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WEDNESDAY March13, 201 3
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OUTDOORS• D1
OUTDOORS• D2
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TODAY'S READERBOARD
rin s ors review: ase a
PreservingChavez — There's been talk of keeping
the Venezuelan leader's body in a glass tomb "for eternity." How exactly does that work?
• Part1 of a serielsooking aheadat the prepseasonfor local schools, C1
Well, if you haven't just eaten, read on.A4
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SOda fight —The beverage industry had some unlikely
allies when it came totaking on New YorkCity's proposed rules.A6
The Bulletin
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Golf —Part-time pays off for Steve Stricker.C1
NFL —Free agencybegins with some big moves.C1
W I
• A dead owlwasfound nearthe regular haunt, probablyhit by acar By Dylan J. Darling
SAY„NO
Off-road motorbikers could get younger
A barred owl that drew crowds of onlookers while swooping around at Farewell Bend Park earlier this year may well be dead. The owl was seen from mid-January into last month, regularly hunting for mice and voles along the Deschutes River just upstream of the Old Mill District. It then disappeared about a month ago. Two photographers found a dead owl March 3 about 10
feet from the Farewell Bend Park picnic area, according to a Listserv of Central Oregon birders. A U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist confirmed it was a barred owl. "The location where it was found kind of makes you think it was the same bird," said Jeff Cooney, a veterinary professorat Central Oregon Community College. Cooney on Thursday performed a necropsy on the owl at COCC to determine its cause of death. He didn't find
a clear answer, but said the bird was likely ailing before it died about a week before it was found. The owl was emaciated and battered, with a dislocated left shoulder and lower jaw, as well as a crushed right eye socket, said Jeanette Bonomo, a veterinary technician who assistedin the necropsy and took radiographs of the bird. Bonomo said the owl was likely sick before it was hit by
a passing car. SeeOwl/A5
By Lauren Dake The Bulletin
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin file photo
A barred owl was seen at Farewell Bend Park from mid- January until about a month ago.
Cheney —A documentary takes a look at the polarizing yet still fascinating former vice president.D6
HOrSe meat —The scandal shines a light on EU schisms.
A ter ire, o en or mea s a ain
A3
ln national news —stark differences in Republican and
Democratic budget plans.A2
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Coleges offering many perks for facuty
SALEM — Speaking on behalf of a bill that, if passed, would allow children younger than 7 to operatea motorcycle, Sen. Bruce Starr asked his fellow lawmakers Tuesday, "Who cares more about a child than a parent?" Starr, R-Hillsboro, said the state should be trusting parents with their children's safety. This bill, he said, empowers parents to make decisions for their own family and promotes family recreation. Senate Bill 238 passed the Senate, 22-7, and now heads to the House. The bill would allow young children tooperate motorcycles on public lands. Sen. Laurie Monnes Anderson, D-Gresham, said it doesn't "seem prudent to let children under the age of 7 to operate this machinery." SeeMotorcycles/A5
SenateBill 238 What it's about:Allows a child
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younger than 7 to operate a Class III all-terrain vehicle, a motorcycle, on public lands if the child meets "rider fit"
guidelines established by the State Board of Parks and Recreation. Specifies that
children younger than16 must meet rider fit guidelines to operate Class III all-terrain
vehicles on public lands. What happened:Passed
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By John Hechinger and MichaelMcDonald
Senate, 22-7.
What's next:Movesto House.
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Bloomberg News
BOSTON — The University of Chicago paid James Madara $2.5 million in severance when he stepped down in 2009 as medical dean and hospital chief. Madara, who remained on the faculty, later joined the American Medical Association.
Congress is taking a look at such payments following disclosures that Jacob Lew, the new Treasury secretary,received a $685,000 bonus when he left New York University and had $1.5 million in housing loans from the school. Harvard and Stanford universities also offer realestate loans with sweet terms, records show. While the amounts are small relative to university budgets, the perks insulate faculty and administrators from the costs upsetting many middle-class families, said Jonathan Robe, a research fellow at the Center for College Affordability and Productivity in Washington. "It certainly gives the public a clear example of how out of touch some universities are," Robe said. "Parents will think, 'Here I am scraping by, raiding my retirement plan to pay forcollege.Why are they making me do this just to enrich these executives?"' SeePerks/A5
Photos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin
amily Kitchen guest Tommy O'Dell Jr., above left, eats a plate of potatoes and meatloaf Tuesday inside St. Helens Hall. A member of the Trinity Episcopal Church volunteer team, Mae Lane, above right, helps another
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guest. The kitchen resumed operations after smoke damage was cleaned up following last week's fire. A fire also caused significant damage to the neighboring Trinity Episcopal Church. Hot lunch will be available today and Friday beginning at ll a.m. and Saturday at noon. Dinner is served beginning at 5 p.m. every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. At right, Family Kitchen volunteers Pat Serrurier, left, Judi Inglis, center, and Joan Roberts prepare food Tuesday.
By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times
Smallpox drugcostsmillions, stokesdebate By Donald G. McNeil Jr. New Yorlz Times News Service
The United States government is buying enough of a new smallpox medicine to treat 2 million people in the event of a bioterrorism attack, and took delivery of the first shipment of
TODAY'S WEATHER A few clouds High 63, Low 34
Page B6
it last week. But the purchase has set off a debate about the lucrative contract, with some experts saying the government is buying too much of the drug at too high a price. A small company, Siga Technologies, developed the
drug inrecent years. Whether the $463 million order is a
boondoggle or a bargain depends on which expert is talking. The deal will transform the finances of Siga, which is controlled by Ronald Perelman, a billionaire financier,
Rover finds formula for life on Mars
philanthropist and takeover specialist. Smallpox was eradicated by 1980 and the only known remaining virus is in government laboratories in the United States and Russia. SeeSmallpox /A6
INDEX Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors D1-5 C1-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal & State B1-6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Ob i tuaries B5 TV / Movies D6
The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 110,No. 72, 30 pages, 5 sections
Hydrogen. Carbon. Oxygen. Nitrogen. Sulfur. Phosphorous. These elements accountformore than 96 percent of the stuff life on Earth is made from — and all six have been found in a rock sample on Mars. NASA scientists said Tuesday that the Curiosity rover discovered these basic building blocks in the first rock it drilled — along with signs that the Red Planet was once capable of hosting primitive microbes. "It definitely has allthe indications ofbeing a habitable environment at one point in time," said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for NASA's Mars Exploration Program. See Mars/A6
+ .4 We userecycled newsprint
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u e in u e By Andrew Taylor The Associated Press
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WASHINGTON — H ouse Republicans redoubled their efforts to roll back signature accomplishments of President Barack Obama on Tuesday, of-
fering a slashing budget plan
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that would repeal new health care subsidies and cut spending across a wide swath of programs dear to Obama and his Democratic allies. The GOP plan was immediately rejected by the White House as an approach that "just doesn't addup" and would harm America's middle class. Obama has rebuffed similar plans two years in a row and ran strongly against the ideas when winning re-election last year — when its chief author, Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., was on the Republican ticket. Ryan's budget i l lustrates
the stark differences in the visions of tea party-backed Republicans and Obama and his Democratic allies about the size and role of government — with no obvious avenues for compromise. Senate Democrats are responding with a milder plan that would repeal automatic spending cuts that began to take effect earlier this month while offering $100 billion in new spending forinfrastructure and job training. Details of the plan weren't disclosed before its official unveiling today, but its rough outlines were described b y a i d e s. They spoke only on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to describe it publicly. That plan by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Patty Murray, D-Wash., would raise taxes by almost $1 trillion over
an s
COIOI'ado Shooting —A judge entered a not guilty plea Tuesday for James Holmes, aformer neuroscience student charged with killing 12 people and wounding scores more in a mass shooting in a suburban Denver movie theater. Holmes' lawyers told the judge
they weren't ready to enter a plea —despite numerous delays since
a decade and cut spending by almost $1 trillion over the same period. But more than half of the combined deficit savings would be used to repeal the automatic, across-theboard spending cuts that began to hit the economy earlier this month and are slated to continue through the decade. All this was in the works as Obama trekked to the Capitol to join Senate Democrats for their weekly closed-door policy luncheon as part of his bipartisan outreach efforts to lawmakers in both House and Senate onthe budget. Obama is pressing for a "grand bargain" that would attract more moderate elements from both parties — even as this week's competing budget presentations are tailored to appeal strictly along party lines. Obama meets with House Republicans today.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org
MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn
Tuesday night are:
geg2gggogogo The estimated jackpot is now $12 million.
Cannidai fantaSy trial —A NewYork police officer was convicted Tuesday in abizarre plot to kidnap, torture, kill and eat women, ending a trial whose outcome hinged on a delicate distinction between fantasy and reality. There was no evidence that any of the women that
the officer, Gilberto Valle, wasaccused of plotting to kill were harmed. But prosecutors argued that the officer took actual steps to further his plot, like conducting surveillance of potential victims.
Medal reVieW —The military has stopped production of a new medal for remote warfare troops — droneoperators and cyber warfighters — as it considers complaints from veteransand lawmakers over the award, which was ranked higher than traditional combat medals like the Purple Heart and Bronze Star. Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel has ordered areview.
ban. A background check took only amatter of minutes to complete, Mark Kelly said in the Facebook post. J P
Craigslist plot —A self-styled street preacher accused of team-
•
ing up with a high school student in a deadly plot to lure men with Craigslist job offers and then rob them was found guilty Tuesday of
aggravated murder andcould face the death penalty. A jury in Akron, Ohio, returned the verdict in the case against Richard Beasley, who was charged with killing two men from Ohio and one from Norfolk, Va.
BBC scandal —Police failures over five decadesallowed Jimmy Savile, one of Britain's best-known television personalities, to escape
investigation for a lifetime of sexoffenses dating to the early1960s, according to a report published Tuesday.Thereview of police conduct revealed acatalog of poor procedures and missed opportunities and anunwillingness to pursueaccusations against one of the country's most famous celebrities. — From wire reports
Emilio Morenatu /The Associated Press
The faithful gather Tuesday inSt. Peter's Square to follow a Mass taking place inside St. Peter's Basilica on a giant screen, not pictured. Later in the evening, black smoke billowed from the chimney atop the Vatican's Sistine Chapel less than 2f/a hours after the doors were shut tooutsiders. The dark fumes signified an inconclusive vote to elect the next
pope, and adisappointed murmur rose from the crowd of thousands who had assembled in St. Peter's Square in anticipation. An immediate agreement on a new pontiff was never likely. But the first
vote is always important as ameasure ofthestrength of support for particular candidates. It also lets thecardinals chat and caucusinformally at dinner and sleep on the result, to decide in the morning whether to stick to their original choice, switch sides or look for dark-horse alternatives.
What happens in the Sistine Chapel is supposed to stay in the Sistine Chapel; even support staffers attending the115 cardinals have been
sworn to silence onpain of excommunication. Whoever is chosen by atleast a two-thirds majority — 77 votes in this
0
case — will become the 266th pope, succeeding Benedict XVI, whose resignation last month threw the Catholic Church into uncertainty. — Los Angeles Times
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buying a military-style rifle — a purchase he made to demonstrate how easy it is to obtain the kind of firearms he's lobbying Congress to
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feeding a war fever — a tactic that North Korean leaders have used in past times of tension, suggesting that their country is under immi-
MOre gun dedate —The husband of former U.S. Rep.Gabrielle Giffords generated nearly 4,000 comments onFacebook from people on both sides of the gundebateafter he posted a photo of himself
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said Tuesday.TheSouth Korean officials characterized the movesas
and warn that it is a precursor to a federal registry of gun owners.
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zens into tunnels with emergency provisions and putting military camouflage on buses and trucks, the South Korean Defense Ministry
gress, where GOP lawmakers say it would have little impact on crime
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the July 20 attack that killed 12 people and injured 70 at a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight Rises." Holmes can still change his plea
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Pentagon cyberteams formed to preventattacks By Richard Lardner The Associated Press
WASHINGTON The Defense Department is establishing a series of cyber teams charged with carrying out offensive operations to combat the threat of an electronic assault on the United States that couldcause major damage and disruption to the country's vital infrastructure, a senior military official said Tuesday. Gen. Keith Alexander, the top officer at U.S. Cyber Command, warned during testimony that the potential for an attack against the nation's electric grid and other essential systems isreal and more aggressivesteps need to be taken by the federal government and the private sector in order to improve digital defenses. Alexander told the Senate Armed Services Committee that foreign leaders are deterred from launching cyberattacks on the United States because they know such a strike could be traced to its source and would generate a robust response. But the country is not preventing what Alexander called "low-level harassment of private and public websites, property and information by other states." He did not mention any specific countries, even though the Obama administration is escalating its criticism of cyber thefts by China that have become intolerable to the interna-
tional community. Offensive cyber weapons are growing and evolving, Alexander said, and it is only a matter of time before tools developed by other nations wind up in the hands of extremist groups or even individuals who could do significant harm. Alexander said 1 3 c y ber teams are being formed for the mission of guarding the nation in cyberspace. He described them as "defend-the-nation" teams but stressed their role would be offensive. In comments to reporters after the hearing, Alexander likened the teams' duties to knocking an incoming missile out of the sky before it hits a target. He also said the teams would work outside the United States, but he did not say where. He also said another 27 cyber teams are being established to support the military's warfighting commands while others will protect Defense Department computer systems and data. But even as Alexander detailedthese moves, he pushed lawmakers to pass cybersecurity legislationthat would make it easier for the government and the private sector — which controls critical infrastructure such as the electric grid, banking systems, chemical facilities and water treatment systems — to share detailed information about who is getting hacked and what to do about it.
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Wednesday, March13, the 72nd day of 2013. There are 293 days left in the year.
CULTURE HAPPENINGS
s ensions in
Budget —U.S. Rep. PaulRyan's "Pathway to Prosperity" plan will be formally drafted in the House Budget Committee;
a Democratic counter plan will be unveiled, as well.A2
The food-labeling scandal has brought into the open some of the deep schisms — cultural and otherwise — that continue to
SCienCe —The world's most expensive andpowerful ground-based telescope —the Atacama Large Millimeter/
plague the European Union, despite its emphasis on shared trade.
submillimeter Array, located in northern Chile — officially
New York Times News Service
goes online.
HISTORY Highlight:In1781, the seventh
planet of the solar system, Uranus, was discovered bySir William Herschel. In 1639, New College was
renamed Harvard College for clergyman JohnHarvard. In1862,President Abraham Lincoln signed ameasure prohibiting Union military officers
from returning fugitive slaves to their owners. In1901, the 23rd President of the United States, Benjamin Harrison, died in Indianapolis at age 67.
In1925, the TennesseeGeneral Assembly approved abill prohibiting the teaching of the
theory of evolution. (Gov.Austin Peay signed the measure on
March 21.) In 1933, banks in the U.S. be-
gan to reopenafter a "holiday" declared by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In1938, famed attorney Clar-
ence Darrow died in Chicago. In1943, author-poet Stephen Vincent Benet, 44, died in New York. Financier and philanthropist J.P. Morgan, Jr., 75, died in
Boca Grande, Fla. In1964, bar manager Cath-
erine "Kitty" Genovese, 28, was stabbed to death near her
Queens, N.Y.home; the case generated controversy over the supposed failure of Genovese's neighbors to respond to her cries for help. In1969, the Apollo 9 astro-
nauts splashed down, ending a mission that included the successful testing of the Lunar Module.
In1980,Ford Motor Chairman Henry Ford II announced he
was st eppingdown, thesame day a jury in Winamac, Ind., found the company not guilty of reckless homicide in the
fiery deaths of three young women in a Ford Pinto. In1996, a gunman burst into an elementary school in Dun-
blane, Scotland, and opened fire, killing 16 children and one teacher before killing himself.
Ten yearsago:Forced into a diplomatic retreat, U.S. officials
said President GeorgeW. Bush might delay a vote on his troubled United Nations resolu-
By Andrew Higgins
"The Germans are saying, 'We are only going to
OLOMOUC, Czech Republic — For Zuzana Navelkova, it was just another day at the office. She showed up for work last month and found a twopound bag of f rozen Swedish meatballs awaiting her attention. "There was nothing unusual, just the normal routine," recalled Navelkova, head of the virology department at a statefinanced veterinary laboratory in this sleepy Czech town about 160 miles east of Prague. Normal, that is, until she found horse meat in the meatballs, retrieved from an Ikea furniture store in the nearby city of Brno. The discovery, based on DNA testing, did not stir any alarm at the laboratory, which spends most of its time hunting for potentially deadly health hazards, not for food-labeling fraud. "I would still eat these meatballs," Navelkova said. "No problem." But the results set off a firestorm across Europe, pouring fuel on a slow-burning scandal that had begun weeks earlier with the first discovery of horse meat masquerading as beef in Ireland and then Britain. "We never expected this kind of reaction," Navelkova said.
eat German products.' The French are saying the same for French products. What happened to the common market?" — Francoise Grossetete, French member of the European Parliament
er nations of Western Europe to point a finger at what they often see as their poor and unreliable country cousins in the former Communist East. When it was first discovered that lasagna on sale in France and Britain contained horse meat, Romania, the secondpoorest country in the European Union, was immediately cast as the culprit. Fed by mostly fictitious accounts of a mass slaughter of Romanian horses after the introduction of new traffic rules banning horsedrawn carts, the news media in France and Britain reported that hundreds of thousands of Romanian horses had suddenly entered the food chain. "It is total nonsense," said Lucian Dinita, the chief of Romania's road police. The nation, he said, did introduce a law in 2006 restricting horse-drawn carts on roads, but it was scrapped two years later and led to no
number of E u r opean f ood producers and stores to seek shelter in patriotism by assuring consumers that their meat comes entirely from w i thin their own country's borders. The French frozen-food chain Picard and the supermarkets Carrefour and Intermarche, for example, have all said they will use all-French beef in their meat dishes. Growing calls for mandatory "country of origin" labeling on all processed meats sold in Europe have stirred concern in Brussels about a surge in what Borg has called "veiled protectionism." Until now, only unprocessed meat had to identify its place of origin. "The Germans are saying, 'We are onlygoing to eatG erman products.' The French are saying the same forFrench products. What happenedtothe common market? This is really serious," said Francoise Grossetete,a mass culling of unemployed French member of the Eurohorses. pean Parliament. Some of the horse meat that The European Union's main ended up in processed foods response so far has been to sold in France and other coun- prod member statesto undertries did originate in Roma- take a one-month program of nia, but a French government random DNA testing for horse report issued last month said meat. As testing and labeling this had been clearly labeled as rules become more stringent, coming from horses, not cows. however, the likelihood of yet The fraudulent substitution of more scandals and f u r ther horse meat for beef — about blows to consumer confidence three times the cost — occurred only increases. "What do we do at a factory in southern France, when it turns out that hot dogs the report said. really do contain dog?" joked a Brussels officials involved Dining out on patriotism in food issues. He added, "But All nations in Eastern Eu- at least that wouldn't be false rope except Estonia produce labeling." horse meat, but appetites for it there are waning fast, as in the West. "I eat it occasionally, although it is not my personal favorite and I don't search it out," I n P shelter • help hope said Tomas Hrouda, the chief executive of Pribramska uzenina, aCzech food company that Donate your vehicle today! produces horse sausages. He said he worried that the ruckus over fraudulent labeling "sends a bad signal to customers and casts a shadow over all meat producers." www.bethleheminn.org It has also led a growing 541.322.8768 ext. 21
Pavel Horejsi / New York Times News Service
Zuzana Navelkova, head of the virology department at a veterinary lab in Olomouc, Czech Republic, found horse meat in a package of meatballs last month, a discovery that fanned the flames of a foodlabeling scandal that had begun weeks earlier in Ireland and Britain. brought into the open the deep divisions, cultural and otherwise, that bedevil the European Union. A meat that nearly all Britons consider revolting, for example,is cherished as a protein-rich delight by a small but loyal minority in places like Belgium, the home of the European Union's Brussels bureau-
effort over six decades to push Europe's once warring nations into a zone of peace rooted in shared economic and ultimately political sovereignty. Under an unwieldy system intended to assure national governments that they can give up some sovereignty but not lose control, legions of officials at cracy and Europe's biggest per the European Commission, the capitaconsumer of horse meat. union's Brussels-based execu(Italy, with its larger population, tive arm, churn out regulations eats the most horse overall.) and directives but lack the authorityor resources to enforce An unpalatable system? them. For a surging camp of soFor the most part, that is the called Euroskeptics in Britain, province of individual counDifferent tastes the fact that horse meat has tries. This means that while Neither, it seems safe to say, entered the food chain through Brussels may loom large in the did many in Europe, where a host of middlemen and fac- public imagination, particularin normal times tons of horse t ories scattered across the ly in countries like Britain, as a meat are consumed every year Continent stands as proof of meddlesome, even omnipotent without causing a stir. The unbridgeable cultural chasms authority, it is actually weak. "Those who think that the scandal has cast a pall over that, in their view, make the EuEurope's proudest achievement ropean Union unworkable. European Union or the Com"With 27 different countries mission has an army of inspec— a vast common market that allows the free flow of goods with completely different cul- tors and wardens to implement and services across borders tural backgrounds, there is no legislation in this field or any — and even the very idea that cultural brake on what goes other should know that there Europe's different nations can into our food," said Godfrey is nothing in existence of this somehow work together to set Bloom, a member of the Euro- sort," Tonio Borg, the union's and enforcecommon rules. pean Parliament for the United senior official for health and Consumers are increasingly Kingdom Independence Party, consumer policy, told the Euroasking a simple but discomfort- a group that wants Britain to pean Parliament recently. ing question: Why, in a trading pull out of the bloc. "I don't The European Commission, bloc notorious for regulating think it is possible at all to have he explained, is largely powerthings like the shape of banan- 27 countriesagreeing to and less to make sure its rules on as and the font size on food la- complying with an d i m ple- food labeling or anything else bels, was something as simple menting" the same rules, he get observed. as identifying the difference be- said during a recent hearing on Feeding stereotypes tween a cow and a horse prov- horse meat in Brussels. ing so difficult'? The union's failure to preThe horse meat fracas has And at a time of immense vent what Ireland's agriculture also put a spotlight on the testrains brought on by the euro minister, Simon Coveney, de- nacity of cultural and national crisis a n d Con t i nentwide scribed as "fraud on a massive stereotypesthat were supposed austerity — when new, anti- scale across multiple countries" to fade away as a new common European political forces are flows from a deliberate design sense of European identity took rising in country after country in the foundations of the so- hold. Particularly pronounced — the horse meat scandal has called European project, an has beena tendency in the rich-
tion or evendrop it — andfight
Pbethlehem
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Iraq without the international
body's backing. TheSenate voted 64-33 to ban aprocedure that critics called partial birth
abortion. (The measurepassed theHouseandwassignedinto law by President Bush in No-
vember 2003.) Five yearsago:The bodyof ChaldeanCatholic Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahhowas found in a shallow grave in northern
Iraq, two weeksafter he was kidnapped bygunmen in one of the most dramatic attacks
against the country's small Christian community.
One year ago:Twenty-two students returning from a ski holiday and six adults died
when their bus crashed inside a tunnel in southern Switzer-
land. Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc. said it would stop publishing print editions of its flagship
encyclopedia.
BIRTHDAYS Singer-songwriter Neil Sedaka
is 74. Operasinger Julia Migenes is 64. Actor William H. Macy is 63. Actress Dana Delany is 57. Rock musician
Adam Clayton (U2) is 53. Jazz musician Terence Blanchard is 51. Actress Annabeth Gish is
42. Rapper-actor Commonis 41. Actor Emile Hirsch is 28. — From wire reports
POLITICS
Formerworld leadersurge U.S. to rethink drugpolicy By Tim Johnson
Mexico look on with bewilderment at the gap between U.S. MEXICO CITY — T h r ee federal law, changing public former heads ofstate are urg- attitudes and the race by states ing the United States to engage to permit medical marijuana or in aserious discussion of drug outright legalization. legalization, saying its counterHe spoke last week at a fonarcotics policies are becoming r um in Mexico City by t h e untenable in the wake of voter Global Commission on Drug approval last fall of measures Policy, a panel that seeks a that legalized the recreational dramatic reappraisal of drug use of marijuana in Washing- laws and includes seven forton state and Colorado. mer presidents, among them The three — t h e f o rmer Fernando Henrique Cardoso presidents of Brazil, Colombia of Brazil and Ruth Dreifuss of and Switzerland — said the Switzerland. inconsistency in U.S. attitudes Gaviria, Henrique Cardoso toward marijuana shows that and Dreifuss all dismissed a American public opinion is warning by the International changing, even as the U.S. con- Narcotics Control Board that tinues to press Latin American the U.S. risks falling afoul of innations for tough enforcement ternational treaties if it permits of anti-drug trafficking laws. Colorado and Washington to "There's been a great silence legalize marijuana. "What happened in Portuover these initiatives, silence by the administration and the gal, in Switzerland or the NethDepartment of Justice, silence erlands'?" Henrique Cardoso within the media, silence by the asked, referring to nations that parties," Cesar Gaviria, former either decriminalized drug use president of C olombia, said or offeredprescription narcotabout the legalization push. ics to addicts. "They are not in Gaviria said nations such as compliance."
•
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McCiatchy Newspapers
Come learn the ABC's and D's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.
Free class open to the public: BEND — St. Charles Medical Center, 2500 NE Neff Road Tuesday, March 19, 6:30pm
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
IN FOCUS: PRESERVING WORLD LEADERS
• If Venezuela . :2002 Military Venezuel a ' s Hugo C h av ez attempt carries out a planto President Hugo Chavez, one of Latin America's most charismatic and ;: :leaders coup, but Chavez : ;returns after two figures, ruled Venezuela for 14 years. He used the preserve theformer controversial days; says U.S. country's oil wealth to underwrite programs for the poor and to gain : :was behind coup influence abroad. A look at his life and career as a world leader: president's body,it , :2004 Wins recall 1954Bornin ; 1991 Putincharge :. referendum; begins will require constant Chavezcampaigns inrainstorm, Sabaneta, Barinas : ,of paratrooper , 'seizing land to October state, to school- ; : b a ttalion; holds plant food; wins maintenance 2012 rank of commander re-election in 2006; teachers
many years i s e s sentially the same, note Fountain and Camilo Jaramillo, a Colombian embalmer and alumnus of the A m erican A cademy McAllister Institute of Funeral Service. "The difference when one wants to preserve a body for a long time is that the doctors apply more-concentrated amounts of th e c hemicals," Jaramillo said. "It is a much slower process and must be done verycarefully. "Indefinite preservation reallydoesn'texist.... Itrequires periodic maintenance.... But noembalmingstopsdecomposition; itonlyslows it,"he said. The time it takes a body to deteriorate varies on the health and weight of the deceasedandotherenvironmental factors, including whether the body wasrefrigerated immediatelyafter death. Regardless, the key is to embalm as soonaspossibleafterdeath.
2012 Wins re-electionbut is Chavezin March2011 hospitalizedin V Cuba; can't be sworn in; returns home February 2013; dies March 5
body.
AtOughjob Permanently staving off decompositionisnoeasyjob. When Chinese communist leader Mao Zedong died in 1976,the Chinesemedicalspecialiststaskedwithpreserving his corpsefor permanent displaywere ataloss. I n the m i ddle o f a r if t with the Soviet Union, they couldn't ask the Russians for the formulaused on Lenin, according to a memoir by Mao's doctor. Vietnam, which had embalmed Ho Chi Minh, rebuffed them, too, the doctor wrote. In the end, the Chinese doctors used a formula found in a Western journal in a medical
Sources: The Miami Herald, BBC, MCTPhoto Service, AP, New York Times News Service
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Judy Treible, Robert Dorrel/1©2013Mcolatchy-Tribune News Serwcc
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Techniques Inthe U.S., mostembalmers use a machine that injects fluid laced with chemicals, principally formaldehyde, into an artery of the body, while the majority of the blood is emptied fromavein. Often a chemical known as a humectant is added, which "helpstofillout thebody, some of the hollow spaces, and adds a degree of moisture," Fountain said. While h e s t r essed t h at he has no personal knowledge about the condition of Chavez's body at the time of his death or when it was or will be embalmed, Fountain said one possible method of preserving his corpse is to follow the embalming process with aperiodicinjectionofhumectant or something similar tokeepmoistureinthetissues. Makeup alsohelps to cover areas thathave gonebrown with dehydration. Just to be safe, Venezuelan officials could take an extra precautionary step and make a face mask, using Chavez's real face to form a mold that could be placed over the flesh inthe future"andkeep itlooking more like he did when he died,"Fountainsaid. The process of e mbalm-
2004 Venezuela is founding member of Union of South American Nations
. :nationalizes key 1992Attempts presidential coup; : :industries surrenders on 2006 Atthe U.N., national TV; uses Chavez says jail time to build President George political support W Bushis"the devil" who thinks 1994After pardon, goes to he is"the ownerof Cuba; Fidel Castro the world" and says becomes amentor the room smells of sulfur . :1990 Wins run for 2007 Iranian ; :presidenton 1909 Forms secret : plafform to rewrite President Bolivarian Mahmoud : constitution movement with Ahmadinejad visits; ' , :2000 Re-elected to Chavez says this other cadets to : six-year termunder represents his reformnation . :new constitution; opposition to U.S. . :opposition grows to foreign policy : his socialist 2009 Wins reforms referendum that lifts term limits on Chavez meetswith elected officials Ahmadinelad ; :2011Reveals he in Venezuela, : has cancer; travels 2007 , .:to Cuba repeatedly for treatment
The AssociatedPress
No one lives forever — nor do they last forever. At least not withoutalotof tuneups. Asmuch asitmayseemlike the bodies of famous world leaders such as Vladimir Ilyich Lenin and Mao Zedong have been preserved for all eternity, their enduring physical presence is simply an illusionaidedbyscience. Venezuelan officials originally said they intended to preserve Hugo Chavez and display his body"for eternity" inside a glass tomb. But earlier this week, the information ministrysaidthatofficialshad not decided what will happen tothe latepresident'sbody. If they go ahead with the plan to preseve Chavez and f ollow procedures that a r e used in the United States, the techniquemightberathersimple: repeatembalming. "The first thing to remember about embalming as we do it in the U.S. is that it is designed to delaythe natural deterioration of the body; it's not forever," said Vernie Fountain, alicensedembalmerandownerandfounderof the Fountain National Academy of Professional Embalming Skills in Springfield, Mo. So what does thatmean, exactly? You might want to put down your sandwich before you read on.
2001 Forms ALBA, alliance with other left-leaning Latin American nations
1975 Graduates frommilitary academy, where he was a star student
By Lisa J. Adams
Lenin's embalming process, still seen to this day as one of thefinestexamplesofitskind, was presentedto the world as a feat for Soviet science in its quest to preserve a body in suchperfection. But the idea was probably forced upon government officials, who may have feared another bloody revolution after they saw the huge crowds thatshoweduptosaygoodbye toLenin. Well over 500,000 people braved the biting winter cold just to catch a glimpse of the
Chavez's efforts to weaken U.S. power in the hemisphere
Chinese officials paytheir respects Mao Zedong atanunknownlocationin China in 1977. Theman commonly known as Chairman Mao is oneof several worldleaders whose bodies havebeen preserved and put on perpetual display.
was later removed, and North Korea's father-and-sonleaders KimIl Sung and Kim JongIl. But it was the famous display of Soviet founder Lenin in Moscow's Red Square in 1924 that inspired the custom amongleft-leaningleaders. And then there was Evita, the actress who married thenPresident Juan Domingo Peron and went on to claim a following of millions for her role in securing labor benefits for the working class, founding hospitals and helping women get the vote. When she died young from uterinecancerin 1952,themil-
extradosesofformaldehydeto boost thepreservativeeffect. "The results were shocking. Mao's facewas round as a ball, andhisneckwasnowthe width of his head," Li Zhisui wrote in "The Private Life of Chairman M ao," p u blished outside China 18 years after Mao's death. The team managed to restore Mao to a more normal a ppearance with h o ur s o f careful massage and makeup, hesaid, but, justincase, awax copy of the body was readied as astand-in.
itaryleaders who overthrew her husband in 1955 were so worriedaboutadeathcult that they tookdesperate measures tohidethebody. For two decades, the corpse was secretly moved around Argentina and then buried in an unmarked grave in Italy. Meanwhile, several wax and fiberglass decoy corpses were sent out around the world. The realcorpse remained in Rome until it was delivered to Peron's home in 1971 while he was in exile in Spain. Now it rests in her family's crypt in the opulent Recoleta cemetery, amajor touristspot.
— Thisstoryincludesreports from The AssociatedPress.
Still with their people W orldleader swhosebodieshavebeenpreservedandputon perpetual display:
I
VLADIMIR LENIN Body of Soviet Union's founder hasbeendisplayed since January 1924ina mausoleum atRedSquare. His tomb is one of Moscow's
II
mostfamous symbols and communists consider italmosta shrine. The embalmmentfor displayis considered the model for
subsequent communist worldleaders put on exhibit. JOSEF STALIN Sovietdictator's embalmedbody was put on displaynext to Lenin
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display on Aug. 29, 1975. It rests in a glass sarcophagus in the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleumin Hanoiandisa popular destination for tourists.
MAO ZEDONG Embalmedbody of the founding father of the People's Republic of China was unveiled on Sept. 9, 1977. It rests in the Chairman Mao
MemorialHallin the center of TiananmenSquare in Beijing. Long lines of people form daily to viewthe man commonlyknownas Chairman Mao.
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KIM IL SUNG Preservedbodyof the man considered the founding father of
North Korea wasunveiled on July 8, 1995. Itlies under glass for viewing purposesintheKumsusanmausoleum,acavernous former presidential palace. KIM JONG IL The leader's body, stillinhis trademarkkhaki jumpsuit, was
unveiled on Dec.17,2012, the anniversaryofhis death. It rests a fewfloors belowthe body ofhis father, KimII Sung, in the
Kumsusanmausoleum. — The Associated Press
Ideally, a body would be embalmed "the very day or next morning, r ather t h an three or five or six days down the road," Fountain said. "But it's not impossible. I have embalmed bodies that have been refrigerated forsixmonths."
Whydoit? Confrontedwithsuchanever-ending and unsavory task, why do countries such as Russia, China, Vietnam, and now perhaps Venezuela, go to such lengths to preserve their leaders'remains'? "The decision to embalm
Chavez is an attempt to include him in a pantheon of communist deities," said Nina Tumarkin, a professor of history at Wellesley College and the author of "Lenin Lives! The Lenin C ul t i n S o v i et Russia." "It's a throwback to Soviet, communist times, anditmight seem obsolete, but it might be the only pantheon where he belongs. Bettertobelong tothe wrongclub thannoneat all." Other socialist or communist leaders embalmed after dyinginclude Russian dictator Josef Stalin, though his body
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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SUMMER VOUTH ACTIVITY GUIDE NEVER BEBORED DURING SUMMER AGAIN
Find the summer's hottest activities for kids in this guide. Summer is the time of the year kids look forward to most. It is when they are free to explore, play and be who they want to be. The Summer Youth Activity Guide provides parents with information about the youthoriented programs that take place in Central Oregon — from away-from-home camps to daytime activities, sports to arts and crafts. There's no excuse to have bored kids at home. Find what suits them best in The Bulletin's Summer Youth Activity Guide
PudliShing Date: Friday, April 12
GRADUATION 2 0 1 3 HONORING OURLATEST HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES
One of life's greatest accomplishments, high school graduation, is celedrated in this annual publication. Every Central Oregon high school graduate is listed in this annual publication profiling each of the area's high school graduating classes. Graduates and parents alike look forward to this keepsake publication, which includes the names and photos of Central Oregon's newest graduates. Congratulations Graduates!
PudliShing Date: Wednesday, June12
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Owl Continued from A1 "It was really underweight," she said. The dead owl weighed just more than a pound, Bonomo said in an email, while female barred owls typically weigh between 1'/4 pounds and 2/4 pounds. Prior to the necropsy the Fish and Wildlife Service retrieved the bird and Jennifer O'Reilly, a fish and wildlife biologist for the agency, wrote an email to the Listserv, saying the cause of death for the owl was undetermined. She did rule out some possibilities though. "It did not starve, was not e lectrocuted an d w a s n o t shot," she said in a n email March 6. A cousin to the northern spotted owl, the barred owl has moved west from the East Coast over the past 100 years. The names of both owls describe their chest and belly feather patterns. While the spotted owl has been listed as a threatenedspecies since 1990, the barred owl is not a listed species, although it is protected by the federal migratory bird act an d o t her laws. The barred owl at Farewell Bend Park f i r s t a p peared Jan. 20. As word spread, the number of birders and photographers visiting the park to see the owl grew. At times the bird had an entourage of about 20 people, many with cameras, following it around as it hunted. While the bird may have seemed healthy, it is hard to
judge a bird's health just by looking at it , s aid D amian Fagan, who teaches birding
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A radiograph of a dead barred owl found March 3 at Farewell Bend Park shows injuries and other health problems. classes through COCC's Community Learning program. He said tests are usually needed to determine whether a bird is sick. "You'd really have to have the bird in hand and check fat counts and blood samples to know," Fagan said. A mystery that may now never besolved iswhether the owl was planning on building a nest in or near the park and whether it had found a mate. Ginger Sanders, a birder from Bend, said she is sure two barred owls lived at Farewell Bend Park. On Jan. 31,
she said, she photographed a barred owl more than a mile n orthwest of th e p ark a n d then drove straight to the park and five minutes later photog raphed another owl in t h e park. After comparing photos she took on d i fferent occasions of the owl at Farewell Bend Park, and noting differences in behavior, Sanders said she thinks the two owls actually took turns being the owl at the park. She said she thinks one was a male and one a female. Sanders, who runs a photography website called www.
photographoregon.com, said she firstheard about the dead owl at the park March 4 at a photo club meeting. There a pair of photographer friends told her they'd seen a dead owl in the park the day before. Now that at least one of the owls at Farewell Bend Park is likely dead, Sanders said she isn't surprised that no barred owls have been seen there recently. "If one loses its mate it goes to another area to look for another mate," Sanders said.
be wearing. So you're ensuring safety, notdecreasing." Continued from A1 Ron Price, the all-terrain veThe young riders must hicle coordinator with the Orshow they are physically egon State Parks, said SB 238 capable of operating the ma- extends to motorcycles the nochine, known as "rider fit." age limit that applies to ATVs They must be able to reach and makes the law more equal the brakes and handlebars across the spectrum of off-road and must demonstrate they vehicles. Also, he said, kids are can turn t h e m otorcycle already riding dirt bikes on while keeping control of the their farms; this makes it legal throttle and brake. for them to ride with their fami"I started using a trac- lies on trails. "There are kids that are 5 tor when I was 5," said Sen. Jeff Kruse, R-Roseburg. "A and 6 years old that are better lot of us grew up with these riders than I am," he said. (machines) and bigger, and Wade Bryant teaches quad or somehow we have managed four-wheelATV safetycourses. to survive." Peoplecome from allover the Right now, the law per- state to ride Central Oregon's mits 7- to 15-year-olds to trails, he said. It's the same with ride as long as they have motorcycles. Price said he's a permit and are accom- talking with Bryant to extend panied by an adult. In Or- those classes to encompass egon, everything that goes young motorcycleriders. "We're a big destination," off-road, such as a Jeep, motorcycle or dune buggy, Bryant said of Central Oregon. is considered an all-terrain — Reporter: 541-554-1162, vehicle, by law. There are IdakeC<bendbulletin.com no age restrictions currently when it comes to riding DOUBLE SAVINGS NOW! four-wheelers, often known as ATVs. $25-50 rebates on select Sen. Lee Beyer, D-SpringHunter Douglas products, f ield, said e nsuring t h e and matching instant dealer young children who want rebates (thru 4/2/1 3) to ride the vehicles are first tested and given a certification will increase safety. "We're actually educating their parents," he said. COVERINGS "We're probably m aking sure the young people have 541-388-4418 the safety gear they should www.classic-coverings.com
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Colleges must "attract and retain the best leaders we can," Continued from A1 Kloehn said. Madara, 62, who Congress an d P r e sident b e c ame chief executive officer Barack Obama h ave b een o f t h e AMA in 2011, declined pushing colleges to control to c o mment. tuition and other costs, which In te r m s of favorable loan can exceed $60,000 ayear at deals for faculty and some a private school. In a weak job a d m i nistrators, Harvard and market, students are strugS t a nford are among the biggling to pay off $1 trillion in g e s t players. As at NYU, the education loans. colleges said they do so beExit bonuses are becoming c a use of high real estate costs. more common among senior A l ong wi th low - i nterest executives at large colleges in h o m e l oans, Harvard offers major cities, said Stephen Joel " shared-appreciation" m o r t Trachtenberg,a former presi- gages to tenured faculty and dent of George Washington s o m e a d ministrators. These University who does execu- l o a ns, which cover only a portive-pay consulting. tion of a property's purchase Typically, such "super sev- p r i ce, don't have monthly payerance" amounts to one t o me n t s or set interest, though three times an administrator's t h e y give Harvard a share in annual salary and bonus, ac- a n y g ain in value when the cording to Charles Skorina, p r o perty i s sold. Stanfordand founder and president of an NY U h a v esimilarprograms. executive-search At Harvard, facfirm in San Franulty can also take ~OLI IOOk fOf' cisco who specialout no - i n terest izes in placing fi- SI/I/ee/ef1ef.S education l o a ns. nance executives Eight p r ofessors, ~ge C>< ><y at universities. s ome w i t h ad Especially at dri V e r, the ministrative jobs,
vided the loan so he could buy a comparable home in the Boston area, said Julie Rafferty, a spokeswoman for the Harvard School of Public Health. When he sells, the school will be repaid in full and receivepart of the appreciated value of the house, she satd. At Stanford, near Palo Alto, Calif., four senior administrators and faculty had a total of $4.6 million in housing loans outstanding, according to its most recent tax filing. Philip P izzo, former dean o f t h e school ofmedicine, had three loans, amounting to $2.7 million. Martin Shell, vice president for development, owed $1 million. Pizzo and Shell didn't return messages requesting comment. The housing program "allows facultyto enter into a very
board offered him the bonus to keep him in his job during his final year, until a successor arrived in 2011, he said. "There was no compelling reason for me to stay" without the extramoney, said Kerrey, 69. "This was a payment to retain me on the job."
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said Lisa Lapin, a Stanford "Otherwise spokeswoman. the cost is so prohibitive." During Lew's confirmation hearings, Sen. Charles Grassley, the Iowa Republican who universities o n hOu S eand o wed $2. 8 mi l - has long been critical of highthe East and West lion in home and er education compensation, coasts, where real tper > y>Cg education l o a ns, sharply questioned such perks estate expenses eA6 eXit b01IUS. ac cording to the at New York University, where and oth~~ costs An eX it bOnuS Camb r idge Mass- Lew was executivevice presiare high, trustees . basedschool's2010 dent and chief operating ofP I ~ ~1 i ncluding W a l l tax return. ficer from 2001 to 2006. NYU Street executives be C BUSe Uri tll J ulio Frenk , f orgave $440,000 of L e w 's are eager to pay the gUy le+VeS dean of the Har- real-estate loans. "There always seems to be their p r e sidents , v ard S c hool o f t opdollar,Skorina ~ Public Health and more money for the executive said. They look for tO deal With it." Mex i c o's f o rmer suite even as colleges raise tuways to pay addihealth mi n i ster, ition year after year," Grassley " " " "'" tional compensaheida$1.16miiiion said in an email. "Universities tion that doesn't executivesearchfirm loan for the purhave to answer for their exshow up in annual chase of a home. ecutiveperks in exchange for surveys that can Homi Bhabha, di- their tax exemption." anger donors and rector of Harvard's Natalie Earnest, a Treasury employees, he said. H umanities C e nter, o w e d Department s p okeswoman, "You look for sweeteners, 8318,000 on a $552,000 loan r eferred questions to N Y U . the carand driver,the house for"dependent's education." In answering queries from and then a back-end exit boSumm e rs, Harvard's presi- G rassley, Lew said h e r e nus," said Skorina. "An exit d e n t from 2001 to 2006, owed paid his loan by refinancing bonus is p alatable because $ 1 m i l lion for th e purchase privately. until the guy leaves you don't o f a h o m e and $177,000 for NYU won't discuss details have to deal with it." a dependent's education, ac- of individual employees' comColleges say they must offer c o r ding to Harvard's 2009 tax pensation, said Beckman, the compensation packages to win r e t u rn. spokesman. In its real-estate over talented executives and In J u n e 2006,Summerstook program, fewer than 10 loans faculty. Harvard and Stan- o u t the real-estate loan, avail- have been forgiven, and the ford said they keep tuition af- a b l e to all faculty members. university does so only to refordable with generous finan- W h e n h e was president, he tain an employee, he said. cial-aid programs. High-level l i v ed in a university-provided The school, based in Manadministratorsfocus on ef- residence. In 2009, Summers, hattan's Greenwich Village, f iciency and financial health, T r e asury s e cretary u n d er offers separation payments for said NYU spokesman John P r e sident Bill Clinton, became a variety of reasons, including Beckman. director of the National Eco- a history of outstanding work "When they have been suc- n o mic Council in the Obama or a contractual obligation, cessful — as was the case with a d m i nistration. In 2 011, he Beckman said. "NYU does not do this ofJack Lew — thebenefitto the returned to Harvard as a ten," he said. "We understand university can range in th e pr o f essor. tens of millions of dollars," Har v a r d o f fers mortgages how important it is to be careBeckman said in an email. and education loans because it ful stewards of the university's At the University of Chi i s " c ommittedtorecruitingthe resources." cago, Madara's severance pay- m ost talented teachers and reIn 2010, NYU's neighbor, ment,including deferred com- searchers in the world," Kevin the New School, paid former pensation and retirement ben- G a l vin, a Harvard spokesman, senator Bob Kerrey a bonus of efits, reflected money earned s a id in an email. $1.2 million when he stepped over thecourse of his career, Sum m ers declined to comdown as president. part of a package typical of m e n t . Bhabha didn't respond Kerrey, in a telephone interexecutives at peer institutions, t o an email. view, said he had received job accordingto Steve Kloehn, the W hen F r enk was recruited offers that year far above his school's spokesman. from Mexico, Harvard propay at the New School. The
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
IN FOCUS: NEW YORK'SSTALLED SUGARY DRINKS CRACKDOWN l
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By Nicholas Confessore New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — The decision by a New York state judge striking down the Bloomberg administration's ban on large, sugary drinks this week was not just a high-profile victory for the soda companies in their pitched battle against anti-obesity policies that are aimed at their products. It was also a victory for the industry's steadfast, if surprising, allies: advocacy groups representing the very communities hit hardest by the obesity epidemic.
