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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Daylight saving timeDid you remember to setyour clocks ahead onehour?

within 60miles • Natives getpreferenceunder one plan; another mayupthe ante Hiring The Warm Springs By Beau Eastes

Harvesting juniperwood

The Bulletin

— "One man's trash is another man's treasure," says this Hines lumberman.E1

Whale wisdom — Long

New job opportunities couldbe headed to the Warm Springs Indian Reservation as soon as this summer. The Warm Springs Tribal Council last week unanimous-

past child-bearing age, female orcas provide leadership to their pods — adiscovery that may give insight into humans, who share the rare trait.A3

tribal members, preferred status for any open jobs on the reservation. The plan also indudes a memorandum of understanding with the Oregon

among others — could only be bid on by TERO-certified contractors who promise to em-

Department of Transportation

Springs TEROplanwillbe the

that any state and/or federal

third such program in the state. The Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation and theConfederated Tribes

road construction projects

ly approvedthe creation of its within a 60-mile radius of the own Tribal Employment Rights reservation — a huge swath Ordinance, an ordinance that

of land that encompasses the

gives all Native Americans, and especially Warm Springs

cities of Bend, Prineville, The Dalles, Gresham, and Stayton,

ploy a certain number of Native American workers. The Warm

of Grand Ronde already have TERO plans in operation. See Tribes /A4

—Warm Springs Reservation agreeing to aTribal Portland The Danes Employment Rights • Salem Ordinance that gives preference to hiring Native Americans for Eugene Bend TERO proposal jobs on the with ODOT reservation, are working with ODOT to receive the same references for any jobs MILES within a 60-mile radil s of the reservation's 0 25 50 borders. tribes, in addition to

Sources: Warm Springs Tribal Council, Warm Springs Ventures

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Pot positions — Toppresidential candidates saythey'll let states continue legalizing.A6

ANALYSIS

Changing

Plus: Candidate dooks

— A 2016 literary guide.FS

And a Wed exclusiveOn the anniversary of Flight 370's disappearance, considering the enduring mystery. bentibnlletin.com/extrns

owto ee

i r ror on

How siltgetsintoNirror Pond

EDITOR'SCHOICE

college good? cear for Not yet By Kevin Cnrey

There are acouple of ways all that sediment makes it to the bottom of the pond:

$5,200 or $5.2M'? It's all how it's framed

New York Times News Service

ONE WAY:WATER WAXES AND WANES The Deschutes River is controlled during winter and summer, creating levels that vary from the river's natural flow. Thehigh fluctuation in water levels leaves riverside plants without water for parts of the year, causing them to die. Without their root systems intact, the bank loses its integrity, allowing the soil to beswept downriver to the dam.

Three years ago, technology was going to transform higher education. What

happened? Over the course of a few months in early

Summerwaterflow 800CFS Natural water flow600-700CFS

2012, leading scientists from Harvard, Stanford and MIT started three

companies to provide Massive Open Online Courses, or MOOCs,

By Lorne Manly

to anyone with an Internet connection. The

New York Times News Service

The viscountess had de-

courseswere free.Mil -

The soil alsofreezesandthaws when exposedduring winter water flow levels,causing it to crack andallow for erosion, or widening ofthe riverbank, when higher waterscomethrough.

cided to downsize.

When Lady Hambleden, the former wife of the fourth Viscount Hambleden,

moved from her stately manor to a cottage in a vil-

Winter water flow100CFS

revolution.

But today, enrollment in traditional colleges remains robust, and

lage outside London in 2013, she held a kind of "Downton

Abbey" tag sale at Christie's inLondon.Amongthe300-

plus items she put up for auction was an oil sketch that copied "Salisbury

By Scott Hammers

Cathedral Fromthe Mead-

the Mirror Pond dam and

ed — morethan 28 feetdeep.

modifythe pond floor to speed the water and deter accumulationof sedimentbecomes a reality, dredging will be a key part of pond maintenance for as long as the pond remains apond. Since the city andthe Bend

Even so, the 1984 dredging only removed a fraction of the

The Bulletin

Evenif theplantoreplace

ows," one of thebest-known works of the great 19th-cen-

tury English landscape painter John Constable. Listed as the work of a

Constable follower, it sold for just $5,200. But the anonymous buyer, an art dealer, had a hunch. See Framed /A7

TODAY'S WEATHER

pp

Mostly sunny High 64, Low31 Page B6

ANOTHER WAY:LOTS OF DRAINAGE The city's piped stormwater system drains a large basin into the Deschutes River, sediment andall.

Universities do not seem

poised to join travel agents and video stores on the ash heap of history — at least, not yet.

pire A

The failure of MOOCs to disrupt

estimated350,000 cubicyards of sedimentbehindthe dam at the time. By most estimates

higher education has nothing to do with the

presentedby officials working on the Minor Pond project, sediment levelsinthepond

quality of the courses

themselves, many of which are quite good and getting better. Colleges are holding technology at bay because the only thing MOOCs provide is access to world-class professors

are at or near where they were

began discussing what ought tobe done to dealwiththe seHment that's built up since the pond was last dredged in 1984, officials working on the projecthavebeen clear — if

before theywerelast dredged. Public discussions ofhow

Ad Hoc Committee — the pri-

at an unbeatable price.

local residents want to keep

mary group working onpond issues today — hasbeen in

What they don't offer are official college de-

discussions with the Oregon

grees, the kind that can

the center of the city, that pond will continue to be a magnet

Books F4-5 Local/State Bf -6 Business Ef -6 Obituaries B4-5 Calendar B2 Opinion Ff -3 C lassified Gf-6 Puzzles C 6 Comm. Life Cf -8 Sports Df -6 Crossword C6,G2 TV/Movies Ca

60,000 cubicyards of sediment, enough to cover a football field — endzones indud-

undergraduates are paying higher tuition and taking out larger loans than ever before.

Park & Recreation District

awide, slow-movingpond in

INDEX

lions of students signed up. Pundits called it a

Skyline s R

all that sediment has made

its way to Minor Pond have been few, but the Mirror Pond

for silt, mud and other debris

Water Resources Deparlment to see if there mightbe away

carried frompoints upstteanL

to cut off some of that sedi-

Duringthe 1984 dredging, crewsremoved approximately

ment at its source. SeeSilt /A4

Drainagebasin

get you a job.

And that is mostly what college students Source: City of Bend

Graphics by Carli Krueger and Greg Cross i The Bulletin

are paying for. See College/A7

W hat's'natur al'food?Even thosewho make itaren'tsure

The Bulletin

An Independent Newspaper

By Peter Whoriskey

Vol. 113, No. S7,

The Washington Post

4e pages, 7sections

ANAHEIM, Calif. — If you are confused about what a

Q I/I/e use recyc/ed newsprint

: 'IIIIIIIIIII I o

8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

7

At the nation's largest

annual gathering of organic and "natural" food makers, doubts are rife, because

"natural" food is, turns out you're in good company.

while U.S. food regulators have yet to offer a clear legal

So are the food-makers

definition, a spate of class-ac-

whose advertising depends on tion lawsuits from consumers the description. has made clear the penalties

for not knowing. "Who's here to not get

and the enthusiasm — or maybe it was confusion — was evi-

standing-room only. "I operate on the premise

sued?"Michele Simon, an

dent. When Simon presented a list of food additives that could

that the system is broken," said Kim Richman, another

be targeted by class-action lawyers, many in the audience held aloft their smartphones to snap pictures. A later program

attorney who addressed at-

attorney who specializes in the area, asked a ballroom audience of about 200 industry types at the Natural Products

Expo West last week. A few score hands shot up,

about "Defining Natural" was

tendees. "One piece of advice: be careful with that "all-natu-

ral" claim."

See Natural /A4


A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW tOreaCh US IIIIl t8ikS —Secretary of State JohnKerry wrappedup aweek of diplomacy within whatmanyexperts say isstriking distance of aninitial accord with Iran overits nuclear program. But Kerry's immediatetask Saturday was topresent atableau of unity with Europeancounterparts a day after theFrenchforeign minister, Laurent Fabius, complainedthat the emergingaccord didnotyet go far enough toconstrain Iran's nuclear capabilities. Fabiuswarned that thelack of a"solid" agreement would prompt other states in theregion to mount their own nuclear programs in response.After meeting with Fabius onSaturday, Kerry insisted France andthe United Statesagreed morework wasneeded.

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Battle fOr Tikrit —The top U.S. general predicts the one-two punch of Iranian-backed militias and Iraqi government troops will prevail over Islamic State fighters in the unfolding battle for Tikrit, Saddam Hussein's hometown. But U.S.Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the expected successful push in Tikrit, about 80 miles north of Baghdad, Iraq's capital, would not be possible without U.S. airstrikes that havetied down IS elsewhere in the north.

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Gerald Herbert/The Associated Press

President Barack Obama, joined by his family, members of Congress, former President George W. Bush and his wife, Laura, and civil rights leaders make a symbolic walk across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Saturday in Selma, Alabama. It was the 50th anniversary of "Bloody Sunday," a civil rights march in which protesters were beaten, trampled and tear-gassed by police at the bridge.

IS IOOtillg —Islamic State militants continued their campaign targeting cultural heritage sites in territories they control in northern Iraq, looting and damaging theancient city of Hatra just one dayafter bulldozing the historic city of Nimrud, according to Iraqi government officials and local residents. Thedestruction in Hatra comes asthe militant Islamic group fendedoff an Iraqi army offensive in Saddam Hussein's hometown andfought pitched battles in eastern Syria in an area populated by predominantly Christian villages. Iraqi officials in the northern city of Mosul said Saturday that Islamic State militants havebegun demolishingHatra,amoveUNESCO describedas"cultural cleansing."

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generation struggles over race Obama's Justice Department and power in America, Pres- excoriated the police departADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher John Costa........................541-383-0337 ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................54t-363-0356

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ident Barack Obama and a

ment of Ferguson, Missouri,

host of political figures from both parties came here Saturday, to the site of one of the most searing days of the civil rights era, to reflect on how far the country has come and how

provoked d e monstrations. "What happened in Ferguson may not be unique," he said, "but it's no longer endemic. It's no longer sanctioned by law or custom, and before the civil rights movement, it most surelywas." But the president also re-

as a hotbed of racist oppression, even as it cleared a white officer in the killing of an unarmed black teenager, the anniversaryseemed more than jected the notion that racism a commemoration of long-ago has been defeated. "We don't far it still has to go. events on a black-and-white need the Ferguson report to Fifty years after peaceful newsreel. Instead, it provid- know that's not true," he said. protesters trying to cross a ed a moment to measure the "We just need to open our eyes bridge were beaten by po- country's far narrower, and and our ears and our hearts lice officers with billy clubs, yet stubbornly p ersistent, to know that this nation's rashocking the nation and lead- divide i n bl a c k-and-white cial history still casts its long ing to passage of the land- reality. shadow upon us. We know mark Voting Rights Act of In an address at the scene the march is not yet over, we 1965, the nation's first African-American presidentled a

of what became known as

al to the pioneers whose cour-

relations have not improved

"Bloody Sunday," Obama rebipartisan, biracial testimoni- jected the notion that race age helped pave the way for his own election to the highest

know the race is not yet won.

We know reaching that blessed destination where we are

judged by the content of our since then, despite the string character requires admitting of police shootings that have as much."

Libya attaCk —Fighters from the Islamic State group attacked an oil field in Libya, killing several members of the security detail at the site and nine foreign workers are missing, European officials said Saturday. Austrian Foreign Ministry spokesman Martin Weiss said the Friday afternoon attack occurred at the al-Ghani oil field, south of Sirte. Security teams retook the site, but nine foreign workers are unaccounted for, including one Austrian, one Czechand sevennon-EU citizens.No demands havebeenmade byanygroup or individual for their return.

RuSSia iiemtSOvinveStigatiOn —Russia's security service head said Saturday that two suspects in the killing of leading opposition figure Boris Nemtsov havebeen detained. Russian news reports later cited an official as saying one of themhadservedwith police troops in Chechnya.Theshort and vagueannouncement of the detentions by Federal Security Service director Alexander Bortnikov prompted only skepticism andweak satisfaction from his comrades. Bortnikov, in comments shown onstate television, said the two suspects were from Russia's North Caucasus region, but gave no details other than their names. Nocharges were immediately announced, but the two were expected appear in aMoscow court today. Winter eCOnamy —Ignore anyone whotells you snow is free. Every workday lost during NewEngland's winter has meant millions of dollars taken out of the regional economy. IHSGlobal Insight, an economic analysis firm, estimates Massachusetts alone suffered roughly $1 billion in lost wagesand profits, as storm after storm pummeled the region, delivering more than 8feet of snow in roughly a month. Retailers and restaurants wereamongthe hardest hit, as customers held off on big purchases or chose to stay at homerather than enjoy a night on the town. — Fromwirereports

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Another fatal police shooting of unarmed teen promptsprotest By Dana Ferguson The Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. — The fatal shooting of an unarmed

black 19-year-old by a white police officer, who authorities say firedafter he was assault-

ed, prompted protesters Saturday to take to the college

"He was unarmed. That's

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guson, Missouri, officer who fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was black and unarmed, after a struggle in the street last August.

Federal officials did, however, find patterns of racial profiling, bigotry and profit-driven

city's police chief said he un- the wake of the shooting and derstood the anger, assuring a grand jury's decision not to demonstrators his department charge Wilson. would defend their rights as he Other high-profile deaths of implored the community to act black suspects at the hands of with restraint. police officers have prompted Tony Robinson died Friday nationwide protests, including night after being shot in his that of Eric Garner, who died apartment following a con- in July after New York City frontation with Officer Matt officers put him in a chokeKenny, who had forced his hold and a video showed him way inside after hearing a dis- repeatedly saying, "I can't turbance while responding to breathe." A Cleveland police a call, authorities and neigh- officer in November fatally bors said. shot 12-year-old Tamir Rice, Madison Police Chief Mike who had been pointing a pellet Koval said Kenny was injured, gun at a playground. A Milbut didn't provide details. It w aukee polic e officerwho fason, who died at a hospital, was alone.

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law enforcement in the St. Loutown's streets wit h c h ants is suburb, which saw spates of of "Black Lives Matter." The sometimes-violent protests in

wasn't clear whether Robin-

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going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept,"

tally shot Dontre Hamilton last April was found to have acted in self-defense, but was fired

for ignoring department policy regarding mental illness. Koval struck a conciliatory tone Saturday while addressing the potential for more protests in Madison, saying he understood the community's dis-

I •

Koval said of Robinson. The department said Kenny would not have been wearing a body camera. trust after "this tragic death." "For those who do want to Several dozen protesters who gathered outside the po- take to the street and protest," lice department Saturday af- Koval said, his department ternoon held signs and chant- would be there to " defend, ed "Black Lives Matter" — a

facilitate, foster those First

slogan adopted by activists Amendment rights of assemand protesters nationwide bly and freedom of speech." after recent officer-involved The promise echoed as a stark deaths of unarmed blacks contrast to Ferguson, where an before walking toward aggressive police response to the neighborhood where the protesters after Brown's death shooting took place. drew worldwide attention. The shooting came days afKoval also asked protestter the U.S. Justice Department ers to follow what he said was said it would not issue civil the lead of Robinson's family rights charges against Darren in asking for "nondestructive" Wilson, the white former Fer- demonstrations.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 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 Sunday, March 8, the 67th

day of 2015. Thereare298 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS RuSSia Slaying —Apair of suspects in the death of opposition figure Boris Nemtsov are set to appear in court in Moscow.

Mars once had anentire ocean and then lost it, scientists say By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times

Dry, dusty Mars once had an ocean that held as much water as the Arctic Ocean

HISTORY Highlight:In1965, the United States landed its first combat troops in South Vietnamas 3,500 Marines arrived to defend the U.S.air base at Da Nang. In1702, England's Queen Anne acceded to the throne upon the death of King William III.

In1854, U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry madehis second landing in Japan; within a month, he concluded atreaty with the Japanese. In1862, during the Civil War, the ironclad CSS Virginia rammed andsank the USS Cumberland andheavily damaged the USSCongress, both frigates, off Newport News, Virginia. In1874, the 13th president

end, female killer whalesstick around, providing an evolutionary advantage: their knowledge.

Actress SueAneLangdon is 79. Baseball player-turned-author Jim Bouton is 76.Songwriter Carole BayerSager is 71. Actor-director Micky Dolenz (The Monkees) is 70. Singer-musician RandyMeisner is 69. NBCNews anchor Lester Holt is 56. Actor AidanQuinn is 56. Actress Camryn Manheim is 54. Actress AndreaParker is 45. Actor Freddie PrinzeJr. is 39. Actor JamesVanDer Beek is 38. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kameelah Williams (702) is 37. Rock musician AndyRoss(OK Go) is 36. Actress JessicaCollins is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kristinia DeBarge is25. — From wire reports

Mars was in the past."

examined the patterns in the Martian atmosphere to try to understand how much water it has lost in the last few bil-

lion years — and finds that the planetmay have been wetter and for longer than

Villanueva, a planetary scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Researchers have gone back and forth o n w h eth-

stored in its polar ice caps. Based on their calculations, the scientists found that the

share of heavy water in the atmosphere near the polar

areaswas about seven times as high as in the water on Earth. At one point, the wa-

ter reserves must have been — Geronimo Villanueva, about 6.5 times larger than

planetary scientist et NASA's the reserves mostly stored Godderd Space Flight Center in the Martian polar ice caps

today. An early Mars would have held about 4.8 million

cubic miles of water. based telescopes to study Where did all this water the composition of the traces lie'? While it probably could of water in the atmosphere have coveredthe entireplanover almost six Earth years et with a 450-foot-deep lay(which are roughly three er, it was probably mostly Mars years). Thus, they were contained on the low-lying able to map the atmospheres, northern plains, and in some and witness seasonal and mi- places could have gone about croclimate changes over the a mile deep. "If you drop all that water entire planet. They specifically looked at on the planet, it will accumutwo isotopes of water left in late in the northern part of the atmosphere: regular wa- the planet," Villanueva said. ter, made of an oxygen and "So that's (where) we think it two hydrogens, and semi- formed an ocean." NASA's MAVEN s paceheavy water, where one of the hydrogens has an extra neu- craft is studying what re-

er Mars held enough water for long enough to have given microbial life a sporting tron in its nucleus. Regular mains of Mars' now-thin atchance to emerge on the water, which is lighter, tends mosphere to see if scientists Red Planet. NASA's Curios- to rise up and escape the at- can learn how much of it esity rover has tasted the air mosphere at a faster rate, caped — data that will be of and found that the Martian while the heavier water stays great use to planetary scienatmosphere may have been put. So over time, the share tists looking to solve the mysstripped so long ago that of heavy water grows — and tery of the M artian water. there was a slim chance for the greater the share of heavy The European Space Agenlife; but studies of rocks that water today, the more wa- cy's first ExoMars mission the rover has drilled in Gale ter must have been lost over is also scheduled to arrive at Crater have revealed signs time. Mars in 2016. "In the n ext f i v e y ears of a series of lakes that lasted The scientists took a parfor many millions of years. t icular interest i n t h e a t - we're going t o p r obably To get at this question, mosphere near the polar change our perception of a n i nternational t eam o f regions, because much of what Mars was in the past," researchers used ground- t he Red Planet's water i s Villanueva said.

y''

voted to limit filibusters by

BIRTHDAYS

the Red Planet's surface than

said lead author Geronimo

Fillmore, died in Buffalo, New York, at age74. In1917, Russia's "February Revolution" (referring to the Old Style calendar) began in Petrograd; the result was the abdication of the Russian monarchy in favor of a provisional government. TheU.S. Senate adopting the cloture rule. In1930,the 27th president of the United States, William Howard Taft, died in Washington at age 72. In1944, two days after an initial strike, U.S. heavy bombers resumed raiding Berlin during World War II. In1971, Joe Frazier defeated MuhammadAli by decision in what was billed as "TheFight of the Century" at Madison Square Garden inNewYork. In1975, the first International Women's Daywascelebrated. In1979,technology firm Philips demonstrated a prototype compact disc player during a press conference in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. In1983, in a speech to the National Association of Evangelicals convention in Orlando, Florida, President Ronald Reagan referred to the Soviet Union as an"evil empire." In1999, baseball Hall of Famer Joe DiMaggio died in Hollywood, Florida, at age84. Tee years age:President George W.Bushsaid authoritarian rule in the Middle East had begun to ease,andhe insisted anewthat Syria had to end its nearly three-decade occupation of Lebanon. Hundreds of thousands jammeda central Beirut square, chanting support for Syria in a thundering show of strength by the militant group Hezbollah. Five years ege:President Barack Obama made aspirited, shirt-sleeved appeal for passage of health care legislation during a visit to Arcadia University in Pennsylvania. A magnitude 6 earthquakestruck eastern Turkey, killing at least 41 people. One year age:Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, aBoeing 777 with 239 people onboard, vanished during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, setting off a massive search for its whereabouts. (To date, the fate of the jetliner and its occupants has yet to bedetermined.)

perception of what

scientists may have thought. As the scientists examined their surprising findings, "the story started to make sense,"

of the United States, Millard

years we're going to probably change our

and covered a larger share of the Atlantic Ocean does on Earth, according to a surprising new study. The findings, described online in the journal Science,

Long after their child-bearing years cometo an

"In the next five

Elaine Thompson/The AssociatedPressfile photo

A female orca leaps from the water in Puget Sound. While older male killer whales tend to die off quickly, older females can live

Find It All Onlinebendbulletin.com

decades longer — anecological rarity. By Melisse Healy

tured the movements of pods of killer whales whose populaWhat does an ocean-going tions have been identified and

You Are Invited to 8'hispering 8 inds'Special Event

Los Angeles Times

titaness do after she has lost the

tracked since 1976. That al-

abilitytobearyoung? lowed theresearchers to deterWell, for starters, she goes mine the age and relatedness of on living — sometimes past the the 102 creatures whose moveripe old age of 90, while male ments they analyzed. killer whales over 50 are dying Such detail also allowed the off in droves. Throughout the authors to speculate on why animal kingdom, that is unusu- post-menopausal survival is so al enough. very rare.If post-reproductive But the menopausal female females can be such an evolukiller whale does more than tionary boon for their kin, why survive, says a new study: She do theynotsurviveto serve that "leans in," becoming an influ- function across many species? ential leader of younger killer Some hav e s u ggested whales, honing the survival that for humans, at least, the skills of her progeny — and post-menopausal survival of their progeny — unencum- women is merely an artifact of bered by direct childcare duties better medical care. of her own.

Quite the opposite of being a burden to her kind, her post-menopausal leadership role seems to make the older female killer whale her species' evolutionary ace in the hole. Published in the journal Current Biology, the new research finds that among killer whales, females beyond their

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Not so, new research — in-

a~ot gree~ ®eer

duding the killer whales study — suggests. The answer, the authors of this study wrote,

may lie in different kinship patterns. Among killer whales, generations of males and females stay together throughout their lives, foraging as a group. As a female ages, her level of genetic relatedness to members reproductive years b ecome ofher pod increases. " Menopause wil l on l y habitual leaders of collective movement — generally forag- evolve," they wrote, "when ing movement — within their indusive fitness benefits outpods. Their position "on point" weigh the costs of terminating becomes particularly promi- Ieproductlon. nent in lean years, when salmIn short, an older female's on — the mainstay of the killer continued value to the group whales' diet — is scarce. may be a function not only of The new findings offer the her accumulated knowledge first evidence that in certain

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Why — in humans and in two

reaching sexual maturity tend-

species of toothed whales only — would individuals who no longerpropagate their genes continue to survive?

ed to leave the group. As her sons and their many mates and children populated her group, an aging woman's "relatedness" to that group tended to

The authors of the study are

marine mammal researchers grow. In contrast, among othfrom the universities of York er long-lived mammals, sons and Exeter in Great Britain and move off as they reach sexual the Center for Whale Research

er. Under those circumstances,

Southern resident killer whales the authors write, she mayhave during annual salmon migra- sufficient ecological wisdom tions off the coast of British Co-

lumbia and Washington.

but not a sufficient level of "re-

latedness" to her group to ensure her survival beyond the period of nine years. They cap- years of reproduction. The videos were taken over a

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

Tribes

to companies owned not just by the tribes, but also by any

Continued from A1

business owned at least 51 per-

"A lot of contractors look

dron says, is that a non-Native

American laborer a contractor I think it's a wonderful pro- uses on a regular basis might The tribes, located in North- cent by Native Americans who gram," said Mike Walker, an be out of a job for the duration eastern Oregon and the Willa- are members of afederally estimator for Vic Russell Con- of the TERO project. "They'll be put on a list to mette Valley, respectively, also recognized tribe. Outside the struction in La Pine. Walker have similar memoranda of reservation, within the 60-mile used to own his own paving see if they can come out (and understanding with ODOT. TERO boundary, contractors company and did multiple work), but that's not always the "This is going to be fan- would be obligated to hire a projects involving the Umatil- case," Waldron said. tastic for us," Carlos Smith, a certain percentage of Native la TERO plan. "The intent is to While TERO plans are spemember of the 11-person tribal American employees, with the hire Native Americans and it cifically designed to help incouncil, said Wednesday."It'll exact number depending on does a good job of that.... This dividuals find work, they also providejobs for our construc- the size of the project. program gives people a chance help strengthen tribes' rela"Right now, our construc- at acareerthey maybe haven't tionships with the state, says tion company (which operates ODOT's Wynette Gentemann. under Warm Springs Ven- tion crew isn't consistently em- been exposed to before." "These agreements help tures, the business arm of the ployed," Smith said. "There's Once a bid within a TERO tribes) and for tribal members not always something nearby boundary has been accept- establish close ties with the lookingforwork on andoffthe to work on. With the TERO, ed, contractors meet with the sovereign nations," said Genreservation." not only construction work, but TERO director and submit a temann, manager of the ODOT The tribes are now in the contractors and sub-contrac- list of their "core crew," perma- procurement office and herprocess of hiring a TERO di- tors will have to employ tribal nent and key employees such self a member of the Choctaw rector, said Do n S ampson, members. Even if it's not agiant as foremen orspecialized ma- Nation. "ODOT listens to the executive director of Warm deal, there's an opportunity for chine operators who are essen- needs of the tribes and the peoSprings Ventures. A five-per- a guy that owns a backhoe or a tial to completion of theproject. ple that make up the tribes.... son TERO commission will CAT (construction machine)." The TERO director and the (The TERO plans) help build also be selected to help run the Sampson expects the Warm contractor then negotiate the trust, which traditionally hasn't program. The commission will Springs TERO program to number of Native Americans always been there." provide policy oversight, work be self-sufficient within two to be employed for the job, a The first TERO laws were with contractors on TERO hir- years. To become TERO cer- figure that depends on the size enacted in the late 1970s, and ing practices and serve as an tified, which lasts for three of the project and available now more than 300 federally appeals board. years, contractorsmust attend workforce. recognized tribes and Alas"This is an exerdse of the a half-day workshop that typ"I don't care what color you ka Native villages around the tribes' sovereign rights," said ically costs between $450 and are or whether you sit down country employ TERO plans. "This will open a lot of emSampson, who hopes to have $750. Contractors will also pay or stand up to pee, as long as the Warm Springs TERO plan an upfront TERO fee to the you can do the particular job ployment opportunities, but in effect by the summer con- tribes. The Umatilla and Grand at hand," said Elroy Waldron, a it also provides a future for struction season. "The ideal Ronde TERO agreements call general contractor whose Wal- young people that want a consituation is that it i n creases for fees between 0.5 percent dron & Sons construction com- struction job or want to start a employment opportunities for and 2.5 percent of the total bid. pany has done several TERO construction company," Smith tribal members." The exact fee formula for the projects in northeast Oregon. said. "This guarantees there'll On the Warm Springs In- Warm Springs TERO agree- "If this helps someone get into be jobs in the future." dian Reservation, that means

ment with ODOT is still being

preference in bids and projects finalized.

at it as a pain in the neck, but

a craft, that's great." The flip side of that, Wal-

— Reporter: 541-617-7829; beastes@bendbulletin.com.

Checking theingredient list? Ingredients targeted as potentially unnatural by lawyers: • Ascorbic acid • Beta carotene • Biotin

• Calcium pantothenate • Calcium phosphate • Calcium sulfate • Caramel color • Citric acid

• Cochineal extract (color) • Cyanocobalamin • d-alpha-tocopherol • D-calcium pantothenate • Disodium phosphate • Fibersol-2 • Fructooligosaccharides • Glycerin or vegetable glycerin • Hexane • Inulin •Magnesiumphosphate •Monocalc ium phosphate • Niacinamide • Potassium cirate

• Potassium carbonate • Potassium iodide • Phytonadione • Pyridoxine hydrochloride • Sodium acid pyrophosphate • Sodium benzoate • Sodium citrate • Sodium dioxide • Sodium molybdate • Sodium selenite • Soy lecithin • Soy protein concentrate • Soy protein isolate • Steviol glycosides • Sucralose • Soy ingredients (textured soy protein, soy grits, soy flour) • Synthetic fiber such as Fibersol-2 • Thiamin hydrochloride • Vitamin A palmitate • Vitamin 02

• Xanthan gum • Zinc methionine sulfate • Zinc oxide

Natural

Agriculture,

food-makers have profited

Neither the Natural Products

from describing their products as "all-natural."

Association nor the Organic

mea n w hile,

has offered that natural Continued from A1 foods: "must be minimally As c o n sumer i n t erest processed." in the origins of food has Even trade groups have grown i n r e cent years, struggled to define the word. and Natural Health Associ-

The word "natural" helps

SIIt

create erosion." Higher summertime flows Continued from A1 in the upper Deschutes give Ryan Houston, executive the river more power to nibd irector of t h e U p per D e - ble away at the banks along schutes Watershed Council, bends, Houston said, and the and Matt Shinderman, a nat- fine ash soil that lines much ural resources instructor at of the river is easily eroded. OSU-Cascades, said allrivers As the river straightens, that are constantly carrying sedi- power is enhanced further, he

Pond. Water flowing into the

manholes is allowed to rest before continuing to the river, she said, giving small particles an opportunity to sink to the bottom. Yearly, city crews inspect

Gorman said irrigation districts, local governments, conservation groups, and others with a stake in the Deschutes

River have recently begun a study of the entire Deschutes

the city's sediment manholes,

basin, from its far southern

reachestothe drainage basin that feeds the Crooked River,

ment from upstream to down- sald. "Every time a river meanstream, but t h e D e schutes,

and clean out the accumulated sediment. Edde said before city road crews switchedfrom scatt ering red cinders on icy roads

and particularly the upper

to a duller shade of rock, red-

the three-year study, Gorman

ders and it moves side to side, it's releasing energy and dissipating energy," Houston said. "When you gofrom a mean-

dish fans of deposits could be than average due to the way seen on the bottom of the pond it's managed for irrigation. at many of the outfall pipes Houston an d S h i n derman der to straight, the river has where no filtration system is in were members of earlier com- more energy, and more ability place. mittees studying sediment to pick up particles and move Aggressive street sweeping accumulation in Mirror Pond, them downstream." helps reduce the amount of and bothdescribed the mechAerial photos from the area material that ends up in Mirror anism by which the Deschutes just south of Sunriver show Pond. Between July 2013 and picks up and moves sediment what's changed over the de- June 2014, city crews swept up in similar terms. cades, Houston said. Wide 18,187 cubic yards of dirt and oxbow bends have been cut debris along the roads, Edde Erosion off, with the water finding the said, though that figure inIt begins 55 miles up- shortest route in its journey cludes areas of the city that do stream from Bend, at Wickiup downhill. Since Wickiup Res- not drain to the river or Mirror Reservoir. ervoir began operating, it's Pond. The largest storage reser- estimated the Deschutes River Beyond reducing the frevoir in an irrigation system has grown 20 percent wider on quency of dredging, cutting that ferries water to cropland average above Bend, he said, back on the sediment that f rom Bend to north of M a as much of what was once the flows in to Mirror Pond could dras, Wickiup Reservoir be- river's banks has been washed improve the health of fish and gan operating in 1947. Filled downstream. other wildlife living in the with winter rains and snowIn theory, it's possible to de- pond, Edde said. "Sediment is listed as a polmelt, the reservoir controls the termine what parts of the river flow of water into the upper are generating the most sedi- lutant of concern in the river," Deschutes — less in winter to ment. The composition of soils she said. "It can clog fish gills, allow the reservoir to fill, and through the upper Deschutes reduce disease resistance, and much more during the sum- basin varies somewhat, Shind- cover the bottom and destroy mer growing season. erman said, andby taking core the habitat of small organPrior to the construction of samples in areas with heavy isms that supply food to other Wickiup, the Deschutes was sediment deposits like Mirror wildlife." noted for its unusually con- Pond or the Old Mill District, Kyle Gorman, the region stant flow from winter to sum- researchers can identify where manager with the Oregon Demer. A 2012 research paper by they were likely located before partment of Water Resources, the Deschutes River Conser- being carried downriver. helps decide how much water vancy stated pre-dam winter S hinderman said such a is released from Wickiup Resflows below the reservoir aver- study would be expensive and ervoir and when. Gorman said aged 660 cubic feet per second, time-consuming, but could he doesn't dispute the mechanwith summer flows averaging help pinpoint what kinds of ics of how management of the anti-erosion efforts might be 730 cubic feet per second. flows at W i ckiup Reservoir In order to provide water to most effective upriver. contributes to sediment accu"I think it's important we farmers and ranchers when mulation in Bend. "I think what we're seeing they needed it, Wickiup altered put some effort into trying to those patterns, and drastically. determine where the sediment now is just the change in flow Between 1981 and 2011, the is coming from," Shinderman regime that was historical median winter flow in the De- said. "If you don't know where there before the dam," he said. schutes below Wickiup Reser- the sediment is coming from, (The river is) significantly difvoir was measured at 37 cubic it's almost impossible to come ferent, it's changing its shape, feet per second. The median up with a sustainable solution it's got more energy." summer flow was 1,150 cubic — you're just doing a Band-Aid Gorman said after almost 70 feet per second, and higher approach." years of modifying the flows still in July and August. in the upper Deschutes for irAs a result, the river flows Runoff rigation, it appears unlikely much lower in its channel in While erosion along the the river will reach a point of winter, and much higher in upper Deschutes is widely be- equilibrium where it's no lonsummer. lieved to be the primary source gercarrying large amounts of Areas that would have re- of sediment in Mirror Pond, sediment downriver. To slow mained mostly submerged runoff within the city plays a the transport o f s e diment, under near-constant flows are role as well. Gorman said the winter and exposed in winter, making it Much of t h e s t ormwater summer flows in the upper difficult for aquatic plants to from the west side of Bend and Deschutes need to be brought take root and stabilize the soil. downtown Bend drains into closer to where they were beExposure to the air subjects the Deschutes River, entering fore Wickiup Reservoir was theseareasto a cycleoffreez- the river at outfall pipes pri- built. ing and thawing through the marily upriver of Mirror Pond. Getting there could take winter, further loosening the As part of the larger vision to various forms, Gorman said. soil. When the river level ris- rehabilitate Mirror Pond, of- If the various irrigation dises during irrigation season, a ficials working on the project tricts that depend on Wickiup portion of this soil is swept up have proposed finding a way could find other reservoirs to and washed downstream. to filter the stormwater empty- store their water allotment, Shinderman said h u m an ing into the river. he said Wickiup could release activity beyond the irrigation Wendy Edde, stormwater more water through the winsystem also contributes to sed- specialist with the city of Bend ter. Reducing the amount of iment in the upper Deschutes said some filtration systems water lost to leakage and evapand the little Deschutes, its have been put in place since oration in the pipe and canal flows similarly managed by a the pond was last dredged. systems that deliver water to reservoir at Crescent Lake. The city has 10 sediment fields and farms would mean "We've built docks all along manholes in various areas less water would have to be the upper Deschutes, we've around the city that drain to sent down the Deschutes to the built homes, we've removed ri- the river, Edde said, essentially spots near Bend where irrigaparianvegetation and replaced large underground vessels that tion districts draw water from it with sod," he said."There are filter stormwater through the the river — allowing more waa lot of things that happen in same mechanism that allows ter to flow into the river from the upper Deschutes basin that sediment to build up in Mirror Wickiup in winter. Deschutes, likely carries more

ationhave yet offered rules, sell about $41 billion worth according to Simon. of food each year, according Into this uncertainty have to data from Nielsen. But ex- arisen scores of lawsuits actly what that word means brought on behalf of conhas beenleft,to a large de- sumers, whose attorneys argree,for the courtsto decide. gue that the label has been The U.S. Food and Drug used in a misleading fashion. Administration offers little more than that natural is

The lawsuits have forced

big brands into paying to settle lawsuits or forcing them

said, which is currently in its planning stages. But boosting

"difficult" to define. "FDA has not developed a to remove "natural" claims definition for use of the term from the packaging. But for natural or its derivatives," ac- the smaller entrepreneurs cording to a statement placed here touting everything from on its website. "However, the chiastrawberry fruitspread agency has not objected to to thyme-lemongrass de-

wintertime flows below Wicki-

the use of the term if the food

up Reservoir is a target, he said — and if that can be achieved,

does not contain added color, from a lawsuit may be much artificial flavors or synthetic greater. substances." Shoppers, meanwhile, may The U.S. Department of be lef ttoguess.

clear to the mouth on the Co-

lumbia River near Biggs. Sediment is only one facet of

they'll be able to turn their at-

tention to replanting and restoring the eroding banks of the upper Deschutes. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

odorant, the potential harm

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Boko Haram'pledges fideli to the IS By Rukmini Callimachi

in the world, including in

level of c onnection with

in Britain, wh o

New York Times News Service

Libya, there are few details about how much direct con-

Boko Haram," said A aron Zelin, a fellow at the Washington Institute who tracks

following the group since 2011. But Cummings raised

propaganda by Islamic extremists. "The key question is whether the Islamic

command-and-control structure could exist between the

With thousands of fighters and some parts of northeast-

trol the Islamic State lead-

ern Nigeria under its control,

ers have over their distant

Boko Haram is believed to

proxies. If confirmed, the agree-

be the largest jihadi group to pledge fidelity to the Islamic State. But terrorism

experts say that the practical significance of the move announced Saturday is as yet AndrewQuilty/New YorkTimes News Service

Mohammad Ali sits with his wife, Zakia, and their daughter, Ruqia, outside the town of Bamian, Afghanistan. The couple faced criminal charges and death threats after eloping and fleeing their village in the high mountains of central Afghanistan last year, but have now had their legal issues resolved and their marriage legally recognized — but that doesn't mean their troubles are over.

Back in Afghanistan, modern Romeoand Juliet facegraverisks By Rod Nordland

Read a previous storyabout Mohammadand Zakia Ali at BAMIAN, Afghanistan After nearly a yearon the run, bendbulletin.cem/afgbanlevers a pair of star-crossed young lovers are back in the Afghan Tajikistan on visas, along with village where both their love af- Mohammad Ali's father, Anfair and their problems began. war, intending to apply for staThe young couple, Zakia tus asrefugees,in the hopesof and Mohammad Ali, had faced then asking for asylum in the criminal charges and death West. threats after eloping and fleeRefugee officials had told ing their village in the high them they qualified on at least mountains of central Afghan- five grounds, any one of which istan last year. Now, they have would normally qualify somehad their legal issues resolved one for asylum, induding a seand their marriage legally rious threat to their lives based recognlzed. on discrimination because of But while his family has gender, race, religion, ethnicity welcomed them back, hers is and choice of spouse. another matter. When MohamShortly after they started New York Times News Service

mad Ali, 22, works in the fields

unclear. Some experts say that the pledge, or "bayat," by the leader of Boko Haram, a Nigerian Islamist extremist group, is a spiritually binding oath, and that it indicates that its leader agrees to be

m ent w i t h B o k o H a r a m State dispatched individuals would mirror the steps taken from Syria orIraq or else by Islamic State affiliates in from Libya, down to northLibya, Algeria, Egypt, Af- ern Nigeria to help out with

ghanistan and beyond. In each case, a group's leaders swore allegiance in a public message posted online. Weeks later, the oath was formally accepted by the

h a s b een

questions about what kind of two entities. "It seems at the moment that this is a statement that

is akin to saying, 'We are on the same page,'" he said. A U.S. intelligence official

operations on the ground, or else with methodology, also reacted cautiously, sayor in terms of governance ing that while Boko Haram activities." would not turn down money Boko Haram has an esti-

or material support from the

mated 6,000 fighters and at Islamic State, it was unlikely Islamic State, also known least some level of control that it would take orders from as ISIS, in a statement isover approximately 12,400 it. "It's probably more for prosued by the group's official square miles of northeastern paganda purposes than anyunder the authority of the Is- spokesman. Nigeria, according to Ryan thing else," said the official, "It's quite clear that since Cummings, chief analyst who spoke on the condition lamic State group. But as with such pledges at least m id- January, the for Africafor red24, a crisis of anonymity to discuss intelfrom other groups elsewhere Islamic State has had some management group based ligence matters.

. US.Cellular.

the process to register with

of his family's farm, he wears the U.N. High Commissioner his shirt untucked, and a black for Refugees in Tajikistan, Zapistol attached to his belt pokes

kia and Mohammad Ali were

out beneath it. A guard dog stopped on a busy street in the is tied up in front of their mud Tajik capital, Dushanbe, during house, one of several small daytime by two men who idenbuildings in a walled courtyard tified themselves as police in their village on the outskirts officers. The officers robbed of the town of Bamian.

them of their life savings, about

Zakia Ali, 19, never goes out $5,000, induding jewelry that at all, for fear that she might en- Zakia wore and cellphones, counter someone from her own

large family. Her father and brothers publicly vowed to kill

There's never been a better time to switch. We'll pay off your old contract, up to $350 per line.

and then summarily deported them from Tajikistan.

Babar Baloch, a spokesman for the U.N. High Commissionthey eloped.They accused him erforRefugees,saidtheagency of kidnapping her, and said she could not discuss the couple's her and Mohammad Ali when

had been married to a man she

specific case but that the agen-

had never met, chosen for her by her father. Since eloping March 21, the couple has faced many obstades. There were months of flight, followed by Mohammad Ali's capture by the police in Kabul, who he said beat him daily. Zakia Ali took refuge in a shelter run by Women for Afghan Women, a charity. The group's lawyers managed to win Mohammad Ali's freedom,

cy was aware that "in some instances, asylum seekers may face h arassment, a r bitrary detention and deportation" in

Tajikistan. "We're done with running away," Mohammad Ali said, sitting at home late last month

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was born at the end of December. "This is our proof that we

belonged together," he added, nodding toward Ruqia. "Notheir marriage recognized as body can take this away from valid. us now." and thetwo were reunited and

Even as they became a cause

Economically, their situation

celebre — particularly among at home has been desperate. young Afghans, many of whom They were low on food and mounted Facebook and Twitter even fuel during the bitterly campaigns hailing them as a cold winter here, burningbushmodern Romeo and Juliet who es and dung rather than more had the courage to choose their own mates in defiance of Af-

costly wood or coal for heat.

Zakia Ali's brothers, armed

Anwar's harvest sits in storage

I ltll g g i l g

•e

Anwar's small farm produces ghan social norms — the cou- potatoes, but competition from ple dropped from public view. Pakistani farmers made itnearThey returnedbriefly to their ly impossible for many Afghan village, but before long one of farmers to sell last fall's crop. with a gun and a knife, pur- without a buyer, and will spoil sued Mohammad Ali through if not soldbefore winter ends. the potato fields. He managed Mohammad Ali said they toescape,butMohammad and were getting by because an a pregnant Zakia fled to the anonymous benefactor in the protection of distant mountain

United States who had read

villages in Yakawlang District. Zakia Ali was having a difficult pregnancy though, and there were few medical services in Yakawlang, so they returned to hiding in Kabul in August.

about theirplight had sent them

"They live in a constant state of fear," said Aziza Ahmadi,

ther's home, and with some of the rest he bought the pistol he

$1,000 via Western Union to

help care for their baby. He used half of the money to buy food and fuel for their family, which numbers 10 adults and

nine children sharing his fa-

acting head of women's affairs now carries. in Bamian province. She was Bamian's deputy police chief, among those officials who tried Mohammad Ali Lagzi, said the to negotiate an amicable settle- authorities were aware of the ment with Zakia Ali's family, but they remained vehemently

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ous about how much real proopposed to the union because tection the police could provide they were Tajiks and Sunni in a rural community where Muslims whereas Mohammad Zakia's family has a home less Ali was a Hazara and a Shiite than half a mile away. Muslim. "They're really at risk If they survive, Zakia said, if they stay here," Ahmadi said. they want to see their daugh"It's better for them to leave the ter get the education neither country." They tried that, too. Officials

of them had. "It doesn't matter

at several European embassies

illiterate as we are."

that she is ababy girl," she said. at the U.S. Embassy as well as "I just want her not to grow up in Kabul told them they could consider their asylum request only if they first fled as refugees to aneighboring country. In October, they crossed into

$

If they do live to see Ruqia's adulthood, Mohammad Ali added, one thing was for sure. "We won't choose her husband," he said. "She will."

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

TODAY'S READ: CAMPUS POLITICS

2 1 conten erss e out otstances Echoes of oldbias in

discussion of Jewish student's position By Adam Nagoumey

the Judicial Board, whose duties include hearing challeng-

New Yorh Times News Service

LOS

A N G ELES -

It

es to the constitutionality of

seemed like routine business actions of the council. "As a member of the Judif or the s t udent council at the University of California, cial Board, I do not feel it is Los Angeles: confirming the appropriate for me to comnomination of Rachel Beyda, ment on the actions of UCLA's a second-year economics ma- elected student government," jor who wants to be a lawyer she said by email. someday, to the council's JudiThe four students who opcial Board. posed her wrote a letter of U ntil i t c a m e t i m e f o r apology to the campus newsquestions. paper, the Daily Bruin. "Our "Giventhat you are a Jew- intentions were never to atish student and very active tack, insult or delegitimize in the Jewish community,"

the identity of an individual or people," they wrote. "It is

Fabienne Roth, a member of the Undergraduate Students our responsibility as elected Association Council, began, officials to maintain a posilooking at Beyda at the oth- tion of fairness, exercise juster end of the room, "how do ness, and represent the Bruin you see yourself being able to community to the best of our maintain an unbiased view?" abilities, and we are truly sorFor the next 40 m i nutes, ry for any words used during after Beyda was dispatched this meeting that suggested from the room, the council otherwise." tangled in a d e b ate about Roth, in an email Thursday whether her faith and affilievening, expressed distress ation with Jewish organiza- about the episode. "I have altions, including her sorority ready apologized profusely and Hillel, a popular student for what happened during our group, meant she would be council meeting and I deepbiased in dealing with sen- ly regret how I phrased my sitive governance questions questions to Rachel," she said. that come before the board, which is the campus equiv- 'A teaching moment' alent of the Supreme Court. The university's chancellor, The discussion, recorded in Gene Block, issued a statewritten minutes and captured ment denouncing the attacks on video, seemed to echo the on Beyda. "To assume that evkind of questions, prejudic- ery member ofa group can't es and tropes — particularly be impartial or is motivated about divided loyalties — that by hatred is intellectually and have plagued Jews across the morally unacceptable," he globe for centuries, students said. "When hurtful stereoand Jewish leaders said. types — of any group — are The council, in a meeting wielded to delegitimize oththat took place on Feb. 10, vot- ers, we are all debased." ed first to reject Beyda's nomIn an interview on Thursination, with four of its seven day, Block said he viewed this members against her. Then, as "a teaching moment. These at the prodding of a faculty are students that are learnadviser there who pointed out ing about governance. I think that belonging to Jewish or- they all learned about what's ganizations was not a conflict appropriate and what's not of interest, the students revis- appropriate. The campus has ited the question and unani-

mously put her on the board.

By Rob Hotakalnen

eral interference is quickly becoming the default position among ambitious politicians

Potshots

McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Early

Here's what some of the prospective 2016 presidential hopefuls have to sayabout the legalization of marijuana:

signs indicate that marijuana entrepreneurs may have little to worry about as the

2016 presidential campaign rung hopefuls warming to the idea of letting states decide whether to legalize recreational pot. On the Republican side,

"If the citizens of Colorado decide they want to go down that road, that's their prerogative. I

indude former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, both of whom

It's "yet to be determined" whether

called "the states' rights card"

for the most part is a good thing. States' rights is a good thing."

as often as possible. But he noted thateven George W. Bush, as a Republican presidential

— Sen. Rand Paul

candidate in 1999, said states

should have the right to decide whether to legalize medical m arijuana. As president,Bush backed the federal law outlawing marijuana. "I doubt that any of these

"On recreational (marijuana), states are the laboratories of democracy. Wehave at least two states that are

experimenting with that right now.

opened last July in Prosser,

I want to wait and see what the

Washington. With Thompson's store legal under Washington state law, he said it would be a mistakefor anyone running for president in

candidates will want to run as the pro-marijuana candidate," Sabet said. "Even Rand Paul

evidence is."

stopped short of endorsing le-

— Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton

galization, and he is the most

Bush, Cruz and Paul, all Republicans, madetheir comments at the Conservative Political Action Conference raMaryland last month, responding to questions from talkshow host Sean Hannity of the Fox News Channel. Clinton, a Democrat, disclosed her views inJune in an interview with Christiane Amanpour of CNN.

2016 to try to shut down his

Conservative Political Ac-

away, it's hardly a surprise that candidates are using what he

in Colorado, but "I think freedom

na to his customers at Alti-

long as they do a good job policing themselves. Legalization emerged as a big winner at last month's

eral election still 20 months

legalization is a good or bad idea

tude, the retail pot shop he

tion's lead in allowing states to tax and regulate it, as

Kevin Sabet, president of the anti-legalization group Smart Approachesto Marijuana, said that with the gen-

— Sen.Ted Cruz,asked the same question as Bush

Hillary Clinton says she never experimented with marijuana but a ppears open to the idea of allowing states to legalize it. It's all good news for Tim Thompson, who commits a felony under federal law every time he sells marijua-

that bans marijuana or follow the Obama administra-

on how the issue would fare in 2016.

that's their right."

former Secretary of State

to enforce the federal law

And others say it's far too

early to draw any conclusions

personally don't agree with it, but

have admitted to using the drug during their younger years, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, who has said he was no "choir boy" in college. On the Democratic side,

will have to decide whether

To be sure, not all of the like-

ly contenders in the top tier are jumping on thebandwagon. Wisconsin Republican Gov. ScottWalker, a crowd-pleaser at CPAC who's scoring high in early polls, is among those who have consistently opposed legalization.

— Former Gov.Jeb Bush, on what he thought of Colorado's decision to legalize marijuana

those potential candidates

momentum in the past two years, the next president

lead, politicians have to follow or get left behind," he said.

"I thought it was a bad idea, but states ought to have the right to do it."

takes shape, with some top-

operation. "They'd be alienating themselves from a large majority of people who are for legalization if they took a hard line against it," Thompson said. While the push for legalization has gained great

in both parties.... When voters

libertarian of the bunch." Paul, who won the straw poll at CPAC for the third con-

secutive year, had plenty of backing from pro-marijuana tion Conference in Maryland, allowed recreational pot sales where nearly two-thirds of the in January of last year. 3,000 activists who voted in At the g athering, Paul, a straw poll said it should be Bush and Cruz all said that legal for either recreational or legalization should be left up medical purposes. to the states, responding to Nationally, the most recent questions from talk-show host Gallup poll, conducted in Octo- Sean Hannity of the Fox News ber, found 51 percent of Amer- Channel. Clinton disclosed her icans backing legalization. But views in June on CNN. less than a third of conservaTom Angell, chairman of tives said it should be legal. the pro-legalization group The growing popularity of Marijuana Majority, based in legalization was not lost on the Washington, D.C., said it's obparade of politicians at CPAC. vious that presidential candi"Well, I was told Colorado dates are paying attention to providedthe brownies hereto- polls. day," Cruz told his audience, a "Letting states set their own reference to the first state that marijuana laws without fed-

activists at

t h e c o nference.

Many of his supporters said they believe Paul would move

to legalize marijuana if he won the presidency. "He's more receptive to it

than any other candidate," said Dave Hargitt of Fayetteville, North Carolina, president of that state's chapter of Repub-

licans Against M arijuana Prohibition, a group that had a booth at the exhibit hall at CPAC. "God gave us all free w ill, and that's free will t o

make good decisions or bad decisions — it's not the government's place to tell me what I

can and cannot do."

come together on this." Yet some Jewish leaders

here questioned whether

A wider debate

Block or the students appreBut in t h e w e eks since, ciated the meaning of the that u n comfortable d ebate event. John Rosove, the sehas upended this campus of nior rabbi at Temple Israel of 29,600 students that has long Hollywood, said the incident been central to the identity "reflects something deeper,

of Los Angeles. It has set off an anguished discussion of how Jews are treated, particularly in comparison with other groups that are more

typically viewed as victims of discrimination, such as African-Americans and gays and lesbians. The session — a complete recording of which has been removed from YouTube — has served to spotlight what appearstobe a surge ofhostile sentiment directed against Jews at many campuses in the country, often a byprod-

uct of animosity toward the policies of Israel. This is one of many campuses where the student council passed, on a second tryand afterfierce de-

bate, a resolution supporting the Boycotts, Divestment and Sanctions movement aimed

OUT

more troubling, insidious, and pervasive not just at UCLA

but on

c ollege campuses

20

nationwide."

"I am not one who sees anti-Semites lurking under every bed," he wrote in his blog. "I am not a fear-monger. I do not believe that all criticism

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of Jews or the state of Israel is

25

necessarily anti-Semitic." "Yet," he said, "our inability

1d

to use the term anti-Semitism

when it concerns Jews, when we don't have a problem call-

afaciencj' l'

ing other forms of ethnic and

religious bigotry what it is, raises disturbing questions about prevalent attitudes to-

wards Jews, Judaism, Zion-

30 l2 13

34 l6

35

questioning at the session and

"We don't like to wave the flag of anti-Semitism, but this is different," Rabbi Aaron Le-

sought at first to rule Roth's question out of order. "I don't

u

u rr u r %

peared stunned at the turn of

at punishing Israeb

l 0/4/ I U

33

ism, and the state of Israel." The president of the student

council, Avinoam Baral, who had nominated Beyda, ap-

32

vu

I

Jj ll///Ae.f/// //////b.l///

feel that's an appropriate rner, the incoming executive question," he said. director of the H i llel chapter at UCLA, said of the vote

against Beyda. "This is bigotry. This is discriminating against someone because of their identity." Reports of anti-Israeli or anti-Jewish sentiment have been

on the rise across the country in recent years, especially directed at younger Jews, researchers said. Barry Kosmin, a Trinity College researcher and a co-author of a study issued last month that found

In an interview, Baral, who

is Jewish, said he "related personally to what Rachel was

going through." "It's very problematic to me that students would feel that

it was appropriate to ask that kind of questions, especially given the long cultural history of Jews," he said. "We've been questioned all of our history: Are Jews loyal citizens,

don't they have divided loyalties? All of these anti-Semitic tropes."

The boycott resolution, and ti-Semitism directed at college the battle it set off here, was e xtensive examples of

an-

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students, said he had not come

not explicitly mentioned but

across anything as striking as what happened at UCLA. "It's egregious and startling," Kosmin said. "If they had used this with any other group — sexual, racial, any kind of identity group — they

was described by her and others as setting the subtext for

Charney, student president of

Get more from your energy. Call us at 1.866.368.7878

would have realized it w as

the UCLA chapter of Hillel.

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president-elect of the Jewish

the anti-Israel culture in which

the episode.

"The overall culture of targeting Israel led to targeting Jewish students," said Natalie

"People say that being anti-Isillegal." Beyda, 20, who is from Cu- rael is not the same as being pertino, California, and is anti-Semitic. The problem is sorority Sigma Alpha Epsilon we are singling out only the Pi, said she did not want to comment on her confirmation

Jewish state creates an environment where it's OK to sin-

hearing because of her role on gle out Jewish students."

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

College

Lawma ers caimsur risin connection

Continued fromA1 Now information technol-

ogy is poised to transform college degrees. When that

By BillSizemore ~The Associated Press

happens, the economic foun-

RICHMOND, Va.— When Virginia Sen. Donald McEachin made an offhand comment during

dations beneath the academy will truly begin to tremble. Traditional college degrees represent several diff erent kinds of information. Elite uni-

H •+

versities run admissions tour-

naments as a way of identifying the best and the brightest.

who also claims to be a descendant of the Founding Father: "Hold on. You're kidding me."

the job market almost exactly

the same thing: "This person was good enough to get into ye

m e aning

and structure to collections

of college courses. A bachelor'sdegree signifies more

owners were commonplace. McEachin, o f He n rico

a kinship with McEachin.

tant to divulge his African an-

To graduate, students need a certain number of upper- and

the story is a studyin historical

lower-division credits, a ma-

prIde. Hamilton — the arch-nem-

irony, family lore and racial Edmon de Haro/The New YorkTimes

MassiveOpen OnlineCourses humanities. haven't yet swayed college College degrees are also enrollment figures — inpart berequired to get graduate de- causethey don'tofferdegrees. grees. Most important, tra-

That meybe about to change.

ditional college degrees are deeply embedded in government regulation and standard

human resources practice. It doesn't matter how good a teacher you are — if you don't

peers. Because transcripts provide few means of reliably distinguishing the great from the rest, employers give a leg up to private college graduates who probably had some legs up to begin with.

have a bachelor's degree, it's illegal for a public school to hire you. Private-sector employThe new digital credentials ersoften use college degrees as a cheap and easy way to can solve this problem by proselect for certain basic attri- viding exponentially more inbutes, mostly the discipline formation. Think about all the and wherewithal necessary to workyou did in college. Unless earn 120 college credits. you are a recent graduate, how Free online courses won't much of it was saved in a way revolutionize education until thatyou can access now? What about the skills you acquired in there is a parallel system of free or low-fee credentials, not various jobs? Digital learning controlled by traditional col- environments can save and leges, that leads to jobs. The organize almost everything. Mozilla Foundation, which Open credentialing systems albrought the world the Firefox low people to control informaWeb browser, has spent the tion about themselves — what past few years creating what they learned in college, and it calls the Open Badges proj- what they learned everywhere ect.Badges are electronic cre- else — and present that data didentials that any organization, rectly to employers. In a world collegiate or otherwise, can where people increasingly inissue. Badges indicate specific teract over distances, electronskills and knowledge, backed ically, the ability to control your by links to electronic evidence online educational identity is of how and why, exactly, the crucial. This does present a new badge was earned. challenge for employers, who Traditional institutions, including Michigan State and will have to sift through all the University of Illinois at Ur-

this additional i n formation.

bana-Champaign, are experi- Of course, processing large menting with issuing badges. amounts of information is So are organizations like the exactly what computers are National Oceanic and Atmo- good for. Scientists at Carnspheric Administration, 4-H, egie Mellon University are the Smithsonian, the Dallas designing open badges that e," Museum of Art and the YMCA are "machine discoverabl of Greater New York. so employers using search alThe most important thing gorithms will be able to locate about badges is t ha t t h ey people with specific skills. aren't limited to what peoProtecting private, personple learn in college. People al information is a big part of learn throughout their lives, navigating the digital era. But at work, at home, in church, people want certain kinds of among t h ei r

c o m munities. information to be as public as

MOOC providers have always possible — for example, that offeredcredentials. they are very good at specifTake Coursera, a for-profit ic jobs and would like to find MOOC platform, which offers an employer looking for such sequences of courses akin to people. Companies such as college majors, followed by LinkedIn are steadily builda capstone project in which ing new tools for people to destudents demonstrate their scribe their employable selves. skills and receive a verified College degrees, by contrast, certif icate,for a fee of $470. say little and never change. The Coursera Data Science seIn the long run, MOOCs will quence is taught by Johns Hop- most likelybe seen as a crucial kins University and includes step forward in the reformanine four-week courses like tion of higher education. But exploratory data analysis, re- their true impact won't be felt gression models and machine until students and learners of learning. The capstone project all kinds have access to digital requires students to build a

credentials that are also built

data model and create visual- for the modern world. Then izations to communicate their they'll be able to acquire skills analysis. The certificate is offi- and get jobs for a fraction of cially endorsed by both Cour- what colleges cost today. sera and Johns Hopkins.

tween slaves and their white

lawmakers are Democrats and already were friends beforelearning they may share a common lineage. But Petersen drew quizzical looks a few days later when he referred during a Senate floor speech to Proving the relationship with certainty is difficult, but

than just 120 college credits.

jor and perhaps a sprinkling of coursesin the sciences and

There, just as in the American South, sexual liaisons be-

who is black — told Sen. Chap Petersen, who is white. Both

It's why "Harvard dropout" and "Harvard graduate" tell

Degrees give

dinner about his distant relation to Alexander Hamilton, it drew a shocked reply from a colleague

No kidding, McEachin-

That, in itself, is valuable data.

Harvard."

County, acknowledges that

he can't prove a family link to Hamilton, but he isn't ready to give up on the legend. "He may have been reluccestry" in an era when slavery was legal and even free blacks Steve Helber/The Associated Press had few rights, McEachin said. "If he covered up his past, who Virginia state Sen. Chap Petersen, D-Fairfax, left, talks with Sen. Donald McEeohin, D-Riohmond, on the floor of the Senate during couldblame him?" the session et the Capitol in Richmond, Virginia. Both claim an

Hamilton left his past far be-

esis of Thomas Jefferson, who ancestral connection to founding father Alexander Hamilton. hated Hamilton's idea of a

hind, becoming a trusted aide to Gen. George Washington,

strong central government-

a military hero at the battle of

was famously killed in a duel

grandfather, an Episcopalian

with Jefferson's vice president, Aaron Burr.

minister named Aston Hamil-

ton, was born and grew up on The saga of his connection St. Kitts before emigrating to to two 21st-century lawmakers Virginia as a young man in the goes back to his birth around early20th century. 1755 on Nevis, an island in The shared last name and what was then the British geographical proximity were West Indies. His parents were no coincidence, McEachin's not married to each othermother used to tell him: They an inconvenient biographical were related to A l exander

African blood. The noted African-American scholar W.E.B.

DuBois referredtohim as"our own Hamilton." Some theorize that Ham-

ilton's mother was part African, while others daim he fathered a mixed-race son in the

Yorktown, an ardent proponent of the Constitution and the young nation's first trea-

sury secretary. His ascent was aided in no small part by his marriage to Elizabeth Schuyler, a daughter of one of New York's wealthi-

West Indies. Neither theory is est and most prominent famfar-fetched, but impossible to ilies. Petersen, of Fairfax, deproveallthe same, according scends from the Schuyler famdetail that came back to haunt Hamilton. to Hamilton biographer Ron ily tree through his mother. "It was discussed with cer- Chernow. him as an adult. And Petersen is proud to have Hamilton's father deserted tainty and pride in my family," The belief that Hamilton descended from such stock. "Hamilton was a great man the family and his mother died McEachin said. w as biracial "probably arose when he was around 11, leavThat belief reflected a wide- from the incontestable truth who came from nothing and inghim orphaned and penni- spread and long-held pre- that many, if not most, illegit- succeeded on the basis of his less. Helater emigratedto New sumption in the Caribbean imate children in the West In- ability and desire," Petersen York. and th e A f r i can-American dies bore mixed blood," Cher- said. "It's a very American McEachin's maternal community that Hamilton had nowhas written. story."

