. KATU-TVreports that Port spokeswomanKamaSimonds said the plane hadjust taken off about 6:30 p.m. when it hit the birds. Simonds said the crew of two was unhurt and the planelandedsafely. She said at least five northern pintail ducks struck the plane.The plane's operators were not immediately reachable to discuss theextent of the damage. Blli'glei' IlitS Medfei'd IlemeS —Police in Medford are looking for a burglar who hit three homes, netting electronic items anda gun and letting out a pet dogthat was later fatally struck by a car. The crimes were reported late Tuesdayafternoon after homeowners returned from work. Lt. Mike Budreausaid neighbors sawthe man back his vehicle up into driveways of the homes. Items taken included a 9 mm revolver, a cameraand lenses, a laptop computer, a 32-inch television and two video game consoles. At one home, police said the burglar left open adoor, allowing a shiba inudog to get out and behit bya car. POrtland PetheleS —The Portland City Council will let voters decide how to payfor street repairs. Mayor Charlie Hales said Wednesday that voters in Maywill be presented with a list of funding options. The one that gets the most "yes" votes will be scheduled for adoption by the council. Nearly half of Portland's most traveled roads are in poor or very poor condition, and Halesand Transportation Commissioner Steve Novick said the city needsadditional money to repair them. Details of the various plans will be discussed at apublic hearing tonight. Hales said "do nothing" won't be anoption on the ballot.
Trial Set in ROSeblirg Slaying — Atrial has beenscheduled for the manaccused of fatally stabbing andbeating a convenience store clerk in Roseburg last September. TheRoseburg News-Review reported that 27-year-old John JosephFlannigan goes ontrial Jan. 19 on a charge of murder. Hehas pleaded not guilty and faces amandatory minimum sentence of 25years in prison. Police havesaid that Flannigan told them hedidn't know the victim, 38-year-old Lori Lynn Rothrock, but hated her.Theslaying was captured on asurveillance video. — From wire reports
Sea turtle foundhypothermic is improving at aquarium
SOUTHERN OREGON
Wa -un erwei t eart at e romtreeawaitsits ate
The Associated Press NEWPORT — Authorities
say a sea turtle found hypo-
Solstice flapped her flippers
Jim Burke says that
in water last weekend and has warmed up to her ideal
while she happily chomps fish, she
thermic and emaciated last
life officials on Wednesday were deciding the fate of a 14-pound bear — way underweight for its age — that fell from a tree in Southern Ore-
body temperatureof 75 demonth on a southwest Wash- grees. She's also eating welL ington beach is improving at Aquarium official Jim Burke a Newport aquarium. says that while she happily A second cold sea turtle, chomps fish, she spits out the found last Friday on Wash- nutrient-packed gel food supington's Long Beach Pen- plement she's offered. insula, was dead on arrival Burke says putting the
gon: Can it be saved or must it
Monday evening at the Seat-
turtle in a rehabilitation pool
be put to death'? The black bear was found in blackberry bushes Tuesday near Phoenix, south of M edford, aftercallers reported a bear climbing in trees. A state b iologist captured it, and wildlife work-
tle Aquarium. Oregon Coast Aquarium
confirmed one concern: she and he hopes the issue re-
The Associated Press MEDFORD — State wild-
has buoyancy issues that
spits out the nutrient-
packed gel food supplement she's offered. ment for distressed turtles solves itself.
prevent her from diving beThe turtles were found far in Newport said Tuesday that low the water's surface. He from thetemperate waters of the olive ridley turtle named says this is a common ail- their normal winter range. spokeswoman Erin Paxton
'-:C.
ers planned to tr ansport it
to a Department of Fish and Wildlife facility in Corvallis for a n
Injured climber rescued onMount Hood
a s sessment and
decision.
Steve Niemela/Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via TheAssociated Press
The possibilities were rehabilitation for eventual re-
The Associated Press
A 14-pound bear, way underweight for its age, fell from a tree near
Phoenix, Oregon. Oregon wildlife officials are considering the
PORTLAND — The Clack-
lease in a remote area, place- fate of the bear: Can it be rehabilitated, or must it be put to death?
amas County Sheriff's Office said a 62-year-old suburban
ment in a zoo or euthanasia, Among the possibilities are rehabilitation for eventual release, the Medford M ai l T r i bune placement in a zoo oreuthanasia.
Portland man who fell while
reported.
climbing on Mount Hood has been rescued.
Because it's so small, the
bear has a chance for rehab, but the size could be a result of a
Meghan Dugan. in a zoo or similar facility apCubs should weigh 40 to 60 proved by the Association of
h ealth problem, pounds when they den in late
Zoos and Aquariums, or they
said Mark Vargas, an agency fall or early winter, she said. biologist. Based on i nitial obser-
can be sent to a rehabilitation
"It's got to be healthy," he
Sgt. Nathan
T h ompson
said Edward Trompke of Lake Oswego suffered a cramp while taking a break
during his climb Wednesday and rescue team responded and decided to turn around. and called for additional help. While descending, he fell and Paramedics reached the man slid about 200 feet, injuring shortly after noon and dehis shoulder and hitting his termined he could be transhead. The man was climbing ported down the mountain. with his son and they called Portland Mountain Rescue 911 since his injuries left him brought him down. unable to continue down the Thompson said Trompmountain. The sheriff's office search
ke left with his son to get treatment.
centerfor later release, Var-
gas said. Dugan said, but it was too Bears older than 9 months rambunctious for f u r ther can be difficult to handle, he ed at 9 to 12 months. Black examination. said, and those over a year bears in the region typically Under agency policy, bears that find their way to urban are born at the end of Janu- younger than 9 months that areas and b e gi n i n t eractary and weaned in August, are healthy and not habitu- ing with people are usually said agency spokeswoman ated to people can be placed euthanized. vations, the bear is female,
sard. The bear's age is estimat-
Fin It All
n l ine
bendbulletin.com 1j
4
il BiilletinreporterINIrk Morical leadsamultimediadlitz ofadvance aiidgame-day coverage.
t' C
The2015CollegeFootdill Playoff NationalChampionship, presenteddy ATIT, isthenational championshipSameof the 2014college foothall season.TheIlscks will dethereJaii. 12;ourteamwil detoo.
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B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
Ou i e aXeS, IS OI' Oll f you like taxes, Oregon's 2015 Legislature could be a very
W sp
special one for you. No pint or byte may soon go untaxed.
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~~ /flnl
Existing exemptions or deductions may be stripped. And some in the Legislature are pushing for a change to make it easier to raise revenue. City governments could tax local sales of alcoholicbeverages with the passage of a bill based on legislative concept 1036. Cities can't do that now. The proposal would eliminate the prohibition. Warmheartedsouls at the bar could rally behind the slogan: Have another, it's good for Bend. But when you tax something, you get less of it, so we don't imagine that Oregon's brewers and distillers will be so pleased. City governments could also tax Internet access and telephone service under another legislative concept. Of course, many cities do that already in a way through franchise fees for the operators of such businesses. Some cities mustyearn to be more free to tax. There's more oomph in that particular legislative concept — 321. It allows more room for taxing in the future. It restricts future tax prohibitions by the state on local governments. A tax prohibition could last only fouryears. Have you thought food prices were too low? Did you pay too little for a Christmas tree? The Legislature has remedy in store aimed at farmers. It's going to push their costsup. Legislative concept 1674 would
remove some existingtax exemptions for farmproducts and machinery. They would be slated to expire unless they are renewed. What a nice present for Oregon's agricultural industry and consumers.
If you are paying a mortgage, you are getting some attention, too. The Legislature is not going to make it easier for you to pay your mortgage. Legislative concept 903 aims to cap the mortgage interest deduction on state taxes. Article IV Section 25 of the Oregon Constitution requires that threefifths of all members of each house of the Legislature shall be necessary to pass bills for raising revenue. Legislative concept 332 wouldput on the ballot a constitutional amendment to make the requirement a simple majority. There are some tax changes on the table for 2015 that we do like. For instance, Oregon's gas tax is not capturing enough revenue because of changes in vehide fuel efficiency. It needs to be changed. But probably the best thing for the Legislature to do is to vote down every other one of these proposals. With Democratic majorities in both houses and a Democratic governor, though, 2015 could be a great year for those that believe the government that governs best is that which always find newways to tax.
'T e Interview'
oes not re resent America's est
wonder what reaction the United States would have if North with North Korea on containing Korea released a fil m w h ose its production of nuclear materials theme centered on a plot to assassi- and warheads, does "The Internateour currentpresidentby name view,"encourage an environment and face'? of goodwill and mutual underWould we take it i n s t ride as standing? Or will it antagonize a
t
freedom of expression, no matter
see them. It also suggests those interested go back and reread the ballot meastue itself and a list of frequently asked questions that are available on the agency'swebsite. If survey-takers do both, they're more likely to give useful answers to survey questions. All that's great as long as agency officialsviewtheresults withcaution. Online surveys such as the OLCC's and the Bend Park and Recreation District's Mirror Pond one are available to any and all comersOregonians, Texans and folks from Zimbabwe if they so choose. And, good idea. Oregon is abigplace, and while they're available pretty much evenwitha series of publicmeetings anywhere, there's some self-selecting around the state, it will be difficult going on that cannot be accounted forsome who hope to have theirsay for. People with limited Internet acto get to one of the public sessions. cess,for example, the poor and,perThe online survey will provide that haps, the elderly, are unlikely to be opportunity. It also may uncover fairly represented. An online survey some valid concerns OLCC staffers such as the OLCC's, then, is unlikely might not otherwise think of. to represent all Oregonians fairly. The OLCC has done a good job of Knowing all that, we hope the presenting the survey to the public, OLCC gives the survey results the meanwhile. The first page reminds proper weight.Good idea generawould-be respondents that their an- tor, yes; valid representation of Orswers will become part of the public egonians'concerns on the subject? record, available to all who wish to Maybe not so much.
leader known for impulsive punishment for even the most minor offense'?
how crude or unrealistic?
In an era of interconnectivity and high technology, did the U.S.
Since American culture permeates, even dominates, so many corners of the globe, can't we support a more peaceful world by exporting the best, not
worst, of who we are? It dren if they produced a video of just takes the insensitivity How would we advise our chil-
really expect the film "The Inter-
Another online survey? he latest public agency to get into the online survey business is the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. The commission will write rules to govern marijuana sales inthis state, and it wants to know what Oregonians think about the issue. That's good, so long as the agency keeps the problems associated with such surveys in mind when consideringthe results. A link to the survey can be found at marijuana.oregon.gov. It's available until Jan. 12. The survey is, in its own way, a
IN MY VIEW
By Mary Ellen Coulter
view," admittedly a silly comedy, how to harm a fellow classmate, of a few to create a which vividly depicts the killing or if another child made a similar reputation for being of North Korea's leader, Kim Jong video threatening to injure them'? Un, to go unanswered? Would we say, "It's just a joke, don't intolerant or disrespectful. Do the makers of the movie ap- take it personally." preciate that the citizens of North The comparison, though of a Korea do not view their leader smaller scale, might translate to embassy and murder of our amas do those of us in the Western how they view similar situations bassadorand several emissaries. world'? According to a recent inon a larger level. T he film i s t h o ught t o h a v e t erview with novelist Suki K i m , Since American culture perme- played a contributing role, as milauthor of "Without You, There Is ates, even dominates, so many cor- lions of Muslims worldwide were No Us," the great leader in North ners of the globe, can't we support offended. Korea is the basis for their entire a more peaceful world by exportAmericansare often accused of existence. ing the best, not worst, of who we having too little awareness of other Right or wrong, the content of are? It just takes the insensitivity of ways of life and thinking. Examthe movie would be extremely dis- a few to create a reputation for be- plesabound from our presence in turbing to the majority of its pop- ing intolerant or disrespectful. Iraq and Afghanistan. Could we ulation, and they have no context Might we, as a nation, follow not prevent many conflicts with with which to understand its come- the lead of the new Catholic Pope dic intent. Francis in extending kindness and L est we t h in k t h er e i s l i t t l e compassion rather than ridicule. chance of a North Korean viewing Too often, a lack of cultural unthe film, a group of activists from derstanding has led to major con-
South Korea are planning to drop flicts with other countries. Lessons by balloon more than 100,000 cop- could have been learned from the ies of "The Interview" in March. international outrage generated by The world is truly flat, especially the Internet video released depictwith respect to entertainment. ing Muhammad (depicting his imAssuming the U.S. intends to age is a violation of that religion), resume and continue negotiations before the storming of the Libyan
better knowledge of and interest in
others? This letter is not meant to deny
our right to freedom of speech or expression but rather to present an alternative point of view: That if we
truly aspire to be a great nation and to promote peaceful coexistence and communication, we might re-
consider how we project ourselves on the world stage. — Mary Ellen Coulter lives in Bend.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
The problem with searching for a life with meaning
N
ot long ago, a friend sent me a speech that the great civic leader John Gardner gave to
the Stanford Alumni Association 61
years after he graduated from that college. The speech is chock-full of practical wisdom. I especially liked this passage: "The things you learn in maturity aren't simple things such as acquiring information and skills. You learn not to engage in self-destructive behavior. You learn not to burn up energy in anxiety. You discover how to manage your tensions. You learn that self-pity and resentment are among the most
toxic of drugs. You find that the world loves talent but pays off on character. "You come to understand that most
people are neither for you nor against you; they are thinking about themselves. You learn that no matter how
hard you try to please, some people in this world are not going to love you, a lesson that is at first troubling and
then really quite relaxing." Gardner goes on in this wise way.
DAVID
BROOKS And then, at the end, he goes into a peroration about leading a meaningful life. "Meaning is something you build into your life. You build it out of your own past, out of your affections
and loyalties, out of the experience of humankind as it is passed on to you.
should be about more than material success. The person leading a meaningful life has found some way of serving others that leads to a feeling of significance. Second, a meaningful life is more satisfying than a merely happy life. Happiness is about enjoying the present; meaning is about dedicating oneself to the future. Happiness is about receiving; meaningfulness is about giving. Happiness is about upbeat moods andniceexperiences.People leading meaningful lives experience adeepersense ofsatisfaction. In this way, meaning is an uplifting
la or Albert Schweitzer or Abraham Lincoln — it w asn't because they
ible. Because it is built solely on emotion, it's subjective and relativistic.
wanted to bathe luxuriously in their own sense of meaningfulness. They
You get meaning one way. Igetmeaning another way. Who is any of us to had objective and eternally true stan- judge another's emotion'? dards of justice and injustice. They Because it's based solely on senwere indignant when those eternal timent, it is useless. There are no standards were violated. They sub-
criteria to determine what kind of
scribed to moral systems — whether secular or religious — that recommended specific ways of being, and had specific structures of what is right and wrong, and had specific disciplines about how you might get
meaningfulness is higher. There's no practical manual that would help
guide each of us as we move from shallowerforms ofserviceto deeper ones.There isno hierarchy ofvalues
that would help us select, from among all the things we might do, that activiMeaningfulness tries to replace ty which is highest and best to do. tern that will be your life." state of consciousness. It's what you structures, standards and disciplines The philosophy of meaningfulness Gardner puts "meaning" at the apo- feel when you're serving things be- with self-regarding emotion. The ul- emerges in a culture in which there gee of human existence. His speech yond self. timate authority of meaningful is the is no common moral vocabulary or reminded me how often we've heard Yet it has to be said, as commonly warm tingling we get when we feel framework. Real moral systems are that word over the past decades. It is used today, the word is flabby and significant and meaningful. Mean- based on a balance of intellectual one of the few phrases acceptable in vacuous, the product of a culture that ingfulness tries to replace moral sys- rigor and aroused moral sentiments. modernparlance to describe afunda- has grown inarticulate about inner tems with the emotional corona that Meaningfulness is pure and self-rementally spiritual need. life. surrounds acts of charity. garding feeling, the NutraSweet of It's a paltry substitute. Because the inner life. Yet what do we mean when we use Let me put it this way: If we look at the word meaning? the people in history who achieved meaningfulness is built solely on an — David Brooksis a columnist The first thing we mean is that life great things — like Nelson Mande- emotion, it is contentless and irreducfor The New York Times. ... You are the only one who can put them together into that unique pat-
better over time.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
School board
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 "I grew up in retail," said Etnire, who has been with
B5
"Rhonda's very involved in the
communityand has a loyal following. We're
Fred Meyer the past 16 years.
very excited to have herjoin the board." and worked my way up. I've " I started when I w a s 2 0
Harold 'Jim' St. Clair Funk Dec. 10, 1927- Dec. 7, 2014
Jan Lewis Ward, of Bend
H arold 'Jim ' S . F un k o f B end, Or e g o n , p as s e d a way at hi s h ome on D e cember 7, 2014. He was 86 years old. Jim w a s b o r n in San Jose, Calif ornia, t o H arold T . and his wife, Harriet E. (St.
April16, 1938- Jan. 4,2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Services: A private family celebration of his life will be held at a later date.
Funk. He enlisted in II t he N a v y 'Jim' Funk towards t he end of W W I I an d w a s honorably d i scharged. He married his w i fe , Patricia J. Funk, on April 28, 1953. J im w o r k e d a s a fi r e f ighter for th e city o f S a n Jose for years and retired as a Captain before movi ng t o B e n d , O r e gon, i n 1979. Jim had many interests in life i n c l u din g a u t o an d motorcycle mechanics, dirt bike riding, camping, car-
Oct. 26, 1928 - Jan. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made
Clair)
pentry, photography, land-
scaping, sn ow m o b i l i n g, and traveling with his wife Pat in their RV. J im i s s u r v i ved b y h i s t wo dau g h t ers , Cl o v e r L ynn Th eall an d C y n t h i a J une Gregory, as w el l a s t hree g r a n dchildren a n d three great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents and his wife of 60 years, Pat Funk. In lieu of f l ow ers, please m ake donations i n J i m ' s m emory t o St . Ch a r l e s Home H e a l t h Ser v i c es, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, OR 97701, ww w .foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org Baird Funeral Home of Bend was honored to serve the f a m i ly . 5 4 1 -382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Jerry Leon Page Jae. 27, 1936- Jae. 1, 2015 Jerry L e o n Page o f L a Pine, passed away o n J anuary 1 , 2 0 1 5 , a f e w days shy of his 79th birth-
day.
A p r i v at e f a m i l y ce r e mony w il l b e h e l d a t a later date. J erry w a s b orn on January 27, 1 9 3 6, t o Roy & Bessie
(Berry) P age i n L os
Jerry Page
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
DEATH NOTICES
An-
geles,
Califor-
nia. He was a graduate of the Class of 1955, at Pomona High School in Pomona, California . He t h en p roudly served hi s c o u n try for nearly four years in the U.S. Navy, aboard the USS Kearsarge. During his s ervice, Je r r y mar r i e d E dith L o u i s e D i t t l e r o n July 5 , 1 9 58, i n C o l o n i a, N ew J e rsey. T h e y w e r e blessed with two sons. Jerry worked as an elect rician fo r 3 0 y e a r s w i t h I .B.E.W. Local 1 1 i n L o s Angeles, California. Jerry and Edith lived in Pomona, C alifornia, u nt il 197 1 . Then moved to L a V e r n e, California, w h e r e th ey stayed until J erry r e t i red. Finally, t h e y mo v e d t o La Pine, Oregon in 1991. H e wa s a n a v i d g o l f e r
Harry "Bud" C. England, of Bend
to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org, Mt. Hood Historical Museum, 88900 Government Camp Loop, Government Camp, OR 97028, www.mthoodmuseum.org
Deaths of note from around the world:
James M. Hester, 90: New York University's 11th and
institution with national ac-
youngest president, at 38 in
ademic stature. Died Dec. 31
1962, who steered the school
at his home in Princeton, New
through campus unrest in the 1960s and helped chart its
Jersey.
Online bendbulletin.com
— From wire reports
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com
Bend, OR 97708
Fax: 541-322-7254
walks of life, and all levels of income.... I think that experience will be helpfuL" "When you're doing this, derstanding, relevant expeyou try to identify who is go- rience and level of commiting to be a dynamic leader ment were all rated by the on the board and what the current board. board needs," added board John Meyer, a financial Chairman A .J . L o soya. adviser at Edward Jones, "Rhonda's very involved in and Johnny Corbin, a retired the community and has a vocational teacher, also aployal following. We're very plied for the position. "We've had to do this sevexcited to have her join the board." Etnire identified the prob-
eral times the last couple of
rated 1-5 on a series of crite-
see if it's something that I'm
years, and it's never easy," lem of bullying in schools as Losoya said about critiquing one of her top issues. the strengths and weakness"I'd like to see more pre- es of each candidate with vention and true reaction," them in the room. "If anyshe said about a topic that thing, it just gets harder." has affected her own family. Etnire's weighted average Four community members on the five points of imporapplied for the vacant school tance was 4.24 points and board position, though Etni- Carpenter's was 4.19. Neither re andformer board member Meyer nor Corbin received Tim Carpenter were the two averages above 3. Etnire's favorites based on the rating appointment will be a trial of system of Losoya and fellow sorts as her position will be board members Bob Per- up for election this spring. "I'll get in there and see ry, Shane Nelson and Rick Bailey. how it goes," Etnire said, unC andidates, wh o w e r e sure whether she would run e ach interviewed for 5 0 for the school board when minutes Wednesday, were her term ends in June. "We'll ria, with 5 being the highest led to do." score. Applicants' interest in — Reporter: 541-383-0305, serving, skill sets, level of unbeastes@bendbulletin.com
The Washington Post
/
Martin Anderson, a conservative and libertarian-leaning
II
intellectual who was a key adviser to Republican presidents
I
and was credited with provid-
ing many of the ideas and arguments that created America's all-volunteer m i l itary,
died Saturday at his home in Portola Valley, California. He
state in 2014. After deduct-
Stanford University, where Anderson had been a senior Submitted photo / Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum
cause.
Martin Anderson, left, the first domestic policy adviser to PresDuring th e p r esidential ident Ronald Reagan, meets with Reagan in the Oval Office in campaign years of 1967 and Washington in 1981. 1968, A n derson p r o v ided e nd the military d r aft a n d
idential Foundation and, from on said that a system that 1993 to 1998, served on the seemed arbitrary in its selec-
replace it with the volunteer
California Governor's Coun-
force that in recent genera-
cil of Economic Advisers. Besides supplying advice to other Republican aspirants
becoming known as a mem-
and administrations, Ander-
In his book "America in scribed Anderson as having been enlisted from the ac-
came a symbol of resistance
to the government's policy. Those who opposed the draft most vigorously were often considered to h ave liberal or l e ftist p olitical
and later a special consultant
But in 1967, Nixon named Anderson, then on the busi-
to the president. After being Reagan's chief adviser on do- ness faculty at Columbia Unimestic policy, he served as versity in New York, to be his a member of the president's r esearch director. In A p r i l Economic Policy Advisory of that year, according to "I Board from 1982 to 1989.
Want You!: The Evolution of
From 1987 through 1993, the All-Volunteer Force," Anduring the later Reagan years derson sent Nixon a memo and throughout the succeed- arguing for th e v olunteer ing administration of Presi- military. dent George H.W. Bush, AnA more thorough discusderson saton the president's sion followed a few months General Advisory Committee later, according to the book's on Arms Control. authors, Bernard Rostker and In addition, he was a trust-
ee of the Ronald Reagan Pres-
K.C. Yeh.
In the 1968 campaign, Nix-
whether the department will Ponte said the process have another policy issued is "quite a workload," but for the next fiscal year by a program "that benefits the same insurance compa- both the state and local ny. He said the deductible
could change if it is offered, but the department will like-
communities." — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
"cannot be squared with our whole concept of liberty, jus-
C an)i ee ~ y e r
tice and equality under the
Candice Christine (Kandra) Hayespeacefully joined her momand dad, Jerri and Carol Kandta in heaven onDec.30, 20I4 in Portland, OR
law."
In a letter written while still at th e H o over I n stitution, a candidate, Reagan said that the think tank on the Stan- except in times of the most ford campus that has been severe national emergency, an incubator of conservative a draft or draft registration
thought and scholarship. who set the ideological tone One of the acts for which for Reagan's administration Anderson is best known, the in the 1980s. abolition of the draft, was perOne of t h e p i oneering haps his boldest argument. chroniclers of American pol- During the Vietnam War in itics, Theodore White, noted the 1960s, opponents of the Anderson's prominent posi- conflict focused much of their tion in Washington's highest attention on the draft. The councils, those places "where burning of draft cards beSearch of Itself," White de-
A ss i stance
tion of some but not others
son was a longtime fellow
ber of the close circle of aides
ideas intersect with actions."
Management
Ponte said it i s u n clear other documentation.
fellow since 1971, announced his death but did not cite a
to President Ronald Reagan,
"It will be an interesting
ibles and an insurance pol- Program,requires copies of icy, the cost was reduced to time sheets, shift tickets for $28.5 million. individual firefighters and
was 78. The Hoover Institution at
tions has been the basis of American defense and the underpinning of American foreign policy. Anderson also was the first domestic policy adviser
ly still take it.
Continued from B1 next couple months," said A success during the fire, Ponte. Ponte said, was the formaThe total state cost for fire tion of a joint information season is further reduced center among federal, state by the Federal Emergency and local agencies. Management Agency, which "Any type of similar inci- will refund 75 percent of the dent in the future we're go- remaining cost. ing to look real hard at doing The Central Oregon dissomething like that (again)," trict and other districts are Ponte said. undergoing an audit, howevThe Department of Forer, by the federal agency in estry spent about $75 million order to receive the refund. fighting fires throughout the The audit, under the Fire
By Martin Weil
Q uail ademic world to become in Run Golf Course for 22 time "Reagan's Seeing Eye inclinations. It was true, as some historiyears. H e w a s al s o an dog ... a one-man warehouse a mateur a r t i st , c r e a t i n g of facts ... guiding Reagan ans have noted, that conscripm etal a n d w o o d sc u l p - to that growing minority re- tion was never part of the natures. volting against the dominant tion's traditions or principles. Survivors i nc l u d e h i s liberal ideas that reigned on Nevertheless, m a i n t aining wife, Edith of La Pine; two American campuses." the draft seemed to m any s ons, Dennis o f L a P i n e , A bespectacled man with to be a requisite for providOregon a nd Ste v e o f W ickham, W e s tern A u s - a skeptical glance who swam i ng the president with t h e against prevailing currents power to protect the nation's tralia; four g r a ndchildren, of academic opinion, Ander- interests. Sean, Hayley, Rachel, and Kevin; a n d t wo si s t e r s, son over the years held many Thus, to many unfamiliar Dorothy "D olly" D i t t ler of titles in Washington that sug- with the full range of debate B end, O r egon a n d R u t h gested his proximity to power on the subject, it seemed surNichols of A p t os, Califorbut did not always reveal the prising for a c onservative n ia. H e i s p r e c e ded i n candidate or his advisers to death by h i s p a r ents an d influence he wielded. In the Nixon White House urge abandoning a system both his brothers, Eldred & from 1969 to 1970, he was spe- that appeared to be part of the Wayne. cial assistant to the president bedrock of the nation. Contributions in honor of
Find It All
evolution from a commuter school on the brink of bankruptcy to a highly selective
Republican presidential adviser Forests helped end themilitary draft
GOP candidate Richard Nixon with proposals that helped
— Board Chairman A.J. Loeoya
different communities, all
FEATURED OBITUARY
and a member of
Jerry can be made to Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 N E W y att C t , B e n d , O R 97701, www.partnersbend.org. Baird M e m o r ia l C h a p el i n La P in e i s h o n ored t o serve Mr. Page's family.
worked with people from all
"destroys the very values our society is committed to defending." "I Want You!" describes those words as most likely written by Anderson.
Martin Carl Anderson was born Aug. 5, 1936, in the Lowell, Massachusetts, area on
the dairy farm operated by his father. After his parents divorced, he and his mother, a nurse, left to live with his
grandparents. He was taught to read by
his grandfather, a f oundry worker, who used comic books to ignite his grandson's intellectual curiosity. An accomplished athlete
and student in high school, he won a full scholarship to Dartmouth College in N ew
Hampshire. He obtained an undergraduate degree in 1957 and studied business admin-
istration and engineering for a master'sdegree at Dartmouth in 1958.
After Army service, he earned a doctorate in industrial management from the M assachusetts In stitute o f
Technology in 1962 and then joined the faculty at Colum-
bia. While there, he published "The Federal B u l ldozer" (1964), a critical study of federal urban renewal policy. Belief in the benefits of such policy was an article of faith among many inthe academic world.
Vigorous debate prompted by his book helped raise his public profile, and his leanings and capacities brought him to Nixon's attention. In 1965, he married Annelise G r a ebner. B e s ides
his wife, survivors include a half-brother.
Candice wasborn in Medford, OR onSept. 23, 194i'. Shehadcountless fond memories growing up on ranches in Alturas, CA and Merrill, OR with het parents, andmany aunts, unclesand cousins,and her little brother, Curtis Kandra. Candice graduated from Merrill High School in l965 and attendedboth Oregon Institute of Technology andOregonState University. Shewas briefly married andhadherprecious daughter, Kimberly Kandra (Hayes) Myers, in l967. She beganher banking careerwith First National Bank in Merrill. Het career tookher to Philomath, Bend, Prineville, Redmond, Salem,Klamath Falls, Portland, CottageGrove, EugeneandJunction City. One of het many accomplishments wasthe ability to goto a "problem" branch, quickly determine theissuesandsuccessfully resolvethem. After 34 years, she retired as branchmanagerand assistant vice president with Wells Fargo dueto her diagnosis of multiplesclerosisand congestive heart failure. While hetcareerwassuccessful and shemadelong-lasting friendships with herco-workers,shewas also a generous philanthropist. Candice often visited nursinghomes,taking cookiesandspending her time visiting the residents. Shewas aBig Sister and spent manyweekends taking little girls shopping,to the movies andteaching them to read. Shewas often a secretSanta delivering food and gifts to families thatwere lessfortunate. Giving backto her community was an important lessonshe passeddown to her family. Though her accomplishmentswere important to her, she would much rather be rememberedas amother andgrandmother. Shewas known as "GrandmaBook" due to her love of readingandgifting books toher friends and family. Shewas anintelligent, fun and loving woman who was always up for anadventure aslong as it involved her family. Many happy timeswere spent camping, fishing, rafting, playing cardsand board and video games,watching movies, having parties, attending concerts, dancing in the kitchen, goingto Disneyland, and mostespecialy, spoiling her well-loved grandsons, ChristopherScott Conner Myersand Nathan TaylorMyers. Candice wasthe heart of het family and will be deeply missed byher daughter, son-in-law, andgrandsons - Kimberly, Steven, Christopher and Nathan Myers of Battle Ground, WA; brother, sister-in-law andniecesCurtis, Trina, Ellie andDelaneyKandra of Portland, OR;aunt Marcia Conner of Burlington, WA; aunt Joanne"Aunt Chuckie" Snapp of Grass Valley, CA;cousins from the Kandra, Conner, Lemieuxand Bittle families; and lifelong friends, SandyandRogerMcJunkin of Bend, OR;and the St. Clair Family of Philomath, OR. A funeralservicewill be held at I I:00 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 9, in O'Hair Funeral Chapel. She will be laid to rest at Merrill I.O.O.F. Cemetery. Please sign the online guestbook at tuww.heraldandttews.comlobituaries
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
i
I
i
'
I
TODAY
iI
TONIGHT
HIGH 44'
LOW 29'
Partly sunny
I f ' I
FRIDAY "'" 45'
SATURDAY "'" 45'
SUNDAY "'" 40'
28'
28'
29'
Mostly cloudy
Partly cloudy
ALMANAC
Mostly cloudy
TEMPERATURE
EAST: There will be a mixofcloudsandsun Seasid today with patchy low 55/Rq clouds and fogearly Cannon on in the east. 55/44
/4
•
•
•
•
•
•
r
Q
•
UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
-": .*.~o~:
*
OHE 5G at Wiuamette Pass:Noweatherrelated travel delaystodaywith sunshine and patchy cloudsandmild temperatures. OHE13Bat DiamondLuke:Noweather-related travel problems as it will be drywith sun.
