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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75fII

THURSDAY january10, 201 3

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SPORTS• C1

HEALTH• D1

bendbulletln.com

TODAY'S READERBOARD

DESCHUTES

an

GadgetS —That smartphonecase?Itcould bemuch more. At the electronics show in Vegas, everything is getting a little "smarter."A3

ino

Hall of Fame —Bondsand Clemens aredenied, though Cooperstown is no stranger to

Ol

miscreants.C1andC4

ee

TreaSury —This signature could show up on dollar bills. No, really.A6

• Doors close on the only facility in the county to take in unwanted felines

By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

DiSCOVery —Howmuch do you know about your belly but-

Deschutes County commissioners want feedback on pro-

ton, "one of the last biological frontiers"?D2

posed changes for accessing property information online, they said Wednesday during a work session. Commissioners tentatively scheduled a public hearing for Jan. 23 to take comments on a proposal that would create a two-tiered system for the public to access property ownership, value, sales and tax information over the county's website. The proposal would create a limited basic version that would not permit searches of individual properties by the owners' names, and an enhanced versionforregistered users that would, along with access to other information. Currently, most of the information is available without a registration. Deschutes County Clerk Nancy Blankenship said the extra step of registering could appease residents who are concerned about how much information is publicly available. "It's how you serve it up," Blankenship said. "The information is public. It's how easily is it made available to balance issues of privacy." Commissioner Alan Unger wanted to know what, if anything, the county would do with the information provided by registered users. See Records/A4

Nlltff'ilOD —Five recipes for healthier eating in 2013.D1

ln entertainment news — The People's Choice

Awards provide a feast for

"The Hunger Games."D6

And a Wed exclusiveDecades after his death, a WWII soldier's tale is finally told.

bendbulletin.com/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

A financial service for folks fedLip with banks By Jenna Wortham

Photos by Joe Kiine i rhe Bulletin

Lynn Porter, a frequent volunteer, greets Dorie, a cat taken in from Jefferson County, at the Cat Rescue, Adoption & Foster Team (CRAFT) shelter facility near Tumalo on Wednesday afternoon. The shelter took in 16 cats from Jefferson County after the Humane Society there recently closed its doors. AT TOP: Mindy, a Jefferson County cat, at CRAFT.

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

The Humane Society of Jefferson County found no reason to celebrate New Year's Eve last week. That's because after years of running on meager donations, the nonprofit cat-care

This winter, illnessesget

New York Times News Service

Like many people, Josh Reich got fed up with his bank after it charged him overdraft fees and he endured painful customer service calls to fight them. But unlike most people, Reich, a software engineer from Australia, decided to come up with a better way to bank. Reich and a co-founder, Shamir Karkal, created Simple, an online banking startup based in Portland that offers its customers free checking accounts and data-rich analyses of their transactions and spending habits. Few entrepreneurs dare to set their sights on industries as large and entrenched as banking and expect to flourish. But Reich, 34, a professed data nerd who has built computers and tinkered with the innards of sophisticated cameras, holds a master's degree in business and has a robust background in financial data analysis. He is confident that Simple's minimalist approach — it promises not to charge any fees for any services — will draw fans and customers. "Banks make money by keeping customers confused," Reich said. "There's no incentives to make the experience better." See Banking /A4

organization decided to permanently close its doors the last day of 2012. "I've been discouraged with people's attitudes," said Glennis Fellas, the Humane Society president. "I really don't know. It's strange that people don't want to take care of cats. I don't

past flLI shots

know why it's more geared toward taking care of dogs." The organization, which cared just for cats, cited a lack of funding, lack of volunteers and volunteer health issues as the main reasons for shutting down its operation. The remaining felines at the society were adopted out. Run as a nonprofit out of Fellas' home just west of Madras, the Humane Society's sole purpose was to care for unwanted and stray cats, connect them with spay and neuter services and adopt them out. The society would spay and neuter about 150 cats a year and providetemporary foster care for up to 10 cats at a time. The organization was run by five elderly volunteers and was operated entirely through private donations and volunteer efforts.

TODAY'S WEATHER Sporadic snow High 30, Low 16

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Lucas, a Jefferson County cat, looks out the window at the CRAFT facility near Tumalo. Fellas, 69, said she's attended several Jefferson County and Madras City Council meetings over the years to plead for funding given the dire outlook for the Humane Society, but that her requests were always denied.

The society filled a niche in Jefferson County that the Jefferson County Kennels, the animal shelter operated by the Jefferson County Public Works Department in southeast Madras, doesn't. The small indoor kennel takes only

dogs, and officials with the facility say they have no room for felines. "There's just a lack of funding and a lack of space," said Renee Davidson, a dog control officer with the kennel. "We're operating out of an old building. We're doing what we can." The Jefferson County Kennels receives $130,000 in county funding each year to support staff and care for unwanted and stray dogs. Davidson said the small office has only nine dog kennels and employs just two people. Jefferson County Commissioner Wayne Fording said the county had no money availableand turned down Fellas' requests to fund her cat care organization. See Cats/A4

New York Times News Service

It is not your imagination — more people you know are sick this winter, even people who have had flu shots. The country is in the grip of three emerging flu or flulike epidemics: an early start to the annual flu season with an unusually aggressive virus; a surge in a new type of norovirus; and the worst whooping cough outbreak in 60 years — all against the backdrop of the normal winter highs for the many virusesthat cause symptoms on the "colds and flu" spectrum. Influenza is widespread and causing local crises. On Wednesday, Boston's mayor declareda public health emergency as cases flooded hospital emergency rooms. See Flu /A6

The Bulletin

INDEX 01-5 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 S o Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al & StateB1-6 Tv/Movies

By Donald G. McNeil Jr. and Katharine Q. Seelye

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol.110, No. 10 30 pages, 5 sections

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

: IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329


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ity defense and said they might The Associated Press present testimony about the deCENTENNIAL, Colo. — The fendant's mental health — dephotos were chilling and enig- cided not to call any witnesses. matic, just like their subject. A judge is due to rule by FriIn the pictures, taken on his day whether prosecutors preiPhone hours before the Auro- sentedenough evidence to jusra movietheater massacre, ac- tify Holmes standing trial for cused gunman James Holmes more than 160 felony counts mugs for the camera, sticks stemming from the July 20 atout his tongue and smiles as tack, which killed 12 people he holds a Glock under his face and injured 70. Holmes, 25, and displays his arsenal armay enter a formal plea that rayed on his bed. day. Prosecutors who displayed The three-day hearing octhe pictures at a hearing that curred as the nation still reended W ednesday a r gued covers from the shock of last the p hotos d i splay " i den- month's shooting at a C o ntity, deliberation and extreme necticut elementary s chool indifference." that killed 20 children and six Holmes' attorneys — who adults. It wrapped up just as have been setting up an insan- the Colorado Legislature be-

gan its session and pledged to tackle gun violence, and Vice President Joe Biden met with families of victims as part of the White House's own gun control push. Prosecutors presented the most detailed description of the attack and Holmes' alleged months of p r eparation. But they never addressed the mystery of why Holmes opened fire six weeks after leaving a neuroscience graduate program. Legal experts say evidence against Holmes is so strong that the case may end in a plea deal. That would make the hearing the only detailed presentation of the evidence that victims, their families and the public will hear.

Wednesday wouldbeanironcladbanonassaultweaponsandlargecapacit ymagazinesandnew measurestokeepgunsoutofthehandsof criminals and the mentally ill.

Syria conflict —Syria rebels freed 48Iranians onWednesday in exchange for more than 2,000 prisoners, including women and children, held by Syrian authorities — a deal struckafter rare negotiations

involving regional powersTurkey,Qatar andIran. It wasthe first major prisoner swapsince the uprising began against President BasharAssad nearly 22 months ago.

Ferry mishap —A high-speed ferry loaded with hundreds of commuters from New Jersey crashed into a dock in lower Manhattan on

Wednesdayduring the morning rushhour,seriously injuring 11people, including one who suffered a severe head wound falling down a stairwell.

Vialent death —The United States suffers far more violentdeaths than any other wealthy nation, due in part to the widespread possession

of firearms andthe practice of storing them athomein a place that is often unlocked, according to a report released Wednesday by two of the nation's leading health research institutions.

WikiLeakS CaSe —Military prosecutors preparing to try Pfc. Bradley Manning said Wednesday that they would introduce evidence that

Osama binLadenrequested andreceived from anal-Qaida member some of the State Department cables and military reports that Manning

ZORBING MISHAP KILLS 1 IN RUSSIA

is accused ofpassing toWikiLeaks. Gay marriage —The Washington National Cathedral, the nation's traditional host of prayer services for presidents and memorial services

for national tragedies, announcedWednesdaythat it will now also hold weddings forsame-sexcouples.

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InauguratiOn paStOr —The pastor whom President Barack Obama has chosen to deliver the benediction at his inauguration this month delivered a sermon in the 1990s in which he called on fellow Christians

'•

to fight the "aggressiveagenda" of thegay rights movement andadvocated "the healing power ofJesus" as "the only wayout of ahomo-

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sexual lifestyle." Think Progress, a liberal blog affiliated with the Center

for American ProgressAction Fund, reportedWednesdayafternoon on

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the sermon delivered by the Rev. Louie Giglio, an Atlanta minister.

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China neWSpaper —Propagandaofficials in the southern province of Guangdonghaveagreed to loosen somecontrols over an embattled newspaperwhosestruggle against censorship has galvanized free-speech advocatesacross China, according to journalists at the newspaper. AuStrBIIB WlldflfBS —Bushfires raging across someof the most populous parts of Australia — feeding off drought conditions and high winds — pushed firefighters to their limits Wednesday as meteorologists

tracked thecountry's hottest spring andsummer on record into uncharted territory.

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He pledgedthat action would betaken.

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groups and gun-safety organizations as he drafts the Obama administration's response to the shooting at a Connecticut elementary school.

NeW YOrk guII COntrOI —NewYork state is nearing agreement on a proposal to putwhat would besome ofthe nation's strictest gun-

541 -382-1811 By Dan Elliott

NatiOnal gulI COntrOI —Vice President Joe BidenonWednesday heard personal stories of gun violence from representatives of victims

— From wire reports

Familyphoto via The Associated Press

Aframe grabfrom avideo shows Denis BurakovandVladimir Shcherbakov about to roll downhill in a zorb — a giant, transparent plastic ball — at the

Dombai ski resort in therugged CaucasusMountains of southern Russia. The zorb bouncedoff its intended pathandover arocky ledge before disappearing down agorge below Mount Mussa-Achitara. The Emergencies Ministry said both men were ejected from the zorb as it

CORRECTIONS

tumbled andthey landed onthe snowabout 30 feet apart after having rolled

The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you know ofan error in a story, call us at 541-383-0358.

about a mile. Burakov suffered serious spinal injuries and died on the way to the hospital. Shcherbakov suffered a concussion and other injuries and

remains hospitalized.

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Fact check: Whatexactly is Clinton's travel record? By Glenn Kessler

Christopher 34 times and Henry Kissinger 36 times. "Mrs. Clinton holds the reNow that the State Departcord for the most countries menthasannouncedthat Clinton visited by a secretary of state, will no longer travel during her 112, though her total of 956,733 tenure, we thought it would be air miles will fall short of the worth updating the statistics to 1.06 million logged by her pre- see whereshe ranks in terms of decessor, Condoleezza Rice." what we call "days on the road" — New York Times, Jan. 4, — in other words, conducting ac2013 tual diplomacy and meeting with The New York Times came foreign officials overseas. up with a nifty phrase earlier Under this method, we igthis week in an article about nore the often-useless hours (or Secretary of State Hillary Clin- days) spent in the air flying to ton's health — that she is the far-flung locations. "most widely traveled" secreIn double-checking the retary of state. That refers to the cords, there was one surprise fact that she has visited more — the most traveled secretary countries than any previous of state turns out to be George secretary of state. Shultz, largely because he I'm as guilty as anyone in us- servedformore than six years. ing travel as a metric for gradCondoleezza Rice certainly ing a secretary of state, having wins the prize for a four-year vvitten an article as The Post's term, but Kissinger (who served diplomatic correspondent that for only 39 months) probably negatively assessed Colin Pow- would have bested everyone if ell's travel record as secretary he had justbeen able to serve of state, based on records main- for full 48 months. tained by the State Department Secretary of state travel (enhistorian's office. gaged in diplomacyoverseas) Counting countries is another George Shultz*"': 357 days way to do it, though it might Condoleezza Rice: 326 days also suggest the secretary lacks Henry Kissinger"": 313 days a clear focus or agenda. The Madeleine Albright: 310 days records show that most other Hillary Clinton: 306 days secretaries racked up the miles James Baker: 283 days while trying to achieve peace in Warren C hristopher: 270 the Middle East. Clinton earned days her country points by hitting all Colin Powell: 220 days three Baltic states, lots of 'stans, Cyrus Vance*: 186 days "'less than a four-year term much of the former Yugoslavia '"more than a four-year term and countriesnotvisitedbyasecretary of state in more than five Clinton, of c ourse, might decades (Laos) or ever (Togo). have done better in the rankBut Clinton made only five ings if she had not broken her visits to Israel — the least of any elbow in 2009, which kept her full-term secretary of state since from traveling for a few weeks, William Rogers, who served or suffered a concussion rein the Nixon administration. cently. Still, cracking into the By contrast, Condoleezza Rice 300-day club ought to count for visited Israel 25 times, Warren something. The Washington Post

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It's Thursday, Jan.10, the10th day of 2013. There are 355 days left in the year.

CUTTING EDGE

A breakout year for 'body hacking'

HAPPENINGS AWardS —Nominations are announced for the Academy Awards, and the Critics' Choice Awards are held in Santa

Monica, Calif.

a esare e in 'smarer'

Adherents call this

"body hacking" or the "quantified self" movement, and at the Con-

sumer Electronics Show,

At the Consumer Electronics Show, a gadget's primary function isn't necessarily its selling point.

this year, it's getting quite

BOmb plOt —Jury selection begins in the trial of Mohamed

Sure, companies are still rolling out new washing machines. But can those washers communicate with

Mohamud, accused of plotting to detonate a car bomb during

a boost. A wireless armband tracks the calories

your TV'? Can your TV access the Internet'? This year, it's all about connectivity.

you burn and the length of time you sleep. A Wi-fi en-

Portland's 2010 Christmas tree

abled scale can check your

lighting ceremony.

body fat and heart rate.

By Andrea Chang TreaSury —President Barack

Los Angeles Times

Obama is expected to nominate White House chief of staff Jack

L AS VEGAS — A t t h i s y ear's I n t ernational C o n sumer Electronics Show, e verything is getting a b i t "smarter." Smartphonesusheredinthe notion that cellphones didn't have to be limited to just making calls, and tablets uprooted the definition of the personal computer. Now, the buzz at the world's largest tech gadget conference has shifted from the devices themselves to the

Lew to behis second-term Secretary of the Treasury.A6

HISTORY Highlight:In1863, the Lon-

don Underground had its beginnings as the Metropolitan, the world's first underground

passenger railway, opened to the public with service between Paddington and Far-

ringdon Street. In1776, Thomas Paine

anonymously published his influential pamphlet, "Com-

mon Sense," which argued for American independence from British rule. In 1860, the Pemberton Mill

in Lawrence, Mass., collapsed and caught fire, killing up to 145 people, mostly female

workers from Scotland and Ireland. In1861, Florida became the third state to secede from the Union. In1870, John D. Rockefeller incorporated Standard Oil. In 1901, the Spindletop oil field in Beaumont, Texas,

produced the Lucas Gusher, heralding the start of the

Texas oil boom. In1920, the League of Na-

tions was established as the Treaty of Versailles went into effect. In1946, the first General Assembly of the United Nations

convenedin London. In1947, the musical fantasy "Finian's Rainbow," with mu-

sic by Burton Lane and lyrics by E.Y. Harburg, opened on Broadway. In 1957, Harold Macmillan became prime minister of Britain, following the resignation of Anthony Eden.

In1962, an ice avalanche on Nevado Huascaran in Peru resulted in some 4,000

deaths. John W. McCormack became speaker of the House, succeeding the late Samuel Rayburn. In1971, "Masterpiece Theatre" premiered on PBS with host Alistair Cooke introduc-

The movement is hardly new, and plenty of apps have grown up around it already — Run-

Keeper, SleepCycle and MyFitnessPal come to mind. Since at least 2008,

developers have tinkered with ways to track users'

calories, menstrual cycles and even sex lives. But 2013 seems like a breakout yearforthe

[:-I-.-I

growing crop of accessories

Connectivity is one of the main reasons smartphones and tablets became blockbuster hits among consumers, and tech manufacturers want to bring that feature to other objects — many of them everyday, nondigital household items. So a smartphone case is no longer just about protecting your phone, a fork is not just an instrument for getting food into your mouth, and a wristwatch is about more than just a fashion statement to tell the time. "Things are better when they'reconnected," said Chris Penrose, senior vice president of emerging devices at AT8T Inc. "They're smart wh en they're c o nnected, t h ey're dumb when they're not." LG Electronics Inc. on Monday rolled out a line of smart appliances that can connect to and be controlled by users' smartphones or smart televisions. The smart appliances i nclude a r e f r i gerator, a n oven, a vacuum robot and a washer. For example, a smart TV can be used to pause a

Consider BodyMedia's

withdrew from a global treaty barring it from making nuclear

facturers vie to dominate the

market for gadgets controlled via the Internet. Android-based products

ranging from RoyalPhilips Elec-

weapons. Five years ago:The United States lodged a formal diplo-

tronics's PicoPix pocket projector and LG Electronics's Smart

matic protest with lran over an incident in which lranian

Asteroid car stereo systems and

speedboats harassed U.S. warships in the Persian Gulf.

One year ago:Former Mas-

Thinq refrigerators to Parrot's

Jae C. Hong/The AssociatedPress

Newt Gingrich and Rick San-

ness andone-upsoftware rivals

torum trailing.

BIRTHDAYS Blues artist Eddy Clearwater is 78. Baseball Hall-of-Famer Willie McCovey is 75. Movie director Walter Hill is 73. Singer Frank Sinatra Jr. is 69.

Singer Rod Stewart is 68. Rock singer-musician Donald

Fagen (Steely Dan) is 65. Actor William Sanderson is 65. Boxing Hall of Famer and

entrepreneur GeorgeForeman is 64. Singer Pat Benatar is 60. Hall of Fame race car driver and team owner Bobby Rahal

is 60. Singer ShawnColvin is 57. — From wire reports

Microsoft and Apple. Android

also is aneasyto-use-platform that helps appliance makers like Samsung and Philips add

product featuresand benefit from demand for Internet-connected devices — a market IDC

predicts will reachmorethan $2 trillion in 2015. "Android is sitting pretty in

this space totake moreshare from the incumbents," said IDC analyst Al Hilwa. "The funda-

mental advantagewith Android is that the vendor can take a bigger chunk of the software

and own it." Since the first Android-based

phones went onsale in 2008, devices based onthe mobile operating systemhavesurged in popularity. Smartphones

not just weight and body fat, as older models did, but also heart rate, ambi-

ent temperature and C02 levels. And Fitbug, one of the earlier health-tracking

devices on the market, now comes as part of an interconnected suite: calorie-counter, blood pressure monitor and scale, all sending their data to the

same apps.

During a media briefing

If that seems like overkill, just wait — it's

Sunday, the Consumer Electronics A ssociation, w h ich

only the beginning. A Boston-based company recently developed postage stamp-sized body

runs CES, said global spending on consumer electronic devices is projected to hit $1.1 trillion in 2013, with tablets and smartphones accounting for 40 percent of that tally. That sum would represent about 4 percent growth from 2012 andreflecta turnaround of sorts from last year, when spending unexpectedly fell about I p ercent, said Steve K oenig, senior d i rector o f market research for CEA.

sensors for monitoring hydration, insulin levels

and sun exposure. And the Japanese smart toilet

can analyze blood sugar and BMI, among other things. — Caitlin Dewey, The Washington Post

with less human intervention. Atelevision, for example, might

show a pop-upmessagefrom a clothes dryer in the basement, indicating that the homeowner's

jeans arenot yet dry. Theuser could press a button on the TV remote to automatically add

being usedand setcooking

primary; Ron Paul finished second,with Jon Huntsman,

cluding skin temperature, heat flux and motion. Not to be outdone, the new Smart Body Analyzer from Withings will measure

these features doesn't mean we should, because many consumers are confused by the poor user experience provided," he said. People are used to passively interacting with their products, so "the key challenge is to educate t he consumer on w hat t h e benefits are." The show officially began Tuesday, with about 3,200 exhibitors displaying their latest gadgets and gizmos in 1.9 million square feet of exhibition space at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Inc. Building Android directly into devices canmakeit easier for electronic equipmentand appliances to exchangeinformation

at the Consumer Electronics Show. let Google collect more data to build its lucrative search busi-

fitted with sensors that track how often they're placed inside someone's mouth. Too many lip trips in too short a time span — say, three in a minute — causes the handle of the fork or spoon to gently pulsate. Users can program the devices to buzz at a personalized pace. "You can be told to eat slowly, but you usually forget," inventor Jacques Lepine said. "This way, your mind doesn't have to do the work." Even information placards at museums are getting a digital boost, with 3M showing off an air-hockey-table-sized t ouch-screen table that w i l l enable museum-goers to have a more interactive experience with art and science exhibits. The irony, though, is that as products become packed with more features and can connect to one another and to the Internet, they often become more confusing to consumers, said Scott Steinberg, an innovation consultant at TechSavvy andlongtime CES attendee. "Just because we can add

third quarter, while Applehad14

15 minutes to thedryer cycle. A connected ricecooker could

won the NewHampshire

CES, which claims to collect more than 5,000

data points a minute, in-

Samsung Electronics's Galaxy Camera are ondisplay this week Extending its freeoperating system to newdevices could

sachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney

CORE 2armband, premiered shortly before

Show attendees look at an installation made with smart TVs at the Samsung booth at the International Consumer ElectronicsShow inLas Vegas on Tuesday.

percent, according to Gartner

phone operating system, is making the leapto ricecookers and refrigerators asmanu-

more metrics with more

accuracy than ever before.

sides of the iPhone. "At any given time, statistically speaking, the thumbs and f i ngers a r e c o v ering about 25 percent to 33 percent of the screen," said Ian Spinelli, a marketing coordinator at Canopy Co. in Minneapolis, w h ic h m a n ufactures the Sensus case. "When you're covering the screen, especially with g ames and other things, you can't see what's going on." The case snaps on to the phone, and users can play games by touching the back of thecase and scrollthrough text by sliding a finger down the side of the case. Instead of awkwardly p ressing on the glass surface of the touch screen to snap a photo, users can press on the side, much washing cycle. like they would with a digital Another p r oduct g etting camera. an upgrade i s t h e s m artAnother s ensor-equipped phone case. The new Sensus item is the "smart electronic" iPhone case, a plastic cover- Hapifork, designed to vibrate ing no bulkier than a typical in diners' hands when they protectivesmartphone case, chow too q u i ckly. Creator incorporates a processor and Hapilabs has also made a sensors that add touch-screen similar spoon. sensitivity to th e back and The tech-filled utensils are

the most widely used smart-

advances and the growing ubiquity of smartphones, consumers can now track

F.

Google's Android software,

century. Ten years ago:North Korea

lead a CESpanel on digital • I

ion designer CocoChanel died in Paris at age 87. full diplomatic relations for the first time in more than a

'fil

popularity.

First Churchills." French fash-

and the Vatican established

cording to people like Arianna Huffington, who will health. Thanks to tech

running the software held 72 percent of the market in the

In1984, the United States

movement, at least ac-

at

and technologies that are piggybacking on their massive

Android powering many'smart'devices

ing the drama series "The

),

determine what type of rice is instructions accordingly.

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

Records Continued from A1 "I'm curious how big brotherish we're getting," he said during the discussion. The proposed policy coincides with the retooling of the online applications — making all property information available through one Web page, rather than via multiple pages, as it is now, said Bob Haas, GIS program developer and coordinator for the county. It will also be accessible over multiple platforms. Although th e a p plication will have the ability to track users, that is not the intent, and monitoring won't occur without a policy to do so, he sa>d. But for meeting attendee Brian Larson, the idea ofregistering to view public information is an invasion of privacy. "It's like Facebook. If you're not selling or using information, why do you need it?" he said. "If you don't need the information, why are you gathering it? "For 10 years we've been using (DIAL) without giving our names." Larson said the ability to track who's viewing the information and how often could lead to future charges for the service or the disclosure of that information. "It's none of their business," he said. While some Oregon countiescharge for online access to property information, Haas said, that isn't the intent of Deschutes County's proposal. C ommissioner Tamm y Baney said she wasn't convinced registration is neces-

Cats Continued from A1 "It's not that it's not a good program," Fording said. "But we're just trying to preserve the services we've got now. It's not like we're getting any more revenue in. It just comes down to dollars and cents." Fording said the countyrun k e nnels h av e b a r ely stayed afloatover the years. He said feral and stray cats are a problem in Madras, but the county is unable to fund a cat care program, no matter how deserving. "If we had resources, we w ould most l i k ely d o i t , " Fording said. "There's definitely a cat issue, but figuring out how to handle it isn't always so easy." J efferson C o unt y C o m missioner Mike Ahern said in an email that he proposed the county help expand optionsfor cat care in Jefferson County last year, but that the proposal lost out in the bud-

Banking

To comment

Continued from A1 Of course, inviting people to trust a startup with their money is a lot to ask. The

To comment on a Deschutes County

proposal for accessing property records online:

board©deschutes.org.

sary. At first, she said, she understood why the county would want to require someone to registerbefore being able to search for an individual property owner by name. "But (now) I don't know that the argument is compelling enough at that because you could go to w hitepages.com

(and) get the name. There's so many easy ways to do that," she said.

"So, we're just asking peo-

ple essentially to take an extra step to get to where they need to go, when they're going to get there anyway, and it's public." For Bend resident Bob Hammond, the idea of registering doesn't make a d i f f erence. He attended the work session Wednesday to ensure he'd still have access to all the information he needed. The same information will be available, he said, it will simply be easier to access. " There's r e all y no t h i ng new here," Hammond said.

"I figured they wanted (a registration) because they were getting set to charge ... but it doesn't appear that that's the case."

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbtdletinicom

Jefferson County tocare for them. "I d on't k n o w wha t ' l l happen now," Fellas said. "The poor cats don't have a chance." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mlzehoe@bendbulletin.com

ing up customers late last year in a deliberately slow fashion, now has 20,000 and has processed transactions worth more than $200 million. It also has the backing of prominent v enture c apital firms including Shasta Ventures, SV Angel and IA Ventures and has raised more than $13 million. Simple has few, if any, direct competitors,although some services like SmartyPig and Mint offer analyses of bank accounts and financial transactions. Simple is actually not a bank. It has deals with CBW Bank and Bancorp, federally insured banks, to hold its customers' money. And it has built slick apps for the Web and mobile devices to give customers an overview of t heir accounts and transactions. But it encourages customers to treat it as a bank, closing their more traditional accounts and only using Simple.

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Shamir Karkal, left, and Josh Reich, founders of the online banking startup Simple, work at the company's offices in Portland. Simple offers its customers free checking accounts and data-heavy analysis of their transactions and spending habits. n or does it p la n t o b u i l d any. As a result, Simple customers cannot make cash deposits and must rely on the Internet and phone for service. Simple tries to make up for what it does not have with modern software design and data analysis. Each Simple transaction is tagged with detailed information that allows customers to search their accounts with plain E n g lish c o m mands like "Show me how much I spent on meals over $30 last month," or "Show me how much money I spent on gifts in December." Customers can see transactions plotted on a map or search for all transactions in a particular state or country, something that would be difficult with a traditional bank account. "Banks throw out a lot of data," Reich said. "There are 80 fields of data per transaction, and banks only show you a few: the dollar amount, the place and the date. We can use much more than that to let people have real-time fi-

creativepeople, Reich asked how many in attendance were Simple customers. A majority of the crowd raised hands. R eich said S i mple w a s k eeping its f i rst g r oup o f customers small to allow it The company's biggest to work out any kinks. (Alchallenge, banking analysts ready there have been some say, will be to persuade peo- flaws, like one that briefly ple to give it a try. locked severalusers out of "It is extremely difficult to their accounts in November.) get consumers to change and At this stage, those who want leave their banks," said Jacob a Simple account have to reJegher, an analyst at Celent, a quest an invitation on its site, research and consulting firm. though these are handed out "Plus, although they are not a fairly liberally to those who bank, they still operate like a meet the minimal qualificafinancial institution, and they tions of Simple and its bank will face challenges that big partners. banks have decades of expeCustomers receive a plain rience with." white card that can be used After the financial crisis, like a debit card. The comsmaller community b a n k s pany offers most traditional and credit unions gained cus- banking features, like direct tomers eager for alternatives deposit and money transfers. to larger corporate banks. Ex- But there is plenty it does not perts say Simple could attract offer, like joint or business those customers as well. checking accounts, or paper Early adopters are warm- checkbooks, which may be a ing to the service; during a deal killer for some. speech last fall at a conferThe startup does not have ence aimed at t e chnology physical bank branches or enthusiasts, designers and automated teller machines, •

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can helppeople learn more about their physical activity and how many hours a night they sleep, Simple hopes to offer insights into spending behavior. Simple will have to expand to survive. It makes money by earning interest on the cash it carriesand from interchange fees, which it gets from each swipe of the card. It will re-

quire a large enough base of deposits and customers to cover its costs. And there is always the risk that Simple's greatest advantage — its data tools

— could be copied by competitors. Jegher, the Celent analyst, said, "Can they get to critical mass before banks catch up with their own digital tools to offer a competing experience?"

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geting process. Bonnie Baker, the founder and executive director of the Cat Rescue, Adoption 8 Foster Team (CRAFT) in Bend, saidthere are more laws and policies regarding care facilitiesfor canines because stray dogs pose a safety threat to the public that stray cats generally don't. "Cats are an afterthought in the state statutes," Baker said. "They get the short of end of the stick here. Nobody wants to deal with them." B aker had w o r ked w i t h the Humane Society of Jefferson County and the county animal control division since 2009, when Sandra Ballard, a Madras woman who was associated with the Humane Society of Jefferson County for a brief time, relinquished 147 cats that she had been keeping in her Madras home to the authorities. Since taking in several of those cats, CRAFT has been absorbing straysfrom Jefferson County into its facility. "The problem with county-run shelters is that when money gets tight, it's one of the first things that gets cut back," Ballard said. W ith th e c l osure of t h e Humane Society of J e fferson County, unwanted and stray cats in the county will be dispersed throughout the region. Some will be taken in by C R A FT, o r s h uffled t o nearby shelters like t h e Redmond Humane Society. Some may possibly go to the Portland H u mane S ociety, though there will no longer be any concentrated effort in

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

Flu

IN FOCUS: THE WHITE HOUSE

Obama taps Lew to lead Treasury

Continued from A1 G oogle's national f l u trend maps, which track flu-related searches, are almost solid red (for "intense activity"), and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's weekly F luView maps, which track confirmed cases, are nearly solid brown (for "widespread activity"). "Yesterday, I saw a cons truction w orker, a b i g strong guy in his Carhartts who looked like he could fall off a roof without noticing it," said Dr. Beth Zee-

Nationally, deaths and h ospitalizations ar e s t i l l below epidemic thresholds. But experts do not expect that to remain true. Pneumonia usually shows up in national statistics only a week or two after emergency rooms report surges in cases, and deaths start rising a week or two after that, said Dr. Gregory Poland, a vaccine specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. T he p r edominant f l u s train circulating i s a n H3N2, w h ic h ty p i cally kills more people than the H1N1 strains that usually predominate; the relatively lethal 2003-4 "Fujian flu" season was o v erwhelmingly H3N2. No cases have been resistant to Tamiflu, which c an ease s y mptoms i f taken within 48 hours, and this year's flu shot is wellmatched to the H3N2 strain, the CDC said. Flu shots are i mperfect, especially i n the elderly, whose immune systems may not be strong enough to produce enough antibodies. Simultaneously, t he

Pete Souza/ The White House via New York Trmes News Service

ama's inner circ 00 , SO Bi'

country is seeing a large and early outbreak of norovirus, the "cruise ship flu" or "stomach flu," said Dr. Aron Hall of the CDC's viral gast r o enterology branch. It includes a new strain, which first appeared in Australia and is known as the Sydney 2012 variant. This w e ek , Mai n e 's h ealth d epartment s a i d that state was seeing a large spike in cases. Cities across Canada reported norovirus o u tbreaks so serious that hospitals were shutting down whole wards for disinfection because patients were being infected after moving into the rooms of those who had just recovered. The classic symptoms of norovirus are "explosive" diarrhea and " projectile" vomiting, which can send infectious particles flying

yards away. "I also saw a woman I'm sure had norovirus," Zeeman said. "She said she'd gone to the bathroom 14 times at home and four times since she came into the ER. You can get dehydrated really quickly that

way."

T his month, the C D C said the United States was having its biggest outbreak

of whooping cough, or pertussis, in 60 years; there were about 42,000 confirmed cases, the highest total since 1955. The disease is unrelated to flu but causes a hacking, constant cough and breathlessness. While it i s u npleasant, adults almost always survive; the greatest danger is to i n f ants, especially premature ones with undeveloped lungs. Of the 18 recorded deaths in 2012, all but three were of infants

under age 1. That outbreak is worst in cold-weather states, including Colorado, Washington, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Vermont.

By Annie Lowrey

speculation about the chief of staff position now rests on DeW ASHINGTON — I n a n nis McDonough, the deputy Oval Office meeting on Dec. national security adviser, and 29, 11 of P resident Barack Ronald Klain, a former chief Obama's top advisers stood of staff to Vice President Joe before hi m d i s cussing t he Biden. For the Treasury posiheated fiscal negotiations. The tion, most expect Obama to 10 visible in a White House name his current chief of staff, photo are men. Jacob Lew. " It's not s o much about In the days since, Obama has put together a national checking a box, like on a censecurity team dominated by sus form,"said Tracy Sefl,a men, with Sen. John Kerry of Democratic political consulMassachusetts nominated to tant in Washington. "It's about replace Hillary Clinton as the the qualitative properties that secretary of state, Chuck Ha- the candidate takes to the pogel chosen tobe the defense sition. In this case you're talksecretary and John Brennan ing about tremendous women, nominated as t h e d i r ector and then we get a whole bunch of the CIA. Today, Obama is more white guys." expected to nominate White The candidate 'pipeline' House chief of staff Jack Lew to be hissecond-term SecreInterviews w i t h c u r r ent tary of the Treasury. Given and former members of the the leading contenders for administration, both men and other top jobs, including chief women, suggested that there of staff, Obama's inner circle was no single reason for the will continue to be dominated gender discrepancy in adminby men well into his second istration appointments, and term. several repeatedly spoke of From th e W h i t e H o u se the administration's internal down the ranks, the Obama commitment to diversity and administration has compiled a gender equity. broad appointment record that But several said that the has significantly exceeded the "pipeline" of candidates apB ush administration in a p - peared to be one problem. They pointing women but has done said it seemed that more men no better than the Clinton ad- than women were put forward ministration, according to an or put their names forward analysis of personnel data by for jobs. In part, that might be The New York Times. About a result of the persistence of 43 percent of Obama's appoin- historical discrepancies: men tees have been women, about have traditionally dominated the same proportion as in the government fields like finance, Clinton administration, but up security and defense. from the roughly one-third apThe Obama administration pointed by George W. Bush. has helpedreverse that trend The skew was widespread: by putting women in top polim ale ap p o intees u nd e r Obama outnumbered female appointees at 11 of the 15 federal departments, for instance. In some cases, the skew was also deep. At the Departments of Justice, Defense, Veterans Affairs and Energy, male appointees outnumbered female appointees by about 2-to-l. "We're not only getting better than p r evious administrations, but we also want to get better ourselves as well," Nancy Hogan, assistant to the president and director of presidential personnel, said in response to the Times analysis. "The president puts a premium on making his team representative of the American people." The White House itself employs almost exactly the same number of men and women, andadministrationofficials said they hoped to even out the ratio across the government and help ensure that future Democratic administrations have a diverse and deep bench of candidates for high-level jobs. New York Times News Service

Representation at the top But Obama's recent nominations raised concern that women were being underrepresented at the highest level of government and would be passed overfortop positions. For instance, many Democrats had hoped that Obama would name Michele Flournoy, a former undersecretary of defense, to the Pentagon post. They had also hoped that he might name Alyssa Mastromonaco or Nancy-Ann DeParle, who are top White House aides, to the chief of staff job, or Lael Brainard, an undersecretary at the Treasury Department, as secretary. But

The Washington Post

spending sparingly so as to

preservefunding fordomestic priorities such as education. Republicans oppose new taxes, saying they would crimp economic growth, and favor deep cuts to spending. Lew, 57, is a veteran of these fights. He was formerly the budget director for Obama and President Bill Clinton. He has been negotiating c o m promises over taxes and spending budget wars. ing since the 1980s, when he Obama chose Lew totake was a top aide to then-House over from Treasury Secre- Speaker T h o m as "Tip" tary Timothy Geithner, the O'Neill Jr., D-Mass. "Jack Lew is a great budget president's l o ngest-serving economic adviser, according man taking over Treasury at to two people familiar with exactly the moment that budthe pick. The selection of Lew get and tax issues have besignals that Obama's second come the dominant economic term will not initially focus on issue in Washington," said big new ideas to create jobs or Austan Goolsbee, a former expand government invest- chairman of Obama's Counment in the economy. cil of Economic Advisers. Rather, it will i nvolve a Some Democrats say that sustained conflict with con- although Lew may be the gressionalRepublicans over best choice at the moment, the the nation's finances. The White House must address government is likely to face unemployment and keep a deadline to raise the $16.4 pushingfor measures to cretrillion federal debt ceiling ate jobs. "Jack Lew is the guy you'd no later than March 1 — as well as a series of deep and want thereforupcomingfiscal a utomatic s pending c u t s deals, but it's also very imporknown as sequestration set tant to have folks on the team to begin around the same who will push the Keynestime. ian, or jobs, imperative from These upcoming battles the inside, even if that means will once again pit Democrats' a temporarily larger budget economic vision against that deficit," said Jared Bernstein, of Republicans. Democrats a former White House ecosay they want to raise taxes nomic adviser.

President Barack Obama meets with senior advisers during the fiscal negotiations in the Oval Office of the White House last month. Though Obama has exceeded the Bush administration in appointing women, male appointees under Obama outnumber female appointees at11 of the15 federal departments.

Not an epidemic ... yet

on the wealthy to shrink the deficit but reduce government

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama recently said he would love to hire a top executive into his administration. But for the job of Treasury secretary, he didn't pick a corporate executive, a famous economist or a former politician — he tapped his trusted adviser, White House Chief of Staff Jacob Lew, an expert L e w on the nation's ongo-

man, an emergency room doctorfor MetroWest Medical Center i n F r a mingham, just outside Boston. "He was in a fetal position with fever and chills, like a wet rag. When I see one of those cases, I just tighten up my mask a little." Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston started asking visitors with even mild cold symptoms to wear masks and to avoid maternity wards. The hospital has treated 532 confirmed influenza patients this season and admitted 167, even more than it did by this date during the 2009-10 swine flu pandemic.

By Zachary A. Goldfarb, Jim Tankersley and Chris Cillizza

cymaking jobs in t r aditionally male-dominated fields, officials said. "It makes a huge d ifference when yo u h a v e women who are leaders," said Celeste Wallander, who was a deputy assistantdefense secretary until July. "They tend to have networks of excellent w omen theycan callon."

In many areas of government, the Obama administration has brought the gender ratio much closer to even than the Bush administration. At the T r easury D e p artment, which ha s a l o n gstanding reputation as a b o ys' club, men made upabout 57 percent of appointees, down from 64 percent during the Bush administration as of 2008 and 60 percent in the Clinton administrationas of2000.Moreover, women now hold some of the

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The Associated Press

Treasury Department, including Brainard, the country's top financial diplomat, and Mary Miller, the undersecretary for domestic finance. But experts on the representation of women in government and business said that the White House had more work to do to ensure that women were more equally repre-

WASHINGTON — J ack Lew's nomination for treasury secretary means a new signature could soon be coming to the dollar bill. Not that you'll be able to read it. Lew's signature starts off p romising enough, with a soft "J." But what follows are seven loopy scribbles, rendering his signature illegible.

sented, including changing the work conditions within the administration. "It is not just a pipeline issue," said Marie Wilson, a women's leadership advocate who is the founder of the White House Project, a New York-based nonprofit group. "The pipeline in government has loads of talented people in it, and loads of talented women."

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bendbroadband.com/threefer : .541.312.7219

bendbroadband" we're the local dog. we better be good.