Framed Continued fromA1 Real Constables were often painted over during the 19th

century, when their rough, seemingly unfinished quality put off prospective purchasers. So the dealer had it cleaned and took it to a leading Constable expert, Anne

Lyles, aformer curatoratTate Britain. " When I

tention of suing over a work This time it is Christie's for which she had little affecthat is facing questioning over tion and that her mother-inwhether it bungled the attri- law had stuffed in a cupboard bution of a painting. "We un- for 60 years. "It was sold under my derstand that there is no clear consensusofexpertise on the name," she said, "but on new attribution," the company behalf of my children. So it would be their decision said in a statement. It thenprovided the name of whether or not to bring legal an expert who holds a differ- action." Her sons did not respond to ent view from Lyles. "I could m essagesseeking see no sign of Constable's anumber of hand in the work," said Conal comment. Constable, who is known Shields, an art historian and for his expressive brushwork, Constable scholar. Nonetheless, some in Ham- often done with a p a l ette bleden, an idyllic village of knife, and for mixing colors brick and flint cottages that on the canvas, is now viewed was the backdrop for mov- as aprecursorto Impressionies like "Chitty Chitty Bang ism.But fordecades afterhis Bang" and often fills on week- death in 1837 his sketches ends with equestrians and were over-pai nted to make shooting parties, say they feel them more palatable to buyaggrieved on behalf of the ers who expected something viscountess. more finished. "Lady Hambleden is a love"Heleavesbits of theprimed ly person — very gracious, canvas showing through a friendly and kind," said Steve finished painting; he leaves Skowron, a neighbor of the these visible brush strokes; he viscountess, who was Count- doesn't smooth out the tones ess Maria Carmela Attolico of his colors so there's an even di Adelfia when she married gradation," said Jonathan by the master himself.

f i r s t sa w t h i s

sketch, newly cleaned, there was just something about the

application of the paint, the texture in the sky and the expression of the light and shade all looked promising," she said recently in a phone interview.

In January, the painting, now deemed a true Constable by Lyles, was sold at Sotheby's in New York. It fetched $5.2

million. At a time when the attribu-

tion of paintings can be so litigious that many experts have retreated from the field, the

startling reassessment of the "Cathedral," and its sudden explosion in value, provides William Herbert Smith, the a rare window into the often

fourth viscount, in 1955.

"She's very well liked in imprecise, and debate-riddled, field of identifying the author- the village," he said. "She has an annual Christmas party ship of art works. The Metropolitan Muse- and invites everyone over. um of Art has twice changed The case of the John Constaits mind in the past four ble painting is a very strange decades over whether its one. How can Christie's have portrait of Philip the IV is a missed it? I think the consenmasterpiece by Velazquez sus of the village is that she (the current view), or a fine should sue." painting by an also-ran. SoYes, admits Lady H a mtheby's was sued after it sold bleden, 84, when she first what it had determined to be learned the painting was by a copy of Caravaggio's "The Constable, "I felt like a fool! I Cardsharps" for $83,000 in know it's not my fault, but that 2006, only to have a scholar was my first feeling." later declare it was actually But she said she has no in-

Clarkson, a senior lecturer in

the history and theory of art at the Cardiff School of Art and Design and the author of

a monograph on Constable.

his father. So before Lyles would affix her name to a reattribution of

the 18-by-24-inch Hambleden " Salisbury C a thedral," s h e

wanted to show it played a role in the evolution of the final work, rather than being someone's imitation, albeit with

brilliant brushwork. She found several features that, to her,

proved the link, induding the striking way the light from the stormy sky falls on the Cathe-

dral spire. Sotheby's later hired her to write the catalog entry for the

sale,for an undisclosed fee. "Obviously," she said, "I'm not going to risk putting my name to somethingthatI don'tbelieve tl

With her imprimatur as the

bedrock evidence, the painting was put up as a Constable at Sotheby's Jan. 29 sale. The bidding soon surged past the high estimate of $3 million and ended light years from the high estimate that Christie's in 2013 placed on the work

— $1,200. And even that value would have been excessive for Shields,

the dissenting Constable expert: "It's a really crass, inept painting."

"And at the time people just

thought this was sloppy practice — that it was because he couldn't paint better — rather

than he was choosing to paint this way." Complicating matters: as

Constable's reputation grew, forgers and imitators picked up their pace. And one of his seven children was also an accomplished artist, whose work can sometimes be difficult to distinguish from that of

Inevitably, there will be a

lag between the creation of such new credentials and their widespread acceptance by employers and government regulators. H.R. departments know what a bachelor's de-

gree is. "Verified certificates" are something new. But em-

ployers have a powerful incentive to move in this direction:

Traditional college degrees are deeply inadequate tools for communicating information. College transcripts are

a nightmare of departmental abbreviations, course numbers of indeterminate mean-

ing and grades whose value has been steadily eroded by their inflation. This has the effect of rein-

forcing class biases that are built into college admissions. A relatively open-access traditional public university might graduate as many great job candidates as a small, exclusive, private university — say, 200 each. But the public 200

may graduate alongside 3,000 other students, while the private 200 may have only 300

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

WASHINGTON WEEK

o s aine in seizure s i nee o m e s

WASHINGTON-

U.S. HOUSEVOTE • The House of Representatives voted Tuesday to fund the Department of Homeland Security through the end of theyear, ending the possibility of government shutdown. The "clean" funding bill, so called because it did not contain any policy riders designed to block President Obama's executive orders on immigration, provides $40 billion for homeland security, enough to fund the department through the end of the fiscal year. The measure passedby a 257-167 margin, with 75 Republicans and182 Democrats voting yes. All of the167 novotes came from Republicans.

Walden (R).............. Blumenauer (D)...... Bonaml cl (D),........ DeFazio (D)...,........ Schrader (D)..........

.......Y ....... Y ....... Y ....... Y .......Y

U.S. SENATEVOTE • On Wednesday, the Senate failed to collect enough votes to override President Obama'sveto of a bill approving the Keystone XLpipeline. In January, the Senate passed the bill endorsing the construction of a pipeline to transport oil from tar sands in Canada to refineries in the Gulf of Mexico. Obama vetoedthe bill last month. Needing 67 votes to override the veto, the override failed by a 62-37 margin. Eight Democrats joined 54 Republicans in supporting the override, while all of the 37 novotes were cast by Democrats. /t/ferldey (D)....... YY)/den(D).........

STATE NEWS • Aroundthe state: Strong winter on East Coast hurting lumber sales in Oregon,B3 • Wilderville:Paralyzed woman continues to race trucks,B3

methods after job scam In the wake of a scam that left a homeless man about

t;

.

$2,600 in debt with no apparent legal recourse, the Beth-

lehem Inn homeless shelter \

/

i

.

~i,

-

\+

r

t

has changed the way it connects residents with people offering day labor. Bethlehem Inn has long allowed people from the community to come to the

shelter and offer homeless residents temporary jobs. It helps residents make some

~ fl/j //g . a'@~= ~gy'~jgj > I///

much-needed cash, quickly and without the usual red

tape, said Managing Director Chris Clouart. Most of the jobs are manual labor, like moving furniture or landscaping.

ii>

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin

Lynne Ouchida, community outreach manager for the Humane Society of Central Oregon, gives some affection to Scarlet, 14, while Ailia, 11, and Dinah, 14, enjoy the sun outside the shelter's grounds in Bend on Friday morning.

By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin

Lookingtoyour golden years, you probably imagine the comfort of your own home

Now they are in good health and ready to be adopted.Lynne Ouchida, community outreach manager for the society, will be excited to see the animals placed somewhere

with the people you love, not alone and searching for anew family. But a fewelderly dogs at the Humane Society of Central Oregon are hoping for just

long term. She explained that the three left

that. Scarlet, Dinah and Ailia,

grown nails. They couldn't have the animals spayed or

surgery. Nowthey are in good

Brittany spaniels, were the oldest of the bunch to come to

neutered until Deschutes

the Humane Society of Central Oregon after law enforcem ent sei zed dogs from an overcrowded East Bend home last fall. Most of the dogs who

County legallyput them in the

ed.Lynne Ouchida,community outreach manager for the

came, 36 in total, were the

Brittany spanielbreed. The rest were either Australian terriers or basset hounds. For the first two months the dogs were there, the shelter

onlytooknecessary care, like deaningandtrimming over-

were sociable and loving dogs, the "cream of the crop" in terms of personality.

quireanyone off ering work to show identification and

leave their license plate number with staff, Clouart said.

How toadopt Those interested in adopting any of the three Brittany spaniels can visit the HumaneSociety of Central Oregon, 61170SE 27th St., in Bend to begin the process, or fill out a form ahead of time at hsco.org.

health and ready to be adopt-

"If they balk at that, we

can assume something fishy is going on," Clouart said Tuesday. On Feb.27,fourme n came to Bethlehem Inn looking for help with paving at a construction site. Shelter

resident David Rogers, 46, agreed to go with them to check out the work site. Two

staff members told Rogers he didn't have to go with the

She enjoys the attention and

warmth of people, as well as the animals placed somewhere sunshine. Scarlet has mamlongterm. She explained that mary cancer, likely the result cal conditions that required the three left were sociable and of notbeing spayed until old surgeries afterthe otherpups lovingdogs, the"cream of the age. crop" interms of personality. were spayed, neutered and Dinah, 14, is the most inde"Given time," Ouchida said, adopted. Humane Society of pendent of the three. She loves Central Oregon allowed Scar- "all of these will settle really to sniff around and run in the let, Dinah and Ailia to gain nicely into a home." play area outside. She was some weight and be relieved of Scarlet, 14, is the "snuggler." spayed duringher time at the the stress of a crowded house Anytime she can cozyup to society. a two-legged friend, she will. before theyput them into SeeDogs/B2 shelter's care.

Aside from introducing the employer to residents interested in work, Bethlehem Inn stayed out of the transaction. But now, the shelter will re-

society, will be excited to see

Like most elderly dogs, the three face long-term medi-

men if he didn't feel comfortable, but after talking to the men Rogers said it "seemed OK and I really needed the work." Once in the car, the four

men told Rogers they needed his help before they showed him the job site, Rogers said. They convinced Rogers to help them with their business

by opening five cellphone accounts in his name. They gave him the cash needed to

purchase an iPhone 6 with each account and said the ac-

Warmer weathersendsCentral Qregoniansoutside By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Central Oregon residents

ventured outdoors Saturday, soaking up the sun on the latest in a string of unsea-

sonably warm days. Highs hit 64 in Bend and 68 in Redmond, according to the National Weather

— Andrei/l/Clevenger, 7)te Bulletin

changes

The Bulletin

....... Y ....... Y ....... Y ....... Y ....... Y

• On Wednesday, the House approved$8 billion in funding for Amtrak, the national railway system. Thebill, which provides funding through 2019, also contains a provision that would let passengers bring pets on the trains, which are heavily used in the Northeast but less popular in other parts of the country. The bill passed 316-101,with 132 Republicans and 184 Democrats supporting the measures. All of the no votes werecast by Republicans.

Shelter

By Jasmine Rockow

i@h Walden (R).............. Blumenauer (D)...... Bonamlcl (D) .......... DeFazio (D)............. Schrader(D) ...........

BETHLEHEM INN

Service. Both fell short of record highs for the same date,

but not by much — Bend's record of 70 degrees was set in 1941, while Redmond's

record of 71 degrees was set in 2004.

The average high in Bend for March 7, as measured between 1981 and 2010, is

counts would be transferred out of his name later in the

week.

"I'm on medications for

depression and anxiety, so my thinking isn't as clear as

49 degrees, with an average high on the same date in

it used to be," Rogers said. He said he felt overwhelmed,

Redmond of 52.

trapped and outnumbered by

Locals who went out to enjoy the weather said they've been puzzled but pleased by the area's warm winter.

the four men in the car.

Vicente Herrera, 21, of Bend, headed to Meadow

Rogers purchased three phones at the Verizon store

Camp upstream of Bend for some fishing at a spot recommended by a friend. Herrera said he wanted to be

in the Bend River Prome-

sure he made the most of a

but the store didn't have any iPhones. Rogers said the men were visibly upset, and they took him to Fred Meyer, where he was able to buy a Samsung phone. SeeScam/B2

warm Saturday. "You gotta make it count when you get it," Herrera said. "It could be raining or snowing." See Weather /B2

According to incident notes obtained from Deschutes County dispatch,

nade and handed them over once inside the car. They then took him to Wal-Mart,

i

Meg Roueeoe/The Bulletin

Vicente Herrera, 21, of Bend, casts a line while fishing on the

DeschutesRiverona sunny day in Bend onSaturday.

YESTERYEAR

Well shot! Reader photos

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

Crowds gather to watch tower onTowerTheater go up in 'l940 Compiled by Don Hoiness

a deposit of diatomaceous sil-

fromarchivedcopies of

ica near Terrebonne in Crook

The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

County, said to be one of the largest in the United States. V.L. Holt, of Eugene, is credit-

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending March 7, 1915

Silica beds to be developed Announcement was made last week of the "discovery" of

edby the Portland papers with the discovery, the news being made public when he applied to the Dock Commission for space on a dock at Portland on

According to Mr. Hall in an

it in the possession of a pros-

of greater resistance than

pector while going through the New York quotation on the the country in the interest of

the common kind, is part of lyddite and other explosives

silica is about $40 a ton and because of the war which has

a land colonization syndicate.

as manufactured abroad, but

The sample was taken to the Oregon University at Eugene,

not a part of United States explosive products, also as

and there an analysis and ex-

insulation against heat, cold,

amination disclosed its value. There are 41 principal uses

noise and fire. Mr. Holt said there were as large deposits in

for the silica. It polishes silver

Tripoli and in Northern Africa

as the one in Oregon, but that much lower grade. SeeYesteryear/B5

interview in the Oregonian

shut off shipments from Germany, it is a most opportune time to place it on the market.

The deposit he explained, lies

which to establish a plant for

in an old lake bed and was covered with about 12 feet of

grinding the silica or to store

sand, loam and other stuff

and other ware, is used in Europe as a face powder, also

it en route to New York and

that was carried onto it by

mixed with asbestos fiber

Europe.

winds. He found a sample of

is said to make an asbestos

the German deposits were of



SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

win er means woo Is iin u , r icesown

AROUND THE STATE Maii On fire —Portland police areinvestigating after a manset himself on fire in aPortland neighborhoodfollowing adomestic dispute. Officers respondedSaturday atabout1:30 p.m. to reports that themanset himself on fire inside a vehicle. Firefighters put thefire out andmedical personnel treatedthe manfor burns. Hewastransported to a Portland hospital with critical injuries. Authorities saythe man's action wasanapparent suicideattempt. According to investigators, themanwas involved in a domestic disputejust prior to setting himself onfire. l-5 Clesh —Portland Police said amultiple-vehicle crash on Interstate 5 in Portland hasleft nine peopleinjured, including two childrenandone adult in critical condition. Thecrash happenedjust before 3:30p.m. Saturday, on1-5northbound andVictory Boulevard. Fivecarswere involved in the crash.

By Craig Reed The (Roseburg) News-Review

R OSEBURG — Wit h t h e

deep freeze that has inundated the eastern half of the

BOQ fOllllll —Multnomah CountySheriff's Office is investigating after a bodywasfound atthe baseof Broughton Bluff, apopular rock climbing spot nearthe Sandy River. Investigators said arockclimber called 911 onSaturday atabout10 a.m. after spotting a bodyas hewas going up thetrail from Lewis andClark State Park inTroutdale, a Portland suburb. Thebody layatthe baseof Broughton Bluff. Therock climber also reported seeing a gunnear the body. Deputies locatedthe body of a deceasedadult maleand recoveredthe gun. Noother details havebeen released.

United States contributing to

the drop, prices for logs and lumber processed on the West Coast have dipped over the

last couple of months. Sales are down and wood inventories are up.

The market today is not what was being hoped for and expected just a few months

ago. "There was a quick uptick

Botchedroddery —Authorities said a mancalled 911after he was shot in the legwith his ownweaponwhile robbing a Springfield home. Springfield police officers foundCaseyMichael Carlson inthe street, suffering from agunshot wound to his right thigh. Investigators said Carlson, 24, wasarmedwith thegunwhen heallegedly forced his wayinto a house shortly before1 a.m.andencountered the homeowner. Thegun went off asCarlsonfought with the homeowner.After being shot, Carlson staggeredoutsideandcalled 911.Carlson wastaken to a hospital, where heunderwent surgery. Thehomeowner received minor injuries. Police saidCarlson will likely becharged with first-degree robbery.

in the market in late 2014, and

that had a lot of people in the industry anticipating a good start to the new year," said

Shawn Church, editor of Random Lengths, a Eugene-based publication that tracks the log

and lumber businesses. "There was also the fore-

cast of housing starts increasMichael Sullivan/The (Rcseburg) News-Review ing again. They had been up Log scaler Wade Anderson grades a log at Swanson Group Manufacturing in Roseburg on Feb. 26. An to 1 million in '14 and they were forecast to total 1.1 to 1.2

intense winter on the East Coast has contributed to a drop in prices for logs and lumber processed on the West Coast as construction has halted and demand is low.

million in 2015. This all gave everybody high expectations for a good start to the year," markets, adding to the comhe said. petitiveness in the industry, The end of 2014, with posi- which impacts pricing. tive factors such as home conWith fewer overall sales, struction projects, improving log and lumber inventories at home prices, mortgage inter- Douglas County mills have estrates ataround 4 percent increased, resulting in a bigand steady stud prices, made ger supply than demand. The the year comparable to the supply has also increased good year of 2005. because a mild winter in the Steve Killgore, vice presi- west has allowed for a steady dent of sales and marketing stream of trees to be cut and for Roseburg Forest Products, hauled from the woods over said the company finished logging roads that are usually 2014 in good shape and was closed at this time of year by moving wood products all bad weather. acrossthe U.S. All these factors have led B ut then w i nter h i t t h e to the wood market being in a eastern half of the U.S. hard downturn during the first two with snow and b itter cold,

months of 2015.

bringing any construction to Killgore gave some pricing a halt. The U.S. is the largest examples. He said last year a market for soft wood lumber 2 x 4 stud was selling for $2.70, products. and today it's at $2.28. On a In addition, China expe- larger scale, he said the price rienced an economic slow- was $454 per thousand board down. And changes in mone- feet a year ago, and today it is tary exchange rates have also $380. resulted in that country look-

"The weather is shutting

in Glendale, explained that

before the China slowdown, there had been enough exporting of products through the port of Coos Bay to Asia to keep the entire Swanson company busy. But he added that

ward," in prices this spring. "We're still waiting on a full recovery," he said. "I expect no layoffs or anything like that this year. Considering

attacked ahunter on aremote hilltop in Oregonwasfound guilty of attempted murderandsecond-degreeassault. A Washington County jury returned theverdict for Linus Norgren onFriday.Theattack happenedin October 2013deepin the woods. Court documentsshow Norgren, then 20 year sold,punchedhunterJeffMcDonald,bashed him inthehead with a rock, and tried to chokehim. While the hunter lay unconscious, Norgren alsodislocated hisarms. Duringtheattack, prosecutors said Norgren told McDonald, "Sasquatchkills the hunter." Thetwo mendid not know eachother. Eventually, McDonaldwasable to call 911.Norgren's attorney,BearWilner-Nugent, said Norgren hasbipolar disorder.

we made it through 2009, the

worst year, I would anticipate having no trouble keeping ships scheduled to leave with people working this year." a load of logs for anywhere. Paul Beck, the general Swanson expressed op- manager of Mountain West t imism, however, that t h e Log Scalingand Grading Buoversupply of wood prod- reau, said the company's 84 ucts would decrease in just a log scalers have been "really at this time, he knew of no

month or two after the weather begins to warm across the

busy" at 35 different locations

country. "Then I expect to see a modest increase in pricing," he said. "What I'm anticipating isa gradual increase for all of our products, plywood and lumber. With some note of caution, things should be good in our region." Until the demand equals the supply again and prices do creep up, the low lumber prices will encourage con-

fornia, at the southern end of that state's Central Valley

ing more to Russia, where the down so many markets," he struction projects when the exchange is better, than to the said. "There's more supply eastern half of the U.S. does U.S. or Canada for logs and than demand.We have plenty thaw out. lumber. With China and other of supply here that needs to Toby Luther, the CEO of Asian countries buying fewer find a home." Lone Rock Timber, said he products, Canada has been Steve Swanson, president expects to see "a little bit of a looking south to sell to U.S. and CEO of Swanson Lumber lift, but not a huge swing up-

Naked attack verdict — Amentaly ill manwhostripped nakedand

between Terra Bella, Caliand the Columbia River to the north. "While there is a downturn

now, my impression from most of the people we deal with is that they think it won't

last," Beck said. "Companies have decent inventories now, but they're optimistic there

will be real growth in their business this year."

Each of the last couple of years has been better than the previous one for the timber

and lumber industries. Those in the profession are expecting that trend to continue in

CardO11 emiSSiOn aPPeal requeSt —Anoil companyconsortium has askedthe Oregon Court of Appeals to blockthe state's low-carbon fuel standard. Lawmakersvoted Wednesdayto implement thestandard and sent thebill to Gov.KateBrown. Thefuel standardrequires areduction in theamount of carbon incar andtruck fuels in Oregonover the next decade.The lawsuit from the Western States PetroleumAssociation challengestheso-called "phase 2" rulesfor the program that were drafted by theOregonDepartment of Environmental Quality andfinalized earlier this year. Byvoting to continuethe low-carbon fuels programinstead of letting it expire, lawmakersbasically kept the rulesandprogram alive. Theconsortium contends the most recent ruleswent beyondthe authority earlier granted by the Legislature. Sothe oil companies' group contends that makesthe most recent DEQrules "illegal." Environmental Quality officials weren't immediately reachablefor comment. Car fOund iiiriver —Divers haverecovered the body of amotorist whose pickupwent into the Wilamette River atthe OakGrove boat ramp. Aspokesmanfor ClackamasFireDistrict No. 1 said afisherman told crews heheard thevehicle go into thewater Fridaymorning. Divers found thevehicle morethan 25feet belowthe surface, andthe motorist's body wasrecovered 45minutes later. TheClackamas County Sheriff's Office is trying to determinewhy it happened.Thedriver's name hasnot been released. Hiker reSCue —Portland firefighters rescuedawoman whofell from a trail at PowellButte. Fireofficials said thewomanslipped off the trail Friday andfell about100 yards beforeshegot caught insomebranches. They usedropesandabasket in the rescue. Officials said shehasa leg and hip injury. — From wire reports

2015 when compared to 2014.

Driver, with legsparalyzedin accident, still racesthe tough trucks By Ryan Pfiel

brae, paralyzing her near her the lead on the project. He

land and as far south as Red

Medford Mail Tribune

belly button down to her feet. Box was later taken to Asante

Bluff, California. She races once or twice a month. "It's good to have compe-

WILDERVILLE

-

For

Kelsey Box, tough truck racing is freedom; a chance, as she said, to "feel normal, like nothing ever happened." What did happen — a 2013 car accident that paralyzed Box from the waist downcould have put an end to her

installed hand controls and

Rogue Regional Medical Center in Medford for surgery and additional recovery. She spent four days in an inten-

modified the steering wheel to make turning easier. Kelsey helped where she could, painting, welding and doing some detail work. In about

sive care unit, then was able

three months, it was finished.

to speak to a doctor. "He told me I had a one-

Box dubbed the silver Ford Ranger with a pink and silver wrap "Chunky Chick," and started getting used to the controls. "When I got the hang of it,

in-a-million chance to walk

again," Box said. "(But) my main concernwas me being able to race again. I asked him if that was possible." it wasn't that bad," she said. He answered yes, but to "I still wanted to use my feet give it a year or so. Box did. when I first did it." During that time, she got Box started racing again in busy adapting to her new life. February last year. Rob Box She mastered getting in and said it was difficult to watch out of her wheelchair, dress- at first because of her injury, ing herself, basic hygiene. but he felt better when he saw "I basically had to learn her renewed skill behind the how to live over again. I wheel.

laps and leaps around dirt tracks. But the 23-year-old chose

to keep going, and two years later, is still doing it. It comes with a radical change in how she competes, however, specifically in customizing a Ford Ranger she helped her dad build with hand controls. "It took me about a month to fully get used to it just be-

cause of how the brake and the gas is," Box said. She's apparently quite comfortable now. Last year, Box netted $3,500 in winnings from races across Oregon and

think that's the toughest part for me," Box said. "I have to

"She's a natural," he said.

"No fear. She's totally in focus learn to do everything else in with what she's doing. She a different way. But I make it work."

While Box recovered from

in Northern California. Box started tough t r u ck racing in2008. Her sister had

her injuries, a custom-made truck started to take shape. Her father, Rob Box, took

done it first, tearing around

just handles it.

"It was therapy for both of us. It gave us something to look forward to."

Kelsey Box's travels have taken her as far north as Port-

the turns and jumps of cours-

es at the Josephine County Fairgrounds. She stopped after a back injury, and Box gave it a try. She started with her sis-

Jamie Lusch/ (Medfcrd) Mail Tribune

Kelsey Box, 23, sits in her race truck at her home outside of Grants

Pass on Thursday. Box is aparaplegic and still races trucks against men.

DOES EVERYONE MUMQLEP

SUN FoREsT +e stsa ~

'

CoNSTRUCTION

ter's truck, then upgraded to

another she built with her father. The races continued in Grants Pass, into a ditch. that truck from 2012 into early 2013. Then came Jan. 19, 2013.

"I was just not in the right mind. I wasn't myself. I wasn't

Connect Hearing they first came up. They didn't even know I was alive," Box

said. there," Box said. Emergency re s ponders Box said she had been going Arriving firefighters and rushed Box to Asante Three through an emotional rough paramedics thought the crash Rivers Medical Center, where patch when she drove her had been fatal, at first. it was discovered she had "They called a fatality when broken her Tl1 and T12 vertecar off New Hope Road, near

meeting other tough truck racers, many of whom admire that she's still racing despite her injury, has been great. "It's competition and fun get-

ting to know and learn about new people." Ultimately, Box hopes her

racing will inspire others with disabilities. "You can do whatever you

want," she said. "Just because you're in a wheelchair doesn't mean it's the end of your life."

ONES Jones, a 2Y2 year old Retriever mix, is sure to amaze you with his intelligence. Hewould be a great candidate for dog sports and training. Jones will fit best into a home without cats and small children. Such a fun companiondog!Can you give this boy a forever home and some new adventures to go on?See more photos at brightsideanimals.org/ adoptable-dogs or meet him in person Tues.-sat., 10-5.

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

BITUARIES Ruby Jeanette Schlaht Kraus

DEATH 1VOTICES Beverly Ann Wafford, of Bend

Geraldine F. Pass, of Bend

Mark Andrew Stokes, of Bend

Jan. 22, 1944 - Feb. 25, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592

Mar. 31, 1928 - Mar. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at

June 4, 1962 - Feb. 24, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

www.deschutesmemorialchapeicom

Services: No services will be held.

Frances Marian Scoggin, of Bend July 14, 1923 - Mar. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: A Celebration of Life service will be held on Sat., Mar. 14 at 1 PM at St. Albans Episcopal Church, 3277 NW 10th St., Redmond, OR 97756.

Donald Charles

Landberg, of Bend Oct. 16, 1932 - Feb. 27, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private celebration of life will take place at a later date.

www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: No Immediate Memorial is Planned. Contributions may be made

Prudhomme, of Bend Nov. 26, 1929 - Feb. 27, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701.

Gerald Crowley April 30,1923 - Jan. 31, 2015 Gerald J. Crowley died o n Jan. 3 1 , 2 0 1 5 a t t h e Partners in C a r e H o spice House in Bend. G erry was born on A p r i l 30, 1923 in San Fr ancisco to Daniel J. and M a rgaret

F. (Moriarty), the second of i ng

liv-

chil-

d ren. H e s pent h i s early childhood in Colusa, CA an d

g rew

Private family services will be held at a later date.

"Marie" Hazel Marie

to:

t hree

Services:

Services: A private service will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:

Alzheimer's Association, 1379 Dublin Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43215 or call 614-457-6003.

John Mark Rudishauser, of Redmond Oct. 9, 1952- Feb. 28, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592

www.deschutesmemorialchapeicom

Services: No services will be held.

up

Gerald Dwayne Flath, in San of Redmond Francisco, Gerald J. attending Oct. 14, 1948 - Feb. 21, 2015 Darlene Louana Crowley St. patrick Arrangements: (Harris) Bartz, of Bend m inor Sem i n a r y , an d Redmond Memorial Chapel July 4, 1933 - Mar. 5, 2015 graduating fro m St . I g n ais honored to serve Arrangements: tius High School i n 1 9 41. Gerald's family; Baird Funeral Home of He was in th e ROTC pr o541-548-3219. Please sign Bend is honored to serve am at the U n i v ersity of our guest book at the family. 541-382-0903 an Francisco, majored in www.redmondmemorial.com www.bairdmortuaries.com accounting and g r aduated Services: i n 1947 . Du r i n g W o r l d Services: Celebration of Gerald's War II Gerry served in the A private family gathering Life will be held 1:00-3:00 A rmy i n t h e 4 1 7 2 Q u a r will be held at a later p.m. Tuesday, March 10, termaster Depot Co. in the date. 2015 at the Opportunity Asiatic Pacific Theater as Foundation, 835 E. Hwy supply depot commander. Dean Ross Hansen, of 126, Redmond, Oregon W hile w o r k in g f o r th e Bend 97756. Y osemite Park an d C u r r y July 14, 1962 - Feb. 23, 2015 Contributionsmay be made Co., Gerry met a vivacious to: Arrangements: N avy v e t eran f r o m N e w The Opportunity Autumn Funerals, Bend Y ork n a m e d M a r y P a g Foundation, P.O. Box 541-318-0842 liuca. Romance led to their 430, Redmond, OR www.autumnfunerals.net m arriage i n S . F . o n J a n . 97756, in lieu of flowers. Services: 2 8, 1950. G e r r y a n d h i s Private family services bride lived in West Covina, Edna "Juanita" Kirzy, will held at a later date. C A fo r 3 6 y e a rs . Th e y of Bend raised three children while Jan. 9, 1926 - Feb. 26, 2015 G erry w o r ke d a s a n a c Nancy Irene Wood, of Arrangements: countant, general manBend Baird Funeral Home of ager, and insurance salesJan. 15, 1928 - Feb. 28, 2015 Bend is honored to serve man. After an economic Arrangements: the family. 541-382-0903 s lowdown i n t h e ' 7 0s, h e Autumn Funerals, Bend www.bairdmortuaries.com r eturned to s chool a t C a l 541-318-0842 S tate L o s A ng e l e s a n d Services: www.autumnfunerals.net earned a teaching credenA Memorial Service will Services: tial. He then taught for the be held on Saturday, At her request no M ontebello S c h oo l Di s March 21, 2015, at 11:00 services will be held. trictfor 16 years. He was AM at Partners In Care Contributionsmay be made active in his church parish Hospice House to: and i n th e Ch a r i s matic Conference Room, Partners In Care/Hospice Renewal Movement. Gerry located at 2075 NE Wyatt House, 2075 N.E. Wyatt and Mary m o ved to B end Court in Bend. Court, Bend, Oregon Contributionsmay be made in 1989. They participated 97702. to: in the St. Francis of Assisi Partners In Care p arish, a t t e n ded p r a y e r 2075 NE Wyatt Court m eetings, an d Ger r y James "Jime Robert Bend, Oregon 97701 h elped lead r etreats. H e Sutton, of La Pine www.partnersbend.org became a E uch aristic Mar. 30, 1932 - Mar. 4, 2015 m inister a t St . Ch a r l e s Arrangements: Medical Center and served Baird Memorial Chapel of for 25 years. H e a lso volLa Pine is honored to u nteered f or I nt e r f a i t h serve the family. C aregivers a n d d o n a t e d 541-536-5104 gallons o f b l o o d t o th e Oct. 9, 1952- Feb. 28, 2015 www.bairdmortuaries.com A merican Red Cross. A f John w a s b o r n i n Ft . Services: ter his wife's death in 2010 Bragg, North Carolina. He A family gathering will be at Hospice House, he volheld at a later date. u nteered t h er e f o r P a r t - g rew up i n P o r t l and, OR a nd the f a m il y m o ved t o Contributionsmay be made ners In Care until s h ortly Beavercreek, OR when he to: before his death. Heart 'n Home Hospice, G erry l o v e d t o tr a v e l , was 12. He attended MolaPO Box 3540, La Pine, h ike, camp, ski , l i sten t o lla Union High School and C lackamas Comm u n i t y OR 97739, music, swim, r e ad, p aint, C ollege. Later i n l i f e , h e 800-HOSPICE, garden, and m eet p eople. www.gohospice.com His faith, optimism, gener- worked for Reddaway and o us spirit, c u r i osity, a n d then retired i n R e d m ond, energy kept him going as OR. He was a v e r y s p i r i tual if he were a younger man. man. He loved to raft and He survived a rollover acc ident sh ortly b e f or e h i s fish the C l ackamas River ( among others) and e n 90th birthday and went on Jan. 22, 1944- Feb. 25, 2015 to celebrate his 90th in his Ioyed many miles of hiking w h i l e p h o t o graphing B everly passed away o n hometown with his family. February 25, 2015, in Bend, C rowley i s s u r v i ved b y n ature. Hi s t r u sted c o m anion Dusty (border cola t the age of 71, with h e r h is d a u g h t er , Suz a n n e son at her side. ( Scott) Thomas o f B u r n s ; ie) was always by his side. He is survived by his parB everly wa s b or n J a n u - s on, Dave (Marian) of Las e nts, Joh n a n d V i r g i n i a a ry 22, 1944, to I t h a a n d V egas; d a u g hter , P a u l a R udishauser, s i ster, L e e C harles Babcock i n N e w - (Curtis) Hansen of Covina, (Harold) H a r t feil, berg, OR, and was one of CA; a n d gr a n d c h ildren, Ann e ight ch i l dren w h o g r e w Monica, A d r i an , M e l anie, brothers, James (Cindy) up in and around Eugene, L ucas, K a tie, E r i ca , a n d R udishauser a n d D av i d R udishauser, dau g h t e r , OR. Ryan. A ngela R u dishauser, an d Beverly mar ried C h arles He was preceded in death five nephews. W afford o n Oct o b e r 8 , b y his w i fe, M a ry; hi s i n No service will be held. 1 960, in V a n couver, W A . f ant d a u g hter, L i s a ; h i s D eschutes M emor i a l They settled in Bend, OR, brother and sisters; and an C hapel i s e n t r usted w i t h in 1979. infant grandson. John's arrangements. Beverly was a loving and T here will b e a M a s s of devoted wife and mother. C hristian b u r ia l o n S a t . , S he w a s pr e c e ded i n March 14, 2015 at 10 a.m. Food, Home 8 Garden d eath b y h er h u s b a n d , at the Historic St. Francis C harles o n A ug u s t 11 , of Assisi Church at FrankIn 2 011. She i s s u r v ived b y l in and L ava i n B e nd . A her son, M ar vin W a f f ord; rosary will be said at 9:30 grandchildren , A k ael a a .m. T h e r e c e ption f o l • • Th eBulletin W afford a n d C o d y W a f - l owing the funeral w il l b e f ord; a n d s i b l i n gs , I r i s , a t D o u bletree b y H i l t o n Bob, Dennis, Dick, Donna, H otel, 30 0 N W Fr a n k l i n Carol and Greg. A ve. ( a c r os s f r o m th e Where Buyers N o services will b e h e l d church). Autumn Funerals And Sellers Meet per her request. is in charge of a rrange1000's Of Ads Every Day D eschutes M emor i a l ments, an d c a n s u g g est C hapel i s e n t r u sted w i t h where to donate in lieu of ClaSS1 „IedS her arrangements. flowers.

John Mark Rudishauser

Beverly Ann Wafford

AT HOME

DEATHS

Jeanne Maxine Eastman Zimmerman

Apr. 24,1935- Feb. 22, 2015 Ruby J e a nette S c h l aht w as born t o R e u bi n a n d L ouise S c hlaht i n Twi n F alls Idaho o n A p r i l 2 4 , 1935. Ruby died February 2 2, 2 0 1 5 a fter s u s taining an unexp ected vi r al i n f e ction of the heart leading to severe heart f a ilRuby Kraus R uby's f a mily, w h i c h i n cluded siblings Bill, D i ane and Jim, settled i n S c apo ose Oregon d u r ing h e r igh school years. T h e r e, R uby m e t a nd mar r i e d Gene G r os s i n 1954 . G ene's parents, Te x a n d Gin thought of her as their o wn daughter. G e n e a n d Ruby lived for a time in tiny B locksburg, Cali fo r n i a

Dec. 28, 1922- Mar. 4, 2015

Jeanne Maxine Eastman Z immerman w en t t o j o i n o ur h e a venly f a t h e r o n March 4, 2015. Jeanne was born December 28, 1922, in M edford, O r e g on . Her family moved to Bend, Ore gon, when sh e w a s s i x m onths old. She grew u p in Bend with her three sist ers, Marge, Dorothy a n d Virpnia. Dorothy and Virginia p r e c eded h e r i n death as di d h e r p a r ents, E d an d T r u d y E a s t m an and her husband, Arlie. J eanne an d A r l i e Z i m m erman w er e m a r r ied i n B end o n J u n e 1 4 , 1 9 4 1. T hey h a d t wo ch i l d r e n ; Edwin A. Zimmerman that lives in Bend an d Sh aron L. Zimmerman Kr opf t h at lives in Prineville, Oregon. Arlie a n d J e a nn e r a i s ed their two children in Redmond, Oregon. Jeanne w o r ked at where Gene began logging. H odecker's p o t at o w a r e They lived in a t in y single w ide t r a iler w h er e R u b y h ouse fo r 2 5 y e a rs , a n d b egan raising t h ei r t h r e e t hen A r l i e a nd Jea n n e bought 5 a cres just south young children. R uby and G ene moved back t o O r - o f R e d m ond , o n Can a l Blvd., and put in a S enior egon and eventually settled i n McMinnville. T h e y d i - Citizen mobile home park. They had that for 15 years. vorced in the 1970's. Ruby married Ron Kraus in 1988. When they sold that t h ey T hey l i v e d i n Su n r i v er , r etired a n d tr a v e le d a l l T ucson a nd Redm o n d . over the United States for Ruby loved t o r e ad, p l ay many years. J eanne l o ve d t o sh o p , golf and bridge, and spend t ime with her family. H e r t ravel, f i sh , h u n t , m a k e f riends w ere v er y i m p o r - quilts and play cards. Her r andkids were the joy o f tant to her. She loved their er life. She is survived by dog, Lady, and cat, Spooky. Ruby was always "dressed h er two children, Ed Zi m t o th e n i n es" an d w o u l d merman a n d h i s w i fe , Sandy (Mayhugh), Sharon never leave the house withKropf; an d h e r h u s b and, out make-up and every hair E .J. Kropf , s even g r a n din place. R uby w a s p r e ceded i n kids, an d 1 3 g r e at-grand kids. death by her p arents, and Jeanne lived i n C e n t r al sister, Diane. Survivors inO regon most o f h e r l i f e . clude her husband, Ron; her S he di d li v e i n Mi l t o n three children, Cheryl, Terr ie a n d K e n n eth ; R o n ' s F reewater, Oregon, fo r a children, Tom (Cathy) and s hort p e r io d o f h e r l i f e Dan; eight g r a ndchildren; before h e r a nd A r li e moved b a c k to B en d , seven great-grandchildren; brothers, B i l l (L l o y dean) w here sh e r e s i ded u n t i l 2 011, at w h i c h t i m e s h e and Jim (Julia). P lease join us fo r a C e l - moved to Prineville to live h er dau ght e r , e bration o f L i f e a t 1: 0 0 w it h M arch 1 4 , J u n i pe r G o l f son-in-law a n d g r a n d son until her death. Course, 1938 SW E l k horn Ave., R e dmond, O r e gon. At her request there will be no service. Those who Bring your favorite stories wish may v i sit th e o n l i ne about Ruby to share. Ruby w as cared for i n h e r f i n al r egistry fo r t h e f a m il y a t d ays by t h e s t aff a t S t . www.niswonger-reynolds. com. Charles Redmond. F a m ily w ould l i k e to exp r e s s t hanks t o t h e m f o r t h e i r kindness and skilled care. Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve Ruby's f amily. Please sign our on l ine gue s t b ook at www.redmondmemorial.com

ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:

Dirk Shafer, 52: Former Playgirl magazine centerfold who chronicled his experiences as a closeted gay man in a 1995 mock documentary, "Man of the Year."Died on

Thursday in West Hollywood, California.

Bertrice Small, 77: Convent-educated writer w hose

dozens of bodice-ripping romance novels titillated readers for decades. Died on Feb. 24 at her home in Southold,

New York, leaving her 57th novel unfinished. — 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. Theymay be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020

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Thelma wss born to parents Clarence and Jennie Larson in Randall, lowa. She grew up on the family farm with three brothers and one sister. After graduating from high school, Thelma moved to Des Moines, lowa, where she worked until she met and married Carl Potthoff. They had three children together. In 1976, Thelma moved to Oregon to be closer to her oldest children who were living in Bend. She enjoyed her job hostessing at The Riverhouse restaurant for several years. In 1996, Thelma moved to Redmond after purchasing her own home and remained there for 29 years. She was a great help to her son-in-law and daughter working at their business, Sully's Italian Restaurant as a hostess/manager until she retired at age 80. Thelma was an avid walker. Her legs were her transportation and she walked to and from work, church, stores and just for enjoyment. Thelma loved people and visiting as well. She combined the two on her walking routes by stopping in and supporting local businesses and getting to know people. Thelma was a wonderful listener and genuinely interested in people's lives. She was a friend to all with a beautiful smile always ready. Thelma wss a talented seamstress and loved to sew. She loved to work in her flower garden and kept her yard groomed to perfection. Thelma was an avid reader and also enjoyed spending time in the kitchen cooking and baking for her family, hosting many birthday and holiday parties. Faith wss an important part of Thelma's life. She was a member of Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond where she had many friends. Most of all, Thelma loved and was devoted to her family. She was the best mother, grandmother and great grandmother imaginable. She was always supportive, encouraging, kind and loving. Thelma was happy and enjoyed life. She always looked at the positive and found enjoyment in every single day. Thelma was always thankful and appreciative for everything in her life. She had amazing strength of character and determination. She enjoyed her independence and lived on her own until her passing. Thelma is survived by her children Greg Potthoff, Carlye Seitz (Peterj and Julie Potthoff, all of Central Oregon, 6 grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren, all who loved and adored her. She also left behind brothers David Larson (Judyj, Lawrence Larson (Joaniej and sister Betty McDowell (Ralphj. A celebration of life will be held at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 14, at Zion Lutheran Church in Redmond. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations to St. Charles Hospice or Zion Lutheran Church. tr ~ V~

A


SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Yesteryear

BITUARIES

ber of Commerce Bulletin,

Today's landing involved In recent years our friend 1,400 Leathernecks, the first endured a great deal. Physi- of two Marine battalions tocal ills crippled him frequent- taling 3,500 men who were ly and the fact that only then ordered into South Vietnam did his humor seem at times to provide security at the Da to falter tells how he suffered. Nang base. It is the jumping In spite of suffering, however, off point for American and his buoyant spirit and, above South Vietnamese air strikes

mention is made of the fact

all, his interest and pride in

Continued from B1 The existence of this silica deposit, which is now hailed

as a recent discovery, has

FEATURED OBITUARY

s~

been known for some time. In a recent Portland Cham-

r I

museum

cepted it.

that "near Terrebonne a large the progress of his two fine acreage is underlaid with sil- sons kept his head unbowed. ica in one of the largest and T here is g r ief i n B o b purest deposits in the United Gould's going but h appy States." In a volume on the memories of him are left. geology of Oregon by the late Professor Thomas Condon New theater raises tower

against north.

t he

B5

Visitors to the High Desert

Museum this weekend got to "meet" such notables from

the history of the west as Sarah Winnemucca,John Strong Newberry and Mark Twain.

The characters, portrayed by f ourth-grade students

Comm u n i st from Bear Creek Elementa-

ry School, represented various eras in the development

justspend a quiet evening with some old records, or how tomake parentsfeel

of the i ntermountain west. In step with the Spirit of the

West Exhibit, the costumed youngsters offered visitors information on such historion building the statement is made that Two couples, all Bend res- cal periods as native people, "extensive beds of silica are The new Tower T heater idents, spent a quiet evening fur traders, overland migrafound fossil along the upper presented its first "show" to- with some old phonograph tion, exploration and survey, Deschutes River in old lake day as workmen erected the records the other night. And hardrock mining, placer minbed deposits." tower portion of the building what an evening it was. All ing, settlement and the buckAccording t o P r ofessor while scores of Bend visitors four like music. One of the aroo era. Condon this substance is the watched from the streets four had bought, and kept out Teacher Lynda Hatch said

a

U.S. Air Force via The New York Times file photo

Lt. Col. Dean Hess, in the cockpit of his F-510, decided to leave his ministry end enlist in the Aviation Cadet Program after the

remains of one celled plants

below. At one time this af-

of the hands of the children

the 26 students who staffed

whose cell coating was silica

ternoon, at least 100 people watchedfrom the eastside of

all these years, a number of exceptionally good records

the scenes spent several

Wall Street as portions of the tower were lifted to the top of

albums o f

and it is the accumulation of these shells, or coatings that

makes the mass of the de-

Japanese bombed Pearl Harbour. He wes portarey& by Rock

posit. Residents of the Lower

Hudson in the film "Battle Hymn." He died on March 2. He was 97.

Bridge country have known of thedepositforyears. That steps are now being taken to develop the silica industry is regarded with

Preacher pilot aided Korean orphanages By Sem Roberts

intervening to provide relief New York Times News Service for starving and homeless D ean Hess, a fl y i n g children orphaned by the preacher who unwittingly war. bombed a German orphanAccording to the National age during World War II Museum of the United States and six years later helped Air Force, Hess; Lt. Col. Rusrescue hundreds of Korean sell L. Blaisdell, a command foundlings endangered by chaplain; Staff Sgt. Merle Communist troops converg- Strang; and other 5th Air ing on Seoul, died Monday at Force airmen and Korean his home in Huber Heights, social workers started what Ohio, near Dayton. He was they called Operation Kiddy 97. His death, after a short ill-

ness, was confirmed by his son Lawrence.

Car.

They rounded up orphans in Seoul, found them shelter and medical care, and collected contributions of

As a young minister of the Disciples of Christ church, food, clothing and cash. AfHess preached his first ser- ter commandeering 16C-54 mon at 16 and flew a Piper transports, they evacuated Cub as he hopscotched from the children from Incheon to parish to parish in the Mid- Jeju, an island off the southwest. But after the Japanese ern Korean coast where attacked Pearl Harbor, he Hess helped establish an decided to enlist in the Avia- orphanage. tion Cadet Program. President Syngman Rhee The church elders were of South Korea awarded incredulous. But he recalled telling them: "If we believe

him a medal in 1951. Hess

later donated the proceeds our cause is just and neces- from the book and film to sary, how in all conscience support a second orphancan I ask others to protect age near Seoul and adopted it — and me — while I keep a 5-year-old Korean girl in clean of the gory mess of 1960.

war?"

A reporter for Th e A i r

His wartime exploits-

Force Times once conjec-

he flew more than 300 com-

tured that Operation Kiddy

satisfaction as being yet an-

T he clock t u rned back 3 0

nesota, was halted for a time,

County.

as workers anchored ropes in the street.

years pretty easily as Benny, LionelHampton, Teddy

Helianthi people are enjoying? If not, do so at once and you will find that it is perfectly deli-

new theater will be more than

Have you tried this new vegetable that hundreds of

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending March 7, 1940

Robert B. Gould (editorial)

if beneath the piles of bricks

two other sons, Edward and

a few small bodies still lay, as yet undiscovered." After the war, he earned

Ronald; a daughter, Marilyn Hess; seven grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

a master's degree in European history at Ohio University and was working on

His wife, the former Mary Lorentz, died in 1996. Lawrence Hess said his

his doctorate at Ohio State in 1948 when the military

father had grown up wanting to be a pastor. According

recalled him. (By then the Army Air Forces had become the Air Force, a separate branch.) He was deployed to Korea, ostensibly to train the fledgling South Korean air force, but there was no keeping him out of combat — or from

to an article in Life magazine in 1957, when the film "Battle Hymn" was released, H ess oncesaid his life so far

— it was not even half over — had been a confluence of flying and faith. "Flight brought me many times closer to God," he said.

Meanwhile the V i rginia Historical Society h elped y oung students f l esh

James was as clear as a belL

Combat-ready Marines land in South Vietnam

out

sketchy background information on the hardrock mining period, a Chinese store in John Day sent a book that helped with research into the settlement era, and Elko,

Woody Herman was great, as always. Combat-ready U.S. MaThe evening wore on and rines swarmed ashore today the discussion grew warm. and took up defense positions One of the couples, the elder, around the Da Nang air base plumped for the return of the only eight miles from Com- big band. The other felt the munist North Vietnam. day of the big band was dead

Nevada,came through with information about Guadalupe Garcia, a saddle and harness

maker. The students also scoured

the local library, read journals and photocopied old news articles to learn about their characters' lives. Hatch

I t was t h e f i r s t M a r i ne forever.

credited the youngsters with conducting college level research in some cases. She also praised the excite-

25 YEARS AGO

can step to "widen the war of

in the real people who shaped Oregon's past.

For the week ending

Fourth grade pioneers learn living history at

aggression."

knew him who was not his f riend. There was n o o n e

who knew him well whose feeling of friendship did not grow into something akin to affection. Bob Gould was a good

0

ployed him, the state, Bend

and other Central Oregon cities, the county and scores

of firms and individuals. He worked at the jobs he had to

portance in the county that

paving in Bend, Burns and

eye," he wrote."I wondered Lawrence, he is survived by

that lasted half an hour.

ment the project fostered as it stimulated students' interest

translated as "By faith I fly." A fter enlisting, he w a s

Ohio. He never returned to the ministry. Besides his son

Shannon Applegate, and received a return phone call

ly protested the amphibious March 7, 1990 operation as another Ameri-

does (not) have his mark on it. He laid out most of the ad-

"But it seemed to stare at me like some m alevolent

wrote a letter to a r e lative

North Vietnam i m mediate-

standards were high. There is hardly a road of major im-

Marietta, Ohio. His father,

acters. Hatch said one girl portraying Jesse Applegate

passed away. None would leavea more numerous company of friends. Almost everybody knew him; no one

do and he did them well. His

tion of the bomb casing, and Lemuel, was the city gova moment later the insides of ernment's electrician. His the building spilled out," he mother, the former Florence Miller, was a homemaker. wrote. Sometime later, driving a Hess was a graduate of Marijeep through Kaiserslautern, etta College. he learned that the blackAfter returning from Koened shell of the building rea, Hess served in recruitthat his bomb had destroyed ing and public affairs roles had been an orphanage and until he retired from the Air a school for hundreds of Force in 1969. He later taught children of local war work- high school e conomics, ers. He tried not to look. history and psychology in

cases to research their char-

than that felt since Bob Gould

at the center of the story: an i ts intended target in t h e F-51 bearing the number railroad yard." 18 and, on the engine cowlAs he flew back to France ing, Korean characters that from Kaiserslautern, he re-

the wall from the penetra-

"living history" characters were portrayed by children. The 9 an d 10-year-olds went to great lengths in some

Another album contained

There are few, if any, of us landing in a combat zone since the Korean War. would cause more sorrow C ommunist C h i n a an d

mission, accomplished with a degree of success because at least one bomb had found

er he had killed anyone, but sent to France in 1944 and was more concerned about flew 63 c o mbat m i ssions whether he had fulfilled his there for the Army Air Forc- mission. "If I was suffering," es. On one, he wrote in "Bat- he wrote, "it was in some tle Hymn," he was strafing remote and s u bconscious railroad yards at Kaiser- part of my mind; for when I slautern, Germany, when a became a combatant, it was 1,000-pound bomb he had with the full knowledge that dropped overshot its target I had to accept killing in beand struck a brick apart- half of the way of life I had ment building. Dozens were sworn to protect." killed. Dean Elmer Hess was "A little hole appeared in born on D ec. 6 , 1917, in

vacation i n N e w O r l e ans, she visited an historic house in the French Quarter where

Adding t o

here in Bend whose death

it seemed like just another

called, he wondered wheth-

the project when on spring

70 feet above the level of the three dozen favorite Glenn street. Miller numbers. They kept two or three plants of it make rolling along all evening. The beautiful greenery for the two Dorsey brothers, Tom50 YEARS AGO garden. It is specially adapted my and Jimmy, sounded just to dry farming and 250 bush- For the week ending as good as they had years els may be obtained from an March 7, 1965 ago. The trumpet of Harry

erwise have given the service he did to those who em-

to the film and, for the airborne scenes, flew the plane

Hatch was inspired to create

cious. Beside being a food product it is ornamental and

acre. Get it at Shaw's Feed Store or write Fletcher Edwards, Box 286, Bend.

months studying characters. An adult volunteer at the

museum during her off time,

Wilson and Gene Krupa took

dif f i culties turns at their specialties. The o f workmen, a s t if f w i n d only argument was whether whipped over Bend as the or not, in fact, Goodman had work was under way. put together the best of the The tower that is to top the "big name" bands of all time.

engineer. He could not oth-

He was also a consultant

era. The record player was the high building. hooked up, and the four spent A long boom, very much the evening just listening. resembling a slanting teleThere was a collection of graph pole, was used as the Benny Goodman classics. A metal parts of the tower were good many of our younger lifted to the top of the build- readers may not even have ing. All traffic on Wall Street, heard of Benny Goodman. between Franklin and Min-

and Korea and retired as a lieutenant colonel — were immortalized in an autobi-

Rock Hudson.

t h e 1 9 3 5-1945

other phase of the exploitation of the resources of Crook

bat missions over Europe

Car representedatonement of sorts for the accidental bombing in Germany. "I do not know," Hess said. ography, "Battle Hymn," and Of course, anyone would be a movie of the same name. sympathetic to the plight of ("Wing and a Prayer" was children, he said, but added, taken.) He was played by "At the time of the bombing,

old (editorial)

ditions to Bend. He planned and supervised th e s t r eet Lakeview. He ran the lines

for a good many miles of railroad, his last employment

of this nature, just finished,

having been on th e new Brooks-Scanlon road toward Sisters. His map of Deschutes

County and his various maps of Bend testify to the care, the skill and the accuracy with

which he did his work. But a man doesnot make and keep friends because he is a good engineer or whatever else his profession may be. Nor did Bob Gould. Friend-

ships have their bases on other qualities and he had them in a r are combination. His

honesty and sincerity, and above all, his droll humor drew one to him. It was fun

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

Q Where

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

The Riverhouse Convention Center 2850 Rippling River Court, Bend

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

to be with him and to hear him tell a story or relate an experience, more often than

not one in which the joke was on him. Many of the things of life were touched with humor

for him and friends always shared the jest. On the serious side and in c onnection w it h h i s w o r k

he was capable of a rare detachment. Better than any he

could hold a question up, ex-

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

To reserve your seat: CAU. 541.382.1778 I E-MAIL Seminars@oregonCommunityCU.org

amine it on every side with

all personal feeling eliminated and reach a conclusion. It might be a conclusion opposed to his own interest or his belief of what ought to be.

-

If logic led to the result he ac-

Find It All

Online

bendbulletin.com TheBulletin

'Securities andsdvisory services offered Srough LPL Financial and Registered Investment Advisor, member FINRCVSIPC. Insurance products offered through LPL Financial or its licensed affiliatea Oregon Community Credit Union and Oregon Community Investment Services ere not registered broker-dealers and ars notaffiilated with LPL Financial.

Not NCUA Insured

Not C r e dit Union Guaranteed

May Lose Value


B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCUWeather, lnc. ©2015

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 64' I f '

Mostly sunny andmild

I

ALMANAC EAST: Sunshine mixed with a few clouds and remaining quite warm. Clear and mild tonight. Still warm tomorrow.

TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 64 26'

Low

49 26'

70' in 1 9 14 3'in 1951

PRECIPITATION

Cannon / Tigamo • 64/46 Mc innvill

sunshine andtuming quite warm in the Lincoln afternoon. Mainly clear 60/43 and still mild tonight.

34'

"'" ~

33'

3 7'

68/40

66/31

• •

• Eugene

• 64 / C e Grove Oakridge 66/46

/39

62/ Gold ach 60/

0'

Gra a

UV INDEX TODAY

Ham on

ROAD CONDITONS Fcr web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbulletin.com/webcams I-64 at CabbageHill: Mostly sunny andmild today; dry conditions. Mainly clear tonight. US 20atSantiam Pass:Mostly sunny and mild today.Mainly clear tonight. US 26 at Gov't Camp:Sunnymuchof the time and mild today.Mainly clear tonight. US 26atOchoco Divide:Mostlysunnyand warm today.Clear to partly cloudy tonight. ORE 56 atWigamette Pass: Mostly sunny and mild today.Clear to partly cloudytonight. Mostly sunnytomorrow. ORE 136 atDiamond Lake:Mostly sunny and mild today.Mainly clear tonight.

62/25

tario 31

Valee 64/40

Nyssa 64/ 3 6

untura • Burns J63/31 Riley 64/24

Chr i stmas alley

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

58/32

62/25

• Burns Jun tion • 63/28

• Paisley

Rorne 64/25

Klamath • Faga

• Lakeview

67/27

McDermi

66/23

63/24

Yesterday Today Monday

Yesterday Today Monday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 62/40/0.00 62/41/pc57/39/pc La Grande 63/28/0.00 62/27/s 67/30/s 63/24/0.00 62/25/s 64/28/s La Pine 66/19/0.00 64/29/s 65/31/s Brookings 55/39/0.00 61/45/pc 63/47/s M e dford 71/3 5 /0.00 74/37/s 72/40/s Bums 67/23/0.00 64/24/s 66/26/s Ne wport 52/4 5 /0.00 60/42/pc 58/43/pc Eugene 64/33/0.00 66/37/s 67/39/s No r th Bend 55 / 46/0.00 64/44/pc 63/45/s Klamath Fags 68/20/0.00 67/27/s 67/27/s O n tario 64/27/0.00 65/31/s 66/32/s Lakeview 70/18/0.00 66/23/s 67/26/s Pe ndleton 64/ 3 5/0.00 64/36/s 67/38/s

3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.

'Baker C

64/21

City Astoria Baker City

The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmiiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor sysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low,

'66/28

73/3

Yesterday Today Monday

T

• Silver Lake 66/27 66/27 • Chiloquin •

Beaver Marsh

Medfo d

61/

2 p .m. 4 p .m.

La Pine 65/31

• Ashl nd

Bro ings

JosePh Grande • Union

6 27

• John eU • Prineville Day 1/25 65/31 • P a lina 6 2/2 6

• Fort Rock Cresce t • 65/25

Roseburg

Low: ta'

• Mitch ll 63/26

n

' Re d Brothers Su iVero 64/31

70/42

at Lakeview

• • 61/32

Graniteo 59/31

29

• ~ 36

Camp Sh man Red

R

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 68/3 4/0.0069/40/s 67/40/pc Prinevigs 70/ 2 2/0.0065/31/s 65/31/s Redmond 68 / 22/0.0066/25/s 67/26/s Roseburg 69 / 39/0.00 70/42/s 71/43/s Salem 68/33/0.00 67/37/s 68/38/s Sisters 67/21/0.00 67/28/s 67/27/s The Dages 6 8 /32/0.00 69/38/s 73/38/s

Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 1 08 ~

08

~ 08

~ t aa

NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY(for the

~ 208

~ 408

Cslgs 56/32

5 41/41

46 contiguousstates) National high: 90 at Death Valley,CA National low: -12'

~ 308

49/40

~ 508

~ 608

• Billings

~ 708

** * * * ~ T

Wi nip

34/ 4 Bismarck 47/27

~ 608

~ 908

0'

~ 10 0 8 ~ 11 0 8

Que c 29/8

o d ur Bay **

oio

*

*

SKI REPORT

'+„

sfffsx p, land® hgffo o *

Yesterday

Today Monday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 59/34/0.00 Akron 38/1 5/Tr Albany 35/8/0.02 Albuquerque 62/32/0.00 Anchorage 42/35/0.66 Atlanta 63/30/0.00 Atlantic City 37/9/0.00 Austin 60/34/0.00 Baltimore 45/6/0.00 Billings 63/24/0.00 Birmingham 63/24/0.00 Bismarck 49/29/0.00 Boise 62/35/0.00 Boston 38/1 7/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 33/15/0.00 Buffalo 31/14/0.02 Burlington, VT 30/1 6/0.00 Caribou, ME 28/5/0.00 Charleston, SC 61/30/0.00 Charlotte 61/23/0.00 Chattanooga 62/25/0.00 Cheyenne 52/26/0.00 Chicago 44/24/0.00 Cincinnati 48/21/0.00 Cleveland 41/1 9/0.00 ColoradoSprings 52/26/0.00 Columbia, MO 63/37/0.00 Columbia, SC 65/27/0.00 Columbus,GA 67/31/0.00 Columbus,OH 42/1 6/0.00 Concord, NH 37/-1/0.00 Corpus Christi 60/46/0.00 Dallas 61/28/0.00 Dayton 47/22/0.00 Denver 52/26/0.00 Des Moines 53/31/0.00 Detroit 41/1 8/0.00 Duluth 33/23/Tr El Paso 66/43/0.00 Fairbanks 33/25/0.25 Fargo 43/28/0.00 Flagstaff 51/1 9/0.00 Grand Rapids 41/14/0.00 Green Bay 42/15/0.00 Greensboro 57/20/0.00 Harrisburg 42/3/Tr Harfford, CT 39/9/0.00 Helena 61/35/0.00 Honolulu 76/67/0.01 Houston 60/35/0.00 Huntsville 61/25/0.00 Indianapolis 42/21/0.00 Jackson, MS 64/26/0.00 Jacksonville 61/39/0.00

Hi/Lo/W 55/44/c 39/29/pc 39/19/sf 62/35/pc 29/12/sf 67/47/pc 46/32/pc 51/43/r 47/28/pc 56/33/s 66/45/c 47/27/s 62/35/s 43/27/pc 41/23/pc 30/25/sf 35/18/sn 29/4/c 71/46/pc 68/48/pc 64/43/pc 46/25/s 39/24/c 48/31/pc 38/29/pc 42/25/pc 61/35/pc 72/48/pc 69/49/pc 41/30/pc 38/1 6/c 61/52/r 51/42/r 43/31/pc 45/24/pc 49/30/pc 39/29/pc 38/21/c 71/42/pc 22/-1/sf 42/25/pc 56/24/s 36/26/c 42/22/c 64/44/pc 42/27/pc 43/21/c 58/31/s 75/63/c 54/48/r 60/42/c 42/30/pc 62/45/r 71/51/c

Hi/Lo/W 51/39/sh 44/32/pc 39/18/sf 59/34/pc 20/6/s 63/54/r 48/34/pc 53/43/r 51/33/pc 60/35/s 60/54/r 57/30/s 65/37/s 43/27/pc 41/26/pc 36/26/pc 35/17/sf 27/8/sf 73/56/pc 67/50/c 59/50/sh 52/29/s 43/31/s 52/37/pc 42/30/pc 48/26/s 54/38/pc 73/55/c 70/58/r 46/34/pc 41/16/sf 64/49/r 50/43/r 48/35/pc 53/27/s 54/37/s 43/32/pc 42/32/s 66/42/pc 7/-18/sf 49/30/s 54/23/s 41/29/pc 42/31/s 65/48/c 46/31/pc 44/20/pc 59/35/s 77/63/pc 57/50/r 56/51/sh 48/35/pc 59/53/r 76/60/pc

Amsterdam Athens

55/39/pc 55/47/sh 73/61/sh 79/56/s 95/79/s 57/24/pc 75/59/s 59/39/pc 68/48/pc 50/26/s 85/67/s 83/58/pc 84/61/pc 56/32/s 85/71/pc 46/35/pc 49/34/c 58/37/pc 82/56/s 74/65/pc 50/44/c 71/53/pc 79/54/pc 80/67/pc 72/50/s 57/40/c 71/36/pc 89/71/s

53/41/c 55/46/sh 74/61/sh 80/54/pc 96/78/s 39/22/s 73/64/s 54/39/pc 69/49/c 51/29/s 84/71/s 85/56/s 85/62/pc 63/29/pc 85/73/s 53/36/r 50/39/r 59/39/pc 81/57/1 76/62/pc 50/44/r 72/58/pc 77/56/1 79/67/pc 72/49/s 54/45/c 69/38/s 90/72/s

Ski resort New snow Anthony LakesMtn 0 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 0 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 Vail, CO 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 Squaw Valley,CA 0 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 0

Base 50-5 0 1-5 24-5 3 50-9 1

32-69 1-5 26-5 0

53-60 59-5 9 30-60 22-5 3

62-62

31-6 1

Source: OnTheSnow.com

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 42/38/0.05 44/33/r 39/24/sh 70/37/0.00 63/32/pc 57/35/pc

City

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vsgas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis

44/16/0.00 75/48/0.00 45/19/0.00 64/24/0.00 60/28/0.00 86/54/0.00 50/23/0.00 45/17/0.00 56/27/0.00 Miami 80/68/0.46 Milwaukee 46/21/0.00 Minneapolis 44/28/0.00 Nashville 61/22/0.00 New Orleans 62/40/0.00 New YorkCity 38/18/0.00 Newark, NJ 38/11/0.00 Norfolk, VA 52/18/0.00 OklahomaCity 69/29/0.00 Omaha 59/29/0.00 Orlando 70/53/Tr Palm Springs 87/63/0.00 Psoria 51/28/0.00 Philadelphia 41/11/0.00 Phoenix 83/55/0.00 Pittsburgh 41/13/Tr Portland, ME 38/14/0.00 Providence 35/8/0.00 Raleigh 58/20/0.00 Rapid City 58/29/0.00 Reno 68/28/0.00 Richmond 55/18/0.00 Rochester, NY 30/8/0.05 Sacramento 76/42/0.00 St. Louis 67/35/0.00 Salt Lake City 59/31/0.00 San Antonio 61/43/0.00 San Diego 84/54/0.00 San Francisco 73/48/0.00 San Jose 76/44/0.00 Santa re 60/26/0.00 Savannah 63/33/0.00 Seattle 62/39/0.00 Sioux Fags 45/28/0.00 Spokane 61/32/0.00 Springfield, Mo 67/31/0.00 Tampa 73/51/Tr Tucson 79/53/0.00 Tulsa 69/28/0.00 Washington, DC 49/19/0.00 Wichita 70/28/0.00 Yakima 69/33/0.00 Yuma 83/59/0.00 i

.

ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Mild with partial sunshine

showers; cooler

57/37/0.00 P 55/48/0.39 • 62/35 51/2 dW L ; Milws ** *fdew Auckland 68/63/0.36 40/24 * etrolt Baghdad 77/45/0.00 I atYork, PA Che Bangkok 95/81/0.00 Philsdelph /23 o Precipitation: OAB" 44/ /31 Beijing 55/36/0.00 Ssli Lake ity 'es ~Co Beirut 79/59/0.00 at Miami, FL sh s hclvco Omah uis fe • De '/30 58/34 Berlin 54/39/0.00 47/50 45/2 W I ngton Las V ss Bogota 68/52/0.10 d 75/5 Kansas Cfty St. uis Budapest 48/25/0.00 43/32 Buenos Ai r es 88/64/0.00 mvu Chsrl Los Ao lss Cabo San Lucas 79/63/0.00 57/4 8 • • L' Cairo 81/56/0.00 Phoen Anchorage Albuque ue klshoma Ci • At Calgary 45/21/0.00 • aa/54 5 40 29/1 ey/4 Cancun 82P5/0.00 ,.PF. Bir inghs 7 /55 xxx x 0' gjvr ~*tunesu Wps Dublin 57/48/0.03 46/ 4 atll 1/ xx xxxx e s w's. Edinburgh 55/47/0.36 64/33 d d d d Geneva 52/28/0.00 • rishdo Harare 78/55/0.00 w Orleans 48 7 43 Hong Kong 69/63/0.00 Honolulu x x CMhuafuar' d d d d d d 69/55 Istanbul 49/46/0.00 74/43 Jerusalem 72/52/0.00 Johannesburg 76/57/0.53 Lima 78/69/0.00 Lisbon 72/48/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 61/43/0.00 T-storms Rain Showers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 73/30/0.00 Manila 89/75/0.00 Bu +8

ee/33

Bois

31'

i

Umatilla 68/36 • ermiston lington 66/35 Meac am Losti ne 36 dt6> " 5• 8/ 2 63/ 3 4 Enterprlse

• pmy

/39

60/42

6pct

ik (4

TRAVEL WEATHER

/36

a

THU RSDAY

66'

Variable cloudiness

Mostly sunny andmild

• W co

67/3

Newpo

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

l

'r~

he Dall • 64/ • 69/36 • HeP Pner Gove nt • upi Condon /32 Cam • 66 61/

andy•

Sale

High: 72' at Corvallis

Apr 4

Tonight's slty: The double clusters of Perseus is high above the northwestern horizon after sunset.

~ s

31'

Rufus

Portland

60/43

YESTERDAY

c

s 1~ 4

66'

Hood RiVer

WEST: Quitesunny Yach today with just a Today Mon. few clouds near the 7:31 a.m. 7: 2 9 a.m. coastline; a warm F l oren e 7:02 p.m. 7: 0 3 p.m. afternoon. Clearand 61/44 10: 12 p.m. 11 :11 p.m. mild tonight. 6:4 7 a.m. 9:1 7 a.m. OREGON EXTREMES New First Full

10 a.m. Noon

""

WED NESDAY

Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows.

60/41

SUN ANDMOON

Q Mar 13 Mar 2G Mar 26

LOW

Mainly clear

ria

4

Seasid

CENTRAL: Plenty of

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 2.30" in 1906 Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.19") Year to date(normal) 1.11 " (2.61 ") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 17"

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset last

TUESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

High

MONDAY

4

38/26/c 41/30/pc 75/51/s 75/50/s

48/36/pc 54/42/pc 56/24/s 59/33/s 51/40/r 51/46/sh 80/52/s 82/54/pc

49/37/pc 55/43/pc 42/24/c 43/31/s 55/41/r 53/48/sh 8101/sh 8393/pc 40/26/c 41/32/s 42/23/pc 48/33/s 57/40/pc 58/48/sh 69/55/c 69/62/r

46/32/pc 46/34/pc 45/29/pc 46/31/pc

56/37/pc 55/40/pc 64/43/c 57/41/c

54/28/s 58/36/s 77/63/c 82/65/sh 87/58/s 87/58/s

46/29/pc 49/36/pc 46/31/pc 48/34/pc 82/56/s 82/57/s 40/30/c 45/31/pc

39/20/pc 40/20/pc 42/22/pc 42/23/pc 66/43/pc 64/46/c 51/28/s 59/28/s

69/33/s 69/33/s 59/35/pc 61/41/pc 32/24/sf 37/24/pc 76/45/s 77/47/s

55/37/pc 53/41/pc 58/34/s 59/36/s 55/48/r 57/48/r 74/55/s 73/55/pc 67/50/pc 69/51/s

74/46/s 58/29/pc 71/46/c 61/41/s 46/25/s 60/34/s

76/49/s 55/28/pc 74/58/pc 61/41/pc

55/31/s

61/35/s 58/35/pc 54/39/c 79/66/pc 82/67/sh

77/48/pc 78/49/s 62/40/pc 59/40/c 51/36/pc 56/40/pc 65/37/pc 60/34/pc 67/32/s 71/36/s 84/55/s 86/56/s

I

Mecca Mexico City

99/75/0.00 76/48/0.00 Montreal 28/9/0.00 Moscow 37/30/0.04 Nairobi 88/58/0.00 Nassau 86/72/0'.00 New Delhi 79/59/0.02 Osaka 49/43/0.30 Oslo 43/36/0.00 Ottawa 28/10/0.09 Paris 59/30/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 86/73/0.28 Rome 55/41/0.00 Santiago 82/52/0.00 Sao Paulo 77/68/1.26 Sapporo 40/28/0.21 Seoul 49/21/0.00 Shanghai 52/35/0.01 Singapore 91/77/0.04 Stockholm 45/30/0.00 Sydney 79/66/0.00 Taipei 66/59/0.00 Tel Aviv 85/64/0.00 Tokyo 47/41/0.37 Toronto 30/18/0.04 Vancouver 52/36/0.00 Vienna 50/34/0.00 Warsaw 45/32/0.13

99/75/s 71/52/pc 31/19/sn 38/37/sn 88/59/s 83/70/s 81/53/1 56/42/pc 56/41/pc 32/16/sf 62/40/pc 87/75/1 57/39/s 86/58/s 76/67/r 42/30/pc 54/34/pc 52/44/r 9108/t 56/37/s 82/70/pc 76/60/pc 77/58/pc 50/46/r 31/26/c 54/40/s 51/34/pc 52/36/pc

101/77/s 73/51/pc 31/21/sf 43/34/pc 87/57/s 83/71/s 79/52/pc 55/33/r 50/44/pc 32/19/pc 56/41/c 88/76/t 59/40/pc 88/59/s 77/66/r 43/41/r 39/21/pc 50/34/r

gom/t

48/37/s 85/71/s 65/54/r 79/63/pc 53/45/r 38/26/pc 54/37/s 51/33/pc 54/32/pc

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

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

Five years ago, looking for ways to diversify in a struggling economy, the Kristofersons cast their eyes toward

recreational opportunities and discovered zip-lining. They studied the adrenaline-inducing sport in several locations before starting construction on their own set of lines.

Canopy Tours Northwest opened on the farm in August 2011. The erstwhile

dairy barn is now the staging area, where trained guides outfit adventurers with sturdy harnesses while outlining safety considerations. Then it's off to the woods,

Guides instruct soon-to-be zip-liners on the logistics of gliding between trees during an orientation session in the original Kristoferson dairy barn.

which rise on an east-facing hillside adjacent to the Camano Ridge Forest Preserve. There are six zip lines, their platforms

anchored firmly to old-growth conifers,

NORTHWEST TRAVEL

some with panoramic outlooks across Livingston Bay toward the Washington state mainland. But this isn't a high-anx-

Next week: Oregon's Washington County

iety course. Children as young as 5, and one bucket-lister who came on her 97th

birthday, have easily handled the moderate network with the guides' assistance. And Kristoferson is especially pleased

to have added an education component to the sport; interpretive displays atop each platform showcase sustainable agricul-

By John Gottberg AndersoneFor the Bulletin

tureand forestry practices."If someone

CAMANO ISLAND, Wash. — When Alfred Kristoferson and his can takeaway maybe one thing they fn u

didn't know before, we think that's good,"

:s

son, August, established a dairy operation on this once-remote island he said.

t

in 1912 and introduced the process of pasteurization to the Pacific No ferry, no town Camano Island, an hour's drive north

Northwest, they could not have known that a century later, the five- of Seattle, is full of surprises. An unincorporated district of Island County, it

generation farm would have zip-liners soaring through its trees.

is separated from Whidbey Island by as little as 2 miles of water but more than

I was among the brave. As I glided on steel cables between Douglas 30 miles of highways. No ferries serve fir and Western red cedars late last month, peering through the greenery to distant views of 10,778-foot Mount Baker, I gave silent i'

thanks that I wasn't slogging through a milking bar in rubber boots. August Clark "Kris" Kristoferson III, four siblings and their

Wearing a harness attached to two steel

cables, a zip-liner cruises through anoldgrowth forest at Canopy Tours Northwest. Six zip lines have plafforms anchored

Camano; instead, a two-lane bridge from Stanwood, a mainland town of about 5,000, passes over marsh and the skinny Davis Slough to arrive at the northeast-

ern edge of Camano Island. Heavily wooded Camano is said to be home to 17,000 full-time residents, but a visitor would never know it. There's no town center — no town at all, in fact-

children now control this 231-acre Camano Island farm. The cattle and a couple of shopping areas. One of

firmly to Douglas firs andWestern red ce-

have departed, but the family continues to produce hay in its fields

ders, some with panoramic views beyond the trees.

and timberfrom a designated 100-acre tree farm.

them, at Terry's Corner where state Highway 532 enters from Stanwood and Interstate 5, has a visitor orientation.

SeeCamano/C4

. !' E

ue

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson (For The Bulletin

The Olympic Mountains rise in the distance beyond Whidbey Island in this view of Camano Island at Alger Bsy. A19th-century logging camp like many other locations on 22-mile-long Camano, the bay is now home to some of the island's 17,000 residents.

3/14/15: It's a bigdayfor lovers of pi — and lovers of pie By Mac McLean The Bulletin

chance to do math, eat pizza and pie and recite the digits of

Redmond Community

a mathematical constant that

Librarian Josie Hanneman hopes Saturday's date-

never ends (see "If you go").

March 14, 2015 (3/14/15)will bring back memories for

a really cool idea to have

anyone who has ever tried to

calculate the area of a circle, the volume of a sphere or how

"I thought it would be fun with math, science and treats," said Hanneman, who

an event wherein Central Or-

celebrated Pi Day when she taught school in Bolivia five years ago. She wanted to bring the party to Central Oregon with this week's celebration. For people who might not remember anything they

egon fifth-graders will get a

learned from their math

long it takes a pendulum to

complete its swing. That's right, it's National Pi Day, andthe Redmond Public

Library is celebrating with

Ifyou go What:Redmond PublicLibrary celebrates Pi Day When:3 p.m. Saturday Where:827 SWDeschutes Ave. in Redmond Cost:Free Contact:541-312-1050 classes in school, pi is an irrational number calculated by dividing the circumference of a circle by its diameter.

It has an infinite number of

digits that according to the Pi Day website go like this:

Heisenberg's uncertainty principle and Albert Einstein's field equation.

67,890 digits of pi from memory in 2005; and Yasumasa Kanada, who calculated a 1.24 trillion-digit version of pi

3.14159265358979323846264

Because of its utility and

.... And so on. Referred to by the Greek

infinite length, pi gained a cult following among mathe-

with a Hitachi supercomputer

letter tr, pi plays a key role

maticians such as Archime-

Physicist Larry Shaw added his name to this distinguished group of pi lovers when he and some of his friends marched around a

in several mathematical formulas, including those used

des, who calculated pi out to three digits in 250 BCE by to calculate the area of circle figuring out the perimeter (trr'), the volume of a sphere of a 96-sided polygon he fit (4/3 trr') and the surface area inside a circle; George Reitof a cylinder (2trrh+ 2trr'). It wiesner and John von Neumakes appearances in the mann, who stretched their formula Isaac Newton used calculation of pi to 2,037 digto calculate the length of a its using an ENIAC computer pendulum's swing, Werner in 1949; Lu Chao, who recited

in 2009.

circular space at the San

Francisco Exploratorium on March 14, 1989, before going back to their office and eating

fruit pies. See Pi/C7



SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

u stomone- a tourisa oo stai'ttoseein an By Scott Kraft

smarter. My research turned up an interesting possibility. Shanghai Pathways offered

Los Angeles Times

SHANGHAI —

A s th e

nighttime lights of Shanghai

what i t

winked to life late on a damp

trips," including educational tours, and it specialized in small groups. Several dozen

Saturday afternoon, the tour guide said she had one last stop in mind: the marriage market in People's Park. "I just hope we're not too

photos." Janny, who is 30, started the agency four years ago after working as an event planner for expatriate companies.

c a l led " a lternative

She has a staff of five tour

guides, each with a specialty.

site, including such things as feng shui consultations and dumpling making.

late," she said as we hailed a

still in the park, all parents

ai

wise, I might as well look at

tours were listed on its web-

taxi and headed for the huge park in central Shanghai. The m a rriage m a rket wasn't listed in my guidebooks. But I had spent the day following her suggest ions, exploring parts o f Shanghai I wouldn't have discovered on my own, and I had yet to be disappointed. It was as though I had hired a local friend for the day. We found dozens of people

C3

After lunch, we took a taxi

I didn't see exactly what I

to the Old City of Shanghai, once surrounded by a wall, and strolled through a food

was looking for, so I emailed

market on the narrow streets.

Janny, t h e

seemed to instantly grasp my goaL She recommended the

Though the skies were overcast, the temperature was surprisingly mild for late au-

Custom Tour, a seven-hour

tumn. Because it's on the East

guided trip that she tailors to

China Sea, Shanghai tends

a visitor'sinterests. At 2,200

to have milder winters than

ow n e r , wh o

yuan (about $350) for one or two people, it was pricey. But it seemed worth a try. On a cool fall Saturday, Janny showed up at my hotel at 10 a.m. She carried a backpack and anumbrella,looking more like a graduate stu-

, III

Beijing. We paused for tea, and I

II}%N

was a little worried. During

I lll l s l ss nllll Ii

I

my visit to Beijing, I had been taken tosee a "free" tea cer-

nnIIIn

IIIIIIII lIlllnll •IIII I IIIIII}III IIIIIIII lll

emony and then pressured to

shopping for mates for adult children.Some had created signs touting their offspring dent than a business owner. and affixed those ads to open She had roughed out an umbrellas on the sidewalk. itinerary, starting with the

buy $40 tins of tea. In the Old City, though,

Others were clumped in cir-

Bund, th e

half-hour with owner Chen

cles, engaged in animated conversations.

front and Shanghai's most famous site, a viewing point

Shop and spent a pleasant

h i s toric w a ter-

"Why just the parents?" I

for the high-rises across the

asked Janny Chyn, the guide. "The children h a r dly ever come," she said. "They wouldn't want to be seen here. These are the parents

Huangpu River. The curving, mile-long embankment,

who are embarrassed that their children aren't married

we pulled up two stools at t he Yellow M o u ntain T e a

W angqing sampling a n d talking about tea, its history, how to drink it and its im-

portance in China. ("Slurp it," Janny advised. "The loud-

dotted with stunning build-

Scott Kraft/ LosAngeles Times

The high-rises of Pudong, on the east bank of the Huangpu RIver In central Shanghai, can be seen

asked whether I w anted to

an international settlement of American and British finan-

from the Bund.

buy. (I didn't.) The marriage market in People's Park was our last

ciers and later a major commercial center for East Asia. borhood that until the midShe translated some of After strolling along the 20th century was considered the signs. One described Bund, we crossed a bridge to French soil. a 32-year-old man w i t h a the Astor House Hotel, where The all-you-can-eat dim master's degree in econom- we wandered upstairs to see sum brunch (88 yuan, or ics and an annual salary of the historic rooms where about $14 per person) includ300,000 yuan (about $48,000) Charlie Chaplin and Albert ed steamed pork dumplings, who owns his own house. He Einstein, among other nota- pan-fried pork bun, deepwanted a wife who was 28 to bles, stayed. fried turnip cake, bean curd 30, about 5 feet, 4 inches tall, Then we went next door to soup, Shanghai smoked fish with a bachelor's degree. a part of the Astor that had We leaned in to a rapid-fire been converted into residencdiscussion between the moth- es. It was surreal: Some of the and are desperate.

er of an unmarried woman

dark teak hotel room doors

and the parents of an unmarried young man. They were showing photographs of their children, like old friends, and discussing career ambitions. (The woman, a nurse, made more money thanthe man,

bore their original numbers, and hallways had been con-

which seemed to surprise his

W e caught another t a x i

and black rice in lotus root. Janny showed me how to use a spoon and chopsticks

to eat the Shanghai specialty, soup dumplings. (The key: Hold the dumpling in a spoon, lift the gathered top with your chopsticks and take a small bite, gently sucking out the broth.)

Categories listed

OOES NOT INCLUDERJRNnURE OR UNFINISHED CRAFTWOOD

DOES NOT INCUJDESBISONALDEPARTMENT

• Netal Decor Sale

with stoves and sinks. We passed a woman rinsing abalone and a man chopping garlic.

• Collage Frames

All the while, I realized I

to the Bird and Cricket Mar-

• Candleholders wA~s TA~

was privy to something special. Taking a customized tour of Shanghai was my way of dealing with a predicament: I had one free day and wanted to see the city's high-

ket. Amid the chirping, Janny explained how many Chinese people revere crickets and keep them as pets. (She has two.) The qualities to look for,

• Decorative Memo Soards, ChalIrboards 8 Corirboards

lights. But I also wanted to

she said, are color and "the

step off the beaten path, maybe meet some residents, sample good local cuisine and get a sense of what it is like to live there. Finding all of those things in one group tour didn't seem likely. I'm also not a fan of the big-bus tour. I was reminded of that a year ago when I had arranged for a p ersonalized tour of the Great Wall near Beijing and, on the way back, my guide took me to lunch at a giant restaurant — hundreds of idling buses outside

sound of their song." Some were d ime-sized,

We made quick work of the rest of the market: birds,

turtles, chinchillas, a creepy collection of newborn rat pups and large vats of justcooked bird food and wiggling worms.

E L

5$"NF

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OUR WEDDING. FLORAL 4 MRIC

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FEATURING ANERICANAS, CERAMCQAT49. FOEK ARTSI

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SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD I K E S

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the popular Shanghai neigh-

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• Plush Animals • Paper Plstes & Napldns • Home 5 Party Demr • baskets • Phs5c Eggs • Cralsa Hore

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W AR M T H

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All llems labdcd Sudlo nls a Hcn

A DRIFT

Birdcafles a Terrariums • Decoratiye Vegetable-

Eaater Items

'40',SFF '

Next up was lunch at Lynn,

6 8 5 3 2 9 7 14

• Decorative lanterns,

INCWDES GLASS DEPARTNENT, FLORAL GLASS VASES s CRAFT GLASSCONTAINERS DOES NOT INQ.UDE CRIFT STNNEDGIASS OR GIASSTAIRETOPS

aspring

a modern Chinese restaurant

4 63 7 9 2 5 8 1 ' 5 18 6 3 4 9 2 7 7 92 5 8 1 4 3 6

DOESNOT INCLUDE lARGETRUNKS OR CRAFTIkPAPERCRAFTINe STORAGE

J

accents and industrial Chi-

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU

• Trays, Colsters a Place Mats • Knobs, Drawer Pulls I Handles • Glass Decor Sale

Afl Items labeled.

and knickknacks, American

F r ench C oncession,

• All Wicker, Decorative Boxes a Storage

ITEMS LABELED THE SPRING SHOP, EASTER,ST. PATRICK'5 AND SUNNEL> ARE NOT INCLUDED IN HONE ACCENTS SALE

market was filled with kiosks hand-painted boxes with air vents.

WALL s TABLE

• Framed Art I Canvas Art

ITENS PRfCED$24.99 4 VP

sold for fighting — were nearly as large as a fist. The selling cricket accessories, including cricket homes-

• Nen's Netal 8 Wood Decor

CHOOSE FROM METAL WALL DECOR AND FUNCTIONAL s DECORATIVE NETAL ACCESSORIES INCLUDES nETAL CONTAINERS IN OUR FLORAL s CRAFT DEPARTMENTS DOES NOT ING.UDE FVRNITURE

(they are cheap in Shanghai)

but others — especially those

Over lunch, we t a lked stop. about her philosophy of travAs we headed to the hotel, el, which led her to create the I thought back on the day. It company. would take weeks, months "When I travel," she said, and even years to know a " it's important f o r me to city as large and complex as connect with someone who Shanghai. But, in a little less knows the place, who can than eight hours, thanks to pass alongthe experience of someone who did know it knowing that place. Other- well, I had made a start.

DECOR s FINISHED DECORATIVE

verted to open-plan kitchens

parents.)

er the better.") No one even

ings, once was the heart of

50 N F

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Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

During its heyday, the Cama Beach Resort was wildly popular, if there's any truth to this whimsical painting that hangs today in the Cama Beach Cafe. But the park has a long history that speaks to prehistoric mammoths, native fishing camps and19th-century logging.

A carved sasquatch peers from trees on the west side of Camano Island, perhaps a reminder that one doesn't always know who

lurks in the forest. One notorious resident, teen-aged Colton

WhidbeyIsland

Harris-Moore, became known as the "Barefoot Bandit" for his activities. >+3

CamanoIsland

r"

Everet

;t

Seattl Carli Krueger/The Bulletin

Camano Continued from C1 The other, which includes the island's only supermar-

A dessert of sweet-woodruff ice cream, wild-ginger cake with elderberries and a cherry-blossom garnish is indicative of chef Ja-

ket, is 2 miles farther down

Aldous took over as chef at the Camano Island Inn in February.

son Aldous' focus onusing complex local ingredients in cooking.

the road beside the public golf course.

Camano Island is shaped much like a sea otter, its muz- The Camano Island Inn, built in1904 as a boardinghouse for mill workers, was renovated as a hotel zle pointing toward the land between World War I andWorld War II. Now again a luxurious accommodation, the nine-room inn bridge to Stanwood, its long features a spa and an intimate bistro. tail dangling 22 miles south

Aldous, 30, was the sous

renovated for overnight use. Guests are expected to pro-

west coast and just north of its sister, Camano Island State Park.

vide their own bedding, and just above the Saratoga Pas- most of the smaller cabins sage shoreline: It's on display share use of a bathhouse. A in the office of park Manag- few of the larger cabins have er Jeff Wheeler, along with kitchen and private bath faprehistoric teeth and other cilities. Each cabin is charmartifacts. ing, especially on sunny days, Coastal Salish p eoples when the snowy crest of the made this shoreline a sea- Olympic Mountains may be sonal camp for at least 1,600 seen rising above Whidbey in years, perhaps much more. the west. They harvested fish and shellIn the heart of the shoreline fish, foraged roots and ber- cabin community is The Cenries, hunted seals and deer. ter for Wooden Boats, which By the late 1800s, a logging occupies the resort'sformer camp had been established on boathouse. Today it continthe site; it was succeeded by ues to rent boats and canoes what Wheeler described as "a as it did during the Stradley stump farm with cattle" until era, but Operations Manager the Stradley family purchased Shane Bishop now directs a the acreage and opened it as a mostly volunteer crew in the family fishing resort in 1934. construction and renovation Cama Beach remained with of arange ofothervessels,inthe Stradleys for 55 years. cluding kayaks and baidarkas When the resort closed in (Aleut kayaks). 1989, heirs requested its transPrivate vehicles aren't per-

Cama Beach

fer to the State of Washington. Cama Beach State Park for-

Point, site of a late-19th-cen-

tury sawmill, is the creature's shoulder. The island's history has generally been quiet, but folks still talk about Colton Harris-Moore, the teenage "Bare-

foot Bandit," who was raised on Camano. Arrested in 2011

after stealing a small plane and teaching himself to fly, he was sentenced to prison for

multiple instances of burglary, theft, malicious mischief and other crimes. He became an

anti-hero to some observers, although Camano citizens don't hold him with that level

of esteem. What they do hold in high regard are t heir t w o

s t ate

parks, especially Cama Beach, midway down the island's

was unearthed in a landslide

mitted on the beach, so park

on another small island, not

tendrils of foliage surround

unlike Camano. I was fortunate to eat withhim on his first

the full moon and embrace

nesting birds. Karla Matzke has become prepared a repastto rememknown for "hard-edged realber — smoked mussels with ism," depicting rural buildseaweed and sorrel, black cod ings and cityscapes in soft with wild peas, roast duck pastels. She also is a sculptor with mushrooms and rutaba- in stone and steel, and she exga and a dessert of wild-herb hibits a range of her work at ice cream and ginger cake. the Matzke Fine Art Gallery His farm-to-table approach and Sculpture Park in a forest — the inn has its own produce clearing off South Camano

toward Everett. Iverson Spit

represents the otter's shell- lumbia mammoth, one that fish-nibbling paws; Utsalady stood 9 feet tall at the shoulder,

the leaves of her paintings,

c hef a t a Jam e s B e a r d most of which seem to be in 50 Award-nominated restaurant shades of green. Long, wispy

Beach Cafe, a popular local breakfastspot and venue for community events.

night on the new job, and he

The Island Inn Many of the visitors who

stay overnight on the island eventually find their way to the Camano Island Inn, for

pampered lodging in one of its nine rooms, for a spa treat-

farm, less than a mile away-

ment or for a meal in its intimate bistro.

is perfect for Camano Island

Drive. At the same time, she is a

v isitors. The flavors of h i s

tireless promoter of the Cama-

Located above a sunset-fac- dishes are complex and multiing beach, the Inn traces its or- layered. "I like to focus on inigin to the mill town of Cama- gredients," the chef said, "and no City, a few miles north of you can't beat the ingredients Cama Beach. Built a r ound here." 1904 and barged to its present artists site as a boardinghouse for Active mill workers, it was reborn as Aldous' culinary artistry is a hotel between World War a nice complement to the fine I and World War II. Subse- arts being created in solitary quently, it became a private

no art scene, rotating themed

exhibitions through her gallery (a current show, through April 12, features fabric art by

six women) and expanding upon her contemporary outdoor sculpture garden with contributions by many other artists.

Continued next page

studios on this island. I en-

residence and a nursing home, joyed visits with a trio of sucuntil the mid-'90s, when new cessful local artists. owners revitalized it as a bed-

Susan Cohen Thompson is

and-breakfast inn. Since purchasing the inn in

a tree person. Indeed, a tree rises through the center of the

guests must leave their cars in 2009, Ajit and Ambili Sukesan One can catch glimpses of mally opened in 2008, with small lots on the overlooking have given it another boost, the entire history of Camano many of its original structures bluff and follow short, unlit offering s everal t r e atment Island at Cama Beach. The — including more than 30 tiny trails to their rental cabins. At rooms for spa patrons and 40,000-year-old tusk of a Co- but charming guest cabinsthe top of the hill is the Cama bringing in outstanding chefs.

CRATCH

EPIT

house she shares with her en-

gineer husband near Camano

S ECT I O Pl

Island State Park. She describes her oils, watercolors

Blemtehed pmdacte that work llne.

and ceramics as expressing her spiritual relationship with

ast month, they lured Jason Aldous from The Willows Inn

Watchtrs grow end change!

nature, accented by time spent

on Lummi Island to be execu-

541-382-6223 jo/rnsonbrothersar.oom

among tribes in the Amazon jungle. Faces peer through

tive chef.

I

-

-

'ruur laeal apg>rrenoe exgrerts

MEMBER APPRECIATION

,„„„„„Ifailllllllllll

SEPTEMBER 12-19, 2015

l •~ •

• t

I g/r ((

8

: ]r,.

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I't

Shane Bishop, CamaBeachoperations manager for The Center for Wooden Boats, stands in his shop in a historic boathouse. Besides offering boat rentals, The Center has a mostly volunteer crew that builds and renovates all manner of watercraft.

\

a

'

All pricing is per person, double occupancy, cruise only, and subject to change and availability. Air, transfers, fuel

surcharges, government taxes and fees are additional. Shipboard credit is up to $37.50 per person for a maximum of $75 per stateroom. Ships' Registry: The Netherlands.


SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Expenses

moderate to expensive.

Gas,BendtoCamano Island (round-trip), 784 miles at $2.30/gallon: $72.13 Lunches en route: $20 Dinner, RockawayBar 8 Grill: $35 Lodging (two nights with breakfast), Camano Island Inn: $387.45 Lunch, CamanoLodge: $26 Dinner, CamanoIsland Bistro: $85 Zip-lining, CanopyTours Northwest: $103.27 Lunch, Red's Fish House: $12.75 Dinner, TheCollective: $17 State parks Discover Pass(one day): $10 Lodging (one night), Cama Beach State Park: $71.95 Breakfast, CamaBeach Cafe: $12 TOTAL: $852.87

DINING • Cama BeachCafe & Catering. Cama BeachState Park,1880 SW CamanoDrive,Camano Island; 360-387-3222, www.

camabeachcafe.com. Breakfast and lunch every day in summer,weekendsonlyin winter. Budget • The Camano Lodge Restaurant. 170 E.Cross IslandRoad,Camano Island; 360-387-9972, www. camanolodge.com. Three meals every day. Moderate • The Collective on Tap.848 N. Sunrise Blvd., Building F, Camano Island; 360-9268975, www.collectiveontap. com. Lunch anddinner every day. Budget • Red's Fish House. 848 N. Sunrise Blvd., Building G, Camano Island; 360-5724855, www.redsfishhouse. com. Lunch anddinner. Budget to moderate • Rockaway Bar & Grill. 326 N. EastCamano Drive,Camano (all addresses inWashington) Island; 360-926-8920, www. facebook.com. Lunch anddinINFORMATION ner. Moderate • Camano Island Chamberof Commerce. 848 N.Sunrise ATTRACTIONS Blvd., Camano Island;360• Camano Island Coffee Roast629-7136, www.camanoisers. 848 N. Sunrise Blvd., land.org Building B, CamanoIsland; • Island County Tourism Coun- 360-387-7493, www.camancil. www.whidbeycamanoisoislandcoffee.com lands.com • Canopy Tours Northwest. 332 NE CamanoDrive, CamaLODGING • Blue Moon BeachHouse Bed no Island; 360-387-5807, www.canopytoursnw.com & Breakfast. 3267 Shoreline • The Center for Wooden Drive, CamanoIsland; 360Boats. 1880S.WestCamano 387-6666, www.bluemoonDrive, CamanoIsland; 360beachhouse. com. Ratesfrom 387-9361, www.cwb.org $219. • Koffman Art with a Smile! • Cama BeachandCamano Island State Parks. 1880 S.West 578 E. North CamanoDrive, Camano Drive, CamanoIsland; Camano Island; 360-3486277, www.artwithasmile.com 360-387-3306, www.parks. wa.gov. Cabin rates from $53 • Matzke Fine Art Gallery & winter season, $71 summer Sculpture Park. 2345 Blanche season. W ay, Camano Island;360• Camano Island Inn, Restau- 387-2759, www.matzkefine art.com rant & Spa. 1054 S.West Camano Drive, CamanoIsland; • Thompson Art Studio. 2188 360-387-0783, www.camanLowell Point Road,Camano oislandinn.com. Rates from Island; 360-387-4245, www. $175. Includes theCamano thompsonartstudio.com. Open Island Bistro (dinner nightly); by appointment.

Ifyou go

From previous page Start with the beans, which Danny Koffman describes come from 32 villages in eight his production as "art with a countries i n A s i a , A f r i ca, smile." His tiny gallery is any- South America and the Pacifthing but i n conspicuous: It ic. "In one generation, we've stands at the entrance to Ter- gone from people wondering ry's Corner, where the high- what they're going to eat, to way splits at the north end sending their kids to college," of the island. Beside the gal- Ericson said. "Of course this is lery is volunteer-maintained free-tradecoffee,butit'sm ore Freedom Park, adorned with

than that. We support land

Koffman's bronze elephants. ownership for a gricultural A lifetime of often-whimsical workers, clean water and nuimages — martini men, sports

trition. Our job is to make the

cars, a smiling Albert Einstein — are catalogued and ready

whole supply chain clean." And although he spends

for framing. "I'm an artist who

about half of his year on the road, traveling between the

is also a businessman," Koffman explained with a smile. "So many people have not yet discovered Camano Island," said the bearded artist,

who moved here from Californiaseveralyearsago."Our goal is that they not only discover it, but are inspired by it. This is a place of celebration. My goal is about celebrating the things that people feel passionate about."

Coffee culture

coffee-producing communities, he is equally devoted to

his Camano Island community. The roastery anchors a 17-acre campus known as the

Camano Island Marketplace, featuring a store where island artists, writers, weavers,

woodworkers and others can sell their wares. A seasonal farmers' market is staged

around an open-air amphitheater used for music and other events. Two restaurants -

Perhaps no one feels more The Collective, a popular pour passionate about Camano Is- house with 40 taps, and the land, or life in general, than new Red's Fish House — face business leader Jeff Ericson. the amphitheater, and a yoga Having made a small fortune studiooccupies a second-story in the quick-print industry, he space above. "Where do you get a life like retired at the age of 30, moved from Arizona to Camano and this?" Ericson mused. "I think invested his millions in coffee. theinconvenience of Camano That was 23 years ago. is what creates the passion for To hear Ericson tell it, cof- Camano. You only live here fee, like money, is a means to because you really want to. "The islanders are all faman end, not an end in itself. Never mind that Camano Is-

C5

GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA

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By Melanie D.G. Kaplan Speciai to The Washington Post

GAINESVILLE, F l a. Rule No. 1 when it comes to

fleeing an alligator: Don't run in a straight line. I learned

this while standing feet from a prehistoric-looking, kayak-size animal that had

crawled up onto the bank of a canal to bask in the crisp January morning sun. "If you have to run, run zigzag," warned Brack Barker, whom I had hired to show

me around Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park in

Gainesville. "They can run fast, but only straight ahead." We'd beenwalking along a grassy path, Barker slightly in front, and he'd turned around to warn me about a

gator hidden in the grasses. I Jason Dearen/The Washington Post approached slowly and found An alligator rests on a bank at Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park in Gainesville, Florida, where park an abnormally large-headed trails let visitors get a close-up view of the reptiles and hundreds of species of birds and, if they're animal with bumpy skin and lucky, catch a glimpse of bison or wild horses. closed eyes. Rule No 2: D on't forget

your grade school science les- barking in the flatbeds of sons, in which you probably pickup trucks. Early the next learned that reptiles experi- morning, the air was chilly. encea sortofhalf-doze called I walked around the cabin thermoregulation. In plain where I'd stayed and noticed English, that means they're Spanish moss hanging not not really asleep. So even only from trees but also from though this creature was still telephone wires and street as a log, I was aware of stand- signs, making everything ing well beyond the suggest- look like it needed a good ed wildlife viewing distance dusting. and began thinking about Barker met Jason and me zigzagging. in the parking lot outside But I also couldn't dismiss Pearl's Country Store. A wiry the fact I had come to the man with a gray beard, Barkpark for this very experience. er wore wire-rimmed glasses I was traveling through the and a bandanna around his Southeast, and m y

f r i e nd neck. We drove to Paynes

Jason, a recent transplant from San Francisco, told me Paynes Prairie was filled with wildlife — not only the iconic gators, but also, surprisingly, bison, along with wild horses and cattle de-

Stalking gators

and Mickey Mouse. But fossils

We saw our first gators lined up along the waterline, their short legs half submerged — as when humans drag beach chairs to sit in

show that they once grazed

w ho used to work for t h e

about 50 bison roam the prai-

in north central Florida. Park officials decided to import 10

from Oklahoma in 1975, and — with no natural predatorsthe sand right where the surf the herd grew, inevitably causbreaks. Through binoculars, ing problems such as escapees I studied their graceless, car- to the suburbs. So a few years toon-character bodies and ago, the park culled the herd, rows of stubby teeth. removing the males and creatBarker, an anthropologist ing more controversies. Today, Florida Park Service and St. rie, but they remained elusive Augustine Alligator Farm, on our walk. dropped gator tidbits — including the fact males bel- Good'gator-dar' low during mating season to As we retraced our steps on

Prairie, stopping along U.S. set their territory. The total Highway 441 to look out to inches between the alliga-

the trail, we counted 33 alliga-

the land from an observa-

tor's eyes and snout equal the

life? Sign me up. Paynes Prairie i s a 20,000-plus-acre park less than 10 miles from the university campus and down-

tors. Jason even spied one underwater. "You've got a good tion platform. Standing on length of the body in feet, he eye," I said, squinting to find the boardwalk, surrounded explained, putting some of the animaL "I'm getting good gator-dar," by cattail and pickerelweed, our specimens at well over 8 B arker explained that t h e feet. he said, straight-faced. park was formed by a numA few times, we wouldn't Jason and I bid farewell to ber of sinkholes coming to- see an alligator nestled in the Barker, and we drove to Blue gether to create the basin tens grasses until we were nearly Highway, just outside the of thousands of years ago. on top of it. One was 5 feet park, for lunch. On the radio, I "You're standing in a giant away, its eyes open and it feet tuned into an AM station that sinkhole," he said. "This used moving in slow motion as ran a 1950s-sounding promoto be underwater." though it were stretching af- tional loop for Paynes Prairie. I n th e l a t e 1 800s, th e ter anap. A scratchy voice proclaimed, 8-mile-wide prairie was a We stopped under over- "As wild as the Everglades, but lake, with fish camps, steam- cast skies and listened to easier toseeand experience!" boat charters and barges that the cacophony of squawks, Later, I walked on a f ew transported citrus. Then, squeaks, caws and chatter- trails by myself and realized suddenly, the sink drained. ing. Birds landed on the wa- my sense of place had been Just like that. Within days, ter like water-skiers, splashed completely upended. All day, the prairie went dry — and and dived under for fish, I'd forgotten I was in Florida. could do so again anytime. flapped their wings, waded The wide-open prairie made

town Gainesville. The state's

For now, Paynes Prairie has

and frolicked. All the activity

me think of the Great Plains,

looked and sounded like that of kids swimming in a massive pool. Paynes Prairie was putting on quite a show. "The coots are on the

and the Spanish moss and pickups reminded me of the

scended from those brought

over centuries ago by Spaniards. Of course, Gainesville — midway between the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of

Mexico, in north Florida — is perhaps best-known for the University of Florida Gators. I

don't generally make detours for mascots, but n o se-tosnout encounters with wild-

firstpreserve and a designat- smaller bodies of water that ed National Natural Land- drain underground to remark, the terrain was once charge the aquifer, a giant home to the saber-toothed cat reserve used for drinking and, much later, the largest

water. We drove to the northern

of remembering my whereabouts was a burst of delight march," Barker said, point- — the type of travel surprise I ing to countless small birds welcome. creating a commotion in the As I walked on the pine nee-

Spanish cattle ranch in Florida. Today, it sustains more side of the park, passing a than 20 distinct biological turtle-crossing sign and ancommunities, including more cient live oaks. La Chua Trail water. He identified the little than 270 species of birds. It is among the park's most blue heron, belted kingfisher has campsites and trails for popular because of wildlife and mockingbird.We even hiking, horseback riding and sightings. As we followed the heard the trumpeting of the cycling; because of its wide- trail along the water, Barker beloved sandhill crane. "It's a open vistas, the park is also a

pointed out birds: the anhin-

great place to watch sunrises, ga, spreading its impressive sunsets and stars. wings to warm in the sun; the red-legged white ibis, pickIn a giant sinkhole ing around in the wet ground The evening before my for snails and frogs; and the tour with B a rker, I d r o ve great black cormorant, jockinto town, passing ranches, eying an uncooperative fish vegetable stands and dogs into its beak.

Deep South. Each instance

dle-and-sand trail, the sun be-

bird-watcher's dream today,"

gan relaxing into the horizon, and the temperature dropped quickly. Iheaded back toward my car, mindfully zigzagging, just in case.

he said. Although we passed piles

www.AgateBeachMotel.eom

of horse manure and hoof

prints, we saw no similar signs of bison. Like many vis-

Private, vintage,oeeanfront getaway ewport, O tR

itors, I was surprised to learn that bison roam in a state bet-

ter known for spring training

ily. I feel like I contribute to a

land Coffee Roasters is ubiq- living economy on this island." uitous on this little island. It's

about the bigger picture.

— Reporter:janderson@ bendbulletin.com

Jeff Eric-

son, owner of Camano Island Coffee Roasters,

purchases his free-trade

beans from 32 villages in eight countries. "We

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workers, clean water and nutrition," he said, adding, "Our job is to make the whole

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DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *

By Myscha Theriault

and basic tourist amenities for

It's free to visit and hosts spe-

Tribune News Service

those who would like to stay

Diverse architectural assets, easy pet access and a slamming food scene are a few of the reasons to visit Macon, Georgia. The i nternational cherry blossom festival held in March is another. With special events, music and public art ac-

a bit to picnic and explore the

cial events for dogs and their servicehumans during warm-

cess, this annual event easily

rivals others around the world. Factor in a music history that includes the likes of Little Rich-

ard, Otis Redding, the Allman Brothers and other greats, and you can begin to see why the locals are so proud to call this place home. Bonus? Macon is

* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

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Architecture andfood scenemake

Macon,Georgia,worth thejourney

to form six ordinary words.

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Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,

more than affordable for the

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

average traveler. Here's how

Sunday, March 8, 2015

to make the most of your time when visiting this sultry South-

Political rumblings

ern city. • Architecture: Macon's historic buildings contribute a

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency C)

A mid the ACBL Fall Championships, the natives were restless. Concerned players were grumbling about — among other things s hortcomings i n t h e

league's technology, including a $1.9 million outlay for a new scoring system that became a fiasco. Moreover, though the ACBL has s ubstantial c a s h re s erves, i t s l eadership a p p roved a hef t y smcharge for p l a y w i t h " t a b le screens": wooden partitions that prevent a player from seeing his partner. They are used in the late stage of major events. The gripe seemed to be not the money but that no explanation for the surcharge was forthcoming. (See bridgewinners.com, a site that hosts discussions on bridge-related issues.) The ACBL has historically lacked transparency. Perhaps matters will improve in 2015 with C hicago's petite but dynamic Suzi Subeck as its president. Back to bridge. A safety play gives up the chance for the maximum number of tricks but guards against a devastating loss. At m atchpoints, where overtricks at a normal contract are vital, safety plays are usually avoided. In the L if e M aster Pairs, Jim Krekorian chose a descriptive lNT second bid as South. When West led a diamond, Krekorian won with the

ten and liked his position enough to adopt a partial safety play in spades: He took the K-A. If no queen had appeared, declarer would have led a third spade toward his jack. As it was, he finessed with his eight for four spade tricks. He was sure of eight tricks in all and ended with nine — for a super resultwhen the defense slipped. East dealer Neither side vulnerable

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for peekingback in time. The Hay House, in particu-

lar, is worth a stop. A popular wedding venue with over-the-

grounds. Although fees are er weather. charged during special events, TailsSpin, a downtown pet day-to-day access to the Oc- food and accessories store, mulgee National Monument is features packaged gourmet free. snacks and other goodies that • Appetites: Whether you're your pooch can enjoy with looking for roll-up-your-sleeves gusto. soul food or a high-end dinner To catch some live music and splurge, you'll find plenty of make Fido happy at the same succulent options in this South- time, check out Macon's Secern city. One fancy yet frugal ond Sunday concerts. These option is the Tic Toc Room. A free monthly events start in former music venue famous for mid-April and feature rocking hosting performances by Little tunes, a cash bar, food venRichard, Otis Redding, James dors and boatloads of enthusiBrown and more, it provides asticcanines. As parents of a a romantic atmosphere with a large pooch, my husband and streamlined, modern vibe. I were thrilled to see so many Small plates of lobster tacos, big dogs attending on the same tapenade with pita wedges and night our Labrador did. Not all calamari are available for less pet-friendly events are approthan $10, and the selection of priatefor dogs larger than a fusion sushi rolls is available loaf of bread, but this one defifor $8 a piece. nitely is. If you're in the mood for If you want to check out local something a little more sub- venues where canines aren't stantial, there are a number allowed, People and Pets proof seafood entrees available vides day care and personal for less than $20, including attention for roughly $20. If grilled salmon, jumbo lump you'd like a little luxury in your crab cakes, shrimp with grits choice of overnight accommoand lobster ravioli. Dovetail

dations, the 1842 Inn is worth

is a splurge-worthy choice as consideration. well, although more suited to Nightly happy-hour recepcarnivores. tions and period decor comIf traditional Southern fare

bined with plush rooms and

is your food of choice, head to complementary br e akfast public for tours. Those inter- H & H Soul Food. Managed by make this venue a huge bang ested in getting a glimpse of the same woman for decades, for the buck. history's high society lifestyle it's an experience sought by loRack rates start as low as can do so with an affordable cals and tourists. A four-piece $189,and the $50 petfee isper $11 entry ticket. The Cannon- fried chicken order with two stay, not per night. Rooms toball House offers a similar rolls is $6, with home-style ward the back of the property historical experience, albeit a desserts ringing in at $2.50. can take breakfast on the paless elaborately decorated one. Francar's Wings is also of note, tio instead of the front parlor. This structureis so named be- selling wings with a long list of Our lovable drool machine is causeitmanaged to survive a sauce options, along with waf- known to have trouble inpublic cannonball strike and remain fles and other regional sides. dining situations, but we found • Animals: Traveling with that booking an early breakstanding. Tours last 45 minutes, and entrypasses are $6. a four-legged family mem- fast slot and hooking her leash Perhaps the oldest architec- ber? Macon makes things to the sturdy porch rails while ture Macon has to offer, how- easier with a number of ca- we shared our treats to be a sitever, is the Ocmulgee National nine-appropriate a m e nities. uation where she could easily Monument. Featuring ancient First, there's the Macon Dog succeed. It's also important to note Indian earth mounds and var- Park, which features separate ious tribal artifacts from dif- play areas for large and small that the breakfasts here are ferent habitation periods, this breeds, summer shade,seating pretty high-end, so if you're National Park Service venue benches and a small stream staying a minimum of two provides access to the interi- complete with a waterfall for nights, the morning meal more than makes up for the pet fee. or architecture of the mounds frolicking. top opulence, it's open to the

Opening lead — 0 5 (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

a n uorous oun in an

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ByShayneBenowitz~Miami Herald

here's a Spanish proverb that goes, "How wonderful to do nothing, and then rest." It's found printed on T-shirts at Ernie's Bar, a humble beach shack on Anguilla's Shoal Bay, a stretch of powder-white sand and endless turquoise-teal water, once named the No. I beach in the world by Travel Channel. It's a sentiment that's easy chair at the cliffside restaurant to settle into on this Caribbe- overlooking Bobbing Cove an island of 35 square miles Beach, you're firmly situated with a population of 15,000. inside an F. Scott Fitzgerald A British territory and northernmost of the Leeward Is-

novel on the Cote d'Azur.

The hotel is nothing short lands, Anguilla's a three-hour of spectacular, and this exflight from Miami and then a tends to the cuisine directed 20-minute ferry from St. Mar- by Executive Chef Jeremy tin/St. Maarten. Bearman, formerly of New Anguilla has long been a York City's five-time Michelin-starred restaurant Rouge sanctuary for c elebrities in search of under-the-radar re- Tomate. Think elevated Caribtreats (it's where Brad and Jen bean fare and a farm-to-table had their infamous breakup sensibility with entrees such walk on the beach) and mere as lobster and conch pizza, mortals desperate for rest tamarind-glazed duck with and relaxation in style. Un- cornbread and coconut butter, blemished by cruise ships, the and for dessert, light-as-air, island's slight removal from house-made coconut yogurt the beaten path makes just served with tropical fruit. the difference. Days are spent Malliouhana.aubergeresimply gazing into the horizon sorts.com; 877-733-3611; Rates while lounging by an infini- from $1,042 per night. ty pool perched precariously atop a craggy cliff overlook- Viceroy — Themodernist ing the sea, a surprisingly tirThe Viceroy is a true stuning exercise. But one happily ner from the moment you set succumbs to the languorous foot inside the lobby. All right pace that seems finely attuned angles in a pastiche of natural to the gravitational pull of the grey- and sand-toned marble, moon's tides and the sunset. it opens up to the dramatic The big questions of the day Sunset Lounge set atop a cliff, are: Beach or pool? Rose or framing a panoramic vista of rum punch? Kindle or hard- Meads and Barnes bays. An back? Lunch on my lounge adjacent infinity pool — the chair or at the poolside cafe? first of three pools on the reWith luxurious resorts veer- sort — is nearby, lined in black ing toward the sublime, where pebble for effect. The archiyou stay in Anguilla makes all tectural concept by Wimberly the difference. These four ho- Allison Tong 8: Goo is modern tels are leading the pack with minimalism rising from the aesthetically unique offerings organic landscape, serving to for discerning travelers of highlight its natural beauty. varying tastes. Purveyor of style Kelly Wearstler designed the hotel's

Malliouhana —Tropical eclectic

interiors with surreal objets d'art such as petrified wood

Ce Blue is the answer. A year old, situated high in the lush green hills of Crocus Bay, Ce Blue offers eight two-story private villas of up to five oceanfront bedrooms with vaulted

ceilings and a softly modern, organic design scheme. Each room is complete with a stun-

ning en suite master bath featuring an open shower and egg-shaped soaking tub, some with impressive views of the bay, especially at sunset. Idealfor a group offriends MallIouhana's tiered infinity pools overlooking the CarIbbean. or a family reunion, each 8,000-square-foot villa boasts a 5,000-square-foot wooden

the resort'sstandard rooms

deck with pool and outdoor shower and dizzyingly sweeping views of the sea. Accommodations come standard

and suites aren't quite at the same level of modern luxury, even after a recent multimillion-dollar update. with gourmet k i tchen a nd With four dining venues, dining room, an outdoor bar- Pimms is the resort's high-end becue, washer and dryer and restaurant, featuring a fusion living room w it h ment center.

entertain- of Caribbean and European

flavors with pristine views of o nsite Maundays Bay. The adjacent restaurant and bar p opular Spice Moroccan Lounge is with locals that specializes newly opened in a plush, exotin gourmet pizza, as well as ic setting. Ce Blue has an

room service and the option to

It's the perfect place to mus-

arrange for an in-villa private ter up some energy for a drink chef. While there's no direct with live music after a day at beach access, a short walk

the beach, and then of course,

down a steep road leads to rest and do nothing. Crocus Bay beach with waterCapjuluca.com; 888-858sports and two more restau-

5822; Rates from $1,397 per

rants where you can charge meals to your room. Ceblueanguilla.com; 800304-1484; Rates from $2,400$3,600 per night (based on four-night minimum stay).

night.

Cap juluca — Moorish marvel

W here to eatand drink • Blanchards — Situated in

a cozy cottage on Meads Bay beneath a pink facade and teal s hutters, Blanchards is r u n

by an American ex-patriate couple and has been a go-to

Cap Juluca, the grand dame Malliouhana, A n g uilla's tables,chairs carved of natu- of Anguilla's resorts, opened original luxury resort, which ral wood with larger-than-life in 1988 and is situated on 179 opened in 1984, re-emerged in Renaissance-style p r o files acres of Maundays Bay, an November 2014 after a three- sculpted into the backs and, intimate, white-sand crescent year closure and an 18-month at Aleta restaurant, gilded fish with impossibly pale blue warestoration by Auberge Re- lining the walls. ter. Its design is inspired by sorts. The result is a dazThe 35-acre resort, built in Greco-Moorish architecture, zlingly transporting 55-room 2009, houses 166 serene ac- which can feel more novelty

spot for fresh Caribbean fare

boutique hotel positioned on

the inquisitive foodie, arrange a tour of CuisinArt's hydroponic farm, where they grow

commodations with

p r i vate than luxury, yet there's some-

and warm hospitality for 20 years. Start with the Caribbean sampler and feast on fresh

grilled mahi, jerk chicken and crayfish (similar to lobster island and its menus). • CuisinArt Resort — For

thing decidedly r omantic about the place. Its 15 white

indoor-outdoor showers and

• Sandy Island — Charter a boat with Shoal Bay Scuba or

mosaic floor reflects celadon

soaking tubs, the suite also

take the sea shuttle Happiness

s tucco vi llas

w i t h d o m ed 44 varieties of lettuce, toma-

roofs, terracotta tile floors and arched doorways contain 70 guestrooms. The new 3,290 square-foot, two-bedroom Jonquil Suite

toes and herbs in a green-

is a habitation that begs to be

lunch made of the farm's fresh ingredients poolside at Cafe

luxuriated in. With ample living space, courtyards, a full kitchen and bathrooms with

Sunset vIews wIth a bath at Ce Blue.

and equally abundant on the

25 acres of beachfront bluff. villas, townhomes and suites Upon arrival, you will regard with up to t hree bedrooms. the hotel's white box facade The rooms, bathrooms and with high-arched entryways sundecks are extra large in and chic striped awnings more Italian travertine marble with as Beverly Hills than Caribbe- private outdoor soaking pools. an — that is, until you see the From sushi at Sunset Lounge ocean shimmering through to fine dining and a lavish bufthe tiered, open-air lobby. fet breakfast at Coba, there Inside, your senses are de- are five bars and restaurants lighted with a wall adorned in all, making never leavfloor to ceiling with vintage ing the resort tempting and dive helmets. A m i r rored true relaxation all the more achievable.

Photos by Shayne Benowitz /Tribune News Service

house through water recir-

culation and drip irrigation, allowing for farm fresh crops year round. Afterward, have Med.

walls and Caribbean curio, while the adjacent Sunset Lounge features paintings

Viceroyhotelsandresorts. boasts an ocean-facing front ($10 per person round trip) com/en/anguilla; 8 0 0 -578-yard with direct beach ac- from Sandy Ground Beach 2 0283; Rates from $800 per cess, private infinity pool and miles offshore to the remote, by Haitian artist Jasmin Jo- night. Jacuzzi. pink sand beaches of Sandy You'll feel as i f y o u've Island. Spend the day snorseph depicting the Garden of Ce Blue — Secluded serenity stepped into your home away keling, frolicking in the shalEden. Outside, tiered infinity pools are adorned with yellow For those in search of the from home i n A n g uilla, low water and refueling with ruffled umbrellas. And once privacy of a condo with the ready to entertain. While the a Caribbean barbecue party. you've pulled up a cushioned servicesof a boutique resort, Jonquil Suite is i mpressive, Menu highlights include fresh

grilled lobster with coconut and ginger and rum punch.

pork ribs and chicken made from livestock raised on his • Bankie Banx's Dune Pre- own farm. Hours vary, conserve — Anguillian reggae sult your concierge. • The Pumphouse — Servartist Bankie Banx has his own delightfully ramshack- ing elevated Caribbean cuile beach bar on Rendezvous sine in a funky setting by Bay, where he performs live the old salt ponds in Sandy weekly. The governor of An- Ground, The Pumphouse is guilla is a big fan and can of- ideal for someone who wants ten be found at a private table to come for dinner and stay enjoying his music. for live music (offered nightly). • Hungry's Food Van• Tasty's — For a true taste Check out Anguilla's thriving of what the locals eat, head to food-truck scene at Hungry's. Tasty's for conch creole with Owned by aformer executive coconut dumplings, curried chef at Cap Juluca, the van goat stew, grilled crayfish, dishes up fresh quesadillas pumpkin soup and johnny stuffed with r ice, peas and cakes. carrots and your choice of filling (the lobster is superb), as See us for retractable well as soups and salads. awnings, exterior solar • Ken's BBQ — Ken's BBQ screens, shade structures. is a roadside food stand in The Sun rl/hen you wantit, Valley loved by locals across the isl and, serving barbecue shade when you needit.

IRI I Q

Pi Continued from C1 His original Pi Day celebration later inspired Dan Helerich, who created the Pi

Day website to promote "cool pi-related things from around the web" in March 2001, and

the U.S. House of Representatives, which in 2009 passed a resolution making March 14

"National Pi Day.". But while this resolution officially recognizes the awesomeness that is pi, it also recognizes a few things that

grade girls on biology, physics science right about the fifth and earthsciences tests,and and sixth grades, which is • Students who come from also right about the time they predominantly minority or start learning about pi and the i mpoverished school d i s- things it can do. tricts have the lowest math She said Pi Day celebraand science test scores in the tions — which even in the case country. of physicist Shaw boil down Former U.S. Rep. Bart Gor- to nothing more than talking don, D-Tennessee, and the about math and eating tasty resolution's other authors en- pies — can put the fun back couraged schools across the country to celebrate Pi Day in

— pizza or fruit — they want might be what helps students to eat. get over the fact they need to — Reporter: 541-617-7816, know only 39 digits of pi to mmclean@bendbulletin.com missed," Hanneman said, ex-

plaining the amount of fun to be had at her Pi Day celebra-

tion really depends on who shows up and how much pie

and attract them to study sci• Fourth- and eighth-grad- ence and mathematics." ers from Taiwan, Singapore, The more studentsare inRussia, England, South Ko- terested in math and science, rea, Latvia and Japan out- they argued, the more likely

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performed their A m e r ican they are to pay attention in peers on a series of interna- their classes and the more tional math and science tests they can learn. that were a dministered in Hanneman gave the same 2007. answer when asked why she • Students in t h e U n i t e d thinks its important for people States had shown "minimal to celebrate Pi Day. "It's a fun way to play with improvement" on their math and science test scores be- math," she said. tween 1995 and 2009. Hanneman said s t udents • Eighth-grade boys con- start to l o s e t h eir n a tural sistently outperform eighth- f ascination wit h m at h a n d

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

o o an TV SPOTLIGHT

r s 'means e o a u s

iil II 1

"Night of Too ManyStars: America Comes Together for Autism Programs"

trJ

ample of the benefits of proper stays glued to his smartphone, education and therapy. "Night of Too Many Stars" texting. Jim Gaffigan addresses arose f ro m t h e d i ff i c ulty the region's raw, miserable Robert Smigel and his wife, weather, which seems always Michelle, had in finding the to catch sufferers off-guard: appropriate educational r e"We're ANNOYED that it 's sources for their autistic son, freezing in February! We Daniel, who now is 17. To fill want to BLAME somebody: the gap in existing offerings, 'It's freezing. Obama!'" they joined with other parents who, between his chime ins,

'

a,

8 tonight, Comedy Central

By Frazier Moore The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Y ou're a

bit late to bid on the chance to join John Oliver in robbing a wine store. You're also too late to bid on taking a bow onstage with the

Actor Paul Rudd submits to

e

cast of the Broadway hit "It's

Only a Play" while Louis C.K. presents you with flowers in

front of the bemused theater patrons. Never mind. You can catch

Charles Sykes /The Associated Press

Jon Bon Jovi, left, and Will Forte perform at Comedy Central's "Night of Too Many Stars: America Comes Together for Autism Programs" at the Beacon Theatre in New York. The telethon,

man, Bill Burr, Steve Buscemi,

Gilbert Gottfried, Chris Rock don, Martin Short and Larry Of course, you can also pledge your own contribution online or by phone. And if the special number should slip your mind, Maya Rudolph will jog your memory in a rollicking routine that translates it into Roman numerals. Live cut-ins will feature a

Wilmore.

Since 2006, these biennial telethons have raised more than $18 million. Taped at Manhattan's Beacon Theatre on Feb. 28, the

evening began with host Jon Stewart reminding everyone that the purpose is not to raise money for an autism cure: "It's

about helping people who live celebrity phone bank staffed with autism right now. The by stars such as Uzo Aduba, only clinically proven treatFred Armisen, Andy Cohen, ment for autism is appropriTony Danza, Larry D a vid, ate, intensive education. "It's a great show," he addWillie Geist, Susan Saran-

Dear Abby: I recently learned

friends in the f uture regardless

of the outcome of her husband's mine has cancer.Shesharedthein- illness. formation with me during our last Dear Abby: I'm a 48-year-old meeting. I was shocked and hardly woman. Occasionally, I suffer from knew how to respond. She is not night sweats and have had a couple a close friend, but we are fond of

want to let lier

support. Smigel is an actor and a w riter best-known fo r

DFP,R

ABBY

know that I'm think-

ing of her and that I'm available if she needs anything, but I'm afraid of saying something cliched or insensitive. What is the most tactful way to do this?

— Challenged in Oklahoma Dear Challenged: Contact your friend. Tell her you were shocked by the news she gave you, which mayhave beena cryforhelp.M ake a point of staying in touch by calling to ask how she and her husband are doing. Tell her you know she might

Rudd, mouth-to-mouth, like a

J ack M c Brayer o n A d u l t Swim's "The Jack and Tri-

mother bird feeding her chick. Not pretty. But funny.

already), because they might be caused by hormonal changes in your body, and he or she might be able to recommend a medication that can help with them.