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the soda industry. They're taking the money and looking the other way on obesity, diabetes, heart disease. They look the other way or issue statements that have no teeth or don't go after the industry." Officials at P epsiCo and Coca-Cola, whose p roducts dominate the beverage market, said there was no connection between the grants to community groups and their positions on soda regulation. In interviews, officials at
ing many serving black and Latino communities, to join its coalition and help throttle the
proposaL "Their opposition makes the battles harder," said Michael Jacobson, executive director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which is leading the FDA petition effort. "It gives credibility to the industry's arguments, which are
some groups receiving indus-
Dozens of Hispanic and African-American c ivi l r i g h ts groups, health advocacy organizations and business associations have joined the bever-
filed an amicus brief in support of the beverage industry's effort to block Mayor Michael B loomberg's proposal for a citywide ban on large, sugary age industry in opposing soda beverages. The judge ruled on regulation around the country Monday that the limits would in recent years, arguing that be "arbitrary and capricious" such measures — perhaps the because they would apply ungreatest regulatory threat the equally to some establishments soft-drink industry has ever and to different kinds of sugary faced — arediscriminatory, pa- beverages. ternalistic or ineffective. The Bloomberg administraMany of these groups have tion said it would appeal the desomething else in c ommon: cision. And the fight over soda They areamong the recipients regulation is likely to intensify of tens of millions of dollars beyond New York in the comfrom the beverage industry ing months. that has flowed to nonprofit In February, after a string and educational organizations of defeats at the state and loserving blacks and Hispanics cal levels, a coalition of health overthe lastdecade, according advocates and public officials to a review by The New York petitioned the Food and Drug Times of charity records and Administration to regulate the other documents. amount of caloric sweeteners Soda companies have spon- in sodas and other beverages, sored conferences for the Na- asserting that th e s cientific tional H i spana L e adership consensus was clear that added Institute, scholarships for local sugars had made such products chapters of the National As- unsafe. sociation for the Advancement The two groups that opposed of Colored People, financial the New York ban — both of literacy classes offered by the which have received grants or National Puerto Rican Coali- sponsorship dollars from Cocation and programs from the Cola or PepsiCo — argued that National H i spanic M e dical the regulations unfairly disAssociation. criminated against bodegas These connections came and other small neighborhood to the fore last month when stores while leaving supermarthe New York chapter of the kets and other retailers exempt. NAACP, along with the HisIn an interview, Jose Caldepanic Federation, a coalition of ron, the president of the HisHispanic community service p anic Federation, said h e agencies in the New York area, shared Bloomberg's concern
In interviews, soda industry executives said that nonwith obesity among Latinos ming from the industry's early profit groups in the black and but disagreed with his strat- embrace of th e c ivil r i ghts Hispanic communities were egy. He also said the federation movement. But as battles over important partners in beating would have probably opposed soda taxes have broken out back what they viewed as misa ban even if it had covered all around the country in recent guided tax proposals. "It's important to have all businesses. years, advocates for t ighter "I don't think we move the regulation argue, the money impacted parties out there so needle by l e gislating what has effectively muzzled organi- we can educate lawmakers people ultimately eat or drink," zations that might otherwise be and the media about the imCalderon said. "Our experience on the side of regulation. pact bans would have on our "A lot of these organizations business," said C h ristopher has been that you educate folks, empower folks — meet them have particular niches that they Gindlesperger, a spokesman where they are, basically." useto servicethe communities," for the American Beverage said Gus West, president of the Association, which has led the Longtime relationships Hispanic Institute, a policy ad- battle against bans and taxes. In many cases, the finan- vocacy organization based in The a ssociation f o r med cial r e lationships b e tween Washingtonthat supportstight- Americans Against Food Taxsoda companies and nonprofit er regulation of sugary drinks. es in 2009,when the Obama groups go back decades, stem- "And they're getting funded by administration considered a
Smallpox
Mars
Vaccines ar e n o r m ally given before an infection to Continued from A1 prevent a disease, while antiBut there have longbeen ru- virals are given after virus inmors ofrenegade stocks that fections, to treat them. Smallcould be sprayed in airports pox has such a long incubaor sports stadiums. Experts tion period that the vaccine say thevirus could also be re- can prevent disease even if it engineered into existence in a is given as late as three days sophisticated genetics lab. after infection. Arestvyr may As part of its efforts to pre- also prevent infection if given pare for a possible bioterror- early enough, but that has not ism attack, the government been proven. is paying more than $200 for Dr. Eric Rose, the president each course of treatment. of Siga and a vice president Siga argues that the price of Perelman's holding comis a fair return on years of pany, MacAndrews 8 Forbes, investment. acknowledged that the drug And R o bi n Ro b i nson, cost little to make, but said director of th e B iomedical the pricebeing charged for a Advanced Research and De- patented drug was a bargain velopment Authority, p art compared with AIDS antiof the Department of Health retrovirals that cost $20,000 and Human Services, the a year and cancer drugs that overseer of the contract for cost more than $100,000 a the drug, Arestvyr, defended year. the size of the order and the Asked about the size of the price paid. He said that 2 mil- purchase, he compared it with lion doses was the amount a fludrug. "There are 80 milanalysts predicted would be lion courses of Tamiflu in the needed to contain a smallpox strategic national stockpile," outbreak in a large city and he said. "Smallpox is just as that the whole country would contagious and has 30 times require 12 million, along with the mortality. By measures vaccines. like that, I'd say 2 million is on The price, he said, was ar- the low end." rived at through federal purHe also said that Perelman chasing guidelines and was had invested $80million in the "fair and reasonable" com- company through years of repared with the price of other search with no sales. Without commercial antiviral drugs, a profit potential, no company which he said ranged from would take up smallpox, Eb$108 to $7,364. ola and other lethal but very But when stockpiling a rare diseases, he said. smallpox drug was first proAnd Dr. Isaac Weisfuse, posed in 2001 after the Sept. who was formerly head of 11 and anthrax attacks, it pandemic planning for the was expected to cost only New York City health de$5 to $10 per course, said Dr. partment and is now Siga's Donald Henderson, who led medical policy director, said a government advisory panel that plans calling for tens of on biodefense in the wake of millions Americans to be vacthose attacks. Henderson was cinated within days of a maa leader in the eradication of jor smallpox outbreak were smallpox in the 1960s and is unrealistic and that Arestvyr now at the Center for Biosecu- could save lives. rity at the University of PittsArestvyr — w h ich until burgh MedicalCenter. November was known as STDr. Richard Ebright, a bio- 246 or tecovirimat — prevents weapons expert at Rutgers the virus from forming the University, said there was lit- double outer envelope that lets tle need for so much Arestvyr, it break out of the first cells it since the country has raised infects and spread throughits stockpile of smallpox vac- out the body. A 14-day course cine to 300 million doses now, can be taken in combination up from only 15 million in with smallpox vaccine, offer2001. ing double protection, which "Is it appropriate to stock- Henderson c a l led "quite pile it? Absolutely," he said. amazing." "Is it appropriate to stockpile 2 Arestvyr is not approved million doses? Absolutely not. by the Food and Drug AdTwenty thousand seems like ministration except for use in the right number." emergencies.
soda tax to help pay for its signature health care legislation. The industry began a withering counterattack, recruiting a wide varietyof businesses and nonprofit agencies, includ-
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New York Times News Service file photo
A Pepsi delivery truck advocates against New York's proposed limits on sugary drinks In 2010. A judge ruled against the proposal Monday, a decision fought for by the beverage industry but also dozens of Hispanic and African-American civil rights groups, health advocacy organizations and business associations.
Continued from A1 The rover's results are filling in a picture of what increasingly appears to have been a very inviting environment — low acidity, full of water, with signs of chemically complementary compounds. "We have found a h abitable environment that is so benign and is so supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would have been able to drink it," said John Grotzinger, lead scientist for the Mars Science Laboratory mission, as Curiosity is officially known. Grotzinger, a geologist at the California Institute of Technology, was quick to add that "we're not a life-detection mission." Curiosity's analytical machinery isn't built to find life's metabolic remnants, and its cameras wouldn't be able to resolve an image of a fossil microbe if it were staring the rover in the face, he added. Still, the findings fired up t he imaginations of N A S A officials. "I feel giddy," said John Grunsfeld, a former astronaut who now serves as an administrator for the space agency's Science Mission Directorate. "I have an image now of possibly a lake, a freshwater lake, on a Mars with probably a thicker atmosphere." The discovery fulfills the primary purpose of Curiosity's mission just seven months after its landing on the Red Planet. It also provides a major coup for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Canada Flintridge, Calif., which is managing the mission. Among the first hints that Curiosity's first drilled sample would reveal a wealth of information was its color. Rather than rusty red, the powder drilled last month showed up as shades of gray — indicating that the rock underneath, protected from the atmosphere, could still contain vital information about the planet's mineral history. "If there was organic material present there, it could have been preserved," said David Blake of NASA's Ames Research Center in Northern California. Blake is the scientist in charge of Curiosity's chemistry and mineralogy instrument.
try money said they opposed a soda tax because it was bad policy, too narrowly focused on a single factor in rising obesity rates. They also said the tax fell disproportionately on the poor. "We don't support soda taxes and things like that, any kind of grocery taxes, because we think they hurt our community more than helping," said Christina Martinez, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Hispanic Leadership Institute. Martinez said the institute, which counts PepsiCo and Coca-Cola among its sponsors, had advised local officials, including Mayor Julian Castro of San Antonio, on obesity and nutrition initiatives.
typically self-serving." While some local NAACP chapters have been members of Americans Against Food Taxes, the national NAACP, whose anti-obesity advocacy is funded chiefly by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, does not oppose soda taxes. In a resolution adopted at the group's 2010 annual convention, the NAACP hailed its partnerships with beverage companies but also cited the foundation's research showing that higher prices can drive people to eat fewer unhealthy foods. The resolution called for local chapters to pursue a range of strategiesto reduce African-Americans' consumption of p r oducts containing
Invaluable backing
added sugars. For nonprofit groups, especially those serving low-income communities,corporate grants and sponsorships can be a financial lifeline, underwritingprograms, conferences and research. And as community groups serving blacks and Latinos try to tackle rising rates of obes>ty, many of them have chosen to team up with soda makers and other food companies. Their p r eferred solutions often reflect those favored by the beverage industry: calorie labeling, nutritional education and expanded exercise programs.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5
Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
BRIEFING
Plea delayed for Bendman The manaccusedof shooting and killing his
houseguest intheearly morning hours ofFeb.4 has had his entry of plea delayed until next month. Luke Wirkkala,32, is charged with onecount of murderafter he allegedly
fired one roundfrom a12gaugepump-actionshotgun, killing David Ryder,31,
who wasvisiting Wirkkala's Bend home atthetime. Wirkkala was dueto
enter apleaTuesday,but his attorney, Terry Rahmsdorff, asked that the plea
be set overuntil April 22. Wirkkala remains in the Deschutes Countyjail without bail.
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
The city of Bend asked many of its union employees Tuesday to adopt a new system that would reward those at the top of the pay scale for putting extra effort into their jobs. City managers and the City of Bend Employees Association are in the midst of bargaining for a new contract. The current contract expires at the end of June. The City of Bend Employees Association, or COBEA, represents approximately 160 employees in the public works, f inance, information t echnology a n d community development departments.
Human resources director Rob DuValle presented the union with two proposals for the section of the contract that deals with wages. "The official proposal on the table is a (cost-of-living-adjustment) formula for three years," DuValle said. He did notdescribe the proposed costof-living raises, which were in a document presented to the union. The city and union exchanged written proposals on a variety of issues, but would not provide copies to the media. Then DuValle presented what he described as the "what if" proposal, which includes a new, simplified pay schedule. In
the first year of implementation, the schedule would result in an average pay increase of 3 percent for employees, DuValle said. Under this model, employees who reach the top of the pay schedule would be eligible for a bonus of up to 10 percent of their pay, if they demonstrated exceptional performance. The goal is to encourage union employees at the top of the pay scale to put "discretionary effort" into their jobs, and demonstrate for all employees the rewards of going above and beyond, DuValle said. The plan could also help attract talented employees to city job openings, DuValle said. SeeBargaining/B5
The manaccusedof robbing a Shari's restaurant innorth Bend and
anArco gasstation on the east side of town was
arraignedTuesdayontwo counts of tamperingwith a witness. Anthony Pastran,44, is
in DeschutesCountyjail. He and Lisa Schnittke, 39,
are chargedwith seven counts of unlawful useof aweapon,threecounts of first-degree robbery, two
counts offourth-degree assaultand one count of second-degreeassault related tothe robberies that took place inAugust
and Novemberof lastyear. Pastranisalsocharged with one count each of third-degree assault, reck-
less endangerment,methamphetamine possession andbeing afelonin possession of a firearm, after he allegedly shot Schnittke in their home in northeast
Bend inDecember. According to asearch warrant return filed March 6, deputiesatthe Deschutes Countyjail found a
series ofnotesfrom Pastran to Schnittke, several of whichmake reference to the robberiesandtesti-
monythatshe mightgive during a trial.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Pastran's nextcourtappearance isscheduled for
ouise Gaston, of Bend, takes advantage of the springlike weather Tuesday to clean out
March 26.
last year's growth from a row of white and purple irises in her yard. The temperature is
Deck flre results In llttle damage
expected to hit 63 today and 64 tomorrow before the weather turns cooler and wetter over the weekend. A complete weather forecast is on Page B6.
east Bend homewas extinguished early Tues-
day, according to the Bend Fire Department. Firefighters responded to reports of a fire at
2824 Baroness Place
SISTERS
were not home,andtotal
Voters endorserenewal ot school tax levy
damage to the deck was estimated at $200.
By Scott Hammers
just before B:30 a.m. The residents of the house
Firefighters believe a charcoal briquette barbecue started the fire.
1 hurt, 1 jailed
in allegedstabbing An altercation Monday nightat a transient camp in Bend ended with one
manhospitalizedandone in jail. Bend Police were
summoned tothe camp near the intersection of Northeast Fourth Street
and XerxesAvenueat
DA wants 2nd look at Awbrey shooting
en ro oses onus a ore rae o wo rers
Allegedrodder faces newcharges
A small fire on the wooden deck of a north-
www.bendbulletin.com/local
The Bulletin
The Sisters School District local option levy appeared headed for a comfortable victory Tuesday evening, with more than 79 percent of voters choosing to continue a property tax funding additional programs for Sisters students. As of8:45 p.m., ye s votes were outpacing no votes by a margin of 2,348 to 617, with votes from 53 percent of all eligible voters within the district counted. Winter Lewis, co-chairman of the levy campaign, said the Deschutes County Clerk's Office told him total turnout was expected to reach 62 percent. The continuation of the 75 cents per
$1,000 in assessed property value levy will provide the Sisters district with an estimated $6.8 million over the next five years. Tuesday's election marks the third time Sisters voters have renewed the levy originally approved by voters in 2000. Over the last four years, funds raised through the levy have represented approximately 9 percent of the district's operating budget. The levy has historically been used to reduce class sizes and provide all-day kindergarten, as well as funding a variety of arts and music programs. The district's Americana Project, in which students learn to build a guitar and write folk music, and the Interdisciplinary Environmental Expedition, involving a
fall trip to Middle Sister and a two-night outing to study the aquatic life of the Deschutes River in spring are both funded through the levy. Lewis said levy boosters had been "quietly optimistic" in recent weeks, but were still impressed by the wide margin in initial returns. A 2004 election to renew the levy for five years had been the previous high-water mark, garnering58 percent support according to records kept by the Clerk's Office. "We're pleasantly surprised for sure," Lewis said. "It was a big community effort, and there was a lot of personal touch to this one as opposed to just cold phone calls." SeeSisters/B5
By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin
The Deschutes County District Attorney's Office has asked the Bend Police Department to re-examine last June's fatal shooting on Northwest Awbrey Road. The Bend Police last week denied a public records request made by The Bulletin,
asking for a copy of the police investigative file into the shooting death of 33-yearold Shane Munoz. "The District Attorney has not made the decision not to prosecute, and the investigation remains ongoing," Capt. Jim Porter wrote in his denial letter. Munoz was shot in the early morning hours of June 24 at 2461 N.W. Awbrey Road, a home owned by 36-year-old Kevin Perry. Police say Perry, accompaniedby Amanda Weinman, of Eugene, arrived home to find Munoz in the living room. The door to the home had apparently been forced open. There was a struggle involving all three, according to police, and Perry shot Munoz. Perry and Weinman were both injured in the struggle. Munoz was found dead at the scene. According to a September interview with Jon Springer, Weinman's attorney, on the evening in question the couple ate at Kanpai on Newport Avenue, had drinks and returned to Perry's house on Northwest Awbrey Road in a taxi. Springer also said during the struggle Munoz bit Weinman on her chest. Perry and Weinman have not been arrested or charged with any crimes in connection with the incident. On Tuesday, Porter said the DA's office gave police a list of 20-25 questions it wants reviewed, but dedined to say what those investigative questions entailed. "We had done all we thought they wanted done," Porter said of the DA's office. "But they reviewed the case and there were additional things they wanted done." Porter said the majority of theforensic evidence has been analyzed. "We are hoping to have the investigation wrapped up within the next three to four months," he said. Springer said last summer Weinman gavepolice a full statement, participated in a walk-through of the scene, and provided authorities with her cellphone. Portland attorney Stephen Houze represents Perry and said his client spoke to authorities at the scene on the night of the shooting. In an email Tuesday, Houze wrote, "I have no information as to why the investigation is ongoing after so long a time," and noted he had not had access to the police reports. — Reporter: 541-617-7831, smiller@bendbulletin.com
7:23 p.m. Officers found Lauren Graham, 39, who had a severe cut on his left
forearm and a puncture wound on his right side
from anapparent dogbite. Investigators determined Jacob Calhoun, 29,
In er uture iest eJo o a in
had gotten into anargument with Graham and othersat the camp, and had stabbed Graham with a knife or similar weapon and ordered his dog to bite him.
Calhounwasarrested
By Megan Kehoe The BuI leti n
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS
andjailed ontwocountsof Educational news and
second-degreeassaultand unlawful useofaweapon.
activities, and local kids
Graham wastreatedatSt. Charles Bendforhis injuries. — Bulletin staff reports
and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2
When teachers see Joy Grossman coming down the hallways of Mountain View High School,they know they can count on a few things. They know they can expect a friendly smile, an upbeat attitude, and if they're lucky, a tasty treat fresh from the school's culinary classroom. "We call her 'Joyful' because she's got a great attitude and she always has a smile on herface,"Jules Schmitz, Joy's culinary teacher said. "And you can just see how
passionate she is about culinary." Joy, 17, is a Mountain View High School senior whoseplans for the future include alot of batter, frosting, sprinkles and hard work. She's chasing a big dream — she wants to own her own bakery business one day.
~qghN r
i
"Baking is just my happy place," Joy
said. "I'll be doing it until I'm too old and rickety to." Joy is going to culinary school to study pastry next year, after which she is planning to open up a pastry shop with her best friend. SeeStudent/B2
Ryan Brennecke i TheBulletin
Joy Grossman, a Mountain View High School senior, is a talented baker who plans to attend Central Oregon Community College's Cascade Culinary Institute next year. She's also a member of her high school's equestrian team.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
E VENT TODAY AN EVENINGWITH JARED PAUL: The performance poet, hip-hop artist and activist performs; followed by an open mic; $5 suggested donation;7 p.m.;The Nature of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233, info© thenatureofwords.org or www. thenatureofwords.org. CODY BEEBE 8 THECROOKS:The Seattle-based roots-rock group performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. PALEYFEST:"THEBIGBANG THEORY":A live broadcast of a Q8Awith stars and producersfrom the television comedy, "The Big Bang Theory"; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541382-6347orwww.fathomevents. com. "THE SHADOW BOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. OI'g.
KORY QUINN: The Portland-based Americana act performs, with Left
AL E N D A R Coast Country; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand,507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.
THURSDAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at Mlww.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
presents the 2012 festival winner for best documentary, followed by a Skype Q&A with director Kristy Guevara-Flanagan; $12 plus fees;7 p.m .,doors open at6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "OKLAHOMA!":The Mountain View High School music and drama departments present the story of two cowboys in 20th Century Oklahoma Territory seeking the hearts of the women they love; $8, $6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6 and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. "THE SHADOW BOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical.
THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Stitches" by David Small; free; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7084 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks" by Rebecca Skloot; free; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-3121055 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. HISTORY PUB:Local rock climber and author Alan Watts presents an illustrated talk on the history of rock climbing at Smith Rock State Park; hosted by the Jefferson County Historical Society; free; 5-7 p.m.; Great Earth Natural Foods, 46 S.W. Ol'g. D St., Madras; 541-475-1813. BROWN EDITION:TheWashingtonJAZZ CONCERT: The Central based jazz and funk act performs; Oregon Community College free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Big Band Jazz performs under Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond the direction of Andy Warr; $5 St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. suggested minimum donation; 7:30 mcmenamins.com. p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center,2600 N.W. WONDERWOMEN:THE College Way, Bend; 541-280-9371. UNTOLD STORY OFAMERICAN SUPERHEROINES:BendFilm ROLLERRUMBLERACESERIES:
Age:17,a senior at Mountain View High School
COLLEGE NOTES
Favorite Movie:"Django
The following students werenamed to the 2012fall semester dean's list at Central OregonCommunity College: Jennifer Abernathy, Kathryn Ainsworth, Dusti Akers, Troy Alfama, Lawrence Allen, Krysten AllenAlford, Elizabeth Allison, Matthew Allison, Angela Alvarez, SarahAmen, Erin Anderson, Jennifer Anderson, Cathie Apple, TamaraApple, David Ardon, Matthew Armstead, Sherrie Arsenault, Melissa Ashley, Peter Askew, Jessica Atkinson, Michelle Auker. Lisa Baertlein, Archie Bailey, Roy Baker, Catharine Baker Beardslee, Joshua Ballou, Kevin Bamer,Tina Banks, Correy Barbari, Ryly Barber, Robin Barham, ChelseaBarnes, Emma Barnes, Holly Barnett, Lisa Barnett, Sy Bartels, Christopher Barth, Jasmine Bartley, Samuel Bass,KellenBateham,Alex Bauman, Aiyanna Bearchum-Dunn, Michael Bedaywi, JoshuaBeith, SeanBell, Lillian Bemrose, Michael Benintendi, Kathline Benitez, Jill Bernard, Sherene Bernard, Jacky Berthold, Brandon Bird, Victoria Bishop, Elena Blackman, Marian Blasquez, Kay Bloking, Daniel Blood, Rachel Boatright, McKenzi Boehme, Kristina Bomberger, Isabella Bonanno, Tatiana Bonanno, LoganBorg, Lucas Boskovich, Angelica Bouska, Katie Bowens, Alice Bowerman,Jamie Bowles, Joshua Bowles, Anthony Brande, MathewBrantley, Rachel Breadon, JoeBrenner, Tyler Brewer, Connor Briggs, Atlee Brink, Toni Britt, Jason Brocius, Michael Brooks, Shannen Brouner, AmandaBrown, Austin Brown, Christopher Brown, Ethan Brown, JesseBrown, Lindsey Brown, Michael Brown, Renee Brown, Jayde Brumitt, Cheryl Bruns, Sheila Bryan, Molly Buce,Felicia Burciaga, Heather Burke, Victoria Burts, Cody Buss, Erin Butler, Cassia Buttars. Shawna Cable,Tiffani Cable, Cade Cahoon,Christina Campbell, Miranda Campbell, Lydia CampbellWhite, Dortha Campo,Gordon Cano, Barbara Cantrell, Dustin Cardot, Scott Carlile, Kevin Carlin, Linda Carlin, Alisha Carlson, TyCarlson, Shannon Carlton, Nancy Carmack, Vito Carmosino, JasonCarr, DebraCarrell, Charles Carter, Jeff Carter, Natalie Carter, Rachel Cartrette, RyanCary, PamelaCastaneda,LauraChalbeck, Lane Charley,AnnaCherry, Katelyn Chervnsik, Jackie Christensen, Kesslea Christensen, Madeline Churm, AndreaCisneros, Sally Claridge, MeganClark, AmyClasonMessina, Paul-Michael Coduti, Tara Coffe, Jessica Collins, Mikayla Collins, Trinity Combs, Lindsey Conard, Hollie Conger,ShaunConley, Lorinda Conner,Caitlin Connolly, Cody Cook,Terri Cook, Nikita Cooley, Celina Coons, Travis Coons, Travis Cooper, JohnCowin, Patricia Cowles, Matthew Cox,Caroline Crafard, Brandon Crane, Michael Crane, Tricia Creekmore, Britney Crockett, Christopher Cruz,SheenaCullins, Allie Cummins, Stefany Cunningham, Sean Cunnington, ColsonCurry, Andrew Curtis, MeganCurtis, Morgan Cyrus, William Cyrus. Amy Dach, Melanie Dale, Brock Davis, Jacob Davis,M icah Davis, Nichole Davis, Trista Davis, Burke DeBoer,Joseph DeLance,Trish Denney, JosephDennis, GayleDeroo, Lexie DeWitt, Cristopher Dickinson, Zoe Ditmore, Kevin Dodge, Michael Dolan Jr., Gabriel Dommershausen, Rene Dow,Paris Draheim, Joshua Drake, Sally Drutman, Cori Dubay, Emily Dudley, KyleDunnahoo, Carrie Dura, Aaron Duran, Yuridi Durantes, Acacia Dyer. Amanda Easterly, Mckyeli Eastland, Karen Eberle, Tim Ebersole, Galina Ebert, Yoshihito Echizenya, Camille Eckel, Melissa Egelston, Danial Eggleston, Matthew Eitel, Leslie Elliot, Taylor Ellson, James Emerson, Janice Emerson, Noelle Ensz, David Erb, ShenaErcanbrack, Cassandra Ereman, Brian Erickson, ToshaEsterman,ScottEubank, Ambra Evans. Amy Falkenrath, Brian Farmer, Lauren Fedance, Erin Fields, Madeline Fields, RebeccaFigueroa, Samuel Fisch, Sierra Fitzwater,
Boss"
Favorite Book:"The Hunger
Games" Favorite Music: The Band
Perry Hodbles:Drawing, baking
Student Contlnued from B1 She's already got the name: "Bubble Cakes," based on her nickname — derived from her bubbly personality. Joy has been in Mountain View High School's culinary
program since she was a freshman. Her love for baking started at age 13, when she started watching "Cake Boss," a reality show set at a bakery in Hoboken, N.J. "Everyone on the show always seems sohappy with what they're doing, and I could see myself doing that too," Joy said. "I found it very motivational." While she's learned to cook a variety of dishes, Joy has a passion for pastry, especially cupcakes. Every Friday dur-
ingherculinary classes'open session, she experiments with a different cupcake recipe. Mountain View teachers and administration are often the happy recipients of her creations, Joy said. Schmitz says Joy's positive attitude combined with h e r enthusiasm for culinary arts makes her one of the top students in her class. "She's one of those kids who you want to hurry up and graduate because you know they have a bright future ahead of them," Jules said. When Joy isn't in the kitchen, she can be found practicing with Mountain View High's e questrian t eam. J o y h a s owned her Arabian "Gizmo" since elementary school, and has been on the equestrian team since her sophomore
year. This year, Joy has agood shot at going to the state competition af ter pl a cing t h i rd recently in a district keyhole race, which involves running the horse at full speed, stopping before a line, and turning around abruptly to run in the other direction. "It takes a lot of control," Joy said. "It's a lot of time and work, but it's worth it." Joy doesn't know if s he'll continue with her equestrian endeavors after high school, but she is certain about her future in the culinary industry. She's planning on attending Central Oregon Community College's Cascade Culinary Institute next year, where she hopes to refine her skills in the kitchen. "My favorite part of baking is seeing how happy it makes people," Joy said. "You can express a lot of feeling through the food you make." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
FRIDAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Ellee Thalheimer talks about her book, "Cycling Sojourner: A Guide to the Best Multi-Day Tours in Oregon"; with a slide show; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina SpringsBooks,422S.W . Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. "OKLAHOMA!":The Mountain View High School music and drama departments present the story of two cowboys in 20th Century Oklahoma Territory seeking the hearts of the women they love; $8, $6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6 and younger;
7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. "THE KING OFNAPAVALLEY": Thoroughly Modern Productions andJames Leepresenttheplay about the world of California winemaking and the families involved; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m. champagne reception; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE SHADOW BOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Ol'g.
JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring a performance by TomScott and California Express; $49 plus fees in advance; 8 p.m.;TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford. com. LUKE REDFIELD:The indie-folk act performs, with Hawkmeat; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand.
SATURDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: FRANCESCA DARIMINI": Starring Eva-Maria Westbroek, Mark Delavan andMarcello Giordani in a presentation of Zandonai's masterpiece; operaperformance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18children; 9 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-382-6347. TRIUMPH FORAVREY& CASCADE LAKES SK BEERRUN:Race 5K from Triumph Fitnessto downtown Redmond, ending with anafter party at Cascade Lakes7th Street BrewHouse; registration required; proceedsbenefit Avrey Walker, ayoung girl battling cancer; $30-$35; 10a.m.; Triumph Fitness, 2757 N.W.Seventh St., Unit A, Redmond. info©triumphfit com A CELTIC JOURNEY:Featuring a performance bythe Dillon-Moore Academy of Irish Dance,with live music; $7,$4children;2 p.m .;Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541383-6290. KNOW SHAKESPEARE: BECOMING THE BARD OFAVON: Southern Oregon University professor David McCandless sharessomefascinating and surprising information about Shakespeare; free; 2p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855Venture Lane; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar.
SCHOOL NOTES
Joy Grossm an Unchained," the Harry Potter movies Favorite TV Show:"Cake
Competitors race a sprint on bikes attached to fork-mounted rollers, with music and raffles; $5 to race, $3 specta ors t ;7 p.m .,6:30 p.m . sign-up; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-2453. TODD CLOUSER'S ALOVE ELECTRIC:The rock act performs, with Mark Ransom; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand. SMASHELTOOTH:The electronic act performs, with The Pirate, Lyfe and Thumbprint Collective; free; 9 p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.slipmatscience.com.
Solomon, John Sopher, John Soules, Caitlin Sparrow, Angela Speranza, Joshua Sprague, Daniel Springer, Joshua St. Clair, Marlow Stanton, Mary Starnes, Austin Steimer, Teen feats:Kids recognizedrecently for academic School briefs:Items and announcements of Sarah Stevens, Nikkol Stewart, achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or general interest. Stefanie Stewart, Jeanelle Stone, volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Heather Storer, Sheri Storey, Jeffrey Phone: 541-633-2161 Strang, Amie Strassmaier, Jessica Phone: 541-383-0358 Email: news©bendbulletin.com Strecker, Cassandra Stubbs, Kenneth Email: youth@bendbulletin.com Stutesman, Crystal Sutphen, Jesse Student profiles:Know of a kid with a Sutton, Kailey Sutton, Cody Swartz, Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend,OR 97708 compelling storyz Tori Swearingen, Ronald Sylvester. Other schoolnotes:Collegeannouncements, Phone: 541-383-0354 Jesse Tacadena,Anthony Tallon, military graduations or training completions, Shirine Taylor, Marleny Tejada, Email: mkehoe@bendbulletin.com Alicia Tejedas, KyleTenney,Seth reunion announcements. Theroux, Linda Thompson,Valerie Phone: 541-383-0358 Thorsted, Austin Throop, Mileah Email: bulletin©bendbulletin.com Tiernan, Ciara Timm,Jennifer Timm, Janne Tolentino Jennifer Toomey Jesse Toomey, DebbieTotaro, Hailey Totorica, Michael Towner, Kym Megan Flavion, Bryan Fleetwood, Kerley, Alexis Kerns,CassieKillam, Michelle Patterson, Steffan Paul, Townsend, Jessica Treas, Mark Troxel, George Fleissner, Jacob Fletcher, James King, NolanKing,Wendi King, Hannah Pavola, RyanPayeur,Rachel David Troyer, Amanda Trumpf, Kevin Jacob Flick, Urbanie Flores, Megan Jerry Kinman,Kimberly Kinney,Anna Pearson, DuanePerrin, Megan Perry, Turley, Christina Turnipseed. Kirkpatrick, Edward Kissler, Erica Kite, Tamera Peter, Austin Peters, Amber Floyd, Wendi Forsberg, Brandon Vincent Unga. Forseth, Calder Foss, Sierra Foster, Kevin Klett, Laura Knapp,Stacy Knoke, Peterson, Stephanie Peterson, Aaron Laura Frame,ShanaFreed, Sarah Jessica Knox,John Knox,Krimsen Petit, Kathryn Pfeil, Michael Phanco, Kortney Valencia, ZoeVan Der French, Rachel Freshour, Michael Koerth, ElizabethKofford, PaulKoos, Torren Phillips, Richard Pierce,Jesse Linden Jonathan Van Vliet Emily J. Korne, ElmerKremer, Jamie Kruse, Pierzina, CameronPlatner, Eric Posner, Varco, Rachel Vargas, LaddVariel, Fuchs, Dakota Fuller. David Vaughan, HannahVieregg, William Kujawa,Shelley Kurianski. Asia Potter, JacobPotter, Katherine Camille Gaber,TaraGabriel, Levi Powers, AthenaPrindle, Marc Proctor, Justin Vilhauer, Kaylee Vincent, Colin Gagnon, Jerry Gallegos, Seanmichael Matthew Lachance, Sierra Josh Prull, DianePurkerson, Anthony Visage, Jessica Vollmer. Galloway, Sofia Gamboa,Carlos Lacock, Nathan Laflin, Angella Purkey, StevenPutnam. LaFontaine, Justin Lagrimas, Laura Jacob Walimaki-Miller, Mercedes Garcia, SkyeGardner, Sandra Garrett, TheadaGasperetti, Dalton Lamberton, Lesli Lampert, Lindsey Jason Quartucy, Christopher Quinn, Waliser, Matthew Walters, David Ward, Gates, Benjamin Gaultier, Guy Landis, ChelseaLangmas,Scott Max Quinn. Sydney Ward,Jarid Warfield, Michelle George, Walter Gerardo, Rebekah Laroche, Michael Larrabee,Matthew Warner, AndrewWarrenburg, Jesse Tyler Radabaugh,Terry Radford, Washburn, Erin Waters, Skylar Waters, Gerdes, JaredGillen, McKenzie Larraneta, Adam Latiolais, Carolina Trever Ray, Jacqueline Reber, Gillespie, Jerin Gillett, Jimmie Ginn, Laurie, Alan Lawyer, Simon Leach, Jess Watts, ZoeyWavrin, Frankie Joshua Reed,Kelly Regan, Kirsten Christina Glenn, Christopher Goelze, Michael Leavitt, Desiree Ledwith, Weeks, CathyWeigum, Andrew Wells, Rehn, Galen Reid, Tia Renee,Bobbie Tiffany Gomes,Jason Gonzales, Megan Leedom,Matthew Leifer, Kelsey Wells, EvelynWentworth, Reynolds, Danielle Reynolds, Corey Elaine Westfall, Michael Wharton, Gail Matthew Gonzales, Judith Gonzalez, Rebecca Lemke,JaimeLengele, Rice, Daniel Ridgeway,Jesse Rigel, Patricia Gonzalez, PepperGood, Debra Leonard, Megan Light, Jason Whelan, EvanWhite, Jesse White, Austin Riley, Michelle Riley, Nathan Michelle Gordon, Phil Gordon, Lindsay, Robert Line, Summer Rintala, Emily Ritchey, Daniel Roberts, Tara White, HannahWieber, Ronda Tanysha Gormley, ToddGottfried, Lisignoli, Sydney Lisignoli, Jessica Eric Roberts, Jordan Robeson,Kaycee Wiederholt, Maddison Wiese,Travis David Grady, Kristi Grant, Misty Littlefield, Summer Lloyd, Benjamin Robinson, Shari Rodmaker, Philip Roe, Wiggins, Alyssa Wilder, John Wilder, Gravem, AndrewGreenstone, Scott Loggins, Cassandra Lopez,Michael Sarah Wilder, AmandaWilliams, Thomas Rogers, Aaron Rohrbacher, Greenstone, Peter Gregg, Justin Lopez, Jacob Lorence, Lisa Lovell, Darlene Willingham, CarmelaWilson, Katharina Rolfness, Seth Rollins, Gregor, Peri Gregory, Gordon Joshua Lucero, Michele Luck, Joelle Virgil Romero, Faith Romine, Hannah Jennifer Wisniewski, Alexandra Witmeyer, Jennifer Witmeyer, Sheridan Gribling, Kate Griffin, Steven Griffin, Lund, Chris Lyons. Ronhaar, Carolynn Ross, NancyRuiz, Christopher Griffith, Amalia Grijalva, Wolfe, TessaWoods, Lisa Woolhiser, Cory Macauley,Chantelle Machau, Sandra Ruiz, Dillon Russell, Jessica Michael Groat, Richard Grotsky, Kale Woolsey, Katrina Worley, Kate Kathrine Mackenzie-Dillard, Erin Ryan, Barbara Rybarczyk. Ranni Grove, Michael Grover, Tierra Worthing, BriannaWright, Charissa MacMillan, LexeyMactaggart, Brittany Sabin, Austin Sandford, Wright, ThomasWurm. Grubbs, Giselle Gutknecht Faux. Michelle Maddox, SarahMadison, Alysha Sandstrom, Lizbeth Santana, Jennifer Hall, Britney Hallin, Paige Magee,ThomasMagill, Kristine BreanneYasi, Andrew Yeaple, Daysi Santellano, Yolanda Santellano, Thomas Hamlik, Stan Hammett, Mahurin, SeanMaielua, James Stephanie Yopp, JonYoung, Lori Anita Santoyo, Dipesh Sapkota, Angela Hammond,Janell Hamrick, Malone, PamelaManning,David Daniel Saunders,Adam Saxton,Jade Young, Michele Young,Vandy Yunker. James Hanauska, Jo AnnHand, Marnier, JansonMarshall, Thyia Scaggs, Jordan Scaggs, Benjamin Serena Zendejas,LesleeZenich, Garrett Handke,Christopher Hansen, Marshall, Bethany Martin, Chelsea Schade, Braden Schick, Chelsea Brandon Zgraggen,Larissa Zgraggen, Kelli Hansen, VivecaHanson, Martin, Marissa Martin, Trenton Schmidt, Chad Schmitt, Amber Leanna Zigelhofer, Kristi Zinniker, Benjamin Hardin, Ashly Harding, Martin, BrandonMassey,Devon Joseph Zivkovich, NicholasZollman. Schmucker, Arthur Schnaible, Brandon Hargous, Janel Harlan, Matteis, Scott Matthews, Jeremiah Corinne Schnitzer, Phillip Schreffler, Sonja Harmeson, MakenaHarris, Mattson, Daniel Maulsby,Joseph Trudie SchreinerWood, Kourtney Riley Harris, Charles Hart, Shalee Mauti, CalebMazur, Bart Mazzariello, F RI G I DLI RE Schroff, Casey Schuder, Christian Heidi McBride,Jason McBride, Hart, Lacey Hartill, HannahHaugen, Schuster, Alicia Scott, Annie Segal, Compact Owen Havac, Brynn Hayes,Jacob Randy McBride,Teri McConnell, Joseph Segalla, Alejandro Segoviano, Hayes, AngelaHaynie, Holly Hayter, BrookMcDonald,JakeMcDonald, Refrigerator Jordan Selb, Holden Sellentin, Christopher Healam, Larry Heath, Collin McElroy,CatherineMcGreevy Derrick Sellers, Ernest Shearer, Brooke Hein, Brian Heller, Briana Hanratty, CassieMcGuire, Brittany Adjustable Glass Marina Sheets, Stevie Shelton, Shelves Helmholtz, Gale Helmholtz, Ryan McKee, RyanMcMahon, Sean William Shelton, Marion Shepard, Crisper Drawer Heltemes, Robert Henderson, McNall, MichaelMcNamee,Dave Brittanie Shepherd, Lisa Shields, CheyenneHenley, Mark Henry, McNiff, Georgia McNulty, Richard Rachael Shire, Jessica Sholes, Torie Kyle Herbst, Janelle Hernandez, Mcpheeters, EvinMead,DonMedlin, Simmons, Dale Simpson, Shelby Socorro Hernandez-Orea,Sarah Alyssa Meek,RebeccaMeek,Aurora Simpson, Clifford Sleeth, Ashley Hershberger, TeresaHess, Lacey Mehlman, Catherine Mejia, Luis Smith, Drew Smith, Jackson Smith, Hice, Brian Hickey, IsaacHigdon, Mendoza, MichaelMercker,Angelique JasonSmith,JesseSmith,Joshua Bryan Hildebrandt, Mary Hildebrandt, Merentis, SabrinaMerritt, Emily Miller, Smith, Kelly Smith, Kimberly Smith, Gregory Hill, Jacklyn Hill, Josi Hill, Kathleen Miller, Marie Miller, Melanie Michelle Smith, Tyler Smith, Erin TV.APPLIANCE Derek Hines, Stacy Hippe, Kimra Miller, Melissa Miller, Misty Miller, j ohnsonbrotherstv.com Hite, Sandie Hockett, McKayla Shannon Miller, KyleMillon, Dusteen Hockman, DanielHodges,Alexander Mink, Amelia Mondry, Francessa Hogen,KathleenHoliday,Damon Moneymaker,Ashlee Morales, Kortnee R ED m O A D Holland, Jaycie Holland, Jeff Holland, Moreland, DianaMorgan, Kirstie William Holland, Michelle Holliday, Morrison, StevenMorrison, Jacklyn p ROF l c l E n c ' v Guye Holmes, Karrie Holmes, Brooke Morton, Erik Moulton, RyanMungall, Hoover, ReneeHoughton, David JasmineMurphy,JosephMurphy, Houston, Tiffany Howell, Christine Stephen Murphy,Jenna Murray, Aaron Huber, Bryce Hughes,Tracy Hughes, Mutch, CaseyMutch. 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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 'l3,2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Police nab Teen honored for courage homicide after lifesaving feat in fire suspect in Lincoln City By Lauren Gambino The Associated Press
LINCOLN CITY — Police stormed into a motel room in this seaside town Tuesday evening and captured a Washington state man suspected of killing his grandparents, ending a m u ltistate s earch a n d a tense daylong standoff at the motel. " Eve r y one's safe. No Boysen one's h u rt," said Lincoln City P olice Chief Keith Kilian. Police had spent much of the day trying to persuade Michael Boysen to surrender. After breaching the motel room door, they stormed in and captured him. Kilian said no shots were fired and Boysen offered no resistance. Kilian said Boysen had suffered from a s e l f-inflicted wound, apparently a cut. He was taken away in an ambulance. The bodies of Boysen's grandparents were found Saturday in their suburban Seattle home, a day after Boysen was released from prison and was greeted with a welcome home party. During the siege in this tourist town, police pointed rifles at the motel, fired blasts from a water cannon and used a bullhorn to try to persuade Boysen to give up. Boysen checked into the motel Monday night under his own name, but the name wasn't r ecognized until T u esday m o r n ing when a desk clerk saw a television story about the case and called the Lincoln City police, Kilian said. Boysen, 26, made threats a gainst members of h i s family and law enforcement while behind bars, Corrections Department spokesm an Chad L e w i s s a i d Tuesday. But a u thorities didn't learn of the threats until after the bodies of the grandparents were found and authorities had started looking for Boysen. " Sources went t o o u r staff at the Monroe Correctional Center and told us he had been threatening to do all this," Lewis said. T he i n f ormation w a s passed on to King County deputies, and that's why King County Sheriff John Urquhart c a lled B oysen extremely dangerous at a Monday news conference. Boysen j us t fi n i shed s erving nine m onths i n prison on a burglary conviction, Lewis said. He had no violent infractions in prison — "nothing extraordinary," Lewis said. He served a p r evious sentence between 2006 and February 2011 for four robbery convictions. Those convictions were r elated to an addiction to narcotic painkillers, Lewis said.
Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via TheAssociated Press
Marcos Ugarte, 15, will be honored as one of this year's citizen heroes by the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. Last September, Ugarte, of Troutdale, saved an 8-year-old boy from the second story of a burning house. He is the youngest winner of the award.
The Associated Press PORTLAND — A T r o u tdale teenager who climbed a ladder to rescue an 8-year-old boy from the second story of a burning house has gotten national recognition and an award for his courage. The Congressional Medal of Honor Society says Marcos Ugarte is one of four winners of this year's Citizen Service Before Self award, The Oregonian reported Tuesday. In September, Ugarte and his father, Eduardo Ugarte, heard screaming a few houses away, and they bolted out the door to help. They found a house on fire and family members outside. An 8-year-old boy had locked himself in a second-story bedroom when he spotted flames, and his father couldn't reach him. Eduardo Ugarte charged into the house to try to rescue the boy but was forced back by flames. So Marcos Ugarte grabbed a ladder,scurried to the second floor, punched out a screen window and coaxed the terrified boy out. With his father holding the ladder, Ugarte scooped his arm around the child and lowered him to safety. "I knew I couldn't mess up becausethere was a life on the line," Ugarte said. The fire caused extensive damage but no injuries. Ugarte and the three others were picked among 23 finalists nominated by police and fire officials, mayors, governors and residents. Medal of Honor recipients picked the final honorees. Ugarte is a Gresham High School freshman. He will receive the award on March 25, Medal of Honor Day, at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
AROUND THE STATE Skull fOund —Authorities in Port Orford say a humanskull has been found beneath a trailer at a mobile home park, and investigators
are trying to determine whether a crimewas committed. Police Chief Marvin Combs told KCBY-TV that crime lab staff members from the State Police were at the trailer park today to try to determine whether
more body parts are present. Combssaysthe owners of the park found the skull when they were moving a trailer on Monday. He says police consider it a death investigation, but are not calling the site a
crime scene. ChemiCal Spray —Police in St. Helens say ayoung womanand a juvenile discharged chemical spray in agrocery store last week, prompting the evacuation of about100 people. Authorities say 31
shoppers reported having trouble breathing last Wednesdayand one man was taken to ahospital after the incident at a Safeway store. St. Helens Police Chief Steven Salle said Elisha Nichols,18, of Rainier, and the juvenile were arrested Monday. Nichols was arrested for in-
vestigation of counts including assault, disorderly conduct, reckless endangerment and unlawful use of Mace. She was booked into the Columbia County Jail with bail set at $400,000. The juvenile's case
was referred to juvenile prosecutors. St. Helens is 28 miles northwest of Portland.
