Serving Central Oregon since190375
TUESDAY March11,2014
rom a ineoco e e oume Droughtworries SPORTS • C1
BUSINESS • C6
oQIL5
05
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
ROADWORK
Utiity ines
Flying snakes —Though they sound like aB-movie menace, flying snakesare garnering notice for how they do what they do.A3
NCAA hoops — Oregonand Oregon State will face off in the first round of the conference tournament.C1
By Joseph Ditzler
employment rate is improving faster than any other metropolitan area in Oregon," Regional
The Bulletin
rates, but the gaps are narrow-
ment rate dropped in January
ing. Plus, rates are fallingin the to 8.6 percent, according to the Unemployment dipped again High Desert primarilybecause Employment Department. In in Central Oregon in January Economist Damon Runberg more people are finding work, January2013, the rate was 10.4 and marked another milestone wrote in a report released not due to unemployed workers percent. on the way to a full recovery, Monday. dropping out of the labor force Jefferson County's rate stood the Oregon Employment DeJobless rates in all three Cen- or retiring. at 9.7percent in January, down partment reported Monday. tral Oregon counties are higher In Deschutes County, the from 12 percent a year ago. "Deschutes County's unthan the state and national seasonally adjusted unemploySee Jobs/A4
SUI'pl'ISe The Bulletin
Decliningunemployment inCentral Oregon
Early on the morning of March 4, the Oregon
The seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate declined slightly in all three Central Oregon counties in January, as did state and national rates.
Department of Transporta-
UNITED STATES
OREGON
tion sent out a short news
CROOK COUNTY
D E S CHUTES COUNTY JEFFERSON COUNTY release. There was a natural gas leak at the agency's Murphy Road project in
13.6%
Side dishes —Tasty yet simple dishes ready to take center stage onyour table. D1
11.2% 1Q 9%
8.3% ' '
6 . 7'/. 6.6/.
7.1% 7.Q%
1Q 4%
12% 9.9/e 9 7%
8.9% 8 6%
south Bend, and streets
in the area were closed to traffic. Officials evacuated
Kitchen improvement
— With a newmethod and material, redoing your kitchen's backsplash is easier and cheaper.D1
can be a By Hillary Borrud
Holocaust trains — Jewish survivors are calling for reparations from aFrench railway company that carried people todeathcamps.A6
at times
people from a handful of nearby businesses and kept local streets closed JAN DEC 2013 2013
J AN 20 1 4
JAN DEC 2013 2013
J AN 20 1 4
JAN DEC 2013 2013
JAN 20 1 4
JAN DEC 2013 2013
J AN 20 1 4
Source: Oregon Employment Department
JAN DEC 2013 2013
JAN 20 1 4
Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin
for most of the day. It turned out that an excavation subcontractor on the
In world news — Rus-
project had hit a natural gas line.
sia rejects the U.S. plan for Ukraine, draws upone of its own.A2
woman for Cascade
And a Web exclusive —A growing alarmamongtribes: On some reservations, youth suicides are10 timestheaverage. bendbulletin.cem/extras
Laura Lueder, a spokes-
Being a brewmaster: It's a joboften defined morebylogistics and damagecontrol thanflavors andcrafting. Andthe roadto thetitle is a long one.
Natural Gas Corp., said a utility location contractor
who went out to look for pipelines in the area did not search for this specific pipe, because it was not on the gas company's map. The incident revealed how
little utility companies and government agencies know about some of the older pipelines and other
EDITOR'5CHOICE
buried utilities in the area.
Everyone involved says they followed protocol,
Newtown shooter's dad speaks
and little can be done to
prevent these incidents. "We do not have any service records on the line,
so it was not on our map," Lueder said. "If we don't have aline on our map, the
locator is less likely to look for the line."
By Marc Santora
SeeUtilities /A5
New Yorh Times News Service
Peter Lanza had not
seen his son Adam for two years before the day
Mystery of missing jetdeepens
Adam walked intoSandy
Hook ElementarySchool in Newtown, Conn., and
killed 20 schoolchildren and six adults. Since that morning, Lanza cannot go an hour
without thinking about his child. And now, he says, he wishes his son had never
been born.
Cascade Lakes Brewing Co. head brewer JohnVanDuzer, middle, and employee Peter Bishop, back right, load empty bottles at
By Simon Denyer,William Wan and Ashley Halsey III
the compsny's Redmond facility Thursday. Ven Duzer hss been professionally brewing for 18 years.
The Washington Post
Roh Kerr/The Bulletin
eYou can't get any more evil," he said in his first
public comments since the shooting. "How much do I beat up on myself about the fact that he's my son?
BEIJING — Frustration
mounted Monday over what has become one of the most perplexing aviation disasters in history, as the search for a vanished Malaysia Airlines passenger jet dramatically expanded in
Alot."
In a series of emotionally wrenching interviews with the writer Andrew Solomon, Lanza detailed his
its third day.
son's medical history and increasing isolation, his exwife's struggle to deal with their troubled child, and
Hopes for a breakthrough were dashed when Malaysian authorities said oil
his own role as the father
found onthe ocean surface hadbeen tested and found
of the person who commit-
not to have come from the
ted one of the worst mass shootings in the nation's
By Megan Kehoe
Boise. After that, he spent
brewmaster is often a long
history.
The Bulletin
time working out the details of contracts with hops com-
one, in most cases requiring
See Lanza /A4
On Thursday, Jimmy Seifrit arrived at work to find that the boiler wouldn't
start up.
Correction In a story headlined "Bend finishes latest AOAplan," which appeared Monday, March10, on PageA1,the number of curb ramps still out of compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act was incorrect. There were4,891 noncompliant curb ramps in the city of Bend as ofDecember 2013.
The Bulletin regrets the error.
He spent the early part of
the morning on the phone getting repair people out to the brewery to fix the problem. He then oversaw the
removal of decommissioned tanks that were bound for
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 49, Low 27 Page 86
panies. Later, he met with
members of a construction outfit to discuss the brewery's expansion. All of this before lunchtime. It was just another morn-
ing for the 10 Barrel Brewing Co. brewmaster. The road to becoming a
a combination of experience and education. But what ac-
and what it represents have evolved over the years. Deschutes Brewery founder
tually makes a brewmaster
Gary Fish says there are numerous interpretations of
a brewmaster has become a
the term, many of them not
topic of discussion at many breweries of late, as Ameri-
up to par with what brewmaster actually signifies
can craft brewing continues to move forward into un-
in countries like Germany
precedented stratospheres of growth. The meaning of the title
and England, where the tradition is thoroughly established.
SeeBrewmasters/A4
INDEX D6 Ob ituaries B5 At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1-6 Dear Abby B usiness C5-6 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Sports C1- 4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B t - 6 TV/Movies D6
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Voi. 112, No. 70,
30 pages, 5 sections
jetliner. Various pieces of flotsam picked up in the vicinity of the plane's last
knownlocationwere also found tobe unconnected. "This unprecedented
missing aircraft mystery — as you can put it — it is mystifying," Azharuddin AbdulRahman, director general of Malaysia's Department of Civil Aviation,
said at a news conference in Kuala Lumpur. SeeMystery/A5
Q l/i/e userecycled newsprint
': IIIII I o
8 8 267 02329
A2
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NATION Ee ORLD
n raine, ussia se a ernaive 0 e es By Maria Danilova and Jim Heintz The Associated Press
KIEV, Ukraine — Russia
said Monday it is drafting counterproposals to a U.S. plan for a negotiated solution to the Ukraine crisis, denounc-
ing the new Western-backed government as a n u n acceptable "fait accompli" and
Russian F o reign
Mi n i ster visit to Moscow to discuss the
Sergey Lavrov said propos- situation, and Russia had deals made by U.S. Secretary cided to prepare new proposof State John Kerry are "not als of its own, though he did suitable" because they take not say what they were. "the situation created by the "We suggested that he come coup as a starting point," refer- today ... and we were prepared ring to the ouster of Ukraine's to receive him. He gave his pro-Kremlin president, Viktor preliminary consent. He then Yanukovych. called me on Saturday and Referring to a document he said he would like to postpone received from Kerry explain- it for a w h ile," the minister ing the U.S. view of the situa- said.
claiming that Russian-leaning parts of the country have been plunged into lawlessness. tion in Ukraine, Lavrov said: The Kremlin moves came as "To be frank, it raises many Russian forces strengthened questions on our side." "Everything was stated in their control over Crimea, less thanaweekbeforethe strategic terms of allegedly having a region is to hold a contentious conflict between Russia and referendum on whether to split Ukraine, and in terms of acoff and become part of Russia. cepting the fait accompli," he In a televised briefing with sald. P resident V l a dimi r P u t i n , Lavrov said Kerry delayed a
But in Washington, State Department officials said that it was Russia's refusal to disthat was hurting prospects for
a negotiated solution — in particular, the idea of direct talks between Russian officials and those of the new Ukrainian
government.
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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356.
all-nighter Mondayevening as 26Democrats who call themselves the "climate caucus" planned to speaknonstop about climate change from about 6:30 p.m. until 9 a.m. today. Thetalkathon is the latest effort by the group, which is working with a parallel Housecaucus, to elevate the issue of global warming. those killed and injured in the bombings at last year's marathon and to stage a racethis year that will be one of the biggest — and, they said Monday, the safest. More than 3,500 police officers, twice last year's number, will be deployed for the118th running of the Boston Marathon, scheduled for April 21, public safety officials said at a news conference. Thoseplans include plainclothes officers, security contractors, security checkpoints with metal detectors, bomb-sniffing dogs and surveillance cameras.
Talihan threatS —TheTalibanthreatened to attack next month's presidential election inAfghanistan, calling on its followers "to useall force" in targeting poll workersandpolitical activists and to disrupt balloting. "Weonce again call on all of ourcountrymen to keepawayfrom electoral offices, voting booths, rallies andcampaigns sothat, mayGod forbid, their livesarenot put into danger," read astatement releasedMonday by theIslamic Emirate ofAfghanistan, asthe Taliban likes to becalled.
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Senate all-nighter —TheSenatewasheadedinto another
PiStoriuS trial —Oscar Pistorius, the double amputee track star accused of murdering his girlfriend, vomited repeatedly in the courtroom on Monday as a pathologist gave "graphic" evidence about her injuries. Newscoverage of the testimony was restricted by a sweeping ban onlive broadcasting or reporting on Twitter. The athlete's reaction cameafter the judge, Thokozile Masipa, concurred with requests from both the defenseand prosecution — andfrom the pathologist, Gert Saayman —for live audio, Twitter feeds and video broadcasting of testimony to be prohibited because ofwhat was termed the "explicitly graphic nature" of the evidence.
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SOOWdOn Sp88kS — Appearing on ascreen against the backdrop of the U.S.Constitution, National Security Agency leakerEdward Snowden spent an hour onMondayoffering practical advice andcalls to action specific to the largeaudienceatthe South bySouthwest Interactive festival. "South bySouthwest andthe technology community, the people in the room inAustin, they're the folks who can really fix things, whocan enforce our rights through technical standards," Snowdensaid.
Marathon security —Bostonplansto hold aceremony to honor
Dtschuiersv
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MediCare prOpOSal —Under pressure from patients, pharmaceutical companiesand members of Congress from both parties, the Obamaadministration Monday withdrew aproposal that would have allowed insurers to limit Medicare coveragefor certain classes of drugs, including those used to treat depression andschizophrenia. Medicare officials hadsaid the proposal would havesaved money and reduced the overuse of drugs. But it created political problems for the White House, with someDemocrats joining Republicans in denouncing the changes,saying they would harm Medicare beneficiaries.
cuss the American proposals
SHORTAGES IN JAPAN THREEYEARS AFTER TSUNAMI
Si sil.AvL
COIOI3dO pnt SSIOS —Colorado made roughly $2 million in marijuana taxes in January, state revenueofficials reported Monday in the world's first accounting of the recreational pot business. The tax total reported by the state Department of Revenueindicates $14.02 million worth of recreational pot was sold from 59 businesses. The state collected roughly $2.01 million in taxes. Colorado legalized pot in 2012, but the commercial sale of marijuana didn't begin until January. Washington state sales begin in coming months.
= : ='
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Shizuo Kambayashi/The Associated Press
Visitors offer prayers early today in front of the main entrance of OkawaElementary School where 74 of the108 students went missing after the March11, 2011, tsunami in Ishinomaki, northern Japan. Japan marked the third anniversary today of the 2011 earthquakeandtsunami that killed15,884 people and left more than 2,600 unaccounted for in vast areas of its northern coast. Tens of thousands of people onJapan's northeastern coast who wereleft homeless in the March 2011 tsunami are shivering their way through yet another winter in crampedtemporary housing, with perhaps several more to go. Reconstruction plans aretaking shape after three
years of debate andredtape, but shortages of skilled workers and materials are delaying the work. In areas such as Tanohata, a fishing town of 3,800 along a scenic stretch of craggy cliffs and forests, less than a tenth of the newhousing has been built. Overall, the figure is less than 8percent completed, and less than a quarter of projects started. As Japan's over-stretched construction industry begins gearing up to build venuesand revamp aging infrastructure for the 2020Tokyo Olympics, shortages of skilled carpenters and heavyequipment operators as well as cementand other materials, are frustrating residents and local officials. — The Associated Press
Payal triP —Pope Francis is to travel to South Korea in August, the Vatican said Monday, in what will be the first papal visit to the country in 25 years. "His Holiness Francis will make an Apostolic Trip to the Republic of Korea from 14 to 18August 2014, onthe occasion of the Sixth Asian Youth Day, to beheld in the diocese of Daejeon," Vatican spokesmanFather Federico Lombardi said in astatement. — From wire reports
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SWIVEL-STEERING BAGGED UPRIGHT
SenateOl(s bill on military sexualassault By Donna Cassata The Associated Press
likened to a cancer within the ranks.
WASHINGTON — The Sen-
"Unanimous agreement in
ate overwhelmingly approved a bill late Monday making big changes in the military justice system to deal with sexual assault, including scrapping the nearly century-old practice of using a "good soldier defense"
the U.S. Senate is pretty rare — but rarer stN is the kind
necessary 60. Though expressing certain reservations, th e
P e ntagon
had beengenerall y accepting of the new bill.
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year in the military justice system," McCaskill said after the
has been committed.
port was in sharp contrast
On a voteof 97-0, the Senate rallied behind a bipartisan
to last week, when military
publicans Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire and Deb Fischer
s
g
we've achieved over the past
vote. Still, that unanimous sup-
McCaskill of Missouri and Re-
limited time only!
of sweeping, historic change
to raise doubts that a crime
plan crafted by three female senators — Democrat Claire
Meet the lightest, full-powered, swivel-steering upright vacuum cleaner we have ever made
leaders vigorously opposed a measure by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-NY., that w ould
have stripped commanders of their authority to prosecute cases and given that power
to seasoned military lawyers pose a half-dozen changes to outside the chain of command. of Nebraska — that would im-
combat the pervasive problem of rape and sexual offenses
The Senate voted 55-45 for
that farther-reaching bill, but that Pentagon leaders have that was five votes short of the
General's prosecutionput in doubt FORT BRAGG, N.C.— The sexual assault caseagainst an Army general was thrown into jeopardy Mondaywhenthe judge said the military may haveimproperly pressed aheadwith a trial to send a messageabout its determination to curb rape andother widespread misconduct. Judge Col. JamesPohl refused to dismiss the chargesagainst Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Sinclair but offered the defenseanother chance to plea-bargain the casewith a set of military officials not previously involved with the matter. The judge reviewednewly disclosed emails inSinclair's case and said he foundthe appearanceof "unlawful command influence" in Fort Bragg officials' decision to reject apleabargain with the general in January. Under themilitary code ofjustice, the decision was supposedto be decided solely onthe evidence, not its broaderpolitical implications. Pohl said the emails showedthat the military officials who rejected the pleabargain had discussed aletter from the accuser's lawyer. The letter warned that allowing the general to avoid trial would "send the wrong signal." — The Associated Press
FREE REMODELING WORKSHOPS Saturday, March 15th • Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Rd. Enjoy a continental breakfast and get inspired for your next project with presentations by Neil Kelly Design Consultants Kathjeen Donohue and Nate Ewen. Wajk-ins welcome;RSVp at www.neilkelly.com/seminars! 9:30am ........Amazing Bathroom Makeovers 10:30am ......Q&A with a Neil Kelly Client 10:45am ......Inspired Kitchen Design
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TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Tuesday, March11, the 70th day of 2014. Thereare 295 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Art —"Mural," a painting by Jackson Pollock, goes on display to the general public at the J. Paul Getty Museumafter more than ayear of undergoing extensive restoration.
CUTTING EDGE
SCIENCE
e in ci ren Researchers tackle mystery of howsome snakescanfly wl own By Meeri Kim
TeStimOny — Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson testifies before aHouse Appropriations subcommittee hearing on the president's budget proposal. JObS —The U.S. Labor Department releases job openings and labor turnover survey for January.
HISTORY Highlight:In1954, the U.S. Army charged that Sen. JosephMcCarthy,R-Wis., and his subcommittee's chief counsel, RoyCohn, hadexerted pressure to obtain favored treatment for Pvt. G. David Schine, a former consultant to the subcommittee. (The confrontation culminated in the famous Senate Army-McCarthy hearings.) In1861, the Constitution of the Confederate States of America was adopted by theConfederate Congress in Montgomery, Ala. In1888, the Blizzard of '88, also known asthe "Great White Hurricane," began inundating the northeastern United States, resulting in some400 deaths. In1930, former President and Chief Justice William Howard Taft was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. In1942,as Japaneseforces continued to advance in the Pacific during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur left the Philippines for Australia. (MacArthur, who subsequently vowed, "I shall return," kept that promise more than 2t/2 years later.) In1959, the Lorraine Hansberry drama "ARaisin in the Sun" opened at NewYork's Ethel Barrymore Theater. In1964, at the 21st Golden Globe Awards, "TheCardinal" was named best film drama of 1963 while "TomJones" won for best film musical or comedy. In1977,more than130 hostages held in Washington, D.C. by Hanafi Muslims were freed after ambassadors from three Islamic nations joined the negotiations. In1989, the reality TV show "COPS" premiered on theFox Network. In2011,amagnitude-9.0 earthquake andresulting tsunami struck Japan's northeastern coast, killing nearly 20,000 people andseverelydamaging the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station. In2012, 16 Afghan villagersmostly womenand childrenwere shot dead asthey slept by U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, who later pleadedguilty to war crimes andwas sentenced to life in prison without parole. Ten years age:Tenbombs explodedinquicksuccession across the commuter rail network in Madrid, killing 191 people andwounding more than 2,000 in an attack linked
to al-Qaida-inspired militants. Five years age:A teenager, Tim Kretschmer, went on a shooting rampagestarting at a school in Winnenden,Germany, killing 15 people before committing suicide. One yearage: Former Detroit Mayor KwameKilpatrick, a Democrat, was convicted of a raft of crimes, including racketeering conspiracy (hewas later sentenced to 28years in prison).
BIRTHDAYS Media mogul Rupert Murdoch is 83. SupremeCourt Justice Antonin Scalia is 78. Actor-director Peter Berg is 52. Former U.S. Rep.Jesse Jackson Jr., D-lll., is 49. Singer Lisa Loebis 46. Actor Terrence Howard is 45. Actor Johnny Knoxville is 43. Actor Anton Yelchin is 25. — From wire reports
Special to The Washington Post
An ornate, lime-green s nake hangs f ro m a branch. Upon spotting a predator, it suddenly pro-
s n rome earn
pels itself into the air, flat-
Drugmakers are taking advantage of the latest brain research to help the thousands of children born with the genetic condition each year. By Robert Langreth Bloomberg News
NEWYORK — Aiming deep
insidethe brain, drugmakers are testing medicines that may improve learning in people with Down syndrome, an ad-
s yndrome
Jake SochaviaThe Washington Post
sure on top of its body, generating lift and allowing it to glide. The snakes are found in lowland areas of Southeast and Southern Asia.
students with Down syndrome
the wingless reptile manages to remain airborne rainforestsof Southeast and the body's trajectory in the air. despite its lack of flight South Asia, flying snakes are "Normally, an airplane wing appendages. fairly small creatures, grow- operates at very low angles." W hile in t h e a i r , t h e ing to lengths of only a few Socha has found that sers nakes t r ansform t h e i r feet and about the diameter of pents tend to maintain angles cross-sectional sha p e, a lipstick. But upon jumping of attack of about 20 to 40 desplaying their ribs and from a tall tree, say 30 feet, grees. Also, some portions of flattening t h ei r b o d i es. they can reach a horizontal the snake's body are perpenThrough c o mputational distance of 10 times their body dicular to the trajectory they and physical modeling, re- length. are moving in, so they become searchers have discovered As a biomechanist, Socha like little sections of a wing. that this modified shape works at the intersection of They hit the wind sideways, helps them become more biology and physics, studying allowing for more lift. "If the cross-section was aerodynamic and allows flying snakes for almost 20 vortexes of air above their years. He noticedthatsomuch round, there's no way it would bodies to s u ction t h em was known about how birds glide at all would be our upwards. fly, but so little work had been guess," he said. "Little by little, we built done on serpent flight despite So shape matters, but ana theory about how t h e the creature first being recog- other question lingers: Why snakes are interacting with nized in the late 1800s. do the snakes undulate during "Most of the early writ- flight'? the air to generate very "When the snake glides, it large lift forces," said aero- ing was natural history-type nautical engineer Lorena notes, where some British sci- is actually moving pretty draBarba of George Wash- entist in Southeast Asia hap- matically in the air," Socha ington University, who au- pens to see one go through said, noting that other gliders thored a study published in his tea garden," Socha said. "'I hold their bodies virtually still. Physics of Fluids last week. tried to whack it with a stick "It looks like it's swimming In a tor n a do , the and missed it!'" through the air." low-pressure region is in The glide starts with a small Similar to laying a jump the center, or eye. Similar- jump, after which the snake rope on the floor and shifting ly, researchers found areas extends itself out to full-body it rhythmically up and down of low pressure that form length. It gains speed as it from one end, the back-andon top of the snake's body, sharply drops; then mid-flight, forth motion of the snake's creating a small amount of its ribs splay apart and cause head causes large waves that suction and helping to gen- the normally circular body to propagate down the body. The erate lift. In collaboration flatten. It makes an S-shape two researchers plan to tackle with flying-snake expert and starts to undulate. Even- what kind of flight contribuJake Socha of Virginia tually, the flight path becomes tion this motion has — a much Tech, Barba was able to vi- more horizontal as it glides more difficult t a sk, S ocha sualize these swirls of air forward. sard. "We have not solved the in a complex computer airIn earlier experiments, Soflow simulation. cha filmed snakes diving off mystery of how snakes fly," An earlier study by tree branches using multiple he said. "At this point, we have Socha, published in the cameras positioned at differ- one piece of the puzzle." Journal of E x p erimental ent angles in order to capture Biology in January, also an accurate description of investigated the flattened their geometry during flight. shape by using a 3-D print- Using that data, he created ' NQRTHWEsT ed snake model submerged an idealized 3-D model of the CROSSING in a tank of flowing water. snake's flattened body, which Both experiments found formed the basis for Barba's Aauard-aeinning that, surprisingly, the rep- computer simulations and his neighborhood tile has an excellent capac- physical fluid-flow model. "These shapes are very efity to generate propelling on Bend's flight forces, or lift. ficient at generating lift when teestside. They are called "flying they are positioned at high
are integrated into the classroom," said Sara Weir,vice
Both Roche, based in Ba-
increase their understanding
of the sometimes subtle changes that occur within the brains
Instead, they aim to compen-
of children with developmental
disorders. They now see conditions such as Down syndrome
and autism "as very specific pathologies that can be targeted with drugs," said Omar connections, crucial for mem- Khwaja, a neurologist who ory formation. leads Roche's Down syndrome "Ten years ago, if you told trials program. anyone there were going to A key step forward was the be trials of drugs to improve creation in the mid-1990s of cognitive symptoms of Down a mouse with an extra chrosyndrome, they would have mosome that had many of the laughed you out of town," said symptoms of Down syndrome, Roger Reeves, a geneticist at including memory problems, Johns Hopkins University in said Reeves, the Johns Hopkins Baltimore. The advances "in researcher who has worked on the disorder since 1983. He and others showed that the mice
Down syndrome is among
had subtle deficits in the hippocampus, a region involvedin es of intellectual disability, af- learning and memory. flicting 250,000 Americans. It's In 2004, Stanford University caused by having a third copy neurobiologist Craig Garner of chromosome 21. The main and a student of his at the time, known risk factor is maternal FabianFernandez,realized sciage, with most cases occurring entists might be able to counrandomly in egg-cell matura- teract the problem with drugs tion or sperm formation. aimed at the samebrain chemithe most common genetic caus-
m oderate cal targeted by the anti-anxiety
cognitive impairment, the ex- medicine Valium and the sleeptra chromosome can cause ing pill Ambien. Those theraproblemsthatrange from heart pies calm the brain by boostdefects to hearing problems to ing the brain chemical GABA; intestinal disorders. they also can produce memory Michelle Schwab, of Holly problems. Springs, N.C., whose 16-yearA drug that did the opposite old son, Matthew, has the con- in key brain regions might endition, says algebra is difficult hance memory formation in for him because he can't re- people with Down syndrome member the steps needed to by restoring a proper balance work out the problems. Spatial
t h ese ser-
pents are elegant gliders that have evolved a special In two new studies, engineers have used simula-
T he treatments aren't a
Besides mild to
B-movie, but
By splaying its ribcage, the flying snakecreates areas of low pres-
cure, and don't address the underlying genetic problem.
the just last five years are truly amazlIlg.
Flying snakes sound likecreatures from a bad
skill that sets them apart.
eachyear.Most attend school, sel, Switzerland, and Balance aided by programs designed to Therapeutics, a dosely held help them deal with their dis- company in San Bruno, Calif., abilities. Now Roche Holding are testing drugs that counterand Balance Therapeutics, tak- act a chemical called GABA ing advantage of a research re- that depresses activity in brain naissance in brain science, are cells. Lab studies suggest the testing drugs in human trials extra chromosome may spur that may pave the way toward excess activity from the chema new era. The goal: Improve ical, disrupting a crucial balthe ability of these children to ance in the brain. remember and learn. New technology developed in the last two decades has Nota cure helped scientists dramatically
sate for chemistry imbalances inherent in the condition by boosting the ability of nerve cells in the brain to communicate and form long-lasting
a faraway tree.
date people with disabilities in regular dassrooms as much as possible. Each change in the law "has improved the way
vance unimaginable50 years presidentof advocacy and afago when many children with filiate relations at the National the genetic condition were con- Down Syndrome Society. sideredhopelessly disabled. ndevelopment About 6,000 U.S. babies are Drugsi born with D ow n
tening and wiggling its body until safely landing in
tions to try to decipher how
snakes," but to be more pre-
angles of attack," Barba said,
cise, they are masters of the referring to the angle of the glide. Found in the lowland flat surface with respect to
www.northwe's'tcrossing.com
between inhibition and exci-
tasks, such as reading an an- tation of neurons, Garner said alog clock, are also difficult, he realized. Schwab said. R esearchers did a t est in Matthew is a freshman in mice using an old GABA-blockpublic school, according to ing drug called PTZ. After 17 Schwab. A drug that would days, the treatment normalhed help him overcome those edu- the rodents' performance on cationalhurdles as he makes
mazes and certainobject rec-
his way through high school would "be tremendous," she
ognition and memory tasks for as longas tw o months, according to results published in 2007 in Nature Neuroscience. "It was bloody amazing," Garner said by telephone. "It was shocking how well it
sald.
"Because he functions so dose to normallyin everyother area, it is frustrating to watch
him struggle academically," she said. "It would be wonder- worked." ful if there were something that
Garnersaidhetried foryears
could enhance his cognitive without success to get drug ability and just make things a companies that had been purlittle less difficult." suing GABA-blocking mediCognitive-enhancing drugs cines for treating memory loss may have a significant impact, in the elderly to be interested in doctors say. An IQ boost of just Down syndrome. In late 2009, 10 to 15 points could greatly he gave up and co-founded Balincrease the chance that some- ance Therapeutics with Lynone with the syndrome would
don Lien, a former Elan Corp.
be able to live independently
executive, and another scien-
as an adult, said Brian Skotko, co-director of the Down syn-
tist, Dan Wetmore. Balance is now testing a GA-
drome program at Massachu- BA-blocking drug, BTD-001, setts General Hospital in Bos- on 90 adolescents and adults ton, who has a sister with the condition.
Children with the disorder
with Down syndrome in Aus-
tralia, with results expected by early next year, said Lien,
benefit from federal laws that
chief executive officer of the
require schools to accommo-
company.
Attend one of our free seminars to learn about Medicare Advantage Plans starting as low as $25. Bend Thursday, March 20, 2:30pm Hilton Garden Inn, 425 SW Bluff Drive 541-241-6926 www.Medicare.PacificSource.com
MedtcareRsvp@pactficsource.com p 800-735-2900 (TTY)
aCjf jCQOurCe Medicare
For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings call 541-241-6926 or 711 TTY. PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is an HMO/PPOplan with a Medicare contract. EnrollmentinPacificSourceMedicare dependsoncontractrenewal. Asalesperson will be present with information and applications. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. Limitations, copays and restrictions may apply. Premium maychange on January1 of each year. Y0021 MRK2149
A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
Jobs Continued from A1 Only Crook County in Central Oregon held onto a double-digit unemployment rate, at 10.9 percent, which is down
from 13.6 percent in January 2013, according to department numbers. With a rate of 11.6
percent, Harney County had the state's highest jobless rate. Statewide, the u nemployment rate stood at 7 percent in January and the national rate at 6.6 percent.
In Deschutes County, 7,530 workers reported being jobless in January, out of a labor
forceof77,243.Thelaborforce itself strengthened slightly over the past year, up by 252 in January from the same month a year earlier.
Over the past several years, in smaller markets. However, a shrinking labor force led, in jobs in business and profespart, to declines in unemploy- sional services, white-collar ment rates in some months. jobs, typically pay better and Strongest growth in jobs require workers with a higher continued in the same sector education, Runberg said. where it's tracked the past two But strong gains in hiring quarters,in professional and continue elsewhere. Education business services, according and health services, the secto department data. That cat- ond largest sector in Deschutes egory covers a multitude of County with 10,600 employed occupations, from temporary in January, gained 370 workoffice employees to lawyers. ers in 2013, according to deWhile not the largest sector partment data. Retail trade, in Deschutes County — that w hich employed 9,630,gained rank goes to the sector that 300 over the same period. includes retail — professional Regionwide, Central Oreand business services added gon gained 3.4 percent more 690 jobs in the past year. nonfarm workers, overall, not "It's the story o f
2 013, I
seasonally adjusted, between
would say," Runberg said. "A January 2013 and January lot of industries are doing well, 2014. Both Portland and the but it seemed to carry the re- Willamette Valley posted 2.6 covery in 2013." percent gains, according to the "Which bucks the trend we The Employment Depart- Employment Department. had for a while," Runberg said ment collects data from emCrook County gained 80 Monday. "Not a huge jump ployers with a guarantee of jobs since January 2013; Jef... but not to see it shrinkconfidentiality, which limits ferson was up by 370, according for a month is to stop and the state's ability to publicly de- ing to department data. say, 'Whoa, are we turning a tail, beyond hiring data, what — Reporter: 541-617-7815, corner?'" industries are driving trends jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Lanza Continued from A1 Solomon, the author of the book "Far From the Tree: Par-
ents, Children and the Search for Identity," recounts the interviews in an article in this
Peter Lanza said he had no doubt that his son would have
Continued from A1 "The term of brewmaster
brother.
firms the basic portrait that
the culinary industry, the term has a specific meaning. Only those who go through a certain amount of training and have a
tion, and adds new details as
emerged from the investiga-
certain amount of experience are entitledtothe term."
Fish, who isnota brewmaster himself but has overseen
half a dozen carrying the title since he started the brewery in 1988, said he considers a true
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Cascade Lakes Brewing Co. head brewer John Van Duzer stocks labels onto a labeling machine during a bottling operation at the Redmond facility Thursday. Much of a head brewer's duties have to do with logistical planning rather then actually brewing beer.
pandingcraftbeerindustry of- Brewing, is a self-taught brewfers plenty of opportunities for er whostarted home brewing the rising number of graduates in 1992. He has had no formal "I'm not the brewmaster po- coming out of brewing educa- training in brewing, and said as lice," Fish said. "I think people tionprograms. the brewery starts to produce can call themselves anything more beer he has considered they want to be called. A lot of The right background taking brewing courses in a people start up their own brewMany brewmasters agree formal setting. He's also considery and put a lot of sweat and that abrewmaster needs both ering being an intern for a few blood into it, and feel like they practical experience and an ed- days at alarge-scalebrewery. "I guess when it gets to the want to be called that. And who ucational background in brewcanblame them'?" ing. Arney said education most point when you start producing certainly helped him climb beer at a larger scale and you Day-to-day work through the brewing ranks. s tart wondering — ~ a t a m Although the title may sug- When Arney started at De- I getting myself into?' — is the gest days spent in the brew schutes in 1996, he had complet- point when you'd start contemhouse, refining and experi- ed one of the nation's top brew- plating something more," Wise menting with flavors while ing programs but didn't have a said. "You don't know what you brewing up classics, the truth lot of practical experience. He don't know." is that very little of a brewmas- represented a transition of sorts ter's day is actually dedicated at the brewery, when young Evolution of a title to brewing. Seifrit said much of brewers wit h e d ucational Seifrit, who was a former his job has to do with logistical backgrounds began to be hired senior brewer at Deschutes, planning, damage control and alongside brewers who had said that while his official title solving any problems that arise worked their way up from the at 10 Barrel is brewmaster, he while making the 16,100barrels cellar room andbottling lines. considers himself to be a head "I learned that education brewer, despite the fact that he of beer 10 Barrel Brewing Co. produced lastyear. plays a really good role in set- has nearly 18 years of experi"It means wearing multiple ting a benchmark," Arney said. ence brewing and a certificahats and doing a lot of things in ''You come out of school with tion from the Siebel Institute of a short period of time," Seifrit the understanding of specif- Technologyinbrewing. "I actually hate the term, to said. "Maybe the hardest part ic principles. It's a good, basic about it is that we don't get to jumping-off point. But my real be honest," Seifrit said. "I've albrew as much as we'd like. It education, as the case with al- ways found it to be hoity-toity." kind of kills me that I don't get most every brewer, came at the Seifrit said the meaning of to brew more beer." brewery. Your biggest learning the term has evolved in the past John Van Duzer, the head opportunities happen when two decades. In the 1990s, the brewer at Cascade Lakes Brew- stuff goes wrong, and that's not term refe rred to a brewer who ing Co., said his 50-hour work something you can get by sit- oversaw production and had week mostly includes schedul- tingin a classroom." atleast25 years ofexperience ing brew sessions, overseeing Recently, The Ale Apothe- brewing. Then at some point production brewers, dealing cary hired its first staff brewer, in the early 2000s, the meanwith contractors, buying equip- and thebrewery is paying for ing of the term morphed to the ment from vendors and sourc- his brewing education courses point that the brewers at brewingmaterials. at Oregon State University in pubs are now sometimes called "I'm actually brewing very Corvallis. brewmasters, he said. little these days," Van Duzer Van Duzer worked his way His definition of a brewmassaid last week. "It's an unfortu- up from washing kegs at De- ter sides with the older version nate side of the job. If you talk schutes Brewery in 1994 to of the term: someone who has at it doesn't necessarily make it so," Fish said.
to other brewers, a lot of them
brewing there, then attained say the same thing. It's tedious. certification at the University of
least a quarterofacenturyexpe-
rienceand oversees astaffofat California, Davis, before even- least20at alarge-scalebrewery. tually taking a position at CasWise said he's not sure what cade Lakes Brewery. He said the distinction is between a getting a degree in brewing sci- brewmaster and head brewer, ence isn't completely necessary
and that the distinctionbetween
tobecome aheadbrewer, buthe titles most likely refers to the said it depends on the brewer's scale of thebrewery. As the sole ambitions.
"The majority probably do ecaryin2011, said he left inpart because he wanted to focus on have brewing educations of
brewer at Below Grade, Wise's
sition means being in charge of the technical aspect of the brew process and managing the staff so operationsrunsmoothly. Competition for the head
duties run the gamut, from bottling to keg-washing, to develsome sort, but it's definitely not oping recipes and then brewing arequirement, "Van Duzersaid. them. Though he wears many "There are plenty of talented hats, Wise says he prefers to be brewers who haven't received called head brewer. an education and took a kind of Arney doesn't consider himworking-class route." self abrewmaster either, despite Seifrit thinks the r equire- holding a bachelor's degree and ments for the position have abrewmaster certification from changedto the point where most UC-Davis, and 18years of expelarge-scale facilitiesviewbrewer rience brewing. "To me, a brewmaster is education as a crucial step. "I think it's almost a necessi- somebody in charge of a very ty now to have a degree," Seifrit large production brewery who's said. 'You used to be able to put been around the block," Arney time in at abrewery and roll into said. "They're more cerebral a position like (head brewer). If — they're the visionary. To me, you want to work at a brewpub, 'master' means somebody who
brewer orbrewmaster jobs at
then it's no big deal at all not to
managerial duties. "Just like a lot of vocations, you spend 15 to 20 years learning a skill, and then the next step is managing people," Arney said. 'Which a lot of times
has nothingto do with what you spentyour life training for." A t Deschutes, which ~
-
ly has two brewmasters who sharethe duties, Fishsaidthepo-
mid-level to large-scale brew- have a degree. But if you're at a eries is stiff, said Seifrit, as they production facility like here or require a combination of skills, at GoodLife (Brewing Co.) or including the technical know- Worthy (Brewing Co.), then you how, the brewing knowledge need to have a degree." and the logistical vision. At the same time, Seifrit said the ex-
Peter Lanza said that the di-
agnosis might have kept them from realizing the danger their son posed.
"If he had been a totally
Lanza said that the first of-
normal adolescent and he was ficial diagnosis they received well-adjusted and then all of concerning Adam's mental a sudden went into isolation,
killed him as well. "With hindsight, I know health came when he was 13. Adam would have killed me The diagnosis was Aspergin a heartbeat, if he'd had the er's syndrome, a category that chance. I don't question that the American Psychiatric Asfor a minute," he said. "The sociation has since subsumed reason he shot Nancy four into the broader diagnosis of times was one for each of us: an autism spectrum disorder. one for Nancy, one for him, Adam refused to accept that one for Ryan, one for me." he had the disorder. Ryan is A d am's older When Adam was 14, the
gets misused a lot," Fish said. "It's similar to the term 'chef.' In
the actual brewing rather than
er group to commit violent crimes.
alarms would go off," Lanza said. "But let's keep in mind that you expect Adam to be welrd. In2009,theLanzasdivorced.
In September2010,Adam and his father had an argument about his education, and it was
thelast timethetwo spoke. "I was hurt," Peter Lanza recalled. "I never expected that I
Lanzas took him to the Yale Child Study Center for further
would never talk to him again.
diagnosis. "The psychiatrist who as-
I thought it was a matter of when."
leased last year provided the most complete picture to date sessed Adam, Robert King, about Adam Lanza's life and recorded that he was a 'pale, the events on the day of the gaunt, awkward young adoshooting. lescent standing rigidly with Peter Lanza's account con- downcast gaze and dedining
Brewmasters
leaving to start The Ale Apoth-
— Peter Lanza
Adam Lanza, 20, shot his have harbored a problem with mother, Nancy, before going his elementary school. "Adam loved Sandy Hook on his shooting rampage at Sandy Hook on Dec. 14, 2012, school," he said. "He stated, and then shot himself just as as he was growing older, how the police were arriving at the much he had liked being a litelementary school. tlekid."
An exhaustive report by
There's a lot of scheduling and shuffling. Sometimes it's like putting a puzzle together and making it all fit." Paul Arney, who held the position of assistant brewmaster at Deschutes Brewery before
off But let's keep in mind that you expect Adam to be weird."
week's issue of The New Yorker magazine.
Connecticut authorities re-
brewmaster a person who has at least seven to 10 years of experience brewing, and who also has abrewer's education to complement that. "Words have meaning, and if you call yourself a brewmaster,
"If he had been a totally normal adolescent and he was well-adjusted and then all of a sudden went into isolation, alarms would go
Dean Wise, the head brewer
and founder of Below Grade
email, according to the state
investigation. Lanza said that if his wife
little spontaneous speech but was worried for her safety, she well as a deeper understand- responded in a flat tone with never told anyone, as far as he ing of how he and Adam's little inflection and almost me- knew. "She never confided to her mother struggled to under- chanical prosody,'" according stand and care fortheir son. to the New Yorker article. sister or best friend about beLanza described Adam's King noted the demands ing afraid of him," Lanza said. behavior as a child as "weird" that Adam was increasingly "She slept with her bedroom but never dangerous. placing on his mother. door unlocked, and she kept "In preschool and at Sandy "He disapproves if moth- guns in the house, which she Hook, where he was apupil till er leans on anything in the would not have done if she the beginning of sixth grade, house becauseitis 'im proper,'" were frightened." he sometimes smelled things Solomon wrote. "He is also inLanza, an accountant and that weren't there and washed tolerant if mother brushes by a vice president for taxes at a his hands excessively," Solo- his chair and objected to her General Electric subsidiary, mon writes. "A doctor diag- new high heel boots, because insisted that no one could have nosed sensory-integration dis- they were 'too loud.' If moth- predicted what his son would order, and Adam underwent er walks in front of him in the do. Still, he regrets not pushspeech therapy and occupa- kitchen, he would insist she ing harder to remain a part of his life. Now, his son is a contional therapy in kindergarten redoit." and first grade. Teachers were Experts say there is no ev- stant presence in his thoughts. "It's not like I ever go an told to watch for seizures." idence that people who have Lanza saidhe neverhad any autism spectrum disorders hour when it doesn't cross my indication that his son might are more likely than any oth- mind," he said.
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this almost omnipotent person around the brewery — this apparition that can be anywhere — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
stopped speaking to his mother, communicating only via
to shake hands.' He also noted that Adam 'had relatively
has this inhuman amount of information. They have to be
at any time."
In those years Adam grew more isolated. He eventually
•II •
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TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Utilities
confirmed that local subcontractor Jack Robinson
Continued from A1 5 Sons did call the state Companies g e n erally utility notification center to do not share maps of their request location services, buried utilities with govern- and the locators missed the ments or residents in Ore- pipe. "It's not v ery c o mmon, gon unless those parties ask for the information and the but it does happen," Madutility company believes it dox said. "Even the locators is necessary. Instead, state miss things.... And on oclaw requires excavators to casion, there are surprises." contact the Oregon Utility A project manager for Sons
Mystery
sonar and other search capabil-
Continued from A1 "To confirm what happened
signal emitted from the plane's black box.
ities and can also listen for any
craft, we need hard evidence," he said. "We need concrete evidence. We need partsofthe aircraft forusto analyze,forus
on which excavation is less
agreement with the city of Bend, Cascade Natural Gas
Malaysia toward Vietnam. The
than 12 inches deep and will not take place in an es- provides the city with ac-
search expanded Sunday into areaswellbeyond the plane's
tablished easement.
cess to the company's GIS
intended northeasterly flight
Lueder said Cascade Nat- mapping data. The company also provides the inforof pipelines installed more mation to other government recently, but this particular agencies and companies as small steel pipe — which needed, Lueder wrote. led to a vacant lot — was
probably installed in the early 1970s. Lueder con-
firmed that gas was flowing through the line at the time a contractor struck it. " It's very r ar e f o r t h i s
type of situation to occur,"
B end Public Works D i rector Paul R h eault s aid
Cascade Natural Gas has a good history of quickly locating any buried lines where the city plans to excavate. "I don't think we've had
Lueder said. "We're confident that our records and
any issues striking a natural gas line," Rheault said. maps are completely accu- There are a lot of buried rate with more recent lines utility lines in some parts we've installed." of Bend, and the city uses Peter Murphy, a spokes- specialized excavation techman for t h e O r egon De- niques in these areas. "When we're in an area partment of Transportation, said agency officials have where we know there are a been discussing whether lot of utilities, we don't use there was anything they a backhoe," Rheault said. could have done to avoid Instead, the city s prays the gas line. "I know we did pressurized water on the some soul-searching after area and then vacuums up that," Murphy said. Howev- the soil with a specially er, Murphy said there was equipped truck. "It's very, very important nothing the state agency could have done to prevent for us to have good, accuthe situation, because an ex-
cavation subcontractor followed the proper procedure of requesting utility location services and still was not told of the gas line. "We rely on the u t i l ities," Murphy
said. "We generally do not do our own analysis." Murphy said he was not aware of any similar incidents in Central Oregon where contractors struck gas lines in recent history. Ken M addox, b u siness
manager for Eugene-based Hamilton
Con s t r uction,
rate records of where all these utilities are," Rheault
said. Rheault said he would like to have one master map of all utilities in the city of
Bend, but it will be awhile before the city ca n b u i ld that. In the meantime, city
crews will continue to call the state utility notification center to r equest location
task more difficult.
