Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
THURSDAY FebrUary12, 201 5
ese a ras sis ersareon amission bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD CigaretteS —Anewstudy links tobacco to more diseases — and more deaths.A6
• Kitzhaber digs in, but sources sayhe took steps to quit By Jonathan J. Cooper
fiancee, but he changed his
The Associated Press
mind for reasons that are un-
SALEM — Embattled Ore-
gon Gov. John Kitzhaber had reacheda decisionto resign because of an ethics scandal surrounding him and his
clear, three people with direct knowledge of the situation said Wednesday. They said the Democratic governor informed some of
to The Associated Press
Hours later, Kitzhaber issued
on condition of anonymity
a statement saying he would stayput. "Let me be as clear as I
his aides on Sunday that he was going to resign and on Tuesday he asked his wouldbe successor, Secretary of
because they were not authorized to talk about private dhscusshons. Brown's abrupt and un-
State Kate Brown, to rush
explained return to Oregon sparked speculation that
back from a conference in Washington, D.C. They spoke
Chocolate —Just in time for Valentine's Day: measuring its lead content.A6
War powers —Obamafor-
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Politicians
sad to see Jon Stewart
go (theysay)
Bend Ale Trail
By Andrew Clevenger
venues
Bend has a well-deserved reputation as a great
The Bulletin
WASHINGTON-
Drinkable Detour venues
place to get a beer, thanks in part to the success of the Bend Ale Trail. Now, Visit Bend, the tourism-promotion agency that initially came up with the Ale
Trail, is launching Drinkable Detours along the Bend Ale Trail to bring the same type of attention to the region's wineries, distilleries and other beverage makers. "With the growth and creativity happening in
t ius
lawsuits filed by the American Civil Liberties Union and The New York Times,
C Iver
MaragasWinery
urging the court to require
Three Creeks BrewingCe.
, Faith,Hepeand Charity Vineyards
Bend's alternative beverage industry, we believe it's
the right time to increase our marketing support behind this important segment of Bend's economy,"
Oregon's U.S. senators weighed in Wednesday on
Visit Bend came up with the idea last year. The agency plans to launch Drinkable Detours as a sister
PowellBu e
cial date has not been set. "Thereare a lotofpeople who come here forbeer
Information Act in 2011.
tourism, but not everyone likes beer," said Drew Wil-
rea eal
Bend
son, spokesman for Red Tank Cider Co., one of the businesses taking part in Drinkable Detours. "So I
The following year, after the administration refused
Alfalf
to release the opinions
think it really helps to have spirits and gluten-free options for everyone else." See Trail /A5
and memos, citing FOIA exemptions designed to protect national security, the organizations sued in
New York Times News Service
federal court. The court
I
WASHINGTON — He
m irw'htve h
has allbut called them losers and fools, but when
Bend AleTrail venues
9 ALE I
CD
TR A IL
Riverhenti BrewingCe.
Spirtt Bistiiiers
, utl)r Market
Cider Bend BrewingCe.
Silver Noon Brewing
By Simon Denyer
Werthy Brewing
QeschntesBrewery Pnhiic House
bored no ill will.
Graham's response is a perfect example of the kind
Hnmm ttemhncha
N wPhh v.
10 Barrel BrewingCe.
senator said in an interview Wednesdaythat he har-
show before it's over with."
Fighting for China's jilted wives
Far Afield
art cried as a six-person ensemblemarched onstage playing"When the Saints Go Marching In."
Does Graham ever feel
have appealed that ruling. SeeDrone/A5
Oregon
into a fit of sarcastic ecstasy. "Thank you, Jesus!" Stew-
offended? "No," he said. "I'm going to try to go on that
GeedLite Brewing
BeneyardBeer
out his possessions and emptying their joint bank
' edr Crildk Rd.
account, she felt as though
the sky had fallen on her head.
RedTank '
Cider Ce.
Stewart's favorite targets often express. The joke may
Ih"Qe
be at their expense. But
Rat Hole
Naked Winery
they're laughing nonetheless. In interviews, some of ists who found themselves in Stewart's commentary talked with fear and ad-
Cascade lakes BrewingCe.
But after a week in
which she barely ate or slept, her pain and anger
Atlas Harl Cider Ce.
skeweredthem, theymattered — even if they might wince a little at what they
heard. See Stewart/A5
were channeled into a new determination: to find
out who his mistress was, where they were living and why he had turned his back on 16 years of marriage — and to force him to provide proper financial support for her and their young son.
Brewing
Beschntes Brewery tasting room
miration abouthis ability to shape, create and tear down popular perception, especially among younger voters. And they said they knew that if Jon Stewart
BEIJING — When
Zhang Yufen's husband finally admitted to having an affair and left her to live with his mistress, clearing
Crux Fermentatien """.. Project
Volcano Vineyards
The Washington Post
McMenamins
of conflicted sentiments that
the politicians and journal-
some legal opinions, but sided with the government against releasing all of the requested documents. The ACLU and Times
Cascade Alchemy
sey Graham, R-S.C., whose recent announcement that he was considering a run forpresident sent Stewart
Graham, a foreign-policy hawk, "delusional," but the
Drinkable Detour venues
CI I
hard time, I understand that I've arrived," said Sen. Lind-
Stewart went on to call
requiredthe release of
LEGEND
f
Jon Stewart announced
fication for lethal drone
Times requested the legal justifications produced by the Justice Department's Office of Legal Council under the Freedom of
Bendistiiiery
program to the Ale Trail this month, although an offi-
to release its legal justiBoth the ACLU and the
Redmond P
Siste
Doug La Placa, CEO of Visit Bend, wrote in an email.
the Obama administration
strikes.
T
By Jeremy W.Peters
Tuesdaythathe would leave "The Daily Show" sometime this year, manypoliticians and news mediapersonalities had something of an unusual reaction: grief. "When he gives me a
SeeKitzhaber/A5
Merkley 'Drinkable Detours' from the Bend Ale Trail and Wyden highlights makers of beverages beyond beer seek drone justification By StephenHamway eThe Bulletin
"Innovation officers" popular with states, local governments, but some question their value. beedbeiietie.cem/extras
Kitzhaber said in a statement.
IN D.C.
mally petitions Congress.A2
And a Wed exclusive-
intention of resigning as Governor of the state of Oregon,"
Kitzhaber planned to quit.
JuiCing —The market keeps growing. Is the latest health food (or health drink) craze here to stay?D1 Rtiilillilg Or no't. — Presidential campaigns havebeen slow to officially kick off.A4
was last week, that I have no
See Wives /A4
GregCross/The Bulletin
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 61, Low34 Page B6
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Df-6 Obituaries B5 C5 - 6 C omics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Cf-4 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sp orts Ef - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B f - 6 TV/Movies D6
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. 43,
30 pages, 5 sections
Q I/ire use recyclnewspri ed nt
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaChuS
'AmeriCan Sniper' trial —Shortly before hewasshot to death by a troubled former Marine at aTexas gun range, legendary Navy SEAL sniper Chris Kyle texted a buddy, "This dude is straight-up nuts," a defense attorney told jurors Wednesday. Alawyer for Eddie Ray Routh said in opening statements of the man's murder trial that Routh's insanity was so evident that Kyle and his friend ChadLittlefield exchanged texts expressing alarm as the three rode together in February 2013 to aTexas shooting range. "He's (sitting) right behind me, watch my six," Littlefield texted back, using a military reference for watching one's back. But a prosecutor said Routh still knew right from wrong, even with a history of mental illness.
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KeyStOne pipeline —The Republican-controlled Congress cleared a bill Wednesday to construct the Keystone XL oil pipeline, setting up a confrontation with President Barack Obama,who has threatened to veto the measure. TheHouse passed the bill on a 270-152 vote, endorsing changes made bythe Senatethat stated climate changewas real and not a hoax, and oil sands should no longer be exempt from a tax used to cleanup oil spills. Only oneRepublican, Michigan Rep.Justin Amash, voted against the measure, while 29 Democrats backed it. But neither the Housenor the Senate has enough votes to overcome aveto, the first of many skirmishes between the Democratic White Houseand Congress on energy and environmental policy.
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Hameland SeCurity dill —HouseSpeakerJohn Boehner
Jacquelyn Martin /The Associated Press
challenged Senate Democrats Wednesday to "get off their ass" and pass a bill to fund the Homeland Security Department and restrict President Barack Obama's executive moves on immigration. His comments seemed unlikely to changeSenate Democrats' behavior. But they underscored a worsening stalemate on Capitol Hill with funding for the Homeland Security Department set to expire Feb. 27. A day earlier, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell declared the Senate "stuck" on the issue andsaid the next move was in the House's court.
President Barack Obama, flanked by Vice President Joe Biden and Secretary of State John Kerry, speaks about the Islamic State group Wednesday in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington. Obama asked the U.S. Congress on Wednesday to authorize military force to "degrade and defeat" Islamic State forces in the Middle East without sustained, large-scale U.S. ground combat operations, setting lawmakers on a path toward their first war powers vote in 13 years.
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Greek bailOut —Talks between Greeceand its creditors in the 19-country eurozone broke down today without agreement or even a plan of action on how to moveforward on the country's debts and bailout. Following an emergency meeting of the eurogroup in Brussels, the two sides failed to even issue astatement, a sign that a compromise deal over Greece's debts at next Monday's follow-up meeting will be a struggle. Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the head of the eurogroup of finance ministers, said detailed proposals weren't even discussed, adding that there wasn't enough common ground to chart the road to the next meeting.
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ByKaren DeYoung
him "the flexibility we need
The Washington Post
for unforeseen circumstanc-
WASHINGTON —
P r esi- es," including ground deploy-
day to discuss next steps. Obama, flanked at a White
House appearance by Vice
ment of Special Operations President Joe Biden and his forces for r e scue missions secretaries of state and dethority to use military force and unspecified assistance to fense, said his strategy of against the Islamic State set local forces. using U.S. and coalition airthe stage for the first broad Many D e mocrats c a lled strikes against the militants, congressional debate over the that restriction too vague. "It's and bolstering local ground administration's strategy in a very broad grant of author- forces to push them back, was Syria and Iraq. ity ... that leaves wide open succeeding. "This is a difficult mission, Looking toward what could the possibility of real engagebe months of hearings and ment of U.S. combat forces on and it will remain difficult for significant changes in White the ground in Iraq and Syria," some time," he said. "But our House language before a fi- said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, coalition is on the offensive, nal vote, Republicans seek- D-Md. ISIL is on the defensive, and ing a broader authority, and Others said the authority ISIL is going to lose." ISIL is Democrats hoping to narrow did not go far enough. "The an acronym for the Islamic the President's war options, president must articulate and State. staked out widely divergent implement a comprehensive The n e w au t h o rization positions. strategy that gives our mili- would also repeal the 2002 House Speaker John Boeh- tary experts and command- AUMF under which President ner, R-Ohio, said O b ama, ers the agility and authority George W. Bush invaded Iraq, is also "going to have to go they need to successfully con- but it would leave in place the out and make his case to the front this increasingly dan- 2001 authorization against American people. The deliv- gerous and complex threat," the al-Qaida perpetrators of ery of t his authorization is said Rep. Michael Turner, the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. the beginning of a legislative R-Ohio. "Today's request by Both have been cited by the process." the president does not meet O bama a d m inistration a s The requested Authoriza- that criteria." legal justification for its milition for the Use of Military Senior Republicans, includ- tary action in Iraq and Syria. Force, or AUMF, would pering SenateArmed Services Obama has said that the mit ongoing airstrikes and Chairman John McCain of war is likely to continue beU.S. military training for lo- Arizona, whose committee yond his administration. Incal ground forces in Iraq and will consider the bill, have cluding a three-year limitation Syria for the next three years, said that ground forces might on the authorization was "not while prohibiting "enduring be needed and that nothing a timetable," he said Wednesoffensive ground combat should be ruled out in con- day. "It is no t a n nouncing operations." It includes no fronting the dire threat posed that the mission is completgeographic limitations on a b y the I slamic State. In a ed at any given period. What possible extension of the war statement late Wednesday, it is saying is that Congress beyond those two countries McCain expressed "deep con- should revisit the issue at the in pursuit of the Islamic State cerns" about what he called beginning of the next presiand "associated persons or Obama's "narrow definition dent's term. It's conceivable forces." of strategy" and called the that the mission is completed "It is not the authorization proposal a"recipeforfailure." earlier. It's conceivable that of another ground war, like McCain andForeign Rela- after deliberation, debate and Afghanistan or Iraq," Obama tions Committee Chairman evaluation, that there are adsaid in a White House appear- Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn., met ditional tasks to be carried out ance. But he said it would give with GOP senators Wednes- in this area."
Gaza inquiry —The Canadian law professor who resigned this month as head of aU.N. inquiry into last summer's Gazaconflict said his appointment had beentroubled from the outset by intense pressure from Israel's government, which accused him of a pro-Palestinian bias. William Schabasalso said hehad beensubjected to a stream of vulgar emails and somethreats. Schabas resigned after the United Nations began aninquiry into a possible conflict of interest by him, in response to an Israeli complaint that he haddone consulting workfor the Palestine Liberation Organization. Schabas acknowledged having done thework, but asserted it was irrelevant to his objectivity.
dent Barack Obama's formal request Wednesday for au-
Captain COnViCted —An Italian court Wednesday convicted the captain of a cruise liner that capsized in 2012, killing 32 people, of manslaughter and sentenced him to just over16 years in prison for his role in one of the worst maritime disasters in modern Italian history. Francesco Schettino, 54, was convicted of multiple counts of manslaughter, causing a shipwreck andabandoning the vessel, the Costa Concordia, before all of its 4,229 passengers and crew members had beenevacuated. The captain's lawyers said they would appeal the verdict. Schettino will remain free in the meantime; under Italian law, the appeals process can takeyears to resolve. — Fromwirereports
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for supporting the separatists or ... spins out of control," PoThe Associated Press with troops and equipment, roshenko said upon arriving. MINSK, Belarus — Intense which Russia vehemently deRussian Foreign Minister t alks on ending the war i n nies it is doing. Sergey Lavrov signaled some Ukraine entered the 14th hour The urgency felt by all sides progress, saying late Wednestoday asthe leaders ofRussia, appeared to be underlined by day that the talks were "active, Ukraine, France and Germany the extraordinary length and better than super." But it was sought to untangle a compli- discomfort of the talks be- unclear when a decision might cated skein of military and po- tween the leaders of Ukraine, be announced — and h ow litical issues. Russia, France and Germany. soon the shooting would stop if More than 5,300people have They sat down with each other an agreement is reached. died since April in the fighting Wednesday evening in the BeA top rebel official, Andrei between Ukrainian forces and larusian capital and the talks Purgin, told Russian televiRussia-backed separatists in continued amid daylight today sion that it might take a day or two eastern provinces and the more than 14 hours later. more for hostilities to end even bloodshed rose sharply in reIn a diplomatic blitz that if a cease-fire is called. cent weeks. began last week, German Details of a possible peace Despite the ongoing talks, Chancellor Angela Merkel dealhaven'tbeen released,but both rebels and government and French President Fran- key sticking points include a troops reported fighting across cois Hollande visited Kiev and new line of division, withdraweastern Ukraine. Moscow to speak to Ukrainian ing Russian troops and equipAs President Barack Obama President Petro Poroshenko ment from eastern Ukraine, considers rising calls at home and Russian President Vlad- securing the Ukraine-Russia for sending U.S. lethal aid to imir Putin, paving the way borderand giving theseparatUkraine, European leaders for the marathon session in ists more autonomy. fear that would only aggravate Minsk. At a n ews conference in "The entire world is waiting Moscow, Lavrov said there the fight. Russia, meanwhile, faces a severe economic down- to see whether the situation was "notable progress" in the turn driven in part by sanc- moves toward de-escalation, peace process, but gave no tions the West has imposed weapons pullback, cease-fire, details.
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, Feb. 12, the 43rd
day of 2015. Thereare322 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS War POWerS — The House Foreign Affairs Committee has scheduled a hearing to review President Barack Obama's request for authorization to fight the Islamic State.
PICTURETHIS
STUDY
some l.esauran s "'"' safer than drunk ones on' ac ua wan By Christopher Ingraham
rates with which these pro-
The Washington Post
HISTORY Highlight:1809, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, was born in present-day LarueCounty, Kentucky. 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. In1915, the cornerstone was laid for the Lincoln Memorial. 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,a Northwest Orient Airlines Boeing 720 broke up during severe turbulence and crashed 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. In1995, Iron Butterfly bass player Philip "Taylor" Kramer disappeared; four years later, his skeletal remains were found inside his wrecked minivan in a ravine nearMalibu, California. In1999, the Senatevoted to acquit President Bill Clinton of perjuryand obstruction of justice. Tea years age:Former presidential candidate Howard Dean was elected national Democratic chairman during the party's winter meeting. "The Gates," a16-day art exhibit created by Christo and JeanneClaude, debuted in New York's Central Park with the unfurling of saffron-colored fabric banners suspended from 16-foothigh frames. Five years age:Onthe day the Winter Olympics opened in Vancouver, British Columbia, Nodar Kumaritashvili, a 21-year-old luger from the republic of Georgia, was killed in a high-speed crash during a practice run. ThreeUniversity of Alabama-Huntsville professors were gunneddown during a faculty meeting; police charged neurobiologist Amy Bishop with capital murder. (Bishop later pleadedguilty and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.) One year age:Legislation to raise the U.S.federal debt limit and prevent a crippling government default cleared Congress.
BIRTHDAYS Movie director FrancoZeffirelli is 92. Actor Louis Zorich is 91. Baseball Hall of Fame sportscaster JoeGaragiola is 89. Basketball Hall of Famer Bill Russell is 81. Actor Joe Don Baker is 79. Author Judy Blume is 77.Former Israeli Prime Minister EhudBarak is 73. Country singer MoeBandy is 71. Actor Cliff DeYoungis 69. Actor Michael Ironside is 65. Rock singer Michael McDonald is 63. Actress Joanna Kerns is 62. Actor-talk show host Arsenio Hall is 59. Actor John Michael Higgins is 52. Actor Raphael Sbarge is 51. Actress Christine Elise is 50. Actor Josh Brolin is 47.Actress Christina Ricci is 35. NFLquarterback Robert Griffin III is 25. Actress Jennifer Stone is 22. — From wire reports
cesses occur. Alcohol, in comparison, is more predictable." study from the National High- In heavy marijuana users, way Traffic Safety Adminis- measurable amounts of THC WASHINGTON — A new
OLl 0 ol' el' essel'
days or even weeks after the last use, and long after any
had not used any drugs or al- sets a blood THC threshold cohol prior to driving. of 0.5 nanograms per milliFor marijuana,and for a liter. But that number tells us number of other legal and next to nothing about whethillegal drugs, including an- er a person is impaired or fit tidepressants, pa i n k illers, to drive. The implication is stimulants and the like, there that these states are locking is no statistically significant up people who are perfectly change in the risk of a crash sober. associated with using that A companion study redrug prior to driving. But leased by the NHTSA idenoverall alcoholuse,m easured tified a sharp jump in the at a blood alcohol concen- number of weekend nighttration threshold of 0.05 or time drivers testing positive above, increases your odds of for THC between 2007 and 2013-14, from 8.6 percent to a wreck nearly sevenfold. The study's findings un- 12.6 percent. Numbers like derscore an important point: these are alarming at first that the measurable presence glance. of THC (marijuana's primary But all these numbers realactive ingredient) in aperson's ly tell us is that more people system doesn't correlate with are using marijuana at some impairment in the same way point in the days or weeks bethat blood alcohol concentra- fore they drive. With legalization does. The NHTSAdoesn't tion fullyunderwayin several mince words: "At the current states, there's nothingsurpristime, specific drug concentra- ing about this. "The change tion levels cannot be reliably in use may reflect the emerequated with a specific degree gence of a new trend in the of driver impairment." country that warrants monThere are a whole host of itoring," the NHTSA study factors why detectable drug concludes. presence doesn't indicate So, should we all assume impairment the way it does that we're safe to blaze one with alcohol. "Most psycho- and go for a joyride whenactive drugs are chemically ever the whimsy strikes us? complex molecules, whose Absolutely not. There's plenabsorption, action and elimi- ty of evidence showing that nation from thebody are diffi- marijuana use impairs key cult to predict," the report au- driving skills. If you get realthors write, "and considerable ly stoned and then get behind differences exist between the wheel, you're asking for individuals with regard to the trouble.
The Washington Post
W ASHINGTON — If y o u
think you're doing a restaurant any favors by ordering dessert, you might want to think again. Dessert can be delicious. And it can be profitable, too. But generally speaking, when diners extend their meal with
slicesofchocolate cake, cups of ice cream and servings of creme brulee, it can come at restaurants' expense. "It's hard to make money
on desserts in the restaurant business today," said Tyler Cowen, an economics profes-
sor at George Mason University who has written extensively about the economics of eating out. "I don't think
many (restaurants) benefit when people order them
anymore." There are many problems with dessert, but it all starts
with one pretty simple truth: The restaurant industry is a
place of razor-thin margins, and dessert tends to offerone of the thinnest.
Food in general is tough to make money on. Restaurants have long relied on the markup they tack onto drinks, not Thinkstock
The restaurant industry operates on thin margins, and desserts tend to offer one of the thinnest. "It's hard to make money on desserts in the restaurant business today," said Tyler Cowen, an
economics professor at George MasonUniversity.
craft. Some restaurants, in- finished their dinner in a litstead of using pastry chefs, tle over an hour instead lingredients, Todd Kliman noted have opted to serve simpler ger for closer to two when recently in t h e W ashingto- desserts made by line cooks, they opt for dessert. And they nian. For desserts, the ceiling while others "have given up stay the extra 3 0 m i n utes is much lower, and much less entirely," a n d ou t s ourced while consuming only a fracflexible, says Cowen. their sweets, according to tion of what they did during "Dessert needs good in- Kliman. the first part of the meal. It gredients to taste good, but Dessert is also problematic would be different if people you can't p sychologically for restaurants because the ordered drinks more often convince people to pay even course createsa bottleneck alongside cake, but they of$20 for dessert," Cowen said. at the end of meals. At restau- ten don't. It would change "You can't really go cheap on rants serving food in some things if dessert wines were it, but you really can't charge of the country's busier cities, more popular, finer and more extra either." turnover is essential to their expensive, but they aren't, Forbes, for that very rea- bottom line. Time is quite lit- Cowen said. son, noted in 2011 that des- erally money. "The more people they sert is often a great deal — for diners. serve the more revenue they Weekly Arts 8 But it's also made serving get," Cowen said. "A lot of Entertainment In it a growing pain for many restaurant costs are f i x ed. restaurants. The cost of serv- Beingableto servemore peoing a house-prepared line of ple, to sell them food, drinks, desserts includes employing and especially expensive a pastry chef and dedicated wine, is what varies." space in the kitchen to the P arties that m i ght h a v e
NOW SAVE
restaurants, that limit is $30 for entrees, no matter the in-
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gling Postal Service, which has lost tens of billions of dolW ASHINGTON — M a n y lars in recent years through Americans still opt for paper a mix of declining mail volbilling despite a preference for ume and growing financial online payments, according to obligations. a study commissioned by the Bill deliveries, one of USPS's U.S. Postal Service's inspector core functions, is still a robust general's office. business for the agency, with The analysis, which covered American consumers receivthree consecutive months of ing 24 billion statements in 2014 billing data for a major 2013, according to the report. U.S. utility company, found Overall, transactional statethat 91 percent of customers ments such as household bills chose to receive their state- and payments totaled $18.5 ments by mail, even though billion in 2013, or more than only one-quarter of them pay one-quarterof Postal Service sumers value the physical mailpiece as a record-keeping
don't have to pay for the post-
age required to receive them, report said. "In general, cus- the study said. As for businesstomers value having options es, many have continued mailfor bill delivery and payment." ing bills just to keep customers The study offers a ray of happy, deciding that the cost is hope for the financially strug- worth the satisfaction. tool and reminder to pay," the
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Several states have passed laws attempting to define "marijuana-impaired driving" similarly to drunk driving. Colorado, for instance,
likely to crash than those who
By Roberto A. Ferdman
grub, to boost profits. As food
psychoactive effects remain.
than driverswho use alcohol. And after adjusting for age, gender, race and alcohol use, drivers who tested positive for marijuana were no more
not necessarily in the restaurant's best business interest if you say yes.
only become more true, because there's a limit to how much people are willing to pay for different parts of their meal. For many midscale
can be detectable in the body
use marijuana are at a significantly lower risk for a crash
"Can I interest you in dessert?" is a common question on a meal out, but it's
costs soar, that reality has
tration finds that drivers who
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
Potential presidential candidatesareslow to say they're running By David Lightman
at least eight potential candi-
McClatchy Washington Bureau
dates are to appear at Iowa Ag Summit. New Hampshire Re-
WASHINGTON — There's
one year to go before the pres- publicans are organizing a big i dential voting s t arts, a n d get-together in mid-April. no one's even inching to the The candidates-in-waiting starting gate. No one has an- have a lot of reasons to stay nounced a candidacy. No one's coy: close. • The Clinton factor. Hillary The field of potential candi-
Clinton's decision, likely this
dates for the 2016 Democratic summer, "buys people time. and Republican presidential They want to see who they nominations is q uiet about may be running against," said running. They're raising mon- Judy Davidson, Scott County, ey, ripping rivals, speaking at Iowa, Republican chairwomIowa breakfasts, lunches and
an. If Clinton is out, a lot of Re-
dinners — but they're holding publicansand Democrats see back on announcements. big opportunities. It's a stark contrast from • The weather factor. The 2007 — the last time there average Des Moines daily was no incumbent running high temperature never climbs — when most of the big-name above freezing in January, and c andidates were all i n b y Manchester, New Hampshire, mid-February. is almost as cold. It's better to Three days after Christmas
stage the big event in better
2006, Democrat John Edwards weather. began the election season with • The legal factor. Once an announcement tour that
someone becomes acandidate
began in at a home in New Or- under federal campaign-fileans being rebuilt after Hurri- nance laws, the candidate has cane Katrina. On Jan. 20,2007,
to disclose personal finances,
Hillary Clinton declared "I'm
register with the Federal Elecin" on her website and released tion Commission and file regua 1 minute, 45 second video.
lar statements detailing spend-
She said she was "beginning a ing and contributions. conversation with you." • The scrutiny factor. Once T hat s am e m o n th , J o e you're really in, the media Biden, Bill R ichardson and won't let you alone. If you're Chris Dodd joined the race. On not, you can skip big events Feb. 10, 2007, in the shadow of without looking rude and the Old State Capitol in Spring- daim areason to duck reportfield, Illinois, Barack Obama ers. The Republican National entered, and three days later, Committee has cited 28 inMitt Romney announced in stances since last spring when Michigan. Clinton's staff refused to reThis year, no one's in a spond to media requests. hurry. • The Romney factor. The Party bigwigs say the race 2012 Republican nominee said has already begun in ear- last month that he was out. ly-voting states such as Iowa. 2016 hopefuls pounced, now The evidence: More than 1,000 that his donors and supportIowa Republican activists ers were free. That crowd and spent all day Jan. 24 listening its money are now available, to potential candidates.
"That event allowed them to begin their campaigns without actually having to begin their campaigns," said Iowa Republican Chairman Jeff Kaufmann.
Republicans will gather at the Conservative Political Ac-
and that means a lot of time on the phone and in small meet-
ings, not on the stump making speeches. Then there's the practical
way to look at an announcement: Has anyone ever won or lost because they delayed their
tion Conference in Maryland
candidacyannouncement for a couple of months in the year
later this month. A week later,
before an election?
Wives
Jinping wages a campaign against official corruption,
ASRh®
Continued fromA1 There was only one way to do that, she decidedgood old-fashioned detec-
the government has cracked
C. fiI.Ait t iI-'
down hard on freelance private eyes. "It shows Xi's anti-corrup-
tion campaign is highly selective, and aimed at clearing
tive work — and only one
person to do it, and that was her.
out those not on his side," Zhu sald.
In the search for her hus-
band and his mistress, and in her longcourtbattle with them, Zhang embarked on a journey that led her to establish what could be China's only women's detective
agency, working on behalf of wronged wives. T he
In her simply furnished living room, Zhang reminisced about C ommunist era.
"Back in Mao's time, we never used to lock our doors,
g,i0"
and civil servants would serve
the people," she said. "Not like now — you would consider yourself lucky if they don't gangup onyou and fleece you. Everything is about money,
c o r r uption a n d
decadence entwined with Simon Denyer/The Washington Post C ommunist Party r u l e Zhang Yufen of the Alliance Against Mistresses carries out private here have fueled the phe-
nomenon of the ernai, or second wife, and xiao san, literally the "little third,"
C h i na's
founder, Mao Zedong, and his
detective work on behalf of wives to gather evidence of the infidelity of their husbands — often officials who finance their affairs with corruption — in order to win better divorce settlements.
or mistress. Party officials commonly have a mis- in bed together," she said. tress or multiple mistress- "She grabbed her husband's es, showering them with phones and found pictures of luxury gifts and renting many women,and theirphone
and corruption is everywhere." But the woman from Xi'an
Inspired by her own experience, Zhang in 1997 gradually started taking other people's cases. Word
said Xi's anti-corruption campaign has given her hope that One court mysteriously "lost" things might improve. Offithe evidence she had present- cials who used to spend their ed, while another, she alleges, evenings at lavish banquets numbers." warned the husband, who had and in marathon drinking sesZhang said she found that time to empty a bank account sions at karaoke bars — with he had 17 mistresses in the dif- of savings well beyond his business associates and prosferent cities where he worked. earnings. Sometimes she pres- titutes — now worry about beHe was promoting his rela- ents evidence of corruption to ing exposed. "People say Xi has saved tives inside the railway system an offici al's boss,and the boss and raking in huge kickbacks won't want to listen, probably many families, because offifrom construction contracts. because he is corrupt himself, cials now have to come home His wife got the divorce, she says. directly after work," she said. Zhang's husband worked in Zhang said, but the evidence of corruption was never ad- A dangerous profession the district taxation bureau in mitted in court or acted on by The profession of private de- the city of Xi'an. She says she his superiors. tective was officially banned spent five years following him In another case, Zhang in 1993, although the business and his mistress, who turned helped a woman from Xi'an flourished, largely u nder- out to be her best friend. whose husband had divorced ground. Zhu Ruifeng, a "citiShe tried unsuccessfully to her. Despite his cheating, the zen reporter" who runs a web- sue him for bigamy. She finaljudge had awardedhim the site aimed at exposing corrup- ly won a divorce and received family land. tion, said many people hire a payout in 2007. Later, she S ubsequently, and w i t h private detectives — mostly confronted her former husZhang's help, the womanmen — in marital cases band and asked him why he "Often i t' s t h e o ff i c ials' had broken their marriage. who spoke on the condition of "He said: 'Everyone in the anonymitybecause shefeared wives who want t o p r otect her remarks would be taken their interests in case of a di- taxation bureau had a misas criticism of the Communist vorce;or to hold the evidence tress. I would have lost face if Party — said she followed her of infidelity as a card to secure I didn't have one.'" husband for two years before the marriage; or sometimes finally tracking down where mistresses have private deteche lived, breaking in and gath- tives get evidence just in case," ering evidence of infidelity he said. Iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN
of her work soon spread:
and corruption.
them plush
a p artments,
all financed by the spoils of corruption. Research by scholars at Renmin Univer-
sity of China in 2012 found that 95 percent of officials under investigation for cor-
ruption were cheating on their wives.
Their wives are often pushed aside, neglected and forgotten. Divorce car-
ries stigma for a woman, although not for a man, and divorce law and the courts
are often stackedin the husband's favor. Zhang's detective agency was an attempt
to redress the balance. "There is no protection for wronged wives," she said. "In most cases they are left with no money, no house and no guarantees."
Finding the evidence
She remembers being approached early on for help by an elderly woman whose daughter had drunk pesticide because her husband was cheating on her. "I asked her why they didn't take the husband to court, and she said they
didn't have the evidence." To gather the evidence, Zhang established the Fire Phoenix agency in 2003 with nine friends, but she says she charged only for basic expenses, and a
often run i nto b r ick w a lls.
ASSURANCE
"It was really difficult be-
cause he had a car, and we had
In recent years, the work
manages your lovedone's medications
has become more dangerous. Even while President Xi
to move on foot and by taxi," she said. "But Zhang and the other wronged wives stood up for me. Come heavy snow or scorching sun, they followed him; they never gave up." But Zhang says her efforts to expose official corruption
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lack of finance eventually forced it to close.
Samsung: Our TVs
aren't eavesdropping By Hayley Tsukayama
which then is stored and trans-
The Washington Post
mitted to a server to process
Samsung has clarified its privacy policy for its smart televisions after a panicked flurry of headlines proclaim-
what users have said. That's where the "third-party" comes in. That third party, Samsung said, is Nuance Communi-
ing that those who bought the
sets were essentially bugging cations — t h e p r o m inent their own homes. voice-recognition s o ftware The furor started aftera firm that makes products inD aily Beast article hit t h e cluding the Dragon Naturally Web with a headline saying, Speaking line of software. "Your Samsung SmadI'V is Nuance is providing the serSpying on You, Basically." vice that Samsung uses to recIn that piece, writer Shane ognize what you're saying so Harris pulled out a line from your television can ultimately Samsung's smart television provide you with the answer privacy policy that sent chills you want. down people's spines: "Please But, Samsung said, users be aware that if your spoken won't ever be recorded unexwords include personal or oth- pectedly. In the new policy, er sensitive information, that Samsung makes clear that it information will be among the "will collect your interactive data captured and transmitted voicecommands only when to a third party." you make a specific search That prompted a lot of chat- request ... by clicking the actiter over th e w eekend that vation button" on your remote clearly became loud enough control or on your screen. for the firm to weigh in. In a In truth, a lot of voice-concompany blog post, Samsung trol technology is listening laid out exactly how its voice
recognition features work and
all the time, though more in a sleep state than anything
said that it would modify its
else. Any service that you ac-
policy language. "Samsung takes consumer privacy very seriously and our products are designed with privacy in mind. We employ
tivate with a certain phrase-
whether it's "Hey Siri," "Okay Google," "Xbox" or " A lexa"
These days,
Z h ang,
57, works alone from her small apartment outside
Beijing, running the Alli-
advice and advocacy for wronged wives. She still only charges for expenses.
I
Some have nicknamed this lively, talkative woman
the ernai shashou, or "mistress killer."
Over the years, she says, thousands of women have
.t ~
~r'
JAI(IETS II PANTS
come to her for the evi-
dence they need to prove their husbands were cheat-
I
ing — and to force them to
pay compensation. But not all want to go to court.
HEL'METS+-GO IQILE~S i OIVE iS P'OiiE~S • QL
"I understand why a lot
of women don't want a divorce," she said. "In smaller places, people gossip. They often laugh at the wife, but they don't necessarily
judge the husband. She often feels shame and loss of
I I
II
face." Her methods are low-
tech, labor-intensive and painstaking: While speaking, she showed off two hand-held tape recorders,
OiBMO i Sl(IIS
two pairs of binoculars, a
(Last years inventoryi
cheap camera and a notebook. She talks of hiding behind trees and electricity
poles, of long stakeouts and of following her quarry in taxis and on foot.
