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WEPNESPAY February12,2014
oar NSaiSin QC I SPORTS • C1
Vista Butte OUTDOORS • D1-
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
MIRROR POND
Dam to e
Ski aid —Justin wadsworth, a Bend resident and coachfor TeamCanada,comes totheaid of a Russian skier.CS
Odituary —shirley Temple
ixe
Black, child star who lifted the nation during the Depression. BS
Nazi diary —Alengthy search unearths the chilling document thought lost.AS
in Apri
ByTylerLeeds sThe Bulletin
While colleges sprint to stay up with the digital habits of students, old-fashioned paper brochures
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
Nordic options — Mt. Hood Meadows'15 kilometers are good in adown year. D3
still remain essential to recruiting efforts. But how do you sell a school that doesn't even exist yet?
PacifiCorp announced
That's the question Oregon State University-Cascades Campus has just answered with the release
on'Ittesday that it will repair the leak in Mirror Pond
of what administrators call their "freshman brochure." Targeting the first set of students who will
dam in April, in time for people to enjoy higher water levels on the Deschutes
attend OSU-Cascades for four years starting in 2015, the brochure spends equal space offering views into the college's classrooms and of the expanse of mountains and snow neighboring Bend. SeeOSU /A4
River this summer. One of the wooden panels
inthe dambegan leaking in October, and since then, the water level has sunk, leav-
Look closely —Testyour knowledge of Bendwith our "Where am I?" quiz. beudbulletiu.cem/guesswhere
ln national news — Gop
ing visible the mud flats that have been building up in
APeek at OSU'SPitCh
the Mirror Pond section of
These imagesarefrom anew brochure targeted atrecruiting OSU-Cascades' first-ever freshman class.Here'swhat it includes andwhy,according to university officials.
the river. The utility stopped generatingpower at the
R ecreation vs. education > Administrators acknowledgethat earlier in the university's history, therewasa concern thatOSU-Cascades'proximity to recreation overshadowedits academics. But, Communications Director Christine Coffin said, "With thestrength and breadth of ourprogramsnow,that's nota concern."
leaders allow debt deal.A2
dam after it discovered the
leak, and executives have been meeting with a Bend city councilor and the exec-
utive director of the Bend Park & Recreation District
I< ~gyH gLg EDGE
EDITOR'SCHOICE •
Openly gay Scout earns Eagle ranking By Theresa Vargas
to discuss thepossibility of transferring ownership of the dam to a government
agency. PacifiCorp plans to install a steel sheet piling upstream of the leaking panel, accordingto a news release from the utility.
.
•
•
•
Once the dam isrepaired, PacifiCorp will again begin generating electricity at the dam, Mark Tallman, PacifiCorp's vice president for
. v
. •
•
•
A Spotlight onsustainadility OSU-Cascades wantsstudentstoknow thatsustainability and theoutdoors play arole in thecurriculum. Both theenergy systems engineering and sustainability degreeprogramsare gearedtoward growing industries in the region.
renewable resources, said •
I
.
.
I
•
~
ig iig~
in the release. SeeMirror Pond/A8
•
The Washington Post
History passed quickly in a Chevy Chase, Md., church Monday night. During a regular meeting of Boy Scout Troop 52,thescoutmasteran-
17
students per / class on average
300
nounced thata member
had earned the coveted Eagle Scout ranking. He
18
And with that, Pascal Tes-
a new policy that went into effect last month. "It's just really amazing, and it honestly hasn't really sunk in yet," said Tessier,
< Snapshot ofthe student experience "We want to give students a snapshot of life
stand and receive a badge.
Scouts' highest rank under
Felipe Delatorre
sunny days on average each year
invited the 17-year-old to
sier was recognized as one of the nation's first openly gay youths to achieve the
uu
20
here, and that has to do with the weather and
bachelor degree
34o/o
BOW
of OSU-Cascadesstudents participate in internships, practicumsand study abroad programs
minutes to
t. Bachelor
minors and options
resources as well as the classes andacademic opportunities," admissions adviser DannyCecchini said. "Skiing and snowboarding are a part of Bend — wewant students to take advantage of that."
to happen at alL" See Scout/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER ~~
Ligh t rain High 46, Low 36 Page B6
INDEX Business C7-8 Calendar B2 Classified Ef-6 Comics/ Puzzles E3-4 Crosswords E4
Dear Abby D6 Local/State Bf-6 Obituaries B5 Outdoors Df-6 Sports Cf -6 TV/Movies D6
The Bulletin
8
898 Oregon
The university based personal expenses onnational averages and used COCC'sdorm to offer an estimate of what its future residence hall will cost.
residents
by Jeff VanderMeer that
was released last week, tells the story of a scientific
•
$
$
I
has been cut off from the rest of the world. Fans who want to know what happens in the sec-
ond book won't be on tenterhooks for long. That book, "Authority,"
will come out in May, only months after the first book. •
Resident tuition and fees' $7,071
Books and supplies $1,965
On its heels is the third nov-
•
Personal expenses 52,577
Housing and meals"" 5e,600
el, "Acceptance," tobe published in early September. While the television in-
to impatient audiences by re-
leasing entire series at once, thebookbusiness is upend-
On the Weh —View the university's "Oregon State with an edge" webpage atusucascades.edu/edge Sources:Bulletin reporting and interviews. Brochure imagescourtesy oeu-cascades.
Tyler Leedsand David Wray i The Bulletin
ing its traditional timetable. SeeBooks/A6
What the jobless donow that benefits have ended
vol. 112, No. 43, 34 pages, 5sections
WASHINGTON — The end to federal jobless benefits
Q i/l/e use recycied newsprint
for nearly2 millionpeople has sparked abitter debatein
88 267 02329
"Annihilation," the chill-
ing first novel of a trilogy
dustryhas begun catering
By Ylan Q. Mui
o
4
> Calculating the cost
An IndependentNewspaper
:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII
•
Total students .. Undergraduate studen Graduatestudents...
By Julie Bosman New York Times News Service
expedition to a mysterious place called Area X that
a senior at Bethesda-Chevy
Chase High School. "We didn't know if it was going
Short-order books, set for bingeing
It is also providing real-time answers to a question economists have long pondered: How do people survive when they suddenly have no money commg m?
Security or other government
Congress about whether Wash-
Studies showthat about a
with more-idiosyncratic solu-
ingtonis abandoningdesperate households or simplyprotecting
thiMof thepeoplecutoff from long-termunemploymentbenefits will findhelp from Social
The Washington Post
strained government coffers.
programs. Others willcobble together dwindling savings or support from family. But most
bafflingtoeconomists arethe people who appear to come up tions, whicharetoughto identify and almostimpossible to track. Take Wessita McKinley of
Capitol Heights, Md. She had to think outside thebox after her contract with a local school
board ended last summer. An Air Force veteran, she earned a six-figure salary as a private contractorbefore therecession. But she took a series of increasingly low-paying jobs as the economy soured.
Nowthat her unemployment
benefits aregone, McKinleyrelies onwhat she calls"legal hustling"topayherbills andkeep her daughterincollege: helping friends' children fill out financial
aid forms, driving friends on errands, entering data for small businesses — allfor afee. SeeJobless /A6
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
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Unwilling to spook the markets and divided among themselves, House Republicans backed away from a battle over the government's debt limit Tuesday and permitted
President Barack Obama's Democratic allies to drive quick passage of a measure extending Treasury's borrowing authority without any concessions from the White House.
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Speaker John Boehner announced that his fractured party would relent. Just 28 Republicans voted for the
measure, including Boehner and his top lieutenants. But 193 Democrats more than compensated for the low
support among Republicans. Senate Democrats hoped to vote on the legislation as early as to-
day and send it to Obama for his signature. The move was denounced by many conservative groups but came after most Republicans in the House
I
made clear they had no taste for an- Washington defused a government other high-stakes fight with Obama shutdown and debt crisis that burned over the nation's debt ceiling, which Republicans politically — an experimust beraised so the government ence they did not want to repeat. can borrow money to pay all of its The White House applauded Tuesday's vote. bills. "Tonight's vote is a positive step The bill would permit the Treasury Department to borrow normally for in moving away from the political another 13 months, putting off the
brinkmanship that's a
n e e dless
chance of a debt crisis well past the drag on our economy," White House November elections and providing spokesman Jay Carney said. He said time for a newly elected Congress to Congress should now take additiondecide how to handle the issue. al steps to strengthen the economy Just Monday, Republicans sug- and pressed efforts by Obama and gested pairing the debt measure with Democrats to restore jobless benefits legislation to roll back a recent cut in to the long-term unemployed and to the inflation adjustment of pension increase the minimum wage. benefits for working age military reTuesday's developments, which tirees. Democrats insisted on a debt many Capitol Hill insiders saw commeasure completely clean of unrelat- ing, mark a reversal of the GOP's ed legislation. strategy of trying to use the debt lim"The full faith and credit (of the it to force spending cuts or other conUnited States) should be unques- cessions on Obama. The president tioned and it is not negotiable," said yielded to such demands in 2011House Minority Leader Nancy Pelo- before his re-election — but has since si, D-Calif. boxed in Republicans by refusing to The vote comes four months after negotiate.
Si oii.AvL
Dtsouies re
SCORES DEAD IN ALGERIAN PLANE CRASH ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
the very few countries whereeuthanasia is legal, is expected to take theunprecedented step this week of abolishing agerestrictions on who can ask to be put to death —extending the right to children for the first time. Thelegislation appears to have wide support in the largely liberal country. But it has also aroused intense opposition from foes — including a list of pediatricians — and everyday people whohavestaged noisy street protests, fearing that vulnerable children will be talked into making a final, irreversible choice. GeOrgia Starm —President Barack Obamadeclared a state ofemergency in Georgia onTuesday as the southern stateawaitedwhat the National Weather Service called apotentially "crippling" ice and snow storm "of historical proportions." The roads in Atlanta, usually cloggedwith traffic, were unusually quiet at middayTuesday asstudents and workers stayed home to await a storm that could potentially knock out power insomeareasfor days. FraCking rIIISS —TheObamaadministration on Tuesdaymovedto exert morecontrol over the injection of dieselfuel deepunderground to extract oil and natural gas,its first foray into addressingthe potential contamination ofwater fromthecontroversial technique.TheEnvironmental Protection Agency has little authority to regulate fluids used inhydraulic fracturing, or fracking, which involvespumping water lacedwith chemicals into shaleformations to unlock trappedoil andgas. Butthe agency has been allowed since2005 to regulate the useof diesel in fracking. Until Tuesday, ithadnot doneso. Syrian COnfliCt —Aid workers failed to evacuate anyone from blockaded rebel-held neighborhoods in the central Syrian city of Homs on Tuesday or deliver any food, increasing pressure on them to complete theambitious humanitarian operation before a fragile truce expires, activists and Syrian RedCrescent officials said. More than 1,000 civilians havealready left the embattled districts, which havebeenunder siegefor 20 months by government forces andsuffer from widespread hunger. Thethree-day truce that allowed the U.N.Red Crescent operation wasextended to six days, now expiring at midnight today.
'ChOOSelife' plateS — Afederal appeals
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court on Tuesday ruled that North Carolina's attempt to offer a"Choose Life" license plate and not offer an abortion-rights plate was unconstitutional. The U.S.Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled in a 3-0 opinion written by Judge James Wynn of North Carolina.
TALK TO AN EDITOR
Nazi-era art —Dozensmoremasterpieces by
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artists such asPablo Picasso andClaudeMonet havebeendiscovered inasecondhome belonging to the elderly Germanrecluse whose Munich apartment yielded anastonishing trove of more than1,400 artworks, including somebelieved plundered by theNazis. Theadditional 60 pieces were kept inside Cornelius Gurlitt's home in Salzburg, Austria, about two hours' drive from his apartment in southern Germany.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
043064Os7 O n073 O
e
The estimated jackpot is now $139 million.
Mohamed Ali I The Associated Press
People watch rescueworkers at the wreckage of anAlgeriThe ministry gave no estimate of the number of passenan military transport aircraft Tuesdayafter it slammed into a gers on board, but different Algerian news outlets reported mountain in the country's rugged eastern region. that at least102 people had been on the plane, including the By nightfall rescuers had recovered at least 77 bodies and crew. Some people at the scene said the number could be one survivor, according to Algerian National Television. higher. It was the first major crash in the country in more than a The crash site was in themountainous province of OumEl decade. Bouaghi, about 300 miles from Algiers, the country's capital. In a statement, the Algerian Ministry of National DefensedeThe military's statement said the planehadgone down in scribed the crash as a"tragic accident" and said that the plane, apparently horrendous weather conditions in which there was a LockheedC-130Hercules, a widely used U.S.-made military a storm and cascading snow, which Algerian aviation experts transport craft, had beencarrying members of the military and said most likely had led to poor visibility. their families. — New YorkTimesNews Service
Holder pushes for felonsto get voting rights back By Adam Goldman
fort underway by the Justice Desociety. He pointed to a recent study partment to overhaul the criminal
harder for them to reintegrate into
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Attorney Gen-
that showed that felons in Florida
justice system, which U.S. officials
eral Eric Holder on Tuesday called who were granted the right to vote on states to repeal laws that prohibit again had a lower recidivism rate. "These restrictions are not only former felons from voting after their release from prison,urging changes unnecessary and unjust, they are that could allow millions more for- also counterproductive," Holder mer convicts across the country to said. "By perpetuating the stigma cast ballots. and isolation imposed on formerly In a speech at Georgetown Uni- incarcerated individuals, these laws versity Law Center, Holder said, "It increase the likelihood they will
say often treats minority groups unfairly.
is time to fundamentally reconsider
because of current or previous felony convictions. Of those, nearly 38
laws that permanently disenfranchise people who are no longer under federal or state supervision."
Holder said that current laws forbidding felons from voting make it
commit future crimes."
Holder does not have the authority to force states to change their
The attorney general said that after the Civil War, laws that prohibit
KOrean tenSianS —Senior officials from the rival Koreas met today at aborder village, their highest-level talks in years and a potential signal that Pyongyangwants better ties andthe resumption of lucrative cooperative projects. Seoul officials said the meeting was requested by North Korea, which has launched arecent charm offensive after raising tensions last spring with repeated threats to fire nuclear-tipped missiles against Seoul andWashington.
Ritual killing —Twoteenageboys were hoping to make adeal with the devil when they sexually assaulted and killed a15-year-old suburban Houston girl in a satanic ritual, a prosecutor said Tuesday.Seventeen-year-old Jose Reyesand a16-year-old boy areaccused of disfiguring the girl's body, including carving an upside downcrucifix on her stomach. Reyesandthe16-year-old boy,whose name isnotbeingreleased because he is a juvenile, eachface acapital murder charge for the death of Corriann Cervantes.
BrakaW CanCer — Veteran TVnewsmanTom Brokaw hasbeendiagnosed with cancer, NBC News saidTuesday.TheMayo Clinic discovered last summer that Brokawhas multiple myeloma, acancer affecting blood cells in thebonemarrow, NBC News said. His doctors areoptimistic about his treatment andencouraged by his progress since the August diagnosis, the network division said. In a statement released byNBC,Brokaw said he remains, in his words, "the luckiest guy I know."
former felons from voting were a way for post-Reconstruction states
to keep blacks from casting ballots. Today, an estimated 5.8 million Americans are not allowed to vote percent are black.
laws, but his request could influence The Justice Department said that the debate to restore voting rights. 23 states since 1997 have enacted His appeal is part of a broader ef- voting rights overhauls.
PakiStani attaCk —A series of blasts struck a crowded movie theater in Peshawar, Pakistan, on Tuesday, killing 11 peopleandwounding 17 others, police said. Theattack at Shama Cinema, which occurred asabout100 moviegoers were watching a film, was the latest in a spateof explosions that havemarred the Pakistani government's nascent attempts to enter into peacetalks with a banned Islamist militant group. — From wire reports
With Hollandevisiting, Obamawarns companies on Iran "Businesses may be explor- ernment had no control over ing, are there some possibilities whether French businesses horse race to get back into that to get in sooner rather than lat- made a private trip, noting, country, and could fracture the er if and when there is an actual "The president of the republic is international sanctions regime agreementtobe had," Obama not the president of the employcobbled together by the U.S. said at a White House news ers' union in France." and Europe. conference with Hollande. "But It was a r are moment of Administration of fic i a ls I can tell you that they do so at tension in a joint appearance have complained publicly and their own peril right now be- in which both leaders tried to privately to French officials, cause we will come down on project an image of trans-Atand Obama delivered the most them like aton ofbricks." lantic harmony, celebrating a pointedwarningyet, even as he Hollande said he had warned rejuvenated French-American welcomed President Franr„ois the companies not to sign com- partnership on issues from Iran Hollande for a state visit replete mercial agreements with Iran and Syria to counterterrorism with symbols of French-Ameri- before sanctions were lifted. operations in North Africa. can amity. But he said the French govOn Syria, however, that part-
By Mark Landler
that the interim nuclear agree-
New York Times News Service
ment with Iran is setting off a
W ASHINGTON —
Wit h
the French president looking on, President Barack Obama
vowed 'Ittesday to come down on companies that evade sanctions against Iran "like a ton of
bricks." He spoke a week after a delegation of French corporate executives traveled to Teh-
ran looking for business opportunities amid diplomatic efforts to reach a nuclear deal. The French executives' visit
to Tehran has crystallized fears
nership has done little to ease the bloodshed and deepening despair — a fact acknowledged by Obama and Hollande, who devoted much of their meeting to the crisis but emerged with
no new ideas for ending the civilwar,beyond a generalpledge to keep supporting the moderate opposition. "We still have a horrendous situation on the ground in Syr-
ia," Obama said, adding later that "nobody's going to deny there is enormous frustration
here."
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday,Feb.12,the 43rd day of 2014. Thereare 322 days left in the year.
IN PERSPECTIVE
HAPPENINGS District Court judge hears arguments in a caseseeking to overturn Texas' ban ongay marriage.
Syria —An extendedceasefire for the city of Homsexpires at midnight.A2
HISTORY Highlight:In1809, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was born in present-day LarueCounty, Ky. In1554, Lady JaneGrey, who'd claimed the throne of England for nine days, andher husband, Guildford Dudley, were beheadedafter being condemned for high treason. In1818, Chile officially proclaimed its independence, more than sevenyears after initially renouncing Spanish rule. In1909, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored Peoplewas founded. In1912,Pu Yi (poo yee), the last emperor of China, abdicated, marking the end of the Qing Dynasty. In1914,groundbreaking took place for the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.(Ayear later on this date, the Memorial's cornerstone was laid.) In1924,George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue" premiered in New York. In1940,the radio play "The Adventures of Superman" debuted with BudCollyer as the Man of Steel. In1959, the redesigned Lincoln penny — with an image of the Lincoln Memorial replacing two ears of wheat on the reverse side —wentinto circulation. In1963, President John F. Kennedy celebrated the100th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation with a reception at the White House. A Northwest Orient Airlines Boeing 720 broke upduring severe turbulence andcrashed into the Florida Everglades, killing all 43 people aboard. In1973, Operation Homecoming began asthe first release of American prisoners of war from the Vietnam conflict took place. In1994,the17th Winter Olympic Gamesopened in Lillehammer, Norway. Aversion of Edvard Munch's painting "The Scream" wasstolen from the National Gallery in Oslo, Norway (it was recovered a few months later in a sting operation). In1999, the Senatevoted to acquit President Bill Clinton of perjuryand obstruction of justice. Ten years ago:Defying a California law, SanFrancisco officials began performing weddings for same-sex couples. Four menwerecharged in a 42-count indictment alleging they'd run a steroid-distribution ring that provided performance-enhancing drugs to dozens of athletes in the NFL, the major leaguesandtrack and field. (All four later pleaded guilty to drug charges.) Five years alo:Saying "I made mi a stake,"Sen.Judd Gregg, R-N.H., abruptly withdrew his nomination as President BarackObama's commerce secretary. One year ago:The manhunt for rogue ex-Los Angeles cop Christopher Dorner came toan end with his apparent suicide in a mountain cabin following a gunbattle with law enforcement; authorities blamed Dorner for killing four people, including two officers.
BIRTHDAYS Baseball Hall-of-Famesportscaster Joe Garagiola is 88. Basketball Hall-of-Famer Bill Russell is 80. Author Judy Blume is 76. Actor-talk show host Arsenio Hall is 58. Actor Josh Brolin is 46. NFLquarterback Robert Griffin III is 24. Actresses Baylie andRylie Cregut (TV: "Raising Hope") are 4. — From wire reports
New 'climate hLjbs' will
ime,
SQU 0
Gay marriage —U A.s.
RESEARCH
provide data tofarmers
ace in
OU 0
By Eli Kintisch Agriculture wants to pro-
en applications for other federal research funding, she adds. Such relationships have
vide more useful data on
been a staple of the exten-
climate to farmers, ranchers, and others affected by climate change. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced last week that he is designating seven so-called "climate hubs" at federal agriculture laboratories across
sion system which has linked USDA, local farmers and
the country that will seek to
beneficial forfarmers. For ex-
create more useful climate data and disseminate it more broadly. USDA already dedicates about $120 million to climate
ample, hubs could help visu-
research, Vilsack told report-
hasn't"beenput into this kind
Science/AAAS
The U.S. Department of
Camels are ubiquitous in the Bible. In reality, though, the domestic pack animals likely had little or no role in the lives of early Jewish patriarchs such as Abraham, Jacob and Joseph.
universities since the 19th century. But agriculture data
and outreach specialist Al Sutherland o f
Ok l a homa
State University says a deeper rolefor the feds could be alize data in ways that make it more useful to the public.
Researchers have long had access to such data, but it
ers at a news briefing. The of picture that people could new effort "will add on top of readily understand," says that," he said. But initially the
Sutherland, who works at
addition will most likely involve reassignment of USDA research personnel and funding, officials say, not new
Oklahoma State's Mesonet, which creates forecasts and
money. Theshifted resources will be used to build websites,
other "data products" using
weather stations and federal climatological data. (The precipitation and t emperature
convene groups of stakehold- data are updated yearly at ers and possibly create new http://climate.ok.gov.) forecasts, databases,and othFor example, in the case of er tools. The hope is that the the precipitation data, which work will better inform scientists within USDA and other
was first publicized in 2004, both scientists and farmers
departments on what farm-
had been thinking in terms of widely available 30-year averages, which can be misleading. In contrast, the new 100-year perspective showed a local wheat breeder, for example, that the cultivars he had been developing over the previous decades werebiased
ers, ranchers, and foresters
need to know to prepare and adapt to a shifting reality.
Allauddin Khan/The Associated Press file photo
Israeli biblical scholar Noam Mizrahi says the Bible features too many camels, an anachronism that serves as evidence the Bible was written or edited well after the events it narrates and is not always reliable as verifiable history.
The nation must "be able to
adapt andmitigate, because if we don't, our economy is going to be impacted," Vilsack said last Wednesday at the White House. "Those 16 mil- toward c o nditions w e tter lion people that are depend- than the average over the preing upon agriculture and for- vious century. estry, they want to make sure Oklahoma's historical fluc-
By John Noble Wilford
Wadi Finan in Jordan. They development," Ben-Yosef said sought evidence of when do- in a telephone interview. "The There are too many camels mesticated camels were first camel enabled long-distance
New York Times News Service
in the Bible, out of time and out
introducedinto the land of Isra-
trade for the first time, all the
of place. Camels probably had little or
eland thesurrounding region.
way to India, and perfume
no role in the lives of such early
The camel's domestication
trade with Arabia. It's unlikely
that they continue to have a
that mules and donkeys could
B.C. camels had become widely employed in trade and travel
job because we're continuing tions were suddenly apparto produce and create new ent.The wheat breeder "improducts. mediately added a drought "USDA hasn't really priori- assessment of the wheat tized getting this information strains to his tasks," Sutherto stakeholders before," says land says. agricultural m eteorologist That move now seems preEugene Takle of Iowa State scient, because parts of OklaUniversity. homa have subsequently fallAmong those with new en into serious drought. By marching orders is research the same token, farmers and
in Israel and through the Mid-
meteorologist Jeanne Schnei-
dleEast,from Africa asfaras
der of USDA's Grazinglands management practices and R esearch Laboratory in El the varieties of crops they Reno, Okla. Of late, she's grew had been developed been publishing research during an extended wet spell. on the usefulnessof federal Federally provided temforecast data for agricultural perature data stretching back decisions, but the announce- to 1895 has also provided im-
Jewishpatriarchs as Abraham, The archaeologists, Erez have traversed the distance Jacob and Joseph, who lived in B en-Yosef an d L i d a r S a - from one desert oasis to the the first half of the second mil-
pir-Hen, u sed
r a d iocarbon next."
lennium B.C., and yet stories dating to pinpoint the earliest Mizrahi, a professor of Heabout them mention these do- known domesticated camels brew culture studies at Tel Aviv mesticated pack animals more than 20 times. Genesis 24, for
in Israel to the last third of the 10th century B.C. — centuries
University who was not direct-
example, tells of Abraham's servant going by camel on a mission to find a wife for Isaac. These anachronisms are
after the patriarchs lived and decadesafter the kingdom of David, according to the Bible. Some bones in deeper sediments, they said, probably belonged to wild camels that people hunted for their meat. Sapir-Hen could identify a domesticated animal by signs in leg bones that it had carried heavyloads. The findings were published
that by the seventh century
telling evidence that the Bible
was written or edited long after the events it narrates and is not
always reliable as verifiable history. These camel stories "do not encapsulate memories from the second millennium,"
ly involved in the research, said
India. The camel's influence on
biblical research was profound, if confusing, for that happened to be the time that the patriarchal stories were committed
to writing and eventually can-
said Noam Mizrahi, an Israeli biblical scholar, "but should recently in the journal Tel Aviv be viewed as back-projections and in a news release from Tel from a much later period." Aviv University. The archaeMizrahi likened the practice ologists said that the origin of to a historical account of me- the domesticated camel was dieval events that veers off to probably in the Arabian Pena description of "how people insula, which borders the Arain the Middle Ages used semi- vah Valley. Egyptians exploittrailers in order to transport ed the copper resources there goods from one European and probably had a hand in kingdom to another." introducing the camels. EarliFor two archaeologists at Tel er, people in the region relied
onized as part of the Hebrew Bible.
ment that her lab will host
rush to the conclusion that the
outreach role.As leader of
new archaeological findings automatically deny any histor-
the hub, she'll be able to call on tech assistance, secretari-
Aviv University, the anachro-
ern economic system. But this does not mean that these very
on mules and donkeys as their
Are Pacific windsbehind global-warmingslowdown? By Alex Morales Bloomberg News
LONDON — Stronger Pacif-
ic Ocean winds may help explain the slowdown in the rate of global warming since the turn of the century, scientists said. More powerful winds in the past 20 years may be forcing warmer seas deeper and bringing cooler water to the
plaininghowthat heat couldbe getting there. "The net effect o f
t h ese
anomalous winds is a cooling in the 2012 global average surface airtemperature of 0.1-0.2 count for much of the hiatus
in surface warming observed since 2001," the researchers wrote. They're led by Matthew
England, a professor of oceanthe U.S. and Australia said Sat- ography at the University of urday in the journal Nature. New South Wales in Australia. global temperature by as much as 0.2 degrees Celsius (0.36 degrees Fahrenheit) since 2001. Scientists have been trying to find out why the rate of global warming has eased in the past 20 years while greenhouse — gasemissions havesurgedto
portant contextfor farmers
"One should be careful not to
data give farmers a sense of
"Rather, they established that
the natural range of temperature. It shows that the coolest al time and portions of her year was 57 degrees Fahrcolleagues' time to launch a enheit on average and the website and new databases warmest year (63 degrees).
these traditions were indeed
on relevant projects, experts
ical value from the biblical stories," Mizrahi said in an email.
and data sources."We hope to be a convening force, which should help people within the farming, ranching, and research communities
reformulated in relatively late periodsafter camels had been integrated into the Near East-
know what others are doing,"
Over the next century, cli-
mate model scenarios predict the state's average temperatures could increase by about
3 to 9 degrees. That means that future years could be warmer than the warmest
she says. Such collaborations years experienced in the temalso will hopefully strength- perature record.
OIA TUESDAYFEBRUARY18™from 4-7pm as Dr, Rebecca Nonweiler, M,D. Presents
AG E LESS BEAUTY INNOVATIONS
degree Celsius, which can ac-
surface, 10 researchers from
That has cooled the average
ranchers realized that their
one of the new hubs switch- thinking about future climate es her from a research to an change, Sutherland says. The
nisms were motivation to dig beasts ofburden. "The introduction of the traditions cannot capture other for camel bones at an ancient copper smelting camp in the cameltoourregion was avery details that have an older hisAravah Valley in Israel and in important economic and social toricalbackground."
STUDY
tuations into drought condi-
The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said in September that
Featuring Ultherapy, the non-surgical face-lift Space is limited RSVP 541-381-7311 to reserve your spot I I I
• • • •
•
•
the averagetemperature since 1998 has increased at less than half the rate since 1951. The
world has warmed by an average 0.05 degree per decade since 1998, compared with the
1951-2012 average of 0.12 deon a theory that deep seas are gree a decade, the UNIPCC absorbing more warmth by ex- SBld.
N OR T H W E S T
M ED I
SPA
a record. The paper elaborates
l as e
c en t er
541-31 8-731 1
.
•
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www.northwestmeciispa.com 447 NE Greenwood • B e n d
A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
UPDATE: SECURITY
's
eara er now en,
a as I a I' l s, I I 'Bc OI'sas By David E. Sanger and Eric Schmitt
gested that as a highly trained to possess could expose the systems administrator work- identities of undercover U.S. New York Times News Service ing for Booz Allen Hamilton, operatives as well as foreignWASHINGTON — The di- which providescomputer ser- ers who have been recruited rector of national intelligence vices to the agency, Snowden by U.S. spy agencies. acknowledged Tuesday that knew how to evade the protecThe information Snowden nearly a year after the con- tions in place. has released so far through tractor E d w ar d S n o wden "He knew exactly what he several newspapers and a new "scraped" highly classified was doing," Clapper said. "And digital news organization that documents from the National hewaspretty skilled at staying began publi shing on Monday Security Agency's networks, below the radar, so what he has not revealed the names the technology was not yet ful- was doing wasn't visible." of agents or operatives, and it ly in place to prevent another But Clapper confirmed the is unclear how much of that insider from stealing top-se- outlines of a New York Times information he took with him cret data on a similarly large report that the former NSA when he fledthe U.S. He is scale. contractor had used a web now in Russia. The director, James Clap- crawler, a commonly available Under questioning, Clapper, testifying before the Sen- piece of software, to sweep up per made dear that while the ate Armed Services Commit- a huge trove of documents. NSA has installed security uptee, said Snowden had taken Clapper also said, for the grades, not all locations have advantage of a "perfect storm" first time, that some of the in- the software and warning of security lapses. He also sug- formation Snowdenisbelieved systems that could detect mass
downloads of information. He did not address why the agency was not able to detect the web crawler, which indexed and copied all the data in its
path. He said it was likely that Snowden would have been
caught if he had been taking the information from inside NSA headquarters at Fort Me-
ade, Md., instead of at an outpost in Hawaii. "We are going to proliferate deployment of auditing and monitoring capabilities to enhance our insider threat de-
tection," he said. Such systems have already been widely used at some intelligence agencies, including the CIA, officials said.
OSU
ining the anatomy of a model
Continued from A1 Danny C e cchini, an OSU-Cascades admissions adviser, has boxes filled with the
age of students standing in a field of solar panels nods to the
skeleton. On the inside, an im-
brochuresstacked 7 feet high
in his Cascades Hall office. The distance between the boxes and the ceiling will grow as Cecchini heads out on the college recruiting circuit this spring, initially focusing on Oregon
Continued from A1 Tessier put his Eagle Scout
to visit, for a lot of them, they
"The brochure is, I like to
"At the end of the day, we are
think, a snapshot of life here," OSU, even if we're in Bend," CeCecchini said. "And what is cchini said. "That's what your definitely true about OSU-Cas- degree will say if you come cades is that our location is dif- here, so it's important people ferent. Students who enjoy out- see that."
slope of Broken Top. On the
What's harder to let future
Southwest Chandler Avenue members of this first freshman
back, a student walks through dass will be able to find their the snow with snowshoes on dasses, food and beds within his back and a snowboard in 146,000 square feet of building his hands. Inside, a graphic de- space. But that's all OSU-Casdares "20 minutes to Mt. Bach- cades knows at this point. The elor" and "300 sunny days on space is still trees and dirt, and average eachyear." the university hasn't even yet "Youknow, it's actuallyreally closed on a contiguous 46-acre
ed in a public demonstration in
advance of a vote held by the National Council of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) to determine whether to lift the or-
ganization's long-standing ban on gay members and leaders. Ultimately, the council voted to accept gay youths but not gay adults. Even as he celebrated Monday night, Tessier was well aware of how the partial policy change could affect him. He will turn 18 in August.
important to point out the sun-
"It's kind of a backhanded
acceptance: We accept you for
Evelyn Hockstein / For The Washington Post
Pascal Tessier receives his Eagle Scout badge Monday from Scoutmaster Don Beckham at the Ali Saints Church in Chevy Chase, Md. Tessier is believed the be the first openly gay Boy Scout to
There is no way to know if become an Eagle Scout under a new policy allowing gay Scouts. any other openly gay Scouts have become Eagle Scouts under the changed policy, which things might happen — one, Troop 52's scoutmaster, went into effect last month, but of course, that he would get Don Beckham, who recomadvocates believe Tessier is the kicked out, which would be mended Tessier for the Eafirst. a shame because he really gle ranking and presented "I don't know of any other wanted it," she said. "He'd been him with his badge Monday Scouts outtherewhohave said, dreaming about becoming night, called him "an excep'I am gay and I defy BSA to an Eagle since he was 7 years tional young man." kick me out' — and Pascal has old." During the review process,
sitting in your seat, being a scoutmaster? "You've asked me t h at
question in other boards, and you know I wouldn't bring you a Scout that wasn't wor-
thy," Beckham said he replied. "In this case, I can tell done that," said Eric Andresen, Felker comes to the issue Beckham said t h e b o ard you I hope more than anywhose gay son, Ryan, was de- in a unique position: Both of asked him: In 30 years, how thing that Pascal is in this nied Eagle Scout status in 2012 her sons are openly gay. Luc- would you feel about Tessier seat in 30 years." eventhough he had completed ien came out to his parents in all the requirements. 10th grade; Pascal came out Andresen, who is on the ex- two years later, while in eighth ecutive board of a group called grade. Scouts for Equality, said his Felker said the problem with son, now 19, was treated so the Boy Scout's new policy badly that he no longer talks is that it suggests something aboutit. changes in her children once
kl
they hit 18.
"What no one really wants able to get his award is directly because of what Ryan unfortu- to talk about is the suggestion nately went though," Andresen that gay adults are child abus-
site, aplot thatwillbe essentialto
shine, as a lot of out-of-state stu- theuniversity's long-termgoals. "It'll be terrific once we do dentsthink ofOregon as rainy and muddy," Cecchininoted. have iconic images of our camOSU-Cascades Communica- pus we can share, but we're not tions Director Christine Coffin there yet," Coffin said. "But, acknowledged that earlier in I don't think we're lacking in the university's history, there images that show our student was a concern the school's experience." proximity to recreation over-
While the i n formation is
shadowed its academics.
prominently displayed on" With t h e s t r ength a n d line and in more in-depth adbreadth of our programs now, missions literature, the brothat's not a concern," Coffin chure does not mention that said. "We believe we appeal to OSU-Cascades is not yet a fourstudents who not only want to year campus. "Four-year colleges don't say take advantage of the outdoors for fun and health, but for their 'we are a four-year college,'" studies, too." Coffin said. "Once we do have Coffin added that the school illustrations of the campus, wanted to make sure the bro- though, we will definitely take chure didn't "oversell the recre- advantage of those. Hopefully, ational opportunities" of Bend. they aren't too far off." To that end, below the image of
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
Broken Top is a student exam-
I
ers, andthat is infuriating," she sald. "It's impossible to believe that the creme de la creme of
rector of Scouts for Equality, said his organization plans to the Scouts, just because they continue pushing for the inclu- turn 18, are no longer suitable sion of gay adult leaders. Tessi- to participate intheprograms," er's achievement only helps the Felker said. cause, he said. Tessier said that his parents "We certainly think this is a and troop have always acceptday to celebrate," Wahls said. ed him and that he has only "As we see more Pascal Tes- seen the support swell since siers coming up though the speaking publicly on the issue. program, getting their Eagle Among the letters Tessier Scouts, other scouting par- received were two from Eagle ents and other scouting lead- Scouts offering up their badgers who might be a little more es to him. "It's
i nteresting t o
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nothing to be afraid of, that how ready the world was for Pascal is a phenomenal young change," he said. man andpeople like him make Aaron Chusid, a spokesman scoutingbetter." for the Boy Scouts' NationDeron Smith, a spokesman al Capital Area Council, said for the BSA, said that 55,000
the area has not seen much
young men earn the rank of
change in enrollment or funding since the policy changed.
Eagle Scouteach year and that
important to indude," Myers
On the front of the brochure and Century Drive roundabout. is a woman running down the Somewhere on that site by 2015,
he spoke to the news media about being gay and participat-
conservative will see there is
like, both inside and outside the dassroom," Coffin said.
are just too far away. That's said. "It's not just students, but whywe need the brochure." faculty go up the mountain, too. When creating a brochure, I'm glad they included it." universities always include Balancing recreation and what Cecchini calls "the pillars" academics wasn't the only — things such as academic pro- concern. The university also grams,demographics,dasssiz- worked with OSU in Corvallis es and cost. But when a college to ensure the brochure was recfair is packed with recruiters ognized as a product of OSU, hawking their own paper, you which is reflected in the black need a way to stand out. and orange color scheme.
and we want to show that off."
rank on the line last year when
said. Zach Wahls, who was an Eagle and is the executive di-
"We want to give students
an idea of what life here will be
and we also have an awesome freshman students see is what arts and music scene, good their campus will look like. Last shopping and food. College life week, OSU-Cascades dosed on happens outside the dassroom, a 10-acte wooded site near the
Scout
"The fact that Pascal is now
energy systems engineeri ng degrees.
How well did they do? Kat Myers, a sophomore enrolled and other states in the West. at both OSU-Cascades and "Brochures for any recruiter Central Oregon Community are a lifeline," he said. "They're College, said, "overall, pretty a portal into the world we have good. "The outdoor part is really here, and while we like students
door recreation will like it here,
now," he said. "It says to you you'rea monster of some sort."
university's sustainability and
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more than 2 million have done At 77 percent, the retention so since 1912. rate remains one the highest in " Our f ocus
r e mains o n
working together to deliver the nation's foremost youth program of character development and values-based leadership training," Smith said in a
the nation, he said. Chusid has not met Tessier,
who, along with his parents and classmates, held a demonstration a mile and a half from
the NCAC's headquarters in written statement. April, but he commended his Tessier's mother, Tracie accomplishment. "Here's a Scout that is standFelker, said that she had mixed feelings when her son decid- ing up in a very public way for ed to speak publicly about the what he believes is right, even ban. The family's photo album though he knew it might cost shows Tessier as young as him personally, and there is age 4 at scouting events with no better example of what we his older brother Lucien, who teach," Chusid said. achieved his Eagle ranking To achieve an Eagle Scout ranking, a boy must meet sevseveral years ago. "On the one hand, I was very eral criteria, including earning proud of him for standing up 21 merit badges, completing for his principles and especial- a community service project ly for speaking up for those and appearing before a board young people who didn't have of review.Tessier'sboard of rethe support he had," Felker view was on Jan. 24. said. A formal ceremony will be "On the other hand, I was held for him and fellow Eagles also anxious that several in June.
7
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A5
TODAY'SREAD: A LOST PIECE OF AN UNSPEAKABLE ERA
e un or eos azi ia By Richard Simon Los Angeles Times
"Seventeen years, and finally, I'm looking at it. • ..It was like finding the white whale. It doesn't get much better than this as an archivist." — Henry Mayer
WASHINGTON — Henry Mayer had long heard of the lost Nazi diary. Mayer helped maintain the vast collection of artifacts at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and knew the diary had been kept by Alfred Rosenberg, the Nazi Party's chief ideologue and a confidant of Adolf Hitler. The diary was found in the final days of World War II, hidden behind a false wall in a Bavarian castle. Excerpts were introduced into evidence at the Nuremberg war crimes trials.
Then the 425-page diary disappeared. Half a century later, Mayer, documents stacked in the bedthe son of a Holocaust survivor, room and basement, dining made it his mission to find it. room and living room, closets His quest began in 1996, and an enclosed porch. Floors when the former legal secre- hadbudded under the weight. taries of Robert Kempner, a The team spent one day asNuremberg prosecutor, sug- sessing the condition and size gested the museum contact the of the collection. There was no lawyer's two sons about donat- sign of the diary. ing their father's papers. KempAn unrelated dispute over ner died in 1993 at age 93. He Kempner's estate delayed the had amassed a huge collection transfer of the materials to the ofdocumentsfromacareerthat museum for two years. When induded helping to convict Her- Mayer returned to the house, mann Goeringand other Nazis he was greeted by the Kempof war crimes. ner family's attorney and, for The legal secretaries made reasons he didn't understand, a no mention of the diary, but police officer. Mayer, then 46 years old and He quickly saw that the colthe museum's chief archivist, lection wasn't as large as he suspected it might be among remembered and suspected Kempner's files. a burglary. The officer called
Richard Simon / LosAngeles Times
Henry Mayer, who helps maintain the collection of artifacts at the U.S.Holocaust Memorial Museum, knew a diary had been kept by Alfred Rosenberg, the Nazi Party's chief ideologue and a confidant of Adolf Hitler. It took great effort, but he finally located it.
detectives.
had published excerpts from it
them to Lewiston, NY., near
that nobody else had ever seen,"
Niagara Falls. There, Mayer to securethe Kempner collecsaid, he found a sign in front of tion, and their motivations were a small white-clapboard house never quite dear. that read: "The Robert KempKempner himself hadn't alner Collegium." ways been forthcoming about The building also housed the documents he collected. He a stockroom for a publishing had previously held back on business owned by a Dr. Her- sharing his discovery of a copy bert Richardson,a former pro- of the Wannsee Protocol, a refessor who was acquainted cord ofthe 1942 meetingwhere with Kempner's legal secretar- Nazis plotted the "final solution" for the murder of Jews. ies.One of the secretaries was at the house, Mayer recalled, Mayer and others long hoped and screamed at him to get off to securethe diary because of her property. the prominent role Rosenberg "However, her attorney, the played in the Nazi hierarchy.
Rosenberg recalled Hitler tell-
ing him shortlybefore the invasion of Russia, "Rosenberg, jetzt
ist Ihre grosse Stunde gekommen!" ("Rosenberg, now your great hour has come!") Kempner's sons agreed to hand over their father's collection, and in 1997 Mayer and
three colleagues traveled to his house in Lansdowne, Pa., outside Philadelphia.
Police followed clues that led puzzledMayer.They seemed to both help and hinder his efforts
Jewry," Supreme Court Justice
Robert Jackson, the chief U.S. prosecutor at Nuremberg, said at the tribunal.
Rosenberg was hanged on Oct. 16, 1946, at age 53. The German-born Kemp-
ner had been an early critic of the Nazi regime and fled the country in the mid-1930s. The
man who fired Kempner from his position as legal counsel to the Prussian State Police was
Goering. "Thus the great irony that
recoveringthe diary proved to be surprisingly difficult, and the museum turned to Robert
museum officials received a call Wittman, a retired FBI agent from a Pennsylvania junk deal- who had developed an experer who said he had found about tise in tracking down missing 40 boxes of papers while dean- property. Wittman, who wrote ing out Kempner's home for his the book "Priceless: How I heirs. Went Undercover to Rescue Museum officials w e re the World'sStolen Treasures," stunned. They didn't know located Richardson and conwhere thedocuments had come tacted the U.S. Attorney's Offrom andwere surethey hadn't fice in Wilmington, Del., which missed 40 boxes when they in- worked with a unit of Immigraventoried the collection. The tion and Customs Enforcement junk dealer offered to sell the specializing in recovering stomaterial — for $100,000. len artifacts. "It was then that we contact-
"It had been rumored that Dr. Kempner had the diary. He
Mayer said. Kempner cited an April 2, 1941, diary entry in which
dients in Nazi restitution cases. A few months after visiting the Robert Kempner Collegium,
It took 10 years to find Rich-
ed the FBI," Mayer said. The ardson and to execute comFBI seized the papers. plicated legal steps needed to In time, the museum col- claim Rosenberg's writings. lected 600 boxes of materials Finally, in March 2013, federal assembled by Kempner, and authorities traveled to upstate went through them carefully in New York and served Richardhopes of finding the diary. Still, son with a subpoena to produce it eluded them the diary. About four weeks latThen in 2003, Mayer received er, he surrendered it. Richarda call from the attorney for the son, now in his 80s, did not resister and guardian of one of the spond to requests for comment, legal secretaries, offering yet and authorities have dedined to more papers. These were stored discuss him. in a locker near Buffalo. A few more weeks passed "I was completely shocked," before Mayer took a train to Mayer said. "This was even the Immigration and Customs more material of Dr. Kempner's Enforcement office in Wilm... that was never shown to us." ington, where investigators Mayer made two day trips to wearing white gloves had set the storagelocker to rummage out stacks of the papers on a through 300more boxes of doc- table. Mayer walked into an uments. On the second trip, he office to see hundreds ofloose brought up the diary, telling the pagesthathadbeenkept, just as sister how disappointed he was the sister recalled, in three red that he had not found it in the binders. Some of it was written locker. on the back of Nazi stationery In what he described as an emblazoned with the swastika. "offhand, off-the-cuff manner," "Seventeenyears, and finally, the woman said she'd seen the I'm looking at it," Mayer said. diary at the Lansdowne house The first page he saw was and that it was held in three red binders. She said that she had
he had helped to convict Goer- been present when her sister ing," Mayer said. "According to told a reporter for a German Kempner, when he entered Go- magazine that she had giventhe "It was like Miss Havisham's police and I reminded her that "It was Rosenberg, the intel- ering's cell, Goering exdaimed, diary to Richardson, the retired home in 'Great Expectations,"' there was an agreement that lectual high priest of the 'master cYou f professor, for "safekeeping." "I was blown away," Mayer Mayer said. "Stuff everywhere. allowed us to remove Dr. Kemp- race,' who provided the docKempner later practiced law ner's papers," he said. Piles andpiles andpiles." trine of hatred which gave the inthe United States and Germa- SBld. The museum team found Kempner'slegal secretaries impetus for the annihilation of ny, mostly representing Jewish But finding Richardson and 0 I!
dated April 2, 1941 — Rosen-
berg's account of Hitler telling him "your great hour has come." "It was like finding the white whale," said Mayer, who is now 63 and senior adviser on archivesat the museum. "It doesn't get much better than
this as an archivist."