On Monday, hopes briefly centered on a rectangular orLai Seng Sin/The Associated Press
South China Sea, northeast of A banner reading "Prey for MH370" is displayed early today in Kuaia Lumpur. Days after the Malaysia Airlines flight with 239 people on board disappeared en route from Kueie Lumpur to Beijing, no debris has been seen in Southeast Asian waters es search efforts continue.
path toward China. Authorities are now looking even at areas in the Andaman Sea, onthe
ham News and Comment, in an email from Seattle. " If t h e airplane deviated
from its planned flight path (as a turn might indicate), they are looking in the wrong place. Also, the fact that no debris whatsoever has emerged from
where they are looking, this certainly suggests to me they are looking in the wrong place, whatever the reason." In a vacuum of hard evidence about what went wrong
out and mark t heir l i nes,
lot suicide, an extraordinarily
rare occurrence that has taken down two commercial airliners
in recent years. "You have to ask the ques-
ange object that authorities said
mighthavebeen alifejacket. But when a Vietnamese helicopter recovered the piece of flotsam,
it was identified as "a moss-covered cap of a cable reel," the CivilAviation Authorityof Vietnam
tion," said one U.S. aviation official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
western side of the Malaysian peninsula. The Malaysia Airlines flight For theplane to have crashed reportedlywas being tracked into the Andaman Sea would by radar when its transponder imply that it h a d somehow went dark. There were no radio turned back and crossed the transmissions to indicate that entire Malaysian peninsula anything was amiss aboard without being detected by ra- the plane. Boththetransponder dar operators. signals and radio communicaMalaysian authorities said tion are controlled by the pilot. "They need to be able to Sunday that the plane may have turned around before dis- control the electronics from appearing from radar without the cockpit in case there is a a distress call. If true, aviation short-circuit," the U.S. official experts said this could offer a said. "The pilot also can turn clue as to why no debris had yet off the voice recorder." That's what investigators bebeen found. "Was this turn under pilot lieve happened aboard SilkAir command, hijacker command, Flight 185 before it spiraled or induced by a structural fail- to the ground in Indonesia in ure of somekind — eitherby an 1997, killing 97 passengers and airplane fault or by a bomb?" seven crew members. wrote Scott Hamilton, an aviaWhile Indonesian investigation expert and founder of Lee- tors said they could not deter-
aboard the flight, speculation turned to the possibility of pi-
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
as well as the expanding size of thesearchareaarema king the
combing a vastarea of ocean in the Gulf of Thailand and the
services. "When they come we're trusting they're pretty accurate," Rheault said.
time passes, currents and wind
About 40 ships and 34 aircraftfrom nine countries are
did not return calls for comment.
ural Gas has better records
we can see it. It's an extremely large area," he said. As more
at every inch of the sea."
J ack Robinson 8 z
fr a nchise
ketball. It's not a matter of if
ed, "We are every hour, every minute, every second, looking
quest location services at least two days before digging. There is an exemption for private properties
Lueder wrote in an email
see things as small as almost the size of your hand or a bas-
to do forensic studies." He add-
N otification Center to r e -
that under a
"Just from the air, we can
that day on this ill-fated air-
aboard the EgyptAir Flight 990, said on its website. which has received renewed attentionafterthe MalaysiaAir-
This was not the first time hopes have been dashed in the
lines flight wentmissing. The 1999 Egyptian flight
past two days.
Late Sunday afternoon, Viett h e A t l a ntic namese authorities said one
crashed int o
south of Nantucket, killing 217 of their aircraft had spotted a people. rectangular object that could U.S. investigators conciud- have been an inner door from ed that the crash was caused the missing plane, but it was by crew member Gameel too dark to be sure. By Monday, AI-Batouti. ships and planes had returned The cockpit r ecorder on to the area, but could not locate that flight was activated, and the object. Meanwhile, sightit recorded the flight's captain ings of what had resembled a departing for the rest room. piece of the plane's tail turned Thirty seconds later, Al-Batouti
out to be logs tied together to
said in Arabic, "I rely on God." form a pontoon, Malaysian auThe autopilot was disengaged thorities said. and theplane began an erratic pattern that investigators said could not have been caused
by a mechanical malfunction. When the captain rushed back to the cockpit to confront
Al-Batouti, both engines had been shut down. team of U.S. investigators said While the captain struggled someone in the cockpit — most to bring the plane's nose up likely the captain — turned off again, Al-Batouti was on his the transponder and cockpit re- own set of controls, working to corder and took the plane into a keep the plane in a dive. fatal dive. The National Transportation Asked how a pilot or co-pilot Safety Board determined that would let his colleague inten- the crash was "a result of the tionally crash the plane, the relief first officer's flight control U.S. official said: "It's easy. You inputs. The reason for the relief wait until the other guy leaves first officer's actions was not to use the bathroom. Even determined." though he has a key (to the In a phone interview Moncockpit), you have time." day, a spokesman for the U.S. Or, he said, there may have Navy's 7th Fleet, Navy Cmdr. been a struggle between crew William Marks, confirmed that members thatwent unrecorded the USS Pinckney has joined because the cockpit recorder the search. Marks told the BBC had been turned off. that the destroyer and the heliThat's w h a t hap p ened copters it carries have infrared, mine what caused the crash, a
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
TODAY'S READ: SENTENCE FOR A HISTORICAL CRIME
IN FOCUS:TRANSPORTATION
More choices, more rides ee in accouna ii bring a transit renaissance or a irm's oocaus sins •
•
Related
By Justin Pritchard
By Katherine Shaver
LOS ANGELES — With more trains and buses to
The Washington Post
take, and the appeal of us-
WASHINGTON — Leo Bretholz recalled some of the last words he heard on Nov. 6, 1942, before he squeezed through the window bars of a cattle car carrying 1,000 prisoners from France to Auschwitz. "If you jump, maybe you'll be able to tell the story," said an elderly woman in the stifling crowd of Jews packed in so tightly that they were forced to stand for days — with little food, no water and an overflowing bucket for a toilet. "Who else will tell this story?" she said. Bretholz, 93, died Saturday, but in a recent interview with The W ashington Post he talked about his Holocaust
ing travel time for pursuits
other than dodging traffic, Americans are taking greater advantage of a renaissance in public transit, according to a new report. The number of rides tak-
In 2013, the number of billion nationally, the highest since 1956, according
Md., area, said he had grown weary of sharing the horrors
portation Association and released Monday.
he witnessed on the train op-
Of course, the nation's
erated by SNCF, the government-owned French railway.
population has been expanding, so there are more people to ride the rails and buses. The association's
But he wanted SNCF held ac-
countablefor the 76,000 Jews and other prisoners it shipped "All I w ant i s a d e claraLinda Davidson/The Washington Post tion — a f o r ceful declara- Holocaust survivor Leo Bretholz, of Pikesville, Md., died Saturday tion — of: 'We did something at age 93. Bretholz, shown on Feb. 19 at his home, was among the very wrong, something inhu- Holocaust survivors seeking reparations from the French train mane. We sent people to their company SNCF.
deaths,'" Bretholz said recently in his living room. "I want jus- don't dispute that the railway tice to be done." carried76,000 people to Nazi Bretholz said the need had camps. However, they also grown more urgent since Jan- point to the billions in reparauary, when a company major- tions paid by the French govity-owned by SNCF was invit- ernment — SNCF officials say ed, among others, to bid on a French law permits only the contract valued at more than government, not its rail com$6 billion to build and operate pany, to pay reparations — and a light-rail line in an expansion to the company's financial doof the Washington-area Metro nations to Holocaust memorisystem in Maryland. als, and research and educaCalls by Bretholz and other tionprograms in France. survivors to block the compaCompany leaders draw a ny from any Metro contract line between expressing regret until SNCF pays reparations and accepting blame. Alain raise questions that victims of Leray, president and chief ex-
the railway has "confronted"
its history.
How muchblame? Historians disagree about how much SNCF is to blame for
argues,aw idersegment of Americans are using mass
One regularly-priced non-bird food item"
transit, which now offers
ership is up 37 percent.
follow German orders to deport
During that time, the US
Jews and other prisoners. 0thers say France's Vichy government willingly used the railway as part of its collaboration with
population has increased
the United States ignore that
Since 1995, transit rid-
' Validthrough 3/23/I4on onenon-birIfooditem. One Cgj@P( ~ Cgy@ttltt9$ discountperpurchase.Offernotvalid onpreviouspurchases, Nature Shop optics, gift cards , DailySavingsClubmemberships,orsaleitems.
about 20 percent, and ve-
Forum Center, Bend
hicle miles traveled are up about 23 percent.
541-617-8840 www.wbu.com/bend
"People are making a fundamental shift to having options" aside from a
igS
turned to the private sector. Ger-
the companywas placedunder man companies such as Bayer German command by a 1940 and Volkswagenpaid into a reparmistice a g reement a f t er arations fundforpeopleused as Germany occupied France. forced labor during World War "I understand their feelings. II. German and French banks
SNCF was not interested in
began tocompensate survivors for stolen assets and unpaid life insurance policies. In exchange, companies were protected from lawsuits. "Money is just a token of ac-
and about 8,000 euros ($11,000) annually to surviving spouses
reparations.
also pushed for a ban on Keo-
says it represents about 250 and orphans, the official said. people in the United States, Abraham Foxman, national duector of the Anti-Defamation
League, said SNCF has a "moral responsibility" to compensate
victims. Reparations mean ia Railway Express trains. accountability, and they mean Rosette Goldstein, 75, of
Foxman, who lost 14 family members inthe Holocaust in Poland and Belarus. "Even talking
about dosure on something so unde and two teenage cousins horrific is offensive.... How do Recent talks were killed in the gas cham- youquantifyit?" The State Department and bers at Auschwitz, and her M ichael Marrus, a professor the French foreign ministry father died of illness after sev- emeritus of Holocaust studies at recently began formal nego- eral years in labor camps. All the University of Toronto who is tiations about incorporating of them left France on SNCF considereda leading experton Americans into th e F rench trains. Vichy France, said trying to do Holocaust com p ensation "I feel they're coming to sotodayismisguided. "I don't diminish the trageprogram. the table because they realize The French government has (SNCF) did something wrong dy or the pain and suffering, paid more than $6 billion in — that and (they want) billions but I think at the end of the Holocaust reparations since of dollars in contracts," Gold- day, there will never be justice 1948, including to people de- stein said. in the sense that most of the ported on SNCF trains, an Rabbi Andrew Baker, di- perpetrators have died by now embassy spokeswoman said. rector of international Jewish and most of the people who However, those payments cov- affairs for the American Jew- suffered directly have died by er only French citizens and ish Committee, said American now," Marrus said. "I just don't those of four other countries survivors should be compen- see any merit in continuing that have bilateral agreements sated, but he views SNCF as this, especially when (there has "one cog in this machine" that been) open acknowledgment with France. Boca Raton, Fla., said her aunt,
a c - persecuted Jews in World War
and contrition." He added: "I think these mat-
knowledged the company's II. He said French Jews have role in the Holocaust. They told him they are satisfied that ters shouldbeputtobed."
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the American deportees. Still, he
ing pro bono for the advocacy II ties. It passed the Maryland said, he has been uncomfortable group Coalition for Holocaust legislature unanimously. The with the general idea of HoloRail Justice. "Most compa- group also protested Keolis caust reparations. ''You can't buy justice," said nies involved in the Holocaust winning an $85 million con-
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In 2011, the Coalition for Holocaust Rail Justice, which
-
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enrich. It's of symbolicvalue." How much American deport-
were deported on SNCF trains,
tract in 2010 to operate Virgin-
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scheduled to consider legislation that would ban Keolis, the bidder majority-owned by SNCF, from winning the contract until SNCF pays
SNCF disclosed its World War
i
knowledgment," said Deborah Dwork, director of the Strassler
ny remains interested in the
"SNCF is a real outlier," said lis winning Maryland MARC Rafi Prober, an Akin Gump commuter rail contracts until
0
and insurance companies also
a nd Means C o mmittee i s
S NCF officials h ave
transportation association
them more choices.
the Nazis. Regardless, Holocaust ex-
Op
But even accounting for p opulation growth, t h e
agree with SNCF officials that the railway had no choice but to
negotiations, a U.S. official said. The French reparations pmgram pays an average of 25,000 to 30,000 euros (about $35,000to $42,000) annually to people who
justice."
t h e 1950s,
when investments in highways and a growth in car ownership began enticing Americans to move away from cities and heralded a
its World War II history. Some
perts say the sense of who des erves com~ on — a n d he hopes the French-U.S. repa- who should pay it — has exrations talks "bring peace and panded over the years. Europeclosure to this tragic issue." an governments began forming But he said those fighting reparations programs in the late SNCF's business interests in 1940s. Inthelate 1990s, thefocus
In the case of SNCF — for- discussingreparations, some mally known as Societe Na- advocates say, until it began tionale des Chemins de fer losing a public relations battle Francais — another question over the past several years, has arisen: Does it matter if a as aging Holocaust survivors company financially atones spoke out against SNCF's exfor its sins 70 years after the pressed interest in high-speed fact — and only after it stood to rail proposals in California lose billions of dollars in U.S. and Florida. The Florida rail business'? plan has since been canceled. Maryland's House Ways SNCF officials say the compa-
have paid reparations to their
often than in
ecutive of SNCF America, said
or even a century ago? I understand their sadness. I Descendants of U.S. slaves understand their anger," Lerhave not received reparations. ay said. "Of course they want Survivors of the Japanese SNCF to pay. But I ask them to American internment camps consider that we were under received a formal apology and inescapable duress,so their $20,000 each under legislation anger should be targeted at the that President Reagan signed Nazis, not SNCF."
attorney who said he is work-
4i.'
decline in mass transit.
from a rose-coloredarmchair
in 1988.
, ri
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the average U.S. resident is taking public transit more
about 2,000 were killed.
events that occurred decades
.'jy
numbers don't mean that
to Nazi death camps. All but
should pay for their suffering, and for how long are governments and companies morally and financially responsible for
wor k
trips stood at nearly 10.7 t o data compiled by t h e American Public T r ans-
d uring World War I I : H o w much are victims owed, who
to
en on public buses, trains and subways has fully recovered from a dip during they cite a w i despread re- voters in cities such as Atlanta the Great Recession. And turn tourban centers and the have rejected taxes for transit with services restored fol- movement to concentrate new improvements. lowing e c onomy-driven cutbacks, ridership appears set to resume what
who lived in th e Pikesville,
pressedfor years, including descendents of African and Caribbean slaves and Japanese Americans interned
"People w an t
and live along transit lines," car in how they get around, Melaniphy said. "Businesssaid Michael Melaniphy, pres- es, universities and housing ident and CEO of the public are all moving along those transportation a s sociation. corrtdors." "This is a l o ng-term trend. The increased ridership is This isn't just a blip." not universal. Transit agenTransit advocates argue cies in Tennessee, Kentucky, that the public increasingly P ortland, M i l w aukee a n d values the abilityto get around Boston, for example, reported without a car. As evidence, falling ridership rates. And
had been a steady increase.
experience and his life since. The retired linen salesman,
other historical injustices have
development around transit hubs.
• Portland, however, sees a decline, B3
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
BRIEFING
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
MAY 2014 ELE CTION
~
Geraldine Brooks coming toBend Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks will serve asthe Distinguished Visiting Writer in the OregonState University-CascadesCampus creative writing MFA program this summer. The Australian-American author and journalist is best known for her second novel, "March," which won the 2006 Pu-
litzer Prize for Fiction. She also workedas a correspondentfor the Wall Street Journal for11 years, covering Bosnia, Somalia andthe Middle East. Hermost recent work of fiction, "Caleb's Crossing," was released in 2011. While in Bend, Brooks also will participate in the Deschutes Public Library Foundation's "Author! Author!" series on June19 at BendHigh School. — Bulletin staff report
reae uca ors oa ain e n a a n i n wan a By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
A cadre of Bend-La Pine
Schools administrators and teachers will make what has
By Andrew Clevenger
Rwanda for spring break.
WASHINGTON — Bend businesswoman Aelea Chris-
The Bulletin
The self-funded teacher
training mission is led by Assistant Superintendent
: ~4njitlL-.
Jay Mathisen, who first went to Rwanda in 2010 while
still a George Fox University
„t
School of Education doctoral student. At the time, his goal
• Portland:Transit use is rising in much of the U.S., but not for TriMet, B3
Well shot! Reader photos
• We want to see your photos showing the signs of spring for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the
Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletin.com /spring2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotosO bendbnlletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as
possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aawell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution
toffer son announced Monday that she is running for Congress in Oregon's 2nd District. Christofferson, 61, is seeking the Democratic nomination to
'+Mge.~@ ~.
was to help some professors
vie for the seat currently held by Rep. Greg
with a master's program
they were developing, but in the end, Mathisen said he
Walden, R-Hood River. She has
i)
only made it to the school's
I
campus once. On his first night in Rwanda, he had
never run for elected office before. Christofferson is the founder
ican who was training local
Portland
Christofferson to challenge for Walden's Houseseat
become an annual trip to the central African nation of
dinner with another Amer-
STATE NEWS
bendbnlletin.com/elections
and president of ATL Communications, which helps toll-free
teachers in instructional
techniques to help mentor other teachers. "I invited myself to hang
numbers reduce their routing
costs and helps them re-establish service following disasters. SeeChristofferson/B5
out with them for the rest of
the trip, and found myself on the back of motorbikes going to schools for a lot of the time," Mathisen said. "I just really loved it." The trip sparked
Appeals
Mathisen's dissertation, which examined the 1994
court sides with Bend in land case
Rwandan genocide's impact on three education reform movements.Near the end of the document, Mathisen
concludes, "The impact the slaughter had on the educa-
tion systems was immense, and continues on in some regards today." He offers recommendations, but acknowledged they "do not
By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
include simple answers to
the complex nature of those challenges." Despite these challenges, Mathisen has stayed committed to helping ameliorate some ofthe issues faced
by Rwandan educators, in particular the lack of access to research on the latest
teaching techniques. Since his first trip to Rwanda, Mathisen has become the
Submitted photo
The Oregon Court of Appealsin February affirmed a
Kathleen Yaeger, a science teacher from BendHigh, went to Rwanda last spring break to help with
Deschutes County jury's 2011
education programs. Yaeger and a group of Bend-La Pine Schools administrators and teachers will again be headed to Rwanda this spring break.
verdict in a case in which a local man had his land development plans halted by city planning officials. Scott Dahlen bought prop-
'You can tell the difference ... between an IEE
(International Education Exchange) school and one without that help."
noted that even the best pedagogical techniques can't overcome some of the disad-
vantages faced by Rwandan
— Jay Mathisen, Bend-La Pine Schools assistant superintendent
educators.
"They have class sizes
into the 70s, very little to no resources,and from third
organizerofAmerican assistance for the organization he helped in 2010, the International Education
is to help train the roughly
of teachers," said Karen
40 Rwandan instructional
Exchange (IEE), a Rwandan-led group that provides professional development
to 80 schools serving more than 80,000 students.
Stiner, a High Desert Middle School teacher who went on last year's trip. "It's changed m e profoundly to havegone." Stiner describes the trips
to teachers. While there
we have been able to help
as a chance to put "research
this year, Mathisen's goal
hundreds, maybethousands
into action." But she also
coaches whom IEE sends "Because of Jay's vision,
grade on, English is the only language taught, so there's a high need for second language (instruction)," Stiner said, referencing the great linguistic diversity in the country. SeeRwanda/B2
erty in 2003 between Simpson
and Troon avenues on the east side of Mt. Washington Drive in Bend, intending to develop a 17-lot residential subdivision
on the property. The city refused to issue permits, saying the property was a "landscape buffer" and couldnotbedeveloped. The city took the po-
sition that the original master plan for Broken Top, created in 1991, designated the property as a buffer area. SeeCase/B2
(at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
HAPPENED TO ... •
Corrections Due to anediting error, a reader's letter that appeared in "My Nickel's Worth" on Friday, March 7,on Page B4, misconstrued the viewpoint of Byron H. Dudley of Sisters. Dudley, writing against the proposed removal of ponderosa pines in Sisters Creekside Park to accommodate the expansion of an RV park, asked, "Should this ill-advised project proceed, willthe Sisters City Council take down the Sisters TreeCity flag that flies above the 'Wel-
come to Sisters' sign at the east end of town?" In a Letter to the Editor headlined "Threatening Putin," published March 8 on PageB4, an incorrect namewas included. Thesentence should have read: "If Obama is unable to stop Putin on his own, perhaps hecould enlist the services from either Joe Biden, John Kerry, Nancy Pelosi or Harry Reid."
The Bulletin regrets the errors.
Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've beenout of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit bendbnlletin.com/npdates
Nmalo trail still alive after archaeological snag By Elon Glucklich and Tumalo State Park with
project. University of Oregon archaeology students discovered the fragments on the west bank of the Deschutes
a new walking trail hit a snag
River in late 2012.
in 2012, after a survey of the
Building a trail around the archaeological site, as well as
The Bulletin
A proposal to link Tumalo
area turned up a previously undiscovered archaeological site.
But after more than a year of uncertainty, state parks officials say the project is still alive. Construction of the trail could start as soon as next year. If built, the trail would start at Tumalo State Park and wind north between the
Deschutes River and O.B. Riley Road, ending 1.2 miles
2
I ToSistes
Tu
two other historic sites in the
area, ballooned the project's estimated cost, Deschutes
v Russell said. Building the trail without disrupting the sites would haverequired severalalternate options to a standard path: placing a layer of permeable fabric under the paveRob Kerr/The Bulletin ment in some areas; using a Mountain biker Chad Cheeney rides a small trail south out from County Senior Planner Peter
different material altogether;
under the U.S. Highway 20 bridge on the west side of the De-
later, just east of U.S. High-
or constructing the trail in
schutes River in Tumalo last week. The discovery of archaeo-
way 20.
another location. Russell said the county
logical sites has disrupted the progress of the development of a 1.2-mile trail designed to connect the town of Tumalo with Tumalo State Park.
Deschutes County officials had discussed the trail pro-
returned the grant money to
posal for nearly four years,
the state last year after the
and received a $140,000 state
site was discovered. "We didn't budget for that
recreational grant to construct the paved path in 2012. But the discovery of "lithic scatters," the remnants of
amount of work or those amount of restrictions to
build the trail," he said.
rockfragments used centu-
"We're basically out of it."
ries ago to create other stone tools, threatened to derail the
Yet the project is still alive. Deschutes County asked
Rivervie Ave.
Proposefi route nderpass
Paved portion
Unpaved ortion
I
the state Parks and Recreation Department to take
over the project and keep surveying the trail area, according to Rocky Houston, the parks department's trails coordinator.
"We're still working on
To Bend
the project," Houston said.
"We're working with a geologist, looking at what we need
umalo ate Park
to do to get the area ready to
build the path." SeeTrail /B2
Andy Zeinert/The Bulletin
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Author Joan Bauer will talk about her work "MISS REPRESENTATION":A and her approach to writing; free; screening of the 2011 film about media misrepresentation of women, 6:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-312followed by a panel discussion 1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. with local media and business professionals; $5 suggested THE MARVINS: The Detroit, donation, reservation requested; Mich., folk-rock duo performs; 6:30 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Bend's Community Center, 1036 Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond N.E. Fifth St.; 541-419-4534 or St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. www.justicefilmcircle.org. mcmenamins.com. "CHASING ICE": The awardwinning film about James Balog's bold three-year quest capturing THURSDAY the receding of an Arctic glacier and evidence of climate change, AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Cat sponsored by the Sierra Club; free, Warren presents "What the Dog open to the public; 7 p.m., gathering Knows: The Science andWonder at6:30 p.m.; The Environmental of WorkingDogs";$5;6:30 p.m.; Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; Paulina SpringsBooks,252 W .Hood 541-389-0785. Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. THE BLAQKS: The Boise, Idaho, "SOLSTICE— 1WOMAN, 1 DAY, rock-indie-pop band performs, with 100 MILES": A screening of the Silvero; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 documentary about arookie's race p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. at the Western States 100 Mile Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 Endurance Run; free, reservation or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. requested;7 p.m.;FootZone,842 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or www.foot zonebend.com/events. INTERNATIONALFLYFISHING FILM WEDMESDAY FESTIVAL: A screening of fly-fishing AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Willy films showcasingthe passion, Vlautin reads from his latest novel, lifestyle and culture of fly-fishing; "The Free"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown $15, plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open 6 Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall Wall St.; 541-312-1032, lizg© St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. deschuteslibrary.org or www. towertheatre.org. deschuteslibrary.org. WORLD'S FINEST:The Portland AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Cat reggae-grassbandperforms; Warren presents "What the Dog free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Knows: The Science and Wonder Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond of Working Dogs";$5;6:30 p.m.; St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. Paulina Springs Books,422 S.W . mcmenamins.com.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMr.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
LEWIS 8 CLARK: An interactive performance with children and students playing Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea and soldiers; $10, $5 children12 and younger, plus fees;
TODAY
7 p.m., doorsopen6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. oi'g. "FUNNY MONEY": A comedy about a mild-mannered accountant accidentally picking up a briefcase full of money and trying to explain himself to a police detective; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. James Balog1Extreme Ice Survey via The Associated Press oi'g. This 2009 photo released by Extreme Ice Survey shows Birthday "THE PERKSOFBEINGA Canyon in Greenland during the filming of "Chasing Ice." The film WALLFLOWER": A screening of the about climate change will be screened tonight at The Envlronmen- 2012 film (PG-13) starring Emma tal Center. Watson; free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E "FUNNY MONEY" PREVIEW St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. FRIDAY NIGHT: A comedy about a mildjcld.org. mannered accountant accidentally ST. PATRICK'S DAYCANDLELIGHT IMPROV ANDCOMEDY:Bend picking up a briefcase full of money DINNER DANCE:Dinner followed by Improv Group performs, with local and trying to explain himself to a comedians; $8 inadvance,$10 at live music; $12 in advance, $20 at the police detective; $10; 7:30 p.m., the door; 7:30 p.m., doors open 7 door; 6-9 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, doors open 6:30 p.m.; Greenwood p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood 388-1133 or www.bendparksandrec. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. or www.2ndstreettheater.com. org/Senior Center. cascadestheatrical.org. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring BIGBAND JAZZ WINTER CONCERT: AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Karen Western swing band Bruce Forman Spears Zacharias presents "Mother Directed by Warren Zaiger, Central and Cow Bop; $39 plus fees; 8 p.m.; of Rain"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Oregon Community College's The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., ensemble, will perform the music Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. Sisters; 541-549-0866. of Miles Davis, John Coltrane and jazzattheoxford.com. "JOLLYROGER 8tTHEPIRATE Herbie Hancock; $10, $5 for seniors AARON CRAWFORD: The Seattle and COCC students with ID; 7:30 QUEEN": A playaboutan English country artist performs; $3 plus aristocrat and her suitor; $5; 7 p.m.; p.m.; Central Oregon Community fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's College, Pinckney Center for the Journey, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., Ste. Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Arts, 2600 N.W. College W ay,Bend; 100, Bend; 541-647-2944 or www. Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. 541-383-7510. bendtheatre.org. maverickscountrybar.com.
PUBLIC OFFICIALS DESCHU'FES COU5ITY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
STATE OF OREGON
• Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 County Commission Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 • Tammy Baney,R-Bend Web: http://governor.oregon.gov Phone: 541-388-6567 Email :Tammy Baney©co.deschules.or.us • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol • Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • Tony DeBone,R-LaPine Fax: 503-986-1616 Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us Email :Tony DeBone@o.deschutes.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. N.E. CROOK COUMTY Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 300 N.E.Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Email: oregon.treasurer@state.or.us Phone: 541-447-6555 Web: www.ost.state.or.us Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, D 1162 Court St. N.E. Web: co.crook.or.us Salem, OR97301 County Court Phone: 503-378-4400 •MikeMcCabe,CreokCountyjudge Fax:503-378-4017 Phone: 541-447-6555 Web: www.doj.state.or.us Email: mike.mccabe@co.crook.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avskian • Ken Fahlgren 800 N.E. OregonSt., Suite 1045 Phone: 541-447-6555 Portland, OR 97232 Email: ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us Phone:971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 JEFFERSOM COUNTY Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli 66 S.E. DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 LEGISLATURE Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us Senate County Commission • Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-District30 • Mike Ahern (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) • John Hatfield 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 • Wayne Fording Salem, OR97301 Phone: 541-475-2449 Phone: 503-986-1950
House ef Representattves • Rep. Jason Conger,R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-District59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-District 55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
went after the city for $2.1 sible for damages because million in damages in a civil Dahlen's name was not on Contlnued from B1 lawsuit initially filed in 2007 the title to the land during the Dahlen took the case to the in Deschutes County Circuit time he was trying to develop state Land Use Board of Ap- Court, claiming the city's it. Though he purchased the peals andin 2008 and had the roadblocks had p revented land, he had the title held first city's decisionreversed. LUBA him from developing the land in his wife's name and then in reversed thedecision based on when he could have turned a a family friend's name. an updated 1992 master plan, hefty profit. Dahlen, whose attorney did which made no reference to D ahlen sued the c it y o f not return a call for comment, the property as a landscape Bend for "temporary unconsti- alleged that an August 2004 buffer, establishing it as a tutional taking of his proper- cease-and-desist letter issued ty,"according tocourt records. by the city thwarted his debuildable tax lot. By that t ime, new home The case went to trial, and velopment plans and amountconstruction in the area had in April 2011 a 12-person jury ed to "temporary taking." ground to a halt, and Dahlen ruled the city was not respon- The jury found that because
Contlnued from B1 Nonetheless, Mathisen said, "You can still work with teachers to get kids to think and talk
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 7:46 a.m. March 7, inthe area of Northwest Fifth Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 10:44 a.m. March 7, inthe area of Northeast Wilshire Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 11:57 a.m. March 7, inthe areaof Southeast Algonquin Loop. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:36 p.m. March 7, inthe areaof Northwest HarwoodStreet. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 5:29 p.m. March 7, inthe area of West First Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 2:28 p.m. March 8, inthe areaof Northeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 3:23 p.m. March 8, inthe Southeast Fifth Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of
Dahlen's name was not on the title during that time, he was
not legally able to sue for damages. The Oregon Court of Appeals in February upheld the jury's verdict and issued an
in groups about atask even in a thinkabout tasks and engage room with that many kids." in problems. You can tell the "When I went in 2010, it was difference right when you walk chalk-and-talk e d u cation,"in between an IEEschool and Mathisen added. "And the lec- one without that help." tures were in English,which Going on this year's trip are plenty of kids couldn't under- Bend High School Principal
"THE METROPOLITANOPERA: WERTHER": Starring Jonas Kaufmann in the title role of Massenet's adaptation of Goethe's revolutionary and tragic romance; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. DISCOVERNATUREDAY: Families can track wildlife, explore the stream, meet birds of prey, learn map and compass, play games and more; hosted bythe Deschutes Children's Forest; K-eighth grade with parent or guardian; free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Cline Falls State Park, OR 126, 4 miles west of Redmond; 541-383-5592 or www. deschuteschildrensforest.org. MOTHER, DAUGHTER 8t FRIENDS TEA: Featuring lunch with tea, raffles, drawings and friendship photos; proceeds benefit the General Federation of Women's Clubs of Central Oregon; $15 donation, reservation requested; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; 541-279-1441 or gfwccentralor.org.
criminal mischief wasreported at8a.m. March 9, in theareaof Southeast LynnBoulevard. Theft — Atheft was reported at 4:55 p.m. March 9, inthe area of Northwest Third Street.
JEFFERSON COUMTY SHERIFF'8 OFFICE Theft — A theft was reported at 8:13 a.m. March 3, in the2100block of Northwest GumwoodLane in Madras. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at1:22 p.m. March 3, inthe 500 block of Colfax Lane inMadras. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at 8:11 a.m.March 5, inthe 4600 block of Southwest Belmont Lanein Madras. Theft — Atheft was reported at 3:17 p.m. March 5, in the16700 block of Southwest SteelheadRoad in Crooked RiverRanch. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:07 p.m.March 7,in the area ofNorthwest Birch Lanein Madras. Theft — Atheft was reported at4:44 p.m. March 8, inthe 600block of First Avenue inCulver.
12:53 a.m. March 8, inthe areaof U.S. Highway97and SouthwestOdemMedo Road. DUII — AndreaSuzanneNewcomb, 39, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:08a.m. March9,intheareaof U.S. Highway 97and RevereAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 9:07 p.m.March 9, inthe 20000 block of Pinebrook Boulevard.
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affirmation without opinion.
Bend city attorney Mary Winters said Dahlen could now apply to have his case heard by the Oregon Supreme Court, but she said it would be "unusual" for the highest court
to hear a case like this one. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletirt.com
BEND 541-383-1733
REDMOND 541-504-2134
SR-22'S • SUSPENSIONS DUII'S • TICKETS • • • BECAUSE HOW YOU SEE THE WORLD MATTERS
stand. They would copy the H.D. Weddel, Weddel'swife Patsymbols and try to memorize ty, a kindergarten teacher, and them, but they didn't grasp the their two children; Highland content. By now the teachers Magnet School Principal Paul who work with IEE are think- Dean and his wife Mary; Execing about how to get students to
SATURDAY
NEWS OF RECORD Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tim Knopp,R-District 27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
Case
Rwanda
ANCIENTSOL:The Portland hip-hop band performs, with Mosley Wotta; $5;9 p.m.;VolcanicTheatrePub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub. com. PRSN: Electronic dance music, with Radaand Ells;$3;10 p.m.;Dojo,852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-7069091 or www.dojobend.com.
Join AAA Travel and guest, Janet Anderson of Tauck, and learn of unique travel
utive Director for Curriculum
experiences in North America and abroad
and Instructional Technology Shay Mikalson; Bend Highscience teacher Kathleen Yaeger;
as we explore various cultures and their food, wine and traditions. Tauck is known
and Mathisen's wife Shannon and the couple's two children. — Reporter: 541-633-2160,
for its cultural engagement programs which enhance the travel experience and enrich
tleeds@bendbulletirt.com
the lives of Tauck guests.
AAA Travel
Trail Contlnued from B1 He said it's still too early to
know many specifics of the plan, like how much of the path would be paved versus unpaved. But Houston said parks and recreation officials
would finish surveys of the cross U.S. Highway 20. The area and apply for trailpermits proposed trail would branch in the next six to eight months. off east along the Deschutes Actual trail construction could start in 2015, he said.
The project's goalis to give pedestrians and bicyclists a
way to reach the park from Tumalo without having to
River and beneath the High-
way 20 underpass, ending on the other side of the highway near Riverview Avenue. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, egluci'zlichibendbulletin.com
20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A5 ttaiKM
J>LI>isP>aatt~LxS~Ri,
TueSday, MarCh 18 at 6:00PM RSVP: 541-383-0069
TAUcK4%
WORLD DISCOVERY
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
ransi use own or ri e
Alley Out OfgOVernOrraCe — Former OregonRepublican Party
bus and MAX routes carry a
Chairman Allen Alley says he won't be running for governor or any other elected office this year. Alley announced his decision onTwitter on Mondayandconfirmed in a telephone call. He says he's "not going away," but it's not the right time for him to run for office. He says a run would make it impossible for him to the follow through on promises to help the management teams of companies he's invested in. Alley ran for governor in 2010but lost the GOPprimary to Chris Dudley. Hehad publicly mulled another run this year to challenge Democrat John Kitzhaber. His decision not to run leavesstate Rep. Dennis Richardson of Central Point as the front-runner for the Republican nomination.
combined 312,000 riders on an average weekday.
Biologist: Cougar killed goats — AnOregonwildlife biologist
• With ridership boomingin the U.S., Portland systemseesdecline
Ridesincreased from 430,000
By Gosia Wozniacks
Federal officials have previously hailed Portland ar-
ao3
The Associated Press
PORTLAND — While the
jj->
•
ea's public transportation as
visionary, easy to use and a model for other cities. TriMet's
•
use of buses, trains and subways is on the rise in many U .S. cities, ridership in t h e
Portland region's much touted TriMet system has fallen off.
between 2012 and 2013. Other mass transit systems
says a cougar was responsible for killing two goats andsomechickens over three consecutive nights at a homenear an 80-acre park in south Eugene.Oregon Fishand Wildlife biologist Brian Wolfer said Monday that tracks found in two pastures near the homeconfirm a cougar was responsible. Wolfer thinks it was probably ayoung adult. Wildlife officers set a trap in hopes of capturing the cougar. He cautioned users of nearby Hendricks Park to keeppets on aleash.
in Oregon also didn't see much rise in ridership.
Machete killing suspect unfit for trial —Ajudgesaysa
Over the past two decades,
rs © irtsr
New data released by the
in 2012 to 480,000 in 2013.
ridership of TriMet has steadi-
American Public Transporta-
ly increased until the Great Recession and then leveled. It
tion Association shows it was down 3.8 percent from t h e
declined, especially on MAX,
past year. In 2013, TriMet recorded
f
98.8 million rides, compared
to about 102.7 million rides in Don Ryan/The Associated Press 2012. A bicyclist waits to board an incoming MAX train in Portland on TriMet's spo k e swoman Monday. While use of buses, trains and subways is onthe rise Mary Fetsch says the recent in many cities across America, ridership in the Portland area's decrease is due to the elimi- much-touted system has actually fallen off, according to new data nation of the Free Rail Zone released by the American Public Transportation Association.
in Portland, fare hikes, more fare enforcement and s e rvice cuts made during t h e open in 2015. recession. R idership o n M A X , t h e The agency says it has add- T riMet's light rail, saw t h e
The Salem-Keizer Transit,
popularly known as Cherriots,also saw a decrease of 2.4 percent. An d r i d ership
of Wilsonville's South Metro A re a R e gional T r ansit — aka SMART — remained
from about 60.4 million rides stagnant. in 2012 to about 58.9 million in 2013.
Nationally, public
t r ansit
systems saw the highest total ed back more bus service in largest dip, 6.1 percent. Some The area'scommuter rail of rides since 1956 — nearly September and plans to re- 38.4 million trips were taken line saw more success. The 10.7 billion trips in 2013. Cities store frequent bus service on on MAX in 2013, about 2,000 Westside Express Serviceor such as Houston, New York, its busiest Portland routes. A less than the previous year. WES, which connects Beaver- Seattle, Miami, Denver and new P o r t land-to-Milwaukie TriMet bus ridership also ton and Wilsonville, saw a 10 San Diego saw large ridership light rail line is also slated to decreased 2.4 percent, going percent increase in ridership. gains.
National monument adds 900 acres — Another largetract of private timberland within the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument in Southern Oregonhasbeentransferred to public ownership. The Mail Tribune in Medford reports the LandandWater Conservation Fund hasturned over 900 acres to the federal government as part of a continuing effort to buy parcels within the monument held bytheHancockTimberResourceGroup.Thefund makespurchases with money from the development of federal offshore oil and gas leases. The timber group still owns another 2,900 acres within the monument. Theparcel includes a stretch of the popular Pacific Crest Trail. The monumentwas created by President Bill Clinton in 2000 to protect the rare ecosystems found at the intersection of the Cascade RangeandSiskiyouMountains.
Shipping company to stick with Port of Portland The Associated Press P ORTLAND —
Many Northwest business- of the
P ort o f
Portland officials say a South Korean shipping company unhappy about the pace of work among longshore workers will continue serving the port's
es use the terminal to export
shore &
I n ternational L ong- and running." W a rehouse Union The decision wasn't unex-
or import goods. Their costs clashed with t h e P h i lip- pected, said a statement from would rise and the port would pines-based company known J ennifer Sargent, a u n i o n suffer a blow if cargo had to as ICTSI that operates it for spokeswoman. "The taxpayers of three Orbe trucked to or from Puget the port. Sound.
The port granted $20-a-conThe long-awaited word tainer subsidies in hopes they came Monday in a memo from would keep Hanjin sending Hanjin Shipping, which han- ships up the Columbia River to dles more than 75 percent of the port. the container volume at the Terminal 6 has been in turport's Terminal 6. moil since 2012, as members container operation.
"The Port of Portland's productivity has still not shown
egon counties have spent more
any sign of improvement for
entice Hanjin to stay in Portland despite ICTSI's monopo-
the past m onths," Hanjin's
than $10 million in subsidies to
memo said. "We are working closely with the terminal to
listic-generated performance
solve the productivity issues
el of squeezing labor, government and carriers."
in orderto keep the service up
and worldwide business mod-
Sheriff's gap inJosephineCounty currently beingfilled by state police The Associated Press GRANTS PASS — Oregon state troopers are filling the law enforcement gap in rural Josephine County after voters refused to raise local taxes to pay
72 percent of patrol calls and
"The guys that are working nights and weekends have re-
86 percent of detective calls
ally had to do a lot more," said
State police say since then,
were referred from the sheriff's state police Senior Trooper Josh office. Quick. "We're not able to work State police are sending traffic as much as in the past." for sheriffs patrols. more personnelto Josephine The 797 cases state police State detectives investigated County to handle the extra detectives investigated in Josenearly 800 cases in Josephine work, amounting to a state law phine County in 2013 compares County last year, 86 percent re- enforcement subsidy. Five of to just 148 cases in neighborferred fromthe sheriff's office. the 10 new troopers approved ing Jackson County, where Investigations went from 5 by the Legislature for 2015 will the population is more than to 10cases a month before cuts be based in Josephine County. twice as large and the sheriffs in the sheriffs office, to 50 to 85 Sheriff Gil Gilbertson said department has patrols and cases after the cuts, the Grants that with one deputy injured, detectives. "OSP is definitely feeling Pass Daily Courier reported. he was down to just one patrol The cuts were imposed in deputyto covertheruralcoun- an impact while working very June 2012 as the federal gov- ty's 1,600 square miles. They hard to minimize the effect ernment cut subsidies to tim- work business hours Monday it has on the community and ber-dependent counties, leav- through Friday, and are not transportation safety," state poing the sheriffs office two pa- available nights or weekends, lice spokesman Lt. Gregg Hasttrol deputies and no detectives. when state police fill the gap. mgs sard.
suspect accused of using amachete to fatally slash a LakeOswego man is unfit to stand trial. JudgeEveMiller ruled Monday that Erik John Meiser should return to the OregonState Hospital. Meiser suffers from delusions. Hewas placed on medication, but later was reported not taking it. A hospital psychiatrist concluded Meiser can't cooperate with a lawyer anddecide on arealistic legal course. Meiser is accused of aggravated murder. Authorities say Frederick HayesJr. surprised him during a 2012burglary and waskilled. Last year Meiser told a clinical psychologist he could befreed if he could explain his situation to a jury. Hesays conspirators tormented him and wantedto turn his son into a cannibal.
Horse death attriduted to equine herpes — State livestock officials say oneLaneCounty horse has died andfour others from the same stable havetested positive for a neurological form of equine herpes virus. StateVeterinarian Dr. Brad LeaMaster said Mondaythe incidentappears to beisolated and there is no indication the virus has spread to other horses. Officials say all horses onthe property have been quarantined andthose showing symptoms of the disease are being treated. Equineherpesvirus is highly contagious, but the neurological form of it is rare. Thevirus cannot be transmitted to humans. The diseasetypically causes horses to develop afever, lose control of their extremities andcanresult in death. There is novaccine. — From wire reports
Q RE G Q N C 0
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
en s ou ocuson o oes eore an I s
I VV~LSVNe
ome of the potholes in Bend are big enough to hold a city council meeting in. Well, probably not. But driving along Bend's streets can be a menace to tires, suspension, safety and wallets. The point is, when we read that council is trying to find a bigger space to hold its meetings, our mind shifted to potholes and the city's many other priorities cra~g
Street maybe a reasonable solution. But before the council spends a dime on fancier digs or moving, let's get some priorities straight. The cramped council chambers are anoccasional problem. Bend has an everyday pothole problem. Its roads are estimated to need $16 million a year in maintemoney. nance for the next five years to get C ouncil chambers ca n g e t them to an optimal level. The city cramped. While the chambers can says it spends about $2.2 million typically handle the smattering of a year to maintain streets and at attendance, some topics bring a that rate, they will continue to get crowd. worse. There is no place for them to Bend has an everyday fire and sit. The crowd overflows into the ambulance response time probhallway. lem. We urgeyou to support the That makes it difficult for them May fire levy to help. to participate. It's not very welcomThere arealso funding puzzles ing. It also can make it difficult to with the police, and water and sewhear inside the chambers, because er. And it should make its sidewalk of people chatting in the hallway. ramps accessible. The council has rightly asked Stacked up against those evstaff to hunt around for some op- eryday problems, throwing montions. It might be possible to ren- ey at renovating or moving the ovate the existing chambers. The council chambers doesn't seem as municipal court on Northeast 15th important.
