Bulletin Daily Paper 02-10-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUESDAY February10, 201 5

~

o ~ g

Insideachocolatier's kitchen

LICCS Bll 8 IleW SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• E1

bendbulletin com TODAY'S READERBOARD Wine growlers — with no new federal rules, wine growlers are still a go in Oregonand elsewhere — for now.B1

KITZHABER

Doctor leaveslegacyin cancer, hospicecare Hayes' By Tnrn Bannow

too. Despite his genuine concern, patients also described

After serving

There were days during her husband's decadelong treatment for leukemia

Kornfeld as direct, efficient

patients in Central Ore-

when Lisa Davies Pollard

to the development of the

said his oncologist, Dr. Stephen Kornfeld, would enter

region's first comprehensive

the room with tears in his

hospice facility, all while fighting for patients' lives and supporting their loved

The Bulletin

eyes. That meant a patient had passed away, she said. "He loves every single pa-

and sharp. Over the past 24 years, Kornfeld contributed cancer center and inpatient

tient," said Davies Pollard,

weave a baconblanket — and more fun bacon ideas.E2

of Bend. "So to lose one, he's cologist and hematologist at having a bad day. But he St. Charles Health System at worked through it." the end of 2014. But there was balance, SeeKornfeld/A6

Free throws' digpayoff

gon for more than 20 years, Dr. Stephen Kornfeld has retired from full-time practice at St. Charles Health System.

S

ones. Kornfeld retired from

Makin' dacon —Howto

— Central Oregon players and coaches explain why it's so important to cash in at the charity stripe.C1

cancer

full-time practice as an on-

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

oot ri e's uncertain uture:

A bipartisan Twitter town hall could be aboostfor the passage of a U.S.transportation bill. bendbnlletin.cnm/extrns

garnered by his fiancee, Cylvia Hayes,

of questions over the contracts between groups looking to shape public policies and Hayes while she was also acting as an unpaid state adviser. See Review/A4 r. 'I

E

Taking aim at asbestos in Nevada

bleeding. Punctured lungs. Those injuries, and worse, are possible every time a world-class skier plunges out of a starting gate and slides down

asnowy • Ski worlds racecourse. c overage, G i v en

By Deborah Blum

that, it is not

New York Times News Service

surprising

For the past few years, geologists

that skiing's international

governing body recently approved for use an air bag

Brenda Buck and

Rodney Metcalfhave

safety device that has been

in development for nearly four years. But many

combed the wild

terrain of southern Nevada, analyzing

racers have expressed

reluctance toward the new technology.

its stony dunes and

To outsiders, this reac-

tion might seem incongruous. What skier hurtling Joe Kline/The Bulletin

This footbridge, which sits atop a city waterline, extends over the Deschutes River at the end of Firerock Road in northwest Bend.

rocky outcroppings — and to their dismay, tallying mounting evidence of a landscape filled with asbestos. Asbestos occurs

naturally in many parts of the country,

• Bend has closed the Firerockfootbridge No crossing city of Bend recently closed the Firerock footbridge, which for a safety assessment.Nowthe city must The crosses the Deschutes River between the Rimrock West Phase 3 development and Rimrock Village. Most of the people who used the decide whether to repair it or removeit bridge would go from Rimrock West to the other side and back. By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

In a photo caption accompanying a story headlined "Girl Scout cookies — now a (mouse) click away," which appeared Monday,Feb. 9,on Page A1,Erin Crawford was misidentified. Sheappeared alongside BeccaReedand Katy Norris. In a story headlined "High Desert Museum founder and lover of nature dies at 69," which appearedSaturday, Feb. 7, the names ofDanaWhitelaw, president of the High Desert Museum, andNurbu Sherpa, caregiver for museumfounder Donald Kerr, were misspelled. The Bulletin regrets the errors.

of the contracts

ready faced months

tered shoulders. Internal

Corrections

letter asking Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum for an independent review

gated Hayes. Kitzhaber had al-

MOLVENA, Italy-

that rival, if not surpass, safety concerns. SeeAir bag/A5

office is under investigation by the state's attorney general.

This is the second time the Department of Justice has investi-

Broken collarbones. Shat-

allperformance arefactors

SALEM — Gov. John Kitzhaber's

back to say she'd already started an investigation.

New York Times News Service

But as often happens in pro sports, money and above

The Bulletin

Rosenblum wrote

By Snm Borden

the event of a violent crash?

By Taylor W.Anderson

his policy adviser.

Racersare reluctant to embrace ski air bags

downhill at up to 90 mph would not want a bit more protection, especially if his or her neck, shoulders and chest might be shielded in

I'evlew

while she was also

EDITOR'5CHOICE

C1, C4

Lllldei'

Kitzhaber sent a

And a Wed exclusive-

Related

work

Chains, locks and red warning signs make it clear the city of Bend does

not want people crossing a wooden bridge over the Deschutes River off of O.B.

sits atop a city waterline. The city closed the bridge, likely built in the 1970s, late

Tucked in the river canyon

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 50, Low29 Page B6

commercial development were sending the fibers into the wtnd. Buck and Metcalf,

perts in asbestos-re-

Half ay

lated diseases. With

Firereclf leetdrldge

data from Nevada's cancer registry, an epidemiologist prepared apreliminary report that outlining

re Ave.

what she felt was a

troubling pattern of mesothelioma, a canSource: City of Bend

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

natural erosion and

reached out to exFire ckRd

The future of the bridge planning to either repair the bridge or remove it, Vaughan sard. "We aregoing to make every effort we can to not have to remove the bridge," Vaughan said. SeeBridge/A4

scientists found

professors of geoscience at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas,

sides wait.

"We want to do a safety assessment for it," said

in northwest Bend, the bridge

BE D

weighing the future of the bridge while people on both is uncertain, with the city

the city of Bend Utilities Department.

I

last month. Now the city is

Riley Road. Ken Vaughan, safety and risk program manager for

Po Sholes Dr.

mostly in the West. But in Nevada, the

E1-8 Classified D 1 - 6Dear Abby E7 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Puzzles D3-4 Horoscope f7 $ n B2 Crosswords D 4 L o cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies

B5 Q$4 E7

AnIndependent Newspaper

vol.113,No.41, 32 pages, 5 sections 0

cer often related to

asbestos exposure. See Asbestos/A5

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

IIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

The Bulletin

NATION Ee ORLD

HOW to reaCh US NeW EhglOlld StONI —More than 2feet of fresh snow piled up in parts of NewEngland on Monday, breaking records set during the blizzard of1978and testing thepatience of officials andcommuters as forecasters warned ofmorewinter misery later in the week.The latest onslaught forced thecancellations of hundreds of flights, tested transit systems andtempers andcollapsed roofs straining beneaththeweight of 5 feet or more ofsnow inlessthan two weeks.

STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F ri.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun.

GENERAL INFORMATION

Beating death —An 11-year-old suburban Ohiogirlhas been charged with murder inthebeating death of a2-month-old who was staying overnight with herand hermother to givethe baby's moma break. The11-year-old, hermother andthe babygirl, Zuri Whitehead, were on acouch downstairs whenthe mother fell asleep at about 3a.m. Friday, Wickliffe PoliceChief RandyIcesaid at a newsconference Monday. Themother wasawakenedless thananhour later by herdaughter, who was holding thebadly injured infant. Ice said the11-year-old took the infant upstairs. Whenshe returned downstairs, the infant was bleeding and herheadwas badly swollen, he said. The11-year-old's mother immediately called 911,Icesaid. Zuri wasflown to a children's trauma center in Cleveland,whereshe died.

541-382-1811 ONLINE

www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL

bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

541-383-0367

Brian WilliamS COntrOverSy —Avigorous debate over Brian Williams' future is brewing as"NBCNightly News" aired Mondaywithout the decadelonganchor. Somecritics suggest that Williams, who apologized last weekfor falsely claiming hewas in a helicopter that had been hit by a grenadewhile in Iraq in 2003, should befired. Others wonder if commerce will win out, sinceWilliams haskept"Nightly News" at the top of the ratings while much ofhis newsdivision crumbled aroundhim.

NEW S R O O M FA X

541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.com Ciiy Desk..........newsepbendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com

OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 SW Chandler Ave Bend, OR97702 Mailing.........P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706

Si sil.AvL

Deauiesi e

Petr David Josek/The Associated Press

A pro-Russian rebel walks along a shelled-out street in Donetsk, Ukraine, on Monday. An armed conflict between Russia-backed separatists and Ukraine government forces has killed more than 5,300

people and displaced more than a million people in eastern Ukraine.

a ma: ai or a s e ore armin raine

Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher John Costa........................541-383-0337 ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-363-0356

New York Times News Service

W ASHINGTON —

change Mr. Putin's calculus? P r e s- And the possibility of lethal

ident Barack Obama said defensive weapons is one of Monday he would wait for the those options that's b eing examined."

Many leaders in European backed economic sanctions capitals share the Obama ad- against Russia would survive ministration's deep distrust such a dispute. "Russian aggression has of Putin, but they continue to hope the pressure of eco- only reinforced the unity nomic sanctions will lead him between the United States, to accept some sort of settle- Germany and other Europement. But the major Western an allies," the president said. European countries, includ- "There's going to continue to ing Britain, Germany and be astrong, unified response France, oppose sending arms. between the U n ited States "We continue to pursue a and Europe; that's not going diplomatic solution, although to change." we have suffered a lot of setMerkel said the alliance backs," Merkel said during would remain "solid" and add-

Such assistance would repre-

sent a striking break with European allies who say arming

Business Tim Ooran.........541-363-0360 CiiySheila G.Miler..........541-617-7631 CommunityLite, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....541-363-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon.......................541-363-0377 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey.....541-363-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............541-363-0359

REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 NW Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box766 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-546-3203

CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356.

TO SUBSCRIBE

Home deliveryandE-Edition: One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)

By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutss County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-365-5609 Advertisingfax..................541-385-5802 Other information .............541-362-1611

OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-363-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7625 Back issues ......................541-365-5600

All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS fr552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc., 1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97706. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

OtOeOaaO ao04t 04r The estimated jackpot is now $10 million.

Merkel and Obama sought to play down the impact of a disagreement, saying the in-

deciding whether to provide lethal weapons to Ukraine.

DEPARTMENT HEADS

TALK TO AN EDITOR

soldiers from Russia. But both

outcome ofpeace talks before

Advertising Jay Brandt.....541-363-0370 Circulation AdamSears ...541-365-5605

HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................

the country against Russian

aggression would make the conflict worse. In a

DreW PetelSOIImurder plat —Drew Peterson, the former suburban Chicagopolice officer convicted of killing his third wife and suspected in thedisappearance of his fourth, has beencharged with trying to hire someone to kill the prosecutor who helped put him instate prison, authorities announcedMonday.Peterson appeared incourt on charges that betweenSeptember 2013and December2014, while behind bars, hesolicited a person tofind someonehe could payto kill Will County State's Attorney James Glasgow. Peterson did not enter a plea. Peterson, 61,has beenin prison since hewasconvicted in 2012 of first-degreemurder inthe 2004 bathtub drowning of his third wife, Kathleen Savio.

Obama said. "What other which has been stoked by a means can we put in place to steady supply of weapons and

By Michael D. Shear and Andrew Higgins ADMINISTRATION

MOOh SOIIVOlliIS fOllllll —More than four decadesafter the Apollo 11 moon landing, acloth bag full of souvenirs brought back byastronaut Neil Armstrong hascometo light. Amongthe trove: a16 mmmovie camera from insidethelunar modulethat filmed its descent to the moon and Armstrong's first steps onthe lunar surface in1969. That camera "took one ofthe most significant sets of images inthe 20th century," said Allan Needell, acurator in spacehistory at the National Air and Space Museum. In aninterview Monday, Needell saidthemuseumhad been told about thebagin June 2013 byArmstrong's widow, who had found it while cleaningout acloset in their suburban Cincinnati home.

j o in t W h i t e H o use

news conference with Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, Obama said he was hopeful economic sanctions would persuade President Vladimir Putin of Russia to

seize a diplomatic solution. But he said the United States

her White House visit. The issue of whether to pro-

would consider sending defensive weapons to Ukraine if

vide more than nonlethal military aid to Ukraine's army

European-ledtalks scheduled

has threatened to cleave what

for this week did not produce has until now been a united peace. front among the United States "If, in fact, diplomacy fails, and some of its major Europewhat I've asked my team to an allies over how to respond do is to look at all options," to th e U k r a inian c o nflict,

ternational coalition that has

Dbama, Netanyahu ClaSh —Thelatestconflict between President BarackObamaand Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel erupted into public viewMonday,asthe two leadersclashedfrom afar over Netanyahu's plans tovisit Washington next month andthe direction of negotiations with Iran overits nuclear program. At aWhite House news conference,Obamasignaled his displeasurewith the speech Netanyahu isscheduled to give in March to ajoint meeting of Congress at the invitation of HouseSpeakerJohn Boehner,suggesting that his visit two weeksbeforethe Israeli election risked injecting politics into the relationship betweenthe United Statesand Israel. But in Jerusalem, Netanyahu vowed he would go forward with the speech,despite increasing pressure in Israelandthe United States to cancel oralter his plans to appeal directly to U.S.Iawmakersfor a harder line against Iran.

ed that "this t r ans-Atlantic

partnership for Germany and for Europe is indispensable." Obama signaled his willingness to wait for Merkel, Pu-

— Fromwirereports

tin and the leaders of Ukraine and France to seek a negoti-

2 Locationsin Bend

Find It All

ated cease-fire at a meeting scheduled for Wednesday in

Main Center 2f50NE StudioRd,Suite10

Online

Minsk, the capital of Belarus.

NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteito

bendbulletin.com

541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com

Weekly Arls Ifr

Gay marriage inAlabama begins, butonly inparts By Alan Blinder and Richard Perez-Pena New York Times News Service

B IRMINGHAM,

Ala.

Despite a f ederal judge's rulings legalizing same-sex marriage, most probate judges in Alabama on Monday refused to issue marriage licenses to gay and lesbian couples, escalating a legal showdown that echoed the

unconstitutional. To some, including Justice Clarence Thomas, who offered a spirited dissent, the failure to order a stay was the

strongest signal to date that

Q

DENTUREPROBLEMS? pg

MSGfkmfMS

DOES EVERYONE MUMQLEP

+e stsa ~

Start enjoying the benefits of secure, natural looking teeth in as little as one day.

'

Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS

FORMERLY

I.EAQEI.D HEARINiaAIDCENTER

1-888-568-9884

the court is likely to establish a nationwide right to same-

)

sex marriage. "The court looks the other way as yet

TURNER D MD, L L C

another federal district judge casts aside state laws without

battles over desegregation making any effort to preserve here in the 1960s. the status quo pending the Although court officials in court's resolution of a constisome of the state's largest cit- tutional question it left open ies — including Birmingham, in United States v. Windsor," Huntsville and Montgomery he wrote, referring to a 2013 — quickly issued marriage dectston. "This licenses to same-sex couacquiescence," ples, up to 52 of Alabama's 67 Thomas added, "may well be counties, according to the gay seen as a signal of the court's rights group Human Rights i ntended resolution of t h at Campaign, declined to pro- question." cess the required paperwork. Clarity was hard to come It was unclear how many of by in Alabama, however. the judges were acting out of At the Jefferson County overt defiance and how many Courthouse here, Judge Miwere simply weighing how chael Graffeo of Circuit Court to navigate a freshly jumbled officiated, at times tearfully, legal landscape after Chief at the civil wedding of Dinah Justice Roy Moore of the Ala- McCaryer and Olanda Smith, bama Supreme Court on Sun- the first to emerge from the day ordered the judges not crowd of same-sex couples to issue marriage licenses to Monday morning. "I now prosame-sex couples. nounce Olanda and D i n ah "We've got Alabama's chief are married spouses, entitled justice issuing an order, and to all rights and privileges, as we've got an order out from well as all responsibilities, afa federal judge," said Judge fordedand placed upon them Greg Norris of Monroe Coun- by the state of Alabama," ty, who is also president of Graffeo said. the Alabama Probate Judges On the other hand, in FlorAssociation. "It's just a very ence, in the northwest corner difficult situation."

Enterlainment

of the state, Judge James Hall

The day o f

e s calating of Probate Court explained to Beth Ridley and Rose RoysSupreme Court said it would den that he would not issue not block the ruling by Judge a license, saying, "I'm caught Callie V.S. Granade of U.S. up in the middle of this."

Come learn the ABC's and 0's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'ii find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.

Free classes open to the public: Bend — Thursday, February 19, 5:30 p.m. Central Oregon Community College — Chandler Lab 1027 NW Trenton Avenue Sponsored by:

For more information call 541-241-6927

www.Medtcare.pactnceource.com PaCtj tCSOurCe Ahedicare

events began when the U.S.

D istrict

C o u rt , w h o l as t

The tearful couple said they

month declared Alabama's would drive to Birmingham m arriage restrictions to b e and marry there.

This event isonly for educational purposes.Noplan-specific benefits or details will be shared. PacificSource Community Health Plans,Inc. is anHMO/PPOplan with a Medicarecontract. Enrollment inPacificSourceMedicaredependson contract renewal. Y0021 MRK2699CMSAccepted


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 3

TART TODAY

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

It's Tuesday, Feb. 10, the 41st

day of 2015. Thereare324 days left in the year.

ANNIVERSARYAPPROACHES

HAPPENINGS

owe U incons eec a cut-an — aste o

SpaCeX launCh —After being forced to scrap potential launches SundayandMonday, SpaceX tries again to launch its Falcon 9 rocket with a U.S. satellite designed to watch for solar storms.

HISTORY Highlight: In 1940, MGM

released theanimated short "Puss Gets theBoot," the debut of Tom andJerry (although in this cartoon, the cat is called "Jasper" by its owner while the mouse wasdubbed"Jinx" by creators William Hannaand Joseph Barbera). In1763, Britain, Spain and France signed theTreaty of Paris, ending theSevenYears' War (also known as the French and Indian War inNorth America). In1840, Britain's QueenVictoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg andGotha. In 1841, UpperCanadaand Lower Canadawere proclaimed united under anAct of Union passed by theBritish Parliament. In1959, a major tornado tore through the St. Louis area, killing 21 peopleandcausing heavy damage. In1962, the Soviet Union exchanged captured American U-2 pilot Francis GaryPowers for Rudolf Abel, aSoviet spy held by the United States.

Republi canGeorgeRomney announced his ultimately successful candidacy for governor of Michigan. In 1967, the 25th Amendment to the U.S.Constitution, dealing with presidential disability and succession, was ratified as Minnesota andNevadaadopted it.

In1981, eight peoplewere killed when afire set by a busboy broke out at the LasVegas Hilton hotel-casino. In1989, Ron Brownwas elected the first black chairman of the Democratic National Committee. In1998, Dr. DavidSatcher was confirmed by theSenate tobe surgeon general. Ten years ago: Playwright Arthur Miller died in Roxbury, Connecticut, at age 89on the 56th anniversary of the Broadway opening of "Death of a Salesman." Britain's Prince Charles announced he would marry his divorced lover, Camilla Parker Bowles, in April. North Korea boasted publicly for the first time that it possessed nuclear weapons. Five years ago: Shuttle Endeavour arrived to awarm welcome at the International Space Station, delivering a newroom and observation deck. Former CongressmanCharlie Wilson, a TexasDemocratwhosefunding of Afghanistan's resistance to the Soviet Union waschronicled in the movieand book "Charlie Wilson's War," died in Dallas at age76. One year ago: In Iraq, aninstructor teaching his militant recruits how to makecar bombs accidentally set off explosives in his demonstration, killing 21 of them in ablast that alerted authorities to the existence of a training campnorth of Baghdad.

BIRTHDAYS Cinematographer Douglas Slocombe (Film: "Raiders of the Lost Ark") is102. Operasinger Leontyne Price is 88.Actor Robert Wagner is 85. Singer Roberta Flack is 78.Olympic gold-medal swimmer Mark Spitz is 65. Walt DisneyCo. chairman andchief executive Robert Iger is 64. World Golf Hall of FamerGregNorman is 60. ABCNewscorrespondentGeorgeStephanopoulos is 54. Retired MLBAll-Star Lenny Dykstra is 52. Political commentator GlennBeckis 51. Actress LauraDern is48. Actress Elizabeth Banks is41. Actress UzoAduba (TV: "Orange is the NewBlack") is 34. Actress EmmaRoberts is 24. Actress MakenzieVegais 21. Actress ChloeGraceMoretz is 18. Actress YaraShahidi (TV: "black-ish") is 15. — From wire reports

Two versions of a speech Abraham Lincoln delivered near the close of the Civil War will go on display at

"all nations "

"And like the Gettysburg Address, the second inaugural (speech) is full of one-syllable

the Library of Congress next month, offering a glimpse at our 16th president's quirky composihon style.

words," she said. "Most of it is

By Michael E. Ruane

very simple language — beautiful, but simple language."

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON In the winter of 1865, near the

Lincoln wrote the speech

on four sheets of lined paper, probably using a steel-nibbed pen he dipped in standard iron gall ink. A few of his ink smudges are still on the pages. The last page is significantly darker, from exposure, than the first three because it was

close of the Civil War, a haggard-looking Abraham Lincoln took a printed draft of his

upcoming second inaugural address and cut it to pieces.

(yQ

He sliced it i nto 2 7 seg-

ments, and then, using the smelly, a n imal-bone-based

exhibited more often, the ex-

glue of the time, reassembled

perts think. That is the page thatbears the famous passage:

~pW

iton aheavy piece ofpaperhe folded down the middle. He took the original four

"with malice toward none."

According to records, that page might have been on display by itself for as long as 10 years inthe 1950s, said William Jacobs, head of the library's interpretative programs office.

large paragraphs and broke them into 25, carefully spacing them on the page for special emphasis and in the process creating one of the greatest speeches in Ameri-

The handwritten v ersion

can history.

was given to the library in 1916 by descendants of Hay. On the back of the last page

Next month, the Library of

Congress will put on display for the first time in a half-cen-

Lincoln has inscribed it:

Linda Davidson /The WashingtonPost

L i n c oln's p a t chwork President Abraham Lincoln first wrote his second inaugural address by hand, then had a typed, cut "reading copy" of the speech and glued "reading copy," which he had on the podium. Both versions will be on exhibit at the Library and the four-page handwritten of Congress in March honoring the150th anniversary of Lincoln's famous speech dated March 4, version he gave to his young 1865.

"Original manuscript of second inaugeral presented to Maj. John Hay. A. Lincoln.

secretary, John Hay, days before his assassination. The library is mounting the

misspelled inaugural.)

tury

The library is not certain

The documents are considOn the reading copy, he display to mark the 150th an- ered among the library's "top broke out "And the war came" niversary of the speech March treasures," said Elmer Eus- and made it a separate, dra4. But because the documents man, chief of the conservation matic paragraph — "one of the are so fragile, the display will division. They are stored in a many famous phrases" in the be only four days: March 4 to protective vault. speech, Krowl said. "It's pretty humbling to March 7. The four-page, handwritten The documents are sched- see them naked," said Holly copy is powerful in its own uled to be displayed in the Krueger, head of the library's way. Great Hall of the library's Jef- paper conservation section. Krowl said Lincoln wrote ferson Building, across from Lincoln had taken such care it in large, neat handwriting the U.S. Capitol. The library with his March 4, 1865, speech probably to send to the printer. believes the documents were because the defeat of the Con- But he made some last-minute last displayed together in 1959. federacy was at hand, said corrections before he did that. "It could be a once-in-a-life- Krowl, the Civil War specialist. He altered, for example, the time opportunity to see all the

what the bloody, four-year struggle had been about and War specialist. where the country might be The speech, which is etched headed. stead, that the whole country — "both North and South"-

it concludes, "with charity for all; with firmness in the right,

And, typical of Lincoln, he w anted tobebrief.The speech

as God gives us to see the

was about 700 words. But he

right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in." Lincoln was shot at Ford's Theatre in W a shington 10 weeks later, on April 14. He

cut and pasted them on his reading copy for maximum

On Thursday, experts at the

where it obtained the reading copy of the speech. Lincoln

among ourselves and with the world."

he spoke. "I expect the (speech) to wear as well as anything I haveproduced," he later wrote.

1

sl

• I • TV APPL IANCE

PRESIDENTS' DAY+2015

SAVINGS=

war's cause, slavery. •

Although there are no eyewitness accounts, "you can just imagine Lincoln sitting there with a pair of scissors and the gluepot, thinking

DID YOU HEAR?

Ultimate Valentine: Name a roach after a lovedone

>.s s s.4

gQg oN THEPAIR

U%jf AFTER REBATE

;

• e

$832

•O

>washerMSRP$1099 Good: 2-4/2-24

$832

*DryerMSRp$1ogg ••

Good: 2-4 / 2-24 NlaslerCard®

qoo

Sy Mas 24/2-16

NEW ENERGYSTAR® certified Dryer uses20% ERKKtlessenergy thanstandard dryers.

•9 •

Maytag® Maxima® Front Load Washer & Electric Dryer • Extra Lanle 4.5Cu.Ft. Capacity • MaytagCommercial Technology powerWashCyde

• e

tiMHW5100ow I MEo5100ow

'

Find low sale prices on Whirlpool, Maytag 8 Amana ranges, dishwashers, microhoods, refrigerators!

*MSRP $1099

s MSRP$1499

INastercard® Rebate

By INail 24/246

• The names correspond to

actual codamches, and at least

Maytag® 25 Cu. Ft. Stainless Steel Side-By-Side Refrigerator

Amana®19Cu. Ft. Stainless Steel Bottom Freezer Refrigerator

at the Bronx Zoo, there are thousands that are still, sadly,

nameless. • Some cockroaches might

• Temp Assure~ FreshnessControls

• Extemal Ice & Filtered Water Dispenser

¹ABB1921 BRM

¹MSF25D4MDM

even be able to survive a nuclear . Just like your love, am I

Check out our

right'?

• Madagascar HlsslBg Cock-

cording to the San Francisco

• The money goes toward Zoo. For more information, visit httpJ/bmnxzoo.comhxiach.

50:.=-"

February 11-17

life Conservation Society

roaches have been unfairly maactuaHycare about. It'snot areal ligned by their urban relative thing. No one is allowed to name pesls. They have no interest in starsafter random people, and terrorizing humans, and they paying money to do it doesn't are an important part of their make it any more possible. nativeMadagascan ecosystem. On the other hand, there are • They also have super insect also a lot of good reasons to powers, induding the ability to choose the Madagascm Hissing scale glass and, of course, hissCockroach as your means of ob- ing: They are believed to be the jectifyingyourboo (or ex-boo for only insects that can hiss, acstudpllg and preservlllg specles here on earth through the Wild-

4' Ei,r»

s.4.' '".,s

SCRAKH-N-DENT SECTION

name a starafter someone you

that matter):

+4 s ~eg • ~+y~t

'100

It's almost Valentine's Day, so

~

t

t$

impact.

make war rather than let the light, covering the documents nation survive, and the othwith large sheets of paper er would accept war rather before and after discussing than let it perish. And the war them. came."

now is probably as good a time as any to remind you that naming a shu after your loved one is aterriblewasteoftime andmoney. But we have another suggestion: Why not name a hissing cedaoach afterher or him'? Seriously. There's noreasonto

said to have turned sunny as

s sfi

t <+i ~ ess

careful to limit the exposure to

The Washington Post

dress at the east front of the Capitol on a rainy day that is

y* s '

might share the blame for the

library showed the two versions of the speech, explained about how he wanted to do Lincoln's quirky composition this," Krowl said. style and spoke about the In the handwritten version, damage thedocuments have he wrote about the start of the incurred over 150 years. conflict: "Both parties deprecated Even in a library conservation lab, the experts were war, but one of them would

By Abby Phillip

delivered the five-minute ad-

The new ending: "to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace "But I believe it is not immeamong ourselves and with the diately popular. Men are not world." flattered by being shown ... a He later crossed out "the difference of purpose between world" and replaced it with the Almighty and them."

He didn't want to celebrate,

however, and suggested, in-

on the war and its causes, slavery and the judgments of God, healing and peace. "With malice toward none,"

died the next morning.

conclusion by writing a new ending on another strip of paper and pasting it over the old ending. The old ending: "to achieve and cherish a lasting peace

He wanted to summarize

pages that we have," said Michelle Krowl, a library Civil in stone at the Lincoln Memorial, is a 700-word meditation

April 10, 1865." (Lincoln often

forbargains galore! Watch us change and grow in order to serve you better. 541-382-6223 i

s

'

B

s


A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

IN FOCUS:CLIMATE CHANGE AND CULTURE

Review

Climate is ofgrowing concern to Hispanics

Continued fromA1 "It is increasingly clear

By Coral Davenport

of whites agreed the Earth had been warming, and 41 per-

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Alfredo

cent attributed that to human activity. A 2014 study in the scientific

Padilla grew up in Texas as a migrant farmworker who fol-

journal PLOS One found that nationally, minorities were

lowed the harvest with his par-

ents to pick sugar beets in Minnesota each summer. He has

exposed to concentrations of

the toxic pollutant nitrogen dioxide that were 38 percent

not forgotten the aches of labor

or how much the weathertoo little rain, or too muchaffected the family livelihood. Now an insurance lawyer in Carrizo Springs, Texas, he

higher than what whites faced.

Nitrogen dioxide is linked to respiratory illness and, such as planet-warming carbon dioxide, is spewed from vehicle tailpipes and power plant smoke-

said he was concerned about

global warming. "It's obviously happening, the flooding, the record droughts," said Padilla, who agrees with the science that

stacks. While it is not directly

mer Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit.

That contract hadn't previously been reported by the t hat th e s t atutory p r o - governor's office, and other cess established to review reportsallege Hayes may not questions of this nature, to determine the facts and to

have noted the income on her taxes, citing tax returns she

arrive at conclusions concerning whether laws have been violated has in no way stemmed the rush to judgment currently underway inthe Oregon media,"

shared. Two groups asked for the

Kitzhaber said. "Therefore, I

a m re-

questing that your office use its authority to undertake a full and indepen-

linked to global warming, populations that experience high levels of exposure to it are likely to be more supportive of pollution regulation in general, Sanchez said. The nationwide poll was

based on weather. And when

conducted Jan. 7-22 using cell-

ciate your intent to coop-

phones and landlines by the Times, Stanford and Resourc-

erate fully,"

there are hurricanes, when

there is flooding, who gets hit global warming. the worst? The people on the Among Hispanic respon-

liberals. "There's a stereotype that

poor side of town."

Latinos are not aware of or concerned about these issues,"

dents to the poll, 54 percent

Padilla's concern is echoed rated global warming as exby other Hispanics across the tremely or very important to country, according to a poll them personally, compared conducted last month by The with 37 percent of whites. Sixty-seven percent of Hispanics

New York T i mes, Stanford University and the nonpartisan environmental research

said they would be hurt personally to a significant degree

group Resources for the Fu- if nothing was done to reduce ture. The survey, in which Pa- global warming, compared dilla was a respondent, found with half of whites. that Hispanics are more likeAnd 63 percent of Hispanics ly than non-Hispanic whites said the federal government to view global warming as a should act broadly to address problem that affects them per- global warming, compared sonally. It also found that they

with 49 percent of whites.

are far more likely to support polici es,such astaxesand regulations on greenhouse gas pollution, aimed at curbing it. The findings in the poll could have significant implications for the 2016 presidential campaign as both parties seek

A greater percentage of Hispanics than whites identify as

Democrats, and Democrats are more likely than Republicans and independents to say

that the government should fight climate change. In the poll, 48 percent of Hispanics identified as Democrats, 31

to win votes from Hispanics,

es for the Future. Interviews

were in English or Spanish with 1,006 adults, including

said GabrielSanchez, an as- 738 non-Hispanic white adults sociate professor of political and 103 Hispanic adults. The science at the University of margin of sampling error is New Mexico and director of plus or minus 4 percentage research at Latino Decisions, points for non-Hispanic white a survey firm focused on the adults and 1 2 p ercentage Hispanic population. "But points for Hispanic adults. Latinos are actually among The combined results have the most concerned about the been weighted to adjust for environment, pa r t icularly variation in the sample relatglobal warming." ing to geographic region, sex, One reason, Sanchez and race, Hispanic origin, marital others said, is that Hispanics status, age, education and, often live in areas where they for landline households, the are directly exposed to pollu- number of adults and number tion, such as neighborhoods of phone lines. In comparing near highways and power subgroups, The Times only plants. reports poll results that are staHispanics typically rate im- tistically significant. migration, education and emTony Vazquez, of San Jose, ployment in the top tier of the California, a poll respondent policy issues on which they and a former truck driver who vote, but the poll is the latest in now makes nickel plates for a growing body of data show- car parts, said in a follow-up ing that Hispanics also care interview that he would supintensely about environmental port policies such as nationissues. al taxes on greenhouse gas A 2013 poll by the Pew Re- pollution. "Where I live, you don't search Center found that 76 percent of Hispanics agreed know what you're breathing that the Earth had been warm- — smog and pollution from ing, and 59 percent attributed refineries, ships, diesel trucks,"

particularly in states such as percent as independents and Florida and Colorado that will 15 percent as Republicans. be influential in determining Among whites, 23 percent the outcome of the election. identified as Democrats, 41 The poll also shows the chal- percent as independents and lenge for the potential Repub- 27percent as Republicans. lican presidential candidates Overall, the findings of the — including two Hispanics poll run contrary to a long— many of whom question or standing view in politics that deny the scientific basis for the the environment is largely that warming to human activ- Vazquez said. "You're breathfinding that humans caused a concern of affluent, white ity. By comparison, 62 percent ing it all."

Bridge

bridge does "get used quite a looking up- and downriver bit." Most of the people cross- "because it is such a beautiful ing it are going from Rimrock site." West to the other side and Reaction to the city's closback. ing of the bridge and its

Continued fromA1 Before deciding what to do

with the bridge, city officials must first decide what to do

Rimrock West has about 40

homes spread around more also likely due for replace- than 130 acres, and the develment or removal. City engi- opment includes 11 common neering crews are set to eval- areas such as small private uate the waterline soon. p arks, said M a r tita M a r x , The bridge crosses from a secretary for the homeowners sliver of public land between association representing peohomes in Rimrock Village on ple living in Rimrock West. the east to private land in Rim- The design promotes people rock West to the west. Called walking around the neighborthe Firerock footbridge, the hood and to the river. bridge isaccessed from the Residents of Rimrock West east via a short path and flight use the bridge to cross the of stairs leading down from river and access fishing, she Firerock Road, which con- said. Many people, including nects to O.B. Riley Road. Marx, also like to walk halfWhile he did not have exact way across the bridge, stop numbers, Vaughan said the there and turn around after with the waterline, which is

u ncertain f u ture i s

team has advised his departm i x e d ment to assume the bridge

among people living in Rim-

belongs to the city. The bridge rock West, Marx said. Some likely was built along with the people are ecstatic the bridge waterline, which was part of may be removed, she said, a private water district before while some people would it was added to the city's waprefer to have the bridge kept ter delivery system about 25 and fixed up. years ago. "They seem pretty well tied Those who would like to see the bridge go argue that together," Vaughan said. it brings in unwanted visi— Reporter: 541-617-7812, tors, including people who do ddarling@bendbulletin.com not clean up after their dogs or who litter along the river.

will conduct a full investigation in March.

it so that if other things come up, he can say, 'You know I R osenblum can't talk about that because

wrote back. Rosenblum's authority

there's an ongoing investigation,'" Moore said.

is to investigate cases of

Kitzhaber's office on Fri-

potential public corruption. She can't file criminal charges, however. Oregon law leaves that power to the state's 36 county dis-

day released a trove of documents from a pile of records

trict attorneys. Marion County District

requests that had amassed since October. The office still

hasn't released some documents, including Hayes' emails to state workers, that

Attorney Walt Beglau said The Bulletin requested in he couldn't comment at this time.

No one

October.

Central Oregon legislators, i s a l l eging who had previously been

criminal conduct against

Kitzhaber. News reports have raised questions over whether Hayes has failed to pay income taxes on money from some of the

mixed on how they wanted Kitzhaber to move forward,

said Monday they were happy he'd taken this step. "I'm pleased the governor has acknowledged that his

contracts, however.

and Ms. Hayes' ethical and

Hayes was also investigated by Attorney General John Kroger in 2011 forcontractsshe received

alleged criminal violations need an independent investigation," said Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend. "It is my hope that the attorney general will now open a fair and thorough investigation and let the evidence inform a decision."

before Kitzhaber started his third term in 2011. She

wasn't charged with any crimes as a result of that

investigation. The initial questions about H ay e s ' wor k stemmed from an article i n W i l lamette Week i n early October, just weeks before the election. The

article pointed out private contracts that seemed to

the initial questions up to

House Republican L eader Mike M cLane, R-Powell Butte, also supported Rosen-

blum's move.He had previously focused on the ethics commission inquiry. "Given the disclosure of emails on Friday and the media reports that followed, the Attorney General's decision to

launch an investigation is reasonable and timely," McLane said in a written statement. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbullettn.com

election-season p olitics and avoided calls for an independent review.

The issue simmered for months, with the governor's office slow to release

public r ecords, before Hayes confirmed to an EO Media Group/Pamplin Media Group reporter in January that she accepted contracts in 2011 and 2012 worth $118,000 total with the Clean Economy De-

velopment Center, a for-

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

Those who would like to see

the bridge stay say it provides an emergency evacuation

4

4

4

-

route for the wooded subdivi-

sion, which only has one road

I II I

There was some question

as to who owns the bridge, but Vaughan said the city's legal

The commission is expected to announce whether it

into this matter. I appre-

overlap between Hayes' public policy work and groups seeking to steer the same public policies. The governor chalked

leading in and out.

said that inquiry would answer all open questions.

dent factual review of any Jim Moore, director of the and all questions or alle- Tom McCall Center for Policy gations as you see fit." Innovation at Pacific UniverThe governor called the sity, said the decision to ask allegations a "distraction" for the review should help the and twice cited the media governor, who has faced calls as a reason for calling for to resignfrom newspaper edthe review. itorial boards, including The "Thank you for your let- Oregonian's. "It puts him in front of the ter. My office has already opened an investigation story, and then it also makes

Jose Barajas takes a drink while working in a garlic field near Cantua Creek, California, last February. A record drought in 2014 human activities are the lead- threatened hundreds of thousands of acres of farmland in the Cening cause of climate change. tral Valley. Hispanics are far more likely than whites to view global "And all this affects poor peo- warming as a problem that affects them personally and to support ple harder. The jobs are more policies aimed at curbing it, a New York Times poll has found.

MattBlackiTheNew YorkTimesfilephoto

Government Ethics Commission to look into the matter, and Kitzhaber has repeatedly

Join us during the next six weeks as we host a lecture series to increase safety awareness on fall prevention, common home injuries and provide solutions to keep you safe!

The mostcommonmistake madebytaxpayers is engaging the IRSor State on your own. If youowebacktaxes or have unfiled tax returns to the IRSor State, call Ultimate TaxDefenders nowto receive aconfidential consultation. Allow our team of tax attorneysandtax specialists to protect you and negotiate your absolute best resolution!

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 4:00 PM

Our services:

Avoid Bathroom Dangers

SafetyMan says "Always be Safe to Ensure an Active 8 Independent Lifestyle"

Falls Are Preventable The opportunity to help reduce falls among older adults has never been better. Today, there are effective fall prevention interventions that can be used in community settings. Fall prevention programs can reduce falls and help older adults live better, longer lives.

TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 4:00 PM

IZ Bank Levy Release 2 Penalty Abatement IZ Unfiled Tax Returns 2 W age Garnishment Release

E E E E

Tax Lien A udit Defense I ncome Tax Debt Payroll Taxes

Dangers exist all around your home, and unless safety precautions are in place, you leave yourself in danger. Aside from the kitchen, the bathroom is one of the most dangerous rooms in your home. Recognizing these dangers,and making some common sense decisions, will go a long way in protecting you and your family.

Learn the 411 On Medicare Coverage I I

e

I

r

I

I

I

I

o

' I

TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 4:00 PM Medicare is a government-sponsored program that people over the age of 65 and those who meet their special criteria turn to for their social insurance. This program provides health insurance normally to seniors. Come and learn more about what it covers and what it does not.

I

r

o l l l s

s

• •

I •

••

I ~l

L)ltimate T AX

DE F E N DE R S

Space is limited for this FREE educational series. For more information or to reserve your seat please call (541) 312-2003. Managed by Prestige Senior Living High Desert 2660 NE Mary Rose Place www.PrestigeCare.com Bend, Oregon 97701

Prestige Senior Living, L.L.C


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

~

I+ \ 'w

A5

Air bag Continued fromA1 "As racers, we all want to go

"

-

as fast as possible, and it does add a little weight, a little more of a hump on your back," the U.S. Olympian Marco Sullivan said of the most recent air bag design,which resembles

'/

a skintight vest with a small

computer sensor and a tiny gas canister tucked in its back.

Geologists Brenda Buck, left, and Rodney Metcalf take samples of

"If you're the only guy wearing it, it's probably a disadvantage as far as speed goes." Despite the apparent benefits of the air bags, similar to

rock in thedesert near Henderson, Nevada, lastmonth. Research

those used in motorcycle rac-

indicating a natural asbestos hazard in the air has been played down and hindered by the state of Nevada, scientists say.

ing, the international ski federation has hesitated to make

Isaac Brekken/The New YorkTimes

, QIIsiifs&"

J

r Uk~l

/',

ii

J); '

'

'f

them mandatory. The feder-

Asbestos

ation, known by its French After seven months, an

analysis conduded that while Continued fromA1 asbestos was ubiquitous in But if the scientists expect- the area (found in all 150 soil ed to be applauded by state of- samples), the levels were low ficials for their initiative, they enough for workers to prowere mistaken. ceed safely with the construcUpon learning of the report, tion. Still, the state DOTplans the Nevada Department of to proceed with protective Health forced the epidemiolo- measures, such as watering gist, Francine Baumann of the downthe roadbed andcontinUniversity of Hawaii, to with- ual air monitoring. draw a presentation of the Plans for a federal interfindings at a scientific confer- state highway connecting Las ence and revoked her access Vegas and Phoenix may also to the state cancer registry. be affected. The suggested Metcalf and Buck offered to route would cut through the meet with state officials but asbestos deposits in Arizona saytheywere rebuffed. recently identified by Metcalf In the years since, "no one and Buck. No one has sugfrom the health department gested that naturally occurhas ever contacted us to ask ring asbestos is causing an for any information about the epidemic of cancer in southminerals," Metcalf said. ern Nevada. The question So began one of the coun- is whether exposure to the try's more unsettling public mineral may be contributing health controversies. Over inunrecognized, perhaps prethe pastseveralyears,the re- ventable ways. searchers say, they have been vilified for making legitimate State pusbback scientific inquiries that may In her original review of have public health conse- data from the state cancer quences. Officials at the state registry, Baumann says she health department counter found an unusual number thatthe researchers are sim-

of mesothelioma cases in

ply wrong about the asbestos hazardand arepromulgating an alarmLthypothesis. The department's own analysis has turned up no particular asbestos risks to residents, the officials say,

younger residents and in women in the affected areas. The disease usually occurs in older men, after years of on-the-job exposure. Baumann thought the pattern she

observed suggested an environmentalexposure to asbesdence of mesothelioma in the tos at an early age. She substate is well within the nation- mitted an abstract describing alaverage. the research to the Geological "Asbestos was there for Society of America and was hundreds, if not thousands, of to present it at the group's nayears, and that has not trans- tional meeting in 2012. lated into negative health efBut when t h e N e v ada fects," said Dr. Ihsan Azzam, health department was alertpointing out that the inci-

the state epidemiologist.

ed to the presentation, the

Naturally occurring asbes- state health officer, Dr. Tractos deposits are not uncom- ey Green, invoked a clause mon, and in past decades, in an agreement signed by particularly rich veins were Baumann, which allowed the mined for commercial use. health department to approve It proved to be a dangerous any scientific publication reoccupation:Asbestos fibers sulting from access granted travel easily through the air to the state cancer registry. In and are easily inhaled, scien- a letter, Green demanded that tists later found, embedding the abstract be taken off the themselves in the lungs. website, and the presentation Once there, even in modest

was canceled. "If you choose

amounts, the fibers set off a not to retract the abstract orto cascade of inflammatory ef- decide to publish other manufects that can lead decades scripts based on the statistics later to lung cancer, mesothe- that you were provided, you lioma and other respiratory may incur legal liabilities for ailments. One study conduct-

your conduct," Green wrote.

ed a few years ago found that

In an interview, Green acknowledged it was the only

one-fifth of the residents of

Libby, Montana, the site of a time as the state health officer large vermiculite mining op- that she had ever invoked the eration,suffered asbestos-re- department's right to preaplated lung diseases. Many prove scienti fic research. She never worked in the mines. said it was necessary because The Environmental Protec- Baumannwas so persistent in tion Agency designated the wanting to publish a misguidarea a Superfund site in 2002 ed study. "The data has been evaluHealth and Human Services, atedand re-evaluated,"Gr een and, with the Department of

declared apublichealth emer- said. "There is no pattern of gency there in 2009. undue risk." She and her colleagues arA closer look gue Baumann gave too much The growing body of re- weight to a few anomalous search into asbestos expo- cancer cases, making her sure inspired Buck and Met- findings suspect. "You just calf to take a closer look at don't scare the hell out of peotheir home state. In October ple this way," said Azzam, the 2013, they published a study state epidemiologist. finding that natural asbesAs a precaution, he said, tos-bearing mineral deposits the department recently inwere abundant in the region, creased its monitoring of from the southern shore of airborne fibers in southern Lake Mead to the edges of the Nevada. McCullough Range. The department's reaction In afollow-up analysis, Met- has dismayed other scientists calf and Buck reported that who have been watching the asbestosfibers around Boul- research unfold. "I've never der City and the eastern part heard of any state saying, 'No, of Henderson and Las Vegas you can't publish your findwere similar in shape and ings,'" said Christopher Weis, size to those sickening people a toxicology adviser to the diin Libby. And last month, the

rector of the National Institute

two geolo~ p u b lished a of Environmental Health Scipaper showing that a continu- ences. "To be aware of that sitous swathof natural asbestos uation in your backyard and runs from Nevada into neigh- not explore it doesn't make boring Arizona. sense from a public health The findings have already standpoint." had consequences. The NevaScientists do not yet underda Department of Transpor- stand how, and how often, tation delayed construction of naturally occurring asbestos a $490 million highway proj- can causedisease,said Geofect, called the Boulder City frey Plumlee, a geochemist at Bypass, after learning that it the U.S. Geological Survey. would run through an area "We need lots of information that the scientists had found available to try to make good to be rich in asbestos. decisions," he said.

acronym, FIS, said last week

during the Alpine world championships in Beaver Creek,

Dainesevia The New YorkTimes

Colorado, that it would wait

Jan Farrell tests the 0-Air Ski air bag for skiers by Dainese. The use of the air bag safety device has

until skiers had more options, because the air bag is currently manufactured by only one company. "No one is going to wear it until everyone is wearing it," Sullivan said. Sullivan's perspective is not unique, in any sport. High-level athletes are, as a rule, persnickety aboutchanges to anything even remotely related to their performance. (Baseball fans might recall how many players rejected early versions of newer, safer batting helmets simply because of their bulbous appearance.) And on the list of what to obsess about, equipment is

not gained acceptance amongthe sport's professionals yet, despite the risk of serious injury that

perhaps the area in which ath-

competitors face in violent crashes.

risked inflating their air bags whenever they zoomed off an incline, so a flying mode was added. The other issue for Dainese was the physical design. Skiers wear skintight body suits while racing, with a thin back

calls the D-air, has been approved for use since Dec. 31, and Cafaggi said Mirena Kiing, a Swiss skier, used it in competition during a women's

pad underneath, and the ini-

exception, though. Ted Ligety, an American downhill star, said he was offered one of the

tial air bags resembled bulky flak jackets. The latest version, which Cafaggi said was ready for use, is much sleeker and uses thin synthetic material — think of a moisture-wicking jogging shirt — to hold a credit-card-size electronics board,

not that simple." Werner Heel, an Italian ski-

er who has a partnership with Dainese, said he was willing to use the air bag only in training because he felt a bit "con-

event in St. Moritz, Switzer-

land, last month.

stricted" in the vest. Steven Nyman, an American who is not affiliated with D ainese,

That instance has been the was skeptical about the en-

vests but turned it down be-

tire concept of air bags, noting that in motorcycle racing, an air bag could be designed to inflate as soon as the rider comes off the bike. "In ski racing," he said, "it's

cause it was not made by one of his sponsors and because he did not trust it yet.