My husband enjoys turning on the

Dear Abby:What do you think of people who show up at graveside services for "family only"'? Recently, a friend passed away.

m attress heater i n

She didn't want a funeral. The fam-

of hotflashes.

o ur bed. He h a s ilyannounced there would be a turned my side on by service at the grave for family only, mistake a few times, followed by a small reception for which caused me to family and friends. roast and have an uncomfortable Well, some of the "friends" night. Even when he heats only his showed up at the service anyway. side, it's too hot for me. I wake up One of them stated, "But she was sweating and see him lying naked, like a sister to me!" I felt it was an with all his covers flipped onto intrusion. me! The family was gracious enough I have suggested he cuddle with that they didn't let these people me if he's cold. But he insists on

know their presence wasn'twel-

using the electric heater. I don't see comed.What do you think,Abby? any reason to waste the electricity,

— Family Friend From Maine

especially when it makes me unDear Family Friend:Oh, my. Of comfortable. I am thinking about course it was an intrusion. The separate beds. Please help. person who was conducting the be overwhelmed, and volunteer — Overheated in ldaho service should have spoken up and to bring food if she's too busy or Dear Overheated:Separate beds "reminded" the attendees that the stressed to cook, run errands for might be a good idea. That's a prac- interment was for family only so her or even do the laundry if her tical solution for some couples. But the family wouldn't be placed in an hands are full with caregiving. I before making the investment, awkward position. can almost guarantee that if you have a talk with your doctor about — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom do, you and this lady will be close your hot flashes (if you haven't or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY i

I

I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, feel overwhelmed by new opportunities and the work that they bring. Be careful with your finances, as you could be subject to wild swings. Avoid a devilmay-care attitude. If you are single, from August onyoucould meetsomeone quite special. Take your time getting to know each other; rushing Btafs showthe klud the relationship of day you'll Itave would be a mis** * * * D ynamic take. If you are ** * * p osltlve attached, your significant other could *** Average ** So-so be taken aback by a seemingly new * Difficult wild streak. He or she also might enjoy this change, at least for a little while. LIBRA appreciates your creativity and gentleness.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

a positive conclusion. Understand what is happening with a loved one who can't seem to get enough of you. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Be present in the moment.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You could be on top of your game,butothers seem to needyou.As a result, you might need to change any

plansyouhavemadefornow.Openupto new possibilities that surround you. Slow down andevaluatewhatis happening. Tonight: Out late.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * Be direct in how you deal with others. Your vision of what is right could differ from a loved one's. Make it OKto have different views. Resist having an argument. This person might have some trouble opening up to you. Tonight: Go for

mystery. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * * A n invitation from a friend will fit your idea of a good day perfectly. Though you might be slow to get started, you'll still get there. You could discover that a family member has some strong emotions that he or she is unwilling to share. Tonight: Where your friends are.

GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * Even if you are just at brunch, your ** * * L isten to news that is forthcom- leadership will be needed. You will have to ing. Loosen up and deal with others in a figure out what everyone wants, as peomore straightforward way. Ask questions ple seem to be drifting and not present. openly, without hostility. Refuse to accept Listen to your instincts, and let go of a poARIES (March21-April19) tentialmisunderstanding. Tonight: Touch ** * * Others' somber attitudes might information as anything but hearsay for base with an older relative. force you to reflect on what is happening now. Tonight: Make the most out of the last few hours of the weekend. around you. Whatyou perceive to be AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) happening might not be accurate. Be sen- VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You might be jolted by events sitive, yet detach to get to the bottom of a ** * Be aware of the costs of what you in the early morning. You'll like what you problem. Tonight: Visualize more of what aredoing.In some sense,a discussionon hear, but it won't be what you expected. If you desire, and then act! the homefront might not feel comfortable. you feel a need to detach and not buy in to You probably won't be able to change this news, do. A friend could act strangeTAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * A trip could be in the offing, or per- your choices right now, butyou can be ly. Let it go. Tonight: Just make sure there hapsyou canexpect a visit from someone more aware of where a loved one is com- is great music around you. you havenotseen in aw hile.A loved one ing from. Tonight: Return calls. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) will do his or her very best to be support** * * Deal with a friend directly. You LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ive. It might be a good idea to head out ** * * * N o matter what takes place, might not get the full gist of what this perto the movies to alleviate some stress. let it slide off you like water. You havean son is saying. Ask questions from a nonTonight: Work on being mellow. understanding that is unique from those judgmental point of view. An older family GEMINI (May 21-June 20) around you. Communication might seem member could have a lot to share with ** * * * Y our creativity will emerge, you. Listen carefully to what he or she has off, but just try to go with the flow. Your allowing you to be more upbeat. Extremes adaptable attitude is likely to be contato say. Tonight: Play it low-key. mark discussions, yet you will come to gious. Tonight: Your choice. © King Features Syndicate

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 800-326-3264. • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:50, 6:50, 9:55 • BIRDMAN(R)12:05, 3:05, 6:10, 9:20 • BOLSHOIBALLET: ROMEOAND JULIET(no MPAA rating) 12:55 • CHAPPIE(R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:45, 9:45 • CHAPPIE IMAX(R) 12, 3:30, 7: I5, 10:15 • THE DUFF(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:15, 6:20, 9:15 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) 12,3, 7, 10 • FOCUS (R) 4,6:30, 9:05 • HOT TUBTIMEMACHINE2 (R) 9 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 3:35, 9:45 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-l3) 12:25, 9:50 • JUPITERASCENDING 30 (PG-13)3:40,6:55 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:30, IO:30 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) I:10, 4:15, 7:15, IO:05 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:35, 3:50, 7:10, f0:10 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:45 a.m., 3:45, 6:40, 9:35 • SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS: SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:55 • SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS: SPONGE OUT OF WATER 30(PG) 2:55,6 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:10, 6:15, 9:10 • THEORYOFEVERYTHING(PG-13) 12:10, 6:20 • UNFINISHEDBUSINESS(R) f2:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:15, 9:30

7:30 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers" —A helicopter might seem like a dicey investment, and

Bob (voice of H.Jon Benjamin) learns what a risk he took when the vehicle collapses in the new episode "L'il Hard Dad." He gets Gene's (voice of Eugene Mirman) help in pursuing a refund, but it's hardly a simple matter. Scheduled to give an oral book report, Tina (voice of Dan Mintz) gets assistance — or that's what it's meant to be — from Louise and Linda (voices of Kristen Schaal and John Roberts). 8 p.m. ou 6, "Madam Secretary" —Diplomatic relations with Turkey become so dicey, Elizabeth (Tea Leoni) travels there to try to repair the damage in the new episode "The Ninth Circle." The problems stem from a video made public by that country's government — and placing the CIA's reputation in question. Jason's (Evan Roe) conflict with a bully at school leaves him facing the possibility of being expelled. 8:30 p.m. ou10, "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" —Bradley Whitford ("The West Wing") guest

stars as Jake's(AndySamberg) long-absent father in the new episode"Captain Peralta." His visit has Jake excited, but Charles (Joe Lo Truglio) wonders if the

man has a secret agenda.A

number of precinct members compete for tickets to a Beyonce concert by tackling Captain Holt's (Andre Braugher) highly

challenging quiz.Terry Crews, Melissa Fumero, Chelsea Peretti and Stephanie Beatriz also star. gp.m. ou6, "The GoodWife" — Michael J.Fox isbackas Louis Canning in the new episode"Mind'sEye,"asthe lawyer seeks a settlement in his case against Alicia, Cary and Diane (Julianna Margulies, Matt Czuchry, Christine Baranski). Alicia already is on edge from having to prepare for a critical interview that could do much to determine whether she's elected State's Attorney. David Hyde Pierce also returns as her opponent, Frank Prady. 9 p.m. on FOOD,"All-Star

Academy" —Ina newepisode called "Mentor's Choice," demanding guest judge and Iron Chef Geoffrey Zakarian evaluates the results as the eight remaining home cooks work with

their mentors onachallenge

that forces them to reinvent famous food pairings. Ted Allen

("Chopped") is host.

o zap2it

r

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend,541-330-8562 • NIGHT ATTHEMUSEUM 3 (PG) 11:30 a.m. • THEHUNGER GAMES: MOGKINGJAY- PART1 (PG-13) 2 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 5:30 • PROJECTALMANAC(PG-13) 9 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. i

MARCH 8, 2015:This yearyou often

his

wisecracking puppet, Triumph the Insult Comic Dog (currently headlining with

umph Show"), and he's held A highlight i s t h e r e - in esteem by many members turn of young Jodi DiPiaz- of the comic mafia. They have za, who wowed the crowd flocked to the telethons he has ed. "I know, because Brian at the "Night of Too Many since stewarded (this year's Williams and Bill O'Reilly told Stars" bash in 2012 when she "Night of Too Many Stars" is me." played the piano and sang in the fifth). "When we s tarted t h i s Seriously, folks, it's full of a duet with Katy Perry. This laughs. time, Jodi, now 13, performs event," Smigel told the auSteve Carell lays bare the alongside another of her fa- dience this time, "we called contents of the swag bags he vorite entertainers, Weird Al autism a disease. Then we says all the stars got. Their Yankovic, in a r endition of changed it to a disorder. Now goodies include the keys to his "Lola" sendup, "Yoda" ("I we call it a condition. "Everybody in this room a self-driving Google car, a know Darth Vader's really got fresh rhinoceros horn, loose you annoyed/But remember, understands," he said, surediamonds and "a strain of flu if you kill him, then you'll be ly also meaning everyone vaccine that actually works." unemployed"). who sees the broadcast. "But Jon Bon Jovi performs a Besides being a comfort- there's so much left for the rousing rendition of "Want- able fit among the night's rest of the world to learn ed Dead or Alive" with vocal stars, Jodi, diagnosed with au- about what these kids are caassistance from W il l F orte, tism at age 2, is a shining ex- pable of."

that the husband of a f r iend of

then.

nationwide they w anted to

Bird," which calls for chewing up food and feeding it to

I nessma rin ee er rien s i each other and enjoy getting together for a drink every now and

required fundraising, as did similar educational programs

and the fate labeled "Baby

such fundraising hijinks and lots more during Comedy Central's "Night of Too Many airing at 8 tonight, will raise money for autism educational proStars" telethon, which gathers grams. Amy Schumer, Sarah Silverand others to raise money for autism educational programs.

to establish their own school in New York. But the venture

indignities at the hands of audience participants who spin a wheel to decide how each of them should deal with him. Options include slapping him in the face as hard as possible, shot-gunning beers with him

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • TWO DAYS,ONENIGHT(Deux jours, une nuit) (PG-13) 5 • SONG OFTHE SEA (PG)2:45 • WHIPLASH(R) 7:15 • The "Spaghetti Irirestem" will screen at 630 p.m. Wednesday (doorsopenat6 p.m)andincludesan allyou-ean-eat spaghettidinner. I

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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 r s h o m e . c o m

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • FOCUS(R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7,9:15 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:30, 3:15,6:05, 8:45 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)3:45,6:30,9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:45 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • FOCUS (R)2, 4:15, 6:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)4, 6:30 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) I:45, 4,6 • IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 1:30 • THEORYOFEVERYTHING(PG-13) 1:30 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)4,6:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • Movie times were notavailable as of press time. •

C om p l e m e n t s

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., Prineville, 541-4161014 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • FOCUS(Upstairs — R) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility

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

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

COLLEGE

PREP ALPINE SKIING: OSSA STATECHAMPIONSHIPS

WRESTLING

TENNIS

Redmondgrad wins NAIAtitle

His mind at ease, a star returns

TOPEKA,Kan. Taylor Johnson is a national champion. Johnson, a 2009 Redmond High graduate and nowa Southern Oregon senior, defeated Garrett DeMers of -

Montana State-North-

ern11-7 to secure the 197-pound title at the NAIA wrestling championships Saturday night, becoming Southern Oregon's 27th individual national champ.

By Douglas Robson New York Times News Service

These days, tennis comebacks arrive in all shapes and sizes, driven by injury, illness, burnout or suspension, some-

After taking fifth at

the national tournament his sophomore season and third as a junior, Johnson reboundedand powered through the 197-pound bracket, and a reversal with11 seconds left in the second period gaveJohnson

times after years away

fromtheprofessional

inside • Davis Dup. Sports in brief,02

a 6-5 lead in the title

match on his wayto beating DeMers, who defeated the Southern Oregon senior in the finals of the Western Region qualifying tournament two weeksago. The Raiders placed second as ateam for the fifth time in the past seven years with 109 points. Grand Viewwon with 147.5 points.

tours. Justthis month, three nota-

ble players —Juan

Martin del Potro, Tommy Haas and

Laura Robson — will resume competition after long injury layoffs. But in the poignant

Og

department, few com-

pare to Mardy Fish. Once a top-10 player and the highest-ranked U.S. man, Fish's late-ca-

reer resurgence derailed three years ago because

— Bulletin staff report

of a heart problem that

morphed into a more insidious psychological

MLB

impediment. At his

worst, Fish had hourly panic attacks and was

unable to leave his house for months. SeeFish /D6

Photosby Joelaine/TheBuletin

Bend's Shelby Cutter skis her first run on the Cliffhanger course during the OSSA alpine skiing state championships Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area. Cutter recorded the fastest girls time as the Lava Bears won the team title. Darron Cummings / The Associated Press

Michigan football

Mt. Bachelor ski area Saturday

A pioneer seeks a frontier in China

for the final race of the Oregon School Ski Association sea-

By Eddie Pells

son, no one could say whether

The Associated Press

Bend or Summit would claim the combined team title.

Burton is taking his

• Bend High girls win their 4th straight championshipwhi , le Summitwins the boystitle

coach Jim Harbaugh coached first base for two innings with the Oakland A's on

Saturday.

New A's coach: Jim Hardaugh? MESA, Ariz.— For-

mer San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaughmighthavegiven the Oakland A's their identity for this season Saturday, telling them in a preworkout meeting that he thought of them

as "jungle lions." Harbaugh, who now leads the Michigan football program, explained his thinking while wearinga No.4A'suniform, threads hewould need for the two innings he was due to coach first base later in the afternoon. "The A's to me, the way they compete, the team, the different way they think, they are jungle lions," said Harbaugh. "Zoo lions get tired of zebraafter a while and want filet mignon. Not jungle lions." Harbaugh, who described himself as a "mediocre baseball player," played onthe same Ameri can Legion team as A'smanager Bob Melvin, although not at the sametime, and Harbaugh said even then "Bobwas a legend." Harbaughinvoked the old Ernie Banks line as he stood on the field at Hohokam Stadium, saying "it's a beautiful day for baseball. Let's play two." "I'm getting a chance to be on the field and coach," he said. "How does it get any better than that? It's great to get a chance to put on the uniform." — The Oakland (Calif) Tribune

SNO'+gOARp

By Victoria Jacobsen The Bulletin

MOUNT BACHELOR-

When skiers and coaches arrived at the Cliffhanger run at

VAIL, Colo. — Jake

After the first day of the

snowboards to China.

OSSA final on Friday, the

If things break right for him, maybe the Winter Olympics will end up there, too.

Lava Bears and Storm were locked at 154 points apiece,

with the Bend girls and Summit boys each leading their

Un-

respective season standings

by 10 points. "It's kind of exciting, coming into the final day not knowing and having everything on the line going into the final race,"

willing to Burton

ness must be suffering as snowboarding's growth flattens, the man who brought the sport to the

Summit coach Dave McKae

sard. After two tightly contested slalom runs, the title picture

was not much clearer. The

Summit's Thomas Wimberly skis his first run on the Cliffhanger course Saturday. Wimberly recorded the fastest time for the boys on the course, and the Storm won the boys team title.

final results — tabulated after

Bears girls easily won Saturday's slalom with a combined time of 5 minutes, 57.56 seconds, extending their total lead

to 12 points as they clinched

The Bend boys knew it

urday as their top three skiers

their fourth straight OSSA title. Summit's top three skiers

would be difficult to catch Summit in the points stand-

completed their two runs in a

finished in 6:09.59, good for second place on the day and for the season.

ings, Bend coach Greg Timm

than 15 seconds faster than the Storm.

grabsa loose ball against Pendleton in the first

round of the Class SA state

playoffs at Summit High

School on Saturday. The Storm lost 62-43. Meg Roussos /The Bulletin

dozen stores in a country

said, but the Lava Bears

riders but an overall population of 1.35 billion. "It's a huge growth op-

combined time of 5:31.25, more

smashed the competition Sat-

SeeSkiing/D4

Qo See additional photos from the final day of the OSSA state championships on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/stateskiing

Summit's Sarah Heinly

masses has opened five with only around 50,000

everyone had packed up and driven down from Mount Bachelor — showed the Lava

bowto the narrative that busi-

portunity," Burton said this week in an interview while in Vail to host his

U.S. Open snowboarding contest. SeeBurton/D6

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL:CLASS 5A STATE PLAYOFFS

Storm ousted, lose toPendleton By Grant Lucas

Inside

tournament for the first time

the game Saturday afternoon, and the Buckaroos never

• Bend High girls lose to Silverton since 2005. "It's really emotional," Pendin first round. Prep roundup,D4 leton coach Michelle Kennedy • State results. Prep scoreboard,D4 said. "You go through a very, very long season and (with) spurt provided the visitors with some people that have not an eight-point lead in the first been there for so long... they quarter, and Pendletonpulled never experienced it. It's imaway from there en route to a portant because I want them 62-43 victory in the first round to be able to feel the greatness of the Class 5A girls basketball that it is to go to what we call 'the big show.'" state playoffs, earning the

trailed after that. A seven-point

Buckaroos a spot at the state

The Bulletin

Sarah Heinly expected solid competition. After all, this is the state

playoffs. The intensitylevel ramps up. The skill level rises. Heinly completely understood. But the Summit junior did

not expect this. Pendleton hit its first shot of

SeeStorm /D4


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

COHEBOARD ON DECK Tuesday Boys basketball: 5AquarterfinalsatGil Coliseum, Corvallis:MountainViewvs. Pendleton,1:30 p.m., Summivs. t Marist, 8:15p.m. Thursday Boys basketball: 4Aquarterfinals, Madrasvs. Philomath atCentury High, Higsboro,8:15p.m.

SKIINGI SNOW B O A R D ING USCSA UNITEDSTATES COLLEGIATESKIAND

SNOWBOARDASSOCIATION

National Championships Af Mt. Bachelor March 1-7 Top-five results Men's alpineskiing Overall combined Team —Sie rraNevada2,RockyMountain4, Clarkson7,CastletonSt. 7,St. Olaf11. Individual — 1, Nils Hogbom, Rocky Mountain, 3.46. 2, FinlayNeeson, Sierra Nevada, 5.76. 3, Jaka Jazbec,SierraNevada, 38.98. 4, VikingRoald, Sierra Nevada, 44.75. 5, Cannon O'Brien, SierraNevada, 60.68.

Giant slalom Individual —1, FinlayNeeson, Sierra Nevada, 1:51.76. 2,NilsHogbom,Rocky Mountain, 1:52.02. 3, VikingRoald, SierraNevada,1:53.37. 4, JakaJazbec,SierraNevada,1:54.05. 5, CannonO'Brien,Sierra Nevada,1:54.63. Dual slalom Individual —1, Jan-Alexis Coutelen,Colorado Mesa. 2,ChaseEnnis, UMass. 3, MichaelP.Hladku, RIT. 4,EnanEyubigku, Stanford.

Men's nordic relay

Team —1, Wyoming. 2, St. Olaf(+0:47.9). 3, Clarkson(+t:16.2). 4, Cornell(+2:03.9). 5, Colorado Mesa(+2:13.1). Men's snowboard Giant slalom Individual — 1,GrahamThomas, Westminster, 1:14.8. 2,NicholasHowe,Viterbo,1:16.3. 3,lanWieczorek,SierraNevada,1:19.3. 4, AlexSheppard, Emerson,1:21.2.5, OwenGolden,Westminster, 1:21.3. Women's nordic relay Team —1,St. Olaf.2, Wyoming(+I:24.1). 3, Clarkson (+3:36.4). 4, Western St. (+5:19.4).5, Cornell(+5:51.4).

Women's alpineskiing Dual slalom

Team —1, St. Olaf. 2, RockyMountain. 3, Brown.4, Clarkson. Individual — 1,SandraGerlich, BritishColumbia. 2,DaisySchladlich, California.

Women's freeslyle skiing Skier cross

Team — Rocky Mountain 15, SierraNevada15, Air Force44,Collegeof Idaho51, PennSt. 56. Individual — 1, CarolineSandenGustafsson, College ofIdaho.2, Malin Eriksson,RockyMountain. 3,SusanBeks, RockyMountain. 4, Emilie Lamoreaux,Sierra Nevada. 5, FrancescaCurtolo, Sierra Nevada.

Women'ssnowboarding Boarder cross

Team — Westminster11, SierraNevada13, Virginia 67,UCDavis73, Vilanova75. Individual — 1, EmmaCrosby,Westminster. 2, DanieffeSteinhoff,Sierra Nevada. 3, JaimeVincent, Westminster.4,LaceyVilandry, JamesMadison. 5, ColleenHealey, SierraNevada. Giantslalom Individual —1, DanieffeSteinhoff, SierraNevada,1:18.8. 2,BonniePlausteiner,BostonCollege, 1:20.8. 3,ColleenHealey, SierraNevada, 1:21.2. 4, Katie Selhorst,Viffanova,1:21.8. 5, CelineHolland, SierraNevada,1:23.0.

GOLF WGC Cadillac Champio nship Saturday afTrump National D oral, Doral, Fla. Yardage: 7,528; P ar: 72 Third Roundleaders J.B. Holmes 62-73-70—205 DustinJohnson 68-73-69—210 BubbaWatson 71-69-70—210 RyanMoore 66-71-74—211 Biff Haas 74-73-65—212 71-74-67—212 LouisOosthuizen HenrikStenson 69-71-72—212 LeeWestwood 71-72-70—213 WebbSimpson 74-69-70—213 SergioGarcia 73-69-71—213 AdamScott 70-68-75—213 71-74-70—215 ShaneLowry VictorDubuisson 72-73-70—215 PatrickReed 71-73-71—215 Morgan Hoff mann 73-71-71—215 RoryMcllroy 73-70-72—215 RyanPalmer 71-70-74—215 74-71-71—216 KevinNa RickieFowler 68-77-71—216 Charl eyHoff man 70-74-72—216 BrooksKoepka 69-74-73—216 Mikkollonen 78-72-67—217 MarcWarren 73-75-69—217 BrandtSnedeker 74-73-70—217 JimmyWalker 71-76-70—217 Brendon Todd 72-73-72—217 Jordan Spieth 75-69-73—217 JohnSenden 73-70-74—217 RossFisher 78-71-69—218 Matt Kuchar 73-75-70—218 MartinKaym er 71-76-71—218 CharlSchwartzel 71-72-75—218 JamieDonaldson 70-72-76—218 Phil Mickelson 74-74-71—219 BerndWiesberger 74-74-71—219 Thomas Aiken 78-69-72—219 Cameron Tringale 73-74-72—219 Sangmoon Bae 75-71-73—219 Jim Furyk 70-73-76—219 JasonDay 76-74-70—220 DannyWiffett 73-76-71—220 HidekiMatsuyama 76-72-72—220 RusselHenl l ey 74-74-72—220 PaulCasey 75-73-72—220 JustinRose 73-74-73—220 GaryWoodland 70-74-76—220 AlexanderLevy 68-73-79—220

PGA

MOTOR SPORTS

Puerto RicoOpen Saturday atTrumpInternat ional-PuertoRico. NASCAR Sprint Cup Rio Grande,Puerto Rico Kobalt 400Lineup Yardage: 7,806;Par: 72 After Fridayqualifying; race todayat Las Third RoundIeaders VegasMotorSpeedway,LasVegas, Nev. a-amateu Lap length: 1.5miles 73-70-67 —210 ScottBrown (Car numberin parentheses) 69-73-68—210 ChrisSmith 1. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet,194.679 mph. 70-71-70—211 Jon Curran 69-70-72—211 2. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,194.315. EmilianoGrilo Kahne, Chevrolet,194.287. 72-72-68—212 3. 5) Kasey AdamHadwin 72-71-69—212 4. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,194.091. FabrizioZanotti 42 Kyle Larson,Chevrolet,193.959. 5. Scott Pinckne y 70-71-71—212 6. 20 MattKenseth, Toyota,193.632. (f BrendondeJonge 71-70-71—212 AlexCejka 70-67-75—212 7. (31)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,193.507. Johnson Wagner 75-71-67—213 8. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,193.389. RafaelCabreraBelo 70-75-68—213 9. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,193.334. JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,193.112. BooWeekley 74-71-68—213 10. (1 MartinFlores 72-73-68—213 11. (2( BradKeselowski, Ford,192.555. SamSaunders 72-72-69—213 12. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,192.287. MichaelBradley 71-72-70—213 13. (18)DavidRagan,Toyota,192.685. MarkHubbard 68-74-71—213 14. (19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,192.527. ChadCoffins 70-72-71—213 15.(43Aric Almirola,Ford,192.472. Biffle, Ford,192.424. )Greg GonzaloFdez-Castano 73-69-71—213 16. (16 sey Mears, Chevrolet,192.294. JonathanByrd 70-71-72—213 17. (13)Ca 18. (4) Kevi n Ha rvick, Chevrolet,192.28. Y.E.Yang 74-72-68—214 Tim Petrovic 75-71-68—214 19. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,191.782. AndresRomero 72-73-69—214 20. (15)Clint Bowyer, Toyota,191.768. 75-69-70—214 21. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,191.523. Will MacKe nzie 70-74-70—214 22. (47)AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet,191.34. DickyPride 74-70-70—214 23. (33BrianScott,Chevrolet,190.564. GregOwen 72-70-72—214 24.(27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 189.994. JohnDaly 70-71-73—214 25. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,190.355. RodPampling 77-69-69—215 26. (51)Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet,189.967. Will Wilcox 73-73-69—215 27. (7)AlexBowman,Chevrolet,189.947. TroyMatteson 72-73-70—215 28. (55)BrianVickers, Toyota,189.82. Chris Stroud Hornish Jr., Ford,189.727. 73-71-71—215 29. 9) Sam Jeff Overton 72-71-72—215 30. (21)RyanBlaney, Ford, 189.447. LeeJanzen StenhouseJr., Ford,189.354. 71-72-72—215 31. (17 Ricky ShaunMicheel 73-69-73—215 32. (95 MichaelMcDoweg, Ford,189.314. GuyBoros 33. (46 Mi c hael Annett, Chevrolet,189.228. BobbyWyatt 74-68-73—215 34. (41ReganSmith, Chevrolet,189.215. D.J. Traha n 72-70-73—215 35. (6)TrevorBayne,Ford,189.003. ByronSmith 73-73-70—216 36. (34)BrettMoffitt, Ford,188.488. BenjaminAlvarado 74-70-72—216 37.(38DavidGililand,Ford,Owner Points. ArjunAtwal 73-71-72—216 38. 35 Cole itt, Ford,Owner Points. )JoshWh DavidDuval 70-74-72—216 39. (98) Wise,Ford, Owner Points. BrandtJobe 76-68-72—216 40. (23 J.J.Yeley,Toyota, Owner Points. AndrewSvoboda 71-72-73—216 41. (26 JebBurton,Toyota, Owner Points. DanielChopra 74-69-73—216 42. (40 Landon Cassil, Chevrolet,Owner Points. RyanArmour 73-69-74—216 43. (62 Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, Owner Points. Billy Mayfair 69-73-74—216 GlenDay 73-68-75—216 BrandonHagy 71-67-78—216 TyroneVanAswegen 75-71-71—217 HOCKEY RobertoCastro 74-72-71—217 ScottLangley 76-69-72—217 NHL JohnMerrick 75-70-72—217 NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Vaughn Taylor 74-71-72—217 AU TimesPDT ChessonHadley 71-70-76—217 BriceGarnett 72-74-72—218 EasternConference JasonGore 71-75-72—218 Atlantic Division FabianGomez 74-72-72—218 GP W L OT Pls GF GA 71-75-72—218 JoshTeater 73-72-73—218 Montreal 66 42 18 6 90 177 146 JonathanRandolph 71-74-73—218 T ampa B ay 67 41 20 6 88 222 177 JerryKelly 75-70-73—218 Detroit 63 36 16 11 83 184 165 Matt Bettencourt 76-69-73—218 Boston 64 32 22 10 74 171 167 BillLunde Florida 75-70-73—218 66 29 23 14 72 163 188 Zac Blair 73-72-73—218 Ottawa 63 29 23 11 69 179 169 Bo Van Pelt 72-72-74—218 Toronto 66 26 35 5 57 176 205 Stephen Ames 72-71-75—218 Buffalo 66 19 42 5 43 126 224 OscarFraustro 73-73-73—219 MetropolitanDivisioII RobertKarlsson GP W L OT Pls GF GA Eric Axley 71-72-76—219 72-74-74—220 N.Y.lslanders 67 42 21 4 88 214 189 WheeKim a-ErickMorales 75-71-74—220 N.Y.Rangers 63 39 17 7 85 197 155 CameronBeckman 72-74-74—220 Pittsburgh 65 3 8 18 9 85 188 160 Alex Kang 76-70-74—220 Washington 67 36 21 10 82 200 165 Tim Herron 74-71-75—220 Philadelphia 66 28 25 13 69 175 190 J.J. Henry 70-73-77—220 NewJersey 65 27 28 10 64 146 168 Columbus 65 27 34 4 58 166 207 C arolina 6 3 2 4 3 2 7 55 145 170 WeslernConference LPGA Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA HSBCWomen'ss Champrons Nashvi l le 67 41 19 7 89 197 165 Saturday atSenfosaGolf Club (Serapong St. Loui s 65 41 19 5 87 204 163 Course), Singa pore Chicago 65 39 21 5 83 190 153 Yardage: 6,883; ar: P 72 Minnesota 65 36 22 7 79 184 165 Third Roundleaders Winnipeg 66 33 21 12 78 183 176 a-amateur 65 29 25 11 69 174 183 InbeePark 66-69-68—203 Colorado 66 29 27 10 68 207 220 LydiaKo 68-70-67—205 Dallas Pacific Division StacyLewis 69-69-67—205 GP W L OT Pls GF GA 69-70-68—207 AnnaNordqvist 67 42 18 7 91 198 184 SuzannPettersen 71-68-68—207 Anaheim 65 37 24 4 78 187 178 70-67-70—207 Vancouver AzaharaMunoz 65 36 25 4 76 187 167 70-69-69—208 Calgary So YeonRyu Los Angel e s 65 31 21 13 75 175 168 70-71-68—209 Shanshan Feng San Jose 66 32 26 8 72 187 186 72-67-70—209 JessicaKorda 66 21 38 7 49 142 222 69-66-74—209 Arizona CarlotaCiganda 65 18 36 11 47 146 215 70-72-69—211 Edmonton LizetteSalas 71-68-72—211 CarolineMasson Saturday' sGames 68-70-73—211 JennyShin 71-74-67—212 Florida 4,N.Y.Islanders3, SO Na YeonChoi 74-71-67—212 Boston3, Philadelphia2,OT BrittanyLincicome YaniTseng 66-75-71—212 St. Louis6,Toronto1 DanielleKang 70-70-72—212 TampaBay5, Dallas4 6, Buffalo1 KarrieWe bb 68-70-74 —212 Washington Colorado 4, Columbus0 HyoJooKim 70-74-69 —213 Winni p eg 3, Nashvile1 Mo Martin 68-72-73—213 LexiThompson 69-75-70—214 Montreal2,Arizona0 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 70-69-75—214 Pittsburgh1,LosAngeles 0, OT MinaHarigae 73-73-69—215 Vancouver3,SanJose2 Today'sGames Pornanong Phatlum 75-71-69—215 9:30 p.m. KarineIcher 74-71-70—215 Detroitat Boston, at Carolina, noon Mi HyangLee 73-72-70—215 Edmonton HeeYoungPark 69-76-70—215 Philadelphiaat NewJersey, 2p.m. C olorado at Minnesota,3 p.m. MorganPressel 73-72-70—215 lheeLee 72-72-71—215 CalgaryatOttawa,4p.m. CatrionaMathew 72-72-71—215 N.Y.RangersatChicago,4:30 p.m. MondayrsGames BelenMozo 72-71-72—215 AngelaStanford 67-74-74—215 N.Y.IslandersatToronto, 4:30p.m. Edmonton at D e troi t,4:30 p.m. HaruNomura 70-70-75—215 atVancouver, 7p.m. Sei Young Kim 73-73-70—216 Anaheim 72-74-70—216 Nashvilleat Arizona,7p.m. BeatrizRecari 73-71-72—216 PittsburghatSanJose, 7p.m. JanePark 73-70-73—216 ChellaChoi 75-76-66—217 CarolineHedwall 73-75-69—217 ChristinaKim TENNIS 73-70-74—217 MichelleWie 71-70-76—217 MeenaLee Davis Cup 75-75-68—218 MirimLee 73-74-71—218 CristieKerr First Rouad 72-75-71—218 BrittanyLang Britain 2, UnitedStates1 Eun-Hee Ji 72-74-72—218 Singles Jing Yan 72-73-73—218 Andy Murray,Britain, def.DonaldYoung,United I.K. Kim 74-70-74—218 States,6-1,6-1, 4-6,6-2. MariajoUribe 68-76-74—218 JamesWard, Britain, def.JohnIsner, United States, MinjeeLee 70-73-75—218 6-7 (4),5-7,6-3,7-6(3), 15-13. QBaek 77-69-73—219 Doubles In Gee Chun 74-71-74—219 Bob andMikeBryan, UnitedStates,def. Dom inic PaulaCreamer 74-71-74—219 Inglot and JamieMurray, Britain, 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-7 AmyYang 71-72-76—219 (8), 9-7.

SOUTH Alabama A&M70,Grambling St.66 Alabama St.62,JacksonSt.42 AppalachiaSt. n 72, Texas-Arlington 60 Charlotte86,Marshall 73 Duke84, NorthCarolina 77 FIU 70,UAB66 FloridaSt. 61,Pittsburgh52 Georgia 64,Auburn61 Georgia St.72,Georgia Southern55 Malaysia nOpen Kentucky 67, Florida50 Saturday atKualaLumpur, Malaysia Louis iana-Monroe56,TexasSt.53 Semifinals Louisville Virginia57 AlexandraDulgheru,Romania, def. Jarmila Gaj- Miami82,59, Virginia Tech61 dosova (4), Australia, 5-7, 7-5,7-6(4). iddleTennessee77, FAU54 CarolineWozniacki (1),Denm ark, def. HsiehSu- M MississippiSt.52, Missouri43 wei, Taiwan, 6-2,6-2. NC State71, Syracuse57 NichoffsSt. 75,SELouisiana69 NorthwesternSt.88, NewOrleans78 OldDominion75,W.Kentucky52 SOCCER Richmond 67, Saint Louis51 SouthAlabam a96, Troy93 MLS SouthCarolina60,Tennessee49 MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Tulane 67, SouthFlorida 63 AH TimesPDT VCU71,GeorgeMason60 Vanderbilt86,Mississippi 77 EasternConference MIDWEST W L T Pts GF GA lowa69,Northwestern 52 TorontoFC 1 0 0 3 3 1 Marquette 58, DePaul 48 D.C. United 1 0 0 3 1 0 Michigan79,Rutgers69 Philadelphia 0 0 1 1 0 0 MichiganSt.74, Indiana72 NewEngland 0 0 0 0 0 0 NotreDam e81, Clemson67 NewYork 0 0 0 0 0 0 Purdue63,llinois 58 NewYorkCity FC 0 0 0 0 0 0 Xavier74,Creighton73 OrlandoCity 0 0 0 0 0 0 SOUTHWE ST Columbus 0 1 0 0 0 1 Alabama 61,TexasA&M60 Montreal 0 1 0 0 0 1 HoustonBaptist 78,IncarnateWord77,OT Chicago 0 1 0 0 0 2 lowaSt. 89,TCU76 WesternConference SU81,Arkansas78 W L T Pts GF GA L 81,ArkansasSt. 57 Los Angeles 1 0 0 3 2 0 Louisiana-Lafayette Houston 1 0 0 3 1 0 Oklahoma75, Kansas73 Prairie Vi e w 83, Al c orn St. 80 FCDallas 1 0 0 3 1 0 Stephe nF.Austin64,Sam HoustonSt.55 Colorado 0 0 1 1 0 0 Texas 62, KansasSt. 49 Portland 0 0 1 1 0 0 A8M-CC58,Abilene Christian 27 RealSaltLake 0 0 1 1 0 0 Texas Seattle 0 0 0 0 0 0 TexasSouthern 88,SouthernU. 78 T exas-Pan American53,UMKC51 SportingKansasCity 0 0 0 0 0 0 SanJose 0 1 0 0 0 1 UTEP68, Rice65 Vancouver 0 1 0 0 1 3 UTSA69,North Texas68 FARWEST Arizona91,Stanford69 Saturday'sGames Arizona St. 74, Ca l i f orni a 70 D.C.United1,Montreal0 BoiseSt. 71,FresnoSt.52 Philadelphia0, Colorado0, tie Colorado St. 75,UtahSt.70 TorontoFC3,Vancouver1 E. Washington79,WeberSt. 71,OT Houston1,Columbus0 Grand Canyon83, Seattle 70 FC Daga s1, SanJose0 Hawai91, i CalSt.-Fullerton 70 Portland0, RealSalt Lake0,tie IdahoSt. 67,Idaho65 Today'sGames LongBeachSt.59, UCRiverside 58 NewYorkCity FCat OrlandoCity,2 p.m. Montan a70,MontanaSt.54 NewYorkatSporting KansasCity,4p.m. N. Arizona 70,Sacramento St.68 NewEnglandat Seattle, 6:30p.m. N. Colorado72,North Dakota71 NewMexico52,Wyoming49,OT NewMexicoSt.61, ChicagoSt. 57 BASKETBALL PortlandSt.86,S. Utah73 SanDiegoSt.67, Nevada43 Men's college UC Davis80,UCIrvine 61 UC Santa Barbara64, CalPoly 56 Pac-12 UNLV71,SanJoseSt. 58 AH TimesPDT UtahValley74,CSBakersfield 69 gton77,Utah68 Conference O v erall Washin Colorado91,OT W L Pct W L Pc t WashingtonSt. 96, TOURNAMEN TS Arizona 16 2 . 8 8 9 28 3 . 903 Big SouthConference Utah 13 5 .722 2 3 7 . 7 67 Semifinals Oregon 13 5 . 7 2 2 23 8 . 7 42 UCLA 11 7 .611 1 9 1 2 .613 CoastalCarolina73, Gardner-Webb70 W inthrop 71,Longw ood 58 Stanford 9 9 .5 0 0 19 1 1 .633 ColonialAthleticAssociation ArizonaSt. 9 9 .5 0 0 17 1 4 .548 Quarlerfinals Oregon St. 8 1 0.444 1 7 1 3 .567 74,JamesMadison57 California 7 11 .389 1 7 1 4 .548 Hofstra N ortheastern 67, D e laware64 Colorado 7 11 . 389 1 4 1 6 .467 Washington St. 7 11 .389 1 3 1 7 .433 UNCWilmington79, Coll. of Charleston53 Mary72,Elon59 Washington 5 1 3 .278 1 6 14 .533 William & HorizonLeague Southern Cal 3 15 .167 1 1 19 .367 Semifinals G reen Ba y vs. Il l i n oi s-Chicago, 7p.m. Saturday'sGames V alparai s o vs. Cl e vel a ndState,9:30 p.m. Arizona St.74, California 70 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Arizona91,Stanford69 Quarlerlinals Washin gton77,Utah68 lona 74,Siena71 WashingtonSt.96,Colorado91 Manhattan 74, Mari s t 58 End ofregular season Monmouth (N.J.) 60,Canisius 54 St. Peter's68,Rider59 Pac-12 tournament Missouri ValleyConference At Las Vegas Semifinals Wednesday'sGames fflinois St. 65, WichitaSt.62 First Round N.Iowa63,LoyolaofChicago49 WashingtonSt.vs. California, noon NorlheastConference SouthernCalvs. ArizonaSt., 2:30p.m. Semifinals Coloradovs.OregonSt., 6p.m. Robert Morri s 66,Bryant53 Washingtonvs. Stanford,8:30p.m. St. Franci s (N.Y) 62, St.Francis (Pa.) 48 Thursday'sGames Ohio ValleyConference Quarterfinals Championship WashingtonSt./Californiavs.Arizona,noon Belmont 88,Murray St.87 SouthernCal/ArizonaSt. vs. UCLA,2:30p.m.

WTA

Alberto MonterreyAfirme Saturday atMonterrey,Mexico Semifinals TimeaBacsinszky(4), Switzerland, def.SaraErrani (2), Italy,6-0,4-6, 7-6(3). CarolineGarcia(3), France,def. AnaIvanovic (1), Serbia,6-1,6-4.

Colorado/Oregon St.vs. Oregon, 6p.m. Washington/Stanfordvs. Utah,8:30p.m. Saturday'sGames TOP 25 No.1Kentucky67,Florida 50

No.16 Louisville59,No.2Virginia 57 No. 3Duke84, No.19 NorthCarolina 77 No. 4Vilanova105,St. John's66 No. 5Arizona91, Stanford 69 No. 7Gonzaga81,SanFrancisco 73 lginoisSt.65,No.8 Wichita St.62 No. 15Oklahoma75,No.9Kansas73 No. 11N. Iowa63, LoyolaofChicago49

No.12NotreDame81, Clemson67 Washington77,No.13Utah68 No. 17lowaSt.89,TCU76 LSU81,No.18Arkansas78 No. 20West Virginia 81,OklahomaSt.72 No. 21Butler68, No.24Providence64 Belmont88,No.25MurraySt. 87 EAST BostonCollege79,WakeForest 61 Butler68,Providence64 Dartmouth59,Yale58 Davidson107,Duquesne78 George Washington87,UMass65 Georgetown 73,SetonHall 67 Harvard72,Brown62 La Salle55,Dayton53 Penn79,Cornell 72 Princeton85,Columbia83 RhodeIsland78,SaintJoseph's68 St. Bonaven ture66, Fordham52 Temple75, UConn63 Villanova105,St.John's68 WestVirginia81,OklahomaSt. 72

SouthernConference Guarlerfinals Furman 69,Chattanooga67 Mercer89,VMI61 W.Carolina67, ETSU61, OT Woffor d70,UNCGreensboro52 SummitLeague First Round N. Dakota St. 61,Denver50 S. Dakota St.87, W.Ilinois 50 West CoaslConference Guarlerfinals Gonzaga 81,SanFrancisco72 Pepperdine50 SanDiego47 Portland 69, Saint Mary's(Calif.) 52 BYU78,SantaClara76

SOUTH Charlotte66, Marshall 58

GeorgiaSouthern 82,GeorgiaSt.74 GramblingSt.65,AlabamaA&M64 Jackso nSt.68,AlabamaSt.67,OT LouisianaTech67, Southern Miss. 64 Louis iana-Monroe90,TexasSt.84,OT McNeese St.72, Cent. Arkansas68 MiddleTennessee73, FAU60 NewOrleans72, Northwestern St.70 NichollsSt.77,SELouisiana 74 Texas-Arlington 61,Appalachian St.53 Troy86,SouthAlabama79 UAB72, FIU56

W. Kentucky 71, OldDominion62 MIDWEST Akron79,Bowling Green71 Ball St.71,Toledo55 Buffalo68,KentSt.58 Cleveland St. 58,III.-Chicago46 Drake 74 LoyolaofChicago70OT E. Michigan93,Cent. Michigan86 GreenBay52, Detroit 51 l linois St.69,S. Illinois 54 MissouriSt.86,Evansvile 71 N. Colorado 67, North Dakota56 N. Iowa74, Bradley68 NewMexicoSt.62,ChicagoSt.54 Ohio75,Miami(Ohio) 60 Texas-Pan American84, UMKC82,20T W. Michigan 50, N.Illinois 45 WichitaSt.62, IndianaSt.54 WrightSt. 91,Milwaukee73 Youngstown St. 80,Valparaiso57 SOUTHWE ST AlcornSt.63,PrairieView48 Arkansas St. 87,Louisiana-Lafayette65 HoustonBaptist 81,IncarnateWord 71 Rice 79,UTEP62 SouthernU.51,TexasSouthern49 Stephe nF.Austin79,SamHoustonSt.65 TexasA&M-CC60,Abilene Christian 40 UTSA57, NorthTexas54 FARWES T CS Bakersfield78,UtahValey 54 Cal Poly84,UCSantaBarbara63 E.Washington64,WeberSt.62,OT Hawai61, i CalSt.-Fullerton 38 Idaho77,IdahoSt.53 LongBeachSt. 76,UCRiverside66 Montan aSt.65,Montana57 PortlandSt.80, S.Utah65 Sacramento St.105, N.Arizona81 Seattle46,GrandCanyon43 UC Irvine71, UCDavis 62 TOURNAM ENTS AmericaEastConference First Round Albany(N.Y)63, Vermont33 Hartford58,NewHampshire 42 Maine78,Binghamton 71 UMBC 49, StonyBrook47 AmericanAthletic Conference Guarlerlinals EastCarolina77,Temple 71 SouthFlorida79, Memphis 51 Tulane71,Tulsa53 UConn93, Cincinnati 34 Atlantic CoaslConference Semifinals FloridaSt.66, Louisville 51 NotreDam e55, Duke49 Atlantic10 Conference Semifinals Dayton74,Duquesne60 George Washington72,Fordham60 Big EastConference Firsl Round Marquette78,Providence75 Xavier70,Georgetown67 Big SouthConference Semifinals High Poin56, t Gardner-Webb53 Liberly71,Campbell 43 Big TenConference Semifinals Maryland 74, Northwestern 63 Ohio St.91,lowa85, OT Big 12Conference Quarlerlinals Baylor82,KansasSt.70 Oklahoma 67, West Virginia 55 Oklahoma St.67,lowaSt.58 Texas67,TCU61 Ohio ValleyConference Championship Tennessee St. 64,UT-Martin 60,OT Pacific-12 Conference Semifinals California68,Colorado55 Stanford59,ArizonaSt. 56 SoutheasternConference Semifinals SouthCarolina74, LSU54 Tennessee 75, Kentucky64 SummitLeague First Round S. Dakota St. 79, Denver61 SouthDakota78,IPFW 70

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague

KANSAS CITYROYALS— Agreedto termswith RHPChrisYoungonaone-yearcontract. PlacedRHP Kris Medlenonthe60-dayDL. BASKETB ALL National Basketball A

Women's college TOP 25 Saturday'sGames No.1 UConn 93,Cincinnati 34 No. 2NotreDame44, No.16 Duke49 No. 3SouthCarolina74, LSU54 No.4Maryl and74,No.24Nort hwestern63 No. 5Tennesee s 74, No.12 Kentucky 64 No. 6Baylor82, KansasSt.70 No.7 FloridaSt.66, No.10Louisville 51 No. 19Stanford59,No.9ArizonaSt. 56 No.13 Princeton 63, Columbia44 OhioSt.91,No.14lowa85,OT No.21GeorgeWashington72,Fordham 60 EAST Harvard76, Brown69 Penn56, Cornell 42 Princeton63, Columbia44 Yale53,Dartmouth28

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Peterson leadsDucksto win —Freshman left-hander DaVid PeterSOnStruCk Out SeVenin

seven-plus innings, andAustin Grebeck hit his first hOme run Of the SeaSOnin Ofegon'S 7-2 Win OVerSt. JOhn'S in Eugene OIT Saturday. PeterSOn (2-Oj allOwed

two runs in the eighth before being pulled for Josh Graham,VVhO earned hiS SeCOnd SaVe OftheSeaSOn. MitCh TOlmanVVBS4-for-4 With a dOuble and a triPle

PartiallytOFITligamentS in hiS trOubleSOme right

BeaVerS tOPEaSt Caralina — DaniGilmore hit

MaZe Of SIOvenia by 0.91 SeCOndS.FennitTger Cut intO

elbOW. TeXaSgeneral manager Jon DanielSSaidSatur-

a go-ahead RBI dOuble in the toP Of the fOurth inning

NIaze's overall World Cup lead.American Laurenne

day that DarviSh COuld try tO PitCh thrOugh the injury, reSt it fOr UP tO fOur mOnthS Or undergO Surgery.

Saturday, Sammi Noland led off the fifth with a home

ROSS, frOm Bend, did not finiSh.

Daniels said the club would get asecond opinion this Weekend but indiCatedSurgery may bethe Preferred OPtiOn. DarviSh, a three-time AII-Star, VVBS Shut dOWn

for the final sevenweeks last season with inflammation in the sameelbow. He underwent an MRIexam aroundThanksgivingthatcamebackclean,andhad

to lead Oregon (12-2j, which completes a three-game ITOteXPerienCed any trOuble in WOrkOutS and bullPen series against the RedStorm at noon today. sessions.

Beavs sweepFresno in doudleheaderOregOn StateSCOredeight runS Off SeVen hitS in the bottom Of the third inning Saturday and CruiSed tO a12-2 Win in the SeCOndgame Of a daubleheader at CorvalliS. KJ HarriSOn hit hiS team-leading SiXth hOme run in the firSt, and Jeff HBITdriX hit atVVOrun dauble in the SeCOnd, Part Of a fOur-RBI game. TraviS ECkert (2-0) StruCk Out fiVe in 8'/ inningS fOr

the Beavers (12-3j, who earlier Saturday beat the BulldOgS 5-2. DreW RGSmuSSBIT(2-0) SCattered eight hitS OVer 7'/ inningS, and Gabe Clark hit a tWO-run hOme run.

SOFTBALL DuCkS Win tWiCe —Cheridan Hawkins pitched

run and MCKenna ArriOla added an inSuranCetWO-FUIT ShOt IIT the SeVenth aSOregOn State beat EaSt CarOIIna 8-5 in HOnOlulu. BeaVerSStarter Bev Miller (11-5j

allowed 10 hits in a complete game.Arriola led the Beavers (19-6j with four hits.

and Mike Bryan kePt the United StateS aliVeIITitS DaViS CUP firSt-rOund tie againSt Britain, hOlding Off a

SKIING

comeback byJamie Murray and Dominic Inglot to win

Reichelt claims 2nd straight downhill-

The 6-3, 6-2, 3-6, 6-7 (8j, 9-7 victory by theCalifornian

Saturday'S dOubleSIITfiVe SetSin GlaSgOW,SCOtland.

HGITneS RBIChelt Claimed hiS SeCOnd Straight WOrld

brOtherS reduCedthe AmeriCanS' defiCit to 2-1, and tOOk

Cup downhill victory Saturday, cutting the gapon

the World Groupmatch to athird and final day. Britain is

diSCiPline leader Kjetil JanSrud to juSt 20 POintS gOing intO the final raCe Ofthe SeaSOn. Reichelt, the SUPer-G

Still the faVOrite tOadVanCe, With fifth-ranked Andy Murray exPeCted tObeat JOhnISner IITthe firSt Of tOday'S

world champion, went down theOlympiabakken On Saturday night in Fullerton, CalifOrnia. TheDuCkS COurSe in Kvitfjell, NOrWay, in1 minute, 29.65 SBC(16-3j earlier Saturday beat Pacific 9-7. Hawkins (7-2) OndS tobeat Manuel Osborne-Paradis OfCanadaby tied a SeaSOnhigh with10 StrikeoutS. Janelle Lindvall 0.30 seconds for his third victory of the season.

reverse singles. JamesWard then plays DonaldYoung.

hit her SeCOndhOmerun Of the SeaSOn, and DaniCa MBFCadOatfd Janie Takeda Singled hOme runS. IITthe firSt game, Lauren Lindvall hit a baSeS-Clearing dOU-

tOP-Seeded defending ChamPiOnAna IvanOVICOfSer-

Weirather WinSWOmen'SdOWnhill — TIITa

ble and scored on aNikki Udria double, and they both

CUP dOWnhill Win Saturday, On the Same German

drOve in runS IIT the third tO give the DuCkS a 6-0 lead. The TigerS anSwered with faur runS Off DuCkSStarter

a tVVO-hit ShutOut aS OregOn beat FreSnOState 3-0

Weirather of Liechtenstein earned her first World

RangerSaCB YU DarviSh mightneed SeaSOn-ending

had her fifth RBI Of the game IITthe SIXth to Pull the

hill where she captured her maiden victory two yearS ago.Weirather uSedVirtually PerfeCt, Sunny conditions to tame the difficult Kandahar course in a winning time of 1 minute, 40.94 seconds. Shebeat

Tommy John surgery after an MRIexam revealed

Ducks ahead.

Anna Fenninger Of AuStria by 0.51 SeCOndS alTdTina

Rangers' Darvishmay need surgery-

TENNIS Bryans keepU.S.alive in DavisCup—Bob

KariSSaHOVinga (7-1) in the third, but Lauren Lindvall

Garcia, BacsinszkyreachMonterrey final — Third-seededCaroline Garcia of Francebeat

bia 6-1, 6-4 on Saturday night in the Monterrey Open semifinals. Garcia set up arematch today against fourth-seeded TimeaBacsinszky, the Swiss player who beat her last week inAcapulco in the Mexico OPen final. BBCSIITSZkyOutlaSted SeCOnd-Seeded Sara

Errani Of Italy 6-0, 4-6, 7-6 (3) in the firSt Semifinal in the hard-COurt eVent at Club SOITOma. — From staffand wire reports


SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

ON THE AIR

D3

NBA ROUNDUP

TODAY BASKETBALL

Men's college, Memphis at Cincinnati Men's college, Big South tournament, final, Winthrop vs. Coastal Carolina NBA, Chicago atSanAntonio Men's college, PennSt. at Minnesota Women's college, ACC tournament, final, Notre Damevs. Florida St. Women's college, Atlantic10 tournament, final, GeorgeWashington vs. Dayton Women's college, Big East tournament, quarterfinal, Seton Hall vs. Marquette Men's college, MVCTournament, final, lllinois St. vs. N. Iowa Men's college, Atlantic Sun tournament, final, S.C.-Upstate at North Florida Women's college, Big 12tournament, semifinal, OklahomaSt. vs. Baylor Men's college, CAA tournament, semifinal, William & Mary vs. Hofstra Men's college, Tulsa atSMU NBA, L.A. Clippers at GoldenState Women's college, SEC tournament, final, South Carolina vs. Tennessee Women's college, Big East tournament, Creighton vs. St. John's Men's college, EastCarolina at Houston Men's college, Wisconsin at OhioSt. Women's college, Big 12tournament, semifinal, Oklahomavs. Texas Men's college, CAAtournament, semifinal, UNC Wilmington vs. Northeastern Women's college, AAC tournament, semifinal, East Carolina vs. UConn Women's college, BigTentournament, final, Maryland vs. OhioSt. Women's college, Big East tournament, quarterfinal, DePaulvs. Xavier Men's college, Maryland at Nebraska Women's college, AAC tournament, semifinal, South Florida vs. Tulane Women's college, Pac-12tournament, final, Colorado vs. Stanford Women's college, Big East tournament, Butler vs. Villanova HOCKEY NHL, Detroit at Boston

NHL, NewYork Rangers atChicago SOCCER England, FACup, Liverpool vs lackburn MLS, NewYork City FCat Orlando City MLS, NewYorkat Sporting Kansas City MLS, NewEngland at Seattle

Time 9a.m.

azers u se

T V /Radio CBS

' OVeS

9:30 a.m. ESPN2 10 a.m. ABC The Associated Press 10 a.m. B i g Ten MINNEAPOLIS — 1 0 a.m.

ESP N

10 a.m.

E S PNU

10 a.m.

FS2

11 a.m.

CBS

NeXt utI

2:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m.

ESP N

4 p.m. FS2 4:30 p.m. Big Ten 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m.

ESP N

6:30 p.m.

FS2

9 a.m. NBC 4:30 p.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. FS1 1:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. FS1 6:30 p.m. FS1

Rci ky R u -

ute left to help the T i mber-

Also on Saturday: 76ers 92, Hawks 84: PHILADELPHIA — Hollis Thompson and Luc Mbah a Moute scored

wolves snap a four-game s kid with a 121-113 vic-

19 points apiece, and Philadelphia upset short-handed Atlanta, which had its six-game winning streak snapped and rested starters Paul Millsap,

tory over the Trail Blazers

on Saturday night.

1 2:30 p.m. FS2 1 p.m. ES P NN 1 :30 p.m. CB S

NB C SN

"I think Wes is one of the underrated shooting guards in this league," Neal said. "He does it all. He can defend, he can post up, he can knock down the open 3. They're definitely going to miss him."

3 -p o i n t e r w ith a m i n -

12:30 p.m. ESPN

2 p.m.

just always there for Portland.

bio hit a big

11:30 a.m. NBCSN n oon ESP N U 1 2:30 p.m. A B C

FS1

having played in 142 straight games before sitting out Saturday night. To put it simply, he's

ley Matthews. It didn't take long for Minnesota to show them how much. Kevin Martin scored 29 p oints a n d

FS1

2 p.m.

On top of it all, he was one of the most durable Blazers,

they were going to miss Wes-

11:30 a.m. ESPN2

1 1:30 a.m.

quickness and instincts.

Th e Portland Trail Blazers knew

Matthews w ent d o w n

Kyle Korver an d

D e Marre

with a rup-

Carroll. C avaliers 89, Suns

tured Achil-

CLEVELAND

les on Thursday night, a big

r2>g

blow to the Blazers' chances in the powerful Western Con-

ference. He is the team's best p erimeter defender and a n

extremely versatile offensive player as well, and Portland missed him dearly in its first

e)

4l

Jim Mone/TheAssociated Press

Minnesota's Nikola Pekovic lays the ball up as Portland's Robin

game without him. Lopez defends in the first quarter Saturday night in Minneapolis. The Wolves' two shooting The Trail Blazers lost 121-113. guards combined for 56 points and made 19of32 shots.M artin hit 11 of 21 and Gary Neal than anybody, so it's definitely start in place of M atthews, scored 27offthebench on 8-of- different. But we've got guys one of Portland's emotional 11shooting. out there that can go compete leaders. Rubio added 13 points, 15 as- still." The Blazers are missing sists and eight rebounds, and D amian L i l lard h a d 3 2 one of the most dependable Andrew Wiggins scored 18 points, eight assists and sev- and consistent cogs from a while playing in front of a sell- en rebounds fo r P o rtland, starting five that complements out crowd for the third time in which had won five straight. each other so well. Matthews is five home games since Minne- Aldridge added 21 points and one of the team's best 3-point sota reacquired Kevin Garnett eight boards forthe Blazers shooters, can create major in a trade with Brooklyn. (41-20), who started the night problems for a defense with "It's different," Blazers star in the third seed, just ahead of his ability to post up smaller LaMarcus Aldridge said of Houston and the Clippers. guards and is a staunch deplaying without Matthews. Arron Afflalo had 14 points fender on the perimeter with "I probably talk to him more on 5-for-12 shooting in his first a rare combination of size,

-

7 2:

LeBron

James tiedCleveland's career assists record and scored 17 points. James tied Mark Price at 4,206 assists in the third

quarter. Heat 114, Kings 109: MIAMI

— Dwyane Wade scored 28 points, Tyler Johnson added 24 and Miami erased a 12-point,

fourth-quarter deficit. Pelicans 95, Grizzlies 89: NEW ORLEANS — Tyreke Evans scored 26points, Antho-

ny Davis added 23 points and 10 rebounds, and New Orleans

overcame an 18-point deficit. Pacers 92, Knicks 86: NEW YORK — Rodney Stuckey scored 17 points, George Hill made the tiebreaking 3-pointer with 2:35 left, and Indiana won

its season-best fifth straight. Rockets 114, Nuggets 100: DENVER — James Harden

scored 28points, Corey Brewer had 24 and Houston snapped a three-game road losing streak.

BASEBALL

MLB preseason, Baltimore at Minnesota College, Fresno St. at OregonSt. MLB preseason, ColoradoatSanDiego College, Southern Cal atUCLA

10 a.m. MLB 1 p.m. KICE940-AM 1 p.m. MLB 3:30 p.m. Pac-12

NBA SCOREBOARD

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, LasVegas GOLF PGA Tour,WGCCadilac Championship PGA Tour,WGCCadilac Championship

noon 10 a.m. noon

Standings

Fox Golf Golf, NBC

EasternConference x-Atlanta d-Chicago Cleveland d-Torottto

MONDAY BASEBALL

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Women's college, MAAC tournament, final Women's college, Big East tournament, semifinal Women's college, AAC tournament, final Men's college, Southern Conference tournament, final Men's college, CAA tournament, final Men's college, WCC tournament, semifinal Men's college, MAAC tournament, final Women's college, Big 12tournament, final Women's college, Big East tournament, semifinal Men's college, WCC tournament, semifinal HOCKEY NHL, Anaheim atVancouver NHL, Pittsburgh at SanJose

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Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Gordon crashespole car, will start from theback The Associated Press LAS VEGAS — Jeff Gor-

Patrick spun in front of him a n d G ordon was unable to

don crashed during the final avoid her car. Gordon's car practice before today's race suffered heavy damage to

Washington Milwaukee Indiana Miami Charlotte Boston Brooklyn Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork

W L 49 13 39 24 40 25 38 24 35 28 33 29 28 34 28 34 27 33 25 35 25 35 23 38 20 43 14 49 12 49

WesternConference W L d-GoldenState 48 12 d-Memphis 44 18 Houston 43 20 d-Portland 41 20 LA. Clippers 40 22 Dallas 40 24 SanAntonio 38 23 Oklahoma City 34 28 NewOrleans 34 29 Phoenix 33 3t Utah 25 36 Denver 22 41 Sacrame nto 21 40 L.A. Lakers 16 45 Minnesota 14 47 d-divisionleader x-clinched playoffspot

By Anne M. Petersen

r ear .

The Associated Press

Gordon had won Speedway, where he the pole, but will have to s t ill had to hold off a harddroptotherearofthefieldat c harging Ryan Blaney to thestartoftheracebecause wrap up the win. D i llon he changed cars. led 183 of the 200 laps, but The accident happened in

B l a ney used fresh tires to

the final minutes of Satur- chase down Dillon in the day's practice when Danica closinglaps.

619 10'/r 615 10'/t

613 11

556 14'/t

532 t6 452 21 452 21 450 2t 417 23 417 23

377 25'/t 317 29'/t 222 35'/t 197 36'/t

Pct GB 800

ne 5

683 6'/r 672 r t/r 645 9 625 10 623 10'/t 548 15 540 15'/t 516 t7 410 23t/t

349 2Plt 344 2Plt 262 32'/t 230 34'/r

PORTLAND (113)

Batttm7-I2 0-0 17,Aldridge10-201-I 2I, Lopez 2 33 47, Lillard u-236 632, Afflalo5-121-2 14,

Mccollum1-500 3,Blake1-1oe 3, Kaman3522 8,Wright3-70-08,Gee0-00-20.Totals43-88 13-17113. MINNESOT A(121) wiggins 8-151-218,Garnett2-4 0-04, pekovic 5-111-1 11,Rubio5-122-213, Martin11-216-629, Dieng2-32-2 6, Brown0-0 0-00, payne2-21-3 5, Lavine3-62-28, Neal8-1110-1327. Totals 46-85 25-31 121. Portland 30 25 22 36 — 113 Minnesota 29 22 30 40 — 121 3-PointGoals—Portland14-27(Lilard 4-8, Afflalo 3-5, Batum 3-5, Wright 2-5, Blaket-t, McCollum 1-2, Aldridge0-1), Minnesota4-7 (Martin1-1, Neal 1-1, Wiggins1-1, Rubio1-3, Lavine0-1). Fouled Ottt — Aflalo. Rebotinds—Portland 42 (Aldridge 8), Minnesota52(Pekovic, Rubio8). Assists—Portland 18 (ullard8),Minnesota26(Rttbio15). Total FoulsPortland 23, Minnesota15. Technicals—Portland defensivethreesecond, Minnesotadefensive three second. A—19,35609,356).

Rockets114, Ntlggets100 HousToe(114)

Ariza 7-132-3 t9, Jones3-121-2 7, Motielunas 6-9 4-418, Beverley3-4 0-0 8, Harden8-1910-11 28, Smith4 92-410, Dorsey0-1 02 0, Brewer 9-16 5-624,Terry0-30-00, McDaniels0-00-00. Totals 40-86 24-32114.