L.
Ir
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lt's everything that brings us together. It's a million conversations happening at once and sometimes, it's one momentous event that we all witness together. It's our shared sense of wonder. It's our collective hope. It's not just the place we live but the place we're all creating. lN hgt
INe Shgt"e
bendbroadband" 54L382.5551
A6
TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
;:;;;-;;::„'.":;;::;:;.';;; Thwarted: aMafiadrug plansteepedwith fish game," McKinley said. "If you're not creative in this 'Still to this day' economy, you're going to be Humphrey was laid off squashed." from a photography compaNever in more than 65 years ny a year ago. That job paid have so many workers been without a job and without a
less than she had made for
"I still to this day
is still weak, she
NEW YORK — The mob-
sters, from the Calabriaregion of Italy, wanted a foothold in City and thought their success smuggling drugs into Europe
investigation. Central to that plan was Lupoi, 44, owner of the Royal
I
Crown Bakery in Benson-
would serve them well on this side of the Atlantic.
hurst, who prosecutors said was linked to the Gambino
Their methods were known
crime family.
to be precise.
"Theyput ahundredgrams, two hundred grams in each
In 2012, Lupoi's Italian father-in-law, Nicola A ntonio
fish" and "it takes a day to de-
frost and then it takes a day to Ashley Gilbertson/New YorkTimes NewsService take out," Franco Lupoi, said, Federal agents escort a man connected to organized crime after according to prosecutors who arrests Tuesday on suspicion of drug trafficking and money say the conversation was re- laundering in New York. corded by investigators.
that included narcotics traf-
What made the case re-
ficking and money laundering markable w er e n o t th e and that were the culmination charges but the defendants' of a two-year undercover FBI
links to the 'Ndrangheta, the
Books
what he called a "rapid fire"
who acquired the trilogy by
and translate into a lucrative
centric "Seinfeld" character who had no clear means of support.
food and other forms of aid jump since federal benefits lapsed. "Some people are interpreting the fact that we're seeing signs ofeconomic recovery as saying, 'Okay, folks are all right,'" Snyder said. "That's
VanderMeer, said that when
mate it would increase the na-
Kruegersaid he once visited an off-track betting site in the middle of the day in hopes of finding cutoff workers and interviewing t hem a b out how they were supporting themselves.
for three more months failed last week to clear the Senate. The proposal would not have
a major impact on overall economic growth; analysts estition's gross domestic product by less than half a percentage point.
last year to his job teaching
But advocates for the jobless say even a brief extension would make a huge difference in people's lives. "Some members of Congress are just in complete denial about the severity of the
economics at Princeton Uni-
economic downturn," said the
"I still couldn't figure it out," said Krueger, who returned
Changesto benefits Someone who loses a job typically receives unemployment benefits from the state
for 26 weeks. During the re- just not true." cession, however, the number of people who remained out of work swelled, and Congress voted in 2008 to pro-
schedule, partly to avoid an-
Continued from A1 The new model encourages a kind ofbinge reading, releasing new works by a single author at an acceleratedpace. The practice of spacing an author's books at least one
year apart is gradually being discarded aspublishers appeal to the same "must-know-now"
impulse that drives binge viewing of shows like "House of Cards" and "Breaking Bad." "Consumers want to be able to binge-read or binge-watch," Christine Ball, the associate
publisher of Dutton, said in an interview. "We wanted to give the consumers what they
wanted inthis case."
people don't want to wait lon-
screen property, as "Harry he read the first manuscript, Potter," "The Hunger Games" he realized it presented a nar- and the George R.R. Martin rative filled with unanswered "Song of Ice and Fire" novels questions. have done. McDonaldquickly came up But it may have been the with an idea that was believed blockbuster "Fifty Shades of to be a first at Farrar, Straus: Grey," the erotica trilogy by publishing all three books on E.L. James, that showed the
expected to look the other
for kidnappings and for its way. The cocaine would come success importing cocaine from Mexican drugcartelsin into Europe. Guyana, who would conceal Prosecutors said the actions narcotics in frozen fish aboard of Lupoi, and the other local ships operated by a Guyanese defendants suggested t h at company, the authorities said.
which has seen demand for
House chief economist Alan
though a plan to extend them
shipments to Europe, the authorities said. The scheme
in Calabria that is notorious
lice announced the arrest of 17
lyn bakery, and six other peo- people in connection with the ple in New York on charges investigation.
after Cosmo Kramer, the ec-
continuing to press lawmakers to revive federal benefits,
States and expand cocaine
Lupoi, the owner of a Brook-
Sean McDonald, the editor at Farrar, Straus & Giroux
economic growth is falling far short of its potential. The problem has also consumed White House officials, who worry not only about how to get these people back to work but also about how they get by. Former White
to ship heroin into the United
included paying off a port oforganized crime group based ficial in Calabria whom they
On Tuesday, federal author-
versity. He dubbed the phe- Rev. Larry Snyder, president nomenon "the Kramer effect," of Catholic Charities USA,
President Barack Obama is
Simonetta, visited Brooklyn and the two men began plans
ities announced the arrests of investigation. In Italy, the po-
merits of publishing all the books quickly, before readers tagonizing readers. can catch their breath. The "You can end up with angry series, which began as fan and perplexed fans," he said. "I fiction, was first printed by a think people are more aware small press in Australia. Vinof series storytelling and there tage Books, part of Random is this sense of impatience, or House, acquired it in March m aybe a fear of frustration. 2012, and released the books We wanted to make sure peo- in paperback in the space of ple knew that there were an- less than a month. They beswers to these questions." came a word-of-mouth senS eries publishing h a s sation and have sold more boomed in the book business than 90 million copies to in recent years, as publishers date worldwide — Random have searched for storylines House's fastest-selling series that can keep readers hooked ever. "I think the bottom line is forseveralbooks rather than just one. Usually, these are that people are impatient," said genre books, page-turners in Susan Wasson, a longtime the sci-fi, romance and thrill- bookseller at an independent er categories. A s uccessful shop, Bookworks, in Albuseries also has the potential to querque, N.M.'Withthe speed catch Hollywood's attention that life is going these days,
said, but it also shows that
want a job."
they had not seen until this
55
the underworld of New York
the previous 40 years workgovernment lifeline. Congress ing at an insurance company cut off 1 million people en and at a warehousing busimasse in December when it ness. Now, she is hoping to permitteda specialemergen- find a position that pays at cy program for the long-term least $10 an hour. But she has unemployed to lapse. Since had no luck. then, their ranks have been So on Jan. 2 — the first growing by about 72,000 a business day after her jobless week, according to the Na- benefits ran out — Humphrey tional Employment Law Proj- applied for Social Security ect (NELP), which b enefits. A t 6 2 , lobbies on behalf she is e l igible. But the d e c ision of the jobless. I t S AOt like On Tuesday, in tp ay 'y8 gyyiflg m eans she w i l l testimony before receive smaller Congress, Federretirement checks than i f s h e h ad al Reserve Chair th e ir lifeStyle. Janet Yellen high- Ti) py'f p $yyjl7g waited to enroll at lighted long-term age 65, potentialunemployment as ly reducing her tandard stan d ard of living one of the central /OWBr S challenges of the Of/iyifl for the rest of her U.S. economic relife. — CarlVanHorn, "I want a job," covery. Not only is it a s ig n t ha t Rutgers University Humphrey said. the labor market
'Ndrangheta (pronounced n-DRANG-gay-tah) was seeking to expand to New York, an effort the authorities said
By Joseph Goldstein New York Times News Service
chetype," a futuristic action thriller. Its sequel, "Prototype," is scheduledfor release only five months later.
Some publishers who have embraced a faster publishing schedule acknowledge that it can be risky. Cindy Hwang, executive editor at Berkley,
said that while the approach has worked for some of their authors, like Nora Roberts, the
best-selling romance writer, "There's always the fear that you're saturating the market,
that the reader demand isn't as great as whatyou've foreseen." Spacing books on a more traditional schedule can give p ublishers more time to f i nesse plansfor sales,market-
ing and publicity. It also gives late-arriving readers time to
catchup. "I know in the past that the
ger for a sequel. I know I feel one-year mark seems to increase a lot of hype and buzz,
that way. When I like a book, I don't want to wait a year for
and it gives it time for a title to
the sequel." build," said Krys Tourtois, of Publishers are responding Schuler Books and Music in to that sentiment. On Thurs- Michigan. "You think about day, Dutton, an imprint of Pen- what happened with 'Harry guin Random House, released Potter' — the timing helped a hardcover debut novel, "Ar- make a phenomenon."
vide additional aid that made
checks available for as long as 99 weeks in the hardest-hit states.
Last year, lawmakers cut the maximum benefit to 73 weeks. Then, at the end of De-
cember,Congress let federal aid lapse altogether. M itchell Hirsch of N E L P
said people were "thrust essentially overnight from a situation where they were strug-
gling to make ends meet with their benefits into one where
they're now struggling just to survive." Six weeks later, he said, "what we're hearing ... is increasingly desperate." According to a 2012 report
Purchase by
by the Government Account-
February 28th, 2014
ability Office, Social Security is the government program
Treatments performed by May 1, 2014
people turn to most often af-
ter exhausting unemployment benefits. But the share who do so is relatively small, just 18
percent. An additional 6 percent apply for disability insurance, and just 3 percent use
government aid designed for families and children. Regardless of w h e ther they qualify for government help, the vast majority also rely on private sources of income — a mishmash of personal savings, odd jobs, cred-
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FOR ADULTS WITH DUPUYTREN'S CONTRACTURE WHEN A "CORD" CAN BE FELT
XIAFLEX FOR INJECTION
MAY HELP STRAIGHTEN YOUR FINGER, AND THAT'S
TALK TO YOUR DO C TO R TO GE T
S T A R T E D Pr e scription XIAFLEX is the
first and only FDA-approved nonsurgical treatment for adults with Dupuytren's contracture when a
"cord" can be felt. It's a medication given as part of an in-office procedure, with no surgery or general anesthesia required to administer. Studies show that XIAFLEX may help straighten the affected finger and improve range of motion — and that's no small thing. In two clinical studies, 44% and 64% of patients
receiving XIAFLEX (versus 5% and 7% of patients receiving placebo) had a straight or nearly straight
finger after up to 3 XIAFLEX injection procedures. Most people required 1 or 2 injection procedures of XIAFLEX to help "break" the cord.
IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION XIAFLEX can cause serious side effects including tendon rupture (break), ligament damage, nerve injury or other serious injury of the hand, or allergic reaction. Surgery could be required to fix the damaged tendon or ligament. Call your doctor right away if you have trouble bending
your injected finger after the swelling goes down, pain, tingling, numbness, or problems using your treated hand or if you get hives, swollen face, breathing trouble, or chest pain. It's important to tell your doctor about a prior allergic reaction to XIAFLEX, or if you have a bleeding problem or use a blood thinner.
Common side effects include hand swelling, bruising, injection site reaction or bleeding, and pain.
2s
XIAFLEX should be injected into the cord by a healthcare provider who is experienced in injection
procedures of the hand and treating people with Dupuytren's contracture. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA at www.FDA.gov/ medwatch or 1-800-FDA-1088. Please see Important Product Information on the
g
following page.
fgMore and more doctors have treated with XIAFLEX.
t
VisitXIAFLEX.com to find an experienced hand specialist in your area today.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 1-877-XIAFLEX o 2013 Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. All rights reserved. XDC-00449
XIAs LI: — X'
co age oasecosttdomtistoytcom
AS TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
Important Product Information XIAFLEX® (Z'i a flex) (collagenase clostridium histolyticum) What isthe most important information Ishould know about XIAFLEX? XIAFLEX cancause serious side effects,including:
IN FOCUS:THE U.S. NUCLEAR ARSENAL
u e reorm nve usin i eas rie earsa o
1. Tendon rupture or ligament damage.Receiving an injection of XIAFLEX may causedamage to a tendon or ligament in yourhand and cause itto break orweaken. This could require surgery to fix the damaged tendon or ligament. Call your healthcare provider right away if you have trouble bending your injected finger (towards the wrist) after the swelling goes down or you have problems using your treated hand after your follow-up visit.
By Robert Bums
2. Nerve injury or other serious injury of the hand. Call your healthcare provider right awayif you get numbness, tingling, or increased pain in your treated finger or hand after your injection or after your follow-up visit.
years ago the Air Force considereda series of proposals
3. Allergic Reactions.Allergic reactions can happen in people who take XIAFLEX because it contains foreign proteins.
formance and security lapses in its nuclear missile corps, ac-
The Associated Press
W ASHINGTON —
Fiv e
to boost morale and fix per-
Call your healthcare provider right away if you have any of these symptoms of an allergic reaction after an injection of XIAFLEX:hives, swollen face, breathing trouble, chest pain.
cording to internal emails and
What is XIAFLEX?
and now, with the force again in crisis, it's retracing those
XIAFLEX is a prescription medicine used to treat adults with Dupuytren's contracture when a "cord" can be felt.
earlier steps.
In people with Dupuytren's contracture, there is thickening of the skin and tissue in the palm of your hand that is not normal. Over time, this thickened tissue can form a cord in your palm. This causes one or more of your fingers to bend toward the palm, so youcan not straighten them. XIAFLEX should be injected into a cord by a healthcare provider who is skilled in injection procedures of the hand and treating people with Dupuytren's contracture. The proteins in XIAFLEX help to "break" the cord of tissue that is causing the finger to be bent. It is not known if XIAFLEX is safe and effective in children under the age of 18. What should I tell my healthcare provider before starting treatment with XIAFLEX? XIAFLEX may not be right for you. Before receiving XIAFLEX, tell your healthcare provider if you: • have had an allergic reaction to a previous XIAFLEX injection. • have a bleeding problem. • have any other medical conditions. • are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. It is not known if XIAFLEX will harm your unborn baby. • are breastfeeding. It is not known if XIAFLEX passes into your breast-milk. Talk to your healthcare provider about the best way to feed your baby if you receive XIAFLEX. Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take, including prescription and non-prescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Especially tell your healthcare provider if you use: a blood thinner medicine such as aspirin, clopidogrel (PLAVIX®), prasugrel hydrochloride (EFFIENT®), or warfarin sodium (COUMADIN®). If you are told to stop taking a blood thinner before your XIAFLEX injection, your healthcare provider should tell you when to restart the blood thinner. How will I receive XIAFLEX? Your healthcare provider will inject XIAFLEX into the cord that is causing your finger to bend. After an injection of XIAFI EX, your affected hand will be wrapped with a bandage. You should limit moving and using the treated finger after the injection. Do not bend or straighten the fingers of the injected hand until your healthcare provider says it is okay. This will help prevent the medicine from leaking out of the coi'd.
Do not try to straighten the treated finger yourself. Keep the injected hand elevated until bedtime. Call your healthcare provider right away if you have: signs of infection after your injection, such as fever, chills, increased redness, or swelling; numbness or tingling in the treated finger; trouble bending the injected finger after the swelling goes down. Return to your healthcare provider's office as directed on the day after your injection. During this first follow-up visit, if you still have the cord, your healthcare provider may try to extend the treated finger to "break" the cord and try to straighten your finger. Your healthcare provider will provide you with a splint to wear on the treated finger. Wear the splint as instructed by your healthcare provider at bedtime to keep your finger straight. Do finger exercises each day, as instructed by your healthcare provider. Follow your healthcare provider's instructions about when you can start doing your normal activities with the injected hand. What arethe possible side effects ofXIAFLEX? XIAFLEX cancause serious side effects.See "What is the most important information I should know about XIAFLEX?". Common side effects with XIAFLEX include:swelling of the injection site or the hand; bleeding or bruising at the injection site; pain or tenderness of the injection site or the hand; swelling of the lymph nodes (glands) in the elbow or underarm; itching; breaks in the skin; redness or warmth of the skin; pain in the underarm.
documents obtained by The Associated Press. But many fell short or died on the vine,
The new effort is more far-reaching, on a tighter timetable and backed by Defense The Associated Press file photo Secretary Chuck Hagel. So it A mock-up of a Minuteman 3 nuclear missile is used for training appears to hold more promise by missile maintenance crews at F. E. Warren Air Force Base in for an Air Force under scru- Wyoming. In launching anambitious campaign to boost morale in tiny after a variety of embar- a troubled nuclear missile corps, the Air Force is retracing steps it rassing setbacks and missteps took at least five years ago. raised questions about wheth-
er some of the world's most fearsome weapons are being Hagel also has raised the Wilson took over in Novemproperly managed. possibility of i ncentives to ber as commander of Global The e a rlier a p proach, make the ICBM career field Strike Command, in charge of shown in internal Air Force
documents and emails from 2008-09, included some of the ideas being floated again today by a new set of Air Force leaders, including bonus pay and other incentives to make more attractive the work of
the men and women who operate, maintain and secure an Air Force fleet of 450 Min-
more attractive, while noting that money is not the main motivator for most in the nu-
clear weapons field.
allAir Force nuclear forces. Wilson's effort is the latest
in a string. Last summer, shortly before
he was fired following an Air commander of the 341st Mis- Force investigation of his alsile Wing, which operates leged misbehavior while on of150 Minuteman 3 missiles at ficial business in Russia, Maj. Malmstrom Air Force Base, Gen. Michael Carey developed Col. Robert W. Stanley II,
Mont., said in a recent AP in-
what he called a "professional
terview that incentives would uteman 3 nuclear-tipped mis- be welcome. "We've been siles. Then, as now, the Air asking for that for a long, long Force also looked for ways to time," Stanley said. eliminate the most damaging The idea is that fattening
actions" campaign to relieve
"disincentives" — parts of the
paychecks might attract more
tions Carey had come up with,
job that can make missile duty onerous.
people to the ICBM career field, while removing some of the mission's burdens might stop people from leaving it the first chance they get.
an Air Force spokeswoman,
But some who have studied
improve the force remains the
"Keep the faith," one commander wrote to his ICBM
troops in an email in early 2009.
stress on the ICBM force. At the time Carey was top com-
mander of the ICBM force. Asked what specific solu1st Lt. Edith Sakura, said his
campaign was a "communications slogan." It is no longer in use, she said, "but the intent to
Faith, however, seemed to
military personnel issues say same." falter. they doubt financial incentives Sakura said Carey's succeswould make much difference, sor, Maj. Gen. Jack Weinstein, Burnout and other trouble pointing instead to more fun- has recognized that in a force A series of AP reports last damental problems. where a majority of officers "If the missile force can't and enlisted personnel are year documented training failures, low morale, deliberate vi- convince its people that what newcomers, "mentoring is cruolations of security rules, lead- they are doing is really im- cial and needs formal rejuveership lapses and other mis- portant, that it isn't a military nation" throughout the ICBM steps. The AP also disclosed and strategic backwater and/ force. Weinstein also is acting an unpublished study that or obsolete, no combination of to improve leader and profesfound evidence of "burnout" programmatic incentives can sional development, she said. and frustration among misreally fix things," said Robert Back in 2009, a group of sile launch officers and ICBM Goldich, who was a defense ICBM officers and enlisted airsecurity forces. In response, policy specialist for three de- men developed a list of 42 proHagel said something must be cades at the Congressional Re- posed steps, including financial done promptly to restore pub- search Service. and education incentives. They lic confidence in the nuclear included bonuses and other exforce and ensure the weapons Looking for ideas trapay as well as ribbons, other areunder competent control. In 2008 and 2009 the Air forms ofrecognition,and steps Hagel came forward shortly Force solicited ideas from to reduce the work load and after the disclosure of an Air young officers and enlist- make the ICBM base locations Force drug investigation and ed airmen who perform the less unattractive. "These are only rough ideas an exam-cheating scandal mission. "We need you to tell us what being looked at, so please do within the ICBM force whose full dimensions are still being needs to be fixed," said the in- not assume any or all of these investigated. Hagel has giv- troductory page of a 2009 Air will (be) implemented," Col. en the Air Force wide latitude Force confidentialsurvey of Michael Spencer, then vice to find solutions to what he members of the ICBM, or in- commander of the 91st Missile called "personnel failures," but tercontinental ballistic missile, Wing at Minot Air Force Base, he wants action by late March. force. N.D., wrote in an email Feb. 2, I n January, the new A i r Similarly, Lt. Gen. Stephen 2009. In an email a month earForce secretary, Deborah Lee Wilson recently launched a lier he said the top ICBM boss "force improvement program." at the time, Maj. Gen. Roger James, visited all three ICBM missile bases. She picked up In a Jan. 31 letter to all mem- Burg, had told his higher headon people's worries about ca- bers of the ICBM force, Wil- quarters in August 2008 that reer advancement opportunison said he wants to improve incentives should be pursued. "The incentive issue is still ties in the force and wondered the climate within the force whether incentive pay, riband is looking for "innovative, alive," Spencer wrote in a Jan. bons, medals and other recog- concrete solutions" that can 9, 2009, email, "even though nition should be provided. be acted on in coming weeks. the process is slow moving."
These are not all of the possible side effects with XIAFLEX. Tell your healthcare provider about any side effect that bothers you or does not go away. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088. General information about XIAFLEX Medicines are sometimes prescribed for purposes other than those listed here. This is a summary of the most important information about XIAFLEX. If you would like more information, talk to your healthcare provider. You can ask your healthcare provider for information about XIAFLEX that is written for health professionals. For more information visit www.XIAFLEX.com or call 1-877-663-0412. Registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. ©2013 Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. For US residents only. Auxilium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. 640 Lee Road Chesterbrook, PA 19087 www.auxilium.com XDC-00449
XIAFLCX
collage naseclostridiumhistolyticum
Mirror Pond
damage to the structure and
dam to a l ocal government agency. "We don't intend to
the future of the pond. They
group that is meeting with ensure the river will be safe PacifiCorp. However, Horton Continued from A1 for boaters and others recre- said 'Itresday that Wallace Tallman also said it is pos- ating on the river this summer. went ahead and appointed sible Mirror Pond would have Regarding P a c ifiCorp'sDempsey without waiting for filled up anyway this sum- announcement, Horton said, a public meeting. "It shows that PacifiCorp has mer, when more water will Capell said that during be released from Wickiup been listening to the com- the meeting Tuesday, Bend Reservoir. munity's needs and trying to officials and PacifiCorp disIn D ecember, PacifiCorp do their part in this negotia- cussedproposals from firms spokesman Bob Gravely said tion process that we're going that want to conduct an init would not be cost effective through, to figure out a long- dependent inspection of the to repair the dam because it term solution to Mirror Pond dam on behalf of the park produced a meager amount of and the dam." district. Capell had to leave electricity. On Tuesday, GravePacifiCorp also met private- the meeting during discussion ly said utility executives decid- ly on Tuesday afternoon with of a proposal from HDR, a ed to repair the dam for differ- City Councilor Mark Capell large engineering firm where ent reasons. and Horton to continue nego- Capell's brother Paul Capell Gravely said PacifiCorp tiating a possible transfer of works. Capell has said Pacifihopes that repairing the dam ownership of the dam. Capell Corp should repairthe Mirror will make it easier for the util- and Horton are members of Pond dam and give it to the ity and local officials to reach the Mirror Pond ad hoc com- community,and on Tuesday, an agreement to transfer the mittee tasked with deciding he said th e a n nouncement were joined in the negotiating session by Ned Dempsey, a
generate (electricity) longterm, so fixing one leak for citizen member of the committhat purpose wouldn't make tee. Dempsey is a civil engisense." neer who owns a home across Gravely said PacifiCorp from Drake Park. estimates that fixing the leak The committee is scheduled will cost $250,000. to meet at I p.m. today to disPark district Executive Dicuss a proposal from commitrector Don Horton recently tee member and park board called for PacifiCorp to repair Chairman Scott Wallace to the dam to prevent further appoint Dempsey to the small
that the utility will repair the dam does not mean it will be worth more. "It's not going
to make them any money, for sure," Capell said. Nonetheless, Capell said the utility's decision to fix the leak is a p o sitive development. "I thought that was an out-
standing step forward by (PacifiCorp)," Capell said. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletirt.com
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY12, 2014
BRIEFING
BRIDGE CREEK
en ursuin wa er se emen
Schoolboard eddlssses shootlllg The Bend-LaPine School Board discussed Friday's suicide atBend High School during its meeting Tuesdaynight. Board Chairwoman Cheri Helt expressedthe board's sadnessover the BendHighstudent's death and praisedthe response ofthedistrict andcommunity. "Our staff went beyond their job descriptions on Friday,exhibiting extreme strength and poise," Helt said. "I also want to commenthow much the community's support had lifted the spirits of staff andstudents." Superintendent Ron Wilkinson notedthe district will continue to "see what canbe done differently andbetter to improve safety."
By Hillary Borrud
Tuesday on arequest from Central the U.S. Forest Service, which issued Oregon LandWatch and WaterWatch a permit for the Bridge Creek project. City of Bend officials plan to con- of Oregon for a preliminary injunc- The city of Bend wants to build a new tinue settlement talks this week with tion on the project. The injunction intake facility and pipeline to bring groups that sued to stop its $24 million would prevent the city from breaking water from Bridge Creek in the CasBridge Creek water supply project. ground until after Aiken issues a ficades foothills. On Tuesday, U.S. District Court nal decision on the lawsuit. Now, the Currently, the city uses two pipeJudge AnnAiken continued a hearing earliest Aiken will rule on the prelim- lines from the 1920s and 1950s to on the lawsuit until Friday afternoon, inary injunction is Friday. transport water from the creek. In the said Justin Finestone, a city spokesLandWatch and WaterWatch filed lawsuit, LandWatch and WaterWatch man. Aiken was scheduled to rule a federal lawsuit in November against allege the Forest Service did not adeThe Bulletin
quately consider the environmental impacts of the project before issuing the permit.
The city,Forest Service, LandWatch and WaterWatch have been
discussing a possible settlement for the past two weeks. "I think it's fair to say, it's been very
intensive," said city Councilor Sally Russell. See Water /B6
Measures
approach marijuana
differently
Suspectsarrested In theft case Two Redmondresidents werearrested Monday, accused bypolice of stealing mail, applying for credit cards underthe mail-theft victims' names and using theillegal credit cards to purchaseitems online andat retail stores, theRedmond PoliceDepartment said. Amanda JoReeves, 39, who alsogoesby Amanda JoMoore,and Brandon JoelHastings, 34, werearrested on suspicion of aggravated identity theft, forgery, fraudulent use of acredit card andpossession of a controlled substance, among othercharges. An investigation into a string of identity thefts in Redmond, Bend,Springfield, Eugene,Jefferson Countyand CoosCounty ledRedmond policeon Monday tosearch the ReevesandHastings residence,7195W.U.S. Highway126, whichwas followed bythe arrests. Both Reevesand Hastings weretakento the DeschutesCounty jail.
Illnessspreads at Deschlites jail The gastrointestinal illness outbreak that hit
Deschutes County jail on Monday hasspreadto additional inmatesand staff members, theDeschutes CountySheriff's Office saidTuesday. Forty inmatesand eight staff membershave now caughtthestomach illness, which is upfrom the 28 inmatesreported to be ill with it Monday. The Sheriff's Office, whichimmediately contacted theDeschutes County Health Department whentheoutbreak was reported, is waiting to hear results regarding the exact strain of the illness, which is saidto last about 72hours.
Skier rescuednear Swampy lakes Awomanwhohad become disoriented while skiing theSwampy Lakes trail systemwas rescued Mondayevening by DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office Search and Rescue. Sophia Thundercloud, 73, of Ashland, called 911 Mondayafternoon after becoming lost while skiing in theDeschutes National Forest. Twenty search andrescue personnel weredispatched andwere able to ping Thundercloud's cellphone todetermine her location. Atabout7 p.m., they foundThundercloud 5t/2miles from the SwampyLakesSnopark. Shehadstarted a fire andwas ingood condition. — Bulletin staff reports
By Lauren Dake
I.
The Bulletin
.
SALEM — A bill to allow
T)
"t t
local governments to ban medical marijuana dispensaries got a hearing before Oregon lawmakers on Tuesday; then they moved
-
.
the discussion to whether to
lt>.:-
approve legislation asking voters to legalize recreational marijuana. The role "marijuana is going to (have) in Oregon society" is a comIN plex issue, Rep. 5ALEM Peter Buckley,
I
imiii i
Photos by RobKerr/The Bulletin
Bend High student Ashley Cathey, right, harvests basil leaves with assistance from Billy Emick Thursday in Bend High's greenhouse, which has been dubbed the "Dreamhouse.n
D-Ashland, told members of the
tu entssroutin news is wor in in en i 's reen ouse
Senate Judiciary
• About
the bills, Committee. ~5 Lawmakers on the committee first took up Senate Bill 1531, which
would allow local cities and counties to keep medical marijuana dispensaries from opening up shop within their boundaries.
By Megan Kehoe
Last legislative session,
The Bulletin
lawmakers legalized the dispensaries, a type of retail
he temperaturehovered in
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS Educational newsand activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2 See students working on the greeni house: Q bendbulletin. cem/dreamheuse
the single digits and there T was a blistering breeze last Thursday morning, but in-
outlet, many of which have
side Bend High School's Dream-
state's health authority is
house, it felt like summer.
now charged with overseeing the medical marijuana dispensaries and is expected to start registering the retail outlets beginning next
operated in the state for a while outside of the law. The
The sweet smell of basil perfumed the air. Tomato vines
curled down from hanging planters. Ladybugs crawled just about everywhere.
month.
For life skills teacher Robert
Tadjiki, this serene scene is what he's been working toward for seven years. "This project almost died a couple of times," Tadjiki said. "But I'm the kind of person that
Bend High students and educational assistants package harvested
basil in a classroom at the school Thursday morning. first opened its doors, and the place is thriving: both its nu-
when I believe something is going to happen, I'm a nonstop merous plants, and the students believer. I keep fighting with the who care for them. The greenbelief that it's going to work." house, which has been named It's been a year and a half
since Bend High's greenhouse
the "Dreamhouse," was the vision of Tadjiki, who started
fundraising for the greenhouse project in 2006 with the intention of providing the school's developmentally and intellectually disabled students a therapeutic place to cultivate skills.
Expansion,reorganization byBLM planned atthe BadlandsWilderness
SeeSchools/B2
Several cities, including Madras and Metolius in Central Oregon, have expressed concern about allowing medical marijuana dispensaries in their communities. Sen. Bruce Starr, R-Hill-
sboro, testifying on behalf of the measure, said it's an
"issue that ought to be left to local cities and counties to
regulate." See Pot /B5
Bends Newest Dance Studio oI1 tI1c
aast sidc
By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Visitors to the Badlands
Wilderness willbe able to do more loop hikes, runs or horseback rides, according to plans completedbythe U.S. Bureau of Land Management for the fledgling wilderness east of Bend.
e"'
I
r
The changes to trails and trailheads are part of a pro-
posedBLM managementplan for the Badlands, which Congress designated in 2009. "I think that it will offer
more diversity of landscapes,"
Markian Hawryluk/The Bulletin file photo
Some areas of the BadlandsWilderness are expected to becon-
Yo th dance Ccjss nov avcma le Happy Movement Beginning Ballet 38,4 year olds
5 8, 6 year olds
verted to trails, while some trailheads are set to be augmented. The changes would provide visitors with a "diversity of landscapes."
said Berry Phelps, BLM out-
door recreation planner in Prineville. The BLM early this week
finalized plans for changes in and near the Badlands. BLM
officials had used GIS equip-
ment to determine the popular recreation spot has 43 miles
road into trail and creating just over 2 miles of new trail,
of designated trails. Planned changes include converting nearly 7 miles of old two-track
bringing the total to 53 miles of trails. SeeBadlands/B6
For more information or to regi cr visit CascadclndoorSports.c
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
EvxNT
ENm a
TODAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: RUSALKA"ENCORE:Starring Renee Fleming in a soulful fairy-tale opera, with Piotr Beczala as the prince; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. "DEAD COME TOLIFE"TOUR: The Christian musicians Jonathan Thulin, Shine Bright Baby and Loftland perform; free; 7-10 p.m.; Book8 Bean,395 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-3778 or www. bookandbean.com. "RUSHMORE":A screening of the 1998 film directed by WesAnderson; free; 7 p.m.; TheOld Stone,157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-322-7273 or www.bit.ly/WAnders. FLYFISHING FILM TOUR: A screening of a film collection that showcases anglers; $15 plus fees;
SATUIU)AY
Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo
Runners splash through a puddle at the start of the Snow Warriors Dash during the 2013 WinterFest in Bend's Old Mill District. The 2014 Oregon WinterFest is slated to run Friday through Sunday.
541-317-3941, info©cosymphony. com or www.cosymphony.com. "ROMEOAND JULIETON BROADWAY":A screening of the broadway production of the classic love story starring Orlando Bloom;$20;7:30p.m.;RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
dress in your'50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 at the door; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview HighSchool,4555 7 p.m., doorsopenat6 p.m.; Tower S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 504-3600 or linda.nye©redmond. 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. k12.or.us. org. "THE CANTERVILLE GHOST": The ROSE WINDOWS:TheSeattlepsych comedic play by OscarWilde about rock band peforms; free; 7 p.m.; a ghost living in an old mansion McMenamins Old St. Francis School, inEngland;$8,$5studentsand 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382seniors; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. 2855 N.W.Clearwater Drive, Bend; FAILUREMACHINE:The Reno, Nev., 541-322-3300. soul-grunge band performs, with FRIDAY "ITHAPPENED ONE NIGHT": A Patrimony; $5; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. YEE PAW!:A country western screening of the1934 classic film Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 (NR); free, refreshments available; Valentine's dance with live music, or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, dinner and adance lesson; proceeds Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E.E benefit BrightSide Animal Center; St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www. $50, $10for musicanddancing only; 4:30p.m.,7 p.m.m usicand dancing; jcld.org. THI3RSDAY Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 "LOVE LETTERS":Cascades Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or Theatrical Company presents the A.R. MAMA SWEETHEART DINNER:A www.brightsIdeanimals.org/events/ Gurney play about love andfriendship fundraising dinner for the nonprofit, yee-paw. between childhood friends; $19, $15 drug education organization; $30 or for seniors ages 60andolder, $12 $50 per couple, reservation requested OREGONWINTERFEST:Winter for students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood carnival featuring a market place, by Feb.10; 6-8 p.m.; Blue Pine Playhouse,148 N.W.Greenwood Kitchen and Bar, 25S.W.Century live music, artisan fire pits, ice and Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. snow sculpturesandmore;$6-$8 Drive, Bend; 503-974-1219 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. in advance, $10 onevent day; 5-10 mamas.org. p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC "FROM WHARF RATSTO LORDS Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312SERIES:A Valentine's Day concert OF THEDOCKS": ActorlanRuskin 0131 or www.oregonwinterfest.com. featuring Catgut Trio; $42, $15 depicts the life of labor leader Harry students and children18 and VALENTINEDINNERAND DANCE: Bridges; free; 6:30 p.m.; Central A baked Cornish gamehendinner younger; 8p.m., doors openat7 Oregon Community College, p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. with music by Bradley D; leave St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. College Way,Bend;541-383-7700. a message withname, contact highdesertchambermusic.com. number, dateofmessageandthe "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation number in your party; $15, $25 per TONY SMILEYANDKEEZ: An of the1960 musical featuring couple, reservations requested; 5-7 electro-pop-rock performance; choreography by Michelle Mejaski; p.m. dinner, dancing until closing; $7 in advance, $10 atthe door; 9 dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for American LegionPost45,52532 reserved seats, $10at the door; 7 p.m., doorsopenat8p.m.;Volcanic Drafter Road, LaPine; 541-536-1402. Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL'S Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. 504-3600orlinda.nye@redmond. VALENTINE'SDAYCONCERT volcanictheatrepub.com. 8 DINNER: The Salem BigBand k12.or.us. VIBESQUAD: Theelectronic musician performs love songs, with dinner and performs, with Thriftworks, JPod VIRGINIA RIGGS CHILDREN'S dancing; $80; 6 p.m.; Sunriver Resort and III Effekt; $12 plus fees in CONCERT: An informative and Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; 541interactive concert event with the advance, $15 atthe door, $25 for 593-9310 or www.sunrivermusic.org. couples; Central Oregon Symphony and 9p.m .;Domino Room, 51 BIRDIE": A presentation Cascade School of Music; free; 7 p.m., "BYE BYE N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541408-4329 or www.facebook.com/ 6:30 p.m. instrument pettIng zoo; of the1960 musical featuring Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; choreography by Michelle Mejaski; slipmatscience.
"ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT"PANCAKE BREAKFAST:Menu items will includepancakes,linksausage,syrup and butter, and coffee, tea, orange juice or soda; proceeds benefit the Redmond High School softball team; $7, available in advance or at the door; 8-10 a.m.; Applebee's Neighborhood Grill & Bar,3807S.W. 21st St., Redmond; 541-948-9501. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. RUN FORCHOCOLATE:A5K run/ walk with chocolate aid stations; proceeds benefit the La PineHigh School Future Business Leaders of America and athletic programs; free for spectators, $25 before Feb.9, $35 through day of race; 10a.m.; Sunriver Resort,17600 Center Drive; www.j.mp/ChocRun. SENSATIONALSATURDAY:BEADS AND BAGS:Learn the symbolism of the Plateau Indian bags; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10ages 65 and older, $7 ages5-12, free ages 4andyounger;10a.m.-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend;541-3824754 or www.highdesertmuseum.
org.
OREGONWINTERFEST:Winter carnival featuring a market place, live music, artisan fire pits, ice and
snow sculpturesandmore;$6-$8 in advance, $10 onevent day; 11a.m.10 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3120131 or www.oregonwinterfest.com. ZWICKELMANIA:An Oregon Brewers Guild event with beer tastings, brewery tours, special
releasesandpricing, andmore;free
shuttle service between breweries; free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend location; www.oregoncraftbeer.org/events/ zwickelmania. JUMPERJACKPOTSERIES: Competitors jump their horses for cash in a variety of classes; free; noon; Fruition Farm, 5707 S.W. Quarry Avenue, Redmond; 541-4109513 or www.coeventers.com. "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Mejaski; dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10at the door; 2 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541504-3600 or linda.nye©redmond. k12.or.us. "THE CANTERVILLE GHOST": The comedic play by OscarWilde about a ghost living in an old mansion
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT DUII —Jose Antonio Reyes, 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:34 a.m. Feb. 2, in thearea of Northwest Greenwood Avenueand Northwest Harriman Street. DUII —Alex Jon Quiring, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:07 a.m. Feb. 2, in thearea of Romaine Village Wayand South U.S. Highway 97. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:11 a.m. Feb. 4, in the200block of Northeast Sixth Street. DUII —Jeffrey Scott Hawley, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:07 p.m. Feb. 6, in thearea of Northeast Butler Market RoadandNortheast Tiffany Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at4:47 p.m. Feb. 8, in the 800 block of Northeast Third Street. DUII —Clifford Wayne St. John, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:27 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe 61300 block of South U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at7:26 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe 3100 block of North U.S. Highway97. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 2:24 p.m. Jan.30, in the19900 block of Limelight Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12:31 p.m. Jan. 31, in the1100 block of Southeast Third Street.
REDMOMD POLICE DEPARTMEMT Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:23 a.m.Feb. 3, in the 4000 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 8:31 a.m.Feb. 3, in the area of Northwest19th Streetand Northwest Fir Avenue.
Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 9:42a.m. Feb.3, in the 200 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:49 a.m. Feb. 3, in the200 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:58 p.m. Feb. 3, in the 1200 block of Southwest 34th Place. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3 a.m. Feb. 4, in the 600block of Southwest Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:55 a.m. Feb. 4, in the300block of Northwest Sixth Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:10 p.m. Feb. 4, in the900 block of Southwest VeteransWay. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at1:33 p.m. Feb. 4, in the 1200 block of Southwest17th Street. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 2:46 p.m. Feb. 4, in the 4500 block of Southwest Elkhorn Avenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at10:56 a.m. Feb. 5, in the area of Northwest CanalBoulevard and South U.S.Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at11:51 a.m.Feb. 5, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Theft —A theft was reported at l2:29 p.m. Feb. 5, in the500block of Northwest17th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:02p.m.Feb.5,inthe300 blockof Northwest OakTree Lane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 5:32 p.m. Feb. 5, in the300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 8:07 p.m. Feb. 5, in the area of Northwest Wayand Northwest Maple Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at11:20 p.m. Feb. 5, in the area of Northwest19th Street and West Antler Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:53 p.m. Feb. 6, in the300block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:01 p.m. Feb. 6, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 3:54 p.m. Feb. 6, in the area of Southwest Highland Avenue and Southwest Rimrock Way. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was
reported at 4:08 p.m.Feb. 6, in the900 block of Southwest VeteransWay. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 5:12 p.m.Feb. 6, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest HighlandAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:32 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of North U.S. Highway 97and Northwest MapleAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:55 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe areaofSouthwestPumiceAvenue and Southwest CanalBoulevard. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:08 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of Southwest EvergreenAvenue and South U.S. Highway97. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:34 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of Southwest OdemMedo Road and South U.S. Highway97. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:10 p.m.Feb. 7, inthe 500 block of Southwest EvergreenAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:30 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of Southeast Seventh Street and Southeast EvergreenAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at4:43 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe 300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:48 p.m. Feb. 7, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost119. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at5:27 p.m. Feb. 7,inthe 1000 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6 p.m.Feb. 7, inthe area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost124. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6:40 a.m.Feb. 8, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest SalmonAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6:40 a.m.Feb. 8, in the area of Southwest 29th Street and Southwest SalmonAvenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at7:33 a.m.Feb.8,inthe2500 block of Northwest ElmAvenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:10 p.m. Feb. 8, in thearea of Southwest HighlandAvenueand Southwest15th Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:25 p.m. Feb. 8, in the area of Southwest EvergreenAvenue and North U.S. Highway97. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 2:38 p.m. Feb. 8, in the area of South U.S.Highway 97and
That's really the way that those with i n tellectual d i sabilities
Continued from B1
learn — when they go outside
About 25 of the school's life skills students work in
of their norm and do something different."
the greenhouse on a daily basis, caring for the 100 or so plants, which are mostly basil. Students spend their mornings planting, watering, fertilizing and harvesting the herb. Students also package the harvested dippings, and then twice a week del iverthepackagesto local groceries like Newport Market and C.E. Lovejoy's, where they are sold. Money from the sales go back into
h ad never w orked w i t h plants. Now he's one of the
group leaders and spends most mornings in the building caring for and harvestingbasil. One of Donavon's jobs is
opportunities to go out into the community, both when they deliver plants and when theyget to
go on field trips. Tadjiki said the greenhouse is beginning to accomplish everythmg he hoped it would for his students. He said some of the most meaningful moments
have been when he's witnessed a previously agitated student find a moment of peace while
greenhouse, where students can
grow vegetables. These vegetables can then be donated to needy families in the communi-
ty through local churches. "I want our students to learn
that skill of giving to other peoalso to find and weed out ple," Tadjiki said. "So often, which plants are doing poor- people are usually taking care ly. He said you can tell by of them. But learning to give the stem which ones aren't is such an empowering skill to doing well: healthy plants have." have soft green stems, while
unhealthy ones have stems more reminiscent of a hard twig. Heather Lueck, an educational assistant who works
— Reporter: 541-383-N54, mhehoe@bendbulletin.com.
SGHooL NoTEs
with the life skills group in the greenhouse, said Donavon's gotten so good at COLLEGE NOTES spotting dying and diseased Jeffrey Porter,of Culver, was named plants that when the group to the fall 2013 dean's list at Simpson has visited local gardens, University in Redding, Calif. Donavon can pick out the
plants that need attention. "Most of these students come here and they've nev-
er grown anything before," Lueck said. "But they come in here and once they start
growing, they're so excited about it. I love watching that excitement blossom for them." But not everything about
the greenhouse process has been easy. Last year, many of the basil plants perished, as both students and teach-
erslearned tough lessons in gardening. The greenhouse's caretakers solved those issues, and most of the plants are now happily thriving. The group even has plans to plant 6,000 hanging baskets and sell them at Ace Hard-
ware around Mother's Day. Thanks to the money from the greenhouse,the students
seniors; 2 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300.
later this month to catch a Portland Trail Blazers bas-
Southwest OdemMedoRoad. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 4:24 p.m.Feb. 8, in the area of Robal Roadand U.S.Highway 20. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at5:34p.m. Feb. 8, in the 63300 block of U.S. Highway20. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:40 a.m. Feb. 9, in the3500 block of Southwest CascadeVista Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12:53 p.m. Feb. 9, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTreeLane. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at2:51 p.m. Feb. 9, inthe 2000 block of Southwest Timber Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:14 p.m.Feb. 9, in thearea of Southwest Black Butte Boulevard and Southwest Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 6:32 p.m.Feb. 9, in the area of Northeast17th Street and Northeast KingwoodAvenue.
Thanks to the greenhouse, students are continually getting
thegreenhouse, andalsopay working with the plants or for life skills student's field when he's watched students detrips. velop independence through the Donavon Johnson, a soph- skills they've learned. omore, is in his second year Tadjiki has even more plans working in the greenhouse. for the program. He wants to Before Bend High, Donavon build garden beds outside the
inEngland;$8,$5studentsand
XEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG
Schools
are heading over to Portland
Riley Barrett,of Sisters, was named to the fall 2013 dean's list at Fairfield University in Fairfield, Conn.