If the air bag goes off at the wrong time, Nyman said, "it's sketchy."

letes are most particular. a gas canister to inflate the air In some ways, the reticence bags, and the bags themselves. of the skiers is understand- The system is run by a small able; after all, the difference battery. between first place and 12th At present, Cafaggi said, the place in the men's downhill at

system is not for use by rec-

the Sochi Olympics last year

reational skiers because they simply fall too often to make a thing that might have a minus- single-use air bag vest practicule effect on results (or might cal. Still, Dainese has created even be perceived as having a motorcycle air bag for street one) is to be avoided. use, and although tweaking the skiing air bag's algorithm Gruesome injuries abound to make it appropriate for recBut w h il e c a tastrophic reational use would be a sigcrashes in top-level skiing are nificant undertaking, an amanot common, the injuries ath- teur version is not impossible, letes sustain when they hap- Cafaggi said. pen can be gruesome. Lower-body injuries, such as torn The development process knee ligaments or broken legs, During the development was less than a second. Any-

occur most frequently, yet the

damage to the upper body is often the most severe. American Bode Miller, who injured his back in a crash last March, has missed the entire World Cup season after having surgery inNovember to repair a herniated disk; he returned to

process, D a i nese w o r k ed with athletes from a number

'

-

-

-

ygll%4 It

@%% $> NEQI.

r

50~©/e 0eFF* s

I

of national federations to solicit feedback, and Cafaggi disputed Sullivan's claim that anyone who wore the air bags

I

I

I

I

s I

would be at a disadvantage in

terms of speed. Early versions of the system were actually

competition Thursday in the

deemed by FIS to be advan-

super-G at the world championships but promptly crashed head over heels again. According to data compiled by FIS, nearly 20 percent

tageous to skiers who wore them, Cafaggi said. After fre-

of the 726 recorded injuries

quent wind-tunnel testing, the

currentmodels were found to be "aerodynamically neutral." The system, which Dainese

over the past eight seasons

I

-

e -

~

s•

'

I

of Alpine events in the World

Cup series involved the head, neck, shoulders or chest. More than a quarter of those inju-

ries made athletes miss 28 or more days of training and competition. An effort to reduce those

numbers led FIS to partner with Italian company Dainese,

perhaps best known for its link to motorcycle racing, for which it has created numerous

safety devices, including an air bag system that is used by top-level racers.

'Intelligent clothing' In 2011, Dainese, working with FIS, began developing an air bag that could be used in skiing. The challenges were considerable. First, there was

the matter of creating a system that could consistently determine when it was needed,

effectively distinguishing the difference between skiers who lost their balance but were

able to recover and skiers who lost their balance and went

• WHOLE HOME REMODELS

into a dangerous tumble. "That's why we call it intelli-

• ADDITIONS

gent clothing," Vittorio Cafaggi, a manager for strategic development at Dainese, said in an interview at the company's

• KITCHENS

research and development lab

in Molvena. "It isn't enough for it to just protect you; it has to

• BATHROOMS

know when you need protec-

• REPAIRS

tion, too." To mak e

• PAINT

t h a t p o s sible,

Dainese's technicians use gyroscopes, accelerometers and a GPS tracking device to monitor an athlete's position,

angle to the ground and speed. If a skier's angle and speed suddenly change drastically, sending the values outside the algorithm's normal range, the air bag inflates. One of the biggest challenges was accounting for the various jumps racers might encounter on their way down a

c ourse. I n i tially, s k i ers

739 YEARS COLLECTIVE KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE IN BUILDING

WOrking T Ogether to Bu i l d YO ur V i S iOn

esign • Build • R emodel

EsT. 1977 AN EMPLQYEE OwNED CQMPANY

ccBf 36632

wvvw.sforest.e I

//".

54,385.5;2Q„~. „",':-'.;. r


A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

Kornfeld Continued fromA1 "There are alot of lessons

you learn from your patients and their experiences," Kornfeld said. "One of them: Life is precious, and it's a gift and it shouldn't be wasted. I think that kind of helps that part of

the path I feel like I'm on right now." Kornfeld, 57, doesn't plan

to stop completely. He'll still fill in at St. Charles on an as-needed basis and will provide advice to other doctors, especially when it comes to former patients now being seen by colleagues. He'll also occasionally work in hospice

"There are a lot of lessons you learn from your patients and their experiences. One of them: Life is precious, and it's a gift and it shouldn't be wasted. l think that kind of helps that part of the path l feel like l'm on

right now." — Dr. Stephen Kornfeld, who retired from full-time practice as

an oncologist and hematologist at St. Charles Health System fellow oncologists left BMC for three original St. Charles St. Charles, where they estab- oncologists, said Kornfeld's lished the region's first cancer expertise has been on the center. Several nurses and chemical side of thingsstaff members from BMC fol-

systemic solutions versus

localized therapies like radiation and surgery. "I would say he's one of relations between St. Charles, known then as the Cascade the best oncologists I know I'veever met, "Boone said. care, a sector he's been active Healthcare Community, and in since coming to Central BMC. The following year, Lani Dunithan, of Bend, Oregon. BMC went to the police alleg- credits Kornfeld for saving How exactly he'll divide ing the oncologists had ille- her life through his aggreshis time remains up in the air, gally accessed patient records. sive breast cancer treatthough Kornfeld said he's get- After reviewing the circum- ment. He diagnosed her ting plenty of advice from fel- stances, the Deschutes County in 2001 with stage 2 breast low retired physicians. district attorney at the time de- cancer, although she said "Part of my goal here is to clined to file criminal charges. the size of the tumor put it open space for myself just to The two providers disagreed at stage 1. "I have a friend who had see what begins to resonate," on theterms of an arrangehe said. "We'll see over time ment that allowed St. Charles breastcancer, and I feel which direction I go — even oncologists to v i e w B M C 's her doctors didn't treat her though whatever direction I records. aggressively enough and Kornfeld said he doesn't she passed away in July," go, I still want to keep it very limited."

'All init together'

lowed them there. Their departure strained

think the relationship between the two prominent providers

said Dunithan, 62. "So I feel that K ornfeld knew

has improved significantly

what to do. He's just such a professional."

Originally from San Diego, since then. Kornfeld a ttended m e dical

school at the University of Southern California in Los An-

The letters and emails

Era of personalizedmedicine he's gotten from patients Following the strife, Korn-

geles, graduating in 1982. He feld said, he made a purposeful went on to serve his residen- decision to stay out of the polcy and internship at Oregon itics and focus on his patients. Health & Science University Over the y e ars, t hat's in Portland, which is where he strengthened his passion for said he fell in love with Oregon. health policy issues, which After that, he returned to he hopes to become more inSan Diego for his cancer fel- volved with in the future. He

over the years fills Kornfeld

with a lot of joy, he said. W hether you're in a small town or big city, when you practice medicine, it's just you and the patient in front of you, he said. " When I'm k ind o f i n

a room with somebody, lowship, where h e s t a rted said he wants to aid the transi- they're my universe," he down an academic route, un- tion from reimbursing medical said. "Everything else is til Oregon called him back. providers based on the quanti- much less relevant." He initially looked for a job ty of services provided to reim— Reporter: 541-383-0304, in Portland, until a friend told bursingbased on the quality of tbannow@bendbulletin.com him about an opening for an care provided. oncologist at the Bend MemoChemotherapy, for example, rial Clinic. can be amazingly effective "I just kind of drove over, when used appropriately. But it met with the people and I was

can also be detrimental, Korn-

like, 'Wow, this is a pretty cool place,'" Kornfeld said.

feld said.

Why the doctor's officeis a dangerousplacefor data By Tom Murphy and Brandon Bailey

Ross Koppel, a University of Pennsylvania professor who The Associated Press researcheshealth care inforEveryone worries about sto- mation technology. len credit cards or hacked bank But once someone creates accounts, but just visiting the a stolen identity with a Social doctor may put you at greater Security number, it can be hard risk for identity fraud. to fix the damage. A person Those medical forms you can call a bank to shut down a give the receptionist and send stolen credit card, but it's not as to your health insurer provide easyof aprocess whenit comes fertile ground for criminals to Social Security numbers. "There is no such mechlooking to steal your identity, since health care businesses anism with Social Security can lag far behind banks and numbers and our identity," said creditcard companies in pro- Avivah Litan, a cybersecurity tecting sensitive information. analyst at the research firm The names, birthdates and Gartner. "You can't just call the — most importantly — Social bank and say, 'Give me all the Security numbers detailed on money they stole from my identhose forms can help hackers tity.' There's no one to call." open fake credit lines, file false So being that the data is so tax returns and create fake vital to protect, health care medical records. companies are taking every "It's an entire profile of who precaution to defend against you are," said Cynthia Larose, hackers, right? chairofthe privacy and secuNot necessarily. The FBI rity practice at the law firm warnedhealth care companies Mintz Levin in Boston. "It es- a year ago that their industry sentially allows someone to be- was not doing enough to resist come you." cyberattacks, especially comSocial Security numbers pared with companies in the were created to track the earn- financial and retail sectors, acings history of workers in or- cording to Christopher Budd der to determine government of security software company benefits. Now, health care Trend Micro. The warning companiesare,in some cases, came in a government bulletin required to collect the num- to U.S. companies that cited rebers by government agencies. search by a nonprofit security They also use them because institute, he said. they are unique to every indiLast year, more than 10 milvidual and more universal than lion people in the U.S. were other forms of i dentification affectedby health care data like driver's licenses, said Dr. breaches — including hacking

or accidents thatexposed personal information, such as lost

laptops — according to a government database that tracks incidents affecting at least 500

people. That was theworstyear for health care hacking since 2011. Litan estimates the health

care industry is generally about 10 years behind the financial servicessector in terms of protectingconsumer information. She figures that it may

be twice as easy for hackers to get sensitive financial information out of a health care

company compared with a bank. Banks, for instance, are more likely to encrypt personal data, which can garble the information if a hacker gets it.

They also are much more likely to use advanced statistical models and behavior analytics

programs that can spot when someone's credit card use suddenly spikes, says Litan, who studies fraud-detection tech-

nology. That's a sign of possible fraud that may be worth

investigating. "There's a need for that everywhere now," she said.

Find It All Online benCIbulletin.COm TheBulletin

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

"How do we use those tools

when they should be used and BMC in 1991, Central Oregon's figure out ways to avoid them medical offerings were a lot when the condition of the pasimpler than they are today. tient suggests that they may The hospital was an inpatient be more harmful than benefifacility and not much else, he cial?" he said. said. BMC provided all specialDespite the challenges that ty careand most primary care, remain, cancer treatment has he said. improved over the years. EarWhen Kornfeld started at

A round th e

s a m e t i m e, lier this month, the American

o our ea

Kornfeld became involved with Cancer Society announced Partners in Care, a nonprofit

1.5 million cancer deaths had

home health and hospice pro- been averted over the past two vider serving Central Oregon. decades thanks to fewer peoThere, he was part of the team ple smoking and advances in that developed Hospice House, cancer prevention, detection the region's first inpatient hos- and treatment. "paradigm pice facility, one of three such There's a facilities in the state. Patients change" taking place in canstay in private suites with pull- cer treatment toward using out beds for guests, and the

DNA to t arget therapies to

building — which looks more specifi c subtypes of cancers, like a house than a medical Kornfeld said. That's where facility — also has a common

Kornfeld said he foresees ma-

family room area, garden and chapel. "One of the big differences between standard medical

jor advancements taking place

care and hospice care is the recognition that the unit of

care, the person getting the care, isn't the patient — it's the patient and the family,"

within the next five to 10 years.

There may be some lung cancer subtypes that only occur in 1 to 3 percent of patients, for example, he said. Kornfeld said he understands the term "targeted ther-

Kornfeld said. "They're all in it

apy" has been thrown around frequently over the past sever-

together." Throughout the 2000s, there

al years, and some dismiss it as rhetoric.

was a growing feeling among Kornfeld and his fellow on-

"But it really isn't," he said.

"I think the era of personalized

cologists that Central Oregon medicine is happening, and I lacked a comprehensive cancer think that's really cool." center, where patients could re-

Davies Pollard, whose hus-

ceive allof their cancer care, including radiation, surgery and chemotherapy, in one place. "That had been our goal for a very long time," he said. "It

band has been assigned to a new oncologist at St. Charles,

just seemed like there were

try new medications. There

said sh e

a p preciated t h at

Kornfeld was always researching treatments and willing to

forces out of the physician's was always the hope somecontrol that continued to make thing would work — and init not happen." In 2008, Kornfeld and two

deed some have, she said. Dr. Robert Boone, one of the

changing Smiles Denture 6 Implant Center Ja

Experience The Luxury of Personalized Care

g 00 oFF g than just a Denture, it S

> •

Your First Denture

St. GharlesCancerGenter is pleasedtowelcomeJohnWinters, MD, Michael (Andy) Monticelli, MD and Stacie Koehler, PA-G, to its team. The three ProViderSare eXCited to jOin the eStabliShedSt. CharleSCanCer Center grOuPWhere they CanPrOVideCOmPaSSiOnate Careto CanCerPatientS thrOughOutthe regiOn. Dr. MontiCelli COmPleted hiStraining at the UniVerSity of COIOradOand PraCtiCed in EugenefOr 16 yearSbefOre mOVing to Central OregOn.Dr.WinterS trained at the UniVerSity of OklahOmaand reCently COmPleted hiSfellOWShiP at FletCher Allen Health Care at the UniVerSity of VermOnt.Koehler reCeiVedher maSterSof PhySiCianaSSiStant StudieS frOm the UniVerSity of NebraSkaMediCal Center and WOrkedfOr a PraCtiCe in Medford befOre mOVingto Bend. All three ProViderSare aCtiVeOutdOOrenthuSiaStS Whoare COmmitted tO PrOViding hOliStiCCarethat COmbineS the beSt in CanCertreatment With lifeStyle and behaViOr mOdifiCatiOnSto helPCOntrOI CanCer SymPtOmS. To make an aPPOintment, Call St. CharleSCanCerCenter at 541-706-5800.

$175 for a singledenture reline. Couponrequired. Cannotcombine with other offers.Exp. 3-31-1

Same-day repairs and relines

Call today for yourFREENo-Obligation Consultation

541-706-5800

541-388-4444

2500 NE NEFF RD. BEND,OR

changeyoursmile.com

StCharlesHealthCare.org SB

2041 NE Williamson Ct., Bend

ar es CANCER CENTER


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY10, 2015

BRIEFING IndependentParty Is mejof, slale seys SALEM — Aweek after the Independent Party of Oregon declared itself a major party, the state on Monday formally recognized it as a new political group on par with Republicans and Democrats. Secretary of State Kate Brown, a Democrat, said the party can begin planning for its first state-funded primary election in 2016. The party grew quickly to nearly 109,000 members since its founding in 2007. It has been funding its own Internet-based primary open to all of its members who otherwise can't vote until the general election, when most districts in Oregon have largely been decided. Independent Party leaders say a newmajor party would make more districts compet-

un ac ersma ei 0 a em

Tweaks to final school doundarIes Bend-La Pine Schools Superintendent Ron Wilkinson has accepted the district committee's school boundary recommendations, with two minor changes. First, students who live in the midtown area between the Deschutes River, Greenwood and Olney avenues and NE12th Street will attend Bend High instead of Mountain View High. Second, students who live in the Old Bend downtown area between the river, the Bend Parkway, Arizona Street and Greenwood Avenue will attend Miller Elementary and Cascade Middle schools, rather than the proposed Pine Ridge Elementary. Students in fifth, eighth, 11th and 12th

grades who want to stay at their own schools and provide their own transportation in the 2015-16 school year can do So.

See Local briefing /B2

Campus'

— e ore unCOnrO I S 0 By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin

SALEM — One bill filed in

building. Of the two dozen gun bills filed in the week-old legisla-

Oregon would require school

tive session, most are written

districts to provide firearm-

by Republicans, and several seek to scale back Oregon's gun control laws. That didn't stop a group of gun rights activists from Iining the Capitol steps in driving wind and rain Monday to

safety courses. Another would allow any-

one with a valid concealed carry license to present the license, rather than the gun

itself, to a peace officer for inspection when inside a public

renew their opposition to a

'net zero'

umversal background check they say is coming to Oregon and would infringe their right to guns. No such bill has been filed.

withdrawn" because Demo-

But one Senate Democrat says

to Senate Bill 700, which died

goal gets

crats didn't have enough votes to pass it, said longtime gun control advocate Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, referring

donations By Abby Spegman The Bulletin

a bill to require background in committee in 2013 after checks on private gun sales fears of its defeat prevented it will be filed early this session. from getting a vote. "I'm very confident we have "It was thoroughly worked in the last legislative session. It the votes now," she added. was passed to the floor. It was SeeGuns/B5

Oregon State Universi-

ty-Cascades has received three major donations to

help make its new campus as energy efficient as possible. Lee and Connie Kearney, of Vancouver, Washington, gave the $500,000 lead gift for what's called the net zero campus ini-

YOU MAY BREAK IT; THEY HELP (RE)MAKE IT Bend volunteers Robin Jurasinski and Doug Butler, from left, help Doug Eash, also of Bend, fix his blender during the Repair Cafe event put on by the Deschutes Public Library system in downtown Bend on Monday afternoon. The Repair Cafe was part of Maker Monday, which includes a variety of hands-on events at the library the second Mondayof each month. For more information on the upcoming Maker Monday events, go online to www. deschuteslibrary.

Rhs

'i'

itive.

Some Democrats are critical of the Independent Party because they say many of its members don't know they're part of a political party. Secretary Sal Peralta and party co-chair Dan Meek are also asking the state to change a law that effectively requires major-party candidates to be registered members for up to eight months before an election, calling the law unconstitutional. Independents have the backing of Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, who appeared on the ballot with the Independent endorsement. Buehler says he's considering legislation that would allow nonaffiliated voters and Independents, who together make up more than a third of all voters, to vote in primary elections. TheIndependent Party became major when its membership exceeded 5 percent of all voters registered for the 2014 election. It passed that threshold last week. The party needs to maintain that threshold through mid-August, when it will be certified again in order to receive the state-funded primary.

OSU-CASCADES

I

tiative. Lee Kearney, a retired executive of Kiewit

Construction, serves on the advisory board of the Oregon State College of Engineering and is a member of the OSU Foundation's cam-

paign steering committee. OSU-Cascades plans to grow into a four-year university beginning in the falL Despite ongoing legal challenges to the expansion, officials plan to break ground on the

first academic building by July and had set a goal of raising at least $725,000 for the net zero initiative

by March 31. SeeOSU /B5

City: Police, transit are funding priorities

Ol'g. Andy Tullie/Ttte Bulletin

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

The Bend City Council

and city of Bend Budget Committee have tentatively addressed police and tran-

sit as budget priorities for the upcoming fiscal year, while keeping an eye on the five years to come. Councilors met Monday in the first of two meet-

ings to begin discussing how best to spend about $500,000 available from the city's general fund for budget requests from vari-

REDMOND

ous city departments.

Representatives from Bend Police, the Bend Fire

Support, questionsgrow for new reccenter By Beau Eastes

and beach-like leisure pool.

center within Redmond's

The Bulletin

The city's Downtown Urban Renewal Advisory Committee

urban renewal boundary. A feasibility study the city commissioned in 2013 estimated a 72,000-square-foot facility

REDMOND — The next big

development project in downtown Redmond may include an indoor track, workout area

agreed Monday night to further explore the possibility of building a family recreation

WHATEVER

Following up onCentral Oregon stories that have beenout of the headlines.

HAPPENED TO ... •

Emai l ideas to news©bendbulletin.com.

Department, the streets

department and departments addressing livability issues presented five-year forecastsand requestsfor funding, which across the board included personnel growth and quality-of-life

with three lap lanes, a gymnasium, indoor track, conference rooms, child care, weights and a cardio area would cost approximately $30.1 million.

that induded a recreation pool

considerations.

SeeFunding/B3

See Redmond /B3

g

WINE GUIDELINES

Without any new federal rules, wine growlers are OK, for now

I'

'•

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — Last year, the federal Alcohol, To-

bacco Tax and Trade Bureau backed off a proposal that would have required retailers

selling wine in growlers to follow regulations that ap-

Agency spokesman Tom Hogue said Monday the agency was still proceeding with rulemaking for growlers but could not provide a time frame for when its proposed rules would be published. Once the proposed rules

plied to vintners putting wine

are announced, the public

in sealed bottles.

will have a chance to weigh

Almost a year later, the

in and comment, just like any

agency has not published other rulemaking process, new rules for wine growlers he said. that could apply in places like Similar to beer growlers, Oregon, where they arelegal. customers bring refillable

g

I

containers to markets, bars,

restaurants or wineries to be filled on the premises. Containers must be 2 gallons or less in size, with a cap or other method of sealing the

opening. While wine growlers have become popular in areas with a strong craft beer presence where beer growlers are commonplace, they have yet

I

, 'BUY ONE , 'GET ONE ANY AREA QR PAcKAGE OF EQUAL OR LESSORVALUE Coupon requi red.One percuscomen ExpiresM arch 31,2015.Offerscannotbe combined.

EsTHETrxiviD Spa 4 Laser Center

to catch on with wine drink-

ers nationwide, according to industry observers.

See Growlers/B5

11S SWALLEN ROAD

BE ND, OR97702 S 4 1 -330-SSS1

ESTHETIXMD.COM


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

$17 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com NATURALHISTORYPUB:Jay or 541-815-9122. Bowerman will present "The Oregon FLY FISHINGFILMTOUR: A film Spotted Frog," discussing the most tour featuring fly fishing films, aquatic North American frog and how it is listed as "threatened" under to benefit Trout Unlimited, Wild Steelhead Coalition, Bonefish Tarpon the Endangered Species Act; free; Trust, Utah Stream Access Coalition, 5:30-8:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old Stop Pebble Mine and more; $15 St.FrancisSchool,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.highdesertmuseum. plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, org, info©highdesertmuseum.org or 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. 541-382-4754. MBRASCATU:The fusion indie-rock FLY FISHING FILMTOUR:A film band performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; tour featuring fly fishing films, McMenamins Old St. Francis School, to benefit Trout Unlimited, Wild 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. Steelhead Coalition, Bonefish mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. Tarpon Trust, Utah Stream Access Coalition, Stop Pebble Mine AARON LARGET-CAPLAN: The and more; $15 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Colorado Latin guitarist performs; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-317-0700. www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TODAY

WEDMESDAY MUSEUM &ME: Museum is open after hours for children and adults with physical, cognitive or social disabilities; free; 4-7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Garth Stein, author of "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; $20; 7 p.m.; BendHighSchool,230 NE Sixth St.; www.dplfoundation.org, suzyo©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1027. CAROLYN WONDERLAND: The blues singer and guitarist performs;

THURSDAY

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

carnival featuring a wine walk, ice throne carvings, live music and

A~©

more; $6-$8 inadvance,$10at

Submitted photo

Mbrascatu, a fusion indle-rock band, will perform at McMenamins Old St. Francis School for free 7-10 p.m. Wednesday. Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. DEATH BYCHOCOLATEBUNCO NIGHT:Featuring a night of bunco and desserts, prizes and more to benefit Soroptimist International of Bend charities; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend.org or 541-389-8940. REMEMBERINGTHE LEGACY OF PETE SEEGER:Featuring a sing-along to honor the first anniversary of

BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Pete Seeger'spassing; 6:30-8 p.m.; Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NWCollege Way, LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss Bend. "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; AYRONJONESANDTHE WAY:The noon; Redmond Public Library, Seattle rock guitarist performs; free; 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or Francis School,700 NW Bond St., 541-312-1050. Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy VIRGINIA RIGGSCHILDREN'S

Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. BRETT DENNEN: The California pop-rock artist performs; SOLD OUT;8 p.m.,doors openat7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DIVINEGODDESS FASHION SHOW: Featuring a lingerie fashion show by RescueCollective;$5;8-9:30 p.m .; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.

CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs music by Wagner and Delibes, featuring an instrument petting zoo; free; 7 p.m. concert, 6:30 p.m. instrument petting zoo; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.cosymphony.com or 541-383-6290. ROB LARKIN& THE WAYWARD ONES:The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; 8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889.

FRIDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. OREGON WINTERFEST: Winter

the door; 5-11 p.m.; The Old Mill District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.oregonwinterfest. com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Garth Stein, author of "A Sudden Light" and "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; free; 6 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-549-0866. CHILDREN'S THEATER COMPANY DINNER SHOW:Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; SOLD OUT; 6-8:30 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024. THE STRAYBIRDS:The Americana group from Pennsylvania performs, with Cahalen Morrison 8 Eli West;

SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SEThird St.; 541-317-4847. MININGDAY,PAN FOR GOLD: Learn to stake a claim, pan for gold and have your earnings authenticated; admission plus $2 per miner; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. OREGON WINTERFEST: Winter carnival featuring a polar plunge, ice carving, a run, live music by Metal Mulisha, The Autonomics and Filter, and more; $6-$8 in advance, $10 at the door;11 a.m.-11 p.m.; The Old Mill District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.oregonwinterfest.

$20, $10(youth) or $50,$25

(youth) for three-concert series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4947. "BEAUTYANDTHEBEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300. "MARNIE":Showing of the psychological thriller by Alfred Hitchcock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez com.

Weekly

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fivm Bf

The new boundaries are being put in place to help the school district prepare for the opening of a new elementary and middle school in fall 2015. Maps of the final boundaries are expected to be available soon.

Mt. Bachelor driefly loses power The ski lifts at Mt. Bachelor ran on diesel power for about an hour and a half Monday after a power outage. The ski resort lost power at11:35 a.m., when a tree fell on a power line, Midstate Electric spokeswoman Teresa Lackey said in a voice mail. The diesel generator kicked in almost immediately, and lift mechanics manually converted each lift from electric to auxiliary power, said Mt. Bachelor spokesman Drew Jackson. The power returned at about 1 p.m. I

Dog missing after car accident

Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

Black smoke rises from anexhaust pipe at the top of Mt. Bachelor's Sunrise Lift as it runs on its diesel backup due to a midday power outage at the mountaln Monday afternoon.

A dog that reportedly ran awayfrom thesceneofaJan.29 rollover car crash on Cline Falls Highway between Tumalo and Eagle Crest Resort is still at large. The brown11-year-old male was wearing a navy coat and a

camouflage collar with "Jake" written on the tag when hewas last seen. Anyone with information is encouraged to contact Desiree Epps, the daughter of the dog's owner, at 503-910-7883.

Whychus Creek Trail damaged dyvandals Vandalismalong theW hychus Creek Trail has caused erosion into Whychus Creek, the Deschutes National Forest reported Monday. One or more vandals dug 11 boulders out of a steep bank below the trail and then pushed the large stones down anembankment, creating unstable soil, according to the national forest. A volunteer discovered the damage about a week ago. Since then, Sisters Ranger District workers have been out to the creek to assess and repair some of the vandalism. The trail near Sisters was built in 2011 and passes along a federally designated wild and scenic portion of the Whychus Creek.

M AGA Z I N E

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures.

TheBulletin

shade whenyou needit.

Arts &

Enlerlainment I nside

••

Sun I/I/hen you wantit,

Find It All Online

IRI I Q

V CI

O >N DEMA N D

541-389-9983

bendbulletin.com

www.shadeondemand.com

— Bulletin staff eports

Sweep V0ur sweet

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day

Fri day. th 14tg and S

Classtfte s

asadaga„1 aturdaY ge a3' the 15th

$7OPer p erson

www.bendbulletin.com

Find Your Dream Home

in Real Estate

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

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT

Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:02 a.m. Feb. 4, in the19500 block of Amber Meadow Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:13 p.m. Feb. 5, in the 800 block of NW Brooks Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:29 p.m. Feb. 7, in thearea of NEShepard Road and NE Meadow Lane. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:56 p.m. Feb. 8, in the 3500 block of N. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:58 p.m. Feb. 6, in the100 block of NW Greeley Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at8:47 a.m .Feb.6,inthe2200 block of NE Third Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 3:26 p.m. Feb.5, in the 700 block of SWIndustrial Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:37 a.m. Feb. 6, in the 700 block of NW Newport Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:27 p.m. Jan. 21, in the1000 block of NE Purcell Boulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:05a.m. Feb. 8, in the 200 blockof NW Jefferson Place. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11:56 a.m. Feb. 5, in the 61300 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:55 p.m. Feb. 6, in the 2100 block of NW Hill Street.

DUII —Nicole Leigh Olts, 40, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:50 p.m. Feb. 3, in the area of NWBond Street and NWMinnesota Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:53 p.m. Jan. 4, in the 2200 block of NW Lakeside Place. DUII —Robert Ray Kuper, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:02 p.m. Feb. 5, in the 3700 block of N. U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at10:51 a.m. Feb. 6, in the 61600 block of SE 27th Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at12:22 p.m. Feb. 5, in the 2200 block of NW Lakeside Place. Theft —A theft was reported at12:49 p.m. Feb. 5, in the1100 block of NE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at12:59 p.m. Feb. 5, in the63400 blockofU.S.Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 7:01 p.m. Feb. 6, in the 600 block of NEThird Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:27 PRINEVILLE p.m. Feb. 7, in the 600 block of SE POLICE Glencoe Place. Theft —A theft was reported and an DEPARTMENT arrest made at12:05 p.m. Jan. 30, in the 1300 block of NWUnion Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was

reported entered with items stolen at 7:24 p.m. Feb. 5, in the area ofNE Combs Flat Road.

• • •

541.383.8825 www.fl be nd.com

The B ulletin

JEFFERSON COUNTY POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2 p.m. Feb. 2, in the 700 block of SW Elk Drive. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at 2 p.m. Feb. 2, in the 700 block of SWElk Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:50p.m.Feb.2,inthe6800 blockof SW Badger Road. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at12:53 p.m. Feb. 3, in the area of Highway 361and SWNorris Lane.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Matthew AdamWestergaard, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:56 a.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost l33. DUII —Shelley Lynne Gjesdal, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:38 p.m. Feb. 7, in thearea of State Highway126 near milepost103. DUII —Philip Stewart White, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:54 p.m. Feb. 8, in the area ofU.S. Highway 20 near milepost 9.

EXPLORE ENC H A N T ING ELJRQPE Thursday, February 19 B:00 PM AAA Travel 20350 Empire Blvd. Suite A5, Bend, OR RSVP: 541.3B3.0069

INSIGHT VACATIONS

iRe~ +Tou~~ Ay/e

YOU'RE INVITED! Experience Europelike never before! With Insight Vacations you'll enjoy unique experiences, special touchesandexciting surprises that allow you to truly connect with your destination, its people andits culture. Join us for this free event andstart planning your most memorable vacation ever! LIFE GOING'"

A/I events are open to the public and free to attend, but sPaceis limited. Please RSVP.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

u is e s o a s or s eause usinesses ro ems • Complaints stack Up asbargaining over a labor contract keepsdelaying shipments

"Beer can't be sold until it arrives, and they aren't going to order more beer until they use their current shipment. We won't recover the

The Associated Press ALBANY

a contract since July. Dock-

loss. We're getting hit on both sides."

— Wi l l a mette workers say the port manag-

Valley businesses that rely on ers have failed to manage the overseasshipments say they supply chain efficiently. are frustrated by the delays West Coast seaports fully that have come with bargain- reopened Monday after two ing over a labor contract at days during which no ships West Coast ports, and some were unloaded. say the effects have hit them J eff Tobin o f M az a m a coming and going. Brewing in Corvallis said Complaints are c oming kegs from the Netherlands, from managers responsi- imported through Los Angeble for containers filled with les, have been late, meaning products such as compressed later shipping dates. straw destined for Japan and Beer exports are taking lonSouth Korea, grass seed head- ger, Tobin said. A shipment of ed to sites throughout Europe his company's Belgian ale to and China and frozen fruits Japan was supposed to leave and vegetables coming into Tacoma, Washington, on Dec. Oregon, the Albany Demo- 29 for a trip that takes 10 to 12 crat-Herald reported. days, he said. "It got there on Jan. 29," he Port managers say unionized workershave deliberate- said. "Beer can't be sold until ly slowed traffic through the it arrives, and they aren't go-

loss. We're getting hit on both sides." In Tangent, south of Alba-

ny, trucking company owner per day in overtime for office employees to redo paperwork ing for machine operators to

work has tobeperfectforthis type of thing." Mary Harer of Columbia Seeds, which exports its products at this time of year, said

pull containers off trailers.

that if th e delays continue,

and for truck drivers to sit in their vehicles for hours wait-

ing to order more beer until

they use their current ship-

Funding

City Manager Eric King said the feedback from councilors, together with goal-setting meetings the council is scheduled to hold in the coming months,would help shape the process of developing a final budget.

positions, together valued at $480,000 per fiscal year, including a lieutenant, a comput-

er forensics detective and an evidence and records specialist. In an effort to respond to

essary for the downtown core

area," said Donald Crouch, DURAC vice chairman, in sup-

port of the project. "Right now we're seeing a lot of moving parts. We need to make sure they're all in the right place so this makes sense." The study originally looked at three potential sites for the

recreation center: Evergreen Elementary School; the current City Hall; and a vacant lot im-

mediately south of St. Charles Redmond. Evergreen, which m ost

BOy ShOOtSfinger, nO ChargeS — Police said family members thought a 4-year-old Greshamboywas going to his bedroomfor a toy when he left aSaturday night gathering with friends. Instead, police said, the boycarried a plastic stool into his grandfather's bedroom. There, police believe, he took his grandfather's 9 mmhandgun off the top of a gunsafe, unholstered it andfired around that took off part of his right index finger. Doctors wereunable to reattach it. Police said the boy and his family recently movedinto anapartment with the 48-yearold grandfather. Theround went through amattress and into the wall. The boy wasreleasedfrom the hospital Sunday. Policesaid Monday that no chargeshadbeenfiled.

in the coming months, would help shape the process of developing a final budget. Wojda noted the budget process is in its early stages, and so is forecasting the needs and assets of city departments five

According to interim Streets Director David Abbas, cities

planner, could cost anywhere from $240,000 to $570,000 per fiscal year. A development fee study willbe presented at the second financial strategy meeting, in April, which in part may help determine where money

— From wire reports

• ' h earing aids

of revenue, such as property taxes, could increase or de-

L E A GJ E L D

Hearing Better Since 1955.

considering legislation that could affect city government, such as whether to tax recre-

ational marijuana. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com

to meet some of the requests

might come from. Possible revenue generators proposed by council and committee members included a gas tax and reducing the amount of debt service paid on the former Bulletin property on NW Wall Street, which the city bought in 2005 for

$4.8 million, per year to free up more funds. The city sold the property to Getz Properties LLC in March for $1.9 million.

5

54 1 -316-5064 708 SW 11~ Street Redmond, OR 97756

All at blowout prices!

Q

limited uenMies

H I~ N

ReSound

TV-APPLIANCE

SIEMENS ~ st8~ •

ex ~~

hearimgaidsbytricialeagjeld.com

I

I

PHO N AK

O l l fnanangavalable

ofHcon g unitron.

"I just want to be sure we

aren't hamstringing functions," s ai d

core

C o u ncilor

Casey Roats, echoing concerns voiced by other councilors ensuring maintenance of

road quality and public safety services. King said the feedback from councilors, together with goal-setting meetings the

/

(

/

/ )

)

/

/

/

/

(/

/

)

council is scheduled to hold

aquatic centers in similar-sized a bond measure that would be communities, including Ashrequired to pay for the initial land, Sherwood and Durango, construction. Colorado. "There's nothing w rong "These can be successwith us moving this forward ful," Martin said, noting most and seeing if there is a place of the facilities he studied in the urban renewal district were self-sufficient through for this, which I'm not sure memberships and program there is," said DURAC mem- funds once the building was ber Trish Pinkerton. "My fam- constructed. ily wouldn't use this, and I'm not too keen paying taxes for In other business something else I won't use." Also Monday, DURAC disA family recreation center cussed strategies for the city's in Redmond has been talked Housing Opportunity Revolvabout for years, said Heather ing Loan Program, which Richards, the city's commu- provides incentives for buildnity d e velopment d i r ector. ing downtown housing units. The rec center feasibility DURAC member Paul Hanstudy followed a 2012 survey sen repeatedly emphasized the of Redmond residents about need to promote high-density the area's parks system. The apartments and condominiums

desirable location, has since No. 1 amenity those surveyed been chosen to be renovated said they wanted was an ininto Redmond's new City Hall, door pooVaquatic center with eliminating it as a potential an indoor track and workout aquatic center site. facility. "It's not if this is coming, it's "I support (the rec center); I just don't know where it goes when and where is it going to now that the school's out," said happen," Richards said. DURAC member Edwin DanDURAC members agreed ielson."I can't see us not having to investigate the possibility of support for this thing." the rec center within the city's Operational costsconcerned downtown urban renewal disseveral committee members trict. Gabriel Martin, the city's — the Juniper Golf Course economic development/urban is never far from taxpayers' renewal project coordinaminds in Redmond — as did tor, presented information on

B Y TRI C I A

crease. The state House is also

the increase in taxes through

Continued from B1 Redmond has already set aside $7.5 million in urban renewal funds for the project. "Ithinkthis is absolutelynec-

was identified as th e

at some point, and the paper-

years down the line. Sources

growing calls for service, said of similar size — such as RedBend Police Capt. Ben Grego- mond — spend twice as much ry, the department is creating per mile on road maintenance teams to respond to specific and have a "good" rating. types of crimes and incidents. Mayor Jim Clinton suggested Bend F i r e De p a r tment that revamping the road sysChief Larry Langston briefly tem entirely, though it may inoutlined expected revenues cur a large up-front cost, could a nd expenditures, both o f reduce maintenance costs which reflected a May levy ap- in the future compared with proving the implementation of making incremental routine a two-tier hiring system that improvements. "I think there are a lot of will bring in about 26 emergency medical technicians to questions we've put out on the complement the department's table today," said Councilor paramedic firefighters. The and Mayor Pro Tem Sally Rusd epartment predicts an i n - sell of the road issue. "Undercrease in ambulance transport standing these questions and fees paid and in revenues se- understanding, as we play out cured from the transient room all these different scenarios of tax. all the pros and cons, is going City councilors sought more to be really important." detailed predictions for three City Manager Eric King scenarios pertaining to road and interim Finance Director maintenance presented by the Sharon Wojda estimated that streets department. Currently, general fund requests from the city of Bend has a backlog representatives from the city's of an estimated $80 million Community Development and in repairs to be made to city Engineering and Infrastrucstreets. As i t s t ands, Bend ture Planning departments, streets have an average "poor" including requests for two rating under a federal stan- part-time code enforcement dard assessing road quality. officers and a transportation

Redmond

3rd UO daCterial infeCtiOn —Authorities in Eugenesaid a third University of Oregonstudent has beendiagnosed with a contagious bacterial infection. LaneCounty Public Health spokesmanJason Davis said the malestudent with meningococcemia is in the intensive care unit of a local hospital. University spokeswomanJen McCulley said the university sent text messagesandemails Monday to students and faculty who mayhaveshared aclass with the student to tell them that an antibiotic that prevents the spread of thebacteria in the body is available at thecampus health center. Theuniversity notified a total of 2,000 students andfaculty in the two earlier cases, both involving female students whoarerecovering.

Normally, the company has "our customers will likely go to change a shipping order to other suppliers." "There's nothing we grow once a week, said Boshart's daughter, Shelly Boshart Da- in Oregon that can't be provis, vice president in charge duced elsewhere. Right now, o f international sales a n d the ports are making us look marketing. like u nreliable suppliers," "Now, it's 15 or 20 per day," Harer said.

have been working without

ed the addition of three new

customers and their orders was written. "Nearly every

booking has to be changed

West Coast ports, where they

Continued from B1 Bend Police have request-

she said, standing in front of a white board on which information about nearly a dozen

Stan Boshart estimated that it's costing him at least $1,500

Uder in Eugene —The EugeneCity Council said while Uber may be a newtype of ride service, it should comply with the same rules as traditional taxi companies. Thecouncil voted 8-0 Mondaynight to approve a codechange that makes it explicit that ride-sharing services such as Ubermust be licensed bythe city. Councilor Greg Evanssaid the change is designed to ensure that such companies follow the safety and other regulations the city requires of other transportation providers. The changealso lets traditional taxi companies use smartphone applications to calculate fares. Uber hasrefused to comply with Eugene's licensing andother requirements since it beganoperating in the city last summer —andthe city has beenfining it. Uber's Northwest manager, BrookeSteger, said the code change would jeopardize Uber's operations in Eugene. POrtland matel fire —A Portland Fire andRescuespokesman said firefighters haveextinguished a blazethat damagedfour units at a northeast Portland motel. Lt. DamonSimmonssaid crews arriving Monday evening at the UnionAvenue Motel found heavy fire in two units while two others werealso damaged. Themotel was evacuated. No injuries were reported. Thecause of the fire is under investigation. The American RedCross said it is assisting 21 adults and six children displaced by the fire.

— Jeff Tobin of Mazama Brewing in Corvallis

ment. We won't recover the

AROUND THE STATE

in downtown and midtown.

The committee agreed to give priority to projects that create high-density housing within the urban renewal dis-

trict and that target families

that make 150 percent of the averagemedian income. "If we build without achiev-

ing more high-density housing downtown, we've just made the problem permanent," Hansen

said."We've gotjust alittlebit of space here. Let's use it wisely." — Reporter: 541-617-7829; beastes@bendbulletin.com. •

Get ATaste For Food, Home & Garden Every7uesday In AT HOME TheBulletin

-


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

ou arsmus e i e someimes

QHEMEQAgIHE R'AR-LEPsER

urely the most controversial conflicts between humans and wildlife come when animals die because they've ventured into human communities. Thus it should come as no surprise to read that at least some members of the community fault the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife for killing a young cougar found in a tree in

UL

~, ' ~~~I$TIE

southeast Bend in late January. Yet the agency had little choice but to kill the animal. As an agency spokeswoman noted in a Sunday artide written by Dylan Darling, moving the cougar likely would have put it into conflict with other animals. Moreover, said ODFW spokeswoman Michelle Dennehy, the cougar was discovered well inside the city limits in a relatively densely populated neighborhood. It had, agency officials believe, been there overnight,in part because no one saw it moving to the location in which it was found. Dennehy said that had the animal been found along the fringes of Bend, it likely would have been watched and left alone unless it moved into the city. That move was at the heart of the department's decision to kill the animal. It has a responsibility not only to animals but to the people with which they share space; like it or not, people and their safety have

first priority. We cannot ingood conscience suggest it be any other way. Meanwhile, those who do think

the agency's policy is misguided should work to have it changed. If they believe ODFW overestimates the number ofcougars in Oregon, they should offer evidence to the contrary. If they believe there's a better way to determine that number, they should say so. Too, they can ask lawmakers to prohibit ODFW from killing animals, though we suspect it's not likely to happen. While Washington will relocate some animals, its fish and wildlife department notes relocation is seldom effective. Like Oregon and California, its policy is to euthanize animals that pose a threatto humans. A cougar near a park in a heavily populated area poses that threat.

Help out TumaloCreek

T

umalo Creek needs help. It doesn't run dry before it reaches the Deschutes River anymore. It used to. But the creek still has problems. The worst part is arguably a stretch called Reach B. It's downstream from where Bend takes its water and just downstream from where Tumalo Irrigation District takes even more water. The creek's flows in Reach B can dwindle down to just over 10 cubic feet per second, a fifth or sixth of the creek's former size. That warms the water. In turn, that can harm fish and plants and prevent the creek from cooling the Deschutes River. There was ananalysis by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife in the 1980s that said the minimum flow should be 10 cfs and the optimum flow would be 30 cfs. The Bend City Council discussed the creek Friday to get a sense of what policy approach the city wants to take to improving the creek. Staff is going to take the comments and come up with a strategy or strategies to get there. The best place to start is likely to help 'Ibmalo Irrigation District. It has diversions on Tumalo Creek, the Deschutes River and Crescent Lake. City staff said the district loses about45percent of the water it diverts in its canal system. Another 17

'ANYBoDY wANNA HEARoURTHoUIQHT5 oN HEARTP15EA%0"

percent is lost on farms. That leaves only 38 percent of the water that

gets to where it is supposed to go. Pipe more canals and fix more leaks and the creek's flow would meet a goal of 20 cfs and could even get to 30 cfs. There were other good ideas that came out of the meeting. Councilor Nathan Boddie wants to base the need for improvement of 'Ibmalo Creek on the best science. What is the right flow in Reach B to improve habitat? He wants a study. Councilor Victor Chudowsky said the city should focus on realistic, specific, attainable goals — such as 20 cfs in Reach B. Bend Mayor Jim Clinton was counterproductive. He said so himself. He said it's "absurd" that Bend should consider spending money to encourage 'Ibmalo Irrigation District to conserve water from Tumalo Creek. He called the state's water rights system "corrupt" because the system undermines the law's concept that all of the water in Oregon belongs to the public. Clinton's argument is not without its logic. But the city is in a much better position to do things that will help lbmalo Creek than it is to rewrite state water law.