Thts two-year offer expires 2/28/2013 and ts available to new or eesttng sthgte serwce residential customers m BendBroadhand's wired service area who add an adCkttonal two services (vtdeo, Internet or unhmtted home phone) Customers must subscnbe to Essentials TV, Bronze Internet, Unhmtted phone servtce, and Showttme to recetve this offer If servtce ts cancelled or downgraded durtng the 2-year promohOnal penod, regular charges apply for aii remaining services and equipment Offer includes free installation of TV (one set-top hox). phone serwce and Intemet, valued at S9450 Customer wtllhe responsible for payment of installation fees if servtce ts cancelled dunng the hrst stx months Taxes and fees are set hy the FCC and other government agencies andmay change on a quarterly basis Unttmtted phone apphes to calls tn the continental U S only, and excludes Hawaa Alaska. U S Temtortes & international calls Other resthcttons may apply


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

STATE NEWS

www.bendbulletin.comilocal

Portland Salem

Ashland Klamath Falls

By Andrew Clevenger

Wildhorseanddurropopulations

The Bulletin

More than 37,000 wild horses andburros are estimated to • Portland:National

Transportation Safety Board investigators

be roaming on Bureau of Land Management rangejands in

10 Western states. This exceeds the maximumappropriate management level (AML) of 26,545 asdetermined bythe BLM.

have been sentto Peru to investigate the

State

crash of an Oregon company's helicopter.

Arizona

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C alifornia

:

Colorado

:

• Salem:State fair may

get new management. • Klamath Falls:Giant boulder smashes into

house. • Ashland:NewOregon Shakespeare Festival Executive Director Cynthia Rider is no stranger to the stage.

Horses Burros : Total

Idaho Montana

Nevada Oregon

Utah/

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1,96 5::

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WASHINGTON — Last week, the Bureau of Land Management altered its rules for buying wild horses and burros by limiting each buyer to a maximum of four animals per six-month period. The changes come following media reports that since 2008, a single buyer in Colorado has purchased more than 1,700 wild horses from the BLM — almost 70 percent of all horses sold by the agency during that period. The buyer, Tom Davis of La Jara, Colo., cannot account for the whereabouts of all those horses, many of which are suspected to have been sold to Mexican slaughterhouses, according to a joint investigation by Propublica and the Colorado Springs Gazette.

"(The revised policy) marks

another step forward in our agency's steady improvement in ensuring the health and humane treatment of wild horses and burros, both on and off the range," said BLM Acting Director Mike Pool in a preparedstatement. According to BLM estimates, 31,500 wild horses and 5,800 burros live on public lands overseen by the agency in the West. This is about 11,000 more than the total the lands can support. In Oregon, the BLM estimates there are 2,093 wild horses and 35 burros, well below the 2,715 maximum envisioned as the state's appropriate management level. But that doesn't mean the BLM has no plans to reduce

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Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456

Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.D. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

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• School news andnotes:

Email event information to communitylife@bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www .bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 daysbefore the desired date of publication. Details: Thecalendar appears inside this section. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements,

marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: Details: The Milestones page publishesSundayin Community Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

Well shot! reader photos • We want to see your best photos capturing

peaks in winter for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors

section. Submit your best work at www. bendbujjetjn.com/ wejjshot/wjnterpeaks, and we'jj pick the best for publication.

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program for off-highway

Email event information to news©bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• Community events:

o

Over one night last week vandals ran over, knocked down and stole the results of a decade of planning at a trailhead for a new off-highway vehicle area at Cline Buttes. Sometime between the afternoon of Jan. 3 and Jan. 4, the vandals caused about $2,500 in damage to the North Barr Trailhead off state Highway 126 between Redmond and Sisters, said Matt Able. He manages an interagency

• Civic Calendar notices:

Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.com

OCHOCO NATIDNAL

The Bulletin

Sudmissions: • Letters and opinions:

• Obituaries, Death Notices:

HARNEY COUNTY

By Dylan J. Darling

Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831

Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens'ac ademicachievements to youthC!bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin/Nbendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

Creek Herd

Management ~ Area

Vandals damag NorthBarr Trailhead

Bend................541-617-7829 Redmond ........ 541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver ......... 541-383-0348

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The Bulletin

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NATIONAL FOREST

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agency believes the range-

Have astoryidea or sudmission? Contactus!

Deschutes ......541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184

Dayvjjje

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Paige Beaune, 12, left, and her friend Zoie Princehorn, 12, work on making duct tape wallets during the Teen Territory program Wednesday at the Redmond Public Library. Teen Territory is held from 2:30-4 p.m. every second Wednesday of each month. For more information about upcoming events with the Deschutes Public Library, visit www.deschuteslibrary.org.

Governor:Stateneeds COCCboard OKs bigger role inforests no-bid build option "To get something dif• I(itzhaber pitches ferent, we have to do somedifferent," he said. his plan for federal, thing Kitzhaber noted the has no control over state collaboration board federal forests, but can

By Lauren Dake TheBulletin

SALEM — Gov. John Kitzhaber tossed the Oregon Board of Forestry a rhetorical question Wednesday: Why spend state money to manage a resource the federal government is responsible for? Because, he said, answering his own question, "the status quo is not working." Kitzhaber urged the board to back his effort to have the state take a more active role in managing federal forests. Kitzhaber wants to "increase the pace and scale of dry-side forest management." It's a notion he believes in enough that he's willing to designate about $4.5 million in lottery-backed bonds to help fund local and federal forest collaboratives.

influence some aspects of their management, including efforts at fire suppression. On that note, he used the opportunity to compare his notion of forest management with his efforts in health care, where he's pushing for more money for preventive care. Does it make more sense to spend pennies to manage someone's blood pressure, or wait until they have a stroke and spend billions, the governor asked. He said the federal government spent $1.1 billion last year on fire suppression, but only $300 million reducing fuel loads. "It makes no sense and

it's mind boggling," he satd. Tom Imeson, the newly minted chair of the state board, said he is encouraged by the idea. SeeForest/B3

By Ben Botkin

findings.

The Bulletin

It also results in fewer change orders, because the contractor has a stronger understanding of the college's building needs and the architect's intent, according to the findings. "As a result, there is a greater possibility the project will be completed on time and within budget as compared to a traditional design/bid/build," COCC construction project manager Rick Hayes wrote in the findings. The college hasn't yet selected a construction company but will advertise forcontractors,and a selection committee will score the applicants based on qualifications. Matt McCoy, COCC vice president for administration, estimated the college will get five to 10 applicationssome from local companies and others from elsewhere in Oregon. COCC officials had a public hearing Dec. 18 on the no-bid alternative. No one from the public attended.

Central Oregon Community College plans on selecting a contractor to build its new residence hall through a no-bid process. Instead, through a construction manager/general contractor selection process COCC is guaranteed a maximum price for the $23 million, 330-bed facility it expects to open in fall 2015. The COCC board of directors, acting as the Local Contract Review Board, unanimously authorized the college Wednesday to go the construction manager/general contractor, or CM/GC, route. State law requires public

agencies employing CM/GC to establish findings of fact that justify a departure from competitive bidding for the job. The board findings cite benefits that include greater control of costs and early involvement of the contractor in the design phase. That early involvement, which doesn't happen in traditional bidding, allows the contractor to select building materials that result in savings, according to the

— Reporter: 541-977-7185; bbotlzinCbendbufletin.com.

vehicle use in the Deschutes and Ochoco national forests, as well as the Prineville District of the Bureau of Land Management. The trailhead is on land overseen by the BLM at the north end of the Cline Buttes Recreation Area, in the middle of the triangle formed by the highways connecting Bend, Redmond and Sisters. "All that stuff that was vandalized was less than a year old," Able said. Likely using a truck, the vandals ran over signs around the trailhead, splintering the wooden signposts, Able said. They stole the trailhead sign and five "one way" signs, he said, and shot an informational kiosk at least a dozen times anda concrete outhouse four times. The shots appear to havecome from a handgun. The Cline Buttes Recreation Area was a decade in the making, he said, and the BLM finalized its plan in 2009. The directional signs went in late last spring and the trailhead sign was installed last summer. SeeVandals /B2

Vandalismlocation Vandajs shot and stole signs and damaged a restroom at the North Barr Traijhead sometime late

Thursday or Friday.Bureauof Land Management lawenforcement officers are looking for suspects.

North Barr Tranhead

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Bend Greg Cross / The Bulletin


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

E VENT TODAY AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Jennifer Egan, author of "A Visit From the Goon Squad" and "The Keep" speaks; $20-$75; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.org. THE DIRTY HANDFAMILY BAND: The California-based country act performs, with Angel and the Badman; $6; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. NO SKY PROJECT:The Los Angeles-based hip-hop act performs, with The Madhappy Allstars, Theclecktik and more; free; 9 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116 or www.astroloungebend.com.

AL E N D A R "FARGO": A screening of the1996 R-rated murder-comedy by the Coen Brothers, starring William H. Macy and Frances McDormand; $10 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org. MCDOUGALL: The Portland-based folk act performs, with Sassparilla; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. TONY SMILEY: The one-man rock band performs, with Keez; $6; 9:30 p.m., doors open at 8:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com.

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vtttvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand.

SUNDAY

Thinkstock

Proceeds of the Central Oregon Wedding & Event Show benefit the Bend Ronald McDonald House. Admission is $5 or four cans of food Saturday at The Riverhouse Convention Center.

SATURDAY

CENTRAL OREGON WEDDING& EVENT SHOW:Explore wedding FRIDAY services, with a gown fashion show and prizes; a portion of AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tom proceeds benefit the Bend Ronald DeWolf and Sharon Morgan read from their book"Gather at the Table: McDonald House; $5 or four cans of nonperishable food; 9 a.m.-4 The Healing Journey of a Daughter p.m.; The RiverhouseConvention of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Trade"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Court, Bend; 541-317-0450 or www. Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., thecoshow.com. Redmond; 541-526-1491. DANNY BARNES:The experimental POLAR BEARWALK/RUN: 5Kand 10K races; proceeds benefit St. banjoist performs, with Matt Sircely; Thomas Academy; $25-$35; 10 $10; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 a.m.; St. Thomas Academy, 1720 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-548Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. 3785 or www.redmondacademy. mcmenamins.com. com. FINN MILES: The DesMoines, lowaSATURDAYMARKET: Featuring based folk group performs; free; 7-9 local vendors, with new and used p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, items, antique collectibles, crafts 436 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541516-1128 or www.greenplowcoffee. and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 com. N.E. Eighth St.; 541-977-1737.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bill Roorbach talks about his book "Life Among Giants"; RSVP requested; free; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Books 8 Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525, sunriverbooks@sunriverbooks.com or www.sunriverbooks.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tom DeWolf and Sharon Morgan read from their book "Gather at the Table: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and a Son of the Slave Trade"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller William Watson and music by Betsy Branch and Mark Douglass; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943. TRIAGE: The comedy

Vandals

improvisational troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Ol'g.

DAVID JACOBS-STRAIN: The Oregon blues man performs; $15$20 suggested donation;8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209. DANNY BARNES:The experimental banjoist performs, with Matt Sircely; free; 9 p.m.; Hideaway Tavern, 939 S.E. Second St., Bend; 541-3129898 or www.hideawaytavernbend. com. STRANGLEDDARLINGS: The Portland-based alternative act performs; with Blackflowers Blacksun; $5; 9 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-

Horses

Continued from B1 '. t' The BLM is l o o k ing f o r r i nformation about who d i d the vandalism; OHV groups are considering putting out a reward. "It's a c r ime against the c ommunity, n o t a cr i m e against an individual," said Randy Drake, Oregon executive director of the Pacific Northwest Four Wheel Drive Association, a nonprofit representing OHV users in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. The group and t he D e schutes County 4 - W heelers may also donate money to pay the cost of replacing the signs, said Mona Drake, Randy Drake's wife. The couple is among the leaders of the club, which was involved in the development of the Cline Buttes Recreational Area. The area was created to provide opportunities for differentrecreation groups, such as OHV users, mountain bikers and horseback riders. The shiny new signs at the North Barr Trailhead were t here to provide OHV users with directions. Photo courtesy Bureau of Land Management The agency and volunteers A toppled signpost sits on the ground at the North Barr Trailhead spent years planning the off of state Highway126 between Redmond and Sisters. Vandals Cline Buttes Recreation Area caused about$2,500 in damage between Jan.3 and Jan. 4 atthe and finding grants to h elp trailhead in the recently established Cline Buttes Recreation Area. fund it. Seeing the vandalism at the trailhead is deflating, said working eight hours each day, spokeswoman for the BL M Molly Brown, field manager said Mona Drake. The events in Prineville. But she said the for the Bureau of Land Man- drew volunteers from around vandalism at Cline Buttes is agement in Prineville. the state, she added. particularly disheartening. "It has just been a v e ry "It is really sad when someOther public land has had long road to get to this point vandalism i n r e cent y ears thing that has had this much and every dollar is so vital," in Central Oregon — includattention gets damaged," she Brown said. ing the theft of 78 steel barsaid. Volunteers have also put in rier posts in February 2012 at Anyone with i n formation hundreds of hours to create Mayfield Pond east of Bend about the possible identity of the OHV trails at the recre- a nd the r u nning over and the vandals should call the ation area. There have been lighting ablaze of an outhouse BLM at 541-416-6700. around 10 weekend work par- in June 2011 at Reynolds Pond — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ties with about 20 volunteers near Alfalfa, said Lisa Clark, ddarlingC<bendbulletin.com

SECONDSUNDAY: John Daniel reads from a selection of his work, followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. LA LUNA FOLKLORICDANCE: Young artists perform folkloric and traditional dances from Mexico and El Salvador; proceeds benefit the dance troupe; $5, $3 students, free ages five and younger; 7 p.m.; Madras High School, 390 S.E. 10th St.; 541-475-7265.

MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED.

TUESDAY "A CORNISH FAMILY IN GEORGETOWN, COLORADO, 1875-1912": Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by Marilyn Burwell on research methods and townspeople; free; 10 a.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541317-9553 or www.orgenweb. org/deschutes/bend-gs. LUNCH ANDLECTURE: Learn about forest ecology, conditions and management, bring asack lunch; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4and younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754

or www.highdesertmuseum.org. LOUDON WAINWRIGHT III: The folk artist performs, with Dar Williams; $35-$45 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.

WEDNESDAY "BAG IT": A screening of the 2010 documentary film about plastic bag consumption; donations benefit the Plastic Bag Ban Movement; free; 6 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 54 I-9 I4-6676. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: AIDA": Starring Liudmyla Monastyrska, Olga Borodina and Roberto Alagna in an encore performance of Verdi's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. GIRAFFE DODGERS:The Portland-based folk and bluegrass act performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.

THURSDAY Jan. 17 "ANNIE JR.": Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in 1930s New York City; $15, $10 ages18 and younger and seniors; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. beattickets.org.

vised sale po l icy g i v es a BLM assistant director the d iscretion t o a p p rove t h e sale of more than four animals at once. Critics maintain this provides a loophole t hat would allow the B L M to continue the practice that enabled Davis to buy almost 1,700 horses over four years. "Putting the de c ision o f w ho gets m ore t ha n f o u r h orses in the hands of th e very same BLM m a nagers who were exposed (in media

comment. About 49,000 wild horses Continued from B1 and burros are living in BLM In September,the agencorrals an d p a stures. The cy published an environagency encourages adoption mental assessment of its of the captured animals, and wild horse gather plan for sells others to buyers who the Murderer's Creek herd promise not to resell them for management area in Eastslaughter. ern Oregon. Even after reIn addition to possible state moving 80 horses last wincharges for shipping horses ter, the agency estimates out of Colorado without propt hat 250 r e main, m o r e er documentation, Davis is than double the 100 the the subject of a federal probe BLM believes is the ideal being handled by the Departherd size for the 143,000- reports) as being responsible ment of the Interior's Office acre area. for wild ho r ses ending up of the Inspector General, acWithout outside interin the hands of a known kill cording to published reports. vention, wild horse herds buyer who ships horses to Officials at that office could are capable of doubling in Mexican slaughterhouses is not be reached for comment. four years, according to outrageous," said S uzanne When asked about horse government studies. Roy, director of the Ameri- sales and Tom Davis by ColoUnder o n e pro p o sal, can Wild Horse Preservation rado Springs Gazettereportthe BLM w o uld r emove Campaign, in a p r epared er Dave Philipps during an hundreds of horses from statement. "This new policy election-night appearance in the area over the next 10 is window dressing for an ad- Colorado, Interior Secretary years. ministration that uses every Ken Salazar ended the interThe BLM received more excuse to look away and only view abruptly and threatened that 6,000 comments folstarted to ask questions after the reporter. "You know what, you do lowing the report's pubits immoral and potentially lication, including objec- u nlawful actions were ex that to me again (and) I'll tions f r o m Th e Cl o u d posed by the media. It is not punch you out," Salazar said Foundation, an organiza- a serious attempt to stop fed- o n an a u dio r ecording of tion dedicated to the pres- erally protected wild horses the interview posted by the ervation of wild horses on from ending up at Mexican paper. public lands. slaughterhouses," Roy continSalazar later a p ologized " The B L M' s p l a n t o ued. "The only way to do that for his comments. round up hundreds of Or- is to stop rounding up and — Reporter: 202-662-7456, egon mustangs at a time removing wild horses from aclevenger@bendbufletirt.com when the agency's holding public lands in the West and pens are full demonstrates start answering fundamental its lack of commitment to questions, such as why the a sustainable program," BLM is stockpiling more wild said The Cloud Foundation horses than it knows what to director Ginger Kathrens do with." in a prepared statement. B LM s p o k esman T o m "Americans need to know Gorey did not i m mediately 4' b m C T otalCare that the 50,000 wild horses r espond t o a r e q u est f o r Bend Memorial Clinic i~ captured and warehoused by the BLM are in imminent danger of slaughter for appointments so long as this agency concall tinues along the same, untenable path." HOME INTERIORS T he BLM's newly r e 70 SW Century Dr. Suite145 Bend, OR 97702

mplements

541-382-4900

t' 541 322 1337

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"Itis really sad when something that has had this much attention

gets damaged." — LisaClark,Bureau ofLand Management spokeswoman

Please join our vacation planning event, sharing all the ways you can customize a Disney vacation that's just right for you, your family and your budget. As Authorized Disney Vacation Planners, we can educate you about all the Disney Destinations. Special booking incentives will be available to those that attend.

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:11 a.m. Dec. 29, in the 600 block of Southwest PowerhouseDrive. DUII — Irene FrancesWilliams, 60, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants

at 3:57 p.m. Jan. 2, in the areaof Northeast Third Street and Northeast Burnside Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at10:13 a.m. Jan. 6, in the1000 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 4:52 p.m. Jan. 6, in the 900 block of Northwest Bond Street. DUII — Phillip Russell Denney, 53, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:11 p.m. Jan. 6, in thearea of Northwest Galveston Avenueand Northwest Federal Street. Theft — A theft was reported at1:57 p.m. Jan. 7, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT

Tuesday, January 15th

Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at8:30a.m. Jan. 8, in the areaof Northeast BelknapStreet.

at 6:00pm

OREGON STATE POLICE

AAA TRAVEL 20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A5, Bend RSVP:541-383-0069

DUII — Kristin Marie Krantz, 29,was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:52 a.m. Jan. 9, inthe areaof Brookswood Boulevard andFinchwood Drive in Bend.

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BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 12 — Medical aid calls.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B 3

REGON

La er: Driver in uscras reste

AROUND THE STATE Giant doulder knocks hole in house — Asouthern oregon family says a refrigerator-sized boulder crashed into their manufac-

tured home, leaving agiant hole in one wall andthe huge rock in their By Manuel Valdes

on duty for 92 hours in the Boise, Idaho, were Korean. The Associated Press eight-day stretch before the Scheer said the driver was The driver of a Canadian tragedy, exceeding the 70seriously injured in the crash, t ravel c ompany b u s t h a t hour federal limit. but has b een c o operating " I c a n s pecifically s a y crashed and killed 9 passenwith investigators. The driver gers in Oregon last month that he had seven and a half is back in Vancouver. "Mr. Hwang is a licensed had slept for more than seven hours ofsleep when they left hours the night prior to the the morning of the accident," driver. Mr. Hwang had preaccident,a company attorney Scheer said. viously worked as a school said Wednesday. Scheer didn't address the bus driver and truck driver Attorney M ar k S c h eer's federal report on Wednesday with no a ccidents," Scheer comments come a day after beyond saying the company said. "He was in good health the U.S. Department of Trans- had "concerns about the ac- and he doesn't use alcohol or portation revoked Vancouver, curacy" of it . Th e attorney tobacco." British Columbia-based Mi added that black ice was a Scheer said Mi Joo Tour 8 " significant" f a ctor i n t h e Travel has no history of pasJoo Tour 8 Travel's authority to provide passenger service bus losing control on an Orsenger injuries and continues in the United States after de- egon highway and bursting to cooperate with authorities termining a driver was not through a railing. Scheer said and has set up a helpline for properly rested when his bus the bus had already made passengers and their family crashed. a stop the morning of t h e members, including interpreA Federal Motor Carrier crash. tation help. S afety A d m i nistration i n Thirty-eight people were The Oregon State Police vestigation found that driver injured. Most of the passen- and N a tional T r a nsportaHaeng Kyu Hwang had been gers in the bus heading to tion Safety Board have yet to

say what caused the Dec. 30 crash on Interstate 84 east of Pendleton. The crash, Oregon's deadliest since 1971, occurred near a spot called Deadman Pass, at the top of a steep, sevenmile descent from the Blue Mountains. A truck had applied sand to the icy road a few hours before the crash and was behind the bus making another run when the vehicle driven by Hwang plowed through a guardrail and 200 feet down an embankment. On Tuesday, federal authorities also said the company's authority to operate had been suspended for tw o m o nths early last year because the firm didn't pay a fine for failing to meet U.S. requirements for drug and alcohol testing.

living room. The Klamath Falls Herald and News reports that no one was injured. Corey and Jeanine Wells, their adult son and his preg-

nant fiancee wereall in the Klamath County homealong U.S. Highway 97 when the boulder hit on Tuesday. Corey Wells says the house is likely destroyed and the family is "still in shock. Still spooked."

Jeanine Wells says the family has lived safely at the base of asteep incline on the east side of Highway 97 for more than a decade. She says that just before the boulder hit, one of the family's horses "flat-

tened his ears, stuck out his tail and took off." She looked upand saw the giant rock headed for her house.

Port approves sudsidy to keep container dusiness —Port of Portland commissioners have approved an incentive program to entice container-shipping companies to continue visiting the city amid

adecline in productivity. Thecommissioners voted 7-2 onWednesday to pay $10 per container to carriers who stop at the port. The program is capped at $1 million and expires at the end of 2013. Port of Portland

spokesmanJoshThomas saystheincentiveisneededbecausethere has been a sustained decrease in productivity since two unions got into a dispute last May over which was entitled to perform the work of plug-

ging and unplugging refrigerated shipping containers. TheInternational Longshore and Warehouse Union criticized the program, saying in a statement that terminal operator ICTSI Oregon Inc. has mismanaged

operations since taking overtwo years ago.

State fair may get neW management — Management of the Oregon StateFair maybechanging handsagain. Thefair andexposition center functioned as an independent agency until 2006, when lawmakers wanted to wean the operation from tax dollars and put it in the

SERENE REFLECTIONS

Department of ParksandRecreation, which receives lottery proceeds. The Salem Statesman Journal reports agricultural groups have been

jjp,.' W't p;,i

unhappyabout the move.Oneproposal being readiedfor the Legislature would movethe fair to the OregonTourism Commission. But aparks

People take a winter stroll at Dexter Reservoir in Lowell State Park on Wednesday. Cooling temperatures and wet weather

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department official says there are also talks about creating a new semiindependent state agency so the fair could get exceptions to state rules

on budgeting, contracting, purchasing, andpersonnel management.

Dog tracks down driver after crash near Boring —A ClackamasCounty sheriff's police dog tracked down adriver who ran away after crashing into a utility pole on Highway 224 near Boring. Oregon State Police say the man left an injured woman Tuesday after-

may combine

noon trapped in the car. Themanwasfound after a two-hour search.

to bring snow to the area near Lowell in the next few clays.

The 36-year-old Oregon City man was treated at Mount Hood Medical Center and charged with driving under the influence, reckless driving

and hit-and-run. The38-year-old womanwas rescued by afire department crew from Boring and treated and released at Mount Hood Medical Center.

Brian Dav>es I The (Eugene)RegisterGuard

Woman pleads guilty in cellphone scheme — AEugene woman has pleadedguiltytochargesshemademorethan$300,000 buying thousands of cellphones, charging them to heremployer and selling them on the Internet. Federal prosecutors said 41-year-old Ta-

maraDianeBrown usedthemoneyforadownpaymentonahouse, cars and personal expenses. Prosecutors say shehadauthority at the PapeGroupto purchasecompany cellphones.Theysayshebought more than 5,100 phones and related devices from Sprint Nextel over

21 months, had themdelivered to her homeand sold them on eBay. — From wire reports

I

Ore onnativeamon t ose ie inPeru eico tercras NTSB toaid Peru investigation PORTLAND — Ateam of National Transportation Safety Board investigators has been sent to Peru to

help determine thecause of a helicopter crash that killed

all seven people onboard, including five Americans. The Boeing-Vertol 234

helicopter operated by Oregon-based Columbia Helicopters went down in

the Peruvian jungle shortly after takeoff Monday. The

aircraft was carrying an external cargo secured by cables andwas under contract for petroleum exploration support. NTSB spokeswomanKelly Nantel says the threemember team was to

arrive Wednesdayevening. The NTSB investigators

will be accompanied by representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration and Columbia Helicopters. — The Associated Press

Forest

The Associated Press PORTLAND — A 62-yearold Oregon native killed in a helicopter crash in a Peruvian jungle had married his second wife in that country, built a house of stone and planned to retire there, his brother says. Darrel Wayne Birkes was born in Tigard and grew up in Beaverton, his older brother, Marvin Birkes, told The Oregonian. Darrel Birkes worked nearly three decades for Columbia Helicopters, whose chopper crashed on Monday, killing all seven aboard. He was work-

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helpkeep some rural,east-side mills intact. The Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project, for example, has 19 stakeholders at the table that have identified 70,000 acres between Bend, Sisters, and M o un t B a chelor that need thinning and restoration.

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a choker s etter, attaching cables to logs for retrieval by helicopters. "It was a dangerous job," and he broke his jaw a few times as well as his nose, his brother said. After that, he worked for Columbia in Papua New Guinea, and about 10 years ago went to Peru as a master rigging coordinator, figuring out the correct loads for helicopters carrying equipment and people to oil and gas production sites. ing as a load rigging manager M arvin B i r kes s ai d h i s for the company, based in brother remarriedthere and Aurora. lived in the house he built on "He didn't have an enemy the outskirts of Lima, where in the world," Marvin Birkes he had horses, goats, dogs and said. "He'd give you the shirt chickens. off his back. Money wasn't E very s u m m er, Da r r e l that important to him. If you Birkes returned to O r egon needed it, he'd give it to you." for a month, staying with his He said his brother gradu- brother and helping with conated from Sunset High School, struction projects. The brothw as drafted i nto t h e U . S. ers took time off to fish for Army and served as a genera- salmon and sturgeon on the tor repairman in South Korea. Columbia River. "He loved the o utdoors," After that, he was married for a decade, ran a landscap- Marvin Birkes said. "He also ing business in San D iego loved his job. He loved workand returned to Oregon, Mar- ing for Columbia."

eral forest collaboratives will have key stakeholders around Continued from B1 the table figuring out ways to "I think you have to look harvest timber and manage at it from the perspective of it more actively, in part so it what does the state get, op- is not wiped out by fires. The posed to s hould th e s t ate state hopes to partner with the spend money to help federal federal government with the lands," Imeson said. "There idea that the state will spend are benefits to the state on its money to leverage federal this; impact on employment, funds. and the forest health issues, The governor believes givon the east side ... are monu- ing money to locals to figure mental. They are in terrible out ways to manage the fedshape. Failure to act is going eral forests will spur r u r al to create far greater costs in economies, create jobs and forest fire and complete de- help avoid litigation. Allowing struction of an asset that we local stakeholders to identify have in Oregon." timber that can be harvested The idea is that state and fed- without controversy will also

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DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER From itsheritage tothearts, there's somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals vvho work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.

SISTERS M AGAZ I N E WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS

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the achievement compacts between K-12 school districts and the state. It's an improvement over the first year, when only third-grade reading and math were included, although we'd like to see the changes go further. The compacts are part of Gov. John Kitzhaber's plan to revamp education in the state. The governor's ultimate goal is the so-called 40-40-20plan, in which 40 percent of Oregonians would earn at least a bachelor's degree, another 40 percentan associate degree or other post-secondarycredential,and the remaining 20 percent would have a high school degree. The compacts are agreements between school districts and the state, setting goals for specific criteria. The state establishes a base set of items, and districts can add some of their own choosing. Separatecompacts are made between the state and other educational entities, such as universities and community colleges. When the first-year compacts were unveiled nearly a year ago, we were disappointed at the limited focus on academic proficiency. For the second year, the Oregon Education Investment Board de-

cided Tuesday topreserve thirdgrade reading results and to add math results from fifth and eighth grades. Third-grade math will be removed. OEIB policy adviser Whitney Grubbs said educators felt a higher-level math measure was needed. She said math is less meaningful at third grade, where reading is the critical benchmark. Additional changes altered the way ninth-grade attendance and credits are listed and removed one of several measures of graduation rates. Grubbs said the changes were chosen from a longer list of recommendations suggested jointly by the Confederation of Oregon School Administrators, the Oregon School Boards Association and the Oregon Education Association. The changes are a step in the right direction, but additional test results from all grades — especially high school — are needed in the compacts. Without them, we're at risk of granting degrees without sufficient attention to the student knowledge base that justifies them.

Public landsmanagement is hampered by lawsuits couple of articles in recent issues of The Bulletin help explain why public lands are in such sad shape. Both deal with attempts by environmental groups to halt actions planned by the U.S. Forest Service or Bureau of Land Management for public lands. In one case, two groups are suing to halt logging near Diamond Lake. The D-Bug project, which has been in the planning stages since 2007, aims to reduce fire threat caused by a pine beetle infestation killing lodgepole pine in the area. Among the objections is the absurd notion that someone might actually make money on the timber cut in the sale. In the other, the Oregon Natural Desert Association is suing to halt improvements to 133 miles of existing roads in Eastern Oregon. The roads in question have washed out or become overgrown, and ONDA believes they should be left that way. In both cases, however, there are solid reasons for going ahead with proposed actions. The D-Bug sale near Diamond

A

Lake is planned for an area visited by literally thousands of tourists each summer; should a wildfire start in the stands of dead trees left in the pine beetles' wake, those tourists will have to get out and do so in a hurry. Clearing dead trees will reduce the chance of a catastrophic fire starting in the first place. As forthe EasternOregonroads, they lie in some of the most remote territory in Oregon. They're used by ranchers to manage livestock and in case of wildfires, among other things. To be fair, it's not just environmental groups who are lawsuit happy when it comes to public lands. County commissioners in Custer County, Idaho, have sued the BLM over the closure of a road near alocalwilderness area. Americans expect the Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management to be good stewards of public land, yet one group or another objects, in court, to an alarming number of attempts by the government to be just that. Knowing that, it's easy to understand why public lands' problems are as severe as they are.

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M Nickel's Worth Learn about human trafficking Friday is National Human Trafficking Awareness Day in the U.S. thanks to passage of a resolution by the Senate in 2007. However, I doubt many know that such a day exists or that there are reportedly more slaves in the world today than there were during the height of the slave trade in the 1800s. The estimated number of those in bondage worldwide today is 27 million. This human trafficking is the illegal trade of human beings (men, women and children) forthe purposes of commercial sexual exploitation and forced labor. It is the world's fastest-growing criminal industry and has estimated annual revenue of $32 billion. It affects every nation in the world including the United States and every state including Oregon. And yes, it also exists in our own backyard. How can we respond to this human rights crisis? Educate yourself and share what you learn with family, friends and groups. Start by accessing websites such as www. oregonoath.org and w w w .polaris project.org Get involved with Cen-

ter at the eleventh hour. Since we appear to have teenagers running our country,I suggest a teenager fix for our fiscal woes. Our elected officials, who work for us and are spending us into oblivion, should have a new pay plan for the new year. The House and the Senate should be paid minimum wage and have to pay for their health care. (They are exempt f ro m O b amacare, asare their staffs; I wonder why'?) The president should be paid $30 an hour and have the fancy planes grounded and cut out entertaining at the White House until the $16 trillion debt is paid. Our country has not had a budget in four years. And we continue to support these buffoons. Shame on us. It is "we the people" who should take steps to correct the Washington follies. Vote every senator and congressman out of office until we can get the correct people to balance budgets and start acting like adults again.

Why do I get the feeling that our Republican elected officials only care about d e feating a n ything that might have even a hint that a Democrat is behind it'? These elected officials need to have the integrity to represent the people and not the party. And I have come to the conclusion that more Democratic elected officials actually carry out this duty than do our Republican elected officials. Republicans just say nno" unless it is their idea. Ray Powell Terrebonne

Focus onroad damage bytrucks

The Bulletin's Jan. 3 editorial on mileage tax was informative but missed a major point. Most of th e d amage to roads and the cost of road maintenance is caused by heavy trucks. The Oregon Legislature should be raising the taxes on heavy trucks so that Wally Long they pay for the damage they cause Bend (both in-state and out-of-state truck-

Bothsidesofthe m outh

ing). The trucking companies will

pass the cost on to their customers and there will be a better alignment tral Oregon OATH (Oregonians I was reading on Internet news of cause and effect. against Trafficking o f H u m ans) recently about on e r a mification In addition, Bend should review by checking out its website www. of the "cliff" a greement where this issue, as many of the road recooath.org. It is time to act now! Ari Fleischer, President George pairs are due to heavy trucks. Some Maggie Hanson W. Bush's press secretary, said he cities have only certain roads desigBend would give less to charity under nated as trucking routes and fortify the new agreement because he the roads to handle the loads and A teenager fix could claim less of it as tax deduc- size of truck. tions. Isn't that talking out of both To raise taxes on lightweight, enfor our fiscal woes sides of the mouth? On the one side ergy-effi cient cars for road repair After the U.S. House of Repre- most of our Republican elected ofand construction is misguided. We sentatives, the U.S. Senate and the ficials say Democrats want to raise should expect more from the Orpresident have known about the taxes on everything. Then on the egon Legislature. "fiscal cliff" for more than a year, other side when taxes actually get Richard Morris we narrowly avert the fiscal disas- cut, they complain about the cut. Bend

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While leaders debate gun control, NRA takes action By Gladys I. Biglor redible facts in the Newtown, Conn., massacre remain few with on e e x ception. I n nocents were murdered by a deranged madman. It is unforgivable that, in t heir rush to judge, anti-gun politicians immediately clamored for passage of more gun control laws even before thechildren were buried. Gun control advocates were hoping to capitalize on this horrific event, and

a grieving country, to pass legislation before true facts emerged: of the massacre, of a history of failed gun control legislation, of the wisdom and benefits to society of gun ownership. nsemi-automatics," W ords l i k e "military-style assault weapons" and "high-capacity magazines" headline news articles and cartoons depicting "assault weapons." Is this an attempt to convince Americans more gun control is necessary? Many uttering

these words haven't the slightest idea what they're talking about. Are gun control advocates and the media collaborating to mislead an uninformed American public or j ust p ushing their misinformed political agenda'? More pathetic is their cry for acommon ground." History is clear: "common ground" and "common sense gun laws" means further erosion of principled Americans' right to bear arms. Here are some recent realfacts most Americans don't know: • A 12-year-old Oklahoma girl is safetoday because her family chose to keep a gun in their home and ensured the sixth-grader knew how to use it. While alone at home, she stopped a 32-year-old male intruder intent on assault. • A California woman protected herself from a violent male intruder w ho forcefully pushed her to t h e floor, kicking her in the ribs and face. During the altercation she prevented

IN MY VIEW

gun advocates. Still, no matter how hard they try, anti-gun fanatics canthe abduction of her terrified 2-year- not coverup the facts as researchedl old daughter by shooting the suspect documented in More Guns less Crime with her shotgun. by John Lott Jr. • An eighteen-year-old Oklahoma • Human predators prey. mother protected her baby by killing • Gun control harms lawful citian intruder who assaulted her with a zens and increases crime. knife. She shot and killed the assail• Guns save more lives than they ant with a 12-gauge shotgun on New cost. Year's Eve 2011. Her husband had • Criminals f e a r law f u l gu n died from lung cancer on Christmas owners. Day. • Concealed handgun laws reduce Thousands of cases like these gun violence. occur every year unbeknownst to • Crime repeatedly increases after Americans. Guns are truly the "great adoption of gun control laws. • "Gun control is the best thing you equalizer" — especially for women. President Reagan warned that we can do for crooks and gangsters." must neverforget guns are the great — Sammy Gravano, Mafiaturncoat equalizer should big government for• Multiple-victim public shootings get it is a servant, not the master, of are perpetrated by deranged attackthe governed. ers. These shooters purposefully It is unconscionable that knowlavoid locations with tight security, edgeable gun experts, citizens and opting for gun-free zones. politicians who understand guns and Most alarming, President Obama gun laws are vilified by radical antieliminated the "Secure Our Schools"

policing grant b udget, denying Americans the ability to protect our school children. If we want to prevent multiple-victim school shootings, we need to prevent the perpetrators from entering the schools. It's no surprise then that the NRA is working toward developing programs to prevent gun violence in schools. NRA's W ayne L a p ierre spoke the truth on Dec. 21: "The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a

good guy with a gun." So while politicians' debate, the NRA (4 million members strong) dedicates its resources to protect our nation's schoolchildren by developing a model National School Shield Emer-

gency Response Program for every school that wants it. For the safety of the children, our school boards/administrators/teachers would be fools to ignore this multi-faceted pre-eminent safety program. — Gladys J.Biglor lives in Bend.


THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES

Eva Irene Kaser Dec. 16, 1919 - Dec. 27, 2012

Gwen Marie Totten, of Bend Sept. 23, 1972 - Jan. 3, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial Service: 2pm Sat., Jan. 12, 2013 at Christian Life Center, 21720 Highway 20, Bend, OR. Contributions may be made to:

Assist with her children at any Bank of America into the Family Account ending in 4957 c/o Judy Dodge.

Kyle Erik Cooper, of La Pine Oct. 20, 1984 - Jan. 5, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A ViewingNisitation will be held on Friday, January 'l1, 2013, from 1:00 - 3:00 p.m., at Baird Memorial Chapel, located at 16468 Finley Butte Road in La Pine. A Celebration of Kyle's Life will take place on Saturday, January 12, 2013, at 2:00 p.m. at High Lakes Christian Church, located at 25620 Day Road in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:

La Pine Fire Department, P.O. Box10, La Pine, Oregon, 97739, 541-536-2935; or La Pine Community Kitchen, P.O. Box 813, La Pine, OR 97739, (541) 536-1312.

Thelma Marie Lisius, of Redmond Aug. 29,1920- Jan. 7,2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com

Services: A private burial will be held at Redmond Memorial Cemetery.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeralhomes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all

correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

E va I r e n e K a s e r , 93 , passed away on December 2 7, 2012, i n A l b a ny , O r e gon. S h e w a s b or n D e cember 16, 1919, in Mitchell, Oregon, and lived her y outh n e arby w h e r e h e r father had a ho m e s tead o n Cherry C reek i n Jefferson County. S he m a r r ied R o b ert R. K aser i n Eva Kaser 1938 t hey operated a r anch f o r m any years east o f A s h w ood, Oregon. S h e w a s w idely k n o w n for h er baking a nd se a m s t ress prowess, and enjoyed gardening, with e m phasis on flower raising. She kept in c ontact w i t h h e r w id e l y scattered neighbors through Can a s t a and B ridge Club a c t ivities, i n conjunction with the many school fu nc t i on s t h at served at the center of the A shwood community. A f ter Robert R. Kaser passed away, she lived for several e ars i n P r i n e v i lle, a n d a ter Corvallis. S h e w a s preceded in death by three brothers and a sister, and is survived by her brother, M ilton ( B ud ) S h r u m , o f Prineville; her s ons, John Robert Kaser, of Corvallis, a nd Th e o d or e A rt hu r Kaser, of H e nderson, Nevada; four g r a n dchildren; and fou r g r e at-grandchildren. I n t erment will be in The Dalles.

Linda Marie Boyce April 5, 1944- January 3, 2013 L inda M a ri e B o yce w a s born in D e t r oit, M i c higan o n April 5, 194 4 . S h e m oved to California in th e e arly 1 9 50s. Sh e g r a d u ated fro m S a n F e r n ando High S chool i n S an F e r nando Califor'". nia in f 1962. She m oved t o Bend, Oregon in 1976, and Linda Boyce Prineville, Oregon in 1994. She was a loving mother and housewife. L i nda was an avid collector of clocks a nd kn i c k - k nacks. Sh e a lso l oved h e r c a t s a n d dogs. She entered into rest on J anuary 3, 2 0 13, i n P o r t l and, Oregon. L i n d a w a s 68 years old. L mda is survived by h er husband, Robert Boyce Sr. of Prineville, her son, Jeffrey Coffman of Prineville, h er s o n , M i c h a e l and d aughter-in-law Debb i e Coffman o f Ben d , h er d aughter, D e a n n a and s on-in-law Ch r i s Coc k b urn o f Pe n d l eton , h e r step-son, Robert Boyce Jr. of Salem, and her step-son, Jerry Boyce of Enumclaw, W ashington. Sh e h a s 1 0 g randchildren a n d s e v e n great-grandchildren. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n d eath by h e r f a t h er , H a l B ullen, her m o t h er, M a r g aret My e r s , a nd h er step-father, John Myers. A Celebration of Life will be held Friday, January 11 a t 4 p .m . Pr i n e v i ll e F u neral Home, 199 NE 10th St., Contributions m a y b e m ade t o t he A m e r i c a n Cancer Society.

