Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.50
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in er visi o os ua ree arc'135
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bendbulletin.com
LEGAL NOTICES AND THE LAW Editor's note:This report
is part of an occasional series about the legality
of profits being made from the publication of foreclosurenotices,as well as the roles of banks, trustees and the courts in this state-mandated process.Follow along at www.bendbulletin. com/foreclosures.
By Elon Glucklich •The Bulletin oreclosure cases are rapidly filling the dockets in the Deschutes County Circuit Court, adding hundreds of new cases and increasing the workload on a court in its fourth year of budget cuts and staff reductions. The court received 537case filings for initial foreclosure hearings against Deschutes County homeownerslastyear — compared with the 158 filed in 2011 and 50 in 2010. And if January's filing numbers hold steady throughout this year, the court would end 2013 with more than 1,200 cases. For years,foreclosures in Oregon were handled almost entirely outside the court system, through a nonjudicial process created in 1959. But in the second half of last year, lenders shifted to the courts, prompted
TODAY'S READERBOARD
by a new foreclosure mediation program that started in July and an Oregon Court of Appeals ruling issued the same month. The Deschutes County Circuit Court has felt the strain from the increased caseload, said Presiding Judge Alta Brady, one of the court's two judges who hear civil cases. "Just in terms of processing the pretrial conferences (for foreclosure cases), it's having a time impact" onthe court, Brady said."It's just that many more cases we are responding to.u Many civil cases, like divorce and child custody hearings, personal injury claims and contract disputes, can take a year to 15 months from start to finish, Brady said. But foreclosurecases can drag on two years or longer, said David Ambrose, a foreclosure attorney who works in the Bend and Portland areas. SeeForeclosures/A4
Shift to judicial foreclosures The shift by mortgage lenders from a nonjudicial foreclosure process to a judicial one hasled to ... ... an increasein foreclosurecasesin DeschutesCounty Circuit Court...
... and moreproperty auctionsbythe DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office.
600
12o
537
Because of that, the filings of notices of default — the first step in a nonjudicial foreclosure — have nearly vanished. OeschutesCountynotices of default bymonthin 2012:
120
150 143 120
400
95
80
60
39~3
158
Foreclosuremediation program tookeffect July11
90
36 30
0
1 139 5 4 2010 2011 2012
2010 2011 2012
0 January
Sources: Deschutes County Circuit Court, Deschutes County Shenff's Office, Deschutes County Clerk's Office
June
December
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Obama Onine channels education Bush on expanding secrecy in region
h
Wild ride fordighornsheep > — Yep, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife bags them
up and flies them out to anew home, promoting genetic diversity
among herds that are geographically separated. This helicopter relocation happened near the lower Deschutes River late last
year. There are two species native to Oregon, one being the Rocky Mountain bighorn, below.
By Peter Baker
By Ben Botkin
New York Times News Service
The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — If President Barack Obama tuned in to the past week's bracing debate on Capitol Hill about terrorism, executive power, secrecy and due process, he might have recognized the
By leaps and bounds, online education is growing in Central Oregon this year as schools look beyond the traditional classroom to offer options. There are similarities among the programs: All have certified teachers and increased flexibility compared with traditional classes. But there is no one, singular way for online education to unfold. In Bend-La Pine Schools, more than 1,100 students are taking online courses, typically as a supplement to other traditional classroom instruction. An online charter school started this school year in Crook County School District, drawing most of its students from outside the district. Redmond Proficiency Academy, anothercharter school, put an online curriculum in place last month. At Bend-La Pine Schools, online courses are available for students of all grades. SeeOnline/A5
ANALYSIS arguments his critics were making: He once made some of them himself. Four years into his tenure, the onetime critic of his predecessorfinds himself cast as a present-day George W. Bush, justifying the muscular application of force in the defense of the nation while detractors complain that he has sacrificed the country's values in the name of security. Today's debate is not an exact parallel. But in broad terms, the conversation generated by last week's CIA confirmation hearing underscored the degree to which Obama has embraced some of Bush's approach to counterterrorism, right down to a secret legal memo. See President/A6
One more shocker: In Oregon, wild sheep management is funded in part by the auction of one hunting tag per year. A California
man got the 2013tag — for the record-breaking price of $135,000. Story onB1
Snow dusiness —Snowsports are part of why many of us live in Oregon. But what do they do for
our economy? It had beenalmost a quarter-century since the last report on the state's ski industry. The latest numbers, from the
2010-11 season, show:
1.9 million visits to Oregon ski areas
S482 million generated by the industry
6,772 jobs supported by the industry
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Story on E1
ManY2011budgetcut but itte rea-wor
Plus: TheGreat Nordeen — For the11th time, cross-coun-
try skiers raced from Bachelor to Wanoga early Saturday.D1
By David A. Fahrenthold
State of the Union — A
The Washington Post
preview of what President Obama
Late on the night of April 8, 2011, Washington's leaders announced they'd just done something extraordinary. They had agreed to cut the federal budget — and cut it big. "The largest annual spending cut in our history," President Barack Obama called it in a televisedspeech. To prevent a government shutdown, the parties had agreed to slash $37.8 billion: more than the
may say Tuesday.A3
Journalism, andplagiarism — The publication of the hacked
Bush emails and photos raises media ethics questions.A6 ... and the resignation of an al-
leged copycat education minister in Germany shines alight on the national fascination with doctorates and "title arousal."AS
. Ier - , > a eaptfr sa
rr tefe4ftstefeeee~
budgets of the Labor and Commerce departmentscombined. At the Capitol, Republicans savored a win for austerity. There would be "deep, but responsible, reductions in virtually all areas of government," House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold
Rogers, R-Ky., promised before the deal passed. But nearly two years later, these landmark cuts have fallen far short of their promises. SeeSpending/A7
Photoscourtesy ODFW
And a Wed exclusiveWhy can't the U.S. Postal Service m ake money likeUPS orFedEx?Two
words: monopolyandcomplacency. bendbulletin.com/extras
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly clear High 42, Low19
Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business/Stocks Ef-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B 4 - 5 Sports Gf-6 Local & State Bf-6 Opinion/Books Ff-6 TV/Movies Classified
C6 D1-6 C7
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Vol. 110, No. 41, 46 pages, 7 sections
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
: IIIII o
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Fu itive's case reo ene
Slain teen's memorial —Hundreds of mourners and dignitaries, including first lady Michelle Obama,packedthe funeral Saturday for a Chicago honor student whose killing catapulted her into the nation's debate over gun violence. Hadiya Pendleton was shot and
killed Jan. 29 asshestood with friends at a parkabout a mile from By lan Lovett
written statement. New York Times News Service "Therefore, I feel we need to LOS ANGELES — The Los alsopublicly address Dorner's Angeles Police Department allegations regarding his terwill reopen its investigation mination," he said. "I do this into the 2007 episode that led not to appease a murderer. to the firing of C hristopher I do it to reassure the public D orner, the former police offi- that their police department is cer who is wanted in three kill- transparent and fair in all the ings, department officials said things we do." Saturday night. The killings and Dorner's Dorner pledged revenge o nline manifesto have r e against Los A ngeles police opened old wounds for some officers in a m a n i festo he black residents here, even as p osted online, in w h ich h e they condemned theviolence. also claimed that racism in the For decades, the Los Angeles department had led to his dis- Police Department was known missaL He is wanted in connec- nationwide for racism and cortion with the killing of a former ruption. And memories are still police captain's daughter and fresh of the riots in 1992 that her fiance last Sunday and the followed the beating of a black shooting death of a Riverside, man, Rodney King, by white Calif., police officer on Thurs- police officers. The beating day morning. was caught on videotape and "I am aware of the ghosts broadcast around the country. of the LAPD's past and one In explaining why he chose of my biggest concerns is that to reopen Dorner's case, Beck they will be resurrected by acknowledged h i s de p a rtment's difficult history. Dorner's allegations of rac"The Los A ngeles Police ism within the department," Chief Charlie Beck said in a Department has m ade t r e-
mendous strides in g aining the trust and confidence of the people weserve,"he said in his statement, and he conceded that "Dorner's actions may cause a pause in our increasingly positive relationship with the community." Dorner, who joined the police department in 2005, was fired in 2008 for giving false statements, after he accused his training officer of kicking a suspect. He sued the department for wrongful termination, and lost at trial and again on
President Barack Obama's Chicago home in the Kenwood neighbor-
hood. Just days before, the bandmajorette was among the performers during events for Obama's inauguration. Police sayPendleton was an innocent victim in a gang-related shooting.
1st U.S. war casualty of year laid to rest —Acrowd of more than 100 family members, friends and uniformed service members marched slowly and quietly Friday down a hill at Arlington
National Cemetery following Army Sgt. Aaron Wittman's coffin, draped with an American flag andcarried on ahorse-drawn caisson. Wittman was killed Jan. 10 while serving in the Khogyani District of
Nangahar province in Afghanistan, becoming the first U.S. casualty of this year. While on mounted patrol, he was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade, the Defense Departmentsaid.
RaiSe fOr federal WOrkerS? —President Barack Obamawil propose a payraise for federal civilian employees that is less than private-sector wage growth yet more than that favored by manyHouse
appeal. The decision t o r e v i ew Dorner's termination marks a reversal from the tone Beck struck just two days ago, when he was asked about Dorner's accusationsofracism ata news conference. "You're talking about a homicide suspect who has committed atrocious crimes," he said. "If you want to give any attribution to his ramblings on the Internet, go right ahead. But I do not."
Republicans, who want to extend an employee pay freeze. Obama will propose a1 percent pay increase in the administration's fiscal 2014
budget plan, which is expected in mid-March. At the sametime, the House plans to vote soon on legislation that would extend the current freeze on basic pay rates through the end of the 2013 calendar year.
The freezewasoriginally set for two years and had beenscheduled to end in December but was extended until a temporary budget measure expires next month.
Fighting rages iu Syria —syrian troops backedbywarplanes battled rebels for control of a key highway in Damascus on Saturday,
a day after opposition forces cut the strategic artery as part of what they say are efforts to lay the groundwork for an eventual assault on the heavily defended capital. Rebels have been on the offensive in Da-
e
simuooAvc.
mascus since launching aseries of attacks on government positions on Wednesday. They brought their fight to within a mile of the heart of the capital on Friday, seizing army checkpoints and cutting a key high-
Descnuesw'
BLIZZARD FINDS NORTHEAST WELL-PREPARED
way as they pressedtheir campaign for the city, the seat of President Bashar Assad's power. Both the rebels and the government consider the fight for Damascus the most likely endgame in their civil war.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
Mali rebels take to hills —Expelling the Islamist militants from Timbuktu and other northern Malian towns, as the French did
swiftly last month, may havebeenthe easy part of retaking Mali, say military officials, analysts and local fighters. Attention is now being
focused on one ofAfrica's harshest and least-known mountain ranges — the Adrar des Ifoghas, a forbidding landscape in northeastern
DEPARTMENT HEADS
Mali. "These mountains are extremely difficult for foreign armies," said spokesman Backay Ag Hamed Ahmed of the National Movement
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation and Operations Keith Foutz .........................541 -385-5805 Finance Holly West ...........541-383-0321
for the Liberation of Azawad. Egypt banS YOuTude —A Cairo court on Saturday ordered the government to block access to the video-sharing website YouTube
Human Resources Traci Donaca ......................
for 30 days for carrying an anti-Islam film that caused deadly riots
TALK TO AN EDITOR
across theworld.JudgeHassounaTawfiqorderedYouTubeblocked for carrying the film, which hedescribed as "offensive to Islam and
Business ............................ 541 -383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 Community Life, Health JulieJohnson.....................541-383-0308 Editorials Richard Coe......541-383-0353 Family, At Home Alandra Johnson................541 -61 7-7860 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541 -383-0377 News Editor JanJordan....541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey......541-383-0366
the Prophet (Muhammad)." He made the ruling in the Egyptian capital where the first protests against the film erupted last September be-
fore spreading to more than 20countries, killing more than 50. — From wire reports
PhotosbyRobert R Bukaty/The Assocuued Press
REDMOND BUREAU
three feet of snow as of Saturday
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlouery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
SQfsQssQ 58 9 QsQ The estimated jackpot is now $50 million.
MEGABUCKS
The estimated jackpot is now $10.6 million.
maj o r airports and train stations h a d reopened.
~~i ,
Do you have a question about nation or world news? Submit it to Cox News Service editors in Atlanta
at q&a©ajc.com. Include name, phoneandcity.
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140
NEWS Q&A
The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
15Q Q1Q4QSQ 23Q 45
Hours after the storm passed,
But the combination of lucky timing — the storm arrived on a
. Had Boeing chosen all . nickel-cadmium batteries instead of lithium-ion batteriesfor its 787 Dreamliner, how much additional weight would have been added to the plane? • O ne n i c kel-metal h y • dride b a ttery w e i g hs about 100 pounds, or about 40 pounds more than a lithiumion battery, Donald Sadoway, a battery expert and materials chemistry professor at MIT, told Q-and-A on the News in an email. There are two lithium ion batteries — one for power backup and one for engine ignition — on every 787 Dreamliner, Sadoway said. "That means a difference of about 40 pounds per battery, which is less than the luggage allowance for a single passenger," Sadoway wrote. He wrote that nickel-metal hydride batteries are used in the Toyota Prius. All 50 of Boeing's 787s were grounded earlier this month during a n i n v estigation to find out why lithium-ion batteries failed on two planes. One caused a fire on a 787 and another forced an emergency landing.
locals only Valeliflne'IDaySpeeial RivervlewroomsJust Sf09
m a ke it home Friday night as the s t o r m intensified.
mounds of snow.
One manth: $17 (Printonly:$16) By mail in Deschutes County:
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Man y were left with serious
perstorm Sandy still fresh in their minds, dug out from underneath
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night, killing at least four people c o nsequences, however. Hunand surpassing the biggest storm dreds of thousands lost power, on record. and on New York's Long Island, From Maine to NewJersey, abandoned cars littered the roadmillions of people, manywith Su- ways, left by people who could not
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Ladies get a compCimentary rose ysritfi dinner
land, Maine, while a parking meter, ways. That limited the problems left, in the same city is nearly and s h ould allow a straightfor-
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during a blizzard Saturday, in Port- hunker down andget off the road-
Street address.......226 N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR97756 Mailing address....P.o. Box788 Redmond, OR97756 .................................541 -504-2336 .................................541 -548-3203
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A woman digs out her car after F r iday — and advance warning it was blocked in by drifting snow g ave residents plenty of time to
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 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 Sunday, Feb.10, the 41st day of 2013. There are 324 days left in the year.
THE STATE OF THE UNION HAPPENINGS GrammyS —LL Cool J hosts the 55th annual music awards gala at 8 p.m. TV details onCl
New year —TheChinese welcome the arrival of the Year of the Snake.
CommandchangeMarine Gen. Joseph Dunford
'ca to action'on o s, ener, immi ration More details have emerged on the way President Barack Obama will seek to define a second-term agenda built around restoring economic prosperity to the middle class, using Tuesday's State of the Union address to unveil initiatives in education, infrastructure and clean energy. But hot-button social issues won't be ignored.
officially takes charge of forces in Afghanistan; as the conflict winds down, he may be the
By Julie Pace
last commander in America's
The Associated Press
longest war.
President Barack Obama w ill focus his State of t h e Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth at a time of high unemployment,underscoring the degree to which the economy could threaten his ability to pursue second-term priorities such as gun control, immigration policy and climate change. Obama also may use Tuesday'sprime-time address before a joint session of Congress to announce the next steps for concluding the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan by the end of 2014. Obama's State of the Union marks his second high-profile speech to the nation in about three weeks, after his inaugural address Jan. 21 that opened his second term. White House aides see the two speeches as complementary, wit h T u esday's address aimed at providing specifics to back up some of the Inauguration Day's lofty liberal rhetoric. The president previewed the address during a meeting Thursday with House Democrats and said he would speak "about making sure that we're focused onjob creation here in the United States of America." Obama said he would try to accomplish that by "a call to action" for improvements in education, boosting clean en-
HISTORY Highlight:In1763, Britain,
Spain and Francesigned the Treaty of Paris, ending the
Seven Years' War (known as the French and IndianWarin North America). In 1840, Britain's Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of
Saxe-Coburg andGotha. In1841, UpperCanadaand Lower Canadawere proclaimed united under an Act of Union by the British Parliament. In1863, showman PT. Barnum staged the wedding of General Tom Thumb andMercy Lavinia Warren — both little people — in New York City. In1933, the first singing tele-
gram was introduced by the Postal Telegram Co. in New York. In1942,the former French liner
Normandiecapsized in New York Harbor a day after it caught fire while being refitted for the U.S. Navy. RCAVictor presented Glenn Miller and his Orchestra with a "gold record" for their
recording of "ChattanoogaChoo Choo," which had sold more than1 million copies. In1949, Arthur Miller's play
"DeathofaSalesman"opened at Broadway'sMoroscoTheater with Lee J. Cobb asWilly Loman. (Miller died in Roxbury, Conn., at
age 89 on this dayin 2005,the 56th anniversary of theopening.) In1962, the Soviet Union
exchanged capturedAmerican U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers for Rudolf Abel, a Soviet spy held by the United States. In 1967, the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, dealing with presidential disabilityand
succession, was ratified. In1968,figure skater Peggy Fleming won America's only gold medal of the Winter Olym-
pic Games inGrenoble, France. In1998, Dr. David Satcher was confirmed by the Senate to be
surgeon general. Teoyearsago:AtaNATOmeeting in Brussels,France,Germany and Belgium jointly vetoed a
U.S.-backedmeasureto authorize thealliance to makeplans to protect Turkey if Iraq attacked it. Iraq agreed to allow U-2 surveil-
lance flights overits territory, meeting akeydemandbyU.N. inspectors searchingfor banned weapons; PresidentGeorgeW. Bush brushedaside Iraqi concessions as too little, too late.
Fiveyearsago:AmyW inehouse won five Grammys, appearing via satellite from London.
One year ago:President Barack Obamaabruptly abandoned his stand that religious organizations had to payfor free birth control for workers,
demanding that insurance companies step in to provide the coverage instead.
BIRTHDAYS Cinematographer Douglas Slocombe ("Raiders of the Lost Ark") is100. Operasinger Leontyne Price is 86. Actor Robert Wagner is 83. Singer
Roberta Flack is 76.Olympic gold-medal swimmer Mark Spitz is 63. Walt Disney Co.
Chairman andCEORobert Iger is 62. World Golf Hall of Famer
Greg Normanis 58. Actress Kathleen Beller is 57.Country singer Lionel Cartwright is
53. ABCNews correspondent George Stephanopoulos is 52. Retired MLB All-Star Lenny Dykstra is 50. Political
commentator GlennBeck is 49. Actress Laura Dern is 46. Actress Elizabeth Banks is 39.
Actress EmmaRoberts is 22. Actress Makenzie Vega is 19. — From wire reports
ergy production, and reducing the deficit in ways that don't burden the middle class, the poor or the elderly. While those priorities may be cheered by some Democrats, they're certain to be met with skepticism or outright opposition from many congressional Republicans, especially in the GOP-controlled House. The parties are at odds over ways to reduce the deficit. Republicans favor spending cuts; Obama prefers a combination of spending cuts and increasing tax revenue.
Economy and taxes The president said he would address taxes and looming across-the-board budget cuts, known as thesequester,in the speech. The White House and Congress have pushed back the automatic cuts once, and Obama wants to do it again in order tocreate an opening for a larger deficit reduction deal. "I am prepared, eager and anxious to do a big deal, a big package that ends this governance by crisis where every two weeks or every two months or every six months we are threatening this hard-won recovery," he said last week. The economyhas rebounded significantly from the depths of therecession and has taken a back seat for Obama since he won re-election in November. Obama is instead focused on campaigns to overhaul the nation's patchwork immigration laws and enact stricter gun control measures following the massacre of20 schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn., in December.The president also raised expectations for action this year on climatechange after devoting a significant amount of time to the issue in his address at the inauguration. But t h e une m ployment rate is persistently high at 7.9 percent, economic growth slowed last quarter and consumer confidence is falling, so the economy could upend Obama's plans to pursue a broader domestic agenda in his final four years in office. Tony Fratto, who worked in the White House during President George W. Bush's second term, said Obama has to show the public that he's still focused on the economy before he can get their full support for his other proposals. "We're not in a position where he can blame
An evolvingaddress Every U.S. president is required bythe Constitution to report to Congress on the current conditions of the nation. The State of the Union address
has become anannual ritual in which presidents set expectations for Congress, for the public andfor themselves. Eachpresident has usedit for his own purposes, somelaying out grand policy changes or proclamations — others keeping it short andsweet. How theState ofthe Union has changed:
Average number of words byeachpresident: William Howard Taft, 20,000
thelongestspeeches, averaging 22,614 words
18
New YorkTimes NewsServicefile photo
In 2011, Barack Obama delivered his State of the Union address for the first time before a divided Congress. Millions of people are likely to tune in Tuesday for Obama's fifth State of the Union. anybody else for the economy now," Fratto said, "Now it's his economy." The p r e sident's s p eech likely will tie his agenda items together under the common cause ofeconomic prosperity. "I think he's likely to talk about the budget issues but in the context of our values," Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, th e r a n k ing member of the House Budget Committee, told reporters at the conclusion of the House Democratic retreat Friday.
Other domestic issues Obama is expected to use his address to press lawmakers to back his immigration overhaul, which i ncludes a pathway to citizenship for ll million i l l egal i m m i grants, and his gun control proposals, including universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons. On immigration, the president will say he i ntends to make good on his promise to eventually provide a pathway to citizenship for the millions of immigrants in the country
CalvinCoolidge, first address onthe radio
Harry Truman, first oaTV --LyndonJohnson;first at night
a 10-point gender gap. Obama
io
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probably would use the State Monroe polk un c oln Cleveland FDR Nixon clinton of the Union to discuss "adWashington Taft obama vancing a com p r ehensive nuclear agenda to strengthen Note:William Henry Harrison and James Garfield are not shown; they died before delivering the nonproliferation regime, their first State of the Union addresses Source: The Ameecan PresidencyPro~ect © 2013 MCT reduce global stockpiles and secure nuclear materials." As i n pr e v i ous y e a rs, Obama will not spend much FOIIOWing the addreSS —Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a rising time on foreign policy, though Republican star, will deliver the official Republican response after his administration faces nuObama's address to Congress. But Sen.RandPaul, R-Ky., will merous challenges around a also deliver a "tea party response," speaking directly after Rubio, complicated world: instability who is also a favorite of the populist movement and — like Paul — a potential 2016 presidential contender. in the Middle East, growing scrutiny of a continuing drone Obama plans to follow up his speech with trips across the campaign against terrorists, country to promote his calls for job creation. Stops are planned threats from Iran and North Wednesday in Asheville, N.C., andThursday in Atlanta. Korea, and increasing global competition from China.
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carried 55 percentof female voters, many of whom are looking to the White House for their reward. While groups such as Latinos and gays have seen policy initiatives since Election Day, women's groups have not received the same kinds of rollouts.
War and nukes While the centerpiece of Obama's addressis expected to be his domestic agenda, the presidentsees a chance to outline the next steps in bringing the protracted war in Afghanistan to an end. He's facing two pressing decisions: the size and scope of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan after the war formally ends late next year, and the next phase of the troop drawdown this year. M ore t ha n 6 0 ,000 U . S. troops are in Afghanistan. The president could update the public on cuts to the number of U.S. nuclear weapons, a priority for his administration. Vice President Joe Biden recently told a security conference in Germany that Obama
-
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illegally. In remarks in recent weeks, the president has made it clear that he views universal background checks as the most likely gun control measure to pass in a divided Congress, though aides have said that he would not back away from his support for a new assault weapons ban if it can pass. Voting rights groups expect the president to call for changes that would make it easier for people to vote. And W h ite H ouse allies are nudging Obama's team to move forward on a plan to e xpand education for c h i l dren beforethey enter kindergarten. They are reminding Obama's political aides that female voters gave the president a second term, serving up
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These foreclosed homes in Bend and Redmond are scheduled for auction by the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The volume of foreclosureauctions handled by the Sheriff's Office nearly quadrupled in 2012 from the year before. The increase has coincided with foreclosure case filings at the Deschutes County Circuit Court.
Foreclosures
hire an attorney," Brady said. "I can explain to them what the Continued from A1 (case) procedure is; I just can't "And that's really a best- tell them what is a defense or case scenario, from the time not adefense to a foreclosure of a c omplaint being f i led action." to the t im e someone buys Oregon isone of 28 states a property at a foreclosure that u ses t h e n o n j udicial sale," Ambrose said. "A ju- method as the primary track dicial foreclosure can take a forforeclosures.Itlets lenders considerably longer period of repossess homes from delintime than a nonjudicial fore- quent borrowers administraclosure, and it's a much more tively and takes, at minimum, complex process." 120 to 180 days. The judge sees the comBut the new mediation law, p lexity t a k in g i t s t o l l o n which only applies to nonjuhomeowners. dicial foreclosures, prompted She estimated that three- lenders to switch to the judiquarters ofthe homeowners cial process. And those cases who show up for a trial on her are landing on the desk of Jeff docket don't have attorneys. Hall, trial court administrator The U.S. Constitution grants forthe Deschutes County Circitizens the right to an attor- cuit Court. ney in criminal cases, but not The foreclosure case fil es civil ones. are often more than an inch "Some of them are in a posi- t hick, s t uffed w i t h d o c u tion where they can't afford to ments about the history of
maybe a short sale. The Oregon D epartment of Justice expected to receive about 1,000 requests for methem what the (case) procedure is; ljust can't diation each month, said DOJ tell them what is a defense or not a defense to spokesman Jeff Manning. To date, about 400 have a foreclosure action." been filed in total, with 34 — Deschutes County Circuit Judge Alta Brady, who says individual homeowners getmost homeowners who show up for trial don't have attorneys ting a hearing. A total of four have reached an agreement with their lenders through the the mortgage, the lender and Attorneys and mortgage of- program. homeowner. ficials have been keeping close The volume of cases "is not Reviewing them all "takes tabs on the foreclosure shift anywhere close to what we time," Hall said. "It's not like since the summer, when state thought," Manning said. it's two pieces of paper." lawmakers and the Oregon An added twist came just Well beforethe foreclosure Department of J u stice un- a week after the mediation shift, the court had to insti- veiled the foreclosure media- program began. On July 18, tute worker f u rloughs and tion program. the Oregon Court of Appeals other cuts, a result of declining The goal of the program overturned a foreclosure case state judiciary funds. Between was simple: Give homeowners against a homeowner from 2-5 p.m.,court staff does not at risk of losing their homes a R hododendron, t h e tow n answer phones and the public chance to sit down with their on U.S. Highway 26 west of cannot view files. Staffing at lenders and a m e diator, in Mount Hood. The court ruled the court is down about 14 per- hopes of coming up with an that Mortgage Electronic Regcent from 2009. alternative payment plan, or istration Systems, a company
"Some of them are in a position where they can't afford to hire an attorney. I can explain to
Piece ofAlamohistory is returned, somewhat grudgingly By Ben Kamisar
hibit have proven difficult, as caretakersseek to balance the AUSTIN, Texas — When desire to exhibit the letter with Lt. Col. William Barret Travis the need to preserve it. penned his famous "Victory or While Patterson has been Death" letter to call for support the face of the project, it was as the Alamo was surrounded, his communications director, additional troops couldn't arMark Loeffler, who originally rive before the defenders fell to approached the commissioner Mexican soldiers. in 2012 with the idea of exhibitBut 177years later,his letter ing the letter. The agency took is being returned to the place The Associated Press file photo possession of the Alamo in of its sender, with reinforce- The famous "Victory or Death" 2011. And despite the challengments that Travis could never letter calling for military es presented by what he called "unexplored territory," Loeffler have dreamed of. support to fend off Mexican The letter is set to travel to soldiers at the Alamo is being stressed the office's committhe Alamo on Feb.22, accomreturned to San Antonio and ment to protecting the letter. "(The letter) was specific to panied by state troopers as well will be on display. as San Antonio police officers, the memory and the message once the letter enters their jurisof the Alamo, which was courdiction. It will be protected on tection and stability. age, sacrifice and the foundaits journey by unspecified "air The Alamo wasn't designed tions of Texas," Loeffler said. "I support," according to Texas to house archival material, couldn't think of anything that Land Commissioner Jerry Pat- and the historic building pres- would be a better marriage, so terson, who helped arrange the ents uniquechallenges for ar- to speak, than to bring the Trahigh-profile loan to the Alamo chivists trying to control the vis letter back to the Alamo." from the state archives. elements inside. Archivists left The document will be exBut state archivists are wor- a visit to the Alamo last week hibited in an elaborate encloried. They opposed the Alamo with concerns about the light sure built to block out ultravioexhibit plan, saying that dan- (too much) and air condition- let rays and reflect damaging gers to the fragile, historically ing (not enough) in the exhibit light away from it. The letter i mportant d o c ument l u r k hall. They plan to return for a must be kept at a certain temeverywhere. final walk-through before the perature and humidity and exThe document is considered document arrives. hibited in an immovable case. a"Texas Treasure" bythe Tex"There are just too many Two archivists will m onitor as State Library and Archives variables that no human has the letter during the 13-day Commission, a d e signation control over once the document exhibit, checking hourly readgiven to only a few other docu- leaves the safety of the archives ings to ensure its safety. That's not all. ments: original copies of the building," said John Anderson, Texas Declaration of Indepen- a preservation officer at the The Alamo Rangers, the sedence, the state constitution Texas State Library and Arcurity force at the Alamo, will and some treaties. chivesCommission, where the provide24-hour security forthe Lt. Col. Travis wrote the let- document is housed. document. Guests will face seter at the Alamo during the The l i b rary's g o verning curity wands and bag checks, Texas Revolution on Feb. 24, board approved the exhibit in increased security for duration 1836, as his final public plea October, and Anderson emof the letter's 13-day stay. f or r einforcements and t o phasized that the land office The land office privately declare that he wouldn't sur- and the library have gone to raised about $100,000 from render, instead accepting only great lengths to protect the donors to ensure that taxpayer "Victory or Death." document. Anderson said he money wouldn't be used for Archivists handle the docu- was confident that the risks any of the costs associated ment with care, keeping it in have been mitigated. with the exhibit. its Mylar sleeve to provide proStill, the logistics of the exThe document has taken Cox Newspapers
road trips before, traveling to Dallas in 1986 for the 150th anniversary of Texas' independence and was displayed in a museum. Anderson said analysis of the letter showed it was damaged during display in the early 20th century in a glass case in the Capitol. "This is a document of power, and it being a document of power also makes it precious and makes people worry about it," said Patricia Galloway, an archival enterprise
professor at the University of Texas. "But it also makes it something that people want to be in the presence of."
established by lenders to track the sale of mortgages, could not prove that it properly recordedtransfersofthose mortgages,as required by state law. The case has been appealed to the Oregon Supreme Court. The mediation program and ruling against MERS have effectively frozen hundreds of foreclosuresacross the state, notes Ambrose. Without a fix, he said, atrisk homeowners are left in a sort of mortgage limbo, staying in t heir homes without paying down their loans — but waiting for an eviction notice at any time. "The whole (foreclosure) system is broken right now," Ambrose said. Without a solution from the state Legislature, "It's going to be a significant problem for a long time." — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S
IN FOCUS: HEALTH CARE REFORM
overnors
e Ical ex ansion in sa ies in By Sarah KIIff The Washington Post
Several Republican governors have embraced akeypillar of President Barack Obama's health care law and agreed to a major expansion of Medicaid, representing a significant retreat from their party's earlier, widespread opposition. Many Republicans balked at the prospect of growing the already costly Medicaid entitlement program when the Supreme Court made that part of the health care law optional for states in a ruling last June. Supportersofthe law worried that the opposition, driven by Republican governors, could undermine the entire health care overhaul by shrinking the pool of Americans who would gain coverage. But six Republican governors have announced they are planning to join the program, i ncluding M i c higan's R i ck Snyder and Ohio's John Kasich last week. Jan Brewer of Arizona announced her support in mid-January. T his extraordinary t u r n around suggests the lure of federal dollars could halt GOP obstruction of the health care overhaul. Twenty-two states and the District of C olumbia are now on board, and 17 others are deliberating. The remaining 11, all with Republican governors, have said no — but observers believe the recentdecisions could change some minds. "It's a tipping point," Bill Pierce,a former Health and Human Services official under George W. Bush, said. "You've now got a real conservative state, a battleground state and a blue state all signed up. If you're a Republican governor thinking about this, you fit into one of those categories." The Medicaid expansion is a critical piece of the Affordable Care Act, Obama's signature policy accomplishment. Half of the 30 million Americans expected to gain health insurance will do so by moving onto Medicaid, beginning Jan. l. Since the court's decision, hospitals and o t her h ealth care providers have lobbied g overnors a g gressively t o agree to expand their Medicaid programs. The providers had accepted billions of dollars in cuts to health care reimbursements because they thought they would gain millions of newly insured patients through Medicaid. They have teamed up with localchambers of commerce and smallbusinesses to argue that states could net a windfall of federal dollars with little investment of their own, because the law guaranteed that virtually all of the newcomers to Medicaid would be covered with federal money. Governors have become increasingly worried about getting their fair share: If they do not extend Medicaid, their federal tax dollars will still foot the bill for expansions in other states. The Obama administration has also gone out of its way to reassure governors that
"Thelogjam has broken. When you have a
governor like Kasich (in Ohio) getting to yes, you have a critical mass." — Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, a health advocacy group that supports Obamacare
Medicaid grows Medicaid rolls grew more than 70 percent between 2000 and 2011, the most recent year for which information is available.
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sive argument. Their ongoing partnership on this is highly valued." Rather than having to convince the governor,Obamacare supporters were asked to focus their efforts on convincing businesses and legislators. "The governor's office said that, 'If this is going to happen, I need to see that I'm not go-
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© 2013 MCT
17 million Americans would be covered by 2022. If a state does not expand Medicaid, residents with incomes above the poverty line could access federal subsidies to purchase a private health plan. Those who earn less would not have access to the health coverage expansion. "The logjam has broken," said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, a health advocacy group that supports the law. "When you have a governor like Kasich getting to yes, you have a critical mass." Pollack's group will soon
launch a $1 million campaign targeting about a dozen states still on the fence about the Medicaid provision. Families USA will also release data on the economic effect it would have in each state, detailingthe additional health care jobs it could generate. "The business standpoint will be compelling to Republican governors who are otherwise critical of the law," Pollack said. The ACA initially required all states to expand Medicaid coverage to low-income Americans, which would grow the program's enrollment from 32 million to 49 million. It would cost the federal government $795 billion in the course of a
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Notes:Charts use and cost data for fiscal year 2009; enrollment includes total in the program at anypo>ntduring the year. Totals may not add to 100 percent due to rounding. Source: Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured
upcoming budget reductions will not derail the program. " Medicaid cut s f o r t h i s president are not on the table," White Housesenior economic adviser Gene Sperling told a conference of health advocates last week. Any health law p r ogram remains a tough sell among conservatives and could endanger governors seeking reelectionas soon as next year. Most Republican governors, including Brewer and Kasich, have refused to set up health insurance marketplaces,another part of the ACA meant to extend coverage to the uninsured.But because of their positions on M edicaid, The Wall Street Journal's editorial board recentlydescribedthose two governors as "Obamacare Flippers" who accepted "Mr. Obama's Medicaid bribe." "This is going to be a serious problem for them if they want to seek higher office," said Michael Cannon, the health policy director at the libertarian Cato Institute. "It doesn't matter if they say 'I don't consider this Obamacare.' Their base does, and their base really dislikes this law." The Medicaidexpansionwill cover Americans below 133 percent of the federal poverty line — $11,170 for an individual — in 2014. Currently, many of these people have no coverage at all. If all states were to participate in the Medicaid expansion, the Congressional Budget Office estimates an additional
lobbying campaign aimed at
care law. She will soon crisscross the state on a publicity blitz, holding news conferences at local hospitals to rally support for the decision. Not all GOP governors are sold; 10 have said they will not move forward on the program. But health advocates still believe that, with more of their colleagues enlisting, they could have a shot at changing their minds. "There are key constituency groups close to Republican governors who are making a very compellingbusiness case that's hard to ignore," Pollack sard.
got going, it became a persua-
Parsing theprogram Who uses Medicaid
A rizona's h o spitals v o l unteered to pay a new tax to finance the state's Medicaid expansion, which would give the state access to $1.6 billion more in federal funds. Arizona's governor became worried about passing up the M edicaid e x pansion w h en she saw that nearly all of her neighboring states — including California, Colorado, New Mexico and Nevada — were opting into the program. Since announcing her decision in January, Brewer has had conference calls with other governors explaining her state's approach to the health
making a key portion of the health overhaul morepalatable to businesses and legislators. "We knew for the extension to even be a possibility, there needed to be a better understanding of it," Kasich communications director Scott Milburn said. "That case needed to be made by stakeholders on the front lines. Once they
Division of costs
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porters of the law off-guard, the Supreme Court ruled that the mandatory Medicaid expansion was an overreach of federal power. It lets states choose whether to participate — and left Republican governors balancing an influx of federal dollars against political fallout. In Ohio, K a sich's office worked shoulder to shoulder with O b a macare s u pporters and opponents, crafting a
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islature.' So it was very clear what we had to do," said Cathy Levine, executive director of the Universal Health Care Action Network, which supports the health care law. Levine recalls her g roup workingonaneconomicanalysis of the Medicaid expansion, one that would eventually be published in conjunction with the Health Policy I n stitute of Ohio. In that process, she was in regular contact with the governor's office, sharing different budget assumptions, to ensure they would all land near the same place. Hospitals have been espe-
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cially aggressive in pushing for the larger Medicaid program, since increasing the insurance coverage will eliminate much ofthe uncompensated care that they provide.
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they may need to take courses to catch up and graduate from Continued from A1 high school on schedule. "When you meet with famiBut it's not a separate system apart from schools. lies and students, there's a "It's not a st a n d-alone thousand reasons," Mikalson school," said Shay Mikalson, sard. executive director of curriculum and instructional technol- Redmond ogy for Bend-La Pine Schools. Redmond Profi c i ency "It's just kind of an extension." Academy last month started Ofthe studentsparticipating, an online program through it runs the gamut from a stu- Edmentum, an o n l ine c urdent taking one online course riculum company based in and the remaining courses in a Minneapolis. traditional classroom, to a fullIts uses are twofold. For time load of online classes. The one, it i ncludes a program program, calledBend-La Pine that allows students to put a Schools Online, is unique in personalized learning plan in the sense that students aren't place with goals and a specific forced to choose between on- timeline. The students can use line courses and attending that program to stay on track school, Mikalson said. as they complete their school So far, the numbers show work, said Jon Bullock, directhat students are opting for tor of RPA. online instruction as a suppleAlso, students can take onment to the classroom, not a line courses — taught by Orreplacement. Of the 1,100-plus egon certified teachers — and students participating, only move at their own pace, Bullabout 230 are taking online ock said. courses exclusively. A student could take all Students can go with ononline courses and graduate line courses for a multitude of from RPA, but that's not the reasons. They can be home- goal. RPA encourages students schooled students supplement- to pursue their interests and ing their other lessons. They go so far as to create a course may travel frequently w i th based on their strengths and parents with mobile jobs. Or interests.
As a result, a student taking online courses could continue to do that as well, but the course work would be in person. For example, a student could intern with an accountant and get high school credit, while taking the online courses. By offering that combination, Bullock s aid, "That's what makes our virtual academy unique. You can do it in a hybrid way."
Crook County Last year, the Crook County School District authorized Insight Charter School. As part of the agreement between the charterschool and school district, high school students not enrolled in Insight receive access to supplemental online courses. Now in its first year, the K-12 school's enrollment has grown to 440 students, said Dennis Kostelecky, head ofschools for Insight. Of that number, just eight are s t udents w i t hi n t he school district. The other 432 students, he said, are from throughout Oregon. "It actually is more than we anticipated," Kostelecky said. — Reporter: 541-977-7185, bbotkinC<bendbuiietin.com
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
MALYSIS: MEDIA ETHICS
President
Pu is ac e materia ornot? By Paul Farhi The Washington Post
By the old rules of journalism, George W. Bush's private emails to hi s f a mily m i ght never have been published or broadcast, certainly not without his permission. Most news o rganizations w o ul d h a v e thought twice about publishing personal messages that were, in essence, stolen goods. But that was then. The former president's private communications and photos sent to family members went far and wide over the Internet on Friday after they were published by a website. The Smoking Gun, which specializes in unearthing material about criminal and legal matters, disclosed the Bush family'spersonal correspondence in a story based on material it said it received from a hacker identified only as "Guccifer." A predictable and nearinstant tidal wave ensued, with the story and variations on it being linked, tweeted and otherwise disseminated quickly. A predictable question might follow: Are there any j ournalistic standards left? From TMZ's revelations about celebrities behaving badly to high school students' test scores
popping up on a local online forum, the titillating, the taboo and the personal all seem to be fair game for someone. It's not just that information wants to be free — as the old formulation had it — nowadays, it can't help not being that way. The Smoking Gun's story is ostensibly a report on the breach of electronic security surrounding the Bush family. The site reported that the hacked material included confidential lists of home addresses, cellphone numbers and emails for "dozens" of Bush family members, including both former presidents. It did not disclose the details of the lists. But the site, founded in 1997 and owned by Time Warner, went further than merely describing how deeply the hacker had penetrated the family's personal accounts. T he Smoking Gu n p u b lished a p p arently p r i v ate Bush family photos from the hacker's cache, such as a shot of George H.W. Bush sitting up in his hospital bed in December (the photo was taken down a few hours after it appeared). It also quoted from emails that revealeddeep family concerns about the elder Bush's health, including one from George W. Bush seeking input from his relatives for a eulogy to his father. Further, it posted images of paintings made by the younger Bush that he had sent to his sister Dorothy, including paintings of a man showering and one in a bathtub. "We certainly thought hard about using some of the stuff," said William B astone, the site's editor and co-founder, in an exchange of emails Friday. "The nature of the hack was so extensive and extraordinary — considering that two presi-
The Associated Press file photo
George W. Bush walks with his father, George H.W. Bush, in 2008. More recent — and private — photos have been published or broadcast alongside hacked messages from the Bushes' email accounts. The Secret Service is investigating the breach, which appeared to yield little more than a few snapshots and some family discussions. But the incident illustrates how easily hackers can pry into even the lives of one of the nation's most closely guarded political clans. dents had their emails illegally f o r everyone." accessed — that we clearly In D e c ember, an anonymous thought it was newsworthy. i n d i vidual somehow obtained We decided to use a tiny por- a n d p o sted the final grades tion of the material that was o f t h ousands of high school illustrative of the nature of the s t udents in Fairfax County, various incursions and their V a . The 2,100-page document seriousness." appeared on Fairfax UnderBut ethics experts took a gr o u nd, afreewheelingonline dimmer view. Even prominent f o r u m that also disclosed the people "enjoy some right of na m e s of students allegedly privacy," said Richard Wald, a i n v olved in making videos of professoratColumbiaUniver- t h e mselves having sex with sity's school of journalism and several girls. The site removed the former presidentof NBC the grade document after News. "If the hack Fairfax school ofhad revealed malficials obtained an , "Media ethiCS injunction. efaction of a great
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civility." for posting mug ~ The Washington shots of a r rested Post reported the $tephen celebrities, it also story but disPensed '+ard Center for does s u b stantial with its usual PracJournalism Ethics investigative work. t ice of l i n king t o It uses government the original article and legal sources, online and did not reprint the s u ch as court documents and hackedphotos.Whilethehack F r e edom of Information Act is newsworthy, Executive Edi- r e q uests, to obtain exclusive tor Martin Baron said, "I don't m a t erial about criminal and see a reason to display those c i v i l p roceedings. photos. This is all private to In add i t iontotheBushstory, the Bush family. There are no t h e site this week posted court public policy implications here d o cuments filed in criminal acwhatsoever." tionsagainst hackers accused Baron drew a d i stinction o f p r y ing into the email acbetween publishing i m por c o u nts of suchfigures as Mila tant documents taken without K u n is, Miley Cyrus, Scarlett authorization — such as the J o h ansson and Sarah Palin. Pentagon Papers andthe WikiRea c hed by email, former Leaks cables — and personal F l o r ida Gov. Jeb Bush called materials taken from a private t h e hacking "outrageous." source. The former reveal the The r est of the family stayed c onduct of g overnment acq u i e t. "There's a c r i m inal tions, he said, while the latter i n v estigation and, a s s uch, do not. there's nothing else we can The New York Times ap- s a y," said Ji m M c Grath, a peared to ignore the story al- s p o kesman for George H.W. together for much of Friday. Its B u sh in Houston. o nly mention of it was an arts The Sec r e t S e r v ice i s blog entry late in the day as- i n v estigating. sessing George W. Bush's skills Gucc i fer could be outside as a painter. Other outlets psy- t h e U.S., making things more choanalyzedhisartwork, too. co m p licated for authorities in Such ethical constructs are p u r suit, said Tyler Moore, an under siege in an age in which a s sistant professor of computvirtually any individual can e r s cience at Southern Methpublish or b r oadcast infor- o d i s t UniversityinDallas.. "Of all the famous people to mation, said Stephen Ward, director of the Center for Jour- p i c k on," he added, "I wouldn't nalism Ethics at the University p i c k on someone who has an of Wisconsin at Madison. entire law enforcement branch "I've said before that media dedicated to protecting them." ethics aren't just for the media — The Associated Press anymore," he said. "They're contributed to this report.
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Obama "believed the cartoon version of the Bush critique so that Bush wasn't just trying to make tough calls how to protect America in conditions of uncertainty, Bush actually was trying to grab power for nefarious purposes." O thers said t h a t o v e rsimplified the situation and ignored modifications that Obama had enacted. "On almost every m easure," said Geoffrey Stone, a University of Chicago law p rofessor wh o o n c e w a s Obama's boss, "Obama has been more careful,more restrained and more respectful of individual liberties than President Bush was. "On the other hand," Stone added, "at least in his use of drones, President Obama has legitimately opened himself up to criticism for striking the wrong balance" between civil liberties and national security. P articularly striking h a s been thesecret memo authorizing the targeted killing of U.S. citizens deemed terrorists under certaincircumstances without judicial r eview, a memothatbroughtbackmemories of those in which John Yoo, a Justice Department official under Bush, declared harsh interrogation legal. That broad assertion of power, even with limits described b y a d m i nistration officials, combined with the initial White House refusal to releaseeven a sanitized summary of the memo touched o ff protests from left a n d right. Some called Obama a hypocrite. But Yoo himself saw it differently, arguing in The Wall Street Journal that the memo, whatever the surface similarities to his own, betrayed a flawed vision because it presented the issue in law e nforcement terms ratherthan as an exercise of war powers. Michael Hayden, the CIA director under Bush, said that if Obama learns one thing from experience it should be that controversial programs require public support to be sustained. "Err on the side of being open, at least with Congress," he said. "Otherwise you're going to find yourself in a p o l itically v ulnerable position."
First and secondterms
The dissonance is due in part to the fact that Obama ran in 2008 against Bush's first-term policies but, after winning, i n herited B ush's second-term policies. By the time Bush left office, he had shaved off some of the more controversialedges of hiscounterterrorismprogram, both becauseofpressure from Congress and the courts and because he wanted to leave behind policies that would endure. He had closed the secret CIA prisons, obtained predecessor's aggressive ap- congressional approval for proach in one area to avoid warrantless surveillance and Bush's even more aggres- military commissions, and sive approach in others. By worked to close the prison at emphasizing drone strikes, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Obama need not bother with So while Obama banned the tricky issues of detention harsh i n t errogation t e chand interrogation because niques, he preserved much terrorists tracked down on of what he i nherited with his watch are generally incin- some additional safeguards, erated from the sky, not cap- expanded Bush's drone camtured and questioned. By dis- paign and kept on veterans pensing with concerns about of the anti-terrorism wars due process, he avoids a more like Brennan. Some efforts traditional war that he fears at change were thwarted, like could lead to U.S. boots on his vow to close Guantanamo the ground. and to try Sept. 11 plotters in "I'd argue the shift to more a civilian court. "These are the same issues targeted action against (alwe've been grappling with for Qaida) has been a hallmark of Obama's approach against yearsthat are uncomfortable terrorism,whereas Iraq was given our legal structures and Bush's signature decision in the nature of the threat, but his global war on terror," said the Obama team is addressBenjamin Rhodes, a deputy ingtheseissues the same way national security adviser to we did," said Juan Carlos ZaObama. The c o nfirmation rate, who was Bush's deputy hearing fo r C I A di r e ctor national security adviser for nominee John Brennan high- combating terrorism. lighted the convoluted politics Peter Feaver, a Duke Univerof terrorism. Conservatives sity professor andformer Bush complained that if Bush had national security aide, said
at the
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Continued from A1 That secret document authorizes presidential action unfettered by outside forces, just as in the Bush years. At the same time, a separate hearing in Congress revealed how far Obama has gone to avoid what he sees as Bush's central mistake. Obama has already pointed to ways he has tried to exorcise what he sees as the excesses of the last administration. Last week, testimony indicated that the presidenthad overruled his secretaries of state and defense and his military commanders when they advised arming rebels in Syria. With troops only recently home fro m I r aq , O b ama made clear that he was so intent on staying out of another war against a Middle East tyrant that he did not want to be involved even by proxy, especially if the proxies might be questionable. C ritics on t h e l ef t s a w abuse of power, and critics on the right saw passivity. The confluence of these debates suggests the ways Obama is willing to emulate Bush and the ways he is not. In effect, Obama relies on his
done what Obama has done, he would have been eviscerated by liberals and the news media. But p erhaps more than ever before in Obama's tenure, liberals voiced sust ained grievance over t h e president's choices. "That memo coming out, I think, was a wake-up call," said C h ristopher A n d ers, senior legislative counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union. "These last few days, it was like being back in the Bush days." "It's causing a lot of cognitive dissonance for a lot of people," he added. "It's not the President Obama they thought they knew."
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Spending Continued from A1 In some areas, they did bring significant cutbacks in f e deral spending. Grants for clean water dried up. Cities got less money for affordable housing. But the bill also turned out to be an epic kind of Washington illusion. It was stuffed with gimmicks that made the cuts seem far bigger — and the politicians far bolder — than they actually were. In the real world, in fact, many of their "cuts" cut nothing at all. The Transportation D epartment got c r edit f o r "cutting" a $280 million tunnelthat had already been canceled six months earlier. It also "cut" a $375,000 road project thathad been created by a legislative typo, on a road that did not exist. At the Census Bureau, officials also got credit for a whop-
from its own budget to build the Capitol Visitor Center. That changed nothing. The center was already built.
The16 largest cuts To sketch the bill's biggest impacts, The Washington Post focused on the 16 largest individual cuts. Each, in theory, sliced at least $500 million from the federalbudget. Together, they accounted for $26.1 billion, two-thirds of the total. In four of those cases, the real-world impact was difficult to measure. The Department of Homeland Security declined to comment about a $557 million reduction. The Department of State, the Department of Agriculture and the Federal Emergency Man-
agement Agency — whose
cuts totaled $1.9 billion — did not return repeated calls. Among the other 12 cases, therewere atleastseven where ping $6 billion cut, simply for the cuts caused only minimal obeying the calendar. They real-world disruptions or none promised not to hold the expen- at all. sive 2010 census again in 2011. Often, this was made posToday, an examination of sible by a little act of Washing12 of the largest cuts shows ton magic. Agencies got credit that, thanks in part to these for killing what was, in reality, gimmicks, federal agencies already dead. absorbed $23 billion in reducAt the Census Bureau, for tions without losing a single instance, officials had already employee. said they didn't need the more "Many of the cuts we put in than $6 billion they had spent were smoke and mirrors," said the year before.That money Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C., a had paid for the once-a-decade hard-line conservative now in 2010 census. his second term. "That's the But to Congress, that was lesson from April 2011: that still a cut for 2011. The budget when Washington says it cuts bill formally revoked the "budspending, it doesn't mean the get authority" needed to spend same thing that normal people the $6 billion that the Census mean." Bureau didn't want. On paper, it looked like a huge reduction. Sequester: the 'real' cut But, at the Census Bureau, no Now the f ailures of t h at employees were laidoff. No 2011 bill have come back to projects were finished late. haunt the leaders who crafted At the Transportation Deit. Disillusionment with that partment,Congress canceled bill has persuaded many con- $630 million in "orphan earservatives to reject a line-by- marks." These were the wanline, program-by-program ap- dering ghosts of the highway proach to cutting the budget. budget: pots of m o ney asI nstead, many h ave e m signedforspecific road projbracedthe sequester,a looming ects, which were still sitting $85 billion across-the-board unspent years and years later. cut set to take effect March 1. Often, this money seemed Obama and GOP leaders have unlikelyto ever be spent. Many said they don't like the idea: the projects had been canceled.In sequester is a "dumb cut," in one case, the funds were earWashington parlance, which marked for a road that did not would cut the government's even exist. best ideas along with its worst In 1998, Congress had earwithout regard to merit. marked $375,000 to upgrade But at least, conservatives "State Road 31" in Columbus, say, you can trust that this one Ind. But there is no State Road is for real. 31. It was a mistake. So the "There has been a shift in re- money sat. "That was funding solve. They have been burned that we just couldn't otherwise in these fictional cuts. And so use," said Will Wingfield of the sequester is like real cuts," the Indiana Department of said Chris Chocola, a former Transportation. congressman who now heads In the 2011budget deal, Conthe Club for Growth, a conser- gress took that money back. In vative advocacy group. "So I Indiana, Wingfield said, there think that there is a willing- was no noticeable difference. ness to say, 'We've really got The state was already spendto cut stuff, and (the cuts) have ing its own money to fix the got to be real." real-life road, U.S. Route 31, that Congress was supposed The big budget battles to help. The April 2011 budget cuts Democratic and Republican ended thefirst bigbattle of Con- aides, however, defended this gress's current era. That spring, process in recent interviews. a new crop of House conserva- They argued that, under certives — elected with tea party tain conditions, this "orphan" support — w a s d emanding money could still have been large budget cuts. The legisla- spent by states or the federal tors would risk a government government. To cut it was to shutdown to get them. eliminate that possibility. "People tended to say, 'Oh, But in both parties, leaders resisted the idea of a meat-ax these will never be used again.' cut to government. There was But while cuts in orphan eara recession going, after all. marks were sitting on the Hill "Giventheeconomic and emawaiting enactment, cities and ployment crisis, we tried to lim- States were spending the monit cuts that would cause major ey,because they feared it was furloughs or layoffs that would going to go away. It was real put people out of work," Rog- money," Robert Gordon, an ers said in a written statement official at the administration's released this week. Rogers de- Office of M anagement and clined to be interviewed on the Budget, said in a statement record, but his statement went sent by email. on to say that the bill's "cuts are Anyway, he said, these are real, and every dollar we did the rules Washington has alnot provide is a dollar saved for ways played by. "Budget authority is the authe American taxpayer." The leaders found a solu- thority to spend," Gordon said. "You cut budget authority, you tion, according to aides on both sides. In among the real cut the ability to spend." cuts, they would mix in others But this approach led, in that looked huge on paper but some cases, t o s i t u ations would turn out small in real where large "cuts" on paper life. translated into relatively small "The administration offered, changes in reality. and the Republican leadership accepted, cuts in stores Pentagon 'cuts' of funding that ... were unA t the Pentagon, for i n likely to be used in the future," stance, the April 2011 bill resaid Richard Kogan, a former quired a whopping $6.2 billion Obama administration official cut to military construction. who is now at the nonpartisan But through a combination of Center on Budget and Policy congressionally installed gimPriorities. "This was conscious micks and military ingenuity, on both sides." the Pentagon escaped nearly The final deal itself ran to unscathed. 176 pages and included more It happened like this: First, than 250 individual reductions. the Pentagon "cut" $5 billion Some of them certainly caused by doing nothing at all. This real-life sacrifice: one cut to the was money that had b een National Oceanic and Atmo- needed theyear before to help spheric Administration helped close out the Base Relocadelay a crucial weather-satel- tion and Closure process. The lite program, according to the Pentagon had already said it Obama administration. wouldn't need to spend that But in other cases, sacrifice much money in 2011. was minimal. Congress, for It didn't. That counted as a instance, "cut" $14.6 million $5 billion "cut."
"There has been a shiftin resolve. (Conservatives) have been burned in these fictional cuts. And so the sequester is like real cuts." — Chris Chocola, head of the conservative Club for Growth Beyond that, defense officials found 94 existing projects where bids had already come in lower than expected. They added up those savings: $397 million. Then they looked for the bureaucratic dead: projects that had already been nixed for unrelated reasons. There was a sniper range in Louisiana. A headquarters in Djibouti. Air base upgrades in Guam. That was $568 million more. On and on it went, as Pentagon officials filled out their allotted cut painlessly. In the end, there was just one instance where thePentagon"lost scope" purely as a result of the landmark budget cuts. Meaning: where the military had to cut something it actually wanted to keep. That was a project at a base in Qatar — a medical-administration building and two warehouses. Total real-world savings: $25.2 million. Just 0.4 percent of the total
that Congress counted as "cut"
on paper.
Very real cuts Not all the bill's cuts were illusory, however. The Post's analysis found five large cuts that turned out to be very real. None of them actually caused an agency in Washington to shed federal personnel. Instead, they reduced the money that passed through those agencies to state and local projects. There was a $997 million decrease in funding for Environmental Protection Agency programs to loan out for water-restoration projects. The result, EPA officials estimated, was that 210 fewer projects received funding. An additional $942 million was cut from community development funds, shared by 1,200 cities and towns around the country. In Boston, for instance, that translated into a
funding cut of $3.7 million from the year before. The money is used, in part, to fix up dilapidated homes. On average, the city needs $27,000 to fix up a home so it's ready for a tenant in need. "We just do less volume," said Sheila Dillon with the city of Boston. "It's taking us longer to fund good affordable hous-
ing projects." One of the bill's sharpest impacts was felt in Calexico, Calif.For years, people there have complained that the local border crossing cannot handle enough cars: Lines back up for hours on the Mexican side, which provides60 percent of Calexico's retail shoppers. To fix that problem, the U.S. General Services Administration had proposed building a new crossing. But after the 2011 cuts, the GSA "zeroed out" the
$84 million project.
Cutting by percentage Even though the April 2011 bill made these real reductions, its legacy has been defined by its illusions. The impressivesounding "cuts" added in to placate hard-charging conser-
A7
vatives have — upon further review — served to alienate them instead. Since then, in fact, Congress has tended to eschew the lineby-line approach that guided the 2011 cuts. Instead, it has simply slashed a percentage off the top of agency budgets. The deal that ended the debt-ceiling debate cut $25 billion this way. Now Washington is facing the sequester, which would cut $85 billion starting March 1. The administration has sought to persuade Republicans to cancel it or replace it with a
package of spending cuts and tax increases. That, at times, has made for an awkward argument. Two years later, it appears that some of the budget cuts from April 2011 turned out to be less painful than originally believed. But the White House says that can't happen again. This time, it says, the cuts would be very real and very painful. "Reductions that were possible in 2011 are not possible in 2013," Gordon said. "The resources that could be cut, they've been cut. The lowhanging fruit is gone."