Dalai Lama SellOut —It took only 25 minutes Monday for the University of Oregon to sell about 3,000 general public tickets to the Dalai Lama's May10 lecture at Matt Knight Arena. UO spokesman
Phil Weiler says that's comparable to howquickly tickets sold for a 2011 Elton John performance. The Register-Guard reports close to 11,000 people will attend the Dalai Lama's first appearance in Eugene. About 3,000 tickets went to UO students last week and others went to faculty and staff and to the event co-sponsor, the Eugene Sakya Center.
Drunk driving fatality —A drunk driver who killed a womanon a Portland bridge was sentenced to10 days in jail. Kemisha Tonesha
Anderson pleaded nocontest last week in Multnomah County Circuit Court to fatality hit-and-run and driving under the influence of intoxicants. Anderson didn't realize she had hit a person when she ran over
44-year-old Dawn Iva-Maria Murray last Sept. 29 on theBurnside
Bridge. Murray had curled up in a ball in the middle of a lane of traffic. She had recently been arrested by police for standing on MAX tracks.
The Oregonian reports that Anderson canhavethe felony hit-and-run charge erased from her record if she completes drug andalcohol treatment, community service andterms of a one-year license suspension. Murder VerdiCt —A man whofatally shot his mother's boyfriend two years ago in Mt. Angel wasfound guilty of murder except for insanity. Marion County Circuit Judge Dennis Graves sentenced 31-year-old Timothy Darrow Davis on Monday to the custody of the
Oregon Health Authority. The StatesmanJournal reports the authority will determine how long Davis will be treated at the state hospital. Davis shot 54-year-old Albert Hopkins six times in the head in July
2011 as Hopkins was returning homeafter being out of state. Skatedaarder Charged —A skateboarder faces a charge of driving under the influence after a collision with a vanMondayin Salem. Police believe the 20-year-old skateboarder veered into the path of the van. The Statesman Journal reports Jacob Becker was
knocked about 20 feet andsuffered a skull fracture. He was not wearing a helmet. Becker was cited for driving under the influence of intoxicants. The 63-year-old driver of the van remained at the scene
and cooperated with investigators. — From wire reports
Biologist: Dam work helped fish
OREGON LEGISLATURE
House panelmulls bill to boost cigarette tax By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Raising c i garette taxes by $1 a pack would make it t o o e x pensive for some minors to take up smoking, public health advocates told a n O r egon l e gislative panel Tuesday in urging the increase. The House Revenue Committee heard public testimony on cigarette taxes but took no action. "Cigarettes are unsafe at any level of c o nsumption," Bud Pierce,a Salem oncologist and president of the Oregon Medical A s sociation, told the committee. "We need to take this step and move forward, do all we can to make people not s m oke. Paying more money makes people not smoke." C ritics said the tax h i k e would be particularly harmful to people with low incomes, who smoke at much higher rates than the wealthy, and to businesses that sell tobacco
Governor signsColumbia bridge bill SALEM — Oregon Gov. John Kitzhaber has signed a bill to pay
for the state's share of anewInterstate 5 bridge connecting Portland and Vancouver over the Columbia River.
The governor signed the measure on Tuesday authorizing $450 million in bonds. The money will only be spent if Washington state comes up with its own $450 million share, the federal government puts up
more than $1 billion and theU.S. Coast Guard issues a permit. Kitzhaber says this project is a priority for the state and he's hopeful Washington will pass similar legislation this year.
The governor was joined by House Speaker Tina Kotek, legislative leaders and representatives from the business community who helped get the bill through the Oregon Legislature. — The Associated Press
products. "This is an extremely regressive tax on Oregonians," said Mark Nelson, a lobbyist for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and 7-Eleven Inc., whose c onvenience stores sell about $400 million worth o f cigarettes each year i n
courage them to forego other spending that could improve their health in order to pay for their addiction, said Rep. Jason Conger, R-Bend. "I see a real moral hazard in this issue," Conger said, noting he's not opposed to pricing cigarettes out of the reach of
Oregon.
young people.
Taxing a product that people are addicted to might en-
At $1.18 a pack, Oregon's tobacco tax ranks 29th in the
country and below the national average of $1.49, said Colleen H e r mann-Franzen, advocacy and c o mmunications manager at the American Lung Association. The tax hike would discourage children from smoking and would a lso encourage some adults to quit smoking or smoke fewer cigarettes, she said. "We're going to see their health o u tcomes i m p rove, we're going to see their quality of life improve too," HermannFranzen said. Because it raises revenue, an increase in the cigarette tax would r equire support from three-fifths of the House a nd Senate, w hich w o u l d require bipartisan s upport in th e D e mocrat-controlled Senate. Rep. Vicki Berger, of Salem, the top Republican on the Revenue committee, told The Associated Press that the measure would be a tough sell among Republicans.
The Associated Press PENDLETON — Research ontheUmatillaRiverinnortheast Oregon shows fixing irrigation dams has allowed more protectedsteelhead and salmontopassthrough. The East Oregonian says biologist Craig Contor of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation recently delivered a report on the work. Contor says adding rocks in the river and cleaning out gravel in fish ladders helped the fish. He says nearly 1,000 fish havebeentaggedwithtracking devices since 2009, and nearly all made it through the spawning system.
E LEVATIO N
Mountain Medical Immediate Care 541-388-7799
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:15 a.m. March 1, in the 1800 block of Northwest Hill Point Drive. DUII —Thayne Owens, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:35 p.m. March 4, in the area of Southeast Third Street and Southeast Reed Market Road. Criminal mischief —An act of
criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 7:14 p.m. March 6, in the 900 block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. DUII —Kevin James Hurzeler, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:50 p.m. March 7, in the1000 block of Northwest Galveston Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest made at 5:40 p.m. March 8, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. DUII —Brian Scott Anderson, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:13 p.m. March 8, in the area of Northeast11th Street and Northeast Greenwood Avenue. DUII —Tyler Mitchell Billow, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:55 a.m. March 9, in
the 61100 block of Benham Road. Theft —A theft was reported at12:18 p.m. March10, in the 1500 block of Northwest Baltimore Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:34 p.m. March10, in the 2200 block of Northeast Tucson Way. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 6:11 a.m. March 11, in the 100 block of Southwest Scalehouse Loop. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:41 a.m. March11, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 9:48a.m. March11, in the100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:59 p.m. March 11, in the area
Elevation Capital Strategies 400 SW BluA Drive Suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
1302 NE 3rd SWend of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Greenwood Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:14 p.m. March11, in the 400 block of Northeast Third Street.
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REDMOND POLICE DEPARTMENT
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Theft —A theft was reported at 5:52 p.m. March10, in the 300 block of Northwest OakTree Lane.
BEMD FIRE RUNS Monday 7:16a.m. — Natural vegetation fire, 63736 Paramount Drive. 11:38 a.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 254 N.W. Jefferson Place. 7:53p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 19998 Alderwood Circle. 16 —Medical aid calls.
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THE BULLETIN•WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 20'I3
The Bulletin
EDITORIALS
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a Pine, like Bend, Redmond and Madras, sits on both sides of U.S. Highway 97. Unlike its larger cousins, however, there's no traffic light in La Pine to make it easier and safer to move from one side of the highway to the other. A bill before the Oregon Legislature would help make that happen. House Bill 3130, sponsored by Reps. Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, and M ik e M c L ane, R-Powell Butte, would give counties the ability to tap into their Industrial Development Revolving Funds to finance a portion of the cost of traffic signals, including one at the intersection of the highway and First Street in La Pine. It's a sensible change.
were reported in a recent 10-year period. Twenty-eight injuries resulted from those collisions. All three La Pine schools lie on the northwest side of the city, and the First Street-97 intersection is the closest highway crossing point for cars, buses and pedestrians. A light would make navigating the intersection safer for all three groups. Deschutes County asked WhisIn La Pine's case, the light nant and McLane to introduce the would make the city's industrial legislation an d C o m missioner park easier to reach from both Alan Unger argues that it makes the highway and the west side of sense to use county, not city, town. Currently about 6,000 vehi- funds for the project because the cles drive through the intersection city is so small and so new. The daily. Without a light, new busi- city could be asked to contribute, ness cannot locate at the park be- however. cause it would mean added traffic La Pine would not be the only for an already busy intersection. community to benefit from the It's that problem that makes it reachange. Street lights are expensonable to use county industrial sive, but they can be critical to development funds for the light. drawing new industry to a comThe light would make the in- munity. Allowing a county's intersection safer, as well, industry dustrial development funds to or no. There were four collisions be used for traffic control makes at the intersection in 2010, and 25 sense.
The case for needing Big Brother By Charles Kenny
Bill on teacher cuts doesn't go far enough eacher cuts are bad enough the state's largest teacher organifor Oregon school districts. zation, the Oregon Education AsChoosing who gets cut based sociation, also largely supports it. only on seniority can make mat- The OEA wants the definition of ters worse. competency tweaked so it does not When Beaverton School Dis- penalize teachers who took time trict cut 350 teachers last year, it off to raise a child or had to move only looked at seniority and which because of layoffs. teachers were licensed to teach in Butwhile Greenlick'sbill is good new positions. enough, it doesn't go far enough. It ended up with economics Competence is about experiteachers teaching P.E. and history teachers instructing algebra, Sa- ence. It's about years of work. It's lem's Statesman Journal reported. about training. That's crazy. Those are undo u btedly important. State Rep. Mitch Greenlick, DPortland, thought so, too, and he But the bill does not require that has proposed HB 2692 to change school districts consider a teacher's what criteria districts must use. relative effectiveness — in other The bill requires schools to con- words, how good a teacher is, relasider "competence." tive to another teacher. Specifically, the bill would reWhy not? quire that school districts "may not There is nothing about senioragree in any collective bargaining agreement to waive the right to ity or this bill's measure of comconsider competence in making petence that means that the best decisions about the order of reduc- teacher winds up in the classroom. tion in staff or recall of staff." The bill doesn't touch effectiveThat's a good change. ness and that makes it of question-
T
And what's encouraging is that
able effectiveness.
WASHINGTON — Hold on, Mr. Orwell. A bit of attention from Big Brother can be a good thing. For those of us who've spent hours in line at the department of motor vehicles or forked over a couple hundred bucks to get a passport, it may be difficult to appreciate the joys of government-issued i d entification. Even worse is the very real fear that nefarious government agencies will use this information to track and monitor citizens. Yet nearly all of us still carry IDs. Driver's licenses, social security cards, passports and birth certificates are vital in the modern world. If you want to open a bank account, buy a house, claim pension payments, vote, drive, or travel across a border, you need a recognized, legal identification. This is a good thing. Now consider that hundreds of millions of people worldwide have absolutely no legal ID, which keeps them in the shadows of the global economy. According to U N ICEF, 98 percent ofpeople in rich countries have birth certificates, while 40 percent of children in the developing world are not registered at birth — and the proportion grows even higher in poorer parts of the world. In South Asia, for instance, nearly two out of three births went unregistered at the turn of the century. Try claiming legal title to the land your family has farmed for generations if, officially, you don't even exist. And forget about opening a bank account. Under anti-moneylaundering "know your customer" laws, people without IDs are stuck stuffing money in the mattress.
Then there are fake IDs. No, not your teenage daughter's. I'm talking about the millions of people around the world who knowingly have multiple "legal" identifications, which they use to cheat lax governments out of billions of dollars each year in pensions,payments, and services. That costs you money — another reason to embrace Big Brother. For all the justifiable concerns, the bottom line is that the rapid global spread today of more robust ID systems — powered by new technologies that use high-tech personal features from fingerprints to brain waves — is great news. Much of this new spate of innovation is taking place in the developing world, where the most people stand to benefit. From Brazil to South Africa, governments have access to a growing number of biometric identity techniques: fingerprints, facial recognition, iris and retinal scans, voice and vein patterns, and others. A new study by Alan Gelb and Julia Clark of the Center for Global Development (CGD) reports that more than 1 billion people in developing countries have already had their biometrics taken over the past few years. The most ambitious scheme is in India, which is in the midst of biometrically identifying its 1.2 billion residents. It has already registered 200 million citizens, using 10 fingerprints and two iris scans each. Biometric techniques have the advantage of producing identifying markers that are more difficult to forge and more secure from errors than traditional approaches. They are also comparatively cheap
(around $5 per person) and don't rely on language or literacy skills. That has made them not only fair but an incredibly cost-effective tool to ensurepayments and services are given to the right people — and only the right people. Ghana, for example, now mandates that payments for government employees aremade into "e-zwich n bank accounts, verified by fingerprints. More than 300,000 people were enrolled into the system in its first year. Given the scale of the ghost-worker problem i n G h a na — in 2011 morethan 29,000 names on the country'spayroll were reported to be unaccounted for, meaning salaries were being paid to staff members who didn't exist — Gelb and Clark estimate that the e-zwich system paid for itself in a matter of months. Biometrics are also being used to confirm eligibility fo r h e alth coverage, update patient logs, and confirm adherence to t r eatment regimes. Healthworkers are using fingerprints to ensure that people finish tuberculosis treatments in New Delhi, and in South Africa to check that patients are taking their antiretroviral AIDS treatments. These are valid concerns, and new IDs must be accompanied by realchecks and balances to prevent government abuse. For most of the developing world, however, the benefits — access to jobs, protection, and government services — outweigh the risks. — Charles Kenny is a fellow at the Center for Global Development and author, most recently, n of nGetting Better,
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The real innovators won't be found on magazine covers t spend some time hunting for new column ideas on theconference circuit. When you are on that circuit, you are perpetually under the ilIusion that you are hearing from the exciting, fresh people who are about to change history. You're hearing from, say, the brilliant technology entrepreneur Shai Agassi, who is starting a paradigmshifting electric car company. You're hearing from some wizard with a new solar-panel technology, or some new social-networking entrepreneur. My main impression over the past five years is that the conference circuit capitalists who give fantastic presentations have turned out to be marginal to history while the people who are too boring and unfashionable to get invited to the conferences in the first place have actually changed the world under our noses. Shai Agassi's company, Better Place,for example, has generated glowing magazine profiles, but it has managed to lose more than $500 million while selling astoundingly few cars. He stepped down as the chief executive, and his replacement lasted
only a few months. It turns out that the things that are sexy to politicians and paradigm-shifting to conference audiences are not necessarily attractive to consumers. Meanwhile, the anonymous drudges atAmerican farming corporations are exporting $135 billion worth of products every year and transforming the American Midwest. The unfashionable executives at petrochemical companies have been uprooting plants from places like Chile, relocating them to places like Louisiana and transforming economic prospects in the Southeast. Most important of all, the boring old oil and gas engineers have transformed the global balance of power. By 2020, the United States will overtake Saudi Arabia as the world's largest oil producer, according to the International Energy Agency. The U.S. has already overtaken Russia as the world's leading gas producer. Fuel has become America'slargest export item. Within five years, according to a study by Citigroup, North America could beenergy independent."OPEC will find it challenging to survive another 60 years, let alone another
+,"]
D A V ID BROOKS
decade," Edward Morse, Citigroup's researcher, told CNBC. All of this was accomplished by people who exist largely beyond the reach of the lavalier-mike circuit. Joel Kotkin identified America's epicenters of economic dynamism in a study for the Manhattan Institute. It is like a giant arc of unfashionableness. You start at the Dakotas where unemployment rates are at microscopic levels. You drop straight down through the energy belts of the Great Plains until you hit Texas. Occasionally, you turn left to touch the spots where fertilizer output and other manufacturing plants are on the rebound, like the Third Coast areas in Louisiana, Mississippi and Northern Florida. Vanity Fair still ranks the tech and media moguls and calls it The New Establishment, but, as Kotkin notes, the big winners in the current econ-
omy are the "Material Boys," the people who grow grain, drill for fuel and
lay pipeline. The growing parts of the
world, meanwhile, are often the commodity belts, resource-rich places with good rule of law like Canada, Norway and Australia. Daniel Yergin, an energy guru, noted in congressional testimony last month that the revolution in oil and gas extraction has Ied to 1.7 million new jobs in the United States alone, a number that could rise to 3 million by 2020.The shale revolution added $62 billion to federal revenues in 2012. At the same time, carbon-dioxide emissions are down 13 percent since 2007, as gas is used instead of coal to generate electricity. Most of us have grown up in a world in which we assumed that energy was scarce, or even running out. We could now be entering a world of relativelycheap energy abundance. Most of us have grown up in a world in which oil states in the Middle East could throw their weight around because of their grip on the economy's life source. But the power of petro-states is on the wane. Yergin
argues that the oil sanctions against Iran may not have been sustainable if not for the new alternate sources of
supply.
We've grown accustomed todespoticregimes in Russia and Venezuela that live off oil and gas wealth. But those regimesare facing hard times, too. Gazprom is a lready offering roughly 10 percent discounts on existing contracts. The Nigerians and Venezuelans may find it hard to compete. People in China and elsewhere are wondering if the fracking revolution means that the 21st century will be another North American century, just like the last one. What are the names of the people who are leading this shift'? Who is the SteveJobs of shale? Magazine covers don't provide the answers. Whoever they are, they don't seem hungry for celebrity or good with the splashy projectlaunch. They are strong economically, but they are culturally off the map. This r e volution w i l l n o t be plenaried. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Norma R. WareingFaddis, of Tumalo
Lucille L. Horlacher, of Bend
Nov. 21, 1949 - Mar. 10, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at
Feb. 17, 1919 - Mar. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds, 541-382-2471. Please visit the online registry at
www.niswonger-reynolds.com
www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A celebration of her life will be held Fri., Mar. 15, 2013 at 1:00 PM in the Bend Elks Lodge, 63120 Boyd Acres Rd.
Services: Grave side service Friday, March 15, 2013 at Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend, Oregon.
Contributions may be made to:
Avrey Walker fund at any Wells Fargo bank, Account ¹669202571 8, or go to http://www.caringbridge.o rg/visit/avreywalker.
Orvis 'Jim' Leon Meston, of Redmond July 30, 1935 - March 9, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond, 541-504-9485. Services: A private service will be held. Contributions may be made to: Redmond Humane Society
Phyllis Marie Lister Ticoulat, of Bend Nov. 10, 1924 - Mar. 11, 2013 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: Prineville Presbyterian Church, 1771 NW Madras Hwy., Prineville, Oregon, March 16, 2013 at 1:00pm.
Terry "Dutch" L. Smith, of La Pine (Formerly of Tillamook) Nov. 8, 1958- Mar. 7, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family service will be held in Tillamook at a later date.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
By David Rising
Fellowship Bible Church, 61215 Brosterhous Rd., Bend, OR 97702.
BERLIN — Ewald-Heinrich von Kleist, the last surviving member of the main plot to kill Adolf Hitler and who once volunteered to wear a suicide vest to assassinate the Nazi dictator, has died. He was 90. Von Kleist's wife, Gundula von Kleist, said her husband died at his home in Munich on Friday. Von Kleist was born July 10, 1922, on his family estate Schmenzin in Pomerania in an area of northeastern Germany that is today Poland. T he vo n K l e ist f a m ily was a long line of Prussian landowners, who had served the state for centuries in high-ranking military an d a d m i nistrative positions. Von K l e i st's fa t h er, Ewald von Kleist, was an early opponent of H i tler even before he came to power, and was arrested many times after the Nazi d ictator took c ontrol i n 1933. The elder von Kleist famously traveled to England in 1938, the year before World War II broke out, to try and determine whether o t her W e stern nations w o ul d s u p port a coup attempt against H itler, but f a iled t o g et the B r itish g o vernment t o change its p o licy o f appeasement. Despite h i s fam i l y 's opposition to t h e N a zis, younger von Kleist joined the German army in 1940, and was wounded in 1943 in fighting on the Eastern Front. During h i s c o n valescence, he was approached in January 1944 by Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, a nother officer from a n a ristocratic f a mily, a n d presented with a plan to kill Hitler. Von Kleist had b een chosen as th e o f ficer to model a new uniform for Hitler, and von Stauffenberg pro p o sed that he wear a suicide vest underneath, and detonate it when he stood next to the dictator. The suicide attack plan never came to fruition. Months later, however, von Kleist was approached again by von Stauffenberg to take part in what would become known as the July 20 plot — for the day in 1944 that the assassination was attempted. Von Kleist was supposed to play a key role as the person who was to carry a briefcasepacked with explosives to a meeting with Hitler. In a change of plans, however, von Stauffenberg decided to plant the bomb himself. Von Stauffenberg placed the bomb in a conference r oom where H i tler w a s meeting with his aides and military advisers at his East Prussian hea d quarters. Hitler escaped the full force of the blast when someone moved the briefcase next to a table leg, deflecting much of the explosive force. Von Kleist remained in Berlin, charged with overseeing the arrest of officers and officials loyal to Hitler in the city. But when news spread that Hitler had survived, the plot crumbled and von Stauffenberg, von Kleist's father, and scores of others were arrested and executed in an orgy of revenge killings. Some were hanged by the neck with piano wire. Von Stauffenberg was shot
Oliver 'Ollie' Roosevelt Van Cise Jufy14, 1921 - March 8, 2013 Born on July 14, 1921, in Summit, New Jersey, Ollie was the youngest of seven children. A lifetime Presbyter ian, he attended v ille C o l lege in Tenness ee, a n d served his Ollie Van Cise c o u n try i n t he A r m y during World War II. O liver m a r r ie d T h e l m a 'Tally' Bettencourt in 1946, the beginning of 5 9 y e ars together. A teacher an d g u i dance c ounselor for 3 9 y e ars i n C hatham T o w nship, O l l i e w as also an a vi d an d a c complished t e nnis p l a y er and worked at Forest Lake Camp every summer for 30 years. A fter r etiring, O l li e a n d T ally r el o c a te d fr om B asking Ri dge, Ne w J e r sey to Bend, where he will always be remembered for his contagious smile, wonderful sense of humor and magnificent puns. H e is s u r vived b y t h e i r children, G l e n n J. V an Cise and Lynn M a rie V an C ise; his w i fe, T ally, p r eceded him in death.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Sybil Christopher, 83: Perhaps best-known outside of show business as the woman Richard Burton left to marry Elizabeth Taylor,. Christopher became a t heater producer and nightclub founder. The Welsh-born Christopher was Sybil Burton when Richard Burton, her first husband, left her for Taylor in 1963. Two years later,she founded the club Arthur, which became a celebrity hangout. In 1991, she founded the Bay Street Theater with two partners and was its artistic director for 22 years. Died Thursday in New York City. Dorothy DeBolt, 89: Adoption advocate who, with her husband, Bob, reared 20 children — six biological and 14 adopted. Their family was the subject of a documentary that won an Academy Award in 1977. She and her husband later founded a nonprofit adoption agency for special needs children based in O akland, Calif. Died Feb. 24 in El Cajon, Calif. Princess Lillian Craig, 97: W idow of P r i nce Bertil o f Sweden, and a pr incipal in a royal drama that ended a centuries-old custom that held that royalty could not marry commoners without penalty. Craig was the prince's lover for 33 years until the couple
Von I(leist last survivor ot 1944 plot to kill Hitler
Contributions may be made to:
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
FEATURED OBITUARY
was finally allowed to marry by Swedish King Carl Gustaf, who had succeeded his grandfather in 1973.She became Princess Lillian. Her husband died in 1997. Craig died Sunday in Stockholm. Arthur Storch, 87:An exacting stage director who found success on Broadway and later became a forcein regional theater. Storch once asked Eugene Ionesco to r e w rite
a play and goaded a young Aaron Sorkin to work harder. Storch's successes on Broadway included 1964's "The Owl and the Pussycat," 1965's "The Impossible Years," and 1976's "Tribute." He also directed experimental o f f - Broadway works and later founded the Syracuse Stage, an influential regional company. Died Tuesday in New York City. Roy Brown, 96: Designer of the Edsel, perhaps the most flamboyant failure i n a utom otive history. Brown w a s assigned by Henry Ford II in the 1950s to design a mediumpriced car that would be distinctive. But the car flopped with the public and ended up costing Ford $250 million before it was discontinued in 1960. Brown later redeemed himself by designing the Ford Cortina, which became the cmopany's top seller in Britain, and the Econoline van. Died Feb. 24 in Ann Arbor, Mich. — From wire reports
The Associated Press
by firing squad. Von Kleist himself was arrested and q uestioned at length by the Gestapo, and sent to a concentration camp, but then inexplicably released and returned to combat duty.
Scouts surveymembers about li ing ban ongays By Nigel Duara The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Faced with a backlash against its ban on gays, Boy Scouts of America issurveying its members on a potential change in policy. A questionnaire distributed to 1.1 million adult Scouts uses fictional situations to discern w h er e S c outing's membership fallson questions of homosexuality, gays camping with children and gays in church leadership. It allows adult Scouts to indicate arange of feelings,from strong support to strong opposition to the ban on gays. Some questions are direct queries of the respondent's feelings on h o mosexuality and children. "Bob is 15 years old, and the only openly gay Scout in a Boy Scout troop," the survey begins its third question. "Is it acceptable or unacceptable for the troop leader to allow Bob to tent with a heterosexual boy on an overnight
Asamplingof surveypuestions Boy Scouts of America is surveying its members on apotential change in its policy banning gayScout leaders and members. Here are some of the questions distributed to1.1 million adult
Scouts: • Tom started in the program as a Tiger Cub, and finished every requirement for the Eagle Scout Award at16 years of age. At his board of review Tom reveals that he is gay. Is it acceptable or unacceptable for the review board to deny his Eagle Scout award based on that admission?
• What is your greatest concern if the policy remains in place and openly gayyouth and adults are prohibited from joining Scouting? • David, a Boy Scout, believes that homosexuality is wrong. His troop is chartered to a church where the doctrine of that faith
also teaches that homosexuality is wrong. Steve, anopenly gay youth, applies to be amember in the troop and is denied membership. Is it acceptable or unacceptable for this troop to deny Steve membership in their troop? • A gay male troop leader, along with another adult leader, is
taking a group of boys on acamping trip following the youth protection guidelines of two-deep leadership. Is it acceptable
or unacceptable for the gayadult leader to take adolescent boys on an overnight camping trip? • If the Boy Scouts of America makes a decision on this policy that disagrees with your own view, will you continue to participate in the Boy Scouts, or will you leave the
organization? — The Associated Press
camping trip'?" But the majority of the 13question survey is more nuanced, including two openended questions about the impact of either banning or allowing gay members. Many of the questions indicate scenarios that would likely arise should the ban on gays be lifted. For instance, should the lesbian mother of a T i g er Cub be allowed to serve as den leader if the pack is chartered to a church that teaches t hat homosexuality i s n o t wrong? Should a gay youth minister be allowed to serve as a Scoutmaster? Should a boy with the qualifications for Eagle Scout be denied the award if he reveals he's gay at his board review? After the theoretical situations are posed, the survey then again asks respondents about their feelings on gays in Scouting. The Scouts provided the survey by email Tuesday morning to The Associated Press. Long the province of a strict anti-gay policy t h at went so far as to put members found to be gay in the organization's secret "perversion" files, Scouting has now generally evolved into
a sort of "don't-ask, don'ttell" policy concerning its membership — even if the "don't-tell" aspect means the national leadership has had to ignore news accounts of its troops publicly declaring their refusal to abide by the ban on gays. That's already happening in some branches ofthe organization, including troops in M i n nesota, C a l ifornia and Massachusetts, but few troops are eager to publicize their positions, which could end with the troop losing its charter for breaking with the central Scouts office. The survey introduces the possibility of acknowledging thosedifferences. "Different organizations that charter Boy Scout troops have different positions on the morality of homosexuality," the survey said. "Do you support or oppose allowing charter organizations to follow their own beliefs when selecting Boy Scout members and adult leaders, if that means there will be different standards from one organization to the next'?" The survey questions are
part of a semi-annual survey called The Voice of The Scout. It was distributed via email to r e gistered volunteers and parents of Scouts of whom th e o rganization had emailaddresses. Scouts alumni will receive the surveys in "the next couple of days," said Scouts spokesman Deron Smith. Current Boy Scoutsweren't sent these questions. The questions were developed by North Star Opinion Research, a Virginia research firm that says it serves political, corporate and nonprofit clients. "We are currently in the 'Listening Phase,' where the BSA's committees engage key stakeholders for input and develop a summary report," Smith said in an email. "Part of this process is to survey a varietyof key stakeholders." Smith said the Irving, Texas-based organization convened a committee in 2010 made up of professional and volunteer Scouts to review the gay ban. After two years of research, Smith said the committee decided to maintain the policy.
state officials planharder One hurt when bargaining for office space SUV crashes The Associated Press SALEM — Oregonofficials say bargaining with l andlords over state office space is about to get hard-nosed. The S alem S t atesman Journal reports that c onsultants estimate the state could save tens of millions if it bargained better for rental space. A 24-member state group of state a g ency l e aders called the Enterprise Leade rship Team ha s s ent a memo to state agencies tell-
ing them to stop whatever lease negotiations they had
into restaurant
in progress.
The Associated Press
One member of the team says the idea is to stop just renewing leases and then demand better terms and hope to spur competition among landlords. In the Salem area, home of the s t ate C apitol, t he state leases about 1.2 million square feet of privatelyowned office space — about 2 5 percent o f t h e l o c a l market.
L AKE OSW EG O — A fire official i n t h e P ortland suburb of Lake Oswego says a teenage driver b acked an SU V i n t o a restaurant, damaging the front porch and entry way but causing only one minor
injury. Deputy F ir e M a r shal Gert Zoutendijk said there were only n in e c ustomers in th e small r estaurant Tuesday afternoon. One suffered a minor arm
injury.
Sisters Continued from B1 Lewis said supporters approached the campaign as a chance to engage voters in a wide-ranging discussion of how the district operates. "When they had questions and concerns about the way the district is doing things,
Bargaining
Casa Del Pollo owner we took this as an opportunity to pull everyone in to the conversation," he said. "... that was the theme of the entire campaign and I think that's reflected in the number of yes votes we got. I think people felt they were heard." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersC<bendbulletin.com
hybrid system." Lawyer David Snyder, who Continued from B1 representsthe union, said he The city conducted market needed time to compare the researchto determine wheth- city's "what if" pay scheder it i s p a ying employees ule to the official proposal. close to what they would earn Snyder described the c ity for the same job at another proposal as "impressive," but employer. DuValle said he did added that the union would not think the city found any have some concerns about instances where COBEA-rep- the idea. resented employees are curIf the city has a tight budrently paid above the market get year, it could decide not rate for their work. to award the additional pay "We realize in the public to employees who performed sector pay forperformance exceptionally well, Snyder systems are not prevalent," said. "So it could be an empty DuValle said. "What the city promise." is attempting to do is create a Also, Snyder said, "as soon
Jorge Zuniga says he's very glad nobody was sitting near the front door. The fire official says the unidentified driver hit the building "at a significant
speed." A construction company was called to help shore up the building and secure it until repairs can be made.
as you start talking about merit o r e x ceptional pay, you run into concerns about favoritism." However, Snyder said the union would not dismiss the proposal out of hand. DuValle said a p a y-forperformance system would have checks and balances, and t h e d e c ision a b o ut whether to reward an employee would not be left to a single supervisor. The city and COBEA have not scheduled their next bar-
gaining session. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
B6
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
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• Burns Riley 62734
•
Roseburg
57/44
Silver I.ake
60I29
Port Orfor 56/44 0
71/39
•
• Beach 57746
+
64/34
65/38
Freochgle 70/38
Rome
67/36
rants~ Pass
• 69 0 Medford • 24 0 Burns
7H37
Paisley
Chiloquin
MedfOrd
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
Christmas Valley
Chemult
69/46
69/41
66/37
• 72/41
• Klamath
• Brookings
Fields•
• Lakeview
Falls 6/ns
59/46
McDermitt
69/43
68/39
7i/34
i-.l.tih S' g Q/46
•
i » 4 / )3 xx,
Sa s katoon h Wjnnjpe t
.
(in the 48 contiguous states):
10s Thunder Bay
o
~
•
„-w w 39 w + xt xt ts xt +
'Halifax 46/43
xt +
Thermal, Calif. 30
Yellowstone N.P. Wyo.
I Des Moines. 35/28 Ch;cago
56/35 •
Sao Francisco
•
Columbus
• 3.45 w
52/32
iladelphia 50/31
Quillayute, Wash
%82/58
• gi ~
Honolulutob, 78/64
7n O
60S
905 o 89/62 Tijuana 79/SS
s,~
4LV34 I St. Louisg fA 42/31 ~ 40S
I
Los Angeles5,xw
Charlotte
. I Little Rock B.
Vl
6S/47I
H AW A I I •
Chihuahua
os
• Miami 79/57
Os
-0
La Paz 76/59
Anchorage 24/14
stg105
4/45
New Orleans
72/46
~Os
•
2OS
Monterrey 77/53 •
M a z atlan o 78/68
Juneau 24/13
~A LAS KA
CONDITIONS FRONTS
o 4 •
:++++ ++++'
t
W++ t
Cold
S K IREPORT
for solar at noon.
3
Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 78 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 75 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .78-118 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .113-120 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . 106 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......62-69 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 145
IJIUM HIGH 4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires.
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .38-95
Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Aspen, Colorado..... . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . 44-46 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0....100-200 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .55-70 Squaw Vagey,California...... . 0 0 . . . . .28-109
Hwy. 20 at Saotiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
YesterdayWednesdayThursday YesterdayWedoesdaythursday YesterdayWedoesdayrhursday YesterdayWednesdayrhursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......70/49/0.00...70/47/s .. 76/48/s Grand Rapids....35/30/0.03 ..32/20/sn. 37/24/pc RapidCity.......42/23/000..64/39/pc. 69/39/pc Savannah.......74/63/008... 66/37/s.. 62/39/s Akron..........41/34/000 ..34/18/sn.34/25/pc GreenBay.......31/26/0.00..31/12/pc. 35/23/pc Reuo...........72/32/0.00...75/38/s. 75/39/pc Seattle..........55/50/0.03... 58/47/r. 59/46/sh Albany..........54/41/081..45/23/pc..33/20/c Greensboro......65/54/076..50/27/pc..50/32/s Richmond.......70/55/0.77 ..55/30/pc.. 52/31/s Sioux Falls.......29/25/0.00 .. 32/27/pc. 46/30/pc Albuquerque.....66/35/000... 67/41/s .. 72/44/s Harusburg.......55/44/0 65...46/29/c. 39/29/pc Rochester, NY....48/37/0.19.. 38/22/sn.31/23/sn Spokane........55/39/0.01 ..59/43/sh. 60/42/sh Anchorage......32/22/000 ..24/14/pc. 28/17/pc Hartford,CT.....55/46/090 ..52/29/pc .. 39/18/c Sacramento......75/43/000...80/49/s. 79/48/pc Springfield, MO ..53/26/000...48/32/s. 64/42/pc Atlanta.........67/40/1.09...54/29/s .. 57/36/s Helena..........48/20/0.00 ..60/36/pc. 57/40/pc St. Louis.........52/30/000... 42/31/s.59/37/sh Tampa..........69/59/030...73/45/s.. 67/42/s Atlantic City.....55/51/072 ..51/31/pc.44730/pc Honolulu........79/68/000...78/64/s .. 78/66/s Salt Lake City....58/40/000...61/38/s .. 67/42/s Tucson..........83/44/000...85/50/s .. 89/53/s Austin..........78/31/0.00... 73/43/s. 76/44/pc Houston ........73/36/0.00... 73/47/s .. 74/52/5SanAntonio.....79/38/000... 74/47/s. 76/48/pc Tulsa...........61/33/000 ..57/40/pc.. 74/46/s Baltimore.......58/47/063...50/32/c.45/36/pc Huntsvile.......55/32/0.00...51/27/s. 57/38/pcSanDiego.......7150/0.00... 75/58/s.. 75/55/s Washington,DC.60/48/0.83... 50/31/c. 45/33/pc Billings.........48/22/000..65/39/pc. 64/39/pc Indianapolis.....44/31/0.00..35/24/pc.. 43/31/c SanFrancisco....67/46/0.00... 70/49/s.66/48/pc Wichita.........$5/38/0.00.. 58/37/pc.. 70/44/s Birmingham.....59/32/0.00... 54/30/s. 57/39/pc Jackson, MS.... 64/33/0.00... 59/34/s .. 63/41/s SanJose........70/46/000 .. 80/50/s 74/48/s Yakima.........68/38/000 67/42/pc .. 65/41/c Bismarck........26/19/001 ...46/31/c. 50/25/pc Jacksonvile......68/59/003...70/36/s .. 60/36/s SantaFe........61/28/0.00... 62/32/s .. 67/39/s Yuma...........87/55/0.00... 93/59/s .. 96/60/s Boise...........64/35/000 ..69/43/pc. 70/41/pc Juneau..........33/30/000 ..24/13/pc. 25/15/pc INTERNATIONAL Boston..........53/39/005 ..52/32/pc .. 40/26/c KansasCity..... 46/28/trace...48/34/s. 65/40/pc Budgeport,CT....52/46/080 ..50/31/pc. 41/24/pc Lansing.........35/30/001 ..31/18/sn. 37/24/pc Amsterdam......34/23/0 00 41/29/sh 38/25/pc Mecca.........1 04/73/000 96/75/s .. 96/76/c Buffalo.........42/34/006 ..37/22/sn. 30/23/pc LasVegas.......77/50/000... 82/58/s .. 85/60/s Athens..........68/55/0.00..64/56/pc .. 62/50/c Mexico City .....81/48/000 68/44/sh58/41/sh Burlington,VT....54/41/1.00..41/22/sn. 30/16/sn Lexington.......49/35/000...38/24/c.. 46/33/s Auckland........79/59/000 ..72/64/pc.73/59/pc Montreal........45/36/031 .. 39/23/rs. 27/I8/pc Caribou,ME.....45/36/0.12..43/28/sh.. 33/21/c Lincoln..........35/14000 ..41/30/pc. 59/37/pc Baghdad........78/53/000..90/66/pc. 92/67/pc Moscow........25/2/000..19/10/sn. 30/13/su CharlestonSC...73/64/007...65/36/5.. 61/37/s Little Rock.......65/33/000...57/35/s. 65/45/pc Bangkok........95/82/0.00 ..101/80/s. 100/79/s Nairobi.........84/61/0.00... 80/57/s .. 80/57/s Charlotte........70/57/0 72... 54/28/s .. 51/32/s LosAngeles......60/50/000...74/5is .. 74/59/s Beiyng..........45/37/016 ..44/33/pc. 46/34/pc Nassau.........79/68/000 ..77/64/sh. 68/62/pc Chattanooga.....60/39/000...51/27/s.. 55/38/s Louisville........51/36/000 ..40/27/pc. 49/34/pc Beirut..........86/72/0 00... 77/61/c.. 77/70/s New Delh/.......68/63/0 00.. 90/66/pc...86/58/t Cheyenne.......30/16/002...56/35/s.. 62/38/s Madison WI.....33/25/001 ..32/15/pc..38/24/rs Berlin...........28/21/000..31/19/pc.32/18/pc Osaka..........61/30/000...64/33/r. 44/43/pc Chicago.........37/29/005 ..36/25/pc. 43/31/sh Memphis....... 57/31/000 .. 52/33/s. 62/45/pc Bogota.........68/50/0.00... 77/59/t...77/57/t Oslo............39/18/0.00 .. 22/13/pc. 21/10/pc Cincinnati.......46/35/000...36/24/c. 45/31/pc Miami..........82/69/000...79/57/s .. 73/56/s Budapest........55/34/000 .. 54/41/sh. 40/26/sh Ottawa.........41/37/009 .. 36/16/si. 27/14/pc Cleveland.......38/34/000 ..35/22/sn. 33/26/pc Milwaukee......34/28/001..32/19/pc..38/28/rs BuenosAires.....73/57/000...69/50/c. 69/54/pc Paris............28/25/1.08 ..35/26/pc..34/26/rs ColoradoSpnngs.33/27/001...6001/s .. 64/35/s Minneapol/s.....29/22/0.00 ..32/21/pc. 36/26/sn CaboSanLucas ..84/55/0.00... 82/57/s .. 84/61/s Rio deJaneiro....91/79/0.00 .. 91/76/sh...79/74/t Columbia,MO.. 47/26/trace...4300/s. 63/38/pc Nashville........56/36/0.00...49/29/s .. 53/38/c Cairo...........93/72/000 ..89/60/pc .. 95/73/s Rome...........59/45/000 ..57/48/sh.55/39/sh Columbia,SC....73/61/010...6160/s .. 59/36/s New Orleans.....66/47/000...65/43/s .. 63/46/s Calgary.........39/19/0.00.. 54/23/pc... 23/5/c Santiago........81/52/0.00... 80/63/s.. 83/67/s Columbus, GA....70/40/1.01...60/33/5 .. 62/37/s New York.......57/48/0.77..52/32/pc. 41/27/pc Cancun.........77/72/035...76/67/c .. 74/66/c Sao Paulo.......86/70/000 ..81/66/sh...69/67/t Columbus, OH....39/36/000 ..35/23/sn. 42/29/pc Newark,NJ......59/50/0.68..53/31/pc. 42/27/pc Dublin..........39/28/000...42/36/c. 49/39/sh Sapporo ........44/22/000 ..33/15/sn. 26/28/pc Concord,NH.....49/39/024 ..36/15/pc.. 37/22/c Norfolk VA......69/51/0 23 ..55/31/pc .. 50/32/s Edinburgh.......43/18/000 ..38/24/pc .. 42/36/c Seoul...........54/27/000 51/37/sh. .. 48/38/pc Corpus Christi....81/44/000... 77/55/s .. 77/58/s OklahomaCity...60/36/000 ..60/41/pc .. 74/47/s Geneva.........54/39/003...39/24/0..32/16/si Shangha/........70/46/000..52/36/sh. 50/39/pc DallasFtWorth...67/38/000...65/47/s .. 76/53/s Omaha.........33/17/000 ..3I28/pc. 53/33/pc Harare..........72/57/000... 75/56/t...75/58/t Singapore.......90/75/000 ..89/78/pc.89/76/pc Dayton .........40/33/000..34/23/sn.42/30/pc Orlando.........72/63/022...74/45/s.. 68/44/s HongKong......77/66/000..79/68/sh. 71/66/sh Stockholm.......34/18/000...24/12/s. 23/10/pc Denver..........40/24/016...61/42/s.. 67/39/s PalmSprings.... 90/56/000...93/60/s .. 95/63/s Istanbul.........63/50/0.01 ..61/52/pc.. 66/55/c Sydney..........81/70/0.00 ..82/64/pc...81/68/t DesMoines......35/20/000..35/28/pc. 49/33/sh Peoria..........39/25/001...37/25/s. 47/31/pc lerusalem.......80/56/000..79/61/pc. 82/67/pc Taipei...........79/61/000 ..80/58/sh. 61/63/pc Detroit..........40/35/000..35/22/sn.37/27/pc Philadelphia.....59/50/0.86..51/31/pc.43/31/pc Johannesburg....75/52/000..76/56/sh...72/54/t Tel Aviv.........93/63/000 ..86/61/pc. 89/70/pc Duluth..........22/15/001 ..29/16/pc. 35/23/sn Phoeuix.........83/51/000... 89/62/s .. 92/61/s Lima...........81/68/000... 79/70/t. 79/72/pc Tokyo...........59/41/000 ..68/45/pc. 47/45/sh El Paso..........72/40/000...73/46/s .. 77/49/s Pittsburgh.......45/36/001 ..34/21/sn. 35/27/pc Lisbon..........57/48/000 ..54/41/pc 56/42/c Toronto.........41/36/027 34/18/sl 32/27/pc Fairbanks....... 21/12/000... 9/21/s...4/ 22/s Portland,ME.....48/40/0 22..40/19/pc .. 38/24/c London.........41/28/000..41/27/sh.43/30/pc Vancouver.......52/41/051... 50/46/r...52/45/r Fargo...........25/17/004..25/19/sn.36/21/pc Providence......53/41/081 ..53/30/pc.. 41/23/c Madrid.........54/41/000 ..47/30/pc.48/31/pc Vienna..........46/32/000 ..49/30/pc..36/26/sf Flagstaff........55/17/000...62/27/5 .. 66/29/s Raleigh.........69/57/0 65... 54/29/s .. 51/30/s Manila..........91/77/000 ..93/74/sh. 90/73/pc Warsam........27/23/000,,24/23/sn .. 29/18/c
• 91' •
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 64/34 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........78m1934 Monthtodate.......... 0.12" Record low......... 10 in 1956 Average month todate... 0.31" Average high.............. 50 Year to date............ 1.92" Average low .............. 27 Average year to date..... 2.93" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.12 Record 24 hours ...0.69 in1939 *Melted liquid equivalent
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
o www m extremes
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:31 a.m...... 5:36 p.m. Venus......7:20 a.m...... 6:48 p.m. Mars.......7:40 a.m...... 7:47 p.m. Jupiter.....10:33 a.m......140 a.m. Satum.....10;58 p.m...... 9:26 a.m. Uranus.....7:52 a.m...... 8:16 p.m.
Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-57 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .67 78 Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 1 .. . . . . . . 45 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregoo.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
YeSterday'S
PLANET WATCH
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
Astoria ........ 53/49/0.09..... 56/47/r.....55/47/sh Baker City......61/25/0.00.....63/38/c......63/37/c Brookings.... MM/MM/NA.....59/46/c......59/44/c Burns..........59/24/0.00.....64/35/c.....64/33/pc Eugene........62/42/0.00....66/45/pc.....61/44/sh Klamath Falls .. 64/25/0 00 .67/35/pc ...65/34/pc Lakeview.......63/25/0.00 ...68/39/pc.....62/36/pc La Pine........63/28/0.00....62/31/pc......62/31/c Medford.......69/35/0.00....72/41/pc.....70/40/pc Newport.......52/43/0.00.....56/45/c.....55/45/sh North Bend......55/46/NA....58/45/pc.....57/47/sh Ontario........65/32/0.00.....69/41/c.....69/42/pc Pendleton..... 64/44/trace....67/45/pc.....66/44/sh Portland ...... 62/46/trace.....62/48/r.....61/46/sh Prineville....... 61/32/0.00....62/36/pc......66/37/c Redmond...... 63/32/trace....66/40/pc......66/38/c Roseburg.......64/44/0.00.....69/46/c......64/46/c Salem ....... 60/38/0 00 .62/46/pc ...60/44/sh Sisters.........62/30/0.00....63/34/pc......63/35/c The Dages......65/42/0.00....67/44/pc......65/40/c
69/37
63/33
•
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
Ontario Mostly cloudy in 69/4i the north; partly Valeo 67/4i • cloudy in the Nyssa south. 68743 Juntura
• Brothers 62/31
Oa k ridge
Coos Bay
53 28
W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms
*
* * * *
: tx vt
* * * +
Xt 39
Rain F l urries Snow
Ice
PPOVIDED BY .... r
Getaways Travel PleasaniIIolidaqs.
7 .'
t
h, ~z
~ffP M+~ 2w
f)C/g 2 P m'
0
0 ):
Cooler with some morning rainfall.
Yesterday Wednesday Thursday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
60/37
66/43
o Paulina 58/32
65/35
Sunriver Bend
66/4 5
Cottage
HIGH LOW
56 31
OREGON CITIES
EAST
Unity
• Prineville 62/36
Sisters
EUgene •
• Bandon
•
63/38
"D'~
56/48
56/45 ~
HIGH LOW
58 33
•
Mostly cloudy in the north; partly cloudy in the south.
59I36
0
Camp Sherman
Yachats• ~
Florence•
HIGH LOW
64 35
Sunsettoday...... 7 09 p.m First Full L a st Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:I 9 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 7:11 p.m Moonrise today.... 7:58 a.m Mooosettoday .... 9:39 p.m Mar.19 Mar.27 April2 Apnl10
CENTRAL
64/4
68/40
COFVaIIIS
60D7
La Grand
Condon
Warm Springs ~o
66/45
• Mea
I — 58/
• 67/46
•
Willowdale
Albany~
67/45
Ruggs
Ma u pin
owa /39 • Enterprise
• Pendleto
(/9/47
oWasco
67/39
NewpoIt
• Hermiston 70I47
,
Camp52iai
S~l~m
•
' Sandy
•
•
Lincoln City 56/46
4
70/49
Arlington
Dage s 66 /49
tI d FgI booJPortlan6I Tigamook• .P.@/46 ~
Umatilla
Th e Biggs
b
cloudy.
HIGH LOW
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:21 a.m Moon phases
WEST A chance for rain in the north; partly cloudy in the south.
. Ast o ria s d d d d d d
3 d *6/47d „' d d d 8 8 Seasideo 8 3 0 tJ 8 6 d d d d tHood 56747 o daithohohofhd I d d 8 8 Rlver
Mostly sunny to paniy
to average, a few late
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE
"0 ~
Cooling some, close
A bit of extra sunshine, staying warm.
showers.
63 I
•B4
Bs
\t'
Ji/7'~52'
t
Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of PleaSant HOlidayS, GetaWayS TraVel CInd The Bulletin.
'
This fabulous trip for two includes: roundfrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights' accommodation at Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort 5 Spa. A prize package valued at $7,000
/
FOR MORE INFORMATION ORTO SUBSCRIBE, CALLTHE BULLETIN AT For complete rules and regulations, visit www,bendbulletin,com/vacationrules or stop by The Bulletin at1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Additional entry forms are available in newspapers for sale across Central Oregon and in the lobby of The Bulletin, Entry forms should be delivered or mailed to The Bulletin, Last day to enter is March 22, 201 3 at noon, Winner will be drawn March 25, 2013. *Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELES and Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required. ~
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OINIICIIAIL ILIILILIRtI'IIM 6IRMWAVS tI'IRAVIRILVACAI'IIOMCRMWAV SWIRRPSMKIRSIBMtt'H' IPOIRM Sign me up to win The Bulletin's Sixth Annual Subscriber Vacation Getaway Sweepstakes! Official entry form only. No other reproductions are accepted NAME:
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RULES: This award is valid for travel April 1 — May 31, 2013 Bc November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-fransferable, non-refundable, nof redeemable for cash artd may nof be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional irtsurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes artd fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or nof directly specified above. Travel is subject Io availability and some restrictions may apply. Winner must be af least 21 years old. Employees of parficipafirtg companies artd ifs properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are nof eligible fo win. The Bulletin reserves the right Io deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbullefin.com/vacafionrules. Email addresses will nof be sold buf individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN, GETAWAYSTRAVEL artd PLEASANT HOLIDAYS. One coupon per edition.
IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2
NBA, C3
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Sports in brief, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: PAC-12 TOURNAMENT
NFL
Big moves asfree agency begins The Baltimore Ravens
are paying the price for winning a SuperBowl. The NFL champions
lost two key components of their defense, linebackers Paul Kruger and Dannell Ellerbe,
as free agencybegan Tuesday. OnMonday, they traded star receiver
Anquan Boldin, a key to their title run, to San
Francisco — theteam the Ravens beat 34-31 to win the champion-
ship. Kruger went north to division rival Cleveland
for a five-year, $40 million deal, while Ellerbe headed south to Miami for $35 million over five
years. Steelers receiver Mike Wallace joined Ellerbe in choosing the
Dolphins for $60 million.
PaÃ2 hopesVegas gamble will payoff
OSU's Roberto Nelson is
By John Marshall
Rick Bowmerl The Associated Press file
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — Hoping to boost the Pac-12 tournament's appeal, conference Commissioner Larry Scott pushed to move it from Los Angeles to a more exciting destination that would draw from all over the West. The bright lights of The Strip in Las Vegas should be a good fit. "We wantedthere to be vibrancy and energy to the venue and we felt with Vegas, fans can enjoy going there," Scott said. The Pac-12 will open its first tournament in Las Vegas with four games today at the MGM Grand Garden Arena and continue until Saturday's championship game with an automatic NCAA tournament berth on the line. The Pac-12 tournament had been held at the Staples Center for 11 years and one of the big complaints was all the empty seats that could be seen on TV, particularly if UCLA got knocked out.
averaging 17.7 points per game.
By Kevin Hampton Corvallis Gazet te-Times
, Nextup
Pac-12 tourney, first round, Can the Oregon State men's Oregon State vs. Colorado b asketball t eam w i n fo u r • When:Today, 2:30 p.m. games in four days at the Pac• TV:Pac-12 Network 12 tournament? • Oregon plays in the "Absolutely," coach C r aig Robinson said. quarterfinals Thursday at "We are very c onfident that 8:30 p.m. against either Washington or Washington if we are playing our game for 40 minutes, we can win four games in a State on ESPNU. row. "The 64 thousand dollar question is can we do that for 40 minutes." The Beavers are the 12th seed, but A win would match them with No. 4 with the Pac-12's parity this season, seed Arizona. the road doesn't seem much rougher "It was nice to (defeat Colorado) on than if they had finished higher. the road, at altitude in a game where OSU opens the tournament at 2:30 a team was actually playing for somep.m. today against Colorado, a team thing. That gives us a lot of confithe Beavers knocked off in Boulder dence," Robinson said. on Saturday. SeeOSU/C4
SeeVegas /C4
The 49ers didn't go untouched, either. After
OSU confident before first-round contest
giving up asixth-round draft pick for Boldin, they saw tight end
PREP BASEBALL: SEASON OUTLOOK
Delanie Walker leavefor Tennessee.
PREP SOFTBALL
The 32-year-old Bold-
Madras edges
in expressed surprise that he was traded. "I thought this was
the last stop of my career but regardless of the circumstances I came here towin a Championship ... and in
Sisters in
February wecamehome Champions," he said on Twitter.
Teams also madecuts Tuesday. Thebiggest
opener
were Ryan Fitzpatrick in Buffalo and Nnamdi
Asomugha in Philadel-
Bulletin staff report SISTERS — Riding the arm of Jamie Moe and the bat of Inez Jones, Madras High opened its softball season with a 7-6 road victory Tuesday over Sisters. Moe, an all-Tri-Valley Conference first-team selection a year ago as a junior, went the distance for the White Buffaloes, striking out nine while allowing eight hits. Jones led
phia. The Bills' start-
ing quarterback was released1i/s years
after getting a six-year, $59 million contract extension. Fitzpatrick
struggled after signing the new deal, andthe Bills went 6-10 in 2011 and in 2012.
Philadelphia released cornerback Asomugha, who two years agogot a five-year, $60 million contract with $24 million guaranteed when he left
Oakland as afree agent. Asomughawas aflop in
the reigning TVC champiRyan Brennecke i The Bulletin
From left, Bend High's Duke DeGaetano, Jonah Koski and Justin Erlandson hope to improve on the Lava Bears' Class 5A semifinal appearance last season. Bend has not won the Intermountain Conference since 2009.
Philly, often victimized in
single coverage. Also Tuesday,Tony Gonzalez changedhis mind and decided to return to the Falcons. The NFL's career leader
among tight ends said he was 95 percent certain he would retire after 2012, but the other 5 percent won out. — The Associated Press
ALPINE SKIING
Maze aims fortop World Cupseason LENZERHEIDE, Switzerland — Tina Maze is targeting the greatest
season in World Cup history, and aims to start finals week by de-
throning downhill queen Lindsey Vonn today. Maze will complete
a 37-race, five-month campaign on Sunday with a record points to-
IMC'sbest? Summit won the IMC title in 2012, Mountain View in 2011, and Bend in 2009. Here are the top state finishes
• Summit, Mountain View and BendHigh haveall won Intermountain Conferencetitles recently, but the Lava Bearscould be this year's favorite
The Buffs (1-0) led 4-3 By Grant Lucas The Bulletin
The Intermountain Conference baseball
by Bend schools
championship is up for grabs.
over the past four
No one team is a hands-down favorite to run away with the title, according to Mountain View coach Dave McKae, but Bend High may have an edgethanksto varsity expe- • Central Oregon team-by-team rience and key returners. capsules,C4 Summit coach C.J. Colt considers the Lava Bears a force to be reckoned with in the IMC. "Bend High, they're just going to be a powerhouse on the offense side," Colt says. "To beat
years: 2012 Summit
(runner-up) 2011 Mountain View
(quarterfinals) 2010 Bend (round of16) 2009 Bend
(quarterfinals)
tal, approaching 2,500.
ons at the plate, ending the nonleaguecontestthree for five with two doubles and one run batted in. Outlaw senior Cassidy Edwards took the loss for Sisters. Edwards, who has committed to play softball and basketball at Clackamas Community College next year, fanned eight but also issued eight walks. "It was a fun game because it was such a battle," Madras coach Shawna McConnell said.
Bend High, you're just going to have to play deRob Kerr /The Bulletin file
Summit pitcher D.J. Wilson is back for the Class 5A Intermountain Conference champion and state runner-up.
fense and shut them down as much as you can and score enough runs to stay close." SeeBaseball /C4
after six innings before adding three runs in the top of the seventh. Kasheena Stevens, Sarah Brown and Jones posted back-to-back-to-back RBIs in Madras' final at-bat to give the White Buffaloes a 7-3 lead. Sisters (0-1) responded with three runs of its own in the bottom half of the inning before Madras sealed the win. "Both kids threw great games "McConnell said. Caitlin Hulsey also hit well for Madras, going two for five with a double and an RBI.
She can add downhill,
super-G andslalom
titles to the overall and
GS crystal globes she locked up weeksago. On the men'sside in Lenzerheide, Aksel Lund Svindal likely must
repeat his stunning run of victories here in 2007 to beat Marcel Hirscher for the overall title. Hirscher's outstanding
giant slalom form has been eclipsed only by Ted Ligety's career year, and the three-time world
champion from the U.S. goes for a sixth World
Cup win on Saturday. — The Associated Press
Solid start
GOLF: PGA TOUR
Steve Stricker, who is not
Stricker raising profile in 'retirement'- ~ ~
By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Steve Stricker is in semi-retirement from the PGA Tour, though it sure doesn't feel that way to him. Considerthe 48 hours since his runner-up finish at Doral. Stricker had to film an Avis commercial in Los Angeles the next day. When he booked his travel plans, he wasn't aware the final round would end an hour later because of Daylight Savings Time, so he missed his flight. Phil
Mickelson offered him a ride on his plane to San Diego, and Stricker took a charter up the coast. He finally got home to Wisconsin at 2 a.m. Tuesday, and then woke up to take his daughters to school before heading off to a meeting with his foundation until the girls got out of school. He chuckled when talking about a text from caddie Jimmy Johnson that said, "What are you up to?" SeeStricker/C4
'
planning to play afull-time schedule this year, has excelled in the three
events he hasplayed,
winning $1.8 million: Event Finish Hyundai Tournament 2nd
of Champions Accenture Match Play T-5th
Championship Cadillac Championship 2nd Alan Diaz/ The Associated Press
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY BASKETBALL 9 a.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, first round, Providence vs. Cincinnati, ESPN.
11:30 a.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, Syracusevs. Seton Hall, ESPN.
Noon:Men's college, Pac-12 tourney, first round, Stanford vs. Arizona State, Pac-12 Network.
Channel. BASKETBALL 9 a.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, quarterfinal, Georgetown vs. Cincinnati/ Providence, ESPN. 9 a.m.: Men's college, Atlantic 10 tourney, first round, Richmond vs. Charlotte, NBCSN.
9 a.m.:Men's college, Big Ten
tourney, first round, lllinois vs. West tourney, quarterfinal, UNLV Minnesota, Big Ten Network. vs. Air Force, CBSSN. 9 a.m.:Men's college, ACC tourney, first round, Boston 2:30p.m.:Men'scollege,Pac-
Noon:Men's college, Mountain
12 tourney, first round, Colorado
College vs. GeorgiaTech,
vs. Oregon State, Pac-12
ESPNU.
Network.
9:30 a.m.:Men's college, Big 12 tourney, quarterfinal, Oklahoma
2:30p.m.:Men'scollege, Mountain West tourney,
quarterfinal, Colorado State vs. Fresno State, CBSSN.
vs. lowa State, ESPN2.
10 a.m.:Men's college, Conference USAtourney,
quarterfinal, Southern Miss vs. 4 p.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, first round, Villanova vs. UAB/SMU, CBSSN. 11:30 a.m.: Men's college, St. John's, ESPN2. Big East tourney, quarterfinal, 5 p.m.:NBA, Utah at Oklahoma Pittsburgh vs. Syracuse/Seton City, ESPN.
6 p.m.: Men'scollege,Pac-12 tourney, first round, USC vs. Utah, Pac-12 Network.
6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, first round, Notre
Dame vs. Rutgers, ESPN2. 6:30p.m.:Men'scollege, Mountain West tourney,
quarterfinal, NewMexico vs. Wyoming, CBSSN. 7:30 p.m.: NBA, New Yorkat
Denver, ESPN. 8:30p.m.:Men'scollege, Pac-12 tourney, first round,
Washington vs. Washington State, Pac-12 Network. 9 p.m.:Men's college, Mountain West tourney, quarterfinal, San Diego State vs. Boise State, CBSSN.
SOCCER 12:30 p.m.:UEFA Champions
League, round of16, MalagaCF
Hall, ESPN. 11:30 a.m.: Men's college, Atlantic 10 tourney, first round, Dayton vs. Butler, NBCSN.
Network.
11:30 a.m.:Men's college, ACC tourney, first round, North Carolina State vs. Virginia Tech, ESPNU.
Noon: Men's college, Big12 tourney, quarterfinal, Kansas vs. West Virginia/Texas Tech, ESPN2.
Noon:Men's college, Pac-12 tourney, quarterfinal, UCLAvs. Stanford/Arizona State, Pac-12
quarterfinal, UTEP vs. Houston/ Rice, CBSSN.
League,round of 16,FCBayern Munich vs. Arsenal FC(sameday tape), Root Sports.
MLB Network.
HOGKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Philadelphia at New Jersey, NBCSN.
THURSDAY BASEBALL Midnight: MLB, spring training,
Atlanta at Miami (tapedj, MLB Network. 5 a.m.: MLB, spring training,
Philadelphia at NewYork Yankees (taped), MLBNetwork. 10 a.m.:MLB, spring training, Atlanta at St. Louis, MLB Network. 1 p.m.:MLB, spring training,
Chicago White Sox at Los Angeles Angels, MLB Network. 4 p.m.:World Baseball Classic,
second round, Dominican Republic vs. U.S., MLB Network. 8 p.m.:MLB, spring training,
Tampa Bay atBaltimore (tapedj, MLB Network.
GOLF 6:30 a.m.:European Tour, Avantha Masters, first round, Golf Channel.
12 tourney, quarterfinal, Arizona 12 Network.
3:30 p.m.:Men's college, Atlantic 10 tourney, first round, Xavier vs. St. Joseph's, NBCSN.
3:30 p.m.:Men's college, Big Ten tourney, first round, Purdue vs. Nebraska, ESPN2.
4 p.m.: Men's college, Conference USAtourney, quarterfinal, Memphis vs. Tulane/Marshall, CBSSN. 4 p.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, quarterfinal, Louisville vs. St. John's/Villanova, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, ACC tourney, first round, Maryland vs. Wake Forest, ESPNU. 5 p.m.: NBA, Dallas at San Antonio, TNT.
6 p.m.: Men'scollege,Pac-12 tourney, quarterfinal, Cal vs. USC/Utah, Pac-12 Network.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Big Ten tourney, first round, lowa vs. Northwestern, ESPN2.
6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Big East tourney, quarterfinal, Marquette vs. Notre Dame/ Rutgers, ESPN.
6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Atlantic 10 tourney, first round,
HOCKEY
Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BOSTONRED SOX— Optioned OF Alex Hassan and RHP StevenWright to Pawtucket(IL). Reassigned RHPPedroBeato,1B/OF MarkHamilton, DFJeremy Hazelbaker andOFJuanCar osLinarestotheir minor league camp. KANSAS CITYROYALS—OptionedLHPChris Dwyer andLHPJustin Marksto Dmaha (PCL) and LHP John Lamb to NorthwestArkansas(TL). SEATTLEMARINERS— Optioned LHP Anthony
"Yeah, this bear's crafty. But he made
one mistake. See that? He left a paper trail that anyone with a basic knowledge of accounting could follow."
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
GP W L OT PtsGF GA Pittsburgh 2 7 l g 6 0 36 )00 76 NewJersey 26 I 2 9 5 29 65 75 N .Y.Rangers 25 13 10 2 2 6 64 6) N .Y.lslanders 26 11 12 3 2 5 77 BB P hiadephia 27 12 14 ) 2 5 75 62 Northeast Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA Montreal 26 17 5 4 36 64 66 Boston 24 17 4 3 37 72 53 Ottawa 26 I3 6 5 31 61 54 Toronto 27 I5 t t I 31 61 75 Buffalo 2 7 10 14 3 2 3 70 64
Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Carolina 2 5 I 5 9 I 31 79 69 W innipeg 2 6 1 3 1 ) 2 2 6 66 76 T ampaBay 26 11 14 ) 2 3 66 61
W ashington 25 10 14 ) 2 1 69 76 Florida 27 7 ) 4 6 20 66 101
Western Conference Central Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA
Chicago 26 2 1 2 3 45 65 56 S t. Louis 2 6 I 4 I O 2 3 0 60 79 Detroit 26 12 9 5 29 66 66 Nashville 2 6 1 1 9 6 26 56 61 C olumbus 2 7 ) 0 ) 2 5 2 5 62 74 Northwest Division GP W L DT Pts GF GA Vancouver 25 1 2 7 6 30 66 66 M innesota 25 1 3 10 2 2 6 59 61 Edmonton 2 6 I 0 I I 5 25 64 76 Colorado 2 5 I O I I 4 2 4 62 73 Calgary 24 9 11 4 22 64 62
Pacific Division
Championship LIU Brooklyn91, MountSt. Mary's70 SummitLeague Championship S. DakotaSt. 73, N.DakotaSt. 67 Western Athletic Conference First Round TexasSt. 66,Seattle 56 UTSA67,SanJoseState 49 Pacific-12 ConferenceTournament At MGMGrandGardenArena
Las Vegas
First Round Today, March13 Stanfordvs.ArizonaState, 12:06 p.m. Coloradovs.OregonState, 2:36p.m. SouthernCalvs. Utah,6:06 p.m. Washingtonvs WashingtonState,6:36p.m. Quarterftnats Thursday, March14 UCLAvs. Stanford-ArizonaState winner,12.06 p.m. Arizona vs. Colorado-OregonState winner, 2:36 p.m. Ca iforniavs.SouthemCa-utah winner, 606p.m. Oregon vs. Washington-WashingtonStatewinner, 6:36 p.m. Semifinals Friday, March 15 UCLA Stanford-Arizona Statewinner vs.Arizona Colorado-Oregon State winner,6:06 p.m California—Southern Cal-Utah winnervs. OregonWashington-Washington Statewinner, 6:36p.m. Championship Saturday, March 16 Semifinal winners,6:02p.m.
Wo m e n's college
GP W L OT PtsGF GA Tuesday's Games Anaheim 2 5 1 9 3 3 4I 67 63 East Princeton60, Penn44 Los Angeles 25 14 9 2 3 0 73 65 P hoenix 26 1 3 1 0 3 2 9 77 74 Tournaments Big EastConference San Jose 2 5 0 6 6 26 56 61 Dallas 25 I2 t t 2 2 6 67 71 Championship NOTE:Twopoints for awin, onepoint for overtime NotreDame61, uconn 59
loss.
Taesday'sGames
Vancouver2, ColumbusI, SO Buffalo 3,N.Y.Rangers) Carolina 4,Washington 0 Pittsburgh3,Boston2 Tampa Bay3, Florida 2 Winnipeg5,Toronto2 St.Louis 4,SanJose2 Anaheim 2, Minnesota1 Nashvile 4,Dallas0 Edmonton 4, Colorado0 Phoenix 5,LosAngeles2
Today's Games
Ottawa at Montreai, 4p.m. Philadelphiaat NewJersey, 4:3Dp.m. Detroit atCalgary,6.30p.m.
BASKETBALL Men's college Tuesday's Games East
Princeton71, Penn56
Tournaments Big EastConference First Round Rutgers76, DePaul 57 SetonHall46,SouthFlorida42, OT Horizon League Championship Valparaiso62 Wright St. 54 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference First Round Bethun e-Cookman69,Coppin St.76 DelawareSt.73, Howard 61 NC ABT65,Florida A8M54
Mountain WestConference First Round Wyoming65 NevadaBt Northeast Conference
Big WestConference First Round
Cal St.-Fullerton54, LongBeach St. 46 CS NorthridgeBt, Uc Davis40 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference First Round DelawareSt. 55, Bethune-Cookman44 Norfolk St.72, FloridaABM55
Mountain WestConference
First Round Nevada60, Air Force66 Southwestern Athletic Conference First Round Ark.-PineBluff 50,Alcorn St.46 GramblingSt. 60, AlabamaSt 56 SummitLeague Championship S. DakotaSt 56, SouthDakota53 Western Athletic Conference First Round Denver73,TexasSt. 63 NewMexicoSt. 76,Texas-Arlington 63
BASEBALL MLB MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
Spring Training
Tuesday's Games
Detroit10, Philadeiphia 6
N.Y.Yankees3, TampaBay ) Houston 9,Miami4 Atlanta12, St. Louis3 Boston 5,Toronto3 Texas )2, Milwaukee 3 Arizona(ss)5, Seattle 4 Oaklan d6,KansasCity3 Colorado4, Arizona(ss) 3 Cincinnati 6 LA. Dodgers2 San Diego6, SanFrancisco 2
WBC World Baseball Classic Glance All Times PDT
SecondRound Group One At Tokyo Tuesday,March12 Japan0,) Netherlands 6
Fernandezto Jackson(SL). National League ATLANTABRAVES— Optioned RHP CoryRasmus to Gwinnett(IL) andRHPJuanJaime andRHPAaron Northcraft toMississippi (SL). Reassigned LHPRyan Buchter,LHPYohan Flande, RHPGus Schlosser, C Luis Del.aCruz,CBraeden Schlehuber, CJoseYepez and INFJoeLeonardto their minor leaguecamp. CINCINNATI REDS—OptionedLHPTonyCingrani and RHP Daniel Corcinoto Louisville (IL). Optioned RHPKyeLotzkarandRHPJoshRavintoDouble-A (SL). OptionedRHPCarlos ContrerasandOFYorman Rodriguez to Bakersfield (Calif.). OptionedLHP IsmaelGuilon to Dayton(MW). Rea ssigned RHP Nick Christiani,RHPChad Rogers, CNevin Ashey, INF KristopherNegronandOFRyanLaMarre to their minor league camp. LOSANGELES DODGERS— Reassigned INFBrian Barden,INFOmar Lunaand OFJeremyMooreto their minor league camp. ST.LOUIS CARDINALS— Optioned LHP Kevin Siegrist to Memphis(PCL).Reassigned LHPBarret BrowningandCCody Stanley to their minor league camp. National Basketball Association GOLDENSTATE WARRIORS— Assigned G Kent Bazemoreand F MalcolmThomasto Santa Cruz (NBADL). MIAMIHEA T—Signed FJuwan Howard to asecond 1D-day contract. NEW ORLEANS HORNETS— Signed F l .ou Amundsonforthe remainderofthe season.Released F/C Henry Sims. FOOTBALL
National FootballLeague
ARIZONA CARDINALS—Agreed to terms with S Rashad Johnsononathree-yearcontract. ATLANTAFALCONS—Agreed to termswith LT SamBakeronasix-yearcontract. BALTIMORERAVENS— Signed LS Morgan Cox GroupTwo and WR/KR David Reedto two-yearcontracts. At Miami BUFFALO BILLS ReleasedQBRyanFitzpatrick Tuesday,March12 C HICAGO BEARS—Agreed to termswith TEMarDominicanRepublic 5, Italy4 tellus Bennettonafour-year contract andLTJermon UnitedStates7, PuertoRico) Bushrod on a five-yearcontract. SignedDTHenry Today, March13 Melton tohisfranchisetender. Italy vs.PuertoRico, 4p.m. CINCINN ATI BENGALS—Signed DEWallaceGiThursday, March14 berry tocontract a extension. DominicanRepublic vs UnitedStates, 4p.m. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS—Agreed to termswith LB Paul Kruger onafive-year contract. SEMIFINALS DETROIT LIONS—Agreed to terms with S Amari At San Francisco Spieveyonaone-year contract. Sunday, March17 HOUSTONTEXANS— ReleasedWRKevinWalter. Group 2runner-upvs.Japan,6 p.m. INDIANAPO LIS COLTS—Agreedto termswith OL Monday, March18 G osder Cherius, DLDonald Thomas, CBGreg Toler Netherands vs.Group2winner,6 p.m. and LBErik Walden. MINNES OTA VIKINGS—Traded WRPercy Harvin SOCCER to Seattle for 2013 first- and seventh-rounddraft picks and a2014third-round draft pick.Terminated the contractof CBAntoine Winfield. Re-signedT Phil MLS Loadholt. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER NEW YORK JETS—Restructured the contracts All Times PDT of WRSantonio Homesand CBAntonio Cromartie. WaivedNTSione Pou ' ha. Saturday's Games PHILADEL PHIA EAGLES—Released CB Nnamdi D.C. Unitedat NewYork, 9.30a.m. Asomugha. Signed CB Bradley Fletcher,TE James ChicagoatSporting KansasCity, noon Casey, S PatrickChung,LB Jason Philips and DL Toronto FC atMontreal,1 p.m. Isaac Sop oa ga. NewEnglandat Philadelphia,2 p m. PITTSBU RGH STEELERS—Re-signed LB Larry SanJoseat Columbus, 2:30p.m. Foote, WR Plaxico Burress and TE David Johnson. ColoradoatRealSalt Lake,3 p.m. Tenderedcontract offers to RBJonathan Dwyer, RB Portland atSeattle FC,5p.m. Isaac Redm an, NTSteve McLendonand WREmSunday's Games manuelSanders. HoustonatFCDalas, ) 0a.m SAN DIEGOCHARGERS— Released TE Randy ChivasUSAat LosAngeles,2 p m. McMichaelCl . aimedRBFoswhitt Whittakeroff waivers fromArizona. TENNIS ST. LOUISRAMS—Agreedto termswithTEJared Cook on afive-year contract. TENNES SEETITANS—Announced the retirement Professional ol G Steve Hutchinson. BNP ParibasOpen WASHING TONREDSKINS—Agreedto terms with Tuesday PSavRoccaonatwo-yearcontract. At The IndianWells Tennis Garden HOCKEY Indian Wells, Calif. NationalHockeyLeague Purse: Men:$6.05million (Masters1000); CHICAGOBLACKHAWKS—Recalled F Jimmy Women: 6.02million (Premier) Hayesfrom Rockford (AHL).AssignedDSteveMonSurface: Hard-Outdoor tadorto Rockford. Singles COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— Activated F BranMen don Dubinskyfrominjured reserve.AssignedFMatThird Round thewFordto Springfield (AHL). Jo-Wilfried Tsonga (6), France,def. MardyFish DALLASSTARS— RecalledFTomasVincourfrom (32), united States, 7-6(4), 7-6(0). Texas(AHL) AssignedFMatt FrasertoTexas Milos Raoni(17), c Canada, def. MarinCilic (12), DETROIRE T DWINGS—Recalled FGustav Nyquist Croatia, 3 6,6-4,6-3. from Grand Rapids (AHL). ReassignedFTomasTatar SamQuerrey(23), UnitedStates, def MarinkoMa- to GrandRapids andD Gleason Fournier fromGrand tosevic,Australia,7-6(5), 6-7(7), 7-5. RapidstoToledo(ECHL). Tommy Haas(19), Germany, def. NicolasAlmagro MINNESOT AWILD—Traded FMat Kassian to Ot(1)), Spain6-3, , 6-7 (2), 7-6(2). tawafor a2014sixth-round draft pick. NovakDjokovic ()), Serbia, def.GrigorDimitrov NEW JERSEYDEVILS—Placed DHenrik Tallinder (31), Bulgaria7-6 , (4), 6-1 on injuredreserve,retroactiveto March7. Recaled F CarlosBerlocq,Argentina,def. KeiNishikori (16), Harri Pesonen fromAlbany(AHL). Japan,6-2,6-2. PHILADEL PHIAFLYERS—Traded FMatthew Ford Juan Martin del Potro(7), Argentina,def.Bjorn to Columbus for futureconsiderations Phau,Germany,6-2 7-5. PHOENIX COYOTES—Recalled DChris Summers AndyMurray(3), Britain,def.Yen-hsunLu,Taiwan, from Portland(AHL). 6-3, 6-2. TAMPABAYLIGHTNING ReassignedG Cedrick Women Desjardinsto Syracuse(AHL). Fourth Round WASHING TON CAPITALS—Recalled D Cameron Sara Errani (6), Italy, def. Marion Bartoli (9), Schilling fromHershey(AHL). France,6-3, 6-2. COLLEGE PetraKvitova(5), CzechRepublic,def. KlaraZakoBIG EASTCONFERENCE—Reached a definitive palova(19),Czech Republic,6-2,6-3. agreementfor Notre Dameto leavethe conference, Maria Sharapova (2), Russia,def. LaraArruabar- effectiveJuly1. rena-Vecino,Spain,7-5, 6-0. SIENA —Fired men's basketball coachMitchBuoVictoria Azarenka()), Belarus, def. UrszulaRadnaguro wanska,Poland,6-3,6-1. UMKC —Fired men's basketball coach Matt Maria Kirilenko(13), Russia,def. AgnieszkaRadBrown.
NHL ROUNDUP
tourney, first round, Clemson vs. Florida State, ESPNU.
6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Conference USAtourney, quarterfinal, East Carolina vs.
Boedker's two goals helpCoyotesbeat Kings5-2
Tulsa, CBSSN. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, New York at Portland TNT.
The Associated Press GLENDALE, Ariz. — Phoenix coach Dave Tippett had a meeting with Mikkel Boedker on Monday, and the message w as basic: Hang on to t h e puck and see how much better things can be. Boedker did that Tuesday night and scored twice to lead the Coyotes past the Los An-
Championship, first round, Golf
Channel.
State, Pac-12 Network.
ON THE AIR:RADIO TODAY
THURSDAY
BASKETBALL 2:30p.m.:Men'scollege,Pac-
BASKETBALL 8:30 p.m.:Men's college, Pac12 tourney, quarterfinal, Oregon
12 tourney, first round, Colorado vs. Oregon State, KICE-AM 940, KRCO-AM 690.
Saturday Baseball: Bend at The DallesWahtonka(DH), noon; Sprague at MountainView(DH), 2 p.m.; West Salem at Redmond, )) a.mc Roseburgat Redmond, 3 p.m. Softball: WestSalemat Redmond(DH), noon; The DallesWahtonka/Dufur at Bend(DH), noon;West Linn atMountainView(DH), 2 p.m.; Estacadaat CrookCounty, ) p.m.,Lakeviewat LaPine (DH), noon. Track: Summiatt AlohaPreview(frosh/soph), TBD Boys tennis: Madras at Mountain View,noon Girls tennis: MountainViewatMadras, noon
Massachusett svs.George Washington, NBCSN. 6:30p.m.:Men'scollege,ACC
8:30 p.m.:Men's college, Pac12 tourney, quarterfinal, Oregon vs. Washington/Washington
Noon:PGATour, TampaBay
DEALS
a.m.
Network.
12:30 p.m.:Men's college, Conference USAtourney,
In the Bleachers © 2013 Steve Moore Dist. by Universal Ucrick www.gocomrcs.com/rnthebteachers
Friday Baseball :La PineatRidgeview,4p.mxMcLoughlin at Madras,4p.m.; Summit at Sisters, 4 p.m. Softball: La Pine at Ridgeview, 4 p.mzMadras at Redmond,4 p.mJ Summit at Sisters, 4 p.m., Culver atBurns(DH), ) p m. Boys tennis: Summiat t SaxonInvite in Salem,7
Eastern Conference Atlantic Division
Michigan vs. PennState, Big Ten
wanska (3), Poland,6-), 4-6,7-5. SamStosur(7), Australia,def MonaBarthel (24), Germany, 4-6, 6-2,6-3. AngeliqueKerber(4), Germany, def. GarbineMuguruza,Spain,6-4, 7-5.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Thursday Baseball: CulveratSherman,4:30 p.m. Softball: MountainViewat Sprague, TBD Track: Culver,Madrasat CrookCounty Icebreaker, 3:30 p.m. Boys tennis: RidgeviewatMadras,4 p.m., Crook County atSisters, 4p.m. Girls tennis: Sisters at CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Madrasat Ridgeview 4p.m.
Big Ten tourney, first round,
vs. Colorado/Oregon State, Pac-
8 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Milwaukee atArizona (taped),
Today Softball: Summiat t Madras,4p.m. Girls golf: Bend,MountainView,Summit, Crook County ,Redmond,Ridgeview,MadrasatCrooked RiverRanch,noon Track: Sisters,Ridgeview,MountainView,LaPine, Gilchrist at MV Icebreaker,3:15 p.m
Au Times PDT
2:30 p.m.:Men's college, Pac-
Rico, MLB Network.
ON DECK
11:30 a.m.: Men's college,
vs. FC Porto, Root Sports. 7 p.m.:UEFA Champions
BASEBALL 1 p.m.:MLB, spring training, Los Angeles Angels at San Diego, MLBNetwork. 4 p.m.:World Baseball Classic, second round, Italy vs. Puerto
COREBOARD
3:30 p.m.: LPGATour, LPGA Founders Cup, first round, Golf
vs. Washington/Washington State, KBND-AM 1110.
BASEBALL 5:30 p.m.:College, San Francisco at OregonState, KICEAM 690. Listings are the mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changes madeby Tll or radio stations.
mer sealed it with hi s second career NHL goal in two games since he was recalled from Portland of the American Hockey League four days earlier. Mike Smith, in his 250th NHL game, had 31 saves for Phoenix.Jonathan Quick had 24 for the Kings, who played for the second night in a row. "We were tired, they were geles Kings 5-2. "When he has th e p uck fresh," Kings coach Darryl he can be a very dangerous Sutter said. "It's not too hard player," Tippett said. "He just to figure out." has to have it more.... We just Also on Tuesday: Penguins 3, Bruins 2: PITTStalked about when he gets it, don't give it away so easy. BURGH — Brandon Sutter Let's see what happens when scored twice in the final seven you keep it for a while, and minutes to cap a furious rally, tonight he kept it and good and Pittsburgh slipped past things happen." Boston. Hurricanes 4, Capitals 0: S hane Doan a n d R a f f i Torres had a goal and assist WASHINGTON Riley apiece for the Coyotes, who Nash scored twice, Joe Corvo led 4-0 before Mike Richards put one in off the goaltender's and Dustin B r ow n s c ored mask, and Justin Peters got power-play g o als f o r th e his second career shutout as surging Carolina beat slumpKings. Phoenix's Rob Klinkham- ing Washington in the first
game of a home set.
k e y h o me-and- Jose for the second time in three nights. Sabres, 3, Rangers 1: BUFDucks 2, Wild 1: ST. PAUL, FALO, N.Y. — Marcus Foli- Minn. — Luca Sbisa scored the gno scored twice and backup winning goal with 3:04 left in goalie Jhonas Enroth made the third period, Jonas Hiller 18 of his 32 saves in the third made 30 saves, and Anaheim period of Buffalo's win over rallied to beat Minnesota. New York. Predators 4, Stars 0: DALCanucks 2, Blue Jackets 1: LAS — Pekka Rinne made COLUMBUS, Ohio — Mason 32 saves for his NHL-leading R aymond scored th e o n l y fifth shutout of the season, goal in the shootout, and sel- and Shea Weber and Gabriel dom-used Roberto L u ongo Bourque scored power-play stopped 26 s h ots t h r ough goals to lift N ashville over overtime to lead Vancouver Dallas. past Columbus. Jets 5, Maple Leafs 2: WINL ightning 3, P a nthers 2 : NIPEG, Manitoba — Blake SUNRISE, Fla. — Steven Wheelerscored twice and OnStamkos snapped a third-pe- drejPavelec made 24 saves to riod tie with his NHL-leading lead Winnipeg over Toronto. O ilers 4 , Av a lanche 0 : 20th goal, and Tampa Bay held on to beat Florida despite DENVER — Devan Dubnyk recording a s e ason-low 13 stopped 36 shots for his first shots. shutout in nearly a year and Blues 4, Sharks 2: ST. LOU- Shawn Horcoff scored a goal IS — Rookie Jake Allen made in his second straight game 39 saves, Chris Stewart led sincereturning from a broken a balanced attack with tw o knuckle, helping Edmonton goals, and St. Louis beat San beat Colorado.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Beavs' win streak ends — Dylan Davis hit his first
home run of theseason, but that was all the offense the third-ranked Oregon State
baseball teamcould muster in a 5-1 loss to SanFrancisco Tuesday night at Goss Stadium in Corvallis, OSU's first defeat of
the season. Theloss stopped the Beavers' win streak at15.
The pitching staff for SanFrancisco (7-8) allowed just four hits and two walks in the game.
The two teamsplayagain today at 5:35 p.m.
Ducks triumph — Ryon Healy went two for four with a solo home run to lead No. 16
Oregon to a4-3 win over Texas State at PK Park in Eugene on Tuesday night. Trailing 3-2 in the sixth inning, the Ducks took the lead for good after Healy's
homer and RyanHambright's two-out RBI single. The Ducks' bullpen finished off the Bobcats
(5-11) with three scoreless innings. Thetwo teams meet again today at 6 p.m.
U.S. wins in WBC — Gio Gonzalez gave Team USA its best startyet, and David Wright
provided a big finish. Gonzalez pitched five scoreless innings and the Americans beat Puerto Rico 7-1 in the World Baseball Classic on Tuesday night in Miami. Wright drove in five runs, the last three with a basesloaded double in the eighth. The Americans will play Thurs-
day night against the Dominican Republic, which remained unbeaten in the WBC by rally-
ing past Italy 5-4 onTuesday. Puerto Rico plays Italy in an
elimination gametoday.
BASKETBALL Irish take women's Big EaSt title —Natalie Achonwa's layup with1.8 seconds left lifted No. 2 Notre Dame to its first Big East tour-
nament championship with a 61-59 victory over third-ranked
Connecticut on Tuesdaynight in Hartford, Conn. Skylar Diggins stole anerrant pass from KaleenaMosqueda-Lewis with
eight seconds left, and after dribbling through a few defenders, found Achonwa for the
uncontested lay-in.
EXTREME SPORTS XGamesendsevents — The XGameswill no longer feature the snowmobile or Moto X best trick competi-
tions. ESPN,which sanctions and televises the X Games,
announced thecancellations on Tuesday.TheX Gamesstill plans to hold other snowmobile events at Winter X, along with
motorcycle competitions at Summer X. The safety of snow-
mobiles cameunder scrutiny after two incidents last January in Aspen, Colo., including the death of Caleb Moore from
injuries he sustained whenhis 450-pound sled rolled over him
after a backflip gonewrong during a freestyle competition.
CYCLING
NBA ROUNDUP
The Associated Press PORTLAND — Zach Randolph sat out the Grizzlies' first two games against the Trail Blazers this season. So jt he made sure he wasn't going Pjzpv, 8 to miss No. 3 against his forzf mer team. Randolph returned from t an ankle injury with 19 points and 10 rebounds, and Memphis won it s f i ft h straight game with a 102-97 victory over Portland on T uesday night. " I felt p r etty g oo d o u t there," said Randolph, who had missed the past f our g ames with a l e f t a n k l e sprain. "A little sore, but overall I felt all right." Marc Gasol had 20 points for the Grizzlies, who have won 13 of their past 14 games and sit in fourth place in the Western Conference. Mike Conley added 14 points and a career-high 15 assists, and Memphis matched its season high with 31 assists overall. LaMarcus Aldridge had 28 points and 10 rebounds for the Blazers, whose playoff hopes are slipping away. Rookie Damian Lillard had Don Ryan/TheAssociatedPress 27 points. Portland Trail Blazers guard Damian Llllard, right, shoots against Memphis (43-19) led by Memphis Grizzlies guard Tony Allen during the first quarter of as many as 15 points in the Tuesday night's game in Portland. second half but the Blazers closed the gap to 79-72 after Lillard's 3-pointer and a pair any further. Memphis made we gave a good effort." of free throws from Aldridge. its move, going on an 11-2 run Also on Tuesday: midway through the second Lakers 106, Magic 97: OREric M aynor's 3-pointer with 3:49 left narrowed Mem- quarterto go up 36-29 after LANDO, Fla. — Dwight Howphis' lead to 83-78, but Tay- Ed Davis' running hook shot. ard scored a season-high 39 shaun Prince answered with The Grizzlies had a 48-40 points, had 16 rebounds and a 3-pointer for the Grizzlies. lead at the break, shooting was sent to the free throw Portland kept up the pres- nearly 54 percent from the line 39 times by his former sure, pulling within 89-84 on floor. They finished with just team as Los Angeles beat a pair offree throws from over 51 percent shooting for Orlando. Maynor with 1:21 to go, but the game. Heat 98, Hawks 81:MIAMI C onley came back with a There was a lot of jawing — Dwyane Wade scored 23 back-and-forth between the points and Miami extended short jumper and Portland was unable to catch up. teams, particularly between i ts winning s treak t o 1 9 "We just kept holding them former teammates Randolph games, leading wire-to-wire off," Memphis coach Lionel and Aldridge. in beating Atlanta. Hollins said. Maverlcks 115, Bucks 108: Randolph played in Portland his first six seasons in MILWAUKEE — Vince CartThe Grizzlies trailed the Blazers by as many as 17 the league. He and Aldridge er hit three key 3-pointers in points in the third quarter were together for just one the fourthquarter and scored last Wednesday before winseason, when Aldridge was a 23 points off the bench as ning 91-85. rookie in 2006-07. Randolph Dallas won its fourth straight. Portland (29-34) returned was then traded to the Knicks Monta Ellis scored 32 points for the Bucks. home after a 1-2 road trip, in- in theoffseason. "I was talking to him tellcluding the loss at Memphis, Nets 108, Hornets 98: NEW for a three-game homestand. ing him to get in the paint," YORK — Brook Lopez scored The Blazers are four games Randolph said. "It was just 26 points and had a big dunk back of Los Angeles for the fun, nothing serious. I've over twin brother Robin, Dereighth and final playoff spot been talking to him since he on Williams added 21 points and 13 assists, and Brooklyn in the Western Conference. came in the league." "Definitely that door is closAldridge said: "That's just beat New Orleans. ing," Aldridge said. "We're two guys being competitive." Timberwolves 107, Spurs going to have to string togethGasol's 20-foot j u m p er 83: MINNEAPOLIS — Ricky er some wins fast or that door gave Memphis a 57-47lead Rubio had his f irst career is going to close on us." with seven minutes to go in triple-double with 21 points, 13 rebounds and 12 assists, H ollins said b efore t h e the third quarter. Gasol hit game he planned to start another long j u mper t h at leading Minnesota over San Antonio. Randolph but w asn't sure pushed it to 64-51. "It was a struggle to score Bobcats 100, Celtics 74: how much he would play. Randolph showed no linger- all n i ght," B l azers coach CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Gering effects from the injury Terry Stotts said. "I thought ald Henderson had a careerand finished with 28 minutes. we had some good efforts, high 35 points, and Charlotte Portland r ookie M eyers but they're the fourth seed in snapped a 10-game losing Leonard also returned af- the West right now. They're streak by beating Boston. ter missing a game with a a good team, playoff tested, Cavaliers 95, Wizards 90: sprained right ankle. and our team can learn from CLEVELAND — Dion WaitThe Blazers went up 21- t he physical nature of t h e ers scored 20 points, Alonzo 17 late in the first quarter on way they play, how they play Gee added 17 and Cleveland Lillard's 3-pointer, but they defense. It's certainly disap- held off a late run to beat struggled to extend the lead pointing to lose, but I thought Washington.