DENVER (100)

Gallinari 3-15 4-4 11, Chandler11-15 0-0 26, Faried 1-52-2 4, Lawson5-14 2-4 I3, Foye7-11 3-420, Hickson 2-7 0-04, Barton4-82-310, Arthur 1-4 0-0 2, Lauvergne 1-3 2-2 4, Nelson2-6 0-04,

Harris 1-40-0 2, Green0-0 0-0 0. Totals 38-92 15-19100. Houston Denver

Heat114, Kings109 SACRAMENTO (109) Gay12-240-2 27,Thompson1-22-2 4, Cousins 10-177-82t, McCallum 3-102-29, McLemore7-16 3-4 20,Wiliams3-7 2-210, casspi 1-30-03, Miler 3-8 1-2 7,stattskas0-0 0-00, Evans0-12-2 z ToIals 40-88 19-24109. MIAMI (114) walker 4-82-2 11,Haslem0-3 0-0 0, Andersen 3-5 5-6 11,Napier2-7 1-2 5, Wade10-18 r-7 28, Johnson7-127-1024, Beasley 9-170-218, Chalmers 4-63-412,Ennis2-40-05. Totals 41-8025-33 114. Sacramento 30 31 17 18 13 — 109 Miami 26 21 21 28 18 — 114

Cavaliers 89, Suns79

MEMPHIS (89) Je.ereen 8-184-620, Randolph3-101-47, Ga sol 2-74-68, Conle5-94-417, y Lee2-90-0 5, Allen3-5

PHOEeIX(79) Tucker3-u 3-4 u, MarkMorris 6-153-416, Barron 0-2 t-2 t, Knight4-120-010, Bledsoe3-12 0-0 7, Wright3-71-2 1,Goodwin1-30-03, MarcMorris 2-80-05, Green4-92-2t1, Warren4-50-08. Totals 30-8410-1479. CLEVELAND (89) James6-163-617, Love3-64-413, Mozgov6-e 7-819, Irving3-u 2-2 8,Smith 3-120-07, Thompson 6 93315,shumpert1-3003, Dellavedova37 0-0 7,perkins0-30-0 0,JonesO-oe-e 0, Harris 0-0 0-0 0, Miller0-00-0I| Totals 31-7519-23 89. Phoenix 24 13 15 27 — 79 Cleveland 30 23 27 9 — 89

1-27, udrih 4-63-311, Calathes 3-32-49, Koufos 1-4 002, Carter1-3 00 3. Totals 32741929 89.

NEWORLEANS(95) Pondexter1-40-03,Davis11-211-1 23,Asik3-61-2 7, Evans10-163-426, Gordon4-65-516, Cole5-131-1 12, Alinca3-70-06, Wiliams0-20-00, Cunningham 1-50-02, Babbitt0-00-00.Totals 38-8011-1395. Memphis 25 25 17 22 — 89 New0rleatts 18 2 033 24 — 95

76ers 92, Hawks84 ATLANTA (84) Bazemore 2-84-69, Horford6-160-012, Muscala 1-3 0-02, Teagtte 5-13 e-e17, Jenkins3-7 0-0 8, Scott4-90-011,Schroder6-133-416, Brand0-20-0 0, Mack3-60-09.Totals 30-7713-16 84. PHIUIDELPHIA (92) Covington5-12 0-012, Mbaha Mottte 8-160-0 19, Noel 41236 11, Canaan 2 t3 6812, Sampson 0-70-e0,Aldemir0-20-20,Grant0-20-00,Robinson 5-80-010, Smith4-130-1 9,Thompson7-10 0-0 99.Totals 35-959-17 92. Atlanta 31 22 16 15 — 84 Philadelphia 20 2 7 25 20 — 92

Bucks 91, Wizards 85 WASHINGTO N(85)

Pierce4-153-414,Nene3-73-69, Gortat5-700 to, Wall3-143-50, Porter1-30-02, Butler3-112-2

9,Gooden2-80-05,Temple4-62-411,Seraphin2-3 0-04, Sessions 4-71-1 10,Webster 0-00-00. Totals 31-81 14-2285. MILWAUKEE (91) Antetokounmp o 2-10 1-t 5, Ilyasova4-70-0 10, pachttlia2-60 04, carter williams6-u 0-012, Middleton u-20 2-330,Dudley2-9 0-04, Henson2-2 2-46, Bayless4-84-413,Johnson3-50-07. Totals 36-78 9-15 91. Washington 19 20 24 22 — 85 Milwaukee 30 21 14 26 — 91

Pacers 92, Knicks 86 INDIANA(92) SHill3-73-49, West6-102-414,Hibbert0-63-4 3, G.HIII4-116-615, Miles3-120-07, Mahinmi0-1 0-00, Stuckey4-128-817,Watson 4-83-413, Rudez 3-30 08, scola 3-90-06. Totals30-792530 92.

NEWYORK(86)

Early 2-63-4 7,Smith2-41-2 5, Bargnani10-14 t-t 21, Galloway 1-22-45, Harda wayJr 0-91-21, shved5-154-515,Aldrich 3-82-28, Larkin4-92-2 11, Thomas 0-35-65, Acy2-62-26, Wear1-20-Oz Totals 30-7823-3086. Indiana 22 16 22 32 — 92 New York 18 25 20 23 — 86

Leaders ThroughFriday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG westbrook,QKC 47 436 366 1286 27.4 Harden,Hou 61 492 510 I653 27J James,CLE 53 493 310 t385 26.1 Davis,NOR 50 471 273 1216 24.3 Curry,GO L 59 484 238 t404 23.8 cousins,SAC 46 377 327 1083 2a5 Aldridge,PO R 53 483 242 I234 23.3 Griffin, LAC 51 448 245 1149 2z5 Thompson, GOL 59 459 180 I278 21.7 Irving,CLE 59 456 244 t27721.6 Lillard,POR 60 430 267 1272 21.2 Bosh,MIA 44 343 179 928 21.1 Wade,MIA 43 343 188 891 20.7 56 408 264 u40 20.4 Gay,sAC Butler,CHI 55 361 329 1110 20.2 Vucevic,ORL 56 482 139 I105 19.7 Hayward,UTA 61 400 289 u88 19.5 Ellis, DAL 64 480 186 1218 19.0 Walker,CHA 42 278 167 789 18.8 paul, LAC 62 425 202 1149 18.5 Rebottnds G OFFDEF TOTAVG Jordan,LAC 62 289 610 899 14.5 Drummond,DET 61 312 490 802 13.1 Gasol,CHI 59 174 537 ru tz1 cousins, SAC 46 133 418 55t 1zo Chandler,DAL 58 230 446 676 11.7 Randolph,MEM 51 181 412 593 0.6 Vttcevic,ORL 56 179 450 629 11.2 Aldridge,PO R 53 139 420 559 10.5 Monroe,DET 59 203 419 622 10.5 Davis,NOR 50 135 384 519 10.4 Asslsls G AST AVG

wall, wAS

paul, LAC Lawson,DEN westbrook,OKC Rondo,DAL Curry,GO L James,CLE Teague,ATL

62 62 59 47 51 59 53 56

628 10.1 624 10.1 579 9.8 383 8.1 414 8.1 462 7.8 388 7.3 402 7.2

TimberS threaten at end, bLitCan't SC Ore in RSLdraW

the nose and right

at Las Vegas Motor

Pct GB 790

Peiicans 95, Grizzlies 89

MAjOR LEAGUE SOCCER

Speedway, where Next uP

Chevrolet.

T'Wolves121, Trail Blazers113

Saturday'sGames NewOrleans95,Memphis89 Philadelphia 92, Atlanta84 Miami114,Sacramento109, OT Cleyeland 89,phoenix 79 Indiana 92, NewYork86 Minnesota12t,portlandu3 Milwaukee 91, Washington 85 Houston114,Denver100 Today'sGames Chicago atSanAntonio, t0 a.m. L.A. ClippersatGoldenState, 12:30p.m. Bostonat Orlando,3p.m. CharlotteatDetroit,3 p.m. Utah atBrooklyn, 3p.m. TorontoatOklahomaCity, 4p.m. Dallas atLA.Lakers,6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Washingtonat Charlotte, 4p.m. Sacramento atAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Bostonat Miami,4:30 p.m. Memphis atChicago,5p.m. NewOrleansatMilwaukee,5p.m. NewYorkatDenver, 6p.m. GoldenStateatPhoenix, 7p.m. Minnesotaat LA. Clippers,1:30p.m.

at Las Vegas Motor

his Pole-winning RASCAR S r,.ot In S aturday's race: car was damaged CepLas Vegas Dillon wins Xfinienough that Hen- +> ' ty race: Austin Dildrick M otorsports lon dominated the "t d pulled out a backup N " a y Xfinity Series race

Summaries

All Times PDT

Nextup

Los Angeles PORTLAND — NickRiman- at Portland do wasn't at all surprised that the injury-challenged Portland When:4 p.m. March15 TV:FS1 Timbers came at him.

P ortland ha d t h e mo s t six shots to Salt Lake's three. chances in th e m atch, but Rimando came up with an•

' •

Real Salt L ake's veteran

"I'm not sure how we didn't goalkeeper made five saves to fend off the surprisingly tena- win, to be honest with you," cious Timbers for a 0-0 tie in Porter said. "I don't know what the season opener Saturday

night.

more we could have done."

Portland goalkeeper Adam Portland was without three Larsen Kwarasey, signed in the key players in Will Johnson, offseason after playing in NorDiego Valeri and Diego Chara way's top league, earned the because of injuries. clean sheet in his debut.

Rimando kept coming up with big saves. Portland got close in the 29th

other save in the 53rd minute on a point-blank shot from Wallace in the box. Minutes

minute on Dairon Asprilla's later, Rimando stopped another header from about 6 yards out, but it sailed just wide.

The Timbers had another opportunity when Jack Jewsbury's free kick in the 40th

minute sailed into the box where Rodney Wallace got a touch, butRimando dove on

the ball to stop the threat. Portland finished the first half with

shot by Wallace from about the

endline. Kwarasey fended off a shot from Salt Lake's Luis Gil in

the 83rd minute. Kwarasey finished with two saves. "It's always nice to get a clean

sheet," Kwarasey said. "I give credit to my defenders. They were solid the whole game."


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

PREP SCOREBOARD Girls basketball Class 5A State playoffs Round1

Pendleton 62, Summit 43 Pendleton (62) — Kristin Wiliams18,Sperl16, S.Greb9,Lindsey7,H.Greb5,Bodmer4,McGothan 3.Totals 2216-19 62. Summit (43) — SarahHeinly 24, Cornett10, Norby 7, Mo.Hagfors 2.Totals 43. Pendleton 16 14 13 19 — 62 Summit 7 10 10 16 — 43 Three-pointgoals —Pendleton:H. Greb,S. Greb; Summit:Heinly5, Cornett 2, Norby.

Silverton 49, Bend34 Bend (34) —SophiaJackson10, Parker8, A. Jackson 6, Roath 4, Kinkade2, Robinson 2, Scott 1, Evert l. Totals154-6 34. Silverton (49) —Alia Parsons10,McCarty10, Roth 7,Munson5, McLaughlin 5, Dster4. Totals 19 5-0 49. Bend 4 14 4 12 — 34 Silverton 721 5 16 — 49 Three-poingoal t s—Bend; none; Silverton; Parsons 4, McCarty, Munson.

La Salle 64, Ridgeview 28 Ridgeview (28) — Hosanna Wilder 8, Darien Epps 8,S.Wilcox3, Ross3, Whitney 2, McFetridge 2, Woodw ard 2.Totals12 3-14 28. La Salle (64) —AleahGoodman15, Cook14, Wedin 11,T.Goodman8,A.Jansen5,Riehl4,C.Jansen 4, Sisul 2,Tran1. Totals 2510-14 64. 2 11 7 8 — 2 8 Ridueview La Salle 19 19 20 6 — 64 Three-poingoal t s —Ridgeview:Epps; LaSale: T. Goodman, Wedin,Goodman,A.Jansen. Class 4A State playoffs Round1

Cascade 71, Madras56 Madras (56) —LyndenHarry 19,Stacona15,

Suppah 0, Iverson7, Sloan3,Wolfe 2,Adamsl. Totals19 9-11 56. Cascade(71) —HageWright 26, St. Peter20, Biddington11,Loukojarvi 6,Robbins 5,Molan2, Wilson l. Totals 2223-35 71. Madras 12 19 10 15 — 56 Cascade 24 13 21 13 — 71 Three -pointgoals— Madras:Suppah3,Stacona2, Harry;Cascade:St.Peter 2,Biddington, Wright.

Henley 44, Sisters 33 Sisters (33) — HaylieHudson9, Stewart 8, Mann 6,Horner4, Moore3, Arruda2, As.Smith 1. Totals 12 0-1233. Henley (44) —GabbyMathis 9, Heidi Mueller 9, 0'Connor7, DeLonge6, Haigh 4, Kochenderfer 4, Armantrout 3, deHoop2.Totals17 8-1444. Sislers 6 6 10 11 — 33 Henley 1 6 14 9 5 — 4 4 Three-poingoal t s—Sisters: Moore;Henley: Mathis, Mueller. Class 6A State playoffs Round 2 Saturday'sGame No.1 SouthMedford 74, No.16Glencoe48 No. 5Jesuit53,No.12West Albany33 No. 4SouthSalem83, No.13 Grant 45 No.3Beaverton 42, No.14Tigard 32 No. 6Sheldon55, No.11Clackamas47 No.7 St.Mary's73, No.10Central Catholic 61 No.15 Southridge 35, No.2Oregon City 31 State tournament At Chiles Center,Portland Thursday'sGames Guarlertinals No. 0Roseburg vs. No.1South Medford,1:30p.m. No. 5Jesuitvs.No.4South Salem,3:15p.m. No. 6Sheldonvs. No.3 Beaverton, 6:30p.m. No.15Southridge vs. No.7St. Mary's,815 pm. Class 5A State playoffs Round1 Saturday'sResults No.1Hermiston 70, No.16 Crescent Valley 36 No.0Pendleton62,No.8Summit43 No. 5Silverton49, No.12Bend34 No. 4Corvallis 46,No.13EaglePoint 35 No. 3Crater56,No.14Central 33 No. 6Springfield57,No.11TheDages40 No. 7Hrllsboro47,No.10Marist 42 No. 2 LaSale 64,No.15Ridgeview28 State tournament At Gill Coliseum,Corvaffis Wednesday'sGames Quarlerlinals No. 9Pendletonvs. No.1 Hermiston, 1:30p.m. No. 5Silyertonvs.No.4Corvalis,3:15 p.m. No. 6Springfieldvs.No.3 Crater, 6:30p.m. No. 7Hilsborovs.No.2 LaSalle,8:15p.m. Thursday'sGames Consolationsemifinals, 0am.,1045a m. Semifinals,6:30p.m.,8:15 p.m. Friday's Games Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Third-place game, 1:30p.m. Finals,6:30p.m. Class 4A State playoffs Round1 Saturday'sResults No.1Sutherlin75,No.168aker33 No. 9Mazama53, No.0Brookings-Harbor52, DT No. 5Gladstone53, No.12 Marshfield 30 No. 4Cascade71, No.13 Madras56 No. 3ValleyCatholic 57,No.14Junction City26 No. 6Seaside54, No.11Klamath Union43 No. 10Banks39,No.7LaGrande33, DT No. 2Henley44,No.15Sisters33

No. 7NorthMedfordvs.No.2CentralCatholic,815 pm.

Class 5A State tournament At Gill Coliseum,Corvaffis Tuesday'sGames Guarlerlinals No. 8Pendletonvs. No.1Mountain View,1:30 p.m. No.12Churchil vs.No.4Silyerton, 3:15p.m. No. 6Springfieldvs.No.3Wilsonvile, 6;30p.m. No. 7Maristvs.No.2 Summit, 8;15p.m. Wednesday'sGames Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,10:45 a.m. Thursday'sGames Semifinals,1:30p.m., 3:15p.m. Friday's Games Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Champi onship,8:30p.m. Class 4A State tournament Thursday'sGames At CenturyHS,Hiffsboro Quarlerlinals No. 9Cascadevs. No.1 North Bend,1:30p.m. No.5Scappoosevs.No.4Marshfield,3:15p.m. No.11 NorthMarionvs. No.3NorthValey, 6:30 p.m. No.10 Madras vs. No.2Philomath,8:15 p.m. Friday's Games At Liberty HS,Hiffsboro Consolationsemifinals, 9a.m.,10:45 a.m. Semifinals,3:15p.m., 8:15p.m. Saturday'sGames At Liberty HS,Hiffsboro Fourth-placegame,10:45 a.m. Third-placegame,3:15p.m. Champi onship,8:30p.m.

LavaBears irs a to i v erton Bulletin staff report SILVERTON — Bend High faced quite a challenge on Saturday night, and during

as a team," Lava Bears coach Todd Ervin said of Silverton.

the first half, it put a scare into Silverton. The 12th-seeded Lava Bears hung with the No. 5 Foxes in the firsthalf, but Silverton con-

trouble. But it was a great ex-

tinued to pull away after the break to earn a 49-34 girls basketballwininthe first round of

OSSA Finals at Mt. Bachelor,Cliffhanger Giant Slalom Girls Team times —Bend5:57.56, Summ it 6:00.59, Mountain View6:29.37, Sisters 7:12.84, Lakeview 7:54.67,Ridgeviewincomplete. Top 10 individuals (combinedA and0 runs) —1, ShelbCu y ter, 8,1:51.93. 2,PagetRathbun,Sum, 1:56.27. 3, KierstenRowles, B, 2:02.15.4, Madisen Schreder,LV,2:04.14. 5, ShannonBrennan,8, 2:04.41. 6, KeyleeFloyd, Sum,2:05.95. 7, LuciaCharlton, B, 2:06:31. 8,CarmenPark, 8, 2:08.20.9, Natalie Merril, Sum,20954. 10,AlexandraKirksey,MV,23039. other Central Oregonfinishers — 11,Kayla Berg,MV,2:10.43;12, ParkerCampbel, Sum,2:11.58; 13, IsabelAbt, B, 2:11.75;14, Emm a McComb, Sum, 2:17.03;15,BrennaStevens, RV , 2:17.50; 16, Sydney Levine, 8, 2:17.53;18, EmilyAusm an, Sis, 2:21.89; 19,KelseyMacy,Sum,2:23. 32;20,ChloeDowns,8, 2:23.05;21,Annabelle Hueske,Sum,2:24.36;22,Lilian Parks ,Sum,2:24.92;23,CammiBenson,Sis,2:24.04; 24, Emma Jewit, 8, 2:25.57;25, NicoleErmisch, Sum, 2;34.18;26,ErikaMorris, Sum,2:34.93; 27, Mckenzie Banks, Sis,2:35.72;28,ElizabethAusman,Sis,2:36.41; 20,Kelly Brennan,B,2:37.63;30,AnnikaTimm,B, 2:3948;31,AnnaRichelsen, Sum,2;40.48; 32, Casey Matl hews,Sum,2: 44.87;33,LiliHanson,Sum,2:46.94; 34, SayloMi r ler,8, 2:49.25;35,TaylorKing, 8,2:49.45; 36, JordanMcCormack, 0, 2:56.10;37, Raynee Macgowan,MV,2:57.76.

Girls basketball

they fell one step short of the

Epps each scored eight points state tournament in Hillsboro. for the Ravens (15-11). Cascade 71, Madras 56: Henley 44, Sisters 33: TURNER — The 13th-seedKLAMATH FALLS — Haylie ed White Buffaloes used a Hudson had nine points, seven 19-point second quarter to rebounds and seven assists, but the 15th-seeded Outlaws

whittle a 12-point first-period

fell on the road in the first

hole to a more-manageable six-point halftime deficit, but

round of the Class 4A state

the No. 4 Cougars oustcored

Madras (16-10) 21-10 in the third quarter en route to a win in the first round of the Class

4A state playoffs. Lynden Harry paced the Buffs with 19 points, while Mariah Stacona

had 15 points.

t,

n /t

Class2A State tournament Saturday's Results at PendletonConventionCenter Fourlh-placegame No. 8Burns48,No.6 Knappa47, 2DT Third-placegame No. 5Regis 50, No.3Heppner 45 Championship No. 2Toledovs. No.1 Irrigon65, No.2Toledo53

Alpine skiing

perience for the girls, and I'm really proud of them for how far theycame." Also on Saturday:

Hosanna Wilder and Darien

La Salle 64, Ridgeview 28: playoffs. Cierra Mann posted the Class 5A state playoffs. KLAMATH FALLS — Fac- six points, 14 boards and four Sophia Jackson paced Bend ing the highest-scoring team assists for Sisters (11-14), which (15-11) with 10 points, Allison in Class 5A, 15th-seeded Rid- held No. 2 Henley to just 14 Parker had eight, and Alexa geview fell behind 19-2 in the points in the second half. The Jackson added six points. first quarter before falling in Outlaws, however, committed "They played really well the first round of the 5A state 15 turnovers in the first half

Class 3A State tournament Saturday's Results at Marshfield HS,CoosBay Fourth-placegame No. 3 De LaSale 51,No.4 Creswell 46(DT) Third-placegame No.12SalemAcademy51, No.6 BlanchetCatholic 41 Championship No.1Dayton53, No.2Horizon Christian, Tualatin 43

Class1A State tournament at BakerHS,Baker City Saturday's Results Fourth-placegame No. 3Yoncalla60, No.4HosannaChristian 61 Third-placegame No.1Horizon Chrislian, HoodRiver63,No.6SiletzValley42 Championship No. 2CountryChristian61,No.5 Nixyaawii 53

"They played really good defense, gave us all kinds of

playoffs to No. 2 La Salle. and were unable to recover, as

RVCA

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

The Summit High boys alpine skiing team, left, and the Bend High girls team celebrate their OSSA state championships Saturday at Mt. Bachelor ski area.

Skiing Continued from 01 Although Summit still won the boys title, the Bend boys

had narrowed the lead to eight points, clinching the overall combined boys and girls title for the Lava Bears. "They were going at it, and they've gone at it all season,"

said. "By the time the girls overall with 808 points, while went, the snow was pretty second-place finisher Paget Rathbun was close behind much down to a hard surface. Rathbun of Summit. Kiersten with780. The top (of the course) was "It's really nice, for four definitely softer, which made Rowles and Shannon Brennan, both of Bend, finished years I've been here, we've it harder." third and fourth. had awesome competition and W imberly earned 2 0 0 "It was very warm, and the team has been so good," points for posting the fastest that affected the snow," Cutter Cutter said. "It's been nice time in both runs on Saturday, said. "My first run definitely to have the girls win all four giving him 1,230 points for the felt better, faster. The second years, and it's really nice to season and the overall boys run had way more turns and I win the individual title." title. Swisher finished second ute and 51.93 seconds, more than four seconds ahead of

Timm said. "My boys — and the girls — stepped up. They was late a lot, but it was a good made a focused, concentrated day." effort to ski for each other as a At the OSSA banquet, hostteam. There was some really ed at Bend High on Saturday solid team skiing today." evening, Cutter was named Shelby Cutter, a senior at the overall girls champion, Bend, dominated the slalom with 1,460 points from eight in her last high school ski events contested during the competition, completing her season. She also won the intwo runs in a time of 1 min- dividual slalom and giant sla-

lom titles. Rowles was second

Summit's Thomas Wimber-

ly rebounded from a crash in Friday's giant slalom to win Saturday's slalom in a time of 1:46.21. Sam Nelson and Brody Swisher, both of Bend, finished second and t h ird,

with 1,010. Jonathan Wim-

berly, also of Summit, did not finish either run Saturday but

still finished third in the season standings with 745 points. Thomas Wimberly also finished atop the slalom and gi-

respectively. ant slalom standings. "I felt pretty iffy (today), but — Reporter: 541-385-0305; I kept it together," Wimberly

vjacobsen@bendbu((etirt.com

Boys

Team times —Bend5:31.25, Summ it 5:46.41, lakeview5:48.25, Mountain View 0:10.70, Sisters 8:58.65,Ridgeviewincomplete, Redmondincomplete. Top 10 rndfvfduats(combinedA and6 runs) —1, Thoma sWimberly, Sum,1:46.21. 2, SamNelson, 8, 1:48.80. 3, NateDdegaard, LV,1:49.58.4, Brody Swisher,B,1:50.19.5, lanLevine, 8,1:52.17. 6, Kevin Panton,Sum,1:54.65. 7,CorenDdegaard,LV,1:54.83. 8, GiovanniRicci, 8,2:00.38.9, PierceScheder,LV,2:03.84. 10, SrnnWilson, 8,2:04.70. other CentralOregonfinishers —11,lanRicketts, Red,2:05.51;12, Cooper Roslund, Sum,2:05.55; 13, BrianDowner, Sum,2:11.15;14, JasperLadkin, B, 2:14.77;15,LoganTurner,B,2:15.80;16, GreysonHouts, RV,2:23.77;17,Adam Breitenbach,Sum,2:25.04;18, PeterSherwood, B,2:26.14; 19, SamHusband, Red, 2;31.24;20,Garrett Keith, MV,2:31.47; 21, JakeSahlberg,Sis,2;32.60;22, JacksonTebeau, 8, 2;32.03; 23, IsaacBlackburn,8, 2;33.68; 24, RyanDeCastilhosr 8, 2:34. 76;25,Adam Blackburn,B,2;35.20;26,JoelWitts, 8,2:35.20;27,TravisSully,Sum,2:38.01;28,FinnJensen, Sum,2:39.12;29,NathanErickson,Sum,2:44.95; 30,LachlanWood,Sis,2:47. 66;31,BradenAllen,RV, 2:48.08;32, CoginYetey, MV , 2:49.65; 34,NateMiler, Sum,3:00.50;35,EricHayes, 8,3:05.66;36, SeanFraley, MV,3:22.73;37,lanRay,8,3:25.63;38,EmettSantucci, Sum,3:25.81;39,CameronHuntsman,Sum,3:37.28; 40, Yasha Saldi, Sis,3:38.30.

Final seasonstandings Girls andboyscombined—Bend178,Summit 174,Lakeview112,Mountain View90,Sisters70. State tournament Girls Thursday'sGames Giant slalom team — Bend46, Sum mit 42, At Liberly HS,Hiffsboro MountainView28, Lakeview22, Sisters14, Ridgeview4. Guarterlinals Slalom team —Bend48, Summit 40,Lakeview26, No. 0Mazamavs.No.1 Sutherlin, 1:30p.m. MountainView22, Sisters20,Ridgeview0. No.5Gladstonevs.No.4Cascade,3:15p.m. Combinedteam—Bend94, Summit82, Mountain No. 6Seasidevs. No.3Valley Catholic, 6:30p.m. View50,Lakeview48,Sisters 34,Ridgeview4. No.10 Banks vs. No.2 Henley, 8:15p.m. Giant slalom —1, Shelby Cutter, 8, 760.2, Paget Friday's Games Rathb un,Sum,460.3,KierstenRowles,8,427.4,Lucia At CenturyHS,Hiffsboro Charlton,8, 294.5, ShannonBrennan, B,282. 6,Kayla Consolationsemifinals, 9am.,1045a m. Berg,MV,277.7, Natalie Merrill, Sum,257.8, Maggie At Liberly HS,Hiffsboro McElrath,Sum,240. 9,KeyleeFloyd,Sum,234.10, IsaSemifinals,1:30p.m.,6:30 p.m. bel Abt,8,227.11, Sydney Levine,8, 186.12,Madisen Friday's Games Schreder,LV,163. 13, Parker Campbel, Sum,161. 14, At Liberly HS,Hiffsboro CammiBenson,Sis,152.15,DagnyDonohue,B,137. Fourt h-placegame,9a.m. Slalom — 1, Shelby Cutter,8, 700.2, LuciaCharlThird-place game,1:30 p.m. ton, 8,410.3, KierstenRowles,0,381. 4,Paget Rathbun, Finals,6:30p.m. Sum,320.5,ShannonBrennan,0,274.6,NatalieMerrill, Sum, 242.7, MadisenSchreder, LV,236. 8, Maggie Class 3A McElrath,Sum,203. 9,KeyleeFloyd,Sum,198.10,Kayla State tournament Berg,MV,190.11,Parker Campbel, Sum,150.12, SidSaturday'sResults neyDoyle,MV,147.13, CarmenPark, 8,139. 14,Sydney at Norlh BendHS Levine,B,129. 15(tie), DagneyDonohue, 8, 125,and Fourth-placegame IsabelAbt,8,125. No. 5Amity62, No.7PortlandAdventist 41 Combinedoverall — 1, Shelby Cutter, 8, 1,460. At Marshfield HS,CoosBay 2,KierstenRowles,8,800.3,PagetRathbun,Sum,780. Third-placegame 4, LuciaCharlton, 8, 713.5, ShannonBrennan, B,556. No. 2Vale55,No.8St. Mary's28 6, NatalieMerrill, Sum,499.7,Kayla Berg, MV,467. 8, Championship Maggie McElralh,Sum,413.9,KeyleeFloyd,Sum,432. No.3Dayton51,No.4SalemAcademy30 10, Madisen Schreder,LV,309.11, Isabel Abt,8,352.12, SydneyLevine, B,315. 13,ParkerCampbel, Sum,311. Class 2A 14, Sidney Doyle, MV,266. State tournament Boys Saturday'sResults Giantslalomteam—Summit48, Bend40,Lakevat PendletonConvention Center iew32,MountainView20, Sisters20. Fourth-placegame Slalom team —Summit44, Bend44,Lakeview32, No. 3Vernonia61,No.5 Monroe56 Mountain View20,Sisters16. Third-placegame Combined team — Summi t92,Bend84,Lakeview No. 4Union51,No.2Kennedy28 64, MountaiVi new40,Sisters36. Championship Giant slalom—1,ThomasWimberly,Sum,570.2, No.1 Western Mennonite43, No.6 Burns38 Jonathan Wimberly, Sum,565.3,BrodySwisher, 8,500. 4,NateDdegaard,LV,306.5,KevinPanton,Sum,380.6, Class1A SamNelson,0, 249. 7(tie), RyanDeCastilhos, 8, 242, State tournament andWalterlafky, Sum,242. 0,CorenDdegaard, LV,223. at Baker HS,BakerCity 10, Sean Wilson,8,214.11, lanLevine,8,193.12, Yasha Saturday'sResults Saldi,Sis,186.13,Giovanni Ricci, 8,182.14,lanlafky, Fourth-placegame Sum,130.15,PierceSchreder,LV,124. No. 9Adrian45,No.11Elkton34 Slalom — 1,ThomasWimberly,Sum,660.2,Brody Third-placegame Swisher,8,510.3,NateDdegaard,LV,335.4, Kevin PanNo.2NorthDouglas58,No.4Condon/Wheeler40 ton, Sum,307.5,lanLevine,8,263.6,CorenDdegaard, Championship LV,250.7,SeanWilson,B,199.8,SamNelson,B,190. No. 1DamascusChristian51,No.3Country Christian46 9, Giovanni Ricci, 8,186.10,MorganTien,Sum, 184.11, Jonathan Wimberly, Sum,100.12, YashaSaldi, Sis,145. 13, Cooper Roslund,Sum, 144.14, RyanDeCastilhos,B, Boys basketball 123.15,LoganTurner,B,117. Class 6A Combinedoverall — 1,ThomasWimberly, Sum, State tournament 1,230.2,BrodySwisher,B,1,010. 3,Jonalhan Wimberly, At Chiles Center,Portland Sum,745.4,NateDdegaard,8,731.5,KevinPanton,B, Wednesday'sGames 687. 6,CorenDdegaard, LV,473.7,lanLevine, 8,456. 8, Guarlerfinals SamNelson,8,439.9,SeanWilson,B,413.10, Giovanni No. 0Southridge vs. No.1West Linn,1:30 pm. Ricci,Sum,368.11,RyanDeCastilhos, 8,365.12,Yasha No.13 SouthEugenevs.No.5SouthSalem,315pm. Saldi,LV,331.13,Walter Lafky,B,242.14, PierceSchedNo. 11Lakeridgevs. No.3Jesuit, 6:30p.m. er, Sum,236. 15,Cooper Roslund,8,225.

Storm

the No. 9 Buckaroos to stymie

and five rebounds. Summit,

the Storm and advance to the state tournament at Gill Coli-

however, fell into a 13-point

Continued from 01 Despite how o ne-sided seum in Corvallis. The Bucks' Saturday's contest proved down-low dominance came to be, Heinly was not going in the form of K ristin Wildown without a fight. Play- liams, who posted 18 points, ing without one of its top nine boards and three blocks. scorers — sophomore Sarah P endleton's muscle w a s Reeves, who was out with a demonstrated by Kiana Sperl, right knee injury — Summit, who o v erpowered S t orm the No. 8 seed in the 16-team defenders on her way to 16 field, leaned on Heinly. She points and nine rebounds. "Right away, their size and did not disappoint, burying five 3-pointers and finishing physicality got to us," Cruz with a game-high 24 points to said. "(We) gave up a lot of go with seven rebounds. second- an d t h i r d-chance "Just a kid with all heart. o pportunities early in t h e I love the way she competed game.... Their size just overtonight. Never gave in," said whelmed us, and physicality Summit coach Ryan Cruz,

and strength. That's what

noting how Heinly had to

you've got to do to beat an

take onmore of a scoring role with Reeves sidelined. "She's

elite, to learn to play with that

straight season.

This setback was painful, hole by halftime before hang- Heinly assures, but it does ing with Pendleton in the sec-

not take away f rom w h at

ond half. "If we would have taken

Summit accomplished this season, including its first In-

away the first half and started

termountain Conference title

out playing like we did in the since 2009. As sour as Satursecond half then we probably day's loss was for the Storm, would have been right there,"

they expect to return all but

said Cruz, whose team was one player: senior Kaely Goroutscored by six points in don. That, Heinly said, makes the second half. "We let their Summit a dangerous team shooters loose a little bit ear- next year. "I think we're going to be a ly, and it's hard to come from behind when you're playing huge threat just because this from behind. You're chang- team has so much heart and ing things a little bit with per- they play with so much passonnel and how you want to sion," Heinly said. "Every day play the game." in practice, we work harder Shelby Greb scored nine and harder each day. The loss points for Pendleton (17-9), of Kaely is going to be huge, while Darian Lindsey had but I think we're going to take seven points, five assists and this loss and carry it into next four rebounds to help bury season. And I think we're gothe Storm, who were eliming to be a huge threat." inated in the first round of — Reporter: 541-383-0307,

and be stronger." just everything you could ask Megan Cornett hit a pair of 3-pointers for the Storm (18for in a player." But Pendleton's size and 6 overall), and Kelsey Norby offensive rebounding allowed chipped in with seven points the state playoffs for the third

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

GOLF ROUNDUP

Utes' ossgivesDuc s No.2 Pac-12see The Associated Press S EATTLE —

From w i n-

ning its first 11 games to being ranked in the Top 15, to dismissing its most important

Wednesday

Thursday

defensive player, to losing 10 of 11, Washington's perplexing

No. 9 Washington St. No. 8 California

No. 13 Utah might be the most surprISHlg. "Today was fun to w atch from a coach'sperspective be-

No. 12 Southern Cal

cause we played right for 40 minutes on both ends of the

No. 10 Colorado

floor," Washington coach Lo-

No. 7 OregonSt.

renzo Romar said. Nigel Williams-Goss scored 28 points, including a deep 3-pointer with 1:08 remaining

lost the head-to-head tiebreaker having lost to the Ducks in their

Saturday

Pq E

All gamesat MGMGrand,LasVegas

8pm

Johnson also

No. 5 Arizona 91, Stanford 69:

aced the hole Saturday, but him by five strokes. Wilfredo Lee /The Associated Press

McKissic scored 21 points in his last collegiate home game, and Arizona State used late free throws to hold off

8:30 p.m.

California.

No. 6 Stanford

Washington Stale 96, ColoNo. 3 Utah

rado 91: PULLMAN, Wash. — Josh Hawkinson scored 21

expire, and Washington rallied to stun the 13th-ranked Utes

points and Ike Iroegbu added t h i s week's Pac-12 tournament 18 as Washington State won in will now be the No. 3 seed for in Las Vegas after finishing overtime. third time in five games and

Utah (23-7, 13-5) lost for the

Holmes leads

70:TEMPE, Ariz. — Shaquielle

No. 2 Oregon No. 11 Washington

hole-in-one on the fourth tee during the third round of the Cadillac Championship Saturday in Doral, Florida. Dustin

Also on Saturday:

nell had 10 points and 11 assists in his final home game to help Arizona dose out the regular season. Arizona State 74, California

6 p.m. R E (U C

as the shot clock was about to 77-68.

I

TUCSON, Ariz. — T.J. McConNo. 4 UCLA

No. 5 Arizona St.

4

•a

only regular season meeting.

No. 1 Arizona

chapter on Saturday. Of all those events, beating

celebrates a

in a tie with Oregon. The Utes

QUARTERFINALS SEMIS FINAL Friday

J. B. Holmes

PAC-12 ROUNDUP

Pac-12 men'sdasketdall tournament 1ST ROUND

season added another unlikely

D5

Holmes hits anace,4

straight birdiesfor lead The Associated Press D ORAL,

Fla. —

hole. J . B.

"I usually hit a little bit of

Holmes and Dustin Johnson a cut, and if I hit it perfect, it made aces on the same hole would stay straight," Holmes about 20 minutes apart Sat- said. "And it did." urday at Doral, both with a 7-iron from 207 yards and with a shot that reacted al-

It's not a coincidence that Holmes, Watson and Johnson are in the top three in

most identically when it

driving distance this week. Watson managed five bird-

landed in the middle of the

green and rolled up the slope ies, the last one from the and into the cup. back bunker on the dauntBoth pounded one 300- ing closing hole at the Blue yard drive after another on Monster. It was his second a course where length is a straight day holing a bunker huge advantage. And for a shot. "I can't worry about what brief moment, they were separated by one shot. J.B. is doing," Watson said. "This golf course is hard The difference turned out to be the shortest club in the enough as it is. If I start worbag. rying about other people, I'm Holmes found a groove going to lose it."

The Associated Press LEXINGTON, Ky. — After

downplaying the possibility of the achievement in recent

weeks, top-ranked Kentucky finally embraced its milestone following the end of Saturday's 67-50 victory over

with his putter late in the round that carried him to

Florida.

The W ildcats gathered at midcourt and hurriedly donned blue

T-shirts with D one Ye t " in white. For

T OP 2 5

ROUNDUP

sure, they seek nine more wins to claim th e u l timate

achievement for the storied program. But taking a moment to rec-

ognize Kentucky's first 31-0 regular season was signifi-

r

cant for players who insist that

James Crisp /The Associated Press

winning the program's ninth Kentucky's Aaron Harrison, with microphone, addresses the crowd during a ceremony marking the NCAA championship is most team's undefeated regular season after a 67-50 victory over Florida in Lexington, Kentucky, on Saturday. this celebration is temporary as the Wildcats will soon re-

No. 16 Louisville 59, No. 2

sume working toward the only Virginia 57: LOUISVILLE, Ky. thing that matters. — Mangok Mathiangmade a "We take pride but our jour- 15-footer with 2.7 seconds left ney is not done," said fresh- to give Louisville a stunning man forward Trey Lyles, who victory over Virginia. Montrehad 14points and six rebounds zl Harrell had 20 points and 12 for Kentucky. "We have a lot of rebounds to lead Louisville. work to do and we only have No. 3 Duke 84, No. 19 North two guaranteed games left Carolina 77: CHAPEL HILL, in our season, so we have to N.C. — 7yus Jones scored 17 of make sure we go out there and his season-high 24 in the secplay hard and together. ond half to help Duke shoot 59 "It just shows how great percent after the break. theseguys are on the team, Jones scored 17 of his seahow much we care for one an- son-high 24 in the second half other and how much we want for the Blue Devils (28-3, 15-3 to win." Atlantic Coast Conference), Kentucky's methodical path who capitalized on a handful to victory and the milestone of key turnovers by the Tar achievementwere enough for Heels (21-10, 11-7) to finally Florida coach Billy Donovan get a fragile hold on a game in to declare that it could stand which neither team could get for "a long, long time." many second-half stops. "I think it's important for No. 4Villanova105, St. John's people to reflect in a real pos- 68: PHILADELPHIA — Danitive way of what they have iel Ochefu had 21 points and accomplished this season," nine rebounds, and J aysaid Donovan, whose team Vaughn Pinkston scored 18 went 21-0 in SEC play last sea- points as Villanova rolled to its son including a tournament 12th straight victory. championship victory over No. 7 Gonzaga 81, San FranKentucky.

Also on Saturday:

son-high 24 points and Kyle Wiltjer added 19 to lead Gon-

most regular-season wins in school history.

zaga in the West Coast ConferNo. 17 lowa State 89, TCU ence tournament. 76: FORT WORTH, TexasIllinois State 65, No. 8 Wichita Georges Niang and Monte State 62: ST. LOUIS — Dais- Morris each had 19 points for hon Knight capped a 25-point Iowa State, which trailed 32-26 game with two critical free

at halftime.

throws in the closing seconds, LSU 81, No. 18 Arkansas 78: and Illinois State rallied from F AYETTEVILLE, A r k . an eight-point halftime win in Keith Hornsby hit a 3-pointer the Missouri Valley Confer- at the buzzer to lift LSU. ence tournament semifinals. No. 20 West Virginia 81, OklaNo. 15 Oklahoma 75, No. 9 in with 0.2 seconds left to give

22 points to lead West Virginia. No. 21 Butler 66, No. 24 Providence 64: P R OVIDENCE, seven rebounds. R.I. — Roosevelt Jones scored No. 11 Northern lowa 63, 16 points and Kellen Dunham Loyola of Chicago 49: ST. LOU- had 15 for Butler. IS — Seth Tuttle led a balBelmont 88, No. 25 Muranced attack with 13 points, ray State 67: NASHVILLE, and Northern Iowa advanced Tenn. — Taylor Barnette hit a to the Missouri Valley Con- 3-pointer with 3.2 seconds left,

Oklahoma the victory. Hield finished with 18 points and

ference tournament finals and Belmont upset Murray against Illinois State. State to win the Ohio Valley No. 12 Notre Dame 81, Clem- Conference tournament chamson 67:SOUTH BEND, Ind. pionship and clinch its seventh Jerian Grant had 19 points and NCAA tournament berth. The eight assists, and Zach AuRacers (27-5) will have to wait cisco 72:LAS VEGAS — Przeguste added 19 points as Notre to seeif theyhave earned an atmek Karnowski scored a sea- Dame (26-5) finished with the large spot in the tournament. -

Nextup

final minute.

Sophie Brunner led Arizona Pac-12 tournament final: range scored 18 points, Tay- Stanford vs. California State (27-5) with 14 points. The lor Greenfield's driving basSun Devils had a chance to tie, ket with 44 seconds left gave When:6tonightTV:ESPN but Elisha Davis' 3-point atStanford the lead for good tempt at the buzzer was short. tournament: Selection show and the No. 19 Cardinal held NCAA Greenfield finished with 17 off No. 9 Arizona State 59-56 When:4p.m. March16TV: ESPN points including a key offenon Saturday night in the Pacsive rebound and free throw 12 Conference tournament

son and Briana Roberson all

semifinals. Orrange scored 15 points in

knocked down 3-pointers as Kaylee Johnson split her free Stanford (23-9) took a 50-37 throw attempts. lead. The Cardinal needed Arizona State snapped a every bit of that advantage as 16-game losing streak to StanArizona State rallied to take ford, winning on the road in a 56-55 lead with 2:19 left. January,and became the first Greenfiel d's basket proved to conference team to sweep the be the winner as part of wild Cardinal in the regular season

that turned a four-point lead

into a 13-point advantage. Orrange, Bonnie Samuel-

Lydia Ko and Stacy Lewis in

five shots clear of Johnson (69) and Masters champion Bubba Watson (70). "All you can really ask for is a chance to win on Sunday

pions. The second-ranked Park had a bogey-free round to reach 13-under 203 on

on the back nine," Holmes

Brown finishes strong for share of lead: RIO

sard. On a day of two aces, five other eagles on par 4s and even a scuba driver retrieving the 3-iron that Rory McIlroy heaved into the lake Doral with his late surge.

The last time aces were recordedon the same holein the same round onthe PGA

the HSBC Women's Cham-

Sentosa's Serapong Course. Ko and Lewis shot 67. G RANDE, Puerto Rico Scott Brown birdied the final two holes for a 5-under

67 and a share of the lead with Chris Smith in the PGA Tour's wind-swept Puerto

Rico Open. Brown, the 2013 winner, matched Smith at 6-under 210 at Trump International-Puerto Rico. Smith had a 68.

Tour was at Liberty Nation-

Fisher leads Africa Open:

al in 2013 at The Barclays. T hat was K .J. Choi a n d

EAST LONDON, South Africa — South Africa's Trevor Fisher Jr. shot a 9-under 63 to take a two-stroke lead in the

Greg Chalmers, and neither was in contention. This was different.

Africa Open. Fisher had a h a ir 16-under 200 total. England's right," Johnson said about Matt Ford was second after "Pushed it just a

his hole-in-one on the fourth

a 69.

NHL ROUNDUP

Bruins scorelate, in overtime to beat Flyers The Associated Press BOSTON — Boston's Brad

Marchand scored the tying goal late in regulation and added the winner in overtime as the Bruins beat the

Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 on

with 10

since 1988 when the Sun Devils won 53-52 at home in early February. In Sa t u rday's ot h e r semifinal: California 66, Colorado 55:

game injury absenceto score his NHL-leading 44th goal for Washington. Canadiens 2, Coyotes 0: GLENDALE, Ariz. — Carey Price made 29 saves for his seventh shutout of the sea-

Saturday. Marchand sent it to over-

son for Montreal.

time with 14.1 seconds left

VILLE,

and then won it 3:52 into the

S EATTLE — A m ber O r -

Stanford's decisive run midway through the second half

at Trump National Doral, he had a 2-under 70 and was

Kansas 73: NORMAN, Okla. — Buddy Hield scored on a tip- liams tied a career high with

Stanford upsetsArizona State to reachPac-12final

the first half and was part of

pore: SINGAPORE — South Korea's Inbee Park shot a 4-under 68 to take a twostroke lead over top-ranked

homa State 72: MO RGANTOWN, WVa. — Devin Wil-

WOMEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

The Associated Press

Park leads by two in Singa-

four straight birdies and expanded his lead in the Cadillac Championship. Even with a bogey on the final hole

the day before, Holmes took some of the drama out of

important. At the same time

Also on Saturday:

extra session. Also on Saturday: Lightning 5, Stars 4:TAM-

Jets 3, Predators1:NASHT enn. Blake Wheeler scored the goahead goal midway through the second period, and Winnipeg sent Nashville to its

season-worst sixth straight Victor Hedman scored early defeat. third-period goals, and TamBlues 6, Maple Leafs 1: pa Bay rallied to top Dallas. TORONTO — Jori Lehtera Avalanche 4, Blue Jack- and Alexander Steen both PA, Fla. — Alex Killorn and

ets 0: COLUMBUS, Ohio

had three assists, and six St.

Jarome Iginla, Gabriel Landeskog and Matt

Louis players scored. Penguins 1, Kings 0:LOS

Duchene scored in the first

ANGELES — Patric Horn-

10 minutes, and Semyon

qvist scored on a Kings turn-

SEATTLE — Brittany Boyd

Varlamov made 44 saves for his fifth shutout of the sea-

over in the slot 1:44 into overtime, and Pittsburgh beat

had 18 points, 10 rebounds and seven assist s as fourth-seed-

son to lead Colorado. Los Angeles. Panthers 4, Islanders 3: Canucks 3, Sharks 2:SAN

s econds left a f ter ed California beat No. 9 seed

Colorado in the Pac-12 tournament semifinals. Reshanda Gray added 17 points and 10 rebounds for the Bears. Colorado openedthe game with

SUNRISE, Fla. — Jonathan Huberdeau scored the de-

JOSE, Calif. — Radim Vr-

ciding shootout goal to lift

bata scored his second goal of the game to break a tie in

Florida.

the third period and made

Capitals 6, Sabres 1:

an alert defensive play to

a 12-3 lead, but Cal outscored

C u r t i s preserve the lead and help Glencross had a goal and Vancouver complete the ral-

the Buffaloes 26-11 from there for a six-point lead at the half.

two assists, and Alex Ovech- ly from a two-goal deficit to kin returned from a one- beat San Jose.

W ASHINGTON —


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

Fish

Mardy Fish, who has not

Continued from D1

played in a match since

He left the ATP Tour 18

months ago, seemingly for good, dabbled in lower-tier professional golf and became a

"Time has healed most of it," players from UCLA and sevhe said. eral young American pros like Those in his inner circleStefan Kozlov. Fish has shed 20 his wife, Stacey, his parents pounds as he worked himself and his close friends — worry back into playing shape. about how he will handle the At times, he said, he quespressure cooker on a big stage tioned whether he could attain

August 2013, is shown

s4t~ k

during train-

father.

ing Friday at Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, California.

Now he is back for a last go — if for nothing else than to"re-

affirm that I can stiII play the game," Fish, 33, said. He announced on Driritter in

Januarythathe wouldreturnto singles competition at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, California, which begins this week. Speaking by phone Wednesday, Fish said hehad felt robbed of the chance to leave tennis on

supportive, Fish said. His fellow rass myself." Americans are pulling for him, Last month, Fish played too. alongside his friend Mark Roddick said in an email Knowles at a Challenger tourthat he had practiced with Fish nament in Dallas, where they a couple of times recently and reached the quarterfinals. that he lookedgood. Speaking publicly about his Bob Bryan said in an email: psychological struggles has "He still has a lot of mileage left elicited a flood of positive feedon his body and I feel he has back, Fish said, and his return a lot of good tennis left in his to world-dass athletics is not future." only apersonal journey. "There are millions and milFor the past three months, Fish practiced mostly at the lions of people that struggle

Sandy HuffakerI New York Times

News Service

9 Qt

his own terms.

"I wanted a different route out of the game," he said while steps. He has entered only the preparing to practice with 11th- two Masters tournaments at Inranked Grigor Dimitrov in dian Wells and Key Biscayne, Manhattan Beach, California. Florida, this month. Then he "I've afforded myself the oppor- will reassess. " It's certainly not a f u l l tunity to at least try to play one more time." fledged comeback," Fish said. Fish's actions and words sug- "I don't think I can ever do that gestedadesiretoend hiscareer agaIn. on a happier note. Last summer Indian Wells is a logical site he entertained the idea of team-

for his return. It is easy driv-

ing up in doubles with Andy

ing distance from Fish's home in Los Angeles. He has also

Roddick at the U.S. Open. They

were denied because Roddick, who retired in 2012, could not conform to dopingprotocols. The deeper feeling that Fish had been somehow cheated continued to chew him up.

I

kept it dose to the vest for a while," he said. Fish has a protected ranking of No. 25, which means he can gain direct entry to as many as nine ATP Tour events (exduding wild cards) over the next 32

He is realistic about his place in the game.

lem Open against Jarkko Nieminen of Finland, trailing, 7-5, 6-7 (3), 3-2. He has played

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actually a huge step for me," back six months later but endFish said. ed it after six events and nine His professional comeback matches. will commence with baby Fish, who has earned more

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velop a board. That career

and, obviously, the economy, change spawned an industry and the people there love the that now produces more than freestyle thing. We've taken $500 million in merchandise snowboards to a lot of places, sales annually. Burton, who but we've never taken them to has kept his company private, a market where it's as small as is estimated to have between it is there right now." 40 percent and 70 percent of Now 60, and recovering that business, depending on nicely from a r eplacement the sector. He says since its of his left knee, (He rode his third year of existence, Burton snowboard in Vail on Thurs- Snowboards has turned a profday, three weeks to the day it every year. "For sure, snowboarding as of the replacement) Burton is making yet another move into directly compared to skiing, it an Asian market that he first had its run. Nothing goes forevwent to in Japan, which hosted er, right?" Burton said. "There's the inaugural Olympic snow- ebb andfl ow toeverything.But board contest, then in South nobody's going to tell you that Korea, which will host the next snowboardingis going away." He's among the few people one. Beijing is in the running, in the business of running acalong with Almaty, Kazakh- tion-sports contests who hasn't stan, for the 2022 Olympics. given in to the trend of pigBurton isn't depending on a gybacking freeskiing events China victory to make his busi- onto snowboard contests. The ness work there. But it certain- Olympics, Winter X Games ly wouldn't hurt. and Dew T our h av e d one

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it. The inventor of the mod-

comes along with it is amaz- ern-day snowboard doesn't see ing," he said. "But you can't his company going that direcbling this or doubling that." He doesn't shy from the

e

age 30 in 2011. He finished the

But he is light-years from He skipped the French Open where he was. He can sleep that springbutplayed on for the alone. He has pushed himself next few months. He withdrew in practice matches without before a fourth-round match

connect the Olympics to dou-

Fish was in some minds the

es. He has traveled outside the 2012. A form of cardiac arcountry only twice since com- rhythmia was eventually diagpeting at Wimbledon in 2012 nosed, and he underwent a car-

"The inevitable hype that

I

He has few expectations and

does not care about rankings. He is not sure where his level is, although he says he has won "a lot of practice matches."

medication. He remains in ther- year No.8. Fish's heart problems struck apy. He usually wears a heart-

"China's got the mountains

e

I

Sept. 7, in time for one last stop most gifted player among arepat the U.S. Open. utable generation of U.S. men He sayshe dreams of playing that included Roddick, James in New York, on the lawns of Blake, Robby Ginepri and TayWimbledon again or across the lor Dent. Long on talent but globe at the Australian Open, short on discipline, Fish rededalthough such far-flung trips icated himself in his late 20s, appear unrealistic. producinghis best season at

"It sounds crazy, but that's

I

vak Djokovic. Fish's last match was Aug.

s ix tournaments an d n i n e matches in the past 26 months.

— to Canada and the Bahamas.

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ner-up finish to top-ranked No-

cIrcuIt. "I was not secretive, but I

rate monitor when he practic-

al training facility at Carson, ness."It canbe beaten. It canbe California, under the watch- conquered. I'm going to try and ful eye of veteran coach David show people that it's possible at Nainkin. Fish has hit with top the highest level."

Federer on his way to a run-

21, 2013, when he retired in the third round at the Winston-Sa-

Fish is still on anti-anxiety

from it," he said of mental ill-

U.S. Tennis Association nation-

than $7.3 million in prize monHe says, simply, that he is ey, insisted his return was not better. Hehaslearned to increfinancially motivated or indica- mentallymanage each new tive of ennui. anxiety-provoking situation.

enjoyed success at the tournament. In2008, he beat Roger

Marriage,fatherhood and financial security were not enough. So in December, Fish toldhis family and dose friends that he had decided to rejoin the

weeks. That would take him to

"any sort of level to not embar-

like Indian Wells. But all are

tion, however. "We support those events, but it doesn't feel right for this

event," he said. "It's not part of A slow economy, better tech- our heritage. It's like, we could nology in skis and ski appar- start making skis tomorrow, statistics in his own country.

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ed to declines in participation and sales, especially when set against the numbers in skiing. Among the stats: Snowboarders made up about 28 percent

us a

one thing Burton is doing is looking at China. He doesn't blanch at th e t h ought that

someday, 10 percent of his salescould come from there.

"I'm not saying that four of visitors to U.S. ski resorts last season, down from 31 per- years down the road, we have cent the year before, according to be there," he said. "But we to the Kottke National End of Season Survey for 2013-14.

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drugs, compared with 73.5 percent when the study began. The p atients had s i gnificant improvements in perceived pain and functional disabilities. Battisti wrote that "pain ameliorated after 40 days of therapy and the improvement was significant both statistically and clinically."

New Antioxidant Combination Helps Reduce Low Back Pain

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Both substances function as important cellular antioxidants, and alpha-lipoic acid is also used in the treatment of diabetic nerve pain.

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Reference Battisti E,AlbaneseA,Guerra L, et al.Alpha lipoic acid and superoaide dismutase in the treatment of chmnic low backpain. Emopean Journal of Physical andRehabilitation Medicine. 2013;49:1-6.

People with celiac disease whose intestines do not fully heal have a much higher risk of developing lymphoma, an i m mune system cancer, compared with other celiac patients and the general population.

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celiac patients adopt a gluten-free diet, the villi return to normal. Benjamin L e bwhohl, M D , of Col u m b ia University Medical Center, New York City and collaborators at the KarolinskaInstitute, Sweden, studied 7,625 patients with celiac disease, of whom 3,308 had persistent villous atrophythat is, continued flattening of intestinal villi. People with this problem often have difficulty eating a gluten-free diet. Over an average ofnine years of follow up, celiac patients were almost three times more likely to develop lymphoma compared with people who did not have celiac disease. Those with persistent villous atrophy had a four-time greater risk of developing lymphoma compared w ith non-celiac patients. They w er e a l so three times more likely to develop lymphoma compared with celiac patients whose intestines had healed. ReferenceLebwohl B. Granath F, Ekbom A, et al Mucosal healing and risk for lymphopmliferature malignancy in celiac disease. Apopulation-based cohort study. Annals of fnfernalMedicine,2013;159: 169- 175.

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

Inside the nation's biggest sports distributor

At Philly restaurant, they do right by employees

By Cheryl Hall

By Michael Hinkelman

The Dallas Morning News

Philadelphia Daily News

FARMERS BRANCH,

PHILADELPHIAChristian Mora, 38, and Brian Oliveira, 24, are

Texas — If you go to a Friday night high school football game, it's possi-

co-owners of Girard

ble that every inanimate

Brasserie 8z Bruncherie in

thing you see other than the turf on the field was

Philadelphia. They have attracted national atten-

,s ".

bought from BSN Sports

tion for operating a no-tip restaurant and paying their staff living wages

w

LLC — uniforms, equipment, benches, bleachers, goalposts, down signs and chain sets, footballs, scoreboards, water cool-

plus health insurance, sick

leave and paid vacations. I spoke with Mora. the idea for Q •• How'd Girard come about'?

ers, misting fans, even the

paint used for the yard lines. The same holds true

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Gerard LaBrecque is the owner of Joseph's Juniper, a juniper logging andmilling operation in Hines.

for just about every team sports event at every school level anywhere in America.

• I'd been in the indus• try for 15 years and wanted my own restau-

rant. I'd worked with great chefs, and Brian was some-

body who was talented and passionate. We started sharing ideas, and in the fall of 2013 we started looking for a space. We opened

BSN is the largest distributor of team apparel,

footwear and equipment in the country, selling to 125,000 school, league and

last November.

institutional customers in

literally every ZIP code

Q • The startup money?

in America. It distributes

• I'd saved a lot, and

A • Brian's family helped, so it was all person-

more Nike and Under Armour team sports prod-

ucts than any other company. And revenue this

al, just under a half-million.

year is expected to soar

past the half-billion-dollar mark.

But you've probably never heard of the 43-year-old company. "We're the best-kept

secret in team sports," says Adam Blumenfeld, BSN's 44-year-old chief executive and son of the company's founder. "We have more than 500

Juniperlegislation

By StephenHamWaye The Bulletin

HINES-

salespeople on the road talking primarily to high schools, colleges, youth and select sports clubs. We have a catalog division

n al2-acre parcel just west of Burns, Gerard LaBrecque mills wood from perhaps the least

popular tree in Oregon.

that services parks and

recreation departments, clubs, camps, churches and prisons. "We sell to kindergar-

they were worthless," LaBrecque said. "But one man's

tens and to Notre Dame. But we're a behind-the-

trash is another man's treasure."

"Everybody hated the junipers; everybody thought

scenes business." When Gina Farmer

took over as a Texas school district's executive director of athletics in 2001, her district was

dealing with dozens of vendors. Now she buys everything she can from BSN, including snow cone, popcorn and hotdog machines for the district's

new baseball and softball complex. "It's become our onestop shop in a lot of ways," Farmer says. "We use

them for our Nike uniforms, shoes, equipment for PE classes. Literally

every sport of ours orders something from them." SeeSports/E5

Joseph's Juniper, the company LaBrecque founded in 2011, takes in Western

but that wasn't always the case.

Tim Deboodt, an Oregon

juniper logs from across the region and mills them into fence posts, gate entryways and other products. LaBrecque markets his products

State University extension

agent in Crook County, said that those regions have eight to 10 times more juniper now than they did in 1930.

"We're just not keeping in six states, and he said he was granted a 10-year stewahead of thejuniper,"Deardship contract for juniper boodt said. logged near Steens Mountain. Cooler weather contributed "People are becoming to an uptick in populations aware that they can help the

even before 1930, but the

environment in some small way by purchasing juniper,"

introduction of livestock in the area, as well as active fire

LaBrecque said.

suppression, has dramatical-

Today, Western juniper dominates the landscape in

ly tilted the environmental scales toward juniper over

Central and Eastern Oregon

the past eightyyears. SeeJuniperIE2

for as far as the eye can see,

The Oregon House of Representatives has introduced three bills in this session that are aimed at helping the burgeoning juniper industry. Those bills are summarized as follows: • House Bill2808: Requires Oregon Business Development Department, in cooperation with Oregon State University Extension Service, to develop a program to increase harvesting of Western juniper and manufacture and distribution of products made from Western juniper. • HB 2997: Appropriates money from the general fund to Oregon Business Development Department to support cooperative effort to assist Western juniper harvesting and related manufacturing businesses, and to promote liaison efforts regarding concerns and interests of Western juniper harvesting and related manufacturing businesses andwildlife management concerns and interests. • HB2998: Requires Oregon Business Development Department to establish programs for providing economic development assist anceto personsengaged inbusiness of Western juniper harvesting or of manufacturing products from Western juniper, for providing technical business assistance to juniper harvesting and related manufacturing businesses, for providing or funding workforce training assistance for potential juniper harvesting and related manufacturing business workers and for mapping and identification of high quality marketable stands of juniper. Source: Oregon Legislature, www.oregonlegislature.gov

0 0

a specialannualcareerfair

U.S. Department of Agri-

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

for ag students show much of

the same trend, according to

culture studied the shortfall in agricultural jobs on a na-

Sara Newberg, director ofthe university career center that

tional basis, and estimated that from 2010 to 2015 there

University of Minnesota's College of Food, Agricultural and

assists ag majors.

would be about 54,400 openings each year in agriculture and natural resource jobs,

Natural Resource Sciences,

and about 29,300 graduates

line, and he's not surprised

from specialized colleges and university departments to fill

that companies are doubling down to find newly trained

them.

scientists.

friends at the University of Minnesota don't need to wor-

ry about jobs after graduating. They're majoring in agricultural sciences or agricultural business, and large and small companies are eager to hire them.

"Pretty much every member (of my ag fraternity) has a full-time job when they're graduating," Donkers said. "Every junior has an internship, most of the sophomores have internships and a good handful of freshmen have

internships." Job posting boards, on-campus interviews and

"We have a limited number of students with an interest in that career direction and far more employers interested in

hiring them," Newberg said. Donkers, raised on a family farm in Minnesota, is a junior

majoring in agricultural business. He'll learn about agricultural lending this summer at

CoBank, a co-op that specializes in farm credit. It will be Donkers' third internship in

three years, and he's interested in grain merchandising as a career.

Purdue University and the

One of the bigger gaps was in science and engineering, according to the Purdue report, with more than 14,000

jobs available to those with baccalaureate or higher degrees each year and only 6,200specialized graduates. The shortage is being filled by graduates recruited from "allied disciplines," the study

co-owner and head of operations at Girard Brasserie & Bruncherie in the Fishtown section of Philadelphia, a no-tip restaurant where

employees are paid a living wage with health insur-

ance, sick leave and paid vacation. the no-tip model Q •• Was on the table from the start? • Yes. Brian lived in • San Francisco for a while and sent me an article about a restaurant

A

that had done away with tipping. We learned that turnover costs restaurants

a lot. We crunched some numbers and gave it a shot. How are you able to Q •• pay staffers an average of $13 an hour plus full benefits? • There's less on the • bottom line because that's where the money

comes from, and costs such as rent have to be less, too.

0 un i i e S

said — schools of engineering, health sciences and business.

By Tom Meersman MINNEAPOLIS — Adam

Christian Mora is the

SeeNo-tipIE5

r a s avenoS 0 a e o Donkers and many of his

Alejandro A. Alvarez/Philadelphia Inquirer

Brian Buhr, dean of the

saidthere'sclearly aneed for more ag students in the pipe-

"There's a whole high-tech side of ag that's really booming," he said. "It's everything from robotics and sensors in harvesting equipment or livestock production systems, or

even managing soil and drainage issues, all the way over to the genetics and genomics side of the world." SeeAgriculture/E2

Leila htavidi/(Minneapolis)Star Tribune

Adam Donkers is an agriculture business major at the university of Minnesota, at the St. Paul campus. With a small number of students enrolled in programs directed toward agriculture, and businesses constantly hiring, finding a job for students has been

an easy process.