IN MY VIEW

W atTrut i n By Bill Eddie n Jan. 13, The Bulletin pub-

i t e w a nts

O

The campus should be exceptional, providing athletic fields, gymnasiums, walking and biking trails, a theater for the performing arts and enough classrooms and

of Bend unfamiliar with the 500-

dormitories to house 5,000 to 10,000 students.

lished an e ditorial titled "Truth in Site wins very little

in campus fight." For those citizens

plus member group, Truth in Site is a grassroots organization which is pro-college, pro-education, but strongly opposed to the current 3,000 to 5,000 students. Recently, building site selected by the college OSU spokespersons have stated in west Bend.

that this 46-acre parcel, much of it

The concerns expressed by Truth in Site regarding the westside construction of OSU-Cas-

a large pit caused by pumice mining, may not be purchased or developed because the cost would be

dormitories to house 5,000 to 10,000 students.

There should be ample room to expand and modify the campus as educational priorities change in the

future. There should be developable land for affordable student housing,

prohibitive. gestion, transportation issues and More importantly, the governor's restaurants, pubs and other amenithe lack of viable rental housing on 2015 budget does not include the ties that will attract students from west side. $30 million estimated to complete around the country. Student rental housing for 3,000 the development. The current site on the west side to 5,000 students will only exacThis raises the question, where cannot meet the needs of a great erbate our recent concerns about and how does OSU-Cascades in- university. It is not large enough for vacation rentals i n r e sidential tend to expand beyond the original a comprehensive campus, nor does neighborhoods. The whole idea of 10-acre site? This seems a simple it allow for future growth. inserting a university into an exist- question that no one seems to ask, Because of the surfacing probing area of Bend that already offers much less answer. lems concerning funding and deexcellent livability and economic viCertainly the notion of OSU buy- velopment of the original 56-acre tality seems to clash with common- ing up random parcels on the west plan, maybe it's time to take a serisense planning. side and piecing together a univer- ous look at a better location for the In recent months, the original vi- sity seems a patently bad idea espe- campus. sionofthe campus has become less cially since master planning would The Bulletin editorial talks a lot certain due to land and funding con- be impossible. Currently there is no about winning and losing as if this straints. OSU currently owns a 10- master plan for the full build-out of were some type of athletic event. acreparcelon the cornerofCentury the university. While it is factual that Truth in Drive and Chandler Avenue. This Many Bend residents, including Site is opposed to the building loparcel was to represent Phase 1 of members of TIS, would prefer to see cation, both OSU-Cascades and the campus,providing some class- a well-planned, continuous cam- TIS want the same outcome for our rooms, a dorm and parking (300 pus built as part of a "university community. stalls for 1,300 students and faculty). district." The campus should be exAs for the scoreboard, Truth in The adjacent 46-acre parcel was ceptional, providing athletic fields, Site will consider a great university thought to represent "Phase 2" and gymnasiums, walking and biking built in the right location a resoundinclude enough classrooms, park- trails, a theater for the performing mg wm. ing and dormitories for a total of arts and enough classrooms and — Bill Eddie lives in Bend. cades include potential traffic con-

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

There's a reason military pensions are loate By Megan McArdle

time hauling heavy things and runningaround in themud.

They pay really well. The senior

officer corps decline. Note that the biggest industry o an outsider, military penBut there's another problem with ment get paid even better, of course. that uses the up-or-out system withsions sound ridiculous; you rejiggering the A r my's pension But even the entry-level jobs pay out paying big salaries — academia can put in 20 years starting schedule, and that's the way it inter- better than most of the alternatives. — makes up for it by giving the winin your late teens or early 20s and acts with the "up or out" system the The opposite is true in the mili- ners a paycheck for life, which is "retire" at the time when most peo- military uses for officers' careers. tary. It pays badly in the beginning even more extreme than a military ple are hitting their peak earning Basically, officers who don't get se- and it pays badly at the end, relative pension. I'm against tenure, and I'm genyears. Obviously, that's a very ex- lected for promotion get fired. to what those folks could have been pensive benefit for the government The military is not the only insti- making if they'd been steadily mov- erally also against backloading to provide. tution that uses this method. It's also ing up through the ranks in a nor- compensation in the form of deShould we ratchet up the retire- popular with consultancies, law mal industry. fined-benefit pensions. ment age? Some economists think firms and investment banks. That There are all sorts of ancillary These systems areterri ble for we should. system is archaic and barbaric, and benefits, of course, but also all sorts workers who don't stay long enough P eople supporting t h e s t a t us whatever it gains you in reduced of ancillary costs, such as the fact to qualify for a pension, and they're quo will probably argue the mili- payroll costs, it loses you in accu- that your employer expects you to not good for the workforce as a tary is more physically demanding mulated human capital, and it also pick up and move your whole family whole, either: It encourages riskthan most jobs, and therefore you earns you a backstabbing corporate somewhere else every few years ... averse time serving at the expense have to expect people to retire ear- culture. which is not just inconvenient but, in of your organization's mission, not lier. But the pension is available to Of course, no one asked me, and this modern day, plays hell with the to mention clogging your org chart everyone in the military, not just I expect those sorts of firms will career prospects of your spouse. with bu rned-out characters who infantrymen. continue to use up-or-out pyramids Military pensions are extreme- ought to go do something else but Moreover, it is disproportionately for the foreseeable future. But what ly generous compared with those won't leave until they get that goldused by officers, not enlisted men, do all these firms have in common in the private sector, but without en ticket. and by the time they have 20 years with each other, and not with the them, we might have to pay more, or But I also recognize that de-emin, officers are spending a lot less military'? watch the quality of the midcareer phasizing backloaded compensaBloomberg News

T

people who survived the tourna-

tion means youhave to pay more up front, right now. No, don't wave around actuarial charts showing

that your new plan has just as high an expected value as the old one; the workers won't buy it, and I'm

not buying it, either. You're asking them to take more risk, and just as in financial markets, you're going to have to pay them to do so. I think that's a good idea — that ultimately, doing so creates more value for everyone. What you can't do is tinker with one part of the system and expect all

the other parts to stay the same. If we move the nation's military members off the current defined-benefit

system, we are probably going to have to make up for it in some other

way. Especially once the nation's politically powerful veterans groups get involved. — Megan McArdle is a columnist for Bloomberg.


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

OSU

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Maggie Mozell Yost, of Terrebonne

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Continued from B1 They say starting from scratch means they can design and build the most energy-efficient campus possible: a netzero campus, or one that creates as much energy as it uses. Imagine solar panels, geothermal heat pumps and biomass boilers that create ex-

Nov. 8, 1924 - Feb. 4, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services will be held.

Deaths of note from around

cess energy to offset the cam-

theworld:

pus's energyuse. "It's really the future of building," said Matt Shinder-

Finis "Ray" R. Copeland, of La Pine

in Northern California. Ed Sabol, 98: A onetime coat

May 17, 1936 - Feb. 8, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned. Ray's cremains will be interred at La Pine Community Cemetery. Contributionsmay be made to:

Heart 'n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739, 541-536-7399,

www.gohospice.com Can Cancer-

www.cancancer.org

Joseph Langdell, 100: The o ldest crew member of t h e b attleship USS A r i zona t o

have survived the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Died

achieve net zero status on its

served as co-chairman of the OSU-Cascades Campus Ex-

own, Shinderman said, but it would be designed to work with future buildings on campus to be net zero. The bigger

of Engineering. Deschutes Brewery also donated $50,000 toward the net zero initiative

and previously donated to the "Buildings today represent a campus expansion effort. huge drain on our total energy the scale, the more economiCampus leaders say the net budget." cally viable net zero becomes, zero initiative isn't just about The initial $725,000 would he said. The college has re- saving energy. They want go mostly toward the f irst ceived two more gifts to help OSU-Cascades to be among building's "envelope" — the meet the March 31 deadline. the first campuses in the counwalls, roof and windowsRod Ray, former president try to achieve net zero, a disand heating and cooling sys- and CEO of Bend Research, tinction they say would help tem, according to Shinder- and his wife, Lori, former vice attract world-class students man. "That's kind of the first president of Bend Research, and faculty to Central Oregon. "If you want to do that, you law of net zero, if you will, to gave $75,000. An OSU alumreduce demand as much as nus, Ray serves as a trustee have to bedifferent.You have possible through design and of the OSU Foundation and to be bold," Shinderman said. pansion Advisory Committee.

ural resources who leads the system optimization." sustainability degree program The first building may not

is chairman of the adviso-

Guns

state's law requiring back- opposed a ballot initiative in ground checks at gun shows, Washington state, passed in said the check would include November, expanding backa serialnumber to ensure the ground checks there. They say gun isn't stolen. they will take the failed fight "This is really a service to from Washington into the Oregun owners," she said. gon Capitol this session. The rally also included So far the only bill sponsome conservative members sored by Democrats comes of the Legislature, such as from a group of Portland-area Reps. Mike Nearman and Bill lawmakers seeking to prohibit Post and Sen. Kim Thatcher, possession of guns for people all Republicans from the Wil- convicted of certain domestic-violence m i sdemeanors lamette Valley. "I'm always against uni- and those who are subject to versal background checks, a restraining order related to period," said Post, R-Keizer. family abuse. "The only way you can enDemocrats, who are typicalforce it would eventually be ly more friendly to universal registration. background checks, had a 16"To me the Second Amend- 14 majority in the Senate last ment is dear. It's not up for in- session. They expanded their terpretation," Post added. majority to 18-12 this session. The protest was organized — Reporter: 406-589-4347, by a group called the Heirs of tanderson@bendbulletin.com Patrick Henry, Northwest, and induded speakers who also

— Reporter: 541-617-7837, ospegnan@bendbulle tn. tcom

ry board of the OSU College

Wednesday at a nursing home salesman who talked his way into a job as the official motion-picture chronicler of Na-

tional Football League action and whose dramatic action films played a crucial role in makingpro football America's most popular spectator sport. Died Monday at his home in Scottsdale, Arizona. Val Fitch, 92: The rancher's son who shared the Nobel

Prize for detecting a breakdown in the overarching symmetry of physical laws, helping explain how the universe evolved after the Big Bang. Died Thursday in New Jersey. — From wire reports

FEATURED OBITUARY

LizabethScott, the sultry

leading ladyof film noir By David Colker

man, a senior instructor in nat-

at OSU-Cascades. He also

B5

Continued from B1 Background checks are already required for guns sold by licensed dealers. The 2013 proposal and another in 2014 sought to effectivelyrequire all gun sellers to conduct a back-

ground check or face potential fines and jail time. While the rally in Salem was billed broadly as a "constitution and liberty rally" with

Soper, dressed in full military garb with an AR-15 rifle at his side, said while no background check bill has been filed, he came to oppose an aspect of the possible law change. "My problem with the universal background check isn't so much the background check itself. My issue is the

reason of having the firearm serial number included in that," Soper said. "You're

checking the person, not the media,speakersand attendees firearm, and to me it's just holding rifles and holstered another step towards gun pistols made dear guns are on registration." their radar this session. Soper said he would "abBJ Soper and Steve Broad- solutely" support a universal away, members of a group background check that looks called the Central Oregon into a person's criminal histothousands of invites on social

Constitutional Guard, came to Salem from Redmond to

ry and doesn't include the seri-

al number of a gun, which he work as security detail for says would allow the state to the group of about four dozen track gun owners. protesters. Burdick, who penned the

to Dick Powell in the 1948 film

"Pitfall" as "a girl whose first engagement ring was bought by a man stupid enough to emlooks and smoky voice led bezzle and stupid enough to get many a man astray in 1940s caught." and '50s film noir, died Jan. 31 She also played opposite at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Humphrey Bogart, Barbara in Los Angeles. She was 92. Stanwyck andVan Heflin. The cause was congestive In a 1996 interview with docheart failure, said her longtime umentary filmmaker Carole Los Ange(es Times

LOS ANGELES — Actress Lizabeth Scott, whose sultry

Growlers

limited to a certain number

Continued from B1

of producers," he said. "For

In a review of wine's eco-

"It's small, regional and

"The whole thrust of Ore-

those that do it, sure, it's a

nomic impact i n O r egon nice business." published last month, Full In some cases, wineries Glass Research's Christian

Scott aspired to be a stage lament the fact she wasn't cast actressbutwas stereotyped as in studio blockbusters. She the femme fatale in the hard-

tourism.

Langer, Scott said she didn't liked the grittiness of film noir.

"The films that I had seen boiled, film noir world of crime, tough talk and dark secrets. growing up were always boy "She had the smoldering meets girl, boy ends up marrylook, the blond hair, the voice," ing girl, they go off into the sunAlan Rode, a film historian

set," Scott said. After the war, films got more in touch with

who produces annual film noir festivals, said Friday. "She was "the psychological, emotional someone you would see in a things that people feel and peonightclub through a haze of ple do." "It was a new realm, and it cigarette smoke, with a voice made husky by a couple of was very exciting, because sudhighballs and an unfiltered Pall denly you were coming closer Mall." and closer to reality." Scott starred in numerous

films in the genre, mostly as the bad girl — or in a variation, the good girl gone bad — with evocative titles such as "Dead Reckoning," "I Walk Alone,"

She was born Emma Matzo on Sept. 29, 1922, in Scranton,

Pennsylvania, where her father had a grocery store. In her late teens, she left to study acting in New York, landing a role in "Pitfall" and " Too L ate f or a touring company of the hit Tears. stage comedy "Hellzapoppin'." She inspired lines such as In 1942, she got a small part in "What a fall guy I am, think- the original Broadway producing just because you're good tion of Thornton Wilder's "The to look at you'd be good all the Skin of Our Teeth." way through." Burt Lancaster said that to her in the 1948 drama "I Walk Alone," which also

starred Kirk Douglas. And she described herself

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obils©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Scott also understudied the

lead role, and then got to play it in Boston, turning down interest from Hollywood to further

her stage career. At that point, her stage name was Elizabeth Scott — she later removed the "E" tobe more distinctive.

When she finally came west, she was signed by prominent producer Hal Wallis. After several years of making one film noir after another

involved in selling wine for growlers, the ones that do

a

a

are very enthusiastic, particularly in their commitment

to sustainability by reusing containers. "A lot o f

w i n eries have

their own branded reusable packaging that they prefer the consumer wouldprefer," Kaufmann said. Most consumers drink the

wine they purchase within two days, which means wine in growlers will still be fresh, she said. A properly cleaned, sealed and stored growler can keep wine fresh for a few weeks, but not for long periods of time. The more people learn about wine growlers, the more popular they will become, she predicted.

a refillable container to buy as more consumers learn about it," she said. "It's excit-

ing that we're seeing more

think that it shows a lot of

restaurant scene as well. I promise."

J on Fredrikson, a w i n e consultant w it h G o m berg, Fredrikson and A ssociates,

based in Woodside, Califor-

brother Gus Matzo, of Plym-

nia, said the introduction of

outh, Michigan; and sister Jus-

wine growlers has not made a huge impact on the American

tine Birdsall, of Middletown, New York.

egon Wine Board, said while

said in the Langer interview.

great combination." Scott's survivors include her

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

Coolsculp6ng'

8

there weren't many wineries

s tores an d v e nues c o me online and offer it, and the

that lens that I adored, and it adored me back. So we were a

«

Michelle Kaufmann, communications manager for Or-

career. She had a few TV roles inthe 1960s.

"There was something about

W S

e stimate its economic i m -

wine), I think it will catch on

"I loved making films," she

R

www.leffelcenter.com' 541-388-3006

pact," he wrote.

ready for a change. She got it in the 1953comedy"Scared Sti ff," ry Lewis. But as noir faded, so did her

wines carefully fermented

EVERGREEN

Dan' t settle far anyone but a plastic surgean for

in implementation of the law, it is not currently feasible to

"Now that you have more places where you can (use

starring Dean Martin and Jer-

L EFF EL GE N T E R

business and some confusion

or three in a year — Scott was

— sometimes at a pace of two

~+ccoolsculpting

But the economic impact of marily for everyday wine, wine growlers was tough to not for more expensive "Because of the decentralized nature of the growler

iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

Growlers make sense pri-

pin down, Miller noted.

ASSURANCE

gon producers is to bottle a higher-end product," he said.

may prefer to sell their sur-

Miller concluded the indus- plus wine directly to contry contributed $3.35 billion sumers, which fetches a in economic activity to Orhigher price than selling it egon's economy, including in bulk to another wine pro$207.5 million in wine-related ducer, he said.

friend Mary Goodstein.

716 SW11tII St. Redmond 541.923.4732

and bottled by wineries trying to reach higher-end consumers, he said.

FF

wine market.

ROSES

Low Cost Reverse Mortgage

this Valentine's Day!

Call Jerry Gilmaur ~NMLS¹ 124521)

: to order call 1.800.929.0916 or visit:: vrwnv.fromyouflowers.com/roses

18 years reverse mortgage experience,

*50% Off Our Line of RosesOffer applies only to a select line of rose products and does not apply to florist delivered arrangements. See item-level product description for details. *Orders for flower delivery today must be placed by 3pm in the detivety zip code. Next day delivery options or dates in the future are also available. Cut off time for delivery same day varies on weekends and during peak holidays.

local, professional consultation

P~ VPiBametteValleyBank HOME LOAN DIVISION 541-382-4189 121 NW Greenwood Ave, Ste 103, Bend, OR 97701

jerry.gilmour©wvbk.com


B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015

I

'

r

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH ~

M

Partly sunny

i f ' 1

ALMANAC

W EDN E SDAY

LGW

~

Partly cloudy

57' ~

Mostly cloudy and mild

FRIDAY

THU R SDAY

~

6 0'

EAST:Sunshine will mix with clouds and there can be aspotty shower early in the day.

TEMPERATURE

59' 33'

~

Mild with somesunshine

r

Yesterday Today Wednesday

Umatilla 59/37 Rufus • ermiston lington 57/36 Meac am Losti ne • 'W co 5 /36 48/28 Enterprise di tan46/2 •

Hood

Seasid

City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W City Abilene 78/39/0.00 80/47/s 64/38/sh Juneau Cannon High 49 43 91' in 1 9 54 Portland Akron 24/22/0.12 30/21/c 38/26/c Kansas City 53/45 39' 24' -26'in 1933 Low /3 Albany 24/13/0.51 29/4/pc 26/15/pc Lansing he Dall Albuquerque 69/37/0.00 69/38/s 57/32/r Las Vegas • • 47/27 Tillamoo • • 54/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: A mix of andy • Anchorage 12/7/0.00 28/22/pc 32/22/c Lexington 56/37 54/41 Mc lnnvill • Joseph Atlanta 64/57/0.34 55/36/s 63/40/s Lincoln /39 Govee • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.02" clouds andsunshine n t • u p i Condon 5/33 Atlantic City 38/34/0.00 38/28/pc 36/26/pc Litlle Rock • 54 5 31 Record 0.53" in 1902 across the region. Union Lincoln Austin 81/45/0.00 76/47/s 73/43/s Los Angeles 45/ Month to date (normat) 0.2 2" (0.39") Partly cloudyoverSale 54/44 Baltimore 37/36/Tr 43/25/pc 42/29/pc Louisville pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.47 " (1.91 ") night. 55/ • @® Billings 54/27/0.00 48/24/sh 44/30/c Madison, Wl a 'Baker G Newpo 43/26 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 6" • 54 34 Birmingham 65/56/0.06 53/29/s 63/37/s Memphis 5/38 55/44 • Mitch II 50/27 Bismarck 28/20/0.00 37/8/c 13/-9/c Miami Camp Sh man Red WEST:Ashower 51 /31 n R SUN ANDMOON eu Boise 57/48/0.35 53/34/sh 54/34/pc Milwaukee Yach 50/29 • John or two across the 54/39 Boston 25/14/0.81 29/1 8/pc 25/16/sf 54/44 • Prineville Day 7/26 Today Wed. tario Bridgeport, CT 24/20/0.21 34/17/pc 29/16/pc Minneapolis north; otherwise, Nashville 53/30 • Pa lina 50 / 3 1 7:12 a.m. 7: 1 1 a.m. 5 32 Buffalo 17/12/0.20 25/11/pc 33/28/sn New Orleans sunshine mixing with Floren e • Eugene ' Re d Brothers 5:27 p.m. 5: 2 9 p.m. clouds. Partly cloudy 55/42 Valee Burlington, VT 16/7/0.10 21/-4/pc 23/18/c New YorkCity Su iVere 50/29 none 1 2 :19 a.m. 55/35 Caribou, ME 8/-16/0.00 14/-13/pc 7/-4/pc Newark, NJ ovemight. Nyssa • 4 9 / 7 • l.a pine Ham ton e Charleston, SC 70/45/0.02 55/36/s 58/38/s Norfolk, YA 10:14 a.m. 1 0:49 a.m. J untura 56/ 3 2 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 61/54/0.73 55/32/s 57/36/s OklahomaCity S Co • Burns OREGON EXTREME New F i r s t Full 52/32 57/39 /35 Chattanooga 65/53/0.04 52/29/s 61/35/s Omaha 57 9 • Fort Rock Riley 48/26 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 49/25 Cheyenne 61/32/0.00 51/27/pc 47/27/pc Orlando 49/24 49/26 Chicago 27/24/Tr 28/24/pc 37/12/sf Palm Springs High: G1' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 34/33/0.03 38/25/c 49/24/pc Peoria Jordan V Hey Feb 11 Feb 1G Feb 25 M a r 5 at Ontario 57/41 Beaver Silver 4g/24 Frenchglen 56/39 Cleveland 20/18/0.07 25/19/c 38/24/sn Philadelphia Low: 35' 47/31 Marsh Lake 50/26 ColoradoSprings 64/30/0.00 57/32/pc 44/28/pc Phoenix Touight's utttf:At a distance of 8.6 light49/24 at Hermiston 50/25 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 36/32/0.00 50/33/s 42/13/pc Pittsburgh • Paisley 7/ years, Sirius, the brightest star in the night a Columbia, SC 68/44/0.22 58/34/s 60/38/s Portland, ME • 51/26 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 69/53/0.13 60/34/s 65/42/s Providence Medfo d 5 0 / 26 sky, scoots across the south onwinter nights. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 30/27/0.10 36/26/c 43/24/c Raleigh 56/ 52/26 Klamath Concord, NH 17/1 1/0.58 32/2/pc 22/7/pc Rapid City Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd e Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 83/54/0.00 77/53/s 74/52/pc Reno Bro ings 51/29 55/3 50/25 57/41 50/21 50/28 Dallas 75/46/0.00 73/49/s 71/39/s Richmond Dayton 29/28/0.01 35/27/c 45/21/c Rochester, NY Denver 70/31/0.00 59/30/pc 50/29/pc Sacramento 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 33/27/0.00 41/30/c 33/7/pc St. Louis 2 1~3 ~ z l o City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 27/19/Tr 26/16/pc 36/16/sn Salt Lake City The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrm IIYIndex number, Astoria Portland 53/4 6/0.3654/40/pc 58/42/ c 55/50/0.48 55/41/pc60/43/c La Grande 57/46/0.16 52/31/pc 53/37/c Duluth 27/16/0.02 24/19/sn 20/-8/sn San Antonio the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 54/44/0.1150/27/pc 48/30/c La Pine 46/40/0.10 49/28/c 55/30/c Prinevige 52/ 46/0.0553/30/pc 55/31/c El Paso 77/44/0.00 78/44/s 69/42/pc San Diego 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 56/53/0.30 57/41/pc59/45/s Medford 59 /50/0.08 56/32/pc 60/35/s Redmond 51/ 40/0.0853/30/pc 59/32/ c -11/-36/0.00-8/-19/pc 3/-15/c Fairbanks San Francisco Bums 53/44/0.10 48/26/pc 51/27/pc N ewport 54/5 0/0.87 55/44/pc 60/45/c Roseburg 55/ 4 8/0.3156/39/pc 60/43/ pc Fargo 24/1 2/0.00 33/8/sn 9/-13/c San Jose Eugene 52/46/1.00 54/38/pc 57/41/c N o rth Bend 5 4 / 50/1.64 57/40/pc 61/42/pc Salem 53/46/0.67 55/39/pc 58/41/c Flagstaff 64/28/0.00 62/27/s 52/32/s Santa re Klamath Fags 50/40/0.10 50/25/pc 55/25/s O n tario 61/48/0.0856/32/sh 54/34/pc Sisters 51/41/0.04 53/28/pc57/29/ c Grand Rapids 27/1 7/0.00 25/20/pc 34/11/sn Savannah For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lakeview 48/39/0.00 50/21/s 55/23/s Pendleton 59/48/0.06 54/35/pc53/36/c The Dages 4 9 /41/0.46 56/37/pc 56/38/c Green Bay 25/11/0.01 28/24/sn 33/7/sf Seattle www.bendbulletin.com/webcams Greensboro 57/47/0.20 50/31/s 55/35/pc Sioux Fags Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-84at Cabbage Hill: Visibility will be reduced Harrisburg 34/33/0.08 38/21/pc 38/29/pc Spokane at times in themoming with showers. Harfford, CT 20/16/0.59 33/ll/pc 26/10/pc Springfield, Mo Helena 49/34/0.21 50/28/sh 50/31/c Tampa US 20 atSuntiumPass:Noweather-related Honolulu 82/69/0.06 81/66/pc 80/65/pc Tucson delays areexpected with a mixof clouds ~ gs ~ t aa ~ 20a ~ 30 8 ~ 40 6 ~ 50 a ~a ca ~7 09 ~ aga ~ 90 8 ~ 10 0 a ~ 1 1 08 Houston ~ 108 ~ g a 83/54/0.00 72/44/s 72/46/s Tulsa and sun. Huntsville 61/55/0.03 50/28/s 60/34/s Washington,Dc * * * * * * +p ** NATIONAL Calus * * * * * • + US 26 atGov'tCamp:Roadwayswill remain Indianapolis 30/28/0.03 35/26/pc 43/15/pc Wichita Que . + * awe * * * * dry throughtomorrow with increasing clouds. 19/Jackson, MS 70/55/0.01 57/33/s 67/43/s Yakima EXTREMES Jacksonville 68/44/0.12 61/39/s 63/39/s Yuma US 26 atOchocoDivide:With dry roads, no YESTERDAY (for the urll s * sfffarv ~9 uis mroyfn w Vr Vr P ~ weather-related delaysare anticipated today. r e I 49 contiguousstates) "i i no" 37/ 8 * ~+ + ~ 54/40 , " ORE HG at WiHamette Pass:Sunshine will mix National high: 90 ronto + Amsterdam 45/36/0.29 45/33/sh 43/31/c Mecca * * with clouds todayandroads will remain dry. 15 uovtoh Athens 48/43/0.36 45/36/c 45/36/pc Mexico City at Thermal, CA * uke /18 * * Auckland 69/63/0.17 74/58/pc 73/60/pc Montreal ORE138 at Diamond Luke:Sunshinewill mix i uaprd Crty • **9 /2 National low: -27' ~~~~~~'5a/21 w York i i i i Baghdad 77/49/0.00 74/58/pc 73/50/s Moscow I with clouds todayandroads will be dry. at Presque Isle, ME 8/21 Bangkok 90/72/0.00 90/70/pc 92/74/s Nairobi s 41/30 1 hho ~ ~ hfteyo i ~ i Precipitation: 1.94" 49/2 Beijing 46/21/0.00 53/26/s 46/21/s Nassau grLdrdgfty~ C icsg • Col mb Beirut 63/59/0.86 67/52/r 53/52/r New Delhi at North Bend, OR h a hclvco 3 Cfty 2 /24 Berlin 42/31/0.12 44/37/pc 42/33/c Osaka In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday 43/47 itrftttr+ 'dd d us ae Lasy ss ~ v Bogota 64/52/0.08 64/48/t 65/47/r Oslo Den er > >'ddddddddd, <c x x ' Std resort New snow Base u ' 4 3/2 8 74/5 Budapest 34/25/0.15 43/29/sf 42/27/pc Ottawa 59/3 Anthony LakesMtn 1 49-4 9 46/ Buenos Ai r es 88/66/0.03 83/61/pc 88/69/s Paris • svhvif Chsrlq J < d d d d o ~ d Los An fos 1-1 Cabo San Lucas 88/56/0.00 86/60/pc 83/60/pc Rio de Janeiro Hoodoo SkiArea 0 50/2 9/ae Jddd ddd • L' Cairo 68/52/0.00 65/49/s 57/45/s Rome Mt. Ashland 2 26-5 7 \ Anchorauo Albuque ue klshoms Cr • At d dd dd dd dd d dd dd dd' Calgary 12/5/0.06 22/10/c 25/18/c Santiago 8 35 2 48-9 5 Mt. Bachelor 7 „aft/2 69/sa o Phoeni 55/34 Cancun 81/59/0.00 80/57/pc 79/58/s Sao Paulo uir inuha Mt. HoodMeadows 0 29-60 /5 3/54 • Dalla Juneau ul Ps 39/32/0.00 45/34/c 44/33/sb Sapporo 53/ 9 ,dd dd dd d dd dd dd dd Dublin 1-5 . * i ~ " . * , 73/4 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 8/ Edinburgh 48/41/0.00 46/34/pc 44/33/c Seoul 31/27 ssss1 s s d d d d d d Geneva 41/32/0.00 42/29/s 49/34/s Shanghai Timberline Lodge 0 28-3 9 d d d d d • dsndO~g~ s d d d d d Harare 80/58/0.00 83/59/1 84/60/pc Singapore Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA w Orleans s'4 s 6 45 s Hong Kong 66/49/0.00 65/59/s 69/60/s Stockholm Honofufui ~M . Chihuahua 61/42 Istanbul 41/37/0.71 41/37/c 41/38/sn Sydney Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 29-54 dd 81/de ' 76/43 x x x x x x x' i d , Jerusalem 56/43/0.00 58/38/s 48/37/pc Taipei Monte y Vail, CO 0 44-4 4 Te/49 Johannesburg 84/63/0.00 88/63/1 88/61/1 Tel Aviv Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 4 20-40 Lima 85/71/0.00 85/72/c 85/72/pc Tokyo Squaw Valley,CA 5 19-4 7 Lisbon 57/39/0.00 54/47/sh 55/45/sh Toronto Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Tem perature bands are highs for the day. ParkCityMountain,UT 0 47-47 London 50/34/0.00 46/37/pc 44/36/pc Vancouver T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front Sun Valley, ID 3 45-7 2 50/32/0.00 48/38/pc 49/37/sh Yienna Manila 86/73/0.00 86/72/pc 86/73/s Warsaw Source: OnTheSnow.com

Yesterday Normal Record

54/42

RiVer

r

Q

UV INDEX TODAY

ROAD CONDITONS

NATIONAL WEATHER

©

SKI REPORT

l

The m a rketing package is designed to reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion will saturate the marketplace with more than

TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!

Yesterday Today Wednesday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 28/20/0.03 32/30/pc 41/37/r 40/32/Tr 54/33/s 40/11/pc 22/18/Tr 78/62/0.00 49/43/0.01 37/31/0.00 65/46/0.00 73/58/0.00 41/39/0.02 26/19/0.00 57/40/0.00 79/63/0.01 26/22/0.03 33/20/0.00 48/45/0.00 76/56/0.05 28/26/0.15 29/27/0.16 60/49/0.00 70/43/0.00 36/32/0.00 73/55/0.70 89/57/0.00 28/25/Tr 32/31/0.06 83/55/0.00 32/31/0.06 15/9/0.42 21/16/0.41 62/48/0.28 55/28/0.00 54/42/0.38 59/51/0.01 19/14/0.18 66/56/0.08 36/33/Tr 58/8/0.10 84/50/0.00 69/60/0.00 64/58/0.06 66/51/0.07 66/32/0.00 71/45/0.07 56/47/0.21 31/29/0.03 52/44/0.08 37/37/0.00 71/60/0.91 84/49/0.00 61/44/0.00 45/36/Tr 56/33/0.00 53/36/0.03 88/58/0.00

27/19/pc 35/12/sn 74/52/s 73/50/s

95/70/0.00 73/47/0.00 10/0/0.00 23/21/0.39 84/61/0.00 76/67/0.11 75/53/0.00 37/29/0.05 43/28/0.00 9/3/0.22 41/28/0.00 90/73/0.02 46/36/0.00 79/59/0.00 84/68/0.02 24/23/0.04 32/8/0.12 43/22/0.00 86/77/0.02 43/28/0.24 78/72/0.02 54/50/0.08 66/47/0.00 39/35/0.09 12/9/0.19 52/46/0.00 36/28/0.48 36/25/0.20

97/67/s 72/39/pc 19/-6/pc 19/15/s 85/56/s 76/63/s 72/48/pc 47/36/pc 52/41/pc 19/-4/pc 44/31/pc 93/78/pc 58/38/s 85/58/s 8101/t 25/20/sf 44/27/s 48/37/s 86P4/pc 43/30/s 81/70/pc 61/54/c 67/48/pc 50/36/s 24/15/pc 52/41/r 42/34/c 38/32/c

40/25/pc 50/25/s 54/29/s 39/7/pc

54/35/s 59/32/pc 79/56/s 86/57/s

43/28/pc 53/26/s 28/24/sn 34/5/sf 51/34/s 60/32/s 73/53/s 73/54/s

28/26/sn 36/1 0/sf 32/22/sn 23/-1/c 50/28/pc 57/25/s 61/42/s 65/45/s

38/21/pc 32/22/pc 36/20/s 32/22/pc 40/32/c 40/30/pc 72/42/s 57/30/pc

49/28/pc 34/8/pc 67/45/s 67/42/s

85/60/s 85/61/s 36/31/c 39/10/pc

42/26/pc 39/27/pc 83/54/s 83/60/s 35/25/c 41/31/pc

30/6/pc 19/4/pc 31/17/pc 28/16/c 46/31/pc 53/32/s

58/21/pc 41/12/pc 54/26/s 57/27/s

44/29/pc 48/30/s 24/8/pc 35/29/sn 63/40/s 65/41/s

46/34/pc 48/15/pc 54/33/c 54/33/s 77/49/s 75/49/pc 74/55/pc 83/58/s 63/47/s 66/50/s

64/41/s 69/44/s 65/33/s 53/25/r 58/37/s 61/40/s 54/41/sh 57/44/c

46/20/c 26/-1/pc 46/37/c 50/36/c 57/37/s 50/21/s 62/47/s 69/47/s

82/49/s 80/57/s 65/41/s 56/26/pc 46/31/pc 46/32/pc 63/37/s 49/25/s 58/36/pc 54/36/c 85/57/s 83/58/s 93/66/s 71/45/pc 15/10/c 34/28/c 87/56/pc 76/63/s 71/47/pc 51/38/pc 48/36/pc 14/12/sn 43/31/s 94/76/c 56/41/s 88/57/s 84/71/t 32/21/pc 41/1 9/pc 58/38/pc 87/75/pc 41/33/pc 82/70/pc 67/53/pc 58/47/sh 55/40/s 31/21/sn 54/43/c 42/32/pc 37/29/c

ullet

I

)

58' 33'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

ria

""

Mild with times of clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy andmild

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

SATURDAY

I Yourbusinessisimportanttousandwewant

Central Oregon. 30,000 copies of this exclusive

as well astheRedmond Spokesman andthe

it to grow and be assuccessful as possible.

magazine will be direct mailed throughout

Central OregonNickel ads. Wewant your

We also realize youneed affordable market-

theareatoatargeted groupofCentralOregon

marketing dollars to work and so have carefully

ing opportunities tolet peopleknowhow muchyourbusinesshastooff er. Is the

shoppers.Customerscan alsoaccessall the

crafted thisall inclusive c oupon promo-

cost effective advertising solution for your

page which is currently receiving nearly1.5

for success.Call today to schedule a noobli-

business.Thisall new slick stock magazineand

million page viewspermonth. If that weren't

gation appointment to learn moreabout this

interactive digital coupon solution combined

enough,we'll alsoprint your couponin our

powerfu land exci ti ngwaytogetyourmessage

with four separate newsprint products will

holiday gift guide, inserted into 60,000 copies

out to the most broadanddiverse groupof

COuPOnS digitally On the Bulletin'S hOme tional package to give it the best opportunity

give your coupon the most visibility available in of the Bulletin and Central OregonMarketplace

Central Oregoncustomers.

Your messagedesigned anddelivered SIXDIFFERENTWAYSfor onelow price. 3.THE REDMOND SPOKESMAN Allcoupons

5. CENTRAl OREGON MARKETPlACE All

magazinewill bedirect mailed to anexclusive

will be includedfor all subscribersof our

coupons will be delivered toapproximately

listof30,000 Bend-areahouseholdsnon-

Redmondweekly.Approximately4100copi es,

30,000 households throughout Central Oregon

duplicated by Bulletin subscribers. Look for it

9,000 readers, onApril 2.

that are non-Bulletin subscribers, onMarch31.

to arrive in mail boxes onMarch30 or 31.

4. THE NICKElAll coupons will run as

6. BENDBULLETIN.COMAll coupons will

2. THE BULLETINAll coupons will be in full

a special section wrap in this free rack

scroll alongthebottom ofbendbulletin.com's

color and printed on anelectrobrite paper.

distribution shopper which is distributed

homepage-accessibleviacomputer,tablet,

Delivered toapproximately 29,000subscribers,

throughout Central andEastern Oregonwith

and smartphone. More than onemillion page

70,000 readers, onMarch 29.

15,000 copies, onApril 2.

views a month!

1.DIRECT MAIL

0 'll ffyvutterHouse

. Y~ ~

S/cf JfroP

+10

T/rrcr 1976

a slick stockcoupon

H OT WA X

skl or snawuoard 3115W~

e CII 8 a

541389a234

'fsEr'v ~ Accsvrrrrrsri

~~srr Ssfodh

WPcwyderHouse

FowderHouse

@20

OFF FULL TUNE skl or snawuoord 311SW~ w D . 8 d 5414896234

311 SW Century Dnve, Bend, OR 97702 5 4 n 389-6234

ItalyFor st I I

I

I

I

r csrda w nbdhf«ys kydc r

I

iOUII

I

'

T A PAIR

csrdas vdw nbdhf uvv jhgnb kkdlx bvhgn uytr vcsg

MGfnarela'S

I

STILETTO SAL'S

ITALIANslsrso AND BAR

L

25590sauest., Bmdsvlsvs.rvrv

22IO Stste St., Bend 54I-S66.2754

I

SalesDeadline:Februa 18 ForTheMarch30/31Cou onBook

I

'

I

I

i AHVROOIP 0

I FORl Ts

aasdwf

P s oto GO!

6522 JeffwsonAve., Bend541-886-0092


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NFL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C3 NHL, C2 Skiing, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY10, 2015

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

eavs's ion S a Sur riSeS

HelfriCh SignS

5-year extension EUGENE — Oregon coach Mark Helfrich has agreed to a five-year contract extension that could keep him with the

• Picked to finish last, Oregon State is 7-4 andtied for 3rd place

Ducks through the 2019

By Anno M.Peterson

season. Helfrich last month wrapped up his second season with the Ducks, who finished 13-2 and went to the first College Football Playoff, eventually falling to Ohio State in the national championship game. The contract guarantees Helfrich $17.5 million over five years with an annual average of $3.5 million. Thedeal includes incentives for both the team's on-field performance andacademic success. Helfrich's salary comes solely from athletic department funds. It also includes aoneyear automatic rollover for any11-win season that includes avictory in one of the major bowl games. Thedealalso includes sliding financial penalties should Helfrich decide to leave Oregon for another job. An Oregon native, Helfrich has amasseda 24-4 record as Oregon's head coach since taking over when ChipKelly departed for the Philadelphia Eagles.

The Associated Press

CORVALLIS — When

Wayne Tinkle took over as Oregon State's coach, he inherited a program in disarray. The Beavers even held open tryouts to fill out their roster going into this season. But Oregon State has gone a surprising 16-7 overall, and

Inside • Beavers women drop to eighth in AP poll. Scoreboard,C2 • No. 2 UConnwomen rout No.1 South Carolina. Roundup,C3 fans are coming back as well, with ever-increasing crowds filling Gill Coliseum. The Beavers are currently 7-4 in conference play, tied

the team has not dropped a

with Stanford and rival Or-

single game at home. The

egon, sitting behind Pac-12

leader Arizona and second-place Utah. That is significant, as Oregon State was

pickedin theleague'spreseason poll to finish dead last.

"We really do a good job of keeping everybody grounded, to be honest. What I love is that our community is

rallying behind us, because I think our guys have been through a lot," Tinkle said.

SeeBeavers/C3

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Nextuy Oregon at Southern Cal When:6 p.m. Wednesday TV:ESPN2 Radio:KBND1110-AM,100.1-FM

Oregon State at UCLA

When:7 p.m. Wednesday TV:Pac-12

The Associated Press file photo

Radio:KICE 940-AM

Eastern Washington quartorbock Vernon Adams announced Monday howill

transfer to Oregon for his final year of eligibility.

PREP SPORTS THIS WEEK

Ducks add another QB in Eastern Wash. star By Nicholas K. Goronios The Associated Press

SPOKANE, Wash. — East-

ern Washington quarterback Vernon Adams, an FCS

All-American, said Monday he will transfer to Oregon, where he will be eligible to play next season and compete to replace Heisman Trophy

—TheAssociated Press

winner Marcus Mariota.

"Oregon it is!" Adams post-

COLLEGE BASEBALL

ed on Twitter, with an Insta-

gram of the Oregon logo. Adams has been a record-breaking,three-year

Ducks picked2nd, Beavs 5th inpoll Oregon wasselected to finish second and Oregon State fifth in the Pac-12 this season by the conference's baseball coaches in apoll released Monday. Oregon received two first-place votes to rank behind only preseason favorite UCLA.The Bruins, who finished ninth in the 11-team conference last season, received six of a possible10 first-place votes from coaches. Oregon State, the two-time defending conference champion, trailed Arizona State (third, with points and two first-place votes) andStanford (fourth, with onefirstplace vote). Both the Ducksand the Beavers openthe season Friday.

starter at Eastern Washington

A brief about local baseball and softball umpires meetings that appeared in theFeb.6 edition of TheBulletin on Page C1included incorrect information about the meetings. A meeting for new andprospective Central OregonBaseball/Softball Officials

Association umpires is scheduled for Thursday,

reation management. NCAA

rules allow players who have graduated to transfer to another school without having to sit

out a season. The Ducks are looking to replaceMariota,wh odeclared for the NFL draft after his

junior season, giving Adams a chance to start immediately. Adams will have one year of eligibility.

0

Oregon will host Eastern

Washington to open next season.

Adams passed for 10,438 yards and 110touchdowns with 31 interceptions at EastGreg Cross/The Bulletin

• It's not just a catchphrase of former Trail Blazersannouncer Bil Schonely:Central Oregon playersand coachesdiscussthe importance of taking advantage of foul shots

— Bulletin staff report

CORRECTION

and is on target to graduate in May with a degree in rec-

saac Newton's first law

t

of motion is simple: An object, whether in motion

GRANT

or at rest, maintains that

LUCAS

status unless acted upon by an external force. Get hot, gain steam and velocity, and course. Cool off, fall into a

begins 15 feet away from the rim. There, at the free-

slump and plateau, and that

object remains rested until jump-started.

that object will continue its

On the basketball court, Newton's first law of motion

change a person's makeup mentally," says Nathan Co-

throws to get the (win). That does a lot not only for the in-

vill, boys basketball coach at

dividual but for the team." The dimensions are con-

Ridgeview. "If they're having a rough (shooting) night, it can get them in a groove. Or it can change the team's mental makeup if it's some-

stant, players lined up at the charity stripe 15 feet from the rim, which stands 10 feet

above the court. The value

thing that could boil down

is fixed, made free throws

throw line, lies the external

to theend ofa game and you

force — the impetus of in-

have a team that hasn't been

calescence or the catalyst of cool-down.

doing well and they step up

worth a single point. But the significance can be much more, says Craig

to the free-throw line and hit

Reid.

"That one point can

some clutch, pressure free

See Free throws/C4

Q» For more of the best coverage ofCentral Oregon prepsports, visit The Bulletin's website: www.bondbnuotin.com/sports/highschool

ern Washington. See Adams/C2

The Adams file Name:Vernon Adams Jr. Position:Quarterback From:Pasadena,Calif. Year:Sr. Ht/Wt:6-0, 200 PASSING Yr Com-Att-Int Yds TD '12 131-215-8 1 961 20 '13 319-486-15 4,994 55 '14 251-380-8 3,483 35 Tot 701-1,081-31 10,438 110 RUSHING Yr A t t Yds Avg Lng TD I 2 6 5 3 4 2 5.3 24 1 'I3 132 605 4.6 24 4 'I4 IOO 285 2.8 31 6 Tot 297 1,232 4.1 31 11

Feb. 19, starting at 6:30

p.m. in the library at Mountain View High School in Bend. Onthe following Thursday, Feb. 26, also at 6:30 p.m. in the Mountain View High library, all Central Oregon baseball and softball umpires and coaches areencouraged to attend a session on rules interpretation. Oregon School Activities Association and national federation rules interpretation will be covered. The error was the result of incorrect information provided to The Bulletin.

SKIING

In a men's techworld, a mother's touch By Bill Ponnington New York Times News Service

VAIL, Colo. — When skier

Ilka Stuhec has a bad race on the World Cup circuit, sometimes her first instinct is to Doug Mills/New YorkTimes News Service

call her mother back in Slovenia to cry over the phone.