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 1 49-4 9 0 16-1 5 Hoodoo SkiArea Mt. Ashland 0 15-2 S 0 45-7 4 Mt. Bachelor Mt. Hood Meadows 3 35-55 0 18-2 5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl Timberline Lodge 0 28-4 6 Wigamette Pass:est. opening Jan. 3 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 30-49 Vail, CO 0 40-4 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 30-48 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-4 2 ParkCityMountain,UT 0 28-43 Sun Valley, ID 0 45-7 3 Source: OnTheSnow.com
48 contiguousstates) National high:GT at Fillmore, CA National low: -SS' at Poplar, MT Precipitation: 0.11" at Latrobe, PA
49/37
**
*
* *+
*
Bismarck
udlings
Port 1 2
ronto
*
* **
Hi/Lo/W 32/21/sn 16/-4/sf 27/9/sf 39/26/c 34/26/c 40/21/pc 40/18/pc 37/29/i 36/11/pc 15/12/s 38/18/pc 6/-13/s 38/29/pc 34/17/sf 34/16/sf 20/7/sf 25/7/sf 18/1/sf 49/29/pc 43/19/pc 35/16/pc 28/20/pc 3/-8/pc 17/0/pc 17/-1/sf 31/19/sn 15/6/s 45/23/pc 45/24/pc 15/-5/c 27/8/sf 46/34/r 35/23/c 12/-7/pc 29/17/sn 6/-6/s 16/0/sf 0/-11/pc 43/28/c 14/2/pc 5/-9/pc 48/24/pc 12/4/sf 1/-7/c 40/17/pc 30/8/sf 30/11/sf 25/17/pc 79/65/s 40/33/r 33/16/pc 8/-7/pc 41/23/pc 53/32/s
slifsx 2/6
Periods of cloudsand sunshine
0
•
47/42/r 43/33/pc 75/61/pc 56/37/s 87/75/r 45/22/s 50/41/sh 43/37/r 69/45/pc 29/26/c 85/70/t 83/60/pc 54/47/sh 9/-6/sn 79/68/pc 45/43/c 43/39/sh 44/35/r 81/59/c 67/56/s 33/28/sn 42/34/sh 79/61/pc 79/68/pc 57/41/s 51/43/pc 54/29/s 85/70/s
52/48/r 49/38/s 75/61/pc 51/33/c 87/75S/s 46/24/s 47/38/sh 45/40/r 68/46/c 44/37/c 87/71/t 79/54/pc 56/43/pc 23/10/s 79/71/pc 58/42/r 51/42/r 47/44/r 83/58/pc 66/57/s 38/36/pc 37/27/sn 82/59/t 79/68/pc 60/40/s 58/52/sh 58/29/s 82/69/r
Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 31/26/0.99 32/28/c 18/3/0.02 27/5/s 10/5/Tr 9/7/sn 73/46/0.00 66/41/pc 17/16/Tr 21/17/pc 8/2/Tr 32/4/s
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, lM Memphis Miami
37/32/0.00 30/24/s 85/53/0.00 75/55/pc
19/15/Tr -1/-5/Tr
21/16/pc 12/-5/sn
33/19/0.00 28/23/s 81/70/0.00 71/64/sh
1/-2/Tr 12/0/sn -1/-9/0.00 15/-6/sn
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA
26/25/Tr 57/42/0.00 23/19/0.00 25/13/Tr 40/32/0.00 26/24/0.00 9/-1/0.00 68/49/0.00 84/50/0.00 3/1/0.01
OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando
Palm Spdings Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
24/21/s 40/32/s
21/19/s 22/16/s 26/20/pc 35/21/s
30/2/s 60/48/sh 75/51/pc
18/0/pc 24/16/Tr 22/17/s 81/47/0.00 71/49/pc 14/10/0.02 14/11/pc 25/4/Tr 15/12/s Providence 25/11/Tr 19/15/s Raleigh 39/26/0.00 27/20/s Rapid City 19/-4/Tr 33/-7/sn Reno 57/26/0.00 58/30/pc Richmond 36/27/0.00 27/20/s Rochester, NY 17/3/0.02 20/16/sf Sacramento 67/34/0.00 63/42/pc St. Louis 12/9/0.03 27/12/pc Salt Lake City 48/27/0.00 44/28/s San Antonio 55/44/0.00 44/35/pc San Diego 78/50/0.00 72/54/pc San Francisco 60/45/0.00 63/48/pc San Jose 69/37/0.00 67/45/pc Santa re 45/25/0.00 48/23/s Savannah 59/38/0.00 40/26/s Seattle 46/43/0.00 50/39/pc -2/-9/Tr Sioux Fags 18/-8/sf Spokane 34/31/0.00 36/21/pc Springfield, Mo 17/15/Tr 28/12/s Tampa 67/51/0.00 57/47/s Tucson 79/43/0.00 66/48/pc Tulsa 30/17/0.00 33/18/s Washington,Dc 30/20/Tr 24/21/s Wichita 18/13/Tr 33/12/s Yakima 48/25/0.00 45/28/pc Yuma 77/50/0.00 73/53/pc i
Amsterdam Athens
45/36/0.24 epl lleepel * * * 1 Boston 41/32/0.12 * * 3/-7 15/ * * ** /17 * * * ufrslo Auckland 70/64/0.02 w York Baghdad 63/46/0.04 1/18 Bangkok 93/74/0.06 Sal iiy lladelphis Beijing 37/23/0.00 8 •' 1Col mb eyenn Des M nes C ceg 2/17 Beirut 54/47/2.03 h e hclvco me 1 9 Berlin 42/31/0.04 53/48 ington us lle 2 LasV ss Denve Bogota 68/39/0.00 21ne 56/4 44/12 KansasC tty St. u i Budapest 21/9/0.10 27/5 27/1 BuenosAires 86/66/0.00 6 Cherlo Los An les 79/64/0.04 Cabo San Lucas 45/28 Nash 8 • • L' Cairo 52/48/0.10 Phoen Anchoregii klehoma Ci • At Calgary 43/5/0.10 • 71/49 3 24 30/2 II 0 3 31/22 Cancun 8290/0.14 Bir inghe 7 54 • usga Juneau ul pa Dublin 54/41/0.32 30/ 0 37/2 0/3 Edinburgh 52/38/0.47 xKx x x x 32/28 Geneva 41/23/0.00 00 • rlendo Harare 80/63/0.00 Q w Orleans 1/35 6 48 Hong Kong 68/61/0.02 Honolulu Chihuehue 40/32 Istanbul 28/27/0.19 .I 78/da 59/32 Miemi nt y Jerusalem 41/37/0.66 7 1/y- ' Z Johannesburg 77/58/0.24 Lima 79/68/0.00 Lisbon 41/37/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 50/34/0.40 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 52/25/0.00 Manila 85/73/0.00 uois • 38/29
43' 26'
~
Yesterday Today Friday
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 34/28/0.00 42/25/pc /31 High 57 40 57' in 2 0 15 lington 42/29 Portland 44 Akron 12/10/0.05 13/10/pc Meac am Losti ne Low 32' 24' -17'in 1937 / Albany 21/8/Tr 19/12/pc 40/2 • W co 3 /se 42/25 EnterPrise • • dl e t On • he Daa • 43/23 Albuquerque 53/32/0.00 46/28/pc Tigamo • PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:It will be on 56/4O andy • Anchorage 17/8/0.00 30/27/pc 46/33 Mc innve • 5 JosePh Aganfa 40/28/0.00 31/22/s 8/36 Gove • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" the mild side for many nt • upi Condoli 9/28 45 26 Atlantic City 28/17/0.00 23/1 9/s Cam • 4D Record 0.95" in 191 2 locations today with Lincoln union 25 Austin 51/39/0.00 42/32/pc 43/ Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.40") a mix of cloudsand Sale 57/44 Baltimore 24/14/Tr 21/1 4/s • pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.00 " (0.40") sunshine. 49/3 • /31 Billings 16/8/0.06 26/-5/sn 'Baker G ltiewpo 43/24 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 27" Birmingham 38/30/0.00 30/20/s /36 • 26 58/44 • Mitch H 39/24 Bismarck 3/-12/0.00 17/-7/sn C a m P S h m a u R e d WEST:Patchy morning 44/28 I\ OrV R IS SUN ANDMOON Boise 41/24/0.00 38/29/pc 44/28 • John eu fog, otherwise it will Yach 53/37 Boston 5/Tr 19/17/s • Prineville Day /21 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 26/1 be partly sunnytoday 56/46 25/1 6/Tr 23/19/s 42/28 • Pa lina 48/27 Sunrise 7:40 a.m. 7:39 a.m. 28 Buffalo 13/10/0.03 19/12/sf with a mild afternoon. Floren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers Sunset 4:44 p.m. 4:45 p.m. Valee 56/44 Burlington, VT 19/14/Tr 16/13/pc Su iVere 44/29 Moonrise 8:37 p.m. 9:35 p.m. 39/28 Caribou, ME 8/-2/0.02 -7/-10/pc Nyssa • 47/ 9 Ham ton C e Charleston, SC 58/37/0.00 36/23/s Moonset 9:21 a.m. 9:49 a.m. La Pine 38/27 7 Juntura Grove Oakridge Charlotte 41/29/0.00 29/18/s • Burns 41/25 OREGON EXTREMES Co last New F i r st Full 56/41 /41 Chattanooga 33/31/0.00 28/21/s 59 • FortRock Riley 39/20 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 46/25 Cheyenne 23/1 0/Tr 42/9/sn 41/20 50/29 Chicago 6/-2/0.00 12/1/sn High: 73 Bandon Roseburg • C h nstmas alley Cincinnati 14/1 0/Tr 17/15/pc at Brookings Jordan Vgey J an13 J an20 J a n2 6 Fe b s 59/44 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 57/40 Cleveland 12/10/0.02 13/11/pc Low: 23' 43/26 Marsh Lalie 49/28 ColoradoSprings 40/15/0.01 56/17/pc Tunight's ulty:StephenHawking's birthday at Ontario 49/27 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 13/8/0.01 28/8/s • Paisley 9/ (I 942). a Columbia, SC 48/30/0.00 33/19/s 42/25 • Chiloquin 52/28 Columbus,GA 50/36/0.00 36/22/s Medfo d 5 1 / 25 Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 13/1 0/Tr 15/13/pc 4 58/ 42/23 • Klamath Concord, NH 22/-2/Tr 14/7/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd • Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 66/48/0.00 44/38/c Bro ings 49/30 59/ 59/ 54/30 53/25 47/22 Dallas 39/33/0.00 37/27/s Dayton 10/6/Tr 15/11/pc Denver 25/14/Tr 44/12/c 10 u.m. Hoon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Frlday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 1/-3/Tr 26/-4/pc 1 I~ 2 ~ 1 I 0 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 13/7/0.01 10/7/sn The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm liy Index number, Astoria 57/34/0.00 55/40/pc53/42/c La Grande 50/32/0.00 45/26/pc 41/26/c Portland 51/3 4/0.0049/37/pc 51/37/c -2/-16/Tr 6/-10/sn Duluth the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgon.0-2 Low Baker City 44/34/0.00 39/24/pc 35/24/c L a Pine 60/24/0.00 48/28/pc 46/29/c Prinevige 59/ 37/0.0042/28/pc46/27/ c El Paso 59/31/0.00 50/31/i 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme. Brookings 73/45/0.00 59/44/pc 56/44/c M e dford 54/3 2 /0.00 56/34/pc 56/33/c Redmond 59/ 27/0.0044/26/pc 44/26/ c -13/-28/0.007/2/s Fairbanks Bums 49/24/0.00 39/20/pc 37/19/pc N ewport 63/4 3/0.00 58/44/pc 56/45/c Roseburg 52 / 39/0.00 57/40/pc 56/41/c Fargo 6/-11/0.00 12/-7/sn Eugene 42/38/0.00 52/36/pc53/38/c North Bend 64/41/0.00 59/44/pc 56/44/c Salem 44/40/0.00 49/35/pc52/38/ c Flagstaff 49/23/0.00 51/22/pc Klamath Fags 55/25/0.0054/30/pc 53/27/c Ontario 33/23/0.00 40/28/pc 38/28/c Sisters 57/24/0.00 47/26/pc46/25/ c Grand Rapids 10/5/0.02 10/9/sn ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto Lakeview 57/25/0.00 53/26/pc50/24/pc Pendleton 41/28/0.00 38/27/pc 37/28/c The Dages 4 3 /32/0.00 46/33/pc 45/31/c Green 6ay 0/-4/Tr 8/-4/sn www.bendbugetin.com/webcams Greensboro 36/29/0.00 26/1 9/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-adatCabbageHill: Mild and drytoday with Harrisburg 22/11/Tr 19/14/s no weather-related travel delays. Harfford, CT 25/9/Tr 19/13/s Helena 18/8/0.00 25/0/sn US 20 atSuntiumPass:Travel will be good Honolulu 77/62/0.00 78/65/s today with partly to mostly sunnyskies. ~ g s ~f ee ~ 208 ~3 08 ~4 08 ~ 508 ~ ece ~7 0 8 ~ag s ~9 0 8 ~ 10 0 8 ~ f f Oa Houston ~ 108 ~ g s 62/40/0.00 41/35/pc US 26 atGov'tCamp:Mild anddry todaywith Huntsville 33/31/Tr 26/21/s * *Csfee NATIONAL no weather-related travel problems. Indianapolis 6/2/Tr 14/8/pc Que c * 5 -a/-1 Jackson, MS 45/35/0.00 36/23/s EXTREMES * . * . * . * US 26atOohooo Divide:Sun and drytoday 50/39 t * Jacksonville 65/39/0.00 44/31/sh no weather-related travel problems. YESTERDAY (for the
Yesterday Normal Record
~
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 39/29 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
na
~
Cloudy most of the time
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
MONDAY
5
HiRo/W 36/31/c 14/4/s 13/1/sf 64/41/pc 20/2/s 15/2/s 33/19/pc 71/54/pc 21/5/s 2/-9/pc 32/17/pc 78/61/pc 3/-7/pc 2/-10/pc 27/10/s 47/33/c 33/17/sf 35/14/sf 45/22/pc 30/16/pc 13/2/s 63/44/s 74/50/pc 5/-5/pc 35/14/pc 73/51/pc 19/0/sf 30/11/sn 34/15/sf 42/19/pc 17/5/s 56/28/pc 42/18/pc 23/7/sf 63/41/pc 17/9/s 42/31/pc 41/30/i 69/54/pc 61/47/pc 65/44/pc 38/22/s 51/30/pc 52/43/c 1/-11/s 31/25/c 19/7/s 64/45/s 70/44/pc 25/14/pc 38/15/pc 22/8/pc 42/25/c 74/53/pc
I
Mecca Mexico City
79/68/0.00 67/49/0.00 16/-9/0.00 Montreal Moscow 7/-8/0.00 Nairobi 81/60/0.00 Nassau 84/68/0.01 New Delhi 58/45/0.00 Osaka 44/37/0.06 Oslo 36/32/0.18 Ottawa 1/-2/0.16 Paris 41/32/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 91/77/0.00 Rome 57/41/0.04 Santiago 81/55/0.00 Sao Paulo 91/70/0.54 Sapporo 34/18/0.46 Seoul 28/9/0.00 Shanghai 44/28/0.00 Singapore 81/77/0.17 Stockholm 34/32/0.45 Sydney 82/70/0.00 Taipei 60/59/0.02 Tel Aviv 54/48/1.28 Tokyo 48/41/0.00 Toronto 5/0/0.01 Vancouver 45/39/0.00 Yienna 28/25/0.09 Warsaw 21/7/0.08
82/59/c 63/40/pc 10/9/sn 15/1 3/sn 83/60/pc 78/65/sh 62/43/pc 45/35/pc 50/38/pc 13/9/sn 50/42/r 92/76/s 56/41/pc 88/56/s 88/70/1 37/31/sn 30/18/s 47/33/s 83/75/r 42/30/r 85/71/s 60/54/c 55/45/sh 50/37/pc 16/13/c 47/34/pc 35/33/c 35/32/c
78/58/s 66/44/pc 20/-3/sn 22/1 9/sn 83/59/1 81/67/pc 63/44/pc 44/35/sh 41/36/c 19/-6/sn 56/53/r 93/78/s 58/42/pc 92/57/s 90/70A 36/29/sh 37/21/s 53/36/s 84/76/r 34/22/pc 88/73/s 62/55/pc 50/41/r 48/37/pc 22/4/sf 47/38/c 48/46/pc 39/36/sn
WEST NEWS
A as a's recor -warm year in 2014worries o servers ByMaria L. La Ganga The biggeSt State in AmeriCa,
home tomore ocean coastline than all others combined, has juSt Set anOther reCOrd. This
one, however, is nothing to cheer. For the first time in record-
ed history, temperatures in Anchorage did not drop below zeroonce in an entire calendar year. In comparison, Alaska's largest city had 14 days below zero in the 2013 calendar year and 32 days in 2012. The aver-
age is 29 days. At midnight Dec. 31, An-
chorage closed the book on its warmest year since 1926,
according to th e
"Each lovely flake joins
Warm, forAlaska
Los Angeles Times
N ational
Weather Service. The lowest temperaturerecorded in 2014
was zero degrees Fahrenheit
Temperatures in Anchorage haveset a new record: In 2014, the thermometer never dropped below zero. In 2013, Alaska's largest city had14 days below zero, and there were 32 such days in 2012. Historical temperatures are much lower. Somescientists are concerned that the rising temperatures and lack of snow could endanger animals that rely on snow cover.
create an air-trapping matrix above the ground surface," he
Lowesttemperaturerecordeddyyear
white blanket remains a consistent 27degrees Fahrenheit no
2014: 0 0
0
that fretted: '%Tarm weather, treacherous conditions — is the Iditarod in trouble'?" The Bering Sea saw its warmest sum-
matter the temperature above,"
to survive winter."
-1 5'
Among the species partial to snow are the bearberry shrub, yellow jackets and voles.
-20' -25'
Visit Central Oregon's
-30'
HunterDoullas
-34
'T"I"7" I " 7 " I " ' I " I " 7 " I ' " I " I " f " I " ' f " 1" I" I " ' I " 1" ' I" 1"'I" 7 " I " 7 " I " 7 " I " 7 " I " 7 " I " I" I" r "I"'I"1" I" I " ' f " 1" ' I"1'"I" 7 " I " 1" ' I " 7 " I " T " I " r " I " 7 " I " ' I" ' I" 7 " I "
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
p~g
s t ate's
storied dog race was a musher's mess, spurring headlines
"The ground beneath the
remnants of summer's heat released as the ground freezes, allows billions of small bodies
Sea ice has been disappearing. Polar bear populations have dropped. Th e
wrote.
he continued. "That relative warmth, the
1955
on Feb. 11.
spiked arms with others to
1956: 75
1960 : 1 2
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
Q@zx ( D ~
1977: 15
1990: 51
Numbers efdays belowzero Q s o daysorfewer Q
2010
CRD. 2002: 6 20 0 7: 23
See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
2 014 : 0
21 daysormore
Source: National Weather Service, Maria L. La Ganga, Lorena Iniguez Elebee / Los Angeles Times
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Los Angeles Times
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mer on record. "I didn't put my downhill skis on at all last winter, and at Andrew Hartsig, director of the the moment I'm still hoping for Ocean Conservancy's Arctic this winter, but the prospects program. are not good so far," said HenHartsig said Anchorage's ry HLmtington, Who liVeS in an comparatively balmy weathAnchorage suburb and serves er is c onsistent with o ther long-term trends, induding as seniorofficer for the Pew Charitable Trusts' international diminishing summer sea ice Arctic program. and increasing sea surface The Last Frontier didn't ex- temperatures. "These are definitely red actly sweat through Death Valley-style temperatures. Anchor- flags that are very consistent age's 2014 annual average was with climate change," said a chilly 40.6 degrees or so Fahr- Chris Krenz, senior scientist at enheit, said Richard Thoman, Oceana, an international conclimate science and services servation group. "These are manager with theweather ser- anomalies that show ottr cli-
in the Bering Sea and southern Alaska, followed by six cold years. "This year, then, was the breakdown of the string of cold years," Overland said. "What all the scientists are wondering now (is): Is this just one warm year? Could we flip back to a cold sequence again, or is this
here. Is this a sucker punch or n not?
the University of Alaska Fairbanks, penned an online col-
Climate change or chaos
umn with the headline "Snowstarved Alaska not the normal State."
aside, the warm temperatures
arebothrealandworrisome. The w eather s e rvice's Thoman notes that a calendar year in the Northern Hemi-
largest, most valuable fisheries
sald.
we needed another one — of a
term weather pattern that be-
are viewing the thermometer with concern. "To me, the fact that An-
mate system is off-kilter."
rapidly changing dimate," said gan with six years of warming
"frozen, dusty an d
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend
b r own"
•
chorage won't dip below zero degrees in calendar year 2014 is just one more signal — as if
nualaveragetemperature of37 degrees. Environmentalists, policymakers and weather watchers
COVERINGS
Rozell worried that large swaths of Alaska remained
www.classic-coverings.com sphere contains chunks of two through the first three weeks of separate winter seasons: Janu- November, threatening dozens the start of a warm sequence'? ary, February and March, and of species that depend on snow •• g ) ... We don't know, and it makes November and December. cover. abig difference." In the last few months, the Especially to the Alaska pol- lowest temperature in Anchorlock, which NOAA's FishWatch age was 13 degrees Fahrenheit, Putting Care website describesas"oneofthe recorded on Dec. 13, Thoman
in the world." Pollock don't like One record A n chorage James Overland, a research really warm or really cold tem- has yet to break is the longest oceanographer with the Na- perature extremes, and their stretch ofconsecutive days tional Oceanic and Atmospher- food source, small shrimp, do above zero. That record was set ic Administration, would agree not fare well in heat. over 683 days in 2000 and 2001. "We really don't understand with the off-kilter part. But he Still, Thoman said, "Anwould add mysterious to the how these sequences occur, chorage has never had a winmix, too. but they appear to be random ter when the temperature reOverland argues that Alas- and part of the chaotic climate mained warm through the end ka's very cool heat wave is not system, rather than part of the of December." evidence of climate change but global warming signal," said Until now. rather the next stage in a long- Overland, co-author of NOAA's Just before Thanksgiving,
vice in Fairbanks. Still, that was well above last year's an-
s~a C~SSIp
2 014 Arctic R eport C a r d. Ned Rozell, a science writer nWe'Ve had One Warm year for the Geophysical Institute at
mobile
Back Into Health Care
dentures j g
® DHP
Discountapplieswhenadis mentioned for a full set ofdentures...
5-
•
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I
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C2 NBA, C3
College basketball, C3 Preps, C4 NFL, C4
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
GOLF Four local courses on GolfDigestlists Central Oregon has placed three golf courses on Golf Digest's list of America's 100 Greatest Public Courses for 2015-16 andanother on the publication's top 200 courses. Pronghorn Club's Nicklaus Course (No. 33), Sunriver Resort's Crosswater Club (No. 51) and Tetherow Golf Club (No. 54) all placed in Golf Digest's annual list of top courses that allow public access. All three courses are mainstays on the list, but this is the first year all three have madethe
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Mountain View's Whit-
White Buffs hold off Cougs for nonconferencevictory
center, pulls
Inside
Bulletin staff report
• Prep sports roundup,C4
MADRAS — It was not the
prettiest of performances, Madras coach Zach Lillebo assured, but it counts as a win. Andthe White Buffaloes will take it. After a slow start, Madras
two wins," said Lillebo, whose
rallied behind Mariah Stacona and held on for a 44-34 nonconference girls basketball victory over Mountain View on Wednesday night.
I think we're getting our heads back on straight."
team defeated Ridgeview on Tuesday. "I think it's a bigger two wins than people realize. Stacona finished with a
game-high 15 points for the Buffs (7-4 overall), Leah Suppah had nine points, and Lyn-
"The last two nights, we got
ney Siefken, down a rebound as Mariah Staco-
na, of Madras, defends during the second half of
den Harry chipped in with six. For Mountain View (3-9), Hailey Goetz posted 10 points, Kylee Reinwald had nine, and Ryann Van der Zwiep logged
Wednesday night's game
six points and five rebounds.
Joe Kline/ The Bulletin
at Madras High School.
"We played really good," said Cougars coach Steve Riper. "We played a really solid game for about three and a half quarters. Our biggest thing was we just struggled to score in the second half."
top 55.
In addition, Pronghorn's private Fazio Course (No. 144) and Nicklaus (No. 156) placed on Golf Digest's list of The Second100 Greatest courses in the U.S.— a list that includes both public and private courses. The lists, which will be released in the magazine's February 2015 issue, are the result of a survey of golf experts who are asked to rate both private and public golf courses basedon seven criteria. The four courses at Bandon DunesGolf Resort, led by Pacific Dunes at No. 3,and PumpkinRidge' sGhost Creek course (No. 67) were the other Oregon courses ranked in the magazine's lists of top public courses.
PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL
CE~ e
4
— Bulletin staff report
COLLEGE FOOTBALL FSU'sWinstonto enter iliFLdraft TALLAHASSEE,
Fla.— Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston has decided to enter the NFLdraft. He announced his decision on the samedaythe woman whoaccused him of sexual assault filed a lawsuit against the school's board of trustees. The 2013 Heisman Trophy winner said Wednesday hehad decided to forgo his final two years of eligibility "after careful consideration and long thought." Winston's statement was released to ESPN by The LegacyAgency. Winston was the most successful quarterback in college football during the last two seasons, but also faced lengthy sexual assault investigations. Hewas not charged by police and was cleared bythe university. In a lawsuit filed against the school's board of trustees, the woman who accused him of sexual assault claimed the board had an unreasonable responseto heraccusations and created a hostile educational environment for her. The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages, including reimbursement for tuition, damagesfor emotional pain andsuffering and loss of past and present earning and earning capacity. Representatives for the woman declined comment. Florida State president John Thrasher released astatement saying he is disappointed in the lawsuit, but the university looks forward to "addressing these meritless allegations in court." — The Associated Press
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Mountain View alumnusAbe Lodwick is nowplaying professional basketball in Europe. Abe Lodwick, a 26-year-old
• After an unpleasantseasonlast year, Bendpro hoops player AbeLodwick isgetting comfortable in Europe
gy '8IAt • Wall AIOIW
professional basketball
player from Bend playing for Okapi Aalstar in Aalst, Bel-
year in a lot of different areas," says
The Bulletin
Lodwick, a Mountain View High stand-
Abe Lodwick thought it might be time
to hang his sneakers up for good.
gium, goes for a dunk
By Zack Hall
ka
during a game in Belgium's Scooore! League. Freddy Ven Geit/ Okapi Aeletar
out before playing his college ball at Washington State. "It wasn't fun by any
The Bend native had toiled in Austria's
means. But I learned a lot about myself.
with the Oberwart Gunners, and though
made all the difference for the 26-year-
he was putting up decent numbers, he simply was not happy in what is considered a lower-level European league. "Last year was definitely a learning
old Lodwick, who returned home to Bend to visit family last week during a
Admiral Basketball League for all of the I'm thankful for those struggles because 2013-14 season, his second year of profes- it makes me a lot happier when things sional basketball in Europe after graduare going good." ating from Washington State in 2012. He This is no sob story. playedforthreecoaches in oneseason A new season in a new country has
COLLEGE FOOTBALL: NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
brief break in his basketball schedule.
SeeLodwick/C3
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Ducks, Buckeyessettle into prep week Hall inducteesshare By Anne M. Peterson
goes with that, so this is more of a
The Associated Press
business trip, said Oregon senior safety Erick Dargan. A really important
EUGENE — Oregon is treating this week like any other this season. And while that is more comfortable in a
way, it also feels a little odd. After all, the Ducks are preparing to
face Ohio State in the national championship game Monday night at AT%T Stadiumin Arlington, Texas. The
two teams are the first to experience a seasonstretched outforone more game by college football's new playoff system. Both teams have already had their bowl games and all the hoopla that
memories ofcareers
business trip.
"It's just like a regular week. I think that actually plays more to our advantage than having a lot of time,"
Dargan said. "We're back in our groove." The Ducks (13-1) routed Florida State 59-20 in the Rose Bowl, while the
Buckeyes (13-1) beat Alabama 42-35 in the Sugar Bowl on New Year's Day, paving the way for the championship 11 days later. SeeDucks/C4
Nextup National championship, Oregon vs. Ohio State When: 5:30 p.m., Monday TV:ESPN
By Howie Rumberg
"He's 6-10 and he was strug-
The Associated Press
gling with his jersey. I was trying to help him with his
NEW YORK — From the moment John Smoltz stood
hat."
on a chair to place a cap atop The always canny Pedro the head of 6-foot-10-inch Martinez greeted Craig BigRandy Johnson, it was clear gio with an apology of sorts. "I'm extremely honored this gathering ofbaseball's newest Hall of Famers was
to be here with all of you.
going to be different from Craig, I know I brushed you those in past years. back a couple of times. It "I just wanted to be funwasn't intentional," he said. ny," Smoltz said Wednesday. SeeHall /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Women's college, Purdue atMaryland Men's college, Michigan State at lowa Men's college, LSUat Missouri Men's college, Radford at Gardner-Webb Men'scollege,GeorgeMasonatRichmond Women's college, TexasA&M atTennessee Women's college, Arizona St. at Arizona NBA, Houston at NewYork Women's college, Nebraska at Michigan St. Women's college, Vanderbilt at LSU Men's college, Stanford at UCLA Men's college, Memphis at SMU Men's college, Rutgers at Nebraska Men's college,SanFranciscoatGonzaga Men's college, Arizona St. at OregonSt.
Time TV/Radio 3:30 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPNU 4 p.m. NBCSN 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. P a c-12 5 p.m. TNT 5:30 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E SPN2 6 p.m. E SPNU 6 p.m. Roo t 6 p.m. FS1
Men's college, Arizona atOregon
7:30 p.m. Pac-12
BASKETBALL
KICE 940-AM KBND 1110-AM, 100.1 FM
NBA, Miami at Portland Men's college, Pepperdine atBYU
7:30 p.m. T NT 8 p.m. E SPNU
TENNIS
ASB Classic andWTABrisbane, semifinals
5 p.m.
T e nnis
HOCKEY
Florida atVancouver
7:30p.m. CSNNW
FRIDAY
ON DECK Today Boys basketball: TheDagesat Summit, 7p.m. Girls basketball: Summiat t TheDalles, 7p.m. Wrestling: Ridgeviewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Redmondat MountainView,7p.m.
4:30 a.m. Golf 1:30 p.m. Golf 2:30 a.m. (Sat.)Golf 2 :30 p.m. F S 2 4:45 a.m. NBCSN
HOCKEY
College, Minnesota at Michigan College, Dartmouth at NewHampshire
3:30 p.m. Big Ten 4:30 p.m. NBCSN
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Akron atToledo 4 p.m. E SPNU NBA, Chicago atWashington 5 p.m. E S PN Women's college, California at Washington State 5 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college, Butler at St. John's 5 p.m. FS1 Men's college, GreenBayat Wisconsin-Milwaukee 6 p.m. E SPNU High School, Ridgeview at Bend 6:50 p.m. COTV Women's college, Stanford at Washington 7 p.m. P a c-12 7 p.m. Pac-12 (OR) Women's college, Oregon atOregonState NBA, Cleveland atGoldenState 7:30 p.m. ESPN BOXING
Darleys Perezvs. Jonathan Maicelo 6 p.m. DustyHernandezHarrisonvs.Tommy Rainone 7 p.m.
E SPN2 FS1
WRESTLING
College, Michigan at Minnesota
6 p.m. B i g Ten
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI7'or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL FOrmer BeaVer CunninghamSent to 76erS —TheLosAngeles Clippers traded former OregonState guard Jared Cunningham along with the draft rights to CenkAkyol and cash to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchangefor the draft rights to Serhiy Lishchuk. The deal was announced Wednesday. Cunningham appeared in19games this season, averaging 1.8 points and 0.5assists in 4.7 minutes. He signed with the Clippers as a free agent in September. Hehas played 40 career games in theNBAover three seasons, including with Dallas, Atlanta andSacramento. CRVS land Center MOZgoV —TheCleveland Cavaliers filled their biggest need, acquiring center Timofey Mozgov from the Denver Nuggets for two future first-round draft picks. TheCavsannounced their second major trade in threedays during the first half of Wednesday night's gameagainst Houston. Cleveland sent two protected 2015 first-round picks — oneacquired in 2013 from Memphis, the other from OklahomaCity this week — to Denver for the 7-foot-1 Mozgov anda2015second-roundpick.Mozgovaveraged8.5points and 7.8 rebounds this season for the Nuggets.
FOOTBALL Nedraska's Riley hires four assistants —NewNebraska football coach Mike Riley hired four assistant coaches, leaving him with one spot to fill on his staff. The assistants namedWednesday are running backs coachReggie Davis, defensive line coachHank Hughes, offensive coordinator Danny Langsdorf and secondary coach Charlton Warren. Langsdorf was theNewYork Giants quarterbacks coach this seasonafter working nine years as Riley's offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach atOregonState. Riley has already hired defensive coordinator Mark Banker, linebackers coach Trent Bray, offensive line coach MikeCavanaughand special teams coordinator Bruce Read.
Chief sign QB Terrelle Pryor to 1-year deal —TheKansas City Chiefs signedTerrelle Pryor to aone-year deal to provide competition at the backupquarterback spot, a personfamiliar with the situation told The Associated Press.Theperson spoke oncondition of anonymityWednesdaynightbecausetheChiefshadnotannouncedthedeal.
League Baseball's spring training is slated to start when the Philadelphia Phillies host the University of Tampa onMarch1 in Clearwater, Florida. There will be apair of games involving college teamsthe following day, with the Miami Marlins hosting Florida International in Jupiter and Detroit playing at homeagainst Florida in Lakeland. The all-major league portion of the schedule starts with nine gameson March 3, and the first full day of gameswill be March 5, the commissioner's office said Wednesday.
MOTOR SPORTS Korean GrandPrlx droppedfrom F1 calendar —The Korean Grand Prix hasbeendropped from the 2015 Formula One calendar, reducing the season to 20 races.Therace, set to be staged on May 3, wasaddedat the last minute to the calendar last month at a meeting of the World Motor Sport Council, but motorsport's governing body FIAremoved theevent from its revised schedule. The Korean Grand Prix washeld from 2010 to 2013but was dropped from the calendar after organizers faced financial difficulties. — From wire reports
"They've hired a personal trainer! Now we'll never fatten them up!!"
Madras (38) —DevonWolfe 13,Sullivan12, Rehwinkel 6, Rauschenburg5, LeRiche2. Totals 16
4-8 38.
Girls basketball Nonconference
Madras 44, Mountain View34 Mountain View(34) —HaileyGoetz10, Reinwald 9,Hughes7, Vander Zwiep 6, Siefken2. Totals 14 0-2 34. Madras(44) — Mariah Stacona15, Suppah9, Harry 6,Iverson4, Wolfe 4, Sloan2, Whipple 2, Adams2.Totals177-1044. Mountai nview 8 11 10 5 — 34 Madras 5 13 18 11 — 44 Three-pointgoals —MountainView:Reinwald 3, Goetz 2,Hughes;Madras:Stacona2,Suppah.
Wrestling ClassBA Special District 4 Ridgeview42, Summit 38 At Summit 106 — BennettKatter, S,wins by forfeit. 113 — ZackJacoby,RV,wins by forfeit. 128 —Mike Potter,RV,wins byforfeit. 128 —ThomasBrown, S, def. Abraham Nonato, RV,12-6. 132 — Lane Johnson,RV,pins ReeceBurri, S. 138 — Patrick Leiphart, S, pinsTaylor Trost, RV.145 — Grant Leiphart, S, pinsKyzerPiercey,RV.152 — Trent Pickett, RV,pins AidenUffman, S. 160 — Jace Reitz,RV,wins byforfeit. 170—JacobThompson, S, tech fall overJosephScott, RV.182— Dustin Foffett, S, wins byforfeit.195 — BrentYeakey, RV, pins Josh Wittwer, S.220— ConnorSperling, RV, wins byforfeit. 288 —JohnMurphy, S,pins Brandon Hanson,RV.