Donald Brown Stockton

Linda Renee Carlin May15, 1962 - January 5, 2013

Born May 15, 1962 to Jim Aug. 3, 1922 - Jae. 6, 2013 a nd Grace Wyatt i n B e n d Oregon native and b u siOregon. She was 50 years ness leader Donald Brown y oung when sh e l eft t h i s S tockton di e d Su n d a y , world all to soon on JanuJanuary 6, at his h ome in a ry 5, 2013. A m e m o r i al Albany. He was 90. g athering w il l b e h e l d a t Don was born in Oakville R omaine V i l l ag e R e c r e to Ott o a tion H a l l o n Sa t u r d ay , and Hattie January Stockton, 12, 2013 at r ye g r a s s 1:00 p.m. and dairy Linda farmers in graduthe W il ated from lamette .- • Mountain . «i Valley. He View 4 attended nearby S chool i n Donald Bend, OR. Stockton Linda Carlin elementary school, transferring to r ied the l ov e o f h e r l i f e , C orvallis fo r j u n i o r h i g h Darrell C arlin, i n A u g u st and high school. of 1989. D on a t t e n de d Or e g o n L inda worked at B i M a r t State Un i v e r sity , an d in Bend for 2 3 y e ars and w orked f o r Bo e i n g a n d was the smiling f ace that K aiser S h i p y ards b e f o r e greeted al l w h o e n t e r ed. j oining th e U .S. A r m y i n She was a c ompassionate 1943. H e s e r ve d i n t he and giving soul, and left an 102nd Infantry, fighting in i mpression o n al l sh e the Battle of the Bulge, and touched. was awarded th e B r o n ze She loved spending time S tar Medal. A f ter t h e a r - w ith fam i l y , l aug h i n g , m istice, h e m an a ge d a playing games and travelCoca-Cola p l an t f o r t he ing. He r m ost memorable Allied Forces in G ermany v acation w a s s p en t w i t h before returning home. h er s i ster, D o n n a o n a A s u c cessful e n t r e pre- dream trip to Disneyland. neur, he established StockLinda is survived by h er ton Furniture i n N e w p o rt h usband, D a r r e ll , B e n d , a fter the w ar . D u r ing t h e OR; stepdaughter, Claudia 1960s, he built the Oakvilla Carlin, Ot h e l l o , W A ; m anufactured hou si n g m other, Gr a c e W y at t , c ommunity i n O akv i l l e , R edmond, O R ; si st e r s , and bought an d o p erated Karen T o mpkins, ( M a r k), the W i l l amette c o mpany, T umalo, OR, a n d D o n n a LimeCo. During the 1970s, Sutherland, Redmond, OR; he managed a r eal estate a brother, James W. Wyatt company in M aui, Hawaii. ( Brenda), R e dmond, O R , O n return t o t h e P a c i f i c and numerous nieces and N orthwest, he w o r k e d i n nephews. r eal e s t at e in Ev er e t t , S he w a s p r e c eded i n Washington, with w ife Judeath by her f ather and a d ith D aw n S t o ckton, a n d nephew. then returned t o O a k v i l le Autumn Funerals, Bend, where t hey r a i sed s h eep handled the arrangements, a nd cattle. A n d i n 1 9 8 5 541-318-0842. t hey d eve l o pe d L ake Creek Ranch, a m a n ufactured housing community in Tangent, which they ope rated until r e t i rement i n 2006. D on was k n ow n f o r h i s keen i n t elligence, g e nero us spirit an d h i s c o n t r i b utions a s a co m m u n i t y l eader. H e ser v e d tw o t erms as chairman o f t h e By Robert D. McFadden New York Times News Service Albany School Board and w as on th e T a n gent C i t y James Buchanan, a scholar C ouncil ( 1 9 92-2002). H e and author whose analyses a lso was president of t h e of economic and political deM anufactured Hou si n g cision-making won the 1986 C ommunities o f O r e g o n , Nobel in economic sciences a nd a b o a r d m e m be r o f and shaped a generation of Eagle Crest Resort in cent ral Oregon. He wa s a l i - conservative thinking about deficits, taxes and the size of censed pilot, reflecting his government, died Wednesday lifelong love of flying. D on w a s p r e c eded i n in Blacksburg, Va. He was 93. d eath b y h i s p ar e n t s ; Alex Tabarrok, the director brother, Richard Stockton; of the Center of Study for Pubf irst w i f e , M a r y Hel e n lic Choice at George Mason Bogue S t o ckton, o f A l - University, which Buchanan bany; and son, Michael. He founded, confirmed his death. is survived by wife, Judith Buchanan, a prof e ssor Dawn St oc k t on ; son , emeritus at George Mason, in D avid Floyd S t ockton, o f Lebanon; an d d a u g hters, Fairfax, Va., was a leadingproMary Ann Stockton Breviponent of public choice theory, doro, of Albany, and Shirwhich assumes that politicians l ey Stockton K i c k n er , o f and government officials, like N orth A l b a ny ; a n d t h r e e everyone else,are motivated grandchildren. by self-interest — getting reA t Don's request, no f u neral service i s p l a n n ed. electedor gaining more power — and do not necessarily act Please donate to a favorite charity in l i e u o f f l o w ers. in the public interest. He argued that their actions O nline c o n dolences m a y be left at could be analyzed, and even

$' '

Shakespeare festival has a new director By Vickie Aldous

While there, she helped raise $7 million for a second A SHLAND — C y n t h i a stage and supported the creRider's new job as Oregon ation of new plays, according S hakespeare Festival e x - to OSF officials. ecutive director may be to Rider is married and has oversee the financial side, one child attending Ashland but she's no stranger to the High School and another in

Ashland Daily Tidings

stage.

college.

Rider began taking actWhen she firstcame to ing classes at age 6, OSF, Rider loved seemajored in t h eater ing how many students while in college and attended plays there. h as worked as a n S he s a y s mos t actress. y ouths ca n h a n d l e "I started as a perplays that some adults former," she s a ys. Ri d e r t hink m i ght b e t o o " That has b een a challenging. "It's great for kids to see wonderful thing. I have an all-around view of theater. I something that adults think understand how much cour- is a little beyond their comage it takes to get on stage." prehension level," she says. Rider says she wants to "Usually, it never is. There make sure that everyone are great conversations that who works to bring a play you can have after seeing a to life has the resources they play. need to do the job right. Rider says one of the cenRider officially settles into tral questions affecting OSF her new role this month. She is how to make plays accesspent much o f D e cember sible, while a lso g eneratgettinga crash course from ing enough revenue to fund Paul Nicholson, who spent 33 great work. years with OSF and served Some patrons pay p r eas its executive director for mium prices for tickets or 17 years before retiring at donate money, which helps the end of 2012. OSF offer ticket deals to "He both gave me a sense youths, under-served popuof the tradition and history at lations and locals, she says. "We do want people to OSF and how that's honored here, but he also told me to feel that OSF is their place, never let it curtail you from whether they see one show innovating and doing new or all of t h em," she says. "OSF does a great job in balthings," Rider says. She says Nicholson left ancing that." OSF in a strong financial Challenges ahead for OSF condition. include finding enough space Before relocating to Ash- to handle performances, edland with her family, Rider ucation programs, rehearsworked as th e m a naging als and everything else that director of the Kansas City takes place at the company, Repertory Theatre. Rider says.

Economic scholarJamesBuchanan shaped conservativepolitical thought

www.fisherfuneralhome.com

joel A. Lydy Dec. 26, 1957 - Dec. 30, 2012

Former Madras resident, J oel A d d i so n L y d y , 5 5 , passed away Dec. 30, 2012, at Mount Rainier National Park. Survivors i n c l u d e hi s m other, Nancy L e e L y d y o f Metolius; f a ther, J o hn ( and spouse, Daisy) L y d y o f Bend; wife, Joan L y d y of T a c o m a ; hi s son , Jonathan J o e l L y d y of M adras; b r o t h er , L a n c e DEATHS ELSEWHERE L ydy; s i s t er , L i s a L ee L dy; t w o n i e c es, L a u r a VF r yn L yd y a nd A i s h i a Deaths of note from around Died Monday in Glenview, Ill. "Bug" Lydy; st e p s ons, theworld: Ned Wertimer, 89:Actor who Louise Bundy, 88:A staunch played Ralph the Doorman on D .W. H ea d a n d W a r r e n H ead; an d nu mer o u s defender of her serial killer all 11 seasons of the CBS sit- uncles, aunts and cousins. com "The Jeffersons" and had son, Ted Bundy, before he He was preceded in death made a series ofdeath-row one-off roles on dozens of TV by his grandparents, Dean confessions. Died last month shows from the early 1960s a nd L a ur a S t e w ar t a n d in her hometown of Tacoma, through the late 1980s, includ- Lester and Thyra Lydy. In lieu of flowers, memoing "Car 54 Where Are You?" Wash., after a long illness. Nadeane Walker Anderson, and "Mary Tyler Moore." Died rials have been suggested to the Noah's Pet Prolect at 91: Former Associated Press Jan. 2 at a Los Angeles-area B rown's Point Ve t C l i n i c, fashion editor and foreign cor- nursing home following a No- 6 720 Eastside Dr. NE , ¹ 4 , respondent who interviewed vember fall at his home in Bur- Tacoma, WA , 9 8422-1174, or t he Taco m a A r ea legendary designers includ- bank, Calif. American H e ar t A s s ociaing Coco Chanel and ChrisClaude-Anne Lopez,92:Trantian Dior while working in scribedthe 30,000 documents tion, 708 Broadwav, Suite 330, Tacoma, WA, 98402. Paris. Died Monday in Austin, that constitute the Papers of Texas. B enjamin Franklin a t Y a l e Fred Turner, 80: As c h ief University and later became executive helped transform editor-in-chief of the collection McDonald's into a global giant and a formidable expert on and introduced the world to the Franklin. Died Dec. 28 at her Chicken McNugget,the Egg home in New Haven, Conn. • McMuffin and the Happy Meal. — From wire reports

predicted, by applying the tools of economics to political science in ways that yield insights into the tendencies of governmentstogrow, increase

spending, borrow money, run large deficits and let regulations proliferate. The logic o f s e lf-interest was nothing new. Machiavelli's 16th-century treatise "The Prince" detailed cynical rules of statecraft to extend political power. Thomas Hobbes, in his 17th-century book "Leviathan," held that aggressive self-serving acts were "natural" unless forbidden by law. Adam Smith's "The Wealth of Nations," published in 1776, noted that people pursuing their own good also produced benefits for society at large. But Buchanan contended that the pursuit of self-interest by modern politicians often led to harmful public results. Courting voters at electiontime, for example, legislators will approve tax cuts and spending increases for projects and entitlements favored bythe electorate. This combination can lead to ever-rising deficits, public debt burdens and increasingly large

Get ATaste For Food. Home Sr Garden -

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FEATURED OBITUARY

gencies were even desirable as a means to increase spending, governments to conduct the create jobs and cut unemploypublic's business. ment. But that reasoning alIndeed, he said, governments lowed politicians to rationalize had grown so vast and complex deficits under many circumthat it was no longer possible for stances, Buchanan contended. elected officials to make more James McGill B u chanan than a fraction of the policy Jr. was born in Murfreesboro, decisions that genuinely affect Tenn., on Oct. 2, 1919, the son the people. Thus, he said, much of a farmer and a schoolteachdiscretionary power is actually er, Lila Scott Buchanan. His held by civil functionaries who grandfather John Price Bucan manipulate priorities, im- chanan was governor of Tenpose barriers to entitlements nessee from 1891 to 1893. and pressure legislators for He attended Middle Tennesrules and budgets favorable to see State Teachers College in their own interests. Murfreesboro, living at home Over the years since Bu- and milking cows to pay his chanan won the Nobel, much way. He graduated first in his of what h e p r e dicted has class in 1940, and earned a played out. Government is big- master'sdegree in economics ger than ever. Tax revenue has at the University of Tennessee fallen far short of public pro- in 1941. He joined the Navy, grams' needs. Public and pri- became an officerand served vate borrowing has become a in World War II on the staff of way of life. Politicians still act Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, the in their own interests while es- Pacific Fleet commander. pousing the public good, and In 1945, he married Anne national deficits have soared Bakke. The couple had no into the trillions. children. Buchanan partly b l amed Keynesian economics for what he considered adecline in U.S. fiscal discipline. John 541-548-2066 Maynard Keynes argued that budget deficits were not only Adjustable unavoidable but in fiscal emerBeds 5

IN !

WILSONSof Redmond

J.

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EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

MXtTREss

G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084

Jean Hillman Avc, 15, 1929- JAN.2, 2013 Jean gets to be with her beloved Dean again after missing him dearly these past four-and-a-half years. They shared 62 years of marriage, She passed with her daughters at her bedside, and both her sons were able to talk with her via phone before she slipped away. She will be interred with Dean in the Pioneer Cemetery in Terrebonne, Oregon. Jean leaves behind her four children: Linda Vibbert, of Gateway; Roger David Hillman, of Crestone, CO; Bonnie McDonald, of Madras; and Kelly Hillman of Charlotte, NC. Jean loved her eleven grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. She also loved her "chosensise tr,"Dorene DeWhitt.Jean and Dorene played many, many hours of organ and piano music together for church services. Another great love ol Jean's wasto go "trailering" with Dean over the years. They were blessed to spend numerous vacations with friends, and even went on two Bill Gaither Trio cruises. Due to the severe weather, her children have chosen to hold a graveside celebration of life on Mother's Day.


B6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013.

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:39 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 4 47 p.m N ew First F ull Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:39a.m Sunset tomorrow... 4:49 p.m Moonrise today.... 6:23 a.m Moonsettoday .... 4:01 p.m Jan. I I Jan.18 Jan. 26 Feb. 3

Pi •

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:35 a.m...... 4:20 p.m. Venus......6:28 a.m...... 3:20 p.m. Mars.......8:53 a.m...... 6:34 p.m. Jupiter......1:30 p m...... 4 31 a.m. Satum......2:02 a.m.....12:27 p.m. Uranus....10:51 a.m.....11:05 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 45/32 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........63m1962 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow........ -12in1937 Average monthtodate... 051" Average high.............. 41 Year to date............ 0.00" Average low .............. 24 Average year to date..... 0.51" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.81 Record 24 hours ...1.28 in 2010 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

S K IREPORT

The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Yesterday Thursday F riday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

for solar at noon.

Astoria ........51/41/1.46....45/35/pc.....42/35/pc Baker City......40/29/0.04....28/12/sn......26/7/pc Brookings......47743/0.20....44738/sh.....47738/sh Burns......... 40/1 7/trace.....26/8/sn......25/3/pc Eugene........ 50/40/0.08.... 42/31/rs.....39/31/pc Klamath Falls .. 38/25/002 ...28/12/sn ... 29/9/sn Lakeview....... 37/21/0.00 ...26/1 3/sn.....26/1 2/pc La Pine........41/30/0.00....29/15/sn.....31/16/sn Mediord.......47/40/0.04....38/29/sn..... 39/28/rs Newport.......50/41/0.57....44/37/pc.....44/37/pc North Bend.....48/45/0.23....44/37/sh.....47/36/sh Ontario........30/10/0.00....32/I9/sn.....29/1 5/pc Pendleton......57/41/0.00.....39/25/c.....36/22/pc Portland .......53/42/0.21 ....43/31/pc......39/32/s Prinevige.......47/33/0.01 ....29/20/sn.....37/1 8/pc Redmond.......49/34/0.00....31/15/sn.....35/11/pc Roseburg.......46/44/0.16.... 39/32/rs..... 42/33/rs Salem ....... 51/41/0 08 ...43/30/pc ...40/30/pc Sisters.........46/32/0.00....30/1 8/sn.....32/1 6/sn The Dages..... 48/31 Itrace.....39/26/c.....37724/pc

Snow accumulation in inches

1

Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .50-51 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .40-70 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .76-1 02 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .85-106 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . 89 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......54-55 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 104

L 0

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires

Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .38-74

Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .19-21 Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0. . . . .97-192 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .33-49 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . .63-119 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass .. Chains or TT. ag vehicles Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-48 Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .33 44 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake......Chains > 10,000 lbs. Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 21 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun,pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze, sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-iog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass.... Chains or TT. agvehicles Hwy. 26 at Government CampChains or TT. agvehicles Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m

Hermiston

the region.

little to no

tion.

CJCF

EAST

• 58 0

A sunny day returns to

Drier, partly cloudy.

Ce@,<qbCSC accumula-

CC, CCC OC'CC

OREGON CITIES

Yesterday's state extremes

gz

Another day of snowfall,

chance of snow showers today. Scattered snow showers are expected under cloudy skies.

• Brothers 29nsh Nyssa xxxxx(.ouage oakndge ik Jx 4 F Juntura 29/ ~~~Grove ve . ah — '. i n. e 9L HamPton ve ve• BurnS • 4+~@La Pine29/15 «4 1/31 (005 Baykh a zzn66 xo 30/77 Crescent, w 44/38 • 8 8 8 8 'JK ae at at ae Cr 1 , ae Fon Rock 30nt a'' ah Jk !k Jh J h J k J h 316 Jh Sh 316 Sh 27IL4ie t • Bandon 5, Roseburg R.. CHhmuit Jk A.-36 „Christmas,Valley Jh Jh Jh ~ ~ ~ I eh Jh Jhiordan„vallpy Jh a 27/1 Yh JK te Jh Jh Jk Fren(h ien 39/32 I 5/luer 31/18

e 4 /38 a v S

Periods of light snow.

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST: 5TATE I,

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:4+++

.++++e ++

W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms

o 4 • 4 a

*

* * * *

* *

:th ae Xe tk

* +

Rain F l urries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......48/44/085...58/41/s .. 70/43/s GrandRapids....45/33/000 ..39/36/pc...48/44/r RapidCity.......59/I5/0 00..50/I5/pc.. I8/2/sn Savannah.......73/55/0.00... 71/57/I. 77/61/pc Akron..........46/30/004...43/37/s. 52/45/sh GreenBay.......39/32/000..38/33/pc. 43/40/sh Reno...........60/24/000..29/15/sn. 30/14/pc Seattle......... 44/35/1.69..41/30/pc.. 38/30/s Albany..........40/14/000...39/25/s...41/35li Greensboro......63/37/0.00...60/44/c. 52/50/sh Richmond.......6706/0.00 ..59/39/pc. 51/49/sh SiouxFalls.......39/19/0 00... 36/328 .. 36/9/sn Albuquerque.....53/24/000 ..51/31/pc.38/17/pc Harusburg.......40/23/0.00...45/31/s. 45/34/sh Rochester, NY....47/22/0.00... 40/34/s. 46/41/sh Spokane....... 43/33/trace .. 31/17/sn. 22/I 5/pc Anchorage......18/12/000 ..28/23/sn. 33/31/sn Hartford,CT.....57/21/0.00...42/24/s. 42/38/sh Sacramento......49/35/0.00..48/33/pc. 49/30/pc Springfield, MO ..56/44/0.02... 58/44/t. 66/45/pc Atlanta.........65/50/000 ..64/57/sh. 69/60/sh Helena..........45/27/000...25/1/sn ..6/10/sn St. Louis.........58741 /000... 61/48/t. 63750/sh Tampa..........85/69/0 00 ..81/67/pc. 79764/pc Atlantic City.....56/28/000...51/31/s.52/47/sh Honolulu........82/70/000...79/67/s .. 80/67/s Salt Lake City....39/l 7/000 ..42/20/sn. 23711/sn Tucson..........70/34/0.00 ..71/39/pc. 49727/pc Austin..........60/51/1.86...65/46/s .. 71/61/s Houston........67/61/1.30...72/51/s .. 72/62/s SanAntonio.....64/53/1.70... 65/46/s .. 70/62/s Tulsa...........55/45/0.01... 54/46/r. 68/44/pc Baltimore .......49/27/000...52/37/s. 51/43/sh Huntsville.......58/50/031..68/60/sh. 68/56/sh SanDiego.......60/48/000..58741/sh.55/37/pc Washington, DC.50/34/0 01... 53/39/s. 51/46/sh Billings.........54/32/0.00...33/4/sn...9/-2/sn Indianapolis.....48/37/0.10... 46/42/r. 61/47/sh SanFrancisco....55/44/0.02..50/37/pc. 51/37/pc Wichita 54/ 27/0 0051 /40/r64/29/pc Birmingham.....59/52/005..69/62/sh. 70/62/sh Jackson, MS.... 61/56/0.33. 73/54/t. 74/61/sh SanJose........59/43/000.. 50/33/pc. 50/32/pc Yakima.........53/30/000 34/21/pc. 31/18/pc Bismarck.........36/9/000 ..38/15/pc ..15/ I/sn Jacksonvile......76/60/000..79/57/pc. 79/59/pc SantaFe........43/12/000.. 45/22/pc.. 32/9/pc Yuma...........73/47/0.00 ..65/44/pc. 57/38/pc Boise...........46/20/000..32/14/sn.. 27/8/sn Juneau......... 28/21/0.00..29/26/pc. 33/29/sn INTERNATIONAL Boston..........45/28/000...45/30/s. 46/41/sh Kansas City......58/26/0.00... 53/47/i. 66/34/pc Budgepoit,CT... 44/26/000...44/29/s. 43/42/sh Lansing.........45/32/0.00..38/35/pc. 50/44/sh Amsterdam......46/37/0 42 42/32/sh 36/28/pc Mecca..........81/61/000... 73/55/s .. 77/58/s Buffalo........ 44/28/000...40/35/s. 48/42/sh LasVegas.......60/41/0 00.. 59/36/sh. 46/30/pc Athens..........48/35/0.00... 48/41/s.48/43/pc Mexico City .....73/59/000...72745/s. 71/48/pc Burlington, VT....40/12/000...34/25/5...40/38/i Lexington.......54/42/0 00 .. 56/51/sh. 64/55/sh Auckland........77/59/000..74/65/pc. 72/61Ipc Montreal........41/21/000.. 32/23/pc.. 30/30/c Caribou,ME.....32/147000...30/10/s.31730/pcLincoln..........45/18/000...42/34/r.48/19/pc Baghdad........60/50/0.00... 53/39/s .. 52/38/s Moscow.........16/7/0.00 .. 12/1 0/si ..15/15/si Charleston SC...73/53/000... 70757/I. 72762/pc Little Rock.......53/47/047... 67/51/t. 69/53/pc Bangkok........95/73/0.00 ..95/67/pc.. 90/73/s Nairobi.........79/59/0.43... 78/57/s .. 79/58/s Charlotte........65/36/000...62/49/c. 60/54/sh LosAngeles......63/48/0 00 ..56743/sh. 55/40/pc Beiyng...........34/5/0 00 .. 32/I 2/pc.. 41/I6/s Nassau.........84/75/0.00 ..75/70/pc. 76/72/pc Chattanooga.....56/48/005 ..66/55/sh. 69/59/sh Louisvile........60/42/001... 57/53/i.65/55/sh Beirut..........54743/045...47/41/s. 52/46/pc New Delhi.......68/36/000...69749/s .. 70/49/s Cheyenne.......51/30/000 ..55/25/pc.. 25/7/sn MadisonVY J.....41/31/0 00..39/35/sh. 49/39/sh Berlin...........45/43/0.00..40/29/sh .. 30/22/c Osaka..........50/30/000 ..42/33/pc.41/37/pc Chicago.........50/34/000 ..42/40/sh. 56/49/sh Memphis....... 57/53/042 68/60/t. 73/59/pc Bogota.........64741/0.00..72743/pc.. 73/48/s Oslo............27/21/0.01 25/20/pc .. .. 14/7/pc Cincinnati.......56/26/001 ..52/47/sh.62/51/sh Miami..........83/75/0.00..81/71/pc. 82/72/pc Budapest........28/23/010.. 34/28/si..34/23/rs Ottawa.........39/21/0.00 ..32/24/pc. 33/33/sh Cleveland.......45/33/002 ..43/39/pc. 52/46/sh Milwaukee......43/34/0.00..41737/sh. 52/45/sh BuenosAires.....86/66/0.00...90/68/s.. 88/66/s Paris............43/39/0 02 .. 44/43/sh. 42735/sh Colorado Spnngs.49/18/000... 55/27/s .. 39/11/c Minneapolis.....35/29/0 00..38/34/sh ..40/I9/is CaboSanLucas..75/54/000...77/57/s.70/54/pc Rio deJaneiro....93/77/0.00.. 83/72/sh. 78/72/sh Columbia,MO...56/33/000... 58/45/r. 65/46/pc Nashville........54/48/0.55..66/59/sh. 69/57/sh Cairo..........52/46/35.74..52/43/sh.. 59/47/s Rome...........54/43/0 00 .. 52/44/sh. 55/42/pc Columbia,SC....72/40/000...67/53/c. 71/59/sh New Orleans.....67/61/0.61... 73/57/t .. 74/62/c Calgary.........43/I8/0 00.. I1/ 2/sn.. I1/2/pc Santiago........97/63/0.00... 80/67/s .. 86/69/s Columbus, GA....65/55/000 ..72/59/sh. 73/61/sh New York.......49/39/0.00...49/36/s. 47/43/sh Cancun.........84/77/0 00..83/76/sh. 82/73/pc SaoPaulo.......79/37/0.00... 69/64/r. 73/63/sh Columbus, OH....49/317006..49/41/pc. 58/49/sh Newark, Nl......50/32/0.00...49/36/s. 46/40/sh Dublin..........46/28/0.00 ..39/34/sh.. 44/41/c Sapporo .........21/1/0 00 .. 22/11/si. 21/I 6/pc Concord,NH.....36/11/000...40/21/s. 40/33/sh Norfolk VA......69/36/000.56/40/pc. 57751/sh Edinburgh.......46/37/000 ..36/28/pc.. 36/31/c Seoul............18/5/0.00... 21/I 4/s 20/22/si .. Corpus Christi....71/60/0.72... 71/53/s .. 77/66/s OklahomaCity...49/46/007... 54741/i.65/40/pc Geneva.........34/30/0.00... 34/30/c. 34/30/sn Shanghai........45/32/000 ..40/37/pc .. 46/35/c DallasFtWonh...57/48/I 47..61/46/pc.. 70/54/s Omaha.........45/24/000... 40/35/r. 46/19/pc Haiare..........79/59/0.15... 73/62/r.75763/sh Singapore.......90/72/2.47... 90/78/c ..90777/c Dayton .........46/31/006 ..49/41/sh...59/48/t Orlando.........84/65/0.00 ..82/62/pc. 82/61/pc Hong Kong......63/57/000 ..60/48/pc. 60752/pc Stockholm.......32/28/000...28/26/c..25/21/si Denver....... 60/22/000...57/24/s. 33/10/sn PalmSprings.....73/50/000..61/35/sh.56/33/pc Istanbul........34/23/11.84 ..36/33/pc.. 46/43/c Sydney..........73/68/0 00 .. 88/68/sh. 90/70/pc Des Moines......48/29/0.00...43/37/r. 53/23/pc Peoria..........50/30/0.00...45/40/r.. 55/46/c leiusalem.......38/31/0.92 ..39/36/sh.45/38/pc Taipei...........59/57/000 ..57758/sh. 62/58/sh Detroit..........48/25/000..38/34/pc.49/43/sh Philadelphia.....53/31/000...50/35/s. 48/40/sh Johannesburg....86/66/000 ..83/64/sh.79/58/sh Tel Aviv.........$5/43/0.42 ..50/42/sh. 55/42/pc Duluth..........32/27/000 ..37/30/pc...33/23/i Phoeuix.........72/42/0 00 ..68/43/pc. 51/31/pc Lima...........77/70/000..77768/pc.7566/pc Tokyo...........48/41/0.00 ..44/30/pc. 42734/pc El Paso..........57/37/000 ..59/42/pc. 58/33/pc Pittsburgh.......47/27/000...48/39/s. 57/46/sh Lisbon..........63/57/000 57752/sh 61/49/c Toronto.........43/32/0 00 39/29/pc. 37/36/sh Faiibanks....... -6/21/000.... 3/5/c ..18/2/sn Portland,ME.....40/I6/0 00...44/28/s. 39/35/pc London.........4804/014 ..45/40/sh .. 42/36/c Vancuuver.......46/39/1.03 .. 38/25/pc. 36/28/pc Fargo...........33/20/000 ..37/22/pc .. 24/3/sn Providence......46/23/0 00...44/26/s. 46/39/sh Madrid .........41/34/0.00... 53/33/c.52/35/pc Vienna..........45/28/0.03... 37/31/c ..35/20/rs Flagstaff........47/267000..40/15/pc.. 24/3/pc Raleigh.........68/35/000...63743/c.61/53/sh Manila..........86/77/000..87/72/pc.. 82/73/c Warsaw.........28/21/0.06 ..35/26/sn.. 29/23/c

WEST NEWS

Who belongs toSnoqualmieTribe? • Seattle anthropologist examines ancestry records inongoingtribal enrollment dispute

cording to current membership records. But that number could get a lot smaller, or bigg er, depending on how t h e tribe resolves its membership By Lynda V. Mapes dispute. The Seat tle Times "Most records after Tribes decide for themselves SEATTLE — He t r aveled 1920 are inaccurate, who is a member under their with a notebook in his pocket, It is not unusual messed up, corrupted constitution. on an urgent mission. for tribal members to be of All over Western Washing- or intentionally mixed Indian blood, but they ton, for two years beginning in falsified" may enroll irt only one tribe at late 1916, Indian agent Charles once, and must meet the quali— Jay Miller, anthropologist fications determined by that Roblin sought out homeless, landless Indians, left behind tribe to enjoy benefits includand hiding out during the treaing the right to run for office ty-making era, who had never papers and folders, and notat- and vote in elections. received the benefits promised ed irt colored inks — to help reThe Snoqualmie tribe was in return for the loss of their solve an ongoing tribal enroll- recognized by the Department land: a school for their chil- ment dispute under a contract of Interior in 1999. Its first job dren, tools for farming, money. signed by Snoqualmie tribal as a tribe was to produce a On sandbars inthe rivers secretary Nina Repin. base membership roll verified in northern Pttget Sound, he Miller's research indicates under the terms of its constifound Sauk Indians chased that Shelley Burch, chairwom- tution, which says that to vote out of c o m munal g ardens an of the tribal council, several or hold office at Snoqualmie, that had sustained them for other council members, and members must have an ancesgenerations, run out of the for- some tribal members claiming tor on the original Roblin Rolls, ests where loggers didn't want hereditary chief status are de- and today possess at least 1/8 them, and burned out of vil- scended from families nixed degree of Snoqualmie blood. lages wherefishermen didn't by Roblin in red ink. The misBut the t r ibe never prowant them, either. He traveled match with the original record duced a base roll that it certito Tolt, where Snoqualmies shows that contemporary refied on those two fronts. And it had lost their livelihood when cords Used toclaim memberhas been fighting about who is the hop r anches were de- ship today are unreliable, Mill- qualified to be a voting memstroyed by aphids. er said. "Most records after ber of the tribe per its constitu1920 are inaccurate, messed tion ever since. Bloodlines up, corrupted or intentionally Burch did not return phone R oblin took d o w n t h e i r falsified," Miller said. calls for this story, but in an names and family history, and Some question the reliabil- earlier email to The Seattle recorded their enrollment in ity even of the Roblin Rolls, Times, she acknowledged the tribes according to their blood- because tribalmembers were 2004 roll the tribe provided line, so they could secure the self-identifying their lineage; to the Bureau of Indian Afbenefits they had been prom- the oral history they related fairs did not include the blood ised under the treaties. could have been embroidered, quantum verification required Those records are called and other complications defeat by the tribe's constitution. Charles Roblin's S c hedule a perfectly square-cornered The tribe is seeking to exof Unenrolled Indians, dated foundation. pand the casino with a 350Jan. 1, 1919, or Roblin Rolls room hotel tower and 600 more for short. In those records Ro- Gold standard slot machines, for a total of blin used a red pen to denote Nonetheless, th e R o b l in 1,700 machines in alL One esfamilies that did not qualify Rolls preserved at the Nation- timate shows that could pump to be enrolled at Snoqualmie, al Archives are used by many up total revenue for the tribe's because they were already en- as a gold standard against casino property t o n e a r ly rolled in other tribes. which to affirm family trees $300 million a year, including But the red ink was unde- and tribal enrollment claimed $230 million in gambling revetectable in the black-and-white by Indian people today all over nue. That would be a big jump copies and microfilmed rePuget Sound. from 2012, with $189 million cords that made it to NorthAt stake a t S n o qualmie in gambling revenue and $40 west archives, and at l east is not only identity and the million from the casino's resthree major families called out right to vote and hold office, taurants and other facilities. "Somebody has to respect in the Roblin Rolls nonethe- but money. The tribe's casino less claim Snoqualmie ances- just outside Seattle is pull- the documents. What I am dotry today. ing in more than $200 million ing is warning everybody who Seattle anthropologist Jay a year by one estimate. The works in Puget Sound that Miller discovered that secret tribe is mulling an expansion this is a mess, and it has gotten as he combed through the that could boost revenue even to bea mess because of allthe original Roblin Rolls — orga- more, for a tribe numbering millions of dollars involved," nized in a rainbow of colored only about 650 members — ac- Miller said.

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2

NBA, C3

College basketball, C3 Baseball, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

CYCLOCROSS

Bend's Craig wins at nationals MADISON, Wis. -

Bend's AdamCraig won the singlespeed raceat the USACycling CycloCross National Championships on Wednesday. Craig took his second singlespeed victory of the season in muddy, slushy racing conditions at Badger Prairie Park, finishing in 43 minutes,

14 seconds. Aaron Bradford, of Santa Cruz, Calif., finished second, 2:11

behind Craig. Isaac Neff,

® Sisters star scoresand doesa lotmore;. ~<, GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL

~g7

The Bulletin

Taylor Nieri is the epitome of an allaround player — in the eyes of her coach, at least. Nieri can direct an offense like a point guard, post up on the block like a center, and slash and shoot like a wing. With her ballhandling skills and her ability to get to the rim, her coach, Julianne Horner, says:

Rob Kerr/ The Bulletin

"She's far surpassed what I thought she was going to be able to do, getting this team to believe in themselves, taking a leadership role verbally, which she's never done before, taking command of the floor when things get a little awry," says Horner, Sisters' t h i r dyear c o ach. "She commands everybody to follow her. B oth on and o f f the floor, her leadership skills have become incredible." SeeSisters/C4

• The Outlaws are off to a 10-2 start behind the versatile game ofTaylor Nieri, who hassetthe school scoringrecord By Grant Lucas

Sisters senior Taylor Nieri is averaging 19 points a game this season.

"There's nobody that can really stop her." That versatility, combined with a basketball IQ that Horner describes as "probably one of the best I've seen at the (Class) 4A level," has helped Nieri (pronounced NeeAIR-ee), a 5-foot-7-inch senior who earned a full academic scholarship to the University of Oregon, not only become the all-time girls basketball scoring leader at Sisters High but revitalize the program as a whole.

of Madison, Wis., took third, 3:08 back of Craig.

Brennan Wodtli, also of Bend, finished 43rd in

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

SNOWBOARDING

the singlespeed race. Craig is also registered to compete on

Sunday in the pro men's national championship

Bonds, Clemens

race, along with fel-

low Bend locals Ryan Trebon andChristopher Jones. — Bulletin staff report

snubbed by Hall

GOLF Full-field PGA

Tour event ontap HONOLULU — Jeff Maggert is starting his 23rd season on the PGA Tour, and some things

of Fame

~=-= QPjf.:gf TOLfk ,,~

neverchange. "The fun partabout this week is that every-

- ~

- N3B RKII -s

gjf

one is in a goodmood," Maggertsaid Wednesday. "They're not

r tfj o

complaining about how

l Oll

they've been playing."

z/

Much like spring training in baseball, the Sony Open is filled with

By Barry Svrluga

ee „ i ,

The Washington Post

,

optimism for players young and old asthe first full-field event of

the season. No one hasmore confidence than Dustin

Johnson, coming off a season-opening win

George Crosland/submitted to The Bulletin

Bend's Kent Callister, 17, airs it out in the halfpipe while competing in a Dew Tour event in Breckenridge, Colo., last month.

at the Tournament of Champions the day be-

fore on Maui. Everyone else starts from scratch. The rookies tend to have higher

expectations, perhaps because they don't know any better.

John Daly remembers his rookie season in1991, when he missed half the cuts in his opening six events, tied for fourth at the Honda Classicand felt like he had his card

locked up for nextyear when he drove upto Crooked Stick as an alternate for the PGA

Championship and won. "I was just trying

to get my card before the PGA," Daly said. "As for the rookies, I'm

not going to speakfor them, but I would think they're goal is to make

$850,000 as quickly as they can andkeeptheir card." Good thing he's not

speaking for them. Luke List was asked for his No. 1 goal as

"The Australian team actually had a lot of benefits.... It would be nice to ride with my friends on the U.S. team. Itjust costs too

much money. They weren't offering the same benefits as the Australian team." — Bend's Kent Callister, on joining the Australian halfpipe snowboarding team

• Bend snowboarderI(ent Callister hashis sights set on the 2014 Winter Games asa member of the Australian halfpipe team By Mark Morical The Bulletin

The decision was a fairly easy one for Kent Callister. Invited last spring to join both the U.S. Snowboarding Rookie halfpipe team and the Australian halfpipe team, Callister chose the Aussies, making his dream of reaching the 2014 Winter Olympics a realistic one. Callister, a 17-year-old from Bend who has dual citizenship because his father is Australian, received a scholarship from the Olympic Winter Institute of Australia and is now competing at the highest levels of halfpipe

snowboarding. The OWIA is government-funded in Australia, and it has provided Callister more financial support than if he had joined the U.S. Team. "The Australian team actually had a lot of benefits," said Callister this week by phone from Copper Mountain, Colo., where he is training for this week's U.S. Grand Prix. "I wouldn't have to be paying for much at all, mostly just my food. It would be nice to ride with my friends on the U.S. team. It just costs too much money. They weren't offering the same benefits as the Australian team." SeeOlympic/C4

a rookie and saidhe wanted to get in all the

majors as quickly as possible, starting with

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

the Masters only three

months away. "I know it will probably require a win, but I still think a bunch of

good play might do it," he said. There was talk it might be difficult for

the young players to get into tournaments this

season. Buteveryone moving up from Q-school and the

Web.com Tour got into the Sony Open. Of the 23 rookies at the Sony

Open, five of them have never been to a PGA Tour event unless they bought a ticket. — The Associated Press

Nextup Arizona at Oregon • When:

Today, 6 p.m. • TV:ESPN2 • Radio: KBND-AM 1110

Inside OSU missing center Angus Brandt,C3

The Register-Guard

It's Oregon on a 16-

game home winning streak against Arizona, unbeaten 14 games into the season. It's the Ducks bidding for a national ranking against the No. 4 Wildcats, the highest-ranked team to visit Matthew Knight Arena in its three seasons of hosting UO

game. See Baseball /C4

NFL

Bend's Longwell set to kick for Seattle The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. Ryan Longwell's mindset was that he would be running a marathon this weekend. Instead, he'll be back in the NFL playoffs, kicking for the Seattle Seahawks. "To be dead-honest with -

basketball. It's the second week of the Pac-12 season, but it's the one time the Ducks are scheduled to play the conferencefavorite.

you, my wife is probably

"This game is very important for us," UO senior Arsalan Kazemi said. Might tonight's contest even be the biggest game played so far at Matthew Knight Arena? See Ducks/C3

Baseball is a game that reveres numbers, and their numbers offer indisputable evidence they were among the best to ever play. Barry Bonds clobbered more home runs than anyone in a single season or a career, and was honored as his league's most valuable player a record seven times. Roger Clemens won 354 career games and was named winner of the Cy Young Award as his league's best pitcher seven times,another record. Yet on Wednesday, Bonds and Clemens were denied entry to the Baseball Hall of Fame, a sharp rebuke not only to those two stars, but an apparent condemnation of the steroids-tainted period in which they played the

By Tim Booth

Ducks hope tohand No. 4 Wildcats first loss By Bob Clark

• Writers elect no one for induction

Brian Oavles/The Register-Guard

Oregon's Dominic Artis, left, and Arsalan Kazemi surround Oregon State's Eric Moreland during the Ducks'79-66 victory over the Beavers at Gill Coliseum on Sunday. Oregon plays Arizona tonight.

the happiest person that I got called in to work," Longwell said Wednesday. "We were actually training all fall for the Disney marathon that's this Sunday coming up so I got her out of that and got me out of it, too." SeeLongwell /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

ON THE AIR: TELEVISION

SPORTS IN BRIEF

COREBOARD

PREP SPORTS

TODAY GOLF 8 a.m.:European Tour/ Sunshine Tour, Volvo Golf Champions, first round, Golf

Channel. 4 p.m.:PGATour, Sony Open, first round, Golf Channel.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Miami at North Carolina, ESPN.