Hcvvto submit TeenfealLKidsrecognized recentlyforacademicachievementsorfor parlicipationin clubs, choirsorvolunteergroups. (Pleasesubmitaphoto) Contact:541-383-0358,youth© bendbulletin.com Mail:P .O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708
Otherschoolnotes: College announcemenfs,mililarygraduations ortrainingcompletions, reunionannouncements. Coniact:541-383-0358,bulle-
tin©bendbulletin.com
Story ideas SchoelbneILItemsandannouncementsofgeneralinterest. Contact:541-633-2161,news© bendbulletin.com
ketball game. Before the gteenhouse, Tadjiki said field trips like these were rare. "The district isn't able to pay for even one field trip," Tadjiki said. "How are we
Shalentilaliles:Knowofa kid
supposed to teach students how tobecome independent citizens in th e communi-
WILSONSof Redmond
withacompellingstory? Coniact:541-383-0354,mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
541-548-2066
ty unless they're able to go out into that community?
EVERGREEN
%B- IFE
I5&TREss
G allery-Be n d
In-Home Care Servlces
Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-3S9-0006
www.evergreeninhome.com
541-830-5084
&P.CHA NGER
ACE THE NEXT REPORTCARD WITH SYLVAN
BEND FIRE RUNS Friday 6:21 p.m.— Building fire, 19555 Pinehurst Road. 29 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 23 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 12 —Medical aid calls.
REDMOND FIRE RUNS Feb. 3 3:17p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of Southwest 23rd Street. 5:23p.m. —Unauthorized burning, 835 E. state Highway126. 9 —Medical aid calls. Feb. 4 7 —Medical aid calls. Feb. 5 14 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 7 — Medical aid calls. Friday 14 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 11 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 16 —Medical aid calls.
Our personal learning •
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approach will really connect with your child, combining
engaging technology
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with amazing teachers, raising grades and confidence.
Act now to take control of this school year.
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
RKGON MEDFORD
AROUND THE STATE Man accused of killing wife's lover — Apolice affidavitsays
u s a eovereaSSroomS The Associated Press
Porlandmedialion
MEDFORD — Schools in
SouthernOregon'slargestdis-
With a Feb. 20strike dead-
trict reopened Tuesday with
shorter hours and substitutes in the classrooms for striking teachers.
Substituteshiredbythe Medford School District reportedly were transported from hotels in
buses with windows lined with paper to protect their identities. The teachers were given white
; ~ p'.~~
posters to shield their identities from picketers as they entered the schools.
lgg
Superintendent Phil Long said the district expected 50
f
to 60 percent of the district's 13,500 students to return to school on the first day of classe s since teachers went o n
strike Thursday. Attendance
Bob Pennell / (Medford) Mail Tribune
at some schoolsexceeded that
Oak Grove Elementary School teachers Michele Parr, left, and Ma-
threshold, he said at a news conference.
ria Thorpe greet one of their students Tuesday at a teacher's picket line at Howard Elementary School in Medford.
behind by teachers who didn't want their students to fall be-
hind duringthe strike.
"together, in solidarity," if it
becomesnecessary. — TheAssociated Pess
Hired from cities throughout the state, the substitutes
worked with lesson plans left
line looming,both Portland Public Schoolsandits teachers are takingsteps to prepare. Thetwo sidesreportedly metTuesdayafternoon with a statemediator. Also on Tuesday,districtofficials sent out a messagetofull- and part-time teacherssaying they havethe right to strike or continueworking. Thedistrict says all unionmemberswil be required tocheckout with administrators onFeb.19and turn in all district property. The teachersunionsent its members amessagesuggesting thatteachersremove their personalbelongings fromtheirclassrooms
ing" and "gut-wrenching" to see their students return to
eYou can't have quality ed-
said Cindy Woodard, a fifthucation, when quality educa- grade teacher at Oak Grove tion is walking the sidewalk," Elementary.
Judge denies DEA AP course participation
access todatabase below theU.S.average By Steven DuBois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — A f ederal
judge in Portland ruled Tuesday that the U.S. Drug En-
forcement Agency must get a warrant before accessing Oregon's pharmaceutical-monitoring database. The state created the Oregon Prescription Drug Monitoring Program to track prescriptions and help health care providers identify abuse. But federal agents want in-
District Judge Ancer Haggerty wrote in his 16-page opinion. ACLU a t t orney
N a t h an
Freed Wessler praised the decision as a victory for privacy. "The court rightly rejected the government's extreme argument that patients give up their privacy rights by receiving medical treatment from doctors and pharmacists," he said in a statement. Assistant U .S . A t t o rney
Kevin Danielson argued the f ormation f r o m t h e d a t a - case on behalf of the DEA. base to help with their drug He did not return a phone call investigations. seeking comment. State law said police needOregon lawmakers aped a court o rder t o c heck proved the prescription data-
the database. But the DEA asserted that federal law al-
base in 2009,and itbecame
fully operational two years lowed the agency to access later. A pharmacy must electhe information using what is tronically report information known as an administrative about the quantity and type subpoena, which does not of drug dispensed, as well as involve a judge or require the identifying information about governmenttoshow probable the patient and doctor who cause. prescribed the medication. The state sued in 2012 and About 7 million prescripwas joined by the American tion records are uploaded to Civil Liberties Union. the system each year, accord"Although there is not an ing to Haggerty's opinion. absolute right to privacy in According to court records, prescription inf o rmation, the DEA on Sept. 11, 2012, isas patients must expect that sued an administrative subphysicians, pharmacists and poena demanding the preother medical p e rsonnel scription records of a patient. can and must access their The DEA issued another one records, it is more than rea- six days later, requesting a sonable for patients to believe summary of all drugs prethat law enforcement agen- scribed by two doctors. The cies will not have unfettered state balked, starting the leaccess to their records," U.S. gal fight.
By Steven DuBois
Deputy superintendent of
The Associated Press
PORTLAND —
TruCk hitS inmntnS —OregonState Police sayatractor-trailer rig drifted off southboundInterstate 5 nearWilsonville and hit two members of a MultnomahCounty inmateworkcrew whowere picking uplitter. One inmate wasseriously injured, whileasecond inmatewastreated atthe scene Tuesday.Lt. GreggHastingssaysthe truckdriver reported losing consciousness.Thedriver, 44-year-old EdwinGagarin, of Sunnyvale, Calif., wastreated ata hospital fora minor injury. The40-year-old female inmate hospitalizedfor treatment of serious but non-life-threatening injuries wasnot immediately identified. Traffic on 1-5was disrupted for several hours. Hazardousmaterials firefighters worked tocontain anestimated 25 to 50 gallons ofdiesel fuel that spilled from thetruck, which woundupon its side in aditch. Hastings saystroopers areinvestigating the crash.
12-pQr SnntnnCS In IQnk rnblÃrif — A54-year-oldmanwho reportedly hasspentmuchofhis life in prison is headedbackto servea 12-year sentencefor robbingtwo bankslastyear in Grants Pass.John EdwardPerdue,ofGrantsPass,wasgivenanenhancedsentenceMonday in federal court in Medford asacareer offender. Lastyear's robberies occurred lessthanayearafter he was releasedfrom state prison after serving time for robbingbanks in2008in Roseburg andGrants Pass.Perdue also wasconvicted of bank robberies in1996.
Beaverton officershootsannedman — Apolice spokesmanin
On the picket line, teachers school without them. said it was "sad," "heartbreak-
a SouthernOregonmanfoundhis wife in a mobile homebedroom with another man andfatally shot him. RobertWilliams,30, wasreportedly shotata trailer park inWinston south of Roseburg. Authorities arrested 38-year-old DonaldDwight Davisthat evening. Policesaid Davistold them he lookedout hiswindowabout 2:45 a.m., sawhiswife's car atWiliams' trailer, and whennobodyanswered his knockthere, let himself in. Police said Davis initiallytold themWiliams lunged athim andthe gunwent off, but later said hepulled the trigger. Davis'attorney, ElizabethBaker,of Eugene,said the woman"categorically denies that her husbandis responsible."
Oregon schools Rob Saxton O r egon noted in a statement that far
students are taking and pass- more students take AP coursing rigorous Advanced Place- es than 10 years ago. But he ment courses at significantly also identified two "troubling lower rates than the national trends" — teenagers who average, including their peers have the potential to succeed in neighboring Washington are not bothering to particistate. Oregon ranked 29th in the
percentage of its 2013 graduates who passed at least one AP exam during their high school career, the College Board said Tuesday in its annual "AP Report to the Nation."
pate and many are students
of color. The College Board statis-
tics show less than 10 percent of Oregon's Hispanic, Native American and African Amer-
ciated with receiving college credit. That trails the national
Saxton said educators must
"All of our students deserve a clear path to college, and
scored a 3 or better on an
tion rate is an important step
exam. California also easily bested Oregon, while Idaho
in meeting the state's "40-40-
trailed the Beaver State in
expects to see 40 percent
push to get more students to
enroll.
— From wire reports
Weekly Arts 8 Entertainment In
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average of 20 percent. Mean- that starts with ensuring that while, only 24 percent of the each and every student has recent graduates took at least access to rigorous content one AP course during high and the opportunity — and school, wellbelowthe U.S. av- encouragement — to earn erage of 33 percent. college credit while in high In Washington, 34 percent school," he said. of students enrolled in at least Oregon officials have said one AP course and 21 percent boosting the AP participa-
both categories. Advanced Placement classes are seen as good preparation for college and there has been a state and national
Judge dieS —Salempolicesayan autopsy hasdetermined thata 74-year-old MarionCounty Circuit Court judge died inan accidental fall at his home.Lt. SteveBirr says anautopsy performedTuesdaybythe Oregon state medicalexaminer's officedeterminedthat JudgeAlbin Norblad died of asubduralhematoma, which wasthe result of an accidental fall. Officers foundthe judgedeadat his homeMondayafter going to check on him when hedid not answerhis phone. Police investigated becauseit was anunattendeddeath.The presiding judge inMarion County Circuit Court, JameseRhoades,reportedlycalled Norblad a"smart, feisty, cut-throughthe baloneykind of judge." Hewasathird-generation member of afamily that produced governor a andaU.S. representative. Norbladwasinhis 42nd yearas aMarion Countyjudge.
icangraduatesgotascoreof3 or higher on an AP exam.
The results show 15percent do a better job of identifyof recent Oregon graduates ing good candidates, getting had an AP score of 3 or better them to enroll and providing on an exam — the mark asso-
Beaverton saysanofficer whowasconfronted by anarmed manduring a domestic disturbancecall shotand woundedthe man. Officer Mike Rowe said police responded to a homeTuesdayafternoon. Oncethe officers were inside,they saythey wereconfronted bythe 28-year-old man. Rowe says thewoundedmanwas taken to a hospital with what weredescribed as serious butnon-life-threatening injuries. Themanwas not immediately identified. Thespokesmansays no oneelsewasinjured.
20" goal. By 2025, the state
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BAKER COUNTY
Official saysavalanchekiled 2 skiers ~i fiiti f 5lm
By Jayson Jacoby WesCom Wire
BAKER COUNTY — Two c ross-country s k i er s w e r e
killed about noon in an avalanche near Little Eagle Meadows in the southern Wallowa
Mountains near Cornucopia, Mark Bennett, Baker County Commissioner, confirmed
Tuesday. The area is about 10 miles northwest of Halfway.
Baker County Sheriff Mitch Southwick said a LifeFlight helicopter was dispatched to
Southwick said the skiers ter, said Maj. Stephen Bomar, were clients of a Joseph com- director of public affairs for the pany, Wallowa Alpine Huts, Oregon Military Department. "We arein conversations on that conducts wilderness ski tours. He said one survivor what assets are the most apapparently used a cellphone to propriate," Bomar said. "More report the avalanche. than likely, it will be a BlackThe skiers, who were from hawk (helicopter)." the Seattle area, were on a According to a Feb. 6 bulguided multiday trip, accord- letin from the Wallowa Avaing to Connelly Brown, the lanche Center in Joseph, snow owner o f W a l l owa A l p ine that had fallen in the previous week "is not bonding well to Huts. Brown said it appears the the old surface down 12-18" skiers who died are a man in where the new snow fell on his20sand another man in his weak loose grains. This prob-
rescue survivors, but the heli- 30s. copter wasn't able to get closer Brown said an unconfirmed than about a half-mile away report is that a woman in her from the scene. 50s suffered two broken legs,
lem doesn'texist everywhere
and is mainly confined to more northerly aspects at mid-elevations. There was a recent
report from the southern Walbroken leg. lowas of a skier triggered slab to accessthesceneofthe acciWallowa Alpine Huts offers avalanche on this layer. No one dent as well, Southwick said. ski tours in the southern Wal- was caught in this small slide, A total of eight people were lowas that include overnight but there are places in the terskiing together when the av- accommodations in a yurt, as rain where triggering a slide is alanche hit. I n a d dition to well as at the historic Schnied- possible." the two who were killed, two er Cabin. That bulletin was issued bereportedly were seriously inThe Oregon National Guard fore heavy snow fell on Friday jured and four were not hurt. prepared to dispatch a helicop- and Saturday. Members of the Panhandle Snowmobile Club attempted
and a man in his 30s had one
' -
i . ~ sl
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B4
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over. Bend's effort to expand its urban growth boundary,called the UGB, is nowhere near being done. The effortbegan back in 2004. By 2010, it was estimated to have cost the city $4 million. The boundaries have not moved an inch. Nowadays, the city ha s about the equivalent of one of the city's planners working half-time on the expansion. That's troubling, because planning for Bend's future is its own kind of emergency. It's not the same as whenyou need the police or when a home is on fire. But it's still an urgent priority to find room to grow to keep housing prices down and givebusiness a place to locate or expand. Before Bend can move itsboundaries, Bend must march through the state's UGB
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There are any number of ways theUGB couldget off track again. Mess up Bend's water plans and you mess up the UGB. Mess up Bend's sewer plans and you mess up the UGB.
HllLARY ~I'" lll~ ~l~"
CAS co.
M 1Vickel's Worth Sense ofwell-being
ishing up the UGB didn't matter so much. The city laid off half its planning staff. And until perhaps eight months ago, Bend's UGB was on a meandering path. There was no real deadline for the project. There wasn't a dime for consulting work. Without a deadline, without more process. staff, it poked along. Bend sent its first UGB proposThere is now a goal. The city al to the state in 2009. Even before wants to turn in its revision in it was sent, the city was hearing April 2016. opposition and expected to get its To meet that goal, it i s n ot proposal partially rejected by the state's Department of Land Con- enough to rely onhalf an employee. servation and Development. Rankin is asking the Bend City The city had two choices. It Council Thursday for $2.25 million could turn in what it had and try for consulting work to get the UGB to fight through any objections. done. It could go back, revise and try to It's a striking figure. He says tackle the objections. that's what is necessary to do it It turned in what it had. right and by deadline. At the time, what we heard from He says he understands that this the city were complaints about the is as much a political process as a state. The city said some of the technical, planning process. He changes calledfor by the DLCD has tried to start a dialogue with were unreasonable. opponents to the 2009 proposal. It's Some of them were. For in- not just the usual suspects, such as stance, it took work before the Or- Central Oregon LandWatch. Irriegon's Land Conservation and De- gation districts also have concerns velopment Commission eventually about what Bend's expansion will came around to ruling on a point do to service areas. about density: "It is up to Bend Rankin says he is going to get to determine in the first instance the public involved in a way simiwhat isreasonable to accommolar to what the city has done with date its future housing needs with- its sewer planning. And he is comin its own UGB." mitted to being exacting in matchWhat we didn't hear is that ing the state's data requests. Bend also failed. It failed to provide There are any number of ways enough data in many examples as the UGB could get off track again. required. Mess up Bend's water plans and For instance, it didn't provide you mess up the UGB. Mess up data in the right way about its Bend's sewer plans and you mess housing types. It used different cat- up the UGB. egories than required by the state And no matterhow good the and collapsed multiple categories. city's data is, no matter what asThat may sound nitpitcky, but sumptions it makes, it is never Bend can't have expected anything going to be good enough to please but a rejection for its UGB when it some. But if Bend is going to be didn't get basic things right. the kind of place that most people Bryan Rankin, who worked on can afford to live in, if it's going to the 2009 submission and is now in be the kind of place that is home charge of the project, said the city to new business, Bend needs more space. should have done better. When the recession hit, finInfill isn't going to do it.
Support Miller for judge
OSU impact studies
Interesting Jan. 30 artide regardThe Bulletin's Feb. 1 article titled Deschutes County residents have ingpublicperceptions of growthmea- "OSU President Ed Ray touts Cas- the fortunate opportunity to elect sured by people's sense of well-being. cades campus expansion" says, "In Randy Miller as a new circuit court One criterionthat would relatetohow a decade, he envisions the OSU-Cas- judge this May. I've practiced law in Oregon as a people feel about growth would be cadescampus asthriving and hopes their level of confidence in city man-
the estimates of 3,000 to 5,000 new
agement and administration. This would apply to traffic, water and sewer, as well as public safety and how effectively city personnel present and communicate information.
students by 2025 turn out to be a the last 10 years out of Bend, where I low estimate. He hopes it's closer to live. During that time, I've appeared
To me, there are three growth strat-
8,000 or 10,000." Having lived in the
trial attorney for over 40 years, with in all but one of our circuit courts
university towns of Boulder and Fort across Oregon, and before many, Collins, Colo., and Boston, Mass., I many different circuit court judges. am incined to believe Ray's vision
In my career, Iserved as co-counsel
egies. Firstis nogrowth, whereinpro- of 10,000 students by 2025 will be cesses and practices are in place that realized. sion (for example in Boulder, Colo., in the '60s with population caps and limits on building permits). Second, uncontrolled growth, which appears
for the Judicial Fitness Commission in proceedingsto remove a judge Will the t r ansportation, traffic, from office. In my experience, great infrastructure and neighborhood judges possess character, integrity, a impact studies include Ray's hope of strong work ethic, a diverse profes8,000 to 10,000 students by 2025? Or sional background, a deep respect will the impact studies only include for the office and our judicial system
to have been the case in California,
3,000 to 5,000 students?
constrain or even discourage expan-
and are committed to public service.
as many communities struggle with The phrase "rapid development Equally important is the ability to in~ ctu r e failures, economic im- and fast track" have been used re- control proceedings tempered with balances and the decay of quality of peatedly in city and OSU presenta- courtesy, while applying the applilife. Finally, a controlled growth strat-
tions about the campus development
cable law to the facts to render a fair
egy, which wouldindude measurable and clea rly communicated plans and actions. Inmedium-sized citygovernment, I've seen these activities typically driven by the city planning and finance functions. Clearly, the third alternative would
at Southwest Chandler Avenue and
and impartial decision.
Southwest Century Drive. My hope
Miller has all those qualifications. I practiced law with him for about
be the most beneficial for Bend. How-
dents of Bend.
is that the desire for OSU-Cascades to meet the state's 2025 education goal by having freshmen and sophomores on campus by fall of 2015 doesn't come at the expense of resi-
ever, there appears to be a breach as As a resident of Bend's west side evidencedby recentinformation pre- since 1999, I have benefited greatly sented about Mirror Pond and traf-
from the development of the Old Mill
10 years, four of which were directly with me doing trial work out of my firm's Bend office. Both professionally and personally, I give Miller my unqualified endorsement. Miller's unquestionable commitment to the
public indudes his service as a Marine combat veteran, a police officer
fic impact for the OSU campus. The and the beautiful parks and paths tenor of these messages indicate to along the river. I am hopeful city of-
and as a director for local nonprofits, such as Central Oregon Builders As-
me that either the information from
sociation and Crystal Peaks Youth
ficials will allow sufficient time for
the city is not there, is not "ready for complete impact studies, using Ray's Ranch. prime time" or is notbeing communi- vision, so that the OSU-Cascades exMillerdeserves and has earned cated. Whatever the case, it does play pansion will be another success like my vote. Please join me in supporting into public confidence and a sense of the Old Mill and parks, rather than a and voting for Miller as our next Dewell-being. rushed and regretful development. schutes County Circuit Court judge. Jim Keeton Kathy Graham Donald Willis Bend
Bend
Bend
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Perceived uncertainty is making Americans sedentary enforeignvisitorsusedto describe American culhm, they generally settled on different versions of one trait: energy. Whether driven by crass motivations or spiritual ones, Americans, visitors agreed,
er generations. Between the 1980s and the 2000s alone, mobilityamongyoung adults dropped by 41 percent. It's also true that many people are
DAVID
BROOKS
locked into homes with underwater values. But as Timothy Noah pointed
out in Washington Monthly, mobility among renters is down just as sharply as mobility amonghomeowners. It'salso true thatlabor marketsare getting more homogeneous. It used become steadilyless mobile. In 1950,20 to be that the jobs found in Pittsburgh percent of Americans moved in a giv- were different from the ones found in en year. Now, it's around 12 percent. In Atlanta. But now they are more simithe 1950s and 1960s, people lived in the lar, sothere is less reason to move from samehouseforanaverageof fiveyears; one city to another. But that also fails now people live in the same house for to explain the tremendous drops over an average of 8.6 years. When it comes decades. to geographic mobility, we are now at No, a big factor here is a loss in worked morefrantically,m oved more and switchedjobs more thanjust about anybody else on earth. That's changing. In the past 60 years, for example, Americans have
historiclows, no more mobilethan peo-
els in the history of the General Social
self-confidence. It takes faith to move.
ciety, America's role in the world and term faith.
One of the oddities of the mobility that does exist is that people are
organized religion than people from Europe. But now, American attitudes resemble European attitudes.
not moving to low-unemployment/ Fifty percent of Americans over high-income areas. Instead, they are 65 believe America stands above all moving to lower-income areas with
cheap housing. That is to say, they are less likely to endure temporary housing hardship for the sake of future opportunity. This loss of faith is evident in other areas of life. Fertility rates, a good
marker ofconfidence,are down. Even You are putting yourself through tem- accountingfor cydical changes,peoporary expense and hardship because ple are less likely to voluntarily vacate It is true that we are an aging nation you have faith that over the long run, a job in search of a better one. Only 46 and older people tend to move less. But you will slingshot forward. Manyhigh- percent of white Americans believe today's young people are much less ly educated people, who are still mov- theyhave agoodchance ofim proving mobile than young people from earli- ing in high numbers, have that long- their standard of living, the lowest levple in Denmark or Finland. Why is this happeningP
Survey. Peter Beinart wrote a fascinating piece for National Journal, arguhg that Americans used to have much more faith in capitalism, a dassless so-
themselves members of the "have-
nots" has doubled. These pessimistic views bring to mind a concept that's been floatIng around Europe: the Precariat. According to British academic Guy Standing, the Precariat is the growing class of people living with short-term and parttime work with precarious living stan-
dards and without anarrative of occupational development." They live with multiple forms of insecurity and are
liable to join protest movements across Only 27 percent of Americans ages the political spectrum. 18 to 29 believe that. As late as 2003, No one response is going to reverse Americans were more likely than the trend, but Michael Strain of the Italians, Brits and Germans to say the American Enterprise Institute believes "free market economy is the best sys- government should offer moving tem on which to base the future of the vouchers to the long-term unemployed, world." By 2010, they were slightly less so they can chase opportunity. If we others as the greatest nation on earth.
likely than those Europeans to em-
could induce more people to Go West!
brace capitalism. Thirty years ago, a vast majority of
(or South, East or North) in search of opportunity, maybe the old mindset
Americans identi fied as members of the middle dass. But since 1988, the
would return.
percentage of Americans who call
— David Brooksis a columnist for The New York Times.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
GREENHOUSE DAMAGE
BITUARIES James 'Jim' Carmien July 3,1929- February 8, 2014 Jim was born i n B r i stol, I ndiana, t o M a r j o ri e a n d K enneth Car m i e n . H e served in the Army for two y ears as a h e a v y e q u i p ment m e chanic s t ationed o n Guam. He m a r ried hi s high s c h oo l s w e e t heart, Shirley Hilton. Jim and Shirley moved to Corvallis, Oregon, in 1962, w here h e w o r k e d a s a n a uto m echanic a n d l a t e r b ecame a v o c a t ional i n s tructor a t O r e go n S t a t e P enitentiary . Ji m ' s h o b bies wer e f i s h ing, c a m ping and hunting. H e i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s loving wife of 64 years; his daughter, C a th y R u s sell; r andchildren , Jason Sara) Russell of T a coma, Washington, and J ennifer R ussell o f F r a s er , C o l o rado; t h r e e g r e a t-grandchildren, Isabelle, Evelyn, and Connor; and a s i ster, Beverly Paulson of O s k al oosa, Iowa. H e w a s p r eceded in death by his son, C harles; a nd b r ot h e r s , Kenneth and Gerald of E lkhart an d B r i stol, I n d i ana. At his request, there will b e no service. H e w i l l b e i nterned i n W il l a m e t t e N ational Cemetery. T h e r e w ill b e a pr i v a t e f a m i l y service in the spring and a C elebration o f L i f e w i t h f amily a n d f r i e nd s a t a later date. I n h i s me m o ry , d o n a tions m a y be m a d e to F amily A c c ess N e t w o r k , 2 125 N.E. D a ggett L a n e , B end, Or e g o n 9770 1 , Attention: Nancy Childers.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Templeamused a nation and later turned to politics
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
By Valerie J. Nelson Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Silil-
dising onslaught that includ- Los Angeles dance studio run ed Temple-endorsed dresses by former Ziegfeld girl Ethel and dishes. Meglin, who trained young Even bartenders got into children to work in film and the act. Although the 1930s advertising. origins of the nonalcoholic In publicity i nterviews, Shirley Temple cocktail have her mother always claimed been debated, Temple told that Shirley was accidentalthe Los Angeles Times in ly "discovered" in a dancing
ley Temple Black, who as the most popular child movie star of all time lifted a filmgoing nation's spirits during the Depression and then grew up to be a diplomat, has died. She was 85. 1985 that the Brown Derby Black died late Monday at restaurant in Hollywood had her home in the San Fran- named the drink after her. cisco suburb of Woodside, totemple according to publicist Cheryl From page Kagan. No cause was given. To learn her lines, Shirley From 1935 through 1938, essentially memorized the the curly-haired script as her mother, Germoppet billed trude Temple, read it aloud. as Shirley TemWhen Barrymore forgot his ple was the top lines while filming 1934's "Carolina," Shirley sweetly box-office draw in the nation. told him what to say, causing She s aved Temple the star to "roar like a singed what
b e c ame Bl a ck
cat," actor Robert Young later
A decade later, she brief-
Obituary policy
ly returned to Hollywood to
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 besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon 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 9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
ed to churning out formulaic
Phone: 541-617-7825
such films as the Civil War saga "The Littlest Rebel"
Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Dbituaries P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Nancy Holt, 75: A pioneer in the land-art movement of the 1960s and '70s and the creator of one
of the era's most poetic works — "Sun Tunnels," four huge concrete culverts set in the Utah des-
ert to align with the sun on summer and winter solstices. Died Saturday in Manhattan.
John Cali,95: The son of acoal miner, Cali helped create a real estate empire that today, through
the Mack-Cali Realty Corp., encompasses279 office buildings and a dozen multifamily rental
buildings in the Northeast. Died Feb. 1 in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Els Borst, 81:Dutch police say the country's former health minister — a woman who drafted the nation's landmark 2002 law per-
mitting euthanasia — has been found dead in her garage. They have ruled out natural causes.
Died Monday in Amsterdam. Leonard Hirshan, 86: Was Clint Eastwood's agent for more
than 50 years, perhaps a record in Hollywood for a major star. While with the William Morris
Agency, he represented stars such as Jack Lemmon and Sophia Loren. Died Jan. 31 in Bev-
erly Hills. — From wire reports
scripts that usually featured the cheerful, poised Shirley as the accidental Little Miss
Fix-It who could charm any problem away.
Adancingpair
It proved once again that Temple "could, if she wanted
to, steal Christmas from Tiny Her most memorable per- Tim," Anne Edwards wrote in formances included four the 1988 biography "Shirley films she made with Bill "Bo- Temple: American Princess." jangles" Robinson, a black dancer 50 years her senior Another life and a favorite costar, she later sald.
Politics consumed much of her adult life after she mar-
They were first paired as
ried businessman Charlie
foils for cantankerous Lionel Barrymore in 1935's "The Lit-
Black in 1950 and was known
Continued from B1
1 9 98. was the U.S. ambassador to "I would primarily listen the West African nation of to what he was doing and I Ghana and later served as would do it." White House chief of proto-
Their dance routines in
At the dance studio, she was soon spotted by a talent
scout and cast in a low-budget series called "Baby Burlesks," in which she parodied such adult actresses as Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo. Her career took off when
less optimism on screen went
The best of her post-child
starring roles may h ave been the spunky Army brat she played in 1947's "Fort
time in their lives are living more productive lives. But now, we say, 'Yes, the opportunity exists, but you're going to have to go miles away,'" Roblan said, adding
"t think that's to make patients struggling not only fair, it's it doesn't sit well with him
righteous."
with cancer jump through one more hoop.
— Rob Bovett, a lawyer But Sen. Ro d M o n roe, representing the Association D-Portland, who testified in favor of Senate Bill 1531, said of Oregon Counties, on giving choice to local governments locally elected officials un-
derstand the needs of their community better than state
The brother of one of Shirley's classmates, Agar was a 24-year-old Army Air Corps sergeant when his marriage to Temple propelled him into acting. They had a daughter but divorced in 1949.
"He was an intensely inter-
esting and fascinating man to me," Temple said when Black died at 86 in 2005. "I fell in
People on the street in Prague
After moving to Califor-
nia, Black started a fishing and hatchery company and
favorites — the John Ford-directed "Wee Willie Winkie," in which she wins over a British outpost in India, and "Heidi," a hit film that became a
consulted on maritime issues.
Senate Bill1556: Deciares that people older than 21 could produce, transfer and possess recreational marijuana. Allows lawmakers to work out the restrictions, such as taxation and legal amounts. Refers the measure to the people. Chief Sponsors:Sen. Floyd Prozanski, D-Eugene, Rep. Peter Buckley,
lawmakers. If the community feels local officials are out of step with their values, Monroe
said, they can be voted out. Rob Bovett, a lawyer representing the Association of Or-
egon Counties, said approving the measure would avoid costly litigation. Next month, he said, the state is about to roll out "the
Some counties,he said, want to pause to see how it fares before embracing medical marijuana dispensaries locally.
Two of her films released would often stop her and in 1937 were among Temple's pull a memento from their card from Czechoslovakia' s 1930s-era Shirley Temple fan club. That recognition "was very classic. helpful when you want to explain your country's position For the audience on various foreign affairs," In her f i rst f i l m a i m ed she said in the Post article. squarely at children, Shirley The money she made sang "Animal Crackers in as a child had long since My Soup" to fellow orphans evaporated. in 1935's "Curly Top." She At 22, she discovered that danced with Jack Haley in all but $28,000 of her $3.2 mil"Poor Little Rich Girl" (1936), lion income from the movies one of her best films and "a had vanished, because of her top musical on any terms," ac- family's lavish lifestyle and cording to movie critic Leon- bad investments made by ard Maltin. her father, George Temple, a A country desperate for bank manager who left his relief from the excruciating job to oversee her career. economic hardships of the She "felt neither d isapDepression fell in love with pointment nor anger," Temple Shirley and her infectious op- wrote in her 1988 autobiogtimism in "Baby Take a Bow," raphy. "Perhaps years spent the 1934 film that was her ignoring such matters had first starring vehicle. insulated me from disillusion. President Franklin D. Roo- The spilt-milk parable surely sevelt marveled how splendid played a role in my equanimit was "that for just 15 cents, ity, as did the power of bloodan American can go to a mov- line and family ties." ie and look at the smiling face Her brothers were 9 and 13 of a baby and forget his trou- years old when she was born bles," according to an Ameri- April 23, 1928, in Santa Moncan Film Institute history. ica, Calif., to a mother who By 1935, lookalike Shirley had suppressed a desire for Temple dolls, complete with her own career in the arts, acher trademark curls, were cording to Edwards. selling at the rate of 1.5 milWhen Shirley was barely 3, lion a year, part of a merchan- her mother enrolled her in a
"There are O regon citi zens wh o f o r t h e fi r s t
ried at 17 in 1945.
Who in Musicals."
wallets — their membership
"sympathetic to the idea of local control," the state doesn't allow for local regulation of pharmacies or other outlets forprescription drugs.
most unregulated medical marijuana program in the
seen in many parts of the country, according to "Who's
race musical numbers to be
But Sen. Arnie Roblan,
D-Coos Bay, who sits on the
Apache," which paired her romantically on screen with John Agar, whom she mar-
col for President Gerald Ford. love with him at first sight. It She also was an ambassador sounds corny, but that's what to Czechoslovakia from 1989 happened." to 1992, a "substantive job" During the Korean War, that was the best she ever Black rejoined the military held, Temple told The Wash- and worked as an intelligence ington Post in 1998. officer in Washington, where Initially short on diplo- his wife became interested in matic experience, she got an politics, according to a 2001 assist from her childhood. Times article.
(1935) and "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" (1938) reflected theiroff-screen rapport. They were the first mixed-
Senate Bill1531:Would
allow municipalities to ban or restrict medical marijuana dispensaries. Chief sponsors:Sen. Rod Monroe, D-Portland; Sen. Bill Hanseii, R-Athens Status:Work session scheduled for today in Senate Committee on Judiciary Online:https://olis.leg. state.or.us/liz/2014R1/ Measures/Text/SB1531/ Introduced
committee, said although he's
Spotted
as Shirley Temple Black. tle Colonel," in which 7-yearAn active Republican, she old Shirley tap dances up and ran unsuccessfully for Con- Anewname down the staircase, remark- gress in 1967. Two years later, On vacation in Hawaii in ably matching the veteran she was appointed the U.S. 1950, Temple met the dashing Robinson step for step. delegate to the United Nations Black, who was working at a "I would learn by listening by President Richard Nixon. shipping company and had to the taps," Temple told The From 1974 to 1976, Temple never seen any of her films. Washington Post i n
being impacted by the weight of snow that fell last Friday and Saturday.
made the rounds of casting directors with her young daughter.
out of fashion, and she ennarrate and sometimes star in rolled in the Westlake School fairy tales on what was orig- for Girls. She had brought inally called "Shirley Tem- more than $32 million into ple's Storybook,"a successful Fox's coffers, Edwards wrote. show that aired on television from 1959 to 1961.
of Tuesday, seven of the11 greenhouses at the gardens were
Pot
recalled. she signed with Fox in 1934 She attributed her well-ad- — she made 10 films that year more than 40 movies before justed nature on and off the alone. Her baby-doll image she turned 12. set to her "super mother" who was so valuable to the studio Hollywood re c ognized "kept my head on straight" that the 6-year-old's birth certhe enchanting, dimpled and "just dusted off" the adu- tificate was altered to shave scene-stealer's importance to lation, Temple told the Times a year off her age. She did the industry with a "special in 1989. not discover the deceit until award" — a miniature Oscar As she moved into h er her 13th birthday, Temple re— at the Academy Awards for teens, she literally outgrew called in her autobiography. 1934, the year she sang and the movie business — audiBy then, she was officially danced her way into Ameri- ences would not accept her unemployed, released from ca's collective heart. in more mature roles — and her contract in 1940 after her A fter she sang "On t h e Temple made her last film, final two films flopped at the "Mr. Belvedere Goes to Col- box office. With the advent of G ood Ship L ollipop" i n "Bright Eyes," the song be- lege," in 1949. World War II, Temple's endup Shirley Temple Development, a department dedicat-
Schilling Solar City Gardens, located on the Old Bend-Redmond Highway, sustained damage from the recent snowfall. As
class that was for recreation, but from the start, Gertrude
20th Century Fox studios from bankruptcy and made
came a hit, and the studio set
Email: obils©bendbulietin.com
. ha
D-Ashland
Status:Work session scheduled for today in Senate Committee on Judiciary Online:https://oiis.leg. state.or.us/liz/2014R1/ Measures/ Text/SB1556/ Introduced
country."
"I think that's not only fair,
it's righteous," Bovett said. Next, the Senate Judiciary Committee tackled wheth-
er recreational marijuana should be legalized. With the possibility of several measures on the 2014 ballot to legalize marijuana, lawmakersareconsidering a referral asking voters to legalize marijuana and to let lawmakers work out the details.
ney, opposes the measure, testifying he's not only opposed to legalization of recreational marijuana but this measure puts the "cart before
the horse." "What Senate Bill 1556 does is ask voters, 'Do you
want to legalize it and then The q uestion, B u ck- we'll figure out how to regley, of Ashland, said, is ulate it, r ather t han s ay, 'Here's how we can effecwhether "voters are tired of prohibition." tively regulate and deal with "Do th e
v o ters b elieve the
prohibition has done more harm than good? If so, then they will vote yes, they wish to end prohibition," Buckley said, adding he believes the answer is voters are ready to
u n i ntended a d v erse
consequences.'" The measure would make
it legal for those older than 21 to use and produce recreational marijuana. Lawmakers took no action on either
legalize the drug. measure. Doug Harcleroad, a former — Reporter,541-554-1162, Lane County district attor-
ldake@bendbulletin.com
The couple added two more children to their family and moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1954.
In 1972, after undergoing a
,w ru
Joh'ri David Picchetti
modified radical mastectomy,
Temple held a televised news conference from her hospi-
1934 - 2014 John David picchetti passed away February 7, 2014,
tal room to encourage other
at the age of 79.
women to have checkups. When Temple received a Kennedy Center honor in 1998, President Bill Clinton said that "she was the first
child actor ever to carry a full-length A-list picture" and "had the greatest short-lived career in movie history, then gracefully retired to the far less strenuous life of public service." Temple often underplayed her years as the little screen star whose blinding smile and bountiful talent rescued
a studio. "Sometimes one scores a bull's-eye purely by c hance," she wrote in
her
autobiography. Of the shadow that always followed her, Temple told
Time magazine in 1967: "I always think of her as 'the little
girl.' She's not me." Temple is survived by a son, Charlie Jr.; two daught ers, Lor i
a n d S u san; a
g randdaughter; and t w o great-granddaughters.
John was born to Attilio Picchetti and Olga Boilini in NorthJudson, IN, on September 30, 1934. He resided in Bend, OR and St, George, UT. e
John lived an illustrious life. After a long and successful career as att investment advisor, he fueled his interests in geography and enthtopolo by traveling the world. With each trip he gained lifelong friends end new' facts for his vast catalog of trivia with which he loved to stump his friends.'
' John will be remembered as an honest, reir and caring man who lived lifeg<~r to its fullest,
John was active throughout his life, He was a pilot, and he enjoyed participating in tennis, hiking, skiing, and basketball, One of his favorite' past times was riding his bike to meet his friends at Statbucks for his daily fi.appuccino.As an avid Oregon Duck fan, he looked forward to football - games at Autzen. But most of all, John loved to spend time with family and ~ friends. 'John was a philanthropist for his country and community. He cared for' everyone equally and dedicated his time and resources to the Servation Jt s ~-'Atmy end St, Charles Medical Center.
~John is survived by his children, Kary Shemesh end Eric Picchetti; grandchildren, Kyle, Nicole, Marco, Lola, end Nalah; sister, Kathleen Paras = and wife, Lear picchetti. n lieu of flowers, the family asks that memorial donations be made to the Salvation Army at www.salvationarmyusa,otg,
Niswonget-Reynolds Funeral Homeis honored to serve the family, 541-382-247L Pleasesign our online guestbook at www.niswonget-teInolds.com
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 B a sketball, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 Baseball, C2 Pre p sports, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY12, 2014
RODEO
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL
Circuit Finals leaving Redmond The Columbia River Circuit Finals rodeo, a Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association fixture at the Deschutes County Fair 8 ExpoCenter for the last14 years, is headed toYakima, Wash. "We just felt we needed the opportunity for more growth," Columbia River Circuit secretary Debi Davis said Tuesday. "We werethrilled
La Pine's Katie Mickel shoots the ball to score during the
bank
second half of Tuesday night's game against Sisters in La Pine. Mickel
scored13 points for the Hawks in a 50-44 win over the Outlaws.
with the facility — it's
a beautiful facility.... But we needed togo somewhere wherethere was more growth (opportunity) for spectators and sponsorships to produce a better show for everybody." Davis said this year's Columbia River Circuit Finals will be held Nov.
Ryan Brennecke/ The Bulletin
SNOWBOARDING
Bend boarder gets top-10 finish in Sochi • Teenager ICent Callister places ninth in thehalfpipe From staff andwire reports KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia -
Kent Callister accomplished his goal for the 2014 Winter Olympics.
t
The 18-year-old from Bend finished ninth in the men's snowboard halfpipe
',iv
7-8 at the Yakima Valley
event Tuesday at the Sochi Games.
Callister had said coming into the
SunDome.Yakima hosted the CRCFinals for multiple years before theeventmovedto Redmond in 2000.
Olympics that his goal was to "throw in some new tricks and hopefully make the
finals." Competing for Australia, Callister fell during his first run of the finals, netting
— Bulletin staff report
a scoreof40.On hissecond run, he lost some momentum in the bottom of the pipe on one of his final tricks and fin-
BASEBALL
ishedwith a scoreof68.5.
Yanks introduce
Japaneseace
NEW YORK — The
latest high-priced addition to the NewYork Yankees stood at the dais in front of a large news conference, put on his pinstriped jersey with No. 19and smiled. "Hello. My nameis Masahiro Tanaka," he said slowly in English. "I'm very happy to bea Yankee." After chartering a Boeing 787 Dreamliner for his trip from Tokyo to NewYork, the 25-year-old pitcher with the $155 million, seven-year contract was introduced Tuesdaynot in the news conference room downstairs at Yankee Stadium, but in the Legends Suite Club, where the high rollers congregate on game days. Yankees spokesman Jason Zillo concluded that the team's latest Pacific overture drew New York's most-attended news conference since Hideki Matsui arrived in January 2003. Tanaka chartered a Japan Airlines plane, which seats about 200, for the trans-Pacific trip to New York, reportedly costing about $200,000. There were just five passengers on the plane, including his pop star wife, Mai Satoda, plus their poodle Haru. Tanaka was24-0 with a1.27 earned run average last year, leading the Rakuten Golden Eagles to the JapanSeries title.
v•
• La Pine starts fast and stays incontrol to take a 50-44 Sky-EmLeague victory overSisters on Tuesdaynight
Andy Wong/The Associated Press
Australia's Kent Callister, of Bend, com-
petes in the men's snowboard halfpipe semifinal at the Rosa Khutor Extreme Park in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, on Tuesday.
By Emily Oller
secondplacein the Sky-Em League along with her nine points. "I think we played as a team restandings. The Lions, who lost TuesLA PINE — Controlling the game day to Elmira, sit atop the confer- ally well," La Pine coach Kim Beer from the opening quarter, La Pine ence with a 5-1 record. said. "We made some great passes, topped Sisters 50-44 in girls basAshley Pierce led the Hawks (10-8 but as a whole I think we played ketball Tuesday to improve to 3-1 in overall) with a career-high 17 points pretty well as a team. We got our Sky-Em League play and stay with- and six rebounds, Katie Mickel add- posts open and our guards did a in striking distance of league-leader ed 13 points, McKenna Boen just great job getting the ball into them." Cottage Grove. missed a double-double with ll The Hawks, who led 25-17 at the With the win — the Hawks' third points and eight rebounds, and Hol- half, were a force defensively and in a row — La Pine settled alone into li Glenn recorded eight steals to go SeeHawks/C6 The Bulletin
TODAY'SQUOTE
"It was like
watching an animal stuck in a trap. You can't just sit there and do
nothing about it.... I wanted him to have
gs."
That left him with a 99-
35 record and a2.30 ERA in Japan, where he had 53completegames in 172 starts.
PREP BOYSBASKETBALL
Cougarsavenge loss to LavaBears
dignity as he crossed the
TV HIGHLIGHTS Today NBCSN, 4 a.m.: Women's hockey, Canada vs. USA NBC, 3 p.m.:Men's nordic combined, individual K-95 final
NBC, 8 p.m.:Women's alpine, downhill final; women's snowboarding, halfpipe final, men's speedskating, 1,000 final
finish line." — Bend's Justin Wadsworth, C5
Bulletin staff report After falling to Bend High last month, Moun-
— The Associated Press
tain View knew it had no more room for error to stay in the Class 5A Intermountain Conference
NBA
Chris Lee / St. Louis Post-Dispatch file
Missouri linebacker Michael Sam(52) celebrates after scoring a touchdown against Southeastern Louisiana in 2012.
For Sam, upbringing
was biggestchallenge Oklahoma City's Serge lbaka, left,
Callister, who has dual citizenship because his father is Australian, finished third in the semifinals with a score of 79.5. He posted an impressive score of 87 in qualification earlier Tuesday to advance to the semifinals. See Callister /C5
shoots over Port-
By Joe Drape, Steve Eder and Billy Witz
land's center Robin
New YorJz TimesNews Service
Lopez during Tuesday's game.
COLUMBIA, Mo. — Michael Sam was the loud
Thunder overtake Blazers, 98-95
country boy who wore a tank top and a cowboy hat. He was the smooth-singing
Kevin Durant scores 36 points to lead OKC,C3
his coaches and crack up his
baritone who could irritate teammates with his songs.
FOOTBALL He was one of the best players to come out of tiny Hitchcock, Texas, where his
family was well-known for all the wrong reasons. He was an All-American and
defensive terror on the football field. SeeSam /C6
race. On Tuesday night, the Cougars got the 5846 boys basketball win that it needed over its archrival. Mountain View surged in the second quarter to catapult to a home win that put the Civil War
rivals in a heated race for the IMC title — each team with just one loss in league play. "We looked at it as a must-win," said Mountain View coach Craig Reid. "It's pride and all that. So we looked at it like we really needed to
step up." Hot shooting from Grant Lannin keyed Mountain View (15-3 overall). The senior wing scored 27 points and was 5 of 8 from 3-point range to go along with a team-leading six rebounds. Four Cougars added six points apiece. After falling behind 16-14 in the first quarter, the Cougarsoutscored Bend 38-23 over the next
two periods en route to the Civil War victory. And Lannin played no small part, Reid said. See Cougars/C6
r)
rg
veh
Inside German CarinaVogt, bottom, celebrates after winningthefirst gold medal in women's ski jumping, C4
local athletewatch Bend'sLAURENNEROSSis schedule to compete today in the women's downhill at 8 p.m. For more coverage of the 2014 Winter Games, ononline to bendbulletin.com/Olympics
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER EPL, Arsenal vs Manchester United
Time TV/ Radio 11:45 a.m. NBCSN
BASKETBALL
Men's college,whiparoundcoverage 3 :30 p.m. M en's college, Syracuse at Pittsburgh 4 p. m . Men's college, South Florida at Connecticut 4 p.m. Men's college, Baylor at Texas Christian 4 p . m. Men's college, Boston College atGeorgiaTech 4p.m. Men's college, GeorgeWashington at Virginia Commonwealth 4 p.m. NBC S N Men's college, Villanova at DePaul 5 p.m. Fox Sports 1 M en's college, Duke at North Carolina 6 p. m . ESPN M en's college, Stanford at Washington 6p . m . ESPN 2 M en's college, Central Florida at Memphis 6 p.m. ESPN U Men's college, Air Force atSanJose State 7 p.m. Root NBA, Portland at LA. Clippers 7:30 p.m. CSNNW, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
M en's college, California at Washington State 8 p.m.