Baseball
Nidali wins Tirreno —lt-
aly's Vincenzo Nibali defended
Teesday's results Nonconference
his title in the Tirreno-Adriatico race in Italy Tuesday, finish-
La Pine Redmond
ing 23 secondsaheadof Tour de France runner-up Chris Froome. Alberto Contador was third overall, 52 secondsback.
Madras 01 0 000 1 — 2 5 4 Sisters 2 0 0 141 x— 8 12 2
0 00 01 — I 3 2 175 1x — 14 11 2
Class 4A Nonconference
World champion Tony Martin,
who rides for OmegaPharmaQuick Step, won the 5.7-mile time trial in 10 minutes, 25 seconds. Nibali, who rides for Astana, was12th in the time trial and Froome was sixth. Bend's Chris Horner finished
the weeklong race insixth place, 1 minute, 21 seconds behind the winner.
Softball Tnesday's results Nonconference La Pine Redmond
0 00 00 — 0 2 0 014 7X — 12 14 I
Burns 0 10 00 — 1 0 2 C rook County 502 5X 1 27 1 Class 4A Nonconference Madras 00 1 111 3 — 7 10 1 Sisters 0 0 3 000 3 6 8 3
TRACK 8E FIELD Duck women claim
Tennis Tuesday's Results Boys
indOOrtitle — Oregon won just one event —the locked up a fourth consecutive
Nonconference Redmond 6,Sisters 2 At Black Butte Ranch Singles — Poweli, R,def.Fughart, S, 62, 4-6, 10-5; Fitzsimmons,R, det. Houston,S,
NCAA Indoor Track and Field championship for the Ducks Saturday night in Fayetteville, Ark. With the relay victory, Oregon finished with 56 points to
6-2, 6-2; Biondi, R, def Kaping, S, 6 2, 61; Johnston,R,def. Horton,S,6-0, 6-2. Doubles —Camper/Witherow, R,det. Rickards/Calvin, S,
44forrunner-up Kansas.The
vs. 3-6, 7-6,13-11, Ling-scottystanden,S, def. Escami ff a/Roff ins,R,6-3,4-6,6-3;Gilmore)E. Stengel, S,det. Poweff/Schmidt, R,6-4, 4-6,103; Hite/Wrlber,R, def. Anderson/A. Stengel,S, 6-4, 6-3.
4x400-meter relay, the last race of the meet — but that win
UO men, led by Elijah Greer's first-place finish in the 800
meters, tied for sixth place with 22 points. Arkansas won the men's team title with 74 points. — From wire reports
NBA SCOREBOARD
Grizz ies o o B azers
PREP SCOREBOARD
Lacrosse Monday's Result Boys
Nonconference Sheldon6,Sisters 5
C3
Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Aff Times POT
Eastern Conference L
Pct GB
48 14
774 623 9i/z 619 9'/z 585 11'/z 556 13'/z 540 14'/z 540 14'/z
W
x Miami
d-New York d-Indiana Brooklyn Chicago Boston Atlanta Milwaukee Toronto Philadelphia Detroit Cleveland Washington Orlando Charlotte
38 23 39 38 35 34 34
24 27 28 29 29
32 30 25 39 24 39 23 43 22 42
516 16 391 24 381 24'/z
348 27 344 27 323 28
20 42 18 47 14 50
277 31'/z
Western Conference W L 49 16
d-SanAntonio d-Dklahoma City Memphis d-L.A.Clippers Denver GoldenState Houston L.A. Lakers
47 43 45 43
utai
Dallas
Portland Minnesota Phoenix
NewOrleans Sacramento d-divisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
219 35 Pct GB 754
734 1'/z
17 19 20 22
694 41/2
692 4 662 6 554 13 531 14'/z 523 15 516 15'/z 476 18 460 19 361 25 344 26'/z 338 27 338 27
36 29 34 30 34 31 33 31 30 33 29 34 22 39 22 42 22 43 22 43
Nets108, Hornets 98 NEWORLEANS (98) Aminu1-40-02, Davis8-131-317,R.Lopez6-10 3-315, Vasnuez 7-16 0-015, Gordon8-175-5 24, Amundson 0-1 0-0 0,Mason 3-6 0-0 7,Miler0-1 0-00,Roberts3-6 0-0 6,Thomas4-4 4412.Totals 40-7813-15 98. BROOKLYN (108) Wallace3-97-913, Evans3-5 0-06, 8 Lopez1015 6-8 26,Wiliams7-195-721, Watson1-51-2 4, Bogans1-30-0 3, Taylor0-1 0-00, Brooks5-6 4-5 14, Teletovic1-2003, Blatche9150018. Totals 40-80 23-31108. Newerleans 19 2 9 30 20 — 98 Brooklyn 28 29 23 28 — 108
Heat 98, Hawks 81 ATLANTA (81) Toffiver0-20-0 0, Smith7-161-215, Horford613 0-012,Teague4-9 2-212, Stevenson2-3 0-05, D.Jones2-30-04, Jenkins 3-90-06, Harris 3-60-0 7, Korver1-50-03, Johnson2-65-69, Scott3-51-2 7, Mack0-11-21 Totals 33-7810-14 81. MIAMI (98) James3-1191215, Haslem3-70-06, Bosh 612 2-214, Chalmers 5-8 0-014, Wade9-18 5-6 23, Allen 3-84-512, Battier0-3 2-22, Andersen2-3 0-0 4, Cole1-5 0-3 2 Anthony3-40-06, Lewis 0-10-0 0,Miff erg-20-00,J.Jones0-00-00.Totals35-82 22-30 98. Atlanta Miami
Lakers106, Magic97 L.A. LAKERS (106)
Tuesday'sGames Cleveland95,Washington 90 Charlotte100,Boston74 L.A. Lakers106,Orlando97 Brooklyn108,NewOrleans98 Miami 98,Atlanta81 Minnesota107,SanAntonio 83 Daffas115,Milwaukee108 Memphis102,Portland97
World Peace 5-12 2-314, Clark2-50-06, Howard 7-13 25-3939, Nash5-9 0-011, Bryant4-141-211, Jamison5-70-210, Meeks4-71-1 11,Blake2-60-0 4, Sacre0-0 0-00, Morris 0-00-0 0. Totals 34-73 29-47106.
ORLANOO (97)
Harkless4-73-512, Harris7-170-1 17, Vucevic 3-90-0 6, Nelson9-192-3 21, Afflalo 6-184-417, Harrington1-62 25, Moore1-40 03, Udrih4 82 2 12, Jones 0-10-00,O'Quinn2-3 0-04, Nicholson0-1 0-0 0. Totals 37-93 13-1797. L.A. Lakers 22 28 26 30 — 106 Orlando 28 23 22 29 — 97
Today'sGames
Miami atPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Minnesotaatlndiana4pm Mrlwaukee atWashrngton, 4p.m. TorontoatBoston,4:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Atlanta,4:30 pm. Phoeni xatHouston,5 p.m utah atOklahom aCity, 5p.m. Chicagoat Sacramento, 7 p.m. Detroit atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. MemphisatL.A.Clrppers, 7:30p.m. NewYorkatDenver, 730p.m.
Cavaliers 95, Wizards 90 WASHINGTON (90)
Thursday'sGames
Dallas atSanAntonio,5 p.m. NewYorkatPortland,7.30 p.m.
Summaries Tuesday'sGames
Grizzlies102, Blazers97 MEMPHIS(102) Prince4-60-0 9, Randolph 8-133-319, Gasol813 4-6 20, Conley4-126-814, Allen 5-102-512, Davis 6-92-314,Bayless1 7 2 25, Pondexter 3 5 1-28, Wroten 0-1 1-21. Totals 39-7621-31102. PORTLAND (97) Batum0-5 4-44, Aldridge10-19 8-8 28, Hickson 3-102-28, Liffard8-178-827, Matthews3-100-08, Maynor3-8 5-511, Leonard3-6 0-06, Freeland1-1 0-02, Barton1-31-2 3.Totals 32-79 28-2997. Memphis 21 27 20 34 — 102 Portland 21 19 18 39 — 97 3-Point Goal— s Memphis 3-11 (Prince 1-1, Bayless1-3, Pondexter1-3, Allen 0-1, Conley0-3), Portand 5-16 (Liffard 3-5, Matthews2-5, Barton 0-1, Maynor0-2, Batum0-3). Fouled Dut—None. Rebounds Memphi44 s (Randolph10), Portland51
(Aldridge,Batum10). Assists—Memphis 31(Conley 15), Portland 17(Liffard 7). Total Fouls—Memphis 24, Portland 23. Technical— s Davis, Gasol. A18,754(19,980).
Webster6-14 0-0 17, Nene5-11 5-6 15, Dkafor 8-12 2-218, Wal7-1513-14 l 27, Temple1-3 0-02, Ariza1-2 0-02, Booker0-12-2 2, Martin 0-30-0 0, Seraphin1-40-02, Price1 71 33,Coffinsg 00-00, Singleton1-40-12.Totals 31-76 23-2890. CLEVELAND (95) Gee5-153-417,Thompson5-83-313,Zeff er2-4 0-0 4, Livingston6-90-012, Waiters5-1310-14 20, Miles4-100-010,Walton1-40-02,Speights0-50-0 0, Effington4-10 3-4 12, Gibson2-5 0-0 5. Totals 34-83 19-25 95. Washington 33 16 16 26 — 90 Cleveland 20 30 26 19 — 96
Bobcats100, Celtics 74 BOSTON (74) Green4-116-814, Bass4-62-210, Garnett2-10 1-25, Bradley4-110-010, Lee3-60-06, Wilcox00 0 00, Terry2-51-2 5, White1-41-23, Randolph 2-40-24, Crawford4-65-514, TWigiams1-30-23. Totals 27-66 16-2574. CHARLOTTE (100) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-8 1-4 9, McRoberts5-6 2-2 13, Biyombo1-20-0 2, Walker4 112 4 10, Henderson 11-19 12-1235,Mullens 1-30-0 2, Haywood0-3 1-2 1, R.Wigiams0-4 0-0 0, Gordon5-13 4-4 17, Adrien 3-6 2-2 8, Taylo1-2 r 0-0 3. Totals 35-77 24-30 100. Boston 20 26 15 13 — 74 Charlotte 19 30 27 24 — 100
Leaders Mavericks 115, Bucks 108 DALLAS(115)
Crowder6 9 0014, Nowitzki 7-134-519, Kama n 0-2 0-0 0,M.James5-11 2-213, Mayo6-12 0-0 14, Wright 3-73-7 9, Brand3-4 2-28, Carter6-10 7-7 23,Coff ison2-8 4-4 8,Beaubois3-6 0-0 7.Totals 41-82 22-27 115. MILWAUKEE (108) Dunleavy7-120-018, I yasova3-9 0-07,Sanders 5-11 3 413,Jennings2 7 0 04, Ellis12 24 6 632, Ayon 1-21-2 3,Udoh6-92-314, Redick7-132-217, Daniels 0-1 0-0 0,Smith 0-10-0 0. Totals 43-89 14-17108. Dallas
Milwaukee
Timberwolves107, Spurs 83 SAN ANTO NIO(83) Jackson 5-101-214, Bonner1-40-02, Splitter110 2-2 4,Joseph5 94 415, Green4-10 0 010, Neal 0-2 0-0 0,Ginobili 2-103-4 7,Diaw3-11 0-0 6,Blair 2-20-04, DeColo4-64-413, Migs2-72-28, Baynes 0-1 0-00 Totals 29-8216-1883. MINNESOTA (107) Gelabale2 50 05,Wiliams5103 713, Stiemsma 3-50-06, Rubi9-172-321, o Ridnour6-90-014, Barea6-14 0-017, Cunningham4-111-2 9, Shved 6 8 1-2 16,Johnson3 30 4 6. Totals 44 82 7 18 107. SanAntonio 28 10 22 23 — 83 Minnesota 24 29 24 30 — 107
ThroughTuesday's Games Scoring Durant,DKC Anthony,NYK Bryant,LAL James,MIA Harden,HDU Westbrook,DKC Irving, CLE Curry,GDL Wade,MIA Parker,SAN Aldridge,PDR Ellis, MIL Lrffard,PDR Lee,GDL Lopez,Bro Pierce,BDS Griffin, LAC Holiday,PHL Jennings,MIL Williams,Bro
G FG FT PTS AVG 64 578 544 1816 28.4 51 484 329 1423 279 65 629 408 1782 27.4 62 621 319 1645 265 62 482 534 1634 26.4 64 526 358 1490 23.3 49 416 203 1127 23.0 61 469 209 1345 22.0 58 492 263 1263 21.8 56 462 228 1174 21.0 61 513 236 1263 207 62 455 236 1199 193 63 427 203 1196 190 62 482 208 1172 189 58 433 222 1088 188 62 387 267 1157 18.7 63 472 228 1175 18.7 59 440 150 1094 185 62 407 189 1137 183 62 372 240 1115 180
Rebonnds HowardLAL Asik, I-IDD Randolph,MEM Noah,CHI Vucevic,DRL Chandler,NYK Lee,GDL Hickson,PDR Horford,ATL Cousins,SAC
G OFF OEFTOT AVG 59 200 529 729 12.4 64 217 540 757 11.8 56 237 413 650 11.6 59 244 436 680 11.5 65 222 518 740 11.4 61 260 420 680 11.1 62 178 512 690 11.1 62 215 441 656 10.6 60 158 444 602 10.0 60 186 411 597 10.0
PREP ROUNDUP
No-hitter pacesCowgirls in nonleague win Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Miranda Smith tossed a no-hitter and Emily Benton went two for three with a solo home run to lead Crook County to a 1 2-1 victory over Burns in both teams' softball season opener Tuesday. Smith, a senior, struck out 10 and walked just one in Cowgirls coach Gary White's first game. Jena Ovens added two hits in the nonconference matchup, one of which was a triple. "It's nice to get the win, but we're still a ways from where we need to be," White sald. Crook County (1-0) jumped on the Hilanders early, scoring five runs in the first inning. Burns kept the game fairly close before the Cowgirls, who went 14-13 last season,scored five more runs in the bottom of the fourth inning to take a 12-1 lead. The Hilanders (0-1) did not score in the top of the fifth, which led to the game ending due to the 10-run mercy rule. Crook County finished the day with seven hits against Burns. In other Tuesday action: SOFTBALL Redmond 12, La Pine 0: REDMOND — Ashley Pesek struck out 10 hitters and surrendered just two hits as the Panthers opened their season with a five-inning win over the Hawks, who were playing with just nine players on their roster. Redmond broke through offensively in the second inning when Marissa Duchi hit
a solo home run. The flood gates opened in the third inning when the Panthers scored four more runs. "We feel good about winning, but it's just another game," said Redmond coach John Ferera. Alyssa Nitschelm went three for three with two doubles and a triple and knocked in two runs for Redmond (1-0). Duchi added a double and three RBIs. BASEBALL Redmond 14, La Pine 1: REDMOND — J.D. Abbas connected on four hits in as many at-bats with a double and a triple and four runs batted in, and the Panthers
GIRLS TENNIS Rldgevlew 8, The Dalles Wahtonka 0: THE DALLES — The Ravens earned their first win in program history with a dominating performance over The Dalles Wahtonka. Ridgeview's top singles player, Caitlin Carr, cruised to a 6-1, 7-5 win to set the pace. Sally Claridge (6-1, 6-1), Makena
Jordison (6-1, 6-1) and Shaelia Wilcox (6-3
6-3) also won their matches convincingly. In doubles, Claire Wright and Kourtney Wellette survived their match 7-5, 6-3. Rhian Sage and Bailey Simmons (6-4, 61), Shelby Smith and Brittany Hoffman (1-0) exploded for seven runs in the sec- (6-0, 6-0), and Heidi Ronhaar and Chloe ond inning and five more in the third en Goodwin (6-0, 6-0), all cruised in their route to a season-opening nonconference doubles matches. victory. Brayden Bordges, Cam Peters, BOYS TENNIS Matt Dahlen and Dan Peplin recorded Redmond 6, Sisters 2: BLACK BUTTE two hits apiece for Redmond. Jesse Young RANCH — Zach Powell, Calen Fitzsimpaced La Pine (0-2) with a one-for-two mons, Blayne Biondi and Blake Johnston day at the plate. swept the single matches to lead the PanSisters 8, Madras 2: SISTERS — Four thers to victory. Sisters' Paul Fullhart gave Outlaws collected two h i ts, and SisPowell a challenge at No. 1, 6-2, 4-6, 10-5. ters used a four-run fifth inning to pull The teams of Justin Camper and Stephen away from the visiting White Buffaloes Witherow, and Kyle Hite and Bice Wilber in a nonconference win ineach team's won doubles matches for Redmond. The season-opener.Jardon Weems, Justin teams of Sol Ling-Scott and Trevor StanHarrer,Eli Boettner and Joey Morgan den, and Tyrell Gilmore and Ethan Stenrecorded two hits apiece, with Morgan gel won for Sisters. driving in three runs for the Outlaws The Dalles Wahtonka 7, Ridgeview 1: (1-0). Madras coach Joe Dominiak high- REDMOND — The Ravens' No. 2 doubles lighted the performance of pitcher Josh team of Colin Ronhaar and Gabriel Payne Ross, who threw four innings for the won its match against the Eagle Indians White Buffaloes (0-1) while allowing just 6-1, 6-3, but they were the only Ravens to three runs. secure a victory in the nonleague match.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
Baseball Continued from C1 The I M C cr o w n has changed hands each of the past four seasons, but with five all-league players returning from last season's Class 5A state semifinal roster, the Lava Bears could make a push for theirfirst conference title since 2009.
"It's a good group," says
Bend's second-year c oach, Bret Bailey. "It's always nice to have returning players. On paper, it always looks good, but they still have to play the game and still have to be disciplined and still have to perform when they're up to bat or out in the field." Class 5A second-team allstate players Jonah Koski and Justin Erlandson, as well as first-team all-IMC i n f ielder D uke D eGaetano, l ead a group of seven seniors returning for the Bears. Their aim is to improve on Bend's first state semifinal appearance since 2003. "Just the fact that we were able to play well in the playoffs last year with a p retty young team, I think that was a nice representation of the types of kids that we have," Bailey says. "That's probably the main thing is that we now have experience beyond typi-
cal league (play)." Bailey is quick, however, to point to the parity of the IMC. He notes Summit's strong core of r e t u rning p l ayers, Mountain View's tradition of having a strong program that should not be overlooked, and Redmond High's r e turning stable of pitchers. The Storm, who fell in the 5A state championship final lastseason, hope to repeat as
league champs despite losing first-team all-state players at both the pitcher and catcher positions. With all-IMC hurler D .J. Wilson coming back, however, and the improved play of infielders Austin Peters and Erik Alvstad, Colt says Summit has a shot at defending its league title. "The thing I've been key-
ing on with the guys is (that) last year's team left a legacy, and that legacy is that we have an expectation to win here at Summit and to play baseball at the highest level," says Colt, last season's IMC coach of the year. "Even though (last year's
seniors) are gone, what they left here is just this hunger for winning, for being an IMC
champ and going into the playoffs and being a contender." Senior John Carroll returns for Mountain View after receiving second-team all-state honors as an outfielder last season. The Cougars lost four all-conference seniors from the 2012 squad that was ousted in the play-in round, but M cKae says he is confident in the abilities of his players this season. He says that all the Cougars need to do is believe in themselves and stay focused on each at-bat and each pitch. "I think we have a lot of buyin, and that's the key," McKae says. "I think this group is
Stricker
Vegas
"I'm thrilled to be moving to somewhat of a basketball Continued from C1 haven when you consider The Grand Garden has all the tournaments that are p rimarily b een u sed f o r being played there," Utah boxing events, but did have coach Larry K r y stkowiak a test run of sorts when Or- sald. egon State played San Diego For all the fun available there earlier this season. outside in Vegas, it could be While the capacity of the just as good on the court the Grand Garden is only a few way things have gone in the thousand less, it isn't nearly conference this season. as cavernous as the Staples No. 21 UCLA won the regCenter and has the allure of ular-season title, but m ay Vegas as an added attrac- not even be the favorite to tion for fans. win the tournament. "Las Vegas is such a desNo. 18 Arizona has the tination city and so many highest ranking, yet is the people enjoy going there fourth seed after struggling whether there's a sporting late in the season. event going on or not," AriO regon, California a n d zona coach Sean Miller said. possibly Colorado could be "You combine that with the headed to the NCAA tourfact you have this competi- nament, so clearly there's tive tournament and it's the some talent there. first basketball games ever E ven the teams at t h e played at the MGM Grand, bottom half of the bracket and to me, it's exciting and pulled off some upsets durit's going to be exciting for ing t h e r e g ular s e ason. years to come." Three of those came on the final weekend, when WashLas Vegas has been a destination for c onference i ngton State beat U C LA , tournaments. Utah knocked off Oregon The West Coast Confer- and Oregon State beat e nce concluded it s t o u r - Colorado. n ament Monday night a t Colorado pulled off an upOrleans Arena, where the set of sorts by winning last Western A t hletic C o nfer- year's Pac-12 tournament ence started its tournament and it wouldn't be much of o n Tuesday. Th e M o u n - a surprise if there's another tain West is also playing this season the way the regthis week at the Thomas & ular season played out. "Everybody wants to be Mack Center, UNLV's home arena. a ble to m ake th e N C A A Now, with the Pac-12 in t ournament. I t' s s o c o v town, Vegas is even more eted," Miller said. "There of a basketball mecca this are so many teams that are week. close."
Prep dasedall, at aglance A look at the Central Oregon teamscompeting in baseball this spring:
CLASS 5A
CLASS 4A Crook County Head coach:Frank Martinez (first season)
Bend
Head coach:Bret Bailey (second season)
2012record:10-14overall, 2-0 4A Special District1 (first); lost in Class 4A play-in round
2012 record:18-9 overall, 5-3
IMC (second); lost in semifinals
Outlook:Seniors Brandon Alexander, Troy Benton and Joe SaenzguidetheCowboys,who havebeenoustedintheplay-in round each of the past two seasons.
of Class 5A state playoffs Outlook:The Lava Bears build off
the strengths from last season's semifinal-appearing club, seeking their first IMC championship since 2009. Mountain View
Head coach:DaveMcKae(third season) 2012 record:9-14 overall, 1-7
IMC (third); lost in Class 5Aplayinround Outlook:Three coaches on staff
have professional experience to
La Pine Head coach:Bryn Card (third season) 2012record:5-18 overall, 4-11 Sky-Em (fifth)
Outlook: TheHawkshaveimprovedeachseason underCard and look to continue rising the Sky-Em ranks in 2013.
Madras Head coach:Joe Dominiak (first season) 2012 record:15-10 overall, 10-5 TVC (second); lost in quarterfinals of Class 4A state playoffs Outlook:Dominiak, a19-year collegiate coach, takes over the
help mold the Cougars into an IMC contender.
Buffs, whose teamspeedwill give Madras a weapon onthe base paths.
Redmond Head coach:Marc Horner (12th season)
Sisters Head coach:Steve Hodges (seventh season)
2012 record:15-12 overall, 5-3
2012 record:24-4 overall, 15-0 Sky-Em (first); lost in quarterfinals of Class 4A state playoffs
6A Special District1 (second);
Outlook:The Outlaws have lost just one gamein conference
lost in second round of Class 6A state playoffs
play over the past two years and look to make a run at a third straight Sky-Em title.
Outlook: A dozenseniorslead one of the more talented groups in Horner's tenure at Redmond
Ridgeview
High.
Head coach:Josh Davis (first season) 2012 record:First-year program
Summit
Outlook:Mitch Springer and Garrett DeWolf bring varsity experience to the youthful Ravens.
Head coach:C.J. Colt (seventh season) 2012record:25-6 overall, 6-2 IMC (first); lost in Class 5A state
championship Outlook:The Storm hope to return to the 5A state title game, where, in 2012, they were two outs away from earning Summit's first state championship.
CLASS 2A Culver Head coach:Shea Little (second season) 2012 record:10-13 overall, 6-10 Tri-River Conference
(seventh) Outlook:Little looks to seniors Gerson Gonzalez, Ryan Fritz and Clay Gibson to step up if the Bulldogs want to reach the
playoffs for the first time since 2001.
really fundamentally sound." Redmond High is making t he transition from th e 6A level to 5A and brings back 12 players who are now seniors, including 2012 all-Special District I pitchers J.D. Abbas and Daniel Thomas. Panthers coach Marc Horner likens this season's team to Redmond's teams of 2004 to 2006, which claimed at least a share of the IMC championship each season and advanced to the Class 4A state semifinals in 2006. "There's more talent here just because ofthe workouts and the i m plementation of nutrition," says Horner, who heads into his 12th season as Redmond's coach. "These guys are just more physical than any group I've ever had. They're all pretty fast and fit." Among Central O regon's Class 4A teams this season, Madras and Crook County will be guided by new coaches, while Ridgeview breaks the seal on a first-year program. Josh D a vi s c o m e s to Ridgeview in Redmond with seven yearsofassistant coaching experience at Bend High and Mountain View, which he
grams in the area. After spending 19 y ears c oaching c o l legiately, J o e Dominiak, who last summer guided the Bend Elks, takes the reins of the White Buffaloes, a squad that reached the quarterfinals of the state playoffs in 2012. Dominiak says the Buffs are picking up on his teachings pretty well and that, combined with the team's overall speed, has players and coaches enthusiastic about the season. Frank Martinez moves into the varsity coaching role at Crook County after spending time at the JV level and inherits a team with just four seniors. Pitchers Brandon Alexander and Troy Benton, as well as catcher Joe Saenz, are three guys Martinezexpects to stand out for the Cowboys, who have not been to the state playoffs since 2004. Sisterscomes off a schoolrecord 24-win season in 2012, during which t h e O u tlaws strung together a program-record 21 straight wins. Sisters coach Steve Hodges admits repeating that streak will be tough, especially without first-team all-state pitcher says gives him a good gauge of Shane Groth, who graduated how his youthful bunch stacks last spring. With three returnup with the rest of the proing all-Sky-Emplayers, howev-
Continued from C1 "I feel like I'm busier now than when I played a regular schedule," Stricker said. "But it's all good. I'm doing a lot of things around home with the family, and with what (wife) Nicki and I ar e doing with the foundation. I'll go to the grocery store with Nicki. And there's still time to do some fun things." Deer hunting is done, but Stricker was quick to point out that coyote season is still open. He's thinking about driving down to Chicago one day this week to watch the Big Ten men's basketball tournament. As for his golf? Not bad for a part-time player. In three starts this year, he has made $1.82 million and is No. 4 on the money list. He has gone up 10 spots to No. 8 in the world ranking. Stricker was the runner-up at Kapalua and Doral, and he reached the quarterfinals of the Match Play
on tour as he was to the guy working in Aisle 4 at the Home Depot." And now he is jokingly referred to as the part-time putting guru of Tiger Woods. Their m e eting W e d nesday afternoon at Doral was a planned accident. Woods had wanted to play a practice round with Stricker on the eve of the tournament, but Woods didn't arrive until early afternoon and couldn't find him. It was only after Woods played nine holes and finished his media duties that he saw Stricker on the putting green. Stricker is humble enough not to help unless asked. He has given Woods a few tips over the years, such as the Presidents Cup in 2011, and they oftenexchange text messages or chat about the art of putting. This was the longest session, and the most meaningful. He noticed that Woods had his hands behind the ball and his posture was out of sync, p robably from w o r king s o
Championship.
much on hislong game and
He is doing more with less. And along the way, his profile is as high as it has ever been. He already was considered as nice a person as there is on the PGA Tour, mainly for his g ood manners and how h e treats people. His father-inlaw, Dennis Tiziani, summed it up a few years ago when he saidStricker was "as considerate talking to a big executive
the recent hours Woods had spent chipping. Woods walked
away feeling as good as he did at Torrey Pines, where he won by four shots. Over the next four days at Doral, he had his fewest number of putts (100) ever on the PGA Tour, made 27 birdies and won by two shots — over Stricker, no less. Stricker said he told Woods after they finished that session,
OSU
"If you put me on your payroll, I could play a little bit less." Woods is in a good spot with two wins before the Masters. Stricker is in a good spot be-
cause he's playing less and looks as good as ever. "I'm really excited what I'm doing this year," Stricker said Tuesday. "I can tell by my demeanor on the golf course." He probably should have done this a few years ago. He felt he owed it to his sponsors to play a full schedule, and he was thrilled when he realized they were on board with him cutting back this year. Even then, he was concerned that he would be criticized by golf fans for not playing as much. The original plan was to defend his title at Kapalua and walk away. Over the holidays, he struck a compromise of 10 or 11 events. "What I told Nicki was if I could just make enough mon-
ey to pay our yearly expenses as a family, I'm fine with that," Stricker said at Kapalua. "If we don't have to touch anything I've put away, I don't need to do what I'm doing just to make money. I'd rather be staying home, doing things at home. "I wanted to not have it be about me anymore." That's what he's doing, and he's making it work beyond his own expectations. He is play-
ing good golf. He has plenty of time for his family. And he even has time for Woods.
er, and six returners from last season's team that advanced to the 4A quarterfinals, the Outlaws aim to challenge for a third straight conference title.
"They played in some pres-
sure baseballgames before, and as any coach is going to
say, you can't replace playoff experience," H odges s ays. "That's a plus for us is that we've been there, and they've had that big-game experience going into the season." La Pine has improved each season under third-year coach Bryn Card, and in 2013, the s enior-laden Hawks look t o hang a new banner in their gym, one that signifies their first Sky-Em League title since 1990. At 2A Culver, the roster is lacking inexperience, according to Bulldogs coach Shea Little, but that did not stop the team from setting a goal to reach the state playoffs. Seniors Gerson Gonzalez, Ryan Fritz and Clay Gibson will lead the way to help the Bulldogs accomplish that goal, something Culver has not d one since 2001. — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas@bendbulletin.com.
working hard on." In the meantime, Starks Continued from C1 has found ways to help the " This season, with o u r Beavers. record not showing it, beIn the 64-58 win at Coloing competitive i n e v ery rado, he hit a l ayup with s ingle Pac-12 game h a s 2:09 left to give the Beabeen a new feelingfor Or- vers a 56-50 lead and then egon State over the last five dropped in two free throws years. That feeling we have with 33 seconds to go to to keep experiencing and bump the lead back up to not let it go backwards." five. "A lot of people show up Starks' slump d uring t ourney t i me, s o A run through the tour- we'll see what h appens," n ament would be al l t h e Joe Burton said. "If we get more possible with some him going, it will be scary for the opposite team." strong shooting by Ahmad Starks. Starks can swing a game Playing in Vegas with a 3 - p oint s h ooting The teams are stayingspree. and playing — at the MGM Unfortunately f o r the Grand on the La s Vegas Beavers, he's been mired in strip. a slump for most of the conThere's plenty of distracference season. tions in the area, but the "Ahmad is a very good Beavers can't afford to lose basketball player who unfocus. "I would approach it and d erstands th e g a m e a s well, i f n o t b e t ter, t h an I think the rest of the team most guys," Robinson said. would approach it as a busi"What he's struggled with ness trip," OSU f o r w ard is trying to figure out how Eric Moreland said. "We're in no position to be havt o get himself out of t h i s slump. ing fun like that right now. "At some point in y our We all feel we shouldn't be c areer yo u g o th r o u gh where we're at, so I would what he's going through think that everybody would and you at some point fig- go up there with the mindure out how to get out of it set that this is a business and that's what he's really trip."
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C5 © To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbulletin.comn/buSinss. Alsoseearecapin Sunday's Businesssection.
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 DOW ~ 14,450.06 ~
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NorthwestStocks
The company said on March 7 that it agreed to be acquired by investment firm Sycamore Partners for about $592.4 million in cash. Hot Topic runs its namesake stores as well as the Torrid chain, a plus-size brand. $13.84
$15 $10.01 12
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Operating EPS 4Q '11 4 Q '12 37
based on past 12 months' results
Dividend: $0.32 Div. Yield: 2.3% Source. Facteet
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+32 . 1 +20 . 7 «C +20 . 2 $9 +19. 8 «C +1 9 . 3 4o +1 9 . 2 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +16 . 9 +15. 7 O e Fund target represents weighted +14 . 6 average of stock holdings +14 . 3 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
Losers NAME LAST N autMar h 7 .34 C hiAutL rs 4 . 4 2 eMagin 3.47 Lakelnd 4.26 SearsH&D n 37.50
CHG %CHG -1.66 -18.4 —.79 -15.2 —.58 -14.3 -.70 -14.1 -5.50 -12.8
Foreign Markets NAME Paris
LAST 3,839.97 London 6,510.62 Frankfurt 7,966.12 Hong Kong 22,890.60 Mexico 43,968.74 Milan 16,023.98 Tokyo 12,314.81 Stockholm 1,208.52 Sydney 5,128.56 Zurich 7,802.93
CHG %CHG
CATEGORY MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ASSETS EXP RATIO MANAGER SINCE RETURNS3-MD
Moderate Allocation ** * y y yy $8,194 million 0.81% Charles Burge, Jr. 2010-02-12 +8.6
YTD +8.5 1- YR +15.4 3-YR ANNL +9.3 5-YR-ANNL +6.4
+ 3.70 + . 1 0 + 6.99 + . 1 1 -18.17 —.23 -200.22 -.87 TOP 5HOLDINGS -44.56 -.10 JPMorgan Chase & Co —.42 -68.00 -34.24 —.28 US Treasury Note 2.375% -9.56 -.78 General Electric Co -31.49 -.61 Citigroup Inc + 44.28 + . 5 7 Marsh& McLennan Companies, Inc.
PCT 3.57 2.33 2.24 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 1.87 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 1.56 redemption fee. Source: Morn1ngstar.
PAY Close:$21.68%1.22 or 6.0% The maker of credit-card terminals said that its chief executive officer of 12 years, Douglas Bergeron, is stepping down. $40 30
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20
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D
M
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M
$33.10
$60.98
$17.99 ~
$55.89
Vol.:2.8m (3.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.25 b
P E: 24 .8 Vol.:9.2m (2.1x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$2.35 b
P E: 36 .8
HEK
Close:$4.14 %0.43 or 11.6%
The drilling services company posted a fourth-quarter profit after acquiring Power Fuels, and predicted strong revenue in 2013. $4.5 4.0 3.5
Yield:...
Dick's Sporting Gds.
DKS
Close:$47.32 %2.21 or 4.9% A Citi analyst reiterated her "Buy" rating on the sporting goods retailer, saying investors should snap up the discounted shares.
$55 50 45
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$2.66~
Vol.:15.7m (6.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $648.77 m
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$6.14
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P E: . . . Vol.:6.6m (3.9x avg.) PE: 2 1.9 Yie l d: ... Mkt. Cap:$4.62 b Yiel d : 1. 1 %
Bon-Ton Stores
BONT Close:$12.50L0.59 or 5.0% The retailer said that its fourth-quarter net income fell 5 percent from a year-ago, but its results still beat expectations. $16
Tandy Leather
TLF Close:$7.1440.97 or 15.7% The leather retailer said that its fourth-quarter net income rose 29 percent as it continues to expand the size of its stores.
$8
14 12
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Vol.:578.0k (3.3x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:43.1k (9.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$214.41 m Yi eld: 1.6% Mkt. Cap:$72.53 m
PE: 14 . 3 Yield: ...
Sears Hometown
SHOS Diamond Foods DMND Close:$37.50 V-5.50 or -12.8% Close: $15.89%-1.71 or -9.7% The retailer, which sells home appliThe snack foods maker said that it ances, hardware, tools and lawn and turned a profit in its second quarter, garden equipment said that its but its results still missed Wall Street fourth-quarter results rose. expectations. $50 $18 40 16 30
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Mkt. Cap:$350.69 m
Yield :... AP
. 08 . 11 .14
.08 .11 .14
2 -year T-note . 26 .26 5-year T-note . 8 7 .90 10-year T-note 2.02 2.06
30-year T-bond 3.21 3.26
BONDS
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NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.94 2.98 -0.04 L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.12 4.12 . . . L L Barclays USAggregate 1.95 1.96 -0.01 L L PRIME FED B arclays US High Yield 5.58 5.63 -0.05 w w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.02 4.02 ... L L YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.15 1.18 -0.03 L L 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .84 2.84 ... L L 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities The price of crude oil rose for a fourth straight day to its highest settlement price in nearly two weeks. Natural gas and wholesale gasoline dipped lower, while gold and silver rose.
Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the yen, providing at least a pause to a months-long rise that had carried it to its highest level against the
Japanese currency since 2009.
h5N4 QG
M
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 5 2-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.02 percent Tuesday. Yields affect interest rates on Pric e -earnings ratio consumer loans.
Market value: $45.2 billion
*annualized
-.0012
VeriFone Sys.
60
million, or 90 cents per share, a year earlier. The current quarter included a tax benefit of 14 cents per share related to part of the special dividend that the Issaquah, Wash., company paid in December to its 401(k) participants. Even without the tax benefit, the results beat the $1.06 per share that analysts polledby FactSet expected. Revenue climbed 8 percent to $24.87 billion from $22.97 billion. Wall Street predicted $24.85 billion.
52-WEEK RANGE
Marketsummary
RschMotn
CAB Close:$60.65L6.75 or 12.5% The outdoor gear and sporting goods retailer said it had a strong start to the year and it boosted its first-quarter outlook. $80
DividendFootnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last t2 months. f - Current Vol.:650.8k (6.5x avg.) annual rate, wh>cttwas mcreased bymost recent div>dendannouncement. i - Sum ot dividends pau after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of d>vidends pau tns year. Most recent Mkt. Cap:$866.25 m uudend was omitted or deferred k - Declared cr pau tus year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcnmate cash SOURCE: Sungard value cn ex-distrittution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months
A15 percent rise in membership fees helped Costco Wholesale deliver second-quarter results that beat analyst expectations. The wholesale club operator's fiscal second-quarter net income climbed 39 percent as it pulled in more money from membership fees, sales improved and it recorded a large tax benefit. Costco earned $547 million, or $1.24 per share, for the period ended Feb. 17. That compares with $394
1.3026+
StoryStocks
Heckmann
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
ALK 31.29 — A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 72 BBSI 18.40 BA 66. 8 2 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 CascadeCp CASC 42.86 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 CostcoWholesale COST 81.98 — Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5 62 ~ FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 — Hewlett Packard H PQ 11.35 ~ Home FederalBncpID HOME 8.67 ~ Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — Kroger Co KR 2 0 98 — Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 ~ LA Pacific L PX 7 , 81 —
' + +.48
Cabela's
'
F
NAME
t'
Change: 2.77 (flat) 1 0 DAY S
13,000
1,400 1,350
$92.54
Stock indexes were mixed Tuesday, but the Dow Jones industrial average managed to eke out a wisp of a gain. It was enough to extend the Dow's winning streak to eight days, its longest since February 2011. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and Nasdaq composite both finished the day with modest losses. Drops for stocks in the technology and financial industries outweighed gains for telecommunications and health-care companies. The Dow has risen every day so far in March. During that time, it set a record high after eclipsing its prior peak that had been set in October 2007 before the Great Recession. The S&P 500 is less than 1 percent below its record.
13,500
Alaska Air Group Hot Topic, the teen retailer, will post Avista Corp Bank of America its fourth-quarter and 2012 earnings. Financial analysts expect Barrett Business Boeing Co a strong earnings report.
Price-earnings ratio:
Close: 14,450.06
14,000
StocksRecap
Hot quarter?
'12
.
14,500
Source: Facteet
HOTT
.
13,840
NYSE NASD
0
14 160
1,450
1 1%
Flat
+ +.32
$29.13
1,500
Monthly percentage change
0.2
GOLD
$159150I + 1 3 7 0
Dow jones industrials
Close:1,552.48
1,550
Retail Sales
0.3
i)4
S&p 500 .
1,600
February today. Economists expect retail sales climbed 0.2 percent from January. That would be a slight improvement from January, when retail sales ticked up 0.1 percent from December.
0.2
10 YR T NOTE ~ 2.02%
3 74
1,552.48
1,56o
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
S
$8$P500
NASDAO ~ 1 O 55
277
L L L w L L L
2.69 4.61 2.15 7.1 9 3.93 1.12 3.37
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 92.54 92.06 + 0.52 + 0 . 8 Ethanol (gal) 2.54 2.54 +0.12 +15.8 Heating Dil (gal) 2.95 2.97 -0.70 -3.2 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.65 3.65 - 0.11 + 8 . 8 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.15 3.15 -0.07 + 12.0 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE
CLOSE PVS. 1591.50 1577.80 29.13 28.81 1595.00 1601.20 3.54 3.50 773.40 777.10
%CH. %YTD -5.0 +0.87 t1J t -3.5 - 0.39 + 3 . 7 -2.8 +1.09 -0.48 +10.1
CLOSE 1.29 1.42
PVS. %CH. %YTD -0.9 1.28 +0.45 1.43 -0.98 -1.5 7.41 Corn (bu) 7.35 + 0.88 + 6 . 1 Cotton (Ib) 0.87 0.87 +0.70 +16.2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 389.00 386.50 + 0.65 + 4 . 0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.38 1.36 +0.92 +18.5 Soybeans (bu) 14.90 15.15 - 1.65 + 5 .0 Wheat(bu) 6.94 +0.94 -10.0 7.01
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4909 —.0020 —.13% 1.5637 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 6 1 —.0003 —.03% .9934 USD per Euro 1.3026 —.0012 —.09% 1.3150 —.34 —.35% 82.26 Japanese Yen 95.93 Mexican Peso 12. 4 567 —.0683 —.55% 12.7031 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6807 +.0034 +.09% 3.7778 Norwegian Krone 5.7071 —.0141 —.25% 5.6777 South African Rand 9.1675 +.0635 +.69% 7.5737 6.3574 —.0328 —.52% 6.8031 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9473 —.0005 —.05% .9169 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9692 -.0045 -.46% . 9 523 Chinese Yuan 6.2189 -.0016 -.03% 6.3277 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7570 -.0003 -.00% 7.7578 Indian Rupee 54.198 -.222 -.41% 49.965 Singapore Dollar 1.2466 -.0016 -.13% 1.2608 South Korean Won 1097.26 -1.99 -.18% 1125.19 -.02 -.07% 2 9 .51 Taiwan Dollar 29.67
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
BRIEFING
RoundButte Seed retail stores sold Wilco, an agricultural supply cooperative, has purchased the former Round Butte Seed Co. retail stores in Bend and Prineville, according to a
news release. Based in Mt. Angel,
Wilco has been amember-owned cooperative since 1936 and today
operates in 22 locations in Oregon andWashington. The purchase of the Bend and Prineville
stores marks the coop's entry into the Cen-
tral Oregon market. Wilco bought the two
stores from TennesseebasedHelenaChemical Co., which bought Round Butte Seed Co.
in December. Helena Chemical will continue offering ag supply and marketing services in Bend and Prineville,
e mon reai ro e By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
A Bend developer wants to construct a 9,500square-foot retail building in Redmond, near Lowe's Home Improvement and adjacent to U.S. Highway 97. A Starbucks and a Sleep Country mattress store are expected to fill two of the building's three sections, with discussions under way to try and fill the middle section. Johnnie "Rusty" Ertle applied for a permit with the city of Redmond last week. In 2003, Ertle bought four parcels of land totaling 16.4 acres near the intersection of Canal Boulevard and Veterans Way, Deschutes County property records show. The new project is part of a multi-year effort to develop a retail area on land owned
by the Ertle family, once dubbed the Shops at the Old Fair District for its location on the former Deschutes County Fairgrounds site. "We expect to break ground in April," said Jake Ertle, Rusty Ertle's son. He expects construction to be done by September, assuming the group's permit is approved in the coming weeks. The permit lists the project value at $975,000. The Starbucks and Sleep Country stores are expected to fill all but 1,426 square feet of the proposed building, Jake Ertle said. If approved, it would be the 13th Redmond permit valued at $975,000 or higher issued since the start of 2009, according to city records. Forty-one were issued between 2004 and 2008. Rusty Ertle started de-
veloping the Shops at the Old Fair District project in 2006, envisioning a variety of big-box and midsized retail stores, according to The Bulletin's archives. That proposal came amid a retail building boom in Redmond over the last decade that saw major commercial projects — including a Wal-Mart Supercenter, The Home Depot and a variety of chain restaurants, like Panda Express and Sonic Drive-In. Ertle sold about 11.5 acres to Lowe's in 2007. A year later, his development group constructed an 11,000square-foot building just south of Lowe's, which now houses a U.S. Cellular store, Cold Stone Creamery and an OnPoint Community Credit Union branch. The rest of Ertle's land
r o OSe
is undeveloped, including small parcels just north of the Lowe's store, and south of the planned Starbucks and Sleep Country building. Retail development slowed dramatically in 2008 amid the financial collapse. Jake Ertle said his father is working to find potential tenants for other developments on his property, as well as for the center space in the building tentatively set for construction next month. "We spent a number of years working on the Starbucks and Sleep Country deals. It was getting those deals that allowed us to start." Ertle said. "This project is coming out of the ground, but we still have two other pieces of land."
New retail duilding planned inRedmond A Bend developer applied for a
permit to construct a retail building near Lowe's Home Improvement in Redmond. Construction could start next month and wrap up in September. Bla u Ever reen Ave Hi hiand
Planned
— deVelOp n L o
'I +3/
s
ttter)gs s
— Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluclztich@bendbultetin.com
Andy Zeigert/rhe Bulletin
although its operations
will be separate, according to the news release. Both stores will get
SOUTH BY SOUTHWEST
new merchandise, and plans call for the Bend
FAA to let Boeing test battery fix
store to expand when
the company finds the right location, the news release stated.