Tuecday'cresults La Pine53, Sisters27 At Sisters 106 — TristanWilson, LP,wins by fall, 2:00. 113 —AlexDudley, LP,winsbyforfeit.128 —David Kerr,LP,tech fall overColePade,S, 4:36. 126 — AustinRussell, LP,pins Zachary Reid, S, 2:43. 132 —AndrewStevens, S, wins by forfeit. 138 — SeanBrantley, LP,pins JakeStevens, S, 1:08. 145 —JaredDyer, LP,pins ChayceSproat, S, 3:36. 152 —Cheyen neSproat, S,winsbyforfeit. 188ClaytonDarst,S, winsbyforfeit.170 —MarkFish, S, def.TannerHanson, LP,7-2. 182—ErickTorres, LP, winsbyforfeit. 198 —MitchGibney,S,winsby forfeit. 220 —GageYeager, LP, pinsTyler Surface, S,;41. 285 —HunterDodson, LP,pinsGabe Isle, 5,:25. Sutherlin48, LaPine33 At Sisters 186 —TltstanWilson, LP,pins Dallyn Ritchie, S, 3:26.113 —AlexDudley,LP,wins byforfeit. 120 — DavidKerr, LP,pinsColeJohnson, S,:57. 126 — Austin Russell, LP,pins JerimiahScroggins, S, 4:16.132 —DavidSchriner, S,winsbyforfeit. 138 — Branden Carrigo, S, pinsSean Brantley, LP,3:11. 148 —StuartHainey,S, pinsJaredDyer, LP,3:31. 152 —ConnerGrauf, S,winsbyforfeit.180 —Mike Smith, S, winsbyforfeit. 178—Tanner Hanson, LP, def. Christopher Telo, S, 12-8.182—Justin Crum, S, pinsErickTorres, LP,:27. 195—AndrewSmagey, S, wins by forfeit. 220 —GageYeager, LP,pins Alex Kennedy,S,1:53. 288 —Thomas Smagey, S, pins HunterDodson,LP,1:16.
Sutherlin 42, Sisters80 At Sisters 106 — DallynRitchie, Sut,wins byforfeit. 113 — Doubleforfeit.128—ColePade,Sis, pinsCole Johnson,Sut,1:19. 128 —Zachary Reid, Sis, def. Jerimiah Scroggins, Sut, 12-6.132 — David Schriner, Sut, pins AndrewSteyens, Sis, 2;35. 138 —BrandenCarriffo, Sut,pinsJakeStevens, Sis, 1:19.145 —Stuart Hainey,Sut, pinsChayce Sproat,Sis, 1:03. 152— ConnerGrauf, Sut, pins Cheyenne Sproat, Sis,2:44. 168— Clayton Darst, Sis, pins MikeSmith, Sut,:55. 170 — MarkFish, Sis, pinsChristopherTello, Sut,2:32.182 —Justin Crum,Sut, winsbyforfeit.195 — MitchGibney, Sis, pinsAndrewSmaffey, Sut, 1:58.220 —Tyler Surface,Sis, def. ChristianBeauregard,Sut, 9-5. 285 — CooperGreenham, Sut, pins GabeIsle, Sis, 1:46.
FOOTBALL NFL playoffs NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
AR Times PST
Saturday'sGames
MLB Spring training gameS toStart On March1 — IVlajor
Tampa Bay Montreal Detroit Boston Toronto Florida Ottawa Buffalo
Mountain View 58, Madras38
DivisionalPlayoffs
BASEBALL
NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE AU TimesPST
PREPS
Mountain View (88) —DavisHolly13, Vance 11, Scinto10,VanTassel 8, Wilcox 8, Haugen4, Brent 2, Kurzynow ski2. Totals 23 6-8 58. Madras 6 8 11 13 — 38 Mountai nView 14 14 10 28 — 88 Three-poingoal t s— Madras:Wolfe, Rauschenburg; MountainView:Holly 3, VanTassel2,Vance. Tuesday's result Nonconference South WascoCounty68,Culver23
BaltimoreatNewEngland,1:35 p.m. CarolinaatSeattle,5:15p.m.
Sunday'sGames DallasatGreenBay,10:05a.m. IndianapolisatDenver,1:40p.m.
HOCKEY
1/e
Saturday Boys basketball: Hermistonat Summit, 3:30p.m.; CentralChristianat Butte Falls,4p.m.; RogueValley Adventisat t Gilchrist, 7:30p.m. Girls basketball:CentralChristian atButteFalls,2:30 p.m.;RogueValleyAdventist atGilchrist,6 p.m. Wrestling: Bend,Mountain View,Ridgeview,Summit, Sisters,Madras,LaPineat BendInvitational,10 a.m.;CrookCountyat DallasTournament, TBD Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit, SistersatJayRowanInvite inRedmond,11am.;Madrasat TheDalles,1015a m. Alpine skiing: OSSA atMt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, 1-5 orCliffhanger,TBD Nordic skiing: OISRA skateand relayracesat Mt. Bachel or,noon;OHSNOclassicatMt.HoodMeadowsNordic
Nonconference
EuropeanPGATour Golf, SouthAfrican Open PGA Tour, HyundaiTournament of Champions EuropeanTour, SouthAfrican Open SOCCER U-20 Championship, United States vsGuatemala England, Sunderland vs Liverpool
In the Bleachers O2010 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Friday Boys basketball: Ridgeviewat Bend, 7p.m.; Redmond atSisters,7:15p.mcMadrasat Philomath, 7p.mcCrookCountyatSweetHome,7:15p.m.; Cresweg at LaPine, 7:30p.m.; Irrigon at Culver, 6p.mcChiloquinat Central Christian, 7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Redmond at Sisters, 5:45p.m.; Bend at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; CrookCounty at Sweet Home,5:45 p.m.;Creswell at LaPine,6p.m.; Irrigon at Culver,4:30p.m.; ChiloquinatCentral Christian,6 p.m.;TrinityLutheranatGilchrist, 4p.m.
Boys basketball
GOLF
FARWEST ColoradoSt. 58,Wyoming 55 FresnoSt.70, UtahSt.64 Nevada71, UNLV62 NewMexico62,SanDiegoSt.53 SanJoseSt.91, Air Force64
IN THE BLEACHERS
College Saturday'sGame FCSChampionship NorthDakotaSt.(14-1) vs.Illinois St.(13-1),10am.
BASKETBALL Men's college
America's Line
Pac-12 An TimesPST
Conference Overall Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog W L Pck W L Pct. Hometeamsin CAPS Utah 3 0 1.000 13 2 .866 Stanford 2 0 1.000 10 3 .769 NFL Arizona 1 0 1.000 13 1 .928 Saturday Oregon 1 0 1.000 11 3 .785 P ATRIOTS 7 7 48 Rave ns Colorado 2 1 .666 9 6 . 6 00 SEAHA WKS 11 1 1 40tat P anthersCalifornia 1 2 .333 11 5 .687 Sunday SouthernCal 1 2 .333 9 6 . 6 00 Cowb oys Washington PACKERS 6t/t 6 5 3 St 1 1 .500 7 7 . 5 00 BRONCOS 7 7 54 Colts Oregon St. 0 1 .000 9 4 . 6 92 ArizonaSt. 0 1 .000 8 6 . 5 71 College Washington 0 2 .000 1 1 3 .785 Monday,Jan. 12 UCLA 0 2 .000 8 7 . 5 33 7 6 i/t 75 Oh ioSt Oregon Wednecday'cGames Utah74,Colorado49 TENNIS Southern Cal71, California 57 Today'sGames ATP ArizonaSt.at OregonSt., 6p.m. S tanford at UC LA , 6 p.m. Oatar Open ArizonaatOregon,7:30 p.m. Wednesday atDoha,Qatar Saturday'sGames SecondRound WashingtonSt.atWashington, noon Ivo Karlovic(7),Croatia,def.NikolozBasilashvili, A rizona St. at O re gon, 2p.m. Georgia,7-6(3), 6-3. aliforniaatUCLA, 4:30p.m. Dustin Brown,Germany, def. Jan-LennardStruff, C StanfordatSouthern Cal, 7p.m. Germany, 7-6(9), 6-4. David Ferrer(4), Spain,def.FernandoVerdasco, ArizonaatOregonSt., 7pm. Spain,6-3,6-2. Wednesday'sGames Andreas Seppi, Italy, def.JoaoSouza,Brazil,7-5,6-2. 25 NovakDjokovic (I), Serbia,def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, No. 2Duke73,WakeFTOP orest 65 Ukraine,6-2,6-1. No. 3Virginia61, N.C.State51 IvanDodig,Croatia,def. MichaelBerrer, Germany, No. 4Wisconsin62, Purdue55 7-6 (I), 6-2. o. 5Louisville 58,Clemson52 TomasBerdych (3), CzechRepublic, def. BlazKa- N No. 9Utah74,Colorado49 vcic, Slovenia6-1, , 6-2. fflinois64, No.11Maryland57 RichardGasquet (6), France,def. SimoneBolegi, No. 12Kansas56, Baylor 55 Italy, 6-3,6-2. No. 15WichitaState63, Bradley43 Xavier69,SetonHall 58 ChennaiOpen No. 20VCU71,Davidson65 Wednesday at Chennai, India EAST SecondRound BostonU.70, Navy64 DavidGoffin(4),Belgium,def. RicardasBerankis, Lehigh71,Army60 Lithuania,6-0, 4-6,7-6(t). Loyola(Md.)56,American U.53, OT GigesMuller (8), Luxem bourg, def. EliasYmer, Manhattan68,St. Peter's 63 Sweden, 6-4,6-3. Mass. -Lowell73,UMBC 61,OT StanWawrinka(1), Switzerland,def. BornaCoric, NJIT69,Md.-Eastern Shore60 Croatia 6-1 6-4. R hode Island68, Fordham65 AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, def.Jiri Vesely, UMass 71,LaSalle 65 CzechRepublic, 6-7(3), 6-4, 6-4. Vermont68,Maine54 SOUTH BrisbaneInternational Duke73,WakeForest65 Wednesday at Brisbane, Australia Florida 72, South C a rol ina 68 secondRound Louisville58,Clemson52 Martin Klizan,Slovakia,def. AlexandrDolgopolov Syracuse 46, Georgia Tech45 (7), Ukraine,1-6,7-6(6), 7-6(7). Temple64,Tulane56 Kei Nishikori(2),Japan,def.SteveJohnson,United Tennessee 61, Mississippi St.47 States,6-4, 7-5. 71,Davidson65 GrigorDimitrov(4), Bulgaria,def.Jeremy Chardy, VCU Virginia61,NCState51 France,3-6,6-4/7-6 (8). MIDWEST BernardTomic, Australia, def.Thanasi Kokkinakis, Ball St.60,E.Michigan 59,OT Australia,7-6(2), 6-1. BowlingGreen66,Kent St.64 Buffalo79,Miami(Ohio) 72 DePaul70,Creighton60 WTA f linois 64,Maryland57 Asg Classic Indiana St. 71, Missouri St.56 W ednesday atAuckland,New Zealand KansasSt. 58,TCU53 SecondRound N. Illinois 70,Ohio60 ElenaVesnina, Russia, def. AnaKonjuh, Croatia, N. Iowa 55,S.Illinois 39 6-3,6-1. Wisconsin62,Purdue55 Coco Vand eweghe(7), UnitedStates,def. Kirsten Xavier69,SetonHall 58 Flipkens,Belgium,6-1, 6-7(5), 7-5. SOUTHWE ST VenusWiliams(3), UnitedStates,def. Kurum i Kansas 56, Baylor 55 Nara,Japan,6-4,6-1. Oral Roberts69,IUPUI61, OT Urszula Radw anska, Poland, def. DanielaHan- Texas -PanAmerican87,OurLadyoftheLake78 tuchova,Slovakia,1-6, 6-3,6-1. FARWEST Julia Goerges,Germ any, def. Lucie Hradecka, Air Force 78, SanJoseSt. 56 CzechRepublic, 6-3, 7-5. UC Davis71, CSNorthridge 61 BarboraZahlavovaStrycova(4), CzechRepublic, Utah74,Colorado49 def. MarinaErakovic, NewZealand,6-0, 2-6, 6-4. Wyoming 60, ColoradoSt.54 Caroline Wozniacki (t), Denmark,def. Taylor Townsend, United States, 6-1,7-6(4). Women's college LaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def. SloaneStephens (6), UnitedStates,1-6, 6-4,6-1. Wednesday'sGames TOP 25 ShenzbenOpen No. 2Uconn98,Tulsa 60 Wednesdayat Shenzhen,China No. 3Texas61,West Virginia 55 secondRound No.160kl ahomaState66,TexasTech35 Vera Zvonare va, Russia, def. CaglaBuyukakcay, No. 24Rutgers81, Michigan68 Turkey,6-3,7-6(5). Timea Bacsinszky(8), Switzerland, def. Karin EAST Knapp,ltaly,7-5,6-2. Albany (NY)76, NewHampshire 65 Simona Halep(I), Romania, def. Natalia Vikhlyant- American U.62, Loyola(Md.)50 seva,Russia, 6-2, 6-2. Buckneff 77, Lafayette 71 Aleksandra Krunic, Serbia, def.AnnaSchmiedlova, George Washington83,SaintJoseph's69 Slovakia,3-6,7-6(I), 6-1. Lehigh63,Army51 Tereza Smitkova, CzechRepublic, def.KaterinaSin- Navy61,BostonU.55 iakova,CzechRepublic, 6-3,2-6, 6-1. Rutgers81,Michigan68 Uconn98,Tulsa60 Brisbane International Yale57,Maine55 Wednesday at Brisbane, Australia SOUTH SecondRound Memphis70, UCF66 Alla Kudryavtseva,Russia, def. KarolinaPliskova, Tulane76,East Carolina 63 CzechRepublic, 4-6,6-3, 6-3. MIDWEST CarlaSuarezNavarro (7), Spain,def.MirjanaLu- Oklahoma69, Kansas57 cic-BaroniCroati , a,5-7, 6-3,6-4. SOUTHWE ST KaiaKanepi,Estonia, def.Madison Brengle, United Cincinnati76,Houston 73,20T States,6-3, 7-6(3). Oklahoma St.66,TexasTech35 Ana Ivanovic(2), Serbia,def.JarmilaGajdosova, TCU86, lowaSt. 84 Australia,6-4, 6-1. Texas 61, West Virginia 55
EaclernConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA 42 26 12 4 5 6 138 110 40 26 12 2 5 4 110 93 41 22 10 9 53 116 103 41 20 15 6 46 107 110 41 21 17 3 45 132 128 37 17 11 9 43 8 7 9 7 39 16 15 8 40 103 107 41 14 24 3 3 1 78 140
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Pittsburgh 40 24 10 6 5 4 120 97 N.Y.lslanders 40 26 13 1 53 123 112 Washington 39 21 11 7 4 9 118 101 N.Y.Rangers 37 22 11 4 4 8 117 91 Columbus 38 1 8 17 3 3 9 100 121 Philadelphia 40 15 18 7 37 108121 NewJersey 42 15 20 7 3 7 94 118 Carolina 4 0 1 2 2 4 4 2 8 79 105 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Nashville 39 26 9 4 5 6 119 90 Chicago 40 26 12 2 5 4 124 87 St. Louis 40 24 13 3 5 1 124 99 Winnipeg 40 20 13 7 47 103 96 Dallas 39 18 15 6 42 121 128 Minnesota 38 18 15 5 4 1 107 110 Colorado 40 16 16 8 40 103 117 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GFGA Anaheim 4 2 2 6 1 0 6 5 8 116 114 Vancouver 38 23 12 3 4 9 112 100 SanJose 4 1 2 2 14 5 4 9 113 108 LosAngeles 40 19 12 9 47 112 103 Calgary 41 2 1 17 3 45 1 17 108 Arizona 39 1 5 2 0 4 3 4 9 2 130 Edmonton 41 9 2 3 9 2 7 90 139 Wodnesday'sGames Washington6,Toronto2 Boston3, Pittsburgh2,OT Detroit 3,Calgary2 N.Y.Rangers4, Anaheim1 Today'sGames NewJerseyat Boston, 4p.m. Washington at Philadelphia, 4p.m. BuffaloatCarolina 4pm SanJoseatStLouis5pm Dallas atNashvile, 5 p.m. ChicagoatMinnesota,5 p.m. Ottawaat Colorado, 6p.m. Winnipegat Arizona,6p.m. Florida atVancouver 7pm N.Y.Rangersat LosAngeles,7:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BOSTON REDSOX—Designated CDan Butler for assignment.Agreedto termswith LHPCraig Breslow on aone-yearcontract. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Agreedto terms with INF NickPunto on aminor leaguecontract. NamedRobby Hammock managerofMobile (SL), J.R. House manager of Visalia (Cal), MarkGrudzielanekmanagerofKaneCounty(MWL), ShelleyDuncan managerof Higsboro(NWL), JoeMather manager of Missoula(Ptoneer)andMike Benjaminmanager ofthe AZLDiamondbacks. ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreedto termswith RHP JasonGriffi on atwo-yearcontract andLHPJosh OutmanandCA.J. Pierzynski onone-yearcontracts. NEWYOR KMETS —Agreed to terms with RHP BobbyParnell onaone-yearcontract. SANDIEG OPADRES—Agreedto termswith RHP JoshJohnsononaone-yearcontract.DesignatedINFOF Jake Goebbert for assignment. BASKETB ALL
National Basketball Association CLEVELANDCAVALIERS— AcquiredCTimofey Mozgovfrom Denver for two protected2015firstrounddraftpicks. MIAMIHEA T—Recalled GShabazzNapier from SiouxFalls(NBADL). NEWYORKKNICKS— ReleasedFsLouAmundson andLanceThomas and CAlex Kirk. SignedG LangstonGallowayto a10-daycontract. WASHIN GTON WIZARDS — Waived G-F Glen RiceJr. FOOTBA LL National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS— Announcedassistantgeneral mana gerScott Pioli will takeonproandcolege scoutingandwil report to generalmanager Thomas Dimitroff. BALTIMOR ERAVENS—SignedLBAustin Spitler to a futurecontract. CAROLINA PANTHERS— SignedTEMikeMcNeiff to a futurecontract. CHICAGOBEARS— SignedCTaylorBoggstoa futurecontract. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedCBraxstonCave to a futurecontract. DETROILION T S—SignedDTXavier Proctor,DE RoyPhilon, DBNateHess, LBJerregHarris, TEsJordanThompsonandEmilIgwenaguandWRsAndrew PeacockandSkyeDawsontofuture contracts. KANSASCITY CHIEFS— SignedDBDeMarcus VanDyketo afuturecontract. NEWYO RKGIANTS—Fireddefensivecoordinator PerryFewegand secondary/cornerbacks coachPeter Giunta. NEWYORKJETS— SignedDEKerryHydertoa futurecontract. PDTSBURGHSTEELERS— SignedDEsAlejandro Viganueva andJoeKruger andLB Howard Jonesto futurecontracts. SANDIEGO CHARGERS— Signed08 BradSorensenandDBAaronHester to futurecontracts. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — PlacedDTJordanHillon injured reserve.SignedSStevenTerrefffromthepractice squad andDTJimmyStatentothe practicesquad. TENNE SSEETITANS—Signed NTChigboAnunoby to afuturecontract. HOCKEY
National HockeyLeague NHL — FinedFlorida F VincentTrocheckand Detroit F GustavNyquist $2,000for diving/embe llishment. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Named Peter Horachek interim coach. COLLEGE FLORIDA — Announcedmen' sbasketballFSchuyler Rimmer hastransferred fromStanford. Suspended CJonHorfordandGZachHodskins forconductdetrimental tothebasketball team. FLORIDA STATE— Sophomore QBJameis Winston announ cedhewil entertheNFLdraft. GEOR GIA— Named BrianSchottenheimer offensive coordinatorandquarterbackscoach. KANSAS — NamedZachYenser rungamecoordinator/offensivelinecoach NEBRASKA — NamedReggieDavisrunningbacks coach, HankHughes defensive line coach,Danny Langsdorfoffensivecoordinator andCharlton Warren secondary coach. SOUTH ERNCAL— Announcedwomen's freshmanbasketball GSadieEdwardshastransferred from Connecticut.
Rangers Intinue strong run,roll over Ducks The Associated Press A NAHEIM,
NHL ROUNDUP
C a l i f . — Rick N a s h
scored his 25th goal, Henrik Lundqvist ifornia road trip with a dominant effort made 24 saves, and the New York Rang- against the overall NHL leaders. ers beat the Anaheim Ducks 4-1 on Also on Wednesday: Wednesday night for their 11th victory Bruins 3, Penguins 2: PITTSBURGH in 12 games. — Patrice Bergeron scored twice, inDerick Brassard, Mats Zuccarello and cluding a deflection past Pittsburgh's Dominic Moore also scored for the Rang- Marc-Andre Fleury 2:43 into overers, who opened their three-game Cal- time to lift Boston to a victory over the
Penguins. Capitals 6, Maple Leafs 2: TORONTO — Marcus Johansson and Eric Fehr scored two goals apiece, and Washington spoiled the debut of Toronto interim coach
Peter Horachek. Red Wings 3, Flames 2: CALGARY, Alberta — Justin Abdelkader and Henrik
Zetterberg both had a goal and an assist to lead Detroit over Calgary.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
ers rou a ers The Associated Press
They blew out the Lakers in the third, outscoring them
Jazz 97, Bulls 77: CHICAGO — Derrick Favors had 20
Griffin scored 27 points, Chris 29-15. Bryant made his first Paul had 24 points and Matt basket of the game, hitting a Barnes added 19 in helping 10-footer that left them trailing the Los Angeles Clippers rout 85-55. The Clippers opened the Lakers 114-89 Wednesday the period on a 12-2 run, punc-
points and 11 rebounds, and
n ight for their ninth win i n
DALLAS —
LOS ANGELES — Blake
tuated by Griffin's one-hand-
10 games against the 16-time ed dunk after blowing by two NBA champions. defenders. Griffin just missed a triThe Lakers have lost six of p le-double, with n in e r e - their past eight and two in a bounds and eight assists. De- row while dropping to 11-25 Andre Jordan had 10 points overall. They had been playand 13 rebounds, and J.J. ing slightly better lately, with Redick added 10 points as all their previous 10 games being fivestarters reached double decided by 10 points or less, figures. Paul had 11 assists. but they ran into a buzz saw The Clippers led by 10 after against their Staples Center the opening quarter, stretched co-tenants. it to 22 points at halftime and The Clippers rested their were up by 36 going into the starters in the fourth when fourth in winning their fifth Bryant sat out, too. straight against the Lakers. Also on Wednesday: They are enjoying their most Hawks 96, Grizzlies 86:ATsuccessful stretch against the LANTA — Jeff Teague scored Lakers in franchise history.
Utah used a
Utab runs away from Colorado
s t rong defen-
sive effort to get the win over Chicago. Pistons 108, Mavericks 95:
The Associated Press
D . J . A u gustin
scored 17 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter, and Detroit
S ALT LAKE C I T Y Brandon Taylor scored 14
earned its seventh consecutive
points and Delon Wright
victory. Celtics 89, Nets 81: NEW YORK — Av e r y B r a d ley
added 13 points, six assists and four steals to help No.
9 Utah run away from Colorado for a 74-49 victory on Wednesday night. Dakarai Tucker added 11 off the bench as the Utes (13-2, 3-0 Pac-12) won their
scored 21 points, and Boston snapped a three-game losing streak. Bucks 97, 76ers 77: PHILADELPHIA — Brandon Knight and Khris Middleton scored 18
sixth straight. Utah blew
points apiece, leading Milwau-
the game open early after clamping down defensively on the Buffaloes. Also on Wednesday:
kee to the victory.
Kings 104, Thunder 83: SACRAMENTO, C a l if.
Rudy Gay scored 28 points
Pac-12
and Darren Collison added 24
to help Sacramento snap a 12game losing streak to Oklahoma City. Rockets 105, Cavaliers 93: Suns 113, Timberwolves
Southern Cal 72, Califor-
25 points, and Atlanta beat the Jordan Clarkson scored Memphis for its sixth consec14 points to lead the Lakers. utive win.
Jordan Hill and Wayne Ellington added 13 points each. Kobe Bryant finished with four points, eight rebounds and seven assists after going scoreless in the first half. The Clippers scored a season high in points in leading 70-48 at halftime. They closed on a 23-9 run, highlighted by five dunks, including three by Jordan. He dunked off a
CLEVELAND — James Hard-
en scored 21 points, Dwight Howard had 17 points and 19 rebounds, and Houston roared
past Cleveland in the fourth quarter. Hornets 98, Pelicans 94: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kem-
C3
nia 57: LOS ANGELES-
Nikola Jovanovic scored 21 points and grabbed nine
111: MINNEAPOLIS — Gerald Green scored 15 of his 21
rebounds to lead Southern
points in the fourth quarter to
Cal past California for its first conference win.
scorch his former team and Phoenix handed Minnesota its
Top 25
13th straight loss. Nuggets 93, Magic 90: DEN-
No. 2 Duke 73, Wake
VER — Ty Lawson scored 23
ba Walker scored 31 points, points, Arron Afflalo had 17 including a tiebreaking three- against his former team, and point play with 1.4 seconds Denver beat Orlando for its 3-point miss by Matt Barnes to left, and Charlotte earned its third consecutive win. end the half just after Redick third consecutive win. Warriors 117, Pacers 102: found Griffin open in the lane Wizards 101, Knicks 91: OAKLAND, Calif. — Klay for a windmill jam. WASHINGTON — John Wall Thompson scored 40 points, The Clippers opened the had 18 points and eight assists and Golden State shook off a Mark J. Terrill/The Associated Press game on a 21-7 run while for Washington as the Wiz- slow start to put away pesky Los Angeles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan, left, defends a shot shooting 52 percent in the first ards handed New York a fran- Indiana for its fifth straight by Los Angeles Lakers forward Carlos Boozer during the first half quarter. chise-record 13th straight loss. win. of Wednesdaynight' s game inLosAngeles.
Forest 65: WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Freshman forward Justise Winslow
scored a season-high 20 points and Duke held on to beat Wake Forest. No. 3 Virginia 61, N.C. State 51: CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Justin Anderson scored 16 points
and MalcolmBrogdon added 14 as Virginia weathered a sloppy effort and beat North Carolina State
for its 19th straight home vlctoiy.
No. 4 W isconsin 62,
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Summaries
All TimesPST d-Atlanta d-Toronto
EasternConference W L Pd GB 27 8 24 10
d-Chicago Washington Cleveland Milwaukee Brooklyn Miami Indiana Boston Charlotte Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
25 u
24 11 19 17 I9 1II 16 19 15 20 14 23 12 21 13 24 12 23 13 25 5 29 5 33
WesternConference d-Golden State d-Portland d-Memphis Dallas Houston LA. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix NewOrleans Oklahoma City Denver Sacramen to Utah LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
W L 28 5 27 8 25 10
26 u 24 u
24 12 21 I5 22 16 17 18 17 I9 16 20 15 20 I3 23 11 25 5 29
Wednesday'sGames
Milwaukee 97,Philadelphia 77 Washington101,NewYork91 Charlotte98,NewOrleans94 Houston105,Cleveland93 Atlanta96, Memphis II6 Boston89,Brooklyn81 Utah97,Chicago77 Detroit108,Dallas95 Denver93,Orlando90
phoenix113,Minnesotau1 Sacramento104, OklahomaCity 83 GoldenState117, Indiana102 LA. Clippers114,LA.Lakers89 Today'sGames CharlotteatToronto, 4;30p.m. HoustonatNewYork, 5p.m. Miami atPortland,7:30p.m. Friday'sGames BostonatIndiana,4p.m. Atlantaat Detroit,4:30 p.m. PhiladelphiaatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. MemphisatNewOrleans,5p.m. Utah atOklahomaCity, 5 p.m. Chicago at Washington, 5p.m. Minnesota at Milwaukee,5:30 p.m. Phoeni xatSanAntonio,5:30p.m. DenveratSacramento, 7p.m. ClevelandatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. OrlandoatLA.Lakers, 7:30 p.m.
771
706 2}/z
694 2}/~ 686 3 528 8}/z
514 9 457 11 429 12 378 14 364 14 351 15 343 15
342 15}/z 147 2I}/z 132 23}/~
Pd GB 848 771 2 714 4 703 4 6II6 5
667 5}/~ 583 8}/z 579 II}I~
486 12 472 I2}/2 444 13}I~
429 14 361 16}/~ 306 18}/z 147 23}/z
Clippers114, Lakers89 LA. LAKER s I89)
Bryant2-120-04, E.Davi2-60-24, s Hill 6-81-2 13, Lin 5 90012, Ellington4-103413, Boozer5 8 0-010, Sacre 0-20-00, Clarkson6-102-214, Young 41522u, Kelly1-11-23,Black241-35. Totals 37-8510-17 89. LA. CLIPPERS (114) Barnes6-12 2-219, Griffin9-13 9-1327, Jordan 4-7 2-410, Paul9-152-2 24, Redick3-8 3-310, Crawford1-62-24,Hawes2-62-47, Farmar2-40-0 5, Bullock1-40-02, G.Davis2-50-04, Wilcox1-4 0-02,Udoh0-1 0-00. Totals40-8522-30114. LA. Lakers 24 24 15 26 — 89 L.A. Clippers 34 3 6 29 15 — 114
Slins113, Timderwolves111 PHOENIX (113) Tucker1-5 H 2, Mark.Morris5-134-414,Len4-6 M 9, Bledsoe7-173-417, G.Dragic11-163-425, Plumlee 0-2 0-00, Thomas6-143-417, Marc.Morris 4-70-0 8,Gr}in8-162-22t Totals46-9616-19113. MINNESOT A(111) Muhammad 5-13 1-1 12, Young6-1II 0-0 13, Dieng 3-102-4 8, Williams7-14 5-5 23,Wiggins 10-16 4-525, Bennett 6-102-2 14,Lavine2-4 2-2 6, Budinger5-7 0-0 IO, Hummel 0-00-0 0. Totals 44-92 16-19111. Phoenix 20 25 26 42 — 113 Minnesota 25 23 30 33 — 111
NliggetS 93, MagiC90 ORULNDO (90) T.Harris5-130-112, O'Quinn2-51-1 5, Vucevic 8-184-6 20,Payton1-60-02, Oladipo7-133-417, Frye0-5 0-00,Fournier 4-84-414, Dedmon1-1 0-0 2, BGordon26004, Ridnour1-3003, Nicholson 4-100-011.Totals35-8812-1690. DENVER (93) Chandler5-120-0 12,Faried1-6 Ij-0 2, Nurkic 3-9 2-2 8,Lawson9-142-423, Afflalo 7-133-617, Hickson4-53-411, Robinson1-610-1013,Arthur 3-90-07, Gee 0-00-00. Totals33-74 20-2693. Orlando 18 21 19 32 — 90 Denver 25 15 23 30 — 93
Pistons108, Mavericks 95 DETROIT (108) Singler2-80-04,Monroe11-165-527,Drummond 3-u 0-0 6,Jennings7-180-014, caldwell-pope3-6 1-28, Butler1-40-03, Jerebko3-60-06, Meeks3-u 2-211, Aug}}stin9-164-526, Tolliver1-10-03, Anthony 0-00-00.Totals43-9712-14108.