World Cup skier Ilka Stuhoc and hor mother, Instead, she walks to a fusDorio Crnko, o ski technician, share o lough ot the ty, claustrophobic basement,

alpine world championships in Colorado. Crnko

trailer or hovel where the

is the only female ski tech at worlds.

World Cup ski technicians are

sequestered late into the night as a technician — a secretive, tuning skis for the world's best mysterious but imperative racers. job that can determine who There Stuhec will find finishes first or 30th in a sport her mother, Darja Crnko, in which races are routinely bent over her daughter's decided by a hundredth of a skis, painstakingly waxing, second. brushing and scraping them Crnko, whose father taught — often for five to seven hours her to tune and prepare skis, a day. said she brought something Crnko is the only woman at

ski racing's elite level working

different to the craft.

SeeSkiing/C4

Inside • Bend's Laurenne Ross finishes 14th in

super combined as Lindsey Vonn crashes out, C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY TEiiiilS

Time T V/Radifb

10:30 a.m. Tennis 2 a.m. (Wed.) Tennis

ATP, World TennisTournament ATP, World TennisTournament SOCCER England, Liverpool vs. TottenhamHotspur

n oon

NBC SN

4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m.

Big Ten

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Michigan St. at Northwestern Men's college,KentuckyatLSU Men's college, Notre Dameat Clemson Men's college, Memphis at E.Carolina Men's college, Missouri at South Carolina Men's college, Georgetown at Seton Hall NBA, Houston at Phoenix Women's college, Rutgers at Maryland Men's college, Wisconsin at Nebraska Men's college,KansasatTexasTech Men's college, Arkansas atAuburn Men's college, Nevadaat Utah St. Men's college, Alabamaat Mississippi St. Men's college, Xavier at Marquette Highschool,Redmond atBend NBA, Denverat L.A. Lakers Men's college, NewMexico at Colorado St.

ESPN ESPN2

ESPNU SEC FS1 TNT

Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU

Root SEC

FS1 KBND 1110-AM,100.1-FM 7:30 p.m. TNT 8 p.m. ESPNU

WEDNESDAY TENNIS

10:30 a.m. Tennis 2 a.m. (Thu.) Tennis

ATP, World TennisTournament ATP, World TennisTournament SOCCER England, Chelseavs. Everton

n oon

NBC SN

BASKETBALL

Men's college, PennSt. at Ohio St. Men's college,SyracuseatBostonCollege 4 Men's college, S. Florida atCent. Florida M en's college, Kansas St. at WestVirginia 4 Men's college, Miami atWake Forest Men's college, Georgia atTexasA&M NBA, Miami at Cleveland Men's college, Villanova at Providence Men's college, Indiana atMaryland Men's college, Oregon atSouthern Cal

4 p.m. Bi g Ten p.m. E S PN2 4 p. m . E SPNEWS p .m . ESP N U 4 p.m. Root 4 p.m. SEC 5 p.m. ESP N 5 p.m. FS1 6 p.m. Bi g Ten 6 p.m. E S PN2,

ON DECK Today Boysbasketball:BendatRedmond,7p.m.;;Mountain View atSummit,7 pmcSistersatSweet Home, 7:15 p.m.;Estacadaat Madras, 7p.m.;Gladstoneat CrookCounty,7 p.m.; LaPine atGlide, 7:30p.m.; PaisleyatCentral Christian, 6p.m. Girls basketball: Redm ondat Bend, 7p.m.;Mountain Viewat Summit, 5:15 p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home,5:45 p.m.;MadrasatEstacada,7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Gladstone,7 p,mcLaPineat Glide, 6p.m.;NorthLakeatTrinity Lutheran,5:30 p.m.;Paisleyat Central Christian, 4:30p.m.

KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM

Men's college, OregonSt. at UCLA

7 p.m.

Pa c -12,

KICE 940-AM

NBA, Houston at L.A. Clippers Men's college, W.Oregon at St. Martin's HOCKEY NHL, Detroit at Pittsburgh

NHL,WashingtonatSanJose

7:30 p.m. ESPN 8 p.m. Root 5 p.m. NB CSN 7:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Shields, Padresagree to $75 million, 4-year deal-

Right-hander JamesShields, who helped Kansas City reach the World Series last season, hasagreed to a $75 million, four-year contract with the SanDiego Padres. Thedeal includes anoption for 2019 and is subject to the successful completion of a physical, which likely will take place today. Shields was14-8 with a 3.21 ERAlast season and declined a$15.3 million qualifying offer from the Royals. AnAllStar in 2011,Shields is114-90 with a 3.72 ERAin nine seasons.

FOOTBALL RiChard PrOmOted to SeahaWkS' defenSiVe COOrdinatOr

— Kris Richard was promoted Monday to defensive coordinator for the Seattle Seahawks, replacing DanQuinn, whotook over as head coach in Atlanta. Richard hasbeenwith the Seahawks since Pete Carroll's arrival as headcoach in 2010, first as an assistant defensive backscoach.Since2012,Richard hasbeentheheaddefensivebacks coach. Richard, 35, spent two seasons as agraduate assistant at Southern Cal onCarroll's staff before following him to Seattle.

COllege PaCe OfPlay not exPeCted to be diSCuSSedThe NCAAcoordinator of college football officials said Monday he does not expect pace of play to be amajor topic when the rules committee meets this week. Rogers Redding said the use oftechnology on the sideline will be afocus during committee meetings today and Wednesday. Redding also said eight-person officiating crews, up from seven, will likely be the norm in FBS next season. — From wire reports

NHL ROUNDUP

OilerS PiCkLIPrare Win The Associated Press NEWARK, N.J. — Nail Yakupov shook off an early mid-ice collision and scored a game-winning power-play goal in the second period to

Carter and Dwight King each had a goal and an assist, and Jonathan Quick stopped 23 shots to lead Los Angeles. Wild 5, Canucks 3: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Jason Pom-

inville and Ryan Suter scored ry over New Jersey on Mon- power-play goals, and Mindaynight. nesota won its sixth straight Jordan Eberie had the pri- in regulation. mary assist on Y akupov's Coyotes 3, Blackhawks 2: goal and helped set up de- CHICAGO — Antoine Verfenseman Oscar Klefbom's mette scored in regulation tally as the Oilers snapped a and netted the deciding goal two-game losing streak. Ben i n the third r ound of t h e Scrivens made 13 saves in the shootout to lift Arizona. Devils' second straight loss. Flames 4, Sharks 1: SAN Edmonton (15-30-9) has JOSE, Calif. — Jiri Hudler the fewest wins in the NHL. scored his fifth goal of the Also on Monday: season against San Jose to Kings 4, Blue Jackets 3: help Calgary win for the COLUMBUS, Ohio — Jeff fourth time in five games.

College In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomrcs.comnnthebleachers

Thursday

Friday Boysbasketball:RidgeviewatBend,7p,mcSummit at Redm ond, 7 p.m.; Sistersat JunctionCity, 7:15 p.mcMadrasat Gladstone,7 p.m.; Crook CountyatMolala, 7 p.m.; LaPineatPleasantHil, 7:30 p.m.;CulveratStanfield, 6 p.m.;Gilchrist at CentralChristian,7:30p.m. Girls baskelbalkBendat Ridgeview,7p.m.; Redmond at Summ it, 7p.m.;Sisters atJunctionCity, 5:45p.m.; GladstoneatMadras,7p.m.; Molalaat CrookCounty, 7p.m.; La Pineat PleasantHil,6 p.m.;CulveratSlanfield, 4:30 p.m.;Gilchrist atCentral Christian,6 p.m.; TrinityLutheranat DamascusChristian, 6p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim& Fitness Center, TBD;Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championshipsin Albany,10a.m.; Madrasat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships inMadras, TBD Wrestling: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Class5ASpecial District 4 championshipsinHoodRiver,TBD;CrookCounty, Madrasat Class4ASpecial District 1championships inTigamook,TBD; Sistersat Class4A,Special District 2championshipsin Turner, TBD

Saturday Boys basketball: CulveratHeppner 530pmcTriad at CentralChristian, 5p.m.; Paisleyat Gilchrist, 4:30p.m. Girls basketball: HeppneratCulver,2:30p.mcTriad at CentralChristian,330 pmcButte Falls atTrinity Lutheran,5:30p.m.; Paisley atGilchrist, 3 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim8 FitnessCenter, TBD;Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championships inAlbany,10 a.m.; Madrasat Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships inMadras,TBD Wrestling: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summitat Class 5ASpecial District 4 championshipsinHoodRiver,TBD;CrookCounty, Madrasat Class4ASpecial District1 championships inTigamook,TBD; Sistersat Class4A,Special District 2championships in Turner, TBD

BASKETBALL Men's colleg Pac-12

All Times PST

Conference W L Pcf. 8 2 .80 0

A rizona Utah 8 2 .800 O regon 7 4 .6 3 6 O regon St. 7 4 .6 3 6 S tanford 7 4 .6 3 6 UCLA 6 5 .545 C alifornia 5 6 .4 5 5 C olorado 4 6 .4 0 0 A rizona St. 4 6 . 4 00 Washington St. 4 7 .363 Washington 3 8 . 2 73 Southern Cal 1 10 .091

Overall W L Pct. 20 3 .870 18 4 .818

17 7 .708 16 7 .696 16 7 .696 14 10 .583 15 9 .625 11 11 .500 12 11 .522 10 13 .435 14 9 .609 9 14 .391

Wednesday'sGames OregonatSouthernCal, 6p.m. OregonSt.at UCLA, 7p.m. Thursday'sGames StanfordatUtah, 6p.m. Cahfornlaat Colorado, 6p.m. Friday's Games Arizonaat Washington, 6p.m. Arizona St, atWashington St., 8 p.m. Saturday'sGames OregonatUCLA,noon OregonSt.at SouthernCal, 2p.m. Sunday'sGames StanfordatColorado,1 p.m. ArizonaSt. atWashington, 2:30p.m. Arizonaat Washington St.,3:30 p.m. California at Utah,5:30p.m. The AssociatedPressTop26poll Record Pls Prv 1 . Kentucky(65) 23-0 1 , 625 1 2 1-1 1,518 3 2. Virginia 2 4-1 1,486 2 3.Gonzaga 4. Duke

2 0-3 1,450 2 1-2 1,385 2 1-2 1,294 2 0-3 1,185 1 9-4 1,171 1 9-4 1,120 21-4 948 18-4 94 6 18-6 87 1 22-2 846 17-5 842 21-3 74 3 18-5 694 16-7 565 1 8-6 462 19-5 34 7 18-5 296 16-7 273 18-5 273 18-6 27 1 18-5 221 19-5 8 1

4 5 7 6 8 9 10 13 12 14 11 16 19 21 22 17 18

5. Wisconsin 6. Villanova 7. Arizona 8. Kansas 9. Louisville 10. NotreDame 11.Utah 12. NorthCarolina 13. N.Iowa 14.lowaSt. 15. WichitaSt. 16. Baylor 17. Oklahom a 18. Butler 19. Maryland 20. VCU 21. Oklahoma St. 21. West Virginia 15 23. OhioSt. 20 24. Arkansas 25. SMU 23 Others receivingvotes:lowa38,Providence26, Texas25, StephenF.Austin 22,Cincinnati 21,Murray St. 20, Indiana 13, RhodeIsland 12, Ge orgetown 9, TexasA&M7, Temple6, Mississippi 3, OldDominion 3, Harvard 2,SanDiegoSt. 2,Xavier 2,Valparaiso1. USATodayTop25 coaches poll Record Pts Pvs 23-0 799 1 2. Gonzag a(1) 24-1 74 9 2 3. Virginia 21-1 72 7 3 4. Wisconsin 21-2 70 4 4 5. Duke 20-3 69 4 5 6. Viganova 21-2 62 6 7 7. Arizona 20-3 56 4 6 19-4 560 8 8. Louisville 1 9-4 51 7 9 9. Kansas 18-4 49 7 11 10. Utah 11. NotreDame 21-4 45 6 10 22-2 448 15 12. N.Iowa 21-3 389 17 13. WichitaSt. 17-5 38 8 14 14.lowaSt. 18-6 383 13 15. NorthCarolina 18-5 328 19 16. Baylor 1 6-7 278 21 17. Oklahoma 18-6 24 2 22 18. Butler 19-5 206 16 19. Maryland 1 8-5 187 1 2 20. West Virginia 1 8-6 128 20 21. OhioState 18-5 12 0 18 22. VCU 1 8-5 9 6 23. Arkansas 16-7 6 3 24.OklahomaSt. 19-5 3 9 23 25. SMU Others receiving votes: Indiana 26, lowa20, Cincinnati18,SanDiegoSt. 18,TexasA8M18l StephenF.Austin15, Texas15, Providence14,Mississippi10, Colorado St. 9, MurraySt.8,Tulsa8, Dayton7, Valparaiso7, Georgetown5, RhodeIsland5, BoiseSt. 4,Wyoming3,GeorgeWashington2. 1. Kentucky (31 )

/g

16 - 16 4-26

26 13

GOLF

SIIjL of=

IILI

Pac-12preseasoacoaches poll 2014 conference record Pls 1. UCLA (6) 12-18 96 2. Oregon (2) 18-12 84 3 . Arizona St.(2) 19- 1 1 82 4 . Stanford (1 ) 16-1 4 77 5. Oregon St. 23-7 58 6. SouthernCal 16-14 48 7. Arizona 9-21 44 8. California 13-17 40 9. Washington 21-9 37 1 0. Washington St. 11. Utah

Wrestling:Lakeview,PleasantHil at LaPine,5p.m

KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Men's college,MoreheadSt.atE.Kentucky 6 p.m. ESPNU Women's college, W. Washington at St. Martin's 6 p.m. Root M en's college, Tennessee Vanderbilt at 6 p.m . SEC NBA, L.A. Lakers at Portland 7 p.m. BlazerNet,

BASEBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

Professional WorldGolfRanking ThroughSunday 1. RoryMcllroy,NorthernIreland,11.51. 2. Henrik Stenson,Sweden,7.48. 3. BubbaWatson, USA,7.29. 4. Jason Day,Australia, 6.82.5. AdamScott, Australia, 6.80. 6.JimFuryk, USA,6.07.7. SergioGarcia, Spain, 6.04. 8.JustinRose,England,6.00.9.JordanSpieth, USA,5.44.10.MattKuchar,USA,5.08. 11. MartinKaymer,Germany,5.04.12. RickieFowler USA,502.13.JimmyWalkerUSA,488.14.Hideki Matsuyama, Japan, 4.34. 15.Patrick Reed,USA, 4.15. 16. VictorDubuisson,France,4.14. 17. Bily Horschel,USA,4.08.18. Phil Mickelson,USA,3.88. 19.BrooksKoepka,USA,3.84.20.GraemeMcDowell, NorthernIreland,3.67.

!j / /

RODEO Professional Leaders ThroughSunday All-around — 1.TrevorBrazile, Deca tur, Texas, $34,8 58.2.StevenDent,Mullen,Neb.,$13,849.3.Josh Peek,Pueblo, Colo., $11,124

Monday'sGames TOP 25 No. 4Duke73, FloridaSt. 70 No.170klahoma94, No.14lowaSt.83 No. 21OklahomaSt. 74, No.16 Baylor 65 EAST

BostonU.74, Lafayette60 St. Peter's65, Siena57 SOUTH Alabama St.65,MVSU57 AlcornSt.91, Grambling St. 77 DelawareSt.90,Florida A&M74 Duke73,Florida St.70 Hampton73,Howard69, OT Jackson St. 62,Southern U.52 Md.-EasternShore82,Norfolk St.64 MorganSt.55, SCState 43 NewOrleans81, McNeeseSt. 71 Savannah St.73, CoppinSt. 70 Stephen F.Austin 93,NorthwesternSt. 82 UNCAshevile 92,Gardner-Webb89 VirginiaTech65, GeorgiaTech63 SOUTHWE ST Housto nBaptist77,TexasA8M-CC66 Lamar80, AbileneChristian 61 Oklahoma 94,lowaSt.83 Oklahoma St.74,Baylor 65 SamHoustonSt.88,TexasCollege39 FARWEST UtahValley77, Saint Katherine55

Wo m e n's college The AssociatedPressTop25 poll Record Pts Prv 1. SouthCarolina (26) 22-0 842 1 2. Uconn (8) 22-1 82 4 2 3. Baylor 22-1 77 7 3 4. NotreDame 23-2 75 1 4 5. Maryland 21-2 698 5 6. Tennes see 20-3 69 0 6 7. FloridaSt. 22-2 63 0 9 8. Oregon St. 21-2 57 8 7 9. Louisville 20-3 56 6 8 10. Kentucky 18-5 536 11 11. Duke 1 8-6 488 15 12. Arizona St. 21-3 470 10 13. MississippiSt. 23 - 3 4 3 2 17 14.lowa 19-4 40 4 16 15. Texas A&M 18-6 33 1 14 2 1-0 327 18 16. Princeton 17. NorthCarolina 1 9-5 307 13 18. Rutgers 18-5 27 7 21 1 7-7 239 12 19. Stanford 20. George Washington 21-2 148 2 4 20-3 14 5 23 21. Chattanooga 17-6 12 3 19 22. Nebraska 1 7-7 122 25 23. Syracuse 17-6 9 2 22 24. Georgia 1 9-4 5 6 25. SouthFlorida Others receiving votes:California47,Texas44, Oklahoma 27, FloridaGulf Coast18, SetonHall18, Washin gton10,DePaul9,JamesMadison9,LSU8, GreenBay5, Gonzaga2. Monday'sGames TOP 26 No. 2Uconn87, No.1 SouthCarolina62 No. 21Chatanooga68, Wofford41 Arkansas 54, No.24Georgia48 EAST

Bryant74,MountSt.Mary's 72, OT CCSU 61, St.Francis(NY)43 FairleighDickinson78, St.Francis (Pa.) 63 Quinnipiac85, lona74 RobertMorris77,LIUBrooklyn58 SacredHeart 73,Wagner 60 Uconn87,South Carolina62 SOUTH Alabama A&M72, Ark.-PineBluff48 Alabama St. 61,MVSU57 Chattanooga 68,Wofford41 ETSU72,Furman61 FloridaA&M78,DelawareSt. 63 GramblingSt.82,AlcornSt.57 Hampton 80, Howard61 Md.-EasternShore60,Norfolk St.50 Mercer82,W.Carolina60 MorganSt.54, SCState46 Samford88,UNC-Greensboro66 Savanna hSt.63,CoppinSt.56,OT SouthernU.82,JacksonSt.60 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas 54, Georgia48

BarebackRiding — 1.TimO'Connell, Zwingle, lowa,$14,833.2. RyanGray, Cheney,Wash., $13,591. 3. LukeCreasy, Lubbock, Texas, $12,274. 4. Bobby Mote,Culver,Ore., $11,561.5. DavidPeebles, Redmond,Ore.,$10,969.6. Tyler Nelson,Victor, Idaho, $10569.18.AustinFoss,Terrebonne,Ore., $4005.19. R.C. Landingham,Pendleton,Ore.,$3,894. Steer Wrestling —1.TyErickson,Helena,Mont., $16,3 92.2.Adam Strahan,McKinney,Texas,$14,708. 3. BayloRo r che,Tremonton,Utah,$14,663.4. Mathew Mousseau,Hensag, Ontario, $12,216.5. KyleIrwin, RobertsdaleAl , a., $12,116.6. BeauClark, Belgrade, WTA Mont., $11,139.12.TrevorKnowles, MountVernon, PTTPattayaWomen'sOpen Ore. ,$6,579.16.BlakeKnowles,Heppner,Ore.,$5,773. Monday atPatlaya,Thailand Team Roping lheader) —l1Clay Tryan,BilFirst Round ings, Mont., $17,632.2.TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas, MonicaPuig(7), PuertoRico, def. StefanieVoege- $16,619. 3.JesseStipes, Salina,Okla., $16,440.4. le, Swilzerland, 6-2, 7-6(4). DoyleHoskins,Chualar, Calif., $13,618.5. MattSherRominaOprandi, Switzerland,def. ElenaVesnina, wood,Pima,Ariz., $12,510.6. RileyMinor, Ellensburg, Russia,6-3,6-3. Wash.,$12,076.7. Charly Craw ford, Prinevile, Ore., VeraZvonareva,Russia,def.WangQiang,China, $10,761. 6-2, 6-2. TeamRoping lheeler) — 1.JadeCorkil, Fagon, EvgeniyaRodina,Russia, def. YuliaPutintseva, Nev.,$17,632.2. PatrickSmith, Lipan,Texas,$16,619. Kazakhstan, 7-6(2), 6-4. 3. Billie Saeb ens, Nowata, Okla., $15,340.4. Quinn Kesler,Holden,Utah,$12,510. 5. BradyMinor, Ellensburg, Wa s h. , $1 2,076. 6.ShayCarroll, LaJunta, Colo., SKIING $10761.20.Russell CardozaTerrebonne,Ore.,$5161. Saddle BroncRiding—1.CodyDeMoss, Heflin, Alpine La., $23,244.2.JoeLufkin,Sagisaw,Okl a.,$16,237.3. TaosMuncy,Corona,N.M.,$13,468.4.SpencerWright, World SkiChampionships Milford,Utah,$12,640.5. Chad Ferley,Oelrichs, S.D., Monday atBeaverCreek, Colo. $11,563.6.ClayElliott, Nanton,Alberta, $8,964. Women'sCombined Tie-downRoping —1. MontyLewis, Hereford, (Downhill-slalom times inparentheses) Texas,$22,033.2. SterlingSmith, Stephe nvile, Tex1. TinaMaze,Slovenia, 2:33.37(1:45.25-48.12). as, $17,494.3. CorySolomon, Prairie View,Texas, 2. NicoleHosp,Austria,2;33.59 (1;46.15-47.44). 3. MichaelKi archgasser,Austria, 2:33.72(1:46.58- $15,168. 4. JordanKetscher, SquawValley, Calif., $12,454.5l Dane 47.14). Kissack,Spearfish, S.D.,$11,873.6. 4. Anna Fenninger,Austria, 2:34.26 (1:45.51- TrevorBrazile,Decatur, Texas, $10,287. Steer Roping — 1. Scott Snedecor, Fredericks48.75). burg,Texas,$10,989.2. Vin FisherJr., Andrews,Tex5. Lara Gut, Switzerland, 2:34.31 (1:45.27-49.04). as, $9,194. 3. Trevor Bra zile, Decatur, Texas, $7,952. 6. KathrinZettel, Austria,2;35.01(1;47.00-48.01). 4.JasonEvans,Huntsville,Texas,$7,301.5.Landon 7. IlkaStuhec,Slovenia,2:35.80(1:46.39-49.41). gherty,Tilden,Texas,$6,805.6.MikeChase, 8. FrancescaMarsaglia, Italy, 2:35.96 (1:46.65- Mcclau McAlester,Okla., $4,764. 49.31). Bull Riding —1. ParkerBreding, Edgar, Mon.t, 9. RagnhildMowinckel,Norway,2:35.98 (1:46.32$18,660. 2.ZebLanham, Sweet, Idaho, $16,975.3. 49.66). 10. Margot Bailet, France,2;36.59(1;47.49-49.10). BrennonEldred, Sulphur,Okla., $15l755. 4. Clayton Savage, Yoder, Wyo., $13,349. 5.Dustin Bowen,Waller, Also Texas,$12,690.6. Nile Lebaron,Weatherlord, Texas, 14. Laurenne Ross, USA,2:38.01(1:46.71-51.30). 15. JuliaMancuso,USA,2:38.02 (1:47.92-50.10). $11,741.8.CainSmith, Pendleton, Ore.,$10,084. Barrel Racing — 1. SarahRoseMcDonald, 17. JacquelineWiles, USA, 2:39.08 (1:48.13Brunswick,Ga., $21,173. 2. FagonTaylor, Collins50.95). v il l e,Texas,$17,230.3.AlexaLake,Richmond,Texas, LindseyVonn, USA,1;46.56 (7th-downhil), did not finishslalom. $16,900. 4. VictoriaWiliams,Kiln, Miss., $15,682. 5.MeganJohnson,Deming,N.M.,$15,014.6.Layna Kight,Ocala,Fla.,$14,748.

Brasil Open MondayatSaoPaulo First Round PabloCuevas(5), Uruguay,def. Jiri Vesely,Czech Republic,6-4,3-6, 7-5. Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, def. Guilherme Clezar,Brazil, 7-5,7-5. NicolasAlmagro,Spain, def. BlazRola, Slovenia, 7-6 (3),6-4.

HOCKEY NHL

DEALS

NATIONALHOCKET LEAGUE All TimesPST

Transactions

EasternConference Atlantic Division

AmericanLeague

Tampa Bay Montreal Detroit Boston Florida Toronto Ottawa Buffalo

GP W L OT Pts GF GA 55 34 16 5 73 179 145 52 34 15 3 71 141 117 52 31 12 9 71 155 130 53 28 18 7 6 3 139 131 51 23 17 11 57 127 145 54 23 27 4 50 153 165 51 20 22 9 49 139 144 54 16 35 3 35 102 189

BASEBAL L

NEWYORKYANKEES—Agredtotermswith RHP

KyleDaviesonaminorleaguecontract. National League ATLANTA BRAVES— Named Fred McGriff and GregWalker special assistantsto baseball operations. MILWAU KEEBREWERS— Agreedto termswith RHPChris Perezonaminor leaguecontract. ST.LOUISCARDINALS—Agreedtotermswith OF Jon Jay onatwo-year contract. BASKETB ALL

National Basketball Association Metropolitan Division HOUSTO NROCKETS —Recalled CClint Capela GP W L DT Pts GFGA N.y.lslanders 53 34 18 1 69 167 149 and GNickJohnsonfromRioGrandeValley (NBADL). FOOTBA LL Pittsburgh 5 3 3 0 15 8 6 8 151 134 National Football League Washington 54 28 16 10 66 157135 BUFFALO BILLS—SignedGRichieIncognito. N.Y.Rangers 51 30 16 5 65 152 123 OAKLANDRAIDERS— NamedSamAnnodefensive Philadelphia 53 23 22 8 54 145155 assistant coach, Darryl Eto,Kevin KijowskiandWesley New Jersey 54 21 24 9 5 1 122 148 Columbus 52 23 26 3 4 9 135 161 Miller assistantstrengthandconditioning coaches, Jedefensive linecoach,JoeGomes strength Carolina 5 2 1 9 2 6 7 4 5 116 139 thro Franklin andconditioningcoach,TimHoltassistantoffensiveline WesternConference coach, Ni c k H ol zqualitycontrol/offense,JakePeelzsenior Central Division assistantcoach,TravisSmith quality control/deGP W L OT Pts GF GA offensive Nashville 53 35 12 6 7 6 161 127 fense,BrentVieselmeyer assistant linebackerscoachand stantdefensivebackscoach. St. Louis 53 34 15 4 7 2 168 132 RodWoodsonassi SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — NamedChrisShula Chicago 54 33 18 3 69 163 124 Winnipeg 55 27 18 10 64 152 145 defensivequality control coach. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Signed QB R.J.Archer,G Minnesota 52 26 20 6 58 144 143 Dallas 53 24 21 8 56 167 172 C.Jl DavisLS , LukeIngram, LBBrendanKelly, DEWill P ericak, WR Kevin Smith and CJaredWheeler. Colorado 54 22 21 11 55 137 152 HOCKEY PacificDivision National HockeyLeague GP W L OT Pts GF GA ARIZONACOYOTES — Assigned G Louis Anaheim 54 34 13 7 75 162 148 Calgary 54 30 21 3 63 156 137 Domingueto Portland(AHL). Recalled GMike McKTENNIS SanJose 55 28 20 7 63 154 153 ennafromPortland. Vancouver 52 29 20 3 6 1 143 136 COLUMBU S BLUEJACKETS— PlacedDRyan ATP World Tour LosAngeles 53 23 18 12 58 144 144 Murrayoninjuredreserve. World Tournament Arizona 54 20 27 7 4 7 125 178 DALLASSTARS— ReassignedG JackCampbell Monday atRotterdam,Netherlands (ECHL). Edmonton 54 15 30 9 39 123 178 to Idaho First Round DETROIT REDWINGS—AssignedDXavierOuelSimoneBolegi, Italy, def.LukasRosol, CzechReMonday'sGames let toGrandRapids (AHL). T AMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Traded G Evgeni public, 6-3,6-1. Arizona3,Chicago2,SO RobertoBautistaAgut (7), Spain,def. Alexander Edmonton 2, NewJersey1 Nabokov to SanJosefor futureconsiderations. Zverev,Germany,6-4,6-1 l Los Angele4, s Columbus3 WASHIN GTONCAPITALS—Reassigned DCamDominicThiem,Austria, def. ErnestsGulbis (6), Minnesota 5, Vancouver3 eronSchilingto Hershey(AHL). Latvia,6-4,6-2. Calgary4,SanJose1 SOCCER Grigor Dimitrov (5), Bulgaria, def. Paul-Henri Today'sGames Major LeagueSoccer Mathieu,France,4-6, 7-6(2), 6-2. Dallas atBoston, 4 p.m. FC DALLAS — Announcedanaffiliation with AriGigesMuller, Luxem bourg, def. David Goffin, Bel- OttawaatBuffalo, 4p.m. zonaUnitedSC(USLPRO). gium,7-6(5), 6-7 (6),6-3. Edmontonat N.Y.Islanders, 4 p.m. COLLEGE NCAA —NamedTexasTechathletic directorKirby N.Y.RangersatToronto, 4;30p.m. MemphisOpen Philadelphiaat Montreal, 4:30p.m. Hocutt totheCollegeFootball PlayoffselectioncomMonday atMemphis,Tenn. Anaheim at Florida, 4:30p.m. mittee. BYU— Signedmen' sbasketballcoachDaveRose First Round Arizona at St.Louis, 5p.m. DonaldYoung,UnitedStates, def. AdrianMannariTampa Bayat Nashvile, 5p.m. to a five-yearcontractextensionthroughthe 2019-20 no (8),France,6-3,7-6(9). MinnesotaatWinnipeg,5p.m. season. Ivan Dodig, Croatia, def. TeymurazGabashvili Wednesday'sGames EASTERNWASHINGTON — QB Vernon Adams Russia,6-2,6-2. Detroit atPittsburgh,5p.m. announced hewil transferto Oregon. Dustin Brown,Germany, def. MarinkoMatosevic Vancouver atChicago,5 p.m. OKLAHOMA — NamedKerryCooksdefensivebacks Australia,6-4, 6-4. Washin gtonatSanJose,7:30p.m. coach andDennisSimmonsoutsidereceiverscoach.

lead Edmonton to a 2-1 victo-

Adams

all of our previous prospec-

ing the early departure of Mar- Mariota's backup last season iota.He seta Pac-12 record for was Jeff Lockie, who attemptContinued from C1 signed financial aid agree- total touchdowns last season ed 27 passes, completing 21 for The 6 -foot, 2 0 0-pourkder ments, we choose to reserve with 58 — 42 via pass, 15 on the 207 yards and a touchdown. from Pasadena, California, comment until they have for- ntn and one touchdown catch. Other quarterbacks comalso helped the Eagles upset mally enrolled at the Univer- He also set the Pac-12 mark for peting for the starting job are Oregon State two seasons ago sity of Oregon," said Oregon career touchdowns with 136. s ophomores Ttt Griffin a n d and nearly beat Washington coach Mark Helfrich, who reMariota declared his eligibil- Taylor Aiie, redshirt freshman last year. ceived a five-year contract ex- ity for the NFL draft shortly af- Morgan Mahalak and true Oregon officials said little tension Monday. ter the Ducks fell to Ohio State freshman Travis Waller, who about the transfer. Oregon was looking at its in the first College Football enrolled early in order to par"As has been the case with options at quarterback follow- Playoff championship game. ticipate in spring practice. tive student-athletes who have


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

COLLEGE BASKETBALLROUNDUP

A eratumutuous ear,N 's o season asinaus ieiousstart

No. 2 UConnrouts topranked SouthCarolina The Associated Press This was the 54th meeting STORRS, Conn. — UCo- between the top two teams in

By Mark Maske

nn left no doubt who the best team in the women's basket-

The Washington Post

ball country is.

Richie Incognito is back in the NFL after agreeing to a deal Saturday with the Buffalo Bills. There is increasing specula-

Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis

L'

scored 23 points and BreI

anna Stewart added 22 to help No. 2 UConn beat top-

the nation, and the Huskies

improved to 17-3 in those games. Also on Monday:

Men's Top 25 No. 4 Duke 73, Florida

way they view players with troubled pasts in the aftermath

ranked South Carolina 87-62 State 70: TALLAHASSEE, on Monday night. Fla. — Quinn Cook scored a "I think it speaks for itseason-high 25 points, and self," Stewart said. Jahlil Okafor was 5 of 5 from Still, there is a lot of bas- the floor in the second half ketball left to be played be- and finished with 13 points fore the Final Four in Tampa for Duke. this year. And coach Geno No. 17 Oklahoma 94, No.

of the Ray Rice, Adrian Peter-

Auriemma knows he could

son and Greg Hardy cases? The popular view in Seprage over the league's handling of the Rice and Peterson

seetheGamecocks again. "I think this was one night, one game in February," Auriemma said. "They are going to be playing deep into

cases in particular was at its

the NCAA tournament.... I

height, was that teams would evaluatesuch players much differently going f orward. Franchises' front office deci-

hope weplay them in Tampa. That would be pretty special."

tion that Jameis Winston will be the top overall selection in the NFL draft.

So can it really be said that NFL teams have changed the

tember, when the public out-

14 lowa State 83: NORMAN, Okla. — TaShawn Thom-

as had 22 points and 11 rebounds to lead Oklahoma. No.21 OklahomaSt.74,No.

16 Baylor 65: WACO, Texas — Le'Bryan Nash scored 22 points, and Phil Forte had 16

of his 18 after halftime for Oklahoma State.

sion-makers would have to

think muchlongerand harder, the prevailing sentiment seemed to be at that point, be-

Chris Keane 1 The Associated Press

fore adding aplayer with a history of off-field issues, given the increased public scrutiny of such matters. "It absolutely changes t hings," former Sa n

Carolina defensive end Greg Hardy arrives at the Mecklenburg County Courthouse for his domestic violence appeal trial in Charlotte, North Carolina on Monday. Hardy was convicted on two counts of domestic violence in a bench trial last summer, but prosecutors dismissed the charges Monday after they said the accuser in the case couldn't be found.

F r a n-

bullying scandal, had work- the face of the franchise. He talented defensive end who outsduringthejust-completed l a beled Winston more NFLrecorded 15 sacks in 2013 beCerrato said in a September season with several teams but ready as a pocket passer than fore spending most of the 2014 interview. "The fan base won't was not signed. Mariota. season on the exempt-comaccept it. You just have to look missioner's permission list beat what's been happening. cause of a domestic violence Look at what Anheuser-Bus- Quite soon after a season that clearlywas incident. Charges against ch (which expressed dissatHardy were dismissed Monisfaction at the time with the not business as usual for the NFL, in some day, though the NFL could NFL's handling of its issues) PlaCeSWithin the league it SeemS to be baCk to still suspend him under the said. People aren't going to something resembling businessas usual. league's reworked personal cisco49ers and Washington Redskins executive Vinny

put up with it. The awareness

Instead, he ended up in Buffalo with a Bills franchise that

players. You can't have them

on your team." That was a sensible opinion

has new owners, in Terry and

Kim Pegula, and a newlyhired stances and the public climate. coach, in Rex Ryan. " Considering the list o f But even then, some suspected otherwise. things Incognito has done, this "Some will; some won't," is a bad signing and a terrible Louis Riddick, a former scout message as a first move by and front office executive for a new group," former Eagles the Redskins and Philadel- and Cleveland Browns execphia Eagles, said in September utive Joe Banner wrote Saturat the time, given the circum-

on the topic of whether teams

day on Twitter. ESPN draft analyst Todd

would change their player evaluation practices. "Some

McShay had Florida State's Winston, not fellow quarter-

will always be drawn to the flame of potential even if it's

hours of community service

after receiving a civil citaclear it's red hot and it can gon, going first overall to the tion for walking out of a store burn them. I've seen it happen Tampa Bay Buccaneers in his without paying for $32 worth a million times. I don't think latest mock draft released last of crab legs and crawfish. He you can ever make a blanket week. McShay said the Buc- was suspended for one game statement. Some teams will caneers and any other quar- by the school for standing on always be drawn to that. And terback-needy NFL teams po- a table and yelling a profane that won't change." tentially interested in Winston sexual phrase on campus. Incognito, a veteran guard will have to answer for themBefore the NFL draft, teams who was a central figure in the selves whether they feel com- will likely weigh the merits of Miami Dolphins' locker room fortable with Winston being Hardy, the Carolina Panthers'

1,000-win milestone bounds, 10 assists), and Mar-

INDIANAPOLIS — Gregg c i n Gortat had 14 points and

Popovich's grand plan has 14rebounds for Washington. produced plenty of wins. The H a wks 117, Timber wolves Spurs made it an even 1,000 105: MINNEAPOLIS — Al

for him Monday night. Horford scored a season-high San A n tonio r a l l ied 2 8 points and grabbed eight from a 14 - point rebounds, and Defourth-quarter defi- Ne Xt uP Marre C a rroll addcit and got an 18ed a career-best 26 foot baseline jumper points to lift Atlanta. from Marco Belinelli

Heat 109, Knicks 95: MIAMI — Chris

with 2.1 seconds left to give Popovich a

Bosh scored 32 points

milestone 95-93 vic-

and Mario Chalmers

L A Lakers tory at Indiana. added 18 for Miami. at "I've been here a + hportland Jazz 100, Pelicans 7 long time and I've W < ' < 96: NE W O RLEANS " """ y had good playem. — Gordon Hay ard That's th e f o r m u- TV:BlazerNet scored 25 of his 32 la," Popovich said. Rallie: points in t h e s e c"Getting the players KRCO 690-AM, ond half, and Utah 9 6 .9-FM

have good ones. The time,

over c a m e a 14-point third-quarter deficit.

Bu c ks 103, Nets 97: MIL-

that's the most important ele- W A U KEE — Khris Middlement. You have to be around t o n scored 12 of his 18 points for a while I guess." in the t h ir d q u arter, and Also on Monday: Milwaukee rallied from a

Warriors 89, 76ers 84: PHILADELPHIA

St e -

1 7-point deficit. Cli p p e rs115, Mavericks 98:

phen Curry scored 20 points, DALLAS — DeAndre JorLeandro Barbosa had 16 off

d a n led Los Angeles with 22

the bench and Golden State points and a career-high 27 snapped Philadelphia's four- rebounds. game home winning streak. Thu n der 124, Nuggets 114: Wizards 96, M agic 8 0 : WASHINGTON — John Wall fell one point shy o f

for us to win, we have to be locked in on the defensive

in the offseason, wherever it

side. We've been into it." The program's revival is catching on with fans: On Sunday, when the Beavers

leads to." Tinkle was hired by the

beat Washington 64-50, a

Beavers this past May after

inattendance.

season-high 9,114 fans were

II, leading the team with an

NFL, in some places within the league it seems to be back to something resembling business as usual. Is that appropriate'? That is a question for league leaders, the teams themselves, NFL sponsors and fans of the

average of 12.7 points and in guard Malcolm Duvivier. 8.0 rebounds, said Tinkle has "Coming in here, there were emphasized defense. The a lot of doubters toward our Beavers are ranked second team. That just motivates us in the Pac-12 in scoring de- to come out here and work fense, allowing opponents hard. We want playthe game an average of just 56.6 points the right way, be that gritper game, and first in field- ty team, that hard-working goal percentage defense, al- team. And the fans love it."

sport to ponder.

"It means a lot," chimed

NBA SCOREBOARD

Popovich reaches

is difficult, but I've b een fortunate t o

Payton said. "For any chance

throwing out 'ifs' and 'buts,' we're not wanting anybody to give us songs of sympathy, and we're trying to stay in the moment. We'll enjoy it

not business as usual for the

point out that quite soon af-

NBAROUNDUP

The Associated Press

about lockdown d efense,"

excuses, we haven't been

ter a season that clearly was

are reportedly unlikely to retain Hardy. Should he be reThis is not to single out Mc- leased, pending future action Shay's analysis. It is clear that from the league, he would bemany people within the NFL come a free agent available to feel that way and believe that be signed beginning March 10. Winston will be drafted ahead None of this is to say that of Mariota, even with Wi nIncognito and Hardy should ston's off-field issues while at not be signed or that Winston Florida State. should not be taken early in Winston was i nvestigat- the NFL draft. There are comed for sexual assaultbefore pelling arguments to be made a prosecutordecided against that players deserve chances bringing charges. He was sus- to earn a living after dealing pended from the Florida State with any consequences arisbaseball team for three games ing from their off-field actions. and ordered to perform 20 Rather, this i s m erely to

back Marcus Mariota of Ore-

Continued from C1 "We haven't been making

lowing opponents to shoot an average of 36.8 percent. "From day one he's been

eight seasons at Montana, Oregon State has even where he took the Grizzlies come up witha new nickto the NCAA t o urnament name for Gill Coliseum: Fort three times and finished be- Wayne. " Coach Tinkle an d h i s low.500 only once. He replaced Craig Rob- staff have done a tremeninson, who was let go after dous job," Washington coach six seasons during which Lorenzo Romar said. "The the Beavers failed to make energy in this building was the NCAA tournament. The very impressive. Those guys once-proud Beavers have not have a belief in how they been to the NCAA tourna- play, and how they go about ment since 1990. their business." Oregon State f i nished The victory against the 16-15 last season and was Huskies was the Beavers' bounced in the first round 14th straight at home to start of the CBI by Radford. The the season, a school record. B eavers finished ninth i n But milestones like that Pac-12 play at 8-10. are off-limits topics for the Tinkle had a heady task. Beavers right now as they After tryouts in the fall, he embark on the final seven had seven walk-ons on his games of the regular season. "What record?" Tinkle roster for his first season. Junior guard Gary Payton laughed.

conduct policy. The Panthers

has been heightened. You have to adapt. You can't take those

Beavers

DE N V E R — Kevin Durant

s cored 40 points, Russell We s t brook had 26 and Okla-

his first triple-double of the homa City handed Denver season (nine points, 10 re- its sixth loss in a row.

Standings

Summaries

All TimesPST

d-Atlanta d-Toronto Washington d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Charlotte Miami Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork

Eastern Conterettce Ni L Pct GB 43 10 8u 673 P/r

Ni L 41 9 38 13 35 16 35 17 35 19 34 19 33 19 29 24 21 25 27 25 19 33 19 33 18 32 13 38

Pct GB

WesternConference

d-GoldenState d-Memphis Houston d-Portland Dallas LA. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix NewOrleans Oklahoma City Denver Utah Sacramen to LA. Lakers

Minnesota

35 17 33 20 32 20 32 21 29 23 22 29 22 29 21 30 20 32 19 31 20 33 16 39 12 41 10 42

d-divisionleader

u

615 10'/r

604 u

558 13'/r 431 20 431 20 412 21 385 22'/t 380 22'/r 377 23 291 28 226 31 192 32'/t 820

745 31/2

686 6'/t 673 7

648 8

642 B i/r

635 9

547 13'/r

519 15 519 15 365 23 365 23 360 23

255 28'/t

41 212 3t

Monday'sGames

GoldenState89, Philadelphia 84 Washington 96, Orlando80 SanAntonio95, Indiana93 Miami109,NewYork95 Utsh100,NewOrleans96 Milwaukee103,Brooklyn97 Atlanta117,Minnesota105 LA. ClippeIs115,Dallas98 Oklahoma City124, Denver04

623 to

Today'sGames Detroit atCharlotte,4 p.m. Housto natPhoenix,5p.m SacramentoatChicago,5 p.m. BrooklynatMemphis, 5 p.m Denver at LA. Lakers, 7:30p.m Wednesday'sGames NewYorkatOrlando,4 p.m. WashingtonatToronto, 4:30p.m SanAntonioat Detroit,4:30 p.m Atlantaat Boston, 4:30p.m Indiana atNewOrleans 5p.m MemphisatOklahoma City, 5p.m. SacramentoatMilwaukee,5 p.m. GoldenStateatMinnesota, 5p.m. Miami atCleveland,5p.m Utah atDalas, 5:30p.m LA. Lakers at Portland, 7p.m. HoustonatLA. Clippers,7:30p.m.