— has to always be listen-
In the course of investigating officials through-
ing for its prompting words
out China's civil service,
se c u r ity so it can wake up. That's not safeguards and practices, in- new, though that latent listencluding data encryption, to ing — even if the information secure consumers' personal isn't being transmitted — can information and prevent un- turn some people off from the
Zhang says she has been threatened with violence
authorized collection or use," whole idea of voice control. the company said in its post. Samsung's system doesn't Samsung explained that seem to be much different. voice recognition works in two There is one thing that's not ways on its televisions. The completely clear: whether Nufirst is through a microphone ance's privacy policy applies built into the set that listens for to data collected from Samcommands such as "change sung or not. Nuance's privathe volume" or "change the cy policy promises not to use channel." In this case, the tele- personal information for users vision doesn't store or trans- other than things like custommit anything you say. er servicetransactions. Ads, Users can also ask the tele- for example, don't tap into usvision to search for something, ers' personal data.
s ympathetic to t h e h u s-
industry-standard
III
ance Against Mistresses, an organization that combines detective work with
II
and arrest; her evidence
has been thrown out of court by judges who are
I
(
(]
bands or in collusion with them. But
she
has
had
successes. In 2009, she was ap-
proached by the wife of a senior railway official, she says, and discovered that he was having an af-
fair with a local television anchor. " I told the w ife t o g o
there, and she caught them
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
How muc ea isinc ocoate?
IN FOCUS:TOBACCO STUDY
mo in: ea iert anwet oLi t? By Denise Grady
spiratory illnesses. Two other observations supported the findings, he said.
New York Times News Service
By Lenny Bernstein
Hershey, said in an email. (Hershey had three possible If you have been happily offenders on As You Sow's snarfing down chocolate in list; see www.asyousow.org recent years, secure in the for the full list.) "People have been eating knowledge that those flavonols were at least doing good cocoa and chocolate for centhings for your heart, today turies with no evidence of is not your day. a single incident of concern Just in time for Valentine's regarding these naturally ocDay, a California consumer curring minerals," Beckman health watchdog group filed added. legal notices Wednesday deSusan Smith, senior vice manding that many of the president of communications big chocolate companies and outreach at the National post warnings on their pack- Confectioners A ssociation, ages that show their prod- also wrote back, adding: ucts contain high levels of "Heavy metals such as lead The Washington Post
and cadmium are natural-
lead andcadmium.
As You Sow, an Oakland ly-occurring elements found nonprofit, says single serv- in the Earth's crust. Since ings of 26 products it tested
these elements are present
(three times) contain more of naturally in the soil and wathe two harmful heavy met- ter where plants are grown, als than allowed under the
there are unavoidable trac-
Golden State's Proposition 65 toxic chemical warning
es occurring in virtually all foods, including fish, meats, law. The list includes many grains, fruits and vegetables. of the big-name producers of Likethese otherfoods,cocoa what is many people's favor- beans, one of the main inite food. Try not to weep. gredients in chocolate, may "We are getting (lead and also contain small amounts cadmium) from m u ltiple of heavy metals depending sources," Eleanne Van Vliet,
on the natural conditions in
director of toxic chemicals which it is grown." research for As You Sow, said in an i nterview. "The
Van Vliet insists that As You Sow is not talking about
problem with those toxic
tiny amounts; rather, she says, if you think about the
heavy metals is they accumulate in the body. It's terri-
ble for adults, but especially for children." Overexposure to lead, of course, can cause all kinds of health problems, including lowering children's IQ. Cadmium is a carcinogen and can cause kidney and bone damage. Now before you ask the
amount of chocolate the av-
erage person consumes each year, these concentrations are worrisome.
If we could get them all
However bad you thought smoking was, it is even worse. A new study adds at least ayearto the toll takenbytobacco in the United States. Before the study, smoking was already blamed for nearly half a million deaths a year in this country from 21 diseases, including 12 types of cancer. The new findings are based
um in chocolate from natural
olate twice a week, with 89
sourcesand that regulators percent of women and 85 have rejected this argument percent of men saying they before. indulge at some point. "The (Food and Drug AsIt's true that this is not a sociation) and many states new debate. As You Sow monitor the amount of cad- filed a similar notice against mium and lead in food. All
many of the same companies
Hershey products meet all
last July, but it seems to have
FDA and state standards,
attracted l i t tl e a t t ention, perhaps because chocolate
and our cocoa powder and chocolate are safe to eat. This includes the very strict
doesn't exactly go together with Independence Day the
Proposition 65 standards for way it does with Valentine's lead andcadmium in can- Day. Van Vliet said her orgady and otherproducts,"Jeff nization is still in discussions Beckman, directorof cor- with those producers over porate communications for that notice.
The study also found small increases in the risks of breast
determine whether there were
ers found that smoking was also linked to significantly in- to dig deeper into the causes of observational studies. creased risks of infection, kid- death in smokers after taking Analyzing deaths among the ney disease, intestinal disease an initial look at data from five participants from 2000 to 2011, caused by inadequate blood large health surveys being con- the researchers found that, flow, and heart and lung ail- ducted by other researchers. comparedwith peoplewho had ments not previously attributed The participants were 421,378 never smoked, smokers were
biological mechanisms that would support a connection. A 2014 report by the surgeon general's office said the evidencefora causalconnection
Matt Rourke/The Associated Pressfile photo
cancer was "suggestive but not sufficient." For prostate can-
men and 532,651 women 55
Even though people are already barraged with messages about the dangers of smoking, researchers say it is important to let the public know there is
and older, induding nearly infections, kidney disease, cer, the same report found no 89,000 current smokers. As ex- respiratory ailments not pre- evidence that smoking caused pected, death rateswere higher viously linked to tobacco, and prostate cancer — but it noted among the smokers. But dis- hypertensive heart disease, that in men who did have proseases known to be caused by in which high blood pressure tate cancer, smoking seemed to tobaccoaccounted for only 83 leads to heart failure. Smokers worsen the outcome. percent of the excess deaths in were also six times more likely The diseases that had previpeople who smoked. to die from a rare illness caused ously been established by the "I thought, 'Wow, that's real- by insufficient blood flow to the surgeon general as caused by
yet more bad news.
"The smoking epidemic is still ongoing, and there is a need to evaluate how smoking
ishurtingus as asociety, to support clinicians and policymaking in public health," said Brian Carter, an epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society and
ly low,'" Carter said. '%Tehave
about twice as likely to die from
between smoking and breast
to tobacco.
intestines.
smoking were cancers of the
this huge cohort. Let's get into Carter said he had confithe weeds, cast a wide net and dence in the findings because see what is killing smokers that biologically, it made sense that we don't alreadyknow." those conditions were relatthe first author of an article The research was paid for by ed totobacco. Smoking can about the study, which appears the American Cancer Society, weaken the immune system, in The New England Journal of and Carter worked with scien- increasing the risk of infectists from four universities and the National Cancer Institute.
The study was observational, Colditz, f r o m Wa s hington meaning it looked at people's University School of Medicine habits, such as smoking, and in St. Louis, said the new find- noted statistical correlations beings showed that officials in tween their behavior and their the United States had substan- health. CorreMon does not tially underestimated the efprove cause and effect, so this fect smoking has had on public kind of research is not considhealth. He said smokers, partic- eredasstrongasexperimentsin ularly those who depended on which participants are assigned M edicaid, had notbeen receiv- at random to treatments or plaing enough help to quit. cebos, and then compared. But About 42 million Americans people cannot ethically be insmoke — 15 percent of women structed to smoke for a study, and 21 percent of men — ac- so a lot of the data on smoking's cording to the Centers for Dis- effects on people comes from
tion, he said. It is also known
to cause diabetes, high blood pressure and artery disease,
all of which can lead to kidney problems.Artery disease can also choke off the blood supply to the intestines. Lung damage from smoke, combined with increased vulnerability to in-
fection, can lead to multiple re-
esophagus, stomach, colon, liver, pancreas, larynx, lung, bladder, kidney, cervix, lip and oral cavity; acute myeloid leukemia; diabetes; heart disease; stroke; atherosclerosis;
aortic aneurysm; other artery diseases; chronic lung disease; pneumonia, infl uenza; and tuberculosis.
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Research has shown that their death rates are two to three
times higher than those of peoplewho never smoked and that on average they die more than a decade before nonsmokers. Smokers are more than 20
I'
I
times as likely as nonsmokers
to die of lung cancer. Poor people and those with less formal education are the most likely to
smoke. Carter said he was inspired
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a
ease and stroke, the research-
t han half t h e a m ount i n world leader Sw itzerland,
ation's data shows that the
c orrelation is m ore t han coincidence.
A study ties a host of new diseases to smoking and says an addilung cancer, artery disease, tionai 60,000 to120,000 deaths each year in the United States are heart attacks, chronic lung dis- probably due to tobacco use.
ing machines, let's be clear that the chocolate compa-
amounts of lead and cadmi- average American eats choc-
— suggest that an observed
to the well-known hazards of
boss to remove all the vend-
say there are, at worst, trace
— known as a dose response L
and prostate cancer among smokers. Carter said those findings were not as strong as the others, adding that additional research could help
In an editorial accompanying the article, Dr. Graham
eats 19.8 pounds annually) The confectioners associ-
ers, the risks diminished over time. In general, such effects
million people who were followed for 10 years. In addition
probably agree on one thing: We do eat a lot of chocolate. According to one trade magazine, Americans consume about 9.5 pounds of chocolate every year. (That's less
a ssociation where the average person
was that among former smok-
on health data from nearly a
Medicine. "It's not a done story."
nies, and t h e
a person smoked, the greater the added risks. The second
fivediseases and 60,000 deaths
in a room, both sides would
that represents them, are having none of this. They
One was that the more heavily
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The Bulletm
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
BRIEFING Bomd squad called to collision A head-on collision in Redmond on Wednesday is under investigation after first responders discovered items that looked like
improvised explosive devices in one of the vehicles, according to a news release from Oregon State Police. Troy Schaffner, 27, of Redmond, was traveling northbound on U.S. Highway 97 just north of Airport Way at about 3:30 p.m. when his silver Dodge pickup crossed the center median and crashed headon into a semitruck and trailer driven by Gabriel Perez, 44, of Imperial, California. First responders found items in Schaffner's pickup that looked like improvised explosive devices, according to the release. OSP bombtechnicians closed the highway for
e en an insexa use ria i es By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
A former Deer Ridge Cor-
Bend Police and the Bend Fire Department responded to
rectional Institution counselor
a medical call in a room at the Comfort Inn on SE 27th Street
accused of sexually abusing two teenage girls died early Wednesday on what was supposed to be the final day of
atabout3:30a.m.Wednesday, where they found 44-year-old Jon Michael Yeakey unconscious and not breathing,
his trial, according to District Attorney John Hummel.
Hummel said. "There were attempts to resuscitate him with-
out success," Hummel said.
female relative who was 15 at
Bend Police Lt. Nick Parker wrote in a new release
the time of the alleged acts in
Wednesday afternoon that the investigation into Yeakey's death is ongoing. Yeakey, who lived in Redmond with his family prior to his arrest in October 2013, was
accused of sexually abusing a
2013 and a 16-year-old girl he met while escorting another
in the jury room Wednesday morning, Hummel said. The case will be dismissed. Yeakey was released to
family member to a Narcotics
the custody of his father, also
Anonymous meeting. Deschutes County Circuit Judge Beth Bagley disclosed the news of Yeakey's death in private to the 12-person jury
named JonMichaelYeakey, on Oct. 10, 2013, according to the Oregon Judicial Information Network.
See Yeakey/B2
ACLU
orin a o ssi e career F,ghtt, I'ecoi'd
police heats up
g
By Taylor W. Anderson The Bulletin i .'
about10 minutes to
SALEM — An Oregon
secure the sceneand collected the devices. Traffic was delayed for
civil liberties group already has asked the Legis-
about 2t/2hours.
recordpoliceofficersw ho are on duty. The group is now taking a similar matter to a federal judge.
lature to allow citizens to
An ambulance took Schaffner to St. Charles in Bend. Perezwas not injured. Officials are investigating the devices and what may have caused the collision. More information will be released once it's available.
The American Civil
Liberties Union of Oregon on Monday filed suit in U.S. District Court in a
case that asserts the law is clear and allows people to record police who are
on duty without arrest or detainment. "That it's not just lawful, that it's constitution-
Volunteers sought for housing hoard The city of Bend is seeking applicants to fill vacant seats on its Affordable Housing Advisory Committee and Accessibility Advisory Committee. The city seeks two people from a local lending institution or affordable housing provider to serve on the housing committee. The committee provides the City Council and city staff advice on the allocation of affordable housing funding. The term for each position lasts four years. For the Accessibility Advisory Committee, the city seeks applicants withknowledge of and interest in accessibility issues. The committee represents the interests of the disabled community to city staff. Attendance at a meeting on the fourth Thursday of each month is a minimum requirement. Terms range from one to three years. For applications or questions, call 541388-5505 or visit www. bendoregon.gov/committees. Applications for both committees will be accepted until 5 p.m. March 9 at City Hall, 710 NW Wall St. — Bulletin staff reports Nore briefing, B2
ally protected," said ACLU-OR Executive Director
Dave Fidanque. Lee Gilbert, top left, a school resource officer with Redmond Police Department, discusses with participants in the Explorer program their experiences during ride-alongs with Redmond Police at a meeting Monday evening.
By Claire Withycombe
how to test a substance for
cers, volunteers who learn
The Bulletin
about policing via shadowing and other opportunities. They
ular pursuits: He tutors math,
methamphetamine. Since he was 16, Seals has been wearing the uniform of a Redmond Polic eExplorerand going on ride-alongs, learning
is in the 4-H club and volun-
city ordinances and defensive
ports on their recent activities.
teers at his church. But one of the 18-year-
tactics, and providing traffic support at events.
the tutelage of Redmond Police School Resource Officer Lee Gilbert.
to the Oregon State Police of-
This past Monday, 10 Explorers and Explorer can-
fice in Bend. See Explorers/B2
REDMOND — Ridgeview
High School senior Mitchell Sealshas several extracurric-
old's activities is a bit more unorthodox — it taught him
In a story headlined "City: Police, transit are funding priorities," which appeared Tuesday, Feb.10, on Page B1, the status of a property the city of Bend bought in 2005 was incorrect. Getz Properties LLC, which made a $1.9 million offer on the property in March, has withdrawn its offer, according to Communications Manager Justin Finestone. The Bulletin regrets the error.
Redmond Police Explorers
are like junior reserve offi-
meet everymonth on Monday
eveningsatRedmond'sJustice Court to discuss a topic under
didates gathered to hearapresentation on media relations. Before the presentation began,
the Explorers — who are required to put in 12 ride-along hours per month — gave reOne member recounted a visit
OSU-CaSC adeSaPPeal to bedeCided byAPril By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
A ruling will be made on the appeal challenging
That dispute froze LUBA's
of residents opposed to the
Council decided the campus plan met the letter of the law.
group's second front in a battle for its privacy and police oversight priorities this year. Fidanque also seeks a change in state law to make clear citizens can
record all police encounters, because he says the
language of the current law is hazy. Oregon law says both parties in a video that records audio need to be aware they are being recorded. "We believe that that law would be unconstitutional if it were used
against someone who videotapes a police officer in a public place" and is arrested, Fidanque said. ACLU attorneys repre-
overall review process, pushing its final decision date
university's plans to build a four-year campus on the city's
back further and further. Last
west side. Truth In Site's legal
dure, the city is required to
a Portland woman who describes herself as a
argument has focused on whether the university's parking plan is too reliant on bikers and walkers and if a more thorough planning process should be required.
submit the entire record of
citizen journalist, filed
documents that went into its
suit against an officer and the cities of Portland
plans by April 29. The Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals, which is evaluating the case, ended a monthslong procedural dis-
week's ruling clears the way for the decision, though the case could still go to the Oregon Court of Appeals and the state Supreme Court. The appeal pits the city
pute over a legal document's
of Bend and OSU-Cascades
table of contents last week.
against Truth In Site, a group
OSU-Cascades' expansion
Both an independent hear-
ings officer and the Bend City
As part of LUBA's proce-
decision-makingprocess. Truth In Site complained that
the order of the nearly 6,000page record wasn't compliant with state law.
senting Carrie Medina,
and Gresham for a 2013 incident involving one of Medina's recordings of a police encounter.
See OSU-Cascades/B3
See ACLU /B5 Paid Advertisement
'Pakm<~ Qay;<
Deschute sCountyseeksto increase
transparencywith budgetdata app By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
Correction
The lawsuit is the
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Deschutes County is trying something new in an effort to be more transparent with its
budget. An application from Socra-
tttst' $gj
"Wepicked (the app) because we're always interested in having people understand what's going on in the county." — Wayne Lowry, Deschutes County finance director
ta, a Seattle-based software
company, recently went live on the county website and visually represents budget data. A link to the data sets can be found on the county
finance department page, www.deschutes.org/Finance. aspx. Capital projects and the current $319 million operating budget are displayed, showing general government expenses, public safety, health department and other
appropriations for county programs.
look at the budget instead of the dense paper copy. "We picked (the app) beThe information available through the open budget cause we're always interested software allows viewers to in having people understand browse charts, a bar graph or what's going on in the couna map, which shows locations ty," said Lowry. of county road and building Lowry said the county will projects as well as other capi- try out the app for a year and tal improvements. see what residents think of Wayne Lowry, Deschutes
the "enhanced transparency."
County finance director, said the app makes the county's
Deschutes County is the first local government to implement the app in Oregon.
finances easier to understand
and offers another way to
See Data /B5
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
CONCERT:The Central Oregon
THURSDAY
Symphonyperformsmusic by
BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and
more; freeadmission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Discuss "This is the Story of a Happy Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050. DEATH BYCHOCOLATEBUNCO NIGHT:Featuring a night of bunco
Wagner and Delibes, featuring an instrument petting zoo; free; 7 p.m. concert, 6:30 p.m. instrument petting zoo; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St.; www.cosymphony. com or 541-383-6290. ROB LARKIN& THE WAYWARD ONES:The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; 8 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889.
FRIDAY
Submitted photo
Northern California singer-songwriter Brett Dennenwill brlng his
benefit Soroptimist International of Bend charities; $20; 6-8 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend.org or 541-389-8940. REMEMBERINGTHE LEGACY OF PETE SEEGER:Featuring a sing-along to honor the first anniversary of Pete Seeger's passing; 6:30-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend. AYRON JONES ANDTHE WAY:The Seattle rock guitarist performs; free; 7-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. VIRGINIA RIGGSCHILDREN'S
BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND 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 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. OREGONWINTERFEST:Winter carnival featuring a wine walk, live music and more;$6-$8 inadvance, $10 at the door; 5-11 p.m.; The Old Mill District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. oregonwinterfest.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Garth Stein, author of "A Sudden Light" and "The Art of Racing in the Rain," will speak; free; 6 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-549-0866. CHILDREN'S THEATERCOMPANY DINNER SHOW: Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; SOLD OUT;6-8:30 p.m.; The
Yeakey
Explorers
Continued from B1
Continued from B1 "All of the state trooper guys are like, tall and strong," he
and desserts, prizesandmore to
On Tttesday afternoon,
Bagley had scheduledclosing arguments for 9:30 a.m. Wednesday. The jury was set to deliberate on five days of testimony. Bagley had dismissed six counts of third-degree sexual abuseafter Yeakey's
noted.
Seals reported observing an officerarrest two people and learning the meth test as part
of a ride-along last week. "The one for meth is cool, but the one for cocaine scares
me," said Gilbert. "It gets all
a motion Monday to a cquit Yeakey on those and
hot."
be reached for comment
Wednesday. Twenty-three
other
charges, including first-degree rape, remained und er consideration by t h e court, according to the Or-
egon Judicial Information Network. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwitltycombe@bendbulletin.com
Laughter ensued. "Try to
Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024. THE STRAYBIRDS: The Americana group from Pennsylvania performs, with Cahalen Morrison & Eli West;
$20, $10(youth) or$50, $25 (youth) for three-concert series; 7 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www.sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4947. "BEAUTYANDTHE BEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300.
"MARNIE":Showing of the psychological thriller by Alfred Hitchcock; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www. jcld.org or 541-475-3351. BRETT DENNEN:The California pop-rockartist performs; SOLD OUT;8 p.m.,doors openat7 p.m .; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. DIVINEGODDESS FASHION SHOW: Featuring a lingerie fashion show by RescueCollective;$5;8-9:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend. com or 541-388-0116.
SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND
into full-time employment, have like 10kids coming up to you and asking you all about where," said Redmond Police welding," Gilbert said. Chief Dave Tarbet. AccordTarbet said the program ing to Gilbert, one graduate may help kids figure out has recentl y been accepted to whether they'd be suited to powork at Oregon State Police, licing. "It requires a calm mind while another has joined the and thinking straight," he said. "And these young people get to Air Force. The Explorers programsee that in action, and it gives and the presence of a school them somethingto aspire to." resource officer — was imFor Seals and 17-year-old portant for Gilbert, too. When Justine Krueger, Explorers is he was 14,he was arrested for the next logical step toward a shoplifting by his SRO. career in law enforcement. "I "I think my life would have just always wanted to help out turned out differently" had my community," Seals said. he been arrestedby someone Justine, a senior at Redwith whom he hadn'thad a mond High School, is also relationship, said Gilbert. "He considering work as an emertreated me like a human be- gency dispatcher. "I have just ing." At 15, Gilbert became an always been a very calm perExplorer with the Scappoose son," she said. Justineis one of Police Department and then four girls who attended Monday's meeting — the group the Oregon State Police. Gilbert said, in general, ado- tends to be fairly demographlescentsareeagerto findsome ically diverse, Gilbert said, inrole models who aren't par- cluding with Latino students. ents or teachers. When knocking on doors to "If you're a welder, you'll notify Redmond residents of with our department or else-
attorney, Todd Grover, filed additional charges, Hummel said. Grover could not
strains of folk and pop to the Tower Theatre in Bend on Friday night.
r i d e w it h d i f fer-
ent officers if you can," said Redmond Police Officer Tyler Kirk, who popped in for the beginning of the meeting. Kirk was an Explorer with
Redmond Police as a teenager. At the beginning of his graveyard shift that night, he offeredto help the Explorers with their ride-alonghours. "I can go in later when I'm off work," said an Explorer. "Just text me," Kirk replied. Next, Gilbert reviewed de-
SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. MININGDAY:PAN FOR GOLD: Learn to stake a claim, pan for gold and have your earnings authenticated; admission plus $2 per miner; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. OREGON WINTERFEST: Winter carnival featuring Metal Mulisha biking, live music by The Autonomics and Filter, and more; $6-$8 in advance, $10 at the door; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; The Old Mill District adjacent to Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. oregonwinterfest.com. ZWICKELMANIA:Tour eight Central Oregon breweries; Boneyard Beer, Deschutes Brewery, Goodlife Brewing, McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Riverbend Brewing, Sunriver Brewing, Worthy Brewing and Wild Ride Brewing Co; free, sample prices may vary; 11 a.m.4 p.m.; Bend location; www.
Stein, author of "A Sudden Light" and "The Art of Racing in the Rain" will speak; free; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic& Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-549-0866. CHILDREN'S THEATERCOMPANY DINNER SHOW: Featuring four shows and dinner to benefit the Children's Theater Company; SOLD OUT;6-8:30 p.m.; The Bridge Church of the Nazarene, 2398 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www.childrenstheatercompany. net, childrenstheater©me.com or 541-460-3024. ANNATIVEL ANDJEFFREY MARTIN:The Portland folk
musicians perform; $15-$20 suggested donation, registration requested; 7 p.m., potluck starts at 6 p.m.; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NWStannium Road, Bend; houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830. CHICKS WITHPICKSBENEFIT: A concert by Broken Down Guitars, Tone Red and Kim Kelley and friends to benefit Saving Grace; $8, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "BEAUTY AND THE BEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children 12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300.
oregoncraftbeer.org.
VALENTINESPAGHETTI DINNER: Featuring spaghetti, salad, garlic bread, dessertand more, with live music by Nick Wavers, to benefit the Holy Redeemer Youth Program; $10, $30 per family; 4:30-7:30 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; www. holyrdmr.org or 541-419-9110. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Garth
a traffic-calming strategy last volunteers. Seals now holds month, an Explorer helped that position. an officer by translating for a T olzman said a Dru g Spanish-speaking family. Abuse Resistance Education Hayden Tolzman, 20, is a (D.A.R.E.) officer was his first graduate of Redmond's Ex- meaningful contact with law plorer program and is at- enforcement and said he was tending the Central Oregon inspired by the educational asReserve Academy in B end. pect of policing. "I remember When he turns 21, he'll likely multiple presentations they become a reserve officer with did at my elementary school," Redmond Police. he said. As a freshman in high In order to participate with school, Tolzman attended extracurricular law enforcement
Explorers, those
classesled by school resource officers on Fridays when the Redmond School District had
c heck and
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from B1
Update onNewderry project is March 2 The company leading a geothermal energy experiment at Newberry Volcano plans to give an update onthe project at a public meeting early next month in Bend. AltaRock Energy of Seattle hopes to drill a production well this summer into the volcano south of Bend, completing an engineered geothermal system,said DaveStowe,a spokesmanforthecompany. The project uses advanced techniques andtechnology to create geothermal steam from underground hot rock. The steam could serve as apower source. The meeting is set for 6 p.m. March 2 at the Brooks Room in the Downtown BendPublic Library, Stowe said.
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These women devote their time to serve as leaders, volunteers and mentors. Each and every one of these women should receive an award for their commitments to making our community abetter place and our companies stronger. On March 11, four will be recognized at the Bend Chamber's inaugural Women of the Year Awards, held at the 'Ibwer Theatre in Bend. We are accepting nominations in four categories: Woman of the Year, Young Woman of the Year, Community Hero and Young Community Hero. To learn more and fill out your nominations visit bendchamber.org, under the events tab, or call 541-382-3221.Join us for an elegant evening of celebrating Central Oregon women, brought to you by the Bend Chamber artd US Bank.
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Tarbet. Participants must be four-day school weeks. He 16 years old, though 15-yearthen served as the Explorer olds may begin the application Sergeant, helping coordinate process. meetings, events and otherop— Reporter: 541-383-0376,
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
2 eaf flson sen ence of iamon eis mas ermin
State COnStitutiOn Ou diSplay — Oregon's original state constitution is making a rareappearancethis weekend. It'll be displayed Friday andSaturday in the rotunda at the state Capitol for the state's 156th birthday. Thedocument is in fragile condition. It's kept in a protective, acid-free case in adarkened, controlled stack in the state archives building. It's handled sparingly, and thenonly by gloved hands. State archivist Mary Beth Herkert tells the SalemStatesman Journal she'd like to see the constitution displayed more often, along with other important documents. Shesaid secure display casescost $40,000 each, andtheagency will pass the hat this weekend to kick off a fundraising effort.
• Michael Young orchestrated a string of heists, including one atSaxon'sin Bend By Steven Dubois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The mastermind of an i nterstate di-
amond theft ring, including the robbery of a Bend jewelry store, has been sentenced to 9'/2 years in federal prison.
Michael Young, 40, was the last of 11 defendants sentenced in the brazen scheme t hat i n cluded t h efts f r o m
more than 20 jewelry stores, stretching from th e Pacific
Northwest to Tennessee and Florida. The crew targeted small businesses, and pros-
more than $150,000 were sto- Chihuahua named "Roxy" to len from the store. She cried distract the store employees. while describing how the In another Florida theft, the thieves stole her trust in peo- thieves fled on jets skis from ple, "and that has been one of a jewelry store on Sanibel high-value diamonds. An- the hardest things to get back Island. other conspirator would take emotionally." Young, who has a daughthe diamonds and sprint to a Federal court records indi- ter, apologized to his relawaiting getaway car. That's cate Remor and Cannon were tives and the victims, saying what happened in Bend. in Bend for about two weeks he wants to heal the wounds The May 2011 robbery before pulling off the heist he caused. Hernandez noted of Saxon's Fine Jewelers in at Saxon's. Cannon initially Young's long criminal histoBend's Old Mill District was visited the store and asked ry and asked what's different the last of 23 robberies in to speak to a n employee this time around. Young, who seven states. Young, along who was not at the store. He has been behind bars since with the two men implicated dropped off a business card his 2011 arrest, said this is the in the robbery, Ernest Rem- with a phone number linked first time he's looked at himor and Jack Cannon, were to a disposable cellphone pur- self in the mirror and decided arrested and charged within chased at the Bend Shopko. he needs to be less selfish. "This truly has been an two months of the Saxon's On the day of the robbery, incident. Cannon went back to the extreme wake-up," he said. The owners of Saxon's Fine store. While inspecting a di- "I wish I had this wake-up Jewelers told Judge Hernan- amond ring and some loose when I was 20."
ecutors said many of the stolen items were not insured or dez the theft delayed their re- diamonds with a retail value only partially insured. tirement, caused their insur- of $151,200, Cannon grabbed U.S. District Court Judge ance rates to skyrocket and the ring and diamonds and Marco Hernandez described might have led some custom- fled, climbing into a van waitYoung as a crafty, highly ers and suppliers to believe ing outside. intelligent man who moved they are careless. The van was abandoned his less-savvy co-defendants Annette Henderson said a few blocks away and was around like chess pieces. she and her husband started determined to have been sto" Without h i m mo v i ng the business from n othing len in Tigard the day before. these chess pieces, none of when they were in their early A Saxon's employee identithis happens," Hernandez 20s. fied Cannon as the suspect "To think we could work said Wednesday. in a photo lineup arranged The thefts began in 2009 so hard and then somebody by Bend Police, and surveiland ended two years later, lazy, callous and noncaring lance footage from Shopko with losses to the jewelry could take it f rom us," she was used to identify Remor stores totaling $3.4 million. said. as the buyer of the disposable The thieves typically opHenderson's daughter, Na- cellphone. erated by having one person tasha, was the salesperson In a S a rasota, Florida, ask a store employee to show when two rings valued at theft, the culprit used a pet
Infected UO student —Afraternity and sorority held a party at the home of the third University of Oregon student diagnosed with a contagious bacterial infection — meningococcemia. Lane County Public Health is contacting the students to tell them they may want an antibiotic to stop the spread of the disease. KVAL reported the agency and the University of Oregon have not identified the fraternity and sorority involved. Jason Davis with the county health department said the ill student recognized the flulike symptoms early and is in stable condition. He was the third student in a month with the disease. The first two are women. The university has notified other students and faculty who may havehadcontact with them. Another woman with symptoms did not have the serious disease. — From wire reports
Find It All Online
Assistant U .S . A t t o rney M ichelle Ho l m a n Ker i n
sought a 10-year sentence, saying Young exercised tight supervision from the behindthe-scenes overall aspects of planning and got a disproportionate amount of the proceeds, spending it on cars, motorcycles and designer clothes. Young's l awyer, E l l en Pitcher, asked the judge to sentence her client to eight
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XEws OF REcoRD NW Colorado Avenue. DUII —Zacharie Douglas Bradshaw, 40, was arrested on suspicion The Bulletin will update items in the of driving under the influence of Police Log whensuch arequest intoxicants at 11:06 p.m. Feb. 7,in is received. Any newinformation, thearea ofNW LavaRoad and NW such as the dismissal of charges or Oregon Avenue. acquittal, must be verifiable. For more DUII —Breann G.Riggs, 23, was information, call 541-383-0358. arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:03 BEND POLICE a.m. Feb. 8, In the 800blockof NW Wall Street. DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at11:30 Theft —A theft was reported at 3:07 a.m. Feb. 8, in the 63000 block of Layton Avenue. p.m.Feb.6,inthe2800 blockofNW Clearwater Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:14 a.m. Feb. 9, in the1500 block of NW Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:14a.m. Feb. 7, in the1200 block Davenport Avenue. of NW MilwaukeeAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at Unauthorized use — Avehicle was 10:14 a.m. Feb. 9, in the 2000 block of reported stolen and anarrest was NW Glassow Drive. madeat fo:27a.m. Feb.7,inthe300 block of NWColorado Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:08 p.m.Feb.9,inthe 2700block ofNE Criminal mlschlef —Anact of 27th Street. criminal mischief was reported at 10:27a.m. Feb. 7, in the 300 block of Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:02
POLICE LOG
p.m. Feb. 9, in the1600 block of NW Fifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:23 p.m. Feb. 9, in the 600 block of NW Colorado Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:52 a.m. Feb.10, in the area of NW Shields Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12 p.m.Feb.3,inthe2400 blockofNE Twin Knolls Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:17 a.m. Feb.9, inthe700blockof NE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:02 p.m. Feb. 1, Inthe 20500 block of Sun Meadow Way.
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Jennifer Marie Mitchell, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving
••
541-330-50$4 under the influence of intoxicants at 7:11 p.m. Feb.10, on U.S.Highway97 near milepost145. DUII —Dustin Arthur Kampert, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of Intoxicants at 8:02 p.m. Feb.10, on U.S.Highway 97 near milepost121. DUII —Alicia Marie Shotwell,41, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:34 p.m. Feb.10, on U.S.Highway20near milepost 88. DUII —Benjamin Michael Auker, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:54 a.m. Feb.11, in the area of NE Third Street and NE Burnside Avenue.
BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 11:46 a.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 21663 PalomaDr. 16 — Medical aid calls.
Bend police Depsrtment Daschutas countyshsriff's osce TORCHRUN'
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wpR The Bulletin
Continued from B1 That objection sparked a barrage of back-and-forth filings between the parties and
held up the review process for about two months. In filings with th e
"We chose nottobejerksand onlyfocus on thatone document. They can say whatever
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they want, but this wasn't a ploy to hold up the
process.We could have been way biggerjerks. Everyone knows the city messed thisup." — Scott Morgan, Truth In Site's spokesman
b o ard, O SU-Cas-
cades accused Truth In Site of chicanery, saying the com- her decision. "(Truth In Site's) plaint was a ploy to gain more objection is denied." time. Truth In Site said its Nonetheless, in a footnote, objection was filed to ensure L UBA noted Truth I n S i t e every document was easily missed a chance to have its accessible. objection to the format of the Last week, the Land Use
r ecord granted. Th e
information was going to be seen and evaluated." In an e mail, City A t t or-
ney Mary Winters said she is "pleased" by the decision and
agrees the record is "reasonc o m - ably easy to navigate."
Board of Appeals rejected the plaint only focused on one The appeal comes at a busy objection, giving Truth In Site document, but as the decision time for the city's legal staff, until Feb. 25 to file an argu- notes, the same issue "ap- as an appeal was recently ment stating why the campus pears to be present with other filed in the 9th U.S. Circuit plan shouldn't be approved. documents, and if petitioners Court of Appeals challengThe city and OSU-Cascades had argued that there were ing a drinking water project. have until March 25 to make more than a handful more, Additionally, City Councilor their case, and LUBA's deci- we likely would have required Casey Roats is facing a legal sion will be issued by April that th e r e cord b e r e con- challenge questioning his eli29. structed to comply with our gibility for office. That lawsuit In its complaint, Truth In Site argued the record was
rules, no matter how much additional work t hat w ould
hard to navigate and shouldbe cause for the city." repaginated, as the position of Truth In Site's spokesman one document in the table of Scott Morgan said "it's clear contents did not line up with LUBA didn't think our appeal the ordering of documents was nothing." "We chose not to be jerks within the actual record. The citycontended the record was and only focus on that one easy to use, as the table of con- document," he s aid. "They tents listed the d ocument's can say whatever they want, page number correctly and but this wasn't a ploy to hold that repaginating would be up the process. We could have costly. been way bigger jerks. Every"The record as it stands one knows the city messed can be usable with reason- this up." able effort by (LUBA) and the Morgan said Truth In Site parties," LUBA Board Chair- raised its objection because woman Melissa Ryan wrote in
Join us during the next six weeks as we host a lecture series to increase safety awareness on fall prevention, common home injuries and provide solutions to keep you safe!
it "wanted to be sure all the
SafetyMan says "Always be Safe to Ensure an Active 8 Independent Lifestyle"
Falls Are Preventable TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 4:00 PM
The opportunity to help reduce falls among older adults has never been better. Today, there are effective fall prevention interventions that can be used in community settings. Fall prevention programs can reduce falls and help older adults live better, longer lives.
Avoid Bathroom Dangers
was filed by Foster Fell, the
TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 4:00 PM
partner of city Councilor Barb Campbell.