4 p.m.:Men's college, Michigan State at lowa, ESPN2. 4p.m.: Men's college, Old

Dominion at George Mason, NBCSN. 5p.m.: NBA, New York Knicks at lndiana Pacers, TNT.

5 p.m.:Men's college, Northwestern at Penn State, ESPNU.

6 p.m.:Men's college, Kentucky at Vanderbilt, ESPN.

6p.m.:Men's college, Arizona at Oregon, ESPN2.

6 p.m.:Men's college, UMass at Saint Louis, CBSSN.

6:30 p.m.:Men's college, UCLA at Utah, Pac-12 Network. 7 p.m.: Men'scollege,USC at

Today Wrestling: Summit atBend, 7pimc Redmondat MountainView,6 pmc Ridgeviewat I.a Pine, 6 p.mc Molagaat Madras,6 p.m.; CrookCounty vs. Culver inCowdogClassic at Culver,7 pm. Swimming: Barlowat Madras,4:45p.m.

Mexico State at Seattle, Root

Sports. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Miami Heat at Portland Trail Blazers, TNT.

8 p.m.:Men's college, St. Mary's at Gonzaga, ESPN2.

8:30 p.m.:Men's college, Arizona State at OregonState,

Washington at Western Washington, Root Sports.

FRIDAY GOLF 8 a.m.:European Tour/ Sunshine Tour, Volvo Golf

Champions, second round, Golf Channel. 4 p.m.:PGATour, Sony Open, second round, Golf Channel. GYMNASTICS 7 p.m.:College, Ohio State at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.

HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:College, Union (N.Y) at Princeton, NBCSN.

7 p.m.:College, NebraskaOmaha at Denver, NBCSN. 7 p.m.:Western Hockey

Sports. BASKETBALL 4p.m.: Men's college, Fairfield

at Loyola (Md.), ESPNU. 6 p.m.:Men's college, Wright State at Loyola-Chicago, ESPNU.

5 p.m.:NBA, Chicago Bulls at New York Knicks, ESPN.

6:50 p.m.:High school boys, Bend at Summit, COTV. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Oklahoma City Thunder at Los Angeles

Lakers, ESPN. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Golden State Warriors, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.

BOXING 6p.m.: Friday Night Fights, John Molina vs.Dannie Williams, ESPN2.

ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Miami Heat at Portland Trail Blazers, KBNDAM 1110.

8:30 p.m.:Men's college, Arizona State at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940.

FRIDAY BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Golden State Warriors, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690. Listings arethemost accurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TV or radio stations.

Conference boysbasketball victory of the season.ClayGibson added14 points andJohn Slaght EO 0

contributed 13 to help Culver improve to 1-3 in league and 6-8

n 3

overall. "We got out andplayed

ll

Wednesday's result

eight to10 weeksafter needing

said. Culver, which led 28-23 at halftime, continues TRC play on

surgery to repair a right hand that is broken for the second

Friday with a homegameagainst Kennedy.

time this season. TheMinnesota

Culver girls fall —Santiam

W ednesday. Lovemissedthe

rolled past Culver 72-24 on Wednesday in Mill City in Tri-

first three weeks of the regular

6 C U

O

n 1-10

Class2A Tri-River Conference CULVERI67I — GersonGonzalez 27, Gibson 14, Slaght13,McDonald9, Dougherty4, Beeler,LeQuieu,Fritz, Leeper,Lofting. Totals 27 11-20 67. SANTIAM (48) — BraydonMizeg22, Nicot9, Toge 7,Smart 6, White 3,Whitmire, Sexton,Walczak, Hagen.Totals 1610-23 48. Culver 14 14 17 22 — 67 Santiam 15 7 9 17 — 48 Three-pointgoals — Culver: Gonzalez,McDonald; Santiam:Mizeg2, Nicot 2.

FOOTBALL

6 6

Wednesday'sGames Stanford76,Washington St. 67 Washington 62, California 47

Today's Games Arizonaat Oregon, 6p.m.

UCLA atUtah, 6:30 p.m. USC atColorado,7 p.m. ArizonaStateat OregonState, 6.30 p.m.

uconn 75,Georgetown46 Viganova 65, DePaul 45 WestVirginia53, Texas49 SOUTH

Elon 67,Wofford57 Furman 56, Georgia Southern42 MiddleTennessee73, FAU59 SouthAlabama53, Louisiana-Lafayette43 MIDWEST

CIeveland St. 73, 0I.-chicago69, OT SE Missouri59,Saint Louis52

Betting line NFL

(Hometeamsin Caps) Favorite O p e n Currentunderdog Saturday BRONCOS 9 9 Ravens 49ERS Packers 3 3 Sunday FALCONS 2 2.5 Seahawks PATRIOTS 9 . 5 9.5 Texans

Wednesday's Games

EAST Butler 72,SaintJoseph's66 Delaware 69, Hofstra 54 Fordham62, Duquesne75

GeorgeWashington 76,St. Bonaventure 59 Harttord66,Maine61 Louisvilie 73,SetonHal 56 Rutgers56, St.John's 56 StonyBrook62,Binghamton 37 Syracuse 72, Providence66 Towson99, Wiliamik Mary86, 20T UMBC68, NewHampshire 57 SOUTH Auburn66,LSU63 Austin Peay64, MoreheadSt.61, DT BostonCollege66,Virginia Tech75 Campbel63, l Longwood 73 CharlestonSouthem75,Winthrop 63 Charlotte74, LaSalle 65 CoastalCarolina61, Presbyterian43 E. Kentucky77, MurraySt. 65

35. Bill Haas 36. NicolasColsaerts 37.JasonDay 36. RobertGarrigus 39.JohnSenden

40. ScottPiercy 41. Ryan Moore 42. DavidToms 43. HiroyukiFuiita 44. MatteoManassero 45. Thomas Biorn 46. DavidLynn 47. JamieDonaldson 46. George Coetzee 49. K.J.Choi

50. ThorbiornOlesen 51. GeoffOgilvy 52. Shane Lowry 53. HenrikStenson 54. MiguelAngelJimenez 55. MarcusFraser 56. RichieRamsay 57. Alexander Noren 56. RafaelCahrera-Bego 59. PadraigHarrington 60. MarcelSiem 61. AndersHansen

Toledo70, KentSt. 56 Utah Valley76,UMKC 66

Valparaiso75,Rl.-chicago70 W. Illinois 95,Greenvige46

Wichita St.62, S.Illinois 76 Wright St.69,ClevelandSt. 53 SOUTHWES T Houston76, SMU67 Oklahoma St.63,TCU45 SouthernMiss. 75,Rice52 TexasA&M69,Arkansas 51 WestVirginia57,Texas53, OT FAR WEST Air Force76 Nevada65 Boise St.63,Wyoming61 Cal St.-Fugerton74, CSBakersfield 62 Long Beach St. 76, CSNorthridge 69 NewMexico65, UNLV60 San DiegoSt. 65, FresnoSt. 62 Stantord76,Washington St. 67 UC Irvine66, Hawaii 64 Washington62, Califomia47

62.JohnHuh 63. FredrikJacohson

64. BerndWiesberger 65. GregChalmers 66. SimonDyson 67. BudCauley 66. Thaworn Wiratchant 69. KevinNa 70. Sang-Moon Bae 71. Martin Laird 72. KimKyung-Tae 73.JonasBlixt 74. Brendan Jones 75. RyoIshikawa

Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST L 0 0 0

ENG SAF NIR

Esp

USA

swE USA

usA usA

SAF USA USA USA GER SCO

26. MartinKaym er 29. PaulLawrie 30. CarlPettersson swE 31. RickieFowler USA 32. Francesco Molinari ITA 33. GonzaloFernandez-0astano ESP 34. Branden Grace SAF

Green Bay56,LoyolaotChicago45 IndianaSt 66,Bradley53 Kansas97, lowaSt.69, OT Michigan62, Nebraska47 Minnesota64, Rlinois 67 N. Illinois 72,Miami(Ohio) 61 Ohio 66,Butfalo 66

Overall W 14 13 12

0 2 3

L

faster than most expected,

league record at 2-2. Culver (4-10 played for about a month and overall) hosts Kennedy onFriday. broke two bones in his shooting hand in a game last week against

usA

BEL AUS USA AUS

usA usA usA

JPN ITA Di N ENG WAL SAF KOR Di N AUS IRL

swE ES P AUS SCO

swE Esp IRL GER DIN USA

swE AUT

Aus

ENG USA THA USA KOR SCO KOR

swE Aus JPN

TENNIS Professional Hobarllnternational

3. 77

3.59 3.47 3.43 3.41 3.36 3.27 3.12 3.11 3.05 2.61 2.60 2.80 2.76 2.70 262 2.62 2.56 2.47

2.36 2.35 2.24 2.23 2.17 2.14 2.13 2.12 2.10 2.10 2.10 2.09

2.06 2.05 2.05 2.01 2.01 2.00 1.99 196 196 1.97 1.97 1.95 1.95 1.92 192 1.90 1.69 1.86

Cavs' Varejao needs

Robert Griffin III had two knee

Surgery —Anderson Varejao's

— the result of a knee injury he

miss two more months, a major

suffered during Sunday's playoff

setbackfor a youngCleveland team struggling through another

ligaments surgically repaired big body has betrayed him Wednesday — includingarecon- again. Cleveland's hustling struction of the anterior cruciate center needs surgery to repair a ligament and arepair of a tear muscle that split near his right in the lateral collateral ligament kneeandcouldcausehim to loss to the Seattle Seahawks. It was the second time Griffin's ACL has had to be reconstructed;

viewed Notre Dame coach Brian

HeinekenOpen Wednesday At ASBBank Tennis Centre Auckland, New Zealand Purse: $450,000(WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Second Round SamQuerrey(4), UnitedStates,def. Olivier Rochus, Belgium,7-5,6-3. Xavier Malisse,Belgium, def. SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia,7-6 (6), 6-4. Philipp Kohlschreiber(2), Germany, def. Aleiandro Falla,Colombia,7-6(4), 4-6 6-3. LukasLacko,Slovakia,def.ThomazBegucci(Bl, Brazil, 6-3,6-5. Gael Monfils, France,def. GregJones,Australia, 6-4, 6-2. Jesse Levine,Canada,def. Brian Baker,united States, 7-5,6-4.

TommyHaas(3), Germany, def. Igor Siisling, Netherlands,6-3, 6-4. DavidFerrer(1), Spain,def. Yen-hsunLu,Taiwan, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL COMMISSIONES R'OFFICE Suspe ndedHous-

ton 2BJonathanSingleton 50gamesafter a second violation of theMinor LeagueDrugPrevention and TreatmentProgramfor adrug of abuse. National League LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto termswith RHPMattPalmer,CEliezerAlfonzo, CRamonCastro, INF AlfredoAmezaga, INFBrian Barden, INFDmar Luna, INFDallas McPhersonand OFJerome (Jeremy)Mooreonminor leaguecontracts.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Assigned RHPArcenio Leonoutright to Nashvile. PITTSBU RGH PIRATES Traded OF Quincy Latimoreto Clevelandfor RHPJeanmar Gomez. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA —SuspendedN.y. Knicks F Carmelo Anthony onegamefor confronting KevinGarnettatter Monday'sgame. MIAMI HEAT — SignedF Jarvis Vamadoto a 10-daycontract. PORTLANDTRAILBLAZERS— Recalled G Nolan Smith andGWil Bartonfrom Idaho(NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINAPANTHERS— Named David Gettlemangeneralmanager. CHICAGO BEARS—SignedTEBrody Eldridge to a reserve/futurecontract. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed P TJ.Conley and CB Greg Mccoy to reserve)futurecontracts. SANDIEGO CHARGERS— NamedTom Teesco generalmanager. SEATTLESEAH AWKS — Placed DE Chris Clemonsand PK Steven Haushka on injured reserve SignedDEPatrick Chukwurahand PKRyan Longwell. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS— Fired generalmanager BrianBurke. SOCCER

Major LeagueSoccer D.C. UNITED —SignedF Rafaei. FC DALLAS — Signed D LondonWoodberry. Agreedtotermswith DStephenKeel.

COLLEGE EASTERNWASHINGTON — Announced WR BrandonKaufmanandQBKyle Padron wil enterthe NFL draft. FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON — Announced the resignation of assistant baseball coachEnverLopez. Named Lesleigh Hogg assistant track and field

coach. NEBRASKA Announceditis adding women's sand voleybag as avarsity sport beginning this year. PENN STATE—Announced LBBrennanFranklin and RBCurtis Dukeshaveleft thefootball team. SYRACUSE — Named Scott Shafer football

coach.

Denver. Lovewas averaging 18.3 points and14.0 rebounds per game.

ington Redskins quarterback

Women Guarterfinals AgnieszkaRadwanska (I), Poland, def. Roberta

4.63

4.39 4.35 4.26 4.15 3.62

RGIII haS Surgery — Wash-

in the LCL isconsidered by doc-

4.97

4.75 466 4.60 4.54 4.53

FOOTBALL

Apia International Wednesday At Olympic ParkTennis Centre Sydney, Australia Purse: Men,$486,000(WT250);W omen, $681,000 IPremier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Second Round Denis Istomin, uzbekistan, def. FernandoVerdasco(4),Spain,6-3, 6-3. Julie n Benneteau,France,def.RadekStepanek (6), CzechRepublic, walkover. MarcelGranogers(6), Spain,def. FabioFognini, Italy, 6-2,7-6 (4). Kevin Anderson,SouthAfrica, def. FelicianoLopez, Spain6-3, , 6-4. JarkkoNieminen,Finland, def. GigesSimon(2l, France,6-3, 6-1. RyanHarrison, UnitedStates, def.JohnIsner (fl, united States,6-4, 6-4. BernardTomic,Australia, def.FlorianMayer(5), Germany,7-6(4), 6-2. AndreasSeppi (3), Italy, def.JohnMigman, Aus-

(3),Italy, 6-2,6-1. Li Na (4), China,def. MadisonKeys,united States,4-6, 7-6(2), 6-2. Angelique Kerber(2), Germany,def. Svetlana Kuznetsova,Russia,6-3, 7-5.

GOLF

15. IanPoulter 16. CharlSchwartzel 17. Graeme McDoweg 16 SergioGarcia 19. Phil Mickelson 20. PeterHanson 21. NickWatney 22. MattKuchar 23. BoVanPelt 24. ErnieEs 25.ZachJohnson 26. HunterMahan 27.Jim Furyk

Florida 77,Georgia44 Florida St.65,Maryland62 Gardner-Webb 76, UNCAsheville 71 JamesMadison 76, UNCWilmington 50 Marshall 79,Tulsa61 Memphis67,EastCarolina54 Missi ssippi92,Tennessee74 Mississippi St.56,SouthCarolina 54 NC State63, Georgia Tech70 Radford59,High Point 54 Richmond64, RhodeIsland 61 UCF 64,UAB46 UNCGreensboro66, Lees-McRae47 UTEP66, Tulane57 VCU 74,Dayton62 VMI 62,Liberty69 Viganova61, SouthFlorida53 WakeForest 55,Virginia 52 MIDWEST Akron 65, WMichigan 43 Ba I St 60, E.Michigan56 Cent. Michigan73,Bowling Green67 Evansville 62, N.Iowa59

action, evening the Bulldogs'

the first was when hewasat Bay-

Vinci,Italy, 6-4, 7-5. Dominika Cibulkova,Slovakia, def. SaraErrani

Timberwolves All-Star visited a hand specialist in New York on

season after breaking his hand in the preseason. Hereturned

palova(3), CzechRepublic, 3-6,6-4, 6-2. Monica Niculescu,Romania,def. PengShuai, China,3-6,6-4, 6-4.

tralia, 6-2, 3-6,6-3.

Men World G olf Ranking ThroughWednesday Rank. Name Coun try Points 1. RoryMcgroy NIR 13.02 2. LukeDonald ENG 6.45 3. TigerWoods USA 8.41 4. JustinRose ENG 6.33 5. Adam Scot Aus 6.10 6. LouisOosthuizen SAF 6.07 7. LeeWestwood ENG 5.92 8. BrandtSnedeker USA 5.46 9. Bubba Watson USA 5.34 10. Jason Dufner usA 5.17 11. KeeganBradley usA 5.15 12. DustinJohnson usA 5.12 13. SteveStricker USA 5.10 14. WebbSimpson USA 5.03

Men's college

Conference

SetonHall 64, Cincinriati 56 SOUTHWEST ArkansasSt.49, FIU43 Baylor 67,lowaSt. 39 NorthTexas66, UALR65 Oklahoma65,TCU79 TexasTech59, KansasSt.50 UTEP71,Tulsa 64 FAR WEST Boise St.70,Wyoming66 CS Northridge73,LongBeachSt. 52 FresnoSt.60, SanDiego St.72 Nevada67,Air Force54 UNLV66, NewMexico 57

Profe ssyona

BASKETBALL

Wednesday Al The DomainTennis Centre Hobart, Australia Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound JarmilaGaidosova,Australia, def.OlgaGovortsova, Bearus, 6-3, 6-1. KirstenFlipkens,Belgium,def.BoianaJovanovs-

ki, Serbia,6-3, 6-2. TsvetanaPironkova, Bulgaria, def. Klara Zako-

EAST Boston U. 56, Vermont30 Hartford52,Maine37 Latayette49, Columbia47 NewHampshire 63, UMBC62 Stony Brook56,Binghamton34

Playoff Glance Divisional Playoffs Saturday Baltimoreat Denver, 1:30p.m. (CBS) GreenBayat San Francisco, 5p.m. (Fox) Sunday Seatt eatAtlanta, 10a.m.(Fox) Houstonat NewEngland,1:30 p.m.(CBS) ConferenceChampionships Sunday,Jan.20 NFC,noon(FOX ) AFC,3:30p.m.(CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday,Jan.27 At Honolulu AFCvs.NFC,4p.m. (NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 3 At New Orleans AFCchampionvs. NFCchampion, 3p.m.(CBS)

ArizonaSt. UCLA

6 4 4

9 6

Wednesday'sGames

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPST

Arizona

5 2

Women's college

NFL

W 2 2 2

utah

10 12 6 9 10 10 10 9 6

Kevin Love will miss the next

River Conference girls basketball

w n

0 0 1 2 2 1 2 2 2

BASKETBALL Love out 8-10weeks-

CI

n

2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0

conference that longtime Burke assistant David Nonis will fill the job. Burke will stay as a senior adviser.

Bulldog coach BrennanWhitaker

CO O

Washington Oregon SouthernCal Calitornia Stanford OregonSt. Colorado Washington St.

dent Tom Anselmi said at a news

much better defense, which made for much better offense,"

PREP SPORTS Boys basketball

Sports 8 Entertainment Presi-

(D 9 3 0 O

Ill Q

Nordic skiing: OHSNO freestyle andrelayracesat Hoodoo,11a.mcOISRAskateand relay racesat DiamondLake, 11:30a.m. Wrestling: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Summit, Ridgeview,Sisters at BendInvitational, 6 a.mc Gilchrist atOakridgeInvite, TBD;Culver at Crater C assic in Central Point, TBD.

at Kelowna Rockets, Root

zalez led the way for Culver feated host Santiam 67-48 in Mill City to earn their first Tri-River

Loojc! ITQ 3WcK NlcHoL~Q!

10:30 a.m. Alpine skiing: OSSAat Mt. Bachelor,GiantSlalom, Cliffhanger,10a.m.

League, Tri-City Americans

season set to resumethis month following a tentative settlement ending the lockout. Maple Leaf

with 27 points and11 rebounds Wednesday astheBulldogsde-

Saturday Boys basketball: Triad atGilchrist, 4 p.m., Dutur at Central Christian, 3:30p.mcTrinity Lutheran at Prospect, 4p.m. Girls basketball: Triad atGilchrist, 4 p.m.; Dufur at Central Christian, 2 p.m.,Trinity Lutheranat Prospect,5:30pm. Swimming: Bend, Summit, Ridgeview at RumhaughInvitational in Corvallis, 9 a.mcMountain View atTheDales Wahtonka Invite in HoodRiver,

Pac-12 Network.

9 p.m.:Men's college, Central

IN THE BLEACHERS

Friday Boys basketball: Bend at Summit, 7 p.mc Redmondat Crook County, 7 pim.; Mountain View at Ridgeview, 7 p.m; La Pine atSisters, 5:45 p.mcKennedyat Culver, 6:30 p.mcGilchrist at Trinity Lutheran,5:30p.m.; Central Christianat Sherman,730p.m. Girls basketball: Summit at Bend, 7 p.mc Ridgeview at Mountain View, 7 p.m.; Crook County atRedmond, 7 p.mcGilchrist at Trinity Lutheran, 4p.mcCentral Christian atSherman, 6 p.mc LaPine at Sisters, 715 p.mc Kennedy at Culver, 5p.m. Wrestling: MadrasatSeaside Invite, 9 a.m. Swimming: SistersatAlbany Invite, 6 p.m.

Colorado, ESPNU. 7 p.m.:Men's college, New

Bulldogdoyspost first

league win —GersonGon-

ON DECK

Leafs fired their general manager Wednesday with the NHL

lor in 2009. It is unclear how long his recovery will take, but the tear tors to be a serious complication that could extend the time frame

for his return well past the start of the 2013 season. Dr. James Andrews, the highly regarded or-

thopedic surgeon whooperated

miserable season. The NBA's

leading rebounder, Varejaowas injured Dec. 18vs. Toronto. The injury was initially diagnosed by

team doctors as only a bruised right knee, but as his symptoms persisted, more tests were

performed and revealed a"longitudinal split" betweenVarejao's quadriceps and knee.

Anthony suspended —Car-

a statement releasedthrough the

melo Anthony hasbeen suspended onegameby the NBA for confronting Kevin Garnett

team that "we expect a full recov-

after the New York Knicks' loss

ery and it is everybody's hope

toBostononMonday.Anthony, who was angry about Garnett's

on Griffin — and who is also a Redskins team doctor — said in

and belief that due to Robert's high motivation, he will be ready for the 2013 season."

Eagles after N.D.'sKelly — The Philadelphia Eagles inter-

choice of words during a fourthquarter altercation, went toward

the Celtics' locker room after the game and later waited for Garnett outside Boston's team bus. Anthony didn't believe he

Kelly for their coaching vacancy, a person familiar with the meet-

would be suspendedbecause

ing told TheAssociated Press.

Garnett, not have an altercation.

Kelly was the third college coach Philadelphia interviewed since

But NBA executive vice president

firing Andy Reid onDec.31. The person, speaking oncondition ofanonymitybecausehewasn't authorized to releasethe infor-

he was just looking to talk to

of operations Stu Jackson said Wednesday there were "no circumstances in which it is ac-

ceptable for a player to confront an opponent after a game."

mation, said the Eagles met with

Kelly onTuesday.PennState's Bill O'Brien andOregon's Chip

KingS tOSeattle? — Investor Chris Hansenhascontacted

Kelly interviewed with the Eagles last week, but chose to stay at

the Maloof family about buying

their schools. TheEagles have

up the possibility of the NBA's return to Seattle. Hansen's inter-

interviewed six candidates and plan to meet with four others.

Kelly recently called coaching Notre Dame his dream job, but he wouldn't be the first to explore

his options, perhapseven toget a raise to stay put.

the Sacramento Kings, setting estwas confirmedWednesday by people with knowledge of the situation. They spoke on condi-

tion of anonymity to TheAssociated Press because nodeal has been reached. Oneperson said the Kings could sell for more

Clemson QB returning-

than $500 million. The Kings'

Atlantic Coast Conference player of the year Tajh Boyd will return

future in Sacramento has been

The junior quarterback announced his intention to hold off

come up with a long-term arena solution. Yahoo! Sports first re-

uncertain becausethe Maloofs to Clemson for his senior season. and the city haven't beenableto on the NFL.His return will help

ported the discussions between

keep the Tigers' record-setting,

the Kings and Hansen. Yahoo!

fast-paced attack moving forward in 2013. Boydhasled the

reported a possible sale could

Tigers to a 21-6 record the past

land the Kings in Seattle for the 2013-14 season; the team would

two seasons. Hebroke his own school records this past season

play at KeyArena as a temporary home until a newarena is con-

with 3,896 passing yards and 36

structed.

touchdowns. He was also second on the team inrushing with 514 yards and led Clemson with 10 touchdowns on the ground.

HOCKEY Owners approvedealNHL Commissioner Gary Bettman secured unanimous ownership support for the pend-

ing labor deal, then apologized to everyone hurt by the long lockout and said he isn't go-

CYCLING Oprah to interview

ArmStrOng —Lance Armstrong has agreed to aninterview with Oprah Winfrey and is toaddress allegations heused performance-enhancing drugs during a career in which hewonseven Tour de France titles. According to Winfrey's website on Tuesday,

this will be a "noholds-barred interview." It will be the first with

ing anywhere. Theleague's board of governors met in a

Armstrong since his cycling career crumbled under theweight

Manhattan hotel Wednesday

of a massive report by the U.S.

and overwhelmingly approved Anti-Doping Agency.Thereport the agreement that was reached detailed accusations of drug use early Sunday on the 113th day of the lockout. Players are ex-

pected to vote on thedeal Friday and Saturday. If a majority of the

more than700membersingood standing agree to theterms, training camps canopen Sunday. A 48-game season islikely to begin Jan. 19.

Leafs fire GM —Brian Burke's brash andoutspoken style wasn't a good fit for the

new corporate owners of the Toronto Maple Leafs. TheMaple

by Armstrong and teammates on his U.S. Postal Service teams. It's unclear if the interview at Armstrong's home in Austin,

Texas, hasalready beentaped. Nicole Nichols,aspokeswoman for Oprah Winfrey Network & Harpo Studios, declined com-

ment. She saidArmstrong has not been paid for his appearance and there are norestrictions on what's discussed. Theshow will be broadcast Jan. 17 at 6 p.m. PST onOWN andOprah.com. — From wire reports


THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

NBA ROUNDUP Oklahoma City Thunder forward Serge

Ibaka (9) blocks a shot by Minnesota Timberwolves center Nikola Pekovic (14) in the third quarter of Wednesday night's game in Oklahoma City.

'~'r~ i>' r

re on a e missin i smanin emi e

tt> arg,i>a j

,'~i~+g~ f'

• Loss of AngusBrandt hashurt Beavers By Kevin Hampton

Thunder rebound, trounceT'wolves Also on Wednesday:

Clippers ........... . . . . . . ..99 M avericks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3 LOS ANGELES — Chris Paul had 19 points and 16 assists, and Los Angeles held on to beat Dallas, extending its franchise-record home winning streak to 13 games. Spurs ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Lakers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 SAN ANTONIO — Tony P arker s c ored 2 4 po i n t s to help San A n tonio hand slumping Los Angeles to its fifth straight loss. Kobe Bryant had 27 points but missed a 3-pointer on his f inal attempt that would have tied the game. C eltics..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 7 S uns ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 9 BOSTON — J e f f G r e en scored 14 points, rookie Jared Sullinger added 12 points and 16 rebounds, and Boston recovered from a dreadful third quarter, rallying in the fourth to beat Phoenix. Bucks.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 B ulls ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 6 Brandon CHICAGO Jennings scored 20 of his 35 points in th e t h ir d q uarter and Milwaukee beat Chicago for its second consecutive victory under interim coach Jim Boylan. H ornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 8 R ockets .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 9 NEW ORLEANS — Roger

Mason scored 15 of hi s 17 points in the fourth quarter to rally New Orleans to a victory over Houston. Jazz.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 12 Bobcats ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Jefferson had 26 pointsand eight rebounds to lead Utah to its fourth win in five games with a victory over Charlotte.

Raptors........ . . . . . . . . . . .90 7 6ers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 2 TORONTO — Amir Johns on had 19 points and 12 rebounds, and Toronto beat P hiladelphia, s e nding t h e slumping 76ers to their fifth straight loss. C avaliers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 9 H awks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 3 CLEVELAND — Kyrie Irving scored 18 of his 33 points in the third quarter to lead injury-riddled Cleveland over Atlanta. G rizzlies.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 4 W arriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 7 OAKLAND, Calif. — Zach Randolph had 19 points and 12 rebounds, Rudy Gay scored 18 points and Memphis completed a 3-0 road trip with a victory over Golden State. Nuggets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Magic ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 DENVER Kenneth Faried scored 19 points and grabbed 19 rebounds to help Denver rally for a win over slumping Orlando.

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

ConferenceGlance All TimesPST

EASTE RN CONFE RENCE W L Pct GB d-Miami 23 10 697 d-New York 23 11 676 >/r d-Ir>diai>a 21 14 600 3 Atlanta 20 14 588 3>/t Chicago 19 14 576 4 Brooklyn 20 15 571 4 Milwaukee 18 16 529 5>/t Boston 18 17 514 6 Philadelphia 15 22 405 10 Toronto 13 22 371 u Detroit 13 23 361 0>/t Orlando 12 23 343 12 Charlotte 9 2 5 265 t4>/t Cleveland 9 2 8 243 16 Washington 5 2 8 152 18 WEST ERN CONFE RENCE W t Pct GB d-L.A. Clippers 28 8 778 d-Oklahoma City 771 >/2 27 8 d-SanAntonio 28 10 737 1 Memphis 23 10 697 3>/t GoldenState 22 12 647 5 Houston 21 15 583 7 Denver 21 16 568 7>/r Portland 19 15 559 8 IJtah 19 18 514 9>/r Minnesota 16 16 500 10 L.A. Lakers 15 20 429 12>/t Sacramento 13 22 371 t 4>/t Dallas 13 23 361 15 Phoenix 12 25 324 16>/r NewOrleans 10 25 286 17>/r d-divisioi>leader

Wednesday'sGames Cleveland99,Atlanta 83 Utah112,Charlotte102 Toronto90,Philadelphia 72 Boston87, Phoenix79 Milwattkee104,Chicago96 NewOrleans88,Houston79 Oklahoma City106, Minnesota84 Sa>t At>tot>io108, I.A. Lakers105 Denver108,Orlando105 Memphis94,GoldenState B7 L.A. Clippers99,Dallas93

Today'sGames

NewYorkatIndiana, 5p.m. Dallas atSacramento, 7p.m. Miami atPortand,7:30p.m. Friday's Games CharlotteatToronto,4 p.m Houston at Boston,4:30 p.m. Utah atAtlanta,4:30 p.m. PhoenixatBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. Sat> Antonio atMemphis, 5p.m. Minnesota at NewOrleans, 5p.m. Chicagoat NewYork, 5p.m. Detroit atMilwaukee,5:30 p.m. ClevelandatDenver, 6t>.m. Portlandat GoldenState, 7:30pm. Oklahoma City at L.A.Lakers,7:30p.m.

Thunder 106, Timderwolves 84

Spurs 108, Lakers 105 LA. LAKERS (105) Bryant10-244-7 27,World Peace10-22 0-223, Sacre2-9 0-04,Nash6-12 2-214, Morris1-2 0-02, Jamison4-90-08, Meeks1-3e-02, D> thon1-2 0-0

20 24 29 29 — 102

Raptors 90, 76ers 72

Bucks104, Bulls 96

Cavaliers 99, Hawks83

MILWAUKEE (104) Mbah a Mot>te0-3 1-2 1, llyasova4-10 4-5 13, Sanders3-60-06, Jei>r> i>gs12-24 6-735, Ellis 6-14 2-2 14,Du> tleavy6-u 0-016, Udoh1-22-34, Udrih 5800 10, Henso» r-e 1-25, Dalemb ert 00 ee 0. Totals 39-84 16-21 104. CHICAGO (96) Dei>g7-144-718, Boozer8-15 6 82Z Noah4-12 0-0 8, Robinson 8-17 0-019, Hamilton2-0 0-04, Gibson3-e 2-3 8, Belinelli 4-140-0 9, Moham med t-t 002, Teague01 000,B»tler24226.Totals 39-95 14-20 96. Milwaukee 23 27 31 23 — 104 Chicago 33 24 23 16 — 96

Hornets 88, Rockets79

PHILADELPHIA (72) Wright 2-43-4 7, T.Yottt>g 6-12 4-616, Allen 4-

6 O-t B, Holiday7-18 2-4 16,Turner4-15 1-2 10, Wilk> nsr-e 0-0 4,Hawes2-8 2-26,Ivey1-2 0-0 3, N.Young 1-30-02. Totals 29-74 12-19 72. TORONTO (90) F>elds5-10 e-0 10, Da>r>s 8-14 1-2 17,Johnson 6-117-819,Calderon7-120-014, DeR»zan8-153-3 19, Ai>dersot> 4-13 ee 9,Lt>wry1-2 0-02, Pietrusr-3 0-00 Totals 39-8011-1390. Philadelphia 21 1 92 1 11 — 72 Toronto 24 18 29 19 — 90

ATLANTA (83)

Smith 8-16 0-2 17,Hortord 7-180-014, Pachttlia 4-7 e-0 8, Teagtte7-11 1-1 15, Korver4-8 0-012,

Williamsr-e ee 5, Jei>kir> s 2-7 00 5, Scott1-2 00 2, Harris 02000, Johnson 1-31-23, Petro1-2ee 2, Tolliver0-00-00.Totals 37-84 2-5 83.

CLEVELAND (99) Gee5-120-215, Thomp son5-111-3 u, Zel er 3-8 5-611, Irving11-15e-e 33,waiters 4-11 e-09, Jones1-4002, Livingston4601 8, Casspi2B00 5, Pargo2-51-2 5, Leuer0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-81 13-20 99. Atlanta

Cleveland

28 12 23 20 — 83 29 20 28 22 — 99

Nuggets108, Magic105

HOUSTON (79) Parsons 3-100-0 B,Morris 2-61-27, Asik4-6e-e

ORLANDO (105) Jones5-70-011, Nicholson6-100-012, Vttcevic 590010,Nelson8-1B3-320,Afflalo4143412, O'Qui>tn 2-2e-e4, Redick5-133-317,Smith2-50-0 4, Harkless4-7e-0 9, McRobeits 3-8 e-0 6 Totals 44-93 9-10 105. DENVER (108) Gallinari 5-103-415, Faried7-105-719, K»ttfos 1-4 0-2 2, Lawson7-19 4-519, Igttodala 4-13 2-4 11, Brewer 7 172-616, Mceee1 6 44 6, AMiler 8-12 2-418, Fournier1-30-0 Z Totals 41-94 2218 1 6 25 29 — 88 36 108. Orlando 30 25 22 28 — 105 Denver 22 31 17 38 — 108

8, Lih 4-120-09, Harden 9-185-625, Patterson3-8 0-06, Delfir>o 3-101-29, Douglas2-43-37, G.smith 0-1 e-0 0.Totals30-75 10-13 79. NEWORLEANS (88) Aminu2-7 0-04, Davis3-5e-0 6, Lopez6-9 2-2 14, Vasquez7-13 1-217, Gordon2-121-2 5, Rivers 0-50-00, R.Ar> derson0-70-00, J.smith6-135-617, Robeit s1-3 2-24 Thomas2-30-04,Mason6-72-2 17.Totals 35-8413-16 88. Houston 22 14 33 10 — 79

Newerleans

Celtics87, Suns79 PHOENIX (79) Tucker4-12e-0 9, Scola 6-144-716, Gortat 612 0-012, Dragic4-114-412, Dudley6-171-2 14, Morris 3-62-48, Brownr-e 0-14, Telfair 0-00-0 0, O'Neal1-40-0 2, Beasley1-20-0 Z Totals 33-84 11-1879. BOSTON (87) Pierce3-100-07,Bass>-82-26,Gari>ett5-0 e-e 10, Rondo 4-110-08, Bradley 4-90-0 9, Sttl i»ger6100-012,Terrye-e0-013, Green5-94-414, Lee2-5 2-4 6, Barbosa e-0 0-0 0, Collins0-0 2-22. Totals 37-81 10-1287. Phoenix 24 17 23 15 — 79 Boston 23 30 14 20 — 87

Jazz 112, Bobcats102 UTAH(112) Carroll 460-210, Millsap8-123519, Jefferson

11-154-426, Tinsley4-80-09, Foye3-90-09, Favois 5-5e-010, Hayw ard 4-102-3 14, watson 0-1 1-

21, Burks4-94512, Kanter1-e e-02, Evanse-0 0-0

0, Murphy 01 00 0.Totals 44821421 112. CHARLOTTE (102) SANANTO NIO(108) Kidd-Gilchrist 7-111-115,Thomas0-4 0-0 0, BiLeonard4-71-1 11,Duncan4-13 0-0 8,Splitter 5- yomboO-t 0-00, Walker 6-121-314, Taylor3-90-0 74-414, Parker10-164-524,Green2-40-06, Diaw 6, Haywood1-40-1 2, Warrick 4-92-210, Henderson 0-2 e-00, Ginobili 6-145-619,Jackson5-9e-014, 5-9 4-414, Sessions5-104-514, Gordon8-162-4 Neal5-12001ZTotals41-8414-16108. 20, Adriei>1-10-2 2, R.Wiliams2-2 e-05. Totals LA. Lakers 17 28 30 30 — 105 42-88 14-22 102. Satt Atttottio 24 30 3 1 23 — 108 Utah 27 36 27 22 — 112 3, C ark9-123-422 Totals44959-15105.

Charlotte

MINNESOTA (84) Kirilenko 3-9 3-4 10, Cunningham r-e 0-1 4, Pekovic6-10 5-6 17, Ridi>our4-9 3-411, Shved613 4-5 18,Williams7-15 0-0 14, Rut>io0-3 0-0 0, stie msma 1-20-0z Hayward2-44-48,Amundson 0-1 e-0 0.Totals 31-7219-24 84. OKLAHOMA CITY (106) Dt>rant10-174-426, Ibaka3-6 0-2 6, Perkins1-2 e-0 2,Westbrook7-146-723, Sefolosha 4-6 0010, Col iso>t1-24-46, Martin 4-127-819, Thabeet2-4 0-0 4, Jackson3-70-0 6, Liggins1-3 2-2 4,Maynor 0-3e-0 0.Totals36-7623-27106. Minnesota 16 26 22 20 — 84 Oklahoma City 1 6 3 1 29 30 — 106

Summaries Wednesday'sGames

to fill that role and it showed in OSU's 79-66 lossOregon to on Sunday evening. " We, since A n -

Corvallis Gazette-Times

Sue Ogrocki/The Associated Press

The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin Durant scored 26 points, Russell W e stbrook a d d ed 23 and the Oklahoma City Thunder overpowered the outmanned Minnesota Timberwolves 106-84 on Wednesday night. After losing its last game on a buzzer-beater against a last-place Washington team saddled by injuries to its three top players, Oklahoma City left nothing to chance with the T imberwolves missing A l l Star forward Kevin Love and four others. The Thunder took control with 7-0 run early in the second half and stretched their lead to 24 before pulling Durant, Westbrook and the other starters with 5:44 remaining. Alexey Shved scored 18 points for Minnesota, which announced earlier in the day that Love would miss eight to 10 weeks after breaking his right hand for the second time. Nikola Pekovic added 17 points and 10 rebounds in the opener of a four-game road trip for the Timberwolves. Kevin Martin chipped in 19 points off the bench for Oklahoma City, which had a 12game winning streak in the series snapped last month in Minnesota.

C3

Grizzlies 94, Warriors 87 MEMPHIS(94) Gayg-190-018,Ran dolph 8-133-319, Gasol4-12 4-5 12,co>tey6-123-4 16,Allen4-u 2-310, Bayless 2-10 0-1 5,Speights3-50-0 6, Elli»gton0-1 0-00, Arthur 4-5 0-08. TotaIs 40-88 12-16 94. GOLDEN STATE(87) Barnes3-50-07, Lee6-14>-e14,Ezeli3-60-06, Curry 10220-124,Thompson613 ee 20,Jack1-4 1-1 3, Lai>dry4-6 5-6 13,Jei>kii>s0-0 0-0 0, Biedrii>s

e-00-00, Green O-t0-00,Bazemore0-00-00.Totals33-71 14-20e7. Memphis 27 28 13 26 — 94 Goldett State 26 2 017 24 — 87

T he Oregon State ; ~ • men's bas k e tball team misses Angus Brandt. gus has gone down, al e ~ J ust look a t t h e ' have had a void in numbers. W hen Ari z ona State the l e a dership deh e was lost for th e a t 0 r egon State partment," OSU season with a t or n . W h s a Today c o a ch Craig RobinA CL, B r a ndt h a d 8 30 p rn son said. " I tr y a n d g e t Pergame a v erages • TV:pac-12 of 11.3 points and 8.5 across to these guys N t k rebounds in four conthat I can be a leader tests.At6-foot-lpand on the sideline, but 242 pounds, he gave K~Qf AM not onthe court." the Beavers another The result can be big body inside. play that is akin to a rudder"We miss Angus a l ot . le s s ship, drifting and lack•

We're going to miss him a

DALLAS (93) Marion5-100-011, Nowitzki5-134-6 15,Kaman 4121-29, Co liso»915222 z Mayo 6154417, Brand3-e2-28, Carter 3-90-06, Crowder1-1 0-03, Beaubois0-22-22, Da.Jones0-10-00, M.Jame s0-0 0-00 Totals 36-8415-18 93. LA. CLIPPERS(99) Butler 4-132-211, Griffin 6-133-415,Jordan3-7 2-5 8, Paul8 132-219, Greei>1-3 0-0 3, Bari>es7-11

e 019, odom 2-50-04, crawford3-73 4u, Bledsoe 2-41-2 5,Tttriaf2-3 0-24. Totals 38-7913-21 99. Dallas 21 29 25 18 — 93

LA. Clippers

25 2 7 20 27 — 99

have anybody who's going to take somebody and kind of shake them out of the negativity like an Angus would do," Robinson said.