DALLAs I95)
Parsons5-133-315, Nowitzki8-193-419, Chandler 4-51-2 9, Rondo3-70-0 6, Ellis 6-174-616, Harris5-82-314,Vilanueva3-80-06, SmithI-30-0 2, Jefferson1-40-03,Barea1-20-02,Aminui-1 0-0 3,Powell0-00-00.Totals 38-8713-1895. Detroit 31 23 20 34 — 108 Dallas 26 23 19 27 — 95
Jazz 97, Bulls77
Purdue 55: MA D I S ON, Wis. — Frank Kaminsky
Hornets 98, Pelicans 94
UTAH(97) NEWORLEANS(94) Hayward 6-146-718, Favors8-154-42II, Gobert Evans4-112-410, Davis15-242-232, Asik1-3 5-81-2 u, Burke 6-133-417, Ingles3-80-07, Exum 4-6 6, Holiday6-132-416, Gordon5-131-214, An1-3 0-0 2, Booker5-104-515, Millsap 1-3 0-2 2, derson2-82-26, CunninghamI-30-02,Fredette 1-4 Clark 0-10-00, Evans0-00-00, Wiliams2-20-05, 2-2 5, AIinca1-11-23. Totals36-8016-24 94. Novak 0-10-00. Totals 37-7818-24 97. CHARLO TTEI98) CHICAGO (77) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-105-5 13,Zeller4-9 0-0 8, BiButler 5-134-516,Gasol5-132-213, Noah0-3 yombo I-I 1-2 3,Walker12-246-Ij 31, Henderson 1-21, Rose3-151-2 7, Hinrich 0-5 Ij-0 0, Gibson 7-172-216,Wiliams1-51-23, Neal2-80-05, Hair6-10 3-415, Brooks 3-114-412, Mirotic1-7 0-02, ston 0-20-00,Maxiell3-53-59,Robert s3-52-210. Snell 2-30-0 5, Moore1-20-0 2, Bairstow1-I 0-0 Totals 37-8620-26 98. Neworleans 27 2 1 22 24 — 94 2, Moham med1-1 0-1z Totals28-8415-2077. 22 14 27 34 — 97 Charlotte 20 21 26 31 — 98 Utah Chicago 16 16 19 26 — 77
Hawks96, Griulies 86
Bucks97, 76ers77
MILWAUKE E(97) MEMPHIS (86) Antet okounmpo3-91-27,O'Bryant3-60-06,PaAlle4 n-80-08,Stokes0-00-00,Gasol6-124-4 chulia5-101-1 0, Knight6-122-418,Middleton7-9 16, Conle7-151-1 y 17,Lee3-9 2-29, Leuer2-4 0-0 2-218, Dudley2-30-04, Bayless 6-60-012, Mayo 4, Prince5-u 2-212, Carter2-50-0 5, Koufos2-3 6-u 1-2 15,Henson2-5 0-0 4, wolters 1-5 0-0z 0-04, Udrih1-42-24, PondexterO-i0-00, Calathes Totals41-767-11 97. 3-70-07. Totals 35-7911-1186. PHILADELHIA P (77) ATLANTA (96) Covington1-115-68, Sims1-81-1 3, Noel6-10 Carroll 2-70-05, Millsap2-97-811, Horford5-15 1-2 13, Carter-Wiliams1-13 3-4 5, McDaniels 5-8 2-212, Tea gue9-144-425, Korver5-100-014, Antic 4-414, Aldemi2-30-04, r Wroten4-194-412, Grant 4-5 2-213,Sefolosha1-32-34, Schroder1-42-44, 0-37-87, Thomas 0-10-00, Sampson5-70-011. Scott 3-50-08,Bazemore0-00-00.Totals32-72 Totals 25-8325-29 77. 19-23 96. Milwaukee 27 26 24 20 — 97 Memphis 19 25 15 27 — 86 Philadelphia 11 2 8 2117 — 77 Atlanta 23 26 21 26 — 96
Celtics 89, Nets81 BOSTON (89) Green 4-110-08, Sullinger1-70-02, Zeller 7-14 4-418, Turner3-90-06,Bradley7-124-421, Olynyk 3-8 0-0 6,Smart 3-50-08, Bass3-8 3-69, Crowder 2-7 2-2 6,Thornton2-7 1-1 5. Totals 35-88 141789. BROOKLY N(81) Johnson 7-162-217, Gamett 4-92-210, Plumlee 5-u 6-11 16,Jack7-13 00 15, Karasev1-4 3-45, Teletovic2-4 1-26, Anderson1-5 2-24, Lopez2-7 2-3 6, Williams0-1 0-0 0, Bogdanovic 0-2 0-0 0, Morris 1-20-0 ZToials 30-7418-2681. Boslon 19 21 29 20 — 89 Brooklyn 25 14 23 19 — 81
Rockets105, Cavaliers 93 HOUSTO NIios)
Ariza5-130-013,Motieiunas5-100-010,Howard 6-13 5-u 11,Beverley3-100-0 7, Harden6-18 7-7 21, Jo.smith7-101-416, Brewer4-82-212, Terry 2-30-06, Papanikolaou1-10-03,Canaan0-00-00. Totals 39-8615-24105. CLEVEL AND(93) Miller2 40 05, Love 7193617, Thompson2-7 7-7 11, Irving15-264-4 38, Dellavedova3-81-2 9, Haywood 1-I 0-0 2, J. Smith0-50-0 0, Marion1-6 0-0 2, Harris1-20-Ij 3, J.Jones2-4 0-0 6. Totals 34-8215-19 93. Houston 26 23 24 32 — 105 Cleveland 23 25 26 19 — 93
awesome, I respect the organization, I am proud to play for
started for the majority of his
Continued from C1
this organization, so that just
aged 7.1points per game in his
makes life a lot more fun."
senior season.
7-inch, 215-pound forward After three seasons abroad, signed with Okapi Aalstar, a Lodwick says he has grown team based in Aalst, Belgium comfortable with the Europe(about 20 miles from Brussels), an style of basketball. And his that plays in that country's re- new team allows him to play spected Scooore! League. And a more free-flowing style, a it did not take him long after style he has embraced. arriving in August to know Through 13 games this that he had made the right de- year, Lodwick is averaging 7.8 cision in returning to Europe. points and 3.5 rebounds while "I just had a good feeling in playing 20 minutes per game. my gut the day I got here," re- His team has played well, too, calls Lodwick, who started his going 9-4 before the league European career in Germany. went on its current two-week "The feeling was completely holiday hiatus. night and day compared to the Nearly all o f L o dwick's Freddy Van Geit/Okapi Aalstar previous year. That's not to say contributions have come off Abe Lodwick shoots during a there wasn't a lot of struggles the bench, a role "I'm really game in Belgium's Scooore! and a lot of frustrating things comfortable with," he says. League. Lodwick is enjoying even after that fact. But ulti- And Lodwick says he is a far his third season in Europe's pro mately the biggest thing for better player than he was at basketball leagues. me is just my teammates are Washington State, where he
INDIANA I102) SHill 8153421, West 6u 4416, Hibbert1-2 0-02, Watson 0-35-55, Miles4-152-213, Allen5-6 2-212, Copeland 2-60-Ij 5, Sloan6-112-214, Scola 5-12 4-414, Whittington 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-81 22-23 102. GOLDEN STATE(117) Barnes 2-4 0-04, Green2-82-4 7, Speights8-12 2-218, Curry8-171-1 21,Thompson 14-25 6-640, Bog}}t 2-40-04, Iguodala1-53-45, Livingston1-3 0-1 2, Lee6-101-213, Holiday1-3 0-0 3. Totals 45-91 15-20117. Indiana 28 22 26 26 — 102 GoldenSiate 23 2 7 34 33 — 117
Leaders
ThroughTuesda Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HO U 34 28I 270 917 27.0 James,CLE 29 256 171 731 25.2 Anthony,NYK 30 270 I35 717 23.9 Davis,NOR 33 305 171 781 23.7 Bryant,LAL 3I 248 I89 733 23.6 Aldridge,POR 31 285 128 714 23.0 Curry,GOL 32 26I ug 735 23.0 Wade,MIA 27 241 123 620 23.II Griffin, LAC 35 30I I78 787 22.5 Lillard,POR 35 263 155 778 2z2 Wizards101, Knicks91 Butler,CHI 32 226 216 700 21.9 27 2II9 u7 575 21.3 Bosh,MIA NEWYORK(91) Thompson, GOL 3I 233 94 650 21.0 Hardaway Jr. 3-10 1-17, Acy2-8 0-04, Aldrich Lowry,TOR 34 242 157 702 20.6 5-u 1-211, Calderon 7141-1 17,Prigioni1-300 Ellis, DAL 36 290 I21 742 20.6 3, Smith 3-87-1013, Larkin4-8 0-010, Early 3-5 Gay,SAC 32 233 158 656 20.5 0-0 8, Galloway 2-8 2-2 7, Wear 4-7 0-011. Totals Irving,CLE 32 234 I36 654 20.4 34-8212-16 91. 34 247 178 674 19.8 Gasol,MEM WASHING TON(101) H ayward, UT A 35 220 I66 665 19.0 Porter3-60 06,Nene8-134-620, Gortat5-92-4 Nowitzki,DAL 34 227 130 626 18.4 12, Wall 5-97-918, Beal4-10 0-012, Humphries Rebounds 3-8 0-0 6, Butler6-11 0-Ij 14, Seraphi}I 2-5 0-04, G OFFDEF TOTAVG Webster1-32-25, Miler 1-10-0 2, Blair 1-10-02, 35 I48 330 47II 13.7 Temple 0-00-00,Gooden0-00-00.Totals39-76 Jordan,LAC D rummond, D E T 34 167 281 448 13.2 15-21 101. Chandler,DAL 35 I44 275 419 1zo NewYork 21 20 26 24 — 91 26 97 200 297 u.4 Washington 30 23 24 24 — 101 Randolph,MEM GasolCHI , 32 II6 274 360 11.3 Vucevic,OR L 31 92 249 341 u.0 Kings104, Thunder 83 Aldridge,POR 31 II6 2}I}I 330 10.6 Duncan,SAN 31 82 244 326 10.5 OKLAHOM ACITY(83) NOR 33 II7 258 345 10.5 Durant8-205-724, Ibaka5-100-0 u, Adams1-2 Davis, Love,CLE 34 68 279 347 10.2 1-2 3,Westbrook3-19 4-510, Roberson0-01-21, Assists Perkins0002 0, Morrow3-121-1 8,NCollison Ij 2 G AST AVG 2-2 2,Jones1-30-03,Jackson6-u 0-014,waiters Wall, WAS 34 352 10.4 1-92-24, Lamb 1-10-03, Smith0-00-00. Totals Lawson,DEN 34 34II 10.2 29-8916-23 83. Rondo,DAL 31 3u 10.0 SACRAM ENTO(104) 35 332 9.5 Gay 9-197-8 28,Thompson0-32-4 2, Cousins Paul, LAC 32 248 7 . 8 6-23 u-13 23,D.Collison9-191-1 24, McLemore Curry,GOL 5-90-011, Landry5-6II-010, Williams1-41-24, Lowry,TOR 34 260 7.6 29 221 7 . 6 Stauskas 0 40 00, Hollins 000 00, McCallum1-5 James,CLE C arter-Wi l iams, PH L 25 187 7.5 0-02. Totals 36-9222-28104. Oklahoma City 1 6 27 14 26 — 83 Holiday,NOR 34 243 7 . 1 Sacramento 28 2 5 25 26 — 104 Teague,ATL 31 219 7.1
Lodwick Over the summer, the 6-foot-
Warriors 117, Pacers102
last three seasons and aver-
"The biggest area that I've improved might not even be skillwise," Lodwick s ays. "I've always had decent skills. But the biggest hurdle for me in college was definitely just mental challenges. I struggled with confidence a lot. I think in college a lot of times I was
a robot." Lodwick's newfound comfort extends beyond the court.
Playing alongside former college standouts like Lee Cummard of BYU and Taylor Braun of North Dakota State
(Braun, an Oregonian from Newberg, led NDSU to an up-
scored 21 points and Josh Gasser added 15 as Wisconsin held off stubborn
Purdue. No. 5 Louisville 58, Clemson 52: LOUISVILLE, Ky.
— Chris Jones had his second straight 20-point second half to help Louisville rally past Clemson. illinois 64, No. 11 Maryland 57: CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Illinois wondered who
would score with Rayvonte Rice injured. Malcolm Hill provided the answer with a career-high 28 points against Maryland. No. 12 Kansas 56, No. 21 Baylor 55: WACO,TexasWayne Selden made three consecutive baskets when
Kansas needed them most, and the Jayhawks held off Baylor to wi n t heir 24th
consecutive c o nference opener. No. 15 Wichita State 63, Bradley 43: W I C H I TA, Kan. — D arius C a rter
scored 19 points in Wichita State's v ictory
o v er
Bradley. Xavier 69, No. 19 Seton Hall 58: CINCINNATI Dee Davis scored 14 points and Trevon Bluiett led a
late run as Xavier pulled away from Seton Hall for
the Musketeers' second straight home win over a ranked team. No. 20 VCU 71, Davidson 65: RICHMOND, Va. Treveon Graham had 15 -
points and 10 rebounds for Virginia Commonwealth, which held D avidson's l ong-range shooters i n check.
"All things considered, I am of the downtime. (Lodwick, who is single, says he has lots able I've been in my career, of downtime.) and definitely the happiest, Lodwick does expect to retoo," he says. turn to the U.S. after his play"It's probably growing as a ing career ends, but he cannot player, for sure, and just get- say with certainty what his tingthe experience under my basketball future holds. belt," he adds. "But the specific Unlike last year, though, he situation I am in here now is does not appear ready to let really unique and really cool. the game go. "You learn a lot about basJust getting along well with the guys and coaching staff, it ketball, of course, and you makes basketball a lot of fun learn a lot about yourself and definitely the most comfort-
and makes it easy to come in
a lot about life," Lodwick says
every day to practice." This season, he concludes, has been "a big breath of fresh air." Lodwick is making a decent
of his European experience. "It's a day-in and day-out grind for 10 months, for sure. Some of it is not very fun, but a lot of it is really cool. The ex-
perience is really unique and son bringing a more lucrative it's fun to make some (memoset over Oklahoma in the 2014 contract, he says. And he is en- ries) and play basketball at the NCAA Tournament), Lodwick tertaining the idea of pursuing same time." has connected with his team- a real estate or personal train— Reporter: 541-617-7868, mates, he says. ing license, just to fill in some zhaII®bendbulletin.com. living, too, with each new sea-
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
Hall
Cougars runaway with nonleague win Bulletin staff report
Brent Sullivan had 12 points straight win i n b oth teams' Mountain View converted No. 1 in Class 5A heading into and nine rebounds, but Ma- Intermountain C o nference 17 turnovers into 18 points, the night. Jordan Vance had dras (7-3) was outscored 20-13 opener. Megan Cornett had 13 holding Madras to just one 11 points and eight rebounds, in the fourth quarter. points for Summit (1-0 IMC, point off seven giveaways, and Brian Scinto chipped From late Tuesday: 9-2 overall), which outscored and the Cougars rolled to a
Mountain View, which was
in with 10 points and four
the Panthers 17-7 in the third
Girls basketball
58-38 nonleague boys basket- rebounds.
quarter to grab a 50-20 adball win at Mountain View on For the W h ite Buffaloes, Summit 58, Redmond 32: vantage. Redmond (0-1, 2-8) Wednesday night. ranked seventh in 4A, Devon S arah Reeves poured in a was led by Emily Joyce's 11 Davis Holly l ogged 13 Wolfe posted a double-double game-high 21 points to lead points, while Sophia Hamilton points and four assists to pace with 13 points and 10 boards. the Storm t o t h ei r f o u r th chipped in with 10 points.
bination of all that until it fi-
nally came together for me."
Continued from C1 On this day, the f i erce competitors were all team-
Memorabilia
Fame" in red script stitched
rookie team in Great Falls, M ontana, M a r t inez w a s
As an 18-year-old playing mates in jerseys with "Hall of for the Los Angeles Dodgers' across the chest. "I still love you," Biggio
called up to pitch for Class A Bakersfield in the playoffs,
said. "It's OK."
There was a lot of love, laughter and a dmiration among the largest induction class elected by the writers since 1955. Some of the highlights of the nearly hourlong news conference:
a little more than 100 miles
W hat's a few inches among friends?
He was the only one that
from Dodger Stadium, where his brother Ramon was pitching. Martinez went to visit his
brother and came across a memorabilia auction:
"As a kid, I r emember watching Reggie Jackson.
could pimp a homer back in those days. ... Ramon's former Atlanta Braves team- friend goes, 'You want that mates Gregg Maddux and ball?' I'm like, 'Yeah, I would On his connection with
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE
T om Glavine, wh o
n er's re urn o ea aw s s OLl
e soi i
o ensive ine
w e r e like to have it.' 'You have the
known for pitching on the 250 bucks?' All I had to do corners — sometimes get- was reach in my pocket, pull ting a wider strike zone than it out. I knew it was 250. So usual:
I was handing it to the per-
I didn't, by the way. So don't believe that. I didn't. I didn't."
bucks, 1990, that I made in
"Everyone kind of assumes son, 'Here, buy it.' 'No, no, the three of us together and no. You don't get it that way. links us t ogether," Smoltz You sign your name there. If said. "Everyone's feeling is it happens that nobody bets we got 6 inches off the plate. on it, then you get it.' All 250 Biggio answered Smoltz
By Tim Booth
several minutes later: "I agree with John. It wasn't 6 inches
The Associated Press
RENTON, Wash. — Of all the positions on the offensive line, center is the one most needing continuity. And it has been
off the plate. It was more like 6to 10."
the one most like a revolving door for the
Old goats
r• k
Seattle Seahawks this season.
Martinez on being elected to the Hall, where he visited
Four different players have started at least three games at center this season.
my last 15 days of work in Montana, I paid for a Reggie Jackson signed ball." Smoltz is not so nostalgic: "I'm pretty bad at it, I'll ad-
mit. I never really asked for autographs growing up. I'm better today, but I've been
known to play catch with my
when he was a young player
200th win ball with my son. I don't know where a lot of
But just in time for Saturday's NFC di-
with the Montreal Expos and
stuff is."
visional playoff game against Carolina, veteranMax Unger is expected to return after missing the final six games of the regularseason becauseofan injury. "What he brings is his experience, and comfort level, and knowledge in the system and targeting," Seattle offensive line coach Tom Cable said. "Just being that
had an immediate appreciation of the game's history:
New York, New York
"I couldn't imagine howthe
game was. I could only wonder, but I'm extremely honored to be going back now, being part of it, being looked
of being on the same page. Being able to help thequarterback where he needs to
go. Just the background, that's great experience we're getting back." Unger's entire season has been littered
Ted S. Warren/The Associated Press
with injuries. The former University of Oregon standout played the first four games but suffered a foot injury against Washington. After sitting out four weeks, Unger returned for a pair of games in November, only to suffer a high ankle sprain late in Seattle's 24-20 loss at Kansas City. The ankle injury sidelined Unger for therestoftheregularseason. "Nothing you can do about it," he said. "(This is) stuff that's kind of out of my
Seattle Seahawks center Max Unger takes part in practice drills Wednesday in Renton, Washington. Unger, who missed the past six games with an ankle injury, is expected to be in the lineup when the Seahawks play the Carolina Panthers Saturday in a divisional
placements Seattle has used. First up was
sion for us that helps us just be right more ahawks averaged 392.5 yards of offense and that's a really important thing in the per game, including 203.8 yards rushing. game." Seattle also allowed a total of 13 sacks in Despite the lengthy layoff, Unger and thosesix games, and quarterback Russell his coaches do not believe there will be Wilson had a passer rating of 95 or higher any rust in the return. Unger practiced in five of the six. both days last week during Seattle's bye In the 10 games Unger missed, Seat- and was close to being able to return for tle averaged nearly 30 fewer yards of of- the regular-season finale against St. fense, but the big decline was in the run- Louis. "The bye was huge, as it always is comning game: The Seahawks rushed for just 153.9 yards in those 10 games when Ung- ing off a long schedule and being able to er was out. take a week off and come back," Unger "That's his guidance and his experi- said. "Especially for me and not having ence for the other guys up there," Seattle played for the last six weeks, that was big coach Pete Carroll said. "He's an expert not to be thrown in there and be able to at recognizing looks and calls and di- have a couple of days of practice."
playoff game. golIlg. While Seattle has received serviceable
play from Schilling, Jeanpierre and Lewis, there is no denying the Seahawks have better offensive numbers when Unger is control." on the field. Unger's injuries led to the long list of reIn the six games Unger played — the
injured reserve. Next in line was Patrick
Lewis, who started games in Week 9, 11, 16 and 17. Also thrown in was former Seattle backup Lemuel Jeanpierre, who was
re-signedbeforeWeek 12 and made three starts. "We have rotated a lot of guys, but ev-
erybody who has stepped up has done a great job," guard J.R. Sweezy said. "We may have been alittle offhere and
there, but for the main whole we've really worked at getting our communication down with whoever is in there and be-
ing on top of it and knowing where we're
Ducks
ent," Meyer said. "Those ones,
we had 37 days to prepare. I remember in '06 it was 37 or
like a dinner that featured en-
makes it easier to treat it like a
tertainment from a couple of alligators and a python. Adding the national championship as a 15th game presents some unique challenges for coaches and their players — like guarding against fatigue or injury.
regular game." Ducks coach Mark Helfrich
was one of those who called it all odd. But in a good way. "It's weird in some sense:
It's obviously not just another game, but it's sort of just another week of fall," he said.
"I was talking to someone "We're in school, they're not, earlier and they said it's been so that's a little bit of nuance like 25 weeks," said Ohio State to it. But we've had a plan for senior receiver Evan Spencer. this and built a plan for this "I guess it is just part of the last summer and our guys grind. Part of our job is taking have done a phenomenal job care of your body and making of executing our long-term sure you're ready to go when plan. "Logistically, the time of yournumber iscalled." Buckeyes coach U rban day and how we're practicing, Meyer led a former team, Flor- all that stuff is the same. But ida, to national championships obviously what we're doing in 2006 and 2008. There was during that time is different not a lot of comparison he from when you are in Week I could offer. or Week 26, or whatever it is now."
recting what's going on there. So it just stands to reason that we maximize more
so with him there. We'll just be a little bit more accurate with stuff and the kind
of experience that just takes time to get. Patrick and Lemuel, they just haven't had the background. It's a wonderful dimen-
first four and Weeks 10 and 11 — the Se-
Continued from C1 Upon arrival for the game 47, some ridiculous number; in Pasadena, second-seeded '06 was the first one removed Oregon was involved in all the f rom t h e t r a ditional b o w l customary Rose Bowl activi- date." ties, including the obligatory This one, Meyer said, "is a visit to Disneyland for the pho- one-game shot that really, you to op with Mickey Mouse. have four practices in shoulder The Ducks had essential- pads. ly already done their work: Oregon was keeping everyThere had been 26 days be- thing the same as during the tween the team's regular-sea- regularseason.Same practice son finale and the Granddad- times, same meeting schedule. dy of Them All. That gave The Ducks, like the Buckeyes, Oregon coaches and players leave Friday for the Dallas plenty of time to scheme for area. "We understand what we're the Seminoles and quarterback Jameis Winston. playing for," Oregon center The fourth-seeded Buck- Hroniss Grasu said. "But the eyes weresimilarl y prepared nice thing is that guys who haupon arrival in New Orleans, ven't been in a game like this giving them time for events — not many of us have — it
"Practices are a little differ-
attle Mariners in the Bronx on May 30, 1989. It did not
take the University of Southern California pitcher long to old goats now. They're going meet a fellow Trojan — and to be like, 'Oh, look, that's baseball Hall of Famer: "Tom Seaver is walking Pedro, that's John. That was back then.' So we all became behind me as I'm going into old goats after yesterday." the clubhouse with my suitcase. I played for the legFaking it endary college coach Rod Smoltz got some good Dedeaux at USC. He called advice on how to put away everybody Tiger.... It's also batters: a calling card that when you " I learned it f r o m T om hear someone say 'Tiger' to Glavine who never really you. You know that's USC showed any emotion, which alumni baseball. Tom Seaver is the reason why he won 300 yelled out, 'Tiger, Tiger, Tiger, games and was a Hall of Fam- you can't be carrying your er. I learned if you didn't have own bags. You're pitching towhat you needed that day, day.' ... I went on to win that fake it; don't let them know." game. But more importantly Johnson had a different someone of that stature, who I've become friends with now take on faking it: at as an old goat. That's what we all became. We became
much more right, whether it's run or pass I don't think it really matters. Just kind
Stephen Schilling, who made three starts around midseason before ending up on
Johnson made his f i r st
start after being traded from the MontrealExpos to the Se-
"For me it wa s hard to
since then, the great Tom
fake. You either saw 95 to 100 (mph) or you didn't.... The one thing I had going for me is I could throw really
Seaver, helped me with my suitcase on my pitching day
hard. I was kind of like that Sports Illustrated story that
ing for the Yankees in 2005 and 2006, and he got to know
came out a long time ago ('The Curious Case of Sidd Finch' from April 1, 1985), a kid wearing overalls in a hay field, being able to throw a
several of the team's Hall of
hundred miles an hour. That
was me. I was like Nuke La-
more votes tothe Hall of Fame than I did?' I mean, who does
Loosh in 'Bull Durham' that hit the mascot. I was a com-
that? Friends do. Reggie's the greatest. Ilove Reggie."
in Yankee Stadium."
Johnson ended up pitch-
Famers:
"I'm good friends with Reggie Jackson. He caiied me asking: 'Randy, how did you get
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Bowl ratingsup,attendancedown at start of playoff era By Steve Megargee
program. While ratings are slightThe new playoff era is ly up across the board for drawing lots of college foot- bowl games, attendance has ball fans to bowl game broad- drpped. casts. But it is not necessarily The 38 bowl games this putting more fans in stadium season have drawn an averseats. age announced attendance The Associated Press
ESPN announced that the
of 43,285, down 9.2 percent
Rose Bowl and Sugar Bowl from theaverage of47,659for semifinals in th e College the 34 bowls last season that Football Playoff drew the led up to the BCS championlargest two audiences in ca- ship game. ble television history, with Those figures are skewed each game attracting more by the fact that all four new than 28 million viewers. The bowls that had their inaugutwo semifinals drew more ral games this season drew viewers than any of the four fewer than 30,000 fans. But BCS championship games even if you throw those four broadcast by ESPN, which games out of the mix, the avalso will air Monday's title erage attendance for the regame between Ohio State maining 34 bowls is 45,904, and Oregon. down 3.7 percentfrom last "That was a pleasant sur-
prise," said Burke Magnus, ESPN's senior vice president of programming and acquisitions. "We're cautiously optimistic about Monday, but
season.
uncertainty for all the bowl tracting more local fans who games. The old BCS format are not affiliated with the two was replaced by the "New schools playing in the game Year's Six," which featured each year. He cited the Sugar, the Fiesta, Orange and Peach Peach and Rose as three bowl bowls on New Year's Eve and games with exceptional comthe two semifinals and the munity support. "We've probably gotten Cotton Bowl on New Year's Day. comfortable wit h c r owds T hat new format led t o
coming from schools," Waters
plenty of change. For instance, the Peach Bowl
said. "Just as schools are having trouble with their attenwas formerly known as the dance, we're going to have to C hick-fil-A Bowl a n d t r a - get more active locally." ditionally pitted a SouthWaters saidbowl games eastern Conference school
that have attendance increas-
against an Atlantic Coast Conference program in a prime-time game. This year, the playoff committee arranged a matchup that had a midday kickoff. TCU trounced Ole Miss 42-3 in front of an announced
es generally have compelling matchups featuring regional opponents that are hungry for abowlappearance. T he Texas Bowl had a l l those elements, as f o r mer
Southwest Conference rivals Arkansas and Texas made the short trip to Houston for
Wright Waters, the execu- attendance of 65,706, ending the bowl's string of 17 consec- the Razorbacks' first bowl utive sellouts. appearance since the 2 011 "Obviously it was a (day) season. Arkansas' 31-7 victhe attendance drops reflect regular-season trends. game where in the past we tory drew a sellout crowd of obviously the new format has A C BSSports.com study were in prime time," Peach 71,115, more than double the resonated with fans." showed that the average reg- Bowl CEO a n d p r esident announced attendance of ESPN spokesperson Keri ular-season attendance for Gary Stokan said. "We're 32,327 for the Texas Bowl's Potts said that ESPN's bowl home games this year was going t o s t u d y e v ery- Syracuse-Minnesota pairing telecasts through New Year's 43,483, down 4 percent from thing. I don't know if t h at last season. Day drew an average rat- last season and its lowest fig- had anything to do with • Accessories ing of 3.4, whereas its av- ure since 2000. it. We're studying every• Bed Slide "It's not just a bowl prob- thing because everything erage rating through all its • Aries Automotive bowl telecasts other than the lem," Waters said. "It's a col- has changed for us.... But • Extang championship last season lege football problem that how do you complain with • Undercover • aed Rug was 3.2. Ratings represent we've got to deal with." (65,706)?" the percentage of homes T he first season of t h e Waters suggested that with televisions tuned to a playoff era created plenty of some bowls should try attive director for the Football Bowl Association, notes that
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
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O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
NASDAQ 4,650.47
17,584.52
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2,025.90
TOdap
18,120 "
S8$P 500
Thursday, January 8, 2015
Better quarter?
2 040.
Constellation Brands is expected to report today that its earnings improved in its third fiscal quarter The wine, liquor and beer company, whose brands include Robert Mondavi, Negra Modelo and Svedka Vodka,benefited in the previous quarter from strong sales growth in its beer segment. That helped offset the impact of a recall of about two million case shipments.
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17597.08 17374.78 17584.52 +21 2.88 DOW Trans. 8791.69 8724.61 8772.38 +61.42 DOW Util. 624.18 614.46 621.55 +6.22 NYSE Comp. 10638.74 10514.48 10627.13 +112.26 NASDAQ 4652.72 461 3.91 4650.47 +57.73 S&P 500 2029.61 2005.55 2025.90 +23.29 S&P 400 1430.79 1418.74 1430.65 +1 7.58 Wilshire 5000 21323.88 21060.25 21301.67 +241.42 Russell 2000 1175.98 1164.95 1175.97 +1 4.66
DOW
%CHG. WK $.1.23% V $.0.71% V $.1.01% $.1.07% V $.1.26% V $.1.16% V $.1.24% V $.1.15% V $.1.26% V
D
MO QTR YTD L L -1.34% 'w L -4.02% L L +0.5 6 % 'w v -1.96% 'w L -1.81% 'w L -1.60% -1.50% L L -1.70% -2.38% L L
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
NAME
Alaska Air Group A LK 36.31 ~ 60.94 59. 6 7 +. 9 0 +1.5 V L Avista Corp A VA 27.71 ~ 37.37 35.6 2 +. 6 8 +1 .9 Bank of America BA C 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 16. 9 4 + . 0 8 + 0.5 Racking up debt BarrettBusiness B BS I 18 . 25 ~ 102.2 0 27. 02 + . 8 8 +3.4 L L Strong gains in employment have Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 144. 5 7 12 9.51 +1.98 +1.6 V L made consumers more comfortCascade Bancorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 5.82 5.90 +. 0 5 +1.0 T L able about taking on more debt. ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 26.10 +.05 +0.2 Consumer debt excluding real Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o 45.87 44 .92 + . 5 2 +1 .2 estate loans rose $13.2 billion in CostcoWholesale COST109.50— o 14 6.82144.32 +2.47 +1.7 October, bringing borrowing to a Craft BrewAlliance BREW 10.07 ~ 17.97 1 2. 9 7 -.18 -1.5 T W F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 30.9 0 +. 2 5 $ .0.8 V W record $3.28 trillion. The increase FLIR Systems HewlettPackard H PQ 27. 2 7 — o 40.95 39 .73 + . 4 6 +1.2 W L came even as overall borrowing I NTC 23.50 ~ 37.90 36.9 2 +. 7 4 +2 .1 V W rose at a slightly slower pace than Intel Corp Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 13.1 3 +. 1 0 +0 .8 V V in the previous month. Did the K R 3 5 .13 ~ 64.98 64. 9 9 + 1.91+3.0 L L trend continue in November? Find Kroger Co Lattice Semi L SCC 5.30 ~ 9.19 6.74 +.1 1 +1 .7 V L out today, when the Federal LPX 12.46 ~ 18.8 8 15. 6 9 + . 0 9 +0.6 v w Reserve issues its latest consum- LA Pacific MDUResources M DU 21 . 33 ~ 36.05 23. 7 8 +. 3 9 + 1.7 V er borrowing data. MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 3.8 0 21.29 +.33 +1.6 Microsoft Corp MSFT 34.63 ~ 5 0.0 5 46.23 +.58+1.3 V W Consumer credit Nike Inc B N KE 69.85 ~ 99.76 94.8 7 + 1 .92 +2.1 V W seasonall y adjusted change Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — o 80.54 79 .42 +2.63 +3.4 $25 billion Nwst Nat Gas N WN 40.05 ~ 52.57 48.8 9 +. 4 0 $ .0.8 22.4 PaccarInc P CAR 53.59 ~ 71.15 66.8 3 +. 8 8 $ .1.3 T W Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 7.79 +.0 3 $ .0.4 20 19.4 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 43.3 9 +. 5 5 $ .1.3 PCP 215.09 ~ 275. 0 9 22 9.75 -1.23 -0.5 est. Prec Castparts 15.4 SWY 26.69 — o 36.03 35 .22 + . 05 +0.1 15.3 Safeway Inc 15 Schnitzer Steel SCH N 19.33o — 32.36 20.49 +.63 +3.2 13.6 13.2 Sherwin Wms SHW 174.29 — o 26 6.25265.32 +4.45 +1.7 StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 67. 1 5 +. 6 6 + 1.0 10 StarbucksCp S BUX 6793 ~ 84 20 8118 + 195 +25 V V J J A S 0 N Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 14.94 ~ 1 9.60 16. 1 6 + . 2 3 + 1.4 2014 DS Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 43.5 5 +. 3 8 +0 .9 V V Source: Facteet Washington Fedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.39 +.18 +0.8 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 4.17 ~ 5 5.9 5 5 2.40 +.31 +0.6 V W Weyerhaeuser WY 2 7.48 — o 36.88 36 .18 + . 11 + 0.3
Holiday season boost?