Warriors 89, 76ers 84 GOLDEN STATE(89) Barnes4-10 0-0 9, Green2-6 0-0 4, Bogut2-2 0-2 4, Curry7-203-420, K.Thompson4-144-413, Speights5-80-010, Iguodala5-112-213, Livingston 0-2 0-0 0,Lee0-5 0-0 0,Barbosa5-7 s-r 16.Totals 34-85 14-1989. PHILADELPHIA (84) Covington 715332t, MbahaMoute5131-2 t3, Noel 5-81-211,Frazier4-111-210, Sam pson5-7 0-0 10,H.Thompson0-90-00,Sims4-50-08,McDaniels 2-61-1 5,Grant1-54-46. Totals 33-7911-1484. GoldenStaIe 20 26 21 22 — 89 Philadelphia 24 2 017 23 — 84

Spurs 95, Pacers 93 SANANTO NIO(95) Leonard4-121-1 to, Duncan7-131-1 15,Bonner04000, Parkerr 1755 19,Green29348, Diaw2-71-26,Belinelli4-62-212,Mills4-110-09, Spli tter3-52-28,Baynes2-30-04,Joseph2-20-0 4. Totals 37-8915-1795. INDIANA(93) Miles 5-142-2 13, West3-10 4-4 10, Hibbert 5-13 0-0 10,G.Hil 3-t 0-0 7, Sttickey7-132-2 18, S.Hill 3-52-210,Wa tson 2-53-3 8, Scola5-100-0 11, Rudez 0-3 0-0 0, Whittington 3-80-0 6. Totals 36-88 13-1393. S an Antonio 30 17 18 30 — 95 Indiana 28 17 34 't4 — 93

Bucks103, Nets 97 BROOKLYN (97) Johnson8-160-019, Garnett3-50-0 6, Plumlee 4 85-713, Jack10152 226,Anderson381-38, Will iams0-50-00,Lopez5-70-010,Bogdanovic4-9 4-713, Jeff erson1-30-02.Totals38-7612-1997. MILWAUKEE (103) Antetokottnmpo 4-94-4 12, Dudley7-100-0 19, Henson4-9 2-2 10, Knight2-123-4 8, Middleton 9-150-018, PachttlIa t-63-45, Mayo4-107-8 15, 6ayless3-10 3-39, lyasova2-6 0-05, Gutierrez 1-2 0-02. Totals 37-8922-25103. Brooklyn 30 22 16 29 — 97 Milwaukee 24 23 32 24 — 103

Jau100, Pelicans 96 UTAH(100) Hayward 10-229-1132,Favors 8-162-418, Kanter 6-122-214,Exum3-0 0-08,Milsap1-80-22, Burke 0-10000, Gobeit4 60 08,Booker3-30 06,Novak 450012, ClarkO0000.Totals39931319100. NEWORLEANS(96) Cunnin gham 1-70-0 2,Alinca4-70-08,Asik 2-62-36, TEvans 7-172-218, Gordon9-146-631, Withey1-43-4 5, Pondexter 1-20-0 3, Douglas2-t 3 48, Babbitt6141-1 15,Fredette01 000 Totals 33-79 17-2096. Utah 27 15 29 29 — 100 Newcrleans 25 2 7 15 29 — 96

Hawks117, Timberwolves105 Thunder124, Nuggets114 ATlANTA(117) Carroll 9-13 6-6 26, Milsap8-132-219, Horford u-t86-728, Teague 4-73-312, Korver4-100-012, Brand0-1 0-0 0, Bazemore 2-6 0-04, Schroder3-8 2-2 8, Scott3-100-08, Jenkins0-00-0 0. Totals 44-8619-20117. MINNESOT A(105) Wiggins6-143-415, Young5-0 1-111,pekovic 6-132-214, Rubio 3-tt 1-1 8, Martin7-134-421, Williams3-6 0-06, Muhammad7-14 3-618, Dieng 3-6 0-0 6,Bennett 0-32-4 2, LaVine2-20-0 4, Daniels 0-00-00.Totals42-9316-22105. Atlanta 32 25 29 31 — 117 Minnesota 30 23 19 33 — 105

OKLAHOMA CITY (124) Durant13-197-1140, Ibaka3-70-07, Perkins2-2 004, Westbrook 8-149-1226,Roberson5-60-012, Collison0-32-2 2, Waiters1-8 0-0 2, McGary 6-12 5-6 17,Jackson 1-33-45, Morrow4-60-09.Totals 43-80 26-35124. DENVER (114) Chandler9-154-423, Faried8-146-8 22, Nurkic 6-10 4-616, Lawson 8-121-2 22,Afflalo2-9 2-36, Hickson 231-2 5, Arthur4-10t-2 9, Gallinari t-6 0-03, Foye2-72-28,Green0-1 0-00, Harris 0-00-0 0. Totals 42-8721-29114. OklahomaCit y 3 8 3 5 33 18 — 124 Denver 18 41 33 22 — 114

Wizards 96, Magic 80 ORLANDO (80) A.Gordon 2-41-1 5,Frye1-60-03, Vucevic 6-102-2 14, Payton 4-u 3-511,Oladipo6-181-1 13,Green1-5 0-02, Fournie7-142-2 r 18,O'Quinn2-40-04, Dedmon t-41-43, Harkless3-70-07.Totals 33-8310-1580. WASHINGTON (96) Pierce291-26, Nene6102214, Gortat5 64 4 14, Wal3-102-39, l Tem ple2-32-2 7, Porter0-10-0

0, Httmphries2-22-26, Butler4-144-515,Seraphin 38 1-27, Gooden 471-1 10, Miler 01 222, Webster 2-62-2 6.Totals 33-77 23-2796. Orlando 16 19 19 26 — 80 Washington 24 19 31 22 — 96

Heat109, Knicks 95 NEWYORK(95) Amundson 3-90-16,Anthony9-204-526,Smith 4-7 0-09, Galloway4-111-1 10, Calderon2-52-2 6, Stoudemir4-7 e 6-614, Bargnani 1-22-24, Larkin1-5 1-2 3,Harda wayJr 2-80-05, Thoma s3-60-0 6, Acy 1-20-02, Aldrich 2-20-04. Totals36-8416-1995.

MIAMI (109)

Deng3-96-612,Bosh12-234-532,Whiteside 3-4 1-27, Napie1-32-25, r Chalmers6-143-4 18,

Andersen 4-61-2 10,Cole4-62-212, Granger2-4 449,John son0-20-00,Haslem1-30-02,Hamilton 0-02-22. Totals 36-7425-29109. New York 32 24 18 21 — 95 Miami 23 29 25 32 — 109

Clippers115, Mavericks 98

Leaders ThroughSunday'sGames

Harden,HOU James,CLE Westbrook,OKC Davis,NOR Anthony,NYK Cousins,SAC Aldridge,PO R Curry,GO L Griffin, LAC Thompson,GOL Irving,CLE Lillard,POR Wade,MIA Bosh,MIA Butler,CHI Ellis, DAL Gay,SAC Hayward,UTA Vttcevic,ORL Walker,CH A

Jordan,LAC Drummond,DET Cousins,SAC Gasol,CHI Randolph,MEM Chandler,DAL Vucevic,ORL Monroe,DET Love CLE Aldridge,PO R

Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG

51 425 43 394 37 331 46 436 39 349 38 320 46 429 49 402 51 448 48 388 50 396 52 378 35 291 42 326 48 320 53 427 46 321 51 337 48 409 42 278 Rebottnds

415 1402 27.5 260 1118 26.0 259 957 25.9 256 1129 24.5 185 940 24.1 266 907 23.9 207 1090 23.7 198 058 23.6 245 049 22.5 150 1077 22.4 195 1096 21.9 237 023 21.6 153 750 21.4 171 881 21.0 301 993 20.7 159 1080 20.4 226 914 19.9 237 998 19.6 119 939 19.6 167 789 18.8

G OFFDEF TOT AVG 52 230 468 698 13.4 52 261 414 675 13.0 38 114 357 471 12.4 49 147 446 593 12.1 42 163 345 508 12.1 51 209 407 616 12.1 48 155 384 539 11.2 50 172 351 523 10.5 51 108 425 533 10.5 46 123 351 474 10.3

LA. CLIPPERS (115) Barnes 5-120-0 12,Hawes2-40-1 4,Jordan8-12 6-9 22, Paul7-1510-1025, Redick5-12 2-2 15, Assisls G Crawford9-244-422, Rivers2-71-1 5, Titrkoglu3-6 52 009,Davis001-21,Jones00000,Wilcox00 Wall, WAS Lawson,DEN 49 0-00. Totals 41-9224-29115. 52 DALLAS (98) Paul, LAC Parsons 5155616, Nowilzkl7114518,Chandler Rondo,DAL 43 0 01-21, Barea 610 22 15,Ellis 01 000, Smith01 Curry,GO L 49 0-00, Harri1-82-34, s Powell 0-13-43, AmInit 2-60-0 Westbrook,OKC 37 5, Villltueva 9-133-626, Jeiferson2-82-27, Felton1-5 Teague,ATL 48 0-03, Ledo 0-2H0. Totals 33-8122-3098. James,CLE 43 LA. Clippers 32 3 4 28 21 — 115 Carter-Wiliams,PHL 41 Dallas 31 22 27 18 — 98 Lowry,TOR 52

AST AVG 528 10.2 488 10.0 499 9.6 374 388 280 360 317 302 376

8.7 7.9 7.6 7.5 7.4 7.4 7.2


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

Skiing

SKIING

Continued from C1 "Ski tuning is a m a n's world," Crnko said, smiling. "But I bring a woman's touch. It's in my hands, like growing flowers." Stuhec, who finished 20th in the women's downhill Friday at the Alpine World Ski Championships, agreed. "My mom's skis are always among the best," she said. "We're usually one of the fast-

Amazing Maze wins 3rd medal at worlds

"But I admit, when we first started doing this, we got some

funny looks." The job is known as a ski tech, and it is largely thankless and grimy. The workspace resembles atransients'encampment with dozens of plywood Doug Mills/New York Times News Service

Darja Crnko, the mother of World Cup skier Ilka Stuhec, works on her daughter's skis in a small work-

shop in Vail, Colorado, set up for the Alpine World Ski Championships in nearby Beaver Creek.

the World Cup circuit, from

"She came to my rescue," Central Europe to Scandinavia to North America, setting up Stuhec said. "We just did evshop wherever there is space. erything together. And we still p.m. to midnight. The typical ski tech is fueled by loud music, pizza, Red Bull, beer and chew-

ing tobacco. On race and training days, the techs also rise before the sun to give the precious skis a final coat of wax and loving care. The work stations are side by side, but they are private, windowless booths with

doors that lock. Each tech believes he or she has a secret formula of sophisticated flu-

orocarbon waxes and pricey powders that will make their skiers' skis just a little bit faster

than the competition's. Into this world, Crnko made her first inroads in 2009. Or, as

she said last week at the Slovenia team's hotel here: "That's

when beinga mother became my other job." Stuhec, whose parents are

divorced, grew up near a ski resort in Maribor, Slovenia. She was a three-time world junior

champion and advanced to the national ski team as a teen. Her mother was a former racer

Continued from C1 "You get a chance to re-

group without a defender and have some success," the 15thyear Mountain View boys coach says. "Mentally, that can flip the button on. 'OK, I can do this.' It's a pretty common rem-

edy for players who are struggling on a particular night: Get to the line and get some

rhythm and confidence." That axiom is often heard on telecasts, so much so that it

and helps her in almost daily workouts to keep her right

championships after finishing

knee healthy. The two share

in the super-G at the 2014 Sochi Olympics. But in addition

tt

like, 'I'll do better next time.'" C rnko said: "I d on't l i k e

mom." But Stuhec said no spat ever lasts for long. "We're always over it in five minutes," she said. "It has made us better.We're best

friends." Stuhec has made 80 World Cup starts and was looking

I'

hausted from all the races and

Kirchgasser earned third. training sessions. She has a Bend's Laurenne Ross fin- few rest days before the giant ished 14th in 2:38.01.

slalom and slalom Saturday.

. • sllls •

Marco Trovati I The Associated Press

Slovenia's Tina Maze does acartwheel after finishing her run Monday in Beaver Creek, Colorado.

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustable Beds

SINCE 1980

IjV&TRESS

G allery - B e n d

711 SlN10th • Redmond • (541) 548-8616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com

•3

541-3$0-50$4

I

forward to this month's world

heard about shooters being in View, for example, players "the zone," dialed in from the are requiredto make free floor and seemingly unshak- throws lest they face extra able. That zone, Reid assures, conditioning. "It's not the same as a is real. And like an exothermic reaction, gaining heat at game," says Covill, who recalls the free-throw line and from his coaches conducting similar the field provides energy for foul-shooting drills when he teammates. was a player at the University It is contagious, that feeling of Montana. "But it's also presof invincibility. Often, it besure because they don't want to gins at the charity stripe. Foul make their teammates run for shots begin to fall. Teammates missing free throws, and they don't want that consequence." see the barrier broken. Their mentality shifts: My next shot The in-game result is a sinis going to go down. That men- gle point for each made foul tal fortitude is key, says Covill, shot. But that single point, whose team has made about that one snowball, begins to 75 percentof its free throws avalanche. Those free throws this season. After all, as base- amass throughout each conball Hall of Famer Yogi Berra test, all while placing oppoput it, 90 percent of the game is nents in potential foul trou-

At Ridgeview and Mountain

and fellow Austrian Michaela

TOUCHMARK

WiNDOW TREATS

explaining her mistakes. It would be easier to just be her

has become a cliche. As Covill points out, however, players struggling to make their jump shots sometimes need just one spark, one sight of a shot breaking the lid on the rim and tumbling through the net, to half mental." ble. For Reid and Mountain "It's always that mental edge View, paced by Davis Holly's "get into a groove." "It's such a mental game," that teams have that are suc- robotic 80-of-83 shooting at adds Sarah Reeves, a Sum- cessful," says Covill, now in his the foul line so far this seamit sophomore whose squad third season with the Ravens. son, those free throws, made went a chilly 8 of 21 from the "The successful teams that and attempted, hold more foul line in a loss to Ridgeview have a strong mental makeup significance than mere point recently before following up when it comes time to knock- production. "The amount of attempts is with a respectable 10-of-17 ing free throws down or open performanceina victory over shots, those are the t eams something we use as ameaBend. "When you hit the first that are usually consistently surementfor how aggressi ve we're playing, as far as putting one or two (free throws), you successful." just have that confidence that, To get to that point, quali- pressure on defenses and not 'Now I can hit every other shot ty repetition is vital, players settling for jump shots," Reid that I take.' It's a huge mental developing routines they are says. "That's important begame, and you just need to get comfortable with an d h a ve cause there's going to be days in your head that every shot confidence in while fine-tun- when you don't shoot the ball that you take is going in." ing their shooting technique. well as a team and can rely Those freebies fuel players' As monotonous as the act can on jump shots too much. We confidence levels. They kick seem, free-throw shooting has try to really track, on a gameinto motion, and they stay in long held importance in bas- to-game basis, the amount of motion. Yet there is the sec- ketball. These days, however, free throws we're taking in ond piece of Newton's law that players do not spend enough terms of how aggressive we're needs to be addressed. "On time on their own developing playing." the flip side," Reid says, "'Hey, their shooting forms and rouThe dimensions are conthis is uncontested and I can't tines, Reid notes. That outside stant: the foul line striped 15 make it.'" work is necessary, Covill adds, feet away, the rim rising 10 feet Says Reeves: "When you as there is not always much above the court. The value is miss a few easy buckets or a time during practice to devote fixed: one point for each made jump shot that you normally to free-throw shooting. free throw. make, it's really hard to get That is not to say that it is Yet this is not just a repetiyour mind off of that. I would neglected entirely. But rather tious, seemingly dull act. That definitely say that it's a lot than simply instructing play- foul shot, on point or off line, harder if you're stepping up to ers toshoot a certain number is a spark. What ensues is the line, knowing you missed of foulshots,coaches such as physics, as drawn out by Isaac the past two or three shots, to Covill and Reid set up pres- Newton. sure-filled free-throw drills. step up and knock it down." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, You have more than likely

10th in the downhill and 13th

a room on the road, but they Crnko said the established do not usually eat meals to- to the 20th place in the downtechnicians and coaches treat- gether since Crnko is tuning hill, Stuhec was 17th in the sued her warily at first. But then skis throughout the evening. per-G last week. "I'm disappointed in my perin one of Stuhec's first big Stuhec eats with teammates races that year, she finished and goes to bed early so she formancesso far,"she said. in the top 10. Moreover, in the can be ready for early-mornCrnko, wh o w a s s i t ting flat sections of th e c ourse, ing training or racing. next to her daughter, leaned Stuhec's time was among the Crnko t iptoes i nto t h eir over and put an arm on her best. hotel room late at night and shoulder. "That opened all the doors," customarily returns to her "There are other races said Crnko, who has an engi- ski-techworkplace before her ahead," she said softly. neering degree. "I was a wom- daughter awakens. Stuhec raced in Monday's "It is tiring," Crnko said. "I super combined, finishing sevan, but I obviously knew what I was doing." could use more sleep, but now enth, and will race in ThursWhen Crnko arrived at her is not the time. Ilka needs me. I day's giant slalom. Her chief work station in the ski tech sleep in the summer." goal, if a bit in the future, is to village at the world champiMost days, they meet on the get back to the Winter Olymonships one day last week, mountain, where Crnko also pics in 2018. the other ski techs greeted her helps dispense advice on techWill her mother be there arrival by bellowing: "Hello, nique and race tactics. tuning her skis if she makes it'? "It's not always easy, be"I don't know," Crnko said. Mommy!" Crnko, a soft-spoken wom- cause she has to tell me what "I said I'd only do this for a an with an easy smile, re- I'm doing wrong," Stuhec said. year." minded the crew that since "There will be days after a Ilka Stuhec turned to smile Ilka's sister and only sibling race when she's saying, 'What at her mother. "You said that six y ears has had a child, she is now a were you doing? What were ago," she said, laughing. grandmother. you thinking?' " And sometimes I'll t a l k "I did," said Crnko, who beThe techs for other racers came by Crnko's booth regu- back to her, just kind of say gan to laugh as well. "I did." larly to compare notes or dis- quickly, 'I know, I know, Mom.' cuss the all-important weather If it was a regular coach, I'm details (without sharing their sure I would say something do

and coach, and her father, Igor Stuhec, is a construction engi- most vital secrets). " Darja i s a stro n g , neer. But about eight years ago, Stuhec, now 24, had the first of hard-working woman, and several devastating injuries to she'searned the respect of all her right knee, which has been the other techs," said Hilaire operated on five times. Paleni, who oversees the womBy 2009, Stuhec was no lon- en's World Cup for ski maker ger under the purview of the Rossignol, which sponsors Slovenia ski team and largely Stuhec. "They spend so much making a comeback on her time together there is no foolown. Crnko, 52, took over as ing the group." her daughter's coach, physical C rnko ha s c o ntinued t o therapist, ski tech, driver and coach her daughter, who has travel agent. rejoined the Slovene team,

Free throws

wouldn't have felt good," BEAVER CREEK, Colo. Maze said. "It was a lot of Tina Maze pulled off an im- pressure today. It's not easy to pressive feat on the soft snow race like that. I was really ner— a cartwheel in ski boots. vous before the slalom. "This was a hard win." Her racing wasn't too bad, either. And a difficult day for Maze captured gold in the Vonn, who struggled in the alpine combined Monday, downhill portion, with the icy earning her third medal of surface bothering her surgithe world championships on a cally repaired right knee. Latwarm afternoon when Lind- er, inthe slalom, she straddled sey Vonn failed to finish the a gate just before the first inslalom. terval, endingher day. Leading after the downhill Maze certainly is dialed portion, the Slovenian stand- in at Beaver Creek. She adds out used a clean slalom run this gold to the silver she won to finish in a combined time in the super-G and gold in of 2 minutes, 33.37 seconds. the downhill last week. But Nicole Hosp of Austria was fatigue is starting to play a second, 0.22 seconds behind, factor:Maze said she's ex-

ski prep matters the most.

The usual work hours are 5

t oday I

The Associated Press

est in the flat sections where

cubides hastily assembled in a hotel basement, parking lot or unused warehouse. The ski techs travel week to week with

"If I d i dn't wi n

By Pat Graham

glucas@bendbulletin.com.

,j

'

r

z:

v•

g I g l r sg g I

SEND Fcj)4 p 6tT THkTHk REGISTE RFQR

ll

bl'ovght torov rrr

&e l plunireoregon

Bend Police Department Deschutes County Sheriff's Otrlce

TORCHRUN POI IPICIJL OL1flPICI

jtmSplungsoregon

OIROON

tigw~ssam

c~

Q ILol d M'll

i

8 /plungsoregon

ew Regence QAve

~ ps

T:

The Bulletin

©

g

PENCO


C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY10, 2015

+

+

S&P500

N ASDAQ ~ $ 8 39

17,729.21

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

4,726.01

TOdap Healthy results?

2 020

CVS Health reports fourth-quarter financial results today. Financial analysts predict the drugstore operator and pharmacy benefits manager's earnings and revenue increased versus a year earlier. CVS has benefited in recent quarters from demand for specialty drugs. That has helped offset the loss of sales of tobacco products, which the company stopped selling last fall. $99.56

.

.

.

17,960"

.................. Close: 2,046.74

Change: -8.73 (-0.4%)

2,160 " 2,080 "

18,500"

"

16,500 "

1,840. " A" .:"."S."...'"." Q

StocksRecap

N

.

"

J

D

F

1 6,000

McDonald's

"

A

6

0

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17821.49 17685.32 17729.21 -95.08 DOW Trans. 8921.32 8808.46 8840.63 -91.84 DOW Util. 61 7.13 605.16 607.77 -5.92 NYSE Comp. 10862.88 10803.97 10826.60 -20.91 NASDAQ 4749.47 4719.61 4726.01 -1 8.39 S&P 500 2056.16 2041.88 2046.74 -8.73 -7.43 S&P 400 1477.43 1467.38 1469.46 Wilshire 5000 21705.81 21559.19 21602.52 -103.23 -9.63 Russell 2000 1208.28 1195.38 1195.83

DOW

Price-earnings ratio: 26

J

%CHG. -0.53% -1.03% -0.96% -0.19% -0.39% -0.42% -0.50% -0.48% -0.80%

F

WK MO QTR YTD L L L -0.53% -3.27% L L -1.67% -0.12% L L L L -0.21% L L L -0.59% L L L +1.17% L L L -0.31% -0.74% L L L

NAME

Alaska Air Group A LK 37.71 ~ Avista Corp A VA 28.19 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ All about jobs B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ A new Labor Department survey Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ of job openings should provide Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ insight into the health of the U.S. ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 job market. Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ The December Job Openings Costco Wholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 ~ and Labor Turnover survey, or FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ JOLTS, is due out today. The PQ 28. 64 ~ survey provides figures for overall HewlettP acKard H Intel Corp I NTC 24.06 ~ hiring, as well as the number of Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ quits and layoffs. Job openings Kroger Co K R 3 5 .98 ~ rose 2.9 percent to just under 5 Lattice Semi LSCC 5.94 0— million in November, the most LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ since January 2001. MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 o — — o JOLTS job openings Mentor Graphics M E NT 18.25 seasonally adjusted annual rate Microsoft Corp MSFT 36.29 ty— Nike Ioc B N KE 70.60 ~ 5.00 million est Nordstrom Ioc JWN 57.30 — 0 4.9 4.9 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.30 ~ PaccarIoc PCAR 55.34 ty— 4.8 Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 4.75 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 4.7 4.7 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schoitzer Steel SCH N 1 6.25 o — 4.6 Sherwin Wms SHW 180.82 ~ StaocorpFocl S FG 57.77 ~ 4.50 Starbucks Cp SBUX 67.93 ~ J J A 6 0 N UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ 2014 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ Source:FectSel WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 5.22 ~ 5 Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~

Losing its fizz?

71.40 6 3. 5 1 -2.41 -3.7 V 38.34 3 4. 8 4 -.42 -1.2 V 18.21 1 6. 3 5 -.14 -0.8 w 71.76 38 . 1 3 + . 2 7 +0.7 L 148. 8 9 14 7.58 -.42 -0.3 V 5.82 4.76 -.04 -0.8 T 0.3 6 27.31 -.30 -1.1 W 45.8 7 4 2. 1 1 -1.11 -2.6 W 56.8 5 147.54 -1.16 -0.8 V 17.89 1 2. 2 5 -.27 -2.2 T 37.42 3 3. 6 0 -.37 -1.1 V 41.10 3 7.6 4 -.31 -0.8 W 37.90 3 2. 9 3 -.37 -1.1 V 14.70 1 3. 8 8 -.28 -2.0 V 71.91 7 0. 8 5 -.86 -1.2 V 91 .9 5.95 -.15 -2.5 V 18.88 1 6. 4 9 -.20 -1.2 V 36.0 5 21 . 8 5 -.09 -0.4 V 24.31 24 .07 -.18 -0.7 W 50. 05 42 . 3 6 -.05 -0.1 V 99.76 9 1. 1 7 -.62 -0.7 V 80.54 78 .52 + . 0 2 ... ~ 52.57 4 7. 8 4 -.96 -2.0 V 71. 1 5 63. 1 6 +. 4 1 +0 .7 L 9.17 6.74 -.06 -0.9 V 45.45 4 4. 3 6 -.34 - 0.8 T

275. 09 20 1.52 -2.29 -1.1 w 30. 0 4 1 7 .5 9 + . 56 +3.3 L 280. 7 9 27 4.39 -5.92 -2.1 V 71.80 66 . 4 9 -.43 -0.6 V 89.7 7 8 8. 8 2 -.18 -0.2 V 19. 60 16.48 -.23 -1.3 V 46.10 4 4. 1 7 -.24 -0.5 V 4.5 3 20.77 -.37 -1.8 V 5.9 5 54.21 -.24 -0.4 W 37.04

3 4.8 5

-.02 -0.1 V

L V

w L L L L W

L L

L W W L L V L V L V W L

W W W L

w V L L L L L W L V

Monday's close:$59.66 T price-eamings ratio: 21

52-WEFK RANGF

$46

60

*annualized

AmdFocus

SelectedMutualFunds

AP

3-yr* 21.9

16.35 3.88 6.72 119.72 3.71 3.10 47.32 34.47 19.77

-.14 +.18 +.18 +.79 -.01 +.04 -.69 +.17 +.30

Fidelity SmCapStk d VALUE

FSLCX

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers EnerJex rs PostRck rs

QuatttFuel ZionB wt18

NoAtlDrill Wstptlrm g Mattersight GeoFio Aemetis rs EpirusB rs

LAST 3.44 5.85 3.80 2.39 2.27 5.98 7.15 9.28 4.70 5.59

CHG +1.37 +1.80 +1.01 +.63 +.42 +.96 +1.10 +1.33 +.67 +.74

Losers

%CHG + 66.2 + 4 4.4 ccC Qr + 3 6.2 $$ + 3 5.9 + 2 2.7 co + 1 9.1 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 1 8.2 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 6.7 Q + 1 6.6 average of stock holdings + 1 5.3 • Represents 75% of fuod's stock holdings

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 24 . 82 -.06+0.3 +11.0 +12.8+12.5 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.21 -.20 +1.1 +10.4 +10.4+10.0 A A A CpWldGrlA m 46.64 -.21 +1.2 +7.6 +13.0+10.9 8 A C EurPacGrA m 47.73 -.26 +1.3 +1.3 +8.5 +7.6 C C C FnlnvA m 52. 1 5 - .20 +0.2 +12.2 +15.8+14.5 D C C GrthAmA m 42.84 -.22 +0.4 +10.6 +16.9+14.6 D 6 D IncAmerA m 21.75 -.07 +0.8 +10.5 +11.9+12.0 A A A InvCoAmA m 36.99 -.12 -0.2 +14.4 +16.8+14.3 C 6 D NewPerspA m36.47 -.19 +0.5 +6.1 +13.0+11.9 C A 8 WAMutlnvA m40.78 -.15 -0.4 +13.9 +16.2+15.6 8 6 A Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 8 ... +0 . 7 + 4 .7 + 4.1 +5.1 C 6 8 IntlStk 42.50 - . 1 3 +0.9 + 4 .0 +11.7 +9.3 A A A Stock 178.0 0 - .33 -1.6 +11.2 +19.2+15.8 D A A Fidelity Contra 97.26 - . 6 6 +0.2 +10.9 +16.4+16.0 C C 8 ContraK 97.2 0 - . 65 +0.2 +11.0 +16.5+16.2 C 0 8 LowPriStk d 49.98 -.09 -0.5 +10.7 +15.5+15.9 D D C Fideli S artao 500 ldxAdvtg72.56 -.31 -0.4 +16.2 +17.3+16.2 A 0 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.44 ... +1.2 +5.2 +9.1 +9.6 C A A IncomeA m 2. 4 1 ... +1 .3 + 5 .4 + 9.6+10.2 C A A Oakmarb Intl I 23.62 -.18 +1.2 -2.4 +12.1+11.0 D A A Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 19 . 72 -.09 -1.4 +13.4 +13.3+13.7 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 43 -.08 -1.5 +12.5 +12.3+12.7 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 31 -.08 -1.4 +12.6 +12.5+12.8 D E E SmMidValA m48.84 -.21 +0.2 +14.6 +15.8+14.1 8 C E SmMidValB m41.05 -.18 +0.1 +13.8 +14.9+13.2 8 D E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.6 3 - . 0 7 -0.5 +10.4 +14.7+14.0 E D C GrowStk 52.6 7 - . 34 +1.4 +10.9 +18.0+17.7 D A A HealthSci 70.2 3 - . 76 +3.3 +28.8 +34.3+28.7 A A A Newlncome 9. 6 7 . .. +1 .2 + 5 .4 + 3.2 +4.5 8 C C Vanguard 500Adml 180.12 80 -0.4 +16.2 +17.3+16.2 A 6 A 500lnv 180.10 80 -0.4 +16.1 +17.1+16.1 8 6 A CapOp 52.67 37 -0.1 +16.8 +22.3+16.9 A A A Eqlnc 31.02 13 -0.6 +14.9 +16.1+16.6 8 6 A IntlStkldxAdm 26.44 11 +1.7 +0.6 +5.9 NA 8 D StratgcEq 32.66 22 +1.5 +17.6 +20.2+20.1 A A A TgtRe2020 28.65 08 +0.7 +9.0 +9.7+10.4 A A A TgtRe2035 17.93 06 +0.5 +10.0 +12.1+12.2 A 6 8 Tgtet2025 16.63 05 +0.6 +9.3 +10.5+11.0 A A B TotBdAdml 10.96 +1.1 +5.4 +2.8 +4.3 8 D D Totlntl 15.81 06 +1.7 +0.5 +5.9 +6.1 8 D D TotStlAdm 51.51 23 -0.2 +15.2 +17.2+16.5 8 6 A TotStldx 51.48 24 -0.2 +15.0 +17.0+16.4 C 6 A USGro 29.99 13 +0.3 +14.3 +17.4+16.5 8 6 8

CATEGORY Small Blend C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ** 1 y1y1y -3.45 -25.7 AmiraNatF CVSL n -1.34 -19.6 ASSETS $1,741 million -5.05 -17.3 Chaogyou EXP RATIO 0.68% FifthStFin -1.27 -15.0 MANAGER Lionel Harris -.54 -15.0 Taomee SINCE 2011-11-30 RETURNS3-MO +2.1 Foreign Markets YTD +0.2 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +11.6 -39.95 -.85 Paris 4,651.08 3-YR ANNL +11.7 London 6,837.15 -16.29 -.24 5-YR-ANNL +11.2 Frankfurt 10,663.51 -1 82.88 -1.69 Hong Kong24,521.00 -1 58.39 -.64 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 42,81 0.29 +94.86 + . 22 CoreSite Realty Corp 2.06 Milan 20,366.64 -394.10 -1.90 Silgan Holdings Inc 1.87 Tokyo 17,711.93 +63.43 + . 36 1.86 Stockholm 1,591.40 -8.15 -.51 Plantronics Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -4.60 -.08 AECOMTechnology Corp 1.81 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,770.10 Zurich 8,632.14 +44.15 + . 51 Allied World Assurance CoHoldings AG redemption fee.Source: Morningstar. NAME

L AST 9.95 5.50 24.16 7.22 3.07

$$7.$2 ~

F $103 .78

N

D J 52-week range

$$.1$~

F $40.44

Vol.:8.2m (1.2x avg.) P E: 19.2 Vol.:22.2m (1.3x avg.) PE: 1 .8 Mkt. Cap:$90.24b Yie l d: 3.7% Mkt. Cap:$6.73 b Y i e ld:27.9% CCJ Close:$1 5.35%0.28 or 1.9% The uranium producer reported a boost in fourth-quarter profit on higher uranium prices and lower costs, and set its outlook. $25

Nat.Bank ofGreece

N BG

Close:$1.12 V-0.09 or -7.4% Shares of the bank fell after Greece's new prime minister said he would renegotiate a bailout that imposed harsh austerity.

$3

20 15 N

D

J

F

N

52-week range

D

J

F

52-week range

$1$.$$~

$25.84

$$.$$ ~

$5.83

Vol.:3.8m ( 1.7x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:28.8m (3.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$6.08 b Yie l d: 2.3% Mkt. Cap: $3.96 b

Hasbro

HAS

Close:$59.66L3.92 or 7.0% The toy maker reported better-than-expected quarterly profit on sales of boys' toys and it boosted its quarterly dividend. $60

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Transocean

RIG Close:$20.44L1.93 or 10.4% The owner of offshore oil rigs was one of several energy companies that benefited from a sharp increase in the price of oil. $30 25

55

20

N

D

J

F

N

52-week range

D

J

F

52-week range

$4$.$$ ~

$$0.$$

$$4$0 ~

$4$. $2

Vol.:4.9m (3.3x avg.) P E: 20.4 Vol.:2 0.8m (1.4x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$7.5 b Yiel d : 2. 9% Mkt. Cap:$7.64 b Yi e ld: 14.7%

Achillion Pharma.

ACHN

Close:$11.66 %0.84 or 7.8% The biotechnology company reported positive results from a midstage clinical trial of a potential hepatitis C virus treatment. $16 14

Global Eagle Ent.

ENT Close: $13.50V-2.20 or -14.0% The digital media and content provider for airlines is privately placing $75 million in senior notes to institutional buyers $16 14

N

D J 52-week range

$24$ ~

F $1$ $7

Vol.:23.8m (3.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.17 b

P E: . . Yield:..

N

D J F 52-week range $$$0 ~ $ 1$ 4$ Vol.:991.4k (3.0x avg.) PE: . . . Mkt. Cap:$1.03 b Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill

. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 7 .0 8 -0.01 L

52-wk T-bill

.23

.24

-0.01 L

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.98 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other loans.

2-year T-note . 6 6 .63 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1.51 1.48 +0.03 L 10-year T-note 1.98 1.96 +0.02 L 30-year T-bond 2.56 2.53 +0.03 L

Commodities

FUELS

The price of oil rose Monday after OPEC said that demand for its crude would rise this year and that U.S. output would fall. In metals trading, gold and silver rose. Copper fell.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

BONDS

.08 .08

V L

L L

L L L L

L .31 W 1 47 . V 2.69 W 3.67

.11

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

5-yr*

Fidelity Small Cap Stock focuses on more-stable companies, which FAMILY Marhetsummary American Funds should smooth out returns in Most Active volatile times. That helped its NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG 2014 performance, according to S&P500ETF 771030 204.63 -.92 Morningstar. 770014 404229 397678 372398 347414 343476 342645 337652 337193

SDRL

Close:$14.34%1.08 or 8.1% Chinese property tycoon Tong Jinquan increased his stake in the offshore oil driller to 5.2 percent, according to Bloomberg. $30 20

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.39 2.39 . . . L L W 3.44 Bond Buyer Muni ldx 4.19 4.19 . . . L L W 4.89 14. 8 Barclays USAggregate 2.12 2.02 +0.10 L W 2.35 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.20 6.49 -0.29 W W L 5.65 Dtvt d end $1 72 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.52 3.46 +0.06 L W W 4. 5 0 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.77 1.73 +0.04 L L W 1.7 3 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.97 2.87 +0.10 L W W 3. 1 2 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

otal r eturn 1-y r HAS 2 3.2%

(B a sed on Past12-month results) Dtv yteld 2 goL

AP

NAME

D J 52-week range

12

Hasbro (I-IAS)

SeaDrill

10

N

L + 6.3 +74 . 3 2 1 08 1 4 0 . 80f V -1.4 +30.0 3 6 4 1 1 1 . 32f w -8.6 -0.5 77001 47 0 .20 L +39. 2 - 42.1 153 d d 0 . 88 L + 13. 5 +2 3 .0 4 146 20 3 .64f T -8.3 +5 . 3 69 79 W -1.1 +1 3.0 5 3 2 1 8 0 .64a W -5.5 +2 0.0 3 8 9 2 5 0 . 60f L + 4.1 +35 . 7 2 7 04 3 1 1 .42a T -8.2 - 10.8 11 1 7 7 L + 4.0 +6.8 934 24 0. 4 4f W -6.2 + 3 5.4 7 846 1 4 0 . 6 4 V -9.3 $.42.6 28249 14 0 .96 V -0.1 +13.9 10523 13 0 . 26 L +10. 3 +9 6 .9 5 083 22 0 . 7 4 V - 13.6 + 2 . 7 1 471 1 5 V -0.4 -3.4 1744 dd V -7.0 -29.3 94 7 1 4 0 .73f L +9.8 +25 . 6 75 6 2 0 0. 2 0 V -8.8 +2 0.4 26939 17 1 . 2 4 V -5.2 +29.8 3623 27 1.12f V - 1.1 +36.0 1024 2 1 1 . 32 V - 4.1 +24.7 94 22 1. 8 6 V -7.1 +10.2 1623 1 7 0.88a V - 19.5 +199.6 364 2 4 L + 3.7 +8.4 11 1 8 3 7 1. 7 6 w -16.3 -19.7 1195 16 0 . 12 V -22.0 - 29.3 31 1 4 1 0 . 7 5 L $-4.3 +5 7 .7 65 9 3 1 2. 2 0 V -4.8 + 9 . 7 1 4 6 1 3 1 . 30f L $-8.3 +24 .6 3 3 93 2 7 1. 2 8 V - 3.1 + 0 . 4 9 7 4 2 2 0 . 6 0 V -1.7 +14.0 4478 14 0 . 98 V -6.2 -0.2 32 4 1 3 0 . 52f W -1.1 +24.7 9421 13 1 . 40 V - 2.9 +21.6 2363 2 6 1 . 16

'::"'"" Hasbro shares jump

CSVLgCrde Petrobras Apple Inc s SiriusXM CSVixSht Twitter 8 iPVixST US OilFd

90

Cameco

Wall Street will comb Coca-Cola's latest quarterly results for an update on the company's struggling soda business. Footnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current The world's biggest beverage Dividend annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent maker is trying to turn around its dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend p— Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash flagship soda businesses in North announcement. value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. America, where consumers have cut back on soft drinks over the past decade. To cope, the company is taking steps to trim costs and is pushing smaller cans Shares of Hasbro jumped more than 7 Investment Research. Its revenue of $1.3 and bottles that contain fewer percent Monday. billion was short of the $1.34 billion calories. Coca-Cola reports The toy maker said that sales for analysts were anticipating. fourth-quarter earnings today. Transformers, Nerf and Marvel toy were The company said revenue would strong during the fourth quarter, while have climbed 7 percent if it weren't for a sales of girls' toys fell. Hasbro also $93.4 million drag from foreign exchange. ~ struggled with the impact of the strong Hasbro also forecast a better-thandollar on its international business. expected profit for 2015 of $3.15 per share. Hasbro earned $1.22 per share on an The companyalsoboosted its adjusted basis for the period, in line with quarterly dividend by 7 percent and market expectations, according to Zacks increased its share repurchase plans.

BkofAm

95

52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Source: FactSet

MCD

Close:$92.72 V-1.27 or -1.4% The fast-food restaurant operator reported a drop in a key global sales figure because of food-quality scares, primarily in Asia. $100

NorthwestStocks

based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $1.40 Div. yield:1.4%

EURO +.0018 1.1336+

+1.17 '

Stocks fell moderately Monday, as investors reacted to weak Chinese trade data and more worries about Greece's finances. Over the weekend, politicians with Greece's new left-wing government said it wants to cancel a portion of its debt-reduction measures, setting up for a conflict between Greece and its creditors. Meanwhile Chinese trade data showed imports fell by 20 percent from a year ago, the latest sign that the world's second-largest economy was slowing down. McDonald's also weighed on the market, after it reported a fall in global sales last month. Despite the fall, stocks are still strong this month, with the S&P 500 up 2.6 percent in February.

Change: -95.06 (-0.5%) 10 DAYS "

.

+

.

NYSE NASD

4Q '13 4 Q '14

$52.86

StoryStocks

17,000 "

1,920 "

CRUDEOIL

37

Dow jones industrials Close: 17,729.21

"

Vol. (in mil.) 3,449 1,607 Pvs. Volume 4,126 1,971 Advanced 1302 1003 Declined 1846 1728 New Highs 61 47 New Lows 21 29

60

+

$17.05

"

18,000"

"

17,500" 2,000 "

.

17,000"

SILVER

GOLD $1,240.80

i)2

17,480 "

1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS

60

Operating EPS

+

S8tP 500

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

CVS $65.85

10 YR TNOTE 1.98%

2,046.74

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell versus the

Japanese yen as global markets grew more worried overthe possible implications of Greece's standoff with its creditors.

h5Q HS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 52.86 51.69 1.45 1.43 1.87 1.84 2.60 2.58 1.58 1.56

CLOSE PVS. 1240.80 1233.90 17.05 16.68 1220.40 1221.60 2.60 2.60 779.95 781.60

%CH. %YTD +2.26 -0.8 -0.49 -10.9 + 1.84 + 1.4 +0.70 -1 0.1 +1.23 +1 0.0

%CH. %YTD + 0.56 + 4 .8 + 2.25 + 9 .6 - 0.10 + 1 . 0 -0.15 -8.4 -0.21 -2.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.4 1.58 1.56 +1.52 Coffee (Ib) 1.68 1.67 + 0.45 + 0 . 6 -1.5 Corn (bu) 3.91 3.86 +1.43 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.62 + 1.15 + 3 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 320.80 315.50 +1.68 -3.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.41 1.36 + 3.23 + 0 . 5 Soybeans (bu) 9.79 9.74 +0.51 -4.0 Wheat(bu) 5.30 5.27 +0.52 -1 0.2 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5230 -.0002 -.01% 1.6412 Canadian Dollar 1.2 4 52 -.0078 -.63% 1.1032 USD per Euro 1.1336 +.0018 +.16% 1.3627 -.73 -.62% 102.28 JapaneseYen 118.41 Mexican Peso 14. 8095 -.0684 -.46% 13.2857 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8776 -.0211 -.54% 3.5269 Norwegian Krone 7 . 6100 -.0181 -.24% 6.1826 South African Rand 11.5728 +.0435 +.38% 11.0842 Swedish Krona 8.3 6 18 -.0309 -.37% 6.4891 Swiss Franc .9211 -.0058 -.63% . 8 977 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2798 -.0036 -.28% 1.1161 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2473 +.0107 +.17% 6.0636 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7536 +.0008 +.01% 7.7588 Indian Rupee 62.086 +.107 +.1 7% 62.220 Singapore Dollar 1.3535 -.0007 -.05% 1.2683 South KoreanWon 1096.45 -1.89 -.17% 1073.77 -.08 -.25% 3 0.30 Taiwan Dollar 31.60



ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 •

•I•

• I

e

e'

t,'g;

Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl

kfl

Call for package rates

=a

Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

. Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

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

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

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

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

Th

e

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

B u I l e t i n :

1 7 7g

s

w .

c h a nd l e r 245

210

I ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

Furniture & Appliances

Go l f Equipment CHECK yOUR AO

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves R ange, Jenn A i r , 267- Fuel and Wood on the first day it runs down draft, black, to make sure it isn cor268- Trees, Plants & Flowers n with four b urners, rect. Spellcheck and 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment convection oven with human errors do oc270- Lost and Found three shelves, great cur. If this happens to cond. GARAGESALES your ad, please conPaid $2290. 275 - Auction Sales tact us ASAP so that Asking $1600. corrections and any 280 - Estate Sales 503-866-8858 adjustments can be 281 - Fundraiser Sales made to your ad. 282- Sales NorlhwestBend Refrigerator - white 22 541-385-5809 284- Sales Southwest Bend cu. ft. Maytag, French The Bulletin Classified door with icemaker 286- Sales Norlheast Bend and bottom freezer, 288- Sales Southeast Bend ExR E A T only 2 years old, and 290- Sales RedmondArea has been stored for %%KKX 292 - Sales Other Areas most of that time. NEW FARM MARKET Paid $1500,asking Cleveland Irons! $1000. 541-923-7360. 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in 316- Irrigation Equipment plastic,$325 obo! Sleep Comfort Twin 325- Hay, Grain and Feed New Adams XL adjustable bed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies Idea with vibrator, with or 341 - Horses andEquipment 3,4,5 HB,6-PW, without mattress & senior,$525 obo! 345-Livestockand Equipment foundation, clean, Sa/e ends 2/10/15 needs new air pump. 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 951-454-2561 $400 cash 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers (in Redmond) 541-362-7072 or 358- Farmer's Column 541-410-5165 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing FIND IT! 383- Produce andFood

r

BUY IT! recommends extra ' SELL IT! i caution when pur- The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin

206

206

A v e .

i

,

• B en

d

O r e g o n

246

260

266

266

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Misc. Items

Heating & Stoves

Sales Northeast Bend

Hovv to avoidscam

and fraud attempts Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 ga. - immac., 28" full YBe aware of internachoke, field mdl $750. tional fraud. Deal loWin. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 cally whenever posga. immac., 30" full sible. choke field mdl SOLD! sr Watch for buyers 7mm Rem. mag who offer more than HVA action. improved your asking price and Mauser 98 M o n te who ask to have Carlo stock, Leupold money wired or 4x scope $600. Win. handed back to them. mdl 43 - .218B (1952) Fake cashier checks Weaver 2.5X scope and money orders $550. Win. Mdl 75are common. .22 LR (1942) Exc. HNever give out percond., Weaver 2.5x sonal financial infors cope $750. W i n . mation. Pre-64 Mdl 70 "feath- sfTrust your instincts erweight" .243, (1955) and be wary of E xc., Bushnell 3 x someone using an scope, SOLD! 1944 escrow service or Mauser Mdl 98K-44, agent to pick up your Military rifle w/sling, merchandise. good cond., SOLD. Leupold VariX11 scope The Bulletin Sereing Central Oregon sincefggg 3x9, $175. Call Bob, 541-419-5126. Wanted- paying cash 265 for Hi-fi audio 8 studio equip. Mclntosh, Computers JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, SanT HE BULLETIN r e quires computer ad- sui, Carver, NAD, etc. vertisers with multiple Call 541-261-1808 ad schedules or those selling multiple sysHave an item to tems/ software, to dissell quick? close the name of the business or the term If it's under "dealer" in their ads. '500 you can place it in Private party advertisers are defined as The Bulletin those who sell one Classifieds for: computer.