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A8 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
TODAY'S READ: ACADEMICS AND POLITICS
German ascinationwith egrees an titles claims atest victim By Nicholas Kulish and Chris Cottrell
ence to principle and a knowit-all streak. »I just think that New Yorh Times News Service many Germans have a police BERLIN — For 32 years, the gene in their genetic makeup," German education minister's Rieble said. 351-page dissertation sat on a The University of Heidelberg shelf at Heinrich Heine Univer- revoked the doctorate of Silvasity in Duesseldorf gathering na Koch-Mehrin, former vice dust while its author pursued a president of the European Parsuccessful political career that liament and a leading member carried her to the highest cir- of Germany's Free Democratic cles of German government. Party, in 2011, and she is still The academic work was a fighting the charges in court. time bomb, however, and it In many countries, busy proexploded last year when an fessionals with little interest in anonymous blogger published tenure-track positions at unia catalogof passages suspect- versities do not tend to bother ed of having been lifted from other p u blications w i t hout proper attribution. The university revoked the doctorate of the minister, professor Annette Schavan, on Tuesday, and on Saturday she was forcedto resign her Cabinet post. In an emotional news conf erence, Schavan said s h e would sue to win back the doctorate, but in the meantime she would resign for the greater good. "First the country, then the party and then yourself," she said. Standing beside her, hancellor Angela Merkel, her friend and confidante, said she accepted Schavan's resignation "only with a very heavy heart," but t h a t p o l itically there was no alternative. Small-bore stuff, m a ybe. Except it was the second time a minister had quit the Merkel government over plagiarism in less than two years. Coming after Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg was forcedto step down as defense minister over plagiarism charges in 2011, Schavan's deja-vu scandal can only hurt Merkel (who has adoctorate herself)ahead of September'sparliamentary election. Andthetwoministers are far from the only German officials to have recently had theirpostgraduate degrees revoked amid accusations of academic dishonesty, prompting national soul-searching about what the cases reveal about the German character. •
writing dissertations. In Germany, academic titles provide an ego boost that lures even businesspeopleto pursue them. Professor Debora WeberWulff, a plagiarism expert at the University of Applied Sciences in Berlin and an active participant in VroniPlag, suggested getting rid of superfluous doctoral titles outside of academia. »A doctor only has meaning at a university or in academia," she told German television. "It has no business on political placards." But she is originally from
people instantly think that I'm a medicine man when they read my name," he said. Even within Germany the practicediffers by region, he said, with those in the conservative south insisting on titles more than those in northern cities like H amburg. There are other divides, with many members of the counterculture generation of 1968 rejecting titles, though many have come to enjoy them as they have grown older. Schavan, 57, whose parliamentary district is in the south-
Unheard of in America It can be a shock to Americ ans unfamiliar w i t h t h e practice,as Richter has experienced in New York. "Here
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western state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, was granted her doctorate in 1980. The accusations against her surfaced in 2012 on a bare-bones, anonymous website. But they were particularly significant because she led the federal Ministry of Education and Research. uA health minister doesn't need to be a medical doctor, but if he is one, then he can't have committed malpractice," Rieble said. "An education minister doesn't need to have a Ph.D., but if he does, then his dissertation cannot be plagiarized."
•
Doctorates for all Germans place a greater premium on doctorates than Americans do as marks of distinction and erudition. According to the website Research in Germany, about 25,000 Germans earn doctorates each year, the most in Europe and about twice the per capita rate of the United States. Many Germans believe the scandals are rooted in their abiding lust and respect for academic accolades, including the use of "Prof." before uDr." and occasionally uDr. Dr." for those with two doctoral degrees. Professor Volker Rieble, a law professor at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, calls this obsession "title arousal." uln other countries people aren't as vain about their titles," he said. "With this obsession for titles, of course, comes title envy." A surprising number of doctors of nonmedical subjects like literature and sociology put uDr." on their mailboxes and telephone-directory listings. The website of the German parliament, the Bundestag, shows that 125 of 622 people elected to the current parliament (including Schavan and then-Dr. Guttenberg) had doctorates when sworn in. Merkel appointed professor Johanna Wanka, the state minister of science and culture in Lower Saxony, to take over Schavan's position. W anka got her doctorate in 1980, the same year as Schavan. The finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, is a doctor of law. The vice chancellor, Philipp Roesler, is an ophthalmologist — and thus the only one most Americans would call "doctor."
Pennsylvania. Here the attitudes are deeply ingrained, and few think habits will change anytime soon. "It is a proof that you can handleacademic stuff and that you can keep on task for quite a while," Peter Richter, a correspondent in New York for the newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung, who holds a doctorate, said in an email.
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For the p lagiarism scalp hunters, the a bundance of titles provides what in military circles is known as a targetrich environment, and digging up academic deception by politicians has become an unlikely political blood sport. There is even a collaborative, wiki-style platform where people can anonymously inspect academic texts, known as VroniPlag. Here in the homeland of schadenfreude, the zeal for unmasking academic frauds also reflects certain Teutonic traits, including a rigid adher-
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Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
O w w w.bendbulletin.com/local
REDMOND
LILY RAFF
McCAULOU t
Bighorn sheep don't come cheap regon huntinglicense: $29.50. Entry in state lottery for a big-
horn sheep tag: $8. A tag, for the lucky few who win the right to buy one: $122.50. Wrapping one's hands around the horns of a wild sheep: Priceless. Well, almost. Kevin Small, of Bakersfield, Calif., bypassed the lottery last weekend by paying $135,000 — about the median price of a home in Redmond — for a tag at an auction in Reno, Nev. An out-of-state hunting license, worth $140.50, was included. When the gavel hit the block, Small not only won the right to hunt
BRIEFING
annin OWntown ouSin By Leslie Pugmire Hole It takes more than good traffic flow and choice dining and shopping to create a healthy downtown, Redmond city officials and staff know. It takes a variety of people living there. And while Redmond might not be ready for more downtown housing today, the city thinks the time will come, and it wants to
Downtown Urban Renewal Advisory Commission will be considering the matter and hearing public comment. "We want to make sure we're getting a good crosssection of opinions," said Jon Williams, Redmond's economicdevelopment project manager. In addition to the survey on the city website, which has drawn limited responses during its
be ready. A survey gaug-
early days online, a phone
ing residents' present and future housing needs has been created, and the city's
survey was commissioned with agoal of250 responses, he said.
The Bulletin
The city also formed an advisory group of local real estate agents, housing agency officials and downtown supporters to review the information as it is compiled. "We want them to poke holes in everything, really determine we're getting a good product," said Williams. The survey asks residents to anticipate their near and distant future housing needs: Would they consider living downtown'? If so, what parts of downtown? See Downtown /B3
Ogden hunted bighorn sheep on Pilot Butte. As settlers moved here, they brought livestock with them. Domesticsheep carried parasites and diseases that infected wild ones. Grazing was poorly regulated, so domestic animals degraded some of the bighorns' habitat, too. And settlers over-hunted the wild sheep. These factors combined to extirpate California bighorns from Oregon by 1915, and Rocky Mountain bighorns by 1945. Beginning in the late 1940s, bighorn sheep were reintroduced. Today, Oregon is home to about 800 Rocky Mountain sheep and 3,500 California sheep. "There's not very many rock piles out there that have the potential to support a sheep herd where we haven't put sheep in the last few years," said Craig Foster, a wildlife biologist for ODFW in Lakeview. In 1985, the state decided to auction off one tag per year to fund the sheep management program. The state still issues relatively affordable tags, by lottery. But the odds of drawing one of last year's 97 tags were about one in 200, for example. Foster said he has put in for a tag every year since 1982, and has yet to draw one. "It's the only lottery I play," he said. Still, why pay six figures? Small did not return phone calls. But Foster said that some well-heeled hunters pursue a "grand slam:" bagging one of each of North America's foursub-species ofbighorn sheep. As home to two of the four, Oregon is an especially attractive destination. And Foster adds that the populations in Oregon are managed so that every lucky hunter who draws a once-in-a-lifetime tag has a chance at a trophy ram. When last weekend's auction opened, Foster said he felt optimistic. The Oregontag had sold for $130,000 in both 2006 and 2011, according to Michelle Dennehy, a spokeswoman for ODFW. Foster said that items seemed tobe selling for"above-average prices" that night. The Oregon tag was one of the last items to go to bid, so it was almost 11 p.m. by the time it was offered for a starting price of $100,000. Nobody bid. "My guts were churning," Foster said. "As a sheep biologist, I knew that what we can do for bighorns in Oregon foratleastthe next year was riding on that (auction) floor." The auctioneer lowered the price to $50,000. Someone raised a paddle and the bidding took off. Four or five competing bidders quickly pushed the price past $110,000. At the same event, a similar Montana tag sold for $480,000. — Lily Raff McCaulou isa columnist for TheBulletin. 541-617-7836, fraff@bendbufletin.com
A 28-year-old woman from Camas,Wash.,
If you go
was injured Saturday af-
What:Downtown Urban
crash southeast of Mt. Bachelor.
ternoon in a snowmobile
Renewal Advisory Committee When:5 to 7:30 p.m.
Razlynn Cavazoswas riding on Snowmobile Trail 4 near Forest Ser-
Monday Where: Redmond City Hall,
716 S.W.EvergreenAve., Conference RoomA
vice Road 45whenshe went off the trail and struck a tree. Members
of her group called for
Gentact:Jon Williams, 541-923-7761, jon.
help at 1:19 p.m., and
williams©ci.redmond.or.us
law enforcement personnel arrived on the
Take the survey at www.
scene within 20 minutes.
ci.redmond.or.us
Cavazos wasstabilized andtakenby snowmobile to a landing
area, where ahelicopter met her to transport her to St. Charles Bend. As
of Saturday afternoon, she was listed in serious condition.
House fire in southeast Bend
one bighorn sheep in Oregon between Aug. 14 and Nov. 21, he also single-handedly paid for most of the state's bighorn sheep programs for the next two years. The Wild Sheep Foundation, a nonprofit that sponsored the auction, will keep 10 percent of the price. The remaining $121,500 will fund bighorn sheep research and management in Oregon. There are two types of bighorn sheep native to Oregon. Historically, Rocky Mountain bighorns occupied the northeastern corner of the state, while California bighorns roamed the rest of Oregon's east side. Both species live in rugged, steep terrain. In the 1820s, explorer Peter Skene
Snowmobiier injured in crash
A fire at a rental home in southeast Bend Satur-
day morning wastraced to a faulty exhaust fan motor in the bathroom. At 10 a.m., Bend Fire Department units were called to 52 S.E. Taft
Avenue, just west of the Parkway and south of Southeast Wilson
Avenue. Crewsfound a
By Scott Hammers
fire in the attic upon their arrival, and cut a hole in the roof to extinguish the blaze. Initial investigation
The Bulletin
Rolling a Brazilian rainbow boa back and forth between his hands, Alex Curry soaked up the spectacle inside the Reptile Zone Saturday afternoon. Tortoises, some with balloons taped to their shell, roamed slowly through the corridors. Throngs pressedtheirnoses against glass to peer in at dozing, venomous lizards, and everywhere, small children wandered to and fro with fat pythons curled around their necks. "It's the ice cream" Curry said. "You tell people there will be snakes and ice cream, people will come." Today is the first day of the Chinese"Year ofthe Snake," but Saturday was the fifth anniversary for the Reptile Zone, Central Oregon's headquarters for all things cold-blooded. To mark the occasion, the shop on Greenwood Avenue threw a party for the community, inviting the public to get up close and personal with some of the world's most misunderstood creatures. Curry said reptile owners have a tendency to immerse themselves in the subject. Like him, many spend hours upon hours volunteering at the shop, studying the animals and conversing with their fellow enthusiasts. See Reptiles /B5
suggests the exhaust fan motor overheated and ignited the insula-
tion in the roof abovethe bathroom. Damages to the structure were estimated at $4,000. — From staff reports
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON
— The House of Representatives passed legislation Wednesday that pressures President Dbama toname the ways he would eliminate the deficit. The Require a PLAN Act would require the president to
send a budget for fiscal year 2014 to Congress, and if the estimates in that budget did not
produce ayear when the budget was bal-
anced, Dbamawould be required to submit more information detailing
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Nine-year-old Leja Colman, of Bend, holds Sunshine, a bearded dragon, during the Reptile Zone's anniversary party on Saturday in Bend. "I have two snakes at home, and I've been holding snakes since I was two," Leja said, explaining that she wasn't afraid to touch the reptiles.
how he would achieve a deficit-free budget in the future. See Week/B6
Another fire rips through Bend's downtown in 1 91 3 /
Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb. 9, 1913
Another fire visits town Property worth nearly $20,000 was destroyed and six places of business were wiped out by fire on the west side of Bond Street early last Friday morning. Three frame buildings w ere burned. All ofthem had been erected since the fire of Oct. 12, 1911, which swept over the same site
YESTERDAY and did $10,000 damage. The buildings burned last week were owned by Myers 8t Wilkey, G.W. Lorimer of Piqua, Ohio, and Carmody Bros. The places of business suffering as a result of the fire are as follows: Myers 8t Wilkey, saloon; Frank Dalton, saloon; E.T. Butts, pool room and bowling alley; Carmody Bros., pool, billiards and confectionery; R.D. George, barber shop and Lane Thomas, restaurant. The origin of the fire is not known. It was discovered shortly after 4 a.m. and had gained consider-
able headway before the firefighters could get to the scene. A large amount of goods, including stocks of whiskey and wines, was carried out of the doomed buildings and saved. As has been the case on numerous other occasions, there was, fortunately, an absence of wind, and this made it possible to save the adjoining buildings. Wenandy's livery stable received a scorching, and
being in danger, all livestock and vehicles were got out to a place of safety. The small building on the alley in therear ofthe burned structures was saved with difficulty. See Yesterday /B2
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/
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B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
E VENT TODAY CHILI COOK-OFF:Eatchili and watch competitors compete for the best recipe; proceeds benefit The Education Foundation for Bend-La Pine Schools; $10, $5 ages6-11, free ages 5 andyounger; 12:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-355-5660 or education.foundation©bend.k12. OI'.Us.
OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS: Fiddle music and dancing; donations accepted; 1-3:30 p.m.; VFWHall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-647-4789. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. KNOW CLUE:CLUEING IN TO YOUR INTUITION:Learn an exerciseto develop the practical skill of intuition from Karen GraceKassy; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SECONDSUNDAY:Lily Raff McCaulou reads from a selection of her work, followed by an openmic; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-3121032 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. SPAGHETTI FEED: Proceeds will send World War II veterans to Washington, D.C; $10; 4 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-0118.
Yesterday Continued from B1 At one time it was feared that the f ir e w ould spread to the ne w F i rst N a tional Bank building and give it a scorching. The owners of the burned b uildings w il l n o t p u t u p frame structuresagain, they d eclare. Myers & W il k e y, who own the lot on which the building was, will p robably rebuild of brick or stone as soon as the insurance is adjusted. Carmody Bros. have reopened the confectionery part of their business in the Baird building which they occupied previous to erecting their own building on leased ground. They are as yet undecided w hether t h ey w i l l rebuild. Myers & Wilkey and Dalton have reopened their bars in shacks on the alley in the rear of where they formerly were located. R.D. George is back at his old stand on Oregon Street, having saved part of his barber shop equipment.
John Steidl is back "I've seen a hundred cities since I left Bend and not one of them looks half so good to me as this little old burg." That was th e wa y J o hn Steidl talked when he struck town Sunday night after a five weeks absence, during which he had swung around through the Southwest, via Hot Springs, Ark., to his old Minnesota homes in B e midji and Alexander. Mr. Steidl says that this spring will see a record bunch of immigrants
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vvvvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
AL E N D A R SHAWN MULLINS:The folk-rock artist performs; $26 and $37.50 in advance, $31 and $42.50 day of show, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org.
Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. THE GHOST OFMICHAEL CLARK: The Colorado-based soul artist performs, with Cy Erickson; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. IRATION:The California-based alternative-reggae act performs, with Passafire and Pacific Dub; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 8:30 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. bendticket.com.
MONDAY CONVERSATIONSON BOOKS AND CULTURE:Readand discuss "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Color Blindness" by Michelle Alexander; followed by a discussion; free; noon to1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412.
TUESDAY "THE FUTURE OFFOOD": A screening of the 2004 documentary investigating thetruth behind unlabeled, patented and genetically engineered foods; followed by a discussion; free; 4:30-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-383-7786 or www.cocc.edu/. SHROVE TUESDAYCOMMUNITY PANCAKE SUPPER: Featuring pancakes, ham, eggs, applesauce and drinks; proceeds benefit the St. Andrew's Discretionary Fund for community outreach; donations accepted; 5-7 p.m.; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 807 E.First St., Prineville; 541-447-5813. FLYFISHING FILM TOUR: A screening of a film collection that showcases anglers; $15 plus fees; 7
come to Oregon, and that everywhere he went he found that people know about and are interested in this country.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb. 9, 1938
Hitler tightens grip on Germany A tightening of Nazi control in the economic field may follow the drastic shake-up in the army, air force, foreign office and diplomatic service, it was predicted in some quarters today. Strong hints that the process of "amalgamation of the a rmy and Nazi party" h ad not been completed, and that there wouldbe further moves were thrown out by Nazi party newspapers. It was announced officially today that seven army and six air force generals would retire Feb. 28. It was admitted semiofficially that the retirements were based on"differences of opinion." In full control of the entire fighting forces as chief of national defense, with the war minister and the army commander in chief eliminated, with a switch in foreign ministers and the recall of three key ambassadors, Hitler had effected what some foreign diplomatic quarters called "a bloodless June 30." But Nazis, while admitting that the shakeup had an atmosphere of political tension, denied stoutly that there was anything at all to suggest in it a bloodless version of the dras-
Andy Tull>e/The Bullehn
Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" at 2 p.m. today at the Greenwood Playhouse. p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. HISTORYPUB: Learn about sage grouse conservation; free; 7 p.m., doorsopen at6 p.m.;McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. NICKIBLUHM & THE GRAMBLERS: The San Francisco-based country soul act performs, with Echo Still; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 8 p.m .;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.bendticket.com.
WEDNESDAY MOVIENIGHTAND POTLUCK: A screening of the documentary film, "Nothing Like Chocolate," with a
tic purge of June 30, 1934.
Japanese to refuse data on navy plan A foreign spokesman said today that "perhaps" Japan will answer within the time set in the request of the United States, Great Britain and France, for specific information on Japan's naval building programs. But it was intimated in reliable quarters that even if an answer were sent by Feb. 20, as requested,the government would be likely to say it could not reveal its navy building
potluck; donations accepted; 6-9 p.m.; CascadeCulinary Institute, 2555 N.W. CampusVillage Way, Bend; 877-541-2433 or slowfoodhighdesert@gmail.com. "THE LASTPIRATEOFTHE CARIBBEAN":Children's Theater Company presents a murder mystery dinner theater; registration requested; $15; 6:309 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W.Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-460-3024 or www. childrenstheatercompany.net. FLYFISHING FILM TOUR: A screening of a film collection that showcases anglers; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. YOU, ME &APOLLO:The Coloradobased indie-rock group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.
government to take reasonable steps" to stop lynchings. The co-author of the bill, which is th reatened by fi l ibuster, presented the first argument in defense of the legislation, since debate started four weeks ago. Senator William E. Borah, R., Idaho, joining with southern senators, had described it as an unconstitutional invasion of states' rights.
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Feb. 9, 1963
THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7084 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1055 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "CAN WOMENOUTPERFORM MEN IN ENDURANCE SPORTS?": Health and human performance professor John Liccardo talks about male and female differences in sports performance; free; 6-8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. VALENTINEDINNERCONCERT:The Sunriver Music Festival presents a concert by the Salem Big Band;
registration requested $80 6 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17728 Abbott Drive; 541-593-9310, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or www. sunrivermusic.org. "THE LASTPIRATEOFTHE CARIBBEAN":Children's Theater Company presents a murder mystery dinner theater; registration requested; $15; 6:309 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W.Antler Ave., Redmond; 541-460-3024 or www. childrenstheatercompany.net. "THE REDVELVET CAKEWAR": The Ridgeview High School theater department presents a comedy as its premiere performance; reservations for Feb. 14 show requested; $5; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview HighSchool,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541504-3600. ROB LARKINAND THE WAYWARD ONES:The LosAngeles-based rootsrock band performs, with Joseph Eid; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.Francis School,700 N. W .Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. BASS LOVE:Live music with Phutureprimitive, Medium Troy, Psy Fi, Hyphaandmore; $10, $15for couples; 8 p.m .;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; 541-3896999 or www.slipmatscience.com. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC —CROWN CITY STRING QUARTET: String musicians play selections of chamber music, with pianist Bryan Pezzone; $35, $10 children and students; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436, info© highdesertchambermusic.com or www.highdesertchambermusic.com.
Team completes initial study Of Derrick Cave
space science laboratory is the development of i n struA North A m erican Avia- mentation capable of locating tion Inc. geology team headed lava tubes beneath the moon's by Dr. Jack Green, research surface. geologist, Sunday completed However, it is no ted, the "pure research" being cona week's preliminary study of Derrick Cave, in the Fort ducted is a calculated risk: Rock country. Not until the composition of This was part of a scientific the moon is definitely deterinvestigation aimed toward mined will any practical apbasing men onthe moon. plication be possible. Heavy snows, followed by Some scientists c ontend rains and soggy runoff, ham- that the craters on the moon pered surface e xperiments were ca u sed b y mete o r with sensitive magnetometers contact — not by vo l c anic and gravimeters. A primary explosions. mission for North America's Continued next page
program. "There is no change in Japan's naval policy announced at the time of t h e L ondon conference," s ai d F o r eign Minister Koki H i r ota. This policy was that Japan must have equality of strength in principle. There seemed to be some tendency to answer the note and to allay as far as was possible the suspicion that Japan
I /
hlll l
is engaged in a program of super-ship building, but without disclosing information which the navy believes it must keep secret in the national interest.
The foreign office spokesman in his "perhaps" statement today, repeated denials that Japan was planning 43,000-ton battleships.
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What people may think about you...
Wagner takes hand in lynching debate Robert F. Wagner, D., N.Y., said in the senate today that the constitution presents no obstacles to the anti-lynching bill but in fact "makes it the implied duty of th e federal
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REGON
a moncarcasses set to re ce as nutrients or streams The Associated Press MEDFORD — An Oregon m arine p r ogram i s b e i n g b illed a s "stream en richment," but it's a lot smellier than it sounds. T hat's because the p r o gram really comes down to dumping hundreds of excess hatchery fish carcasses into tributaries. It's a c onservation program billed as a way to make up for the loss of marine-derived nutrients t h at get flushed from West Coast streams. Fish biologist Chuck Fustish calls it the "no muss, no fuss method," and s t udies show carcass placement can put nutrients i nto s t reams that were absorbed by salmon in the ocean and carried inland during their spawning runs. "We're giving th e w h ole
ecosystem a boost in nutrients," Fustish said. "It will provide ocean nutrients in fish that w ould have been here normally. And it's a lot more of a beneficial use than sending them to the landfill." Cole River Hatchery workers are keeping thousands of extra salmon and steelhead carcasses this year, includi ng thousands that w o u l d have gone to landfills in other years. Cole River's records show that 44,792 fish ended up in
It's so cold in the Metolius River basin on this February morning that Kerfoot's breath freezes up amid the coarse hairs ofhis red moustache, forming little c rystals that glitter in the sunlight streaming through the trees. He doesn't notice. He's going to set this tree down exactly where he planned it. "It's like c utting an i c e cube, I guess," Kerfoot says. " The wood seems to c h i p out instead of coming out in shavings." The chill air up here seems to magnify sounds: the sirenlike whine of Kerfoot's chain saw, his cry of "Heads up!" and the pistol crack popping of splitting wood as the tree sways for a l o n g m oment, then falls to earth in an explosion of snow and limbs. W hen the cloud of t w i n kling ice crystals and pine needles has settled and the tree stretches in a t a ngled green massacross the frosted Free throw title won forestfloor, Kerfoot sees that by McMeen boy the impact of brittle tree on Bend H i g h b as k etball frozen ground has split the coaches are casting covet- massive log in half like a fallous eyes on 10-year-old Da- en icicle. ryl McMeen, a f i f th-grader He rests his chain saw on at Kenwood who dropped in the stump a w h ile, turning 42 of 50 free throws to win his Marlboro Man face into the Bend area f ree t h r ow the light of the morning sun. "You stay warm if you stay championship at Bend High Saturday. working," Kerfoot says, but Daryl, coached by Jack En- it's tough getting out of the sworth, Kenwood, bested Bob pickup in the morning." "The m orning" m e a n s Douglas, 13, an eighth-grader at St. Francis, who dropped dawn to Kerfoot and the two in 38of 50 free throws. other loggers in Phil PeterSix finalists from Bend and son's Petco Logging Co., but Redmond competed. The an- tough as it may be to leave nual contest was conducted their warm pickups, few subby Jack Lutz and Richard L. zero temperatures or snow Geiser. storms will keep them out of Daryl will advance to the the woods. s tate finals, to b e h el d i n A thaw will. OSU's Gill Coliseum at CorPeterson, who stands like vallis this Saturday. an earthen wall in his insulated brown coveralls, shut Big crowd on hand d own this operation for a for district meet day and a half two weeks ago P resentation o f di s t i n - when r i s in g t e m peratures guished service awards and softened the ground beneath a salute to the conservation the wheels of the company's man of the year highlighted 6 3,000-pound l o ader a n d t he a n nual m e e ting a n d 32,000-pound log skidder. "Whenever we start leavdinner of the M idstate Soil C onservation D i strict h e r e i ng any i m pression in t h e Wednesday night, at the Pine ground, we just shut down," Forest Grange Hall. 210 per- Peterson says. When we leave sons were present. here this winter, you won't Omar Moffitt, operator of a even know we were here exlarge stock ranch in the Broth- cept for a few logs. That's the point of being ers country east of Bend, was honored as the conservation out here when it's this cold. man of the year for his rota- It's the ideal time to log sensition deferred grazing accom- tivescenic areas. The frozen plishments, through w h i ch ground resists th e c h u r nhe has increased the carry- ing tires of heavy equipment ing capacity of his extensive moving huge logs. range some 22 percent. This L ogging f r o m Nov e m is the first time that the "man ber thorough February has of the year" award had been its complications too. Snow given to a rancher, other than must be plowed from roads a dairyman. — at the logging company's expense. Equipment is even m ore finicky t han i t i s i n 25 YEARS AGO warmer weather. Fuel lines For the week ending freeze.To make repairs, logFeb. 9, 1988 gers must sometimes crawl under their equipment, lie on Winter harvest the hard snowy ground and Phil Kerfoot is sweating in numb their fingers on frosty the subzero air. metal parts. "I've seen it when you could He's slicing hi s 3 6 -inch chainsaw blade into the base have ice skated on the road of a 120-foot-tall, 40-inch di- out to some of these logging ameter ponderosa pine, mak- sites," says Ray Hennings, the ing the cuts that will bring the U.S. Forest Service timber 20,000-pound tree whooshing sale administrator on the Sisand crackling to the ground. ters Ranger District.
From previous page
If preliminary studies of the moon determine that the craters are of meteoric origin, the lava tube investigations will be of no value. Dr. Green is a member of a school that believes that the pock-marked surface of the moon is due to volcanic eruptions or a combination of meteor impact and volcanism. Caves on a volcanic lunar surface would be used for s helter by a s t ronauts w h o will attempt lunar landings. Dr. Green is one of the top authorities o n l u n a r g e ology, and teaches a seminar course at UCLA dealing with that subject. He has been invited to speak at a scientific symposium later this year in Russia. Providing funds are available, Dr. Green and his staff will return to Central Oregon in the spring to continue their lava tube studies.
we can handle it." T his year, f is h w i l l b e t ossed i nt o 1 6 mi l e s o f streams in the Butte Creek, Evans Creek and Elk Creek systems in Jackson County as well as nearly five miles of — Fish biologist Chuck Fustish Taylor Creek, a Rogue tributary in Josephine County. All of the carcasses will be the landfill over the past 11 placed high in th e systems years, while 105,679 were re- and in stretches where waleased alive into streams and ter-quality testing has shown just 14,006 carcasses went they do not already contain to t h e s t r e am-enrichment too many n utrients during program. fish-spawning months, FusUp to 19,200 pounds of tish said. "It serves as a n u t r ient salmon and steelhead will be recycled into local rivers and source for all of the communicreeks this year, The Medford ties in the streams," he said. It's quite a bit more benefiMail Tribune reported. "It's astart," says Larry cial than the phosphate and Butz, of Medford, vice presi- nitrate runoff from agriculdent of the Coastal Conserva- tural fertilizer, which Fustish tion Association. "That's a lot said only leads to blue-green more than we expected,but algae.
"It will provide ocean nutrients in fish that would have been here normally. And it's a lot more of a beneficial use than sending them to the landfill."
Downtown
tively small vacant parcels for future projects, and a wealth Continued from B1 of young families that need H ow much s p ace w i l l large, inexpensive rentals. t hey need? What k ind o f O n the bonusside,the renearby amenities would they port stated that small infill require? development can be a good A housing strategy was thing for a downtown area, commissioned last fall from and Redmond's growth in Johnson Rei d c o n sulting the baby boomer population — expected to continuecompany, to r eview w h at types of housing the marwould likely lead to residents ket in Redmond would ac- more drawn to d owntown cept, which areas downtown living. w ould be the best choices for A feasibility study will be housing and the likely return done sometime in M a rch, on investment. Williams said, and then a The first phase of the re- third report on the developport, a marketing analysis, ment options is expected by was recently given to the city. summer. The overall study is In its findings summary, it laid expected to contain recomout some challenges: a near mendations for five, 10 and 20 total absence of owner-occu- years in the future. pied multifamily units such as A n open house for t h e condos or townhomes, rela- Downtown Urban Renewal
AROUND THE STATE Man convicted of abusing girlfriend — Thefamily of a woman who died before she could testify against the man accused of
binding her with electrical tape andsodomizing her says they found justice with the man's conviction. The Oregonian reports Thomas
Acosta was convicted by aNewport jury of sodomy, second-degree sexual abuseandtwo counts of fourth-degree assault on Friday. His accuser, April Loper, told police Acosta knocked herunconscious, bound her and rapedher repeatedly in December2011. Loper also told her family that Acosta had threatened to kill her if she talked about the assault. But Loper and her father died in a car crash in October. Her statements to police were ruled inadmissible as hearsay.
PriVate SChOOI buSeS. — A Southern Oregon school district is considering hiring a private company to run its school buses, an idea that worries district-employed drivers. The request for proposals from contractors could lead to lower costs for the financiallystrapped Winston-Dillard School District. The Oregon School Em-
ployees Association is mounting a campaign in opposition. Association president Tim Stoelb says the district's13 full-time bus drivers, three substitute drivers, two assistants for special education buses
and a dispatcher may behired by acontractor, but could be paid less or have fewer benefits. A spokesman for the lllinois company that the
city of Roseburg usesfor its buses says private bus driver salaries and benefits are usually comparable to what they earned as district employees.
COrrections officials named — The OregonDepartment of Corrections has named two people to top posts in Eastern Oregon on an interim basis. The East Oregonian reports Steven Franke was
named interim eastside institutions administrator for the Oregon Department of Corrections. Jeri Taylor was named interim superintendent of Two Rivers Correctional Institution in Umatilla. — From wire reports
A dvisory C o mmission h a s been scheduled Monday. A presentation on all the projects and concepts currently being discussed by DURAC — including downtown housing — will be shown, with time for questions and concerns from the public. Reporter: 541-548-2186; IpugmireC~bendbulletin.com
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Darlene Marjorie Spicer, of Redmond
Christopher Andrew Moltzau, of Redmond
Louina Lee Scurlock, of Redmond
Sept. 17, 1928 - Feb. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services to be held.
July 21, 1969 - Jan. 28, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life: 1pm4pm, Sat., Feb. 16, St. Joseph Catholic Church Parish Hall, 200 East First St., Prineville.
July 30, 1941 - Feb. 8, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond, 541-504-9485, Please visit the online registry at www.autumnfunerals.net. Services: A Memorial Service will be take place on Wednesday, February 13, 2013, at 4:30 PM at Trinity Lutheran Church, located at 2550 NE Butler Market Road in Bend, Oregon.
Jackie Atkinson, of Bend Aug. 13, 1943 - Jan. 31, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at
www.niswonger-reynolds.com.
Services: Memorial services will be held at a later date.
Jerry Lloyd Hutchison, of Bend Oct. 2, 1941 - Feb. 1, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals - Bend, 541-318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Jerry's Life will take place in the Spring. Contributions may be made to:
American Diabetes Association, 1701 North Beauregard Street, Alexandria, VA 22311, www.diabetes.org
Mary Sargeant, of Bend Jan. 6, 1930 - Feb. 3, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemonalchapel.com
Services: A private family service will be held at a later date.
Roger D. Fox, of Bend June 25, 1948 to Feb. 5, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 Services: Private services will be held.
Michael A. Cercone, of Bend Dec. 17, 1951 - Jan. 29, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life gathering will be held at the family home, located at 1359 NW Farewell Dr., in Bend, on Sunday, February 17, 2013, at 4:00 p.m. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Terussa Bertrand Kennedy, of Redmond Mar. 21, 1943 - Feb. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: None will be held at her request.
Lloyd Thomas Hampton, of Bend April 2, 1918 - Feb. 6, 2013 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541)382-5592; www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A Celebration of Lloyd's Life will be held this summer at a family gathering.
Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Darrel E. "Bud" Marsh, of La Pine Oct. 7, 1926 - Feb. 6, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Private Niche-Side Service at Rest-Haven Memorial Park in Eugene will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
American Legion-Post 45, 52532 Drafter Rd., La Pine, OR 97739.
Robert A. "Bobby" Colucci, of La Pine (Formerly of Pennsylvania) Feb. 23, 1955 - Jan. 31, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will take place in New York at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Baird Memorial Chapel, P.O. Box 1530, La Pine, OR 97739 for Bobby's final arrangements.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Gordon Priday (Samuel Gordon
Priday)
March 10, 1923 • Feb. 1, 2013 Gordon lived i n C e n t r al O regon most o f t h i s l i f e : Bend, Madras and Prinevi lle. He w o r ked w i t h a n d for Les Schwab for nearly 20 y ears as a store manager a nd a r e a leader. He was a cowboy, rancher, cattle truck driver, Gordon Priday f isherman, t r a p p er , 4 - H leader fo r h o r s emanship: Proud parent, loyal friend, and d evoted c o m p anion. He would say "Let's do it!" Gordon is survived by his wife of 55 years, Betty; his b rother, W a r r en ; d a u g h t ers, L i nd a o f Pu y a l l u p , W ashington, L an a of Cathlamet, W as h i n g ton, C indy o f Pr i n e v i lle, O r e gon, Tami o f B e n d , O r egon; ma n y ch er i s h ed g randchildren a n d g r e a t grandchildren. Graveside services at 11:00 a.m., Saturday, February 16, 2013, Redmond Memorial Cemetery, 3545 S. Canal Blvd., Redmond, Oregon. Celebration o f L i fe at I:00 p.m., Saturday, Febr uary 16, 2013, a t H i g h land Baptist Church, 3100 SW Hi ghland A v e. , R e dmond, Oregon. Reception following. Visitations at NiswongerReynolds Funeral Home in Bend, Friday, February 15, 2013, 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Donations may be made to Partners I n C a r e/Hospice, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Ct ., Bend, Oregon 97701.
Mary "May" Sargeant Jan. 6, 1930 - Feb. 3, 2013
O ur b e l o v e d mot h e r , 'May' Mary Sargeant passed away peacefully on February 3, 2013 in Bend, OR. Mom was born January 6 , 1 93 0 i n G l a s gow, S cotland. A s a c h i l d s h e survived Wo r l d W a r I I a nd rationing . S he m e t her future h u sband, John S argeant, a t a d a n c e i n Glasgow. M a y t r aveled to L ong Beach, C A t o v i s i t John, and they were marr ied June 25, 1955 in L a s K arlin, a s sociated f r o m Vegas, NV. May and John 1945 until his retirement in h ad three daughters. S h e 1977 with Bell Labs, headquar- loved living in Long Beach tered in Murray Hill, N.J., was w here sh e h ad m any widely considered the father f riends, a n d l ov e d th e of human-factors engineer- w arm, sunny weather. A l l ing in U.S. industry. A branch loved her b eautiful l i l t i ng of industrial psychology that S cottish a c cent a n d h e r ry sense of humor . S h e combines experimentation, en- w m oved t o Y e l m , W A i n gineering and product design, 1995 after the death of her human-factors engineering is husband to be close to her concerned with easing the of- d aughter an d p u r sue h e r ten ill-considered marriage be- i nterest in R a m t ha . Sh e tween man andmachine. m oved b a c k to L o ng a nd su n n i e r Karlin later said he realized B each, C A skies in 2000. In 2006, her that the dynamics of using a telephone involved far more d aughters m o ve d h e r t o end, OR t o b e c l oser t o than speaking and hearing. In B family. She is survived by 1947 he persuaded Bell Labs h er dau g h t ers , D eb b y to create a unit to study these Sargeant, Heather D r a k ularger questions; Karlin be- lich, and C a ro l S a r geant; came its head in 1951. her son-in laws, Mike DraBy the late 1950s, when kulich an d B r a d R a n dall; touch-tone dialing — m u ch and h e r q r an d c h ildren, faster than rotary — seemed Conner, Jessie, and Nicole. D eschutes Mem or i a l an inevitability, Karlin's group is honored to serve began to study what form the Chapel the family. phone of the f uture should take. Today's omnipresent 12Weekly Arts ib button keypad, with star and Entertainment pound keys flanking the zero, inside MaoazmE grew directly from the victori• • TheBulletin ous design.
Karlin helped designkeypad of modern touch-tone phone By Margalit Fox
Karlin, who died Jan. 28, at 94, was virtually unknown to A generation ago, when the the general public. But his repoetry of PEnnsylvania and search quietly yet emphatically BUtterfield was about to give defined the experience of using way t o t e lephone numbers the telephone in the mid-20th in unpoetic strings, a critical century and afterward. "He was the one who introquestion arose: Would people be ableto remember all seven duced the notion that behaviordigits long enough to dial al sciencescould answer some them? questions about telephone deAnd when, not long after- sign," said Ed Israelski, an enward, the dial gave way to push gineer who worked under Karbuttons, new questions arose: lin at Bell Labs in the 1970s. round buttons, or square? How In 2013, the 50th anniverbig should they be'? Most cru- sary of the introduction of the cially, how should they be ar- touch-tone phone, the answers rayed? In a circle? A rectangle? to those questions remain palAn arc? pable at the press of a button. For decadesafterWorld War The rectangular design of the II, these questions were studied keypad, the shape of its buttons by a group of social scientists and the position of the numbers and engineers in New Jersey all sprang from empirical reled by one man, a Bell Labs search conducted or overseen industrial psychologist named by Karlin. The legacy of that John Karlin. research now extends far beBy all accounts a modest yond thetelephone: the keypad man despite his v ariegated design Karlin shepherded into accomplishments (he had a being has become the internadoctorate i n ma t h ematical tional standard on objects as p sychology, was t r ained i n diverse as ATMs, gas pumps, electrical engineering and had door locks, vending machines been a professional violinist), and medical equipment. New Yorh Times News Service
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f e) p ATRICIA (PAT) PERSONS Pat was blessed to live a long life filled with much love from her family and friends. She lived her life with true kindness, compassion, caring and giving everyday with strength, humor and grace. Pat was married to her husband Bob for 62 years and they shared their love of the outdoors with family and friends camping, crabbing, fishing and feasting. They raised their family in Portland
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She was a loving Mother to her children Bob Jr., Teri and Mike, a loving Mother in-law to Scou Ashbaugh and Heather Persons and a very special Grandma to Skyler and Colby Ashbaugh, Sara Persons as well as a loving Aunt Pany to many nieces and nephews. We will all miss her unconditional love, her warmth, her smile and laughter. Special thanks to Fran Johnson, Visiting Angels and Hospice of Madras for their kindness and compassion in caring for Pao We will hold your smile and love in our hearts always, love and peace to you dear Patricia.
H oward F . B ov e r s , a f ormer partner of the W i l liam S . P a l e y C o m p a ny d ied Fr iday, J a nuary 2 5 , 2013, at h is h o m e in B end, Oregon. The cause w as c o n gestive heart failure. Bovers, 72, w as Howard Bovers currently Managing Partner of S econd Chance Mining Company LLC, in Utah. Born in Atlantic City, New Jersey, B overs g r a d u ated f r o m Dartmouth College in 1961 and r e c eived h i s M BA f rom A m o s T u c k G r a d u ate School of B u siness in 1962. He served as a First Lieutenant in the United States A rmy Res e r v e b efo r e joining CBS as a financial analyst. After becoming a p artner of t h e W i l l ia m S . Paley Company, h e o v ersaw the design and develo pment of P a ley P ar k i n N ew Yor k C i t y a n d c o n ducted extensive research t o ensure t h e P a r k h a d " the best hot d ogs i n t h e C ity." F o r hi s ef fo r t s , Bovers received an American Institute of A r c h itects (AIA) A w a r d f o r p r o j e ct management, w h i c h h e s hared wit h I . M . Pe i a n d Phillip Johnson. A n entrepreneur b y n a t ure, Bovers c r eated a n d managed a variety of business endeavors after leavi ng C BS , i n c l u ding v e n t ures i n t o t h e en er g y i ndustry. A ctive i n p o l i t i cal an d s o c ia l o r g a nizations, he was a member of the New York Yacht Club, t he N e w Y o r k A th l e t i c C lub, and t h e J o h n' s I s l and Club i n F l o r i da. A n a vid s k i e r a nd bo a t e r , B overs also enjoyed w i n i ng and d i n ing y o un g l a dles. Bovers is survived by his sister, Nancy B. Russell of Falls Church, Virginia; and h is s o n , H . Br adf o r d Bovers of A c w o rth, Georgia. In lieu of flowers, and in memory of his fondness for good f o od , d o n ations may be made to th e Cascade C u l i n ar y In s t i t u te, 2555 NW C ampus Vi l lage Way, Bend, Oregon 97701. D eschutes M emor i a l Chapel 8z Gardens, Bend, handled the arrangements. 541-382-5592
March 5, 1981 - Feb. 4, 2013 D avid A n drew R y der o f B end, O R , ( f o r m erl y o f F t. Thomas, KY ) d i e d o n F ebruary 4 , 2 0 13, a t t h e age of 31. He was born and r aised i n Kentucky and was a 2000 graduate o f H ig h lands S chool i n F t. T ho m as, K Y . David Ryder After high school graduation, D a vi d s e r v ed i n t h e U S N avy fr o m 2 000-2004. H e w a s m a r ried to DeAnna Dawn Garrett on August 19, 2011, in Z ion N a t i onal P a rk , U T . Together they l a ughed as t hey discovered the L a n d of Parenting, b ot h r e v e li ng in every beautiful m i r aculous moment o f t h e i r young son. D avid w a s a b r i l l i a n t , self-taught software develo per an d c o m p uter t e c hn ology e n t husiast, r i s i n g q uickly i n t h e so f t w a r e world t o h i s m o s t r e cent position at G5. D avid's l ov e o f n a t u r e , b ackpacking, h i k i ng , a n d exploring was contagious. He shared this enthusiasm on many wonderful adventures with his father, family and friends. David's big smile and n on-judgmental style wo n h i m c o u n t l ess friends. He will be m issed by so many. D avid is survived by h i s w ife, DeA nn a ; so n , L andon; father, David An t hony R y der o f F t . T h o m as, KY ; m o t h er , N e d a C alhoun o f L a t o n ia, K Y ; s ister, A m be r H e l t o n o f L atonia, KY ; a n d n u m e r o us a u n ts , u n c l es , a n d cousins. A celebration of D a v i d 's l ife i s p en d i n g i n Ft . Thomas, KY. Contributions c an b e made at any C h ase Bank t o t h e D av i d A n dr e w Ryder Memorial F und-Bend, O r egon. T h e contributions f r om th e f und w i l l g o t o Dav i d ' s w ife an d y o u n g c h i l d t o h elp wit h a n y c o st s t h a t will be accumulating.
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Rhonda Mary Slavkovsky 1950-2013 Rhonda Slavkovsky died peacefully at home in the presence of her family on January 17th after a nearly four year /A battle with ovarian cancer. She wasbom March 29, 1950 in Corvallisto Howard and Emily (Peterson) Irvin. She grew up in Corvallls, spent time in Portland and then raised her family in Bend, after marrying Ed Slavkovsky in 1975. The family moved to Eugene in 1994. Rhonda worked in a Bakery, a Doctor's office, a nursing home, the unemployment office and the shrinky-dink factory in Portland. Sheworked for Fuqua homes, cleaned motelrooms,cocktail waitressed at the Copper Room and did nails at a men's salon in Bend. In Eugene, sheworked at Lone Pine Farms, Bl-Mart and managed the restaurant at Diablo's Downtown Lounge for nine years. She kept a clean cozy home. She was exceptionally neat and always had a bag of something in her trunk going to St. Vinnie's or GoodwilL She ironed her t-shirts and made the perfect hed. Shebought Christmas presents annually for single moms and their children at the Eugene Mission. She loved buying Christmas ornaments for immediate family each year and was the perfect party planner, making birthday and holiday dinners special for decades. An excellent cook, she believed in eating at the dinner table, with placemats, cloth napkins, matching silverware and manners.
Always the girl, she dressed with class and style, carrying herself with elegance and grace. She wore minimal makeup and hershoesalways matched. Her nails were manicured from the age of fifteen; her last professional appointment wasto have her nails done. Her family came first andshewasproudofeach member.ShewasMom ioanyonewho neededa Mom and a friend to anyone who needed a friend. Shewasrevered for her advice, love, hugs and quick sense of humor. She kept her word, didn't lie and kept secrets confidential.
FEBRUARY I9, I924 — FEBRUARY I, 2OI3
www.autumnfunerals.com
Aog. 5, 1940 - Jan. 25, 2013
David Andrew Ryder
She was a majorette in parades, at the age of three aml took dance lessonsfor many years. She wanted to dance with the Rockettes and prohablycould have.She loved fl owers and gardening. Rhonda enjoyed motorcycle riding, travel, photography, camping, fishing, bowling and softball. She could launch, drlve and trailer a ski boat.
In Loving Memory o
Bend: 61555 Parrell Road, S41-318-0842 Redmond:485 Nw Larch Ave., S41-S04-948S
Howard Bovers
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She is survived hy Ed,her husband of 37 years, children Troy Slavkovsky, Christina Slavkovsky, Stephanie (jeff) Baker and Melysa (Mark) Manning, all of Eugene, Oregon. She was preceded in death by her sister Marsha Tipsword. She leavesbehind flve grandchildren, nine nieces and nephews, 14 great-nieces and nephewsand 10 great-great nieces and nephews. "I'm the lucky one," she said, "I gotto say goodbye."
Her Memorial and Celebration of Life will be held on February 16th at Paradise Springs, Monroe, at1:00PM.Memorial animal rescue contributions m ay be made to S.A.R.A.STreasures,PO Box 41462,Eugene,OR.97404. Pleasesign theguesi book al w~.regislerguard.com/legacy
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
Reptiles
BITUARIES Jon Edward Nee William Ernest Nov. 1, 1947 - Fed. 3, 2013 'Ernie' McCormack Jon Edward Nee of Bend, Oregon, p as s e d aw ay p eacefully on F ebruary 3 , 2013. He was 65. He was b or n N o v ember I, 1947, i n A r t e sia, C a lif ornia. to D o n a n d A n n a Marie (Troost) N ee. J o n graduated fr om Buena Park High S chool i n 1 965 a n d also r ec eived a Jon Nee BS degree in construction technology f ro m L o n g B e a ch State College. Jon worked in construction technology, computer pr og r a m m i ng, a nd a s a d r a f t s man; h e also was a small business owner as a real estate dev eloper. H e l o v e d h o m e l andscapin g p r oj ec t s , b owling, g ol f a n d f a m i l y time. J on i s s u r v i ved b y h i s wife, Jan of Bend; son, Jon (wife, Colleen), and grands on, Coen; s on , N a t h a n ; his parents, an d b r o t h er, Don. Private f a m i l y s e r v i c es will be held. Contributions may be m ade to P a rtners I n Care, 2075 N E W y a t t Ct., Bend, OR 97701. A utumn F u n e r al s h a v e b een e n t rusted w i t h a r rangements. 541-318-0842
E rnie p a ssed a w a y i n Redmond, OR on Jan. 31, 2013, after a v a l iant f i g ht against lung c a ncer . He was born in Roseburg, OR t o Grant ( Pink) an d D o r o thy ( W h i p p le ) M cC o r m ack, and l i ved i n D r a i n a nd Y o n calla d u r in g h i s school years and early married life. He m oved t o Springfield 1972, then to Red mond i n Ernie 1998. McCormack Ernie was a master of m an y t r a des, learning the skills from his "Pops", w orking o n th e ranch and helping with the many construction projects P ink had g o ing - h e w a s 1 00% committed t o e a c h t ask and job at h and . H e never had a jo b h e d i d n 't like, with hi s f a v orite bei ng b e h i n d th e w h e e l , d rsving th e b i g r i g s a n d l uxury m ot o r coac h e s a cross the c o u ntry . H i s adventurous spirit s h i n ed i n this p r ofession and h e w as able to show hi s h u morous side as well, pulling the tail end of a rig out i nto th e n e x t l a n e w h e n d riving t h e s t ee r t r a i l er , just to get a reaction from the other motorists and to w ake u p th e p r i m a r y d river. H e a l w ay s h a d a j oke or a m u sing st ory t o share. H e n e v e r m e t a s tranger w ho w ou l d n ' t later become a friend, and Ernie was one of the most Dec. 15, 1919 - Jan. 31, 2013 g enerous p e o p l e y ou ' d A dam A l b e r t K u s s of ever meet. He always lent Paradise, CA, (formerly of a h a n d w h e n e ve r and Bend, OR) was one of six wherever he could. children born in St. L o u i s, H unting, f i s hing, c a m p M O, t o A us t r i a n i m m i - i ng and b e ing ou t i n n a grants t ure w er e a c t i v i ties t h a t Frank and b rought him much joy. H e Mary e specially l o ved t h e t i m e Kuss. spent at his grandparents' Adam was c abin a t C r e s cent L a k e , a v eteran b oth when h e w a s y o u ng o f W W I I a nd later on, br inging h i s ~ and girls. E r n i e a l s o b ecame served a n avid da r t s -man a n d w ith t h e pool-player. 345th He was preceded in death Adam Kuss Field by his daughter, Sherri, his Artillery p arents, hi s s i s t ers, K a y B attalion, 9 0 t h Inf a n t r y and Linda, and his brother, D iv. 3rd A r m y , f r o m J a n . Ray. He is survived by his 1 942 - Oct. 1945. He w a s d aughter, Sh awny ; n e p h awarded five Bronze Stars ews, J o h n , M i k e , and for c a m p aign s i n N or - W illie; n i e ces, G ai l a n d mandy, Rhineland, NorthP am; several g r an d a n d ern France, Ardennes, and great-grand-nephews, Central Europe. n ieces an d o t h e r f a m i l y A dam m a r r i ed, V i r g i ni a members and friends who Rutha i n D et r o i t , M I, will miss him greatly. Dec. 1, 1945. He worked as Ernie's wish was that we a m a chinist f o r Fe d e r al share our memories of him M ogul fo r o v e r 2 7 y e a r s i n joy, so t h ere w il l b e a and ret ired fro m barbeque at Crescent Lake Korest-Perterson Corp., afscheduled at a l a ter d ate. ter 15 years. I n lieu o f f l o w ers, it w a s Adam was a life member also his wish that a donaof the Veterans of Foreign tion be made to the AmeriW ars. He s erved a s p o st c an Cancer Society or t h e commander in 1962 — 1963, charity of y o u r c h o ice, in for p o s t ¹ 67 8 2 in E. his memory. Detroit, MI. A dam is survived by h i s wife, Virginia of 67 years; sister, Helen of Taylor, MI; his c h i l d r en , R o b er t o f Chesterfield, MI , K e n neth o f Lake O r i on, M I , C a r ol R ondy of D eckerville, M I , M ichael of P a r adise, CA , Richard o f Ben d , OR, Donna S m i l e y of Por t S anilac, MI , a n d P a u l o f Paradise, U T ; an d 12 g randchildren; a n d n i n e bendbulletin.com great-grandchildren.
Adam Albert Kuss
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DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: John Kerr, 81: Tony Awardwinning actor best known for roles that challenged bigotry in the 1950s in films like "Tea and Sympathy" and "South Pacific"; he also turned down a starringmovie rolebecause of ideological differences with its subject, Charles Lindbergh. Died Feb. 2 in Los Angeles. Paul Tanner, 95: F ormer trombonist for the Glenn Miller Ochestra who played an unlikely role in the history of rock 'n' roll when, using a device he helped invent, he performed the famous electronic accompaniment onthe Beach Boys' signature r e cording "Good Vibrations." Died Tuesday in Carlsbad, Calif. James Muri,94: Veteran of the decisive World War II Battle of Midway who was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for valor. Died Feb. 3 in Laurel, Mont. Shelby Whitfield, 77: Former play-by-play announcer f or the Washington Senators who wrote a critical book about the team's owner in the early 1970s and later managed an all-starcast ofannouncers for ABC Radio. Died Feb. 5. Starr Saphir, 73: Tour guide and birder who led groups through Manhattan's Central Park for over four decades, often showcasing35-50 different species over a day's walk. Died Tuesday in the Bronx, N.Y. — From wire reports
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lights began flashing in her rear-view mirror. dragon, nine-year-old Leja When the trooper shined Colman pondered the ques- a flashlight in at Mickel, the tion of whether any animal snake instinctively moved toscared her. Alligators? No. ward the light, poking its head Bears? No. out the window to investigate. "I have two snakes at "He jumped six feet back!" home, and I've been hold- Leja said. i ng snakes since I w a s Mickel c o n f i rme d her two," Leja s aid, a dding daughters account, and insistthat along with the snakes, ed she's been cutting back on there are six lizards, six the animals — when she was dogs, two cats, two birds, a hamster, a hedgehog and a spider at the apartment she shares with her mother and grandmother. S even-year-old Sk y e Lynn Hornbeck said she found it a bi t odd when she first learned of Leja's unusual collection of pets. With help from her friend, she's grown comfortable around snakes, and though her only pets are cats and dogs, she's keen to have a snake of her own. Leja said her f avorite snake storycomes from before she was born. L eja's m other, K e r r y Mickel, was driving back to Bend one night, with a couple of dogs in the back seat, and a snake looped around her neck. Getting tired, she noticed herself swerving a bit, but before she could pull over for a nap, an Oregon State Police trooper's red and blue
a child growing up on a ranch, she counted more than 1,000 animals among her pets. Kids have a natural curiosity about all animals, Mickel said, even those that make many adults a bit uneasy. "I'm one of those that says the younger you get t h em into things that are spooky or scary, the better," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulleti n.com
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It's an honor to Serve You! The 2013 Oregon leg islative session is starting and I want to th ot~it to o I' ve hadthe hh opportunityto I o meet with many citizens and o receive their input on what's im ortant a s important to them. These meetings included citizen own town a halls s ininBend, Redmond and Sunriver a r,as well as meeting with the school boards in Be endand R Redmondand allthes school superintendents from Central Oregon. j
I ve also met with the city counci/s in Bend, Redmond th esc ues countycommissioners,andmade ' I w ig I h chool, Bend High School g ree ivers Elementary, and Centr entral Christian School. Other meetings included c u e community groups like the 0 ortun e pportunity Foundation, Full Access Central Oregon Sh oot'ingSports Association, the Redm edmond Chamber, Redmond Economic Alliance Io teachers with the eOregon nce, and an ocal Ed on ucation t Association. I have also ave had the opportunity to meet with public an P QoP " g oo oards Association, Oregon Heath Car ea are Association, Oregon Hospitals Association 0, ion, regonUniversitySystem Ore o regon Bankers Association, and a Iong term care advocates such as AARP. hool I
I
If you haven't been able to attend on ese town halls or meetings, I will have regular meetingsinin ob th S e of th alem and in Central Oregon and Ilook forward to meeting you. ve received many emails and letters alread seeki in g I'm assistance e in at category, please contactymy office. includi and if you m inc u ing my contact information so you can reach ac me with h your thoug,hts viI ews, questions or concerns. Best regards,
Op
To
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Jerika Burton, of Bend, handles a ball python during the Reptile Zone's anniversary party on Saturday in Bend.
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Continued from B1 "Some of the little kids in here know more about snakes and reptiles than the owner," Curry said. Owner Jeff Jensen does know his reptiles. A former science teacher, he opened the shop with his own collection of snakes and lizards and has been expanding ever since. Jensen's teaching background informs the way he runs his shop. Seeing anyone — especially kids — get over their fears of snakes and lizards is the best part of the job, he said. Cradling "Sunshine," a golden-colored be a r ded
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SENATOR Senator Tim Knppp
TIM KNopp District: 27
ALL 2012 MERCHANDISE Come Demo the NEW 2013 CLUBS!
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Capitol Phone: 503-986-1727 CapitolAddress: 900 Court St NF, S-309, Salem, OR, 97301 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Website: http://www.leg.state.or. Us/knopp
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W EAT H E R
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 'IO,20'I3
Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013. • •
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Today:t~ Mostly clear.
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Tonight:
Mostly clear.
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Mostly clear.
Mostly clear.
CHANNE Kvvz.cuM
42
19
FORECAST:5TATE 47/36
River
47/40
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• I' McMinnville
34
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Seasideu 48/39 • Cannon Beach•
50/36
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51/40
Florence• 48/40 ~
•
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52/39 •
Roseburg
•
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• Fort Rock 4007•
•
3 7/13
370 6
Port Orford
• BrOOkingS 56/41
Riley
~
1
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Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley 30/1 I •
Frenchglen 38/17
Rome
• 56'
38/1 8
Paisley
Brookings
43/22
• Kl amath FaI IS 40/1 9~
43/ 30% ~
Nyssa Juntura 40/15
40/i 7
4108
Chiloquin
Medfurd •Ashland I I
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39/20
Chr i stmas a y
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OREGON CITIES
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• Lakeview 30/1
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35II9
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31/1
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS -40s ~30s ~20s ~10 ~ O S •
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45/3 7
2 /2 97 1
(in the 48 contiguous states):
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Pellston, Mich.
• 4.89 w
18/3
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Chihuahua 68736
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lando 7/58
74/64
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La Paz 68/54
Anchorage 37/22
Juneau 41/34
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• ~ 36/32+< etroit u .+ + ~ ~ 4 4 35/33 39/206+xc w 'Ji xr+++ ++ 3 8 xaapid cityara@ Ix+xr+IJI+v 29/14 i g I ~ I 3 chi<ago, 7 P
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CONDITIONS
FRONTS Cold
++ v v .++++
The measure passed by a253Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Springfield, voting for it, and166
Democrats and Rep. Paul Broun, R-Ga., voting no.