M 1Vickel's Worth Rule shouldn't stop ukulele festival
third week of July and the High and Dry Bluegrass Festival is held the third weekend of August. Both are family-oriented, nonprofit events.
why ask them to waste precious re- variety of public safety professionals, sources when we can see the answer including members of the judiciary at by just driving our streets? the local, state and federal level. I feel Newly painted crosswalks at confident in knowing a consummate Franklin and Bond'? Already ru- professional when I see one. ined. Fog and bike lane lines all over Without hesitation, I am voting the city? Worn off. This summer's for Randy Miller as our next circuit chip seal on Northwest Ninth/Tren- court judge. ton/12th'? Rutted again. Newport AvMiller has a record of faithful and enue? Ruts exacerbating pavement tireless service to his family, commubreakup, leading to constant pothole nity and country. Very few judicial repairs after snowstorms. candidates present as Miller does the What the editorial fails to point out well-rounded, real-life experiences is that multiple in~ ona l s t udies of honorably serving in the military suggest studs offer unpmved trac- and law enforcement professions tion only on sheet ice, a rare condi- who have also gone on to become
Courageousvote stops
No trouble, no drunks, no fights;
tion even in Central Oregon. In other
misguideddass-actionbill
you can actually bring the entire small amount of addilional safety for family. The Ukulele University Fes- such a small amount of time? Perhaps tival is the same; three days of en- it's because a certain large tire ~er tertaining and teaching with a focus loves them — after all, they don't last of fostering music programs in local but a couple of seasons and people are
C
o ngratulations t o Sc a p poose Democrat Sen. Betsy Johnson for b locking misguided legislative action on class-action suits. The dominant narrative of badguy corporations versus good-
guy Legal Aid has oversimplified a complex issueand very nearly led to passage of a bill before its consequences were sufficiently explored. Under existing law, companies found at fault in class-action lawsuits get to keep money not claimed by those entitled to it. House Bill 4143 would have redirected those funds to support Legal Aid, which provides legal services to the poor. Proponents painted the issue as one about fairness and justice, saying that returning the funds to the corporations was like giving a burglar stolen goods because you couldn't find the original owner. They cited the fact that 48 other states direct leftover class-action funds to some public use. What they didn't address are the details in HB 4143 that raise constitutional questions and are different from provisions in those
48 other states. When former Oregon Attorney General Dave Frohnmayer raised those issues, they were dismissed because he represents companies that might be affected. While that potential bias is certainly worth noting, it doesn't answer the complex questions about statutory and constitutional safeguards that the bill would affect and its other possible consequences for class-action litigation. Last week, Johnson broke with her party to vote against the bill, leaving the vote at 15-15, which effectively killed it. It was a particularly courageous action given the highly partisan nature of the debate. Republicans accused Democrats of political grandstanding in preparation for the fall elections, while Democrats painted Republicans as caring more about rich corporations than poor people who need legal representation. No doubt Legal Aid needs support. But the answer shouldn't be found by rushing complex legislation through during the short legislative session. A more thorough look atthe issues can now proceed, thanks to Johnson's vote.
Are you kidding me? A headline in the newspaper was titled "Ukule-
le festival may face permit trouble." This is a big joke, right? Deschutes County has a rule requiring that events be spaced at least three months apart when on the same property. What for? Why? So what if the Ukulele Festival is held the
a successful business person and
wholesome gatherings! The High condilions they offer simiLe or worse civil business and individual rights and Dry Bluegrass Festival is a won- performance than traction tues. Why attorney. derful, affordable weekend where
would we allow tires that only ofler a
I've learned that Miller's honest,
impartial and practical approach to following and interpreting complex civil law is known and respected and sets him apart. Miller's judicial temperament and hi s m ethodical
approach in arriving at the accurate, No amount of palatable tax can re- fair and just result exemplifies his
schools. What could be better?
hookedonthem
I think Deputy Deschutes County Administrator Erik Kropp needs to
pair the damage these tires do. Even
natural abilities.
work at making some changes re- if the state collected enough, it would garding this ridiculous rule. not likelytrickle down to Bend or the DIana MacKenzIe county to come anywhere close to reTerrebonne pairing our roads. The simplest and most economical
Miller embodies each of the characteristics that citizens should expect and require of their judiciary — foremost, honesty, integrity and impartiality. Stated simply, Miller solution is just to get rid of them. is uniquely qualified to serve as our Get rid of studded tires Jim Roberts circuit court judge. The value deIt is curious that The Bulletin is Bend rived from his experience, talents agreeing with the call for Oregon's and philosophy of being of service transportation department to study to others is immeasurable — and the financial damage studded tires commendable. do to roads. Oregon Department of As a retired Oregon State Police It is my honor to endorse Miller's Transportation has admitted that officerwho served three decades in candidacy for circuit court judge. it has a funding crisis that imperils law enforcement and consulting, I've Robert"Bob" Dent most of its upcoming projects. So had the honor of working with a wide Bend
Vote for Millerforjudge
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.
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'Delusion' afflicting Bend's latest planning effort By John Driscoll The Good Idea Fairy has taken
opportunity to experience something euphemistically known as "smart
possession of Bend's planning office. growth." The MMA will turn Third The Bend Central District Multimodal Mixed-Use Area Project, hereafter known as the MMA, is the latest man-
ifestation of her presence. The MMA is aredevelopment scheme intended
and much worse than the conditions it was intended to improve upon. The MMA, by the admission of its
proponents, is designed to increase congestion and crowding. It is Bend's
promise, and that sooner or later they
fail. Juniper Ridge is a local example of ing east on U.S. Highway 20. The Bend the disappointing results that are typplanning office and Angelo Planning ical of these grand planning schemes. have glossed overthis negative effect. Downtown Eugene still has yet to Street into a bottleneck that will particularly inconvenience trucks travel-
to change an area that is bounded to The de facto intent of the MMA is to the west by the parkway, to the east by drive out establishedbusinesses for the Fourth Street and that stretches north benefit of the ones favored by Bend's fromthe Third Streetunderpass to Re- Planning Office and Angelo Planning vere into something that mimics Port- Group. What evidence is there that land's Pearl District. they have been endowed with special The plan that the planning office insight that entitles them to make such commissioned the Angelo Planning choices, particularly since they will Group of Portland to prepare is one harm the existing businesses, several thatincorporates virtually allthe ideas of which have been located there for currently fashionable among city decades? Higher densities result in planners. Past experience proves that higher infrastructure costs. The Planthe MMA, as is the case with every ning Office and Angelo do not address other similar scheme, will prove, once it is executed, expensive, disruptive
IN MY VIEW
One of the most important reasons why planning doesn't work is the "planning delusion." It is based on the premise that planning is needed because the market doesn't work. The delusion is that, since the market doesn't work, then
government planning must work better.
entirely recover from its redevelopment during the early '70s. The Pearl
District has become the playground that is not possible for individuals. for the very wealthy. It is inhabited priOne of the most important reamarilyby"trustistas" (trust fund recip- sons why planning doesn't work is ients who have migrated from Califor- the "planning delusion." It is based nia and the East Coast), two-income on the premise that planning is needfamilies and highly paid public offi- ed because the market doesn't work. cials and employees. The jobs it has The delusion is that, since the market created are among the lowest-paying doesn't work, then government planpositions in Oregon — waiters, cooks, ning must work better. This delusion house cleaners, laundry workers, has extraordinary implications. beauticians and low-paid salespersons First, if government planning works where the money will come from to at high-priced shops. better than the market, then anything pay these costs. The MMA is yet anThe Kelo Case illustrates the harm that planners come up with must be other exercise in central planning by done to neighborhoods by planning right. This is probably why planners government bureaucrats. schemes such as the MMA. Planning are so susceptible to confusing their The problem with central planning schemes such as the MMA give bu- ideals with facts. Second, if anything by government bureaucrats is that reaucrats the power to magnify the planners come up with is right, then their schemes never deliver what they impact of bad decisions to an extent it would be folly to let individuals do
something different. So rather than relyonmarket tools to implement their
plan, planners inevitably use coercion and regulation. Finally, when they find that their ini-
tial regulations fail to work as intended, planners usually respond by developing ever more restrictive rules. The results arem oreand more unintended consequences, and people develop more and more creative ways to avoid the rules. The planning impulse is fundamentally totalitarian.
Bend is best served by discarding the Angelo Planning Group's plan now rather than attempting to correct itlater. — John Driscoll lives in Bend.
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
CALIFORNIA NEWS
6.9-magnitudequakeoff North Coast was thestate'slargestsince2005
BITUARIES Julia Mae Bernard Jnn. 12, 1962- Feb. 25, 2014 J uli was born J u li a M a e Bernard in Prineville, Ore gon J u n e 1 2 , 1 9 6 2 t o H enry B e rnard J r . a n d Louise Bowlby. She gr ew up on a r a nc h i n S u p lee, Oregon until the ranch was s old i n 1 9 70. Sh e t h en m oved t o P r i n e v ill e a n d went to school there until her graduation. Juli l ov ed t he ou td o o rs , cu tt i n g
wood, camping,
f i shing
and her family most of all. Juli i s s u r v i ve d b y her three children - a daughter, Hanna Rob e r s on , an d sons, RJ and Joshua Bonfiglio; grandchildren, Zakk a nd Loah; br others, M i k e a nd James B e rnard; a n d sister, Sue. Autumn Funerals Bend is honored to serve the family, (541) 318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Fax: 541-322-7254
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Fahimwasapolarizing figure in Afghanistanpolitical landscape By Kevin Sieff and Sayed Salahuddin The Washington Post
K ABUL, A f ghanistan -
Afghanistan's first vice president, Marshal M ohammed
Fahim, a polarizing leader whose political and military career spanned the S oviet War and the American invaHe died of an undisclosed Fahim's death leaves Af-
politics after the American m ilitary
w i t h d r awal thi s
year.
On the California main-
shaking. land, the two most recent By contrast, a 6.5-quake large quakes were the mag-
Los Angeles Times
hit the area in January 2010,
nitude-7.1 Hector Mine tem-
6.9-magnitude earthquake snapping power lines, topthat rattled Northern Califor- pling chimneys, knocking
L OS ANGELES — T h e
blor in 1999 and the magni-
nia on Sunday was the state's
tude-7.3 Landers quake in 1992.
down traffic signals, shatter-
largest temblor in nearly ing windows and prompting a decade. But it caused no the evacuation of at least one damage or injuries. apartment building. That's because the quake The North Coast sits along was centered 50 miles off the Mendocino Triple Juncthe coast of Eureka and oc-
curred at a depth of "10 miles beneath the Pacific seabed," according to the U.S. Geological Survey. By the time the seismic energy reached the shore, it had dissipated significantly. The USGS said the North Coast
Sunday's temblor, which struck less than 55 m i l es from McKinleyville, Fortuna, Eureka and F erndale, was followed by at least 13
tion, where the Pacific, North American and Juan de Fuca tectonic plates collide. It is
aftershocks as large as magnitude 4.6, according to the
one of the most seismically active parts of the San An-
Sgt. Brian Stephens of the Eureka Police Department
dreas fault system that runs through the state. In 2005, a
said that as of about 6:15 a.m.
USGS.
magnitude-7.2 quake struck
Monday, "we have not had one report of damage any-
off Northern California.
where in the city."
lems. Cover Oregon is more Christofferson than a website, she said. It is
effortsso that graduates are
Continued from B1 a program that is helping proChristofferson said she is vide previously uninsured Orresigning as a board mem- egonians with access to health ber of Cover Oregon, the care. state's beleaguered health Walden was the first memexchange, effective imme- ber of Oregon's congressiodiately. Previously, she had nal delegation to call for an been a member of the Ore- investigation by the Governgon Health Fund board. ment Accountability Office of While a cknowledging Cover Oregon's use of more that Cover Oregon and the than $300 million in taxpayAffordable Care Act aren't er funds. Last week, the GAO perfect, Christofferson said confirmed it will investigate she wants to continue to ad- Cover Oregon. "Greg Walden works hard vocate on behalf of making health care more widely every day to get results for available and affordable. Oregonians, and he looks As a small business own- forward to earning the trust
workforce, she said.
better prepared to enter the "I have five kids in their 20s, so I have lots of experi-
ence with job-seekers," she quipped. C hristofferson e arned
t' "
KamranJebreili /The AssociatedPressfile photo
Afghanistan Vice President Field Marshal Mohammed Fahim attends e press conference in 2011 honoring former Afghan President Burhanuddin Rabbani in Kabul, Afghanistan. Fahim, an ethnic Tejik who also served in President Hamid Karzai's first administretion, died Sunday. The government has called for a three-dey
mourning period.
Born in 1957, Fahim first
gained notoriety as a young commander during the So- balance. while many foreign diplomats viet occupation of the 1980s In 2002, when aid began raised concerns about him and then as an anti-Taliban flowing to help create a new privately, Fahim was seen by leader in the 1990s — a lega- Afghan army, Fahim was many as a man who had accy he would parlay into a for- thought to be one of the main crued too much power to be mal position of power under beneficiaries. He was long dismissed or marginalized. President Hamid Karzai. In plagued by allegations of On Sunday, a United Na2001, with American support, drug trafficking and corrup- tions statement called him "a he helped topple the Taliban tion, which many say helped good and trusted partner of as leader of t h e N o r thern enrich a growing circle of the UN." It's Alliance. d evotees, mostly f r o m h i s unclear p r ecisely Karzai on Sunday called own Tajik ethnicity. what role Fahim would have Fahim's death "a huge loss for He built large homes and played in the country's upAfghanistan." held private games of Buz- coming presidential elections While Fahim's battlefield kashi, where men on horse- or the subsequent political experienceinspired respect back fight for control of a transition, but no one doubts in many, to others he symbol- goat carcass. He maintained that he would have used his ized a new generation of Af- an enormous security detail, political muscle to h arness ghan warlords who profited which grew after a major Tal- Tajik voters April 5 to secure immensely from his proxim- iban attack targeted his con- his position in the next adity to power and foreign aid. voy in 2009. ministration. Many b e lieve By many accounts,Fahim Despite the a l legations he would have supported grew enormously wealthy against Fahim, he no doubt Abdullah Abdullah, also a in the years after 2002, first played a crucial role in a mul- former N o r thern A l l i a nce during his stint as defense tiethnic government that, to commander. Because of his minister and then as vice some degree, helped unite sizable following and ethnic president. Tajiks and Pashtuns, the clout, Fahim could have been As he ascended the coun- country's two major ethnic- a force for unity or instabilitry's political ranks, Afghans ities. After he ran for office ty, depending on how he inand foreign diplomats alike as Karzai's vice president in structed his men to behave. In grumbled that they were em- 2009, photos of his likeness that respect, he has no clear powering a man with a shad- were plastered all over Kabul, successor. owy record. But many rec- where they remain today. The Afghan government ognized that plucking Fahim Karzai awarded Fahim the calledfor three days of nafrom power would do more honorary title of "Afghani- tional m o urning, d u ring harm than good, potentially stan's Marshal" for his role which the national flag will upsetting a delicate ethnic during the various wars. And be lowered to half-mast.
University and a master's in
business administration from Golden Gate University. A former president of the Sunriver
Chamber of Commerce, she lives in Bend with her husband, Tom Hall.
C hristofferson said
she
wants to return to Washington — she worked briefly as an
of the voters once more this aide to Rep. Pete Stark, D-Cayear," said Walden spokesman lif., in her youth — to help Andrew Malcolm, noting that find solutions to the country's there are other candidates, problems. "Congress is broken. I hate including Barney Spera of panies are able to set their Ashland and Frank V u lliet to say, (but) it doesn't take a contribution and let emof Sunriver, running for the rocket scientist to figure that ployees choose their own Democratic nomination. "If out," she said. "This Congress Democratic primary voters was the least effective Conplans, she said. Christofferson credited decide they want s omeone gress in history and has lost her experiences as a small responsible for Cover Oregon the respect of the American b usiness owner and t h e as their nominee, that is their people." geographic diversity she choice to make." First elected i n 1 9 98, represented as someone Christofferson's campaign Walden is seeking his ninth from "the other side of the website doesn't list her party term in Congress. Klamath mountains" with l a nding affiliation, and she said she's County Commissioner Dennis her a spot on the Gover- not hiding the fact that she's a Linthicum is running against nor's Committee for Health Democrat, but trying to avoid him in May's primary. The filCare Reform in 2007. From hyperpartisanship. ing deadline for May's prima"Whether I'm a Democrat ry is today at 5 p.m. there, she continued on to membership on the boards or a Republican is the least — Reporter: 202-662-7456, of the Oregon Health Fund important thing in this camaclevenger@bendbulletin.com and Cover Oregon. paign," she said. "(PartisanChristofferson said she ship is) what got the country in has crossed party lines and the fix it's in." votedforWalden a decade Christofferson even allowed mplements ago, but he has become so her position on forestry is likeifsac 'o vl fcs'tse'J conservative she can no ly very similar to Walden's. 70 SWCentury Dr., Ste. 145 "Anybody in Oregon in a longersupporthim. Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 "He began to move more public position right now is complementshomeinteriors.com right, and as much of the looking for the same thing," rest of Congress has, in- she said. "We all want to find stead of making decisions a way to protect the environon individual issues, he ment and at the same time do votes along party lines," something to help rural comshe said. munities that have relied on Christofferson pointed to timber." Walden's 49 votes to repeal Oregon won't be able to put Obamacare as evidence an end to its timber wars until that he's no longer working the groups involved stop takCome check us out! on behalf of the best inter- ing positions that are non-neests of people in Oregon. gotiable, she said. "The problem is he's not Christofferson sees jobs as presenting solutions," she a key issue in the district, and BROTHERS
We beat
'e~ e~ ~o+
said. "'No' is not a solution."
Christofferson
Deathsoj notefrom around
Washington. Norman Yonemoto, 67: A Los Angeles artist who with his younger brother, Bruce, created innovative video installations that often explored mass media, Hollywood and HBO miniseries was based on in September that he was being other forms of pop culture. a book by Stephen Ambrose treatedfor cancer.Died Satur- Died Feb. 28 at his home in Los and followed the members of day at his home in Brussels. Angeles. Easy Company from training Mej. Kurt Chew-Een Lee, 88: Jack Bellivenu, 55: A Harin Georgia in 1942 through the A Chinese-American who led vard scientist whose quest to
history. Mortier was artistic director for Teatro Realin Madrid William "Wild Bill" Guerne- from 2009 until last year, when re, 90:One of the World War II his title was changed to artisveterans whose exploits were tic adviser in a tussle with the dramatized in the TV minise- Spanish government over his ries "Band of Brothers." The successor after he announced
TV.APPLIANCE
wants to strengthen education
lohnsonbrotherstvcom
sai d
too much of the coverage
of Cover Oregon has focused on the troubled online heath care exchange, which was not ready for its Oct. 1 launch and remains beset by technical prob-
541 382-6447 ~2090NE wyatt court ~suite 101 BendOR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
S U r olo S~
%'en- • teti n Improvemient Program T IP S tatew i d
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
=
the world:
war's end in 1945. Died Satur-
dayin Philadelphia. Gererd Mortier, 70:A visionary opera company leader whose bold theatricality and updating of the canon helped define the art form's modern
a
bachelor's degree in political science from California State
with the lack of coverage options for her employees, she said. Under Obamacare, com-
illness, according to Afghanistan's presidential palace.
and its complicated ethnic
felt only moderate to light
er, she became frustrated
sion, died Sunday. He was 57.
ghanistan without one of its most controversial figures, who was expected to play an influential role in the country's security establishment
By Ari Bloomekatz nnd Richie Duchon
Marines into battle against capture the quicksilver flare the Chinese in th e K orean of thought inside a living brain War and was cited for brav- led to the first magnetic reso-
ery for helping to preserve a crucial evacuation route for 8,000 U.S. soldiers. Was found dead March 3 at his home in
nance image of human brain function. Died Feb. 14 in San Mateo, Calif. He was 55. — From wire reports
Get ATaste For Food. Home & Csarden Every Tuesday In
AT HOME
Oreeon Deyartment
ot'%ensportatlon The Central Oregon Area Commission on T r ansportation (COACT) and
Oregon Dept of Transportation (ODOT)
' .
•
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•
•
•
•
•
lmprovement Program (STIP). The •
STIP represent O regon's four-year transportation c a pital i m p rovement program. It i s t h e d o c ument t hat identifies the funding for, and scheduling of transportation projects and programs.
e •
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People interested in l e arning more or providing their comments about
the proposed STIP are encouraged to attend a n O PEN THURSDAY MARCH 13™
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014
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7$42 0.00 85/42 pc 5»I32 pc Grand Rapids,IA 48/34 0.00 3$9 sn zmi sn Rapid City,SO 67/37O.OD 4ll26 sn 51/31 pc SeanleWA 54/47 0.9D 56I49 pc 59/39 pc 51/36 0.00 53/16 r 35/6 sn Greenaay,Wi 52I21 0.00 36I5 sn 1$0 fl Reno, NV 58I 45 0.0051I29 s 56/23 s Siovx ralls, sn 56I380.00 35I22 sn 35/25 pc Albany, NV 41/27 0.00 46I23 pc 36/17 i Greensboro, Nc 71732 0.00 74I43 pc 67/29 sh Richmond, VA 63/32 O.OD 72I50pc 72I33 is Spokane,WA 4$390.37 49Q7 pc 53/33 pc Albuquerque,NM68/30 0.00 6182 pc 52/30 pc Hanisbvr u, PA 61/33 0.00 5$31 pc 52/19 r Rochester, NY 4!I36 0.00 45/13 cd 31N sn sprinuli»ld,MO 74/360.00 75/33pc 4$26 pc Anchorage,AK 268 6 0.00 3$26 sn 32/21sn Harfford, CT 45/30 0.00 51/31 pc 42/19 r sacr»menrn, CA 66I53 0.12 72/43 s 74/45s stLoui s,M O »OI45000 81/32pc 41/25 sn Adnnr», 6A 72/48 0.00 76/51 pc 63/60 sb Helena,rur 45/380.29 44/23 pc 4ms pc salt lake city, UT 66/50 0.00 47/32sn 51/36 pc Tampa,FL 72/57 0.00 77I64 pc 75/54 is Ad»ndcCiiy, rti 5782 0.00 62I39 pc 59I24 is Honolulu, ni 81/69 0.00 »OI72 pc 79/72 pc 5»n Antonio, 1X 67/500.15 83/52 f 65/39 pc Tucso»,A2 78I520.00 77/46 pc 7$50 pc Austin,TX 71I50 0.00 6$49 I 62/37 pc Houston,TX 73/46 0.00 7$47 pc 62/40 pc San Diego, CA 77/57 0.00 67/55 I 71/55 s Tulsa,nx 79/330.00 84/40 pc 57/29 s Balnmore,Mn 6$37 0.00 65/40 pc 63/23 is Huntsville, AL 6»I39 0.00 75/40 pc 60/27 sh san Francisco, CA66I55 0.00 6S/52 s 65/51 s Washington,nz 61/390.00 67/43 pc 67/24 is V Billings, MT 4986 0.00 4$28 pc 50I32 pc Indianapolis, IM 6OI34 0.00 61/22 pc 33/14 sn san lose, CA 69I55 0.01 72/46 s 74/48 s Wichita,xs 79/320.00 6$32 pc 52/28 pc Birmingham,AL 7$42 0.00 75/45 sh 63/30 sh Jackson,Szs 75/43 0.00 72/47 sh 63/34 pc sanlare, NS4 6%30 0.00 6$24 pc 49/24 pc Yakima,WA 6$400.00 55/31 s 59/35 pc -/-0.00 84I57 pc 81/55 pc Bismarck,NO 53I35 0.00 41/22 pc 51/30 pc Jacksonville FL 8$49 0.00 81/56 pc 6$46 sb Savannah, 6A 79I50 0.00 8$58 pc 75/42 sh Yvma,nz Boise, io 53/41 0.36 53/31 pc 57/34 s Juneau, AX 42I34 0.01 42I36 r 43/33 r Boston, MA 44I26 0.03 51/35 pc 44/25 sn KansasCity, MO 74I42 0.00 69/29 pc 45/26 pc Buffa lo,MV 41 /340.01 41/11 pc 31/5 sn lansing, Mr sol36 0.00 3%9sn 24/-3 sn Amsterdam 62/39O.OD 57/41 s 57/39pc Mecca 96I»0 O.iN 96/75 s 95/73 s Bvrlinulnn, VT 37/23 0.04 4$16 pc 31/10sn 1»sV»9»SNV 61/54 0.00 6»I46 pc 71/49 pc Athens 50I44 0.00 51/41 r 51/42 r Mexicooir 71/57 O.iN 73/46 pc 78/46 s Caribou,ruz 27/1 0.00 33/9 sn 22/6 sfl Lcrdn ulnn, XY 65I36 0.00 6»I29 pc 54/18 8 Avddand 77/55 0.00 7557 pc 73/55 s Montreal 32/230.00 3$26 pc 39/28 pc casper,WY 63/41 0.00 35/21 sn 45/26 s Lincoln, Nz 77I37 0.00 46I26 r 47726pc Baghdad 73I64 0.01 »OI57 pc73/55 5 Szoscirw 55I330.00 48I33 s 48/35 pc Chadesrnn,5C 6$52 0.00 6$58 pc 75/41 sh Linle Rock,An 72/44 0.00 75/41 I 56I31 pc Bangkok 91/60 0.00 9rm pc 93/77pc Nairobi 82/600.00 8$59 pc ar/60 pc Chadon»,rcc 74/32 0.00 77/49 pc 71732is LosAnu»les, CA 75/56 0.00 72I55 pc 7»I55 s Bcilino 4$24O.OD 46/30 s 5$33 pc Nassau 76/660.00 75/66 pc 6$69 s Chvn»noona,TN 73/44 0.00 75/43 pc64I28 is louisville,KV 7ma 0.00 7$29 pc 47/21 8 Beirut 66I57 0.00 64/55 pc 66I53 s NewDelhi 73I62 0.00 62I57 s 75/55 is Cheyenne,WY 62/44 0.00 34/17 sn 45/26 pc Madison, Wi 57/33 0.00 38I20 sn 26/13 sn Berlin 64/37 0.00 59/35 pc 5583 pc Osaka 4$330.00 53/33 s 62I50 s Chicago, IL 53/49 0.00 42na r 26/12 sn Memphis,TN 67/36 0.00 7688 f 55/31 pc 80901» 6$44 0.00 66I50 is 69/51 is Oslo 46I41 0.00 53/39 r 5$33 pc cinonnan,on 63/37 0.00 65/22 pc 41/15sn Miami, FL 61/65 0.00 82/69 pc 84/67 is Budapest 53/32 0.00 53/35 cd 57/33pc Ottawa 35I210.00 35/30 pc 39/12 pc Cleveland, OH 57/36 0.00 4»n4 r 32/6 sn Milwaukee,Wi 55/39 0.00 37/13 sn 22/11 pc BuenosAires 71/60 0.00 73/62 s 77/66 s Paris 66/41 0.00 64/42 s 6V41 pc Colo.SPBs , Co 73/36 0.00 47/15 sn 44/21 s Minneapolis, rzu53/32 0.00 36n7 sn 27/18 pc Cabo sanLucas 77/57 0.00 »OI59 s 8$60 s Rio de Janeiro 69/75 0.00 67/73 pc 89I75 s Columbia,MO 77737 0.00 79/32 is 42I24 pc Nashville, TN 72/39 0.00 75/36 pc 56/25 sb Cairo 71 /53 0.00 71 /51 s 71/50pc Rome 62/46 0.00 62/39 s 5$41 pc Columbia, 5C 7»I41 0.00 7»I52 pc 73/38 sb New OrleancTA 75I53 0.00 71/54 is 69/43 pc Calgary 42/28 0.00 41/22 cd 41/26 s Santiago 82/600.00 60/55 pc 8$55 s Columbus,64 76I46 0.00 7$54 sh 71/35 sh NewYorkrfv 5$36 0.00 61/38 pc 51/22 r Cancun 82/64 0.00 84I68 s 84/69pc 5»o paulo 87/680.00 87/66 is 87/68 is Columbus,OH 57/35 0.00 6N16 pc 3$9 sn Newark,Srr 54/37 0.00 6$49 pc 5$22 r Dublin 50I30 0.00 4$32 pc 51/35 s 5»pponr 26/24 0.00 3N-2 sn 32/22 Pc Concord, NC 39I23 0.02 47/26 pc 3689 i Norfolk, VA 6»I31 0.00 71/47 pc 71/36 is Edinburgh 51/33 0.00 51/33pc 51/28 s Seoul 44/23 0.00 50/39 pc 53/35 cd Corpus Christi, 1X 62I53 0.06 7$50 I 65/45 pc Okla. 017,OK 78I35 0.00 7%36 pc 5483 p Geneva 60/32 0.00 62/39 s 59I39pc 5h»nuhai 57/39 0.00 55/42 s 5$51 s Dallas,1X 7»I41 0.00 82/41 pc 56/34pc Omaha,NE 75/37 0.00 44I26 r 43/29 pc Harare 80/64 0.00 aal64 is 8$64 is Singapore 91/68 O.iN 91/69 pc 93/71 pc Dayton,on 6185 0.00 62/34 pc 34la sn OdandoFL ao/56 0.00 83/63 f 83/57 is Hong Kong 60/57 0.00 6259 r 6$62 pc srndcbolm 5$370.00 4$35 r 46/33 pc Denver,CO 72/4O 0.00 4617 sn 49I27 s PalmSpinus, CA6$56 0.00 61/56 pc 79/57 s Istanbul 50I42 0.00 53/42 r 5$42 r Srdn»7 82/71 0.00 8$64 s 87/66 s O»s Moines,14 7$41 0.00 43/23 r 37/26pc Peori a,it 59/36 0.00 56/25 cdi 36/20 sn Jerusalem 66/55 0.00 64/51 r 6»I50pc Taipei 64/550.00 62/57 s 71/59 pc Detroit, 141 47/35 0.00 4urr sh 26I4 sn Phrisdclphra,PA 56I36 0.00 6$43 pc 62/23 sh Johannesburg -I- 0.00 66I60 is 66I62pc Tel Aviv 66I550.00 66I53 r 6»I50 pc Duluth, ruu 52I30 0.00 34/9 pc 19/14pc Phoenix, AZ 81/56 0.00 81/54 pc 79/54 pc uma 80/69 0.00 »OI69 pc 82/69pc Tokyo 4$35 0.00 46I37 s 57/50 s El Paso,TX 71/35 0.00 75/42 pc 58/39 pc Piilsbururx PA 5»I36 0.00 55/la cd 39/7 sn lisbon 68I46 0.00 66/46 s 69/48 s Vancouver 50/41 0.00 5$39 r 48/39 pc Fallbanks, AK 9/-1 3 0.00 3$9 cd 32/4 cd Porlland, 346 34I26 0.00 4$27 pc 39/23 ldndcll 55/41 O.OD60/42 s 57/39 s Vienna 53I28 0.00 51/37 s 57/35 pc Fargo,No 47/36 0.00 32/11 pc 29/22pc Providence,Ri 4$31 0.00 52/36 pc 4$24 r Madrid 66/32 0.00 69/37 s 66/37 s Warssw 57I28 0.00 53I30 pc 51/26 s Flausl»ff, AZ 59/20 0.00 52I26 pc 49/26pc Raleigh, NC 7434 0.00 75/45 pc 6»I32 sh Manila 69/77 0.06 69/75 pc 87/75
5
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Death Valley, CA •0
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33/1
Seattle 56/40
• 88'
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TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS 4 PS ~35 ~2 5
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Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Iakes..................... o"......................63" Hoodoo................................ I " ...................... 48" Mt Ashland p
Mt. HoodMeadows.............1"....................106 Snow level and road conditions representing condiM t. Hood Ski Bowl............... 0" ...................... 29" tions at5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires. T i mberline............................4"......................73" Warner Canyon Pass Conditions Willamette Pass...................0 ......................26 1-5 at5iskiyou5ummit..............Carrychains, T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill................. Carry chains, T. Tires p" 64 Aspen Cp Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass..........Carry chains, T. Tires Mammoth Mtn CA p' 55 Hwy.26atGovernmentCamp.Carr ychains,T.Tires ParkCity, UT........................O".................--.79 Hwy. 26 atOchoco Divide........Carry chains, T. Tires S q uaw Valley, CA.................O"......................17" Hwy. 58 atWigamette Pass........Chains,10000lbs. S u n Valley, ID.......................2"......................41" Hwy.138 atDiamond Lake.........Chains,10000lbs. Taos, NM.............................I".................„„,56" Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass..........Closedforseason Vail, CO................................O" ...................... 68" For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Lcgend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds,h-haze,shdhowers,r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace
Yesterday's stateextremes
45/25
• 59/34
65/ 9
52/46 0.43 56/42 f 57/4 1 p c 4 6/37 0.28 49/24 s 53 / 2 8 s 5 4I46 0.06 65/39 s 61 / 3 9 s 4 7/35 0.26 5$23 s 54 / 2 6 s Eugene 5 7/46 0.09 57/32 f 63 / 3 7 f K lamath Falls 4 2 /32 0.49 49/27 s 58 /31 s La Pine 4 0/33 0.28 47/23 s 52 / 2 7 s lak»vl»w 4 4I32 0.00 45/27 s 54 / 3 1 s M»dford 5 $46 0.62 6 2/36 pc 6 7 /42 f Newport 51/46 0.14 58/42 f 58 /43 pc North Bend 58/ 4 9 0.21 5 8/43 pc 6 1/45 s Ontario 54/44 0.24 57 /29 s 5 /93 2 s Pendleton 56/43 0.39 50/31 pc 5 7 /36 pc Portland 5 4/44 0.10 58/36 f 63/ 4 0 pc Prin»vite 48/37 0.59 52/25 s 5$ 2 9 s Redmond 4 9/37 0.32 52/24 s 5$ 2 9 pc Roseburg 5 $46 0.1 7 59/40 pc 6 3/41 f Saie 5 7/45 0.01 57/36 f 63 / 3 9 f Sisters 4 7/33 0.26 49QS s 54 / 3 1 s The Dates 54/48 0.01 55/33 s 59 / 3 7 pc
45/2 5
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ULTRAVIOLET INDEX E KI REPORT
Asioria Baker City Brookings Bums
EAST
54/31 •
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Yesterday Tuesday Wednesday The higher the UVIndex number, the greater City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totalsthrough4 p.m.
49/25
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Tomorrow Rise Set Yesterday' sweather through 4p.m .in Bend Mercury..... 913Pm..... 732am. High/Low..............44'/35' 24hoursendingdpm*.. 011" Venus.........8.04p.m..... 6.05a.m. Recordhig....... 69 in2008 Monthlodal».......... 0.30 Mars......... 1 2 44 Pm.... 1 1:49 Pm. Remrd low......... 10' in 2006 Average monthto dale... 0 19" Jupiter........ 3:39a.m..... 7:01 p.m. Averagehigh.............. 53' Yeariodate............ 3.43" Saturn........ 3:03 p.m..... I:00a.m. Averagelow............... 25' Averageyeartodate..... 1.81" Uranus......1059pm....11:40a m. Barometricpressure4pm. 3019" Remrd24hours .. 016in2006 *Melted liquid equivalent
Moonsettoday....429 a m. Mar16 Mar 23 Mar30 Apr 7
CENTRAL
Partly d-dy
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Last
Moonrisetoday....2:40 p.m.
Baker City
52/25
Sy/32
58 36
Sunsettoday...... 7:06 p.m. Full Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:22 a m
Mostly sunny and pleasant conditions.
Granite • 45/25 w
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Eursene •
61/43
HIGH LOW
56 34
Sunrisetnday...... 7:24 a.m.MOOn phaSeS
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Camp Sherman 47/75 •
58/3 6
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EnterPrise • 43/25 , Jose phi Grande • . ' 4 3/25
Q
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• 50/29
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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
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BEND ALMANAC
56/42 Seaside 56/43 • Cannon Ipeach
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OREGON NEWS
New test of eyewitness
testimonychallenged By Nlgel Duara The Associated Press
PORTLAND — T h e f i r st challenge tp Oregpn's landmark test for eyewitness testi-
Sitting in a car nearby were twp white teenage girls, identified only as uN" and "D." They
told prosecutors that upon arrival, they immediately knew
mony will begin in earnest this they were put pf their element, week, when prosecutors will and when the gunshpts rang try tp convince the state's high
put, they tried to flee.
court that a murder conviction was wrongly overturned. The Oregon Supreme Court
Before they could, two men jumped into their car. A third
set the natipn's most stringent test for eyewitness testimo-
but he was shoved out.
man also tried to climb inside,
'.
I •
I
•
•
I '' I l
'
I
f•
• I
•
l
/
' /( Jt (
The third man, "D" would
ny in a 2012 decision. Jus- later say, was the shooter. At tices unanimously said they the scene, though, she told couldn't ignore thousands pf police she couldn't identify studies and years pf evidence anything about the shooter. demonstrating hpw notorious- Her friend, "N," could only tell ly unreliable eyewitness testi- a police officer that the shootmony can be. er was a stocky black mari in Npw, prosecutors must first his mid-to-late 20s, wearing a show the testimony is more do-rag. likely than npt to be reliable, Four people pointed the finand the court created a test tp ger at Hickman: The twp girls, gauge witnesses' reliability. another mari whp was for a Among the questions that time a suspect in the slaying p rosecutors should ask a r e and a fourth man, whp was whether witnesses were the
. c"'
under the influence pf alcohol
same race as the suspect, giv- and cocaine and claimed to en that witnesses are signifi- recognizeHickman through a carttly better at i d entifying ski mask. members of their own race, The former suspect in the and how long had passed be- slaying and the fourth man tween the incident and officers
getting their testimony.
each testified with the hope that their t estimony would
8
"It is a c ommon miscpn- lessen impending federal senceptipn that a person's mem- tences in unrelated matters. pry operates like a videotape, Police arrested Hickman and recording an exact copy pf charged him with murder. everything the person sees," Nearly twp years passed. wrote Justice Paul De Muniz Police didn't conduct a lineup in 2012. "A person's capacity pr OtherwiSe ShOwuD" pr "N" for processing information is photos pf Hickman. finite." Hickman remains in prison, Five months after the de- awaiting the court's decision cisipn, the Oregon Court pf
•
— the justices can either up-
Appeals took the new test into hold his original conviction, pr consideration an d r e versed affirm the appeals court decithe murder conviction pf Jer-
sion and call for a new triaL
rin Hickman, saying there
In briefs filed before Thursday's arguments, prosecutors
were serious questions about
the reliability pf eyewitness said in-court i dentifications testimony. are much different than police J ust before midnight o r i lineups. "The jury can see for itself New Year's Eve in 2007, Hickman and several dozen other the potentially suggestive black men gathered in front aspects of the courtroom enof a Portland home. A fight vironment, observe hpw the broke out and someone fired
0
s
state elicits the identification,
a gun once, then three more and watch the witness identify times. Christopher Monette the defendant," wrote Senior was found dead with four gun- Assistant Attorney General shot wounds tp the chest.
0
Andrew Lavin.
• I 9
9
/
8
j
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 MLB, C3 Motor sports, C4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
MEN'S COLLEGEHOOPS: PAC-12 TOURNAMENT
COLLEGE BASKETBALL PREP SPORTS
Arizona cleansup in Pac-12 awards WALNUT CREEK,
I"
Calif.— Arizona guard Nick Johnson was named Pac-12player of the year, teammate Aaron Gordon wonthe award for top freshman and Sean Miller also was honored ascoach of the year. Commissioner Larry Scott announced the awards on Monday.The honors were voted on by the league's coaches. Oregon State senior guard Roberto Nelson and Oregon junior guard Joseph Youngwere each selected to the all-Pac-12 second team. Mike Moser, asenior forward for Oregon, received honorable mention. Oregon State junior forward Eric Moreland was an honorable mention for the all-defensive team. In other awards, Arizona State center Jordan Bachynski won defensive player of the year and Stanford guard Anthony Brownis the most improved player. Johnson averaged 16.1 points and 2.8 assist per game to lead Arizona to a first-place finish and No. 4national ranking at the endof the regular season. He is the seventh Arizona player to win the award with Derrick Williams being the most recent in
Duc s, Beavs see ouro a in inVe as
~® %ww
By Steve Mims The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Oregon is taking it one tournament at a time.
The Ducks put themselves in solid position to earn an at-large berth in the NCAA men's
basketball tournament by closing out the regular season on a seven-game winning streak. Oregon topped its NCAA resume with a 64-57
win over No. 3 Arizona on Saturday afternoon at Matthew Knight Arena. "I'm not worried about the NCAA tourna-
ment right now," senior guard Johnathan Loyd said. "I am worried about the Pac-12 tournament. One game at a time."
The Ducks can erase any doubt about landing a spot on the NCAA bracket by winning the conference tournament as they did last year.
Oregon (22-8, 10-8) will face rival Oregon State (16-14, 8-10) in the first round at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las
Vegas. "We know if we win, we secure that bid, so that is how we look at it," senior forward Mike
Moser said. "Win the tournament and we are in." The Ducks face a tougher task than last year when they finished tied for second in the conferenceand earned a first-round bye in the tournament. The Ducks finished in a five-way
tie for third place this year and missed out on a bye because of the tiebreaker.
Oregon went 1-3 against the other four teams that finished 10-8 in the Pac-12 — Arizona State, Colorado, California and Stanford -
to fall to the No. 7 seed and an opening game against the 10th-seeded Beavers. SeeVegas/C4
2010-11.
For a complete list of Pac-12 honors, see Scoreboard,C2.
Nextup
— The Associated Press
Pac-12 Tournament, first round, Oregon vs. OregonState When:Wednesday, 6 p.m. TV:Pac-12 Network
NFL Seattle re-signs DE Bennett RENTON,Wash. Michael Bennett gambled last offseason that playing on aone-year deal in Seattle would pay off in the future with the long-term contract he always wanted. He was proven to be correct. Bennett now has aSuper
Rafle: 940-AM, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
-
Kelly Caleb / Herald and News
Former La Pine star Kassi Conditt leadsOIT this season with12.8 points and 9.1 rebounds a game.
MLB' COMMENTARY
• Two key contributers to La Pine's state title run in 2009 nowhaveOITplaying for a national women'sbasketball crown
Bowl title
andanew four-year contract that will keep him with the Seahawks. "I don't know if there was any doubt, but there was a lot of speculation a lot of teams tried to get me to comethere," Bennett said Mondayafter signing his newdeal. "But ultimately I wanted to come backand play with these guys andwin some more games." Bennett was considered one of thetopfree agents in theNFLafter a breakout seasonwith the Seahawkswhere he led the team insacks and proved aversatile option as a defensiveendand defensive tackle. But he never made it all theway to the start of today's free agencyafter the Seahawks cameupwith a satisfactory deal. Terms were not announced bythe team. Pro Football Talk reported Bennett's deal was worth about $28.5 million with $16 guaranteed. Bennett said there were other teams offering more money, but the guaranteed amount was most important. Bennett was thought to have beenstrongly pursued by Chicago, where he had achance ofjoining his brother, Martellus, with the
Bears. But he ultimately decided to return to Seattle. — The Associated Press
GRANT
i.
.