Dangers exist all around your home, and unless safety precautions are in place, you leave yourself in danger. Aside from the kitchen, the bathroom is one of the most dangerous rooms in your home. Recognizing these dangers,and making some common sense decisions, will go a long way in protecting you and your family.
" Essentially we a r e h a n -
dling the extremely high legal workload by working as many hours as required," Winters wrote. "In addition to the high-
er-profile legal cases, there (are) also day-to-day legal matters that keep us verybusy. We are in an especially busy time of public meetings, many of which take place at night. This
Learn the 411 On Medicare Coverage TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 4:00 PM Medicare is a government-sponsored program that people over the age of 65 and those
who meet their special criteria turn to for their social insurance. This program provides health insurance normally to seniors. Come and learn more about what it covers and what it does not.
leaves little time for substantive work other than between
meetings or evenings." — Reporter: 541-633-216O, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
Find Your Dream Home In Real EstateEvery Saturday In TheBulletin
Space is limited for this FREEeducational series. For more information or to reserve your seat please call (541) 312-2003. Prestige Senior Living High Desert 2660 NE Mary Rose Place vvvvvv.PrestigeCare.com Bend, Oregon 97701
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regon Senate Bill 188 is not the kind of legislation
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that attracts vocal opposition. The bill makes it a
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crime to distribute explicit images of others with the intent to harm or harass them. The bill is aimed at stopping what'scommonly called revenge porn. Aformer lover can want to strike back and emails or posts intimate images. Websites are dedicatedto such images. The images flaunted in public can be traumatizing and terribly embarrassing to the victim. SB 188 would make such behaviora Class A misdemeanor on the first offense. That is punishableby one year'sim prisonment, a $6,250 fine, or both. It would be a Class C felony if there has been a prior conviction under the statute. That is punishable with five years' imprisonment, a $125,000 fine, or both. The bill was introduced at the request of Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum. Other states are developing similar laws. Nobody testified against the bill at a Senate hearing earlier this week. It's obvious that it should be
a crime. The only concern is if the bill strikes the right balance. Is it narrow enough to protect the innocent? We think so. Some states make the first offense a felony, not a misdemeanor. Some states don't make the distinction that there is an intent to harm or harass. There's also the issue of liability for websites on which the images areposted. A representative from Facebook testified generally in favor of the bill. But Facebook is seeking an amendment that would immunize places where such content is posted from being held liable for hosting the images. We support an amendment along those lines. This bill won't stop revenge porn. It should make a difference. A strong law like it should prevent many people from being tempted and punish those that distribute it.
M 1Vickel's Worth Cougars may not be reported to ODFW
It's time to let hunters deal with the issue.
Patricia McKinney
Paws up, don't shoot. I'm upset that the Oregon De-
mbulances are, almost by definition, expensive propositions. They're filled with costly, high-tech equipment, and the men and women who operate them are specialists in the field. Add in the generally high price of fuel and, in this part of the world, long travel distances, and costs can mount rapidly. Medicare does reimburse ambulance providers for transporting the elderly and others eligible for the medical insurance program under some circumstances. What it actually pays is based in part onwhere the ambulance service is. What it calls super-rural providers,those in such places as Diamond Lake and Prineville, are paid the highest rate, while those in urban areas receive less. Those in rural areas, including Sisters and La Pine, are paid at rates that fall between urban and super rural.
A
But, as is typical of the Medicare program,the federal ambulance reimbursement rate, supposedly 80 percent of one's bill, falls short of that. In fact, the set payment schedule is so far below actual costs that every year or two
Congress steps in with extra money to pick up some of the slack. That's actually a good thing. Ambulances couldn't afford to operate without the extra money, and the service they provide is critical. What's bad about the arrangement is the routine need to increase payments and thepossibility that a more realistic payment schedule will, for some reason, fall by the wayside sometime. So far, that hasn't happened. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, along with another Republican and two Democrats,hope to change that this year. The legislation they've introduced, along with a similar measure in the U.S. Senate,would make the higher, more realistic rates a permanent feature of the program. He introduced similar legislation last year. Approval ofbothbills should be a slam dunk. They do not increase deficits, do not raise taxes and do not createnew programs. Rather,they make permanent something that's already occurring. They are, in effect, housekeeping proposals.Congress should treat them as such and make them law
quickly.
Steve Rooney
Bend
Universal health care is affordable
partment of Fish and Wildlife feels it must kill animals that are not a
threat but happen to be passing through an area. I know I, as well
as many other folks, won't report a cougar for fear it will simply be killed. I don't buy the argument an animal can't be relocated. Patty Campbell Bend
Hunters should get more cougartags
Bend
We shoulduserenewable energy, not coal
"Reforming Regarding A bill, Coal to Clean Energy, has Obamacare" published Sunday, been introduced in the state LegisFeb. 1, we should, as Michael lature that would require electric Strain writes, move toward univer-
utilities to
sal insurance coverage. The proposal he advocates prouniversal catastrophic, or high-deductible, coverage and allow us to
state coal generation to 90 percent cleaner energy by 2025. Suggestionsare being presented that costs and operational limitations are insurmountable. The
decide whether we purchase addi-
costs and risks of coal generation
poses that Americans would have
t r ansition al l o u t-of-
tional health care.
izing cougars, then taking them somewhere private to kill them,
and associated climate change are growing at an alarming rate. We are paying more at the hosic for all in the health sense, but pital, the grocery store and in costs for some, the care necessary as a for disaster assistance and for-
Oregon Department of Fish and
result of the trauma could be easily
Wildlife should just shoot the cougars right out of the trees in front of all the gawkers so they can all see the consequences of feeding the cute little deer in their neigh-
paid out of pocket. home insurance for property damThe plan Mr. Strain promotes re- age caused by extreme weather
there are far too many cougars,
surance purchasers or the provid-
But what is catastrophe? Certainly, major trauma is catastroph-
Perhaps if instead of tranquil-
Congressneedsto fix ambulancecompensation
and how we pay for it can move us forward to a better system.
lies on the marketplace to allocate
est fires, and I am certain on our elsewhere.
health care insurance. It would
Certainly, operational upgrades will be required. However, the rapborhoods. That way the meat could idly falling cost of both wind and be used and the hide preserved for chase insurance that is subsidized, solar development coupled with educational purposes. but not f r ee, w it h t h eir s carce our abundant renewable energy reWe are in their territory. We at- resources. sources in Oregon have now made tract the deer, then we want them They are likely to take the risk of clear the compelling reality of the killedbecause we are scared of going without coverage, with the competitive advantage of renewthem. The cougar was probably potential of facing "catastrophe" ables with both coal and natural just passing through, and if they due to uncovered health care costs. gas. had left it alone, it would have As the family is unable to pay, the The cost of wind and solar enermoved on. costs of the care would be passed gy are expected to fall further if we If they are sincere in thinking on to others, either taxpayers, in- continue to support these indusrequire those with low incomes to make a choice whether they pur-
tries, and we certainly should.
then issue more hunting tags so that people can hunt them and uti-
ers of care, as they are now. We need to begin aggressive We can afford universal health planning and implementation for lize the hide and the meat. If you care. We pay for the highest-cost renewable energy development are going to kill it, don't waste it. health system in the world, yet immediately. Every year, ODFW tranquilizes have no better outcomes than I support the Coal to Clean Enerand kills cougars and bears, then countries spending a tiny portion. gy legislation. kills them in private, wasting the Having that nuanced discussion Garey Kurtz animal. on how and what universal care is Portland
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickei's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: ietters©bendbulietin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Everything we know about recessions might be wrong By Noah Smith
A few intrepid economists have
Bloomberg News
Cycle school and the New Keynesians. means GDP has what is known as a In fact, it's now built into essentially "unit root." In 2009, in the middle of the hat are business cycles? every macro model. Great Recession, Mankiw bet that this Many people think that But what if it's wrong? recessionwould cause a lost decade. booms naturally lead to There have always been those who Interestingly, Paul Krugman was busts — that excesses built up during suspected, deep down, that the reign- amongthe optimists — and turned out good times lead inevitably to a crash. ing wisdom was wrong — that reces- to be wrong. Six years later, our econToday's economists don't see it that sions deal permanent injuries to an omy is healing, but very slowly — and way. Modern macroeconomists think economy, and that booms bring last- what healing there is may have been that recessions and booms are ran- ingbenefits. due to unexpected positive developdom fluctuations around a trend. One seed of doubtwas sown in 1987 ments, such as the shale boom. These fluctuations tend to die out by Greg Mankiw, a Harvard econoIn fact, as University of Oregon pro— a deep recession leads to a fastre- mist who was later an adviser to Presi- fessor Mark Thoma finds, the same covery, and a big expansion tends dent George W. Bush. Along with not- kind of thing has happened to many to evaporate quickly. Eventually, the ed financial economist John Camp- other economies within recent memtrend re-establishes itself after maybe bell, he published the paper "Are Out- ory. Some negative shock — usually five years. No matter what happens put Fluctuations Transitory?" That's a financial crisis of some sort — left — whether the central bank lowers in- economist-ese for "Do recessions each economy at a lower level of GDP terest rates, or the government spends naturally heal?" Mankiw and Camp- for many years. The recoveries were billions on infrastructure — the bad bell look at the evidence — what there usually L-shaped. times will be over soon enough, and is of it — and condude that there's a So if this is a normal thingthat hapthe good old steady growth trend will strong possibility that recessions don't pens to recession-hit economies, it reappear. naturally heal. If gross domestic prod- means that most of our modern macThis was the model endorsed by uct goes down by I percent, it stays I roeconomic models — even the ones Milton Friedman and enshrined in percent lower until something bumps that have won the Nobel prizes — are both of the major schools of thought in it backup. missing something big. Why don't the 1980s and 1990s: the Real Business In the language of econ math, that economies bounceback?
bucked the trend and tried to devel-
w
from a good equilibrium into a bad one, and it can then stay there until
op new models. One of them is Roger a burst of optimism comes along to Farmer of UCLA.
knock it back.
For inspiration, Farmer goes beyond If Farmer is right, then no matter Milton Friedman and back to John how rational it looks, our economy is Maynard Keynes. But Farmer's mod- driven by the vagaries of shifting huels are neither of the New Keynesian man expectations. It is not a self-cortype (which are much doser to Fried- recting system like Milton Friedman man's thinking) or of the simple Old envisaged, but a fragile thing. And that Keynesian type advanced by Paul opens up thepossibilitythat maybe we Krugman. Farmerasks the question need government to knock us out of Keynes asked: What if human sentiment, or "animal spirits," drives the
economy? His approach is mathematically sophisticated, and uses the complex modern techniques that are ubiqui-
the bad equilibrium — somehow.
Farmer's ideashavebeen published in prestigious journals — with his fearsome mathskill s and deep under-
standing of how modern models work, it would be surprising if they weren't. tous in academic Iiterature. The eco- But they have failed to spark a revolunomic agents in Farmer's models are tion in the macro world. Economists not dupes — their bursts of optimism are simply frightened of models where and pessimism become self-fulfilling bad permanent things can happen by prophecies. Farmer finds that this random chance. leads inexorably to a result that most Even if the data show that that's macroeconomists dread — the exis- what really happens. tence of "multiple equilibria." A burst — Noah Smithis an assistant professor of pessimism can knock the economy of finance at Stony Brook University.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
ACLU
layer of evidence during police confrontations. Continued from B1 A proposed bill worked on Medina got off a bus and by a bipartisan group from saw police arresting a young the Oregon House and Senman. She began recording ate would allow citizens to and was eventually c on- record police and would alfronted by one of the arrest- low police to wear body caming officers who asked her if eras. Police would still have he could review the camera. to let people know when they In the video, Gresham Po- are on camera when it's realice Officer Taylor Letsis said sonable to expect the officer he wanted to look for evi- to do so. dence related to the arrest. The bipartisan group inMedina told Letsis she cludes Central Oregon Rewould not give him her publicans Sen. Tim Knopp, phonebeforetheofficertook of Bend, and Rep. John Huffit from her, according to a re- man, of The Dalles. view of the video. Huffman said his goal ACLU attorneys say Letsis with the bill is to "continue
BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES James Albert Grant, of Redmond May 10, 1972 - Feb. 5, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place Sunday, February 15, 2015 at 1:00-4:00 PM at Riverbend Brewing Sports Pub, located at 2650 NE Division Street in Bend, Oregon.
Doris Evelyn Stowe, of Redmond Jan. 20, 1923 - Feb. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of a Life Lived will take place at a later date.
Donna M. McCoy, of Bend Sept. 3, 1921 - Feb. 10, 2015
Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: A private Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.
Emily A. Moore, of Bend Oct. 6, 1943 - Feb. 6, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at wwjN.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: Service information will be announced at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Special Olympics Oregon, High Desert, P. O. Box 6772, Bend, OR 97708 or to PEO, Chapter FY, 12775 SW Powell Butte Hwy., Powell Butte, OR 97753.
Mona M. Conley May 21, 1944- February 9, 2015 Turner — Mona, 70, died M onday, F e bruary 9 , i n S tayton. She was born i n I dabel, OK, moving to Or egon, in 1951, and living in t he W i ll a m ett e V aI l e y since. Mona worked as a typesetter f or m a n y y ears at newspa-
pers
around the valley including Mona Conley Stayton, S weet Home and A l b a ny . She m a r r i e d Br u n k J. Conley on June 8, 1962, in Albany. M ona was a m e m ber o f the La Pine Band of Brothers and the Military Order of the Purple Heart.
She enjoyed oil painting,
crocheting, writing stories, board games, bowling and was a Star Trek fan. Mona was a great listener, gave o od a d v i ce, a n d lo v e d u gs. Her f amily w a s t h e m ost i m p o rtant t h i n g t o her. M o n a w a s a h uge supporter of Stayton High S chool D r a m a Dep a r t ment. Survivors i n c l u d e her husband, B r u n k J. o f Turner; children, Brunk W. (Laura) Conley of Stayton,
James Richard Russell, "Jim", of Madras Feb. 13, 1940 - Feb. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Visitation will be held on Saturday, Sunday and Monday (February 14, 15, and 16th) between of the hours of 9:OOAM-5:OOPM at Bel-Air Colonial Chapel. Graveside services will be held on Tuesday, February 17, 2015 at 11:00 AM at Mount Jefferson Memorial Park in Madras. Contributions may be made to:
Three Rivers Animal Shelter in Madras.
Mary L. King, of Bend Oct. 12, 1936 - Feb. 6, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: A memorial service will be held Tue., Feb. 17, 2015 at 1:00 P.M. at Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
Julia M. Nyars, of Redmond
Nov. 4, 1923 - Feb. 10, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: A public viewing will be held 5:30-6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12 at Redmond Memorial Chapel, 717 SW 6th Street, Redmond, OR. Graveside services 10:00 a.m. Friday, Feb. 13 at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:
Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd Street, Redmond OR 97756; 541-548-7483
RobertJoseph Collins, of Redmond May 29, 1924 - Feb. 6, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
William Thomas Hollinger
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
May 2, 1925- February 5, 2015 " Bill" T h o m a s William Hollinger died on Thursday, February 5, 2015 at the age of 89 at St. Charles Medical Center, Bend, Oregon. He w as b o r n in H o nol ulu, Ha waii to Bill a nd A l v a Lucey
(Fritch)
Deaths ofnote from around the world:
Alex Vraciu, 96: A fighter pilot who became one of the
Navy's top flying aces during World War II , o nce down-
ing six Japanese planes in eight minutes during a battle dubbed the Great Mari anas Turkey S hoot. D i ed Jan. 29in West Sacramento,
Hollinger California. on May 2, — From wire reports 1925. Bill Bill Hollinger grad u a ted with a BS degree from Cal State, Los Angeles, California after which time he beDeath Notices are freeand came the ship Coordinator will be run for oneday, but for the U.S. Oceanographic specific guidelines must be Research and Development followed. Local obituaries Branch in San Diego, Caliare paid advertisements fornia. Prior to that time he submitted by families or fuw as employed a s a m e c hanic at th e Rock e t neral homes. Theymay be B ranch a t Ed w a r d s A i r submitted by phone, mail, Force Base in California. email or fax. TheBulletin On November 14, 1953 he reserves the right to edit was married to Margaret all submissions. Please Mary Weinheimer at Christ include contact information t he King Church, Los A n in all correspondence. eles, California. They were lessed with four children, For information on anyof two of whom are deceased. these services or about the Bill i s s u r v i ved b y hi s obituary policy, contact wife, M a rgaret; hi s s o n s. 541-617-7825.
violated Medina's First and Fourth Amendment rights of
working as new electronics
freepress and freedom from
needs to be done to protect
his sister, Patricia D evrn; three grandchildren, Haven Ruah, Ruby Lynn and Zeo Thomas; and two nephews, C raig, Brian and Ki m H a lula. Bill was a choir m ember and also a lector for many years at St. Francis Church as well as a member of the K nights of Col um b u s , f ourth d egree. H e h a d a great respect for the beauty of the Cascades. Bill loved s kiing and h i k ing an d a r -
chery. Surely he is being missed
as he now sees hrs Heave nly Father w it h h i s o w n spiritual eyes. A Memorial Mass will be held 12:15 p.m. Friday, February 13, 2015 at the H i storic St . F r ancis C atholic Church, Bend, Oregon. A reception will follow at the Double Tree Inn. Contributions m ay be m ade to Partners In C a r e Z 075 N .E . W y a t t C o u r t , B end, Oregon o r T h e S t . F rancis C a t holi c C h u r c h B uilding F un d 2 4 5 0 N . E . Z7th Street, Bend, Oregon 97701.
people's' right to privacy." "Police should always act as they would if they knew there was a camera rolling,"
unreasonable search and seizure when he took Medina's
phone to view her footage. Medina wasn't a r rested
Obituary policy
Kevin (and wife, Meg) and Shawn (and wife, Mary);
come about and see what
as part of the confrontation, Medina said in a statement. and Fidanque says the case Likewise, police officers isn't a challenge to Oregon's support the law that would consent law. allow them to wear the body The ACLU has spotlighted cameras without question. the audio recording consent
House Bill 2757 would re-
law in the wake of racial justice protests nationwide, along with widespread calls, including from President BarackObama, to equip po-
quire departments to have written policies that include
how long officers can store the video. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
lice with body cameras as a
ly moving in the right direction here and joining other Continued from B1 The state of Oregon has used the software on its oregon.gov website to show various state agencies' finances. Ari Hoffnung, a Socrata
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
leaders across the country
that are embracing financial transparency," H o ffnung said. "Wherever you live, there'sa realsense ofa dis-
connect between the public senior adviser and former and the government, and
New York City deputy comp- we hope with these products troller, said the main purpose that we'll be able to bridge of the software is to rebuild
that divide."
"This really provides ac-
trust between governments and their constituents.
cess to data in a way that
He said many taxpayers was much more difficult for people to get their hands on earned money is being spent beforehand," he said. wisely. — Reporter: 541-617-782O, "I think the county is realtshorack@bendbulletin.com wonder whether their hard-
Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Find It All Online
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
bendbulletin.com
•
•
•
a
a
FEATUREDOBITUARY
'60 Minutes' correspondent BobSi mOn WaS'a legend' By Tom McElroy The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Longtime
"60 Minutes" correspondent Bob Simon, who covered wars,
was someone I was intimidat-
edby." Simon wo n n u m erous awards, including his fourth Peabodyand an Emmy forhis
riots, Academy Award-nom- story from Central Africa on inated movies and was held the world's only all-black symcaptivefor more phony in 2012. Another story
Simon
than a month in
about an orchestra in Para-
Iraq two decades ago, was killed in a car crash Wednesday. He
guay, one whose poor members constructed their instruments from trash, won him his 27th Emmy, perhaps the most
held by a journalist for field reporting, CBS said. which Simon was a passenger Simon joined CBS News in hit another car in Manhattan, 1967 as a reporter and assignpolice said. Simon and the ment editor, covering campus was 73. A town car in
town car's driver were taken to a hospital, where Simon
unrest and i nner-city riots,
was pronounced dead. Simon was among a hand-
CBS said. He also worked in
Christy (Gar) Robinson of
ful of elite journalists to cover
T urner a n d L e s ( K a t h y ) Conley of Portland; brothe rs, Charles Upton o f A l bany and William Upton of Sarasota, FL; sister, Mary Jane Sloan of M a r y sville, WA; grandchildren, Brunk V ., Nick, Jacob, Zac, L u cas, Ph il , J e n , J e n n i f er, Betsy an d Ca leb ; great-grandchildren, Endya, R y an , S a v annah, Cilous and Riley. V iewing w i l l b e o n F r i d ay, F ebruary 1 3 , 2 0 1 5 , from 9:00 a.m. — 2:00 p.m., at North Santiam Funeral Service, followed by memorial service at 2:00 p.m., at the Stayton High School Auditorium. Interment will be in W i l l amette National C emetery in Por t l a n d . Contribution s m ay be made to the Stayton High S chool D r a m a Dep a r t m ent. Serving th e f a m i l y , N orth S a n t i a m Fu n e r a l Service, Stayton.
most major overseas conflicts
CBS' Tel Aviv bureau from 1977 to 1981 and in Washington, D.C., as its U.S. Department of State correspondent.
and news stories since the late 1960s, CBS said. He covered
Simon's career in war reporting began in Vietnam,
stories including the Vietnam
and he was on one of the last
helicopters out of Saigon when ed movie"Selma" in a career the U.S. withdrew in 1975. At spanning five decades. the outset of the Gulf War in He had been contributing to January 1991, Simon was cap"60 Minutes"on a regularba- tured by Iraqi forces near the sis since 1996. He also was a Saudi-Kuwaiti b order. CBS correspondentfor"60 Minutes said he and the other three II." members of CBS News' covAnderson Cooper, who does erage team spent 40 days in occasional stories for "60 Min- Iraqi prisons, an experience utes," was near tears talking Simon wrote about in his book about Simon's death. He said "Forty Days." Simon returned that when Simon presented a to Baghdad in January 1993 to "60 Minutes" story "you knew cover the American bombing it was going to be something of Iraq. speciaL" Simon was born May 29, "I dreamed of being, and 1941, in the Bronx. He gradstill hope to be, a quarter of uated from Brandeis Univerthe writer that Bob Simon is sity in 1962 with a degree in and has been," the CNN an- history. He and his wife have chor said. "... Bob Simon was a daughter, who is a producer a legend, in my opinion. He for "60 Minutes" in New York.
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War and the Oscar-nominat-
ROSES
this Valentine's Day! : to order call 1.800.929.0916 or visit:: vrwnv.fromyouflowers.com/roses *50% Off Our Line of RosesOffer applies only to a select line of rose products and does not apply to florist delivered arrangements. See item-level product description for details. *Orders for flower delivery today must be placed by 3pm in the delivery zip code. Next day delivery options or dates in the future are also available. Cut off time for delivery same day varies on weekends and during peak holidays. •
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B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
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TODAY
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TONIGHT
HIGH 6 1' I f '
ALMANAC
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
LOW ~~ x-v 6 0 ' 34' ~ 35 '
~
Mostly cloudy and mild
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FRIDAY
Mild with times of clouds and sun
Partly cloudy
53
EAST:Patchy fog early; otherwise, unSeasid seasonably mild today 58/46 with clouds andsun. Cannon Tonight will be mild 57/47 with patchyclouds. Tigamo
Rather cloudy andmild
TEMPERATURE
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UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
New snow Base
Ski resort Anthony LakesMtn Hoodoo SkiArea
3 4 2 0
Mt. Ashland
49-4 9 1-1 26-5 7 49-9 5
Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen I Snowmass, CO 3 Vail, CO 3 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 4 Squaw Valley,CA 3 ParkCityMountain,UT 0 Sun Valley, ID 0
Bi'amsrck
32-72 1-5 26-3 9
*
19/11 • Billings 5 9/41 p
eo/42
*
*
*
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sr
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0"
46-4 6 24-46 16-5 2 49-49 45-7 5
Source: OnTheSnow.com
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Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wf Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
84n4/pc 57/50/pc 48/42/r 53/41/pc 86//5/sb
32/18/0.05 71/53/0.00 46/19/0.00 36/26/0.00 64/34/0.00 85/55/0.00 49/23/0.00 33/27/0.06 58/32/0.00 73/54/0.00 34/27/0.02 30/11/0.01 54/23/0.00 67/42/0.00 34/22/0.00 33/21/0.00 38/33/0.04 54/42/0.01 39/25/0.00 68/48/0.00 84/60/0.00 37/30/Tr 39/26/0.00 81/54/0.00 37/16/0.00 23/11/0.00 23/19/0.05 51/30/0.00 36/23/0.01 60/30/0.00
Rapid City Reno Richmond 49/28/Tr Rochester, NY 32/1 2/0.03 Sacramento 67/39/0.00 Si. Louis 42/32/0.00 Salt Lake City 53/32/0.00 San Antonio 76/47/0.00 San Diego 82/56/0.00 San Francisco 67/48/0.00 San Jose 68/41/0.00 Santa re 48/38/0.03 Savannah 62/38/0.00 Seattle 55/42/0.00 Sioux Fags 23/17/0.05 Spokane 49/38/0.01 Springfield, Mo 48/28/0.00 Tampa 66/47/0.00 Tucson 76/48/0.00 Tulsa 53/32/0.00 Washington, DC 47/29/0.00 Wichita 43/36/0.00 Yskima 54/36/0.00 Yuma 84/60/0.00 4
10/-2/sf 19/1 5/sn 72/48/s 76/49/s
25/12/pc 30/24/pc 26/21/s 48/23/pc 46/24/s 52/32/s 88/58/s 89/58/s 28/16/pc 34/28/pc 13/3/pc 25/6/sn 38/23/s 46/31/s 76/53/s 73/50/s
13/7/pc 24/12/sn 15/9/pc 28/2/pc 32/17/pc 39/25/pc 61/35/s 53/39/s
36/9/sf 18/10/s 38/8/sf 19/9/s 48/21/pc 31/21/s 48/30/s 64/36/s 24/18/s 44/23/pc 70/41/s 61/37/s
82/56/s 86/58/s 16/12/pc 33/17/pc
42/11/sf 79/53/s 26/4/sf 23/10/sn 29/3/sn 51/20/pc
23/17/pc 82/56/s 19/1 3/c
15/-10/pc 13/-2/pc 38/22/s
52/32/pc 59/25/s 68/35/s 70/36/s
49/17/pc 34/1 8/s 22/-2/sf 8/2/sf 70/45/s 71/44/s 26/17/s 45/29/pc
60/35/pc 61/37/s 61/41/pc 66/48/pc 81/61/s 80/59/s 69/52/s 68/51/s 74/46/s 74/45/s 53/29/s 59/30/s 65/26/s 50/29/s 57/46/c 58/47/c
19/16/s 38/5/pc 52/37/c 53/40/pc 32/20/s 50/28/s 68/42/s 58/40/s
71/49/pc 41/28/s 42/16/c 39/25/s 58/38/c 84/57/s
77/53/pc 60/31/s
86/61/s 66/45/sh 22/-6/sn 35/27/c 87/58/1 76/65/s 73/51/pc 51/33/pc 41/31/pc 19/-16/sf 47/35/pc 97/78/s 56/40/pc 91/60/s 87/72/1 38/20/sf 35/18/s 54/40/s 87/75/pc 38/28/pc 85/69/1 67/54/pc 56/47/sh 53/37/s 15/-13/sf 53/44/r 42/32/c 39/28/pc
86/61/s 66/44/pc -1/-13/pc 33/23/sn 89/57/s 76/63/pc 76/53/pc 41/33/sh 42/35/sh 0/-10/c 52/41/pc 97/79/s 55/41/c 94/59/s 86/70/1 31/26/sn 38/24/s 54/42/s 88/76/pc 35/31/c 79/69/1 71/59/pc 57/46/sh 50/35/pc 11/2/c 55/45/c 40/32/pc 41/27/s
30/21/s 55/31/s
57/40/pc 84/58/pc
I
Mecca Mexico City Montreal
Moscow Nairobi Nassau
New Delhi
Osaka Oslo
91/72/0.00 74/48/Tr 12/1/0.00 30/19/0.06 84/61/0.00 75/66/0.02 72/51/0.00 53/37/0.03 39/36/0.00 12/1/0.04 46/36/0.00
Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro 97ng/0.00 Rome 59/36/0.00 Santiago 91/61/0.00 Sao Paulo 86/68/0.22 Sapporo 32/19/0.02 Seoul 43/23/0.00 Shanghai 59/39/0.00 Singapore 88n5/0.00 Stockholm 41/28/0.00 Sydney 81/71/0.00 Taipei 65/52/0.00 Tel Aviv 58/53/0.32 Tokyo 51/34/0.00 Toronto 29/16/0.05 Vancouver 54/42/0.00 Vienna 39/37/0.00 Warsaw 37/33/Tr
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The m a rketing package is designed to Yourbusinessisimportanttousandwewant reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. it to grOW and be aSSuCCeSSful aS POSSible. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion We alSO realiZe you need affOrdable marketwill saturate the marketplace with more than ing OPPOrtunitieS to let PeOPlknOW e hoW
TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!
49/39/s 52/42/pc 74/60/pc 67/42/s 90/75/pc 46/24/s 57/49/sh 43/31/s 67/48/sh 41/26/pc 78/62/s 80/61/pc 61/47/pc 51/28/pc 79/60/s 46/38/r 45/38/r 50/38/s 81/61/1 70/63/pc 46/40/c 47/38/pc 84/62/pc
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 36/26/0.33 41/40/r 45/40/r 39/29/0.00 29/20/s 47/28/s
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln
ullet
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42/33/sh 47/41/pc 73/59/pc 65/41/s 90/76/pc 42/21/pc 55/50/sh 45/32/s 66/48/1 42/25/c 89/60/pc 81/60/pc 58/46/s 48/29/pc 80/60/s 44/39/sh 45/34/pc 50/33/pc 82/60/1 70/61/pc 43/40/sn 46/36/pc 83/60/s 85/73/pc 57/44/pc 44/38/pc 50/36/pc 87/74/pc
Yesterday Today Friday
City
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Amsterdam Athens
erfvtxrn
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44-54
Hi/Lo/W 68/40/s 18/15/c 6/-9/pc 64/35/s 33/23/s 46/29/s 25/17/s 67/43/s 26/16/pc 61/35/s 46/26/s 30/-8/pc 58/38/pc 15/-1/pc 17/4/pc 8/6/c 1/-12/pc 9/-16/sn 46/28/s 42/23/s 43/25/s 57/37/s 24/11/sn 29/24/c 18/13/c 56/34/s 45/27/s 46/27/s 50/28/s 25/21/c 12/-9/pc 69/49/c 67/39/s 26/23/c 62/35/s 39/17/pc 19/16/c 18/-10/sn 67/40/pc 8/-20/pc 18/-9/pc 60/26/s 21/15/sn 23/6/sn 37/21/pc 20/15/pc 12/-5/pc 60/32/s 80/71/pc 64/45/s 43/26/s 28/21/c 53/33/s 51/30/s
/12
41/38/0.00 41/32/0.10 • 59/34 52/3 *„ „ * * Auckland 69/56/0.02 * ** ifwauk e * Baghdad 73/59/0.00 * II* at Berlin, NH Che n Bangkok 91/72/0.00 * I efpiila Precipitation: 0.29" 56/3 24/1 Beijing 49/30/0.00 **~C DesM nes C i Sslt Lske ity Beirut 55/52/1.60 at Las Vegas,NM sh shclvco 1 /5, ~ v21 * • Dsn eo/35 * Berlin 43/40/0.01 49/52 Ksnva ity ea/3 Lss V ss Bogota 66/50/0.02 29/20 „' 28/ 1 4 72/4 Budapest 48/30/0.00 26/1 BuenosAires 86/61/0.00 Charfott Los An lss 32/17 19 Cabo San Lucas 84/60/0.00 homs City A* • / 48 0 Cairo 55/50/0.00 Phoen * Llufs ock v Aacborsus Afbuque ue • At Calgary 21/12/0.17 • 79/63 ~ * 33/2 II 0 57/32 45/24 Cancun 81/55/0.00 Bir inuhs 8 /41 • uags Juneau ul pa Dublin 43/36/0.10 42/ 0 SS/3 9/3 Edinburgh 41/37/0.00 41/40 New r Geneva 43/23/0.00 v • risnde Harare 83/58/0.24 4 5/39 7 41 s Hong Kong 68/55/0.00 Honolulu c ~ . t Istanbul 39/34/1.04 79/de Mismi Jerusalem 49/41/0.03 7e/p- 'z . Johannesburg 88/64/0.00 s Lima 83/73/0.00 Lisbon 57/46/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 41/40/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 46/36/0.02 Manila 85/73/0.02 Bois
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46 contiguousstates) National high: 60 at Santa Ana,CA National low: -21'
0
Sunny
Yesterday Today Friday
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ORE 56 atWiuamette Pass:Mostly cloudy and mild today.Patchyclouds tonight. Mild tomorrow with cloudsandsun. ORE136 at Diamond Lake: Partly sunny and mild today.Partly cloudytonight.