U.S. HOUSE VOTE • Require a PLAN Act
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
S K IREPORT
M onday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........48/39/0.01 ....47/36/pc.....46/37/sh Baker City......39/29/0.00....36/17/pc......37/21/s Brookings......56/37/0.00....56/41/pc.....52/41/pc Burns..........39/17/0.00....35/11/pc......37/17/s Eugene........47/36/0.00....49/32/pc.....44/33/pc Klamath Falls ...41/16/0 00 .. 40/19/pc......43/21/s Lakeview... MM/MM/0 00 .30/11/pc......39/11/s La Pine ........44/12/000....39/15/pc.....39/19/pc Medford.......49/29/0.01 ....47/34/pc......48/38/f Newport.......45/36/0.00....48/39/pc......49/40/c North Bend......52/34/NA....50/38/pc.....50/39/pc Ontario........44/33/0.00....39/20/pc.....38/23/pc Pendleton......44/27/0.00....42/25/pc.....44/30/pc Portland .......45/33/0.00....50/36/pc......46/37/c Prineville....... 40/17/0.00....39720/pc.....48/26/pc Redmond.......44/16/0.00....42/20/pc.....48/26/pc Roseburg.......49/34/0 00..... 50/37/f...,,,52/38/f Salem .........45/34/0 00....50/33/pc......45/34/c Sisters........ 47/16/000 .40/18/pc.... 46/24/pc The Dages......51/31/0.00....46/29/pc.....48/33/pc
Snow accumulation in inches
2 LOW MEIJIUMg HIGH ~V.HIGH 0
2
4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday.Key:TT. = Traction Tires.
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 68 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . .70-77 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0-0.. . . .71-1 09 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . .101-117 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 97 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......54-59 Timberline...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 .. . . . . . 124
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report
Pass Conditions Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .42-92 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0... . . .26-30 Hwy 20 at Santiam Pass..... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....1-3.. . . .93-185 Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . .46-61 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . .26-97 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0-0. . . . . .24-47 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .44 53 Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 1 .. . . . . . . 32 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www tripcheck com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html 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-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
* *
* * * 4 3 d '* * * * * 4>
*
:+
+w+ Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday 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 ......62/50/0.00..68/34/pc. 63/36/pc GrandRapids.....33/I/0.00...39/36/r. 37/25/sn RapidCity.......39/19/000..29/14/sn. 29/I9/pc Savannah .......67/39/0.00..66/57/pc...72/58/t Akron ..........34/24/0.00..45/37/pc. 48/29/sh GreenBay.......26/-3/0.00...36/32/r. 34/I8/sn Reno...........41/22/0 00..39/I9/pc. 39/19/pc Seattle......... 47/40/trace..49/38/pc.. 50/42/c Albany..........26/14/0.27...30/I9/s..41/29/rs Greensboro......54/29/0.00..53/42/pc. 61/39/sh Richmond.......50/33/0.00..52/39/pc. 62/42/sh SiouxFalls.......43/26/0 00..35/19/sn.. 24/9/sn Albuquerque.....49/34/0.00..44/21/pc.39/I6/pc Harusburg.......37/24/0.00...37/26/s...44/33/r Rochester, NY....21/I3/1.49...37/32/s. 48/31/sh Spokane ........34/26/0.00..38/23/pc.. 37/29/c Anchorage ......34/27/0.00..37/22/sn.. 29/13/c Hartford,CT.....27/21/0.20...36/20/s. 43/34/sh Sacramento......58/34/0.00..61/34/pc..60/35/s Springfield, MO ..42/32/0.00... 63/33/r .. 51/27/s Atlanta .........62/32/0.00... 60/54/t...64/44/t Helena..........38/19/004..25/17/sn. 33/24/pc St.Louis.........43/30/0.00...59/36/t. 50/28/pc Tampa..........77/55/0.00..81/61/pc. 81/61/pc AtlanticCity .....34/25/0.08...40/Jlls. 49/38/sh Honolulu........81/66/0.00...80/68/s.. 80/66/s SaltLake City ....32/23/0 06..27/13/sn. 26716/pc Tucson..........53/36/ON ..55/34/pc. 56/30/pc Austin..........66/52/0.03...75/47/t.70/50/pc Houston ........68/49/0.00...77/59/t. 68/53/pc San Antonio .....66/53/0 04..78/50/pc. 72753/pc Tulsa .......... 44/36/0.01 ..65/32/pc. 52/33/pc Baltimore ...... 40/28/0.00..41/35/pc.52/40/sh Huntsville .......60/32/0.00...58/52/t. 60/40/pc SanDiego.......58/44/0.09..58/45/pc.. 62/45/s Washington,DC..43/31/0.00..44/35/pc. 54/42/sh Billings .........41/22/000..31/13/sn. 34/24/pc Indianapolis.....39/240.00...52/36/t.44/28/pc SanFrancisco....56/41/0.00..56/42/pc.. 57/42/s Wichita.........$1/33/0.01..54/29/w .45/24/pc Birmingham .....64/29/0.00...62/54/t. 64/45/sh Jackson,MS.....63/34/0.00...69/52/t. 60/45/sh SanJose........57/31/0.00..58/38/pc.. 60/38/s Yakima .........52/25/0.00..43/25/pc. 45/29/pc Bismarck........27/24/0.00 ..27/I3/sn .. 20/7/pc Jacksonvile......65/45/000..71/59/pc...76/62/t SantaFe........48/28/0.00..35/I8/pc.. 32/9/sn Yuma...........63/43/0.00..64/44/pc.. 65/44/s Boise...........42/30/0.00 .. 39/20/pc. 39/25/pc Juneau..........40/35/016...41/34/r..38/28/rs INTERNATIONAL Boston..........20/1 6/0.1 5... 36/25/5. 45/36/sh Kansas City......47/28/0.00..56/28/w .43/23/pc Budgeport,CT....28/23/4.89...33/24/s. 44/32/sh Lansing..........30/0/0.00...38/34/i..38/25/rs Amsterdam.... 36/28/007 34/27/pc 34/25/c Mecca..........91/75/000 . 87/69/s 93/75/pc Buffalo.........20/14/0.01...38/32/s. 42/30/sh LasVegas.......54/41/000..55/38/pc. 53/38/pc Athens..........66/51/0.00 ..56/44/pc.. 54/44/s Mexico City ....79/46/0.00 .. 73/46/s.. 76/47/s Burlington,VT.....19/5/0 01...22/I 5/s .. 39/32/rs Lexington .......43/24/0.00...55/46/t. 55/34/pc Auckland........73/59/0.00... 77/59/s.72/60/pc Monveal........I9/10/019...18/3/pc. 33/28/sn Caribou,NE......14/5/0.14.... 23/0/s. 31/22/sn Lincoln..........54/29/0.00...45/25/c. 37/19/pc Baghdad........73/55/0.00 .. 75/57/pc.77/59/pc Moscow........34/28/0.00 .. 33/32/sf..32/27/sf Charleston, SC...63/38/0.00..65/56/pc...71/56/t Little Rock.......47/32/0.00...72/39/t.60/37/pc Bangkok........95/82/0.00... 94/75/t. 98/77/pc Nairobi.........82/59/000...80/58/s. 78/56/sh Charlotte........62/23/0 00 .. 57/47/pc...64/44/t LosAngeles......56/39/0.00..58746/pc..60/46/s Beirng...........37/9/0 00 .. 21/I 7/pc. 26/10/pc Nassau.........77/70/0.00 ..75/67/pc. 75/70/pc Chattanooga.....58/34/0.00... 57/48/t. 63/38/pcLouisville........47/27/0.00...57/45/t. 54/33/pc Beirut..........70/57/000... 65/52/s .. 61/49/s New Delh i 70/46/000 73/54/pc 75/56/pc Cheyenne.......32/20/0.06...26/5/sn .. 24/8/pc Madison,Wl......29/2/0.01...40/30/i. 34/20/sn Berlin...........34/23/000...31/22/c. 30720/pc Osaka..........43/30/0.00 ..45/31/pc. 43/35/pc Chicago.........32/20/0.01 ... 45/3or .. 37/26/c Memphis........51/32/000.. 61/44/t. 57/39/pc Bogota.........68/54/3.92... 66/46/t...70/45/t Oslo.............II3/000...21/20/c.22/19/sn Cincinnati.......43/22/0.00... 52/44/t. 50/30/pc Miami..........81/63/0.00..77/69/pc.79/70/pc Budapest........32/18/0.02 ..30/27/sn. 31/22/pc Ottawa..........19/5/0.37..25/16/pc.33/29/sn Cleveland.......32/24/0.00... 43/38/r .. 46/29/c Milwaukee......30/10/0.00...40/33/r. 36/23/sn Buenos Aires.....90/72/0 00... 93/72/t...95/74/t Paris............36/28/0.36 .. 37/36/sh.. 40/28/c Colorado Spnngs.47/22/0.00...34/I5/c... 23/8/c Minneapolis.....29/22/0.00..35/27/sn. 29/12/sn CaboSanLucas ..81/54/0.00 ..68/63/pc.. 68/61/s Rio deJaneiro....90/77/0.00... 87/75/c. 89/75/pc Columbia,MO...46/31/0.00... 60/32/r .. 47/25/s Nashville........53/34/0.00...59/50/t. 62/36/pc Cairo ....... 68/55/000 72/51/pc. 69/48/s Rome...........48/32/0.00 52/36/s 49/44/sh Columbia,SC....65/31/0.00..63/55/pc...67/49/t New Orleans.....64/54/0.00...74/64/t...71/56/t Calgary.........37/30/000..27/21/pc.. 33/I9/c Santiago........75/64/0.00 ..82/63/pc.. 8464/s Columbus, GA....66/35/0.00... 67/51/t...66/50/t NewYork .......32/25/0.40...38/35/s. 47/38/sh Cancun.........82/64/000..82/75/pc. 83/75/pc SaoPaulo.......77/64/0.00... 78/67/t...83/68/t Columbus, OH....37/20/0 00... 47741/r. 50/30/pc Newark,Nl......34/26/0.55...36/30/s. 48/35/sh Dublin..........48/41/0.13..43/37/sh.. 42/34/c Sapporo ........27/25/0.15.. 28/-2/pc.. 23/13/sf Concord,NH.....19/14/0.71.... 32/7/s. 36/30/sh Norfolk,VA......47/35/000..51/39/pc. 64/47/sh Edinburgh.......41/36/0.00 ..33/31/sn..35/30/rs Seoul............28/3/0 00 26/25/pc. .. 25/26/pc Corpus Christi....76/61/0 02.81/60/pc. 71/61/pc Oklahoma City...45/34/0.00..6373I/pc. 55/31/pc Geneva.........36/25/0 00.. 31/25/pc. 32/25/sn Shangha/........41/27/0.00 35/35/pc. .. 36/33/sh Dallas FtWorth...54/47/0.00... 71/41/t. 65/41/pc Omaha .........49/29/0.00...46/25/c. 35/18/pc Harare..........70/63/0 00... 72/58/t...73/61/t Singapore.......88/75/0.50... 85/77/t...85/77/t Dayton .........38/19/0.00... 48/42/r. 48/29/pc Orlando.........77/54/0.00..77/58/pc.80/62/pc Hong Kong......59/52/000..68/57/pc. 67761/pc Stockholm.......30/25/000.. 34/18/sf. 31/28/sn Denver ....... 39/20/000...36/13/c.. 33/16/c PalmSprings ....62/38/001..60/42/pc.. 58/42/s Istanbul.........54/46/012..51/42/sh.46/40/sh Sydney..........84/72/0.00... 84/68/t. 72/64/pc DesMoines......39/28/0.00... 46/26/r .. 33/21/c Peoria ..........36/27/0.00...49/33/r. 39/24/pc lerusalem.......64/46/0.00... 67/47/s ..57/45/s Taipei...........63/55/0.00...65/63/c. 67/58/sh Detroit..........30/13/0.01 ... 35/33/r .. 42/28/c Philadelphia.....35/26/0I2...39/30/s. 50/38/sh Johannesburg....79/59/0.00... 76/59/t...77/59/t TelAviv.........74/49/0.00...70/53/s.. 65/51/s Duluth..........27/1 3/000.. 31/27/sn. 29/12/sn Phoenix.........57/45/0.00..61/39/pc. 60/37/pc Lima...........88/75/0.00... 79/68/c.81/70/pc Tokyo...........46/36/0.00...52/36/s. 50/30/pc El Paso..........64/44/0.00 ..55/33/pc. 57/32/pc Pittsburgh.......33/22/000..51/40/pc. 52/32/sh Lisbon..........59/43/0.00 .. 54/48/sh. 53/49/sh Toronto.........25/10/0.21..34/34/pc.35/28/sh Fairbanks.......28/-1I/0.00... 23/-4c..15/-I0/c Portland,ME.....21/I2/0 25...31/19/s. 39/35/sh London....... 39/36/000 46/34/sh. 45/34/c Vancouver.......43/39/0 00 45/37/pc. 43/41/sh Fargo...........32/23/000..30/19/sn.. 21/5/sn Providence......25/18/0 I8...35/21/s. 46/35/sh Madrid .........52/32/000..47/31/sh.50/27/pc Yienna..........34/28/0.00.. 28/22/sf. 33/25/pc Flagstaff ........27/19/023..31/13/sn.. 31/9/sn Raleigh.........52/28/0.00..54742/pc...64/42/t Manla..........84/75/000 ..87/74/pc. 84/73/pc Warsaw.........25/19/000...29/26/c..31/28/sf
to the Violence Against Women Act, or VAWA, introduced by
Reform, often referred to by the
Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-lowa. Grassley and other members of
names of its co-chairs, former Sen.AlanSimpson,R-Wyo.,
and 26 Democrats, including
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low..............41/19 2 4hoursendmg4pm*. . 000" Record high........ 61 m 1954 Month to date.......... 0.00" Recordlow........ -26in1933 Average monthtodate... 0.38" Average high.............. 43 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low ............. 24 Average year to date..... 1.91" Barometncpressure at 4 p.m.30.09 Record 24 hours ...0.33 in 1983 *Melted liquid equivalent
jected a Republican amendment
on Fiscal Responsibility and
167 vote, with 227 Republicans
Yesterday Sunday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:52 a.m...... 6:57 p.m. Venus......6:47 a.m...... 4:27 p.m. Mars.......7:51 a.m...... 6:42 p.m. Jupiter ... 1126a.m.... 228a.m. Satum.....12:06 a.m.....10:29 a.m. Uranus.....8:51 a.m...... 9:09 p.m.
On Tuesday, the Senate re-
map to deficit reduction. The National Commission
Continued from B1
84
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Bowles Commission as his road
Week
Sunsettoday. 5 2 8 pm. F irst Ful l La s t Sunnsetomorrow .. 7:I 0 a.m. Sunset tomorrow... 5:30 p.m. Moonnsetoday.... 7:01 a.m. Moonsettoday .... 6:29 p.m. Feb. 17 Feb. 25 Mar. 4 Mar. 11
PLANET WATCH
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
1 0 s 2 0 s ~ O S ~40s ~50s ( 60s 70 s
Vancouver
Ye tS d er ay S extremes
52 25
CENTRAL Partly cloudy and a
Vai Hampto
La plne39/15
Chemult
50/37
• Beach
HIGH LOW
54 26
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:11 a.m. Moon phases
Baker City
• 39/1 8 g
50/32
• Banilon
420 9
Sunriver Bend
Cottage Grove
HIGH LOW
53 29
WEST Fog and freezing fog early; otherwlse, increaslng afternoon sunshine.
bit milder.
•
pa ulina 350636/21
Redmand •
40/18
49/ 3 2
Coos Bay
• Spray43/22 5
y
Sisters
Eugene •
3405
.
• Madras d
3101
35/zt U nion
Granite
•
45/24
Enterprise • 3201
La Grande•
38/24
44/23
Warmhprings•
•
3014
Condon
A I bany &32
4!/39
• Meacham
40/25
Willowdale
31/I 2
42/25
Ruggs
46'26
Government
• PendletOn
5D8
vWaSCO 43/26
Maupin
8 em
•
~3 / 27
The Biggs
• 50/34
•
HIGH LOW
48 27 BEND ALMANAC
• Astoria
Tigamookv
HIGH LOW
the GOP worried that provisions of the bill that would subject offenders on lndian lands to tribal courts are unconstitutional, and hisamendment would have
and Erskine Bowles, a former chief of staff to President Clinton, recommended cutting the
deficit by trimming roughly $2 of federal spending for every $1 in increased revenues.The House rejected Schrader's amendment
imposed stricter oversight of how the money for victims was distributed.
by a75-348 vote,with 54 Demo-
Grassley's amendment failed
walden(R) ..................... ....... Y Blumenauer (D) ..................... N Bonamici (0) ......................... N OeFazio (D) ............................ Y Schrader (D).......................... N
crats and 21 Republicans sup-
U.S. SENATE VOTE
Before the final vote on the
• Amendment to the Require a PLAN Act
VYalden(R) ............................ Blumenauer (D) ..................... Bonamici (D) .........................NY DeFazio (D) ............................ Schrader (D) ..........................
Merkley (D).......................... N Wyden(0) ........................... N
porting it and 141 Democrats and 207 Republicans voting no.
by a 34-65 tally, with all 34 votes in favor coming from Republi-
cans.Ten Republicansjoined 54 Democrats in opposing it.
U.S. HOUSE VOTE
Require a PLANAct, the House votedonanamendment by Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby, that
wouldhaveurged Obama to use the findings of the Simpson-
Fin It All
• Amendment to the Violence Against Women Act
— Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin
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bendbulletin.com
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2
Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/community
5POTLIGHT
Fundraiser set for paralyzedman Friends of Ben Mc-
Cormick are holding a fundraiser at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Redmond
Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave., Redmond.
McCormick, 22, of Redmond, wasparalyzed from the chest down
after an accident inAugust when he dove into shallow water at the Cove
Palisades StatePark. Money raised at the event will be used to
purchase amanual, ultralight wheelchair and, if possible, a van that
can transport McCormick and his wheelchair. The event will include
food from AlohaCafe, music by local artists including Jackie Barrett,
' Y! r/co»A Q
and raffle items, according to McCormick's girlfriend Daelee Phillips.
For more information, contact Phillips: 541279-4501.
Phillips is keeping a blog about McCormick's
condition: blogging 4ben.blogspot.com.
Charity seeks permanent home
,I I I t J«
St. Vincent de Paul Redmond is raising
funds to buy apermah
nent facility to house its
)
programs, servicesand store operations. The organization's goal is to raise $1.2 million over the next two to three years to
purchase thebuilding it currently leases. The nonprofit organization helps people in
4
need with rent, mortgages, utilities, education,
':z$~": .
'e tl I
household andclothing expenses. It provides food boxes,and has fed more than24,000
ot \ /
meals each month to individuals and families
in the Redmondarea. It also refers people to its partner agencies. Tax-deductible dona-
rz, ' retttr a
vs
.PA'tb//I
tions can be mailed to SVDP Redmond, 1616
S.W. VeteransWay, Redmond, OR, 97756. Info: 541-504-9840.
'Baby shower' to assist families Soroptimist Interna-
tional of Bend is hosting a "CommunityBaby Shower" through March
31 in Central Oregon. The organization
seeks donations of new baby items including diapers, pajamas,clothing, blankets, wipes, thermometers, pacifiers, toys, bottles and hygiene
items (babyshampoo and powder). Somegen-
tly used items will also be
accepted. Thedonations will be delivered to the Department of Human Services and distributed
to local families in need.
• Joshua Tree National Parkis morethan just its namesakeplant
r»at/
' +@'.
rii,itt
"" 4~II 'i, r," ':,net I»
By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
JOSHUA TREE, Calif. any a music lover in the Pacific "'P~ j!„' Northwest may never have been closerto a Joshua tree than the cover of a rock album. When the Irish band U2 released its acclaimed collection, "The Joshua Tree," in 1987, the sleeve art featured a photo of lead singer Bono and his band mates beside an odd, yucca-like tree in California's remote Mojave Desert. Occupying morethan 1,200 square miles Although that particular photograph (an area greater than the state of Rhode was taken in an area west Island) northeast of Palm of Death Valley, an entire NORTHWE5T TRAQEL Springs, and immediately national park in Southern south of the sprawling TwenCalifornia is devoted to presNex t w e e k: Crater Lake ty n in ePalms Marine Corps ervation of this unique plant, snowmobiling base, the park is known for which was named by devout its remarkable desert flora Mormon pioneers who were reminded of the an d f auna, as well as a stunning geology that prophet Joshua raising his arms to the heavdr a w s rock climbers from far and wide. ens in prayer. See Joshua Tree/C4 -
'' ' »tll
,t
Photoa by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin
A pair of Joshua trees stand side by side near Sheep Pass, one of the highest points on Park Boulevard. Not really a tree, but a yucca plant without growth rings, the Joshua'strunk is made up of thousands of small fibers that grow at a rateof 2 to 3 inches a year. Inset: The needle-like spines of the silver cholla, which can grow to 6 feet in height, are a common sight in Joshua Tree National Park.
Items may be
dropped off at six locations: Bend Public Library, East Bend Public Library, La Pine Public
Library, RedmondPublic Library, Sisters Public Library and Willowberry
Boutique in Bend. Monetary donations
en cou ecee ra es ears o e er
are also welcomeand are tax-deductible. Contact: www.
• Harry and Freda Fisher remembertheir first kiss in the 19305
sibend.org or info© sibend.org.
By Mac McLean
Contact us with your ideas
Harry Fisher has a few tips to share with married couples who are just starting out.
The Bulletin
Have a story idea or
"(Being married) is a two-
eventsubmission? Contact us! Email event informa-
tion to events©bend bulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. — From staff reports
Photos by Andy Tullia/The Bulletin
Freda and Harry Fisher hold hands while sitting in their wheelchairs at their Bend home last week. Their relationship has spanned World War II, the moon landing and the fall of communism.
way street," he said. "You've got to give and take. You've got to forgive and forget." Let God be your guide if you wind up in a situation where you don't know what to do and remember thateverybody makes mistakes, the 97year-old retired construction worker said Monday as he continued to dole out relationship advice from his home
in northeast Bend's Orchard District. These bits of advice might have a little more weight considering Harry and his wife Freda, 94, celebrated their 79th wedding anniversary on Feb. 2. Hewas 17andshewas 15 when they tied the knot at downtown Bend's True Gospel United Pentecostal Church in 1934. "It was love at first sight," Harry said as he doted on his wife in their living room two days after their anniversary. See Anniversary/C6
j:&
it?p>.
4
Harry and Freda Fisher snuggle up at their Bend home last week. The two, who married as teens, marked their 79th wedding anniversary on Feb. 2.
C2 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
M II ESTONE
Cn
For m s f o rengagementweddinganniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavaiiabieatTheBuUettniyyysw c h a n dterAve.,Bend orby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com.Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
ENGAGEMENTS
BIRTHS
tt .gn'
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b'
Brent and AnnaSchultz, a girl, Makeah BreannaSchultz, 7 pounds, 13 ounces, Jan. 14. Chad and SusanBeihers, a girl, Callie Marie Beihers, 8 pounds, Jan. 13.
Delivered at St. Charles Bend Geraldo and Siephanie Morales, a girl, Elizah JeanMorales, 8 pounds, 3 ounces, Jan. 25. Peter and Melissa Hoover, a boy, Finley Stephen Hoover, 8 pounds, 4 ounces, Jan. 24. Jason and Catheryn Graham, a boy, Masiin Carter Graham, 8 pounds,4 ounces, Jan. 24. John Stuthard and Elisabeih M. Simon-Siuihard, a boy, Lincoln Simon Siuihard, 9 pounds, 4.5 ounces, Jan. 25. Trevor and Ashley Sanders, a girl, McKenna Sanders, 7 pounds, Jan. 22. Tom and Molly Dal Soglio, a boy, ConorThomas DalSoglio,7 pounds, 9 ounces, Nov.7.
g C ,,
4 „-'ta,"csl,A's"~rtgn
Delivered at St. Charles Redmond
Ashuly Hoxie, a boy,Oliver Aluxander Hoxie, 7 pounds, 10 ounces, Feb.3. Chris and RebeccaVaught, a boy, Brody LeeVaught, 7 pounds, 7 ounces, Jan. 28. EyvvoneMcmillan,a boy,Jonathan Estebon Jerold Quintana, 8 pounds, 5 ounces, Jan. 30. Ramonand Evelina Velazquez, a girl, Lyah JanethVelazquez, 7 pounds, 2 ounces, Jan. 29.
Caitlyn Crownover and Jiovanni Martinez
Crownover — Martinez C aitlyn C r o wnover a n d J iovanni Martinez, both o f Bend, plan to marry July 20 at Nativity Lutheran Church. T he future b r ide i s t h e daughter of Chris and Laura Crownover, of Bend. She is a 2009 graduate of Bend High School and a 2012 graduate of Central Oregon Community College, where she studied
Alison Shanahan and Andy Brouillette business. She works as a customer service representative at Bend Garbage and Recycling. The future groom is the son of Venicio Martinez and Paula Vergara, of Bend. He is a 2009 graduate of Mountain View High School and is studying business at Central Oregon Community College. He works for Deschutes Recycling in the organics booth and as a recycling dock attendant.
ShanahanBrouillette
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
graduate of Linfield College, where she studied psychology. She works for DoubleTree by Hilton Portland. The future groom is the son of Tom and Mary Brouillette, of Bend. He is a 2001 graduate of Mountain View High School. He works for B rew Dr . K o m bucha b y Townshend's Tea Company in Portland.
A lison S h anahan a n d A ndy Brouillette, both o f Portland, plan to marry Sept. 14 in Sunriver. T he future bride is t h e daughter of Kirk and Meg Shanahan, of Bend. She is a 2004 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2008
1000's Of Acjs Every Day d
laSS'ifIedS
The Bulletin Mn.ES~ON~S GUI&I'.INEs
Couple honoredfor longevity of marriage The Associated Press FAIRFIELD, Conn. — John and Ann Betar weren't supposed to get married. Her father had arranged for her to wed another man, but she and John fled Bridgeport, Conn., and eloped in New York. That was more than 80 years
• iikbt': /
ago. The couple is still happily hitched, a fact that has led to their naming as the "longest married couple" in the U.S. for 2013 by Worldwide Marriage Encounter, a Christian marriage group based in San Bernardino, Calif. The Betars are scheduled to receive a plaque and other gifts from the group at their granddaughter's home in Fairfield on Saturday. They told the New Y ork Daily News that there are no secrets to a long marriage, only a few simple rules. "We just live with contentment and we don't live beyond our means," John Betar said. "Just go with the flow." John's now 101 years old
BK Angeletti /The Connecticut Post via The Associated Press
John and Ann Betar, of Fairfield, Conn., celebrate their 80th anniversary in Bridgeport, Conn. on Nov. 25. The couple was named the "longest married couple" in the U.S. for 2013 by Worldwide Marriage Encounter, a Christian marriage group based in California. and Ann is 97, and they're still living in their home along the Fairfield shore. They had five children, 14 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Two of
their children died in their 60s. R on and Judy Pekny of Worldwide Marriage Encounter say the title of "longest married couple" is based on nomi-
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Aven Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers:
. St r i
nationsthe group received,so there maybe some couples who have been married longer. J ohn and A n n g r e w u p acrossthe streetfrom each other in Bridgeport, and John used to drive Ann to high school in his Ford Roadster. They fell in love. When her father arranged forher to marry someone else, they eloped in Harrison, N.Y., about 25 miles north of New York City. John went on to open a grocery store in Bridgeport. Ann Betar told the Hearst C onnecticut M e di a G r o u p around their 80th anniversary in November that family has been a key to their longevity. "That's what makes life what it is," she said. "We were fortunate enough to live long enough to see this ... and it's really one of the most gratifying things in the world to see your greatg randchildren, to s e e y o ur grandchildren become adults." John Betar added, "That's what keeps us alive. We live for them."
• •
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AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park & Recreation District The Bend Trolley Bend Wedding &Formal Black Butte Ranch Central Oregon Event Professionals Assoc.
Cuppa Yo The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Eastlake Framing Enhancement Center Medical Spa
Erin Hardy Images Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events Giorgio's Wine, Brews & Spirits House on Metolius M. Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School Michelle Cross Photography Northwest Medi Spa Old Stone Pronghorn Sunriver Resort Totally Polished Widgi Creek Golf Club
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For parents-to-be, babymoon offers the last chance to relax
I
t'is
• By Lynn 0'rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News
Plan for mommy-to-
A new baby in the house can mean sleepless nights and little time for relaxation, so plan a "babymoon" — a getaway for the happy couple before the baby arrives.Here are five to consider: 1. E nchantment R e sort, Sedona, Ariz. With the spectacular Red Rocks of Boynton Canyon as a backdrop, mothers-to-be can relax and choose from eight different treatments for guests who are
be massages and reflexology treatments for dad as we/I as an in-suite foot bath for the expectant
•
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swimming pools. Enjoy dinner at Kitchen 305, the resort's on-site restaurant, where an a ll-you-can-eat dessert b a r
might offer some appeal. Contact: 1 - 8 00-327-5476; newportbeachside.com
4. Zoetry Paraiso de la Bo-
nita, Riviera Maya, Mexico. mom. Choosefrom Parents looking to enjoy a Babymoon in Paradise can a romantic dinner opt for this package, which on the pier or on includes a consultation with a your own private private chef at the beginning of the stay to ensure that all terrace followed by cravings are satisfied. (Lateexpecting (or choose them a chocolate fondue night-craving room service is all). The jojoba butter wrap is fountain with an included.) Plan for mommysaid to ward off stress, pollu- assortment of sweets to-be massages and reflexoltion and the effects of aging. treatments for dad as well .... Before departure, ogy Both parents are invited to as an in-suite foot bath for the take part in an A u ro-Soma parents will receive expectant mom. Choose from relationship reading, to help a special gift for the a romantic dinner on the pier couples recognize each othor on your own private terrace er's unique gifts. An on-site baby. followed by a chocolate fonnutritionist is also available due fountain with an assortto provide tips on nourishing ment of sweets to conclude the the pregnant and postpartum waterfront restaurant where evening. Before d eparture, body as well as the newest ad- the seaside scenery provides a parents will receive a special dition to the family. soothing ambience. gift for the baby. Contact: 928- 2 82-2900; Contact: 1 - 8 66-278-9601; Contact: zoetryresorts.com enchantmentresort.com perrycabin.com 5. Glynn House, Ashland, N.H. 2. The Inn at Perry Cabin, St. 3. Newport Beachside Hotel Fruit smoothies, traditional afMichael's, Md. Check into this & Resort, Sunny Isles Beach, ternoon tea,roses, sparkling c harming r ural r e treat f or Fla. Choose the Barefoot and cider and chocolate-covered your Babymoon on the Bay. Pregnant package and enjoy strawberries await the expectWith just 78 rooms, the his- an oceanfront suite, a parant couple when they reserve toric inn offers moms-to-be a ents-to-bepampering session the Bundle ofJoy Babymoon Moon and Tide prenatal mas- under a p r ivate beachfront getaway package in this picsage, a Barefoot and Beautiful cabana, including dual thera- turesque New England inn. pedicure along with a classic peutic massages, mom-icures Mom and dad can also use manicure as part of the special and pop-icures, along with the getaway to shower a little weekend. The couple will also complimentary moc k t ails. last-minute love on their fourenjoy many amenities, compli- Take advantage of private pre- legged family members — the mentary wireless Internet as natal yoga sessions offered by inn is pet-friendly. well as breakfast and dinner certified instructors as well as Contact: 603- 9 68-3775; in Sherwood's Landing, the access to the fitness center and glynnhouse.com
The Mirror Pond Management Board, appointed by BendCity Council, is launChinga three-PhaSe PrOCeSS tO reaCh a COnCluSiOn On Whatto do
with the silt build-Up in Mirror Pond. FOr the firSt PhaSe,your inPut iS needed by February 25th. l
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Attend a public presentation on February 12th at Bend Park & Recreation District, 799 SWColumbia, 6:30 pm. OR Call (541) 706-6152 to have a questionnaire mailed to you. In the fOIIOWingtWOPhaSeS, SeVeral aCtiOnSWill be PreSented tO the COmmunity
fOr COmmentand then a Preferred COurSeOf aCtiOnWil be deCided in June. Project of The Mirror Pond Management Board, an independent citizen advisory committee established by Bend City Council.
www.MirrorPondBend.com (541) 706-6152
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN C 3
Packing forcold-weathertravel By Myscha Theriault
search time, it's possible to procure ones that are warm Winter weather has a way enough without being too of waging war against the thick and heavy. For examlight-packing efforts of even ple, PowerSox produces a the most seasoned traveler. number of sock collections The extra bulk that comes suitable for snowy getaways, with s w e aters, s c a rves, many of them available in earmuffs and mittens can multipacks for less than $25 make carry-on containment Supplies: If you're delibernearly impossible. By wear- ately traveling to somewhere that's likely to leave you with ing as much as possible on flight days and including a a case of the snifflesand few efficiently-packed essen- some seriously chapped skin, tials, you can do your part to it pays to pack preventativekeep luggage logistics under ly. SkinFare offers several control. certified organic skin balms Footwear: Keeping your in retractable, biodegradable feet warm on a winter get- tubes. Used for a variety of away takes planning, partic- issues from rough elbows, ularly if you are trying hard lip moisturizing, cheek chafto adhere to carry-on require- ing and even dry nostrils, ments. In addition to a pair of the multi-scented balms cost dressy treaded shoes to wear $10 and are roughly the size to dinner, packable boots of a piece of sidewalk chalk. have a place on your list of Other items I favor for frosty cold-weather travel essen- destinations include wellness tials. Teva's Jordanelle boot teas, lozenges, powdered flu for women and their men's medicines and deep condiChair 5 model each fold into tioning treatments for dealt hemselves, taking u p n o ing with split ends. more room than a regular Janet Podolak, food and pair of sturdy shoes. Each travel editor for The Newscomes with a re m ovable Herald in Willoughby, Ohio, insulated bootie with a rubleverages her need for clean berized sole, forming what laundry in order to combat is in essence a slipper that dry conditions. Says Pocan be worn inside cabins to dolak, "As a longtime newsavoid slush puddles. Having paper travel editor I often go two pairs of footwear for the to cold places in the winter. price of one makes the price Battling dry winter air is one palatable, although with a constant dilemma." Her soluminimal amount of online tion? Using the room heater comparison shopping, both as a spot to dry undergarmodels can be had for bements and other light items tween $100 and $130. she typically launders in her Socks are a lso serious hotel room. business when it comes to Gear: Wind resistance and making sure your tootsies warmth are critical things remain toasty. For those who to consider when you are are willing to put in the rerequired to match wits with
the weather in order to achieve your desired itinerary. A large part of that battle can be won with hats. Seirus makes a number of winter-worthy options, although their quick clavas go the extra mile to provide a two-in-one warming solution for travelers. At first glance, they look like your typical midweight knit hat. What's hidden inside is an easy-to-pull-down facecovering that can be worn over the nose, leaving only the eyes exposed. With an MSRP range of $20 to $35, they're an affordable solution for those who'd rather forego the extra suitcase bulk that comes with a heavy face scarf. An even more s t reamlined s olution exists with the performance beanie produced by H e adsweats. Made of a thin fleece, it's designed to pack flat and comes with a discreet ponytail hole towards the bottom of the back edge that's suitable for both genders. At $22, it's workable for a wide range of budgets. Quilted o uterwear v e sts provide body warmth while avoiding the restrictive bulk that can come from wearing heavy sweaters under full jackets. Wind resistance and warmth can also be found in s pecially-designed th i n n er garments, such as the Leadville jacket f r o m M a r mot. It's strong enough to support
McClatchy-Tribune News Service
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Mike Siegel / Seattle Times
A skier explores woods along the Teacup Lake trail system, off Highway 35 about 35 miles from Hood River. This and other areas on the slopes of Mount Hood offer many opportunities for cross-country and downhill skiing.
Hoo River: By Brian J. Cantweii
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shoeing on a variety of winterwonderland trails. HOOD RIVER — This town Perhaps most popular is the full o f e x t reme-sports nuts Teacup Lake trail system, with owes its late-20th century re- more than a dozen miles of naissance to windsurfing and groomed trails and a warming other water sports — things cabin. A $10 daily donation you might think of in summer. supports g r ooming e f f orts Add four craftbreweries and by the Teacup Lake Nordic you get a town of sports nuts Club (teacupnordic.org) and and beer nuts. a Sno-park permit is required When word got out that you (Oregon honors Washington could also ski or snowboard permits). pretty much year-round on Busy weekends nearby Mount H ood, snow nuts came, too. The 200-space lot can fill With cozy brew pubs, good on winter weekends, reports restaurants and a w a lkable Stephen Schneider,president downtown that f estoons itof Oregon Nordic Clubs, of self in lights well beyond the which Teacup is a chapter. holidays, Hood River — whose "On those days, on the trails front yard i s th e Columbia closer in, there are always River — is growing a reputa- l ots of s k iers of a l l t y p e s tion as a getaway for winter as — racers, beginners, family well as summer. outings, couples, you name "We've gotten written up in it ... You'll see many families a couple of ski magazines, and skiing together, with many of while a lot of people (heading them pulling a child behind for Mount Hood) stay in Port- in a sled." land, here we get that small P refer solitude? Go d u rski-town winter v ibe," said ing the week (they groom on Nikki Guerra-Smith, 33, who Tuesdays and Wednesdays, moved 12 years ago from Los too). Those days, the only Angelesaftershe heard about sound you might hear is the that s u m me r s n o w board- swish, swish of your own skis ing. "Sometimes we've had and the occasional plop of a couple feet of snow on the snow dropping off ice-coated sidewalk." boughs. "Weekday t r affic c o unts The main drag at Teacup average about 75 Now she works the front skiers per day, which when d esk at D o ug's Sports on spread overthose trails over downtown's main drag, across a n eight-hour p e riod c a n from the charmingly old-fash- make it seem like you are ioned, redbrick Hood River alone most of the time," SchHotel, which is listed on the neider said. National Historic Register (the Pick up a waterproof Mt. elevator'swire-cage door is a H ood W i n ter T r a il s m a p blast from the past). ( $14.95 at Doug's) for a Hotel guests can rent snow topographic guide with degear at a discount from Doug's t ail maps o f p o pular t r a il and shop staff will cross the systems. "At some you can crossstreet to retrieve it after-hours. Other perks: At this and other country ski an d t ake your area lodging, ask about dis- dogs, or a lot of people like to counted tickets for nearby ski take their dogs snowshoeing areas (up to $24 off the usual — just go wandering with the adult lift price for Mount Hood pups," Guerra-Smith said. Meadows). One place to do that, at no Besides th e c o m mercial charge, is on the edge of Timslopes at Mount Hood's Tim- berline ski area, said Robbie berline, Hood Meadows and Walsh, 30, at Second Wind Cooper Spur — all within 30 Sports, up th e street from minutes to an hour's drive of Doug's. town — sports shops send visiHe said another favorite tors upscenic Highway 35 for place for snowshoers is Tacross-country skiing or snow- manawas Falls, a 3 . 6-mile The Seattle Times
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round trip from the Sherwood Trailhead near Milepost 72 off Highway 35. "It's very popular in summer for hikes,and it' s absolutely gorgeous in winter." And when you're happily worn out at day's end, wander up Oak Street, Hood River's main drag, past Mystic Mud Studio, with handmade pottery; G . W i l l i k er's Toy Shoppe, with a crystal-growing kit i n t h e w i ndow and nary a video game in sight; or Rivertap restaurant, with a blazing "Beer to Go!" neon sign shaped like a g r owler
Iug.
Brewpubs I f you're back f ro m t h e mountain early enough, save time for a f r e e 3 0 -minute guided tour i n t h e s teamy, hop-scented halls of workerowned Ful l S a i l B r e wery (506 Columbia St.), the town's craft-brewing pioneer, named for th e 1 980s w i ndsurfing craze that spawned the town's renewal. Daily tours are on the hour from I to 4 p.m., no reservations needed. Other after-the-snow choice s for b r ewpub tours a n d noshes include Double Mountain Brewery, 8 Fourth St . (with Fa La La La La winter ale), Big Horse Brew Pub, 115 W. State St. (with MacStallion Scotch Export) and a 2012 addition, Belgian-influenced Pfriem Family Brewers, 707 Portway Ave., near the Columbia River shore. With a choice of good restaurants, I end my day in the firelit, red-and-black dining room at B r ian's Pourhouse — couldn't resist the name — with a platter of tilapia tacos and a pint of pumpkin ale in a comfy old house at 606 Oak St. W hen m o r n in g co m e s again, it's time to stop by a bakery c alled K n ead, 102 Fifth St., with a hardworking
young crew rolling dough in the front window, to pack a knapsack with warm cinnamon rolls, then blaze the way back up Highway 35 to the snow. It's how winter works in Hood River.
ing, yet streamlined enough for efficient packing.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 'IO,20'I3 A greater roadrunner greets visitors in the Hidden Valley area of Joshua Tree National Park. Though capable of flight, the 2-footlong desert bird can run 20 miles per hour or faster.
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A Mojave Desert sunset bathes Joshua trees in a golden light. Requiring 6 to 8 inches of annual precipitation to flower in spring, the plants grow mainly at elevations above 2,000 feet, where winter snowmelt helps to nurture them.
Joshua Tree
it had been designated by the United Nations as a world bioContinued from C1 sphere reserve. Enveloping a t r a nsitional It is a worthy detour of a zone wherethe higher Mojave day or more for anyone travdescends to meet the lower eling between Las Vegas and Colorado Desert, and ranging Los Angeles, as photographer in elevation from more than Barb Gonzalez and I did last 5,800feetdown to nearly 500, month. the park was established as a national monument in 1936. It A curious plant was upgraded to national park Rangers estimate the numstatus in 1994, 10 years after ber of Joshua trees in the park
Expenses for two
• Desert HotSpringsSpaHotel. 10805 Palm Drive, Desert Hot Springs, Calif.; 760-329-6000, 800-808-7727, www.dhsspa.
Gas, Las Vegas to LosAngeles via Joshua Tree,493 miles@ $3.50/gallon ................. $69.02 com. Ratesfrom$89 Lodging (3 nights, with • Red Lion Inn 8cSuites. breakfast), Red Lion69151 E. Palm Canyon Drive, Cathedral City............. $230.81
Cathedral City, Calif.; 760-324-
Dinner, Shame onthe Moon, 5939, 800-733-5466, www. Rancho Mirage............. $90.73 redlion.com. Rates from $69. Groceries for oneday's lunches ...............................$20 DINING • Bistro TwentyNine. Vehicle admission, Joshua Tree National Park..............$15 Book, "Road Guide to Joshua Tree National Park" ........ $6.38 Dinner, Salsa's, Cathedral City ................................ $28.04
73527 TwentyninePalms Hwy.,Twentynine Palms, Calif.; 760-361-2229, www.
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Hwy. 111, Rancho Mirage, Calif.; 760-770-1614, www.
bistrotwentynine.com. Dinner Monday to Saturday. Moderate
• The PalmsCafe. 69930
Admission, Indian
thepalmscaferm.com. Canyons..............................$18 Breakfast and lunch every day. Dinner, Riccio's, Palm
Budget
Springs .......................... $70.18 • Riccio's Steakand TOTAL ......................... $578.43 Seafood.495 N. Palm (These figures do notinclude Canyon Drive, Palm Springs, Calif.; 760-325-3111, www.
our travel to LasVegas, wherewe were attending a
ricciossteakandseafood.com. Dinner every day. Moderate to
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expensive • Salsa's Restaurant.
tri p airfare from Redmondl Bend to Palm Springsis $383
69020 E. Palm Canyon Drive, Cathedral City, Calif.; 760321-6612. Lunch and dinner Tuesday to Saturday. Budget
per person.)
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• Shame onthe Moon.69950 Frank Sinatra Drive, Rancho
INFORMATION • Greater PalmSprings
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www.shameonthemoon.com. Dinner every day. Moderate to expensive
Convention 8 Visitors Bureau.70100 Hwy. 111,
Rancho Mirage, Calif.; 760770-9000, 800-967-3767,
ATTRACTIONS
www.palmspringsoasis.com
• Indian Canyons.Agua Caliente Indian Reservation, 3855 S.
LODGING • Ace Hotel PalmSprings. 701 E. PalmCanyonDrive,
Palm CanyonDrive, Palm Springs, Calif.; 760-323-6018,
www.indian-canyons.com • JoshuaTree National Park.
Palm Springs, Calif.; 760-3259900, www.acehotel.comi
palmsprings. Rates from $109 74485 National Park Drive, Twentynine Palms, Calif.; 760• Country Inn 29Palms. 71829 Twentynine Palms Hwy., Twentynine Palms, Calif.; 760-367-0070, www.
367-5500, www.nps.gov/jotri • Tahquitz Canyon.500 W.
countryinn29palms.com. Rates from $59.95
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to be about 5.5 million. They grow mainly in widely spaced "forests" above 2,000 feet, in the northwestern section of the park, where winter snowmelt helps provide the 6 to 8 inches of annual precipitation they need to grow. The Joshua tree is a curious plant. In the traditional sense, it's not a tree at all, but a "short-leaf yucca" according to its Latin name, Yucca brevifolia. It has no growth r ings; instead, its t r unk i s made up o f t h o usands of small fibers that grow at a rate of 2 to 3 inches a year, according to p ar k n a turalist Darwin Spearing. Some
From here, there are two primary routes through the park. Park Boulevard follows a winding, 38-mile loop through the high Mojave Desert country between Joshua Tree and the Mara Oasis Visitor Center at Twentynine Palms, with side roads to such attractions as Keys View and the Barker Dam. Pinto Basin Road runs 46 miles to the park's south entrance, off Interstate 10 near Cottonwood Spring, from a junction with Park Boulevard 8 miles south of Twentynine Palms. So impressed were we with the upper desert, we wound up staying until we saw the sun may appear fragile, but plants setting with a brilliant pinkish such asthe giant Joshua tree glow. We saved Pinto Basinthat stands today in the park's said to be spectacular during Queen Valley — 42 feet tall, a the spring wildflower season dozen feet around — may be — for another time, leaving centuries old. until then a garden of cholla Pollinated only by the noc- cactus, a p atch o f s p indly turnal yucca moth, accord- ocotillo and the Cottonwood ing to Spearing, the Joshua Spring oasis, where the park tree produces large clusters has a third visitor center that of beautiful white flowers in focuses on Colorado Desert early spring. Our visit was a attractions, for a future visit. couple of months too early for this spectacle; instead, we Beep beep! observed the evergreens' clusIf there was one highlight of ters of serrated, bayonet-like our visit, it came at a turnout leaves, arranged in dense spi- near Hidden Valley, a cloisrals off individual branches. tered alcove between huge Seen against a b ackdrop boulders where cattle rustlers of giant boulders stacked like of the late 19th century are marbles, framed by a sky that rumored to have hidden their was almost impossibly blue stolen livestock. and distant peaks fringed with A short time earlier, we had snow, they created a remark- seen a wily coyote cross the able panorama. road in front of us. "In pursuit of the roadrunner, no doubt," I Park access quipped, thinking of the LooWe stayed three nights in ney Tunes cartoon characters. Cathedral City, just outside of But I had never seen a roadPalm Springs, a 90-mile drive runner, native to the southeast of downtown Los Ange- western United States and les and 280 miles southwest Mexico, in the wild. of Las Vegas. We used the Red As luck would have it, the Lion Inn 8 Suites as our base long-legged bird was just waitfor exploring Joshua Tree Na- ing for his cue to enter the tional Park — from morning scene. to dusk — as well as the palm While Gonzalez set up her oases of Indian Canyons on tripod to photograph a desert the nearby Agua Caliente In- landscape, I sat behind the dian Reservation on the fol- wheel of our car, surveying lowing day. the magnificent scenery that T he d r iv e fr o m Pa l m spread before me. A m oveSprings area to the village of ment at ground level distractJoshua Tree, near the West En- ed me. I glanced downward, trance Station to the national and there, staring up at me, park, takes about 45 minutes. was a roadrunner. The Twentynine Palms HighContinued next page way (California state Route 62) climbs more than 3,000 feet in 35 miles into the Little San Bernardino Mountains. It crosses the easily visible San Andreas Fault to Yucca Valley and, a little farther, the Joshua Tree Visitor Center.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
The IndianCanyons Joshua TreeNational Park isn't the only place that offers good hiking options in the Palm
Springs area. Another is the Indian Canyons, on the Agua Caliente lndian Reservation just south of the resort town. Rather than Joshua Treeswhich live primarily above 2,000
feet — the world's largest oasis of California fan palms thrives here at an elevation of150 feet.
An easy 3-mile hike took
in length. Two other nearby canyons — Andreas andMurray — lead to waterfalls and abandoned
us up trickling Palm Canyon
mines. And on the west side of
Creek and past tiny natural warm springs of the kind that
town, Tahquitz Canyonfeatures a luxurious visitor center and
gave Palm Springs its name. Shaded by the giant palms, the
ranger-led interpretive hikes, 2~/~ hours in length, to a sea-
trail was part of a much larger
sonal 60-foot waterfall.
network, more than 15 miles
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many other species. Scrub oak, juniper and pinon pine are prevalent in the Queen Valley and a r ound B arker Dam, a small, rain-fed reservoir near the Keys Ranch h omestead. C r eosote a n d blackbrusharecommon in the arid landscape. And there are cacti — not in the numbers they are found in some Arizona deserts, perhaps, but certainly well represented. In particular, we saw prickly pear, with pads like beavers' tails; ocotillo, gangly and spider-like; silver cholla, sun glinting off its glistening pointers; and pencil cholla, its long spikes issuing a "stay away" warning.
Other highlights Park rangers lead a walkPhotosbyBarb Gonzalez/The Spokesman
Ancient Cahuilla Indian petroglyphs are preserved in a natural alcove near Barker Dam. Many of them have been painted over by vandalswho may have had good intentions, butwhose action many decades ago permanently defaced the primitive art.
From previous page It almost seemed to be begging for a handout, although I knew that the roadrunner's preferred diet is insects and lizards, neither of which I had in my lunch bag. I stuttered in an attempt to alert Gonzalez without startling the bird, which, though capable of flight, can run 20 miles perhour or faster. She succeeded in getting a couple of good shots before the roadrunner, discovering that no food was forthcoming, skittered off intothe brush-covered desert. Despite its desolate appearance, the Mojave is as rich with animal inhabitants as it
is in plant life. Bighorn sheep study the desert floor from rocky heights. Desert tortoises march at their own slow, steady pace across the r emote landscape. Jackrabbits, ground squirrels and wood rats find shelter in burrows. A plethora of reptiles, from nocturnal lizards to venomous rattlesnakes, hide in the rocks. And everywhere are birds: hawks, owls, w oodpeckers, songbirds, quail and the ubiquitous ravens. The foliage is not restricted to Joshua trees. Far from it. While these strange, ancient yuccas are the park's namesake, they share the park with
Joshua Tree National Park Twentynine Palms
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MEXICO Greg Cross/The Bulletin
ing tour (by reservation) of Billand Frances Keys' Desert Queen Ranch, which operated from 1918 to 1963 as one of the only h omesteads in this remote region. Nestled beneath towering o u tcroppings of granite known as the Wonderland of Rocks, 2.5 miles from the Hidden Valley campground, the ranch is a tribute to the perseverance and tenacity of a "desert rat" couple who found a way to live in this foreboding location for 45 years. Bill and Frances Keys did whatever it took to survive. As a cattle rancher, Bill Keys raised the height of the Barker Dam from 9 to 15 feet to water his livestock. He was a prospector and miner, a mill operator, a road builder. His wife was doctorand teacher to their four children, a gardener and housekeeper for the whole family. Rangers also tell the story of Bill Keys' imprisonment. In 1943, they say, he turned the tables on a feuding neighb or, shooting a n d k i l l i n g the man in self-defense. He was sentenced to 10 years for manslaughter, but served only half of that time when writer Erle Stanley Gardner, the creatorof "Perry Mason," took up his case and helped win Keys' parole. He was later pardoned. U nfortunately, ou r vi s i t didn't coincide with the Keys Ranch tour s c hedule. But we did enjoy a I'/4-mile walk around Barker D am , even though its reservoir was dry
Private,>vintage,'oceanfront getaway at the time of our visit last mid-summer visit, when high month. Built around 1900 for temperatures here soar well Newpor +t, OR mining as well as livestock, above 100 degrees. ' zr1-800=755-5674 its vegetated fringe makes it — Reporter: janderson@ a popular place for wildlife bendbulletin.corn spotting. Our trail took u s past a natural alcove that preserves a set of centuries-old Cahuilla Indian petroglyphs. They have been painted over by vandals who may have had good intentions, but whose action many 0 s •0 • e 0 g decades ago permanently defaced the primitive art. Five miles south of Hidden • rr • n sns ! Lsrga n In Valley, the paved road leads to a viewpoint that looks almost a mile down to Palm Springs and th e C o achella V alley. From Keys View, elevation 5,185 feet, the vista stretches across the San Andreas Fault R .R between Mount San GorgoReceive 20% off room rate when you bring nio, at 11,503 feet the highest this ad and donate a can of food summit in southern Califorfor each night of your stay. nia, and the inland Salton Sea, Valid Sun-Thurs, Now - May 23, 2013 (Offer is nor good Mar 22-30, 2013 or with other d>scounts Food donated to Lincoln County Food Share.) 227 feet below sea level. There are many places for Yachats, Oregon rock lovers to clamber over the granite here. One of the most popular is Jumbo Rocks, toward the eastern end of Park 800-338-0507 Boulevard. R oc k c l i m bers overleaflodge.com o verleafspa.com — some technical, many others mere scramblers — love the maze of domes, towers, steeples, arches and balanced rocks. In fact, the entire park is a paradise for rock climbers. We even saw one young m an practicing w a lking a tightrope between two blocks. At a campground amphitheater near Jumbo Rocks, rangers give occasional evening lectures on geology. According to the official "Joshua Tree Guide" published by the National Park S ervice, the creation of these rock form ations began m ore t h a n 100 million years ago, when molten rock oozed upward through the earth b eneath overlying rock, or gneiss. Vertical and horizontal fractures in the cooling process allowed ground water t o p e r colate through; over time the gneiss was eroded and the angular blocks beneath settled into the apparent piles seen today. Spring, from all accounts, is the best time to visit. WinLIMIT ONE 00UPON PER PERSON PER VISIT•COUPON EXPIRES3/4/2013 ter snowmelt has encouraged myriad wildflowers to blossom, and temperatures are comfortable: Typical daytime highs in April and May are in the 80s, with overnight lows Call for reservations, location 5 times: 541.183.1529 ext.209 • 0 e • • oi in the 50s. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • It was cold, I h ave read, when U2 did its desert photo Qa.' '3- . t M / ~ I X rV A shoot. It was chilly in January when I visited. As much as I look forward to a wildflowerseason return, I'll pass on a
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Pink light glazes the peak of distant Ryan Mountain in this twilight view of the Jumbo Rocks. The park displays more than 100 million years of geological history, its granite features created by molten liquid that fractured as it cooled beneath overlying gneiss.
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
SU D O K U
by David L. Huyt and Jeff Knureh
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JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Harry and Freda Fisher relax and enjoy the view out the front window of their Bend home last week.
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
Anniversary
Being vulnerable By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
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I fear that players put too much emphasis on v u l nerability. Some players think "not vulnerable" means invulnerable: They take liberties with preempts and competitive actions. If the same players are vulnerable, they may disappear from the auction like a t urtle i nt o h i s s h e ll . B u t b e i n g vulnerable doesn't mean you can take fewer tricks. Bid your hand. In a team match, West's double suggested support for the unbid suits, hence shortness in h e arts. From East's vantage point, if West's values were minimum, North-South could make four hearts. If West had extra s trength, East-West could w i n a bundle of t ricks at diamonds. But East was vulnerable; he sold out to four hearts. When West led the king of clubs, East ruffed dummy's ace and erred
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hand by jumping to four diamonds.
(C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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Continued from C1 During their relationship, Harry an d F r ed a m o ved from Bend to eastern Idaho and spent 25 to 3 0 y ears running a f arm, pastoring a church and managing a construction company. They came back to Bend for their retirement in 1981 and are now living with their daughter, Doris Newman, her husband and one of their sons. They've raised o r h e lped raise two children — including Doris and her brother Donald, now deceased — as well a s s even g r andchildren, 14 g reat g r andchildren an d s i x g r e at-great grandchildren. Their last family reunion was in July 2009 and drew what Harry said was "better than 60 of us together at the same time." "They've certainly been a good role model for us and our family," said Doris, 77, who has been married to her husband for 58 years and was quick to add that her father, who is an ordained m inister, p e r f ormed t h e
Harry Fisher holds a picture frame with a picture of he and his wife Freda Fisher when the got married in1934, left, celebrating their 50th anniversary, center, and their 75th anniversary. the fall of communism, and the transformation of their childhood home as it grew f rom a m il l t ow n o f o n l y 8,800 souls to a thriving city with a population of 77,905. T he y e ar s h a v e a l s o taken their toll on the Fishers; Harry is hard of hearing and uses a wheelchair because the arthritis in his knees makes it hard for him to stand, while his wife is legally blind and also uses a wheelchair to get around the house. "We had dirt roads back then," Freda said as she remembered a childhood in Bend where horses and buggies were a somewhat common site in the more rural
marriage ceremony. Harry and Freda's marriage saw the final years of the Great Depression, World War II, the moon landing,
parts of C e ntral O r egon. "That's what it was like, we had dirt roads." But their l ove fo r e ach other has stayed constant throughout this time, said Harry, who still remembers the night he and Freda first kissed. It was late one night and they were walking back from a choir practice that a woman in their church had hosted at her house on Fresno Avenue. "We were getting ready to part and she said, 'Can I kiss you?'" he said, recalling where it all started. "I told her that she most certainly could." — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmcleanCmbendbulletin.com
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis uFLORIDATIONn By 82 Bulletproof linen I I8 Some state-
JOHN LAMPKIN
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CROSSW OR D SOLUTION ISON C3
©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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•
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
avi orrisse ru esas e overnor TV SPOTLIGHT
P enny was stabbed by M i chonne, an intruder out to kill By Frazier Moore The Governor. The Associated Press "He loses the one thing he "Brother NEW YORK lives for," says Morrissey, adda gainst brother," says T h e ing with a bit of understateGovernor f iercely. "Winner ment, "Now he's full of anger." goes free. Fight to the death." The 48-year-old actor graviI s this any way to ru n a tates toward c omplex, offtown? kilter roles. He is celebrated AMC's zombie drama "The for the 2003 British miniseries "State of Play," where he Walking Dead" ended the first half of this season with played an u pright M ember a wrenching faceoff: roughof Parliament who may have neck brothers Merle and Dabeen involved in a string of ryl were pitted in a bloody test killings. The same year, "The Deal" was a British TV film of loyalty to The Governor as he rallied his flock — the resiAmy Sussman / Invision via The Associated Press that starred Morrissey as MP dents of Woodbury, Ga. — to Actor David Morrissey plays The Governor onAMC Network's "The (and future prime minister) goad them on. Walking Dead." The popular zombie series returns for another Gordon Brown. That was last December. eight episodes beginning tonight at 9 p.m. A few y e ars earlier, he Things haven't settled down played a jazz musician with as the hit horror serial returns u nderworld connections i n for another eight e pisodes persistent appetite for human His most touching moments the British series "Finney." In Sunday at 9 p.m. EST. The flesh — but also mortals, who s howed hi s d e sperate a t - the 2000 film "Some Voices," death match continues. The are farless predictable. These tempts t o s t a y c o n nected he was t h e l o n g-suffering Governor, played by D avid include the ragtag refugees led with Penny, his undead little brother of schizophrenic DanMorrissey, is increasingly op- by Sheriff Rick Grimes hiding girl. Removing her from the iel Craig. pressive, even deranged. out in an abandoned prison cell in his apartment where Morrissey approached the "With Woodbury, he h as nearby. he kept her chained, he lov- role of The Governor with his "You can adaptto the zombuilt a sanctuary, a place of ingly combed her wiry zom- typical concern that the charsafety where humanity can bie threat, and that's part of bie hair i n on e memorable acter display many facets and start again," says Morrissey. what Woodbury i s a b out," scene, while she snarled and steadily develop. "But the negative side of power says Morrissey. "But the new snapped ferociously. " I wanted to b e sure he is like a wobbly tooth for him. problem that has emerged in S trange as i t w a s , t h e didn't just become a cartoon He just can't stop sticking his Season 3 is human beings. scene made perfectsense to buddy," Morrissey says. tongue in there. There's some- What you have now is two Morrissey. Meanwhile,he began mas"You have a sick child and tering the obligatory Southern thing gloriously painful about communities of h umans in it, and he likes that." conflict. That's much more you're trying to d o n o rmal accent. He seems to be losing his complicated." things that just aren't normal Describing h i s ha p py, m arbles as he seesthreats both In o ther w o r ds: W h at's anymore," he says. "There's working-class chil d h o od within and beyond the town scarier than the undead? The great certainty and comfort in in Liverpool, England - "it walls. This has placed on his living! the past, and he was trying to was a t o ugh e nvironment, enemies list not only the zomIn the p ast, The G overre-create that." but tough in the right way" bies — with their ploddingly nor exhibited a softer side. But in December's finale, — Morrissey speaks in the
GrOOm'S ParentS balk at COS t Of rehearSal Dear Abby: My stepson "Steve" is getting married out of town. His fiancee is an only daughter with three brothers, and her family is throwing a large, traditional, formal wedding. My husband and I have just been informed by Steve's mother that we are to host the rehearsal DEP,R
n ner or e w e
ABBY d ing p a r ty , t h e i r spouses and out-oftown guests. It will cost thousands of dollars in addition to the cost of us attending the wedding, and we will have to go into debt to pay for it. Is this fair? When we were married, we had a simple wedding. We prepared everything ourselves because it was all we could afford. Should we be expected tofork over money we don't have to feed people we don't know just because the bride's family can afford to throw a large, formal wedding? — Stepmom inCanada Dear Stepmom: No, you should not, and you should let the bride's family know it A SAP. Although, traditionally, a rehearsal dinner is hosted by the parents of the groom, today it can be hosted by just about anyone who is willing.