Home valuesdrop in Bend, Redmond Bend and Redmond
medianhome prices declined in February, according to a Bratton
Appraisal Group report released Tuesday. The median price on
a single family home in Bend was$235,000 last month, down from $248,000 in January,
according to the report. Redmond me-
dian prices dropped to $122,000 in February from $143,000 the month before — the
highest monthly median for Redmond since mid2008. — From staff reports
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY
• What's Brewing? The presentand future of Prineviile's wood products industry; Casey Jackson, vice president of manufacturing, and Keith Eager, humanresources manager, Contact Industries; 7-8 a.m., Meadow Lakes Restaurant, 300 S.W. MeadowLakes Drive, Prineviiie. • De-stress While Leading:Wendy Duncan will teach techniques for managing individuals, teams or departments while maintaining a healthy balance; stress management; reservations encouraged; free; 7:30 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendchamber.org. • Business startttp workshops:Forpeople contemplating business ownership; registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. FRIDAY • How will youvote in May?: Townhall forum; registration required; $30 for members, $40for nonmembers; 7:30a.m.; Bend Golfand Country Club, 61045 Country ClubDrive; www.bendchamber.org. SATURDAY • NetworkingNuggets Ten different Networking Nuggets andstorytelling techniques; practice speaking andget immediate feedback; registration requested; $47; 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Cascade School ofMusic,200 N.W . Pacific Park Lane,Bend; 541-617-0340, diane© eloquentexpression.com or www.eioquentexpression. com. To find freeincome tax preparation help, visit the Events Calendar at Mryyylt
bendbulletin.com/events. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.comrbizcal
By Andrea Chang Los Angeles Times
•
AUSTIN, Texas — A San Francisco startup that created a tiny motion-sensing
The Seattle Times The Federal Aviation Administration said Tuesday it has approved Boeing's certification planfortheredesigned 787 battery system and will allow two Dreamliner planes to begin test flights with the revamped protections against overheating batteries and damaging fires. "We are confident the plan we approved today includes all the right elements to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of the battery system redesign," FAA chief Michael Huerta said. "Today's announcement starts a testing process which will demonstrate whether the proposed fix will work as
a
device is making a big splash at South by Southwest, overshadowing major tech brands and scores of new applications with its promise
of changing how consumers interact with their computers. In its debut appearance at the conference known more as a music and film festival, Leap Motion Inc. wowed attendees with its "Minority Report"-style gesture-recognition controller, which enables users to manipulate what's on their screens with a wave of the hand or lift of a finger. Tech enthusiasts say Leap Motion could help usher in the age of touchless computing. The company was one of hundreds of startups at South by Southwest Interactive, the tech component of the annual Austin festival that is increasingly becoming a must-attend event for rising technology companies. SXSW organizers said they expected a 5 to 8 percent increase in the number of Interactive registrants this year from 24,569 in 2012. Whereas the International Consumer Electronics Show, or CES, in Las Vegas is geared toward showing off the latest TVs and tablets, Interactive is more a place for techies to debut brand-new technology and share pie-inthe-sky ideas. So the most buzz-worthy
designed." Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said regulators "won't allow the plane to return to service unless we're satisfied that the new design ensures the safety of the aircraft and its Leap Motion tna McClatchy-Trihune News Service
The Leap is a small, 3-0 motion sensor that goes in front of your computer and creates a 3-0 interactive space from which you can use your hands and fingers to control your computer. moments during the five-day event, which began Friday, surrounded the Leap Motion controller and Elon Musk's keynote, in which the founder of Space Exploration Technologies Corp. and Tesla Motors Inc. discussed hovering rockets, his idea for a new high-speed mode of transportation dubbed the "hyperloop," and space travel to Mars. "I'd like to die on Mars — just not on impact," Musk sald.
Leap Motion's turn as the belle of the ball also signaled a shift for Interactive, which typically skews more software- and app-heavy. Twitter and Foursquare exploded onto the scene at past SXSW festivals, leading many venture capitalists and technology commentators to look to the conferenceas a forecaster for the next big Web startup. This year, however, it was all about the Leap Motion sensor, a 3-inch-long device about the size of a
pack of gum. The company announced the 3-D gesture controller in May but waited until SXSW to unveil it on a large scale. The Leap Motiondevice, which the company is calling a "new frontier for hands and fingers," sits in front of a computer and can track gestures within an 8-cubic-foot area. It has a sensitivity said to be 200 times that of Microsoft's Kinect or Nintendo's Wii and can even track different finger movements.
Google to settle Wi-Fi privacy case The Associated Press SAN FRANCISCO — Google will pay a $7 million fine to settle a multistate investigation into a snoopy software program that enabled the Internet search leader to intercept emails, passwords and other sensitive information sentseveral years ago over unprotected wireless networks in neighborhoods across the world. The agreement announced Tues-
day covers 38 states and the District of Columbia, part of the area where households and local merchants unwittingly had some of their communications on W i -Fi n e tworks snatched by Google Inc. from early 2008 until the spring Of 2010. Google stopped the data collection in May 2010, shortly before the company revealed cars taking street-level photos for its online map-
ping service also had been grabbing information transmitted over unsecured Wi-Fi networks. The company blamed the intru-
sion on a rogue engineer who rigged a d ata-collection p r ogram i n t o equipment that was supposed to only detect basic information about local Wi-Fi networks to help plot the locations of people using its mapping serviceand other products.
passengers." As earlier unofficial reports indicated, Boeing's proposed improvements include "a redesign of the internal battery components to minimize initiation of a short circuit within the battery, better insulation of the cells and the addition of a new containment and venting system," according to the FAA. The agency said its certification plan requires a series of tests that must be passed before the 787 could return to service, with specific pass/fail criteria and testing methodology. FAA engineers will be present for the testing and will be closely involved in all aspects of the process, the agency said.
EXeCutiVe dnnuSeS —Google is paying nearly $15 million in bonuses to four of the Internet search company's top executives for their performances last year. Documents filed Tuesdaydisclosed Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt will get the biggest award at $6 million to supplement his
estimated fortune of $8 billion. Neither Larry Page, CEO and co-founder, nor fellow cofounder Sergey Brin will get a bonus for their
work. They haveusually settled for a $1salary since Google went public in 2004. — The Associated Press
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed March 5 • Zachary J. Hastings, 9080 Boxwood Lane, Terrebonne • Dina Rising, 61775 Harmony Lane,Bend Filed March 6 • Michael T. Millette, 61956 Fall CreekLoop, Bend
• Shawndra R. Coe, 20344 Aberdeen Drive, Bend • Shelby M. Wolfersperger, 62810 Bend Road,Bend Flled March 7 • Allen E. Moore,59945 Minnetonka Circle, Bend • Robert C. McKnight, P.O. Box 883, Hines • Joshua R. Bonfiglio,
1661 N.E.Cackler Lane, Bend • Cathy A. Hammond, 18820 Choctaw Road, Bend • January R. Wilson,114 N.W. GreenwoodAve., Redmond • Jessica M. McEwen, 61373 Sally Lane Unit 2, Bend
Filed March 8 • Charles B. Pearlman, 1108 S.E.Gatewood Place, Bend • Martha Martinez, 941 S.E. Algonquian Court, Prineville • Wilbert L. Smith, 1515 N.W. Fir Ave. No.13, Redmond • Clayton M. Kuehl, P.O.
Box1894, Sisters • Rick A. Spencer III, 61035 Chuckanut Drive, Bend • Robert J. Krohn,2915 N.W. Golf Course Drive, Bend • Dale A. Wratten, 2320 N.E. Yellowpine, Prineville • Keith E. Testerman, 20641 Mary Way,Bend
• Al K. Tyson, 1707 N.W. Elm Court, Redmond • April M. Valenti, 61650 Vega St., Bend Filed March 11 • Shala Ulloa, 21381 Gift Road, Bend • Timothy A. Noben, 20779 Northstar Way, Bend • Teddie F. Curtice, 735
N.W. GreenwoodAve. Space 24, Redmond • Shawn P. Lippy, PO. Box 1297, Bend • Lisa A. Routhier, 1673 N.W. Portland Ave., No. 12, Bend Chapter 13 Filed March 8 • Buddy L. Pinz, 3075 N.W. Ice Ave., Terrebonne
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photos, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Bird Watch, D4 THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
y~l
SNOW REPORT
P
7 Vl
For snow conditions at Oregon ski resorts,
seeB6
BRIEFING
Learn adout fish restoration Registration closes March 23 for the
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife's Salmon and Trout
Enhancement Conference on April 6
OUTING
at Seven Feathers
Convention Center in Canyonville. Volunteers, educators, students, anglers
n s'
and scientists will gather at the biennial
conference to discuss and learn about salmon and trout restoration. The confer-
~4VJ'A4
ence costs $30, which
Skiers will feel dwarfed by wr the huge trees on the Water Tower Trail to Todd Lake.
includes lunch and dinner. Registration
is available online at www.regonline.com/ 2013STEPConference.
The Salmon and Trout Enhancement
Program works to restore and enhanceOregon's native salmon and trout populations, according to the news release. Kevin Herkamp, ODFWSTEPcoordinator, said the conference will highlight
STEP programs and volunteer opportunitiesthroughoutthe
Anne Aurand The Bulletin
• CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING: Even if it's not • SPLITBOARDING: An easieway r your intended nordic destination, it's a good ski to access Todd Ridge's backcountry thrills
state. The keynote
By Anne Aurand• The Bulletin
address will be from
STEP andconservation leader Bill Bradbury. Also on the
agenda are presentations from scientists and ODFW staff, and three hands-on work-
shops April 7. "This is a great opportunity to catch up
on the latest science regarding salmon and trout, and to identify
some practical ways to get more volunteers
involved in salmon and trout restoration,"
m
hen I woke to fresh snow last week, my u n characteristic response was disappointment. I h ad planned to jet down to Diamond Lake for a day of nordic skiing on some little-known trails that I've never skied. But the storm and associated road conditions that morning made me rethink spending so many hours in the car for a cross-country ski in potentially crummy conditions. So I opted for a well-known trail to Todd Lake, starting just 20 miles from Bend. Slightly defeated by my change of
plans, I mourned the adventure of discovery and exploration I had planned. I've skied to Todd Lake many times. Todd Lake is not a hidden, undiscovered or creative destination any time of year. But it's a quintessential trip that every skier or snowshoer should do every winter. That said, it had been years since I'd gone. And as spring approaches and decent snow conditions disappear in lower elevations, 6,151feethigh Todd Lake will remain one of the last viable places to cross-country
ski (or snowshoe). See Outing /D3
Herkamp said in the
We finally crested the ridge, and it was time to remove the skins and put our snowboards together. "Rip hide!" Carlos Cummings yelled, as the wind howled and the heavy snowfall swirled around us. I gave him a confused look, and he explained that climbing skins, applied to skis and splitboards
for traction ADVENTURE
release.
to climb a
Contact: kevin. herkamp@state.or.us or 503-947-6232. — From staff reports
Correction A story titled "Author
pens guide toOregon's best cycling tours," which ran on Page
C1 on Sunday,March 10, gave anincorrect cost for author Ellee
Thalheimer's upcoming presentations atPaus
lina Springs Books. The
correct price is $5. The Bulletin regrets Anne Aurand / The Bulletin
the error.
MARK MORICAL~
This is a view across Todd Lake in the winter.
TRAIL UPDATE
+
HUNTING 5 FISHING
Virginia Meissner: This week, mid- to high-elevation
sno-parks will be in fair to good condition, but expect springlike conditions in the lower elevations. With increased
trail use anticipated during the pleasant weather and upcoming spring
16-24inches
WanogaSnoplayArea: 26-32 inches WanogaSnowmodile: 30-38inches Swampy Lakes: 40-48 inches
VistaButte:56-64 inches Dutchman Flat: 90-98inches
Edison Butte Sno-park: 22-28inches
Skyliner Sno-park: 6-10 inches
Ten Mile Sno-park: Patchy to 6 inches
Crescent Lake Sno-park: 14-18 inches Upper ThreeCreek Sno-park: 18-20inches
break, be sure to follow proper trail etiquette.
LOWER TRAILHEADS Though Deschutes River, Phil's and
DUIChmagFlat SDD-park
Peterson Ridge trails are snow-free higher up with more late-April-like conditions, there's still potential areas
6,350 ft.
good options for summer trails are
Six Mile and Lower Three Creek
sno-parks are snow-free andmost likely done for the season. See Trail Update/D5
en
SDD-park SDD-park 5 , 4 00 ft.
Cascade I akes Hwy.
Mt. Bachelor
Vista Butte SDD-park
Horse Butte, Smith Rock, Lake Billy Chinookand the Oregon Badlands Wilderness.
SNO-PARKS
Swampy Virginia Lakes Meissner 5,800 ft.
of frozen ground andmud bogs. Be sure to avoid muddy trails to prevent tread and vegetation impact. Other
Mark Morical/The Bulletin
Bend's Carlos Cummings skins to the top of Todd Ridge on his splitboard last week.
SNO-PARKSNOWDEPTHS:
WITH CHRIS SABO
SPRINGLIKE, BljT GOOD
SPORTS
slope, were in the past made from animal hides. Nowadays, they are mostly nylon. Anyway, we ripped our new-school hides and began the process of putting our splitboards together for the powder-filled ride down. A strong storm had moved in as we skinned up the horseshoe ridge around the west and north flanks of Todd Lake, an area known as Todd Ridge. The ridge is a remote location that requires a significant step-up in commitment and skill level from more accessible Central Oregon backcountry destinations such as Vista Butte and Tumalo Mountain. See Todd Ridge/D3
Wanoga SDD-park
5,900 ft. 46
5,500 ft.
Edison Butte
Sno-park 5,034 ft.
DESCHuTES
41
45
Sunriver
NATIONAL FOREST Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
Gearing up forspring turkey buntingseason y taste in shotguns runs to wood and blued steel. I like two barrels, one on top of the other or side-by-side, but last year I won a Weatherby SA-08 semi-automatic with a $5 ticket in a raffle. I didn't need another shotgun, I told myself, but then I reflected on a day in a turkey blind a few years ago. We had set up in what I guessed was the birds' daily travel route. When the first big gobbler strolled into range, I centered the bead on it and squeezed the trigger. Now I had patterned the gun the day before with Federal Premium Mag-Shok, but that bird walked right back
GARY LEWIS out of range. Yes, I missed, but there musthave been a turkey-head-shaped hole in the pattern at 20-plus yards. That's the target — that bobbing, weaving, red, white and blue noggin with a beak, snood and wattles. As I fondled that new matte-finished auto-loader with its synthetic stock, I pictured my perfect, dedicated turkey gun. See Lewis /D5
D2 TH E BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
• '
Matthew Lasala
k
Gladys Edwards
Next month's topic is Signs of Spring. Submit at www.bendbulletin.com/wellshot/signsofspring.
Linda
Robert
Dave Adams
Dave Adams
Can you work a camera, and capture a great picture? And canyou tell us a bit about it? Submit your color or black-and-white outdoors photos at bendbulletin. com/wellshot and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, and every week we'll run a stellar local photo in this section.
Lee Schaefer
Submission requirements: Include in your caption as much detail as possible — who, what, when, where, why; any special techniqueused — as wellas yourname, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Outing
on an apple, which fueled my inspiration to ski around the lake. Continued from D1 I was about halfway down the Getting there:TakeCascade On a clear day, Todd Lake offers w estern edge when an arctic gale Lakes Highway southwest from an amazing view ofBroken Top. blasted snow sideways across Bend about17 miles to Mt. On a stormy day, it provides just the lake, stinging my face and Bachelor's main parking lot. Stay enough stimulation to compensate indicating that the storm was in right and parkat the Mt. Bachelor for its familiarity. full swing. I put my head down Nordic Center. The easiest way to ski to Todd and trudged back out, knowing Difficulty: Moderate Lake is an out-and-back on the the blizzard could t ur n r e ally Todd Lake Trail, starting at the Cost:Free, but using wet as the day progressed and Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center's Mt. BachelorNordicCenter. Awomwarmed. "common corridor" trail to access an in the nordic lodge said that's All said, I probably skied about 3.3 miles. the backcountry requiresstopping four miles. in the lodge to pick up a free trail I opted for a counterclockwise Conditions largely dictate difloop, starting on the Water Tower pass. ficulty. It's not a long ski, but in Trail and returning on the Todd slow snow it's hard work. It's not Contact: Deschutes National Lake Trail. a technical route, but I do rememForest, 541-383-5300 Dwarfed by e n ormous hember when I was a beginning skier, locks, I felt very small and alone there were a couple of tricky spots in the woods. I crossed paths with along the route. The soft snow only two snowshoers right at the tiring, and slow going. that day restrained any runaway beginning of the trail. As I reached Todd Lake, the speed, quelling potential adrenaSnowflakesthe size of quarters s un squeezed t h r ough s o m e line rushes from turns on hills by fell all around me, and everything thin clouds and brightened up trees. was covered in fresh powder, in- the landscape for a minute, so I To make a Todd Lake outing cluding the trails. Breaking trail is pulled off my gloves and snacked more of an endurance ski, you
Todd Ridge Continued from D1 Last week, Cummings, a guide for Bend's Oregon Ski Guides and owner of a small business called Center Punch Splitboards, was helping me accomplish two t h ings that had longbeen on my must-do list: snowboard Todd Ridge and try a splitboard. Splitboards are snowboards that split into two, allowing the boarder to apply skins for touring and then adjust the two sides into a single board for riding. I was tired of trudging along in snowshoes and car-
rying my board on my back during backcountry outings — splitboarding seemed to be a more efficient alternative. The day started at Dutchman Flat S no-park, across Century Dr ive fr om Mt. Bachelor ski area. Cummings picked me up on a snowmobile and we settled in for the three-mileride down Cascade Lakes Highway to Todd Lake. A snowmobile is not required to access Todd Ridge, but it certainly is helpful. The distance from the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center (the typical starting point for those not snowmobiling) to Todd Lake is about two miles. The lake can be accessed via Cascade Lakes Highway
could tack on anumber of other trails in the Dutchman Flat Area. Trail maps are available in the nordic center and sometimes near the signs at trailheads. Trail junctions are well-marked. Ski and snowshoe trailsare separated from snowmobile trails (although you can occasionally hear the mosquito-buzz of the machines in the distance.) Somewhere duringthe course of the outing I realized it was plenty of adventure. I also realized that to have any sense of disappointment or defeat by being forced to spend my day skiing to Todd Lake instead of at Diamond Lake was a clear indication that I'd completely lost perspective. There's a saying in the snowsports world: A bad day skiing is better than a good day at work. But this was a satisfying day of skiing, and a great day at work.
Ifyou go
Two splitboards sit atop Todd Ridge
f',
as Carlos Cummings, owner of Center Punch Splitboards, prepares to snowboerd back down the slope.
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Mark Morical The Bulletin
as the snowfall intensified. After "ripping hide" and connecting our boards, Cummings gave me instructions. "Strap in, and head down this straight pitch," he said, pointing down the i ntermediate-looking slope. "At this point, I'm totally confident that the snow stability is good. New
snow seems to be bonding well to the old snowpack and that crust layer. I'm comfortable sending you down first." I stood up on my board, adjusting my balance to account for the weight of my backpack, and headed down the slope. I sunk deep into the powder, snow flying from my board in
Todd Lake ....:
; Todd Ridge Trail
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boarder to apply skins for touring and then adjust the
two sides into one board for riding. The cost of a
splitboard averagesabout $1,000, but they can berented from Bend's Center Punch Splitboards for $50, which
become stronger as rescuers get closer to the victim.
includes the splitboard, skins and poles.
Probes are long sticks, broken down like tent poles, that are
used to search the snow for an
BACKCOUNTRYRESOURCES
avalanche victim. A compact shovel can be used to dig the
Timberline Mountain Guides:
www.oregonskiguides.com; guides©oregonski guides.com;
person out. Climbing skins:Nylon material that sticks to the bottom of skis to provide traction on the
541-312-9242.
Center PunchSplitboards: Carlos Cummings, 541-3901566; centerpunchsplitboards.
way up the slope. Splitdoerd:This snowboard splits in two, allowing the
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both the person who is buried under the snow and those trying to find the victim have them. The devices' signals
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmoricalC<bendbulletin.com
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Todd
Transceivers, probesand shovels:Transceivers work in case of anavalanche only if
male snowshoers early on. We saw no one after that, enjoying the solitude of a blustery backcountry day at Todd Ridge — and the ease with which the splitboards made it possible.
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came upon a group of hardy fe-
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(on a snowmobile or skis) or via backcountry ski trails from the common corridor that starts at the nordic center. A well-used skin track starts from the Todd Lake trailhead (elevation 6,150 feet) and continues around the west side of Todd Lake. At the trailhead, where the closure to motorized vehicles begins, Cummings parked the snowmobile and we started taking our snowboards apart to apply the skins. The splitboards were much less complicated than I h ad imagined. Basically, a small pin is removed and then reinserted to adjust the bindings for touring or snowboarding. The board attaches together via small clips at the top and bottom. We applied our skins, adjusted our poles, and began our trek along the snow-covered lake. Small streams trickling into Todd Lake carved picturesque waves into the snow. C ummings said t hat t h e vertical drop of skiing from the top of the ridge to the lake ranges from about 600 to 800 feet, and it is typically a safe place to ski and snowboard. "I have never really seen a significant (snow) slide out there," he said. "However, it's good practice to always bring all that avalanche equipment (transceivers, probes, shovels)." I ndeed, Cummings p r o vided all the appropriate gear, and he gave me a helpful tutorial on how to use transceivers and probes before we began touring in earnest. He buried a transceiver near the lake and instructed me on how to use mine to find it. The transceiver flashes directional arrows and the distance in meters from th e a valanche burial victim (who, presumably, would be wearing his or her own transceiver). Once the area in which the transceiver is buried is located, probes areused to locate the avalanche victim and shovels are used to dig him or her out. My search for the buried transceiver wa s s uccessful, and we continued on our way. The skin path was flat for a while, until we began heading directly up the slope. Because seven inches of new snow had fallen on hardpack, the skin-
:,, Big Meadow i Trail
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com
white waves. The snow was not bottomless, and I did hit the hard crust layer, but the powder turns through a deserted backcountry hill were well worth th e c hallenging skin up. Cummings followed, and we boarded down the slope through some trees to a meadow. There, we ate lunch, then we took our boards back apart for the skin back to the trailhead and the snowmobile. Our only encounter with others on the trip was when we
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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
U TDOORS FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: Meets on the first Tuesday of each month; new members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For membersto meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first M onday ofeachm onth,6:45 p.m.; ONDA offi ces,Bend;541-306-4509, communications@deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:A group of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; 6-8 p.m.; Orvis Casting Course, Old Mill District, Bend; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub© gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: Meets on the third Thursday of each month; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB: Meetsonthe third Wednesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.
HUNTING CENTRALOREGONCHAPTER ROCKY MOUNTAINELK FOUNDATION:Meetsevery Wednesday through April10; banquet and auction April13; new members welcome; 6:30 p.m.; VFW Hall, Redmond; 541-447-2804 or Facebook at RMEF Central Oregon. LEARN THEARTOFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn how to identify and interpret tracks, sign, and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; two or more walks per month all year; $35; 8 a.m. to noon; 541-633-7045; dave@wildernesstracking.com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: M eets the second Wednesday of
A L E NDAR
each month; 7 p.m.; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION Meets the first Tuesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION Meets the third Tuesday of each month; 7 p.m.; Redmond VFWHall.
Email events at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletirLcom, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
BIRD WATCH
Singing thesongof spring American robin
Food:Insects, worms, berries and fruit, but
Scientific name:Turdus migratorius Characteristics:Afamiliar urban species
winter, huge gatherings of robins descend
has been known to wadeafter minnows. In
that averages10 inches in length with a plain
MISCELLANEOUS DISCOVERNATUREDAY: Partners of the Deschutes Children's Forest come together to present a fun, family-friendly event exploring, learning and playing in Bend's Shevlin Park; track wildlife, explore Tumalo Creek, meet birds of prey in person, plant trees, play gamesand more;gradesK-8 with parent or guardian; free; 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.; April 6; katie@ deschuteschildrensforest.org or www.deschuteschildrensforest.org
MULTISPORT DASH 2 DARE SPY-THEMED URBAN RACE: Teams of two to four people gather clues and perform basic challenges that are all espionage-related; $45 per person; noon; March 24; downtown Bend; for more information or to register, info@dash2dare.com or www. dash2dare.com. THE URBANGPSECO-CHALLENGE Like a scavenger hunt with clues andcheckpoints;$65,includes guide, GPS, instruction, water and materials; daily; 9 a.m. and1:30 p.m.; trips on paths and trails along Deschutes River through Old Mill District shops and Farewell Bend Park; 541-389-8359, 800-9622862, www.wanderlusttours.com.
PADDLING KAYAKINGCLASSES:Weekly classes and open pool; 4-6 p.m.; Sundays; $3; for all ages; equipment provided to those who preregister, first-come, first-served; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; 541-5487275, www.raprd.org.
orange-to-reddish breast, gray backand dark head. Females have a lighter breast and more white in the throat than males. Adults
also have abroken white eye ring and black streaks on awhite throat. Regional plumage
upon juniper trees, where the birds consume the berries. Bird facts:Therobin's song is a series of short, warbled notes often represented as"Cheerily
cheerup cheerio," but alsomakesawhinny and chirping call. Often regarded as asign of spring, robins can now be heard calling in the
variation exists.
early morning. Crayolaoffers a Robin's Egg
Breeding: Buildsacup-shaped nestmade of twigs and grasses on alimb or ledge; the interior is often mud-lined.
Blue crayon. A flock of robins is called worm.
Habltat:Widespread across North America
to Birds and www.whatbird.com. — Damian Faganis a birder, writer andCOCC Community Learninginstructor. He can bereached at damian.fagan@hotmail.com.
and Mexico, from urban neighborhoods to tundra to mountain forests. Often
congregates in hugeflocks in winter. KAYAK ROLLSESSIONS: Class every Sunday through end of May; 4:15-6 p.m.; $12 per boatfor in-district residents and $16 for out-of-district residents; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, Bend; preregistration is available the Monday prior to each session at register.bendparksandrec. org; www.bendparksandrec.org, 541-389-7665.
RUNNING SUNRIVER MUDSLINGERMUD RUN:The1t/2-mile course consists of a half-mile run, a scramble over and under obstacles, and multiple mud pits to run, crawl and jump through; open to individuals, families and teams; creative costumes are encouraged and spectators are welcome; starts and finishes in a meadow near the Sunriver Marina and HOLA! restaurant; event will not be timed in order to keep the focus on fun; 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; March 24; registration costs $20 ages 12 and older and $12 ages 4 to 11 through March 23; www. sunrivermudslinger.com.
Sources:Oregon Department of Wildlife Resources, David Sibley's TheSibley Guide
SHOOTING BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY LEAGUE:Traditional league; Wednesday evenings; Lenny at 541-480-6743; indoor 3-D league Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-4101380 or Del at 541-389-7234. COSSA KIDS:The Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association's NRA Youth Marksmanship Program is every third Saturday of the month;10 a.m. to noon; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and Sundays;milepost30,U.S.Highway 20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-3831428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTING CLAYSAND HUNTINGPRESERVE: 13-station, 100-target course and five-stand; 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to dusk Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday; located at 9020 South
Roh Kerr / The Bulletin
An American robin feeds three newborns in a nest on the front porch of a Bend neighborhood home.
Highway 97, Redmond; www. birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD 8GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the community and offers many training programs; three miles east of Redmond on the north side of state Highway126; www.rrandgc.com for further information. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-8199, www.pinemountainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns;10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.
SNOW SPORTS DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WINTER NATURENIGHTSSERIES: Monthly presentations on nature-related
topics given by experts; A Natural History of Butterflies; 7-8:30 p.m. March 27; Tower Theater, Bend; register at www.deschuteslandtrust. org or 541-330-0017. WANDERLUST MOONLIGHT SNOWSHOETOURS: Discover the Cascades with the bright moonlight reflecting off of the white snow and look for signs of animals in their nocturnal wonderland; no experience necessary; $65 per person includes all equipment and transportation; 8-midnight; March 23-26; www.wanderlusttours.com. MT. BACHELORNATIONAL SKI PATROLEVALUATION:The nonprofit organization is conducting its annual ski evaluation for those interested in joining; it is currently recruiting for both alpine and nordic patrol; a lift ticket will be provided for the candidates participating; at Mt. Bachelor West Village Lodge, downstairs; March 24 or April 6; registration begins at 8:30 a.m.; group will depart the lodge at 9 a.m.; Gary Hollowell at mt.bnsp.training© gmail.com or 541-977-7520.
S rin into is in season By Roger Phillips tdaho Statesman
We're about three weeks away from spring. In Southwest Idaho, that can mean anything from sunny and 60s to frigid snowstorms — and everything in between. But let's be optimists and hope forsome decent weather to start our spring fishing. These areas have tradition-
ally provided good fishing. Of course, it's hard to tell from y ear to year, but w it h t h i s many options, you should be able to find some place to wet a line and hook a fish.
Lake Lowell Why it's worth the trip: It's one of the most convenient but sometimes overlooked fishing spots in the Treasure Valley. The lake has a variety of fish, including perch, bluegill, crappie and catfish, but largemouth and smallmouth bass are its biggest attraction. Even though Lake Lowell isn't at the top of everyone's list, it's also no secret. It hosts several bass tournaments t hroughout the year and i s popular wit h p o werboatcrs. Shore anglers like to fish near dams, boat ramps and docks. T here's easy a ccess f or smaller boats, such as pontoon boats and float tubes, and there are lots of opportunities for uncrowded fishing. Because it's relatively shallow, especially on the south shoreline, the water warms
sideways snowstorms aren't uncommon. But it's ali worth it. People catch a iot of steelhead up there as the fish make their final push to the tributaries and hatcheriesbefore
spawning. It's a trick to catch the river when the conditions are right. Warmer temperatures get fish moving, but they also will eventuallymelt enough snowto blow out the river. Still, there's almost always some fishable water, especially near Stanley. Notes: Steelhead s eason ends April 30, but the best fishing is typically March through early April. After that, their
bodies rapidly degrade as they prepare to spawn.
Little Salmon River Why it's worth the trip:This is arguably the best place to hook a chinook during spring if you don't own a boat, and Riggins comes alive during salmon season. But beware that this river can be challenging. Early forecasts are calling for a smaller spring chinook run than we've seen in recent
years.
aii have t rout, an d S heep Creek has smallmouth bass. There's also a section of the East Fork of the Owyhee River open for anglers.The tribe owns and operates the reservoirs and charges adults $15 per day to fish there; it's $3 per day for those 14 or younger. Mountain View is open yearround, and the other two reservoirs open on April 1, but because of its elevation (about 5,000 feet), fishing is usually best in May and June. The reservoirs are stocked well with hard-fighting rainbow trout. There's usually a lot of fish in the 12-to-15-inch range, and there's also larger fish and a few real trophies there. The reservation is beautiful in the spring with warm, sunny days and cool nights. Summer, however, sparks a bloom of weeds that makes fishing difficult. You also can camp at the reservoirs for a n a dditional charge. There are boat launches, and the town has a grocery store. Notes:For details on fishing and camping on the reservation, go to shopaitribes.org.
The chinook often arrive when the snow melts, and the C J. Strike Reservoir little river starts raging. TimWhy it's worth the trip: Few ing is everything on the Little Salmon, and the peak of the places can match Strike's varirun comes and goes quickly. ety of fish, which include bass, Assuming there's a 14th- trout, perch, crappie, bluegill, straight salmon season, I can catfish, sturgeon, carp and assure you that someonewill more. pull a l arge, hard-fighting, Though they're aii abuntasty fish out the river; it might dant, every year one species fairly quickly in the spring. as well be you. seems to explode, resulting Even if we don't get some The river is also a pretty in great fishing. Based on ice early warm days, the bass of- good for spring steeihead fish- fishing, the perch population ten get active a lot earlier than ing in March. seems to be pretty healthy, most people realize. B ut large salmon run o r but every year offersa few Notes: Motorized boats are small, chinook fishing on the surprises. allowed only f r om A p ril 1 5 Little Salmon has become a Unlike many other reserto Sept. 30. For a map of the spring tradition. voirs, Strike's water level stays lake's access points, visit fws. Notes: The Idaho Fish and fairly constant, so you don't gov/deerflat. Game Commission typically have to worry about big seasets the salmon season in April, sonal fluctuations. Upper Salmon River but chinook fishing is usually The reservoir is among the Why it's worth the trip:Steel- best in late May and early June, largest in Southwest Idaho head fishing beneath the Saw- depending on when the peak and offers plenty of room for tooth Mountains with a herd snow runoff occurs. everyone. Most of the north of eik grazing in the distance shoreline is accessible by boat Duck Valley truly is a unique experience. only, while the south is mostly Why it's worth the trip: The road accessible and has sevMore than 100 m i les of road-accessible steeihead fish- Shoshone Paiute Indian Res- eral campgrounds and boat ing awaits the intrepid angler ervation has iong been a des- launches. who hits the Upper Salmon tination for so uthern Id aho The reservoir has a lo n g River in spring. angiers. c amping season, wit h o p Road conditions a r e a There are three reservoirs tions ranging from developed l ittle challenging f ro m e r - there: Billy Shaw, Mountain campgrounds to undeveloped, raticspring weather, because View and Sheep Creek. They dispersed camping.
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Tim Nevilte/ New York Times News Service file photo
Chris Hansen, Oregon Natural Desert Association's Owyhee regional representative, wades through the Upper West Little Owyhee River during an exploratory hike through Louse Canyon in the Upper West Little Owyhee Wilderness Study Area of southeastern Oregon.
Lucky Peak Reservoir Why it's worth the trip: Lucky Peak is a bit of an enigma because it doesn't give up its fish easily. You can't just show up and expect to land a bunch. You might, but don't expect it. Put in some time and you can catch kokanee salmon. You can also catch trout from shore. The reservoir also has sometrophy-sizedsmallmouth bass, but they can be as tough to find as an original thought in a candidate's speech. Spring also ca n p r ovide good shore fishing for rainbow trout, and A r r owrock Reservoir upstream can be a
good spot.
Owyhee River
red rockcountry reminiscent of the Southwest. But the Owyhee's real draw is its abnormally large brown trout. They typically average 14 to 16 inches, and 20-inch fish or longer are common. The fish get a iot of angling pressure, which is a curse and a blessing. They can be selective about what they eat, but they aren't shy about taking insects off the surface in the presence of angler. During a hatch, it's common to have fish rising aii around you, and at times the browns s eem unflappable i n t h e i r
fun and reliable on the river, and the catfish population is so healthy and durable that Fish and Game uses it as a source to stock catfish in ponds. Spring is one of the best times of year to catch larger smallmouth b a s s b e c ause they move into the shallows to
feeding frenzy.
bass fishing during spring.
Just as quickly, they can disappear and develop a case of lock jaw. But it's almost a lways worth a t r i p t o t h e Owyhce to see what kind of mood the fish are in.
Why it's worth the trip: This Eastern Oregonriveris a rarity in the Northwest — an easily accessible waterway domi- Snake River Why it's worth the t rip: nated by large brown trout that feed mostly on insects. There's so much room to fish That makes the Owyhee a and so many fish in the section magnet for fly anglers. of the Snake that runs through The Owyhee is ayear-round Southwest Idaho. fishery that's been known to Smallmouth bass fishing is
spawn. The lower section of the river in southwestern Idaho and Eastern Oregon also is broad, shallow and slow-moving, so it warms fast in the spring. If you pay attention to flows and water temperatures, you can get into some really fun
TROUBLE MAKING YOUR MORTGAGE PAYMENTS?
produce quality, dry-fly fishing as early as February. Dryfiy fishing in March is pretty common. The lower stretch of the river, where most of the trout fishing takes place, is dam-controiled, so flows are predictable and the river typically stays fishable throughout spring, when the reservoircatches most of the melting snow. The river is fairly easy to wade, and there's good road access. There's also g r eat scenery in the area, which is
GET HELP AT vPure,&troot6 &o.
rd u a~ B~ Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
OREGONHOMEOW N ER SUPPORT.GOV
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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D S
Lewis
FIsHING REPoRT For the water report, turn eachday to the weather page, today on B6 Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in and around Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife:
FLY-TYING CORNER
CENTRAL ZONE ANTELOPEFLAT RESERVOIR: The reservoir is not accessible by vehicle due to the snow on the roads. BEND PINENURSERYPOND:The most recent stocking was in late September with a number of onepound rainbow released. CRESCENTLAKE: Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout are good. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM: Fishing for trout hasbeen good.W aterlevelshave been consistent and fish are feeding on small mayfly and midge nymphs. The use of bait is prohibited until May 2013. Trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must be released unharmed. DESCHUTESRIVER(MOUTH TO THEPELTON REGULATING DAM): Fishing remains good for trout downstream from the Warm Springs Reservation Boundary. Best trout fishing typically occurs around midday, as the best light reaches the canyon floor. Fly anglers will find best success with nymphs along with egg patterns for trout and whitefish. Anglers are reminded trout fishing is closed upstream from the Warm Springs Reservation Boundary. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Fishing has been fair. Anglers are reporting eight- to10-inch kokanee. HOOD RIVER:Anglers are catching a few early winter steelhead. The fishing will continue to get better as the winter progresses. Anglers are reporting the best success on bait due to the cold water temperatures. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK:Fishing for bull trout has been fair. Anglers are
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Flay's Cray, tied by James Flaherty.
For smallmouth, trout and Tie this pattern with brown thread on a No. 2 4x long carp, it pays to have asmall selection of crayfish imita-
streamer hook. Start with10
tions. Flay's Cray is aneasy
or more wraps of.025 lead
tie with the profile, color and flash to attract the attention of a predator. I like that it uses a red tag as a strike
wire. At the back of the hook,
trigger. A crawdad pattern is
wrap a red wool tag andthen tie in split squirrel tail fibers dyed rust. Tie in orangeor black rubber nymph legs for antennae andsix strands of
worthless unless it is weighted to sink right to the bottom. When plumbing the depths for trout or smallmouth bass, fish these
copper Krystal Flash — three
imitations like any other
bell eyes and finish with a
streamer with long strips and
few turns of olive dubbing. — Gary Lewis, For TheBulletin
long pauses. reminded there are small numbers of spring chinook and summer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed. The Metolius Arm is open to fishing again and there are good numbers of legal-sized bull trout. A tribal angling permit is required in the Metolius Arm. Please check the special regulations for this area. METOLIUS RIVER: Trout fishing has beengood.Insecthatchesshould offer lots of opportunities for good dry-fly fishing. Angling for post
on each side. Wrapthe body with peacock sparkle chenille and overlay with rusty brown dubbing. Tie in large dumb-
spawning bull trout should be excellent. Large streamer flies fished in the deeper pools and slots are the best bet. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: The reservoir is ice free and fishing has been fair. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND: The pond is free of ice and the trout are active. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin Pond is fishing well and typically fishes well throughout winter if not iced over.
New rulesmeanmore have to work walleye, fewersturgeon to find some for Washington anglers AFlglerS Wil
steelhead
By Eric Barker The Lewiston Tribune
The Associated Press Already known as a patient bunch by nature, Rogue River anglers have had that mindset tested the past few weeks as they await the rains that will bring the fish. The winter steelhead bite has slowed as the Rogue is clear, low and not p ushing through with enough force. As of Friday, the river was 44 degrees with a flow of 2,500 cubic feet per second. There are steelhead in the area, but anglers must work to find them. Fishing guide Troy Whitaker saideveryone is"hoping for a little more rain to bring the water level up a little bit." If the water level rises, steelhead will have an easier time climbing over the various falls. Whitaker said there's a "whole bunch in the canyon" and in the Tyee rapid waiting to find their way up river. As it stands, there are opportunities. Anglers simply need to find the hot spots. "You've got to cover a lot of water and pound the heck out of it," said Whitaker, of U-Save Gas and Tackle. "If you find a n i c e deep hole and know fish are in there, sooner orlater,they're going to bite." He suggested using smallersized yarn balls and roe. For instance, use dime sizes instead ofquarter sizes because with low turbidity, the fish can scare easily. "If they see a big chunk of bait, they're probably not going to want to eat it," Whitaker said. "If it's smaller, they won't get spooked. When the water is clear, they get a little
spooky." He pointed to the area between the Valley of the Rogue S tate Park and th e city o f
Rogue River as a good plug run. Plug fisherman should use metallic colors because of the sun hitting the water. Whitaker also said there should be good holes between Schroeder and Griffin parks, Griffin to Hog Creek and in the Galice-Almeda area. " We're just dealing w i t h late fish," he said. "With more rain, they would've been here already." The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife reminds anglers that adipose fin-clipped fish may be harvested.
W ashington ang l e r s will be able to keep more b ass an d w a l l eye b u t fewer s t u rgeon f o l l owing decisions made by the state's Fish and W i ldlife Commission. The nine-member board t hat sets policy fo r t h e Washington D e partment of Fish and W i ldlife removed the bag limit for catfish and the bag and size limit for smallmouth bass and walleye on the Snake and Columbia rivers and their tributaries, such as the Grande Ronde River. At the same time, the commission is reducing the bag limit for sturgeon from five per year to one per year on the Snake River between its mouth and Lower Granite Dam. The sturgeon harvest reduction also applies to the Columbia River and takes effect May 1. Starting in 2014, anglers won't be able to keep any sturgeon from the lower C olumbia River an d i t s tributaries, the Washington coast or Puget Sound. Under current rules, anglerscan keep five sturgeon per year on the Snake River below Lower Granite Dam if they are between 43 and 54 inches in length. Glen Mendel, district f isheries biologist for the Washing-
ton Department of Fish and Wildlife at D a yton, said the sturgeon retention rule has its impetus in discussions between Oregon and Washington as part of an effort to stop a dramatic decline in sturgeon numbers below Bonneville Dam on the Columbia River. But he said the agency has also been concerned about the population in t h e l o w er Snake River. "We have been taking a look at potentially restricting harvest from L ower Granite to the mouth of the Snake because of isolation of sturgeon from one pool to the next." He said about 200 sturgeon are harvested from the lower Snake River each year. Ca t c h-and-release regulations have been in place for years between Lower Granite Dam and Hells Canyon Dam on the Snake River, where populations are healthier. T he c o m mission i n creased bag limits on catfish, walleye and bass in a philosophical move that is designed to align fishing regulations wit h r e gionwide efforts to recover salmon a n d st e elhead. Bass, walleye and catfish prey on salmon and steelhead smolts at least part of the year.The new bag limits take effect May 1.
icy crust in the morning and soft snowpack in the Continued from D1 afternoon. Edison B utte Skyliner Sno-park is in Sno-park has a more chalpoor condition with an icy, lenging hard snowpack but crusty layer and some bare is still usable with caution. spots. Virginia M eissner Dutchman Flat Sno-park Sno-park is looking bleak has the best snow condibut still a ccessible with tions but has a slightly wet mid-April-like conditions. snow pack in t h e a f terWanoga Snoplay Area is in noons. Upper Three Creek spring mode with some icy Sno-park has a few inches and crusty spots. Wanoga's of new snow with springs nowmobile trails are i n like conditions. Conditions fair to good condition with at Ten Mile Sno-park are hard snowpack. Swampy not great, with d evelopLakes Sno-park, Crescent ing bare spots and muddy Lake Sno-park and Odell areas. Snowmobile riders L ake area are in f air t o should not r id e t h rough g ood condition w it h a n these areas.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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Troy Rodakowski, of Junction City, shows off a Central Oregon gobbler taken in a pine forest near Prineville.
Oregon's turkey season
gene,prefersa pistol-gripped,
Oregon's turkey season
camouflaged Mossberg Turkey Thug p ump-action 12gauge. In his new book, "Western Turkey Hunting," Haugen recommends a barrel length of 20 to 24 inches and an overall weight of six-and-a-half to eight pounds. He suggests an aftermarket turkey choke and either a fiber-optic sight or a red-dot reflex like the Trijicon RMR. As important as the sight and the choke, the choice of ammunition is critical. Most turkey hunters opt for No. 4 to No. 6 shot. Pattern it before the hunt. A two-ounce load of No. 6 lead carries about 450 pellets, but at 30 or 40 yards the pattern might be so dispersed that it might completely miss a turkey's head. When sightingin, look for the load that puts at least 10 pellets in a turkey head-sized target at 35, 40 or 45 yards. Last year, I h u nted with Troy Rodakowski, a w r i ter from Junction City. He carried a 12-gauge Remington 870 SPS topped with a TruGlo sight and a specialized turkey choke, stoked with 3'/2-inch loads of No. 4 shot. When we heard the first
runs April 15 through May 31. The daily bag limit is
one male or oneturkey with a beard. Hunters are allowed two turkeys for the season, except that a third may be taken in some
i.gir/t>' $ ''f'»" :>q/i!~g
Tagging a spring turkey on a hunt in Central Oregon. Hunters are allowed two turkeys in the spring, except in some Western Oregon counties, where a third may be taken.
counties. A separate tag is required for each turkey.
located three different toms, allon the move, headed down a seriesof ridges toward the creek bottom. After an hour of cat-and-mouse, Rodakowski dropped down behind a log and I tucked in against a tree and pulled up my face mask. In m y ha n d w a s t he Weatherby, modified with a TruGlo Bone Collector choke tube and fiber-optic front and rear sights. The front sight found the bird at 23 yards and it went down hard. The Central Oregon gobbler sported a broomed-off 7'/2-inch beard and o n e-inch w o r n -down spurs. Today, I replaced the magazine plug, installed a Quake sling, screwed the choke back
click on upland bird harvest and statistics.