BBBY $80 $79.15
$78.21
60 '14
50
Operating EPS
I
V V T
T V W V V
V
v
V V
T
V V
V
-0.2 +60.5 1039 1 6 0 . 50 + 0.8 +30.6 3 1 4 1 1 1 . 2 7 5.3 + 1 .9100790 16 0 .20 1.4 -71.1 10 2 d d 0 .88f 0.4 -5.8 3509 19 3.64f 3.7 - 3.5 5 7 5.5 ... 364 16 0 . 64f +0.9 +17.2 2 0 7 2 7 0 . 60f +1.8 +23.0 2101 30 1 . 42 9.5 - 26.0 12 6 7 5 4 .4 + 7 . 1 8 4 9 2 8 0 . 4 0 1.0 +41.0 10440 15 0 . 64 0.7 +42.1 27145 17 0.96f 5.5 -1.2 9540 13 0 . 26 $-1.2 +64.5 5029 20 0.74f 2 .2 +23.2 7 1 6 2 0 5.3 -13.3 1797 (ld +1.2 -19 2 1256 15 0 73f 2.9 - 10.0 285 1 8 0 . 20 0.5 +29.5 28332 18 1 . 24 1.3 +21.3 3521 28 1.12f +27.2 1716 2 1 1 . 32 2.0 +20.5 1 3 9 2 2 1 .86f 1.7 $.14.6 1757 18 0.88a 6 .9 +218.0 61 8 4 6 +1.4 - 0.3 92 8 4 2 1 . 7 6 4.6 -12.9 1242 18 0 . 12 + 0.3 +27.2 1321 3 0.9 2 9.2 - 33.7 466 7 1 0 . 75 + 0.9 +44.0 8 1 7 3 0 2 . 2 0 3.9 + 3 . 3 2 6 4 1 3 1 .30f 1.1 + 5 . 5 4 740 3 0 1 .28f 5.0 -11.6 1677 22 0 . 60 3 .1 + 8 . 7 4 987 1 4 0 . 98 3.4 -5.5 66 2 1 4 0 .59f 4.4 +17.7 15266 13 1 . 40 +0.8 +19.6 2857 2 7 1 . 16
DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, irut are not included. ir - Annualrate pius stock. 8 -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. i - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distriirution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
::: Be a 'Pepper'
52-WEEK RANGE
159
$74
Dividend:none
AP Source: Factset
AmdFocus AP
Federated Kaufmann is rated "Neutral" by Morningstar MarhetSummary analysts. They cite high fees and Most Active transitioning management as NAME VOL (90s) LAST CHG detractions from its strong S&P500ETF 1113242 202.31 +2.49 long-term record. ArenaPhm 1073350 BkofAm 1007899 SiriusXM 933137 iShEMkts 571318 Penney 551999 8 iPVixST 520323 PetrbrsA 491949 Petrobras 454844 MktVGold 436452
5.85 +2.53 16.94 +.08 3.41 +.06 38.74 +.82 7.89 +1.33 32.88 -1.07 6.30 +.16 6.20 +.18 20.09 -.38
F ederated KaufmanR m VALUE
KA O F X
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers ArenaPhm Cosi Inc h Cyan TrioTch OneHorizn Halozyme GalectinTh GenVec h Zafgen n Penney
LAST 5.85 2.16 3.26 3.33 2.57 12.52 4.00 2.82 38.75 7.89
NAME
LAST
CHG +2.53 +.47 +.71 +.69 +.51 +2.46 +.77 +.54 +6.58 +1.33
%CHG + 76.2 + 2 7.8 n48 + 2 7.8 53 + 2 6.1 + 2 4.8 473 + 24.5 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 2 3.8 n Fund target represents weighted + 2 3.7 Q + 20.5 average of stock holdings + 20.3 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings
Losers PostRck rs 2.38 M eruNetw 2 . 9 2 C arverBcp 5 . 40 C T Ptrs 12. 7 5 DrxRsaBear 27.09
CHG %CHG -.66 -21.7 -.78 -21.1 -.85 -13.6 -1.84 -12.6 -3.92 -12.6
StoryStocks U.S. stocks broke a five-day losing streak with a broad rally on Wednesday that swept up nearly all sectors of the market. Stocks rose from the open of trading as oil prices stabilized near six-year lows. Investors are watching oil closely for signs of trouble in a global economy that is struggling to grow. An encouraging report on hiring also cheered investors. Payroll processor ADP reported that companies added more workers in December than they did in November. That raised hopes that a key government report on jobs due Friday will also show strong hiring. Nine of the 10 sectors in the Standard and Poor's 500 index rose, led by health care stocks. JCP Monsanto MON Close:$7.89 %1.33 or 20.3% Close:$117.21 %1.45 or 1.3% The department store operator reThe agriculture products company ported a 3 7 percent increase in reported better-than-expected fiscal same-store sales during the holiday first-quarter profit, but revenue fell shopping season. short of forecasts. $9 $130 8 120 110
D J N 52-week range $4.98~ $11.38 0
Voi.:61.6m (3.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.41 b
PE: . . Yield: ..
RPM International
RPM
Close:$45.27 V-3.81 or -7.8% The chemical products maker reported worse-than-expected quarterly financial results and trimmed its 2015 fiscal outlook. $55
OO
0
D N 52-week range
$104.88~
J
$ 128 .79
VolJ 4.9m (1.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$56.68 b
P E: 22 .6 Yie l d: 1.7%
Dick's Sporting Goods
DK S
Close:$55.01 L5.77 or 11.7% Reuters reported that the retailer is in early-stage talks to investigate the possibility of going private. $60
50 45
50 0
N
D
J
0
52-week range $37.57~
N
D
J
52-week range $5 1.97
$41.35~
$ 58.87
VolJ4.8m (6.5x avg.) PE: 2 1.0 Volc11.0m(6.9x avg.) PE: 2 0.8 Mkt. Cap:$6.04 b Yie l d : 2. 3% Mkt. Cap:$5.21 b Yie l d : 0.9%
MicronTechnology
Mu
Close:$32.10 V-0.77 or -2.3% The chipmaker reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter profit, but its revenue results fell short of expectations. $40
Arena Pharma.
ARNA Close:$5.85L2.53 or 76.2% The biotechnology company reported positive results from an early-stage study on a potential treatment for autoimmune diseases.
$6
35
30 0
N
D
J
0
52-week range $27.32~
N
D
J
52-week range $38.59
Vol.:52.5m (2.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$34.49 b
PE: 12.6 Yield:...
$3.28~
$ 7.97
Volc107.9m (20.0x avg.) PE: ... Mkt. Cap: $1.29 b Yield: ...
Sonic
SONC Keurig Green Mtn. GM CR Close:$29.72%2.63 or 9.7% Close:$133.02%5.83 or 4.6% The drive-in restaurant chain report- The company struck a deal with Dr. ed better-than-expected fiscal PepperSnapple to m ake capsules first-quarter financial results and re- for use in Keurig's soon-to-be reaffirmed its outlook. leasedcold beverage system. $35 $160 30 25
140
CATEGORY Mid-Cap Growth MORNINGSTAR
RATING™ *** r r r r ASSETS $3,500 million EXP RATIO 1.96%
N D J 0 N D J 52-week range 52-week range $18.92~ $3 1.59 $74.44~ $ 158 .87 Vol.:5.2m (6.0x avg.) PE:3 5 . 0 Volc1.8m (1.1x avg.) PE:3 5 . 6 Mkt. Cap:$1.59 b Yie l d : 0.3% Mkt. Cap:$21.56 b Yie l d: 0.9%
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
KeurigGreen Mountain is becoming a "Pepper."The company has reached a deal with Dr. Pepper Snapple to make single-serve capsules for Keurig's soon-to-be released cold beverage system. The companies did not disclose terms of the agreement Wednesday or specify which particular brands will be included. The soda maker's brands include Sunkist, Snapple, Dr. Pepper and Hawaiian Punch among others. re The multi-year deal will make Keurig Green Mountain the exclusive producer in the U.S. and Canada for the drinks that use fountain syrup in the new Keurig Cold machine. Keurig Cold, which is expected to launch in the fall, lets users to make cold carbonated drinks, sports drinks, teas, juice drinks and enhanced waters at home. Shares of Keurig Green Mountain rose 5 percent Wednesday.
Price-earnings ratio: 16 based on past 12 month results
-.0066
0
Keurig Green Mountain (GMCR) Wednesday's close:$133.02 Price change 1 -yr 3 - y*r
3Q '13 3 Q '14
NAME
V
'
70
1.1848+
J.C. Penney
"
NorthwestStocks
Bed Bath & Beyond's latest quarterly report card should provide insight into the retailer's holiday season sales. The company, which owns its namesake store chain and retailers such as Cost Plus World Market, is due to report fiscal third-quarter financial results today. Financial analysts anticipate that Bed Bath & Beyond's earnings and revenue improved from a year earlier.
' + +.72
.
NYSE NASD
(it0rona
"
"
Vol. (in mil.) 3,702 1,890 Pvs. Volume 4,347 2,118 Advanced 2406 1853 Declined 7 47 8 6 9 New Highs 216 57 New Lows 76 66
$.«4
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17,000
1,920 "
$48.65
Dow jones industrials "
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18,000"
"
-.09
$16.51
17,240" ""' 10 DAYS "
StocksRecap
rona
17,680"
17,500" 2,000 "
GOLD ~ $1,210.60
10 YR T NOTE 1 978/
5-yr*
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.97 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 2 .0 2 . 0 9 .09
52-wk T-bill
.24
.25
... -0.01 L
2-year T-note . 6 0 .61 -0.01 V 5 -year T-note 1.48 1.4 8 ... V 10-year T-note 1.97 1.94 +0.03 V 30-year T-bond 2.53 2.50 +0.03 V
BONDS
L
L L L
.04 .07 .12
L
L
.39
T T V
T 1.68 V 2.94 w 3.88
W
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barcl aysLongT-Bdldx 2.37 2.37 ... W W
Bond Buyer Muni ldx 4.19 4.19 .. . w w GMCR 67 7 % 45. 8 BarclaysUSAggregate 2.13 2.19 -0.06 w w Pnce-earnings ratio:36 PRIME FED Barclays US (Ba s ed on past 12 month results) Di v . yield: 0.9% D ivi d end:$1.15 High Yield 6.85 6.74 +0.11 L L RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp ldx 3.50 3.59 -0.09 w w *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.75 1.79 -0.04 w w 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.01 3.06 -0.05 W W 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND NAV CHG Y TD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 51 +.17 1.0 +8.3 +13.9+11.5 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.94 +.47 1.1 +6.4 +10.8 +8.4 A A A CpWldGrlA m 45.20 +.45 1.9 +2.7 +14.7 +8.2 8 8 C EurPacGrA m 46.13 +.35 2.1 -4.1 +10.9 +4.9 8 8 C FnlnvA m 50. 9 9 +.52 2.1 +7.6 +17.4+12.4 D D D GrthAmA m 41.83 +.44 2.0 +7.8 +19.2+12.5 D 8 D IncAmerA m 21.39 +.17 0.9 +8.1 +12.4+10.7 8 8 A InvCoAmA m 36.44 +.40 1.7 +11.2 +18.3+12.5 C C D NewPerspA m 35.57 +.33 2.0 +2.0 +15.3 +9.7 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m40.25 +.41 1.7 +10.0 +17.0+14.1 8 C A Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 4 + .91 +0.4 +5.6 +4.7 +5.1 C A 8 IntlStk 41.94 + . 37 -2.5 -1.7 +14.3 +6.7 A A A Stock 176.6 0 +1.53-2.4 +8.4 +21.9+14.3 C A A Fidelity Contra 96.20 + 1.18 1.8 +8.1 +18.2+14.1 D C 8 ContraK 96.1 3 +1.18 1.8 +8.2 +18.4+14.2 C C 8 LowPriStk d 49.16 +.37 2.2 +5.3 +18.2+14.5 D C 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg71.72 +.84 1.6 +12.5 +19.1+14.5 A 8 A 500ldxlnstl 71 . 72 +.84 1 .6 +12.5 +19.1 NA A 8 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.39 +.91 1.3 +2.7 +9.2 +8.2 D A A IncomeA m 2. 3 6 +.91 1.3 +2.8 +9.7 +8.7 D A A Intl I 22.41 -.94 4.0 -8.3 +15.2 +8.1 D A A Oakmark Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 63 +.23 1.8 +9.7 +15.5+12.1 C E D RisDivB m 17 . 37 +.21 1.8 +8.8 +14.5+11.2 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 24 +.20 1.8 +8.8 +14.6+11.3 D E E SmMidValA m47.60 +.53 2.3 +8.7 +17.2+12.0 C D E SmMidValB m40.94 +.45 2.3 +7.9 +16.2+11.0 C E E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.9 6 + .26 -2.3 +5.7 +16.3+12.1 E D C GrowStk 51.1 9 +.70 -1.5 +7.9 +20.4+15.2 D A A HealthSci 68. 9 3+1.71+1.4 +32.6 +37.4+27.5 8 A A Newlncome 9.65 + 0.8 +6.2 +3.3 +4.5 8 C D Vanguard 500Adml 186.94+2.20 -1.6 +12.5 +19.1+14.5 A 8 A 500lnv 186.94+2.21 -1.6 +12.4 +18.9+14.4 A 8 A CapOp 52.97 +.70 -1.3 +17.6 +24.7+15.2 A A A Eqlnc 30.72 +.33 -1.6 +10.4 +17.0+15.1 8 C A IntlStkldxAdm 25.36 +.20 -2.5 -5.3 +8.2 NA 8 D StratgcEq 31.66 +.38 -1.6 +12.3 +22.8+17.6 A A A TgtRe2020 28.24 +.18 -0.8 +6.6 +11.1 +9.1 A A A Tgtet2025 16.37 +.12 -1.0 +6.5 +12.1 +9.6 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.97 +1.0 +6.5 +2.9 +4.5 8 D D Totlntl 15.16 +.12 -2.5 -5.4 +8.1 +3.2 8 D D TotStlAdm 50.77 +.60 -1.6 +11.3 +19.2+14.7 8 8 A TotStldx 50.75 +.60 -1.6 +11.2 +19.0+14.6 C 8 A USGro 29.46 +.42 -1.5 +11.9 +20.8+14.2 8 A 8 FAMILY
MANAGER Lawrence Auriana SINCE 1986-02-21 RETURNS3-MO +7.7 Foreign Markets YTD -0.5 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +9.1 Paris 4,112.73 +29.23 + . 72 3-YR ANNL +21.0 London 6,41 9.83 +53.32 + . 84 5-YR-ANNL +12.1 Frankfurt 9,518.18 +48.52 + . 51 Hong Kong23,681.26 +1 95.85 +. 83 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 41,81 3.93 +484.52 +1.17 American International Group Inc 3.56 Milan 18,123.45 -19.81 -.11 Salix Pharmaceuticals Ltd 2.86 Tokyo 16,885.33 +2.1 4 +.01 2.7 Stockholm 1,421.34 -33.47 -2.30 lllumina Inc Fund Footnotes: i$ Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -11.70 -.22 DexCom lnc 2.48 iee. i - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,334.50 Zurich 8,900.83 +26.36 + . 30 Samsonite International SA 2.39 redemption iee.Source: Morningstar.
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil rose, the first time that has happened in five days. Oil, though, remains close to its lowest price since 2009. The price of natural gas fell.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
W 3.69
w w L w w L
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.7 48.65 47.93 +1.50 -9.8 1.47 1.50 -1.67 1.70 1.73 -1.52 -7.9 -0.6 2.87 2.94 -2.28 1.34 1.35 -1.23 -6.8
CLOSE PVS. 1210.60 1219.30 16.51 16.60 1220.70 1220.80 2.80 2.80 792.45 800.40 CLOSE 1.66
%CH. %YTD - 0.71 + 2 . 3 - 0.56 + 6 . 1 - 0.01 + 1 . 0 -0.29 -1.5 -0.99 -0.8
PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.66 - 0.07 + 0 . 1
Coffee (Ib) 1.75 1.75 + 0.09 Corn (bu) 3.96 4.05 -2.16 Cotton (Ib) 0.60 0.60 + 0.38 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 327.30 319.70 +2.38 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.43 1.43 + 0.42 Soybeans (bu) 10.53 10.51 + 0.17 Wheat(bu) 5.80 5.92 -2.07
Foreign Exchange The dollar continued its monthslong climb against other currencies, including the euro and
Japanese yen. The U.S. Dollar index is at its highest level since 2005.
h5Q HS
5.1 1 2. 4 8 5.54 4. 5 3 1. 8 8 3 2. 4
+5.1 -0.2 + 0.3 -1.2 + 2.3 + 3.3 -1.7 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5120 -.0045 -.30% 1.6407 Canadian Dollar 1.1 826 +.0009 +.08% 1.0765 USD per Euro 1.1848 -.0066 -.56% 1.3618 JapaneseYen 119.01 + . 3 8 + .32% 1 04.49 Mexican Peso 14. 7146 -.1373 -.93% 13.0266 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9679 +.0134 +.34% 3.5076 Norwegian Krone 7 . 6871 -.0246 -.32% 6.1695 South African Rand 11.6829 -.0202 -.17% 10.6680 Swedish Krona 7.9 5 8 4 + .0615 +.77% 6.5147 Swiss Franc 1.0138 +.0056 +.55% . 9 085 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2379 +.0046 +.37% 1.1209 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2143 -.0005 -.01% 6.0511 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7556 +.0011 +.01% 7.7543 Indian Rupee 63.205 -.264 -.42% 62.225 Singapore Dollar 1.3382 +.0057 +.43% 1.2712 South KoreanWon 1097.62 -1.03 -.09% 1069.68 -.01 -.03% 3 0.14 Taiwan Dollar 32.01
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
BRIEFING
mo a einsurancera es 0 ro
Home pricesdown in Decemder The median price for a single-family home dipped nearly 2 percent last month in Bend from November's median, and it dropped 10 percent in Redmond, according to a report released Wednesday. But year over year, the median price increased nearly 9 percent in Bend and almost15 percent in Redmond, according to The Beacon Report. Bend's median home price fell to $290,000 last month, $5,000 below November's median, according to the report, formerly called The Bratton Report. But Bend's median price last month was $23,000 higher than the median recorded in December 2013. Sales of single-family homes in Bend increased by 12, from 156 in November to 168 in December, according to the report. In December 2013, 149 homes were sold in Bend. Redmond's median price for a single-family home dropped to $189,000 last month, $21,000 below November's median. But it represented an increase of $24,000 over the median price in December 2013, according to the report from the Beacon Appraisal Group in Redmond. Home sales dropped in Redmond last month, from 66 in November to 45 in December. In December 2013, 52 homes were sold in Redmond, according to the report.
By JonathanWeisman New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The job
market is stirring, gas prices are plunging and stocks are near record levels, but a hous-
ingsector that dragged the nation into the worst recession since the Depression remains
federallyissued mortgages to first-time homebuyers, minorities and struggling Americans. The moveism odest,producing savings of $900 a year per homebuyer. However humble, the move
officials said.
to come by. And young work-
empowered Republicans on
That is a fraction of the 2 million to 2.5 million homes
ers who should be first-time
Capitol Hill during their first
week in control of Congress. He began the trip Wednes-
illustrates just how difficult it has become to stimulate
the country out of recession, this time, it is an anchor.
homebuyers are saddled with student-loan debt in ajob market just gaining steam. "There are an awful lot of chickens and eggs and ducks and geese, "said JuliaGordon, director of housing finance and policy at the Center for Ameri-
robust recovery after the 2009
that go to first-time homebuyers a year in a healthy market.
But there are no quick fixes. While housing usually leads
theblack spot in an otherwise resurgent economy.
the housing sector since the 2008 financial crisis. Obama's
private lenders out of the
The financial crisis chased
President Barack Obama, often criticized for inattention
to the housing sector, will seek
proposals couldbring250,000 new homebuyers into the market and lower refinancing
to address the problem today,
costs for an estimated 800,000
lowering insurance rates on
homeowners, administration
mortgage market, leavingthe federal government with avirtual monopoly. Tighter lending rulesimposed afterthecrisis have made loans more difficult
TODAY • Managing Day-to-Day Performance: Identify performance gapsfor improved productivity; part ofCOCC'sLeadership series; $95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, Bendcampus; Boyle EdCenter Room154; 541-383-7270. SATURDAY • Oregon Alcohol Server Training: Oregon Liquor Control Commission Alcohol Server permit; workbook provided. Must be18years of age; $39; registration required; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Cascade Culinary Institute, 2555 NW Campus Village Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Sound Business ti Financial Planning: Business planning for agribusinesses; $10/farm, register online or call 541-447-6228; 9-11:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College Redmond Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.agbiz.eventbrite. com. • Grand Opening Weekend: Hayden Homes new community grand opening weekend; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Hayden Homes at Westerly, 63261 Newhall Place, Bend; 541-316-4966, westerly© hayden-homes.com or www.hayden-homes.com. TUESDAY • SCORE Free Business Counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. WEDNESDAY • Launch Your Business: Central Oregon Community College Small BusinessDevelopment Center course; runs through Feb.11; $199, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler
speech at a Ford plant he claimed credit for the im-
proving economy, in part by highlighting the auto industry's
can Progress, a liberal research federalbailout. "Saving the American auto organization. Obama's announcement will industry was the right thing to do," Obama told autoworkers. come during athree-daytrip that is intended to stealthe po- "Bettingonyou was the right litical spotlight from the newly thing to do."
e in a asin room AT&T
ri e
toallow data to
b
b
roll over
A
co
4
4~+ei
By Brian Fung The Washington Post
AT&T wireless customers who are on a Mobile Share Value plan will soon
be able to roll over any unused mobile data into their
next billing cycle, AT&T said Wednesday. That's potentially a big boost for some subscribers. The change takes effect Jan. 25, and it covers ev-
erybody on a Mobile Share Value plan — new and existing customers. The
uy
data will only roll over for a month,though,meaning you can't stack up your unused data from February, March and April and hope
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
to use it all in May. AT&T seems intent on attracting more Americans to its Mobile Share Value
Trever Hawman has scheduled a soft opening Jan. 22 for Bridge 99 Brewery's new tasting room in Bend He plans to have it open regular-
plans. In November, some
ly Thursdays through Saturdays.
customers on those plans started getting extra data
— Bulletin staff report
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR
dayin Detroit, where in a
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
The time has come to step it up a notch, said Trever
Hawman, of Bend, founder of Bridge 99 Brewery. Until now, Hawman, a car-
penter and building contractor, has brewed his assortment of
beers at home in a1.5-barrel system with a two-barrel fer-
Tappinginto Bridge99 What:Bridge 99 Brewery tasting room soft opening Where:63063 Layton Ave., Bend When:3-7 p.m. Jan. 22 and 23
fact that his wife, Angel Haw-
Bridge 99drewery anb tastingroom
ve'
menter. That part will remain
the same for the time being.
Mel McConnell of Crystal
But starting Jan. 22, he's
Clear Investments, which
opening a tasting room with ninebeers on tap and moving production out of the 400-square-foot attachment
to his home and into the 2,000-sqare-foot commercial space at 63063 Layton Ave.,
Bend. Hawman has been brewing under license at home since
September 2013, he said. His hobby, which he shares with friend and Bridge 99 brewer Rod Kraemer, grew with every pint glass filled until it became a hobby no more. "It's prettymuch getting to the point where I have to do it full time," Hawman said
Tuesday. With encouragement from
Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. THURSDAY • Business Startup Class:Decide if runninga business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College — Crook County Open Campus, 510 SELynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. JAN. 16 • WordPress — Beginning I: Learn to buildabusiness website with WordPress; $99, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo© cocc.edu or www.cocc.edul continuinged. JAN. 17 • OuIckBooksPro2014
BE 0 AndyZeigert/The Bulletin
leasedthespaceforBridge99, Hawman said he decided to re- Oregon." locate his brewing equipment, Hawman said he plans on expand his production and opening the tasting room from open the tasting room in north- 2-6 p.m. Thursdays through east Bend. Saturdays, starting with a soft "You've got to step up your opening Jan. 22 and 23. He game," if you want to succeed has nine taps ready to flow. In at something beyond it being a addition, the room is available hobby, McConnell said. for private tastings by appointAaron Webb, owner of Wub- ment, he said. Benches and fire ba's BBQ Shack, just across pits are staged outside. the parking lot from Bridge Brewing beer took over 99, said he serves Bridge 99 Hawman's career where beers in his restaurant. It's a his work as a custom home big seller, he said. Wizard Falls builder left off, he said. He IPA and Bull Trout Stout are customer favorites, he said.
"It's a greatbeer," Webb said. "The quality is some of the best that I've had in Central
— Beginning I: Learn to set up accounts, create invoices, record sales and enter payments. Includes textbook; $89, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo©cocc.edu or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. JAN. 20 • Search Engine Strategies: Learn about search engine optimization; classruns through Jan. 27; $99; registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo© cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. JAN.21 • Online Marketing With Facebook: Use Facebook for abusiness;class runs through Jan. 28; $79,
man, works softened the blow during the downturn, Hawman sBld. At age 43, Trever Hawman
for no additional charge; people on 2 GB plans were automatically upgraded to 3 GB, and those on 4 GB were automatically up-
figures he's probably one fall away from conduding his constructio n career.Besides, brewing beer isn't a job for him, it's his passion. His goal is to lure folks who don't neces-
graded to 6 GB. The company's Mobile Share Value plan gives customers a communal pool of data that's shared
sarily drink a lot of beer to find
count. For a single smartphone and 3 GB of data on
some surprising tastes in what he has to offer. What he doesn't want to do,
across all devices on an aca two-year contract, the
plan costs $80 a month.
Hawman said, is get ahead ofhimself. He has plans to
AT&T's latest announcement comes as the industry
expand to a 10-barrel system,
battle over pricing has intensified, with many
eventually, and put his beers in bottles. Bridge 99 comes solely by the barrel now, or through growler-filling stations. "You have to start small and move forward," he said. "What
I've been doing is moving
forward." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
customers becoming vo-
racious data users. Last month, T-Mobile introduced its own data rollover
feature, which goes a little further by allowing customers to keep unlimited
amounts of unused data in their "data stash."
felt the slowdown coming in
2006, when big projects were canceled. He's stayed afloat since then but put more time
and effort into brewing. The
• Enhance Visuals for registration required; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Websites: Learn to Community College, 2600 increase the loading NW College Way, Bend; speed of web pages; class 541-383-7270, ceinfo@ runs through Feb. 4; $99, cocc.edu or www.cocc.edul registration required; continuinged. 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon • Bend Cultural Tourism Community College, 2600 Fund Meeting: Discussion NW College Way, Bend; of letters of intent, 541-383-7270, ceinfo© budget, communication cocc.edu or www.cocc.edul plans and grant review continuinged. process; free; 2-4 p.m.; • Beginning InDeslgru Downtown Bend Public Learn Adobe's design and Library, 601 NWWall St.; 541-617-7050, Shannon@ layout program;class PlanchonConsulting.com or runs through Feb. 4; $99, visitbend.culturegrants.org. registration required; • Create Custom 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Designed Logo: Learn the Community College, fundamentals of lllustrator; Redmond campus, 2030 classruns through Feb. 11; SE College Loop, Redmond; $139, registration required; 541-383-7270, ceinfo@ 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon cocc.edu or www.cocc.edul Community College, 2600 continuinged. NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo© • For the complete calendar, cocc.edu or www.cocc.edul pick up Sunday'sBulletin or continuinged. visit bendbulletln.com/bizcal
• • f •
•
1 58 L c r e R a n ch 6172 SF home overlooking McKay Creek/ Allen Creek mea. 68 Irrigated Acres 4 Bay Shop Hay Barn GP Building Cow/Cdf R Hay Production Only 8 miles from Prineville
- $1,SOO , O O O
'l l • $
••/•
I •
•
-
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Medicine, D3 Money, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
eat rou en s earwit su stantia sur us • Reasonsforextra moneymaybesignsofgoodorbadspending By Tara Bannow The Bulletin
Central Oregon's coordinated care organization, PacificSource Community Solutions,
rounded out 2014 MONEY wi th a more than $3 million surplus its leaders are still deciding how they'll spend. It's notyet dear whythe group, which administers health care for more than
52,000Oregon Health Plan beneficiaries in Deschutes, Crook, Jefferson and part
of Klamath counties, took in more money than it spent lastyear. OHP is the state's
version of Medicaid, ahealth care program for low-income individuals.
From apurely economic perspective, it means the group didn't see as many medical claims as it planned for, and its budget performed better than expected. But the
underlying reasons behind the surplus could signal both good and bad things for the OHP population,andthosereasons won't be uncovered until at least mid-2015, which is when
all remaining 2014 claims data will be rounded up, said Lind-
CCO memdersh iys Memberships in Central Oregon's coordinated care organization since Sept. 2014.
more expensive interventions — a cornerstone goal of the
CCOdudlet
Central Oregon's coordinated care organization budget since Sept. 2014.
60,000
CCO initiative, Hopper said.
'Tm very optimistic about
52,110
49,321
that," she said. "A lot of the projects that we've funded are
to support that. I hope that's at least partially responsible for
39,190
40,000
the surplus."
30,181
It could also mean OHP agreements with St. Charles Health System helped control costs. Or that the new OHP beneficiaries who came on
Total revenue ..... $167million Medical claims expenses............$138 million General and administrative expenses.............$9.6million
29,501
20,000
board this year — the firstyear of the Central Oregon Health the program was expandedto Council, the CCO's governing include all adults up to 138 perbody. cent of the federal poverty level The surplus might mean that — were healthier than expectOHP beneficiaries did abetter ed. Or that they didn't try to see job seeking out preventive care doctors as much as expected. beforehealth issuesrequired SeeSurplus/D4
Underwriting income.................$19 million Net income(profit)
sey Hopper, executive director
0
SEPT. 0 n 2013
0 J An. F I 2014
A I
J
J A SEP T. 2014
$8.9 million
Source: PacificSource Community Solutions
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
NUTRITION
Despite menuchanges, fast food isstill unhealthy
r
By Karen Kaplan
forallofthe cheeseburgers, french fries, grilled chicken
Los Angeles Times
Fast food has gotten a lit-
e
~mr
tle better for you over the last
I
18 years — except in cases where it's gotten worse.
'0, f
Among 27 menu items
sandwiches and nondiet sodas sold between 1996 and
2013 at three leading fastfood chains. The restaurants weren't mentioned by name,
subjected to scrutiny by Tufts University researchers, eight of the offerings contained fewer calories in
but one of them was "the top
2013 than in 1996 and nine contained more. In addition, five of the 18 items tested for
other two chains had "similar menu items," a "national
sodium content had less of it at the end of the 18-year peri-
top 10 for total U.S. sales revenue" — attributes that
od and seven had more. The researchers looked
describe Burger King and Wendy's.
restaurant on the basis of
sales" — a designation that describes McDonald's. The presence" and were "in the
up nutritional information
Photos by Matias J. Ocner/The Miami Herald
Kaiden Balfour, 6, walks through the Holtz Children's Hospital's seventh-floor hall, in Miami, Florida, with Elizabeth Carrol, 24, child life specialist, while looking at recently hung artwork. Balfour was diagnosed with leukemia and has recently undergone a bone marrow transplant.
See Fast food/D5
Embracewinter workouts to boost bodyandmind By Nora Krug
and scenery are worth it,"
The Washington Post
she says of her winter rides,
At the height of last year's polar vortex, Megan Jones
forthe "greater sense of ac-
watched the temperature
drop "with a strange glee," she says. The bone-chilling weather
complishment than spinning in place toward nowhere." Many people, understandably, want to hibernate in
colder weather. Even going
FITNESS brought a wel- to the gym seems that much come challenge harder. But for some of us, to the 41-year-old Arlington, winter is not an impediment Virginia, resident's workout. but an opportunity to push When it comes to exercising outside, "I don't think there
ourselves a little harder to
isa'too cold'form e,"says Jones, who regularly commutes about 3 miles bybike
outside. Outdoor exercise
and races with the all-wom-
en Team Sticky Fingers cycling team. "The fresh air
run, bike and even swim might save you the price of a gym membershipand, as long as you're careful, offers benefits for body and mind. SeeWinter/D2 PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Art g ery tran.s orms chil en's hospit
gy .!
0l-
By CrystalChewe The Miami Herald
MIAMIacqueline Roch paced through the hallways of Holtz Children's Hospital as her son, Lucca, underwent an eight-hour heart surgery. •
LuccawasbornwithWolff-Par- CBS News special about the artkinson-White syndrome, a heart condition in which there is an ab-
•
w o r k d i splayed at Cedars Sinai M e d ical Center in Los Angeles. The
• I
Any Medical Spa Service Excludes neuromodulators Expires 2/28/15 May not be combined with any other offer.
1966 when a businessman and Jacqueline Roch helped find local artists willing to donate artwork to help transform the Holtz Children's Hospital's seventh-floor hall into a makeshift art
surgeries. art lover, Frederick Weisman, sufA couple of months after his last fered a head injury. surgery, Roch stumbled upon a SeeArt /D3
•
$100 OFF
normal extra electrical segment highlighted the pathway, which can lead M E DICINE w orld-dass collection of to a rapid heart rate. Doccontemporary art throughtors discovered it when he was 11. out the hospital, a collection begun Now 16, he has gone through three i n
•
gallery.
ESTHETIXMD 115 SW Allen Road• Bend, OR 97702 • 541.330.5551 • EsthetixMO.com
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
FmVESS HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY
MOMDAY
WEDMESDAY
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1260 NEThompson Drive, 800-RED-CROSS.
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
FRIDAY
TUESDAY
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.2:30p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBondSt., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; noon-5 p.m.; First Baptist Church of Prineville, 450 SE Fairview St.; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30-6 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond;
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:305:30p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Christian Life Center, 21720 E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. GET OUT: GET COVERED: Learn about new health insurance plansorhow to makechangesto existing plans with PacificSource representatives; free; 3-7 p.m.; Hilton Garden Inn, 425 SWBluff Dr., Bend; 541-382-5483.
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Grocery Outlet, 694 SE Third St., Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or800-RED-CROSS. TAKE SMALLSTEPS TOHEALTH AND WEALTH:Learn about being healthier and saving more with Dr. Barbara O'Neill; free, registration suggested; 9:30 a.m.-noon; OSU Extension Service, 3893 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.
Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or
www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
extension.oregonstate.edu, glenda.hyde@oregonstate.edu or 541-548-6088. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; The Bulletin, 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.3 p.m.;Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
PEOPLE
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• Jenny Klnghas joined The Center Foundation board of directors. King is the marketing and community relations manager at TheCenter for Orthopedic And Neurosurgical Care and Research. • Michael Hurleyhas joined The Center Foundation board of directors. Hurley works at Morgan Stanley.
T rai an es e e e P T i ersont e at By Chris Erskine
hikers.
Los Angeles Times
Cheryl Strayed's bestselling LOS ANGELES — By hiking memoir, "Wild," now any measure, the Pacific a Reese Witherspoon movie, Crest Trailis abeastlything, touches on their exploits. "I think people basically an angry anaconda that slithers up the entire length want to help, but it's so compliof California and all the cated — 'What's the bestwayto way to Canada, some 2,650 help a homeless person'? Where rugged miles. That's ap- do I start'?'" Strayed says by proximately 6 million steps phone. "With long-distance — some of them glorious, hikers, the needs are so simple many of them merciless. and the payoffs are direct." But along theway, m ercy The trail angels explain their is at hand. generosity by raving about the Near the southern trail- types of people they encounhead, Sandy and B ar- ter. Like Donna Saufley, most ney Mann open up their consider helping the hikers a five-bedroom San Diego spiritual — almost churchlyhome to up to 60 hikers a endeavor, something they were night. They even pick them ordained to do. "We're our better selves out up from the airport and ferry them and their gear to the startingpoint an hour east.
Up the trail, in Agua Dulce, Donna and Jeff Sauf-
leynot onlyprovide a night's rest to more than 1,000 hikers a season, they offer food and shelter to their dogs,
horses and the occasional llama.
East of the Bay Area, Hank Magnuski functions as a sort of outdoors con-
cierge, erecting a pop-up cafe to provide hot coffee and fresh fruit topped by whipped cream to hikers coming off a particularly grueling 300-mile sttetch.