ESP N U
GOLF
LPGATour, Australian Open
Golf
THURSDAY GOLF
PGA Tour, Northern Trust Open
Time 2 p.m.
TV/Radio Golf
BASKETBALL
Men's college, whiparound coverage 3:30 p.m ESPNU Women's college, N.C.State at Clemson 3:30 p.m Root Men's college, Louisville at Temple 4 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Arkansas at Missouri 4 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, UNC-Asheville at Radford 4 p.m. ESPNU Women's college, WestVirginia at Oklahoma 4p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Drexel at College ofCharleston 4p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. TNT NBA, Brooklyn at Chicago Men's college, Minnesota at Wisconsin 6 p.m. ESPN Men's college, Colorado at UCLA 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's college, TennesseeState at Belmont 6 p.m. ESPNU Men's college,PepperdineatGonzaga 6 p.m. Root Men's college, St. John's at Seton Hall 6 p.m. Fox Sports1 Men's college, Utah atUSC 7:30 p.m Pac-12 NBA, OklahomaCity at LosAngeles 7:30 p.m TNT Men's college, SanDiego atSt. Mary's 8 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, BYU at Pacific 8 p.m. Root Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL BrOWnS'CEO,GMleaVing team —TheBrowns announced that CEO Joe Banner is stepping downandgeneral managerMichael Lombardi is leaving theteam. Thestunning front-office shakeupwas announced TuesdaybyownerJimmy Haslam.Also,assistantGM Ray Farmer hasbeenpromoted andwill immediately take overthe team's football operations andleadthe Browns during free agencyanddraft.
ON DECK Today Boysbasketball:LaPineatSweetHome,5:45p.m.; Elmira atSisters, 5:45p.mc NorthMarionat Madras, 7 p.m.;EastLinn Christianat Culver,6:30
Friday Boys basketball: Bendat Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Redmondat Summit, 7 p.mcMountain Viewat Crook County, 7p.m.; Sistersat Sweet Home,7:15p.m.; CottageGroveat LaPine,7:15 p.mcMadras at Molalla, 7p.m.;CentralLinn at Culver,6:30p.m.; CentralChristianat lone,7:30p,mcProspectat Gilchrist, 6:30 p.m. Girls basketball:Summiat t Redmond, 7p,mcCrook Countyat Mountain View,7p.mcSisters atSweet Home,5:45p.m.; Molala at Madras, 7 p.m.; Cottage Grove at LaPine, 5:45p.m. Central Linnat Culver, 5 p.m.;Trinity Lutheranat ButteFalls, 4 p.m.;CentralChristianat lone,6 p.mcProspect at Gilchrist, 5p.m. Wrestling: Bend,MountainView, Redmond, Summit at SpeciaDi l strict 4 championshipsat Bend, 2:30p.m. Swimming: Bend, Mountain View, Redmond, Summit atSpecialDistrict1 championshipsatJuniper Swim &FitnessCenter,4:15 p.mcRidgeview, Sisters atClass4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championshipsat SouthAlbany,TBD;Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Mt. HoodCommunity Colege, TBD Saturday Girls basketball:Gilchrist at Trinity Lutheran,5:30 p.m. Wrestling:Bend, MountainView, Redmond, Summit at SpecialDistrict 4 championships at Bend, 9:30 a.ms Culver at Pre-Districts in Central Linn, noon Swimming: Bend, Mountain View, Redmond, Summit at SpeciaDi l strict1 championshipsatJuniper Swim & FitnessCenter,12:15p.m.; Ridgeview,Sisters atClass4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championshipsat SouthAlbany,TBD;Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Mt. HoodCommunity Colege, TBD
BASKETBALL Men's College Pacific-12Conference All timesPST Conference Overall Arizona UCLA ArizonaSt. Colorado Stanford California Utah Oregon St. Washington Oregon WashingtonSt. SouthernCal
W 10 7 7 7 6 6 5 5 5 3 2 1
L 1 3 4 4 4 4 6 6 6 8 9 9
Today'sGames
W L 23 1 18 5 18 6 18 6 15 7 15 8 16 7 13 10 13 11 15 8 9 14 10 13
StanfordatWashington, 6p.m. Californiaat Washington State, 8p.m. Thursday'sGames Coloradoat UCLA,6 p.m. Utah atUSC,7:30 p.m.
Friday's Games Arizona at ArizonaState, 6p.m. Saturday'sGames California at Washington, noon Utah atUCLA,2p.m. StanfordatWashingtonState, 4p.m. Sunday'sGames OregonStateat Oregon, noon Coloradoat USC, 5p.m.
SAILING San DiegOPOrt OffiCialS OKAmeriCa'S CuPbid — Port commissioners havevoted unanimously to submit a bid to host the nextAmerica'sCuponSanDiegoBay inAugust2017.Thecommissioners, two of whom aresailors, spoke enthusiastically Tuesday about the prospect of hosting sailing's marqueeregatta. Thecommissioners directed the port's staff to respond to a request for information from America's Cupofficials by March 3. — From wire reports
Marquette77, Seton Hall 66 South Alabama 67,Mississippi 64 Florida67,Tennessee58 Gardner-Wehh 68,Liberty 52 NC State 82,WakeForest 67 Midwest Michigan70,OhioSt.60 Notre Dame68,Clemson64,20T WichitaSt. 78,S.Illinois 67 Xavier64,Butler50 Southwesl Texas 87,OklahomaSt.68 Far Wesl UtahSt. 71,ColoradoSt.62 Wyoming 68,SanDiegoSt.62
Wo m en's college Tuesday'sscores Easl Albany(NY)56,UMBC46 Marist 64,St. Peter's49 Marquette71, Providence62
South
Richmond 78, Fordham77,20T IJCF59,SMU54
Southwest Rutgers74,Houston42
$180,592 $166,179 $155,368 $149,008
HOCKEY
II~
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
Standings All TimesPST
Thursday Girls basketball: Ridgeview at Bend, 7p.m.; Trinity Lutheran at Butte Fals, 5 p.m. Wreslling: La Pineat LakeviewTournament, 5:30 p.m.; Ridgeview atMadras, 7p.m. Nordic skiing:OHSNOat HoodooNight Race, Freestyle,TBD
Tuesday'sscores Easl
is retiring after13 major leagueseasons. Thepitcher's agent, Bob Garber, confirmed the decision Tuesdayand said the right-hander would go to work for his agency.The36-year-old Oswalt had a163102 career record with a 3.36ERA. Athree-time All-Star and the 2005 NLchampionshipseriesMVP,Oswal twon20 gamesinconsecutive seasons (2004-05) with the Houston Astros. Hepitched more than 200 innings seventimes but was hampered by injuries in recent years.
In the Bleachers 0 2014Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
p.m. Girls baskelbalk La Pineat Sweet Home,7:15p.m.; Elmira atSisters, 7:15p.mc North Marionat Madras, 5:30p.m.; EastLinn Christianat Culver,5 p.m.
BASEBALL OSWalt retiring after 13 SeaSOnS in majOrS —RoyOswalt
17. Garhine Muguruza 18. Tsvetana Pironkova 19. ElenaVesmna 20. Casey Detlacqua
IN THE BLEACHERS
EaslernConference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT PlsGF GA 5 7 37 16 4 78 176 125 5 8 33 20 5 7 1 168 145 5 9 32 21 6 70 148 142 6 0 32 22 6 70 178 182 58 26 20 12 64 151 163 59 26 22 11 63 169 191 5 8 22 29 7 5 1 139 183 5 7 15 34 8 38 110 172 MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT PlsGF GA P ittsburgh 5 8 4 0 15 3 8 3 186 138 N .Y.Rangers 59 32 24 3 6 7 155 146 P hiladelphia 59 30 23 6 66 162 167 C olumbus 58 29 24 5 6 3 170 161 W ashington 59 27 23 9 6 3 171 175 C arolina 5 7 2 6 2 2 9 6 1 144 158 NewJersey 59 24 22 13 61 135 146 N.Y.islanders 60 22 30 8 52 164 200
Boston Tampa Bay Montreal Toronto Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
WeslernConference Central Division
St. Louis Chicago Colorado Minnesota Dallas Winnipeg Nashville
"Ya see? This is way more fun than just blowing them away with a 12-gauge!!"
TENNIS Professionai U.S. National indoorChampionships Tuesday At TheRacquetClubof Memphis Memphis, Tenn. Purse: $647,676(WT250) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round Ivo Karlovic,Croatia,def. MatthewEhden,Australia, 7-5,6-4. Mikhail Kukushkin(8), Kazakhstan, def. Teymuraz Gahashvili,Russia,7-6(9),7-5. MarcosBaghdatis,Cyprus,def. RaleevRam,united States,6-3, 6-4. Benja minBecker,Germany,def.LukasLacko,Slovakia,6-3, 6-2. Alex Kuznetsov,unitedStates,def. DavidGoffin, Belgium,6-4, 6-3. Jack Sock,UnitedStates, def. AdrianMannarino, France,7-5,1-6, 7-6(5). RyanHarrison, unitedStates, def. BiornPhau, Germany, 6-3, 6-4. AlexBogomolov Jr., Russia, def. SamQuerrey(6), unitedStates,2-6,6-4, 7-6(7).
CopaClaro Tuesday At BuenosAires LawnTennis Club BuenosAires, Argentina Purse: $567,760(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round FabioFognini(2), italy,def. JulianReister, Germany, 7-5,6-2. Leonardo Mayer,Argentina, def.FacundoArguello, Argentina,6-3,6-4. SantiagoGiraldo,Colombia,def. Albert Montanes, Spain,7-6(4), 6-2. RobinHaase(6), Netherlands,def. MartinAlund, Argentina,6-4,6-7 (6), 6-3. FilippoVolandri, italy, def.ChristianGarin, Chile, 5-7,6-0, 6-3.
David Ferrer(t), Spain, def. MaximoGonzalez, Argentina,7-6(7), 6-4. AlbertRam os, Spain,def. JuanMonaco (7), Argentina, 6-7(3),6-4, 6-2. AMROWorldTournament Tuesday At Ahoy'Stadium Rotterdam, Netherlands Purse:$2.06 miNion(WTBOO) Surface:Hard-Indoor Singles First Round ErnestsGulhis,Latvia,def. Denis istomin,uzbekistan,6-4,7-6(4). Marin Cilic, Croatiadef. , LukasRosol, CzechRepublic, 6-2,6-2. Igor Silsling, Netherlands,def. Mikhail Youzhny (7), Russia6-2, , 6-2. GrigorDimitrov(8),Bulgaria,def. Dm itry Tursunov, Russia,6-2,1-6, 6-4. JerzyJanowicz,Poland,vs.Julien Benneteau, France,3-6,6-4, 6-4. Qatar TotalOpen Tuesday At TheKhalifa TennisComplex Doba,Qatar Purse:$2.44million(Premier) Surface:Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round
Anast asia Pavlyuchenkova,Russia,def.Tadelda Maieric,Slovenia,5-7,6-2,6-3. KaiaKanepi, Estonia, def.VarvaraLepchenko,United States, 6-3, 6-4. ZhangShuai, China,def. Maryna Zanevska, ukraine,6-3, 6-2. SoranaCirstea,Romania, def. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia,2-6, 6-1,7-5. Karolina Pliskova,CzechRepublic, def. Cagla Buyukakcay,Turkey, 6-3i6-3. MirianaLucic-Baroni, Croatia,def.YvonneMeusburger,Austria,4-6, 6-2,6-3. JanaCepelova, Slovakia,def. KristinaMladenovic, France, 6-4, 7-6(5). MagdalenaRybarikova, Slovakia, def. Francesca Schiavone,ltaly,7-5,4-6,7-6 (3). StefanieVoegele, Switzerland,def. AgzeCornet, France, 7-6(6), 7-5. Alisa Kleybanva, o Russia,def. DominikaCibulkova (tg), Slovakia5-5,reti , red. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium, def.AndreaPetrovic, Germany,6-4,6-4. LucieSafarova,CzechRepublic, def. KirstenFlipkens(16),Belgium,5-7, 6-4,6-4. Monica Niculescu, Romania, def. Fatma Al NahhaniOm , an,6-1, 6-0. Karin Knapp,Italy, def. CarolineGarcia, France, 6-4, 6-1.
KlaraZakopalova, CzechRepublic, def. ElinaSvitolina, Ukraine, 6-2, 6-4. Anaivanovic(9), Serbia,def. Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia,7-5,1-0,retired. Bethanie Matek-Sands,UnitedStates, def. Eugenie Bouchard (15), Canada,7-5, 6-1. SamStosur(12), Australia,def. MarinaErakovic, NewZealand,6-4, 6-2. ATPMoneyLeaders Through Feb. 9
Player 1. Stanislas Wawrinka 2. RafaelNadal 3. Roger Federer 4. Tomas Berdych 5.Lukasz Kubot 6. David Ferrer 7. GaelMonfils 8. AndyMurray 9. GrigorDimitrov 10. Novak Dlokovic 11. RobertLindstedt 12. FahioFognini 13. FlorianMayer
14. MarinCilic 15. RobertoBautista Agut
16. Edouard Roger-Vasselin 17. KeiNishikori 18. RichardGasquet 19. Kevin Anderson 20. Tomm yRohredo
WTAMoneyLeaders ThroughFeb. 9
Player 1.LiNa 2. DominikaCihulkova 3. EugeniB eouchard 4. Agnieszka Radwanska 5. SaraErrani 6. VictoriaAzarenka 7. Serena Wiliams 8. EkaterinaMakarova 9. Roherta Vinci 10. Ana Ivanovic 11. Simona Halep 12. FlaviaPennetta 13. Angelique Kerher 14. MariaSharapova 15. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova 16. Jelena Jankovic
YTDMoney $2,456,685 $1,385,092 $532,382 $526,522 $288,843 $284,406 $277,070 $265,791 $252,701 $242,811 $237,038 $215,102 $188,815 $174,159 $156,320 $146,958 $146,000 $140,402 $131,335 $128,810 YTDMoney $2,460,485 $1,207,811
$500,074 $488,431 $358,395 $344,255 $316,353 $289,631 $284,847 $283,275 $258,542 $248,674 $223,923 $210,331 $207,598 $192,466
GP W L OT PlsGF GA 5 7 39 12 6 84 196 135 60 35 11 14 84 207 163 5 8 37 16 5 79 174 153 5 9 31 21 7 69 145 147 58 27 21 10 64 164 164 6 0 28 26 6 62 168 175 59 25 24 10 60 146 180
Pacific Division
GP W L OT PlsGF GA A naheim 6 0 4 1 14 5 8 7 196 147 S anJose 5 9 3 7 16 6 8 0 175 142 L os Angeles 59 31 22 6 68 139 128 Phoenix 5 8 27 21 10 64 163 169 Vancouver 60 27 2 4 9 6 3 146 160 C algary 58 2 2 2 9 7 5 1 137 179 E dmonton 60 20 33 7 4 7 153 199
NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Today'sGames No games scheduled Wednesday'sGames No games scheduled
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L MAJORLEAGUE BASEBALL — RHP Roy Oswalt announced his retirement. AmericanLeague BOSTONRED SO X — Agreed to terms with LHP'sJoseMiiares andRichHil on minor league contracts. HOUSTONASTROS— NamedNolanRyanexecutiveadvisor. KANSASCITYROYALS— Placedonwaivers2B Emilio Bonifaciofor the purposeof giving himhis release. LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith RHPBrandon Lyononaminor leaguecontract. National League LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto termswith RHPKenleyJansenonaone-yearcontract. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS— SignedFCartier Martin to a second10-day contract. BOXING WBC—Elected Mauricio Sulaimanpresident. FOOTBAL L National Football League CLEVELANDBROWNS — Announcedtheresignation ofgeneralmanager Michael Lomhardi. PromotedRayFarmerto general manager. Announced CEOJoeBanner will step down in the next two months. MINNES OTAVIKINGS— Signed LBSimoni Lawrence. PHILADELP HIA EAGLES— SignedS DavidSims. PtlTSBURGHSTEELERS — Named JoeyPorter defensiveassistant coach. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— ReleasedGGabe Carimi, TBMichael Hill, QBJordanRodgersandDT DerekLandri. SignedQBMikeKafka. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL — SuspendedColorado D Erik Johnson two gamefor a slashingpenalty duringSaturday's game. FLORIDAPANTHERS— ReassignedDDylanOisen toSanAntonio(AHL). OLYMPICS IOC —ReinstatedIndia's Olympiccommitee, allowingIndianathletesto competeunder their national flag fortherestof theSochi Games. SOCCER Malor LeagueSoccer PORTLANDTIMBERS— Signed FSchilloTshuma and DTaylor Peay. COLLEGE CHOWA N—Announcedit is addingwomen'sgolf forthe 2014-15 academic year. GEORGIA SOUTHERN — Named Boh Connelly offe nsivelinecoach. SAM HOUSTONSTATE— NamedPhilLongooffensivecoordinator. VANDE RBILT — Named Brett Maxie defensive backs coach,MarcLubickreceiverscoachandGerry Gdowskitight endscoach. Promoted Tyler Barnesto director ofplayerpersonnel.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALLCOMMENTARY
Mariners rin eatt es orts ac owntoeart By Jerry Brewer
slugger Nelson Cruz and pitcher they are not than to declare what Ervin Santana, and they also have they are. nd for the first time in t h is the pieces to make a significant For certain, they are not a rebuildpost-Super Bowl era of Seat- trade). ing team waiting for the young guys le sports, Puget Sound-area All in all, though, they are a far to developanymore. They have not fans have collided with reality. more interesting ballclub than they exactly ditched that p lan; Justin The Mariners are back. were. They are still young, but they Smoak, Dustin Ackley, Kyle Seager, So, too, is the understanding that are not engulfed in a youth move- Brad Miller, Nick Franklin, Taijuan joy is fleeting. ment.They have more proven play- Walker, James Paxton and Michael Pitchers and catchers report to- ers, but the potential for disaster is Saunders are still Mariners, at least day in Peoria, Ariz. The full squad even higher. for now. But when you invest in arrives within a week. If it sounds The Mariners will serve as the Cano, then sign veterans such as like the bartender is screaming last ideal case study of Seattle's post-Su- Corey Hart and Fernando Rodney, call to end the best night of your life, per Bowl sports scene. On one hand, you are not playing for tomorrow. wait until you feel the hangover in it is a time to be wildly optimistic When you have Cano and Hernanthe morning. about every Seattle team because dez accounting for nearly $50 milActually, the dawn of the Mar- the Seahawks' triumph is proof of lion of your payroll, you are not hopiners' 2014 season will not be that the possibilities. On the other hand, ing to take baby steps. bad. In fact, if the Seahawks had not expectations and pressure should Hernandez, who turns 28 on April won a little game in front of a record rise significantly for all teams, espe- 8, is in his prime. Cano, 31, is near 111.5 million t elevision v i ewers, cially the ones failing to meet a com- the end of his prime. The Mariners the anticipation for this M's season petitive standard. have about a four-year window to would be greater than it is. Here come the Mariners into this build a great team around two of the The Mariners did a crazy, won- era, trying to execute Plan Q or Plan best players in baseball. Hernandez derful thing this offseason, signing U orwherever they are in the alpha- is in only the second year of a sevsuperstar second baseman Robin- bet, needing desperately to make en-year deal, and Cano is just beson Cano to a 10-year, $240 million progress toward ending a 13-year ginning his 10-year contract. But if contract. And then they did a crazy, playoff drought. For a team that has the Mariners do not feel the urgency not-so-wonderful thing this offsea- invested $175 million in ace pitcher to maximize their talents, they are son, failing to surround Cano with Felix Hernandez and $240 million in being foolish. If the Mariners do not great talent (though we should add Cano in the past calendar year, the realize that either they are all in or the disclaimer "as of yet n because Mariners remain a gigantic ques- they are wasting their money, they they are still in the running for tion mark. It is easier to detail what are not being prudent. The Seattle Times
Desire to win i s not t hi s f r an- pitching rotation, but the Mariners chise's problem. The savvy re- are still searching for a No. 3 starter. quired to build a winner has been Walkerand Paxton are greatyoung the issue. Now they have a new talents who should be just fine, and manager inLloyd McClendon, who Erasmo Ramirez is promising deis quite impressive. And they have spite his injury history. But if Walkpromoted Kevin Mather to replace
er, Paxton and Ramirez fill out the
Chuck Armstrong as the team pres- rotation, the Mariners would have ident. The Mather hiring did not three young pitchers who likely will satisfy fans who wanted someone not reach 200 innings behind their from outside the organization in two studs. It is a bullpen-killing that position, but he has a clean recipe. slate as the team president and repFor all their upgrades, the Mariresents an opportunity to break ners look like a 72- to 78-win team from the much-maligned norm. as spring training opens. We will The Mariners have undergone sig- probably have to revisit that numnificant change at various levels ber because the general manager, this offseason, and it has mostly been positive.
Jack Zduriencik, is almost certain
still a notch or two below Texas and
The youth movement is over. The
to make another significant move, if But on paper, this baseball team is not a few more.
Oakland in the American League Mariners are out of their wait-andWest. It is still not even as danger- see mode. But if the edict is to win ous as the talented and expensive
now — OK, win soon — then they
roster of the Los Angeles Angels. have much work to do. In the end, the Mariners' upgrades Still, the Mariners lag behind the might not move them out of fourth
place in their own division. Their offense should be better, but it could be at the expense of their de-
fense, especially in the outfield. Hernandez and Hisashi Iwakuma are a 1-2 punch at the top of the starting
standard of t heir n eighbors over at CenturyLink Field. And in this post-Super Bowl era,there are two
things you do not want to be for very long. 1. The party pooper. 2. That Other Team.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
GOLF
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Watson
focusedon games,not
Coach Brown has SMU in Top 25 in less than two years
names in
By Stephen Hawkins
freshman coach at North Carolina. I feel exactly the DALLAS L arry s a m e way until I look in the B rown knows his quick m irror," Brown said. "But I The Associated Press
RyderCup
t urnaround a t S o uthern s t i l have l the same passion. Methodist U n iversity i s I love coming to practice,
By Doug Ferguson
m uch different from any- I
The Associated Press
t hing the Hall of Fame bas- c o a ches. I don't think any-
LOS ANGELES — This is what Tom Watson knows about
ketball coach has done in bo dy at my age deserves the past. thi s, and I love it, and I feel
the American with a big lead in the Ryder Cup standings. Jimmy Walker is 35.
L ess than two years after Brown returned to the
He already has three PGA
Tour wins this year. And his hobby is creating photographs of the galaxy. "The first book I read was, 'All About Astronomy,' " Wat-
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Oklahoma City Thunder center Kendrick PerkIns, rIght, reaches In on Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus AldrIdge durIng the fIrst half of Tuesday night's game In Portland.
son said. "If he makes the Ry-
azers a 0
der Cup team, maybe we'll have some common things to talk about." Watson was at Riviera on
Tuesday, even though he is playing this week on the other side of the country in a Champions Tour event. It is typical forRyder Cup captains to make
appearances on the PGA Tour throughout the year to meet with the media and keep their
eye onpotential players. At 64, Watson is the oldest
Ryder Cup captain in history. Some might be concerned that he is out of touch with today's
bestplayers. Ten of the top 15 players in the U.S. standings have never
played in a Ryder Cup. That includes Jordan Spieth, who was born just two months be-
fore Watson was captain of the last American team that won in
Europe. "It was good to sit down at breakfast and see some of the
NBA ROUNDUP
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Kevin Durant said the mutual admiration between the Thunder and
was not immediately known, rookie CJ McCollum's running but the Blazers depend on the
the Trail Blazers only goes so shot, but Durant re-tied it at 91 far. with a long hook. "We respect this team and The teams wrestled for the they respect us, but we don't lead until L a m b's 3 -pointlike them and they don't like er gave the Thunder a 96-95 us," Durant said after Oklaho- advantage. Damian Lillard ma City's hard-fought 98-95 missed a 3-pointer for Portland victory over Portland on Tues- with 45.9 seconds left. day night. "Point blank." Portland got the ball with Durant had 36 points and 12.3 seconds left after officials 10 rebounds as the Thunder reviewed an out-of-bounds evened the series against the call, but LaMarcus Aldridge's Blazers 2-2 in their final regu- mid-range jumper with 2 seclar-season meeting this year. onds left was off and Reggie Jeremy Lamb had 19 points, Jackson hit free throws for the including a key 3-pointer with final margin. "We fought hard," Durant 1:38 left for the Western Conference-leading Thunder, who said. "We're a resilient team. have won 14 of their last 16
W e've kept ou r
games.
David Toms, but see some of the young faces as well," Wat-
Nicolas Batum had 18 points
through adversity and tough times. I'm proud of our team."
for slumping Portland, which
Portland won two of the first
has lost five of seven but still ranks third in the conference
three meetings between the
ty to go down to the practice range and watch some of these guys try to hit it over that fence,
which they have raised 30 feet up there. And it's good to be back on tour and to kind of get
a little bit more knowledge of some of the players who might be on the Ryder Cup team."
Watson knows a lot more than he lets on. He realizes it is still six months before nine
players earn aspotontheteam, and three weeks after that before he has to announce his
three captain's picks. Besides, he is more interested in the game than the name on
thebag. What stood out to him about Walker's most recent victory
Sunday at Pebble Beach was not how a six-shot lead dwin-
dled to one, or even that Walker made it tough on himself by knocking a 25-foot birdie putt some 5 feet past the hole
doesn't break. And he made it.
That's what I'm looking for, the guy that's going to make that 5-footer to win or to tie. That's
what I'm looking for — the guts it takes to do that."
It is too early to figure out who is going to be on this American team, but Watson knows it will be difficult for
players to earn one of the nine spots because the competition
is deeper than ever. The American team is based on PGATour earnings, and the majors count double. The winner of the PGA
Championship, for example, will earn roughly the same points as Walker has accumulated with his three wins.
"We've got a lot of golf between here and there," Walker said. "I don't remember this much talk about the Ryder
Cup in the last couple of years. I don't know if it's because I haven't been on the radar screen or what, but it seems like it's a
verybig, pressingthing." Watson was asked if it mat-
tered whose names are on the U.S. bags at Gleneagles in late September. " Does it m a tter? No , i t doesn't," he said. "No, those
players who get on the team are going to be the best possible players we can have on the team. That's the way I'm look-
ing at it. If they perform, they will win."
two teams, but the Thunder
r e aI fortunate." Ev en before th e n e w college ranks — a quarter pol I with SM U w a s r e o f a century after he won l e ased Monday, students a national title a t were camped out Kansas and with a to get tickets for the record nine National last three sold-out
Basketball Association head coaching
home games. Brown s howed up w i t h jobs to his creditdoughnuts and cofthe No. 23 Mustangs Brown fee, calling that in(19-5) are in The Asteraction "far more s ociated Press poll for the m eaningful than b eing first time since March 1985. ran ked." They are u n defeated a t T alk aboutMoody Madh ome, with three wins over n e s s, all for a team that last ranked teams in the span we nt to the NCAA tournaof five weeks. ment in 1993 and has not " At Kansas and UCLA, I w on a tourney game since
6-foot-11 Brit to spell starting
didn't establish those pro- 1988, the same year Brown
center Lopez.
grams. The traditions at N orth Carolina, Kansas,
and Kansas won the nat i onal title. SMU basketball
on Lamb's 12-foot jumper early in the second quarter. Portland
U CLA, I've been lucky
i ssuddenly a hot ticket in
e nough to be part of that,
D a las. l
held them off, but Lamb's dunk narrowed it to 34-32 and the
but there's so many peoBefore the Connecticut ple that have done great gam e on Jan. 4, SMU had t hings there," Brown said. n o t sold out a home game " This program was high- si n ce 2001. The Mustangs l y thought of, but it was a w i 11 have sellouts for their l ong time ago. We were l a s t six home games, the h opeful coming here we i n c luding next Wednesc ould be a really terrific d a yagainst Houston after p rogram that played at a g a m es this week at Rutgers high level." and Temple. 'When I first got here, Only 56 games into
The Thunder closed to 25-21
Thunder finally pulled ahead 41-39 on Lamb's 3-pointer.
Also on Tuesday: Heat 103, Suns 97: PHOENIX — L e Bron James re-
bounded from one of his worst games of the season to score 37 points and M i ami b eat Phoenix. Bulls 100, Hawks 85: CHICAGO — Joakim Noah scored
19 points as part of a triple-double, and Chicago beat Atlanta.
Bobcats 114, Mavericks 89: CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Jefferson scored 30 points, An-
thony Tolliver added 22, and Charlotte earned a rare win over Dallas.
Cavaliers 109, KIngs 99: CLEVELAND — Luol Deng scored 22 points, and Cleve-
land avenged a 44-point loss to Sacramento. Grizzlies 92, Wizards 89: MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Nick Calathesand Marc Gasol scored 18 points each, and Memphis
overcame a career-best 37 points from W ashington's Bradley Beal to win.
Jazz 96, Lakers 79: LOS
B rown's tenure, the Mus-
The M u s tangs w e n t SM U w a s 1 5 - 1 7 i n m ore than 10 years with- B r own's first season, when o ut a win over a ranked fi ve startersplayed more
t eam before opening the t h a n 32 minutes a game. renovated Moody Colise- Th at was with Moore and u m with a win over then- s t arting big man Markus N o. 17 UConn. They have
Summaries Tuesday'sGames
All TimesPST
EasternConlerence d-Indiana d-Miami d-Toronto Chicago Atlanta Washington Brooklyn Charlotte Detroit NewYork Cleveland Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee
W L 40 11 36 14 27 24 26 25 25 25 25 26 23 26 23 29 22 29 20 31 19 33 19 34 16 37 15 38 9 42
WesternConference
d-oklahoma Cit y d-SanAntonio Portland d-LA, Clippers Houston GoldenState Phoenix Dallas Memphis Denver Minnesota NewOrleans Utah LA. Lakers Sacramen to d-divisionleader
W L 42 12 37 15 36 16 36 18 35 17 31 21 30 21 31 22 28 23 24 26 24 28 22 29 18 33 18 34 17 35
Tuesday'sGames
Cleveland109,Sacramento99 Charlotte114,Dallas89 Chicago 100,Atlanta 85 Memphis 92,Washington89 Miami103,Phoenix97 Oklahoma City 98, Portland95 Utah96,LA.Lakers79
Today'sGames Memphisat Orlando, 4p.m. Dallas atIndiana,4 p.m. AtlantaatToronto,4 p.m. CharlotteatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. SanAntonioatBoston, 4:30p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 4:30p.m. Sacramento atNewYork,4:3ji p.m. Denverat Minnesota, 5 p.m. WashingtonatHouston,5 p.m. NewOrleansat Milwaukee,5p.m. PhiladelphiaatUtah,6p.m. Miami atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Portlandat LA.Clippers,7;30p.m. Thursday'sGames Brooklyn at Chicago,5pJs. Oklahoma City atLA. Lakers,7:30 pss.
Pst GB
.784 .720 3'A .529 13 .510 14 .500 14'/z .490 15 .469 16 .442 17'/z .431 18 .392 20 .365 21'/z .358 22 .3II2 25 .283 26 .176 31
Pst GB
.778 .712 4 .692 5 .667 6 .673 6 .596 10 .588 10'/z .585 10'/z 549 12iA
.480 16 .462 17 .431 18'A .353 2ZA .346 23 .327 24
Thunder 98, Blazers 95
t he latter 76-55 this past
Saturday night for their
'The school's great, Dal-
points in the fourth quarter and Utah sent the injury-rid-
first o n -campus v i ctory
l a sis great.... There's great
dled Los Angeles Lakers to a
franchise record-tying sixth straight home loss.
Gay4-126-614, JThompson0-00-00, Cousins
5-12 0-16 21,Thomas7-141-5 16, Thornton4-9 0-011, Acy 2-20-05, McLem ore 3-61-29, Wiliams 4-102-210, Fredetje0-3 II-00, Gray0-Ij 0-00, McCallum1-I 0-02,Landry2-22-26,0utlaw2-30-05. Totals 34-7423-33 99.
CLEVELAND (109) Deng9-17ji-022, TThompson5-1ji 6-816, Zeller 3-50-06, Jack1-30-02, Irving 5-120-013, Bennett
Grizzlies 92, Wizards 89
Bobcats114, Mavericks 89
MEMPHIS (92) princ e3-40-07,Randolph4-0 5-613,Gasol 7-0 4-418, Calathes 8-121-1 18,Lee5-12 2-213, Morris0-2 0-0Ij, Koufos2-7 2-26, Davis 0-3 2-22, Johnson 3-57-1013, Miler1-30-0z Totals 33-70 23-27 92. Washington 23 16 31 19 — 89 Memphis 24 28 27 13 — 92
Bulls100, Hawks85 ATLANTA (85) Carroll 5-100011,Milsap6-150-015, Ayon1-6 2-44, Teague 6-9 0-012, KoNer2-71-1 7, Wiliams 6-110-013, Brand 3-82-48, Martin1-i 0-03, Scott 3-70-08, Mack2-60-04.Totals 35-805-985.
CHICAGO (100) Dunleavy7-140-015, Gibson12-190-224,Noah 8-15 3-619,Hinrich4-120-010, Butler 5-92-412, Augustin4-111-113, Snell2-40-05, Mohammed 1-1 0-OzTotals43-856-13100. Atlanta 17 22 31 15 — 85 Chicago 33 25 22 20 — 100
Cavaliers109, Kings 99 SACRAME NTO(99)
n i f cant t contributions.
over a top-10 team since tal ent around here, we're in 1967. ag reat conference (AmerS MU last h a d m u l ti - i c an Athletic Conference), ple vict ories over ranked so all the things were in teams in 1984-85, the same pla ce," Brown said. "But I d i dn't know we could as-
as high as No. 2 before sem ble a group like this, d ropping to No. 20 in the t h e transfers we got, the
OKLAHOMA CITY(98) Durant15-285-5 36, Ibaka3-11 II-0 7, Perkins 1-3 0-0 2,Jackson7-192-2 17, Sefolosha0-2 2-2 2, Fisher2-40-06, Adams0-1 0-00, Lamb8-01-1 19, Collison4-41-2 9,Jones0-Ij 0-t 0. Totals 408311-12 98. PORTLAND (95) Batum5-85-518, Aldridge5-222-212, Lopez7-9 3-417, Lillard5-155-616, Matthews2-107-811, Freeland0-Ij 0-0 0, McCollum5-122-215, Watson 0-0 0-0 0,Leonard2-50-0 4, Robinson1-40-0 z Totals 32-8524-2795. Oklahoma Cit y 1 9 2 6 35 18 — 98 Porlland 25 30 25 15 — 95 3-PointGoals—Oklahoma City 7-14 (Lamb2-2, Fisher 2-3, Ibaka1-2, Durant 1-3, Jackson1-4), Portland 7-23(Batum3-5, McCollum3-6, Lillard 1-7, Leonard 0-1,Mathews0-4). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —Oklahoma City 48 (Ibaka11), Portland 52 (Lopez14). Assists—OklahomaCity 14(Jackson 5), Portland11(Lilard 7). Total Fouls—Oklahoma City 22, Portland14. Technical— s Oklahoma City CoachBrooks,Durant, Ibaka,PortlandCoachStots. A—20,01809,980).
WASHINGTON (89) Ariza2-75-610, Nene7-133-317, Gortat4-4 2-5 10, Wal2-101-2 l 5,Beal15-24 2-237,Seraphin 2-5 0-0 4, Webster1-5 0-03, Booker0-41-21, Temple 1-20-02,Vesely0-00-00.Totals 34-7414-2089.
K ennedy sitting out after
s ince posted double-digit t r an sferring and before the wins over Top 25 teams add ition of three freshmen M emphis and Cincinnati, w ho are now making sig-
ANGELES — Reserve Alec B urks scored 13 of h i s 2 4
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
i t seemed like it was just
tangs certainly seem to be ou r parents were here," on a fast track. said senior forward Shawn "I'm not surprised how Wil liams, who now gets quick he turned it around, not iced off the court. "I b ut I know he has some- w as pumping my gas and thing bigger than just bas- som ebody actually knew ketball in this moment," wh o I was. That had never p oint guard Nic Moore h a ppened before." said. "He's trying to make An d it used to be the only us become greatmen in rea son classmatesfigured life. . .. That is how he's h e was a basketball player g etting me to be a better w a s his6-foot-7 frame. 'Now it's crazy," he said. player."
s eason they were ranked
son said. "That's not an easy putt to make because that putt
You can play it right edge and it just hangs on the right edge. It
h e ads u p
behind San Antonio. Robin won the last 105-97 in OklaLopez finished with 17 points homa City last month. Durant and 14 rebounds for his 19th paced the Thunder with 42 double-double of the season. points in that one. LaMarcus Aldridge, who Aldridge was a game-time missed a mid-range jumper decision because of soreness, in the final seconds that could but he started and finished have salvaged the win for with 12 points and 12 rePortland, was asked what he bounds. The Blazers are the thought of Durant's comment. only team that has started the "We're not trying to make same five players in all of their friends out there," he said. games this season. "We're tryingto win games." Aldridge was disappointed Portland led by as many as with the loss — and especially 13 points in the first half and his final missed shot. "I couldn't throw a rock in a held a 55-45 advantage at the break, but the Thunder kept lake tonight," Aldridge said. chipping away and the teams Portland jumped out to a went into the fourth quarter quick 18-6 lead, but the Blaztied at 80. ers were hurt late in the openDerek Fisher hit a 3-point- ing quarter when reserve er and Lamb made a layup forward JoelFreeland's right to put the Thunder up 85-84. knee buckledunderneath him
to createmore drama than he intended. "What Jimmy Walker did this last week is what I'm looking for on that last hole," Watdoesn't break. It just doesn't.
and hehad tobe helped offthe court. The extent of the injury
Portland reclaimed the lead on
old faces, like Davis Love and son said. "Had the opportuni-
un er
Iove being around our
f inal poll before the NCAA
r e c r uits we have, and the
tournament. " I never imagined it
kids we retained. You look a t the contribution of the
c ould be like this for me at
f r eshmen and the trans-
(age) 73. I mean, this is like fers, it's given us a chance g oing back to when I was t o b e pretty good."
6-9 4-919,Waiters7-174-4 20, Gee2-5 ji-0 4, Del-
lavedova0-30-00,Sims3-51-27.Totals41-86 15-23109. Sacramento 23 2 0 25 31 — 99 Cleveland 30 25 25 29 — 109
Heat103, Suns97 MIAMI (1 03) James12-220-14 37, Battier1-5 0-0 3, Bosh 8-0 3-421,Chalmers4-14-613, Douglas2-90-05, Allen 3-60-07,Cole3-93-410, Andersen3-50-Ij 6, Lewis0-21-21. Totals 36-7622-30103. PHOENIX I97) Tucker5-0 2-214, Frye6-130-015, Plumlee1-3 0-0 2, Dragic4-125-515, Green9-14 3-326, Mark. Morris 5-142-212,Barbosa2-31-1 5, Marc.uorris 0-3 0-0 ji, Len0-0 0-0 0, Smith3-3 2-4 8. Totals 35-7615-1797. Miami 22 21 28 32 — 103 Phoenix 25 21 28 23 — 97
DALLAS I89) Marion3-5 0-06, Nowitzki 5-94-416, Dalembert 2-4 0-0 4, Ellis 7-12 2-2 16,Calderon3-8 0-0 8, Carter4-150-08, Harris 3-7 2-29, Blair1-41-2 3, Crowder2-71-2 5, Wright4-7 0-Ij 8, Ellington 2-2 0-04, Larkin1-20-02,James0-00-00.Totals378210-12 89. CHARLOlTE(114) Kidd-Gilchrist1-42-34, McRob erts3-40-ji9, Jefferson14-232-330,Henderson7-0 0-015,walker 2-92-27, Zeller2-41-25, Sessions2-7ji-05, Tolliver 6-0 5-522,Biyombo5-50-010, Douglas-Roberts 0-1 0-00, Adrien2-20-04, Pargo1-1 0-03. Totals 45-8212-15114. Dallas 26 18 21 24 — 89 Charlotte 28 30 31 25 — 114
Jazz 96, Lakers 79 UTAH (96) Jefferson0-42-22, M.Wiliams4-80-09, Favors
4-93-711, Burke 3-111-1 8, Hayw ard 5-133-415, Burks8-0 7-0 24, Evans7-100-0 14, Kanter 3-7 0-06, Rush1-40-03,Garrett2-80-04. Totals 378516-25 96.
LA. LAKERS I79) Johnson7-140-015, S.Wiliams4-81-211, Kamanu-243-325, Nash1-40-02, Blake2-110-05, Kelly 1-11-3 3, Marshall 3-131-17, Hil 2-63-47, Sacre2-40-04. Totals 33-85 9-13 79. Utah 16 32 20 28 — 96 LA. Lakers 27 10 23 19 — 79
Florida beatsTennessee to continue win streak TOP 25 ROUNDUP
The Associated Press KNOXVILLE, Tenn. S cottie Wilbekin had 2 1 -
points and six assists, and No. 3 Florida stepped up its defense in the second half to outlast Tennessee 67-58 Tuesday night for its 16th consecutive victory. Michael Frazier II added 11 points to help the Ga-
No. 4 Wichita State 78,
Southern Illinois 67: WICHITA, Kan. — Ron Baker scored 19 points, Cleantho-
ny Early added 18 and Wichita State overcame a
sloppy start to beat Southern Illinois and remain unbeaten.
tors (22-2, 11-0 SEC) beat Tennessee in Knoxville for
D iego State 62: L A R A -
Wyoming 68, No. 5 San
just the second time in their last nine attempts. Frazier
MIE, Wyo. — Riley Grabau scored 17 points, Larry
and Wilbekin both made
Nance Jr. had 14 and Wy-
oming stopped San Diego stretch to put the game out State's 20-game winning of reach. streak. Jarnell Stokes had 20 No. 15 Michigan 70, No. points and 11 rebounds 22 Ohio State 60: COLUMfor Tennessee (15-9, 6-5), BUS, Ohio — Nik Stauskas which was seeking a victo- scored 15 points and Derry over a highly ranked op- rick Walton III added 13, ponent to boost its NCAA including three critical free tournament hopes. Jordan throws with 1:55 left, to McRae had 17 points and power Michigan past Ohio key 3-pointers down the
Josh Richardson 13. After shooting 62.5 per-
State.
cent (15 of 24) in the first
ma State 68: AUSTIN, Texas — Javan Felix scored 27
half, the Volunteers made
No. 19 Texas 87, Oklaho-
only 29.2 percent (7 of 24) points, making six 3-pointoftheirshotsafterhalftim e. ers and Texas rolled to a Also on Tuesday: win over Oklahoma State.
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
•
•
0
There will be18 medals handedout today in events taking place at theWinter Olympics in Sochi, including the women's downhill. Maria Hoefl-Riesch is thefavorite in that event.
I
T Curling
Alpineskiing
Hockey
Luge
MEN
Men's SuperCombined, downhill, 11 p.m.
MEN
Men's Doubles, 6:15 a.m.
Germanyvs. China, Switzerland vs. Britain, Russia vs. Canada, Denmarkvs. Sweden, 7 a.m. Switzerland vs. Russia, Canada vs. Denmark, Norway vs. Sweden, Britain vs. United States,Thursday, 2 a.m.
Biathlon Men's Individual, Thursday, 6 a.m.
Nordicskiing Women's Classic, 2 a.m.
WOMEN
Japan vs. Russia, United Statesvs. China, SouthKoreavs. Sweden, Canadavs. Britain, 2 a.m. Sweden vs.Denmark, Russia vs. South Korea, Switzerland vs. Canada,Japan vs. United States, Thursday, 7 a.m.
Figureskating Pairs free program, 10:45 a.m.
Events through 6a.m. Thursday PST. All events streamedlive online at NBCOlympics.com
Czech Republicvs. Sweden, 9 a.m. Latvia vs. Switzerland, 9 a.m. Finland vs.Austria, Thursday, midnight Russia vs. Slovania, Thursday, 1:30 a.m. Slovakia vs. United States,Thursday, 1:30 a.m. Canada vs. Norway, Thursday, 6 a.m. WOMEN
Switzerland vs. Finland,Midnight Canada vs. United States,4:30 a.m. Japan vs. Germany, midnight
ROUNDUP
Norway
Nordic comhined Men's Individual Jump (normal hill),1:30a.m. Men's Individual10km, 4:30 a.m.
Snowdoard Women's Halfpipe Quarterfinals, 2 a.m. Women's Halfpipe Semifinals, 7 a.m. Women's Halfpipe Final, 9:30 a.m.
Speedskating Men's1,000, 6 a.m.
picks up four more medals By David Pace The Associated Press
SOCHI, Russia — The most
decorated country in Winter Olympic history earned four more medals 'Ittesday, and the most famous snowboarder in the world had his hopes for a third straight gold in the halfpipe dashed. Norway won double gold in the cross-country freestyle sprints while picking up silver medals in the women's sprint
Medal table
and in the women's 10-kilometer biathlon pursuit. That gave
SKI JUMPING
the Norwegians the medal
lead as the games concluded their fifth day, and it pushed
Through Nionday (18 medal events)
the Norwegians overall total to 317 since the Winter Olym-
G S B T 4 3 4 11 4 3 2 9
Norway Canada Netherlands 3 United States 2 Russia 1 Germany 4 Austria 1 Sweden 0 France 1 Czech Republic 0 2 Slovenia 0 Switzerland 2 Italy 0 Japan 0 Belarus 1 Poland 1 Slovakia 1 South Korea 1 China 0 Finland 0 Britain
Ukraine
0 0
pics began in 1924. The United States saw sev-
eral of its best hopes evapo-
2 3 8 1 4 7
rate, including Shaun White,
3
1 0 5
Podladtchikov. Known as "I-Pod," the Rus-
3 3 0
er was flawless while White failed to master his rival's best trick.