For a look at the 2012 spring wild turkey harvest by management unit, visit www.dfw.state.or.us/
resources/hunting then
gobbles of the morning, we
in and wrapped the fore-end and the stock with Camo Form fabric to break up the shape of the gun. Next time I go to the r ange, I'm going to tr y o u t some new turkey loads. With a mild winter all but behind us, I am looking forward to a great spring turkey season. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "Fishing Central Oregon," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
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that he has modified to fit his frame and deliver a load out to 40 yards and beyond. Television host and outdoor w riter Scott H a ugen, w h o makes his home east of Eu-
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PublishingDate:
Trail Update
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Continued from D1 Like a compound bow, a turkey gun can be set up as simply or as complex as the hunter's taste; it becomes a highly personalized tool. Turkey guns, like t u rkey hunters, come in all shapes and sizes. For some years, t he u l timate t u r key g u n s were long-barreled, with tight chokes, matte finishes, synthetic stocks and fiber-optic sights. A 12-gauge is the standard, but some hunters opt for 10-gauge to get a few more feet of effective range. There is no one-size-fits-all approach. A few years ago, I interviewed outdoor writer M.D. Johnson about his turkey gun. M.D. is taller than most, but he carries a youth model Rem-
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U.S. BANK POLE PEDAL PADDLE THEGUIDETOTHELARGEST SINGLE SPORTINGEVENTIN CENTRAL OREGON. The Pole Pedal Paddle is a tradition in Bend that serves as a fundraiser for Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). MBSEF is the leading nonprofit sports training organization dedicated to promoting positive core values to the Central Oregon youth community. The guide includes the schedule of events, descriptions of the race legs, course maps, and highlights of this signature event.
CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC THEGUIDETOTHESTAGESAND COURSESOFTHELONGEST STANDING CYCLINGSTAGERACEIN AMERICA . The Cascade Cycling Classic is a six-day event with a long list of American cycling stars among its past winners. Staged in Bend,The Cascade Cycling Classic serves as a fundraiser for the Mount Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF). This guide provides information on race stages and locations.
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PublishingDate: Wednesday, Saturday, July 13
D6
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT
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TV SPOTLIGHT "The World According to Dick
Cheney: Documentary" 9 p.m. Friday, Showtime By David Wiegand San Francisco Chronicle
Showtime wil l b r o adcast "The World According to Dick Cheney" on the Ides of March, but that's probably just a coincidence, right? Then again, Cheney's old boss is bloodied in R.J. Cutler and Greg Finton's film about as much as Julius Caesar was in the Roman Forum. Although he's been out of officefor several years, Dick Cheney remains a polarizing figure in American public life. Some love him for his decisive role in a variety of jobs, including that of George W. Bush's vice president for eight years, w hile others see him a s a Machiavellian incarnation of political evil. The film p r obably w on't change anyone's opinion of the man, but that doesn't make Cheney any less of a fascinating figure. Like him or hate him, no other vice president in American history was as "consequential" as Cheney himself correctly puts it. Where other modern-day vice presidents o utlined certain p olicy a r eas to oversee, Cheney's vice presidency wasn't about policy agendas. Instead, he had "walk-in" rights to anything going on in the White House.
New York Times News Service file photo
Dick Cheney is the subject of Showtime's documentary "The World According to Dick Cheney." That was in patt because af- cisions without waiting for ter Bush was elected, Cheney Bush to get back to Washinge ssentially a s sembled t h e ton. Observers comment in entire administration, based the film about how cool and on his insider's knowledge of calm he was in the midst of Washington. And by placing that singular terrorist attack. various people in key posi- But in his view, there is no tions, he built his own power room for emotion in dealing base, one that perhaps ex- with a crisis. ceeded that of the president The film traces Cheney's life himself. from his Wyoming boyhood, From the start of the film, through flunking out of Yale, we see Cheney in c h arge. through a talking to from his When President Ronald Rea- future wife, Lynn, which, algan was shot, then-Secretary though Cheney won't say what of State Alexander Haig fashe told him, marked a turning mously declared himself in point in his life in 1963: Twelve control at the White House, years later, he was the White and was pummeled for his House chief of staff. presumptiveness. When 9/11 By the mid-'90s after roles happened, and Bush was off in the Nixon and Ford adin Florida reading to a class- ministrations, and a notable room of c h i l dren, Cheney midlife career in C ongress, k new better than t o m a k e Cheney had determined the any such declarations. He next logical step was to run for wasted no time making depresident. But after lackluster
polling results, he moved in another direction and became CEO of Halliburton for five years. W hen Bush pu t h i m i n charge of finding a running mate, Cheney created an exhaustive vetting system requiring complete medical records and financial records going back a decade. Candidate after candidate was deemed not quite right for the job. B ush kept asking him t o take the job himself, but, as Barton Gellman ("Angler: The Cheney Vice Presidency") puts it, "the more he ran away, the more Bush pursued him." Gellman says that, traditionally, "Vice presidents don't run things," but Cheney did through much of Bush's eight years in th e W h ite House. Some say he virtually ran the country asthe eminence grise behind the president. The attack on the World Trade center represents "the hinge of history" for Cheney, according to journalist Bob Woodward. Cheney opposed Bush seeking congressional approval to wage war against Saddam Hussein, but Bush went ahead anyway. The c ongressional resolution was in doubt because House Majority Leader Dick Armey opposed it until Cheney pulled him over to the administration's side by feeding him inaccurate information about Iraq's weaponry and readiness. Cheney sticks
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I see nothing wrong with cont inuing y ou r r e l ationship w i t h Mark; however, I think it may be time for you to expand your circle of friends if this is how your old ones behave. You'll all be happier if you do. Trust me on that. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
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This year you might consider making a change in your professional life or opt for a new career. The reason might be irrelevant, butyour decision will not be. If you're tired of Stars showthe kind working in your of day you'll have p articular field, ** * * * D ynamic consider going ** * * P ositive back to school to ** * Average pur s ue a different ** So-so occupation. * Difficult SCORPIOcan be controlling.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * A relationship is changing, and as a result, its significance to you also will change. Before discussing your opinions on this matter, think carefully about what lies ahead. You might want to make an adjustment or do something in atotally different way. Tonight: Kick back.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * S omeone quite close to you might be transforming right in front ofyoureyes.Remember,change is an ongoing process. Just because you don't like whatyou see now, it doesn't mean that this is how he or she will be in another month or two. Do something for you. Tonight: Say "yes."
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * A matter involving your daily life is changing. You could have difficulty approaching someone from a new perspective. Know that you are in an evolving situation — what is happening now might not be reflective of later on. Tonight: Enjoy the here and now.
By Jacqueline Bigar
CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * C hildren could be on your mind, or you just might be yearning to be more playful. Allow your inner rascal to come out, and make the most of this fun moment. A loved one could be changing. A new relationship will enter your life. Tonight: Let the fun times begin.
LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * W hatever happens, you will walk away with a new perspective. Dealing with an associate could be touchy, as this person is not as flexible as you are. Give him or her time to warm up. You might be eyeing a change involving your home life. Tonight: Be imaginative.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Your dreams are aresource for giving life cues. Consider starting a dream notebook, or put arecording device right beside your bed.Let your imagination speak to you. A partner takesthe lead, which leaves you with some time to think. Tonight: Go with someoneelse's suggestion.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * You often feel contradictory when dealing with a partner. Stay calm. You might wantto change how you approach this person. Work on keeping yourself level-headed, too. Check outyour finances. You might be able to make a positive change. Tonight: Your treat.
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *
Stay open to new possibilities.
Realize thatyou might not be seeing the big picture right now. Discuss an important matter that is close to your heart with a friend. Avoid buying any mechanical devices for communication. Tonight: Make some fun plans for the weekend.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * A risk could be ill-advised, especially if it involves your finances and/or security. Takeyour creativity in a different direction. A loved oneadores being with you, but he or shesenses that you are not being asopenasusual.Keepconversations moving. Tonight: Midweekfun!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * Sometimes others react strangely to you. Perhaps this is the result of your personal transformation. Not all people are prepared for the newyou. Give others the space they need, and they will make an adjustment in order to relate to you. Tonight: Hang out with a favorite person.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * You notice a change with a boss. Nothing you can do will root out what is going on before someone is readyto spill the beans. Try not to worry so much — someone just might be in a bad mood. Tonight: Get together with friends for a little gossip and some munchies.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You could be making a big deal out of nothing. Don't be so uptight about your finances or about someone asking for help. You know the word "no," so use it if need be. Distance yourself from a difficult situation. Tonight: Buy a favorite dessert, and stay close to home. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
10 p.m. onLIFE,"America's Supernanny" — In the new episode "TheWilson-Speer Family," Deborah works with a blended clan that's threatening to become ... well, unblended.Two of the stepsiblings are constantly fighting, the mother hassomething in her past that's causing trouble in the marriage, andthe 6-year-old is still sleeping with MomandDad. That's a lot of issues, but if anyone canhelp resolvethem,she can.
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10 p.m. on TNT, "Southland" — John (Michael Cudlitz) thinks about what his life might be like after he leaves the force. Lydia (Regina King) reconnects with someoneshesentto death row years earlier. An act of heroism catapults a reluctant Sammy (Shawn Hatosy) to tabloid fame. A foot pursuit endangers Dewey.
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10 p.m. on USA, "Psych" — In this new episode, Shawn and Gus (James Roday Dule Hill) head into the woods with two college students who are making a documentary about Bigfoot. Kurt Fuller, Kate Rogal, Alex Enriq. ©Zap2it
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YOUR HOROSCOPE
10 p.m. on FX, "The Americans" — A mission to discredit the leader of a Polish pro-democracy movement puts Philip (Matthew Rhys) back into contact with an old flame, further straining his already troubled marriage to Elizabeth (Keri Russell) in the new episode "Duty and Honor."
• There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to changeafter press time. I
also gay Republicans.
10 p.m. on ASE, "Duck Dynasty" — Willie is away, so the guys decide to ditch work and fix up the duck blinds on the property. While they're out, Si thinks he sees the infamous "black panther," but the others are convinced it's a figment of his imagination. Phil assigns his nephew and a football teammate some chores, explaining that it'll make them better players.
The film makes Bush out to be a fool, which may be one reason why he wouldn't sit down for an interview. At one point, we hear Cheney saying that there is clear evidence that Iraq has th e "capability and intent" of developing nuclear arms. A minute later, Bush says the same thing in a press conference — the suggestion being that Cheney said it first, and Bush parroted it as instructed. At the start of the film, we see Cheney clearly in charge when 9/II o ccurs. Next sequence: Bush looking dumbfounded while holding "The Pet Goat" with Florida secondgraders sitting at his feet. The p l acement o f t he two film clips is more than coincidental.
DearAbby: I have been married 30 years and have raised four children to adulthood. I recently found out my husband has been having an affair with a prostitute from a strip club. He paid all her living expenses and promised to marry her. She was 26 when it started; he is 56. He DEAR told her his wife had ABBY run away with another man and that he was divorced. When I confronted him, he lied. He wants to continue living together and pretend nothinghappened. He went to counseling and quit. Then he went to a psychiatrist, who diagnosed him with a "mixed personality disorder." He says he wants to make up for his mistake with me. I doubt he'll ever stop lying to me because he always has. I can't spend the rest of my life looking over my shoulder. He said he just "led a double life" and he doesn't want to do it anymore. He admitted he did it because he never thought he would get caught. During this long affair, he was brazen, arrogant and abusive to me. Now he wants to be attentive, but he makes me sick. What do I do'? — Can't Trust Him in New Jersey
I feel hurt and rejected by my closest friends, some of whom I have known my whole life. I feel torn between them and Mark, who is someone I really care for. Is it wrongto continue my relationship with my boyfriend at the expense of my friends? — Politically Incorrect Dear Politically Incorrect: Twentytwelve was a particularly heated election year, with important issues at stake and negative campaigning bringing out the worst in many people. Now that the election has been decided,one would hope that inflamed emotions will settle down and life can return to normal. I know several couples who have strong and happy "mixed" marriages in which the spouses do not always agree politically. It is a shame that you would be required to choose between the man you care for and your longtime friends, who want to ignore that there are
9p.m. onHEl, "Modern Family" — Jay and Gloria (Ed O'Neill, Sofia Vergara) go all out to give Manny (Rico Rodriguez) a surprise birthday party, where it turns out there are enough surprises for everyone. Phil and Claire (Ty Burrell, Julie Bowen) fret about the new guy in Haley's (Sarah Hyland) life.
years.
Wiecan't or ivec eatin us an Dear Can't Trust Him: Only you can decide that, but in order to do it rationally, without anger or vengefulness, I'm advising you to make up your mind AFTER some sessions with a p sychologist on your own. What your h usband wants a t this point is far less important than what YOU want. And why you would want to c ontinue in a m a r riage to an abusive philanderer is something only you can answer. DearAbby: I am a gay man who has been single for seven years. I met this guy, "Mark," about 10 months ago and we hit it off immediately. We have almost everything in common except that I'm a Democrat and he's a Republican. We both know how we feelabout our political differences and decided to continue dating anyway. My problem concerns my other gay friends, mostly D emocrats, who don't like Mark because he's a Republican. I have tried explaining to them that we overlook our differences andconcentrate on the many things we have in common, and they should try to do the same. But they no longer invite meto gatherings and theirphone callshave ceased.
8 p.m. onH K3, "Whitney" — Alex and Whitney (Chris D'Elia, Whitney Cummings) head to Alex's parents' lake house, where they are surprised to discover Alex's dad, Wayne (Dean Norris). The older man confides to Whitneythat his marriage isn't as perfect as everyone thinks.
by his belief that the Iraq War was justifiable. The strength of the documentary is that although it is grounded in an extensive interview with its subject, it is not hagiography. Writers like Woodward and Gellman weigh in with considered and not always flattering opinions about Cheney. That said, noticeable by their absence as interview subjects in the film are Rice and, in particular, Bush. Rice would have offered a different point of view, of course, on foreign policy. But without Bush, we can only guess how the relationship between Bush and Cheney evolved over the
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,MARCH13, 2013:
TV TODAY
I
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)5:30 • JACK REACHER (PG-13) 9:30 • RISEOFTH EGUARDIANS (PG) 2:30 • After 7 p.m., shows are 27 andolder only. Youngerthan 27 mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedby a legalguardian.
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Western" willscreen at6 tonight (doors open at530 p.m.) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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541-330-5084
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 21 AND OVER (R) 5:15, 7:15 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-13) 4:15, 6:45 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG-I3)4,6:45 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4, 6:30
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • IDENTITY THIEF(R) 6:15 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG- I3) 6:15 • OZ THE GREAT AND POWERFUL (PG)6 • QUARTET (PG-13) 6:30 rf
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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH(PG) 5:05, 7:10 •A GOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)4:30 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-13) 4:05, 6:30 • OZTHEGREATAND POWERFUL3-D (PG)4:10,7 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4:20, 6:50 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 6:40 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6:15 • OZTHE GREATAND POWERFUL(PG) 6 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.
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EXTRAS. Olympic Arms 541-408-2191. AR-15 in great cond. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS TOO MANY EXTRAS TO BUYING & SE L LING The Bulletin liver! 541-389-8420. LIST. $2500 obo. Call for Search the area's most recommends payAll gold jewelry, silver comprehensive listing of details, 541-419-6054 Seniors 8 Veterans! ment for Firewood and gold coins, bars, classified advertising... Adopta companion cat rounds, wedding sets, only upon delivery M8 P real estate to automotive, from Tumalo rescue, fee AR-15 S &W class rings, sterling siland inspection. merchandise to sporting $1500; Browning Citwaived! Tame, fixed, Hay, Grain & Feed goods. Bulletin C!assifieds ori 28" $650; 7.62x39 ver, coin collect, vin- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. shots, ID chip, tested, 4' x 4' x 8' appear every day in the watches, dental more! 389-8420. Photos 1600 rounds, $650. tage 1st quality grass hay, print or on line. gold. Bill Fl e ming, • Receipts should 541-350-1 875. etc: www.craftcats.org. 70Ib bales, barn stored, 541-382-9419. Call 541-385-5809 include name, Like us on Facebook. Bend local pays CASH!! $250/ ton. Also big bales! www.bendbuuetrn.com phone, price and Patterson Ranch, Cartop carrier, Thule kind of wood purYorkie Chihuahua pupfor all firearms 8 Sisters, 541-549-3831 The Bulletin pies, tiny Yorkie-looking. ammo. 541-526-0617 Cascade XT, $275. XM chased. car radio receiver, $25. 1 male $250; 1 fem $300, • Firewood ads Bushmaster MOE Dis- Car tire chains, $55. cash. 541-546-7909 MUST include speHorse Boarding in NW sipator AR-15; NIB; 2-bike rack for t railer What are you Redmond. M o n thly and cost per model 90829, $1,725 hitch, $75. 541-617-0691 cies Find exactly what cord to better serve rates starting at $195 looking for? with 2 30 rnd Magpul per horse. Paddocks, you are looking for in the mags. 458-206-8721 our customers. You'll find it in Want to impress the stalls with t u r nouts CLASSIFIEDS indoor/outdoor CASH!! relatives? Remodel The Bulletin Classifieds avail., riding arenas, trainer For Guns, Ammo 8 210 your home with the on site. 541-504-4282 Reloading Supplies. help of a professional 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Furniture & Appliances 541-408-6900. 541-385-5809 from The Bulletin's $190/cord. Multi-cord "Call A Service discounts, & ~/~ cords Farmers Column A1 Washers8 Dryers DOljirTMISSIHIS Professional" Directory available. Immediate $150 ea. Full warLooking for your delivery! 541-408-6193 10X20 STORAGE ranty. Free Del. Also next employee? wanted, used W/D's BUILDINGS DO YOU HAVE Wanted- paying cash AH Year Dependable Place a Bulletin 541-280-7355 for protecting hay, SOMETHING TO for Hi-fi audio & stu- Firewood: Seasoned help wanted ad firewood, livestock SELL dio equip. Mclntosh, Lodgepole, Split, Del. today and etc. $1496 Installed. Fridge, Frigidaire, side x FOR $500 OR J BL, Marantz, D y Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 reach over 541-617-1133. side, white, like new, LESS? naco, Heathkit, San- for $335. Cash, Check CCB ¹173684. 60,000 readers $395. 559-355-0966 Non-commercial sui, Carver, NAD, etc. or Credit Card OK. kfjbuildersOykwc.net each week. advertisers may GENERATE SOME ex541-420-3484. Call 541-261-1808 Your classified ad place an ad citement i n you r Call The Bulletin At will also with our 208 neighborhood! Plan a 264 541-385-5809 "QUICK CASH appear on garage sale and don't Pets 8 Supplies Snow Removal Equipment Gardening Supplies SPECIAL" bendbulletin.com Place Your Ad Or E-Mail forget to advertise in • & E q uipment 0 which currently At: www.bendbulletin.com classified! Adopt a nice CRAFT cat ARIENS Sno-Tek 24" OI' 541-385-5809. receives over or kitten from Tumalo 5 spds fwd, 2 reverse, ~2 e e k s 2 0 ! 1.5 million page sanctuary, Pet Smart, or For newspaper Electric & Pull Starter, Washer/dryer, front load Ad must views every Petco! Fixed, shots, ID delivery, call the Meat & Animal Processing( Westinghouse, almond, used twice $300 obo. include price of chip, t e sted, m o r e! Circulation Dept. at month at no $75 obo. 20'aluminum Call 541-647-1380 s~le t e o t $500 541-389-8420. Open Sat/ 541-385-5800 extra cost. All N atural g r ain-fed extension ladder, or less, or multiple Sun 1-5pm 65480 78th St Doxie pups! Adorable Werner, $100. Redmond, beef $2.88/lb. hangTo place an ad, call Bulletin 265 items whose total 12-wk.-old short hair. you haul. 503-860-8974 Photos 8 info at 541-385-5809 ing wt, half or whole Classifieds Building Materials does not exceed www.craftcats.org A few reds and wild to b e pro c essed or email Get Results! I Want to Buy or Rent $500. 8 like us on Facebook. boar/red 8 choc. mix. Washer/dryer Irg cap. classned@bendbulletin.com mid-march. $500 dep. Call 541-385-5809 Amana, white, n ew, MADRAS Habitat $300. 5 4 1-508-2167 Half Hog Sale, $190 inI f you have a n u n - Alaskan Malamute AKC Only 3 left! To good $500obo. 541-848-9180 Call Classifieds at or place your ad RESTORE cludes cutting wrapServtng Centrat Oregon stnce 1903 541-385-5809 on-line at wanted 2nd car, local pups, 2 gray & white homes only! Building Supply Resale ping and cure. family is in desperate males, ready to go. www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Quality at bendbulletin.com WHILE THEY LAST! need of a v e h icle. 1st shots, dewormed. LOW PRICES Prompt Delivery recommends extra 541-573-2677 DO YOU HAVE P lease c a l l 541 - $700. 541-410-7563. ~ • p. 84 SW K St. Rock, Sand & Gravel SOMETHING TO GLOCK 9mm Mod 17, 6 39-2856 o r 541 541-475-9722 Multiple Colors, Sizes chasing products or, SELL new, 2 mags, $575. Alaskan Malamutepup, 815-0470. Instant Landscaping Co. services from out of I like Open to the public. FOR $500 OR 541-815-4901 1 male, $400 541-389-9663 the area. Sending I LESS? Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-771-9255. c ash, c hecks, o r • OREGON'S LARGEST 266 Non-commercial vintage costume jewSUPER TOP SOIL l credit i n f o rmation GUN & KNIFE SHOW Heating 8 Stoves www.hershe sovandbark.com elry. Top dollar paid for Bengals TICA R e g., advertisers may may be subjected to March 16817 place an ad with Screened, soil & comGold/Silver.l buy by the C hampion lines, 4 l FRAUD. For more Sat. 9-6 • Sun. 9-4 our Estate, Honest Artist males left, all shots, 80,000 Btu FA heater, post mi x ed , no information about an I ADM: $10.00 "QUICK CASH Elizabeth,541-633-7006 $1000. Ready 4/10. L P o r n a tural g as rocks/clods. High huadvertiser, you may l Portland Expo Center WE SHIP! www.benSPECIAL" $150. 541-550-8107. mus level, exc. for Just bought a new boat? galcatspride.com 1-5 Exit 306B I call t h e Ore g onI flower beds, lawns, Sell your old one in the Call Kim in Redmond, ' State Att or n ey ' For Info: 503-363-9564 282 0 2~ eeks 20! NOTICE TO gardens, straight classifieds! Ask about our 503-860-8974 www.wesknodelgunl General's O f f i c e ADVERTISER Ad must include s creened to p s o i l . Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bendl Super Seller rates! shows.com Consumer Protec• price of single item Since September 29, Bark. Clean fill. De541-385-5809 Dachshund AKC dapl pup t ion ho t l in e at I R emington 700 S P S 1991, advertising for of $500 or less, or liver/you haul. G arage Sale mi s c . Large Inside Farm/ www.bendweenies.com multiple items l 1-877-877-9392. Garage Sale WANTED: Tobacco items tools, misc., Fri. Tactical .308. 4-16x50 used woodstoves has 541-548-3949. $350. 541-508-4558 been limited to modwhose total does pipes - Briars and S at. 9-1. 2039 N W S at., M a rc h 1 6 , scope, bipod, sling, not exceed $500. els which have been smokinIj accessories. Dachshund AKC minia7:30a-3p, 21950 ButPerspective Dr., Bend e xtras. 12 0 m a t c h c ertified by the O r WANTE: RAZORSler Market Rd., Bend. • Lo s t & Found rounds and 100 bulture, b l ac k & tan 100's Antiques & colGillette, Gem, Schick, long-hair male, $325. Call Classifieds at Department of lets. $9 7 5 obo. egon 284 541-385-5809 Environmental Qual- Found earring, square, lectibles, antique furetc. Shaving mugs Info/pix, 541-420-6044 541-419-6862 www.bendbulletin.com Antiques & Sales Southwest Bend niture, tables, desk inand accessories. ity (DEQ) and the fed- on Pilot Butte road. Call cluding school, dresFair prices paid. eral E n v ironmental Smith & Wesson 9mm, Collectibles to identify, 541-610-2558 People Look for Information Call 541-390-7029 Multi-family Garage Sale ser, oak ice box, Vic1 5-rnd, l i k e ne w , Protection Ag e n cy German Shepherds, AKC About Products and between 10 am-3 pm. Fri-Sat, 9-4, 61351 Rock trola, p i ano s t o ol, (EPA) as having met Check out the Services Every Daythrough www.sherman-ranch.us The Bulletin reserves $575. 541-815-4901 Bluff Lane, off Brook- wood washing ma541-281-6829 classifieds online the right to publish all Springfield XDs bi-tone smoke emission stanchine, quilts, spinning TheBulletin Classifieds dards. A cer t ified www.bendbuiletin.com swood. Lots of stuff! ads from The Bulletin wheel, Singer FeathLab Pups AKC, black newspaper onto The 45 - $650; as new in w oodstove may b e Items for Free Updated daily R o seville, Dachshund male, red, & yeilow, Ma s t er Bulletin Internet web- box, 10 shots fired; 2 identified by its certifiJust bought a new boat? erweight, lots glassware, vin2Y2-3 yrs, to lov- Hunter sired, performags, lock, holster. cation label, which is Sell your old one in the FREE large Earth Wood approx site. F ound skis a t s n o w tage jewelry, pedal suitable home only, mance pedigree, OFA 458-206-8721 permanently attached park, call to identify, classifieds! Ask about our car, clock, (15) S tove, you ha u l ! ing, Adcert hips 8 e lbows, $50. 541-934-2233 Super Seller rates! 541-389-8782. to the stove. The Bul541-318-7264 vert. signs, primitive Wanted: Collector Call 541-771-2330 Serving Central 0 eqon srnce l903 541-305-5809 letin will no t k n owwww.kinnamanretrievers.com tools, fishing creels, seeks high quality Horse Manure, large ingly accept advertis- Lost set of keys, with plugs & poles, trunks, fishing items. loads, perfect for garLabradoodies - Mini 8 ing for the sale of lanterns & lamps, oak Call 541-678-5753, or med size, several colors Guns, Hunting d ening, w i l l lo a d , uncertified Bend, sometlme last Sales Northeast Bend telephones, s c ales, 503-351-2746 'f 541-504-2662 FREE. 541-390-6570. & Fishing woodstoves. week. 541-815-9924. coffee grinder, Coca www.alpen-ridge.com Cola cooler & t ray, 255 Dachshund Mini AKC Labrador, AKC black 150 rds of .40 S8W WWII uniform, wind** FREE ** Computers Commercial Industrial Auctioneers Choc. long-haired F. puppies, family raised, m ill p u mps, ir o n Pets 8 Supplies 185gr HP $120. Garage Sale Klt $600. 2 0% off if w i l l parents on site. $300 wheels, R/R i t ems, 541-647-8931 T HE B U LLETIN r e Place an ad in The milk cart, horse drawn spay. 541-598-7417 each. 541-508-0429 200 rds of 45acp quires computer adThe Bulletin recomBulletin for your gai tems, v i sible g a s HP 230gr, $180. vertisers with multiple rage sale and remends extra caution Doberman AKC pups Labrador Pups, AKC pump, 1912 5C slot 541-647-8931 ad schedules or those m achine cash r e g when purc h as- champion lines, black Chocolate/Yellow/White ceive a Garage Sale Sat., Mar. 16, 2013 10 a.m. selling multiple syscouch hide-a-bed 8 & rust, 1 male red, 6 Hips OFA guaranteed. ing products or serKit FREE! 200 rds of 45acp 15338 NW O'Neil Highway $300-$400. tems/ software, to diswks now ready 3/24. loveseat, bar stools, vices from out of the HP 230gr, $180. 1-541-954-1727 Redmond, OR 97756 close the name of the KIT INCLUDES: oak TV cabinet. See $2000F, $1800M. area. Sending cash, 541-647-8931 business or the term • 4 Garage Sale Signs Craigslist. Much bbest242@yahoo.com checks, or credit inPoodle pupsAKC toys. "dealer" in their ads. Preview: Friday, March 15, 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. • $2.00 Off Coupon To much, much more! 541-659-9058 factory ammo, f ormation may b e Loving, cuddly compan- .223 Use Toward Your Priced to sell! Cash 55gr. FMJ, 260 rds, Private party advertissubjected to fraud. ions. 541-475-3889 Next Ad only, no early sales!! deposit bottles/ Auction Highlights: Cat D4 Dozer, John Deere $200. 541-647-8931 ers are defined as For more i nforma- Donate • 10 Tips For "Garage cans to local all volun410D Excavator, Fram Tractors, Implements, Poodle pups Toy,dark tion about an adverrds of .40 S&W, those who sell one Sale Success!" Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler, Allegro 31' Motornon-profit rescue, to colors, 1 males, 1 fe- 300 tiser, you may call teer, 1 80 g r F M J , N I B , computer. home, Recreational Vehicles, Pickups, Collector Sales Redmond AreaI help w/cat spay/neuter male. $250. Ready the O r egon State vet bills. Cans for Cats $210. 541-728-6663. Cars & More. 260 Attorney General's trailer at Grocery Outlet, now! Call or text Julie, PICK UP YOUR MOVING! Stowmaster (5) Tapco AR-15 Office C o n sumer SE 3rd/Wilson, thru 3/19. 760-504-8725 Misc. Items GARAGE SALE K!T at More information and photos available online tow system, garage 30-Rnd P-mags, NIB, Protection hotline at Donate M-F O S m i th Queensiand Heelers 1777 SW Chandler at www.ciauctions.com cabinets & shelving, $200. 541-647-8931 1-877-877-9392. Buying Diamonds Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Signs, 1515 NE 2 nd; standard & mini,$150 & garden & shop tools, up. 541-280-1537 9mm ammo, 147gr, /Goid for Cash C RAFT, Tumalo a n y lamps, vanity & misc. Commercial Industrial Auctioneers time. 541-389-8420; www.rightwayranch.wor HP, 100 rds, $80. Saxon's Fine Jewelers Sat. Only, 9-3, 3743 503-760-0499•CIAuctions.com www.craftcats.org dpress.com 541-647-8931 541-389-6655 SW Xero Ave.
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, StereoandVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGE SALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood
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mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
(541) 383-3152
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Where buyers meet sellers
IC&D
NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i m itations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r ea l e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available
Classifieds •
The Bulletin is l o o king for a r e s ourceful, self-motivated person to work in the features department as the news assistant. Organization, flexibility, excellent writing and basic computer skills are key. Attention to detail is essential. Must enjoy working with the public and understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties. This position is full-time and will assist with various newsroom functions, mostly clerical in nature.
Specific job duties include: Managing the Community Calendar, Community Datebook, Gallery Exhibits and Talks, Handlinga heavy telephone load and, once settled into the job, an opportunity to contribute to the features sections To apply, submit a resume and letter of interest to Marielle Gallagher by March 15: mgallagher@bendbulletin.com. All hiring is contingent on passing a drug test. EOE
RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 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 SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle748
:Qrj II
Northeast Bend Homes 2751 NE Sycamore Ct. Bend/3 bdrm, 1 bath, Updated home on large $149,900 541-388-0882,
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
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C a/I 54/-3 85 -5 8 0 9 to r o m ot e o u r service Debris Removal
Landscaping/Yard Care
JUNK BE GONE
N OTICE: ORE G O N Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671)
The Bulletin
Award Winner. 17,000 obo. 541-548-4807
775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
Show
Features News Assistant
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2007 Ski-Doo Renegade I Haul Away FREE 600 w/513 mi, like new, For Salvage. Also now reduced to $4500. Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Call 541-221-5221 Mel, 541-389-8107 749 (2) 2000 A rctic C at Handyman Southeast Bend Homes Z L580's EFI with n e w covers, electric start w/ I DO THAT! MOUNTAIN GLEN, 20688 White Cliff Circle. reverse, low miles, both Home/Rental repairs 541-383-9313 4 Bdrm, 2 bath home excellent; with new 2009 Small jobs to remodels Professionally FSBO, .46 a c r e,Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, Honest, guaranteed off/on w/double tilt, managed by Norris & single level, w/ office, drive lots of accys. Selling due work. CCB¹151573 Stevens, Inc. laundry room, paved to m edical r e asons. Dennis 541-317-9768 driveway, hardwood $8000 636 all. 541-536-8130 f loors, w h it e v i n y l USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Apt./Multiplex NW Bend fence. $260 , 000.• Yamaha 750 1999 OBO. 541-317-5012. Mountain Max, $1400. Door-to-door selling with Small studios close to li• 1994 Arctic Cat 580 fast results! It's the easiest brary, all util. paid. 750 EXT, $1000. way in the world to sell. $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. • Zieman 4-place Redmond Homes $495 mo.w/$470 dep trailer SOLD! The Bulletin Classified No pets/ no smoking. All in good condition. 541-330- 9769 or 541-385-5809 Looking for your next Located in La Pine. 541-480-7870 emp/oyee? Call 541-408-6149. ERIC REEVE HANDY Place a Bulletin help 648 SERVICES. Home 8 wanted ad today and 860 Houses for Commercial Repairs, reach over 60,000 Motorcycles & Accessories Carpentry-Painting, Rent General readers each week. Pressure-washing, Your classified ad B MW K100 L T 1 9 8 7 Honey Do's. On-time PUBLISHER'S will also appear on 52k miles, b ronze, promise. Senior NOTICE bendbulletin.com extra windshield, Discount. Work guarAll real estate adverwhich currently retrailer hitch, battery 541-389-3361 tising in this newspaceives over charger, full luggage anteed. or 541-771-4463 1.5 million page per is subject to the hard bags, manuals Bonded & Insured F air H o using A c t views every month and paperwork. AlCCB¹181595 which makes it illegal at no extra cost. ways garaged. $3200. to a d v ertise "any Bulletin Classifieds Don, 541-504-5989 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Get Results! preference, limitation Harley Davidson Heri- Search the area's most or disc r imination Call 385-5809 or based on race, color, place your ad on-line tage S oftail C l assic, comprehensive listing of 2006. Black cherry pearl/ classified advertising... religion, sex, handiat b lack p e a rl , ext r a real estate to automotive, bendbulletin.com cap, familial status, chrome, stage one tune, merchandise to sporting marital status or naVance 8 Hines pipes. goods. Bulletin Classifieds tional origin, or an in771 excellent cond„ always appear every day in the tention to make any g araged, never l a id print or on line. Lots such pre f erence, down. 4100 mi, $11,900. Call 541-385-5809 limitation or discrimi541-548-2258; nation." Familial sta- Nice flat lot in Terreb- Home, www.bendbulletin.com .56 a c r es, Cell, 503-970-3328 tus includes children onne, under the age of 18 p aved s t reet, a p - Harley Davidson Softc a p -fill Tail De l uxe 2 0 0 7 , living with parents or proved fo r legal cust o dians, septic, utilities are at white/cobalt, w / paspregnant women, and t he lo t l i n e . M L S senger kit, Vance & Landscaping/Yard Care ¹ 2012001172 P a m people securing cusHines muffler system tody of children under Lester, Principal Bro- 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. ker, Century 21 Gold c ond, 18. This newspaper $16,9 9 9, will not knowingly ac- Country Realty, Inc. 541-389-9188. Zo//dtz gaaErip cept any advertising 541-504-1338 Zaug ga/ e /;a, Harley Heritage for real estate which is 773 Softail, 2003 More Than Service in violation of the law. $5,000+ in extras, Peace Of Mind O ur r e aders ar e Acreages $2000 paint job, hereby informed that 30K mi. 1 owner, Spring Clean Up all dwellings adverFor more information •Leaves tised in this newspa- CHECK YOUR AD please call •Cones per are available on Please check your ad 541-385-8090 • Needles an equal opportunity on the first day it runs or 209-605-5537 • Debris Hauling basis. To complain of to make sure it is cordiscrimination cal l rect. Sometimes inWeed free Bark HUD t o l l -free at s tructions over t h e & flower beds 1-800-877-0246. The phone are misundertoll f re e t e l ephone stood and a n e r ror number for the hear- can occurin your ad. Lawn Renovation ing im p aired is If this happens to your Aeration - Dethatching 1-800-927-9275. Overseed ad, please contact us Harley Limited 103 2011, Compost the first day your ad many extras, stage 1 & air 650 seat. 18,123 mi, Top Dressing appears and we will cushion $21,990. 541-306-0289 Houses for Rent be happy to fix it as Landscape s oon as w e c a n . NE Bend Deadlines are: WeekMaintenance A very sharp looking days 11:00 noon for Full or Partial Service 2000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm/ next day, Sat. 11:00 •Mowing ~Edging • Pruning «Weeding 2bath home, gas FP & a.m. for Sunday and Monday. furnace, tile floors & Sprinkler Adjustments 541-385-5809 HD Fat Boy 1996 carpet, open l i ving Thank you! Completely customized k itchen, dining. N o Fertilizer included Must see and hear to with monthly program smoking/no pets. Call The Bulletin Classified appreciate. 2012 541-388-2250, or
Cascade Rental Management. Co. Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks.
Ads published in "EmNeed to get an ad ployment Opportunit ies" i n c lude e m - FIRE/PARAMEDIC in ASAP? Establishment of and ployee i ndependent po s i - Employment List for tions. Ads for posi- Firefighter/Paramedic Fax it to 541-322-7253 County Fire and tions that require a fee Crook is establishing an or upfront investment Rescue The Bulletin Classifieds list for Firemust be stated. With employment Indiany independent job fighter/Paramedic. who meet the chasing products or I opportunity, p l e aseviduals qualifications services from out of BANK TURNED YOU investigate thor- minimum DOWN? Private party are invited to apply and l the area. Sending oughly. will loan on real estake the examination for c ash, checks, o r tate equity. Credit, no Firefighter/Paramedic. A l credit i n f ormation Use extra caution when complete job description problem, good equity be subjected to applying for jobs on- for Firefighter/Paramedic l may is all you need. Call FRAUD. line and never pro- is posted on the district's For now. Oregon Land more informavide personal infor- website. Th e s a l ary Mortgage 388-4200. mation to any source range is from $4,248- tion about an adveryou may call l you may not have re- $5,002 per month. Appli- l tiser, State TURN THE PAGE searched and deemed cations will be accepted the Oregon General's to be reputable. Use until Monday, March 25, l Attorney For More Ads Office C o n sumer x extreme caution when 2013. Contact: The Bulletin Protection hotline at l r esponding to A N Y Crook County I 1-877-877-9392. Fire 8 Rescue online e m p loyment 500 NE Belknap Street ad from out-of-state. LOCALMONEY:We buy LThe Bulletin Prineville, OR secured trust deeds 8 97754-1932 note,some hard money We suggest you call (541) 447-5011 loans. Call Pat Kelley the State of Oregon Where can you find a cookcoU t 541-382-3099 ext.13. Consumer Hotline at ~ fireandrescue.com helping hand? 1-503-378-4320 From contractors to For Equal Opportunity Janitor Supervisor yard care, it's all here L aws: Oregon B u- Reliable, mot i vated, in The Bulletin's reau of Labor & Indetail oriented, good "Call A Service dustry, C i vil Rights c ommunication a n d Division, administrative s kills. Professional" Directory 971-673-0764 Flex schedule, able to travel locally. If you have any quesLooking for your next 800-352-4353 ext 30 tions, concerns or employee? comments, contact: Place a Bulletin help You know what Look at: Classified Department wanted ad today and they say about Bendhomes.com The Bulletin reach over 60,000 "one man's trash". 541-385-5809 for Complete Listings of readers each week. Your classified ad Area Real Estate for Sale There's a whole pile will also appear on The Bulletin of "treasure" here! bendbulletin.com 541-815-7099. which currently receives over 1.5 KR IL~ItIBER CO. 654 Campground Grts peoplt. Grts products. Grcal cueomer5 million page views Houses for Rent every month at HOStS Maintenance no extra cost. SE Bend Ochoco National Bulletin Classifieds Manager Forest Thousands of ads dai l y Get Results! Foxborough 3 bdrm, 2 is seeking campSawmill/Planer Mill in print andonline. Call 385-5809 C & D Lumber Co. is bath, all appl., gas fp, ground hosts to ocor place dbl garage. NICE! No cupy fe e c a m p- seeking a Ma i n teyour ad on-line at smoking/pets. $1000 grounds, pr o vide nance Manager. For ' bendbulletin.com xs~ mo. 541-389-1416. information to visijob details and extors and c omplete pectations please visit minor maintenance our website at Independent Contractor work for the sumcdlumber.com mer season. Please Mail resume to: contact the office at PO Box 27 * Supplement Your Income* 541-416-6500 if you Riddle, OR 97469 are interested. EOE
r.=.-"-,.— .v
bend and beyond reat estate 20967 yeoman, bend or
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tin Classified
FOX HOLLOW APTS.
FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at:
745
Homes for Sale
2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 8 $540 w/lease.
Can be found on these pages :
0
627
8 GREAT WINTER 8
is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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Vacation Rentals 8 Exchanges
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
The Bulletin
& j' Jl)TJJ JJ~
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
000rj
634
PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
JZI: ~ M
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HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080.
Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
r equires a l l bu s i nesses that advertise t o p e r form L a n dscape C o n struction which includes: p lanting, dec k s , fences, arbors, w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers c ompensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before co n t racting with t h e b u s iness. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.
Nelson Landscaping & Maintenance
Serving Central Oregon Since 2003
Residental/Commercial ~Landsca in
• Landscape construction
• Water feature installation/maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations installation
Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing Maintenance
•Thatch 8 Aerate
•Spring Clean up •Weekly Mowing 8 Edging
• Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.
Senior Discounts
Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759
Advertise your car! Add A Picture!
Reach thousands oi readers!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Cfassffieds SPRING CLEAN-UP!
Aeration/Dethatching
Weekly/one-time service avail. Bonded, insured. Free Estimates! COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca// 541-480-9714
Get your business
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
ALLEN REINSCH Yard maintenance & clean-up, thatching, plugging 8 much more! Call 541-536-1 294
Your Stuff •
Operate Your Own Business ++++++++++++++++++ Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
NOW you Can add a full-COIOr PhOtO to your Bulletin ClaSSified ad Starting Ctt Only $15.00 Per Week, When you Order yOur Cld Online.
© Call Today ® We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Terrebonne * Must be available 7 days a week, early morn-
ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
To PlaCe your Bulletin Cld With a PhOtO, ViSit WWW.bendbuiietin.COm, CliCk On "PlaCe an ad" and fOIIOW theSe eaSy StePS:
II
Pick a category (for example — pets or transportation) and choose your ad package.
Q Write your ad and upload your digital photo. Ql Create your account with any major credit card, All ads appear in both print and online. Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online.
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at online © bendbulletin.com
To place your photo ad, visit us online at
The Bulletin
www.bendbullefin.com or call with questions, 541-385-5809
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
Classifjcds www.bendbulletin.com
E4 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DA ILY
BRIDGE CLU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w!II Shortz N o . 0206
W ednesday,Marcl 13,2O13
Expert thinking
ACROSS
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cry from an ump? 36 Scarf down 37 Signs to heed college or its 35 Cooked, as town Swiss steak 14 Baby attire with 4o Fiancee of crotch snaps Napoleon zs Pistol PAC-ers? 42 Singer Eydie 15 Luau handouts 43 L ank a zz Respiratory 44Anastasia's woe father was one ts 1/sec, in trig 4s Hullabaloo zs Green sci. 47 Island off the coast of zo Graduation Scotland requirement, perhaps 45 Napoleonic marshal Michel 23 Some 'Vette roofs so Dance for two 24 "The Wiz" s2 Big shot director 57 Result of zs Org. that not following negotiates with through (of G.M. which there are four examples 28 Matures in this puzzle's 3o Athlete Jim grid) whose Native American name so Part of 39-Down was Wa-Tho52 " Huk had it!" t Espousing crime? 7 Custard need zo Michigan
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
"I've read your definitions of an expert, such as 'somebody from out of town,'" a club player told me. "I think my partner qualifies as an expert: He can tell me a simple thing in aconfusing way — and make me think the confusion is my fault." As today's declarer, my friend's "expert" partner took the ace of c lubs, drew t r umps and l e d a diamond to ... dummy's KING. He lost one diamond, a club and a heart, but made his game.
diamond, you respond one spade and he bids two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: A t t h i s stage, you should aim to limit your strength and suggest a contract, and a bid of two hearts would do neither. If your partner next bid 2NT, you wouldn't know whether to raise. Also, your spades are so weak that you aren't much interested in hearing partner take a spade preference. Bid 2NT. East dealer Both sides vulnerable
"I made the mistake of asking how he guessed right in diamonds," North said. "He said he'd assumed East had the king of hearts, else there would be EAST at most three losers. But if East also WEST 474 had the K-Q of clubs, he couldn't 410 QKJ9 have theace of diamonds. Then he 9 107 5 3 0 A10 5 2 C Q9 6 4 would have opened." 4 KQ8 7 "But what if West had led a club 4 J 109 2 from K-J-10?" I asked. SOUTH "My partner said that was unlikely. 4 AKQ 8 3 Then West would havehad a more 984 attractive lead. It was too confusing O 873 for my feeblebrain." 4A64 South's reasoning was convoluted but not illogical. Moreover, he made East Pass P ass
the contract.
DAILY QUESTION
Sou th 1 4i 44
PO R T L Y A E O E E M A MI D S T LY D I A S S N I P G I N G E R B E T E R A B R A Y S T B E L L O C A S U S TH EN0 B E RI N D E R Y E S D A
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Opening lead — iei J Youhold: 4 J9 6 5 2 9 A Q 6 2 0 K J A 5 3. Your partner opens one (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, lnc.
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
DOWN t Toot one's horn 2 Cartographer's blowup
U T H B A R E H H E A T L Y S G D O A N S U A L L L Y A T N A
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ss Army Ranger's 34 Last Celtic to 45 Societal wear ¹33 topper breakdown 3s Bride's ride sz "Over my dead 58 All-night bash body!" 35 1954-77 defense grp. s3 Out of kilter 55 Threadbare 4o Lose tautness threads 54 I.Q. test 22Guiding beliefs 42 Austrian "a" pioneer eo U.N. figure: 25 Sleep problem 43 Official seals Abbr. 55 With 12-Down, 27 "The Pied Piper 45 Jaunty in classic of Hamelin" appearance Neapolitan tune ez Saint, in Rio river 25 "I didn't know For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. that!" Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday 32 Exclude crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. 32 Toy you ATST users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit
E D can "put S somebody's eye E out" with L 33 Soap-onS
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nyfimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/leaming/xwords.