) TonyGutierrez/The Associated Press
LUCAS
Former Milwaukee Brewer Corey Hart looks to make a comeback with Seattle this season after
having microfracture surgery on both knees.
t
f Maria Ramirez were not already a twin, you might think K assi
Mariners need Hart for the second act
Conditt was her double. Though hardly identical — Conditt
stands 6 feet 2 inches tall, Ramirez
is 5-10 — the two Oregon Institute of Technology women's basketball teammatesare undeniably connected by a degree of twin telepathy. "They've had some of the most
incredible passing combinations between the two of them that I think
is only possible if you've played together since you were kids," Oregon Tech coach Scott Meredith says. "It's uncanny." "Everyone always comes up to me and Kassi and tells us how the chem-
By Jerry Brewer The Seattie Times
PEORIA, Ariz. — Don't look to Corey Hart
for a sob story. He is not the pitiful type. He is the kind of person who finds worth in adversity and joy in altered plans. Which is good because, if he were not this way, he would be a walkin', talkin', lamentin' blues song. The 31-year-old slugger missed the entire 2013 season. He is attempting to come back
istry between the two of us is so per-
fect," says Ramirez, a senior guard for the Owls who is averaging 5.7 points, 6.0 rebounds and 3.1 assists
per game. "We don't notice it." Conditt sees Ramirez as a
s i s-
ter. The senior post, who leads Oregon Tech with 12.8 points and 9.1
from microfracture surgery — on both knees.
rebounds per contest, says she has known Ramirez "forever." And ever
can have, times two. But the jovial Hart does not need you to pull out a handkerchief for him. "I looked at it and said, 'OK, what can I do
It is only about the scariest operation an athlete
since Conditt first joined the La Pine High School varsity team as a sophomore for the 2007-08 season, Ramirez, then a junior, was there to
lead the way. SeeChampions/C4
to make this positive?' " said Hart, the Seattle Mariners' projected cleanup hitter. "It was fun. Maria Ramirez has helped lead the Owls to the NAIA Division II
You might think I'm crazy to say that, but it was fun. I'm not talking about the rehab or not being
Women's Basketball National Championship tournament.
able to play the game. But I got to live the rest
Steven Smith / Herald and News
of my life. I guess I could've moped or been depressed, but I found something better." See Hart /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
ON THE AIR
COHKBOARD
TODAY Time Women's college,SummitLeague Championship, final, Denvervs. South Dakota11 a.m. Women's college, WestCoast Tournament, final, BYUvs. Gonzaga 1 p.m. Men's college, Horizon LeagueTournament, final, Milwaukeevs. Wright State 4 p.m. Men'scollege,NEC Tournament, final, Mount St. Mary's vs. Robert Morris 4 p.m. Men's college, WCC Tournament, final, BYUvs. Gonzaga 6 p.m. Men's college, Summit LeagueTournament, final, IPFW vs. North Dakota State 6 p.m. Women's college, Big EastTournament, final, St. John's vs. DePaul 6 p.m. HOCKEY NHL, Washington at Pittsburgh 4:30 p.m. BASKETBALL
TV/Radio ESPNU ESPNU ESPN ESPN2 ESPN ESPN2 FS1 NBCSN
OLYMPICS
2014 Paralympic Winter Games, ice sledge hockey,United States vs. Russia 2014 Paralympic Winter Games, wheelchair curling SOCCER UEFAChampions League, Bayern Munich vs. Arsenal UEFAChampions League, Atletico Madrid vs. AC Milan CONCACAF Champions League, San Jose vsDeportivo Toluc
noon
NBCSN
10:30 p.m. NBCSN 12:30 p.m.
FS1
12:30 p.m.
FS2
7 p.m.
FS2
WEDNESDAY BASKETBALL
Men'scollege,ACC Tournament, Notre Damevs. WakeForest Men'scollege,ACC Tournament, Miami vs. Virginia Tech Men's college, Pac-12Tournament, Utah vs. Washington Men's college, Pac-12Tournament, Colorado vs. USC NBA, Brooklyn at Miami Men'scollege,ACC Tournament, Boston college vs. GeorgiaTech Men'scollege,AACTournament, Rutgers vs. South Florida Men's college, Big EastTournament, Butler vs. Seton Hall Men's college, Pac-12Tournament, Oregon vs. OregonState
Time
TV/ R adio
1 0 a.m.
ESP N 2
noon
ESPN2
noon
Pac-12
2:30 p.m. 4 p.m.
Pa c -12
4 p.m.
ESPN2
4 p.m.
ESPNU
4 p.m.
FS1
6 p.m.
ESPN
Pac-12,
1110-AM, 100.1-FM, 940-AM
NBA, Portland at SanAntonio
6:30 p.m.
ES P N,
1110-AM, 100.1-FM
(joined in progress) Men's College, AAC Tournament, Central Florida vs. Temple 6:30 p.m. E S P N2 Men's College, BigEastTournament, DePaul vs. Georgetown 6:30 p.m. FS1 Men's College, Pac-12Tournament, Stanford vs. Washington State 8:30 p.m. Pa c -12 SOCCER UEFAChampions League, round of16, 12:30 p.m. FS1 Barcelona vs Manchester City FC UEFAChampions League, round of16, Paris Saint-Germain vs Bayer 04Leverkusen 12:30 p.m. FS2 CONCACAF Champions League, quarterfinal, Sporting KansasCity vs CruzAzul 5 p.m. FS2 GOLF
PGA Tour, r/alspar Championship, Pro-Am 2 p.m.
Golf
HOCKEY
NHL, Boston at Montreal
4:30 p.m.
N B CSN
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, ChicagoCubsat Seattle
7 p.m.
Root
OLYMPICS
2014 Paralympic Winter Games, ice sledge hockey, semifinal
2 a.m.
NBCSN
Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TV or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF WINTER SPORTS Alaska mushersclose in onIditarod finish —Inayear marked by injuries anddangerous conditions, the final stages of the Iditarod Trail Sled DogRacewere coming down to either a record-tying number of wins or the first woman to claim victory in 24 years. One of those appeared to bethe likely outcome of this year's nearly 1,000-mile race across Alaska, asthe first two mushers arrived at the second-to-last checkpoint Monday morning. TheywereJeff King, 58, and Aliy Zirkle, 44, both of Alaska. King, a four-time champion, is attempting to becomethe race's second five-time winner. Hearrived at 7:02 a.m. at theWhite Mountain checkpoint, 77 miles from the finish line in Nome,and left at 3:02 p.m. AKST,fulfilling exactly the eighthour rest requirement there. Zirkle, 44, who hasfinished second in the last two Iditarods, arrived at7:59a.m. Shebegan thechase for King on the Bering Seaice whenshe left the checkpoint at 4 p.m. A winner could reach the finish line assoon asearly today, with mushers on what appears to be a record pace despite poor trail conditions.
BASKETBALL DelaWare heatS William 8 Mary fOrCAAtitle — CarlBaptiste scored acareer-high 24 points, including ago-aheadlayup with10 seconds left, and top-seededDelawaresqueezed past William 8 Mary 75-74 Mondaynight to win theColonial Athletic Association championship andearn aberth in the NCAAtournament for the first time in 15 years.
Manhattan winS MAAC title Over rival lOna — George Beamon scored 16points Monday night and Manhattan held off rival lona 71-68 for the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference title and aberth into the NCAAtournament. Beamon was oneof four players to score in double figures for Manhattan (25-7), which earned its first NCAA bid in a decade.
WOffOrd tOPS W. Caralina 56-53 far SOCOntitle — Karl Cochran scored 23points, and Wofford beat Western Carolina 56-53 on Monday night to capture theSouthern Conferencechampionship and a spot in theNCAAtournament. Cochran, the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, was 8of16 from the field and hadfive 3-pointers. He madetwo big free throws with 5.3 seconds left to give Wofford a three-pointlead.
ON DECK Wednesday Girls basketball: 5Aquarterfinals, Bendvs. Lebanon at Matthew Knight ArenainEugene, 3:15p.m. Thursday Boys basketball: 5Aquarterfinals, Bendvs.Churchil at Matthew Knight ArenainEugene, 8:15p.m. Girls basketball: 5Aconsolationroundat Mathew KnightArenainEugene,9 a.m. Friday Boysbasketball: 5A semifinalsat MatthewKnight ArenainEugene,815 pmu5Aconsolation at MatthewKnightArenain Eugene, 10:45a.m. Girls basketball:5Asemifinals at MatthewKnight ArenainEugene,1:30p.m.
Fourth/Sixlh Place Consolationsemifinal winners,9a.m. Third/Fifth Place Semifinallosers,1:30p.m. Final Semifinalwinners,6:30p.m.
BASKETBALL Men's College Pacific-12 Conference All times PDT
ConferenceTournament At MGMGrandGardenArena Las Vegas First Round Wednesday'sGames Saturday vs.Washington,noon Boys baskelball: 5A placinggamesat Matthew Utah Coloradovs.Southern Cal, 2:30p.m. KnightArenainEugene regonvs.OregonState,6 p.m. Girls basketball: 5A placinggamesat Matthew O Stanfordvs.WashingtonState, 8:30p.m. KnightArenainEugene Quarterfinals Thursday'sGames Arizona ys.Utah-Washingtonwinner, noon PREP SPORTS Californiavs.Colorado-USCwinner, 2:30p.m. UCLA vs.Oregon-OregonStatewinner,6p.m. Boys basketball ArizonaSt.vs.Stanford-WashingtonSt. winner,8:30p.m. CLASS6A All-Pac-12 ChampionshipTournament Firsl team At ModaCenter, Porlland JordanAdams, g, soph., UCLA; Kyle Anderson,g, Thursday'sGames soph.,UCLA;Jahii Carson,g., soph., ArizonaState; Guarterlinals Justin Cohhs,g, soph., California; AaronGordon, f, WestLinnvs. Central Catholic, 1:30p.m. frosh., Arizona;NickJohnson,g, jr., Arizona;Dwight Jesuitvs.SouthMedford,3;15p.m. Powell, f, sr.,Stanford; ChassonRandle, g, jr., StanSunset vs.SouthSalem,6:30p.m. ford; Josh Scott, f, soph., Colorado;DelonWright, g, Sheldo nvs.Clackamas,8:15p.m. jr., Utah. Friday's Games Secondteam Consolation Semifinals JordanBachynski, c,sr., ArizonaState; TJ. MccoWest Linn/CentralCatholic loser vs. Jesuit/South nneg, g,sr.,Arizona;Roberto Nelson, g, sr., Oregon Medfordloser,9a.m. Sunset/SouthSalemloser vs. Sheldon/Clackam as State;C.J.Wilcox, g,sr., Washington; JosephYoung, g, jr., Oregon. loser,10:45a.m. Honorablemention Semifinals AskiaBooker,g,jr., Colorado;DaVonte Lacy, g,jr., West Linn/CentralCatholic winnervs. Jesuit/South Washi n gton St a te;Jermaine Marshall, g, sr.,Arizona Medfordwinner, 3:15p.m. SouthSalem /Sunset winnervs. Sheldon/Clackamas State; MikeMoser, f, sr., Oregon;RichardSolomon, f, sr., California. winner,8:15p.m. All-freshmanteam Saturday'sGames BryceAlford, g, UCLA;Aaron Gordon, f, Arizona; Fourlh/SixlhPlace RondaeHollis-Jefferson,f, Arizona;ZachLaVine, g, Consolationsemifinal winners,1045a.m. UCLA;NigelWiliams-Goss,g, Washington. Third/Fifth Place All-defensiveteam Semifinallosers,3:15p.m. JordanBachynski, c,sr., ArizonaState;JoshHuesFinal tis, f, sr.,Stanford;NickJohnson, g, jr., Arizona;TJ. Semifinalwinners,8:30p.m. Mcconnell, g,sr., Arizona;DelonWright, g,jr., Utah. Player of theyear CLASSBA Nick Johnson, g, jr., Arizona ChampionshipTournament Freshmanof theyear At MatlhewKnight Arena, Eugene AaronGordon, f, Arizona Thursday'sGames Defensiveplayer ofthe year Guarterlinals JordanBachynski, c,sr., ArizonaState Jeffersonvs.Wilsonvile,1:30 p.m. Coach oftheyear WestAlbanyvs. Eagle Point, 3:15p.m. SeanMiler, Arizona Madisonvs.Sherwood,6:30p.m. Bendvs.Churchil,8:15 p.m. Monday'sScores Friday's Games Tournament Consolation Semiiinals Colonial Athletic Association Jefferson/Wilsonvilleloservs. WestAlbany/Eagle Championship Point loser,9a.m. Delaware75,Wiliam & Mary74 Madison/Sherwood loser vs. Bend/Churchil loser, Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 10:45a.m. Championship Semifinals Manhattan71,lona68 Jefferson/Wilsonvillewinnervs. West Albany/Eagle Mid-Ameri canConference Point winner, 3:15 p.m. First Round Madison/Sherwood winner vs.Bend/Churchil E. Michigan72,Cent. Michigan60 winner,8;15p.m. Miami(Ohio)71,Kent St.64 Saturday'sGames N. Illinois54,Bowling Green51,OT Fourlh/Sixlh Place Ohio 76,BallSt.64 Consolationsemifinal winners,1045a.m. Mid-EasternAthletic Conference Third/Fifth Place First Round Semifinallosers,3;15p.m. N orfolk St.78,Md.-EasternShore74 Final Savannah St.61, SCState47 Semifinalwinners,8:30p.m. SouthernConference Championship CLASS4A Wofford 56, W . Carolina53 ChampionshipTournament Summit League At Gill Coliseum,Corvallis Semifinals Thursday'sGames IPFW 64, S.DakotaSt. 60 Quarterlinals N. DakotaSt.83, Denver48 NorthValleyvs. Phrlomath,1:30 p.m. Henleyvs.LaGrande,3:15 p.m. West CoastConference Seasid evs.Tigamook,6:30p.m. Semifinals CottageGrovevs. LaSale Prep,8:15p.m. Gonzaga 70, Saint Mary's(Cal) 54 Friday's Games BYU79, SanFrancisco77, OT Consolation Semifinals North Valley/Philomathloser vs. Henley/LaGrande Polls loser, a. 9m. AP Top26 Seaside/Tilamook loser vs. CottageGrove/La Salle The top 25teamsin TheAssociatedPress' college Preploser, 10:45a.m. basketbalpoll, l with first-placevotesin parentheses, Semifinals recordsthroughMarch 9, total pointsbasedon25 Philomath/NorthValleywinnervs.Henley/LaGrande points for a first-placevote throughonepoint for a 25th-place voteandlast week's ranking: winner,3:15p.m. Seaside/Tilamook winnervs. CotageGrove/La Salle R ecord Pls P r v Prepwinner,8:15p.m. 1. Florida(50) 29-2 1, 61 0 1 Saturday'sGames 2. WichitaSt.(15) 3 4 - 0 1, 574 2 28-3 1 ,454 6 Fourlh/SixlhPlace 3. Villanova 28-3 1,435 3 Consolationsemifinal winners,1045a.m. 4. Arizona 2 6-5 1,237 1 1 Third/Fifth Place 5. LouIsyile 25-6 1,186 5 Semifinallosers,3:15p.m. 6. Virginia 24-7 1 ,185 4 Final 7. Duke 2 3-7 1 ,143 1 2 Semifinalwinners,8:30p.m. 8. Michigan 2 7-3 1,143 1 0 8. SanDiegoSt. 23-8 1,087 8 10. Kansa s Girls basketball 27-4 1,055 7 11. Syracuse 25-6 9 7 3 9 12. Wi s consi n CLASS6A 13. Cincinnati 26-5 9 2 2 15 ChampionshipTournament 14. Creighton 24-6 7 5 2 13 At ModaCenter, Porlland 15. NorthCarolina 2 3 - 8 709 14 Wednesday'sGames 23-7 5 7 2 16 16. Iowa St . Guarterlinals 17. Oklahom a 23-8 4 7 2 23 SouthSalemvs. SouthMedford,1:30 p.m. 18. SaintLouis 26-5 4 3 3 17 Beave rtonvs.Clackamas,3:15p.m. 19. Memp his 23-8 3 6 7 20 Westviewvs.St. Mary'sAcademy, 6:30p.m. 20. New M e xi c o 24 6 344 21 Tigardvs.OregonCity,8:15 p.m. 21. Uconn 24-7 3 3 0 19 Thursday'sGames 22. Michigan St. 23 - 8 318 22 Consolation Semifinals 2 4-7 2 0 5 South Salem/SouthMedford loser vs. Beaverton/ 23. VCU 24. Ohi o St. 2 3-8 1 6 5 Clackama sloser,9a.m. 23-8 1 5 2 18 Westview/St.Mary'sAcademyloservs.Tigard/Oregon 25.SMU Othersreceivingvotes: Gonzaga 82, StephenF. City loser,10:45a.m. Austin56,Oregon39,Texas31, Harvard27, Kentucky Friday's Games 19, Baylo18, r UCLA14, NebraskaB,lowa 4,TennesSemifinals South Sale/m South Medford winnervs. Beaverton/ see 2,GeorgeWashington1, NCCentral1. Clackamas winner, 1:30p.m. USATodayTop25 Pol Westview/St.Mary'sAcademywinnervs. Tigard/OreThe top25teamsin the USAToday men'scollege gon Citywinner,6:30p.m. basketbal poll, l withfirst-placevotesin parentheses, Saturday'sGames recordsthroughMarch 9, pointsbasedon25 points Fourlh/Sixlh Place forafirst-place votethroughonepointfora25th-place Consolationsemifinal winners,9 a.m. voteandprevious ranking: Third/Fifth Place R ecord Pls P v s Semifinallosers,1:30p.m. 1. Florida(25 ) 29-2 793 1 Final 2. WichitaState(7) 34- 0 775 2 Semifinalwinners,6:30p.m. 3. Villanova 28-3 72 1 6 4.Arizona 28-3 6 7 8 3 CLASS6A 5. Louisville 26-5 6 5 4 9 ChampionshipTournament 6. Duke 24-7 59 1 4 At MatlhewKnight Arena, Eugene 7. San Di e go S tate 2 73 584 1 0 Wednesday'sGames 8. Virginia 25-6 5 8 1 5 Guarterfinals 9. Michigan 23-7 5 3 6 12 Wilsonvs.Wilamette,1:30p.m. 10. Kansas 23-8 5 0 9 8 Bendvs.Lebanon, 3:15p.m. 11. Syracuse 27-4 49 7 7 Sherwoo dvs.Hermiston,6;30p.m. 12. Cinci n nati 26-5 4 4 7 1 5 WestAlbanyvs. Corvagis, 8:15p.m. 13. Wisconsin 25-6 4 4 0 11 Thursday'sGames 14. Creighton 24-6 3 8 4 13 Consolation Semifinals 350 14 Wilson/Wilametteloser vs. Bend/Lebanonloser, 9 15. NorthCarolina 2 3 - 8 16. Iowa S t a t e 23-7 2 6 9 17 a.m. 26-5 2 5 2 16 17. SaintLouis Sherwood/Herm istonloser vs.West Albany/Corvallis 18. Oklahom a 23-8 2 2 1 23 loser,10:45a.m. 19. Memphi s 23-8 1 9 5 20 Friday's Games 20. New M e xi c o 24-6 1 7 7 21 Semifinals 24-7 152 19 Wilson/Wilamettewinnervs. Bend/Lebanonwinner, 21. Connecticut 22. Michigan State 2 3- 8 129 22 1:30p.m. 23-8 9 4 18 Sherwood/Herm istonwinnervs. West Albany/Corval- 23. SMU 2 3-8 8 4 24.0hioState lis winner,6:30p.m. 2 4-7 7 1 25. VCU Saturday'sGames Othersreceivingvotes:Kentucky 43, Gonzaga 32, Fourlh/SixlhPlace Texas27,Oregon21, Southern Miss. 21,StephenF. Consolationsemifinal winners,9a.m. Austin17, Baylor15, lowa10,Harvard8, UMass8, Third/Fifth Place Nebraska5, LouisianaTech 3, Pittsburgh3, George Semifinallosers,1:30p.m. Washington1,KansasState1, OklahomaState1. Final Semifinalwinners,6:30p.m. CLASS4A ChampionshipTournament At Gill Coliseum,Corvallis Wednesday'sGames Guarterfinals Brookings-Harhor vs. Sutherlin, 1:30p.m. Henleyvs.Seaside, 3:15p.m. Mazama vs. Philomath, 6:30 p.m. La Grande vs. LaSagePrep, 8:15p.m. Thursday'sGames Consolation Semiiinals Brookings-Harbor/Sutherlin loservs.Henley/Seaside loser, a. 9m. Mazama/ Philomathloservs.LaGrande/LaSagePrep loser,10:45a.m. Friday's Games Semifinals Brookings-Harhor/Sutherlinwinnervs. Henley/Sea side winner,1:30p.m. Mazama /Philomath winner vs. La Grande/La Salle Prepwinner,6:30p.m. Saturday'sGames
Women's College Monday'sScores Tournament America EastConference Championship Albany(NY) 70,StonyBrook46 AmericanAthletic Conference Championship Uconn72,Louisville 52 Big 12 Conference Championship Baylor74,West Virginia 71 Big EastConference Semifinals DePaul100,Marquette90 St. John's 68,Creighton63, 20T HorizonLeague First Round Valparaiso 76, Detroit 69 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Championship Marist 70,Quinnipiac66
Mid-AmericanConference First Round
Ball St.73,KentSt.38 N. Illinois81,E.Michigan76, OT Toledo61,Ohio44
W. Michigan 82,Miami(Ohio) 72 Mid-EaslernAthletic Conference First Round FloridaA&M86, DelawareSt. 58 Md.-Eastern Shore70, Norfolk St. 66 Savannah St. 82,MorganSt.71 Mountain WestConference First Round San Diego St.63,Air Force56 UNLV 78, SanJoseSt. 75 Utah St.69,NewMexico66 Patriot League Semifinals Army68,AmericanU.55 Holy Cross75, Navy56 SouthernConference Championship Chattanooga 71,Davidson45 SummitLeague Semifinals Denver76,IUPUI69, OT South Dakota72,S.DakotaSt.58 West CoastConference Semifinals BYU77,Pacific 64 Gonzaga 68,Saint Mary's (Cal) 60 Polls AP Women'sTop26 Thetop25teamsinTheAssociatedPress' women's collegebasketball poll, withfirst-placevotesin parentheses, recordsthroughMarch9, total pointsbasedon 25 pointsforafirst-place votethroughonepoint for a 25th-place voteand lastweek's ranking: R ecord Pm P n r 1. Uconn (36) 33-0 900 1 32-0 8 6 4 2 2. NotreDame 3. Louisville 30-3 7 9 9 3 26-5 7 8 4 6 4. Tennes see 5. West Virginia 29-3 719 7 28-3 7 1 1 4 6. Stanford 7. Baylor 28-4 6 9 8 9 8. SouthCarolin a 2 7 - 4 665 5 9. Duke 27-6 6 0 7 10 10. Kentucky 24-8 5 6 3 12 11. Maryland 24-6 5 3 7 8 12. NorthCarolina 2 4 - 9 504 13 13. Nebrask a 25-6 4 6 4 16 14.PennSt. 22-7 4 0 8 11 15.Texas A&M 24-8 4 0 2 15 16. NC State 25-7 3 7 4 14 17.Purdue 21-8 2 4 7 17 18.Gonzaga 27-4 2 2 9 21 19. Iowa 26-8 2 2 6 23 20. MichiganSt. 22 - 9 210 19 21. Oklahoma St. 2 3 - 8 203 18 22. MiddleTennessee 26-4 1 8 0 22 23. DePalu 25-6 1 1 5 25 24. California 21-9 64 20 25. BowlingGreen 27- 3 49 Othersreceivingvotes: SouthernCal 48,Chatanooga 45, OregonSt. 35,BYU15,Rutgers11, Arizona St. 9, UTEP 5, JamesMadison3,Marist 3, LSU2, St. John's2.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
Andy Murray(5), Britain, def.Jiri Vesely,Czech Republic,6-7(2), 6-4, 6-4. RogerFederer(7), Switzerland, def. Dm itry Tursunov (27),Russia,7-6(7), 7-6(2). FahioFognini(13), Italy,def. GaelMonfils (23), France,6-2,3-6, 7-5 Milos Raonic(10), Can ada, def. AlejandroFalla, Colombia6-4, , 6-3. StanislasWawrinka(3), Switzerland,def. Andreas Seppi(29),ltaly,6-0,6-2. AlexandrDolgopolov(28), Ukraine,def.Rafael Nadal(1), Spain6-3, , 3-6, 7-6(5). Kevin Anderson(17), SouthAfrica, def. Evgen y Donskoy,Russia,4-6, 6-0,6-3. Women Third Round Li Na(1),China,def. Karolina Pliskova,CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-4. Aleksandra Wozniak,Canada, def.Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (21),Russia,6-1, 6-7(3),6-0. FlaviaPenn etta (20), Italy, def.SamStosur (16), Australia,6-4, 3-6,6-1. CamilaGiorgi,Italy,def. Maria Sharapova(4), Russia, 6-3,4-6,7-5. Petra Kvitova(8), CzechRepublic, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova(27),Russia, 6-3,2-6,6-0. Alisa Kleyhan ova, Russia, def. Maria-TeresaTorro-Flor,Spain,6-1, 6-3. SloaneStephens(17), UnitedStates,def. AnaIvanovic(11),Serbia,7-6(3), 6-4. DominikaCihulkova(12), Slovakia,def. Ekaterina Makarova(23),Russia,6-4, 7-5.
BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Spring Training All TimesPDT
Monday'sGames
Baltimore7,Pittsburgh6 Atlanta8, Philadelphia1 Boston6,TampaBay2 Detroit17,St.Louis5 Miami11,N.Y.Mets1 LA. Angels8, Cleveland3 ChicagoWhite Sox6,Milwaukee3 ChicagoCuhs3,SanFrancisco2 Kansas City8, Seatle (ss) 2 Texas8,Cincinnati 2 LA. Dodgers 8, Oakland8, tie SanDiego5, Colorado0 Houston7, Washington4 Arizona 3, Seattle (ss)3, tie
Today'sGames Minnesota vs. TampaBayat Port Charlotte, Fla.,10:05 a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs. Washington atViera, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Philadelphiavs.Atlantaat Kissimmee, Fla.,10:05a.m. N.Y.Metsvs.St. LouisatJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Miamivs.Boston(ss) atFortMyers, Fla.,10:05a.m. Torontovs.Detroit atLakeland,Fla.,10:05a.m. Boston(ss)vs.Baltimore atSarasota, Fla.,10:05 a.m. LA. Dodgers vs. KansasCity at Surprise, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Texasvs. ChicagoWhite Soxat Glendale, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Coloradovs.ChicagoCubsat Mesa,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. San Francisco vs. Cincinnati at Goodyear, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Seattlevs.L.A.Angels atTempe, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Oakland vs.SanDiegoat Peoria,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Cleveland vs. ArizonaatScotsdale, Ariz.,1:10 p.m.
DEALS
EasternConference W L T P lsGF GA
Houston 1 0 0 3 4 0 Columbus 1 0 0 3 3 0 Philadelphia 0 0 1 1 1 1 TorontoFC 0 0 0 0 0 0 Chicago 0 1 0 0 2 3 Montreal 0 1 0 0 2 3 SportingKansasCity 0 1 0 0 0 1 NewYork 0 1 0 0 1 4 D.C. 0 1 0 0 0 3 NewEngland 0 1 0 0 0 4 WesternConference W L T P tsGF GA Vancouver 1 0 0 3 4 1 ChivasUSA 1 0 0 3 3 2 FC Dallas 1 0 0 3 3 2 RealSaltLake 1 0 0 3 1 0 Seattle 1 0 0 3 1 0 Portland 0 0 1 1 1 1 Colorado 0 0 0 0 0 0 SanJose 0 0 0 0 0 0 Los Angele s 0 1 0 0 0 1 Saturday'sGames ColoradoatNew York,1p.m. NewEnglandatPhiladelphia,1 p.m. TorontoFCat Seattle FC,1:30 p.m. FC Dallaat s Sporting KansasCity,5:30 p.m MontrealatHouston,5:30 p.m. Real SaltLakeatSanJose,7:30p.m. SundayrsGames Chicago at Portland, noon Vancouver atChivasUSA,4 p.m.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPOT
EasternConference AtlanticDivision GP W L OT PtsGF GA
Boston Toronto Montreal
6 4 42 17 5 89 204 143 6 6 35 23 8 78 196 199 6 6 35 24 7 7 7 166 166 6 5 34 24 7 75 186 171 64 29 22 13 71 171 179 65 28 25 12 68 185 213 6 4 24 33 7 55 156 206 6 4 19 37 8 46 128 188
Tampa Bay Detroit Ottawa Florida
Buffalo
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pts GF GA P ittsburgh 6 4 4 3 17 4 9 0 204 159 N .Y.Rangers 65 35 26 4 74 171 162 P hiladelphia 64 33 24 7 7 3 183 188 C olumbus 64 33 26 5 7 1186 178 Washington 66 30 26 10 70 193 200 NewJersey 65 28 24 13 69 161 167 C arolina 6 4 2 7 2 8 9 6 3160 184 N.y.lslanders 67 25 33 9 59 188 228
St. Louis
WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA
Chicago Colorado Minnesota Dallas Winnipeg Nashville
6 4 44 14 6 9 4 211 145 65 38 13 14 90 223 172 6 5 42 18 5 89 199 172 6 4 34 22 8 7 6 158 157 64 31 23 10 72 185 179 6 6 30 28 8 68 182 192 65 27 28 10 64 156 194
PacificDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA A naheim 6 5 4 3 15 7 9 3208 160 S anJose 6 5 4 1 17 7 8 9199 157 L osAngeles 66 38 22 6 8 2 162 139 Phoenix 65 3 0 2 4 11 71181 188 Vancouver 67 29 28 10 68 157 181 C algary 65 2 5 3 3 7 5 7152 194 E dmonton 65 22 35 8 5 2162 212 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Monday'sGames Phoenix4,TampaBay3, SO Pittsburgh3,Washington 2 Nashville 4,Ottawa3, OT Colorado3, Winnipeg2, OT Los Angele3s Calgary 2 N.Y.Islanders7, Vancouver4 Toronto3,Anaheim1 Columbus atDallas, susp. Today'sGam es Nashville atBuffalo,4p.m. NewJerseyatPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. N.Y.RangersatCarolina, 4 p.m. Detroit atColumbus,4 p.m. PhoenixatFlorida,4:30p.m. Washingtonat Pittsburgh,4:30p.m. Dallas atSt.Louis, 5 p.m. Edmontonat Minnesota, 5p.m. TorontoatSanJose, 7:30p.m.
TENNIS Professional ParibasOpen Monday At The IndianWells Tennis Garden Indian Wells, Calif. Purse: Men:$6.17 million (Masters1000) Women:$6.96million (Premier) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Third Round
Transactions BASEBAL L AmencanLeague
BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Optioned LHPTimBerry
and CMichaelOhlmanto Bowie (EL). ReassignedC BrianWardtotheir minorleaguecamp. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS — Agreed to termswith RHPCodyAllen, LHPScott Barnes, RH PCarlos Carrasco, CYanGomes, INFErik Gonzalez, RH PPreston Guilmet,LHPNick Hagadone, INFJasonKipnis, OF CarlosMoncriefandRHPBryan Price onone-year contracts.Renewed the 2014 contract of RHPZach McAgister. KANSASCITY ROYALS— Optioned LHP Chris Dwyerto Omaha(PCL)and LHP John Lamb,INF CheslorCuthhertandOFLane Adams to Northwest Arkansas(Te xas). AssignedRHPsKyle Zimmer,Jason Adam, AaronBrooksandSugarRayMarimon;CJuan Graterol;INFBrandonLaird andOFsJorge Bonifacio, GorkysHernandez,MelkyMesaandPauloOrlandoto their minor leaguecamp. LOSANGELESANGELS—Optioned LHPMichael Roth toSaltLake(PCL). ReassignedRHPJarrett Gruhe, RHP Michael Morin, RHPMark Sappington and LHPJustin Thomastotheir minorleaguecamp. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Optioned OF Shane Petersonto Sacramento (PCL), RHPRaul Alcantarato MidlandPexas)andRHPMichael Ynoato Stockton
(Cal).
National League ATLANTABRAVES — Named Horacio Ramirez coaching assistant. HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedLHPLuisCruz, RHPDavidMartinez,OFDomingoSantanaandCMax Stassi totheir minorleaguecamp. NEW YORKMETS— OptionedOFCesarPuello,RHP ErikGoeddel,LHPsStevenMalzandJosh EdginandINFWilfredo Tovar to minorleaguecamp. Reass ignedLHPsJackLeathersich and Adam Kolarek;RHP sLoganVerrett, ChasenBradford andJohn Church ;CKevinPlawecki;INFsDannyMunoandINF Dusti nLawley;and OFsBrandonNimmoandCory Vaughnto minor leaguecamp. PllTSBURGH PI RATES — Reassigned RHP Jameson Taigon,INFMattHagueandCCarlosPaulinoto theimi r norleaguecamp. OptionedRHPCasey Sadler toIndianapolisandINFAlenHansonandLHP JoelyRodriguezto Altoona(EL). ST.LOUI S CARDINALS — Optioned RHP Angel Castro,OFMike O'Neil andOFRafael Ortegato Memphis(PCL).Reassigned RH P Kurt Heyer, RHP BooneWhiting,INFPatrick Wisdom,CCarsonKelly, CCaseyRasmusand CCody Stanleyto their minor league camp. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NEWYORKKNICKS— SignedGShannonBrown and FEarl Clarkto second10-daycontracts. FOOTBA LL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS— Promoted Mark Collins to outside linebackerscoach.NamedAndrewThacker defensive assistant. SignedOLMikeJohnsontoa oneyearcontractextension. BUFFALOBILLS— NamedThadBogardusdefensive qualitycontrol coach. CAROLINAPANTHERS — Re-signedFB Richie Brockeltoatwo-year contract andOL GarryWiliams to a one-year contract. DALLASCOWBOYS — SignedPChrisJones. DENVE RBRONCOS—Announced the retirement of OLChrisKuper. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Re-signed CBSam Shields. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—SignedLBJustin Hickman to a contract extension.PromotedBradWhite to assistantlinebackerscoach. JACKSO NVILLEJAGUARS—Announced DEJason Bahin voidedthe final twoyearsofhis contract. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedDLCory Grissom,RBSamMcGuffie, WRTJMoeand LBTaylor Reed. NEW YORKJETS — Released WR Santonio Holmes. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — SignedDEMichaelBennett to amultiyear contract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —Suspended LosAngeles FJordanNolan onegameforpunching an unsuspecting opponent, Edmonto nFJesseJoensuu,duringaMarch9game. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreedto termswith DDillonFournieronathree-year contract. DETROIT REDWINGS—RecalledCCory Emmerton from GrandRapids(AHL). NASHVILL E PREDATORS — Recalled F Col ton SissonsfromMilwaukee (AHL). SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer PORTLANDTIMBERS— SignedMFWillJohnson to a multiyear contract. COLLEGE APPALACHIA NSTATE— Announcedtheywillnot renew the contract of men'sbasketball coachJason Capel. BINGHA MTON— Announced they will not renew thecontract of wom en's basketball coachNicole Scholl. GEOR GIASOUTHERN—NamedAlexAtkins offensive linecoach. HOFSTRA— NamedJoeStaubheadstrengthand conditioning coach. MINNESOTA STATE— NamedJakeDickertdefensive coordinator. XAVIER (NO) — Named JasonHorn athletics director.
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
C3
YOUTH SPORTS
New concussionguidelinesreleased
Bon s ac inGiantsuni orm reporting importance of detection • The former slugger takes on therole of hitting instructor for one week inArizona
By Kevin Dunieavy
a s o c cer m anagement is accountability a n d player growing up in Oklahoma City, transparency. But that is not easy to
Lauren Long earned a college scholarship with an aggressive style of play. But there was a price to pay for her physicality. It came in the form of concussions — 10, by her estimate
The Associated Press
and that of her doctors — that went undiagnosed until her senior season at MidAmerica Nazarene University
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — Barry Bonds certainly thinks he is wor-
thy of election to the Hall of Fame. all-time home run king said Monday at the San Francisco Giants' spring training camp, where he will serve as a hitting instructor for a week. The 49-year-old Bonds spent
his last 15 big league seasons with San Francisco, finishing in 2007 with a career total of 762 homers.
But his final years were clouded by suspicions of performance-enhancing drug use, and the seven-time National League most Chris Carlson /TheAssociated Press valuable player was convicted of San Francisco Giants manager Bruce Bochy, left, listens as former player o ne obstruction count i n A p r i l Barry Bonds speaks at a news conference before a spring training baseball 2011 by a jury that found an an- game in Scottsdale, Ariz., Monday. swer he gave was criminally evasive during 2003 testimony before a grand jury investigating the dis- enjoying it. to slow down, do other things. I "I am more nervous at this than needed that guy to play, it's who I tribution of PEDs. And he did not even come close to election to the I was playing, because it was only was at the time. I'm the same perHall of Fame in his first two turns my mind and me. Hopefully I can son, just a different character.... on the ballot. bring good value to the ballclub. Teammates used to say, you don't Advice for the writers who have We'll see how it works out," he play when you're nice. It worked. not voted for him: "You guys are added. "I don't even know if I'm Whatever it was, it worked." all adults. I have no advice for you." good at it." After meeting with the media, One topic he would not discuss: Looking about 30 pounds light- Bonds watched Buster Posey and Alex Rodriguez, who is serving a er than his playing weight of 230 other Giants hitters intently in the seasonlong drug suspension. and considerably more affable, batting cage. "The timing was right. That's Bonds said he respects Rodri- Bonds wore an orange-and-black guez and will talk to him individ- Giants cap, a black windbreaker why it's happening now," Giants ually, "not in a press conference." and baseball pants, ready for the manager Bruce Bochy said of Meeting with about three dozen first day of work in a seven-day Bonds' presence at the training media members for about 30 min- stay in camp. facility. "It's good for Barry to see utes on a patio overlooking the left He appeared relaxed, laughing how it's going to work for him. To field area at Scottsdale Stadium, and joking more in a few minutes me, he is one of the greatest minds Bonds wanted to put the contro- than he did during the years when in basebalL" versial past behind him. he ruled the team's clubhouse Would he perhaps like to man"It feels really good to be back," from his corner reclining chair. age some day? "I'm just a different character. "I want to try and get through he said. "It feels good to give back to the game that I love. Hopefully, I was a different character play- these seven days first," he said I'll be a part of this longer.... I'm ing," he said. "Now I've had time with a laugh.
NBA ROUNDUP
Stanford as exceptions — answer to their athletic departments. "The problem that we're seeing is not about the NCAA," Hainline said.
"The problem we're seeing is a socie-
tal issue." Youth Sports Safety Alliance mem-
Hill. Also on Monday, the National Athletic Trainers' Association released
tide. At the high school level, concussion rates have steadily climbed each
new guidelines on the management of
of the past 11 years.
sports concussions. According to one guideline, athletes with concussions
Dawn Comstock of the University of Colorado, however, notes that con-
NHL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
son-high 28 — i ncluding
LOS ANGELES — Blake Griffin scored 22 of his 37 points in the first quarter and
six 3-pointers — and mak-
ing 12 of his first 13 shots in the Clippers' 104-96 win at
made 14 of 16 shots before Phoenix. fouling out, and the Los AnThings got testy with 5:28 geles Clippers beat the Phoe- remaining, as Griffin and nix Suns 112-105 on Monday P.J. Tucker began wrestling night for their eighth straight on the floor after they jockvlctory. eyed for position in the paint Darren Collison scored 20 on a missed 3-point shot by points and Chris Paul added Barnes and Griffin fell on 17 points and 11 assists for top of Tucker. the Pacific Division leaders, The two had to be sepwho were 55.1 percent from arated, and the game was the field and improved to delayed while referees Ben23-1 when shooting at least nie Adams, Jason Phillips 50 percent. and Matt Boland examined G oran Dragic had 23 the video monitor to sort it points and five assists during all out. Tucker was charged a foul-plagued 33 minutes with a loose ball foul and for the Suns, who slipped a then ejected, while Griffin half-game behind idle Mem- stayed in the game. phis for the eighth and final Also on Monday: Western Conference playoff Knicks 123, 76ers 110: spot and are 1 A behind Dallas. Phoenix hasn't made the
N EW Y O R K Tim H ardaway Jr . s c ored 2 8
postseason since 2010 under coach Alvin Gentry, now a Clippers associate head coach. Gerald Green, who had a career-high 41 points for the Suns in last Thursday's 128122 win over Oklahoma City,
points as New York defeated Philadelphia, sending the
finished with 16 points after
James led all scorers with 23
averaging 23.4 over his previous 13 games. Miles Plumlee, playing his second game after missing the previous two because of a sprained right knee, had 12 points and nine rebounds as all five
points and Miami clinched a playoff spot. Bobcats 105, Nuggets 98:
Suns starters scored in dou-
straight at home. Bucks 105, Magic 98:
76ers to their 17th straight
loss. Heat 99, Wizards 90: MI—
Dw y a n e W a d e
scored 13 of his 22 points in the fourth quarter, LeBron
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al
Adrien0-00-00, Sessions5-8 6-616, Mayo0-1 0-0 0.Totals 38-8421-25105. Orlando 24 27 20 27 — 98 Milwaukee 13 32 23 37 — 105
Standings AllTimesPOT
EasternConference x-Indiana x-Miami d-Toronto Chicago Washington Brooklyn Charlotte Atlanta NewYork Detroit Cleveland Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee
W L 46 17 44 17 35 27 35 28 33 30 32 30 30 34 27 35 25 40 24 39 24 40 22 41 19 46 15 48 13 50
Pct GB 730 721 1
46 16
742
565 10'/2
556 u
524 13 516 13'/2 469 16'/2 435 18i/2
385 22 381 22
375 22'/2 349 24 292 28
238 31 206 33
WesternConteresce W L Pct GB
d-SanAntonio d-Oklahoma Cit y Houston d-LA. Clippers Portland Golden State Dallas Memphis Phoenix Minnesota Denver NewOrleans Sacramen to Utah LA. Lakers
46 17 44 19 45 20
d-diyisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
42 21 40 24 38 26 36 26 36 27 31 31 27 36 26 37 22 41 22 42 22 42
73p 1/2 698 2'/2 692 2 i/2 667 4'/2
Monday'sGames
Miami99,Washington90 NewYork123, Philadelphia110 Milwaukee105,Orlando98 Atlanta02, Utahuo LA. Clippers02, phoenix105 Today'sGames Bostonat Indiana,4 p.m. Sacramento atDetroit, 4:30p.m. SanAntonioatChicago,5p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 5p.m. HoustonatOklahomaCity,5 p.m. PortlandatMemphis, 5p.m. Dallas at GoldenState,7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGames Denverat Orlando,4p.m. Sacramento atPhiladelphia, 4 p.m. CharlotteatWashington, 4p.m. BrooklynatMiami, 4p.m. Detroitat Toronto,4 p.m. NewYorkatBoston,4:30 p.m. MemphisatNewOrleans,5 p.m. DallasatUtah,6p.m. PortlandatSanAntonio, 6:30p.m. Cleveland atPhoenix, 7p.m. Golden StateatLA. Clippers, 7:30p.m.
Jeffersonscored 26 points and Kemba Walker added 24 as Charlotte won its seventh MILWAUKEE — B r andon
Knight scored 24 points and sparked Milwaukee's rous-
ing rally from an 18-point deficit with a dunk. Nets 101, Raptors 97: NEW YORK — Deron Wil-
quarter and wasn't a factor until the fourth, when the
liams and Shaun Livingston
Suns rallied from a 19-point
an ailing Paul Pierce hit a
deficit with 8:11 remaining and got it down to 109-105 on
3-pointer with 1:14 remain-
each scored 18 points and
ing to lead Brooklyn past Dragic's layup with 32.5 sec- Atlantic Div i s ion-leading onds to play. Toronto. But that was as close as Hawks112, Jazz110: SALT they got, as Matt Barnes LAKE CITY — Kyle Korver made three of four free scored 26 points and Paul Millsap added 23 to help At-
finished with 13 points, just lanta outlast Utah and snap sixdays after scoring a sea- a six-game losing streak.
Knicks123, 76ers110 PHILADELPHIA (110) Thompson2-6 0-0 5, Young8-22 1-2 18, Sims 4-4 2-2 10,Carter-Wiliams8-126-9 23, Anderson 7-12 0-017,Wroten8-187-823,Varnado1-2 2-44, Williams1-30-0 2, Maynor0-00-0 0, Mullens0-0 0-00, Moultrie4-50-08. Totals 43-8418-25110. NEWYORK(123) Anthon y9-244-422,Smith8-182-422,Stoudemire9105 823, Felton4 52213, Shumpert1-3 0-02, Hardaway Jt 9-135-628, Prigioni1-20-03, Tyler2-42-46, ClarkO-I 2-22, S.Brown0-00-40, Murry1-10-02. Totals44-81 22-34123. Philadelphia 31 3 0 24 25 — 110 New York 26 35 30 32 — 123
Nets101, Raptors 97
Summaries Mosday'sGames
Hawks112, Jazz110 ATLANTA (112) Carroll 4-7 0-0 11, Millsap7-147-8 23, Antic 4-8 2-212,Teague3-10 7-914, Korver8-126-626, Brand4-50-1 8, Mack0-40-00, Schroder2-50-04, Scott 3-51-1 7, Martin1-40-03, Muscala2-40-04. Totals 38-7823-27112.
UTAH (110)
Jefferson6-90-015, M.Wiliams6-125-618, Favors 4-106-614, Burke9-15 0-023, Hayward 4-10 4-4 13,Kanter5-101-111,Burks5-1I 2-312,Evans 1-2 1-2 3,Garrett0-3 1-2 1. Totals 40-82 20-24 110. Atlanta 28 31 19 34 — 112 22 22 36 30 — 110 utah
WASHING TON(90) Ariza 2-0 1-1 6, Booker 3-8 0-06, Gortat7-15 0-1 14,Wall2-81-27, Beal7-181-1 18,We bster 5-9 3-417, Harrington1-50-0 3, Gooden7-12 0-015, Porter Jt 1-10-02, Miller1-20-02, Temple0-00-0 0.Totals 36-896-9 90. MIAMI (99) James 10-150-0 23,Ba ttier 2-3 0-0 6, Bosh10140-022,Chalmers0-70-00,Wade8-I76-622, Allen 5-90-0 13,Andersen3-53-3 9, Cole0-4 0-0 0,Beasley2-60-04,Haslem 0-00-00.Totals4080 9-9 99. Washington 23 22 28 17 — 90 Miami 31 22 20 26 — 99
Bobcats105, Nuggets 98 DENVER (98)
Chandler3-131-1 9,Faried7-101-215, Mozgov 4-8 1-2 9, Lawson9-I9 4-6 24, Foye 4-8 1-2 9, Fournier0-1 0-0 0, Vesely2-41-3 5, Hickson2-7 7-1011, Arthur0-0 0-00, Brooks5-0 5-516, Randolph 0-2 0-00. Totals36-83 21-31 98.