46
'p Tq~
Sunny and mild
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 63/46/0.00 56/37/pc /40 High 59 43 65' in 1924 lington 57/37 Portland 59/ Akron 35/1 5/Tr 20/1/sf Meac am Losti ne 32' 24' -ll'in 1905 Low 1/41 Albany 27/7/0.00 28/-3/sn 58/3 • W co6 /36 58/34 Enterprfse dl e 5, n • he Daa Albuquerque 51/39/Tr 57/32/s • 5 7/35 • 57/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Mild today 61/45 andy • Anchorage 33/23/0.00 33/22/sf 59/41 Mc innviu 9/41 • Joseph Agsnfa 64/32/0.00 45/24/pc • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" with times of clouds Gove nt • upi Condon 0/37 Atlantic City 37/28/0.00 43/15/c • 59 58 29 Record 0.63" in 1941 and sun in the south Lincoln union Austin 76/37/0.00 60/36/pc 56/ Month to date (normal) 0.2 2" (0.46") and mostly cloudy Sale 60/47 Baltimore 43/26/0.00 42/11/c • pray Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.47 " (1.99") skies across the north 61/4 • 40 Billings 33/27/0.00 59/41/c 'Baker G Newpo 56/33 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 21 " Birmingham 62/26/0.00 42/20/s /42 61/46 • Mitch ll 57/28 Bismarck 14/5/Tr 19/11/pc campsh WEST:It will be mild orv lljs SUN ANDMOON eu Boise 57/36/0.00 59/34/c Yach 62/35 • John today with sunshine 60/46 60/44 Boston 25/14/Tr • Prineville Day 5/29 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 32/21/0.00 28/7/sn and patchy clouds 34/6/sn 62/36 • Pa lina 60 / 3 5 7:09 a.m. 7: 0 6 a.m. 34 Buffalo 31/12/0.07 18/-6/sf across the south and Floren e • Eugene • Re d B rothers 5933 5:30 p.m. 5: 3 1 p.m. mostly cloudy skies in 61/46 Valee 19/-2/0.00 27/-6/sf Burlington, VT 31 Su Were 61/34 1:19 a.m. 2: 1 9 a.m. 57/35 Caribou, ME 12/-9/0.00 14/0/c the north. Nyssa • 69/ Ham on C e Charleston, SC 59/35/0.00 64/26/s 11:29 a.m. 1 2:15 p.m. • I6 plne J untura 56/ 3 3 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 55/28/0.00 52/19/pc • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 56/35 64/46 /43 Chattanooga 62/29/0.00 37/21/pc • Foit Rock Riley 58/28 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 66/31 Cheyenne 48/31/0.02 56/35/pc d w d 59/26 61/33 Chicago 35/28/Tr 13/5/pc High: 63' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 46/23/0.00 25/13/sf Jordan V gey Feb 16 Feb 25 M a r 5 M a r 13 at Brookings 61/45 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 62/44 Cleveland 34/12/0.01 16/0/sf Low: 22' 56/36 Marsh Lake 62/35 ColoradoSprings 44/33/0.40 57/35/s Touight's sity:Thebright eclipsing variable at Rome 61/30 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 40/27/0.00 26/1 8/s • Paisley 61/ star Algol is in one of its periodic dimming, a Columbia, SC 59/36/0.00 59/23/s • 60/35 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 64/33/0.00 52/23/s Medfo d Bo/32 magnitude 3.4 instead of its usual 2.1. Gold ach ~ Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 38/1 9/Tr 21/8/sf 63/ e+ 61/33 Klamath Concord, NH 26/-5/0.00 25/6/sn Source: JimTodd,OMSI • Ashl nd • FaRS • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 77/49/0.00 69/47/c Bro ings 64/3 61/28 62/ 63/26 60/26 Dallas 67/48/0.00 55/35/s Dayton 39/22/Tr 22/1 2/sf Denver 48/30/Tr 62/34/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Frlday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 29/26/Tr 19/16/s 2 1~ 2 ~ Z I 0 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 34/1 9/0.06 13/0/sf The highertheAccuWsaffrer.rxrmiiy index number, Astoria 56/42/0.00 60/44/c 59/47/pc La Grande 54/30/0.00 58/29/c 59/36/pc Portland 57/4 0/0.0060/42/c 59/45/pc Duluth 14/8/0.10 8/5/pc the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low, Baker City 49/26/0.00 57/28/c 55/30/pc L a Pine 57/26/0.00 60/34/c 60/32/c Prinevige 57/ 37/0.0062/36/c 60/39/pc El Paso 66/43/0.00 59/36/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 63/43/0.00 62/46/pc61/47/pc Medford 5 8 /38/0.00 62/37/pc 62/38/pc Redmond 60 / 29/0.0064/34/c 60/36/pc Fairbanks 11/-8/0.00 8/-9/pc Bums 52/27/0.00 58/28/c 59/29/pc N ewport 57/4 3/0.00 61/46/c 59/46/pc Roseburg 58 / 41/0.00 62/44/c 63/46/pc Fargo 8/2/0.04 9/6/pc Eugene 55/43/0.00 60/43/c 59/44/pc NorthBend 57/45/0.00 63/44/c 61/46/pc Salem 54/39/0.00 61/42/c 61/45/pc Flagstaff 50/22/0.00 54/25/s Klamath Fags 52/30/0.00 61/28/pc 61/29/pc Ontario 54/29/0.00 60/34/c 57/38/pc Sisters 57/27/0.00 65/32/c 60/35/pc Grand Rapids 33/22/0.07 14/3/sf For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lskeview 55/25/0.00 63/26/pc 63/27/pc Pendleton 57/38/0.00 57/38/c 55/41/pc The Dages 5 4 /36/0.00 59/41/c 56/43/pc Green 6ay 30/24/0.27 12/3/pc www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams Greensboro 52/30/0.00 49/17/pc Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-psrffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-tbunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-irace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-64 at Cabbage Hill: Mostly cloudy and mild Harrisburg 37/1 9/0.00 35/7/sf today. Partly cloudytonight. Harfford, CT 28/13/0.00 29/2/sn Helena 51/27/0.00 58/35/c US 20 atBantiam Pass:Mostly cloudy and Honolulu 80/67/0.01 79/66/c mild today.Partly cloudytonight. ~ gs ~ t es ~ 208 ~ 30 s ~ 40 s ~ 50 s ~ eg s ~ 7 0 8 ~ a g s ~ g g s ~ 1 0 0s ~ 1 10s Houston ~ 108 ~ g s 75/44/0.00 65/39/pc US 26 atGov'tCamp:Considerable cloudiHuntsville 59/25/0.00 37/20/s * Csfus * * NATIONAL ness today.Partly cloudy tonight. Indianapolis 39/25/0.04 19/9/pc „t7tre c 48/29 S *43/6 • i nipe T nder uay Jackson, MS 68/33/0.00 49/23/s EXTREMES u US 26 atOchocoDivide:Mostly cloudy and 5 %57/44 2/ 4 Jacksonville 64/40/0.00 69/30/s mild today.Patchyclouds tonight. YESTERDAY (for the
Yesterday Normal Record
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Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 58/38 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College hoops, C4 NHL, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
GOLF Woods takes leave fromTour PEBBLE BEACH,Calif. — Tiger Woodssaid
Wednesday hi sgameis "notacceptable" to compete in tournaments, and he will return whenhe thinks it is.
Hopeful of having injuries behind him, Woods had ahorrific start to the newyear: He shot a career-high 82 in the second round of the Phoenix Open tomiss the cut by12 shots, and he withdrew after11
holes at Torrey Pinesbecause of tightness in his back from afog delay. Woods said on his website that the past two weeks havebeendisappointing, especially at Torrey Pines, wherehe is an eight-time winner. He said henever wants to withdraw, but recent injuries haveallowed that to happentoo often. Woods said his latest injury was not related to the back surgery hehad last spring and that heis feeling better every day with physical therapy. "Right now, I needa lot of work on mygame, and to still spend time with the people that are important to me," Woodssaid."Myplay, and scores, arenot acceptable for tournament golf. Like I've said, I enter a tournament to compete at the highest level, and whenthink I I'm ready, I'll be back." He said hewants to play the HondaClassic, which starts Feb.26, but he won't be there unless his game is tournament ready. "That's not fair to anyone," Woodssaid. "I do, however,expect to be playing againvery soon." Woods is at No.62 in the world, his worst ranking since before he won his first PGATour event in1996. He isnot eligible for the World Golf Championship at Doral. "I am committed to getting back to the pinnacle of mygame," Woods said. — The Associated Press
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL
e riC a By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Nick Saban. Urban Meyer. Jimbo Fisher. Mark Helfrich?
During a press conference leading up to the Rose Bowl, a podium of Oregon football players was asked if the Ducks' young coach was the most underappreciated among his peers in the College Football Playoff. "The most underpaid, yes,"
on arWi
Inside • Comparing Helfrich's new deal with other Pac-12coaches, C3 left tackle Jake Fisher said. "I was going to say that," wide receiver Devon Allen added. Not anymore.
Helfrich signed a five-year, $17.5 million contract Monday after leading Oregon to a Pac12 championship, a Rose Bowl victory, an appearance in the
national championship and a final ranking of No.2.
— The Associated Press
Blazers enter break with win Wesley Matthews scores 20 points, and Portland extends the Los Angeles Lakers' road losing streak to a franchise-record 11 games. Roundup,C3
conference from a public insti-
tution, followed by Arizona's day coaches salaries database, Rich Rodriguez ($3.3 million) Helfrich — whose previous and UCLA's Jim Mora ($3.25 annual salary of $2 million million). Southern California, ranked 52nd nationally and a private school, did not pub10th in the Pac-12 — is now licly disclose its salary inforfourth among Pac-12 coaches mation for Steve Sarkisian. and tied for 22nd nationally California's Sonny Dykes was with an immediate base-pay the lowest-paid Pac-12 coach raise to $3.15 million. with a base salary of $1.8 In 2014, Washington's Chris million. Petersen ($3.7 million) was SeeHelfrich/C3
spoils a needed good story Barry Svrluga The Washington Post
There are questions
about the wisdom and propriety of nationally televising a sporting tournament pitting kids who are 11 to 13 years old. But last summer, weren't we blessed that the
PREP WRESTLING
Little League World Series was on? We were exposed to Mo'ne Davis, the pitcher
from Philadelphia who became a role model and icon for becoming the first girl to throw a shutout on such a stage, appearing on the cover of Sports Illustrated
afterward. And if Davis' team
couldn't win, why not get behind the kids from Jackie Robinson West from Chi-
cago's South Side? Roughly 2.4 million kids play in Lit-
Somelocalwrestlerstowatchin theClassSAdistrict championships • Class 5A competition in Hood Riverwill be one of the state's toughest
Conner
By Grant Lucas
DLII1II
The Bulletin
Like gladiators trudgingthrough the gauntlet of the Colosseum, these
MOIIIITAIII VIEW
tle League nationwide, but these kids must have been
the most riveting, bowing after big base hits, embracing each other and their fans with each run scored, each out recorded. They
were offered no advantages, and made no excuses for it. And they won.
And then, Wednesday, Little League International — the organization
that oversees those 2.4 million kids and, more important, the adults who
oversee them — stripped Jackie Robinson West of
wrestlers are primed for battle.
They'dbetterbe. Because beginning Friday and wrappingup the following afternoon,
its title and suspended its
team managerand thetop administrator from the district because the team had
used players who did not live in the area the league represents. Plainly put, they cheated. SeeLittle League/C2
these wrestlers are in for
combat that would make Maximus tremble.
In a region featuring a team that has won seven of the last eight Class 5A state championships, a
district thatboasts a slew of perennial 5A top-10 state finishers and prides
Mitch Willett
itself as the home of wrestlingpowerhouses, championships in Hood
A person familiar with the negotiations said Wednesdaythe Sacramento Kings and George Karl haveagreed to the framework of a deal for him to takeover as coach. The plan is for Karl to coach the Kings in their first game following the All-Star break Feb. 20at home against Boston. Karl is attending funeral services for former North Carolina coach Dean Smith this week. The Kings areexpected to announce thedeal in the coming days. Karl will be Sacramento's third coach this season. MichaelMalone was fired after an11-13 start. Karl last coached in the 2012-13season, when he wonNBA Coach of the Yearwith Denver before being fired following a firstround playoff loss to Golden State.
the highest-paid coach in the
According to the USA To-
the Special District 4
NBA Karl to become Kings coach
eer S Scandal
REDMOND
River no doubt will be
one of the most competitive district tournaments in the state. There is Hermiston,
the program that has won all but one 5A team state title since the state
expanded to six dassifi-
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Tarkanian pioneered taking aim at NCAA
cations before the 200607 season. There is Pend-
leton, which has placed Adam Kilgore
in the top 10 four of the
pastfiveyears,andthere is Hood River Valley, which finished no worse than 10th in three of the
last four state meets. Then there are the
The Washington Post
Austin Rystedt
Jerry Tarkanian, the
legendary, wily college basketball coach who died
Wednesday at 84, started throwing bricks at the
REDMOND
NCAA's windows decades
Central Oregon programs that continue to
before it became fashionable. While fans and media
turn heads at the state
level: Redmond High, third two years ago;
cheered on the sport's
governing body for supposedly cleaning up college
Mountain View, sev-
enth last season; and of course Bend High, Ridgeview and Summitall three of which daim
basketball in the 1970s and
some of the best rising wrestlers in 5A.
'80s, Tarkanian called it out for the hypocrisy and opacity so many others took so many years to see. Other coaches got along
Essentially, Bend
with the NCAA or steered
coach Luke Larwin
clear. Tarkanian took it to
says, this region is a superconference. SeeWrestling/C4
court. Twice. Obituaries and trib-
Nextup What: Class5A Special District 4 championships Teams:Bend,Hermiston, Hood River Valley, Mountain View, Pendleton, Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit, The Dalles Where:Hood River When:2p.m.Fridayand10 a.m. Saturday
Connor
utes about Tarkanian are bound to include his most
SPerliltg
quotable lines. So many of those captured his defiance.
RIDGEVIEW
SeeTarkanian/C4
Inside
TheBulletinand Wescom News Service file photos
• Young (26 points) leads Oregon past Southern California,C4 • Beavers fall at UCLA,C4 • No. 2 Virginia survives N.C. State. Top 25 roundup,C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY TENNIS
ATP, World TennisTournament ATP, World TennisTournament GOLF PGA Tour, PebbleBeachNational Pro-Am
Time TV/Ragiio 10:30 a.m. Tennis 3:30a.m. (Fri.j Tennis noon
Golf
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Minnesota at lowa Men's college, Mississippi at Florida Men's college, Tulsa atUConn Men's college, Purdue atRutgers Women's college, Florida St. at North Carolina Women's college, Mississippi St. at Kentucky Men's college, Northeastern at Hofstra NBA, Cleveland atChicago Women's college, lowa atNebraska Men's college, Michigan at lllinois Men's college, St. Mary's at BYU Men's college, SMUat Houston Men's college, Stanford at Utah Men's college, Loyola Marymount at Gonzaga Women's college,ArkansasatTexasA8M Men's college, California at Colorado Men's college, SantaClara atSan Francisco Women's college, UCLA at California
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.
Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU Root SEC NB CSN TNT
Bi g Ten ESP N ES P N2 ES P NU Pa c -12 Root SEC FS1 ES P NU Pa c -12
FRIDAY GOLF Champions Tour,ACEGroup Classic PGA Tour, PebbleBeachNational Pro-Am
9 :30 a.m. noon
G olf Golf
BASEBALL
College, Northwestern vs. OregonSt. College, Indiana atStanford SOCCER Women's int'I friendly, England vs. USA England, FACup, West Bromvs. West Ham
noon KICE940-AM 3 p.m. Pa c -12 noon FS1 4:30a.m. (Sat.) FS1
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Daytona 500 practice 2 p.m. NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Daytona 500 final practice3:30 p.m.
FS1 FS1
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Kent State atToledo NBA, All-Star Celebrity Game Men's college, GreenBayat Valparaiso Men's college, Cleveland St. at Detroit Men's college, Arizona atWashington Women's college, Arizona St. at OregonSt. NBA, Rising Stars Challenge Women's college, St. John's at Marquette High school, Ridgeview at Bend Men's college, lona at Manhattan Men's college, Arizona St. atWashington St. HOCKEY College, Wisconsin at Ohio St. College, Providence atNotre Dame College, Michigan at Minnesota NHL, Boston atVancouver
3 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6:50 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.
ESPNU ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU ESPN
3:40 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m.
Big Ten NBCSN Bi g Ten C S NNW
Pac-12 TNT FS1 COTV ESPNU
Pac-12
TENNIS
ATP, Memphis Open ATP, Memphis Open
5 p.m. 7 p.m.
Tennis Tennis
6 p.m.
ESPN2
BOXING
Friday Night Fights
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Helmet CamS, Sideline CamPuterS COming — TheNCAA football rules committee wants to experiment with helmet cameras, wireless communication betweencoaches and players on the field and the use of computers on the sideline ascoaching tools. The committee announcedWednesday after two days of meetings in Indianapolis that it was hoping to gather dataabout expanding the use of technology in college football with an eye toward implementing rules as soon asthe 2016 season. The helmet cameraswould likely be placed onquarterbacks andused to allow coaches to seewhat the player is seeing on thefield. The committee also passed aproposal to adjust the ineligible mandownfield rule from 3 yards to1 yard past the line of scrimmage.
BASKETBALL WOmen'S SeleCtian COmmittee releaSeS tOP SeedSWith SelectionMondayaboutamonthaway,theNCAA women'sbasketball committee gavecoaches, players and fans a look at where the top teams are. There isn't much of asurprise that Connecticut is the overall No. 1 seed.South Carolina, Notre DameandTennessee are the other top teams. Thecommittee also put out a list of the next16 teams, in alphabetical order, which includes Pac-12schools Arizona State. Oregon State, California, Stanford andWashington. — From wire reports
Little League Continued from C1 What happened was just another depressing bit of insanity added to a bit of society that should be immune from such
things, youth sports. This is not a baseball-only issue. But at a time when the
African-American participation in the game is dwindling — a studyby the Pew Research
Center found that only 8.3 percent of players on opening-day rosters in the majors last year
were black, down from 18.7 percent in 1981 — the Jackie Robinson West kids represent-
ed hope. There was something pure about them and their story. Until Wednesday, when it became taintedand ended up in the same wastebasket as all the others before it — and a de-
pressing reminder that others will follow, because when win-
ON DECK Today Wrestling: Lakeview, Pleasant Hil at LaPine, 5p.m. Friday Boysbasketball:RidgeviewatBend,7p,mcSummit at Redm ond, 7 p.m.; Sistersat JunctionCity, 7:15 p.mcMadrasat Gladstone, 7 p.m.; Crook CountyatMolala, 7 p.m.; LaPineatPleasantHil, 7:30 p.m.;CulveratStanfield, 6 p.m.;Gilchrist at CentralChristian,7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Bend atRidgeview,7p.m.; Redmond at Summ it, 7p.m.; SistersatJunctionCity, 5:45p.m.; GladstoneatMadras,7p.m.; MolagaatCrookCounty, 7p.m.; La Pineat PleasantHil,6p.m.; CulveratStanfield,430 p.m.; Gilchrlst atCentral Christian,6 p.m.; TrinityLutheranat DamascusChristian,6p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim8, FitnessCenter, 4:15 p.m.;Sisters at Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 3 championshipsinAlbany, 10a.m.; Madras at Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 2championshipsinMadras,TBD Wrestling:Bend, Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Class5ASpecial District 4 champi onshipsinHoodRiver,2pmcCrookCounty, Madrasat Class4ASpecial District1 championships in Tigamook,TBD;Sisters at Class4A, SpecialDistrict 2championships inTurner,TBD
In the Bleachers O 201 5 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
WRESTC IIIG
Viganoya74,Providence68 WestVirginia76,Kansas St. 72
SOUTH Charleston Southern 83,Coastal Carolina 72 Davidson92, George Mason71 E. Kentucky 69, MoreheadSt. 57 High Poin73, t Winthrop72 JacksonvilleSt. 72,Belmont70 La Salle74,VCU69,20T Louisville 69Pittsburgh56 Maryland68, Indiana66 Radford80,Longwood75 Richmond73, Fordham71 Tennessee 76, Vanderbilt 73,OT UCF73, SouthFlorida 62 UNCWilmington58,Coll. of Charleston45 Virginia51,N.C.State 47 WakeForest72, Miami70 William 8Mary77, Elon58 MIDWEST
Saturday Boys basketball: CulveratHeppner 530pmcTriad at CentralChristian, 5p.m.; Paisleyat Gilchrist, 4:30p.m. Girls basketball: Heppner atCulver 230pm4Triad at CentralChristian,330 pmcButte Fals atTrinity Lutheran,5;30p.m.; Paisley atGilchrist, 3 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipsatJuniper Swim8, FitnessCenter, 12:15p.mcSisters at Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 3 championshipsin Albany,10a.mcMadras at Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2championshipsinMadras,TBD Wrestling: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summitat Class 5ASpecial District 4 championships in HoodRiver, 10 a.m.; Crook County,Madrasat Class4ASpecial District 1 championshipsinTilamook, TBD;Sistersat Class 4A, SpeciaDi l strict 2 championships inTurner, TBD
Drake60, Bradley54 GreenBay63,YoungstownSt.62 IPFW69, IUPUI54 Loyolaof Chicago66, S.Illinois 62 N. Iowa83, glinois St.64 Ohio St.75, PennSt. 55 WichitaSt.74, IndianaSt.57 SOUTHWE ST Georgia62,TexasA&M53 Texas66,TCU43 FARWEST BoiseSt.67,Air Force42 Oregon80,SouthernCal75 SanDiegoSt. 67,Wyoming41 UCLA75,OregonSt. 59
World TennisTournament Wednesdayat Rotterdam,Netherlands First Round AndreasSeppi, Italy, def. RobinHaase, Netherlands,6-7(5), 6-3,6-3. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez,Spain, def.Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan,7-6(5), 6-4. HOCKEY Andy Murray (f), Britain, def. NicolasMahut, France,6-3,6-2. NHL Stan Wawrinka(4), Switzerland,def.JesseHuta NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Galung,Netherlands, 6-3,3-6, 6-3. AU TimesPST SecondRound SergiyStakhovsky,Ukraine,def. Dom inic Thiem, EasternConference Austria,6-1, 6-3. Atlantic Division GaelMonfils, France,def. Roberto Bautista Agut, GP W L OT Pts GF GA Spain,7-5,7-6(5). TampaBay 56 34 16 6 74 181 148 Gilles Muller,Luxem bourg, def. Grigor Dimitrov Montreal 53 35 15 3 73 143 118 (5), Bulgaria6-2, , 7-6(8). Detroit 53 31 13 9 71 156 134 Boston 54 28 19 7 63 142 136 WTA Florida 52 24 17 11 59 133 147 52 21 22 9 51 141 145 Ottawa DiamondGames Toronto 55 23 28 4 50 157 170 Wednesday at Antwerp, Belgium Buffalo 55 16 36 3 35 103 191 First Round Metropolitan Division Indy deVroome,Netherlands, def. TsvetanaPiGP W L OT Pls GF GA ronkoya,Bulgaria,5-76-3, 6-3. N.Y.lslanders 54 35 18 1 71 170 151 KristinaMladenovic, France,def.Silvia Soler-EspiP ittsburgh 5 4 3 1 15 8 70 155 135 nosa,Spain,6-2,1-0, retired. Washington 55 29 16 10 68 162 139 DominikaCibulkova(6), Slovakia, def. Kateryna N.Y.Rangers 52 31 16 5 67 157 127 Bondarenko, Ukraine, 6-1,6-2. Philadelphia 54 23 22 9 55 146 157 KarolinaPliskova(8), Czech Republic, def. Mirjana New Jersey 54 21 24 9 51 122 148 Lucic-BaroniCroati , a, 6-4,7-6(5). Columbus 52 23 26 3 49 135 161 MonicaNiculescu,Romania, def. KristenFlipkens, C arolina 5 2 1 9 2 6 7 45 116 139 Belgium,6-3, 6-2. WeslernConference CarlaSuarezNavarro(5), Spain, def.Camila Giorgi, Central Division Italy,1-6, 6-2,6-4. GP W L OT Pts GF GA SecondRound Nashville 54 36 12 6 78 164 129 Andrea Petkovic (3), Germany, def.AlisonVanUytSt. Louis 54 35 15 4 74 170 133 vanck,Belgium,6-7(7), 7-6(5), 6-2. Chicago 55 33 18 4 70 167 129 PattayaWomen'sOpen Winnipeg 56 28 18 10 66 154 146 Wednesday at Pattaya,Tbailand Minnesota 53 26 20 7 59 145 145 SecondRound Dallas 54 25 21 8 58 172 175 Misaki Doi , Jap an, def. PengShuai (I), China,6-3, Colorado 54 22 21 11 55 137 152 2-6,6-2. Pacific Division VeraZvonareva,Russia,def. ZhangShuai(8), ChiGP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 55 34 14 7 75 164 154 na, 7-6(6),6-3. MonicaPuig(7), PuertoRico,def. RominaOprandi, SanJose 56 28 20 8 64 158 158 6-1, 3-6,6-0. Vancouver 53 30 20 3 63 148 140 Switzerland, MarinaErakovic, NewZealand, def. Yuliya BeyCalgary 54 30 21 3 63 156 137 LosAngeles 53 23 18 12 58 144 144 gelzimer,Ukraine,6-1,6-1. Arizona 55 20 28 7 47 126 180 Edmonton 55 15 31 9 39 125 181 BASKETBALL
Wednesday'sGames
Pittsburgh4, Detroit1
Vancouver5,Chicago4, OT Washin gton5,SanJose4,OT Today'sGames TorontoatN.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. Anaheim at Carolina,4 p.m. Edmonton at Montreal, 4:30p.m. PittsburghatOttawa,4:30 p.m. St. LouisatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Winnipegat Nashvile, 5 p.m. Floridaat Minnesota,5 p.m. N.Y.RangersatColorado,6 p.m. Calgar yatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Friday's Games Philadelphia at Columbus,4 p.m. NewJerseyatChicago,5:30 p.m. Floridaat Dalas,5;30 p.m. SanJoseatArizona, 6p.m. Bostonat Vancouver, 7p.m.
TENNIS ATP World Tour Brasil Open Wednesdayat SaoPaulo SecondRound LeonardoMayer (4), Argentina,def. Albert Ramos-Vinolas, Spain, 6-4,3-6, 6-1. PabloCuevas (5), Uruguay,def. Facundo Bagnis, Argentina,5-1, retired. NicolasAlmagro, Spain, def.TommyRobredo (2), Spain,6-3, 7-6(2).
MemphisOpen Wednesday atMemphis,Tenn. SecondRound AustinKrajieck,UnitedStates, def.IvoKarlovic (5), Croatia,7-6(4), 4-6r6-4. SamQuerrey, UnitedStates,def.JaredDonaldson, UnitedStates,6-4, 6-1. Kei Nishikori(1),Japan,def.RyanHarrison, United States,3-6,6-3, 6-4. John Isner(3),UnitedStates, def.IvanDodig, Croatia, 6-4,7-6(5).
EAST Buckneg52, Navy51 Colgate76, Boston U.69 Duquesne 78,GeorgeWashington 62 Holy Cross73,Army64 Loyola(Md.)62,Lafayette 43 Saint Joseph'65, s RhodeIsland64 St. John's86,DePaul78 StonyBrook73, UMBC61 Syracuse 70, Boston College 56 UMass55,St. Bonaventure 53 Vermont96, Mass.-Lowell 53
IN THE BLEACHERS
Wo m e n's college Wednesday'sGames TOP 25 No.3Baylor89,Oklahoma66 Saint Louis79, No.20GeorgeWashington61 EAST Albany(N.Y)75, Binghamton53 American U. 74,Lehigh64 Army53,HolyCross51 Bucknel51, l Navy50 Colgate67, Boston U.54 Duquesne 72,LaSage66 Fairfield43,Manhattan26 Lafayette69,Loyola(Md.) 63 Maine 74,Mass.-Lowell46 MichiganSt. 74,PennSt. 67 NJIT52,MorganSt.49 RhodeIsland63, Saint Joseph's 61,OT StonyBrook74,UMBC41 UMass 85,GeorgeMason79,OT Vermont63, NewHampshire60 SOUTH Belmont55,Jacksonville St. 52,OT MIDWEST Akron81,Buffalo70 Ball St.72,E.Michigan62
ChicagoSt.78, Indiana-Northwest56 Dayton79,Richmond41 Detroit76,Ig.-chicago68 IUPUI78,IPFW68 Indiana85,glinois 58 KansasSt. 93,TCU79 Miami(Ohio)69, KentSt.53 Minnesota93,Wisconsin 82 Northwestern73,Purdue65, OT Ohio71,BowlingGreen46 SaintLouis79,GeorgeWashington61 Toledo61, Cent. Michigan46 UT-Martin78,SEMissouri 60 W. Michigan 60, N.Illinois 51 Youngs townSt.76,Oakland54 SOUTHWE ST Baylo r89,Oklahoma66 Memphis 64,Houston58 Oklah omaSt.66,Texas60 Oral Roberts67,N. DakotaSt.41 Texas Tech71, lowaSt. 58
ning and losing matter, some from the White House, where light packages — those are all adults cannot be trusted to President and M rs. Obama indelible. oversee the kids they are sup- welcomed the e n tire t e am But so is that feeling of loss posed to teach. last November, showing them suffered by th e M ountain It is worth remembering around the Oval Office, smil- Ridge Little League, the Las the narrative from last sum- ing for pictures. eSay cheese!" Vegas kids who did not have mer: "The young players' vic- the president said, then said, the country behind thembut at torious run held even more "Baseball!" as he smiled wide. least figured they were playing meaning, however, for the That e x perience c a nnot a fair game. "For more than 75 years, city that they came from. Chi- be taken away from the kids. cago has grabbed headlines They were there. They shook Little League has been an ornationwide for its increased hands wit h t h e p r e sident, ganization where fair play is gkm violence and high murder who used to be a community valued over the importance rate, and many of the Jackie organizer in neighborhoods of wins and losses," Stephen Robinson West players come not far from theirs and spoke Keener, Little League Interfrom neighborhoods suffer- afterward about how the con- national president and CEO, ing from this violence as well versation was like a chat with said in a statement Wednesas disproportionate levels of someone they had known for day. "This is a heartbreaking poverty. But the team's run years. Likewise, that moment decision. What these players this summer helped provide a when they turned a nifty 1-6- accomplished on the field and respite from some of the city's 3 double play to beat a team the memories and lessons they troubles, with the players'hard from Nevada in the United have learned during the Little work and upstanding exam- States final and advance to League World Series tournaple ultimately bringing hope, the Little League World Series ment is something the kids can inspiration, and unity to their championship game — the be proud of, but it is unfortucommunity." embraces, the high fives, the nate that the actions of adults The source of this tale: direct ESpN "SpOrtSCentere high- have led to this outcome."
DEALS
FARWEST BoiseSt. 88,Air Force69 Denver77,S.DakotaSt. 72 Nevada 49, UtahSt.44 NewMexico 67, ColoradoSt.40 UNLV73,FresnoSt. 70,OT Wyoming 74,SanDiegoSt.66
Transactions BASEBAL L
Men's colleg Pac-12
All TimesPST
Conference W L Pct. 8 2 .80 0
A rizona Utah 8 2 .800 O regon 8 4 .66 7 S tanford 7 4 .6 3 6 Oregon St. 7 5 . 5 83 UCLA 7 5 .583 C alifornia 5 6 .4 5 5 A rizona St. 4 6 . 4 00 C olorado 4 6 .4 00 Washington St. 4 7 .363 Washington 3 8 . 2 73 Southern Cal 1 11 .083
Overall W L Pct. 20 3 .870 18 4 .818
18 7 .725 16 7 .696 16 8 .667 15 10 .600 15 9 .625 12 11 .522 11 11 .500 10 13 .435 14 9 .609 9 15 .375
Wednesday'sGames Oregon80,SouthernCal75 UCLA75,0regonSt.59 Today'sGames Stanfordat Utah,6p.m. Californiaat Colorado, 6p.m. Friday's Games Arizonaat Washington, 6p.m. ArizonaSt.atWashington St.,8 p.m. Saturday'sGames Oregonat UCLA,noon OregonSt. atSouthernCal, 2 p.m. W ednesda y' sSummaries
Oregon 80, SouthernCai75 OREGON (18-7)
Benjamin3-70-06, Cook5-7 5-615, Brooks7-9 0-015, Young 11-20 2-226, Abdul-Bassit 3-50-08, Bell4-60-08, Benson 0-20-00, Rorie1-30-02, Sorkin 0-00-00.Totals 34-69 7-880. SOUTHERN CAL(9-15) Clark 4-84-412,Jovanovic5-81-1 11,Reinhardt 4130 09, McLaughlin3101-27, Jacobs8121-1 18, Martin3-51-1 7,Bryan0-01-41, Dukes3-60-0 8, Marquetti1-20-02, Stewart 0-20-00. Totals 3166 9-13 75. Halftime —Oregon 35-27. 3-Point Goals—Oregon 5-16 (Abdul-Bassi2-3, t Young2-5, Brooks1-3, Cook
0-1, Benson 0-2, Benjamin 0-2), SouthernCal 4-18 (Dukes 2-4,Jacobs1-2, Reinhardt1-4, Jovanovic 0-1, Stewart0-2, McLaughlin0-5). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —Oregon 34 (Cook 7), SouthernCal 29 (Clark7). Assists—Oregon13 (Cook6), SouthernCal 13 (Jacobs6). Total Fouls—Oregon 13, Southern Cal 12. A—2,836.
UCLA75, OregonSt. 59 OREGON ST. (16-8) Payton 09-15 3-724, Duvivier0-6 3-4 3,Morris-Walker8-161-1 19,Gomis0-11-21, Schaftenaar 04 0 0 0,hrdiaye0 00 00, Sanders0 0 00 0, Reid 2-96-710,Stangel1-10-02, Livesay0-00-00. Totals 20-6214-21 69. UCLA (15-10) Poweg1-62-3 4, Looney4-100-2 10,Hamilton 4-8 5-616, BAlford 6-105-622, Parker4-6 7-915, Goloman 0-00-00, Allen0-21-21, Welsh3-41-2 7. Totals 22-46 21-3075. Halftime—UCLA 40-25. 3-Point Goals—Oregon St. 5-22(Payton0 3-8, Morris-Walker2-7, Duvivier 0-3, Schaftenaar 0-4), UCLA10-18 (B. Alford 5-9, Hamilton3-5, Looney2-3, Powell O-t). FouledOutNone.Rebounds—Oregon St. 23 (Morris-Walker8), UCLA41(Parkerf0). Assists—Oregon St. 12(Duvivier 4),UCLA17 (Hamilton 9). Total Fouls—Oregon St.18, UCLA19.A—6,346.
Wednesday'sGames TOP 25 No. 2Virginia51, N.C.State47 No. 6Vilanova74,Providence68 No. 9Louisville 69,Pittsburgh56 No.13 N.Iowa83,lginois St. 64 No. 15WichitaSt.74,IndianaSt.57 No.19 Maryland 68, Indiana66 La Sage74,No.20VCU69,20T No. 21West Virginia 76, KansasSt. 72 No.23OhioSt.75,PennSt.55
AmericanLeague CHICAGO WHITESOX—Agreedtotermswith1B CodyDailyonaminor leaguecontract. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—Agreedto termswith INF MichaelMartinezonaminor leaguecontract. HOUSTO NASTROS— Agreed to termswith 2B Nicolas Miranda, 38AnthonyRodriguez,OFJose Hernandez andRHPs Luidin Toribio andLuis Castro on minorleague contracts. KANSAS CITYROYALS— Agreedto termswith
RHPDerekGordononaminor leaguecontract. LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith RHPOliver Ortegaonaminor leaguecontract. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Agreed to termswith RHPTyler Clippard onaone-yearcontract. TEXAS RANGERS— Named JamesViladecoach of Frisco(TL),Alberto Puellocoachof HighDesert (Cal), Francisco Matoshitting coachandChadComer coach ofHickory(SAL)andChase Lambin coachof Spokane(NWL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Agreedto terms with LHPOscarAbreu,OFFrankPolancoandRHP DionyRodriguezonminor leaguecontracts.
ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreedto termswith RHP JoseVeras,LHPOmar Camilo, CWiliam Contreras, SS LuisMejiaandRHPCarlos Lopezonminor league contracts. CINCINN ATI REDS— Agreed to termswith INF ChrisDominguezonaminor leaguecontract. SANDIEG OPADRES—Agreedto termswith RHP James Shieldsonafour-yearcontract. BASKETB ALL Women'sNational Basketball Association CHICAGO SKY—Agreedto termswith FTamera Young ona multi-yearcontract. FOOTBA LL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS— NamedCameronTurner assistantwidereceiverscoach. CHICAGOBEARS— NamedBenWilkersonassistant offensivle inecoach. INDIANAPOLI S COLTS — Released S LaRon Landry.WaivedLBAndrewJacksonand OTXavier Nixon. NEW ORLEANSSAINTS— NamedDennisAllen seniordefensiveassistant,JohnMortonwidereceivers coach ,JoelThomasrunningbackscoach,JamesWilliams defensiveassistant/linebackers,BrendanNugent coachingassistant andKyleDeVan and Greg Lewis offe nsiveassistants.Reassignedrunningbackscoach DanRoushartotightends coach. NEWYORKGIANTS— SignedCBrettJones.ReleasedRBDavidWilson. SEATTLESEAHAWKS — Pro moted defensive passinggamecoordinator RockySetoto assistant headcoach/defense. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— Terminatedthecontract ofQBJoshMccown. HOCKET National HockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES—Claimed FMarkArcobego off waiversfromPitsburgh. BUFFALO SABRES—ReassignedFKevin Sundher from Rochester (AHL)to Elmira (ECHL). CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS — AssignedFJoakim Nordstromto Rockford (AHL).Activated FFKris Versteegfrominjured reserve. DALLAS STARS— Reassigned RWBrett Richie to Texas (AHL). Recaled GHenri Kiviahofrom Idaho (ECHL) to Texas andFCurtis McKenzie fromTexas. Traded G Anders Lindbackanda 2016conditional third-rounddraft pickto Bufalo forGJhonasEnroth. EDMONTONOILERS — Recalled G Tyler Bunz fromWichita(ECHL) to OklahomaCity (AHL). LOSANGELESKINGS—RecalledDDerekForbort fromManchester (AHL). MINNES OTAWILD—ReassignedFBrett Suter to lowa(AHL).Recalled FStephaneVeigeuxfromlowa. NEWYORKISLANDERS— LoanedG KentSimpson from Bridgeport (AHL)to Stockton(ECHL). SANJOS ESHARKS—Announcedthe retirement of G EvgeniNabokov. TAMPABA Y LIGHTNING— Recalled F Vladislav NamestnikovfromSyracuse(AHL). TORONTOMAPLE LEAPS — Recalled D Petter GranbergfromToronto(AHL). WINNIPEG JETS — Traded DZach Bogosian,F EvanderKaneand GJason Kasdorf to Buffalofor D TylerMyers,FsDrewStafford, JoelArmiaand Brendan Lemieuxanda2015first-round draft pick.Reassigned FPatriceCormertoSt.John's(AHL). COLLEGE SETON HALL—Announced GJarenSina hasleft the men'ba ssketball program. UMASS — NamedFran O'Leary men'ssoccer coach.