NOTICE TO ** FREE ** ADVERTISER Since September 29, Garage Sale Klt 1991, advertising for Place an ad in The used woodstoves has Bulletin for your gabeen limited to mod- rage sale and reels which have been ceive a Garage Sale certified by the OrKit FREE! egon Department of Environmental QualKIT INCLUDES: ity (DEQ) and the fed- • 4 Garage Sale Signs eral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To Protection A g e n cy Lise Toward Your (EPA) as having met Next Ad smoke emission stan- • 10 Tips For "Garage dards. A cer t ified Sale Success!" w oodstove may b e identified by its certifiPICK UP YOUR cation label, which is GARAGE SALE Kll at permanently attached 1777 SW to the stove. The Bul- Ave., Bend,Chandler OR 97702 letin will not knowingly accept advertis- The Bulletin ierrrng Cenrral Oregon rrnre tggs ing for the sale of uncertified woodstoves. 267

Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species 8 cost per cord to better serve our customers.

chasing products or, services from out of I 246 area. Sending I Donate deposit bottles/ Wheaten Terrier, pure- the Guns, Hunting checks, or ' cans to local all vol., bred, soft no-shed coat, i cash, & Fishing non-profit rescue, for tail docked, dewclaws, credit i n f ormation feral cat spay/neuter. shots. 12-wk f emale, may be subjected to Bend local pays CASH!! 257 '10 - 3 lines, 7 days T railer a t Jak e ' scrate & d oggy doori FRAUD. For more 8 ammo. D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; trained. Family pet only! information about an c for firearms Musical Instruments '16 -3 lines, 14 days 541-526-0617 advertiser, you may i Petco in Redmond; $875. 541-447-8970 (Private Party ads only) I call t h e Ore g onI donate M-F at Smith 202 CASH!! ' State Atto r ney ' Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Find It in For Guns, Ammo 8 Want to Buy or Rent i General's O f f i ce Bend; or CRAFT in WHEN YOU SEE THIS Reloading Supplies. Tumalo. Can pick up The Bulletin Classifieds! Consumer Protec- • 541-408-6900. The Bulletin Wanted: $Cash paid for large amts, 389-8420. 541 -385-5809 tion h o t line at I Senrrng Central Oregon sincerggg vintage costume jew- www.craftcats.org i 1-877-877-9392. Colt 4 5 mo d e l 80 elry. Top dollar paid for MorePixat Bendbjjlletij.com 210 totally 269 Gold/Silver.l buy by the I TheBulletin I Commander, 1981 Yamaha On a classified ad Sererng Central Oregon since tggg customized, A c curFurniture & Appliances Estate, Honest Artist Console Piano go to Gardening Supplies rails tritium sights, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 www.bendbulletin.com bench, & Equipment Parkerized fr a m e, 1 with 212 to view additional owner, rich tone, A1 Washers&Dryers much more. In box fire WANTEDwood dressphotos of the item. Antiques & excellent condition, $150 ea. Full wartwice, mint, $ 1000. ers; dead washers. currently tuned For newspaper Free Del. Also Collectibles 503-888-2101 French Bulldog AKC pup- ranty. 541-420-5640 by Jana. delivery, call the 261 wanted, used W/D's pies, great ValentIne's Circulation Dept. at 541-260-7355 Old Gas Pumps/Soda edical Equipment gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 205 $1200obo. 541-385-5800 Vending Machines chrisandcyndi@yahoo.com 541-369-1966 To place an ad, call Items for Free WANTED! Will pay cash. Pride Go-Go Ultra X 541-385-5809 Kyle, 541-504-1050 German Shepherds 3-wheeled scooter, like or email Gas R a nge, b l a ck www.sherman-ranch.us DO YOU HAVE Drum Kits:Specializing new, $425. 541-318-0567 claggifiedObendbtslletin.com The Bulletin reserves SOMETHING TO w/four burners, 7 yrs. $1900+. 541-281-6829 in High QuaiIty New & the right to publish all SELL Used Drum Sets! old, oven needs work. 262 The Bulletin ads from The Bulletin FOR $500 OR Serelng Central Oregon sincefggg Your haul. Kevin, 541-420-2323 newspaper onto The Commercial/Office 541-388-3555 LESS? The Drum Shop Armoire Bulletin Internet web,! e • L , Non-commercial Equipment & Fixtures 270 Upright Dressersite. advertisers may 206 r Custom quality, excelLost & Found place an ad I Pets & Supplies lent condition, crafted The Bulletin with our walnut 8 swirly walnut Lost: male English BullHAVANESE PIJPS, "QUICK CASH burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 dog Feb. 1. Much loved, AKC non-shedding, SPECIAL" The Bulletin recomcedar-lined drawers plus USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 1 week 1-yr old, has black collar hypo-allergenic, great 3 lines 12 mends extra caution Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, 3 other drawers (2 partiwith skulls. NE Bend off OI' when purc has- family pets, UTD shots/ tioned for socks). Size: Door-to-door selling with 1977, excellent cond, Deschutes Mkt Rd. wormer. $850. ee eke eta ing products or ser~ only played senior year in eH x 36ew x 16e D. If 73 fast results! It's the easiest 5-drawer Hon Reward! 541-848-1448 541-460-1277 Ad must college, $1000 obo.AND vices from out of the new, $5,500; Industries way in the world to sell. include price of area. Sending cash, A KC LA B 3 bla c k selling for$1275. commercial file Find exactly what in le item oi gaoo n~ checks, or credit in541-312-2393 The Bulletin Classified cabinet, males, 8 wks, dew or less, or multiple f ormation may b e you are looking for in the 43" wide, 66" high. claws, shots, wormed. 541-385-5809 items whosetotal subjected to fraud. CLASSIFIEDS $500. 541-410-3635 Originally $1000; does not exceed For more informa241 asking $450. $500. tion about an adver- Labrador pups,black, 541-948-1824 Bicycles & King Trombone,1941 tiser, you may call born 1/17, $400/ea. Call Classifieds at HN White, 7-1/2" bell, the O regon State Accessories $200 dep. ready in 4 541-385-5809 REMEMBER: If you $500, obo. 541-388-2045 Attorney General's weeks. 1 Chocolate 263 www.bendbulletin.com or 541-280-1912 eves have lost an animal, Office C o nsumer AKC male left, $800. Drexel don't forget to check Tools Protection hotline at 541-408-8880 260 Woodbridge The Humane Society 1-877-877-9392. Glock 34 Gen4, $650; pecan coffee table Bend Misc.ltems Malemute/Husky pups, and Ruger LC9, $ 300; For Sale: two pecan end 541-382-3537 The Bulletin blue eyes 3 females, Serving Centrel oregon sincetgttg 541-771-3222 Piano Technician tables. End tables 22" 2 stage Craftsman Redmond 5 males. Can send N EW Marin A r tools & supplies, 541-923-0882 Snow Blower, elect. have pull-out shelf. photos. $500 8 up. genta Nev er ridwith rolls of piano Madras start like new, $300 Adopt a rescued cat or 541-977-6150. $300 set. den 2010 m o del Smith & Weeson string, $725. 541-475-6889 541-548-3928 kitten! Altered, vacciM&P15-22 with 503-317-9668 Shimano 105 thruCall 971-219-9122 Prineville nated, ID chip, tested, POODLE or POMAPOO o ut. 6 0 6 1 al u m . 4x16x44 BSA Cats in Redmond BIIylng Dfamonds 541-447-7178 more! CRAFT, 65480 puppies, toy. Adorable! triple- butted Hydro Eye scope, Fieldline /Gofd for Cash or Craft Cats 541-475-3889 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Fridge 22 cf SxS w/ Edge Road main Tactical carrying Saxon's Fine Jewelers Ladder 10' stainless fi541-389-8420. 1-5. 54 1 -389-8420 icemaker, white, $200 frame with carbon case. Excellent con541-389-6655 Queensfand Heelers www.craftcats.org obo. 541-408-0846 s eat-stay and E 4 dition, was used in berglass $125 + 5 gal. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Standard & Mini, $150 anti-flex chain-stay. National Finals buckets 971-219-9122 BUYING & up. 541-280-1537 G ENERATE SOM E Fits 5'Bn- 6'1n $750 Search the area's most Rodeo for target Lionel/American Flyer www.rightwayranch.wor EXCITEMENT in your ($825 if you want PD comprehensive listing of competition. Comes trains, accessories. 265 dpress.com neighborhood! Plan a 5 700 B l ac k S h i classified advertising... with original sights 541-408-2191. Building Materials garage sale and don't mano 105 pedals) real estate to automotive, and 25-round magaShih-Tzu Dogs 3-yr old forget to advertise in 541-480-2483 merchandise to sporting BUYING & S E LLING zine. $650 obo. REDMOND Habitat Male $400, Female classified! All gold jewelry, silver goods. Bulletin Classifieds 541-410-0841 RESTORE Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! Puppy ready Feb 10 541-385-5809. and gold coins, bars, appear every day in the 242 1st shots, dewormed, $500. 541-589-4948 rounds, wedding sets, Building Supply Resale print or on line. $250. 541-771-0956 Quality at blossomhutOgmail.com Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded Exercise Equipment Wanted: Collector seeks class rings, sterling silCall 541-365-5809 glass doors & mirror LOW PRICES high quality fishing items ver, coin collect, vinwww.bendbulletin.com Chihuahua Toy pups, S ib e rian Husky-Wolf at back, 3 cupboards Pilates machine w/re- & upscale fly rods. Call 1242 S. Hwy 97 tage watches, dental cute 9 wks, 2 shots, pups! 2adorablefemales, below. Exc. c o nd. bounder, 2 D V D s, 541-678-5753, or gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-548-1406 The Bulletin 503-351-2746 541-382-9419. Open to the public. Serving Central Oregon sincetgtg $150. 541-977-7766 $ 4 00 each. 541-977-7019 $400. 541-318-8797 $150. 541-504-5982 Pets & Supplies

• P ets & Supplies

I

i i

9 7 7 0 2

I

i

I

J

316

Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $5,000/acre Call 541-419-4440 325

Hay, GraIn & Feed 1st Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $225/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 or 541-948-7010. Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbunetin.com which currently receives over 1.5 minion page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbunetin.com 341

Horses & Equipment '

.

• S, 3-horse Silverado

2001 29'x8' 5th wheel trailer. Deluxe show-

man/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21 900. OBO 541-420-3277

Circle Y mens saddle leather saddle bags, all related tack, $500. 541-385-6021


02 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Rtm(II Ce)

Employment Opportunities

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Mental Health Associate Community Counseling Solutions has an opening for a part-time, weekend 528 Qualified Me n t al Health A s s ociate Loans & Mortgages (QMHA) at our JuniWARNING per Ridge A c ute The Bulletin recomCare Center located mends you use cauin John Day, OR. tion when you proS tarting wage i s vide personal $11.15-$16.73/hour information to compaDOE. For more innies offering loans or formation g o to credit, especially www.worksourceothose asking for adregon.org, Job Listvance loan fees or ing ID ¹ 1 3 14562. companies from out of Download an applistate. If you have cation at www.comconcerns or quesmunitycounselingtions, we suggest you solutions.org or consult your attorney contact Human Reor call CONSUMER Place a photo inyour private party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES sources at HOTLINE, for only $15.00per week. Starting at 3 lines (541)676-9161. Po1-877-877-9392. sition is open until *UNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise filled. EOE. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 will loan on real es14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 tate equity. Credit, no *Illlust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 problem, good equity 28 days .................................................$61.50 is all you need. Call Garage Sale Special Oregon Land Mort4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) chasing products or I gage 541-388-4200. services from out of • I the area. Sending LOCAL MONEY: Webuy A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: secured trust deeds & c ash, checks, o r note,some hard money I credit i n formation Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. loans. Call Pat Kellev • may be subjected to BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) 541-382-3099 ext.13. I FRAUD. For more informaREQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well

Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

r.=.-"-,.— .a I

as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.

The Bulletin bendbulletimcom is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

MX

I I I I tion about an adver-I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General's I C o nsumer c I Office Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. I

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486- Independent Positions

s

s

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

efits. Start ASAP. Please call 541-815-2355

Caregi vers w anted t o j o i n oul' caring 421

Schools 8 Training XITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs!

1-888<38-2235

WWW.DTR.EtXU 476

Employment Opportunities Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bu//etin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Banking

) first communit We are excited to announce an available position for a full-time teller in Bend, Oregon.

Salary Range: $11.00 - $18.00 First Community Credit Union is an equal opportunity employer of protected Veterans and individuals with disabilities. For more details please apply online: www.myfirstccu.org.

Bend Park ai

care

Recreation

c ommunity. A l l shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable.

0

ST R

C T

ls Accepting Applications For:

Also needed part

• Administrative

questions,

please call 541-385-4717

• Outdoor Recreation Supervisor • Therapeutic Recreation Specialist • Fitness Instructor

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

For complete job announcements or to apply go to bendparksandrec.org

Analyst/Recreation t ime c hef. F o r more in f o rma- •• Lifeguard Swim Instructor tion, o r any • Night Custodian

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

Construction Superintendent

Looking for a great opportunity to join a well-established regional residential home builder in the Bend/ Redmond area? Do you have experience overseeing all aspects of residential construction? If you answered yes to these questions, we want to talk to you!

JOURNEYMAN PLUMBER needed for full time position. Must have service knowledge and be suited for customer service. Some new construction and remodel work experience helpful. Good pay & ben-

Maintenance

Whispering Winds Retirement

is seeking a full-time and a par t -time maintenance tech. W ages starts a t $ 11.50/hr. Mus t have some basic electrical, plumbing, carpentry and painting experience. Apply in person at 2920 NE Conners Ave., Bend., Pre-employment drug test required.

Equal Opportunity Employer Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe itemwill help them insomeway.

For more information about this opportunity and application instructions, please see our Craigslist-Bend job ad ¹4877715482.

This advertieing tip brought to you by

The Bulletin servlng centrat oregonsince r9ts

Marketing Sales A/fanager Experience in the health care field preferred, but not required. Must be outgoing and pers onable. Mus t have reli a ble transportation. For more i nform ation, o r a n y questions, please call 541-385-471 7

Mill Workers

If you have a g o o d w ork history and attendance record, please come and apply with us. Starting pay is commensurate with experience $10.50 to $15.00 or more. Medical, dental, vision, and life insurance, after 60 days. Vacation after 6 months. Profit sharing also.

We are a family owned wood remanufacturer in business for over 50 years. Learn more aboutour company and the products we make at www.brightwood.com. Please apply in person at our main office located in the L a ndscaping/Yard Care Madras Industrial Park.

C all 54 /-385-58 0 9 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.com Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recom- number is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employcertifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: Debris Removal www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status JUNK BE GONE before contracting with the business. Persons I Haul Away FREE doing lan d scape For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i Mel, 541-389-8107 cense.

Handyman I DO THAT!

Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

Get on the list now for

Weekly Service and Spring Clean-ups! Free estimates!

COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/i 541-480-9714

"Call A Service Professional" Directory Looking for your next employee'? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Bright WoodCorp. 335 Nyy Hess St. Madras, OR 97741 Must pass pre-employment drug screen.

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin serving central oregon since rse

e

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- Open Houses 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 - CrookCounty Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

'- 9 &RaRs VKP M%

738

Nlultiplexes for Sale

West side 10 units near old Mill, owner carry for qualified Complete RV hook-up principals only. near trails & shops in Broker, 541-480-9947 Bend. Winter rates! Call 541-408-0846 for more info. 745 RV Parking

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers of goods and services dobusinessin these pages.They know you can't beatThe Bulletin Take care of Classified Sectionfor your investments selection and convenience - every item isjust a phone with the help from call away. The Bulletin's The Classified Sectionis "Call A Service easy to use. Evety item is categorizedandevery Professional" Directory cartegory is indexed onthe section's front page. Senior ApartmentIndependent Living Whether youarelooking for a home orneeda service, ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily your future is inthe pagesof The Bulletin Classified. Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-233-9914 The Bulletin

Homes for Sale

Redmond Homes Looking for your next empioyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e Federal F air H ousing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate 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

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

saving central ongon since rjrs

Maintenance

II

tN 808WIBI

Maintenance Supervisor Responsible fo r a l l Pr o duction Center (Retread Plant) machinery and equipment, maintenance a n d rep a ir . Su p ervises maintenance and storeroom staff and works with management to troubleshoot and resolve issues, including nights and w eekends. Requires High School Diploma or GED along with two y ears' experience in g e neral maintenance and the ability to recognize electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical malfunctions or equipment failures. Formal training in related field is a plus. Requires experience managing crew an d s t rong maintenance background.

ake your glassifie 8

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls please. Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

EXPERIENCED FINGERJOINT AND LAMINATION PRODUCTION

We are seeking experienced Operators, Feeders, Graders and Stackers in our Fingerjoint and Lamination plants.

541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

CHECK YOUR AD

with an ad in The Bulletin's

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

m emory

.00

'

Can be found on these pages:

Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN,

I(IIKClk

a ROW I N G

JJSd "t3gr'rJT/~ ~

Get your business

f c

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

LTh Bull

PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./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- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 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 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

Monday • • • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .NoonMon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

J

® lRIARCQ©

Tax

II

tts 8089III

Tax Senior Professional Established in 1952, Les Schwab isn't your regular tire store. We are a growing company with a strong reputation of excellent customer service and over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. We a re currently seeking a Se n ior T a x Professional in our headquarters in Bend, Oregon. T his i s a s e nior level position reporting to the Director of Tax and working extensively with outside service providers. The primary responsibilities of t his r o le include the following: • Manage the tax reporting and tax compliance function for multiple corporations and partnerships • Develop and implement corporate tax strategy • Prepare the tax provision for audited financial statements • Prepare quarterly estimated taxes • Research complex tax matters • Respond to IRS and state/local tax audits

To be successful in this role, the Senior Tax Professional must have the following: • Bachelor's Degree and CPA • At least 5-7 years of experience in public or private accounting • Strong income tax compliance and consulting experience, primarily in the corporate area with some partnership tax experience • Understanding of multistate tax planning and compliance, especially in the western United States • Strong verbal and written communication skills • Extensive experience with Microsoft Excel • Experience with ERP implementation would be beneficial

Les Schwab offers a competitive salary and a full comprehensive benefit package including health, life, d e ntal, v ision, e xceptional retirement plan, paid vacation and holidays. Please go towww.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls please. Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.

CUSTOM ACOUSTIC GUITAR Plays and sounds beautifully. Includes hard-shell case and acoustic pre-amp. Solid top, sides and back. Must see to believe!

Add a color photo to your ad in print and online. TO PlaCe yOur Bulletin ad With a Photo, ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.COm, CliCk On "PlaCe an

ad" and follow these easy steps: 1. ChOOSe a CategOry, ChOOSe a ClaSSifiCatiOn,

and then select your ad package. 2. Write yOur ad and uPIOad yOur digital Photo. 3. Create your account with any major credit CGI'CI.

To place your ad, visit

www.bendb u lletin.com or call

541-385-5809

B SSl I '

S

www.bendbulletin.com

All ads appear in both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print or online.



D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEB 10, 2015

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD vtf ll'sbprtz

C L U B Tuesday, February10,2015

ACROSS

DIAMOND East duly led a diamond, and West took the ace and led another heart. " I w a s a f r aid h e w o u l d r u f f dummy'8 king with his deuce," West writes, "but he came through and ruffed with the six. Declarer'8 trumps were uppercut; he had to overruff w ith the ten. He le d a t r ump t o dummy'3 jack and cashed the ace, but my king scored for down one." Good defense!

DAILY QUESTION Y ouhold: 4K 9 8

u m ode u Place for a hoedown

ss Start to catch 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 up to purchase s4 Thanksgiving 14 15 16 dessert r Sound 34 Passion investments? ss School 17 18 19 3s Somewhat attended by u Business 39 Modern cash Lord Grantham with monthly 20 21 22 register device on "Downton memberships 4oLike many Abbey" 24 25 26 34Neighbor of a mouthwashes ss "Same here" Hoosier 43 Beige shade 27 28 29 30 31 32 sr" Your Dog, zsHam or lamb 43 Where Charlie Brown" zsWinning tic-tac33 34 35 Graceland is: (1968 Tv toe row Abbr. special) zr Traveling, as a 43 1-10, e.g. 39 ss Spreadsheet band contents 44 Result of a 42 zsExercise with a king vs. king ss Mortise inserts cobra pose endgame 46 47 zsPossess 4s Pat DOWN zoLab research 49 50 53 47 Biblical partner 51 52 3 Betty who assistant, of 37-Down appeared in maybe 54 55 56 57 59 4s "The best is "Who Framed u "Hooray for t he o ft h e Roger Rabbit" us!" good": Voltaire 3"It'sall gone 60 61 62 63 34 Word on a 49 Einstein wrong!" red-and-white 64 65 66 sz 1945 3Small songbirds name tag conference site 4 Fierce way to 67 68 69 zs "Frozen" studio s4 House tour fight zr Like a case giver s Estee of before the PUZZLE BYJOEL FAGLIANO ssLike loamy soil fragrances COUrt soSpot for a shot sSignup, to zs Wilson and 3s Like morning ssWhat fans do soMont Blanc, BI'Its Hoover, but not grass e.g. sz Walked sr Really liking Eisenhower r "Little Women" Rammed like a woman ram ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 31 Image often ss Nut job s Speak Persian? accompanying Charles Schwab SOR E R P EA F A S the phrase 59 Grandson of competitor 9Contacted via "Legalize it" 47-Across and ENE R 0 V I EW EM U S beeper 49 It has axes 37-Down LEG AL E A GL E L E A N ao Sporting arenas 34 PI'0Spine-tingling DW I EL L A I NT sz Molecule s| Cheerful ss Deli loaf sl Somewhat, hidden in 4-, OAF S 0 L D B U Z Z A R D disposition informally 3r Biblical partner 11-, 23-, 25MYT H S I RE S T B A M u "Ouch!" of 47-Across s3 O.K. and 29-Down

Supporting arch By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "My partner'sname is Fred," a reader's email relates, "but it really should be Arch because he needs so much support. He was East in this deal, and I guarantee that he would have done the wrong thing if I hadn't saved him." Against South's contract of four s pades, my reader led the six o f hearts as West. Dummy played low, and East won w it h th e j ack and cashed the ace. "I saw a chancefor the defense," my reader writes, "if I could get my partner to lead a diamond next. Under his ace of hearts, I threw the queen as a screaming suit-preference signal, asking him to lead the higher-ranking side suit next."

2 Wine store

bids one spade and you rebid two hearts. Partner next tries 2NT. What do you say? ANSWER: P a rtner w o uld n o t have bid 2NT with a weak hand just to avoid playing at hearts. With most minimum hands, he w o uld h ave passed. He has extra strength and game interest. Since you have sound high-card values for your bidding and high honors in his suits, bid 3NT. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 48A J7

9K85 OKJ42 4KJ8 WEST 48K98

EAST 4862

Q Q976 3 2 0 A6 494

QA J 08753 476532

SOUTH 4 8 Q1054 3

9 104 0 Q109 4AQ10 North 1 NT 4 48

Ea s t Sou t h Pas s 3 48 A ll Pa s s

West Pass

SP AHA LON BUD TE MOM OU I I TC

9 Q 9 7 6 3 2 Opening lead — 0 6

0 A 6 4 9 4 . Yourpartner opens one diamond, you respond one heart, he (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Findfive gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

$0. 0106

APU R I N TH T I GET ND A S S 0 H P

A TE E CH I C U T A L E N AW K E AT I L LY G P A L I OX F

G O T H

L I Z 13 Hall of fame K EN zt Star l ing, Mhe Silence N of the Lambs" I K E S protagonist T I R E u Comoros or MA D Barbados O O S E zs Gap subsidiary N N E R

u Somewhat

O O D S zs "Roll the

For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptio(ss are available for the best of Sunday crosswcrds from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 388 tc download puzzles, or visit nytimes.ccm/mcbilexwcrd for more information. Online subscripticns: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past

puzzles, Isytimes.com/crosswcrds ($39.95 a year). Share tips: Isytimes.com/wcrdplay. Crcsswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/leaming/xwords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

SIZARlto.col/I F 86obookxom/IIisorrocomi4 a s s ifotsess

LateleJ I haven'.t been. able to cheep at YLight.

SUDOKU

IH

Mave ewe been. under a lot of

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains everydigitfrom1 to9 inclusively.

Ctre©CV

SOLUTION TO O(

YESTERDAY'S

B 73 D

SUDOKU

II

45

5 a

I

.J/ .

47

I'

'il(

'(Sx

rl

v I

,, l

B

,9(

( oi

4(

( „if/rz /(7,'.

2'lO'I5

Ic

I

"ANP IFY/JU SVER NESP TD &H'OUT OF TIIS'POGROUSE, f(A'f POOR((NILL(o(LWAYe IIE OPEN TO'iOU,PAP."

u.

3

38

CANDORVILLE IT'1i 700/II/ 70 K Pg/NCIPLEP, Pf/flAN. I'M A /IION-VIOLEI(lr NIY.

l((

SÃ' k/I/ENCVER/ NEAR

Asoi/T rf/EArgoc/rfu IPIP COMM/TP,.

.../ KINP OF VIN k/f CO//Lp EO//fltp rf/EM I/P ANP PPANK rf/Etf ALL k//Tl/ ANSEY PORCU P/IEP

Ol O o

r l/Al' lP / KNO S/. KIIUP OF k / f/AT DIP CEYCL, T f / E POELPIONT. N PINfl' PO TO PC(IFEVE 1llATF

D IFFICULTY RATING: **4 4

4

LOS ANGELESTIMES CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce NicholsLeWiS ACROSS AFE HAVENS A9 A HI)IIiAot I HAVK A5 t( Cjl(r TO Ix,'EMI8)b 'fPIj I H AVS To 'THPT ts)5 PDII'T A & h ( lf I4II

SATHE FIVSTIYI'E5 HOT? A trA).

1 Waned 6 "Boyhood" actor Ethan

71 Dr. of rap 72 Pine (for) 73 Modern surgical tool

11 Taking a personal day, say

DOWN 1 Get away from it 40 Hardly a picky all eater? 2 DVD alternative 41 50+ org. 3 War movie scene 42 Waffl e maker 4 Actress Gabor 43 Vandalized 5 Bit of progress 47 Pasta suffix 6 Manya 49 Muscle injury Woodstock attendee ANSWER TO

14 Emancipation Proclamation subject 15 Tale of Achilles

and Agamemnon 16 Bro 17 Computer user'8 combination © 201 5 by King oaturoo Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved

http:1/www.oafehovonocomic.com

E-moil: bhOlbrook( (8(gma8.COm

WijMO I told you the glass door was a stupid idea...

ZITS PAP,N4ATMAPF C% P5CiPglQlQVF 6.'IPS'P I

- $0ljIZl/icglt WAS WgglNI"TI4ePEHINI HAI-TSZTOP

l(INIIANL..

AhlP, THAT~ 7lkiE AK

HAIC!

Q

ERMAN

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

85

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to fOrm fOur Ordinary WOrdS.

LIRCE OOO(5 Tribune Content Agency, LL0 All Riohte Reeerved.

KEVEO

CAFEDA

g. (0

IF YOU THOUGHl THE

ceNTe(z DF TtS BARTH WA5

A5 HOT A5 THE 5(JRFACF OF

RALUTI

2-10

HER(8(SO(~ 9 Laugh(898(ock ucensins Inc., 0(81 by Universal Udiee 20(5

THe 5U(L YDU'I2 Be-

Now arrange the circled letters lo form the surprise answer, ao suggested by the above cartoon.

Answer here: IAnowero tomorrow)

"I think he's trying to tell us he can't paint!"

19 Green prefix

7 In the style of

20 Gallery display 21 Pinnacle

M USIC W O R K E D UP B E A T Yeoterda 8 ~ AnSwer: Jombloo: BRAVO When they added uP their StrakeS on the galf hole, they were 8 - "TWO-SOME"

51 New Zealand

35 NBC show with skits 37 Suffix with glob 39 Place for cocktails and music

natives 52 Samsung Galaxy competitor 53 Mess (with), as a lock 58 Whirlpool 59 T, on a test 61 Fan mail recipient

65 Lawyer's gp. 66 Long-snouted fish

67 "CSI" evidence

PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

8 III. neighbor A B C D S H U T 9 Prince William'8 S O U R M O N A 22 Accustoms (to) wife 24 Wan H O L E P U N C H 10 Genesis garden 26 Pen points L I 11 Like Verdi'8 most E N L A I 29 They may be run M N E M O N famous works at bars 12 Subject of the C O S T M A G I 30 What potatoes 201 0 film "The U R I S M L and needles both Social Network" B O X S E A T A have 13 Follows dental 31 ATgT, briefly I N A W E R advice 33 Nebraska tribe 18 "Please continue" CO M E D Y C L U 34 Biblical beast 23 -Aztecan: M R R O G 36 Waikiki's island language family P R O P O S A L 38 Aegean island 25 Actor Morales L E D O N B L A 39 Computer user'8 27 Dagwood's wife E F I L E B E L combination 28 Big bunch 43 14-time NBA All- 32"Give me a D I N KY E D A Star Duncan break!" xwordeditor(Iaol.com

44 Washing

machine filler 45 Anthem contraction 46 Indian princess 48 Rainbow maker 50 Leave out 5 4 Have : b e connected 55 Boy with a dragon, in a Disney classic 56 Wine region near San Francisco 57 Part of USSR 60 Louis XVI, for one 62 Resistance measure 63 "Game of Thrones" airer 64 Computer user's combination 68 Spot for a Bluetooth headset 69 United Arab Emirates city 70 Cat- -tails

1

2

3

4

6

5

7

8

9

N I C

E L A N

F A N G

E T T U

R E A P

H A R M U D I 0 R D E C O U L E S B P E R E E R S F A Z E S C K L I S T A M O P E M S N O W 02/10/15 11

10

12

13

52

53

16

14

18

17

20

19

21

24

25

22 26

30

27

39

23

28

31 34

29 32

35

33 37

40

41

43

48

D E S I C C A T E

42

44

45

48

47

38

49

50

58

55 57

58

59

60

63

64

68

69

70

71

72

73

65

By Kevin Christian ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

51

61

66

62 67

02/10/15


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY FEBRUARY 10 2015 D5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881

•fj

I

• •

Travel Trailers 00

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

850

Snowmobiles 2000 Yamaha 700 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 900, only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on r ide-off t r ailer w i t h spare, + much more. $6,995. Call for details. 541-420-6215

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 870

880

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 875

Watercraft ds published in "Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Serv>n Central Ore on since 1903

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg,

880

Motorhomes

$8500. 541-379-3530 880

Motorcycles & Accessories

Harley Davidson

2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shotexhaust, StageI with Vance & Hines fuel management

system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684

Harley Davidson 883 Sportater 1998, 20,200 miles, exc. cond.,

$3,500.

541-548-2872.

Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.

REDUCED! 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking$54K. Ph. 541-447-9268

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

g a~-RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', Ford V10, 28,900 rniles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow package,$68,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wrangler tow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual, $1 1,000 541-815-6319

908 Aircraft, Parts

& Service

1/3interestin

Columbia 400,

882

Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Sport Utility Vehicles

Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987,New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587 CHECKYOUR AD

(located © Bend) 541-288-3333

miles, mud & snow tires, 1 owner, well maintained, $7850. 541-389-3316 V W CONV.

1 9 78

$8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399

Pickups

I tjll'~

4x4, lots of room!

VIn¹J21 627. Only $7,977

ROBBERSON ~magaa

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/28/t 5

C all me i f y o u a r e thinking about trading- Subaru Forester 1998 in to a dealer or sell170k miles., red, two ing your current Full sets tires, daughter Size late model 4WD moved to Sweden pickup and want to needs $. Clean, no get more cash then pets. Dependable car. t/3 interest in welltrade-in. Pri$4200. equipped IFR Beech Bo- dealer party looking to 541-647-0657 nanza A36, new 10-550/ vate p urchase for c a s h prop, located KBDN. one nice condi- ToyotaHighlander $65,000. 541-419-9510 sale tion pickup directly www. N4972M.com f rom o w ner. N O DEALERS PLEASE! Call ( after 6 p.m.) or Text with pictures to Bill 541-420-5318. 2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Fl this beautiful 182 Vin¹024803 One owner last 25 $19,977 years, always hanROBBERSON ~ gared, rigorously maintained, no damage history. 541-312-3986 2005 crew cab great Sensibly priced at Dlr ¹0205. Price looking! Vin¹972932 $44,500. good thru 02/28/1 5 $19,977 Call Don Wilfong for more information 975 541-389-1456 or ROBBERSON wilfong.d@gmail.com Automobiles

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500

LIIICOLII ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/t 5

BMylr 330c2003

CALL c}

TODAYW

Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVRNCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $18,900.More pics available. 541-923-8408

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 54'I -447-5184.

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac en g i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

Laredo 2006 31'

Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649

918

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242

$7,977 ROBBERSON I I N c 0 L II ~

IM RO R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/t 5

Buick LeSabre 2005 super clean, senior owned, always garaged. 74,000 miles.

$7,000.

360-774-2747

No text messages! Ford 2004 F-250 XLT 4x4 Extended Cab 94K miles, excellent M.F. 230 DIESEL CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-382-8038

cond, many extras. $10,900.

LIIICOLII ~

LIIICOLII ~

The Bulletin

Mountaineer 2004

u seoLr~

933

Call 541-233-3281 Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. 881 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exTravel Trailers Ford F250 XLT 925 haust. Loaded! Auto-levPrice Reduced! eling system, 5kw gen, Open Road 36' 2005 Utility Trailers model is like new power mirrors w/defrost, Harle Fat Bo 2002 2 slide-outs with aww/3 slides!! King nings, rear c a mera, bed, hide-a-bed, trailer hitch, driyer door glass shower, 10 gal. w/power window, cruise, water heater, 10 Supercab 1995, exhaust brake, central 2007 Jayco Jay Flight cu.ft. fridge, central 4.9L V6 Vin¹A90118 29 FBS with slide out & vac, satellite sys. Asking vac, satellite dish, $8,977 27" TV Istereo sys$67,500. 503-781-8812 awning - Turn-key ready tr a i ler to use, less than 50 to14k orig. miles.. Extem, front power lev- CargoMate 8'x12' with large rear ROBBERSON tal days used by current cellent cond. Vance & eling jacks & scisowner. Never smoked in, door and extra side Hines exhaust, 5 sor stabilizer jacks, no indoor pets, excellent additional door, spoke HD rims, wind 16' awning. 2005 cond., very clean. Lots of 541-312-3986 hauling rack on top, vest, 12" rise handle model is like new! bonus features; many very good condition. Dlr ¹0205. Price bars, detachable lug$19,500 have never been used. $3800. Call Stan Bto good thru gage rack wl back 541-419-0566 Asking $16,500. C a l l 02/28/2015 rest, hwy pegs & many see 541-420-1916 chrome accents. Must Beaver Marquis, Lisa, 541-4200794 f o r F latbed t r ailer w i t h more info/more photos. see to appreciate! 1993 RV ramps, 7000 lb. ca$10,500. in CRRarea 40-ft, Brunswick CONSIGNMENTS Ford F350 2002 pacity, 26' long, 8'6" call 530-957-1865 WANTED floor plan. Many Dutchman Denali wide, ideal for hauling We Do the Work, 32' 2011 travel extras, well mainhay, materials, cars, You Keep the Cash! trailer. 2 slides Evtained, fire supexc. cond. $2800. HD Fat Bo 1996 On-site credit erything goes, all 541-420-3788 pression behind approval team, kitchen ware, linens refrig, Stow Master 932 web site presence. etc. Hitch, sway 5000 tow bar, We Take Trade-Ins! 7.3 Powerstroke Antique & bars, water & sewer $21,995. 4x4 ¹A90623. hoses. List price 541-383-3503 Classic Autos BIG COUNTRY RV $12,977 $34,500 - asking Bend: 541-330-2495 $26,800Loaded. Completely Redmond: Must see to appreciROBBERSON Rebuilt/Customized 541-548-5254 ate. Redmond, OR. 201 2/201 3 Award 541-604-5993 Winner 541-312-3986 Showroom Cond. Say "goodbuy" Dlr ¹0205. Price Many Extras good thru 2/28/t 5 to that unused Low Miles. Fleetwood D i scovery 1950 Mercury $15,000 item by placing it in 40' 2003, diesel, w/all (e~ 541-548-4807 4-dr Sedan options - 3 slide outs, The Bulletin Classifieds Ground-up GMC 1974 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, restoration, beautiful! ugly but reliable! 870 etc., 32,000 m i les. Call for details. 95% tread on Wintered in h eated Heartland P rowler 5 41-385-580 9 Boats 8 Accessories $35,500 siped tires. shop. $79,995 obo. 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', or best offer. like new, 2 slides-liv541-447-8664 $895. Sliding 5th wheel hitch i ng area & la r g e 541-480-0527 for short-bed pickup, 541-892-3789 closet. Large enough $500. 541-923-4338 to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power aw885 935 ning, power hitch & Sport Utility Vehicles stabilizers, full size Canopies 8 Campers 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 queen bed , l a r ge Wakeboard Boat shower, porcelain sink Adventurer 2013 86 I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Freightliner 1994 8 toilet. tons of extras, low hrs. FB truck camper, Custom $26,500. 541-999-2571 $19,800. 2205 d iy Full wakeboard tower, A Private Collection Motorhome light bars, Polk audio weight, 44 gallons 1956 Ford pickup Will haul small SUV speakers throughout, 1932 DeSoto 2dr f resh water. 3 1 0 or toys, and pull a completely wired for watts rooftop solar, 2 1930 Ford A Coupe BMW X3 35i 2010 amps/subwoofers, untrailer! Powered by 1929 Ford A Coupe deep cycle batteries, Exc cond., 65K derwater lights, fish 8.3 Cummins with 6 LED lights, full size 1923 Ford T Run. finder, 2 batteries cusmiles w/t OOK mile speed Allison auto All good to excellent. q ueen bed. n i c e transferable wartom black paint job. trans, 2nd o wner. floorplan. Also availInside heated shop ranty. Very clean; $12,500 541-815-2523 Very nice! $53,000. BEND 541-382-8038 Keystone Laredo 31' able 2010 C hevy loaded - cold 541-350-4077 RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' Silverado HD, weather pkg, preslide-out. Sleeps 6, $15,000. mium pkg8 techqueen walk-around 360-774-2747 nology pkg. Keyless bed w/storage underNo text messages! access, sunroof, neath. Tub 8 shower. navigation, satellite 2 swivel rockers. TV. radio, extra snow Air cond. Gas stove & tires. (Car top carrefrigerator/freezer. 2007 Bennington rier not included.) Microwave. Awning. 1965 Mustang HOLIDAY RAMBLER Pontoon Boat $22,500. Outside sho w er. Hard top, VACATIONER 2003 541-915-9170 2275 GL, 150hp 6-cylinder, auto trans, 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Slide-through s torHonda VTEC, less power brakes, power workhorse, Allison 1000 a ge. E a s y Lif t . Gem Top -Outfitter than 110 hours, steering, garaged, 5 speed trans., 39K, $29,000 new; AskCanopy for 8' bed original owner, lots well maintained, NEIV TIRES, 2 slides, ing $13,800 truck (presentiy on 97 of extras; Tennes541-447-4805 engine runs strong. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS Dodge). Double doors 74K mi., great condie: see tandem axle brakes, steel cage cockin rear. Lined inside. trailer. Excellent tion. $12,500. pit, washer/dryer, fire~ Opening window on Must see! condition, $23,500 lace, mw/conv. oven, RV one side; sliding 541-598-7940 503-646-1804 ree standing dinette, r CONSIGNMENTS window on the other. ls was $121,060 new; now, S WANTED Boat rack on top. $35,900. 541-536-1008 4x4 ready for We Do The Work ... Ads published in the $850 obo. adventure! ¹Dt 1 893. "Boats" classification You Keep The Cash! In Redmond, OR Bargain Corral On-site credit include: Speed, fishCall 541-548-7154 priced @ $5,977 approval team, ing, drift, canoe, -~ ~ ie • web site presence. house and sail boats. Camper 1995, ROBBERSON 4 We Take Trade-Ins! Lance For all other types of 10.9, on e o w n er,Mercedes 380SL 1982 watercraft, please go electric jacks, awning, Roadster, black on black, BIG COUNTRY RV to Class 875. JAYCO 1993 27' Fantastic fan, winter soft & hard top, excellent 541-312-3986 Bend: 541-330-2495 541-385-5809 50k miles, excellent package, Honda 1000 condition, always gaDlr ¹0205. Price Redmond: condition. $9300 obo. enerator, exc. shape raged. 1 55 K m i l es, good thru 02/28/t 5 541-548-5254 541-573-7131 7500. 541-410-9851 $11,500. 541-549-6407

)'= ~ ~

GMC 2004 Yukon 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K

$125,000

Tom, 541.788.5546

Call 541-526-1201

Antique & Classic Autos

Financing available. Fifth Wheels

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

935

00

sults! Call 385-5809

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very 24' Mercedes Benz clean!Only $67,995! ExPrism, 2015 Model G, tended warranty and/or fiMercedes Diesel engine, nancing avail to qualified 18+ mpg, auto trans, buyers! 541-388-7179 fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Garage Sates Perfect condition only $92K. Garage Sales or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-

932

PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, new tires + mounted studded snow tires, $7250. 541-433-2026

Dodge Neon Sport, 2-dr 1995, 2.0L 4-cyl DOHC, 5-spd, AC, 91,500 mi,exc mpg. Cash only, $1800. Clean title. 541-480-7671

~

Focus SEL2012

ALMOST PERFECT! Vin ¹1 51095.

$12,977 ROBBERSON ~

na aaa

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

HondaAccord 2005

~

Gorgeous and Priced to se/i! Vin ¹¹Ot 8628 11,977 ROBBERSON I I 8 c 0 LN ~

IM RO R

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167

$5,977 ROBBERSON co

~

~maaaa

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

$ 24,823.55, p l u s late charges in the amount of $605.31, plus fees due in the amount of $470.06, for a t o tal d elinof quency $25,898.92. By reason of the default, 2015 the Beneficiary has Time: 9:00 a.m. Location: USDA Ser- declared all sums vice Center 625 SE owing on the obligaSalmon Ave., Red- tion secured by the Deed of Trust immond, OR Contact: For More In- mediately due and thos e formation, c o n tact: p ayable, Tom Bennett (541) sums being the following, to-wit: As of 923-4358 ext 123 P urpose: NRCS i s November 5, 2014, u holding a local work npaid principal in a m o unt of g roup m eeting t o the a ther i nput f r o m $132,920.70, interest in Tarmers, r a n chers, accrued state an d f e d eral the a m o unt of agencies, agriculture $17,331.07, subsidy and conservation or- r ecapture i n th e of ganizations regarding amount plu s natural resource con- $2,115.20, servation pr i orities assessed fees in the of and opportunities to amount plu s invest collaboratively $ 4,329.70, interest on fees in in Deschutes County. the a m o unt of The USDA is an equal $273.45, for a total of opportunity provider amount $156,970.12, p l us and employer. interest continuing A request for accom- to accrue at the rate modations for p e r- of $16.8427 per day sons with disabilities until paid, plus daily interest on fees at should be made at least 48 hours before the rate of $0.5487, the meeting to: Tom plus any u n paid roperty tax e s , Bennett (541) p a ttorney's fee s , 923-4358 ext 123 foreclosure costs, LEGAL NOTICE and sums advanced PUBLIC HEARING by the beneficiary NOTICE pursuant t o the CITY COUNCIL terms of said Deed P ROJECT N U M - of Trust. BER: 14-1095. APWHEREFORE, P LICANT: City o f notice i s h e r eby Bend. NATURE OF given t h a t the THE APP L ICA- undersigned TION: Amendments Trustee will on April to Chapter 10.20 2 1, 2015, a t t h e Historic Preservah our of 11:0 0 tion Code in order to o 'clock, A.M., i n bring th e Ci t y 's a ccord w it h th e preservation code s tandard o f t i m e into compliance with established by ORS the Oregon State 1 87.110, o n th e Certified Local Govfront steps of t he ernment (CLG) proDeschutes County gram qualifications. Courthouse, 1 164 APPLICABLE CRIN W Bond, in t he TERIA: Bend DeC ity of Bend , v elopment C o d e County of Section 4.6.200(B). Deschutes, State of PROPERTY LOCAO regon, sel l a t TION: Cit y wide. public auction to the DATE, T IME, highest bidder for PLACE AND LOcash the interest in C ATION OF T H E the said described HEARING: real property which Wednesday, March the Grantor has or 4, 2015 at 5:30 p.m. had p o we r to at 710 N W W a ii convey at the time Street, Bend, OR, in of the execution by City Hall C o uncil Grantor of the said Chambers. ADDID eed o f T ru s t , TIONAL INFORMAtogether with any TION: The applicainterest which the tion, all documents obligations thereby and evidence subs ecured and t h e mitted by or on becosts and expenses half of the applicant of sale, including a and the application reasonable charge criteria are a vail- by t h e Tr u stee. able for inspection Notice i s fu r ther at City Hall at no given t h a t any cost and will be properson named in vided at a reasonORS 86.778 has the able cost. C O Nright, at any time TACT PE R SON: prior to five (5) days Heidi Kennedy at before the date last (541) 61 7 - 4524, set for the sale, to hkennedy@benhave this doregon.gov. Send foreclosure written testimony to proceeding the City Council c/o dismissed and the CDD, 710 NW Wall D eed o f Tru s t St., B e nd , OR reinstated by 97701, or attend the payment t o the public hearing and B eneficiary of t h e state your views. entire amount then due (other t h an LEGAL NOTICE such portion of the T RUSTEE'S N O and T ICE O F S A L E. principal interest as w ould Reference is made not then be due had to that certain Deed no default occurred) of Trust made by and by curing any Julie C. Grover, as other Grantor, to the Rudefault complained of ral Housing Service t h a t is or it s s u ccessor herein capable of b e ing agency, as Trustee, in favor of United cured by tendering the pe r f ormance States of America required under the acting through the obligation or Deed Rural Housing Sero f Trust, and i n vice or successor a gency, Uni t e d addition to paying said s u m s or States Department tendering the of Agriculture, as Beneficiary, dated performance necessary to cure May 9, 2011, rec orded Ma y 1 7 , the d e f ault, b y paying all costs and 2011, as Instrument No. 20 1 1-18246, expenses actually R ecords of D e s - incurred in enforcing the obligation and chutes County, OrD eed o f T ru s t , egon, covering the together with following described Trustee's and real property situattorney's fees not ated in Deschutes the County, O r e gon, exceeding to-wit: Lot amounts provided by sa i d ORS Forty-Seven (47), In B lock PP , D E S - 86.778. C HUTES R I V ER accordance with the Fair Debt Collection WOODS, recorded Practices Act, this is March 22, 1962, in an attempt to collect Plat Book 6, Desa debt, and a ny chutes County, Orinformation obtained egon. C o mmonly will be used for that referred to as 19145 Indian Sum m er purpose. This c ommunication i s R oad, Bend O R from a debt 97702. A l a n N. In Stewart of H u rley collector. construing this Re, P.C., 747 SW Notice, the singular M ill V ie w W a y , includes the plural, Bend, OR 9 7702, the word "Grantor" was appointed Sucincludes any cessor Trustee by successor in interest the Beneficiary on to the Grantor as November 6, 2014. Both th e B e n efi- well as any other ciary and Trustee person owing an obligation, the have elected to sell the said real propperformance of which is secured by erty to satisfy the said Deed of Trust, obligations secured a nd t h e wor d s by said Deed of "Trustee" Trust and a Notice and "Beneficiary" include of Default has been its respective recorded pursuant successors in to Oregon Revised i nterest, i f any . Statutes 86.735(3); DATED: November the default for which the foreclosure is 2 1, 2014. Alan N . Stewart, Successor made is Grantor's Trustee, Hurley Re, failure to pay when P.C., 747 SW M ill due the f o llowing View Way, Bend, s ums: As o f N o 97702, vember 5 , 2 0 1 4, OR Telephone: pursuant t o the 541-317-5505. P romissory N o t e dated May 11, 2001, the a m o unt of LEGAL NOTICE Agency: U S DA Natural R e s ources Conservation Service Meeting: Deschutes County Local Work Group Meeting Date: February 24,


06 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015• THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809

'I <1

Tb~g lletin

I

• Il

ljri I IRtyyyIIerHottse

y~ t r7crttj,

5fcj$4 P

@%D

197~

H OT W A X

SkI or Snowboard 311 SW Century Drive, Bend 541-389-6234

mv er ouse

„Ar SSESstsdtn

$2 0 O FF FULL T U N E

WPowderHouse

Ski or Snowboard

311 SW Century Drive. Bend 541-3896234

c sscs 4 L s s M c N rv R s c h B hw w

COUPON EXPIRES I 2/20/I e

311 SW Century Drive, Bend, OR 97702 • 541-3B9-6234 1 '1

I

1

1

11

TheIi m arketing package is designedto reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion will saturate the marketplace with more than

TWO MILLIONREADERIMPRESSIONS ... that get results. Your businessis important to us andwe

four separatenewsprint productswill give your

wanti ttogrow andbeassuccessfulaspossible. coupon the mostvisibility available in Central We also realize youneedaffordable marketing opportunities to let people knowhow much yourbusinesshastooff er. is thecost effective advertising solution for your business. This all new slick stockmagazineandinteractive digital couponsolution combined with

Oregon. 30,000 copies of this exclusivemagazine will be direct mailed throughout the area to atargeted group of Central Oregonshoppers. Customers

receiving nearly1.5 million page views per

have carefully craftedthisall inclusive

month. If that weren't enough, we'll also print your

coupon promotional package togive it thebestopportunityforsuccess.

coupon inour holidaygift guide, inserted

Call today toscheduleanoobligation appoint-

into 60,000 copiesofthe Bulletin and Central

ment to learn moreabout this powerful and exciting way to getyour message out to the most broad anddiverse group of Central Oregon customers.

can alsoaccessall the coupons digitally

OregonMarketplaceaswell asthe Redmond Spokesman andthe Central OregonNickel ads.

on the Bulletin's homepagewhich is currently

We want your marketing dollars to work andso

Your message designed and delivered SIX DIFFERENTWAYSfor one low price. 1. DIRECT MAIL a sl i ck stock coupon magazine will be direct mailed to anexclusive list of 30,000 Bend-areahouseholds non-duplicated by Bulletin subscribers. Lookfor it to arrive in mail boxes onMarch 30or 31. 2. THE BULLETINAll couponswill be in full color and printed on anelectrobrite paper.