3 0 1 2
the flamboyant snowboarder who was dethroned by Iouri
7
sian-born Swiss snowboard-
4 4 3
Another U.S. gold medal prospect, cross-country skier
1 3 1 2 3 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 0
1 1 0 0 0
Kikkan Randall, was elimi-
nated in the qualifying rounds of the w omen's freestyle sprint. Maiken Caspersen Falla of Norway took the gold in
2 2 1 1 1
that race, with teammate In-
gvild Flugstad Oestberg earning silver. Ola Vigen Hattestad captured the men's sprint title in
0 0 1 1 1 0 0
0 0 1 1
1 1 1 1
a race marred by a three-ski-
er collision. Emil Joensson of Sweden, who had all but given up earlie rin the race,grabbed the bronze after Sergey Ustiugov of Russia, Marcus Hell-
s
ner of Sweden and Anders
TV schedule
Gloeersen of Norway were in-
• All Times PST,Subject tochange • Primetime replaysareshowneachnight beginning betweenmidnight and2a.m. • Eventsto beaired live ontheWest Coast are noted with anasterisk(*)
c
volved in a crash that left them sprawled across the course.
Soft snow caused a number of spills throughout the day.
a
Cross-country
Today
Hattestad took th e
NBC ined, Individual 3-5p.m. — Men'sNordic Comb K-95GoldMedal Final 0-11:30 p.m.— Women'Al spineSkiing, Downhil Gold MedalFinal; FigureSkating, Pairs' Gold Medal Final; Wom en's Snowboarding, Halfpipe GoldMedalFinal;Men'sSpeedskating,1000 Gold MedalFinal 12:05-1:05 a.m.— Luge, DoublesGold Medal FinalRuns NBCSN Midnight-4 a.m.— Men'sCurling, USAvs. Denmark; Men'sNordicCombined, Individual K-95, Ski Jumpin*g 4-7a.m.—Women'sHockey, Canadavs. USA* 7-10:45 a.m.—FigureSkating, Pairs'GoldMedal Final*; Men'sNordic Com bined, Individual K-95, Cross-Country 11-11:45 a.m.—Luge,DoublesGoldMedal Final Runs 2:30-4 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey
him and then held off Teodor
Peterson of Sweden for the gold. Peterson finished 1.2 seconds behind for silver. Vesna
Fabjan of Slovenia won the bronze in the women's sprint. Charlie Riedel/The Associated Press
Germany's Carina Vogt jumps over the Olympic Rings on her second run during the women's normal hill ski jumping final at the Winter Olympics in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, on Tuesday. Vogt won the event.
MSNBC
Midnight-2:30a.m. — Women's Hockey,Switzerland vs.Finland* — Men' s Ho c k ey, L atv i a vs.Switzerland* 9-11:30a.m.
By Dennis Passa
USA 2-5 a.m.—Women'sCurling, USAvs. China* 9a.m.noon— Men' sHockey,CzechRepublicvs. * Sweden
"I cannot find the right words, jump, but it was enough to give the German a six-point edge. it's amazing, I wouldn't have
The Associated Press
KRASNAYA P O LYANA,
R u ssia
— Based on training sessions in the Caucasus Mountains above Sochi, the
battle for the Winter Olympics' first-ever gold medal in women's ski jumping was between Sara Takanashi and Dan-
iela Iraschko-Stolz. Carina Vogt had other ideas.
Thursday, Feb. 13
A distant second place to Takanashi
NBC
3-5 p.m.—Men'sBiathlon, 20kmIndividual Gold MedalFinal;Luge,TeamRelayGold Medal Final Runs 0-11:30p.m. —Men'sFigureSkating, Short Program; Men'sFreestyleSkiing, Slopestyle Gold Medal Final;Wom en's Speedskating, 1000Gold MedalFinal;Women's Skeleton 12:05-1:05 a.m.—Women'S short Track,500Gold MedalFinal;Men'sShort Track,5000Relay NBCSN Midnight-2:30a.m. —Men'sHockey, Finlandvs. Austria*
2:30-4:30 a.m.— Women 'sCross-Country, 10km ClassicalGoldMedal Final*; Women'Sk s eleton, 4:30-7 a.m.—Men'sHockey, Slovakia vs. USA* 7-0:45a.m. — Men's FigureSkating, Short Pro* gramPart1 0:45 a.m.-noon— Men'sFigure Skating, Short Program Part2* Noon-2 p.m.— Hockey Encore 2-4 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey MSNBC
4:30-7 a.m.— Men's Hockey,Russiavs.Slovenia* 7-9a.m.— Men's Curling,Canadavs.Denmark 0-11:3 0a.m.— Women' sHockey,Swedenvs.Russia" CNBC
2-5p.m.—Women'C surling, USAvs.Japan USA
2-5a.m.—Men'sCurling,USAvs. Britain
*
9a.m.-noon —Men'sHockey,Canadavs.Norway*
Besides Randall, Marit Bjoer-
gen of Norway was also eliminated early.
Biathlon
German Vogtscoresupset, takes first gold in women'sski jumping
CNBC 2-5p.m.—Men'sCurling,Switzerlandvs. Britain
e arly
lead, avoided the crash behind
in the World Cup standings and never a winner of a World Cup event, Vogt now owns the most important medal in her
sport. "I cannot find the right words, it's amazing, I wouldn't have thought it
was possible three hours ago," the German jumper said. "It's amazing. I'm the first woman Olympic champion in ski jumping." Only in 2011 did the International
Olympic Committee agree to allow the women to compete at Sochi — 90 years after men first jumped at the inaugural Winter Games in 1924.
What is even more amazing is that 17-year-old Takanashi did not even make the podium — I raschko-Stolz
Darya Domracheva of Belarus led for most of the women's 10-kilometer pursuit race,
missing only the last target before finishing in 29 minutes, 30.7 seconds. Tora Berger of Norway took silver, and Teja Gregorin of Slovenia claimed the bronze.
Sjopestyje skiing
thought it was possible three hours ago. It's amazing. I'm
Japan had been c ounting on Takanashi to end an Olympic gold medal drought. The country's last gold
Dara Howell won gold with a scoreof94.20,trouncing the
the first woman Olympic
came at the 2006 Turin Games when
marre earned bronze to give the Canadiansseven medals in four days of snowboarding and freestyle skiing, including three events in which they
champion in skt jumping." — Gold medal winner Carina Vogt
Shizuka Arakawa won the ladies singles in figure skating. "I couldn't jump the way I wanted to
on both attempts." Takanashi said. "I came here wanting to do my best. I'm proved — one sixth placing in 2011-12, incredibly disappointed." a third, fourth and sixth in 2012-13, and Sarah Hendrickson, the 19-year-old perhaps more tellingly, a consistent defending world champion from Park four second-place finishes this season, City, Utah, finished 21st of 30 starters, which indicated she may have been clearly still affected by surgery on her closing in on something special. right knee she underwent in August. Two of those four second placings Although she showed improved form came in Japan on back-to-back week- Tuesday, she plans to take the rest of ends, losing both times to Takanashi the season off. and a parochial home crowd. Less Hendrickson says she was not surthan a month later, she would be beat- prised to see Takanashi off the podium. "It's a crazy world, the Olympics," ing the Japanese star where it counted most. she said. "It shows she is a human beVogt, who became interested in ski ing. I wish I could tell her she is still an jumping when she became mesmerized amazing athlete and that she has many by it on TV as a 4-year-old, performed good years to come." when it counted Tuesday, scoring 247.4 Hendrickson, because she has no points on the normal hill at the RusSki ranking from being off the World Cup
rest of the field, and Kim La-
took two of the top three spots.
Devin Logan of the United States took silver.
Speedskating Lee Sang-hwa won the women's 500 meters and set
an Olympic record of 37.28 seconds in her second race, beating the mark of 37.30 set
by Catriona Le May Doan at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. Her combined time of 1
minute, 14.70 seconds also was an Olympic record, beating Le May Doan's mark of 1:14.75.
Olga Fatkulina of Russia won the silver, and Margot Boer of the Netherlands got the
took silver and Coline Mattell of France Gorki Jumping Center, six better than circuit with her injury, was the first earned bronze, leaving Takansahi Iraschko-Stolz. jumper in the Olympic final. "It's an amazing feeling to be the first fourth. Takanashi finished the first round in The 22-year-old Vogt, a trained po- third place, meaning she would jump one to jump in the first women's ski lice officer, did not come to Sochi with third-last in the final round, a place she jumping competition at the Olympics," a glowing resume. She finished third was not used to considering she has led she said. "My performance was not the with Germany in a mixed team at the and won so many World Cups this year. best, but I kind of expected it."
bronze.
world titles last year in Italy, where she
won the silver and Erin Hamlin picked up the bronze, the
was also fifth in the individual normal hill. But her World Cup record has im-
Iraschko-Stolz took the lead with
Two other Americans from Park
three jumpers to go, leaving Vogt need- City competed — JessicaJerome was ing a good jump to overtake her. It 10th, and former world champion Lindwas not as good as the Austrian's final sey Van 15th.
Luge Natalie Ge i senberger's victory was Germany's fifth straight in w omen's luge. Teammate Tatjana Huefner first singles luge medal ever for the United States.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
OLYMPICSCOREBOARD
CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING
Bend's Wadsworth comes to skier's aid Bulletin staff andwire report KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia — In the finals of the men's cross-country skiing sprint Tuesday at the 2014 Winter
Olympics, Russia's Anton Gafarov crashed but still managed to finish the race thanks to Canadian coach and Bend resident Justin Wadsworth, who ran onto the course to help him.
Wadsworth provided a replacement ski for Gafarov, who tried to finish the race on only one ski after the other ski
to
broke in half in the crash.
"It was like watching an animal stuck in a trap," Wadsworth was quoted saying in the Toronto Star. "You can't just sit there and do nothing about it.... I wanted him to have dig-
semifinal of the cross-country sprint at the Winter Olympics in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, on Tuesday.
nity as he crossed the finish line." Gafarov finished nearly three minutes behind the leaders, but the Russian crowd gave him a standing ovation as he
crossed the finish line.
SNOWBOARDING
merican i e inis es our as wisssarwins a i e 0 By John Branch
be postponed because of
New Yorft Times News Service
KRASNAYA
poor conditions and a lack
of practice time. Crews worked overnight honing the shape of the pipe, which
P O L YANA,
Russia — Shaun White stood at the top of the halfpipe, the
last contestant of the competition, needing a near-perfect
tilted downhill for about
run to capture his third con-
before t h e
secutive gold medal at the Winter Olympics. He has built It felt too perfect, too scripted, even by the standards of
workers sprinkled salt on its surface to get it to melt slightly and refreeze, and they sprayed it with water from large hoses. The re-
storytelling that W h ite h as
sult was not perfection, but
inspired. The crowd hushed in anticipation of another com-
adequacy.
250 yards. In the hour
an empire on such moments.
c o m petition,
A few, like Davis, took pratfalls in the gutter of the
mand performance.
White sped down the hill and crestedthe leading edge of the massive halfpipe and began what was sure to be a
pipe. Others flew above its
monumental run. And that is
um crashers out of the contest. A temperature close to
walls and crashed hard on
the deck. Qualifications weeded the unlikely podi-
when it happened — a hard landing here, a gasp-inducing
freezing during the primetime finals helped keep the pipe intact.
bobble there, the dominance
of the world's greatest halfpipe snowboarder slipping away with each diagonal weave White ended up in fourth, a placing probably higher than he deserved, ceding the Olympic throne to someone else for the first time since 2002.
Andy Wong/The Associated Press
Switzerland's louri Podladtchikov, bottom, celebrates with Shaun White of the United States after Podladtchikov won the gold medal in the men's snowboard halfpipe final on Tuesday in Krasnaya
"For meto be remembered in the sport, I don't think tonight makes or breaks my Polyana, Russia. career," White said. "I've been snowboarding for so long, and I love it so much, that I'm hapDavis called White's fourthpyto take this for what it is and placescore "a gift" from the move on and continue to ride." judges, adding that the result It was Iouri Podladtchikov was good for the sport. of Switzerland — I-Pod to his
"The world knows now that
the pipe. "Everybody had the same pipe to deal with," Davis said. White looked down at the pipe through his dark goggles. He had m astered the Yolo flip on his own, and h e
s ometimes
performed it better than P odladtchikov. Wit h
the
and sugary gutter of uneven gold medal on the line, he snow and ice. (Davis blamed launched himself into the it on a "snow snake.") His sec- flip on the opposite side ond run was doomed from the start, out of balance until he
friends — who won the gold there's other snowboarders crashed while landing a trick. medal by doing a trick and a beside Shaun," Davis said. "It's Suspense built with each run that White and the others great, man. There's a bunch of rider. Hiraoka elevated temcould not match. good riders in our sport, and porarily into second place. "It really felt like there was theydeservesome credittoo. " The 5-foot-3, 110-pound Hirano fighting at all," PodladtchiPodladtchikov, who grew no is the rare competitor who kov said. "It felt like it was all up in D avos but competed can launch himself out of the meant to be. It's really weird." for Russia at the 2006 Turin pipe and reach the heights of More than anything, the Games, can sometimes match White, as if filled with helium. night felt like the edge of a White's acrobatics. His Yolo His score, 93.5, put him in ("You Only Live Once") flip, second place. There was only new era. Ayumu Hirano, a 15-year-old from Japan, won 1,440 degrees of rotation that one competitor left. the silver medal, and his coun- includes two a erial somerWhite came to Sochi hoptryman Taku H i raoka won saults, was a rare trick that ing to win two gold medals, bronze. For the first time since White did not master first. having spent a year preparthe halfpipe was added to the Podladtchikov landed it per- ing for the debut of slopestyle, Olympic docket in 1998, there fectly, anchoring a run that an event he dominated on the were no Americans on the was awarded 94.75 points out snowboarding circuit a depodkum. of 100. The cheering crowd cade ago. But after a couple of F our Americans were i n waved Swiss an d R u ssian days of training on the slopethe 40-man field, and three flags. Podladtchikov moved style course last week, amid of them advanced to the 12- to Switzerland from Russia concerns over the size and man final. But Greg Bretz and when he was 8, and the merg- shapes of the jumps, he pulled Danny Davis, two of the snow- ing of time and place hit hard. out to focus on the halfpipe. "I love to be here," he said. "I boarders who had previously American Sage Kotsenburg beaten White in a halfpipe love to speak Russian. It's my won the event. "The slopestyle course had competition, each fell on both mother language, and it reof their runs. Davis finished minds me of so many things." some issues, and I just felt like 10th, Bretz 12th. Six riders had a chance to my best bet was to focus on "I hate not landing two beat Podladtchikov's score. the halfpipe," White said Tuesruns," Davis said. "Especially Davis was one of them. A day. "Then the halfpipe had firstrun was up- some issues." in this event, with such a big near-perfect crowd and theamount of me- ended by a stumble in the flat The night before the halfdia here. But, back to normal portion of the pipe between pipe competition, some athlife, man." the 22-foot walls, a choppy letes suggested that the event
Freestyle skiing Women'sBlopeslyle Finals Run1 1. DaraHowell, Canada, 94.20. 2.DevinLogan,WestDover,Vt.,85.40. 3. Anna Segal, Australia, 77.00. 4.EmmaDahlstrom,Sweden,72.80. 5. YukiTsubota,Canada,71.60. 6. SilviaBertagna,Italy,69.60. 7. EvelineBhend,Swilzerland,58.40. 8. KeriHerm an, Breckenridge, Colo.,50.00. 9. JuliaKrass,Hanover, N.H., 42.40. 10. Katie Summerhayes,Britain,19.40. 11. Kim Lamarre, Canada,15.00. 12. CamigiaBerra, Switzerland, 5.60. Run 2 1. KimLamarre, Canada,(15.00;85.00)85.00. 2.EmmaDahlstrom,Sweden,(72.80;75.40)75.40. 3. KatieSummerhayes, Britain, (19.40;70.60)70.60. 4. EvelineBhend,Switzerland, (58.40;63.20)63.20. 5. Dara Howell, Canada, (94.20; 48.40)48.40. 6. JuliaKrass,Hanover, N.H.,(42.40;38.60)38.60. 7. Keri Herm an, Breckenridge, Colo., (50.00;35.40) 35.40. 8. CamiliaBerra,Swilzerland, (5.60;30.40)30.40.
Afterward, riders were reluctant to place blame on
downhill.
Women 10km Pursuit (Penaaies inparentheses) 1. Darya Domracheva, Belarus, 29:30.7(1). 2. Tora Berger, Norway, 30:08.3 (1). 3. TejG aregorin, Slovenia,30:12.7(1). 4. Gabriela Soukalova,CzechRepublic, 30:18.3(1). 5. ValSem j erenko, Ukraine,30:23.6(1). 6. AnastasiyK auzmina,Slovakia, 30:29.1(2). 7. Olga Vilukhina,Russia,30:32.9(1). 8. KarinOberhofer,Italy, 30:37.8(1). U.B. Finishers 18. Susan Dunklee, Barton, Vt., 31:11.6(4). 51. Sarah Studebaker, Boise, Idaho,35:00.0(5). 54. AnnelieCo s ok,SaranacLake, N.Y., 36:20.9(5).
Individual Sprint Men Semilinals Heat1 1. OlaVigenHattestad, Norway,3:36.33(Q). 2. Teodor Peterson, Sweden, 3:36.48(Q). 3. Anders Gloeersen,Norway, 3;36.95(LL). 4. Marcus Hellner, Sweden,3:36.98(LL). 5. EirikBrandsdal,Norway,3:37.09. 6.AntonGafarov,Russia,6:25.95. Heat 2 1. Sergey Ustiugov, Russia,3:37.37(Q). 2.EmilJoensson,Sweden,3:37.43(Q). 3. Bernhard Tritscher, Austria, 3:37.64. 4. Alexey Petukhov,Russia,3:37.89. 5. PetterJr. Northug,Norway,3:54.28. 6. FedericoPegegrino, Italy,3:55.99. Final 1. OlaVigenHattestad,Norway,3:38.39. 2. TeodorPeterson, Sweden,3:39.61. 3. EmiJoensson, l Sweden,3:58.13. 4. Anders Gloeersen,Norway, 4:02.05. 5. Sergey Ustiugov, Russia,4:32.48. 6. Marcus Helner,Sweden,5:24.31. Women Semilinals Heat1 1. MaikenCaspersenFalla, Now r ay,2:35.80 (Q). 2. Vesna Fabjan,Slovenia, 2:36.02(Q). 3. IdaIngemarsdoter, Sweden,2:36.05(LL). 4. AstridUhrenholdtJacobsen,Norway, 2:36.32(LL). 5.StinaNilsson,Sweden,2:36.42. 6. Aurore Jean,France,2:38.28. Heat 2 1. IngvildFlugstadOestberg, Norway,2:36.66 (Q). 2. Sophie Caldwell, Peru,Vt.,2:36.67(Q). 3. GaiVu a erich, Italy,2:36.87. 4 DeniseHerrmann Germany 23694 5. Katja Visnar,Slovenia,2:37.76. 6. MaritBjoergen,Norway, 2:52.27. Final 1. Maiken CaspersenFaga, Norway,2:35.49. 2. IngvildFlugstadOestberg, Norway,2:35.87. 3. Vesna Fabjan, Slovenia,2:35.89. 4. AstridUhrenholdtJacobsen,Norway, 2:37.31. 5. IdaIngemarsdoter, Sweden,2:42.04. 6. Sophie Caldwell, Peru,Vt.,2:47.75.
helped Gafarov put the new ski on.
Russia's Anton Gafarov falls with a broken ski during his men's
Biathlon
Cross-country skiing
Wadsworth — a former U.S. Olympian whose wife, Beckie Scott, won an Olympic gold medal for Canada in 2002-
Matthias Schrader/The Associated Press
C5
9. Devin Logan,WestDover,Vt., (85.40; 30.00) 30.00. 10. Anna Segal, Australia, (77.00;28.80)28.80. 11. YukiTsubota, Canada, (71.60; 28.40) 28.40. 12. SilviaBertagna,Italy, (69.60;21.80)21.80. Final Ranking 1. Dara Howell, Canada, (94.20; 48.40)94.20. 2. Devin Logan,WestDover,Vt., (85.40; 30.00) 85.40. 3. KimLamarre, Canada,(15.00;85.00)85.00. 4. Anna Segal, Australia, (77.00;28.80)77.00. 5.EmmaDahlstrom,Sweden,(72.80;75.40)75.40. 6. YukiTsubota, Canada,(71.60; 28.40)71.60. 7. KatieSummerhayes, Britain, (19.40;70.60)70.60. 8. SilviaBertagna,Italy, (69.60;21.80)69.60. 9. EvelineBhend,Swilzerland, (58.40;63.20)63.20. 10. KeriHerman,Breckenridge, Colo.,(50.00; 35.40) 50.00. 11.JuliaKrass,Hanover, N.H.,(42.40; 38.60)42.40. 12. CamigiaBerra, Switzerland, (5.60;30.40)30.40.
Luge Women Singles Final Ranking 1. NatalieGeisenberger,Germany,3:19.768. 2. Tatjana Huefner,Germany,3:20.907.
from where Podladtchikov
performed his. White's board hit the lip of the pipe, bending but not breaking. He somehow stayed on his feet and sped
6. MajaVtic,Slovenia(100.5, 71.0,48.0; 99.0, 68.0, 52.5)241.9. 7. YukiIto,Japan(97.5, 65.0, 53.5; 98.5, 67.0, 53.5) 241.8.
8. MarenLundby, Norway(97.0, 64.0, 53.5; 87.5, 45.0, 54.5)235.5. U.S. Finishers 10. JessicaJerome,ParkCity, Utah(97.0, 64.0,52.5; 97.5, 65.0,47.0)234.1. 15. LindseyVan, ParkCity, Utah(97.0, 64.0,51.0; 95.0, 60.0,51.0)227.2. 21. SarahHendrickson, ParkCity, Utah(94.0, 58.0, 52.5; 97.0,64.0, 49.5) 217.6.
Snowboard Men's Hallpipe Finals (Btart position inparentheses) Run 1 1.t1) AyumuHirano,Japan,90.75. 2. I3) Zhang Yiwei, China,87.25. 3. (6) louriPodladtchikoy,Switzerland, 86.50. 4. (2)ShiWancheng,China,81.00. 5. 7 DavidHabluetzel,Swilzerland,80.75. 6. 1 Tim-KevinRavnjak, Slovenia, 72.25. 7. 8DannyDavis,Highland,Mich.,53.00. 8. 9 ChristianHaller,Swilzerland,46.25. 9. (10)TakuHiraoka, Japan,45.50. 10.4) KentCallister, Australia,40.00. 11.I12)ShaunWhite, Carlsbad, Calif., 35.00. 12. (5)GregBretz, MammothLakes, Calif.,21.75. Run 2 1. (6) louriPodladtchikov,Swilzerland, (86.50;94.75) 94.75.
2.(11) Ayumu Hirano,Japan,(90.75; 93.50)93.50. 3.(10)TakuHiraoka,Japan,(45.50;92.25) 92.25. 4. (12)ShaunWhite, Carlsbad,Calif., (35.00;90.25) 90.25. 5. (7) DavidHabluetzel,Switzerland,(80.75; 88.50) 88.50. 6. (4) KentCallister,Australia, (40.00;68.50)68.50. 7. (3) Zhang Yiwei, China,(87.25; 58.50)58.50. 8. (9) ChristianHaller, Switzerland, (46.25;51.50) 51.50. 9. (8) DannyDavis, Highland,Mich., (53.00;45.25) 45.25.
10. (5) GregBretz,Mammoth Lakes, Calif., (21.75; 26.50)26.50. 11. (2)ShiWancheng, China, (81.00; 25.00)25.00. 12. (1) Tim-KevinRavnjak, Slovenia,(72.25; 16.50) 16.50. Final Ranking 1. Iouri Podladtchikov,Switzerland, (86.50;94.75) 94.75.
2. Ayumu Hirano, Japan,(90.75; 93.50)93.50. 3. Taku Hiraoka, Japan, (45.50; 92.25)92.25. 4. ShaunWhite, Carlsbad,Calif., (35.00; 90.25) 90.25. 5. David Habluelzel, Switzerland, (80.75; 88.50) 88.50. 6. ZhangYiwei, China,(87.25;58.50)87.25. 7. ShiWancheng,China, (81.00; 25.00)81.00. 8. Tim-KevinRavnjak, Slovenia,(72.25;16.50) 72.25. 9. KentCallister,Australia, (40.00;68.50)68.50. 10. DannyDavis, Highland, Mich., (53.00;45.25) 53.00. 11. ChristianHaler, Switzerland, (46.25;51.50)51.50. 12. GregBrelz, Mammoth Lakes, Calif., (21.75;26.50) 26.50.
Speedskating Women
500 Final Ranking
1. LeeSangHwa, South Korea(1, 37.42; 1, 37.28) 1:14.70. 2. Olga Fatkulina, Russia (2, 37.57; 2, 37.49) 1:15.06. 3. Margot Boer,Netherlands(5, 37.77; 3, 37.71) 1:15.48. 4.ZhangHong, China(3, 37.58; 7,37.99)1:15.58. 5. NaoKodaira,Japan (7,37.88; 4,37.72)1:15.61. 6. Jenny Wolf, Germany(8, 37.93; 5, 37.73) 1:15.67. 7. Wang Beixing, China(6, 37.82;6,37.86)1:15.68. 8. HeatherRichardson,HighPoint, N.C.(4, 37.73;8, 38.02)1:15.75. Other U.S.Finishers 13. BrittanyBowe,Ocala, Fla. (17,38.81;10,38.37) 1:17.19.
15. Lauren Cholewinski, RockHil, S.C.(12,38.54;19, 38.80)1:17.35. 29. SugarTodd,Milwaukee(28, 39.278;28,39.25) 1:18.53.
Tuesday's Medalists BIATHLON
Women 10km Pursuit GOLD — DaryaDomracheva,Belarus SILVER —ToraBerger, Norway BRONZ E—TejaGregorin,Slovenia CROSS-COUNTRYSKIING Individual Sprint
Men
GOLD —OlaVigenHattestad, Norway SILVER —Teodor Peterson, Sweden BRONZE — EmilJoensson,Sweden
Women GOLD — MaikenCaspersenFalla,Norway SILVER —Ingvild FlugstadOestberg, Norway BRONZE — VesnaFabjan,Slovenia FREESTYLE SKING Women'sSlopestyle GOLD — DaraHowell,Canada SILVER —Deyin Logan,West Dover,Vt. BRONZE — Kim Lamarre,Canada
3. ErinHamlin,Remsen, N.Y., 3:21.145.
4.AlexGough, Canada,3:21.578. 5. KimberleMc y rae,Canada,3:21.895. 6. Anke Wischnewski, Germany, 3:21.960. 7. Tatyana Ivanova,Russia,3:22.006. 8. NataljaKhoreva,Russia, 3:22.067. OtherU.B.Finishers 10.KateHansen,LaCanada,Calif.,3:22.667. 15. Summe r Britcher, GlenRock, Pa.,3:24.143.
across the pipe for his next
trick. By then, his chance at winning a third gold medal was gone. "I went for big tricks that only Iouri and myself are doing," White said. "I could have played it safe, I guess, and tried to get in a decent score, but I really
Ski jumping Women's K90Individual Final Ranking First andsecondjumps in parentheses) 1. arina Vogt,Germany(103.0, 76.0, 53.0;100.5,
71.0, 53.0)247.4. 2. DanielaIraschko-Stolz, Austria (98.5,67.0, 54.0; 102.5,75.0,49.0)246.2. 3.ColineMattel,France(995,690,560;1000,700, 55.0) 245.2. 4. SaraTakanashi, Japan(100.0, 70.0, 51.0;103.0, 76.0, 50.0)243.0. 5. EvelynInsam,Italy (98.5, 67.0,52.5;97.0, 64.0, 52.0) 242.2.
wanted to win. We came here on a mission and it just
wasn't my night, which is really tough to say. It's a big night."
LUGE
Women GOLD —Natalie Geisenberger, Germany SILVER —TatjanaHuefner, Germany BRONZE — ErinHamlin,Remsen,N.Y.
BKI JUMPING Women'sK90Individual GOLD —CarinaVogt, Germany SILVER —DanielaIraschko-Stolz, Austria BRONZ E—ColineMattel, France
BNOWBD ARD Men Halfpipe GOLD —louri Podladtchikov,Switzerland SILVER —AyumuHirano,Japan BRONZ E—TakuHiraoka,Japan SPEEDSK ATING
Women 600 GOLD —LeeSang Hwa, South Korea SILVER —OlgaFatkulina, Russia BRONZ E—Margot Boer, Netherlands
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Callister
States failed to reach the med- first Olympics because the al stand, finishing fourth with U.S. team is so stacked with
Continued from C1
a second-run score of 90.25.
talent.
ed the day in the qualifying
Callister finished ahead of the two other U.S. riders
the Games, he also reached
round, and 12 advanced to the
in the final, as Danny Davis
Forty snowboarders start-
finals.
was 10th and Gregory Bretz Iouri Podladtchikov of Swit- placed 12th. zerland claimed the gold medAfter honing his halfpipe al with a second-run score prowess at Mt. Bachelor ski of 94.75 in the finals. Ayumu area while growing up in Hirano of Japan won the sil-
Bend, Callister was invited
ver medal with a 93.5, and his to join the U.S. Snowboardteammate Taku Hiraoka took ing Rookie halfpipe team in
Not only did he qualify for the Olympic final and finished in the top 10. Two other Australian halfpipe competitors,
Nathan Johnstone and Scotty James, did not advance to the finals. Halfpipe s n o wboarders are judged on the difficulty, execution and amplitude of
the aerial tricks they perform Two-time Olympic champi- the Aussies, figuring he had a as they soar in and out of the on Shaun White of the United better chance of reaching his pipe.
the bronze with a 92.25.
2012. But he chose to go with
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
PREP SCOREBOARD
Storm snapskid, edgeCowboyson road Bulletin staff report
and five assists by Samuel Wieber, the Hawks snapped snapped a three-game boys a three-game skid to claim basketball l osing s t reak a Class 4A Sky-Em League PRINEVILLE — Summit
Tuesday as the Storm held
win. Zack Smith posted 17
off Crook County 52-47
points for La Pine, which was i n I n t ermountain H y b r i d 22 of 36 from the field — inaction. cluding an 8-of-14 mark from Nick Moyer scored 16 3-point range — to improve points, Max Michalski add- to 2-3 in league play and 10-9 ed nine and Jason Garcia overalL Tyress Turnsplenty and Kyle Cornett each had had 12 points for the Hawks. six points for Summit. The For Sisters, which dropped Storm (10-9 overall) led 28-18 to 1-4 in Sky-Em action and at halftime, but the Cowboys 3-15 overall, Justin Harrer led (2-16) made things close, out- the way with 18 points, while scoring Summit 29-24 in the
Connor Schaab contributed
second half before falling at home.
13 points.
Seth Kessi led Crook Coun-
ty with 16 points.
Santiam 63, Culver 21: MILL
CITY — The Bulldogs fell to 2-11 in Tri-River Confer-
44: The host Storm connected onnine 3-pointers en route to an Intermountain Hybrid win — their fifth victory in the lastseven games. Sar-
a stretch of three games in
three days, Culver trailed just 11-10 after t h e f i rst quarter a g ainst
S a ntiam,
ah Heinly drilled four shots among the top 2A teams in from beyond the 3-point line the state. But the Wolverines and finished with 18 points
took a 28-18 lead by halftime
for Summit, which improved and Bulldogs coach Scott to 14-6 on the season. Raja Fritz said he began to subChar had 16 points and sev-
stitute for his starters in the
en assists for the Storm, third to conserve energy for and Sarah Reeves added 15 the rough three-day stretch. points and 10 rebounds. For Alysha Fritz led Culver (4-9 the Cowgirls (6-13), Kimmer TRC, 7-14 overall) with 19 Severance led the way with points. a game-high 22 points, while Trinity Lutheran 50, North Baylee Bannon, M ichae- L ake 32: SILVER LAKE line Malott and Jena Ovens The visiting Saints took a chipped in with six points 14-6 first-quarter lead and apiece. outscored the Cowgirls 25Ridgeview 66, Redmond 14 in the second half to earn
ence play and 3-17 overall after getting blown out by 21: REDMOND — The visRidgeview 56, Redmond 47: the Wolverines, who entered iting Ravens outscored the REDMOND — T h e c r oss- the game with just two wins crosstown Panthers 18-2 in In other Tuesday action: BOYS BASKETBALL
scheduled to be the first in
their fourth straight Class
the Panthers (3-14) with 13 points, Cody Moss recorded
Bears (5-0 IMC) and Kendall Kramer contributed 11points.
1A Mountain Valley League win. Katie Murphy paced the second quarter to grab Trinity Lutheran (8-2 MVL, a 32-7 halftime lead before 13-7 overall) with 15 points, securing an Intermountain seven assists and five reHybrid w in . M a rt a R odes bounds, while Emily Eidler paced Ridgeview (12-6) with chipped in with 14 points and a game-high 13 points, McK- eight rebounds. North Lake enzie Hidalgo had 11, and rallied to take an 18-16 lead Hosanna Wilder f i nished in thesecond quarter before with 10 points. Chantel Dan- the Saints scored the last nis posted 11 points and eight nine points of the period for a rebounds to lead the way for 25-18 halftime lead. Victoria Redmond (2-16), while Sophia Sample had 10 points for the Hamilton logged five points Saints, who were tied with and five boards. North Lake for third place Santiam 53, Culver 33: in the MVL heading into the MILL CITY — The Bulldogs contest. Karrah Davidson led hung close early, but the host the Cowgirls (7-3, 13-6) with Wolverinesassumed control 10 points, eight rebounds and
11, and Alani Troutman con-
Jessie Goetz paced Moun-
in the second quarter and
tributed 10 points. La Pine 62, Sisters 52: LA
tain View (2-4, 5-14) with 11 pulled away in a Class 2A points. Tri-River Conference showSummit 64, Crook County down. In a game that was
town rivals combined for 19
of their own. Santiam (2-11
3-pointers, but 10 by the host TRC, 3-19 overall) led 36-7 at Ravens helped them secure halftime in a game that was a n I n termountain H y b r i d never close. John Slaght led victory. George Mendazona Culver with seven points. connected on six shots from GIRLS BASKETBALL 3-point range and finished Bend 70, Mountain View 33: with a game-high 22 points Eight players scored six or to go along with seven as- more points as the host Lava sists. Tanner O'Neal had 12
Bears rolled past the Cou-
points, five rebounds and four steals for Ridgeview (9-9), and Justin Alvarez chipped in with 11 points, five steals and four assists.
gars to improve to 14-4 overall. Lisa Sylvester recorded a game-high 16 points for Bend
B randon
in the Class 5A Intermoun-
tain Conference contest. Ma-
B e n so n p a c e d rissa Hayes added 12 for the
PINE — Behind 18 points
Hawks
the season against the Out-
Continued from C1 limited Sisters to 14 points or
did not rebound well and eked out a 29-26 victory.
fewer each quarter.
"I think we played pretty aggressively," said Mickel,
laws on Jan. 21, the Hawks "We made our shots and
two blocks. Also for North
Lake, Kendra Murphy had eight points, 14 boards and six blocks.
things up defensively, though, added 11. recording three steals that led "We are a die-hard team," to six points — all by Boen-
Girls basketball Class BA tntermountainConference Bend70,MountainView 33 Mountain View (33) — Jessie Goetz11, Tsoor mas8,VanderZwiep4,H.Goetz3,Stevens 2, Williams 2, McClain2, Skoog1. Totals11 8 16 33. Bend (70) —LisaSylvester14, Hayes12, Kramer11, Crook7, McClay 6, Burnham6, S.Jackson6, Parker6,A.Jackson2.Totals 2813-16 70. Mountai nview 5 8 5 15 — 33 Bend 14 16 24 16 — 70 Three-poingoal t s— MountainView:Tsuourmas2,J. Goetz;Bend: Crook.
8, J. Stockton6, Nelson2, Harris 2, Fine2, Hand2. Totals152-432. Trinity Lutheran 1 4 11 13 12 — 50 NorthLake 6 12 6 8 — 3 2 Three-pointgoals — Trinity Lutheran:M. Murphy, Sample,Eidler;NorthLake: none.
Boys basketball Class 5A IntermountainConference Mountai nView 50,Bend46 Bend (46) — JaylinRobinson16. Hogiday6, Kearsley6, Harmeson5, Parsons4,Warinner4, Beaumarchai3, s Scott 2.Totals159-1746. Mountain View(58) —Grant Lannin27, Catteg 6, Hjelm6, Haugen6, Holly 6,Kurzynowski 4, Roth3. Totals 197-1458. Bend (46 ) 16 7 10 1 3 — 46 Mountain View (58) 14 20 18 6 — 50 Three -pointgoals— Bend:Robinson3,Hogiday2, BeaumarchaisHarm , eson; Mountain View:Lannin 5, Haugen,Catell.
Intermountain Hybrid Bummrt64, CrookCounty44 Crook County (44) — KimmerSeverance22, Bannon6, Malott 6, Ovens6, Martin 2, Wood2. Totals179-1644. Summit (64) — SarahHeinly 18, Char16, Reeves15,Gordon5, Manley4, Hasenoehrl 4,Cornet 2. Totals 2211-1464. Intermountain Hybrid CrookCounty 10 1 2 9 13 — 44 Summit 52,CrookCounty47 Summit 17 19 17 11 — 64 Summit (52) — NickMoyer16, Michalski9, Three-poingoal t s— CrookCounty: Ovens; Summit: Garcia 6,Cornett6, Derman4, Reeves5, McCormick Heinly 4,Char3, Reeves,Gordon. 4, Cherry2.Totals 23 4-1152. Crook County(47) —SethKessi 16,Sofich 12, IntermountainHybrid Kee10,Bartels5, Kilthao2, Heiney 2.Totals 1611Ridgeutew66, Redmond21 47. Ridgeuiew (66) — MartaRodes13, Hidalgo 19 Summit 17 11 4 20 — 52 11, H.Wilder10,Wilcox9, Durre8, Watt 6, D.WildCrookCounty 9 9 10 1 9 —47 er 4, Kenny 2, Ross2, Martin 1. Totals 28 8-16 Three-poingoal t s — Summi t; Ree ves, Michalski; 66. CrookCounty: Kessi 2,Kee. Redmond(21) —Chantel Dannis t t, Hamilton 5, Joyce 2,Bergum2, Edwards1. Totals 7 6-14 tntermountainHybrid 21. Ridgeview 58,Redmond47 Ridgeview 14 18 14 20 — 66 Redmond(47) —BrandonBenson13,Moss11, Redmond 5 2 4 1 0 — 21 Troutman10,Aamodt 5, Winters 4, T.Brown2, BurThree-pointgoal— s Ridgeview:Durre, Hidalgo; Red- roughs2.Totals 18 2-4 47. mond:Hamilton. Ridgevie w(50)— GeorgeMendazona22,O'Neal12, Alvarez11,Johnson6, Bowman3, Manselle 3, Class 4A Albrecht1.Totals 224-0 50. Bky-EmLeague Redmond 5 15 13 14 — 47 La Pine 50,Sisters 44 12 19 13 14 — 58 Sisters (44) — Savannah Spear 13, Peterson Ridgeview T hree p o i n t g o a l s — R e d mond:Moss3,Benson3, 11,Henson8,Moore6,Hudson4,Mann2.Totals Trout man 2,Aamodt;Ridgeview:Mendazona6, unavailable. Alvarez3, Bowman. La Pine (50) —AshleyPierce17, K.Mickel13, Boen11,Glenn9.Totals unavailable. Class 4A Sisters 7 10 13 14 — 44 Bky-EmLeague LaPine 16 9 12 13 — 50 La Pine62, Sisters52 Threepointgoals—Sisters: Moore, Petterson,Spear; Sisters (52) — JustinHarrer18, Schaab13, La Pine:Glenn. Larson 7,Kaping4, Moore3, Martinez 3, Stadeli 2, Adams1,Gi01. Totals 20 7-14 52. Class 2A La Pine (62) —Samuel Wieber16, Smith17, Tri-Riuer Conference Turnsplenty12,Johnson6, Ramirez5, Brown2,Taylor Bantiam 53,Culuer33 2. Totals 22 10-1362. Santiam(53)— HannahThompson25,David- Sisters 9 13 13 17 — 52 son 0, K. Clark6, Reeser 6,Arndt3, A.Clark1. Totals La Pine 16 16 9 21 — 62 22 2-9 53. ngoal t s — Sisters: Harrer2, Schaab2, Culver (33) — Alysha Fritz 19, Lewis6, Hoke Three-poi Moore; LaPine:Tnrnsplenty2, Wieber2,Johnson 4, Retano 2,J. Johnson1, H.Johnson1.Totals 14 2, Smi t h, Ramirez. 4-10 33. Bautiam 11 17 15 10 — 53 Class 2A Culuer 10 8 11 4 — 33 Tri-River Conference Three-poingoal t s—Santiam: Thompson 7; Culver: Bantiam 63,Culver 21 Fritz. Culver (21) —JohnSlaght 7, Martinez4, Bogart 2,Knepp2,McDonald2,Rumbarger2,Ogveras1. Class1A Totals 8 5-1321. Mountain Valley League Bantiam (63)—Nicto20,Whitman15,Walczack Trinity Lutheran50, Norlh Lake32 7, Ardnt 7,Hagen6, Butler5, Grenbemer 3. Totals Trinity Lutheran(50) — KatieMnrphy15, Eidler 26 8-19 63. 4 3 8 6 — 21 14, Sample10,Cowan4, M.Murphy3, Clift 2, Spen- Culver cer 2.Totals1713-1950. Bantiam 14 22 12 15 — 63 North Lake(32)—KarrahDavidsontg, Murphy Three-poingoal t s—Culver:none:Santiam: Nicot3.
points and Jacobie Petterson
said Sisters coach Julianne in the final four minutes of H orner, whose team o u t - the game. scored La Pine 27-25 in the La Pine and Sisters are second half. "We were real- both back on the floor to-
that's what we've been struggling with," Mickel said about 'Tuesday's win. "When we do ly pushing forward in that night after last weekend's that, it gets us excited on de- fourth quarter. But we need to snow storm canceled a slate
Cougars
half."
Continued from C1 "He was absolutely tre-
M ountain V iew s ho t 1 9 of 42 from the field and hit
looked for openings, we were fense. It also motivated our
be able to finish."
of games. The Hawks are at
really good night tonight.
patient, and when we had the
Midway through the fourth quarter the Outlaws nar-
Sweet Home and the Outlaws
He's been shooting it w ell.
opportunity we took control and made the shots."
team and brought the other team down." S avannah Spear led t h e
host Elmira.
He took advantage of what they were giving him, and
seven 3-pointers, helping the Cougars overcome Bend's 31-23 rebounding advantage. Jaylin Robinson led Bend (4-1, 11-6) with 16 points and Steffan Kearsley grabbed seven rebounds to go with
In La Pine's first game of
Outlaws (1-3, 5-11) with 13
three points. Glenn turned
that was critical in the first
his six points.
whose team has won four of its last five games. "We
rowed the Hawks' lead to
Sam
Fame defensive end renowned for his toughness, "is turning over in his Continued from C1 grave." He was a regular at the gay club Michael Sam had anticipated his where the bartenders knew him by family's uneasiness. In an interview name. Sunday in North Hollywood, Calif., Sam introduced himself to the he spoke about his tough upbringing, world Sunday night as a National which he said was more challengFootball League prospect who just ing than the decision to come out happens to be gay. Now, he is poised publicly. "I'm closer to my friends than I am to become a trailblazer in a violent and macho world that will scrutinize to my family," Sam conceded. his every action and turn his private He declined to speak beyond the life into a very public debate. initial interview Sunday. But Sam has never had it easy. He Indeed, Sam had begun telling grew up about 40 miles southeast small groups of his University of Misof Houston near Galveston Bay in souri teammates that he was gay two Texas, the seventh of eight children. years earlier. In August he told the Three of his siblings have died and whole group, along with the coaching two brothers are in prison. He lived
staff. Most of them already knew. If he was not quite public about his
— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoller@berzdbrzlietirz.com.
family. They didn't know our background and the adversity we had to endure. I wanted to succeed and be a beacon of hope in my family." Nobody in Sam's family had attended college and Sam did not believe he would be the first. But as he
coped with a disjointed family and wrestled with his sexuality, one certainty emerged in his life: He needed to get out of Hitchcock. And he knew his best chance was through football.
mendous in the f i rst h alf," Reid said. "His shot looked
safe haven," said Ron Purl, w ho
SoCo Club in Columbia, a nightclub
keeps a photo of Sam in his Missouri
and cabaret that hosts regular drag
shows, among other events. just another son. If he did something Marty Newman, SoCo's owner wrong, he got yelled at just like the and general manager, said Sam was others did." entirely open about who he was: a gay man and a football star. He was football uniform in his office. "He is
Casual disclosures
happy to talk sports with the bar-
Sam may havebeen big for Hitch- tenders and anyone else. "No one felt the need to out him," cock, but he was small on Missouri's defensive line. The coaches did not know what to make of their under-
sized freshman.
Newman said. "He was respected
here and was allowed to be himself." In Sam's senior season, Missou-
"He was a two-star recruit," said
ri finished 12-2 and won the Cotton
Pat Ivey, an associate athletic direcSam began his football career as tor who oversees the strength departa water boy. In junior high school, ment. "I didn't really see him being Craig Smith, the football coach, saw an All-American." that Sam was athletically blessed At first, Sam's teammates intimand, even better, hungry for guidance idated him. His affinity for Harry and camaraderie. The coaches draft- Potter books made him stand out. ed him to carry equipment and hang He was noisy and could not sit still.