Michigan wins, moves t016-0 The Associated Press ROUNDUP A NN A RB O R , M ic h . — Glenn Robinson III had 14 points, including a pair of cru- assists and the Orange (15-1, cial dunks in the second half, 3-0 Big East) rallied from a and No. 2Michigan equaled nine-point, first-half deficit to its best start to a season with beat the Friars. a 62-47 victory over Nebras- No. 8 Minnesota..... . . . . . . 84 ka on Wednesday night. N o. 12 Illinois...... . . . . . . . . 67 The Wolverines (16-0, 3-0 CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Joe Big Ten) overcame their shak- Coleman scored 29 points to iest shooting performance in help the Gophers (15-1, 3-0 a while, holding the lead for Big Ten) top the Illini (14-3, the entire second half. 1-2). N o.11 Florida ...... . . . . . . . 77 Ray Gallegos scored 19 points for Nebraska (9-7, 0-3), G eorgia...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 which held the Wolverines to GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Mike Rosario scored 19 39 percent shooting. Also on Wednesday: points, Erik Murphy added N o. 3 Louisville...... . . . . . . 73 11 despite playing with a broken rib and the Gators (11-2) S eton Hall ...... . . . . . . . . . . 5 8 NEWARK, N.J. — Goropened Southeastern Confergui Dieng had 16 points and ence play with a victory. 14 rebounds — both season N o. 14 Butler..... . . . . . . . . . 72 highs — to lead the Cardinals S aint Joseph's ...... . . . . . . 66 (14-1, 2-0 Big East) to their PHILADELPHIA — Rotnei ninth straight win. Clarke scored 28 points and Andrew Smith had 24 points N o. 6 Kansas...... . . . . . . . . 97 l owa State ...... . . . . . . . . . . 8 9 and 10 rebounds to lead the L AWRENCE, K a n . Bulldogs (13-2, 1-0 Atlantic Freshman Ben M c L emore 10) in their A-10 debut. had a career-high 33 points, No. 16 San Diego State.....65 including a tying 3-pointer F resno State..... . . . . . . . . . 62 with a second left in regulaFRESNO, Calif. — Jamaal tion to force overtime, and the Franklin scored 20 points, inJayhawks (13-1, 1-0 Big 12) cluding a highlight reel dunk, rallied to beat the Cyclones. and had 18 rebounds to help

No. 7 Syracuse............72

San Diego State (13-2, 1-0)

P rovidence ...... . . . . . . . . . 66 PROVIDENCE, R.I. — C.J. Fair scored 23 with 11 rebounds, and Michael CarterWilliams scored 17 with six

win its Mountain West Conference opener. No. 20 N.C. State...... . . . . . 83

Ducks

Kazemi motivated," acknowledged. With a national television audience for a broadcast on ESPN2, and the r elatively early tipoff of 6 p.m., this will provide much of the nation its first look at the Ducks, and some of those viewers are likely to be voters in the national polls. Win tonight,

Georgia Tech........... . ..70 RALEIGH, N.C. — Loren-

Continued from C1 Oregon junior point guard Johnathan Loyd said that description would fit, "just because it's the highest-ranked team to come into the building and it's the start of the Pac-12 and they're undefeated. To give them their first loss, it would be nice." and Oregon (12-2 overall, 1Ever the cautionary voice, 0 in the Pac-12) could make some serious gains on a top UO coach Dana Altman reminded reporters that there 25 ranking. "We had achance one time have been some other significant games at Matthew (to be ranked) but we let it K night, starting w it h t h e slip against UTEP," Kazemi opening game at the facility said of an earlier defeat. two years ago against USC. "This is at home, so it's a The Ducks also won the Col- huge opportunity for us to lege Basketball Invitational play against a ranked team." at their new home, and a couHow much does being at ple of games in the National home matter'? While there Invitation Tournament last isn't quite the same feeling season. there was at McArthur Court

"It's a big game but no big-

ger than our other eight con-

Clippers 99, Mavericks 93

i n g focus.

lot this whole season," OSU A l ea d e r w a s needed to guard Ahmad Starks said. s t e p up i n th e second half "With the way Angus was a g a insttheDucks. rebounding at t h e b e gin The B e a vers played well ning and his presence, his e n o ugh in the first half, but strength, his size, we're go- U O g o t it s transition game ing to miss that." going and OSU could not reAsasenior,Brandtbrought c o v er. The Ducks outscored another aspect to the game. t h e Beavers 51-32 after the O ne that never shows up in b r e a k . "They just came out with the stats. Brandt brought leadership a p u r p ose and ran up and to the court. d own th e f l oo r a n d w e O ther players have failed w e r en't a ble t o r u n w i t h

them," OSU guard Roberto Nelson said. Not only was it a h o me Civil War game, but the first Pacific-12game of the season for both teams. T he Beavers could n o t muster enough good basketball on both ends of the court. Robinson said the Beavers didn't make plays. "And that could be nerves, that could be the moment, it could be the fact that it's the firstconference game," he said. "It could be anything. It could b e p sychological, which I'm not pooh-poohing at all. I think we still are at a point where we need to feel like we can win games like this and not just suppose we can win games like this." A stabilizing influence on the court would make a significant impact on a t eam that needs a beliefboost. Brandt would have been that player. "I think we have a group of very nice kids but we don't

ference games (at home)," Altman said. "All of 'em are very important." Still, it is Arizona, it's an early showdown in the conference and before today, the highest ranked team to come to Matthew Knight A r ena was 20th-ranked Washington two years ago. "It m akes y o u mor e

zo Brown had 21 points and 10 assists and the Wolfpack (13-2, 2-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) pulled away late to beat the Yellow Jackets for their ninth straight win. No. 23 Wichita State .......82 S outhern Illinois...... . . . . . 76 WICHITA, Kan. — Cleanthony Early scored 39 points to help Wichita State (15-1, 40 Missouri Valley) win. No. 25 New Mexico ...... . .65 N o.24UNLV.... . . . . . . . . . . 60 ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Alex Kirk had 23 points and nine rebounds to lead the Lobos (14-2, 1-0) over the Rebels (13-3, 0-1) in the Mountain West opener for both teams. W ashington...... . . . . . . . . . 62 C alifornia..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 BERKELEY, Calif. — C.J. Wilcox scored 19 points to reach 1,000 for his career and -

Washington (8-5, 2-0 Pac-12) scored 16 straight points in the first half to roll to a second straightconference road win. Pac-12 leading scorer Allen Crabbe was held to nine points on three for 12 shooting for the Golden Bears (9-6,

1-2). S tanford..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Washington State ...... . . . 67 STANFORD, Calif. Aaron Bright scored a season-high 19 points for Stanford (10-6, 1-2 Pac-12). Brock Motum matched his seasonhigh with 29 points to lead the Cougars (9-6, 0-2).

having picked up their entire allotment of tickets. Reserved s eats remain available i n most sections, priced from $16 to $53. "Our students are back (in school) and they've always

been pretty good (supporters), so I hope they'll be ready

to go," Altman said. "It'll be nice to have a crowd but we've got to play. "Crowds are always a big part of c o llege basketball, but our job's in front of us. It doesn't matter if the crowd's big or small, we've got to bring it." The Ducks haven't had a sellout, listed at 12,364, in two years, and the biggest crowd this season was 9,137 for a November game against Vanderbilt. Since then, the attendance has only once gotten over 6,000 and Oregon's for a big game, the Ducks are average attendance of 5,866 27-3 in games at Matthew ranks seventh in the Pac-12. " You want y o u r h o m e Knight Arena the past two seasons, and haven't lost at court to have great electricity, home in almost a year. great excitement in the build"This place can really ing," Altman said. "That's not rock, we've just got to pack something you beg for, that it," Loyd said. you ask for, you just hope it Today's game will be a test develops. "It's not something you're of Oregon's drawing power. As of T uesday afternoon, entitled to, it's something you about 8,000 tickets had been have to earn, and we're still sold, with the UO students in the process of earning it."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

Hall of Famehasalways made room for infamyandmiscreants By Bill Pennington New Yorte Times News Service

p,'/P'. '<II

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

Sisters High senior Taylor Nieri gets a good look at the basket moments before hitting a threepointer against Stayton Tuesday night. Nieri is the school's all-time leading scorer.

Sisters

scoring spot in Outlaws history. Two free throws later, Continued from C1 Nieri had rewritten the reFor three seasons, Nieri, cord book, surpassing the a four-year varsity starter, 774 points scored by Hughes. worked t o w a r d Sis t ers' "When I was a freshman, s coring mark, set b y K a - (Katie Hughes) and I were tie Hughes in the 2006-07 kind of close, and she told season. me, 'If I wanted anyone to She did it while playing on break the record, it would teams that compiled a mod- be you,'" says Nieri, who, est overall record of 30-41 before the current season beand never advanced past the gan, needed just 41 points to 4A play-in round. break the record. "Since that Now, after three seasons day, I've just been working of sub-.500records,the Out- hard for it." W ith 19 p o ints i n S i s laws are off to their best start in school history at 10-2 over- ters' 62-40 win over Stayton all. Most important, perhaps, on Tuesday night, Nieri, a is the fact that Nieri, the Sis- three-sport athlete at S i sters team captain, is on pace ters including volleyball and to lead the Outlaws to the softball, now has scored 941 state playoffs for th e f i r st points in her Outlaw career. time since 2006. That, Nieri This season, she is averag-

says, makes what happened ing 19 points per game to go back on Dec. 5 even more memorable. On that date, during a game at R e dmond H i g h, Nieri wa s f o uled. Sisters' scorekeeper mentioned to Nieri that she was two points away from claiming the top

Olympic Continued from C1 And while the competition to make the U.S. Olympic halfpipe team is fierce, with the likes of well-established stars Shaun White and Louie Vito, such is not the case Down Under. "It's a pretty realistic goal," Callister said of his chances of qualifying for the W i nter Games in Sochi, Russia, little more than a year away. "There's only a f e w o t her Australians trying to get on the team." Callister was born in San Diego, where his mother is f rom, and moved with h i s parents and older sister to Gold Coast, Australia, when he was 5. The family moved back to the United States, this time to Bend, when he was 9. C allister b e ga n s n o w boarding with the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation and rose through the amateur ranks. Two years ago, he won the USA Snowboard Association Nationals in halfpipe. "When we moved to Bend, that's when I really got into it with MBSEF and started hitting jumps and the pipe," Callister said. "After I won (at USASA Nationals), I knew I wanted to do this for as long as I could." Last season Callister won the Free Flow Tour Finals in both halfpipe and slopestyle, which helped launch his professional career. Those victories qualified him for this season's Dew Tour — o n e

Longwell Continued from C1 L ongwell, a B en d H i g h graduate, a n d de f e nsive end P a t rick C h u k w urah were officially signed by the Seahawks on Wednesday. Theytaketherosterspotsof kicker Steven Hauschka and defensive end Chris Clemons, who were both placed on injured reserve. Clemons was lost for the season to an ACL and meniscus tear in his left knee in last Sunday's 24-14 playoff win over Washington, while Hauschka suffered a calf strain that limited his

along with 10 rebounds and five steals per contest. Nieri has the scoring title firmly in hand, but Horner says Nieri deserves much more. "I think she's the kind of player that needs to break all the school records because

of the most prestigious ski and snowboard series in the country — and drew the interest of the U.S. and Australian national teams. Halfpipe s n o w boarders are judged on the difficulty, execution and amplitude of the aerial tricks they perform as they soar in and out of the

she's the player who set the new foundation that Sisters is a basketball school," Horn-

er says.

77-year-old gallery of rogues

H eading i n t o Sk y - E m League play on Friday, Nieri, w ho Horner p redicts w i l l break other school records, has scored 298 points this season, just 58 off the Outlaws' single-season mark. O ne school r ecord h a s fallen, and several more are in Nieri's sights. Horner says Nieri eventually will " blow everybody out of the water." Despite having her name in the Sisters High record b ooks, N i er i s a y s t h o s e achievements will not define her career as an Outlaw. "I've always been like a shooting guard, but o b viously I can't do it w i thout the point guard, without all the people around me," Nieri says. "It takes a team effort, but I'm really appreciative of them being so willing and so forth with the ball to help me get that all-time record."

be the perfect fit for Bonds and Clemens? R obert W . C o h en, w h o wrote the 2009 book "Baseball Hall of Fame — Or Hall of Shame?,"readily recalled a catalog of reprehensible acts by Hall of Fame inductees. "Baseball has always had some form of hypocrisy when it comes to its exalted heroes," Cohen said. "In theory, when it comes to these kinds of votes, it's true that character should matter, but once you've already let in Ty Cobb, how can you exclude anyone else?" Cobb, portrayed as a sociopath in biographies and a Hollywood film starring Tommy Lee Jones, is without question the Hall of Famer mentioned most often whenever the in-

— Reporter:541-383-0307, glucasC<bendbulletin.com.

the team, and that Kent has made the transition onto the team quite smoothly. Alexander added that he is focusing on the big picture with Kent: the Sochi Olympics and then the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

"I see him having a good

chance," Alexander said of U-shaped pipe. Callister's Olympic h opes. Callister's f a ther, B r ett "I firmly believe that Kent, Callister, envisioned his son over the next, say, 12 months, as a professional on another c ompeting i n t h e Wo r l d kind of board — a skateboard Cup events, I think he's got — when Kent was younger. a chance to perform well But Kent's potential in snow- enough to get himself a spot. "The U.S. team is pretty boarding b ecame e v ident fairly quickly. stacked. It would have been "I try to keep him on a pretty tough for him to get skateboard when he's not into the Olympic Games. I competing, just to keep those think he made a really smart muscle-memory skills," Brett decision. It's definitely creCallister said. ated a lot more opportunities The Grand Prix at Copper for him." Mountain starts today with Callister is not th e f i r st halfpipe qualifying. After winter sports athlete with the Grand P r ix , C a l lister dual citizenship to choose to will head to Canada for the compete for Australia instead Snowboard World Champi- of his or her native country. onships, Jan. 17-20 in Stone- Most notably, Canadian moham, Quebec. At the Grand gul skier Dale Begg-Smith Prix, World Championships won the Olympic gold medal and other World Cup events, in 2006 and Olympic silver s nowboarders c a n ear n in 2010 while competing for points toward qualifying for Australia. " Hopefully, Kent can do the Olympics. Next month, Callister is the same for us," Alexander s cheduled to c o m pete i n said. For now, Callister is enthe halfpipe in Sochi at the O lympic s n owboard t e s t joying his first season as a event, a sort of trial run to professional s n o w boarder see how the venues and offi- traveling the world to elite cials will handle the competi- competitions. "It's awesome," he said, tion and spectators. Callister's A ust r a l ian "just getting to snowboard halfpipe coach, Ben A lexevery day." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, ander, said this week that mmorical@bendbulletin.com he is excited to have Kent on

availability on long field goals Longwell made 22 of 28 atand kickoffs. Seattle coach Pete Carroll said Longwell beat out three other kickers during a tryout on Tuesday. "When you look at Ryan's background, the great experience he's had, the time he's had in playoff situations and all of that, to make this transition for a younger guy may be more of an issue, and I think he can handle it," Carroll said. Longwell, who spent 15 seasons with Green Bay and Minnesota, did not kick in the NFL this season. In his final year with the Vikings, 2011,

The Baseball Hall of Fame, the most august f r aternity of its kind in U.S. sports, unveiled its latest induction class Wednesday — and no one was voted in. This year, for the first time, balloters had to weigh the fate of two eminent stars, Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, who are also the most celebrated poster boys for the game's disgraced steroid era. Players linked to steroid use have beenresoundingly rejected by Hall of Fame voters lately, shunned as synthetically enhanced frauds. But drawing an integrity line in the sand is a tenuous stance at a Hall of Fame with a membership that already includes multiple virulent racists, drunks, cheaters, brawlers, drug users and at least one acknowledged sex addict. In the spirit of Groucho Marx, who refused to join any club that would have him as a member, would not baseball's

tempts, but was only six of 10 from 40-49 yards. Longwell

got a call Sunday night from his agent and was on his way to Seattle the next day. "I love the pressure, I love kicking if it comes down to it," Longwell said. "Hopefully for the team, it's a blowout or something. But I think that's something I do well: handle the situation. I'm here to help these guys win. They've had an incredibleseason, incredible talent and they're on a really, really impressive run and you just want to keep it

going."

tegrity of the game's top players is questioned. Known as the Georgia Peach, he was often painted a racist and had numerous documented alterc ations with blacks off t h e field, including one that led to a charge of attempted murder. Cobb, along with fellow Hall of Famer Tris Speaker, was also implicated in a game-fix-

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

lord Perry (class of 1991) had a disregard for the rules that was far more patent and unashamed than an y s t eroid ing scheme. Several research- user. Perry doctored baseballs ers have written that Cobb and with spit, Vaseline or other Speaker were members of the substances to confound hitKu Klux Klan, although that ters. All of baseball knew what has never been conclusively Perry was doing even if he verified. never admitted it — until a tell"Plaster saints is not what all book after his retirement. Orlando Cepeda served 10 we have in the Hall of Fame," said John Thorn, perhaps the months in prison after being nation's most widely known arrested in 1975 for smuggling b aseball historian an d t h e marijuana in Puerto Rico. The author ofmore than a dozen Baseball Writers' Association baseball books. "Many were of America did not select him far from moral exemplars." for the Hall of Fame; instead, Cobb, who was included on Cepeda was elected by the 222 of 226 ballots during the Veterans Committee in 1999. "But there's a real distincinaugural 1936 Hall of Fame voting, is far from alone when tion between a player who it comes to baseball elite old- does inappropriate things not timers and i m putations of related to his job and a player racism, some of them blatant, who does inappropriate things recurring and historic. that affect his job," said Bill "Cap Anson helped make James, an influential and piosure baseball's color line was neering baseball author and established i n t h e 1 8 80s," s tatistician wh o w r ot e t h e Thorn said of t h e C hicago book "Whatever Happened to Cubs first baseman and man- the Hall of Fame?" ager who was enshrined in In the debate about whether the Hall of Fame the year it players linked to steroids beopened in Cooperstown, N.Y., long in the Hall of Famein 1939. "He was relentless in when compared with players who might have been ne'erthat cause." Often, the miscreants in the do-wells — a frequent line of Hall of Fame are viewed more thinking is that there is a critilike rascals than scoundrels cal difference between crimes or bigots. Babe Ruth (class of against society and c r imes 1936), a prodigious drinker against baseball. A player can, and womanizer and yet popu- for instance, neglect to pay his lar and revered, fits the cat- income taxes and remain in egory. Casey Stengel (class of the good graces of the Hall of 1966) once called right fielder Fame (Duke Snider, class of Paul Waner (class of 1952) a 1980), but neglect to run out graceful player. Why? routine ground balls and it "Because," Stengel said, "he will undoubtedly cost the playcould slide into second base er Hall of Fame votes. without breaking the bottle in It is the reason that certain his hip pocket." players, like Pete Rose, who Famed Chicago n ewspa- gambled on baseball games, per columnist M ik e R oyko are on baseball's ineligible list once wrote that Hack Wilson and prohibited from the Hall (class of 1979) should have of Fame ballot. Taking drugs been moved tofirstbase from to hit more home runs apparthe outfield, where he usually ently falls into a similar catplayed, "because he wouldn't egory for many voters. "Being inducted is an honor, have as far to stagger to the dugout." not a paycheck you are entiGrover Cleveland Alexan- tled to," James said, defending der (class of 1938) pitched bet- the character clause written ter drunk than sober, accord- into the criteria on the Hall ing to team owner Bill Veeck of Fame ballot. "No one is en(class of 1991). titled to be elected. The voters Meanwhile, pitcher G ay- choose who to honor."

Baseball

what this chalks up to." News of the vote was emContinued from C1 braced by some and brought In their first time eligible to swift rebuttals from others. receivethe sport'stop honor Clemens, who has defiantly from th e B aseball W r iters and publicly expressed his inAssociation of America, both nocence, took to Twitter to exmen — whose careers ended press his reaction. with suspicions they used per"After what has been writformance-enhancing drugs, ten and said over the last few d espite their denials — r e years I'm not overly surprised," ceived fewer than four out of Clemens wrote in a link from 10 votes, well short of the 75 his account. "Thanks to all the percent needed for induction. teams I've worked with and to For the first time since 1996, fans and friends for all the fanthe baseball writers elected no tastic letters, voice mails and one to the Hall. Among those texts of support over the last rejected were Sammy Sosa, few years. "To those who did take the the slugger who sits eighth on the all-time home run list time to look at the facts ... we and who joined Clemens and very much appreciate it." Bonds on the ballot for the first Michael Weiner, the executime. Mark McGwire, who sits tive director of the players' 10th on the all-time home run union, called the result "unforlist, failed again, receiving his tunate, if not sad." "To ignore the historic aclowest percentage in seven years of eligibility. McGwire complishments o f Bar r y has admitted steroid use. Sosa Bonds and Roger Clemens, for example, is hard to justify," was widely suspected of it. The vote was the latest em- Weiner said in a statement. "Moreover,to penalize players phatic, ifexpected, pronouncement that the vast majority of exonerated inlegal proceedthe 569 writers who cast bal- ings — and others never even lots are not ready to elect even implicated — is simply unfair." Both Bonds and Clemens the best performers if there are fears they used drugs. have been directly linked to (The Washington Post does baseball's steroids period. In 2003, Bonds b ecame not participate in the voting.) "It means that the period in embroiled in the scandal surbaseball from about the time I rounding the Bay Area Laboleft until the present is a pretty ratory Cooperative (BALCO), dirty, if that's the right word, to which his personal trainer, period," said Fay Vincent, who lifelong friend Greg Anderson, served as baseball's commis- had ties. Bonds maintained his sioner from 1989-92. "I think innocence, but in 2007 — the everybody, including many year he hit the last of his rewho were probably clean, are cord 762 home runs — he was subject to that judgment, and indicted on perjury and obany judgment has got to be a struction of justice charges in cloudy one." relation to his grand jury tesThe results extended the timony in the BALCO case. In debate about how baseball, 2011 he was convicted on one a sport that cherishes its history, should remember those

count of obstruction of justice. Clemens was a prominent figure in baseball's independent investigation into steroid use, led by f o rmer senator George Mitchell, in 2007, when Clemens recorded the last of his 4,672 strikeouts, a total that ranks third all-time. The following February, Clemens appeared before a congressional committee and denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs even as Brian McNamee, his former trainer, offered detailed accounts of injecting Clemens with steroids. Members of Congress eventually recommended that the Justice Department investigate whether Clemens lied under oath.A procedural misstep by prosecutors initially led to a mistrial. Last June, Clemens was acquitted of six counts of lying to Congress — enough to clear his name legally but not, apparently, to clear it in the minds of Hall of Fame voters. Vincent said those voters have "a very murky, opaque decision.... I think it's the right decision. But it reflects very badly on that whole era in baseball." Bonds, Clemens, Sosa and anyone receiving more than five percent of the vote will be eligible in the future, for as long as 15 years. Idelson said there are no plans to change the procedures for voting. "It's evident that the voters took this exercise probably more serious than any other ballot that they filled out, and that's because there's so many questions in voters' minds," Idelson said. "It takes time for history to sort itself out. I'm not surprised we had a shutout today."

players who defined and dominated an era from the 1990s through the mid-2000s in which baseball's own investigation undertaken just as the careers of Bonds and Clemens were ending — showed the use of performance-enhancing drugs was widespread. "It's a tough period for evaluation," Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson said. "That's

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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

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Grocery chain operator Supervalu reports fiscal third-quarter earnings today. But investors' curiosity in the company'sresults may be muted compared with interest in Supervalu's review of strategic alternatives. The struggling company has spent months reviewing its options, including putting itself up for sale, and recent published reports have suggested private equity firm Cerberus may be considering buying a portion of the company.

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,566 1,661 Pvs. Volume 3,519 1,708 Advanced 2053 1594 Declined 9 78 8 5 1 New Highs 3 03 141 New Lows 7 5

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DDW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

HIGH LOW CLOSE 13416.55 13329.08 13390.51 5552.06 5491.91 5545.79 459.25 455.75 456.97 8653.11 8618.68 8636.10 3111.23 3096.34 3105.81 1464.73 1457.15 1461.02 1056.84 1050.41 1056.45 15448.86 15364.43 15419.66 877.01 879.54 879.51

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NorthwestStocks NAME

ALK 31.29 — Stocking up A VA 22.78 ~ When businesses order more BAC 6 . 19 goods, it generally leads to more BBSI 15.68 — factory production, which boosts BA 66. 8 2 economic growth. CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 — Wholesalecompanies have been CascadeCp CASC 42.86 increasing their stockpiles in recent Columbia Sporlswear COLM 43.88 Costco Wholesale COST 78.81 months in response to solid sales Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 gains. Companies increased their FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 stockpiles in September by the Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 biggest amount in nine months. They followed that up with a modest Home Federal BncpID HOME 8.67 — INTC 19.23 increase in October. The Commerce Intel Corp Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — Department reports November Kroger Co KR 20 . 98 ~ figures today. Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 ~ LA Pacific L PX 7 , 66 —

Wholesale inventories Seasonally adjusted monthly percentage change

MDU Resources M entor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Inc 8 NordstromInc 1.0'o Nwst NatGas est. OfficeMax Inc 4.1 PaccarInc Planar Systms 0.5 Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Inc Schnitzer Steel 0.0 SherwinWms Stancorp Fncl J J A S 0 StarbucksCp Source Factset Triguint Semi Umpqua Holdings US Bancorp Washington Fedl Layoffs easing? WellsFargo& Co Economists anticipate that fewer West CoastBcpOR Americans applied for unemployWeyerhaeuser ment benefits last week. The Labor Department is expected to report today that unemployment claims declined in the first week of January to 365,000 from 372,000 a week earlier. Applications for unemployment benefits increased on a weekly basis through much of December. But the four-week average, a less volatile measure, remained near the lowest level in more than four years.

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DividendFootnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, bul are nolincluded. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amountdeclared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whun was mcreasen bymost recent diudend announcement. i - Sum ol dividends pud after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of uvidends pud tus year. Most recent uudend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pud tus year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, appro70matecash value on exsustribeuon date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no PlE ratio shown. cc - PlE exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months

GM sets 52-week

h'gh

General Motors stock reached a 52-week high after CEO Dan Akerson said he hopes the company regains investment-grade credit status this

said the company's recent $11 billion credit line received investment grade rating, showing that banks are ahead of the ratings agencies. He also had an optimistic outlook for 2013, saying that GM sales in $ Pet pott iig e a r .hTe company S -'tr 'ht t yIsworklng wlthcredlt North America should outpace the rating agencies to raise its status rest of the market this year. Last from junk, where it's been year, GM's L.S. sales rose 3.7 since 2005. percent, slower than the 13 percent Companies with industry-wide increase. investment-grade status get After setting a 52-week high of lower interest rates when $30.28, shared edged downward they borrow money. Akerson and closed Wednesday at $29.97.

52-WEEK RANGE

Price-earnings ratio (Based on past 12 months' results):11

Total return this year: 2%

30

Dec. 7

14

21

Jan. 28

4

Source Factset

AP

$19 ~

Ma r ket value: $4.0 billion

Total returns through Jan. 8

FundFocus

~

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30

SOURCES: Morningstar; FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 20.76 +.06 +1.8 +14.4 +10.1 +47 A A A BondA m 12.9 3 + .81 -0.1 + 5.7 + 6.2 + 39 D D E CaplncBuA m 53.27 +.10 +0.9 +1 3.4 +7.5 + 1.5 8 8 C NAME CpWldGrlA m 37.76 +.13 +1.5 +20.3 +5.5 - 01 8 D 0 BkofAm EurPacGrA m 41.61 +.87 +0.9 +20.0 +3.4 - 09 8 C A Facebook n 1020699 30.59 +1.53 FnlnvA m 41.8 0 + .14 e2.5 +17.9 +9.3 + 23 A C C NokiaCp 914534 3.75 -.30 Federated TotRetBdA m TLRAX GrthAmA m 35. 23 +.14 +2.6 +20.9 +8.7 + 23 A D C S&P500ETF 794044 145.92 e . 37 IncAmerA m 18 .29 +.04 et.3 +13.0 +9.7 + 39 8 A 8 SiriusXM 682513 3.12 —.02 LIMITED MODERATE EXTENSIVE InvCoAmA m 30 .90 +.11 e2.5 +16.2 +7.9 + 20 0 D 0 SprintNex 606454 5.88 -.09 -.03 NewPerspA m 31.85 +.08 et.9 +21.3 +7.8 + 22 A 8 8 SPDR Fncl 476964 16.93 Clearwire 453036 3 .13 e . 21 cu WAMutlnvA m 31.84 +.11 +2.0 +13.1 +11.0 + 28 D A 8 Citigroup 442058 42.04 —.42 Dodge 8 Cox Inco me 13.87 +.81 + 0 .1 + 7 . 7 + 6 .4 +6.9 8 C 8 Herbalife 440677 39.95 +1.60 IntlStk 35.23 +.20 + 1 .7 + 23.6 +4.4 -1.0 A 8 A Stock 125.70 +.35 +3.1 +2 2.7 + 9.8+1.1 A 8 D Gainers Fidelity Contra 79.67 +.25 + 2 .7 + 17.8 +11.1 +3.3 8 8 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG GrowCo 96.11 +.52 + 2 .9 + 18.9 +13.0 +5.1 8 A A LowPriStk d 40 . 27 +.20 + 1 .9 + 18.8 +12.2 +6.4 8 8 8 Repros wtB 23.00 +10.39 + 8 2 .4 FrankTemp-Franklinlncome A m 2.2 7 +.01 +1 .9 +14.6 +9.4 +5.1 A A 8 SyngyP un 14.85 +2.60 + 2 1.2 ParagSh rs 4.42 +.77 + 2 1 .1 RisDivA m 17.8 8 +.87 +2 .8 + 13.5 +9.4 +2.4 D C 0 Oppenheimer Intactlnt 39.02 +6.12 + 1 8 .6 Cl RisDivB m 16.2 1 +.07 + 2 .7 + 12.4 +8.4 +1.5 E D D CdnSolar 4.37 +.67 + 1 8 .1 RisDivC m 16.1 3 +.07 + 2 .7 + 12.6 +8.5 +1.6 E C D CharmCom 4.91 +.67 + 1 5 .8 SmMidValA m 33.24 +.14 +2.6 +10.3 +6.5 -0.5 E E E SinoGlob h 2.28 +.31 + 1 5 .7 Morningslar OwnershipZone™ SmMidVal8 m 28.87 +.13 +2.6 +9.4 +5.7 -1.3 E E E DaqoNE rs 9.45 +1.25 + 1 5 .2 Vertical axis represents average credit PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 3 +.01 -0.1 + 9 .3 + 7.0 +7.5 A 8 A RosttaG rs 5.26 +.66 + 1 4 .2 quality; horizontal axis represents Sharps 2.73 +.33 + 1 3.8 interest-rate sensitivity T Rowe Price Eq t ylnc 27.88 +.99 + 2 .4 + 17.4 +9.8 +2.9 8 8 8 GrowStk 38.90 + .18 + 3 .0 + 20.3 +11.6 +4.0 A A 8 Losers CATEGORY Intermediate-Term Bond HealthSci 43.6 9 + .57 +6 .0 +34.6 +20.6+10.9 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR Vanguard 500Adml 134.66 +.36 e2.5 +16.7 +10.8 +3.0 8 A 8 RATING™ ** A c ycy 500lnv 134.65 +.35 e2.5 +16.5 +10.6 +2.9 8 A 8 -52.6 SantFn pfF 500.00 -555.00 WashFstBk 11.75 -2.25 -16.1 ASSETS $962 million CapDp 34.57 +.22 +2.8 +18.7 +7.5 +4.0 8 D 8 —.27 -11.6 PeregrinP 2.06 Eqlnc 24.66 +.09 e2.I +14.5 +13.0 +4.1 D A A EXP RATIO 0.91% MagicJack 15.30 -2.01 -11.6 GNMAAdml 10.89 -.02 -0.1 e2.2 +5.6 +5.8 0 A A MANAGER Anthony DelSerone -2.61 -11.0 Mistras 21.11 MulntAdml 14.43 +.03 +0.4 $-5.5 +6.0 +5.3 8 8 8 SINCE 1996-10-01 STGradeAd 10.83 0.0 $-4.5 +3.8 +4.0 8 8 8 RETURNS 3-MD +0.4 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 22.12 +.13 +3.1 +20.0 +13.4 +4.6 8 A C YTD -0.1 Tgtet2025 13.80 +.83 +1.5 +13.7 +8.4 +3.3 0 8 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +5.7 TotBdAdml 11.85 -.81 -0.3 +3.9 +5.8 +5.6 E D C Paris e 11.57 e . 3 1 3,717.45 3-YR ANNL +5.9 Totlntl 15.16 +.07 $-1.2 +18.7 +3.1 -2.4 C C 8 London 6,098.65 + 45.02 + . 7 4 5-YR-ANNL +5.8 TotStlAdm 36.62 +.12 e2.7 +17.3 +11.2 +3.8 8 A A Frankfurt + 24.64 + . 3 2 7,720.47 TotStldx 36.61 +.12 e2.7 +17.1 $-11.1 e3.7 8 A A Hong Kong 23,218.47 + 107.28 + . 4 6 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico USGro 21.96 +.12 e3.3 +20.3 +9.8 +3.5 A 8 8 44,862.54 + 291.34 + . 6 5 Federated Mortgage Core Portfolio 28.48 Milan 17,326.27 e375.13 $2.21 Welltn 34.44 +.10 +1.8 +13.1 +9.0 +4.8 8 A A High Yield Bond Portfolio 8.18 Tokyo + 70.51 + . 6 7 10,578.57 WelltnAdm 59.48 +.17 +1.8 +13.1 +9.1 e4.9 8 A A Stockholm 1,127.67 + 2.28 + . 2 0 Series 18 Investment Grade Index, Credit Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney + 17.75 + . 3 8 Default S... 6.71 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 4,730.07 Zurich 7,151.60 +77.08 +1.09 Series 18 Investment Grade Index, Credit redemption fee. Source: Morningstac.

The lead manager of this fund has a less-than-rosy economic outlook for the next few quarMost Active ters. Joe Balestrino anticipates VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG that volatile markets could send —.55 Treasury prices even higher. 3073805 11.43

Marketsummary

Greenbrier Companies

14

20

12

15

0

N D J 52-wcek range $11.75 ~ $23.05

VolJ 4.5m(2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.05 b

0

N D J 52-week range $137 • ~ $ 26.66

P E: 17 . 6 Volu1.8m ( 2.2x avg.) P Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$481.79 m GPN

Close:$48.86 %2.79 or 6.1%

GB X

Close:$17.75L0.48 or 2.8% The railcar company said that its first-quarter net income fell 28 percent, but its revenue topped Wall Street expectations. $25

E:9.3 Yield :...

First Solar

FSLR

Close:$31.90 %0.88 or 2.8%

The electronic payments processor

The solar panel company purchased

said that its second-quarter earnings rose nearly 15 percent, beating Wall Street's expectations. $50

Chilean solar development company Solar Chile as energy demand in the region continues to rise. 30

45 40~

$35 25

0

N D J 0 N D J 52-week range 52-week range $39.37~ $53.93 $71.43 ~ $50.20 Volu3.6m (5.2x avg.) PE: 2 2.5 VolJ 3.7m (0.8x avg.) P E: .. . Mkt. Cap:$3.85 b Yiel d : 0. 2 % Mkt. Cap:$2.78 b Yield:...

Dunkin' Brands

DNKN Close:$34.97 %0.86 or 2.5% A Janney Capital Markets analyst upgraded the stock of the company, which owns the Dunkin' Donuts coffee chains, to a "Buy0 rating. $40

Clearwire CLWR Close:$3.13%0.21 or 7.2% Dish Network, the Satellite TV provider, is offering to buy the wireless network operator Clealwire for about $5.15 billion. $4

35

.

General MOtOrS (GM) Wednesday's close:$29.97

325

-.0031

~

est. 365

350

47.11 28.05 12.20 4115 78.02

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Initial unemployment claims In thousands, seasonally adjusted

375

0

ARO Close:$13.37L0.49 or 3.8% A Jefferies analyst reiterated his "Buy" rating on the teen retailer saying that its results should be in line with expectations. $16

Global Payments

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Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co

1.3053+

Optimism about the strength of corporate earnings sent stock indexes higher Wednesday for the first time this week. Aluminum maker Alcoa was the first company in the Dow Jones industrial average to report its fourth-quarter results, and it said after the markets closed on Tuesday that it returned to a profit. It also reported stronger revenue than financial analysts expected and said it expects demand growth to accelerate this year. Across the Standard & Poor's 500 index, analysts expect fourth-quarter earnings growth of 3.3 percent from a year earlier. They forecast revenue growth of 3.4 percent, according to S&P Capital IQ.

13,500

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, C lose: 13,390.51

13,800

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$93.10

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Change: 3.87 (0.3%) 1,360 '

+

SILVER

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10 YR T NOTE 1.86%

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Apollo Group

APOL Close:$19.32 V-1.63 or -7.8% The for-profit education company said that enrollment at its University of Phoenix school fell again in its fiscal first quarter. $30 25

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SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.86 percent Wednesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 0 6 .05 . 0 9 .10 .13 .14

2-year T-note . 2 4 .26 5-year T-note . 7 7 .79 10-year T-note 1.86 1.87 30-year T-bond 3.06 3.07

BONDS

-

w w

. 02 .04

-0.01 ~

W

V

.10

-0.02 V -0.02 -0.01 L -0.01 L

V L L L

T L L L

.25 .85 1.97 3.02

+ 0 .01 w

-0.01 w w

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.65 2.66 -0.01 L L BondBuyerMuni Idx 4.05 4.07 -0.02 W L Barclays USAggregate 1.80 1.81 -0.01 L L PRIME FED Barcl ays US High Yield 5.83 5.85 -0.02 w w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.77 3.80 -0.03 L L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.04 1.06 -0.02 L L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .72 2.74 -0.02 L L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities The price of natural gas fell to its lowest level since September. Mild temperatures mean less demand for heat, and natural gas is already struggling with a glut of supply.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the Japanese yen, nearing its highest level since 2010. The dollar rose modestly against the euro ahead of the European Central Bank's meeting on Thursday.

h5N4 QG

L 2.56 W 4 .74 L 2.21 8.03 L 3.86 L 1.05 W 3.73

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 93.10 93.15 - 0.05 + 1 . 4 Ethanol (gal) 2.23 2.22 + 0.18 + 2 . 0 Heating Dil (gal) 3.07 3.06 + 0.37 + 0 . 8 -7.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.11 3.22 -3.26 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.78 2.79 -0.55 -1.2 FUELS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1654.80 1661.50 30.20 30.42 1597.80 1580.60 3.66 3.66 687.45 667.10

%CH. %YTD -0.40 -1.2 - 0.70 + 0 . 1 + 1.09 + 3 . 8 - 0.01 + 0 . 4 +3.05 -2.2

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.32 1.33 - 0.75 + 1 . 3 1.48 1.48 - 0.17 + 2 . 9 6.94 -0.6 Corn (bu) 6.89 +0.80 -0.5 Cotton (Ib) 0.75 0.75 -0.44 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 370.50 370.50 -0.9 -5.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.10 1.09 +1.34 Soybeans (bu) 14.20 14.14 + 0.42 + 0 . 1 Wheat(bu) 7.46 -4.2 7.51 -0.67 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6016 —.0043 —.27% 1.5450 Canadian Dollar .9876 +.0005 +.05% 1 .0243 USD per Euro 1.3053 —.0031 —.24% 1.2762 Japanese Yen 8 7.75 + . 5 6 + . 64 % 76 . 8 9 Mexican Peso 12. 7 294 —.0706 —.55% 13.7098 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7771 +.0028 +.07% 3.8445 Norwegian Krone 5.5987 +.0023 +.04% 6.0066 South African Rand 8.5997 +.0205 +.24% 8.1662 6.5699 +.0205 +.31% 6.8994 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9260 +.0021 +.23% .9506 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9518 -.0007 -.07% . 9 770 Chinese Yuan 6.2310 +.0040 +.06% 6 .3168 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7521 +.0012 +.02% 7 .7658 Indian Rupee 54.780 -.225 -.41% 52.515 Singapore Dollar 1.2275 -.0021 -.17% 1.2967 South Korean Won 1060.30 -3.16 -.30% 1159.81 -.04 -.14% 3 0 .13 Taiwan Dollar 29.01


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

BRIEFING

AIG won't sue U.S. over bailout Afraid of looking like a world-class ingrate, AIG

on Wednesdaydecided against suing thefederal government over the $182 billion bailout that

saved thegiant insurance company from collapse. American lnternation-

al Group lnc. was put in the awkward position

of having to consider joining a lawsuit brought against Uncle Samby its former CEO, Maurice

"Hank" Greenberg.