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

B USI1VESS TODAY Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County, walk-ins available; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482

or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep. html.

MONDAY Deschutes Soil and Water Conservation District Board Meeting: The Board of Directors next board meeting agenda items are normal district business and long range planning. The public is invited to attend; 8:15 a.m.; Deschutes County administration building, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-923-2204 x132 or www.

E1 V D AR

deschutesswcd.com. QuickBooksPro 2014, Beginning for Macs: Two-day class, learn to

set up new customer and vendor accounts, create invoices, record sales, and enterpayments; $89, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.

Email events at least 10days before publication date to business®bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

Bank; $30 members, $35 nonmembers, $250 for a table of 8; 7:30-9:30a.m.; Bend Golfand Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-585-1879,

mtesterman©midoregon.com or

www.rmahq.org. Internet for Beginners: This class provides a basic introduction to the Internet, including Internet lingo, using an Internet browser, and getting online by typing in some Web addresses. Prerequisites: TUESDAY "Computers for Beginners" or familiarity with a mouse and the Executive Panel, "Regional Windows operating system; free, Banks, Innovate, Merge or registration required; 2-3 p.m.; Die": The Risk Management Association (RMA) East Cascades Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7085 Chapter will feature an executive or www.deschuteslibrary.org. panel discussion with three regional bankers: Hadley Robins, SCORE free business COO of Columbia, Brent Beardall, counseling: SCORE business CBO at Washington Federal and counselors conduct free Mark Wardlow, CCO of Umpqua 30-minute one-on-one

conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.;

www.scorecentraloregon.org.

WEDNESDAY Open Lab, Finding Funders with the Foundation Directory Online: This workshop lets you work on navigating the FDO with a trained professional on-hand to help answer questions. The workshop will be centered on the Foundation Directory Online, the primary database for nonprofit grants. Prerequisite: Introduction to Finding Funders; registration required; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-6517-7092 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. Central Oregon Business

Education Network (COBEN) Monthly Meeting: Delivering Effective & Engaging Group Presentations. Meeting and interact with Ed Weiser while he shares a sample of his workshop series on how to use PowerPoint and other presentation tools to charm and entertain your audience while selling them on your message; free; 11:15 a.m.12:45 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-728-3875 or Isimpsonwfg@ gmail.com.

THURSDAY

2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382-3221 or sandy© bendchamber.org. Computer Lab: Free time to practice your computer skills or work on any problems you're having with one of our staff on hand to help; free; 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.

FRIDAY eCommerce with WordPress: Discover how easy it is to set

up and use eCommerce onyour

On Boarding and Team Building: Presented by Trygve Bolken of Bend Research and Cindy O'Neal of The Center; $50 per person, registration deadline March 5; 8 a.m.-12:15 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center,

website with WordPress. Class runs through March 20; $99, registration required; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www. cocc.edu/conti nuinged.

• Alberta I. McCrea to Nicholas G. and Janelle J. Parker, CascadeView Estates Phase 7,Lot 64, $325,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Marsha A. Golgart, Rivers EdgeVillage Phase 7, Lot143, $689,950 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Mark J. and Cheryl L. Neffendorf, Rivers Edge Village Phase15, Lot 43, $470,000 • Kathren L. Williams to Gilbert J. and Nancy L. Sprauer, Skyline RidgePhase 2, Lot1, Block4, $205,000 •H4G LLCtoAllenHuang,Township 15, Range13, Section 9, $325,000 • Richard Del Johnson andLori A. Johnsonto KelseyJohnson Nonella and Roger T.Nonella, Plateau Estates, Lot 7, Block 3, $260,000 • Michael K. and Dana N.Coffman to Frederick C.and Katrina K. Horstman, Ridge at EagleCrest 36, Lot 27, $395,000 • Gary J. Meyer to Victor P. Perdue, Wilderness West First Addition, Lot 3, Block1, $349,999 • Steven E. andPatricia L. Reder, trustees of the RederLiving Trust, to Matthew R. Lachance,Circle CAcres, Lot 4, Block 2, $219,000 • Gail L. Ochsner to Ernest F. and Gaye S. Gilpin, trustees of theGilpin Family Trust, Providence Phase1, Lot17, Block1, $232,500 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Elaine A. Meadors, Parkland, Lot 68, $217,500 • Francis M. and Isabelle L. Senger to Sandra C.Bachulis, trustee of the Sandra C.Bachulis revocable Trust, ParkAdditionto Bend, Lot6and7, Block 27, $625,000 •HaydenHomes LLCtoPatrickM.and Stephanie Q.Burke,Village Meadows, Lot 29, $234,581 • Cheryl D. Powers, Patricia A. Moore, A. Robert Modeste, andJean M. Manocchio to Gloria B.Janeck, trustee of the JaneckFamily Trust, Empire Village Phase1-3, Lot 20, $305,000 • Margaret M. Olson to Christine McKinley, Providence Phase7, Lot 6, Block 8, $239,800 • North Twin Lake Investment LLC to Daniel P.andTerri L.K. Cooper, River Village 2, Lot 20, Block12, $391,400.18 • Michael P. and Karen E.Doolan to Patric kand Susan Daniels,Sundance East Phase 3,Lot 33, Block 9, $390,000

• Paterson Communications Inc. to Larry J. andPatricia P.Wolff, trustees of the1990 Wolff Family Revocable Living Trust, Views atOaktree Phases 3-5, Lot 37, $285,000 • Charles Schwab Bankto Brian K. and Catherine G.Miles, River Canyon Estates, Lot 56, $395,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Brandon J. Sizemore, SundanceMeadows, Lot 43, $232,022 • Maarten J. Leunento Robert and SydneyBales,StonehedgeWe st Phase1, Lot 21, $294,000 • Jeffrey L. Payne to Larry J. and Patricia P.Wolff, trustees of the1990 Wolff Family Revocable Living Trust, Pettigrew Highlands, Lot 4, $287,475 • Herbert H. and Linda R. Jolliff, trustee of the Herbert 8 Linda Jolliff Revocable Living Trust, to Michael W. and Teresa A.Palmer, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 23, Block BB, $240,000 • Jerry W. andAnna M.Samples to Michael J. andLaura A.Palmer, Partition Plat1996-59, Parcel1 and 2, $600,000 • C. Lorin and Diane J. Berryto Michael T.,Ethan M.andJoshuaM. Rudometkin, Partition Plat1990-66, Parcel 1, $275,000 • Denise G. Miller, who acquired title as Denise G.Rumbarger, to Santos C. Quitoriano, Township15, Range10, Section11, $250,000 • Arlee J. and NancyM. Holm to Timothy J. andHannah L. Kirkman, North Rim, Lot5and 6, Block7, $175,000 • Kenneth D. andJoan D.O'Dell, trustees of the Kenneth D.andJoan D. O'Dell RevocableTrust, to Trevor A. and Joy A.Waybright, Darnel Estates Phase 2, Lot 27,$297,500 • Charles W. Anderson to Matthew J. Thomas, Awbrey Butte Homesites Phase 22, Lot 27,Block 20, $625,000 • Larry M. and Jessica A. Madron to Robert and Chersti Thomack, Summit Crest Phase1, Lot 67,$257,000 • Robert W. and KarenA. O'Gorman to Leslie A. Randall and Kip K.Courser, Oregon WaterWonderland Unit No. 2, Lot 14, Block 47,$215,000 • T. Duncan andMarcia S. VanHorn to William Perezand JaneVan Dyke Perez, Staats Addition to Bend, Lot 4, Block13, $325,000

DEEDS Deschutes County • David P. Rixe, trustee of the David P. Rixe Revocable Living Trust, to William L. Ereth, KeystoneTerrace, Lot 5, Block 9, $249,000 • Alfred A. TozerJr. and Shelley D. Tozer, trustees of theTozerTrust, to Dennis Crowell, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot18, Block17, $407000 • Brian K. andCatherine G. Miles, trustees of the Brian K.Miles Living Trust, and trustees of theCatherine G. Miles Living Trust, to Kenneth F. Thompson, River CanyonEstates, Lot 98, $265,000 • John B. and Sherrie L. McCrorie and Edwin E.Honeycutt Jr. and Ethel L. Honeycutt to Stephen R.Gotchall, trustee of the Stephen R.Gotchall Revocable Living Trust, Eagleweoodat Sunriver, Lot18, $320,000 • Bonita E. andRichard A. Bennett, trustees of the Bennett Family Revocable Trust, to Arnis andMaureen Berkulis, Hawks RidgePhase1, Lot 8, $196,000 • Terry V. and Debora L. Trussell to Jeanne L. Dougal, Township17, Range 14, Section17, $275,000 • Rhode Island Church of Christ to Martin E. andLisa P. Locke, Starr Ranch, Lot10, Block2, $295,000 • James M. andGenelle F.Brunner to Douglas andVictoria Taylor, Diamond Bar Ranch Phase 3,Lot106, $215,000 • Stone Bridge HomesNWLLCto Mary K. Berryman, trustee of the 2012 Mary K. BerrymanTrust, NorthWest Crossing Phase18, Lot 645, $709,900 • Irma L. Davis, trustee of the Irma L. Davis RevocableTrust, to Jared C. Rheinor, Winchester, Lot 27, Block2, $215,000 • AA Bend LLC to David A. and Rebecca Young,BoydCrossing, Lot 19, $234,500 • North Twin Lake Investment LLC to Daniel P.andTerri L. K. Cooper, River Village 2, Lot 20, Block12, $391,400.18 • James T. RashJr. and Linda C.Rash to Jones andStephanie L'Argent, Cimarron City First Addition, Lot 4, Block 9, $242,000 • Carl L. Shadburn to Janell Winegar, Sun Mountain RanchesFirst Addition, Lot1, Block 2, $235,000 • Brenda Grigsby to Luma Vista Investments Inc., Holliday Park

Third Addition Phase 2,Lot1 and 2, $150,000 • Katherine A. Brookhart, who acquired title as Katherine A.Potter, to Lois A. Errington, Riverrim P.U.D. Phase1, Lot 63, $259,000 • Choice OneBuilders LLCto Peter C. and Kimberly M. Pistey, ChaseVillage, Lot 2, $276,000 • Loretta V. Fread, trustee of the Loretta V. FreadRevocable Living Trust, to Ville and Kristen Jokinen, Second Addition to BendPark, Lot 5 and 6, Block154, $160,000 • B-K Property Investments LLC to Dennis and Dorella Wittkopp, trustee of the Dennis & Dorella Wittkopp Family Trust, Timer Creek 2Phase1, Lot 34, $300,000 • Michael Y. andCindy A. Easton to Todd R. andStaceyA.Mickey,Caldera Springs Phase1, Lot 210, $164,380 • Pacwest II LLC to Brittney D. W iggins, GardensidePU.D.Phase2, Lot 95 and 96, $236,382 • Christina J. Hannam and Diane S. Bianchi to Melvin P.Accher and Paula R. Marqua, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 8 Part 2, Lot 4, Block113, $167000 • Richard and Lisa Gloor to John A. Kristiansen andTessa A.Allen, Golden Mantle, Lot 3, $172,000 • Larry J. and Judy A. Romaine, trustees of the Larry J. & JudyA. Romaine RevocableTrust, to Rodger K. and Kathleen M.Coombs, Broken Top Phases1-Aand1-8, Lot101, $845,000 • Thomas G. andUnaC.O'Shea to Jeffery J. Hamilton andSheryle Roberts-Hamilton, River Canyon Estates, Lot 23, $595,000 • Robert F. Smith II to Nora andJedZ. Smith, Wildwood Park, Lot 8, Block1, $286,000 • Brian K. and Shawna L Stallcop to Diana L. Hall, trustee of the Survivor's Trust under TheGeorge J. Hall Family Trust, W estbrookMeadows PUD Phase 3, Lot19, $410,000 • C4 Inc. to HaydenHomesLLC, Township17, Range12, Section 23, $1,040,000 • Wanda L. Dailey, trustee of the Dailey Revocable Trust,andNancyMcCulley to Craig M. andCynthia L. Singer, Wildwood Park, Lot 3 and 4, Block 3, $302,500

• Glenco lnvestments Inc. to Hayden Homes LLC,Township18, Range12, Section 3, along with Partition Plat 1991-37, Parcel 3, $292,500 • Glennis L. Wolfe to HaydenHomes LLC, Partition Plat1991-37, Parcel 3, $292,500 • Norman E. andCheryl A. Royse, trustees of the Norman 8 Cheryl Royse Joint Trust, to Scott and Lori Graaf, Park Addition to Bend, Lot 5and 6, Block 12, $854,750 • Phillip A. Minor and Karen A. Smith, trustees of the Phillip A. Minor & Karen A. Smith 2006 Trust, to Alfred and Barbara Williams, ThePinesat Sisters P.U.D., Lot 44, $165,900 • Shelley L. Nelson to Michelle Orlandos, ArrowheadPhases1-4, Lot 68, $228,000 • Timothy B. andDianna L. Sanford, trustees of the Sanford Family Trust, to Ann M. Cap,River CanyonEstates, Lot 47, $259,000 • Robert L. Barber and WendyM. Howard, trustees of the BarberHoward Family Trust, to JamesR. Hill, River CanyonEstates, Lot108, $290,000 • Cody Constable, trustee of the Trust Agreementfor Benefit of Brooke Constable, to Bruce G.and Mylee P. Card, SageMeadow, Lot 7,Block 4, $215,000 • Southgate (Casper) LLC to Platt Family Properties LLC,South Gate Estates, Lot 4-7, Block 2, $1,050,000 • Marie Applegate to Shana J. Biggs, The Winchester, Lot20, Block1, $199,900 • Jennifer K. Taylor and Christine D. Pollard to Patrick C.Worleyand Sarah A. Grover Worley, Partition Plat 200152, Parcel 2, $392,500 • William Osborne to AdaaasHoldings LLC, ParkwayVillage Phases1-3, Lot 60, $199,000 • Rex S. andEmily R. Gibson to Allegra A. Keith, Foxborough Phase 5,Lot 261, $221,000 • Deschutes County Ventures LLC to Glora B. Janeck, trustee of theJaneck Family Trust, Empire Village Phase 1-3, Lot 39, $301,000 • Charles A. andSusan B. McMonagle, trustees of the McMonagleFamily Trust, to Brad M.andJane M. Malatesta, Desert SandArabian Ranch, Lot 6, Block1, $790,000

• Carolyn L. Miller to Terry L. and Pamela D.Black, Kings Forest Second Addition, Lot 22, Block 5, $485,000 • Gregory W. Bakerto Paula A. and Kathryn G. Rocheleau, Star Bright Estates, Lot11, Block1, $191,600 • Metolius Meadows LLC to Gray L. and Leah S.Skinner, Elk Ridge Condominiums, Unit17, $153,500 • Carrissa D. Andersen to Jody E. Powell, North Pilot Butte Addition, Lot 8and 25, Block 2, $205,000 • Karen L. and Steven J. Skoog, trustees of the Karen L.SkoogTrust, to Merle E.and Karla M. Reasor, River Village 2, Lot 2, Block12, $425,000 • Daniel A. Brayton to Ronald S. and Gail R. Stone, Partition Plat1997-27, Parcel1, $190,000 • Bella Villa HomesCorp. to Robert and Kia Selley, CalderaSprings Phase 2, Lot 268, $150,000 • Randy J. and SusanA. Bacchus to Mark B. Arnett, Hunts ThreeSisters View Tracts, Lot10and15, Block2, $250,000 • John C. Nesbyto Douglas A. Drakeley andTerri L. Morates, Tanglewood Phase 6,Lot12, $352,000 • Wendell and NancyJ. King, trustees of the Wendell& NancyJ. King Family Trust, to Anthony M. andTeonnaM. Hatcher, PineTreeMeadows Phase1, Lot 6, $173,900 • Kenneth Simmsto Giacomo M. and RosaSomenzi,YardleyEstates Phase 6, Lot142, $349,000 • Kenneth H. andShirley R. Plam to George W.andPamelaC.Weaver, Plaza Condominiums, Unit 201, $380,000 • Billy D. Henry to Kenneth A. Simms, Township16, Range12, Section 20, $408,000 • J & K Partners LLC to Timothy J. and Elizabeth Broadbent, Old Mill Terrace, Lot12, $422,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Lucia and LouisR.Bustamante,Megan Park Phase1, Lot11, $237,538 • James O. andMartha A. Rawlins to Paul D. andShauna D.Rawlins, Timber Creek 2 Phase 1,Lot 46, $275,000 • Nicholas G. and Janelle J. Parker to Steven P.and Juanita Ellis, West Canyon Estates Phase 2,Lot 48, $235,000

Juniper

kerous," citing its small size, tendency to grow in terrain

Agriculture

Continued from E1

that is difficult to log and the

Continued from E1

Deboodt said that livestock

hard, knotted nature of the

overgrazed grasses and other plants in the area when they

wood itself as impediments. "When you cut into it, ce-

Adam Holton, CHS senior vice president of hu-

man resources, said the

mand during the past decade, Wyse said, and students lost interest in basic agronomy — the science of growing crops for production — because there were fewer

were

dar is like butter," LaBrecque

shortage of t r ained stu-

opportunities.

said. "Juniper is like rock." Despite the challenges, the industry is growing, as consumers become more aware of the benefits to buying juniper wood. LaBrecque said that he expects to ship 40 semitrucks of juniperwood of

dents is not a crisis, but that it has becomemore

Now thependulum is swinging back, said Wyse, because

difficult to find and attract

companies have determined

i n i t i ally in t r o duced,

ensuring that juniper could spread largely unimpeded. And increased wildfire suppression mitigated another factor that kept the trees in

Ãf

check.

r

"Today, we have so many juniper seeds that it's overwhelming the system," Deboodt said. Juniper puts a n a dded strain on t h e

various shapes and sizes this

year, up from around 25 semi loads last year.

e nvironment,

Meanwhile, Su s t ainable N orthwest W ood, a P o r t -

due to its ability to suck up water that other plants and animals need to survive. De-

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

boodt said juniper is one of

Daniel Jones cuts a piece of juniper for firewood at Joseph's Juni-

the few trees that has needles that intercept the water before

per in Hineson Wednesday.

Director of Operations Tamra

it hits the ground, giving it an advantage over other plants.

The trees can consume nearly 35gallons of water per day in some areas.

"There are so many statis-

tics that show how much a

land-based lumberyard that focuses on regional, sustainable products, is one of LaBrecque's primary clients. Rooney said that about a third

including the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service, have combined to reduce juniper on public lands.

very hard to burn," Deboodt said. "And if it does, often it

"Presently, agencies treat an average of 50,000 acres of

ty, LaBrecque's first job at

juniper drinks," LaBrecque said. "That slows down an ar- juniper each year by mowgument. I think we should just ing, under-thinning and presay it drinks a lot of water." scribed burning dense and LaBrecque stepped into overcrowded stands," reads this landscape in 1993, buy- a public interagency memo ing land in Eastern Oregon from 2014. following a 33-year stint as a Still, removing the juniper commercial fisherman off the is often easier said than done.

turns into a crown fire, and

nobodywants that." Because of this difficul-

of the company's total sales in

2014were forOregon juniper. "We're really looking to develop as many juniper products as we can," Rooney said. Rooney said that consum-

the mill was to "salvage" 200 ers were drawn to its durabilacres of juniper. That is, to re- ity. It takes longer to rot than move and reprocess the wood many other types of wood. after the trees had been cut Additionally, milled juniper doW11. has fewer harmful chemicals Over the last four years, than other finished wood. he has expanded his territo- Rooney said that Sustainable ry to take in junipers from Northwest Wood had seen Crook, Lake, Klamath and the market for juniper double coast of Alaska. He said he Deboodt s aid t h at w h i l e Grant counties, in addition to each year since the company intended to retire, but instead prescribedfires might work his stewardship near Steens began offering it about three found a local artisan who on younger junipers, as well Mountain. years ago. "This company is as re"Once people see it and sold heirloom furniture made as trees that have already from juniper, and eventual- been cut down, it is very dif- gional as one can be working understand some of its shortly decided to build furniture ficult to burn mature juniper within the juniper industry," comings, I think they realize himself. groves without doing signifi- LaBrecque said. what a good product it can Because of juniper's spread cant damage. The tree itself is famously be," Rooney said. "Once the tree gains domiacross Eastern Oregon, severdifficult to work with. LaBrec— Reporter: 541-617-7818, al state and federal agencies, nance in a region, it becomes que referred to it as "cantanshamway@bendbulletin.com

the best candidates in some that their future profits may areas. depend less on new genetics, "In our case, that runs and more on improved crop the gamut on the pure engi- systems that increase yields neering side with our ener- by using precision agriculture. "So now the companies are gy business to our agriculture side to our processing stepping up and saying, where and food ingredients," he in the world are all the agronsaid. CHS is the nation's

omists? And where are all the

largestfarmer-owned co- applied cropping systemspeooperative. "There is a chal- ple?" he said. lenge, and as we go into the That might includepeople to future it will get harder." analyze chlorophyll in plants To recruit the best people to see how well they're growfor its needs, Holton said, ing, Wyse said, or specialists CHS has heightened is ef- to design precision planting forts to go "upstream" and contact undergraduate and

equipment, or

a n a l ysts t o

dents early in their studies to inform them about ag-re-

rieties to plant and how far

omy and Plant Genetics at

seekers.

Minnesota, has watched the number of students in agricultural sciences fluctuate over the past four decades, and has super-

"The needs continue to grow to feed a hungry world w ith th e

vised graduate students

environmental sciences and

who took their advanced degrees intoplant breeding

agricultural sciences," he said. "My guess is there are jobs that will exist in precision ag 10years from now that we're not even thinking about right

study soil chemistry and crop community college stu- history to predict which vaapart to space them. "It's a wide array of opporlated fields and careers. The company also main- tunities," he said. tains strong partnerships Holton, of CHS, agrees, and with collegesand universi- said basic agronomy knowlties, he said. edge coupled with the latDon Wyse, a professor in est technical skills will be a the Department of Agron- winning combination for job

and genetics labs at Mon-

santo, Syngenta and other companies. Those jobs were in de-

s ame amount o r

less of acreage, and that's all coming through technology:

now."


SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

e

0

QUEsrioN: Can I reimburse my employees for their cost of an individual health plan? Answer:Many of our business clients have asked, "Can I just pay my employees a stipend so they can go purchase their own plan from an exchange?" By the letter of the law (and related IRS guidance), the Greg answer is no. The IRS has stated that, FowIer under their i n terpretation o f I n t ernal CPA,CFP' Re v enue Code Section 4980D, employer r eimbursement plans under w hich a n employer reimburses an employee forsome or all of the premium expenses incurred for an individual health insurance policy or d irectly pays a premium for an individual health insurance policy covering the employee is considered a group plan that will not be in compliance with the code section 4980D, also known as the Affordable Care Act(ACA). N on-compliant plans are subject to a $100/day/employee fine. That's right, $36,500 per year, per employee! Fortunately, the IRS issued relief for employers to come into compliance by June 30th of 2015. So, if you are an employer, and you are not providing a qualified group health benefit, please be sure to review your benefits programs with your CPA to be sure that you will not run afoul of this expensive tax penalty.

®il FOWLER 8 Co., INc. CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANIS

www.GregFowlerCPA.com 541-550-1656 S

5

i

0

QtIEsTioN: Do Credit Repair Services Really W ork? Honestly , many of the companies doing credit repair are a scam. Most charge aset monthly fee with uo eud date in sight. They convince their clients that credit improvement takes longer than is necessary; they don't generate an individualized pathtorecoveryforeach person.Thisapproach can costa lotof unnecessary time andmoney. Kathy

ANswER:Some companies state that 100% of derogatory information will be removed from credit reports. No credible company would say this. While thereare some accounts that can beim proved orremoved from credit reports...if it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn't true. Usually these companies charge an exorbitant fee that doesn't comply with either federal or state guidelines.

These companies rarely remain in business for long. Credit Team LLC is the only company registered with the state of Oregon since 2/1999 under the Division of Finance & CorporateSecurities. We are also bonded. We will assist you in understanding what you can do, and what we can do, to improve your credit in a legal manner using our experience and knowledge of federal and state laws. We are proud of our reputation and our joy comes from seeing our clients achieve their goals.

QUEsrioN: My car was totaled two months afterI purchased it,and now the insurance company is not giving me enough money to pay off the loan, what can I do? ANswER:Most auto insurance claims are settled on an actual cash value basis, so the insurance company will only pay you what it is worth on the open market the day it Karen was totaled.When you buy a new car and Brannon drive it off the lot there is an immediate and significant depreciation in value from what you paid for it. Two issues come into play, the first is that you could be left owing more than it is worth and the second is that you may not be able to replace it with a new vehicle unless you pay the diff erence out of pocket. There are two optional coverages available on some auto insurance policies that are designed to prevent this from happening. The first is Residual Debt or Gap Coverage that pays off the loan if there is a total loss even if this amount exceeds the actual cash value, and the second is a New Car Pledge that guarantees you will be able to get a new car if yours is totaled during a set period of time after the purchase. Both of these coverages will increase your premium but they are well worth the extra money when you consider that buying a new car is one of the biggest purchases you will ever make.

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i

QUEsriorc I just filed my 2014 taxes and paid a penalty because I didn't have health insurance in 2014. I thought the penalty was going to be $95 but lt ended up being a lot higherbecause of my household income. I am also told the penalty could be even higher for 2015 anit I didn't purchase a health plan beforethe February 15 cutoff date. Is there patrlck O'Keefe anything I can ito? ANswKEuiYou are correct that the penalty will increase for 2015. The base penalty for not having credible health insurance coverage will be $325 or 2 percent of the household income, whichever is higher. Children will be fined half the adult rate or $162.50 for those under 18 years old. There are however limits to how high the penalty can be and some exceptions for getting out of the penalty. As with many other rules with the Affordable Care Act, apparently the February 15th date was not written in stone. New rules have come out that apply to anyone who didn't have coverage in 2014. If you have filed your tax return and paid a penalty for not having coverage you now have until April 30th to enroll in a plan for 2015.

Question: We just found a home to purchase in the perfect neighborhood and school district. But we really need another bathroom in the home and my husband wanted a shop. ANswERIGreat, we have the solution for you. Rehabilitate that property into the Judy per fe c t h ome for you and your family. "g O ur M i n i -Rehab l oa n p r o v ides t h e funding to purchase the home and to upgrade it to fit your needs. The work can be cosmetic, structural or purely luxury items like a hot tub or new gazebo with water feature. The bids for work must be in before we order the appraisal because the value is based on after the work is completed. All work must be done by licensed contractor(s) with appropriate permits. This is a wonderful tool to create the perfect environment for your family. Credit on approval. Terms subject to change without notice. Not a commitment to lend.

QUEsrioN: I am retired, just got my taxes done and owequitea bltbecause of my earnings and pension. How can I lower my tax bill? ANswKR:There are several ways you can indeed reduce the amount of taxes owed. However everyone is different and we would have to look at the types of investments you are in, are you currently receiving social security, the withholding on your pension and if you are Barbara doing any consulting or part time work since Seaman many people retire and still want to work part time. Are you over 70 '/2 and taking a required distribution? At Cornerstone Financial Planning Group we take all that and more into consideration. Do you have or would you likea second home or a rental? How areyour investments held? Stocks, mutual funds, bonds? How much in IRA's or do you still have a 401K or TSP? Wecan look at coordinating a systematic withdrawal if you need additional funds to reduce the full taxation. Another avenue would be to defer earnings via a fixed, indexed or variable annuity. There are variable annuities now that do not charge a lot of fees since they do not have additional income riders or death benefit riders. Another choice would be a charitable trust. You then have a deduction and a stream of income that can come to you. As with all taxes you need to consult your CPA or tax preparer to see if you need to be making quarterly tax payments. Source:IRC 408 (d) (B); IRS announcement 2014-2015 Representative is registered with and offers only securities and advisory services through PlanMemicr Securities Corporation, a registered broker/dealer, investment advisor and member FINRA/SIPC. 6187 Carpinteria Ave, Carpinteria, CA. 93013, (800) 874-691a Cornerstone Financial Planning GroupLLC and PlanMember Securities Corporation are independently owned and operated. PlanMember is not responsible or liable for ancillary productsorservicesoff eredbyCornerstone FinancialPlanningGroup orthisrepresentative.

Cornerstone Financial PlanningGroupLLC www.CornerstoneFinancialBend.com 5 4 1-388-1708

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Q UEsrioN: After Iam pre-approveitanithave an accepted offer on ahome, how long before Ican move into my new home? ANswKEuBecause you have already obtained a p r e approval upfront, the process becomes easier after you have found ahome and have accepted an offer between you and the seller. You may be required to update some documentation for your lender depending on how long it took to find a home after obtaining your initial preapproval. The lender will order the approval about the time you complete your home inspection. The appraiser usually takes about 5-7 business days to complete the appraisal and return it to the lender for review. Once the lender's underwriter determines if the appraisal meets guidelines, the value is the same of higher than the agreed upon sales price and there are no repairs required (by the appraiser or home inspection), the lender can then have your loan documents for your to sign within 12 to 24 hours after your final loan approval. At escrow, you will then sign you loan papers, this is called your "signing" Within about 24 to 48 hours after signing, your purchase is recorded at the county courthouse and you usually get your keys that evening.

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Question: How Can I Keep Divorce From Trashing My Credit? Answer: Divorce is a difficult, stressful, and emotionally draining time in anyone's life! Not only are you dealing with the end of a once loving and trusting relationship, you must also realize how that emotional element can affect your financial health, credit report, and scores. Just because you are divorcing your SimpsonHankins spo u se that doesn't mean you're divorcing your creditors! State Lic.¹272837 In addition to affecting your personal debt, a home and mortgage can be another matter. In most cases, you're asked to sign a hold-harmless agreement, which supposedly protects the ex-spouses from each other's irresponsible actions, but I'm here to tell you...they don't always work! lf you wait until after divorce when you're ready to build a new life and buy a home...it may be too late! You could be waiting years to obtain financing if you have charged- off accounts, a bankruptcy, short-sale or even unauthorized debt. So, It's important to talk with a credit/mortgage expert to see how you may beaffected before the damage isdone! I can perform my "Credit Readiness Review" and give you some helpful hints to get you where you need to be as quickly as possible. Give me a call today or check out my website

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QLEsrioN: Now that the February 15th health insurancedeadlineis over,whatdo Ido? ANswsm Now that open enrollment has ended, most people are settling into the new year aud their new health insurance plans. But what does theendof openenrollmentreallymean? , I lI(i An important part of the Affordable Care Act

IIj(I

Krlstlne Akenson

(ACA ) was removing pre-existing conditions from the u nderwriting process; this means that during open enroll ment you cannot be denied coverage, but this also means that outside of the open enrollment period you cannot change your plan, or company, without a qualifying event. In the mean time, settle in and explore your plan. Make notes of what works or doesn't work for you so that next year during the open enrollment period you can make an informed decision about the plan that works best for you. Is the deductible the most important part of the plan for you? Do you have a special prescription that you need to have covered or perhaps you have a major surgery planned? These are all items to take into consideration when choosing a plan. Just remember, insurance isn't designed to cover everything, so it is important to review your coverage aud learn how your company and plan covers procedures, prescriptions, labs, and so forth. When 2015 open enrollment starts in the fall, these notes will help you and your licensed health insurance agent better choose a plan that works for you. In the meantime, if you have any questions, call our office. HIGH DESERT

INSURANCE FINANCIAL SKRVICES

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Sports

with the company at least six months as of July 1, 2014, which

No-tip

Continued from E1

equates to about two times their

Continued from E1

BSN started out as Blumenfeld Sport Net in 1972, when Adam's father, Mike, a former St. Louis Cardinals outfielder,

annual salaries. BSNhas 1,200employees, induding 350 in Farmers Branch, a suburb of Dallas. Its sales force has grown from 175 five years ago to more than 500 road warriors who sell primarily to high schools, colleges, and youth and select sports dubs. Its catalog division, which distributes 3 million 450-page salesbooks each year,sells to

began selling tennis nets and kickballs out of his pickup to recreation departments in

Memphis, Tennessee. He moved his family to Dallas in 1978 in search of

We will distribute locally in

Main Center

WINDOW TREATS

2150IIEStudioRd,SuiteIO NWX 2863Nortwhest CrossingDr,SuitelO sylvaneberrdbroadband.com

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benefits that would other-

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A they all seem content. I be• We still have the staff • we started with, and

lieve a happy employee is a better employee. also appears that Q •• Itpatrons are having to

Pharmacyclics PCYC MXP Semiconductors NXP I F reescale semi Ltd FSL Cooper Company COO Medivation Inc M DVN E -Trade Financial ETFC Brist Myr Sqb B MY Mobileye MV M BLY ONEOK OKE BioMarin Pharma BMR N Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALMY Vertex Pharm vRTx schwab corp SCHW Foot Locker Inc FL Qorvo Inc QRVO

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ny and grow, as opposed to a shell out more — $31 to $42 server who's just here to pay — for dinner. for graduate school.

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••

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FOR LEASE! NEW O WN E R S > NEW MAN A G E M E N T ! 4102+/- Square Feet Rentable Ground Floor! Great DowntownLocation with LOTS of Parking (3 lots!) Combination of perimeter offices and open collaborative spaces. $L25 per square foot plus NNN Upgrades in Process. ClassA Offices.

INDEX

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• I had to be sharp about A • hiring. I w ant people who will stay in our compa-

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Globalmarkets

CRMD

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been the biggest Q •• What's challenge you've faced'?

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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Goldcorp Inc Barrick Gold Mewmont Mining EncanaCorp Teck Resources Ltd Freeport McMoRan Chesapk Engy lululemon athletica Abbvie Inc Mosaic Co

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FRIDAY C LOS E

• Right now, we have five A • front-of-house staff and six people in the back of the

The value prop?

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• It isn't easy, and profit

541 389 4212 I 541-585-2446

between C.O. and PDX area.

711 SW10th • Redmond • (541) 548-8616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com

541-389-9252

more? • I'd say about 10 to 20

Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker

C.O. or do line hauls

Licensed & Bonded

nearby. A lot of people like our business model. We've gotten suburban customers, too.

much do ownWhy don't more restauQ •• How ers forego to pay staff Q • • rants use this model'?

financing for his growing direct-sales catalog company. By the early 1990s, Mike Blumenfeld's company was the Ben Torres/The Dalls Morning News parks and recreation departlargest manufacturer and dis- CEO Adam Blumenfeld, left, and president Terry Babilla, of BSN ments, YMCAs, clubs, camps, tributor of mail-order sports Sports LLC, at their main headquarters in Dallas. BSN Sports is churches andprisons. equipment in America. the largest distributor of team sports apparel end equipment in the During a tour of the head"I grew up working in the U.S. with 2015 sales expected to reach $500 million. quarters, factory and shipping warehouse pulling out those operations, Babilla asks everybig red kickballs and tenone howlong they'vebeen with "We don't care who owns the company. "Rookies" turn nis nets and p utting t hem Ten years ago, BSN didn't on trucks," says Adam, who sell Nike, Under Armour or any us as long as we get to do what out to be those who've been took over as CEO in 2007."I footwear or uniforms. Now it's we love to do," says Babilla (his there less than 10 years. Most learned business by listening the largest distributor of team name rhymes with vanilla). "I are 20-year-plus veterans. to my dad on his phone calls sports apparel for both as well want this company to be the One of BSN's fastest-growdoing deals." as many other brands. That Nordstrom or Sewell Lexus of ing divisions has a partnerAdam joined his dad full segment will account for half of team sports. Ifwe focuson the ship with the Cooper Clinic in time in 1993 after graduating its 2015 sales and even more in customer like that, we don't Dallas to fight childhood obefrom Tulane University. His the future. have to worry about anything sity. Cooper has developed a first job was helping former Gone are the days of uni- else." heart-healthy curriculum and Texas Rangers first baseman forms being handed down, H e and B l umenfeld w i l l assessment tools needed by Dave Hostetler start B SN's Blumenfeld says. "You're only probably get their wish to be kindergartens and elementary youth league business. goingto buy so manybleachers left alone. A.J. Janower, man- schools to get federal funding. Terry Babilla, who was the in your life cyde as an athletic aging director at Charlesbank, BSN developed products that company's outside counsel at director. But you're going to sees no reason for change. fill 250 pages of a catalog and "It's well-run, has a terrif- handles the distribution. Hughes 8z Luce in Dallas, was buy uniforms everyyear." BSN's technology enables its ic financial profile," Janower "The products are everybrought in-house by Mike Blumenfeld in 1995. He's now pres- salespeople to see what inven- says. "It's a great employer. It's thing from gigantic fuzzy dice ident and chief operating offi- tory its major apparel vendors a great member of the commu- to spongy relay sticks," Blucer in addition to BSN's general have on hand, design team uni- nities it serves. Adam and Ter- menfeld says. counsel. forms on an iPad in the coach's ry have been very innovative. Blumenfeld and Babilla will Ownership has been a re- office and have the order on its The past five years have been tell you they're on a mission to volving succession of privately way to the school in 24 hours, remarkable." save America's youth — and held, public, ESOP and private Blumenfeld says. Five years from now'? not just by selling sporting "We hope the business will goods. equity transactions that came Rob Held, category sales di"We're not curing cancer with name changes, acquisi- rector of Nike's team division, double again," Janower says. tions, divestitures and sales says BSN and the two guys at "We're putting in a lot of cap- here. We get that," Blumenfeld swings too numerous to get the top excel at building trust ital, hiring a lot of peoplesays. "But we feel we have a into. with schools and teams. many in Dallas — and invest- pretty high calling. There are " In '06, Terry and I p u t "Adam and Terry have ing in thebusiness." 55 million kids in school. All of Humpty Dumpty back togeth- armedtheir employees withthe BSN is about to share the them are in physical education, er again," Blumenfeld says. necessary tools that allows for riches from the private equi- and a third of them play sports. "We started building this con- more time selling and less time ty purchase by distributing We touch the lives of all these solidated equipment and ap- worrying about the post-sale $65 million of the proceeds kids in all these communities. parel business. It grew from work," Held says."Sitting still to all employees who've been We love that." about $200 (million in revenue) is not part of theirvocabulary." to $250 (million) in 2010," deBSN is now a subsidiary of spite the Great Recession and Varsity Brands in Memphis, Looking for loads tvyside Co a tough government funding which was purchased in De>Ie~ goe for our 26' Freightliner environment. cember by Charlesbank CapThis year, he's forecasting ital Partners, a private equity box truck (26,000 GVW) $525 million. firm in Boston. with 4K lift gate. 2 locations isBend

E5

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Quotable "This doesn't mean we like the stock, or don't like the stock, or something like that." — David Blitzer,chairman of the index committee at S&p Dow Jones, to The Associated Press after Apple was added to the Dow Jones industrial average

Mote: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion Ilarge).

Wal-Mart onwa es

I s'der Title: CEO, Wal-Mart Stores Outlook:Better pay will help improve a customer's in-store experience

Doug McMillon

The price tag is high, but Wal-Mart Stores is betting that its workers can help save its struggling U.S. business. The nation's largest private employer last month said It would increase Its entry level pay to at least $9 an hour by April and by at least $10 an hour by February 2016. It's part of a $1 billion investment in employee pay and training. The changescome as the national debate over the plight of low-wage earners heats up, with President Obama's proposal to raise the federal minimum wage and several states considering hikes too. Wal-Mart, in particular, has faced pressure from labor groups asking it to pay $1 5 an hour. But Wal-Mart also has business reasons for its decision. The company's

U.S. business has had nearly two years of mostly lackluster sales. It's also been criticized for the poor condition of its stores and the lack of customer seivice. Some analysts say Wal-Mart's strategy will lead to sales growth and encourage other retailers to follow suit. Already, TJX Cos., the owner of TJ Maxx,HomeGoods and Marshalls stores, has followed Wal-Mart. Wal-Mart CEO Doug McMillon, who started at Wal-Mart in an hourly position loading trucks while he was in college, took the top job in February 2014. He recently sat down with The Associated Press to talk about Wal-Mart's decision to raise wages: What was behlnd the decision to raise wages?

We want to create a great store store experiences for customers, online experience for customers and do that by and in every way we can service them. investing in our own people. And over time, that matters the most.

How would you address crltlcs who say Wal-Mart's pay increases don't go far enough? We are not in the business of trying to satisfy every constituency. We get to invest in people and invest in training. I am proud of what we're doing and believe it will result in a better outcome for the company.

What dld you learn as an hourly worker at Wal-Mart? I quickly learned who runs a Wal-Mart store. And the answer is department managers and our hourly associates that make the store great. And in the company, we practice what we call service leadership. To Us, that means we're leaders here to make things easier so they can be successful. We want customers taken care of so we take care of associates. And that results in a business model that works.

Is It hard to break the perception that Wal-Mart has Iow-end jobs? What we can worry about is the reality. If the reality is good enough, eventually I think most people know perception Interviewed by Anne O'Innocenzio. corrects itself. Our job is to create great Answers edited for clarity and length.

AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, March 6, 2015

+

17,856.78

f laSOaa ~ 4,927.37

3 51 5

S&P500

2,071.26+

3 3 24

RUSSELL2000 I,217.52

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E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

UNDAY D

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Pesky lightscould

ina ,ana -w ee rive a

cost 1,000 to repair

By Larry Printz Tribune News Service

There was a time when all cars used rear-wheel drive. When winter hit, drivers put sand in the trunk for extra

brake system and traction module-pump assembly can control) started showing. illuminate the three lamps you

w a s u ntil t w o

After I drove a few miles,

mentioned. A faulty input or

these lights would go off.

power/ground fault to the module/pump can also trigger a code and lamps and is equally as likely. I agree the module/

This went on for several weeks, and then the lights

their rear-wheel-

c h a riots

started staying on at all

with front-wheeldrive cars in an effort to save

times. After about a month

w eight and decrease fuelconsumption. But along the way, Courtesy Jaguar vis Tribune News Service something funny happened. The chassis of the 2015 Jaguar XF can be set to one of three modes: Normal, Dynamic and Winter. As drivers became comfortable with f r ont-wheel drive, they also became accustomed

to the added grip it afforded. By placing most of the driveline's weight on the front wheels, foul weather grip is superior to that of rear-wheel drive.

But like everything in modern life, this resulted in an arms race. While front-wheel drive is

more than enough to get drivers through most snowstorms,

in the past fewyears, all-wheeldrive became a must, even in the South, where snow is

greetedas warmly as General Sherman. This is apparent in any culde-sac, where any number of Audi A6, BMW 5 Series and Mercedes-Benz E-Class models fitted with all-wheel drive

resides. And while this may not

2015JaguarXF

5.0-liter V-8, a 510-horsepower supercharged 5.0-liter V-8, and a 550-horsepower supercharged 5.0-liter V-8, opting for all-wheel drive means getting the 340-horsepower V-6 mated to an eight-speed automatic

Base price: $51,175 As tested: $60,800 Type: midsize sports sedan, all-wheel drive Engine: 340-horsepower V-6 mated to aneightspeed automatic transmission Mileage:17mpg city, 27 mpg highway

transmission.

So you have to wonder what

front wheels when needed. It adds just enough traction to keep things fun without sacri-

ficing the joy inherent in a reardrive set-up. Once comfortable with the

XF's performance, you'll no-

Disappointed? Don't be. This tice the airy cabin retains the simple eloquence and unique F-Type sports car. In this appli- quirkiness that has always cation, the V-6 provides more been a partofthecar'sappeal. than enough thrust to get you

Climb into the car with the

to the Piggly Wiggly, soccer smart key in your pocket and practice or the opera with more the starter button light puls-

four-wheeled feline to your fa- than a little gusto.

es like a heartbeat. Once the

vored ski slope without fear of

But it's this Jag's underpin-

car starts, the dosed air vents

sliding off some twisty moun-

nings that make it such a willing dance partner, with quick reflexes and a vibrant disposition that combine with a supple

tain road. The XF is offered with a V6 in Premium, Portfolio and Sport trim, and the final two suspension that still manages can be ha d w i t h a l l-wheel to answer the demands of en-

drive. Opting for a V-8 means dale or Los Angeles, it is in Bos- choosing among the 5.0 Superton, Chicago or Minneapolis. charged, XFR or XFR-S trim took the good folks at Jaguar so long to fit the midsize XF

30 percent of the torque to the

driveline is also used in the new

be true in Phoenix, Ft. Lauder-

levels, but only with rear-wheel drive. So while rear-wheel-drive

XF buyers have a choice of endrive, when thesame company gines, induding a 240-horseproduces Land Rovers. Well, power turbocharged four-cylyou can keep wondering, but inder engine, a 340-horsepower it doesn't matter. For 2015, you supercharged 3.0-liter V-6, a can finally take your favorite 470-horsepower supercharged sports sedan with a ll-wheel

• I

a no-code situation'? Did you

Q

OPEC oil embargoes in the 1970s led automakers to replace REVIEW d r iv e

certain of their diagnosis. Is it

Tribune News Service

• I own a 2002 Buick receive a written explanation, • L eSabre w i th j u s t listing DTCs and test results to over 50,000 miles on it. Sev- substantiate their diagnosis? eral weeks ago, three warnA failure within the inteing lights (brake, anti-lock grated ABS/traciion control

weight and placed studded snow tires on the wheels for extra grip. If none of that was enough, tire chains were deployed for cutting through the icy morass. A nd so i t

By Brad Bergholdt

I

rotate open, while the transmission shift knob rises like

Icarus out of the center console. A touch screen controls vital

functions, induding a heated steering wheel and seats as thusiastic driving. The chas- well as navigation system and sis can be set to one of three an exceptional Meridian audio modes: Normal, Dynamic and system. It's a unique flavor, one unWinter. As you'd expect, each one adjusts the car's perfor- like its competitors. Its sexy mance parametersdepending looks still draw admirers, deon driver preference. spite an aging design. Add in Having driven this car from an animated driving feel, amBoston to Burlington, Vermont, ple power and foul weather in February, I can attest that friendliness and you'll find this Winter mode is most helpful Jaguar will satisfy you no matthis time of year since it sends ter what the weather.

of the lights not going off, I made an appointment

pump is the worst-case scenario, and the part at list price

plus diagnosis and installation

with the dealer to h ave could hit the price mentioned. the problem checked. On I'm at a loss as to what the sec-

the way to the dealer, the ond $1,000 possibility could be. lights, of course, went out. Second opinion please! • I've got a 2010 Ford EsThey checked the system and said they could find no • cape with built-in GPS. It's time to update the maps, so problem butrecommended bringing it back if the lights we invested $150 for the softcame onagain.A couple of ware. The instructions say inweeks later, the lights came stall with the engine running on again so I left the vehi- — not just on, but not while cle at the dealer to have it driving. This means the car checked.They told me they will be idling for possibly three found the worst-case sce- hours total. This seems like an nario and explained to me incredible waste of gasoline, in esoteric terms that I did energy, time and obvious EPA not understand what could implications. I called the numb e wrong with the A B S ber they have to confirm this s ystem, stating it w o u ld idiocy, but they insisted, and be about $1,000 to replace confirmed the car should not one item, and if that did be driven during the update not work, another $1,000 process. Isn't there abetter way to replace the other item. to go about this'?

A

As the brakes were recent• This does seem like an ly replaced and seem to be • inconvenient length of working fine, I feeltheprob- time to let the engine idle, but lem seems tobe more of if you were to do this key-on/ an electrical problem with engine-off, the battery would the warning lights than the likely discharge and corrupt ABS system. Do you have the process, along with other any suggestions? unpleasant effects. I'dbe tempt• It's odd there was not

A• a stored diagnostic troublecode after such a

ed to connect a battery charger

and do it, but can understand why the software folks would

short time period between

not want to suggest it. It's best

the lamps being on and diagnosis during your first

to play by the rules when performing a software upload. I

repair visit. It's also trou-

believe you'll find this takes

bling the shop can'tbe more less time than was indicated.

LOOK FOR IT COMING YOUR WAY In The Bulletin • March 29th In The Redmond Spokesman • April 1st In The Nickel • April 2nd In The Central Oregon Marketplace • March 31st Online at • www.bendbulletin.com Direct Mailed Magazine • March 30th 8c 31st

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© wtNw.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

JOHN COSTA SUNDAY READER

There is no perfect site for campus

A

s Bulletin reporter Tyler Leeds wrote last week, the ar-

guments of the opponents of OSU-Cascades' proposed west-side campus are now formally public and before the state's Land Use Board of Appeals. That's good. The points of Truth in Site, the organization opposingthe branch's siting, are neither new nor meaningless.

Theybelieve that OSU shouldbe requiredto produce am asterplan for its long-term campus dreams, even

though the only solid proposal at hand is the development of a 10-acre site already zoned for the use the university wants.

That smaller site, the opponents say, is but a prelude to a larger campus incorporating a46-acre adjacent addition, which would need to be rezoned for the university to use.

The other argument is that OSU has an unrealistically low estimate of student use of autos. A more realistic

estimate, the argument goes, would require more parking than the university, whichhopes to get the students outofcars,plansfor. From the start, The Bulletin's ed-

itorial page has expressed some of the same misgivings about increased automobile traffic in the area.

The cit yofBend,which approved OSU's proposal, will respond by March 25, and LUBA will issue its

opinion by April 29. Nothing is certain, but the smart money is on LUBA approving the site, as the City Council and ahearings officer already have, with perhaps a few modifications.

The question that goes beyond this decision is whether the idea of the west-side siting of the university,

as OSU is proposing, is a good one, whether at 10 acres, 56 acres or larger. Thinkstock

Or whether, as Truth in Site has

said, there are better sites available. A year ago in The Bulletin, Leeds described multiple other sites that

OSU considered, all of which had significant challenges. Included in the multiple reports were aerial

photographs, maps and descriptions

• Scientists settheir sights on the brain in a questto figure out what causesParkinson's. Advancescould openthe door to understanding other neurodegenerative diseases.

of the challenges of the sites OSU

rejected. Does the west-side site have challenges? Absolutely, and they need to be addressed. But so does every site. There is no perfect, flawless place for what is the greatest advance this community will make in the near or, perhaps, distant future. I wonder if Truth in Site, or any oth-

er group, is willingto let the university die instead of accepting a less-than-

By Jon Palfreman ~ NewYork Times News Service

EUGENEour years ago, I was told I had Parkinson's disease, a condition that affects about I million Americans. The disease is relentlessly progressive; often starting with a tremor in one limb on one side of the body, it spreads. The patient's muscles become more rigid, frequently leading to a stooped posture, and movements slow down and get smaller and less fluid. As the disease advances-

perfect place.

usually over a number of years — the patient becomes more and more disabled, experiencing symptoms

Make no mistake about it. That could happen, and that would be the

from constipation to sleep disorders to cognitive impairment.

legacy of the opposition and, unfortunately, the whole of Bend and Central Oregon. In fact, that would be the

legacy of the state, induding all of our elected representatives, Republican

Can Parkinson's be slowed, stopped or even reversed? Can the disease be prevented before it starts, like polio and smallpox'? More than at any other time in history, success seems possible.

and Democrat.

There havebeen manymischaracterizations of The Bulletin's position

Having sequenced the human genome,

a pathfinder. If they can figure out what

in all this. It's important topoint out that we

biomedicalresearch-

causes Parkinson's, it

ers have now set their

did not choose the site.

sights on the ultimate frontier — the human

might open the door to understanding a host

ishing errors by withholding the chemical. Babies rely on the basal ganglia to

of other neurodegen-

learn how to deploy

erative diseases — and to making sense of an

their muscles to reach, grab, babble and crawl, and later to accomplish many

It was OSU's choice.

We thinkthe leaders of OSU, selected and guided by state officials and supported by the Legislature, brought the same expertise to this choice that they have exercised in building a great American university. Unlike so many critics, we don't

brain. The formidable puzzle is to figure out how a 3-pound lump

fool ourselves into thinking that we

walking, seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching, thinking, loving, hating, speaking

knowhowto site a contemporaryuniversity loaded with assumptions and requirements that never existed when

we all went to college. The world has changed and is changing. Maybe that's the real problem. All that said, there are good questions from the critics, and it's essential

of mostly fatty matter enablesus to perform

a seemingly endless number of tasks, like

and writing ... and why those awesome abilities break down with

neurological disease. Many scientists view Parkinson's as

organ of incredible complexity.

mine bursts and pun-

In Parkinson's, the

complex tasks without

circuitry in a tiny region of the brain called the basal ganglia becomes dysfunctional.

thinking. For example, when a tennis player practices a stroke over

Along with the cerebel-

and over again, the basal ganglia circuit-

lum, the basal ganglia

ry both rewards and

normally acts as a kind of adviser that helps

people learn adaptive skills by classic conditioning — rewarding

good results with dopa-

1

"learns" the correct

sequence of activities to produce, say, a

good backhand drive automatically.

See Parkinson's/F6

Submitted photo

Jon Paifreman was diagnosed with Parkinson's dis-

ease four years ago.

for OSU to go out of its way, however frustratingthe repetition maybe, to provide answers.

If we get it right, and I'm convinced we can, we will validate the ambitions of generations Central Oregon citi-

zens and offer educational opportunities that no could have imaginedjust a decade ago. — John Costais publisher of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com

Having Parkinson's feelsa bt t like going on vacation in another country and having to drive on the "wrong" side of the road. Driving ts one of those activities that we outsource, irj large part,to the basal ganglia. When an American who has spent thousands of hours driving on the right side of the street tries to drive in England, his learned habits are a liability.


F2

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fter years of discussion, it's time for the next step

.y

in the effort to save Bend's Mirror Pond. Bend city councilorsand members of the Bend Park 8 Recreation District board will be asked to endorse the broad outlines of a plan to save the pond in the weeks ahead. p Both bodies should do so. City officials have looked for answers to the buildup of sediment in the pond for years. During the discussion, it's become clear that PacifiCorp has no plans to maintain the dam behind which the pond formed back in 1910. The dam itself is in bad shape, and repairs are expensive. Negotiations with the company about removal of the dam continue, though no agreement has been reached. Meanwhile, silt continues to build behind the dam. The pond was last dredged in 1984, at a cost of $312,000. Most of that money came from a grant from the federal Environmental Protection Agency; the city and park district each chipped in a chunk, and the pond's neighbors put up about $20,000. Today, a similar project could

cost as much as $3 million and would not address the sorry state of the dam itself. The city and park district now have a rough plan to remove the dam and replace it with a more natural-looking rock riffle that would allow for fish passage. The river project would be financed, in part, through development nearby. There's also a possibility that the state Legislature could chip in $5 million, if a bill proposed by Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, is approved. Although that is still several months away, it stands no chance unless it's clear the city and park district are on board with the general plan. All of which makes quick positive action on the current proposal vital. While approval would not bind either agency, it would make clear to lawmakers that the pond is important to the whole community.

+L44<''

Bend deserves transparency on OSU-Cascades costs, plans M

ist-to-lobbyist lobbying until 2013, when the Oregon Government Ethics Commission issued an advisory opinion, The Oregon Capital Insider reported. Lobbyists got a te m porary break from reporting in 2013. That exemption is to expire this year. That's why House Bill 2058 was introduced. Reporting on the spending of lobbyists is a tremendous improvement on the lack thereof. It's really helpful to Oregonians, though, only if it gives them a good picture of how the money is sloshing around in Salem and around the state. Rules for lobbying at the federal level attempt to capture lobbying effortmore broadly than Oregon's laws would if HB 2058 were passed. We don't know what was going on with the influence and lobbying that was coming out of former Gov. John Kitzhaber'soffice and from his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes. But it doesn't give the impression that Oregonians should know less. Ron Bersin, the executive director of the Oregon Government Ethics Commission, says lawmakers should vote no on this bill. And so dowe.

uch has been written re-

cently about the proposed new OSU-Cascades campus and plans to "break ground" on the project as early as this summer. In reality, they are putting the

Lobbying bill merits 'no' earch your memory. Is there a worse time in Salem for lobbyists to want less disclosure of their activities? But that's indeed what they are pushing for with House Bill 2058. It would make permanent the exemption from reporting to the state ethics commission when one lobbyist lobbies another lobbyist. Your first question might well be: What are lobbyists doing lobbying other lobbyists? They apparently do that sort of thing to build coalitions behind legislation and policy matters. And they also might do quite a bit of it. The Oregon Capital Insider reported that in 2014, "companies, interest groups and other entities reported spending $26 million on lobbyists but lobbyists only reported spending $92,000 on the people they lobbied." There is something — or several somethings — missing. The fact is, lobbyists currently report spending only on lawmakers and other people who fall under the category of legislative and executive officials. They did not believe they had to report lobby-

IN MY VIEW

By Mike Walker

struction debris, stabilization of the overly steep slopes and availability of soil for even a partial filling of the pit. The potential costs are staggering. cart in front of the horse. Maybe Consider that the appraisal for OSU-Cascades thinks that "if we the 46 acres was $10,400,000. This build it, they will come," but let's figure includes the land plus all mitlook at the facts. igation for past mining activity and Currently, OSU-Cascades owns enough fill soil to prepare the propjust 10 acres on the west side of erty for commercial or residential Bend. Obviously, this would be development of the entire 46 acres. barely enough land to build a small OSU-Cascades has unsuccessfully grammar school, letalonerepresent attempted to solve its cost dilemthe initial stage of a four-year uni- ma by presenting a concept where versity. Realizing the need for more less than half of the 46 acres is land, OSU-Cascades has long stated developed. its intention to expand west along Now consider new figures that Chandler Avenue on the adjacent put the true costs, by my estimate, 46-acre parcel. Here's where things at over three times the appraisal! get a bit dicey. OSU-Cascades should be in panic The major problem with the mode with the realization that it is OSU-Cascades' grand vision is that looking at up to as much as a $34 it doesn't own the 46 acres. It does million price tag to get the site ready have a contract to buy the land, for buildings.

was, by contract, supposed to have completed its "due diligence" on the 46-acre site by March 30, 2014. As

of now, it claims it doesn't have the "resources" to complete the one remaining due diligence task, and its contracthas been extended three times. Apparently, OSU-Cascades does have the resources to pay for

these extensions, which is currently $30,000per month fora current grand total of $410,000 nonrefundable tax dollars to date. OSU-Cascades has stated that if costs exceed-

ed the appraisal figure, then the sale agreement would not go forward. Since the costs of readying the land for development are three times the

appraisal figure, one wonders how the deal can stand.

Currently, OSU-Cascades has put Bend residents in a state of confusion. If it doesn't move forward with

the 46-acre purchase, then how will it expand the campus? Will it make good on its threats to just buy up

nearbyparcelsand piece together a university? Certainly Bend cannot Legislature are none too pleased accept anything but a contiguous Most of the 46-acre plot is a large with the lack of financial planning, and thoughtful master plan on such hole in the ground created by years and funds requested by OSU-Cas- a major project. of pumice mining followed by ac- cades might be withheld for other It is long past time for OSU-Casceptingabout 290,000 cubic yards projects with actual master plans. cades to be transparent with its exof construction debris, according to After all, we are talking about the pansion plans and its expenditures my calculations. Mind you, this is use (or misuse) of taxpayer dol- of taxpayer dollars. As Bend resinot a tiny hole, but more resembles lars. So, the big question looms for dents, we should demand complete an indentation created by a meteor OSU-Cascades. Will it exercise its accountability now, before we have strike. contract to buy the 46-acreparcelor to live with a regrettable mistake. OSU-Cascades is just now real- scrap the idea altogether? — Mike Walker lives in Bend izing the costs and logistical nightApparently there is no silver linand is a civil engineer and a mares of the removal of the con- ing to this story. OSU-Cascades graduate of Oregon State University. but it has run up against an insurmountable dilemma.

Financial decision-makers in the

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

Moving on: the changing nature of relationships S o much of life is about leave-taking: moving from home to college, from love to love, from city to city and fromlife stage to life stage. In earlier times, leavingwas defined by distance, but now it is defined by silence.Everybody everywhere isjusta text away, a phone call away. Relationships are often defined by the frequency and intensity of communication betweenpeople. The person moving on and changing a relationship no longer makes a one-time choice to physically go to an-

DAVID

BROOKS

We all have heard of men and women who stalk ex-lovers online;

people who bombard a friend with emails even though that friendship has evidently cooled; mentors who

resent their former proteges when their emails are no longer instantly

returned; people who post faux glam ute-by-minute decisions to not text, to pictures on Instagram so they can not email or call, to turn intense com- "win the breakup" against their ex. other town. He makes a series of min-

munication into sporadic conversation

Instant communication creates a

or no communication. His name was new sort of challenge. How do you once constant on his friend's phone gracefully change your communicascreen, but now it is rare, and the void tion patterns when one person legitiis awound. mately wants to step back or is enterIf you are like me, you know a lot of ing another life phase? relationships in which people haven't The paradox is that the person domanaged this sort of transition well. ing the leaving controls the situation, Communication that was once hon-

but greater heroism is demanded of

est and life-enhancing has become the one being left behind. The person perverted — after a transition — by left in the vapor trail is hurt and probresentment, neediness or narcissism.

leaver might not deserve and might never learn about. unnaturally casual banter, emotional That means not calling when you much pain there is when what was once intimate conversation turns into

ably craves contact. It's amazing how

distance or just a void.

are not wanted. Not pleading for more

The person left behind also prob- intimacy or doing the other embarably thinks that the leaver is making rassing things that wine, late nights a big mistake. She probably thinks and instant communications make that it's stupid to leave or change the possible. Maybe that will mean the bond; that the other person is driven permanent end to what once was, in by selfishness, shortsightedness or which case at least the one left behind popularity. has lost with grace. But maybe it will Yet if the whole transition is going to mean rebirth. be managed with any dignity, the perFor example, to be around college son being left has to swallow the pain students these days is to observe how and accept the decision. many parentshave failed to successThe person being left has to grant fully start their child's transition into the leaver the dignityofher own mind, adulthood. has to respect her ability to make her The mistakes usually begin early in own choices about how to live and adolescence. The parents don'tcreate whom to be dose to (except in the a space where the child can establish most highly unusual circumstances). independence. They don't create a The person being left has to suppress context in which the child can be honvindictive flashes of resentment and est about what's actually happening in be motivated by a steady wish for the his life. The child is forced to deceive in other person's ultimate good. Without order to both lead a semi-independent accepting the idea that she deserved life and also maintain parental love. to be left, the person being left has to By college, both sides are to be act in a way worthy of her best nature, pitied. By hanging on too tight, the to continue the sacrificial love that the parents have created exactly the sep-

aration they sought to avoid. The student, meanwhile, does not know if he is worthy of being treated as a dignified adult because his parents haven't treated him that way. They are head-

ing for a life of miscommunication. But if the parents lie down sacrificially, accept the relationship their child defines, then it can reboot on an

adult-to-adult basis. The hiddenness and deception are no longer necessary. Texts and emails can flow, not as

before, but fluidly and sweetly. Communications technology encourages us to express whatever is on our minds in that instant. It makes self-restraint harder. But sometimes

healthy relationships require self-restraint and self-quieting, deference and respect (at the exact moments

those things are hardest to muster). So today a new kind of heroism is required. Feelings are hurt and angry words are at the ready. But they are held back. You can't know the future, but at least you can walk into it as your

best andhighest self. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.


SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN F 3

OMMENTARY

ama: e a u t

ac i o w e a ness

Netanyahu spoke to Congress on Tuesday to warn Americans of

the anti-Western threats from theo-

cratic — and likely to soon be nuclear — Iran. Netanyahu came to the U.S. to outline the Iranian plan to remake the Middle East with a new nuclear arse-

VICTOR

DAVIS HANSON For the last sixyears, lots of American allies, besides Israel, have be-

nal. His warning was delivered over come scared of this strange new difthe objections of the Obama admin- fidence of the United States — as if istration, which wants to cut a deal with Iran that allows the theocracy

to continue to enrich lots of uranium. Netanyahu received a standing

the Obama administration feels that

America's priorprominence asleader and protector of the West was either unwarranted, too costly or resulted

in an unfair world order in need of is currently the greatest global spon- adjustment. ovation for stating the obvious. Iran

sor of terrorism. Tehran now has de facto control over four Middle East

nations: Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen. Iran has serially ignored all past U.S. deadlines to stop nuclear

President Barack Obama entered

office promising reset diplomacy

tions. Hundreds of thousands of reformers hit the streets of Tehran in 2009 to protest what they believed to be the fraudulent results of a presi-

dential election. The theocracy was worried that its nuclear plans would

either cause economic collapse due to the sanctions or prompt some sort of Western military response.