Bowl. He made the All-America first
bound for Louisiana State University. In 2012, the NFL's St. Louis Rams drafted him in the first round. But that night Sam more than kept
a couple of times to emphasize just
A second home
team and was voted by his teammates as Missouri's most valuable
player. On Monday, Pinkel tried to put in
words a singular season that began with his noisiest player's startling an-
briefly in the back seat of his mother's car, and his relationship with his sexuality, he certainly was not hidnouncement,and ended with dozens family remains complicated: When ing it. His self-confidence blossomed, around the squad. But he won the group over with imof men standing by their teammate in he visits home, he usually stays with along with his game. At the start of high school, Smith provised songs that ribbed his team- the national spotlight. "I think mostly why Mike had put him in the starting lineup on the mates or described their grueling "Pretty cool," was the best he could friends. Sam's life has transformed over- such a great season this year is that varsity team. Sam was already so practices. do. "He's got a motor that never stops," night. His announcement this week he could be himself," said L'Damian much bigger than his teammates that On Saturday night, over Chinese p rompted a state senator in M i s- Washington, a Missouri teammate he stood in the back row of the team's defensive lineman Derrion Thomfood at the home of his publicist, souri to seek legislation to bar dis- and close friend. "He got that big yearbook photo. as said. "He is a big personality, and Howard Bragman, Sam was joined crimination based on sexual orien- boulder off his back. Like, finally. I By his sophomore year, Sam when he started with the songs you by an exclusive group: the fraternitation. His courage has been hailed think it was a huge relief. He could played on the offensive and defen- just knew that mind never stopped." ty of publicly gay athletes and their by teammates, famous athletes and be himself and not always be hiding sive lines. How good was he'? Smith The same went for his mouth. peers who have made a cause of sup"He drove me crazy," said Gary porting them. countless football fans, and by Pres- something from everybody." did not know: Hitchcock, with only ident Barack Obama and the first 300 students, was hardly a football Pinkel, the head coach. "He never Dave Kopay, Wade Davis and Bill The notorious Sams lady. powerhouse. shut up. I knew when he was in my Bean were there, along with Brendon But to get a sense of the challenges As a boy growing up in HitchBut Smith got a good a hint of his office talking to the secretary. I'd get Ayanbadejo and Chris Kluwe, two awaiting Sam, look no further than cock,Michael Sam may notyethave potential during Sam's senior year up and shut the door." former NFL players who have been his father. known exactly who he was, but he when the Bulldogs played Chavez Beforehis senior year, Sam had outspoken in their support of gay Last Tuesday, Michael Sam Sr. did know what he needed. He needed High School, a much bigger school in begun telling those closest to him rights. was at aDenny's restaurant near his to play sports. He needed to be part Houston. It was the team's first game who he really was. He skipped the It was a chance to celebrate Sam home outside Dallas to celebrate his of a team. after Hurricane Ike devastated the dramatic pronouncements in favor of on his last night of relative anonymbirthday when his son sent him a text Life had hardly been kind to him region and closed the school for sev- casual disclosures. ity, but it was also a way to tell him message. or his family. Michael Sr. and his eral weeks. Two years ago during Christmas about the world he was diving into. Dad, I'm gay, he wrote. mother, JoAnn Sam, were separated Chavez's star was defensive tackle break,Sam brought home a friend Kopay, a 71-year-old former runThe party stopped cold. "I couldn't after having eight children. He went named Michael Brockers, who was from the swimming team, a man. His ning back, playfully punched Sam eat no more, so I went to Applebee's
to have drinks," Sam Sr. said. "I don't want my grandkids raised in that kind of environment.
to North Texas to work as a trucker. She tried to keep what was left of her
family together. A sister drowned when she was 2,
"I'm old-school," he added. "I'm a before Michael was born, when anman-and-a-woman type of guy." As other child accidentally knocked her evidence, he pointed out that he had off a fishing pier. Another brother, taken an older son to Mexico to lose Russell, was 15 when he was shot and his virginity. killed trying to break into a home, an On Sunday night, just after Mi- incident his father said was part of a chael Sam announced his intention gang initiation. Another brother, Juto make sports history, his father was lian, has not been heard from since still struggling with the news. he left for work one day in 1998; his Sam Sr. loves his son, and he said family believes he is dead. Two othhe hoped his son makes it to the NFL. ers are in jail. "As a black man, we have so many "It was very hard growing up in hurdles to cross," he said. "This is just that environment," Sam said. "My one he has to cross." family was very notorious in the
up with the feared player.
second family, the Purls, did not ask
any questions. When Sam called Ron how intensely he would have to work. Purl later to say that he was gay, Purl He also reminded Sam that if they assured him that he was perfectly
had been freshmen together in 1960,
fine with it — and already knew. Sam, as a black man, would nothave "We knew right then and there that His teammates had s i milar been welcome at Missouri. "Well, you're just taking another Michael could really play with any- reactions. body," Smith said. "I practiced across from him three step forward now," Kopay said. Sam found a comfortable place off years and it was just war," said Elvis Then, there is the public at large, the field as well, thanks in large part Fisher, an offensive lineman and cap- the millions of sports fans who will to Ethan Purl, a classmate and the tain of the 2012 Missouri team. "You soon see a publicly gay player standson of Ron Purl, the president of the don't set out wanting to know each ing tall on an NFL team's defensive local ProsperityBankbranch. other's life, but you spend so much line. It is too early to know how they Ron's wife, Candy, made sure their time with each other you can't help will react, but perhaps the evolution housewas partrecreation centerand but know them. I knew and I love the within Sam's own family offers a part counseling hub for their children clue. "I believe in a person's destiny," his and their friends. By Sam's senior year, he had his own bedroom in the A singular season aunt Geraldine Sam said. "If that's But he expressed discomfort at the town that w e l i ved in . Everyone Purls' house, along with chores like By last August, Sam's sexuali- the way he is, I'm not trying to put my very idea of a gay NFL player, even would say, 'There goes those damn cleaning the pool and carrying the ty was an open secret here. He had religious beliefs on anyone. I respect if the player was his son. He grum- Sams.' I didn't want to paint that ill grocery bags. told a professor he was gay and had people for who they are, not who we "I look at our house as a kind of bled that Deacon Jones, the Hall of picture of me. I knew the good in my become a genialpresence at the want them to be."
C7 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY12, 2014
+
S&P 500
N ASDAQ ~ 4 2 66
15,994.77
+
4,191.05
TOdap Farm industry impact?
1 780
Deere 8 Co., which makes tractors and other farm equipment, reports fourth-quarter financial results today. Wall Street anticipates the company's latest earnings and revenue declined from a year earlier. Deere's fortunes hinge largely on thefarm economy, which has been affected by a slide in crop prices. That prompted the company to warn that its equipment sales would fall this year. $87.46
DE
$92.81
1,720.
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"
.
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.
.
.
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......... Close: 1,819.75 Change: 19.91 (1.1%)
15,000 " 0
N
StocksRecap
Operating EPS
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"F" 14 500
D
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Dean Foods A
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16027.19 15803.40 1 5994.77 +192.98 DOW Trans. 7281.93 7165.67 7254.16 +82.69 DOW Util. 512.97 505.85 511.65 +4.95 NYSE Comp. 10191.13 10062.24 1 0170.37 +119.96 NASDAQ 4198.51 4153.10 4191.05 +42.88 S&P 500 1823.54 1800.41 1819.75 +1 9.91 S&P 400 1327.02 1311.65 1324.74 +1 3.43 Wilshire 5000 19478.81 19235.41 1 9441.10 +205.69 Russell 2000 1131.01 1118.15 1129.16 +1 0.43
DOW
NYSE NASD
Vol. (in mil.) 3,617 1,911 Pvs. Volume 3,219 1,768 Advanced 2425 1803 Declined 6 83 7 8 2 New Highs 93 101 New Lows 18 13
80
StoryStocks
1,650" S
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.1.22% L -3.51% -1.98% $.1.15% L $.0.98% L L L +4.30% $.1.19% -2.21% L $.1.03% L L L +0.35% $.1.11% L -1.55% -1.33% $.1.02% L $.1.07% L -1.34% $.0.93% -2.96% L
1Q '13 1 Q '14
Price-earnings ratio:
NorthwestStocks
10
based on trailing 12 month results
Dividend: $2.04 Div. yield: 2.3%
NAME
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Mope sales woes? Whole Foods Market's latest quarterly results should give a glimpse into the grocer's sales trends as competition increases. The company,which is due to release results for its first fiscal quarter today, reported a revenue shortfall in its fourth fiscal quarter and reduced its outlook for all of 2014. Thesales decline came as the chain, known for its organic and natural food offerings, faces a more competitive landscape.
A
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DF
Close: $14.08V-1.12 or -7.4% Commodity prices at or surpassing all-time highs will make 2014 a challonging year for the nation's largest milk processor. $20 18
Shares of Reynolds American Cempany adjusted earnings were 77 fell 2 percent Tuesday after it $ Otijght cents per share, missing Wall reported fourth-quarter Street expectations by 4 cents. results that missed Wall Street Revenue excluding excise taxes expectations, even though its profit f ell about 2 percent to $2.04 billion. more than doubled. Analysts polled by FactSet expected The nation's second-biggest reve nue of $2.07 billion. tobacco company earned $292 Reynolds American reported million, or 54 cents per share, for the that sales volumes for Pall Mall fell quarter ended Dec. 31. That's up mo r e than 6 percent and volumes from $139 million, or 25 cents per f o r Camel fell 3.5 percent. The share, in the year-ago period that br a nds account for more than 60 included pension and trademarkper c ent of the company's total related charges. The company said cigarette volume.
misses estimates Reynolds American (RAI)
AP
52-WEEK RANGE
Tuesday's close: $48.07
Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):15 10-YR*: 19% Y TD return: -4% 3 - Y R *: 20% 5-Y R*: 27% Total returns through Feb. 11
AmdFocus
RAI
50
16
N
D J 52-week range
$1$.$$~
Vol.:18.1m (7.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.33 b
F
N
$42.12
$42.4$~
D J 52-week range
F $ $2.$$
PE: 3 .7 Vcl.:4.1m (1.9x avg.) PE: 16 . 9 Yield: ... Mkt.Cap:$25.98 b Yield: 5.2%
CAG Sprint S Close:$29.OBT-1.97 or -6.3% Close:$7.90%0.21 or 2.7% The food products company trimmed Fourth-quarter losses were conits outlook for 2014 and 2015 on low tained at the third-largest U.S. wirevolumes, margin pressure and soft less carrier as it added more wiresales for private brands. less devices to its network. $40 $12 35 30
10
N
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$42
*Annualized
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualFunds
F
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52-week range
$2$.$0~
$37.28
$$.4$ ~
$11.47
Vol.:15.4m (5.0x avg.) PE: 1 8 .1 Vol.:44.2m (2.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$12.23 b Yi e ld: 3.4% Mkt. Cap:$31.06 b
P E: . . . Yield: ...
BNNY Groupon GRPN Close:$38.21 T-3.62 or -8.7% Close: $10.40 T-0.68 or -6.1% The rising price of organic wheat for The departure of a key products exthe organic foods maker will weigh ecutive spooked investors, though on profits this year, at least in the most analysts say the online deals first half. site has a deep bench. $50 $14
Annie's
45
12
40
10
N
D
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F
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52-week range $$$.$$~
D
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52-week range $52.38
Vol.:3.0m (8.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$646.21 m
$4.24~
$12.7$
P E: 50.3 Vcl.: 4 1.1m (2.4x avg.) P E: . . . Yield : ... Mkt. Cap: $6.92 b Yield: ...
Allscripts Healthcare
MD RX C adence Pharma.
Close:$16.68%0.46 or 2.8% Analysts withthe Maxim Group tagged the electronic health records company with a "buy" rating citing its turnaround efforts. $18 16
CAD x
Close: $14.00A2.93 or 26.5% Mallinckrodt is buying the pharmaceutical company for about $1.21 billion in a bid to strengthen its specialty drugs unit. $15 10
N
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Vol.:2.0m (1.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.98 b
F $17.$$
P E: .. Yield:..
N
D J 52-week range
F
$4 45 Vol.:82.7m (34.5x avg.)
$14 03
Mkt. Cap:$1.21 b
Yield: ...
PE: . ..
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.73 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
53
Ann. dividend: $2.52 D i v. yield: 5.2%
J
52-week range
$10.$$ ~ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, bui are notincluded. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. i - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate noi known, yield noi shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. i - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.
RAI
Reynolds American
Close:$48.07T-0.74 or -1.5% The tobaccocompany misses earnings estimates, but quarterly profit spiked, fueled by higher prices and lower legal costs. $55
ConAgra Foods
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group A LK 48.24 ~ SOU$$x.: Factset Avista Corp AVA 25.36 — o Bank ofAmerica BAC 10 . 98 — o Barrett Business BBS I 39 . 71 ~ Tech beltwether Boeing Co BA 7 4 .27 ~ Cisco Systems warned Wall Street Cascade Bancorp CAC B 4 . 31 ~ last fall that it might report lower ColumbiaBnkg COLB 1 9.56 ~ 2 revenue in its second fiscal ColumbiaSportswear COLM 50.18 ~ 8 quarter. CostcoWholesale COST 98.95 ~ 1 The seller of software, switches, Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.52 ~ routers and services cited a lack FLIR Systems F LIR 23.00 ~ of confi dence among business Hewlett Packard HPQ 16 . 57 — o leaders as a key hang-up on Home Federal Bncp IDHOME 10.84 ~ 1 sales,which the company Intel Corp I NTC 20.10 ~ K EY 9 .14 ~ estimatedcould be down as much Keycorp K R 2 7 .64 ~ as 10 percent from a year earlier. Kroger Co Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 — o Investors find will find out how LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ Cisco's sales fared today when MDU Resources MDU 23 .10 — o the company reports its latest Mentor Graphics M EN T 1 3.21 ~ quarterly earnings. Microsoft Corp MSFT 2 7.23 ~ Nike Inc 8 N KE 53.27 ~ CSCO $22.71 $30 NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ $21.18 '13,' Nwst Nat Gas N WN 3996 ~ PaccarInc PCAR 45.81 — o 25 Planar Systms P LNR I 55 ~ Plum Creek P CL 41.63 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 ~ 20 Safeway Inc S WY 20.00 ~ Operating Schnitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 I EPS Sherwin Wms SHW 153.94 ~ 2Q '13 2Q '14 StancorpFncl S FG 38.16 ~ Price-earnings ratio: 12 StarbucksCp SBUX 52.52 ~ based on trailing 12 month results Triquint Semi TQNT 4.31 — O UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 Dividend: $0.68 Div. yield: 3.0% Umpqua Holdings US Bancorp U SB 31.99 ~ source: Factset Washington Fedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 4.52 — o Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~
-.0002
The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose for a fourth straight day Tuesday, its longest winning streak of the year. All 10 sectors that make up the index rose, led by energy producers,and the SS P 500 has recovered most of its loss from early in 2014. It was down as much as 5.8 percent for the year in early February, hurt by worries about faltering growth in emerging markets and the U.S. The new chair of the Federal Reserve, Janet Yellen, told Congress Tuesday that the U.S. economy is strengthening enough to warrant a slowdown in the central bank's bond-buying stimulus program. She also said that interest rates should stay low.
15,500
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1.3639+
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16,000"
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+ -.12 '
Close 15 gg477 Change: 192.98 (1.2%)
16,500"
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$99.94
15,680 "
1,700
1,600
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$20.14
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19.91
1,819.75
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Wednesday, February12,2014
$100
O» To look upindividual stocks, gotc bendbugetin.com/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 5 .0 6 -0.01 . 0 9 .1 0 -0.01 L
L L
T
52-wk T-bill
.11
~
L
T T T T
L .85 T 1.96 T 3.17
.11
2-year T-note . 3 3 .31 5-year T-note 1.53 1.49 10-year T-note 2.73 2.67 30-year T-bond 3.69 3.65
BONDS
...
L
+ 0 .02 L +0.04 L +0.06 L +0.04 L
.07 .12 .1 4 .26
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.47 3.45 +0.02 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.89 4.89 . . .
Barclays USAggregate 2.31 2.31 ...
T T T T
L T
PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.56 5.59 -0.03 T RATE FUNDS
L L T T
2.73 4.02
T 1.91 T 6.02 T 3.89 L 1 11 . T 2.81
YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.48 4.50 -0.02 L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.76 1.73 +0.03 L Barclays US Corp 3.08 3.08 ... L
Commodities
FUELS
The price of natural gas more than made up for its sharp loss from a day earlier, continuing its volatile year. Gold also rose, while the price of crude oil dipped modestly.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6449 +.0044 +.27% 1.5664 Canadian Dollar 1.1 0 13 -.0034 -.31% 1.0056 USD per Euro 1.3639 -.0002 -.01% 1.3386 JapaneseYen 102.63 + . 4 2 + .41% 9 3 . 41 Mexican Peso 13. 2906 -.0247 -.19% 12.7490 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5158 -.0055 -.16% 3.6947 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1256 -.0108 -.18% 5.5100 South African Rand 10.9857 -.1488 -1.35% 8.9000 Swedish Krona 6.4 4 18 -.0402 -.62% 6.4025 Swiss Franc .8982 +.0011 +.12% . 9 190 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1067 -.0114 -1.03% . 9723 Chinese Yuan 6.0606 +.0005 +.01% 6.2372 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7564 -.0009 -.01% 7.7551 Indian Rupee 62.031 -.444 -.72% 53.860 Singapore Dollar 1.2673 -.0034 -.27% 1.2405 South KoreanWon 1068.15 -3.85 -.36% 1093.76 -.08 -.26% 2 9.76 Taiwan Dollar 30.29
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.2 3 + .18 -0.8 +16.0 +11.3+15.5 A A A CaplncBuA m 57.65 +.50 -1.5 +10.1 +8.9+12.6 C A C CpWldGrlA m 44.80 +.53 -1.1 +19.0 +10.0+16.2 C 8 C EurPacGrA m 48.25 +.57 -1.7 +15.4 +6.3 +14.8 8 8 8 FnlnvA m 51. 1 6 +.53 -1.6 +22.8 +12.3+18.9 8 C 8 BkofAm 906382 16.88 +.16 GrthAmA m 43.17 +.43 +0.4 +27.5 +13.8+19.2 8 8 C iShEMkts 860962 39.13 +.83 Legg MasonCBEquitylncA m SOPAX IncAmerA m 20.62 +.18 -0.1 +14.5 +10.6+15.8 8 A A iShJapan 639587 11.55 +.16 InvCoAmA m 36.27 +.39 -1.2 +24.7 +12.5+17.4 A C D MktVGold 577398 25.65 +.95 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.14 +.39 -1.1 +20.6 +10.7+18.0 8 0 8 SiriusXM 490452 3.57 + .08 WAMutlnvA m38.87 +.43 -1.4 +24.2 +14.4+18.2 A A B CadencePh 484945 14.00 +2.93 Cisco 456339 22.71 -.12 Dodge &Cox Income 13.73 -.01 +1.5 + 2 .1 + 4.9 +7.2 A 8 B Facebook 446972 64.85 +1.30 IntlStk 42.30 +.58 -1.7 +19.2 +7.2+18.8 A A A FordM 427364 14.96 +.12 Stock 166.39+1.96 -1.5 +29.1 +14.7+21.6 A A A Fidelity Contra 95.32 + . 90 +0.2 +27.5 +14.1+19.9 B 8 C Gainers GrowCo 122 . 95+1.51+3.2 +35.1 +16.4+23.9 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 48.15 +.33 -2.6 +23.7 +14.1+22.2 B A B Fideli S artan 500l dxAdvtg 64.60 +.71 -1.4 +22.5 +13.4+19.4 C 8 B CombiM wt 5.30 +2.30 + 76.7 OceanPw h 3.53 +1.23 + 53.6 «C FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.45+.02 +0.8 +11.9 +8.4+15.3 A A A ChinaDigtl 3.10 +.75 + 3 1.9 $$ IncomeA m 2. 4 2+.02 +0.9 +12.1 +8.9+15.8 A A A DehaierMd 9.60 +2.23 + 3 0.3 Oakmark Intl I 26.09 +.28 -0.9 +20.6 +10.6+22.7 A A A Galectin un 41.00 +8.68 + 26.9 $$$ Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 30 +.21 -2.1 +17.4 +10.9+15.7 E D E CadencePh 14.00 +2.93 + 26.5 RisDivB m 17 . 25 +.19 -2.3 +16.3 +9.9+14.7 E E E Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ IimovSolu 8.34 +1.50 + 2 1.9 RisDivC m 17 . 15 +.19 -2.2 +16.5 +10.1+14.9 E E E UBIC n 5.22 +.84 + 1 9.2 OoFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m43.23 +.36 -2.5 +22.7 +8.8+19.0 C E E Relypsa n 38.52 +6.12 + 18.9 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m36.40 +.30 -2.6 +21.6 +7.9+18.0 C E E Model N n 12.18 +1.92 + 18.7 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.1 5 + .32 -2.1 +19.1 +11.7+19.3 D C A Losers CATEGORY Large Value GrowStk 52.9 0 + .50+0.6 +33.6 +15.5+22.3 A A A NAME L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 62.6 1 +.86 +8.3 +51.8 +31.6+28.9 B A A RATING™ * ** O O Newlncome 9. 4 0 -.02+1.4 -0.4 +3.9 +5.8 D D D -15.95 -48.1 Infoblox 17.19 Nanoyiric 3.36 -1.06 -24.0 ASSETS $2,844 million Vanguard 500Adml 168.05+1.85 -1.4 +22.5 +13.4+19.4 C 8 8 -7.71 -19.1 Rackspace 32.65 500lnv 168.02+1.84 -1.4 +22.3 +13.3+19.3 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.20% CSVlovNG 3.86 -.74 -16.1 CapOp 47.55 +.44 +3.0 +34.4 +15.4+22.1 A A A MANAGER Peter Vanderlee -1.83 -14.5 Compugn 10.80 Eqlnc 29.04 +.34 -2.4 +19.3 +15.1+19.4 D A A SINCE 2009-08-06 IntlStkldxAdm 27.41 +.36 -2.1 + 99 +38 N A E E RETURNS 3-MO +1.5 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 29.74 +.26 -0.9 +29.1 +16.3+23.6 A A A YTO -1.7 TgtRe2020 27.01 +.17 -0.4 +11.7 +8.2+13.9 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +16.4 Tgtet2025 15.66 +.12 -0.6 +13.1 +8.7+14.9 A A C Paris 4,283.32 +46.19 +1.09 3-YR ANNL +12.8 TotBdAdml 10.68 -.03 +1.4 -0.2 +4.0 +4.7 C C E London 6,672.66 +81.11 +1.23 5-YR-ANNL +16.3 Totlntl 16.39 +.22 -2.1 +9.8 +3.7+14.0 E E C Frankfurt 9,478.77 +1 88.91 +2.03 TotStlAdm 46.11 +.49 -1.2 +23.3 +13.5+20.3 8 8 A Hong Kong21,962.98 +383.72 +1.78 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 46.09 +.49 -1.2 +23.2 +13.4+20.2 8 0 A Mexico 40,759.62 +643.26 +1.60 Exxon Mobil Corporation 3 Milan 19,887.39 +204.57 +1.04 USGro 28.85 +.31 +0.6 +27.8 +14.4+19.9 8 0 C 2.9 Tokyo 14,71 8.34 +255.93 +1.77 Berkshire Hathaway lnc Class B Welltn 37.80 +.29 -0.4 +14.5 +10.4+14.5 8 A 8 2.68 Stockholm 1,335.12 +16.47 +1.25 General Electric Co Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.39 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,267.30 +30.80 + . 59 United Technologies Corp Zurich 8,361.52 +36.67 + . 44 3M Co 2.34 redemption fee.Source: Morningsiar.
ClearBridge Equity Income's FAMILY return of nearly 26 percent in Marhetsummary 2013 was near the bottom decile AmericanFunds Most Active of its peer group, but Morningstar NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG says that reflects its cautious S&P500ETF 1057051 181.98 +1.97 strategy.
The dollar rose against the Japanese yen and at one point reached its highest level since the end of January.The dollar fell against the British pound and was little changed against the euro.
55Q QD
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 99.94 100.06 1.97 1.98 3.03 3.00 4.82 4.58 2.75 2.72
CLOSE PVS. 1290.10 1274.80 20.14 20.10 1387.80 1385.90 3.27 3.27 716.15 716.55
%CH. %YTD - 0.12 + 1.5 + 0.20 + 2 . 9 +1.00 -1.6 +5.35 +1 4.0 +1.02 -1.2 %CH. + 1.20 + 0.22 + 0.14 -0.06 -0.06
%YTD + 7 .3 + 4 .2 + 1 .2 -5.0 -0.2
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.43 1.42 + 0.92 + 6 . 2 Coffee (Ib) 1.37 1.36 +0.70 +23.9 Corn (bu) 4.42 4.43 - 0.34 + 4 . 6 Cotton (Ib) 0.89 0.87 + 1.49 + 4 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 359.00 357.90 +0.31 -0.3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.46 1.47 - 0.82 + 6 . 9 Soybeans (bu) 13.35 13.26 + 0.70 + 1 . 7 -2.5 Wheat(bu) 5.90 5.85 +0.94 1YR.
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY12, 2014
BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Consultative Sales Training Course:Learn about the sales process, lead generation, time management and creating a sales playbook; registration required; $395; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. THURSDAY • Build YourBusiness Website with WordPress:Create a customized website that is professional, easy to update and ranks higher in search engines; registration required; $149; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270. FRIDAY • Central Oregon BusinessEducation NetworkFebruary meeting: Learn to improve sales performance with techniques, goals, social media and networking; registration required; free; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 503-805-6524, lynn@ithrive-now.com or www. meetup.com/COBEN12. TUESDAY • MS Project Basics: Learn to managetasks, timelines and resources with MS Project; registration required; $159; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Online Marketing with Facebook:Llse Facebookto marketand advertise your small to medium business; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • iCloud forBusiness: Learn about the Cloud, howto access files from anywhere; registration required; $69; 1-4 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. WEDNESDAY • GrowingYourBusiness with the Federal Government:Class will cover the Government Contract Assistance Program and how it can help local businesses, federal contracting codes and federal acquisition regulations; registration required; free; 1-3 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-736-1088 or www.gcap.org. • ConnectW's February Meeting:Kris Prochaska will be discussing "50 Shades of Leadership," how to lead as awomen; registration required; $25 for members, $40 for nonmembers; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-848-8598 or www.connectw.org. • How to Developa Business Plan:First-time business owners will learn to evaluate their finances, target their market and present ideas in awritten business plan; registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Project Management Fundamentals:Learn to plan, implement, control and close any type of project; registration required; $185; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeWay,Bend; 54 I-383-7270. FEB. 20 • Operational Finance Optimization:Learn what financial statements can tell you about your business in this Opportunity Knocks best-practice seminar; registration required; $35 for members, $45 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; TheDouble Tree, 300 N.W.Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-3179292 or www.eventbrite. com/e/operationalfinance-optimizationtickets-10325093633. • AdvancingYour Leadership Impact:Learn leadership skills; designed to help senior managers and key future talent raise leadership performance; registration required; $1,950; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
BEND
u sinessa OCae e in S r i By Raohael Rees The Bulletin
Carolyn Eagan maybe the advocate for Bendbusinesses, but she alsowants to make sure they follow the rules.
"I want to stop rewarding businesses for not doingthe right thing, and start rewardingbusiness for doingthe right thing," said Eagan, whose city job title is Bend business
advocate. The city's rules for issuing temporary liquor-serving licenses and special-event permits have not been properly
erly assess the applications and meeting earlier this month, she ensure the city recovers its cost suggested raising the licensing to process them. fee to $75 to fully recover the city's cost to process licenses. Businesses were notified Tuesday that they must submit
applications for licenses to serve and sell liquor at special events to the Police Department at least two weeks before the event. Efforts to increase the num-
ber ofbusinesses who register and renewtheirbusiness licenses have been underway for
about ayear, accordingto The Bulletin's archives. Licenses cost $50 annually, and busi-
Eagan also would like better
by last-minute applications.
"When we goback overthe past 10 years, depending on the amount of permits coming in and the other staffing assignments, there's a possibility that
enforcementoftherulesforobtaining special-eventpermits. we could take them in and proBend hosts more than 400 specess them in under seven days," cial events annually. Porter said. "But we've seen The cityplans to require such an increase in activities businesses to apply for the within Bend, that we really no permit 30daysin advance,as longer have the extra staffing outlined in the ordinance, pay hours to be that flexible." the $175 application fee upfront He saidhe hopes the process and submitplans to address ac- will be formalized, as well as
Wall Street, said as the com-
munity grows, it's going to be important to playby the rules whenusing cityinfrastructure toput on events. FootZone puts on an annual
Thanksgiving Day run and walk on the First Street River Trail, but Hatfield said he doesn't anticipate enforcement will have an impact. "I do understand the city has tobalance out the needs of the
whole community, not just the business community," Hatfield
cessibility, traffic diversion and
have it start in the Community
sanitation. Eagan said some businesses weren't submitting complete applications.
Development Department. Eagan said she plans to hold a public meeting next month to
said."The cityis always balancing that fine line of keeping the community healthy economically and keepingit
discuss additional changes for
livable, and that's what they
been enforced. During a Bend Economic
Interim Bend Police Chief Jim Porter said the department, which processes special-event
should be doing."
Development Advisory Board
permits, is being overwhelmed
special events. Teague Hatfield, the owner of FootZone on Northwest
followed, and some businesses
nesses that fail to obtain ali-
have not obtained or renewed their annualbusiness licenses. By requiring businesses to meet the city's timelines, she said, it will allow staff to prop-
censecouldbe subjecttoa $500 fine, but Eagan said it hasn't
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
FEDERALRESERVE
Bernanke policies tempered
by Yellen By BinyaminApplebaum New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Janet Yellen, the new chairwoman
of the Federal Reserve, told a House committee Tuesday that
she strongly supported and planned to continue the policies adopted under her predecessor,
Ben Bernanke. At the same time, in emphasizing her concern about un-
employment — andin agreeing to spend almost six hours anRicardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel file photo
A Centers for Disease Control report claims that "much of antibiotic use in animals is unnecessary and inappropriate and makes everyone less safe." And In December, the Food and Drug Administration announced a plan to curtail the use of antibiotics In animals.
swering the committee's ques-
tions — Yellen alsobegan the delicate process of imposing her owninfl uence on the Fed's
onsumerssai to rom t c an ei n ic - i - c ic e n
direction. Yellen made clear that the Fed planned to keep cutting back on its bond buying, which had been a crucial part of its
economic stimulus campaign, unless there is a"notable change"in theeconomy toward amore negative outlook. "I served on the committee as we formulated our current
By Stephanje Strom
processed ingredients and
antibiotics, I think this is an
of the consumer demand for
New York Times News Service
anything artiTicial. Subway announced last weekthat it would eliminate
important decision," she said.
azodicarbonamide, achem-
the increase in antibiotic-resistantbacteria. Last fall, the
antibiotic-free meat. Bell & Evans, a smaller producer, has worked with its feed supplier to incorporate oregano into
ithin five years, Chick-fil-A says it willno longer sell products containing meat
w
from chickens raised with antibiotics.
The company said consumer demand was responsible
for the change. "We have an ongoing process of constantly monitoring what our
consumerspreferin term s of health and nutrition and what's in our food, and this
issue surfaced as the No. 1 issueforourcustomers,"said Tim Tassopoulos, executive
vice president of operations at Chick-fil-A. A growing number of restaurant chains, inciuding Chipotle and Panera Bread, have made commitments to
only serve meat from animals raised without antibiotics, and
consumers have responded enthusiastically. The trend exemplified what
Daymon Worldwide, a consulting firm that works with the food industry and others,
has identified as "free-from," a quest among consumers for pure and simple products, free of preservatives, highly
ical commercial bakers use
Concern is growing among public health officials about
But she described the re-
covery of the labor market as "far from complete" and said she retained her long-standing
to increase the strength and pliancy of dough. As noted by
Centers for Disease Control
the kibble it feeds its chickens to act as a replacement for an-
for the first time quantified the
tibiotics, and Tyson lastyear
thepower to improve the sit-
consumer crusader Vani Hari,
toll such resistance is taking, estimating that at least 2 mil-
started a line of chicken marketed under the label Nature-
uation. That suggests the Fed
lion Americans fall ill and at
Raised Farm, which is raised cage-free on a vegetarian diet
it's also used forthe samepurposes in yoga mats and shoe soles.
And on Tuesday, Kraft said it was taking sorbic acid, an artificial preservative that had
comeunderattackby consumers, out of some individually wrapped cheese slices. Those were among dozens of product changes announcedbymajor food companies inthe last year. "All of this is makes for great PR, but it doesn't mean the
products are necessarily any
least 23,000die from it each year.
may continue to strengthen the mainstay of its campaign, keeping short-term interest
"much of antibiotic use in animals is unnecessary and inappropriate and makes everyone less safe." Then in December, the Food and Drug Adminis-
chicken breasts free from fill-
tration announced a plan to animals. Meat producers use antibi-
will take time, because it requires changes by producers from the hatcheryto the processingplant. "For instance,
otics to prevent sickness in an-
any flock treated with antibi-
she said, but she mostly skirted
curtail the use of antibiotics in
Chick-fil-A already uses ers, additives and steroids. Rob Dugas, vice president for supply chain management at Chick-fil-A, said the shift
otics todayis aggregated into more nutritious," said Michele the larger production facility," Simon, a public health lawyer operations. Chickens are treat- Dugas said. "For us, birds who writes the blog eatdrinked, for example, with a small will have tobe segregated politics.com dose of gentamicinwhile still all the way down to the egg Simon said that Chick-fil-A's in ovo in an effort toprevent production." decision was different because infection. Chick-fil-A executives said antibiotic resistance is such an Antibiotics also are incorthey could not sayyet whether important issue."This doesn't porated into feed commonly the changes would result in a make fried chicken nuggets used by large producers to priceincreaseforconsumers. good for you, but given the help ~ gro w faster and Typically, antibiotic-free chickpublic health crisis causedby use feed more efficiently. en is more expensive than trathe practice of giving animals But producers are aware ditionallyprocessedpoultry.
• Susan T. Gibbons, 21255 E. Highway 20, No. 89, Bend • Edward W. Collins, 3365 N.E. Stonebrook Loop, Bend • Sherrene J. Hagenbach, 1649 N.E. Lotus Drive, No.1,
convictionthat the Fed had
rates extraordinarilylow. Yellen, in her inaugural public appearance as Fed chairwoman, was fluid in discussing monetary policy but appeared less assured in answering questions about financial regulation. "The work of making the financial system more robust has not yet been completed,"
The CDC report said that
without antibiotics.
imals that are raised in close quarters in industrial farming
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed Feb. 4 • Vicki M. Mays, P.O.Box 432, Terrebonne Filed Feb. 5
policystrategy and I strongly support that strategy," she said.
Bend Filed Feb. 6 • Simon C. Templar, 2800 N.E. Spring Water Place, Bend • Timothy M. Gassner,1870
N.W. 57th Way, Redmond • Summer R. Randall, 1188 N.E. 27th St., No. 124, Bend Filed Feb. 9 • Tracy Hart, 1112 N.W.22nd
Place, Redmond Filed Feb. 10 • Joseph I.D. Doney, 3218 N.W.CanalBlvd.,Redmond • Korinea S. Riepma, 534 S.E. Glenwood Drive, Bend
questions about the details. She faced some confrontational questions, particularly
from Republi cans concerned the Fed's stimulus campaign was doingmore harmthan good. Yellen acknowledged that
she was "surprised" by disappointing estimates of job growth in December and Jan-
uary, but she cautioned against "jumping to conclusions" in assessing the longer-term trend. She noted thegovernment would release an estimate of February job growth before the Fed's March meeting. Like her predecessor, Yellen saidthe Fed's greatestconcern
was the risk of destabilizing financial markets. And like Bernanke, she said the Fed was
watchingcloselybut didn't see problemsyet.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Bird Watch, D4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY12, 2014
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
SNOW REPORT For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts, seeB6
HUNTING 5 FISHING k
BRIEFING Work to begin on pavedpath Constructionis expected to start this month on a 5.5-mile paved pedestrian and bike path from Sunriver to Lava Butte. According to the Oregon Department of Transportation, which is managing the project, clearing will begin this month, with trail earthwork and placement of rock taking place in the spring, paving and installation of railroad crossing protection in late spring to early summer, and completion of the project expected
.
•
Courtesy Don Lewis
r-
Don Lewis caught this Deschutes River steelhead
on a spey rod and awet fly swlng.
ADVENTURE
Mark Morical
SPORTS
snowshoes the trailto
this fall.
The path will create a new connection for bicyclists and pedestrians between Sunriver, BenhamFalls East day-use areaand Lava Butte. Currently, there is not a safe, accessible pedestrian connection between those tourist destinations, according
ary, would you like a bowl of soup right now?" the fishing guide asked. Would I like a bowl of soup? We had been swinging flies on a little
to ODOT.
The Deschutes Nationai Forest andNewberry National Volcanic Monument prepared a detour map, which is available at j.mp/ lavapath. — From staff reports
river on the North Coast. After two hours, the rain
With ChrisSabe WINTER TRAILS Higher-elevation sno-parks such as Dutchman Flat and SwampyLakeswillsee high use throughout the holiday weekendwith good snow conditions. But with rain predicted, users should pack accordingly and beprepared for challenging snow depths. Sixty to 90 percent of grooming operations are in full effect but may be cut back due towet snowpack. Snowmobilers need to use heavy caution when using trail systems becauseofslushy snow conditions. Potential avalanche conditions have increased throughout the area with the rain/snow mixture. Backcountry users are advised to avoid avalanche terrain to prevent potential injury. Sno-park access roads and highways have been mostly cleared by plows but ice and large puddle hazards remain. SNO-PARK SNOW DEPTHS Ten Miie/Newberry Caldera: fair to good
had soaked through my
• Butte southwestof Bendoffers relatively easyaccess to backcountry skiing andsnowboarding was never so happy to hear the
TRAIL UPDATE
ViSta Butte
~s
felt hat and ran in rivulets
down my face. My rain gear had soaked through, and we were fishing until dark. Would I like a bowl
f a Qutte,"""" "
'
.
Sno-park --q ~:"~~-,. IIK":
scream of a snowmobile engine and see one come ripping toward me.
GARY LEWIS
Exhausted after slogging through -Hi h
more than a foot of fresh snow for
.46 '
most of the day, the sight of a groomed snowmobile track was welcoming.
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
The goal had been to snowboard through fresh powder while
backcountry skiing and snowboarding.
sort of got scratched when we hit the flats early during our ride down.
SeeTrails /D4
of tomato soup, and when I looked down into it all the rain on top of my hat
and spring option for snowshoeing and
descending Vista Butte, but that plan
of soup? Cheese with my whine? I took the proffered bowl
Tumalo Mountain, located just
poured in. I ate it anyway. In the afternoon I had
one grab. Travis Huisman had one take on a swung fly. The only steelhead we saw was a fish that elevat-
across Century Drive from Mount
ed and surfaced in a pool. It rained all day.
Bulletin photographer Joe Kline and I Bachelor, is the best-known Central
As I write this, I am at the Pacific Northwest
started out in snowshoes from the Vista Oregon destination for backcountry
Portland, surrounded by
Butte Sno-park along Century Drive
snowriders. But Vista Butte, located
last Thursday, during the
about 2 miles southeast
beginning of the intense
MARK
of Tumalo Mountain, is a
winter storm that would
MORICAL
good optionwhen Mount
slam the Northwest over the next several days.
Bachelor and Tumalo Mountain are getting pounded with
6,619-foot Vista Butte is a viable winter
Sportsman's Show in some of the best steelhead fishermen in the world. And some of them are
in slumps right now, and some of them are at the top
oftheirgame. The Umpqua has been turning out good numbers of fish lately, and some other rivers have
been slow, waiting for rain. I took the opportunity to consult a few steelhead
fishermen in the room on
About 20 miles southwest of Bend, the wind and snow.
what they think is the easi-
SeeVista /D2
est technique for the beginner steelhead fisherman to learn. Todd Saylor, of
the Oregon Fishing Club, surprised me when he said drift fishing with yarnies might be the best way for an angler to learn.
condition with 18-20
inches Dutchman Flat: 5560 inches Swampy Lakes: 2430 inches Virginia Meissner: 18-20 inches Wanoga Sno-play and snowmobile area: 20-24 inches Crescent Lake area sno-parks: 7-8 inches of snow with low-snow hazards. Edison Butte: 24-30 inches Skyliner: 24-30 inches Upper Three Creek: approximately 36 inches Lower Three Creek: approximately 20 inches
Steehead technique for the first-timer
"Even though it's frus-
trating, you learn the river bottom," Saylor said. That helps the angler visualize the habitat.
eYou are going to get snagged up a lot, but when you lose the rig, you're only out 25 cents for the hook and
swivel, not $4 like with a spinner," Saylor added. "A guy can tie up rigs at home and experiment with Morical carves through the
colors."
heavy powder
to drift fish with salmon
at the top of Vista Butte, west of Bend, last Thursday.
eggs or cork bobbers, which are easily expelled from a fish's mouth. The good thing about a yarn
Photos by Joe Kline The Bulletin
A lot of people learned
ball is that it can get stuck
in a fish's teeth and gives the angler a split second more of reaction time. SeeLewis /D5
D2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
An octopus turns red in the waters at Auke Recreation area
• ' •
in Juneau,
k•I' '
• •
Alaska. Annette G.E. Smith via The Associated Press
• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbentidulletin.com/snow2014andwe'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors toreaderphetes©bendbulletin.cemandtell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, andwe'll choose the best for publication in print.
Fascinating hiddenworld in cold watersoff Alaska By Mary Catharine Martin Juneau (Alasita) Empire
Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
instantly gone," she said. "It's the most amazing thing."
A
JUNEAU, Alaska — Giant
r
Pacific octopi hide beneath Challenges rocks, reaching out tentacles Local photographer Art to explore a diver. Schools of
Sutch is a certified dive mas-
spawning salmon swim upstream. Prowfish surround
ter and dives regularly, selling photos and calendars
the wreck of the Princess
from his underwater experi-
Sophia. Recreational scuba div-
ences at his downtown shop. "You're dealing with a
ing in Southeast Alaska re-
lot of adverse conditions up
anywhere else in the world.
is to get trained well, and
p
quires a little more work and here," Sutch said. "Deep, offers different challenges cold water, zero visibility, than w a r m-water d i v ing, current, sea lions coming up but those who do it say it chattering their teeth at you provides sights unlike those ... the biggest prerequisite get experience with experienced people before you go When Annette G. E. Smith do a lot of crazy things on was a child, she was in a ca- your own." noeing accident so traumatic Divers here used to wear
The allure of thedeep
that panic would set in any-
wetsuits.
time she got water up her nose.
Sutch said "just about killed
It wasn't until age 45 that an instructor in Fiji told her
she should learn scuba diving. She laughed at him. "He said 'I'll teach you.' And I was a challenge," she said. "Once I got over that fear it was like 'This is it' for
me. It's an amazing world down there. What's even
I t ' s so m ething
me." Most divers now use dry-
suits, which require additional certification; divers have to counteract the lift
of the air the suit traps with weights of between 30 and
40 pounds, said Phil Sellick, owner of the Scuba Tank. Southeast Alaska divers
also face seasonal challeng-
more amazingishow incred- es. Winter, in which the amible it is under the water here. bient water temperature can People don't think of there hover around 37 degrees, being much in cold water, but provides for better visibiliwe have some amazing cor- ty.Summer has more glaals and sponges." cial runoff. It also has more Now, when she dives, she's plankton bloom. relaxed to the point she can't even think about her "land
Winter, of course, also has
CAN'T STOP,WON'T STOP The cold won't stop Lindsay Woods from playing fetch with her 2-year-old lab Kona, who lives for the ball.
shorter days and less light. "Learning to dive in Alas"Any stress or t r oubles ka is like learning to drive on that I have in my land life are a semi," Sellick said. life."
Vista Continued from D1 However, the key is to find the right pitch when descending the butte. Checking the
topographic map, it appeared Joe and I had ridden too far to
the southwest, into an area too flat to keep our speed in a foot of powder. We ended up post-holing much of our way back down Vista Butte, but then we finally
came to the wide snowmobile trail. The groomed road offered an easy way back down to the sno-park. We raced down the track on our boards, careful to watch for oncoming
sleds, and finally made it back to the car. T he snowshoe up
V i sta
Butte was not particularly taxing, at least not until the final half mile or so where the trail
steepens significantly. We started out along the Butte Trail, then hooked onto the Vista Butte Trail for the final half mile. The total distance of the ascent was 2'/4 miles, with about 700 feet of eleva-
Backcountrygear A rundown of somehandy equipment for snowriding in the backcountry: • Transceivers, probesand shovels:Transceivers work in case of anavalanche only if both the person who is buried under the snowandthose trying to find the victim have them. The device's signal becomes stronger as rescuers get closer to the victim. Probes are long sticks, broken down like tent poles, that are used to search the snowfor an avalanche victim. A compact shovel can beused to dig the person out. • Climbingskins: Nylon mate-
rial that sticks to the bottom of skis to provide traction on the way up the slope. • Alpine touringskis: Skiers have their heels free while skinning up the hills, and then lock their heels in for coming down the mountain. • Telemark skis:Skiers' heels are always free, whether touring or skiing down the slopes. • Splitbeard:This snowboard splits in two, allowing the boarder to apply skins for touring and thenadjust the two sides into one board for riding.
BACKCOUNTRYANDAVALANCHERESOURCES •Northwest • Timberline ePine Mountain Weather Mountain Guides: Sports:www.pineand Avalanche www.oregonski mo u ntainsports. Center:www. guides.com com nwac.us ten out abruptly.