And while the guest list normally includes all attendants and their spouses orpartners, close relatives and special guests such as the clergyperson and spouse, you are not obligated to include out-of-town guests. Out-of-town guests should be given a list of local restaurants and should not expect to be entertained beyond th e w e dding and the reception. Dear Abby:I had a working relationship with a couple, "Ed" and "Millie," for many years. I considered them personal friends as well. I have since left the company and moved about 80 miles away. While I have enjoyed staying in touch with them, their phone calls to me have been overwhelming. They sometimes call at inappropriate times — day and night. Ignoring them or not returning calls didn't work. Ed sent me texts, and I finally responded with "Please don't call me anymore," but his calls continue. Ichanged my phone number, but now I'm starting to get calls where I work, and they have even called my daughter's phone. I know Ed is retired now and has some health issues, but I don't know why I'm the one he calls when he's bored
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,
YOURHOROSCOPE
FEB. 10, 2013:This yearyou havean opportunity for a new beginning. Your charisma and energy are what separate you from many people. Youwill be noticed, no matter where you are. Becareful, as you might act on certain Stars showthe kind feelings and create of day you'll have a problem within ** * * * D ynamic a relationship. ** * * P ositive Y o u'll also have ** * A verage ate n dencyto be ** So-so quite me-oriented. * Difficult If you are single, you draw quite a few people toward you. Usecaution with overindulging. If you are attached, try to walk in your sweetie's footsteps more often. PISCESdraws you in. Youenjoy his or her reverie.
By Jacqueline Bigar
you. Let go of any resentment or anger. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
CANCER (June21-July22)
** * * * R each out to someone at a distance. Your conversation could be very lively, and it might take you to a point where you start fighting over a trivial matter. Try to avoid this situation for the sake of the relationship. Do something just for you. Tonight: Not to be found. LEO (Joly 23-Aug. 22) ** * * D eal with others on a oneon-one level right now. It seems as though many people wantyour exclusive attention. Relating in this manner can, and ARIES (March20-April19) probably will, open many doors. Tonight: ** * You have been so busy living life to the fullest that you might not have realized Be a duo. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) how tired you've gotten. You can see it ** * * O thers seek you out. Your now in yourreactions.W henyou become triggered, your anger could get a little out popularity will soar, as long as you can of control. Excessiveness seems to follow take a harmless jab or two. Even though it might be more fun just to get along, it you. Tonight: Not to be found. still is important to clear the air. Follow TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You have the rare opportunity someone's suggestion. Tonight: Go with the moment. to get some quality time with your loved LIBRA (Sept23-Oct. 22) ones. You could have a little too much ** * * B e more direct with others, energy and good will. You might want especially if you are working as a team. to buy a token of appreciation for nearly Holding back mightfeel good at first, but anyone you see. Discipline yourself! ultimately, it does not take you to victory. Tonight: Forget tomorrow. Live today. Afterward, you'll want to partake in some GEMINI (May 21-June20) type of relaxing activity, and perhaps even ** * * K n ow that others might be take a nap. Tonight: Do for you. admiring your choices and how you are handling yourself. For some reason, you might feel as if they are checking in on
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *
You know what you want. A love
and wants someone to talk to. I have reached the point where I don't think it is possible to continue this friendship if it's going to involve multiple phone calls each day and 20 messages in my mailbox during the week. How do I get these nice people to give me some space? — Smothered in Carrollton, Ga. Dear Smothered: How sad. Multiple daily phone calls and 20 email messages a week after you have asked the person not to contact you isn't normal behavior. It's harassment. In light of your long friendship with this couple, and the fact that Ed's behavior is escalating, call his wife. Explain that you are concerned about her h usband's behavior and urge her to have him evaluated by his doctor. To My Asian Readers:The Lunar New Year begins today. It's the Year of theSnake. According to Asian culture, individuals born in the year of the snake are goal-oriented and hate failure. They are excellent mediators — intelligent, refined, clever in business and good providersbecause they value material wealth. A healthy, happy and prosperous New Year to you alL — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
interest could be a little too spunky for you right now. Do your best to wear this person down; interactions will be easier if you do. Realize that a loved one goes a longway to accommodate you.Tonight: Let your imagination lead.
singsongy lilt reminiscent of t he Liverpudlian lads w h o formed the world's greatest
rock band (and might pronounce "band" s omething
like "bah-yind.")
He says he worked with the same accent coach assigned to series star Andrew Lincoln
(who plays Rick Grimes), a fellow Brit. And he trained hard. "My children got very bored with me reading them bedtime stories in a Georgia accent," he says with a laugh. The Woodbury scenes were shot in the town of Senoia, Ga., 40 miles south of Atlanta. Months of filming took Morrissey away from his family — sons 17and 8years old, and a daughter, 15, as well as his wife, novelist Esther Freud (who happens to be the great-
granddaughter of Sigmund Freud). "The people who live there are great," says Morrissey, "because we do disrupt their lives." Shooting for the season wrapped in November, "and I had a lovely time there." But will The Governor be back to rule over the ultimate gated community? Not sur-
prisingly, Morrissey is cagey when replying to that question: "Contractually, I'm there for five years. But that's not to say that I don't die at the end of this season, Or whenever." Whether or not he's back on "The Walking Dead," Morrissey means to keep taking risks with his roles.
There may be anadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. Movie times aresubject to changeafter press time. Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 BULLET TO THE HEAD(R) 1:45, 4:35, 7:15, 10:20 DJANGO UNCHAINED(R)I2:45,4:25,8 GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 12:05, 3:35, 7, 9:50 HANSEL &GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS (R)3:50,IO:IO HANSEL & GRETEL: WITCHHUNTERS3-0 (R) 1:20, 7:45 THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY 3-0(PG-13)6 THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)2, 9:40 IDENTITY THIEF(R) 12:25, 3:20, 4:45, 6:25, 7:25, 9: I5, 10:15 LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 12:40, 4:05, 7:35 LIFE OF PI(PG)12:15 LIFE OF PI 3-0 (PG)3:40, 6:40, 9:35 LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:40, 9:55 MAMA(PG-13) 1:10, 4:20, 7:55, 10:25 MOVIE 43(R) 1:55 PARKER (R) 12:20, 3:05, 6:10, 9:10 SIDE EFFECTS (R) 1, 3:45, 7:10, 9:45 TOP GUN IMAX (PG) 12:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:15 WARM BODIES (PG-13) 1:25, 3:55, 6:45, 9:20 ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:15, 6:40, 10:05 Accessibility devices areavailable for some movies.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * D iscussions revolve around new plans and different points of view. Be smart and respect differences rather than try to prove that you're right. "Right" is subjective, and it's different from person to person. Make plans for a fun happening. Tonight: Hang out with friends.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feh.18) ** * * * Y ou have a lot of spunk in your personality. You'll have moments that will make you smile and release your fun ideas and good nature out into the world. Recognize that you are likely to go overboard. Avoid a disagreement if possible. Tonight: Yourtreat.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * * * Y ou might be the ringmaster of a happening, and others will want to join in. Avoid being caustic or sharp. You know whatyou want, and also know how m uch you enjoy certain people.You have a chance to bring everyone together. Tonight: You call the shots. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
9 p.m. on H C), "Revenge" — Jack and Amanda's (Nick Wechsler, Margarita Levieva) wedding brings back painful memories for Emily (Emily VanCamp)as she thinks about what might have been. Conrad (Henry Czerny) begins a newchapter. Things at Grayson Global get complicated for Daniel (Josh Bowman) in the new epi sode "Union."Madeleine Stowe also stars. 9 p.m. on H, "Masterpiece Classic" —Change arrives in a big way for several key characters at Downton Abbey. Ayearly cricket match with the village sees old scores settled and new plots hatched in this new episode. Hugh Bonneville, Laura Carmichael, Brendan Coyle and Elizabeth McGovern star. 9:30 p.m. on HBO,"Enlightened" —Amy, Tyler and Dougie (Laura Dern, Mike White, Timm Sharp) take turns trying to make friends with CEDCharles Szidon's (James Rebhorn) assistant, Eileen (Molly Shannon), to get some dirt on him. Things get complicated when Eileen becomes smitten with Tyler, and they start dating in the new episode"The GhostIs Seen." 10:02 p.m. on AMC,"Talking Dead" —The popular after-show for "The Walking Dead" returns in an expanded 60-minute format, allowing host Chris Hardwick more time to break down the newest episode of "TWD" with the show's cast and creators, celebrity guests and fervent fans. 11:30 p.m. on ESPN2,"NBA Basketball" —A pair of marqueematchups is on taptoday on ABC, starting with this tilt at Madison Square Garden between the Atlantic Division-leading New York Knicks and the Pacificleading Los Angeles Clippers. Then it's a battle that no doubt looked good on paper when the schedule was ma de,a clash in Miami between the Southeastleading Heat and the struggling Los Angeles Lakers. ©zap2it
W ILSONSof Redmond 541-54S-2066 Adjustable Beds
Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347
ARGO (R) 12:15, 3, 6 HYDE PARK ONHUDSON(R) 1:15, 7 THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15 LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 3:45 QUARTET(PG-13) 12:45, 4, 7:15 SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(R) Noon, 3:15, 6:30 STAND UP GUYS(R) 1,4:15, 6:45 McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 54I-330-8562 SKYFALL (PG-13) 3:30, 8 WRECK-IT RALPH (PG) Noon After 7 p.m., showsare 2f and older only. Younger than21 may attend screenings before 7 pm. if accompanied by a legal guardian.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.21-Dec.21) ** * T ension builds around you. Someone very close to you has very different ideas that often do not work for you. A discussion could turn into an argument. Be aware that you have different approaches to the same issue. Both ways work. Tonight: Close to home.
8 p.m. on E3, "The 55thAnnual GrammyAwards" — LL Cool J hosts the annual gala honoring the best of the recording industry. Top nominees this year include Jay-Z, FrankOcean, Kanye West, Mumford & Sons, Fun. and Dan Auerbach of the Black Keys, who are up for six awards each. Mumford & Sons, Fun. and the Black Keys arealso scheduled to perform on the show, along with Carrie Underwood, Rihannaand Taylor Swift.
Wilson's
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 HANSEL &GRETEL:WITCH HUNTERS(R) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 WARM BODIES (PG-13) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 ZERODARKTHIRTY (R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9:15
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt,541-549-8800 HYDE PARKONHUDSON(R)I:30 LINCOLN (PG-13) 3:30, 6:30 SIDE EFFECTS (R) 2,4:30, 7 SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 1:30, 4:15, 6:45 ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 2:30, 6
CANIC Ernie is o
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C8 TH E BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
The 21" Annual Gala at The Riverhouse fundraiser raised $200,273 for Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon! Over $2,000,000 in 21 years. The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center and the Central Oregon Visitors Association would like to thank all our supporters, volunteers and staff for their continued commi tm ent to the Gala. We also offer our sincere t hanks to all the attendees for your generosity and spirit of givin g .
Please join us next year at the 22nd Annual Gala at The Riverhouse benefitting The Education Foundation for
Bend-La Pine Schools
The 21st Annual Gala at The Riverhouse was made possible by the donations, efforts, services, and support of the following individuals, businesses, and organizations. e ntra
r e g on
(":) MoybelleClatkMacdonyld Th e B u l l e t yn
iVerhouSe
Columbia
NEank
lES SCNNAB
oser
U P FRO N T
Columbia State Bank
DONATIONS
James Reclusado Jan Werner
Adele and Michael Tennant American Licorice Anna Dihhen Anthony's at The Old Mill
Jay Junkin
Applebee's Ardyce and Jim Swift Arnolds Restaurant Art on the Go Art Station Aspen Lakes Golf Course Audio Visions Plus Awbrey Dental Group Awbrey Glen Golf and Country Club Baja Fresh Mexican Grill
BarbaraJohnson Be-Bop Biscotti Bed Bath & Beyond Bend Electric Bikes Bend Family Mediation Bend LaPine Education Foundation Bend Rock Gym Bend Whole Health Bendistillery Bethany Powers Flint Bette Fraser Bicycle Rides Northwest Big Sky Balloon Co Bluefish Dental and Orthodontics Bob and Kaye Eberhard Body Smart Fitness Bouncing Off The Wall
Brandy Richardson Brasada Ranch Broken Top Country Club Cahill Construction Callie Bowers Carlson Signs Cascade Chiropractic & Natural Medicine Cascade Disposal Cascade Lakes Brewing Company Cascade Lakes Relay Central Oregon Breeze Central Oregon Visitors Assoc.
Cheryl Puddy Chris and Elena Otto Comfort Inn and Suites-Bend Comfort Suites Redmond
Cowgirl Candy Crosswater Dan Rickard
Darell Churchill David McDonald Debi and John Corso Deer Ridge Correctional Institute Dennis Luke Deschutes Children's Foundation DFV Wines Diego's Restaurant Douglas Fine Jewelry Dove Lewis Downtown Athletic Club Dr. William Shirk Dump City Dumplings Eagle Crest Resort Echo Photography Eco Bistro,Bar and Boutique Ed and Lois Frey
E&J Gallo Family Winery Energize Fitness
Eric Nielsen Erica Turpijn ExperTech Solutions Fit Kids Oregon, Inc Flower Boutique Fly Fisherman's Place Food 4 Less Gary Conner Girls on the Run of Deschutes County Gold Beach Chamber of Commerce Goodlife Brewing Goody's Chocolates Grant Bullock Personal Trainer Green Plow Coffee Roasters Habitat for Humanity Restore
Redmond Hallmark Hand in Hand Productions Hawks Cay Resort Healthy Habits High Desert Oasis Hola! Restaurants Horizon Broadcasting Group Hotel 50 Hydro Flask lan Burbidge Ice Fine Jewelry Ida's Cupcakes Incredible Events In the Garden Inside Out J.C. Whidden James E Hodson DMD, PC
Jeanette Breenot
Jeff Breit Jeff Perin Jerry and Jinny Andres Jerry Werner Jim Clinton
Jo Jorgensen Joanie Krehbiel JoAnn Sticka JoAnne and Don Sutherland Joe Padilla John Corso John Flannery Josh and Sunshine Willis Juniper Golf Club Justy's Jelly's Ka Nui Salon Kate andJim Bailey KC Snider Kerianne Brothers Kim Corpus
Kohl's Krisi Smalling Kristi Richter Kylie Stalter LanetteChild
Larry and Nancy Snyder Laurenne Ross Lava Lanes Leading Edge Aviation Lee Barker Lil' Beans Love Home Decor Lisa Louise Maxwell Lois Frey Lori Ontko Madras Speedway Marina Ponce Mark Davies Mary Kay Cosmetics Maxwell Burbidge MazatlanRestaurant McKay Cottage McMenamins Melanie Bills Metolius Climbing Michael Garcia Michael Stark Michelle Malare Mission Linens M t. Bachelor, Inc. Myrna Freshwaters Nate and Dani Wyeth Naturally Clean Nicole Kraus Photography Office Max Oil Can Henry's Ola Day Spa Old Mill District Oregon Spirit Distillers OSU-Cascades Overleaf Lodge and Spa Painted People Ceramics Pamela Norr Pappy's Pizzeria Pat Carr Patricia Wise Patti and Gary Mode
Paul and Kathy Rodby Paul Morton Peter Yonan and Anne Scott Phoenix Inn Suites
Pig and Pound House Pub Polar Bear Gas and Wash Portland Timbers Portland Trail Blazers Postal Connections
Pro Golf Pronghorn Pump House Regis Salon REI Representative Greg Walden Representative Jason Conger Rhonda Cox Rick Steber Rocket Coffee Ronald McDonald House Charities Roxanne Cook Ryder Graphics Sage Cafe Samantha Blake Sandra Booth Sara Bella Upcycled Sarah Marie Edwards Savory Spice Shop Saxon's Fine Jewelry Sean and Toni Watt Seventh Mountain Resort Seventh Mountain Resort Stables Seventh Street Brewhouse Sharon Watkinds
Sheldon Suga Silipint Sisters Coffee
Sisters View Clydesdales Soup to Nuts St Charles Medical Center Stand on Liquid Stanley Sterling Savings Bank Steve Schwam DDS Steve Yang Studio Savant Sunriver Brewing Company Susan Reed Sysco Taco Del Mar Tammy Boyer Tara Townsend TechniQue Auto Salon Ted Freeman The Creekside Gallery The Ladybug Flowers and Gifts The Oxford Hotel & 10 Below The Truckstop Skate Park Thin Lizzy Athletics Thomas Nadermann Thrift Way Store Tom Mital Tony Parsley DMD PC Toomies Totally Polished Trader Joe's Tumalo Feed Company Vicious Cycles Visit Bend Wabi Sabi WalMart Wanderlust Tours Well Traveled Fork Wells Fargo Bank- Central Bend West Coast Paper Company Western Beverage Wheel Fun Rentals Whole Foods Widgi Creek Wild Birds Unlimited Will Power Training Studio
Wonderland Toy Shoppe Xpress Printing Yo Wild Young's Market Company Zulu Nyala Group EVENT SPONSORS The Riverhouse Central Oregon Visitors Assoc. Horizon Broadcasting Group Maybelle Clark Macdonald Fund Wells Fargo Central Oregon Truck Co. Columbia State Bank Les Schwab Tires Nosler The Bulletin
TABLE SPONSORS Abilitree Avion Water Bank of the Cascades
Barbara George Bea Leach Bend Broadband Bend Garbage Bend Research Brook Resources Capstone CPAs Century Link DA Davidson Deschutes Brewery Home Federal Joanne Sutherland Kate Bailey Knife River Lewis & Clark Bank Lowes Commercial Properties Margie Biggers McDonald's of Redmond Mode Farrens LLC Mt. Bachelor NAVIS ODS On Point Credit Union
OSU Cascades Oxford Hotel Partnership to End Poverty RBC Wealth Management Robberson Ford Saxon's St. Charles Medical Center Sunriver Resorts System Transport Taylor Northwest Tennant Development Teresa Burdick
UBS Financial Services US Bank Visit Bend
RIVERHOUSE VOLUNTEERS
Gordon Pennock Marina Ponce Karen Pool
Rocky Adrianson Trini Anderson Norma Bautista Larissa Beck Blake Berner Grant Berner Gina Brezinger Sucy Christman Tim Christman David Canche Mettin Cinar Fabian Clark Gary Cox Tessa Cox Colleen Cunningham Nicole Daane-McCarthy Niki DeMarr Kayla Derschon Ramon Diaz Troy Eckberg James Flemming Victor Florian Kim Fritz Alonzo Garcia Jo Ann Garcia Debi Gentry Marie Gillan Brayan Gonzalez Antonio Hernandez Gustavo Hernandez Leopoldo Hernandez
Heather Powell
Shannon Hinderberger Betsy Jenkins Nancy Johnson Liz Kersten
Chuck Kindig Randy Knapp Ted Lewis Paul Lopen Angelina Mazzola Seth McKay Anthony Muirhead Angela Oregon Robert Parks Crystal Phelps Howard Price Albert Revera Hailee Sallee Donna Scheitrum Sherry Simpson Phyllis Small Debi Smith Kaitlin Smith
Carol Spaw David Sturm Kimberly Terry Meredith Thompson Amber Tiller Emily Verdoom Kathi Wade Mitch Webb Wade Webster Erin Woods
Jeff Woods Rich Zebrowski
Kalynn Powell Julianne Repman Keegan Richardson Joe Richter Kristi Richter
Tyrone Anthony Rock Alley Sabin Genna Salmon Debra Shaw Dan Shelfer Jeff Stefanick Susie Stuemke Kaila Trickey Emy Vallerga Laura van der Veer Heather Vihstadt Caitlin Von Gaertner Richard Wagner
Kelli Wallace
BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS BOARD MEMBERS Kathleen Bailey Jeff Breit Teresa Burdick Scott Lauray Patti Mode
Jason Mooney-Nunez Susan Reed Van Schlosser Dave Standerwick MichaelStark JoAnne Sutherland Sean Watt
BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS STAFF MEMBERS Lisa Louise Maxwell Executive Director Brandy Richardson Operations Director Nate Wyeth Marketing & Development Director
Laura van der Veer Office Manager Derek Beauvais Bend Club Director
Leo Gonzalez Terrebonne Club Director Brandi McClennen Redmond Club Director Dan Shelfer Ariel Club Director Melissa Macmaniman Girls on the Run, Council Director
OTHER VOLUNTEERS Tia Burdick Skylar Bush Robin Carey Will Chan David Dieter Taylor Fleener Falecia Gaston Phil Gattey
Jessie Gipson Leo Gonzalez Amber Gowing Imer Gutierrez Ryan Hart Lisa Hart Cheri Helt Laura Herrington Colleen Hogan Paulina Hopkins Vicki Jenkins Michelle Johnson Robert Jones Peggy Kinkade
Julie Kirksey Dan Lightell Maureen Mattingly Kristine McConnell Tate Metcalf Madison Mills Crystal Mooney
Jillian Morgan Lindsay Moulton Chantelle Nelson Pamela Norr Mitchell Parks Kourtney Parks
BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS GALA COMMITTEE Jenny Brown, Auction Coordinator
Sandy Booth Andrea Brown Laura Chan Debi Corso Jill Cummings Barbara George Jeffrey Stefanick Bea Leach Emy Vallerga Toni Watt
20 I 3 GALA COMMITTEE The Riverhouse Wayne Purcell Shannon Hinderberger Erin Woods Central Oregon Visitors Assoc. Alana Hughson Kristi Richter Horizon Broadcasting Group Keith Shipman
MaybelleClark Macdonald Fund Monique McCleary
Thank You!
A special thank you to our heartfelt and awe-inspiring guest speaker A.C. Green, former NBA Player and Oregon State University Basketball Player
Scoreboard, D2 College basketball, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Prep sports, D4 Golf, D3 NHL, D5 NBA, D3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
PREP SWIMMING: CLASS 5A SPECIAL DISTRICT 1 CHAMPIONSHIPS
WEATHER
NFL COMMENTARY
Northeast storm disrupts sports
Asnow
BOSTON — The
Tampa BayLightning were already in Boston
Su er Bow is not in to ear
when the blizzard shut down the roads, trains
and airports. The Bruins and all of the game officials were standing
by, too. But with a state of
emergency still in effect through most of Massachusetts, public transportation shut down and
the roads closed by a
storm that dumped as
much as ayard of snow on some areas, the NHL decided to postpone Saturday's gamebetween the Lightning and the Bruins.
By Tim Dahlberg
No makeupdate had been scheduled, a process mademore dif-
The Associated Press
w
ficult by the lack of off-
days in the compressed 48-game schedule that resulted from the lockout. Several other pro-
Photos by Joe Khne /The Bulletin
Summit's Tommy Brewer swims the boys 200-yard individual medley during the Class 5A Special District1 swimming championships on Saturday at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend. Brewer finished first and set a district record in the event.
fessional teams were forced to rearrange their travel plans because of the storm, which
stranded the Knicks in Minnesota and the Spurs in Detroit on
Friday night. NewYork's airports reopened on Saturday, but Boston's
Logan Airport remained closed into Saturday
night as airlines canceled more than 5,300 flights. The Knicks, who
played the Timberwolves on Friday night,
have a matineeagainst the Los Angeles Clippers today. TheSpurs,
The Bulletin
At last year's district swim meet, Summit's Tommy Brewer thrilled the crowd at Juniper Swim 8c Fitness Center with a pair of epic freestyle showdowns against Bend's Doug Steinhauff. On Saturday, the Storm's sophomore standout was in a class of his own, battling only against history. Brewer won four events Saturday at the 2013 Class 5A Special District I boys
from Washington after losing to the Wizards on Friday night.
The Bruins said Saturday's gamewould be rescheduled assoon as a makeupdatecould be confirmed. — The Associated Press
MEN'5 COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Beavs prep for Buffaloes today
n
!(Iflr
tI
IIIIIII
By Beau Eastes
game winning streak against the Pistons, play the Brooklyn Nets tonight. The Nets took a train home instead of flying
imagine they'll still be playing
• Summit's Tommy Brewer setstwo individual records to lead the boysto a district teamtitle
who ended their11-
Ar .
py
Bend's Bella Wiener, right, hugs Summit's Gianna Belza after finishing the girls 50yard freestyle race at the Class 5A Special District 1 swimming championship on Saturday. Wiener took first place and Belza finished second in the race.
• Summit's girls narrowly beat Bendto take a 12th straight title By Beau Eastes
swim championships, again
The Bulletin
at Bend's Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center, and set two new district meet records while leading the reigning state champions to their second consecutive district championship. SeeBoys/D4
Summit's grip on Class 5A swimming's Special District I remains intact. Barely. The Storm girls won their 12th consecutive district swim title Saturday, narrowly edging runner-up Bend High 517-501 at Juniper Swim 5 Fitness Center in Bend. Ashland finished third with 301 points ahead of Moun-
CORVALLIS — Ore-
tain View (288 points) and Redmond (75). The reigning state champions claimed seven of the eight individual events at the two-day meet and two of the three relays, but the Lava Bears countered with 12 topthree finishes of their own, including victories by Bella Wiener in the 50-yard freestyle and a first-place effort by their 200 freestyle
relay squad. SeeGirls/D4
gonStatemen'sbasketball team looks to get its first weekend sweep in
PREP WRESTLING: CLASS 5A SPECIAL DISTRICT 4 CHAMPIONSHIPS
Pac-12 play this season when it hosts Colorado tonight at 6 p.m. on the Pac-12 Network.
The Beavers(12-11, 2-8 Pac-12) scored their second conference victory of the season on Wednesdaywhen they beat Utah 82-64.
e mon sen s • The Panthers triumph for the district title
Roberto Nelson ledOSU with 26 points, while Joe Burton scored17 to go with10 assists against the Utes.
Colorado (15-7, 5-5), which is coming off a 48-47 victory over Or-
egon on Thursday, has four players averaging
Bulletin staff report EUGENE — The Class 5A state wrestling championships will have their fair share of Central Oregonians after Redmond High, Mountain View, Summit and Bend
oody Johnson owns the New York Jets, so he's no stranger to making big proclamations. Consider this one, just after the New York area won the bid for the first Super Bowl in an outdoor stadium in a cold weather market. "I like doing things for the first time," Johnson said. "I hope it snows." Not quite as bold as guaranteeing his team would be both a host and participant in the game. As dysfunctional as the Jets are, it's hard to
High qualified 25 athletes from the Special District 4 regional meet at Churchill High School on Saturday night. The Panthers, who won the 11-team tournament with 379 points, will send 15 wres-
OSae
tlers to Portland's Memorial Coliseum for the state championships on Feb. 22 and 23, including four district champions: Chance Lindquist at 145 pounds, Sarek Shields at 152, Gunnar Sigado at 182 and Sumner Saulsbury at 220. SeeWrestling/D5
Inside More coverage of Saturday's prep events: •TheMadrasboysclaim a district title in swimming;
prep roundup,D4 • Results from swimming and wrestling districts; prep
scoreboard,04
next Feb. 2 when the two best teams in football square off in the 48th big game of the modern — or any other — era. But Johnson could easily get his wish when it comes to the weather, as New Yorkers were reminded this weekend. Probably not a foot of snow like the New York area got hit with in the latest storm just days after the Super Bowl in New Orleans. But cold, definitely, with snow more than just a random possibility. It's a scenario that will occupy organizers for many long hours. There will be volunteers ready to sweep snow from the stadium at the Meadowlands, portable heaters everywhere, and extra stocks of hot chocolate and schnapps for corporate executives to sip in the stands. Ultimately, though, it's not something the NFL needs to be terribly worried about. The league can do no wrong, and that won't change just because the elements will intrude on the next Super Bowl. Might even make it more interesting for the 100 million or so people who will be watching in the comfort of their own living rooms. Football is a game meant to be played in the elements, as Commissioner Roger Goodell reminded us last week in New Orleans. One of the NFL's iconic games was the so-called "Ice Bowl" of 1967, when the Green Bay Packers defeated the Dallas Cowboys on the frozen tundra of Lambeau Field to win a spot in the second Super Bowl. The temperatureat game time was 14 degrees below zero, and the wind chill was far worse.The field was a sheet of ice, and it was so cold referees couldn't use whistles because they became frozen to their lips. SeeNFL/D5
double figures this sea-
son: Spencer Dinwiddie (14.4), Askia Booker (13.8),Josh Scott(12.0) and Andre Roberson (10.7). Roberson is also pulling in 11.7 rebounds
per game. — t3ulietin staff report
WINTER SPORTS
Competitors hit the trails for Great Nordeen race By Amanda Miles The Bulletin
Ducks endlosing streak, beat Utes EJ. Singler scores 21 points to lead Oregon over Utah,D3
WANOGA SNO-PARK — To race in the Great Nordeen, you have to wake before the sun rises. That isbecause the cross-country ski race, the 11th edition of which was staged on Saturday morning, starts at Mt. Bachelor ski area at 7:30 a.m. "It is a bit early. I guess it wasn't too hard to get up, because I was excited to race," said men's 30-kilometer winner Santi Ocariz, an XC Oregon skier from Bend. "I've been
Inside • Results from Saturday's race in Scoreboard,D2 getting to bed earlier this week than normal. Had it been a regular restaurant workday beforehand (Ocariz works at Anthony's at the Old Mill District in Bend), I would have been
a little groggy." Mary Wellington, the women's 30K winner and another XC Oregon skier, echoed Ocariz's sentiments. SeeNordeen /D5
Joe Kllne/The Bulletin
Lars Ellefson and other racers leave the starting line of the Great Nordeen nordic ski race on Saturday morning outside the West Village Lodge at Mt. Bachelor ski area.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
Evansville, ESPNU.
TODAY
5 p.m.:NBA, SanAntonio Spurs
GOLF 6 a.m.:European Tour, Joburg Open, final round, Golf Channel. 10a.m.: PGATour, Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, final round, Golf Channel.
Noon: PGATour, PebbleBeach National Pro-Am, final round, CBS.
4 p.m.:Champions Tour, Allianz Championship, final round, Golf
at Brooklyn Nets, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.
7 p.m.:Men's college, Washington at USC, Root Sports.
HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.: NHL, Los Angeles Kings at Detroit Red Wings, NBC.
Channel. BASKETBALL 8:30a.m.:Women'scollege,
4:30 p.m.:NHL, NewJersey
North Carolinaat Georgia Tech, ESPNU. 10 a.m.:NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at New York Knicks, ABC.
WINTER SPORTS 10 a.m.:Snowboarding, Air and Style, Innsbruck (tapedj, ESPN2. Noon: Skiing, alpine world championships (tapedj, NBC. 2 p.m.: Luge, World Cup, Lake Placid, N.Y.,women (tapedj,
10 a.m.:Men's college, Indiana at Ohio State, CBS.
10 a.m.:Women's college, Houston at Rice, Root Sports.
10:30 a.m.:Women's college, Georgia at LSU, ESPNU. 11 a.m.:Women's college, Michigan State at Penn State, ESPN2.
Noon:Men'scollege,St.John's at Syracuse, ESPN.
Devils at Pittsburgh Penguins, NBCSN.
NBCSN. 3 p.m.: Biathlon, world
championship, men's pursuit (same-day tape), NBCSN. RUGBY 11 a.m.: Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBCSN.
1 p.m.:Sevens World Series: Las Vegas, NBC.
Noon:Women'scollege,Oregon State at Utah, Pac-12 Network.
MONDAY
Noon:Women's college, Tulane at Tulsa, Root Sports. 12:30 p.m.:NBA, Los Angeles Lakers at Miami Heat, ABC.
11:55a.m.: English Premier
12:30p.m.:Women'scollege,
League, Liverpool FCvs. West
DePaul at Connecticut, ESPNU.
Bromwich Albion FC, ESPN2.
1 p.m.:Women's college, 2 p.m.:Women's college,
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, Marquette at Georgetown,
Arizona State at Stanford, Pac12 Network.
4 p.m.:Women's college,
Kentucky at Vanderbilt, ESPN2.
2 p.m.:Women's college,
SOCCER
ESPN. Maryland at Duke, ESPN2.
Oklahoma State at Oklahoma,
Root Sports. 3 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Orlando Magic, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 3 p.m.:Men's college, Duke at Boston College, ESPNU.
3 p.m.:Boys high school, Chester (Pa.) at Neumann-
4 p.m.:Men's college, Texas Christian at Oklahoma, ESPNU. 4 p.m.: Men's college, Old Dominion at Delaware, NBCSN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Kansas State at Kansas, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Women's college, Louisville at Notre Dame, ESPN2.
Goretti (Pa.j, ESPN2.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Alcorn
4 p.m.:Men's college, Calat Arizona, Pac-12 Network. 5 p.m.:Men's college, Drake at
State at Arkansas-Pine Bluff, ESPNU.
TODAY BASKETBALL 3 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Orlando Magic, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Colorado at Oregon State, KICE-AM940, KRCO-AM 690. Listings are the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes made by TV orradio stations.
WINTER SPORTS
detai ls.Sweeneyalsocoached Montana State and Washington
Svindal winsalpine
State before hewas hired by
WOI'IdS —Aksel Lund Svindal
Fresno State in1976. He retired following the1996 season, and the field at Bulldog Stadium was renamed in his honor.
of Norway wonthe men's downhill title at the alpine skiing world championships Saturday in Schladming, Austria, after a powerful
run down the Planai course that no onecame closetomatching. Svindal kept anear-perfect line down the entire 3.33-kilometer course to finish in 2 minutes,
1.32 seconds for his second
world downhill title, after also winning the marquee event in 2007. It was his fifth world title
SaintS hire Ryan —NewOrleansSaintscoachSean Payton has chosenRobRyanas his new defensive coordinator, hoping New Orleans can overhaul a unit that was historically bad last
season. Ryan, thebrother of New York Jets coach Rex Ryan, spent
overall, to go with an Olympic
the past two seasons asDallas' defensive coordinator. Hewas
gold in super-G. Dominik Paris of Italy, who leads this season's
fired after last season, when his defense ranked19th.
World Cupdownhill standings, trailed Svindal by 0.46 in second. David Poisson of France finished third, 0.97 behind.
BASEBALL Red S0XPrOSPeCt ShOOtS Mlf — Boston Red Soxgeneral manager BenCherington says outfield prospect Bryce Brentz
accidentally shot himself in the leg last month, but could recover
in time to play in spring training. Cherington said Saturday
TENNIS U.S. tied in FedCup-
American Varvara Lepchenko won in her FedCup singles debut to lift the U.S. team to a1-1 tie against Italy on Saturday in Ri-
mini, Italy, after SaraErrani beat JamieHampton 6-2,6-1.Lepchenko rallied past Roberta Vinci 2-6, 6-4, 7-5 after the Italian struggled with a leg cramp in the final set, which featured seven
breaks of serve. Thedoubles
that Brentz was cleaning the gun went it went off. The bullet
today will feature Melanie Oudin and Liezel Huber against Nas-
passed through Brentz's left leg.
tassja Burnettand Karin Knapp.
Cherington said Brentz wasn't doing anything illegal. Brentz
was a first-round draft pick by the Red Sox in 2010.
FOOTBALL Former Fresnocoachdies
SOCCER U.S. women get victory — Tom Sermanni coachedthe U.S. women's soccer team toa 4-1 win over Scotland on Satur-
— Jim Sweeney,whocoached
day in Jacksonville, Fla., making the most of two first-half goals
Fresno State's football team for 19 seasons and retired with a
by Christen Press. It was quite the debut for Sermanni, who was
school-record144 victories, has
born in Scotland andspent the
died. He was 83. The school an-
past eight years as Australia's
nounced Sweeney's death onFriday night. It provided nofurther
t OREBOARD
coach.
— From wire reports
IndianaSt.66, S.Illinois 65 lowa 71,Northwestem57 KansasSt.79, lowaSt. 70 Monday Boys basketball: Tri-RiverConferenceplayoff game, KentSt.87, Cent.Michigan72 Marquette89, DePaul 78 Cu verat Wadport, 7 p.m. MichiganSt.78, Purdue65 Missouri 98 Mississippi79 Tuesday Boys basketball: CrookCountyat Bend,7 p.m.; N. DakotaSt 58, IPFW54 Madras at LaSalle, 7 p.mz Sisters at Cottage NJIT 63,ChicagoSt. 58 67, PennSt. 53 Grove, 7:15p.mc Junction City at La Pine,7.15 Nebraska aha85, IUPUI78 pm.;SummitatRidgeview,7 p.m.; MountainView Nebraska-Om Notre Dame104, Louisville101, 50T at Redmond,7p.m.; Trinity LutheranatNorth Lake, Oakland88,S. DakotaSt.83 6 p.m. Girls basketball: Bend atCrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Ohio 72,BowlingGreen63 Redmond at MountainView, 7 p.m.; LaSalle at Pittsburgh62,Cincinnati 52 Madras,7p.m.;JunctionCity atLaPine, 5:45p.m.; SE Missouri77,E.Illinois 64 Ridgeview at Summit, 7 p.m.;Sisters at Cottage Temple72,Dayton 71 60,E.Michigan52 Grove,5:45p.m.; Trinity Lutheranat North Lake, Toledo 4:30 p.m.;Tri-River Conferenceplayoff game,East UMKC80,South Dakota65 Valparaiso 80, ClevelandSt.72 Linn Christianat Culver,6p.m. WichitaSt. 79, Missouri St.50 Wisconsin65, Michigan62, OT WINTER SPORTS WrightSt.64, Milwaukee49 Southwest Ark-PineBluff55 SouthernU 52 Cross-country skiing Baylor 75,TexasTech48 Great Nordeen North Texas77,FIU67 Saturday Oklahoma 72, Kansas66 Mt. Bachelorskiareato Wanoga Sno-park Oklah omaSt.72,Texas59 30 kilometers SMU61, Rice39 Men (top 40finishers) Sam HoustonSt.78,Lamar40 1, Santi OcarizBend, , I:03z03. 2, Offie Burruss, StephenF.Austin 77, Oral Roberts 67 Bend,1:04:16. 3,Samuel Cordeff, Parkdale,1:04:36. TexasAB,M-CC61, McNeeseSt. 58 4, MarshalGreene, l Bend, 1:05:27. 5, l.ars Effefson, Texas-Arlington68,UTSA63 Bend, 1:06:39. 6,Reitler Hodgert,Bend,1:07:30. 7, Tulane88, Houston85 Tav Streit, HoodRiver, 1:09:38. 8, JasonAdams, Tulsa 74,UTEP70 Bend,1:09:50.9,LorenHanson, Sammamish, Wash., WestVirginia63, TCU50 I:11:28.10,JasonTedrow,Bend, I:11:50. Far West 11, Colin Mahood,Bend,1:13:08. 12, Damon BoiseSt. 68,Wyoming 61 Kluck, Bend, 1:13:43. 13, Dan Packman,Bend, CS Bakersfield82, CSSanMarcos71 1:14:38.14,BradSt. Clair, Bend,1:15:12.15,James Cal Poly68,UCDavis 53 Williams, Bend,1.15:19. 16, MarkThomas,Hood Cal St.-Fufferton79,UCRiverside 67 River, 1:15:23. 17, Scott Seaton, Bend, 1:16:28. Denver74, Idaho58 18, AndrewBoone,Bend, 117:40. 19, ToddGro- E. Washington77,N. Arizona74, OT ver, Bend,1:17:47. 20, PeterMiksovsky, Portland, Gonzaga 74,LoyolaMarymount55 1:17:58. LongBeachSt.83, CSNorthridge 80 21, PeterVraniak,Bend,1:18:43. 22, BobMadden, Montana78, North Dakota58 Bend, I:19:36 23,DaveSjogren, Bend,I:19:41. 24, N. Colorado85,MontanaSt. 72 Byron Roe,Bend,1.21:11. 25,Javier Ocariz-Elsen, Nevada74,Air Force69 Bend, 1:21:39 26, HonzaVrbata, Bend, 1:2211. NewMexicoSt.60, Seatle 57 27, LarryKatz,Bend,1:22:12. 28, David 8air, Bend, Oregon73, Utah64 1:22:14. 29,MattWiliams, Bend,1:22.17. 30, Scott Pepperdine72, Portland68 OT Wyman, Bend,1:23:00. SacramentoSt. 77,PortlandSt. 71 31, Cyril Burguiere,Portand, 1:24:28.32, Tom Saint Mary's(Cal) 74,SanDiego64 Rodhouse,Bend,1:24:39. 33,AaronTalbot, 1:24:47. San DiegoSt.75, FresnoSt. 53 34, PatrickRosser,Bend,1.24:58. 35, DevonCalvin, San Francisco99, BYU87 Sisters, 125:12. 36, AndrewDeenik, HoodRiver, Stanford62, ArizonaSt.59 I:25: 44.37,Jeff Jones,Eugene,1:26:28.38,Rutger UC SantaBarbara66, Pacific 53 Engbersen,HoodRiver, 1:26:29.39, ToddSchock, UCLA76,Washington St. 62 Bend,1 26:36.40, EdwardMicek, Bend,1:2645. UNLV64, NewMexico 55 Women UtahValley66,Texas-PanAmerican49 1, Mary Welington, Bend,1.18:30.2,AlycePearce, WeberSt.75, S.Utah58 Bend,1:20:40.3, AnnaSchulz, Bend,1:24:59. 4,Sierra Foster,Redmond,1:27:39. 5, Julie Downing, Bend, Saturday's Summary 1:28:41. 6,CynthiaEngel, Bend,1:32:31. 7, Angelina Salerno,Bend,1:32:45. 8, TayeNakamura-Koyama, 73, Utah 64 Bend,1:36:21.9, KirstenMunck,Bend, 1:37:18 10, No.19 Oregon Emily Hyde,Bend,I:37:29. UTAH(10-13) 11, DagmarEriksson, Bend,1:38:45. 12, Ruth Loveridge6-130-0 14,Martin 0-03-4 3, WashWilliamson,Bend, 1:39:43 13, KathleenWeffand, I:40:33.I4,JannaBednorz,I:43:13.I5, NancySor- burn 9-132-320, DuBois 5-84-415, Taylor2-81-2 lie, Bend,1:45:34.16, KarenKenlan, Bend,1.47:19. 6, Dean1-5 1-24,Lenz0-1 0-00,Tucker 1-10-12 17, TiaraBaker,Bend,1:48:44. 18, BarbaraTaylor, Osterloh 0-00-0 0, Olsen0-1 0-0 0.Totals 24-50 Bend, 1:50:00.I9,LauraAnneLaMena-coff ,Eugene, 11-16 64. OREGON (19-6) I:52:46.20,AnneLinton, Bend,I:54:12. Kazemi4-63-411, Singler 4-612-13 21,Woods 21, Karen Cammack, Bend,1:55:40. 22, CarolPel1-42-24, Loyd2-71-47, Dotson 5-115-516, Austin mas,20930. 23,AdairHeinz,Hil sboro,2:17:25.24, 1-4 0-0 2,Moore0-43-43, Carter1-1 0-1 2, Emory AmeeKoch,2:17:27. 3-101-27. Totals 21-63 27-36 73. 18 kilometers Halftime —Utah30-22. 3-Point Goals—Utah5-13 Men I, Andy Clark,Eugene,54:17. 2, AaronHenson, (Loveridge2-4, Dean1-2, DuBois1-2, Taylor 1-5), Oregon 4-16 (Loyd2-4, Singler 1-3, Dotson 1-6, Bend, 55:18. 3,BobReynolds, Bend,59:41. 4,Joe Heiserman,ParadiseValley, Ariz., 1:00:01. 5, Joe Moore0-1,Emory 0-2). FouledOut DuBois, Martin, Lukens,LakeOswego, 1:02:08. 6, ElinSchlichting, Taylor.Rebounds—Utah19 (Washburn 7), Oregon41 Bend, 1.02:09. 7,JuddWagner, Redmond, 1:02:46. (Kazemi14).Assists—Utah14(DuBois5), Oregon11 8, BrandonGallagher, Bend, 1:03:39. 9, Britton (Loyd 3).Total Fouls—Utah 26, Oregon20. TechniSexton, Salem, 103:52. 10, Gavin Noble, Bend, cals Martin, UtahBench. A 9,041 1:08:31. Pacific-12 Conference 11, Jim Wells, Bend,1:11.36. 12, Robert McAll Times PST Donald, Bend, 111:51. 13, SteveGreening, Bend, I:12:41. 14, LewBecker, Bend,I:19:35. 15, Adam Conference Overall Marlow, Bend,1:25:13. 16, Pat Creedican,Bend, W L W L 1:28:49 Arizona 8 2 20 2 Women Oregon 19 5 8 3 1, MelissaKent, Bend,59:11. 2, AshleyBruce, 8 3 18 6 Redmond,1:00:47. 3,StacyTotland, Bend,1:01:29. UCLA 7 4 18 6 4, HeatherJohnston Bend,1:02:55.5, NoelleTeuber, ArizonaSt. 6 5 15 9 Bend, 1:0450. 6, MaryWallace,Sunriver, 1:07:03. Stanford 15 7 Colorado 5 5 7, EllenWaterston,Bend,1.08.14. 8, SadieGorman, 5 5 13 9 Bend,1:12.50. 9 Ste la Hyde,Bend,1:12:51.10, 01- California Washington 5 5 13 10 ivia Colton,Bend,I:12:51. 5 5 10 13 11, NancyColton, Bend,1:12:53. 12,JeanMc- SouthernCal 12 11 Oregon St. 2 8 Calmont, Prineviffe, 1:12:54. 13, Patti Calande, 2 9 11 13 Bend, I:15:30. 14, Patricia Ivie, Portland, I:19:16. WashingtonSt. 2 9 10 13 15, Kristina Rashid,Portland,1:19:19. 16, Miranda Utah Saturday's Games Harris Hamlin,1:21:44.17, Annemarie Hamlin, Bend, Stanford 62, Anzona St a te 59 1:25:49.18,KristrnaMarshal, Portland,1:31:18.19, Oregon73, Utah64 EdelWhelan,1:35:22. UCLA76, Washington State62 Today's Games BASKETBALL Califomia atAnzona,4p.m. Coloradoat OregonState, 6p.m. Washingtonat USC,7p.m. Men's college
ON DECK
Saturday's Games East American U.70 Colgate55 Boston U.79,Binghamton58 Buckneff 60 Army58 Buffalo59,N. Illinois 54 Butler 59,GeorgeWashington 56 Georgetown 69,Rutgers63 lona 78,Rider71 La Salle89, Fordham53 Lafayette70,Navy47 Lehigh68, HolyCross61 Maine66,Albany(NY) 52 MountSt.Mary's69, St.Francis(Pa.) 58 Penn71,Brown48 RobertMorris83,Wagner79,OT St. Bonaventure 67, RhodeIsland61 UMass80,Saint Joseph's62 Vermont67 UMBC55 Viffanova68,SouthFlorida 40 Xavier73,Duquesne65 Yale69,Princeton65 South Alabama 60 LSU57 Alabama St 69,AlabamaA8M 62 Arkansas St 67,W.Kentucky 49 Belmont 78Austin Peay65 Charleston Southem86, Campbell 68 Coll. of Char eston71, Chatanooga 68 David son87,AppalachianSt.52 Delaware79, GeorgeMason72 E Kentucky 68, MoreheadSt. 47 ETSU62,Stetson61 Elon 64,Furman60 Florida83,Mississippi St.58 FloridaGulf Coast74,SC-Upstate49 Gardner-Webb 71,Liberty 68 Georgia52, TexasA8M46 GeorgiaTech64, Virginia Tech54 High Point74, Coastal Carolina62 Hofstra65, UNCWilmington 56 HoustonBaptist 75,NewOrleans68,OT Howard63, Md.-EasternShore44 Kennesa wSt.75,Jacksonville68 Kentucky 72, Auburn62 Longwood 62, Winthrop56 LouisianaTech84, TexasSt. 69 MVSU80,AlcornSt. 75 Memphis89, SouthemMrss. 76 Mercer64,NorthFlorida44 Miami87,NorthCarolina61 MiddleTennessee93,Troy41 Morgan St. 80, CoppinSt. 51 MurraySt. 69,Tennessee St. 48 NC A8 T 65,Bethune-Cookman55 NC Central51,FloridaA&M43 NorfolkSt. 74, DelawareSt. 56 Northeastern79,OldDominion 74,OT NorthwesternSt.93, Cent.Arkansas73 Prairie View 63,Grambling St. 53 Radford76,Presbyterian65 SE l.ouisiana 73, NichoffsSt 62 Saint Louis56, Richmond46 Samford79,TheCitadel 67 Savannah St.50, SCState46 SouthAlabama72,FAU71 Tennessee Tech78,Jacksonville St.64 Texas Southern61,JacksonSt.54 Towson90,GeorgiaSt.82,OT UAB75, Marshall61 UCF83, EastCarolina 73 UT-Martin77,SIU-Edwardsviffe 68 VCU68, Charlotte61 Vanderbilt 67,Arkansas 49 W. Caroina71,GeorgiaSouthern 62 Wake Forest71, Florida St.46 Wofford59, UNCGreensboro 50 Midwest Akron54,Mrami(Ohro)50 Ball St. 65,W.Michigan62 Green Bay68, Detroit 59 fflrnois St.75, Creighton72
Women's college Saturday's Games East Albany(NY)86,Maine54 AmericanU.69, Colgate44 Army44,Buckneff35 Boston U.73,Binghamton51 Canisius48,Loyola(Md.) 39 Dartmouth62, Columbia52 lona 88,Rider58 Navy60 Lafayette52,OT Niagara67,St. Peter's55 NotreDame69,Seton Hall 49 Princeton68, Brown37 RobertMorris57, Wagner39 Rutgers55,Cincinnati 46 St. Francis(NY)70, LIUBrooklyn 62 St. Francis(Pa.)83,MountSt. Mary's59 St. John's76,Georgetown72,OT UMBC71,Vermont55 Yale65,Penn56 South Alabama St.73,AlabamaA8M 66 ArkansasSt. 78,W.Kentucky 74 Campbel84, l Winthrop 69 CharlestonSouthern55, Gardner-Webb48 Chattanooga63,Elon40 CoastalCarolina50,UNCAshevile 46 Coll. ofChareston65,Georgia Southern 60 David son 56,AppalachianSt.49 E. Kentucky66,MoreheadSt. 64 FAU59,SouthAlabama56 Florida A8 M63, NCCentral 50 FloridaGulf Coast72, SC-Upstate 49 Furman46,WCarolina 45 High Point65, Radford 57 Howard59,Md.-EasternShore30 Kennesaw St.57, Jacksonville 51 Liberty97,Longwood56 Louisville 78,Pittsburgh45 MVSU65,Alcorn St.57 Mercer51,NorthFlorida49 MorganSt. 74,CoppinSt.61 N. Kentucky75, Lipscomb58 NC AB,T 56, Bethune-Cookman 31 Nichoff sSt.69,SELouisiana65 NorfolkSt.61,Delaware St.51 NorthwesternSt. 52,Cent.Arkansas47 Prairie View 83, Grambing St 49 SIU-Edwardsville66, UT-Martin 63 Savannah St. 49,SCState46 Stetson74, ETSU65 Tennessee St.71, AustinPeay52 Tennes seeTech79,JacksonvilleSt.52 TexasSouthern67,JacksonSt.58 UNC-Greensboro 52, Samford 51 Midwest Akron84, Miami(Ohio)77 Detroit 70,Valparaiso61 E. Illinois 64, SE Missouri 46 E. Michrgan 64, Ohio57 Evansville52,S.Illinois 41 GreenBay64, Milwaukee49 IPFW70,N. DakotaSt 58 IUPUI45 Nebraska-Omaha43 lowa St.87, KansasSt. 71 Loyola ofChicago79, ClevelandSt. 78 Montana61, North Dakota42 S. DakotaSt.83, Oakland48 South Dakota 67, UMKC45 Texas-Pan American 71, ChicagoSt. 40 WestVirginia72, Kansas56 Southwest Ark.-PineBluff59, SouthernU.50 Baylor75,Texas48 FIU 72,NorthTexas63 Lamar 52,Sam Houston St.48 NewOrleans65,Houston Baptist 58 Oral Roberts68, StephenF.Austin 64 TexasAB,M-CC60, McNeeseSt. 59 TexasSt.68, LouisianaTech 63
TexasTech64, TCU46 UTSA73,Texas-Arlington 45 Far West Air Force63, Nevada56 Gonzag7a0,LoyolaMarymount56 Idaho70,Denver64 IdahoSt.60, S.Utah50 LongBeachSt. 70,CSNorthridge 63 N. Arizona 62, E.Washington 58 N. Colorado 62, MontanaSt.51 Portland73, Pepperdine34 Sacramento St. 88, PortlandSt.82 Saint Mary's(Cal)64, BYU52 San Diego St. 74,FresnoSt.49 Santa C ara69,SanFrancrsco64 Seattle78,NewMexico St 62 UC Davis79, CalPoly69 UC Irvine64, Hawaii 52 UC Riverside 64, CalSt-Fufferton45 UC Santa Barbara 52,Pacific 47 UNLV58,NewMexico 57 Utah St.87, SanJoseSt. 54 UtahValley64, NJIT47 Wyoming 77,BoiseSt.60
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT PtsGF GA NewJersey 11 7 1 3 17 30 23 Pittsburgh 1 2 8 4 0 16 40 29 Philadelphia 12 5 6 1 11 29 33 N.Y.Rangers 10 5 5 0 10 24 26 N.Y. Islanders 11 4 6 I 9 32 37 Norlheast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA 9 7 1 1 15 26 20 12 12 11 12
6 4 7 5 6 4 5 6
2 0 1 1
14 14 13 11
31 23 34 31 31 30 38 43
Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA TampaBay 10 6 4 0 12 42 27 Carolina 10 5 4 I 11 28 30 Winnipeg 1 1 5 5 1 11 30 37 Florida 11 4 Washington 12 3
6
1 9 25 40
8 1 7 30 41 WesternConference Central Division
Larry Mize Mark O'Meara FredFunk CoreyPavin John Huston Bart Bryant BobTway Jay DonBlake PeterSenior John Cook MichaelAllen Willie Wood SteveJones Kirk Triplett Larry Nelson Jim GallagherJr Olin Browne RussCochran Esteban Toledo Jim Thorpe Mark McNulty DuffyWaldorf Scott Simpson PeterJacobsen Jeff Sluman StevePate KennyPerry Hale Irwin Joe Daley AndrewMagee JoelEdwards BradFaxon Jay Haas Mark Mouland TomLehman Bill Glasson Morris Hatalsky BradBryant BlaineMccaffister Lee Rinker RogerChapman GaryHallberg John I-larris Hal Sutton DavidEger Jim Rutledge DanaQuigley WayneLevi BruceVaughan Dick Mast TomPurtzer SteveElkrngton ChienSoonLu Gil Morgan Mike Hulbert GeneJones
69-67 — 136 69-67 136 67-69—136 67-69 — I36 68-69 — 137 67-70 — 137 71-67 138 72-66—138 69-69 — I38 68-70 — 138 68-70 — 13
MikeGoodes Dan Forsman SteveLowery TomKite Bob Gilder SandyLyle Joey Sindelar Mark Brooks MarkWiebe Vancouver 11 7 2 2 16 33 24 Craig Stadler Edmonton 11 4 4 3 11 25 29 D.A. Weibring Minnesota 11 5 5 1 11 24 29 Tommy Armour ffl Calgary 9 3 4 2 8 25 33 Sonny Skinner Colorado 10 4 6 0 8 21 26 BobbyWadkins Pacific Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Mark Calcavecchia BenCrenshaw Anaheim 11 8 2 1 17 39 31 Chie-Hsiang Lin San Jose 1 1 7 2 2 16 34 22 Fuzzy Zoeffer Dallas 12 6 5 I 13 26 28 Allen Doyle Phoenix 12 5 5 2 12 32 33 Los Angeles 9 3 4 2 8 20 28 AndyBean NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime WarrenJurkowitz loss Saturday's Games TENNIS Phoenix1,SanJose0, SO Anaheim 6, St. Louis5, SO Professyonal NewJersey3, Pittsburgh1 Fed Cup Philadelphia4, Carolina3, OT World Group Detroit 2,Edm onton1 First Round Winnipeg I,Ottawa0 Winners to semifinals, losers to WG playoffs, Buffalo 3,N.Y.Islanders2 April 20-21 Washington 5, Florida 0 Italy1, United States1 Toronto6, Montreal 0 At 105 Stadium Minnesota2 Nashviffe1 OT Rimini, Italy Vancouver 5, Calgary 1 Surface: Clay-Indoor Tampa Bayat Boston, ppd.,snow Today's Games Singles Sara Errani, Italy, def. JamieHampton, United Los Angeleat s Detroit, 9.30a.m. States„6-2, 6-1. EdmontonatColumbus,3 p.m. VarvaraLepchenko, UnitedStates, def. Roberta BostonatBuffalo, 4p.m. Vinci, Italy,2-6,6-4, 7-5 Tampa Bayat N.Y.Rangers, 430p.m. NewJerseyatPittsburgh,430 p.m. Otherscores:CzechRepublic 2,Australia 0;Russia Chicago at Nashvile, 5 p.m. I, Japan I;SerbiaI, Slovakial. GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 11 9 0 2 20 39 25 Nashville 11 5 2 4 14 24 23 Detroit 11 6 4 1 13 30 30 St. Louis 11 6 4 1 13 38 36 Columbus 11 3 6 2 8 23 36 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA
GOLF PGA Tour
VTR Open Saturday At Club Naval deCampoLas Salinas Vina del Mar, Chile Purse: $467,800(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor
Pebble BeachNational Pro-Am Saturday Singles Pebble Beach, Calif. Semifinals Purse: $8.5 million Horacio Zebaffos, Argentina, def. CarlosBerlocq p-Pebble BeachGL;8,816 yards; par 72 (8), Argentina,6-3, 7-6(4). m-MontereyPeninsula CC,sore Course; RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. JeremyChardy (3), 6,838 yards; par70 France,6-2,6-2. s-Spyglass Hill GC;6,953yards; par 72 Third Round Open Sudde France BrandtSnedeker 66m-68s-68b —202 Saturday JamesHahn 71b-65m-66s 202 At Arena Montpellier Chris Kirk 71s-68b-64m—203 Montpellier, France PatrickReed 68s-69b-67m—204 Purse: $638,050(WT260) RichardH.Lee 68m-71s-66b—205 Surface: Hard-Indoor RetiefGoosen 71s-68b-67m—206 Singles RobertGarrigus 71m-69s-66b—206 Semifinals JasonDay 68m-68s-70b 206 Benoit Paire (8), France,def. Michael Llodra, JamesDriscoll 72m-67s-67b—206 France, 4-6,6-3,6-1. JimmyWalker 68m-71s-67b—206 RichardGasquet(3), France,def.JarkkoNieminen, SeanO'Hair 70b-67m-70s—207 Finland,6-3, 3-6,6-2. LukeGuthrie 68b-70m-69s—207 KevinStadler 69b-69m-69s—207 Zagreb Indoors WebbSimpson 71m-71s-65b 207 Saturday FredrikJacobson 71s-66b-70m—207 At DomSportova TedPotter,Jr. 67b-67m-73s—207 Zagreb, Croatia Charlie Wi 70m-70s-68b —208 Purse: $838,050(WT250) HunterMahan 66b-69m-73s—208 Surface: Hard-Indoor Alistair Presneff 68s-72b-68m —208 Singles Matt Every 67b-70m-71s—208 Semifinals WilliamMcGirt 72s-69b-67m—208 JurgenMelzer(4), Austria, def.RobinHaase, NethKevinNa 68s-72b-68m—208 erlands, 7-6 (2), 6-3. RussellKnox 64m-73s-71b—208 Marin Cilic (1),Croatia,def. Mikhail Youzhny(3), Billy Horschel 70s-71b-67m—208 PatrickCantlay 66m-70s-72b 208 Russia,4-6,6-4, 6-3. JordanSpieth 70m-70s-68b —208 Biff Lunde 71s-70b-68m—209 DEALS AaronBaddeley 69s-71b-69m—209 Scott Brown 72b-68m-69s—209 Transactions John Merrick 68b-67m-74s—209 Justin Hicks 71s-68b-70m 209 BASEBALL ChezReavie 70b-72m-68s—210 AmericanLeague Josh Teater 70m-72s-68b—210 BOSTON RED SOX—Agreed to terms with RHP Vijay Singh 72b-72m-66s—210 Anthony Carter, INFJonathanDiaz, INF-OFMark Scott Gardiner 73s-69b-68m—210 Hamilton,INFLyleOverbayandOFRyanSweeneyon BrianHarman 68m-73s-70b—211 minor league contracts. LeeWestwood 68b-70m-73s 211 CLEVEL AND INDIANS—Named Steve l.ubratich BrendondeJonge 67m-71s-73b—211 director of pro scoutingandDaveMiler, Michael HeathSlocum 69b-71m-71s—211 Calitri andBryanCoreyproscouts. PromotedVictor Mike Weir 75b-65m-71s—211 Wang toassistant director of proscoutingandTrey Ryuji Imada 65m-73s-73b—211 Hendricks to proscout NamedBoHughesanational 65m-77s-69b —211 cross Scott Langley checkerandCarlosMunizandJohnHeuerman 68m-75s-69b—212 area scouts.PromotedScott Barnsbyto a national JohnMaff inger Nick O'Hern 70b-66m-76s—212 crosschecker,Paul Coganto scoutingadvisor/crossCameron Tringale 71 s-71 b-70m—212 checkerandJasonSmith to westcoast srosschecker. StuartAppleby 70b-71m-71s—212 Promoted JasonLynnto assistant director, internaBob Estes 69s-71b-72m—212 tional scouting, Antonio Caballero to Venezuelan 71b-70m-71s 212 scouting supervisor andAllen Lin to Pacific Rim JasonBohn PeterTomasulo 71m-75s-66b—212 scoutingsupervisor. Name d Clinton Matsuzawaarea Seung-YulNoh 67s-73b-72m—212 scout inJapan,LuisCamacho and Rafael Cariel area Jim Furyk 75s-69b-68m—212 scouts inVenezuela, AmoldEffesareascout in CoPat Perez 69m-69s-74b—212 lombiaandDaniel Kimareascout in SouthKorea BryceMolder 71m-72s-69b—212 Agreed to termswith DH/I 8JasonGiambi onaminor Kelly Kraft 69m-71s-72b 212 league contract. 71s-72b-69m—212 KenDuke National League DougLaBeffe0 69s-75b-69m—213 CINCINNATIREDS Agreed to termswith RHP J.B. Holmes 72s-70b-71m—213 Armando Galarragaonaminorleaguecontract. RodPampling 71 m-70s-72b —213 FOOTBALL Phil Mickelson 69m-71 s-73b—213 National Football League J.J. Henry 72s-71b-70m 213 NEW ORLEANSSAINTS— Named Rob Ryan de69b-72m-72s—213 fensivecoordinatorandStanKwan assistant special Brian Stuard Tim Clark 76s-67b-70m—213 teamscoach. Brad Fritsch 69m-73s-71b—213 HOCKEY Troy Kelly 73b-68m-72s—213 NationalHockeyLeague 76s-71b-66m 213 SamSaunders ANAHEIMDUCKS—Reassigned D Jordan Hen67m-73s-73b—213 dry and DSamiVatanento Norfolk (AHL).Recalled Jeff Maggert 74b-68m-71 s—213 CameronPercy GJeffDeslauriersfrom Norfolk ReassignedGMarco Matt Jones 69s-72b-72m—213 Cousineau to Norfolk fromFort Wayne(ECHL). GregOwen 65m-75s-73b—213 COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— Assigned D David KevinStreelman 69b-69m-75s—213 SavardtoSpringfield (AHL). DALLAS STARS—AssignedFAntoine Roussel to Texas(AHL). Champions Tour SANJOSESHARKS—ReassignedD Mat Irwinto Allianz Championship Worcester(AHL). SOCCER Saturday AtThe OldCourseat BrokenSound North AmericanSoccerLeague Boca Raton, Fla. NEWYORKCOSMOS SignedMFAyoze Nationa lW omen' sSoccerLeague Purse: $1.8 million Yardage:6,807; Par:72 WASHINGTON SPIRIT— Signed D CandaceChap67-61 —128 man. RoccoMediate TomPerniceJr. 66-65—131 COLLEGE BemhardLanger 66-67 133 MISSISSIPPIST ATE Suspendedjuniorbasketball 70-65 —135 DavidFrost GJalenSteeleindefinitely for violatingteamrules
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Mavericks down slumping Warriors DALLAS — Dallas didn't have to worry about another close finish against the weary Golden State Warriors. Shawn Marion scored a season-high 26 points, O.J. Mayo added 19 and the Mavericks handed th e G o lden State Warriors their fourth straight loss, 116-91 on Saturday night. Dallas had lost its first two meetings to Golden State by a combined seven points. The Warriors beat the Mavericks 105-101 in overtime on Nov. 19 and edged Dallas 100-97 on Jan. 31. The narrow loss last week was still on D allas' mind, especially since coach Rick Carlisle was fined $25,000 for criticizing the lategame officiating. Darren Collison, who had 18 points and eight assists, keyed a 21-6 first-quarter run. The Mavericks stretched the lead to 27 in the second quarterand were barely threatened after that. "We were right in the game against Golden State when we played them at their place a week ago," Collison said. "I think everybody was upset about that game. We knew we had to go at them in the first five minutes." Marion went 11 of 16 from t he floor an d g r abbed 1 1 r ebounds. D i r k Now i t z k i
chipped in with 15 points for the Mavericks. The Mavericks, five games behind eighth-place Houston in the Western Conference, improved to 2-0 on a five-game homestand. In otherSaturday games: Nuggets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Cavaliers ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 103 C LEVELAND — Da n i l o Gallinari scored 19 p oints, Kenneth Faried added 17 and Denver won its ninth straight game with a v i c t ory o v er Cleveland. 7 6ers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 7 B obcats ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 PHILADELPHIA — Lavoy Allen had 14 points and a career-high 22 rebounds, and Jrue Holidayscored 20 points to l ead P h i ladelphia p a st Charlotte. Pistons..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Bucks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100 MILWAUKEE — C h a rlie Villanueva hit a 3-pointer with 9.7 seconds left and Rodney Stuckey sealed the win with two free throws as Detroit beat Milwaukee. Kings...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 Jazz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 S ACRAMENTO, Cali f . — Isaiah Thomas scored 25 points and Marcus Thornton had 24 for Sacramento in a victory over Utah.