Delivered to approximately 29,000subscribers, 70,000 readers, onMarch29. 3.THE REDMOND SPOKESMAN Allcoupons

will be includedfor all subscribersof our Redmondweekly.Approximately4100 copies, 9,000 readers, onApril1.

4. THE NICKEL All couponswil run as aspecial

that are non-Bulletin subscribers, onMarch31.

section wrap in this free rackdistribution shop6. BENDBULLETIN.COMAll couponswill per which is distributed throughout Central and scroll along the bottom ofbendbulletin.com's Eastern Oregonwith15,000 copies, on April 2. 5. CENTRALOREGON MARKETPLACE All

homepage-accessiblevi acomputer,tablet,and smartphone. Morethanonemilion pageviews

couponswill bedelivered to approximately

a month!

30,000 households throughout Central Oregon ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~v ~ ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ '

I I I

I

I

,

-

~aa~z~z

vltvmve o lii a INVIOOIPA I F

I I

'

STILETTO SAL'S

EEAIIANsssrsoAND SAR

L

A P AIR I

dss sdw nbdht Uys kkdhf bvhgn Uyrr vssg

arola's

I

i FORJIll

,G

22I0 Stete St.,Bend 641-866.27St

I

~l

l• ebruae Sales Deadline: ublishes: Narc> 30 3

e

eI

I

I

I

S rs

Pl

sdwl

to10!


rv

rv

cg

Standard Sofa

5QFF

O

any Stanley Steemer Service.

INCLUDES LABOR, PREMIUM BRAKE PADS, CLEAN & LUBRICATE HARDWARE AND RESURFACE ROTORS G OOD THROUGH 2/28/ 5I SOME YEHICLES EXCLUDED.

AYERAGE REGULARPRICE $205N

Iilnlmum $125 servlce. Cannot be used with other offers. Cleaning completed by 3/31/15

DYANCE,'D AUTOREPAIR

CLEANING COMPLETED BY:3/9/15

STANLEY STEEMER

E xPE~ E N c E

CARPET I UPHOLSTERY ITILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

ST STANL)Y STE MER =

DISC BRAKESERYICE

Qe Qe O'FF

Is EYER

C

54 I .923.AUTO (2886)

HING

~(

T 789 S W V E T E R A N S W A Y STE C 54'I -923-2886 REDMOND'S ¹'I CHOICE FOR VEHICLE REPAIR • DIESEL REPAIRS E AST O F A LG R EE N S U N D E R T H E B IG G R E E N R O O F

54q ygg Ogog 1-800-STEEMEIL I stanleyeteemercom

st KCX~J Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details.

5 5 • m

m •

an

O

KATHRYN L. SCOTT, EA LTC

TAX R ACCOUNTING SERVICKS

: :::- NEWCLIENTOFFER-:: U p to$35 ofFTax Preparation

Kathryn L, Scott, Enrolled Agent LicensedTax Consultant

Over 15 Years Experience

OR. Lic,¹ 71861C

Individual ~ Business ~ Prior Years ~ All States

I'I'

ll

I

'

c

<ry. t:hem p

e

<SNTRAL PRSG pg

Perfect for Ceramic, Porcelain, Slate, Granite andTravertine

I

Chem-Dry of Central Oregon

OFF

i I

Any Pizza,AnySize!

Serving Deschutes,Crook &Jeff erson Counties Independently Owned& O perated

Fresh Pan in Large only Ftr/I/Oyr/~

Enplres03/31/15.Phcountoa repsur mesu prka. ssclsdes ulslMurph', Pppsa asdPesserls.Vasd atparsclpatlnp lmssona. /toirapdulth olher oaem Canrul be aola tranahmd or duppcaled. Ums3. 513-PRNT0303l5

' ,AMAZ I

"MIG H T Y

N G E ATS ',

C L E A N !'-'

d ry c l e a n h ag c a r l net se r v a c e "The original one-price drycleaning carpet service!",„

A Professional Service Without the Price!

I I I

I I I

CHIPS & HOUSE MADE SALSA PhotosCourtesyof LivingLuxsGluten Free

I I I

I

BTBS

F G R E V E R Y GNEI

S GM E T H ING

W WW.BTBSBEND COMI DAIILY 11 AM-IO PM

ANY SIZE 2-STORYHOME

PLUS s25oo FOR STAIRS FREE! Pre-Spray• Pre-Spotting • Deodorizer• Stain Guard

Now open In Bend - Call 541.390 8081 Today!

I I

ITO ONW PENCE LN

5

®

ANYSIZEI-STORYHOME

BROKEN TOP BG T TLE SHGP

I

8 99

el uevusnmmrnur~~

With thiscoupon,cannotcombine with otheroffers, one coupon per check.Expires 2/23/2015

I I

New Yeai Special!

S oo

with purchaseof 2Drinksor 2 Meals g

I

Serving Bend, Redmond, Terrebonne, Prineville, Sunriver, Sisters, LaPine

ue

~fu/~~LEM~ LONGER LIFE THROUGH

REGULAR MAINTENANCE

e

Guaranteed Evervdav lowest Prices!

us

S~UBA~RU CO M P~LETE ~OI~L 8~~O ~IL g F~ ILT~ER SE~RVj~ICE

INCLUDES:

Up To 6quarts 5W-30 Oil Subaru cars only, other makesslightly higher.

Subarugenuineoil filter 32-point inspection

8 ,~9S

Synthetic oilss4r'

I

Must presentcouponat time of service. Goodthrough 2/28/15 I

541-38$-3031 I

I

I

I

ww w . SudaruofBenti.com 20 0 0 NE Hwy 20

l

Call your Bulletin AccountExecutive TODA Y or call 541-382-1811 for more information about this and other opportunities!

WINDO W B L INDS AND DR A P E R IES Hunter Douglas Showroom '' +~E~~4~' Shepforyour Imne i< ':( I I

in your tuhrne,''

'25% QFF'

' ' -

'

-

;

' Exclusive Signature Series®Window ' Treatments byBudgetBlinds'

Locally Owned Offer valid through3/9/15 ~

ggggly

nt

p'

,

FREE in-home Consultation

541-788-8444 Find us online at www.BudgetBlinds.com

Valid on Exclusive Series®Window Treatments only. Offer not valid with any other offers. CCB Licensed ¹197715 I Bonded I Insured I 30+ Years Experience.


95' V$g,' i'~

OIL CHANGE

CARPETCLEANING

LUBRICATE CHASSIS & CHECK ALL FLUIDS. 20 POINT SAFETYINSPECTION

ADYANCEDAUTOREPAIR

CAL L

$

I L

GOOD THROUGH 2/28/I5 F O R A p p O I N T M E fh l T

CARPETCLEANING

3 ROOMS CLEANED

5 ROOMS CLEANED

Expires 3/9/t 5

54'I.923.AUTO (2886) Iyee

STANLEY STEEMER CARPET i UPHOLSTERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

sw vE T E R A NS WAY

541-706-9390 1-B00-STEEMEL I stmnleysteemercom

STE C REDMOND'S ¹I CHOICE FOR YEHICLE REPAIR • DIESEL REPAIRS U N D E R T H E B IG G R E E N R O O F

54'I -923-2886

E AST OF W A L G R E E N S

$

II

Q g gnetQ Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details. P

Big Mac Tuesdays

KATHRYN L. SCOTT, EA LTC

~2.29

TAX 5 A CCOUNTING SERViCES

~4.29

Big Mac

• Individual Tax Returns

• Rentals, Clergy, Farms

• Prior Year Returns

I

• Business Tax Returns

• A l l S t ate Returns

• Accounting Services

I

Available Year Round for All Services • Same Day Service Available FREE Review of Prior Year Returns

+ phone aheadwe'll have it ready whenyouarrive MADRAS 1100 SW Hwy 97 541-475-1555

REDMOND 955 SW Highland Ave across from Fred Meyer 541-548-7272

PRINEVILLE 1300 NE 3rd St 541-447-5999

BEND-SOUTH 61160 S Hwy 97 across from Albertsons 541-382-6767

Extra ValueMeal Tuesday

I I I

I

Ata nl Ia tl an 0 I a e n w t 3 Aa 0 lr 0 ea e an l a ea e e o laII ~ o

I

BEND - NORTH 211 NE Revere next to Blockbuster 541-389-7272

Big Mac™

Only on Tuesdays

N

IssnIeyins

mm.

I

<<ry i asem Drier. Cleaner. Hoalthiarp

we welcome ~ is ~

~ E BT

I

caur a oaao

I 1CARP+E T . UPHOLSEERV . EilLE. SEONE • GROUT I,CLEAN a SEAL

, papamurphys. com/CouponsAndeClub

facebook.com/PapaMurphysPl zza

i++ I I

TeztFRE$H toQQ421 and receive $PEC!AL QFFER$ Valid at participating locations only for a limited time. Show text at store. You will receive up to a messages per montIL Msg and data rates may apply. Consent to receive atext message is not a condition of purchasing a good or service. Seo Terms at Conditions at wwwpapamurphysccm/TormsAndConditions Text STOP to godat to opt out HELP for more info.

Carpet

Upho l s ter y

Area Rugs S p e cialty Stains Pet Urine Removal Tile & Grout

Residential & Commercial Offer valid with coupon only.Not including Ryr & stairs. Not valid with other offers. MINIMUMSAPPLY.Payment duoat time of service. Expiration: 2/28/2015

0 <~rs

I 54E-3ee=y3rr4I Lt rai

MuapMmou ~www.clie~mdrybe~ndtcom

wtaa-aatv-suna

e aola Papa Murphx'0 Intamatlonal LLC

"MIG H T Y

C L E A N !'-'

jIrokenT oyjIottleShoy

Cryclean in g ca r pe t se r v kce The original one-price drycteaning carpet servicel"

A Professional Service Without the Pricel

Bz Ale Cafe

New Year Special!

S oo

®' 'SQ

ANYSIZEI-STORYHOME

S 99

0 «taaoannemm~

We're not a brew pub, we're a brew HUB! •

• Gluten Free, Vegetarian & Vegan'Options! • Delicious, Local & Healthy Food!

PLUS e25N FOR STAIRS

Now open in Bend - Call 541 390.8081 Today!

S OM E T H I N G WWW.BTBSBEND.COM

Serving Bend, Redmond, Terrebonne, Prinevilie, Sunriver, Sisters, LaPine

C~ar C'a~reg Insp'ectio~n

Help your tires last longerwith afour wheel alignmentbyour factory trained technicians onourstate-of-the-alt alignmentmachine.

• Rotating 12-Tap Draft Beer & Cider Selection • Hundreds of Bottled & Canned Beer, Sake, Wine, Cider, Mead & Kombucha

Special Price: $69.95 Couponncl validwith anyother cssr. Mustpresentcoupon at time of purchase.Limit1 couponpsrperson. Coupondoes ncl apply tc prior purchases.Other restrictions mayapply. Void where prohibited. Expires2/28/15.

17 4 0 NW PENCE LN

ru j~ ~s'

Save money on our special discount for any major service. 30, 60, 90K and up. Our team at Subaru of Bend will treat you right!!!!!!

Must present coupon at time of service. Good through 2/28/15.

S100Max.Mustpresentcouponattimeof service. Good through2/28/15.

A

FOR EVERY O N E!

DA ILY 11 AM<D PM

y~20I4Q% o Off ~

You will receive amultipoint inspectionchecklist estimate of any immediaterepair needs as well asitemsthat canbe budgeted infor alater date.

a

541- 8 -3031

Shop Online SS/7 • Suild Your Suharu• Search Inventory

I IC

ISI

0 II

~

2 0 6 0 NE HWY 20 • BEN

a style l'or everypoint of view

,'Bhnck

We fit your style andyour budgeti Shop-at-home convenience Personal Style Consultants Thousands ofwindow coverings Professional measuringfk installation

Confleenee rn Mouon

Hunter

Douglas Showroom

g We bring youthebest brandsincluding:

I a sfy/efor everypointof vievV I Hgnterogagia~s J

PROFES SIONALINSTALLATION

SUBARU

UNDER THE BIG AMER ICAN FLAG

' ,Bhfids

I ExclusiveSignature SerieseWindow g TreatmentsbyBudget Blinds' g

I

www . subaruofBend.co

I

g Olar tot valiwi dthaty olharoiiart Oliargoodal timeol illial estimate only.Oftergoodal participatingfranchisesonly. E achfranchise I indepe denntlyownedaadoperated.OffervalidlhralghI/9/15

aalta

Call 541-788-8444 or visi t us online at www.budgetblinds.com

Bhnds

a style for every point of vietd/'

AwardedBy theSource Weekly's Bestof Bend

ANY SIZE 2-STORYHOME

FREE! Pre-Spray• Pre-Spotting • Deodorizer• Stain Guard

AEIGNIENT SPECIAl FgR~EE

••s

I

I

I

I

l

Call yourBulletin AccountExecutive TODAY or call 541-382-1811 for more information about this and other opportunities!


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, E2-4 Home, Garden, E5-6 Martha Stewart, E5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY10, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

Concealandreveal: gardensthat guide you, place toplace

HOME

By Norman Winter Tribune News Service

This spring, as you contemplate planting season and changes to your landscape, strive to make the garden one of participaPegasusGourmet Chocolatesaremade in Bendwith handmade

A chocolate drink made bySusan Moini includes gourmet choco-

chocolate and sold in beautiful boxes (below).

late, cream and milk. "Please don't call it hot cocoa," she says.

tion. This is the ultimate in

design and

GARDEN enjoyment. By participation you might think I am referring to the outdoor cooking area or perhaps the fort or treehouse where the children play. Both of these could certainly be applied in the concept, but a garden of participation is much more

one part of the landscape to

The concept comes from getting your visitors, whether they are family or friends, to have a participatory experience by being pulled from one part of the landscape to

another. This moving bamboo fountain certainly commands attention, to the eye and through the sound of water.

another. Important to this

path or walkway.

one point.

Once out in thegarden and in the first outdoor room, younotice another

location revealed through a "door" or "window." It's not really a door or window.

in Oregon for more than120.

(AND IT'S OH SOGOOD)

• In the Kitchen with ... Pegasus GourmetChocolates

about being drawn from

than that.

design is not to reveal everything at once. You can't see the whole garden from any

Pegasus hasbeen making chocolate in Bend for 11 years, under the Moinis' leadership for 40 and

TNS

"Participatory gardens" are

Looking through framelike placementoftreesorshrubs is like a window. It could be

a gate, but probably just as easily served by a curved

As you and the visitors

are enticed to go to the next location, youhave become an active garden participant. In the new room or location, the room that was

your starting point is now concealed. Whether ornot the garden ends there is up to you, but hopefully it will continue to another room or two. Even in a small garden, curves play the role of hiding what is ahead. SeeParticipate/E6

Brighten wintermeals with a dash of citrus

By Penny Nakamura For The Bulletin

his could be considered one of the best food

By Gretchen McKay

careers in the world if

Maybe I'm just a grump, but I, for one, am pretty darn tired of having to pull on

ines to grapefruit, lemons and limes — they're all available in spades now through late spring, brightening the culinary landscape while

sweaters to stay warm in my

tickling our taste buds. And

T

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

you're a chocolate lover, and let's face it, who isn't?

Every morning, Susan Moini rises before the sun, makes her coffee and eats

don't forget about those

ner, Kaz Moini, has been making chocolate for 40

drafty old house. Bring back summer, already! It can seem equally bleak at the grocery FOOD st ore. Root vegetables and winter greens make great comfort foods, but they

years at Pegasus Gourmet

don't have quite the same

Chocolates. Lucky for Central Oregon,

pizazz as, say, a basket of homegrown tomatoes or a

103 million boxes (4.64 tons) of oranges out of Florida this

the Moinis brought their

pint of sun-sweetened, local

chocolate expertise and

strawberries. Try as it may, a parsnip just ain't the same as apeach. Thank goodness there's

chocolatesforbreakfast.

"I really do," confesses Susan, who with her husband and business part-

business to Bend 11 years

ago, after making chocolates for nearly 30 years in

adorable little "cuties," an

easy-to-peel, supersweet clementine orange that's the perfect size for snacking. It's shaping up to be another good year for citrus, with the USDA forecasting some season.

California also should enjoybrisk sales, with some 50 million boxes of fruit ex-

pected to hit the market, including tangerines and cara aneasyfixforthewinter cara oranges, a red-fleshed blues: juicy, colorful citrus navel grown in the San Joafruits. The winter months are quin Valley that's gaining in peak season for these sweet, popularity. Sweet and tangy, sometimes tangy orbs, which with notes of cranberry and bring a dose of sunshine to cherry, these bright-orange the table along with a health- hybrids are especially prized ful shot of vitamin C and for their low acidity and lack

Newport. "Let me tell you some of

the history. This chocolate shop, it was originally called West Homemade Candy. It

was founded in 1892, and that was before Highway 101 was built," says the energetic Susan, in her distinctive

other antioxidants.

of seeds.

From oranges and tanger-

Danish accent. "We bought

it 40 years ago, and we were only the second owners." Seeking a drier climate, with less rain and fog, the couple moved Pegasus

TODAY'S RECIPES

Gourmet Chocolate to

Bend's Wagner Mall on Third Street.

The name is Pegasus becauseKaz isfrom Greece, and Pegasus is the winged divine white stallion in

Greek mythology who carries thunderbolts for Zeus. "When Kaz wanted to

name it Pegasus, I said, 'It's OK; it's cute,'" recalls Susan laughing. "Kaz says to me, 'No, it's not cute — it's beautiful.'"

Photosby Meg RoussosiThe Bulletin

See Chocolate/E6

SeeCitrus /E4

Susan Moini, who owns Pegasus Gourmet Chocolates with her husband, Kaz, eats chocolate for breakfast. Yes, that's true.

"Every day it's a different challenge, because the weather changes, so you're dealing with different humidity levels and the variation in temperatures in Bend. At the coast, the weather has

pretty consistent temperatures throughout the year, but here you can be29 degrees one day and 55 degrees the next." — Kaz Moini, explaining the hardwork of being a professional chocolate maker

Orange, yellow anttpink are the new black: Grapefruit is hot this citrus season, and it adds a zing to this easy, slightly sour margarita recipe. ~ Other citrus recipes onE4: • Elegant Citrus Tart • Shrimp 8 Avocado Ceviche with Lime Crema • Lemon Mayonnaise • Wheat Berry, Baby Kale, Recipe Finder:A great EggGrape andOrangeSalad plant Parmesan (but don't tell • Crispy Orange Beef your guests that),E2 Cracklin' Corn Bread: Maderight when you want to eat it, E3 Mulled wine:It's the perfect time, Martha Stewart says, ES

FOOD TIPS Better bacon:Howto make the most of the meat: Don't forget the fat and the crispy bits. Try jams anddressings. All else fails, get your bacon andwrap another meat with it. E2 QIA:Olive oil secrets, soft-scrambled eggs, DIY yogurt, etc.E3


E2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

FOOD

EggplantParmesan for eggplantskeptics

a n' aconeven e er What's below this blanket

By James P.Dewan Chicago Tribune

of bacon?

Bacon was invented long

By Julie Rothman

before the age of electricity as a means of preventing meat from spoiling. Now, however, in this modern age of canning, refrigeration and cryogenics, we don't need to make bacon anymore. And yet we do. Why? Because we love it.

The Baltimore Sun

Omer Mir, of Baltimore, was

looking for a recipe for eggplant Parmesan that was publishedsome yearsago in The Baltimore Sun. He thought it

was a particularly good recipe and was hoping we might be able to track it down for him.

After a search of the Sun's

hope is the one he is in search

from a magazine. Pelter said he made the dish for a Christmas luncheon at work and didn't tell anyone what it was until

everyone had finished eating it. "People were

a stonished

Thinkstock

"This is the kind of

eggplant Parmesan that can make anyone an eggplant lover. The breading, the cheese and the meaty sauce show off the vegetable to best effect."

that it was eggplant because some said they didn't even like eggplant. One individual liked

— Laura Riley, recipe tester

it so much that she asked me if

shad roe as well as the restau-

I would make it for a wedding rant's continental salad. The reception," Pelter said. saladhad a Greek-style dressLaura Riley, the recipe tes- ing he has never been able to ter at the time, said, "This is duplicate. Ziegler was wonderthe kind of eggplant Parme- ing if anyone remembers Carsan that can make anyone an men's and perhaps could give eggplant lover. The breading, him some idea of how to make the cheese and th e m eaty the salad. sauce show off the vegetable to best effect." I agree with Pelter and Riley completely. RECIPE FINDER

Requests Jack Ziegler, of Baltimore, is looking for a recipe from the long-closedCarmen's restaurant h ere. T h e r e staurant closed sometime in the 1960s, but at the time, John Dors-

ey, the Sun's restaurant critic, rated Carmen's one of the

best restaurants in Maryland. Ziegler and his wife were par-

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

ticularly found of the shad and

Eggplant Parmesan Makes 6 servings. 1med eggplant 2 tsp salt (divided use) 1 TBS plus /s C butter or

margarine (divided use) 1 med onion, chopped /3 C chopped green pepper 1 Ib ground beef

1 (28-oz) can tomatoes, undrained and coarsely chopped (diced works, too) 1 (6-oz) can tomato paste

having bathed the meatloaf underneath (that's what it is ...) withits succulent fat.

/2 tsp dried whole oregano /2 tsp dried whole basil /2 tsp dried whole marjoram /2 tsp pepper 2 eggs, beaten with 4TBS milk /4 C dry bread crumbs 2 C shredded mozzarella

cheese

enlisted the advice of my editor as to which one to choose moment's hesitation, he said, "I like the bacon idea ... be-

cause, well, bacon!" And that pretty much sums up why you need to learn this.

Three products in one! What is i t

a bout bacon

that so inflames our passions? Of course there's that terrific smoky, porky flavor. Perhaps more important, though, it satisfies two of our

portions.) Here's the thing, though: If all you're doing is eating the cooked bacon, you're consuming less than half of its original, raw weight. The rest is being wasted. And we can't have that. So, what is that unused portion? First t h ere's the

melted (aka "rendered") fat.

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

We couldn't help but notice an unusual new item in the

pour the fat through a fine mesh strainer into a lidded salt and umami. Suffice it to glass jar and keep it in the resay these two tastes are re- frigerator. It has all the same lated to chemical compounds porky, smoky flavor as the our bodies crave. Bacon fills bacon itself. Use it to saute that salt craving because it's vegetables or sear meats for made by curing pork belly an added element of smoky in salt. Lots and lots of salt.

Because one of the functions of salt is to draw out mois-

umami.

Crispy bits

ture, and because water has A nd then there are al l no taste, the umami gets in- those little brown, crispy bits creased as well.

that stick to the bottom of the

U nfortunately the

s a d pan as the bacon cooks, like truth is most of us don't get dehydrated clumps of smoky the most out of our bacon. bacon juice. They can add a We just cook it and eat it, pile of flavor to soups, saucnever realizing every pack- es, braises and stews. Here's age of bacon gives us not one how: but three awfully useful and After pouring the fat into terribly delicious products. your glass jar, deglaze the Let me explain.

p an with

b r oth o r w h i t e

Obviously, there's the ba- wine or even water. Scrape con itself. Cook it in strips that deglazed liquid into the to your desired doneness jar with the fat. The liquid and have it with eggs or on will sink to the bottom and, a BLT sandwich. (Add a cou- when it cools, turn into a suple of slicesofavocado fora per flavorful, gelatinized goo "BLAT." Or, strips of orange protected from any microorrind for a B LORT? OK, I ganisms by an airtight seal made that one up.) of solid bacon fat. Next time A lternately, slice it r a w you're making a pan sauce crosswise into i nch-long, or a simple tomato sauce, q uarter-inch-wide s t r i p s use the fat to saute your arcalled "lardons." Crisp them omatics, then scrape in that in a pan and they're perfect gelatinized goo. Trust me, it's sprinkled over nearly any- worth the small effort. And thing: salads, soups, baked the best part is, because of potatoes, vanilla ice cream,

that airtight seal, it'll last in

Green pepper rings andfresh parsley sprigs, for garnish

chocolate pudding. 0, Bacon, is there anything you can't improve? (By the way, lardons cook more evenly than bacon

your fridge for — well, not forever, surely, but it might just still be good when they reanimate your cryogenically frozen head.

strips and

• Replace the bent-back pieces so they cover the crosswise piece. • Next, peel back the even-numbered pieces all the way to the first crosswise piece. • Lay another crosswise piece over the odd pieces so that it touches the bent-back evenpieces, then replace theevenpieces to their original position. • Continue on with this until you have a beautiful bacon blanket that you'd be happy to swaddleyour baby in. If your baby were made of meatloaf. Add the bacon back, reduce to baconstrips.Forlargerroasts, a syrupy, jammy consistency,

this is meatloaf covered with such as a

b o neless turkey then pulse it in a food proces-

breast, weave the strips into a blanket (see sidebar). Bacon jam:Crisp I pound of bacon lardons; remove them from the pan. Saute I each

sor and serve with crackers, cheese, bread,omeletsorfreshly cooked vegetables. Bacon dressing: Like an unreduced bacon jam, just

minced shallot and onion in the

crispsome lardons, add some

fat, then add a couple of ounces each of brown sugar, maple syrup, cider vinegar, bourbon (if you like) and brewed coffee.

sliced red onion, vinegar and a little maple syrup and pour over fresh greens — spinach is

t h erefore look

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

• •

g •

THURSDAY . FEBRUARY 12TH FROM 5:00 — 8:OOPM

ture, sells at one discount store

Special pricing on certified Angus beef & big bold red w i n es.

We had to wonder why it

in the cereal aisle. But there

You bake them. At home. So it would be among the very what was being offered here, highest-priced. So why not the under the Post Honey Bunches granola bar aisle? They would of Oats brand? look expensive there, too, Make-at-home G r a nola and they would be competing Snackers (chocolate chip or there with granola bars you honey oat). These are items you don't have to bake. preparein your 12-cup muffin In view of our stellar record tin: Microwave the honey from of mispredicting product failthe pouch in the box with but- ures, including having preter and brown sugar that you sumed General Mills' Berry supply, stir that into the gra- Berry Kix, which became one nola mix from the box, press of General Mills' best sellers, the mixture into the muffin tin would disappear because it with a small glass and bake. sounded like a disease, we're The ll-ouncebox, whichcon- pretty sure Granola Snackers tains about 2A ounces of honey will sweep the nation.

traditional.

better than crumbled bacon, Afew more ideas which often has large piecBarding: Th is s i m ply es of undercooked bacon fat means covering with fat. The attached to overly crisp meat most common iteration of

and 8Younces ofthe chocolate chip granola and flour mix-

That's the basic idea of the was displayed there, when it whole aisle of cake mixes, cup- surely would look less pricey cake mixes and muffin mixes:

If you know how to make alattice pie crust, making a bacon mat is pretty much the sametechnique. • Lay an odd number of bacon strips next to one another with sides touching. • Peel the odd-numbered pieces all the waybackdown to within about an inch from the end. • Lay another bacon slice crosswise across the evenpieces, nestling it so it touches the bent-back pieces.

most basic taste cravings:

for $3.99 (plus the butter and baking mixes aisle. Even larg- brown sugar), which puts it way er than the bright yellow and out of the price range of any of red "New!" banner across the the neighboring cake, cupcake top, the biggest words on the and muffin mixes. box were "Bake At HOME!"

Weaving adacendlanket

After your bacon is cooked,

A yOLi-bakegranOlabrand By Al Sicherman

Chicago Tribune

from the many ideas we'd kicked around. Without a

/4 C grated Parmesan cheese

Peel eggplant, if desired, and cut eggplant intot/4-inch-thick slices. Sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt; let stand for 1 hour. Pat moisture off with paper towels. Melt1 tablespoon butter in a very large saucepan; add onion and greenpepper. Saute until the onion is translucent. Add the ground beef, cooking over medium heat and stirring to crumble, until beef is browned. Drain. Add the tomatoes, tomato paste, oregano, basil, marjoram, 1 teaspoon salt andt/2 teaspoon pepper. Bring to a boil; reduce heatandsimmer, covered, for 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Dip eggplant slices into the egg mixture and then into the breadcrumbs, coating well. Melt t/4cup butter in a heavy skillet. Arrange a single layer of eggplant in the skillet and brown on both sides, about 3 minutes per side. Repeat with remaining eggplant slices, adding more butter as needed. Layer a third of the meat sauce, half of the eggplant, 1 cup mozzarella and /~ cup Parmesan cheese in a lightly greased 13-by-9-by-2-inch baking dish. Repeat layers. Add remaining meat sauce and top with remaining Parmesancheese. Bakefor 30 to 35 minutes. Garnish with green pepper rings and parsley.

Photos by Bill Hogan

P/

winter story, and therefore

len Hawks, in June 2004 that I

him in the '80s, which came

browned

and crispy,

would make a good mid-

appearedinthe Recipe Finder column, then written by Elof. At the time, two readers

The bacon itself emerges

I was a bit confused, truthfully, at f i rst, about what

archives, I located a recipe that

were looking for an eggplant Parmesan recipe they had seen in a magazine. Bill Pelter, of Timonium, Maryland, shared a recipe he said someone gave

Who cares?

>I I

ll

I

II

I

O ur din ner m e n u

ENT11AM-2PM! Just or oopotntsto uyin. Re-buy for the same price to try for a higher score. Tournament sessions 11AM and 12PM, re-buy rounds at 1PM, play-offs at 2PM. Must beat least 55 anda BonusClub member to participate. Limit onebrunchper guest per Monday.Management hasthe right to revise, review,or cancelthis promotionat anytime. Restrictionsapply:seeBonus Club for complete details.

featuring NW cui sine will also be available

Bendbusrunsthefirst Mondayof the month

Call for reservations, location & times: 541.183.7529 ext209 Valid forBend,LaPins snd Redmond guestsonly;localzip codesdo notapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires March5,2015

34333HWY . 97 iQRTH CHILOOUIii, OR9762ti Sti1.783.7529 KLiiMOYACiisliiO.COM

award

w inning wine l i st .

Facebook O

'33 FRE ESLOTPLAY00llpol LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS!

w ith o u r

"Like" us on

ss~

i I s'

t •s+

t •s ~

••

t • • •

• •

t

t

• • •

t

541-383-8200 • r e ception@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. • www.brokentop.com


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN E 3

F OO D

on' e ieve eve in ou eara ou oiveoi • Plus a secretortwo: For aforgotten spice, for instance,addthe oil to the seasoning The Washington Post • About a year ago, I took • a cooking class in which the chef said you shouldn't waste your money using extra-virgin olive oil in cooking because the heat kills any

Q

flavor or nutrition it had. She

gurt-making last year. Suggestion: Perfect your plain yogurt first, so you understand the conditions in which it turns out

best in your kitchen. Then you can work on flavored yogurts. The main thing to remember with adding fruits is to make

said to use regular olive oil sure they are not fresh, but frofor cooking with heat and ex- zen or in jam form. The fresh tra-virgin when there's no heat fruit could contain acids that involved. In the store, I found

curdle the milk.

Thinkstock

only extra-virgin available, so Once you've got the plain First question: To EVOO or not the next time I took a cooking yogurt-making down, do fruit- to EVOO? class, I asked the chef about it.

o n-the-bottom y o gurt ,

not

He said he uses extra-virgin blending it in. for everything. Where do you — Tim Carman, Joe Yonan weigh in on this?

your set? Check out the tips from canning maven Cathy Soft-scrambled eggs Barrow in her recipe for Just • I had soft scrambled Right Strawberry Preserves. • eggs at brunch, and — B.K. I decided I was never having normal scrambled eggs Super-soaker onion soup again. The problem is, using When making French the recipe I tried (which seems • onion soup, I've had a to make sense, at one table- problem with the bread soakspoon of milk per egg), it never ing up all the soup. How can seems to have the right texture that be prevented'? or flavor. What's the secret'? • I find that if the pieces • I like to do it in a double • of bread are very lightly • boiler so the heat is real- toasted beforehand (and prefly low. I use cream and/or but- erably a little stale!), the bread ter with the eggs, and they can does not absorb a lot of liquid. take as long as 20 minutes to As well, it is a good idea to cook. You stir constantly with assemble the bread/cheese just

A• you is an old-fashioned Q gin was more of a specialty • What the first chef told

idea, from back when extra-vir-

product, and more expensive. But as yo u

d i scovered, it's

pretty difficult to find non-extra-virgin olive oil. So don't sweat it, especially since EVOO

doesn't have to be super-expensive, and it is beautiful to cook with. To quote Nancy Harmon Jenkins' "Virgin Territory": "I

take my cue from generations of Mediterranean cooks at all

levels ... and only cookwith extra-virgin olive oil." — Joe Yonan

Q•

~.~~~cV~

A

a flexible spatula, and it seems

~

before the final heating of it

like it's never going to happen, all, to melt the cheese. I began decantQ •• iSince ng my everyday olive

and then it finally starts to form these big, soft curds. It's

oil into a bottle with one of

a glorious thing.

those skinny pouring spouts, I have wondered how I ever did without it. It's not like remov-

ing and replacing a cap is that

— J.Y.

Sweetpotatooven fries

Q

• I would like to make much trouble, but somehow • your oven fries using this has (almost) changed my sweet potatoes instead of life. Really, try it; you'll like it. russet, but I can never get • I feel the same. I am a rel- sweet potatoes crispy. They • atively recent convert to taste good, but they're mushy. this, too,using asnazzy curved What's the secret?

A

— L.Y.

Pie-making for Pi Day

•0

hosting a party for Q •• I'm Pi Day, March 14, and

tt "~(g $ t~)Q,+t~gy

would like to get a jump-start on my pie-making. How early can I make and freeze crusts'?

• A pie crust can be made, A • rolled out, placed in the pan and refrigerated, lightly

$4<~~>Ajj;i(Pc~~>Aggj4.

•5

covered, for 36 hours. You can freezethe crustinthepanabout • It's true that sweet pota- two weeks, well-wrapped. red number that looks great on my stovetop. More important, • toes have so much more — L.Y. it's just such a time-saver, eh? moisture in them, it's harder

A

— J.Y.

to get them crisp in the oven. I

use a perforated baking sheet, • I made a recipe for quick which helps because of the air • chicken curry and re- circulation. You also need to alized I'd forgotten to add the make sure there's no overlap curry powder until about 20 of the potatoes in the oven. minutes of cooking time was And spread them on a cooling left. I went ahead and added rack rather than a lined plate. it then, but the curry flavor, High heat, too! unsurprisingly, seemed di— J.Y. minished. I figured it might be worth asking if there are cer- Firmup your jam • I'm hoping you can antain spices that can be added late in cooking time to little or • swer a canning-related no effect on the dishes. question for me. Although I • A g e n eral t h o ught: have made lots of jam over the • When a powdered spice past few years, over the weekis left out, you can first try to end I made it for the first time

Q

A

Love to bake, hate the oven

Q

• I just moved to a new

• place, and while I love

to bake, the oven seems not to

love me as much. I suspect it's going at a bit higher temperature than what's stated on the

reader, so I've been baking things for a shorter time. However, whenever the inside of,

say, a cake is done, the batter that touched the pan is always very dark brown, hard and burnt. How do you fix this'? • It may be a case of your • oven not maintaining a

steadyheat, orithas"hot spots," or the rack is not level. Possibly,

heat it in a small amount of olive oil to bloom it, then add it to

without using pectin. It was

at the last minute is ineffec-

few months back. The set was softer than I wanted. Should I

pan are incompatible. If you use a very thin-weight pan, the heat will absorb quickly and the edges may over-brown.

perhaps have boiled it longer

— L.Y.

a strawberry/blueberry mix, the mixture. Adding dry spice and Ihad frozen theberries a tive, as you noted. — Lisa Yockelson

to get it to firm up a bit? Sounds like that might

Rottenpotatoes

Q

• Every summer I grow

A •• be the case. Did you test

PRICES START AT JUST

it maybe that the batter and the

startingto rot. What should I do

4

4 I

4

For your baking needs, a cornbread recipefollows.

a

0 O

O

4 4

g oO

4 a O

4 e •

o 0 0

e

O

e o

e

• •

D+Oo

a 0 • •

• 4

e

4

a

e

Cracklin' Corn Bread

A

, •

4

1

o

$

e o :g S 0 •

C a k e,

Sweet Potato Samosas, Per- 4 oz bacon, preferably Benton's, sian-Spiced Sweet Potato Pie, pius more as needed Sweet Potato Rolls and Thai 2 C coarse cornmeal, preferably Sweet Potato Soup, for startAnson Mills Antebellum ers, at washingtonpost.com/ Coarse Yellow Cornmeal pb/recipes. 1 tsp kosher salt

l •

• 0

with them? Can I make soup'? Makes 8 servings (one 8- to 9-inch round bread). Bake it right before you I'm not even sure where want to eat it. Order Anson Mills cornmeal at www.ansonmills.com, or • to start! Soup, pies, rolls look for coarse yellow cornmeal milled regularly near you. If you can't and so much more! Check find Allan Benton's bacon near you, you can order it from the Internet: out our recipes for Brown shop.bent onscountryham.com. Sugar-Sweet Potato

g

• a ton of sweet potatoes,

and every spring I throw out most of them, uneaten and

~OOI~ O 04

Wt«4~

/2tsp baking soda /2tsp baking powder 1t/ C regular buttermilk (may substitute Iow-fat buttermilk),

+

2~ ~4%~&2~~%©.

plus more as needed 1 Ig egg, lightly beaten

— Becky Krystai

V-Day meal for two

Q

• I would love sugges• tions for a nice meal to

cook for two for Valentine's

Day. I cook a lot, but it's a lot of hearty, more basic foods, and I'm looking to step up my game to something more sophisticated than pastas and stews.

piccata — lovely A•• Chicken and lemony — is sophis-

ticated without breaking the

budget and not stew-y at all! — L.Y.

DN yogurt going to dive into Q •• I'm making yogurtand am looking for advice as to how to best add additional flavors. My guess is I should make it plain, then scoop out a bit of the plain to use as starter for the next batch, then add whatever

I'd like to the rest (I'm thinking some sort of fruit compote). Good plan or bad plan? • We did s ome exper-

A

• iments i n

DIY

yo-

Preheat the oven to450 degrees. Put adeep8- or 9-inch cast-iron skillet in the oven for at least10 minutes, leaving it there while you prepare the batter. Run the bacon through a meat grinder, or chop it very fine. Put the bacon in a skillet large enough to hold it in one layer, andcook over medium-low heat, stirring frequently so it doesn't burn, until the fat is rendered and the bits of bacon are crispy, 5 to 10 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to transfer the bits of bacon to a paper towel to drain, reserving the fat. (You'll need 5 tablespoons of bacon fat for this recipe; if you come Up short, fry another slice or two of bacon for the grease, and reserve the slices for another Use.) Whisk together the cornmeal, salt, baking soda, baking powder and bits of bacon in amedium bowl, making sure thebaking soda and powder are evenly distributed. Reserve 1 tablespoon of the bacon fat and combine the remaining 4 tablespoons of fat with the buttermilk and egg in a small bowl. Stir the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients just to combine; do not overmix. The batter should be loose and pourable; if it's too thick to pour easily, stir in a little more buttermilk. Move the cast-iron skillet from theoven tothe stove, placing it over high heat. Add the reserved tablespoon of bacon fat and swirl to coat the skillet, getting it up the sides of the skillet if possible. Pour the batter into the center of the skillet (it should sizzle) andlet it spread in the pan onits own. Let it cook for a minute or two onthe stovetop, then transfer it to the oven. Bake the corn bread for about 20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. While the corn bread is still hot, place a plate upside down over the skillet and carefully invert skillet and plate together so the corn bread drops onto the plate. Slide the corn bread back into the skillet; the crunchy bottom edge will now be ontop. Serve warm from the skillet. — Adapted from "Heritage,"by SeanBrock(Artisan, 2014)

F IN E

FURNITUR E

*

FREE STATEWIDE DELIVERY Bend River Promenade

www.mjacobsfamilyofstores.com 541-382-5900 • Toll Free 1-800-275-7214 Open Mon.-Fri. 10AM to 7PM • Sat. 5 Sun.10AM to 6PM *$999 or more


E4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

Citrus Continued from E1 Navel oranges, which came to the U.S. in the mid-1800s

from Bahia, Brazil, by way of missionaries, also are selling well, says registered dietitian/nutrition coach Samantha Montgomery, along with blood oranges, Meyer lemons and green-skinned pummelos. Also known as Chinese grapefruit, these specialty fruitsthe largest of all citrus fruits — can grow to the size of vol-

Measuringlemons,limesandoranges One lemonyields about1 tablespoon of zest and 2to 3 tablespoons of juice. A mediumorangehastwice that amount. Anaveragelime has about 2 teaspoons ofzest and 2tablespoons of juice.

when lemons and limes are at their juiciest; in summer

they tend to be a little seedier. And don't forget about red and

white grapefruit, which are for so much more than breakfast. Grapefruit can be peeled and eaten out of hand just like an

leyballs. Aromatic and juicy, orange, or sectioned and addthey're a bit sweeter than tra-

ditional grapefruit. Minneolas also are getting a lot of second looks, says Montgomery, because the peel doesn't stick to the fruit as much as with a regular navel.

F OO D

ed to salads, entrees and desserts. And its juice makes a

puckery, sweet-sour cocktail mixer.

If you're not particularly big on citrus, you might want to reconsider. According to the

get-friendly way to get those goods in the body. Not only does citrus help stave off flu and colds, says Montgomery, but it's also high in fiber, which helps you feel full (good for weight management) and aids with digestion. "And it's really easy to take with you and relatively easy to consume," she adds. "If you're out shopping or r u nning sweet; juiced into Latin-style about, you can grab an orange soups and stews; blended into or a couple of cuties as you smoothies and salad dressings; head out the door." and zested for baked goods. Citrus also is versatile. Its The biggest nutritional ben-

USDA, a healthy diet includes juice can be used to mariat least l i/z to 2 cups of fruit nate seafoodfor ceviche or makes it nice for opening," she a day — or a quarter of what brighten a dessert curd; it also says. goes on your plate at each can be sectioned and tossed This time of year is also meal — and citrus is a bud- into salads both savory and That, and the fruit's knoblike formation on the stem, "which

Lemon mayo is

spots are OK, avoid citrus that feels soft or spongy or has cuts

just one

and bruises. You also want to

easy winter edible

steer clear if there's any mold in the stem or the skin looks

you can

dried out. Weight matters-

make with citrus.

the fruit should feel heavier than anticipated. Higher water

Photos by Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

content means it'll be juicier.

If you plan on zesting the fruit (it's most aromatic and flavorful when you first re-

move it, so use it quickly), make sure the peel is really clean and shiny, regardless of whether it's organic. In addition to insecticides, color dyes

and edible wax are sprayed on some fruit to slow the loss Using citrus juice and zest as flavoring also is a nice way to reducesodium-related seasonings in many dishes, in that it

of moisture. Always wash it

under warm running water, using just the friction of your fingers to scrub them clean.

efits come from raw citrus,

adds a little extra zip naturally, "and you don't need a ton of it,"

We're offering some fresh ideas on cooking with vi-

but it's still pretty good for you tossed into a stir-fry (cooking it will make it sweeter) or baked or squeezed into a dessert.

says Montgomery. When buying citrus, look for firm fruit with bright, colorful skin. While a few rough

brant winter citrus. It's sure

to brighten your mood and bring edible sunshine into the kitchen.

r

..u

Cheers! A grapefruit margarita.