I had heard from a few tion gain, though it seemed Central Oregon backcounlike much more elevation gain try experts that the southern with all the new snow. portion of the butte offers the We began to slow on that best lines for skiing and snowfinal push to the summit, held boarding — and riding that back by the steepness and the directioncan place you back deepening fresh snow. near Vista Butte Sno-park. When we finally made it A clearing above the tree to the top, we admired the line offered smooth, soft turns unique wind-carved cornices at just the right pitch. But the on which we stood. Visibility treesbecame numerous rather was hindered by the clouds quickly, making it difficult to and falling snow, but we could navigate through the powder make out Century Drive be- — like "Return of the Jedi" on low us to the south. a snowboard. I dropped in and made a Vista Butte is not quite as few turns down the east-fac- steep as the main bowl on ing slope, but I stopped to hike Tumalo Mountain, but it is preback up when I reached the cipitous enough for skiers or tree line. If I had continued boarders to get plenty of turns to descend in that direction, while keeping a sufficient I would have ended up miles speed, as long as they stay on from the car.Also, as we a steep enough section of the looked out to the east, we ob- butte, as Joe and I learned the servedthattheslopeappeared hard way. to be steep enough for riding Next time I will plan to take but also that it seemed to flat- a route more directly south
down Vista Butte, as the ter-
rain levels out somewhat suddenly to the southwest. Most of the snowriding on
Vista Butte is among the trees, so skiers an d
s n owboard-
SMOLICH
e
moto r
• 'Q
s
FULL DETAIL INCLUDES Wash Clean Engine W ipe Down Vacuum Stain Removal Windows Clean Wheels Exterior Wax
a en ina'S a e cia! n •
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ers should watch out for tree wells, areas around the bases of trees where unconsolidated
snow collects and which can be hazardous for an unsuspecting snowrider. Backcountry skiers and snowboarders should also be prepared for avalanche risk, especially after all the recent snowfall.
REGULAR
$229"
At Vista Butte, the numer-
ous trees anchor the snow to make for reduced avalanche danger, but snowriders should come equipped with all the
Includes Free Loaner Car With Appointment (While Supplies Last)
necessary avalanche tools, in-
cluding a shovel, a probe and a transceiver. And they should make sure to avoid the flats. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
AIY MAKE OR MODEL S M O L IC H
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
No snow: Mt. Asbland ski area could take tumble
e ournor ic ixa ou n o o • In a low-snow year, Mt. Hood Meadows offers abundantoptionsfor nordic skiers By Zach Urness
spreading it across the trails this winter, creating a reli-
(Salem) Statesman Journal
able place to ski while Mother Nature brings Oregon litidiot. tle but dry air. "We've been in the busiThe horrendous snow conditions in the Cascade Moun- ness of snow farming this At some point, it's import-
ant to admit you've been an
The Associated Press ASHLAND — Unless big winter snows fall on the ski area at Mount Ashland, there may be no season at the South-
ern Oregon site and big trouble for the nonprofit association that's been running it since the
1990s. "It could potentially close the area," General Manager Kim Clark told the Daily Tidings. "Could any business survive a
tains have kept me off nordic skis this w i nter, sitting at
winter," said D al e
home in the valley's soup of stagnated air whining about the lack of powder at mountain sno-parks.
Hood Meadows. "We've been
able to blade snow together from the parking lot, create s mall mountains o f
s n ow
This, of course, was stupid
and use grooming equip-
(and a little petulant). Because while snow con-
ment to smear it out to create
a good surface. "The staff is out every day with shovels and rakes
this season — quite possibly the worst in 60 years-
The forecasts for the region
P eters,
nordic center manager at Mt.
ditions might not b e i deal
year without income?"
making sure we smooth over
Mt. Hood Meadows Nordic
rough edges to keep it as op-
this week call for either the
Center has been grooming
timal as possible. Even with
snow the ski area desperately needs orthe rainthatcouldbe a
trails among forest, mead- the limited (snow), we've had ows and w a t erfalls since excellent skiing conditions."
disaster for what snowpack ex-
Thanksgiving. The cost to glide is $15 per day (or $12 from noon to 4 p.m.), but that's the price you pay for bright sunshine and
ists. Theyput the snow level"up pretty high. There will be more rain than snow probably," said Charles Glaser of the National
The work has paid off.
,'~z yiy!~l/" i~'~' l ZachUrness 1 Statesman Journal
Dale Peters, nordic center manager at Mt. HoodMeadows, skis below Mount Hood in ascenic meadow that's part of the area's trail system last month.
When I arrived at the nordic
center last week, the trails were as smooth as Peters
Raven Way, Hanel and Bear-
grass Loop. fast, rolling terrain on the reThe white cone of Mount sort's 15 kilometers of begin- — a meadow with M o unt Hood played peak-a-boo ner to expert loops. Hood looming o verhead t hrough the t r ees a s I Meadows has thrown the and a trail to 40-foot Sahale dropped down dips a nd might of its grooming fleet Falls — before heading onto around corners, enjoying i nto collecting snow a n d the moderate level loops on that unique thrill of nordic skiing that combines scenery, exploration and speed. Along the way, I met Sam Cordell, a former member of What:Groomed nordic trails, ski rentals and lessons at the largthe U.S. Biathlon team who est ski area onMount Hood now works as the director Open: 9a.m.to4 p.m.Thursdaysto Mondays of slope maintenance of Mt. location:The Nordic Center is located at the HoodRiver MeadHood Meadows. ows parking lot, 1 mile north of the mainentrance to Meadows He pointed out that skiing on Highway 35 at places like Meadowsas opposed to sno-parks on Trail breakdown:15kilometers of groomed trail with loops for mountain passes — offers beginners, intermediate andexperts consistency and better conInfo:Phone: 503-337-2222, ext. 1262; email at Nordic©skiditions for beginners and hood.com children.
Weather Service.
Clark said he's seeing forecasts with conflicting moisture
forecasts. Snow fell over the weekend,
bringing the depth to 11 inches, not enough to open. The latest the ski area has
promised. We skiedtwo easy routes
Nt. HoodNeadowsNordicCenter
everopenedwas Feb. 17in 1977. A handful of area employees are working part-time and
the ski area is paying its bills while earning no revenue. "We continue to watch our reserves
dwindle," Clarksaid. Some season-pass buyers have begun asking for refunds. But Clark said no refunds arebeing offered now, and the ski area has no policy to issue refunds if it never opens for the
"I spent a lot of time ski-
season.
SEATTLE
ar traiso ers ectacuarscene By Tan Vinh
rtt ttt' $
The Seattle Times
SEATTLE Chukundi Salisbury has arguably walked on more park trails in Seattle than anyone in the
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last two decades. As Seattle
Parks and Recreation's trails coordinator, he has walked most of the 120 miles of trails
'
a
in Seattle parks — often dozens if not hundreds of times, '*
'4j
er, and conditions are ex-
can develop skiers from 3
tremely variable — you never know what you're going to get," Cordell said. "With the groomed trails up here, you have a real consistent product." "The grooming also caters to people coming up with
years on up." As if to prove the point, Cordell's 10-year-old son, Max, explained what keeps
a family. It's a much better
fast," Max said.
way to get youngsters on skis."
him on cross-county skis. "It's really fun to explore
new areas, and on skis it's so fun because you get to go It would be difficult to sum
In a sense, the nordic cen-
it up better than that. It was a reminder, at least to me, that
ter is about making it as easy as possible to get people on
even when snow conditions in Oregon are ugly, it's still
the snow. Along with offer-
worth making the drive to Mount Hood.
ing rental skis, boots and poles, they also feature lessons for everyone from children to first-time adults.
"We really specialize in
families," Peters said. "We
After all, spending time exploring the f orest and speeding down trails beats sitting at h ome w hining about the lack of snow.
Trail system coming to Columbia Gorge? By Stevie Mathieu The Columbian (Wash.)
the north end of that overflow lot is the entrance to the Cistern Trail."
V ANCOUVER, — With determination and
with that mission, many said.
• Lakeridge Park, 10101 S. Cornell Ave. — This lush 36acre park in South Seattle takes you through a ravine
careful planning, the Columbia River Gorge is set to become a worldwidehiking destination that could give a big economic boost
In particular, the two groups are focusing their attention on a new hiking path that would connect part of the Chinook Trail in Washougal to the in-
and features one of the city's
to businesses in
largest creeks, Taylor Creek.
communities.
few places. You walk along a creek and the trail takes you to the top, where there's a loop
trian bridge, having helped build many of them.
and a couple ofbridges." • Lincoln Park, 8011 S.W. Fauntleroy Way — He likes
1
accommodate everybody's size, skill and interest. We
side of the railroad track. At
walk, switchback and pedesWe asked the Rainier Val-
ing in the backcountry and touring when I was young-
flow parking lot on the east
"It's not a difficult trail and less than a mile, but it's steep in a
s~
treading over the same paths
season after season. He's been on every board-
D3
ciation's goal to create one big 300-mile hiking loop around W a s h . the Gorge goes han¹in-hand
G o r ge ternationally renowned Pacific
Crest Trail as it passes through Stevenson.
Trails that take tourists
through meadows bursting with wildflowers and paths thatgivehikers aviewof the Columbia River valley could even pass through a vineyard, where visitors could
needed for that connector trail is already on public territory, Tkach said. The rest will require efforts to buy the property or acquire
sample local wines. After a
an easement.Since the groups
About 95 percent of the land
ley resident, who has been to all 465 city parks, for his top
the path to Colman Pool as
a family hike. Even children
long day of hiking, tourists announced their plans to concould trek down for dinner nect the two trails, leaders in
10 favorite park walks.
who hate the outdoors like it
at one of the towns along the
the city of Carson, located just
because they can play on the water slide when the outdoor
Gorge and spend the night
northeast of Stevenson, said
at a bed and breakfast.
they want to link up to the trail, too.
G reen Lake,
for o n e,
..C. J ls P
didn't make his cut. He prefers less-crowded parks. He wants i n stant g r atification — short walks with a view,
'
•
pool is open in summer. But to get to the heated saltwater
pool, they have to hike. No car access. Along the way, "there's trees and views of Puget Sound. And if you hav-
close to the parking lot, and kid-friendly. Here are his picks, in alphabetical order: • Camp Long, 5200 S.W.
en't worn your kids out in the
35th Ave. — This 6 8-acre
park has 2.8 miles of trail,
pool, then the steep hike and stairs to get back to the parking lot just takes the energy right out of them. And they sleep on the way home and you have a quiet drive." • Matthews Beach Park,
That's the pitch "Gorge Towns to Trails" project manager Renee Tkach, of Friends of th e
"They're saying, we're con-
necting to Stevenson. Don't C olumbia leave us out," Tkach told the
Gorge, gave to members group of about 35 trail volunof the Chinook Trail Asso-
teers and community members
ciation during the associ- attending a recent meeting. ation's annual meeting in The Chinook Trail AssociVancouver. A system of trails that connect to riverfront towns would provide "not a back-
ation has been advocating for more than two decades for
N.E. 49th Ave. and N.E. 93rd St. — In the Sand Point area, Matthews Beach Park gets
perience," Tkach said, not-
Vancouver Lake all the way
said. He likes the Lower Loop trail, which has a few inclines They can't run away," he said. treat them as one. You start
overshadowed by Magnuson Park, which is why he prefers the former. "It's more serene. I like trails that take you near
azine ranked the Gorge the sixthbestplace tovisitinthe world. "We're on the map.
"They have to stay along the
the water. Matthews Beach
but it's the 10 rustic cabins that make this West Seattle
park different from any other metropolitan park, he said.
At night you start a campfire by your cabin and it feels like you're deep in a forest when in reality you're a five-minute walk away from single-fami-
Mike Siegel/The Seattle Times
Chukundi Salisbury, Seattle Parks and Recreation's trails coordinator, walks along a trail in Fauntleroy Park, one of his 10 favorite trails in Seattle parks. Salisbury considers the park one of the best-kept secrets in the park system.
ly homes and street traffic, he but isn't steep.
f r o m t h e top at Frink Park
• Carkeek Park, N.W. 950 boardwalk. And it looks real- (17 acres) and hike down to gets you up against the water. Carkeek Park Road — It's ly cool with tons of Lake Washington It has a cool trail system that a 220-acre park fi lled with skunk cabbage." through Le s chi you can access right off the • meadows, wetlands, beach, 6 Fauntleroy (lt) mBkBS Park ( 1 8.5 acres).Burke-Gilman Trail." miles of trails and a salmon Park, 3951 S.W. yp U fggl ljkg Less t h an a mile. • Seward Park, 5895 S. Lake "There's a n ice Washington Blvd. —As Salisrun at Pipers Creek. You get Barton St. — One spectacular views of Puget of the best-kept se- ~oU' b ridge w e b u i l t bury has learned from hanSound and the Olympic crets in the park MO U f lh BBkBI'- ov er the wetlands" dling trail inquiries, folks are M ountains without a l o n g , system, he said. S f7DqU~lmf8 at F r i nk and "from picky. He's heard it all. Want strenuous hike, he said. "You This 33-acre park Leschi Park, at the a park walk but not in the can park right at the lot and with 1.5 miles of Na t i O nal end of Yesler Way, woods. Hate narrow t r ails. take a short walk to the bluff. trail gets little foot FO reSt." y ou can t ake t h e Don't want shoes to get dirty. You can see ships going back traffic. On a weekt rail al l t h e w a y Well, Seward Park is the an— Ch"k"ndl downtothebeach" swer, he said. This 300-acre and forth." day you have the Salisbury Seattle • Go l den Gar- park has old-growth forest • Discovery Park, 3801 Dis- park to y ourself. Parks and dens Park, 84gs and beaches, garden and a covery Park Blvd.— The city's There's a patch of Recreatlon's tralls N.W. Seaview place 2.4-mile biking-and-walking largest park has 11.8 miles of old-growth t r e es coordlila'lor, on trails spread across 534 acres, t hat m a k e s Most people trail. There's something for Fauntie«y Pa« th ink of the beach, everybody here: A perimebut his favorite walk is just off you feel like you're the north parking lot, the half- i n M o u n t Bak right?" Well, this ter trail if you fear insects mile Wolf Tree Nature Trail. er-Snoqualmie NaBallard park has and critters that rustle in the It's a raised trail with board- tional Forest." 3.2 miles of trail, woods. A wide service road walks over the wetlands. It's • Frink Park, 398 S. Lake though it's not as flat and called the Spine Trail for a good trail for parents who Washington Blvd., and Les- easy as the other walks on walkers who complain that want to keep track of their chi Park, 201 S. Lakeside Ave. his list. The concrete steps ar- trails are too claustrophobic. children. "It's swampy area. — It's two parks, but locals en't uniform. "Go to the over- And that trail isn't muddy.
the creation of its 300-mile hiking loop around the rim of country experience, (but) the Gorge. The vision includes more of a front country ex- a path that spans east from ingthat just a fewyears ago, to the Highway 97 Bridge near National Geographic mag- Biggs.
p urc 6m/6 t"o.
Visitors are coming, and they're looking for these experiences."
>j B~ du
The Chinook Trail Asso-
Bend Redmond
John Day
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
UrDOORS
E1VD
CLIMBING
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
SHOOTIMG
BIRD WATCH
ROCK MONKEYS TUESDAYS OR THURSDAYS:Beginner rock climbing class for kids ages 7 to 12; $75 to $95 per month, includes gym membership; throughJune;4 to 5:15 p.m.;Bend RockGym; 541-
COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is Habitat:Found along lakes, rivers, ponds $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each and coastal areas. 388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com. Scientific name:Bucephala clangula month; Central Oregon Shooting Food:Thebirds dive underwater and forage Sports Association range, milepost YOUTH ROCKCLIMBING MONDAYS Characteristics:A medium-sized diving on aquatic invertebrates, plants, small fish, 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don AND WEDNESDAYS:Designed for duck with white underparts and adark back crustaceans, amphibians andmollusks. Thomas, 541-389-8284. intermediate to advanced climbers with white stripes on the sides; females have These birds can dive to depths of 20 feet or looking to hone their skills; $95 BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, a grayish-brown body andwhite belly. The more in search of food. five-stand and skeet shooting; to $110 per month, includes gym male has aglossy greenish-black headwith Comments: Theyoung leavethenestsiteby membership; through June; 4 to 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and a white, roundish spot located betweenthe gliding or flapping their tiny wings rapidly 5:30 p.m.; Bend Rock Gym; 541Sundays; milepost30,U.S.Highway golden eyesandthe bill, while the female's 388-6764; info©bendrockgym.com. 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-383Courtesy U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service head is brown. Theduck's dark wings have a a day or two after hatching. Femalesoften 1428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. The commongoldeneyeisa smallduck large white patch that is visible in flight. Both return to their natal areas to breedandwill return to these sites year after year. The often seen in Bend's Drake Park and FISHIMG sexeshavegoldenoryellowisheyes. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTING common name isderived from the coloration other open waters. CLAYSANDHUNTING PRESERVE: Breeding:Thesebirds breed in the northern CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: oftheeye.Thegenusname means"buffalo13-station, 100-target course U.S., Canada and Northern Territories and New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; and five-stand;10 a.m. to dusk headed" in reference to the large head.The use a tree cavity, lined with down, as a nest — DamianFaganisan EastCascades meets on the first Tuesday of each Saturdays and Sundays, 11 a.m. species namemeans "small noise" and is in site. Though the nest tree is often located Audubon Society volunteerandCentralOregon month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; to dusk Mondays, Tuesdays, reference to the whistling sound produced by near water, it may be up to a mile away from www.cobc.us. Community College's Community Learning Thursdays and Fridays; 9020 S. water; will also use anest box. Afemale may the wings while in flight. "Whistler" is one of instructor. Hecan bereached at damian.faganfgi U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; www. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT the birds' nicknames. lay up to 20 eggs in onenest, andthe female hotmail.com. UNLIMITED:For members to meet birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. incubates the eggs. Current viewing:Deschutes River, Hatfield and greet and discuss what the Sources: Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources, Birds REDMOND ROD &GUN CLUB: Range:Widespread throughout North America, Lakes, agricultural ponds, DrakePark and of Oregonand "The Audubon Society Encyclopedia of chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting North American Birds" by John Terres these birds migratethrough Central Oregon. other open water areas in the region. the first Monday of each month; clays and trap; club is open to the Oregon Natural Desert Association community and offers many training month; Bend Senior Center; www. Buffet, Bend; ohabend. webs.com. and much more; annual head and offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, programs; 3 miles east of Redmond MISCELLAMEOUS horns competition, kids' trout pond, communications@deschutestu.org, coflyfishers.org. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE on the north side of state Highway warm-water demo tank, and camp www.deschutestu.org. OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: YOUNG BIRDERSOF CENTRAL 126; www.rrandgc.com. cooking demonstrations; adults $10, HUNTING 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group OREGON:Information booth in PINE MOUNTAIN POSSE:Cowboy juniors (ages 6 to16)$5, ages5and each month; Prineville Fire Hall; Bend's Old Mill District from11 of fly anglers from around Central action shooting club;second Sunday LEARN THE ART OF TRACKING 541-447-5029. under free; March 6-9; Deschutes Oregon who are trying to improve a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday; the birdof each month; Central Oregon ANIMALS:Guided walks and County Fair & Expo Center in their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; watching club is for ages 12 to 18 THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE Shooting Sports Association range, Redmond; www.OTshows.com. club meets on the fourth Wednesday workshops with a certified OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: and supporting adults; the17th milepost 24, U.S.Highway20, east professional tracker to learn how to 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of of each month; location TBA; 541annual Great Backyard Bird Count, of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. identify and interpret tracks, signs 306-4509 or bendcastingclub© a world-wide event, is scheduled each month; Redmond VFWHall. PADDLING pinemount ainposse.com. gmail.com. and scat of the animals in Central for Feb. 14-17; for more information CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER HORSE RIDGE PISTOLEROS: Oregon; 8a.m. to noon; two or more ROCKY MOUNTAINELK on the Young Birders of Central KAYAKROLLSESSIONS: THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: Cowboy action shooting with walks per month; $35; 541-633Oregon, which meets twice a month, Noninstructed sessions at indoor 7 p.m.; meets on the third FOUNDATION:6:30 p.m.; meets pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 7045; dave©wildernesstracking. call Annette Gerard at 541-385-1799 pool; 4:05-6 p.m.; runs through Thursday of each month; Sunriver Wednesdays on Feb. 19, March a.m.; first and third Sunday of each or email ybcobirds©gmail.com Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation com, wildernesstracking.com. the end of May; $12 for in-district 5,12,19,26,April2and9;big month; Central Oregon Shooting Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. residents, $16 otherwise; Juniper THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE 2014 CENTRALOREGON game banquet April12; VFW Sports Association range, milepost OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: Hall, Redmond; 541-447-2804 or SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Extensive Swim 8 Fitness Center, Bend; THE CENTRALOREGON 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; FLYFISHERSCLUB: 7 p.m.;meets 7 p.m.;meetsthe second facebook.com at RMEFCentral resources on fishing, boating, register at bendparksandrec.org or 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass. on the third Wednesday of each W ednesday ofeach m onth;King Oregon. shooting sports, hunting, camping call 541-389-7665. com.
Goldeneye migrates throughCentral Oregon
Common golIleneye
Recreationalsmelt dippingseasonopensuponthe Cowlitz
Trails Continued from D1 SUMMER TRAILS Low- to mid-elevation trails are in fair to good condition with snowpack that varies between 10-120 inches of snow. Users should avoid muddy areas to prevent trail damage. Horse Butte Trail and BadlandsWilderness area in good condition for winter activities.
By Tom Paulu
that biologists can get more infor-
lumbia Riverpolicy coordinator for
Longview (Wash.) Daily News
dipping will be allowed this year, for six hours on four consecutive Sport smelt dippers can get their Saturdays — and it's anybody's nets out of storage. The first dipping guess if smelt will be available in seasoninfouryearswas offered in those periods. Last week, Washthe Cowlitz River Saturday. ington and Oregon fish managers Only four days of recreational adopted limited seasons mostly so
mation about the run size and learn more about the fish, which is listed
the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
as threatened under the federalEndangered Species Act "This is not a harvest focus. It is a
research focus," said Ron Roier,Co-
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Sport dipping will be allowed from 6 a.m. to noon from the banks of the Cowlitz on Feb. 15, Feb. 22 and March l.
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PUBUSHIIG FIVENITIONSAYHLR • Friday, MarCh 28 (My Own Two HandS)• Friday, May 23 (SiSterS ROdeO) • Friday, June 27 (Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show) • Friday, August 22 (Folk Festival)• Friday, November 14 (A Cowboy Christmas)
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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
Wild trout thriving, multiplying inBoiseRiver
FLY-TYING CORNER
By Roger Phillips
voir all summer.
tdaho Statesman
That time of year is when many anglers prefer to fish, but higher flows make it a challenging river because it
BOISE, Idaho — We
have a lot to be proud of in the Boise River, especially if you're an angler. It flows through the middle of Idaho's largest met-
eic
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Hare Sculpin Gold, courtesy The Patient Angler. Cast it quartering down and swing the fly cross-current to put on weight. Big fish make or fish it "slack-line" style, their living on little fish. Oneof making a downstream swing the most important items on and micro-mending to work the menu is the sculpin, a tiny different currents. Tie this streamer with tan scavenger at home inmost Western streams. thread on aNo. 4extra long Sculpin survive by staying streamer hook. Tie in black or red lead eyes. Tie in blood-red close to the bottom; when they find themselves caught soft hackle for the gills. To by faster currents, they are imitate the pectoral fins, use natural Indian henhackle tips. prey to any lurking predator. Dave Whitlock's HareSculpin For the under wing/tail, use Gold is a great, deep-running gold rabbit strip. Finish with a streamer that imitates this im- shorter white rabbit strip. — Gary Lewis, For The Bulletin portant food source. Once a trout hits about16
inches, it has to eat a lot of bait
FIsHING REPoRT For the water report, turn each day to the weather page, today onB6 Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife: CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM: Fishing has been good with the warmer weather. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead. FALL RIVER: Depending on weather conditi ons,some good mid-day hatches have been reported. Restricted to fly-fishing with barbless hooks. Fall River below the falls closed at the end of September. HAYSTACKRESERVOIR: The west end of the reservoir has some thin ice. The rest of the reservoir is icefree. Fish should be most active in the late afternoon as the water
warms up. HOOD RIVER: Afew early winter run steelhead are entering the river. These fish are typically chromers. Try fishing in midafternoon when the daily water temps are peaking. We should start seeing more winter steelhead moving into the Hood River as February progresses. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK:The Metolius Arm is now closed to fishing. Fishing has been good for kokanee and bull trout. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring Chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release
these fish unharmed. LAKE SIMTUSTUS: The reservoir is now open to fishing year round. Anglers will need both a tribal fishing license and a fishing license from ODFW. The reservoir is stocked annually with 30,000 rainbow trout and has a decent, selfsustaining population of smallmouth bass. METOLIUS RIVER: Fishing for bull trout and redsides has been decent. The Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge is closed to all angling until fourth Saturday in May. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCODAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. OCHOCORESERVOIR: The west end of the reservoir is iced over. The east end from about the beach and upstream has large portions of open water. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:The upper reservoir is covered with ice but the lower reservoir near the dam is ice-free. Fishing has been slow for bank anglers fishing the open water. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND: The pond is covered in ice and will remain closed until the ice melts. For safety reasons, no one is allowed on the ice.
tends to fill bank-to-bank with swift current.
Trout are also wary be-
ropolitan area and within
cause there is no shortage of
sight of the state Capitol
predators ranging from mink to ospreys to larger trout.
and Bronco Stadium. T he Greenbelt and i t s
Crews captured a 26-inch
walkers, joggers and bikers parallel the river while Canada geese honk from the river and nearbyponds, and bald eagles keep a
brown trout during their fall surveys, and it probably didn't get that big eating insects.
Despite t h a t mon s t er, brown trout haven't been farwatchful eye from above. A fisherman casts his line below a small dam along the Boise River ing as well, Butts said, despite What's below the surface in Boise, Idaho, in 2011. The river's trout population has seen exrecent stockings of fingerlings is no less impressive. Trout, plosive growth since the early1990s, after minimum winter flows that all but disappear. and lots of them, feed in were established, according to Art Butts, regional fish biologist for He said browns are hardriffles and hide beneath Fish and Game. er to raise in hatcheries and Idaho Press-Tribune file photo
brushy shoreline. They're not just any trout — they're
wild, naturally reproducing redband rainbow trout.
The hatchery rainbow trout spawning areas can be identithat are stocked monthly in f i ed and habitat improved.
stabilized since then, and
the trout population more.
from the 2010 survey, but
a little more at how the river functions," he said. Butts thinks the river can
transport than rainbows, and they're not seeing good natural reproduction from browns in the river.
If you've ever tried to the river typically stick to the "I think it's a pretty neat They're also finding the avcatch those trout, it can be areas near where they are s t ream, and I think it's only erage size of the trout tends to humbling. planted, and they're going to get better," decrease as you move downThere are lots of them, either caught or die he said. stream, and the area around possibly more than you within a few weeks, It (BOiSe The Boise Riv- Eagle Island seems to be rearrealize, and some that are Buttssaid. Rjygf) SggmS er is an interesting ing habitat for smaller trout, much bigger than you'd A ngler surveys t t stream that differs as well as brown trout. expect. have shown anyfrom its upstream The river also seems to Every three years, crews where from 25 to Of a n y m Ph t ribu t a ries, t he lack the prolific insect hatchfrom the I d aho D epart- 65 percent of the ff 'Shpryypgr North , S outh and es of o ther d am-controlled ment of Fish and Game stocked trout are p p g gyg g Midd l e forks. rivers, such as the South take their scary (to the fish) caught, depending " T he best t r o ut Fork upstream and the nearaluminum canoe and go o n where they're re- ITI SUmmB/' habi t a t is f ro m by Owyhee River in Eastern "electrofishing." The canoe leasedandthetime Mrgafl mDSg Lucky Peak Dam Oregon. "It (Boise River) seems to has a generator with long of year. down to about Star, wands that shoot electrical H atchery t r o u t then water condibe more of a nymph fishery currents into the river. are also the bulk of Pr e f er dry fly tion s d o wnstream year-round, even in summer The stunned fish wash the harvest, Butts fj S hfrlg" tend to favor warm- when most people prefer dry er-water fish. downstream, and Fish and said. Creel s u rfly fishing," Butts said. That's not to say the Boise Game biologists and tech- veys done in 2008 — Art Butts, Fish In t he str e t ch nicians scoop them up and s howed wild trou t and G a m e fish b e tween th e d a m is ignored by anglers. It gets measure, weigh and record made up less than biologist an d Star, there are thousands of hours of fishing, what they find, then com- 5 percent of the ann umerous di v e r - and people catch a lot of trout pare it with past surveys gler harvest. sions but few nat- there. It's just not easy, and from the river. Also, only about 2 percent ural tributaries and tons of that's part of its charm, and Crews were out in fall of the trout the crews cap- development. also what makes the whole checking different sections tured were remnant hatchery The r i ver flows are reg- thing remarkable. of the river. rainbows. Those fish are ster- u l a ted by the dam, and the A river runs through IdaT he n ew s h a s b e e n ile, so they can't spawn with fl o w cycles differ from its ho's most populated and free-flowing tributaries. good. The r i v er's t r out wild trout. densely developed area, it population has seen exploSpeaking of spawning, deTh o se streams rise when teems with wild trout, but they sive growth since the early spite finding abundant young snowmelt comes out of the can confound even expert 1990s, after minimum win- trout, Butts said they can't m o u n tains, then flows decline anglers. ter flows were established, pinpoint where the fish are t h roughout late spring and a ccording to A r t B u t t s, spawning, even though the s ummer. regional fish biologist for numbers of small trout in the Th e B o ise River rises with Fish and Game. population make it obvious the snowmelt in the springbut "It's r emarkable h o w they are. stays at a higher, regulated this river has recovered," He said if they can identify f low as cool water is released he said. spawning habitat, Fish and f r om the depths of the reserT rout n u m bers h a v e Game may be able to increase AIGIEIFPBDSBDP they're d ow n
s l i ghtly
the fish are also larger on average. There's a healthy mix of young and old trout, and there seems to be plenty of
I
"We need to start looking
sl
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Continued from D1 "I think the easiest way to catch a steelhead is with the
swung fly strategy in summer or fall," said Rob Cran-
dall, owner of Water Time Outfitters and the editor of "Flyfishing 8z Tying Journal." "That's when it is the easiest
casting, with a floating line." The Clackamas is Cran-
AMUSE
dall's home river. " You're fishing wit h a straight line," Crandall said. "You make one mend and swing across the current to
Assortment Seasonal Flatbreads $7
entice a bite."
Courtesy Don Lewis
Water temperature is the This Deschutes River steelhead fell for a black-and-blue leech key, Crandall e x plained. pattern and a downstream wet-fly technique. When the water is warmer,
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50 degrees or higher, fish will move farther to take the fly.
Jerry H augen b elieves the best technique for the first-timer is to use a jig and float or bait and float. Hau-
gen, who makes his home in Walterville, east of Springfield, has spent a lot of time on the McKenzie and Umpqua
"I think the easiest way to catch a steelhead is
with the swung fly strategy in summer or fall. That's when it is the easiest casting, with a
floating line." — Rob Crandall, owner of Water Time Outfitters and the editor of uFlyfishing 8 Tying Journal"
MAIN Scallops R Prawns $26 S e afood Bouillabaisse $24 Petite Filet $26
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rivers where he taught his son, the noted outdoor writer
and TV host Scott Haugen to fish. "The hard thing is to get the angle of the float right, to set the depth of the jig," Jerry Haugen said. "But it's an easy technique, and if you're in a boat, you can fish two hun-
h
perfect." Start with an 8 tr2- to 9-foot
rod with an 8- to 12-pound rating and a 2500- or 3000-
size reel capable of holding 100 to 150 yards of 10- or 12-pound line. It's important to stay on the move to find
river on the North Coast in
TREAT
the midst of a low-pressure system. If we had f ished the next day, on a rising barometer, we probably would
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m o r e a c t ion.
That's how a lot of successful steelheaders do it. They
dred yards of river." Mike Codino agreed with Haugen: "The best way to catch steelhead if you don't have any experience is to use a bobber and jig with a spinning rod and reel." Codino is the manager of
where fish are holding. Cod- watch the w e ather, watch ino recommended three ba- the flows and the pressure, sic color combos for winter and try t o c atch th e r i v er steelhead. and the fish when the water "You need a I/8-ounce jig is going down and the bain pink and white, cerise or rometer is on the rise. black and red," Codino said. Want some more input on "Make two to three castssteelhead technique'? Mark the Fisherman's Marine & one far, one middle and one your calendar for the Central Outdoor store in Tigard, and short — and keep moving." Oregon Sportsman's Show to answers this question at least February and March are be held March 6-9. once a week. the best months for a new — Gary Lewis is the host of "He or she has to learn steelheader to take a shot "Adventure Journal" and author to read the water," Codino at the ocean-going rainof "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "Black Bear Hunting," "Hunting continued. "It should be 4bow. Timing the trip is as to 6-feet deep, about walk- important as anything else. Oregon" and other titles. ing speed. If there are some We happened t o h i t t he Contact Lewis at rocks, big boulders, that's aforementioned n a meless GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
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D6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
5 ears ater, Beatesstea anot ers ow TV SPOTLIGHT
guitar lines and vocal phrasing from "Something." Walsh
1964, the Beatles already had
the benefit of long, hard work: years of playing dubs and re-
By Jon Pareles New Yorft Times News Service
If there's one thing pop has learned in the last 50 years, it's
show included reminiscences
retained not only their musical
the music for the screams. But the Beatles charged into their
of technicians and audience members who couldn't hear
les' original recordings have brilliance but also the nearly universal good will the band
the accumulated nostalgia that makes baby boomers conflate
songs with every part in place — able, by then, to play them as much by feel and sight as by sound. There were no earpiece
its music with all the pleasures
monitors then.
generated in its time, as well as
of melodies, harmonies and
lyrics — Beatles songs have thrived through half a century of remakes.
The Recording Academy was counting on both nostalgia and tunefulness with Sun-
day night's special on CBS, "The Beatles: The Night That
Changed America — A Grammy Salute." It was a Beatles tribute concert recorded in Los Angeles on Jan. 27, the
day after this year's Grammy Awards, with an extensive line-
up induding Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Stevie Wonder, Alicia Keys, Katy Perry, Imagine Dragons and a reunited Eurythmics.Yoko Ono, Sean Lennon and George Harrison's
widow, Olivia Harrison, and son, Dhani Harrison, were in the front row; Dhani helped
perform his f ather's song "Something" onstage. The "night that changed
quite strike sparks in another jam, "While My Guitar Gently Weeps," while Lynne and Dave Grohl fell short of the strange mixture of estrangement and compassion in the original "Hey Bulldog." Others tried to recast the songs more radically, if not wisely. Perry delivered "Yesterday" like an "American Idol" contestant, hyping each verse as an escalation from breathy beginning to tearful, melismatic flourishes. Imagine Dragons treated "Revolution"
Between songs, Sunday's
that Beatles songs never wear out their welcome. The Beat-
of their youth. On purely musical grounds — the foundation
and Gary Clark Jr. couldn't
cent experience with the Beatlemania whirlwind in England.
The special showed some of what CBS' cameras caught that In this Feb. 9, 1964, photo, The Beatles, from left, Paul McCartney, night: young men in matching Ringo Starr on drums, George Harrison and John Lennon, perform suits, delivering their tautly for the aEd Sullivan Show" in New York. constructed songs while smiles were bounced among the band members. The Beatles were America" was the Beatles' ap- audience. There might well be well-rehearsed but looked as if pearance on Feb. 9, 1964, on nostalgia for those days at CBS they were having an absolute "The Ed Sullivan Show," which and the other networks, which lark, and that joy immediately was a confluence of musical in 1964 had only a handful of came through the screen, mulevent, television milestone and broadcast competitors rather tiplying the catchiness of the cultural watershed. It was the than hundreds of cable chan- songs. So it was almost cruel U.S. debut of the Beatles, who nels andthe infinitude of the In- for the special to segue from had the No. 1 single "I Want to ternet. The kind of unified tele- B eatles performances i n t o Hold Your Hand" and an au- vision experience shared when new, live ones that were tense dience primed to scream. The the Beatles arrived occurs now and studious by comparison: next morning, as baby boom- only during championship by Maroon 5, nervously trying ers have been reminding peo- games and awards shows, to copy the 1964 Beatles in "All pleeversince,countlessyoung which are all, as the Ed Sulli- My Loving," or by Keith UrAmericans were announcing van show was, live broadcasts. ban and John Mayer, trying to their favorite Beatle, clamoring Limited broadcast outlets finish the band's 1969 rooftop for elect ric guitars or drums were one constraint the Beatles performance of "Don't Let Me and, if they were boys, daring would turn into an advantage. Down" as a guitar jam. to let their hair grow past their Others were the brevity of pop Joe Walsh from the Eagles singles, which they crammed and Jeff Lynne from ELO (who The broadcast was seen by with ideas, and the limits of re- worked with individual Beatles 74 million people, more than cording technology, which they during their solo years) ear60 percent of the U.S. television would magnificently outwit. By nestly strove to reproduce both Dan Grossi /The Associated Press file photo
on's ir rien eservesres ect
as latter-day hootenanny fare,
strumming acoustic guitars, singing four-part harmonies and entirely missing the point. The celebration, like that Ed
Sullivan show a half century ago, belonged to the Beatles themselves. First was Starr:
bounding onstage to sing Carl Perkins' "Matchbox," settling
in at the drums to play and sing the Shirelles' "Boys" and finishing with a jolly"Yellow Submarine." McCartney rasped and shouted through "Birthday" and savored the humor of "Get Back" while hitting its falsetto
high notes with poise. Fifty years after conquering the United States, McCartney
and Starr didn'tcome acrossas self-congratulatory, or weary, or simply going through show business motions. They've held onto what they brought in 1964.
They were still havingfun.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby: Last August my did not anticipate this hostility. I He opted not to share the informahusband and I allowed our son's feelbad forherbecause they make tion with me so as not to violate 17-year-old girlfriend, "Lindsay," little attempt to hide it. My son her privacy. I found out about it a to move into our home from out loves his girlfriend, and I want her few weeks ago, and I am deeply of state because she needs to live to feel comfortable and welcome hurt that I was excluded. here for a year to establish resi- without alienating my other sons. I feel I have never been includdency for school. She's a wonder- Help! ed as a true part of the family, and — Mom of Three this is just another example. He ful girl, mature, social and helpful. Sons feels his explanation justifies his M y problem i s Dear Mom: You actions and that should be the end DFP,R yot e so s (ages and your husband of it. I am concerned that he will 18 and 14) are very are th e p a rents, keep other things from me he feels angry that we have which means you are none of my business in the fuallowed a "strangare supposed to be ture. I am not at all comfortable er" to move in. My 18-year-old running this "asylum" — not the with this situation. Do you think I
Aggy
is a college student who lives on
inmates. The decision about who
campus an hour away, but comes home on weekends. He and his younger brother feel I show favoritism to Lindsay and make fre-
should or should not be a guest in your home is not up to your jealous older and younger boys, who appear to be suffering from a form quent comments about the non- of "sibling" rivalry. family member. They worry that As a guest in your home, LindI'm spendingmoney on her even say should be treated with respect, though they know her mom sends and it's not happening. You should her money. insist upon it, and if your wishI'll admit it has been nice to es are not complied with, there have a girl around. My boys sleep should be consequences. half the day away on weekends, Dear Abby:My husband of five but she gets up and is happy to run yearshas threechildren from preerrands with me. I still include my vious marriages. Earlier this year sons in many activities without he learned some disturbing inforLindsay, as I always have, and I mation about his youngest child.
am overreacting? — Stepmonster in the South
Dear Stepmonster: Yes, I do. Your husband decided not to dis-
cuss something with you that he felt would violate his daughter's
privacy. Much as you might like to, you can't push your way into being accepted. If relationships are going to happen, they must evolve naturally. So calm down and stop personalizing this. It isn't a threat
to your marriage unless you make it so. — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:20, 6:35, 9:40 • FROZEN(PG)3:25, 6:50 • FROZENSINGALONG(PG) 12:40 • THEHUNGER GAMES: CATCHING FIRE (PG-13)9:25 • I, FRANKENSTEIN(PG-13) 9:50 • JACKRYAN: SHADOW RECRUIT(PG-13)1:05,4:25, 7:15, 9:55 • LABORDAY(PG-13) 12:50, 3:45, 6:30, 9:10 • THELEGO MOVIE(PG) Noon,3,6:15,9 • THELEGO MOVIE 3-D (PG)12:30,3:30,6: 45,9:30 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) l2:10, 3:10, 6:25, 9:20 • THEMETROPOLITAN OPERA:RUSALKA (no MPAA rating) 6:30 • THE MONUMENTSMEN(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 1:15, 2:50, 4:15, 6, 7:20, 9:15, 10:15 • THE NUTJOB(PG)1:45, 4:45, 7:05 • RIDE ALONG (PG-13) 1:40, 4:35, 7:50, 10:20 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 • ROBOCOPIMAX(PG-13)l,4,7,9:45 • THATAWKWARD MOMENT(R)1:30,3:50,7:40,10:IO • VAMPIREACADEMY(PG-13) 1:20, 3:55, 7:30, 10:05 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)12:20 • Accessibilitydevices are availablefor some movies. r
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)6 • THE COUNSELOR (R) 9:15 • WALKINGWITH DINOSAURS(PG) 3 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 mayattend screenings before 7 p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian.
TV TODAY 8 p.m. on10, "American Idol" —The Hollywood rounds continue, as the contestants still standing get another chance to perform for judges Keith Urban, Jennifer Lopez and Harry Connick Jr., who have the tough job of deciding who goes and who stays. Thursday, we'll find out who the semifinalists are.
Bp.m. on(CW), Movie: "Best in Show" —In this witty 2000 satire, director Christopher Guestdoes tothedog competition circuit what he and Rob Reiner did to the rock music world in "This Is Spinal Tap." People who enter their canines in a Philadelphia show are at the center of the parody, though those on the periphery of the
contest also aresent up.
9 p.m. on 6, "Criminal Minds" — Complications from his stabbing have Hotch (Thomas Gibson) fighting for his life and having visions of his late wife, Haley (Meredith Monroe), and his
nemesis, theReaper(C.Thomas
Howell). The rest of the team investigates the estranged father of a missing teen as a possible suspect in her disappearance. 9 p.m. on 7, "NOVA" — It's a mystery to rival the one surrounding the construction of the pyramids: How did the Duomo — theenormous dome atop Florence's Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore — get built? Millions of bricks went into its construction, and keeping everything aligned and symmetrical as the sides converged toward the center was no small feat. In the new episode "Great Cathedral Mystery," modern-day bricklayers test the latest theories by building a"mini-Duomo." 9 p.m. on TRAV, "ToyHunter" — "The bigger, the better" is Jordan's mantra in this new episode.A m anufacturingcompany that makes supersized versions of iconic toys has sent him on a hunt for rare items to add to its line. 9:31p.m. on29, "SuperFun Night" —Work gets in the way of Kimmie's (Rebel Wilson) Valentine's Day celebration with her new boyfriend, James (Nate Torrence). That's not the only complication; Richard (Kevin Bishop) is sending her some mixed messages about their relationship. Marika (Lauren Ash) is surprised when a new friend — a woman (Hana Mae Lee) hits on her. Kendall (Kate Jenkinson) hosts an adult toy party in the new episode "Lesbihonest." cf Zap2it
Plae Well, Retire Well
775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevationcapital.biz
Ae~~~ Dishwasher HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 2014:This yearyou tend to be diligent, at least until your friends and/or loved ones try to distract you. They seem to have agift for knowing how to get your attention. You might find your professional life demanding, and at times it might create insecurity. If you are single, look to summer to meet someone special. If you Stars showthe kind are attached, you of day you'll have mesh well with ** * * * D ynamic p it i v e y o u r s ingif icant other, except when
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
By the afternoon, details might become much less important, compared with the quality of your relationships in a different area of your life. Curb your temper. Tonight: Hang out with friends.