They are all part of a small network of outdoor
FITNESS EVENTS
TODAY RUNNINGPERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICS CLASS:Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners15 to105, beginners and elites; Level1, 6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m.; $96 for eight weeks; Rebound Physical Therapy andBiomechanicsLab,1160 SW Simpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; info© REPoregon.com or 541-419-8208. CERTIFIEDPERSONAL TRAINER PREPARATIONINFOSESSION: Learn about the preparation course and meet the instructor; free,
registration requested; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,
Bend; www.cocc.edu,ceinfo©cocc. edu or 541-383-7270. BACHELORBEAUTS SQUARE DANCELESSONS:Learn to square dance, every Thursday through April 9; $5 per lesson; 7-9 p.m.; Pine Forest Grange, 63214 NEBoyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-617-8589.
FRIDAY RADIANT HEALTHYOGATEACHER TRAINING INFOSESSION: Learn
about the training program, meet the director and more; free, registration requested; 6-7 p.m.; COCC Chandler Lab,1027 NW TrentonAve.,Bend;ceinfo@cocc. edu or 541-383-7270.
SATURDAY INTRO TOIYENGARYOGA: Learn about fundamental standing and floor poses; free; noon-1:15 p.m.; lyengar Yoga of Bend, 660 NE Third St.; www.yogaofbend.
com,nadine@yogaofbend.com or 541-318-1186.
Samaritans called
" t r ail
angels." These self-appointed volunteers assist long-distance
hikers on one of the most grinding outdoor challenges in the world — comparable,
many say, to summiting Mount Everest. And they do it with little or no compensa-
tion, other than the grateful smiles and occasional posttrail postcards.
Saufley is the best known of the trail volunteers. She left a
t h e t r ai l i t self,
she often had that many stay-
ing per night, with a total of 1,200 for the summer. She loves it when her sanctu-
ary is filled with hikers. "The sounds of conversations mingling with music and laughter is divine to my ear," the 58-year-old says. There's a Latin phrase, solvi-
tur ambulando ("it is solved by walking"). And each year, the Pacific Crest Trail Association,
which handles permits, says 2,000or so people try to solve their lives — or merely accumulate stories of river crossings and bear encounters.
"For some, it's a religious pilgrimage," Saufley says. "For others, it's a pub crawl."
corporate career early and now
Facing their 10th year of taking in hikers, the Manns ing hikers and tending to the say those they've helped offamily electrical contracting ten stay in touch with postbusiness. trail notes and cards. Almost Beginning in April, she and through word of mouth alone, her husband set up tents and they have become a go-to a trailer to handle the spring resource: "We get the strangest emails crush. Their home, dubbed "Hiker Heaven," is a popular — 'I've never written to a total mail drop where backpackers stranger before asking to stay — always desperate to lighten at their house, but I'm told it's the load — can send and re- OK,'" Sandy says. ceive packages. And though the trail angels But she sees the long-dis- all claim they're really in it for tance hikers unload more than themselves, there is still somejust unnecessary gear. She thing ... well, faintly divine talks fondly about the payoffs about their dedication. of being a trail angel: witnessBarney, aretiredlawyer, coning the hikers' emerging hu- fesses that providing airport manity, their grit, their brio and runs and meals to hundreds of the inevitable baring of souls. strangers each spring can leave Traveling the trail "is hum- him and Sandy tired and spent. bling," she says. "I compare it to Sowhat. "During that time, we go to the peeling of an onion. You see people for what they are." bed exhausted, and we will inAlmost none of the trail an- variably turn to each other and gels consider what they do an say, 'We are so lucky to be able act of pure charity; rather, they to do this.'" "We do it because we can," think they get as much from the experience as the hikers adds Sandy, a retired biology splits her time between help-
teacher. For Saufley, the transforma-
e n tertain level because I want to get to
angels.'" Estimated at fewer than
100, the trail angels may be America's least-known charitable army. They reach
Continued from 01 For one t hing, outdoor exercise can help fend off seasonal affec tive disorder. "Part of what makes people
she helps. An angel among angels,
"There is a quote in Hebrews," Donna Saufley says. "Something along the lines themselves. "I am involved on a selfish of, 'To show hospitality to strangers is t o
Winter
there," she says of the hikers
As w it h
the angels are a blossoming phenomenon. Saufley says that during her first year — 1997 — she hosted 50 hikers allseason.Lastyear,
into their own pockets to
provide, food, shelter, medicine and hot showers to
tionsshe sees in people are a know the hikers," says Pea fair trade for the expense and Hicks, a San Diego musician fatigue. "They go out for the nawho helps hikers get started at the Mexican border. ture," she says of her long-dis"It's a vicarious way to stay tance guests. "And they end involved in the whole thing," up finding the peace within says Hicks, who hiked the trail themselves." in2006. Solvitur ambulando.
Y
miserable in the winter is be-
ing confined," says Norman Rosenthal, a psychiatrist and author of "Winter Blues: Ev-
erything You Need to Know to Beat Seasonal Affective Disorder." "Getting outside opens a whole vista," he says. "The
greater the light in your environment, the more serotonin
releases in the brain — and that is known to be a very po-
Bill O'Leary I The Washington Post
All lanes are open: A lifeguard stays warm in a little shelter at the edge of the Silver Spring, Maryland, YMCA's outdoor swimming pool.
tent mood regulator."
Dan Guilbeault, who is 35 el effort — cycling hard, runand lives in the District of Co- ning at a training level — you lumbia, has experienced this are burning 10 to 40 percent sort of emotional uplift. "During more calories in the cold than particularly cold weather, run- you would in more temperate ning on the Mall at night can temperatures," says Jo Zimalmost be meditative," he says. merman, an instructor in the "There are very few other peo- department of kinesiology at ple out, and with snow, all the the University of Maryland sound is even mellowed." and a longtime trainer. Louise Papile, 65, a longtime Exercising outside also outdoor winter swimmer, rel- means avoiding gym germs. ishesthe "contrastbetweenthe A bunch of people sweating in cold air and the warmth of the dose quarters ,using the same pool." (She swims at the Silver equipment and locker rooms, Spring, Maryland, YMCA, makes gyms "a good place to which has a heated outdoor pick up a potential pathogen," pool that is open year-round says Philip Tierno, a professor and closes only in extreme of microbiology and patholconditions.) She says her nor- ogy at New York University dic-style workout is more re- and author of "The Secret Life freshing and stimulating than of Germs." Despite what your exercising indoors. She's even grandmother might have told swum while it snowed and you about catching a cold in loves watching the sky change the cold, it's germs that make while doing the backstroke. you sick, and you are less likeAs Ginny Wright, a fitness ly to encounter them if you are instructor who has been run- biking or running outside than ning outdoor classes in North- when you are pounding away ern Virginia for more than a on an elliptical machine that decade, puts it: "Exercising in has been used by who knows winter is amazingly invigorat- whom all day. ing. It is the best natural mood Of course, there are risks to enhancer ... especially when exercising in the cold: falling it's sunny." on ice, hypothermia, dehydraThe benefits of outdoor win- tion and exposure to sun and ter exercise are also physical. wind. People with heart or reExercising in the cold requires spiratory problems need to be extra exertion to raise your especially mindful, but despite body temperature, burning popular beliefs to the contrary, more cal oriesthan comparable your lungs will not freeze on a exerciseindoors. Wind resis- cold run. tance adds an extra challenge. But cold-weather risks are "If you are making athletic-lev- smaller if you're prepared.
For running o r b i k ing, dressing in layers is key, especially with m aterials that
During this time of stress anduncertainty, one of the most important
fend off wind and wick away wetness, and clothes that can be unzipped as you get warm. Some runnerslike compression tights, and on really cold, windy days, a baladava, ski mask or a layer of oil-based lotion on your face can help with
deCiSiOnS you Canmake fOryOurSelf Oryour lOVedOne iS WhoWil PrOVide hOSPiCe Care. And you dohaVea ChOiCe. NOW aVailable in DBSChuteSCounty, St. CharleSHOSPiCe haSbeen PrOViding
comfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for CentralOregonfamilies-
the wind. A hat and gloves or
mittens are also vital. (Basically, you don't want any of your body exposed, unless you're swimming in a heated pool, in
fOr 25 yearS. InadditiOn toSeeing PatientSfrOmany PhySiCianPrOVider, We are alSO the Only hOSPiCe PrOgram in the regiOnWhoCandireCtly CO nneCt to
St. Charlesmedical records, makingadifficult transition a little smoother.
which case, just a suit will do — and two dry towels, one out-
side, one warm one waiting for you inside.) Take more time to warm up and ease into your workout
You haVe aChOiCe in WhoCareSfOr you OryOur lOVedOneduring thiS time.
St CharlesHospice,Apromise of comfort.
slowly to acclimate to the tem-
perature, Zimmerman suggests, and take more time to cool down at the end of your
routine. And don't forget to hydrate — even a warm beverage will do. You may not notice your thirst when you're cold, she says, but you are still losing fluids. Megan Jones says she doesn't mind the additional effort it takes to gear up for her
morning bike ride. Tackling the cold through exercise gives
~
S t . Charles
Hospice
her "an extra boost as I go
through the day," she says. "After battling wind chills, rain, snow or just even the plain
cold, I know that I've already accomplished something even before hitting my desk."
541-706-6700 StCharlesHealthCare.org/Hospice69
THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MEDjctNE
Disca e 'water venti ation'treatment saves a By Jonel Aleccia» The Seattle Times
spread fast. Smith went to a
conference in Washington, D.C., in December, where former colleagues who have studied and used perflubron wanted every detail.
ee
SEATTLESeattle baby was home in time for the
"~e,
"I was just thrilled," said
eA i~s~ t.~~ 4t
holidays after local doctors bet on a last-
Dr. Jay Greenspan, chair of the pediatric department at
chance, once-discarded treatment that
Thomas Jefferson Universi-
ty Hospital, in Philadelphia,
uses liquid, not air, to inflate the collapsed lungs of
and the Nemours Children's Health System. "We think
fragile newborns.
r
>a>r
t '. s Q
L't'4
Tatiana Saiaana, now nearly 4 months old,
bron in the mid-1990s, said
sparkling tree in her family's home recently, safe
e
Just weeks ago, Tatiana was
one of the most critically ill babies doctors at Seattle Chil- ECMO for weeks, with little dren's hospital had ever seen. sign of improvement. "We thought we were near Beforeher birth via emergency cesarean section Aug. 29, the end," Jackson said. Tatiana had inhaled meconi-
um, a mixture of fetal stool and amniotic fluid, causing severe respiratory distress. It's a condition that affects
Last resort
weeks' gestation, weighing 1.5 pounds, and survived only because perflubron helped heal her immature lungs. " I've known about i t
Ken Lambert/The Seattle Times
Days before Christmas, Elise Pele holds her daughter, Tatiana Saiaana, at their home in Seattle. Doctors used a once-abandoned drug to treat the baby's extreme respiratory distress.
as
long as I can remember," said Mancini, now a college student in New Jersey. "I know
I wouldn't have been able to survive without it."
maceuticals, abandoned the effort. "It was something that I'd
That's when Dr . K e ndra kind of given up on," said Smith, a n eonatologist and Jackson. "It did not occur to part of the NICU team, sug- me to use it in Tatiana." gested that she and Jackson But it did occur to Smith, try perflubron, a drug the two who reached out to the federal
about 15 percent of babies, typically near the end of pregnancy when issues with the had both studied extensively placenta can cause stress. more than 15 years ago. It's a clear, oxygen-rich liqOnly about 2 percent of infants develop serious problems like uid twice as heavy as water Tatiana's, experts say. that can seep into the smallest Nearly all of the tiny air air sacs in the lungs, inflating sacs in her lungs had col- the tiny balloons and restorlapsed, making it impossible ing breathing. Perflubron is for the baby to breathe. She the u n d erwater b r e athing was rushed from the hospital drug famously featured in the where she was born to the Se- 1989 movie "The Abyss" — al-
he's still in touch with patients like Adrianna Mancini, now 20. She was born at 24
in the lap of her mother, Elise Pele, 28. circulate blood through an artificial lung and back into the bloodstream of a sick baby. But instead of the typical few days, Tatiana had been on
could do either a little better or significantly better with this."
Greenspan, who conducted pivotal research into perflu-
smiled and stared with big brown eyes at a
"She's doing great," Pele said, cuddling the sturdy girl in the leopard-print sleeper.
there are a lot of babies who
A rtificial v entilation c a n
be traumatic to lung tissue, shearing the delicate cell linings. The liquid protects the fragile structures and has anti-inflammatory properties
tion and the drug's new dis-
that allow them to heal. "It's a different way to ventilate the lungs," Smith said. eYou can fill the lung with
tributor, OriGen, for enough perflubron to treat Tatiana. Because the drug is approved in Canada and Europe, but not
fluid and superimpose gentle breaths that get the oxygen liquid into the body and release CO."
Food and Drug Administra-
the U.S., the FDA granted an
Tatiana didn't respond im-
emergencyexception for one- mediately to the perflubron, time use. which worried the crew carWithin a day, Shanna Sei- ing for her. "People were really ready to gel, a technical-support repattle Children's hospital's neo- though the use of it lost some resentative for OriGen, had let her go," Smith said. "They natal intensive-care unit. luster in recent years. rushed $5,000 worth of the were making a memory box "We only see th e w o rst Although perflubron had drug to Seattle. for her. All the nurses thought of the worst," said Dr. Craig shown success in t r e ating Once it arrived, Smith and she would go." Jackson, director of the NICU. fragile premature babies in Jackson worked to drip small But Smith said she saw "It's something we see may- the mid-1990s, use of the liq- amounts of p erflubron into something vital in the tiny be a dozen times a year at uid stalled after clinical trials Tatiana's lungs, no more than girl surrounded by tubes and Children's." showed no clear benefit in a spoonful or two. The heavy wires. "She would open her eyes, First-line t reatments h ad adults with acute lung inju- liquid settled to the bottom failed. Tatiana had b een ry and respiratory distress. of the tiny air sacs, inflating and she would look at y ou placed on e x t racorporeal Without a large and lucrative t hem and allowing the r e- and you could tell neurologimembrane oxygenation, a potential market, the drug's newed exchange of oxygen cally that she was intact. She treatment that uses a pump to maker, then A l liance Phar- and carbon dioxide. was there," Smith recalled.
"It was like she was searchTwo decades later, there's ing you and asking you to do renewed enthusiasm for the something." liquid ventilation, said Dr. Tatiana's parents, Pele William Fox, a neonatologist and Bruce Saiaana, both 28, at The Children's Hospital weren't at all familiar with the of Philadelphia and an early advanced medical techniques researcher of perflubron. He used to save their daughter. said he'd like to see it become Pele works as a front-desk su- an approved treatment for bapervisor at a local hotel, and bies with life-threatening reBruce Saiaana installs hot spiratory conditions. "Currently, the course of tubs. Insurance through Pele's job coveredmost ofthe costs treatment for these babies is of the treatment, but for the extremely complex, and many most part, she said, they sim- have a very low quality of life," ply trusted the doctors to help he said. "This treatment has their firstborn baby survive. the potential to impact the "It's pretty awesome; you lives ofthousands of babies see stuff in the movies and you who might otherwise die or don't think it happens, but it suffer the long-term effects of happens," said Pele. chronic lung disease." Resurrecting a discarded Road to recovery drug to save a baby's life was "humbling," Smith said. After three or four days of "It was a good lesson for all perflubron treatment, Tatiana began to improve. Against of usas physicians and respithe odds, she recovered. When ratory therapists at her bedshe went home recently, she side," she said. "It emphasizes needed no oxygen, just a feed- the need to go the extra mile, ing tube until she learns to to not let the challenge that it swallow efficiently. might take to get there impede News of Tatiana's success you from getting there."
Study helps to narrow down genetic suspectsfound in autism By Geoff reyMohan
each with somewhat vague
Los Ange(es Times
relationships to a small sliver of the autism spectrum. That
Researchers have narrowed
down the list of genes impli- situation has sparked some cated in autism spectrum dis- to abandon the gene-by-gene order, and they appear to point approachin favor of environtoward a part of the brain that
mental factors that may alter
has largely been overlooked.
gene behavior. "What's special about au-
Most research into the ge-
netic roots of autism, a highly tism is that it doesn't seem heritable disorder that affects like it's a one-gene thing," said about 1 in 68 children, starts Stanford University School of with a kind of inventory of Medicine geneticist Michael genes. Then, it narrows down Snyder, lead investigator of the this genome-wide survey to study published online Ibesprime suspects that appear to day in the journal Molecular be different among those with Systems Biology. "Maybe this is a tough way one or several of the symptoms of autism. to look at it," Snyder said of That gene-by-gene ap- the gene-by-gene approach. p roach, however, ha s u n - "Maybe a better way to look at earthed too many suspects, it is to see what the normal bi-
Art Continued from D1 His wife, M a rcia S imon Weisman, an influential art
collect or,grew alarmed as her husband struggled to remember her name. To stimulate his memory, she brought some artwork to the hospital. He
immediately recognized an abstract piece by Jackson Pollock, with its trademark jagged lines and dripping colors. As Roch watched the broadcast, she knew she wanted to do the same at Holtz, the chil-
dren's hospital of the University of Miami/Jackson Memori-
al Medical Center. "I was still in a very vulnerable, sensitive place and I just
got so moved," said Roch, a visual artist at the Bakehouse
ological landscape looks like, One module involved moand see how people who are lecular activity that goes on mutated for autism map onto all over the brain, particularly that." involving synapses, the tiny What followed was a com- spaces where electrochemical plex computational task that signals cross for one neuron corralled proteins into scores to another. This helps explain of modules tightly bound by why so much autism research their inter-related functions. points toward problems with Then Snyder's team overlaid synapses. the map of gene variants imBut there was another modplicated in autism. ule just as rich in autism impliAt first glance, proteins en-
coded by these 383 suspect genes were scattered among many of these functional modules. But a few of the modules
"screamed out" with autism connections, both from exist-
ing data and a genome screeningthe researchers conducted, Snyder said.
"We feel like art is part of The hospital connected her to the Family Advisory Coun- the healing process," said cil, a small group created by Niki Butcher, the wife of arttwo mothers whose children ist Clyde Butcher, one of the have cancer. Today, the seventh donors. "Art gives people a floor of Holtz has been remod- moment to reflect on life in a eled with 20 different pieces by peaceful manner, takes them 15 local artists, new fluorescent out of the pain and agony that lights and a fresh baby blue they are having." paint job. The floor handles Babette Herschberger, an pediatric bone marrow trans- artist at ArtCenter/South Florplant cases and mothers who ida, donated a painting called have high-riskpregnancies. Linescape.33. "There's nothing more pow"I specifically chose it beerful than a parent whose kid cause it was very bright and has been sick," said Steven cheery," said Herschberger. Burghart, chief executive of "This is very i ntentional. It Holtz Children's Hospital and sends the message that we acthe Women's Hospital at Jack- tually care. Whenyou deal with people's health, you need this." son Memorial. Burghart credits the Family Roch is delighted when she Advisory Council for keeping sees patients and families adtasks on his radar and coming miring the art instead of just up with ideas that only par- pacing the halls.
Art Complex in Miami's Wyn- ents think about. He often implements the projects in both the children's and the women's
sulation around the transmis-
Researchers will need to delve
sion lines of neurons, known as their axons. That greatly aids the propagation of electrochemical signals along the neuron. Defects in this myelin sheathing have been as-
more deeply into each genetic pathway to better define ex-
sociated with developmental dtsorders. Further experiments with
autism.
actly what goes on there-
with the hope of learning how to alter that activity in ways that eliminate symptoms of The existing results, howev-
er, already could help the efcations, and this one implicat- mice and archived human fort to identify those at risk for ed the corpus callosum. That brain tissue showed that the the disorder, Snyder said. "If you can see genes that thick band of fibers connects genes of interest affected the the brain's two hemispheres, way oligodendrocytes ma- are a high risk for autism, you and it's generally smaller tured and were highly activat- may be able to catch it early," among those with autismed in the corpus callosum. Snyder said. "The earlier you a disease marked by many Although the study un- can diagnose people at risk for anomalies in connectivity. covered 28 previously un- this, the better you may be for The corpus callosum is described genetic links to being able to work with such chock full of a different kind of autism, and confirmed other kids."
HAVE YOU HAD A HEART ATTACK OR STROKE WITHIN THE PAST 5 YEARS? If so, you may be eligible for a clinical research study to find out if an investigational medication may reduce the risk of cardiovascular events. You may be eligible if you meet the following criteria: • 40 to 85 years of age • Diagnosed with heart attack or stroke in the past 5 years There are other eligibility requirements that the study doctor will review with you if you are interested in participating in this study. Onlythe study doctor
can determine whether you are eligible to participate in the study or not.
"The idea is to make it an
actual gallery, like if you were walking into a space in the hospital at Jackson. Wynwood, so you can actu"They didn't really know T he artwork c ame f r om ally feel like you're not in a what to d o w i t h m e," said local artists such as Stepha- hospital," she said. "We hope Roch. "I guess nobody really nie Jaffe Werner, Jackie Go- to expand and pretty much calls and says, 'Hey, I want to pie and Clyde Butcher, all of have art everywhere in the give you art.'" whom donated their work. hospital." wood Art District. She decided to donate her own work to Holtz.
brain cell, oligodendrocytes, previously reported links, it which provide a sheath of in- still offers no "smoking gun."
To learn more and find out if you may qualify:
(877) 692-8338 research©bmctotalcare.com
+ti'bm C Bend MemOrial CliniC ea.
TotalCare
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
MoNEY
Guaranteedhealth coverage Health insuranceenrollment changeslivesduringfirstyear strongest in federalmarketplace By Noam N. Levey
By Robert Pear
Tribune Washington Bureau
es when President Barack nosis, she wouldn't be able to Obama signed the health get a new insurance plan. ALEXANDRIA, Va. — Like law in the spring of 2010. She At one point, she emailed many working Americans, didn't involve herself in pol- her sister, a former radiation Lisa Gray thought she had itics. She'd had health insur- oncologist, to ask about life exgood health insurance. ance for decades. pectancy for her without canThat was until she was diWith a monthly $1,095 pre- cer treatment. "It's not a n o p t ion," her agnosed with leukemia in mium, the Kaiser Permanenmid-2013, and the self-em- te plan that she had gotten sister, Cecily Bullock, wrote ployed businesswoman made through her husband's em- back. Gray's family explored goa startling discovery: Her ployer wasn't cheap. health plan didn't cover the But it was her only option. ing to Canada, where pharchemotherapy she needed."I As a breast cancer survivor, m aceuticals are often less exthought I was going to die," Gray probably wouldn't have pensive. They finally found a Gray, 62, said recently, recall- been able to find a new plan; clinical trial closer to home at ing herdesperate scramble to insurers in 2013 could still turn the University of Maryland, get lifesaving drugs. away consumers with pre-ex- Baltimore, where researchers Through a mix oftempo- isting medical conditions. were testing an alternative to rary measures, doctors and Then, on the morning of Gleevec called ponatinib. Gray's cancer quickly repatient advocates managed May 20, 2013, Gray skidded off to keep Gray stable for a few the road driving to her vacation sponded. The relief was only months. condominium on Maryland's temporary, however. In late But it was a new health plan Eastern Shore. Aside from a July, she was hospitalized through the Affordable Care fewbruises, she was unhurt. with pancreatitis, a potentialAct that Gray credits with savBut she had a bigger sur- ly dangerous inflammation of ing her life. The plan, which priseatthe emergency room. the pancreas. started Jan. 1, 2014, gave her A routine blood test showed The nextmonth, Gray had access tothe recommended an unusually high white blood to stop the ponatinib. Without chemotherapy. Her cancer cell count. access to either drug, she was went into remission in the fall. Gray had chronic myeloid again scrambling. It's been one year since the leukemia, a relatively uncomBristol-Myers Squ i b b, federallaw began guarantee- mon form of cancer that starts which provides cancer paing coverage to most Ameri- in the bone marrow and leads tients with a temporary insurcans for the first time, even if to the production of abnormal ance card for a 30-day supply they are sick. blood cells. of yet another cancer drug, Some consumers pay more The disease is now con- seemed to offer hope. But the for insurance. Some pay less. sidered highly t r e atable. card wasn't accepted at the Doctors, hospitals and busi- Gray's oncologist at Kaiser Kaiser pharmacy where Gray nesses are laboring to keep prescribedthe standard oral had to get her prescriptions. up with new requirements. chemotherapy, a medication American Cancer Society And across the c ountry, known as Gleevec. advocate Brandon Costantino, "Obamacare" remains a polarMuch relieved, Gray called who works with patients at the izing political issue. her pharmacy to pick up the University of Maryland, Baltimore, persuaded a company For many Americans like prescription. Gray — who were stuck in There was a pause on the sales representative to give plans that didn't cover vital line. The pharmacist asked Gray a month's supply anyway. Then Gray had to contend services or who couldn't get Gray if she knew the drug insurance because of a pre-ex- would cost $6,809 a month. with yet another obstacle: Pa"I freaked out," she recalled. tients could typically only get isting medical condition — the law has had a personal, even "Why wouldthey even make one month of the drug from life-changing, impact. this drug if people can't afford the manufacturer. She needed "A couple years earlier, I it pn a second to keep up treatment think I would have been done," Neither Gray nor her doctor through December. Gray said. realized her Kaiser plan only Even the promise of a new Even the law's supporters covered $1,500 worth of pre- insurance plan under the Afconcede more must be done to scription drugs a year, a provi- fordableCare Act seemed elucontrol health care costs and sion spelled out in small type sive at first. Gray, like others, ensure access to care. in Appendix B of her 80-page battled through the problems But the insurance guaran- plan brochure. that hobbled HealthCare.gov tee — which includes billions Caps on coverage were once after it opened. "I must have of dollars in aid to low- and routine; most c ommercial called 85 times or more," she middle-income A me r i cans health plans once put some sard. — has extended coverage to kind of a n nual o r l i f etime Finally, on Dec. 2, 2013, she about 10 million people who limit on how much care they selected a new Kaiser Permapreviously had no insurance, covered. nente health plan for $780 a
New York Times News Service
surveys indicate. That cut the
"Patients often didn't know
nation's uninsured rate more they had inadequate coverthan 20 percent last year, the age until they were diagnosed largest drop in half a century. with a c atastrophic illness," The law also changed cov- said Dr. S. Yousuf Zafar, an erage for millions more people oncologist at Duke Cancer Inwho were in plans like Gray's stitute who studies how costs that capped or excluded bene- affect cancer care. fits, a once-common feature of Gray desperately looked for health insurance that is now help. banned. She earned too much to Working out of a trim, white qualify for most charity proColonial in suburban Wash- grams that drugmakers offer. ington, D.C., Gray thought Kaiser wouldn't lift her drug little of these potential chang- cap. And with a cancer diag-
month. That was $315 less than her current plan. Most import-
ant,the plan covered Gleevec for a $30-a-month co-pay. Gray broke down in the pharmacy when she picked up her first prescription last Jan-
uary — she admits she's "kind of a crier." Nine months later, a bone
marrow biopsy showed no further sign of leukemia. Today, Gray is healthy, aside from the occasional sinus infection.
Surplus
"It's hard when you're used at the end of 2014, despite the to somebody and you're all of fact that there is still variaContinued from 01 sudden told to go somewhere tion in wait times for appointIt could also signal some- else," she said, "and you're ments. He also said he's not thing less rosy: Not that like, 'Yeah, but where'? I don't aware of any other providers people didn't try to see doc- know any other doctors.'" telling their OHP patients to tors, but that they couldn't. A couple of clinics Stewart seek care elsewhere. Throughout the first half of called told her that while they 2014, OHP beneficiaries state- accept OHP, they wouldn't be Payment for physicians wide reported having trouble able to treat her chronic back Nationally, reimbursement getting in to see doctors and pain stemming from a miss- to physicians who provide long wait times once they did ing disc in her spine. Stewart primary care under the Medget appointments. eventually landed with a doc- icaid program is expected to Meanwhile, doctors report- tor at Mosaic Medical, but she drop this year. The decrease ed being overwhelmed by a said he won't prescribe the could be as much as 43 perflood a new OH P p atients, pain medication she's taken cent, according to a s t u dy and some complained of in- for nearly a decade. released last month by the "He's weaning me, as he Urban Institute, a nonprofadequate reimbursement for says," said Stewart, who it that researches social and their services. Some d o ctors chose to stop accepting also struggles with arthri- economic policy.The U.S. new OHP patients, and a few tis, diabetes and high blood Centers for Medicare & Medeven dropped existing OHP pressure. icaid Services had been repatients. So far, none of the medica- imbursing providers at MediCentral Oregon's CCO, tions he's prescribed instead care rates in 2013 and 2014 for along with others across the have eased the pain, and treating M edicaid p atients. state, reported taking on some made her so foggy she Medicare typically pays more many more new beneficia- couldn't do more than lie in than Medicaid. As of the beries under the expansion than bed. ginning of this year, that was "I'm trying, a nd it s t i l l no longer the case. its leaders had expected. By April, Central Oregon's CCO hurts," she said. Here in Central Oregon, had taken on nearly 18,000 Dan Stevens, the chief oper- although the federal governnew beneficiaries since the ating officer of PacificSource ment has allocated less monend of 2013, bringing it to Community Solutions, said ey for primary care providers, about 47,000 people. access to providers improved Stevens said Pacifi cSource
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration re-
ported abig increase in new customers signing up for health insurance in Flori-
da, Texas and other states using the federal insurance marketplace. But in s t ates r unning
their own insurance exchanges, the numbers were
more modest. All told, the administration said, in the first month
of open enrollment for 2015 coverage,more than 4 million people signed up for the first time or re-enrolled through the federal and state insurance m a rket-
places. About 3.4 million of them were in the 37 states using the website of the fed-
eral marketplace, HealthCare.gov. More than 2 million con-
sumers signed up for the first time, the administration reported, and 1.8 mil-
lion of them did so through the federal m a rketplace.
States with large numbers of new customers in the federal exchange included Florida (330,000), Texas (205,000), North Carolina (110,000), Georgia (103,000) and Pennsylvania (95,000). The report showed the importance of subsidies to
people seeking coverage under the Affordable Care Act. O fficials said
t ha t 8 7
percent of those selecting health plans for next year in the federal exchange had qualified for subsidies that would reduce their premiums. That is larger than the
proportion of people who qualified for financial assistance in the initial months of
the first open enrollment period (80 percent from Octo-
R e d-
mond, was one of the people whose physician at Central Oregon Family M e dicine dropped her back in April shortly after she gained coverage under OHP. She'd been a patient at the clinic for more than 20 years.
••
automatically renewedthem weren't counted. But it's reasonable to think that theproportion is representative. Lastyear's number at theendof openenrollment was an average of 85 percent. A different report said that a total of 6.5 million people in those stateshadselected plans or been automatically renewed into plans. that the Department of Health The plaintiffs in theSupreme andHuman Serviceshasdeliv- Court case, called King v.Bureredsome numbersonexactly well, argue that thelawdoes not who is signing upfor health allow the subsidies to helpininsurance for 2015,sincethe surance customers inthestates open enrollment period beganin letting the federalgovernment mid-November. run individual insurancemarketThe data thatwasUsedisn't places. And if thecourt agrees, all those peoplewould losetheir perfect or complete —and manycommentators rightly subsidi es,andmanywouldbe grumbled about its shortcompriced out of themarket. As ings — but the report is still a more peoplesign upfor health helpful snapshot of whomthe insurance —andmore of them new insurancemarkets are rely on federal subsidies —the serving. It's particularly detailed potential disruption such arulin looking at thepeople using ing would causegrows. the marketplaces inthe37 So far, outside of official states that areletting the federal briefs, administration officials have beenquiet about any government manage their enrollment. concerns about the case. Overall, it found, customers Asked several times last who were usingHealthCare.gov week in a newsconference to pick insuranceplans — some about possible contingency newcustomers, andsome planning, the health secretary, renewing customers —were Sylvia Mathews Burwell, overwhelmingly likely to qualify insisted that her department for federal subsidies to help was confident that the governthem paytheir premiums. On ment would win in court and average, thereport found that that it was focusing its efforts 87 percent of thesecustomers on signing up new insurance were eligible for subsidies, with customers. But a department higher percentages insome news release highlighted the states — up to ahigh of 95perhigh rate of subsidy, suggestcent in Mississippi. ing thatfederal officials were Those numbersdon't include aware of the case's possible everyone inthe marketplace; reach. — Margot Sanger-Katz, people whowereenrolled in New YorkTimesNewsService plans at thestart and simply
it is about the same as the proportion who eventually of people signing up for 2015 qualified for subsidies in the is similar to that of people who federal exchange: 86 per- previously bought insurance cent through March 2014. on the exchanges. Twenty-four The subsidies are under percent are age 18 to 34, a relattack in a Supreme Court atively healthy group sought case filed by critics of the by many insurers. Latinos achealth care law, who con- count for 8 percent of people tend that it does not autho- signing up for 2015 coverage rize such assistance in states in the federal exchange, comusingthe federal exchange. pared with 7percent in 2014. Larry Levitt, a seniorvice president of the Kaiser Family Foundation, said, "It's
"We see no signs that the
administration has succeeded in getting significantly more significant that the largest young people and Hispannumber of new enrollees ics," said Caroline Pearson, this fall came from states who tracks the data as a vice like Florida and Texas, president of Avalere Health, which were not the most en- a research and consulting thusiastic supporters of the company. health care law." The current enrollment peThe demographic profile riod lasts three months, from
"I think that's going to be will adjust its budget to ensure reimbursement rates re- pretty unique," he said. "No main flat or fall only slightly. longer do those dollars just "A lot of people feel like drop to the CCO's bottom line. there is a pretty strong rela- In our model, they go back to tionship between primary the middle." care reimbursement and paHopper said in the future, tient access and your overall CCO leaders will likely get betfinancial outcome at a population level," he said. "In re-
ter at estimating their claims
Nov. 15 to Feb. 15. It is half as long as the initial open enrollmentperiod, from October2013 through March 2014. The latest numbers include
people who took action to renew their coverage for 2015 or changed plans,but generally do not includepeoplewho were automatically re-enrolled in their current health plans. The
Obama administration repeatedly urged people to return to the marketplace, update infor-
mation on their household income and shop for health plans that might offer better value.