Sour Grapefruit Margarita Makes 2 servings. Fresh grapefruit juice amps up the flavor in this easy, slightly sour margarita recipe. It also offers a dose of antioxidant-rich vitamins C and A, as well as dietary fiber. My pantry is absent agave nectar, but simple syrup worked just fine. Cheers!

A Wheat berry salad Y Shrimp and lime ceviche C i t rus tart >

Coarse salt 1 lime, cut into wedges

Elegant Citrus Tart

1 C fresh grapefruit juice (I used Ruby Reds)

Makes1 tart. Needsomething to shakethe family out of its winter doldrums? This tart delivers, in taste (it's a sweet tart, with a crunchy crust) andpresentation. It's nothing short of spectacular. I used acircular tart pan instead of the rectangular onecalled for in the recipe andlayered sections of grapefruit, orange, lime andlemon ontop. '/ Csweetened flaked coconut

9 assorted citrus fruits, peeled

2 C all-purpose flour

and sectioned Buttery Orange Curd(separate recipe; makes about 2C)

/s C powdered sugar /s C cold butter, cut into pieces /s tsp coconut extract

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Bakecoconut in single layer in a shallow pan 4 to 5 minutes or until toasted and fragrant, stirring halfway through. Cool completely. Pulse coconut, flour and powdered sugar in a food processor until combined. Add butter and coconut extract, and pulse 5 to 6 times or until crumbly. With processor running, gradually add 3 tablespoons water and process until dough forms a ball and leavessides of bowl. (I used wholewheat flour and had toadd about 2 tablespoons more water.)

'/ C fresh lime juice '/4 C agave nectar '/ C tequila

Ice cubes

BUTTERY ORANGE CURD '/s C sugar 2t/ TBS cornstarch

Scatter salt in a wide, shallow dish. Run a wedge of lime around rim of 2 glasses, then dip them in the salt mixture. Set aside. In shaker, combine grapefruit juice, lime juice, agaveandtequila. Drop a handful of ice cubes into the cup and shake well. Carefully strain and pour into prepared glasses. If desired, garnish with a slice of lime.

1'/ C orange juice 1 Ig egg, shghtly beaten 3 TBS butter 2 tsp orange zest Pinch table salt

Combine sugar and cornstarch in a 3-quart saucepan. Gradually whisk in orange juice. Whisk in egg. Bring to a boil. Boil, whisking — "Healthy Latin Eating"by Angie constantly, for 3 to 4 minutes. Roll dough into a 12t/z-by-8-inch rectangle (about t/t-inch thick) on a Remove from heat. Whisk N/artinezand Angelo Sosa(Kyle, 2015, lightly floured surface. (I used acircular pan so rolled it into a circle.) Press in butter, zest and salt. Place $2295) on bottom and upsides of a12-by-9-inch tart pan with removable bottom. heavy-duty plastic wrap directly Trim excess anddiscard. on curd (to prevent a film from Lemon Mayonnaise Bake at350degreesfor 30 minutes. Cool completely onwire rack.Spread forming). Chill 8 hours. Store leftButtery OrangeCurdover crust. Top with citrus sections. Voila! overs in fridge for up to 3days. Makes about s/4 cup. Light and citrusy, this simple homemademayo — "Sotjthem Living: NoTasteLike Home"by Kelly Alexander (Oxmoor House, $2795) is equally delicious in egg or chickShrimp Sc Avocado Ceviche with Lime Crema en salad and as adipping sauce for Makes 4 to 6 servings. The acidic marinade "cooks" the shrimp in this fried seafood. Also tasty on top of Crispy Orange Beef zesty appetizer. Pretty served in a wide-rimmed champagne glass. turkey burgers. Makes 4 servings. This stir-fry recipe is a keeper! Slightly freezing the meat strips made them fry up crisp and 1 Ib med shrimp, peeled, 2 TBS Mexican crema crunchy, while still staying tender inside. I added a little bit more orange peel than what was called for, and an 1 Ig egg yolk deveined and split in half 1 tsp grated fresh ginger extra jalapeno, too, so mysonwouldn't feel impelled to douse his serving with sriracha. Large pinch kosher salt '/ ripeavocado,peeled and cut /4 C fresh orange juice 2 TBS strained freshly 3 TBS fresh lime juice into chunks 1VIbs sirloin steak tips, trimmed 3 TBS molasses 1 jalapeno chile, stemmed, squeezedlemon juice, 1 TBS lemon juice 2 tsp diced red onion 3 TBS soy sauce, divided 2 TBS dry sherry seeded and sliced thin divided '/ C neutral-tasting olive oil 2TBS sugar 1 tsp chopped jalapeno 6TBS cornstarch 1 TBS rice vinegar lengthwise /4 tsp kosher salt 10 (3-inch) strips orange peel, 1/ tsp roasted sesame oii 3 cloves garlic sliced thin lengthwise (/4 C), 3 C vegetable oil / tsp red pepper flakes Combine egg yolk with salt and Put bowl of ice nearby. In medium pot, bring 6 cups water to a boil. plus / C juice (2 oranges) 2 TBS grated fresh ginger 2 scallions, sliced thin on bias 1 teaspoon of lemon juice in small Drop in shrimp and cook only until they just begin to turn pink, about15 bowl. Whisking constantly, drizzle seconds. Do not overcook. Removefrom heat, drain and chill the shrimp Cut beef with grain into 2- to 3-inch-wide pieces. Slice each pieceagainst grain into /z-inch-thick slices. Cut in oil very gradually. Whisk until onice. each slice lengthwise into /z-inch-wide strips. Toss beef with 1 tablespoon soy sauce in bowl. Add cornstarch mayonnaise is spreadable and all In small bowl, combine theorange, lime and lemonjuices with the sug- and toss until evenly coated. Spread beef in single layer on wire rack set in rimmed baking sheet. Put sheet in the oil has been added. Gradually ar, salt, cremaand ginger. Mix well and pour over shrimp. Chill for15 min- freezer until meat is very firm but not completely frozen, about 45 minutes. whisk in more of the lemon juice utes. Just before serving, gently toss in the avocado, onion andjalapeno. Whisk orange juice, molasses, sherry, vinegar, sesame oil and remaining soy saucetogether in bowl. until you have thin, slightly tart — "Healthy Latin Eating" by Angie Martinezand Angelo Sosa (Kyle, 2015, $2295) Line second rimmed baking sheet with triple layer of paper towels. Heat oil in large Dutch ovenover medium mayonnaise ;you may notneed all heat until oil registers 375 degrees. Carefully add /s of beefandfry, stirring occasionally to keep beef from stick- the juice. Season to taste with salt ing, until golden brown, about1/z minutes. Using wire-mesh skimmer, transfer meat to paper towel-lined sheet. and pepper. Store in refrigerator, Wheat Berry, Baby Kale, Grape Return oil to 375 degreesand repeat with remaining beef. After frying, reserve 2 tablespoons frying oil. covered, until ready to use. and Orange Salad — "Blue Chair Cookswith Jam& Heat reserved oil in 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add orange peel and jalapeno Makes 8 servings. I'm not so much into health food (admit it — wheat and cook, stirring occasionally, until about half of orange peel is golden brown, 1/z to 2 minutes. Add ginger, Marmalade"by RachelSaunders berries, which are the whole-grain form of wheat, fall into that category) garlic and pepper flakes; cook, stirring frequently, until garlic begins to brown, about 45 seconds. Addsoy sauce (AndrayysMcMee/ 2014,$45) but this recipe was kind of terrific. Sweet and nutty, with a wonderfully mixture and cook, scraping upany brown bits, until slightly thickened, about 45 seconds. Add beef andscallions chewy texture, the ricelike kernels marry perfectly with sweet oranges and toss. Serve immediately. — "Cook's lllustrated MeatBook"(America's Test A'itchen, 2014,$40) and grapes. I never bought into last year's kale craze (hate the stuff) so Find more citrus recipes at substitute baby spinach. Goeasy on the vinaigrette — it packs apunch. hendbulletin.cem/atheme 2 C wheat berries 1 tsp salt FOR SALAD

5 oz baby kale or babyspinach 1 C seedless red grapes 1 C seedless green grapes 2 oranges, segmented Sait

Freshly ground black pepper 1 C raw, unsalted walnuts,

toasted and chopped

FOR VINAIGRETTE /s C extra-virgin olive oil

'/ C golden balsamic vinegar Zest1 orange 2 TBS fresh orange juice

2 tsp agave nectar 1t/ tsp Dijon mustard 1 tspsalt /4 tsp curry powder

Pinch of cayenne pepper Pinch of ground ginger Freshly ground black pepper

Find Your Pfeam Home In Real Estate • • •

TheB u le I

— "Straight from theEarth"by Myra Goodmanand li//area Goodman (Chronicle, 2014,$Z750)

90 M in u t e

N>crodermabrgsion ' , T r eatment I

Batteries • Crystal • Bands

Make wheat berries:Rinse them and put them in medium pot with 6 cups water and salt. Bring to boil and then reduce to simmer. Cook, covered, 1 hour, until wheat berries are just tender. Add a few cups cold water to pot; stir and then strain. Place wheat berries in a very large bowl to cool, stirring occasionally. Make vinaigrette:Combine oil, vinegar, zest, juice, agave, mustard, salt, curry powder, cayenne, ginger and pepper in a small jar. Seal lid tightly and shakevigorously to combine. Set aside at room temperature. Make salad:Combine cooled wheat berries with kale or spinach in a large bowl. Toss with /z cup of dressing. Add grapes and orange segments and another /4 cup dressing and toss again. Add more dressing if desired and season with salt and pepper. Toss in walnuts right before serving.

®

®

WATCH BATTERY $800 INFINITY WATCHDEPAIP Located between South

Facial Combo

99

tjIr69

I

,'

(f30 Savings)

(g61Savings) I Purchase Onlineby 2/16/15. Expires 6 m onths after purchase date. Valid for a mount paid after expiration date.

I I

Purchase Onlineby 2/16/15. Expires 6 months after purchase date.Valid for amount paid af'ter expiration date.

Purchase Online www.thermaleffecrs.net

Wendy's er Cascade Garden

541-728-0411 61383 S.Hwy. 97, Bend, OR97702 oftce: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner stem st crowns • Movements

'

Lyndsey Carter ly

541-788-5246 ¹18970


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

HOME ck

E5

AR D EN

reasons ouCanwarmu owin erou Si e Mulled Wine

- MARTHA

Makes 4 servings.

STEWART

1 Ig orange 2 cardamom pods or most people, winter

1 cinnamon stick, plus 4 for

garnish 1 bottle (3 C) fruity red wine

F

6 whole clove 6allspice berries

of the great indoors. Nothing wrong with that — who

With a fine grater, zest, then juice the orange. With the flat side of a knife, press firmly on the cardamom pods to bruise them. In a large pot (not aluminum), combine zest, juice, cardamom, cloves, allspice, peppercorns, cinnamon, wine, sugar and brandy. Cook over medium heat, stirring, until sugar dissolves, 1 to 2 minutes. Reduce heat to low; simmer until flavors have melded, about 30 minutes. Pour through a fine-mesh sieve; garnish with cinnamon stick, if desired. Serve immediately.

means battening down the hatches and suc-

'/s C sugar /4 C brandy

6 whole black peppercorns

cumbing to the toasty allure doesn't love a soft blanket, a

comfy couch and a steaming cup of hot cocoa? But staying inside can also mean missing out on the outdoor charms of the cold-weather months. Here are 15 smart, stylish

and scrumptious reasonsfrom surprising twists on

up to 29 years, whereas those (A Martha favorite? Skinceutifound in the less balmy waters cals Hydrating B5 gel; $74 for I of Russi alivednearly200years. ounce, skinceuticals.com.)

winter dishes to fresh takes on

outdoor celebrations — to get out ... and stay out.

It's the perfect time for There's an easy fix for 8 1 K. a c old seat. Be sure answer to sangria, mulled to pack a wool throw or two

It's easier to catch a sun• rise. It takes time to adjust

• mulled wine.

Wi n t er's

daylight, but there is a wonderful upside that comes with

wine (recipe with this story) (Pendleton makes particularly can be prepared the night be- rugged ones, from $98 each, fore, stored in the fridge and pendleton-usa.com) so you

the sun's late-to-rise, early-to-

then, just before a party or an

can rest when you're out and

bed schedule: Watching that giant orb slowly ascend over

outdoor event, reheated and poured into your trusty ther-

about. (Bummer fact: Sitting on a cold surface conducts the

the horizon is a much more

mos. (We're fans of the Stan-

heat from your body to the

plausible scenario when the eventhappens closerto 7 a.m .

ley vacuum-bottle thermos; 1.4 rock or icy ground under you.) quart, $42, stanley-pmi.com.) Your yard misses you. There's nothing betD. Despite being dormant, • ter than hot chili in cold your garden still needs attenweather. Top t h e c l a ssic tion. A few winter outdoor-care c rowd-pleaser with a f e w ideas from Martha: Gently dollops of a yummy avocado brush snow off bushes and tree cream for a satisfying meal branches to prevent breakage, "en plein air." (For Martha's and begin fruit-tree pruning. vegetarian chili and avocado cream recipe, go online to There's a science to marthastewart.com/1047284/ t. winter dressing. And vegetarlan-chili-avocado-crteam) here it is: According to the

to winter's fleeting hours of

than at 5:30 a.m.

2

ural treasures and tourist hot

spots, such as Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon, in

the cold-weather months, Marcus Nilsson / Martha Stewart Living and you'll be rewarded with Summer doesn't have a monopoly on outdoor parties. Start a crackling fire, brew some hot drinks, pristine, jaw-dropping beauty offer some warmseating and you've got yourself the ingredients for a wonderful winter soiree. — minus the hustle and bustle and jostle and clamor of hordes of other visitors. a frozen lake or snowy slope, place, use a huge galvanized it. And washing your hair every you can revel in the fact that tub instead. It's fireproof and other day, something beauty Viruses congregate in- you're burning calories as eminently mobile. Put it front experts recommend because • doors. There's an uptick you commune with n ature: and center in your backyard for daily washing can strip tresses in viruses in the winter. And According to the Mayo Clin- a casual camping-themed gath- of natural oils, is easier to get since staying indoors means ic, for a 160-pound person, ering, or tote it to the banks of a awaywith inthe cooler months. an increased risk of per- cross-country skiing expends frozenpond fora "fireand ice" son-to-person transmission, about 496 calories an hour, skatingparty. (Youcan alsoput A drop in the mercury may venturing outdoors regularly and ice-skatingburns 511. it directly on the ice, provided • be good for you.Exposure

3

is a smart move.

You have an excuse for

4 • being wobbly on your

feet. Ice skates, skis, snowshoes — cold-weather sports call for clumsy footwear that

can be hard to manage at first. As you search for balance on

1

g

It's off-peak season for • national parks.Visit nat-

5

You get to bring theroaring • fire outside. There's ab-

the ice is at least four inches

7 to chilly temperatures may lead

thick andblue to clear)

to a longer life. Studies involv-

ing worms, mice and mussels You can, in good con- have all supported the link be• science, skip your daily tween the cold and longevity. stricted to the indoors. Outdoor shower.Hot water saps your Researchers in the mussels fires, whether in a pit or chime- skin ofprecious moisture, so studywere inspired when they nea, are just as spirit-lifting. If ifthere'severa season to forgo learned that the bivalves found you don't have an outdoor fire- the daily scrub-down, winter is off the coast of Spain survived solutely no reason the beloved hearthside blaze has to be re-

1

National Ski Patrol, you need

Dress up Mother Na'U. ture. Try stringing up some twinkly white lights (the heavy-duty kind made especially for the outdoors) in your backyard. It will cast a gorgeous glow and create a festive atmosphere for outdoor dining.

three levels of winter wear: a moisture-wicking inner layer (usually synthetic), an insulating middle layer (wool or fleece) and an outer shell (such as waterproof Gore-Tex outer

layers). Keep away from cotton, which absorbs moisture and tends to stay wet.

You can streamline your I • skin-care regimen. If You no longer have to you have sensitive skin, you D. fear slipping on ice or might be able to temporarily snow. One word: Yaktrax. Just shelve your correcting treat- put the lightweight traction ments, which can exacerbate slip-ons over your shoes, and dry, irritated skin, and just go you'llbe sure-footedonce more. for a product that moisturizes. Walk, $20, yaktrax.com.

1

Valentines for your sweetheart!

YIA

541-678-5968

wo Studios

vrvv

Magnets Buttons Stickers Zlpper Pulls Mugs

sl4ts + he pceoont

One Store

QO NLga Mom necklaces made while you wait

solvss , opsrrsR ~

tINlt

s

Just a Little Cfmrm Up-cycled Copper"Cool Stuff" 541-647-4497

224 Oregon Ave - Downtown - Across from Pine Tavern

LDlH OF

Complimentary Lash Tint With Any Service Purchased Over $40

12/E/28$Sip

New clients only, cannot be combined with other offers. I Good through Feb.28, 2015 I

S~ ;r

• 100% Organic Products • Ha ir Extensions

• Haircuts for Men, Women &. Children • Wedding Styles • Eyelash Extensions

541.480.1408

8

www.eosorganics.com I • • • s~

I

ss

t

IrI I

2 7T H

A NN U A L

VAL E N

TI N E

S SALE w

a

,.I":I

J EWELRYj PA I N T I N G S AN D

1 0-40 %

res'ervations at r

camplimentary f:

l

valet parking provided

'

i

Il.

U N SET GE M S

O F F ! !!

1hursckry, Frickry & Saturday ONLP. Hurry in, it's the only SALE of the year!

'I,:.' OpEN I j:30am-5:30pm Thursday, Friday I I;ooam-4:Oopm Saturday; '

I

Qa

OXFORDHOTELBEND.COM 1 0 NW M I N N E SOTA AV E v

I 't l.

- B END. OR r •$ l

4I

25 NW Minnesota Ave.¹5 Downtown Bend • 541-388-0155 www.karenbandy.com


E6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

H OM E 8 E G A R D E N

Susan Moini makes her special chocolate drink at home. "My hot chocolate drink is made

Participate Continued from E1 These gardens can be ones of fragrance, encouraging visitors to stoop down to catch some exotic aroma. Around a corner hidden by evergreen shrubs might be a water garden, a bench, statuary, herb planter or something whimsicaL All are features inviting participants to sit,

from pure melted dark chocolate and cream,

not from some powder." She stirs chocolate

pieces over low heat and adds milk and cream, then pours it into

touch or taste.

The conceal-and-reveal method of creating a gar-

espresso cups with whipped

den of p a rticipation not

cream.

only makes the garden interesting, but it also trans-

Meg Roussos The Bulletin

forms the home as almost

Chocolate Continued from E1 There were other reasons to

name the shop Pegasus, tooit happened to be Kaz's nickname when he was an elite

youthsoccerplayerin Greece. "Also, do you know those little stars in the night sky on the

northeast side in October (are) also known as the Pegasus?" says Kaz in his Greek accent,

explaining why their logo also includes stars and the moon. With Valentine's Day just

around the corner, hundreds of Central Oregonians will be visiting the Moinis' shop to buy heart-shaped boxes of luscious handmade chocolates. Though the Moinis are gearing up for the Valentine's rush, Susan invited us into her pristine Bend home kitchen to

talk all things chocolate and make us a special cup of "hot chocolate drink." "Please don't call it hot cocoa," warns Susan. "I will tell

you the difference, and it's a big difference. My hot chocolate drink is made from pure melt-

ed dark chocolate and cream, not from some powder." Susan stirs the chocolate pieces over low heat to melt

and adds some milk and cream. When she feels it's the

right consistency, shepours the thick, rick dark confection into little espresso cups and tops it

with pure whipped cream. It tastes sinfully delicious, but Susan balks at that descrip-

tion, shaking her head and rising to the defense of chocolate. "No, that is wrong — choco-

late is good for you, very good, not sinful," she said in a serious tone. "Dark chocolate, when

it's 98 percent pure cacao, has many antioxidants, hundreds of enzymes, which help with digestion, and new studies are finding it might be a good prevention for cancer. Plus it's

very good for your skin." Susan offered a sample of a roasted cacao bean. It's surprisingly delicious in its natural state. Next she offers a piece

of 96percent pure cacao chocolate. It's wonderfully rich. Susan points to the assort-

ment of chocolates on her kitchen counter and lists a few, offering tastes. It's a tough job, but someone has to do it.

nothing else can do. The play area may indeed be

Q8A with... SusanandKazMoini What are the three in• gredients you'll always find in your homekitchen cupboard or refrigerator? • Susan:Of course, I • always have chocolate here. You will also find plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables, and always raw coconut.

Q•

A

Q•

Q•

What is your favorite If you could invite three • home kitchen appliance? • guests to dinner, who • Susan:My stove. I don't would they be? • use the microwave at all. • Susan:My mother, my • children and Kaz. Favorite hand tool or • Kaz:I think I would • cooking utensil in your • invite our employees at home kitchen? Pegasus! • Susan:The whisk. What do you like to do • outside of the kitchen? How is your homekitch• Susan:I love to garden, • en different than your • hike and go climbing commercial kitchen? on Sunday — it's our only day off. Well, sometimes weopen • Susan:Wehave much, • much more space at on Sunday, when weknow it the shop kitchen, with marble will be busy, like right before Valentine's. counters, and wehavethese gas burners that are huge. • Kaz:I love Bend.We • love to walk about Pilot Butte or hike at Smith Rock, Any cool gadgets at • work that you don't and we love to bearound the have at home? lakes here. • Susan:I love that we • have12 to13 large If you weren't in the food copper cauldrons. I don't know • industry, what profession would you havechosen? why, but when youcook in copper it tastes much better. • Susan:I think I would've • been a lawyer, because What restaurants do I want to makethings right; I • you enjoy? believe in social justice. • Kaz:We like Anthony's, • Kaz:I was an engineer, • and I still am, because I • 900 Wall and Madaline's in Redmond. use my engineering every day making chocolate. Oo you have a favorite • cooking memory? Or Favorite food quote or favorite memorable mealyou • philosophy you often repeat to yourself? prepared? • Susan:I rememberthat • Kaz:Beas honestas • my mother made every• you can be, because thing from scratch, and even I there's no price for that. And, remember her using amortar you never knowanything; the and pestle andgrinding cacao more you know, the moreyou know how little you actually beans. A memorable meal: I sauteedasalmoninlemonand know. Thedayyou don't learn, butter sauce that wasdelicious. you will be dead onthat day.

Q•

A

Q•

large copper cauldrons, which smooths the texture. Kaz says

it's demanding work.

"It's viscosity control with

liquid chocolate," says Kaz. "Every day it's a different challenge, because the weather changes, so you're dealing with different humidity levels and the variation in temperatures in Bend. At the coast, the

weather has pretty consistent temperatures throughout the year, but here you can be 29 degrees one day and 55 degrees the next." Kaz, who earned engineering degrees at Copenhagen University an d

U t a h S t ate

Q•

A

A

A

Q•

Q•

A

A

Q•

A

A

Q•

Q• Q•

this until I moved here."

grind the cacao nibs into a The Moinis jumped at the fine paste. You add sugar and chance to buy that original grind them again. chocolate shop in Newport in The mixture is poured into

Q•

Favorite homemeals • you like to prepare? • Susan:I do love to cook. What's your ideal dream • I like to make couscous with chicken, or brown rice • home kitchen? with carrots and almonds. I'm • Susan:It has to be big Danish, so I use a lot of dill, • and have lots of light with large windows. I'd like a too, and we like lamb. I also like to make a raw fennel salad. new fancy stove, too.

"What do you like?" she asks. "I have rocky road in dark chocolate and milk chocolate, and we make our own University, met Susan in Denm arshmallow cream in t h e mark, where they were workshop for this. Here's an al- ing for the same engineering mond toffee, and we have a firm. Both Ka z an d Susan hazelnut cluster, amaretto ... speak at least three languages. "Sometimes Susan speaks oh, here's a white chocolate, do you like white? all three in one sentence," Kaz "I also make chocolate mac- jokes. adamia nuts, and people from Being Europeans,they had Hawaii take it back to Hawaii a love for chocolate, but when because our chocolate is better they moved to America they than what they sell there on couldn't find chocolate that their macadamia nuts." compared to what they had in But before these delicious Europe. "In Europe, yes, we have chocolates are placed in a beautiful box, there's a lot of a love affair with food — we work that goes into each piece, make it from scratch. We take which is lovinglyhand-dipped. time to buy it each day fresh For this couple, who have from (the) farmers market; we been married 46 years, the taste and savor our food and last 40 years of making choc- take time to eat meals," Susan olate has meant importing the explains. "None of this frozen TV dinbestcacao beans from Africa, Columbia and Honduras. You ner meals — I had never seen roast them, husk them and

Best meal you've ever • eaten in your life? • Kaz:My mother was a • good cook, but Susan is better. Susanmakes agreat stuffed bell pepper, stuffed tomato and stuffed eggplant. But I do rememberthe Greek dishes my mother made, like anything with feta, or fried eggplant andlambshank,moussaka and stuffed grape leaves.

Q•

c orner. The

path that takes you to a woodland seating area or a hidden gazebo has not only revealed a hidden gem but also becomes participatory by encouraging the visitor to sit and relax, taking in

.ei"' a

all that nature has to offer.

Take a look i n y our neighborhood as you drive to work or school, or peer into a real estate buyer's

guides to see the homes for sale. It becomes woefully

apparent that landscaping was put on the proverbi-

Shady paths can take you on a participatory adventure through

al back burner at m any

lush garden foliage.

Photos by TNS

homes. When youlook at nice houses that have the mandatory five shrubs, two

trees and little else, you get the feeling the owner never really considered it a home,

but only a s topping-off place on the road of life. Spring planting time is just around the corner, and trucks full of trees, shrubs, flowers and hard features

such as furniture and fountains will be arriving soon. Now, however, is the time

to look at your landscape and ask yourself if it is a garden of p articipation. Perhaps you are starting with what might be con-

sidered a blank slate. If you still have your native trees, consider yourself lucky. If you look at your landscape and seem a little overwhelmed, con s ider starting with t r a ils. L et

things such as changes in elevation, trees, shifting

patches of light and water guide and inspire you. Notice if animals have al-

ready given you some creative suggestions, or your children who have already adopted the space. Take it in bite-sized increments, and the gardening experience will be much more rewarding as it develops into one of participation as the

months and years go by.

Crystal-clear water features surrounded by lush ferns can entice visitors to sit and relax, provided there are chairs nearby.

YOUR PLACE

New fireplace,stovesafety standard By Alan J. Heavens

deningtools. Control, just because I thought • Rubber totes are perfect it was interesting: A cockTo protect children and for storing anything,whether roach can live a week without others from serious burns, it's Halloween and Christmas its head. It dies only because, newly manufactured glass- decorations you use once a without a mouth, it c annot front gas fire places and year or items you can't fit in- drink water and dies of thirst. stoves now must include in- side your closets, basement or Cockroaches also can go stalled protective barriers attic. Extremely convenient without food for a n e n t ire if their glass-surface tem- when organizing your garage. month. No wonder they'll be peratures exceed 172 de• Lighting is often over- here when we're gone. — Email questions grees, the Hearth Patio & looked, but one reason garagBarbecue Association says. es become disorganized is to aheavens@phillynews.com This standard took effect there is not enough of it. With Jan. I, requiring the bar- the right lighting, you will easriers be in place when the ily be able to find what you are products are installed. looking for. The requirement was I . I I I approved by the American Thosedangroaches... National Standards InstiNow you know. I Pass this PROMPT DELIVERY tute in 2012 and is focused along, courtesy of Hydrex Pest 54$ 389 9663 The philadelphia rnquirer

Kaz comes intothe shop around ll a .m. to begin the

intensive chocolate-making process. A batch of Bordeaux choc-

olates, forexample,takes four hours to make at Pegasus. All of their chocolate is made in

small batches using artisanal methods. "We have the highest-quality chocolate; we make our own blend with three different chocolates," Kaz says. "We do

not add any preservatives. We only use the finest, most ex-

pensive natural ingredients." Because the Moinis are committed to bringing the most refined Old World chocolate to Central Oregon, many of their chocolates can run up

to $35 per pound, and though the price of cacao beans has gone up, Kaz says he won't raise his price or lower his quality. He also says it doesn't take a lot of chocolate to cure a

craving, when the chocolate is "I use engineering every gourmet. "High-quality chocolate, the day," says Kaz, the scientist. "My machines are hundreds taste will stay with you for as of thousands of dollars, and I long as 17 minutes, but cheap have to maintain them, and on chocolate, which can leave an some I make improvements, to oily feel in your mouth, goes away after a few seconds," give us better chocolate." Every morning, S usan Kaz explains. comes to the shop by 6 a.m. Susan is Pegasus' best and starts the process of melt- taste-tester, and Kaz relies on ing the chocolate. Because her taste buds to know if he's their cacao is so pure, it takes added the right amount of an six to seven hours to bring it to ingredient, such as fresh mint. "Yes, it's a good, fun busithe right viscosity to pour or dip. Susan is also the accoun- ness," Susan says with a broad tant and the chocolate wrap- smile."I never get tired of chocper, and she works with sup- olate, and when people leave pliers to get local ingredients ourshop,theyarehappy,too." such as various nuts. — Reporter: halpenl@aoi.com 1976.

around the

BarhTurfSoil.com

on reducing the potential

hazard posed by direct contact with hot glass surfaces to at-risk people, es-

pecially children. Products manufactured before Jan. I still can be

sold if they do not meet the new standard, as retailers clear out the older invento-

ry, the association said. The trade group recommends consumers ask retailers whether the units they are thinking about buying meet the new standard and, if they do not, to ask which types of barrier options may be available.

Getting organized

J

t

ORECK STEAM-IT It goes where no other steam mopcan! • Clean virtually atty surfacewith safe,fast, dry steam heat.'

• Can go almost anywhere. It even works upside down without spilling! • Itspowerfulcleaning force melts dirt away! INCLUOEO WITH PURCHASE: Four washable bonnets, universal cleaning clips and six attachments.

Global Garage Flooring and Design offers a few suggestions for p u tting

WAS 0179

It works upside down without sptlltng'

your car's house in order:

• Consider freestanding shelving units.They're efficient when you're organizing your garage — good for storing hardware and gar-

Hur ! 2weeksonl!

541 -330-0420 ORECK VACUUMS IsLEFT OF WHOLE

C LEAN HOME C E N TE R

F e sss AIID NEAR cssTCO Ia BENO


TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E7

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

Meet the memoirist behind'Fresh Offthe TV SPOTLIGHT

black and white. Especially in

see on television and the Eddie Huang that exists in the

"'Fresh Off the Boat'"

the'80s. Especiallyinthe'90s. It was not a brown, yellow,

world. The real Eddie Huang,

7 tonight, ABC

black, white, purple situation.

for instance, knows the leg-

It was black and white." "Fresh off the Boat" is en-

endary MC Ol' Dirty Bastard predates the concept of "mak-

By Soraya Nadia McDonald The Washington Post

tering a television landscape ing it rain," whereas the show where the presence of shows blithely collapses both into the such as "Black-ish" and "Em- same place in time and space pire" aren't the only ones go- under the banner of hip-hop. ing gangbusters. "Cristela" But it's visibility — and visibiland "Jane the Virgin" are, ity matters when the last show too. Diversity is the buzzword featuring an Asian family on

It's been a long journey since Eddie Huang was the kid in elementary school being ridiculed andostracized by class-

mates who thought his food was laced with shark poop. Huang is the author of the memoir "Fresh Off the Boat."

du jour in the entertainment

network television, "All-Amer-

industry, even if it's not clear

ican Girl," starring Margaret

The ABC comedy based on it

how to achieve it. For Huang, that showed in

Cho, aired in 1994 and lasted

the adaptation of his memoir for network television. Huang

Diaz, who is Dominican: "There's this idea that mon-

had its premiere last week — a

nationally televised triumph that grew out of the torment

Bob D'Amico/ABC

Huang faced as the son of Tai- The cast of ABC's "Fresh Off the Boat," a show inspired by a memwanese-Chinese immigrants oir by Eddie Huang. "I don't think we fully understand the culture growing up in America. of immigrants," Huang says. "I think we consume the culture of When he was in elementary immigrants. We try to bepolitically correct and legislate to protect school, Huang brought sea- the culture of immigrants, but do we truly understand it?" weed to school for show-and-

consults, but is not a writer on

tell, and it went terribly wrong.

size-fits-all antithesis to 'Fresh

The kids in his class reasoned sive when Huang was a child. 'Joy Luck Club.' There's things that since seaweed came from (They have a great relation- like that, but I couldn't relate the sea, it must have been cov- ship now). Huang, now the to any of that. I was just this ered in shark poop, and there- proprietor behind the wildly character.... Why I wrote the fore Huang was an icky, gross successful New York restau- book was you know, you play shark-poop eating weirdo. rant BaoHaus, tried his hand 'Streetfighter,' and I unlocked There was a lesson Huang at stand-up comedy, at lawyer- a character writing that book. gleaned: It wasn't just about ing and television show host- Like, now you have to play the twisted, creative cruelty of ing, but ultimately he found this character in the game. I children. his niche as a uniquely Amer- felt like before I did it, nobody "I can't win with you guys," ican restaurateur steeped and knew that character existed." Huang remembered thinking, cured in hip-hop. So much of the air in converhe said in an interview with NPR. "I just don't know how to be white."

And then he wrote a searing,

sations aboutrace is sucked

sters don't have reflections the show. In a article for New in a mirror. And what I've alYork magazine, he recently ways thought isn't that monaired his concerns. sters don't have reflections in "I didn't understand how

a mirror. It's that if you want

network television, the one-

to make a human being into a monster, deny them, at the

Off the Boat,' was going to house the voice of a futuristic

of themselves. And growing up, I felt like a monster in some ways. I didn't see myself

chinkstronaut. I began to re-

gret ever selling the book, because 'Fresh Off the Boat' was a very specific narrative about SPECIFIC moments in my life,

is something wrong with me? That the whole society seems

new mirror. He may think the

Huang's story is so important.

written by a Persian-American who cut her teeth on race

he's counting on the show's

Farlane. But who is that show written for?"

tives accountable for the im-

er sending the child an inexpensive small gift or card so she'll have something to open. Dear Abby:I'm a high school student who has the amazing opportu-

who may not think exactly the way you do.

was anything she needed to let me know, but that I would rather con-

nity to travel to Spain for a school

was unsure what to do with his late

ABBY

account for her daughter and contribute to it monthly in lieu of birth-

Dear Abby:In response to the letter from "David in Kentucky" (Nov.

2), the 50-year-old single man who

year as a foreign exchange student. mother's engagement ring, I disI know I a m v e r y agree with your answer. Yes, gems l ucky to

ages they're presenting and ultimately make them more

think, for me, my experience There's a tension between in America growing up, it was the Eddie Huang avatar you'll

Dear Abby: My niece had a baby a year after graduating from high school and is now raising her daughter as a single mom. After the first year, I told her if there

DPPR

reflection's a bit smudged, but

"I rarely see conversaaudience to provide the Wintions about race where it's an relations writing for Seth Mac- dex — and hold TV execuAsian person that's speaking," Huang told Coates. "I

h ave t h i s are meant tobe enjoyed, and the

opportunity to travel, but I am scared about the people there.

ring is doing no one any good in a drawer, but he should NOT sell it. I think D avid should have a

I am a Mormon, so man's ring made for himself with it, I will have to uphold so hecan have a memento of what my standards alone in a non-Mor-

his dad gave his mom to treasure

mon environment. I have never many years ago. I wear my mom's day and Christmas gifts for them. been away from home for this long, and grandmother's rings every day However, when those gift-giving and that's hard enough as it is. I on my right hand, and remember occasions come, I worry they may guess I just need some advice on them often with joy. feel slighted when presents arrive how to be strong when I'm there. — Devoted Fan in Florida from me for others. My niece and I — Alone in Spain Dear Devoted Fan:Your suggesnever mentioned it to other family Dear Abby:I agree you are be- tion was the No. 1 comment I remembers. ing given an amazing opportunity ceivedfrom readers.Some said if Would it be appropriate for me to to grow and learn. If you haven't David was eventually to meet the send some kind of reminder occa- spoken about this with your advis- woman he wanted to marry, the sionally so they know the account er, please do so. I assume you will stone could be removed again and is there and growing? be living with a host family. When reset into a lady's ring. — Contributing to Her Future you get there, consider discussing Another good idea several readDear Contributing:Yes, it's ap- your concerns with the parents. I ers offered is to donate the ring in propriate. You should also send am sure you will be encouraged to his mother's memory to a charity your niece a summary at the end of stick to your standards and beliefs, auction of a cause she supported. each year so she can see the prog- and be respected for doing so if you — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com ress. In addition, you might consid- remember to alsorespect others or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

realistic.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. f

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11a.m., 12:15, 2:15, 3:45, 6:15, 7:20,9, 9:40 • AMOST VIOLENT YEAR (R)6:10,9:50 • BLACK OR WHITE(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6, 9:25 • BLACKSEA(R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:40, 10:20 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:20 a.m.,3:10, 6:50,10:10 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 6:25, 9:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 12:50, 3:50 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 3:30, 7:30 • JUPITERASCENDING3-O (PG-13) 12:30, 9:45 • JUPITERASCENDINGIMAX3-O (PG-13) 3, 10 • THE LOFT(R) 10:35 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:30 • PROJECTALMANAC (PG-13)11:40a.m.,2:25,5,7:45, 10:25 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 3:15, 6:30 • SEVENTHSON3-O (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 10:05 • SEVENTHSON IMAX 3-O (PG-13)noon,7 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m.,12:05, 2:45, 6:45, 9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-O (PG) 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:35 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG) 1, 3:40 • THE WEDDINGRINGER(R) 7:50, 10:30 • WILD(R)11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

DAY, FEB.10,2015:Thisyearyour intuition works well with professional dealings. Your focus often will be on joint finances, partnership issues and romance. Be realistic about any risk-taking ventures. You will be more concerned with your public image and your career than you have been in recent years. If

you are single,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

around in circles. Stop and take a deep breath. Your intuition will let you know what is happening. Listen to news carefully, but know that some facts could be missing. Tonight: Change gears.

** * * * A n opportunity is likely to present itself in the midst of a confusing situation. You'll want to sort out what is happening and understand the facts before saying "yes." You might not have a clue about what this will involve. Tonight: Allow your imagination to speak.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Osc. 21)

** * * Do you know what needs to happen in order for you to move past an ** * * A llow your creativity to flourish. obstacle? You must figure this out before Others are likely to ask questions and more complications arise. A friend will enmakesuggestions.Newscomesforward courage you, but he or she might not have that will allow you to see adifferent path. the solution. A family member also adds an The question boils down to whether you element of chaos. Tonight: Do your thing. are ready to take a risk. Tonight: Act as if GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) there were no tomorrow. ** * * You'll be more upbeat than those more visible as a couple, as youseemto enjoy being out together. Nevertheless, LEO (July23-Aug.22) around you. Your positive energy might you also will like to take vacations without ** * * You could be withdrawn and be needed in various situations. Your children or any responsibilities interfering. somewhat quiet, which is unlike you. You plans could become quite erratic as you SCORPIO can be a stern taskmaster. might not want to share what is going on. absorb a lot of others' confusion. Confirm Be prepared for a barrage of questions from meetings andverify any newsyou hear. ARIES (March21-April19) those who care aboutyou. Realize thata Tonight: Read between the lines. *** * Confusion seemsto surrounda financial matter needs to bedealt with carepartnership. You will have a better sense AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) fully. Tonight: With a favorite person. of what is going on than the other party. *** Someone yourespect demands Your sixth sense could kick in and point VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) your attention and time. You naturally will you to the best way to resolve the situa** * * * You might be slightly disoriented do what is asked, but it could add some tion. Convincing others will take talent. in the morning, but by the afternoon, you tension to your day. Use caution with Tonight: Let go and relax. will have a clear view of what is going on. A funds, asyoueasily could makean error. loved one will respond well to a one-on-one Follow through on priorities, but don't TAURUS (April 20-May20) give in to an impulse. Tonight: Your treat. ** * * * You'll move through a problem conversation; both will enjoy being on the same page.Tonight: Visit over dinner. quickly, especially if you decide to let PISCES (Feb.19-March20) someone else take the lead. This person ** * * Work on detachment, and you'll LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) seems to have afirm grasp of the issue. *** Be aware ofyour finances. Douget a better perspective of what is hapConfusion might be difficult to eliminate, as ble-checkyour budget, and understand pening in your immediate environment. you could be wearing rose-colored glasswhat is required in various situations. The Observe what might not be obvious. Seek es. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. pressure you feel could be eliminated more outan answeras to why others seem to be acting in a confusing manner. Tonight: GEMINI (May 21-June 20) quickly than you might have expected. You'll be able to manifest a long-term goal Be entertained! ** * You have a lot of ground to cover, and you might feel as if you are running soon. Tonight: Get into a favorite pastime. © King Features Syndicate Stars showthe kind romance could sf day you'll have en ter your life at ** * * * D ynamic any point. You will ** * * Positive kn o w when you ** * Average hav e met Mr. or ** So-so Ms. Right. If you * Difficult are attached, the two of you become

CANCER (June21-July 22)

it difficult to fit in, however, especially after she befriends an unpopular trophy wife, while Eddie (Hudson Yang) tries to win the respect of the other neighborhood kids in the newepisode "The Shunning." Another episode follows immediately. 8 p.m.on10, "MastsrChef"— A new episode called "Junior Edition: Restaurant Takeover" finds the six remaining lunior home cooks confronted by one of the toughest challenges of the entire season. Divided into two teams of three, the contestants take over a real Los Angeles restaurant and prepare a full meal for equally real patrons, some of whom arevery demanding. The outcome will determine who advances to the Top 4 competition 8 p.m. on 7, "GenealogyRoadshow" —In the new episode "St. Louis — Union Station," Missouri residents and genealogists gather at the city's historic venue to exchange family stories, including a musician who is hop-

ing to find apersonal connection

to a famous jazz composer from St. Louis. Two sisters learn more about their links to two survivors of the notorious Donner Party,

and an Italian-Americanwoman finds out if she is related to Italian royalty. 8:30 p.m. on 5, 8, "Parks and

called "Pie-Mary," Ben and Leslie (Adam Scott, Amy Poehler) draw some flack for participating in a Pawnee tradition, and Ron and April (Nick Offerman, Aubrey

Plaza) go on a scavenger hunt.

Elsewhere, Donna andGarry (Retta, Jim O'Heir) — aka"Jerry," "Larry" and now "Terry" — take some time out for a stroll

down memorylane. 9 p.m. sn CW,"Supernatural" — After a ghost starts killing people by using electronic devices,

DeanandSam(JensenAckles,

Jared Padalecki) discover fairly readily who the vengeful entity is and why he is targeting a group of college students for payback. They just don't know exactly how the spirit is doing it, making it impossible for them to figure outawaytostop him, inthenew episode "Halt 8 Catch Fire." O Zap2it

%ILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustablg -Beds-

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE GAMBLER (R) 9:30 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 5:30 • Younger than 2t mayattend aiiscreeningsif accompanied by a legal guardian. f

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUES-

Jessica (ConstanceWu)finds

Recreation" — In anewepisode

MOVIE TIMESTDDAY

riod, Louis (RandalPark) l urges the rest of his family to make new friends — and promote the restaurant — during a cul-de-sac block party celebrating NASCAR.

reflected at all. I was like, 'Yo,

such as kneeling in a driveway to think that people like me holding buckets of rice over- don't exist?' And part of what head or seeing pink nipples for inspired me, was this deep dethe first time. The network's sire that before I died, I would approach was to tell a univer- make a couple of mirrors. " sal, ambiguous, cornstarch Like Diaz, Huang's made a

Point out behind-the-scenesgifts

M y n i ece w a s thrilled, so I set up a college savings

cultural level, any reflection

incredibly well-received mem- into a binary vacuum of black story about Asian-Americans oir. It was new, it was biting, and white, which is one reason resembling moo goo gai pan

For years, Huang ran away and it was a story about being from his family's legacy as a first-generation American purveyors of pork buns. Most- that hadn't been told before. "I just felt that no one was ly, he revealed in a discussion with The Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi telling our story this way," Coates, he was running from Huang said. "There was 'The his father, who had been abu- Woman Warrior.' There's the

tribute to a college fund for her daughter than send her toys for

one season. Said writer Junot

8 p.m. on 2, 9, "FreshOffthe Boat" —As this new sitcom moves into its regulartime pe-

G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED ANIMATION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 4:30 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTIONSHORTS (no MPAA rating) 2 I

I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 4, 7:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 4:15, 6:45 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:20, 6:55 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:15, 6 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 6:15 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-l3) 6:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 3:30, 5:45 • THETHEORY OFEVERYTHING (PG-13)3:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:45, 6:40 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:05, 6:50 • PROJECTALMANAC(PG-13) 5:05, 7:30 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 7 • SEVENTHSON3-O (PG-13) 4:45 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50, 7:10 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Upstairs — R) 6:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

RlV&TREss

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT

803 sw Industrial way, Bend, 0R

Visit Central Oregon's

HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!

See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures

s®aCMSSIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com ••

g )


ES TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015

Lv~*, r .

-

~

"

~

,

-.:;yv

~I'

y ~ , y yrr zgf<

gQ D ' g /<

1

"" ++o~>+- C)P

p

F RID AY , F E B R U A R Y 1 5 T H S AT U R D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 1 4 T H

Q

og

O EC O RATIVECABT 4r IRO NHO O KS

DECA DENTVERMONTTRUFFLESFORALL! e®.

New $t;. p ~t., cox' ~+s3.ve go Qeay g

e

8 .99 ~g r

FLO RAL PITC HERIVASE S~4.99

)I)0

Gome check out the garden room — It's a1vrays a customerfavorite!

'

is C

/

ygg'

" Oneper household, whDe dsGg supp19.es 1sst.

L OCA L L Y

O V V N E D 8 'z OP E R A T E D

YOUR HOMETOWN DECOR STORE i

®

I

660 SE 9thStreet Bend> OR 4

4 •

Corner of 9th 8c Wilson — The building vrith all the stars! 541-617-1186 •mIIIrvr.realdeals.net/bend t

C


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.