** * * You might not realize the extent to which you have held yourself back. You also might cast criticisms on others without intending to. Sometimes you make snap decisions or quickly spurt out words without thinking first. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
** * * A relationship could be building in importance. Do not make any commit** * * You could be more in tune with a ments right now; instead, continue to prosituation if it is emotional. Resist starting cess and work on your relationship. This a fight with a friend in order to keep the bond could be professional or personal. bond intact. In the late afternoon, deal Sometimes you restrict yourself in unnecwith a loved one directly. You actually essary ways. Tonight: Kick up your heels. might be far more possessive than you realize. Tonight: Treatafriend to munchies. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You might be dealing with an inLEO (July23-Aug.22) ternal struggle, but others observing you ** * * You might be dragging in the never would know. You relate with authormorning, but you will be a veritable force ity in an easygoing way. As the day grows to deal with by the afternoon. You'll older, you might want to let others run the recognize that you are on a roll, and you show,aslongasyouhaveconfidencein won't want to stop. Your impulsiveness could make the day a lot more fun for you them. Tonight: Dinner for two. and your friends. Tonight: All smiles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * Get through whatyou must in the VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) morning. A special opportunity to expand ** * If you have to schedule a meeting, your inner circle might emerge. Takeaddo so in the morning. You might need to vantage of this! You will be able to throw head in a different direction in the afteryourself completely into whatever you are noon. You could have several important doing. Tonight: Be a social butterfly. conversations that could carry a lot of meaning. Tonight: Vanish while you can. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Use the morning for any major LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * Others will be very aware of you, creative project that heads your way. Your to such an extent thatyou might be some- ingenuity could become a star feature in your interactions. In the afternoon, you what embarrassed. Consider the options that surround an important life goal. You might be more in the mood to run errands might want to rethinkyour path. Don't that seem rather menial. Tonight: Get as
** * * Handle a financial matter in the morning, when you feel more focused.
Tonight: Where the fun is.
you are feeling pressured by outside commitments. Hopefullyyour sweetie will understand. You enter a more romantic phase come summertime. You will remember this time together for a long time. LEOoften challenges your way of thinking. * Difficult
ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * A restriction appears that could cause anger if you can't get past it. Don't get emotional; instead, transform the hassle. Solutions will come up in a meeting. Trust in your ability to find a resolution. W hat was an obstaclecould become a key to the solution. Tonight: Midweek break.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Make calls early in the day, as you tend to be most effective in the morning. In the late afternoon, you might want to work from home or head out early. You will feel best in a situation where you know whatis agiven.Avoidan exchange ofanger. Tonight: Take iteasy.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
make finances abigger dealthanthey are.
muchsleepaspossible. © King Features Syndicate
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Westem" will screen at 630 tonight (doors open at6 p.m.) andincludesana/I-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)4:30,6:45 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:15, 6:45 • RIDEALONG(PG-13) 5,7:15 • ROBOCOP (R) 4:30, 7 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 6 • LABORDAY(PG-13) 7:15 • THE LEGO MOVIE (PG)6:15 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)6:30 • NEBRASKA (R) 5 Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • I, FRANKENSTEIN (PG-13) 5:15, 7:20 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)4:40,7 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:10, 6:40 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 4:15, 6:50 • VAMPIREACADEMY(PG-13) 4:45, 7:10 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THE LEGO MOVIE(Upstairs — PG) 4:10. 6:45 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • •
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264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-260-7355
space with
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I burial container built I in, located in MeadI owpark area of De- I I schutes Memorial I Gardens, $ 1 000. I Call 541-389 1821 I
Snowblower
Craftsman electric or pull-start, 29" wide, 9HP, 5 forward 2 re-
Lost Black Lab-mix 12 yr female, "Sissy." Last seen 2/9 on NW 67th headed toward Hwy 126, Redmond. 541-548-2360 L ost M o torola c e l l p hone NE side o f Bend. 541-480-5794
SHOW February 14-15-16 Alderwood Quiltworks verse speeds. Portland Expo machine quilting $400 cash. Center frame for sale, locally 541-815-6319 Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, made in Prineville, Sun.10-4 easy to use, makes 1-5 exit ¹306B quilting a dream! RENIEMBER:If you Admission $10 Comes with Handi Buying Diamonds have lost an animal, handles, includes. I 1 . 800.559.3440 Armoire for sale, don't forget to check /Gold for Cash www. Collectors Cherry/wrought iron manual, exc. shape, The Humane Society Saxon'9 Fine Jewelers West.com only used to quilt 4 Perfect condition, u.i 9 541-389-6655 Bend handmade, tops, like new. 541-382-3537 SNOWBLOWER! solid wood. $600. 541-549-1273 246 BUYING Redmond John Deere dual 69 ex39nx23.5". or 541-419-2160 Guns, Hunting Lionel/American Flyer 541-923-0882 stage with hand $650. trains, accessories. & Fishing Pnne ale warmers, Briggs & kcaravelli@gmail.com 541-408-2191. Brother Industrial 541-447-7178; Stratton 4 cycle 16.5 Sewing machine& Bend local pays CASHI! BVTING & SE LLING hp, model 1332PE, o 05 8c eta G ENERATE SOM E table 541-389-8420. for all firearms & used one season, gold jewelry, silver EXCITEMENT in your ammo. 541-526-0617 Alland like new.$1 I00. gold coins, bars, neighborhood! Plan a 541-306-6505 or rounds, wedding sets, CASH!! garage sale and don't 503-819-8100 class rings, sterling silFor Guns, Ammo & forget to advertise in ver, coin collect, vinReloading Supplies. classified! 541-408-6900. tage watches, dental 265 541-385-5809. gold. Bill Fl e ming, Brother L S 2 -B837 Building Materials 541-382-9419. Loveseat, beautiful Rach- walking foot, needle elin Classics, cream, sac- fed industrial leather How to avoid scam MADRAS Habitat rifice $150. 541-410-1312 sewing m a chine. and fraud attempts RESTORE DO YOU HAVE M achine i s t a b le Building Supply Resale HBe aware of internaSOMETHING TO The Bulletin mounted. When last Quality at 306 SELL Iional fraud. Deal lorecommends extra ' used it was in exLOW PRICES cally whenever posFarm Equipment FOR $500 OR I caution when purcellent working con84 SW K St. LESS? sible. & Machinery chasing products or, dition. Add i tional 541-475-9722 H Watch for buyers Non-commercinl services from out of I pictures upon reOpen to the public. 60" Brush hog, good who offer more than 206 206 advertisers may the area. Sending I quest. $1500 OBO. place an ad your asking price and cash, checks, or ' condition, $550; and Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies 541-213-2333 267 with our who ask Io have 60" adjustable blade I credit i n f ormation 0 Fuel & Wood "QUICK CASH money wired or may be subjected to for t ractor, S OLD. Jack Russell Terrier/ handed back to them. Stamp Collector SPECIAL" 541-923-9758 Fox Terrier mix pup- I FRAUD. For more 1 week3lines 12 Fake cashier checks pies. 7 weeks. $150 information about an I Cash paid for new or WHEN BUYING oi' and money orders N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 used postage stamps. Call 5 4 1 -323-1787. advertiser, you may I FIREWOOD... swather, 14' header Honest old collector! are common. ~2 e e k e 2 N Pictures avail. I call t h e Ore g onI with conditioner, cab 541-279-0336 Ad must HNever give out perTo avoid fraud, ' State Atto r ney ' heat/A/C, 1300 orig. include price of sonal financial inforAbandoned, starving La Llewellin Setter/black & I General's O f f i ce The Bulletin hrs. $29,000 obo. Walker puppies! Consumer Protec- • en le tem of 8500 243 mation. ~ recommends pny- 1486 Pine kittens were found white 202 International, cab w/lots of tion or less, or multiple v'Trustyour instincts by a Deputy who called cEye-catching ment for Firewood h o t line at I Ski Equipment heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1 000 olor; t h ey're v e r y Want to Buy or Rent CRAFT. They h ave items whose total and be wary of only upon delivery & love people. 1 i 1-877-877-9392. Pto, 3 sets remotes, does not exceed someone using an upper respiratory is- friendly nnd inspection. nice tractor. $18,000. I $125; 2 males I TheBulletin I u»' CASH for dressers, $500. escrow service or • A cord is 128 cu. ft. sues & were almost female 541-419-3253 SececngCentral Oregon since 7905 dead washers/dryers dead from dehydration, O $100. 541-447-1323 4' x 4' x 8' agent Io pick up your 541-420-5640 Call Classifieds at merchandise. • Receipts should but responded well to Lovebirds (2) h a nd325 541-385-5809 include name, 212 Just bought a new boat? vet care & should be tamed wit h c a g e, www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Hay, Grain & Feed phone, price and SececngCentral Oregon since 7903 Sell your old one in the OK. Sponsors, fosters $100. 541-279-3578 Antiques & kind of wood classifieds! Ask about our & adopters needed. People Look for Information First quality Orchard/TimCollectibles Austrian-made Glock gun l i ght/laser purchased. Call 541-598-5488 or Super Seller rates! othy/Blue Grass mixed About Products and Volant Silver Natural gas Ruud • Firewood ads 389-8420. CRAFT, Bx sight, $200; High cap 541-385-5809 hay, no rain, barn stored, diamond-finished .40 Glock mags, $20 tankless water MUST include 6441, Bend 9 7 708, Services EveryDaythrough Mid-Century Unique $250/ton.Patterson Ranch Wanted: $Cash paid for www.craftcats.org. skis, e a; .40 G o l d D o t , heater, brand new! species & cost per The Bulletin Clnssigeds Sisters, 541-549-3831 Pow'rBall, Ho r nady 199 Btu, $1800. vintage costume jew- www.facebook.com/Cr 170cm in length. cord to better serve Lovebirds (5) with cage, Used only 5 times, Critical Defense, 75C/rd. elry. Top dollar paid for aftCats. Thanks! Also brand new 80 our customers. 503-585-5000, Bend. Gold/Silver.l buy by the $120 obo. they are in great Looking for your gal. electric water Estate, Honest Artist Adopt a rescued kitten 541-279-3578 condition. heater, $500. next employee? The Bulletin GUN SHOW Elizabeth,541-633-7006 or cat! Fixed, shots, SecelngCentral Oregon since 7909 Were over $1200 In Sunriver area. Place n Bulletin Feb. 22-23rd N ewfoundland AK C new; asking $300 530-938-3003 Deschutes Fairgrounds help wanted nd Just bought a new boat? ID chip, tested, more! puppy, m a le , 12 Head & Footboard, or best offer. Rescue at 65480 78th weeks, black, current with wood-grain look, Buy! Sell! Trade! today and 1 cord dry split Juniper Sell your old one in the 541-389-0049 SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 reach over classifieds! Ask about our St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ on shots, $1100. Call double size has no $190/cord. Multi-cord Two Berninas: 1000 $8 Admission, Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. Jill 541-279-6344 Super Seller rates! side rails. Could be & 7/~ cords 60,000 readers Special fre e -arm, discounts, 12 & under free! www.craftcats.org available. Immediate 541-385-5809 repurposed into a each week. $250; 2000DE Serger delivery! OREGON TRAIL GUN Parakeets (7) w i th garden bench, or a Find exactly what 541-408-6193 Your classified ad Wanted: Cement mixer, Adult barn/shop cats, cage, $50; u nique item. U s e you are looking for in the SHOWS, 641N47-2120 with elasticator and will also or 541 %04-1690 m ultipurpose foo t All YearDependable used, gas or electric, fixed, shots, some 541-279-3578 your imagination! CLABBIFIEDB appear on $150. 760-917-1969 call 541-447-7807 friendly, others not so POODLE pups AKC to, Asking $75. Firewood: Seasoned; Raptor AR-15, e xtra bendbuffeti n.com much. No fee & we'll tiny teacup, cuddly people 541-419-6408 long barrel, $900 firm. Wanted- paying cash Lodgepole 1 for $195 which currently 206 deliver. 541-389 8420 245 541-610-2363 or 2 for $365. Cedar, dogs. 541-475-3889 for Hi-fi audio 8 stureceives over del. Bend: 1 for Items for Free Golf Equipment SIG P938 with crimson dio equip. Mclntosh, split, 1.5 million page Bichon Frise AKC reg. Queensland Heelers Oak Showcase $175 or 2 for $325. trace, black with rose JBL, Marantz, Dy9 0 views every male puppy . Standard & Mini, $150 541-420-3484. 16 TVs (2) free60 long, 24" wide CHECK yOUR AD red grip, 3 clips. $850 naco, Heathkit, Sanmonth nt no 541-953-0755 or & up. 541-280-1537 still work good. 42" high. Great sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-604-4203. 541-912-1905. Well over a cord - split extra cost. www.rightwayranch.wor 541-330-2282 Call 541-261-1808 counter case, rwellette@yahoo.com seasoned lodgepole, Bulletin dpress.com plate glass top. delivered. $195. Blue office cubicle diClnsnifiedn Stag Arms AR-15: 261 8475 541-480-5335 vider, 4 x 5 ' . F ree! Border Collie/New ZealModel Stag15, Get Results! edicnl Equipment 541-382-6773 541-420-4303 and Huntaway pups, great 5.56/223, Stainless Call 541-385-5809 on the first day it runs 269 dogs, working parents, steel barrel. Leor place your ad make sure it isn corPeople Look for Information $300. 541-546-6171. on-line at The Bulletin reserves to 9 upold Firedot G Falcon 4-w h e el Gardening Supplies I rect. Spellcheck and About Products and 3-9X40 Scope, the right to publish all bendbuffeti n.com power scooter with & Equipment human errors do ocCockatiel female with Services Every Daythrough ads from The Bulletin cur. If this happens to MagPul PRS Sponsor needed for accessories, gently cage, $60 obo. buttstock, Hogue used, in need of The Bulletin Classifieds Tomasita, abandoned, newspaper onto The your ad, please con541-279-3578 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS BnrkTurfSoil.com s tarving, matted & Bulletin Internet webgrip, Bipod. $2000 new battery (ordertact us ASAP so that Search the area's most needing dental care. site. ing info avail.) $400. Call 541-410-3568 208 corrections and any comprehensive listing of Donate deposit bottles/ Social 8 glad Io be out Call 5 41-389-1821 PROMPT DELIVERY Pets & Supplies adjustments can be classified advertising... cans to local all vol., of the cold, thanks to a The Bulletin 542-389-9663 made to your ad. Wanted: Collector seeks for details. non-profit rescue, for Redmond meter reader Secwng Cenece7Oregon since 7909 real estate to automotive, 541 -385-5609 high quality fishing items merchandise to sporting The Bulletin recom- feral cat spay/neuter. who found her & called The Bulletin Classified & upscale bamboo fly Need to get an for Cats trailer at CRAFT. Vet says OK goods. Bulletin Classifieds mends extra caution Cans rods. Call 541-678-5753, Full size power For newspaper Jake'9 Diner; or doappear every day in the except for a badly inad in ASAP? when purc h asor 503-351-2746 delivery, call the adjustable bed M-F a t S m i th fected mouth, dehydraprint or on line. ing products or ser- nate You can place it Mint condition w/memory foam Circulation Dept. at Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or Iion, emaciation & re255 Call 541-385-5609 vices from out of the upgraded senior 541-385-5800 online at: mattress, $800. PorCRAFT, Tumalo. ally bad mats. We are www.bendbulletin.com area. Sending cash, at Computers shafts, hend covTo place an ad, call Call for Irg. quantity table wheelchair, etting her well enough www.bendbulletin.com checks, or credit in- pickup, 541-389-8420. 541-385-5809 ers &new grips. 4 leg walker, for surgery, but we're a The Bulletin f ormation may be T HE B U LLETIN r e - Quadri-Poise cane, or email www.craftcats.org small rescue and vet Drlvers: Ping G10 subjected to fraud. e Claggified@bendbulletin.gom 541-385 5809 quires computer adbathroom assist costs are a big hit. A 13.5 T-Made Super For more informavertisers with multiple 356 s ponsorship for h e r chair, all for $200. fast 12'. The Bulletin tion about an adver240 ad schedules or those Call 541-526-5737 ServingCenacel Oregon since 7909 would be a blessing, 8 Hybrlds: Cobra DWS Farmers Column tiser, you may call selling multiple sysa foster home to re4-5-6 irons; CleveCrafts & Hobbies • n the O r egon State tems/ software, to discover after surgery, or land HB 3, 7-8-9 and 10X20 Storage Buildings Attorney General's 263 270 close the name of the better yet, a f o rever for protecting hay, P/W; Ping G156 Office C o n sumer AGATE HUNTERS business or the term home. 5 41-598-5488, Tools Lost & Found firewood, livestock etc. iron green dot; Protection hotline at Pelishers • Saws "dealer" in their ads. HAVANESE PUPPIES 389-8420. CRAFT, Bx $1496 Installed. Cleveland XLi S/W, 1-877-877-9392. Private party advertis- 6hp air compressor, 125 Found 'Mother's ring' in (other sizes available) AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 6441, Ben d 9 7 708, • • 4 • Wedges: Ping G15, ers are defined as Ib max, 240V, like new, Redmond near s w im non-shed, www.craftcats.org. Repair & Supplies 541-617-1133. gap S/W, lobb. The Bulletin shots/wormer, hypoallernenic, $850 www.facebook.com/Cra 4 those who sell one asking $625. Delivery center. 5 4 1-382-1289, CCB ¹173684 Secaing0807787Ongon since 7909 951-454-2561 541-460-1277. ftCats. Thanks! computer. available. 541-385-9350 leave message. kfjbuilders6Jykwc.net
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E2 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 634
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AptJMultiplex NE Bend
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris 8 Stevens, Inc.
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • •5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • .NoonMon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • ••11:00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• 3:00 pm Fri. • 5:00 pm Fri• Placea photo in your private party ad for only $15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*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 26 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*llllust 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 PLEASENOTE:Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
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Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486- Independent Positions
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Employment Opportunities
476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbufletin.com Updated daily
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Apt JMultiplex General CHECK YOUR AD
Add your web address Pharmacy p o sitions to your ad and readavailable. Apply with ers on The Bulietin's resumes and referweb site, www.bendences at Drug Mart bulletin.com, will be Pharmacy in La Pine able to click through or email to: automatically to your drugmartpharm Oqwest website. office.net GOLF COURSE MAINT.
Accounting Local CPA Firm seeks an experienced bookkeeper. Must have exp. in QuickBooks, payroll and can handle multiple projects simultaneously. For detailed job description and application, please visit our website at www.bendcpa.com
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FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
Bend Golf & Country Club Golf is hiring for
Course Maintenance-
Seasonal full and part-time positions, March-October. Golfing priveleges included. Apply in person at: 61045 Country Club Drive in Bend, or call 541-382-1083 for more information.
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DOES THISSOVND LIKE YOU? •OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE • PERSONABLE & ENTHUSIASTIC •CONSISTENT 8 MOTIVATED
Our winning team of sales 8 promotion professionals are making an average of $400 - $800 per week doing special events, trade shows, retail 8 grocery store promotions while representing THE BULLETIN newspaper as an independent contractor yyE OFFER:
* Solid Income Opportunity * * Complete Training Program * * No Selling Door to Door * * No Telemarketing Involved * * Great Advancement Opportunity * * Full and Part Time Hours * FOR THE CHANCE OF A LIFETIME, Call Adam Johnson 541-410-5521, TODAY!
All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l imita648 tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly Houses for accept any advertisRent General ing for real estate which is in violation of PUBLISHER'S this law. All persons NOTICE are hereby informed All real estate adver- that all dwellings adtising in this newspa- vertised are available per is subject to the on an equal opportuF air H o using A c t nity basis. The Bullewhich makes it illegal tin Classified to a d vertise "any preference, limitation 771 or disc r imination based on race, color, Lots Manufacturedl religion, sex, handiMobile Homes cap, familial status, SHEVLIN RIDGE marital status or na- 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, aptional origin, or an in- proved plans. More LOT MODEL tention to make any details and photos on LIQUIDATION such pre f erence, craigslist. $149,900. Prices Slashed Huge limitation or discrimi- 541-389-8614 Savings! 10 Year nation." Familial staconditional warranty. tus includes children Finished on your site. 775 under the age of 18 ONLY 2 LEFT! living with parents or Manufacturedl Redmond, Oregon legal cus t odians, Mobile Homes 541-548-5511 pregnant women, and JandMHomes.com people securing cus- FACTORY SPECIAL tody of children under New Home, 3 bdrm, 18. This newspaper $46,500 finished Take care of will not knowingly acon your site. cept any advertising J and M Homes your investments for real estate which is 541-548-5511 with the help from in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e The Bulletin's TURN THE PAGE hereby informed that "Call A Service all dwellings adverFor More Ads tised in this newspaProfessional" Directory The Bulletin per are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination ca l l Economic Development Coordinator H UD t o l l-free a t Wheeler County, Oregon 1-800-877-0246. The This position coordinates and implements ecotoll f ree t e lephone nomic development plans and programs, pronumber for the hear- motes local economic development interests, ing i m paired is and supports regional tourism marketing. 1-800-927-9275. Grant seeking and administration required. Currently.75 FTE position w/ benefits. Application and Job Requirements available online at Just too many www.wheelercountyoregon.com and in the collectibles'? County Clerk's office, 701 Adams St, Fossil, OR 97830. Applications must be received in Sell them in the Wheeler County Clerk's office by 5:00 The Bulletin Classifieds p.m.,Monday, March 3, 2014. For questions call 541-763-2912.
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
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
541-385-5809 654
C ommunity Counseling Solutions i s recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center b d r m S E , locatedinJohn Day, OR.
l l l may be subjected to FRAUD. l more informa- I I For tion about an adver- • l tiser, you may call l the Oregon State l Attorney General's l s Office C o n s umer s l Protection hotline atl I 1-877-877-9392.
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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Pressroom
Night Supervisor
The Bulletin,1ocatedin beautiful Bend, Oregon is seeking a night time press supervisor. 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 manage a small crew of 3 and must have prior press experience. The candidate must be able to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on style is a requirement for our 3t/a tower KBA press. Prior management/leadership experience p referred. I n ad d ition t o our 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous commercial print clients as well. Besides a competitive wage, we also provide potential opportunity for advancement. If you provide dependability combined with a positive attitude, are able to manage people and schedules 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 and raise a family, let us hear from you.
Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at anelson@wescom a ers.com withyourcomplete resume, r eferences an d s a lary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
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 nsure 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. Please visit th e O r egon Employment Department or the Community Counseling Solutions website for an a pplication or contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Heppner, OR 97836.
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C ommunity Counseling Solutions i s recruiting for Registered Nurses to work at Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center locatedinJohn Day,OR.
WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential information to compaTreatment Facility providing services to nies offering loans or individuals with a severe mental illness. credit, especially those asking for adThese positions provide mental health vance loan fees or nursing care including medication oversight, companies from out of medication r e lated t r e atment, f o llow state. If you have concerns or quesphysician's prescriptions and procedures, measure and record patient's general tions, we suggest you consult your attorney p hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , or call CONSUMER temperature and respiration to provide daily HOTLINE, information, educate and train staff on 1-877-877-9392. medication administration, and e n sure documentation is kept according to policies. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party This position works with the treatment team will loan on real esto promote recovery from mental illness. tate equity. Credit, no This position includes telephone consultaproblem, good equity tion and crisis intervention in the facility. is all you need. Call Oregon Land MortQualified applicants must have a v alid gage 541-388-4200. Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's license at the time of hire, hold a valid LOCAL NIONEyrWe buy Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal secured trust deeds & history background check. Wages depennote,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev dent upon education and experience, but 541-382-3099 ext.13. will be between $48,000 to $72,000. Excellent benefit package, including signing Where can you find a bonus. helping hand? Please visit th e O regon Employment From contractors to Department or the Community Counseling yard care, it's all here Solutions website for an application or in The Bulletin's contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, "Call A Service Heppner, OR 97836. Professional" Directory
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0 ENCLOSED TRAILER 2 axle toy hauler, Can hold a small car or 3 quads. great shape! Chrome, Diamond plate many extras! $3,500 OBO 541-000-000
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903
541-385-5809
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ItemPriced af: Your Tofrfl Ad Cost onl: • Under $500.......................................................................$29 • $500 to $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499..............................................................$49 • $2500 and over...............................................................$59 Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
your ad will alsoappearin: • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace
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Some restrictions apply
'Private parly merchandise only - excludes pets & livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories.
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738- Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747- Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 - CrookCounty Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
caution when purchasing products or I Call The Sultetin At N ewer 4 master main l evel, services from out of a 541-385-5809 2100 SF, large yard, Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential l the area. Sending very n ice. $ 1 795. Treatment Facility providing services to Place Your Ad Or E-Mail c ash, checks, o r l credit i n formation At: www.bendbulletin.com 54f-480-9200 individuals with a severe mental illness.
LThe Bulletin Independent Contractor Sales
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EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
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541-548-4807 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
2013 Harley Davidson Dyna Wide Glide, black, only 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter cover, helmet. Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384 Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Triumph D a ytona 2004, 15K m i les, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.
$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend DreamcarsBend.com 541-878-0240 Dlr 3665
V ictory TC 9 2 ci 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665 870
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000 or best offer. 541-318-6049
Boats & Accessories
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishSay "goodbuy" ing, drift, canoe, to that unused house and sail boats. For all other types of item by placing it in watercraft, please go The Bulletin Classifieds to Class 875. 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
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Building/Contracting
o u r service Handyman
NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY law requires anyone SERVICES. Home & who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, construction work to Carpentry-Painting, be licensed with the Pressure-washing, Construction ContracHoney Do's. On -time tors Board (CCB). An promise. Senior active license Discount. Work guarmeans the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 is bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 Verify the contractor's Bonded & Insured CCB l i c ense at CCB¹t Bt 595 www.hirealicensedcontractor.com or call 503-378-4621. People Lookfor Information The Bulletin recomAbout Products and mends checking with Services Every Daythrough the CCB prior to con- The SvlletinC/assilfeds tracting with anyone. Some other t rades also req u ire additional licenses and Landscaping/Yard Care certifications. NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law Debris Removal (ORS 671) requires all businesses that adJUNK BE GONE vertise t o pe r form I Haul Away FREE Landscape ConstrucFor Salvage. Also tion which includes: Cleanups & Cleanouts p lanting, deck s , fences, arbors, Mel, 541-389-8107 water-features, and installation, repair of irDomestic Services rigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e A ssisting Seniors a t Landscape ContracHome. Light house keeping & other ser tors Board. This 4-digit number is to be invices. Licensed Bonded. BBB Certi cluded in all advertisements which indified. 503-756-3544 cate the business has a bond, insurance and Handyman workers compensation for their employI DO THAT! ees. For your protecHome/Rental repairs tion call 503-378-5909 Small jobs to remodels or use our website: Honest, guaranteed www.lcb.state.or.us to work. CCB¹151573 check license status Dennis 541-317-9768 before contracting with Just bought a new boat? the business. Persons Sell your old one in the doing lan d scape classifieds! Ask about our maintenance do not Super Seller rates! r equire an LC B l i cense. 541-385-5809
THE BULLETIN o WEDNESDAY, FEB 12, 2014
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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii $bprtz
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ACROSS 1 Measage indicating "adult beverages not supplied" 5 Cowboy'5 prod 9Analyze, as a sentence 14Karl who advised Bush 43 1SGive the onceover 16Amazon.com'8 line 17[Attention, please
35Washing-up spot? 66 Great Plains tribe 36 Channel for the 67 Davis with a character named 1988 Oscar by the ends of 68 "Omigosh!" 18-, 24-, 5269All of these may and 59-Across be off 40 Morticia, to Fester, on "The Addams Family" DOWN 42 Mummy's place 1 Like a spoiled kid 43 Big Brother's 2 Start of a pirate'5 creator refrain 45 Be momentarily 3 No longer fazed by bothered 51 Navigate a 4 Candy heart biathlon course, "] request say 18Tub accessory 5 Melodramatic 20OuffielderHunter 52 New Year's Eve response hot spot with nine Gold 6 FedExCup org. Gloves SSShe,in Salerno 7 Michelob 22Mob tumcoat 57 Lavatory sign (light brew) 23 European capital 58Throatbug, BFix up, as a until 1990 briefly building 24 Doohickey 59 2011 Tina Fey 9 r al l y autobiography 28 Frequent hoax subj. bit of 630ne of a jungle 10Tiny progress couple 29 Latin lover's declaration 11 Left in the lurch 64Tickle 30 Manse occupant 65Occasionto eat 12Accept officially, as a package 32 Ear-related POI 13 "Gee, I think you're swell" girl ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE of a 19608 song S AC S I I M I V O D K A 19 Knock off H UL U F R OS I T R I P 21 Supermarket OD I N K I L LE R B E E S franchise chain G EOD E N T E S T S L O 25 In a frenzy I NS A N E A 5 Y LU M 5 26 Church choir ETC A US T song R B I R A D I C A LS I G N 27 Location in a A RN O R E D OS E Z I 0 game of tag W IC K E D W I T C H E F T 31 "Homeland" T UR N AAA network, for short 8 A D M 0 0 N R I 5 I N G 33 U.N. workers' B O A W A H O O R ID E R agcy. I ST H I S G O O D A I R E 34 Part makers F L EA S OL I 0 N OV A Initial public F OSS E D A L I S T E T 36 offering
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
A finesse that gains nothing even if it wins has been known as a "Chinese finesse." But bridge is big in China; i ts t e am s a re doi n g wel l internationally. So to treat the term as disparaging is inappropriate. At 6N T t o day's declarer has options: not only which major suit to attack first but how to go about it. A novice player might lead the jack of spades orqueen of hearts. Neither play could gain against best defense. Beforeyou read on, form a plan of play.
and he bids one spade. What do you say? ANSWER: This is a classic case of responder's obligation to place the contract at his second turn if possible. Bid 3NT. If your hand were J 4, A J 7 4 3, K 5, A 7 3 2, you would be less certain of the best contract and would force with a bid of two clubs, giving your partner a chance to bid notrump or to show belated heait support. South dealer N-S vtdnerable NORTH 4 AK7 5 2
3-3 BREAK
QQ6
OK72 4AK5
South should win the first diamond with the ace and start the hearts, leading low toward dummy's queen. If East had the king, South would need a 3-3 heart break. As the cards lie, South has 12 tricks if West takes the king, so West ducks. With two heart tricks in the bag, South leads a spade toward his jack. If West had the queen, South would need a 3-3 spade break. But when East takes the queen, South is home with four spades, two hearts, two diamonds and four clubs. Did you find the best play?
WEST 4596 Iv) K1085
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SOUTH 45 J4 Q AJ74 3 OA5
4Q J97 S outh 1 Ivl 2 NT
DAILY QUESTION
We s t Pass Pas s
Nor t h 24 6 NT
Eas t Pass AII P a ss
Youhold: 4 J 4 Q A J 7 4 3 Opening lead — 0 Q 0 A5 4 Q J 9 7 . Yourpartner opens one diamond, you respond one heart (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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No. 0108
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PUZZLE BY SAM EZERSKY ANO VICTOR FLEMING
37 Puck handler's surface 38 Bill Russell or Larry Bird, briefly 39 Some substantial hits: Abbr. 40 Feeder in a stable 41 Annoying 44 Evidence of an ankle sprain
53 Like the conslstency of an old apple
46 Stanford-Binet
figs.
47Weirdo
54 Yawn inducer 48Activitythat includes 56 Part of 6-Down: roundhouse kicks A b br. 49"Amtoo!"
60 Roll-call call
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61 Keg feature
50 Homes for the 66-Across
62 Drag to court
For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nyfimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nyfimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nyiimes.com/learning/xwords.
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nest egg 25 Hippy dance 28 1963 Newman film 29 Ousted Iranian 33 Arctic "snowshoe" critters 34 Quizzical sounds 35 Bears owner/coach who won eight NFL titles in four different decades 37 Singer Piaf
47 Tremulous glow 50 Except 54 Beeline 59 "Hava Nagila" dance 60 Different 62 Worker welfare OI'g.
63 Progress slowly 64 Organ with chambers 65 Son of Odin 66 Sinister chuckles
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ANSIER TOPREVIOUS PUZZLE:
8 "COnsarn it!"
9 Motrin target 10 Those folks 11 Suffragette Julia Ward 13 Former Labor secretary Elaine 14 Where she blows 20 Vehicle safety measure 22 Jug band percussion instrument 24 "Say what?" 25 Tackled 26 "Vega$" actor 27 Mythical river of forgeffulneSS 1
2
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H GA S E AG H R R A I B A D I V AR E N A B E R L I N A B U P E T C LO B S RO A EL A N D O R D AD A I S T UG L I A A L B B R E A CA D G E C R TR U E R C O S A B O T E N xwordeditoriaol.com
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OW N S N E U P O B L Y A L S D D E D A D E R G E M E G A S I N A S E S R G B A D Y O G A L I E N E L S A 02/12/14
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By JtmHorne and JeffChen (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
02/12/14
E6 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
975
Automobiles
Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, S-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt @ 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648
Olds 98 REgency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. 82000. 541-389-9377
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
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 $39,700 541-322-9647
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, $69,700. 541-322-9647
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE CENLAR FSB, Plaintiff/s, v. DAVID M ARTIN; M O R T GAGE ELECTRONIC R E GISTRATION SYSTEMS, I N C .; TAYLOR, BEAN & WHITAKER MORTGAGE C ORP.; FIRS T RATE PROPERTY M GMT LLC; D EPARTMENT OF THE TREASURYI NTERNAL R E V ENUE S E RVICE; O CCUPANTS O F THE P ROPERTY, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0107. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will on March 4, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1075 Park v iew C ourt, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office to review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.or-
egonsheri ff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE
JPMorgan C hase Bank, National Association, its s uccessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Brian J. Carroll; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.:
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
NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 7 , 2014 at 10:00 AM in '10 - 3 lines, 7 days the main lobby of '16 -3 lines, 14 days the Desc h utes (Private Party ads only) County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, Subaru Legacy 2012 3.6R Limited. 26k mi. O regon, sell, a t ¹004365 $2 3 ,968 public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for cash o r cashier's check, the real property com541-598-3750 m only known a s www.aaaoregonauto17051 Gle n dale source.com R oad, Bend, O r egon 97707. CondiToyota Celica tions of Sale: PoConvertible 1993 tential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office to review bid d er's GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 f unds. Only U . S. speed, a/c, pw, pdl, currency an d / or nicest c o nvertible cashier's c h e cks around in this price made payable to range, new t i res, Deschutes County wheels, clutch, timSheriff's Office will ing belt, plugs, etc. be accepted. Pay111K mi., remarkment must be made able cond. i nside in full immediately and out. Fun car to upon the close of drive, Must S E E! the sale. For more $5995. R edmond. information on this 541-504-1993 sale go to: www.or-
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
12CV1227.
egonsheri ff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE
JPMorgan C hase Bank, National Association, its s ucin interest V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 cessors ass i gns, AWD, sunroof, lux/winter and/or v. Joshua pkgs, new tires, more! Plaintiff/s, Tam e ra $79775 obo.541-330-5818 S auter; Sauter; Northwest Community Credit Looking for your Union; Occupants of next employee? the Premises and Place a Bulletin help the Real Property wanted ad today and located at 1 6 0 20 reach over 60,000 Cascade Lane, La readers each week. P ine, Orego n Your classified ad 97739, Defendant/s. will also appear on Case No.: bendbulletin.com 13CV0083. NOwhich currently reT ICE O F SAL E ceives over 1.5 milUNDER WRIT OF lion page views EXECUTION every month at REAL PROPERTY. no extra cost. BulleNotice i s h e r eby tin Classifieds given that the DesGet Results! Call c hutes Coun t y 385-5809 or place Sheriff's Office will your ad on-line at o n February 2 7 , bendbulletin.com 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes I The Bulletin recoml County Sheriff's Ofmends extra cautionI fice, 6 3 33 3 W. when p u r chasing I Highway 20, Bend, f products or services O regon, sell, a t from out of the area. public oral auction f S ending c ash , to the highest bidchecks, or credit in- q d er, for c ash o r formation may be I cashier's check, the [ subject to FRAUD. real property comFor more informam only known as f tion about an adver16020 Cas c ade tiser, you may call Lane, La Pine, OrI the Oregon Statel egon 97739. CondiAttorney General's ~ tions of Sale: PoOffice C o nsumer I tential bidders must f Protection hotline at arrive 15 minutes 1-877-877-9392. prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Serving Central Oregon sinceSIB Sheriff's Office to
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review bid d er's funds. Only U .S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan C h ase Bank, NA as successor by merger to C hase Home F i nance, LLC, its successors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Lance Lindbeck AKA Lance R a y mond Lindbeck; D e s ert Meadows H omeowners Association; Sheri Lynn L indbeck; and O c cupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0228. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 7, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the real property commonly known as 865 N ortheast Sh o s hone Court, Red-
m ond,
Ore g on
97756. C o nditions of Sale: P o tential bidders must arrive
15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's
checks made pay-
able to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, Plaintiff/s, v. Adam Buchanan; O ccupants of t h e Property, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0703. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will on March 4, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County Sheriff's Off i c e, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1215 SW 32nd Ct, Redmond, Oregon 97756-6470. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d er's funds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriffs.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JP MORGA N CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, its s ucces-
sors i n int e rest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. J E FF ERY R . B U S HN ELL AK A J E F FREY BUSHNELL;
AND OCCUPANTS OF T H E PRE MISES, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0135. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 0, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c as h o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s
1957 Sou t hwest 24th St., Redmond, O regon 977 5 6 .
Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan C hase Bank, National Association, its s uccessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Christian W . Bu r k ert; Rachel Bur k ert; Summit Crest Homeowners' Assoc iation, Inc.; a n d O ccupants of t h e Premises, D efendant/s. Case No.:
12CV1203. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 7, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, s ell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for cash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 4820 So u t hwest Umatilla A v e nue, Redmond, Oregon 97756. C onditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h i s sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE JPMorgan C h ase
Bank, National Association, its s uccessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff/s, v. Daniel J. Bauer AKA Daniel Joseph Bauer; State of Oregon; and Occupants of the Premises, Defendant/s. Case No.:
13CV0206. NOT ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 5, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, s ell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for cash o r cashier's check, the real property comm only known a s 2 0030 Volt e r a P lace, Bend, O regon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.or-
egonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm
LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar M o rtLLC, gage Plaintiff/s, v. Louise M. Kreft; Mark Devoney; U.S. Bank National A s sociation ND; City View Owners Association Inc.; Occupants of the Property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 12CV0394. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will on March 6, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e ,
63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1 296 C it y V i e w D rive, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must ardive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE N ationstar M o rtgage LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Trevor D. Shores; Janay Shores; Capital One Bank (USA), N.A.; Webster Bank, N.A.; OSU Federal Credit Union; Ray K lein Inc.; Occupants of the Property, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0342. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will o n February 2 7 , 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of the Desc h utes County Sheriff's Office, 6 3 33 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, O regon, sell, a t public oral auction to the highest bidd er, for c ash o r cashier's check, the
real property com-
m only known a s 3291 NE J o nahs C ourt, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Nationstar Mortgage, LLC, its successors and/or assigns, Plaint iff/s, v. R obyn M . Kimball; Heather A. Kimball; and All Other Persons or P arties Unknown c l a iming any right, title, lien or interest in the Real Property commonly known as 20652 Wild Goose Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0098. NOTICE OF SALE U NDER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on M arch 17, 2 014 a t
10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s c hutes Coun t y Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 20652 WildGoose Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. TAMMY J. I A MS; SUN MEA D OW OWNERS A S SOCIATION; O CCUP ANTS O F T H E P ROPERTY, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0372. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will on March 4, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County
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Legal Notices S heriff's Of fi c e , ECUTION - REAL 63333 W. Highway PROPERTY. Notice is 20, Bend, Oregon, hereby given that the sell, at public oral Deschutes C o u nty auction to the highSheriff's Office will on est bidder, for cash March 13, 2014 at or cashier's check, 10:00 AM in the main the real p roperty lobby of t h e D e scommonly known as chutes County 20569 Sun Meadow Sheriff's Office, 63333 Way, Bend, Oregon W. Highway 20, Bend, 97702. Conditions Oregon, sell, at public of Sale: P o tential o ral auction to t h e bidders must arrive h ighest bidder, f or 15 minutes prior to cash o r ca s hier's the auction to allow check, the real propthe Desc h utes erty commonly known County Sheriff's Ofas 55015 Mallard Dr., f ice to revi e w Bend, Oregon 97707. bidder's funds. Only Conditions of S ale: U.S. currency Potential bidders must and/or ca s hier's arrive 15 minutes prior checks made payto the auction to allow able to Deschutes the Deschutes County County Sheriff's OfSheriff's Office to ref ice will b e a c view bidder's funds. cepted. P a y ment Only U.S. currency must be made in full and/or cashier's immediately u pon checks made payable t he close of t h e to Deschutes County sale. For more inSheriff's Office will be f ormation on t h is accepted. P ayment sale go to: www.ormust be made in full egonsheriffs.com/sa immediately upon the les.htm close of the sale. For more information on LEGAL NOTICE this s al e g o to: OCWEN LOAN SER- www.oregonsheriffs.c VICING, LLC, om/sales.htm Plaintiff/s, v. DONNA A. ARRIGHI; DONNA LEGAL NOTICE A. ARRIGHI, U.S. Bank National T RUSTEE OF T H E Association, as DONNA A ARRIGHI Trustee, in Trust for REVOCABLE LIVING Registered Holders TRUST, U/T/A of M errill L y nch DATED MAY, 2006; Mortgage Investors PERSONS OR PAR- Trust, Mo r t gage TIES UNK N OWN Loan Asset-Backed CLAIMING ANY Certificates, Series RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN O R INTEREST I N THE PRO P E RTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 13CV0265. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on February 20, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e D e schutes County Sheriff 's Office,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e highest bidder, f or cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 3010 SW Obsidian Lane, Redmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
2006-HE6,
Plaintiff/s, v. M. Sarah Holmes; Michael E. Holmes; CitiFinancial, Inc.; EGP Investments, LLC; O ccupants of t h e Property, D e fendant/s. Case No.: 13CV0653. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice i s h e r eby given that the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office will on March 6, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1846 N E 13th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: P otential bidders must arrive 15 m inutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Cou n t y S heriff's Office t o review bid d er's f unds. Only U . S. currency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately LEGAL NOTICE upon the close of O NEWEST B A N K , the sale. For more F SB, Plaintiff/s, v . information on this NICHOLAS FLORES; sale go to: www.orMELISSA V IELMA; egonsheriff s.com/sa OREGON A FFORD- les.htm ABLE HOUSING ASSISTANCE CORPOLEGAL NOTICE RATION; AND U.S. B A N K NAPERSONS OR PAR- TIONAL A S SOCIATIES UNK N OWN TION, Plaintiff/s, v. CLAIMING ANY LAWRENCE PERIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, T ERS; AN D P E R O R I NTEREST I N SONS OR PARTIES THE PRO P ERTY UNKNOWN C LAIMDESCRIBED IN THE ING AN Y R I G HT, COMPLAINT TITLE, LIEN, OR INHEREIN, T EREST I N THE D efendant/s. C a s e PROPERTY DENo.: 13CV0733. NO- S CRIBED I N T H E TICE OF SALE UN- COMPLAINT DER WRIT OF EXHEREIN, ECUTION - REAL D efendant/s. C a s e PROPERTY. Notice is No.: 13CV0219. NOhereby given that the TICE OF SALE UNDeschutes C o u nty DER WRIT OF EXSheriff's Office will on ECUTION - REAL February 20, 2014 at PROPERTY. Notice is 10:00 AM in the main hereby given that the l obby of t h e D e s- Deschutes C o u nty chutes County Sheriff's Office will on Sheriff 's Office,63333 February 20, 2014 at W. Highway 20, Bend, 10:00 AM in the main Oregon, sell, at public l obby of t h e D e s o ral auction to t h e chutes County h ighest bidder, f o r Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 cash o r ca s hier's W. Highway 20, Bend, check, the real prop- Oregon, sell, at public erty commonly known o ral auction to t h e as 1734 NW Larch h ighest bidder, f o r Ave., Redmond, Or- cash o r ca s hier's egon 97756. Condi- check, the real proptions of Sale: Poten- erty commonly known t ial b i dders m u s t a s 1565 N E B e a r arrive 15 minutes prior Creek Rd., Bend, Orto the auction to allow egon 97701. Condithe Deschutes County tions of Sale: PotenSheriff's Office to re- t ial b i dders m u s t view bidder's funds. arrive 15 minutes prior Only U.S. currency to the auction to allow and/or cashier's the Deschutes County checks made payable Sheriff's Office to reto Deschutes County view bidder's funds. Sheriff's Office will be Only U.S. currency accepted. P ayment and/or cashier's must be made in full checks made payable immediately upon the to Deschutes County close of the sale. For Sheriff's Office will be more information on accepted. P ayment this s al e go to: must be made in full www.oregonsheriffs.c immediately upon the om/sales.htm close of the sale. For more information on LEGAL NOTICE this s al e go to: OneWest Bank, FSB, www.oregonsheriffs.c Plaintiff/s, v. Valerie J. om/sales.htm Fulmer; Turner Building and Design, Inc.; LEGAL NOTICE Steve Woolley; State U.S. Bank National of Oregon, Employ- Association, as ment D e p artment;Trustee f o r BN C Persons or P a rties Mortgage Loan Trust Unknown c l a iming 2007-1 Mor t gage any right, title, lien or Pass-Through Certifiinterest in the Prop- cates, Series 2007-1, erty described in the Plaintiff/s, v. Jeffrey S. M. complaint her e in, Powers, Jud y D efendant/s. C a s e Powers, and Persons No.: 11CV1130. NO- or Parties Unknown TICE OF SALE UN- claiming any r i ght, DER WRIT OF EX- title, lien, or interest in
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1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
t he P r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o . : 13CV0475. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o tice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on M arch 13, 2014 a t 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 3010 N E R o ck Chuck Dr., Bend, Oregon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potent ial b i dders m u s t arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE U .S. B AN K N A TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS T RUSTEE, S U C C ESSOR I N I N TEREST TO BANK OF AMERICA, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE AS S U CCESSOR BY MERGER TO L ASALLE BAN K NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS
TRUSTEE FOR CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF BEAR S T EARNS ASSET B A CKED SECURITIES I LLC, ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-AQ1, through its loan serv icing agent J P MORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A., Plaintiff/s, v. CHRISTINA L. GAGE; BRYCE J. GAGE; H A Y DEN RANCH ESTATES HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION; F IRST SEL E CT CORP.; STATE OF O REGON, DI V I SION O F C H I LD S UPPORT; L I S A ANN GAGE; CAPITAL ON E B A N K; OCCUPANTS OF THE P R OPERTY, Defendant/s. Case No.: 13C V 0267. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. Notice is h e reby given that the Desc hutes Cou n t y Sheriff's Office will on March 4, 2014 at 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of the Deschutes County S heriff's Of fi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder for cash or cashier's check, the real p roperty commonly known as 1390 Northeast 3rd St., Redmond, OR, O regon 977 5 6 . Conditions of Sale: Potential b i d ders must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or cashier's c h e cks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa les.htm LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo B ank, N.A. as Trustee for WAMU Mor t gage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2 005-PR4 Trus t , Plaintiff/s, v. Jesse D. R oberts; Maria D . Roberts; J P Morgan Chase Bank, National Association; A m erican Express Centurion Bank; Sagewood Owners Association, Inc.; Other Persons or Parties, including Occupants, U n k nown claiming any r ight, title, lien or interest in t he P r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Cas e N o . : 1 3CV1048FC. N O TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on February 27, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e D e schutes County Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r
cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 61475 Elder Ridge Street, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P ayment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e g o to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm LEGAL NOTICE Wilmington Trust National Association, as Successor Trustee to C itiBank, N .A., a s Trustee f o r BN C Mortgage Loan Trust Series 2007-3, Plaintiff/s, v. Andrew Stalberg, and Persons or Parties Unk n own claiming any r ight, title, lien, or interest in t he p r operty d e scribed in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Cas e N o . : 13CV0195. NOTICE OF SALE U N DER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will on March 13, 2014 at 10:00 AM in the main lobby of t h e D e sc hutes Count y Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's check, the real property commonly known as 8515 5th Street, Terrebonne Oregon 97760. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale. For more information on this s al e go to: www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm
PUBLIC NOTICE
On
Wed n esday,
March 12, 2014, at 10
a.m. in t h e B oard Hearing Room of the Deschutes C o unty Services Bu i l ding 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, O