But all of that has changed due to the Obama administration's zeal to conclude an agreement with Iran at

any cost.

asking Putin to negotiate a face-sav-

ing compromise — as if somehowthe former president George W. Bush's U.S., not Syria, had overstepped. punitive measures against RussiaIn reaction to a series of terrorist with Russia. He declared an end to

enrichment. It habitually misled U.N. as if somehow the United States, not inspectors. It threatens to spark a nu- Russia, was responsible for the growclear arms race in the Middle East. ing estrangement. At one point the Iranian economy Russian President Vladimir Puwas sputtering due to Western sanc-

crises — the shootings at Fort Hood,

illary and Bill Clinton have one home in Washington, D.C., another in Chappaqua,

New York, and a whole wide world

that opens its arms and wallets to them. But their permanent address is on

the fault line where defiance meets self-destruction. They know what the caricature of

~ i s associated not just with amassive borrowing and spending spree at

presidency wasthat she'd been vet-

strued as a cloak over her communi-

But that assessment shortchanged

ted as nobody's ever been vetted, with no surprises left. All the skeletons had been tugged from the Clinfor floutingrules and operating in se- tons' labyrinthine closets. All the crecy was to put what could be con- mud had been dugup and flung.

Europe and the Arab states as welL

Moreover, if Iran gets a bomb, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Egypt would surely be tempted to do so as well,

and,suddenly,you'd have a Middle East that is already full of sectarian

proxy wars also full of nuclear weapons — with few of the deterrent safeguards you had during the Cold War between Washington and Moscow. There are actors in the Middle East for whom "mutual assured destruction" is an invitation to a party — not

a system of mutual deterrence. Also, if Iran gets a bomb, there's a good chance the whole global nuclear nonproliferation regime, already frayed, would unravel, which would be very destabilizing. Here, PresidentBarack Obama cerns. And, in fairness, I doubt there would have been the sanctions and

Referring to the controversial sources of funds raised by the Clinton Foundation in recent years, Ted Cruz joked that she wasn't present

point that they'd never get a fair shake and should cut the corners

negotiations we have today with Iran had Bibi not threatened to go full "Dr.

that they could and behave as they wished. Their foes would storm the

because the conference's organizers

gates regardless.

Strangelove" on Tehran. However, Bibi argues that any deal should eliminate all of Iran's centrifuges and related components

days. If there's not a private luxu-

inevitably been blasted for all of that. And now, from Michael Schmidt's story in The Times, we learn that Hillary's response to her reputation

What both the United States and

Israel agree on, and I certainly do, is that Iran must be prevented from building a nuclear bomb, because it could be used to threaten the Jewish state and, once loaded onto a missile,

It's as if they decided at a certain

those they're not savaging. Although they've long been derided for a surrender of principle when There's pushback from her dethey're on the hunt for donations, fenders over how rare this really

Until a month ago, one of the ar-

the critiques of our policy from the serious Bibi versus the cynical Bibi?

and Netanyahu share the same con-

barely comes out in public these would find sexual misdeeds even

dreds of thousands, extra coddling: guments I frequently heard in favor They have demanded, received and of herpresumed candidacy forthe

terests? And how should we balance

some of it deserved, some of it not.

they tune out their critics, at least

Wall Street bankers, fees in the hun-

are not fully aligned. What is the minimum we need to satisfy our in-

their entire political lives under fire,

the bill." Reince Priebus added: "Hillary

was. There are explanations and in-

interest in striking a deal with Iran? Because our interests and Israel's

last week wasn't Jeb Bush, Rand Paul or Scott Walker. It was Hillary Clinton, in absentia.

"couldn't find a foreign nation to foot

in a manner that opens them up to formation still to come. fresh, predictable accusations of that. But this was reckless, given the Although they've long been cast as questions that would surely be asked greedy —remember the china, flat- if it came to light, the likelihood that w are and furniture carted outofthe it would, and how she'd wind up White House? — they hit the speaking looking. circuit in a way that only strengthDoes she have a political death ened that impression. Audiences of wish'?

made his case on Iran before Congress, with all the circus atmorious questions: What is America's

The withdrawal from the world

them is, and they play right into it. They're familiar with the rap against them and generously feed it. And

their foundation has raked in money

ow that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has sphere it involved, let's get to the se-

Day" in which they star. would they be forced to reckon fulRepublicans are having a field day. ly with her habit of clinging to her The dominant figure at the Conser- ways. vative Political Action Conference She and her husband have lived

New York Times News Service

didn't say in speech

run over $500billion.

the bombings at the Boston Mara- home, but also with administration thon, the killings in Ottawa and Syd- penance for supposed past self-righney and, mostrecently,the murder teousness and sins abroad — as tin, however, interpreted the reset as of journalists and Jewish citizens in Obama cites the gamut from the CruAmerican guilt. He assumed there Paris — the Obama administration sades, the Inquisition, slavery and Jim would be few consequences to gob- has refused even to utter the phrase Crow to the more recent Afghanistan bling up the Crimea and eastern "radical Islam." and Iraq wars, Guantanamo Bay and Ukraine in the same way that he had Amid such moral confusion, who the war on terror. sliced off parts of Georgia. He has is the American enemy and who is Unfortunately, throughout history, been right. No wonder that he eyes the ally? Netanyahu has received leaders who have appeared weary and the Baltic states next. more administration invective than sounded apologetic have invited chaControversy surrounds the cre- has Iran — as if a Western democrat- os. And chaos encourages war — all ation and spread of the Islamic State ic nation, not the specter of a nucle- the more so when weakness appears in Syria and Iraq. But there is no ar Iran, were the source of growing so audacious. disagreement about what followed tensions. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist Obama's abrupt withdrawal of U.S. The common theme in all these and historian at the Hoover Institution, forces from Iraq, as he fulfilled a examples is that somehow the UnitStanford University.

By Frank BrunI

What Bibi

resulting in annual deficits that still

Does she have a political death wish? H

FRIEDMAN

campaign promise.

sraeli Prime Minister Benjamin

ed States (or its allies) is portrayed as At one time, the administration being culpable for current problems bragged of Iraq as possibly its "great- — not the autocratic, theocratic thugs est achievement," and as being "sta- who invade their neighbors, threaten ble" and "secure." But the precipitous to obliterate democracies and see terpullout led to anarchy and a fertile ror as a legitimate tool of state policy. landscape in which the Islamic State The Obama administration's paralcould thrive. After 2011, it turned ysis is not just rhetorical. For the first out that the absence of U.S. troops in time since 2001, defense spending Iraq, not their presence, had enabled will dip below 4 percent of GDP, as the the savage terrorists. Army, Navy and Air Force shrink to The same muddlecharacterized near-record postwar levels. American policy in Syria. Syrian The astronomical $18 trillion in naPresident Bashar al-Assad ignored tional debt was not the only cause of Obama's "red line" by using chem- military cutbacks. America's enemies ical weapons, but Obama imposed understood that even massive defense cuts — andtaxhikes — still didnotoffno consequences. Then, Secretary of State John Kerry was reduced to set vast increases in social spending,

THOMAS

But there are times when the Clintons are their own worst enemies.

Insistent that hi s

p ersecutors

that can enrich material for a bomb.

I don't begrudge him that wish. Most of my Israeli friends share it. But, as

where none existed, Bill gave them a

Robert Einhorn, a former member of

ry jet and a quarter-million-dollar blue dress and Monica Lewinsky. speaking fee waiting for her, you can Aggrieved by the way her detracforget about it." tors saw her as haughtily above it That gibe was over the top. But it all, Hillary decided on an email aptouched on a worry that many Dem- proach assecretary of state tha thas ocrats have: Can Hillary, of all Dem- made her look haughtily above it all. ocrats, persuasively style herself as Is that entitlement? Or hubris? An a champion of the struggling middle inability to change? Or a refusal to? class'? I approached someone who knows It also demonstrates how much the Clintons well, asked how to make ammunition she's needlessly giving sense of this and got an answer that a future Republican rival. echoed observations about them That is, if she runs and if she gets from the past: "They'd rather seek her party's nomination. Democrats forgiveness than permission." should look closely at the revelations Because theyhave passion and talof recentweeks andthinkhard about ent, forgiveness has routinely come. finding a primary opponent for her, But the longer they live on that fault one more fearsome than those who line, the greater the chance of an irhave stepped forward so far. redeemable misstep and the taller Only then would she get the prac- the odds that they'll reclaim a temtice she might need in answering porary address: 1600 Pennsylvania the latest charges against her. Only Avenue. then would Democratic voters see — Frank Bruni is a columnist

the U.S. negotiating team with Iran,

for The New York Times.

make a bomb and managed to import all the components to do so,

cations as secretary of state by using the couple's ability to make new only a private email account. messes. It ignored the "Groundhog how well she handles that. Only then

observed, that position "is neither achievable nor necessary" to safe-

guard our security or that of our Mideast allies.

Netanyahu never made a convincing argument as to why walking away from Obama's draft deal with Iran would result in either a better

deal, more sanctions or an Iranian capitulation — and not a situation where Iran would continue to build

toward abomb and our only two choices would be to live with it or

bomb it. In that sense, his speech was perfect for Congress: I've got a better plan, and it won't cost a thing or re-

quire any sacrifice by the American people. The U.S. position — shared by China, Russia, Germany, Britain and France — is this: Given that Iran has already mastered the techniques to despite sanctions, it is impossible to

eliminate Iran's bomb-making capabilities. What is possible is to demand

No prize winner: Africa's message of 'shame' By Adam Taylor The Washington Post

T

hisweek, the Mo Ibrahim Foun-

dation named outgoing ¹ mibian President Hifikepunye Pohamba as winner of the 2014 Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African

Leadership. "During the decade of his Presidential mandate, he demonstrated sound and wise leadership," Salim Ahmed Salim, the chairman

of the prize committee, said at a Nairobi, Kenya, news conference. "At the same time, he maintained his humili-

ty throughout his presidency." While the Ibrahim Prize lacks the name recognition of the Nobel Peace

Prize, it's still a very, very big deal. In fact, the Africa-focused prize beats its Scandinavian rival in one important

way: money. The recipient of the Ibrahim Prize

is awarded more than $5 million in an initial payment that is spread over 10 years, with $200,000 every yearafter that for the rest of his life. It's said to

prize, which is supposed to be given There are no rules about prizes out every year, often finds no suitable saying they have to be given out evcandidates. In fact, in the eight years ery year; the Nobel Peace Prize has since it was first announced, it has skipped a number of years since its beengiven out four times. inception in 1901. Still, given the high Here's how it runs down. monetary reward of th e I brahim 2007 — Joaquim Chissano,for- Mze and its lofty ideals, a 50 percent mer president of Mozambique, is the failure to award the prize is striking. winner. "He was a powerful voice for In fact, it's those lofty ideals — and Africa on the international stage and probably the high monetary reward, played an important role in pushing too — that explain why the prize is debt relief up the agenda," former awarded so infrequently. Set up by U.N. secretary general Kofi Annan British Sudanese telecom billionaire said while announcingtheprize. Mo Ibrahim in 2006, the Ibrahim 2008 — Festus Mogae, former Mze is awarded based on the decipresident of Botwana, is the winner. sion made by an independent prize "President Mogae's outstanding lead- committee full ofheavyweightnames ership has ensured Botswana's con- — including Nobel laureates Martti tinued stability and prosperity in the Ahtisaari and Mohamed ElBaradei. face of an HIV/AIDS pandemic which It has an extremely strict set of crite-

and other technologies so that if Iran decidedone day to make a bomb, it would take it a year — more than

anyone would like and the most stable

enough time for the U.S. and its allies

leaders can serve in office for almost is not that easy. And although there

to destroy it. I think such a deal would be in A merica's interest if — if — i t i n cludes Iran agreeing to constant,

are anumber of good Africanleaders, they don't space out their departures

intrusive and unannounced inspections of, and limits on, all bomb-mak-

from office to enable them all to win

ing capacities and if, even after the

consecutive prizes. Ibrahim himself acknowledges that

specified10 years, there are more than the usual inspections. I would also welcome Congress accompanying the deal by granting the president authorization — right now — to use "any means necessary" to respond

two decades or more, sometimes finding an individual who fits every year

the standards are very high. "It is a

prize for excellence in leadership. We are not lowering our standards," he told Al Jazeera last week. "If this prize

w as offered to European presidents and leaders, how many ... would have

should Iran try to break the deal.

won this prize in the last eight years?" That's a fair point, but it's hard to

U.S. strategic concerns, while open-

miss the negative message sent by

These conditions would satisfy ing the possibility — nothing more — for Iran to become more integrat-

announcing that no leader in the con-

ed into the global system. Ultimately,

threatened the future of his country and people," Annan said at the time.

ria to which no exceptions are made.

tinent of Africa is worthy of the prize On its website, the Mo Ibrahim Foun- so frequently. Each year that no win-

the only safeguard against Iran's nuclear ambitions is an internally driv-

2009 — No prize was awarded.

dation lists the criteria for potential winners:

en change in the character of Iran's

2010 — No prize was awarded. 2011 — Pedro Pires, former pres-

ner is announced, there's a barrage

of negative global headlines about • a former African Executive Head the quality of African leadership.

ident of Cape Verde, is the winner. of State or Government

• left office inthe last threeyears be the largest prize of its kind in the "The prize committee has been great• democraticallyelected ly impressed by ~ s ident Pedro • served his/her constitutionally Pires' vision in transforming Cape — a little less than $1 million — and a Verde into a model of democracy, mandated term • demonstrated e xce p tional gold medal). stability and increased prosperity," Yet there's also something quite Salim told reporters. leadership 2012 — No prize is awarded. disheartening about the Ibrahim In Africa' s young democracies, 2013 — No prize is awarded. Prize: The committee that awards the wherecoups aremore frequent than world (in contrast, the Nobel Prize in 2014 was 8 million Swedish kronor

that Iran roll back its enrichment

regime. My problem with

N etanyahu

"The shame ends," is how a relieved

is that he warned that the interim

South African newspaper, the Mail and Guardian, titled its coverage of

deal Obama negotiated with Iranwhich froze and rolled back parts of

Pohamba's win.

Iran's nuclear program and created

— Adam Taylor writes about foreign affairs for The Washington Post. From London, he studied at the University of Manchester and Columbia University.

these negotiations — would lead to a collapse of sanctions and be violated by Iran. None of it happened. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New Yorh Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended March1. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead) 2. "Prodigal Son" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 3. "All the Light WeCannot See" by Anthony Doerr (Scrib-

ner)

4. "Mightier than theSword" by Jeffrey Archer (St. Martin's) 5. "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin's) 6. "A Spool of BlueThread" by Anne Tyler (Knopf) 7."Obsession inDeath"by J.D. Robb (Putnam) 8. "Private Vegas" by James Patterson and Maxine Paetro (Little, Brown) 9. "Double FudgeBrownie Murder" by JoanneFluke (Kensington) 10. "Gray Mountain" by John Grisham (Doubleday) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 2. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil

McGraw (Bird Street) 3. "Future Crimes" by Marc Goodman (Doubleday) 4. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 5."Killing Patton" by Bill O'Reilly Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 6. "Girl in a Band" by Kim Gordon (Morrow/Dey Street) 7. "Effortless Healing" by Joseph Mercola (Harmony) 8. "Bold" by Peter Diamandis and StevenKotler (Simon 8 Schuster) 9. "The FoodBabeWay" by Vani Hari (Little, Brown) 10. "Yes Please" byAmy Poehler (Morrow/Dey Street) — Tribune NewsService

J.K. Rowling

bibliography revealsnew 'Potter' info By Carolyn Kellogg Los Angeles Times

An exhaustive new J.K.

Rowling bibliography being published in the UK reveals secrets behind the workings of her Harry Potter books, the Guardian

reports. "J.K. Rowling: A Bibliography 1997-2013" by Philip Errington includes correspondence between Rowling and her editor and details the revisions of the

Potter works in progress. Rowling wrote a blurb for the book herself. "As some-

one who respects comprehensive research, I am in awe of the level of detail

and amount of time Philip Errington has dedicated to

this slavishly thorough and somewhat mind-boggling bibliography," she writes. Among the secrets fans will discover: • Alternative titles con-

sideredfor "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" were "Harry Potter and the Death Eaters," "Harry Potter and the Fire Goblet" and "Harry Potter and the

Three Champions." • The manuscript of "The Order of the Phoenix" was

n ac in

e r o m iseso vi amin

"Vitamania: Our Obsessive Quest for Nutritional Perfection"

did not contain the ingredients

By Christie Aschwanden

listed on the label. Several incidents have highlighted a need for greater oversight: In the 1990s, contaminated L-tryptophan supplements killed 40 people and harmed

New York Times News Service

more than 1,550 others. But

by Catherine Price (Penguin

Press,318 pages, $27.95)

In the late 1800s, a disfig-

even toothless regulatory pro-

uring and often fatal disease

posals have met fierce push-

became epidemic in the South.

back from the supplements

Called pellagra (Italian for "rough skin"), it caused diar-

llldustry. An amendment tothe Fed-

rhea, mental confusion and

eral Food, Drug and Cosmetic

severe scaling and flaking of the skin. By 1911, pellagra had become the leading cause of death in asylums. Eventually, the Public Health Service dispatchedphysician Joseph Goldberger to determine its cause. At the t i me, a "pellagra germ" was the leading suspect, but Goldberger dismissed this Tony Cenicola/The New York Times file photo hypothesis after observing that "Scientists still don't fully understand all the nuances of what vitamins do in our bodies," writes Cath-

Act in 1976 prohibits the FDA

the cases didn't fit an infecwho depended on corn as a sta-

tists still don't fully understand

ple, and he proposed a dietary

all the nuances of what vita-

mins do in ourbodies, how they Goldberger became so sure do it, or what the long-term efof his theory that he hosted fects of moderate deficiencies "filth parties" where he and a might be," she writes. few of his medical colleagues Once thing is certain: No downed pills filled with urine, matter how poor your diet, it is fecesand dried skin flake stak- virtually impossible to become en from people with pellagra truly vitamin-deficient in the to prove that the disease was United States these days, Price not contagious. Despite such says, because our processed experiments (which sickened foods are so universally ennone of the participants), scien- riched and fortified with syncause.

unconvinced.

thetic vitamins. The majority tured in China, and without

years after Goldberger's death them, much of our food would — that niacin, or vitamin B3, be devoid of nutritional value. was isolated and identified as Vitamins are typically flathe cure. Diets reliant on corn vorless and invisible, so we make people susceptible to a depend on experts and proddeficiency of niacin. uct labels to tell us which ones Catherine Price recounts the are contained in an item and story of how science cracked which foods we should considthe pellagra mystery in "Vita- er healthy. Our dependence on mania," her absorbing and me- labels "has primed us to accept ticulously researched history the amazing array of health of the beginnings and causes daims, advertisements and of our obsession with vitamins advicethatwe encounter each and nutrition. After more than day," Price writes. a century of research, "ScienWe eagerly gobble up foods

"Lucky Alan Lethem's recent novels, such and Other Stories" protagonists are a sketchily by Jonathan Letharn (Double- defined lot — crudely carved day, 157 pages, $24.95) chess pieces that he moves

t ective with T o urette's syndrome "Motherless in

Brooklyn." The people in this c o l lection, "Lucky Alan and

encounter — or dre a m s he's had an encoun-

w ho watches television alone

• In its edits, that book

lost a song for the ghost Nearly Headless Nick. The song was later posted online by Rowling.

on the sea buckthorn packaging, by contrast, were confident

and comforting.

store, Price f i nd s N a tural tr a t ion, and he is not alone. What supplement peddlers Curves, a product that promA stu d y in 2007 found that are really selling is hope, Price ises to deliver "natural bust a t h i rdofdoctorsdidn'tknow argues — a counter to the unenhancement" with a "100% t h a t d ietary supplements ar- certainty that so often accomnatural" "balanced formula for en't subject to FDA approval or panies real science.

maximum results." safety testing. Given the lack Asearchofthemedicalliter- of oversight, it is not terribly ature turns up no evidence that s u r prising that a recent inves-

the proprietary blend of herbs tigationbythe New Yorkattorlisted on the bottle could make ney general's office found that good on the product's prom- a large number of the herbal ises.Nor are there rigorous supplements on store shelves

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g )

P

of these stories. A man ha s a n

snowed-in house in the country, a ba sket containing a human

them, speedily..."

On a trip to her local GNC

aren't approved by the Food and Drug Adminis-

early work, there is a d r eamlike quality to some

containing the manuscript. • Working on "The

over, so if it needs more cuts after this, I'm ready to make

common sense."

that his favorite agnosis, "let alone a treatment," supp l e ment pills she writes. The promises made

As in Lethem's

tioning the enormous sack

you suggested, but I amvery happy with it now, which wasn't the case before. The hard work, the significant rewrites I wanted to do, are

the pressure of

man experiences while taking his daughters to SeaWorldBy Michiko Kakutani his plot points. These stories of- there is something perfunctory New York Times News Service feel like throwbacks to his and glancing about these tales. In two of the stories in his earl y genre-inspired work, but They have little of the social s uperfluous new c o l lection, t h e ylack the energy and imita- detail found in "The Fortress of J onathan Lethem uses th e t i v everve that fueled the best of Solitude" and "Dissident Gardens"and none of their emosnow globe as a symbol for t h os e endeavors. "Their Back Pages" is a pre- tional depth of field, and they isolation and removal from the hustle and bustle and Sturm di ct able Pirandello-esque fable feel like unnecessary pit stops und Drang of ordinary life. It's about an assortment of charac- in what is otherwise a bright, a favorite image, which has ters from old conuc strips — m- ascendant career. ' g members of a dysfuncpopped up in earlier books, cludm such as "Motherless Brooklyn" tion al family; a rabbit named a nd "Chronic City," and is an P e tr; e and a generic clown, a pt metaphor for the separa- vi l l ain and mo n ster tion that so many whose plane crashof his characters lands on an island, feel, whether it's stranding t h em Dylan Ebdus in like the castaways "The Fortress of on "Gilligan's Island" and forcing S olitude," w h o was bullied as a them to construct child, or Lionel survival strategies Essrog, the defor themselves.

solitude — cut offby fate, choice si de his house with a group of o r temperament. A man in a wo l ves who present him with

"I've done more to it than

und e r ~ car li a R IN'E PetcE

about mechanicallyto illustrate

an agent who left it behind with the editor, never men-

"overlong," Rowling wrote,

crack

Dreamliketales, linked insolitude

O ther Stories," also t e n d

her editor had said w as

were safe or effective. When the FDA attempted

Find Your Dream Home

handed over in a London pub, spy-style: brought in by

Chamber of Secrets," which

ers would not be required to demonstrate that their products

to ban unsubstantiated daims from supplement labels, a trade group called the Nationclaiming that added vitamins s t u dies to support claims made al Health Alliance organized and die t ar y chem i - b ya sea buckthorn product to a huge — and, Price argues, cals will"support soothe the au- deceptive — letter-writing camthor's sensitive paign, despite the fact that the a healthy metab- i proposed rules would have reg~ I stop to ask what Despite the ulated only the labels, not the productsthemselves. oee 0$$$$$l$$ ee$$$ res how it has been sltt'itttriotsALplkflcftog idenc e , ev en The campaign e nlisted proved: "As long medical experts employees and customers of as ad v e rtisecan f a l l l nt o 10,000 or so health food stores ments employ marketing traps. to write Congress. An estimatthe magic word Price's physical ed2 million letters were sent. science, we are therapist is flabPrice understands why. Docwilling to a cbergasted when tors she had seen for her skin aN -4j4 cept claims that s he tells h i m problem couldn't agree on a di-

oftheseadditivesare manufac- otherwise might

It wasn't until 1937 — eight

ensure that supplement mak-

erine Price, author of nVitamania: Our Obsessive Quest for Nutritional Perfection" writes.

tious-disease pattern. Pellagra was prevalent among people

tists and politicians remained

from limiting the potency of vitamins and minerals or regulating them as drugs. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 helped

to

live in their own fortresses of ter-

in the snowy woods out-

b a b y. In another tale, a man

with his dog ("Traveler Home"). nam ed Stevick watches workA nerdy derk in a sex boutique, ers use jackhammers to drill w ho reviews porn films for its a h ole in the street outside a newsletter ('The Porn Critic"). Manh attan cafe and then lower

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A once-venerated avant-gar- a h u mancaptive into the hole; d e theater director (known for i n s tad e of calling the police,

miniaturist spectades, such as Stem'ck ends up participating in staging "Krapp's Last Tape" in wha t is either a deeply sinister t he elevator of a prewar office u n dertaking or a bizarre piece b uilding) who sees a movie o f p erformance art. every afte rnoon alone; he is Th ese stories are not withdescribedby the narrator as "a out their pleasures: Lethem skateruphis ownriver, afrozen is a nimble and resourceful ribbon the rest of us might have writ er and knows how to use glimpsed through trees, from pop and classical culture to inwithin a rink where we cirded ject even banal incidents with to tinny music" ("Lucky Alan"). mem ory-triggering e c hoes. Unlike the c h aracters i n But with the exception of the

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SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

resi en ia o eusiera By David Knowies

servative taking on the Amer-

Marco Rubio

Bloomberg News

ican cultural and partisan Judging from the plethora divide by going after the likes of titles now crowding book- of Beyonce. Huckabee knows store shelves, it would appear his audience, and his book that publishing a memoir has tour was largely centered in become something of a re- the south, with notable stops quirement for politicians hop- in Iowa. ing to become president. The urge to make the leap Carly Fiorina from politician to a uthor L ike Huc k makes sense on a number of abee, f o r mer levels. Releasing a book can Hewlett-Packard help introduce a regional polChief Executive itician to a national audience, Carly F i o rina laying the groundwork for a has timed the recampaign. While the bulk of Fiorina leas e of her two a first-time effort will be spent memoirs to the on biographical details and start of political campaigns. formative anecdotes, most Her first effort, "Tough Choiceventually veer toward poli- es: A Memoir" came out in cy positions without actually 2007 as Fiorina was preparing committing their authors to to face off against Democrat specifics, giving readers a hint Barbara Boxer in her ill-fatof how he or she might govern ed attempt to win the latter's without chiseling a platform California Senate seat. Unin stone. fortunately for Fiorina, the Of course, once a book is basics ofher story about her released, it provides its au- time at HP ended with Fiorina's well-publicized firing, a thor with the opportunity to head out on a promotional biographical note that didn't tour. These carefully planned inspire a majority of voters in jaunts — surprise, surprisethe state to support her. often mirror the early primaThis year's offering, due ry state itinerary of prospec- out in May, is "Rising to the tive candidates — Iowa, New Challenge: My L eadership Hampshire, South Carolina Journey," and according to and so on. In the best-case its promotional materials, is s cenario, said memoir w i l l

result in robust sales that will translate into votes that will then lead to another contract

and a hefty advance to write a second memoir (wash, rinse, repeat ... and re-elect). This y e ar's c r o p of as-yetundeclared candidates has spent no small amount

of time crafting books (many with the help of ghostwriters or credited co-writers). For many politicians, the publication date of a memoir is the real clue as to whether he

or she will soon be declaring his or her candidacy. In general, if a memoir comes with-

in a year or two of the start of campaign season, there's a good bet that its author will be

a part of the festivities. Here's a sampling of their output.

Mike Huckabee Just as he did the last time he

ran for

p r esi-

d ent, i n 2 0 0 8 , Mike Huckabee

is prepping the Huokabee gr ound for a run with a m emoir. In 2007, the former Arkan-

sas governor and contributor John Perry released "Char-

In 2013, two

y ears

afte r

one will find these days," Cannato said of the book.

January, a few months before

in 2016 gave his latest book the thumbs up.

nized labor of collective bar-

ner for the White House and seemed to prove what con-

Although book tours give

servatives including Rush prospective candidates a foLimbaugh had been saying rum in placeswhere voters for years: Republicans should might not know then, they stop trying to elect moderates. also present risks. Rubio re- "Walker is living proof that cently was heckled by im- conservatives need not move migration activists during a to the center to win," the probook signing at Miami Dade motional copy reads. College.

Rand Paul

Ted Cruz

A lth o u g h The much an-

Sen. Rand Paul

k utani w r ote i n T h e N e w to navigate the Republican York Times, "Hard Choices primary season. Along with is a statesmanlike document Bush's support of Common ... with succinct and often Core educational standards,

ernor, is serious

about running for president, he

by Erik Larson (Crown

with the Latin motto "'Drta Ten-

Americans, at atimethe United

The Lusitania is about to

sink — and sink, and sinkall over again. This May is the 100th anniversary of the attack on the grand British ocean liner by a German submarine, and the expected crop ofbooks will commemorate the occasion. But the most attention-getting

of the bunch is guaranteed to be Erik Larson's "Dead Wake," because Larson is an old hand

at treating nonfiction like high drama. As he demonstrat ed with "In the Garden of Beasts" and "The Devil in the White

City," he knows how to pick details that have maximum soapy

potential and then churn them until they foam.

Would he be writing about the Lusitania if the anniversary were not imminent'? To its credit, "Dead Wake" doesn't read

that way. This does not seem like an opportunistic book, or a cobbled-together clip job full of previously known information. There can't be many new

sources to draw on 100 years afterthe fact, but Larsonhas an eye for haunting, unexploited

— have left their own impresfrom Washington" seemed to

~

ican Patriots: Answering the

impress Louisiana Gov. Bob- Call to Freedom." Two years by Jindal, for example. "My later, Santorum was back on friend Rick Perry knows that

bookstore shelves with "Blue

it is the American people who Collar Conservatives: Recommake this country great and mitting to an A m erica that not Washington," Jindal said

Works," but ahead of the 2016

of the book. "With appropriate campaign,he has released the respect for both our rich histo- deeply personal "Bella's Gift: ry and the practical needs of

How One Little Girl Trans-

formed Our Family and Inspired a Nation." It details the

story of the Santorums' eighth child, Bella, who was born with the chromosome disorder

Trisomy 18, and the wrenching choices the family has to make upon learning of her diagnosis.

Ben Carson Though Ben Carson has never held elected

Carson

office, the retired neurosurgeon has a lot of experience publishing books. In 1990,

Carson made his literary debut with "Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story." From there,

he moved to Zondervan Publishing, a Christian publishing house, and released "Think

Big: Unleashing Your Potential for Excellence" (1996), "The Big Picture" (2000), "Take the Risk: Learning to Identify, Choose, and Live with Acceptable Risk" (2008), "America the Beautiful: Rediscovering What Made This Nation Great" (2011). By 2014, Carson had received the

Presidential Medal of Freedom from George W. Bush, declared leadership shows that conser- himself a Republican and givvative ideas applied to today's en a widely publicized speech problems can net real results.

at 2013's N ational

P r ayer

He is emerging as one of the Breakfast. A bona fide literary cons i der writing nation's most competent lead- commodity, Carson released a new book. Ka- er," Bush stated. two more books in 2014: "One m ight w ant

to

Nation: What We Can All Do to Save America's Future" and "One Vote: Make Your Voice Some politicians have such Heard." success as writers that runIn 2015, Carson has kept up ning for office might be seen his prodigious pace with Gregg as a good way to promote Lewis in "You Have a Brain: book sales rather than the oth- A Teen's Guide to T.H.I.N.K. er way around. The authors in

B.I.G.," an acronym that stands

this category might also pub- for Talent, Honesty, Insight, belish books timed to the launch ing Nice, Knowledge, Books, of a political campaign, but In-Depth learning, and God.

ears ateI it's frustrating not to have any.

and a very distracted President

son who goes into the details

Woodrow Wilson, who was at least as busywooinghis second wife, Edith Bolling Galt Wilson, as he was paying attention to

of Lauriat's rare book business There'sa frontispiece of the

ebo," or "I will be safe." Wrong States had not entered World words, wrong ship. War I. Debate and conspiraAs he freely acknowledg- cy theories still persist about international affairs. Or at least es, Larson didn't know much how and why the big ship was that's what the most lovestruck a bout the L u denied B r i t ish moments of "Dead Wake," sitania when he naval protection backed up by Wilson's syrupy embarked upon or the crucial letters to her, seem to say. this project. A lot, knowledge that Since he never fears hyperof people think a German sub- bole, Larson has little trouble "shipwreck = Timarine was close stitching all this together. He tanic" and stop enough to strike. has made his reputation on right there. But Since this is cliffhanger phrasings includthese two tragnot an easy sto- ing "Schwieger again took the edies at sea had ry either to tell periscope. What he saw now very d i fferent or sell, Larson shocked even him." And he oframifications. uses his skills as ten throws in anecdotes simply T he sinking of , a pitchman right because they're colorful, not • t he Titanic i n from the start. because they advance any cenApril 1912 shatHis introductory tral narrative. t ered the i d ea note bills this as Compared with another new "something sim- book, "Lusitania" by Greg King that huge ocean liners were invulnerable. ple and satisfying: and Penny Wilson, Larson's The torpedoing of the Lusitaaverygood story" and"atrage- islessgossipy butmuch more nia in May 1915 made it clear dy of monumental scale, whose illuminating. that sinking passenger ships true character and import have Both booksmention a boy could occur as acts of war. longbeen obscured inthe mists who survived the voyage, but There had been i nstancof history." only Larson noted that the teenes of what was then called But in other hands it could ager was quarantined, because "frightfulness," a more polite be a very diffuse and sprawl- he had measles; he escaped name for terrorism, preceding ing story. It has threads about only because the ship was so the Lusitania attack. Walther the captains of the two vessels; badly damaged that the door Schwieger, commander of the the buildup to war; the many that confined him didn't close submarine U-20 and a major passengers' individual circum- anymore. figure in Larson's book, had al- stances; the c a t-and-mouse Both mention the book dealready taken a shot at a hospital tactics of subs and their prey; er Charles Lauriat, who later ship without qualms. But the the sinking and its aftermath; wrote a memoir. But it's Lar•

fall 2012, Santorum and con-

sion. His 2011 book, "Fed Up: servative columnist William Our Fight to Save America Bennett came out with "Amer-

ae: wartime isasteI; Ieto Lusitania was a ship carrying nearly2,000 people, induding

after two terms in office. On

sticks in many the bright side, that gave him voters' m i nds, more time to write books. Perry his tw o memoirs After Santorum conceded — written during the Republican presidential his tenure as Texas governor nomination to Mitt Romney in

seems to spend today, Rick sees abright future t' an awful lot of for America, based on freeaimed at broadening the Republican party's appeal. "FioTed Cruz, R-Textime trolling his dom and limited government." rina believes that politics, like as, is scheduled political r i vals In his earlier work, 2008's business, is primarily about for June 30, by Paul on the Internet, "On My Honor: Why t he which time more the senator from American Values of the Boy people," a news release reads. Cruz "She shows how conservathan a few pres- Kentucky has also written two Scouts Are Worth Fighting tives can reach out across idential hopefuls will have memoirs. In 2011, he released For," Perry's beef is with secthe usual barriers of gender, declared their intention to run "The Tea Party Goes to Wash- ular humanists who are,acrace, income and party affil- for the White House. ington," and in 2012, he fol- cording to the former governor, Cruz's book comes with a lowed up with "Government helping to erode the country's iation to craft a message that appeals to a wide range of unique title, "Unti Ted Cruz," Bullies: How Everyday Amer- valuesystem, and,m orespecifAmericans." but little other i nformation icans Are Being Harassed, ically, "the left's legal assaults has been made public about Abused, and Imprisoned by on the Boy Scouts of America." Hillary Clinton the 256-page book. "The first the Feds," a libertarian call to Former Sec- book from controversial Sen- arms that featured a foreword Bobby jindal In "Leadership retary of State ator Ted Cruz, whom many by Paul's father, Ron, and that Hillary Rodham consider the front-runner for Sarah Palin praised as "an and Crisis," Jindal's only politiClinton selected the GOP presidential nomina- exciting and needed call to a title for her lat- tion in 2016," the promotional change for all Americans." cal memoir, the est book, "Hard copy reads. With Paul contemplating a abiding theme is Ciinton Choices," that White House run, it was clear that the goveris eerily famil- Jeb Bush that another book could help Jindai nor of L o u isiana iar to that of Fiorina's first. Co-authored spread his limited governknows how to get Released in June 2014, "Hard by conservative ment message, and it appears things done. The 2010 release Choices" follows 2004's "Livwriter Clint Bol- that his new title will be a details Jindal's response in the ing History" and 1996's "It ick, Jeb Bush's word-of-mouth affair. On May years after Hurricane Katrina Takes a Village: And Other one and only po- 26, he is slated to release the and the Deepwater Horizon Lessons Children Teach Us." litical memoir is audio book "Taking a Stand: oil spill, slamming the federal The takeaway message from Bush 2014' s "Immigra- Moving Beyond Partisan Pol- government's efforts at regular the latest book is that she postion Wars: Forg- itics to Unite America." turns. sesses a wealth of foreign pol- ing an American Solution." Jeb Bush again f ound icy experience. As the title suggests, the book John Kasich enough time to read the book "A subtle, finely calibrat- deals with one of the thornier I f J oh n K a - and offer a few kind words. ed work," critic Michiko Kaissues for politicians hoping sich, Ohio's gov- "Bobby Jindal's principled p

passenger carried a gold seal

New Yorh Times News Service

idential debates

ticipated literary debut of S en.

detail. He points out that one

By Janet Maslin

they've spent so much time on their literary output that they could easily fall back on a ca-

W iscon s i n

he is expected to announce gaining rights. It was this vicw hether he w i l l m o un t a tory that catapulted Walker White House run. On Twitter, from being a local politician to one of Rubio's potential rivals one seen as a GOP front-run-

"Dead Wake: The Last Crossing of the Lusitania" Publishers, 430 pages, $28)

Before "Every Other Mon-

day," Kasich published two

for Something: The Battle for reer as a writer if the politics America's Soul," and 1998's thing doesn't work out. ate, he released Gov. Scott Walk- "Courage is Contagious." "An American er is b u ilding Among the fans of Kasich's Rick Santorum Rubio Son : A Memhis c a mpaign past literary works is ABC After releasoir," which tells around w ha t News' George Stephanopouing a self-titled the story of the senator's immany c o nser- los, who declared, "'Stand for debut memoir in migrant Cuban parents as Walker vatives see as Something' is passionate, prin2005 and comwell as his own political rise his s i g nature cipled, and sure to provoke." ing out with his in Florida. Sticking with the accomplishment: taking on second book, "It themes developed in his de- unions. In his 2014 memoir, Rick Perry Santorum Ta kes a Family: but,Rubio released hissecond "Unintimidated: A Governor's Although former Texas Gov. Conservatism nonfiction effort, "American Story and A N ation's ChalRick Pe r r y 's and the Common Good," a "oops" moment year later, former Sen. Rick Dreams: Restoring Economic lenge," Walker recounts his Opportunity for Everyone" in successful battle to strip orgain the 2012 pres- Santorum lost his seat in 2006 M arco Rub i o entered the Sen-

acter Makes a Difference: s hrewd appraisals of t h e immigration is c onsidered Kasich Where I'm From, Where I've complex web of political, eco- one of his liabilities in the priBeen, and What I Believe." nomic and historical forces in maries as many in the party sich's last title, "Every Other This year, Huckabee is back play around the world and the see any accommodation for Monday: Twenty Years of Life, with the m ore streamlined difficulties American leaders the millions of undocumented Lunch, Faith and Friendship" "God, Guns, Grits and Gravy," face in balancing strategic immigrants currently in t he was released in 2010. Chroniappealing to a larger national concerns with 'core values.' country as "amnesty." cling the twice-a-month meetBush's approach to the top- ings of members of Kasich's audience generated by Huck- The tone is calm and meaabee's Fox News television sured, with o ccasional hu- ic might well resonate with Bible study group, the timeless show, and his first attempt morous asides, like describing voters in the general election, topics range from whether a at becoming the Republican an offer by Vladimir V. Putin, h owever, as it did w ith t h e supreme being actually exists presidential nominee. A New the Russian leader, to take Bill Wall Street Journal's Vincent to how one stays spiritually York Times best-seller, the Clinton along on a polar bear Cannato. "About as sensible a grounded while striving to four Gs finds the social con- tagging expedition." look at immigration policy as rise in the ranks at work.

' ea

uie

other memoirs, 2006's "Stand

Scott Walker

F5

and the fact that he was car-

rying Charles Dickens' own copy of "A Christmas Carol," with Dickens' notes about suing "literary pirates" scribbled

ship, but that's all. When Larson writes about individual

charactersorparts ofthe ship, it's natural to want to know what they looked like. Other

Lusitania books include the excases of apassenger's having to pected illustrations. in it. Here was one of the worst decide what to let go down with

the ship, but Lauriat's final decision is worth knowing about.

Are your hearing aids working properly?

Larson is also suspenseful

about the details of naval warfare, which is so crucial to this story. The capabilities of both

the U-20 and the Lusitania are thoroughlyexplained, and by the time of their confrontation,

the sub has lost its communications system and is operating blind. "Dead Wake" could easily

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F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015

esor a came roma o "Wilma's World: Good Advice from a Good Dog"

there's so much information

Remember Vienna? The love?The blood? "All the Old Knives" by Olen Steinhauer(Minotaur

in the U . S. Embassy. W hen the y m e et a t t h e

By Tim Mckeough

coming at us, that it's sensory overload. Wilma teaches me to see the world in a very simple, childlike way and to home in on the details. People miss so

By Janet Maslin

Henry is temporarily unstrung.

New Yorh Times News Service

much beauty in the world be-

New Yorid Times News Service

The Old attraCtiOnCOmeSruSh i n g b ack, and for awhile Stein-

by Rae Dunn (Chronicle

Books, 128 pages, $15.95)

Overthelasttwodecades, ce-

cause they're not observing.

ramist Rae Dunn has attracted many admirers with her inten-

Q •• candid andposed shots? • Ninety percent of the

with subtle details, whimsical

• pictures were taken be-

teapots, earthyvaseswithwobbly forms. So when she pub-

cause I always have a camera, we're always together, and we just stumble upon things. We go to Vermont every summer, so there are a lot of shots from

lished her first book, 'Vlilma's World," itwas natural to expect

that it wouldbe about ceramics. Instead, the book is filled

there — like there's a tractor

with photos of Dunn's Jack Russell terrier, Wilma, induded

we found, and I just put her on it.

with bits of homespun advice:

A few of them, where I want-

Wilma at a typewriter ("tell your story"); diessed as a cowboy ("get roped into new experiences"); looking alarmed at a pile of chewed-up plastic ("admit whenyou're wrong"). Dunn, 52, recently explained how thedog became aguiding figure in her life.

ed a message, I intentionally set it up. There's one where she's painting on the beach, and I posed her for that. There are also a few of her wilh costumes on. I would never buy a cos-

tume for her, but I have a friend in Hong Kong who sends me dog dothes because she thinks

they're funny, andI always take

did Wilma come Q •• How into your life?

apictuie.

my b i r thday, A•• Itin was 2005, and my boy-

Rae Dunn with her Jack Russell terrier, Wilma, at her studio in

friend came and took me to

Berkeley, California. Dunn hasattracted many admirers with

see someone who had a litter of puppies in the backyard.

her intentionally imperfect handmade ceramic pieces, but if you thought her first book, "Wilma's World," would be about ceram-

A • explain. I've always been very simple and minimal, and

He knew that I wanted a girl

ics, you'd be mistaken.

Wilma is like that, too. I did a

dog and a brown, wiry-haired Jack Russell terrier, like the dog on"Frasier." He had called the person ahead of time, and the man had put all the wiryhaired girls in one pen and the others in anotherpen. I was looking though the pen of brown ones, and they were

very rambunctious. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw in the next pen this black, smooth-

Drew Kelly/The New York Times

and just pose. So I started ac-

t h e p h otos

• When I took her home, • she was smaller than a

Beanie Baby. She was teeny. So of course I took a picture of her. She would sit there and

look at the camera, very still,

Has Wilma influenced Q •• your ceramics? • Definitely, but it's hard to

series of Wilma work that had bigpolka dots, because she has these amazing organic polka dots on her back. She's my muse. She seems enlightened and has definitely changed my life. A lot of people say that a dog takes on the personality of

cumulating thousands of pic- more I tealized that each pictures of her, because she was tuie had ifs ownmessage. so easy to photograph. So itbegan as abook for What did you see in the • children? • photos that suggested a • I thought it w o uld be its owner; but with me, I want book? • perfect for k i ds, be- to take on her personality. • I never intended to do a cause it would be life lessons • book of Wilma. I started from adog.Im ade a mock-up Is that why she's listed as a blog for her, just because I and presented it to Chroni• the book's author? had so many pictures. How- cle Books. They liked it im• She basically wrote the

Q•

A

coat dog just sitting there observing everything. She was very pensive and docile, andwe ever, I had always wanted to justconnected. write andillustrate a children's book. di d Q •• How begin?

the more I looked at them, the

Q•

A

Q•

mediately but said: "This is

not a children's book. It's a grown-up book." Now I realize I started looking at the pic- children already do all these tures of Wilma on my comput- things in the book. It's growner, because there are a million ups who need to be reminded of them, and I thought maybe I to act more like children. could use photographs instead • Why do you say that? of illustrations. I printed out my favorite ones and was trying to • The world is so complimake a story out of them. But • cated these days, and

Q A

• book. It's what Wilma

and I experience as we go through the world together. There's one shot in there of her

with a pair of eyeglasses that I found on the street, and it says, "Take a closer look." That's

the main message. There's so much beauty and inspiration if you just look and notice the

small things in life.

r e staurant, which Steinhauer suitably calls Rendez-vous,

The inspiration for "All the

Are the photos a mix of

tionally imperfet handmade pieces: pami-down tableware

Books, 294 pages, $23.99)

Old Knives," Olen Steinhauer's hauer seems not to be himself, unusually short and wily spy either. The book goes weak novel, was a television adapta- a t its knees with observations

tion of a poem. As he watched such as, "She is, and always has Alan Rickman and Emma b een, a breathtaking woman." Thompson in the 2010 British

This i s not the kind thing

dramatization of the Christo- that's earned him comparisons pher Reid poem "The Song of to John le Carre. But it turns out Lunch," Steinhauer was excited t o be as devious as every other

by its structure.

aspect of this sneaky little gem. Because w h i le

The poem de-

scribes two lovers meeting for a

Henry

n a r r ates

his part of the story, we are blind-

meal long after the

end of their afihh; that i ii LES ediohathev efact and it is essential,~ f we no idea ly confined to a ~ S7@~ HAL'IhR wh at Celia thinks -=.~. ; . „ , .... i s restaurant. Could h appening, or a good spy novel i~ even what the surbe written if an ~ Agl 7HE~ veillance report on author payed by tlusencounerwill lgp"c' OLO KNl those same rules? later reveal. '

,

-

.

Youbet it could.

And then sud-

Steinhauer, better

denly we're watchknown for such ing the table from elaborate stories of interna- C e lia's p o i ntofview. tional intrigue that they make S u f f ice it to say that she sees heads spin ("The Cairo Affair," the past very differently from "The Tourist"), forced himself thewayHenrydoes. Andat this to simplify his narrative style pointinthebook, aboutathird — a little. His basic premise of the way through, it becomes is that two old colleagues and clear that a serious, deadly belovers, Henry Pelham and Ce- trayal has brought about this lia Favreau, nee Harrison, are meeting. One of them might going to have a restaurant ren- know who was responsible for dezvous in Celia's picturesque the deaths of passengers on an new California home base, airplane, or might have had inCarmel-by-the-Sea. side knowledge of the event. It was in Vienna that they

A nd y e t Steinhauer sustains

were CIA case officers con- the difficult balancing act of ductingaloveaffair.Itwasalso melding a heart-racing espioin Vienna, in 2006, that some- nage plot with credible dinner thing so catastrophic happened table conversation. He never vithat neither of them can bear to o l ates the book's basic premise,

remember it. But as the book not even when his characters begins, Henry is on a plane begin to have the darkest suspiheading south from San Fran- cions about each other. cisco (the first of Steinhauer's R e aders familiar with the little format-stretching tricks) genre will not be surprised to and memories of the disaster learn that this evening is not come flooding back to him. d estined to end happily, with There was a hostage crisis at the ex-lovers wishing each oththe Vienna airport, and the er well and going their separate terrorists knew way too much ways. Steinhauer specializes about what the authorities' re- i n

t ough showdowns. And the

sponse would be. Rumors cir- more innocentlytheybegin, the culated that they had a source more devastatinglytheyend.

Parkinson's

the New Jersey neuroscien-

Continued from F1

across two patients who were descendants of an extended

But this brain circuit has a vulnerability: It depends on

tist Lawrence Golbe stumbled family from th e Italian vil-

lage of Contursi. This family tion of dopamine is interrupt- was cursed with a very rare ed, as it is with Parkinson's, genetic form of Parkinson's; the signals passing through family members had a 50 perthe basal ganglia are garbled, cent chance of inheriting the and it ends up giving poor ad- disease. Subsequent research vice. Corrupted signals pass found that those affected to other brain regions such carried a mutated gene on as the thalamus (which relays chromosome 4 that coded for sensory and motor data) and alpha-synuclein. the cortex (which is responAlthough Parkinson's dissible for many higher func- ease is not usually inherited tions such as language and like this, the discovery providconsciousness). ed a vital clue about the way These bad signals disrupt Parkinson's typically worked. communication between the Most patients do not have this dopamine.When theproduc-

brain and the muscles. This is

mutation, but they do, it turned out, have sticky deposits of

So patients are looking to neuroscience research to lend nature a helping hand. And remarkably, some researchers foresee the possibility that

the behavior of a common protein called alpha-synuclein. This molecule's importance for

them if they don't. But these controls are not perfect. As hu-

man life spans increase so, too, does the likelihood of protein

Parkinson's was discovered malfunctioning that could lead more than 20 years ago, when to neurological disease.

d

t /

one day in the not too distant

future they might be able to develop drugs to target these rogue proteins, potentially combating several neurological diseases in one go. An American biotech com-

pany, NeuroPhage, for example, plans to enroll Alzheimer's

I• I

and Parkinson's patients in 2016 and 2017 in Phase 1 trials

I

I

I

of its new product, a genetically engineered compound derived from a naturally occurring virus called M13. Re-

I I

I

I

I r

I

I

I I

searchers have demonstrated

that this compound can enter rodents' brains and neutralize toxic dumps of alpha-synucleinand the corresponding targets for Alzheimer's (the proteins amyloid beta and tau). The question is, will it work as well in people's brains? And

one reason people with Parkinson's have trouble picking alpha-synuclein inside their up small objects and moving brains, found when they were around fluently: Their motions examined postmortem. This are too hesitant, too small, too protein seems to be an integral slow, too rigid, too shaky, too part of the disease that affects feeble and badly timed. These all Parkinson's patients. Here's the theory scientists will it arrest or reverse paare symptoms of a brain in conflict with itself. have come up with: Sometimes tients' symptoms? Having Parkinson's feels a good proteins go bad. For mulPeople wit h P a r k inson's bit like going on vacation in tiple reasons (Iike genes, envi- progressi vely lose core pieces another country and having to ronment and age), proteins can of themselves. We forget how drive onthe"wrong" side of the "misfold" and stickto otherpro- to walk. Our ar m m u scles road. Driving is one of those teins. When proteins do this, get weaker. Our movements activities that we outsource, they can become toxic,capa- slow down. Our hands fumble in large part, to the basal gan- ble of jumping from cell to cell, simple tasks like buttoning a glia. When an American who causing other alpha-synuclein shirt or balancing spaghetti has spent thousands of hours proteins to do the same and on a fork. Our faces no longer driving on the right side of potentially killing neurons (es- express emotions. Our voicthe street tries to drive in En- pecially dopamine-producing es lose volume and clarity. gland, his learned habits are ones) in their wake. This pro- Our minds, in time, may lose a liability. To compensate, he cess is not confined to Parkin- their sharpness and more. But must invoke the deliberate and son'sdisease. Misfolded pro- unlike many cancer victims, goal-directed part of his brain teins appear to be implicated in people with Parkinson's tend — the cortex — to override the other devastating neurological to survive for a long time. And basal ganglia. The driving will disorders such as Alzheimer's unlike Alzheimer's or Hunbe difficult, partly because the disease,Huntington's disease, tington's patients, many of conscious brain is now doing Lou Gehrig's disease and us can report lucidly on our all the work, but mainly be- Creutzfel dt-Jakob disease — a condition until the end. Parcause it's havingto compensate human variant of mad cow. kinson's patients like me take for signals from the basal ganWhat can be done about comfort from the idea that our glia that are inappropriate for such badly behaving proteins? insights can help unpack these the situation at hand. Cellspossess an elaborate se- diseases and assist in the sciBut why is the production of ries of control mechanisms to entific pursuit of better theradopamine interrupted in the help proteinsbehave correct- pies and ultimate cures. first place? ly and to destroy and recycle — Jon Palfremanis a That might come down to

s

KEZI Distinguished Professor of Broadcast Journalism, University of Oregon. Palfreman is an Emmy, a DuPont and a Peabody Award-winning journalist.

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Golf Equipment

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Misc. Items

The Bulletin

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

A v e

Pets & Supplies

arecommends extra ' ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

r

CHECK YOUR AD

l caution when pur-l products or • I chasing services from out of I

Parson Russell Terriers, 8 the area. Sending 8 AKC, show/pet/agility, • cash, checks, or • 10 wks. 360-914-0366 l credit i n f ormation may be subjected to

away are advised to be selective about the new owners. For the protection of the animal, a personal visit to the home is recommended.

on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please con8 call t he Ore g on8 tact us ASAP so that ' State Atto r ney ' corrections and any adjustments can be l General's O f f i ce made to your ad. Consumer Protec- • 541-385-5809 tion h o t line a t i The Bulletin Classified i 1-877-877-9392.

l l FRAUD. For morel about an c I information advertiser, you may C l

I

The Bulletin > TheBulletin > Serving Central Oregon since f9t8

POODLE or POIIIIAPOO puppies, toy. Stud also 541-475-3889 Purebred Lab p u ps, champ bloodlines. 7F, 1M, blacks 8 yellows. Avail. in May. Come meet your new companion! S i sters (503) 459-1580 Queensland Heelers Standard 8 Mini, $150 8 up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com

Serving Centraf Oregon since lggs

212

Antiques & Collectibles

246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing Bend local pays CASHII

for firearms & ammo.

Gun & Knife Show Nlarch 28-29 Deschutes County Fair/Expo Center $5.00 Admission (under 14 FREE!) Sat. 9-5; Sun. 9-3 Info: 541-610-3717 ORVIS Hydros Fly Rod Fine fishing gear, new or like new. 541-549-6036

Smith & Wesson M&P15-22 with 4x16x44 BSA Cats Eye scope, Fieldline Tactical carrying case. Excellent condition, was used in National Finals Rodeo for target competition. Comes with original sights and 25-round magazine.$850 obo.

T HE B ULLETIN

r e - BUYING & SE LLING quires computer ad- All gold jewelry, silver vertisers with multiple and gold coins, bars, ad schedules or those rouncfsi wedding sets, selling multiple sys- class rings, sterling siltems/ software, to dis- ver, coin collect, vinclose the name of the tage watches, dental Bill Fl e ming, business or the term gold. "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-9419. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer. 257

Musical Instruments 2006 Breedlove SC22 w/Fishman p/u; 1964 Gretsch Classic; practice amp. 541-647-1510 Amencan Tnbuteelectnc guitar, amp, stand, case, etc. $225. 541-306-0166

Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville. Call 541-447-7820

541-526-0617 For Sale: Piano Technician Browning 1885 High Wall 541-410-0841 How to avoid scam tools & supplies, octagon barrel, .45/70, and fraudattempts with rolls of piano $1200. Pedersoli HowVBe aware of inter- dah double 20-ga, black Wanted: Collector seeks string, $725. quality fishing items Find exactly what national fraud. Deal Call 971-219-9122 powder, engraved ani- high locally w h e never mal scene, $600. Rem- & upscale fly rods. Call in Redmond you are looking for in the 541-678-5753, or possible. ington 1100 shotgun 3", CLASSIFIEDS 503-351-2746 18tda barrel, $450. V Watch for buyers FIND IT! Call 541-550-7189 who offer more than 253 BUY ITr your asking price Dell P713W Wi-fi CASH!! TV, Stereo & Video SELL IT! and who ask to have printer, like new, $30. For Guns, Ammo & m oney wired o r The BulletinClassifieds 541-788-5325 Reloading Supplies. DISH T V Ret a iler. 202 208 h anded back t o 541-408-6900. Starting ai Stand for violin/fiddle/ them. Fake cashier Want to Buy or Rent • P ets & Supplies YOU KNOW 7 IN $19.99/month (for 12 mandolin, like new, DID checks and money 10 Americans or 158 g mos.) & High Speed IOI'IIIS THIS $39. 541-330-9070 orders are common. million U.S. A d ults Wanted- paying cash The Bulletin recomI nternet starting a t Y N ever give o u t for Hi-fi audio & sturead content f r om $14.95/month (where 260 mends extra caution personal f i nancial SAINT BERNARDS dio equip. Mclntosh, when newspaper m e d ia DO YOU HAVE available.) SAVE! Ask purc hasMisc. Items information. Brandy & Bruno's 6 each week? Discover JBL, Marantz, D y About SAME DAY InSOMETHING TO products or ser- beautifui full-mask pup- s/ T rust y o ur in the Power of the Panaco, Heathkit, San- ing SELL stallationl CALL Nowl Are you in BIG trouble from out of the pies, 1 male, 3 females, stincts and be wary cific Northwest Newssui, Carver, NAD, etc. vices 1-800-308-1563 FOR $500 OR area. Sending cash, born Jan. 11; ready for with the IRS? Stop of someone using an Call 541-261-1808 Advertising. For LESS? (PNDC) checks, or credit in- adoption 3/8 (photo taken escrow service or wage & bank levies, paper a free brochure call Non-commercial f ormation may b e 2/27). Dew claws reliens & audits, unfiled agent to pick up your or Switch 8 Save Event tax returns, payroll is- 916-288-6011 202 advertisers may subjected to fraud. moved, 1st shots. $500. merchandise. WANTEDwood dressfrom DirecTVI Packemail place an ad For appointment, call Want to Buy or Rent ers; dead washers. For more informasues, & resolve tax a ges s t a rting a t debt FAST. Seen on cecelia©cnpa.com with our 541-548-3520 541-420-5640 tion about an adverThe Bulletin $19.99/mo. Free (PNDC) "QUICK CASH Wanted: $Cash paid for tiser, you may call Siberian Husky champion Sernng Centraf Ctregon rince Sgtg 3-Months of HBO, CNN. A B BB. Call SPECIAL" vintage costume jewthe O r egon State 1-800-989-1278. bloodline Stud Service. The Bulletin reserves 1 week3lines 12 Starz, SHOWTIME & elry. Top dollar paid for BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Attorney General's Find It in Call 541-977-7019 C INEMAX. FRE E (PNDC) or Gold/Silver.l buy by the Office C o nsumer the right to publish all Search the area's most GENIE HD/DVR UpThe Bulletin Classiffedsl Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 Board games (Piction- comprehensive listing of Estate, Honest Artist ads from The Bulletin ~eo eka eo! Protection hotline at g rade! 2 01 5 N F L Ad must Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-385-5809 Fs, 1 M, 12 wks old, UTD newspaper onto The ary, Trivial) like new. classified advertising... 1-877-877-9392. Sunday Ticket. I nshots, health guar, pics. include price of $29/ea. 541-330-9070 real estate to automotive, Bulletin Internet webcluded with S e lect $1100. 541-777-7743 n l e t e of aeoo The Bulletm site. ~ merchandise to sporting Packages. New Cusgerving Centrat Oregon sincetggg Buying Diamonds or less, or multiple goods. Bulletin Classifieds 210 tomers Only IV Supitems whose total /Gold for Cash The Bulletin gervlng Central Oregon sincefggg port Holdings LLC- An Saxon's Fine Jewelers appear every day in the does not exceed print or on line. 3 male Dachshunds 2 Furniture & Appliances authorized D i recTV 541-389-6655 $500. 240 fawn, 1 black 8 tan. Dealer. Some excluCall 541-385-5809 2 Ethan Allen side $300 each. Ready tables, 1 loveseat and 1 Crafts & Hobbies www.bendbuffetin.com sions apply - Call for BUYING Call Classifieds at 3/26. 541-447-0113 details Lionel/American Flyer table lamp. All for $125. 541-385-5809 Fabric: vintage 8 South 1-800-410-2572 trains, accessories. The Bulletin 541-548-5172 evenings www.bendbulletln.com Serving Central gregon sinceigig Adopt a rescued cat or 541-408-2191. American, $79 for all. (PNDC) kitten! Altered, vacci- USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI 541-330-9070 nated, ID chip, tested, 284 292 morel CRAFT, 65480 Door-to-door selling with 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Sales Southwest Bend Sales Other Areas 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420fast results! It's the easiest Poushers • Saws way in the world to sell. Something for every- Large Sale in S ilver www.craftcats.org one! Roadmaster car Lake! Moving, everyRepalr & Supplles The Bulletin Classified d olly & m o r e R V thing must gol Guns, r items, S mokerCraft ammo, reloading sup541-385-5809 qB~+ boat with cabin. Too plies, knives, antiques Aussie/Mini puppy 241 many items to l ist, of all kinds including A1 Washers&Dryere Blue Merle male, Sat. 8 Sun 8-5. 60872 antique ammo, sewFull warranty, FREE Bicycles & Bwks, $300 cash. Onyx Street. delivery! Also, used ing machine, 1930s 541-678-7599 Accessories washers/dryers wanted. • g • g bulk Chevron oil tank, 541-280-7355 286 early 1900s kids toys, New Diamondback hySales Northeast Bend and other household Dining table, hardwood, brid bike, Shimano gears, goods this weekend, 6 chairs, $65 obo. lots of upqrades, selling F ri. thru Sun. 9 - 5 , 3-Bav Garage Sale! 541-306-0677 at $225. 541-306-0166 Sat. & Sun. 9-4. 1078 NE follow signs. Dresser, all wood $59. 242 Francis Ct. Household round oak dining table Exercise Equipment goods, tools, clothes frig, Brittany Spaniel/ Find It in $79. 541-420-2220 treadmill, garden, books, Whoodle mix puppies, kitchen. Cash or card! The Bulletin Classiffedsl only 1 male left! Reddish G ENERATE SOM E Power Plate machine, 541-385-5809 hypoallergenic coat. EXCITEMENT in your exercises for muscle$650. 541-408-0490 r neighborhood! Plan a strengthening, stretching, ** FREE ** ea ' MOVING SALE massage & relaxation, garage sale and don't Everything in the house Chihuahua male 2t/g yrs forget to advertise in $500. 541-504-3869 Garage Sale Kit oesl Too much to list. o ld, i n tact. F R E E classified! Place an ad in The 243 hurs-Sun, 3/5-6-7-8, 541-447-0210 -' e~gg gtlS 541-385-5809. Bulletin for your ga- Bam-4pm.1357 + Koyoda Ski Equipment ggeg$tttgt rage sale and rectgtttt' g t tb w' St. in Madras (turn east TO CANCEL tttgtt ceive a Garage Sale on Brush Lane, just north Donate deposit bottles/ NEED ttuon, YOUR AD? Alpine Ski suit (2 pce) cans to local all vol., fgl >"+, Item Priced at: Your Total Ad Coston Kit FREE! of Sonny's Motel & The Bulletin womans md/Ig olive. non-profit rescue, for qS"ttgg „+ «gN • Under $500 $29 follow signs) feral cat spay/neuter. Classifieds has an $39. 541-330-9070 pntge tttt KIT IN CLUDES: • $500 fo $999...................................................................$39 T railer a t Jak e 's "After Hours"Line • 4 Garage Sale Signs stwwouo Have an item to D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Call 541-383-2371 Have an item to • $2.000ff Coupon To • $1000 fo $2499.............................................................. $49 1 INO C00 Petco in R edmond; Use Toward Your 24 hrs. to cancel sell quick? sell quick? • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 donate M-F at Smith Next Ad your ad! If it's under If it's under • 10 Tips For "Garage Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold Oak roll-top desk, 48" Sale Success!" or CRAFT in '500 you can place it in Bend; headline and price. Tumalo. Can pick up wide, very good cond. '500 you can place it in The Bulletin large amts, 389-8420. $85. 541-280-1144 The Bulletin Serving Central Oregan since tgt8 PICK UP YOUR www.craftcats.org Yourad will a/so appear in: SLEEPER SOFA, light Classifieds for: Classifieds for: GARAGE SALE KIT at tan, exc. cond $95. 541-385-5809 he Bulletin • he Central Oregon Nickel Ads 1777 SW Chandler LOOKING FOR A NEW 541-419-6828 '10- 3 lines, 7 days '10-3lines,7days Ave., Bend, OR 97702 • endbulletin.com COMPANION? • Central Oregon Marketplace Some restncgana app/y '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Cute, healthy small dogs Two quality bar stools, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days The Bulletin for adoption. $69 each. Serving Cenrrai Oregon since tgOS *Private Party merchandise only - excludes Pets 8 livestock, autos, R vs, motortycles, boats, airPlanes, and garage sale categories. (Private Party ads only) (Private Party ads only) Visit resqac.com 541-420-2220

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The Bulletin

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G2 SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

T HE N E W

YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D

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125Big export of Myanmar 126Nine-month pregnancy 127"Let's Make a Deal" features 128 Figure in a Sunni/ Shia dispute 129 Where the Potemkin Steps are 130With 78-Across, "Righto!"