But several million people evidently failed to do so, and their coverage will be renewed in the same or similar health plans.
In the summer of 2015, Cen-
tral Oregon's CCO will receive money from the state that was withheld until it meets a num-
ber of quality metrics, such as emergency department use, access to care and adolescent
well-care visits. The CCO is on track to
costs for subsequent years so meet five of t hose metrics, as to prevent such surpluses. according to a document prewill, at the federal level, it The Oregon Health Au- sented at the Central Oregon doesn't require us to lower re- thority has implemented a re- Health Council's December imbursement. We can make quirement that CCOs refund 2013 meeting. Another seven that decision at a local leveL" a portion of their revenues if metricsare considered borThe actual rates won't be their costs for providing ser- derline, including adolescent determined until after con- vices to new OHP beneficia- well care visits, emergency versations with the Central ries come in less than antici- d epartment ut ilization a n d Oregon Health Council and pated. Stevens said that deter- colorectalcancer screenings. physicians, he said. mination won't happen until The CCO already says it will Leaders with th e H ealth the end of 2015, however, and miss two metrics: performing Council are now in the pro- will cover both 2014 and 2015. mental and physical health cess of deciding how to alloAs of the end of September, assessments on kids within cate the surplus money, and the CCO's budget showed a 60 days of their being placed they'reconsidering a num- roughly $9 million net in- in foster care and follow-up ber of health improvement come, but Hopper said admin- visits within a week of being projects that would benefit istrators project that will de- discharged from the hospital communities. Stevens said crease by year's end because for a mental illness. he thinks that process will of claims through December. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, be among the highlights of That also doesn't account for tbannow@bendbuIIetin.com the Health Council's work in money that goes back to promoving that subsidy, if you
2015. Not all CCOs get to ded-
viders because it was with-
icate their surplus money to community projects, he said.
held at beginning of the year
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A new reportfrom theObama administration highlights the very high stakesfor achallenge to the AffordableCareAct before theSupremeCourt. The subsidies that thecourt may eradicate arehelping alarge majority of HealthCare.gov customers payfor their health insurance. The report is the first time
ber to December 2013). But
One patient's story Sandra Stewart, of
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THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
TION Recalidrating assumptions I assume the couple who took my puppy from his crate outside my hotel in Flagstaff, Arizona, on Christmas Eve morning thought they were doing a good deed. From the note they left, they assumed he had been left out in the cold all night. They were mistaken. I assumed — after taking him out earlier that morning for a romp and feeding — that he would be safe in the morning sun as I prepared to leave the hotel. I was mistaken. We make mistaken assumptions in the world of nutrition as well. One is the rule of thumb — based on calculations done in 1958 — that we will lose1
pound of body fat for every 3,500 calories we cut from our diet. Based on what we know now, this formula is too simple for those who need to lose more than just a few pounds, according to an article in Today's Dietitian by registered dietitian Densie Webb, Ph.D.
Today, more complex formulas have been developed to factor in how the body adapts to weight loss over time, says Webb. In other words, we may needto adjust our calorie goals as we continue to lose weight. When I lost my puppy, I was encouraged to learn about online help to recover lost pets. Lost Dogs Arizona on Facebook got me in touch with helpinglostpets.com — a national outreach to locate lost animals. That led to more information from the Arizona Border Collie Rescue organization. Likewise, new formulas to calculate weight loss goals are now available online. Nutrition experts at the National Institutes of Health have developed a Body Weight Simulator to help calculate calorie goals for weight loss and weight maintenance. Biomedical researchers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, have also developed an online calculator to predict how much weight one can expect to lose in a specific amount of time at certain calorie levels: http://pbrc.edu/ research-and-faculty/ calculators/sswcp . A simpler — yet more accurateformula than the 3,500-calorie rule is this, according to NIH investigators: Every10 fewer calories that we eat each day will eventually lead to the loss of 1 pound of body fat, but it may take more time to get there than was originally estimated in 1958.
Our assumptions about weight loss therefore needadjusting, say experts. When we do it right, weight loss may be slow, even slower than wethought. Current research has confirmed that we need patience and consistency to successfully lose excess weight. So as we approach this New Year, wecan learn from the past and adjust to new information. We can remember that success requires diligence. And I assume that someone will contact me if they find my dear Buddy. — Barbara Quinn, Tbe Monterey (Calif) Herald
oun in t eaarmon iseasecause su ar By Barbara Sadick ~ ChicagoTribune
Is sugar making us sick'? A team of scientists at the University of California in San Francisco believes so, and they're doing something about it. They launched an initiative to bring information on food and drink and added sugar to the public by reviewing more than 8,000 scientific papers that show a strong link between the consumption of added
sugar and chronic diseases. The common belief until now was that sugar just makes us fat, but it's become
clear through research that it's making us sick. For example, there's the rise in fatty-liver disease, the emergence of Type2 diabetes as an epidemic in children and the dramatic increase in metabolic disorders.
Laura Schmidt, a UCSFprofessor at the School of Medicine and the lead investigator
on theproject,SugarScience, said the idea is to make the findings comprehensible and clearto everyone. The results will be available to all on a website (SugarScience.org) and social media platforms
sumption of added sugars in the Western diet.
Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show th e
c ategory
of heart attack/stroke as the leading cause of death in the U nited States. Every
d ay,
2,200 Americansdie of cardiovascular disease. That's about 800,000 a year, or 1 in 3
deaths. The latest statistics from the American Diabetes Association show that 29.1 million
Americans, or 9.3 percent, have diabetes. Of that num-
Fotolia via Tribune News Service
ber, 21 million have been di- Liquid sugar in sodas, energy drinks and sports drinks is the leading source of added sugar in the agnosed and 8.1 million have American diet. not, and the numbers contin-
ue to grow, according to the Added sugars, Schmidt association. said, are sugars that don't ocIt doesn't stop there. The cur naturally in foods. They American Liver Foundation are found in 74 percent of says at least 30 million Ameriall packaged foods, have 61 cans, or1in 10, has one of 100 names and often are difficult kinds of liver disease. to decipher on food labels. Clinicians widely believe Although the U.S. Food and that obesity is the cause of Drug Administration requires metabolic disease. Although food companies to list ingre- it is a marker for these disdients on packaging, the sug- eases, Lustig said, it's not the gested daily values of natural cause. "Too much sugar causand added sugars can't be es chronic metabolic disease found. in both fat and thin people," The FDA is considering a he said, "and instead of focusproposal to require food man- ing on obesity as the problem, ufacturers to list information we should be focusing on our on sugars in the same way processed-food supply." they do for fats, cholesterol, The average American sodium, carbohydrates and consumes 19.5 t easpoons protein. But because so much (78 grams) of sugar a day, added sugar is dumped into so substantially more than the many products, one average amount recommended bythe like Facebook and Twitter.
"People are becoming literate about the toxic effectsofsugar and have more understanding of the idea that high doses are bad for one's
health war," he said, "but the
health."
problem. As a nation, Schillinger added, we would need
time has come to do so."
Such a war would have to take on the root causes of the
— Dean Schillinger, professor of medicine at UCSF to look at our food policies,
causes more sugar to be sent to the pancreas and liver than either can process properly, and the resulting buildup of sugarleads to heart disease,
"People are becoming literate about the toxic effects of
sugar," Schillinger said, "and have more understanding of
food pricing, availability of healthy foods, and the marketing being carried out by food and beverage industries to hook the public on unhealthy choices loaded with
would likely exceed a reason- The association sets t hese able daily limit. limits: 6 teaspoons (24 grams) "SugarScience shows that for women, 9 teaspoons (36 a calorie is not a calorie but grams) for men, and 3-6 tearather that the source of a cal- spoons (12-24 grams) for chilorie determines how it's medren, depending on age. Just tabolized," said pediatric en- one 12-ounce soda contains 8 docrinologist Robert Lustig, a to 9 teaspoons (32-36 grams) member of theSugarScience of sugar. team and the author of "Fat Liquid sugar in sodas, enerChance: Beating the Odds gy drinks and sports drinks Against Sugar, Processed is the leading source of added Food, Obesity, and Disease." sugar in the American diet. Lustig said that more than That represents 36 percent of half of the U.S. population all added sugars consumed, is sick with metabolic syn- according to the Department drome, a group of risk factors of Health and Human Serfor chronic diseases such as vices. And because liquid does heart disease, diabetes and not include fiber, the body liver disease that are directly processes it quickly. That
added sugar. Frank Hu, a professor of bad for one's health." He sees Consuming too much sug- evidence that those in a high- nutrition and epidemiology at ar causesthe levelofglucose er socioeconomic bracketare the Harvard School of Public sugar in the bloodstream to taking steps to limit intake of Health, is not a SugarScience increase. That, in turn, causes sugar when compared with researcher, but he agreed the pancreasto release high poorer, less literate people. that the amount of sugar conlevels of insulin that cause the Healthy food is expensive sumed by the American pubbody to store extra calories as and less readily accessible in lic is too high. SugarScience, fat. poorer neighborhoods, and he said, is being helpful by i n f ormation Too much insulin also af- because corn is so abundant bringing th e fects the hormone leptin, a and cheap, it is added to many about added sugar to public natural appetite suppressant food p r o ducts. "Dumping attention. "It's just a b out i m possithat signals the brain to stop high fructose corn syrup into eating when full. But the cheap foods, sodas, sports ble," Hu said, "to know from imbalance of i n sulin l evels drinks and energy drinks is food labels what kinds and caused by the intake of too toxic to the body, causing epi- a mounts of s ugars ar e i n much sugar causes lipid resis- demic metabolic diseases and a product." That's why he tance,and the brain no longer a serious health crisis," Schil- thinks the FDA should require linger said. food companies to list those gets that signal. Another member of t he To underscore the scope of amounts on all food labels so S ugarScience team, D e a n the problem, he pointed out people know what they're eatSchillinger, is a professor of that during the Iraq and Af- ing, in what amounts they're m edicine atUCSF and a prac- ghanistan wars, 1,500 Amer- eating it, and what amounts ticing primary care doctor at ican soldiers lost a limb in are safe. Food labels are important, San Francisco General Hos- combat. In that same period, pital. He believes the overcon- 1.5 million people in the U.S. Schillinger said, andtheyneed sumption of added sugars is lost l i mbs t o a m p utations to be revised, but the most ima social problem, not a prob- from Type 2diabetes,a pre- portant change needed is to lem of individual choice and ventable disease. "We have make the healthier choice the freedom. yet to mobilize for a public easier choice.
Fastfood
Americans from the USDA and th e U . S . D e partment
also varied over time. An or-
to a public health campaign launched by New York City officials against partially hydrogenated oils and to the people who followed their lead. These oils are handy for food producers because they have a long shelf life, but they're bad for the body because they raise levels of LDL cholesterol (the bad kind) while lowering levels of HDL cholesterol (the good kind). A typical meal — a large c heeseburger, large f r i es and large drink — at a one
der of small fries at the top chain contained 20 calories
of the fast-food joints would make it pretty difficult for a
able sodium. The cheeseburger alone would account for
American breakfast of cereal
Continued from 01 In general, the calorie content of similar items varied
from chain to chain, the researchers found. For instance,
an orderofsmall fries atone of the chains packed 110 more c alories than a n
o r der o f
small fries at one of the other chains. (The one exception to this trend was large-sized or-
ders of fries.) The calorie content of foods
more in 2013 than it did in 1996. At the other two chains,
the calorie count for small fries rose by 50 and 90 during the same period. The story was about the same with s o dium, w h i ch
varied by chain for all menu items except for t h e
small
cheeseburgers. If you ordered large fries in 2013, for example, you could be served anywhere from 700 to 1,420 mil-
ligrams of sodium per 1,000
Find It All
calories of potatoes, the re-
Online
All three restaurants saw t he amount of t r ans fat i n
bendbulletin.com
related to the excessive con-
searchers discovered. french fries plummet to "undetectable levels" between 2006 and 2009. That was due
American Heart Association.
well-meaning person to stick
the idea that high doses are
diabetes and liver disease.
of Health and Human Services advise people to eat no
Get ATaste For Food, Home Sr Garden ' • TheBulletin -
•
•
more than 1,500 to 2,300 mil-
ligrams of sodium per day, depending on age and health history. If you ordered your cheeseburger meal at the lowest-sodium chain, you'd be
OSPICE
of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3
consuming 63 percent to 97
You Have A Cholce. Ask For Us Bg Name.
percent of your daily sodium in a single sitting. In the highest-sodium chain, that meal
I I I I
would account for 91 percent to 139 percent of your allow-
o
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about 50percent to 75 percent
of your daily sodium, the researchers demonstrated.If searchers reported. Fast-food c h a i n s may you were trying limit yourselfto 2,000 calories per day seem like an easy target for in 2013, that meal would have n utrition experts, but t h e accounted for well over half researcherssaid their invesof your daily calories no mat- tigation was warranted beter which of the three restau- cause Americans eat more rants you patronized. De- than one-third of their calpending on the chain, those ories away from home, and three items would add up to about 40 percent of those between 65 percent and 80 caloriescome from fast-food percentofyour recommended establishments. daily calories, the researchThe results appeared in a ers calculated. (The U.S. De- pair of reports published last partment of Agriculture has week in the journal Preventsomewhat detailed calorie ing Chronic Disease, which recommendations based on is published by the Centers age and gender online.) for Disease Control and The Dietary Guidelines for Prevention.
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT AWARDS
Lovean crisis in 'To et erness'onHB TV SPOTLIGHT "Togetherness"
becomes oddly mesmerized by a spacey New Age type named Linda (Mary Steenburgen), who is buried beneath a pile of
.rararr
9:30 p.m. Sundays, HBO
By David Wiegand The San Francisco Chronicle
SAN F R A N C ISCO Brothers Mark and Jay Duplass could have called their
new half-hour HBO show "Too Close for Comfort," if that title hadn't been used by anoth-
it more accurately reflects the compellingly credible mix of comedy and more serious stuff that happens when four people share living space. Brett (Mark Duplass) and Michelle Pierson (Melanie Lynskey) are having a kind of midmarriage crisis. It's fairly low grade, but that's because
leaves and branches to get in touch withher own death when Brett first meets her. Mean-
directors, actors and tech-
while, Alex predictably begins crushing on Tina, who dashes his hopes when she meets Larry (Peter Gallagher), a Hollywood movie producer who goes everywhere with a Pomer-
achieve true greatness. "Togetherness" has a great script, written by the Duplass brothers and Zissis. It is rich in telling detail, and the dialogue rings realistically true. From that strong foundation,
nicians, but without a great script, a T V s h o w c a nnot
the four lead actors have built
extraordinary performances. It's not just that they're entire-
tional belief that America is
neither really knows how to Todd Williamson /The Associated Press identify w hat t h e p r o blem Mark Duplass andMelanieLynskey play ahusband and wifegoing is. Some of it involves sex, through a midmarriage crisis while figuring out themselves in the because, well, doesn't every- heartwarming comedy"Togetherness." thing? Michelle is never in the
mood anymore and Brett is frustrated.
are the best-written. That isn't to deny the contributions of
As sick to death as I usually am with TV's myopic institu-
a better title, though, because
even if the animal in the shot is
when, first, Brett's best friend,
Their problems as a couple — you got it — a coyote. are really about their problems Melanie is bored with her as individuals. Brett w orks life and looking for both puras a sound tech in the movie pose and an outlet. She meets industry. He often goes out David (John Ortiz), a divorced gathering real-life sounds to father, who wants to start a replicate in films. He likes that charterschool in Eagle Rock. part of his job. What he doesn't Melanie wants to help, not like are egomaniac, half-crazy quite allowing herself to bedirectors who keep their sound lieve she may be interested in guys waiting for hours and David.
Alex (Steve Zissis), a plump
insist that real coyote howls
out-of-work actor, is evicted from his apartment and asks
to crash on the couch. Then Melanie's party planner sister Tina (Amanda Peet) moves in as well, and you have the makings of something Beaumarchais might have whipped up if he were working in Hollywood in 2015.
The unsteady alliance at
aren't as good as wolf howls, the Pierson home is rattled
But wait, there's more, as
they say on infomercials: Brett
fascinated with Los Angeles ly believable at all times, but and its various weirdnesses, that they are able to bring so this time the setting works, in many emotional colors to their part because it doesn't really characters. "Togetherness" is billed as matter. Brett isn't a film or TV star, fading or otherwise: He's a comedy, and it is often very an anonymous sound tech funny, but it also touches the guy. Melanie is a suburban heart. We at least empathize mom. Tina plans parties and with the major characters. At rents bounce houses and Alex other times, we're moved more is never going to give Brad Pitt deeply by them. Alex is so a run for his money. much the buffoon, so much the It's easy to overlook the L.A. typical comic foil, for example. attitude, not only because it's
We were all shocked
as he has been very good to my sister
DPPR
and other members
of the family. So far, we haven't
said anything to my sister or her boyfriend, and I am unsure what to do. I have a small child and it
and Tina are hiding in a closet and he is close enough to her and Larry, but also because to smell her hair. Zissis doesn't our attention is focused on the say a word quite yet, but he quartet of major characters. doesn't have to. It's a moment They are, by turns, funny, poi- ofcredibleheartbreak. "Togetherness" is easy to gnant and perhaps even a little panicked as they contemplate like on one level and probably that their lives seem to be con- a little more challenging as tinuing apace under their own the Duplass brothers explore steam andnotbecausethey're the ennui of quiet discontent in control of them anymore. among people who are just If a successful real estate trying to do they best they can. deal is all about location, a It's worth the effort. The emos uccessful TV s ho w i s , a t tional payoff is enormous.
everything you have written to
cy before the big event. R ealistically, shouldn't I e x -
me and ask if she's aware that
pect more than second best in
her live-in boyfriend is on a sex offender website. If his offense
his world'? Is there a time limit for grieving, or does the deceased get
concerned a minor child, it is pos-
to control her hubby from the oth-
sible that he is not supposed to be er side'? — Waiting and Wondering around childrenand if he has been Dear Waiting and Wondering: that the authorities Realistically, this has less to do would like to know. with what you should "expect" But f i r st ,
d i s cuss than conclusions the w i d ower must arrive at on his own. Ask him in a nonconfrontational way not — be able to put your fears to how he FEELS about carrying out
this with your sister, who may — or may
my sister knows, and I don't know how to bring it up. I am upset with my family member because he didn't say anything immediately after find-
rest. Dear Abby:I have been dating a widower for a year. While he was eager to jump into the dating pool, he still has a mini shrine of his late wife's ashes and belongings in their house. I can't bring myself to havedinner or sleep over there
ing this information. I'm upset at
with that overt presence.
makes me nervous. I don't know if
my sister if she knows and hasn't been honest with us, and I am upset with this man. What should I
do?
— Upset in Virginia
Dear Upset: First let me tell you what NOT to do. Do not remain
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, JAN. 8, 2015:This year, you
will experience many changes in your By Jacqueline Bigar daily life. You have the spirit to not let this situation bother you, and you have spoken cannot be taken back. The less what it takes to cruise right by it. You will have a tendency to swallow your upset you create, the less you'll have to resolve. Tonight: Remain secure. feelings and withdraw. Make it OK to express your less-pleasant feelings, and CANCER (June21-July 22) you will feel better. If you are single, you ** * * Y ou'll want to focus on comcould meet someone very special from pleting an important project. You could August on. If you decide to deal with someone's anger, or Stsfsshpwthe kjstl are attached, the you might opt to walk away from the volsf dayyoll'Ilhave two of you seem atile situation. Timing will be everything. ** * * * D ynamic to have a psychic Tonight: Invite a loved one to join you for ** * * p ositive co n nection. Plan adinner at a favorite spot. ** * Average spe c ial time away LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** So-so where you can enjoy the intensity ** * * You could be taken aback by * Difficult everything that is going on. Howyou that exists behandle a volatile friend will define how tween you. VIRGO is much fussier than you feel for the remainder of the day. you are. Investigate options more openly with an ARIES (March 21-April 19) eye to positive change. Someone might ** * * S omeone close to you will push be a little too serious for your taste. Tohard to achieve what he or she wants. night: Buy a gift. Others will react, and what started out
as a peaceful, normal request could
about a future with him.
yourself in the midst of a public squabble. If you can keep your eye on the big picture, you will land perfectly. Remain centered. You could feel uptight about a key issue that seems to be undermining your dealings. Tonight: Where the fun is.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * * R each out to someone at a distance whom you care about but might be irritated with. Understand what is happening; you might want to pull back rather than trigger a reaction. Emotions could run high, though you aren't likely to show them. Tonight: Make it an early night.
CAPRiCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Deal with someone directly, and know that this person will be quite touched by your time and attention. Make a point of connecting with a friend at a distance who cares a lot about you. If you feel depressed or unhappy, share your feelings. Tonight: Get ready for
some TVbinging. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You might feel off in the morn- ** * * Others will demonstrate their
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
** * * ing, but later in the day — when the Moon enters your sign — you'll feel like the lead player. Investigate opportunities that appeal to you. If a family member TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * * Y our imagination seems to be appears to be closed-off, give him or her some space. Tonight: As you like it. going haywire. A brainstorming session LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) could help take you in a new direction. Don't allow someoneto pushyouaway ** * Pressure builds, and some of you could be easily antagonized by a child because of a seemingly unresolvable or loved one. You might need to take a problem. Tonight: Let loved ones know walk and commit to saying nothing for how much you care. now. Focus on the big picture and on the GEMINI (May 21-Juns20) bonds that tie you together. Tonight: Let ** * * M ake calls in the morning, off some steam. when others appear to bemoreresponsive. Someone's temper might encourSCORPIO (oct. 23-Nov.21) age you to retreat later in the day. Words ** * * D efer to others, rather than find explode into quite a fight. Try to prevent this from happening. Moodiness seems to be everywhere. Tonight: A chat is inevitable.
all of his deceased wife's wishes — and whether he thinks it is fair to himself or you. Be prepared to discuss it without becoming emotional. His answers will tell you everything you need to know
P.S. If your relationship with him is good, why not focus on the He recently told me he's sav- present and not worry about what ing her remains to be intermin- happens to his body when he's gled with his when he dies. It was gone? However, if this is a deal among a long list of her afterlife breaker, then don't invest any instructions he described. He's more time. in good health. I figure he has 25 — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com years — or more — life expectan- or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
YOURHOROSCOPE
TV TODAY • More TVlistingsinsideSports
Yet, there's a moment when he
caring, but not in the way you might expect. In fact, you could be too irritated to be gracious. Try your best to be appreciative, because you will not be able to mend a broken bridge quickly. Zero in on what you want. Tonight: Out late.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Msrch20) ** * * * Y ou'll be more on edge than you realize. Part of the problem could be that you seem to be holding on to your uglier feelings more than you have in the past. As a result, you'll be more prone to getting the flu and other such ailments. Tonight: Choose a favorite stressbuster. © King Features Syndicate
7 p.m. on WE, "Love Thy Sistsr" —"Meet the Ruckers," the aptly named premiere episode of this new unscripted series, introduces viewers to the three black Southern siblings at the heart of the show: hot-headed former lawyer Ruby, who is going through some financial struggles; Ellen Rucker Carter, who has put her chiropractic practice on hold following her divorce from NBA star Vince
Carter, so shecan spend more quality time with their daughter; and lone, the youngest, who is trying to prove to her older sisters she is more than the pampered baby of the family.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may t/e an additional fee for 3-D and i/MAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
silent and stew. Tell your sister
Source: The Associated Press
largely represented in secondary characters like Linda
nine searc reveasscar news Dear Abby: Recently, a member of the family suggested that my mother Google the name of my sister's new live-in boyfriend. (Another family member said he had done it months ago.) When Mom did, she saw that he is a convicted sex offender.
AWefdS —Robert Downey Jr. was seeing double at the People's Choice Awards. The star of "The Judge" and "Iron Man" picked up the trophies for favorite dramatic movie actor and favorite movie actor at Wednesday's fan-favorite ceremony honoring stars in film, television and music. "The Big Bang Theory" also won multiple honors. The sitcom about a group of scientists was awarded trophies for favorite network TV comedy and favorite TV show, while co-star Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting was chosen as favorite comedic TV actress. Melissa McCarthy was honored as favorite comedic movie actress, while Adam Sandler was selected as favorite comedic movie actor. See a list of all winners at www.peoples choice.com/pca/ awards/nominees /
heart, all about writing. Again and again, the greatest shows
anian tucked under his arm.
er comedy from yesteryear. "Togetherness" may work as
People's Choice
I
I
8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The Biggest Loser" —It's "Makeover Week" in this new episode, with Tim Gunn and hairstylist Ken Paves helping to give said
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ANNIE(PGj 11:20 a.m., 2:20, 6:20, 9:10 • BIGEYESlPG-13)noon,3,7:20,10 • BIG HERO 6 lPG) 11:50 a.m., 3:30 • ExoDUs:G0Ds AND KINGs lPG-13)2:40,6:05 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS 3-D (PG-13)10:50a.m., 9:25 • THE GAMBLER lR) 11:35 a.m., 3:10, 6:55, 9:40 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 10:35 a.m., 1:50, 6, 9:15 • THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 3-D (PG-13j 6:45, 10 • THE HOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES IMAX 3-0 (PG-13) 11:05a.m., 2:50, 6:30, 9:40 • THEHUNGER GAMES: NiOCKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) 11 a.m., 1:45, 6:15 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:35, 7:05, 10:05 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13j 11:30 a.m., 3:30 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 11:15 a.m., 2:30, 6:10, 9:20 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 12:20, 4:25, 7:35, 10:10 • PENGUINSOF MADAGASCAR (PG)12:05,3:55 • SELMA(PG-13)7, lo • TAKEN 3lPG-13) 8, 10 • UNBRQKENlPG-13)10:45 a.m.,2,6:35,9:45 • WILDlR) 11:30 a.m., 3:05, 6:50, 9:35 • THEWOMAN IN BLACK 2:ANGEL OF DEATH (PG-13) 12:15, 4:10, 7:40, 10:15 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
makeovers to the remaining contestants — and also to two of the eliminated at Comeback Canyon. The effects of their new looks are made clear when they meet up with their respective loved ones on a Los Angeles rooftop, where singer Gavin DeGraw performs. Trainer Bob Harper has a surprise for those who are still in the contest. Alison Sweeney is the host. © Zap2it
•
•
~~~coolsculpting
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I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • GONE GIRL(R) 5:30 • HORRIBLEBOSSES2(R) 9 • Younger then 2t matrattendallscreeningsif accompanied t/y a legalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • CITIZENFOUR lR) 5:30 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 3, 6:05 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 4,6:I5 • UNBRQKEN lPG-13) 3:15, 6:15 • THEWOMAN IN BLACK 2:ANGEL OF DEATH (PG-13) 4:15, 6:30
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TOUCHMARK slacr 1980
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 'THEHOBBIT:THE BATTLE OFTHE FIVEARMIES (PGI3j 4,7:30 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 4:50,7:IO • UNBRQKEN lPG-13) 3:50, 6:45 • WILDlR) 4:25, 7 • THEWOMAN IN BLACK 2:ANGEL OF DEATH (PG-13) 5, 7:05 • *NOPASSES OR DISCOUNTS ACCEPTED. •
•3
•
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 6:15 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (Upstairs — PG)6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
S
Don't s etr/rfrr anyone brrt a p/cutir surgeonfor Cro/rru/t r/ng
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
Check out our Miele coffee machines!