NBA SCOREBOARD % tandi ~ n c NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PST W 33 32 31 30 29
d-Miami d-New York d-Indiana
Chicago Brooklyn Atlanta
Boston Milwaukee Philadelphia Detroit Toronto Cleveland Washington Orlando Charlotte
Pct GB 702
27 22
551 7 531 8 510 9 449 12 365 15N 360 16'/z 314 19
23 24 27 32 32 35 35 36 39
Western Conference
d-SanAntonio d-Oklahoma City d-L.A. Clippers Denver Memphis GoldenState Houston
utah
Portland LA. Lakers Dallas Minnesota
L 14 16 20 20 21
26 25 22 20 16 16 14 14 11
Sacramen to NewOrleans Phoenix d-divisiooleader
W L 39 12 36 12 35 17 33 16 31 16 30 21 26 24 28 24 25 25 24 27 22 26 18 29 18 33 17 33 17 34
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL'PAC-12 ROUNDUP
re onsna s - ames i
NBA ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
D3
667 1 t/t
606 4 600 4r/t 580 5t/t
266 20
260 20t/t
220 23'/z
Pct GB
15 0-017, Holiday10-230-020, N.young2-81-2 5, Pargo4-93-312, Mouhrie1-31-3 3 Wright0-20-0 0. Totals39-93 7-10 97. Charlotte 17 20 17 22 — 76 Philadelphia 23 1 525 24 — 57
Nuggets111, Cavaliers103 DENVER (111) Gaginari 6-134-5 19,Faried7-123-6 17, Koufos 5-6 0-010, Lawsoo3-11 4-411, Iguodala6-9 0-0 14, Chandler 2 6 3-4 7, McGee6 71 213, AMiler 3-6 4-5 10, Brewer 2-6 6-6 10. Totals 40-90 2534 111. CLEVELAND(103) Gee6-61-2 20,Thompson4-10 3-411, Zeger1-3 5-6 7, Irving10-244-4 26,Waiters 1-61-2 3, Speights1-10 3-4 5, Livingston 561-211, Walton 0-2 0-0 0, Egington4-62-2 13, Miles3-7 0-0 7.Totals 37-5420-26 103. Denver 30 29 26 27 — 111 Cleveland 32 20 21 30 — 103
765 760
'/z 673 4r/t 647 6 633 7
566 9 536 11r/t
536 u t/t 500 13t/t
471 15 440 16r/t
363 19 353 21 340 21'lt
333 22
Saturday'sGames
Denver111,Cleveland103 Philadelphia 67, Charlotte 76 Dagas116,GoldenState91 Detroit105,Milwaukee100 Sacramento120,Utah109 Today'sGames LA. ClippersatNewYork,10 a.m. LA. Lakersat Miami,12:30 p.m. Minnesotaai Memphis, 3p.m. Denveral Boston,3p.m. NewOrleansal Toronto, 3p.m. Port and al Orando,3p.m Oklahoma City ai Phoenix,5p.m. SanAntonioalBrooklyn, 5p.m. Houstonal Sacramento, 6p.m.
Pistons105, Bucks100 DETROIT (105) Singler 5-111-2 11,Maxieli 2-4 0-0 4, Monroe 6-12 2-3 14, Caderon10-130-0 23, Knight2-13 0-0 4, Stuckey5-96-6 19 Viganueva7-13 0-0 16 Bynum4-64-412,Kravtsov0-00-20.Totals41-93 15-19 105. MILWAUKE(100) E Mhah aMoute5-9 1-2 11,gyasova5-6 3-3 15, Dalemhert5-104-4 14, Jennings6-27 6-626, Elis 3-9 2-2 6, Udrih 1-7 0-0 2, Ouoleavy3-7 3-3 10, Udoh 1-4 5-6 7, Henson3-5 1-2 7. Totals 34-96 25-29 100. Detroit 33 24 24 24 — 105 Milwaukee 22 34 26 19 — 100
Mavericks116, Warriors91 GOLDEN STATE(91) Barnes 4-10 2-2 12, Lee4-9 2-2 10, Biedrins00 0-0 0, Curry8-231-1 16,Thompson 4-14 0-011, Landry4-65-713, Bazemore3-111-4 7,Jefferson113-45, Green3-82-28,Ezeli2-30-04,Jenkins0-2 0 0 0, Tyler1-21-23.Totals 34 5917 24 91. DALLAS (115) Marion 11-16 2-2 26, Nowitzki 3-12 6-11 15, B.James 1-20-3 2, Cogisoo5-9 5-5 16,Mayo6-13 5-519, Brand5-91-211, Carter1-44 67, Crowder 2-5 0-0 6,Beauhois2-30-0 4, Oa.Jones1-24-4 6, M.James 0-0 0-0 0 Wright1-1 0-0 2, Do.Jones0-1 0 0 0 Totals 39-7729-39115. GoldenState 15 2 03 0 25 — 91 Dallas 30 32 23 31 — 116
Monday'sGames Minnesotaai Cleveland,4O.m. Bostonai Charlotte, 4p.m. LA. ClippersatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. BrooklynatIndiana,4p.m. NewOrleansai Detroit, 4:30O.m. SaoAntonioalChicago,5 p.m. Washington at Milwaukee,5 p.m. Atlanta atDallas,5:30p.m.
Kings120, Jazz109 UTAH(109)
Summaries Saturday's Games
76ers87, Bobcats76 CHARLOTTE (76) Kidd-Gilchrist1-6 0-0 2,Mullens7-192-316, Biyomho0-2 0-00, Walker2-92-2 6 Henderson4-12 5-6 13, Haywood 3-7 3-4 9, Sessions6-167-7 20, Adrien1-4 0-0 2,Gordon3-101-1 6, Taylor0-30-0 0. Totals 27-BB 20-23 76. PHILADELPHIA (97) Turner 7172 216, Aiien 7160 014, Hawes 8-
Ma.Williams3-50-0 6, Miisap3-40-0 6, Jefferson 6-114-416, Tinsley1-4 0-0 2,Foye3-81-1 6, Watson2-3 0 04, Favors 3-72-28, Burks7-159-9 24, Kanter6-103-315, CarroI 5-104-514, J.Evaos 1-2 2-2 4, Murphy0-30-0 0. Totals 40-92 25-26 109. SACRAME NTO(120) Salmons4-11 0-1 11,Thompson9-11 3-5 21,
Cousins4-95-913, Thomas10-163-3 25, TEvans
4-10 4-4 12,Fredelte4-6 0-0 9,Thomton 7-146-9 24, Garcia1-50-02, Hayes0-1 1-41, Robinson1-2 0-0 2. Totals44-95 24-35120. utah 29 25 20 35 — 109 Sacramento 31 3 1 2 5 33 — 120
The Associated Press EUGENE — Oregon forward Arsalan Kazemi had seen enough. Trailing 30-22 to Utah at the half, Kazemi made an impassioned locker-room plea: The Ducks' three-game losing streak needed to end right there. Kazemi's speech resonated with his teammates, and No. 19 Oregon took charge midway through the second half to beat the Utes 73-64 on Saturday. "I realized that was t he time," said Kazemi, a senior transfer who finished with 11 points and 14 rebounds for his sixth double-double with the Ducks. "We needed someone to stand up." E.J. Singler had 21 points and seven rebounds for the Ducks, (19-5, 8-3 P ac-12), who had been on a slide after opening conference play with seven straight victories and
climbing as high as No. 10 in the rankings. Freshman Damyean Dotson, who added 16 points for Oregon, said he had never seen Kazemi so animated as he was at halftime. '"He said, 'We've got to go out there and show it. We can't just talk about it,' " Dotson said. The Ducks pulled in front midway through the second and extended its lead to 53-45 on Carlos Emory's tip-in with
"We finally hit some shots," Oregon coach Dana Altman said about the turnaround. "Dot(son) got on a roll there, E.J. hit a couple, and although we didn't shoot a very good percentage, itwa s good to see the ball go through the net a little bit." The Ducks were without freshman point guard Dominic Artis for the fifth straight game because of a left foot injury. He averages 10.2 points and a team-leading 3.8 assists for the Ducks, and his steadying influence has been missed. Also on Saturday: Stanford..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Arizona State ...... . . . . . . . 59 TEMPE, Ariz. — Dwight Powell scored 22 points, Stanford made 10 of 18 3-pointers and the Cardinal held on to f beat Arizona State. Stanford (15-9, 6-5 Pac-12) won for the fourth time in f ive games, and sixth straight over AriI zona State, earning a split in the desert after losing 73-66 Chrrs Pretsch /The Associated Press at No. 7 Arizona Wednesday Oregon's E. J. Singler gets to the basket ahead of Utah's Xan night. Ricketts during the second half of Saturday night's game in U CLA ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 6 Eugene. Oregon beat Utah 73-64. Washington State ...... . . . 62 L OS A NG E L E S Shabazz Muhammad scored 6:32 left. The Ducks scored 51 their second straight after a 12 of his 17 points in the first second-half points and led by victory over Colorado, which half, when UCLA took control as many as 13 points down upset Oregon 48-47 on Thurs- on its way to routing Washday ntght. T h e B u ff aloes ington State for the Bruins' the stretch. Jason Washburn had 20 scored the final eight points second straight victory overpoints and seven rebounds for to snap Oregon's 20-game all and seventh in a row over the Utes (10-13, 2-9), who lost winning streak at home. the Cougars.
,i.
/
I
W isconsin upsetsNo.3 M ichigan in OT The Associated Press M ADISON, W i s . When Ben Brust tied the game at the end of regulation with a shot from just inside midcourt, his teammate M i k e Br u e sewitz looked over at Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan and saw something unusual. His coach had both his arms in the air. "You know when he shows some emotion, you've done something pretty special," Bruesewitz said. Brust hit a tie-breaking 3-pointer with less than 40 seconds left in overtime as Wisconsin beat No. 3 Michigan 65-62 on Saturday. "It was awesome, something I'll remember forever, and I'm sure a lot of people w ill," Brust said o f t h e game, which ended with students storming the court and Bruesewitz taking the public address announcer's microphone to thank the crowd as students celebrated around him. The Wolverines became the third top three team to lose this week as No. 1 Indiana lost to Illinois and No. 2 Florida was beaten by Arkansas. This should be the sixth straight week with a different No. 1 in The Associated Press' Top 25. Brust's shot at the end of regulation was a dramatic turn of events for Wiscon-
sin (17-7, 8-3 Big Ten) and a soul crusher for Michigan
(21-3, 8-3).
Also on Saturday: N o. 2 Florida ...... . . . . . . 8 3 Mississippi State..... ... 58 GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Mike Rosario scored 18 points, Erik Murphy added
TOP 25 ROUNDUP 17 and Florida bounced back from a humbling loss earlier in the week to thump Mississippi State. O klahoma ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 7 2 N o. 5 Kansas...... . . . . . . . . . 6 6 NORMAN, Okla. — Romero Osby scored 17 p oints, Steven Pledger added 15 and Oklahoma held off Kansas to give the Jayhawks their first three-game losing streak in eight years. N o.6Gonzaga ...... . . . . . . . 74
ed 17, leading Michigan State past Purdue. No.13 Kansas State ...... . . 79 l owa State ...... . . . . . . . . . . . 70 M ANHATTAN, K a n . Rodney McGruder scored 22 points and Angel Rodriguez added 20 as K a nsas State knocked off Iowa State to take sole possession of first place in the Big 12. N o. 14 Butler..... . . . . . . . . . . 59
nati, keeping the momentum going for one of the Big East's hottest teams. No. 20 Georgetown..... . . . . 69 R utgers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 P ISCATAWAY, N . J . Markel Starksscored 20 points and Otto Porter took over down the stretch for Georgetown in its win over Rutgers. N o. 21 Missouri...... . . . . . . . 98
GeorgeWashington ........56
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Alex Oriakhi had a career-high 22 points to go with 18 rebounds, three blocks and a central role in a second-halffracas for Missouri. No. 22Oklahoma State......72 T exas...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 9 AUSTIN, Texas — Marcus Smart scored 23 points and Oklahoma State got its fifth straight wi n a f t e r b e ating Texas. N o. 24 Marquette..... . . . . . . 89 D epaul ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 8 MILWAUKEE — V a nder Blue scored 18 points and Junior Cadougan added 17 as Marquette handed DePaul its eighth straight loss.
WASHINGTON — Rotnei Clark scored 14 points and Butler nearly blew a 17-point lead, going the last 7 t/z minLoyola-Marymount.........55 utes without a field goal before SPOKANE, Wash.— Kevin holding on. Pangos andKelly Olynyk each U NLV...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 scored 20 points, and Gonzaga No. 15 New Mexico....... . . . 55 LAS VEGAS — A nthony beat Loyola-Marymount to put itself on the brink of cracking Bennett had 17 points and 12 the top 5. rebounds to lead UNLV to a N o. 8 Miami..... . . . . . . . . . . . 8 7 victory over New Mexico. N orth Carolina ...... . . . . . . . 6 1 I llinois State...... . . . . . . . . . . 75 C ORAL G A B L ES, F l a . No.16 Creighton ...... . . . . . 72 — Shane Larkin had 18 points OMAHA, N eb. — Tyler and a career-high nine asB rown scored 23 of hi s 27 sists to lead Miami to its 11th points in the second half and Illinois State took advantage straight win. No. 25 Notre Dame....... . .104 of Creighton's dismal shooting No. 11 Louisville...... . . . . . 101 to beat the Bluejays. No. 23 Pittsburgh...... . . . . . 62 S OUTH BEND, I n d . Cameron Biedscheid scored No. 17 Cincinnati ...... . . . . . 52 on a layup with 1:19 left in the CINCINNATI Tray fifth overtime, and Eric Atkins Woodall scored 14 points and and Pat Connaugton added led a late surge that sent Pittsfree throws in the final 19 sec- burgh to a victory over Cincinonds as Notre Dame overcame an eight-point deficit in regulation to beat Louisville. No. 12 Michigan State.......78 P urdue..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 5 WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. EVERGREEN In-Home Care Servlces — Branden Dawson scored 20 Care for loved ones. Comfort for att. points and Keith Appling add541-389-0006 www.evefgfeeeinhome.com
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Snedeker, Hahntied at Pebble The Associated Press PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. Brandt Snedeker had his ninth straight round in the 60s on Saturday. One more like that and he might really have reason to celebrate. Snedeker ra n o f f fou r straight birdies along the prettiest part of Pebble Beach for a
GOLF ROUNDUP
-
prepared, no matter who is around me in the last group," Snedeker said. "I'm probably going to have the most experience of anybody in those last
couple groups of winning a
golf tournament." Hahn had a 66 at Spyglass of the lead with 31-year-old H ill, making birdie on t h e rookie James Hahn going into last three holes to join Snethe final round of the Pebble deker at 12-under 202. Chris Kirk birdied his last hole at Beach National Pro-Am. A runner-up in consecutive Monterey Peninsula for a 64 weeks to Tiger Woods and and was one shot behind the Phil Mickelson, this time the leaders. spotlight belongs to Snedeker. Also on Saturday: "You never know what toMediate leads by 3 shots morrow holds, but I feel like BOCA RATON, Fla. — RocI'm i n g r eat p osition, and co Mediate shot an 11-under I'm going to be surely more 61, setting a course record and
4-under 68, giving him a share
building a three-shot lead over Tom Pernice Jr. heading into the final round of the Allianz Championship. Mediate is trying to become the 16th player to win his first start on the Champions Tour. He won six times on the PGA Tour. Sterne, Fisher top leaderboard JOHANNESBURG — South African duo Richard Sterne and Trevor Fisher Jr. each shot a 4-under 68 to move five shots ahead of the field at the Joburg Open. Both men birdied the final hole for a 19-under total of 196 at the Royal Johannesburg 8 Kensington GC. Felipe
Aguilar (68), Jaco van Zyl (67) and George Coetzee (70) and
two-time tournament winner Charl Schwartzel (68) trail at 14-under.
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Nordeen Continued from D1 "I don't mind the 7:30 start," she said. "I just don't like the 5:30 wake up." But Ocariz and Wellington were among the dozens of participants who did not let the early start nor a chill in the air dissuade them from taking part, as more than 150 skiers finished the Nordeen's 30K and 18K courses. The event bears the name of early 20th-century Central Oregon nordic skiing luminary Emil Nordeen, one of the founders of Skyliners Ski Club. That club eventually bedtit'I' came and is now known as the 2J Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, which puts on the Great Nordeen. On Saturday, racers of both distances started at the West Village Lodge at Mt. Bachelor ski area and finished near the snow-play area of W a noga Sno-park west of Bend. In between, the 18K participants took a more direct route on area trails between the ski resort and the sno-park, while the 30K skiers headed southeast after the course split and then primarily northeast to Joe Khne/The Bulletin reach the finish line. Wellington has raced the Peter Vraniak climbs a hill on the way to the finish line while skiing Great Nordeen on several oc- the Great Nordeen nordic ski race on Saturday at Wanoga Sno-park. casions — five or six, she recalled on Saturday morning. "It's always such a great, fun "It's always such a have to wait until you get to time on this race," the 42-year- great, fun time on this some hills." old Bend resident said. "It's inAaron Henson, of Bend, finrace. It's interesting teresting to ski from Bachelor ished second in the 18K race down to Wanoga. It makes it a to ski from Bachelor on a pair of "vintage" nordic fun day." skis that he estimated were at down to Wanoga. It In past editions of the Norleast 20 years old. makes it a fun day." "This is my newest pair of deen, Wellington had done well, but she had not won. Her — Great Nordeen women's 30K skis," the 43-year-old Henson best results prior to this year's winner Mary Wellington said with a laugh. race were a second-place finLike O c ariz, S a t urday's ish to Bend endurance sports race was Henson's first Great standout Stephanie Howe by Nordeen. He finished second just more than a minute a year russ, also of Bend, was sec- in the 18K despite falling over ago and another second place ond in 1:04:16, and Parkdale's another fallen skier inside the in 2009. S amuel Cordell was t h i r d, first kilometer of the race. But That changed on Saturday. another 20 seconds back. the tumble seemed to leave The 42-year-old Bend resident Ocariz said it was at the no lasting harm. Andy Clark, and masters skiing standout course's first uphill, which he of Eugene, won in 54:17, and finished with a time of 1 hour, estimated was located a bit Henson was just off the pace 18 minutes, 30 seconds. Bend's past the halfway mark, that he in 55:18. Melissa Kent, of Alyce Pearce was second in finally started to create some Bend, took third place overall 1:20:40, and A n n a S c hulz, separation at the front. Earlier and first among women in also of Bend, placed third in on, he spent the first part of the 59:11. I:24:59. Though Henson said the often downhill race among a "It's great to win but just as rotation of skiers taking turns 18K was a good distance for much fun to just be able to get in the lead. him at this point, perhaps he "It's really hard to get away, might be better suited to race out there and ski it, too," Wellington said. because if you get to the front the 30K. For Ocariz, 26, Saturday's and work super, super hard, A fter all, he said with a N ordeen was hi s f i r st. H e the people behind you are just chuckle: "I didn't really start completed the 30K in I:03:03, tucking," Ocariz said. "And feeling good until probably 10 defeating XC Oregon team- they can just stick in that draft kilometers into it." — Reporter: 541-383-0393, mate and 2012 champion Ollie and not work hard at all. It's amiles®bendbulletin.com. Burruss to the finish line. Bur- like cycling. So you kind of '
Wrestling
"We keep getting a little bettive weight classes — the most ter every year," Summit coach Continued from D1 district champions the school Tom Nelson said. "The room's Eagle Point placed second has ever boasted — to highgetting tougher. (With Reyes with 297 points. light the tournament for the winning) it sets the expecta"We pushed everybody Cougars, who will send three tion a little higher." With a third-place finish at through t h a t w e th o u ght others to the state championwe would an d t h e n s o me ships as well. Mountain View D2 pounds, Nico Spring will — had some surprises," said scored 208 pointsduring the be Bend High's lone represenRedmond coach Kris Davis, two-day event an d p l aced tative at state. Spring lost in who was voted the district's fourth overall. the quarterfinals but won four coach of the year. "When you Summit, w h ic h f i n i shed straight matches, including the come out and compete like sixth with 102 points, celebrat- third-place meeting against that in this type of tournament ed its first district champion Mountain View's Tracy Pitchand perform like this, it's pret- in school history, as Joaquin er, whom Bend coach Luke ty nice." Reyes took first place at 170 Larwin said Spring had lost to Mountain View's J.T. Ayers pounds to lead a trio of wres- twice during the season. The (113 pounds), Kaleb Wine- tlers the Storm will send to Lava Bears ended the tournament 10th overall. barger (126) and Kyler Ayers state.
NFL
(138) each won their respec-
clips from historic cold-weath-
er games.
Continued from D1 Trust the NFL to pull this S orry, Ne w J e rsey, b u t one off. This is a league, after you're not going to top that. all, that is so untouchable that A nd they s t il l p l ayed t h e a 34-minute power outage in game. New Orleans not only turned Yes, it could be cold. Yes, a rout into a competitive game there could be snow. but made TV ratings go up And, yes, the game would around the country. And the time it rained at a be better off in Florida or inside a dome with good electri- Super Bowl? You may not recal service. That's especially member the game, but probatrue if th e p articipants are bly do remember Prince playteams used to domes or warm ing "Purple Rain" as it came climates. down in Miami in 2007. But the Jets and G i ants Nothing can dent the NFL's spent a lot of money to build widespread popularity. Not a the new stadium they share, lockout,replacement referees, and they wanted a Super Bowl or even brain injuries. for the New York metropolitan Certainly not a l i ttle cold area. and snow. U ltimately t h a t ' s wh a t "The plans that have been drives Super Bowl selection developed for the Super Bowl, these days. Owners want to re- I think, are extraordinary, and ward their fellow owners, and they're just beginning to be refive of the past 10 title games leased," Goodell said in New have gone to cities that have Orleans. "We will be prepared forthe weather factors." ponied up for new stadiums. Giving one to the New York Actually, the NFL has some area was always a little dic- issues to worry about other ey, which is why it took four than the weather at the Meadvotes by owners a few years o wlands. Hotel r ooms w i l l back to give the game to the surelybe in short supply even Meadowlands over bids by at exorbitant prices, and transwarm weather sites Tampa portation for teams, support and South Florida. It came staff, media and volunteers will be a challenge. afterorganizers urged them to "Make Some History" and There are also a ton of loshowed a video that included gistical worries that go along
with putting the most watched sporting event in America in the most congested area in the country, and not everyone is cooperating. The mayors of at least two towns near MetLife S tadium, upset t h a t t h e i r towns don't get some benefit from the facility, threatened in a recent press release not to help with police, fire or other municipal services needed for the Super Bowl u n less the NFL starts writing some checks.
"With one of (the) world's largest sporting events coming to th e East Rutherford venue, there is little doubt that the mayors will b e expecting a call that their services are needed," Secaucus Mayor Michael Gonnelli said in the statement. "The answer will be clear: Don't ask." The Super Bowl will not be without problems. Even the NFL can't m ak e e veryone happy, no matter what t h e weather is like. But let a little cold and snow mess up the first — and quite possibly only — Super Bowl in the New York area'? Fuhggedaboutit. — Tim Dahlberg isa national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at tdahlberg@ap.org or http:/ltwitter. comltimdahlberg.
DS
QT goal lifts Wild overPredators The Associated Press ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Minnesota Wild have reshuffled lines, made a trade
and held a players-only meeting to try and get going this season. Maybe Devin Setoguchi
ending his goal-scoring drought on Saturday will do the trick.
Setoguchi's power-play goal at 4:21 of overtime gave Minnesota a 2-1 win over the Nashville Predators and ended the Wild's three-game losing streak. Setoguchi took a p a ss f rom M i kk o K o iv u a n d fired a shot past Chris Mason for his first goal of the season andthe Wild's 23rd
in 11 games. "This is a clean slate. I don't care what happened the first 10 games or whatever,"Wild coach Mike Yeo said. "We're not for making excuses,but at the same time, there was no training camp and there was no exhibition. It takes some guys a little time to get going. That's a real thing. Let's hope this is the point where we start to take off." C al C l utterbuck a l s o scored, and Niklas Backstrom stopped 25 shots for Minnesota. Paul G austad s c ored for Nashville, which had a four-game winning streak broken. Gaustad was whistled for a hand-pass penalty on a faceoff at 2:48 of overtime. Gaustad held his hands up in bewilderment as he skated to the penalty box, and coach Barry Trotz yelled at the officials. "I don't really want to comment on it too much because I'll probably get fined," Gaustad said. "The interpretation of the rule, I thought, i s i n tentional
NHL ROUNDUP
Smith made 33 saves through overtime and t h e n t u r n ed aside two more shots in the "I've had three games in a row shootout to carry Phoenix past now where I've done the right San Jose. things and got the chances. C apitals ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Any time you can do that and P anthers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 get rewarded it feels good." W ASHINGTON — Tr o y Also on Saturday: Brouwer scored tw o g o als and Braden Holtby stopped Canucks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 F lames..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 27 shots and assisted on BrouV ANCOUVER, Br it i s h wer's second goal and WashColumbia — Rookie Jordan ington shut out Florida in the Schroederscored his firsttw o opener of a home-and-home NHL goals and Cory Sch- series. neider stopped 33 shots as S abres ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Vancouver beat Calgary for its I slanders ........... . . . . . . . . 2 fifth consecutive victory. UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Ryan D evils ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Miller made 41 saves, and P enguins ........... . . . . . . . . 1 Alexander Sulzer scored the NEWARK, N.J. — Adam t iebreaking g o a l mid w a y Henrique and Bobby Butler through the third period for scored power-play goals 2:12 Buffalo, which earned a vicapart in the third period, and tory over the New York IsNew Jersey extended its win- landers despite being outshot ning streak to four games with 43-15. M aple Leafs........... . . . . . . 6 a victory over Pittsburgh that snapped the Penguins' five- C anadiens..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 game winning streak. MONTREAL James F lyers ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Reimer made 37 saves, Phil H urricanes...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Kessel had a goal and two asPHILADELPHIA — Danny sists, and Toronto defeated Briere scored 1:47 into over- Montreal. time to lift Philadelphia over D ucks ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Carolina. B lues...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 R ed Wings...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 ST. LOUIS — Viktor Fasth stopped three of six shootout O ilers ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 DETROIT — Niklas Kro- attempts to become the first nwall's third-period goal broke NHL goalie in eight years to a tie, and Pavel Datsyuk had a win his first five starts, and goal and an assist in Detroit's Bobby Ryan had two goals narrow win over Edmonton. and two assists as Anaheim J ets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 beat struggling St. Louis.
S enators.......... . . . . . . . . . . 0
Lightning-Bruins game
OTTAWA — A l M o ntoya postponed m ade 33 saves, and A l e x BOSTON — The game bePonikarovsky scored the only tween Tampa Bay and host goal in Winnipeg's win over Boston was postponedbecause of the blizzard that dumped Ottawa. C oyotes .......... . . . . . . . . . . 1 more than 2 feet of snow on the S harks ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 Boston area. No makeup date SAN JOSE, Calif. — Mike had been scheduled yet.
glove play. The drop goes up in the air three feet, I'm on my movement, hits the top of my glove without me trying to do it, and I think they probably should explain the rules a little more clear to us." Trotz has been on the committee that examined the faceoff rule, and even he was u nclear exactly what happened. "I'm going to get an explanation from the league. For me it was a poor call, a questionable call at a very important time of the game," Trotz said. "I mean, come on. I don't agree with that at all." Mason - s tarting i n p lace o f P e k k a R i n n e — turned aside a couple of Wild scoring chances after the penalty, but couldn't stop Setoguchi's shot. "There were things in my game in the first six or seven games that weren't g ood," S etoguchi s a i d .
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06
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
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RULES:This award is valid for travel April 1 - May 31, 2013 & November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-transferable, non-refundable, not redeemable for cash and may not be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional insurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes and fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or not directly specified above. Travel is subject to availability and some restrictions may apply.Winner must be at least 21 years old. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are not eligible to win. The Bulletin reserves the right to deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacationrules. Email addresses will not be sold but individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN, GETAWAYSTRAVEL and PLEASANT HOLIDAYS. One coupon per edition.
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/business
e most wa nte un in merica • Aggressivemarketing hasmade the AR-1 5the fasting-selling rifle By Natasha Singer New York Times News Service
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Mt. Bachelor bartender Gail Black, right, makes a drinkfor one of the skiers and snowboarders relaxing and enjoying the mountain views in the bar at Sunrise Lodge on Friday.
• Oregon ski resorts, Mt. Bachelor,givestate economy$482 milion boost By Rachael Rees
Visits to Oregon ski areas
The Butletin
r egon's sk i i ndus try g e n erated n e a rly $ 482 million i n to t a l
s pending during
A recently released analysis conducted for Ski Oregon identified favorite and the most commonly visited ski areas in the state.
Favorite ski areas
the
Mt. Bachelor, 38%
2010-11 season and provided an e stimated 6,772 jobs, accordingto a recent report. And for regions like Central Oregon, that revenue plays a vital role in sustaining the economy during the winter months. M Mt. Bachelor is a world-class ski resort with two base villages, Bend and Sunriver,m said Doug La Placa, CEO and president of Visit Bend, th e c i t y's t o urism
M t . Hood Meadows, 25% T i m berline, 15% Ho o doo, 11%
Most commonly visited ski areas in Oregon ~
3. Timberline
50%
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8. Cooper Spur
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Steve Ruark/ New York Times News Service
8% (est i mate)
Portland ~
4. Mt. Hood skl Bowl 42% lestimate)
agency. "The skiers Mt. Bachelor brings to the area bring a considerable amount of business to Bend restaurants, hotels and shops." While the "Oregon Skier Profile and Economic Impact Analysis" concluded skier visits have in creased and the industry's financial impact statewide has grown, it also issued some warnings: Ski and snowboard enthusiasts are getting older, as a group, and the sport has not been attracting new skiers to replace them. See Impact /E2
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At thePasadena Pawn and Gun Shop inMaryland, customers can join a waiting list to buy an AR-15-style rifle. "It's kind of fashionable," Frank Loane Sr., the shop's proprietor, said of the gun.
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By Patrick May
7. Mt. Ashland 11% (estimate)
San Jose Mercury News
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Source: Oregon Skier Profile and Economic Impact Analysis
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Facts adoutOregonskiers Average distance traveled oneway
PASADENA, Md. — The phone rings again at Pasadena Pawn and Gun, and a familiar question comes down the line: MGot any ARs'?m The answer is no. Pasadena Pawn and Gun, a gun retailer and pawnshop 15 miles south of Baltimore, is pretty much sold out of America's m ost w an t e d g un, th e A R 1 5-style s e m i automatic ri fle. Since the mass acre in N e w The 2003 issue of Guns & t own, Con n . , Ammo, featuring an article in De c ember, on ARs. The gun industry the AR-15, the has spent years stoking m ilit a r y - s t y l e demand for the weapon. w eapon tha t the police say was used in the shootings,has been selling fasthere and across the nation. Before Newtown, the rifles sold for about $1,100,on average. Now some retailers charge twice that. At Pasadena Pawn, on the wall behind glass counters of handguns, are three dozen or so AR-15-style rifles. Dangling from nearly every one is a tag that says "Sold." See Rifles /E3
40
Median age of those surveyed
February $ 82,500 Month with Median household income
greatest activity
9Own 1 their percent gear
Source: Oregon Skier Profile and Economic lmpactAnalysis
SAN FRANCISCO — Chuck La Tournous was about two minutes into his presentation this week at Macworld 2013, "Tech vs. Wild," when a Boy Scoutish-looking kid in the audience shot up hts hand. M I go camping a lot,m he said, mbut they won't let us take our tech into the woods." That sort of anti-geek outdoorsman mentality may soon be going the way of analog television. At the 29th annual Macworld, the message was that when the going gets tough, the tough get even techier. See Survival /E3
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 'IO, 2013
Impact
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 daysbeforepublication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323
TODAY FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
MONDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson Street, La Pine; 541 -536-6237. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507. DOWNTOWN URBAN RENEWAL ADVISORYCOMMITTEE:Overview ofthe renewal plan and project; free; 6 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 541-923-7710.
OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30p.m .; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. EXPERIENCECHINA INFO SESSION: Diana Haffner will talk about the Bend Chamber trip to China. She will share photos of her recent trip, discuss the itinerary, business conference in Beijing, required documentation, registration, details of the trip from flight service to optional tours and answerany questions you may have; register at http://bendchamber.org/chamberevents/china-trip; free; 4-5 p.m.; Bend Park 8 Recreation District Office, Community Room, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 541-389-7275. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free oneon-one small business counseling; no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.sco re centraloregon.org.
WEDNESDAY
BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. THE ARTOF CONTENT MARKETING, ENGAGING YOURAUDIENCE: Kelly Walker, creative directorand senior copywriter for lntrepid Marketing, will discuss howto develop written content that builds brand loyalty and leads your readers to action, including content development best practices, principles for getting attention that converts to sales and tailoring content to different marketing media; TUESDAY registration requested; free; 7:30 a.m.; HOW TOTAKE CONTROL OF YOUR Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. TIME ANDGET MORE OUT OF LIFE!: Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389Online webinar with strategies and 0803 or www.bendchamber.org. solutions to boost productivity and AARP FREETAXPREPARATION efficiency; hosted by SIMPLIFY; SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; registration required; $65; 8-9:30 appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503-260-8714 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, or info@simplifynw.com. 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 54 I -706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: appointments requested; free; Demonstration on accessing, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, downloading and transferring library 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; digital books to eReaders; 9:30541-706-6234. 11 a.m.; Sisters Public Library, CENTRAL OREGONIRRIGATION 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070. DISTRICT BOARD MEETING: Free; FREE TAXPREPARATION 9 a.m.; Central Oregon Irrigation SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; District Office, 1055 S.W. Lake appointments requested; free; Court, Redmond; 541-548-6047. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend KNOW EXCEL BUDGETS: Learn Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; to create a monthly budget 54 I -389-6507. spreadsheet; 2-3:30 p.m.; KNOW COFFEE,KNOW EBOOKS: Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 Learn about eReaders and how to N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. download eBooks and audiobooks OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2:30-4p.m .; from Deschutes Public Library; East Bend Public Library,62080 eReaders are available or bring your Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. own; free; 1:30-2:30 p.m.; Bellatazza
Coffee, 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-617-7083. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507.
541-383-0187, coordinator© centraloregonmediation.com or www.centraloregonmediation. com. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAXPREPARATION THURSDAY SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; appointments requested; free; AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Family Resource Center, 1144 appointments requested; free; Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; PUBLICMEETING OF THE 541-706-6234. STATEWIDETRANSPORTATION IMPROVEMENTPROGRAM: AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION Region 4 "super-ACT" meeting; SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; free; 10 a.m.-noon; Deschutes appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of County administration building, God, 51491 Morson Street, La Pine; 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend. 541-536-6237. TAX FILINGCLINICS: With Spanish language interpreters; AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Becky SERVICES:SeeMonday's listing; Johnson Center, 412 S.W.Eighth appointments requested; free; St., Redmond; 541-617-4798. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center, 1144 Warm KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: Springs St.; 541-553-1626. Demonstration on accessing, OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; downloading and transferring library digital books to eReaders; Downtown Bend Public Library, 10:30a.m.; Redmond Public 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes BUSINESSNETWORK Ave.; 541-312-1050. INTERNATIONALWILDFIRE CENTRALOREGONREAL CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: ESTATEINVESTMENTCLUB: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, 541-480-1 765. Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. KNOW EXCELBUDGETS: Learn to create a monthly budget FRIDAY spreadsheet; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. PERS REFORM 5IMPACTS ON Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. LOCAL GOVERNMENT: Town hall forum; discussion of PERS reform, its impact on local government and what the future will hold; a panel of SATURDAY speakers will discuss ways to ensure public employees aretaken care of, BASIC MEDIATIONTRAINING: reasonable solutions and howthose See Friday's listing; registration solutions will impact public safety and required; $495; 8:30 a.m.education; registration required; $30 5 p.m.; Deschutes Children's for members, $40 for nonmembers; Foundation EastCampus, 7:30a.m.; BendGolf 8 Country Club, 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382541-383-0187, coordinator© 7437 or www.bendchamber.org. centraloregonmediation.com or BASIC MEDIATIONTRAINING: www.centraloregon This four-day training includes mediation.com. theory and practice in interestFREE TAXPREPARATION based negotiation and provides SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; the tools to navigate and intervene free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Prineville when conflicts arise; the training COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; meets the requirements for 541-447-3260. mediators set out in the Oregon Revised Statutes and in the Oregon DESIGN WORKSHOP:New homes, new products, cooking Administrative Rules; successful andappliance demo and bath completion of this training will remodeling; 9:30 a.m.; Neil enable participants to mediate Kelly, 190 N.E. Irving Ave., Bend; as a volunteer at Central Oregon 541-382-7580. Mediation lnc. as well as many other community mediation centers FREE TAXPREPARATION in Oregon; registration required; SERVICES:SeeToday's listing; $495; 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Children's Foundation East Campus, Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane, Bend; Wall St.; 541-389-6507.
Continued from E1 But its findings about skier participation, d emographics and other topics do not necessarily reflect Mt. Bachelor, the area with the largest number of skiable acres in the state, according to several websites. Its market, said President and General Manager Dave Rathbun, goes beyond the state of
Oregon. "I don't look at any other Oregon mountain," he said. "The Sun Valleys and resorts down in Lake Tahoe, they are more indicative of t h e c ustomers we're trying to attract." The Oregon skier profile, prepared by the University of Oregon's Community Service Center an d E C ONorthwest for industry organization Ski Oregon, studied skier partici-
pation, demographics, spending and other topics through a survey of 874 skiers and snowboarders at Oregon ski areas. It's the first look at the state's snowsports industry since the 1988-89 season, when the industry had an estimated 1.5 million skier visits and generated $152 million in direct economic impact, equal to about $282 million in 2012 dollars. In the 2010-11 season, Oregon ski areas recorded about 1.9 million visits, which created $311 million in direct economic impact, according the latest report. When researchers added indirect spending — retail and equipment purchases and personal income of the industry's workers — the total economic impact rose to nearly $482 million. Day visitors represented the majority, 78 percent, of total skier visits in Oregon. However, destination skiers, those who stayed one or more nights and two or more days away from home, each spent about $300 per day, more than three times what day skiers spent. Skier visits in Oregon grew at a faster rate than those for the nation as a whole, in the two decadesbetween industry reports:nearly 27 percent for Oregon andcloseto 14 percent nationwide, according to data from the National Ski Areas Association. "The snowsports industry ... has maintained growth despite the economic downturn," the Oregon skier profile report said. W hile s k ier v i s its h a v e grown, the report warns the ski and snowboard population is aging, and the participation rate for young people is declining. Rathbun said Mt. Bachelor deviates from the findings suggested in the report. For example, he said, Mt. Bachelor has received national
recognition for its efforts at growing interest in the sport. "We're strategically engaged in focusing on driving skier and rider development ... and we have proof that we're having success," he said. Last year, M t . B a chelor won the National Ski Areas Association's Conversion Cup Challenge, an award for turning beginner skiers and riders into repeat customers. To attract the next crop of skiers and snowboarders, he said, Mt. Bachelor has focused its ski-school programs, developed terrain parks and added events at the mountain. "Our whole focus on our destination has been around the family and youth market," he satd. Unlike the survey results, Rathbun said, Mt. Bachelor attracts more destination than day skiers, with about 60 percent staying overnight. However, he said, while the national and statewide visitation numbers have been climbing, Mt. Bachelor's haven't. Bachelor, like the majority of O regon ski resorts,operates on public land administered by the U.S.ForestService.That leaves few opportunities forbase-area development, the report said. Mt. Bachelor hasn't added any new lifts or terrain since 1996, unlike other resorts in the region and nation, Rathbun said. That makes Mt. Bachelor less competitive. "We were a market leader and innovator in t h e e arly '80s and '90s," he said, noting Mt. Bachelor had b etween 525,000 to 600,000 skier visits a year. "(But) the industry caught up, and Mt. Bachelor stayed the same. There's been a shift where people in the Northwest ski and ride." Rathbun said Mt. Bachelor is counting on an expansion plan that includes lift improvements and year-round recreation activities to attract more skier visits. It's waiting for a decision from the Forest Service. Despite Mt. Bachelor's lack of new infrastructure, those surveyed for the Oregon skier profile ranked it as their favorite destination out of Oregon's 12 ski resorts. It was also the second-most commonly visited in the state, just behind Mt. Hood Meadows, according to the "Oregon Skier Profile an d E c onomic I mpact Analysis." "It is already a great place to ski," according to a comment included at the end of the report. "Mt. Bachelor has wonderful long, wide-groomed runs." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulfetin. com
Dine with us
DEEDS Deschutes County • Alex A. Arrache to Michael andTeresa Godfrey, Ridgepointe, Lot12, $161,000 • Christopher M. and Lisa L. Griffin to Mike E. andAthena V.Alvarez, Summit Crest, Phase1, Lot13, $249,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporationto Nichole M.Davisson, Centennial Glen, Lot 21,$185,000 • Nancy A. andClark W.Simons to Ricky W. andRita E.Ryser, Woodside Ranch, Phase 5,Lot10, Block 9, $419,000 • Lands Bend LLC to Robert and Monica L. Standen, South Deerfield Park, Lot11, $199,400 • COCC Foundation Property LLC to Michael S.andTracy L. Bennett, trusteesfor MichaelandTracy Bennett Family1996 RevocableTrust, Cedar Village, Phases 1, 2 and3, Lot13, Phase 2,$150,000 • Fred J. and Kimberly A. Fischbach to Elaine V.Remy,Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 2, Lot 69, $372,000 • Edward D. and Judith L. Mori, trustees for Edward D.Mori Living Trust, to John A. andJoy R.Fetters, trustees for 1992 John AllanFetters andJoyRae Fetters RevocableTrust, Orion Estates, Lot 26, Block 5, $285,000 • Pahlisch Homeslnc. to JeremyJ. and Karen E.Lind, Bridges at ShadowGlen, Phase 1, Lot74,$300,402 • Oregon Joy LLC to Hayden Homes LLC, Antler Ridge, Phase 2,Lots 25, 28, 29, 30 and 89,Partition Plat 2008-43, Parcel 3, $442,200 • Roy W. Geiger to RoyW.Geigerand John A. Farley III, Township 18,Range 12, Section12, $160,000 • Deutsche BankNational Trust Companyto L. ColleenHanlon, Township 17,Range12, Section 14, $27I,050 • Sharrell E. Bunger,trustee for Sharrell E. BungerRevocableTrust, to Joan and Malcolm Buxton, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase 6, Lot172, $507,500 • John Gilmore to JamesM.and Maya H. Gauvreau, Kenwood, Lots12-13, Block 1, $165,000 • David and Marie Torranceto Christopher M. andLisa M. McCoy, Ridge at EagleCrest 45 Lot 4, $225,000
• Thomas A. andLaura C.Poole, trustee for Thomas A.Pooleand Laura C. Poole RevocableTrust, to Douglas S. and Laurie A.Jackson, Majestic Ridge, Phases1-2, Lot16, $356,000 • Pacific Coast Construction lnc. to Kendall E.and Lucille I. Loving, West CanyonEstates, Phase1, Lot 2, $200,000 •HaydenHomesLLCtoJamesM.and Paula J.Sansburn, AspenRim No. 2, Lot 208, $255,568 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Jack Beye, ForestMeadow,Phase2, Lot1, $264,950 • Hayden HomesLLCto Robert Halderman,AspenRim,Lot47, $197,959 • William J. Miller Revocable Trustto Lauri L. Thomas,Ridgeat EagleCrest 57, Lot 155, $200,000 • David M. Frank and Melanie L. Brown to Nichole A.Thurner andJoyce Gallacher, Chestnut Park, Phase1, Lot 21, $155,752 • Karen L. Smith to David M. Feldman, Diamond A, First Addition, Lot1, Block 3, $368,000 • BC WestLLCto Spotted Goats LLC, Pasco Industrial Park, Lot 2, $750,000 • Melvin McDougalto AlanNunes, Island Park, Lots 20-35, $330,000 • Melvin McDougal to RandiAdams, Island Park, Lots 9-19,$300,000 • NorthWest Crossing Condominium Development LLC toShari Winicki, NorthWest CrossingCondominium, Unit 8, $169,000 • Merrit and AnnaQuarumto Aaron A. and Elina Budrevich, Mountain Village East2, Lot4, Block8,$258,000 • Honeysuckle of BendLLCto Jay G.ClarkandJacquelynThompson, Township 17,Range13,Section 4, $155,000 • Richard E. andMarianne M.Arnold, trustees for Arnold FamilyTrust, to Wade W.and Karen M. Watson, Crosswater, Phase3, Lot 59, $700,000 • Benjamin Nicholsto Pamela J. Wilson, Woodcrest, Phase 4,Lot 22, $151,000 • 4951 Eight Mile Rd.LLCto Thomas S. O'Neil, Mill Addition to Bend,Lot17, Block 4, $200,000 • Myrlie B. Evers-Williams, trusteefor Myrlie Evers-Williams RevocableTrust,
to Rachel M.Dutcherand Pierpont E. Meadow, Lot16, Block 5,$415,000 Dutcher IV, BoonesBorough I, Lots3 • Nicholas M. andStephanie D. and 4, Block1, $339,000 Kohler to Donald D.and Jackie L. • R. Joan Worrell to SusanF.Becker, Looney, Partition Plat 2003-74, Starwood, Lot 8, Block 7,$185,450 Parcel 2, $305,000 • Thomas E.Martin to Julia Coburn, Eastbrook Estates, Phase 1, Lot1, $160,000 Mountain Medical •RonJ.andJacquelineA.Schmid, trustees for Ron J.Schmid Revocable Immediate Care Trust, Gayle P. Ishima and Thomas C. 541-3SS-7799 Zimmerman toThomasC.Zimmerman, Fairway Island, Lot1, Block5, $380,000 1302 NE 3rd St. Bend • Paul and Debora Crippato Alan F. www.mtmedgr.com Scheideggerand Marti A. Ayers, Sage
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Rifles
Survival
Continued from E1 "The AR-15, it's kind of fashionable," said Frank Loane Sr., the proprietor. His shop has a revolving waiting list for the rifles, and a handful of people are now on it. "The young generation likes them, the assault-
Continued from E1 "The idea is that tech can be useful in the great outdoors," said La Tournous, a 50-year-old blogger from western New Jersey and founder of T r a ilCamper. com. "As a kid, you maybe c ould have t a ken y o u r Walkman on a camp-out, but today there's a lot of good reasons to take tech with you. It doesn't distract from the outdoorsexperience, it enhances it." The San Jose Mercury News decided to take a hike with La Tournous, along with some of the survival products he's reviewed on his website. But i n stead of heading for the trails, we joined him on a walk through the urban wildernessjusta few blocks from San Francisco's Moscone Center. We left Macworld and headed t oward M a r k et and Sixth streets, where the drug-dealing, Dumpster-diving, p a n handling denizens can make an outof-towner feel like a babe in the woods. While some of La Tournous' tech tools, like stargazing apps and w aterproof smartphone cases, are clearly m or e s uited for the wilderness, he said others would come in handy in an u rban environment gonebad.That would include terrorist attacks, civil unrest, earthquakes or other natural disasters. He got to personally test this theory recently after Hurricane Sandy knocked out power in his hometown for more than a week. W alking u p M ar k e t , La Tournous pulled out one of the survival tools he presentedat Macworld. It's a portable solar battery chargerthe size of a large napkin (Goal Zero,
looking guns." On one level, what is happening here and elsewhere simply reflects supply and demand. The gun industry has spent decades stoking demand for the AR-15 and rifles like it. Now, after the mass killings in Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, P resident B a r ac k O b a m a wants to reduce the supply. He has asked Congress for tougher controls, including a ban on what are commonly called "military-style assault weapons", the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on gun violence Jan. 30. Many enthusiasts are rushing to buy one of the rifles now, in case the president prevails. But how did gun makers stir up the demand for these particular guns in t h e f i r st place?The answer isa story of shrewd advertisi ng, aggressive marketing and savvy manufacturing — a virtual recasting of the place of guns in American life. With speed and skill, firearms manufacturers transformed a niche market for the AR-15 and similar rifles into a fast-growing profit center. W hen certain r i f les a n d f eatures were b a nned u n der federal law from 1994 to 2004, gun makers tweaked their manufacturing specifications — and introduced more AR-15-style rifles than ever. With ads celebrating the rifle's military c o nnections, t h ey lured a new and eager audience to weapons that, not long ago, few serious gun enthusiasts would buy. It might seem remarkable, given the national conversation about gun control, but guns are a r elatively small business in the United States. Sales of commercial guns and ammunition — as opposed to those sold to the military and police — amounted to about $5 billion in 2012. That's less than half of the profits that A pple earned i n t h e f i n a l 13 weeks of last year. But despite the headlines, and partly because of them, commercial gun sales are growing. Last year, they were up 16 percent i ndustrywide, according t o estimates from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry trade association. S emi-automatic r i f le s l i k e the AR-15 ar e r e sponsible for a significant share of that growth. By now, many Americans probably recognize the AR-15, whether ornot they recognize the term. Unlike its military counterpart, the M-16, the civilian AR-15 cannot spray a continuous stream of ammunition with one pull of the trigger. But, as a semi-automatic, it can fire individual bullets as fast as the trigger can be squeezed. By design, it looks and feels like something commandos might carry. That is part of its appeal, and of manufacturers' pitch. On one l evel, marketing military-style weapons to civilians is not so different from pitching professional sports equipment to high-school athletes. Garry James, the senior field editor at Guns & Ammo, says a military pedigree inspiresconsumer confidence in a gun's reliability. "Credibility of performance is what appeals to the firearms enthusiast," James wrote in an email. Yet marketing combat-derived weapons to civilians is a risky business, particularly now. The industry itself has promoted the guns by using battle imagery and words like "assault" and "combat." Bushmaster Firearms, a l eading maker of A R-15-style guns, and whose rifles have been used inseveralmass shootings, features the Bushmaster ACR, short fo r a d aptive combat rifle, on its website. "Forces of opposition, bow down," part of the site says. All the same, gun makers say customers buy these weapons withpeaceable intentions. The AR-15 isn't the f i r st military-style weapon to gain a consumer following. After World War II , some people bought surplus German serviceriflesmade by Mauser and repurposed them for hunting and competitive shooting. But the selling of the AR-15 represents the first mass marketing of a m i l itary-style semi-automatic rifle made by a number of different gun makers.