The suit claims that the terms of the taxpay-

er-funded bailout were too onerous.

Bank auditors face SECcharges

ui er u sa en su By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

A local builder has purchased a nearly undeveloped southeast Bend subdivision, adding to the list of east-side neighborhoods that changed hands after the real estate crash. Redmond-based Hayden Homes bought 24 of the 31 home lots at South Point, a neighborhood just east of R.E. Jewell Elementary School and north of Murphy Road. Hayden purchased the lots from Portland developer John Tennant for nearly $1.1 million, according to Deschutes County deeds records. Just five of the 31 lots have finished homes on them,

county property records show. The subdivision was platted in 2007, according to property records. The company's timeline for development isn't known; Hayden Homes officials did not respond to several messages. But the location isn't a sur-

prise, according to Andy High, vice president of government affairs with the Central Oregon Builders Association. Developersseemingly flocked to east Bend in 2012, buying stalled subdivisions forfractions oftheirpre-recession value, betting that prices wouldn't drop any further. "Two or three years ago, land everywhere was worth pretty much nothing," High

said. But that's no longer the case: Values are rising, more so in west Bend, which is seen as more desirableforhigher-end homes. But lower-priced homes drove much of the sales activity between 2009 and 2012, and developers capitalized. In 2010, a real estate investment company headed by Oxford Hotel Group president Curt Baney bought 61 home lots in the Eagles Landing subdivision on Southeast 27th Street, lessthan a year after the previous developer lost them in foreclosure. A group of investors that includes U.S. Rep. Gary Miller, R-Calif., bought into several unfinished east Bend subdivi-

i vision

sions, including South Deerfield Park, off Parrell Road; Gleneden, off Reed Market Road near Southeast Sixth Street; and Mirada, near the intersection of Butler Market Road and Eagle Road. "It's definitely cheaper to develop and build in east Bend," High said. "Guys like Hayden

(Homes), if they can pick up a subdivision with the infrastructure already in place and all the lots penciled out, that probably makes more sense than investing somewhere else." More than half of the roughly 3,000 empty home lots in Bend are on the east side,

Suddivisiondought

Hayden Homes paid nearly $1.1

million to buy 24 home lots in the South Point subdivision.

Brosterhous Rd.

South Point

suddivision („4J I

urphy Rd.

BEND

High said. — Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluchlich@bendbulletin.com

Greg Cross/Ttte Bulletin

In its first case

against auditors stemming from the financial crisis, the Securities and

IRS official

Exchange Commission on Wednesday took action against two KPMG

employees whohad given a cleanaudit opinion to a Nebraska-based bank holding company that later failed because of bad loans it had made

to real estate developers in Nevadaand Florida. The SEC asked an administrative law judge to

• A new wave of startups offers a mobile workforce By Peter Delevett

bar John Aesoph, 40, a

San Jose Mercury News

partner in the Omaha office of KPMG, and Dar-

Tech's "sharing economy" movement has spawned companies like Airbnb and Relay Rides, which let people save and make money via exchanges for things like spare bedrooms and car trips. Now a new slew of startups is using the model to match consumers with professional services for less. YourMechanic, for instance, has a mobile network of certified auto mechanics who will come to your home or office; Pathjoy promises "maid service for the masses," booked online. Similar

ren Bennett, 35, a senior manager, for their roles in an audit of TierOne in 2008. That included what the SEC said was a failure to take steps to review the audit after evidence emerged that the auditors had been misled about whether the bank had taken large

enough write-downs on the value of real estate development loans. — From wire reports

exchanges are popping up for

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Public meeting of the Central Oregon Area Commission on Transportation: 3-5 p.m.; City of Redmond Public Works TrainingRoom,243 E. Antler Avenue; 541-5043306. • Open computer lab: 23:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. FRIDAY • CCB license test prep course: Two-day course for contractors; approved by the Oregon Construction Contractors Board and satisfies the educational requirement to take the test to become alicensed contractor in Oregon; course continues Jan. 12; prepayment and preregistration required; $299; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-883-7290. • Central Oregon Business Education Network January meeting: Comemeetthe 2013 leadership council; this session will be an opportunityto discuss member needs, wants and expectations for COBEN in the newyear; registration requested; $5; 11:30a.m.-1 p.m.; University of Oregon Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave.,Bend; 503-805-6524, Lynn@ALJLLC.comorwww.meetup. com/COBEN12/. • Know Computers for Beginners:10:30 a.m.-noon; RedmondPublic Library, 827 S.W.Deschutes Ave.; 54 I-312-1050. SATURDAY • Citizens Climate Lobby presentation and launch: Amy Hoyt Bennett of the Citizens Climate Lobby will lead the training to teach concerned citizens the tools to maketheir voices heard by decision-makers in the U.S.Congress; 1-4 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; www. CitizensClimateLobby.org.

For the complete calendar, pickup Sunday's 13ulletin or visit bendbuiietin.comlbizcal

calls for tax code overhaul By Catherine Rampell New York Times News Service

Dat Sugano/San Jose Mercury News

(GoHaircut).

Whitney Ortiz, a master technician for YourMechanic, works on a repair at his customer's apartment parking lot in East Palo Alto, Calif. YourMechanic is a startup that features a network of auto mechanics who make house or office calls.

Backers say the new breed of mobile services isn't just more convenient and cheaper for users; it's also a way for craftspeopleto find steady employment inan uneven economy. "Most stylists are looking for part-time work to supplement their income," said GoHaircut CEO Tom Maxim, who hit on the idea while at a New York startup that was trying to take on Skype. Locked into long hours at his desk, Maxim asked if his barber would make house calls; soon Maxim's co-workers were doing the same, and he moved to Silicon Valley to turn his idea into a company. San Jose, Calif.-based GoHaircut, launched in October, contracts with half a dozen stylists who will drive to a customer's home or office, lay down a mat and start

gan using GoHaircut for himself and his three employees at San Francisco advertising startup AdStage. "And $30 per head for haircuts that typically can be upward of $100 just can't be beat." As with most of its peers in other come-to-you markets, GoHaircut lets customers pay directly on its website, so no money changes hands once the professional shows up. Abhas "Art" Agrawal, CEO of Mountain View, Calif.based YourMechanic, first began experimenting with online labor marketplaces five years ago, when he launched a site to help hospitals find temporary nurses. When that flopped amid the 2008 recession, Agrawal decided to open a car repair

snipping.

shop.

"The convenience factor goes without saying," said Sahil Jain, who recently be-

But while interviewing mechanics, he learned that many of them offered mobile

chefs (Kitchit) and barbers

repair through outlets like Craigslist — and realized he could combine two business models into one. "The problem is, you don't know who these guys on Craigslist are," he said. "You don't know how much it should cost. The whole experience felt broken." YourMechanic, which made its debut in September, has compiled a database of automobile part and labor prices. So if the owner of a 2000 Honda Civic needs brake pads, the app can calculate what the job would cost, taking into account how far the mechanic needs to drive, then ship the parts from a wholesaler. Agrawal said his company — whose investors include actor Ashton Kutcher and venture capital firms SoftTech and Andreessen Horowitz — works with about a dozen certified me-

chanics who cover roughly half the San Francisco Bay Area. On-site services aren't new to the valley; during the dotcom bubble, many compa-

niesbegan offeringworkers mobile perks like personal training and dentist visits, the better to keep them corralled on campus. GoHaircut, for instance, has a local competitor called On-site Haircuts, which operates a salon inside an RV. But thecompany, which was founded in 2003, sets up at specific locations on specific days. "They don't come to your office on demand," Maxim notes. The new wave of such services is built, in part, on the increasing ubiquity of mobile phones, which make it easy for customers to schedule services on the fly and for workers in the field to be notified of new clients.

Lawmakers need to overhaul the tax code completely to reduce the "significant, even unconscionable, burden" placed on taxpayers just to file a tax return, the Internal Revenue Service's ombudsman told Congress on Wednesday. In her legally required annual report to Congress, the national taxpayer advocate, Nina Olson, estimated that individuals and businesses spend about 6.1 billion hours a year complying with tax-filing requirements. That adds up to the equivalent of more than 3 million full-time workers, or more than the number of jobs on the entire federal government's payroll. And filing is only becoming more complicated as lawmakers haggle over new tax breaks. Since 2001, Congress has made nearly 5,000 changes to the U.S. tax code, or more than one a day on average. Nine in 10 taxpayers now pay money forprofessional preparers or often-expensive commercial tax software to figure out how much money theyowe the government. One of the advocate's suggestions for streamlining the tax code was to repeal the alternative minimum tax, a parallel tax system intended to make sure rich Americans pay a fair amount in taxes, which is increasingly engulfing middle-classtaxpayers. Another was to reduce the number of income exclusions, deductions and credits, known collectively as "tax expenditures," that clutter up the tax code.

2012 noted for affordability By Alejandro Lazo Los Angeles Times

Last year was probably one of the most affordable years ever to buy a house as prices bottomed and mortgage interest rates hit record lows, according to an industry group. The National Association of Realtors reported that 2012 will probably go down as a record year for housing affordability, according to its affordability index. That measure, which is calculated based on

the median home price, family income and the average mortgage interest rate, stood at 198.2 in November. The higher the index number, the more purchasing power available to consumers. A reading of 100 is the point at which a family with a median income can afford a medianpriced home, presuming a 20 percent down payment. For the entire year of 2012, the group projects the index will hit an average of 194, the

highest it has been since re-

cordkeeping began in 1970.

NIgLBR rttrrt

~p$

While homes may be affordable and mortgage interest rates low, 2012 was also marked by low inventory, steep competition for homes

ts tsettttt'"~' a=

and tight mortgage lending standards. These conditions shut out many families still struggling from the recession. Many of the most successfulbuyers were firms and investors paying cash for properties.

NEWPlg(;Ql

=

The Associated Press file photo

A sign advertises a lower price for a home in North Andover, Mass. Houses were very affordable in 2012, according to a national index.

PERMITS City of Bend • Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 21174S.E. Capella, $190,289

• West Bend Property B Company LLC,213 I N.W. Lemhi Pass, $154,170 • BTBSR LLC, 20678

eau mont, $162,686 • BTBSR LLC, 63789 Hun t ers, $144,551 • Brookswood Bend

LLC,19753 S.W.Aspen Meadows, $199,275 City of Redmond • Dunlap Fine Homes

Inc., 2371 N.W.ElmAve., $135,919 • Redmond Associates, 2050 S.W.Timber Ave.,

$375,000 $331,062.48 Deschutes County • Michael C. Maloney, • Bart S. Gernhart, 55553 19030 Pinehurst Road, Big River Drive, Bend, Ben d, $367,356.24


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Medicine, D2 M o ney, D4 Fitness, D3

Nutr i t ion, D5

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

MONEY

Distracted

Start the

surgeons

new year

can ead to errors

with 5 heathfu

• OSU-Cascades Campus professor leadsstudy

dishes By Stephanie Witt Sedgwick Special to The Washington Post

By Heidi Hagemeier

• Jefferson Countyfacility expects improvementsaspart of largersystem

The Buuetin

Inexperienced surgeons make significant mistakes when faced with common operating room distractions, a recent study led by an assistant engineering professorat Oregon State University-Cascades Cam-

By Heidi Hagemeier •The Bulletin igns bearing the longtime name of Jefferson County's lone hospital — Mountain View Hospital — came down on Monday. The 25-bed facility in Madras, built in 1967 and added onto seven times over the decades, became part of the St. Charles Health System on Jan. 1. The signs now say St. Charles Madras. It's the first change patients will likely notice about the rural hospital's move into the regional system. Other changes are expected take place gradually in the

pus suggests. It also

MEDICINE

that those errors are more likely to occur after 1 p.m., regardless of whether surgeons were at the beginning or end of their shifts. The study was spearheaded by Robin Feuerbacher, who leads the Energy Systems Engineering Program for OSU-Cascades. Feuerbacher's area of interest is human factors engineering, which is essentially about why people make mistakes. The research, he said, will likely be used to develop strategies for training surgeons to deal with distractions — particularly at Oregon Health 8 Science University, which partnered in the study with both faculty and participating surgical residents. Faculty from OSU also participated.

NUTRITION»rge cabbages like savoy, take a page

coming years. Renovations, such as adding a second operating room, are on the table. Down the line is possibly making available tests or services that patients presently travel to get in Redmond or Bend. What will not change, those involved in the transition say, is the level of services at the hospital. "To me, it's a win-win for Jefferson County," said Tom Kirsch, an area farmer who has served on the Mountain View Hospital board of directors since 1979. "We see the

Jeanine Gentry, CEO of what is now St. Charles Madras, stands in a hallway of the hospital Monday. She started the job 18 months ago. same servicesbeing continued. That'spartofour agreement. In fact, I think it's only going to get better." See Madras /D4

from what has happened to Brussels sprouts, which are being roasted or shredded, then qu>ckly sauteed. With similar treatment, savory cabbage could become filling for ravioli or mashed into potatoes with caramelized onions. Stir-fried

Napa cabbage pairs beautifully with shiitake mushrooms as egg roll filling or in fried rice. Roasting yields great results for cauliflower, as

does pan-steaming. SeeDishes/D5

Create the utimate

"l didn't expect it by time of day. I

housework workout

1•

expected

By Penelope Green

it by fatigue, how long they had been on duty, those kinds of things ... but

New Yorh Times News Service

NEW YORK — Can housework help you live longer? A New York Times blogpost by Gretchen Reynolds last month cited research linking vigorous activity, including housework, and longevity. The study, which tracked the death rates of

none of the general, conventional fatigue measurements indicated an effect." M

— Robin Feuerbacher, of OSU-Cascades Campus

M

a

FITNE55

• Ls

,

B r itish civil

servants, was the latest in a flurry of scientific reports crediting domestic chores with health benefits like a lowered risk for breast and colon cancers. In one piquant study published in 2009, researchers found that couples who spent more hours on housework had sex more frequently (with each

•W

"Surgeons are very data driven,so ifthey're aware of this they'll develop compensating methods," Feuerbacher said. "And it could be simple things, like they may refresh themselves after lunch and goforaquickwalk, do whatever it takes to revitalize themselves." Published in November in the journal Archives of Surgery, the study asked 18 surgeons in residency — practicing doctors that still must be supervised — to conduct a simulated laparoscopic gallbladder removal on a medical machine commonly used for training. The operation is a delicate one using minimally invasive techniques. During the operations, the surgical residents encountered distractions and interruptions considered typical in an operating room: A metal tray drops to the floor. A cellphone rings. Two staff members engage in a sidebar political conversation. The surgeon is asked about how to care for a patient operated on earlier that day who is now having breathing problems. SeeMistakes /D2

Even in the bright new days of the new year, cabbages, cauliflower and rutabagas are nutritional powerhouses in need of a little PR. They can bring new and unexpected flavors to the table, but ho-hum ways of cooking them fail to inspire all but the most loyal fans. For

l;

other) though presumably

'A., 8

not while vacuuming. (The

,,I Q4' jI

report did not specify.) SeeHousework/D3

lt.

P%

p

Photosby Ryan Brennecke iThe Bulletin

Mountain View Hospital in Madras in now known as St. Charles Madras. The new signs went up Monday.

lllustration by Stephen Webster New YorkTimes NewsService


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

HEALTH EVENTS

MEDICINE

CLASSES HEALTHYBEGINNINGS SCREENINGS:Free health screenings for ages 0-5; Friday; Redmond; call for location, 541-383-6357. SUICIDE PREVENTION& CRISIS INTERVENTION: Learn to recognize signs of suicide, use resources and offer hope to those at risk, hosted by the National Alliance on Mental lllness Central Oregon; free; 7-9 p.m. Jan.15; St. Charles Medical Center, conference room A, 2500 N.E. Neff Road, Bend; www. namicentraloregon.org. MENTAL HEALTHSCREENING: Screenings offered by licensed professionals, with referrals; registration required; free; 9 a.m.5 p.m. Jan. 17; Cascade View Counseling, 390 S.W. Columbia, Suite 210, Bend; 541-610-4597.

How to submit Health Events: Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days

before the desireddate of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated

monthly and will appearat www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People: Email info about local

Mistakes

research wasn't using realistic distractions," Feuerbacher said. "A lot of time the distrac-

Continued from D1 The distractions regularly occurred at c r itical points in th e operations. The residents didn't know this was the reason they were being observed. The data showed that eight out of 1 8 r esidents made serious medicalerrors when distracted, particularly when tested in the afternoon. Only one surgeon made amistake when there were no distractions. Major errors were considered damage to o r gans, ducts or arteries. The simulator machine was important, since live patients cannot be used for this kind of research. It's realistic and provides recordings of the operation, making for an objective record of what happened when. "The big benefit of the research is up until now there hasn't been a model for this," Feuerbacher said. "We could test the effects of training the surgeons to manage distractions better." Feuerbacher s ai d he started the research seven

people involved inhealth issues to healthevents©

tion was (surgeons) were do-

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I

Courtesy Earline Millsaps

OSU-Cascades Assistant Professor Robin Feuerbacher, left, observes a mock experiment with the surgical simulator at Oregon Health & Science University with volunteer Earline Millsaps at the controls. It was part of Feuerbacher's research studying medical errors linked to operating room distractions. years ago while completing his doctorate. He spent roughly 25 hours observing in operating rooms to come up with realis-

tic distractions. Many of those he used actu-

ally happened during his observations, though research-

ere'sa un ein our e

bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

By Warren Wolfe

• Mark DeJohn, a licensed massage therapist in Bend, recently moved to anew (~ location at155 S.W. Century Drive in Bend. His practice is located inside Bend Piiates. DeJohn specializes in active release techniques, aform of soft tissue therapy that restores motion to injured tissues.

1 in 24 admit

nodding off while driving By Mike Stobbe The Associated Press

NEW YORK — This could give you nightmares: I in 24 U.S. adults say they recently fell asleep while driving. And health officials behind the study think the number is probably higher. That's because some peopledon'trealize it when they nod off for a second or two behind the wheel. "If I'm on the road, I'd be a little worried about the other drivers," said the study's lead author, Anne Wheaton of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In the CDC study released Thursday, about 4 percent of U.S. adults said they nodded off or fell asleep at least once while driving in the previous month. Some earlier studies reached a similar conclusion, but the CDC telephone survey of 147,000 adults was far larger. It was conducted in 19 states and the District of Columbia in 2009 and 2010. CDC r e searchers f o u nd d rowsy dr iving w a s m o r e

utton Bacteria mug shats

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

PEOPLE

ers included them as a potentially greater frequency than average during the study. "Prior to this, most of the

Not to gross you out, but your belly button is crawling with bacteria — billions of them, in all shapes, sizes and appetites. That's a good thing, a group of North Carolina researchers says after studying more than 500 bellybutton swabs, some from their own navels. Most of the tiny critters in that "jungle of microbial diversity" are harmless, the researchers say, and lots of them actually kill off their disease-causing cousins. Not just numerous, they also are diverse: 2,368 different types identified so far, with everybody's belly button carrying a different cast of characters. Those are among findings of the Belly Button Biodiversity Project, an effortby researchers atNorth Carolina State University and the N o rt h C a rolina Museum of N atural Sciences, both in Raleigh.

Checkout some of the findings of the Belly Button Biodiversity Project — an effort by researchers at North Carolina State University and the North Carolina Museum of Natural

Sciences — atwww.wildlife ofyourbody.org

take over." Gently washing your navel Thinkstock with soap and water regularly Your belly button is crawling with tiny critters and, according to will lower the hkehhood of North Carolina researchers, that's a good thing. "Each person's bacterial problems, but you'll microbial jungle is so rich, colorful and dynamic that in all likelistill have lots of microbial visihood your body hosts species that no scientist has ever studied," tors in there. said lead researcher Jiri Hulcr. "Your navel may well be one of the About 90 percent of belly last biological frontiers." buttons are "innies," navel depressions that fold inward, created when the umbilical and moist — a perfect home." and make waste from what's cord connecting a mom with Too many people think all leftover. Some consume left- a newborn baby is cut after bacteriaare bad, said lead re- over detritus on our skin that birth and heals. Not surprissearcher Jiri Hulcr. The Belly otherwise might feed harmingly, innies carry more bacButton Project is out to "edu- ful pathogens. Still others are teria than protruding "outies," cate the public about the role harnessed by scientists to pro- Hulcr said. "Each person's microbial bacteria play in ou r w o rld. duce medicinesand vaccines. Bacteria are always present on But sometimes they c an jungle is so rich, colorful and Magnified mug our skin and in our bodies." cause sorethroats, ear infec- dynamic that in all likelihood shots o f the bac t eria They live in and on every tions, pneumonia or m o r e- your body hosts species that are posted on t h e p r oj- square inch of you, and for deadly diseases such as chol- no scientist has ever studied," ect's w ebsite, w i l d lifeof the most part it's a win-win era and leprosy. They also can he said. "Your navel may well yourbody.org — along with relationship — just you and cause belly-button infections. be one of the last biological "Infections u sually a r e frontiers." an article detailing the like- 100 trillion very close friends, ly critters crawling on pop about 10 times the number of treated w i t h ant i b i otics," The researchers are still superstar Lady Gaga. cells that make up your body. Kottke said, "but we've got- gazing at navels, but they've " Your belly b u tton i s The one-celled creatures ten more cautious about pre- also cast their eyes on wildlife a great place to grow up — so tiny that you'd have to scribing them. Sometimes an- that flourish on other body if y o u're a b a c t erium," stack up 25,000 or so to equal tibiotics do more harm than parts. said cardiologist Dr. Tom an inch — help out in many So stay tuned: The new targood, like when they w i pe Kottke at Regions Hospital w ays. Some help us m a ke out all the beneficial bacteria gets arearmpit microbes and in St. Paul. "It's warm, dark use of the nutrients in food in your gut and the bad ones forehead mites.

ing math in their heads. "I never saw anyone make a seriousmistake because of a distraction," he added. Feuerbacher has presented the research several times. He said surgeons felt it was realistic and that they could relate anecdotally. The study also opens up other possible avenues for research. Feuerbacher said he would b e i n terested in working w i t h e x p erienced surgeons and older surgeons. He would also like to look at why errors popped up more in the afternoon, like whether a post-lunch slump affects performance. "I didn't expect it by time of day," he said. "I expected it by fatigue, how long they had been on duty, those kinds of things ... but none of the general, conventional fatigue measurements indicated an effect." — Reporter: 541-6l7-7828, hhagemeier~bendbuiletin.com

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common inmen, people ages 25 to 34, those who averaged less than six hours of sleep each night, and — for some unexplained reason — Texans. Wheaton said it's possible the Texas survey sample included larger numbers of sleep-deprived young adults or apnea-suffering overweight

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people. Most of the CDC findings are not surprising to t hose who study this problem. "A lot of people are getting i nsufficient sleep," said D r . Gregory Belenky, director of Washington State University's Sleep and Performance Research Center in Spokane. The government estimates that about 3 percent of fatal traffic crashes involve drowsy drivers, but other estimates have put that number as high as 33 percent. Warning signs of drowsy driving: Feeling very tired, not remembering the last mile or two, or drifting onto rumble strips on the side of the road.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

FITNESS

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Housework Continued from D1 I ntrigued by scie n c e that merged the efforts of a Martha with the results of an Arnold (a buffer buffer?), this reporter challenged a household expert and a fitness authority to create the ultimate h ousework w o rkout — a houseworkout — in her New York City apartment. Perhaps she could add a few years to her own life while learning some fancy new moves for her Swiffer. Christopher Ely, once a footman at B u ckingham Palace, and Brooke Astor's longtime butler, was appointed cleaner-in-chief. Ely is a man who approaches what the professionals call househ old management with t h e range and depth of an Oxford don. Although he is working on his memoirs (he described his book as a room-by-room primer with anecdotes from his years in service), he was happy enough to put his writing aside for an afternoon. His collaborator was Carol Johnson, a dancer and fitness instructorwho develops classes at Crunch N YC, i n cluding those based on Broadway musicals like "Legally Blonde" and "Rock of Ages." Ely arrived first, beautifully dressed in dark gray wool pants, a black suit coat and a crisp white shirt with silver cuff links. He cleans house in a white shirt? "I know how to clean it," he countered, meaning the shirt. When Johnson appeared (in black spandex and a ruffly white chiffon blouse, which she switched out for a Crunch T-shirt), theory, method and materials were discussed. " If y o u're d r eading t h e laundry," Johnson said, "why not create a space where it's actually fun to do by putting on some music?" If fitness is defined by cardio health, she added, it will be achallenge to create housework that leaves you slightly out of breath. "I'm thinking interval training," she said. As it happens, one trend in exercise has been workouts that are i n spired by r e alworld chores, or what Rob Morea, a high-end trainer, described the other day as "mimicking hard labor activities." In his studio, Morea has clients simulate the actions of construction workers hefting cement bagsover their shoulders (Morea uses sand bags) or pushing a wheelbarrow or

chopping wood. Ely averred that service extreme h o usekeeping — is physically demanding, with sore feet and bad knees the least of it s d ebilitating byproducts. Ely still suffers

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Christopher Ely, once a footman at Buckingham Palace, and Carol Johnson, a dancer and fitness instructor who develops classes at Crunch NYC, warm up for cleaning. A study, which tracked the death rates of British civil servants, was the latest in a flurry of scientific reports crediting domestic chores with health benefits like a lowered risk for breast and colon cancers. from an injury he i ncurred while carrying a poodle to its mistress over icy front steps in Washington. And the right equipment matters: After two weeks' employ in a n p e nthouse, he was handed a pair of Reeboks by his new boss, the better to withstand the apartment's wall-to-wall g r anite floors. Ely, whose talents and ex-

by the front and back doors, so the spiders can eat any mosquitoes coming or going.) Choose a mop with microfi-

pertise are wide-ranging (he

But first, to stretch. Johnson took hold of this reporter's Bona floor mop (it's like a Swiffer, but with a r eusable washcloth) and Ely followed along with an old-fashioned string mop. Although Ely has a kind of loose-limbed elegance, he is not exactly limber. He grimaced as he parroted Johnson, who used her mop as Gene Kelly did his umbrella, stretching her arms overhead, one by one, twisting from side to side, sucking in her stomach, rising up on tip toes. Johnson adjusted his chin — "You're going to hurt yourself if you keep sticking your neck out," she warnedand Ely raised a black-socked foot napped with cat hair and chastised this reporter: "Would you look at that?" (The cat had vanished early on, but his "debris," as Ely put it, was still very much in evidence. The reporter hung her head. Did she know that cat spit is toxic? Ely

can stock a wine cellar, do the flowers, set a silver service, iron like a maestro and clean gutters, as he did once or twice at Holly Hill, Astor's Westchester estate), is a minimalist when it comes to materials. He favors any simple dish detergent as a multipurpose cleaner, along with a little vinegar, for glass, and not much else. "Dish detergent is designed for cutting g r ease; there's nothing better," he said. He's anti-ammonia, antibleach. He said bleach destroys fabric, particularly anything with elastic in it. "Knickers and bleach are a terrible combination," he said."I had a boss who thought he had skin cancer. His entire trunk had turned red and itchy." It seems hi s u n derpants were being washed in bleach.

(Collective wince.)

"It's horrible stuff," he said. As for tools, he likes a cobweb cleaner — this reporter had bought Oxo's extendable duster, which has a fluffy orange cotton duster that snaps onto a sort of wand, but Ely prefers the kind that looks like a round chimney brush. (If you live in a house, he also suggestsleaving the cobwebs

ber fronds (he suggested the 0 Cedar brand) because it dries quickly and doesn't smell. And a sturdy vacuum. Also, stacks of microfiber cloths or a terry cloth towel ripped up.

Start at the top

it along ceiling corners, moldings, soffits and, uh, the top of the fridge (major dust harvest there). His form was pretty, like a serve by Roger Federer, if not exactly aerobic. For Ely kept stopping to lecture this reporter — on condensation; on the basic principles of heat transfer and why one needs to vacuum the r efrigerator coils; on th e m ovement of moist air in a kitchen; on floor care, which involved a long story about a Belgian monastery whose inhabitants never washed the kitchen floor; on how to dust the halogen spot lights (use a cotton cloth, not a microfiber one, and make sure the lights are off, and

approved his ambidexterity for its neural benefits — "It's always good to fire up both sides of the brain," she saidand then together they tackled the white marble kitchen i sland. With a b owl o f h o t water and a smidgen of dish-

uming wants to be done slowly and methodically, it turns out. Use the soft b rush attachment first, on moldings and the like, then a wand for crevices. What Ely really likes is a natural bristle paintbrush and a wand. His vacuum stroke, washing detergent (Ely said once you've hit the floor, is you want something you can careful, not at all slapdash. shimmy along with, r ather Johnson would like to see him than a big bucket) Ely per- lunge inbetween each stroke, formed a gorgeous, two-fisted which he does, but we all can swoop of the surface, but then s ee that his natural form stopped again to n ote that very upright, and a light grip stubborn stains on m a rble on the vacuum — is both more can be removed with a razor efficient and more effective. "Pick a line and stick to it," blade or steel wool. "A lot of cleaning is touch," he said. "Work in stripes. Now he said. "Also, you need to ro- look at what you've done to tateyour dishes.These ones at your vacuum." cool). the bottom are probably never He stopped again and point"I do rabbit on, don't I?" he used." ed to the white paint scuffs said. When Johnson suggested that covered its body. " You're d estroying y o u r Johnson gamely h u stled Ely throw in a plie, even the him along, noting that anyphotographer revolted. paint job," he said. "Guys can't do t h at," he time you raise your arms over Another full stop. He reyour head you can raise your said. moved the vacuum head and heart rate. Indeed, Ely's knees popped began to suction off the hair "What about a balance exer- like firecrackers. and lint that was entangled cise?" she cajoled, executing a Four hours had e lapsed. there. "I hope your hairbrush is in neat series of leg lifts. "That's The kitchen was only slightly good for the butler's booty!" cleaner, though much domes- better shape," he said. "Now do Ely's next move was a sur- tic theory had been absorbed. you change the filter inside?" face wash. No one was sweating, howAs a matter of fact, yes. "You want to wash, then "You are a good girl," he ever. This reporter pushed her dry; it's a two-handed move- vacuum into Ely's arms. said. "I can vacuum my apartment," he said. "When I wash The reporter beamed. a crystal chandelier, it's like ment in 10 minutes," she said At this point it was clear that milking a cow." proudly. true cleanliness and fitness He pantomimed. Johnson A stern look from Ely. Vacu- may be mutually exclusive.

wondered.)

"We're w arming u p t h e spine," Johnson said. "Squeeze your abdominals." Ely looked worried: "I don't think I have abdominals!" Ely's technique is to clean a room from top to bottom. That means he begins with the cobweb cleaner, wafting

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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 20'I3

MoNEY Madras Continued from 01 The St . C h arles system has pledged to invest at least $10 million over the next four years in the Madras hospital. On the list of needs are a few big-ticket items, such as replacingthe more than 40-yearold boiler and a conversion to electronic medical r e cords, which is a requirement of the federal Affordable Care Act. Other details of the agreement include th e t r a nsfer of $9.7 million of Mountain View's assets to St. Charles. Madras r e p resents a b o ut 3 percent of the health system's overall assets. Also, the agreement offers employment to the hospital's 220 staff. Salaries and benefits might be increasing or decreasing depending on the position. The addition of the Madras hospital is the latest in t h e growth of St. Charles, which in just more than a decade has gone from a single hospital to a larger health system that operates every hospital in Central Oregon. The Central Oregon District Hospital in Redmond joined with the larger St. Charles Bend in 2001. Prineville's hospital, Pioneer Memorial Hospital, entered into a lease agreement with the system in 2008 in which Pioneer continues to own the land, buildings and other fixed assets. St. Charles runs the hospital, taking on its profits and losses. Jim Diegel, president and CEO of the St. Charles system, called Madras' inclusion a natural progression that will lead to better care coordination in the region. St. Charles has provided management services for the Madras hospital since 1998 and at times serves the same patients. "You're still going to see the same caregivers in Madras, you're still going to get that

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There is one operating room at St. Charles Madras, shown here. The hospital needs a second one in the coming years.

Possible changes Below are anumber of St. Charles Madras' needs identified by several people close to the project. The priority and timeline for

these projects haven't yet been established: • Convert from paper to

electronic medical records. • Add a new boiler.

• Add a second operating room. • Update the emergency department. • Create a better space for

the imaging department.

personalized attention t h at patients have come to expect in Madras," he said. "But now you've got the strength, the system support, the capital, the technology and other resources ofSt.Charles Health System available."

Resources needed T he M adras h ospital i s a smaller player compared to t h e s y s tem's f l a gship, St. Charles Bend. The Jefferson County hospital sees about 1,200 inpatient and outpatient visitors a year, plus 12,000 emergency room visits, said Jeanine Gentry, CEO of St. Charles Madras. By contrast, St. Charles Bend in 2011 handled 7,905 inpatient surgeries, 6,986 outpatient surgeries and 3 6 ,239 e mergency ro o m vi si t s . Yet the small hospital serves a wide region, including the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, Fossil, Antelope and parts of Wasco County. Its services include critical and intensive care units, a family birthing center, surgery, respiratorycare and medical

imaging. As recently as early 2011, the hospital was working toward an expansion and r emodel

that was expected to take it from roughly 80,000 square feet to 110,000 square feet. Since then, Kirsch said, it became apparent to the publicly elected Mountain View board of directors that the hospital's financial future wasn't rosy. The board backed away from the building plans and began discussing a possible collaboration with a larger hospital system. Gentry said Mountain View Hospital ended its last fiscal year $500,000 in the red. More significantly, changes to Medicaid reimbursements due to coming health reforms pose a serious financial challenge. About one-third of the hospital's patients are on Medicaid, Gentry said, and another 10 percent are served by the Indian Health Service plan that reimburses at Medicaid rates. Kirsch said these factors, along with the continued economic slump and a dip in the

number of the financially attractive e l ective s u rgeries, made it apparent that the hospital would struggle to keep up. "We realized we couldn't afford many things on our own," Gentry said. "You can hang on to your independence and pride until it will costyou," Kirsch said."And we didn't want to do that." The same pressures are spurring hospital consolidations throughout the industry, Diegel said. Hospitals are needinglarger scales and more resources in order to survive. Just in O r egon, Ashland Community Hospital is discussing a merger with Medford-based A s ante H e a lth System, and PeaceHealth in E ugene announced in A u gust it will merge with Colorado-based Catholic Health Initiatives. "You can't operate inefficient entities," Diegel said. "It's especially hard for rural hospitals, because you have all this infrastructure." Kirsch said the board disc ussed partnering w i t h a health system outside Central Oregon, like Providence Health 8 Services in Portland. It would have posed a competitor to St. Charles, which is presently the lone large health system in the region. But the board felt St. Charles was its first choice, as staff there already knew its interworkings and the system is well-connected in the region. Specialists from Bend and Redmond regularly travel to Madras to offer services. "They have a stake in our success that nobody else has," Gentry said. "They're going to see our patients anyway. If we're going to improve health care, we're going to have to do it together."

Coming next

tails of the asset transfer. Next, Gentry said, comes planning forthe future. Diegel said a ke y l esson from the Redmond and Prineville experiences was to make the human resources piece of the consolidation happen quickly. Madras staff w ent through new employee seminars in December. Next comes developing the priority list for upgrades in Madras. Diegel said he expects that will take roughly six months. Electronic m e d i ca l records will come first, as all of St. Charles is switching to a new system in August — Gentry said the conversion alone, which Madras is required to accomplish by 2014, will cost a fraction of t h e p r ojected $3.5 million because of the consolidation with St. Charles. A second operating room is also needed, Gentry said. This is particularly important to accommodate for Caesarian sections from the birthing center. The building, particularly its older sections, have other issues, she added. The boiler, f or instance, went ou t f o r a time on New Year's Eve. The emergency department rooms weren't built to fit all the modern-day computerized equipment. I n t h e me a n time, t h e St. Charles system is expected to adda Jefferson County resident to its board of directors. The Madras hospital district board will continue to meet for a time to manage the transfer as it unfolds and file any last necessary r e ports, K i r s ch said. Its tax levy will eventually also be done away with, although he expects it will not be within the year. "Now begins the work of how we plot all this stuff out," Diegel said. — Reporter: 54b617-7828, hhagemeier®bendbulletin.com Bulletin staff writer Mac McLean contributed to this report.

Currently, St. Charles is acclimating its new employees and finishing up the last de-

Eating disorders can leave patients facing difficult insurance hurdles By Shefali S. Kulkarni

between coverage and out-ofpocket costs led to gaps in her W hen she w a s 5 y e a r s treatment. "It took me a long time to get old, Chevese Turner had her first episode of binge eating. to anything that even looked Turner, now 44, recalls sneak- like recovery," Turner said. ing a box of ice cream cones The Eating Disorders Coalifrom the kitchen and eating tion tried unsuccessfully to get as many as she could, alone in treatments for eating disorher room. ders included in the "essential This kind of behavior con- health benefits" that i n surtinued over the years, leav- ance plans are required to proing her feeling shameful and vide, beginning in 2014, in the guilty. insurance marketplaces, or "I realized that food was the exchanges, being set up under one thing I could have for my- the Affordable Care Act. "Exclusion of e ating d i sself, and Icould sortofescape," said Turner, who lives in An- orders is all too common on napolis, Md. But "over time it the part of insurers seeking became a way for me to disas- to limit interventions deemed sociate from my problems or n onessential," t h e gr ou p whatever I was trying to avoid." wrote to federal officials in a Binge-eating disorder is a January letter. "Despite being condition that includes signifi- biologically based mental illcant overeating brought on by nesses with potentially severe depression or other emotional physical health ramifications, issues, according to m ental including death, eating disorhealth experts. Researchers ders are all too often found on estimate that about 3 percent lists of benefit exclusions. of the nearly 14 million people The group noted that a surwith eating disorders are binge vey of more than 100 eating eaters. Other eating disorders disorder specialists found that "96.7 percent believe their painclude anorexia and bulimia. For many of those who seek tients with anorexia nervosa treatment for these disorders, are put in life-threatening situgetting a full range of insur- ations" because treatments ofance coverage can be difficult. ten are cut short when coverMental health coverage, es- age is denied. pecially in individual plans, is But insurers say that exoftenless generous than cov- perts have not identified clear erage for physical ills. (The protocols for treatment. They federal mental health parity note that there is little research law does not apply to individu- on how best to treat the mental al insurance policies and does and the physical aspects of an not require treatment for spe- eating disorder. "Any eating disorder is a cific disorders.) In addition, treatment of eat- complex condition," said Diing disorders is complicated ane Robertson, director of the because it often involves medi- ECRI Institute, a nonprofit that cal care, mental health ser- conducts research for insurers vices and nutritional therapy, and hospitals. requiring a team of specialists Eating-disorders research— often a primary-care doctor, ers "haven't done a good job in a therapist, a psychiatrist and doing outcomes research and a dietitian. Patients argue that finding what combination of insurers don't adequately cov- treatments work," according er all those services, although to Robertson. estimates of how many paSusan Pisano, a s p okestientsreceive coverage vary. woman for America's Health Turner, who has received Insurance Plans, an industry treatment f o r b i n g e-eating trade association, says that indisorder for more than 20 surers are not hesitant to cover years, says that sometimes the behavioral and physical her plans have covered treat- treatments for other chronic ments for depression but not conditions. "For diabetes," she said, many other services, such as nutritional counseling. At one "you have the physical aspects point, she says, she paid up to that are treated and then you $200 a week to meet with a have behavioral issues addietitian. This back-and-forth dressed as well"via exercise Kaiser Health News

and courses on better nutrition, for example. "But for eating disorders,there's a lack of evidence for what works and what doesn't work." Mark C h avez, p r o gram chief for the Eating Disorders R esearch Program a t t h e National Institute of Mental Health, said there is no silver bullet for treating eating disorders. On its website, the institute says "specifictreatments" for chroniceating disorders "have not yet been identified." Treatment, "often tailored to individual needs," can include antidepressants,group counseling sessions, individual therapy and consultations with dietitians to help reeducate patients on hunger, nutrition and satiety, the institute says. In extreme circumstances,

patients are hospitalized; some may have to be fed through a tube. Those hospitalizations can include care for electrolyte depletion, irregular heartbeat and over-hydration c aused when patients consume too much liquid to try to hide their weight loss. Some patients are also referred to a residential facility for mental health care. Insurance companies often limit the amount of hospital coverage, because it is costly and they say the length of stay is unpredictable. Angela Woods, who oversees insurance authorizations for Insights Behavioral Health Centers, a Ch i c ago-based firm that treats patients with eating disorders and other mental health issues, said insurance companies "are more willing to authorize treatment

"And they also will generalfor m ood d i sorders" such as depression and a n xiety ly authorize for a longer period "than they do for most eating of time for the mood disorder," disorders." she added.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DS

NUTRITION VITAL STATS

Lemon Garlic Israeli Couscous with Cauliflower

Few knowall the risks of obesity

7 or 8 servings

.