8
0
BROTHERS
TV.APPLIANCE ohnaonbrothersttrcom
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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NOTICE TO Lodgepole, juniper ADVERTISER and hemlock. neighborhood! Plan a Remington1100 Since September 29, $200 cord semi- auto 12 ga., ITEMS FORSALE 264- Snow Removal Equipment garage sale and don't 1991, advertising for Delivery included. 3" shells. Purforget to advertise in used woodstoves has 541-604-1925 201 - NewToday 265 - BuildingMaterials On a classified ad classified! chasedin 1980s. been limited to mod202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves go to 541-385-5809. Present condition is els which have been 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood on the first day it runs www.bendbulletin.com certified by the Or- Pine & Juniper Split like new. Asking 204- Santa's Gift Basket to make sure it isn cor268- Trees, Plants & Flowers to view additional Kitchen table & 4 n egon Department of $750. 541-410-4066 PROMPT DELIVERY 205- Free Items photos of the item. 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment chairs, brand new, $250 rect. Spellcheck and Environmental Qual541-389-9663 human errors do oc208- Pets and Supplies obo. 541-647-6214. 270- Lost and Found ity (DEQ) and the fedWanted: Collector seeks cur. If this happens to high quality fishing items Where can you find a 210 -Furniture & Appliances eral E n v ironmental GARAGESALES your ad, please con269 211- Children's Items The Bulletin helping hand? Protection A g e n cy 8 upscale bamboo fly 275 - Auction Sales tact us ASAP so that rods. 212 -Antiques & Collectibles recommends extra ' Call 541-678-5753, (EPA) as having met Gardening Supplies From contractors to corrections and any 280 - Estate Sales i caution when puror 503-351-2746 smoke emission stan215- Coins & Stamps 8 Equipment adjustments can be yard care, it's all here 281 - Fundraiser Sales chasing products or > dards. A cer t ified 240- Crafts and Hobbies made to your ad. 255 services from out of I 282Sales Norlhwest Bend in The Bulletin's w oodstove may b e 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 541-385-5809 Computers f the area. Sending f The Bulletin For newspaper identified by its cerlifi284- Sales Southwest Bend "Call A Service 242 - Exercise Equipment Classified ' cash, checks, o r ' delivery, call the cation label, which is 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 243 - Ski Equipment Professional" Directory T HE BULLETIN r e i credit i n f ormation permanently attached Circulation Dept. at 288- Sales Southeast Bend 244 - Snowboards may be subjected to quires computer ad541-385-5800 to the stove. The Bul245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea vertisers with multiple 264 i FRAUD. For more To place an ad, call letin will not know246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas ad schedules or those Snow Removal 541-385-5809 information about an c ingly accept advertisEquipment selling multiple sys247- Sporting Goods - Misc. advertiser, you may I or email ing for the sale of FARM MARKET classifiedObendbulletin.ccm tems/ software, to dis- Toro Power clear 180 uncertified 248- HealthandBeauty Items call t h e Ore g ont 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery t' State close the name of the 18 n 4 c ycle snow- woodstoves. Atto r ney ' 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs The Bulletin 316- Irrigation Equipment NEW business or the term blower, good cond., i General's O f f i ce Serving Central Oregon sincetgte 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 325- Hay, Grain and Feed "dealer" in their ads. $225. 541-639-9857 Consumer Protec- • Cleveland Irons! 267 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in Private party advertistion h o t line a t i 270 255 - Computers Fuel & Wood ers are defined as plastic,$350! 341 Horses and Equi p ment i 1-877-877-9392. 265 256 - Photography Lost & Found 951-454-2561 those who sell one 345-Livestockand Equipment Building Materials 257 - Musical Instruments (in Redmond) computer. I TheBulletin I WHEN BUYING 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals Serving Central Oregon sincetggs Found: SW Yew and 258 - Travel/Tickets 257 Bend Habitat FIREWOOD... 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Canal Blvd. round259 - Memberships 246 RESTORE about, in Redmond; 358- Farmer's Column Musical Instruments 212 To avoid fraud, 260- Misc. Items Guns, Hunting Building Supply Resale 500 or so full color 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing The Bulletin 261 - Medical Equipment Antiques & Quality at LOW photos. Call to iden& Fishing Drum Kits recommends pay383- Produce andFood 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. PRICES Collectibles tify at 541-548-2491. Specializing in High ment for Firewood 263- Tools 740 NE 1st Quality Used Drum Sets! only upon delivery Found Trekking pole at 300 Weatherby 541-312-6709 Antiques Wanted: Tools, Call Kevin, 541-420-2323 and inspection. 208 210 Tumalo Falls, Jan. 2. furniture, pre-'80s John magnum Mark V Open to the public. The Drum Shop • A cord is 128 cu. ft. To cla i m call Pets & Supplies Furniture & Appliances Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W German made, with 4' x 4' x 8' 541-388-8897 260 Leupold 3x9x50 photographv, beer cans. s • Receipts should • Cambria Quartz CHINA HUTCH 541-389-1578 scope. Misc.ltems Lost cat, black short include name, nBellingham,n 2 piece $200. $1600 obo. h air, white m u s nx36", nearly phone, price and The Bulletin reserves 55 541-420-1818 541-480-9430 4-drawer office filing tache, lost 10 days, kind of wood 1-1/2n thick, never the right to publish all cabinet, beige $50 obo. near 92nd &Tumalo purchased. ads from The Bulletin installed,$300 or 541-241-4426 Rd. Chipped. Refactory boxes Win 20ga • Firewood ads newspaper onto The 3 best offer. ward. 541-389-9377 ¹5; 2 boxes Win 12ga ¹6; Buylng Diamonds MUST include Bulletin Internet webDaschund mix pups 2 boxes Rem rifle 30-06 species 8 cost per /Gofd for Cash site. Bronze & Crystal Only 2 left (1F, 1M) 1st What are you 150qr. $125 new; asking Saxon's Fine Jewelers •2-tier, 202 cord to better serve 6-arm chanshots, wormed, $250 $70 for all. 541-678-5303 our customers. The Bulletin 541-389-6655 Want to Buy or Rent delier, 22" across, looking for? obo. 541-508-2167. Bend local pays CASH!! $300 or best offer. BUYING Dining Chairs (8) You'll find it in Donate deposit bottles/ for all firearms & Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-923-7491 The Bulletin 240 Lionel/American Flyer & Table Sernng Centrai Oregon srncetgte to local all vol., ammo. 541-526-0617 vintage costume jew- cans trains, accessories. The Bulletin Classifieds Moving, just 6 Crafts & Hobbies elly. Top dollar paid for non-profit rescue, for 541-408-2191. CASH!! months old. Sisters Habitat ReStore All yearDependable Gold/Silver.l buy by the feral cat spay/neuter. For Guns, Ammo & ATTENTION BUYING & S E LLING Jak e ' s Estate, Honest Artist T railer a t Supply Resale Firewood: Seasoned; Purchased at 541-385-5809 Reloading Supplies All gold jewelry, silver Building CRAFTERS Elizabeth,541-633-7006 D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Haven Homes for Quality items. 541-408-6900. Lodgepole, split, del, SPRING FAIR Mar 27-29 and gold coins, bars, Petco (near Wal-Mart) LOW PRICES! $10K; at Douglas County Fairrounds, wedding sets, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 in Redmond; or do150 N. Fir. WANTEDwood dressasking $5,000. or 2 cords for $365. grounds. Our 40th year! class rings, sterling silnate M-F a t S m ith 541-549-1621 ers; dead washers. Call fo r m u lti-cord 541-419-8860 Booths available for ver, coin collect, vinSign, 1515 NE 2nd 541-420-5640 Open to the public. discountsi quality crafts. For info, tage watches, dental Bend; or CRAFT in 541-420-3484. send SASE to: Spring gold. Bill Fl e ming, Tumalo. Can pick up DO YOU HAVE 266 206 Fair 2015, PO Box 22, 541-382-9419. suw SOMETHING TO Missing s o ut h of large amts, 389-8420. Dillard, OR 97432 Heating 8 Stoves Dry split Juniper Pets & Supplies www.craftcats.org SELL Prineville. white Boxer How to avoidscam innerspacefamily@gmail. $210/cord. Multi-cord with a large brown FOR $500 OR and fraud attempts Eden P u r e he a t er discounts available. com English Buudogi Mini LESS? spot on his rump and The Bulletin recomYBe aware of internaBrand n ew . $7 5 Immediate delivery! Australian Shepherd Non-commercial right ear. Reward for Sewing machine Viking mends extra caution tional fraud. Deal loCASH 541-389-7062 541-408-6193 pups, 11/1/14, tails advertisers may Riley. 541-233-6819 Quilt Designer w ith when purc h as- docked, shots, 5F/2M Dining tableplus 6 cally whenever posplace an ad large amount of exing products or serchairs, custom n sible. brindles 503.250.0424 with our tras and includes 10 vices from out of the made, 82nx43nx29 s/ Watch for buyers "QUICK CASH electronic stitch cards. Husky-Wolf female, area. Sending cash, end grain walnut and who offer more than YQUR AD wILL REcEIYEcLosE To L004000 SPECIAL" Lovely price of $600 checks, or credit in- 3 mos, adorable! Black alder. $1150. your asking price and EXPOSURESFOR ONLYtzSO! & white, only $200. or be s t offe r . 1 week3lines 12 f ormation may be 541-312-2393 who ask to have ol' 0 s Cro ecsd I eeNc~R eerl re~ N na r sl a nn 541-977-7019 541-549-1947 subjected to fraud. money wired or ~ee eke ei a Reek of January 5, 2015 For more informa- POODLE or POMAPOO handed back to them. 241 Ad must tion about an adverFake cashier checks puppies, toy. Adorable! include price of Bicycles & tiser, you may call and money orders 541-475-3889 le te i S soo o~ the O r egon State Accessories are common. or less, or multiple Serving CentralOregon since 1903 Attorney General's Queensland Heelers YNever give out peritems whosetotal Office C o n sumer Standard 8 Mini, $150 541-385-5809 sonal financial infordoes not exceed Protection hotline at 8 up. 541-280-1537 mation. $500. 1-877-877-9392. www.rightwayranch.wor Drexel VTrust your instincts dpress.com Woodbridge and be wary of Call Classifieds at The Bulletin pecan coffee table Serving Central Cregon sincetgga someone using an 541-385-5809 N EW Marin A r DIVORCE $155. C o m plete p r e paration. and two pecan end escrow service or www.bendbulletin.com genta Nev er ridtables. End tables agent to pick up your Adopt a rescued cat or den 2010 m o del merchandise. Includes children, custody, support, property have pull-out shelf. Check out the kitten! Altered, vacciShimano 105 thru$300 set. nated, ID chip, tested, classifieds online The Bulletin o ut. 6 0 6 1 al u m . and bills division. No court appearances. Servrng Central Cregon srnce t903 503-317-9668 more! CRAFT, 65480 SCHNOODLE PUPS, triple- butted Hydro www.bendbulletin.com Edge Road main 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Great with kids, 1st Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772Updated daily 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 shots, non-shed. Born frame with carbon www.craftcats.org s eat-stay and E 4 Kel-Tec PF9 9mm, 3 ex TURN THE PAGE www.paralegalalternatives.com 5295. 11/4. Black. $ 500. anti-flex chain-stay. mags, holster & SS 541-410-7701 For More Ads n8'1n Fits 5'8 $750 Canaries, males and rod guide. $250. Must legalaltomsn.com The Bulletin females, $30-$45 Wheaten Terriers, pure($825 if you want PD do a ba c kground 5 700 B lack S h i - check. 541-771-0665. Olhauneen regulaeach. 541-548-7947. bred, soft no-shed coat, mano 105 pedals) tails docked, dewclaws, tion size pool table 541-480-2483 in very good shape Chihuahua, 2 - y r-oldshots, 1M, 1F, parents on with cues, balls, male, free to good site, family raised. $875. MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! 541-447-8970 misc. accessories. home. 541-447-0210 Santa Cruz Solo mtn. $1 000. racing bike, med., fullI Yorkie pups AKC babv Train at home to process Medical Billing 541-389-1272 or Chocolate Labrador dollsl Shots pouy trained Exceptional c r a fts- suspension, good cond, brand new tires, must sell, 541-480-4695 AKC reg. PuPPies, $800, health guar., ready now! &. Insurance Claims! N O E X PERIENCE $300 dep. b. 12/1 6 ready $600 8 up 541 777 7743' manship signed by $3000. 541-480-2652 • New, never fired builder. All solid oak to go 2/1. 541-408-8880 Professional m o v ing VanNEEDED! Online training at Bryan University! medium colored stain Schwinn High Timber, Weatherby 210 blankets, asking $5 S2, synthetic desk that looks as el- mtn bike, la d i es, guard each 541-647-6214. stock, cal 30-06. $550. Furniture & Appliances egant from the back $100. 541-408-4273 HS D iploma/GED & Co m p uter/Internet • New, never fired as it does from the Wanted- paying cash Howa, wood stock, cal 242 needed 1-877-259-3880. front. Lumbar supfor Hi-fi audio & stuA1 Washersa Dryers .300 Win Mag.$725 dio equip. Mclntosh, ported chair included. Exercise Equipment Must pass back$150 ea. Full warPaid $4400 asking JBL, Marantz, Dyranty. Free Del. Also ground check. Please Dachshundsminilong$650 cash. More info Pilates Power Gym Pro naco, Heathkit, Sanwanted, used W/D's call 541.389.3694, haired AKC. $500 & up available. n ew $ 2 5 0 obo . sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-260-7355 leave message. 541-598-7417 541-408-5227 541-408-0846. Call 541-261-1808 G ENERATE SOM E EXCITEMENT in your
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 8, 2015
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz
C L U B T hursday, January8,2015
Negative inferences
ACROSS 1Haunt 7Gamewith its
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Learning bridge i s n o t a b o ut a bsorbing r u l e s or bi ddi n g conventions. The game's essence is problem-solving: drawing inferences from the bidding or play. Negative inferences from what didn't happen are equally useful. Today's West led his singleton heart against four spades, and East took theace. He cashed the ace of clubs and returned a heart. West ruffed and led a diamond, and S outh wo n w i t h t h e a c e a n d wondered how to play the trumps. Only four were still out, so South took the A-K. East's queen scored; down one.
Partner next bids three diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner suggests six diamonds, four c l ubs and e xtra s trength. With42, 2,A Q 10 7 6 2 , K Q 5 3, he would have rebid two diamonds. You can't try 3NT with such weak spades, but you must act. An expert panel might support a bid of threehearts,four clubs or four diamonds. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 41 J94 9 108 OA874 AKQ105
HEART RUFF South missed a negative inference. Say East had two low trumps. He could have given West an immediate heart ruff, won the club return and led a third heart to promote West's queen of trumps. But if East defends that way on the actual deal, West can't overruff dummy on the third heart. East's defense should have told South that East didn't want to betray the location of the queen of trumps. At Trick Five South must let the jack of trumps ride. DAILY QUESTION
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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 8 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 860
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 860
870
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Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
The Bulletin Say egoodbuy
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to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
5 41-385-580 9 880
Motorhomes
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
870
Harle Fat Bo 2002
Call on one of the professionals today!
HDFatBo 1996
870
Boats & Accessories 17.5' Bayliner 175 Capri, like new, 135hp I/O, low time, Bimini top, many extras, Karavan trailer with swing neck current
registrations. $7000. 541-350-2336
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$75,000
54'I -546-4807
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
17.5' Seaswirl 2002
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $55K. Ph. 541-447-9268
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & readers each week. Your classified ad awning - Turn-key ready will also appear on to use, less than 50 tobendbulletin.com tal days used by current which currently reowner. Never smoked in, ceives over 1.5 milno indoor pets, excellent lion page views evcond., very clean. Lots of ery month at no bonus features; many extra cost. Bulletin have never been used. Asking $18,000. C a l l Classifieds Get ReLisa, 541-420-0794 for sults! Call 365-5609 more info / more photos. or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Dutchman Denali
32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all HOLIDAY RAMBLER kitchen ware, linens VACATIONER 2003 etc. Hitch, sway 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 bars, water & sewer hoses. List price 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, $34,500 - asking Onan 5.5w gen., ABS $26,800Loaded. brakes, steel cage cock- Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. pit, washer/dryer, fire541-604-5993 lace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
882
Fifth Wheels
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5609
aThe Bulleti
5000 tow bar, $21,995. 541-383-3503
00 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3interestin
Columbia 400, Financing available.
$125,000
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Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500 Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries & tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i ., more! 541-260-3251
Servsng Cenfrei Oregon since 1903
Jay FlightBunk House 2010, 19 ft.,
Like New!! VIN ¹6A0092.$12,998.
541-266-3333
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available.541-923-6408 Laredo2006 31' Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000
or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, Alpenlite 28 ft. light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, 1987, New stove, completely wired for fridge. Good furamps/subwoofers, unnace, AC. Stereo, derwater lights, fish DVD player. Queen finder, 2 batteries cusbed WITH bedding. tom black paint job. 20 ft. awning. • ~ ~ L : Allegro 32' 2007, like $12,500 5414!15-2523 Good shape. $4500 new, only 12,600 miles. 541-977-5587 Heartland P rowler Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 2012, 29PRKS, 33', transmission, dual exlike new, 2 slides-livhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, RV PACKAGE-2006 i ng area 8 la r g e Just too many power mirrors w/defrost, Monaco Monarch, 31', closet. Large enough collectibles? 2 slide-outs with aw- Ford V10, 28,900 miles, to live in, but easy to nings, rear c a mera, auto-level, 2 slides, towl 15' power awSell them in trailer hitch, driyer door queen bed & hide-a-bed ning, power hitch & 2007 Bennington w/power window, cruise, sofa, 4k gen, conv mistabilizers, full s ize The Bulletin Classifieds Pontoon Boat exhaust brake, central crowave, 2 TV's, tow queen bed, l a r ge 2275 GL, 150hp vac, satellite sys. Asking package,$66,000. shower, porcelain sink 541-385-5809 Honda VTEC, less $67,500. 503-781-8812 OPTION - 2003 Jeep 8 toilet. than 110 hours, Wranglertow car, 84K $26,500. 541-999-2571 miles, hard & soft top, 5 original owner, lots CHECKYOUR AD of extras; Tennesspeed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319 see tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804 •i
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master
00
(located @ Bend)
Serving Censrei Oregon since 1903
Motorcycles & Accessories llotorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
HD Softtail Deuce 2002, broken back forces sale, only 200 mi. on new motor from Harley, new trans case and p arts, s p o ke 14k orig. miles.. Exwheels, new brakes, cellent cond. Vance & n early all o f bi k e Hines exhaust, 5 brand new. Has proof spoke HD rims, wind e of all work done. Revest, 12 rise handle movable windshield, bars, detachable lugT-bags, black and all gage rack w/ back chromed out with a rest, hwy pegs & many chrome accents. Must willy skeleton theme on all caps and covsee to appreciate! $10,500. In CRR area ers. Lots o f w o r k, call 530-957-1865 heart and love went into all aspects. All done at professional shops, call for info. The Bulletin's Must sell quickly due "Call A Service to m e d ical bi l l s, Professional" Directory $6250. Call Jack at 541-279-9538. is all about meeting your needs.
0
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. Fleetwood D i scovery Ready to makememories! Keystone Laredo31' Keystone 5th Wheel 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Top-selling Winnebago $11,590. 2004, 29 ft., original owners, non- Rtr 2006 w ith 1 2 ' 541-546-0345. options - 3 slide outs, 31J, great condition. slide-out. Sleeps 6, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, smokers, garaged, only queen walk-around WINTER BLOW OUT! miles, auto-level875 etc., 32,000 m iles. 16,800 w/storage under- VIN ¹044013.$12,888. ing jacks, (2) slides, up- bed Wintered in h eated neath. Tub 8 shower. (exp. 1/11/1 5) DLR ¹366 Watercraft graded queen bed bunk shop. $79,995 obo. 2 swivel rockers. TV. beds, micro, (3) TVs, ~OMQ4, Air cond. Gas stove & ds published in eWa- 541-447-8664 sleeps 10! Lots of storrefrigerator/freezer. tercraft" include: Kayage, maintained, very aks, rafts and motor- People Look for Information clean!Only $67,995! Ex- Microwave. Awning. sho w er. Oe Ized personal About Products and tended warranty and/or fi- Outside watercrafts. For Services Every Daythrough nancing avail to qualified Slide-through stor541-548-1448 a ge. E a s y Li f t . "boats" please see The Bulletin ClassiBeds buyers! 541-388-7179 smolichmotors.com $29,000 new; AskClass 670. 881 ing $13,600 541-385-5609 541-447-4605 Travel Trailers ,i~ B
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. eSpellchecke and
human errors do oc(exp. 1/11/15) DLR ¹366 cur. 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 541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com The Bulletin Classified
Laredo 30' 2009
igt„~ 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
S'22,500
541-419-3301
!
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I
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 youwijlneed. Roomtogrowinyour a to ugh V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.
Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995 541-419-0566
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*SPeCial PriVate Party rateS aPPly to
merchandise and automotive categories.
The Bulletin 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 c a ll with questions,
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.766.5546
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164.
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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
Snowbird Speciall
In print ctnd online with The Bulletin's Clctssifieds. A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e !
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
916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment 0= IGL
M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-362-6036
E6 THURSDAY JANUARY 8 2015 • THE BULLETIN I
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932
933
Pickups Ford F350 2002
7.3 powerstroke 4x4 Vin¹A90623
$15,998 ROBBERSON i "«o. ®
maaaa
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price
good thru
01/31/2015
FORD RANGER 1990
4x4, xtra cab, 5 spd, good cond, $2,300.
Automobiles
Chrysler Pacifica 2005,
Subaru Outback Limited 2014, (exp. 1/11/1 5) VIN ¹219928 Stock ¹82924
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Ram 3500 Dually 2006, 5.9L Diesel, 4x4, low miles. Was $35,995 NOW $29,998. VIN ¹261452.
Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A
$12,979 or $169/mo., $27,979 or $339/mo., $2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR
on ap-
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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S UBA R U
$3900 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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S UBA R U
Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 4WD, w/traction control, alloy wheels, mud & snow t ires, tow pkg. + forillustration only) trailer break, back PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, fphoto Subaru Outback up camera, r oof 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, Wagon2006, new tires + mounted rack, ABS breaks + AWD, 2.5L H-4 cyl, studded snow tires, independent system, $7250. 541-433-2026 VIN ¹332660. $1 3,995. blue tooth connec(exp. 1/11/15) DLR ¹366 tion, hands free cell SMOLICH phone c a p ability, compass, o utside V O LV Q temp, inclinometer, 541-749-2156 32K mi. , p r istine smolichvolvo.com condition, $29,900. 541-549-1736 or Dodge Avenger 2013, ToyotaCamry 2004 541-647-0081. (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015 Toyota Highlander $13,979 or $195/mo., $2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
541-410-5959
restoration, $32,900.
(exp. 1/1 1/1 5)
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 935 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Sport Utility Vehicles Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Chevelle Mallbu 1966 Complete
(509) 521-0713 (in Bend, OR)
Automobiles
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AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Antique & Classic Autos
BEND 541-382-8038
975
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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats 6 Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975
2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $1 9,977
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$10,977
StlBNIUOWBRNO COM
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ROBBERSON ~
nsa oa
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price
ROBBERSON ueeoar~
S UBA R U .
Loaded, runs and looks great! Vin¹ 155032
~~
1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE Public Auction The following units will be sold at Public Auction on Thursday January 15, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. at Old Mill
Self Storage, 150 SW Industrial Way, Bend, O R 9 7 7 02 . Uni t ¹303-Diana Delfino & unit ¹305-Mary Currin. LEGAL NOTICE The following units will be sold at Public A u c tion on Thursday, January 15, 2015 at 12 p.m. at Northwest Self Storage, 100 SE 3rd St, B e n d , OR 97702. Unit¹ C172Lonie Centers, Unit¹ C163 Forrest Dodge, Unit¹ C262Richard Gi ff els, Unit¹ C194- Casey G raziano, Uni t ¹ D281 - Kevin Knippel, Unit¹ C154 Hamilton Pate. LEGAL NOTICE The following unit(s) will be sold at Public Auction on Thursday, January 15th, 2015 at 10 a.m. at A-1 Westside Storage, Bend 97702. Unit ¹ 215 Virginia Darden. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T S. No.: OR-14-641261-NH
auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the s aid described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest w h ic h the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and t he costs an d e x -
penses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that a n y pe r s on named i n Se c tion 86.778 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure p r oceeding d ismissed and t h e trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), t o gether w ith t he cost s , trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.servicelinkasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If any irregularities are disc overed within 1 0 days of the date of this sale, the trustee will rescind the sale, return th e b u yer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only t o a r e turn of t h e m onies paid to t h e Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the B eneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged thr o ugh bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan i n w h ich case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. As required b y law, y o u a r e hereby notified that a negative credit report r eflecting o n yo u r credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Without limiting t he t r ustee's d i s claimer of representations or w arranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential p r operty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to b e t o xic. Prospective purchasers o f res i dential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. Q UALITY MAY B E CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A D E BT
Reference is made to t hat c ertain d e ed made by , D A NIEL ROOT AND JENNY L ROOT HU S BAND Honda Accord3.5 EX AND WIFE as Grantor 2010, leather, to WESTERN TITLE, moonroof, loaded. 1965 Mustang as trustee, in favor of Hard top, VIN ¹002776. $14,888. 541-548-1448 MORTGAGE E LEC6-cylinder, auto trans, (exp. 1/11/1 5) DLR ¹366 Toyota Corolla 201 3, smolichmotors.com (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) TRONIC REGISTRApower brakes, power Vin ¹053527 TION SYS T EMS, steering, garaged, 935 Stock ¹83072 well maintained, INC., ("MERS") AS Volvo XC60 201 0, Sport Utility Vehicles $15,979 or $199 mo., NOMINEE FOR engine runs strong. T6, navigation, AWD, $2000 down, 84 mo., A MERICAN M O R T 74K mi., great condipremium wheels. 4 .49% APR o n a p - GAGE EXPRESS FItion.$12,500. VIN ¹118925. $21,995. 541-548-1448 proved credit. License NANCIAL DBA MILMust see! (exp. 1/11/1 5) DLR ¹366 smolichmotors.com and title i ncluded in 541-598-7940 LENNIUM FUNDING payment. SMOLICH GROUP, as Benefi'n~o K 2 0 S UBA R U ciary, dated V Q LV Q 12/17/2004, recorded 541-749-2156 BMWX3 35i 2010 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 12/23/2004, in official smolichvolvo.com Exc cond., 65K miles 877-266-3821 r ecords o f DES w/100K mile transferDlr ¹0354 CHUTES County, Or940 able warranty. Very egon in book/reel/volFIND IT! clean; loaded - cold Vans ume No. Mercedes 380SL 1982 weather pkg, premium BVY IT! AWD Sedan. fee/file/instrument/miRoadster, black on black, pkg & technology pkg. SELL IT! Bargain Corral Price crofilm/reception soft & hard top, excellent Keyless access, sunThe Bulletin Classifieds number 2004-76705 $12,977 condition, aiways ga- roof, nayigation, satelVin¹615069 covering the following raged. 155 K m i les, lite radio, extra snow $11,500. 541-549-6407 tires. (Car top carrier described real propROBBERSON erty situated in said not included.)$22,500. Call The Bulletin At LINCOIII ~ II IBRD B County, and S t ate, 541-91 5-9170 Chrysler Town & 541-385-5809 to-wit: APN: 191595 Country LXI 1997, 541-312-3986 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 151304BC01300 LOT beautiful inside & Dlr ¹0205. Price Volvo S60T6 13, CANYON POINT At: www.bendbulletin.com out, one owner, nongood thru 01/31/1 5 R Design 2013, ESTATES-PHASE 1, smoker, loaded with leather, 3.0L 1-6 cyl DESCHUTES options! 197,892 mi. VIN ¹223939. $36,995. COUNTY, OREGON. Service rec o rds (exp. 1/11/15) DLR ¹366 Commonly known as: available. $4 , 950. 2456 NORTHWEST SMOLICH fphoto forillustrstiononly) Call Mike, (541) 815CANYON DR, REDChevy Tahoe 2007, 8176 after 3:30 p.m. V O LV Q MOND, O R 9 7 7 56 VW CONV. 1 9 78 4x4, all power options 541-749-2156 Both the beneficiary with tow pkg. $8999 -1600cc, fuel Scion XB 2013, 975 smolichvolvo.com and the trustee have injected, classic 1978 VIN ¹280003.$24,998. (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) elected to sell the said (exp. 1/11/15) DLR ¹366 Automobiles Volkswagen ConvertVin ¹034131 real property to satible. Cobalt blue with Stock ¹83065 isfy the o b ligations a black convertible $15,979 or $199/mo., secured by said trust top, cream colored $2000 down, 84 mo., deed and notice has interior & black dash. 4 .49% APR o n a p been recorded pursuThis little beauty runs proved credit. License a nt to Sect i o n and looks great and and title included in 541-548-1448 VOLVO XC90 2007 86.752(3) of Oregon turns heads wherever payment. smolichmotors.com AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, Buick LeSabre 2005 Revised Statutes: the it goes. Mi: 131,902. power everything, m id-size, 179k m i . Phone 541-504-8399 S UBA R U default for which the grey on grey, leather $3,900/trades/offers? foreclosure is made is 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. heated lumbar seats, . 541-419-5060 the grantors: The in933 3rd row seat, moon877-266-3821 stallments of principal roof, new tires, alPickups Dlr ¹0354 and interest which beways garaged, all came due on maintenance up to Find exactly what 1 2/1/2007, and a l l Jeep Patriot 2008, Chev Silverado date, excellent cond. subsequent i n s tallyou are looking for in the A STEAL AT $13,900. (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) ments of principal and Vin ¹693843 541-223-2218 CLASSIFIEDS interest through the Stock ¹44853A Audi A42009, 2.07 date of this Notice, $13,999 or $150/mo., Avant Quattro, leather, Subaru Forester 2004 plus amounts that are $2800 down, 84 mo., moonroof. 95k mi, (13k mi on new due for late charges, 4 .49% APR o n a p - VIN ¹230022. $19,995. engine, clutch, timing delinquent p r operty proved credit. License (exp. 1/11/1 5) DLR ¹366 2005 crew cab great belt, etc), winter 8 taxes, insurance preand title included in looking! Vin¹972932 summer tires, manual payment. SMQLICH miums, ad v a nces $22,998 trans., 541-549-4652 made on senior liens, S U Wa u V Q L V Q VW 2010 TDI Diesel taxes and/or insurROBBERSON 541-749-2156 Sport Wagon Subaru Legacy '09 ance, trustee's fees, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. LINCOIII ~ II IBRDB smolichvolvo.com A rare find! and any attorney fees 877-266-3821 38-46 mpg, excellent and court costs aris541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0354 condition. TOO 000-mile BN/I¹/330c 2003 ing from or associDlr ¹0205. Price transferrable warran The Bulletin ated with the benefigood thru 01/31/1 5 auto trans, 74K miles, ciaries e ff orts to To Subscribe call ALL OPTIONS. 2 sets and preserve 541-385-5800 or go to alloy wheels plus 2 new protect i ts security, al l of Clean and very nice. GALLct sets summer & winter www.bendbulletin.com which must be paid as Vin¹211545 tires. Non-smoker car. TODAYA a condition of reinOnly $11,977 Chevy Pickup 1978, $17,995. JEEP WRANGLER Convertible, seastatement, including 541-678-2517 long bed, 4x4, frame sonal special ROBBERSON all sums that shall acup restoration. 500 Vin¹U96242 crue through r einLINCOLN ~ IM I s s Cadillac eng i ne, statement or pay-off. $7,977 fresh R4 transmis541-312-3986 Nothing in this notice sion w/overdrive, low Dlr ¹0205. ROBBERSON ~ shall be construed as mi., no rust, custom Price good thru a waiver of any fees ~ na aaa interior and carpet, 01/31/2015 owing to the Benefi2009 hard top n ew wheels a n d I/yy Jetta 2012, 541-312-3986 ciary under the Deed 18,000 miles. autotires, You must see 6-Speed Automatic Dlr ¹0205. Price of Trust pursuant to matic, AC, tilt & it! $25,000 invested. VIN ¹393688. $1 1,995. good thru 01/31/15 the terms of the loan cruise, power win$1 2,000 OBO. (exp. 1/11/15) DLR ¹366 documents. By t h is dows, power steer541-536-3889 or SMOLICH reason of said default ing, power locks, al541-420-6215. the beneficiary has loy wheels and V Q L V Q declared all o bligarunning boards, 541-749-2156 SubaruLegacy 3.0R tions secured by said garaged. DodgeRam 2003 smolichvolvo.com Limited 2008, deed of trust immedi$22,500. (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) 541-419-5980 WHEN YOU SEE THIS ately due and payVin ¹207281 able, said sums being Chrysler 200 LX 201 2, Stock ¹82547 the following, to-wit: (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) The sum of $21,979 or $259/mo., VIN ¹2922'I 3 $3600 down, 84 mo., $148,159.90 together Stock ¹83014 On a classified ad 4 .49% APR o n a p with interest thereon Good runner $13,979 or $195/mo., proved credit. License go to at the rate of 6.6250 $2000 down, 72 mo., Vin¹ 672057 and title i ncluded in www.bendbulletin.com p er a n num f r o m 4 .49% APR o n a p - payment. $5,998 to view additional 11/1/2007 until paid; credit. License LOW MILES 42,000!! proved photos of the item. and title i ncluded in plus all accrued late S UBA RU SATURN VUE 2008 SUSARUOP3lMD.OOM ROBBERSONX payment. charges thereon; and Leather, Brand new o. ~ mam a NE Hwy 20, Bend. all t rustee's f ees, Find It in © s u a a au 2060 877-266-3821 snow tires .$10,000 foreclosure costs and The Bulletin Classifieds! 541.913.6693 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0354 any sums advanced 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0205. Price 877-266-3821 by th e b e neficiary AND ANY INFORMAgood thru 01/31/1 5 O BT A INED Dlr ¹0354 pursuant to the terms TION of said deed of trust. WILL BE USED FOR Looking for your Whereof, notice THAT PURPOSE. TS next employee? Ch sier 300C 2005 Ford 150 2010 J hereby is given that No: Place a Bulletin help Quality Loan Service OR-14-641261-NH wanted ad today and Corporation of WashD ated: 12/ 10 / 14 ToyotaF J Cruiser reach over 60,000 Subaru Legacy ington, the u n der- Quality Loan Service 2012, readers each week. LLBean 2006, signed trustee will on Corporation of Wash(exp. 1/1 1/1 5) Your classified ad (exp. 1/1 1/1 5) 4/24/2015 at the hour ington, as T r ustee Vin ¹144018 Vin ¹203053. will also appear on of 11:00 am, StanSignature By: N i na Stock ¹44682A bendbulletin.com Gorgeous, Stock ¹82770 Supercrew 4x4 with dard of Time, as es- Hernandez, Assistant $29,999 or $357/mo., which currently relow miles heated and cooled $17,979 or $199/mo., tablished by section Secretary T rustee's $3500 down, 84 mo., ceives over 1.5 mil$3500 down, 84 mo. at seats, Vin¹ A36361. Vin¹689855 187.110, Oregon Re- Mailing Add r ess: 4 .49% APR o n a p 4 .49% APR o n a p lion page views $29,977 10,977 proved credit. License vised Statues, At the Quality Loan Service proved credit. License every month at and title included in front entrance of the Corp. of Washington and title included in ROBBERSON'L ROBBERSON ~ no extra cost. Bullepayment. C ourthouse, 11 6 4 C /0 Q u ality L o a n payment. tin Classifieds ~ mam a ~ na aaa N.W. Bond S t reet, Service Corporation © s u a a au Get Results! Call ® s u a a au B end, O R 977 0 1 411 Ivy Street San 541-312-3986 541-312-3986 385-5809 or place 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. C ounty o f DES - D iego, C A 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 92 1 0 1 Dlr ¹0205. Price Dlr ¹0205. Price your ad on-line at 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 C HUTES, State o f Trustee's Ph y sical bendbuiietin.com good thru 01/31/1 5 good thru 01/31/15 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354 Oregon, sell at public Address: Quality Loan (exp. 1/11/1 5) DLR ¹366
good thru 01/31/15
1000
Legal Notices
541-312-3966 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15
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MorePixatBendbulletin.com
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Service C o rp . of Washington 108 1st Ave South, Suite 202, Seattle, WA 9 8 104 Toll F r e e: (866) 925-0241 A-4502789
01/08/2015, 01/15/2015, 01/22/2015, 01/29/2015 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-14-637215-NH
Reference is made to t hat c e rtain d e e d made by, JANETTE C ORSON, A M A R R IED WOMAN a s Grantor to FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INS URANCE CO, a s
trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE E LECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYS T EMS, INC., ("MERS") AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICA'S WHOLESALE LENDER., as Beneficiary, dated 4/26/2004, recorded 4/30/2004, in official r ecords o f DE S CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. fee/file/instrument/microfilm/reception number 2004-24840 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and S t ate, to-wit: APN: 205082 141316BD00403 LOT 1, TE R R EBONNE
tire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), t o gether w ith t he cost s , trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance r e q uired under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.servicelinkasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing a n o b ligation, t h e performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been i ssued by Quality Loan Service Corporation of Washington. If any irregularities are disc overed within 1 0 days of the date of this sale, the trustee will rescind the sale, return th e b u yer's money and take further action as necessary. If the sale is set aside for any reason, including if the Trustee is unable to convey title, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only t o a r e turn of t h e m onies paid to t he Trustee. This shall be the Purchaser's sole and exclusive remedy. The purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Trustor, the Trustee, the Beneficiary, the Beneficiary's Agent, or the B eneficiary's Attorney. If you have previously been discharged thr o ugh bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan i n w h ich case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. As required b y law, y o u a r e hereby notified that a negative credit report r eflecting o n yo u r credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. Without limiting t he t r ustee's d i s claimer of representations or w arranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some residential p r operty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to b e t o xic. Prospective purchasers o f res i dential property should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. Q UALITY MAY B E CONSIDERED A DEBT COLLECTOR ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A D E BT
ESTATES PHASE 1 A, DESC H UTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 9180 Boxwood Lane, Terrebonne, OR 97760 Both the beneficiary a n d the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.752(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 10/1/2011, and all subsequent i n stallments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, ad v a nces made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries e f forts to protect and preserve i ts security, all o f which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through r einstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. By t his reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all o bligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $134,378.28 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.8750 p er a n num f r o m 9/1/2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all t r ustee's f e e s, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by th e b e neficiary AND ANY INFORMAO BT A INED pursuant to the terms TION of said deed of trust. WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. TS Whereof, notice hereby is given that No: Quality Loan Service OR-14-637215-NH Corporation of Wash- Quality Loan Service ington, th e u n der- Corporation of Washsigned trustee will on ington, as T r ustee 4/29/2015 at the hour Signature By: Nina of 11:00 am, Stan- Hernandez, Assistant dard of Time, as es- Secretary A ssistant tablished by section Secretary T rustee's Add r ess: 187.110, Oregon Re- Mailing vised Statues, At the Quality Loan Service front entrance of the Corp. of Washington C ourthouse, 11 6 4 C /0 Q u ality L o a n N.W. Bond S t reet, Service Corporation B end, O R 97 7 0 1 411 Ivy Street San 92 1 0 1 County o f DES - D iego, C A Trustee's Ph y sical C HUTES, State o f Oregon, sell at public Address: Quality Loan of auction to the highest Service C o rp . Washington 108 1st bidder for cash the interest in the s aid Ave South, Suite 202, described real prop- Seattle, WA 9 8 104 erty which the grantor Toll F r e e: (866) had or had power to 925-0241 A-4502740 convey at the time of 01/08/2015, the execution by him 01/1 5/2015, of the said trust deed, 01/22/2015, together with any in- 01/29/2015 terest w h ic h the grantor or his successors in interest acPUBLIC NOTICE quired after the ex- PURSUANT TO ORS ecution of said trust CHAPTER 87 deed, to satisfy the Notice is hereby given foregoing obligations that the following vethereby secured and hicle will be sold, for t he costs and e x - cash to the highest penses of sale, in- bidder, on 1/26/2015. cluding a reasonable The sale will be held charge by the trustee. a t 10:00 a .m. b y Notice is further given SCOTT'S PERFORt hat a n y per s on MANCE, 63222 SERnamed in S e ction VICE RD., B E ND, 86.778 of Oregon Re- OR. 2006 Chevrolet vised Statutes has the Malibu. VIN right to have the fore- 1 G1 ZW63186F220840. closure proceeding Amount due on lien d ismissed and t h e $6745.00. R e puted trust deed reinstated owner(s) Ted H arb y payment to t he wood, Theodore Harbeneficiary of the en- wood, GMAC.