CHARLolrE(105)
Kidd-Gilchrist 2-52-2 6,McRoberts 5-7 2-2 15, Jefferson12-232-626, Walker6-1512-1224, Douglas-Roberts2-83-4 9, Zeller 2-20-04, Neal7-92-2 19, Ridnour1-40-02,Tolliver0-60-00, Biyombo0-2 0-00. Totals 37-8123-28105. Denver 22 23 23 30 — 98 Charlotle 25 26 28 26 — 105
Clippers112, Suns105
W ASHINGTON —
Sid-
ney Crosby had a hand in both early goals as Pittsits first three shots Monday night, Chris Kunitz scored twice, and the Penguins beat
Alex Ovechkin's struggling Washington Capitals 3-2. Crosby finished with his 30th goal and two assists to raise his NHL-leading point total to 87, matching his uni-
form number. The Penguins beat Washington for the sevovertook idle Boston for the Eastern Conference's best record.
The Capitals have lost four of their past five games. Also on Monday: Predators 4, Senators 3: OTTAWA, Ontario — Seth Jones scored at 3:49 of overtime and Nashville defeated Ottawa.
Coyotes 4, Lightning 3: TAMPA, Fla. — Radim Vr-
bata scored the lone shootout goal to lead Phoenix past Tampa Bay. Maple Leafs 3, Ducks 1: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Phil Kessel and Tyler Bozak each had a goal and two assists, and Toronto celebrated
coach Randy Carlyle's return to Anaheim with a victory over the Ducks.
A valanche 3, Jets 2 :
PHOENIX (105) Tucker3-5 8-11 14,Frye4-11 0-0 10, Plumlee 6-100-012, Dragi7-12 c 9-0 23, G.Green6-141-2 16, Smith0-50-00, MarkMorris 7-161-316, Len 1-1 0-02,Marc.Morris5-100-011,Goodwin0-11-2 1. Totals39-8520-29105. LA. CLIPPERS (112) Barnes4-114-613, Griffin 14-169-1037,Jordan 4-6 0-1 8,Paul7-163-517, Collison8-12 3-4 20, wGreen03000, Davis1-3002, Granger5u 23 14, Turkoglu0-01-21. Totals 43-7822-31112. Phoenix 23 22 31 29 — 105 LA. Clippers 34 2 8 28 22 — 112
Bucks105, Magic 98
Leaders
ORLANDO I98) Harkless 5-101-1 14,O'Quinn5-80-010, Vucevic 6-13 0-012,Nelson5-90-013, Afflalo 4-143-612, Harris 5-101-1 u, Oladipo5-6 0-012, Moore4-7 0-08,Nicholson3-90-06,LambO-20-00.Totals 42-88 5-8 98. MILWAUKEE (105) Middleton5-13 6-6 21, llyasova6-13 3-6 16, Pachulia 2-5 0-04, Knight9-23 5-524, Wolters 4-8 0-0 8, Antetokounmpo 2-41-2 6, Henson5-9 0-010,
ThroughSunday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG 62 647 532 61 610 353 58 581 323 59 503 413 55 418 408 64 578 379 58 558 253
The Associated Press
enth consecutive time and
Heat 99, Wizards 90
Durant,OKC Anthony,NYK James,MIA Love,MIN Harden,HOU Griffin, LAC Aldridge,PO R
Penguinsstart fast en route to beating Capitals burgh converted on two of
TORONTO(97) Ross5-12 0-012,A.Johnson8-14 0-016, Valanciunas2-32-3 6, Lowry8-161-1 21, DeR ozan 3-9 625 7 8-8 14,Hansbrough4-6 8-1016,Vasquez2-6 0-04, 594 9 Salmons1-32-24, Novak1-i 0-02,Hayes1-10-02. 581 10 Totals 35-7121-24 97. 571 10'/2 BROOKLYN (101) 500 15 J.Johnson 6-130-014, Pierce3-86-815, Plumlee 429 19i/2 3-7 0-0 6,Wiliams6-132-418, Livingston7-104-4 413 20'/2 18, Blatche4-71-2 9, Thornton2-6 0-15, Teletovic 349 24'/2 1-3 3-4 5,Anderson2-3 6-811, Collins 0-0 0-00. 344 25 Totals 34-7022-31 101. 344 25 Toronto 30 21 22 24 — 97 Brooklyn 19 31 28 23 — 101
Charlotte105,Denver98 Brooklyn101,Toronto97
sion awareness has started to shift the
should not return to play the same cussion rates have declined in wresday. tling and boys soccer while other When Long sustained the final sports show a leveling off. concussion of her soccer career — an C omstock s ay s t h e "epidemic opponent hitting her in the face with curves" are beginning "to peak just a an elbow — she was back on the field little bit. We've got to figure out why." minutes later. The increased awareness over the "They said, 'Your nose is broken, past decade makes some former athbut can you go back in'?' " Long said. letes, such as Long, wish she had been "I had never missed a game because born 10 years later. "If someone had said, at 27, this is of a concussion. Looking back, had the education and awareness been what you're gonna be like, I'd have there, I most certainly would have walked away along time ago," Long sat out — two, three (weeks), maybe said. even a month — because of what I was Long has joined another former feeling." soccer player, Samantha Sanderson, While the National Football League to form Concussion Connection, a and National Hockey League have website to educate and support vicestablished protocols to deal with tims of concussions. Sanderson, a concussions, other organizations lag player at Miami who aspired to a probehind. fessionalcareer,suffered four concusBrian Hainline, chief medical offi- sions as a college junior six years ago. cer of the NCAA, said that the organi- Her symptoms remain today. "The biggest thing for me is (I have) zation is working long term to create a concussion database for all of its depersonalization," Sanderson said. athletes. In the short term, changes to "I'm still trying to figure out who I am football practice guidelines are in the without soccer."
NBA SCOREBOARD
Clippers takewinning streak to eight games
throws to close it out. Barnes
accomplish when athletic trainers at most schools — he cited Princeton and
(Kan.). Seven years later, Long still strug- bers said getting athletic organizagles with the effects. tions at lower levels to enhance conOn Monday, Long spoke at the fifth cussion-management procedures has annual Youth Sports Safety Summit, been challenging. providing evidence of the importance During Monday's conference, it was of detection, treatment and prevention pointed out on more than one occaof concussions. Long and others from sion that Mississippi was the last state nearly 140 organizations committed to enact concussion legislation for to keeping young athletes safe will youth sports when it did so in January. meet today with legislators on Capitol There is some evidence that concus-
"Without a d oubt," baseball's
ble figures. Dragic came in averaging 20.5 points, third in the league among point guards behind Stephen Curry (23.5) and Kyrie Irving (21.5). But he picked up his third foul 2 minutes into the second
His goal with respect to concussion
WASHINGTON — A s
By Don Ketchum
A MI
works.
The Associated Press
1965 31.7 1714 28.1 1569 27.1 1563 26.5 1368 24.9 1546 24.2 1372 23.7
DENVER — Matt Duchene s cored 2 :3 3 i n t o ov e r -
time, and Semyon Varlamov stopped 33 shots to lift Colorado to a win over
Winnipeg. Kings 3, Flames 2: CALGARY, Alberta — Anze Ko-
pitar had a goal and an assist to lead Los Angeles to its eighth straight win. Islanders 7, Canucks 4: V ANCOUVER, Br iti s h Columbia — M at t M a r tin
scored the winner in the Islanders' seven-goal third period, and New York erased a
three-goal deficit in the final frame to beat Vancouver.
Jackets-Stars postponed when Playerfalls ill DALLAS —Thegame between Dallas andColumbus was postponed by the NHL onMonday night after Stars forward Rich Peverley collapsed on the bench during the first period. Play was halted 6:23 in as Peverley wasquickly carried from the bench. A public address announcementwas made several minutes later that the
31-year-old Peverley was conscious and taken to a hospital. "We treated (Peverley) for a cardiac event successfully," Dr. Gil Salazar said. "As soon as wetreated him, he regained consciousness. Hewasable to tell me where hewas." There was no immediate announcement of when thegame would bemade up. Columbus wasleading 1-0.
"Dallas player Rich Peverley is doing well and is in stable condition," the
NHL said in astatement. "He has beentransported to the hospital. As aresult of the emotional state of the players on both teams causedbythemedical emergency, the game isbeing postponed.We apologize for any inconvenience and wethank the fans." Peverley missed the preseason andthe season opener becauseof a procedure to correct an irregular heartbeat, a condition diagnosed during a training camp physical. He madehis Stars debut on Oct. 5 against Washington. — The Associated Press
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
Vegas
Champions
Continued from C1 Oregon State's hopes of getforthe first time since 1990
Continued from C1 "I was a younger kid, I didn't really fit in," says Conditt. "She took me under her wing and made me feel a part of the team and made
rest on winning the confer-
me feel included. I think that was a big deal
ence tournament. The Beavers will have to get past Oregon
in my life and in my basketball career. I don't even know if she knows that, but she made a big difference for me. And having her come back to OIT and get to play with her again is one of the most rewarding experiences of my life." A connectionwas made back in La Pine. And an unexplainable chemistry has contin-
ting to the NCAA tournament
first. They beat the D ucks 80-72 in Corvallis on Jan. 19,
starting a run of four wins in five games for OSU that culminated with a 71-67 home tri-
umph over UCLA. Since beating the Bruins on
Feb. 2, however, things have not gone well for the Beavers.
ued between the two former Hawks at OIT in Klamath Falls.
The two senior starters have guided the
They went 3-6 in the second
Owls to a program-best 28-5 record this sea-
half of the conference schedule, including a 93-83 loss at Oregon on Feb. 16 — the game
son and the team's first Cascade Collegiate Conferencetournament championship last Monday. The former standouts who led La Pine
that started the Ducks on their current tear.
"With seven (straight) wins, we feel pretty good, but it is going to be tougher than last year," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "We will be playing on Wednesday, so we have to play four games instead of three, so the challenge is tougher. But I like our depth. If there is a team that could
run four games, we've got a shot because of our depth. But
again, you have to win the first one, and this league is deep this year." The Ducks feel better about their inside depth after Waverly Austin had his best game of the season with a career-high 10 rebounds and five blocked shots last Tuesday against Ari-
zona State. Ben Carter had one of his best outings against Arizona with five points, four re-
bounds, two assists, two steals and one block in 13 minutes. "The exciting thing is, if we can play long enough, we still have a lot more there," Altman
said. "Ben has been stepping up and making plays, Waverly's performance in the last
couple games.... It is exciting because I think we have a lot of guys that can give us some of that. We will have our
chance ... and hopefully we keep playing well." The Ducks started the sea-
EVENT OF THEWEEK With team wins at the OregonSchool Ski Association alpine state championships at Mt. Bachelor ski area onSaturday, Bend High secured the boysand girls season team titles thanks in large part to KeenanSeidel and Elinor Wilson. Seidel, who swept the giant slalom and slalom events at theOSSAseason finale races this past weekend, claimed the boys overall, GSandslalom season championships. Wilson nearly mirrored the feat in the girls competition. The senior took second in both the GSand slalom races on Friday andSaturday andfinished as the overall, giant slalom andslalom season champ. PLAYER OFTHEWEEK A buzzer-beating 3-pointer by Madison on Saturday night overshadowed theperformance of Grant Lannin, the Intermountain Conference boys basketball player of the year. OnSaturday night, the Mountain View senior poured in 28 points to go along with14 rebounds andthe game's only two blocks. Lannin posted12 points in the first quarter and added12 more in the third, but the host Cougars fell 58-55 in the first round of the Class 5Astate playoffs.
to a Class 4A state title in 2009
have helped Oregon Tech earn a No. 18 national ranking as the Conditt
Owl s h ead to this week's NAIA Division II Women's Basketball
National Championship tournament in Sioux City, Iowa.
Meredith acknowledges that Conditt (a 2010 La Pine graduate) and Ramirez (2009) have Remirez
STAT OF THEWEEK Twenty-nine to three. Late in the third quarter on Saturday, BendHightrailed visiting Liberty 35-31 in the first round of the Class 5A boys basketball state playoffs. But the Lava Bears thenwent on a29-3 run — including five 3-pointers — to assumecontrol and coast to a 66-45 victory.
bee n i n s trumental in O r egon
Tech's success. "They've got an i ncredible chemistry together," the fifth-year OIT coach says. "They've been through state playoffs several times. They've been state champions. So they understand what it takes to get to the
top. I love recruiting kids out of successful programs."
we want when we call it," Conditt adds. "He
From little ol' La Pine, Conditt and Ramirez
(Meredith) knows that we work together well.
NASCARmust
addressdangers in quali ing format "We don't have impact data on 170-, 180-mph differenCHARLOTTE, N.C. — tial impacts," he said. "If I hit
By Jenna Fryer
The Associated Press
NASCAR would be hard- someone with those speed pressed to find many fans discrepancies, that's going to who do not prefer the dra- be really bad for everyone." ma and intrigue of the new, W h at more does NASCAR knockout qualifying for- need to hear before officials mat over the old system of figure out a solution'? True, single-car runs. the system is only two weeks But the rules have creat- old and there has yet to be a
ed a wrinkle that drivers up serious incident. and down the grid say is far W a i ting to see how it develtoo dangerous. ops over the next few weeks NASCAR has now been is a reckless gamble. warned — repeatedly, by Af t e r spending much of some of the biggest names last year working on a new in the sport. And finding an rules package to improve the immediate solution to what quality of racing at superB rian Vickers called "the s peedways, NA SCAR v i c e
most dangerous thing I've president of innovation and ever done in racing" should racing development Gene beNASCAR'sonlyitemon Stefanyshyn warned before the agenda this week. Sund a y's first test at Las VeFor two weeks in a row, gas that one race would not
drivers have complained be a true indicator of progthat their engines are too ress. Give it time, he urged, hot following their qualify- for teams to get a handle on ing runs. They can either the rules and adjust accordcool the engines or gamble ingly before deciding if more on not blowing the engine workwasneeded.
have helped vault Oregon Tech into the national small-college spotlight this season, as the Owls opened their schedule with 14 straight wins (a school record) and reached a season-high No. 14 ranking in the NAIA coaches'poll.
And he just wants us to score, basically, when
the playbook for the last two years?"
their cars on pit road be-
"To get two kids of that caliber from what I consider a local school, it's just been phenom-
Especially considering the effectiveness of the play. "Like people say," Ramirez says, "the chem-
cause doing so would re- luxury of taking a wait-andquire the use of a cooling see approach on what combox. Sincefewadjustments petitors say is a significant are allowed during qualify- safety concern. ingrounds, the coolingbox D o t hey wait for a major is not an option because accident before they act? it would require teams to A d river injury? NASCAR open the hood of the car. clearly has something good Once the hoods are open, on its hands with the new inspectors would have too knockout format, and drivers difficult of a time policing have warned that something pitroadtomakesurenoad- bad could happen unless a justments are being made change is made. Why even
he calls it." When Meredith introduced the play at the beginning of the season, Conditt laughed. Ramirez's reaction: "Why hasn't this been in
enal," says Meredith, who is convinced that nabbing the former La Pine stars was a steal. istry that we have and the ability to know "They've really been a backbone for us the what one another is going to do makes it exlast couple years." tremely effective on people who don't know." La Pine is in the rearview mirror for ConThe crafty passing of Ramirez and the ditt and Ramirez, but their hometown made dominant post play of Conditt, who is third in its way into the Oregon Tech playbook this the NAIA with 115 blocks this season, have season. helped propel Oregon Tech this far, to the Several times each game, Meredith will NAIA D-II national tournament, which the raise a hand into the air, forming an 'L' above Owls begin Wednesday against Purdue Unihis head with a thumb and forefinger. The versity Calumet. Owls know the play well, especially ConEvery game now, with the season on the
son 13-0 and finished with
ditt and Ramirez. It is called "La Pine," and
line, Ramirez and Conditt remind themselves
s even straight wins. In t h e
it is designed specifically for the two former
middle of those streaks was a stretch during which they lost eight of 10 games. "Are you glass-half-empty or glass-half-full?" Altman said. "The half-full says we played our tails off and really got it going. The half-empty is, 'What the heck were we doing for those eight games?' I screwed a couple of them up. If I am going to ask my players to take responsibility and accountability, I just didn't have
Hawks.
of that championship season at La Pine High five years ago.
us in the right sets, didn't get
MOTOR SPORTS: COMMENTARY
The play is a simple pick and roll, as Con-
"In La Pine, everyone kind of rallied around
ditt, who was named to the all-conference
us when we started winning games," Conditt recalls. "They wanted to be a part of it, and I
squad for the second straight year, fires from the low post to set a screen for Ramirez. The guard rubs off the pick and has several choices: go in for a shot, pass to the rolling Conditt for a jump shot/layup, or look to one of three teammates who are spread out on the back
feel the same way here. I feel there's a great
sense of community, and everyone just kind of jumped in — two feet in.... We're just along for the ride. We're enjoying it while we can and trying to make waves here." "It's probably one of the most memorable
side of the play. The beauty of "La Pine" is that it can be ex- seasons that we'll have," Ramirez adds. "And ecuted anywhere on the floor, and it is run, being on the team together, and with the girls Meredith says, by two exceptionally intelli- that we have at OIT, it's always a good time. It's never a dull moment. It's a really special gent players. "Basically," Meredith says, "we're saying, time for us — all 15 of us." 'Our two are better than your two.' " — Reporter: 541-383-0307, "Really, we just get free rein to do whatever glucas@bendbulletirLcom.
on the next fast lap.
NASCAR can have all the
Only NASCAR has pro- time it needs to figure out an hibited teams from cooling aero package.
to the cars.
Off i c i als do not have the
take the chance?
So teams figured out Si x - time NASCAR chamtheir own solution: Drivers pion Jimmie Johnson had anare slowing their cars to a o t her suggestion, too.
crawlandcirclingthetrack At t h e start of qualifying, at slow speeds to cool the cars are being parked on pit engines following their fast road facing in, requiring the laps. It is going on at the drivers to back out when they same time as other drivers are ready to make their lap. It
are speeding along, making makes for a lot of activity in a their qualifying attempt. sh o r t period of time. "You're going 200 mph "That initial roll-out is very out there, and cars that ar- sketchy and I think we're go-
en't even running are run- ing to start crashing cars just ning about 40," grumbled backing out, because you've ClintBowyer. got guys at various angles Asked for his opinion, trying to back out and guys Ryan Newman simply said: backing out before the clock
tion wasn't there, and that is
"It's not safe. That's an easy strikes zero and the track is answer. It's not safe." gree n , " Johnson said."We Those were just two of n e ed to clean it up a little. I
disappointing as a coach." The Ducks suffered four
the gripes that came out of think the format is awesome. Las Vegas Motor Speed- It's great for the fans, it's
us to execute. The connection wasn't there, the communica-
two-point losses during that
stretch, including their last two lossesof the regular season at Arizona and Arizona
State when Oregon lost a lead
Hart Continued from C1 Hart found extra time to
way, a 1.5-mile track that
g r eat for the teams, but some
with him this spring.
been to before his introducto-
"I'm concerned about it,"
has enough room on the ofthelogisticsandflowonpit apron to accommodate the road could be addressed."
rynews conference in December. On a team that features
said Lloyd McClendon, the first-year Seattle manager.
slow cars while the car s You h a v e b e e n w a r ned, whizzing b y t h e m m a k - N A S CAR. Do not wait to see
and in a new city he had never
in the last couple minutes of
spend with his family. He
ace pit cher Felix Hernandez
"I feel better about it every
ing a qualifying run. But if the drivers are crying wolf.
both games. After the ASU loss, Moser said the Ducks
is a native Kentuckian who
day as we move forward. But
NASCAR heads to Bristol
you have to be realistic, too.
stayed confident and talked about how they needed to win
has settled into a family-first lifestyle. He and his wife, Kristina, have four children.
and star second baseman Robinson Cano — another first-year Mariner — Hart is quietly the most important
the rest of their games, but
Hart admits that, early in his
piece of the puzzle.
can have him out there for,
Altman knows there was a
career, during his years in
chance his team's confidence could have gone the other way. "A lot of guys would have quit," Altman said. " 'Coach doesn't know what he's doing. This is not working. We're playing the wrong guys.' A lot of guys would have just lost faith, but these guys didn't. They stayed together and that talks about the character in
the Milwaukee Brewers' mi-
hopefully, 150 games in some and Cano provide. They are capacity — whether it's DH,
Motor Speedway this weekend, and the 0.533-mile bullring is incredibly short on the real estate needed to accommodate cars driving
nor-league system, he drank
two perennial All-Stars who
too much and experimented
are consistent and durable.
the room. We worked through
some deficiencies we had and are playing better basketball." Loyd said the Ducks knew
they had too much potential to give up on the season when
You know what Hernandez
speeds.
with drugs. Later, as he devel- But to get the best out of Cano oped into a legit big-leaguer, and to make the middle of the a two-time All-Star, he had Mariners' lineup potent, Hart to learn not to overindulge in must be there for productivistardom. Those experienc- ty and protection. There is no es have made him what he question about Hart's abiliis now: a veteran ballplayer ty. He has a career on-baselauded for his character, a reli- plus-slugging percentage of gious man proud of his Chris- .824, five seasons of at least tianity, and a husband and 20 home runs, two 30-homer father who has his priorities seasons and four seasons
spring training, I don't think
a point during qualifying at Las Vegas on Friday when he was riding slowly
inorder.
he did not limp back to the dugout. "We're on a good pace," Hart said. "Everything is good so far. I'm not really holding back." The Mariners signed Hart to a one-year, $6 million con-
with at least 80 runs batted
end and now the Ducks head
to Las Vegas to try to defend
er Institute of Physical Ther-
their title. " We know f o r s u r e w e
apy & Performance to work
can go down there and do it again," said Loyd, a Las Ve-
of getting both knees healthy.
gas native who was the most
again. "I was just a regular dad,"
conference at 3-8 and well outside the NCAA t ournament
bubble. "We were still playing for a lot, (because) the season was obviously not over," Loyd said. "We could still make something happen, so it didn't make any sense to fold it. We were
too talented, had too many weapons. We had to iron some things out and that is what we
are doing." Oregon was the only team in the Pac-12 that won both of
its games on the final week-
valuable player of last year's Pac-12 tournament. "We have all the weapons, a lot of depth.
We have to win four games in four days, but it is definitely possible for us to do that."
Instead of moping, Hart
through the arduous process
that's the smart way to do it."
A few days ago, Hart stole home, freelancing and turning Xavier Avery's swipe of second base into a double steal that the coaching staff
Vickers said there was
Plae Well, Retire Well
around the bottom of the
track and Reed Sorenson iled Past him at a speed difference of 170 mph.
did not call. "I fainted," McClendon
775SwBonnetway, Suite120• Bend 541-7pa-Q3pf www.ei ~ evaiioncapilai.biz
joked. B ut Hart m ade it . A n d
tract w it h
i n centives that
couldearnhim an eight-figure salary if he can stay healthy. It is a gamble, but Hart is do-
ing everythingnecessary to be ready. He is leaner, having lost 20 pounds during rehab. He stretches like crazy now. In the mornings, he is metic-
ulous about his training regimen, and after workouts and games, he is working to keep the knees strong.
"It was a little scary at first," in October, and he is still re- Hart said. "You look on the covering. A sabaseballplayer, Internet, and there are a lot of Hart does not have to endure horror stories. But I'm giving
j HrGH DeseRT " ". WILD GAMEs;
A Benefit for the Fu11 Access Beth Rixe Service Center Grand Prizes to be awarded at the end of the evening.
What: Casino Style Night of Gaming and Wild Game Sampling When: March 15, 2014 • 6:00 - 10:00 p.m. Where: The Elks Lodge in Bend Saxon's Sponsored raffle for a lovely piece of jewelry
Tickets: $50 per person Ticket Purchase Includes: $1,000 in script for a fun night of casino style gaming Commemorative wine glass• Food samplings 4 wild game tastings No-host wine and beer bar • Wine raffle • Silent auction Sponsored By:
The Bulletin
procedure was on his ankle
as much pounding on his myself every opportunity not knees, and the Mariners could to have any setbacks." make him a full-time desigAs much as Hart loves beHart said. "I couldn't be sad nated hitter if they need to do ing a regular dad, he still has about that." so. So far, Hart is moving well some life left in his irregular With greater perspective, and says he feels good. Still, profession. And the Mariners Hart returns to baseball, with there are no guarantees. The desperately need Hart to be a new team, ina new league Mariners are being careful available for this second act. And then it was family time
j
at dramatically d i f ferent
first base or right field. But to put him out there full-bore in
in. He is a bopper, and when swam with his children all healthy, he has shown the summer. He watched about versatility to play multiple po50 of hisson'sbaseballgames. sitions (right field, first base). He went to hi s d aughters' He is quite athletic at 6 feet 6 talent show. H e a t t ended and 230 pounds. an event honoring his wife But can he stay healthy? for her work with homeless Microfracture knee surgeryouth. ieshave ended or diminished All the while, Hart missed plenty of sports careers. Greg baseball, but he gained great- Oden. Penny Hardaway. Traer clarity of where baseball cy McGrady. Amar'e Stoubelongs in his life. It did not demire. It expeditedthe retirediminish his desire to return ment of Seattle Seahawks legto form, however. Hart, whose end Walter Jones. But those primary residence is in the are basketball and football Phoenix area, would wake players. up at 5:45 in the morning and The closest recent baseball help get the kids off to school. comparison might be Matt Then he would go to the Fisch- Kemp, but his microfracture
they were in 10th place in the
He had two major surgeries. We have to be cautious so we
ServingCentral Oregon since 1903
P ~ FINE JEwELERs 's
I KUl029 N IIII I I I
Tickets may be purchased online at www.FullAccess.org or in person at the Full Access office, Saxon's FineJewelers and Bright Spot Juice 6 Java in Sisters. ~ Must be 21 years of age Creating Opportunities for
psi[T gc c esg~5/Ii p e ople with developmental disabilities.
For more information call: 541-749-2158
C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
+
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
+
S&PBOO
NASDAQ ~ 4,334.45
16,418.68
10 YRTNOTE ~ 2.78%
1,877.17
TOdap
GOLD
01
$1,341.40I
MiP 500
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
................ Close:1,877.17
Put it all on red?
1,S60 "
Caesars Entertainment reports its financial results today for the last three months of 2013. The casino operator is expected to say its loss for the OctoberDecember period shrank from a year earlier, when the company booked a $450 million charge and a steep drop in revenue at its Atlantic City casinos. Caesars' operations in Atlantic City and other U.S. marketsoutside Las Vegas have been struggling amid stiffer competition and weakness in the gambling market.
1,800' " ""'10 DAYS
"
Change: -0.87 (flat) 17,000"
1,850 "
1,800 " 1,750.
"
16,000"
"
'
"
1,700"
15,000"
1,650
D
StocksRecap
:M 14 500
J
StoryStocks
"
"
Boeing
"
8
F
HIGH LOW CLOSE 16453.10 16334.20 16418.68 DOW Trans. 7623.51 7541.31 7580.25 DOW Util. 514.69 510.40 512.51 NYSE Comp. 10491.86 10429.61 10486.12 NASDAQ 4339.93 4307.84 4334.45 S&P 500 1877.87 1867.04 1877.17 S&P 400 1388.22 1377.08 1381.99 Wilshire 5000 20154.89 20026.84 20133.07 Russell 2000 1202.29 1193.24 1200.54
CHG. -34.04 -12.11 -1.69 -25.79 -1.77 -0.87 -6.96 -21.82 -2.78
%CHG. -0.21% -0.16% -0.33% -0.25% -0.04% -0.05% -0.50% -0.11% -0.23%
M
WK MO QTR YTD L L L -0.95% L L L +2.43% L L +4.47% L L L +0.82% L L L +3.78% L L L +1.56% L L L +2.94% L L L +2.17% L L L +3.17%
NorthwestStocks NAME
Economic bellwether The rate of growth in U.S. wholesale business stockpiles has been slowing in recent months. Wholesalers, manufacturers and retailers increased their inventories in December at the slowest pace since the summer. It was the second month in a row that the rate of growth in wholesale inventories declined. The Commerce Department reports data on January's wholesale stockpiles today.
Wholesale inventories Monthly percent change 1.2%
0. 0.
0.3
0.
0J
A
S
0
N
D
Source: Factaet
Retail blues? Wall Street expects that American Eagle Ouffitter's latest quarterly financial results will be down from a year earlier. The teen retailer lowered its earnings outlook for its fiscal fourth quarter in December after reporting that revenue at stores open at least a year fell 5 percent in the third quarter. American Eagle delivers its earnings report today. Investors will be listening for an update on what the retailer is doing to help revive sales growth.
$25
AEO
$14.21 '13 , ''14
$20.41 20 15
10
~
Operating EPS
•
I
est. I
8
4Q '12 4 Q '13 Price-earnings ratio:
17
based on past 12 months' results
Dividend: $0.50 Div. Yield: 3.5% Source: Factaet
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank ofAmerica Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Baacorp ColumbiaBokg ColumbiaSportswear Costco Wholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett Packard Home Federal Bocp ID Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Ioc 8 NordstromInc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarIoc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Ioc Schoitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StaocorpFocl StarbucksCp Triquiot Semi UmpquaHoldings US Baocorp Washington Fedl Wells Fargo & Co Weyerhaeuser
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27.12 14.14 45.25 8 .00 22 55
24.8 4 13. 9 8 4 3.7 5 7 . 68 17 69
MDU 23 . 37 ~ M EN T 1 7.06 ~ MSFT 27.64 ~ N KE 53.27 ~ J WN 52.16 ~ NWN 39.96 ~ PCAR 47.12 — o
35.10 24.31 38.98 80.26 63.72 45.89 66.46
3 3. 0 1 2 2. 3 5 3 7. 8 2 7 8. 9 8 62. 6 3 4 2. 0 9 65 .56
2.93
2.31
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~
PCL 41.63 o — PCP 180.06 ~ SWY 22.26 ~ SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 SHW 162.22 ~ SFG 40.32 — o
+. 2 0 +0 .8 L L +. 0 8 +0.6 L L -.03 -0.1 V L -.11 -1.4 w L -.60 -33 V L -.10 -0.3 W L -.24 -1.1 V L -.08 -0.2 V L -.48 -0.6 V L +. 2 2 +0.4 L L - .01 . . . ~ L -.37 -0.6 W L -.07 -2.9 T L
54.6 2 42 . 5 9 -.50 -1.2 274. 9 6 26 0.81 -2.15 -0.8 40.25 38. 8 8 +. 2 8 +0.7 3.3 2 25.93 -.43 -1.6 208. 6 3 28 6.10 -.61 -0.3
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w L L L L L W L L L L W
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-4.3 +16.7 24324 13 0 . 90 +4.2 +42 . 3 14292 14 0 . 2 2 +10.7 +46 . 8 561 0 15 0.66
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DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate pius stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. 1 - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 8 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
Chiquita Brands
CQB Close: $12.00L1.16 or 10.7% The companyisbuying Fyff esof Dublin to become the world's biggest banana seller with $4.6 billion in annual revenue. $13
140
12
130
D
J F M 52-week range $86.96~ $14 4.57
D
J F M 52-week range $6.94~ $ 13.68
Vol.:7.0m (1.3x avg.) P E: 21.3 Vol.:2.6m (6.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$94.33b Yie l d: 2.3% Mkt. Cap:$562 m
in
96 94
20 18 D
J
F
D
M
52-week range $15.48 ~
Mkt. Cap:$1.49 b
J
F
892.22~
$103 .70
PE:4 0 . 6 Vol.:4.4m (0.9x avg.)
PE:1 7 . 2
Yie l d : 0.6% Mkt.Cap:$94.24 b
Helmerich & Payne
HP Close:$1 00.34%-0.16 or -0.2% Wall Street analysts are growing increasingly optimistic about the drilling company and its earnings outlook. $120
Yield: 3.4%
FuelCell Energy FCEL Close:$3.93L0.40 or 11.3% Shares spiked ahead of the power company's earnings report after it got another fat contract extension from the U.S. $4
100
80 D
J
F
M
D
52-week range $55.78 Vol.:1.0m (O.sx avg.) Mkt. Cap:$10.79 b
ATHN Close:$183.04T-2.12 or -1.1% Oppenheimer downgraded the business services company, citing the stock's strong price growth over the past 52 weeks. $250
F
M
$4.23 PE: . . . Yield: ...
EBay EBAY Close:$58.22 V-0.84 or -1.4% The online retailer rejected the two board nominees from Carl Icahn, asking shareholders to approve four of its own instead. $60
200 150 00
J
52-week range
$D.84 ~ $101.02 PE:1 4 .9 Vol.:132.9m (9.6x avg.) Yie l d: 2.5% Mkt. Cap:$929.3 m
Athenahealth
55
D
J F M 52-week range $82.DI ~ $28 6.78 Vol.:552.5k (0.8x avg.) PE: 2614.9 Mkt. Cap: $6.84 b Yield: ...
D
J F M 52-week range $48.86~ $ 59.78 Vol.:9.8m (0.7x avg.) PE:2 6 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$75.37 b Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
HIS
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill
. 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 . 0 8 .08 ... L
V V
5 2-wk T-bill
.12
L
L
2 -year T-note
. 3 7 .37
... L -0.02 L -0.01 L
L L L
L .25 L .89 W 2.0 4
L
w 3. 2 5
.12
5-year T-note 1.62 1.64 10-year T-note 2.78 2.79 30-year T-bond 3.72 3.72
BONDS
...
Commodities The price of crude oil slumped to its lowest settlement price in three weeks following an unexpectedly weak report on China's exports. Gold rose for the third time in four days.
FUELS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
The dollar was little changed against the euro and Japanese yen. It rose against the British pound and at one point reached its highest level against the currency in
seven days.
55Q QD
.09 .11 .14
~
L W L W W L L
W W W W W L W
2.97 4 .12 1.9 3 5. 6 2 3. 9 6 1.16 2.8 1
%CH. %YTD - 1.42
+ 2.7
-0.30 +1 8.3 -1.48 -3.6 +0.71 +1 0.0 - 0.82 + 5.9
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1341.40 1338.10 +0.25 +11.6 20.88 20.90 - 0.09 + 8 . 0 1477.20 1483.60 - 0.43 + 7 . 7 3.11 3.16 -1.46 -9.6 776.65 781.60 - 0.63 + 8 . 3
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.43 1.43 - 0.07 + 6 . 4 Coffee (Ib) 2.03 1.96 +3.29 +82.9 Corn (hu) 4.72 4.81 -1.87 +11.9 Cotton (Ih) 0.92 0.91 + 0.32 + 8 . 2 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 363.80 361.60 + 0.61 + 1 . 0
Orange Juice (Ih) Soybeans (hu) Wheat(hu)
Foreign Exchange
L L L L L L L
CLOSE PVS. 101.12 102.58 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.26 2.31 Heating Oil (gal) 2.97 3.01 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.65 4.62 UnleadedGas(gal) 2.95 2.97 METALS
w W
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.52 3.52 . . . BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.85 4.85 ... Barclays USAggregate 2.40 2.36 +0.04 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.26 5.18 +0.08 Total return YTD: 25% 1-YR: 94% 5-YR *: 35% Ann. d ividend: $0.16 D i v. yield: 0.7% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.46 4.42 +0.04 *Annualized AP Total returns through March 10 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.86 1.86 ... 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.15 3.09 +0.06 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.7 6 - . 8 2 +1.4 +16.3 +12.6+18.3 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.93 -.17 +0.6 +11.5 +9.5+15.1 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 45.98 -.17 +1.5 +19.7 +11.3+19.5 C C C EurPacGrA m 49.24 -.42 +0.3 +15.9 +7.2+17.5 8 8 C FnlnvA m 52. 6 2 - .11 +1.3 +23.0 +14.0+22.3 C C C FuelCellE 1286229 3.93 + .40 GrthAmA m 44.49 -.87 +3.5 +28.4 +15.8+22.4 C 8 D BkofAm 806839 17.47 +.14 Diamond Hill SmcapA m D H SCX IncAmerA m 21.85 -.85 +1.9 +14.7 +11.4+18.6 8 A A S&P500ETF 692537 188.16 -.10 InvCoAmA m 37.44 -.82 +2.0 +25.8 +14.5+20.9 A C D SiriusXM 607367 3.47 -.04 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.13 -.22 +1.5 +20.6 +12.3+21.5 8 8 C Facebook 583450 72.03 +2.23 WAMutlnvA m40.87 -.87 +1.6 +23.8 +16.0+22.7 8 A 8 iShEMkts 529178 39.25 -.27 BallardPw 472262 6.88 +1.60 Dodge &Cox Income 13.78 +.81 +1.8 +2 .5 +4.6+8.0 A 8 8 AMD 406189 3.81 -.14 IntlStk 43.72 -.22 +1.6 +21.4 +8.9+23.2 A A A VerizoriCm 305515 47.03 -.12 Stock 172.38 -.23 +2.1 +29.9+17.4 +26.7 A A A Fidelity Contra 98.82 - . 8 5 +3.8 +29.1 +16.6+23.2 8 8 C Gainers GrowCo 126 . 84 -.17+6.4 +35.6 +19.1+27.5 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.87 +.84 + 1.2 +26.6 +15.9+27.2 8 8 8 Fideli S artao 500l d xAdvtg 66.78 -.82 +2.0 +23.5 +15.6+23.7 C 8 8 UBIC n 10.00 +4.18 + 7 1.8 UQM Tech 2.99 +.87 + 4 1.0 «C FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.49 ... +2.8 +12.6+9.3+18.8 A A A RegadoB n 11.30 +3.12 + 3 8.1 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 6 -. 81 +2.9 +12.9 +9.8+19.4 A A A THT HeatT 2.09 +.54 + 3 4.8 Oakmark Intl I 26.50 -.17 +0.7 +21.2 +11.9+26.7 A A A DBCmdyS 31.47 +7.97 + 33.9 673 Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 88 . . . +1 .8 + 19.1 +13.2+19.3 E D E BallardPw 6.88 +1.60 + 30.3 RisDivB m 17 . 94 . . . +1 .6 + 18.1 +12.1+18.2 E E E Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ NwstBioth 7.85 +1.79 + 2 9.6 RisDivC m 17 . 83 -.81+1.7 +18.2 +12.3+18.4 E D E DB AgriLg 16.79 +3.75 + 2 8.8 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m45.61 ... +2 .8 +26.7 +11.5+25.1 EgaletCp n 18.83 +3.84 + 25.6 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 38.39 ... +2.7 +25.6+10.6+24.1 PlugPowr h 10.31 +2.04 + 24.7 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.9 8 - . 86 +0.4 +18.7 +13.6+23.9 D C A Losers CATEGORY Small Value GrowStk 54.6 4 - . 14 +3.9 +34.6 +18.6+25.4 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 64.7 3 +.19+12.0 +49.0 +32.4+33.8 8 A A RATING™ ** * V rVr Newlncome 9. 4 0 .. . + 1 . 6 -0.2 +3.5 +6.3 D C D -.57 -19.2 BiostarPh 2.40 Chanticleer 3.98 -.90 -18.4 ASSETS $577 million Vanguard 500Adml 173.72 -.87 +2.0 +23.5 +15.6+23.7 C 8 8 -.50 -17.3 CombiM wt 2.39 500lnv 173.68 -.87 +1.9 +23.4 +15.5+23.6 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.33% Cimatron 8.01 -1.50 -15.8 CapOp 49.72 +.88 +7.7 +35.6 +18.8+25.8 A A A MANAGER Jason Downey -.61 -14.7 FFinSvc 3.54 Eqlnc 29.92 -.82 +0.5 +19.2 +16.5+24.1 D A A SINCE 201 3-02-28 IntlStkldxAdm 27.97 -.16 -0.1 +10.8 +4.9 NA D E RETURNS 3-MO +4.3 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31.45 -.11 +4.8 +32.3 +19.6+29.9 A A A YTD +2.2 TgtRe2020 27.56 -.84 +1.7 +12.6 +9.3+16.8 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +25.3 Tgtet2025 16.81 -.83 +1.7 +14.0 +9.9+18.0 8 A C Paris 4,370.84 +4.42 + . 10 3-YR ANNL +14.5 TotBdAdml 10.67 +1.5 +0.2 +3.5 +5.0 C D E London 6,689.45 -23.22 -.35 5-YR-ANNL +25.5 Totlntl 16.72 -.10 -0.2 +10.8 +4.8+17.6 D E C -85.25 -.91 Frankfurt 9,265.50 TotStlAdm 47.84 -.85 +2.5 +24.8 +15.9+24.8 8 A A Hong Kong22,264.93 -395.56 -1.75 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.62 Avis Budget Group Inc TotStldx 47.82 -.85 +2.5 +24.7 +15.8+24.7 8 8 A Mexico 38,671.01 -242.03 3.5 Milan 20,753.36 +119.15 + . 58 USGro 29.85 -.89 +4.0 +29.3 +17.1+23.3 8 8 C 3.18 Tokyo 15,120.14 -153.93 -1.01 iStar Financial, Inc. Welltn 38.58 -.82 +1.7 +14.8 +11.4+17.3 8 A 8 2.67 Stockholm 1,359.93 + 1.57 + . 1 2 Rosetta Resources, Inc. Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -46.20 -.84 HCC InsuranceHoldings Inc. 2.51 fee. 1 - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,430.80 Zurich 8,367.55 -11.03 -.13 DST Systems, Inc. 2.49 redemption fee.Source: Morningstac
M
52-week range $25 .14
Vol.:7.2m(1.8x avg.)
SU
FAMILY
P E: .. . Yield: ...
KBH McDonald's MCD Close: $17.65%-0.77 or -4.1% Close:$95.20 V-0.30 or -0.3% The entire sector is under pressure Sales fell 1.4 percent at established as Bank of America and Citigroup U.S. locations in February. The burgdowngradednumerous homebuilder chain blamed harsh winter weathers, seeing a short-term slowdown. er. $22 $98
The stock price of Southwest crowding on flights following InterestRates PnnY cancellations, the carrier said. Airlines hit an all-time high Monday as it reported that SPOtlight Pas s engers flew 7.15 billion passengers are flying more miles on Southwest and miles, boosting a key revenue subsidiary AirTran Airways, up 1.2 figure. percent over February 2013. Revenue for every seat flown one The average flight was 78.1 mile grew 5 percent last month from percent full, up from 75.8 percent a The yield on the a year earlier. It is a closely watched year earlier. Southwest continued to 10-year Treasury fell to figure in the airline business, and stretch the average trip; up 2.4 2.78 percent rises when more seats are filled percent to 948 miles. Monday. Yields or average fares increase. Southwest's stock price rose as Revenue rose last month much as$23.67 Monday, its highest affect rates on mortgages and as bad winter weather led to more level ever. other consumer loans. 52-WEEK RANGE Southwest Airlines (LUV) M onday's close:$23.60 $12 24 Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):22
Diamond Hill Small Cap carries Morningstar's gold-medal MarhetSummary analyst rating for expected Most Active performance; its 10-year record NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG is in the top 25 percent of PlugPowrh 2042633 10.31 +2.04 small-cap value funds. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP
BA
Close:$1 26.89 V-1.65 or -1.3% The manufacturer is inspecting 42 aircraft for possible hairline cracks, and aJapan Airlines 787 made an emergency landing. $150
KB Home
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV A LK 50.31 ~ 91.73 8 8. 9 2 -.48 -0.5 V L L + 21. 2 +6 0 .7 4 1 2 1 2 1 . 00f A VA 25.55 ~
-.0004
Worries about a slowing global economy hurt stocks Monday. The Standard & Poor's 500 index ticked lower from the record high it set last week. Disappointing data from Asia caused the concerns: China's exports fell 18 percent last month from a year earlier, causing losses in Asian stock markets that spread to Europe later in the day. The S&P 500 index fell as much as 0.6 percent in morning trading, but it recovered most of its loss as the day progressed. Of the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500, six fell. The sharpest losses came from industrial stocks. It was the first loss for the S&P 500 in the last three days.
.
DOW
1.3870+
Dow Jones industrials
15,500
.
-1.46 '
$1 01.12
Close: 16,418.68 Change: -34.04 (-0 2%) "
16,500"
.