2 C dried Israeli couscous Salt 3 TBS olive oil 2 TBS finely chopped garlic 12 oz cauliflower florets, broken or cut into small pieces about /4-inch long at the widest point /2 cup homemade or no-saltadded chicken broth

-C I5

WASHINGTON

— Heart diseaseand diabetes get all the attention, but what about

the many other ways obesity can damage your health?

Carrying too many pounds may lead to or worsen sometypes of cancer, arthritis, sleep

Freshly ground black pepper Finely grated zest and freshly squeezed juice of 2 lemons (4 to 6 tsp zest, 6 TBS juice) /2 tsp sugar 3 TBS finely chopped parsley

apnea, even infertility.

But a new poll suggests few Americans realize the links.

Only about one-quarter of people think it's possible for someoneto be very overweight and still be healthy, accord-

Prepare the couscous according to the package directions, making sure to add a pinch of salt to the cooking water. Meanwhile, heat the oil in a deep 10-inch nonstick saute pan or skil-

let over medium-low heat. Add the garlic and a pinch of salt. Cook for

ing to the poll by The Associated Press-NORC

about 8 minutes, until the garlic is soft, stirring frequently and adjusting the heat as needed to keep the garlic from browning. Add the cauliflower

Center for Public Affairs Research.

and stir to combine. Increase the heat to medium-high; add the broth, season with salt and pepper to taste, and cover. Cook for 7 to 9 minutes, until the cauliflower pieces are tender when pierced with a fork. Uncover and cook just until the broth has evaporated but the cauliflower still looks moist, about1 minute. When the couscous is ready, transfer it to a large bowl along with the Photos by Tracy A. Woodward /The Washington Post

Ask about the most

serious consequences, and more than 7 in10

Americans can correctly tick off heart disease

lemon zest and juice, sugar and parsley. Season with salt and pepper to

and diabetes. Heart disease is the nation's

taste. Add the cauliflower and garlic, and toss to combine.

Dishes Continued from D1 Pair it with acidic ingredients such as citrus or vinegar, and don't forget to think about using blanched or steamed bite-size pieces in mixed winter salads. Humble, homely rutabagas tend to be overlooked altogether. They're covered with a thin wax, which makes them hard to peel. This is the year to enjoy them without the crutches of cream and butter; try roasting chunks of rutabaga, then glamorize with a sweet-sour

Taste, and adjust the seasoning as needed. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Roasted Rutabagas with Golden Raisin-Maple Vinaigrette

NUTRITION: Per serving (based on 8): 210 calories, 6g protein, 34g carbohydrates, 6g fat, g saturated fat, Omg cholesterol, 60mg sodium,

4 or 5servings

ing pan. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Roast for 30 to 35 minutes, turning the pieces over every10 to 15 minutes, until the rutabaga is tender. Meanwhile, combine the remainingt/2 TBS of oil with the vinegar,

maple syrup and raisins. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Whisk to form an emulsified vinaigrette. Transfer the rutabaga to a serving dish; spoon the vinaigrette over the rutabaga. Serve warm.

NUTRITION: Per serving (based on 5): 160 calories, 3g protein, 29g

K ale had quite a r u n i n 2012, as it was worked into Caesar s a lads, m a ssaged with tahini vinaigrettes and folded into casseroles. If its bitter taste or toughness is a stumbling block, a b r i ef blanch i n b o i l i n g s a l t ed water should do th e t r i ck .

carbohydrates, 5g fat,1g saturated fat, Omg cholesterol, 9 mg sodium, 5g dietary fiber, 21g sugar

Or you can add baby kale to softer, sweet vegetables such as winter squashes and carrots.

epidemics. The other consequences aren't so well known. "People are often

1g dietary fiber, 2g sugar

One 2-pound rutabaga, peeled 2 TBS apple cider vinegar and cut into1-inch chunks 2 TBS maple syrup 1t/s TBS olive oil 1/3 C golden raisins, coarsely Sait chopped Freshly ground black pepper Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Toss together the rutabaga and 1 TBS of the oil in a nonstick roast-

dressing.

leading killer, and diabetes and obesity are twin

To get yo u s t arted, our week's worth o f h e a lthful dishes lends cooking love to all those ingredients.

White Bean, Andouille and Kale Soup Makes about 9t/~ cups (6 to 8 servings)

Napa Cabbage, Shiitake and Pork Fried Rice

shocked to hear how far-reaching the effects

4 to 6 servings

of obesity are," said Jennifer Dimitriou, a dietitian at New York's

1 TBS mild olive or peanut oil 4 medium scallions, white and light-green parts, cut crosswise into slices t(/s C) 1 medium carrot, cut into approximately '/4-inch dice (t/2 cup) 8 oz lean ground pork t/stsp salt 4 oz shiitake mushrooms (stems discarded), thinly sliced 8 oz Napa cabbage, cut into strips 1-inch long and '/2-inch wide 2 C cooked rice, preferably sushi rice, but any brown or white variety will do 2 TBS low-sodium soy sauce, or to taste 2 TBS toasted sesame oil, or to taste 1 large egg, lightly beaten Heat the olive or peanut oil in a

Montefiore Medical Center. Just 7 percent of

people surveyed mentioned cancer, although

doctors long have known that fat increases the nsk of developing

cancers of the colon, breast, prostate, uterus and certain other sites. Plus, being overweight

can make it harder to spot tumors early and to treat them. Then there's the toll

on your joints, especially the knees. About15

percent of people knew obesity can contribute to arthritis. — The Associated Press

NUTRITION: Per serving (based

large braising pan over medium- on 6): 290 calories, 14gprotein, 22g 2 TBS olive oil s/4C diced onion 1 medium carrot, cut into t/4-inch dice t(/s C) 1 rib celery, cut intot/4-inch dice ('/s C) Sait 8 oz fresh andouille sausage, casings removed 3 oz peeled, seeded winter squash, such as butternut, cut intot/s-inch dice 1 medium potato, peeled and cut into approximately /2 inch dice (6 oz) /2 C canned no-salt-added

chopped Italian-style tomatoes, drained One 15.5-oz can no-salt-added Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed (1 /s C) /3 C uncooked basmati or longgrain white rice 6 C homemade orno-salt-added chicken broth Freshly ground black pepper 4 oz kale, baby kale or Swiss chard, thick stems removed and discarded, leaves torn into approximately 1t/s-inch pieces Water, as needed

high heat. Add the scallions and cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Add

carbohydrates, 16g fat, 4g saturated fat, 70mg cholesterol, 310mg

the carrot; cook, stirring, for 3

sodium,1g dietary fiber, 2gsugar

minutes. Add the pork and salt; cook, stirring, until the pork just starts to lose its raw look. Add the shiitakes and cook, stirring every

tral Oregon

30 seconds or so, for about 5 minutes, until the mushrooms soften and just start to brown. Add the cabbage. Cook, stirring, for about 5 minutes, until the cabbage wilts and softens. Add the cooked rice and mix well. Dis-

tribute the soy sauce and sesame oil evenly over the contents of the pan, stirring to combine.

Heat the oil in a 4- to 5-quart soup pot over medium-high heat. Add the onion; cook for about 3 minutes, until

When everything is well mixed,

the onion starts to soften. Add the carrot, celery and salt to taste; cook, stirring, for 3 minutes. Add the andouille;

move the rice and vegetables to

NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS —CENTRAL OREGON

January Educational Meeting SUICIDE PREVENTION: QPR Presenters: Deschutes County Suicide Prevention Task Force Members ttL Cheryl Emerson & Lisa Golden, QPR Specialists When: 7-9 PM, January 15, 2013 (3rd Tues) Where: St. Charles Medical Center-Bend 2500 Neff Rd. Conference Rm: "A"

cook for about 5 minutes, until the sausageappears to be cooked, using a spoon to break up anyclumps. Add the edges of the pan, creating a the squash, potato, tomatoes, beans, rice and broth. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Bring the broth to a well in the center. Pour the beaten boil, then cover the pot and reduce the heat to medium-low. Cook for about 20 minutes, adjusting the heat so the egg into the well and scramble it broth maintains a very slow boil, until the rice is cooked through and the potatoes are tender. until cooked. Mix the egg with

While the soup is cooking, bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Add the kaleand cook for 2 minutes. If you're

the rice-and-vegetable mixture, using baby kale or chard, cook for1 minute. Immediately pour into a colander to drain. breaking up any large clumps of When the soup is ready, add the blanched greens and stir to combine. Taste, and adjust the seasoning as egg. needed. If the soup is too thick, thin with water or additional broth. Taste, and add soy sauce and/ NUTRITION: Per serving (based on 8): 220 calories,10g protein, 24g carbohydrates,10g fat, 3g saturated fat, or sesame oil as needed. Serve 35mg cholesterol, 370mg sodium, 5g dietary fiber, 3g sugar warm.

Suicide prevention is an important public health issue for ourcommunity. Please come and learn to recognize warning signs, how to offer hope and know how to get help.

Meeting is free and open to the public www.namicentraloregon.org

Twice-Baked Curried Potatoes with Savoy Cabbage

~

Makes six 6-ounce servings •

1 TBS olive oil 5 tsp unsalted butter, or more to taste 1 /3 C finely diced onion (about

6 oz) Sait 8 ounces savoy cabbage, cut into approximately s/4-inch dlce 1 TBS sweet curry powder, or your favorite curry powder 2 t/a lbs. baking or russet

potatoes, baked until tender, flesh scooped out, shells discarded or reserved for another use (1t/s pounds of cooked potatoes) 6 oz plain nonfat yogurt 1 C homemade or no-saltadded chickenbroth, or more

~fa

as needed /s teaspoon sugar 2 TBS finely chopped cilantro

Freshly ground black pepper

Grease six 6-ounce ramekins with nonstick cooking oil spray and place them on a rimmed baking sheet lined with aluminum foil. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Heat the oil and 3 tsp of the butter in a large nonstick saute pan or skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion and season with salt to taste. Reduce the heat to medium; cook for 6 to 7 minutes, until the onion is very soft. Add the cabbage and cook, stirring every minute or so, for 6 to 8 minutes, until the cabbage is soft. Add the

curry powder; cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Use a potato masher or large spoon to mash the baked potato flesh in a large bowl. (Small lumps are fine; just make sure to break up any large ones.) Add the cabbage mixture and the yogurt. Stir to combine well. Add the

broth, sugar and cilantro. Mix well; season with salt and pepper to taste, and thin with additional broth. Either spoon the mixture into a piping bag or a resealable plastic freezer bag with the corner cut off, and pipe the mixture decoratively into the ramekins; or spoon the mixture directly into the ramekins. Melt the remaining

IDENTITY THEFT 101 r

For the Education & Benefit of our Valued Senior Citizens

Friday, January 11, 2013 ~ Noon to 1:00 pm KEY POINTS: • • • • •

Computer Fraud Identity Theft, assess your risk Mi sleading Information Consumer Fraud, protect yourself Ab use

PRESENTER: Lt. Scott Beard, Deschutes Co. Sheriff's Office

RSVP I CONTACT: Seating is limited. Lunch Provided with RSVP.

Call Lisa H. at: 541-382-5882 Or email her at: lisamh@partnersbend.org

2 tsp of butter in asmall dish in the microwave or the preheated oven. Brush thetop of the potato mixture in each

1 contact hour upon approval

ramekin with the butter. Bake for about 20 minutes or until the potato mixture is lightly browned around the edges. Allow to sit for

Location: Partners In Care; large conference room

5 minutes before serving. Serve hot.

In Care

2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, OR 97701

541-3e2-5ee2

2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend Oregon

www.partnersbend.org

NUTRITION: Per serving: 190 calories, 5g protein, 31g carbohydrates, 6g fat, 3g saturated fat, 15mg cholesterol, 110mg sodium, 4g dietary fiber, 5g sugar •


D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT AWARDS People's ChoiceAwards

— "The HungerGames" devoured the competition at the People's Choice

' ou ar own' ee szin ers in

Awards, emerging the top victor with five trophies.

TV SPOTLIGHT

The film was namedfavorite mov-

"Cougar Town"

ie, action movie and movie franchise, and stars Jennifer Lawrence, Chris

Courteney Cox, left, starsas a recently divorced single mother exploring the honest truths about dating

e

10p.m. Tuesdays, TBS

Hutcherson and LiamHemsworth had fans' favorite on-screen chemistry. Lawrence also won favorite

By Robert Lloyd

movie actress and "face of heroism."

"Cougar Town" returned to television Tuesday night, not on ABC, where it was born in 2009, but on TBS, which acquired it after ABC (whose ABC Studios remains involved) decided that 3 million viewers and change were not enough to be going on with. And that is a lesson in the economics of broadcast network television. Originally, and sadly, the show was hung on the whole "cougar" thing that seemed worth discussing back then — older women dating younger men, though perhaps "dating" isn't quite the right word. Courteney Cox, for whom the series was created — by Bill Lawrence, who created "Scrubs," and Kevin Biegel, who worked on it — played a hot fortysomething back on the prowl after a divorce. But "cougar" as a concept proved to be no more remarkable on television than in life, and after struggling for a while to justify its title, the producers let the original premise go and began to apologize for it instead, posting messages in the opening credits, such as, "New Year's resolutions: Embrace our stupid title and lose six pounds," "Not what the show is" and, "She's marrying a man her own age, so why is it called 'Cougar Town'?" As with "Community," whose actual and substantial heart remained hidden as long as the producers endeavored to make a show about characters with relatively realistic motivations in a relatively realistic setting, "Cougar Town"

Katy Perry won three awards at the

Wednesday nightceremony inLos Angeles, at which fans selected the winners in categories spanning music, movies and television.

Perry was the fans' favorite female artist and pop artist. Her video for "Part of Me" also won.

Here are the winners in major categories: • MOVIE:"The Hunger Games" • COMEDIC MOVIE: "Ted" • DRAMATICMOVIE: "The Perks of Being aWallflower" • ACTIONMOVIE:"The Hunger Games" • MOVIEACTOR: Robert Downey, Jr. • MOVIEACTRESS:JenniferLawrence • ACTIONMOVIESTAR:Chris Hemsworth • NETWORK TV DRAMA: "Grey's Anatomy" • NETWORK TVCOMEDY: "The Big BangTheory" • COMPETITIONTV SHOW: "The X Factor" • CABLE TVDRAMA: "Leverage" • CABLE TV COMEDY: "Awkward" • LATE-NIGHTTALKSHOWHOST: Jimmy Fallon • MALEARTIST: Jason Mraz • FEMALE ARTIST: Katy Perry • BAND:Maroon 5 • SONG:"What MakesYou Beautiful," One Direction • ALBUM:"Up All Night," One Direction • MUSIC VIDEO: "Part of Me," Katy Perry See a complete list of winners in all

categories at www.pcavote.com/pca.

Los Angeles Times

II IN'

worked toward it, but expected it to just happen eventually. She has a foundation of trust and friendship that helps a marriage through the rough times. Many marriages that end in divorce rely on s exual a t t r ac4= tion and passion to carry them instead of friendship. "Had It " s h o uld t ake another l o ok at what she's about to lose and tally up the costs to her family. Is she really trapped? Or has she just been unwilling to choose to love? — Barbara in Mount Vernon, Wash. Dear Barbara:Thank you for writing. I advised "Had It" to think long and hard before leaving her husband, but that if she truly cannot love him the way he deserves, she should move on. My readers' comments: Dear Abby: "Had It" doesn't feel love toward her husband because she spends her time and energy ruminating about a "mistake" she thinks she made 20 years ago. She says he is doing everything right and they get along fine. If she tried somethingpositive, like reminding herself

ABBYQ

Town." Busy Philipps costars. ABC via The Associated Press file photo

found its feet when it abandoned itself to the mutual chemistry of its ensemble and — in "Cougar's" case, just let them hang out and drink.

little of it may be enough. The serieshas stayed irreverent and inappropriate — and downright irresponsible, some might say, on the subject They play games and make rules and of alcohol, a point to which the writers rewrite the language to suit themselves are not insensible. ("Wow, are you guys — as on Tuesday night, when Cox's Jules all alcoholics'? Are you all in AA?" Jules' decided that "junk in the trunk" should son, Travis, played by Dan Byrd, asks mean "emotional baggage," or in last in the opening moments of Tuesday's season'scloser,w hen she decreed that"fat episodeas hismother and her friends get chance" must mean that a thing is likely down to business. "Honey, that's two difbecause "slim chance" means it is not. ferent questions," his mother replies, anExcept for fewer location shoots and swering neither of them.) guest stars, the move to TBS has been The characters drink buckets withaccomplished without injury; there is out seeming to get drunk — it is a runstill a nice meta, fantastic charge to the ning joke more than a dramatic reality, humor and though the title card on the and a symbol of their bonding — which opening episode asks, "Can we curse also robs them of the excuse of having on TV now?" the writers still prefer to been drunk. Everyone has to own his or work in metaphors and euphemisms. her shame. And though there are perhaps more They are generous and cruel, though sex jokes now, they are somehow less mostly the former. But even their crudesperate from the run of that mill; it is elty has a way of working around to even suggested — a TV heresy — that a something positive and loving.

Readersurgewife to work through it Dear Abby:This is in response to "Had It in Hartford" (Oct. 6), who has been unhappily married to her husband for 20 years. She said she married him for all the wrong reasons and "has never loved him the way a woman should love a man." After I had been • EAR married fo r s e ven years, I went to my pastor concerned that the grass on the other side was looking greener than mine. As we spoke, I began to realize the extent of the investment I had put into my marriage and that I didn't want to start over again on a new one. My mom always told me, "Marriage is not easy. You will always have to work on it. There will be times when you won't feel that you like him or love him." I have been married for 36 years now. Do I noticehandsome men, or appreciate a man who treats me kindly? Of course. I'm not blind or dead. Love isn't just a feeling, but a choice and a commitment. I'm committed to my husband not because I'm "supposed" to be, but because I CHOOSE to be. It seems to me that "Had lt" never made that choice or

in "Cougar

ie

about the qualities she likes about him and doing things she knows make him happy instead of fantasizing about other men, she might find the love she craves in her marriage. Loving feelings come from loving behavior, not the other way around. The sooner she realizes this, the sooner she'll see that what she really wants is right there at home with her family. And it has been there all along.

— Dr. Peggy B.

Dear Abby: I have this message for "Had lt": I felt like you and acted on my feelings. Don't do it! Wait until your kids are older. As much as you want a more intimate relationship, you cannot begin to imagine the impact straying will have on your kids. I deeply regret what I did and I wish someone would have told me what l'm telling you. Pull yourself together. Think about your children, extended family and friends. You ar e c o nnected t o o t h ers through your husband, and once you pull your marriage apart, everything else falls away, too. — Regrettinglt in New Yorlz

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • CIRQUEDU SOLEIL:W ORLDS AWAY 3-D (PG)6:45,9:20 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 12:05, 2, 4, 6:10, 7:45, 9:45 • THE GUILTTRIP(PG-13) I, 3:25, 6:25, 9:05 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)Noon, 3:55, 7:35 •THE HOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY IMAX (PG-13) l2:15,4: I0,8 • JACK REACHER (PG- I3) 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:40 • LES MISERABLES (PG- I3) 12: IO,1:50, 3:45, 6:05, 7:55, 9:35 • LIFE OF PI (PG)3:10 • LIFE OF PI3-D (PG) 12: I5, 6:15, 9:25 • LINCOLN (PG-13) I2:25, 3:40, 6:55, 10:10 • MONSTERS,INC.3-D (G) I:25, 3:50 • NOT FADE AWAY(R) 12:20, 3:05, 7:05, 9:50 • PARENTALGUIDANCE (PG) l2:55,3:30,6:20,9 • RISE OF THEGUARDIANS (PG)12:45, 3:15 • SKYFALL(PG-l3) 6, 9:15 • TEXAS CHAINSAW 3-D (R) 1:40, 4:20, 7:25, 10 • THIS IS 40(R) Noon, 3, 7:15, 10:15 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies. I

'

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THURSDAY, JAN. 10, 2013:This year you make waves wherever you go. Your combination of high energy, strong intellect and charisma draws in many opportunities for you. Others might see you Stars showthekind as self-involved, of day you'll have es pecially your ** * * * Dynamicsweetie. Work on ** * * P ositive be i ng more aware ** * Average of others, and ** S o-so listen to feedback * Difficult more carefully. If you are single, you attract many admirers who want to make you theirs. You'll want to relate directly, but because of all the other activity going on in your life, you could find it difficult to focus on one person. CAPRICORNhas endurance. Do not bet against him or her.

YOURHOROSCOPE By JacquelineBigar

even if you get an odd reaction. Go with the flow. Tonight: Get to know someone better over dinner.

8 p.m. on (CW), "The 18th Annual Critics' Choice Movie Awards" —The top movies from 2012 as selected by the Broadcast Film Critics Association are honored in this ceremony from Santa Monica, Calif. Steven Spielberg's biodrama "Lincoln" leads the pack with a whopping 13 nominations, including one for star Daniel Day-Lewis, breaking the previous record of12 for "Black Swan." "Les Miserables" and "Silver Linings Playbook" are next in line with11 and10 nominations, respectively. Bp.m. onFX, Movie: "Iron Man 2" — Robert Downey Jr. reprises the part of Tony Stark, who gets plentiful new use for his superpowered costume, in the Marvel Comics hero's second live-action iteration for the big screen. Returning director Jon Favreau folds a lot into the adventure, as Stark deals with the alluring Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson) as well as the evil Whiplash (Mickey Rourke). Gwyneth Paltrow is back as well, with Don Cheadle andSamuel L. Jacksonalso added to the cast.

9 p.m. onH C3, "The Office" — Meredith (Kate Flannery) ends up taking the blame whenPam (Jenna Fischer) inadvertently brings lice into the office, while Dwight (Rainn Wilson) declares war on the bugs. Jim (John Krasinski) spends the day in Philadelphia courting a potential new business associate (guest star Julius Erving). Phyllis, Kevin and Nellie (Phyllis Smith, Brian Baumgartner, Catherine Tate) get involved in Darryl's (Craig Robinson) love life. 9 p.m. on BRAVO,"The Millionaire Matchmaker" — After five seasons of successfully finding love for single millionaires, Patti Stanger is ready to find her own true love — but can the famed matchmaker follow her own rules? Patti also uncovers information about her birth parents that makes her approach relationships in a whole new way. ©Zap2it

SelfReferrals Welcome

Hear Ceoter

I

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or PO. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069

• ARGO (R) 12:15, 3, 6 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)12:30, 6:15 • HYDE PARK ONHUDSON(R) 1,4:15, 6:30 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) Noon, 3:30, 6:45 • PROMISED LAND(R) 12:45, 4, 7 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 1:15, 3:45, 7:15

tone or word choice in order to get through to someone. Demonstrate some flexibility when dealing with this individual. Your creativity flourishes when brainstorming with a friend or loved one. Tonight: Let it all happen.

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CELESTEAND JESSEFOREVER(R) 9 • HERECOMES THE BDOM (PG)6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only. Younger than21 may at tendscreeningsbefore 7p.m.ifaccompaniedby a legal guardian.

I

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * Use good sense with money, as you could cause yourself a mini disaster ** * * Y ou are able to sway a situation if you're not careful. If you feel unsure of a situation or an offer, opt to hold off for in the direction you desire, but at what now. You will know what to do in time. cost? A key person or boss could have a negative reaction to your manipulation. Be A family member could be confusing at best. Tonight: Revamp your budget. sure to test the waters first. At the same time, askyourself whether it's worth it. CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) Tonight: Let others make the first move. ** * * * Y ou are in your element, yet youalsocould be overwhelmed by the LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) hectic pace and the amount of people ** * * P ut your best foot forward, seeking youout.Theyknow who has it and remember how close you are to the together. Your intuition will guide you weekend. If you can accomplish more with a neighbor or close relative. Tonight: than your usual workload right now, do ARIES (March21-April19) Check in with a friend who might be so. Unexpected news could have you ** * Visualize and create more of what depressed. daydreaming. It's OK to let your mind you want. Your energy of late could be wander. Tonight: Off to the gym. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) very challenging to a boss, older person ** * You might not like whatyou are VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) or supervisor. Much is changing around ** * * * Y ou see a situation developing seeing. You could choose to say little and the two of you. Use good sense, and do more observing. Gather information that could be demanding yet lots of fun. remain responsible if you care about the that fits with your ideas, and perhaps seek long term. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil. Think positively, but be aware as you walk out an expert for some feedback. After all, into this scenario. A partner reacts to TAURUS (April 20-May20) news. You are learning how unpredictable that is what you are looking for. Tonight: ** * * You have the ability to read Time off from the hectic pace. the people in your life can be. Tonight: between the lines right now. Use the Sort through your many ideas. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) information you are gathering for your ** * * * Y ou have always been an LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) own purposes. Youm ightbestunned ** * You might be holding back morethan intuitive sign, but you're even more so at what is occurring. Break past rigid you realize. Allow your creativity to flow, and of late. You'll zero in on a problem and thinking and you just might like the toss everything else in the air. Some outcome. Tonight: Relax and surf the Web. you will find solutions rather quickly. Let go friends might feel concerned, but it's of a preconceived idea. Once you do, you' l l GEMINI (May 21-June20) seea new path.Reachouttoa loved oneata only because they don't understand the ** * * * Y ou have the capacity to relate importance of this readjustment. Tonight: distance. Tonight: Happily headhome. intensely to key persons. You know what Just don't be alone. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) your expectations are, but can you fulfill ** * * You will have to change your them? Share them with your inner circle, ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

CANCER (June21-July 22)

Bp.m. onH f3, "30Rock" — Jack (Alec Baldwin) enlists his rival Devin Banks (guest star Will Arnett) to help him discredit his youngnemesis,Kaylie Hooper (guest star Chloe Grace Moretz), the future CEOof KableTown. Liz (Tina Fey) weighs her options for becoming a mother. Tracy (Tracy Morgan) wants to direct Octavia Spencer (guest starring as herself) in his new movie.

Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347

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Award-ceinning

neighborhood on Bend's westside. www.northwestcrossing.com

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 4:50, 8:20 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY3-D (PG-13) 4:30, 8:10 • JACK REACHER (PG-13) 4, 6:40 • PARENTAL GUIDANCE(PG) 5:05, 7:20 • PROMISED LAND(R)4:45, 7 •

Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014

• LIFE OF Pl (PG)6 • PARENTALGUIDANCE (UPSTAIRS — PG)6:30 • The upstairs screening room has limitedaccessibility.

ion or

InaC ninS HNsoN TV.APPLIANCE


ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 'IO, 2013

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c ontact u s : Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Includeyour name, phone number and address

: Monday — Friday : 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Place, cancel or extend an ad

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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 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,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty 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 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood 208

0

00 Boxer/English Bulldog (Vaney Bulldog) puppies, C~KC Re 'd, bi dles fawns, 1st shots. $900. 541-325-3376

DACHSHUND PUPS AKC mini longhaired

r

eM $500 eF $600 541-598-7417

Wanted: $Cash paid for CANARIES vintaqe costume jewHatched 2012 elry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the 3 female Waterslagers, 1 female, 1 male crested Estate, Honest Artist Stafford, 2 female Red Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Factors, $45 ea. Terrebonne, 541-420-2149. Items for Free Cats & s ome k ittens avail. t h r u r e s c ue FREE: TV's (27" & 13 group. Tame, shots, wNHS), both analog altered, ID chip, more. Call 541-416-0699. Sat/Sun 1-5; call re: other days. 541-5985488, 389-8420. Map, Pets & Supplies photos 8 other info at www.craftcats.org. The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, ii'///////' " ' checks, or credit inf ormation may b e Chihuahua Pups, a s sorted colors, teacup, subjected to fraud. 1st shots, w ormed, For more i nforma$250, 541-977-0035 tion about an advertiser, you may call the O r egon State People Look for Information Attorney General's About Products and Office C o n sumer Services Every Daythrough Protection hotline at The ftulietin Classifieds 1

1-877-877-9392.

Sening Central Oregon SnCe 1903

541 788 7799

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classitieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates!

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?

Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with oui'

"QUICK CASH SPECIAL"

o 2~ e eks 2 0 ! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulietin.com

English Mastiff puppies. AKC males/females. $1200 8 up. 541-279-1437

The Bulletin

Aussie Mini/Toy AKC, t aii g t $250. Parents on site. Call 541 598 531 4'

C h a n tt i e r

208

210

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Golden Retriever AKC puppies born 12/5/1 2, ready to go end of January. Call 605-999-9089 or

go to Chihuahua Teacup CKC pups $595-$695. goldenfieldkennels.com Highest quality Chi's Guinea pigs for sale i n C e nt. OR. Current 4-H abyssinian shots, guaranteed. breeding project, $15 www.oregonpups.com to $20 each. Call Lisa

541 323 1p6g at 541-480-0479 541-385-5809 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are still over 2,000 folks in our community without permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift camps, getting by as best they can. The following items are badly needed to HAVANESE p u ppies help them get through the winter: AKC, Hypoallergenic @ CAMPING GEAR of any sort: @ & N on-Shed, U T D New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. shots/wormer, $850. e WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. Call 541-460-1277. PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m.

For Special pick up please call Ken @ 541-389-3296

PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE.

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MorePixatBendbulletil com Lab puppies, purebred; $400 F, $350 M, all colors! 541-416-1175 Iv msg

$400. 541-548-3604 541-508-6859.

MASTIFF PU P P IES AKC, 4 large males Nutone range exhaust available, great family fan, black $40, Over the bath cabinet $25, 36 pet, for more pics/info tank al aquarium complete, www.arudedog.com 70. 541-416-0699 or call 541-820-4546. Twin bed set like new used in guest room. $135. 541-420-2220

Washer/dryer Whirlpool stack, Irg. cap., many options, works great! $350. 541-416-0296 Washer, Fisher 8 Paykel large front-load, 6 yrs old,

9

Q7~

Crafts & Hobbies

Mtn Bike, 2011 Giant, brand new off-road tires, must sell, great cond., $200. 541-480-2652. 245

Golf Equipment

to The Bulletin's

new print and online Classifieds. Check out our NEW color coded categories! All Classified text ads appear in The Bulletin and at www,bendbulletin,corn.

You'll find NEW features including:

Golf Membership Lease, Brasada Ranch. 541-408-0014

Mixed breed "Foxy Lady" 246 born 7/16/2006, $ 50. Guns, Hunting Closing kennel: 1 AKC & Fishing Maltese female 8 small mixed breeds. No ship$175. 541-647-2685 44 mag Ruger revolver, p ing o r AM cal l s . 541-350-5106 for appt. Wingback chair, exc. stainless, 7y2" b arrel, condition. $ 125 new, $495. 541-815-4901 Norwich Terriers, AKC. AR-15s for Sale: BushRare! Only 2 females left. 541-420-2220. Delivery available. master, CMTS, Daewoo, $2000. 541-487-4511 or The Bulletin O lympic A rms, Si g sharonm Opeak.org recommends extra Sauer, Ruger Ranch, 7.62x39. 541-447-4101 a he p Pitbull, blue female, free l cat products or, to apprvd home. Shots chasing local pays CASH!! from out of I Bendfor UTD: excellent with pets/ services all firearms 8 the area. Sending t children. 541-420-0310 ammo. 541-526-0617 cash, checks, or

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A v e . ,• B e n d

Labradoodles - Mini & Dining s et : e l e gant 8th Street Artisans med size, several colors pedestal table and 6 Saturday Market 541-504-2662 chairs, faux marble in 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. www.alpen-ridge.com 264-Snow RemovalEquipment beiges 8 cream. Cost 1036 NE 8th St., Bend $1600, asking $399. 265 - Building Materials behind 7-11 store. Labrador Pups, AKC 266- Heating and Stoves Support local Chocolate/Yellow/White 541-410-8636 craftsmen! 267- Fuel and Wood Hips OFA guaranteed. GENERATE SOME ex541-977-1737 $300-$400. citement i n you r 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 1-541 -954-1 727 neighborhood! Plan a 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment ATTENTION sale and don't 270 - Lost and Found CRAFTERS! Maltese Poodle puppies, garage forget to advertise in 1 off-white male, 1 apriSPRING FAIR Mar 22-24 GARAGESALES classified! at Douglas County Faircot male, $250 ea., cash. 541-385-5809. 275 - Auction Sales 541-546-7909 grounds. Our 38th year! 280 - Estate Sales Booths available for reclining Maremma Guard Dog cLeather hair and ottomanswivel dark quality crafts. For info, 281 - Fundraiser Sales pups, purebred, great $40. send SASE to: Spring 282- Sales Northwest Bend dogs, $ 30 0 e a c h, 541 548 6642 Fair 2013, PO Box 22, 284- Sales Southwest Bend 541-546-6171. Dillard, OR 97432 286- Sales Northeast Bend Memory foam mattress from Costco only 2yrs 241 288- Sales Southeast Bend old paid, $900 have 290- Sales RedmondArea Bicycles & receipt sacrifice at 292- Sales Other Areas Accessories

Pets 8 Supplies

I Want to Buy or Rent

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Full color ad photos •

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CHEVYBLAZER, 1991 4x4 Tahoe LT, tow, air, tilt, leather interior, custom wheels and trim, loaded, $8,900 080.

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Color in

i n f ormation POODLE PUPS, AKC I credit CASHI! toys. Small, friendly, & may be subjected to For Guns, Ammo & loving! 541-475-3889 I FRAUD. For more Reloading Supplies. information about an t 541-408-6900. POODLE, Toy, 4 mo. advertiser, you may I old male. Very social! call t h e Or e gont Colt SP1 AR15, manuf'd 541-520-7259 State At tor n ey ' 1968, low ser no's $2500 O f f ice obo.Other Mil. rifles; call Queensfand Heelers I General's Consumer Protec- • for list. 541-410-2225 standard 8 mini,$150 8 t ion ho t l in e at I up. 541-280-1537 DON'IMISSTHIS rightwayranch.word- I 1-877-877-9392.

DINING TABLE, oak, w/8 chairs

your ads

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• •• • •

• • • • • • •

I

$400; 5-piece oak dinette $100; Gold La-Z-Boy sofa sleeper & rocker recliner $200; 4-piece dble . maple bdrm. set $100. All items must go now!

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press.com

LThe Bulleting

Rodent control specialDO YOU HAVE ists (barn cats) seek SOMETHING TO work in exchange for USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! SELL safe shelter, food. We FOR $500 OR deliver! Door-to-door selling with LESS? 541-389-8420. Non-commercial fast results! It's the easiest advertisers may Save/donate your deway in the world to sell. place an ad posit bottles/cans to with our local al l v o l unteer, The Bulletin Classified "QUICK CASH non- profit animal res541-385-5809 SPECIAL" cue, to help with cat 1 week3lines 12 spay/neuter costs & 212 OI' o ther vet bills. S e e Antiques & ~2 e e k s 2 0 ! C RAFT's Cans f o r Ad must Collectibles Cats trailer at Petco, include price of by Applebee's, Bend, s~il e it e D f $500 1/1-1/14. Eagle Crest Antique school desk, or less, or multiple @ p r ivate c l u bs, wood, wrought iron legs, $ 1 3 5. items whose total 1/15-1/28. Donate @ e xclnt c o nd , does not exceed Smith Sign, 2nd/Ol- 541-382-5045 $500. ney, M-F, or Tumalo sanctuary a n y time. Call Classifieds at www.craftcats.org, or 541-385-5809 A cottvttttt „cott pt Facebook.389-8420. www.bendbulletin.com Visit our HUGE Shih-Tzu puppies, 8 wks home decor allmeds, 2 @ $250 ea H8 R .308 s e mi-auto consignment store. 541-420-4403 hunting rifle, with 3-round New items clip, $500. 541-771-9902 Will care for your pet in arrive daily! m y home while you're on 930 SE Textron, Wanted: Collector vacation. Great alterna- Bend 541-318-1501 seeks high quality tive to kennel! $25/day. www.redeuxbend.com fishing items. 541-647-7308 Call 541-678-5753, or The Bulletin reserves 503-351-2746 Wolf-Husky pups, $325; right to publish all pure Siberian Husky pup, the ads from The Bulletin 255 $400. 541-977-7019 newspaper onto The Computers Bulletin Internet webYorkie AKC pups, 2 girls 2 boys, ready now! site. T HE B U LLETIN r e Health guar., shots, pixs quires computer adavail,$650. 541-777-7743 The Bulletin vertisers with multiple Serwng Central Oregan s>nce l903 ad schedules or those 210 215 selling multiple sysFurniture & Appliances tems/ software, to disCoins 8 Stamps close the name of the Private collector buying business or the term A1 Washers&Dryers p ostage stamp a l - "dealer" in their ads. $150 ea. Full warbums 8 c o llections, Private party advertisranty. Free Del. Also world-wide and U.S. ers are defined as wanted, used W/D's 573-286-4343 (local, those who sell one 541-280-7355 cell ¹) computer.

Ad

borders •

Italic and bold headlines

DINING TABLE,oak, w/8 chairs $400 5-pi eceoakdinette$100 Gold La-Z-Boy sofa sleeper & rocker recliner $200; 4-piece dble. maple bdrm. set $100. All items must gonow!

MINI BEAGLEPUPPIES 2 female s,$250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!

MINI BEAGLE PUPPIES 2 females, $250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!

Attention-

RC, BtIX

NOW!

getting graphics •

MINI BEAGLEPUPPIES 2females, $250,2 males,$350, AKC registered. Cute!

To place your ad, call 385-5809 or visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com

BSSl 1C S

www.bentjbu l l et in .com


E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mone Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e Noon Tuese

QOrj0~

fg,/F~>Jir) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ Jg Can be found on these pages:

RECEPTIONIST

Full-time, needed for our EMPLOYMENT Redmond location. 410 - Private Instruction Competitive pay and benefits. 421 - Schools and Training

421

Schools & Training

TRUCK SCHOOL www. IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages Please send resume to 454- Looking for Employment bcrvhire@ mail.com or 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments apply in person at 63500 476 - Employment Opportunities N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. 486 - Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities

Remember.... 476 476 A dd your we b a d Employment Employment dress to your ad and readers on The Opportunities Opportunities Bulletin' s web site will be able to click Service Technicians through automatically C entral Oregon R V Looking for your next to your site. dealership seeks ser- Placeemployee? a Bulletin help technicians. Must Call The Bulletin At vice be customer service ori- wanted ad today and 541-385-5809 reach over 60,000 ented and have RV & 526 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Camper e x p erience. readers each week. Your classified ad Loans & Mortgages At: www.bendbulletin.com C ompetitive pay a n d will also appear on benefits. Please send 470 RV Techs! Looking for resume to bendbulletin.com WARNING Domestic & a warmer cli m ate bcrvhire@ mail.com which currently The Bulletin recomduring winter months? or apply in person at receives over 1.5 In-Home Positions mends you use cauC all RV Mast e r 63500 N. Hwy 97, Bend, million page views tion when you proevery month at Wanted: lady to spend Techs, Goodyear, AZ Oregon. vide personal 877-788-3247 no extra cost. nights with older lady in information to compaBulletin Classifieds exchange for room. Call nies offering loans or Sales Manager Need to get an 541-382-0824 for info. Get Results! credit especially Growing d e alership Call 385-5809 ad in ASAP? those asking for ad476 seeking Sales Manor place vance loan fees or You can place it ager who is looking Employment your ad on-line at companies from out of online at: for a p e r formancebendbulletin.com state. If you have Opportunities based pay plan. Ben- www.bendbulletin.com concerns or quesefits include: Retiretions, we suggest you ment Plan, Paid Vaconsult your attorney CAUTION READERS 541-385-5809 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS cation, and a or call CONSUMER Search the area' s most HOTLINE, Ads published in "Em- competitive medical Service Writer comprehensive listing of 1-877-877-9392. ployment Opportuni- benefit package. Must t ies" i n c lude e m - be a team player with needed for a growing RV classified advertising... BANK TURNED YOU ployee and a p ositive a ttitude; company. Competitive real estate to automotive, DOWN? Private party i ndependent po s i - operate with energy, pay and benefits. merchandise to sporting will loan on real estions. Ads for posi- and be customer ser- Please send resume to goods. Bulletin Classifieds tate equity. Credit, no mail.com or tions that require a fee vice oriented. Send bctvhire@ problem, good equity apply in person at 63500 appear every day in the or upfront investment resume to: is all you need. Call print or on line. must be stated. With bcrvhire© mail.com N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR. now. Oregon Land any independent job Mortgage 388-4200. Call 541-385-5809 opportunity, p l ease www.bendbulletln.com LOCAL MONEY:We buy > Home Delivery Advisor > investigate thorsecured trustdeeds & oughly. note,some hard money The Bulletin Circulation Department is 5ervegCenrralOregon«nce fse loans. Call Pat Kellev seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a Use extra caution when 541-382-3099 ext.13. applying for jobs on- full time position and consists of managing a line and never pro- delivery area and working with an adult carPress Supervisor rier force to ensure our customers receive suvide personal inforThe Bulletin is seeking a night time press sumation to any source perior service. Must be able to create and pervisor. We are part of Western Communicayou may not have re- perform strategic plans to meet department tions, Inc., which is a small, family-owned group searched and deemed objectives such as increasing market share consisting of seven newspapers, five in Oregon to be reputable. Use and route by route penetration. Ideal candiand two in California. Our ideal candidate will extreme caution when date will be a self-starter who can work both in manage a small crew of three and must be able r esponding to A N Y the office and in their assigned territory with to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A online e m p loyment minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are hands-on style is a requirement for our 3 t/a necessary with company vehicle provided. ad from out-of-state. tower KBA press. Prior management/leaderStrong customer service skills and manageship experience preferred. In addition to our We suggest you cali ment skills are necessary. Computer experi7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous the State of Oregon ence is helpful. We offer benefits including commercial print clients as well. In addition to a medical, dental, 401(k), paid vacation and sick Consumer Hotline at competitive wage and benefit program, we also 1-503-378-4320 time. We believe in promoting from within so provide potential opportunity for advancement. advancement within the company is available. If you provide dependability combined with a For Equal Opportunity If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse positive attitude, are able to manage people and backgrounds, and you are energetic, have L aws: Oregon B uschedules and are a team player, we would like great organizational skills and interpersonal reau of Labor & Into hear from you. If you seek a stable work endustry, C i vil Rights communication skills, please fill out an applivironment that provides a great place to live and Division, cation at The Bulletin or send your resume to: raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact ei971-673-0764 ther; Keith Foutz, Corporate Circulation & OpJob Opening-Circulation erations Director at kfoutz@wescompapers.com The Bulletin If you have any quesor anelson tl wescompapers.com with y our PO Box 6020 tions, concerns or complete resume, references and salary Bend, OR 97708 comments, contact: history/requirements. Prior press room experiOI' ence required. No phone calls please. Drug Classified Department circulation@bendbulletin.com test is required prior to employment. EOE The Bulletin

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. 1-888-387-9252 Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Looking for454Employment Saturday • • • • .. 3:00 pm Fri. CAREGIVER - Christian woman w il l work for Redmond/ • • • 5:00 pm Fri • room/board, Sunday. • • • • Bend. 541-598-4114

a

Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines

"UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER '500in total merchandise

7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days..................................