Gretchen Ertl / New York Times News Service
Tammy Hadley of Waterford, Me., a quality manager at Windham Weaponry, checked parts during the manufacturing of an AR-15-style rifle. f
and gray guns assumes these 'new generation' hunters are merelyfantasizing 'war games' and ar e p l aying ' s oldier,'" Ak Art Blatt, a writer at Guns & Ammo, said in that 1981 issue. Blatt, now deceased, covered I all types of firearms for the • I • ) magazine and was himself a shotgun enthusiast. But the gun media found ways to appeal to readers. In that 1981 article on the Colt AR~i n groN ~ 15 and similar firearms, Blatt invoked the r i f les' m ilitary Daniel Rosenbaum pedigree, "spawned in the cruNew York Times News Service cible of war." He spoke of their An ad for the Remington 870 military-level durability, speed shotgun emphasizing quality and accuracy. In a 1983 cover and durability in a July1981 article on "Bushmaster assault issue of Guns & Ammo. systems," he noted that in tests on a human-size silhouette target 10 yards away, a BushmasIts success has led to an in- ter with a full 30-round magacreasing militarization of the zine could be "rapidly emptied entire c o nsumer f i r e arms into the lethal zone." market, says Tom Diaz, a gun The new rifles used ammuindustry researcher and gun nition — .223 caliber — that control advocate. was considered too small for "It speaks to the fact that b ig-game hunting i n m o s t there are a lot of young men in states. Before long, consumthe U.S. who will never be in ers were buying the guns for the military but feel that male small game — "varmint huntcompulsion to w arriorhood," ing" — as well as recreational said Diaz, the author of "The shooting called "plinking." Last Gun," a forthcoming book Some gun w r i ters w e re on the industry. not entirely comfortable with the rifles. In hi s article on Shrewd advertising Bushmaster, Blatt wrote that A Remington model 870, a the guns seemed "a mite too classic pump-action shotgun powerful and penetrating" for with an all-steel receiver and home defense. He recommendwalnut stock, sits on a brown ed the Bushmaster for police gingham tablecloth along with SWAT teams "in close-quarter a slice of apple pie, a mug of encounters with evildoers." coffee and an issue of the Old Savvymanufacturing Farmer's Almanac. This is how guns were marIn 1976, Richard Dyke, a keted in 1981. That year, the Korean War veteran, bought Remington 870 was featured a bankrupt gun maker in Banon the back cover of the July gor, Maine, for $241,000. That issue of Guns & Ammo, in an business grew into Bushmasad that emphasized quality ter Firearms, which quickly and durability. "The 870," the earned a following after target ad read. "Still as American as shooters began winning comapple pie." petitions with its rifles. "That did give us prestige," The front cover of the same issue showed something very Dyke said i n a n i n t erview different: a photograph of two with The New York T imes gleaming black rifles, with the in 2011. "Then we won lawcover line: "The New Breed of e nforcement contracts a n d Assault Rifle." started getting recognition in That breed's military ante- the trade press." (Dyke later cedent, the M-16, developed by sold Bushmaster and started Colt,had been an American another gun company, Windstaple of the Vietnam War; ham Weaponry. He declined soldiers had nicknamed it the to comment for this article). "black rifle" for its anodized Then, in 1994, the AR-15 coating. But, by th e 1980s, hit a speed bump. Congress with the war ended and milipassed a 10-year ban on "astary orders waning, the indus- sault weapons," which legistry was eager to find a market lators defined as semi-autofor the civilian AR-15. Many matic rifles that included two gun makers were under pres- or more specific features, like sure as traditional customers pistol-type handle grips and like hunters were aging and metal mounts, called bayonet young Americans were taklugs, to which bayonets could ing up other pursuits like com- be attached. People who alputers and video games. Net ready owned such rifles were domestic gun sales fell from allowed to keep them. more than 5 million guns in The ban made the r i fles 1980 to fewer than 4 million only more desirablefor some in 1987, according to a report consumers. To meet the dein 2000 from the Bureau of mand, gun makers removed Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms prohibited features, like bayoand Explosives. net lugs, and marketed them Some gun makers respond- as legal alternatives. "It was u nfortunately an ed by advertising handguns for women. Others found suc- i ndustrywide e vent w h e r e cess in adapting combat weap- companies were openly bragons for civilians. Colt, which ging about their ability to sell had introduced an updated guns in circumvention of the law," said Josh Sugarmann, version of the M-16 for the military, began selling a simi- executive director of the Violarly tweaked AR-15 for the lence Policy Center, a research consumer market. Some parts and g u n-control a d vocacy manufacturers started sellgroup in Washington. ing AR-15 parts to consumers The industry produced an who wanted to piece together estimated 1 million modified their own rifles. Other compa- AR-15-style rifles during the nies imported semi-automatic ban — more than it had proUzis, a version of the Israel duced of the original version Defense Force weapon, for ci- in the previous decade — says vilian use. Gary Mehalik, a former marThe look and the gas-pow- keting executive at the Naered mechanisms of the new tional Shooting Sports Founblack rifles offended some gun dation and at Taurus USA, a enthusiasts, who viewed them handgun maker in Miami. He as mere high-powered toys. denied that gun makers cirEven magazines like Guns & cumvented the law. "If you drive 40 miles an Ammo, the Vogue of firearms, had to acknowledge the initial hour i n a 40 - m ile-an-hour wariness of some readers. zone, are you exploiting a "The dyed-in-the-wool deer loophole or following the law?" hunter watching his domain Mehalik asked. being infiltrated by these black After the ban's expiration, m s~,
gun makers simply restored the once-prohibited features. Some companies added muscle to the rifles — to enthusiastic reviews in the gun media. "Scoffed at for being a 'poodle shooter,' the AR has grown fangs and is now available in a variety of calibers including big bores," said an article in Guns & Ammo in 2005. "Today's ARs ride in an increasing number of patrol cars," the article said, adding that the guns' military counterparts "are turning live terrorists into dead ones in Iraq and Afghanistan." Combat allusions increased in ads as well. In a 2008 issue of Guns & Ammo, an ad for Stag Arms, a leading AR-15style rifle and parts maker, showed a photo of two policemen wearing bulletproof vests a nd helmets, carrying t h e black rifles." Stag Arms rifles meet the highest standards of engineeringprecision and reliability," the ad said. "Just ask
these guys." An article about Stag Arms in the same issue described one of the company's models as "a southpaw's dream" and i nvoked "the role this r i f le plays in combat." Mark Malkowski, the president of Stag Arms, declined to comment. James, of Guns & Ammo, said his m agazine devoted many articles to AR-15-style rifles because manufacturers over time had improved the guns and introduced a variety of accessories, thereby attracting readers' attention. "Guns & A m mo's role in popularizing the platform is purely a function of reader interest and t h e p l atform's unique adaptability for a wide
range of sporting purposes," James wrote. Pressured by investors in the wake of Newtown, Cerberus Capital M anagement, a private i nvestment f i r m that bought Bushmaster from Dyke and has built the nation's largestgun company, the Freedom Group, announced that it would sell its gun interests. It has yet to find a buyer.
Aggressive marketing A w oman w e aring m i r rored aviator sunglasses and a make-my-day smirk aims a hefty black semi-automatic Benelli rifle a t a n u n seen predator. "This baby handles prairie varmints or the kind that come uninvited through your door," the Benelli website says of the rifle. "Chosen by the United States Marine Corps." G un makers seem to b e competing to roll out the next civilianized combat weapon. T oday, one t r e ndsetter i n handguns is a new generation of semi-automatic pistols with
$80 plus a $30 rechargeable battery) that can charge your iPhone with just three to four hours of sunlight. If power goes out, as it did after Sandy, you can still
keep your phone juiced up. And if cell coverage dies, as it did after the storm, La Tournous recommends SPOT Connect ($170, with
yearly $99 subscription). If you're bumped off the grid, either in the woods or in a post-disaster urban environment, this small device sends a messagevia satellite to send in the cavalry. W alking d ow n S i x t h , through a phalanx of the shifty-eyed and s i n ister, La Tournous showed off more tools for times when
Photos by Karl Mondon/Contra Costa Times
Chuck La Tournous charges his iPhone with his Goal Zero portable solar-powered charger in San Francisco. It sells for
$80, plus a $30 rechargeable battery.
La Tournous shows off the SteriPEN that can purify a glass of water in 48 seconds. It sells for $99. things go bad. There's the PowerPot f r o m Pr a c t ical Power ($149), a thermoelectric generator that transforms the heat of a fire into electricity for
charging devices just by boiling a pot of water — "All you need is fire," he said, "so this will get you power even if the sun's not out." Then there's the water purifier t ha t u se s u l t raviolet
light (SteriPEN, $99) to clean a liter of drinking water in 48 seconds. "After Sandy, a lot of towns had boil advisories," Tournous said, "so this would have taken care of the problem of getting drinking water." After showing off several seemingly inde s t ructible s martphone c a ses, w h i c h would be nice to have if you're caught up in a riot and your phone goes flying, La Tournous pulled out the piece de resistance: The Opena iPhone Bottle Opener ($40), which in a way could be considered the ultimate survival tool. Why? Incorporated into a sturdy protective smartphone cover is an opener to crack that bottle of beer you'll need after leaving the relative safety of Macworld to spend time on the mean streets of San Francisco.
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In our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes County who can't afford it, the Kempie Memorial Children's Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists for their volunteered services in December 2012.
large-capacity magazines and other features. An ad for a pistol from Taurus USA promoted it as "the extreme-duty next-generation handgun, created for Special Operations Personnel." Some marketing executives take a d i fferent view, suggesting that the industry include warnings the way alcohol and cigarette ads do. In a blog post last month on Adage.com titled "In a Culture of Mass Shootings, the Ad Industry Shares the Blame," David Morse, a contributor,recommended that gun makers develop "more responsible ways" to present their products. "Should w e b e ho l d i ng manufacturers accountable?" Morse, the CEO of New American Dimensions, a multicultural marketing research firm, asked in a phone interview. "The marketing messages do share inthe blame because the messages are picked up and misinterpreted by the wrong
kind of people."
E3
VOLU N T E E R DE N T ISTS TREATING KEM PLE KIDS IN OWN OFFICES IN JANUARY 2013 Dr. Susan Armstrong
Dr. Jeff Johnson
Dr. Robert Burnside
Dr. Brad Johnson
Dr. Scot Burgess
Dr. Zack Porter
Dr. David Cauble
Dr. Maureen Porter
Dr. Steve Christensen
Dr. Catherine Quas
Dr. Blake Drew
Dr. Daniel Radatti
Dr. Greg Everson
Dr. Steve Rogers
Dr. Matt Falkenstein
Dr. Brian Rosenzweig
Dr. David Fuller
Dr. Marika Stone
Dr. James Hammett
Dr. Andrew Timm
Dr. Brad Hester
Dr. Jeff Timm
Dr. Dennis Holly
Dr. Ryan Timm
Dr. Mark Jensen A Special Thank You to Dr. Zack Porter for treating a dental emergency on Friday at the end of the day. a At the KempleMemorial Children's Dental Clinic, ourmission is to improvethe health and well-being of children in DeschutesCounty byfacilitating critical preventative, educational anddental treatment servicesfor children whosefamilies cannot access basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all children needingtimely, highquality dental care.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
ES
Coffee Continued from E1 Since the Indian government changed its policies and allowed farmers to take control of their own sales in the mid-'90s, India's coffee industry has seen a boost in quality and profits, and has taken a seat in gourmet coffee circles. Even Starbucks has noticed. After years of buying very little Indian coffee, the chain is using it exclusively in espresso drinks at its recently opened shops in India. Eventually, the granddaddy of specialty coffee expects to use Indian espressoin other countries, said John Culver, president of Starbucks' AsiaPacific region. It operates the new stores w it h M u m baibased Tata, a conglomerate that is one of Asia's largest coffee producers. The story of Indian coffee is compelling in ways that farmers in more marketing-prone countries might seize on for a label. Aside from it s r o manticsounding pests — monkeys, king cobras and elephantsIndian coffee is grown not just in the shade, but in forests that from theground resemble the slopes of Cascade Mountains. I ts workers l iv e i n f r e e multiroom homes and have government-mandated free child care and pensions. Some make dinner using electric spicegrinders and have satellite television. "Bird-friendly and ethical coffee, I think we had before you even spoke about it, but we never marketed it," Mammen said. "Even now, we're very poor in marketing." Coming from a man who sells "monkey p archment," that could be hyperbole. But it is true that Indian coffee is no tascelebrated as some coffees from Latin America, I ndonesia and A f r ica. It i s rarely used by U.S. specialty roasters, partly because it is so far away and partly because it is so little known. Indian coffee also had a late start. In the 1940s, India began pooling its coffee and paying farmers mostly for quantity, not quality. That continued until the '90s and meant India missed the start of the specialty coffee craze in the 1970s, when roasters from Seattle and
t hp
Sunalini Menon heads Coffeelab, a nine-person company that inspects coffee quality and advises farmers about how to improve the flavor of their coffee.
Photos by Erika Schultz / Seattle Times
Poornima, 24, holds her son Ganesh, 2, inside worker housing at Badra Estates in India. In addition to free housing, under government regulations, coffee workers receive a set wage — currently about $4 a day. (India's average income is $1,490 a year.) elsewhere began searching the world for gourmet coffee. Today, although they have yet to crack the U.S. market, Mammen and others have spent time and money to improve their coffee and sell it to high-end roasters in Asia and Europe, including Illy in Italy. Despite its youth in specialty coffee, India was one of the first countries in the world to grow it. The crop was first cultivated in Ethiopia, and by the 1600s
coffee barons with tigers they when the government agency shot at theirfeet. downsized in the 1990s. AlWhen the British arrived in though the Coffee Board did the 1600s, looking at first to not focus on quality, Menon break a Dutch monopoly on had created a small program the spice trade, tea and cof- in which some farmers were fee were "backyard crops" in paid more for better-tasting India. Over the centuries, the coffee. British installed plantations. Now her nine-person CofTea, which is a much larger feelab in Bangalore inspects crop, is grown mostly in the coffeequality for cafe chains north, while coffee is grown and advises farmers about mostly in the south. how to improve the flavor of East of t h e m o untaintop their coffee. temple sits Mammen's 375Two-thirds of India's coffee acre Arabicaplantation, where is Robusta, the long-maligned was hugely popular through- workers shoot "monkey guns" sibling to gourmet coffee's preout th e O t t oman E m pire. and sometimes see tigers that ferred Arabica. The Turks boiled or roasted live on a nearby preserve. Although Robusta's repucoffee beans before they left For many I n d ian c o ffee tation has improved, it still is the Yemeni port of Mocha to farmers, the path to better fla- not used by many high-end keep them from being grown vor and higher profits started roasters, including Starbucks. elsewhere, according to cof- with a woman named Suna- It also remains unwelcome in fee historian and author Mark lini Menon. the prestigious Cup of ExcelPendergrast. Formerly head of q uality lence competition, which has That is why, according to at the Coffee Board of India, brought high prices and fame legend, a 17th-century MusMenon took early retirement to some coffee-producing lim pilgrim named Baba Budan taped seven coffee beans to his stomach and smuggled them to India. The hills where he planted those beans are now known as "Quality Painting Inside and Out" the Bababudan Giris. A Hindu J Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years temple sits atop the highest peak, and coffee forests are visible in all directions. To the west is the town of Chikmagalur, where growers still congregate at a membersInsured Bonded and Licensed¹156152 Phone:541-383-2927 only club. The walls are hung 18633 RiverwoodsDrive Email: heartlandllc@msn.com Bend, OR 97702 with animal heads and skins, Inquire about trading goods for services. and photographs of B r itish
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/I With our extreme low level of homes currently available, I have several buyers still looking: Buyer ¹V2: Budget $250,000 SW/Old Mill/West Areas - Single Family House Buyer ¹MI: Budget $750,000 West Side —Newer Single Family or Townhome,View Buyer ¹H2: Budget $450,000 West Side - Single Family Home, Main Floor Master Buyer ¹R2: Budget $150,000 Downtown West - Vacant Lot or House Buyer ¹52: Budget $200,000 Open —Single Family Home for Investment r
IP 'll
Brian L a rl lf, principal Broker LearnmoreatBendPropertySource.com ~ 541.408.3912
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Disclaimer: This data is as of 1/24/2013 from TrendVision based os all residential homes under $1,000,000 in the 97701 and 97702 zip codes. If you are a seller and currently have an agency agreement with ae agent please disregard this notice or have your agent contact us to discuss our current portfolio of buyers.
Goodrich Pet.
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Loews earnings 4Q est. $0.29• Year ago $0.77 Coca-Cola earnings 4Q est. $0.44• Year ago $0.40 Cisco Systems earnings 2Q est. $0.48• Year ago $0.47 Deere earnings 1Q est. $1.39• Year ago $1.30 Duke Energy earnings 4Q est. $0.65• Year ago $0.72 Import prices Jan. est. 0.8%• Dec. -0.1% Retail sales Jan. est. 0.1%• Dec. 0.5% PepsiCo earnings 4Q est. $1.05• Year ago $1.15 Industrial production Jan. est. 0.2%• Dec. 0.3%
Technology giant Cisco Systems will report its Cisco stock lagged behind the Standard 8 Poor's 500 index in each of the last three years. quarterly results on Wednesday, and financial analysts expect to see a modest gain in earnings But it has climbed strongly since November. That's when Chambers per share. But what investors are Cisc o Systems (CSC said that spending by 0) most looking forward to U.S. companies was may be what Chief growing, helping to offset Executive John Chamcontinued weakness from bers has to say about tg Europe. A month later, how the future looks for Cisco unveiled a change his company and the in strategy to broaden its economy. As the world's offerings in services and '12 ' '13 largest seller of networksoftware. ing equipment for Analysts expect Cisco EPS Revenue (bilions) computers, cisco has a to report a 2 percent gain so.47 s o.48 $11 53 $ 1 2 .06 good view into global in quarterly earnings per economy and compashare from a year ago on Year 2Q Year 2Q nies' willingness to ago est. ago est. a 5 percent rise in spend. S ource. FactSet r e v e n u e .
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"We don't just strip Robusta off the tree and say, 'Hey, Robusta's not a bad coffee.' It's a lot of work," said Mammen, standing in his new $200,000 Robusta processing facility. Roughly 65 percent of the coffee he grows is Robusta. Robusta is harder to process and fetcheslower prices than Arabica, but it r emains appealing to farmers because the treestend to be stronger and produce more coffee.
farms and regions. "That's so sad," Menon, a judge for the Cup of Excellence, says of Robusta's reputation for harsh flavor. Robusta can be spicy and buttery if it is processed correctly, she said. She has p u shed I n dia's farmers to wet-processtheir R obusta coffee as they d o Arabica, even though Robusta beans can take twice as long to ferment.
Source: FactSet
'
WILSHIRE 5000 16,035.04 ~
INDEX
LAST FRI. CHG 1517.93 +8.54 Frankfurt DAX 7652.14 +61.29 London FTSE100 6263.93 +35.51 Hong Kong Hang Serig 23215.16 +38.16 Paris CAC-40 3649.50 +48.45 Tokyo Nikkei 225 11153.16 -203.91
s8 P 500
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA Buenos Aires Mert/al Mexico City Bolsa
Sao paolo Bovespa Toronto S&p/TSx
FRL CHG WK MO QTR +0.57% +0.81% +0.57% +0.16% +1.35% -1.80% T
3279.96 -23.01 45089.55 +70.34 58497.83 t125.37 12801.23 +45.31
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345.13 +1.43 2505.91 +12.65 830.06 +17.04 7395.97 +58.92 16630.50 +229.94 40892.65 +197.88 1175.05 +9.34
+0.42% +0.51%
+0.36%
YTD +6.43% +0.52% +6.21% +2.46% +0.23% +7.29%
+14.91% +3.17% -4.03% +2.96%
EUROPE/AFRICA
Amsterdam Brussels Madrid Zurich Milan Johannesburg Stockholm ASIA Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times Sydney All Ordinaries Taipei Taiex Shanghai Composite
1950.90 3270.30 4989.40 7906.65 2432.40
+19.13 +8.53 +33.63 +19.71 +13.87
+2.10% +0.80% +1.40% +0.49% +0.80%
+0.99% +0.26% +0.68% T L +0.25% +0.57%
+0.71% +1.22% +0.65% +8.41% t2.19%
+4.18% +6.37%
-z31% +3.26% +6.96% t2.69%
+7.20%
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
UNDAY DRI V ER
'Check engine' light might mean a disaster, or not By Brad Bergholdt McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Q
• I r e member you s aid • there can be dozens, if not hundreds, of reasons my "check engine" light m i ght come on. And since there's no way for me to know which one it is without it being checked by a repair shop, how do I know it's a serious problem or not? I think I heard somewhere the gas cap being loose is a common cause; what others are there? . Aside from a flat tire or . dead battery, an illuminated "check engine" lightalso known as a malfunction i ndicator lamp, or MIL — i s probably the most d readed and common automotive quirk to wreck someone's day. This amber lamp indicates the emission control system, engine or transmission has incurred a fault that will cause exhaust emissions to rise above allowable values. In many cases, the vehicle will drive flawlessly. In other cases, misfiring, stalling or other drivability symptoms can lead to bigger problems. In most cases, a continuously glowing MIL with normal engine and transmission performance canbe prioritized as a sometime-this-week visit to a technician. A flashing MIL is a different story; the vehicle should be driven as tenderly and briefly as possible, as a severe engine misfire is occurring, which can damage the catalytic converter, among other issues. If the lamp stops flashing and misfire symptoms, such as shuddering or a thumping engine, abate, one may tread further. According to the California Bureau of Automotive Repair, the most common "check engine" lamp causes and diagnostic trouble codes are as follows: • "Catalyst system efficiency below threshold" (P0420): This means the catalytic converter is no longer functioning efficiently and probably requires r eplacement. This w i l l n o t adversely affect vehicle operation, but exhaust emissions aren't being properly treated. • "System too lean" (P0171 or P0174): Lean means the engine is not receiving enough fuel or is admitting too much air, and may be indicated by stumbling, pinging or a loss of power. Engine damage is slightly possible with this situation, if the vehicle is driven under demanding conditions. "Exhaust gas recirculation flow insufficient detected" (P0401): This can cause combustion temperatures to rise excessively, leading to rattling, knocking sounds or pinging. Reducing speed and avoiding hills and hot-weather driving can help mitigate possible engine damage prior to repair. "Random/multiple cylinder misfire detected" (P0300). If noticeable engine shuddering or reduced power is evident, get this fixed as soon as possible. Engine misfire causes ahost of problems, as noted above. "Evaporative emission control system leak detected" (P0442, P0455, o r P 0 440): This means fuel tank or vapor storage canister vapors are escaping to the atmosphere. Check for a loose gas cap, but remember that it ma y t a k e several days for the lamp to go out. Vehicle performance is unaffected. • "02 sensor heater circuit" (P0135 or others): In this case, a faulty heater in one of the oxygen sensors is prolonging sensor warm-up or allowing cool-down. V ehicle p e rformance is unaffected. A neighbor with an inexpensive OBD-II scan tool or code reader can safely retrieve the stored diagnostic trouble code, and a q u ick I nternet search of the code will yield sufficient information to allow repair prioritization. •
Not uietor uic utitscootsoversnow By Christopher Jensen New Yorh Times News Service
Anyone who lives where an 8-inch dump of snow doesn't raise a frost-covered eyebrow knows that all-wheel drive isn't enough: If you want to get through deep snow you need ground clearance, too. T hat is the point of t h e 2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, which is basically a modified Impreza compact hatchback operating at,
RE+Eg/
we ll,a higher
level. While the Impreza has 5.7 inches of ground clearance, t he Crosstrek SV h a s 8 . 7 inches. That's nearly as much as the Chevrolet Tahoe, a conventional SUV. Those extra 3 inches seriously reduce the chance of
bogging down in deep snow, whether on an unplowed road or while clambering over the mounds left by snowplows in front of side roads and driveways. The Crosstrek isn't intended forserious off-roading, but its higher stance gives it a better chance of handling rutted, rough roads without damaging the parts down under. While the XV is based on the Impreza, it has a different body style with jaunty, assertive styling. The biggest mechanical changes, Subaru says, involve borrowing some components from the Forester SUV for the higher-riding suspension. The Crosstrek's cabin is virtually identical to the Impreza's in appearance and dimensions. The interior has an economy-car look but is practical and comfortable enough for four adults — assuming nobody is much over 6 feet tall or feels entitled to stretch-out legroom. Subaru says there's 22 cubic feet of space behind the back seat. Plop that seat down and you create a huge 52-cubic-foot cargo hold. I spent about a week with a Limited with the continuously variable transmission, followed by a Premium with the manual. The manual allows more involvement, but t here are two downsides. One is a mile-
Subaru of America via The New York Times
The 2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek rides as high as many SUV's and despite its economy look, the interior is comfortable.
2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek Base price:$22,805 As tested:$25,305 Type:An elevated impreza with a rakish roofline, a rear hatch and sporty trim. Engine:A 2-liter flat 4
(148 horsepower) and either a 5-speedmanual or a continuously variable automatic transmission; all-wheel drive is standard. Mileage:Automatic
25 mpgcity,33 mpg highway; manual23 mpg city, 30 mpg highway
age rating that's 2 mpg lower in town and 3 lower on the
highway. T he other i s n o i se. A t highway speeds the engine — working hard just to maintain 70 mph — adds to the already considerableracket from the road and the wind. Life is quieter with the vari-
able automatic, which allows the engine speed to drop considerably, reducing the racket. And the CV T c omes with some underhood soundproofing that isn't in the manual. A spokesman said soundproofing would be made available for installation on the manual Crosstrek.
the Subaru changes direction quickly and th e body lean is nicely controlled. It is also possible, by lifting off the gas in the middle of a quick turn, to get the tail to move slightly to the outside, helping to change direction. On rough surfaces, the ride can be a bit jolting. One question for poOf course, you pay a price tential buyers is whether the in performance for the good Crosstrek is worth its price fuel economy. Acceleration is premium over the Impreza. just acceptable, at best, with For the budget-minded who don't need the extra ground either the manual or the variable automatic. The testers at clearance, yet want all-wheel Consumer Reports clocked drive and good fuel economy, a CVT model at a leisurely the cheapest Impreza with a 9.7seconds from a stop to 60 manual transmission is about mph. $3,600 less than the entry-levWhile the manual shifter el Crosstrek. But that's a misis slightly notchy, the CVT leading comparison because works well. And because the the Crosstrek has a lot more transmission lets the engine standard equipment. operate at p eak e f ficiency The closest apples-to-apmost of the time, it's a big fac- ples comparison would be the tor in fuel efficiency. XV Crosstrek Premium with The Crosstrek makes up the Impreza Sport Limited, for its casual approach to ve- which has similar upscale fealocity with an energetic de- tures like heated seats. Those meanor on a two-lane road. two models are each just unDespite the high ride height, der $24,000.
Buying the XV Crosstrek also means a slight loss in fuel economy. The Impreza h atchback wit h t h e a u t omatic is rated at 2 mpg more in town and 3 more on the highway. The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that the Impreza would consume $100 less in gasoline in a year, based on 15,000 miles of driving with a fuel price of $3.36 a gallon. The Crosstrek comes with all of the important safety features, including electronic stability c ontrol. It is rated a Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety for its performance in front and side-impact crashtestsand for roof strength. A thoroughly likable and practical crossover, the XV Crosstrek is impressive not for its speed but for its ability to adapt to driving conditions, whether meandering along a mountain road or slogging t hrough deep s now. A n d wherever it travels, it goes easy on the finances.
Automakersscorebig with SuperBowl commercials By Brent Snaveiy
cials were ranked among the top five. USA Today ranked Ram's ode to the American farmer with still photos and legendary radio broadcaster Paul Harvey third behind Tide's "Miracle Stain" commercial and Budweiser's Clydesdale commercial with Fleetwood Mac's " Landslide" a s t h e soundtrack.
Detroit Free Press
The automotive industry had a strong showing in Super Bowl XLVII as eight car brands blitzed the commercial breaks with 13 game time ads. Five of those commercials were ranked by USA Today's Ad Meter in the top 10 and both of Chrysler's commer-
Chrysler's tw o- m i nute commercial illustrating Jeep's p artnership wit h t h e U . S . military that wa s n arrated by talk-show host and media
mogul Oprah Winfrey was ranked fifth by USA Today after a Doritos commercial. John Kovac, vice president of consumer marketing for AutoTrader.com said the automotive industry also has
a history of using the Super Bowl to energize its market-
aired during the Super Bowl instantly sparked a surge in ing campaign and doesn't of- search traffic on AutoTrader. ten make the mistake of using com's Web site, Kovac said. the big game as a once-andOn AutoTrader's site, the done opportunity. b iggest winners w ere t h e That's important, K ovac Hyundai Santa Fe, Kia Forte said, since Super Bowl com- and Kia Sorento. Search acmercials cost, on average, tivity surged for those models almost $4 million for a 30-sec- by 1,004 percent, 750 percent ond spot. and 531 percent respectively, Every automotive ad that Kovac said.
aI
A Free Public Service
0>>A 6 regon Newapeper i~+ , PLrlhlishers As t OCi8t k l ll
•
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— Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.
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INSIDE: BOOICS> Editorials, F2
Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
~~",l
DA VID BROOKS
Machiavelli and the drones his winter I'm taking part in a great course at Yale called Grand Strategy. We're reading strategic thought from Sun Tzu and Pericles straight through to Churchill and George Kennan. This week we read Machiavelli. Machiavelli is a tonic because he counteracts the sentiments of our age. We're awash in TV news segments celebrating the human spirit, but Machiavelli had a lower estimation of our worth. "For it may be said of men in general that they are ungrateful, voluble, dissemblers, anxious to avoid danger and covetous of gain," he writes in "The Prince." "It needs to be taken for granted that all men are wicked and that they will always give vent to the malignity that is in their minds when opportunity offers," he adds in "The Discourses." The conventional view is that Machiavelli believed that since people are brutes then everything is permitted. Leaders should do anything they can to hold power. The ends justify the means. In fact, Machiavelli was a moralistic thinker. He wrote movingly of his love for his city, Florence. His vision of a great and unified Italy was romantic and idealistic. He barely goes a page without some appeal to honor and virtue. He just had a different concept of political virtue. It would be nice, he writes, if a political leader could practice the Christian virtues of charity, mercy and gentleness and still provide for his people. But, in the real world, that's usually not possible. In the real world, a great leader is called upon to create a civilized order for the city he serves. To create that order, to defeat the forces of anarchy and savagery, the virtuous leader is compelled to do hard things, to take, as it were, the sins of the situation upon himself. The leader who does good things cannot always be good himself. Sometimes bad acts produce good outcomes. Sometimes a leader has to love his country more than his souL Since aleader isforced by circumstances to do morally suspect things, Machiavelli at least wants him to do them effectively. Machiavelli is full of advice. If you have to do something cruel, do it fast; if you get to do something generous, do it slowly. W hen you read Machiavelli,you realize how lucky we are. Unlike 16th-century Florence, we have a good Constitution that channels conflict. We have manners, respect for law and social trust. Even in the realm of foreign affairs, we've inherited an international order that restrains conflict. Our ancestors behaved savagely to build our world, so we don't have to. But it's still not possible to rule with perfectly clean hands. There are still terrorists out there, hiding in the shadows and plotting to kill Americans. So even today'sleaders face the Machiavellian choice: Do I have to be brutal to protect the people I serve? Do I have to use drones, which sometimes kill innocent children, in order to thwart terror and save the lives of my own? When Barack Obama was a senator, he wasn't compelled to confront the brutal logic of leadership. Now in office, he's thrown into the Machiavellian world. He's decided, correctly, that we are in a long war against al-Qaida; that drone strikes do effectively kill terrorists; that, in fact, they inflict fewer civilian deaths than bombing campaigns, or any practical alternative; that, in fact, civilian death rates are dropping sharply as the CIA gets better at this. Acting brutally abroad saves lives at home. If you take Machiavelli's toughminded view of human nature, you have to be brutal to your enemiesbut you also have to set up skeptical checks on the people you empower to destroy them.
T
— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return.
Matthew Eich/New York Times News Service
Kathy and Rick Fee rest at their home with a photograph of their son, Richard, who committed suicide in 2011. The suicide of Richard Fee, pictured below at his graduation, highlights issues in the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD, as growing numbers of youths fake symptoms to obtain steady prescriptions for stimulants that carry serious psychological dangers.
in a stream of rescri tions • A case thatendedtragically highlights a growing abuseof stimulants
Courtesy of the Fee family via NYT
By AlanSchwarz eNew York Times News Service
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va.
not now as a 24-year-old college graduate, and that he
-
very morning on her way to work, Kathy Fee
was getting dangerously addicted to the medication.
holds her breath as she drives past the squat
It was inside the building that her husband, Rick,
brick building that houses Dominion
ALysls implored Richard's doctor to stop prescribing him
Psychiatric Associates.
Adderall, warning, "You're going to kill him."
It was there that her son, Richard, visited a doctor and
It was where, after becoming violently delusional
received prescriptions for Adderall, an amphetamine-
and spending a week in a psychiatric hospital in 2011,
based medication for attention deficit hyperactivity
Richard met with his doctor and received prescriptions
disorder. It was in the parking lot that she insisted to
for 90 more days of Adderall. He hanged himself in his
Richard that he did not have ADHD, not as a child and
bedroom closet two weeks after they expired.
Adisturdingtrend Prescriptions to young adults for attention
deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)more than doubled in four years.
ADHD prescriptions per1,000 people 359 +56% SINCE 2007
400
Ages 0-19 300
230
169 +141% SINCE 2007
200 Ages 20-39 100 "
"
70
'07
'08
'09
'10
Source: IMS Health New York Times News Service
The story of Richard Fee, an athletic, personable college class president and aspiring medical student, highlights widespread failings in the system through which five million Americans take medication for ADHD, doctors and other experts said. Medications like Adderall can markedly improve the lives of children and others with the disorder. But the tunnel-like focus the medicines provide has led growing numbers of teenagers and young adults to fake symptoms to obtain steady prescriptions for highly addictive medications that carry serious psychologicaldangers. These efforts are facilitated by a segment of doctors who skip established diagnostic procedures, renew prescriptions reflexively and spend too little time with patients to accurately monitor side effects. Richard Fee's experience included it all. Conversations with friends, family members and a review of detailed medical records depict an intelligent and articulate young man lying to doctor after doctor, physicians issuing hasty diagnoses, and psychiatrists continuing to prescribe medication — even increasing dosages — despite evidence of his growing addiction and psychiatric breakdown. Very few people who misuse stimulants devolve into psychotic or suicidal addicts. But even one of Richard's own physicians, Dr. Charles Parker,characterized his case as a virtual textbook for ways that ADHD practices can fail patients, particularly young adults. "We have a significant travesty being done in this country with how the diagnosis is being made and the meds are being administered,"
said Parker, a psychiatrist in Virginia Beach. "I think it's an abnegation of trust. The public needs to say this is totally unacceptable and walk out." Young adults are by far the fastest-growing segment of people taking ADHD medications. Nearly 14 million monthly prescriptions for the condition were written for Americans ages 20 to 39 in 2011, two and a half times the 5.6 million just four years before, according to the data company IMS Health. While this rise is generally attributed to the maturing of adolescents who have ADHD into young adultscombined with a greater recognition of adult ADHD in general — many experts caution that savvy college graduates, freed of parental oversight, can legally and easily obtain stimulant prescriptions from obliging doctors. "Any step along the way, someone could have helped him — they were just handing out drugs," said Richard's father. Emphasizing that he had no intention of bringing legal action against any of the doctors involved, Fee said: "People have to know that kids are out there getting these drugs and getting addicted to them. And doctors are helping them do it."
The first signs of trouble Richard began acting strangely soon after moving back home in late 2009, his parents said. He stayed up for days at a time, went from gregarious to grumpy and back, and scrawled compulsively in notebooks. His father, while trying to add Richard to his health insurance policy, learned that he was taking Vyvanse for ADHD. SeeStimulants /F5
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
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he Internet has flooded us with information, but it doesn't always help us distinguish the valuable from the misleading. In health care, one disturbing result
ITED STATE' TAL SERVI(
is the low rate of immunization among our children. Legislation pending in Salem would attempt to assure that parents have accurate information, and it deserves support. The problem is acute in Bend, where several schools have so many unimmunized children that they're at risk for outbreaks of diseases that have become rare, as reporter Heidi Hagemeier detailed Thursday in The Bulletin's Health section. Statewide, more kindergartners lack immunizations than anywhere else in the nation. Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the notion that vaccines cause more harm than good has taken hold among a group of parents, prompting them to take advantage of Oregon's relatively lax process to gain exemption from immunization requirements. The risk is not just an abstraction. Already, reports show a resurgence of measles and pertussis, also known as whooping cough. And low rates of immunization mean that so-called herd immunity — where high rates of vaccination prevent the spread of disease — is being lost. Whooping cough can be fatal to infants too young to be immunized, but herd immunity can protect them. Current Oregon law allows students to attend school without vaccinations if parents sign a form stat-
ing they have a religious objection, no details required. The proposed legislation would remove the religious reference and add an education component. Parents would need to complete an online education program or get a physician signature. They could then exempt their children by signing a form. The idea, say supporters of the bill, is to be sure parents base their decision on accurate information. Lake Oswego pediatrician Jay Rosenbloom, who has worked on the proposal, said some parents won't vaccinate their children no matter what, but others could be swayed by valid science. He said a blanket ban on unvaccinated children in school could be seen as violating civil rights and lead to challenges. The hope is that education will increase rates enough topreserve or re-establish the protections of herd immunity. Ann Stone, executive director of the Oregon Pediatric Society, said similar legislation enacted in Washington state in 2011 reduced immunization exemptions by 25 percent the following year. That's good evidence and clearly supports giving this approach a try. Legislators shouldbe ready, though, to go further if this method doesn't make a sufficient difference.
Bill would enhanceand redefine DUII enforcement regon's law governing driving under the influence of intoxicants is likely pretty typical. It defines intoxicants as alcohol, controlled substances and inhalants — and leaves it at that. It is a definition that, unfortunately, does not recognize the ability of modern chemists to create intoxicating substances that are none of those three things. Such drugs as "spice," "bath salts" and "herbal incense" can impair drivers every bit as effectivelyas booze or cocaine.According to the National Office of Drug Control Policy, spice is a synthetic marijuana, while bath salts mimic amphetamines. Their ingredients may include plants and chemicals, and they're illegal in both Oregon and Washington. Yet in Oregon today it may be illegal to possess spice, but it is not illegal to drive under its influence. That's true of a whole variety of chemical creations designed to imitate other illegal substances, as well. State lawmakers no doubt rec-
O
ognized the problem when they created a task force in 2011 to look into the issue. Hearings on the four bills that resulted began Monday. One of the four, HB 2114, would expand the state's definition of intoxicants to include synthetic drugs or any other substance that "affects a person's physical or mental faculties to a noticeable degree." That presumably includes over-thecounter medications that can have a disorienting effect on some users. The proposed definition provides a no-nonsense approach to an increasingly large problem. Though bath salts and some other synthetics are now illegal under federal as well as state law, manufacturers have become increasingly adept at changing formulas to skirt current legal definitions. Oregon's proposed definition based on symptoms rather than chemical composition gives police the ability to get a group of impaired drivers off the road that might otherwise go free. That, in turn, makes Oregon's highways safer. It's difficult to oppose that.
M IVickel's Worth Demand Abedini's release
most undervalued and luxurious indulgence bid even higher by this decision. God bless Saeed Abedini, a selfless, brave American.
forests, we maintain a strong recreation program, complete with 24 On Jan. 27, Iran strengthened its miles of well-maintained trails, as attempt to humiliate America: Rev. our contribution to the health and Saeed Abedini, 32 years old and an happiness of the local community. American citizen, was sentenced Wayne Mayo It is very important to us to offer to eight years in Iran's most cruel Scappoose high quality opportunities to mounprison for "threatening the security tain bikers. However, it is necessary It's a federal highway of Iran." for us to clearly articulate uses that His crime? Still unclear, but acare not allowed on the forest. For excording to sparse news reports, Dear fellow Bendites: I think that ample, we do not allow people to use "unauthorized" trails located on the Abedini met with fellow Christians some are forgetting why we have n in homes over six years encourag- U.S. Highway 97, which bisects forest, which are created directly by ing them in their faith." He was not Oregon. users, do not meet our standards for plotting terrorism, smuggling guns This major federal highway used design, construction or maintenance or bombs, promoting public dissent, to connect businesses as well as and can cause damage to resources. or organizing protests. handle hugetrucks and commerce Our dusk-to-dawnclosureisposted on The president an d C o n gress of all kinds between Klamath Falls all official entry points and enforced should demand Abedini's immedi- and the Columbia River. by Benton County Sheriff's Office. ate release. No chit should be ofHow foolish and self-centered we Visitors may find themselves faced fered, no accolades for compliance; are to thinkthat, inorder for a few with some hefty trespassing fines for just a reminder that only insecure businessesto be more accessible,we entering the forest after dark. governments are threatened by drag all of Central Oregon's through Come visit us during daylight ideas. Especially when that idea in- traffic (north/south) onto yet anoth- hours, and we'll show you some cludes a much needed orphanage in er "Third Street." spectacular views a n d t h r i l ling Iran, no less. This is a national-federal highway trails! For more information about Juxtaposed to Iran, the West's re- — not just another "through street"! our trails, visit our website at: www sponse to differing religions except Char Kolzow .cof.orst.edu/cf/. when they violate law seems lackBend John Mann ing in conviction, but it's not. Rather Director of OSU College Forests, than threaten to imprison others, Forest closed at night Corvallis Western policy reflects antiquity's Biblical teaching to, "bear with This letter is in response to the Guns and bullets great patience those who oppose us recent article "Night riders" by Zach "Guns don't kill etc/ ...n Whenever hoping that God will grant them re- Urness, published Jan. 23, which pentance unto life." identified the McDonald Forest as a I see this familiar anti-gun-control So you can understand America's prime location for after-dark riding. slogan, I think of Charlton Heston's practice of g overnment through We want to let your readers know comment to pal Tom Selleck at a Fair civil debate, printed and broadcast that all OSU College Forests are ac- Play For Russian Roulette fundraiser: "Guns don't kill people, bullets kill dissent, noisy and messy public pro- tually closed to visitors from dusk tests — all that public discourse in- until dawn for safety reasons. people — and, for that matter, only cludes. We may appear gridlocked, The College Forests include the the teeny little tips at the end.n incoherent, certainly not offering McDonald and Dunn forests near Right on target, Charlton! And rethe ease of definition and execu- Corvallis and are owned and manmember, if nobody had guns, everytion Iran's totalitarian government aged by the OSU College of Forbody would have to throw bullets. enjoys. Westerners are offered estry. While outdoor recreation is David Fahrner freedom of thought; apparently a not part of the official mission of the Terrebonne
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Progressive income tax is more than just a bad idea By Jonathan KahnoskI in adjusted gross income, and just rogressive income taxes are over 81 million tax returns reported bad policy, divisive and immor- adjusted gross income between al. You don't hear that often, $25,000 and $1 million. The middle so let me say it again. Progressive class always ends up paying the bill. income taxes are bad public policy, No surprise, the wealthy seek to socially divisive and immoral. Let's escape steep tax rates by lobbying explore each in turn. Congress and state legBad public policy:Taxing islatures for deductions QEW higher incomes at higher a nd subsidies. All t h i s rates and lower incomes at lobbying is why we have lower rates (or not at all), convinces a so many tax breaks for the rich. The lot of people they can vote themselves result is our politics and tax codes government services but have some- have become corrupt and the rich one else ("the rich," amillionaires and don't pay the high tax rates anyway. billionairesn) pay for those services. Bad social policy: Progressive inIt creates the illusion there is a free come tax rates divide us based upon lunch, or at least someone else is buy- incomes — thewealthy versus everying lunch. one else. Politicians and social critics However, according to IRS numdemonize the wealthy for not paying bers for 2009 (last year that statistics their "fair share" and tell everyone are available), just under 237,000 tax else they are being cheated. This returns reported $1 million or more is called the zero-sum game — the
wealthy earn more money causing everyone else to make less. No matter how the wealthy earned their money — most wealthy people are first generation wealthy; they didn't inherit it. More i m p ortant, t a x in g the wealthy more doesn't make anyone else better off. The poor and middle class are still poor or middle class, just more dependent upon government bureaucrats for handouts. The politicians benefit, however, because they use all that tax revenue for their own vote buying schemes. Here again, the end result is not a growing economy benefiting everyone, but political corruption. Immoral: Since the Declaration of Independence, it has been a fundamental American principle that "all men are createdequal."Perhaps the worst part of progressive income taxes is that they violate this principle.
They make it lawful to treat Americans differently solely based on what they earn. We don't expect a wealthy person to pay more for the same loaf of bread a poor person buys because the wealthy can afford to pay more. We don't insist the A students give some of their grade point averages to the D students to make things "fair." Imposing such unequal treatment in prices or grades would be considered un-American, taking by force of law from those who have more just because they have more even if they earned it by working harder. The same is true for tax rates. You wouldn't demand your neighbor who
The progressive income tax isn't about fairness. What is someone's "fair share" anyway? We are never told how much someone must pay to pay their "fair share." No, the progressive income tax is about the greed of "I have less; you have more; you should have to give me some," routed through the government, of course. Bad public policy, socially divisive, and immoral — the progressive income tax cannot be justified. In theory, all Americans have an equal responsibility to pay for government, implying everyone should pay the same flat rate on income and no loopholes/deductions for anyone. has a better-paying job give you some Of course, we must stop expecting of his money just because you want the federal and state governments to it. Why is it moral for the government fix every problem. Why that is a good to demand it for you? The answer, of idea is a topic for a future column. course, is that it isn't. — Jonathan Kahnoski lives in Sunriver.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
mmi ration re orm is inco erent othing about illegal immigration quite adds up. Conservative c o r p orate employers still support the idea of imported, cheap, non-union labor — in a strange alliance with liberal activists who want the larger blocs of Latino voters that eventually follow massive influxes from Latin America. Yet how conservativearebusinesses that in the past flouted federal law — and how liberal are activists who undermined the bargaining power of American minimum-wage, entry-level workers, many of them minorities? The remedies for illegal immigration under discussion are just as incoherent. If the government now plans to offer some foreign nationals a pathway to citizenship, does it also suddenly have the will to determine who among illegal immigrants does not qualify for citizenship? Millions of illegal immigrants have resided in the United States for some time. They have not been convicted of crimes. And they have been hardworking and self-supporting. But if the majority deserves a chance to obtain legal residence and begin the process of citizenship, what about others who would not qualify under those same considerations'? There is also talk of reforming legal immigration as well. From now on we would select most immigrants for citizenship not by their place of origin, or by the fact of their prior illegal residence in the United States, but on the
VICTOR DAVIS
HANSON~g basis of needed skill sets and education, and their willingness to wait in
line legally. Yet are loud proponents of "comprehensive immigration reform" really willing to embrace the reforms they boast about'? It might spell the end of privileging millions from Latin America to enter the United States without requisite concern about legality, education, English fluency or particular skill sets. Massive illegal immigration is not ethnically blind or based on education. For decades it has favored more proximate Latin American arrivals who can easily cross the U.S.-Mexican border over those from distant Asia, Africa or Europe who simply cannot. The politics of immigration are just as weird. Democrats, buoyed by the two election victories of Barack Obama, now welcome large pools of new Latino citizens to vote in bloc fashion for Democratic candidates. But if the border were actually closed and immigration returned to a legal, systematic process, then in time Latinos — inthe pattern of Greek-, Italianand Armenian-Americans — would follow most other ethnic minorities and decouple their ethnic allegiances from politics.
Republicansseem more confused. After needlessly bombastic talk in the 2012 presidential primaries, they have gone to the other extreme of emphasizing amnesties instead of enforcement — largely in efforts to pander to growing numbers of Latino voters. Here, too, paradoxes abound. Various polls suggest that immigration was not the primary reason why Latinos voted overwhelmingly for Barack Obama. When the Pew Research Center recently surveyed Latinos and asked whether they preferred high taxes and big government or low taxes and small government, they preferred high taxes and big government by a 75-19 margin. And they usually see liberal Democrats as far better stewards of redistributionist government, and Republicans more as h eartless advocatesof a capricious free market. Stranger still, Asian-Americans, for whom illegal immigration is not really an issue, voted for Democrats by about the same margins as did Latinos — and perhaps for similar perceptions of minority-friendly big government. Moreover,the largest concentrations of Latino voters are in Southwestern blue states like California, New Mexico and Nevada, where Republicans usually lose anyway, and for a variety of reasons other than immigration. Ironically, the best longterm strategy for Republicans would be to close the border and allow the
forces of upward mobility, assimilation and the natural social conservatism of Latinos to work. Everyone talks grandly of passing bipartisan comprehensive immigration reform as if the present system had not sprung up to serve the needs of all sorts of special interests that certainly have not gone away. We forget that too many employers still want the cheap labor of foreign nationals. The Mexican government still promotes illegal immigration as a political safety valve and a valuable source of cash remittances. Too many ethnic activists, whose supportderives from large numbers of under-assimilated Latinos, don't want to deport anyone and do not welcome legal immigration redefined by ethnically blind, skill-based criteria. Democratic politicos don't want closed borders, only to see the melting pot someday turn their loyal supporters into independent voters. And panicky Republicans simply have no idea what they want — other than to cater to as many constituencies as they can. The present system of immigration is far too often illegal and immoral. But it is also weirdly rational in the way that it serves so well so many lobbies — and so poorly the shared public interest at large. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,
Stanford University.
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN~ .
J
The power, possibilities of youth NEW DELHIt's hard to escape a visit to India without someone asking you to compare it to China. This visit was no exception, but I think it's more revealing to widen the aperture and compare India, China and Egypt. India has a weak central government but a really strong civil society, bubbling with elections and associations at every level. China has a muscularcentralgovernment but a weak civil society, yet one that is clearly straining to express itself more. Egypt, alas, has a weak government and a very weak civil society, one that was suppressed for 50 years, denied real elections and, therefore, is easy prey to have its revolution diverted by the one group that could organize, the Muslim Brotherhood, in the one free space, the mosque. But there is one thing all three have in common: gigantic youth bulgesunder the age of30,increasingly connected by technology but very unevenly educated. My view: Of these three, the one that will thrive the most in the 21st century will be the one that is most successful at converting its youth bulge into a "demographic dividend" that keeps
t
payingoffeverydecade,asopposedto
Drones have the least negative effects By Michael W. Lewis Los Angeles Times
residentObama's second term begins amid intense criticism of the drone strikes being conducted by the United States in Pakistan. Much of this criticism is based on claims that drones are doing more harm than good. A recent Stanford/NYU study concluded that drones cause excessive civilian casualties and frequently fail to hit leadership targets, and thatthe presence of drones spreads fear and anxiety among the civilian population, disrupts civilians' daily lives, limits public gatherings and disrupts access to education. Other critics cite the Taliban's detention and execution of suspected "spies" who assist drone targeting. Like many such studies, the NYU/ Stanford one did not attempt to interview a single member of the U.S. military. Had it done so, it might have learned that (at least in Afghanistan) therehave been instances ofTaliban or al-Qaida forces killing civilians and placing their bodies at the site of drone attacks to increase civilian casualty counts. Yet the study's only attempt to gain the government's perspective was a letter requesting a meeting with the National Security Council. Because the council did not reply within a month, the U.S. government'sperspective was excluded from the report. The report's discussion of civilian casualties adopts the highest estimate offered by any of the three sources that compile such information — the Bureau of Investigative Journalism. And it consistently describes civilian casualties in the ag-
p
gregate since the beginning of the drone program rather than examining recenttrends. Even the bureau estimates that only seven civilians have been killed in about 60 strikes conducted over the last 13 months. These same strikes are estimated to have killed 250 to 400 militants. A ny a lternative use o f f o r c e against Taliban or al-Qaida forces would be likely to cause many more civilian casualties. Even if drones continue to cause some civilian casualties and have other negative effects, the question of whether continuing the drone campaign is a good policy decision cannot be answered without carefully considering the alternatives available. There are four obvious options for dealing with th e Taliban/al-Qaida presence in the federally administered tribal areas of Pakistan. One is to accept their presence and control of that area and cease operations against them. But this course of action wouldn't address most of the concerns about drones. T aliban control w ould b e f a r more disruptive to the daily lives of those living in the tribal region than drones are. Public meetings, unless authorized by the Taliban, would be rare and extremely dangerous. The Taliban's shooting of a 14-yearold girl for attending school speaks volumes about access to education under Taliban rule. And the detention and execution of undesirable individuals would continue, albeit under theguise ofheresy rather than spying. Also, ceding the territory to Taliban control would provide the Afghan Taliban with a safe haven from which to continue its opera-
any guide, using ground troops would result in as many or more civilian casualties than the current drone
campaignand would bemore deeply
tions against American and Afghan forces across the border. The second option would be for Pakistan's military to assert control over the region. However, its last serious attempt to do so — the Swat Valley campaign of 2009 — utilized armored vehicles, artillery and airstrikes to try to dislodge about 5,000 Taliban fighters. This resulted in the displacement of more than I million civilians who fled the army's indiscriminate firepower. Last year, mere rumors that the Pakistani military was planning a campaign in Waziristan caused thousands to flee. Pakistan lacks both the desire and the capacity to pursue another campaign to gain control of the tribal areas, and any attempt to conductsuch a campaign would be a humanitarian nightmare for the civilians who live there. The third option would be for the United States to use ground troops and special forces to conduct counterinsurgency operations in the tribal areas. Even if Pakistan were willing to publicly consent to American ground forces on its territory, an issue that it has carefully finessed in the context of drone operations, it is unlikely that this option would alleviate any of the frequently voiced concerns about the use of drones. If operations in Afghanistan are
unpopular in Pakistan — not to mention that it would result in higher U.S. casualties. Ground operations in territory controlled by the Taliban would still rely heavily on drone surveillance, and most raids would occur at night. Such operations in Afghanistan were so unpopular and disruptive of daily life that President Hamid Karzai insisted that continued Afghan cooperation with the United States was contingent on Afghan control over night raids. The final option is the continued use of drones. Even according to the leastfavorable numbers presented by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, drones have effectively disrupted the leadership structure of the Taliban and al-Qaida in Pakistan by killing scores of senior leaders and operational commanders. And the drones'constant presence continues to deny the Taliban a safe haven in which it can train and organize its forces for operations in Afghanistan. Most important, drones have done this while consistently improving their accuracy and reducing civilian casualties. After examining the alternatives, it is clear that drones remain the best option available to minimize the negative effects of the conflict on civilians while continuing to disrupt the Taliban and deny it control of territory in the tribal areas. — Michael W. Lewis teaches international Iaw and the Iaw of vvar at Ohio Northern University's College of Law.