NYSE NASD
• II • I
"
1,900
Vol. (in mil.) 2,966 2,070 Pvs. Volume 3,496 2,107 Advanced 1355 1168 Declined 1728 1384 New Highs 1 02 1 1 7 New Lows 24 8
Iili iiii
16,040" ""' 10 DAYS "
-.02
$20.88
+ 3 30
1.57 14.19 6.45
1.55 14.58 6.46
+0.97 +1 4.7 - 2.62 + 8 . 1 - 0.19 + 6 . 6 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6638 -.0088 -.53% 1.4936 Canadian Dollar 1.1 104 +.0007 +.06% 1.0287 USD per Euro 1.3870 -.0004 -.03% 1.3005 -.11 -.11% 9 5.82 JapaneseYen 103.19 Mexican Peso 13. 2 255 +.0175 +.13% 12.6246 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4731 +.0091 +.26% 3.6857 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9594 -.0196 -.33% 5.7232 SouthAfrican Rand 10.7674 +.0295 +.27% 9.0800 Swedish Krona 6.3 7 69 -.0039 -.06% 6.3995 Swiss Franc .8781 +.0008 +.09% . 9 511 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1091 +.0063 +.57% .9767 Chinese Yuan 6.1388 +.0109 +.18% 6.2195 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7615 +.0008 +.01% 7.7566 Indian Rupee 60.830 -.260 -.43% 54.355 Singapore Dollar 1.2684 -.0002 -.02% 1.2474 South KoreanWon 1067.05 +1.40 +.13% 1093.66 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.31 + . 0 5 +.16% 29.74
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
BRIEFING Home prices on the rise The median price of a single-family home rose last month in Bendand Redmond, according to figures released Monday by the Bratton Appraisal Group. Bend's median price increased to $271,000 in February, up $5,000 from January, according to the Bratton Report. In February 2013, the median price was $235,000.
CROOK COUNTY
EXECUTIVE FILE
ec aration o FOLl ta ea?
What:Justy's Jelly What it does:Maker of smallbatch jarred jellies Pictnred:Justine "Justy" Haney Where:623 N.W.CedarAve., Redmond Employees:Three Phone:541-408-3859 Weh:www.justysjelly.com
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
The Oregon Drought Council on Monday recommended the governor'sofficedeclarea drought emergency in Crook County, the fifth county in the state to seek that designation. Snowpack in the Ochoco Mountains, which feeds the
Last month, 132 sin-
gle-family homes sold in Bend, an increase of 31 sales over January. Redmond's median home price jumpedto $187,000 inFebruary,an increase of$29,000 from January's medianprice, according to thereport. Sales of single-family homes last month in Redmond reached50, an increase of15 sales overJanuary.
LaughingPlanet coming toBend Portland-based Laughing Planet Cafe plans to open arestaurant in Bend byearly June, CEO Franz Spielvogel said Monday. The restaurant will be located in the former home of Taylor's Sausage Deli & Pub,913 N.E. Third St.
"We are doing a total renovation of the space," Spielvogel wrote in an email. "The space will be very different, featuring living walls, (which are walls filled with plants), gamearea and yes — lots of our collectible toys." He said the menuwill be the same asthe Portland locations, featuring locally sourced bowls, salads, burritos, all-fruit smoothies, along with a juice bar andmicrobrews on tap. The company is also building restaurants in Reno, Nev.,and Lake Oswego, which will bring the total number of locations, including Bend, to 14. "Bend is the next logical step for our company since there is little available in our category and the demographic of active/outdoor enthusiasts are our core customers," he wrote. — Bulletin staff reports
headwaters of the Crooked River and fills the Ochoco Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
US
do you Q •• Where see the busi-
S
ness in five years? • My hope is to • be in more retail locations across the Northwest, and my main focus is to getinto more restaurants,food shacks, to have more ofthe culinary part of the business.
en er rise
Do you plan Q •• on any further
By Joseph Ditzler• The Bulletin
REDMONDelly is more than something you spread on toast to
J Justine "Justy" Haney. It's the culinary wave of the future.
Haney looks forward to a day when foodies ask for Justy's Jelly by name, and not just as a morn-
ing condiment. It's a fine complement to wild-game dishes, for example, and already served in eateries around Central Oregon. Sykes Mitchell of Duck Creek Outfitters uses Justy's Jelly in
recipes served regularly at the hunting lodge in Sisters.
business, and support my family and me," she said. By 1998, however, she had
hiring? • We are hope• fully growing out of this building in the nextyear, and hiring a full-time cookand someone labeling in a different room.
A
breast with jelly applied inside and out and grilled to a crispy finish. Justy's Jelly deserves better
than a cracker, he said. Haney in 1996 paid the owner of the since-closed Paradise Grill,
where Haney worked as a server, $3,000 for some pots, pans, ladles, spoons and two recipes. Those original two — pineapple jalapeno and pineapple roasted garlic — have since grown to 10. Haney set out to make jelly a thriving
TODAY • Real Estate Forecast Breakfast: Learnwhat's in store for Deschutes County in 2014;registration required; 7:30a.m.The RiverhouseConvention Center, 2850N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382-3221 orwww. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • Central Oregon Business Education Network Marchmeeting: Getto know COBEN'smembers; registration requested;5:307p.m.; BrokenTopBottle Shop 8 AleCafe,1740N.W. Pence Lane,Suite1, Bend; 503-805-6524, lynn©ithrive-now.com orwww. meetup.com/COBEN12. • Launch YourBusiness: Find help developing a working plan; coaching sessionswill take place the weekbefore the course starts; course runsthrough April 9; preregistration required; $119includes workbook; 6-9 p.m.;COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Website Traffic Course: Learn to generatetraffic to your website usingGoogle AdWords; registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
sign off within a week, said Chuck Perino, emergency management planner with the
Oregon Office of Emergency Management. If Kitzhaber approves, Crook County would join Klamath, Lake, Harney and Malheur counties in a
Department's acting state en-
drought emergency. "We were dry going into
gineer, told the council.
February, as far as snow-
That means farmers and ranchersupstream of the res-
pack," said hydrologist Melissa Webb of the National
ervoirs will see stream flows dropping earlier than usual, probably in late April or early May, according to presenta-
Resource Conservation Ser-
tions to the council Tuesday.
mental coordinator for the
mittee, a part of the Drought Council. "Then February was a game changer for a lot of the state," she said. Between 20 percent and 30
federal Farm ServiceAgency.
percent of the annual snow-
"The Crooked River tends
fall dropped in February in Oregon, she said.
"The snowpack is almost gone right now," said Peter Halvorson, Oregon environ-
to have almost no flow by mid-July, August. It's a little early to predict for sure, but that's likely to occur a little bit
vice, speaking of conditions statewide. She briefed the state Water Availability Com-
"Unfortunately, there were
four dry months leading up to March I," she added. "One
to farmers and ranchers a
from her job as receptionist for a local building contractor, she fired up her stove once again. Today, she employs three people, all part-timers, to cook
making 12 cases a week and now produces as many as 40. Her
jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Safeway'snewowner not
afraid tomakechanges
clients range from Whole Foods
By Heather Somerville
it for profits," said Mike Hen-
Markets in Oregon and Washington and Ray's Food Place stores in Oregon, to a gourmet food club in Texas and Internet customers on
San Jose Mercury News
neberry,spokesmanforthe United Food and Commercial
the East Coast. She plows profits back into the
business but remains optimistic. The business is free of debt and
expanding. "We're growing 25 to 50 percent per year," she said.
The private equity firm that
struck a $9.4billion deal to buy Safeway has proved it's not afraid to makebig supermarketpurchases — and turn around and make big changes. In2006, Cerberus Capital Managementboughtmore
Workers union Local 5, which
represents Bay Area Safeway employees. "I'm hoping (the latter is) not the case, but that
has notbeen Cerberus'track record in Northern California." Cerberus' deal, announced
Chiquita to purchase rival Fyffes
last week, will merge Safeway stores, indudingmore than 170 with Albertsons, which still in Northern California. Today, has stores in Southern Califorfollowing dozens of store clonia and other states, to create a sures andthe sale of dozens groceryconglomerate of2,400 more, not a single Albertsons is stores and 27 distribution facilleft in Northern California. ities. The deal is expected tobe Thatbloodbath is the first finalized in the fourth quarter thing that comes to mind for of this year, although other many grocery store labor buyers could still make abid leadersand industryveterans for the company.
By Dnnielle Douglas
when they think of Cerberus and what the buyout might
enterprise. "I wanted it to be my full-time
— Reporter: 541-617-7815 jditzlerlbendbulletin.com
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR
drought declaration on Feb. 20. Gov. JohnKitzhaber may
opportunities. But in 2010, laid off
west Cedar Avenue with two ordinary stoves. She started out
stuff." A favorite recipe is a duck
the Oregon Water Resources
The Crook County Court officially asked for a governor's
by the responsibilities of motherhood and the lack of marketing
350-square-foot space on North-
"We go through cases of the
according to recent measurements. Most of that snow lies above 6,000 feet; below that elevation the snowpack is almost nonexistent, Keith Mills,
ter source rights, for example.
earlier this year with no snow- month of wet weather is not pack recharging the basin." making up for four months of A state-level drought decdry weather." laration makes available — Reporter: 541-617-7815,
curtailed the operation, prompted
and label, and rents a one-room,
"It's fantastic," Mitchell said.
and Prineville reservoirs, is only half its normal depth,
number of relief measures, including temporary, expedited well permits, water right transfers and changes in wa-
The Washington Post
Produce giant Chiquita Brands International said Monday that it will buy Irish
rival Fyffes in an all-stock deal valued at $526 million, makingthe Charlotte, N.C.based company the world's largest banana supplier. The merger is sure to raise a stink in an industry dom-
inated by a small bunch of suppliers. Chiquita, Fyffes, Dole Food and Fresh Del Monte control more than 80
percentoftheworld'sbanana trade, according to the United Nations.
Chiquita estimates that the acquisition will result in annual revenue of $4.6billion and operational savings of about $40 million by the end
of 2016. The deal, which is
expected to close by the end of 2014, has been approved by both boards. It is subject to shareholder and regulatory approval. Thecombined companywillbe known as ChiquitaFyffes, with 50.7percent of the firm owned by Chiquita shareholders andthe remaining49.3percentheld by Fyffes shareholders.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Daniel D. and Sindy A. Smith to Robert I. Stone, Lazy River South, First Addition, Lot12, Block17, $170,800 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Mark E Smith and Shawn E.Cannon, Stonegate PU.D., Phase1, Lot19, $355,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto James L. and Katherine G.Mecham,Aspen Rim, Lot 108, $263,357 • Sean T. andBritt F. Dimmickto Richard C. Hunt, North Rim onAwbrey Butte, Phase1, Lot6, $202,000 • Floyd C.Antonsenand Elizabeth Aguilar-Antonsen to Gregory and Pennie P.Lancaster, 27th Street Crossing, Lot 9, $252,000 • Edward S. andConnie L. Harman to Tracy J. England andNancy A. Oster, The Winchester, Lot 25, Block 2, $249,000 • Elizabeth E. Lancaster,trusteeforthe Elizabeth E Lancaster Living Trust, to Jennifer K. Taylor andChristine D. Pollard, Partition Plat 2001-52, Parcel 2, $375,000
• Charles Drake to Andrew C.and Denise D.Balyeat,SunMeadow No.3, Lot 101, $320,000 • Pacwest II LLC to GinaSmith, Southcrest Subdivision, Lot12, $246,822 • DennisA. Rempeios and Angela L. Tallent-Rempelos, formerly known asAngela L. Rempelos, to Pamela R. Tait, Aspen Rim ,Lot72,$220,000 • Belinda A. Ashenfelter, the Estate of Marilyn E. Urbanek, John Houston, Scot and Bonnie A. McElrath, to Dora Latkoczy, Pheasant Hill, Lot 7, Block 2, $173,000 • Leader Builders LLC to John H. Burton Jr. andCaren L. Burton, Renaissance at Shevlin Park, Lot 58, $576,915 • Ron C. andDonita F.Rice to Charles S. Thomas andElizabeth M. Trader, Partition Plat 2013-16, Parcel1, $179,900 • Joann and David Jeffers to Todd and Shimiko Montgomery, Woodriver Village, Lot6, Block18, $170,000 • Molly Wells to Kelli Sloper, Sunpointe, Phase 2, Lot 21, $225,000
•JaniceL.Hammondand RobertJ. Krohn, personal representative for the Estate of Marilyn R. Krohn, to Bruce E. and Kathleen J. Fogerty, Quail Pine Estates, Phase12, Lot 2, $292,000 • Jessie L. and Jacob T.Singleton to Deborah D.and Richard C. Hibbard, Meerkat Meadows,Lot6,Block3, $255,000 • Patrick F. andJennifer D. MacCrone to Todd B. andBecky L. Haley,Second Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot 9, Block 21, $257,500 • Susan J. Chaney,who acquired title as Susan JoSapp, to Frederick J. Manniia, NorthWestCrossing, Phase 8, Lot 388, $446,000 • Donald W. andJudith J. Moilanen, trusteesfor the Moilanen Family Trust, to Benjamin L. andNicole R. Hough, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase2, Lots11 and12, Block5, $960,000 • Bruce D. andRachael L. Aschim, trustees for the Rachael Lucille Aschim Trustand the BruceDouglas Aschim Trust, to Brent N. andDebra A. Johnson, Fairway Vista Estates, Lot 7, $175,000
than 600 Albertsons grocery
After about two decades as
an independently run, public mean for theSan Francisco grocery company, under the Bay Area. Safeway for decades direction of a single chief exhas been the region's dominant ecutive for most of that stretch, supermarket, andthePleasan- Safeway now finds itself under ton, Calif.-based chain is also the control of a $25 billion one of the largest employers in private equity firm from New the East Bay. "They can do one of two
things with Safeway: They can run it like a grocery chain, or they could dismantle it and sell
York Albertsons executives
have said emphaticallythere are no plans to close Safeway stores and business will pro-
ceed as usual.
House to investigate slow
response to GMignition flaw and Bill Vlasic
said it would recall more than 1.6 million cars because of a
New Yorh Times News Service
defective ignition switch that,
WASHINGTON — A House committee has started an investigation into the response
if jostled or weighed downby a heavykey ring,couldturn off
by General Motors and federal safety regulators to complaints
system, disabling the air bags. Also Monday, General Mo-
about faulty ignition switches that have been linked to 13
tors said its internal investiga-
deaths, officials said Monday. An Energy and Commerce
federal prosecutor, Anton Va-
By Matthew L. Wald
the car's engine and electrical
tion wouldbe led by a former
Committee subcommittee will
lukas, who was the court-appointed examiner of the Leh-
hold hearings that will include
man Brothers bankruptcy.
the automakerand the ¹
The congressional investigation is not the first time the
tional Highway Traffic Safety Administration, although the date has not been set, said
Charlotte Baker, a committee spokeswoman. Last month, General Motors
committee's chairman, Fred Upton, has looked into the
issue of consumer complaints going unheeded over defective cars.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/athome
GARDEN
What to
make of forgotten spaces By Michael Tortorello New York Times News Service
I recently asked a distinguished garden designer what I should plant in the
blank space next to my garage, and he said a wheat field. Interesting choice.
a
' •
•
•
•
But then I've read that
"heritage grains" are fashionable in that obsolete kind of way: like landlines and pencils and romantic
love. The distinguished gar-
ide dishes have been on the sidelines for too long.
• • I
Cookbook author Tara Mataraza
den designer went on to
Desmond noticed that while talking to
recommend parsley as a digestive and mint for
friends about Thanksgiving a few years back.
tea. And thistles, because
they repel evil wizards. If I knew any homeless birds, he added, I should probably grow a birdhouse gourd, right?
T%
Wait, did I say I consult-
ed a distinguished garden designer? I meant to say I
asked my 6-year-old son. That plant list also happens to be what we grew together last summer. After
failing to make a plan, we scattered a shoe box full of
orphaned seeds over the dirt. Instant garden.
Failing to make a plan: That was probably an oversight. So last week, I really did call three distinguished horticulturists and garden designers.
~C
And I asked what they
would make of a neglected 10-by-10-foot space close
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
to their homes: in subur-
Coconut RiceSalad with Cashews and Mango atDevore's Good Food Store. For this and other side dish recipes, see Pages D2-3.
ban New Jersey; Washington, D.C.; and Seattle. Almost every yard has one. A forgotten province on the far side of the drive-
"I was making a turnip and rutabaga gratin, right before Thanksgiving, emailing some friends
way. A patio to nowhere. A
limbo that could be heaven if you just knew what to grow there. The garden designers also named a few places
and asking what they were •
making, and no one was talking
e
•
about the turkey; it was all about
you can find some of their
pet plants. But first a note about shopping for plants
•o
•
are not Amazon, and they
on the fact that sides have a
are not headquartered in the Amazon,either.The
major part of the meal, but by
proprietors may hesitate to ship a half-living specimen
virtue of the name, 'sides,' seem
into an arctic dead zone.
e
•
•
«~
•
• e
o --' 0
•
-
secondary," said Desmond in a phone interview
A good local garden store will be able to order many plants, and they'll know
from her home in Philadelphia.
the best time to do it.
See Sides/D2
Susan Cohan Roots: Susan Cohan
Gardens is a boutique landscape-design firm in suburban New Jersey,
with a semiparadoxical aesthetic. The most successful projects match
the homeowner's style so naturally, she said, that "it doesn't really
look like I've been there." But Cohan, 60, is hardly invisible: She is the president of the Association of Professional Landscape Designers. See Spaces/D4
TODAY'S RECIPES
HOME
Do it: a new backsplash at a lower cost Editor's note: Check back every other week for do-it-
ment, adding a distinctive finishing touch to one of the most
yourself projects.
important rooms in the house.
GraphiC timesthatormore, a less expensive Dn p4
inchpanelsaremuch larger
make more sense. We found
By Alison Highborger
If your backsplash doesn't look so hot, the good news is
For The Bulletin
that installing a new one is a
The kitchen backsplash started as a functional ele-
This week we're featuring a relatively affordableback-
ter and food splashes that can cause damage. It has evolved
very doable DIYproject. When you consider that glazed ceramic or glass tile costs an average of $2 to $10 persquarefoot,w ith designer
ble-sidedtape or tube adhesive. The panels come in a wide variety of styles and finishes to fit any kind of decor. The kit comes with enough panels, trims, double-sided tape and outlet covers to complete an
into an important design ele-
tiles priced at two to three
ment to protect walls from wa-
alternative might
one. splash application that doesn't involve tile at all. It's the Fasade
backsplash kit (approximately $149) with decorative thermoplasticpanels. These 18-by-24
•
•
the sides. That threw a spotlight
online: These nurseries
•
e
than traditional backsplash tiles and are installed with dou-
18-square-foot installation.
See Backsplash /D4
Warm Grain Salad with Pakistani Curry Spices and Spinach Salad from Scanlon's Restaurant: A side dish with a healthy side, fitting for an athletic club restaurant,D2 Moreside dishes: Coconut RiceSalad with Cashews& Mango from Devore' sGood Food Store, RedPotatoes with Cider Mustard and Candied Bacon,BroccoliSesame Crunch, D2;Ginger HoneyCarrots, D3 Butternut Squash Polunta with Sausage and Onion: Simple yet tasty, D3 Recipe Finder: An almond cake fit for an Italian king, D3
•
•
D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
FOOD
Next week: A fresh approach to carrots
Warm Grain Salad with Pakistani Curry Spices and Spinach Salad from Scanlon's Restaurant
Red Potatoes with Cider Mustard and Candied Bacon
Makes 6 servings.
Makes 6 to 8servings. If you're looking for an alternative to creamy potato saladforachange of pace or to pacify mayo skeptics, look no further. This sweet and sour melange is crowned with shards of salty, sugary candied bacon and can be served hot, warm or at room temperature.
PAKISTANI CURRY PASTE:
3 roasted, peeled, seeded jalapeno peppers 1 yellow onion, chopped finely
2 TBS olive oil
1 tsp ground cumin ~/2 tsp ground coriander ~/2 tsp ground cinnamon ~/4 tsp ground turmeric ~/4 tsp ground cardamom ~/4 C dry white wine
1 TBS peeled, finely chopped
fresh ginger 1 TBS finelychopped ftesh garlic 2 TBS water
— Tara MatarazaDesmond
Add jalapenos, onion, ginger, garlic and water to a food processor and blend until smooth. Put the olive oil into a heavy bottom saucepan over high heat, and then add the paste and cook until soft, about 8 minutes, stirring constantly, and then lower the heat to medium. To the curry paste in the saucepan, add the cumin, coriander, cinnamon, turmeric and cardamom, and stir until the spices are toasted and mixed in well. Add '/4 cup white wine to deglaze the pan, loosening any "fond" or browned bits of food remaining in the pan. Remove the curry paste mixture from the heatandset aside.
2~/2 Ibs red potatoes (8 or 9
med), quartered and cut into 1-inch chunks 2 TBS extra virgin olive oil ~/2 tsp kosher salt ~/4 tsp freshly ground black
pepper (about 20 grinds) 6 slices thick-cut bacon
2 TBS dark brownsugar 1 sm yellow onion, thinly sliced
WHOLE GRAIN MIX: ~/2 C bulk kamut (high protein
(about 1 C) 2 cloves garlic, minced
~/2 C bulk farro (a grain in the
wheat kernels)
wheat family)
~/2 C bulk spelt (a grain with a
~/2 C apple cider vinegar 3 TBS water
nutty flavor)
1 TBS pure maple syrup Cook each grain separately in a pan, covering the grains with water. Boil until they are soft to the bite, approximately 25 minutes each. (Farro takes the longest of these three grains to cook.) Drain the grains in a colander and allow to cool, and then combine themall. Note:You can substitute other whole grains: quinoa, gluten-free amaranth, brown rice, for example. Youcanalso cook the grains a day ahead and store them in the refrigerator. COMPLETE THE WARM GRAIN SALAD: 1 TBS olive oil 2 TBS orange juice concentrate /2 of the curry paste mixture ~/2 C golden raisins you already made SaN
Warm olive oil in a large, heavy bottom pan, then addhalf of the curry paste and increase the heat to high. Whenthe curry paste is hot, add the mixed grains and stir. When the grains are hot andstarting to stick to the bottom of the pan, stir in the orangejuice concentrate and golden raisins. Cook until liquid is absorbed, and add more salt to taste. Serve as aside dish or on top of spinach salad (seerecipe).
Scanlon's Spinach Salad Makes 6 servings. 3-4 C fresh babyspinach Dressing ofyourchoice: (Scanlon's uses a vinaigrette made with toastedsesame oil)
Goat cheese (1 TBS, crumbled, per salad) Dry-roasted peanuts, rough chopped (1 TBSper salad)
TOPPINGS:
GARNISHES:
4 C sauteed mushrooms(sliced
Fresh cilantro, chopped
crimini and shiitake)
Shallots, fried(Slice shallots thinly, dust them in dce flour, fry inhot olive oil for 2 minutes until browned and crispy, then drain on paper towels)
Pumpkins seeds (1TBSper salad) Cherry tomatoes, halved (4-5
halves per salad)
Toss spinach with dressing, and top with any of the options that appeal to you: sauteed mushrooms, pumpkin seeds, cherry tomatoes, goat cheese andpeanuts. Add the warm curried grains on top of the spinach salad, andthen garnish with cilantro and fried shallots. — Scanlon's at theAthletic Club of Bend, 61615Athletlc Club Drive, Bend, 54t382-8769,wwwathleticclubofbend.com
Coconut Rice Salad with Cashews Sc Mango from Devore's Good Food Store Makes 4 side dish servings. 1 C basmati rice 2-3 stalks celery, chopped /3 C diced red onion (about '/4
DRESSING: 1 C coconut milk 2 TBS fresh lime juice 1 TBS Sambal Oelek (chili
onion)
sauce)
~/4 C cilantro, chopped
4 green onions, sliced
1~/2 TBS sugar
~/2 C roasted, salted cashews
1 TBS minced fresh ginger 1 tsp kosher salt (or to taste)
1 mango, peeled and diced
In a saucepan, cook the rice with 1~/~ cups of water on the stovetop for about 20 minutes, or cook it in a rice cooker. Chill the cooked rice. Wash andpreparethevegetables.Addtheveggies,cashews andmango tothe cooled rice. In a small bowl, whisk together all of the dressing ingredients. Pour the dressing over the rice, stir to combine, and thenseason with more salt or sugar to taste. It's best chilled, but is also a great side dish served warm (reheat it just before serving). — Devon."s Good Food Store, 1124N.Iilt Newport Ave., Bend,541-389-6588, www.devoresgoodtoodstore.com
1 tsp whole grain or stoneground Dijon mustard
Preheat the oven to400. In a large mixing bowl, toss the potatoes with the olive oil, half of the salt and half of the pepper. Spread them out on abaking sheet in a single layer. Reserve the bowl. Cover another baking sheet with a piece of parchment paper cut to fit it. Set the bacon strips on the sheet, evenly spaced. Distribute the brown sugar across the slices and rub the sugar into one side of each. Put the baking sheets in the oven on separate racks. Cook the bacon for 15 to 20 minutes, or until crisp. Take care to not overcook because the sugar will burn. Takethebaconoutoftheovenand move the strips to a paper towel-lined plate to cool completely. Carefully lift the parchment paper and pour the melted bacon grease that pools on it into a small bowl Andy Tullis/The Bulletin or empty jelly jar. Scoop out 2 taThe Warm Grains Salad with Pakistani Curry Spices is served on top of a baby spinach salad at Scanblespoons of the grease and add lon's Restaurant in the Athletic Club of Bend. it to a large saute pan. Store any remaining greasefor another use. Continue roasting the potatoes for 30 minutes longer, until tender Broccoli Sesame Crunch and just starting to brown a little. Continued from D1 Makes 6 to 8servings. Flip the potatoes over using aspatDesmond, who cooks for People grow up having broccoli boiled and steamedand boring. I wanted ula once or twice. her husband and three chil- to create something interesting, so people would say, "Wow, broccoli is While the potatoes cook, heat dren, started planning her more than meets theeye." Blanching and shocking the broccoli — boiling the bacon grease in the large home-cooked meals from the it briefly and then bathing it in cold water to halt the cooking — is the key sautepan overmedium heat.Add side, instead of from the main to making it bright green and crunchy with the slightest tenderness in its the onion and cook for 7 minutes, dish, and ended up writing bite. Alternatively, you cansteam it briefly until just barely fork-tender. until softened and starting to turn "Choosing Sides: From Hol— Tara MatarazaDesmond blond. Add the garlic and cook for idays to Every Day, 130 De2 minutes more. Pour in the vinelicious Recipes to Make the 2 Ibs broccoli crowns, stem 1 tsp sesame oil (light or dark) gar, water, maple syrup and musMeal" (Andrews McMeel Pubends trimmed 2 TBS rice vinegar tard and whisk to combine. Heat lishing LLC, 2013). Kosher salt ~/2 C thinly sliced scallions (2 or the mixture for 1 minute and then "I think it's an obvious but of- 2 TBS miso paste (mild white or 3 Ig scallions) turn off the heat, cover and set ten overlookedwayto approach other variety) 2 TBS toasted sesameseeds aside. a meaL Go at it sideways. Start 1 TBS low-sodium soy sauce 1 C roasted salted cashews When the potatoes are done, with a colorful, flavorful side dump them back into the large dish, and plan the meal from Cut the broccoli into bite-sized mixing bowl and pour the warm there. Itnotonly strikes inspira- florets and slice the stems into vinegar mixture over the top. Add tion in you as acook, it makes '/4-inch pieces. Fill a large saucethe remaining half of the salt and meal planning easier. pan with water, salt it generously, pepper and toss to combine. Let "It's so much simpler than and bring it to a boil over high heat. the warm potatoes soak up the starting with a chicken, and Add the broccoli and blanch it for 2 vinegar for about 30 minutes. trying to c onstruct a m e al minutes (it will be overly soft and Transfer the potatoes to a mefrom it. Think about summer's soggy in the salad if you blanch it dium platter. Crumble the bacon backyard grilling — it's all any longer). Drain and dunk it in a across the top andserve. about the sides, and then you large bowl of ice water or run very If you plan to make ahead, let throw something on the grill," cold water over it until it is comthe potatoes and vinegar cool and Desmond said. pletely cool. Shake the colander of then refrigerate in an airtight conShe's right. Summer meal any excesswater andthen leavethe tainer. Bring to room temperature planning may start with some- broccoli to drain for at least15 minor warm in the microwave and thing from the farmers mar- utes. (Skipping this stepguarantees sprinkle the bacon crumbles on ket or backyard garden that's a watery pool of vinaigrette at the top just before serving. The bacon fresh, or from an urge for po- bottom of the salad bowl whenyou courtesy Ben pieper/Andrews McMeel crumbles can be refrigerated in a Publishing, LLC tato salad. "Choosing Sides" in- serve it!) The blanching, cooling resealable plastic bag for up to 2 dudes a classic vintage potato anddrainingstepcanbedoneuptoadayahead. days. — "Choosing Sides:From Holidays salad with a mayonnaise dressWhisk together the miso, soy sauce, sesameoil and vinegar, breaking ing, plus a non-mayo Red Po- up any miso clumps. Oncethe broccoli is sufficiently drained, transfer it to Every Day,130Delicious Recipes tatoes with Cider Mustard and to a serving bowl, pour the miso mixture over it, and toss several times to Make theMeal,"by Tara Mataraza Candied Bacon (see recipe). to dress it with the liquid. Add the scallions, sesameseeds and cashews Desmond, AndrewsMcMeel "My husband is not a creamy and toss again to combine. Serve immediately or refrigerate for up to 2 Publishing, wwwandrewsmcmeet potato salad guy. He doesn't days.Ifyou makethesaladahead,add thesesame seedsand cashews com,2013 like mayo, and I love it, but a just before serving so they retain their crunch longer.
s<~4~~
Sides
/
— "Choosing Sides: FmmHolidays to Every Day, 130Delicious Recipes to Make the Meal," by TaraMataraza Desmond, AndrewsMcMeel Publishing, www. Side dishes can be simple andrewsmcmeel.com,2013 or complicated. "Choosing Sides" has a chapter devoted to weeknight dinners that are
potato salad is an American
classic, no matter what, andis a great side all year. I knew that sour, sweet, crunchy combo
in a vinegary red potato salad would be a favorite. I created it for my husband and anyone else who doesn't like mayo," Desmond said.
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culture (CSA) and get a farm easy and quick side dishes for share box full of vegetables busy evenings, plus chapters Press, 2009), cook some of each week in the summer and for holiday feasts and intimate the ancient grains that have fall. gatherings that require more "It's increasingly common effort. D esmond observed t h a t become popular (e.g., quinoa, making side dishes a priori- faro, bulgur), or subscribe to that people are getting big, Desmond includes charts ty makes sense if you eat less community-supported agri- bulk boxes of food, and if they with suggestions for mainapproach their meal from that coursepairings,w hich comes box, it's a lot easier to create a in handy if you often find Batteries • Crystal • Bands balanced plate. yourself wondering, "What "People are becoming more goes with that?" e nthused about f o od, a n d If you know you're serving don't just want a singular hot beef, for example, she lists and steamy ingredient sitting dozens ofside dish recipes beside a hunk of meat on the in the book that would work, plate. We want something from Chipotle Black Beans to exciting and delicious on a Broccoli Sesame Crunch (see Wednesday night," she said. recipe). "Choosing Sides" makes it If you find a side dish rec"Almost Meatless," Ten Speed
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easy to branch out into more interesting side dishes than
503-887-4241 61405 S. Hwy. 97, Bend OR 97702 Office: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell,Owner Stem & Crowns • Movements
ipe in the book that sounds
delicious, you'll be pleased to the usual salad, potatoes, see that each recipe has a list bread, buttered noodles and of "alongside" suggestions for steamed broccoli, carrots or the kinds of foods that would green beans that many of us complement it. return to, time and again. Continued next page
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F OO D
D3
oena's ourne: anc o amiiar Tort> «<
as roya roots
By Melissa Clark New York Times News Service
When polenta first hit the By Julie Rothman
food scene in the United States, it was the kind of delicacy that
RECIPE FINDE
The Baltimore Sun
graced the likes of only Italian specialty food shops and highend restaurants.
Sophie Filippetti f r om S anta Rosa, C a lif.,
Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman,Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,
was
searchingfor a recipe for Italian king's cake.
No matter that it came from peasant Italian stock, or that
She said her mother-in-
it bore an extremely close resemblance to its humble cousin, cornmeal mush (yes,
law used to make it often
501 N. Calvert St., Balti-
and even won first prize at their county fair some time
Mary and Laura Ingalls on
ago. She has lost the recipe and
their trip West). Polenta was
wanted to be able to make it
fancy, expensive and fussy to prepare, with most recipes calling for constant stirring for its 45-minute cooking time: dinner-party food at its so-
for her family again.
the same stuff that sustained
more, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipesfor them to bepublished.
Kathleen McMalin fr om Potter Valley, Calif., sent in
phisticated best.
ei
Flash-forward a couple of decades, and let's just say po-
Request
a recipe for Torta del Reking's cake in Italian. Not to Fred Heskett from Burbe confused with the king tonsville, Md., is looking for cake common duringMardi the recipe for the barbecue Gras in New Orleans, this sauce that was served on the
lenta has been around. You're
traditional, flour-less almond
likely to run into it every-
cake from the Piedmont re- old Ritchie farmers market gion of northern Italy is a on Ritchie Highway in Glen popular choice for Passover Burnie, Md., in the 1960s and '70s. dessert.
where, in m any m a nifestations, even hanging out in the
refrigeratedcases of your local supermarket, fully cooked and squeezed into a plastic tube.
Andrew Scrivani/New York Times News Service
Butternut squash lends polenta a refined air, and atopping of sausage andonions keeps it simple.
Torta del Re (Italian King's Cake)
And here's the thing: With the exception of the stuff in the
plastic tube (which is vile and should be avoided), all polenta is good polenta. Yes, the long-simmered, coarsely ground stuff is better, especially if yo u c an sourcefreshly milled, coarsely ground polenta from heirloom corn. But even the powdery instant variety is acceptable for a q uick after-work
meal when you're starving for
chicken at the diner in the
Makes12 servings.
Butternut Squash Polenta with Sausage and Onion
2 TBS butter or margarine for
Makes 4 servings.
1 tsp vanilla extract 1 tsp almond extract Grated zest of a lemon
greasing the pan 5 Ig eggs, separated
1~/ tsp kosher salt, more as
needed
3 TBS unsalted butter
Black pepper, as needed
1 bay leaf 1 C fine polenta (not quick-
cooking) 5 oz seeded and peeled butternut squash, coarsely
grated (1 C)
1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil,
more as needed 1i/ Ibs sweet or hot Italian pork sausage, sliced into /4-inch I'ounds
1 tsp fennel seeds (optional) 2sm onions,peeled,halved
Confectioner's sugar for garnish
Sm pinch of salt 1~/4 Csugar 2/s C blanched almonds, very
lengthwise and sliced into /4inch half moons
/4 C sliced almonds, toasted
finely chopped (if you usea blender or food processor, add a tablespoon of sugar
Rosemary sprigs, for garnish (optional)
from the 1/4 C so nuts don't
2 tsp minced rosemary
clump together)
a little comfort but don't have much time.
In a large pot over medium-high heat, combinei4/s cups water, the salt and thebay leaf. Bring to a boil. Slowly whisk in polenta. Stir in squash. Reduceheat to medium-low and simmer, stirring frequently, until polenta and squash are very tender, 20 to 30 minutes. If the mixture gets too thick while cooking, add a little more water to the pot. Stir in butter and black pepper.Tasteandadjust seasoning if needed. While polenta cooks, heat1 tablespoon oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add sausage, rosemary and fennel seeds if using. Cook, stirring occasionally, until meat is golden andcookedthrough, 7 to 10 minutes. nubby texture and fuller flavor (Do this in batches if necessary, adding oil if the pan looks dry.) Transfer to a paper-towel-lined plate. than the instant kind. It cooks Add more oil to the skillet if it looks dry, then addonions. Cook, stirring occasionally, until they are tender and in about 25 minutes, and you golden, 10 to 15minutes. Return sausage to panandstir to heat through. Spoon polenta into bowls and top with don't have to stir it very much. sausage andonion. Garnish with rosemary if you like. While it cooks, you'll have the Note:If you're using coarsely ground polenta, cook for 30 to 40 minutes, adding more water if it starts to dry chance to throw together some out. If you haveonly instant (or quick-cooking) polenta, add the squash, salt and bayleaf to the boiling water15 kind of topping. minutes before stirring in the polenta. Coarsely ground cornmeal can besubstituted for fine polenta. In this recipe, I keep the t opping fairly s i mple: a it's just a cozy weeknight meal s traightforward s aute o f addition to a bay leaf and a sweetness to the mix. browned onions and sausage good amount of butter, I stir The squash also lends the with a twist. You decide. The spiked with fennel seeds and in some grated raw butternut polenta a refined air, per- p olenta'sseenitall. rosemary. squash. The squash cooks in haps even elevating it back to But I do add something the same amount of time as its halcyon days on the dinspecial to the polenta pot. In the cornmeal, adding a mild ner-party circuit. Or maybe
Line bottom of a10-inch springform panwith parchment paper and grease the sides with butter or margarine. Preheat oven to 325degrees. Beat the eggwhites with salt until stiff and dry. In a separate bowl, beat the egg yolks until foamy, then gradually add the sugarand continue beating until the mixture is lemon-colored. Gradually add the chopped almonds, then the two extracts and the lemon zest. Youshould have avery hard paste. Mix athird of the beaten egg whites into the almondmixture to make it softer. Delicately fold in the remaining eggwhites and pour into the prepared pan. Place in the center of the middle rack in the preheated oven and bake for one hour. After the hour is over, leave the oven door ajar for 10 to 15 minutes, then remove the pan from the oven and place it upside down on a cooling rack. When the cake is cool, remove it from the pan and place it upside down over a cake dish. Top with confectioner's sugar using a sifter and sprinkle with the toasted sliced almonds.
Usually, though, I split the difference and opt for finely ground polenta that's quicker to cook than the coarse stuff, but has a more interesting,
Oll From previous page For Ginger Honey Carrots (see recipe), Desmond's "alongside" list recommends five-spice rubbed r oasted chicken, tofu-fried rice or lamb and chickpea curry to spark the cook's imagination. "My biggest thing in creating this cookbook was to help people achieve a balanced, delicious plate by coming up
Makes 4 to 6servings. Cooked carrots like so many other throwback side sides too often suffer cooking abuse, jostling around in bland, boiling water until mushy soft. Scraped out into a seeping watery pile next to wrinkled green peas, an orange mound of humongous carrot coins is a sad sight. But this preparation does right bythe sweet, earthy root, coaxing its sugars with a quick saute and then cloaking the cuts in a sweet and spicy simmer sauce. Fresh ginger packs apunch that heat seekers will love.
with beautiful side dishes that
1i/2 TBS honey
Ginger Honey Carrots •
cery take-out counters have caught on to the allure of great side dishes. Executive chef Chris Tate at Scanlon's Restaurant inside the Athletic Club of Bend
prides himself on side dishes that make meals memorable, like his Warm Grain Salad
with Pakistani Curry Spice (see recipe). It is also served over spinach salad as a more elaborate side dish. "A side dish should accent the flavor of the main protein
or food you're accompanying it with. It shouldn't just
be on the plate for looks. The side dish can help round out the flavor profile of the whole
meal. Like a piece of grilled chicken is a neutral flavor, so of, 'Wow, that's a great dish.' It should create a food memory,"
Tate said. When Tate started working
Range MER86808S
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$799
$799
~/2 tsp kosher salt, plus salt to taste 1 TBS unsalted butter 1i/2 Ibs carrots, sliced diagonally into1-inch chunks
1 clove garlic, thinly sliced
1 (2-inch) chunk fresh ginger, peeled and grated on a microplane or very finely minced
6.2 cu Ft oven
Freshly ground black pepper
Dishwasher ~
Whisk the honey, water, vinegar and salt together in a small mixing bowl and set aside. Heat the butter in a mediumdeep saute pan or medium saucepanover medium-high heat. Add the carrots and saute for 5 minutes, until they start to release somewater and the outsides becomejust slightly tender. Add the garlic and ginger andsaute for 30 seconds. Pour the liquid over the carrots and bring it to a boil. Cover the panand decrease the heat to medium-low to simmer for 5 minutes, until the carrots are mostly tender when pierced with a knife. Remove the lid, return the heat to medium-high, and boil the liquid and carrots10 to12 minutes, stirring once or twice, until the liquid is nearly gone. Season to taste with more salt and the pepper as needed. Served immediately.
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Front Load Laundry Pair
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— "Choosing Sides: FromHolidays to Every Day, 130Delicious Recipes to Make the Meal,"by Tara Matarea DeSmOnd, Andn. WSMCMeel PubliShing, Wilrnr. andrewsmcmeel.com, 2013
„Whirlp~ol Value
37 years in the same location and flavors. If you have somein May. thing that's rich or fried, you Devore's take-out deli is want to pair it with a side dish well known for its wide va-
-0eac iec
the side dish should balance
that and contribute to a feeling
•
— Tara MatarazaDesmond
also help improve nutrition," 1~/4 C water Desmond said. 2 tsp rice vinegar Local restaurants and gro-
•
R rigerator
that's bright or tangy to cut
riety of side dishes, includ- that richness. Same with texat Scanlon's about three years ing salads, soups, dips and ture: If you have a smoother ago, he said the food was rich- spreads and casseroles (the texture on your main, make er and heavier than it is now. key lime pie and other home- a nice, crunchy side. Our co"We're connected t o a m ade desserts are not to be conut rice is a bold-flavored health club, so I started from missed either). side, so it's best with a paired scratch and rebuilt the menu Katie Hahn Klaassen is De- down, or more basic main around a healthier food life- vore's production manager. dish. Olive oil and salt and style: more Mediterranean, She shared Devore's Coconut pepper ongrilled chicken or and more healthy alternatives. Rice Salad with Cashews and a pork chop would go really O ur Warm G r ain Salad i s Mangoes (see recipe), telling well with it, or a simple garlic, good with a hamburger or as a us it's a great side dish, cold or tamari, black pepper marinatside for a grilled piece of fish. warm. ed tofu — something simple. Side dishes, even when they're Klaassen is a food science You wouldn't want a bunch of healthy and low in fat, can major from Central Washing- flavors fighting with the rice be the star of the plate some- ton University who also atsalad," Klaassen said. times," Tate said. tended the Cambridge School So, let's give the sides a little Devore's Good Food Store of Culinary Arts in Cam- more love and attention. You'll on Bend's west side is Central bridge, Mass. She told us what boost the flavors, textures and Oregon's oldest natural foods she thinks makes a great side nutrition of your meals and store, featuring organic and dish. have morefun cooking,too. "The biggest thing is ballocally sourced items. Mary — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. and Bob Devore will celebrate ancing the plate with textures com
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014
HOME ck Backsplash Continued from D1 You'll have to prepare your walls, and then measure and cut the panels to fit, but we're told it's not hard to do.
"Just remember the old
adage, measure twice, cut
once. Our customers send us pictures and comments, and universally they say, 'I can't believe how easy this is. I can't believe I didn't do this years ago,'" said Jennifer Owen, spokeswoman for Acoustic Ceiling Products, the manufacturer of the Fasade back-
splash line, from her office in Neenah, Wis. Fasade is available at Home
Depot, Lowe's and Menards stores around t h e U n i t ed States, or it may be ordered
online (www.backsplashideas. com and w w w .fasadeideas. com. Not all of the styles are
available in the $149 kits). We also checked in w i th Tom Perri, owner o f G e nerations Tile Installation in
Bend (541-508-9386 and on Facebook) for some tiling tips and advice. Perri has 25 years of residential and commercial tile installation expe-
rience in Deschutes County. He told us the hardest part of
this kind of project is picking
AR D EN
Next week: Primroses 101
fasadei deas.com. Thesitehas details about how to layout panels that are centered behind asink or stove, for example.) Cutthe panels with a utility knife, using asteel straight edge as aguide, or use scissors or tin snips, if you prefer. Carefully measureand markthe placement of electrical outlets, and then score the panelandcut out the outlet hole.
Install a kitchen hacksplash With today's materials, a metallic-looking backsplash can be fitted in hours.