(call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

*Must state prices in ed

C®X

The Bulletin bendbulletin.ccm

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 257

260

Musical Instruments

Misc. Items

1923 Chickering 5'6" WHEN YOU SEE THIS Baby Grand, beautiful

tone & action, $3000. 541-504-4416

I

Employment Opportunities

Misc Items Bend's Indoor Swap Meet - A Mini-Mall full of Unique Treasures! 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat.

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. BUYING &

~ Oo MOrePiXatBendbulletiII,CO m

266

• Heating & Stoves • NOTICE TO ADVERTISER

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE **

Since September 29, Garage Sale Kit 1991, advertising for Place an ad in The used woodstoves has Bulletin for your gaOn a classified ad been limited to modrage sale and rego to els which have been a Garage Sale www.bendbulletin.com c ertified by th e O r - ceive Kit FREE! to view additional egon Department of photos of the item. Environmental QualKIT I NCLUDES: ity (DEQ) and the fed- • 4 Garage Sale Signs 263 eral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To Tools Protection Ag e n cy Use Toward Your (EPA) as having met Next Ad 8" wood band saw, 8" smoke emission stan- • 10 Tips For "Garage throat, 1.5 HP, $100. dards. A cer t i fied Sale Success!" H541-410-3218. w oodstove may b e identified by its certifiBill-Jax 5-ft & 3-ft scafPICK UP YOUR fold sets, 10-ft aluminum cation label, which is GARAGE SALE KIT at & p l ywood s c affold permanently attached 1777 SW Chandler boards, casters, levelers to the stove. The Bul& braces, nice set, paid letin will no t k n ow- Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $3600, asking $2000. ingly accept advertis- The Bulletin 541-350-3921 i ng for the s ale o f uncertified 264 woodstoves. Snow RemovalEquipment Snow plow on Sears

SE L LING tractor. Attachments incl

& new mower. 1 cord dry, split Juniper, All gold jewelry, silver chains new; sell $800. $190/cord. Multi-cord and gold coins, bars, $1600 for p l owing, discounts, & t/a cords rounds, wedding sets, Excellent available. Immediate class rings, sterling sil- very good cond; Kohler delivery! 541-408-6193 ver, coin collect, vin- engine. 541-389-9832 tage watches, dental All Year Dependable gold. Bill Fl e ming, Find exactly what Sp lit, Del. 541-382-9419. you are looking for in the Firewood: Bend. Lod g epole, Farm Equipment CLASSIFIEDS & Machinery Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 Cemetery p l o t Defor $350. Cash, Check chutes Memorial Garor Credit Card OK. 265 dens. Any reasonable 2005 John Deere 541-420-3484. offer. 541-408-1477 Building Materials 790 tractor w/box blade, loader, Wanted- paying cash Sisters Habitat ReStore quick-connect forks, for Hi-fi audio & stu- Building Supply Resale only 143 hrs, dio equip. Mclntosh, Quality items. $12,500. J BL, M a rantz, D y LOW PRICES! naco, Heathkit, San150 N. Fir. 541-350-3921 For newspaper sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-549-1621 delivery, call the Call 541-261-1808 Open to the public. Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800

To place an ad, call 541-385-5809

or email

classifiedObendbulletin.ccm

• •

C al l 5 4 7 - 3 8 5-58 0 9 to r o m ot e

I Building/Contracting

o u r s ervice Home Improvement

NOTICE: Oregon state Kelly Kerfoot Const. law req u ires any- 28 yrs exp in Central OR! one who c o n tractsQuality & honesty, from for construction work carpentry & handyman to be licensed with the jobs, to expert wall covC onstruction Con - ering install / removal.

The Bulletin

Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, virtually new, less than 5 hrs. $7500 new; asking $5000. 541-421-3222

KO~O rj

The Bulletin

541-385-5809

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

No phone calls, please. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE.

Ser ng Central Qregon s ncelstB

DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:

it c ,

- '! =;: —.-;F',-',

www.bendbulletin.com

I:II.'

Hospitality Front desk positions part time and full time. Apply in person at Sugarloaf M o untain Motel, 62980 No. Hwy 97, Bend, Oregon.

Housekeeping Part time position, some hotel resort cleaning exp. preferred. Must be able to work weekends. Please call Dennis or Tam m y at 541-923-3564.

I

I iv

Information Services Systems AnalystWasco County, The Hay, Grain & Feed5 Dalles, $3830.85 to E xpensive bicy c l e found i n Orc h ard 1st quality grass hay, $4024.30/mth. See Wasco County webNeighborhood District. 70- Ib bales, barn stored, site for job descripCall to ID $250/ ton. Also big bales! 541-948-2252 tion and application. Patterson Ranch, Sisters, 541-549-3831 Closes 1/1 8/1 3 Check out the classifieds online 345 LOGGING www.bendbuffetin.com Livestock & Equipment company has imUpdated daily mediate openings WANTED: Round pen, for experienced Found Rx glasses in blue in good or fair condi- Yard Engineer case, 1/7, off Reed Mkt tion. 541-546-7909 and logging crew.

tractors Board (CCB). Sr. discounts CCB¹47120 A n active lice n se Licensed/bonded/insured means the contractor 541-389-1413/ 410-2422 i s bonded and i n s ured. Ver if y t h e Just bought a new boat? contractor's CCB Sell your old one in the c ense through t h e CCB Cons u mer classifieds! Ask about our Rd. Call 541-280-7727 Super Seller rates! Website Found young kitten, light 541-385-5809 www.hireahcensedcontractor. orange tabby with white com chest, back legs & and or call 503-378-4621. paws, in Cimarron The Bulletin recom- Landscaping/Yard Care front City area. 541-389-6458 mends checking with the CCB prior to con- N OTICE: O R E G O N Lost Ford key and retracting with anyone. Landscape Contrac- mote Jan. 6 M i rror Some other t r ades tors Law (ORS 671) P ond pking lo t t o also req u ire addi- r equires a l l bu s i - Tower Theatre, $25 tional licenses and nesses that advertise reward. 541-389-7535 certifications. to p e r form L a n d- LOST Jewelry - Reward! scape C o nstruction Placed inside bear when Debris Removal which inclu d es:moving; bear given to p lanting, decks , Redmond Humane SociJUNK BE GONE fences, arbors, Thrift store in August, I Haul Away FREE w ater-features, a n d ety 2012. Call 541-516-8681 For Salvage. Also installation, repair of Cleanups & Cleanouts irrigation systems to Lost tan male ChihuaMel, 541-389-8107 be licensed with the hua since 12/27, off Landscape Contrac- Dustin/Burgess in Handyman t ors B o a rd . Th i s LaPine $1500 re4-digit number is to be ward. 541-410-8295 I DO THAT! included in all adverHome/Rental repairs tisements which indiSmall jobs to remodels cate the business has Honest, guaranteed a bond, insurance and work. CCB¹151573 workers c ompensaDennis 541-317-9768 tion for their employERIC REEVE HANDY ees. For your protecMISSING tion call 503-378-5909 SERVICES. Home & Chihuahua puppy!!! Commercial Repairs, or use our website: $1,500 Reward www.lcb.state.or.us to Carpentry-Painting, Tan/male, named Pressure-washing, check license status before con t racting Kl Kl, 8" tall, last Honey Do's. On-time seen La Pine,OR with t h e bu s iness. promise. Senior 541-306-8248 Discount. Work guar- Persons doing landanteed. 541-389-3361 scape maintenance do not require a LCB or 541-771-4463 REMEMBER: If you Bonded & Insured license. have lost an animal, CCB¹181595 don't forget to check Margo Construction The Humane Society LLC Since 1992 Painting/Wall Covering in Bend 541-382-3537 • Pavers• Carpentry Redmond, • Remodeling • Decks Now is an excellent time 541-923-0882 • Window/Door for interior painting! Prineville, Replacement • Int/Ext Jeff A. Miller Painting 541-447-7178; Paint • CCB 176121 541-404-2826 OR Craft Cats, 541-480-3179 CCB¹194196 541-389-8420.

Farmers Column • 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS

for protecting hay,

firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net

Opportunity for year-round full-time employment. • Top wages • Benefits. For application call 541-997-8212 R&R KING LOGGING, INC. Florence, Oregon

Independent Contractor

* Supplement YourIncome *

Operate Your Own Business ++++++++++++++++++ Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

© Call Today © We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

* Prineville *

Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.

The Earned Income Tax Credit. You may have earned it. Why not claim it? If you're working hard just to make ends meet and have one or more children living with you, you may qualify for the EITC. Think of it as a reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our Web site or ask yOur taX preparer if you qualify. Because when it comes to getting mare fOr your family, COnSiderit dOne. A message from the Internal Revenue Service. W WW.irs.gOV/e i t C

Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at online © bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

The Internal Revenue Se rvice


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E4 THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D AILY B R I D G E

CLU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD )IIII Sh ()rtZ

T h ursday,Janu ary10,2013

ACROSS

Overberried

36 House starter or ender 37 Substance in sSubstances the middle of high on the the 49-Across 49-Across 3s Program zo Ring 39 Actress Long t4 Federal watchdog agcy. 4o Avid ts Complete 4z Lifts te Swear 42 Contemporary of Aeschylus zz Half an Asian capital? 44 N.L. East team, informally ts Cache 4s Place for cargo 19 End of a haircut? 46 Fictional captive in zo -engine carbonite 23 Stick (to) 49 Theme of this 22 Vixen feature puzzle 24 Leaned in one sz Mich. neighbor direction zs "Typee" sequel s3 Destructive pest 27 Verbalized -Tass news s4 agency zs Won 32 Delivery person ss Foolable 34 Programs sz DVR system 3s Nigerian native sa Pop

se Hold off so Six-Day War leader Weizman sz Some map lines: Abbr. 62 Substances low on the 49-Across 63 Capitol V.I.P.'s: Abbr.

3 Needle holder

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

When I watched today's deal in a money game at the club, South was the infamous Joe Overberry, who t hinks it's nobler to go down i n pursuit of an overtrick than to make his bid. That drives his partners crazy. Joe's rebid of t w o s pades was c onservative, an d w h e n N o r t h scraped up a raise, Joe went on. Four spades was a good spot, especially with a v u l nerable game b onus looming, but when West led the jack of diamonds, Joe saw 11 tricks with a crossruff. He took the ace and "cashed"theking — and West ruffed and led a trump.

player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: The hand calls for a conservative response. The long suit may take time to establish, and the singleton i n pa r t ner's s u i t is discouraging. You might respond two diamonds as a passed hand, but as it is, bid INT. If partner rebids two spades, you'll pass. If tw o clubs, y ou'll bid tw o d iamonds. If t w o hearts, you'll pass or try 2NT. South dealer N-S vulnerable

Joe then had two low diamonds and only one trump left in dummy. He lost a diamond and two hearts and went down one. "Same old story," North grumbled. "The man wants 650 points instead of 620 and ends up minus 100." F or 10 tricks Joe leads a l o w diamond at Trick Two. He can win East's trump shift, ruff a diamond with dummy's last trump, take the ace of clubs, ruff a club, draw trumps and score the king of diamonds to land the contract.

DAILY QUESTION

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East Pass Pass

Youhold: 4 6 9 K Q 4 Opening lead — O J 0 Q 1 0 9 8 6 5 4 Q 10 9. Y o u r partner opens one spade, and the next (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

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P C N SS U NG E CUL P A E L I R I T AME BOO R N E S N N ENG N E T E ST C K A S CH L E P

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superficially 3o PayPal purchaser 33 Gets into 32 Dominates

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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DOWN 36 37 38 t Bit of attire for 39 40 41 Mr. Monopoly 2"The Mary Tyler 42 43 Moore Show" co-star 45 46 47 48 3 Arrange 49 50 51 52 53 4 Deli choice 34 55 56 57 sWhole lot 6 Chipped in 58 59 60 7 Cargo vessel 61 62 63 s E.E.C. part: Abbr. Puzzle by JILL DENNYANDJEFF CHEN 9 More erotic to Unreal 34 Imprisoned 46 Gathered, as st Women's rights pioneer bees zt Elliptical 37 Big name in Elizabeth flying tz "Fat chance!" Stanton 47 Energize ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 3s Beats L3 Pitcher C L A D UNC U T S FP D 4o Subj. for a 4s Olfactory 23 Entre Y U L E P I A N 0 C RUE forest ranger ticklers sz Surcharge item zs Lieutenant in many hotels S A L T S P R I NG R 0 L L 43 Recycling of "Forrest 49 Do some online T U D O R S A T R A Z E S Gump" 43 Scarlett's kin skulduggery AX I S M E T I M E zs Command 44 Futuristic ss Federal agcy. of ST Y FED RAL NBC weapons s o Place, as cargo 194 6 - 75 zs Lugs P AS S F A I L B A L GLO

NORTH 43 K 10 ~JI J 1075 032 AA J 863

ONE TRUMP

1

No. 1206

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobiiexword for more information.

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: hytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

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© 2013 by King Features Syndicate, Inc World ugute reserved

E-mail bhelbrookIC>gmal com

hupitwww eafehavenecouzc.com

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By Jennifer Nutt (c)2013 Tnbune Medta SerYlees, Inc.

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THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 10 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719- Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 -Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755- Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

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oQ00

870

880

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

with o u r

sp e c i al rates for selling your I I,w „ I boat or watercraft! Southwind 35.5' Triton 2008,V10, 2slides, Du I Place an ad in The pont UV coat, 7500 mi B ulletin w it h ou r Bought new at

600 w/513 mi, like new,

very fast! Reduced to I *5 lines of text and $5500. 541-221-5221 a photo or up to 10 I lines with no photo. *Free online ad at I bendbulletin.com *Free pick up into Arctic Cat (2) 2005 I The Central Oregon F7 Firecats: EFI I Nickel ads. Snowpro & EFI EXT excellent cond, I Rates start at $46. I $2800 ea;

I I

541-410-2186

Call for details! 541-385-5809

L The Bulleting Snowmobile trailer 2002, 25-ft Interstate & 3 sleds, $10,900. 541-480-8009 TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

$132,913; asking $93,500.

bay f r ont w i n dow, large patio, mature landscaping, fenced yard. $128,000. MLS

mo. includes utilities. 1st, last + $200 dep. 541-382-7972.

630

658

Rooms for Rent

Houses for Rent Redmond

201207127

Pam Lester, Principal B roker, Century 2 1 Gold Country Realty,

Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ Newer 2326 sq.ft. deluxe Inc. 541-504-1338 cable, micro & fridge. home, 3/3, gas fireUtils 8 l i nens. New place, 7500' lot, fenced Looking for your next owners. $145-$165/wk yard, 1655 SW Saraemp/oyee? 541-382-1885 soda Ct. $ 1 195/mo. Place a Bulletin help 541-350-2206 wanted ad today and 631 reach over 60,000 687 Condo/Townhomes readers each week. Commercial for for Rent Your classified ad Rent/Lease will also appear on Hospital Area, NE Bend bendbulletin.com Clean, quiet, awesome Spectrum professional which currently retownhouse! 2 m a ster building, ceives over 3 5 0 ' -500', bedrooms, 2t/9 baths, all $1.00 per ft. total. No 1.5 million page kitchen appliances, N NN. C a l l A nd y , views every month washer/dryer hook-up, 541-385-6732. at no extra cost. garage w/opener. Gas Bulletin Classifieds heat & air. $695/mo + Get Results! deposit. S/W/G paid. NO Call 385-5809 or DOGS. 541-382-2033 place your ad on-line 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 8 GREATWINTER e

DEAL!

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bendbuHetin.com 771

NOW OPEN under new management! Komfort 25' 2 0 06, Come 8 see us! slide AC T V a wning Open Monday-Friday 8-3 NEW: tires, converter,

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HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, e 103 motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080.

The Bulletin

,

wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629

'55 Chevy 2 dr . wgn PROJECT car, 350 small block w/Weiand dual quad tunnel ram with 450 Holleys. T-10 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar whls, extra rolling chassis + extras. $6000 for all. 541-389-7669.

Trucks 8 Heavy Equipment

Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. Pilgrim

Int e rnationalDiamond Reo Du mp Truck

2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5

www.bendbulletin.com

197 4 , 1 2 - 1 4

541-312-4466

G K E A T

$10,000

Fleetwood Wilderness Gl 31' 1999. 12' slide, 24' awning, queen bed, couch/tablemake into dbl beds, FSC, outside shower, E-Z lift s tabilizer hitch, l i ke new, been stored. $10,999. 541-419-5060

541-719-8444 Ads published in aWatercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal

watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870.

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541-385-5809

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call

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' OQ Aircraft, Parts & Service

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Peterbilt 359 p o table water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp n p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-820-3724

Motorhomes Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. Call 541-647-3718

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Country Coach Intrigue 2002, 40' Tag axle. 400hp Cummins Diesel. two slide-outs. 1 /3 interest i n w e ll41,000 miles, new equipped IFR Beech Botires & batteries. Most Springdale 29' 2 0 07, nanza A36, new 10-550/ slide,Bunkhouse style, options.$95,000 OBO sleeps 7-8, excellent prop, located KBDN. 541 -678-571 2 condition, $ 1 6 ,900,$65,000. 541-419-9510

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1966 GMC, 2nd owner, too many extras to list, $8500 obo. Serious buyers only. 541-536-0123

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541-749-0724

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MorePixatBendbulletincom

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1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

yard box, runs good, $ 2 1,865. $6900, 541-548-6812

Fall price

Lots

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Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

at Bend airport.

2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.

$17,000 CallDon I 541-410-3823

O'=W@.%"-.g:

931

(KBDN)

Call 541-382-8998.

COACHMEN 1979 23' trailer Fully equipped. $2000. 541-312-8879 or 541-350-4622

Watercraft

2010, 805 miles, Black Chameleon.

2 bdrm, 1 bath, 870 $530 8 $540 w/lease. 732 Nice flat lot in TerrebCarports included! Commercial/Investment onne, .56 a c res, Boats & Accessories p aved s t reet, a p FOX HOLLOW APTS. Properties for Sale proved f o r ca p -fill13' Smokercraft '85, (541) 383-3152 septic, utilities are at Cascade Rental Prime Hwy 97 commer- the lot line. $42,000. good cond., 15I-IP Management. Co. cial updated in 2006, MLS 32 0 1 2001172 gas Evinrude + Minnkota 44 elec. People Look for Information 850 sq.ft., plenty of Pam Lester, Principal motor, fish finder, 2 parking in rear, cenB roker, Century 2 1 About Products and tral a i r . $1 0 9,900. Gold Country Realty, extra seats, trailer, Services Every Daythrough MLS ¹ 201 0 03034 extra equip. $2900. The Bulletin Classigeds Pam Lester, Principal Inc. 541-504-1338 541-388-9270 B roker, Century 2 1 The Highlands at Bro636 Gold Country Realty, ken top, 10 a cres, Apt./Multiplex NW Bend Inc. 541-504-1338 gated, private well, 17' 1984 Chris Craft utilities at lot, app for - Scorpion, 140 HP 745 Nice, quiet, upper level 2 cap-fill septic. inboard/outboard, 2 Bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, Homes for Sale $535,000. MLS depth finders, trollW/S/G/cable pd, laundry ing motor, full cover, ¹ 201200937. Pa m facils. $650mo $500 dep. BANK OWNED HOMES! Lester, Principal Bro- EZ - L oad t railer, No smkg. 541-383-2430 FREE List w/Pics! OBO. ker, Century 21 Gold $3500 541-382-3728. BendRepos.com Country Realty, Inc. Small studio close to li- www. bend and beyond real estate 541-504-1338 brary, all util. pd. $550, 20967 yeoman, bend or $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-330Where can you find a Catt a Pro 'e 9769 or 541-480-7870 helping hand? Whether you need a 642 From contractors to fence fixed, hedges Apt./Multiplex Redmond yard care, it's all here trimmed or a house 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 in The Bulletin's built, you'll find Volvo Penta, 270HP, 2 bdrm, 1 bath duplex "Call A Service unit, $550 mo.+ $635 low hrs., must see, professional help in d ep. 1326 SW O b - Professional" Directory $15,000, 541-330-3939 The Bulletin's "Call a sidian, Avail Feb. 1. t t s l st s t st 541-728-6421. Service Professional" NOTICE = All real estate adverDirectory 648 tised here in is sub54I -385-5B09 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Houses for ject to t h e F e deral 205 Run About, 220 Rent General F air H o using A c t , 773 HP, V8, open bow, which makes it illegal exc. cond., very fast Acreages to advertise any prefPUBLISHER'S w/very low hours, erence, limitation or NOTICE lots of extras incl. All real estate adver- discrimination based tower, Bimini & tising in this newspa- on race, color, reli- CHECK YOUR AD custom trailer, gion, sex, handicap, per is subject to the Please check your ad $19,500. F air H o using A c t familial status or na- on the first day it runs 541-389-1413 which makes it illegal tional origin, or inten- to make sure it is corto a d v ertise "any tion to make any such rect. Sometimes inpreference, limitation preferences, l i m ita- s tructions over t h e or disc r imination tions or discrimination. phone are misunderbased on race, color, We will not knowingly stood and a n e r ror religion, sex, handi- accept any advertis- can occurin your ad. 20.5' Seaswirl Spycap, familial status, ing for r ea l e s tate If this happens to your der 1989 H.O. 302, marital status or na- which is in violation of ad, please contact us 285 hrs., exc. cond., tional origin, or an in- this law. All persons the first day your ad stored indoors for tention to make any are hereby informed appears and we will life $11,900 OBO. such pre f erence, that all dwellings ad- be happy to fix it as 541-379-3530 limitation or discrimi- vertised are available s oon as w e c a n . nation." Familial sta- on an equal opportu- Deadlines are: Weektus includes children nity basis. The Bulle- days 11:00 noon for Get your under the age of 18 tin Classified next day, Sat. 11:00 business living with parents or Single level on 1 acre, 3 a.m. for Sunday and legal cust o dians, Monday. 2 b ath, 1716 pregnant women, and bdrm, 541-385-5809 sq.ft., master separaa ROW I N G people securing cus- tion, office, fenced, Thank you! tody of children under f lower garden, R V The Bulletin Classified with an ad in 18. This newspaper parking. $ 1 3 5,000. will not knowingly ac- MLS The Bulletin's ¹ 20 1 0 07848. 775 cept any advertising Pam Lester, Principal "Call A Service for real estate which is B roker, Century 2 1 Manufactured/ Professional" in violation of the law. Gold Country Realty, Mobile Homes O ur r e a ders ar e Inc. 541-504-1338 Directory hereby informed that Mobile home for sale by all dwellings adver748 owner, in a park, $6000. Ads published in the tised in this newspa- Northeast Bend Homes Terms available. "Boats" classification per are available on 541-279-0109 or include: Speed, fishan equal opportunity Sweetest 4 bdrm, 2 bath 541-617-2834 ing, drift, canoe, basis. To complain of in Bend! 1635 sq ft, great house and sail boats. discrimination cal l neighborhood, lovingly Own your own home for For all other types of HUD t o l l -free at upgraded for 7 years. less t ha n r e n ting. watercraft, please see 1-800-877-0246. The O pen f l oorplan, R V Centrally located in Class 875. toll f re e t e lephoneparking, garden, hot tub, Madras. In- h ouse 541-385-5809 opti o ns number for the hear- 8 so much more. For f inancing ing im p aired is details 8 photos go to available. Call now at 1-800-927-9275. www.tangocreekhome.com 541-475-2291 Serr ng Cennal 0 egon smre 1903

at Bend Airport

P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h

875

Softail Deluxe

Executive Hangar

Travel Trailers

serelng Central Oregon smte 1903

541-389-9188.

Harley Heritage Softail, 2003 $5 000+ in extras $2000 paint job, 30K mi. 1 owner, For more information please call 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537

Call 541-318-8989

batteries. Hardly used.

$15,500. 541-923-2595

60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bi-fold door. Natural Studded tires 75% on gas heat, office, bath- Sport Subaru w h ls, MONTANA 3585 2008, room. Parking for 6 $200. 541-410-3218 exc. cond., 3 slides, c ars. A djacent t o king bed, Irg LR, ArcFrontage Rd; g reat The Bulletin Winnebago It a s ca tic insulation, all opvisibility for a viation To Subscribe call tions $37,500. Sundancer 26' 1987, bus. 1jetjock@q.com 541-385-5800 or go to 541-420-3250 51K mi., exc. cond. 541-948-2126 $8000. 541-419-9251 Nuufa 29 7LK Hi t c hwww.bendbulletin.com Hiker 2007, 3 slides, Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, We Buy Junk 32' touring coach, left based in Madras, alCars & Trucks! kitchen, rear lounge, ways hangared since Cash paid for junk many extras, beautiful new. New annual, auto vehicles, batteries 8 c ond. inside 8 o u t , pilot, IFR, one piece catalytic converters. OBO, Prinev- windshield. Fastest ArServing all of C.O.! Winnebago Suncruiser34' $32,900 ille. 541-447-5502 days cher around. 1750 to2004, only 34K, loaded, 8 541-447-1641 eves. Call 541-408-1+90 tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. too much to list, ext'd 541-475-6947, ask for 932 warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Rob Berg. Dennis, 541-589-3243 Antique & T-Hangar for rent Classic Autos 881

The Bulletin

senger kit, Vance & Hines muffler system & kit, 1045 mi., exc. c ond, $19,9 9 9 ,

Walton 14' dump trailer, power up/power down, 7,000 Ib tandem axles, used very little, new $11,900; mine, $7200. 541-350-3921

(Bend Municipal Airport)

Call 541-419-4212

Used out-drive parts - Mercury 652 750 860 OMC rebuilt maHouses for Rent Redmond Homes Motorcycles & Accessories rine motors: 151 NW Bend $1595; 3.0 $1895; NE Redmond, 3 bdrm, Harley Davidson Soft4.3 (1993), $1995. Small studio apt., 362 2 bath, 1360 sq. ft., Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , 541-389-0435 NW Riverside. $410 triple garage, office, white/cobalt, w / pas-

50000

Utility Trailers

AIRPORT CAFE

I YOURBOAT ... I

I I 3-month package I 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade I which includes: Snowmobiles

925

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Fifth Wheels

Utility Trailers

Soer Asr!

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $22,000, 541-923-6049

j'=.

Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7'x16', 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.

Chevy Wagon 1957, 4-dr., complete, $7,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-389-6998

541-390-2504

MorePixat Bej)dbjletin.com CAN'T BEAT THIS!

L ook before y o u buy, below market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! Class A 32' Hurricane by Four Winds, 2007. 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, Ithr, cherry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900.

Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 29', weatherized, like n ew, f u rnished 8 ready to go, incl Wineard S a t ellite dish,

541-548-5216

26,995. 541-420-9964

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lici I

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Gulfstream S cen i c Cruiser 38 ft. 1999, Weekend Warrior Toy Cummins 330 hp die- Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 fuel station, exc cond. in. kitchen slide out, sleeps 8, black/gray new tires,under cover, i nterior, u se d 3X , hwy. miles only,4 door $24,999. f ridge/freezer ice 541-389-9188 maker, W/D combo, Interbath t ub & Looking for your shower, 50 amp pronext employee? pane gen & m ore! Place a Bulletin help $55,000. wanted ad today and 541-948-2310 reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 milJayco Seneca 2007, lion page views every month at no 17K mi., 35ft., Chevy 5500 d i e sel , t oy extra cost. Bulletin hauler $13 0 ,000. Classifieds Get Re541-389-2636. sults! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Get great deals On all kinds of sports equipment and more in The Bulletin Classifieds.

682

Immaculate!

Fifth Wheels

Beaver Coach Marquis 40' 1987. New cover, new paint (2004), new inverter (2007). Onan 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, parked covered $35,000 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 obo. 541-419-9859 or by Carriage, 4 slide541-280-2014 outs, inverter, satellite sys, fireplace, 2 flat screen TVs. $60,000.

The Bulletin

541-480-3923

BSSl 1C S

Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now $119,000, 5 4 1 -9238572 or 541-749-0037

Look at:

Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

www.bendbulletin.com

Fleetwood Wilderness 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, rear bdrm, fireplace, AC, W/D hkup beautiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500.

54i-3S5-5S09

541-815-2380

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E6 THURSDAY, JANUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN • u

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

u

Pickups

Sp o rt Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles •

Aut o m obiles

Automobiles •

Automo b iles

4

Subaru Baja Turbo

Buick Lucerne CXL Toyota Camrys: 2006, Sp o rt u tility, 2009, $12,500, low 1984, $1200 obo; fully loaded, tow pkg., low miles; 2000 Buick moon roof, leather. Century $2900. You'll 1985 SOLD; BOATS &RVs AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION not find nicer Buicks Was $17,999. Now 1986 parts car, 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 805 - Misc. Items One look's worth a $13,788. Vin ¹103218 $500. RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L GMC Envoy 2002 4WD thousand words. Call MMy Little Red Corvette" 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 850 - Snowmobiles Call for details, hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise, $6,450. Loaded, Bob, 541-318-9999. 4 @ S U B A R U. 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 925 - Utility Trailers 1996 coupe. 132K, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-548-6592 Leather, Heated for an appt. and take a 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. 927 - Automotive Trades 865 - ATVs 541-420-3634 /390-1285 drive in a 30 mpg car! seats, Bose sound 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 929 Automotive Wanted $12,500 541-923-1781 877-266-3821 870 - Boats & Accessories system. Ext. roof rack 935 Dlr ¹0354 931 - Automotive Parts, Service Toyota Corolla 2004, (218) 478-4469 875 - Watercraft Sport Utility Vehicles auto., loaded, 204k and Accessories 880 - Motorhomes 940 Jeep Liberty Limited miles orig owner non 932- Antique and Classic Autos 881 - Travel Trailers Acura MDX 2010, 28k smoker, exc. c ond. 2007, auto, l eather, Vans 933 - Pickups mi. ¹503119 $37,988 $6500 Prin e ville moon roof, roof rack, 882 - Fifth Wheels 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 503-358-8241 alloys, Was. $13,999. 885 - Canopies and Campers 940 - Vans Chrysler Sebring 2006 N ow $ 10,988. V i n 890- RVsfor Rent Fully loaded, exc.cond, Nissan Sentra, 2012- Just bought a new boat? Oregon 975 - Automobiles ¹646827 very low miles (38k), 12,610 mk full warranty, Sell your old one in the AuroSource PS, PB,AC,8 more! 932 always garaged, 541-598-3750 classifieds! Ask about our f j® S U B A R U . transferable warranty $16 000 541-788-0427 www.aaaoregonautoSuper Seller rates~ Antique & Pickups incl. $8100 obo source.com 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Chevrolet G20 Sports541-385-5809 Classic Autos 541-848-9180 877-266-3821 man, 1993, exlnt cond, F ord F 3 5 0 Kin g Dlr ¹0354 $4750. 541-362-5559 or Ranch Super Cab K= Chrysler 300 C o upe 541-663-6046 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, 2004, l eather, t o w Kia Optima EX 2004 0 pkg., bed liner, much 2.7L V6, all power auto. trans, ps, air, Jeep Wrangler 4x4, jtJ' more. MUST SEE!! frame on rebuild, reoptions, moonroof, 1997 6-cyl, soft top, Chevy Astro Was $25,999. Now spoiler, leather, In- Porsche 911 1974, low painted original blue, roll bar, front tow Cargo Van 2001, finity AM/FM/CD/ original blue interior, $23,788. Vin ¹A34788 Buick Enclave 2008 CXL mi., complete motor/ bar, new tires, pw, pdl, great cond., GMC VE ton 1971, Only cassette, alloys, AWD, V-6, black, clean, trans. rebuild, tuned original hub caps, exc. chrome rims, 103K business car, well S UB A R U . mechanicall y sound, 82k studded tires, mechrome, asking $9000 $19,700! Original low SURARUOSSENDCOM suspension, int. 8 ext. miles, gd cond, maint'd, regular oil mile, exceptional, 3rd 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend miles. $20,995. ticulously maint., refurb., oi l c o o ling, or make offer. $5700 obo. changes, $4500. owner. 951-699-7171 Call 541-815-1216 $8750. (in Bend) shows new in & out, 541-385-9350 541-504-3253 or 877-266-3821 Please call 760-715-9123 p erf. m ech. c o n d. 503-504-2764 Dlr ¹0354 541-633-5149 Chevy Sub u rban Much more! Legal Notices 1500 LT Z71 P kg FORD RANGER XLT $28,000 541-420-2715 Mitsubishi 3 00 0 G T 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 2004, t o w pkg. , Jeep Wrangler Un- Chev 1994 G20 c usChrysler SD 4-Door 1 999, a u to., p e a r l LEGAL NOTICE 200 8 , tomized van, 1 2 8k, running l imited X PORSCHE 914 1974, speed, with car alarm, leather, 1930, CD S R oyal boards, 3rd row seat, Sport Utility, 6 speed, 3 50 motor, HD t o w w hite, very low m i . Roller (no engine), Old broken couch & CD player, extra tires Standard, 8-cylinder, hard top, p r emium e quipped, seats 7 , $9500. 541-788-8218. on rims. Runs good. Was $13,999. Now lowered, full roll cage, bed, old towel, used body is good, needs Plymouth wheels, running sleeps 2. comfort, utilpants broken lamp, $9988. Vin ¹212758 B a r racuda Clean. 92,000 miles 5-pt harnesses, racsome r e s toration, 1966, original car! 300 o n m o t or . $ 2 6 0 0 o ld ca r o i l , p o t , boards, low m i les. ity road ready, nice ing seats, 911 dash 8 Find It in runs, taking bids, Was $26,999. Now Larr y hp, 360 V8, center- OBO. 541-771-6511. ~i S USUEARUOSEI!ND BA R COM U. cond. $4000?Trade for The Bulletin Classifieds! instruments, d ecent g lasses. 541-383-3888, lines, (Original 273 $23,988. Vin ¹572535 mini van. Call Bob, shape, v e r y c o ol! 714-369-7290. Sale 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 541-81 5-331 8 541-385-5809 Jan. 30, 2013 1690 541-318-9999 eng 8 wheels incl.) GMC 1978 4x4 Heavy $1699. 541-678-3249 S UBA RU. 877-266-3821 NE Lotus, Bend. Duty Camper Special SUEMtUOSREND COM 541-593-2597 Dlr ¹0354 2500, 3 5 0 e n gine, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 877-266-3821 7 -pass. v a n wit h PROJECT CARS:Chevy auto., 40k miles on Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 Dlr ¹0354 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & new eng., brakes 8 p ower c h a i r lif t , 4x4. 120K mi, Power roun AD WILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 tires good. $ 2495. seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd Chevy Coupe 1950 $1500; 1989 Dodge Classified Advertise your car! EXPOSURES FORONLY $2SOI rolling chassis's $1750 541-504-3833 Turbo Va n 7 - pass. row seating, e xtra Add A Picture! Chevy 4-dr 1949, has new motor and tires, CD, privacy tint- Reach Advertising 0AROAClatttfiedAde tUtAENAMASUSte tteo r the0 RONNCCpapt Ptuttht tAtttEtNtOE FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, ea., thousands of readers! FIND IT! complete car, $ 1949; ing, upgraded rims. Call 541-385-5809 t rans., $1500. I f i n Week of December 3, 2012 door panels w/flowers Cadillac Series 61 1950, Network SUY IT! Fantastic cond. $7995 The Bulletin Cfassifieds terested c a l l Jay & hummingbirds, 2 dr. hard top, complete SELL IT! Contact Timm at 503-269-1057. white soft top & hard w/spare f r on t cl i p .,The Bulletin Classifieds 541-408-2393 for info Jeep Wrangler top. Just reduced to $3950, 541-382-7391 or to view vehicle. Unlimited X 2007 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 $3,750. 541-317-9319 Ford Windstar 1996 Honda Ridgeline C hevy T ahoe L S Sport Utility, 6 spd, or 541-647-8483 Mini Van, 173K, no 541-385-5809 DON'TMISS IHIS RTL 2006, 4 D o o r, Sport Utility 2004, running boards, preair, 3 seats, room V6, a u to , le a ther, mium wheels, off road galore! Dependable, moon roof, running 4x4, power windows, tires, tow pkg. Low VW Karman Ghia road-ready to anylocks, cruise, boards, tow pkg., very power 1970, good cond., miles. Was $25,999. tilt, al l o ys , Was place, even Tumalo! clean. Was. $18,999. Now $22,788. new upholstery and All this for $1500DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, N ow $ 1 5,450. V i n $12,999. Now $9799. convertible top. Vin¹147938 Vin ¹ 216330 really! 541-318-9999 ¹512698 $10,000. custody, support, property and bills division. No court Ford Galaxie 500 1963, S UBA R U . 541-389-2636 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, S UB A R U . Qgjj S UB A R U . appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend SURARUOSEIINDCOM 975 390 vs,auto, pwr. steer 8 877-266-3821 radio (orig),541-419-4989 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend legalalt©msn.com. Automobiles 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Ford Mustang Coupe Dlr ¹0354 ~AR a % Dlr ¹0354 1966, original owner, Nissan Armada SE V8, automatic, great Sport Utility 2007, Ford Explorer 4x4, shape, $9000 OBO. auto, power windows, 1991 - 154K miles, 530-515-8199 DRIVER:$0.03enhancedquarterlybonus.Getpaidforanyportion power locks, leather, rare 5-speed tranny VW Thing 1974, good International Fla t fully loaded, very nice. 8 manual hubs, you qualifyfor: safety, production, MPG, CDL-A, 3 monthscurrent cond. Extremely Rare! BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. Ford Ranchero Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Was $16,999. Now clean, straight, evOnly built in 1973 & owner, exc. c o n d. OTR exp. 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com ton dually, 4 s pd. $13,988. Vin ¹700432 1979 eryday driver. Was 1974. $8,000. trans., great MPG, 101k miles, new tires, with 351 Cleveland $2200; now $1900! 541-389-2636 loaded, sunroof. could be exc. wood ggbSUBARU. $9500. 541-706-1897 modified engine. Bob, 541-318-9999 DRIVERS: Inexperienced/Experienced. Unbeatable Career hauler, runs great, Body is in 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 933 new brakes, $1950. excellent condition, QO ~ Opportunities. Trainee, Company Driver, LEASE OPERATOR, 877-266-3821 541-419-5480. Ford Explorer XLT Pickups $2500 obo. MOrePiXat Belidbulleti!I,COm Dlr ¹0354 2006, Pow e r w i n541-420-4677 LEASE TRAINERS (877)369-7104 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs. dows, power locks, tilt com cruise, running Ford T-Bird 1966 boards, roof r a c k, 390 engine, power Was $12,999. Now DRIVERS: Experienced Drivers - $1,000 Sign-on Bonus! everything, new $7788. Vin ¹A18448. paint, 54K original Excellent Regional Truckload Opportunities in Your Area! Be Jeep Comanche, 1990, Ford 250 XLT 1990, S UB A R U . Porsche Cayenne 2004, miles, runs great, BMW Z4 Roadster SURARUOSRRND COM original owner, 167K, 6 yd. dump bed, excellent cond. in & Home Every Week. Run Up to 2,000 miles/week. www.driveffe. 2005, 62K miles, ex86k, immac, dealer 4WD, 5-spd, tags good 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend out. Asking $8,500. 139k, Auto, $5500. till 9/2015, $4500 obo. 877-266-3821 maint'd, loaded, now cellent cond. $14,000. com 866-333-1021 541-480-3179 541-410-9997 541-604-9064 541-633-7761 $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 Dlr ¹0354 •

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