Little L e a gu e o ff i c i als, Pledge — which includes the though, said the decision was lines, "I will play fair/And clear. They said officials from strive to win/But win or lose/I Jackie Robinson West "know- will always do my best" — for ingly violated" the organiza- this ruse to be perpetrated. "It's sad for everybody intion's rules by including kids from beyond their boundaries. volved," Montouri said. "From But it must be difficult to keep a parent perspective, we make track of such logistics, partic- it clear to the kids when you're ularly in areas like Chicago's playing, you're playing to be a South Side, where kids from good sportsperson, be a good underprivileged backgrounds citizen. These are the ideals might live with one family you try to hold up. Now, you member in one neighborhood want to be competitive. You sometimes, another in a different area at others.
want to win, sure. But we try to
W ashington, which serves 500
instill in the kids that there are bigger reasons to play than just winning. "You hate to see something like this happen, because you
kids. Little League, Montouri
don't want the kids to get cyn-
said, is very clear that a player must live or attend school within a boundary for specific league, and this must be documented. Adults had to knowingly violate the Little League
ical about it. I'm sure some of the older kids will say, 'Hey, what happened?'" The adults who led and
"It's not hard," said Don
Montouri, the president of the Capitol Hill Little League in
coached the team owe them, at least, an answer.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
C3
Helfrich Year's Six bowl (Cotton, FiContinued from C1 Saban, Alabama'scoach, esta,Orange, Peach,Rose or was the nation's top-paid Sugar). coach at $7.2 million. MeySo m e of the fringe bener, whose Ohio State team
e f i t s i n H e lfrich's contract
defeated Oregon in the title i nclude: • Two courtesy cars. game on Jan. 12, made $4.5 million. Florida State's Fish• Membership to the Euer, whose national champi- gene Country Club and the onship defense ended with a Downtown Athletic Club. 59-20 loss to the Ducks in the • Use of a skybox suite and semifinals,made$5million.
The Associated Press PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers were more
concerned aboutthemselves than the struggling Los Angeles Lakers. Wary of a letdown following a win on the road and with the
All-Star break looming, the Blazers jumped on the Lakers early and never let up in a 102-
86 victory Wednesday night. The loss was the 11th straight on the road for the
Lakers, a franchise record. "We were focused," Portland's Nicolas Batum said.
"Those games can sometimes be like a trap or tricky game, and maybe we could focus on the break. But we were focused. We knew we had a job
~4 'i.
I l ~ '-
tdHtr g
to do tonight."
LaMarcus Aldridge had 18 points and 12 r ebounds for his 27th double-double of
the season, and Wesley Matthews added 20 points for the Blazers, who won their second
straight before heading into the break. It was the sixth straight loss
overall for the Lakers, who trailedby asm any as23. Mired
in
Greg Wahl-Stephens / The Associated Press
Portiand's Wesley Matthews (2) drives against Los Angeles Lakers' Wesley Johnson(11) and Wayne
Pac-12 North Division.
Eiiington (2) during the second half Wednesday night in Portland. Matthews had a team-high 20 points as the Trail Biazers won 102-86.
Helfrich can also earn ac- field performance, the assisademic incentive payments tants are also in line for raisfor an A c ademic Prog- es to be announced this year. ress Rateof 975 or greater Defensive coordinator ($100,000), an APR between Don Pellum ($400,000) and 950 and 974 ($50,000), a cu- offensive coordinator Scott mulative team grade-point Frost ($400,000) rank outside average of 3.00 or greater the top 100 nationally for ($100,000), a team GPA of b ase pay among assistants in 2.75 to 2.99 ($50,000) and theUSATodaydatabase.
Nextup
place in the Western Conference, the Lakers (13-40) be- When:6 p.m. gan their road losing streak in Feb. 20
TV:CSNNW Raflie:KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM;
Wayne Ellington had 16 points and eight rebounds for
KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM
the Lakers and Jordan Clark-
Damian L i l l ard
91: MINNEAPOLIS — Ste- Durant scored 26 points, and phen Curry had 25 points on Russell Westbrook added 24 f i n i shed 9-for-23 shooting for Golden
son had 17 points.
with 15 points and eight asThe Blazers also won the sists. He is the onlyNBAplayprevious two meetings with er toscore in double figures the Lakers this season and in all of his team's games this have taken four straight over- season. He and Aldridge sat all. All those wins have come out the fourth quarter. "Everybody did their part, with Kobe Bryant sitting out because of injuries. everybody understood that we Portland was without in-
jured center Chris Kaman (sprained right ankle). The Blazers jumped out to a
30-20 lead in the first quarter
West and George Hill each running scoop shot with 0.2 scored 17 points each, and Inseconds left to give Boston its diana went into the All-Star only lead of the game as the break with its fourth victory in Celtics sent Atlanta to just its the past five games. third loss of the calendar year. Thunder 105, Grizzlies 89: Warriors 94, Timberwolves OKLAHOMA CITY — Kevin TON — Evan Turner made a
sec o nd-to-last Portland at Utah
Portland with a 98-94 loss on Jan. 5.
State (42-9), which goes into the All-Star break with the best record in the NBA.
Magic 89, Knicks 83: ORLANDO, Fla. — Nik Vucevic
had 28 points and 18 rebounds for Orlando, which improved interim coach James Borhad to be the team that we've rego's record to 2-2 since takbeen the last couple games to ing over for Jacque Vaughn, win it and we did that," Lillard who was fired last week. sald. Raptors 95, Wizards 93: TOPortland's 36-17 record is
identical to their record going of the game. Batum's 20-foot into last year's All-Star break. "Hopefully, you reflect a jumper off a pass from Aldridge gave Portland a 50-39 little bit on the first 50 games lead, and the Blazers went into and you come back with a the break ahead 54-46. different sense of purpose as Portland extended the lead well," Lakers coach Byron in the third quarter to 77-56 Scott said. "It's always good to following Matthews' 3-pointer get a little bit of a break." and a fast-break layup from Also on Wednesday: Aldridge. Ceitics 89, Hawks 88: BOSand stayed in front for the rest
for Oklahoma City, which has won five of six heading into the All-Star break. Bucks 111, Kings 103: MILWAUKEE — Brandon Knight
scored 20 points and powered a 27-18 third-quarter Milwau-
kee surge. Cavaliers 113, Heat 93: CLEVELAND LeBron James scored 18 points against his former Miami teammates,
and Cleveland had six others
RONTO — Toronto's DeMar score in double figures for its DeRozan hit a t i e breaking 14th win in 15 games.
jump shot with 12 seconds left
LAS —
loss in the past eight games. Spurs 104, Pistons 87:AU-
scored 15 of his season-high 22 points in the third quarter. Clippers 110, Rockets 95:
BURN HILLS, Mich. — Dan-
D a l las' J.J. Barea
ny Green scored 19 points and LOS ANGELES — DeAndre Tony Parker added 17 for San Jordan had 24 points and 20 Antonio.
rebounds, and Jamal Craw-
Pacers 106, Peiicans 93: NEW ORLEANS —
Trail Blazers102, Lakers86
All TimesPST
EasternConference d-Atlanta d-Toronto d-Chicago Cleveland Washington Milwaukee Charlotte Miami Brooklyn Boston Detroit Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W t
43 u
36 17 33 20 33 21 33 21 30 23 22 30 22 30 21 31 20 31 21 33 21 33 I7 39 12 41 10 43
WesternConference
d-Golden State d-Memphis d-Portland Houston Dallas LA. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix Oklahoma City NewOrleans Denver Utah Sacramen to LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
W 42 39 36 36
t 9 l4 17 l7
36 Ig
35 19 34 lg 29 25 28 25 27 26 20 33 19 34 18 34 13 40
u
Pct GB 796 679 6'/t
623 9'/r
6u 10
611 10 566 12'/t 423 20 423 20 404 21 392 21'/r 389 22 389 22 304 27 226 30'It
189 32'/r
Pct GB 824 736 4 679 7 679 7 655 8
Summaries
Clarkson6-144-417, Ellittgtolt 6-14 2-216, Boozer
t-u 0-02, Davis4-70-08,Young4-12 t-t 9, Lin0-6 2-22, Johnson 5-u 0-012.Totals 34-9311-1186. PORTLAIID (102) Batum2-62-27,Aldridge6-20H18 ,Lopez3-8 4-510, Lillard5-85-515,Mathews7-143-320, Blake 1-42-25,Leonard4-60-IIII, McCollum4-u 0-010, Robinson2-50-04, Crabbe1-20-02, Barton0-10-0 0, Claver01 00 0. Totals 35 8622 23102. Ljt. Latters 24 22 19 21 — 86 Porlland 32 22 34 14 — 102 3-Point Goal— s LA. Lakers 7-16 (Kelly 2-2, Ellington2-3, Johnson2-4, Clarkson1-3, Young0-4), Portland10-30(Leoltard3-5, Matthews3-7, McColltim 2-5, Blake1-3, Batum1-4, Aldridge0-1, Barton 0-1, Claver 0-1, Lillard 0-3). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —LA, Lakers 53(Davis 1I), Portland58 (Aldridge12).Assists—LA. Lakers17 (Clarksort 4), Portland27(Lilard 8). TotalFouls—LA. Lakers 23, Portland u. — A 19,585(19,980).
Mavericks87, Jazz82
648 8 i/t
642 9 537 14'/t 528 15 509 16 377 23 358 24 346 24'/t
245 30 42 208 32
Wedttesday'sGames Orlando89,NewYork83 Toronto95,Washington 93 SanAntonio104,Detroit 87 Boston89, Atlanta88 Indiana 106, NewOrleans93 Oklahoma City105, Memphis 89 Milwaukee111,SaIramento 103 Golden State94, Minnesota91 Clevelartdu3, Miami93 Dallas87,Utah82 Portlaltd I02, LA.Lakers86 LA. Clippersu0, Houston95 Today'sGame ClevelandatChicago,5p.m.
L.A. UIKERS (86) Kelly 3-60-08,BlackO-I 0-00, Sacre5-112-212,
ford and J.J. Redick each had
D a vid 20 points for Los Angeles.
UTAH(82)
Hayward 5-14 1-212, Favors5-10 4-614, Kaitter 3-1 0-1 6,ExumI-80-02, Milsap 38 3-410, Burke 6-150-016,Gobert0-42-62, Novak4-60-012, Booker 2-71-26,Clark1-10 0Z Totals 30-8011-2182. DALUIS(87) parsons2-u 2-2 8, Nowilzki5-145-615, Smith 1-1 2-44,Barea8-152-222,Ellis l-6447, Aminu37 0-06,Ha Iris2-73-48,James3-73-49,Villanueva3-7 0-08, Jeff erson0-00-00.Totals28-7521-2687. Ulatt' 9 28 20 25 — 82 Dallas 22 17 25 23 — 87
Warriors 94, Timberwolves 91 GOLDEN STATE(94) Barnss 3-7008, Greert 1-61-23, Bogut5-100010, Curry9-235-525,Thompson5-141-214, Barbosa5-10 H 10, Igtiodala4-40-08,Speights4-10H8, Livingston2-40-04, Lee2-20-04. Talals 40-907-994. MINNESOT A(91) Wiggins3-7 0-0 6, Young7-141-2 I5, Pekovic 6-13 5-717,Rubio7-I62-218, Martin9-190-0 21, LaVine0-41-2 l, Muhammad 1-4 4-46, Bennett 0-3 4-4 4, Dieng 0-52-4 2, Budinger0-11-21. Totals 33-86 20-2791. Golden State 28 28 17 21 — 94 Mittttesota
25 21 21 24 — 91
Cavaliers113, Heat93
Magic 89, Knicks83 NEWYORK(83) Hardaway Jr 2-9 5-7 10,Amtindson0-1 0-0 0, Smith 10-164-625,Calderon4-u 0-0 9, Galloway 1-66-68, Aldrich2-71-25, Prigioni1-30-03, Larkin 0-2232,Stoudemire0-35-65,Bargnani3-95-6 11, Early1-5 0-0 3,Acy1-1 0-0 Z Totals 25-73 28-36 83. ORLANDO I89) Fournier2-60-05, FryeI-30-0 3, Vucevic12-20 4-6 28, Payton 4-8 4-512, Oladipo4-u 11-1119, AGordort1-20-02, Ridnour2-30-04,Green4-83-4 13,O'Quinn0-31-21,B.Gordon0-20-00,Dedmon 1-1 0-0 Z Totals31-67 23-2889. NewYork 24 23 13 23 — 83 Orlando 27 17 20 25 — 89
Spurs104, Pistons87 SANANTONIOI104) Duncan4-7 0-0 8, Leonard2-12 4-4 8, Baynes 6-8 0-012,Parker6-10 5-517,Green7-13 0-019, Ginobili 6-9 0-013,Diaw1-5 0-0 2, Splitter 3-6 0-0 6, Belinelli 4-100-010, Mills 2-41-27, Bonner0-2 0-00, Joseph 0-10-00, Ayres1-I 0-02. Totals4288 10-11 104. DETROIT (87) Singler0-40-00, Monroe3-100-1 6, Drummond
Raptors95, Wizards93 WASHING TON(93)
Pierce7-12 1-217, Nene7-8 0-214, Gortat 4-8 1-2 9, Wall 7-156-8 21,Porter2-6 2-2 6, Gooden 5-12 0-0 10,Temple1-3 0-0 3, Butler 2-100-0 5, Seraphin3-70-0 6, Miler 1-4 0-0 ZTotals 39-85 10-16 93.
TORONTO(95) JJohnson 3 4006,AJohrtson1-24 76, Valanciunas3-50-0 6, Lowry5-12 0-013, DeR ozan6-18 10-1023,Wiliams8-16r-7 27,Paterson 1-80-02, Ross0-20-0 0,Hansbrough0-21-21, Vasquez4-t 0-011.Totals31-76 22-26 95. Washington 25 22 29 17 — 93 Toronto 27 22 26 20 — 95
Celtics 89, Hawks88 ATLANTA I88) Carroll 4-154-514, Millsap3-115-811, Horford 11-15 0-022, Teague4-12 2-210, Korver1-5l-2 4, Bazemore 3-60-29, Antic0-21-21, Schroder3-62-2 8,Scott4-60-09.Totals33-7815-2388.
Harden,HOU Westbrook,OKC James,CLE MIAMI(93) SACRAME NTO(103) Deng5-134-4 17,Bosh5-17 4-515, Whiteside Davis,NOR Gay7-122-317, Casspi3-8 0-06, Cousins9-20 8-151-317,Napier3-60-06, Chalmers6-164-518, Anthony,NYK 10-1228,Sessions0-62-22, McLemore5-122-2 16, Granger 0-10-00, Cole3-70-07, Andersent-t 0-0 11, Kottfos3-40-2 6, Letter2-31-2 5, J.Adams0-0 Cousins,SAC StauskasO-I 2-22, Wiliams3-74-6 u, Thom pson 2, Johnson 1-40-03, Haslem1-33-35, Hamilton1-t 0-00,Ja.Greert 0-20-00, R.Smith1-23-45. Totals Curry,GO L 3-4 1-3 7,McCallum4-8 0-010, Lartdry2-60-04. 0-0 3.Totals34-8416-2093. 32-86 23-30 89. Aldridge,PO R Griffin, LAC Totals 36-8423-30103. CLEVElAND I113) OKLAHOMC AITY (105) MILWANEE I111) GOL James6-166-7 18,Love5-8 1-2 12,Mozgov Durant9-154-4 26, Ibaka3-71-2 7, Perkins 1-1 Thompson, Aittetokounmpo 4-9 5-7 13, Dudley3-5 2-2 9, g-u 2-2 20, Irving5-142-2 15,Smith 4-100-010, 0-02, Westbrook 4-1515-1524, Roberson1-3 0-02, Irving,CLE Heltson5-82-212, Knight 8-141-2 20, Middleton Shumpert5-70-113,Thompson1-83- t11, Dellave- Waiters5-90-011, Collison6-122-215, McG ary 0-3 Lillard,POR 4u 66 15, PachulIa410008, Mayo 614rr 21, dova 1-20-0 2, Marion1-1 1-13, Harris1-1 0-03, 0-0 0, Morrow 2-8 2-2 6, Jackson4-60-0 8, Jones 6osh, MIA BayleSS 0-0 2-2 2, IlyaSO VaI-1 0-0 2, O'Bryaltt 2-5 Haywood 0-0 0-00, Jones0-00-0 0. Totals 44-78 1-20-02, I.Smith0-10-00, Lamb1-t 0-OZ Totals Butler,CHI 0-34, Gutierrez 2-3l-l 5. Totals 39-80 26-32111. 15-19 113. 37-83 24-25105. Gay,SAC Sacramento 29 2 2 18 34 — 103 Miami 23 25 21 24 — 93 Memphis 26 22 21 20 — 89 Ellis, DAL Milwaukee 29 31 27 24 — 111 Cleveland 38 21 26 28 — 113 Oklahoma Citr 3 5 3 1 19 20 — 105 Hayward,UTA
Bucks111, Kings103
BOSTQN I89)
Turner4-11 4-412, Sttllinger 6-154-417, Bass 2 80-04, Smart3-12 3-4u, Bradley 4-132 211, Thornton4-102-214, Crowder1-8 0-02, Zeller 2-5 2-26, Prince 2-62-27, Young2-50-05. Totals 304-10 2-6 10, AttgUS tilt 8-18 4-4 22, CaldW el-POPe 93 19-20 89. 7-154-420, Meeks3-90-07, Tolliver3-50-09, Ltt- Atlanta 23 26 23 16 — 88 cas III 4-60-09, Jerebko1-20-0 2, Datome0-1 0-0 Boslon 13 21 27 28 — 89 0, Dinwiddi0-1 e 0-0 0, Anthony0-0 2-2 2. Totals 33-81 12-1787. 95 San Antonio 20 2 8 34 22 — 104 Clippers110, Rockets Detroit 12 27 24 24 — 87 HOUSTON (95) Ariza4-134-413,MotieIunas5-112-212,Dorsey Pacers106, Pelicans 93 1-1 0-0 2,Beverley3-11 0-09, Harden3-12 3-59, Smith 8-173-5 21, Papanikolaou1-5 2-2 4, Terry INDIANA (106) 1-1 0-0 3, Brewer8-15 4-422, Canaan O-t 0-0 0, Miles 4-u l-l 9, West8-9 1-2 17,Hibbert3-6 Johnson 0-00-00, Capela0-00-0 0. To tals 34-87 3-3 9,G.Hil 6-111-I 17, S.Hill 4-52-212, Watson 18-22 95. 2-6 2-2 7,Mahinmi1-20-0 2, Stttckey7-100-016, L.A. CLIPPERS (110) Rudez 3-5 0-06, Scola 2-63-3 7, Sloan0-00-0 0, Barltes4-82-210, Hawes5-9 2-312, Jordan6-8 Whittington0-2 4-4 4, Copeland0-2 0-0 0. Totals 12-26 24, Paul4-14 3-4 12, Redick9-16 0-0 20, 40-7517-18106. Crawford6-15 7-8 20,Davis 3-5 2-2 8, Rivers2-6 NEWORLEANS(93) 0-04, Turkoglu0-00-00.Totals39-81 28-45110. Cunni ngham0-30-00,Aiinca3-88-814,Asik3-6 Houston 26 30 23 16 — 95 1-47, Evans 3-102-28, Gordon2-100-06, Withey LA. Clippers 2 6 28 26 30 —110 571-211, Pondexter4 7009, Douglas5 93614, Babbitt 5-72-215, Fredette 4-71-1 9. Totals34-74 18-25 93. Leaders Indiana Through Tuesday's Games New Orleans
Thunder105, Grizzlies89
MEMPHIS (89) Je.Greett 4-13 2-2 11, Randolph5-15 6-6 16, Gasol2-104-48, Conley2-74-4 8, Lee0-50-0 0, Calathes 5-80-010, Allen4-61-3 9, Udiih4-u 2-3
a team GPA of 2.50 to 2.74
new deal and the Ducks' on-
Def e n sive line coach Ron
Aiken ($500,000) was actu($25,000). If Helfrich decides to leave ally Oregon's top-paid assisOregon, the deal includes a
t a nt. The total base salary for
buyout of $3 million during the nine full-time staff memthe first two years, $2 mil- bers was $3.28 million. lion in the third and fourth years and $1 million after the
For wi n n i n g th e confere n ce title and the national
fourth year.
semifinal, Helfrich's as-
Helfrich's base salary will
s i s tants e a r ned b o n uses
increase to $3.3 million in e qual to four months' sala2016-17, $3.5 million in 2017- ry — amounts that ranged 18, $3.7 million in 2018-19 b e tween $45,833 to $66,667
and $3.85 million in 2019-20. — plus between $20,000 and A year canalso be add- $30,000 forOregon finishing ed to Helfrich's contract for
r a n k ed i n t hetop lpofthefi-
winning 11 or more games in nal Associated Press poll.
Mavericks 87, Jazz 82: DAL-
to hand Washington its sixth
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
12 t i c kets to home football
The ne w d e a l r u n s g a mes; four tickets to home through Jan. 31, 2020, and games of Oregon's other varHelfrich can earn more s i ty sports. • Travel for his money by reaching performance spouse to reguincentives t h at if H e jfnCh l ar-se ason r o a d include: decides ~o • $500,000 for j ~< ~ r spouse and chilwinning a nationdren to postseaal championship. tj I e deal son gam e s. • $250,000for jnC/UdeS a Oregon athletic 12winsinthereg- QU O g Of tf director Rob Mul3 lens also has a ular season. • $200,000 for ml l l lOn dUnng n e w six-year cona national cham- gQe fjySf tract wi t h a base p ionship g a m e ( salary of $700,000, tWO yearS, plusin c entives. appearance. • $150,000 for $2 milliOn M ullens w a s winning a Pac-12 jn tQe fhjyd previ o usly m a kchampionship. ing $500,000 in d f gQ • $175,000 for base salary, with a College Foot- ye a rS and $1 inc e ntive bonuses ball Play off mj i i j Onage l' tot c d ing $150,000. appearance. After introduc~ ~ • $1PP,PPP for IP ing Oregon's 2P15 or 11 wins in the y e a r . recruiting c l ass regular season. last week, Hel• $60,000 for frich said he plans finishing in the top 10 in the to have his entire coaching final Associated Press poll. s t aff return for next season. • $50,000for w inning the Based on the head coach's
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG
53 41 429 I451 27.4 39 343 283 1007 25.8 44 400 266 u36 25.8 46 436 256 1129 24.5 40 358 189 966 24.2 40 334 281 950 23.8 5I 418 206 1203 23.6 47 435 213 1108 23.6 5l 448 245 1149 2z5 50 397 155 u04 2z1 5l 401 197 110 21.8 53 383 242 u38 21.5 44 343 179 928 21.1 49 322 302 998 20.4 48 338 231 955 19.9 55 428 163 1087 19.8 53 352 247 1042 19.7
Pac-12coachingcontracts In 2014, Oregon's Mark HelfrIch rankednInth In payamong Pac-12 Conferencecoaches. Not accounting for adjustments to compensation for other Pac-12coaches, Helfrich's newcontract moves him to fourth in the league(figures in millions). C hris Petersen Was h ington $3 . 7 Rich Rodriguez Ari zona $3.3 Jim Mora UCLA $3.3 Mark Helfrich ('15) Oregon $3.2 Mike Leach Washington St. $2.8 Todd Graham A rizona St. $2. 7 K yle Whittingham U t ah $2.2 David Shaw Stanford $2.0 Mike Maclntyre Col o rado $2.0 Mark Helfrich ('14) Oregon $2.0 Sonny Dykes California $1.8 Mike Riley O regon St. $1. 5 Note: Southern California, a private school, did not release the contract of coach Steve Sarkasian.
Source USA Today
NHL ROUNDUP
Sharks goalieNabakov announcesretirement The Associated Press SAN JOSE, Calif. — An
emotional Evgeni Nabokov announced his retirement
NHL All-Star, making the team in 2001 and 2008. As a
rookie in the 2000-01 season, Nabokov won t h e
C a lder
Memorial Trophy. "The only thing that's just two days after he was traded by Tampa Bay to the missing is a Stanley Cup," San Jose Sharks, the team Nabokov said. "I think the that drafted him in 1994. management is doing ev"It means a lot that this erything they possibly can. circle is coming to an end It was up to us as players to and I'm happy I will retire win it. We failed. Hopefully as a Shark," Nabokov said, one day we can celebrate." holding back tears at a news In Wednesday's games: conference attended by his Canucks 5, Blackhawks 4: family, friends and former CHICAGO — Daniel Sedin San Jose teammates. scored his second goal at Nabokov played 10 sea- 1:20 of overtime, and Vansons for the Sharks, a span couver recovered after blowthat ended after the 2009-10 ing a late two-goal lead. campaign. He owns a long Penguins 4, Red Wings list of franchise goaltend- 1: PITTSBURGH — Pittsing records, including most burgh's Blake C o meau wins (293), shutouts (50) and scored and picked up an assist in his return from an upgames (563). T he S h a r k s dr a f t e d per body injury. Nabokov out of Kazakhstan Capitals 5, Sharks 4: in the ninth round with the SAN JOSE, Calif. — Joel Wednesday from the NHL,
219th pick in the 1994 NHL draft. Nabokov was a two-time
Ward scored with 2:18 remaining in overtime to lift
Washington.
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 NASDAQ ~
S&P 500
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>3 53
4,801.18
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
Todap
17,960"
S8$P 500
Thursday, February 12, 201 5
More appetizing results?
2 020 .
Wall Street anticipates that Kraft's latest quarterly earnings increased versus a year ago. The maker of Oscar Mayer meats, Jell-0 pudding and Velveeta cheese is due to report financial results for the final three months of 2014 today. Kraft has been facing intensifying competition for a number of its products. Its namesake macaroni and cheese, for example, is being challenged by smaller players touting higher-quality ingredients.
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 17897.21 17759.65 17862.14 DOW Trans. 8978.12 8911.73 8941.40 DOW Util. 61 7.45 604.37 605.63 NYSE Comp. 10907.81 10831.52 10889.05 NASDAQ 481 0.36 4780.13 4801.18 S&P 500 2073.48 2057.99 2068.53 S&P 400 1483.82 1473.06 1480.10 Wilshire 5000 21857.24 21701.23 21807.21 Russell 2000 1204.44 1195.28 1201.55
DOW
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CHG. -6.62 +24.78 -1 5.00 -26.09 +1 3.53 -0.06 -0.49 -6.76 -1.63
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NorthwestStocks
Weyerhaeuser
W Y 2 7.48
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RAD
Close:$8.08%0.50 or 6.6% The drugstore operator is expanding into managing pharmacy benefits with the $2 billion cash-andstock purchase of EnvisionRx. $10 8
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1 . 16
Betler deal? Groupon releases its fourth-quarter financial results today. Financial analysts expect the online daily deal service will report DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paidin last12 months. 1 -Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, rs regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent improved revenue versus a year dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash earlier, but also a slight dip in value ss ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-snd fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. adjusted earnings. Groupon has benefited from higher billings as more customers snap up vouchers listed on its site. However, Groupon hasfl agged changes in foreign exchange rates as a Pier 1 shares plummeted Wednesday, falling 24 CnrnPanY share for its fiscal year, below market expectapotential drag on earnings. Spatlight tions of $1 per share. This is the percent, after the home decor retailer cut its full-year profit forecast. third time the retailer has lowered GRPN $7.58 The companysaid late Tuesday $12 its outlook. g t $11.08 that its holiday sales were strong, but Pier 1 Imports also said Cary January sales were below forecast Turner, the company's CFO since and it is cautious about February. It 1999, has retired. Laura Coffey, a also is struggling with some supply company executive, will be Pier 1's '14 ,' chain costs. In turn, Pier 1 said it now interim chief financial officer while it expects to earn 80 to 83 cents per looks for a permanent replacement. Operating I I' EPS * 4Q '13 4 Q '14 Pier 1 (PIR) 5-yr* Wednesday's close:$12.84 T ota l return 1-y r 3-yr Price-earnings ratio: lost money 52-WEEK RANGE Price-earnings ratio:15 based on past 12-month results (Dasedonpast12-monthresults) $11 20 Dlv yleid. 1 g% D l v l dend $024 Dividend: none AP *annualized Source: FactSet
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$4.42~
Vol.:118.5m (5.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$7.93 b
AmdFocus
SelectedMutualFunds
AP
MFS Utilities had a tough 2014. Although it rose 13 percent, its Marhetsummary relatively high energy exposure Most Active led it place in the bottom quartile NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG of its peer group, according to RiteAid 1100046 8.08 + .50 Morningstar. BkofAm 856745 S&P500ETF 770251 Apple Inc s 713429 CSVLgCrde 494312 SiriusXM 456800 Petrobras 455677 Cisco 418716 iShEMkts 404210 Pfizer 384727
16.36 -.06 206.93 +.12 124.88 +2.86 3.16 -.22 3.81 + .06 6.23 26.93 -.56 39.37 -.29 34.25 +.10
MFS utilA m
MMUFX
VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
LAST BallardPw 2.71 CafePress 2.85 Pfenex n 9.75 DigitalAlly 12.54 Bellatrix g 2.61 TrovaGnwt 4.19 CleaoDsl h 2.32 LiveDeal s 3.78 AntheraP h 3.78 Flanign 33.01
CHG +1.02 +.73 +1.75 +2.04 +.39 +.62 +.34 +.53 +.53 +4.41
%CHG + 60.4 + 3 4.4 CL cC + 2 1.9 $$ + 1 9.4 + 1 7.6 $$$ + 1 7.4 MomingstarOwnershipZone™ + 1 7.2 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 6.3 Q + 1 6.3 average of stock holdings + 15.4 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
Losers NAME LAST Pier 1 12.84 M arketo 28 . 5 2 PostRck rs 5 . 04 A10 Nwks n 4.01 CSVlnvNG 6 . 88
CHG %CHG -4.13 -24.3 -6.86 -19.4 -1.21 -19.4 -.88 -18.0 -1.11 -13.9
CATEGORY Utilities MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** O O ASSETS $3,480 million EXP RATIO 1.01%
MANAGER Claud Davis SINCE 2014-04-30 RETURNS3-MO -3.1 Foreign Markets YTD -0.8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +10.2 -16.27 -.35 Paris 4,679.38 3-YR ANNL +14.2 London 6,81 8.17 -10.95 -.16 5-YR-ANNL +14.1 -1.72 -.02 Frankfurt 10,752.11 Hong Kong24,315.02 -213.08 -.87 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 41,933.26 -701.93 -1.65 PPL Corp Milan 20,565.76 -1 59.87 -.77 -.34 NextEra Energy Inc Tokyo 17,652.68 -59.25 Stockholm 1,593.03 -9.71 -.61 Comcast Corp Class A -25.70 -A5 NRG Energy Inc Sydney 5,731.70 Zurich 8,577.76 -42.66 -.49 Exelon Corp
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$$ .$2
$11.$$~
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F $20.15
PE : 27.9 Vol.:36.0m (13.3x avg.) PE: 14.9 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.16 b Yie l d : 1.9%
PepsiCo
PEP
Close:$100AO+2.41 or 2.5% The beverage and snack company reported better-than-expected financial results, partly on strong sales of Frito-Lay snacks. $105 100 95
45 N
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52-week range $4 $.$$ $77.01 $100.76 PE:3 2 .7 Vol.:9.7m (2.0x avg.) PE:2 2 . 2 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$150.26 b Yi e ld: 2.6%
$$2.$1 ~
Vol.:7.3m (6.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$3.13 b
Ballard Power Sys.
B LDP
Sangamo BioSciences SGMO
Close:$2.71 %1.02 or 60.4% The fuel cell maker announced an $80 million deal with Volkswagen for automotive fuel cell technology and engineering services.
Close: $13.93L1.26 or 9.9% The biotechnology company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter financial results and a positive 2015 fiscal outlook. $20
$3
15
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52-week range $1.4$~
D
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52-week range $$.$$
Vol.:31.2m (22.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$358 m
PE: . Yield:.
Marketo
MKTO Close:$28.52 V-6.86 or -19.4% The provider of cloud-based marketing software reported better-than-expected financial results, but gave a mixed fiscal outlook. $40
$$.$$ ~
$24.69
Vol.:2 .1m (2.2x avg.) P Mkt.Cap:$952.87 m
E: . . . Yie ld: ...
Jive Software
JIVE Close:$5.29V-0.80 or -13.1% The business software maker reported better-than-expected financial results, but its outlook fell short and it named a new CEO.
$7
35 30 N
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$22.$2~
F $4 $.$0
Vol.:3.2m (10.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.18 b
P E: . . Yield:..
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$$.0$~ Vol.:3.6m (5.9x avg.)
F
$$.4$ P E: .. . Yield : ...