28 Something a trypanophobe fears 32 In the slightest 33 Latin 101 verb 34Trumpet sound 39Go (through) 40 Citrus fruit 41Official in a turban 42 Bit of filming 45 deM b xico (Mexico City daily) 46 A.L. East, e.g.: Abbr. 47Paperless party DOWN planner's option 1 Two out of 11? 49 2011 Marvel film 2 Nicki with the 2014 hit 50 "Anaconda" neanderthalensis 3 Dress to the nines 51Checked out 4 Rite Aid rival 52 " tight" 5 Picks up 53 Singer Bareilles with 6 Checked out the 2007 hit "Love Song" 7 "The culminating 54 Heaps point that beauty has attained in the 55Interprets sphere of music," 56Many a Silicon Valley per Tchaikovsky worker: Abbr. 8 cr a w l 61 Heart 9 Guy'sname that'san 63Maker ofDreamcast alphabet run games 10Viola parts 65 See 48-Across llRemove anytrace of 66 Cave opening? 12 1961 Disney villainess 69 Eldest Stark child on "Game of Thrones" 13Crime boss John 14Not esta or esa 70 Pivots 71Rendezvous 15 Disturb 162022 World Cup city 72 File 18Food-poisoning cause 73Little songbirds 74 Bigger than big 23 Asian capital nicknamed the City 75 Luzon, por ejemplo of Azaleas 76 Manhattanite, e.g., 25 Hifor short 26 Does a real number 80Hooters on, say 81 12 points

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 8photo in your private party sd for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260

262

Misc. Items

Commercial/Office • Equipment & Fixtures

How to avoid scam and fraud attempts

ar'Be aware of international fraud. Deal locally whenever possible. sv'Watch for buyers who offer more than 5-drawer Hon your asking price and Industries who ask to have commercial file money wired or cabinet, handed back io them. 43" wide, 66" high. Fake cashier checks Originally $1000; and money orders asking$450. are common. 541-948-1824 YNever give oui personal financial infor265 mation. YTrust your instincts Building Materials and be wary of someone using an REDMOND Habitat escrow service or RESTORE agent to pick up your Building Supply Resale merchandise. Quality at LOW PRICES The Bulletin 1242 S. Hwy 97 sernng renrnn oregon since r9IB 541 -548-f 406 Open to the public. Reduce Your Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Need help fixing stuff? Percent. Stop Levies, Call A Service Professional Liens and Wage Gar- find the help you need. nishments. Call The www.bendbulletin.com Tax DR Now to see if Qualify you 266 1 -800-791-2099. Heating & Stoves (PNDC)

267

Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • Acordis 128cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.

The Bulletin

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Gardening Supplie & Equipment

Hay, Grain & Feed

541 -385-5800

classified@bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes

Instant Landscaping Co.

541-389-9663

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

SnvrnsCentral nrvsonsince SIB

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Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water 85,000/acre Call 541-419-4440 n

Say "goodbuy to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

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Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulleiin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at To place an ad, call 541 -385-5809 or email

Lost & Found

325

Found: 1 (one) ring on Hay, Grain & Feed 1/28/15, area of Mary Rose Place & Watt Way. First Quality, 2nd cutting Please call 541-848-1 657 grass hay, no rain,

375

What are you looking for? You'll find it in

1/2 Beef, all natural, no Buermann's Ranch hormones or antibiotics, M eats. Annual Hog Sale $3.50/lb., cui & wrapped. /2 hog fully processed The Bulletin Classifieds 541-480-2200 delivered to your area $240. Call 54f -573-2677

541-385-5809

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Horses & Equipment

to identify. barn stored, $225/ton. Call 541 -549-3831 Found Cat, black 8 Patterson Ranch, Sisters white, Eagle Road area in Bend, Call to Premium orchard grass, Aii Year Dependable identify 541-388-1 322 barn stored no rain, Firewood: Seasoned; 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. Lodgepole, split, del, Found stamp collection avail. 5 41 -420-91 58 NOTICE TO book in Sunriver area. Bend, 1 f o r $ 1 95 ADVERTISER or 541-948-7010. SOCIAL S E C URITY 2 cords for $365. Call Sunriver police to D ISABILITY B E N - Since September 29, or identify. 54f -593-39f 1 discounts! E FITS. Unable t o 1991, advertising for Multi-cord Tick, Tock used woodstoves has 541 -420-3484. Lost woman's gold ring work? Denied benwith topaz stone & 2 efits? We Can Help! been limited io modTiCk, TOCk... WIN or Pay Nothing! els which have been Pine & Juniper Spllt diamonds, in Sunriver between SHARC & Vil...don't let time get Contact Bill Gordon & certified by the OrAssociates ai egon Department of PROMPT DELIVERY lage Mall. 360-423-351 9 away. Hire a Environmental Qual1 -800-879-3312 to 54i-sss-ssss ity (DEQ) and the fedprofessional out start your application eral E n v ironmental today! (PNDC) of The Bulletin's 269 Protection A g e ncy REMEMBER: If you "Call A Service have lost an animal, (EPA) as having met Gardening Supplie The Bulletin Offers don't forget io check smoke emission stan- • Professional" 8 E q uipment FreePrivate Party Ads dards. A cer t ified The Humane Society Directory today! • 3 lines - 3 days woodstove may be Bend • Pdivaie Party Only identified by its certifi541-382-3537 BarkTurfSoil.com Quality orchard mixed • Total of items adver- cation label, which is Redmond grass hay, $1 90-$235 tised must equal $200 permanently attached 541 -923-0882 ion, small bales. Deliv. or Less to the stove. The Bul- PROMPT DELIVERY Madras avail.541 -280-7781 542-389-9663 FOR DETAILS or to letin will not k now541-475-6889 beiwn Bend/Redmond PLACE AN AD, ingly accept advertisPrineville Call 541-385-5809 ing for the sale of Garden Shelf, 3 t ier, 541-447-7178 Wheat Straw for Sale. Fax 541-385-5002 reen pwdr coat, new, uncertified or Craft Cats Also, weaner pigs. woodstoves. 49. 541-330-9070 541 -389-8420. 54f -546-61 71

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Meat & Animal Processing Meat & Animal Processing

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A>j . I 1

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3-horse Silverado 2001 29'xs' 5th wheel trailer. Deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

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Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail AI: www.bendbulletin.com

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Farmers Column 10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $161 6 Installed. (other sizes available) 541-617-1 133. CCB ¹f 73684 kfjbuilders@ykwc.net •

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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM

THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM

Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level and 2 story plans.

Recently finished Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the Directiottsi North on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is righi on Sierra OR north on 1ah known for, Now selling PomEmpire, le/I onJierra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for slgris. more information. Homes from the

Hosted 6 Listed byi

TEAM DELAY Principal Broker

EDIE DELAY

541-420-2950

20878SEGoldenGatePlace,Bend Directions:East on Reed/ifarltet /td v firsi exII ai rotindabout onIo 15th, at RoadDetour Signturn left on Ferguson.Right at SageCreek Drive,left at Manhae Lane, right at Gofrfen Gate.

H omes St~ g Mid-$200s

Hosted 6 Listed by:

RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR

541-5064)959

$220,000s


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

I:: ~/ UPFS IJNj~~MJLB JM

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Can be found on these pages:

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

454

Looking for Employment

421

Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU

476

Employment Opportunities

Woman willing to errands for the elderly Add your web address for s light f e e in to your ad and readBend/Redmond. ers on The Bulletin's 541-280-0892 web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be The Bulletin able to click through To Subscribe call automatically to your 541-385-5800 or go to website. www.bendbulletin.com Banking 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions

Look at: HOUSE CLEANING Bendhomes.com Cle aning homes inBend for 18 years. Hourly rate, for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale call Rosie 541-385-0367.

Pressman

The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 /2 tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at anelsonOwescom a ers.com with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.

) first communit We are excited to announce an available position for a full-time teller in Bend, Oregon.

Salary Range: $11.00 - $18.00 First Community Credit Union is an equal opportunity employer of protected Veterans and individuals with disabilities. For more details please apply online: www.myfirstccu.org.

TELEFUNDRAISING

TRUCK DRIVER WANTED Must have doubles endorsement.

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER 0 NI G N I L E N A S A M J U P

E C O L I

T A Local run. I Truck is parked in Madras. 541-475-4221 P WILDLAND E Pastini Pastaria FIREFIGHTERS in the Old Mill District is T H E H I Seniors and a/I GFP Enterprises Inc./ hiring talented ASP Fire currently H O Y A Line Cooks others welcome. seeking qualified applito join the team. c ants f o r CR W B , O N I E N S Mon-Thur. ENGB, FFT 1 /ICT5 Apply online at 4:30-8:30 p.m. AND FFT2. No exp. R O D G E www. astini.com/careers $9.25/hour. necessary: Entry level G or stop by between and advanced training 2pm-4pm daily. Call 541-382-8672 O P E R A provided. $14-$32/hr . SALES DOE. For more infor- W I N O Freight Broker/ mation please reply to Logistics Illlanager hrOgfpenterprises.com L C D T V A well-established 3PL or call 541-967-8425. S A S H I company is seeking Visit us and apply on qualified candidates the web www.gfpemerD for t hi s f a st-paced chasing products or I gency.com Drug Free I I T H R EE transportation sales services from out of workplace - EOE - Vetposition. Responsibili- I the area. SendingI erans encouraged to T H E S O ties include develop- c ash, checks, o r appiy O R I T ing new and existing I credit i n f ormationI business to arranging • may be subjected to DOO R S for your next I Looking for the transportation I FRAUD. employee? of customers' freight I For more informa- I Place a Bulletin help shipments. This posi- tion about an advertion offers unlimited I tiser, you may callI wanted ad today and Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels •Defeat Diabetes Foundation •Veterans (OPVA)

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commission-based income for a committed I individual with a passion to succeed. To apply please call I Bend WorkSource at

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541-388-6070

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Human Resources Assistant

R O B B NII S S U S A

will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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home, 2 acres, 35% LTV. 541-788-9500 573

Business Opportunities 528

Loans & Mortgages

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BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party KNO W The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources will loan on real esNewspaper-generAssistant. HR duties will include all areas of tate equity. Credit, no a ted content is s o pre-employment drug testing, preparing pavaluable it's taken and perwork for newly hired employees, orienta- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! problem, good equity is all you need. Call repeated, condensed, tion; benefit enrollment and helping employOregon Land Mortbroadcast, tweeted, ees keep t heir p ersonnel and b enefit Door-to-door selling with discussed, p o sted, information current. Maintains personnel files fast results! It's the easiest gage 541-388-4200. copied, edited, and and records for the purpose of providing way in the world to sell. LOCAL AIONEY:We buy emailed c o u ntless up-to-date reference and audit trail complisecured trustdeeds & times throughout the ance. Assist with payroll processing as the The Bulletin Classified note,some hard money day by others? Dis- back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides adloans. Call Pat Kellev 541485-5809 cover the Power of vice to employees on matters in designated 541-382-3099 ext.13. Newspaper Advertis- human resources areas. Establish and maining in FIVE STATES tain favorable working relationships within all with just one phone WesCom departments to assist in effectively call. For free Pacific achieving department objectives, while reThe Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and Northwest Newspa- sponding to requests for reports, records and self-motivated full-time employee to assist a per Association Net- information in a professional and timely manThe Bulletin large staff and write daily clerical reports. This Serving Centraf Oregon s/nce t90S work brochures call ner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to person should like working in a fast-paced en915-288-6011 or support employee actions such as promotions, vironment and be able to meet tight deadlines email transfers, hires and terminations while mainon a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial expececelia©cnpa.com taining the highest level of data integrity. rience preferred. General (PNDC) Other duties include, processing paperwork for unemploymentand worker's compensation as Organization, flexibility, and a high level of Director ol Dining well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves computer proficiency are essential. A solid Services of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typJob Summary: Reception desk when necessary. ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. Central Oregon Community College has Directs food service openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to operations w i t hin Minimum two years human resources experiAbility to work for long periods doing detail-orihttps://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply the community inence (payroll and benefits knowledge preented work is necessary. This person must online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, c luding al l fo o d ferred) in a support capacity. General knowlunderstand the importance of accuracy and 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; preparation, dining edge of applicable state and federal laws. thoroughness in all duties. (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, room o p e rations California experience a plus. Working knowlOregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. and dining delivery edge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong comExcellent customer service and interpersonal COCC is an AA/EO employer. services. Purputer skills with the ability to proficiently use skills are required. Must enjoy working with the chases all food and Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. public. College degree or previous office exExecutiveDirector for COCC Foundation manages inventory Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able to perience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free Responsible for providing leadership for insuring e f f ective maintain highest degree of confidentiality, disworkplace and equal opportunity employer. Foundation activities, fundraising opportunicost controls and cretion and tact. Pre-employment drug screening is required ties, and development of grant applications. vendor service prior to hiring. Provide management for Foundation staff. quality. Ensures the For qualifying employees we offer benefits inRepresent the Foundation to the p ublic, highest nutrition and cluding life insurance, short-term & long-term To apply, please send a resume and any writdonors, College staff, media, and volunteers. food quality for the disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. ing samples to: nolson@bendbulletin.com. Bachelor's degree + 5-yrs management with health and pleasure Drug test is required prior to employment. No phone inquiries please. d irect fu n d-raising ex p erience re q . of th e r e sidents. $61,000-$73,000/yr. Closes Mar 16. C omplies with a l l EOE/Drug Free workplace federal, state and AssistantProfessor I ol Chinese local regulations to If interested please submit resume Serving Central Oregon srncef903 Provide foreign language instruction in ensure sanitary and and salary expectations to Chinese to first and second year language safe op e rations. hrresumes@wescom a ers.com sequences.Advising and student assistance. Plans and executes No phoneca//s p/ease. Masters in Chinese required + 2-yrs teaching General entertaining dining college level Chinese o r o t her f oreign events and themes language req. $42,722-$49,202 for 9 mo Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities in conjunction with contract. ClosesNfar 16. Activities D irector, serving central crerJon sincer903 Patrol Deputy Sheriff - $3,226.00 to Marketing Director AssistantProfessor i, and other adminis$4,731.00 per month - DOQ Nondestructive Testing Open until Filled — First Review Date: trative staff to optiDigital Advertising Sales Provide classroom and lab instruction and March 11th, 2015 mize the life and Coordinator/Trafficker program leadership in the NDT Program, on pleasure of the resithe Redmond Campus. AAS + Level II CertifiFor complete job description and application d ents. May a l so The Bulletin is seeking an individual experication in RT and PT + 5-yrs industry exp. form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Hucater events as reenced in the role of digital advertising sched$42,722-$49,202for 9mo contract. Open man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or quested by r e s iuler, utilizing inventory systems (AdJuggler, call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson Until Filled. dents or staff. Must OAS, or DFP) to deliver ad exposures for the h ave at l e ast 8 County Application forms to Jefferson County Bulletin's online commercial accounts. This Part-Time lnstructor Positions Human Resources, 68 SE D Street, Suite E, years e xperience. position will: Looking for talented individuals to t each Madras, OR 97741. For more informapart-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our tion, or any ques• Prepare scheduling, creative requests, and employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. tions, please call JeffersonCountyis an review billing for each order. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 Equal EmploymentOpportunity Employer 541-385-4717 • Employ the ad inventory system (DFP) to inclass credit), with additional perks. dividually and collectively ensure that all onEMPLOYMENT line ad impression requirements are met in Supervisor HIGH SCHOOL the allotted timeframes. Executive Director JUNIORS ONLY • Review contracts for completeness, correctBrightSide Animal Center If you're a junior in hiqh ness, and deliverability. seeks key leader. Ideal school, you can join • Assist Digital Sales Manager in responding candidate has history of A Forest Pmducts Company the National Guard to RFP's. success in fundraising, t hrough th e Sp l i t • Work closely with both in-house salespeople donor development, Training Option and Facility Safety Supervisor and outside clients to gather information and managing staff, volunteers; excellent commube back from Basic assets necessary for campaign fulfillment. Riddle Engineered Wood and Dillard nicauon, problem-solving, management and Combat Training in • Deliver accurate tracking and reporting of analysis skills; loves animals, supports our time for your senior online ad performance to our advertising cliRoseburg is a leader in the wood products high-save mission; experienced in animal ear. Next year, you'll ents. industry. This position is a member of the welfare. Willing to work evenings or weeke back in time for senior management team at the facility. The ends when needed. Society of Animal Welcollege. Joining the Qualifications include experience with online Facility Safety Supervisor provides highly fare Administrators cert a plus. Salary DOE. Guard will open many ad inventory and placement systems, cameffective safety leadership and oversight while Visit brightsideanimals.org/executive-director doors for you with ensuring c o mpliance t o gov e rnment performance reporting, and Google for details. Submit letter of interest and rebenefits like college paign The successful candidate must be regulations and Roseburg's Health and Safety sume to brightsideboardOgmail.com . tuition assistance and Analytics. committed to exceptional customer service Management System. excellent tra i ning. and quality, and be able to balance multiple Plus, it's one of the The Responsibilities & Key Functions are: projects with equal priorities. High degree of best part-time jobs Accounting plans, implements and coordinates safety ou can have while in accuracy, foresight, and follow-through reprograms and procedures; regulations and quired. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace igh school. changes. Ensures manuals,poli cies and The 2015 Split Training and pre-employment drug testing is required. procedures are in adherence to company Option season ends Please email your resume to: expectations; collaborates with other safety April 30. Applicants staff; support and mentor safety skills; must be 17 years old jbrandtObendbulletin.com and have p arental No phone calls please. executes safety vision and plan and mentor Inventory Accounting Analyst consent prior to obemployees; conducts employee training in taining a contractual areas of s a fety, regulations, hazardous Serving Centra/ Oregon since 1903 Les Schwab is looking for an I nventory obligation. Eligibility condition monitoring, and use o f s a fety r estrictions ap p l y. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer Accounting Analyst to work closely with store equipment; leads and documents appropriate Contact your l ocal management t o id e ntify a n d a n a lyze risk/hazard assessments. C o nducts and National Guard Repvariances within their inventory and gross implementation of corrective action items; resentative and semargin results. Th e Inventory Accounting effectively communicates safety g o als, cure your future now. Circulation Night Dock Assistant Analyst performs month-end financial close objectives, e xpectations, a n d me t rics; SSG Jason Bain The Bulletin is looking for a motivated, reduties including account reconciliations and partners with HR and the Worker's Compen(541) 325-1027 sponsible individual to join our Circulation Dejournal e ntries a n d pr e pares m o nthly sation seeking to identify opportunities for Ore on uard.com pariment team and fill a vital position working inventory reports. This position also provides performance and cost reduction; performs and within our circulation Dock crew. assistance to store personnel on their daily administers audits and inspects facilities, and Fire Chief responsibilities such a s p o sting/receiving to ensure safety compliance; oversees safety The Alfalfa Fire Person is responsible for all dock issues: sortpurchase orders, maintaining store inventory, inventory, including supplies, equipment and District will be taking ing, distribution, and loading all all WesCom and analyzing and correcting certain system training materials; analysis to develop action applications for a products to haulers and carriers. Knowledge of transactions. plans. part-time Fire Chief. packaging, transportation and d istribution The announcement methods, as well as inventory skills and cusQualifications: The Qualifications are: w orking toward/ closes March 31, tomer service skills a plus. May drive com• Ability to both work independently and achieving two or Four year degree in Safety 2015. Go to pany vehicles to transport various WesCom contribute to overall team performance Management, Industrial Hygiene or r elated www.alfalfafiredistrict.or • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft products from time to time (such as post office, subject required; working toward/achieving to view a full copy of etc.). Interacts with Home Delivery Advisors, Excel OHST, ASP or CIH; demonstrated 3+ years the employment Carriers, Customer Service Representatives, • Prior accounting coursework or experience experience in safety leadership position; agreement, job's and all management at The Bulletin. Preferred: knowledge of safety and health regulations; description and how • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, excellent interpersonal, written, verbal and to apply. Ability to lift 50 pounds, work night shift. Apbusiness administration or equivalent electronic communications skills; s t rong proximately 24 hours per week shift to start. • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP Check out the teaching, coaching, facilitation, and mentoring Wage DOE. All hiring is contingent on passing systems classifieds online skills; proficiency in Microsoft Office; excellent drug and DMV screening. • Experience working in teams that problem solving and investigation skills and www.bendbulletin.com implemented new accounting systems development of corrective actions; knowledge Updated daily pPlease apply by delivering a Letter of Interest of business/financial concepts; ability to and resume, 8-5, Mon. through Fri. to The Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Project Managerfor analyze and present data and interpret into bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave. or apply via customer service, with over 450 stores and actionable information. We offer a competiproduction home buildemail to mewingObendbulletin.com with a 7,000 employees in the western United States. ing company. Requires tive salary and comprehensive benefits packWe offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, subdivision management Letter of Interest, resume, and with the job title age, including family insurance, matching of several homes under in the subject line. retirement and cash bonus. Please go to 401k andcompany paidpension plan. To apconstruction, from excawww.lesschwab.comtoapply.No phone calls ply online and attach resume, please go to vation to completion. please. Roseburg.applicantpool.com. Servlng Cencral Oregonsince l903 Must have several years exper. Send resume to: ROE Drug Free Workplace Les Schwab is proud to be an An Equal OpportunityEmployer constructionmana er equal opportunity employer. including Disability and Veterans bende mail.com ~

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P S U T B U R E E W S S A S W E E A L 80 C H H A M I R E D E I C T N R I E V O T A M U S U B I D E S

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2

reach over 50,000

Attorney General'sI readers each week. Your classified ad Office C o nsumer s

I Protection hotline at I 1-877-877-9392. I

N E E D L E

C L O M V E G O S A L Z R E A A N D R T S T A L S A R L A T E R O A S A N D L S U FF E S T P S U S A T T T H O M E N D O F A X R L I O

DID YOU KNOW that

Your Future Is Here.

not only does newspaper media reach a Whether you're HUGE Audience, they looking for a home also reach an ENGAGED AUDIENCE. or need a service, Discover the Power of your future is in Newspaper Advertisthese pages. ing in six states - AK ID, MT,OR & WA. For a free rate brochure call 916-288-8011 or email cecelia©cnpa.com Thousandsofadsdaily (PNDC) in print andonline. For sale a small tax and b ookkeeping b u s i ness in La Pine. For info call evenings at

Classifjeds

541-508-0124.

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin

servrnycentral oreyon xnce 1903

Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is s eeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral.

Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-platform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Management experi ence a plus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skills level of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required. Please email your resume to: jbrandt@bendbulletin.com No phone calls please.

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincei903

The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer •

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

Materials Service Specialists Do you like to work in a positive environment while processing high volumes of materials and occasionally interacting with customers in person, via phone, and electronically? It's a great chance to grow in a fun environment and to make a difFerence in the lives of children, teens, and adults. Two part-time positions are available. Deadline: z:oo on March tz. http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ employment for more details, application, and supplemental questionnaire. Or call (54t) 312-toz5 for assistance. EOE

D ESCH U T E S P U B L I C

! L I BRA R Y


G4 SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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s

I •

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./Muitlplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Muitlplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Muitlplex 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 RentSunrlver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prlnevlile 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Moblle/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Moblle/Mfd. Space

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

s

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Tlmeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 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

AptJMultiplex General AptiMultiplex NE Bend CHECK YOUR AD

. Ij Ij

Call for Speciafs! Limited numbers avail. 1,28 3bdrms w/d hookups, patios or decks. Mountain Glen

648

745

865

880

880

881

Houses for Rent General

Homes for Sale

ATVs

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

2010 Polaris Sportsman NOTICE Tioga 24' Class C Looking for your EPS, fuily loaded, All real estate adver- 850XP Bought new in 2000, next employee? tised here in is sub- $6950. 541-316-0210 currently under 21K Place a Bulletin help All real estate adver- ject to the Federal miles, exc. shape, wanted ad today and tising in this newspa- F air Housing A c t , new tires, profesreach over 60,000 per is subject to the which makes it illegal winterized readers each week. Fleetwood D i scovery sionally F air H o using A c t to advertise any prefyear, cut-off Your classified ad 40' 2003, diesel, w/all every which makes it illegal erence, limitation or to b a ttery, will also appear on options - 3 slide outs, switch to a d vertise "any discrimination based plus new RV batbendbulletin.com preference, limitation on race, color, reli- Polaris 500, 2005, wind- satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, t eries. Oven, h o t which currently reshield, back & front etc., 34,000 m iles. or disc r imination ion, sex, handicap, water heater & air ceives over 1.5 milexcellent cond, no Wintered in h e ated cond., seldom used; based on race, color, amilial status or na- racks, lion page views evshop. $78,995 obo. just add water and religion, sex, handi- tional origin, or inten- off-road miles. $3750. ery month at no Call 541-546-3330 541-447-8664 it's r eady to g o ! cap, familial status, tion to make any such extra cost. Bulletin marital status or na- preferences, l i mita870 $22,000 obo. SeriClassifieds Get ReCall a Pro tional origin, or an in- tions or discrimination. Boats & Accessories ous inquiries, only. sults! Call 365-5809 tention to make any We will not knowingly Stored in T errebWhether you need a or place your ad onne. 541-546-5174 such pre f erence, accept any advertison-line at fence fixed, hedges limitation or discrimi- ing for real estate bendbulletin.com trimmed or a house nation." Familial sta- which is in violation of tus includes children this law. All persons built, you'll find Need to get an under the age of 16 are hereby informed 882 1 ad in ASAP? professional help in living with parents or that all dwellings adFifth Wheels The Bulletin's "Call a You can place it legal cus t odians, vertised are available 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 pregnant women, and on an equal opportuWakeboard Boat Service Professional" online at: CHECK YOUR AD people securing cus- nity basis. The Bulle- I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Directory www.bendbulletin.com tody of children under tin Classified tons of extras, low hrs. 541-385-5809 16. This newspaper Full wakeboard tower, 747 will not knowingly ac541-385-5809 light bars, Polk audio cept any advertising Southwest Bend Homes speakers throughout, for real estate which is completely wired for on the first day it runs in violation of the law. Broken Top Townhome! amps/subwoofers, unSS~Q to make sure it is corO ur r e aders a r e 19425 Ironwood Circle derwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries cusrect. "Spellcheck" and hereby informed that 2003 2-story, 2310 sf. tom black paint job. human errors do ocall dwellings adver- Enjoy 3 private suites w/own bath, library, of$12,500 541-81 5-2523 cur. If this happens to tised in this newspaFour Winds 32' per are available on fice, Irg private wood Ready to makememories! your ad, please con2010 Top-selling Winnebago tact us ASAP so that an equal opportunity deck. Comfy, quiet, Triton V-10 with corrections and any basis. To complain of convenient! Sam Rawl31J, original owners, non13,000 miles. Large smokers, garaged, only adjustments can be d iscrimination ca l l ins, Broker, Rim Rock slide, Sleeps 7. Lots Investments, 18,800 miles, auto-levelmade to your ad. HUD t o l l-free at of storage. 5000lb 541-620-4242 ing jacks, (2) slides, up1-800-877-0246. The 541-385-5809 hitch. Like new. graded queen bed, bunk toll f ree t e lephone The Bulletin Classified 750 $51,900 beds, micro, (3) TVs, number for the hear541-325-6813 Redmond Homes 2007 Bennington sleeps 10! Lots of storing i m p aired is age, maintained, very Pontoon Boat 1-800-927-9275. Need to get an ad Private Setting on 1.48 clean! Only $67,995! Ex2275 GL, 150hp acre! Custom 3 bdrm, 2.5 tended warranty and/or fiin ASAP? Honda VTEC, less bath, 2450 SF home has nancing avail to qualified than 110 hours, bonus rm, shop, canal & buyers!541488-7179 B3ae0 original owner lots Fax it to 541-322-7253 nice Mtn view! 1075 NW of extras; TenneslRe ©nlh Newell Ave., Terrebonne. 881 see tandem axle By owner, $359,000. Call The Bulletin Classifieds trailer. Excellent Freightlfner 1994 Travel Trailers 541-923-4995 to see condition, $23,500 Custom PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

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541-383-9313 on the first day it runs managed by to make sure it is cor- Professionally Norris & Stevens, Inc. rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to Good classified ads tell your ad, please conthe essential facts in an tact us ASAP so that interesting Manner. Write corrections and any adjustments can be from the readers view -not 732 made to your ad. the seller's. Convert the Commercial/lnvestment 541-385-5809 facts into benefits. Show Meet singles right now! The Bulletin Properties for Sale Classified the reader howthe item will No paid o perators, help them in some way. just real people like This HIGH PROFILE you. Browse greetSmall clean studio LOCATION IN advertising tip ings, exchange mesdowntown Old Mill brought toyou by DOWNTOWN sages and connect area. No pets, no REDMOND live. Try it free. Call smoking $495 mo., The Bulletin This commercial now: 677-955-5505. $475 dep., All util. Semng Central Oregonstnce 19tB building offers expaid. 541-330-9769 (PNDC) cellent exposure along desirable NW 6th Street. Currently housing The Redmond Spokesman newspaper offices, the 2,746 sq. ft. space is call 54385 I 5809 topromote yourservice• Advertise for 28daysstarting at'lfoIrhissechlpackop isnotav rr> 7abkanI rwebsilei perfect for owner/user. Two private offices and generous open Building/Contracting Handyman Landscaping/Yard Care spaces. Three parking places in NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landback+ street parklaw requires anyone I DO THAT! scape Contractors Law ing. $259,000. who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adCall Graham Dent be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form 541-383-2444 Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucCOMPASS tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Commercial active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor Handyman/Remodeli fences, arbors, ng is bonded & insured. water-features, and inResldendal/Commerciaf Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Smull Jobs to www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e Ewlire Room Remodels contractor.com Landscape ContracGarage Orgamization or call 503-376-4621. Home InsPectiow RePairs tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in- Woodsman Country guatity, Honest Work mends checking with cluded in all adver- L odge. AA A A pthe CCB prior to con- Dennis541.317 9768 tisements which indi- proved. Unique 15 tracting with anyone. calnsl573Bonded/Insamvl cate the business has unit motel in CresSome other t rades a bond, insurance and cent, OR on busy also re q uire addi-Landscaping/Yard Care workers compensa- Hwy 97, 45 miles tional licenses and tion for their employ- n orth o f Cra t e r certifications. ees. For your protec- Lake. T o tally retion call 503-376-5909 modeled w/ log furor use our website: niture and log cabin Take care of www.lcb.state.or.us to decor. F u lly f u rZuOdt4QuadriI. check license status nished 3 Bdrm, 2 your investments Zarug gme r<~. before contracting with 1/2 bath o w ners with the help from the business. Persons quarters. DownsizFull Service doing lan d scape ing. The Bulletin's Landscape Ever y thing maintenance do not Call for apManagement "Call A Service r equire an LCB l i - stays. pointment cense. Professional" Directory Spring Clean Up 1-541-433-2710. $1,250,000 OBO. •Leaves •Cones USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Computer/Cabling Install 738 •Needles •Debris Hauling Door-to-door selling with Multiplexes for Sale Computer training, fast results! It's the easiest WeedFree Bark set up & r e p air way in the world to sell. & Flower Beds from the comfort of your own home. The Bulletin Classified Lawn Renovation 30+ yrs exp., I am 541 485-5809 an exc. teacher, very Aeration - Dethatching Overseed patient & can offer Compost DUPLEX by owner SE instruction on your Top Dressing Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath W indows o r M a c ~+™ l~o ea., 14yrs old. Great computers. Offering COLLINS cond. $219,900 .kareninexpensive training, Landscape michellen@hotmail.com. set up 8 configuraMaintenance 541-615- 7707 tion or repairs & upFull or Partial Service g rades. Call f o r Aerattoa/tyethstchtng •Mowing .Edging quotation or for appt. 744 •Pruning ~Weeding • spflllg clesn-Up Dirk Brandenhorst Water Management Open Houses • Mowtns ~udaing 541-647-1341 619-997-8291 • Pruning ~Weedeattna Fertilizer included

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Ij QoP

with monthly program

• rerttuxtsg ~Hauttna • Gmunds Keeping

FIND IT!

aslIY (y7 SELL IT! The BulletinClassifieds Debris Removal

Weekly, monthly or one time service.

mwaly nsviI opt4on FREE ESTIMATES Cafl nowto scbeduk!

Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006

j41-480BONDED a IN $714 URED

Senior Discounts

Painting/Wall Covering

Open 12-3 1881 NW Hartford Ave. NorthWest Crossing

Room for the Family Shelley Griffin, Broker 541-280-3804 Theearnereroup.com

541-390-1466

Same Day Response

Open 12-3 20939 Miramar Dr. Relax or Entertain

Will Haul Away

®

"FREE

For Salvage k'. Any Location.' ' .:,.:tRemoval,

Also CleanupsI i l4 Cleaaoats'. +

,

I®a

Courier Service We will distribute locally in C.O. or do line hauls between C.O. and PDX area. Looking for loads for our 26' Freightliner Box truck t26,000 GVW) with 4K l ift ate. Lic. & Bonded. ontact Bill at wsdahl©bendbroadband.com. +~~side Cp+>ig~ .

saRVINQ CENTRAL OREQON

Slnce 2008 Resldentlal a Commerelal

Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing MAINTENANCE • Thatch 4 Aerate • Spring Clean up • Weekly Mowing & Edging • Bi-Monthly & MonthlyMaintenance • Bark, Rock, Etc.

IAMlSCAPIjtfG • Landscape Construction • Water Feature Instalfatlon/lytalnt. • Pavers • Renovations • Irrfgatfons Installatlon Senlor Dlscounts Bonded and Insured

541%15<458 Lcas875e

• Interior and Exterior • Family-Owned • Residential R Commercial • 40 years expertence • Senior Discounts • 5-year Warranties

In Secluded Setting Carol Donohoe, Broker 541-41 0-1773

Call 541.337.6149 CCIS204918

MARTIN JAINES European Pnfessional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon Llcense ¹186147 LLC

541-815-28&8

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. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Servin Central Ore on since 1903

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $'I 1,590.

771

541-548-0345.

Lots

875

Watercraft

Awbrey Butte .48 acre lot withCascade Mtn. views,3275 NW Horizon Dr. $249,900. Call 714-510-7386 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough TheBulletin Classiffeds Lot ¹5 Phase 33, one acre. NW Baltch at Starview/Mt. W a s hington. 541-946-1219

Fg gg~ i

Open 12-3 61060 Ruby Peak Ln. Contemporary Design With Many Features

L

745

Homes for Sale

PINNACLE 1990 30', clean.

Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $6500. 541-306-7268 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

16' Cata Raft

2 Outfitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 6" Ouffitter blades and

Redmond:

®

Ij 0 850

The Bulletin

~

880

541-385-5809

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. $19,750.More p/cs available. 541-923-6408

Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. ing area & l a r ge Awning. Like new, hardly used. closet. Large enough Must sell $20,000 to live in, but easy to or take over paytow! 15' power awments. Call ning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full s i ze 541-410-5649 queen bed, l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. Heartland P r owler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-liv-

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

RV PACKAGE-2006 541 316 1322. Monaco Monarch, 31 ', Additional information Ford V10, 28,900 miles, Texas USA Best Buy and photos on auto-level, 2 slides, Own a prime 20 acre request, too! queen bed & hide-a-bed ranch in scenic Texas sofa, 4k gen, conv minow only $395 per Just too many crowave, 2 TV's, tow acre, $99 per month, package,$66,000. collectibles? c all S t ev e Li n n , OPTION - 2003 Jeep owner, Broker. Wrangler tow car, 64K 600-675-6568. Sell them in miles, hard& soft top, 5 The Bulletin Classifieds speed manual,$1 1,000 775 541-815-6319 Manufactured/ 541-385-5809 Mobile Homes Garage Sales Ads published in "Wa List Your Home tercraft" include: Kay Garage Sales JandMHomes.com aks, rafts and motor We Have Buyers Ized personal Garage Sales Get Top Dollar watercrafts. Fo Financing Available. Find them "boats" please se 541-546-5511 Class 870. in 541-385-5809 The Bulletin :e. Classifieds 5ervin Central Oregon since 1903

Acreages

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993

$26,500. 541-999-2571

541-548-5254

l ots of gear, all i n "very good to exc." condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700

773

Call on one of the professionals today! Pegasus 27' 2005 FQS, 14' slide, lots of extras & lots of storage in and out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated arage when not in use. 15,750. 541-526-1361 RV CONSIGNMENTS

WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254 885

Canopies & Campers Adventurer 2013 66 FB truck camper, $16,600. 2205 dlY weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 2010 C hevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!

Motorhomes

, ae.

Snowmobiles 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', clean, nonsmoking exc. cond. More info.$49,900 541-447-9268

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 YAMAHA 700 2000 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 0 0, 24' Mercedes Benz only 768 mi., new mir- Prism, 2015 Model G, rors, covers, custom Mercedes Diesel engine, skis, n e w rid e -on 18+ mpg, auto trans, r ide-off t r ailer w i t h fully loaded with spare, + much more. double-expando, $6,995. Call for deand only 5200 miles. tails. 541-420-6215 Perfect condition only $92K. 860 Call 541-526-1201 Motorcycles & Accessories or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.

Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.

HD Fat Bo 1996

Rob Davis, Broker 541-280-9589 Theearnereroup.com

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

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Theearnereroup.com

Askrrbosr our SPMNG SPECMLf

503-646-1804

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 541-546-4607

— FSBOMotivated & Ready! 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq ft Honda CB250 NightQuality home, hawk, 2008, very good Quality price! cond, $2000. 3300 miles. Call 541-409-1661 $205K. 541-279-8763

Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, Skw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812

Get your business

e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

S hew y e u r s tu ff ,

s ell y o u r s tu ff . Add a photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 per week.

Visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy steps. All ads appear in both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.

assi ie s

www.bendbulletin.com

To PlaCeyOur PhatOad, ViSit USOnline at

i anvw.bend b u l l e t i n . c o m or Call With queStiOnS,

5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9


TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385

00

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY MARCH 8 2015 G5 932

933

935

935

Utility Trailers

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. capacity, 26' long, 8'6" wide, ideal for hauling hay, materials, cars, exc.cond. $2800. 541-420-3788

00

-5809

925

Aircraft, Parts & Service

LIIICOLII ~

~

© s un mu

1/3interestin

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$125,000

931 Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

(located O Bend) 541-288-3333

Four Nokian 35x12.50 17LT tires, 50% tread $150. 541-639-7501

Studded snow

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 BEND 541-382-8038

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.

541-892-3789

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Buick Electra 225 1964 Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 168K miles. $9,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-480-6130

Dodge RAN 2500 quad cab 2006, 5.7L V-8 cyl. VIN ¹150429. $22,888. (exp. 3/9/1 5) DLR ¹366 ~ONOp om

0

VW CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023

Mercury Mariner —+ ,

LIIICOL N ~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

F ord Ranger X L T 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, tow pkg, runs great, $5200. 541-385-4790. 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

4x4 and ready for fun! Vin ¹J28963

Bargain Corral price $4,998 ROBBERSON

Pickups

~

Chev Silverado BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile

$19,977 ROBBERSON i LINcoLII ~

I M ROR

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

CAL LW

plug relay. Asking$17,900 541-480-1868

1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

mmmm ~

541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5

975

975

Automobiles

DID YOU KNOW 144

Chrysler 200 LX2012, BMW 328i XDrive (exp. 3/8/15) VIN ¹292213 2011, 3.0L 1-6 cyl. Stock ¹83014 VIN ¹N81801. $24,995. $13,979 or $195/mo., (exp. 3/9/15) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment.

©

smolichvolvo.com

SuaARU.

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Buick LeSabre 2005 custom, exc. cond., tires 40%, 3800 Series 113.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., 2nd owner. $7700 obo 541-430-7400 or 541-815-8487

Chrysler Pacifica 2005, (exp. 3/8/15) Vin ¹315989 Stock ¹44375A

$10,733 or $135/mo.,

million U.S. A dults read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Advertising in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, OrGorgeous and egon and WashingPnced to se//! ton with iust one ¹018628 $1 1,977 p hone call. Fo r a FREE adv e rtising ROBBERSON y network brochure call 916-288-6011 or email 541-312-3986 cecelia@cnpa.com www.robberson.com (PNDC) Dlr ¹0205. Pnce good thru 03/31/15 LIIICOLN ~

4 .49% APR o n a p -

proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

payment.

Honda Accord LX

© s un mu

$2500 down, 72 mo. 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 and title included in payment. Dlr ¹0354

1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$5,977 ROBBERSON uvroa» ~

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15

J Jll

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 GMC yukon XL 1500 Cadillac eng i ne, SLT 4WD2013, fresh R4 transmis5.3L V-8 cyl sion w/overdrive, low VIN ¹213994. $35,998. mi., no rust, custom (exp. 3/9/1 5) DLR ¹366 interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d ~ONOp tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. om 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215. 541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com

2008 Sport, 3rd row, lots more! ¹024803 $19,977 ROBBERSON LIIICOLII ~

Nm m m

541-312-3986

www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/1 5

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• sw

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~m m m

54'I -312-3986

CHECKYOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e rror may occur in your ad, A Lot of car for p lease contact u s $6,977! and we will be happy Vin¹133699 to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: ROBBERSON ~ Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, S at. 11:00 a.m. for Sun541-312-3986 day; Sat. 12:00 for www.robberson.com Monday. Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 541-385-5809 3/31/1 5 The Bulletin Classified

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel (Photo for illustration only) your home with the HyundaiAccent help of a professional Hatchback 201 1, from The Bulletin's 1.6L 1-4 cyl "Call A Service VIN ¹192014. $8,998. (exp. 3/9/1 5) DLR ¹366 Professional" Directory Dodge SRT-4

2 0 05.

Mopar Stage 3 suspension, Stage 1 en-

gine. 88,000 mi. New Turbo. $6500. Phone 541 420 2239

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.com

Time to deCIUtter? Need SOme eXtra CaSh? NeedSOmeeXtra SPaCethe garage?

UM

~

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to Dodge Avenger2013, (exp. 3/8/15) yard care, it's all here Vin ¹535474 in The Bulletin's Stock ¹83015 "Call A Service $13,979 or $195/mo., $2000 down, 72 mo., Professional Directory

Subaru Forester 1998 Buick LeSabre © s U B ARU 170k miles., red, two Limited 2000, sets tires, daughter 3.8L V-6 cy 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. moved to Sweden VIN ¹166929. $2,688. 877-266-3821 needs $. Clean, no (exp. 3/9/15) DLR ¹366 Dlr ¹0354 pets. Dependable car. $4200. Dodge Dart SXT2013, 541-647-0657 Find It in 2.0L 1-4 cyl. Just bought a new boat? The Bulletin Classifieds! VIN ¹106645.$14,995. Sell your old one in the (exp. 3/9/1 5) DLR ¹366 541-385-5809 classifieds! Ask about our 541-548-1448 SMOLICH Super Seller rates! smolichmotors.com 541-385-5809 V Q LV Q 541-749-2156 Concorde 2002 Toyota Highlander smolichvolvo.com

TODAY I

Ford F550 1999 7.3 Diesel Truck 2-Door 1.5 ton crane & welder, 227,000 miles New tires, radiator, water pump, glow

~

AUTOS& TRANSPORTATION 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

Automobiles

t

2010. Only 56k mi.. Vin ¹J20929 16,977 ROBBERSON

975

Automobiles

Mountaineer 1999

933

2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932

Advertise your car! Add APicture!

¹

Automobiles

I

541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com

541-447-5184.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998.

L~

BOATS 8 RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882- Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent

975

1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up

t i r es

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sure LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE e es a n d cos t s; t ogether w it h ti t l e OF SALE File No. costs, 7236.25892 R e f e r- expense, t rustee's fees a nd ence is made to that fees c ertain t rust d e e d attorneys made by Eric Bozov- i ncurred herein b y ich and Kelley Kersch, reason of said default; a s grantor, to R e - a ny f u rther s u ms th e gional Trustee Ser- advanced b y vices Corporation, as b eneficiary fo r t h e trustee, in favor of protection o f the Mortgage Electronic above described real Registration Systems, property a n d its Inc. as nominee for interest therein; and WMC Mort g age prepayment Corp., its successors penalties/premiums, if and assigns, as ben- applicable. eficiary, dated WHEREFORE, notice 09/01/06, r e c orded hereby is given that undersigned 09/06/06, in the mort- the age records of DE- trustee will on June 8, CHUTES C o unty, 2015 at the hour of Oregon, as 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in w i t h the 2006-60939 and sub- accord tim e sequently assigned to s tandard o f U.S. Bank N.A., as established by ORS 187.110, at the trustee, on behalf of following place: inside t he holders, of t h e J.P. Morgan Mort- the main lobby of the gage Acquisition Trust Deschutes C o u nty 2006-WMC4 A s s et Courthouse, 1164 NW Backed Pass-Through Bond, in the City of Certificates, S e ries B end, C ounty o f DESCHUTES, State 2006-WMC4 by Assignment recorded as o f Oregon, sell a t 2014-031896, cover- public auction to the ing the following de- h ighest bidder f o r scribed real property cash the interest in situated in said county the described real and state, to wit: Lot property which t he Thirty-six, Block Eight, grantor had or had PONDEROSA PINES power to convey at the t i m e of the IN FOURTH ADDITION, Des c hutes execution by grantor C ounty, Oreg o n of the t rust deed, PROPERTY AD- t ogether w it h a n y DRESS: 15202 PON- i nterest which t h e grantor or grantor's DEROSA LOOP LA PINE, OR 97739 Both successors in interest the beneficiary and a cquired after t h e t he t r ustee h a v e execution of the trust elected to sell the real deed, to satisfy the property to satisfy the foregoing obligations obligations secured by thereby secured and the cos t s and the trust deed and a notice of default has e xpenses of s a l e , a been recorded pursu- including ant to Oregon Re- reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is vised Statutes 86.752(3); the default further given that for or for which foreclosure reinstatement quotes is made is grantors' payoff failure to pay when requested pursuant to due th e fo l lowing O RS 8 6 .786 a n d sums: monthly pay- 86.789 must be timely ments of $764.92 be- c ommunicated in a inning 07/01/09 and written request that 1,026.58 beginning c omplies with t h at 1 0/1/1 0; plus l a t e statute addressed to charges of $ 3 8.24 the trustee's "Urgent each month begin- Request Desk" either ning 07/16/09; plus by personal delivery t he tru s tee's prior accrued l a te to charges of $ 25.13; physical offices (call for address) or by first p lus a dvances o f $14,596.76 that rep- class, certified mail, return receipt resent property inspections, p roperty requested, addressed preservations, prop- to the trustee's post erty valuation and officebox address set paid foreclosure fees forth in this notice. pot e ntial and costs; together Due t o with t itle e x pense, conflicts with federal law, persons having costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees no record legal or equitable interest in incurred herein by reason of said default the subject property inspections, property will o n l y rec e ive preservations, prop- information the erty valuation and concerning paid foreclosure fees lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid and; any further sums advanced by the ben- i nformation is a l s o a t the eficiary for the protec- available web s ite, tion of the above de- trustee's scribed real property www.northwesttrustee and i ts inte r est .com. Notice is further therein; and prepay- given that any person ment penalties/premi- named in ORS 86.778 ums, if applicable. By has the right, at any reason of said default time prior to five days before the date last the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s set for the sale, to owing on the obliga- have this foreclosure tion secured by the proceeding dismissed trust deed immedi- and the trust deed ately due and pay- reinstated by payment able, said sums being to the beneficiary of the entire a mount the following, to wit: $154,639.02 with in- then due (other than such portion of the terest thereon at the rate of 5 percent per principal as would not annum be g inning then be due had no 06/01/09; plus l ate default occurred) and charges of $ 3 8.24 by curing any other each month begin- default complained of ning 07/16/09 until herein that is capable paid; plus prior ac- of being cured by the crued late charges of tendering $ 25.13; p lu s ad - performance required vances of $14,596.76 under the obligation or that represent prop- t rust deed, and i n erty insp e ctions, addition to paying said property p r eserva- sums or tendering the tions, property valua- performance tion and paid foreclo- necessary to cure the

default, by paying all Northwest quarter (S costs and expenses 1/2 NW 1/4) of Section 13, Township 14 actually incurred in enforcing the South, Range 13 East of the Willamette Meobligation and t rust Des c hutes deed, together with ridian, trustee's and County, Oregon, more a ttorney's fees n ot particularly described exceeding the as follows: Beginning amounts provided by at a point from which said OR S 8 6 . 778. the West quarter corRequests from ner of said Section 13 bears South 89 dep ersons named i n ORS 8 6 .778 fo r grees 30' 18 N West, reinstatement quotes 1330.63 feet, thence received less than six North, 630.68 f eet; days prior to the date thence South 66 deset for the trustee's grees 34' 52" East, sale will be honored 153.77 feet; thence only at the discretion South 52 degrees 00' of the beneficiary or if 37" East, 463.30 feet; required by the terms thence South 0 deof the loan grees 29' 42" East, documents. In 280.00 feet; thence 89 degrees 30' construing this notice, South the singular includes 18 N West, 508.69 feet to the point of beginthe plural, the word Exce p ting "grantor" includes any ning. successor in interest therefrom the Northto the grantor as well easterly 25 feet and as any other person the Easterly 25 feet owing an obligation, which is reserved for roadway p u rposes the performance of which is secured by and that portion lying within the right of way said trust deed, and the words "trustee" of the Lambert Road. "beneficiary" PROPERTY ADand include their DRESS: 3800 Northrespective successors east Xenolith Street OR i n interest, i f a n y . Terrebonne, 97760 Both the benWithout limiting the eficiary a n d the trustee's disclaimer of representation or trustee have elected warranties, O r egon to sell the real propl aw r e q uires t h e erty to satisfy the oblitrustee to state in this gations secured by n otice t ha t so m e the trust deed and a residential p r operty notice of default has sold at a trustee's sale been recorded pursumay have been used ant to Oregon ReStatutes in manufacturing vlsed 86.752(3); the default methamphetamines, the chemical for which foreclosure components of which is made is grantors' are known to be toxic. failure to pay when fo l lowing Prospective purchas- due th e ers o f res i dential sums: monthly payments of $ 2,715.42 property should be aware of this poten- beginning 08/01/09; tial danger b efore plus late charges of deciding to place a bid $135.77 each month for this property at the beginning 08/1 6/09; p lus advances o f t rustee's sale. T h e t rustee's r ules o f $6,672.00 that repreauction m a y be sent property preseraccessed at vations, property inwww.northwesttrustee spections and paid .com a nd are foreclosure fees and costs; together with incorporated by this reference. You may title expense, costs, a lso a ccess s a l e t rustee's fees a n d status at www.north- a ttorney's fees i n curred herein by reawesttrustee.com and son of said default; www.USA-Foreclosur e.com. Fo r f u rther any further sums adinformation, p l ease vanced by the beneficontact: Kathy ciary for the protecTaggart N o rthwest tion of t h e a b ove Trustee Services, Inc. described real propP.O. Box 997 erty and its interest Bellevue, WA therein; and prepay98009-0997 586-1900 ment penalties/premiBOZOVICH, E R IC ums, if applicable. By and KERSCH, reason of said default KELLEY (TS¹ the beneficiary has d eclared all s u ms 7236.25892) owing on the obliga1002.277572-File No. tion secured by the LEGAL NOTICE deed TRUSTEE'S NOTICE trust mmediately due and O F SALE File N o . payable, said sums 7236.25635 R e f e r- being the following, to ence is made to that wit: $532,000.00 with c ertain trust d e ed interest thereon at the made by Danna K of 6.125 percent Frint, Del R Frint, as rate annum beginning g rantor, t o Firs t per plus l a te American Title Insur- 07/01/09; charges of $135.77 ance Company of Or- each monthbeginning egon, as trustee, in 6/09 until paid; favor o f M o rtgage 08/1 lus advances o f Electronic Registra- p that tion Systems, Inc. as $6,672.00 p r o perty nominee for Ameri- represent propcan Brokers Conduit, preservations, inspections and its successors and erty foreclosure fees assigns, as b enefi- paid and costs; together ciary, dated 05/18/07, with title e x pense, recorded 05/23/07, in costs, trustee's fees the mortgage records and attorneys fees of Deschutes County, i ncurred herein b y Oregon, as of said default; 2007-29230 and sub- reason f u rther s u ms sequently assigned to any advanced y th e U.S. Bank National b eneficiarybfo he Association, as protection o f r tthe trustee for J.P. Mor- above described real gan Mortgage Trust property an d its 2007-S3 by Assign- interest therein; and m ent recorded a s prepayment 2013-019856, coverif ing the following de- penalties/premiums, applicable. scribed real property WHEREFORE, notice situated in said county hereby is given that and state, to wit: A undersigned tract of land located in the trustee will on May 26, the South half of the 2015 at the hour of

10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord w i t h the standard o f tim e established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, C o unty of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which t he grantor had or h ad power to convey at the t i m e of the execution by grantor of the t r ust d eed, t ogether with a n y i nterest which t h e grantor or grantor's successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the cos t s and

expenses of

s a le,

including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trus t ee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post officebox address set forth in t his n otice. Due t o pot e ntial conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will o n l y re c eive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee .com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the e ntire a m ount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the

performance required under the obligation or t rust deed, and i n addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all

costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and t rust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n ot exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from p ersons named i n ORS 8 6 .778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan

documents. In of Labor and Indus- Proposals will not be will on May 1, 2015, at construing this notice, tries (BOLI) Wage accepted after dead- the hour of 11:00 AM, the singular includes Rates, dated Janu- l ine. N o f a xed o r i n accord with t h e the plural, the word ary 1 , 2 0 1 5 a n d electronic (email) standard of time es"grantor" includes any amendments for resubmissions will be t ablished b y OR S Des successor in interest gion 10 as defined accepted. Direct any 1 87.110, a t to the grantor as well under ORS 279C.800 questions regarding chutes County Courtas any other person to 279C.870. t his s olicitation t o : house Front Entrance, owing an obligation, Elizabeth Hol d en, 1164 N W Bond the performance of Elizabeth holden©de S treet, Bend, O R Scope of Work: Imwhich is secured by provements generally schutes.org (541) 97701, in the City of said trust deed, and include removal and 322-7489. Bend, County of Desthe words "trustee" r eplacement of t h e chutes, State of OrLEGAL NOTICE and "beneficiary" existing fire sprinkler TRUSTEE'S NOTICE egon, sell at public include their system located in the to the highest SALE. Reference auction respective successors w est wing o f th e OF bidder for cash the is made to that ceri n interest, if a n y. Transportation Facil- tain trust deed made interest in th e r e al Without limiting the ity of Redmond Pub- by Chris Kimmel, a property d e scribed trustee's disclaimer of lic Works. married person and a bove, w h ich t h e representation or grantor had or had McMichael a warranties, O r egon Contract Documents Patrick power to convey at s ingle p e rson a s l aw r e quires t h e may be examined at grantor, to F i delity the time of the executrustee to state in this the following locaby grantor of the National Title Ins Co tion n otice t ha t so m e tions: trust deed t ogether as trustee, in favor of residential p r operty •City of Redmond Ena n y in t e rest Fargo B ank, with the sold at a trustee's sale gineering Department Wells grantor or N.A. as beneficiary, which may have been used 243 NE A ntler Avgrantor's successors dated December 14, in manufacturing enue, Redmond, Or- 2009, recorded Janu- in interest acquired methamphetamines, after the execution of egon. ary 4, 2010, in the the chemical Bwww.ciplist.com the trust deed, to satmortgage records of components of which isfy the foregoing obDeschutes C o unty, are known to be toxic. Digital copies of the Oregon, as D ocu- ligations thereby seProspective and the costs plans, specifications, 2010-00051, cured of and bid proposal, in- ment No. the expenses of the purchasers following and residential p r operty cluding any future ad- covering sale, including real prop- sonable chargesreashould be aware of denda or revisions to described erty situated in said the trustee. Noticeby this potential danger the bid d ocuments, county and state, is to b efore deciding t o are available by go- wit: LOT 3, BLOCK 2, further given that any place a bid for this ing to www.ciplist.com ROMAINE VILLAGE, person named in ORS has the right, property a t the and signing up, by 2, DES- 86.778 trustee's sale. T he going to the Member UNIT any time that is not COUNTY, at t rustee's rules o f Login (It's f r ee). CHUTES later than days REGON. P R O P- before the five auction m a y be General Contractors O date last ERTY AD D RESS: accessed at who plan to bid on this for the sale, to McMullin Drive, set www.northwesttrustee project are required to 60921 have this foreclosure Bend, O R 97 7 0 2. .com a nd are r egister for an a c - There is a default by proceeding dismissed incorporated by this count the trust deed on grantor or other and reference. You may www.ciplist.com to be the r einstated by p a y person owing an oblia lso a ccess s a l e included in the Plan gation or by their suc- ment to the benefistatus at Holder's list and to reof t h e e ntire in interest, the ciary www.northwesttrustee ceive email updates of cessor a mount t he n d u e performance of which .com and any addenda or revi- is secured by said (other than such porwww.USA-Foreclosur s ions t o of the principle as t h e bid deed, or by their tion e.com. For f u rther documents. No Pro- trust would not then be due successor in interest, information, p l ease posal will be consid- with respect to provi- had no default occontact: Kathy ered from a General and by curing therein which curred) Taggart N o r thwest Contractor to whom sions o t her d e fault sale in the any Trustee Services, Inc. a proposal form has authorize complained of herein of default of P.O. Box 997 not been issued by event that is capable of besuch provision. The Bellevue, WA the City of Redmond default for which fore- ing cured by tender98009-0997 586-1900 to registered bidders closure is made is ing the performance FRINT, DANNA F and from www.ciplist.com. required under the grantors' failure to pay DEL R (TS¹ o bligation o r tr u s t when due the follow7236.25635) deed, and in addition PUBLISH:Bend ing sums: monthly 1002.277207-File No. those sums Bulletin - Sunday, payments of to paying tendering the perMarch 8, 2015 LEGAL NOTICE $1,061.10 beginning or formance ADOPTION = LOVE. September 1, 2013; to cure thenecessary LEGAL NOTICE default, by We promise your monthly payments of paying all costs Project Name:Reand baby a happy, joyquest for Proposal for $1,052.49 beginning expenses actually inful, secure life. ExTreatment Foster/Re- March 1, 2014; plus curred in enforcing the prior accrued l a te obligation and trust penses paid. Call spite Care Services 1-800-943-7780. Project L o c ation: charges of $127.32; deed, together with p lus advances o f trustee and attorney BEND, OR LEGAL NOTICE $1,183.00; t o gether fees not exceeding Project Owner:DEINVITATION TO BID SCHUTES COUNTY with t itle e x pense, the amounts provided costs, trustee's fees by ORS 86.778.WithHEALTH SERVICES Sealed bids for the and attorney's fees out c onstruction of t h e RFP Date:January i ting the i ncurred herein b y trustee'sli m City o f R e d mond, 27, 2015 disclaimer of reason of said default; Description: Redmond P u b l ic or further sums ad- r epresentations Works Transporta- DESCHUTES COUNTY any O r egon vanced by the benefi- warranties, tion Building Sprin- HEALTH SERVICES, l aw r e quires t h ciary for the protec- trustee to state in thise BEHAVIORAL k ler S ystem R e tion of t h e a b o ve notice that some resiHEALTH placement Phase 1, described real prop- dential property sold DIVISION addressed to the City erty and its interest at a t rustee's sale R ecorder, Cit y o f C o unty therein; and prepay- may have been used Redmond, Oregon will Deschutes penalties/premi- in be received until 2:30 Health Services De- ment manufacturing partment (DCHS), ums, if applicable. By methamphetamines, PM local time at the reason of said default, the chemical compoCity Recorder's office, Behavioral Health Di- the beneficiary City Hall, 716 SW Ev- vision, is seeking pro- d eclared al l shas of which are u m s nents ergreen Ave n ue, p osals for on e o r owing on the obligaknown to be t oxic. Redmond, Oregon, on more contractors to tion secured by said Prospective purchasTr e atment March 31, 2015 and provide of re s i dential deed i mmedi- ers then publicly opened Foster Care and/or trust property should be ately due and paytemporary R e s pite and read at 2:30 PM of this potensaid sums being aware in Conference Room Care Services to chil- able, danger before defollowing, to wit: tial A, City H a ll, R ed- dren ages five (5) to the ciding to place a bid with in- for this property mond, Oregon. First eighteen (18) years $146,563.24 at the terest thereon at the tier subcontractor list old meeting the eligi- rate of 5.50000 per- trustee's sale In conis required to be sub- bility criteria stipu- cent per annum be- struing this notice, the lated by DCHS. mitted by 4:30 PM, includes the g inning August 1 , singular same day (Note: The p lural, t h e wor d 2013; plus prior acProposals due first tier subcontractor "grantor" includes any crued late charges of successor 5:00 pm, list may also be subin interest $ 127.32; plus a d - to the grantor March 13, 2015 mitted with the sealed as well vances of $1,183.00; as any other person bid a t c o n tractor's p lus e s crow a d REQUEST FOR p reference). Bid s an obligation, vances of $2,412.76; owing PROPOSAL shall be clearly lathe performance of plus fees of $53.00; beled: Redmond is secured by with title ex- which Public Works Trans- The Request for Pro- together trust deed, and pense, costs, trustee's the p osal may b e o b "trustee" portation B uilding and attorney's the words Sprinkler S y s tem tained from the Des- fees beneficiary" infees incurred herein and chutes County clude their respective Replacement Phase website at: by reason of said de- successors in interest, 1. http://www.deschutes. fault; any further sums if any. Robinson Tait, advanced by the ben- P .S., Authorized t o No mandatory pre-bid org/rfp eficiary for the protec- sign on behalf of the meeting will be held. P r o posals tion of the above de- trustee, 710 Second N o bid will be a c - Sealed property and cepted by a general must be received by scribed Suite 710, Seits interest therein; Ave., contractor who is not M arch 13, 2015 a t attle, WA 98104. and prepayment on the plan holders 5 :00 PM, a t D e s - a lties/premiums, penif chutes County Health list. Services, Attn: Eliza- applicable. WHERE- Need help fixing stuff? n o tice is This is a Public Works beth Holden, 1340 FORE, given that the Call A Service Professional Contract and subject NW W a l l Str e et, hereby find the help you need. 9 7 7 0 1. undersigned trustee www.bendbulletin.com to the Oregon Bureau Bend, O R


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