The evil that purrs nearby — and stalks its prey By Charles Lane
mammal slaughter. Scientific though it may be, the reormer President George W. port is not irony-free. It brands cats Bush's dog Barney has gone to an "invasive" species, imported to that great kennel club in the sky. North America by humans and unBut I'll bet Barney died smiling. He checked by natural predators. Yet lived to see the day when humans fi- three of the 11 most-victimized bird nally acknowledged that cats are a species in the study are also invasive: menace. the house sparrow, the rock pigeon In f a ct , g o v ernment-affiliated and the European starling. scientists have produced statistical In my book, that means every time proof of feline perfidy, in a new study a cat takes out one of those winged showing that cats stalk and kill 2.4 pests, it's a case of justifiable avicide. billion birds and 12.3 billion mamBut never mind that. "Scientifimals in the United States each year, cally sound conservation and policy give or take a few billion. This "kill intervention is needed to reduce this rate" is two to four times higher than impact," the study notes. I don't think they're talking about previously believed, and worse than that attributable to windmills, cars federally subsidized tummy rubs. and other "anthropogenic" threats. Some environmentalists t h i nk The victims include not just rats that euthanasia may be the only way and mice but also songbirds, chip- to prevent an uncontrolled killermunks and other valued wildlife cat population from ravaging wildspecies, according to The New York life, given the absence of a natural Times. predator. Feral — "stray" — cats, which numOthers recoil at mass cat-killing to ber 80 million or so, are the main cure mass bird-killing. Some animal culprits, the study concluded. But the welfare advocates think the solution nation's 86.4 million domestic cats ac- is to sterilize feral cats and then recount for about 29 percent of cat-on- lease them. A variant is to rehabilibird killings and 11 percent of cat-on- tate freshly neutered or spayed stray The Washington Post
F
felines as "working cats," who keep rats out of human hangouts, including — in one actual case — a Los Angeles police station. But it has been rightly noted that the life of a stray is pretty miserable, what with the constant threat of cars and disease. Useful as mousers may be, the supply of working cats will probably always exceed demand. Our f r ontier a ncestors surely would have marveled at a society so civilized and affluent that it can indulge in such quarrels. And arguments don't crop up only in the context of cat vs. bird. Controversy rages in the Washington, D.C., area about how to control Rock Creek Park's population of white-tailed deer. For my part, I don't have a dog in any of these fights. My only semiserious point is that it is much easier to declareone's concern foranimals, their welfare and even their rights than to act on that concern in a logical, consistent manner. When it comes to moral reasoning about animals, we're all sort of chasing our tails. Science can help describe issues and inform debate. But it still takes
human judgment, leavened by instinct and intuition, to balance the interests of the various species affected — homo sapiens included. Even The Times, in an earnest editorial on the feline "superpredator" study, conceded that, while restocking suburbia with coyotes would help control cats — just as Australia got results by siccing dingos on them — "most Americans will never put
up with a burgeoning coyote population." So much for that otherwise promising idea. Mietzi, our long-haired Norwegian forest cat, is not allowed out. She spends hours each day crouched against the window, glaring at birds and squirrels as they impudently hop by. Her tail twitches. How she longs to springatherprey,as herancestors did among the pines of Scandinavia! But the glass — that incomprehensible transparent hardness — frustrates her every time. Mietzi feels better when we feed her tuna, ground up and packed into a little can with a convenient pop-top lid. I'm pretty sure it's dolphin-safe. — Charles Lane is a member of The Washington Post's editorial board.
a "demographic bomb" that keeps going off every decade. That will be the society that provides more of its youth with the education, jobs and voice they seek to realize their full potential. This race is about "who can enable and inspire more of its youth to help build broad societal prosperity," argues Dov Seidman, the author of "How" and CEO of LRN, which has an operating center in India. "And that's all about leaders,parents and teachers creating environments where young people can be on a quest, not just for a job, but for a career — for a better life that doesn't just surpass but far surpasses their parents." Countries that fail to do that will have a youth bulge that is not only unemployed but unemployable, he argued. "They will be disconnected in a connected world, despairing as they watch others build and realize their potential and curiosity." If your country has either a strong government or a strong civil society, it has the ability to rise to this challenge. If it has neither, it will have real problems, which is why Egypt is struggling. China leads in providing its youth bulge with education, infrastructure and jobs, but lags in unleashing freedom and curiosity. India is the most intriguing case — if it can get its governance and corruption under controL "India today has 560 million young people under the age of 25 and 225 million between the ages of 10 and 19," explained Shashi Tharoor, India's minister of state for human resource development. "So for the next 40 years we should have a youthful workingage population" at a time when China and the broad industrialized world is
aging. According to Tharoor, the average age in Chinatoday is around 38, whereas in India it's around 28. In 20 years, that gap will be much larger. So this couldbe a huge demographic dividend — "provided that we can educate our youth — offering vocational training to some and university to others to equip them to take advantage of what the 21st-century global economy offers," said Tharoor. "If we get it right, India becomes the workhorse ofthe world. If we get it wrong, there is nothing worse than unemployable, frustrated" youth. So there is now a huge push here to lure poor kids into school. India runs the world's biggest midday lunch program, serving 250 million free school lunches each day. It's also doubled its number of Indian Institutes of Technology, from eight to 16, and is planning 14 new universities for innovation and research. But this will al l b e f o r n aught without better governance, argues Gurcharan Das, the former CEO of Procter 8 Gamble India, whose latest book is "India Grows at Night: A Liberal Case for a Strong State." "The aspirational India has no one to vote for, because no one is talking the language of public goods. Why should it take us 15 years to get justice in the courtsor 12 years to build a road? The gap between ((youth)) aspirations and government performance is huge. My thesis is that India has risen despite the state. It is a story of public failure and private success." That is what Das means by India grows at night, when government
sleeps. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
Humor, mystery work well "The Riptide Ultra-Glide" by Tim Dorsey
(Morrow,$25.99) By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel (Florida)
While a mystery's twists and turns will keep readers turning the pages until the wee hours of the night, the c h a racters are what make readers return, novel after novel. A we l l devised plot is a thing of beauty; but a thoughtfully constructed character who changes and grows in each book and especially during a long-running series is a work of art. Tim D o r sey's n o vels will never be mistaken for works of art. He has taken what is essentially a gimmick — a serial killer so enamored with Florida that he attacks those who don't share his passion, or are just rude — and lathered it with broad, slapstick humor and made it work. Series "hero" Serge A. Storms never changes, never grows, but has amassed a solid following that will, no doubt, continue with "The Riptide Ultra-Glide," the 16th in the Tampa author's series. "The Riptide Ultra-Glide" is, like Dorsey's previous
Serge novels, simply fun. N o social issues, no i n depth characters, no scintillating dialogue, yet Dorsey hooks the reader with his unabashed enthusiasm and devotion to all things Florida. Here, Serge wants to have his own reality show but on his way to fame has to deal with bullies, those who extort the elderly, pain clinics and Wisconsin residents Patrick and Barbara McDougall who pick t he wrong hoteL There's also a war erupting between the Kentucky mafia and Mexican drug lords. A nd a m i d a l l th o s e laughs, readers also will learn something about the Sunshine State — though it's doubtful that Dorsey ever would equate his Serge novels with an education, unless it was a lesson in humor.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks thebestsellers for week ending Feb.2. Hardcover fiction
1. "Until the End ofTime" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 2. "Private Berlin" by Patterson/ Sullivan lLittle, Brown) 3. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn lcrownj 4. "A Memory of Light" by Robert Jordan(Tor) 5. "Suspect" by Robert Crais lPutnam) 6. "Tenth of December: Stories" by George saunders lRandom House) 7. "A DeeperLoveInside" by Sister Souljah (Atria) 8. "The Fifth Assassin" by Brad Meltzer (GrandCentral) 9."Speakingfrom Among the Bones" by Alan Bradley lDelacorte) 10."The Racketeer" by John Grisham lDoubledayj Hardcover nonfiction
1. "The Legend ofZelda" by shigeru Miyamoto lDark Horse) 2. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. lSt. Martin'sj 3. "Francona" byTerry Francona lHMH) 4. "My Beloved World" by Sonia Sotomayor (Knopf) 5. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly lHenry Holt) 6. "Hitmaker" by TommyMottola lGrand Central) 7. "The Future" by Al Gore lRandom House) 8. "Remembering Whitney" by Cissy Houston (Harper) 9. "Rebooting Work" by Maynard Webb (Jossey-Bass) 10. "I Declare" by Joel Osteen lFaithwordsj — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
O www.bendbulletin.com/books
'THE SPLENDID CHINESE GARDEN'
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Origins, Aesthetics and Architecture" by Hu Jie (Better Link Press, Tut tle Publishing, $34.95) By Tish Wells
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For many, there is nothing more beautiful than a garden. For some,there is no greater beauty than a Chinese garden. And for those people, there is "The Splendid Chinese Garden" by Hu Jie. "In line with the essential philosophies of Chinese Taoism, Chinese gardens are the imitations of n a tural l a ndscapes," says Hu. The garden "combines the b eauties of natural creations and human creation, and unifies the realm of art and those of real life." His book is an in-depth look at China's gardens and the architecture. The first chapters are a history of China, starting about 3,000 years ago, and how it relates to the building of
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gardens. In many ways, it was the first emperor, Qin Shihuang (221-206 B.C.), who started it all when he unified the country. He built several gardens, but it was the successor dynasty, the Han, that went into grand imperial gardens — and palaces to accompany them. A few centuries on, the Tang dynasty (618-907) arose, "a glorious time of cultural development," with l a ndscape poetry and paintings rising to new heights. The gardens followed suit. At a certain point in "The Splendid Chinese Garden," you descend into the weeds of too m uch i n formation. "As a man-made landscape garden, Gen Yue Garden placed a huge rockery hill, the Wansui Mountain (Mount Longevity), in the center of the overall blueprint, and set up
Wansong Ridge (Ridge with Ten Thousand Pines) and Yan-
chi Pond (Wild Goose Pond) as its wings." Then step back and look at the photographs. Not only are the reproductions of historical
McClatchy-Tribune NewsService photos
"The Splendid Chinese Garden," by Hu Jie, is an extensive history of Chinese gardens over 2,000 years. Pictured above are the stone window designs typical in Chinese gardens.
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For example, a window is not just an opening in China. It could be a frame for a beautifulgarden, tree or rockery outside. The windows have carved stone frames, and are latticed with designs. For example, in the Lion Grove Garden, one window has a stone harp caught in a spider's web of stone. When "lit by sunlight from different angles, the patterns in the carved windows
(brings) about changing and
Chinese nature paintings gorgeous, but the book includes diagrams of gardens lost in history. By the time you reach the section on the Art of Classical Garden construction and carved doors and windows, you're in love with the book.
d iversified shades" a s t h e shadows become part of the inner room's decor. Two other outstanding parts in the book are a glossary, with pictures, of the Chinese gardens and, more important, a map of eastern China that tells you which of these gardens are open to visitors. Just remember to take this book along.
Beliefs collide as afamily's move South causes friction "A Town of Empty Rooms" by Karen E. Bender
(Counterpoint, $25) By Gina Webb The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Not long after her father's unexpected death robs her of a last chance to talk to him, Serena Shine uses her company creditcard to buy $8,000 worth of jewelry from Saks Fifth Avenue over a period of three days. W hen he r e m ployers discover her crime and fire her, they ask Serena to explain why she did it. But she can't explain
how "it felt like a final
4 E II
conversation with her father, like a deep and uncontrollable act of love." Conversations — about love, faith, belonging, and the nature of God — rattle and hum throughout Karen Bender's outstanding new novel, "A Town of Empty Rooms." The book itself is a series of conversations — though it is the ones we don't have, Bender suggests, that matter the most. Their lives ruined in New York City, Serena and her husband, Dan, who are Jewish, relocate to the South for the only job Dan can find, in Waring, N.C., a town that "boasts a plethora of churches and signs bearing messages such as, 'If God is your Co-Pilot, Switch Seats.'" Not only do they know no one in their new commu-
nity, they are now strangers to one another. Dan is reeling from the recent loss of his older brother, and this, combined with the shock of Serena's theft, has left her normally warm, optimistic husband "encased in ice." Bender, who moved to Wilmington, N.C., from New York in 2002 and now teaches at University of North Carolina, Wilmington, says she mined her own family's experiences for some of the incidents in the novel. 'll In the f i r st of three parts, th e c o u ple s truggle t o re o r ient themselves. To E cope with her shipwrecked life, Serena joins the local synagogue, where she is soon drawn into a needy alliance and plenty of insider squabbles. Their 5-year-old son, Zeb, enters kindergarten, the only Jewish child in his class. Worried about Zeb's growing unhappiness, Dan turns for support to the local chapter of the Boy Scouts, led by their new next-door neighbor, an officious octogenarian named Forrest Sanders whose initial friendliness soon turns meddlesome and threatening. Issues o f s e l f -protection and identity p e rmeate the story, interwoven into Dan's certainty that the Boy Scouts can help his family assimilate, Zeb's wistful worship of his new and very Christian best
lENO il E
friend, and Forrest's growing obsession with property lines and keeping the "Christ" in Christmas. Even the snug haven of the Temple Shalom proves illusory when Serenarealizes that the Rabbi, an ex-army chaplain most comfortable in war zones,finds his parishioners' needs shallow and suffocating. They urge Serena to take sides against him. Bender balances the point of view between Serena and Dan, but also occasionally slips inside the heads of the Temple members, and once, inpart two, offers a glimpse of Nazi Germany through the eyes of Serena'sfather,whose lifelong obsession with escape fueled Serena'sbuying spree. Part II alsointroduces Serena's mother and sister, who shed more light on the past. Perhaps the most intimate conversationhere arises from Serena and Dan's fractured marriage, when events wall them off from each other into separate, closed spaces — not so much by her theft and the death of his brother, as by the unbearablememories these crises stir up. Dan, who has spent much of his adult life "trying to find people who did not surprise him at all," is so fixated on the Boy Scouts as a cure-all that he doesn't hear the menacing tones in their neighbor's voice. Nor can Dan admitto Serena how fearful he is, and why.
3 ooks examine Dickens' love li e By Peter M. Giantotti
wouldn't have been at his best at a PTA meeting. Charles Dickens fathered Slater deftly separates the 10 children. But his most be- gossipfrom the research into loved offspring was David Dickens' "wild indiscretion." Copperfield. Dickens' actual children He dumped his wife for a are the subject of Robert teenager. But he i magined Gottlieb's "Great Expectahimself Sydney Carton. tions: The Sons and Daughters The more you learn about of Charles Dickens" (Farrar, the personal life of the revered Straus and Giroux, $25). "Why was I ever a father!" author, eminent Victorian and permanent resident of Poets' Dickens wrote two years beCorner in Westminster Ab- fore he died. Gottlieb, former bey,the more he seems worth editor of The New Yorker a serialized novel himself. and a former editor in chief Dickens'201stbirthdaywas at Alfred A. Knopf, writes a Feb. 7, the culmination of a bi- vivid, entertaining, enlightcentennial that has been cel- ening story about children ebrated grandly. And his love never living up to what their life has gotten some attention, driven, domineering, fanatitoo, from three books. cally orderly, self-made father "The Great Charles Dickens wanted. "Certainly, their lives, howScandal" (Yale U n i versity Press, $30) by Michael Slater ever unfortunate, were far is a sharply focused exami- from disgraceful," Gottlieb nation of Dickens' affair with writes. One, for example, was actress Ellen Lawless "Nelly" a respected editor; another, T ernan. Seventeen w h en an admired jurist. she met the author, Ternan Dickens' surviving chilwas the age of his youngest dren protected his image. But daughter. after his last son died, the revSlater, a Dickens biogra- elations about Ternan started pher and emeritus profes- to become part of the legacy. sor of Victorian literature at Robert Garnett's "Charles Birbeck College, University Dickens in Love" (Pegasus of London, delivers a terse, Books, $28.95) covers the lively account of the relation- Ternan affair as well as the ship that dominated the last impact of Hogarth and Beaddecade-plus of the writer's life nell. Garnett is a professor — and the intricate cover-up of English a t G e t tysburg that went with it. College. By now, the Ternan tale His account is exceedingly isn't exactly news. But Slater earnest and unduly sympamasterfully tells it, with con- thetic, as well as repetitive, siderable detail and clarifica- equivocating and, to use one tion about what's known and ofhis favoritewords, "vexing." what isn't, what's speculative Garnett is better at discussing and what's true. In recent the classic fiction than the eluyears, the D i ckens-Ternan sive facts. That's magnified affair has fueled sensational with Ternan, with whom "he headlines in t h e L o n don entered the labyrinth." Beadt abloids, f r om "Dickens's nell "taught him how passionRomps with Naughty Nelly" ately he could love, and how to "Dickens Kept a Keen Eye hard he could work." "Mary Hogarth, in fact, beon Fallen Women." The story is especially juicy came his religion." They were and ironic because Dickens his "muses and teachers in remains "our great national the school of love." celebrant of hearth, home Wince away. And when and family love.... Radiant Garnett compares Dickens domesticity is also the domi- with Faust or sets a scene nant mood at the end of most with "Let's imagine ...," you'll of his great novels ..." The be ready to write your own creator of Oliver Twist, Little ending to his unfinished "The Nell and Tiny Tim, however, Mystery of Edwin Drood." Newsday
Bend Park p Recreation
Position Open: Board of Directors The Bend Park 8 Recreation District Board of Directors will appoint a board member to serve in a vacant position until june 30, 2013. The Board is composed of five memberswhoserve four-year terms. Each member represents the district at-large rather than separate precincts. Position Requirements: 1. Reside within the district boundaries.
2. Be a registeredvoter. 3. Attend regularly scheduled and other periodic meetings. 4. Candidates must be willing to run for the seat in the May 2013 election for the term ending June 30,2015. 5. This is a volunteer position and does not receive
compensation. To apply, submit a letter of interest to: Chairman ScottAsla Bend Park & Recreation District 799 SWColumbia,Bend,OR 97702
Or email to board®bendparksandrec.org.
2Lpplication deadline: Friday, February 1$, 2013 Applicants to answer questions and make a 3- 5 minute presentation to the Board at the Tuesday, February 19th,4:00 pm board meeting. Board appointment effective immediately on February 19th. Contact Paula Lowery at (541) 706-6110 or paula@bendparksandrec.org formore information.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN F S
Stimulants
"no Adderall for now" on his Renee Strelitz,andemphasized information — such as a par"~I f~lllll,lilrnn ent,teacheror friend — mustbe chartandthenextdayrefused his abuse of Adderall. Richard Inllllll~ Pl "kept giving me dirty looks," ContinuedfromF1 pursued to learn the nuances Richard's phone request for Richard explained to him of a patient's difficulties and to more. Instead he prescribed Kathy Fee recalled. She said thathehadbeenhavingtrouble rule out other maladies before Abilify and Seroquel, antipsy- shelaterleftadetailedmessage concentrating while studying making a proper diagnosis of chotics for schizophrenia that on Strelitz's voicemail, urging for medical school entrance ADHD. Other doctors interdo not provide the bursts of her and Parkernot toprescribe exams the previous year and viewed said they would not focus and purpose that stimu- stimulants under any circumthat he had seen a doctor and prescribemedications on a palants do. Richard became en- stances when Richard came in receivedadiagnosis. His father tient's first visit, specifically to raged,his parents recalled. He thenextday. C reacted with surprise. Richard deterthe fakingofsymptoms. triedtobackup overhis father Parker met w it h R i chard had never shown any ADHD According to hi s p arents, in the Dominion Psychiatric alone. Thedoctornoteddepressymptoms his entire life, from Richard had n o p sychiatric parking lot and threatened to sion,anxietyandsuicidalideas. nursery school through high history, or even suspicion of burnthehousedown.Athome, Hewrote"no meds"withabox P school, when he was awarded problems, t h rough c o llege. hetookabaseballbatfromthe around it — an indication, he a full academic scholarship to None of his dozen high school garage, smashed flower pots explained later, that he was Greensboro College in North and college acquaintances inand screamed, "You're taking aware of the parents' concerns Carolina. Rick Fee also ex- terviewed for this article said mymedicine!" regardingADHDstimulants. pressed concerns about the he ever showed or mentioned Courtesythe Feefamilyvia New YorkTimes News Service Richard disappeared for a Parker wrote three 30-day safety of his son taking daily behaviors related to ADHDRick Fee withhisson, Richard, at Yankee Stadiumin November fewweeks. He returned to the p rescriptions: C lonidine ( a amphetamines for a condition certainlynot the"losingthings" 2009. Richardoncetoldhis father that thedoctor wouldn't prescribe house when he learned of his sleep aid), Venlafaxine (an anand "difficulty awaiting turn" hemightnothave. anything that'sbadforhim."I'mnotbuying itonthestreetcorner," grandmother's death, the Fees tidepressant) and Adderall, 60 "The doctor wouldn't give he reported on the Triad ques- Richardsaidtohisfather. In2011, Richardcommittedsuicide. sa~d. milligramsaday. me anythingthat'sbadforme," tionnaire — suggesting that he The morning after the fuIn an interview last NovemRick Fee recalled his son say- probablyfakedoratleastexagneral, Richard walked down ber, Parkersaidhedidnotrecall ing that day."I'm not buying it geratedhissymptomstogethis prescription was renewed for warning Ellison,"Youkeepgiv- Potters Road to what became the details of Richard's casebut onthestreetcorner." diagnosis. 30moredaysat50milligrams. ing Adderall to my son, you're a nine-minute visit with Elli- reviewed his notes and tried to Richard's first e xperience That is neither uncommon Through the remainder of goingtokiIIhim." son. He left with two prescrip- re-create his mindset during with ADHD pills, like so many nor difficult, said David Berry, 2010, in appointments with ElEllison declined repeated re- tions: one for Abilify, and an- that appointment. He said he others', had come in college. a professor and researcher at lison that usually lasted under questsforcommenton Richard otherfor50milligrams adayof m usthavetrusted Richard'sasFriends said he was a typical the University of Kentucky. He five minutes, Richard returned Fee's case. His oNce records, Adderall. sertionsthatmedicationwasnot undergraduate user — when is a co-author of a 2010 study for refills of Adderall. Records like those of other doctors inAccording to Rick Fee, Rich- anissue,andmusthave figured he needed to finish a paper or that compared two groups of indicate that he received only volved, were obtained by Rick ard later told him that he had thathisparentswerejustphilocram for exams, one Adderall college students — those with whatwas consistentlycodedas Fee under Virginia and fedlied to Ellison — he told the sophically ant i - medication. capsule would jolt him with fo- diagnosesofADHDandothers "pharmacologicmanagement" eral law, which allow the legal doctorhewas feeling great, life Parker recalled that he was recus andpurpose for sixtoeight who were asked to fake symp- — theofficialtermforquickap- representativeof a deceased was back on track and he had assuredby Richard's intelligent hours, repeatasnecessary. toms — to see whether stan- praisals of medication effects patient to obtain medical re- found a job in Greensboro that discussions of the ins and outs So many fellow students dard symptom questionnaires — and none of the more con- cords as if he were the patient he would lose without Adder- of stimulants and his desire to had prescriptions or stashes could tell them apart. They ventional talk-based therapy himself. all. Ellison's notes do not say pursuemedicinehimself. to share, friends of Richard re- wereindistinguishable. that experts generally consider As 2011 began, the Fees per- whyheagreedtostartAdderall Kathy Fee was outraged. "With college students," an important component of calledininterviews,thatguesssuaded Richard to see a psy- again. Over the next severaldays, ing where he gothis was futile. Berry said in an interview,"it's ADHDtreatment. chologist, Scott Sautter, whose R ichard's d elusions a n d she recalled, she repeatedly He was popular enough on clear that it doesn't take much His Adderall prescriptions records note Richard's delu- mood swings only got worse, spoke with Strelitz over the campus — he was sophomore information for someone who were always for the fast-acting sions, paranoia and "severe his parents said. They would phone to detail Richard's conclass president and played first wantstofeignADHDtodoso." variety, rather thanthe extend- andpervasivementaldisorder." lock their bedroom door when tinuedabuseof themedication base on the baseball teamRichard Fee filled his pre- ed-release formula that is less Sautter r ecommended t h at they went to sleep because of (shefoundninepills goneafter thatthey doubted he even had scription for Vyvanse within proneto abuse. Adderall either be stopped or his unpredictable rages. "We 48 hours) and hand-delivered to pay the typical $5 or $10per hours at a local Rite Aid. He paired with a sleep aid "if not were scared of our own son," Sautter's appraisal of his repill. returnedto see the nurse three Tension and disturbances medicaiiycontraindicated." Rick Fee said. Richard would cent psychosis. Parker con"Hewouldjustprocrastinate, weeks later and reported exRegardless of whathe might Rick Fee did not trust his blow through his monthly pre- firmed that he received this waittillthelastminuteandthen cellent concentration: "reading have told his doctor, Richard son to share this report with scriptions in 10 to 15 days and information. take a pill to study for tests," books — read 10!" her notes Fee was anything but well or Ellison, so he drove back to then go through hideous withRichard next saw Parker on said Ryan Sykes, a friend. "It indicate. Sheincreasedhisdose calm during his firstyear back Dominion Psychiatric and, he drawals. A friend said that he June 27. Kathy Fee drove him got to the point where he'd say to 50 milligrams a day. Three home,hisfathersaid. recalled, was told by a recep- would occasionally get Rich- to the clinic and waited in the hecouldn'tgetanythingdoneif w eeks later ,after Richardleft a Blowing through a month's tionist that he could leave the ard some extrapills during the parking lot. Soon afterward, hedidn'thavetheAdderall." m essage for her asking forthe w orth of Adderall in a f e w information with her. Rick Fee worst of it, but that "it wasn't Richard returned and asked Various studies have esti- doseto go up to 60, which is on weeks, Richard stayed up all said he demanded to put it in enough because he would take to head to the pharmacy to mated that about 8 percent to the high end of normal adult night reading and scribbling in Ellison's hands himself and fouror fiveatatime." fill a prescription. Parker had 35 percent of college students doses, she wrote on his chart, notebooks, occasionally climb- threatened to break down his One night during an argu- raised his Adderall to 80 miltake stimulant pills to enhance "Okayrewrite." ingoutofhisbedroomwindow doorinordertodoso. ment, afterRichard became ligrams aday. school performance.Few stuRichard filled that prescrip- and onto the roof to converse Rick Fee said that Ellison particularly threatening and Parker recalled that the apdents realize that giving or ac- tion later that afternoon. It was withthemoonandstars. When then came out, read the report pushed him over a chair, Rick pointment was a 15-minute cepting even one Adderall pill histhirdmonth'sworthofmed- thepillsranout,hewouldsleep and, appreciating the gravity Fee called the police. They ar- "med check" that left l i ttle from a friendwith a prescrip- icationin43days. for 48 hours straight and not of thesituation, spokewithhim rested Richard for domestic time forcareful assessment of tionisafederalcrime. Adderall leave his room for 72. He got about Richard for 45 minutes. violence. The e pisode per- any Adderall addiction. Once and its stimulant siblings are Prescriptionrefills so hot during the day that he They scheduled an appoint- suaded Richard to see another again, Parker said, he must classifi edbythe Drug EnforceRichard scored too low on walked around the house with mentfortheentirefamily. local psychiatrist, Dr. Charles have believed Richard's asserment Administrationas Sched- the MCATin2009toqualifyfor ice packs around his neckParker. tionsthatheneededadditional uleIIdrugs,inthesamecatego- a top medical school. Although and in frigid weather, he would Deceiving doctors Kathy Fee said she attended medicine more than the famiry ascocaine,because oftheir he had started taking Vyvanse cool offbyjumping into the 52Ellison stopped R i chard Richard'sinitialconsultationon ly'spleasthatitbe stopped. Fee's prescription — he wrote June 3 with Parker's clinician, highlyaddictiveproperties. for its jolts of focus and pur- degreebackyardpool. Continuednext page "It's incredibly nonchalant," pose,their side eff ects began AsRichardlostaseriesofjobs Chris Hewitt, a friend of Rich- to take hold. His sleep pat- and tensions in the house ran ard, said of students' attitudes terns increasingly scrambled higher — particularlywhentalk to the drug."It's: 'Anyone have and his mood darkening, he turned to his Adderall — Rick ' I I I' I any Adderall'? I want to study movedbackin withhisparents and Kathy Fee continued to retonight,"' said Hewitt, now an in Virginia Beach and sought searchthesideeffectsof ADHD elementary school teacher in a local physician to renew his medication. They learned that Greensboro. prescriptions. stimulants are e xceptionally I After graduating with honA friend recommended a successful at mollifying the imors in2008with a degree inbi- family physician, Dr. Robert pulsivity and distractibility that I I[ I I ology, Richardplannedtoapply Woodard. W o odard h e a rd characterize classic ADHD, but II I' I to medical schools and stayed R ichard describe how w e ll that they can cause insomnia, I I I II I / / I II I I in Greensboro to study for the Vyvanse was working for his increased blood pressure and / / / entrance exams. He remem- ADHD, made a diagnosis of elevated body t e mperature. beredhowAdderallhadhelped "othermalaiseandfatigue"and Food and Drug Administration ' el I I e I him concentrate so well as an renewed his prescription for warnings on packaging also il ' I undergraduate, friends said, one month. He suggested that note "high potential for abuse," 'I ' ' e ' I e I I and he made an appointment Richardthereafterseeatrained as well as psychiatric side efI I atnearby Triad Psychiatricand psychiatrist at Dominion Psy- fects such as aggression, halluI Counseling Center. chiatric Associates — only a cinationsandparanoia. I ' 'I I i According to r ecords ob- five-minutewalkfromtheFees' A 2006 study in the journal 5 tained by R ichard's parents house. Drug and Alcohol Dependence • • after his death, a nurse pracWith eight psychiatrists and claimed that about 10 pertitioner at Triad detailed his almost 20 therapists on staff, cent of adolescents and young unremarkable medical and Dominion Psychiatric is one of adults who misused ADHD psychiatric history before re- the better-known practices in stimulants became addicted to — saaasaaeev7seef h cording his complaints about Virginia Beach, residents said. them. Even proper, doctor-su+cttilw't + UJkd "organization, memory, atten- Oneofitsbetter-knowndoctors perviseduseofthemedications tion to detail." She is Dr. Waldo Elcan trigger psychotic behavior „!) C' NEVER BEBORED DURING SUMMER c haracterized hi s lison, a practicing or suicidal thoughts in about dolMWit~ COI/ege psyc h iatrist since 1 in 400 patients, according speech as "clear," i , ej AGAIN U b histhoughtprocess S/UdeI7jS, It S 1974. to a 2006 study in The Ameri"goal directed" and Find the summer's hottest activities for In i n terviews, can Journal of Psychiatry. So his concen~ration some pat t ents while a vast majority of stimukids in this guide. "attentive." i t d OeSn 't and parents o f pa lant users will not experience Summer is the time of the year kids look forward to R ichard f i lled $gke m u C/1 tients of Ellison's psychosis — and a doctor may most. It is when they are free to explore, play and be out an 18-question described him as never encounteritin decades survey on w h ich veryquickto iden- of carefulpractice — the sheer who they want to be. The Summer Youth Activity Guide he rated various SOmeOAe W AO t>f y A D H D a n d volumeofprescriptionsleadsto provides parents with information about the youthsymptoms on a 0 pres c ribe medica-thousands of cases every year, WBritS ga fejgii oriented programs that take place in Central Oregon to-3 scale. His total tion for it. Sandy experts acknowledged. — from away-from-home camps to daytime activities, score of 29 led the Paxson of nearby When Kathy Fee noticed sports to arts and crafts. There's no excuse to have nurse practitioner Norfolk said she Richard putting tape over his ay!QQlptry tomakeadiagnosis University oI Kentucky took her 15-year- computer'scamera, he told her bored kids at home. Find what suits them best in of"ADHD, inattenfessorand oldsontoseeElli- thatpeoplewerespyingonhim. The Bulletin's Summer Youth Activity Guide tive-type" — a type (Heput tape onhis fingers, too, researcher son for anxiety in of ADHD without 2008; within a few to avoid leaving fingerprints.) PubliShing Date: Fr!day, Apr!I 12 hyperactivity. She minutes, Paxson He cut himself out of family r eco m m e n d e d recalled, E l lison pictures,talkedtothetelevision Vyvanse, 30 milligrams a day, said her son had ADHD and and became increasingly vioforthreeweeks. prescribedhimAdderall. lentwhenagitated. Phone and fax requests to Ellison met with Richard in In late December, Rick Fee Triad officials for c omment his office for the first time on drove to Dominion Psychiatric HONORING OURLATEST HIGH SCHOOL werenotreturned. Feb. 5, 2010. He took a medi- and asked to see Ellison, who GRADUATES Some doctors worry t h at cal history, heard Richard's explained that federal privacy ADHD q u estionnaires, d e- c omplaints r egarding c o n - laws forbade any discussion of One of life's greatest accomplishments, high signed to assist and standard- centration, noted how he was an adult patient, even with the school graduation, ize the gathering of a patient's drumming hi s f i ngers and patient's father. Rick Fee said symptoms, are being used as made a diagnosis of ADHD he tried unsuccessfully to deis celedrated in this annual publication. a shortcut to diagnosis. Keith with "moderate symptoms or tail Richard's bizarre behavior, Every Central Oregon high school graduate is listed Conners, a l o n gtime c h ild difficulty functioning." Domin- assuming that Richardhad not in this annual publication profiling each of the area's psychologist who d eveloped ion Psychiatric records of that shared such details with his high school graduating classes. Graduates a popular scale similar to the visit do not mention the use of doctor. "I can't talktoyou," Rick Fee one used with Richard, said in any ADHD symptomquestionand parents alike look forward to this keepsake aninterviewthatscaleslikehis naire to identify particular arrecalled Ellison telling him. "I publication, "have reinforced this tendency easof difficultyorstrategiesfor did this one time with another which includes the names and photos of Central forquickanddirtypractice." treatment. family, sat down and talked Oregon's newest graduates. Congratulations Conners, anemeritusprofesAsthe47-minutesessionend- with them, and I ended up getGraduates! sor ofpsychiatry andbehavior- ed, Ellison prescribed a com- ting sued. I can't talk with you al sciences at Duke University mon starting dose of Adderall: unless your son comes with Medical Center, emphasized 30milligramsdailyfor21 days. you." PubliShing Date: Wednesday, June12 that a detailed life historymust Eight days later, while Richard Rick Fee said he turned to be taken and other sources of still had D pills remaining, his leave but d i stinctly r ecalls A *P"
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013
From previous page
"Maybe he's walking on the beach or something." They got ready to leave before Rick Fee stopped. "Wait a minute," he said. "I didn't check the closet."
that contains no amphetamines and, therefore, is neither a controlled substance nor particularlyprone to abuse.Hisrecords make no mention of the Adderall prescription Richard filled on Sept. 21; they do note, however, "Fathersays thathe iscrazy and abusive of the Adderall — has made directives with regard to giving Richard anymore stimu-
The Fees decided to go to a documentary screeing and panel discussion, "ADD and Loving It?!" in October 2012. The event was sponsored by the local chapter of Children and Adults with Attention DefiShock and questions cit Disorder (CHADD), the naFriends and former baseball tion's primary advocacy group teammates flocked to Richard for ADHD patients. They want'Paranoid and psychotic' Fee's memorial service in Vir- ed to attend the question-andThe 911 operator answered lants — bringing up charges — I ginia Beach. Most remembered answer sessionafterward with the call and heard a young man explained this to Richard." only the funny and gregarious local doctors and community screaming onthe other end. His Prescription records indiguy they knew in high school college officials. parents would not give him his cate that Richard did not fill the and college; many knew absoThe evening opened with pills. With the man's language Matthew Eich / NYT Strattera prescription before lutely nothing of his last two the local CHADD coordinator scattered an d in c r easingly Dr. Charles Parker was one of the doctors who saw Richard Fee, returning to E l lison's office years. He left no note explain- thanking the drug company threatening, the police were who committed suicide in 2011. "I do feel partially responsible for two weeks later to ask for more ing his suicide. Shire — the manufacturer of sent to the home of Rick and what happened to this kid," Parker said. stimulants. At a gathering at the Fees' several ADHD drugs, including Kathy Fee. Ellison never saw Richard house afterward, Rick Fee told Vyvanse and extended-release The Fees told officers that again. Given his patterns of them about Richard's addiction Adderall — for partially under"He told me it was normal Richard was addicted to Adderordinary conversation. As he abuse, friends said, Richard to Adderall. Many recalled how writing the event. An hourlong all, andthat afterhe received his procedure and not 90 days at looked at Richard he saw two probably took his last Adderall they too had blithely abused the film directed and narrated by most recent prescription, they one time," Rick Fee recalled. "I images flickering ontop of each pill in early October. Because drug in college — to cram, just two men with ADHD closed by allowed him to fill it through flipped out on him: 'You gave other — the boy he had raised he abruptly stopped without like Richard had — and could examining some"myths" about his mother's insurance plan on my son 90 days of Adderall? to love school and baseball, and the slow and delicate reduc- not help but wonder if they had stimulant medications. the condition that they hold it You're going to kill him!'" the desperateaddict he feared tion of medication that is rec- played the same game of RusSitting in the fourth row, and dispense it appropriately. Rick Fee said he and Ellison that boy had become. ommended to minimize major sian roulette. Rick Fee raised his hand to ask "I guarantee you a g o od a question to the panel, which Richard was now demanding discussed voiding the two outBefore he left, Rick Fee made psychological risks, especially his next day's pills early. standing scripts. Rick Fee said as loving a demand as he could for instant-release stimulants, number of them had used it for was moderated by Jeffrey Katz, Richard denied his addiction he was told that it was possible, muster. he crashed harder than ever. studying — that shock was def- a local clinical psychologist "Please. Give them to me," and threats. So the police, not- but that should Richard need On Nov. 7, after arriving initely there in that room," said and a national board member ing that Richard was an adult, emergency medical attention, Rick Fee said. home from a weekend away, a Greensboro baseball team- of CHADD. "What are some of the drawinstructed the Fees to give him it could keep him from getRichard looked his father Kathy Fee heard a message on mate, Danny Michael, adding the bottle. They said they would ting what would otherwise be dead in the eye. the family answering machine that he was among the few who backs or some of the dangers of "I destroyedthem," he said. "I from Richard, asking his par- had not. comply only if he left the house propercare or medication. Rick a misdiagnosis in somebody," for good. Officers escorted Fee confirmed that with a phar- don't have them. Don't worry." ents to call him. She phoned Almost every one of more Rick Fee asked, "and then the Richard off the property. macist and decided instead to back at 10 that night and left a than 40 ADHD experts inter- subsequent medication t h at A few hours later Richard drive to Richard's apartment A tragic ending message herself. viewed for this article said that goes along with that?" called his parents, threatening and try to persuade him to rip R ichard g enerally f i l l ed Not hearing back by the fol- worst-case scenarios like RichKatz looked straight at the to stab himself in the head with up the prescriptions. his prescriptions at a CVS on lowing afternoon, Kathy Fee ard Fee's can occur with any Fees as he answered, "Not "I know that you've got these Laskin Road, less than three checked Richard's cellphone medication — and that people much." Adding that "the media knife. The police located him and took him to the Virginia other prescriptions to get pills," miles from his parents' home. records — he was on her plan who do have ADHD, or parents cation itself is pretty innocuBeach Psychiatric Center. Rick Fee recalled telling Rich- But on Aug. 23, he went to a — and sawno calls ortexts. At 9 of children with the disorder, ous," Katz continuedthat someDescribed as "paranoid and ard. "You're doing so good. different CVS about 11 miles p.m. the Fees drove to Richard's should not be dissuaded from one without ADHD might feel psychotic" by th e a dmitting You've got a job, you're work- away, closer to Norfolk and far- apartment in Norfolk to check considering the proven benefits more awake with stimulants physician, Dr. John Riedler, ing. Things with us are better. If ther from the locations that his on him. The lights were on, his of stimulant medication when but would not consider it"someRichard spent one week in the you get them filled, I'm worried father might have called to alert car was in the driveway. He did supervised by a r e sponsible thing that they need." "If you misdiagnose it and hospital denying that he had about what will happen." them to the situation. For his not answer. Beginning to panic, physician. "You're right," Rick Fee said Sept. 21 prescription he trav- Rick Fee found the kitchen any psychiatric or addiction Other experts, however, cau- you give somebody medication, issues. He was placed on two Richard replied. "I tore them up eled even farther, into Norfolk, window ajar and climbed in tioned that Richard Fee's expe- it's not going to do anything for medications: Seroquel and the and threw them away." to get his pills. through it. rience is instructive less in its them," Katz concluded. "Why antidepressant Wellbutrin, no Rick Fee spent two more On Oct. 3, Richard visited He searched the apartment ending than its evolution — that would they continue to take it?" stimulants. hours with Richard making Ellison for a n a p pointment and found nothing amiss. it underscores aspects of ADHD Rick Fee slowly sat dovm, "He isn't here," Rick Fee said treatment that are mishandled trembling. Kathy Fee placed Unwelcome at home after his relative small talk — increas- lasting 17 minutes. The doctor discharge from the psychiat- ingly gnawed, he recalled later, prescribedtwo weeks of Strat- he told his wife. every day with countless pa- her hand on his knee as the "Oh, thank God," she replied. tients, many of them children. ric hospital, Richard stayed in by the sense that this was no tera, a medication for ADHD panel continued. cheap motels for a few weeks. His Adderall prescription from Parker expired on July 26, leaving him eligible for a renewal. He phoned the office of Ellison, who had not seen him in four months. "He was pitching me very well — I was asking him very specific questions, and he was very good at telling me the answers in a very specific way," Parkerrecalled.He added later, "I do feel partially responsible for what happened to this kid."
Increased concerns The 2:15 p.m. appointment went better than Richard could have hoped. He told Ellison that the pre-psychotic and metaphoric thinking back in March had receded, and that all that remained was his ADHD. He said nothing of his visits to Parker, his recent prescriptions or his week in the psychiatric hospital. At 2:21 p.m., according to Ellison's records, he prescribed Richard 30 days' worth of Adderall at 50 milligrams a day. He also gave him prescriptions postdated for Aug. 23 and Sept. 21, presumably to allow him to get pills into late October without the need for follow-up appointments. (Virginia state law forbids the dispensation of 90 days of a controlled substance at one time but does allow doctors to write two 30-day prescriptions in advance.) Virginia is one of 43 states with aformal Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, an online database that allows doctors to check a patient's one-year prescription history, partly to see if he or she is getting medication elsewhere. Although pharmacies are required to enter all prescriptions fo r c o n trolled substances into the system, Virginia law does not require doctors to consult it. Ellison's notes suggest that he didnot check the program before issuing the three prescriptions to Richard, who filled the first within hours. About a week later, Richard called his father with more good news: A job he had found overseeing storm cleanup crews was going well. He was feeling much better. But Rick Fee noticed that the more calm and measured speech that Richard had regained during his hospital stay was gone. He jumped from one subject to the next, sounding anxious and rushed. When the call ended, Rick Fee recalled, he went straight to his wife. "Call your insurance company," he said, "and find out if they've filled any prescriptions for Adderall." A n insurancerepresentative confirmed that Richard had filled a prescription for Adderall on July 25. Rick Fee confronted Ellison in the Dominion Psychiatric parking lot. Rick Fee told him that Richard had been in the psychiatric hospital, had been suicidal and had been taking Adderall through June and July. Ellison confirmed that he had written not only another prescription but two others for later in August and September.
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The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The or 541-404-1890 SPECIALS to 3 m i lBulletin Internet website. lion P acific N o rthM&M AK-47 rifle NIB, westerners! 30 daily asking $1100 o b o. newspapers, The Bulletin six Sererng Cenfret Oregonsrnoe 1903 541-771-9902. states. 25-word clasOne week only! 30 Rnd. sified $525 for a 3-day 240 Cal l (916) AR-15 Magazines $40 a d. Crafts 8 Hobbies vis i t Each. While they last. 2 88-6019 o r www.pnna.com/advert Rockhound Equipment 541-601-7858 Bend ising pndc.cfm for the - Saw, grind, sand & Pacific Nor t h west p olish. L o rtone & Daily Con n ection. Highland Park Bend. Largest 3 Day (PNDC) Info 541 280-5574 GUN & KNIFE Buying Diamonds SHOW 242 /Gold for Cash February 15-16-17 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Exercise Equipment Portland Expo 541-389-6655 Center Wesco Treadmill, Just bought a new boat? 1-5 exit ¹306B good condition, $200. Sell your old one in the Admission $10 Call 541-388-6846 ciassifieds! Ask about our Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, Super Seller rates! Sun.10-4 246 541-385-5809 I 18 00-659-3440 I Guns, Hunting BUYING I CollectorsWest.co im Lionel/American & Fishing Flyer trains, accessories. AK-47 Pro-mag 30-rnd Ruger SR9 (2) 17 rnd 541-408-2191. maqazines, brand new, 9 clips, new in box, $750 BUYING 8( SE L LING obo. 541-475-3272 @ $35 ea. 541-788-8852 Ail gold jewelry, silver AR-15 DPMS Sportical Ruger Super Single-six, and gold coins, bars, star rounds, wedding sets, NIB w/2 30-round clips pre-warninq, model, SgS,9.5 bbl, class nngs, sterling sil$1200. 541-480-9912 NEW NEVER FIRED ver, coin collect, vinBend local pays CASH!! orig. box 8 m anual. tage watches, dental for ali firearms & $700 firm, cash. ask for gold. Bill Fl e ming, ammo. 541-526-0617 Steve 541-389-8215. 541-382-9419. •
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SAT R SUN 12 PM — 3 PM
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4 bedroom, 3.5 bath,
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garage, fenced yard. Just east on Reed /r/cirke/, south on 15/h d own th e s t r eet f r o m ft (easri. the amazing community 5/ree/, to community on le
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541-420-2950
Guns, Hunting
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Consumer P rotec- • ho t l in e at I I 1-877-877-9392.
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products or • I chasing services from out of I y the area. Sending y ' cash, checks, or I I credit i n f o rmationI may be subjected to I FRAUD. For moreI information about an s I advertiser, you may I
SAT 8r. SUN
NOON — 4PM
I
The Bulletin recommends extra '
Beautiful and healthy Springer Spaniel Pups 4' t angerine m i l k H AVANESE PU P P Y ready2/17,Champion snake. 6' tank and ac- AKC, Dewclaws, UTD lines, $400. Now taking cessories. Bargain at s hots/wormer, n o n - dep, 541-604-6232 $500. (541) 610-2363 shed, hypoailergenic, Taste of the Wild, $850 541-460-1277. 30!bs - $38. Dachshund, AKC mini Quarry Ave. Hay & biack/tan female, $250. Help needed NOW to spay/neuter stray/fe- Feed. 541-923-2400 541-633-3221 ral cats before kitten www.quarryfeed.com Donate deposit bottles/ season! Too many Yellow Lab AKC male cans to local all vol- cats & n o t e n ough 14 wks, basic obed. all unteer, non-profit res- homes! Rescue group shots. 541-771-6687 cue, to help with cat needs people to huy -4+. - + spay/neuter vet bills. manely trap in all ars) s sgs Cans for Cats trailer eas, plus funds for at Sheriff's parking lot, addtl. humane traps 8 Yorkie/Chihuahua puppy, Hwy, 20 W, 2/11-22, spay/neuter vet bills. $180, cash. erence 1st shots, PetSmart 2/2 3 -25. Make a bigdiff 541-678-7599 Donate M-F @ Smith in your area & help Signs, 1515 NE 2nd; animals at the same Yorkie pup, male. Ail or at Tumalo sanctu- time. Lv. msg. at 541 shots & neutered, $350 ary a nytime. I n fo: 3 89 8420, o r v i s itcash. 541-536-7770 www.craftcats.org & 541-389-8420; e-mail if you can help. Where can you find a www.craftcats.org. helping hand? Husky-Wolf female, 3 mos, beautiful blue eyes! From contractors to DO YOU HAVE $250. 541-977-7019 SOMETHING TO yard care, it's all here SELL Labrador Pups, AKC in The Bulletin's FOR $500 OR Chocolate/Yei!ow/White "Call A Service LESS? Hips OFA guaranteed. Professional" Directory Non-commercial $300-$400. 1-541-954-1727 advertisers may Yorkies! Everlasting love 208 208 place an ad with Labradors, AKC, Males, just in time for Valenoui Pets 8 Supplies Pets & Supplies Black and Chocolate. tines, 3 puppies left. "QUICK CASH S o s w e et ! $5 5 0 . 541-777-7743 SPECIAL" Adult companion cats 541-410-0588 The Bulletin recomFREE to seniors, dis- 1 week 3 lines 1 2 210 k 2tlt Papiilion puppies adormends extra caution ~2 abled & vet e rans! able tri-colored, $350. Furniture & Appliances when purc h as- Tame, altered, shots, Ad must include Excellent references, ing products or serprice of single item ID chip, more. Will ai541-350-1684 vices from out of the of $500 or less, or ways take back for A1 Washers&Dryers multiple items area. Sending cash, any reason. 541-389$150 ea. Full warchecks, or credit inwhose total does 8420. Visit S at/Sun 202 ranty. Free Del. Also f ormation may b e 1 -5. P h otos, i n f o : not exceed $500. used W/D's • Want to Buy or Rent P eople g i ving p e t s wanted, subjected to fraud. www.craftcats.org. 541-280-7355 away are advised to Call Classifieds at For more i nformaWanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adver- Alaskan Malamute AKC be selective about the 541-385-5809 vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call new owners. For the p ups, ready to g o . www.bendbulleiin.com eiry. Top dollar paid for the O r egon State protection of the aniF irst shots & d e w Gold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General's mal, a personal visit to ormed. $ 7 00-$800. Estate, Honest Artist Office D$Vitrit Foster homes needed the home is recomCo n s umer 541-410-7563. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 for the upcoming kitmended. Visit our HUGE Protection hotline at Just bought a new boat? ten season & for spehome decor 1-877-877-9392. Sell your old one in the cial needs cats. Resconsignment store. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 classifieds! Ask about our cue provides food, Items for Free New items Super Seller rates! supplies, vet support; Queensland Heelers arrive daily! 541-385-5809 standard 8 mini,$150 & Free baggedleaves, 930 SE Textron, you provide safe, lovup. 541-280-1537 for garden/compost? ing care. Need to be Bend 541-318-1501 rightwayranch.wordYou haul. 541-548-5667 Adopt a n ice C RAFT Alaskan Malamute www.redeuxbend.com able to commit to 3-6 pups, 2M 3F, $400 or kitten from Tupress.com wks, Also n e eded, Just bought a new boat? cat each. 541-771-9255. maio sanctuary, pet foster home trainers/ Rodent control experts GENERATE SOME exSell your old one in the mart, o r Pet c o merican Eskimo, 5 coordinators. Lv. msg, (barn cats) seek work citement i n your ciassifieds! Ask about our S Fixed ' shots, ID chip A mo. 541 389 8420, or see in exchange for safe Super Seller ratesl old male, pure neighborhood! Plan a t ested, m ore! 3 8 9 - white, AKC/UKC reg., www.craftcats.org & 541 385 5809 shelter, basic c are. garage sale and don't 8420. Photos, i nfo: e-mail if you can help. Fixed, shots. We de- forget to advertise in Loveseat, m u l ti-color, w w w.craftcats.org & $800. 541-610-2286 classified! liver! 389-8420. good condition, free! You like us on Facebook. 541-385-5809. pickup. 541-848-7525 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Scottish Terrier puppies, There are over 2,000 folks in our community AKC, male 8 female, 1st Need help fixing stuff? BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! without permanent shelter, living in cars, shots, wormed, 8 weeks, The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are A Service Professional make-shift camps, getting by as best they can. ready to go now! Cali Call still over 2,000 folks in our community without find the help you need. 541-317-5624 The following items are badly needed to permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift www.bendbulletin.com help them get through the winter: camps, getting by as best they can. Shiba Inu Reg'd male e CAMPING GEARof any sort: 4 puppies, ready now, vet NEED TO CANCEL The following items are badly needed to New/used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blanchecked 1st shots $600 YOUR AD? help them get through the winter: each. 541-388-5418 The Bulletin kets. e WARM CLOTHING: 8 CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ Classifieds has an Rain Gear, boots, Gloves. Siberian Husky females: New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. "After Hours" Line 10wks, $300; 15 mo AKC 8 WARM CLOTHING: PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS Call 541-383-2371 $400. 541-977-7019 24 hrs. to cancel Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. AT THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 1036 NE 5th St., Bend, Just bought a new boat? your ad! PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT Sell your old one in the Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER W hirlpool washer 8 ciassifieds! Ask about our 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. PLEASEHELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. dryer pair, good cond, Super Seller rates!
The Bulletin
O r e g o n
Pets & Supplies Price Reduced
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
B e n d
541-480-5159
CaSCade
Li.S/ed byr
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DEB TEBBS, Brc3kerr'Pres.
SOtheby S tntsltnnttonnt eentrr
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY FEBRUARY 10 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D A WHIFF OF COLOGNE By Dan Schoenhotz / Edited by Will Shortz
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45 Dick , co-creator of "Saturday Ni g ht Live"
6 Divi s io n o f a h o u se
10 They may be running in a saloon
79 Like many a f raternity p a r t y
49 Tangle
80 Insect's opening fo r air
8 Schreiber who won a Tony for "Glengarry Gl en Ross"
5 1 Either end of a n
8 5 Puppet of old T V
9 Place for a Dumpster
87 French Champagne
1 0 Vaudevill e s i n g e r ' s
edge, in graph
1 7 Sun, in Verd u n
theory
18 Thin ice, e.g.
52 Ph.D. hurdles
88 Make a call
2 1 Alt e r n a t iv e t o w h i t e
54 Diamond stat
8 9 Mason's tr o u g h
23 How overhead photos may be
5 5 Worked the soil , i n a way
90 Noodle
2 4 "That ' s
9 1 Group of br i g h t
5 6 "A Cl o c k w o r k excuse
2 5 Like St. L o ui s v i s - a vis New O r l e ans
92 Baseball c ommissioner B u d
57 Actress Loughlin of "90210"
27 Name
5 8 Soda fountai n option
28 End to end?
5 9 Spriteli k e
29 Torn
6 0 Skater M i d o r i
30 Inexperienced
61 Cool
31 See 67-Ac r o ss
62 Roosevelt's successor
33 Kind of tape 3 4 "How I M e t Y o u r M other" n a r r a t o r
stars?
Orange" hooli g an
93 Homey 9 4 Bushel or b a r r e l : Abbr. 95 Chem 96 Potter' s pedal 98 Language related to Tahitian 99 Tousles
6 4 Roosevelt ' s successor 6 5 Shade provi d e r
36 Who said "Familiarity breeds contempt — and children"
67 With 3 1 - A c r o s s, f avor, as a ball o t
37 Like Vi r g i ni a among s tates to rat if y t h e C onstit u t i o n
104 Noble rank 105 Playwright Joe w ho wr ot e " W h a t
the Butler Saw"
measure
1 06 Tessellati o n
6 8 1952 Brando t i t l e
role 70 Fairbanks Daily News-
38 Booth, e.g.
41 Sphere 43 PC component
7 2 European coin w i t h a hole in i t
44 Target of minor surgery
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
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3 Move, as a plant
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78 Actress Dennings of "The 40- Year-Old Virgin"
5 Camera type, briefl y 6 Hidden
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63 More pink, maybe 66 All' s p a r t n er
47 Depressed at the poles 48 Jungle vine
37 Los mosqueteros
67 Goes off on a tangent 7 0 Small bi t
49 Big media to-do
39 Confi d ent testtaker's cry
5 0 Info r mal so c i a l gathering
4 0 Some "Bourne" f i l m
51 Inexperienced
74 Mark of 7 6 Discuss lightl y 79 Big
4 1 Ring ev e n t
53 Caught at a 41Down
44 R apper?
55 Went after
45 Inner
5 8 St. Peter's Basil i c a feature
46 Forceful advance
7 Alan of " A r g o "
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36 E-mail f o r e r u n ner
7 1 Geraint's w i fe , i n Arthurian l e gend
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1 3 Old New Y o r k p aper, for shor t
32 Customizable character in a computer game
107 Clipped
69 Enzyme ending
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2 2 Paavo , 192 0s Finnish Olympic hero
102 Low grade?
35 Put out
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1 1 "In the A m e r i c a n West" phot o g r apher
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taken
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61 Snookums
84 Trim 85 Time's second A fri c an- A m e r i c an Person of the Year 8 6 Primates wit h t a i l s
95 Mother of C a stor
87 Scold 8 8 Mark of a r i f l e ' s laser sight
100 Word missing
and Pollux 97 Gaelic ground
98 Principal
t wice in t h e Beatles' "
9 1 Conductor K u r t
80 Ill - h u m o r ed 81 set ( t oo l assortment)
82 Jumbled 83 Cheap, as housing
Said
Said"
92 Present-day p e r s o n a I i t y?
1 01 One on fo o t ,
93 Alfalf a's love in " The Li t t l e Rascals"
103 Verizon forerunner
i n form aI I y
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
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PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
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Garage Sale Special
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon srnte t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
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4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if 8 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 onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall nol be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.
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Mlsc. Items
Mlsc. Items
• Heating & Stoves
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Fuel tk Wood
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DISH Network. Starting ProFlowers - Enjoy 60 Wanted- paying cash EdenPURE® Portable WHEN BUYING at $19.99/moiJth (for percent off T e nder for Hi-fi audio & stuInfrared Heaters. Join 1 2 mos.) & Hi g h Hugs and Kisses with dio equip. Mclntosh, the 3 million beating FIREWOOD... Speed Internet start- Chocolates for your J BL, Marantz, D y the cold and winter To avold fraud, ing at $14.95/month valentine! Site price: naco, Heathkit, Sanheating bills. SAVE The Bulletln (where ava i lable.) $49.99, you pay just sui, Carver, NAD, etc. $229 on our recommends payS AVE! A s k Ab o u t $19.99. Plus take 20 Call 541-261-1808 EdenPURE® Model ment for Firewood SAME DAY Installa- percent off other gifts 750. C A L L NOW only upon dellvery 263 t ion! C A L L Now ! over $29! G o to while supplies last! and inspection. 1-866-947-7995. www.Proflowers.com/f Tools 1 -866-906-6902. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. (PNDC) abulous or call (PNDC) 4' x 4' x 8' 1-888-721-9617. Craftsman 10" Table Just bought 8 new boat? • Receipts should (PNDC) TURN THE PAGE include name, Saw, $199; Yamaha Sell your old one in the 2600 Portable Genclassifieds! Ask about our phone, price and For More Ads Need help fixing stuff? Super Seller rates! kind of wood purCall A Service Professional erator (never used) The Bulletin $450; Craftsman 541-385-5809 chased. find the help you need. rotating bench, $75. • Firewood ads www.bendbulletin.com NOTICE TO GENERATE SOME Mike, 541-923-2953. MUST include speADVERTISER EXCITEMENT cies and cost per SHARI S BERRIES Since September 29, IN YOUR cord to better serve Delight all of your val265 NEIGBORHOOD. 1991, advertising for our customers. w i t h our Bulldlng Materlals used woodstoves has Plan a garage sale and entines freshly dipped strawbeen limited to moddon't forget to adverberries, dec a dent REDMOND Habitat els which have been Serving Central Oregon since ieaa tise in classified! truffles and c ertified by the O r 541-385-5809. RESTORE hand-crafted sweets! Building Supply Resale egon Department of 1 cord dry, split Juniper, GET FREE OF CREDIT SAVE 20 percent on Environmental QualQuality at $190/cord. Multi-cord qualifying gifts over CARD DEBT NOW! LOW PRICES ity (DEQ) aiJd the feddiscounts, 8 t/a cords Cut payments by up $29! Visit w ww.bereral En v ironmental available. Immediate 1242 S. Hwy 97 ies.com/enticing o r to half. Stop creditors rCall 541 -548-1406 Protection A g e ncy delivery! 541-408-6193 1-888-718-8479. from calling. (PNDC) Open to the public. (EPA) as having met 866-775-9621. smoke emission stan- All Year Dependable dards. A cer t i fied Flrewood: Seasoned (PNDC) The Bulletin Offers Find It in w oodstove may b e Lodgepole, Split, Del. Free Private Party Ads The Bulletin CI888ified8! Highspeed Internet EV- • 3 lines - 3 days identified by its certifi- Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 541-385-5809 ERYWHERE By Sat- • Private Party Only cation label, which is for $335. Cash, Check ellite! Speeds up to • Total of items adverpermanently attached or Credit Card OK. 12mbps! (200x faster tised must equal $200 266 to the stove. The Bul- 541-420-3484. than dial-up.) Starting or Less letin will no t k now- Spllt, Dry lodgepole, Heatlng & Stoves at $49.95/mo. CALL FOR DETAILS or to ingly accept advertis- red tlr, cedar and juNOW & G O F A ST! PLACE AN AD, Const. propane heater, i ng for the s ale of nlper, $200/cord, 1-888-718-2162. uncertified Call 541-385-5809 250,000 Btu $90 obo. delivery included! (PNDC) 541-410-4596 woodstoves. Fax 541-385-5802 541-923-6987, Iv msg.
The Bulletin
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Fuel & Wood
Losttk Found
Tamarack seasoned 2 Found black 8 white cat o n Piitehurst in T u years, $225 cord. 541-977-2040 m alo. L i ke s mi l k ! 541-389-9062. 269 Found I-Pod, on Zenith Gardening Supplles Ave., Redmond. Call to I.D., 541-504-7033 & Equipment TURN THE PAGE For newspaper For More Ads delivery, call the The Bulletin Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
claaaified@bendbolletin com
The Bulletin ier ing Central Oregon nnre reat
Found piece of silver, SE Bend, call to identify; will hold u n t i l 4/3 0 /t 3.
541-639-7767
Found; Sunday, skateboard near Congress St., Call to i dentify.
286
Sales Northeast Bend
Estate Sales
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Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-
garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds:
rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Klt FREE!
KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
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1777 SW Chandler 541-385-5809 or 541-480-3122 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 email P oulan rider 42" c u t Found tiny white dog, NE classified@bendbulletin.com 189I hp, $ 6 5 0 obo. 18th & Mor n ingstar, 541-389-9268. morning of 2/3. Call to Get your identify, 541-419-1 575 Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand 8 Gravel Lost: Cardigan Corgi febusiness Good classified ads tell Multiple Colors, Sizes male, from Pine Nursery the essential facts in an Instant Landscaping Co. Dog Park, Fri 2/f, blue 541-389-9663 merle very cute, $500 interesting Manner.Write reward. 541-633-9056 or from the readersview -not 541-788-2849 SUPER TOP SOIL the seller's. Convert the www.hetehe eoilandbatk.oom R EMEMBER: If you facts into benefits. Show Screened, soil & comWith an ad in have lost an animal, the readerhowtheitem wil post mi x ed , no don't forget to check rocks/clods. High huhelp them insomeway. The Bulletin's The Humane Society mus level, exc. for This in Bend 541-382-3537 flower beds, lawns, "Call A Service advertising tlp Redmond, straight gardens, 541-923-0882 brought to you by s creened to p s o il. Professional" Prineville, Bark. Clean fill. De541-447-7178; liver/you haul. tervng Central Oregon sincefeet Directory OR Craft Cats,
The Bulletin
8ROWING
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541-548-3949.
541-389-8420.
u . e
a ur
u .
In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds. Full Color Photos
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 G3
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER S P A R T A
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476
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Employment Opportunities
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: www.bendbulletin.com
Food Service
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
erhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend, OR. Or apply and submit your resume/cover letter on line at : w w w .river-
Fax resume including references to
541-389-2662 Attn:
Clinic Administrator.
house.com.
PRE E M P LOYMENT DRUG SCREENING IS REQUIRED. FARM FOREMAN (Bio Science Research 'obs©klamathtribes.com Hotel/Resort Tech 2 ) Cen t r al 541-783-2219 x 113 T he R i v erhouse i s Oregon A g r icultural seeking a Front Desk
No calls, please.