Mkt. Cap:$378.73 m
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury dipped to 1.99 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill
. 0 1 .01 ... . 0 7 .06 + 0 .01 L
V V
L
.05 .09
52-wk T-bill
.22
L
L
.11
.23
-0.01 L
2-year T-note . 6 7 .66 + 0 .01 L L 5-year T-note 1.51 1.51 10-year T-oote 1.99 2.00 -0.01 L L 30-year T-bond 2.59 2.58 +0.01 L L
BONDS
L .33 T 1.53 W 2.73 W 3.69
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.43 2.44 -0.01 L L W 3 4.7 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.23 4.22+0.01 L L W 4.89 Barclays USAggregate 2.16 2.13 +0.03 L L W 2.3 1 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.21 6.23 -0.02 W W L 5.5 6 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp ldx 3.64 3.52 +0.12 L L W 4.4 8 YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.82 1.81 +0.01 L L W 1.7 6 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.00 2.98 +0.02 L L W 3.0 8 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 97 +.81+0.9 +10.7 +13.2+12.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.40 -.18 +1.4 +9.8 +10.7 +9.9 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 46.88 -.14 +1.7 +7.0 +13.6+10.9 8 8 C fell on news EurPacGrA m 47.87 -.21 +1.6 +0.6 +9.1 +7.4 C C C that U.S. crude FnlnvA m 52. 6 5 +.85+1.1 +11.9 +16.6+14.6 D C C inventories rose GrthAmA m 43.29 +.83 +1.4 +10.4 +17.6+14.7 D 8 D last week to IncAmerA m 21.86 -.84 +1.3 +10.0 +12.3+12.0 8 A A their highest InvCoAmA m 37.37 +0.8 +14.3 +17.5+14.3 C 8 D level in NewPerspA m 36.77 -.86 +1.4 +5.8 +13.8+11.9 C A 8 decades. Gold, WAMutlnvA m41.13 -.81 +0.4 +13.3 +16.8+15.7 C 8 A silver and copDodge &Cox Income 13.8 6 ... +0 . 6 + 4 .5 + 4.0 +5.2 C 8 8 per fell. Wheat, IntlStk 42.32 - . 3 5 +0.5 + 2 .3 +12.1 +9.1 A A A Stock 179.3 8 - . 87 -0.9 +11.1 +19.9+15.9 D A A corn and Fidelity Contra 98.46 + . 89 +1.5 +11.0 +17.1+16.0 C C 8 soybeans also ContraK 98.3 9 + .88 +1.5 +11.1 +17.2+16.2 C 8 8 edged lower. LowPriStk d 50.33 +.85 +0.2 +10.8 +16.1+15.9 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 73.36 +.82 +0.7 +16.0 +18.0+16.3 A 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.44 ... +1.2 +4.0 +9.3 +9.8 D A A IncomeA m 2. 4 1 -. 81 +1.3 + 4 .5 + 9.8+10.2 C A A Oakmarb Intl I 23.67 -.89 +1.4 -3.2 +12.7+10.9 D A A Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 19 . 94 +.81 -0.3 +13.1 +14.0+13.7 D E D RisDivB m 1 7 . 62 . . . -0.4 +12.2 +13.0+12.7 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 50 +.81 -0.3 +12.2 +13.2+12.9 D E E SmMidValA m49.22 +.81 +1.0 +14.6 +16.5+14.0 8 D E SmMidValB m41.37 ... +0 .9 +13.8 +15.5+13.1 8 D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.8 0 - . 88 0. 0 +9 . 8 +15.2+14.0 E D C Exchange GrowStk 53.4 1 + .84 +2.8 +11.2 +18.8+17.7 C A A The dollar HealthSci 71.5 9 +.17 +5.3 +28.3 +35.3+28.9 A A A gained against Newlncome 9. 6 4 - .81+ 0.9 + 5 .2 + 3.0 +4.5 8 C D the euro, pound Vanguard 500Adml 191.21 +.86 +0.7 +16.0 +18.0+16.3 A 8 A and the 500lnv 191.18 +.86 +0.7 +15.9 +17.8+16.2 A 8 A Japanese yen. CapOp 53.27 -.84 +1.0 +16.6 +23.2+16.9 A A A The ICE U.S. Eqlnc 31.23 -.87 +0.1 +14.1 +16.7+16.6 8 C A Dollar index, IntlStkldxAdm 26.44 -.13 +1.7 -0.4 +6.6 NA 8 D which measures StratgcEq 32.91 +2.3 +17.3 +20.9+20.0 A A A the dollar TgtRe2020 28.76 -.82 +1.1 +8.6 +10.1+10.3 A A A against a basket TgtRe2035 18.83 -.82 +1.1 +9.5 +12.6+12.2 A 8 A of key Tgtet2025 16.71 -.81 +1.1 +9.0 +11.0+11.0 A A B currencies, TotBdAdml 10.94 +0.9 +5.4 +2.7 +4.3 8 D D edged higher. Totlntl 15.81 -.88 +1.7 -0.5 +6.5 +6.0 8 D D TotStlAdm 52.84 +.81 +0.9 +14.9 +17.9+16.6 8 8 A TotStldx 52.82 +.82 +0.9 +14.8 +17.7+16.4 C 8 A USGro 30.41 +.84 +1.7 +14.3 +18.2+16.6 8 8 8 FAMILY
PCT 3.65 3.59 3.04 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 2.7 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 2.61 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
PIR
16
F
AOL Close:$40.22 V-4.61 or -10.3% The Internet company reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit, but its revenue for the period fell short of forecasts. $50
PIPI shares fall onlower forecast SU
Source: Factaet
Pier 1 Imports
Close: $12.84V-4.13 or -24.3% The home decor retailer cut its forecast for the fiscal year ending in February, citing sales, and CFO Cary Turner is retiring. $18 14
AOL
52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV Alaska Air Group A LK 37.71 ~ 71.40 6 4. 5 1 -.86 -1.3 V L L + 7.9 +72 . 1 1 5 29 1 5 0 .80f Sizing up retail sales Avista Corp A VA 28.19 ~ 38.34 3 4. 6 8 -.74 -2.1 V V V -1.9 +28.2 2 2 5 1 1 1 . 32f BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 6. 3 6 -.06 -0.4 W L W -8.6 -1.1 85675 47 0 .20 Even with the job market on a roll Bank of America B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 71.76 38 . 5 2 + . 6 2 +1.6 L L L +40. 6 - 40.1 141 d d 0 . 88 and gas prices falling, U.S. Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 148. 8 9 14 7.92 + . 79 +0.5 L L L + 13. 8 +1 8 .7 3 197 20 3 .64f consumers havebeen cutting Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 5.82 4.63 -.07 -1.5 T L T -10.8 ... 40 77 back spending. L W -1.6 +1 2.7 1 5 6 1 8 0 .64a ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 27.17 -.27 -1.0 W Retail sales fell a seasonally C olumbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 45.87 41 . 95 -.13 -0.3 W W W -5.8 +1 4.6 3 3 2 2 5 0 . 60f adjusted 0.9 percent from Costco Wholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 56.8 5 147.46 -.40 -0.3 V L L + 4.0 +35 . 8 2 1 25 31 1 .42a November to December, the Craft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 ~ 17.89 1 1. 9 2 -.14 -1.2 T L T -10.6 -16.3 3 8 75 largest drop in nearly a year. FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 2. 7 4 -.54 -1.6 V L L +1.3 $.1 0 .5 6 7 8 2 3 0. 4 4f Americans spent less at restauHewlettP acKard H PQ 28. 64 ~ 41.10 38.1 8 +. 2 9 +0.8 L W W -4.9 + 3 3.7 7 166 15 0 . 6 4 rants, online retailers and at gas Intel Corp I NTC 24.06 ~ 37.90 3 3. 5 5 -.15 -0.4 L W V -7.6 $.42.5 17766 14 0 . 96 stations. Sales of autos and L +0.1 +12. 3 12483 13 0.26 Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.70 1 3. 9 2 -.06 -0.4 V L building materials also declined. Kroger Co K R 3 5 .98 ~ 71.91 71. 7 1 +. 2 1 +0.3 L L L +11. 7 + 1 00.0 3235 22 0 . 7 4 Did the trend continue last month? Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 0— 9.19 6.04 +.0 8 + 1 .3 V V V -12.3 -13.2 1813 15 Find out today, when the LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 18.88 1 6. 0 0 -.40 -2.4 v w v -3.4 -2.9 8738 dd MDU Resources MDU 21 . 33 o — 36.0 5 21 . 6 0 -.44 -2.0 V V V -8.1 -30.6 1002 14 0.73f Commerce Department reports — o Mentor Graphics M E NT 18.25 24.50 24 .13 -.26 -1.1 W L L +10. 1 +2 4 .5 4 0 7 2 0 0. 2 0 January retail sales. Microsoft Corp MSFT 36.29 $y — 50 . 05 42 . 3 8 -.22 -0.5 V V V -8.8 +1 8.9 36084 17 1 . 2 4 Retail sales Nike Ioc B N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 9 1. 3 1 -1.44 -1.6 V W V -5.0 +29.0 4168 27 1.12f seasonally adjusted percent change L V Nordstrom Ioc JWN 57.30 — 0 80.54 79 .03 -.23 -0.3 L -0.5 + 3 7.6 1 068 21 1. 3 2 0.6 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 40.30 ~ 52.57 4 7. 8 4 -.86 -1.8 V W V - 4.1 +23.0 69 22 1. 8 6 05 PaccarIoc PCAR 55.34 $y — 71. 15 62 . 8 4 -.10 -0.2 L W V -7.6 +11.2 2010 16 0.88a 0.4 0.3 Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6 .73 +.04 $ .0.6 V W V - 19.6 +197.3 283 2 4 est. P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 3. 6 7 -.72 -1.6 T W L +2.1 +8.9 14 0 9 3 7 1. 7 6 -0.9 -0.5 Plum Creek -0.1 0.0 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 09 28 3.12 +1.61 +0.8 v w v -15.7 - 21.8 824 1 6 0 . 12 Schoitzer Steel SCH N 1 6.25 o — 30. 0 4 1 7 .1 9 + . 01 +0.1 L V V -23.8 - 28.3 556 4 0 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 180.82 ~ 280. 7 9 27 7.95 -2.11 -0.8 V L L +5.7 +54 . 8 510 3 1 2. 2 0 -0.5 StaocorpFocl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 67.3 6 +. 4 4 +0 .7 L L V -3.6 + 7 . 4 1 0 7 1 3 1 . 30f Starbucks Cp SBUX 67.93 ~ 91.38 9 0. 7 9 -.39 -0.4 L L L +10. 7 +2 3 .4 3 139 28 1 . 2 8 L V umpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70 ~ 19. 60 16.39 -.15 -0.9 V - 3.6 + 0 . 5 8 9 3 2 2 0 . 6 0 -1.0 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 2 7 -.25 -0.6 V L V -1.5 +13.5 3940 14 0 . 98 A S 0 N D I J L V WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.73 -.13 -0.6 V -6.4 -3.0 31 1 1 3 0 .52f '14 i '15 WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 5.22 ~ 5 5.9 5 53.90 -.67 -1.2 W L W -1.7 +23.0 16631 13 1 .40 Source: Factaet
-.0014
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Vol. (in mil.) 3,509 1,743 Pvs. Volume 3,551 1,734 Advanced 1444 1205 Declined 1689 1469 New Highs 111 78 New Lows 26 52
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U.S. stock indexes were little changed Wednesday as investors eyed Greek debt talks and a renewed drop in oil prices. Greece met with finance ministers from other countries that use the euro as a currency in hopes of easing the terms of its bailout loans. Investors are worried that if the negotiations fail, Greece could be forced out of the eurozone, a move that would rock financial markets. U.S. benchmark oil fell below $50 a barrel, pushing energy stocks down. Oil has lost more than half its value since June as supplies increase and demand weakens. Six of the 10 industry sectors of the Standard and Poor's 500 index dropped, led by utility stocks.
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Dow jones industrials Change: -6.62 (flat)
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$48.84
$16.75
Close: 17,862.14
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17,000"
"
GOLD ~ $1,219.00
01
"
17,480"
1,960 ' " " " ' 10 DAYS
NYSE NASD
•
10 YRTNOTE ~ 1 99$/
06
2,068.53
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 48.84 50.02 -2.36 -8.3 -11.1 1.45 1.46 1.81 1.83 -1.01 -1.8 -3.2 2.80 2.68 +4.48 1.54 1.55 - 0.59 + 7 . 5
CLOSE PVS. 1219.00 1231.60 16.75 16.86 1195.60 1207.30 2.55 2.56 766.85 766.00
%CH. %YTD - 1.02 + 3 . 0 - 0.66 + 7 . 6 -0.97 -1.1 -0.39 -10.1 +0.11 -4.0
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.3 1.59 1.59 -0.31 Coffee (Ib) 1.59 1.59 +0.03 -4.3 -2.8 Corn (bu) 3.86 3.88 -0.58 Cotton (Ih) 0.62 0.63 - 0.78 + 2 . 9 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 313.80 317.80 -1.26 -5.2 -3.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.35 1.36 -0.48 Soybeans (hu) 9.78 9.69 +0.90 -4.1 Wheat(hu) 5.26 5.22 +0.77 -1 0.9 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5246 -.0006 -.04% 1.6449 Canadian Dollar 1.2 654 +.0053 +.42% 1.1013 USD per Euro 1.1298 -.0014 -.12% 1.3639 JapaneseYen 120.29 + . 8 5 + .71% 1 02.63 Mexican Peso 15. 0 990 +.1320 +.87% 13.2906 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8849 +.0135 +.35% 3.5158 Norwegian Krone 7 . 6700 +.0858 +1.12% 6.1256 South African Rand 11.8522 +.1609 +1.36% 10.9857 Swedish Krona 8.4 0 0 3 + .0834 +.99% 6.4418 Swiss Franc .9279 +.0015 +.16% . 8 982 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2972 +.0099 +.76% 1.1067 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2453 +.001 0 +.02% 6.0606 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7546 +.0003 +.00% 7.7564 Indian Rupee 62.455 +.161 +.26% 62.031 Singapore Dollar 1.3616 +.0066 +.48% 1.2673 South KoreanWon 1108.99 +8.79 +.79% 1068.15 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.61 + . 0 2 +.06% 30.29
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
BRIEFING BendBroadband to improve email BendBroadbandis looking to upgrade its email service following two recent outages, one of which lost an unknown amount of information from customer accounts, a spokeswoman for the company said Wednesday. "Technology platforms age, and the existing email platform needs to be upgraded to meet the demandsof our customers," wrote Krista Ledbetter, of TDS Telecom, the parent company of BendBroadband, in an email. The number of customers affected by the outages is difficult to ascertain, she wrote, because not all BendBroadband Internet customers use the email service. BendBroadband customers lost email traffic during a 24-hour outage that occurred Jan. 24 and 25, Ledbetter
wrote. Another outage Feb. 6 lasted several hours but no information was lost, she wrote. Voice mail service was also interrupted in both cases;Internet and cable television service were not affected. "We have adesignated team evaluating new technologies to replace the current infrastructure as quickly as possible in order to prevent further interruptions," Ledbetter wrote. "We are 100 percent focused on this effort."
V-Day spending up to $19.6B Consumers areexpected to spend$19.6 billion to celebrate the
holiday this year, up 3.8 percent from 2014. The averageAmerican will drop $139.70 on chocolates, flowers and other gifts, up from $134.56 in 2014, IBISWorld said. The biggest chunk of Valentine's Dayspending — nearly $10 billion — will go to a restaurant meal with a special someone. — Staffand wirs reports
PERMITS City of Bend • Triad Homes Inc., 21198 SE Kayla Court, Bend, 3283,152 • Walter G. Trest, 1668 NW Wild RyeCircle, Bend, $634,464 • Lucas A. Nelson, 19753 Hollygrape Street, Bend, $236,375 • Hayden HomesLLC, 21196 SEGolden Market Lane, Bend, $157,669 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership,20805 NE Sierra Drive, Bend, $199,835 • South of Sierra Limited Partnership,20801 NE Sierra Drive, Bend, $177,593 • Dorene L. French, 19502 Spencers Crossing Lane, Bend, $374,709 • Solaire Homes Inc., 1921 NW Shevlin Crest Drive, Bend, $287,761 • Pahlisch Homes, 61123 SE Ambassador Drive, Bend, $254,202 • Gienco investments Inc., 21105 Azalia Avenue,Bend, $313,744 • FC Fund LLC,612 SE Gleneden Place,Bend, $134,877 • Structure Development NW LLC,2663 NWNiagara Court, Bend, $403,960 • Dekat Family Revocable Trust, 61668 Tam McArthur Loop, Bend, $287,000 • Cushman Construction Inc., 1571 NWMilwaukee Avenue, Bend,$272,535 • Cushman Construction Inc., 1579 NWMilwaukee Avenue, Bend,$272,535 • Pahlisch Homes, 3113 NW River Trail Place, Bend, $354,236
BEND
Dea o or owntown ro e • The would-be buyerof the former Bulletin site hasbackedout
be helpful in designing a devel-
By Scott Hammers
site. King said though he and others at the city aren't convinced a signal or roundabout or other traffic fixis necessary on the site, he really liked Getz's proposal.
NW head Todd Taylor. The city had envisioned the
The Bulletin
The would-be developer of a downtownpropertyowned by the city of Bend has backed out of the deal, leavingthe city toput the propertybackonthe market. Getz Properties LLC spent
nearly ayear exploring its options for building a combination of retail, housing and office space on a 3-acre property across Wall Street from
Pioneer Park. The property, once home to the offices of The Bulletin, was sold to the city
for $4.78 million in 2005 by developer Jeff Pickhardt and construction company Taylor
site as a possible home for a new city hall, a plan that was
shelved when the city began laying off employees as the economy weakened. Last spring, city officials agreed to sell the property to Getz Properties for $1.9 million. On Wednesday, company head Mel Getz said concerns about vehide access in and out
of the property ultimately sunk his plans. Getz said traffic engineers
working with his company determined the proposal
Wall Street near the north end
of the property. Although the city was willing to allow a new signal, Getz said his company wouldhave hadto coverthe full cost of it and road improve-
opment that can work on the
"I think the concept was
ments, hurting the project's
Florida brewery refuses A-B sale By Laura Reiley Tampa Bay Times
financial viability. "For retail, you have great
great, Ithinkthere's just differ-
access," Getz said. "They'll
project and howto bestmanage the traffic," King said. King said the city is working with agents at Compass Commercial to determine whether
in a beer can. At the end
an improving real estate market will allowthe cityto set a
it was purchasing Seattle-based Elysian Brewing
new, higher asking price for the property.
Co. And now Anheus-
come the first time, but why would you want to fight it? Even if it has great shopping, if it's a problem getting in and out, you go elsewhere." City Manager Eric King said the analysis conductedby
would not be feasible without
Getz's company over the last year will be shared with future
an additional traffic signal on
prospective buyers and should
ent ways to look at a mixed-use
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletm.com
TAMPA — It's a tempest of 2014, Anheuser-Busch
InBev purchased 10 Barrel Brewing Co. of Bend. In January, it announced
er-Busch, the world's largest brewer with 25 percent global market share, is sniffing around Tampa's Cigar City Brewing. Joey Redner, the found-
er and owner of Cigar City, says yes, he took a meeting. But he says local beer drinkers shouldn't be
Is aenine's a, on' e
WOITled.
"I've always had this 'take the meeting' mentali-
ec noo ruin ourrea ions i
ty — you never know what
of text-based communications systems. While an occasional
you might learn, and it gives you a sense for what your company is valued at. It's a normal part of doing business and it's educational," he says, adding,
SAN JOSE, Calif. — When
love letter and quick notes were
"You take the meeting with
you gaze intoyourparlner's eyes on Valentine's Day, will they be lit by the warm glow of a candle or the artificial light of a smartphone screen? While technology has made meetingpotential partners and communicating with loved oneseasier,m obilegadgetsand social networks can distract and causerifts,especiallyfor high-tech workers who feel the need to be constantly connected to their jobs to ensure
typically the only written communication between couples
Budweiser."
By Jeremy C. Owens San Jose Mercury News
for generations, now we use
instant messaging, text messaging and emails daily.
pany that has come calling. "Other breweries, private
nocuouscomments infl aming
investment groups — any time people see rapid growth, they're going to take a look at you," Redner
a situation and messages that never fade.
notes. He says that "the Super
With text-based communica-
tions, however, context is largely absent, which can lead to in-
vvi4V'
To avoidthese issues,always
pickup the phone or get togeth-
everyone else doesn't lose their
er in person when a conversation takes a bad turn.
favorite service. The key to avoiding such problems, expertssay,isopen communicationbetween couples, with special focus on
"If you're upset with somebody, put it in a phone call," Weiss suggests.
Don't share passwords
areas that could cause tension.
In a long relationship, it can happen so easily — one person needs another's smartphone passcode to grab a number or email password to look something up. But having that
To foster that communication, we developed four rules that
couples can follow or at least discuss to keep gadgets and online profiles from interfering with a special relationship.
ferent media platforms on the Internet built up different
cultures," noted Robert Weiss, a licensed clinical social work-
er who has written books on technology's effect on relationships including the freshly released "Always Turned On: Sex Addiction in the Digital Age." Potential issues with social
names, not startups.
James C.Best Jr. I The New YorkTimes
media are rife through the life of a relationship, induding differing opinions onposting picturesofchildren or each
other, as anyone who has posted an unflatteringpicture of a partner can tell you. The rule to avoid these issues is to seek
permission before involving a loved one in your social media post.
Establishtime without
technology
Even if you and your partner are not experiencingissues with technology in your relationship, establishing regular
times to put the gadgets away can be beneficial, especially on early dates. These tech-free times canbe daily — no phones at the dinner table or no tablets inbed, forexample — orlessfrequent,
continuinged. • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. THURSDAY • City Club of Central Oregon: Benefit Companies — Oregon's new lawfor social entrepreneurs; $20 members, $35 nonmembers; registration required by Feb.16; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, Center for Health & Learning, 2500 NENeff Road; 541-633-7163, info© cityclubco.com or www. cityclubco.org. • Blogging for Business 5 Beyond: How toset up a Wordpress.com blog, integrate it with other social media, engage your audienceand other bloggers and create original
"They made a lot of waves with (the purchase of) 10 Barrel, because it is relatively small with craftbeer street cred, but they
trust your partner, but as soon
had approached us before that deal went down." Go to any tap house in the Tampa Bay area and you'll find Cigar City, but
as they've shownyouthat they're cruising hookers on
Redner isn't sure he wants that reach to stretch across
Tinder — once you have that
the country. "I have no plans to go nationally and no desire to. It seems like we have
information, allbets are off," Weiss said. While communication can
help establish parameters thatbothmembers can agree
plenty on our plate. But we
with Andersen noting that
upon, it's probably better to just
could be a southeast regional brewery. Ninety-five
many of her friends promise to leave their phones at home on weekly or monthly"date nights" with their spouses.
avoidthe temptationto snoop that sharing of passwords
percent of our beer stays in the state, but it's abig state.
can create. People should be
With 80-plus million visi-
understandingif partners — at any stage in the relationship — are reluctant to pass along passwords, the experts said, and all said they share few, if
tors a year, we could have
End the threadbefore itbecomesa Sght The biggest change technology has wrought on relationships is the advancement
content on the fly; class runs through March 5; $75, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Coll egeWay ,Bend; 541-383-7270or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. • Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837290 or www.cocc.edul sbdc. FEB. 20 • Grant Writing for Nonprofits: Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications; $89; registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus,2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270or www. cocc.edu/continuinged.
25 (million) or 30 million people in this state at any time. That's a lot of peo-
any, passwords withtheir own
ple to get past before you start sending beer to other
spouses.
states."
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • Reducing Your Risk & Determining Production Cost: Analyze annual production costs and associated benchmarks; $10/farm; RSVPonline or call; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. TUESDAY • Visit Bendboard meeting: Open to the public; free, RSVPby email;8 a.m.; BendVisitor Center, 750 NWLava Road; 541-382-8048, valerie@ visitbend.com or www. visitbend.com. •BeginningQuickBooks Pro 2014: Learn to set up new customer and vendor accounts, create invoices, record salesand enter payments; continues Thursday, Feb.19; $89, registration required; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend;541-3837270or www.cocc.edul
Bowl ad spot that made fun of craft beer drinkers), the beer giant is looking at smaller craft breweries, but ones with established
ra'sbox. "It's great as long as you
Social media has become
one of the biggest danger zones forprospectiveparamours, with many couples' first major discussion about a committed relationship centered on changing their Facebook relationship status. "In the last few years, dif-
Bowl ad notwithstanding" (there was a controversial Anheuser-Busch Super
information can open a Pando-
Ask beforeyou tag
But, he says, Anheuser-Busch isn't the only com-
• • f • FEB. 23 • MS Project Basics: Learn to manage tasks, timelines and resources. Work with tracking and reporting features to accurately monitor your projects and prepare professional estimates. Class runs through March 2; $159, registration required;8:3011:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. • Intermediate Photoshop: Master the masking and compositing and learn how to isolate objects in your photos using Photoshop CS5.5. Class runs through March 2; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-3837270or www.cocc.edul continuinged.
•
Many yoasibilitiea for yroyerty, currently Cowboy 6orner Market Main floor is 2425 sq. ft.... Upper level is 1635 sq. ft. with 1 bedroom/studio apt.
Building, business, inventory & equipment. High traffic area.
- 0~so ooo -
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
'l l I
•
I
••/•
•
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Nutrition, D3
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
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Americansarestressed, main y overfinances
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By Melissa Healy
4
chronic financial stress. In 2007, the nation had
Los Angeles Times •
Stress is plentiful in the United States, and stress
i
over money, which is anything but plentiful for many American families, is in overflowing supply, says a new survey. More than 1 in 4 Americans report they most or all of the time, and most say their stress over
experience roughly equal levels of overall stress. By 2014, stress levels began to averaged stresslevels of 5.2
money has either remained
about the same as last year (59 percent) or gotten worse (29 percent). As the nation emerges from a long economic
j;.
and have-nots professed to
diverge along income lines. Lower-income households
feel stressed over money
downturn, the American
C
no such "stress inequality gap": While average stress levels were higher than they were in 2014, the haves
on a 1-to-10 scale on which 10 was the highest. Those with higher household incomes averaged stress levels of 4.7. The psychological pulse-taking makes clear that this increasingly
.'7
Psychological Association's annual survey of stress in
/
America, issued this week,
will probably exacerbate
paints a picture of stress that largely parallels the
the dramatic inequities in the health of poorer and
nation's uneven recovery.
richer Americans. Those living in lower-income households were almost twice as likely as wealthier
/
/
Among those on the economy's lower rungs, 36 percent report they feel stress over money all or most
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Sisters Erika, left, (in black) and Monica Torres (in pink) follow along as Studio K owner Karina Feigner, right, leads a Zumba class on
Tuesday evening in Madras.
skewed patternof stress
respondents to tell survey-takers that financial
of the time. Among those living in households with
insecurity stands in the way of their living a more
income above$50,000,half as many — 18 percent — ac-
knowledged they felt such
healthful lifestyle. SeeStress /D4
MEDICINE
Can measuringtelomeres
belp predictyourlife span? By Lisa M. Krieger
entists the 2009 Nobel Prize.
San Jose (Calif) Mercury News
So I leapt at the chance
The moment will come,
By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
whisked off life's stage. But when'? It's a mystery that has haunted humans
since the dawn of civili-
or most of their lives, Monica and Erika Torres ate the way they
zation. If it's soon, we can cancel that dental appoint-
learned to growing up: unhealthy.
For me, a clue — perhaps — arrived in my email from
about it — just go through the drive-thru. Grab some-
thing. Let me order a pizza and have it delivered." It wasn't until Monica sat
across from a doctor who told her that her son, Derek, was dangerously overweight, that she realized there was a problem. Worried for him and knowing diabetes runs
It 00 i
Monica, 37.
Erika have done the
respective weight divisions
company, Telomere Diagnostics. Its test measures the length of a protective cap, called a telomere, at the end
last year — and Monica's
of each strand of DNA, the
team took first place. "I want people to be Erika
genetic blueprint of life. My telomeres are shrinking right now. So are yours.
and Monica, who do it, lose
Every time a cell divides, its
telomeres shorten until they
Sincethen,severaltest-
reach a critical length, and
ing companies have been founded by respected scien-
cha l lenge each year since it more," said Carolyn Harvey, star t ed, and they've lost near- who first launched Movin' advocates launched the ly 60 pounds and 50 pounds, Mountains in Jefferson Movin' Mountains Slimrespectively — Monica since County. "Then they're the down Challengein 2009, a 2009 and Erika since 2013, role model for everybody to weight-loss competition for wh e n her youngest child waslook at." Jefferson County residents bor n . The sisters won their SeeWeight loss/D2
the cell dies. Their shrinking servesas a clock thatcounts off a cell's life span. They tell
LOS ANGELES — A year cleanse, reset,detox and glow
equivalent of an Egg McMuffin
a little. Today, things are only busier in
— fast and convenient — al-
These tiny telomeres are so important to human bi-
Church, director of Harvard University's Molecular Tech-
ology that their discovery earned three American sci-
nology Group. SeeTelomeres/D4
though the juice client would never venture into a fast-food shop. Today's juice — cold-pressed betweenplates, meaning
juice — andI don't mean Minute Maid. Juic-
ing just won't go away. "The concept has settled into being just part of a healthy life,
Park, adding to the dozens of
places where people are paying in the double digits (yes, you can pay $12 for a drink that's not spiked with vodka)
g
•
In a way, it's the moral
NUTRITION the world of
downtown and in Highland
San Francisco and George
us: Time's running out.
ket is estimated at $100million
a year. What gives?
L.A. hot spots as the Ace Hotel
tists, such as Nobel laureate Elizabeth Blackburn of UC
ness he did then, he says. The cold-pressed juice mar-
ago, trendistas were snuggling up to juice bars all over L.A. to
But a "thing" it remains. Juicebars have opened in such
exercise and diet.
e u icin is eretosta
Los Angeles Times
San Francisco.
genetics, chronic stress and health behaviors, such as
it,come back and then, you know, they don't need it any-
•
restaurant consulting firm in
But a fast-growing body of research is finding that telomere length in leukocytes, the white blood cells of the immune system, reliably predicts age-related disease — and can be affected by
it, come back, keep losing
That change finally happened when public health
By Mary Macvean
rather than a thing," says Andrew Freeman of the AF8 Co.
are other theories to explain DNA.
a Menlo Park, California,
little ones to and fro. Life got busy. Meals: even less thought-out.
yet — and will likely never be — life's crystal ball. There aging, such as damaged cell membranes and mutated
fordecades ofdecrepitude.
Madras — had kids, suddenly everything was about working and shuttling
in her family, she vowed to t ha t 's judged individually make a change. and in teams. The program "Whatever you do as a is r u n by a personal trainer, family, that's exactly the feat u res classes on eating same thing that your kids well and exercising and cash are going to do when prizes. they're older," said FITN ES S Both Monica and
A telomere test is not
ment, quit the job and take a dream vacation. If not, plan
Once the sisters — both of whom have spent most of their lives in
that was fast," Monica said. "I didn't even have to think
sured — and get paid $50 per test — in Telomere Diagnostics' yearlong study to identify normal telomere lengths and rates of change.
we know, when we're
MADRAS-
"Kids have sports and activities, so it was something
to have my telomeres mea-
no heat is used — is a great
Jay L. Clendenin /Los Angeles Times
Juice shops have been popping upall over the country, and with increased demand, the trend looks to continue.
answer for busy people, says Alexis Schulze,co-founderand chief visionary officer of the Costa Mesa, California-based Nekter Juice Bar chain of 49 shops. "It's accessible for people who tryto get their fruits and
for abottle of juice, albeit cold- outside his pristine, tiny shop pressed and organic in a range on Beverly Boulevard in Los ofprettycolors.Cold-pressed A ngeles. Hisbusinessbegan in juice is even for sale in airports 1975 as the Beverly Hills Juice and at Trader Joe's. Club, an extension ofhis "quest "It's amazing; it's amazing," fora pe rfectdiet."These days, Dave Otto says one morning he does 10 to 15times the busi-
vegetables inbut who say, 'I just don't have time to sit down
and eat a salad,'" she said over a glass of Toxin Flush, made with apple, ginger, lemon, parsley and spinach. SeeJuicing/D3
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ESTHETlXiyiD Spa 4 Laser Center
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
FmVESS HEALTH EVENTS com, info©synergyhealthbend.com
TODAY
or 541-323-3488.
AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required; call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Culver Christian Church, 501 W.Fourth Ave.; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE — PINTFEST:Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. STEWARDS OF CHILDREN:Training for adults on how to recognize the signs of sexual abuse in children, how to respond to suspicions of abuse and more; free; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; Sisters High School,1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www. kidscenter.org, kbohme©kidscenter. org or 541-306-6062.
MOMDAY AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1-6:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment;1-6 p.m.; Holy Trinity Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Sunriver; www.redcrossblood. org or 800-RED-CROSS.
TUESDAY
AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment;11 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of LatterdaySaints,450 SW RimrockWay, FRIDAY Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE: Identification required, DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.call for appointment; 12:30-5:30 2:30p.m.;Bend Blood Donation p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. 110; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD for appointment; 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; DRIVE:Identification required, call Amity Creek Magnet School, 437 NW for appointment; 1-6 p.m.; Crooked Wall St., Bend; www.redcrossblood. River Ranch Fire & Rescue, 6971 SW org or 800-RED-CROSS. Shad Road; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC for appointment;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; CONDITIONS: Learn about managing Stone Lodge Retirement, 1460 NE day-to-day symptoms of chronic 27th St., Bend; www.redcrossblood. pain and improving quality of life; org or 800-RED-CROSS. $1 0 for six-week series, registration required; 2:30-5 p.m., Tuesdays SATURDAY through March 24; Deschutes County Health Building, Stan OwenRoom, KIND LISTENING 5PLAIN 2577 NE Courtney Drive, Bend; www. SPEAKINGFOR CAREGIVERS: Learn livingwellco.org or 541-322-7430. compassionate communication to better help caregivers, family members, nurses and nursing aides, WEDNESDAY nursing home staff and more; 9 a.m.; $10-$20 suggested donation, Center AMERICANRED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, for Compassionate Living, 339 SW Century Drive, Suite 203, Bend, 530- call for appointment; 10 a.m.867-3198 or barklesswagmore04© 3 p.m.;Bend Blood Donation gmail.com. Center, 815 SWBond St., Suite 110; www.redcrossblood.org or AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD 800-RED-CROSS. DRIVE: Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m.; AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD Crook County Library, 175 NW DRIVE:Identification required, Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; call for appointment; 10 a.m.www.redcrossblood.org or 3:30p.m.;Jeff ersonCounty Fire 800-RED-CROSS. Station, 765 S. Adams Drive, TOOTHFAIRYSMILEDRIVE: Madras; www.redcrossblood.org or Featuring dental screenings and 800-RED-CROSS. oral care kits, donate toothpaste, COFFEE 5CONNECTION: Meet toothbrushes and floss for the other peoplewhoselives have Kemple Clinic to help kids in Central been affected by cancer; free;11 Oregon, for kids ages 3-18; free; a.m.-12:30 p.m.; St. Charles Cancer 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Wal-Mart, 300 NW Center, 2100 NE Wyatt Court, Oak Tree Lane, Redmond; www. Bend; www.stcharlescancer.org or kempleclinic.org, info@kempleclinic. 541-706-3754. com or 541-671-1653. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD COUPLES MASSAGEWORKSHOP: DRIVE:Identification required, call Learn simple massage techniques; $60 per couple, registration required; for appointment;1-6 p.m.; Madras 4-5:30 p.m.; Synergy Health8 United Methodist Church,49 NE Wellness, 244 NEFranklin Ave., Suite 12th St.; www.redcrossblood.org or 5, Bend; www.synergyhealthbend. 800-RED-CROSS.
oomuc runnin? omet in no By Justin Woifers
tes, smoking and drinking. was bad news for the researchThe researchers acknowlers, because 17 was clearly too edge this lack of significance few deaths to discern whether but confounded the issue by the risk of death was related to pointing to a different question. running intensity. Instead of focusing on the difN onetheless, t h e stu d y ferences between light, moderclaimed that too much jogging ate and heavy joggers, they ask was associated with a higher instead whether each group of mortality rate. At a literal level, runners had a lower death rate the mortality rate was highest than an altogether different among those who ran the most group, a separatesample of413 and at the highest intensity. nonrunners. But the evidentiary basis for And indeed, both light and this claim is weak. It is based moderate joggers had a signifion 40 people who were catego- cantly lower death rate than the rized as "strenuous joggers"sedentary nonrunners. among whom only two died. There is even less to these That's right: The conclusions findings than meets the eye, as that received so much attention the researchersdid not comw ere basedon a grand totalof pare runners with nonrunners two deaths among strenuous but rather with the subgroup of joggers. As Alex Hutchinson of nonrunners who lead the most Runner's World wrote, "Thank sedentary lives. The usual congoodness a third person didn't cerns about correlation not imdie, or public health authorities plying causation are particularwould be banning jogging." ly relevant here, given that an Needless to say, these two extremely sedentary lifestyle deaths do not add up to a sta- may be both a cause and a contistically significant finding. sequence of poor health. Moreover, the researchers do What then of the strenuous noteven report whether those joggers? There are so few of two deaths were from causes them in the sample that their that could plausibly be related death rate cannot be reliably to running. discerned to be different from The death rate among mod- any of these groups — the light erate joggers was also higher joggers,the moderate joggers than that for light joggers, but or the sedentary. given that there were fewer This led to perhaps the most than 10 deaths among either egregious overinterpretation category, this difference could of the study, in which the Britnot be reliably discerned from ish newspaper The Telegraph theeffectsofchance. blared the headline that "Fast Indeed, none of the compar- running is as deadly as sitting isons between those who run on couch, scientists find." The a lot versus a little, frequent- Telegraphwas largely repeatly versus infrequently, or fast ingthe study's authors, who say versus slow, were statistically that "stn.'nuous joggers have a significant, even after adjust- mortality rate not statistically ing for potential factors such as different from that of the sedage, gender, education, diabe- entary group." In fact, on every for the surviving runners, it
New Yorh Times News Service
Don't run less hard. Don't run less often. Don't run less
distance. And don't be persuaded by underpowered medical studies — a habit
that really could harm your health. I say this in response to a
recent study suggesting that too much strenuous jogging shortens your life. The con-
clusions, published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, have received wide attention.