Lay out panels Measure andfit before cuttingcut all panelsandfit before gluing
Measure and cut Score face ofpanelseveral times and snap tocut edges.Scoreafter measuring carefully for outlets, cut from center to cornersandsnap. 18" x 24" thermoplnstic .,'s~t .«~ ,'etnd snapPS panel
•S •I
Step 3: Tapenndstick Apply tape to thetop, middle and bottom of the backside of the panGlue or use doubleel. Before taking thepaperoff the Submitted photo top of the double-sided tape,hold stick tape This shows the Fesade backsplash traditional silver design. the panel onthe wall, rechecking I I I p a nel Apply tube adhesive in a serpentine -- » I I ie,j I backsplashiI to see that it fits perfectly, andthen pattern with a caulking gun orthree strips of the recommendedtape. have the right number of panels. remove thepaper from the tapeand Cost:$149 to $250 Remove old tile or wallpaper from press the panelfirmly to the wall. Back of Supplies: walls. Repair holes ordefects, The kit also comeswith laminate panel • Fasade kit (www.fasadeideas. and lightly sandwalls to remove to cover outlet covers andmatch the backsplash (seeinstructional com): $149 (includes panels, trim, any shiny surfaces.Walls must be double-sided tape, outlet covers) clean, dry andsmooth. "If you have videoatwww.fasadeideas.com on • Measuring tape ($10) some fresh drywall, I suggestyou how to wrapeachoutlet cover like a • Steel straight edge ($12) to prime the wall before youinstall the package, andthen usea utility knife use with utility knife backsplash. It'll help theadhesive to cut out eachoutlet opening). • Pencil stick better," Perri said. If this DIY jobsoundstoo Greg Cross/The Bulletin • Scissors, utility knife or tin complicated, consider hiring a tile snips Step 2: Measure twice, cut contractor to install the backsplash kit for you. Perri told us that he'd once out a backsplash that looks last and go with everything," Step1: Plannnd prep Remeasure theareasthat will be charge about $6 to $9persquare timeless. "A lot of people have Perri said. Decide onyour backsplashpanel covered with backsplash panels. foot, and, depending onhowdetrouble picking out the right style and color. Measureyour back- Mark the panels with a pencil or tailed the kitchen cabinets are, his colors and style. The best Time: splash ar eas t o comput e how many other nonpermanent market. (View labor cost for installation would run thing is to call a design center One day, or aone-weekend square feet youhave(go towww. the instructional videos about how about$200. and ask them to help you pick project to install Fasadebacksplashes, backspl ashideas.com foracomout your tile. They'll help you — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. trim and outlet covers at www. puting tool), so youcan besure to decide on something that will Difficulty:Intermediate com Outlet
Spaces Continued from D1 And she blogs about gar-
i.
dens at Miss Rumphius' Rules, with the occasional burr included: e.g., "I'm tired of the
n
so-called 'new' perennial gardens with all of their blowsy grasses and prairie leanings." Home field: Cohan runs a
game preservein Chatham, N.J., 30 miles west of midtown Manhattan. That i s t o s a y,
herds of deer loot the garden and plantings outside her tiny 1920s home, which was originally a summer cottage. The plants she trials in the yard, then, should be as appetizing as asphalt. Ideally, a little greener. Leaf motif:The shady nook. Ground rules:Her 10-by-10www.plantdelights.com via New York Times News Service foot void is a shaded corner Susan Cohnn, who runs a game preserve in New Jersey and is president of the Association of Profeswith a stone wall. Her vision? A sional Landscape Designers, suggests Lamiummeculatum Purple Dragon es acontainer plant. gV
of coffee — and maybe watch the deer promenade. The dirt: Cohan started by "great little plant" called sweet box (Sarcofxtcca hookeriana
s
•
var. humilis Fragrant Valley). This tight, shiny evergreen is sort of the Shetland pony of shrubbery: It's adorable and it won't grow much bigger than 2 feet tall. Not only is sweet box fairly cold-hardy, she said, but:
::a. IIDIP
'This one blooms in March. And
it's incredibly fraymt." (Source: Rare Find Nursery, at 732-833-
0613 or rareflndnursery.com) Tall native grasses would overwhelm this hedge: You may as well serve a 72-ounce
porterhouse steak on a spoon as an amuse-bouche. For a
right-size ground cover, Cohan praised the pink pyramidal blooms (picture a Smurfs hat) of the native foam flower (Tiarella Pink Skyrocket). "I love this plant so much I would give up all my other ground covers," Cohan said. (Source: Digging
www.plantdelights.com via New York Times News Service
Hellebores are one of the recommendations by Rizanino Reyesof
Flower Farm, at 800-503-9624
or whiteflowerfarm.com.) Setting her sights yet highDog Nursery, at 707-937-1130 or er, Cohan said, "People don't diggingdog.com.) think about flowering vines for A 6-foot-tall perennial is a a vertical space in the shade." A big boy in a playpen. You can favorite is Clematis macropeput a smaller plant at eye level tala Bluebird. "It's got graceful, with a booster seat — that is, nodding blooms," she said, that a container. One of Cohan's
remind her of little ballerinas.
favorites is a Branch Tapered The vines of this tiny dancer Hudson Pot, made in Detroit from galvanized steel. It comes
won't reach much more than 8
feet high. "The best thing for a in various sizes, any of which small garden is it won't eat the will develop a lovely patina and house." (Source: Wayside Garlastpractically forever. Remem- dens, at 800-845-1124 or wayber, though, that your plant sidegardens.com.) is going to quintuple over the On the subject of munchies, growing season, and a small- "A question I get asked all the er pot will need to be watered time," Cohan said, is "what can three times a day in the swelter I grow instead of a hosta? Anyof August. Cohan's specifica- one who knows deer knows tions: "Always go bigger than you might as well put out a jar you think you need" — which of salad dressing!" An alternaactually sounds like a rule for tive to brighten a shade garden living. (Source: Detroit Garden is Siberian bugloss (Brunnera Works, at 248-335-8089 or de- macrophylla Silverheart). She troitgardenworks.com.) likes this cultivar for its heartIf you feel ambitious, you shaped foliage and blue flowcould fill your container with
ers. And "deer don't like them."
a new display every season. (Source: Klehm's Song SparOr you could go with Cohan's row Nursery, at 800-553-3715 "one-time deal": a Dixie wood or songsparrow.com.) fern (Dryopteris x. australis), Another thing no deer will which "makes a big statement nibble: a boulder. Cohan said in a pot", and Lamium macushe would surround her rock latum Purple Dragon, which with cushion moss (Leuco"kind of cascades over the bryum glaucum). You can side," she said. (Source: Plant find a home in the woods, she Delights, at 919-772-4794 or said, or you can bring a bit of
a few woody plants. For a start, Japanese snowbell (Styrax japonicus) will succeed the old weeping maple. It's a big shrub or a small tree, depending on how you look at it. She praises
the silver-gray bark and the elegant May blooms. You can buy pink, but Draper will be feet across. Put it near the front and drabs of color. He wants a "trying to keep it subtle" with of the bed to stare down the river. The right pairing for the classic white. (Source: Rare neighbors. They'll stare back: job is Narcissus Jack Snipe and Find Nursery, at 732-833-0613 "It's something you wouldn't grape hyacinth (Muscari latifo- or rarefindnursery.com.) normally see in the Pacific lium). In the Pacific Northwest Not e v er y ma t c hmaker Northwest, where we're known
and other temperate zones, would set up a snowbell with a
for the damp,"Reyes said. these bulbs will light up the (Source: Cistus Nursery, at 503- yard in spring and then linger 621-2233 or cistus.com.) as perennials. Twenty-five of For the agave's big brother, the daffodil Jack Snipe should Reyes likes an exhibitionist of put on "an instant show," he a shrub called Arctostaphylos said. The grape hyacinth runs densiflora Sentinel. The ever- small — and the price is small greencanopy ofthis m anzani- enough, too. "I would get a hunta will form a vase shape, about dred. Why not?" (Source for a 15 feet tall and 8 feet across. late summer/fall order: Brent And the whole thing will turn and Becky's Bulbs, at 804-693pale pink when it blooms. But 3966 or brentandbeckysbulbs. Reyes feels an attraction to the com.) muscularity of the limbs and their smooth, reddish bark.
"It's like running your hand down areally tanned,buffleg." (Source: Moosa Creek Nursery, the woodlands home. (Source: at 760-749-3216 or moosacreekMoss Acres, at 866-437-6677 or nursery.com.) mossacres.com.) Consider posting a caution signinstead of abotanicaltagfor Rizaniho(Riz)Reyes the winged thorn rose (Rosa serRoots: R eyes, 31, was a iceassp.omeiensis f.pteracanplantsman before he was a tha). "It's not your dassic hybrid grown-up man: He started tearose,"Reyes said.Itproduces propagating plants on a small small white flowers in season, apartment deck during grade sute, he said. "But it has long, school. Under the name RHR arching canes with really big Horticulture, Reyes now de- thorns that are deep blood red. signs residential gardens in When the sun hits it, they kind Seattle. "And I've been get- of glow. It's pretty stunnittg." ting back to doing some floral (Saum Far Reaches Farm for work," he said. He talks about pickup in Seattle, at 360-390his favorite plants (and people) 5114 or faneachesimm.com; or
Seattle for filling a small space with low-maintenance plants.
plantdelights.com, and White
bores are "so adaptable and
hardy," he said. The Winter Jewel series produce draping blooms in January, he added, and "will continue on looking good until the end of March." (Source: Plant Delights, at 919of spiny, grayish-blue leaves 772-4794 or plantdelights.com.) won't grow much bigger than 2 Reyes doesn't go in for drips
spot to read a book, drink a cup
setting some personal boundaries.Fora low hedge,shelikesa
Ron Rabideau / RareFind Nursery via New York Times News Service
Janet Draper, a horticulturist at the Smithsonian Institution, praises Japanese snowbell for its elegant blooms.
janet Draper
Tanyosho pine (Pinus densiflora Umbraculifera). Even with its reddish peelingbark, this evergreenlooks likerough trade. You'll often find the deep green needles of this dwarf cultivar sheared into a kind of yakuza flattop. Draper prefers a "nat-
ural-looking doud pruning." (Source: Forestfarm, at 541846-7269 or forestfarm.com.) With its thick and tight ev-
ergreen foliage, the Kingsville dwarf boxwood (Buxus microphylla) looks as if it just made a stop at the barbershop. But, in fact, you won't need to perform
Roots:For 15 years, Draper, 50, has been the lead horticulturist (and lone horticulturist) any tritnnung at all, unless at the Mary Livingston Ripley you're planning a bonsai garGarden, part of the Smithso- den. "It is so tiny," Draper said, nian Institution. Her little patch
"it will only get to be 1 foot tall
also happens to sit on the ¹ tional Mall, where it is open to the public 24 hours a day, every day of the year. This is the opposite ofasecretgarden. Home field:Draper's thirdof-an-acre garden is an exuberant encydopedia of plants,
in 50 years." A small shrub can equal a big price, especially if you're planting seven of them, as Draper is. You can find cheaper littleleaf boxwood, she said, but none cuter. (Source:
Avant Gardens, at 508-9988819 or avantgardensne.com.) with 800 taxa on display — and Gardening in a bed that's 3 individually labeled, too. "I feet above the path can feel like have a habit of overdoing col- performing on a dais. A casor," she said. A co-worker once cading plant like Cotoneaster daimed, "It looked like Walt dammeri Streib's Findling sits Disney threw up here," she at the edge and dangles its feet
on the Next Generation Gar-
Whitman Farms, at 503-585- said. "It's a statement that has
above theaudience.The white
dener blog. Leaf motif: Out-of-the-office space. Ground rules:Reyes' 10-by10-foot space is the unused
8728 or whitmanfarms.com.) stuck with me for a long time." Having cowed the neighbors, Leaf motif: Contemplation Reyes is ready to play nice. near the Capitol. Near the sidewalk, he likes to Ground rules: A weeping install "something that people (and sprawling) maple and will instantly recognize. And two decrepit evergreen shrubs I want to throw in an edible." used to occupy a kidney-beanHis pick: a compact blueberry shaped garden bed. Seeing bush called Top Hat. One or it newly empty, Draper said, two could fit in a container. For is like having your boyfriend his part, Reyes would go boun- shave his decades-old beard: tiful, planting five or six at least. disorienting. The 36-inch-high For passers-by, he said, "Give bed forms a placid backdrop the suggestion: Hey, there's to a fountain popular with govplenty here. Help yourself to a ernment workers on their lunch little snack." (Source: Raintree hour."So many visitors come to Nursery, at 800-391-8892 or escape these concrete bunkers raintreenursery.com.) all around," Draper said.
flowers are ahnost too small to
"urban postage stamp" front
yard of an off ice endurance champion. It's full sun to part shade: There's practically noth-
ing growing there but a plant or two for appearance' sake and a bag of red mulch. The dient's main question, Reyes said: "How can I make this look like an awesome jungle, but I don't really have to do anythingo" The dirt: This yard needs more than a makeover. It needs
a personality transplant. "Agave parryi is a spiky, big succulent," Reyes said. "It's bold, it's
dramatic and it's just very imposing." That said, the rosette
be noticed; the red berries that
follow are hard to miss. One or two plants will form a spider web of low, creeping branches. More than that, you have a
rat's nest. (Source: Forest Lakes Nursery, at 707-726-9371 or for-
estlakesnursery.com.) Moving still lower toward the ground, Draper will be planting "an extremely dwarf mondo grass" called Ophiopogon japonicus Nana. The name sounds like one of the lesser Transformers — much lesser. Clumping at just an inch or two high, the turf may be Now that the architecture is The dirt:Nature is not a minsmaller than the botanical label taken care of, it's time to cov- imalist and neither is Draper. Draper will dutifully place next er up that ghastly red mulch. She credits a colleague, Rick to it. (Source: Commonwealth Reyes favors drought-tolerant Shilling, with helping to pare Nurseries, at 508-755-1780 or perennials and bulbs. Helle- down her messthetic in favor of comnur.com.)
TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
LIVING SMART
e ore It- -
OLl
HICKS
Can I see your plan? A drawing is the best way to be sure ready to offer as much detail you can envision what a landabout your preferences as pos- scaper proposes. Ask each bidsible. For inspiration, print, der to provide a design sketch. copy or tear out images from They may charge a fee if you landscaping websites, maga- want to keep it, but they should zines and books. at least be able to let you see it. Now you are ready for ini- In addition, ask for photos of 2. Gather your ideas. Be
eady to hire help to spruce up your property this year? Before you dig too deeply tial conversations with sever- projects they've done that are into hiring a landscaping con- al companies that are, hope- similar to what you want. What's your process? Ask tractor, take time to do two fully, appropriately licensed, things: bonded and insured and have about basic work practicI. Be clear about what you earned re c ommendations es and what materials and want to achieve. If you only from friends or family or users equipment would be used. want yard work, check out of a trusted online review site. For example, would they dig companies that specialize in Keep in mind that while some your patio out by hand or use residential lawn services. If companiesoffer free consul- machinery? What's your experience? you want design or installa- tations, others charge but if tion services, you'll need a hired will deduct the fee from M ake sure the contractoryou fullservice landscaper.These the job price. hire has the experience, mancan plan and install patios Here are questions to ask power and skill to handle your and walkways, water features, prospective landscapers,com- project. How long has the comdrainageand erosion systems, piled by my Angie's List team pany beenin business? Does it retaining walls and other ser- and based on the experience have an office in addition to a vices. They can take a job from of consumers and highly rated website? design to completion, or pro- landscapers: Ask for references and con-
R
ASK MARTHA
lrea an Sea el imeto ecutter
vide a plan that you carry out.
ANGIE
tact several. Consider visiting completed work. Relying on website photos alone isn't a
our coat coset
good idea, since you can't be sure they weren't purchased. F ind out
/ iP; s l
- MARTHA
what k ind o f
training the contractor and his or her staff have undergone. Do they belong to local, state or national landscaping associations? What's y ou r
g u a r antee?
Reputable landscaping contractors should be willing to guarantee their work for at
least two years, preferably five. Ask about separate warranties for plants.
How well do you communicate? Ask each bidder for
the best way to communicate so you're likely to get a timely response. — AngieHicksisthefounder of Angie's List, which offers consumerreviews on everything from home repair to health care.
a a ei.nsares a in u
STEWART
A
t this time of year,
it's entirely possible the weather could require wearing a ski parka, a slicker, rain boots, sandals and sunscreen ... all on the same day. No
wonder your coat closet is so crammed and out of control.
"It's dangerously easy to get comfortable with the daily fight for your coats and boots," says New York City professional organizer Erica Ecker, founder of
the Spacialist (thespacialist.com). "But don't start thinking of your closet as a shove-all." Indeed, the first step in streamlining the space is going through it item by item and asking yourself if each thing really belongs there. "This is an active closet, not a storage closet,"
By Elizabeth Mayhew
itself is costly, as is the installa-
Special To The Washington Post
tion. But pre-pasted and pastefreedesigns havechanged that.
Traditionally I have not been
says Stacey Platt, author of "What's a Disorganized Person to Do?" "Aim to
the glue. (This is the company's first foray into wallpaper; more
only have things that pertain to coming and going." Considering that you're often rushing in and out the door, Ecker points out
patterns will be launched in the
that "the l aziest system
fall.) Easy-to-follow, step-bystep directions on howto install the paper are available on the company's website. Peter Fowler, West Elm's head merchant
makes the best system. If you know you'll never put your shoes in individual boxes, don't even try. Be realistic." This is true for
fordecorative accessories,says that putting it up "is definite-
yourself and the rest of
a fan of patterned wallpaper. I
Recently, West Elm launched
have always liked it in principle, and would happily use just about any design as wrapping paper, but when it comes to installing it in a room, I have rarely been able to do it. (I distinguish patterned paper from grasscloth and other solid textured coverings, which I use all the time, mostly because they, like paint, provide a neutral
several pre-pasted designs that require only water to activate
ly a DIY project," by which he
your family: If, for example, your husband has yet
means the process isn't hard,
to ever place his jacket on
my ability to use pattern else- Scribble wallpaper from West Elm, one of a variety of retailers now
it just takes some time, particularly when you have to match a
a hanger, it might be time to let it go ... and assign
where in the room but also lim-
pattern.
him a coat hook.
backdrop for almost all deco-
rating schemes.) I have found that committing my walls to one design not only restricts
West Elm via The Washington Post
selling wall coverings that range in design from the dynamic to the
its me from making changes demure. and updates to the room over
The company decided not to produce paste-free papers, which are essentially large wall decals, Fowler explains, because the peel-and-stick decals "can be quite challenging," particularly when you are dealing with big walls. The decals are
time. For those reasons, I have
installed patterned wallpaper only a few times in my decorating career, and every time I have used designs with a lot of white space, which has kept the room looking fresh and
super sticky, and it's hard to
avoid bubbling. Still, peel-andstick papers, which are removable, are a good option for renters who in the past had to live with ho-hum beige walls.
not too overdone. And when I have used it, it has always been
in small rooms, like powder rooms, closets and cozy nooks. Case in point: In my old house, I used Albert Hadley's Reddish Rose (available through designers at www.hinsonco.com) in my daughter's tiny, under-theeaves bedroom. The two-col-
Another reason wallpaper is
so appealing right now is that there are any number of talent-
or pattern is p redominantly
white, so the room remained West Elm via The Washington Post airy, but the wispy roses gave West Elm's Strata Marble wallpaper. Wallpaper is experiencing a the awkward wall spaces some renaissance partly due to technology. much-needed visual interest. But lately my ambivalence about wallpaper has been re- have made it possible to cre- topaz designs look like the real placed by a sudden willingness ate complicated designs that thing. Like Schumacher, Brett to cover every wall. Maybe it's were, until recently, impossible Design has capitalized on this because I am just seeing more to achieve.Jeanne McCom- technology to produce papers of it. These days wallpaperis on sey, design director of prints at that replicate malachite, snakea roll (pun intended). Retailers Schumacher, explains that with skin and even quilted fabric. such as CB2, West Elm, Ballard digital imaging, "you can print The same technology has Designs, and Anthropologie, hundredsofcolorsandtextures enabled designers to blow up as well as a myriad of online that you could not do with tra- photographs into giant wall apsources — not to mention the ditional screen or block print- plications. At Murals Your Way dassic trade-only sourcesing methods." Take, for exam- you can choose from hundreds sell wall coverings that range ple, Schumacher's new marble of images or upload your own in design from the dynamic to prints from Martyn Lawrence photo, and they will enlarge it the demure, from the natural Bullard, which were inspired to custom fit your wall. Such to the photo-realistic. In part, by trompe I'oeil techniques advances have made wall covthiscraze can be chalked up to from thelegendary decorator erings more appealing to peofashion; prints are hot. And as Renzo Mongiardino as wellas ple who, in the past, may have we so often see, runway trends from classic Venetian marbled rejected the trend because of its quicklymake their wayinto the paper. Such complex patterns granny, flowery stereotype. interior design world. But there that capture every vein and Other advances in applicais another reason wallpaper gradation of color could not lion have made the use of wallis experi encing a renaissance: have been achieved without paper more democratic. Tratechnology. digital processing; to the naked ditionally, wallpaper has been Advances in digital imaging eye, these lapis, Carrara and an expensive option: The paper
ed designers who are showing us how to hang it right. Tom Scheerer has singlehandedly popularized Quadrille's Lyford Trellis pattern. He has skillfully used the chinoiserie-style bamboo design in small and largerooms alike.The reason it works: The pattern gives the
rooms a graphic architectural element. And New York-based interi-
or decorator Connie Newberry points out that wallpaper can
No more wire hangers. Invest in sturdy ones. "Good, strong hangers are the most i m portant
element," says Elizabeth Botero, a professional orbies often lead to c oats
ly used items in baskets
architectural detail. She likes to use graphic papers in entryways to delineate the space and create visual interest. If clients
tents with stripes of craft
timid about using it in a big space, she recommends using it in a powder room or bath-
room. What Newberry warns against is papering only one wall, which, she says, "looks like your paperhanger walked out on the job." — ElizabethMayhew, a "Today" show style expert and former magazine editor, is the author of "Flip! for Decorating."
The Philadelphia rnquirer
Now that we're at least on
the same calendar page as spring, it's time to tackle a reader's question about r e-
moving pine sap from her car. Thanks to all for their suggestions. Trish Davidson says that she makes Christmas wreaths and rubs her hands with olive
oil to remove the sap. Lindsey Nair of Roanoke, Va., says any kind of vegetable oil, as well as peanut butter, would work. Let the oil soak into the sap spots overnight to
loosen them. S usan Grantham of
Tal-
Q•
save this sentimental chair or will it have to be disposed of?
You can never have too many umbrellas. "This is the rare case where more rs more. You should have three times
as many as you think you need," says Ecker, who recommends buying inexpensive umbrellas by the dozen so you can quickly grab one as you head out the door (and not waste time looking for y o ur "favorite"). Wait until things are dry to put them away. Let wet coats and shoes dry outside the closet-
otherwise, you risk dirtying or d ampening dry
for 20 years without any odor. • Everyone suggests bak• ing soda, so you might
ing up valuable space with boot shapers, Botero recommends a simple binder clip at the top of wellies to keep them standing upright. Consider keeping
want to try it. We would al-
towels or bath mats in the
ways useiton thecarpetwhen
closet, too: That way, when you or your kids come in wet or muddy, you can clean off.
We have had it in ourpossession
the dog had an accident, and it
worked to a point. Is the odor emanating from the wood or the upholstery?
The upholstery might have gotten damp, since putting it in the sunlight helped, and that musty smell might be mold or mildew. Perhaps a furniture expert
Protect offseason coats from moths. Pack away jackets in breathable cotton garment bags, Botero says. Hang a
is next.
cedar plank — a natural
— Contact the writer: aheavens@ phiilynews.com.
organizer.
Where toduy Modern WeaveHarvest baskets tontep shelf): from $39 each,westeim. com. Mercantile stacking bin (en floor), in Weathered White:$349, rhbabyandchild.com. Streamline hooks, in Brass:$16 each, anthropologie.com. Diamenti indeer/euttieer rug, in Platinum/White: $148, dashandalbert.com. White handtowels, by Martha Stewart Cellection: $14each,macys.com. Cap'nbasket, in White/ Red:$100, shop.dougjohnston.net. Organize It All vacuum-accessery caddy:$15, amazon.com. DC39 Multi-Floor vacuum: $450, dyson.com. losing its scent, rub the sur-
can be emailed to msiietters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
paint.
items. Rather than chew-
lahassee, Fla., uses rubbing would probably work. It is sold alcohol, putting some on a under thename Goo Gone. soft cloth and rubbing gently. If there's some haze, the sap A small Queen Anne is still there, she says, so you • chair began to put out might go over the area with an odor that is quite offensive a little car wax. It works on and brings to mind the smell windshields and glass, too. you notice when entering an Road tar? Try lighter fluid. antiques shop. Arline Ritz solved a simiAfter researching on the Inlar problem with Bluemagic ternet, we sealed the chair in Road Tar 8 Bug Gel ($5 at Pep a plastic bag with lava rocks Boys). The product claims to inside for two weeks. It did not safely remove road tar, tree help. Later, it was placed indisap, and bird droppings with- rectly in the sunlight for severout damage to car and truck al weeks, and it made a slight finishes, including clear coats, improvement. It has been replastic and fiberglass. upholstered over the original Dick Amrhine i n F reder- fabric and padding. icksburg, Va., says lemon oil Please let me know if I can
Even the vacuum cleaner can fit neatly into the coat closet with the help of a wall-mounted
on the floor.) Assign each face with coarse sandpaper family member a color for (outdoors or in a well-ventihis or her hangers, Ecker lated area). says. Try using ribbon or paint. Make peacewith the vacuum cleaner. Use a basket to stash Vacuum storage may not small seasonal items. pertain to coming and goGive each person a little ing, but in many homes the bin for such belongings as coat closet is the only place mittens, scarves and sun- to store one. A wall-mounted glasses. "In spring, store organizer for the hose and ataway all the winter acces- tachments can keep you from soriesand replace them feeling as if you're wrestling with warm-weather stuff an elephant whenever you like kids' caps, sidewalk open the door. chalk and sunblock," EckVisit m a r thastewart.com/ er says. (Hang the baskets o rganizing-tips fo r m ore low, so kids have access.) helpful organizing ideas. Store less f r equent- — Questions of general interest on high shelves; you can even color-code by con-
are partial to a paper but are
James Ransom New York Times News Service
ganizer in New York City. (Flimsy dry-cleaner free-
be transformative, particularly in rooms that have little to no
In springtime, our thoughts turn to stain removal By Alan J. Heavens
D5
moth repellent — in each one. If a plank seems to be
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ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
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TV TODAY 8 p.m. on 2 9, "Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."When Lorelei (Elena Satine), a
dangerous seductress whohas
TV SPOTLIGHT
"This is related to the late '60s, ners. "I knew those people." Glaser said his concern was which is all I will say about it." trying to make work that sug- He added, "It maintains the gested a late-1960s feel without idea that this is somehow go-
By Randy Kennedy New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — In the world of "Mad Men," whose seventh
season begins April 13, one of the central dramatic devices is the client meeting, the scene
where the advertising gurus and thepeople who pay them gather in their glassed-office agora to wrestle over the natureofcommerce, persuasion, art and desire.
On a recent morning in a town-house office in Manhattan, reality was treading close-
Fred R. Conrad/ New York Times News Service
ly, and somewhat strangely, Graphic designer Milton Glaser, left, displays some of his work in fiction's footsteps. The cli- with Matthew Weiner, the creator of "Mad Men," at Glaser's office ent sitting in the conference
pillaging his own late-1960s ing on in Don Draper's mind, feel. "I haven't been working which is what the story is althis way for 30 years or so," ways about — and what the he said. "My anxiety was that back of his head is about, on people would think, wait a some level." minute, I'm still doing this sort Glaser, who works at a batof thing." tered, easel-like desk with no The poster and ads he came computer and a profusion of up with read like a sly reappro- Tibetan and other Eastern art priation of his past, a shaggy pinned up on the wall above it, explosion of color, flowers and drew the imagery for the ads Art Nouveau curves on top of by hand, something he doesn't which is the by now familiar get to do nearly as much as he back-of-the-head silhouette of usedto. "It really turned out to be a lot more fun than I thought it
Don Draper with his arm ex-
tended over a chair and a cig-
in New York.
room, waiting for his real-life ad man, was the show's cre-
would be," he said. This was partly because it allowed him interesting. into a profile of a w oman's to think again about the deeply "I grew up with a poster by face, the spire of the Chrys- unsettled time he helped deMilton in my house, which my ler Building and a glass into fine, when New York was slidparents bought at MoMA," which wine is being poured. ing toward near-insolvency, "There is a dreamlike qual- the country was mired in war, said Weiner, 48, describing a 1966 promotion for WOR-FM ity to it, and believe it or not, disillusionment was profound, radio, now in the collection of it is related to the show, and and yet there was still a field the Museum of Modern Art, not because it's psychedelic," called advertising whose job showing five Beatles-esque said Weiner, dressed appro- was to sell dreams and create performers rendered in a wild- priately for the period, with a desire. Occasionally, he said, it ly colorful style that evoked buttoned-up suit vest but also had — and still has — the powboth Art Deco and hard-edge a bright pink patterned tie. er to transcend commerce and "That's not what it's about. speak to the human condition. painting. arette in his hand. What first
reads asabstraction resolves
said, smiling as he took off his ad man was not just another coat and hat and welcomed his bright, creative type from the guest. art department. It was Milton Over the years of producing Glaser, who — probably more and writing the show, Weiner than any graphic designer of has become something of a his generation — forged the so- student of graphic design and phisticated, exuberant adver- commercial illustration. And tising look of the late 1960s, the he said hehad long dreamed of time "Mad Men" is traversing, Glaser's having a hand in the and whose work to publicize show's ads — not only because ator, Matthew Weiner. And the
the show's new season will
coming with plot details, said,
tional Sterling Cooper & Part-
of his renown as the creator
begin appearing next week on of the ubiquitous I T NY logo buses and billboards around and other images, but also be-
Indeed, Glaser, 84, with his
"The search for that thread,
What it's about is the material
imposingbald pate, goatee and and the immaterial world, and the experience that we all feel of the era, as the clean-lined, w ry professoria lair,could eas- that's what I loved." r ooted in, is what we do first time we're meeting, after clean-conscience advertising ily be a character on the show, Did the imagery hold any that's the best thing we can all your work," Weiner said, of the 1950s and early 1960s a seen-it-all Zen master from clues to the season, beyond do," Glaser said, adding with a shaking Glaser's hand. "Hi. I fractured, along with the cul- the creative department. "I Don Draper's affection for shrug and a smile, "And if you guess I'm the client." ture, into s omething m ore could have walked in the door women and drink? Weiner, can't live with contradiction, "No higher calling," Glaser chaotic, self-doubting and of that firm," he said, of the fic- known for being unforth- get out of town, right'?"
the country. "I can't believe this is the
cause he embodied the ethos
Te cousina out'sta er,'orno?
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times a/e subject tochangeafter p/ess time. l
Dear Abby: About a year ago, Dear Confused: I don't blame The problem is, I d o n't l ove I stopped seeing a man I'll call you for feeling intimidated, which Dawn. We don't get along well any"Vince." Since then he has been is what your stalker is trying to more. My mother tells me I should stalking me. He sends me texts
accomplish. You can put an end to
with photos he took of us while we were dating, but distorts them to make me look like I'm stabbing
it by having your neighbors docu- of my own, but Charise "feels" like ment his "drive-bys" and turning my kid. I can't imagine losing her. the pictures, videos and any othOne friend suggested I marry er communications Dawn so I can stay in her daughVince has sent you ter's life, but I want to be in love
him in the heart. He
find someone else and have kids
sends videos with my head on a dancover to the police. If with the woman I marry. Am I DFP,R he sent them via U.S. wrong for not wanting to lose a g ar i y ABBY n eighbors tell m e mail, the postmarks child I consider my daughter, but they see him drive on t h e e n v elopes not wanting to marry someone I past my house. (He (and f i n gerprints) don't love? —Spinning My Wheels in lives across town.) I refuse to talk to will prove what he has been up to. him now because he scares me. It may take a restraining order to California Vince has now begun making put an end to this. Dear Spinning: Charise may moves on my cousin "Nancy." She As to his relationship with your "feel" like your child, but she ISN'T. says their relationship isn't roman- cousin, I agree that if she has feel- And even though she may callyou tic, butothershavetoldmetheyhave ings for him, she'll be reluctant to "Dad," you AREN'T. Your romance seen them cuddle at restaurants and believe anything you tell her isn't with her mother is already on the parks. He still continues to send me sour grapes. However, if you show downhill slide, so the kindest thing scarypictures and emails. her the texts he's sending you — I you could do for all concerned is How can I tell Nancy about this presume they're time-stampedend the relationship. But before without her thinking it's jealous she may believe you. you do, it is important that you retaliation against their new relaDear Abby:I have been dating make clear to Charise that it has tionship? I honestly believe he is "Dawn" for more than a year. She nothing to do with her or your feelgetting close to her only to spite me has an amazing 7-year-old daugh- ings for her. and keepan emotional hold on me. ter, "Charise," who started calling Your mother is right. You need to His relationship with her has made me Dad about six months after her settle down with someone you can me afraid to tell her about my per- mother and I began dating. I love love. To follow your friend's sugsonal life or hang out with her for being a "dad" — going to the park, gestion would be a huge mistake. fear that he'll show up with her. on trips, helping out at school and — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com —Confused fn Oregon telling bedtime stories. or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014:This yearyou experience a natural schism between your
mind andyour emotions. Manyofyou might choose to listen to one voice instead of the other. Decide what the right one for you is. If you are single, you will meet several potential suitors. Enjoy the dating process. Mr. or Ms. Right might be right around the corner. Stars showthe kind if you are attached, " yy " " . your a warenessof ** * * * D ynamic ++++ Positive yo u r feelings and thoughts will evolve into many discussions with your * Difficult significant other. Add more romance by re-enacting your first date, or other memorable occasions. Some of you might decide to act out your first encounter. Have fun with your sweetie! LEO is aromantic, likeyou.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * Misunderstandings seem to lurk, yet there seems to be a sense of emotional connection. You keep ignoring verbal disconnects as if they are nothing. Beaware that, sooner or later, someone will get angry. The good news is that it likely won't be you. Tonight: Try to keep the peace!
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Youhave a way aboutyou that draws in many people except that one person who seems so distant. Conversations will seem awkward at best, yet the emo-
tional connectionendures. Beopen-minded, even if someone is being sarcastic or difficult. Tonight: Out and about.
GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * You might be overly concerned
aboutyour finances,especially whenyou
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
look at the situation intellectually. Your emotions could be telling you something very different. It boils down to this: How much do you trust your feelings? Tonight: Use moderation.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You will have a very emotional bondwithsomeone.Youcould feelsoconnected to this person, yetyou might think and speak very differently from how he or she does. Try to sort out any verbal misunderstandings. Respect your differences. Tonight: Beam in what you want.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * The Lion usually roars, but you might opt to be invisible today. You'll see a situation evolving, and you could bevery worried about the outcome. Share your feelings only if asked. For now, the less said the better. Tonight: Nap, and you will feel much better.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * Keep your focus on the whole rather than on the individual. You will be more effective, and others will be more responsive. Confusion surrounds communication, butyour intentions will be made known. Use care with spending. Tonight: Where the crowds are.
** * * Take an overview, and refuse to be reactive. Your knee-jerk reactions seem to be right-on, so follow your gut feelings. You instinctively will want control, but that might not be possible at this point in time. Tonight: Tap into your imagination for inspiration.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Deal with others on a one-on-one basis right now. Youwill find that communication might not be asdifficult as you previously thought. Still, there could be some awkward moments. You seem to be holding a lot in. Tonight: Munchies with a friend.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * You'll feed off the energy of those aroundyou.They seem enthusiasticand more than willing to do what it takes to reach a mutual goal. Generally you are the leader, and they are the followers. Enjoy the change and the break from such intensity. Tonight: Go with a suggestion.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * You are able to accomplish a lot and remain focused by pulling away from others. Your persona at work might be more serious than you intend to project. News seems to carry a controversial aspect that could cause a disagreement. Tonight: Don't push too hard.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20)
** * * * Your imagination touches many different realms and subjects. Others no** Pressure continues to intensify, no tice that faraway look. Somepeople could matter what you do. Youeasily could find feel rejected byyour attitude, while others will feel intrigued. A close friend might yourself feeling angry about the situation. You also could feel financially limited. Make want to be the most important topic on sure thatyou stay in touch with a boss or your mind. Tonight: Avoid a fight. older friend. Tonight: Work late if need be. © King Features Syndicate
I
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escaped from Asgard, attacks
Coulson (ClarkGregg)and his team, Thor's Lady Sif (Jaimie Alexander) comes to their rescue in the new episode "Yes Men." Ming-Na Wen, Brett Dalton and Chloe Bennetalso star. 8 p.m. on FAM, "Pretty Little Liars" —While dealing with their own individual issues, Spencer, Aria, Emily and Hanna (Troian Bellisario, Lucy Hale, Shay Mitchell, Ashley Benson) come to the joint realization that Mrs. DeLaurentiis (Andrea Parker) holds the key to solving the mystery of the night Ali
(Sasha Pieterse) wentmissing. They volunteer to help at her charity bridal fashion show as a way of getting into her home to search for answers in the new episode "Unbridled." 9 p.m. on TNT, "Rizzoli 5
Isles" —Jane (Angie Harmon) and her colleagues investigate the death of a food truck chef in this new episode. While the evidence points to poisoning, this case is far from open and shut. Angela (Lorraine Bracco) is excited about a big announcement from Tommy (Colin Egglesfield). Maura's (Sasha Alexander) birth mother (Sharon Lawrence) tries to make amends with her in "Food for Thought." 9:31 p.m. on 29, "Trophy Wife" —After finding videos of Pete's (Bradley Whitford) weddings to Diane and Jackie
(Marcia GayHarden, Michaela Watkins), Kate (Malin Akerman) realizes she missed out on something special by eloping and wants a real wedding. Diane decides to go public about her relationship with Russ Bradley Morrison (Dennis Haysbert), but Jackie isn't sure how to tell Bert (Albert Tsai) she's dating Sad Steve (Nat Faxon) in the new episode "The WeddingPart One." 10 p.m. on 58, "Chicago Fire" —Lindsay (Sophia Bush) starts calling in suspects with strong motives to make Katie's kidnapper disappear, and Severide (Taylor Kinney) is at the top of her list. Jones (Daisy Betts) continues having trouble fitting in. Herrmann (David Eigenberg) doesn't get much support for the 20th anniversary gift he plans to give his wife in the new episode "A Rocket Blasting Off." Jesse Spencer also stars. © Zap2it
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Expert RV Service - All Classes, MakesFyModels RVIA Certified Technicians No Charge lnsurance Estimates. Insurance Repairs Quality Service Without the Wait! Emergency Service Collision Repairs Small Paint Scratches to Major Collision Repairs Maintenance, Electrical, Plumbing, Water Leak Prevention and Repair, Winterization Special Open 6 Days • Tow Bars Ey Wiring • We Specialize in Complete Appliance Repairs
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NlliaSNINI!NNII Totally Polished Nail 8 Skin Studio 1289 NE Second Street Bend• 541.322.0156
Help your tires last longerwith afour wheel alignmentbyourfactory trained technicians onour state-of-the-art alignmentmachine.
Special Price:$19.95 Couponnotvalid withanyotheroifer. Muslpresentcoupon at timeofpumhasa. limit1 couponper person.Coupondoes not apply toprior purchases.Olher restridions msyapply. Voidwhereprohibited. Expires3/31/14.
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You will receive3multipoint inspectionchecklist, estimate of anyimmediaterepair needs as well asitemsthat canbe budgetedinfor alater date.
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!!!!!!
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Our Hot Carbonating Truck Mount Extraction cleans deep! We use one-fifth the amount of water compared to steam cleaners so carpet dries in 1 to 2 hours. Our cleaner, The Natural®, is green certified, non-toxic, so it's safe for your family and pets who are allergy sensitive! Leaves no sticky residue! Using Chem-Dry resists re-soiling so your carpet fibers stay cleaner, longer! Don't forget your area rugs & upholstery too!
Chem-Dry of Central Oregon 54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated
Call your Bulletin AccountExecutive TODA Y or call 541-382-1811 for more information about this and other opportunities!
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • •
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contact us:
hours:
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.
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7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Subscribe or manage your subscription
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
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202
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jeweliy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
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Antiques & Collectibles
Golf Equipment
Computers
Misc.ltems
Medical Equipment
Fuel & Wood
CHECK YOURAD
T HE B U LLETIN
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able 1K-gallon propane
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1940's Bell & Howell 8mm Projector, Model L Design 122. Comes complete with hard carrying case, in immaculate condition, $100. Tripod projection screen, $100. 541-383-1629
tank. 541-318-1233
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn corn rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 246
205
Malti-Poo tiny designer Items for Free pups, mom 8 Ibs, dad lbs., hypoallergenic 2 drawer green f i le 3 no m atting/shedding, cabinet (letter/legal); boy $750/gir™I$925. 541manila file f o lders; 233-6328/ 541-390-5401 1940's Cine-Kodak notebooks (white 1" Eight Model 60 and 2 n); letter and le- POODLE pupstoy.Also, Movie Camera, gal hanging file fold- 5 mo. male or female. 541-475-3889 includes carrying ers 541-977-2735 case, instructions La-Z-Boy recliner& Yorkie pups AKC, 4 baby and film splicer, $75. loveseat/hideabed. free doll boys, potty training, 541-383-1629 for the hauling! UTD shots, health guar., 541-678-4165 Iv msg. $850& up. 541-777-7743 Light teal rounded arm Yorkie Pups, AKC, born Mid-Century Unique skirted sofa, 70", free! 1/11. Male $550; female, You haul 541-923-7491 $650. 541-241-0518 Unframed mirrors: 2 I 30" x 36"; 1© 36" x USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 38" and 1@ 16ex 24". Door-to-door selling with 541-977-2735 fast results! It's the easiest Head & Footboard, 208 with wood-grain look, way in the world to sell. Pets & Supplies double size has no side rails. Could be The Bulletin Classified repurposed into a 541-385-5809 The Bulletin recomgarden bench, or a mends extra caution u nique item. U s e when purc h as210 your imagination! ing products or ser- Furniture & Appliances Asking $75. vices from out of the 541-419-6408 area. Sending cash, checks, or credit inA1 Washers&Dryers The Bulletin reserves $150 ea. Full warf ormation may be the right to publish all ranty. Free Del. Also subjected to fraud. ads from The Bulletin wanted, used W/D's For more informanewspaper onto The 541-280-7355 tion about an adverBulletin Internet webtiser, you may call site. the O r egon State Attorney General's Dining table The Bulletin Office C o n sumer ServfngCentral igregon sincerggg Beautiful round Protection hotline at oak pedestal table 1-877-877-9392. Wanted: Old Oriental with 4 matching rugs, any size or conchairs, table is 42" The Bulletin dition, call toll free, in diameter and in Serving Cenrrel Ongon sincesggg 1-800-660-8938 brand new condition, as are the A CERF Eye Clinic and 240 chairs. Priced at CGC Testing 1 0:00 a.m., March 15, 2014 $400. 541-447-3342 • Crafts & Hobbies at 65960 61st St., off Hwy 9 7 be t ween Bend and Redmond Veterinarian is Sarah /J Oorlstgrl C,itcgpt Maxwell, DVM. For tlgSJJPJ appt. 541-382-7752. Visit our HUGE $25/exam. C a n i ne home decor Alderwood Good Citizen (CGC) consignment store. Quiltworks Quilting testing at the same New items Frame,locally made venue. Sponsored by arrive daily! in Prineville, easy to The Mt . Ba c helor 930 SE Textron, use, makes quilting a Kennel Club. Bend 541-318-1501 dream! Just add your Adopt a rescued cat or www.redeuxbend.com machine to use with older kitten! Fixed, shots, included Handi ID chip, tested, more! G ENERATE SOM E handles. Manual incl. 65480 78th, Bend/Tu- EXCITEMENT in your Exlnt shape, only malo, Thurs/ Sat/Sun 1-5, neighborhood! Plan a used to quilt 4 tops, 541-389-8420, 598-5488. garage sale and don't $600. 541-549-1273 www.craftcats.org forget to advertise in or 541-419-2160 Adult barn/shop/working classified! 242 cats, fixed, shots. No fee, 541-385-5809. free delivery. LOVESEAT by Lane, Exercise Equipment 541-306-4519 leather, electric, Aussie AKC Mini, Blue $1048 new, asking • Chandelier, Merle, M/F, blue eyes $575. 541-312-2448. 22" diameter x 17n parents on site, shots/ high, 12 lights, wormed. 541-598-5314 The Bulletin bronze 8 crystal, Just bought a new boat? recommends extra ' has 6 arms (2 lights Sell your old one in the i caution when puron each arm), classifieds! Ask about our chasing products or • $300 obo. Super Seller rates! services from out of I 541-385-5809 l the area. Sending l • Weslo Cadence Canaries, 2 Bronze • cash, c hecks, o r • Treadmill,folds up males, $45 ea. i credit i n f ormation for easy storage, may be subjected to 541-548-7947 light use, works For more great. $150. Donate deposit bottles/ i FRAUD. information about an l 541-923-7491 cans to local all vol., advertiser, you may l non-profit rescue, for fe- / call t h e Or e gon / ral cat spay/neuter. Cans Atto r ney ' Pilates XP297; Pilates for Cats trailer at Jake's ' State chair, fluidity bar, call i General's O f fi ce Diner; or donate M-F at Consumer Protec- • for info. 541-408-0846 Smith Sign, 1515 NE h o t line a t I 2nd; or at CRAFT, Tu- tion People Look for Information malo. Call for Irg. quan- i 1-877-877-9392. About Products and tity pickup, l TheBulletin l Services Every Daythrough 541-389-8420. Serving Censrel Oregon since1903 www.craftcats.org The Bulletin Classifieds
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Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Pets & Supplies
HAVANESE PUPPIES AKC, Dewclaws, UTD shots/wormer, non-shed, hypoallergenic, $850 541-480-1277. Labrador Puppies, $300 & $350. 1st shots. vet checked. 541-416-1175
Elizabeth,541-633-7006 WANTED good rebuild-
Classified telephone hours:
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
Q u I I e t i n : g
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„,
Guns, Hunting & Fishing CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.