476
Hotel/Resort
Meadow Lakes Golf T he R i verhouse i s FINANCEAND BUSINESS Course is looking for seeking an e x peri- EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts a w ait s t aff e m - enced Assistant 514 -Insurance ployee. Good work F ront O f fice M a n- 421 - Schools and Training ethic and excellent ager. Applicants will 454- Looking for Employment 52 8 - Loans and Mortgages have previous manacustomer se r v ice 470 - Domestic & In-Hom e Posit ions 543-Stocksand Bonds gerial experience in skills are essential. mentoring employees, 476 - Employment Opportunities 55 8 - Business Investments Must be 21 or over forecasting/revenue 486 - Independent Positions 573 - Business Opportunities as you will be exm anagement, an d pected to be able to prioritizing/managing 476 476 573 tend bar periodically. multiple tasks e ff iEmployment Employment Business Opportunities H ours ma y v a r y . ciently. Co m puter, Opportunities Opportunities Pays minimum wage multi-line phone sysWARNING The Bulletin and tips. Apply on- tem, and o r ganizarecommends that you line at w ww.cityof- t ional skills are r e Medical Assistant in Looking for your next investigate every prineville.com quired. Ex e mplary Bend. Full-time, 40 employee? phase of investment customer ser v i ce hr./4 day work week Place a Bulletin help opportunities, espeskills and the ability to at a b usy internal wanted ad today and c ially t h os e fr o m Forester work a varied schedmedicine p r actice. reach over 60,000 out-of-state or offered $39,166 - $56,075 ule are a must. Full Benefits Recent MA experireaders each week. by a p e rson doing B ring r esumes a n d ence with EMR req. Prof-Mgmt, Regular Your classified ad business out of a locomplete application Great benefit packFull-Time will also appear on cal motel or hotel. Inin person to The Riv- age; salary DOE. bendbulletin.com vestment of f e rings
C U Need to get an ad P in ASAP? 0 L Fax it to 541-322-7253 A C L E The Bulletin Classifieds H 0 D D AWG DRIVER A 0 R I CDL Driver/Service Rep This position is needed for local envi- located in Chiloquin. R T E N ronmental s e r vices L I N G company. Submit re- For more information contact: sume to: A CT CHunter@tnermcfluids.com
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ
gJJIJaCan.'beJf))JIÃf Jl)'JJ'JJ g found on these pages:
The Klamath Tribes PO Box 436 Chiloquin, OR 97624
Medical /Clerical Excellent o p portunity with b e nefits, strong com p uter skills required, up t o $ 1 5/hr. D O E . Supervisor. Ap p l i- Contact: HR Dept. at cants will have exem- 855-357-6311. plary customer service and c o mputer Need help fixing stuff? skills, multi-line phone Call A Service Professional system, pri o r itize/ manage multiple tasks find the help you need. efficiently. Hotel and www.bendbulletin.com Supervisory e x perience preferred. Must Painter b e able to w ork a Full time position, exp. varied sche d ule. in all phases of painting req. Call Chuck at Great opportunity for future growth. Bring 541-948-8499. r esumes and c o mplete application in Plumber, Journeymen needed for new conperson at The Riverstruction. Start immedihouse, 3075 N Hwy ately! Call Gary, 97, Bend, OR. Or ap541-410-1655 ply and submit your resume/cover letter on Remember.... line at : w w w .river- A dd your we b a d house.com. PRE EM- dress to your ad and
which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
must be r e gistered with the Oregon Department of Finance. We suggest you consult your attorney or call CON S UMER HOTLINE, 1-503-378-4320,
8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. A Classified ad is an EASY W A Y TO REACH over 3 million Pacific Northwesterners. $5 2 5 /25-word c lassified ad i n 3 0 daily newspapers for 3-days. Call the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection (916) 2 88-6019 o r em a i l elizabethOcnpa.com for more info (PNDC)
R esearch Cen t e r Lead Forester (COARC) M a dras, $43,691 - $61,595 RHE!MS OR. Full Benefits CAUTION READERS: Residential Counselors r e sponsibility 8 DITI@5mSM Prof-Mgmt, Regular Mature individuals to Primary Full-Time Ads published in "Em- work in drug & alcohol for all f a rming/crop operaployment Opportuni- residential treatment for management tions, equipment upThis position is t ies" i n c lude e m - teens. Apply at: at the located in Chiloquin. ployee and www.rimrocktrailsats.org keep/repair COARC Madras locai ndependent po s i tion. Must be highly For more information tions. Ads for posi- Automotive Techniself-directed, k nowlcontact: tions that require a fee c ian 1st quality grass hay, 528 Neede d . edgeable of farming 70- Ib bales, barn stored, or upfront investment Mopar exp. desired. Find It in Loans 8 Mortgages practices and able to The Klamath Tribes $250/ ton. Also big bales! must be stated. With Chrysler ce r t ified work in collaboration The Bulletin Classifieds! PO Box 436 Patterson Ranch, any independent job and ASE certificawith other staff and Chiloquin, OR 97624 WARNING 541-385-5809 Sisters, 541-549-3831 opportunity, p l e ase t ion are a ma j o r The Bulletin recomresearch faculty. Re- obs©klamathtribes.com investigate thor- p lus. V er y b u s y quires CDL l icense 541-783-2219 x 113 mends you use cau- Extreme Value AdverWhere can you find a oughly. shop. Hard worker tion when you prowithin 3 months and tising! 30 Daily newshelping hand? and attention to dePesticide A p plicator vide personal Just bought a new boat? papers $525/25-word Use extra caution when From contractors to tail. Will be reqarded information to compaLicense w i t hi n 6 Sell your old one in the classified, 3- d a ys. applying for jobs on- with top pay. m onths. A p p l y a t classifieds! Ask about our nies offering loans or yard care, it's all here Reach 3 million Paline and never proSend replies to: Super Seller rates! credit, especially http://oregonstate.edu cific Northwesterners. vide personal inforin The Bulletin's PO Box 6676 541-385-5809 /jobs/ those asking for adposting For more information mation to any source "Call A Service Bend, OR 97708 vance loan fees or ¹0010181. For assiscall (916) 288-6019 or you may not have reP LOYMENT D R U G Home Cleaning crew tance, call readers on The companies from out of email: Professional" Directory searched and deemed IS REmember, w eekdays SCREENING state. If you have (541)475-7107. Bulletin' s web site elizabeth@cnpa.com to be reputable. Use QUIRED only. No weekends, concerns or queswill be able to click 356 Find It in for the Pacific Northextreme caution when FLOORING evening or holidays. Manager tions, we suggest you through automatically west Daily Connecr esponding to A N Y The Bulletin Classifieds! Farmers Column Experienced 541-815-0015. Now Hiring at Juniper to your site. consult your attorney tion. (PNDC) online e m p loyment 541-385-5809 Hardwood Finish in Motel i n Mad r as. or call CONSUMER ad from out-of-state. 10X20 STORAGE Place Installers Looking fo r l i v e-in HOTLINE, FIND YOUR FUTURE BUILDINGS Looking fo r ex p e ri Get your full-time man a ger. 1-877-877-9392. We suggest you call Carpeting, Vinyl and HOME INTHE BULLETIN for protecting hay, enced craftsmen to Position includes 3 business Tile Installers the State of Oregon firewood, livestock start work i m medibdrm, 2 bath home chasing products or I Your future is just a page Consumer Hotline at Looking for full-time in- ately. Work will be in Get your etc. $1496 Installed. and living expenses. stallers to start work away. Whether you're looking 1-503-378-4320 541-617-1133. services from out of i both the Tri-Cities and business For information call a ROWI N G immediately. Work will Walla Walla, Washfor a hat or a place to hangit, CCB ¹173684. i the area. Sending 541-639-9936. in both the Tri-Cit- ington areas. V a lid The Bulletin Classified is kfjbuilders@ykwc.net For Equal Opportunity be c ash, checks, o r ies and Walla Walla, your best source. with an ad in L aws: Oregon B udriver's license and i credit i n f ormation e ROW I N G WA areas. RequireTURN THE PAGE Where can you find a reau of Labor & InThe Bulletin's Every day thousandsof reliable transportation i may be sublected to include reliable dustry, C i vil Rights ments For More Ads FRAUD. helping hand? buyers and sellers of goods "Call A Service transportation & valid are required. Contact with an ad in Division, Brian o r Jim at For more informaand services do business in The Bulletin driver's license; priFrom contractors to Professional" The Bulletin's 971-673-0764 tion about an adverC a r p et these pages.Theyknow vately owned tools are Benjamin's yard care, it's all here "Call A Service Directory a plus. Vinyl installers One, Richland, WA; Medical A ss i s tant i tiser, you may call you can't beat TheBulletin If you have any questhe Oregon State in The Bulletin's should be proficient in 509-946-4506 Full-time, 6 mo. min. Classified Section for Professional" tions, concerns or selection and convenience cove welding or willing exp. Pick up appli- I Attorney General's "Call A Service Directory comments, contact: Office C o n sumer x every item isjust a phone to become so. Contact Social Worker (LCSyi/) cation/job descripProfessional" Directory Classified Department Brian o r Jim at Protection hotline at I call away. tion pkg at office. The Bulletin BANK TURNED YOU Benjamin's Ca r p et I 1-877-877-9392. Madras Medical Rafter L F Ranch & 541-385-5809 DOWN? Private party The Classified Section is One, Richland, WA; Group easy to use. Everyitem Farm Svcs.- Custom will loan on real es509-946-4506 LTlae, Bulletin 76 NE 12th St., Haying & Field Work tate equity. Credit, no is categorized andevery Madras, OR. The Bulletin Call Lee Fischer, problem, good equity cartegory is indexed onthe Servng Central Or<gon i~nce l903 Dental Assistant 541-410-4495 section's front page. is all you need. Call with EFDA needed. Send /n Care N si g now. Oregon Land Whether youare looking for Need help fixing stuff? resume & cover letter to Partners In Care, is seeking a full-time Social 375 Mortgage 388-4200. Call A Service Professional Box 20277396, c/o The a home orneed aservice, Meat & Animal Processing find the help you need. Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Worker to provide support to its hospice LOCAL MONEY:We buy your future is in the pagesof patients and families. www.bendbulletin.com Bend, OR 97708. HEALTH PLANS The Bulletin Classified. secured trust deeds 8 Grain-fed beef $2.88/lb. Help us change healthcare! If you are an RN note,some hard money Preferred candidates will have a M aster's hanging weight, half loans. Call Pat Kelley with a broad clinical background and would degree in Social Work (MSW) including LCSW The Bulletin or whole to be proLab Assistant (Organic Chemistry 8 541-382-3099 ext.13. like to enhance patients' quality of life, we certification and previous hospice experience. cessed m i d-march. Biology), Temporary, Part-time. have two excellent opportunities at Pacific$500 deposit. Source Health Plans! Qualified applicants are encouraged to send Independent Contractor Half Hog Sale, $190 in- Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has c over letter an d r e sume vi a e m ail t o cludes cutting wrap- a temporary, part-time employment opportuHROpartnersbend.org or regular mail to: Senior Nurse Care Manager: This position ping and cure. nity. The ideal applicant functions as a memwould be responsible for oversight of defined * Supplement Your Income* WHILE THEY LAST! ber of the OSU-Cascades upper division GenPartners ln Care / HR Department, Health Services programs, services, or func541-573-2677 eral Science (Organic Chemistry and Biology) tions which may include, but not be limited to, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct, programs. Lambs corn-fed, taking Bend OR 97701. condition/disease management program, beorders now for March havioral health services, complex case manDuties include, but are not limited to, setting delivery. agement, UM/CM, grievance and appeals, up/preparation for spring term Organic Chem541-475-7479 claim review, and/or policy/procedure writing. Hotel/Resort istry and Biology labs, assisting in Organic ++++++++++++++++++ Assistant Front Of f i ce Ma n ager. ExperiChemistry lab development and execution of enced applicants will have previous manageNurse Case Manager: Provide case manthe lab courses. agement services which promotes quality, rial experience in mentoring employees, forecost-effective outcomes by helping selected casting/revenue management, and Required qualifications include a familiarity member populations achieve effective utilizaprioritizing/managing multiple tasks efficiently. with chemistry laboratory techniques including Computer, multi-line phone system, and orgation of healthcare services. Incorporate the eshandling chemicals, making solutions, hansential functions of professional case mannizational skills are required. Exemplary cusdling glassware and equipment. Preferred tomer service skills and the ability to work a agement concepts to enhance patients' quality qualifications include experience with lab inof life and maximize health plan benefits. varied schedule are a must. Bring resumes VVe are looking for independent construmentation (e.g., IR, GC, and HPLC) and and complete application in person to The sterile technique as well as a demonstrated tractors to service home delivery Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97, Review the full job description and complete commitment to promoting and enhancing diroutes in: 421 our online application at versity. Front Desk Supervisor. Applicants will have www.pacificsource.com/careers. Schools & Training exemplary customer service and computer T he salary rate i s $ 1 1.82/hour and t h e skills, multi-line phone system, prioritize/manEOE Must be available 7 days a week, early mornA IRLINES ARE H I R- anticipated start date is March 1, 2013. ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. age multiple tasks efficiently. Hotel and SuperING - Train for hands visory experience preferred. Must be able to on Aviation MainteTo apply for this position, please submit a General work a varied schedule. Great opportunity for nance Career. FAA Please call 541.385.5800 or resume and/or a temp job application future growth. Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t u nit approved p r ogram. (http://oregonstate.edu/ 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or Financial aid if qualiadmin/hristeam/forms/TS901.doc) Seasonal Deputy, Salary Depends on apply via email at Bring resumes and complete application in fied - Housing availto Jeff .Gautschi©osucascades.edu or via fax Experience and Qualifications online O bendbulletin.com person at The Riverhouse, 3075 N Hwy 97, able. Call Aviation In© 541-382-7053 or Closes February 28th, 2013 Bend, OR. O r a p pl y a n d s u bmit y o ur stitute of The closing date is 2/15/13. resume/cover letter on line at: www.riverMaintenance. OSU is an AA/EOE. house.com. PR E E M P LOYMENT D R UG F or c o m plete j o b des c ription a n d 1-877-804-5293. application form go to SCREENING IS REQUIRED (PNDC) www.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H uman Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call ATTEND COL L E GE GeneraI gwus o Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t u n it 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson ONLINE 100%. General 0 *Medical, B u s iness, County Application forms to: STAFF ASSISTANT III z DESCHUTES COUNTY *Criminal Jus t i ce, Client Service Assistant Jefferson County Human Resources, *Hospitality, *Web. $2,137.16 mo. - $2,603.42 mo. - DOQ 66 SE D Street, Suite E, CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Job placement assisCentral Oregon Community College tance. Comp u ter Madras, OR 97741. has o p enings l i sted b e l ow. Go to First Review — February 19, 2013 CIVIL TE C H NICIAN (2013-00009), available. F i n ancial https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment Aid if qual i f ied. online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, Sheriff's Office. Full-time position $3,217 Opportunity Employer F or c o mplete j o b des c ription a n d SCHEV a u thorized. 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; form go to - $4,104 per month for a 173.33 hour work Call 866- 6 8 8-7078 application (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, www.co.jefferson.or.us; click o n H uman www.CenturaOnline.c Oregon Relay Services number is 7 -1-1. month.Deadline: SUNDAY, 03/03/13. Roll Tender Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call om (PNDC) COCC is an AA/EO employer. 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST County Application forms to: Part Time Office Specialist 3 Get your II - Older Adult Behavioral Health Specialist — Disability Services Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Jefferson County Human Resources, business Provide clerical support, bookkeeping, and (2012-00076), Behavioral Health Division. 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Are you interested in learning the entry detailed record keeping. Provide corresponMadras, OR 97741. Full-time position $4,057 - $5,553 per month level basics of being a pressman? dence, scheduling, and coordination of sera ROW I N G vices for students, and public. Associates + for a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: Jefferson Countyis an Equal Employment The Bulletin has an immediate opening for a 3yr exp. $13.47-$16.04 30hr/wk. Closes Feb Opportunity Employer with an ad in full time p r essroom Roll T e nder. T h is OPEN UNTIL FILLED. 18 entry-level position is responsible for the loadThe Bulletin's DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS ing of newsprint rolls and the operation of the Part-Time Instructor ol "Call A Service Clerical/Office reel stands on the press. The work schedule Veterinary Technician Education APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY Professional" will consist of 4 days at 10 hours per day, from Provide instruction in the Veterinarian TechniWe are looking for a full-time employee that is FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, 3:30 PM to approximately 2:30 AM, on a cian program, develop curriculum, evaluate Directory resourceful and self-motivated to assist a rotating schedule that will allow for every other student performance. 3 Years exp. as DVM or PLEASE VISIT OUR W E BSITE AT large staff and write daily clerical reports. This weekend being 3 days off. Starting rate is LVT with current license. Position need Spring TRUCK SCHOOL person should like working in a fast-paced www.deschutes.org/jobs. All candidates $10.00 per hour DOE. Term March 2013. www.llTR.net environment and be able to meet tight deadwill receive an email response regarding their Redmond Campus lines on a daily basis. The right person for the job must be able to Assistant Professor I, Mathematics Student Loans/Job application status after the recruitment has move and lift 50 lbs. or more on a continuing Provide instruction in all levels of community Waiting Toll Free Organization, flexibility, writing skills and a basis. The position also requires reaching, college mathematics courses (basic math, closed and applications have been reviewed. 1-888-387-9252 high level of computer proficiency are essenpre-algebra, algebra I, II, & i ntermediate). standing, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, tial. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts Notifications to candidates are sent via email kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. LearnMaster's + 1 year teaching mathematics req. Where can you find a and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is reing and using proper safety practices will be a $38,209-$46,309 for 9 mos. Position need Fall only. If you need assistance, please contact quired. helping hand? primary responsibility. Term September 2013. the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 From contractors to Ability to work for long periods of time doing For more information or to submit a resume, Assistant Professor l, English NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 yard care, it's all here detail-oriented work is necessary. This perplease contact: Provide instruction in composition and literason must understand the importance of accuin The Bulletin's (541) 617-4722. t ure / huma n ities. Ma s t er's req . racy and thoroughness in all duties. "Call A Service Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, $38,209-$46,309 for 9mos. Position need Fall Deschutes County provides reasonable Term September 2013. anelson Obendbulletin.com Professional" Directory Excellent customer service and interpersonal accommodations for persons with disabilities. skills are required. Must enjoy working with Part Time Instructors Needed Applications are also available at the front desk 454 the public. College degree or previous office This material will be furnished in alternative NEW! INater Distribution Systems at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, experience preferred. Looking for Employment Looking for t alented individuals to t e ach OR. For consideration all resumes/applicaformat if needed. For hearing impaired, please part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our tions must be received prior to February 22nd. To apply, please send a resume to: Would love to do child call TTY/TDD 711. web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay Pre-employment drug testing required. Box 20281649, c/o The Bulletin, care or in-home adult $500 per load unit (1 LU= 1 class credit), with PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 c are, p a r t tim e . EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER additional perks. EOE 541-383-2851 ALCOHOL & DRUG
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G4 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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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
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
648
750
870
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Houses for Rent General
Redmond Homes
Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
17' 1984 Chris Craft - Scorpion, 140 HP inboard/outboard, 2 depth finders, troll-
( YOURBOAT ... (
P U BLI SHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the
F air H o using A c t 744 which makes it illegal to a d v ertise "any Open Houses preference, limitation or disc r imination Open 12-3 based on race, color, 20125 Cirrus Ct. religion, sex, handiQuiet Cul-de-Sac cap, familial status, in SW Bend marital status or naAlison Mata, tional origin, or an inBroker tention to make any 541-280-6250 such pre f e rence, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t o dians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly ac- www.thegarnergroup.tom cept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Open 12-3 O ur r e a ders ar e 20536 Gloucester hereby informed that Ln. all dwellings adverWoodhill Park tised in this newspaCharming 3-Bdrm per are available on Erin Campbell, an equal opportunity Broker. basis. To complain of 541-410-0872 discrimination cal l HUD t o l l -free at
ga'r"rier.
1-800-877-0246. The
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toll f ree t e lephone number for the hearing im p a ired is
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Need help fixing stuff?
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1-800-927-9275.
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Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Meet singles right now!
630
Rooms for Rent
No paid o p erators, Studios 8 Kitchenettes room, TV w/ just real people like Furnished you. Browse greet- cable, micro 8 fridge. Utils 8 l i nens. New ings, exchange mes- owners. $145-$165/wk sages and c o nnect 541-382-1885 live. Try it free. Call now: 8 7 7-955-5505. 634
Gambling Too Much? Free, confidential help is available statewide.
Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT (PNDC) to talk to a c e rtified Western Washington Apt./Multiplex NE Bend counselor 24/7 or visit Guy seeks gal 48-65, e GREAT WINTER rh 1877mylimit.org to slim(average build, to chat live with a counDEAL! share quiet times; selor. We are not here 2 bdrm, 1 bath, trips, walks, nature, to judge. We are here moon-light, cuddling! $530 8 $540 w/lease. to help. You can get Carports included! Greg, PO Box 3013 your life back. Arlington, WA 98223. FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 383-3152
Cascade Rental Management. Co.
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i C all 54 /-385-58 0 9 to r o m o t e ou r s e rvice
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Fax it to 541-322-7253
Handyman
Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires anyone who co n t racts for construction work to be licensed with the C onstruction Con tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se means the contractor i s bonded an d i n s ured. Ver if y t h e contractor's CCB c ense through t h e CCB Cons u m er Website www.hirealicenaeocontractor. com
or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone.
ERIC REEVE
)8 HANDY Pp SERVICES
All Home & Commercial Repaira Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's.
Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Discount Au work guaranteed.
541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insured CCB¹I49468
Some other t rades 30 years Construction also req u ire addi- Experience tional licenses a nd 17 Years certifications. tgb In Central De b ris Removal•
Will Haul Away
< FREEe For Salvage t Any Location . 4 Removal Also Cleanups A& Cfeanouts'I~
I'
IXL
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hours to
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Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5B09
636
51366 Riverland,
La Pine. 1 acre, garage, w/ non livable trailer. $28,000. 541-659-1416
541-385-5809 Thank you! The Bulletin Classified
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
www.thegarnergroup.tom
541-385-5809
745
775
Sec/dep.541-923-0908 541-480-7863
Get your business
659
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
1he Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
a ROWI N G
QPH
850
541-382-3728.
Snowmobiles
860
Motorcycles & Accessories
CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need.
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exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500. 541-389-1413
20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530
TiCk, Tock TiCk, Tock...
HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player, hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it.
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
541-480-8080. 865
ATVs 2008 Polaris Ranger, 500 Fl, 76 total hrs. Incl Warn winch 8 s n o w p l ow, $6200. 541-536-6081
22' Custom Weld Jet, 2002, 350 Vortec, 210
hrs, garaged, loaded. 541-923-0854.
870
Boats & Accessories
with
our
spe c i al
rates for selling your I ~ boat or watercraft!
/ Place an ad in The /
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of
LEVI'S DIRT WORKS
Residential/ ~~, , tah Commercial
General Contractor
For ALL your dirt & excavation needs • Small jobs for homeowners, by job or by the hour • Concrete • Custom Pads • Driveway gradingLow cost - get rid of pot holes & smooth out your drive! Call 641-639-5282
~ which includes:
[ *5 lines of text and a photo or up to 10 [ lines with no photo.
I Rates start at $46. I Call for details! 541-385-5609
gThe Bulleting GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.
The Bulletin
Serv>ne Central Oregon rmre 7903
Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435
Check out the classifieds online wurtN.bendbulletin.com Updated daily
Watercraft
•
2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.
$10,000 541-719-8444
Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809
The Buljeti
rerimg central oregon 5wce 190
WOW!
Serving Central Oregon rmce 1903
$21,500. 541-504-3253
NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified
CCB¹194077
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Handyman •
I DO THAT!
Small Jobs rr> EntireRoom Remodels Garage Organizarion Hr>me fnspeclion Repairs Quality, Horreru Work
Dennis 541.317.9768 r.carrai ara Buarferlnararrd
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
I
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ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to
The Earned Income Tax Credit. You may have earned it. Why not claim it?
check license status before con t racting with t h e bu s iness. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.
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
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
moSt lOVing jObS. ViSit Our Web Site Or aSk Painting/Wall Covering
Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial
• 0
$ Rh ' f ~L
yOur taX PreParer if you qualify.
MARTIN JAMES
BeCauSe When it COmeS to getting more for your family, considerit d one. A meSSage from the Internal Revenue ServiCe.
European Professional
www.irs.gov/eitc
Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License
Wrenoltee. One of the i5 things that make up a D isaster Supp l i es K i t . w w w . p r e p a r e F o r L i f e . o r g
¹186147 LLC
541-81 5-2888
Build a kit Make a plan Get trained Prepare Oregon
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American Red Cross Oregon Chapters
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watercraft, please see 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, Class 875. no slide-out, Triton eng, 541-385-5809 all amenities, 1 owner, perfect, only 17K miles,
The Bulletin
541 -977-9971
[
*Free online ad at I bendbulletin.com *Free pick up into ~ The Central Oregon ~ J Nickel ads.
I
People Look for Information 12' Aluminum, 06 NisAbout Products and Services Every Day through san, 6hp, 4 cycle, The Bulletin Classiffeds trailer, extras, $995.
The Bulletin
ou r
f 3-month package f
OOO
or 209-605-5537
FACTORY SPECIAL Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, New Home, 3 bdrm, race-ready, lots of extras, $46,500 finished $5500/obo 541-647-8931 on your site. J and M Homes
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
I t
20.5' 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow,
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
541-548-5511
I
FLOAT
B ulletin w it h
2007 Ski-Doo Renegade Find exactly what 600 w/513 mi, like new, very fast! Reduced to you are looking for in the $5000. 541-221-5221 CLASSIFIEDS • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1750. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 EXT, $1250. • Zieman 4-place hp Bowrider w/depth finder, radio/CD player, trailer, SOLD! rod holders, full canAll in good condition. vas, EZ Loader trailer, Located in La Pine. exclnt cond, $14,500. Call 541-408-6149. 707-484-3518 (Bend)
The Bulletin
ga'r"rier.
Homes for Sale Eagle Crest - B ehind the gates. Beautiful 2100 s q .ft., 3 / 2 .5, BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics! Reverse living. Large BendRepos.com garagetworkshop. Hot www. bend and beyond real estate tub. $1400/mo. Lease 20967 yeoman, hend or option. $36 5 ,000.
ing motor, full cover, EZ - L oad t railer, $3500 OBO.
Call 541-385-5809 CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes in- Harley Davidson Softs tructions over t h e Tail D e luxe 2 0 0 7 , phone are misunder- white/cobalt, w / passtood and an e rror senger kit, Vance & can occurin your ad. Hines muffler system If this happens to your & kit, 1045 mi., exc. $16,9 9 9 , ad, please contact us c ond, the first day your ad 541-389-9188. appears and we will Harley Heritage be happy to fix it as Softail, 2003 s oon as w e c a n . $5,000+ in extras, Deadlines are: Week$2000 paint job, days 11:00 noon for 30K mi. 1 owner, next day, Sat. 11:00 For more information a.m. for Sunday and please call Monday. 541-385-8090
668
Door-to-door selling with The Bulletin Classifieds fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend
Open 12-3 20729 Kilbourne Lp. Large Family Home Deluxe Finishes Victoria Davis, Broker. 541-410-2621
Acreages
Houses for Rent Redmond
Limited numbers avail. Houses for Rent 1,28 3bdrms Sunriver w/d hookups, patios or decks. VILLAGE PROPERTIES Mountain Glen Sunriver, Three Rivers, 541-383-9313 La Pine. Great Professionally managed by Selection. Prices range Norris & Stevens, Inc. $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Need to get an ad Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061 in ASAP? Fax it to 541-322-7253
www.thegarnergroup.oom
773
I
The Bulletin
Excavating
•
Call for Specials!
541-383-2371 24
ga'rrier.
at
bendbulletin.com
Small studio close to li675 brary, all util. pd. $550, RV Parking $525 dep. No pets/ I Margo smoking. 541-330space for rent TuCOnStruCtiOn, LK 9769 or 541-480-7870 RV malo. 30 amp + water & sewer. Gravel lot. Home Repairs & Where can you find a Avail. 3/1. $350 mo. Remodeling helping hand? 541-41 9-5060 Window & Door From contractors to 687 Replacement yard care, it's all here Commercial for ccn ¹176121 in The Bulletin's Rent/Lease "Call A Service 541-480-3179 Professional" Directory 3000 sq. ft. commercial space @ 30C sq. ft. 61510 (¹120) 642 Landscaping/Yard Care American Lane. FOR SALE Apt./Multiplex Redmond Call 530-305-0104 N OTICE: O R E G O N When buying a home Landscape Contrac- Avail 2/15, Well cared BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 83% of Central tors Law (ORS 671) for 3/2 duplex, near Search the area's most Oregonians turn to r equires a l l bu s i - park/schools, fenced comprehensive listing of nesses that advertise y ard, n e w woo d classified advertising... Serwng Central Oregan s>nce l903 t o p e r form L a n d- floors, garage, small real estate to automotive, scape C o nstruction pet neg. $795. + $750 merchandise to sporting Call 541-385-5809 to which includes: dep. 541-410-6298 goods. Bulletin Classifieds place your p lanting, decks , appear every day in the Real Estate ad. fences, arbors, Country Living - Upstairs print or on line. w ater-features, a n d duplex, small kitchenette, Just bought a new boat? Call 541-385-5809 installation, repair of 1 bedroom, den, outside www.bendbulletin.com Sell your old one in the deck, 17735 NW Lone irrigation systems to classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! r be licensed with the Pine Rd., Terrebonne. 'r ' $500/mo. 541-504-0837 ser ng cenrrai 0 egon s<nce i903 541-385-5809 Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers c ompensa~5 tion for their employ-
Oregon j
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The Bulletin Classifieds
Rented your property? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line. Call
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line
o.
The Internal Revenue Se rvice
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2013 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 •
Mo t o rhomes •
Trave l Trailers
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Beaver Marquis Dia- Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 mante, 1 of 20, '98, pris- 29', weatherized, like tine, 44K mi, garaged, n ew, f u rnished & $119,900. 541-771-3030 ready to go, incl Wineard S a tellite dish,
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929
933
Automotive Wanted
Pickups
DONATE YOUR CARFast Free Towing 24 hr. Response - Tax Ford Ranchero Deduction. U N ITED 1979 BREAST C A N CER with 351 Cleveland F OUNDATION P r o modified engine. viding Free MammoBody is in grams & Breast Can- excellent condition, cer Info $2500 obo. 888-785-9788.
& Service
541-420-4677
(PNDC)
26,995. 541-420-9964 III R -
I-
• Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
ig
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Econoline RV 19 8 9, fully loaded, exc. cond, Weekend Warrior Toy 35K m i. , R e duced Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, $15,250. 541-546-6133 fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray Four Winds Class i nterior, u se d 3X , A 32' H u r ricane $24,999. 2007. CAN'T BEAT 541-389-9188 THIS! Look before you buy, b e low Looking for your market value! Size next employee? 8 mileage DOES Place a Bulletin help matter! 12,500 mi, wanted ad today and all amenities, Ford reach over 60,000 V10, Ithr, c h erry, readers each week. slides, like new! New Your classified ad low price, $54,900. will also appear on 541-548-5216 bendbulletin.com which currently reGulfstream Scenic ceives over 1.5 milCruiser 36 ft. 1999, lion page views evCummins 330 hp dieery month at no sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 extra cost. Bulletin in. kitchen slide out, Classifieds Get Renew tires,under cover, sults! Call 385-5809 hwy. miles only,4 door or place your ad fridge/freezer iceon-line at maker, W/D combo, bendbulletin.com Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp pro882 pane gen 8 more! Fifth Wheels $45,000.
•J~ •
RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-420-3634/390-1285
NOW!
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 1983, 8000-Ib Warn winch, 2 sets of tire At: www.bendbulletin.com
BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890 - RVs for Rent
1/5th interest in 1973
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and
engine, hangared in Bend. Exce//entperformance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-382-6752
Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, most options, new paint Jeep Comanche, 1990, 8 tires, 159K mi., $4250. 1966 GMC, 2nd owner, original owner, 1 67K, Call 541-233-8944 too many extras to list, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good $8500 obo. Serious buy- till 9/2015, $4500 obo. ers only. 541-536-0123 541-633-7761
I
AIR PORT CAF E
Now open 7 days/wk! • Daily Spec!als • New Management
ot:"!SuI pt":."'-BB psm'EBM-"!+l. Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 OPEN DAILY, 8-3 Chevy C-20 Pickup Plymouth Monaco Dynasty2004, by Carriage, 4 slideCall 541-318-8989 B a r racuda 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; 1966, original loaded, 3 slides, dieouts, inverter, satelcar! 300 auto 4-spd, 396, model sel, Reduced - now lite sys, fireplace, 2 Location, Location, hp, 360 V8, centerCST /all options, orig. $119,000, 5 4 1 -923flat screen TVs. lines, (Original 273 Location! owner, $22,000, 8572 or 541-749-0037 $60,000. eng & wheels incl.) Executive Hanqar 541-923-6049 541-480-3923 541-593-2597 at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn I ( I ' cf CHECK YOUR AD PROJECT CARS:Chevy P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 w/55' wide x 17' high biFB 1949-(SOLD) & fold dr. Natural gas heat, small block w/Weiand 2-dr Coupe 1950 offc, bathroom. Adjacent dual quad tunnel ram Chevy L with 450 Holleys. T-10 rolling chassis's $1750 to Frontage Rd; great ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, visibility for aviation busi- 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Southwind 35.5' Triton, ness. 541-948-2126 or Weld Prostar whls, complete car, $ 1949; 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duextra rolling chassis + Cadillac Series 61 1950, Please chec your a email 1jetjockOq.com pont UV coat, 7500 mi. dr. hard top, complete on the first day it runs extras. $6000 for all. 2 Bought new at w /spare f r on t cl i p ., $132,913; to make sure it is cor- Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 541-389-7669. $3950, 541-382-7391 based in Madras, alasking $93,500. rect. Sometimes inways hangared since Call 541-419-4212 structions over the new. New annual, auto phone are misTioga Class C 23', 2000, pilot, IFR, one piece understood and an error 25,500 mi, Onan gen, can occur in your ad. windshield. Fastest Ar$15,900. 541-419-9229 cher around. 1750 toIf this happens to your Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 ad, please contact us tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. Chevy Wagon 1957, 1971 new trans, 2 541-475-6947, ask for the first day your ad 4-dr., complete, new t i r es , ne w Rob Berg. appears and we will brakes, 2nd owner, $7,000 OBO, trades. be happy to fix it Please call r uns/drives g o o d . 916 as soon as we can. 541-389-6998 Make good w o od Trucks & If we can assist you, truck. $2395 OBO Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Winnebago 30A Sightplease call us: Heavy Equipment 541-350-2859 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, seer 2012, 31 ft., all 541-385-5809 auto. trans, ps, air, options, 2 sli d es, The Bulletin Classified frame on rebuild, re- Chevy 362HP V10, 10K mi., Sil v erado painted original blue, 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, mint cond., $105,900. original blue interior, 8' box, bed liner, std 541-330-5516 original hub caps, exc. cab, auto, 4x4, 54k chrome, asking $9000 mi., e xc . co n d ., Diamond Reo Dump or make offer. $9000. Truck 19 7 4, 12 -14 541-385-9350 541-977-6653 Fleetwood Wilderness 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812 bdrm, fireplace, Winnebago Suncruiser34' rear 2004, only 34K, loaded, AC, W/D hkup beauChrysler SD 4-Door too much to list, ext'd tiful u n it! $30,500. G K E A T warr. thru 2014, $54,900 541-815-2380 1930, CD S R oyal Dennis, 541-589-3243 Standard, B-cylinder, body is good, needs Hysfer H25E, runs some r e s toration, Ford 250 XLT 1990, well, 2982 Hours, runs, taking bids, 6 yd. dump bed, Travel Trailers $3500,call 541-383-3888, 139k, Auto, $5500. 541-749-0724 541-410-9997 541-815-3318 23' Wanderer, 1997, excellent condition, f u ll MONTANA 3585 2008, bath, roll-out awning. exc. cond., 3 slides, $5800. 541-546-9395 king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all RV CONSIGNMENTS options $37,500. WANTED 541-420-3250 We Do The Work ... Peterbilt 359 p o table You Keep The Cash! NuWa 297LK H i tch- water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Ford F350 Super Duty Hiker 2007, 3 slides, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp On-site credit Ranch 2 004, door panels w/flowers King 32' touring coach, left p ump, 4 - 3 U hoses, Deisel, loaded. Vin¹ approval team, & hummingbirds, kitchen, rear lounge, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. web site presence. A34788. white soft top 8 hard many extras, beautiful 541-820-3724 Now $23,788. We Take Trade-Ins! top. Just reduced to cond. inside & o ut, Free Advertising. S UBA R U . $3,750. 541-317-9319 $32,900 OBO, Prinev925 BIG COUNTRY RV or 541-647-8483 ille. 541-447-5502 days Bend 541-330-2495 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Utility Trailers & 541-447-1641 eves. H
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PYo~ Ler! Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7'x16', 7000 lb.
GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.
SUBSRUOPBRHD COM
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Redmond: 541-548-5254
541-350-8629
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
FORD RANGER XLT 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5
Ford Galaxie 5001963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 radio (orig),541-419-4989 F ord Model A 1 9 2 8 Roadster pic k u p, runs, titled, project car from So. Cal, no rust, not a rat rod. $4000. 541-876-7237, leave msg, or call after 6pm.
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: Springdale 29' 2 0 07, Pilgrim Ford Mustang Coupe In t ernational slide,Bunkhouse style, 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, www.bendbulletin.com 1966, original owner, sleeps 7-8, excellent Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 V8, automatic, great condition, $ 1 6 ,900, Fall price $ 2 1,865. shape, $9000 OBO. 541 -385-5809 541-390-2504 530-515-8199 541-312-4466
speed, with car alarm, CD player, extra tires on rims. Runs good. Clean. 92,000 miles o n m o t or . $ 2 6 0 0 OBO. 541-771-6511.
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REMODELING DESIGN 8 OUTDOOR LIVING SHOW •4
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PublishingDate: Tuesday, August 20
ONE-STOP SHOPPING FOR HOMEOWNERSLOOKING FOR INSPIRATION The Central Oregon Builders Association (COBAj presents the Remodeling Design 8 Outdoor Living Show just in time for autumn and winter home improvements. This guide features information about the vendors at the show, and is a handy resource for finding local home improvement experts and products for the home throughout the year.
THE NATURE OF WORDS
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THEGUIDETOCENTRAL OREGON'S PREMIER LITERARYEVENT
NOV. 7-11
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TheNatureofWordsannualliteraryfestival celebrates the literary arts in Central Oregon during a multi-day event each autumn. The event features authors, seminars, workshops and contests. Throughout the year, The Nature of Words, as an organization, supports • Q creative writing t hrough o utreach programs for both students and adults in Central Oregon. The Nature of Words guide is distributed to all Bulletin readers as well as those who attend the annual Friday, October 25 literary event. J,
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541-419-5480.
$6,450. Loaded, Leather, Heated seats, Bose sound system. Ext. roof rack (218) 478-4469
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I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s p d. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.
GMC Envoy 2002 4WD
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
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wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TV,full awning, excellent shape, $23,900.
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P ilgrim 27', 2007 5 t h
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chains, canopy, 22R (4) Hankook studded motor, 5-spd t ranstires, 20 5 / 65R15S, mission, $2495 obo. e xc. c o n d . $30 0 541-350-2859 541-388-5152 935 935 935 Call 541-647-3718 Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles 4 studded tires on rims, 935 Merc Sable, 205/75x14, Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 eng, power everything, Sport Utility Vehicles F ord Freestvle S E L $10 ea. 541-475-1091 new paint, 54K original - ~ N aea 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, miles, runs great, exfront & side airbags, 25 cellent condition in 8 mpg, 3rd row seating, Antique & out. Asking $8,500. pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, Classic Autos 541-480-3179 traction control, new tires 1/3 interest i n w e l lDodge Durango 2004, F ord Explorer X L T 8 brks, maintained exequipped IFR Beech Boremely well, runs 8 leather, tow nanza A36, new 10-550/ 2006, 4 x 4, cle a n . tdrives Buick Enclave 2008 CXL Limited, exlnt,148K hwy mi, pkg. V in ¹ 1 4 2 655. V in¹ A 1 8448. N o w prop, located KBDN. AWD, V-6, black, clean, Now $9988 $7200. 541-604-4166 $65,000. 541-419-9510 $7,988. 1921 Model T mechanicall y sound, 82k miles. $20,995. Delivery Truck BARU. S UB ARU. 4@ i SUSUBBRUOPSEHDCOM Call 541-815-1216 SUBSRUOPBEHD COM Restored & Runs GMC P!Efon 1971,Only sI 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend $9000. $19,700! Original low 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 541-389-8963 mile, exceptional, 3rd ~e• g~ ~ Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 owner. 951-699-7171 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $ 1 38,500.
541-948-231 0
Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811
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G6 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Sport Utility Vehicles S p ort Utility Vehicles
Autom o biles
GMC Envoy 2005, 4x4, Toyota Tacoma 2011, running boards, tinted 4x4, lift, very clean. window. Vin¹ 260943. V in¹ 0 1 5638. N o w $26,988. Now $12,688.
CHECKYOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and an e rror can occurin your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as
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96 Ford Windstar & 2000 Nissan Quest,
GMC Yu kon De n ali both 7-passenger 2005, loaded, v e r y clean. Vin¹ 1 69789. vans, high miles, low prices, $1200 8 Now $15,477 $2900, and worth every cent! ©+ S U BARU. 541-318-9999 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 SUBARUOIBKND COM
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond.,
L
business car, well maint'd, regular oil
Au t o mobiles
Nissan Sentra 2012,
12,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB, AC, ¹ more! $16,000. 541-788-0427
Need help fixing stuff? Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
s oon as w e c a n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for
940
Vans
•
next day, Sat. 11:00
a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, Porsche 911 1974, low please call us: mi., complete motor/ 541-385-5809 trans. rebuild, tuned The Bulletin Classified suspension, int. & ext. refurb., oil c o oling, C hevy C obalt 2 0 0 5, shows new in & out, white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K erf. m ech. c o nd. miles, over 35mpg, auto uch more! trans, AC, CD player, $28,000 541-420-2715 dual airbags, manual locks ¹ windows, good cond in/out, runs/drives great, non-smkr, always maintained. $4950. Call 541-350-9938
changes,$4500. Please call
Scion XB 2006, 5 dr., FWD, tinted windows, Jeep Wrangler Unlim541-633-5149 Clean. Vin¹ 060269. ited 2008, Hard top, Now $9688. lift, S weet ! V in¹ 572535. Now Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 @gjj S UBA R U . $23,988. 7 -pass. v a n wit h Little Red Corvette" p ower c h a i r lif t , "My1996 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 4 j®'S U B A R U. coupe. 132K, $1500; 1989 Dodge 877-266-3821 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Turbo Va n 7 - pass. $12,500 541-923-1781 Dlr ¹0354 has new motor and 877-266-3821 t rans., $1500. I f i n Dlr ¹0354 Toyota Camrysr terested c a l l Ja y 503-269-1057. 1984, $1200 obo; 9UBARUOlBRND COM
SUBARUOIBRND COM
1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car, $500. Call for details, 541-548-6592
975
Automobiles
Nissan Armada 2007, 4x4, tow pkg., pw, pl. V in¹ 7 0 0432. N o w $13,988.
Ford Taurus wagon 2004, very nice, pwr everything, 120K, FWD, good tires, $4900 obo. 541-815-9939
Toyota Corolla 2004, auto., loaded, 204k miles. orig. owner, non smoker, exc. c o nd. $6500 Prin e ville
Kia Optima EX 2004 2.7L V6, all power ~©S U B A R U . BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. SUBARUOIBRND COM options, moonroof, o wner, e xc . c o n d . 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 101k miles, new tires, spoiler, leather, 877-266-3821 Infinity AM/FM/CD, loaded, sunroof. Dlr ¹0354 alloys, Michelin & $8900. 541-706-1897 studded tires, ~oo meticulously mainToyota 4Ru n n er tained, $6250. 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , MOre pjXatBendbulletjn.I,Om Bend, 760-715-9123 4WD, V6, 5 speed,
t ow pkg., plus 4 studs tires on rims, r uns great. W a s $ 5500, now o n l y
Buick Lucerne CXL 2009, $12,500, low low miles; 2003 LeSabre, $4000. You'll not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a thousand words. Call
$4000.541-659-1416
Toyota Landcruiser, 2000, 85K mi, leather, tow pkg, beautiful! $17,700. 541-389-3769
503-358-8241
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
~Oo
More PixatBendbjletiij,com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Lexus CT 2011 200h hybrid 22.5k mil, ¹003116 $28,988
Looking for your next employee?
Oregon Autosource 541-598-3750
Bob, 541-318-9999.
for an appt. and take a drive in a 30 mpg car!
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Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in Toyota L a ndcruiser The Bulletin 2000, Au t o, 4x4, leather. Vin¹ 214783 Classifieds for: Now $18,788. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days ~g®'SUBARU. SUBARUOPI!EHD COM '16 -3 lines, 14 days 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend (Private Party ads only) 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
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Legal Notices • LEGAL NOTICE
IN TH E
C I R CUIT
COURT FOR THE STATE O F OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES ONEWEST BANK, FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS O F D ONALD A .
HILL AKA DONALD ALTON HILL; RONALD V A N CE HILL, IND I VIDUALLY A N D A S PURPORTED PERSONAL R E P-
RESENTATIVE OF
T HE ESTATE O F DONALD A. H ILL; PONDEROSA
PINES PROPERTY OWNER'S A S SOCIATION; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; STATE OF OREGON; OCCUPANTS OF THE P REMISES; A N D THE REAL PROP-
ERTY L O C A TED AT 52012 NOBLE FIR, LA PINE, OR-
EGON 97739, Defendants. Case No. 1 2CV0888. S U M MONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS:
UNKNOWN HEIRS O F D O NALD A . HILL AKA DONALD ALTON HILL: In the
name of the State of O regon, you a r e hereby required to
appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court a nd cause on o r before the e xpiration of 30 days from the date of the first p ublication of t h i s summons. The date of first publication in this matter is February 10, 2013. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a j u d icial foreclosure o f a d eed of t r us t i n which the p l aintiff r equests that t h e plaintiff be allowed to f oreclose your interest in the f ol-
lowing d e s cribed real property: LOT 15 IN BLOCK 6 OF PONDEROSA PINES, THIRD ADDITION,
DES-
CHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Commonly known a s: 52012 Noble Fir, La P ine, Orego n 97739. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS: READ THESE PA-
The Bullt.tin's
I
l
Service Directory reaches over 60,000 people each day, for a fraction of the cost of advertising in the Yellow Pages, Call 541-385-5800
PERS CAREFULLY! A l a w suit has been s tarted against you in the above-entitled court by OneWest Bank, FSB, plain t iff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mus t "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he court a legal document called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "an-
swer" (or "reply") must be given to the c ourt clerk or a dministrator within 30
days of the date of first publ i cation s pecified her e i n along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof o f service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Re f e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. ROUTH CRAB-
TREE OLSEN, P.C. By Michael Botthof, O SB ¹ 113 3 3 7 , mbotthof@rcolegal. com, Attorneys for P laintiff, 51 1 S W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, P: (503) 459-0140 F: (503) 977-7963. LEGAL NOTICE
c warstt •i•'
IN TH E C I R CUIT COURT FOR THE STATE O F OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, ONEWEST BANK,
FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS O F E D WARD R KONANTZ; JENNIF E R L. KONANTZ; UNITED S T ATES OF A MERI C A ; STATE O F ORE GON; OCCU P ANTS O F TH E
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
•
P REMISES; A N D THE REAL PROPERTY L O C ATED AT 15847 WOODCHIP L A NE , L A
the court, the p ersonal representative, or the lawyers for the personal representa-
PINE, OR E G ON 97739, Defendants. Case No. 1 2CV0731. S U M MONS BY PUBLIC ATION. TO T H E DEFENDANTS:
P.C. Dated and first published on February 10, 2013. JENNIFER LETZ, Personal representative. LEGAL NOTICE
UNKNOWN HEIRS O F E DWARD R KONANTZ; AND THE REAL PROPERTY LO C A TED AT 15847 WOODC HIP L A NE, L A
PINE, OR E G ON 97739: In the name of the State of Or-
egon, y o u are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court a nd cause on o r before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first p ublication of t h is summons. The date of first publication in this matter is February 10, 2013. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a j u d icial foreclosure o f a d eed o f t r us t i n which the p l aintiff r equests that t h e plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the f o llowing d e s cribed real property: LOT 5 IN BLOCK 26, TALL PINES FIFTH ADDITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Comm only known a s : 15847 W o o dchip Lane, La Pine, Oregon 97739. NOTICE TO D EFENDANTS: REA D
t ive, H U RLEY
RE,
PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE BEND CITY COUNCIL PROJECT NUMBER: PZ¹ 12-426 A P PLI-
C ANT: Central O regon Com m unity College NATURE OF
THE A PPLICATION:
Amendment to Bend D evelopment C o d e Chapter 2.7.1000 COCC Special Planned Dist r ict/ Overlay Zone to establish a r o ad/drive design review p rocess, standards and criteria f o r pr i vate roads. APPLICABLE CRITERIA: Bend Dev elopment Cod e , Chapter 4.1, Chapter 4.6; Bend Area General Plan; O r egon Administrative Rules; Chapter 660, Department of Land Conservation and Development, available in City Hall or at the Community Development Department portion of the C ity's w e bsite. PROPERTY L O CATION: 2600 NW Col-
lege
W ay,
Map
1 7-11-25, T L 1 0 0 0 and Map 17-11-25A, T L 0 0 103. D A T E , T IME, PLACE A N D LOCATION OF HEARING: March 6, 2 013, 7:00 p .m. a t 710 NW Wall Street,
L e g al Notices
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2:00 pm, March 21, 2013 at City Hall, PO Box 431, Bend, OR 97709. Both oral and written comments will be considered in the d evelopment of t h e Council's final funding decision. T he location of t h e
hearing is accessible to persons with dis-
abilities. P l ease let R obyn Christie, a t 541-388-5505, know if
y ou will need a ny special accommodation to attend or participate in the meeting. More info r mation a bout t h e Cit y ' s CDBG Program and the funding proposal process is available at City Hall, 710 Wall Street, during regular office hours. Adv ance notice is r e quested. I f s p ecial accommodations are needed, please notify R obyn C hristie a t 541-388-5505 so that
appropriate a s s i st ance can b e p r o vided. LEGAL NOTICE The regular meeting of the Board of Directors of th e D eschutes County Rural Fire Protection District ¹2 will be held on Tuesday, F e b ruary 1 2, 2013
a t 1 1 :30
L e gal Notices • ments of $12,587.45 as of September 21, 2012. By reason of said default, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed imm ediately due a n d payable, said sums being the f ollowing, to-wit: $29,957.45, plus all interest, late charges, fees and ass essments that b e come due after the dates set forth above and prior to the sale. W HEREFORE, n o tice is hereby given that the undersigned Trustee will on April 2, 2013, at the hour of 11:30 o'clock A.M., in accord with the standard of t ime established by ORS 187.110, at the Deschutes County Courthouse steps, 1 164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in said described real p roperty which t h e Grantors had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with a n y int e rest which the Grantors or their successors in interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and ex-
a.m. at the c onfere nce room o f t h e North Fir e S t a tion, 63377 Jamison St., penses of sale, inBend, OR. Items on cluding a reasonable the agenda include: by the the fire d epartment charge report, th e P r oject T rustee. N o t ice i s given that any Bend, OR, in City Hall Wildfire report, an up- further person named in ORS Council C h a mbers. date of the status of a 86.753 has the right, A DDITIONAL IN- f easibility study o n F ORMATION: T h e department funding, at any time prior to days before the application, all docu- and a discussion on five ments and evidence RFP's for an a udit. date last set for the ale, to h a v e t h i s s ubmitted by o r o n The meeting location sforeclosure proceedbehalf of the a ppli- is accessible to perT HESE PA P E RS ing dismissed and the cant and the applica- sons with disabilities. Trust CAREFULLY! A Deed reinstated tion criteria are availA request for interl awsuit has b e e n y payment to t h e able for inspection at preter for the hearing b started against you City Hall at no cost impaired or for other Beneficiary of the enin th e a b ove-en- and will be provided at accommodations for tire amount when due titled court by One(other than such pora r easonable cost. person with disabiliWest Bank, F S B, CONTACT PERSON: ties should be made tion of the principal as plaintiff. P l a intiff's Amy Bar r y at at least 48 hrs. before would not then be due claims are stated in had no default oc(541)693-2114, the meeting to: Tom curred) t he w r itten c o m and by curing abarry@ci bend or us Fay 54 1 - 318-0459. p laint, a c o p y o f any o t he r d e f ault Send w ritten t e sti- TTY 800-735-2900. which was filed with complained of herein mony to Amy Barry LEGAL NOTICE the a b ove-entitled c /o CDD, 71 0 N W that is capable of beTRUSTEE'S NOTICE C ourt. You mus t ing cured by renderWall St. 97702, or atOF SALE "appear" in this case ing the performance tend the meeting and Reference is made to or the other side will r equired under t h e state your views. The that certain trust deed win a u tomatically. hearing will be cono bligation o r T r u st m ade by L i s a M . To "appear" you ducted in accordance Jensen, as grantor, to Deed, and in addition m ust file with t he to paying said sums with B D C Se c t ion Western Title & Escourt a legal docuor tendering the per4.1.800. crow Company, as ment called a "moformance necessary tion" or "answer." LEGAL NOTICE t rustee, in f avor o f to cure the default by I NNspired, LLC, a n The "motion" or "anPublic Notice and paying all costs and swer" (or "reply") Notice of Public Oregon limited liabil- expenses actually inity company as benHearing must be given to the curred in enforcing the eficiary, dated Sep- obligation and t r ust court clerk or a dThe City of Bend has tember 21, 2004 and deed, together with ministrator within 30 received proposals for recorded on June 1, Trustee's days of the date of and 2010, as Instrument a ttorney's fees n o t first publ i cation funding through the City's Community DeNo. 2010-21349 of the exceeding s pecified her e i n the v elopment Bloc k O fficial Records o f along with the reamounts provided by Grant (CDBG) ProDeschutes C o unty, quired filing fee. It ORS 86.753. In congram. The Affordable Oregon, covering the struing this notice, the must be in proper Housing Adw s o ry following d e s cribed masculine gender inform and have proof Committee has devel- real property situated cludes the f eminine o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney oped its funding rec- in said county and and the neuter, the or, if t h e p l aintiff ommendations for the state, to-wit: Unit No. singular includes the 2013 — 2014 CDBG 687, Building No. 15, does not have an plural, t h e word Program Year, outUsage Week B, of the "Grantors" i n c ludes a ttorney, proof o f lined in the City's draft Inn of th e S eventh service on the plainany successor in in2013-2014 CDBG Ac- M ountain Con d o - terest to the Grantors tiff.lf you have any tion Plan. minium, according to questions, you as well as any other the Decla r ation person owing an oblishould see an attorCopies of the d raft thereof executed Feb- gation, th e p e rforney immediately. If Action Plan, including ruary 13, 1970 and you need help in mance of which is sethe proposed funding recorded in V olume cured by said Trust finding an attorney, recommendations, are 168, Page 886, Deed you may contact the Deed, and the words now available for re- records of Deschutes "Trustee" and "BenOregon State Bar's view at the at Bend County, Oregon, unLawyer Re f e rral eficiary" include their C ity Hall (710 N W der at Auditors File S ervice online a t respective s u c cesWall St.) in the City No. 467 7, as sors in interest, if any. www.oregonstateAdministration Office, amended and DATED: October 30, bar.org or by calling and on the City's web supplemented, as le- 2012. Benjamin M. (503) 684-3763 (in page gally described in atthe Portland metroKearney, Successor tached Exhibit A. Both T rustee, 8 0 0 Wil (www.ci.bend.or.us). p olitan a rea) o r Interested parties may the Beneficiary and toll-free elsewhere lamette Street, Suite also request copies to t he T r ustee h a v e 8 00, E ugene, O R in Oregon at (800) be sent through the elected to sell the said 97401, 541-484-0188. 452-7636. This m ail by call i n g real property to satsummons is issued NOTICE isfy th e o b ligations PUBLIC pursuant to ORCP (541)312-4915. ELECTRICAL secured by said Trust 7. ROUTH CRABAPPRENTICESHIP The Affordable Hous- Deed and a Notice of TREE OLSEN, P.C. OPPORTUNITIES ing Advisory Com- Default has been reBy Michael Botthof, Registered with the mittee will hold a pub- corded pursuant to O SB ¹ 1133 3 7 , State of Oregon lic hearing March 21, Oregon Revised Statmbotthof@rcolegal. 2013 at 2:00 pm in the utes 86.735(3); the This is a notice to escom, Attorneys for po o l of City of Bend Council default for which the tablish a P laintiff, 51 1 S W not to fulfill Chambers at 710 NW foreclosure is made is eligible's, 10th Ave., Ste. 400, immediate job openWall Street. The pur- G rantor's failure t o Portland, OR 97205, ings. Starting wage of pose of this hearing is abide by the obliga- first P: (503) 459-0140 period apprentice to receive input on the tions set forth in that F: (503) 977-7963. $10.45/hour. Advisory Committee's certain Co-Ownership is ACCEPTING APPLI2013-2014 f u n ding Agreement E s t a bFind It in ATIONS March 4 , recommendations. lishing Fractional In- C The Bulletin Classifieds! Citizens, social ser- terests dated S e p- 2013-March 15, 2013, Monday-Friday 8:00 541-385-5809 vice agencies, eco- tember 21, 2004, and a.m. - 5 p.m. Y O U nomic d e velopment entered into between MUST A P PL Y IN LEGAL NOTICE organizations, homeGrantor and BenefiP ERSON: Work IN T H E CIR C U IT less and housing pro- ciary, including the COURT O F THE viders, health profes- obligation to pay fees source of Bend, c/o Dave Medina, 1645 STATE OF OREGON s ionals, an d o t h er and assessments set FOR THE COUNTY interested parties are f orth therein i n t h e NE F o rbes R o a d, Bend, OR 97701. InOF DESCHUTES, In encouraged to partici- total am o un t of may be obthe Matter of the Espate. $29,957.45, including formation t ate of WILL I A M special assessments tained at w ww.highdesertapprenticeship. MAXSON JOHNSON, Written comments are of $17,370.00 as of com. III, Deceased, Case a lso welcome a n d September 30, 2012 No. 13PB0010. NOmust be received by and regular assessT ICE T O INT E R ESTED P ERSONS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the u ndersigned has been
appointed p e rsonal representative of the above-captioned estate. All persons having claims against the estate are required to p resent them, w i th vouchers attached, to the undersigned personal representative at 747 SW Mill View
Way, Bend, Oregon 9 7702, w i thin f o u r months after the date of first publication of t his notice, o r t h e claims may be barred. All persons whose r ights may b e a f f ected by t h e p r o ceedings may obtain additional information from the records of
A RE P U B L I C NOTICES I MPO RTA N T An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go towwvv.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classified Ads"
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