In fact, the main thing the study shows is
t h at
small samples yield unreliable estimates that cannot be reliably discerned from the effects of chance. And the main thing the reaction shows is that perhaps we
are all a bit too quick to believe medical studies that tell us what we want to hear.
The study doesn't change what the weight of the evidence shows: Most Amer-
icans need to worry about exercising too little, not too much, and it's not clear that
any substantial number of people are harming their healthbyrunningtoo much. Let's startbytakinga closer look at what the study ac-
tually says. The researchers asked Danish runners about the speed, frequency and duration of their workouts,
categorizing 878 of them as light, moderate or strenuous
joggers. Ten years later, the researchers checked government records to see how
many of them had died. Happily, only 17 had. While this was good news
Weight loss
cording to the OHA.
'An amazing feeling'
Continued from 01
In an interview about their transformations last week, the sisters were energetic
'It's spread out' Jefferson County's health statistics have been dismal
and chatty while wrangling over the years, and Harvey a couple of rambunctious said she hopes to help turn kids, laughing and poking things around. Between 2009 fun at one another. Both have and 2013, Jefferson Coun- wide smiles and bouncy, spity had the state's lowest life
expectancy at birth at 76.3 years old, according to data from th e Authority.
O r egon H ealth
About 40 percent of Jefferson County residents were
overweightbetween2008and 2011, compared with about 35.5 percent statewide, ac-
cording to OHA data. About 21percent reported getting no physical activity in their free time, compared with 17.5 percent statewide. One contributing factor.
How to submit Events:Email eventinformation to healthevents©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before thedesired date ofpublication. Ongoing class listings must beupdatedmonthly and will appear online at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
The county is very rural, Harveysaid. "People have to get into their cars to get anywhere," she said. The city of Madras has done a good job of adding bike paths and walking trails,
TODAY RUNNINGPERFORMANCE BIOMECHANICS CLASS:Designed by Jay Dicharry and taught by Jen Luebke; for runners15 to105, beginners and elites; Level1, 6:30 p.m.; Level 2, 5:30 p.m.; $96 for eight weeks; Rebound Physical Therapy andBiomechanicsLab,1160 SW Simpson Ave., Suite 200, Bend; info© REPoregon.com or 541-419-8208.
Armature, 50 SE Scott St., Suites1 and 2, Bend;ucabend©gmail.com or 541-678-3460.
WEDMESDAY ARGENTINETANGO DANCE LESSONS: TangoAficionadosof
Bend ArgentineTangobeginning class every Wednesday, followed by two hours of practice for all levels of dancers; individualized attention for
beginningdancers inafriendly and
TUESDAY CAPOEIRA:Danceclass featuring the fightlike, martial art-influenced dance; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; The
supportive environment; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 NW Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-639-9399
or www.tangoaficionadosofbend. wordpress.com.
ther, faster or more frequently recorded a lower death rate than nonrunners.
But because the sample size was so small, this difference is not statistically significant. It's an old statistical mistake to
report the failure to disprove a hypothesis — that the death
rates of the two groups might be the same — as leading to the implication that it's valid — that
they are in fact the same. Just as important, other evidence suggests that running, like other forms of exercise, benefits health. There may be an amount of running so great as to damage health, but, if so, it's probably far greater than four hours per week. If you feel there's a drumbeat of evidence accumulat-
ing about the risks of running too far, because you've heard similar conclusions before, it is worth putting the noise into
context: It comes fromthe same place. As Runner's World has
noted, these same data were published a few years back in a separate study. Moreover, oth-
er studies supporting this idea come fromthe same author. But scientific progress is slower and less spectacular than it often appears. To get a sense of what we are
learning, let me recommend a careful review of the literature, written by Hutchinson, a
physicist-turned-writer. His conclusion: "Running an hour a day is certainly no less healthy, and probably a bit healthier, than running less." Armed with that more accu-
rate assessment of the science, I hope to see you on the running trails.
gym), and I'm going to be
pared with other groups; less
there seven times a day!" Er-
than 46 percent of them lost
ika jabbed at Monica, who shrugged it off.
weight. Among the women who had frequent support from family and friends, by contrast, nearly 72 percent lost weight. Watching the Torres sisters
Hands-onapproach Monica said what she likes most about Movin' Mountains is that it's hands on. There are
talk, it's easy to see how they
encourage one another. Even though they don't make it to the gym until 9:30 p.m. most nights ral-curled hair. nutritionists a n d pe r sonal — Monica works two jobs and Monica, wearing red lip- trainers. She learned the val- Erika helps out at their parents' stick and glittery eyeshadow, ue of planning out her family's restaurant — they stay until said she never used to wear meals beforethe week starts, 11:30 or midnight. makeup or nice clothes to for example. But that includes a lot of "They don't just say, 'OK, stretching, Monica said. work. Only sweatpants. " I never used t o w e a r come sign up with us,' and then "And we take selfies for a dresses, but now I buy my- just leave you out to dry,'" she while," Erika laughed. self dresses," she said. "It's an SBld. Both sisters have gotten amazing feeling.... It literally This year, Harvey, a personal Facebook messages from disbrings tears to my eyes." trainer herself, is ramping up tant friends amazed by their Likewise, Erika, 34, said that support, sending all partic- weight loss over the years. "One of my friends said, 'You she went from a size 24 to a ipants regular emails with diet size 14, and hopes to lose even and exercise tips and letting know what? You look so amazmore weight. them know she's there to an- ing. You are an inspiration "Maybe I can work into swer questions and give advice. to me,'" Monica said. "I never "I'm going to be their trainer- would've seen myself like that." some shorts this summer," she said. slash-pest," she said. Monica continued on, noting meetings and two to three dasses per month hosted by
Meals in both households
Studies have shown when it
have changed dramatically.
comes to weight loss, support — especially from family-
for the gym with kids, then suddenly stopped herself.
kids a lot of fish and adds tends to lead to better results. ground turkey to meals for A 2012 study in the journal protein. She always makes Obesity found that women who she said, but on the Warm sure there's fruit on hand, and never experienced healthy eatSprings Indian Reservation chips — her personal viceing or physical activity support — where she used to workare not allowed. from family — but frequent it's hardto walk anywhere. It's also made a difference support from friends — were "Everything is spread out, for Derek, now 9 years old. least likely to lose weight com-
" I think I ' m t a l k ing t o o much," she said. " No y o u're n o t! " E r i k a laughed. "It's OK, we want to
there are dogs, it's not safe,"
FITNESS EVENTS
measure, those who run far-
Monica said she feeds her
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbuifetin.com
OSPICE
of Redmond 5 4 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3 You Have A Cholce. Ask For Us Bg Name. I I I I
(~ o
IBIEH IHIH
Your Local Nonprofit Hospice Committed to Quatitg of Life For Over 33 Years
— opponents in the 16-week
2004, Jefferson County had weight loss competition. the third-highest rate of death from diabetes in the state, ac-
hear your life story, like when you were ababy."
The boy's doctor, taking note
she said. of his dramatic weight loss, Harvey serves as wellness told Monica Derek should coordinator for the Let's Talk be a poster child for healthy Diversity Coalition, a group eating. working to foster equity in The sisters, both of whom Warm Springs and Jeffer- say they never worked out beson County. She started a fore, now take Zumba dasses previous incarnation of the at a studio in Madras, swim in Movin' Mountains challenge a local pool and hit the gym in Warm Springs, part of five days a week. which is in Jefferson CounThis year's Movin' Mounty, in 2005 when she was tains challenge, which kicked the reservation's wellness off in late January, will be difcoordinator. ferent for the Torres sisters. Harvey had been hired Rather than being in sepato work in Warm Springs rate weight divisions like bethrough a diabetes preven- fore, they're in the same one tion grant. Between 2000 and
how difficult it is to make time
"Now you can take three
days off a week (from the
®
Honoring your wishes for your care
® P ersonalized care in your own home
St. Charlesseeks participantsfor heart diseasestudV
The STRENGTH Trial will addomega-3carboxylicacids (concentrated fish oili to statin therapy to study whether it reduces major adverse cardiac St. Charles Health System is events in adults with persistent seeking participants for a clinical hypertriglyceridemia, or high trial that will test the effects of triglyceride levels. Participants medication combinations on pa- must attend up to four screening tients with risk factors for heart visits to check cholesterol levels disease. and 12 visits during their treat-
ment to monitor blood chemistry and perform assessments. Follow-ups will also occur by phone every six months. Participants must be18 years of age or older andhavehigh triglycerides despite having taken a statin medication. They must also have at least one of the following risk factors for heart disease: anyatherosclerotic CV
disease, a history of Type1 or Type 2 diabetes, a family history of premature coronary heart disease, a history of hypertension or currently be taking antihypertensive medication, chronic cigarette smoking, a history of albuminuria or impaired renal function. For more information, call Kristi Sterry at 541-706-3732.
® ® ®
Working closely with your personal doctor Access to our nurses 24/7 Bereavement support for your loved ones
Serving Bend I Redmond I Sisters I Powell Butte I Crooked Rlver Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
TION
ar ssa e By Tamar Haspel Special To The Washington Post
To help navigate the world of carbs the food, it's helpful to spend a little time with carbs
ra as e n e w i e vi ain "It's easier for a lot of people to cut off whole
It's become popular to think categories of food than to eat moderately." of foods as either good or bad, the molecules. something to eat or something — Marion Nestle, professor in New York University's to avoid. Carbohydrates, which Breakingitdown department of nutrition, food studies and public health had their moment as a good Carbohydrates run the gamfood backwhen fat was the bad ut from very simple molecules but pasta, particularly if it's guy, are now being blamed in that your body breaks down ing with sugar. part for the epidemic of obesi- easily to very complex moleIn the complex world of not overcooked, doesn't have ty, diabetes and heart disease. cules that your body breaks food, it's refreshing to find an that effect. Although the inAnd a slew of diet books pro- down more slowly, or not at all. idea on which there is uni- gredients of the two foods are poses that you will feel better Since carbohydrates that you versal agreement: Everyone almost identical, pasta has a and be healthier if you never eat are mainly convertedto glu- thinks it's important to limit difficult molecular structure eat bread, pasta or sugar again. cose, the sugarthat everycell of sugar consumption. There is, that your body can't break But are carbs really so bad? your body can use for energy, however, a range of opinion down as quickly. Science makes the answer the faster the carbohydrate is on just how bad sugar is. There is a measure for how pretty dear: no. While bread, digested, the quicker it's turned Some doctors and scientists much a particular food inpasta and sugar are hard-to-re- into blood sugar. believe that the problem with creases your blood sugar: the sist sources of calories without There are questions about sugar is that it's empty calo- glycemic index, or GI. When much in the way of nutrition, possible negative health effects ries — tasty empty calories carbohydrates in a food get other ca r bohydrate-heavyof somecarbs,such as fructose, that go down very easily, par- converted quickly, that causes foods — whole grains, legumes which is found in sugar and ticularly in sweetened drinks. a spike in insulin, which your and fruit — are nutrient-rich. high-fructose corn syrup, and Others believe that the ease pancreas releasesto prompt Carbohydrates can play a galactose, which is found in with which our bodies turn cells to absorb the glucose. healthful role in your diet or milk. But the question of how sugar in soda into sugar in our The hormones that your body they can be your undoing, de- carbs affect health is mostly bloodstream messes with our releases in response can make pending on which, and how focused on how quickly and metabolism in a way that dis- you feel hungry. The higher many, you eat. efficiently the body can break poses us to overeat. the GI, the higher the blood The biggest beef against the molecule down and deliver Because the carbohydrates sugar level. If you eat highcarbs is that it's easy to eat glucose to the bloodstream. in refined grains — bread, GI foods often, the repeated too much of them, which is a But you don't eat carbo- white rice, pasta — come stressing of your insulin-proproblem because it can lead to hydrates, you eat food, so it's packaged with some fiber, ducing machinerymay have w eight gain and because they useful to categorize foods by some protein and even a few other effects, such as increascan crowd out more-nutritious the type of carbohydrates that other nutrients, their calories ing your risk for diabetes. foods.There's also speculation
predominate.
aren't quite as empty, and the
that the way our bodies digest sugar and certain processed grains such as those found in white bread and white rice makes us hungry again soon
Simple-carb foods are those that your body breaks down quiddy and easily, such as sweeteners (sugar, honey, maple syrup) and refined grains (white flour, pasta, white rice).
speed with which they're digested varies. (Refined flour
It could be because low-GI sold. "I'm not a great believer foods tend to be healthful for in its importance," she says, reasons other than their GI and points out that the GI mea- values — they're nutrient- or sures foods eaten alone, and fiber-rich — while high-GI what you eat with your carbs foods tend to be unhealthful. affects subsequent blood sugar In general, whole grains, lelevels. gumes and vegetables have Glycemic index response lower — i.e., better — GI scores is also affected by how the than refined-grain breads, food was cooked (not only the baked goods and sugary method but how long it was drinks. So "high-GI" may be cooked), how thoroughly you a marker for an unhealthful chew and other factors, says diet. Susan Roberts, director ofthe If you eat a lot of junk food, energy metabolism laboratory your diet is definitely high-GI. designed around it, Nestle isn't
at Tufts University in Boston.
As Julie Jones says, "We don't
A person can have a differ- need any kind of index to tell ent response to the same food us we shouldn't eat Doodles, Ding-Dongs and doughnuts." from one day to another. A study published in DeRoberts says that it could cember in the Journal of the be the higher nutrient levels of American Medical Associa- low-GI foods, and not the glytion compared high- and low- cemicresponse,that'sresponGI diets and found that peo- sible for the lowered disease ple lost the same amount of risk. Luc Tappy of Switzerweight on both. The research- land's University of Lausanne, ers found little difference in who chairs the committee cholesterol, triglyceride lev- revisingcarbohydrate recomels and insulin resistance (a mendations for France, says condition in which the body we don't have conclusive evidoesn't use insulin efficiently), dence of the glycemic index's and concluded that "using gly- importance. He calls it an cemic index to select specific "open question." foods may not improve cardioWhen questions are open, vascularrisk factors." W hy is i t t h at w hen r e-
it's often hard to know what to eat.But everyone agrees that
limiting sugar is important, and Jones points to the U.S. government's Dietary Guidelines for Americans as a simple rule for other carb-heavy foods: Make half your grains whole.
sumption, of anything, is the enemy." Even so, the good-or-bad
searchers look at the diet of There is disagreement about the population as a whole, they sential to reducing the risk of the importance of the glyce- find that a low-GI diet has benfetal neural tube defects.) mic index. While some scien- efits, but when they bring peoWhite bread, for example, tists believe it's an essential ple into the lab and feed them These are the carbs that tend lets loose a flood of glucose, measure of diet quality, and low- and high-GI diets, they to get the bad rap because they so your blood sugar spikes, while many diets have been don't find those advantages? cause spikes in blood sugar. Complex-carb foods, which include whole grains and legumes, have large, complex molecules that are more difficult to digest and consequently
notion gets traction. "It's easi-
don't cause the same rapid in-
er for a lot of people to cut off whole categories of food than
crease inblood sugar. The simple/complex classifi-
to eat moderately," says Mar-
cation isn't perfect. Many fruits
after eating.
"Carbs aren't the enemy," says Julie Jones, a professor emeritus of food and nutrition at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, Minnesota. "Overcon-
Weighing the importance of the glyoemicindex
is also fortified with folate, es-
ion Nestle, a professor in New and vegetables contain both York University's department types of carbohydrates: Some of nutrition, food studies and getbroken down quiddy, others public health. And a lot of peo- more slowly. Andit's not always ple report that they feel better
true that whole foods are digest-
and lose weight when they cut ed slowly while refined foods out sugar and refined carbohy- are digested quickly. Potatoes, drates, she says. Yet there's no
o our ea
for example, have lots of carbo-
reason, she adds, that bread, hydrates in the form of starch, pasta and plain old sugar which is broken down quiddy. should be completely off-limits, as somepopulardiets recom- Simplecarbohydrates Let's look at some of the mend. In moderation, they'll do you no harm. simple carbohydrates, start-
Juicing
that the "jury is still out on whether your body can ab-
Continued from D1
sorb the nutrients more easily
Are we really that busy?
Apparently so. Busy but also yearning, Otto says: "People are sick and
tired of being sick and tired." Amanda Chantal B acon, founder of Moon Juice, which
in liquid form or if there's any advantage in giving your digestive system a break from working on fiber." Dana Hunnes, a senior dietitian at the Ronald Reagan
UCLA Medical Center, says has shops in Venice and Silver she's asked often about juicLake, California, says people ing. "I think it's healthier to are taking their health into eat the food and get the fiber their own hands because they and other things," though she feel disappointed by conven- says there's likely no harm in tional food and medicine. jump-starting an effort to eat "People have invested so healthfully with a one-day much time and energyand juice regimen. hope in fat-free foods like While many juices contain SnackWells and $200 eye kale or spinach and other vegcreams and pills to make you etables and herbs, they often happy in your marriage. We also contain apples and other gave it a really good effort," sweeter produce. And that can she says, explaining that she mean a fair amount of sugar. became ajuicer to guard her To counter that, Sussman own health. suggests juicing four servings With names for concoctions of leaf y or cruciferous vegetalike Glow, Purity or Goodness bles for every one of fruit. (Of Greens, who wouldn't want to course, juicing at home takes drink up? There are seasonal a commitment ranging from flavors, such as pumpkin spice $100 to $2,500 for the juicer.) "Successful long-term juicand cranberry-cinnamon, and more exotic ones. Juice Served ers learn to liquefy greens Here, which has a handful of and vegetables on a daily bastores in the L.A. area, offers sis and to juice sweet-tasting charcoal lemonade; Moon fruits and the sweetest root Juice sells Silver Strawberry vegetables ... in moderation,"
St. GharlesCancerGenter is pleasedtowelcomeJohnWinters, MD, Michael (Andy) Monticelli, MD and Stacie Koehler, PA-G, to its team. The three ProViderSare eXCited to jOin the eStabliShedSt. CharleSCanCer Center grOuPWhere they CanPrOVideCOmPaSSiOnate Careto CanCerPatientS thrOughOutthe regiOn. Dr. MontiCelli COmPleted hiStraining at the UniVerSity of COIOradOand PraCtiCed in EugenefOr 16 yearSbefOre mOVing to Central OregOn.Dr.WinterS trained at the UniVerSity of OklahOmaand reCently COmPleted hiSfellOWShiP at FletCher Allen Health Care at the UniVerSity of VermOnt.Koehler reCeiVedher maSterSof PhySiCianaSSiStant StudieS frOm the UniVerSity of NebraSkaMediCal Center and WOrkedfOr a PraCtiCe in Medford befOre mOVingto Bend.
with Mezotrace silver.
E ric Helms writes in " T h e
And with the possibility of greater energy, glowing skin, a clearer mind, a detoxified gut and more, who could refuse'? Most people eat so little plant food, says Joe Cross, au-
Juice Generation," which is company. Whether organic coldpressed juices are healthful depends in part on the con-
All three ProViderSare aCtiVeOutdOOrenthuSiaStS Whoare COmmitted tO PrOViding hOliStiCCarethat COmbineS the beSt in CanCertreatment With lifeStyle and behaViOr mOdifiCatiOnSto helPCOntrOI CanCer SymPtOmS.
thor of "The Reboot With Joe Juice Diet, "is it any wonder
text, says Tricia Psota, a nutritionist at the U.S. Department
To make an aPPOintment, Call St. CharleSCanCerCenter at 541-706-5800.
also the name of his New York
that when they add these su- of Agriculture. percharged flood of nutrients If juice is an addition to your that they feel better?" diet, the calories can add up (a 16-ounce bottle typically has But it's hard to prove that glowing skin, clearer think- about 200 calories). So can the ing or resetting is the result of dollars. On the other hand, if a juicing. And there's plenty of juice replaces your usual middisagreement about the value morning doughnut, it's hard to of a 16-ounce juice, even one argue against it. made from up to 2 pounds of Juice fans are not flinching, produce, compared with the Freeman says. "They're willfood itself. ing to pay for quality, to be in Lisa Sussman writes in her the know.We've come a long book "Cold Press Juice Bible" way from Tang."
541-706-5800 2500 NE NEFF RD. BEND,OR
StCharlesHealthCare.org SB
ar es CANCER CENTER
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
w
QUEsrioN: F or V a lentine's day m y husband bought me a b e autiful d iamond necklace and wants me t o h ave more 'cleavage' to show it off . What would make more cleavage for me, silicone or saline implants? A dam p An etes A N swER. Both may give you the
M.D.
lo o k you want depending upon your Board Certified current anatomy an d y o u r d e sired pi u s B s ize and s h ape. I n c r e asing y o u r cleavage is a function of many factors such as breast width, cup size, amount of skin elasticity to name a few. Saline and silicone implants have advantages and disadvantages as well. It's best to discuss all your options with your plastic surgeon so you can choose what is best for you personally and meet your goals.
Happy Valentine's Day!
QUEsrioN: What are the benefits of having implants placed for denture support? Answer:
j(
I m p l a nt s p r o v id e b e t t er
d e n t ure s t ability a n d re t ention particularly in the lower (mandible)
jaw. Patients subjective perceptions regarding a n im p l a n t s u p p o r ted Pinkerton LieeneedDenturiet denture are a positive one and report to having a more " n atural feeling." This may translate into better occlusal awareness and biting force. There are also several studies that have proven patients with implant supported dentures will experience less bone loss. To see if you are a good candidate for an implant supported denture we offer free consultations and can go over the pros and cons involved in being a denture wearer.
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QUEsTIQN: I found a lump in my breast? What do Ido?
ANswER: If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/GYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. I»» » Amb«B When the results are received the course M.D., FACS
of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a Surgeon. You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educate you on the many options and treatments available to you. If you have breast cancer you have a choice in the specialists you see. The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St. Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. You should thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment. YOUR HEALTH Y O U R CHOICE • OUR EXPERTISE
f
QUEsrioNi Iam 44 and have been having menstrual irregularitiesfor the last 6 months.Am I starting menopause? DoIneedto doanyttungaboutit? ,/-:
ANswER: It is likely that you are entering what would be called peri-menopause. Menopause is defined as not having your menstrual cycle for one year. This generally happens between the N.D. ages of 45 and 55. So, when you start skipping periods periodically or if periods start coming more frequently, or if you start bleeding more/longer/less, it is likely perimenopause. Sometimes women will have some irregularities for a few months and then their cycle goesback on schedule for months or years more. It is different for everybody. Stopping your mensescompletely at44 or younger is early and causes higher risks of osteoporosis and heart disease in the future. It is important to check in with your doctor or gynecologist if this occurs. If you are still having cycles, even if they are somewhat irregular, your risk of these conditions is less. Severity of other symptoms such as mood swings, sleep irregularities, hot flashes and vaginal dryness will help you and your provider decide if hormonal intervention is warranted. Often I will try treatments involving diet, lifestyle, herbs and some specific nutrients or fatty acids in caseslike yours to start. Often peri-menopausal symptoms do not require hormones to treat. I find the one exception to this is often vaginal dryness which improves greatly with a small dose oflocal estriol and/or estradiol.
• RI D . A*
D r. Azure K a r l i , N . D . Bend Naturopathic Clinic www.bendnaturopath.com 544 -389-9750
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QUEsrioN: What areas can be treated with CoolSculpting? ANswER: CoolSculpting is FDA approved in the United States to treat the abdomen, hips and love handles, muffin top region, and thighs. Upper arms are also treated. DualSculpting, treating two areas simultaneously with CoolSculpting is now available at The Leffel Center. Dr. Leffel i s successfully using Dr Linda J DualSculpting to freeze twice the fat in half the L~ffel time. DualSculpting successfully treats twice the fat, in half the time. The procedure is FDA cleared, safe and effective with permanent results. CoolSculpting uses controlled cooling and freezing to permanently destroy unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. Over 1 million CoolSculpting treatments have been safely performed worldwide. If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon or surgeon who had completed a residency in cosmetic surgery and body contouring. Before any office procedure you should have a consultation and exam by the treating physician, to thoroughly assess your general health and if you are a candidate for the procedure. CoolSculpting is a medical treatment and should be performed in a doctors office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more information or questions please call our office 541-388-3006 or visit www. LeffelCenter.com.
JoinUs ForCoolNightOu tThursday,February 19,2015
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S
L EFF E L C EN T E R
V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e
2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR97701 s ur g e r y
Ca r e o e
541-323-2790 www.vanamburgsurgery.com
C O S M E T IG , B R E A S T
A N D L A SE R S U R G E R Y
Dr. Linda J. Leffel, MD 1715 SWChandler Ave. ¹100 Bend, OR 97702 541-388-3006 www.leffelcenter.com
Ask one of our Health Professionals on the following
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
e a 'istro in, utinana urin wa TV SPOTLIGHT
child, ever. e nthood," which w a s p u r e During a news conference marshmallow compared to last month with "The Slap's" "The Slap's" bitter taste. "The actors and producers, it be- Slap" i s a n ex p e r imental came clear that critics and choice for NBC; in tone and reporters who had seen the its vaguely eRashomon"-like show had lingering concerns structure, it's got a lot in comfor the young actor, Dylan mon with Showtime's "The Schombing, who plays Hugo. Affair." That's a program-
"TheSiap" 8 p.m. Thursdays, NBC By Hank Stuever The Washington Post
TV shows are getting better at the modern ways of trolling, which, after all, is an ancient
and perhaps fundamental feature of drama — the ability to stir emotions, get goats and
raise hackles. Provocative characters make terrible decisions in order to draw us into
their moral quandaries. How flattering that we each get a reserved seat in the judge's chair. But "The Slap," NBC's heavy-hearted (and heavy-handed) drama based on an Australian series (which itself was based on a novel by
Christos Tsiolkas), trolls a little too hard, knowing that our
culture today is quite easily baited on matters of parenthood, coupling and modern manners. The result is a de-
pressing — if engrossingrehash of arguments found every day online. Ably directed and co-produced by Lisa Cholodenko ("Olive Kitteridge"), "The Slap," premiering t onight and running for eight halfhour episodes, is the story of a Greek-American family that comes unglued after an incident at a 4 0th b i rthday
That worry is a testament to the power of the scene. Did
ming shift I'm inclined to en-
courage, despite "The Slap's"
Quinto — aka "Star Trek's" initial flaws. Some will find it latter-day Mr. Spock — really too blunt and upsetting; others slap the boy? Well, of course may wince at the slightly flornot. id narration (supplied by the "Obviously, we had to do voice of Victor Garber, it turns (the scene) repetitively, but out) that lends the story a nagVirginia Sherwood / NBC we isolated the moment of ging air of homily. NBC's "The Slap" may be over the top in certain instances, but it the slap," Quinto said. "There Yet there's something quite touches on real-life dilemmasthat hit home. was really clear communica- absorbing about the show, tion with the kids, and then particularly as each episode all of the explosive anger and deals with a different adult barbecue party, in w h ich Brooklyn hipsters, that's who!) emotion that exists around participant, illuminating the Harry (Zachary Quinto), the and Hugo's mother (Melissa that actual incident was all c haracter's reaction t o t h e hot-headed cousin of the guest George) still breast-feeds him done without the kids there, of slap and its aftermath and of honor, Hector (Peter Sars- (the kid's gotta be at least 5!). course. So I think it was really also chipping away at their All we see of Hugo, initially, well-handled, really well-ex- own p r i vate s h ortcomings gaard), slaps another couple's young son after the child dan- is that he's an undisciplined ecuted, and, oddly, for all of as spouses, lovers, parents, gerously swings a baseball bat screamer who can be tamed us, because we spent so much children, siblings, cousins. If at other children. only by mommy's milk. Lead- time shooting that sequence, everyone in "The Slap" was By the time "The Slap's" ing up to the slap, we see Hugo kind of enjoyable. ... Even a blogger, their comments slap occurs near the end of remove vintage jazz LPs from though it was in the context of fields would be filled with anthe first episode, the show their sleeves and hurl them this horrific act, we all had as gry and probably unwanted has effectively fomented its across a hardwood floor (a good a time as we could." advice. audience, exploiting every ste- crime against all humanity); (No one asked the obvious What a viewer will see, imreotypical detail it can muster he slams an iPad against a cof- follow-up question about the mediately, is a story relevant about the slap's recipient, who fee table (strike two); he rips breast-feeding scenes — how to all cultures nowadays and is a stand-in for today's over- perennials out of the backyard do you prep a child actor for the sense that, when it comes ly coddled child: His name is garden bed ... you get the pic- that?) to relationships and tolerance, I t's interesting that " T h e we're all living much too close Hugo (cue: What kind of par- ture. For some viewers, "The ents name their kid 'Hugo'?'); Slap's" slap can't come soon Slap" arrives in the wake of to the powder keg. Everyone Hugo's father (Thomas Sado- enough. For others, there is the the recently departed (and here, not just Harry, is ready to ski) is an artist (artsy-fartsy horror of seeing anyone hit a adored) family drama "Par- explode. h
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Grey's Anatomy" — In the new episode "All I Could Do Was Cry," Jackson and April (Jesse Williams, Sarah Drew) are forced to come to a tough decision about their unborn child. Catherine (guest star Debbie Allen) runs into Richard (James Pickens Jr.) at the hospital. Meredith
(Ellen Pompeo) looks for a baby sitter so she can go visit Derek (Patrick Dempsey), while Amelia and Stephanie (Caterina Scorsone, Jerrika Hinton) work together on a case. Geena Davis also guest stars. 8p.m. on5,8, "TheSlap"Adapted from an Australian TV drama based on a novel by Christos Tsiolkas, this limited series charts the emotional fallout that follows a seemingly minor incident: An adult man slaps a misbehaving child who is not related to him. The episode occurs at the 40th birthday of Hector (Peter Sarsgaard), whose hot-headed
cousin, Harry (Zachary Quinto), is the slapper. In the aftermath, long-buried secrets come to light. The strong cast also includes Thandie Newton, Uma Thurman, Melissa George and Brian Cox. 9 p.m. on10, "Backstrom" — After Backstrom (Rainn Wilson) declares that the murder
of a drag queenblogger was a
hate crime, the investigation takes an unexpected turn when
Gregory Valentine (Thomas
Dekker), Backstrom's tenant,
emerges as asuspect in the
Couple fakeslovefor daughter's sake
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may t/e an additional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: My husband, "Ma-
carryon thischarade foranylength of time. You say your husband "won't talk to anyone," but he owes YOU some straight answers. If he hasn't been in love with you "for a while," he shouldn't have fathered a second not in love with me anymore, and it child with you. has been eating at him for a while. Would his feelings be different if He said he was too scared to tell me the babyyou're carrying was a boy? sooner. Could there be anoth-
son,"and Ihavebeen marriedfor10 years.We have a beautiful7-yearold daughter and have just found out we are having another girl. The day we learned her gender, Mason dropped abomb on me. He said he's
H e won't talk t o
anyone and doesn't seem to want to fix it. We both came from
er woman involved?
DPPR Ag gy
broken homes and had always agreed not to do that to our kids. But I can't
act like everything is normal under
Your husband owes it to you and those children to act respon-
Dear Attracted: If the woman tells her gay friend how she feels, he may be flattered, or it may make him uncomfortable. That's the risk
she takes. As to whether she should ignore her feelings, if she wants a romantic partner who can reciprocate her physical attraction, she will have to concentrate on finding
someone who is straight. Trust me onthat.
Dear Abby: A friend of mine, "Fran," died nine years ago. Prior to her death, I had little interaction with her husband, "Dexter." As a matter of fact, when I met Fran, she
sibly and at least try to save his marriage. was divorced, but she and Dexter Running away is not the answer.
In the meantime, my advice is to
reunited. Dexter and I are now in love and
are planningto marry. He is 66 and I from her or him about protecting am 61. A lot of people feel it is wrong place at night after our daughter yourself and your children finan- for us to be together. Your thoughts, goes to sleep. He's at work before cially. Doing so does not mean you please? she's up for school anyway. We "must" file divorce papers, but you — Goingfor Happiness agreed that if she wakes up at night will have someone who isn't emoin South Carolina and calls out for him, I should tell tionally involved looking out for Dear Going:"A lot of people" are her he got "called in to work." Please your interests. unhappy in their lives and judggive me some advice. Dear Abby:What should a single, mental. They sometimes poke their — Broken fn Nevada straight woman do if she is attract- noses into matters that are none of Dear Broken:Bythe age of 7,your ed to and interested in a man she is their business. If you and Dexter daughter is old enough to recognize "pretty sure" is gay? What should want to be happy, avoid the naysaytension between her parents. She is she do in the same situation if he is ersasiftheyhaveavirus— because also aware enough to comprehend openly gay? Should she ignore her the kind of ill will they spread is that her father is no longer living feelings'? Tell him'? contagious. there ifhe's spendinghis nights else—Attracted to Him — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com where, particularly if he intends to in Washington or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 the same roof. He says he'll stay at his brother's
talk to a lawyer and take your cues
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTHURSDAY, FEB. 12, 2015:This yearyouwil focus on your imageandyour long-term plans. Your career could be akey issue, as you will demand growth and more financial benefits. When youconcentrate on an objective or desire, you tend to hit a home
run. If youaresingle, someonecomes
strolling into your life and puts a big smile
on your face.This 8tsrssttowttte kintt year could markthe of tlay you'll have beginning of a seri** * * * D ynamic ous relationship, if ** * * Positive yo u a«open « it. ** * Average If y o u are attached, ** So-so the two ofyou often sound and act like * Difficult two lovebirds. Your sweetie might seem almost perfect to you, and vice versa. SAGITTARIUS makes agreat friend and is likely to act on some of your more adventurous ideas!
Tonight: Catch up onemails.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
You could geta lotof information, butyou still might feel as if someoneclose to you is
not revealingeverything heor sheknows. Find out why. Tonight: An older person triggers many thoughts.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) ** * You might want to straighten out a
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11a.m., 12:15, 2:15, 3:45, 8:15, 7,9 • AMOST VIOLENT YEAR (R)6:55 • BLACK OR WHITE(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6 • BLACKSEA(R) 12:45, 3:55, 6:40, 10:20 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) 8, 8:30, 9, 9:30, 10 • THEH08BIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 3:10, 6:50 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:05, 9:05 • INTOTHEWOODS(PG) l2:50,3:50 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 3:30,6 • JUPITERASCENDING3-D (PG-l3) 12:30, 9:50 • JUPITERASCENDINGIMAX3-D (PG-13) 3, 10 • KINGSMAN:THESECRETSERVICE (R) 8:25, 10:15 • PADDINGTON(PG) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 • PROJECTALMANAG (PG-13)11:40a.m.,2:25,5,7:45, IO:25 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 3:15, 7 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 11:45 a.m.,1010 • SEVENTHSON IMAX 3-D (PG-13)noon,7 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:30 a.m., 12:05, 2:45, 6, 9:30 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-D (PG) 2, 4:30, 7:15, 9:35 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG) 1, 3:40 • WILD(R) 11:10a.m., 2:20, 6:20 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE GAMBLER (R) 9:30 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 5:30 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied t/yalegal guardian. t
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED ANIMATION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 5:30 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (no MPAArating) 8 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTIONSHORTS (no MPAA rating) 3:15 I
able. You knowwhat is possible andwhat you desire from a situation. Convincing someone who is involved in your finances could be a different story. Tonight: Letyour imagination speak.
Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 4, 7:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 4:15, 6:45 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:20, 6:55 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15
** * * You could be pushing someone ** * * Prepare to do whatyou want, but away without realizing howyou are coming expect to get some impromptu questions off. Get feedback from several people who and demands. Stay steady, and figure out know you well. Try to eliminate whatever where you want to focus your energy. Rec- seemstobe holdingyou back.Tonight:Reognize your limits. You might need to say spond to an offer that is too good to betrue. "no" to someoneyou can't help. Tonight: CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) Get some extra Rand R. ** * * Try to maintain better contact LEO (July23-Aug. 22) with friends and loved ones. There could ** * * You might want to give in to your be some confusion or a misunderstanding fun yet spontaneous personality. Perhaps about plans. You might want to confirm you are not as sure of yourself as you would meetings, plans andanything of signifilike to be whendealing with a loved one. cance; you will be alot happier as aresult. ARIES (March 21-April19) You seem to bewithdrawn. Relax, and Tonight: Vanish while you can. ** * * You'll have a strong sense of knowthatyou are well cared for. Tonight: A AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) where a partner is coming from. Once you friend inspires you. engage in aconversation, you might feel as ** * * You could be taken aback bya if this person is too set in his or her ways VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) meeting or get-together with a friend. Work for you to continue down the samepath. On ** * * You might want to understand on beingpositive about along-term goal. some level, you might feel locked. Tonight: what is happening with someonewho is Your endurance will count. Understand Tap into your imagination. instrumental in helping you maintain your thatyou might not get there overnight, TAURUS (April20-May20) well-being. This person might be depressed but your goal is achievable. Tonight: Be ** * * O thers seekyou out in the morn- or holding back. Make a point of finding out spontaneous. ing, and you might feel overwhelmed. what is going on with him or her.Tonight: PISCES (Feb.19-March20) Decide whom youwant to spend your time Make it easy, andorder in. ** * * You could havedifficult a time with, and go about making it happen. Know LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) listening to a boss or parent. Your mind when to establish stronger boundaries. ** * * You could be somewhat withseems to be drifting from one interest Tonight: Tap into your imagination when to another. Beaware of your limits when drawn as you seewhat goes on around making weekend plans. dealing with others. Leaveany difficult or you. Someonewith whom you need to GEMINI (May21-June28) speak also might seem distant. Don't push demanding situation for a different day. ** * * You'll seek out others as you Tonight: Do whatyou want. too hard; letthis personhavesomespace. attempt to get a better grasp on a situation. Schedul eamassageorjoinayogaclass. © King Features Syndicate
9 p.m. on LIFE, "Project Runway All Stars" —It's all over but the stitching in the Season 4 finale, a new episode called "4 Seasonsin One Finale."The title doesn't refer to all seasons of this show to date, but rather to the four seasons of the year, which drive the final challenge: to design collections representing fashions for spring, summer, fall and winter. Designer and "Project Runway" judge Zac Posen and Academy Award winner Mira Sorvino join the judges to crown a winner from the finalists. © Zap2it
'
NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
I
money issuebeforeitbecomesunmanage-
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21)
new episode "I Am a Bird Now." As if that's not enough on his plate, Backstrom also has to testify before a civilian oversight committee about his shooting of a suspect during a previous investigation. Sarah Chalke and Amy Pietz guest star.
I
See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun ehen youwantit, shade ehen Jouneedit.
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Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:15, 6 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 6:15 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 8:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 3:30, 5:45 • THETHEORY OF EVERYTHING (PG-13)3:45
ISI I Q
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SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION
DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 3:45, 6:40 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-13) 4:05, 6:50 • PROJECTALMANAG (PG-13)5:05,7:30 • SEVENTHSON(PG-13) 7 • SEVENTHSON3-D (PG-13) 4:45 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4:50 7:10
PAINT
803 Sw Industrial way, Bend, OR
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Upstairs — R) 6:30 • THE SPONGE808 MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
All at blowout prices!
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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GG! Magazine
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T HE B U LLETIN r e - Fake cashier checks 275 - Auction Sales include name, 212 -Antiques & Collectibles Paid $1500,asking Originally $1000; quires computer adand money orders phone, price and 280 Estate Sales DO YOU HAVE $1000. 541-923-7360. 215- Coins & Stamps asking $450. vertisers with multiple are common. kind of wood SOMETHING TO 281 - Fundraiser Sales 541-948-1824 240- Crafts and Hobbies ad schedules or those HNever give out perpurchased. SELL 282Sales Norlhwest Bend 241 -Bicycles and Accessories Sleep Comfort Twin selling multiple sys• Firewood ads FOR $500 OR sonal financial infor284Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment XL adjustable bed tems/ software, to dis263 MUST include mation. LESS? with vibrator, with or 286- Sales Norlheast Bend close the name of the sfTrust your instincts 243 - Ski Equipment species 8 cost per Non-commercial Tools without mattress & 288- Sales Southeast Bend business or the term cord to better serve 244 - Snowboards advertisers may and be wary of foundation, clean, "dealer" in their ads. our customers. 245 - Golf Equipment 290- Sales RedmondArea someone using an place an ad Ladder 10' stainless fineeds new air pump. Private party advertiswith our escrow service or berglass $125 + 5 gal. 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 292 - Sales Other Areas $400 cash ers are defined as "QUICK CASH agent to pick up your buckets 971-219-9122 The Bulletin 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 541-382-7072 or teretng Central Oregon sincefgtg FARM MARKET those who sell one SPECIAL" merchandise. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 541-410-5165 265 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery computer. 1 week 3 lines 12 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs The Bulletin 316- Irrigation Equipment Building Materials Ali Year Dependable or serking central oregon sincefeos 257 251 - Hot TubsandSpas Washer & dryer white 325- Hay, Grain and Feed ee eke ei e Firewood: Seasoned; ~ 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo Maytag Neptune, Musical Instruments REDMOND Habitat Lodgepole, split, del, Ad must 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 255 - Computers runs great, $500. Wantedpaying cash include price of RESTORE B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 341 Horses and Equi p ment 541-788-5206. for Hi-fi audio 8 stu256 - Photography Building Supply Resale or 2 cords for $365. n~ le te ike o o 345Li v es t o ck and E qui pment dio equip. Mclntosh, 257 - Musical Instruments or less, or multiple Quality at Multi-cord discounts! 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals JBL, Marantz, DyLOW PRICES 541-420-3484. 258 - Travel/Tickets items whosetotal The Bulletin naco, Heathkit, San350 Horseshoeing/Farriers 1242 S. Hwy 97 recommends extra ' does not exceed 259 - Memberships sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-548-1406 358- Farmer's Column $500. Pine & Juniper Split 260- Misc. Items i caution when purCall 541-261-1808 Open to the public. 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing chasing products or, 261 - Medical Equipment Call Classifieds at services from out of I 383- Produce andFood 1981 Yamaha 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. PROMPT DELIVERY 266 541-385-5809 the area. Sending tI Good classified adstell Console Piano 541-389-9663 263- Tools www.bendbulletin.com Heating & Stoves cash, checks, or the essential facts in an with bench, i credit i n f ormation 208 206 1 owner, rich tone, interesting Manner. Write NOTICE TO may be subjected to Glock 34 Gen4, $650; excellent condition, from the readers view- not Get your Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies ADVERTISER i FRAUD. For more currently tuned Ruger LC9, $ 3 00; the seller's. Convert the Since September 29, business information about an c by Jana. 541-771-3222 facts into benefits. Show Donate deposit bottles/ Pomeranian male, large advertiser, you may 1991, advertising for the reader how the item wi l l cans to local all vol., size, long-hair, trained. I c all t h e Oregonf used woodstoves has $1200obo. non-profit rescue, for $200. 541-213-1172 help them insomeway. been limited to mod- e ROW I N G 541-389-1966 State Attor ney ' feral cat spay/neuter. This els which have been T railer a t Jak e ' s POODLE or POMAPOO i General's O f f i ce l Largest 3-Day l advertising tip certified by the OrConsumer Protec- • with an ad in GUN & KNIFE D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; puppies, toy. Adorable! brought to you by egon Department of Want to impress the tion h o t line a t i 541-475-3889 Petco in Redmond; The Bulletin's SHOW Environmental Qualrelatives? Remodel i 1-877-877-9392. donate M-F at Smith The Bulletin l February13-14-151 "Call A Service ity (DEQ) and the fed202 Serking Central Oreean sincefaig Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Queensland Heelers your home with the Portland Expo eral E n v ironmental I Professional" Want to Buy or Rent Bend; or CRAFT in Standard 8 Mini, $150 I TheBulletin help of a professional Sernng Cenvai Oregon s ncetg03 Center Protection A g e n cy & up. 541-280-1537 Tumalo. Can pick up Directory WHEN YOU SEE THIS (EPA) as having met Fri. 12-6, Sat. 9-5, from The Bulletin's www.rightwayranch.wor Wanted: $Cash paid for large amts, 389-8420. Sun.10-4 smoke emission stan"Call A Service dpress.com 212 vintage costume jew- www.craftcats.org 269 1-5 exit ¹306B dards. A cer t ified Professional" Directory elry. Top dollar paid for Antiques & "The One"! Admission $10 w oodstove may b e Gardening Supplies Shih-Tzu Dogs 3-yr old Gold/Silver.l buy by the CatFind I 1- 8 00-659-3440I identified by its certifiadoptions at CRAFT, Male $400, Female Collectibles On a classified ad & Equipment Estate, Honest Artist Kits:Specializing cation label, which is i CollectorsWest.com~ Drum Puppy ready Feb 10 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 featuring special needs go to in High Quahty New & cats8 others! Sat. & Old Gas Pumps/Soda permanently attached $500. 541-589-4948 www.bendbulletin.com Used Drum Sets! Vending Machines to the stove. The BulFor newspaper WANTEDwood dress- Sun., 2/14 & 2/15, 1 to 5 blossomhutOgmail.com to view additional Kevin, 541-420-2323 pm. A great chance to WANTEDI Will pav cash. letin will not knowSmith 8 Wesson delivery, call the ers; dead washers. photos of the item. The Drum Shop give a senior or special Kyle, 541-504-f 050 ingly accept advertis541-420-5640 Siberian Husky-Wolf Illl&P15-22with Circulation Dept. at needs cat a forever pups! 2 adorable females, ing for the sale of 4x16x44 BSA Cats 541-385-5800 The Bulletin reserves home! Reduced adop261 $400 each. 541-977-7019 For Sale: uncertified 208 Eye scope, Fieldline To place an ad, call tion fees, & fee waived the right to publish all woodstoves. Tactical carrying Piano Technician 541-385-5809 Medical Equipment Pets & Supplies for seniors/veterans! Wheaten Terrier, pure- ads from The Bulletin tools 8 supplies, Excellent conor email Other cats of all kinds bred, soft no-shed coat, newspaper onto The case. clasoified@bendbulletin.crom TURN THE PAGE dition, was used in with rolls of piano Pride Go-Go Ultra X also available. Bulletin Internet webtail docked, dewclaws, string, $725. The Bulletin recomNational Finals 3-wheeled scooter, like For More Ads www.craftcats.org The Bulletin shots. 12-wk female, site. mends extra caution Rodeo for target Call 971-219-9122 new, $425. 541-318-0567 Serving Central Oregon sincetggi 541-389-8420. The Bulletin crate & d oggy door in Redmond when purc h ascompetition. Comes trained. Family pet only! The Bulletin ing products or serwith original sights $875. 541-447-8970 vices from out of the and 25-round magaarea. Sending cash, 242 zine. $850 obo. 210 YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE To 2,000,000 checks, or credit in541-410-0841 EXPOSURESFOR ONLYtzSO! Furniture & Appliances Exercise Equipment f ormation may be 0 s Crot ' C ad I eene~R e etlre~ n ne r Sl k S n subjected to fraud. exercise maFor more informa- French Bulldog AKC pup- A1 Washers&oryers Elliptical What are you Reek of February 9, 2015 c hine, sturdy $ 8 9 . Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, tion about an adver- pies, great Valenune's $150 ea. Full war541-317-2890 looking for? 1977, excellent cond, tiser, you may call gift! $2000. 541-279-3588 ranty. Free Del. Also only played senior year in the O regon State chrisandcyndi©yahoo.com wanted, You'll find it in Pilates machine w/reused W/D's college, $1000 obo.AND Attorney General's Serving Central Oregon since1903 bounder, 2 D V D s, German Shepherds 541-280-7355 The Bulletin Classifieds Office C o n sumer www.sherman-ranch.us $150. 541-504-5982 541-385-5809 Protection hotline at $1900+. 541-281-6829 1-877-877-9392. 245 541-385-5809 Golf Equipment s i. o 7 The Bulletin Serving Centrel taregon sincetgtg re • Wanted: Collector seeks DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes et St « , .V CHECK YOURAD high quality fishing items King Trombone,1941 HN White, 7-1/2" bell, children, custody, support, property and bills & upscale fly rods. Call Adopt a rescued cat or 541-678-5753, or $500, obo. 541-388-2045 kitten! Altered, vacciArmoire division. No c o urt a p pearances. Divorced 503-351-2746 or 541-280-1912 eves nated, ID chip, tested, HAVANESE PUPS, Upright Dressermore! CRAFT, 65480 AKC non-shedding, in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. Www. Custom quality, excelWin. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 260 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, hypo-allergenic, great lent condition, crafted ga. immac., 28" full Misc.ltems 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 family pets, UTD shots/ on the first day it runs choke, field mdl $750. paralegalalternatives.cDm legalaltomsn.com walnut & swirly walnut www.craftcats.org wormer. $850. burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 to make sure it is corMdl 12 (1955) 12 Buyfng D/amonds 541-460-1277 cedar-lined drawers plus rect. eSpellcheckn and Win. ga. immac., 30" full /Go/d for Cash (0' other drawers (2 partihuman errors do occhoke field mdl SOLD! Saxon's Fine Jewelers Koi pond, 1200 gallons, 3tioned for socks). Size: cur. If this happens to 10' x 5' x 4' deep. Liner, 73 eH x 36eW x 16e D. If 7mm Rem. mag 541-389-6655 your ad, please con- HVA action. improved If you haVe a VehiCle that Can toW at leaSt 7,000 2 filters, 2 UV l ights, new, $5,500; tact us ASAP so that ump & fish food. $400. M auser 9 8 M o n t e BUYING 'e sellingfor $1275. pounds, you can make a living delivering RVS as corrections and any ics avail. 541-515-4799 Carlo stock, Leupold Lionel/American Flyer 541-312-2393 adjustments can be Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! 4x scope $600. Win. trains, accessories. a contract driver for Foremost Transport! Be your made to your ad. 1st shots, dewormed, A KC LA B 3 bla c k mdl 43 - .218B (1952) 541-408-2191. Custom-built futon, 541-385-5809 males, 8 wks, dew opens $250. 541-771-0956 Weaver 2.5X scope Dwnbossand seethe country. ForemostTransport. into queen bed, The Bulletin Classified claws, shots, wormed. $550. Win.Mdl 75- BUYING & SE LLING excellent condition, $200. $500. 541-410-3635 All gold jewelry, silver BlogsPot.com Dr 866-764-1601! Where can you find a .22 LR (1942) Exc. 541 390 8237 246 and gold coins, bars, cond., Weaver 2.5x helping hand? Labrador pups,black, rounds, wedding sets, Guns, Hunting Fridge 22 cf SxS w/ s cope $750. W i n. class born 1/17, $400/ea. From contractors to rings, sterling silicemaker, white, $200 Pre-64 Mdl 70 "feath- ver, coin & Fishing $200 dep. ready in 4 collect, vinyard care, it's all here erweight" .243, (1955) tage watches, obo. 541-408-0846 weeks. 1 Chocolate dental MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train Bend local pays CASH!! E xc., Bushnell 3 x gold. Bill in The Bulletin's AKC male left, $800. Fl e ming, G ENERATE SOM E for firearms 8 ammo. scope, SOLD! 1944 541-408-8880 541-382-9419. "Call A Service at home to process Medical Billing 8 Insurance EXCITEMENT in your Mauser Mdl 98K-44, 541-526-0617 Professional" Directory Malemute/Husky pups, neighborhood! Plan a Military rifle w/sling, Collectible car p enty Claims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online blue eyes 3 females, garage sale and don't good cond., SOLD. CASH!! tools; car memoraChihuahua Toy pups, 5 males. Can send forget to advertise in training at Bryan University!! HS DiplomaiGED 8 For Guns, Ammo & Leupold VariX11 scope bilia. Grande moped cute 9 wks, 2 shots, photos. $500 & up. classified! Reloading Supplies. 3x9, $175. Call Bob, 39 m i les, $ 1 5 00. Computer/Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880 541-977-6150. 541-385-5809. 541-408-6900. 541-419-5126. 541-598-7636 $150. 541-977-7766
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ursday, February 12,2015 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Th
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD vtfjll Shor tz
Over when it's over
ACROSS i Nobel-winning novelist Kertesz s"The Wind in the Willows" squire ii 3-Down sound i4 Take off is Engaqement party. is Kerfuffle iz Place for a bed and dresser is Kerfuffle zoExcellence, to ancient Greeks 2iWhat may have quite a stir? 33 It's no fun 34 City on the Italian Riviera 34 Not overt 37 Time past zs Like some vin 3oBad state to be in
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"I've been married 35 years," a club player told me rueftdly, "and I've learned a lot. For instance, the argument I 'won' with my wife isn't over yet." My friend was today's East, and his wife led her singleton diamond against four hearts. He took the ace and returned the deuce — a suitpreference play to show club strength — and West ruffed with the deuce and led the six of clubs: nine, queen, ace. "Declarer next led a trump," East said. "I won and led a third diamond, but my wife couldn't ruff. So declarer drew trumps and ran the diamonds, making four."
spade, you bid 1NT and he tries two hearts. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: If your partner has a weak hand with five cards in each major, a pass would be your best action. More likely though, he has five spades and four hearts, and then he will generally do better at the 5-2 fit. Though a pass might pick up the marbles, I'd bid two spades. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
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02/12/15
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
s
I •
•
•
•
s
f e •
850
870
880
880
881
881
Snowmobiles
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
•
P
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 RentSunriver 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
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 County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
745
745
Homes for Sale
Homes for Sale
I'
R 4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 54'I-379-3530 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
Harley Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance& Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Harjey Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,
$3,500.
Acreages
Single Level - $385,000 Hard-to-find 5-acre flat • 4 bed, 3 bath, 2456 sf buildable corner lot • Great room with gas located in Lake Park fireplace Estates with mature • Bonus Room l andscaping. M L S¹ • Paver Patio in private 201406959 Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, backyard $135,500. Call Pam Rinehart, Dempsey Lester, Principal Broextras, 13,000 orig and Phelps ker, Century 21 Gold miles, like new, health 541-480-5432 Country Realty, Inc. forces sale. Sacrifice 541-504-1338 Windermere $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856. Central Oregon Real Estate Harle Fat Bo 2002
Miss This One?! $549,900 • Classic 2624 SF log home • Sunroom & mountain views • 40 AC, 20x36 shop & borders grassland • Private & secluded Diana Barker, Broker 541-480-7777
Windermere Central Oregon Real Estate
750
NOTICE
Redmond Homes
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 i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
List Your Home Jandfy/Homes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
Snowmobiles
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat
2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5609
The Bulletin
Serein Central are on since 1903
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345. 875
ds published in eWa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal
watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 670. 541-365-5609
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 19D3
880
850
HD Fat Bo 1996
Motorhomes
2000 Yamaha 700 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 00,
only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -on Completely 771 r ide-off t r ailer w i t h Rebuilt/Customized Lots spare, + much more. 2012/2013 Award $ 6,995. Call for d e Winner Awbrey Butte .48 acre tails. 541-420-6215 Showroom Cond. Find exactly what lot with Cascade Mtn. i Many Extras you are looking for in the views, 3275 NW Hori- FIND Iyl Low Miles. zon Dr. $289,900. asslg(y I CLASSIFIEDS $15,000 Call 714-510-7388 SELL IT! 541-548-4807 The Bulletin Classifieds
HOLIDAY RAMBLER 2007 Jayco Jay Flight 29 FBS with slide out & VACATIONER 2003 8.1L Vs Gas, 340 hp, awning - Turn-key ready workhorse, Allison 1000 to use, less than 50 to5 speed trans., 39K, tal days used by current NEW TIRES, 2 slides, owner. Never smoked in, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS no indoor pets, excellent brakes, steel cage cock- cond., very clean. Lots of pit, washer/dryer, fire- bonus features; many lace, mw/conv. oven, have never been used. ree standing dinette, A sking $16,500. C a l l was $121,060 new; now, Lisa, 541-420-0794 for $35,900. 541-536-1008 more info /more photos. •
Watercraft 14k orig. miles.. Excellent cond. Vance & Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind vest, 12e rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/back rest, hwy pegs & many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. In CRR area call 530-957-1865
24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only $92K. Call 541-526-1201 or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., in Redmond.
.Rk ~-:.u,
exc. cond.,
541-548-2872. •
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
REDUCED! 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $54K. Ph. 541447-9268
Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with aw-
68
JAYCO 1993 27' 50k miles, excellent condition. $9300 obo. 541-573-7131
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED nings, rear c a mera, We Do The Work ... trailer hitch, driyer door You Keep The Cash! w/power window, cruise, On-site credit exhaust brake, central approval team, vac, satellite sys. Asking web site presence. $67,500. 503-781-8812 We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993
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 882
Fifth Wheels
Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987, New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587
Heartland
P r o wler
CHECK YOUR AD
2012, 29PRKS, 33',
like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r g e closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awon the first day it runs Beaver Marquis, ning, power hitch 8 to make sure it ise cor1993 e stabilizers, full s ize rect. Spellcheck and 40-ft, Brunswick queen bed , l a r ge human errors do ocfloor plan. Many shower, porcelain sink cur. If this happens to extras, well mainRV PACKAGE-2006 & toilet. your ad, please contained, fire supMonaco Monarch, 31 ', $26,500. 541-999-2571 tact us ASAP so that pression behind Ford V10, 28,900 miles, corrections and any refrig, Stow Master auto-level, 2 slides, adjustments can be queen bed & hide-a-bed 5000 tow bar, made to your ad. sofa, 4k gen, conv mi$21,995. 541-385-5809 541-383-3503 crowave, 2 TV's, tow The Bulletin Classified package, $66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Find It in Wrangler tow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 Keystone Laredo 31' The Bulletin Classigedsl speed manual, $1 1,000 R V 2006 with 1 2 ' 541-385-5809 541-815-6319 slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. Fleetwood D i scovery 2 swivel rockers. TV. 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Air cond. Gas stove & options - 3 slide outs, refrigerator/freezer satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Awning. Keystone Everest 5th etc., 32,000 miles. Ready to make memories! Microwave. sho w er. Wheel, 2004 Wintered in h e ated Top-selling Winnebago Outside Slide-through s t orshop. $79,995 obo. 31J, original owners, non- a ge. E a s y Li f t . Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, 541-447-8664 smokers, garaged, only $29,000 new; Askfireplace, 2 TV's, 18,800 miles, auto-level- lng $13,600 CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner ing jacks, (2) slides, up541-447-4805 w/surround sound, A/C, graded queen bed, bunk custom bed, ceiling fan, beds, micro, (3) Tvs, W/D ready, many extras. sleeps 10! Lots of storNew awning & tires. age, maintained, very RV Excellent condition. clean! Only $67,995! ExCONSIGNMENTS $18,900. More p/cs tended warranty and/or fiWANTED available. 541-923-6408 Freightliner 1994 nancing avail to qualified We Do The Work ... CuStOm buyers! 541-388-7179 You Keep The Cash! Laredo 2006 31' Motorhome On-site credit Fully S/C Will haul small SUV USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! approval team, or toys, and pull a one slide-out. web site presence. Awning. Like new, trailer! Powered by Door-to-door selling with We Take Trade-Ins! 8.3 Cummins with 6 fast results! It's the easiest hardly used. speed Allison auto BIG COUNTRY RV Must sell $20,000 way in the world to sell. trans, 2nd owner. Bend: 541-330-2495 or take over payVery nice! $53,000. Redmond: ments. Call The Bulletin Classified 541-350-4077 541-548-5254 541-410-5649 541-385-5809 541-548-5254
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash? Need some extra space the garage?
n se t
:::li:: Igso
oca
s
List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
To receive your FREECLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SWChandler Ave. (on Bends west side) *OI!erallowsfor 3linesoi textonly. Excludesall service,hay,wood,pets/animals, plants,tickets,weapons,rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Mustbeanindividual itemunder$200.00andprice oi individual itemmust beincludedinthead. Ask yourBulletin SalesRepresentativeaboutspecial pricing,longerrunschedulesandadditional features. Limi!1 adperitemper 30daysIo besold.
E6 THURSDAY FEBRUARY 12 2015 • THE BULLETIN I
• 0 ~ I •
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiies 860 - Motorcycies And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
933
935
975
975
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
•
AUTOS8ITRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
882
908
932
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Ford 2004 F-250 XLT 4x4 Extended Cab 94K miles, excellent
cond, many extras. $10,900. Call 541-233-3281
Honda CRV 2007, (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A $2900 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
Ford F250X T
payment.
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254 885
Super cab 1995, 4.9L V6 Vin¹A90118
~
mama ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price
A Private Collection 1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop
© s un mu
good thru
Fl this beautiful 162 One owner last 25 years, always hangared, rigorously maintained, no damage history. Sensibly priced at
Ford F350 2002
$44,500.
Call Don Wilfong for more information 541-369-1456 or wilfong.d©gmail.com HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.
ROBBERSON~
1965 Mustang Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/26/15
GMC 1974 ugly but reliable! 95% tread on siped tires. $895. 541-480-0527
Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.766.5546
smolichvolvo.com
s u a aau
H n
A
Say ngoodbuy
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
2005, (exp. 2/15/15) Vin ¹315969 Stock ¹44375A
cI n o 0 e It ~
$ 2500 down 7 2 m o . 4 49'/ A P R o n a p -
M(I
and title i ncluded in
payment.
000
© s u sARu
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,
power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900.
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat,
Exc cond., 65K
miles w/100K mile
full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164. 916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1976
M.F. 230 DIESEL
Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399
CASE 200 GAS FORD 2N GAS BEND 541-362-8036
Pickups
933
transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170
Utility Trailers
Ford Escape 2005
2005 crew cab great
1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up
$125,000
54'I -266-3333
541-892-3789
/
4x4 ready for adventure! ¹D11693. Bargain Corral
priced O $5,977
ROBBERSON cllteecn ~
II IR W R
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/28/1 5
Automobiles
Audi A4 Avant
541-749-2156
BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Bfyf0/330c 2003
541-312-3986
s u a aau
Dodge Neon Sport, 2-dr 1995, 2.0L 4-cyl DOHC, 5-spd, AC, 91,500 mi,exc mpg. Cash only, $1600. Clean title. 541-480-7671
Focus SEL2012
ALMOST PERFECT! Vin ¹151095.
$12,977 ROBBERSON 4 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/26/15
Ford Focus SE2011, 5 Speed manual VIN ¹113207. $9,997
(exp. 2/15/15) DLR ¹366
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it GMC 2004 Yukon 4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K online at: mud 8 snow tires, www.bendbulletin.com 1miles, owner, well maintained, $7850. 541-385-5809 541-389-3316
smolichvolvo.com Convertible, seaHonda Accord2005
IM ROR
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/26/1 5
Buick LeSabre 2005 super clean, senior owned, always garaged. 74,000 miles.
$7,000.
360-774-2747
No text messages!
Each candidate for an office listed a bove must file a declaration of candidacy or petition for nomina-
tion for office with the Place a Bulletin help County Clerk of Deswanted ad today and chutes County, Orreach over 60,000 egon, not later than readers each week. the 61st day before SuberuLegacy 3.0R Your classified ad the date of the reguLimited 2008, will also appear on lar district election. (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) bendbulletin.com The filing deadline is 5 Vin ¹207261 which currently rep m on M a rch 1 9 , Stock ¹62547 ceives over 1.5 mil2015. $21,979 or $259/mo., lion page views $3600 down, 64 mo., every month at Filing forms are avail4 .49% APR o n a p - no extra cost. Bulleable at the Deschutes proved credit. License tin Classifieds County Clerk's office, and title included in Get Results! Call 1300 NW Wall Street, payment. 365-5609 or place Suite 202, Bend, OrS UBA R u your ad on-line at egon 97701 and oneonenooenenn oog bendbulletin.com line a t ww w .des2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. chutes.org/clerk. 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354 Take care of Nancy Blankenship your investments Deschutes County Clerk with the help from The Bulletin's LEGAL NOTICE "Call A Service The following units SubaruLegacy Professional" Directory will be sold at PubLLBean 2006, lic A u c tion on (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) February The Bulletin recom- I Thursday, Vin ¹203053. 19, 2015 at 12 p.m. Stock ¹62770 mends extra caution l at Northwest Self $17,979 or $199/mo., when p u rchasing ~Storage, 100 SE 3rd $3500 down, 64 mo. at f products or services St., B e nd , OR 4 .49% APR o n ap - from out of the area. 97702. Unit¹ C203proved credit. License f S ending c ash , Cokley, Unit¹ and title included in checks, or credit in- g Chris B29 Tanner payment. formation may be I Gaffey, Unit¹ C146S US A R u J sublect to FRAUD. Miranda Samples. Ionengoennnn.ool For more informa2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. f tion about an adverLEGAL NOTICE 677-266-3621 tiser, you may call The following unit(s) Dlr¹0354 I the Oregon State will be sold at Public Attorney General's s Auction Thursday, Office C o nsumer I Februaryon19th, 2015 f Protection hotline at a t 10 a .m. a t A - 1 1-677-677-9392. Westside S t o rage, Bend 97702. Unit ¹ Serving Central Oregonsince Iggg 157 Nicholas Ng. Subaru Outback Limited 2014 LEGAL NOTICE (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) T he owner o f t h e Tick, Tock VIN ¹219926 Non-Contributing Stock ¹62924 Historical property loTick, Tock... $27,979 or $339/mo., c ated at 4 0 0 N W $3900 down, 64 mo., ...don't let time get Sisemore St. is ap4 .49% APR o n ap plying to demolish the away. Hire a proved credit. License garage structure. Any and title included in professional out parties interested in payment. of The Bulletin's purchasing or renting © s u a aau this structure should "Call A Service contact the owner at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Professional" P.O. Box 1316 Bend, 677-266-3621 OR 97709. Directory today! Dlr ¹0354
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Notice is hereby given that on Tuesday, May 19, 2015, an election will be held for the purpose of e lecting three board members to fill the following position and term, including any vacancy which may exist on the board of Chaparral Water Control District.
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SMOLICH
sonal special
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541-749-2156
'10 - 3 lines, 7 days t16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
541-749-2156
Looking for your next employee?
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/26/1 5
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
V Q LV Q
On a classified ad go to 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. www.bendbulletin.com to view additional 677-266-3621 677-266-3621 photos of the item. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
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smolichvolvo.com
ROBBERSON'L mama ~
Control District
SMOLICH
4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License proved credit. License and title included in and title included in payment. payment.
975
Serving Central Oregonsince IIOI
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Chaparral Water
smolichvolvo.com $13,979 or $195/mo., $15,979 or $199/mo., $2000 down, 72 mo., $2000 down 64 mo., WHEN YOU SEE THIS
SMOLICH V Q LV Q 541-596-3750
541-223-2218
Scion XB2013, (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹63065
(exp. 2/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹535474
(exp. 2/1 5/1 5) DLR ¹366
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
looking! Vin¹972932
Dodge Avenger 2013,
Premium2009, C hevy LT Tahoe 2010 AWD, 2.0T, silver, 76k miles, loaded VIN ¹230022. $19,995
925
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF ELECTION OF DISTRICT BOARD MEMBERS
Vyy Jette2011, 6-Speed Automatic VIN ¹095197. $14,995
s.
Stock ¹63015
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BMW X3 35i 2010
150 HP, low time,
1000
Legal Notices
(exp. 2/15/15) DLR ¹366
2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977
Iennng CentralOregonsince I9N
HCILIIN(W
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
proved credit. License
541-596-3750
Toyota Highlander
The Bulletin
541-385-5809
IM RO R
541-312-3966 Dlr ¹0205 Price good thru 02/26/1 5
$10,733 or $135/mo.,
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers of goods and services do business in these pages.Theyknow you can't beatTheBulletin Classified Section for selection andconvenience -every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy tc use.Every item is categorizedandevery cartegcry is indexed onthe secticn's front page. Whether youare lookingfor a home orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.
ROBBERSON
Subaru Forester 1998 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3621 170k miles., red, two Dlr ¹0354 sets tires, daughter moved to Sweden needs $. Clean, no The Bulletin's pets. Dependable car. Hyundai Genesis2012, "Call A Service $4200. 3.6L V-6 cyl. Professional" Directory VIN ¹169637. 541-647-0657 $21,997 is all about meeting (exp. 2/15/15) DLR ¹366 S ubaru Outback 2014 your needs. SMOLICH Prem. pkg, 20,500 mi. Call on one of the V Q LV Q professionals today! 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com
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Mercedes 360SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, aiways garaged. 155 K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407
S UBA R U
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
$5,977
Only $7,977 Il g m g g
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541-749-2156
1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167
4x4, lots of rooml
935
restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.
(located O Bend)
$15,979 or $199 mo.,
V Q LV Q
Chrysler Pacifica
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 2/26/1 5
7.3 Powerstroke 4x4 ¹A90623. $12,977
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Financing available.
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Toyota Corolla2013, (exp. 2/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹63072
ellneneoennttn.ooM
tr a i ler www.bendbulletin.com Cargollllate $19,977 6'x12' with large rear Lance Camper 1995, door and extra side ROBBERSON 10.9, on e o w n er, door, additional mazaa electric jacks, awning, hauling rack on top, ~ ~ Fantastic fan, winter very good condition. 541-312-3986 package, Honda 1000 $3800. Call Stan t(to Dlr ¹0205. Price ~enerator, exc. shape see 541-420-1916 good thru 02/26/15 7500. 541-410-9651 F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. ca-n GA L LW pacity, 26' long, 6'6 wide, ideal for hauling TODAYM hay, materials, cars, Chevy Pickup 1978, exc.cond. $2600. long bed, 4x4, frame 541-420-3766 up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, 932 fresh R4 transmisAntique & sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom Classic Autos 908 interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d Aircraft, Parts tires, You must see & Service it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3669 or 541-420-6215.
1/3 interestin
SMOLICH
$ 2000 down 72 mo 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
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ROBBERSON
BEND 541-362-6036
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need.
Columbia400,
(exp. 2/15/15) DLR ¹366
„ I IIii+8
Sport Utility Vehicles
Gem Top Outfitter Canopy for 8' bed truck (presently on 97 Dodge). Double doors in rear. Lined inside. Opening window on one side; sliding window on the other. Boat rack on top. $650 obo. in Redmond, OR Call 541-548-7154
VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹63014
Mountaineer2004
02/26/2015
Canopies & Campers Adventurer 2013 66 FB truck camper, $19,600. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e floorplan. Also available 2010 C hevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!
(exp. 2/1 5/1 5)
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3621 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
ROBBERSON'L
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
Honda Accord 2010, 5-Speed Automatic VIN ¹002776. $13,995
Chrysler 200 LX 2012,
$13,999 or $175/mo., $13,979 or $195/mo.,
$8,977
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
I
Fifth Wheels
Price Reduced! Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $19,500 541-419-0566
975
Gorgeous and Priced to selii Vin ¹¹016626 11.977 ROBBERSON ~ nmaaa ~
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541-312%986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 02/26/15
A dd color photos and sell youI stuff fa s t . In Print and Online With The BL!Iletin'S CICISSifiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8
more! u
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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul jt ail! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwjlln66d. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will gst the job own little paradise! Call now. call right away. $500 done on the ranch.
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To place your photo ad, visit us online atwwnv.bendbulleti n. com
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