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: U T A H S O T S M I M I P R O W PE A K V I EW I R E E F E R C R E S T F A L L H I T O Y L I O TA O N S T O P O T H E M E R R A T A C A R R E Y R OR O M O U N T NO D E U N O S U M M I T D I P U S A I R E R I L E N T E R E N xwordeditorfeaol.com 5
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M C J O B S A O N E N G T I M E E S N I P E N E K E D E E D E D T A R O R N I N S P U N E M O D E A I N D E W GR I N L O M A C Y E 0 N E A T Y O L K
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By Gerry Wlldenberg (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
03/13/13
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MARCH 13 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 •
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
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BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Motorhomes
935
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
Ford Ranchero 1979
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,500. 541-382-6752
Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN)
eeo ATVs
932
60' wide x 50' d eep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat,
Travel Trailers
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677
Toyota 4Ru n ner 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , 4WD, V6, 5 speed, t ow pkg., plus 4 studs tires on rims, r uns g reat. W a s $ 5500, no w o n l y $4000.541-659-1416 • 940
Vans 96 Ford Windstar 8 2000 Nissan Quest
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
both 7-passenger vans, 160K miles, low pnces $1200 & $2900, and worth every centi 541-318-9999
offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great Chevy Astro visibility for aviation busiCargo Van 2001, ness. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or pw, pdl, great cond., email 1jetjock©q.com business car, well maint'd, regular oil Yamaha Banshee 2001 Country Coach Intrigue Wind River 250 RLSW Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, changes, $4500. custom built 350 motor 2002, 40' Tag axle. 2011 (subsidiary of based in Madras, al- GMC V~ton 1971, Only Please call race-ready, lots of extras Arctic Fox Mfg) 4-sea- ways hangared since $19,700! Original low 400hp Cummins Die541-633-5149 $4999/obo 541-647-8931 son pkg, dual pane sel. two slide-outs. new. New annual, auto mile, exceptional, 3rd windows, large picture 41,000 miles, new pilot, IFR, one piece owner. 951-699-7171 Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 window in rear, super tires & batteries. Most windshield. Fastest Arslide, 26" LCD TV. 7 -pass. v a n wit h /Boats & Accessories options.$85,000 OBO cher around. 1750 toGaraqed. $25,900. p ower c h a i r lif t , 541-678-5712 Nl tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. ~po $1500; 1989 Dodge 541-475-6947, ask for Turbo Van 7 - pass. More P x i a l B e n d bu ll e ti t .com Four Winds Class Rob Berg. 541-408-2111 has new motor and A 32' H u r ricane Jeep Comanche, 1990, t rans., $1500. I f i n 2007. CAN'T BEAT original owner, 167K, terested c a l l Ja y Looking for your THIS! Look before Trucks & 4WD, 5-spd, tags good 503-269-1057. you buy, b e low next employee? Heavy Equipment 16' SeaSwirl 1980 till 9/2015, $3900 obo. market value! Size Place a Bulletin help 975 541-633-7761 1990 4-Stroke 45hp & mileage DOES wanted ad today and Honda Outboard, Automobiles matter! 12,500 mi, reach over 60,000 $3000. Text all amenities, Ford readers each week. 541-639-2479 V10, Ithr, c h erry, Your classified ad slides, like new! New will also appear on low price, $54,900. 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, bendbulletin.com 541-548-5216 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 which currently reDiamond Reo Dump hp Bowrider w/depth ceives over 1.5 milTruck 1 974, 12-14 Plymouth B a r racuda finder, radio/CD player, Gulfstream Scenic lion page views evyard box, runs good, 1966, original car! 300 BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. rod holders, full canCruiser 36 ft. 1999, ery month at no hp, 360 V8, center- o wner, e xc . c o n d. $6900, 541-548-6812 vas, EZ Loader trailer, Cummins 330 hp dieextra cost. Bulletin 101k miles, new tires, lines, (Original 273 exclnt cond, $13,000. sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 FIND IT! Classifieds Get Reeng & wheels incl.) loaded, sunroof. 707-484-3518 (Bend) in. kitchen slide out, sults! Call 385-5809 fygV fy I $8,300. 541-706-1897 541-593-2597 new tires,under cover, or place your ad SELL IT! ~ Qo tl I 1t I I I I hwy. miles only,4 door on-line at CARS:Chevy The Bulletin Classifieds PROJECT fridge/freezer ice2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & MorepjxatBendbujletjncom bendbulletin.com maker, W/D combo, Chevy Coupe 1950 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Interbath tub & a a E A T rolling chassis's $1750 Buick LeSabre 1996. 205 Run About, 220 shower, 50 amp proea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Good condition, Fifth Wheels pane gen 8 more! • complete car, $ 1949; HP, V8, open bow, 121,000 miles. exc. cond., very fast $45,000. Non-smoker Hysfer H25E, runs Cadillac Series 61 1950, 2 dr. hard top, complete 541-948-2310 w/very low hours, well, 2982 Hours, $2600 OBO. w/spare f r on t cl i p ., lots of extras incl. $3500,call 541-954-5193. $3950, 541-382-7391 tower, Bimini 8 541-749-0724 custom trailer, 933 $19,500. Buick LeSabre 2004, Pickups 541-389-1413 30 mpg, 75k, heated Laredo 2009 30' with 2 seats, nice wheels, slides, TV, A/C, table Monaco Dynasty 2004, & c h airs, s a t ellite, auto, white, leather, Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 Almost like n e w!! loaded, 3 slides, die- Arctic pkg., p o wer 1971 new trans, 2 sel, Reduced - now Bring $6000 and it's awning, Exc. cond! new t i r es , ne w Peterbilt 359 p o table $119,000, 5 4 1-923- $28,000. 541-419-3301 yours. 541-318-9999 20.5' Seaswirl Spywater t ruck, 1 9 90, brakes, 2nd owner, 8572 or 541-749-0037 3200 gal. tank, 5hp r uns/drives g o o d. or 541-508-9133. der 1989 H.O. 302, pump, 4-3" h oses, Make good wood RV CONSIGNMENTS 285 hrs., exc. cond., WANTED camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. truck. $1995 OBO Cadillac DeVille, 2001, stored indoors for 541-820-3724 39K mi, new cond, loaded, 541-350-2859 We Do The Work ... life $11,900 OBO. $12,000. 541-598-5210 You Keep The Cash! 541-379-3530 On-site credit Antique & MONTANA 3585 2008, approval team, 21' Crownline 215 hp web site presence. exc. cond., 3 slides, Classic Autos in/outboard e n g ine We Take Trade-Ins! king bed, Irg LR, 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin Arctic insulation, all sleeps 2/3 p e ople, Free Advertising. options $35,000. BIG COUNTRY RV portable toilet, exc. 541-420-3250 Chrysler Sebring 2004 Ford 250 XLT 1990, cond. Asking $8,000. Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 6 yd. dump bed, 84k, beautiful dark gray/ OBO. 541-388-8339 1921 Model T Nuylfa 29 7LK Hi t chbrown, tan leather int., 139k, Auto, $4500 Hiker 2007, 3 slides, Delivery Truck $5995 541-350-5373 541-410-9997 32' touring coach, left jI= I" I , 0 Restored & Runs kitchen, rear lounge, 7 $9000. many extras, beautiful 541-389-8963 c ond. inside & o u t , $32,900 OBO, PrinevI nternational Fla t 35.5' Triton ille. 541-447-5502 days 22' Custom Weld Jet, Southwind Bed Pickup 1963, 1 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du & 541-447-1641 eves. 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 ton dually, 4 s p d. UV coat, 7500 mi hrs, garaged, loaded. pont Bought The Bulletin trans., great MPG, "MyLittle Red Corvette" new at 541-923-0854. could be exc. wood 1996 coupe. 132K, $132,913; To Subscribe call hauler, runs great, 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. asking $91,000. 541-385-5800 or go to Ads published in the new brakes, $1950. Call 503-982-4745 1966 GMC, 2nd owner $12,500 541-923-1781 "Boats" classification www.bendbulletin.com too many extras to list 541-419-5480. include: Speed, fishF ord F reestyle SEL $8500 obo. Serious buy • -'I • I • ing, drift, canoe, 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, ers only. 541-536-0123 i~ house and sail boats. I, „ front 8 side airbags, 25 For all other types of mpg, 3rd row seating, watercraft, please see pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, Class 875. Winnebago Suncruiser34' traction control, new tires 541-385-5809 2004, only 34K, loaded, Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th & brks, maintained extoo much to list, ext'd wheel, 1 s lide, AC, t remely well, runs 8 RAM 2500 HD '03 hemi, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 TV,full awning, exceldrives exlnt,148K hwy mi, 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, Dennis, 541-589-3243 Chevy C-20 Pickup $6700. 541-604-4166 lent shape, $23,900. am/fm/cd. $7000 obro. 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; 541-680-9965 /390-1285 GENERATE SOME ex541-350-8629 ee1 auto 4-spd, 396, model citement in your neigTravel Trailers CST /all options, orig. borhood. Plan a gaowner, $22,000, rage sale and don't c 0"'""" . 541-923-6049 ,lalrAnrn CERTIFIED forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809. Cars-Trucks-SUVs '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn Ford Taurus wagon 2004 PROJECT car, 3 50 very nice, pwr everything, Pilgrim In t e rnational small block w/Weiand Serving Central Oregon smce 1903 120K, FWD, good tires, dual quad tunnel ram 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 Keystone Cougar 243RKS Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 with 450 Holleys. T-10 Used out-drive 2008, excellent cond, al- Fall price $ 2 1,865. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, parts - Mercury Weld Prostar wheels, ways stored inside, used 541-312-4466 OMC rebuilt maextra rolling chassis + 2011 Toyota Tundra twice, extended service RV CONS IG NMENTS extras. $6000 for all. rine motors: 151 contract to 6/15. $17,500. Crew Max 4x4, WANTED 541-389-7669. $1595; 3.0 $1895; 541-420-8707 leather, winch We Do The Work ... 4.3 (1993), $1995. ¹174496 $3 4,995 Hyundai Sonata 2007 Need help fixing stuff? You Keep The Cash! 541-389-0435 64,700 mi,excelOn-site credit Call A Service Professional 2006 Chevy Silverado GLS, cond, good tires, approval team, find the help you need. 4x4 crew¹6258$24,995 lent non-smoker, new tags, web site presence. www.bendbulletin.com 2009 Ford F150 Crew $9500. 541-280-7352 We Take Trade-Ins! Watercraft ¹C77945 $28, 9 95 Protector toy hauler travel Free Advertising. 2009 Subaru Legacy Chevy Wagon 1957, BIG COUNTRY RV Ads published in "Wa- tlr cover fits 26-29' NIB AWD ¹6347 $14,895 4-dr., complete, Bend: 541-330-2495 tercraft" include: Kay- $199. 541-325-6147 $7,000 OBO, trades. 2010 Lexus RX 450 Redmond: 541-548-5254 aks, rafts and motor¹019757 $ 38,9 9 5 Please call Ized personal I '" 2010 Audi Q5 3.2 RV space for rent Tu541-389-6998 watercrafts. For malo. 30 amp + water ¹099460 $ 33,9 9 5 Nissan Sentra 2012 "boats" please see & sewer. Gravel lot. Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 541-598-3750 Full warranty, 35mpg, Class 870. Avail. now. $350 mo. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine,Corner 97 8 w. Empire 520 per tank, all power. auto. trans, ps, air, aaaoregonautosource.com 541-385-5809 541-419-5060 $13,500. 541-788-0427 frame on rebuild, reProwler 2009 Extreme painted original blue, 935 E dition. Model 2 7 0 original blue interior, Toyota Camrysr RL, 2 slides, oppos- Canopies & Campers Sport Utility Vehicles original hub caps exc 1984, SOLD; ing in living area, ent. chrome, asking $9000 1985 SOLD; center, sep. bedroom, Canopies: 1 fits LWB, or make offer. $50obo; small pkup SB, 2 ne w e x tra t i res, 1986 parts car 541-385-9350 $50 obo. 541-408-1389 hitch, bars, sway bar only one left! $500 included. P r o-Pack, Call for details, anti-theft. Good cond, 541-548-6592 Sea Kayaks - His & c lean. 'til Re g . Hers, Eddyline Wind 4/20/15. $19 , 900. Chrysler SD 4-Ooor Chevrolet Blazer LT 0 0 • I Dancers,17', fiberglass 541-390-1122 2000 -130k miles, Call Toyota Corolla 2004, 1930, CD S R oyal boats, all equip incl., skslra@msn.com auto., loaded, 204k Standard, 8-cylinder, for info. $4800 OBO paddies, personal flomiles. orig. owner, non body is good, needs 541-480-0781 tation devices,dry bags, RV CONSIGNMENTS smoker, exc. c o nd. some r e s toration, spray skirts,roof rack w/ WANTED $6500 Prin e ville runs, taking bids, towers & cradles. ReWe Do The Work ... 503-358-8241 541-383-3888, duced price $1100/boat You Keep The Cash! 541-815-331 8 Firm. 541-504-8557. On-site credit USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI approval team, web site presence. Door-to-door selling with We Take Trade-Ins! Motorhomes Free Advertising. most options, new tires, fast results! It's the easiest 159K rniies $3750 Caii way in the world to sell. BIG COUNTRY RV 541-233-8944 Bend: 541-330-2495 The Bulletin Classified Redmond: 541-548-5254 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 541-385-5809 door panels w/flowers +IYIIP & hummingbirds, Lm 1/3 interest in Columbia white soft top 8 hard Looking for your 2003 Fleetwood Dis400, $150,000 located top. Just reduced to next employee? covery 40' diesel mo@ Sunriver. H o urly $3,750. 541-317-9319 Place a Bulletin help torhome w/all rental rate (based upon Honda CRV 2004, or 541-647-8483 wanted ad today and options-3 slide outs, Springdale 2005 27', 4' approval) $775. Also: $9,995. reach over 60,000 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, slide in dining/living area, S21 hangar avail. for Call 541-610-6150 or see readers each week. e tc.32,000 mile s . sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 sale, o r le a s e @ http://bend.craigslist.org Your classified ad Wintered i n h e ated obo. 541-408-3811 /cto/3676208637.html $15/day or $325/mo. will also appear on shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 541-948-2963 bendbulletin.com 541-447-8664 which currently refisI I .I I i I ceives over 1.5 milFord Galaxle 5001963, lion page views 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, I every month at 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Weekend Warrior Toy radio (orig),541-419-4989 no extra cost. BulleHauler 28' 2007, Gen, Honda CRV 2010, like tin Classifieds 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, fuel station, exc cond. 1/3 interest i n w e l l- Ford Mustang Coupe new condition, very low Get Results! Call no slide-out, Triton eng, sleeps 8, black/gray equipped IFR Beech Bo- 1966, original owner, miles, well-maintained, 385-5809 or place all amenities, 1 owner, i nterior, u se d 3X , nanza A36, new 10-550/ V8, automatic, great AC, 6-CD player, sunyour ad on-line at perfect, only 17K miles, $19,999 firm. prop, located KBDN. shape, $9000 OBO. roof. $21,900 bendbuffetin.com 541-389-9188 530-515-8199 541-647-2058 $21,500. 541-504-3253 $65,000. 541-419-9510 ,•
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L e g al Notices LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I R CUIT C OURT O F T H E STATE O F ORDESEGON CHUTES COUNTY,
Federal Na t i onal Mortgage Association, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Rick Pape; Riverrim Community Association; and Occ upants o f the Premises, D e f endant/s. Case No.: 11CV0898. NOT ICE O F SAL E UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY.
Notice i s h e r eby given that I will on A pril 4 , 2 0 1 3 a t 1 0:00 AM i n t h e main lobby of t he Deschutes County S heriff's Offi c e , 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash or cashier's check, the following real property, known as 19529 Fis h hawk L oop, Bend, O r egon 97702, to wit, Lot 29 of Riverrim P U D., Phase 1 , City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ o f E x ecution i n Foreclosure issued out of t h e C i rcuit Court of the State of Oregon f o r the C ounty o f Des chutes, dated January 29, 2013, to me directed in the a bove-entitled a c tion wherein Federal National Mortgage Association as p laintiff/s, re c o v ered Cor r ected General Judgment of Fore c losure A gainst: (1) R i c k
Pape, (2) Riverrim Community A ssociation; and Money Award Against: In Rem the Real Prope rty L o cated a t 19529 Fis h hawk L oop, Bend, O r egon 97702, on December 12, 2 012, against Rick Pape and Riverrim Community Association
as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT T HE SA L E , A P ROS P ECTIVE BIDDER S H OULD INDEPENDENTLY
INVESTIGATE: (a)
.
(b) Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the prope rty; (d) Limits o n farming o r f o r est p ractices o n th e property; (e) Rights of neig h boring property o w n ers; and (f) Environmental laws and regulations that affect the p roperty. L A R RY B LANTON, D esc hutes Coun t y Sheriff. Ant h o ny Raguine, Civ il Technician. D a t e:
M arch 4 , 201 3 . Published in Bend Bulletin. D at e of First and S uccessive P u b lications: M arch 6 , 201 3 ; M arch 13 , 2 0 1 3 ; M arch 20 , 2 0 1 3 . Date of Last Public ation: March 2 7 , 2013. Attorney: Tony Kullen, OSB ¹ 050110, Rou t h
C rabtree
Ols e n ,
P.C., 511 SW 10th Avenue, Suite 400, Portland, OR 97205,
(503) 977 - 7840. Conditions of Sale: Potential bi d d ers must arrive 15 minu tes prior t o t h e auction to allow the Deschutes County S heriff's Office t o review bidd e r's f unds. Only U . S . c urrency and / o r cashier's ch e c ks m ade payable t o Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will
be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY, OneWest Bank FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns Plaintiff/s v Unknown Heirs of Alice F. Fairchild; Robert W. Fairchild; Ter-
PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on April 23, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend,
Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s h ier's check, the following real property, known as 55660 Blue Eagle Road, Bend, Oregon 97707, to wit, Lot 2 in
Block 15 of Vandevert Acres South, Deschutes County, Ore gon. Said sale i s made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t h e State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated February 21, 2013, to me directed in t he above-entitled action wherein One W est Bank FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure Against: (1) Unknown Heirs of Alice F. Fairchild; (2) Robert W. Fairchild; (3) Teresa Vanasen; (5) State of Oregon; and
(7) and Occupants of the Premises; and Money Award Against the Real Property located at 55660 Blue Eagle Road, Bend, Oregon 97707, rendered on January 23, 2 013, a gainst U n known Heirs of Alice F. Fairchild, Robert W. Fairchild, Teresa Vanasen, State of Oregon, and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE B IDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY IN V E STI-
GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b) Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the property; (c)Approved uses for the (d)Limits on esa Vanasen; fproperty; arming o r for e s t V andevert Acre s practices on the propSouth H o meowners erty; (e) Rights of Association; State of neighboring property Oregon; United States owners; and (f)Enviof America; and Ocronmental laws and cupants of the Preregulations that affect mises, D efendant/s. the property. PubCase No.: 12CV0136. lished in Bend BulleN OTICE O F S A L E tin. Date of First and U NDER WRIT O F Successive PublicaEXECUTION - REAL
Pacific Power is committed to providing you with safe and reliable power. To meet that commitment, we must continue investing in our system. We understand the impact that price increases have on our customers and we're continuing to take measures to keep our costs down.
The Bulletin
.
The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment c r editor;
Legal Notices
Managing our business to serve our customers
f g';I8-~ I
The Bulletin
Legal Notices •
On March I, 2013, Pacific Power requested an overall rate change of$56.2 million or 4.7 percent to become effective on january I, 2014. Aftertaking into account other rate changes which areexpected to occur in 2013 and ifapproved by the Public Utility Commission of Oregon, the net rate increase as a result of this request would be $44.8 million or 3.7 percent on january I, 2014.
--..4
Pacific Power serves approximately 560,000 customers in Oregon. The rate increase will vary by customer type, but under Pacific Power's proposal, no customer class would see anincrease greaterthan 6.5 percent. The increase to residential customers would be approximately 2.9 percent. If approved by the Commission, the expected impact on an average residential customer using 900 kwh would be $2.BI per month. The increase to commercial and industrial customers would range from l.7 to 6.5 percent. The primary reason for this filing is to recover the costs of ongoing new investments in the electrical system, providing safe, reliable electricity for our customers and complying with regulatorymandates.
•
The Bulletin
We understand the impact that price increases have on our customers and workto mitigate that impact as much as possible. Customers can visit pacificpower. net/wattsmart for energy- and money-saving tips and information.Energy Trust of Oregon alsooffers energy efficiency programs and information to Oregon residents and businesses.Contact Energy Trust of Oregon at energytrust.orgor 1-866-368-7878 for more information. Copies of Pacific Power's rate request application are available at our main office,located at 825 NE Multnomah Street,Portland, Oregon 97232 and on our website at pacificpower.net/rates. Customers may contact Pacific Power for additional information about the filing by mail to Pacific Power's main office at the address above, or by calling I-BBB-22I-7070. TDD/TTY users can call the National Relay Service or I-BBB-22I-7070. Parrj un representante que habla espanol, llame al f-888-225-26f f. Requeststo receive notice ofthe time and place ofany heorinf, on this application may be directed to the Public Utility Commission of Oregon at 550 Copitol Street NE, Salem, Oregon 973IO or by calling I -800-522-2404. Thepurpose ofthis announcementis to provide our customers with general information regarding the company's price increase application and the expected effect on customers. Calculations and statements contained in this notice are not binding on the Public Utility Commission ofOregon.
WON!
Mj PACIFIC POWER po
Public Notice Document Oregon price change application
E6 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
1000
Legal Notices tions:March 13, 2013; M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; March 27, 2013. Date of Last P ublication: April 3, 2013. Attorney:Michael T hornicroft, OSB ¹ 981104, R outh Crab t r ee Olsen, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, 503-977-7840. Condi-
tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY
B L A NTON,
Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : March 11, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN
THE
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must be i n p r oper IN T H E CIR C U IT form and have proof COURT O F T HE o f service o n t h e STATE OF OREGON plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not DESCHUTES at t o rney, COUNTY, GMAC have a n M ortgage, LLC, i t s proof of service on the successors in interest plaintiff. The object of and/or assigns, Plain- t he complaint is t o t iff/s, v. Damo n foreclose a deed of Moore; Cindy Moore; trust dated December Selco Com m unity 1 7, 2007 a n d r e Credit Union; and Oc- corded as Instrument No. 2007-65198 given cupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. by Owen D. Sodja Case No.: 12CV0475. and Sheralee J. HilN OTICE OF S A L E ton on property comUNDER W RI T O F monly known as 3135 EXECUTION - REAL South West Pumice Place, Redmond, OR P ROP ERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will 97756 and legally described as: Lot 15, on April 23, 2013 at HA Y D EN 10:00 AM in the main Block 5 , l obby of t h e D e s - VILLAGE, PHASE 11, County Deschutes C o unty, chutes Sheriff's Office, 63333 O regon. The c o mW. Highway 20, Bend, plaint seeks to foreOregon, sell, at public close and terminate o ral auction to t h e all interest of Sherah ighest bidder, f o r lee J. Hilton and all cash o r cas h ier's other interests in the check, the following property. The "motion" "answer" (or real property, known or "reply") must be given a s 20416 Clay P i geon Court, B e nd, to the court clerk or LEGAL NOTICE
Oregon 97702, to wit, CI R C U IT Lot 5, Block 2, Trap
COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY, Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas as Trustee for RALI 2004QAt, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Tessa White; Kevin White; M o rtgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for Flagstar Bank; and Occupants o f the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0230. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL P ROP ERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on April 11, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e schutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the following real property, known as 1134 N o rthwest Columbia S t reet Bend, Oregon 97701, to wit, Lot 5, Block 25, of Boulevard Addition to Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure i s s ued out o f t h e C i r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated February 20, 2013, to m e directed in t h e above-entitled action wherein Deu t sche Bank Trust Company Americas as Trustee for RALI 2004QA1, its successors in interest
and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered General Judgment Of Foreclosure Against: (1) Tessa White; (2) Kevin White; (3) Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for Flagstar Bank; (4) Occupants o f the Premises; And Money A ward Against t h e R eal Property L o -
Club Road Estates, Deschutes C o u nty, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t h e State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated February 20, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein GMAC Mortgage, LLC, its successors i n i n t erest
and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, r ecovered General Judgment of Foreclosure Against: (1) Damon Moore, (2) C indy Moore; A n d Money Award Against the Real Property Located at 20416 Clay Pigeon Court, Bend, Oregon 97702, rendered on January 3, 2013, against Damon M oore a n d Ci n d y Moore as defendant/s. BEFORE B I DDING A T TH E
S A LE , A
PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judg-
ment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e s t practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. LARRY BLANTON, Deschutes County Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : March 11, 2013. Published in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Successive Publications:March 13, 2013;
M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; March 27, 2013. Date of Last P ublication: April 3, 2013. Attorney: Michael Thornicroft, OSB ¹ 981104, R outh Crab t r ee Olsen, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, cated at 1134 North- 503-977-7840. Condiwest Columbia Street, tions of Sale: PotenBend, Oregon 97701, tial bidders must arrendered on Decem- rive 15 minutes prior ber 28, 2012, against to the auction to allow Tessa White, Kevin the Deschutes County White, Mort g age Sheriff's Office to re-
Electronic R egistrat ion S ystems, I n c. solely as nominee for Flagstar Bank, and Occupants o f the Premises as d efend ant/s. BEFO R E B IDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment
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view bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.
LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F T HE STATE OF OREGON creditor; (b)Land use FOR THE COUNTY laws and regulations OF DE S C HUTES, applicable t o the WELLS FARGO property; (c)ApBANK, N.A., S U CBY proved uses for the CESSOR property; (d) Limits on MERGER TO f arming o r for e s t WACHOVIA B A N K, practices on the prop- N .A., P l aintiff, v s . of O WEN D . SO D J A erty; (e) Rights neighboring property A/K/A OWEN DONNI owners; and (f)EnviSODJA; SHERALEE ronmental laws and J. HILTON; STATE regulations that affect OF OREGON; AND the p roperty. PubOCCUPANTS OF lished in Bend Bulle- THE PREM I SES, tin. Date of First and Defendants. No. Successive Publica- 1 2CV0633. CIV I L tions:March 13, 2013; SUMMONS. TO THE M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; DEFENDANTS: March 27, 2013. Date Sheralee J . H i l ton. of Last P ublication: NOTICE TO DEFENApril 3, 2013. Attor- DANT: READ THESE ney:Michael T horni- P APERS CARE croft, OSB ¹ 981104, FULLY! A lawsuit has R outh Crab t r ee been started against Olsen, P.C., 511 SW you in the above-en10th Ave., Ste. 400, titled Court by WELLS Portland, OR 97205, FARGO BANK, N.A., 503-977-7840. Condi- SUCCESSOR BY tions of Sale: Poten- MERGER TO tial bidders must arWACHOVIA B A N K, rive 15 minutes prior N.A., Plaintiff. to the auction to allow Plaintiff's c l ai m is the Deschutes County stated in the written Sheriff's Office to re- Complaint, a copy of view bidder's funds. which is on file at the Only U.S. c urrency Deschutes C o u nty and/or cashier's Courthouse. You checks made payable must "appear" in this to Deschutes County case or the other side Sheriff's Office will be will win automatically. accepted. P a yment To "appear" you must must be made in full file with the court a leimmediately upon the gal paper called a close of t h e s a l e. "motion" or "answer." LARRY B L A NTON, The "motion" or "anDeschutes Co u n ty swer" must be given Sheriff. Blair to the court clerk or Barkhurst, Field administrator w i t hin T echnician. Dat e : 30 days along with the March 11, 2013. required filing fee. It
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503-977-7840. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sherifffs Office to review bidder's funds.
Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : March 11, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C U IT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES
COUNTY, Pennymac Loan Services, LLC, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. William Tastula; Judy Tastula; Sun Meadow Owners administrator w i t h in 30 days of the date of A ssociation; O c c u of the Premises, first publication speci- pants efendant/s. C a s e fied herein along with D No.: 12CV0402. NOthe required filing fee. TICE OF SALE UNThe date of first publi- D ER WRIT OF E X c ation of t h e s u m- ECUTION - REAL mons is February 20, P ROP ERTY. Notice is 2 013. If y o u ha v e given that I will questions, you should hereby on April 16, 2013 at see an attorney im10:00 AM main mediately. If you need l obby of int hthe e D eshelp in finding an atCounty torney, you may con- chutes Sheriff's Office, 63333 tact the Oregon State 20, Bend, Bar's Lawyer Referral W. Highway sell, at public S ervice o n line a t Oregon, o ral auction t o t h e www.oregonstatebar. ighest bidder, f o r org or by calling (503) h or ca s h ier's 684-3763 ( in t h e cash the real propPortland metropolitan check, commonly known area) or toll-free else- erty as 20584 J acklight where in Oregon at Lane, Bend, Oregon (800) 452-7636. Atan d f u r ther torney for Plaintiff, /s/ 97702, escribed as , Lo t J ames A . Cra f t . d Thirty Five (35), Sun J ames A. Craf t Meadow No. 2, Des¹090146, chutes County, Or[jcraftO logs.com], e gon. Said sale i s SHAPIRO & S UTHmade under a Writ of ERLAND, LLC, 1499 SE Tech Center Execution in Forecloissued out of the P lace, S u it e 2 5 5 , sure ircuit Court of t h e Vancouver, WA C State of Oregon for 98683, the County of Des( 360)260-2253; F a x chutes, dated Febru(360)260-2285. S&S ary 22, 2013, to me No. 11-108220 directed in the above-entitled action LEGAL NOTICE wherein P e n nymac IN T H E CIR C U IT Services, LLC, COURT O F THE Loan its successors in inSTATE OF OREGON terest and/or assigns, DESCHUTES as plaintiff/s, recovCOUNTY, Wells JudgFargo Bank, N.A., its ered General of Foreclosure successors in interest ment 1 . W i l liam and/or assigns, Plain- Against: 2 . Judy tiff/s, v. Sean L. Bell; Tastula; 3. Sun S tonehedge on t h e Tastula; Meadow Owners Rim Association, Incu sociation; 4. O cAscuand Occupants of the pants of the Premises; Premises, Money A ward D efendant/s. C a s e And A gainst t h e Rea l No.: 12CV0640. NOProperty Located at TICE OF SALE UN20584 Jacklight Ln., D ER WRIT OF E X Oregon 97702, ECUTION - REAL Bend, rendered on January P ROP E RTY. Notice is 3, 2013, against Wilhereby given that I will liam Tastula, J u dy on April 23, 2013 at Tastula, Sun Meadow 10:00 AM in the main Association, l obby of t h e D e s - Owners Occupants of the chutes County and as d efenSheriff's Office, 63333 Premises ant/s. BEFO R E W. Highway 20, Bend, d BIDDING A T THE Oregon, sell, at public SALE, A PROSPECo ral auction to t h e TIVE BIDDER h ighest bidder, f o r SHOULD INDEPENcash o r ca s h ier's DENTLY IN V E STIcheck, the following GATE: (a)The priority real property, known of the lien or interest as 2153 S outhwest jud g ment Obsidian Ave n u e, of t h e(b)Land use Redmond, O r e g on creditor; laws and regulations 97756, to wit, Lot 33, applicable t o the S tonehedge on t h e (c)ApRim, Phase II, City of property; for the Redmond, Deschutes proved uses (d)Limits on County, Oregon. Said property; arming o r for e s t sale is made under a fpractices on the propWrit of Execution in of Foreclosure i s s ued erty; (e) Rights property out o f t h e C i r cuit neighboring owners; and (f)EnviCourt of the State of laws and Oregon for the County ronmental regulations that affect of Deschutes, dated PubFebruary 15, 2013, to the property. in Bend Bullem e directed in t h e lished tin. Date of First and above-entitled action Publicawherein Wells Fargo Successive tions:March 13, 2013; Bank, N.A., its sucM arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; cessors i n i n t erest March 27, 2013. Date a nd/or assigns, as of Last P ublication: plaintiff/s, recovered April 3, 2013. AttorGeneral Judgment of ney: Michael ThorniForeclosure Against: croft, OSB ¹ 981104, 1) Sean L. Bell; 2) Crab t ree S tonehedge on t h e Rouch P.C., 511 SW Rim Association, Inc; Olsen, 10th Ave., Ste. 400, 3) Occupants of the OR 97205, Premises; and Money Portland, 503-977-7840. CondiAward Against Sean of Sale: PotenL. Bell, rendered on tionsbidders must arO ctober 30 , 2 0 1 2 , tial rive 15 minutes prior against Sean L. Bell, to the auction allow S tonehedge on t h e the Deschutesto Rim Association, Inc., Sheriff's Office County to reand Occupants of the view bidder's funds. Premises as d efen- Only U.S. c urrency d ant/s. BEFO R E and/or cashier's BIDDING A T TH E checks made payable SALE, A PROSPECto Deschutes County TIVE BIDDER Sheriff's Office will be SHOULD INDEPENaccepted. P a yment DENTLY I N V ESTIbe made in full GATE: (a)The priority must immediately upon the of the lien or interest e s a l e. of t h e jud g ment close of Bt h L A NTON, creditor; (b) Land use LARRY Co u n ty laws and regulations Deschutes Blair applicable t o the Sheriff. Barkhurst, Field property; (c)ApT echnician. Dat e: proved uses for the March 11, 2013. property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e s t LEGAL NOTICE practices on the prop- IN T H E CI R C UIT erty; (e) Rights of COURT O F THE neighboring property STATE OF OREGON owners; and (f)EnviDESCHUTES ronmental laws and COUNTY, GMAC regulations that affect M ortgage, LLC, i t s the property. Pubsuccessors in interest lished in Bend Bulle- and/or assigns, Plaintin. Date of First and tiff/s, v. Wade Forsyth; Successive Publica- and Occupants of the tions:March 13, 2013; Premises, M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; D efendant/s. C a s e March 27, 2013. Date No.: 12CV0202. NOof Last P ublication: TICE OF SALE UNApril 3, 2013. AttorD ER WRIT OF E X ney: Michael ThorniECUTION - REAL croft, OSB ¹ 981104, P ROP ERTY. Notice is R outh Crab t r ee hereby given that I will Olsen, P.C., 511 SW on April 11, 2013 at 10th Ave., Ste. 400, 10:00 AM in the main Portland, OR 97205, l obby of t h e D e s -
1000
1000
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chutes County for the County of DesSheriff's Office, 63333 chutes, dated FebruW. Highway 20, Bend, a ry 8, 2013, to m e Oregon, sell, at public directed in the o ral auction to t h e above-entitled action h ighest bidder, f o r wherein Pro v ident cash o r cas h ier's Funding Associates, check, the real prop- LP, its successors in erty commonly known i nterest and/or a s as 2165 North West signs, as p l aintiff/s, Hill Street, Bend, Orrecovered G e n eral egon 97701, and fur- Judgment of Foreclot her described a s , sure Against: 1. Karen Unit Fourteen (14), as Kassy; 2. Occupants described in that cer- of the Premises; and t ain Declaration o f Money Award Against U nit ownership f o r Karen Kassy on NoRusty Hills C ondo- v ember 1 3 , 20 1 2 , miniums, r e c o rded against Karen Kassy July 1, 1980 in Book and Occupants of the 324, Page 39, Deed Premises as defenr ecord, a n d re r e - d ant/s. B EFO R E corded July 23, 1981, BIDDING A T TH E in Book 344, Page SALE, A PROSPECBIDDER 845, Deed records, of TIVE Deschutes C o u nty, SHOULD INDEPENOregon, appertaining DENTLY I N V ESTIto a tract of land situ- GATE: (a)The priority ated in L ot s 6 - 11, of the lien or interest Block 7, of the replat of t h e jud g ment o f Blocks 6 and 7 , creditor; (b) Land use Riverside A d d i tion, laws and regulations City of B end, Desapplicable t o the chutes County, Orproperty; (c)Apegon, as described in proved uses for the D eclaration whi c h property; (d)Limits on Declaration is incorpo- f arming o r for e st rated herein by refer- practices on the propence and made a part erty; (e) Rights of hereof as if fully set neighboring property forth herein; together owners; and (f) Enviwith a percentage of ronmental laws and the common ele- regulations that affect ments as set forth in the property. Pubsaid Declaration aplished in Bend Bullep ertaining t o sai d tin. Date of First and units. A lso together Successive Publicawith the common ar- tions: February 20, eas as set forth on the 2 013; February 2 7 , plat of R u sty H i lls 2013; March 6, 2013. Condominiums. Said Date of Last Publicasale is made under a tion: March 13, 2013. Writ of Execution in Attorney: Michael Foreclosure i s s ued Thornicroft, OSB out o f t h e Ci r c uit ¹ 981104, Ro ut h Court of the State of Crabtree Olsen, P.C., Oregon for the County 511 SW 10th Ave, Ste of Deschutes, dated 4 00, P o rtland, O R February 20, 2013, to 97205, (503) m e directed in t h e 977-7840. Conditions above-entitled action of Sale: Po t e ntial wherein GMAC Mort- bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the gage, LLC, its successors i n i n t erest auction to allow the a nd/or assigns a s Deschutes C o u nty plaintiff/s, recovered Sheriff's Office to reGeneral Judgment of view bidder's funds. Foreclosure Against: Only U.S. c urrency cashier's (1) Wade Forsyth (2) and/or Occupants o f the checks made payable Premises; And Money to Deschutes County A ward Against t h e Sheriff's Office will be real property located accepted. P a yment at 2165 North West must be made in full Hill Street, Bend, Orimmediately upon the egon 97701 on Janu- close of t h e s a l e. ary 3, 2013, against LARRY B L A NTON, Wade Forsyth; and Deschutes Co u n ty Occupants o f the Sheriff. Lisa Griggs, Premises as defen- Civil Division. Date: d ant/s. BEFO R E February 15, 2013. B IDDING A T TH E SALE, A PROSPEC- LEGAL NOTICE
L e g al Notices • tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. LARRY
B L A NTON,
Deschutes Co u n ty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : March 11, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY, OneWest Bank, FSB, its successors i n i n t erest
and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v . Un k n own Heirs of Barbara B. D udley; Robert N . Dudley; Kimberly C. Dudley; United States of America; State of Oregon; and Occupants of the Premises , Defendant/s. Case No.: 11CV1049. NOTICE OF SALE UND ER WRIT OF E X ECUTION - REAL P ROP ERTY. Notice is
hereby given that I will on April 11, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r
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to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Blair Barkhurst, Field T echnician. Dat e : March 11, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C UIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES COUNTY, Fe d e ral National M o r tgage Association, its successors i n i n t erest and/or assigns, Plaint iff/s, v . S. Rea d Bashian; and Occupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0089. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that I will on April 11, 2013 at 10:00 AM in the main l obby of t h e D e s chutes County Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's check, the real property commonly known as 2 71 2 N o rtheast Canyon Park Place, Bend, Oregon 97701, and further described as, Lot Fifteen (15) in B lock Three (3) o f Canyon Park, City of Bend, Des c hutes County, Oregon. Said sale is made under a Writ Of Execution In Foreclosure i s sued out o f t h e Ci r cuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated February 14, 2013, to m e directed i n t h e above-entitled action wherein Federal National Mortgage Association, it s s u ccessors in interest and/or assigns, as plaintiff/s, recovered G e n eral Judgment of Foreclosure Against: (1) S. Read Bashian; (1) Occupants o f the Premises; And Money A ward A g ainst S . Read Bashian on Dec ember 1 1 , 20 1 2 , against S . Read Bashian and Occupants of the Premises as defendant/s. BEFORE BIDDING AT
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cash o r ca s h ier's check, the following real property, known as 1 7 00 7 J a c into Road, Bend, Oregon 97707, to wit, Lot Two (2), Block Thirty-one (31), Deschutes River Recreation H o mesites, Inc., Unit 4, Deschutes County, Ore gon. Said sale i s made under a Writ Of Execution In Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t he State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated February 21, 2013, to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein One W est Bank, FSB, its successors i n i n t erest a nd/or assigns, a s plaintiff/s, recovered THE SALE, A PROTIVE BIDDER I N THE CIRC U I T General Judgment of SPECTIVE B I DDER Foreclosure Against: SHOULD INDEPEN- COURT O F THE (1) Unknown Heirs of SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI- STATE OF OREGON Barbara B. Dudley; (2) DENTLY I N V ESTIGATE: (a)The priority DESCHUTES GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest COUNTY, I n t he Robert N. Dudley (3) of the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment Matter of the Guard- Kimberly C. Dudley; of t h e j ud g ment creditor; (b) Land use ianship of: Stephanie (5) Occupants of the (b)Land use laws and regulations Nicole Reece, date of Premises; (6) State of creditor; and regulations applicable t o the birth August 14, 1992 Oregon; And Money laws applicable to the property; (c)Ap(a minor), Respon- A ward Against t h e (c)Approved uses for the d ent/s. C as e N o . : R eal P roperty L o - property; proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on 09-PC-0040-MS. NO- cated at 1 7007 Ja(d)Limits on f arming o r for e st TICE OF SALE UN- cinto Road, Bend, Or- property; for e st egon 97707, rendered f arming o r practices on the prop- DER WRIT OF EXpractices on the property; (e) Rights of ECUTION - REAL on January 24, 2013, of Unk n o wn erty; (e) Rights neighboring property PROPERTY. Notice is against neighboring property owners; and (f)Envihereby given that I will Heirs of Barbara B. owners; and (f) EnviD udley, Robert N . ronmental laws and on April 23, 2013 at ronmental laws and regulations that affect 10:00 AM in the main Dudley, Kimberly C. regulations that affect the p roperty. P u bl obby of t h e D e s - Dudley, Occupants of the property. Published in Bend Bulle- chutes County t he P r emises a n d lished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Sheriff's Office, 63333 State of Oregon as BE- tin. Date of First and Successive Publica- W. Highway 20, Bend, defendant/s. Successive Publications:March 13, 2013; Oregon, sell, at public FORE BIDDING AT tions M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; o ral auction to t h e THE SALE, A PROMarch 27, 2013. Date h ighest bidder, f o r SPECTIVE B I DDER of Last P u blication: cash o r cas h ier's SHOULD INDEPENI N V ESTIApril 3, 2013. Attor- check, the real prop- DENTLY ney: Michael Thorni- erty commonly known GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest croft, OSB ¹981104, as 20003 South Alt h e jud g ment R outh Crabt r e e derwood Circle, Bend, of creditor; (b)Land use Olsen, P.C., 511 SW Oregon 97702, and 10th Ave., Ste. 400, further described as, laws and regulations the Portland, OR 97205, Lot Seven (7) in Block applicable t o (c)Ap503-977-7840. Condi(10), Woodriver Vil- property; tions of Sale: Potenlage, recorded No- proved uses for the property; (d)Limits on tial bidders must ar- v ember 9, 1 972, i n f arming o r for e st rive 15 minutes prior Cabinet B, Page 1, to the auction to allow Deschutes C o u nty, practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights the Deschutes County Oregon. Said sale is Sheriff's Office to remade under a Writ Of neighboring property view bidder's funds. Execution issued out owners; and (f)Environmental laws and Only U.S. c urrency of the Circuit Court of and/or cashier's the State of Oregon regulations that affect checks made payable for the County of Des- the property. P ubto Deschutes County chutes, dated Janu- lished in Bend Bulletin. Date of First and Sheriff's Office will be ary 29, 2013, to me accepted. P a y ment directed in the Successive Publicamust be made in full above-entitled action tions:March 13, 2013; immediately upon the wherein Al b e rtazzi M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; c lose of t h e s a l e . Law Firm as plaintiff/s, March 27, 2013. Date LARRY B L A NTON, recovered Corrected of Last P u blication: Deschutes C o u nty Supplemental Judg- April 3 2 0 13. AttorSheriff. Blair ment fo r At t orney ney: Michael ThorniBarkhurst, Field F ees an d Mo n e y croft, OSB ¹ 981104, Crabt r e e T echnician. Dat e : Award on October 10, R outh Olsen, P.C., 511 SW March 11, 2013. 2012, against In the Matter of the Guard- 10th Ave., Ste. 400, LEGAL NOTICE ianship of: Stephanie Portland, OR 97205, IN T H E CI R CUIT Nicole Reece, date of 503-977-7840. CondiCOURT O F THE birth August 14, 1992 tions of Sale: PotenSTATE OF OREGON (a minor), as respon- tial bidders must arDESCHUTES d ent/s. B EFO R E rive 15 minutes prior COUNTY, Provident BIDDING A T TH E to the auction to allow Funding Associates, SALE, A PROSPEC- the Deschutes County LP, its successors in TIVE BIDDER Sheriff's Office to rei nterest and/or a s - SHOULD INDEPEN- view bidder's funds. signs, Plaintiff/s, v. DENTLY I N V ESTI- Only U.S. c urrency cashier's Karen Kassy; and Oc- GATE: (a)The priority and/or cupants of the Pre- of the lien or interest checks made payable mises, D efendant/s. of t h e jud g ment Case No.: 11CV1121. creditor; (b) Land use N OTICE O F S A L E laws and regulations l LRE P U B L I C U NDER WRIT O F applicable t o the EXECUTION - REAL property; (c)ApNOTICES PROPERTY. Notice is proved uses for the hereby given that I will property; (d)Limits on INPORTANT+ on March 26, 2013 at f arming o r for e s t 10:00 AM in the main practices on the propAn important premise upon which the principle of l obby of t h e D e s- erty; (e) Rights of chutes County neighboring property democracy is based is thatinformation about Sheriff's Office, 63333 owners; and (f)EnviW. Highway 20, Bend, ronmental laws and government activities must be accessible in order Oregon, sell, at public regulations that affect for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. o ral auction to t h e the property. PubPublic notices provide this sort of accessibility fo h ighest bidder, f o r lished in Bend Bullecash o r cas h ier's tin. Date of First and citizens who want fo know more about government check, the following Successive Publicaactivities. real property, known tions:March 13, 2013; as 63210 Deschutes M arch 2 0 , 201 3 ; Market Road, Bend, March 27, 2013. Date Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin Oregon 97701, to wit, of Last P ublication: classifieds or go fowvvw.bendbulletin.com and SEE ATTA C H ED April 3, 2013. AttorEXHIBIT A. Said sale n ey:Anthony V. A l click on "Classified Ads" is made under a Writ b ertazzi P.C., O S B of Execution in Fore- ¹96003, Al b e rtazzi closure issued out of Law Firm, 44 NW Irvthe Circuit Court of ing, Bend, OR 97701, The Bulletin the State of Oregon 541-317-0231. Condi-