Desert Baby Eagle .40 caliber handgun, 2 holsters, Rail Flashlight, 50 rounds ammo, $650 obo.
r e - How to avoid scam quires computer adand fraud attempts vertisers with multiple YBe aware of internaad schedules or those tional fraud. Deal loselling multiple syswhenever postems/ software, to dis- cally close the name of the Y sible. Watch buyers business or the term who offerformore than "dealer" in their ads. asking price and Private party adverlis- your who ask to have ers are defined as money wired or those who sell one handed back to them. computer. Fake cashier checks and money orders 256 are common. Photography s/Never give out personal financial inforMinolta QTSI Maxxum mation. camera, includes 100- YTrust your instincts 300mm zoom lens + filbe wary of ters & c a se, $ 195. and using an Yashica Microtec Zoom someone service or 90 camera & case, like escrow agent to pick up your new, $20. 541-383-1629 merchandise.
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS 257
Musical Instruments
916-952-4109
IOI'I lSISTHS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
Ad must include price of s~ le ee oi $50D or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500.
Sunvision Pro 28LX Tanning Bed Has only 300 hours, (lamps have average life of 800-1000 hours
of effective tanning usage). 1 owner, great condition, includes manual, goggles & head pillow. $900. Call fosee! 541-385-9318 in Bend
Beautiful Lowrey Adventurer II Organ Absolutely perfect condition, not a scratch on it, about 4-feet wide, does everythingl Includes a nice bench, too. $1600. 541-385-5685
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily WANTED: Able-bodied crew members to sail Winchester Bay Oregon to San Francisco in June or July, 2014. 260 Mark, 541-233-8944 Misc. Items Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio & stuBuying Diamonds dio equip. Mclntosh, /Gold for Cash JBL, Marantz, D ySaxon's Fine Jewelers naco, Heathkit, San541-389-6655 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer WHEN YOU SEE THIS trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.
Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
Guns for sale by a
collector. Call for details: 541-504-1619 Ruger P94 .40 caliber. Original owner seldom used. $450 obo 54'I -480-5801
More PixatBendbjletin.coj
BUYING & S E LLIHG On a classified ad All gold jewelry, silver go to and gold coins, bars, www.bendbulletin.com rounds, wedding sets, to view additional class rings, sterling silphotos of the item. ver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental 261 qold. Bill Fl e ming, Illledical Equipment 541-382-9419.
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Taurus PT 140, 40 cal, 4 mags, holster, 2 maq belt clip, box of shells, $425. Cemetery space: al 541-383-7659 double depth intergrave space I Wanted: Collector seeks i ment outer b u rial high quality fishing items with container built in, 8 upscale bamboo fly in Meadowrods. Call 541-678-5753, i located park area of Desor 503-351-2746 -
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Art, Jewelry & Furs 4 Charles Russell prints for sale, beautifully glass framed. 541-475-2057
i chutes M e morial i Gardens, $900. Call
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Falcon 4-w h e el power scooter with accessories, gently used, in mint condit ion. $ 4 00. C a l l 5 41-389-1821 f o r details.
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com ServsngCentral Oregon nnce Sge
265
Building Materials (2) new 3' wide x 6' tall vinyl Low E single hung windows, $150 ea. 1 4x8 new Low E fixed window, $350. 541-233-3500 REDMOND Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-548-1406 Open to the public. WANTED good rebuildable 1K-gallon propane tank. 541-318-1233
NOTICE TO ADVERTISER
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for
delivery! 541-408-6193
All YearDependable Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole 1 for $195 or 2 for $365. Cedar,
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 & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin
FAST! Flatscreen Magnifier Optlec Clearview+ viewer, magnifier for reading, writing and viewing for those who have vision loss. $900 obo. (ofher items listed previously havebeen sold) In Bend, call 541-480-6162
If it's under$500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
$10 • 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days
(Private Party ads only)
308
Farm Equipment & Machinery
split, del. Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 for $325. 541-420-3484. (4) 5'x12' horse panels, $75/ea. Assorted waCall The Bulletin At ter and feed tubs, call 541 e385-5809 for prices. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-923-9758 At: www.bendbulletin.com N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 swather, 14' header Plne & Iunlper Split with conditioner, cab heat/A/C, 1300 orig. PROMPT DELIVERY hrs. $29,000 obo. 542-389-9663 1486 International, cab heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 Pto, 3 sets remotes, Seasoned Juniper nice tractor. $18,000. $150/ cord rounds; 541-419-3253 $170/ cord split. Delivered in Central 316 OR, since 1970! Call Irrigation Equipment eves, 541-420-4379 269
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
1/4 mile wheel line, 7-ft wheels, $4950. 541-389-8963 325
BarkTurfSoil.com
Hay, Grain & Feed
PROMPT DELIVERY
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
542-389-9663
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
used woodstoves has To place an ad, call been limited to mod541-385-5809 els which have been or email Clahhified@bendbulletirh.COm certified by the O regon Department of The Bulletin Environmental Qualgervlng Central Oregon sincerggg ity (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental 270 protection A g e ncy (EFA) as having met Lost & Found smoke emission standards. A cer t ifiedFound: Black male cat, w oodstove may b e approx. 7 yrs. old, identified by its certifi- fnendly, near Boyd cation label, which is Acres & Vogt Rd. Call permanently attached 541-388-1174, Betty. to the stove. The Bulletin will not know- Found nice women's ingly accept advertis- sweater, March 3rd ing for the sale of p.m.,NW Bond St. in uncertified Bend. Call to identify, 541-389-2896 woodstoves.
Sell an Item
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The Bulletin
WANTED: Snow blower tire chains, size 13x4. Call 541-408-0846
1 Cord dry, split Juniper, $190/cord. Multi-corddiscounts, & yg cords available. Immediate
Heating & Stoves
Excellent condition, beautiful tone, well cared for. Includes carrying case. $2000. 541-383-1629
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70 - SA.308 Win. Classic Featherweight, Monte Carlo Stock, Burris 3x9 scope and case. Very clean and well cared for. $750. 541-420-4183
Natural gas Ruud tankless water heater, brand new! 199 Btu, $1800. Also brand new 80 gal. electric water heater, $500. In Sunriver area. 530-938-3003
264
Snow Removal Equipment
266
~ee eke eo!
Winchester Model
ServingCensrelOregon since Sggg
1957 00-18G Martin Guitar
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3!ines 12
Stag Arms AR-15: Model Stag15, 5.56/223, Stainless steel barrel. Leupold Firedot G 3-9X40 Scope, MagPul PRS buttstock, Hogue grip, Bipod. $1875 Call 541-410-3568
The Bulletin
Full size power adjustable bed w/memory foam mattress, $800. Portable wheelchair, 4 leg walker, Quadri-Poise cane, bathroom assist chair, all for $200. Call 541-526-5737
9g $0
341
Horses & Equipment
Found Pit Bull puppy 3/6 at Cline Falls State Rowell-built work saddle, Park. Describe gender 16n seat, 7/8 double rig, & color. 541-548-6244 $ 250 obo. 541-389-5741 358
REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Prine ille
Farmers Column 10X20 Storage Buildings for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. (other sizes available) 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684 kfjbuildersOykwc.net
eei-ssr-ri78; o Ceitoeie '
54i-389-842D.
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
266 Your future is just apage Sales Northeast Bend away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is ** FREE ** your best source. Garage Sale Kjt Every daythousandsof Place an ad in The buyers andsellers of goods Bulletin for your gaand services do business in rage sale and rethese pages.Theyknow ceive a Garage Sale you can't beatTheBulletin Kit FREE! Classified Section for selection andconvenience KIT INCLUDES: -every item isjust a phone • 4 Garage Sale Signs call away. • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your The Classified Section is Next Ad easy to use.Every item • 10 Tips For "Garage is categorizedandevery Sale Success!" cartegoiy is indexed onthe section's front page. Whether youare lookingfor PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at a home orneeda service, 1777 SW Chandler your future is inthepagesof Ave., Bend, OR 97702 The Bulletin Classified.
The Bulletin
Serving Censref Oregon sincel903
The Bulletin Sernng CentralOregon since Shh
E2 TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
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Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• •... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. 528 Loans & Mortgages Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. WARNING Bulletin recomThursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. The mends you use cauFriday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • •• 11:00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• 3:00 pm Fri. • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place aphoto in your private party ad for only $15.00por week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
Icall for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*ltllust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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Employment Opportunities
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Drug Treatment Court Looking for your next Coordinator The Bulletin is your employee? Oregon Judicial Departm ent,Crook & Jeff erson Place a Bulletin help Employment Circuit Courts. Limited wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Duration (80% of full Marketplace 476 time}. Coordinates and readers each week. monitors the drug court Your classified ad Employment rograms. R e q uires will also appear on Call Opportunities achelor's degree (or bendbulletin.com equiv. work experience) which currently 541-385-5809 & 3 years experience in receives over 1.5 CAUTION: social/human services million page views Ads published in court systems. to advertise. every month at "Employment Op- and/or $3086 - $5024/ no extra cost. portunities" include Salary: (at 32 hrs/week) plus Bulletin Classifieds employee and inde- mo. www.bendbulletin.com For complete Get Results! pendent positions. benefits. announcement and apCall 385-5809 Ads for p o sitions plication visit: or place that require a fee or www.courtsiore on. ov/ your ad on-line at upfront investment o'd/'obs ~ bendbulletin.com ServingCenrral Oregonsince lata must be stated. With or call 541-447-6541 any independentjob x 102. opportunity, please Closes March 13, 2014. i nvestigate tho r Auto Renew Coordinator oughly. Use extra Immediate opening in the Circulation departcaution when ap- EMPLOYMENT ment for a full time Auto Renew Coordinator. plying for jobs on- Now taking applications! Job duties primarily encompass the processline and never proing of all subscriber Auto Renew payments A new Behavioral vide personal inforthrough accounting software, data entry of new Health Center is mation to any source credit card or bank draft information, and opening in the Bend/ you may not have resolution with customers of declined Auto La Pine area. All posiresearched and tions available, inciuding: Renew payments, as well as, generating subdeemed to be repu- • Counseling Staff scriber renewals and refunds. Other tasks intable. Use extreme • Dietary clude entering employee subscription adjustc aution when r e - • Housekeeping ments, transferring funds from subscriber s ponding to A N Y • Maintenance accounts for single copy purchases, dispatchonline employment • Support staff ing of all promotional items associated with ad from out-of-state. • Clerical new subscriptions and upgrades, as well as We suggest you call Competitive benefits and tracking/ordering Circulation office supplies. the State of Oregon wages. Please email Responsibilities also include month end billing, Consumer H otline your (etter of interest and invoicing and collections for Buffalo Distribuat 1-503-378-4320 resume to tion and back up to the CSR and billing staff. For Equal Opportu- Emil Okleancenter.com Ability to perform all these tasks accurately and nity Laws contact with attention to deadlines is a must. Oregon Bureau of Work shift hours are Monday through Friday Labor & I n dustry, 8:00 AM to5:00 PM. Please send resume to: Civil Rights Division, ahusted Obendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin 541-385-5809
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Buiietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Courier-Driver The Newspaper in Education Campaign for The Bulletin needs a driver to pick up sponsorship payments from local businesses on behalf of their Newspaper in Education Program. Daytime work 2-4 hours daily. Average $30-$40 per hour. Must have reliable, economical transportation and proof of liability insurance. This is an independent contractor position. Call (330) 605-6767 9 a.m.to 4 p.m. only. Driver Night Driver needed Apply at Owl Taxi, 1919 NE 2nd St., Bend, OR 97701
Wherebuyers meet sellers.
Classifieds Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline. •
•
secured trustdeeds8 note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.18.
serving central oreeen since 1903
Call a Pro
Ability to work for long periods of time doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.
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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
EOE/Drug free workplace
Organization, flexibility and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required.
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring. To apply, please send a resume to: Box 20473443, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 EOE
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SoutheastBend Homesl
NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, Nottingham Square 1300 amilial status or naHouses for Rent sq ft nicely updated 3/2, tional origin, or intenbacks to canal, 2 car gar. tion to make any SE Bend such 20747 Canterbury, FSBO, preferences, l i mita$210,000. 541-390-1579 N ewer 4 b d r m S E , tions or discrimination. master main l evel, We will not knowingly 2100 SF, large yard, accept any advertisLookat: very n ice. $ 1 595. ing for real estate 541-480-9200 Bendhom es.com which is in violation of this law. All persons Need help fixing stuff? for Com p l e t e L i s t i n gs o f are hereby informed Call A Service Professional that all dwellings adfind the help you need. AreaRealEstate for Sale veltised are available www.bendbulletin.com on an equal opportunity basis. The BulleSALES tin Classified
I
Invigorate your career at
MacOonald-Miller Facility Solutions!
Seekin Ex erienced
s~ t
Fax 206-768-4115 or mail to: Attn: HR PO Box 47983 Seattle, WA 98146
CW
MacDonald-Mlller FACILITY aOWTIONSe
Equal Opportunity Employer
Registered Nurses
• Reliable • Money Motivated
• Professional • Team Player • Goal Oriented • Consistent If so, come join a winning team of positive Sales/Promotion Men& Women making "$600-$800 Per Week" working FULL TIME covering sponsored special events & trade shows
yjfE OFFER: More Advancement Opportunity Weekly Awards and Bonuses Full Training & Support Opportunity for Growth if you want a serious opportunity, and you can close the sale, Call M-F 10am-3pm, 541-410-5521
Pressman
The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking anight time pressman. We are part of Western Communications, Inc. which is a small, family owned group consisting of 7 newspapers, 5 in Oregon and 2 in California. Our ideal candidate will have prior web press experience and be able to learn our equipment (3 t/a tower KBA Comet press) and processes quickly. In addition to our 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. In addition to a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude and are a team player, we would like to hear from you. If you seek a stable work environment that provides a great place to live, let us hear from you. Contact James Baisinger, Operations Manager baisin er@wescom a ers.com with your complete resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employ-
Community Counseling Solutions is recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedlnJohn Day, OR. Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential Treatment Facility providing services to individuals with a severe mental illness.
These positions provide mental health nursing care including medication oversight, medication r e lated t r e atment, f o llow physician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , temperature and respiration to provide daily information, educate and train staff on medication administration, and e n sure documentation is kept according to policies. This position works with the treatment team to promote recovery from mental illness. This position includes telephone consultation and crisis intervention in the facility.
Qualified applicants must have a v alid Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's license at the time of hire, hold a valid Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal history background check. Wages dependent upon education and experience, but will be between $48,000 to $72,000. Excellent benefit package, including signing bonus.
Redmond Homes Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECiAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
Mfd JMobile Homes with Land 3 bdrm, 2 bath mobile home for sale or rent. Private, along COI canal. 541-389-2636
Get your business
aROWING With an ad in
The Bulletin's Please visit th e O r egon Employment "Call A Service Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for an application or contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, Professional" nina.bissontNgobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Directory Heppner, OR 97836.
The Bulletin
serving central oreqoe since 1903
Equal Opportunity Employer Call54I 385 5809toprsmoteyaurSerV iCe• AdVertiSefOr28dap StOrtingatII4I fffarfrrrtrf~atr t rrrtarrtrer teer rrrtsai
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t r ong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
The Bulletin
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller@bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE
S UNRI t r R ESO R T A DESTINATIONe RESO T
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Thursday,March13th 4:00pm-7:00pm at the 6reat Hall inSunriver Wednesday,April 23rd4:00pm-7:00pm at the Homesteadin Sunriver Will be interviewingfor positions inCulinaryand Foodif Beverage, HouseIteeping,6olf, Grounds, Recreation andFrontOIIIce
For moreinformationand full list of positionsavailable visit
Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for Zdped gua/reI construction work to be licensed with the Zavt/<giu e I,. Construction Contrac- More Than Service tors Board (CCB). An Peace Of Mind active license means the contractor is bonded & insured. Spring Clean Up •Leaves Verify the contractor's •Cones CCB l i c ense at •Needles www.hirealicensed• Debris Hauling contractor.com or call 503-378-4621. WeedFree Bark The Bulletin recom& Flower Beds mends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation Some other t rades Aeration - Dethatching also re q uire addiOverseed tional licenses and Compost certifications. Top Dressing Debris Removal
JUNK BE GONE I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107
Domestic Services
Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service • Mowing eEdging
•Pruning .Weeding Sprinkler Adjustments Fertilizer included with monthly program
NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r form Landscape Construction which includes: p lanting, deck s ,
fences, arbors, water-features, and installation, repair of ir-
rigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcbistate.or.us to check license status before contracting with the business. Persons doing land scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i -
cense.
Aeration/Dethatching 1-time or Weekly Services
A ssisting Seniors a t Weekly,monthly Home. Light house- or one time service. Ask about FREEadded svcs w/seasonal contract! keeping 8 other serv ices. L icensed & Bonded & Insured. EXPERIENCED COLLINS Lawn Maint. Bonded. BBB CertiCommercial fied. 503-756-3544 Ca/i 541-480-9714 & Residential Handyman Tree Services Senior Discounts I DO THAT! MR. STUMP BUSTER 541-390-1466 Home/Rental repairs Professional Stump & Tree Removal• 24 yrs exp. Small jobs to remodels Same Day Response Insured - Free estimates! Honest, guaranteed Call 541-213-9103 work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768 FIND YOUR FUTURE ERIC REEVE HANDY Serving Central HOME INTHE BULLETIN SERVICES. Home & Oregon Since 2003 Commercial Repairs, Residental/Commercial Yourfutureisjustapageaway. Carpentry-Painting, Whetheryou're lookingforahal or Sprinkier Pressure-washing, aplacelohang il TheBulletin Activation/Repair Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Back Flow Testing Classifiedisyourbestsource. Discount. Work guarEverydaythousandsolbuyersacd Maintenance anteed. 541-389-3361 eThatch & Aerate or 541-771-4463 sellersofgoodsandservicesdo Bonded & Insured • Spring Clean up businessinthesepages. They .Weekly Mowing CCBff181595 know youcant' beatTheBulletin & Edging •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Classified Sectionforseledion Maintenance Tick, Tock •Bark, andconvenience-everyitemis Rock, Etc. just ph aonecallaway. Tick, Tock... ~LandSCa nn T he Cl a s s ifiedSectioniseasy ...don't let time get •Landscape Io use.Everyitemiscategorized Construction eWater Feature andeverycategoryisindexedon away. Hire 8 Installation/Maint. the seclion'front s page. professional out •Pavers W hether yo u a r e lo o kingforahome •Renovations of The Bulletin's •Irrigations Installation or need aseit/ice,yourfutureis in "Call A Service the pages ol TheBulletin Classfied. Senior Discounts Professional" Bonded & Insured
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[pgoo' gggg Call for Speciais! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. NfOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally 749 managed by Norris & Southeast Bend Homes Stevens, Inc.
hr@macmiller.com
SALES
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As a major design/build mechanical contractor, our comprehensive capabilities allow us to help our customers with HVAC/piping system concepts, full installation and ongoing services. Simply put "We Make Buildings Work Better!" Do you strive to work for a company that values integrity, fun, and superior service? If so, we are looking for an eager & innovative Maintenance Sales Account Manager with two years of successful sales and cold-calling experience to sell contracts to existing buildings in our RedSmall studio downtown HVAC OR location. High emphasis is being area, $495 mo., $475 mond, placed being able to develop new relationdep. No pets/smking. ships in on order to be successful. Salary DOE. Call 5 4 1 -330-9769, For moreinformation, visit www.macmiller.com or 541-480-7870. Submit resume to
www.sunriverresort'obs.com
•
•
•
The Bulletin
Clerical/Office We are looking for a full-time employee that is resourceful and self-motivated to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred.
Easily. The Classified Section is easy to use. Every item is categorized and every category is indexed on the section's front page.
For rent, 8'x20' container in secure facility. Dry, clean, only $90/mo. Call 9th Street RV Storage Center, 541-420-6851.
Home Delivery Advisor
products or I I chasing services from out of • l the area. Sendingl c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f ormationl • may be subjected to I FRAUD. l more informaI For tion about an adver-l l tiser, you may calll the Oregon State l Attorney General'sl C o nsumer a I Office Protection hotline at l I 1-877-877-9392. I
CABINET INSTALLER,
must be experienced. To ap p ly , call 541-382-6287.
604
Storage Rentals
tion when you provide personal information to compa632 nies offering loans or credit, especially AptiMultiplex General those asking for advance loan fees or CHECK YOUR AD companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER on the first day it runs HOTLINE, to make sure it is cor'I -877-877-9392. rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do ocBANK TURNED YOU cur. If this happens to DOWN? Private party your ad, please conwill loan on real estact us ASAP so that tate equity. Credit, no corrections and any problem, good equity adjustments can be is all you need. Call made to your ad. Oregon Land Mort541-385-5809 gage 541-388-4200. The Bulletin Classified LOCAL MONEY:Webuy
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ARE YOU?
PLEASE NOTE: 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.
971-673- 0764.
Apt./llllultiplex NE Bend
Directory today!
541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
The Bulletin serving cenfral oeron since19ts
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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will Sbprtz
T tfesflay, March 11,2014
Trapped in dummy
ACROSS 1 Coal carriers STakepleasure, as in one's glory 9One-namml singer with the 2006 hit "Too, Little Too Late" 13soon quaintly 14Tennis'sNastase 15"Samewith me" 17Authorof the best-selling book series in history 19 b ud d y 20 Founder of U.S. Steel 21"Thankyou," in Hawaii 22ActressCaldwell and others 23 Instant 24Office PC hookup 25 Joe Namath or Mark Gastineau 28 Actress Christine of "Funny About Love" 30WallSt. operator 31 Eschews takeout, say 35A deadly sin
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "My partners think I' m s l owing down," an older club player told me. "It's not true. I've still got a mind like a ... a ... what's that thing called?" N o m a t ter h o w go o d you r technique, you won't win if you lack focus. In today's deal, South refused the first spade, won the second and took dummy's A- K o f d i a monds. When East threw a c l ub , S outh realized that he couldn't get all five of his diamond tricks. So South tried exiting with a spade. If West cashed two spades, South c ould u nblock b y d i s c arding a diamond from his hand. But West wouldn't cooperate: He led the jack of diamonds, and South could take only eight tricks.
club, and the next player doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: If your opponent had passed, you might have bid one heart to look for a fit i n the major suit. After the double, which suggests length and strength in hearts, your a im should b e t o p r epare for a competitive auction by d escribing your hand to partner. Jump to four clubs, preemptive. South dealer Both sides vulnerable 45763 2
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It didn't take a steel trap of a mind to make 3NT. South lost his focus early in the play. He should take only the ace of diamonds before he exits with a spade. If West shifts to a heart or a club, South wins and leads a diamond to dummy. When East shows out, South discards a diamond on dummy'8 last spade and is safe for nine tricks.
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By Kurt Mengel and Jan-Michele Gianette (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
03/11/14
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, MARCH 11 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
880
882
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
0
00
CHECKyOUR AD
932
933
935
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Ford Ran er XLT
Lincoln MKZ 2009
975
•
Dodge 2500 2005, 4-dr Laramie pkg, Cummins Diesel, 77K miles, red w/brown leather, excellent cond, $28,000 obo. 541-410-1135 or 541-923-0159
8
TIFFINPHAETON QSH on the first day it runs 2007with 4 slides, CAT 908 to make sure it is cor2011 S u percrewLeather seat, Blue350hp diesel engine, rect. "Spellcheck" and Aircraft, Parts Snowmobiles cab! less than 12k tooth, auto 6 s pd, $125,900. 30,900 miles, human errors do oc& Service mi., 4WD, Ford certiF WD 54 k mi l e s new Michelin tires, great cur. If this happens to Arctic Cat 580 1994, fied. Vin¹PA76782 vin¹613915 cond! Dishwasher, w/d, EXT, in good your ad, please con$15,977 central vac, roof satellite, $21,947 tact us ASAP so that Price Reduced! condition, $1000. aluminum wheels, 2 full ROBBERSON y Located in La Pine. corrections and any ROBBERSON Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 slide-thru basement trays adjustments can be Call 541-408-6149. engine, power every& 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towmade to your ad. thing, new paint, 54K bar and Even-Brake in541-382-4521 860 541 -385-5809 orig. miles, runs great, 541 -382-4521 cluded. DLR¹0205 DLR¹0205 The Bulletin Classified 1/3 interest in wellexc. cond.in/out. $7500 Motorcycles & Accessories Call 541-977-4150 equipped IFR Beech Bo- obo. 541-480-3179 FIND IT! nanza A36, new 10-550/ Advertise your car! BIIT ITI Tioga 24' Class C prop, located KBDN. Add A Picture! Motorhome SELL IT! $65,000. 541-419-95i0 Reach thousands of readers! www.N4972M.com Fleetwood Discovery Bought new in 2000, The Bulletin Classifieds Call 541-385-5809 currently under 20K 40' 2003, diesel, w/all The Bulletin Classifieds miles, excellent options - 3 slide outs, shape, new tires, 940 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Ford Supercab 1992, GMC 2500 2003 professionaly winterFXSTD Harley etc., 32,000 m iles. Vans brown/tan color with HD SLE Crew Cab every year, cutDavidson 2001,twin Wintered in h eated ized m atching full s i z e 4-wheel drive, 6.6 switch to battery, cam 88, fuel injected, shop. $84,900 O.B.O. off canopy, 2WD, 4 60 liter VB Turbo Dieplus new RV batterVance 8 Hines short 541-447-8664 over drive, 135K mi., sel Duramax engine, ies. Oven, hot water shotexhaust, StageI Fleetwood Prowler 1/5th interest in 1973 full bench rear seat, heater & air condiAllison transmission, 32' - 2001 with Vance & Hines Cessna 150 LLC slide rear w i ndow, tioning have never many options, fuel management 2 slides, ducted 150hp conversion, low bucket seats, power been used! 107,000 miles. system, custom parts, heat & air, great time on air frame and Very good condition, seats w/lumbar, pw, $24,000 obo. Serious extra seat. $10,500 condition, snowbird engine, hangared in HD receiver & trailer Chrysler Town & inquiries, please. $24,500. OBO. Call ready, Many upBend.Excellent perbrakes, good t ires. Country LXI 1997, Stored in Terrebonne. 707-484-3518 Today Forest River Sunseeker grade options, fiformance & afford541-548-5174 Good cond i tion. beautiful inside 8 (locafedin Bend) 541-516-8684 Class C, 24ft - Double nancing available! able flying! $6,000. out, one owner, non$4900. 541-389-5341 bed, roomy bath/shower, $14,500 obo. 541-410-6007 smoker,. loaded with lots storage, oak wood, options! 197,892 mi. dining area slide-out w/ Harley Davidson 2009 Call Dick, Service rec o rds new awning. Micro, air, Super Glide Custom, 541-480-1687. available. $4 , 950. new flat screen TV 8 RV Stage 1 Screaming Call Mike, (541) 815batt. On-board gen/low Eagle performance, 6176 after 3:30 p.m. too many options to hrs, arctic pkq, full cover. Fleetwood GMC Sierra 1977 short Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, list, $8900. Wilderness 2000 FORD XLT 1992 Winnebago Aspect bed, exlnt o r iginal 541-388-8939 tow pkg, leather seats, no 2009172 CessnaShare model, 28', 1 slide, 32', 3 slide3/4 ton 4x4 Honda Odyssey cond., runs & drives smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 IFR equipped, new good condition, with outs, Leather intematching canopy, 1999. Very good great. V8, new paint $31,500. avionics, Garmin 750 and tires. $4750 obo. awning and A/C, rior, Power s e at, 30k original miles, cond. Runs well, 541<t 9-6176 touchscreen, center 541-504-1050 $7500. locks, win d ows, possible trade for Two sets of tires on 541-383-8270 stack, 160hp. Aluminum wheels. classic car, pickup, rims - summer and 17" Flat Screen, Exceptionally clean motorcycle, RV winter. $2500. Surround s o u nd, & economical! $13,500. 541-593-23'I 2 camera, Queen bed, $13,500. In La Pine, call or 541-977-7588 Foam mattress, Aw928-581-9190 Hangared in KBDN Harley Davidson ning, Generator, InCall 541-728-0773 975 2011 Classic Limverter, Auto Jacks, G ulfstream S u n Plymouth B a rracuda ited, Loaded! 9500 Automobiles sport 30' Class A Air leveling, Moon 1966, original car! 300 miles, custom paint 1988 new f r idge, roof, no smoking or Keystone Challenger hp, 360 V8, center"Broken Glass" by TV, solar panel, new p ets. L ik e n e w , 2004 CH34TLB04 34' lines, 541-593-2597 Nicholas Del Drago, fully S/C, w/d hookups, refrigerator, 4000W $74,900 new condition, new 18' Dometic aw541-480-6900 generator, w heelheated handgrips, ning, 4 new tires, new chair lift avail. Good GMC Sonoma 2001 4x4 auto cruise control. Kubota 7000w marine cond. $11,500 obo Ext Cab, 4.3L V6, 87,650 1974 Bellanca $32k in bike, diesel generator, 3 541-447-5504 miles, very good cond. 1730A only $20,000 or best slides, exc. cond. in$5500. 541-388-1714 CorvetteCoupe offer. 541-318-6049 s ide 8 o ut. 27" TV 1996, 350 auto, dvd/cd/am/fm e n terRolls Royce 1992 Sil2180 TT, 440 SMO, WINNEBAGO 135k, non-ethanol tain center. Call for 180 mph, excellent ver Spur II,excellent! fuel/synthetic oil, BRAVE 2003 more details. O nly Midnight Blue exterior, condition, always garaged/covered. • 34D, 2 slides nternational Fl a t used 4 times total in hangared, 1 owner Parchment leather inte- IBed Bose Premium Gold Pickup 1963, 1 15-inch chrome RR • Tires 80% last 5 t/s years.. No for 35 years. $60K. rior, system. Orig. owner wheels, Alpine Sirius ton dually, 4 s pd. pets, no smoking. High • Just completely manual. Stock! DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS trans., great MPG, KOUNTRY AIRE retail $27,700. Will sell serviced $10,500 OBO. In Madras, navigation system, could be exc. wood 1994 37.5' motorfor $24,000 including Harley Davidson Retired. Must sell! • 39,000 miles call 541-475-6302 77,200 miles, dealerhauler, runs great, home, with awning, sliding hitch that fits in Dyna Wide Glide 541-923-1781 ship maintained, al• No trades new brakes, $1950. and one slide-out, your truck. Call 8 a.m. 2013, black, only ways garaged. New, 541-419-5480. Only 47k miles to 10 p.m. for appt to • $48,000 firm 200 miles, brand about $250,000; sell and good condition. see. 541-330-5527. 541-815-3150 new, all stock, plus $19,500. 541-480-3348 Cadillac Deville $25,000. after-market exDHS 2000. Most 541-548-0318 933 haust. Has winter Laredo 30'2009 options, exc. cond. (photo aboveis of a cover, helmet. Pickups wfI' similar model & not the 93,000 mi.. New Selling for what actual vehicle) tires. $6,500. I owe on it: $15,500. Cessna 182Q, 1977, 541-233-8944. Call anytime, mid-time engine/ Nissan Titan 2004 4x4 541-554-0384 prop, custom panel, King Cab LE, 4-dr, Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' S-Tec 30+ altitude black, 141K miles, 2004, 35K, loaded, too -",IBj!5 hold, Garmin 430, overall length is 35' $6500. 541-815-4121 much to list, ext'd warr. GPSS, oversized HDFatBo 1996 has 2 slides, Arctic Chevy 3500 Crew thru 2014, $49,900 Den- package, A/C, table 935 tires, digital fuel flow, Cab, 2005 4x4 Dually Sport Utility Vehicles nis, 541-589-3243 excellent paint 8 & chairs, satellite, Monaco Lapalma, Duramax Allison, 4' Arctic pkg., power interior. Must see to 2002, 34'10" -Worklift, Edge Chip, only 881 awning, in excellent appreciate. horse 8.1i Less than Corvette 1979 66,000 miles. LS trim Travel Trailers condition! More pix Asking $68,000. 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan L82- 4speed. pkg, split-bench front at bendbulletin.com Bill, 541-480-7930 gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. 85,000 miles seat, tow pkg, brake Completely refrig w/icemaker, $28,000 controller. Very good Garaged since new. 541-419-3301 Rebuilt/Customized micro/convection I've owned it 25 condition - looks 2012/2013 Award oven, water purifier, good, pulls better! years. Never damhydraulic jacks, power Winner Original owner needs BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, aged or abused. miles, premium packShowroom Condition pilot seat+ more opto sell - $35,000. 2 slides, AC, recliners, $12,900. age, heated lumbar tions. Exceptionally Many Extras walk-around queen bed, 541-408-7826 supported seats, pan- Dave, 541-350-4077 clean. $59,900/make Low Miles. KeystoneLsredo 31' sliding glass door closet, oramic mo o nroof, offer. 541-504-1008 RV 20 06 with 1 2' new tub & 10-gal water Save money. Learn $7 7,000 Need to get an Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe541-548-4807 slide-out. Sleeps 6, heater, good tires. Brand to fly or build hours non headlights, tan & queen walk-around new 20' screen room with your own airad in ASAP? black leather interior, G R E AT bed w/storage under- available. Super clean, 1 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o You can place it n ew front 8 re a r neath. Tub 8 shower. owner, n o n-smokers. Commander, 4 seat, brakes O 76K miles, online at: $12,995. 541-447-7968 2 swivel rockers. TV. 150 HP, low time, National RV one owner, all records, Air cond. Gas stove & full panel. $23,000 www.bendbulletin.com very clean, $1 6,900. Tropical, 1997, CORVETTE COUPE refrigerator/freezer. obo. Contact Paul at 541-388-4360 35-ft, Chevy Vortec Glasstop 201 0 Microwave. Awning. 541-447-5184. 541-385-5809 Grand Sport - 4 LT engine, new tires, Outside sho w er. Slide through storFordExpedition loaded, clear bra new awnings, 12-ft Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 Triumph Daytona T-Hangar for rent hood & fenders. a ge, E a s y Li f t . Limited201 2 slide-out, queen with camper shell, 2004, 15K m i l e s, at Bend airport. $29,000 new; New Michelin Super bed, Italian leather MONTANA 3585 2008, Call 541-382-8998. good cond., $1500 perfect bike, needs Sports, G.S. floor Asking$1 8,600 couch and recliner, exc. cond., 3 slides, OBO. 541-447-5504. hs nothing. Vin 541-4947-4805 mats, 17,000 miles, excellent condition. king bed, Irg LR, 916 ¹201536. Crystal red. Arctic insulation, all Ready to travel„ FORD F-1502010 $4995 Trucks & $42,000. options $35,000 obo. towing hitch in503-358-1164. Dream Csr Heavy Equipment 541-420-3250 cluded. $19,900. Auto Sales less than 25k mi., 541-815-4811 1801 Division, Bend Good classified adstell heated leather DreamCarsBend.com seats, Vin¹F01898 the essential facts in an 541 -678-0240 $41,944 interesting Manner. Write Dlr 3665 from the readers view not Orbit 21'2007, used Lariat SupercrewROBBERSON y the seller's. Convert the cab! less than 53k only 8 times, A/C, \ I II c 0 4 N ~ I M RDB facts into benefits. Show Peterbilt 359 p otable miles heated seats oven, tub shower, water truck, 1 990, Vin¹D04934 Ford Thunderbird 541 -382-4521 micro, load leveler the reader howthe item will 3200 gal. tank, Shp help them insomeway. DLR¹0205 2004 hitch, awning, dual $32,977 Navion RV 2008, pump, 4-3" hoses, This Convertible batteries, sleeps 4-5, Sprinter chassis 25'. camlocks, $25,000. ROBBERSON with hard & soft top, advertising tip Mercedes Benz diesel, EXCELLENT CON541-820-3724 LINcoLN ~ I ssssa Hummer H22006 silver with black DITION. All accesbrought to you by 24,000 miles, pristine interior, cond., quality through- sories are included. 932 541 -382-4521 The Bulletin all original, V ictory TC 9 2 c i $14,51 1 OBO. out, rear slide-out w/ sernng central oregon sincerss DLR¹0205 Antique & very low mileage, 541 -382-9441 2002, runs great, queen bed, deluxe in premium condition. captain swivel front Classic Autos 40K mi., Stage 1 $19,900. seats, diesel generator, Performance Kit, FORD F-150 XLT 702-249-2567 awning, no pets/ RV n ew tires, r e a r (car is in Bend) no smoking. SUT au t o 4 - s pd. CONSIGNMENTS brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 6.0L V-B, less than $75,500. WANTED 541-771-0665 541-382-2430 88k mi., 4x4, leather We Do The Work ... 1921 Model T Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr seats. VIN¹ 101123 OPEN ROAD 36' You Keep The Cash! Delivery Truck (longer style) sedan, 2005 $25,500 $26,977 On-site credit silver, black leather, 4.2L 870 Restored 8 Runs King bed, hide-a-bed approval team, V8, AT, AC, fully loaded 2013 S u percrew$9000. ROBBERSON g Boats & Accessories sofa, 3 slides, glass + moonroof. Runs great, web site presence. cab! le ss than Bk 541-389-8963 shower, 10 gal. wa~m arr r a reliable, always garaged, We Take Trade-Ins! mi., 5.01 VB, 4WD. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. Free Advertising. Vin¹E12866 541 -382-4521 fridge, central vac, Front/side airbags, BIG COUNTRY RV $30,977 Providence2005 DLR¹0205 s atellite dish, 2 7 " non-smoker. $7900. Bend: 541-330-2495 Fully loaded, 35,000 TV/stereo syst., front 541-350-9938 Redmond: ROBBERSON miles, 350 Cat, Very front power leveling 541-548-5254 LINcoLN ~ I ssssa clean, non-smoker, Pa Jeep Wrangler 2011 jacks and s cissor Nfazda3 201 2 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, 3 slides, side-by-side Unlimited Rubicon stabilizer jacks, 16' 541 -382-4521 inboard motor, g reat refrigerator with ice awning. Like new! Buick Skylark 1972 DLR¹0205 cond, well maintained, maker, Washer/Dryer, 541-419-0566 Please see Bend $8995obo. 541-350-7755 Flat screen TV's, In iftll Craigslist for details and motion satellite. more photos. Ads published in the $95,000 $18,900. "Boats" classification 541-480-2019 541-323-1898 Sport, 5 spd, leather include: Speed, fishLeather trimmed Tango 29.6' 2007, seats, hatchback, ing, drift, canoe, seat, 4 spd auto, RV Rear living, walkFWD. 68,398 mi. house and sail boats. Ford F250 Camper SpeVin¹611550 CONSIGNMENTS around queen bed, vin¹532282 For all other types of cial 1966, AT w/limited $32,977 WANTED Recreation by Design watercraft, please go central air, awning, slip rear end. A few is$1 7,977 We Do The Work ... 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft sues but runs good. Full to Class 875. 1 large slide, ROBBERSON y Top living room, 2 bdrm, You Keep The Cash! ROBBERSON 541-385-5809 steel rack w/drs. $1950 I I II C 0 I5 ~ Ie s m a $12,000. has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, On-site credit firm, cash. 541-420-0156 LINcoLN ~ l sssss 541-280-2547 or entertainment center, approval team, 541 -382-4521 541-815-4121 servin central ore on since 19ra fireplace, W/D, web site presence. 541 -382-4521 DLR¹0205 Ford F-350 4x4, garden tub/shower, in We Take Trade-Ins! DLR ¹0205 WANTED: Able-bodied great condition.$36,000 Free Advertising. Cadillac crew members to sail or best offer. Call Peter, Lexus GX 460 2010 8®~ Looking for your BIG COUNTRY RV Winchester Bay Oregon Bend: 4WD, Premium Sport. 307-221-2422, Eldorado, 1978 next employee? 541-330-2495 Mazda CX-7i 201 1 to San Francisco in New brakes, tires, ¹002691 $36,988 Place a Bulletin help Redmond: June or Julv, 2014. AILL DELIV/R axles, needs paint & 541-548-5254 wanted ad today and Mark, 541-233-8944 vinyl top. Very good reach over 60,000 2006 XLT 4-door condition. $2200 readers each week. RV Crew Cab 875 obo, cash. Call for Your classified ad CONSIGNMENTS 541-598-3750 Get your full details! Watercraft will also appear on WANTED www.aaaoregonauto6.0L Turbo diesel, full 541-678-5575 business bendbulletin.com We Do the Work, source.com Sport, 5 spd, Bluepower, a u tomatic, ds published in "Wawhich currently reYou Keep the Cash! tooth, remote pwr 6-disc CD, cruise, fog tercraft" include: Kayceives over 1.5 milOn-site credit Toyota Highlander 2012 locks, less than 25k lights, running boards, AWD 15,540 mi. aks, rafts and motor- e ROW I N G lion page views evapproval team, mi., vin¹368668 tow pkg, bedliner, grill Ized personal ery month at no web site presence. ¹161242 $24,988 guard, folding rear $17,977 watercrafts. For with an ad in extra cost. Bulletin We Take Trade-Ins! seat. Tan cloth inte"boats" please see Free Advertising. Classifieds Get Rerior, metallic tan exteROBBERSON The Bulletin's Class 870. sults! Call 385-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV rior. 91,400 miles. LI N c0 IN ~ I sssss "Call A Service Chevy Silverado 2001, or place your ad Bend: 541-330-2495 541-385-5809 nice truck, but has blown Priced to sell $21,500 541-598-3750 Professional" on-line at Redmond: 541-382-4521 engine. Make reasonwww.aaaoregonauto541-548-5254 541-350-6925 DLR ¹0205 bendbulletin.com Directory Serving Central Oregon since 1903 able offer. 541-385-5685 source.com 850
Auto m obiles
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652
LIIICOLN ~
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Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt O 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648
Mercury Grand Marquis 1997, 75K mi, very nice, $3000. 541-385-6823
Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires.$2000. 541-389-9377
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
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•
The Bulletin
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The Bulletin
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully ser-
viced, garaged,
looks and runs like new. Excellent condition$29,700 541-322-9647 Porsche 911 Turbo
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700. 541-322-9647
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928 Subaru Legacy 2012 3.6R Limited. 26k mi. ¹004365 $2 2 ,988
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Toyota Celica Convertible 1 993
GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993
V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 AWD, sunroof, lux/winter pkgs, new tires, more! $6775 obo.541-330-5818
MI Hlcoj!SI©
000 1000
Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE
Sub-Bids Requested Rite Aid Redmond, OR Bids Due: March 18, 2014 O 10:00am
Scope of Work: The project includes a n ew, g round u p , 17,400 sf pharmacy with masonry walls, a steel roof structure, TPO/built up roofing, finishes, p l u mbing, HVAC, fire sprinkler, electrical. Construction type: VB non-rate with automatic f ire suppression system. Questions: Call Matt Winkler at 503.444.0661 or email mwinklerojrabbott com
We are an equal opportunity e m ployer and request sub-bids from minority, women, d isadvantaged a n d emerging small business enterprises. CCB ¹54656
E6 TUESDAY MARCH 11 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
•
•
Gibson Electric Guitar
Leathey CoUch S
201 1 Gibson Limited
SG Melody Maker
Electric Guitar, made h USA. Maple body, satin with grain textured s
finish. Oneuolumecontrol and solidly designed wraparound tailpiece. $395 541-000-000
„nt,i lt sells
Italian soft l hair ottomanandco h set. Excellent condition: no tears, stains. Very omtortableWas$.7600 ew, offering foronly
or up to 8 weeks ( h jgheQey COmeS <jyS~
item Prl<ed at.
$700 547-000-000
Your Total Ad Cost onl
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16.3 Oz Selected Varieties
160z,4 Pack, Selected Varieties
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16 Oz Selected Varieties
12 Oz Selected Varieties
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PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, MAR 11,2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND
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FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, MAR 11,2014 IPAGE 3
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P~ G~, SPECIAI.S.
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FOSTERFARMS WHOLE BAGGED CHICKEN
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• Food Stamps
$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, MAR 11,2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND
• WIC Vouchers We reserve the right to limit quantities
• Manufacturer's Coupons